; 23 Die in State Police searching for a hit-and-run car which lulled an 11-year-old Waterford Township boy over the weekend, one of the worst traffic fatality weekends in Michigan this year. * * * Waterford Township police suspect a metallic gold or white late model Cadillac struck Darelle J. Desotell, 739 Scott Lake, while he was walking on an edge of a road hear his honie Saturday evening. He died yesterday afternoon in Pontiac General Hospital. A witness to the accident told police the hit-and-run vehicle stopped momentarily after striking the boy on Scott Lake Road near Pontiac Lake Road but then sped off. Highway Toll in ’67 Higljway 86 Last Ytar ta Data 121 mation concerning the accident, which occurred at 7:29 p.m., to contact them. A woman is a possible suspect in the case, according to police. Area residents say they saw a woman driving a car fitting the description in the area after the accident. The hospital reported a woman came in three hours later to check on the boy's condition and then left in a hurry. Desotell was walking a few inches on the paved roadway when hit by the car, according to a friend, Jim Shastel, 11, of 2863 Chrysler, Waterford Town-sMp, who was walking beside him. The boys were walking south on Scott Lake Road and the car approached them from behind, police said. Desotell was wearing dark clothing. Paint on the boy’s clothing and headlight glass and chrome found at the scene were analyzed by the State Police crime lab in East Lansing. The Desotell boy was among at least 23 persons killed in traffic accidents in Michigan over the weekend. when their cars ran off the road and eight were killed when their autos c the approaching north-of its eight engines out. [suggested at the recent Arab.i the Su-I^ AP Wirtphoto NOBEL PRIZE WINNER City Police Will Pass Out Candy In the ground war in South Vietnam, U.S. and South Vietnamese forces beat' off an attack by about 1,000 Vietcong on a rubber plantation 70 miles north of Saigon after nearly 14 hours of fighting. N.Y., today was awarded the Nobel Prize for physics by the Swedish Academy of Science. He was awarded the prize for his contributions to the theory of nuclear reactions and especially his discoveries concemmg the energy production m stars. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PON’HAC AND VICINITY - Increasing cloudiness, windy and warmer today with showers and possibly scattered thunderstorms likely. Highs 56 to 62. Cooler tonight with rain likely. Lows 46 to 46. Tuesday: Cooler with rain likely early Tuesday. Southeast to southerly winds IS to 28 miles today, diminishing and becoming west to northwesterly tonight. Outlook for Wednesday: Mostly sunny and a little warmer. Percentage of precipitation probabilities; Today 60, tonight 80, Tuesday 60. .owes! tBmptrpturB prtCBdIng I kt I i.m.: Wind Veloc’* ---------- DIrtcflofl: SouthtPit-t Wind VelocHy 15-2 * iBit'South 5:30 p.n _______ Bt 7:03 6 today Moon rises Tuesday at Loweit t«mp«ratur* 3) 21 Mn»n t*tnp«r«tura 35.5 37.5 Waathar Cloudy, Partly Sunny Murder Fails to Upset Party Guests Laugh, Thinking Man's Slaying a Joke VAN Nftvs, CaW. HAP) -Gaily costumed guests at a Hal-loiyeen party watched and laughed as a man burst Into the midst of] the throng early yesterday followed by a man wifh a gun. They thought the shooting was all a clever skit. Then they found the man was Area Boy Kitled by Hit-and-Run (Continued From Page One) Walter Herbert Ritz, 40, of Port Huron, killed Friday night when his car hit a truck and careened into another vehicle near Goodells on M2L Alice Blackledge, 63, and Mary Ann Blackledge, 21, both of near Marion, killed Saturday Lai transshipment point, all within seven miles of the center of Haiphong, North Viefoam’s chief port. ★ ★ ★ ' ' It was the first raid of the war on the barge repair yard. North Vietnam claimed three U.S. planes were shot down, but the U.S. Command made no report of any losses. Since the heavy raids on the Hanoi-Haiphong area began last Tuesday, the U.S. Command has an- as their car skidded on the nounced the loss of 15 planes j Ml 15 Muskegon River bridge in and 16 fliers. | Osceola County and landed up- •UNCONFIRMED’ j side down in three feet of water, There was also no confirma- sunimit meeting danese capital. The Republicans decided to form a peace commission to contact all Yemenis, Republican and Royalist. The statement called on all Yemenis to forget the past and to work together. TO MAKE VISIT Sallal will leave shortly for! The civil war began in 1962 tion of a Hanoi claim that a B52 strategic bomber was shot down just north of the demilitarized zone Sunday. In the 28 months the hig high-altitude bombers have been attacking in Vietnam, none has been shot down but four have collided in the air over the sea and crashed and another crashed at Da Nang while mak- Police said Kenneth A. Lind strand, 32, lay on the floor the luxurious apartment for several minutes until one of the 50 guests noticed blood coming from his mouth. One guest said later: “It looked to everyone like a skit. When the man fell down and was moving and mumbling on the floor we all thought, gee, this guy is really putting It on.” He said Lindstrand, a salesman, appeared at the private party in this Los Angeles suburb about 1 a.m. not in costume. ★ ★ ★ He danced with h few of the guests, then left. A few minutes later he ran back into the room, followed by a stocky man carrying a gun. “It looked like a toy,” said another guest, Bruce Cane. “I saw the flashes.” There were two shots. One, struck Lindstrand in the side, the other hit a wall. The guests watched and laughed as Lmdstrand writhed on the floor for several minutes while his assailant fled, virtually unnoticed, according to a woman guest who would not identify herself. She said, “A girl sitting next to me said, ‘I see blood commg out of his mouth.’ “I told her, ‘It must be a of! Two C/ean/ng ""“smash^ Firms in City Are Robbed Dawfitown Tamptratura* lighest temparaturt LowaM temparatgra Mean tamperature Waafher — Sonny Escanaba « Jacksonville 75 59|CapSUle he has InsidC. G. Rapids 4$ 43 Kansas City 68 41'---------------------- , AO Hooo^on 40 37 LOS Angelas 84 60 40 Lansing ............... ’ " Marquetta o Miiskagon Peliston _ - _ Traversa C. 46 4J Omaha Aibuquarqua 60 33 PhotniK ' 67 43 ^Pinsburgh 49 35 St. Louis 50 34 Tampa 84 65 ' ~ Sait Lake C. 50 271 Robberies at two dry clean-mg establishments over the weekend were under mvestiga-tion today by Pontiac police. On Saturday afternoon, a masked bandit held up Ogg Cleaners, 430 Orchard Lake, and escaped with $263 in currency and some change. Two employes, Dorothy Elcan, 31, of 35 GUlespie and Sandra Hirsch, 17, of 13 ColUngwood, told police that the man was Douglas McKay Jr., 18, of S^inaw, killed Saturday when his car ran off M13 in Zilwau-kee Township and Ut a troe. Clyde Benton, 41, of Sturgis, killed Saturday when his car hit a crossing signal abutment at a New York Central railroad crossing south of White Pigeon. Francis O. Norman, 18, of Detroit, killed Saturday in Detroit when the car in which he was riding went out of control into a building. ★ ★ Carl Pettijohn, 27, of Grand Blanc, killed Saturday in Grand Blanc Township, Genesee County, when two cars collided at an intersection. Vera Rangel, 17, of Munger, was killed Saturday night when hit by a car as she walked along M15 about eight miles southeast of Bay City. Herbert Fronta, 75, of Jack-son, killed Saturday night when hit by a car as he crossed a downtown Jackson intersection. bidden under Us coat and that they could only tee the barrel They said he was wearing a black Halloween mask and dark trench coat with a hood. Two armed bandits held up Davis Dry Cleaners, 691 Orchard Lake, at about 8:30 last night WWW Ronald Ruple, 15, of 1057 Boston said the two men entered the shop while he was cleaning up and demanded that he turn over money in a cash box. It contained about $42 They also took several items of clothing. Mlcml Btach I) 761 ■ • Kukec 54 4*. Orlaant 81 6ti Ntw York S3 351 ‘ • 51 33 65 54| Cincinnati 63 45 S. Franclfco 77 ----- I Danvtr 44 34 S. Sta. Marla 44 Highatl and Lowast Tamparaturas Datrolt 50 47 Saattia 57 51 This Data in 95 Yaart Duluth 38 30 Waihlngton 76 In 1950 24 in 1917 Fort Worth “ ‘ Jackson Parolee Sought in Wounding of 5 Persons NATIONAL WEATHER — The only rain expected b the country tonight is in Louisiana. Milder temperatures are expected on the East and West coasts. Colder weather is slated for the midsection of the country. YPSILANTI (AP) - A nation wide alert was out today for the arrest of a 24-year-old parolee from Southern Michigan State Prison who police say shot and wounded five persons — four of them critically. Police soug|it Joseph Bouchie arid 'his 18-year-old girlfriend, Unda Winters. Washtenaw County sheriff’s deputies reported four persons were shot in a parking lot outside of Ypeilanti early Sunday and Detroit police said that a service station owner had been shot while trying to collect less than $5 for gas several hours later. FOLLOW ARGUMENT The Ypsilanti shootings reportedly followed an argument. Deputies were dispatched University Hospital in nei Ann Arbor to protect the four victims from any further attack. Detroit police said the car used by the man involved in the gas station shooting matched the descriptim of the one Bouchie reportedly was driving, w w w In critical condition with stomach wounds in University Hospital were Raymond Pope, 23; Edward L. Gillespie, 28; and his brother, Lawrence Gillespie, 31. Pope’s wife Barbara, 20, was in good condition with an . arm wound. ^ The service station owner, Lloyd Ash, 55, was listed in critical condition with chest wounds in Detroit General Hospital. Trick-or-Treat Is Tomorrow (Continued From Page One) Parties will be held for children in costume from 7 to 8:30 p.m. at Pontiac Lake School, 2515 Williams Lake; Leggett School, 3621 Pontiac Lake; erside School, 5280 Farm and the Community Activities building, 5640 Williams Lake. Prizes will be awarded far costumes. Donuts and cider will be served a Sponsors are the township recreation departinent. Community School Services, Waterford Township Jaycees, Fire Fighters, Rotary and Optimist clubs. ★ ★ ★ Safety is a big concern of both- Pontiac and Waterford Township police departments. Motorists are asked to be* especially careful as “the btg| may be wearing masks or costumes that impair their visfon of oncoming cars. Also, parents of younger children are asked to see that their children are b at an early hour, as near after dark as pos- Gefs Jail Term /LONDON (AP)—Brian Jones, 2>year-old guitarist of the Rolling Stones pop group, pleaded guilty today to drug charges and was sentenced by a London court to nine months imprisonment He was denied bail pending an appeal. Patroling Pontiac police will pass' out candy to children between the “trick or treat” hours of 6 and 7 p.m. tomorrow. (3iief William K. Hanger said that each scout car will have bags of candy that officers will distribute to youngsters they see during their patrols. I The candy has been donat^ located at Chester and Merrill and will replace the 98-year old Hill building, said Piel. The second floor will house administrative offices with the first floor to be exclusively for indoor parking. The Hill building will be torn down to make way for expansion of the Baldwin Elementary School playground. CONTRACTS AWARDED Architectural contracts were awarded to the Schurrer Construction Co. for $465,603; mechanical to Kenneth Cornwall, Inc. for $100,140; and electrical to Lowren Hickman, Inc. for $85,257. Funds for the building will come from a $9.8 million bond issue passed in 1966. The administrative secretaries contract agreed to earlier was ratified by the board Saturday. The new two-year, contract gives the secretaries an 8-cent an hour raise. rebel army officers headed by Sallal threw Imam Mo; hammed el Badr off 11-century-old throne and set up a republic. Egypt sent troops to help SaL lyl, and Saudi Arabia, alarmed by the presence of the Egyptian army on its border, threw its support behind Royalist tribesmen who railed around the Imam. Teen Hunter Dies TRENTON (jn-A 15-year-old Southgate youth was shot to death in a duck hunting acd-dent Sunday on Calf Island, southwest of Grosse Ide b the Detroit'River. Police said Daryl Asher was in a duck bliild with three other hunters when a gun discharged, wounding Asher. The victim was dead on arrival jat a Trenton hospital. Jane Purdy, vocal instructor at the Birmingham Conservatory of Music, 772 East Maple, has been selected”to participate as a semi-finalist. in a contest Saturday in Chicago sponsored by the Chicago Lyric Opera Association. Miss Purdy has sung with the Detroit Symphony Orchestra as a soloist and this past summer with Boris Goldovsky/ world famous operatic impressario, said Director Cliff Morris. She was one of four finalists in the Grinnell’s auditions last year and traveled to Cleveland for regional auditions for the i Metropolitan Opera. JkJkt American MMe Cold Weather Apparel at SIMI|S Low Discount Pricos Thasa spaelals for noonday, TOasday and Wadnasday Boys’ Flesee Lined Sweat Shirts Simtn$ Price Crew neck and fleece thirts with long In all the popular colors. Full/ washable, 100% cotton. Size S-M-U — Botement Children's 100% Cotton Flannel 2-Pc. Sleepers -99* Children's 2-pc. sleepers with non-slip feet, gripper and elastic waist, several styles to choose frohi. Pretty pastel colors and sizes I to 6. —Main Floor Short sl« suits of 100% cotton __ knit, shrink resistant and full cut. First quality. Ankle length. Sires 12-14 and 16. —Basement Prints, Checks, Solid Colors Yard Goods 6!99* Choose from a good variety of cotton percale yard goods in asserted’ p'rints, solid colors and checks. Fully washable and fast colon. —Main Floor First Quality Elastic Waist Children’s Pants 10 With Warm Ear Flaps Boys’ Wintor Caps At Simmt Jutt 10 plastic or nylon materiel with bill and ear flaps« They come In assorted pelors and sizes. SIMMS'S,. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1967 A——3 Institutions' Trading Warping Stock Prices ly concerned, seenl to, be sty- veiy 'deOnitim ^ the word IS ' contrasted By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business Analyst jmied by a lack of funds NEW YORK - A concentra- ®""®*®^ l^gulatlons in theli- in-tion (rf power among mammoth 11®®*'*“**®“* ®* * conoentra- and growing institutions as mu-j"®“‘ tual funds is now tending to Nevertheless, the shift from a accentuate stock price changes marketplace of random public in a manner reminiscent of the orders to one more neary domi-outlawed pools of the 1930s. i . j u u , . , . , . nated by sheer power appears This concentrated buy mg and, -j selling, which is entirely legal ^®" ®!‘‘l® has todamentally changed the and sometimes destructive character of the stock market! IP"®,®?'"?®® “I *1®®^ ''®\“^® an Associated Press study hasi^J^fy® *"®''‘'®‘- «>e study found. suggests. ^ ^ ^ Federal officials, though deep-[ Amidst this heavy volume, the to “speculation” has become .ob-spui^ by mutual finds which buy and sell stocks within weeks in their quest for “perform-ahce.” PICTURE OF CHANGE niustrating the changed conditions are these facts: • Mutual funds now control 20 to 30 per cent of the shares of many large corporations, and one-third the value of all shares on the New York Stock Ex- pensitHi funds, insurance companies, endowments and bank-administered trusts. • More blocks of 10,000 shares or more. Indicating institutional buying and selling, have crossed the New York Stock i^xchange ticker tape year than in alll 1966. In September alone there were more than 570. * * • Mutual funds are turning over their portfolios at the rate of 40 per cent a year. Several performance funds have rates change is owned by mutual and I much higher than this^s much me 2-DAY SPECIAt! MONDAY and TUESDAY 108 N. SAGINAW RCAVICTOR New COLOR TV complete with cart! Big, rectangular screen color, all-channel reception and smart styling are yours to enjoy with this new RCA TVI Has 180 sq. inch picture with New Vista 24,000-volt chassis. Super-Bright Hi-Lite picture tube produces most vivid color everl Delivery, installation and 90 days home service ore included. 2-DAY SPECIAL *388 complete with cart NO MONEY DOWN-Only Weekly OPEN MONDAY NIGHT (TONIGHT) Until 9-PARK FREE Rear of Store TO STEP "IPOWN ^PRias _ LEAF BAGS OR TRASH CAN 20. or PUSTIG LINERS 58< Whilt Quantity Last ■ 30-31 Nov.llBimB DRAYTON I BLOOMFIELD | PLAINS I MIRACLE MILE | DETROIT 'AP) - Burton L. Girardin knew he’d made a mistake shortly after he joined the suburban Dearborn police force in 1956. Not that he had anything against the Dearborn department. He had joined it because several friends were on it. But then a few months later he transferred to the Detroit police force and that’s where he felt at home. ‘Tt just didn’t 1 right to be with any other police department,” he said. For Girardin, that’s understandable. He’s the fourth gen-1 JOINED FORCE eration of Girardins who have served on the force. In fact, I S. S, KRESGE COMPANY per cent and more a itutional speculation, Willi^ McChesney Martin told the ,iv5th anniversary celebration of the New York Stock Exchange this year, not only is poisonous but could end disas-terously. Martin, Federal Reserve Board chairman and a forimr exchange president, suggested that “thiis cult of short-run market performance” compares in some ways to the outlawed pools, in which traders created activity to attract buying and push up prices. Policeman at Home Now Keeps Tradition Going present Burton, began his career as a messenger at age 15. He served on the force 43 years until his death in 1927 and was founder of the police record bureau. Inspector Burton in turn was followed by his two sons. Burton C. and Sidney. Though Sidney rose to sergeant, Burton C. remained a patrolman by choice. He was recommended for promotion, but his son, the present patrolman, said he preferred to remain at the lower rank to be' able to devote more time to his family Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. Drain fii Dp.m. Tubs, and Wed. Hours: 9 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. You’d Better Get These Hard-to-Get Items In SIMMS FREE LAYAWAY Now for Christmas It's true, the items listed below will be in short supply come December—and if you want to giv* one for gifts or your own use, you'd better get It now. Todoy-Tues. and Wed. Specials. He died shortly after his son Rife for Ford Man DEARBORN (AP) — Services there’s always been a Girardto on the force in its 102-year histo-jP®pg^^^,^^„ wife, Lucille, have an NO OTHER GOAL 111-year-old son, Steven B. Andj ‘T never really thought of as might be expected, he’d like | ^ being anything but a police-!to become a policeman, man,” said the 33-year-old Girardin, a patrolman assigned to the motor traffic bureau. ‘Tve always had police work in my blood. Everything else less interesting,” he'wHl be held Wednesday in Dear-adds. He is not related to Ray!b'»'n for Lincoln G. Love, gen-Girardin, the department’s re-|eral purchasing agent for the tiring commissioner. I Ford Motor Co. Love, 54, died ★ * w I Sunday in Dearborn. The family tradition began | with his great-grandfather, Pierre N. Girardin, who after mustering out of the Union Army at the end of the Civil War joined the Detroit police force when it was formed in October 1865. One of its first 14 officers, he became the first taptain and later served as acting superintendent for 17 years until his death in 1882. SECOND GENERATION j His two sons, Peter and Bur-; ton, both became police inspectors. Peter was police paymaster, serving in the department 34 years. Burton, the grandfather to the One More Job for Fired Clerk DANIA, Fla. (AP) - Mary Thornhill was dismissed from her job as city clerk Friday, but she’ll be asked to perform one more chore today. The city fathers want her to open their safe. ★ , * * After Mary’s departufe, May-Richard Marant said he wanted to check the contents of the City Hall safe and found ‘she’s the only one who knows i the combination.” After a hurried conference; with the city attorney and members of the City Commission,! Marant said, “I guess she’ll; give us the combination. I would imagine she can be forced to give it to us.” M LUMBER CO. DO-IT-YOURSELF WEEKLY GARAGE SPECIAL Gable Front 22'x24' GARAGE Delivered Cash Price SAUOO T I "X Plus Tax FREE Garage Plans Available CALL FE 4-1594 or Stop in Personally at 151 Oakland Ave. CAMERA DEPARTMEMT DISCOUNTS Hardest Radios to Get This Year EOUCE-CAU Portables iW&raucECiUi 10-TRS. Radios $29.95 yalue 19“ Model BIOAP by Alaron—full warranty on this radio. Complet* with case, battery and earphone. $1 holds in free iayaway. Not os shovim. 3-BAND 14-TRS. Radios BATTERY & AC POLICE CALLS--FM & AM $49.95 value — model BI40P is extra hi power radio for police calls, FM and AM broadcasts. Styled somewhat os shown — but not exactly. $1 hold* or charge iFwith o-credit cord. 39“ Sale of Walkie-Talkies Kids 3-Tr. Claricon Up to 2 block rpnge — ideal for kids use. Buy for Christmas gift giving 31* Just Arrived 'ROSS’ 6-Tr. Transceiver 6-transistor walkie-talkie is good for up to V2 mile range. ROSSR£670.OnV$I holds. First Time Ever! -TRS.>XtalNo.9 Transceiver Alaron #B999 walkie-talkie for 1 to 3 mile range — ideal for all around use by the odults. $1 holds. ICY The Taste of Canada cool, clean, crisp. It’s in a bottle of McMasters* McMASTER'S IMPORTED CANADIAN WHISKY $4.47 the fifth. Retail Tax Included CANADIAN WHISKY. A BLEND. SO . IMPORTED By McMASTER IMPORT CO., ALLEN FaRK, MICH, For HUHTERS and SPORTS Events ‘BUSHNELL’ Binoculars Extra-Wide Angle 7x35 $54.50 voluo — Buihn.ll Sportvimy model with 11 dagrM fi.ld of vl«w. With cow and strops.^I holds, Extra-Brite 7x50 27“ 27*8 Show Super 8 and Regular 8mm BELL & HOWELL Movie Projector ZOOM Lens 119“ Latest 1968 model projector with outomatic threading, zoom lens feature. Reverse and still projectors, too. Takes new Super 8 film and regular 8mm film for briiliant shows. Model 456 with ZOOM lens. $I holds or use a major credit card to charge it. SIMMS..'* A4r. And Mrs. HenriH Hansen Of Denmark Visit Here Danish Woman Visits Son After 34 Years Out of U.S. WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP - A woman who had lived in the United States only nine years came back recently for a visit after being away 34 years. Mrs. Henrik Hansen, mother of Alfred Hansen, 8421 Cooley, was born in Denmark, came here to marry her first husband and returned in 1933 after he died. The second husband, with whom she came back, hews the same name and was bom on the same date as her first As they both sat in the living room of her son’s home on Cooley Lake, they looked quite American. But Mrs. Hansen pointed out that her blue suit and her husband’s shirt and slacks were completely wash-and-wear — products more common in Denmark than in the United States. ★ ★ * Mr. and Mrs. Hansen also appeared relaxed after 10 weeks visiting relatives and friends And touring Michigan. They are now on their way home with a stopover in Iceland planned. MAJOR CHANGE Mrs. Hansen immediately cited prosperity as a point of difference between the two countries and one of the major ways the area has changed since li^. She looked out the Hansen’s ample living room window and saw the new houses, stores and cars she didn’t see 34 years ago. Her first husband was a foreman at the Borden’s Creamery, formerly in Pontiac. They lived at 17 Augusta, Pontiac and tai Juhl, the Danish settlement in Michigan’s thumb area. Al, who has an insurance business here, ts the only one of Mrs. Hansen’s three children to have returned to the United States. * ★ * During the first three years of Mrs. Hansen's return to Denmark, she operated a bakery. She then moved to a farm with her second husband, who was a woodsman. FIRST VIEW OF U.S. For Hansen, this trip was his first view of the U.S. and the beginning of his retirement. He returns to several gardening jobs and his own vegetable and berry garden. Mrs. Hansen will continue embroidery work, she says, pointing to the wall hanging she made for her son’s home. COG Debate Near in Orchard Lake ORCHARD LAKE - Tonight Orchard Lake residents will hear about the controversial Southeastern Michigan Council of Governments (COG). This public meeting at ^ at the West Bloomfield Junior High School, 3380 Orchard Lake, has been set up by the City Council. The council has been considering joining COG, an association of government units and school districts in the six-conn-, ty Detroit Metropolitan area. Speakers at the meeting have been selected with the aim of presenting both sides of the CCXl issue. Robert Farley, executive director of COG, '•nd William L. Mainland, chairman of COG’S by-laws conunittee, have been asked to appear by Councilman Frederick S. Strong Jr., who represents the city in COG. SENATOR INVITED Sen. Robert J. Huber, R-Troy,.has been asked to appear by William A. Allen, a resident who has voiced opposi-UontoCOG. Lots of Shopping Dollars Women Like LSD Trips | By L. GARY THORNE Assistant City Editor —Suburban i I am an admirer of women which is no more unique among us males than being able to walk upright. Admittedly, those men who honor women are legion, and I am but one of the multitude. Despite this typical male frailty, which dictates that women be cherished as sisters, wives, lovers and mothers, there is much about women that is laughable, if yon ignore the pain. The woman who keeps my house is addicted to shopping, which, my office col--leagues lament, is a conrunon affliction. The habit begi^ sometime after the honeymoon and is never arrested or fully satisfied. ♦ W ★ • ITEM: The shopping sickness can normally be kept to one onslaught per day, providing proper amounts of anger, outrage and scorn are administered by the husband. • ITEM: The amount of time or money permitted has little affect on the victim. A woman can devote three houra to a tour ' Floral Print Sheared TOWELS Choose from three attractive' colors. Slight Irr. Bath $]28 Hand “/gc W. Cloth 2S^ Jacquard B.T. 1.58 H.T. 88c B.T. 48c Towels ... Fourth Floor COMFORT NAP THERMAL BLANKET Keeps you worm in winter ond cool in summer. A blend of 94‘’,o royon ond 6% ocrylic with a nylon binding. 72x9Q-In. size fits twin or full bed. ' Reg. 7.00 $429 f-- THE PONTIAC PRESS 4t West Huron Street Pontiac, Blichigan 4805S MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1967 OlulrilitB of tlu BoMd ■ecreUry Md Ad**rtl«taa nmup u, rmoiiAu Trauurar and nnanot BowAts B. Bnaanuu, IX Praaldant and Fu^Ualwf Amo Mccmir It Seems to Me Michigan Continues Victint of Witless Time Standard Michigan has temporarily gained back one hour of daylight sanity and common sense. This was knocked out over the weekend. That still leaves us 60 minutes out of step with the Nation, the sun and the moon not to mention Venus, Mars and Outer Saturn.' ★ ★ ★ Portions of our Upper Peninsula refuse to accept the stupidity of even continuing on Eastern Time and they’re using the Central Time zone. That’s where we belong. Ask the Lord. ★ ★ ★ 'This last mentioned hour was thrust upon the bulk of the State many, many years ago. A group of Detroit busihessmen got excited and decided it would be Big Stuff to have our clocks aligned with New York. What a thrill! The rest of the State supinely followed suit and we were placed one hour off sc)iedule with nature. Then our current Legislature in Lansing went berserk and just willy-nilly added an hour of “daylight savings’’ to our already misfit clocks. This pushed us an astounding 120 minutes out of step with the universe, except with those on daylight savings and we were still a cockeyed hour out of step with them. ★ ★ ★ Lansing stupidity must be compounded to sink to such abysmal depths. I understand some Detroiter with an unpronounceable name championed the cause. And we prevailed upon the House and Senate. Now we’re stuck with it through 1968 when a State referendum comes up. Expecting a wallowing time-blind legislature to put us back on Central time where we belong is probably hoping for too much. But we’re temporarily freed from the extra yoke and fetters thrown around our necks and clocks last spring. Booooo. Voice of the People: *Romney Should Reveql Solution to End War’ In an interview with reporters. Gov. Romney said he has a solution to end the war in Vietnam but is not ready to say what it is “at this time.” Why doesn’t he tell all of us, including the President, what the solution Is? Is this a tactic to get votes in the next election? ★ ★ ★ It seems if some smart individual knows how to put an end to this terrible waste of lives on both sides he should speak out now., That would bring him all the votes come next election, including that of the President. MRS. R. S. JEFFERSON 2124 JACKSON, HIGHLAND ROMNEY 'Yoo-Hoo, Peace-Keeping Force David Lawrence Says: Publications Proposal Biased Taken to Task One of the Nation’s well-known newspaper leaders has taken hjs own profession to task for helping build up Stokely Carmichael and others of his ilk. Felix R. McKnight, Dallas Times Herald says: “I wince when I think of the mileage he has received from the news media. We have helped make a national figure out of a totally unknown.” ★ ★ ★ He specifically charges that news media “gave him a platform where he preached hatred and killing and burning!” Regretfully, we agree in the main with what Mr. McKnight charges. Primarily, all news media must keep abreast of actual happenings, whether they look upon them with favor or the opposite. But we’ve certainly overplayed our collective hands. ★ ★ ★ We’ve erred in judgment. Corrections should be instituted. Further, the Dallas man suggests more vigorous editorial coverage of those dastardly events, together with their causes and effects. The Texan is so right. Potential Candidates Richard M. Nixon’s supporters are establishing campaign headquarters in four states which offer presidential primaries. At the moment, Mr. Nixon appears to be the most formidable opponent of Michigan’s George Romney. However, both Reagan and Rockefeller have ears to the ground and are listening intently for signs of any defections anywhere. WASHINGTON - Congress under the Constitution is not permitted to pass any law that abridges speech or freedom of the press. Some members of congress, however' seem to have forgotten that freedom I of the press is I also guaran-l -teed by the LAWRENCE first a m e n d m e n t. For instance, the House of Representatives has passed and there is under consideration in the Senate a proposal to put a special charge on mailings of a publication above 500,000 copies. The placing of appropriate charges on all publications for transportation t h r o u g h the mails is a sound practice, as they should naturally be expected to pay for the cost of delivery and help offset the expenses of the Post Office Department. But Richard M. Nixon is edging^,' »>«* y*‘ slowly but persistently towards the ® center of the picture. He probably h9s feweriivowed “critics” than any prominent GOP entrant. These are important days for all concerned and the failure to dot an “i” or cross a “t” could become calamitous. imp^ed a license, tax for the privilege of enga^g in the business of selling adv^lis-Ing. But it applied only to publishers of newspapers and magazines with a weekly circulation of more than 20,000 copies. ABRIDGED FREEDOM The high court said the state law imposing the tax was “unconstitutional under, the due process of law clause because it abridges freedom of the press.’’ Justice Sutherland, who wrote the opinion of the court, said: “The form in which the tax is imposed is in itself suspicious. It is not mrasured or limited by the volume of advertisements. “It is measured alone by the extent of the circulation of the publication in which the advertisements are carried, with the plain purpose of penalizing the publishers and curtailing the circulation of a selected group of newspapers.’* The postal bill being considered at present by the Senate would impose, in addition to a highefr rate for all publications — newspapers and magazines — a supplementary charge for each copy mailed in excess of 500,000. It takes a good many years for a publication to attain that amount of circulation, so. the “surcharge” amounts to, a discriminatory penalty imposed upon growth and efficiency. Congress could apply higher mail rates to all publications uniformly, and, while there ^Appreciate Help With Recent Workshop' We appreciate all persons who help^ make the Home Owner’s Workshop a reality. Your participation indicated an attitude of cooperation and support. JAMES L. JACKSON RELOCATION OFFICER PLANNING and URBAN RENEWAL Mothers Discuss Lunches Served at School Do parents know how much food school cllildren are served for 35 cents? Our children come home starved because they eat so early and are served so little. One day our children had milk, one small carrot stick, one. tablespoon of beans on a slice of canned meat, a small portion of sour grapefruit and a cookie. * * ★ Approximately 600 are fed in one hour and the children are packed so close at tables that a child who brings his lunch has to stand up to take his food out of the sack. They eat with coats and li«^ on as they go right outside after eating. We suggest parents come and eat lunch with your children and see what goes on. SHIRLEY FRANTZ 204 W. CORNELL BARBARA TEAGUE 495 TALLAHASSEE Tells Where to Find Answer to Problems People are too concerned about Issues and not enough concern is placed on the answer. There is but one answer and that is God. The world’s problems are wrapped up in one word—sin. The world’s answer is just as simple—Jesus Christ. Each one of us is able to see the sins of others, overlooking our own, until we have the spirit of God. To find more about this, turn to yolir Holy Bible, in prayer. MRS. IDA S. KERSEY 248 CRYSTAL LAKE DRIVE Gives View on Holly Area School Millage ★ -A- Governor Romney, be very circumspect. You’re our boy. M. Bob Considine Says: those publicaUons having a ^ mail circulation in excess of a set figure should be penali:;ed instead of the same rate being applied uniformly to all publications delivered by mail. The Supreme Court in 1936 ruled that a levy of this kind is unconstitutional. The judgment was rendered in the case of a Louisiana statute which Today an election on a bond issue is being brought before property owners and taxpayers of Holly Area School mifiht be some wotests from- ^‘strict. We are informed that if this bond issue goes through, there will be another election asking for 4V4 mUl increase. During the past five months we have had three special elections. The first was for a ten mill raise which was defeated, the second for a ten miil increase which was again defeated, and in August another special election asked to keep the seven mills which was soon to expire. The people voted to keep the seven mills. - ★ ★ ★ Now even though they tell us they are in desperate need of more money and the school is about ready to fold because of being broke, they want to build some fabulous new schools. The school officials don’t realize that taxes are hurting us. Let’s put the school on a budget by voting “no” on the coming bond issue and the increase in millage. The two high)est paid school officials in our district do not iive in our school district so they do not pay school taxes in the Holly Area School District. those affected, there certainly could be no objection raised from a constitutional standpoint. It is the use of governmental power to discriminate between large and small publications which has evoked criticism. Sorry About This, NRA, but Gun Ads Are Obscene AN OVERTAXED TAXPAYER Control of Schools \ With teacher strikes generally abated, American newspapers and th^ readers are appraising the whme situation. Strikes in many places were absolutely counter to State laws. A union violating this statute in New York is liable for a $10,000 a day fine. Is it going to be imposed? The teachers , claimed they had “resigned” but this was clearly a conspiracy. ★ ★ ★ Must we decide whether the control of the schools rests with unions or with school boards? If this be true, let’s have a show- NEW YORK-At the heavy risk of offending the National Rifle Association once more, --------------------------- and It is a ^ most sensi- | lie?” Pop: “It depends on SL^Thl whether you mean Wash- s u g g estion ington, George, or Wash- that the gun ington,D.C.”............... Mrs. Kennedy (Jackie) is constantly covered news- Christmas wise when she shows up pitch are ob-anywhere with a man. . . scene. century Saxon wheel lock dogs has half-octagon barrel, about 75 per cent ivory in-^ laid. Completely Inlaid ivory I ball butt. Seventeen inches long over-all. No spanner, in extremely fine condition; true museum piece, $13,000.” ★ * ★ I’ll take four pairs for my kids. grandparents placed it. ★ ★ And in Conclusion Jottings from the well-thumbed notebook of your peripatetic reporter: In Manila, four (4) young men were sentenced to death for kidnapping and raping a movie star. Manila — where justice prevails....... Overheard: “When science gets a man on the moon, will it begin to get those pigeons down from public buildings?”...............Insider’s Newsletter says Leon Samson, professional strong man from Australia, will devour an entire automobile, tires and windows included, during the next four years to win a bet of |22J)00.... *........Hearing Clem- down. Certainly the Nation’l teachers are currently “teaching” school children that the general standing of their profession is considerably below the . . pedestal on which their parents ............Senator Charles ,.J ..____ .. and grandparents have always Percy pulled this one: ^ F^STdSp's! Will Bobby Kennedy run but really, now, does the man for President? Only his who has everj^ng (or the Their national image has been hairdresser knows for woman) want: sullied in the eyes of preceding sure.”....................New “This World War I com- generations and probably the chil- York hotels were jammed memoraUve Colt, Battle of dren. Aside from the teachers them- this past month. No one ^ selves, con^nts around the (?oun- knows why. try have been rather unanimous in ★ ★ ★ |joo, sale subject to sute supporting 'soiiool boards in lieu of Why do so many attrac- laws?” belligerent unions. tive girls and ladies ruin Or what about “unusual their appearance by using ... very rare Scottish flint-water colors on their eyes? pistols ... and in mu-Phir-aon Iiac condiUon. Eighteenth • ; ......■ .Lnpgo nas century. AH metal. ., silver \ ® pollution suit plated cm brass. Belt hook on EHjr Attlee referred to as a very against 12 corporations leR side; ful^ and beautifully modest man,” Winston Churchill and will press the matter engraved, maker is_ unknown nodded sagely and remarked: “Well, in court...............Sign he has a lot to be modest about.” in Birmingham, Alabama, street intersection: “No U-all turns.”.....• • • • • Inhere are 50,000 known drug addicts in New York — -------------- ,,, , . , j..,. „ ThnTofacf Virginia’s 6th district Con- Liiy. . . . . . . . . . me latest Mr. and,Mrs. Francis L. Clancy gressman Richard Poff, head for men? Belts made of chains. Jingle, Jangle. . . ....... Dept of Cheers and Jeers: the C’s — last week’s Indian summer; the J’s — last week’s early snow —Harold A. Fitzgerald Question and Answer What’s the change in women's working hours that I hear goes into effect soon? WORKING MOTHER REPLY As of Nov. 3, there will be no legal limit^ to the number of hours a woman may work, except an employer would still be subject to prosecution if his working hours constituted a hazard to the health or well-being of his employes. Reviewing Other Editorial Pages ★ ★ Trusted scouts tell me Holly Baker deserves mention as one of the attractive young ladJes in the area......... . . . Junior: “Pop, is it true, Washington never told a pair $6,500?” Or: ★ ★ ★ “A magnificent pair of 16th Verbal Orchids Crime Epidemic Richmond News Leader Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark, under attack for supposedly not doing enough to combat crime, said recently that the justice department has undertaken a war against organi-ized crime “which is unequaled in its dimensions and unparalleled in its results.” “Unparalleled” Is right. The FBI reports that in the first six months of this year, crime thruout the nation increased 17 per cent over the same period in 1966. Crime in the District of Columbia went up at more than 43.1 per cent. worst example of the crime epidemic.” If Mr. Clark and the nation’s combined law enforcement' agencies cannot contain the epidemic in any other way, they might take • a cue from Defense Secretary Robert McNamara and tiy some barbed-wire fences. of 480 Mt. Clemens' S7th wedding anniversary. Mri>. Bertha Hyatt of 308 Oakland; 96th IHrthday. Mrs. DeU^ IngersoU of 2125 Pompey; 83rd birthday. of the Republican task force on crime, says that “organized crime is the seedbed of street crime.” * * A And he adds: “Washingtop, D.C., Ahich should be a showcase of successfiil law en-is the Private Pilots Arizona Daily Star American aviation seems at times to be geared to the big airlines, but the fact is that there are 138,000 private pilots in the nation and they deserve consideration, too. It is in the general ipterest that they have 'available to them fully safe airports, with facilities for instrument landing if they need thus to land, and with good acconunoda-tions for overnight or longcjr stays., * A A The Aircraft Owners and Private Pilots Association has called on the Federal Aviation Administration to help In the of an air- borne warning system that will help to prevent midair tragedies such as have occurred twice in civil aviation in the 'pa$t five months. ★ A ★ Tucson International Airport is an unusually safe one for a number of reasons. Nevertheless, it accommodates a vast private pilot trade and the private operators should not be neglected. Genius... The Tiro (Ohio) World They laughed at Watt, too, until he invented fhe Watt SchmacaM. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER A—7 U S. Cuts 5,000 Rear-Echelon Jobs in Viet i By JOHN T. WHEELER i(^)—The U. S. Command has stripped away some 5,000 rear-eeart aliiihily additional Monda.v, Tur>.l.r and Thurada, 12:00 lo 8:00-Wrdneaday, Friday and Saturday 9:00 to 5:00. ^ ^ KENDALES Photographers ae wr xx 5-0322-PHONE FE S-3260 Phone AAONDAY-TUESDAY AA ONTGOMERY WARD OEtWERS Save 61 SORRY, NO PHONE, AAAIL OR C.O.D. ORDERS • ALL ITEMS ON SALE WHILE THEY LAST Save 1.56 Save 82' Save 25% Football r Sweatshirts I 1 88 Reg. 2.49 • Sewe$t, sporty look to titp any shirks • Colorful iiiimhers on u hitr ground • Coinfortahlr rottnn knit svilh Jlrcce lining For the latest "in" look! Navy, green or maroon numbers on front, bock and sleeve. Fleece lined white cotton, S. M, L. Sportswriir Misses’ Ripple-KNIT PANTS 344 Reg. $5 ' Orion® acrylic bonded to acetate tricot • Spicy slintlrs for stylish fall wear e Tiir'O-n-ny stretch, clasticized uaist Slim-line pants stretch both ways for a more flattering look, greater comfort. Navy, chili, brown and block. Misses' 8-1 8. Sportsuear Boys’ Warm Flannel PJ’s 1 77 Reg. 2.! • Pre-shrnnk cotton is long-uearing • W ashfast to hold its bright colors • Rig sarings on boys’ winter comfort Keep them worm in long-lasting cotton PJ's from Words! Button-front and slipover styles, many colorful prints. 8 to 20. Louvered Shutters BUY Qatrei. nuci Get 1 Free e Snndetl, readyto-fin-ish American pinm e A great selection of sixes at Wards e Elegant louver design adtls charm to rooms Not-to-be-missed sov* ings on handsomo pin* shutters, ready for paint or stoinl MovgbloMouv-ers, tilt bar aro decora* tive, practicall Save 1.11 ASST. MIRROR TRAYS Save 6.07 FIREPLACE SCREEN Save 24.12 SOLID STATE STEREO SNO-TREAD TIRE Choose from 3 lovely styles. Bottoms hove protective suede cloth or rubber. Filigree rims in gold color metal. Cosmetic Dept. 88 Reg. 3.99 Mode to order; custom sized for your fireplace. Bldck-mesh screening mounted inside brass bar. Easy to install. Dome Improvement Dept, 21 88 Reg. 21.95 All transistors —no tubes, has two 5-inch clip-in speakers, tone and volume controls, changer shuts unit off. Radio-'IT Dept. 54 88 ^ SAVE 2.09 Little Girls' Shoes il90 Reg. 6.99 Fashion-wide grained block leather with adjustable otter strop, squared toe. BVa to 4. Shoe Dept. ANTI-FREEZE 1 44 Reg. 1.59 One filling* gives winter-long protection. Fights rust, won't boil away. One gallon. Automotive Accessories SAVE $3 WARM BLANKETS 1^99 Reg. 9.99 Choose thermal Aire Cell or luxury woven acrylic with nylon binding. 72x90-inch. Bedding Dept, SAVE 2.72 5-PC. WRENCH SET !97 Reg. 6.69 Open-end wrenches ore extra-strong forged alloy steel. 3/8x7/T 6 to 15/16x1-inch. Reg. $19 SAVE 1.55 FLASHLIGHT Factory retreaded from side-wall to sidewall with tough, cold rubber. 24-month rood hazard guarantee. Automotive Dept. 15« 144 Reg. 3.99 Three-way lock switch, built-in bulb protector, ring. Three-cell. 2-Cell Flashlight.. 1.44 Sporting Goods Dept. SAVE 25c FURNACE FILTERS 44. Reg. 19c Keep furnace dust out of house air, off furniture, drapes. 1 -in. in 16x20 to 20x25-in. Heuling Equipment SAVE $1 SALT-PEPPER SET 99c Reg. 1.99 Wood with tempered steel gears. 5Vi-in. salt and pepper mill in wood groin, colors. China Dept. SAVE 1.33 SUPER PLUS LATEX 366 Oal. ’ Reg. 4.99 / It's the dripless interior point that dries in 30 minutes. Washable, odorless. Paint Dept. Pontiac Mall Io M.M'. to ‘»;00 i>.M, Ol’EN MOM)AY THRU FRIDAY 10 A.M'. To >»;( SATUJiDAY 0:30 A.M. TC>'0:00 I'.M. STODAY 12 INOON TO 5 R.M. • 6«2-t04<) Jk=L THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. OCTOBER 30, 1067 31 Yanks Listed as Killed in Viet WASHINGTON (API - The latest casualty list from the Defense Department includes the names of 31 men killed in action in Vietnam. Killed in action: ARMY ALABAMA — Spec* 4 Nathaniel H. "^'‘dALfFoSNIA - Pfe. Loul, Oclx Hanford. FLORIDA - 2nd Lt. Harold Durlii Jr., Bonita torings; Spac. 4 Michaal Millar, Mt. Plaasant, INDIANA - Spac. 4 Ray N. OrlMi Muncia. MICHIOAN — Pfc. emll e. Ma R'SSSaska"—Spac. 4 Slanlay D. Gub- 2»V“wSiai°V.'ilfio«7 •Sr-FrJd.'JSiJ Garmantowni Pfc. Roban L. I ^t¥xA?'— Spec. 4 Joa Lovato Jr., Lub- Utah - Pfe. Scott G. Ryan, ^S^^etn - cpi. Claud* c. We. Jafui 4. Caitll- wEiSLt - '• tiaTI'Of-"" ^^TEXAS - CpI. Quinton M. Sica, Tax*, Died of wounds: MARINE CORPS A4AS8ACHUSETTS - Lane* Cpi. thy L. Vtcalvl, Springllald. Yule Tree-Lift Missing to dead—hostile; LOUISIANA - Spac. 4 Michaal J. rail, Harahan. - Pfe. cimani Gllff^fr.................... “• laSlfanS:Vd.*T*V^ ^ 5yl^NSYL"v!SNir*I' Doitaon, RoblnMn. TEXAS — Pfc. Arturo Garcia, M cadat. Missing as a result of hostile action; ARMY Pfc. John D. Kriich*. Died not as a result of hostile action; WEST VIRGINIA — PfC. I Fleck, Marmet; Pfc. Richard Nitre. NAVY WISCONSIN - Hospital Corp flobart H. Dacktr# CoItv. MARINI CORPS ^ CALIpORN RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - The management of the Branch Banking and Trust Co. building nireila’iSSIi,^*’*'''***' plans to put a 50-foot ,.T.«as - staff sgt. c*n 3,000-pound Christmas tree on top of the 16-story structure in downtown Raleigh on Nov. 13 by having a helicopter lift if into place. AIR FORCR lh*i*Topeka“ Missing to dead—nonhostile; ARMY CALIFORNIA - Spac. 4-William H. ANYONE CAN JOIN our credit union! Ask About Our Many Services PONTIAC CO-OP Phone 3S4-2401 iiiiii. Royal York Sport Coats & Bla»r$ reduced frod S37.50-$44.50 $311« $38 Proportioneii-fit Puro Wool Slacks reduced from $15.50417.50 $1290 to $1490 All alteratioru without charge Uie Bond'i mort convenient Optional IBond’s Rocbester-Talloreil Coats rOPCOATS routed from $55 . ....S47 '>f| ZIPLINED COATS reduced from $65 $56 It OVERCOATS reduced from $70... .$60 ! Cruise VMsels sailing from the United States during the 1906-1967 season topp^ the 200,-mark: for the third straight year. ^ NAVY TEXAS — Aviation Electrician's Mata I : not as a result of hostile action: wo Dannis G. wS^man. ' . 4 Bobby R. GrHfIn. Anfbony B. CadMlI. I??.': 156 W«s» Huron Oeefi Saturday 'Til Ona • BUY! SELL! TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS I Your choice, ploy m aa bike *r podel car •I.Tyd-. All itRRl pedal car with 5* rear wheels or banana seat ploy bike. Your chaica af 1.66. Choose Tripoley, Noah's Ark, B«rt-terflies or Moon Shot games. Road race and train set, both for only Ploy with them separately or togetherl You get road racing set and train set y for both. Worth twice the pricel "Buddy L" toys All steel wrecker or Comoro car with recessing head lights. Jr. series. Buddy L action a £_g% work truck! I.OTbr- Steel constructed pick-up truck er dump truck. Jr. seriei. Sturdy. Train set with village scenery, now ^99 Complete let with 5 cars and picturesque village, made to sell for much morel Provides hours of fun for the whole familyl Huhryl Daniel Soano and 99c By Morxl Solid poly plastic with jointed limbs. With accessories. Now Mochanicoi i eji Choo-Choo train I *44 As train speeds along track it hits musical xylophone notes. Savel Remco'f famous baby*crowl-along She crawls by herself like a real baby I Push the secret pocketbook button and watch her A ^9^9 gel Eyes open ond close. Batteries extra. ■ The Pontiac AAall Fomout Ditnaykin 1 OQ character set 1.00 34 different Disney character for hours and hours of ploy fun. Kk m M0% Zarra rifle 1.49 Fires caps. AAadf of sturdy plastic. Sparkling action. 43H." long. By AAarxl Marx Marvel the Mustang I 1.00 Horse moves without batteries or motor. Sturdy plastic. Tan with whit# markings. OSIN IVERY NI6HT TO ftJO Drayten Open Svnrfayt Naan to 4 Doll stroller, pram er carriage Your choicel For lini 5.00.. Atlas Ready-to-Roca slot racing sal Includss 7 cars, 7 hOfMl controls, power .pock, a figurs I round roils, shoulder and guard rails. ^ Use of homo or on commercial track. DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PUINS THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 1967 A-^9 Computers Select Roommaf&s/Turn Out Horoscopes NEW YORK (AP) - There’s ft computer in Manhattan that part of its time IV peoj^ tu share apartments. JR has a colleague that spends pirt of its working week huning out U,ttXl.^nMxi horoscopes for the astavlogically minded. Either service costs $15. ★ ★ ★ The first is offered by Brad-duw Realty, an apartmoit rental add management firm. The sec(Hid by TBS Computer Centers Corp. and Time Pattern Researdi Institute, Inc. ★ ★ ★ They’re among the latest jobs assigned to computers which not too long ago started out as adding machines and now can play, chess, create pictures, match boys and girls for dates and help a person find a job. IMPORTANT PARTNERSHIP Using a computer to help select the proper roommate is the idea of Herb Riddick, general manager of Bradshaw. Riddick believes that “next to marriage, getting a proper roommate is one of the most important partnerships a person can enter into. Being misroom-mated is almost as bad as being mismated.’’ ★ ★ w Applicants can be either those who are looking for an apartment and want to share it, or those who have an apartment and want a roommate. ’The application contains a 25-question “personality ap^ praisai form’’ developed by a psychologist. MEASURE INTENSITY ‘”rhe questions try to measure types of intensity,’’ Riddick says. “If one person agrees strongly with something and another disagrees strongly with the same thing then, all things being equal, the odds are that they won’t be good rooounates. By and large similar peoide jmake the best roommates.*' The data from the personality fMTO is fed into the ccanputer, Riddick says, and the machine is programmed to cough out the names of six of the room- mate scjlectfons in its files. ’Then it’s up to the applicants to interview each other and see if they want to share an apartment ★ A ★ Those who can’t find a roomr mate in 90 days get their $15 back. ^ Astro]^, iHredictiiig the for fore by char^ the fancied effect M stars on human events, is at least 5,000 years dd. Murray Lee, pi’esident Ot TBS, estimate there are S- miUi(xi devotees of the subject in the United States. Another 40 million dab- ble in it, usually by reading their horoscope in the daily newspap^, he saya. UP TO $500 Lee says it used to take as much as a week to cast a personal horoscope at a cost of up to $500. The cotpputer can do the same thing in leas than a minute and for $15, Lee says. irhe om^Miter is programmed, he says, to produce as many as 2 billion different astrological reports. ...especially when you buy your new '68 car Bikes Racked Up VALLEY FORGE, Pa. (AP) — The new bicycle racks at the Caley School in nearby Upper Merion are a foot in the air, instead of being flush to the pavement. Little kids say they will have to be wei^t lifters. It's great to own a '681 The new models incorporate more sofety features than ever before. And when you finance your car through a credit union, you not only get safety In the car but Safety for your family. Qualified credit union members receive life insurance at no extra cost. You also save money on low C.U. rates. You see, credit union rates are clear cot. A credit union is in busineu to help its members. It is owned by its members and there's no point in esmniftil IN7, Mtchlgon CrMlII Union iMguo charging yourself high Interest rotes. That's why a credit union offers advantages you find nowhere else. Go ahead. Buy that new '68 you've set your heart on. And for low-cost financing, see your credit union. It's the smartest move a car buyer can make. If you ore not a member and would like more information, contact the Credit Union where you work or the one in your parish or coll 332-9193 /fpays to save or borrow at your credit union FIBERGLAS Washable, no-iron shortie drapes in lovely prints to brighten your windows Pinch pleated drapes In soft brush textured Fiberglass glass hang gracefully, hand wash easily, and drip dry quickly—never need ironing! Now In gayly colored floral, colonial, kitchen and kiddie prints. Ideal for any room in your home. Charge It. OPIN EVERY NIGHT TO 9:30 Drayton Open Sundays Noon to 6 DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS A—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 80, 1967 U' No Surtax OK This Year-AAarajsfield ■LtNDCD »COTC!l WHIKY. » YROOr. lliroUTED IH 01I6IWAI. CASK* WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield says he sees no chance Congress will approve a tax hike this year—and a Democratic colleague views such a failure as a break for President Johnson. “There seems to be no possibility of a tax bill at this time,” Mansfield said Sunday. “I’m sorry,” he added, “because I feel that a tax bill is necessary.” He predicted inflation would cost the average tax- payer more than the 10 per cent income tax surcharge asked by the President. Sen. William ProKmire, D-Wis., said Congress would be doing Johnson a politfcal favor by refusing to approve the tax bm^t. He cited the possibility of higher taxes as a key reason for what he called a decline in Johnson's popularity. PROSPERITY SEEN “I would hope that the Congress would help him out by not passing his tax incrdan,. and in that case; I tlpnk we pould have a continuation of our prosperity without serious inflation,” said Protmire. Mansfield became the highest-ranking Democratic leader to have conceded publicly that the tax boost proposal is all but dead for this session of Con- He said if the hike weren’t enacted this year, “we’ll have to face it next year, and next year it will be more politically unhappy for us.” . The surcharge proposal currently is bottMup fen the House Ways and Means Committee. Chairman Wilbur D. Mills, D-Ark., already has indicated it will stay there unless Johnson slashes spending to Mills’ satisfaction. • * * -k Mansfield was interviewed on NBC’s television-radio program “Meet the Press,” while Proxmire gave his views on the Metromedia radio-television^, program “Opinion: Washington.” BUY! SELL! TRADE! ... USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! By the taste McMastcr’s® Scotch tastes expensive, smooth and mellow. You can tell that without looking. Try the McMaster’s Scotch taste test: Pour McMaster’s fine Scotch and your expensive Scotch into separate glasses. Have a friend blindfold you, rearrange the glasses. ^30 Taste both. Aren’t you glad you tried McMaster’s? not the price. All you have to pay is l<-98 for a $7.00 value: how do we do it? We bring McMaster’s fine Scotch over from Scotland in barrels. And bottle it only after-it arrives in this country. So we save on taxes, ship* ping and handling. We pass the savings on to you. The onlyexpen-sivethingaboutour C aoA ^ Scotch is the taste. 4/5 (ff. AP wirtvhoto HELD IN SOCIALITE’S DEATH-A deputy U.S. marshal (right) leads a man identified as Frederick Benjamin Thompson to arraignment before a U. S. commissioner in Chicago' Saturday. Thompson was arrested by FBI agents at a bus station in (Tiicago and is charged with the fatal stabbing of socialite Dorothy Beck Palmer in her Morristown, N.J., hrea home in September. Rep. Ford Says U.S. Lacks Strong, Moral Leadership enncui iAiA\/e cioeT miAi ITV ^ ALWAYS PIRST QUALITY CLEVELAND, Ohio (UPI) -House Republican leader Gerald R. Ford said today the Johnson administration should take a lesson in leadership from Detroit. * ★ * Blaming' the administration He said the administration “simply is unwilling to let the private sector grab the ball and run with it. And that is the underlying reason for its fail-ires.” Barely touching on Vietnam, for “constant turmoil” in the|f'®'‘'l >*W ph®** »nly lately have nation. Ford said the cause ofihe®" permitted to hit targets rioting and protest lay in a lack of strong, moral leadership. He said President Johnson was failing to solve the nation’s ills abroad dir at home. In remarks prepared for delivery to the Ohio Association of Insurance Agents, Ford said instead of poshing unsuccessful government program, the administration should turn to private enterprise. The Michigan congressman cited Ford Motor Co.’s efforts to hire thousands from the ghettoes of Detroit - part of a leadership that pro- major effort to dit unemployment in that city led by com- should have been struck two years ago. He said the GOP National Coordinating Committee in December 1965 urged full use of conventional air and sea power in Vietnam and warned against involvement in “a huge land war.” ★ ★ ★ “I believe America is erupting for lack of strong leadership, moral leadership, the kind of leadership that creates confidence and makes the people of a nation believe in munity and business leaders in the wake of the summer’s violence. .. TAX CREDIT URGED Urging federal aid in the form of tax credits to encourage similar private enterprise efforts throughout the country, Ford said, “That’s -the approach that premises truly effective results —, a people-oriented program for progress with full involvement of the private sector.” duces progress for the deprived without hurting others, decisive, impartial leadership that brings peace, genuine prosperity and domestic tranquility,” he said. YOUR HEALTH “LOW BACK PAIN” riod of a year. The fnrealei-t tragedy it- that at leai-t 8.'>9{- of them neetl not i.uffer at all. Tei.t>. »hpw that let.* than one out of five victimh of backurhe hai. any organic defect. By thi* we mean deformitiei-, dii« degeneration, arthritib, etc., and a good percentage of thebC can l>e helped. Kh our bodiei. age. tonicity of muKlec, 'ligamentb, tendnn> and other binding tibbue* great-ly weaken. Thib allowb for exccae blippage to occur in the begmentb of the bpine. The rebultb ib prebburr and irritation on nerve rootb which are rcbponbihle fur the byiii|iluiiib of backache. Chiropractic offera cuiii|ilcte care and rehabilitation for |it-u-ple with backache and other related ronditioiib. Itb rr-ultb are laeting. Treatment, arc not nainful. Dr. H. H. illexaniler f.'Alropriirtlc Phylriun, 1029 Joolyn Ave., ...jEfiAom, FOUNDER'S DAYS We said to Mr. Penney, "Founders Days are your days. Tell us how to celebrate." Mr. Penney said, "Show me what we can do today when we put all aur resources behind a demonstration of the Penney value that made us famous." RENT a Rne Band Instrument for Your Chilcj J jP" « month (minimum 3 months] • Rant a trunnpat, cornaf, clarinah trombona, fluta. violin, 'guitar, sntra drum • Flnast brand namat • Unlimitad rai If you buy, all rantal pay-manli apply to purchaia. Th« Pontiac Mall Open Every Eve. 'til 9 682-0422 . Downtown Pontiac 27 S. Saginaw FE 3-7168 Open Mon. and Fri. 'til 9 PENNEYS MIRACLE MILE Exciting coot looks at oxciling Pennoy savingsl Now's tho porfsct tirtit to soUct your brand now coot . .. and what a superb collection you hove to choose from! Glorious fur lavished stytingsi elegant natural mink, kit fox, opossum, squirrel*! Lush fabrics, the finest we could find, tailored into casual or 'dressy' designs. Sixes for misses, juniors, half sixes, and petites. Values almost too good to be true ... better fiurry Ini •All (ws lebeltd to shew seunity ef Migln ef ImgeHed furs. STORE HOURS 9:30 kJA. to 9 PM. CHARGE IT! THE PONTIAC PHESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1967 A—11 N.yiet Films Carry Disturbing Message By LEON DANIEL TOKYO (UPI) — Some North Vietnamese films released in Tokyo last week showed pretty much what the Communists wanted them to show, hut behind the prc^ganda lay some message Americans might well find distnrbing. If there are any Americans still aropnd who think of ‘‘Charlie” as a peasant with a vintage rifle and a little bag of rice on the belt that holds up the trousers of his black pajamas, it would be well fw thm to see these films. Hiey W0bM 8^, among other awesome sights, American jets blasted iwt of Oie afar by snrface-to^ir missiles (SAMs). llMv wonM Ifet a cktse-np view of the horrendons weapon Ainerlcan pilots 'have detorlb^ as looking “like a telephone pole coming strai|d>f yon.” U.S. pilots have described the flak around Hanoi and Haiphong as heavier and deadlier than the antiaircraft weaponry of World War H and Korea. ★ ★ ★ A look at these films makes this easy to believe. The camera zeros ih on the antiaircraft defenders of Hanoi as the American planes swoop in with their bombs. The sound track explodes in a continual roar and the sky around .the planes erup|s in deadly little puffs. ■ And then it happens. A jet bursts into flames. You don’t really expect to see a parachute but a few seconds later there is one. The Uttk puffs keep going off around the pilot as he floats toward the ground and you wonder if he is going to make it. You never find out for sure, but the scene shifts to show the capture of a downed pilot. The capture could have been faked but the young pilot, who is limping, looks as downcast as any man you have ever seen. v . ★ ★ ★ The officer, surrounded by bayonets, raises his arms high over his head and looks not at all like a dashing pilot but very much like a man who knows his luck has run 'out. .Then you re- member all that flak he lived through and wonder if he wis not in fact a lucky man.' There is a lot (rf footage on the antiaircraft crews in action. They wheel their guns 360 degrees and fire from positions that appear ex|wsed. i The film shows some of the guns being moved into position by trucks and taken away after attacks. It showed the big SAMs being towed Into position by bigger trucks. A few of the anti-aircraft defenders are women. “The films, purchased in Hanoi by Nihon Dempa News Co., clearly show at close range dozens of U.S. helicopters carrying troops to landing zones in South Vietnam. ■ ★ The camera also catches U.S. tracked vehicles and shows Vietcong troops moving through jungle only a few hundred yards away from them. ' Some of the Vietcong are women. All are well-armed, most with AK47 automatic rifles. They move quietly through the jungle with leaves and vegetation stuck in their hats for camouflage. One of the most startling sequences shows what is said,to be a pro-Vietcong rally “near Saigon.” Hundreds of peasants are riding in trucks and shouting and waving the flag of the so-called National Liberation Front. A Nihon Dempa spokesman showing the film was asked who owned the trucks and he replied that presumably they belonged to the French owners of the plantation. ★ * ' ★ The film showed Vietcong troops casually stopping buses and passing out propaganda leaflets to those aboard. One of the buses had “Salgon-Bieh Hoa” on its side. ★ ★ ★ This could have beOT faked, although it.did not appear to be. It is well-known that armed Vietcong often stop traffic on South Vietnam highways to exact “taxes.” mneui ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY ^ Lively girls would like to wear seamless nylon tights BariiiH Emtml We just won’t be undersold -Shop and Compare-SAVE NOW GENERAL ELECTiaC Big Picture, FM Sound Personal Portable TV Siiing-A-Way CAN OPENER Reduced to Only Elerlricily oprriH ran* of all bUea and tihapm. 'rhe^r Kill Kell fast— hurry. PHILCO 22” Portable with 282 sq. in. Image No Money Down! $5.00 Monthly, or 90 Days, Same As Cash. Free Delivery, Service and Warranty! top performin; TV with critp, sharp 60 Picture areat. Also has front-mounted FM Speak- . No Money Down $7.33 Monthl.v, oi 90 Days .Same As Cash Free Delivery, Service and Warranty Bi|( console^ize picture—console-Iiko sound-but, it's fully portable on handsome roll-ABOUT STAND (opt., extra). And, it has a Ions B*t uf finer features: High Performance Si([ht V Sound Sys. tern—82.Channel Reception—Walnut color Finish Cabinet and Stand—Switchlitr Channel Indicators, and more. MAYTAG iVcip 1968 WRINGER WASHER $10995 $6.99 MONTHLY Service, Warranty Delivery Here’i a great October special — built to la.st yearn — heavy (jiity — Big all rliiircoal tub — large self adjusting balloon rolls — hard rubber, easy-to-roli casters — and so inurli more — roiiie see — ronie buy! EASY Spin-Dryer WASHER No Money Money $8.96 MONTHLY Delivered—Serviced—Warranted Designed to wash 60 pounds in 60 minutes. Big heavy duty washer designed for big families. Engineered to wash as clean as a wringer and rinse and spin as au automatic. What a value! 1 u Humidify Your Home, More Comfort, Less Heat HUMIDIFIER by COOLEIiATOH *5450 Desipned to liiiniiilify as much water into the house aiilnniBlirallr as it is iirrdrd for your belter heallli — Imill in a walnut style hard finish cabinet with automatic adjustable liu-midistaL RCA VICTORTH Speed PORTABLE PLAYER $3995 Take it anywhere, playa all apeeiU and al| rerordfi, automatically. RejecU and ahult off after laat record Is finithed. Durable cabinet conalruction, ligbiweighl. Good ilyling. General Electric 8-Speaker STEREO AM, FM, AMC. RADIO $269’" Thnu..nossible to put on a birthday party for children and try to entertain adults at the siame time. What can 1 do? ★ ★ ★ If I say the party is for children only, some of the mothers might get mad and refuse to let their children come. If you, or other mothers have any, ideas on how to w6rk this out, I would be up into the former very grateful. BAFFLED sides of the haylofts. “It will be sort of a ‘theatre-in-the-round’ setting, although of course our barn is not round,” .(Iston said. A A A ' A lofty ceiling, typical of gambrel-roofed bams but free of posts and beams, also will give an illusion of great space above the stage, Aston noted. . *■ If ^ ^ Fart of the grbund-floor leve} of the bam is Wing turned into a coffee shop. Much of thh mk will be reserved Ipr akt art gallety, featuring studeht alt, which will be finished and furnished later. Grain storage rooms have been turned into staff offices and a restored silo will make an unusual dressing room for the actors. AAA In other major structural changes, ramps have been built to provide fire exits from the upper levels of the theatre, the entire barn has been insulated with enough fiberglass batting to take care of three average-sized homes, and a radiant beating system has been installed. AAA Professional contractors were hired to do the major heating, plumbing, and wiring work. Almost all of the rest of the work has been done by student volunteers. Halloween Treat for Lynda, Charles MILWAUKEE, Wis. (UPI) - Lynda Bird Johnson and her fiance. Marine Capt. Charles Robb, greeted pre-hallo-ween trick-or-treaters Sunday at a party given by Robb’s parents. Robb’s father, James, said the afternoon party was “Just a little reception to introduce Charles and Lynda to a few neighbors and very close friends. ” AAA He said Charles was .happy to be back in Milwaukee because he’s “got his gal with him.” President Johnson’s daughteif wearing a Kelly green suit, white opaque stockings and brown shoes, held hands with her fiance and posed for photographers outside the home before the reception. , Phyllis' Smith Harris, Pontiac soprano, will be the guest artist at the first Pontiac. Symphony Family Concert Nov. 12. During a recent visit to Montieth school, she discusses music ivith Steven Grover, 7, son of the Larry Grovers, of Harriett Street. Slate Concerts for Families DEAR BAFFLED; If you have friends who drive, perhaps as a favor to you they would collect and deliver home those children whose mothers would pose a problem. DEAR ABBY; Tell that woman whose (husband is on the road three or four days a week not to feel so sorry for hnnself. My husband travels, too. He leaves early Monday morning, and comes home Friday in time for dinner. AAA Whjle he is gone, I cook, clean, mend, shop, and do all the things a wife and mother must do, so I am free to spend all my time with him when he is home. He has never heard me say, “I’m so tired,” or, “I have so much work to do.” The children run to meet him at the door, and the week-ends are like honeymoons. Again this year, a series of two Sunday afternoon concerts are planned under sponsorship of the Pontiac Symphony Orchestra Family Concert Association. A A A The first is scheduled Nov. 12. Felix Resnick will conduct the program which includes “Dance of the Buffoons” from the Snow Maiden by Rimsky-Korsakov; "Mosquito Dance” by White and “The Day the Orchestra Played” by Cacavas. Ar A A- William Belaney will narrate the last named Selection. ★ A A ‘ Phyllis Smith Harris, soprano soloSst at Christ Church, Cranbrook, will sing “Caro Nome” from Verdi’s “Rigoletto” and “Summer Time” from “Porgy and Bess” by American composer George Gershwin. , SECOND CONCERT The second concert, slated for Feb. My husband told me I didn’t have to worry about his chasing other women on the road, that if a man is going to cheat, he can work in town six days a week, and make time on his lunch hour. HAPPY WIFE AAA Problems? Write to Abby, in care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. El-600, P. 0. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich., 48056. For a personal reply, inclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope. Students at Oakland University are rushing to complete their Barn Theatre in time for the opening performance of “Stop the World—I Want to Get Off.” The Student Enterprise Theatre has taken over a former dairy barn south of the Science Building. Tickets will be available at the door for performances which begin at 8:30 p.m. Friday, Saturday and Nov. 10-11. 25, will be conducted by Alonzo Sea-boldt. Bud Guest will narrate Saint-Saens’ “Carnival of the Animals.” The topic of the program will be “Aillmals in the Orchestra.” Fliers with order forms attached are being sent to all students’ homes in the elementary schools in Pontiac, Wi(ter-ford, and part of Bloomfield Hills and West Bloomfield. AAA As in the past, concerts will be repeated on each occasion. The first performance will be at 2:30 p.m.; the second at 4 p.m. The place is Pontiac Northern High School Auditorium. AAA Tickets may be purchased on a season-ticket basis at a reduction in price. A A , A Those who cannot purchase tickets through their schools may order them from the Pontiac Symphony office oi^ at the door on the day of ^e concert. Concert time desired should be specified when ordering. AP Wlrtptiolo Mrs. Jdhn F. Kennedy is shown arriving at the airport in Rome Sunday for a two-day stopover on her way to southeast Asia. The former First Lady will leave the Italian capital Tuesday for a two-week stay in Thailand and Cambodia. Widower's Offer Perfectly Proper In This Case By ELIZABETH L. POST Dear Mrs. Post: I am a widower and have been going out with a widow near my age. I have gone to her home for dinner a few ti'mes. We both live alone. I do not want always to be going to her home for dinner so I extended an invitation to her to come to my home for dinner. She said she would like to come but it would not be proper. I told her I was very sorry if I had asked her to do something that was improper. Will you please set me straight on this problem? — Steve. AAA Dear Steve: There is no reason that a mature widow and widower should not have dinner together in either one’s home. Your friend should not linger on late into the night, of course, but you could go to a movie, or take her home a little while after dinner. Ask her again, and tell her that as far as etiquette goes, there would be no cause for criticism. JUNIOR BRIDESMAID Dear Mrs. Post: I have been criticized by two members of my family for not inviting the juniw bridesmaid (age 15) to a bridal shower. Was I in the wrong? — Theresa. Dear Theresa: Young teenage girls are generally enthralled with the romance and excitement of a wedding. If all the guests at the shower were older woihen — friends of the parents, perhaps — the junior bride^aid need not have been invited. ,' But if the other attendants were among the guests, she certainly should have been included. 1 am sure, at her age, she was disappointed at being left out of any part of the festivities. CjBMmaTiie/ Tleo/iquMte/tA Vinyl Asbestos TILE . First Uuality — Orease Proof Light Colors-Marble Chip Design PLASTIC WALL TILE 1c-2c-3c Ea. GENUINE |„ Quality ca'IIKIL inlaid LINOLEUM #E $q.Yd. 9”x9” WE BUY CLASS FE 4-5216 LAMPS AND LEADED CUSS SHADES! Fri. • to 1 Across from HUDSON’S PONTIAC MALL 22H aUAKlN U. M. FRONT DOOR PARKING SO. FT. SOUO VINYL TILE Each V VINYL RUBBER TILE 9"x9“ flioOiR' SHOPr B-,2 E POXTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 30. 1967 News of Engagenh^nfs and Weddings Filli/;^ir, Mr. and Mrs. Hilding Norman of Hospital Road announce the engagement of their daughter, Mary Ann, to Pfc. Michael James FiU brandt, USA. Miss Norman’s fiance, the son of the William Filbrandts of Lakeside Drive, is currently stationed in Germany. The engagement of Christa Regina Rust to Ronald E. Coffmon, both sophomores at Ferris State College, has been announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Rudolf Rust of Rochester. He is the son of the Arnold Butterfields of Lapeer. Vows are slated for mid-December. Early December vows are planned by Gloria Seaman and Larry Bertrand. Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Elwood W. Seaman of Clarkston and Mr. and Mrs. Alexander G. Bertrand of Alpena. Mr. and Mrs. Clare M. Smith of Rochester announce the betrothal of their daughter, Linda Lee, to George James Terry. The son of Mrs. Carmen Romano of Madison Heights, he has attended the University of Detroit. ' The engagement of Michelle Diane Court to Harold Robert Koster is announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Pierre D. Court of Huntirigton Woods. Miss Court and her fiance are graduates of Oakland Community College. The son of the Jac C. Kosters of Lake Orion, he. will begin graduate study at Wayne State University in January. Vows are slated for August. MRS. J. A. PELOQUIN MRS. R. A. MIHOLEK , MRS. D. R. KISSICK MRS. F. L. O’HAVER The engagement is announced of Ruthann Kilgus and Sylvester V Following a northern Michigan honeymoon, Lance Cpl. James Arthur Peloquin, USMC and his bride, nee Lee Ann Coppersmith, will make their home in California where he is stationed. Vows were spoken Friday evening in Our Lady of the Lake: Catholic Church. * * * The bride, attended by Hath-lyeen Go]embeske and. Mrs. Gary Vieu and Mrs. liiomas Petrie bridesmaids, carried white rose buds tipped in per-sdmmqn, She wds attired in white peau de sole accented with reem-broidered Alencon lace and seed pearls. A cathedral train of the same material complemented the A-line sheath. Her veil, five tiers of lusion, was held ^th a ing lace headpiece. * .★ * Best man for the ceremony In an evening ceremony Fri-, A Canadian honeymoon fol-day at the Oxford home of the lowed a reception at the First Rev. Fred Clark, Susan Marie First Federal Savings of Oak-Peters and Riobvd A. Miholek land for new^weds, the Oonald were united in marriage. IR. Kissicks. • The bride is the daughter of| Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Herachel Peters of I William Easlick of Lacota Lakeville. Parents of the bride-iStreet, Claire Ann Easlick was groom are the Andrew Miholeks attired in white peau de sole of Glaspie Road, Oxford Town-'styled with a batteau neckline, ship. j fitted bodice and long tapered * •'* ★ sleeves. For the voWs, the new Mrs. * * * Miholek was attired in a day| The gown was frosted with length white satin ensemble, ac- French lace. cented at thei'bodice and sleeves with lace. A crown of pearls held her short illusion veil. She carried a colonial bouquet of white cama- * ★ ★ Maid of honor was Billie De-Steven Travis as best A floral headpiece, trimmed with seed pearls, capped her elbow length veil. She carried white carnations and roses with baby’s breath. Mrs. Gregory King was matron of honor. The bridegroom, son of iMr. and Mrs. Osborne R. Kissick of Myrtle Street, was attended ng a reception at the by best man Ronald McNally home of the bride’s parents, the of Saginaw. OuitiaUit son of knives- Thomas Petrie with qewiyweds .left for Niagara Ushers for the Friday evening ilTnoJfZS Coppersmith and Kent, * ceremony in St. Benedict’s Cath- V- wuuiquu oj ues- powell. ' -phev wiii make their home in oiic Church were Frank EasUck mond Street and Mrs. , Following the vows, members Q^ford. and Joseph Cobble, of the bridal party and parents, of the newlyweds, the Victor C. | Bentleys of Ortonville Road, In- The First Methodist Church was the setting Friday for vows exchanged by Delores Ann Kar-lish and Francis Leroy O’Haver. A pearled crown capped the bride’s shoulder length veil. ★ ★ * Her gown of peau de soie, featured a Chantilly lace bodice and long lace sleeves with a sa-brina neckline trimmed in sequins and pearls. Matching lace panels accented the gown’s A-line skirt and detachable Watteau train. * ★ * For her bouquet, the bride carried white carnations centered with Sweetheart roses. Ronor attendants were the bride’s sister, Carolyn, and the brother of the bridegroom, James. Peggy Cone was bridesmaid with ushers Leslie and Leonard Wamick and Ronald Slone. Guests were received in the church parlors before the new-lyweds left for a northern Michigan honeymoon. Leno Ofencia of Rockwell Avenue.^ Miss Kilgus, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Kilgus of Peck, and her fiance are students at Michigan State University. A winter 1968 wedding is planned by Hazel Mae Shoemaker and James John Edgette. The bride elect is the daughter of the Augustus G. Shoemakers of North Roslyn Street. Her fiance, son of Mr. and Mrs. James Edgette of St. Clair, received his BA degree from Michigan State University. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Van Gilder of Dill Road announce the engagement of their daughter, Carol Jean, to Ronald Gene Van Gordon. Miss Van Gilder and her fiance, the son of the Glenn Van Gordons of Scotch Lake Road, West Bloomfield Township, are both students at. Oakland Community College. May vows are planned. Two Bank Accounts Are Better Than One arriage ought to ;ood things going m m ance, to be turned over to her reguteriy — the only string at tached being that she stay within that total. How she does it is her business. If she can filch a few dollars out of the grocery money and still run a blue-ribbon household, okay. Let her cram her gains in the bank. Or let her buy another hat. Have separate checking ac- Variefy Club's Hydraulic Buses for Crippled Kids By MARY FEELEY Consultant in Money Management When two middle-age people marry, the marriage ought have a lot of good things going for it — emotional maturity a practical outlook, a sense of values. Yet, find many] such marriages run head on into troublel over money. And not for the MARY lack of it. FEELEY The problem, as I often hear it, can be summed up In two sentences — He’s “set In bis ways’’ and she’s “sticking to her old habits.’’ So the budget gets fouled up like a car at the crossing where the sign says stop and the light says go. I talked to two such frustrated couples recently — one in tiieir 50's, the other in their 40’s. For Mrs. A, 51 years old, this is a first marriage. She’s accustomed to thinking savings first. Caution is second nature to her, conditioned as she is to depending on herself alone. It’s Mr. A’s second marriage . bill-pay- “r The upshot of it is. Mrs. She can’t sell her husband on her point of view — but neither can she resist saving his money! Even though she has to sneak it from here and hide it over there. Her question is: Should she nag him or deceive him? Mr. and Mrs. B, recently married, have the same hassel over money, only in reverse. It’s Mrs. B’s second marriage and she always had it easy. She didn’t have to worry over where the money came from or how it went. Mr. B, on the other hand; is a confirmed money-watcher. He always aimed at saving $1 for every |2 spent. And as a bachelor he was free to work at it. Now he this wildly extravagant if she wants two scoops of ice cream in the sundae instead of one. So what to do? FlexibiUty, let’s admit, is not the chief characteristic of our middle years. Everybody’s “set in his ways” to some extent. But there are some techniques of handling the income that ^ can help ease the conflict. ST. LOUIS (UPl) - Edwin D. Dorsey fights a personal war to wife is provide transportation for crip-pled.children around the world. Dorsey is a prominent Variety Club member who has helped raise funds for “Sunshine Coaches,” big special vehicles made with hydraulic lifts for wheelchairs. The buses are used to transport crippled children to parks and picnics, to camps and circuses, to museums and zoos. * * * Dorsey is chief barker of Vari- counts, and don’t look ever each other’s shoulder at the check stubs. Neither partner can play too many tricks, after all, since income tax time guarantees an annual expose of mutual operations! And a fight once a year is better than one every pay day. Have separate savings accounts, separate bonds, separate investments. Discuss the main target for the income. This needs to be put into words. ’The very young can envision all sorts of goals with a lifetime to shoot for them. But the most meaningful objectives narrow down with the years. The most important one is easier to spot at age SO than it is at age 20. Talking about it in earnest may reveal an underlying agreement. If both partners are really stirving for the same thing, but going at it In different ways, each may may gain a more sympathetic understanding of the situation. Compromise is more comfortable than feuding. There’s an old saying that “each partner should go 90 per cent of the way in marriage.” Well, if you can you’re doing fine. dependence Township and the E. James Peloquins of Edge Court, received guests at the Rotor building in Ortonville. Nun's Artistry Reproduced in Porcelain COBURG, Germany (UPI) — The world-famed Hummel figurines of little children in Bavarian costumes were the brainchild of a young artist who later became a nun. The figurines, made by a porcelain manufacturer near Coburg, are named after their creator, Berta Hummel, who was born May 21, 1909, in the Bavarian village of Massing, outside Munich. ★ ★ ★ When she was 16, Berta left her home to attend the Munich Academy of Fine Arts. There she became friendly with two nuns and decided to take the vows herself. She took the name Sister Meria Innocentia (her initials on every Hummel figure) and lived in a convent id Sies-almoet on Lake Constance (Boden See). Sister Maria Innocentia continued to draw and paint, especially Bavarian children from her childhood memories. Instantly, they became popular. In 1935, the W. Goebel porcelain company of Oeslau obtained permission (o reproduce the nun's drawings as porcdain figures. MORE SKETCHES Although Sister Maria Innocentia died in 1946, many of her sketches have not yet been turned into porcelain figures. The most popular flguriqe is the Merry Wanderer, a boy — with a satchel and a furled umbrella over his shoulder. Polly's Pointers File Cards for Bride By POLLY CRAMER ito its appearance. — BERNA-DEAR POLLY - Brides mak- DINE ing out guest lists for their wed- DEAR POLLY — I would like dings would do well to put the ^ know kow to bring the fin-names and addresses on recipe'*"'* **«** *® » “«*"« file cards. Put a check on the Parents of the bridal couple are Mrs. Russell Karlish of East Ypsilanti Street and the late Mr. Karlish and the John H. O’Havers of Nikep, Md. card by the name when an invitation is I also took these cards to my bridal shower. One of my friends added, at the bottom of the proper card, what the gift was that I had received. When I had written the thank-yon note, I put a check In front of the gift listed. I also had the addresses right at hand to address the envelopes. By filing these in alphabetical order they become real time savers. Also good for checking off thank-you notes for wedding gifts and, too, you have your Christmas card list started for the next year. — FRAN DEAR POLLY — Pat a hook In a nice clean board, and sdien yon are washing dress belts pnt the buckles over the h Stretch out nntll Ae belt or board. A red hot glass baking dish was put down on it and homed a black circle. How can we remove the bum and Aen refinish Ae top? — BERTHA DEAR POLLY - In answer to P. A.’s problem of lost coat buttons I want to tell her that I put the eye part of hooks and eyes through the metal button on a coat and then sew the eyes to t^e coat and thal really solves the problem . — MRS. R. R. You will receive a dollar if thumbtack in Ae oAer end to hold Ae belt tight until dry. This works wonderfully and eliminates ironing. — ‘hlElAlA DEAR POLLY - When a pic ture of the finished dish accompanies a new recipe I want to cut from a newspaper or magazine, I always cut out the pic-Are as well as the recipe and put it on the back of my recipe card so I know exactly how the dish should look and get Ideas about garnishes Aat would add Polly your favorite home- making idea, Polly’s Problem or solution to a problem. Gifts children can make. There’s a whole section in POLLY’S CHRISTMAS POINTERS booklet. Mail name, address and 50-cent check or money order to Christmas Pointers care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056 Weds Recently Mr. and Mrs. Eugene V. Hil-yard of Walled Lake announce the recent marriage of th^r daughter, Linda Louise, to Johh Thonus Newmyer in St. Williams CaAolic Church, ★ ★ * . Parents of Ae bridegroom are the Joseph M. Newmyers of .Wolverine Drive, Commerce Township. 3 Youngsters Take Plunge in Dog Bath BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (UPD-Tycoons of the world, ’ watch out! The young generation has a get-up-and-go to envy. Cindy, David and Sharon Barkhurst of suburban Vestavia Hills are an example. ★ ★ ★ The three, ages eight to 11, are earning money from a new and thriving business. “DOG BATH,” their sign at the edge of the Barkhurst lawn proclaims in bold letters. * * ★ Plain washing or a tick and flea bate costs 25, 50 or 75 cents according to size of the dog. ★ * ★ Perfumed baAs cost an extra five cents. To build good will Ae threesome throws in free a bright ribbon or a spot of dog walkmg. The'three use a plastic baby Ab, Ae garden hose, a hair dryer and a bottle of perfume which “smells like a flower” and came from mom’s cosmetics supply. MOM’S PERFUME Mrs. Barkhurst shrugs off her misappropriated perfume and even occasional use of Ae bath-tub for dog baAihg but she admits some concern about the car-stopping sign. ★ ★ ★ wonder what we’ll do tf somebody drives up with a Saint Bernard!” ; Braille on Dials Eases Cooking Chores for Blind admits she’s developing a gwlt Aings are being run “Ae right complex if she so much as FuAr*^' a dime In Ae collection plate.' DefAe her household 5 million for projects involving children. Variety Club members have built 210 “Sunshine Coaches” for crippled cAldren, and by next year Ae goal is 800. NEW YORK un-Like many other women, Mrs. Michael O’Brien, a Brooklyn grand-motha-, happily spends many Sundays cooking a roast beef dinner wiA all the fixins’ for her family. But there is one difference — Mrs. O’Brien is blind. Home economists at the Gas Appliance Manufacturers Asso-I _ , elation have trained Mrs. 0’- One thing I do hold out for: grien and thousands of oAer, the partner who brings in the in- blind people to cook confidently' come should get a decent break, on especially adapted gas As long as he doesn’t strangle range. Actually Ae alterations the budget in a death grip, or are minor; instead of dials. wear sieves for pockets, he’s entitled to a louder argument that she is. braAe-Iike raised dots assist Ad blind cook wlA proper oven dial settings and temperatures. Six-iveek-old Timothy adds the fifth generation to this family gro up. Great - great --grandfather, (from left) Frank Ripperton, 85, and great-grandmother, Mrs. Le-land Williams, traveled from Onslow, Iowa for the reunion with the baby’s grandmother, Mrs. Henry * McMillion of Fisher Street, Com- Z merce Township, ^d the' ptpud '■ father, Phillip McMillion of Mufbrd. • Grandma was hospitalized at the • time and the picture was taken in * the .^lospitaVs lounge. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. OCTOBER 30, 1967 B-3 Some of the articles to be featured in the Christmas bazaar of Areme chapter No. 503, Order of the Eastern Stat', are displayed by Mrs. Edward Moden of Chippewa Street and Sidney Fellows of South Roslyn. A salad luncheon will be served at the affair on Saturday in Roosevelt Masonic Temple. A men’s hobby booth, cake and candy, aprons and fancy work, rummage, white elephants and a shop for “children only” are also planned. Mrs. Sidney Fellows is chairman. The hours are 10 a.m. until 4 p.m. The bazaar is open to the public. The Sound of jChildrcn,” a ir parents and teachers of pre-school children wiU be held Nov. 18 at Oakland University with Annmarie Roeper of the City and Country School of Bloomfield Hills as keynote speaker. ★ ★ * Other distinguished speakers In the field of pre-school education include Frank Bruno, M. Ed., College of Education, Department of Special Ekiucation, Wayne State University; Esther Middlewood, Chief, Educatiim Section, Michigan Department of Mental Health; and Marjorie Sanger, Ed.D., Merrill-Palmer Institute. Betty Garlick, Director of Headstart Training, Michigan State University; Esther Cal-lard, Ph.D., Associate Profes- Parental Influence Goes Up in Smoke Il&|nu want your child to (and nowadays what "parent wouldn’t?) you’d better take whatever measures are needed before he’s 15. Because after that, according to a recent study, external pressures such as advice, scoldings, or educationai efforts, won’t do much good. The study of 560 young girls and boys was conducted by Drs. Eva Salber and Theodor Abelin of Harvard University School of PubUc Health. This same group had been studied in 1959 to determine Its smoking haUts. The children at that time were 15 years old. The object of the later study was twofold*, ““to observe changes in smoking behaviour, over a year span, and to identify traits that might foretell such changes. ★ * ★ Nonsmokers, it was found, were more ready to answer questions than were smokers. And girls were more ready than boys. Results showed that 88 per cent of those who smoked at age 15 were still smoking at age 21. In the interval, the percentage of new smokers had doubled among girls, and almost doubled among boys. Also, there was a general trend toward heavier smoking. And this despite the publicity on lung cancer about this time! ★ * * Most nonsmokers who at 15 had looked forward to smoking, did begin before age 21; figures were 80 per cent for girls .and 70 for boys. Among those who did not express this feeling, most girls gave aesthetic or moral reasons for avoiding tobacco. Significantly, 78 per cent of girls who had smoked, but given it up by age 15, resumed the habit before age 21. In ^11 71 per cent of smokers who dis- continued went back to it during the period of the study. SCHOLARSHIP Boys who had stopped, and who also rated high scholastically, much less frequently resumed smoking than those of lower standing. This did not hold true for girls. To those who would set up antismoking programs for the education of young people past 15, these findings, say Drs. Sal ber and Abelin, are not encouraging. Somehow, teaching scolding and advice just don’t sink in. The answer would seem to be, to catch these kids while they’re young. Leader, Sponsor for a Meeting Mrs. Richard Cogger as leader and Mrs. Rose Elliott as sponsor will take part in Wednesday’s demonstration annual meeting of the Parliamentary Study Club. Items to be discussed at the 1:30 p.m. meeting in First Fed eral Savings of Oakland include: “Precedence of Motions,’ “Memorize Page,” “Motion to Amend.” Two Fowls a Hit for Dinner Menu WASHINGTON, Iowa OP) Darrell Borchardt has “inv ed” a new item for the dinner menu — a “gooskey,” wiiidb is half a goose and half a turkey both boned, tied with butcher’s cord and encased in a plastic bag. Borchardt, who has a ent application on file for his product, finds that the combi nation of fowl peases consum ers because goose meat is greasy and juicy and turkey rheat is dry. DON’T MISS OUR save Annual 35% to FALL 45% Reopholstering ^ New Custom Furniture Strrimg Onkltnul County Over 35 Yoan WILLIAM WRIGHT 270 Oreiiard Lake Makmrt and VphaUtormro F£ 4-0558 Oil Conference on Pre-Schoolers Is Scheduled sor. Human Development and Relationships, Wayne State University, and Mrs. Helen Williams, consultant on children’s literature, ^ifl also lead special Oakland University’s Division of Continuing Education presented its first pre-school conference in 1960 as a community service {Kvject, expanding and enlar^kvg the scope' of the conference through the years. This yeat topics range from “When Will Your Child ’Think?” to "Kids and Sex,” as well as discussions on the de-velqiment of the child, children’s literature and prejudices. Mrs. Sidney Schuchter, past president of the Michigan Council of Cooperative Nurseries, planned the program with the of Mrs. Douglas 0^ en, Oakland University cttifer-ence coordinator and her committee: Mrs. Robert Guernsey Parent Cooperative Pre-Schools Intemationsd; Mrs, Donald Frew, State Department of ^ial Services; Mrs. George Hardy, Michigan State Cooperative Extension; Mrs. Russi^l Gilsan,. Pre-School Association of Metropolitan Detroit; kl-f s. Walter Leikett, llichig^ cil Cooperative Nurseries; James Meisner, Greater Deti^ Cooperative Nursery Council; Mrs. E. Lester Ober, St. Paul’s Cooperative Nursery. Registration for the conference begins at 9:30 a.m. with the day’s program starting at 10:30 following the introduction of Mrs. Roeper by Mrs. Priscilla Jackson, director of conferen- Following luncheon, the program will resume at 2 p.m. with the repetition of the sessions so that delegates may have an opportunity to attend more than one of the programs. The $5.50 fee includes the luncheon. Reservations should be made by Nov. 10. BEAUTY SALON, PHONE 682-4940, EXT. 329 WE FASHION THE NEW FRINGE EFFECTS... with feminine neck 'bangs’... with fabulous instant color... After our experts feather your tresses to this fragile new flattery— they color with Fanci-Full: instant rinse from Roux that colors gray, or adds delicate color-tone to bleached hair. Just rinses in, shampoos out whenever you wish —perfect finish to our brilliant brush work. To complement your color we suggest a soft holding PERMANENT WAVE, with shampoo & style set ^8 75 NOW 3 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU ONE HOUR MARTINIZINQ Miracle Mile Center izabeth Lake Center Sally Brent Cleaners (formerly One Hevr Valet) Tel-Huron Shopping Confer Dry Cleaning Special Mon., Tues., Wed., Oct. 30, 31st, Nov. 1st 1 or 2-Piece Plain Dresses Ladies’ 2-Piece Suits Reg. $1.70 to $1.85 Value 39 ONE HOUR MARTiNIZING Miracle Mile f.C. Phonei 332-1122 Open Daily 7:30 A.M.‘T:00 P.M.. OlBonm (formerly One Hr. Volet) TEL-HURON S.C. Phone 335-7934 Open Doily: 7:30 A.M.-6:00 P.M. One Hour Martinizing Elizabeth Lake S.C. 33IT Elizabeth Lake M. Phone 332-0884 Open Doily: 8:00 A.M.-8:00 P.M. Cosponsors along with the Division of Continuing Education are the Grater Detroit (Cooperative Nursery Council, Michigan Council of Cooperative Nurseries, Pre-School Association of Metropolitan Detroit and Michigan State Cooperative Extension Service. Teen-Age Thief PLEASANT HHJL, Calif. (*-Police are searching for a modem “Jessica James” who, according to a department store manager, slipped a tube of lipstick into her pocket, hustled outside, and leaped onto a big red horse. The teen-age blonde, then galloped her getaway horse out of the parking lot, forcing some clerks to scurry for safety. 47’‘Barmir m Its Thrifty WIN A Two-Piece Set of AMERICAN TOURISTER LUGGAGE Scads and Scads of styles! Colors^ colors and more colors MAGNIFICENT SUPER-SALE LADIES' SWEATERS, SKIRTS and SLACKS Regular to ^18.00 S'’’-6’'’ Our most famous brand of dyed to match separates in the value event of the year. You’ll want several when you see them. Use a Lion Charge Plan B—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 30. 1967 ALL PERMANENTS 3951,595 NeNE HIGHER Include$ All Thii: 1 — New Lu«lre Shampoo 2 - Flallerinf; Hair Cut' 3 - Lanolin Neutralising 4 — Snurt Style Setting' NO APPOINTMENT HOLLYWOOD BEAUTY Open Mornings at 8 A.M. . 78 N. Saginaw Over Basley Mkt. 338*7660 C. R. HASKILL STUDIO Has Photographed Over 2,000 Weddings May We Make Your Pictures? Price Includes: • Picture for Press a Just Married Sign • Miniature Marriage Certificate > a Rice to Throw “Everything but a WILLING MATE! Clyte R. Haskfil 1 University Drive FE 4-0553 A baby dai^hter ms bom early Sunday to singer Ed^ Fisher'dnd actress Connie Stevens, officials of St. Joseph Hospital m Burbank, Califannounced. The two are shovon last January in New York when they announced their engagement. Fisher’s publicity agent, Joseph Halperin, said the couple, had been secretly married. He declined to say when. Fleming. Is to Speak to Area Alumni Group Robben W. Fleniiiig, prt»I-| He comes to U. of M. from denW^giMto rf the UniyerM^ of chanceUor at the Uni* of bOchlgan will make his first pubUc aw>earance befwe a Wisconsin. M alumni group at 8:30 pjn.j Nov. 8 in the Village Woman’s aub. Sr Mrs. Robert Wy8tt «f Ends-leigh Drive is diairmah ‘Of the conunittee taking reservations. Assisting her are Mrs. Harold Coon of Lathrup and Mrs. Daniel Bimllngame ef Bhpilngham. Fl«yng will assume office as the ninth president of'tiie Uni* versify tm Jan. 1, 1968. IBs subject at the dinner meeting will be “Reflectitms on the Uniyer*| sify of Michigan.” | I He was graduated from , Beloit College in V^sconsin. He took his bachelor of law degree' from the University of Wiscon-| sin and later became director! of Industrial Relations for the University of Illinois. ; Chi^gtn Gtt Stuck Up gm rid M diliien, basive t«^ on the bi|a aod vait a finr aeconds. Then Jbrk off the tape quickly ajod the chigger will come out with it; To restore velvet, bfqsh ft well, steam it wrong i and hang it up to dry. Good Ms^od £ T.«M>n ngilm .nd •it. uma in an aagal food cail. combin«>Ai the tmal amount ^ sugar to housed with the fl& before you sift. it. Sugar s^ rates the flouuur particles ak out, permito their eveir dispersal throutfilovt the batter. ,* Prefers Outdoors SOCORRO, N. M. (AP) - A mathematics major work^ her way through college at New In past decades styles in cloth-tures of the present younger ing and in dance have come and generation should, however,’ re-gone. These Styles have char-impnrtunre ofl**® to,^,typewriter,-So, acterized many an era, as the™"® ® “ MiSiHarding, 1 sophomore, be- flapper and the Charleston char- personahty component in so- Ua^ ^an acterized the 1920’s. lecting our own clothes. ' ' It appears that the 1960’s have introduced a period of experi- Mexico Tech, Ethelyi% Harding, deddod ^ didn’t wgnt Jo M PRICE »EY! NONE HIGHER ALL 100% HUMAN HAIR WIGS ^IsIwT* 2950 R»g.$49.M Hwmui Hair ^ WHaLETS ^15 HUMAN HAIR FALLS Wonderful eolor nmgel YouVo dMM «t Ihriee the price for thb fine mki SPECIAL on PERMANENTS CBStMn Cold Wave $(|!|9 Phone FE 5-9257 Beauty Salon ^pCmupIete JVo Appointment Neceteary 11 N. SAGINAW—Between Lawrence and Pike St. Gifts wrapped free ... always 1' Lirt Weekof HONEYBARE SALEI Cantreoe micro seamless, nude heel and demi-toe. 77f 2 pairs $1.50 JXeumodeJ^osierj^Shops 82 N. SAGINAW ST. mentation and individualism in both clothing and dance styles. Even though the fashicm designers are currently concentrating on mini-sMrts, bucUe shoes and adventurous combinations rf colors, I have the impresrion that a great diversity of personal styles are being developed by young women. Recently, I had the opportunity to visit a dance club in New York City itequented mainly by people under 30. I was struck not only by the diversity of styles in dance and dress but also by the apparent sucf»ss of these experiments in individual expression.’ TAILORED SUIT One young ‘woman sported a tig^ tailored, black velvet suit wHii hi^H»Ilared Edwardian shirt and a scarlet ascot. She WOTS blade boots and a scarlet beret on her shortly sculpted hairdo. She danced in neat, pre-dse steps confined to any area of no more than two feet in diameter. AW* Another young woman wore bluejeans ^ a scocmed neck, crocheted brown wool blouse. Her hair was loose and her feet bare' Her dancing was expansive, rhythmical and gracrful. One petite, young woman was elegantly dressed b a silk print shift, high heels, and a large scarlet felt hat which drooped becomingly about her face. I ★ ★ ★ I This range in styles would scarcely be suitable fer the office, the supermarket or the bridge club and might not be .becoming to the more mature I woman. These stylish adven. FINE FURNISHINGS SINCE 1917 This Week Only! RECLINA-ROCKER* A Selection of Fine Reclining Chairs featuring the provIdEs 3-poslilon log rost oomfort wlih or without roollning tho ohair tmitm inW< arMtaki mui S^ially Priced at MANY OTHER MODELS AT THE SAME PRICE ilataigntf Th« La-Z-Poy Raclina* Rockar will add to th« gracious living of your hom*. Its smooHi rocking will rolax you and, whon. you wont to stroteh out to nop, simply roiso tho Com-‘ fort Soloctor that providos o choiqo of 3 lofhTost com-foit Msitieds. Ikon loon ‘bosijlkTO any rocitning pe-' sitlsiin. fwll SELECT FROM A WIDE VARIETY OF FINE FABRICS BUDOCTTIRMS-90 DAYS SAMI AS CASH; 1680 S. Tologroph, South of Orchard Loko Rd. Parking Front and Sido of Storo FE 2*8384 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1967 B—5 MMMMM WANTED HifbiflPifotiPiitf Piek Up” FE 2-0200 JiMK CARS Mo Paris AraUabto B Scrap ISO Branch SHIT? MOWERS, POWER MOWERS, BOAES. • - - - USE A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CUASStFIED AD. TO PLACE YOURS, CAUL 33M1S1. 63 Deiroifers Attend Class, Learn How to Live hr Less DETROIT (UPl) - Twice a week, S3 Detrdtm gather in a lecture room at Wayne State University to learn how to live for less. ★ ★ ♦ Formally, the course they’re taking is called “The Consumer Educatkm Project.’^ Aetoally, ezpols to various fields of eoasnuier eeonoi shew how to save money when In't bitkir rtiiiii tkis li! Unlast you are intarasiad la aomfori for your ontira family... SUNNER and WIUrER! featuring quality GAS"^ FURNACE wHh UFCTMt auAMiTO HUT ueunatn idy cd iCIIiSIjIIi'WlfWRtK^nAitHthKtf Xing Kimon iniviM loni, d«|MiidaU« pwtanMiMa aMl hMrttnt cam- , nlif hM«n( ar ■umnM, CMlinf. '**■ aOM IVUNIIt I *Exclu$iv« Greater Oakland County Dealer ENJOY TOTAL HOME COMFORT • HEATINQ • AIR CONDITIONrNG • ELECTRONIC AIR CLEANING • POWER HUMIOIFICATION NO MONEY DOWN ... 5 YEARS TO PAY CHANDLER HEATING CD. SMS HIOHLManaIn, W mu* Ust •! Untiae Airport Mkit 1144411 m Tonnt NiaHT tfllVIOC 0R.S44U iMytaif drugs, food, cosmeties, eMhes and other needs M Bfe. Mrs. Diane Place of the federal Food add Drug Admiids-bvUod coMdinates the drugs and cosmetics part of the program. * ★ * For example, the huge bottle of aspirin is not necessarily the (dieai^, she tells the group. SAVINGS OR NOT? “You may save money in terms of the cost of each pill,” she said. “But if your family’s snjall with few headaches, the aspirin will just stay in the medicine cabinet until they decompose and lose their effectiveness.” Mrs. Roberta McBride, an assistant librarian at Wayne State and an adult education expert, coordinates the project. She said the people in the class have never had the chance to learn what they could buy for less because “there’s simply very little in print.” * * * Mrs. McBride said she first became interested in such a project when she stayed after work one evening a couple of years ago to do her shopping in the area. ACCEPTS CHALLENGE Wayne State lies on the fringes of the city’s ^ettoes. Mrs. McBride said that she was appalled to find the stores in the area “were not only nn- inltary but more expensive.” So when a group of local residents asked the university to teach them how to save, she accepted the challenge. * * * The federal government provided funds. Each person in the course represents a local organization. Each one will go back to his group when he finishes the course and pass on what he’s learned. “The course tries to teach economic realities In relation to income,” Mrs. Place said. stand the Igbel on a drug; the difference MwMn labels and advmiislng; hotr to evaluate needs; and.^ difference between the generic brand name. name and a For example the project tells the puidls how to build a medicine budget. TIRHE OF TOOTHPASTE Or such helpftil hints to the housewife as waking up in the morning and Hnding both the tube of toothpaste and her purse empty. “She could use salt,” Mrs. Place said. The students also are encouraged to read labels. “A label has to tell the truth,” said Mrs. Place. “If someone reads the label and compares it to the advertisement,” he may decide he doesn’t need the drug.” Winte >roof Your Pofth or Breozowoy iCK UP Tack Over Windows a Doors/oo with Oonuino Shotterureof FLEX-O-GLASS Costs So Uttio, Anyone Can Affeni Itl $20.00 Is all that it takas to cover an avaraga screan porch... a braazaway less than $16.00. Hava a dry, protoctad room tor children's play or storage area all winter long. The Only Plastic Window Material that carrias a 2-YEAR GUARANTEE The name Warp's Flax-O-QIass Is printed on the edge for your protactlon. Look For Gonuint FLEX-O-GLASS At Your Local Hdwr. or Lmbr. Dealer Schenley.*.| Pt. Coda 471 1 4/5 Of. Coda 672 Vi Coda 9645 1 All Mess Inslada Tss always in the center of things Naturally! It mixes beautifully... with soda, ice, people, good times! Good things happen when you serve Schenley PRICES REDUCED ON NEW 1967 FRIGIDAIRE iPPLlMCESI All '67 models must go to make ■ room for new '68's now on the way! FRIGIDAIRE SELF CLEANING OVIN RJMieE Lowest Priced Frigidaire Elec-triclean Oven Range. Oven Cleans Itself Automatically, Electrically!' 248 We have built our business on satisfied, loyal customers. You must be satisfied or well make it good. PRieiOAIRB DRYER With Durable Press Care MATCHING WASHER WITH JET ACTION DPC FORNO-IHONFABHICS FOR $ ONLY FAMOUS NO DOWN PAYMENT, 36 MONTHS TO PAY OPEN EVERY imuNoit V Ta-HUROM SHOPPING CEHTER-POHTIAC 1550 UNON UKE RD.-IM0N LAKE FE 3-7879 363-0286 \ , 7m . HnMTtBCK) *^Th0rmlBmr*HHUmmdMar^lft^r^e* 1 ' D»< ‘ '' '■ ' ' ' * X v'' ^*1 fDMI 1W«t SUW *VK0m Gaumatei^^imp^ y'- vrX 719 WwtHHf^-FE 4-1536 ^ HADLEY’S IWlWgHWiWimW ’P ; 'cbmferf dti^'Oi^.'n.Hw Ml,#?'# Vown, ♦««,'•§’ *.A.ka ^y. T ’1 y' wpi^ -MA 4-4631 , !|lewi«#l4.lfllkuA ,7 I 4 , .‘l’''' ilOFFMNRIElM. ^V'-iliii;«ji||tt - r nEEZEMHe. * ga^maiHiiiiiiy *v - '. ■: i ^‘-.v:' VEy^,i:«iaiil^ TIm Fkntfitw Mfltl »*•:?’ tf' ~~t .r>^ . < ^ Thi» Advertisement THE PONTIAC PRESS.,.MOXDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1967 -^^hmt»erambt4id word gamie ter kiM» B—7 fimny-looking nonsense words tt» actuaUy REAL words, but their ^ have been mixed up by some, r one-Youtoustputtheirlettersbackin-totherightoyder so that they make or- dinary words that you can find in the dictionary. WRITE THE LETTERS OP EACH WORD UNDER EACH NONSENSE WORD-BUT ONLY yvu are reaay lo iina ine FUNNY ANSWER to this puzzle. The picture above will give you a hint. Study it carefully. Then take the let- ters that appear in the circles and play around with them. You will find that you can put them in order so that they form the answer you are looking for. PiMttsFBMT UBWEIbiri SHE QX] them [TH» Puzzle Answers on Pg. B-* Witches Brewing Charity Spoof Red Chm&s Hippies Are a Bit Different HONG KONG (AP) - Miji-tant Commuhist Oiina faas its own hippies, but wi^ a dice.. Many of the Red Guards, Chinese arrivals from Red China report, have lost their revolutionary zeal after more than a year of drifting around the country. They can be seen in various parts of the country— with young boys hugging scantily dressed girls at railway stations, in parks and other public places. ★ ★ ★ The arrivals say Communist authorities forbid people to take pictures of the hippie-like Red Guards. One Chinese seaman who stayed in China for more than two months said: “All Chinese hippie-lands are strictly off limits to foreign visitors.” KNOWN FOR MOTTANCY While the American hippies advocate love and nonviolence, the Cdinese ones are known for their militancy. And they steal food and loot, according to the travelers. Clashes between rival Red Guard gangs in China have been reported frequently. Recently the Communist authorities ordered all Red Guards to return to their schools, which were closed in the summer of 1966. But, the arrivals say, in many schools, neither teachers nor students tumdd up. “The teachers are afraid of vengeful action from students, while the students, after more than a year of free traveling and comparatively easy life, are reluctant to go back to schools where some kind of discipline must be kept,” one source said. the inside story on this Gleneagles all-weather coat is a pure alpaca-wool lining BELLEVUE, Wash. (AP) -Forty housewives in this plush Seattle suburb will band together in a broken-down shack this Halloween to terrify children in the name of charity. It's an annual spoof on spooks sponsored by the Overtake Service League, 500 women who have been using thelf wits to raise money for good causes since 1911. V * * Ik In this case, the project involves turning housewives into hags, putting them in squalid houses and charging people 25 cents each to see them. Last year, 18,000 paid and the league raised $5,000 for impoverished families. The project is billed as House Haunting, and after five seasons the ladies are getting proficient at it. The first problem was to find a house with potential and no price tag. This year’s seven-room specimen was donated by a Bellevue contractor who eventually will rip down the build-J ‘"K- I For now, it's the women whol have smashing ideas ★ * ★ Armed with hammers, saws and crowbars, they have made a few basic modifications—like tummg a second-story window into the front door. The stairway was built by another contractor. General Chairman Dorothy McCormick, with the help of a 13-woman committee, has done some frightful redecorating on the gloomy two-story structure. Over-all ugliness was enhanced by covering walls and ceilings with black paper. The comers thrive with spiders and bats. Witched-up women double as child comforters when things get a bit too convincing. Separate dramas unfold in each room. Hansel and Gretel are boiled In an upstairs bed-ro«n and right next door, a witch doctor brews a tasty dish called people. Downstairs, the ma(j doctor performs a “messy-ectomy” on the dining room ta- Machine Fails to Stop Speech by Therqpy Expert GREENVRJLE, S.C. (AP) -Dr. George R. Bach, group therapy expert from Beverly Hills, Calif., was speaking in Greenville when he was asked to pause while tapes were changed on the equipment recording his remarks for delayed television broadcast. “We want to get all of your remarks on tape, if you don’t mind,” he was told. ^ “But I do mind,” seid the doctor. “You see, we can’t let ms-chines determine what we do.” He went ahead with his talk, and part of it was never recorded. ble and a fuzzy five-fpot spider i peers out of what might have; been a closet. Other distractions are the Pirate Cave, the Witches of Oz and the Man of Oz. Aii are animated — either by women who work in two-hour shifts or by improvised power units. The house is open daily during the week prior to Halloween night, capping one year of planning and a week of actual construction. When it’s over, the witches return home with a familiar problem-how to dress up their houses for Christmas. NRA Power Hit WASHINGTON (UPI) - Sen. Joseph D. Tydings, D-Md., a sponsor of President Johnson’s gun control bill, claims the National Rifle Association is more powerful than the administration when it comes to firearms legislation. The news that begins with an all-weather coat by Gleneagles continues under the surface with a feather-light, pure alpaca-wool lining. The coat is tailored in a blend of 65% Dacron* and 35% cotton ... patterned to perfection in Glen plaid ... and treated with a Scotchgard stain and water repellent finish. Priced at $60. Other Gleneagles coats range from $55 to $75. Owr Pwillac Man Slora 0*w Mm.> Tim, M wW tat. !• * P. M. Tiiaa. tut Wad. la S:N P. M. Our BIrmlnlliam tiara Opan Tlwra. and PrI. la f P. ML . Sal. la liM P. M. -fca Plarca tt., Blrmlntliani ARtORlAND • BIRMINSHAM • lAtTlAND . ORAND RIVER A OREENFIELD . JACKSON . lINCOlM pXrk . LIVONIA MALL • MACK A MOROtt MACOMB MALL . NORTHLAND . PONTIAC MALL . SHELBY A STATE • UNIVERSAL CITY • WESTBORN • WESTLAND . WONDERLAND • WOODWARD A MONTCALM IITURE'S CITY OF PONTIAC PERMIT NO. 2098 ^00,000.00 STOCK MUST BE LIQUIDATED LAST TEN DAYS EVERYTHING WILL BE SOLD ON A FIRST GOME, FIRST SERVED BASIS. ALL FLOOR SAMPLES WILL BE SOLD <AMERICAN MUSIC STOMS. INC. tMibamiRiNr-na-im 5 piece Sale *129*® A TERRWic Wl Fonr heiiy Mauts Chairs and a unrdy 3A’’x4il'’ oval table with 12" ISsf. IhiV’kinr for yotir HoNdiy DtnuSrt. , | NODOWMPAYMEKT V PAY ONLY 1.50 Wogkiy THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1967 B-^9 Boom Entering Its 81st Month f WASHINGTON (UPI) — How rich can yoUjber of unemployed workers has dropped from . nearly five million to three million. I Americans should a^k themselves that ques- Jl6n Wednesday because Nov. 1 marks the start' people say the Vietnam war is re- ^f the 81st month of the current U.S economic implication being expansion. jthat the nation can't be prosperous unless it's Call it a boom, if you like. Whatever it'si*" ? * called, it's the longest stretch of prosperity the n * * u United States has ever experienced ^ ^ expansion already had broken alt peacetime records and The long upsurge that accomnanied World a'l wartime records but one by the time the War II lasted 80 months. The recovery from I Vietnam buildup began in the summer of 1965. the great depression lasted 50 months. The eX- Other people credit the Federal Reserve pansions that went with the Civil War, World Board with sustaining the expansion by pumping War I and Korea were good for 44 to 46 months k>ut necessary money and credit, instead of slam-ench. jming on the monetary brakes as in the past. So the present prosperity is the longest ever. But for the first four and a half years, the peacetime or wartime. i economy was operating far enough below full Since February 1961, when it ali began, grossl^^Ploy®*”! inflation was never a threat, national product (GNP) has risen from $504 „ u * u ^ biUion to $790 billion, or 57 per cent. liaviMl f’T". k out inflation, the rise in reaPoutput has been pgp the administration and tightened money. The I result was the highest interest rates in 40 years NEARLY DOUBLE and a depression in housing For the man in the street the boom has ^ . meant a 31 per cent increase in his after-tax The best explanation for why the boom has income, from $1,942 to $2,747 per capita Evenl‘asted more than 80 months is that the govem-allowing for inflation, the rise in the average " man's purchasing power has been 28 per cgnt. Business profits after taxes have nearly doubled, from $24 billion to $47 billion. The num- a tool for sustaining prosperity. The government has finally been willing to accept a budget deficit, when necessary, to stimulate the economy. R-E-D-l-C-E HUE’S WHAT A SEGINNER CAN EXKCT IN JUST H TO M DAYS AT HOLIDAY 1 ★ BUST ★ Holiday Firm. Sogging Suit Line ir STOMACH it Flatten. Flabby Bulge. Harden. Stomach AAu.cl.. ^THIBNSA^ i Tone ond Tighten Flabby Tissue and Taper Calves 1 'A'ARMS ^ ★ WAIST * LOSE Fiym and Tone Arm Mutcl.i Slim Down Fat Wai.tline Reduce. 2 to 5 Inch.. 20 LBS. iiii±Si5SSSaS53S^ Join Today For 83! Thio it tho TOTAL averago coot if you enroll TODAY for a eourta,tetitnad;aapaoially for YOU! CHECK YOUR OWN CRESS SIZE ir If you are a size 20, yifu con bo o porfecl )4 m 60>90 days 'At if you are a size 18, you con bo o'porfoct 14 in 60-90 days ir If you are a size 16, you con bo o porfoct 12 in 60-90 days ^ If you are a size 14, you can b* a parfcct 10 in 60-90 doyt NO STRENUOUS DIETING NO CLASSES TO AHEND "Arrang* Visit to Suit Your Convanianca as Oftan AS YOU LIKE" (OPEN EVENINGS 'TIL 10) TODAY IS OCT. 30th it SIZE 22? .. ir SIZE 20? .. ir SIZE 18? .. it SIZE 16? .. BE A SIZE 16 BY DEC. 30th BE A SIZE 14 BY DEC. 30th BE A SIZE 14 BY DEC. 30th BE A SIZE 12 BY DEC. 30th Modern Steam Sauna Baths Ralax in modarn ilaom bothi . . . wbar# tl._ axeats pounds visually malt Oway. You con faal your poras opan and ralaosa complaxion harming toxins. Laova with that axhilarotad tingling or rafrashad claonlinais. Luxurious Sunrooms Gal Ihol baouliful ton in luxurious sunrooms. Thasa soloriums provida concantrotad sporkla; giva you houri of sunshina in just o tow minutas tima. Fraa with your mombarship. HSPA 3432 W. Hurvfr-IIEW LOCATIOH-Hi. 334-1591 Cut from Mature, Corn-Fed Beef! "Super-Right* STUKS Round Sirloin FRESH Mushrooms -49* \__________________________ CUT-UF LB. lie A A . Whole Fresh Fryers •. 29 -SUFER-aiDHY" BONBLESt UAO Cube Steaks...............m “BUFER-HIDHT” BNOUND BEEP JW Round Steak ..... ^ 89' “SUPER-RIG^HT" SKINLESS All-Meet Franks . . 99‘ ■OSTON STYLE BUTT—**SUPER-RISHr* mg Pork Roast...........59 CUT FROM BOSTON STYLE BUTTS Pork Steak...............09 REELED AND DEVEINED 4^ MO Medium Shrimp a • 2^ MEDIUM SIZE OnnOw Shell on Shrimp . . . 99* 89- 99‘- 1 T'Bono 09 lb. Porterhouse Steaks ^1'* BONELESS! "SUPER-RIGHT" ROTISSERIE OR Beef Rump Roast • # '■> 99 "SUPER-RIGHr' SPARE 2 to 3 lb. Sizes lb. 49 ALLGOOD SLICED **SUFER-RI8Hr* FANCY Sliced Bacon . . -SUFIR-RiaHr’ THICK-SLieen ^ ^ Bacon ..... FULLY COOKED CANNED HAMS A RIAL VALUt BANANAS -15‘ SAVE 16c-JANE PARKER Apple Pie 39c ^ Gmeu Beans... S'^69 A&P—GRADE "A " CREAM STYLE OR jm MT Kernel Corn ... 4 - 09 KIDDIES LOVE 'EM ^[||M jm Fudgsicles «.. • 1249 -------------^ WHITE BEAUTY Shortening 3" 49 ALL FLAVORS—DURKEE'S Pie Perfect 4‘»99* Luncheon Meat • • DEE-LISH POLISH Dill Pickles............ 1-LB. BAG 59c Eight O'clock Coffee WOO CANS ■ I'/z-QT. lAR 3. mis m 1-LB. 8-OZ. SIZE JANE PARKER ENRICHED White Breed 89< Hallowe’en Special—Jane Parker PLAIN OR SUGARED DONUTS 2-45' Never, Never AliP—OUR FINKST DUALITY JM M Cane Sugar ... 5 49' ALLPURPOSE B Sunnyfield Flour 5 39' CHAMPION ^ Fig Bars . .2 39 AAP—DRAOE "A" HAWAIIAN f.gy Pineapple JuiM 3 79 ANN FADE QUALITY ^ Elbow Macaroni . . 39 AAP-SOLID PACK WHITE 4^ hET WT. |g A A AlbacoreTuno 3 »Nt 1 A&P SOFT MARGARINE 3 100 Price. Ettactiv. Through Tu..dey, Oct. 31.t B^IO THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 80, 196^ Congress Probes Group That Sets Up Tax Havens WAanNGTON (AP) enterprise some describe as factory fw tuning out tax havens—and which others say is simply helping middle-income recipients get the same tax breaks as the rich—comes under congressional scrutiny today. Ihe organization is Americans Building Constitutionally (ABC), with headquarters in the Chicago suburb of Barrington, 111. After months of staff investi- An gation, a House Small Business “Officials of this outfit are frank to admit that they afti attempting to mass-pro^ce the tax-dod^g specialties that were once associated only with millionaires." He said ABC “pitches its appeal to the upper-middle Income to the witness stand Robert D. Hayes, whom it Identified as a trustee of ABC, and James R. Walsh Jr., described as one of its principal architects. ABC provides services in setting up foundations that enjoy tax exemptions. OFTICIALS FRANK Subcommittee Chairman Wright Patman, D-Tex., told the House earlier this month that. quite group-doctors, lawyers othyr professiohaBj.’*^^!; The tax advantages rep6rted-ly are obtairted by an individual who assigns property and earnings to a foundation and is then employed by the foundation for a salary and sometimes the right'to use the p«^)erty—such as a house or automobile. Patman’s subcommittee and the Internal Reveiuie Service have been investigating a number of foundations to determine whether they in fact contribute enough to charity to qualify un-iceeds, “tax-exempt foundations der law for tax exemptions. MAY BECOME COMMON Patman said if the technique of providing a comparatively low-priced package of services will be as commonplace in this country as bathtub distill^es were during the prohibition erai” , The resiflt, he said, “could be the beginning of complete chaos for setting up a foundation suc-|for the nation’s tax structure.'^' more firmlr Mt. OieeB Ing or ncurlty and added eomfqit. No gummy, gooey taste or feeling. Dentures that St are eaieitttal to health. See your dentist regularly. Oet FASnxTH at all drug oduntere. BUY, SELL, ’TRADE - - - USE PONTIAC PRESS WAJft ADSl *P Wlreehete CONSOLED—Mrs. Elizabeth Estergall is consoled by the Rev. Gerald Borgie after she learned her two daughters were found dead yesterday of carbon monoxide poisoning in Cleveland. The ^Is were found in a stolen car with their dates. (Heveland police said -they would investigate to see if the youths were high on marijuana. Carbon Monoxide Kills 4 Teens; Dope Link Eyed CLEVELAND (AP) — Four teen-agers found dead in an au tomobile parked in a garage on the East Side Sunday died of carbon monoxide poisoning, police reported. A coroner’s examination was planned today tb determine if they were under the influence of marijuana. * ★ ★ Police said one of the victims, Henry L., Pugh, 19, told his mother Saturday afternoon that “We’re gonna have somh fun tonight. We’re going to get some pot (marijuana) and turn on.' Found dead with Pugh were Betty Ann Gagliardo, 18; her sister Charla, 16, and Bruce Schiavonl, 19. CAR STOLEN OCT. » Shiavonl and Betty Gagliardo were on the front seat of the car and the other two were on rear seat. Ail four were fuMy clothed. Police said the car had been stolen Oct. 22. * * * The bodies were found by Elizabeth Estergall, mother of the sisters, who went to the garage dn a hunch after she became worried because her daughters hadn’t home. Mrs. Estergall said thought of the garage because Betty Ann had asked her once If it would be all right if she and her date went there and talked, and she gave her permission. ★ W W Schiavoni’s car was parked in the driveway by the garage Personal income increased OK in Vermont than in any other state in April of 1967 as with April 1966 ,the compared Bigf holiday cash? Come to where the money Come to the people m m f folk to the men where whose only business is jLSSi • the money is. Nearly 2 making loans. 8000 million people a year do loans a day. Holiday shopping —atovar 1750affitiatad Bene-loans. Bill-paying loans. Alt ficial offices throughout the kinds of loans. Come to Bene- U.S., Canada and around the ficial. That’s vrhere the moiwy world. Phone now. This Is is. Just call or drop in. And where the money is. BENEFICIAL BENEnCIAL RNANCE SYSTEM • 1750 omCES COAST-TO COAsf Loans up to $1000 on your signature, furniture or aiitn PONTIAC —(2 Offices) Beneficial Finance Co. of Detroit • 10 N. Saginaw...............334-9595 Beneficial Finance Co. of Waterford • 477 Elizabeth Lake Rd.......334-4513 OKN EVENINGS BY APrOiNTMENT-FHONE FOR HOURS • 1067, BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO. GENERAL ELECTRIC STEREO CONSOLE Id ilo)* ■l•raa Hi-Fi ... no luboi to n out! 4 apood outomotic rocord *99“ HOTPOINT 2-CYCLE WASHER *148 TOP BRAND 10' REFRIGERATOR Sts! ixsj; lini cold conHol. Doky bor. Ftoo doll«o- Kreuz grabbing three for 60 and Lynch two for 39. The elusive quarterback ran the ball 21 times for 124 yards. Brother Rice, who equalled the school’s previous one-season high victory total with its sixth conquest, now will play Double A representative Divine Child at 8 p.m. Friday at Titan Stadium for the Catholic League championship. The Warriors gained the berth by virtue of tying Notre Dame in the standings and beating the Irish in their head-to-head meeting. A Saturday night Double-A contest saw Royal Oak Shine routing Holy Redeemer, 39-8. (Continued on Page C-3, Col. 1) The 39-yard-old Howe scoitd his fifth and sixth goals of the nine-game-old National Hockey League season Sunday night as the Red Wings beat the Chicago Black Hawks 5-1 and took over first place in the East Division. ’The NHL’s all-time scoring king broke open a close game with the 654th and 655th goals of his 22-year career, leading the Wings to their fourth straight victory and a one-point lead over idle Montreal in the East. Two goals by Eddie Shack powered Boston to a 4-2 victory over Pittsburgh; Bob Nevin scored twice as New York nipped Toronto 3-2 and Aut Erickson’s late goal earned California 2-2 tie at Philadelphia. Detroit led M when Howe connected with a second-period slap shot for his first goal of the game. The powerful right-winger scored again while the Black Hawks were short-handed in the third period. Rookie Gary Jarrett opened and closed the Wings’ scoring with his first two NHL goals. Ted Hampson netted the other Detroit score. Ken Wharram’s first-period tally averted a shutout for the Hawks’ who have won only one of nine starts. Manager-coach Sid Abel shifted Howe from his usual right wing spot to center with Norm Ullman sidelined by an injury. SHIFTS HOWE When Howe responded with his second goal. Hawk Coach Bill Reay lifted goalie Denis DeJordy. Meanwhile, Roger Crozier whs showing his old form in the crease and on. more than one occasion made the big save. He lowered his average to 2.05, stopping 22 shots while his teammates took aim on the Chicago nets 44 times. In the shuffle, Jarrett was also moved to center from his usual wing position .causing Ullman to comment, “I should be ready for Thursday against Toronto.” Shack, acquired by the Bruins from Toronto last spring, tipped in Ted Green’s long drive in the second period and slammed a 26-footer into the Pittsburgh net in the third period. He has scored four times in seven games. Phil Esposito’s sixth goal and defense-m£m Gary Doak’s first of the year helped stake Boston to a 4-0 lead before Andy Bathgate connected for the Pen-quins with less than six minutes to play. Nevin, a 20-goal scorer for New York last season, ended a seven-game famine in the first period and then scored the winner 31 seconds after Orland Kurten-bach shot the Rangers even in the third period. The victory extended the Rangers’ unbeaten streak to six games and left them tied with Boston for third place in the East — one point behind Montreal and two off the pace. Erickson’s first NHL goal since 1961, a 40-foot drive with 1:38 remaining in the last period, salvaged a tie for California, which had dropped five games in a row on its first eastern road trip. Wayne State, Alma Triumph; Western Michigan Routs Foe By The Associated Press Two teams tumbled from the ranks of the unbeaten and ties for two conference championships were clinched over the weekend as the Michigan college football season entered its showdown stage. The undefeated Tartars of Wayne State rolled over Eastern Michigan 20-3 Saturday, handing the Hurons their first loss of the season. ★ ★ * In another clash between previously unbeaten teams Alma assured itself of at least a tie for the MIAA crown by ploughing Olivet into the mud 34-0. Tailback Craig Tefft drove for three touchdowns as Centeral Michigan came from behind to whip Illinois State 19-14, guaranteeing the Chippewas at least a tie for the IIAC title. In other action, Kalamazoo whipped Hope 14-7; Western Michigan routed Marshall 42-10; Albion shut out Adrian 34-9; Northwood of Midland defeated Milton, Wis., 39-7; Bluffton whipped Grand Rapids 29-8; Winona, Minn, beat Michigan Tech 10-6; Nohh^ Michigan edged St. Herbert, Wis. 24-M; Northern lUnois rolled over Hillsdale 24-14 and Fenia State was upended by the University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee ^14. Halfback George Crawford scored twice for Wayne State, once on a 31- MEXICO QTY UFl - Coaches of those world swimming powers gathered for the Pre-Olympic Games, which ended Sunday, generally believe the U.S. team will be the one to beat at the 1968 Olympics here, but they expect a decline of U. S. aquatic power in coming years. American swimmers won 15 gold medals, Russia and East Germany took five each and The Netherlands and Mexico got two apiece. In over-all competition, Russia won 40 gold medals. The United States was second in unofficial medal tabulations with 21 golds, followed by Japan and Italy with 11 each and East Germany with 10. Mexico’s B team won the final gold medal of the two-week competition Sunday, by finishing first in the modified Cup of Nations Equestrian jumping event. France was second and a mixed team was third. CHECK COMPETTnON Several swimming coaches were asked if — given the fact that many teams had left strong swimmers at hqpie and Sweefan Leads 45-3 Rout of 49ers in Coast Game yard pass play from quarterback A. J. Vaughn and again when he ran back an EMU punt 68 yards. Jim Hetrick scurried seven yards to score for Alma after Dennis Bongard recovered an Olivet fumble. Then, Hetrick hit Bongard on a 25-yard pass play for another touchdown. The Broncos of Wqstem Michigan ran up their biggest score in seven years in routing Marshall Saturday, but WMU is still locked in a three-way tie for the top spot in the conference. OTHER SCORES Toledo edged Kent State 14-13 and Miami sneaked by Bowling Green 0-7 Saturday, giving WMU, Miami and Toledo all 4-1 records in conference play. The Broncos travel to Athens, Ohio, next Saturday to meet the Bobcats of Ohio University. Tim Majerle and Jack Foster each scored twice for WMU in Saturday’s victory over the Thundering Herd. * * ★ Majerle pul»the Broncos on the score-board first with a 41-yard run to paydirt in the first quarter and added another tally from one yard out in the fourth quarter. The 190-pound fullback from Cadillac carried 20 times for 130 yards. By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Edito-, Pontiac Press SAN FRANCISCO. CAUF. - There was a big happening yesterday at Kezar Stadium which stands in the heart of San Francisco’s psychedelic hippie community. * * * It was the biggest happoiing in the 33-year pro football history of the Detroit Lions as they demolished the Forty-Niners, 45-3. ★ ★ ★ At no other time during regular season play did the Lions ever defeat anyone by 42 points, and as a tribute to the current defensive unit, this was the second straight game in which the opposition was held without a touchdown. FINEST PERFORMANCE It was without doubt the finest performance for young quarterback Karl Sweetan who. said ‘T wanted to win big and erase the bad memory of last year.” * ★ ★ It was here that Sweetan made his starting debut in 1966 and lost a 27-24 decision in the final three seconds. Coach Joe Schmidt called yesterday’s victory “the best that our offense and defense have put things together.” “Karl called a fine game,” Schmidt said. However, he did not want Sweetan to pour it on and ordered Karl to stay on the ground instead of passing hi the late stages when the contest was out of reach. The master plan for setting up the Lions’ defense was charted by assistant coach Jimmy David, who was a former Jack Christiansen of the Pontiac Prau Phataa by Edward K. Nabla BOO’TLEG BREAKAWAY—Karl Sweetan, Detroit Lions’ quarterback breaks away for a 16-yard gain on a dazzling bootleg play which led to the Detroit Lions’ second touchdown against the San Francisco 49ers yesterday. Sweetan had the finest day of his young pro career as the Lions walloped the 49ers, 45-3 in the Golden Gate city. U.S, Tankers Highly Rated for Olympics a number of those who had come were not in top condition — they had gotten any idea here of their strongest competition in the 1968 Games. * ★ * “I don’t think we’ll have any problem winning as a team, said U.S. Coach Sherman Chavoor. “Over-all, we should emerge on top. But there are individuals who are tops in other countries: East Germany’s Roland Mathes double gold winner in the backstroke, Holland’s Ada Kj)jc double gold winner in women’s butterfly, Can-a - With a standing-room-only crowd watching St. Louis’ youthful quarterback, Jim Hart faces his toughest National Football League test tonight. The opponents are the Green Bay Packers. The ,23-year-old Hart must have felt like David against Goliath when he read the statistics — the Packers have allowed only 57 yards per game passing. Vince Lombardi’s pack, with a 4-1-1 record in the Western Conference Central Division, were led by venerable quarterback Bart Starr, who has been hampered by sore ribs. * * ★ Hart has led the Cardinals to a 4-2 season in the Century Division of the Eastern Conference. Improving with each game, he helped crush Philadelphia 48-14 a week ago Sunday. For this The Associated Press named him offensive Player of the Week. Beside the 50,000-sell-out, the game is being nationally televised. The Lions blitzed linebackers and defensive backs from all side$ to force Brodie to throw the ball wildy and for a total of five interceptions. “Jimmy (David) knows the defensive personnel of the 49ers since he coached them, and we followed his game plan to the letter,” said Schmidt. Except for the first period in which the Uons’ defense manhandled the 49ers with three interceptions including a 31 yard runback by Mike Lucci for a touchdown, Sweetan directed the ball club with a mechanical parade of first downs. He converted 10 second downs and seven third down plays for first downs with a good mixture of running and passing, and one of the key runs of the game was Sweetan’s bootleg early in the second quarter in which he completely befuddled the 49ers. ★ * ★ He went 16 yards to the Frisco 12 before the 49er secondary realized he had the ball. A couple plays later Mel Farr bounced into the end zone for a one yard touchdown. ★ ★ ★ The 49ers came back on the ensuing kickoff when Bill Tucker returned the kick 26 yards and a piling on penalty put the ball on the 48. Brodie passed to. Dave Parks covering 43 yards to the nine and when the Lions’ defense again held. Tommy Davis kicked a 13 yard field goal and that’s as dose as they got tlw rest of the way. A 26 yard field goal in the third quarter by Garo Yepremian made it 17-3 and when rookie Lem Barney intercepted his second pass of the game late in the quarter, going 19 yards to the Frisco 23, the Lions needed only five plays and make it 24-3 with Garo’s kick. * * * Alex Karras, again playing a tremendous pass rush game, recovered a Brodie fumble on the Detroit 41 and six plays later Sweetan passed 19 yards to Nowatzke for the touchdown. With six minutes left after a short punt by Steve Spurrier the Lions again started on their own 41 and Amos Marsh went the final 18 yards to complete the drive in eight plays and a 38-3 lead. Spurrier replaced Brodie and his first pass was Intercepted by Dick LeBeau. From the Detroit 46, the Lions went the distance in 10 plays with Sweetan again bootlegging and scoring from the five. * * * Commenting on the bootleg plays, Sweetan said “Coach Bill MePeak had us working on it in practice and I figured it was the right time to use the play when we did in the game.” He ran the ball three times for 29 yards. Total firat down« ................... 10 14 First down* rushing ................4 U First downs passing ................?. 5 7 First downs by panalty ............... t 1 Total yards gained 173 223^3f1 Yards gained rushing (net) ......... 12 729 Passes 10-33 17—33 Passes Intercepted ................... 0 5 Punts ........................... 7-41.4 4-41.0 Penaltlesand yarls ............... 42-74 4-40 Fumbles and lost ....... . . . 1—1 2—2 Total offensive plays (Inc. T. T. P.) SO 77 Individual Ruthlng N. L.Y. N. L.Y. 49era AN. Y. Av. O.L.TD Liens AN. Y. Av.-G.L.TO Willard 14 44 3,2 7 0 0 Nowatako 12 40 4.1 4 0 1 Crow 4 2S 4.2 21 1 0 Felts 4 59 9.7 22 1 0 Kopay 2 13 4.5 10 0 0 Farr 12 44 3.4 12 3 1 Marsh 4 40 5.0 14 0 1 Sweetan 3 29 9.7 14 0 1 Watkins 3 4 2.0 3 0 0 Totals 22 42 3.7 21 1 0 Totals 44 229 5.2 22 4 4 Individual Passing 49ers AN. C. 6.'In. Liens AN. V. O.'ln. Bodie 29 4 119 4 Sweeten 33 17 142 0 Spurr^ier 3 2 11 1 Crow 10 0 0 Totals 33 10 130 4 Totals 33 17 142 0 DelreN ............................ 7 7 10 11-43 San Francisco ..................... 0 3 0 0-0 Det.—Lucci, 31 pass Interception (Yeprjmlan kick) Det.-Farr, 1 run (Yepremian kick) • SF-FG, Oavis 13 Det.—FC, Yepremian 24 Det.—NowatzKe, 4 run (Yepremian kick) Det.—Nowatzke, 19 pass from Sweetan (Yaprem-lan kick) Det.-Marsh, 14 run (Yepremian kick) Del.—Sweetan, 4 run (Yepremian kick) 37,990. BP Billy Hardwick Wins Kokomo Open Tourney KOKOMO, Ind. (AP) - Billy Hardwick of San Mateo, Calif., won the Professional Bowlers Association 130,000 Kokomo Open Sunday night. Hardwick won by 470 pins over Joe Joseph of Lansing. Hardwick had 9,487 pins over th^ 40-game route, including 600 bonus pins for ynnning 12 of 16 matches Sunday. The victory was worth $3,000. IT\ CAN’T BE! - Dave Parks, San Francisco 49ers end, furiously kicks his helmet after he was called for offensive interference on a pass play in which he ivas the intended receiver and Detroit’s Tommy Vaughn was pushed out of the play. Coast Swimmers Win SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - The United States, represented by Margo McGrath of San .Francisco, won first place in bojh stunt and solo finals comp^tion at the Golden Gate International Synchronized Swimming Solo (Championships Sunday. NO BLl’TZ SHELTER — Quarterback John Brodie of the San Francisco 49ers could find no shelter yesterday as the Detroit Lions blitzed him with a savoge rush led by tackle Alex Karras who is about to pull Brodie down to the turf. I c-« THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. OCTOBER 30, 196T JUGGLING INTERCEPnON-Rookie defensive back Lem Barned (20) juggles a deflected pass off the hands of Dick Wichter^ (88) but manages to hold on for his second interception in the game against the 49ers Pontiac Prtss eiwtM by Edwtre a. NMM yesterday in San Francisco. Barney, a rookie of the year candidate for the Lions, has six interceptions fw the season and he helped Detroit to a 45-3 win yesterday. Baltimore Skins Ikins; Giants iJp^t Browns Coifs Win Squeaker; Eagles, Rams Roll WASHINGTON (AP) — B more overcame a determined Washington defense Sunday to win 17-13 and continue their nine-year hex oyer their National Football League neighbors. It was the eighth straight league victory by the Colts over the Redskins and their 16th in a )w including exhiNtion games. The Ck)lts, however, stnigigled against the Washington defense until 9:36 remained in the fourth Firebirds Need Fielp in MFL Race Pontiac Victor Over Flint 11 League Race Still Has Mt. Clemens on Top By FLETCHER SPEARS Pontiac’s Firebirds will have the ‘Help Wanted’ sign out for the next four weeks as they attempt to catch up in the Midwest Football League. Hie Firebirds, the MFL’s newest entry which was given littie chance of succeeding in this year’s race, is right in the thick of the battle for the championship but the ’Birds need some help to bag the crown. And Uiat help has to come In the next four weeks. ’The Firebirds have games remaining with Detroit, Flint, Lansing and YpsilantI and they must win them all and hope soi sidetracks ieagne-leading The Firebirds ran their record to 6-2 Saturday at Wisner Stadium as they rode the arm of quarterback Tim Jones to a 46-25 victory over Flint that left them in a tie for second with idle YpsilantI. * * ★ Mount Clemens, a 30rl2 winner over Detroit, is setting the pace in the race with an 8-1 record, but the Arrows have two rough road games ahead — YpsilantI next week and Day-ton in the season finale. Day-ton handed the Arrows their only loss this season and the Firebirds are hoping it’ll happen again. In the other game Saturday night, Dayton evened its record at 4-4 with an 18-0 nod over Lansing (2-7). Jone^, the 6-2, 200-pounder from Weber State who is with the Firebirds as a loan from the Detroit Lions, had an off night in the completion department — hitting on only 8 ol 26 passes — but he connected on the big ones — four TD pitches — as Pontiac outclassed Flint before a small, cold crowd at Wisner. The Firebirds blew it open with 27 points in the first quarter. Hiey added two more touchdowns in the third and another in the fourth. Flint bagged single touchdowns in the first two frames and wound up the scoring with a pair of sbi-pointers off a spread formatioa in the Unbeaten' Chargers Riddled by Raiders By the Associated Press i “All pro teams have these The Oakland Raiders shot day,’’ shrugged Coach Sid Gill-holes through San Diego’s un-|man of the Chargers, who gets beaten American Football League record, then prepared to start ducking themselves “Now everybody will be shooting at us,’’ agreed Haider quarterback Daryle Lamonica and Coach John Raunch after Oakland riddled the Chargers 51-10 Sunday and replaced San Diego on top of the Western Division. The Raiders are 6-1, just ahead of San Diego’s 5-1-1. Denver will take aim at Oakland next Sunday, but does not figure to fire anything but after Kansas City crushed the Broncos 52-9 to stay alive in the West at 4-3 ★ ★ ★ In other games, the New York Jets protected their Eastern Division lead by overcoming Boston 30-23 while second-place Houston trimmed Buffalo 10-3. another shot at Oakland Dec. 3 in San Diego. CLOSE FIRST HALF The game was expected to be a tight affair and was for the first half, which ended with the Raiders leading only 16-10 on an safety, Lamonica's 40-yard scoring pass to Clem Daniels and Lamonica’s three-yard TD run. * * * Then Oakland’s machine gun attack opened up. Daniels and Lamonica ran for scores in the third period and Lamonica and his replacement, George Blanda, threw for scores in the final session. Hewritt Dixon powered over from seven yards out for the final 'TD before a record crowd of 53,474 in Oakland’s Coliseum. * * * Daniels picked up 94 yards rushing to overtake San Diego’s Paul Lowe, who netted only 29, as the AFL’s top career Rround gainer. He has 5,006 yards to Lowe’s 4,M7. Daniels a^so caught four passes for 101 yards. The Jets, 5-1-1, relied as usual on Joe Namath to pull them from behind a 20-7 deficit. Namath, who threw two yards to Bill Mathis for the first score r when* Tom Matte ran, seven yards for the toudidown' to give Baltimore a 14-13 edge. PILING ON / The 65-yard drive to the touchdown was aided by a 16-yard penalty for piling on quarterback Johnny Unitas-a call obviously unpopular with the 50,-' 574 sellout crowd. - . I Lou hfichaels later kicked at 30-yard field goal. Baltimore remained undefeated and now has a 60-1 record. The Redskins are 2^2. Mi ............... t 7 OlS-17 Wlih-A PHILADELPHIA (AP) - The Philadelphia Eagles turned fumble and a surprise onside kick into touchdown drives for an upset 21-14 victory-over the Dallas Cowboys Sunday in National Football League game before a sellout crowd of 60,740. Philadelphia scored all its )ints in the first half on a 17-yard run by halfback Izzy Lang, a three-yard pass from quarterback Norm Snead to Gary Ball-and Tom Woodeschick’s \ ■ » 7 7 #-14 Phil—Binmwi 3 pan from Sdmi 0«'i^ll«itnl TOtya.lilcW CHICAGO (AP) - A trick after a 50-yard toss to Don May-|P tl^st halfback Tom-nard, set up three field goals by ® passuig role Jim Turner and a scoring run „f Sl-yartf so^g toss to by Emerson Boozer with his tosses. He then hit Boozer, Maynard ai^ George Sauer on fourth ql^er drive before connecting with Pete Lammons for winning Td. Indiana Powerhouse Earns Poll Backing By the Associated Press him an Indiana record of nine Namath finished with 22 completions in 43 tries for 362 yards and hit his first three to give him a record-tying 15 straight. But he still gave credit to the New York defense, which rushed Babe Parilli relentlessly in the final half. ’®ch^2olw'‘nnL “Our defensive line was their 1 weakest point," Namath said of the Patriots. Beroie Casey sealed a 28-17 victory for the Los Angeles Rams over the Chicago Bears Sunday. The aeriql njaneuver came in the third period of the penalty plagued National Football League contest and shoved the Rams out of reach 21-10. Mason took a handoff from Roman Gabriel, faded wide and let go to Casey as the Bear defense was sucked in. Atlanta Makes BIG GRABBER — Gail Cc^dill (89) makes an overhead catch of a pass from Karl Sweetan and gets by defensive back Kermit Alexander as the Detroit Lions whipped the 49ers yesterday, 45-3. The pass went for 31 yards, helping the Lions to a touchdown. Allison Winner Ford Team Shows Zip 14 31—51 Charger* ................ 0 10 0 0—10 Raldor* ............... * 7 0*k-5alcty, Post tacklaO by In and lona Oak—Daniel* 40 pas* In Hand* kick) SD-FG Vap Raphorat 40 ■ ind# kl<*> 4adl (Van-kick) The University of Indiana year after year one of those football teams voted least likely to succeed, is demanding a recount. The unbelievable Hoosiers college football’s version of the Boston Red Sox, have won their first six games, and the balloting last week placed them 10th in the Associated Press rankings. With another weekly vote coming up, the Hoosiers are likely to climb even higher after whomping Arizona 42-7 last Saturday. ★ ★ ★ Any shifting in the Top Ten was made probable by Oklahoma State’s stunning 167 victors over third-ranked Colorado and 14-13 verdict over ninth-rated Houston. The other seven teams, with idle second-ranked UCLA, got through the weekend intact, although some of them had narrow escapes. Jones and his favorite catcher, speedy Sam West, a 610, 176pounder who got a look from the Lions in camp last summer, teamed on two scoring passes. We^t hauled in a 34-yarderjPurtue, No in the first and a six-yarder in the third, and in between be caught a 46yard scoring pitch from halfback Marty Malatin. Next Saturday, the Firebirds entertain Detroit, while Mount Clemens visits Lansing. Dayton visits Flint on Sunday. STATISTICS Flr*l Down* Rinblng F lr*t Down* P***lng . Flr*t Ogtwi* Pwialfh* f-31 Southern California, No. 1, overpowered Oregon 266, North Carolina State, No. 5, handled Duke 267, Georgia, No. 6, man-tiandled Kentucky 31-7 and 7, wiped out Iowa 41-22. HANDS FULL Tennessee, No. 4, had its hands full beating Louisiana State 17-14, and Wyoming, No. 8, had trouble edging Arizona State 1613. Quarterback Harry Gonso and Mike Perry led Indiana to its highest points total in 18 yaars. Gonso ran one yard for a score and set up another with a 36 yard pass before Peny engineered the last four scores, passing 73 yards to Jade Butch-lAAoi-^i’ one. Butcher, a halfback, caught another TD pass, giving for the season. 3 run i la^rst kick) Oak^Oanlkls 1 Oak—Lamonca ' kick) Oak-WtIlB U a kick) Oak—Dixon 7 i B^FG CapMl NY-^Boozar 2 r NY-FG J. Turnar 14 NY-FG J. Turner 21 CappallattI 33 J. Tun Only in 1945, when they were No. 4, have the Hoosiers finished in the Top Ten during the 30 years of its existence. That ic'lMiiini kick)' was also the last time Indiana'-''' ’ won the Big Ten title, but it has never gone to the Rose Bowl. However, the road gets rougher now for Indiana, which hasn’t had a winning season since 1958 and has never finished higher than eighth in the conference since 1958. The Hoosiers face weak Wisconsin next Saturday, but then comes Michigan State and Minnesota and Purdue, the other two teams with 60 conference marks. PURDUE ROMP (Blind* kick) ..... ID Id 3 B-33 ...... 0 14 ♦ 7-30 NV-FG J. Turmr 3* NV-L*mm Turntr kick) , 5rl, unable to go to the Rose B()wl this year after playing there last season, routed Iowa on Leroy Keyes’ four TDs. I 35 Inicrcepllon run (J. Turiwr kick) Irom Ntmalli (J OII*r» ............... Bu(f-FG M*rc*r 47 Hou*-F6 Whiltanbom 35 Hout—Bntbard I run kick) K*n*a* Clly—44,003 0 7 t G-7 10 0 10-53 ■1S?w’i KC-Artwr (SiMwrud kick) KC-T*ylor tntrud kick) :C-^*rrelt 10 run (SItwud kick) rrwt 0 ran (Sltnorud kick) *n*0n 4T _ . - ir»*. kick) KC-Thom** (SIwwrud kick) p*u from Daw*on 073 7-17 1 run (Ptrclval kick) Chl.^prdon 24 p*** (rum Concannon (Percival kick) ROCKINGHAM, N.C. (AP) If Bobby Allison and ex-driving great Fred Lbrenzen have nothing else in conunon, they may just be the best new stock car racing team to come over the bill in quite a spell. Allison, a family man with four children, drove playboy bachelor Lorenzen’s Ford Fair-lane to an impressive victory Sunday in one of the South’s foulest big races, the American 500 at saucer-shaped Nortb Carolina Mdtor Speedway. Tbe two got together only last Monday, Lorenzen as the owner of the spanking new race car, and Allison as the driver selected to take it through its maiden voyage. It was Allison’s third factory-backed car of the season. None of the other jobs panned out. On Sunday, Allison obviously had the most potent car in the 44-car starting field that included international stars Jimmy Clark and Jochen Rindt. * * * Allison, of Hueytown, Ala., finished just over a lap shead of David Pearson of Spartanburg S.C., who took over the factory Fbrd that Lorenzen vacated because of ulcers in May. It was Pearson’s fourth second-place finished in big races this sea *144)75. 2. Da»L Ford, *10,150. SMrt«nburg* $,C., Munster, Iwl., Plyrrv AJ. Fpyt. Gordon J Mercury, $1,175, 6. Bi ■ 11.350. Moore, Chiriottc, N.C., Dodg% Soars, Ellerbe, N.C., Ford, $1, I.C., Ford, II. New Yorkers Take 38-34 Thriller; Saints Fall to Steeiers NEW YORK (AP) — At the ludfway mark in 1966 the New ‘ York Giants were a sad i-61 en route to a 1-12-1 last place finish.. This year they are 4-3 and v^ much in the running in the Century Division of the Eastern Conference in the National Football League. If Green Bay knocks off the St. Louis Cardinals tonight, the Giants will be tied for the division lead with the Cleveland Browns and the Cards. As they already have beaten all three teams in their division, the “Good Bye Allie” Choral Society no longer meets regularly at Yankee Stadium. The thrilling 38-34 victory over the Browns Sunday has to rank with the Giai)ts’ most important victories in many a year. They had not whipped Cleveland since 1963 and had lost six in a row to Blanton Collier’s men. The wild game saw the Brown8 open up a 104) lead in the first eight minutes only to have Fran Tarkenton bring the Giants out front at halftime 21-17. Tarkenton’s two touchdown passek to Joe Morrison widened the gap to 3617 after five minutes of the third period. Cleveland came back strong and narrowed it to 3634 at 2:05 of the final session. Brawn* Glanlt Flr*t down* 17 22 Ruiliino yardag* no 137 Pauing yardag* 75* 2S1 from Ryan (Grou Cla-FG Groia )1 Oxford Runners Champs, Too Chiefs Capture 'A' Regional Crown Pontiac Central’s Chiefs, fresh from their victory in the Class A state cross country regional at Farmington, now have their sights on the state championship n and they’U go after that gem Saturday at East Lansing. * * * The speedy Chiefs totaled 89 points over the Farmington Country Club course Saturday capturing the team’s first regional title since 1954. Their last state title came back in 1951. Jon Cwtello placed third far the Chiefs I twbii Larry i Larry edvered the two-mile layout in 10:11.6 with his brother at 10:19. Trailing Costello in the Chief’s I place finish In the Class B run scoring column were Larry at Royal Oak Kimball. De-Hurst (9), Bob Dickie (14), Jul'troit St. Anthony won the title Gloomis (19) and Ken Long I with 45 points. (44) TWO QUALIFY Oxford and West Bloomfield qualified in the Class B section of state regional action and they’ll be on hand for the finals at Ypsilanti Saturday. ★ * 2 Oxford won the regional crown —the school’s first — behind the efforts of Dennis Clack (4), Doug Bass (5), Jim Acheson (17), BiU Moroski (28) and Mike Sefton (32) at Fenton. BiU Drew (3), BiU Schr (6) and Jim Schnarr (7) West Bloomfield to a sec "^1to'ai3'5FtAy’r“< Pont.-AAalalln, 30 past (ram (kick (allad) Pant.-W**t, 34 p**i from Joiwi lar kick) Pont.-Malatin, 3 run (Wotier kick) FlIrrt-LaaHar, 70 kickofi ralurn (klckl------ -------------------- failed) Pont.-Waat, 43 p*>* Irom MalalinI _______ . i , MIDWIIT ppOTOALL LSAGUE Poot.-SitilSv'j Mr kick)........' . __ _ MounI Clamani I T 0 failed) i2i^<*ilktek*?*ll!5') rSSiot L T PF FA T 0 32t 5* 3 0 Royal Oak Kimball won the ‘A’ crown with 55 points, while Royal Oak Dondero came in second at 89 in the field of 20 learns. Greg Brawner of KimbaU led the field with a time of 10:06. CLASS.A AT KIMBALL Rayal 0(k klmB*ll 55) Oandara W 1. Grea Crawnar (K) 10:04) 3. Jack Whit*. Ml. daman*) 3. Rick Wagnar, Oondaro; 4. Mark Coblaigh, Frailer) 5. Nalll Dutton, Kimball) i. Slav* Staan, Lakavlawl. 7. Jack SItadar, Kimball) a. Oav* Matmrvicli, Frailer; 7. Ed Modie-Mwtkl, South Loko; 10. Tom Herrman, South Lake. I. MIkt Braftin, Lutheran W**t, 10:17; 2. Ron Afcanio, St. Anthony; 3. Bill Ortw, Wo*t Bloomflald; 4. Darroll Iwan-kovltich, Sf. Anthony; 5. CIKI JarrMt, Romeo; 4. Bill Schrader, West Bloom--'‘P SFknarr, West BItemlleld; I. Al Devil, Harper Woods; T Dev* Pugh^-- ........... - Kathy Scores Win of Alamo SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP)- -Tarkanton 15 run (Gpgolak kick) NT-FredarIckson 3 run (d^lak kick) Cle-Kelly • run (Groi* )(lck) NY—Thom** 32 pas* from Tarkanton Go«lak kick) NY—AAorrIa M pat* from Tarkenton Gowlak kick) NY-Morrl*on 12 pan from Tirkanlon Gogolak klckl Cle-FG Groi* 37 Cla—Warfield 33 pas* from Ryan (Gto-I* kick) ^Cja-jWarflald 33 pat* Irom Ryon (Cro- Ruihlng-cloloilaSiA Green 13, Ryan 4-13; New York, 'Fradarickton 13-54, Key 13-54, Tarkanton 7-37. Racflvlng-Cltvtland, WarfltW 5-124, Kelly 3^, Collins 3-57, Graon ^34) Naw York, Key 5-42, Thomas 5-110, Morrison 3-57, Jones 3-54, Fradtrlckion 3-22. Ing-«»5o.i4) o.4o>i5 •.oasis NEW TREADS target n . $9006* (retreads oniAOund tlr* bodies) llzM ^ mO Expert Engine Tune-Up Get trained specialists, low budget price, plus easy terms 11^^ ditiontd csrse Clean and space plugs; reset timing & points; adjust car-buretor & choke; clean fuel bowl, air frlter tc battery; check ignition wires, condenser, distributor cap, starter, zegulator, generator, fan belt, cylinder comp.,' battery. 4-WHEEL BRAKE DEALS THE CHRISTIAN BROTHERS BRANDY SPORTSQUIZ Cars with non sell* Cars wltb self- adlustlng brakes.^ adjusting brakeSos# 1 Pf'sysa* O We remove front wheels, clean front wheel bearings. Inspect greese seals, add Ouid, adjust brakes all 4 wheels, test NEXT Walworth then plunged over Michigan State has already OLSM’s Eaglets broke open a for his third six-pointer. The Minnesota. It hosts Indi-ecoreless battle with two sec-, 156-pound senior gained 86 travels to ond-period six-pointers. Dan yards on 12 carries. Teammate Purdue Nov. 18. This Satur-Kowalski plung^ three yards Boyer, who passed to Martinez opponent is Ohio State, and then passed 29 yards to for the first score, added the which sports a 1-2 conference Tony Koterba for the 12-0 half-final touchdown on a 16-yard time lead. • play on which he bounced off ( Sophomore fullback Jeff Zim- Van Muehfeld added » third tacklers and bulled to pay-merman scored three touch- JSI W.lertiram Gullla^ > WMps through Snow y^jike a team off huskies.- Now's a great time to own a*jaunty ‘Jeepster Commando’ Station Wagon! Snow? Forget iti Make your own tracks. Flip one lever Into 'Jeep' 4-wheal ^ive ... and make the deep stuff say “uncle'^v 4-wheel (jrive and 4-cylinder angina are standard pn all models. Add your choice of sporty options like husky V-6 with (or without) Turbo Hydra-Matic* automatic transmission; sports console; power brakes; air conditioning. Besides this station wagon, there's the 'Jeepster' Convertible with continental spare. Alto a Roadster model. And a snappy Pick-up. Smooth performers on the road ... tougher than nails in the rough. Holy Toledo-... what a carl $ cyl. U.S. nstdid. Add 13 to. for • and If t»o Jeepster’ 4-wheel drive ffun cars Ym'vg get ta drive H to believe HI See your ‘Jeop’ dealor. Chock the Yellow Pages. GOODYEAR HRVICI STORI 1370 Wids Track Drive C~4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 80, im AAMCO TRANSMISSION 150 W. Moatralm, b«t. Oaldand «nd Baidwiii, 3344951 lAUT WIIK tPRCIAU PrwfliiislMd 2.88 4»x7» 4»x8» 3*69 Ea. CIILim TILI Oli^e AoomHeal, t2”x1t**. 14'/a- ALLEN _________urjiwfjico.: TIT4HI0HLANDII0. AT WILLIAMS UKERO. ■ OMMitaWMtefPanftacAIrpeit ■ 50B44HI inM49Pied off to a 7-0 lead in the first quarter on four-yard run by tailback Dana Coin and Coin’s PAT kick, but Stevenson came back with 13 points in the second period and added its final marker in the third stanza. SCORING PASSES Quarterback Jerry Better connected on 23yard scoiiig passes to Nick Exarhas in the second period and to Roim Ochala in the fourth, and sandwiched between them was an eigfa^yard scoring jaunt by fuUback Dale Denver. Gene Walker ran two PATS. Down 237, PNH still had a chance and actually came does to winning in the fourth perlodl The Huskies had the ball inside the Stevenson 13yard line four times in the final period and couldn’t score. Their best opportunity came at the start of the final frame when the Spartans stopped them at the one-foot line. =!nt Downs PauliM .. « T Ru^RlivKlMlng' (3^l« PsiMt ifitoraglMl to1 3 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1967 C-^ ABA Squad Triumphs ® ... — ■ ' .1 . ........... $25 Lesson Teaches Muskies By tlie Aiiociated Press ^The Minnesota Muskies got th« niessage. The Muskies, fined $25 per player for not hustling in a lis-91 American Basketball Asso-I elation loss to Anaheim last ^ Thursday, did just that Sunday gight as they defeated Kentucky * * * Miimesota jumped to a 9-1 lead and never let up, building a 27-point, lead on stage of the game. Les Hunter and Mel Daniels led the Muskies with 20 and 19 points, respectively. Cotton Nash topped Kentucky with 16. In the only other ABA game, Oakland edged Anaheim 123-120. Los Angeles beat Baltimore 118-105, Cincinnati outgunned San Diego 108-99 and San Francisco hammered Chicago 125-105 in the only scheduled National Basketball Association action. Los Angeles used good passing and the shooting o fArchie Clark, Elgin Baylor and Tommy Hawkins to beat the Btdkts. Clark pored in 38 points, BiQrlor 20 and Hawkins 19. Kevin Lw-ghery led Baltimore with 21. NO BIG ‘O’ Cincinnati didn’t have Oscar Robertson, who is injured, but Crowd Records Rise in AFL NEW YORK (AP) - Foitt American Football League games attracted a record 190,-320 fans Sunday, an average of 47,580 per game, another new mark. ★ ♦ ★ The San Diego game at Oakland drew 53,474, making the Raiders the fifth team this year to set an individual team reebrd. Boston at New York attracted 62,784, Denver at Kansas City 42,004 and Buffalo at Houston 30,060. Royals didn’t need him against the expansioii San Diego club. Guy Rodgers took up some of the slack caused by the Big O’s absence by scori^ 21 pdnts and handb% out 14 assists: Jo*-ry Lucas sowed 23 for Cincinnati, and J(dumy Grran got 21 for San Diego. San Francisco had little trouble in handing winlesa Chica go its eighth straight loss. Jim King got 26 points, Rudy LaRus-80 21 and Nate Thurnoond 22 as the Wattlors won flieir fourth in a row. Keith Erickson scored 20 for Chicago, which played without the Injured Erwin Mueller and McCoy McLemore. * * ★ Oakland used a fast break for its victory. The Oaks were paced by Lavem Tart’s 33 points, Willie PorterV 27 and Wes Bialosuknla’s 25. Les iSel-vage, who hit on five three-pSAnt field goals, led Anaheim with 29 points. Steve Chubin sidded 26. Results, Entries DRC Results --“w-i- ... «ff. atSwi". E. Orluom .nfry. NBA SCORES “Tit iverside H.ST. WHEN YOU BUY THE FIRST 6.50-13 TUBELESS BLACKWALL AT OUR REGULAR TRADE-IN PRICE PLUS 1.80 F.E.T. TUBELESS BLACKWALL SIZES REQ. PRICE EACH 2HD TIRE ONLY PUIS F.I.T. EACH 6.50-13 $20*., 14* 1.80 7.75/7.50-14 7.75/6.70-15 $25* IT* 2.21 2.29 S.25/B.00-14 S27* H* _ 2.33 8.55/8.50-14 $29* HI* 2.86 *Wilh trade-in tira* off your cor. Whitewall* $3 mora aa lOTb : CO THREE COLORS TTTT?. PONTIAC ^Q» ^967 THREE COLORS Everyday Low Prices * Frieudly PEOPLES FOOD MARKETS 7.. *ub«. *v...I.M orchard LK. M. 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INSTANT PILLSBURY ■ , ' ll IIA FLOOR C—8 THE PONTIAC PB£SS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 80, 1967 Report Has Big Plans for Future of Detroit DETROIT (AP) - The future, of Detroit in the aftermath (A the July riot may be bound up In two thick volumes currently being pored over by a committee formed to supervise reconstruction of the neighborhoods damaged In the violence. It Is Cavanagh's report, compile for him by two men, ahd submitted by the mayor to the New Detroit Committee, which he has named to supervise planning redevelopment of areas damaged hi the July 23-30 riot The violence claimed 43 lives The TSO-page volumes repre-and caused damage estimated sent what Mayor Jerome P. Ca-vanagh calls “a milestone report fw Detroit on the road to a stronger, safer, healthier city in all its parts.” He said it could lead to “a city of good nel^bors regardless of race, color or creed” and ‘‘will serve to mark the directions in which we must move to achieve this goal.” Writer Famed for Historical Novels Dies Nov- AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) -elist Edison Marshall, gained fame wjth a aeries of historical novels, died night at bis Augusta home. He was 73. Marshall, who had been in declining health for several years turned to novels in 1941 after many years writer. His first book, “BeBjamln Blake,” published in 1941, was a favorite of American troops overseas In World War II. Later works included “Yankee Pasha” and “The Viking,' which were made into movies. WORLD TRAVEUm A native of Rensselaer, Ind Marshall was a graduate of the University of Oregon and world traveler. He first came to Augusta as an Army lieutenant in World War 1. He married the former Agnes Sharpe Flytbe of Augusta and made Georgia bis home. Marshall’s short stories appeared in such magazines as Collier’s, the Saturday Evening Post and Cosmopolitan. A short stoiy written in 1921, “The Heart of UtUe Shikari,” won the 0. Henry Prize and turned up 36 years later as one of the stories reprinted In a Russian magazine, “Around the World.” SOVIET INVirAlTON Marshall, who was invited by the Soviets to submit a personal message to accompany the story, described the story as one “of India under the BrMsh with very little political bay to be made out of it.” Funeral arran^enients were incomplete. Besides his widow, Marshall is survived by a aon, Edison Jr., Aupstat a daughter, Mrs. Frank R. Motley of Vlnlnia Beach, Va.; a sister, Mrs. Don cruitment of civilians into a new at more than $80 million. * * * The report proposes a huge program for a variety of goals— improved riot control, restora tion of areas wracked by violence, increased housing for low-income families, expankion of the job market. It does not, however, carry a price tag. Neither is there a timetable. Richard Strichartz, former city controller, and Fred Romanoff, former executive secretary to the mayor, com|dled the report, which called for new tactics and some revamping of antipoverty programs. DETAILS CONFIDENTIAL Strlcharfz said detaUs of fht riot control planning could not be revealed, for security reasons, but he specified the following proposals: * * ♦, • TVo operational headquarters for agencies fighting a riot, one fm operatiims, the dther fof support action, each of which could function independently if the other was eliminated from actkdi. • Increased day-today watch over critical but vulnerable installations. • Improvement of communications between police and fire departments and other agencies that would be involved. • Recruiting additional auxiliary policemen to back up regular officers in the field and at command posts. • Riot control maneuvers at periodic intervals to keep personnel up to standards. ORGANIZATIONAL SHIFTS Among the organizational shifts proposed by the report were these: • Merging the Human Resources Development Committee, the Conunission on Children and Youth, and the Mayor’s Cunmittee on Skid Row Problems into one organization, with a director and a seven-member executive committee to run it. • Combining the City Planning Commission and Gty Housing Commission under a group to be called Gty Development Agency, possibly to some 14 city departments— health, public works and others. • Consolidation of all job placement programs, establishment of small job training centers aqiecially in high schools, and creation of a citywide job exploitation office to find em-polyment for skilled and semiskilled workers. Other proposals called for re- Colvig of Templeton, Calif.; and ttiKS grandchildren. life Photographer's Detroit Exhibit Set A panorama of pictures by Life Magazine photc^rapher Alfred Eisenstaedt opens at the Detroit Institute of Arts on Nov. 8. > This exhibit spans his almost four decades as S photographer, his growth as an artist and his understanding of and empathy with hunun nature. Considered to be the “father” of modem photojournalism, he has worked on more than 1,700 assignments in his 30 years as a photographer for Life. Johnson Visits Ranch After Trip to Mexico^ JOHNSON CITY, Tex. (AP)lof Juarez and a quiet Sunday i than on the other side of the — President Jidmson was at his with his famfly, border, ranch today after a ^eek«id| Johnson and Wife Lady Birti! As part of the Giamizal settle-that encompassed s motorcade drove 19 miles torn their home'™">(> ^ United States turned through the Mexican bo^ city near Johnson Gty to Sunday over some 500 acres to Mexico, at ^ ' ' Motorists Sfill Lose Ayoiding Drunk Tests LANSING (AP)-D^nk drlv-,ers, there are three ways you can avoid being tested, for M-cohol if you’re stopped by police In SUCCESS STORY—Twice a high school dropout and now a persevering college student Recently cited for achievement, Cherie, 22 and divorced with a 9-year-old boy, maintains a three-point average at Oakland Community College. This transition from the welfare roles to a professional woman was made with the help and guidance and professional counseling of the Pontiac Urban League, a United Fund agency. State Senators to Probe Trips to See Faith Healer Any way you lose. I A ★ * I You can be dead. You can be unconscious. You can refuse. I If you are found in either of the first two conditions, a policeman doesn’t have the right to test you for alcohol undef the ‘implied consent” law Wdlitih goes into effect Thursday. UCENSE REVOCATION If you refuse a test, the chances are pretty good the secretary of state will revoke your driver’s license for 90 days er two years. Under the controverMal law, which has suiwlved’^a United States Supreme Court test, a driver is considered to h given his consent for the test when apidying for a Michigan driver’s license. DETROT (UH) - A state Sedate investigating committee probably will be set up this week to look Into the recent pilgrimage of a group of local crippled people to a Filipino I faith healer. * * * Sen. John McCauley, D-Wy-andotte, said the' organizer of the pilgrimage to the Philippines has agreed to testify before the five-man committee. Joseph Rnffner, 47, the steel-otter from soborban Wyandotte who organized the trip, n he would* “gladly” group to be called “pidlce neigh-borh^ communication units”, based on police precinct boundaries to serve as channels Of liaison between the conununl-ty and the police department; payment of replacement value, rfther than the market value of homes taken by urban renewal; study of state insurance laws with a view toward determining whether changes are needed to protect riot-prone areas; tablishment of an agency to promote rental or sale of “used homes” to low4ncome families, and support of' an open bouring proposal The New Detroit Committee has the document under study as part of its deliberations. There has been no Indication when it vrill give its estimate of the report’s proposals. CAMPUS! THEATRE IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC, FE 4-4436 (Formerly the Forum) HffiMt Dailir - 0|Mii 11:46 SHOW STMTS AT IMS CpjmRMUS J NSW SMOWHIi PSIIIA11IIII AiULTS! 1st RUN M PONTIAO AREA Mia Has the Flu, Will Return to Work This Week LOS ANGELES (AP) - Mia Fa^ow has nothing mere than a case of the flu and should be ready to go back to work this week, says the press representative for Miss Farrow’s bus-band, Frank Sinatra. The agent said Miss Farrow was to arrive in Los Angeles ahortly from New York where she visited Sinatra. * * ♦ The actress became ill week while working on the film ‘Rosemary’s Babjr’’ at Para mount. She was given Thursday and Friday off and flew to New York where Sinatra is making ‘The Detective” for 20th Century-Fox. She will join the cast of ‘The Detective” after finishing her role at Paramount. testify before the committee, McCauley said. McCauley Introduced a resolution asking that the investigating cominittee be formed. It will probably be enacted when the Senate reconvenes Wednesday, he said. , Wayne County Prosecutor William L. Cahalan is conducting another investigation into the trip by the 111 persons. SOME CCHMPLAIN Cahalan said he decided on his investigation without a tw-mat complaint. McCauley’s caU for investigation came after some of the pilgrims complained they had been taken for an expensive ride, he said. ★ w * The trip early this month was billed as a healing session with Antonio (Dr. Tony) AgpM, who reportedly performed painless surgery with his bare hands. Several of the pilgrims later complained they were chMged high prices, subjected td sanltaiy conditions and left' pal church in Fredericksburg. The sermom on the “new morality” was delivered by tile Rev. Miltoei Btown; a private pilot who said he flew for Johnson several times during the 1990 campaign. The RUv. Mr. Brown chaplain pt the Texas Military Institute ft SaB Antonio. ★ ★ ★ The Johnsons flew to their ranch from El Paso Saturday after jototing Mexico’s l^wsideflt pustavo Diaz Qrdaz to celebrate settlement of the 100-year-old Chamizal border dispute. These festivities included a drive by the two chief executives through downtown Juarez, across the Rio Grande from El Paso. Standpig in an open car, they were showered with confetti, flowers and cries of “Viva” by tens of thousands of Mexicans. Their drive through El Paso drew friendly crowds, too, but their numbers were far fewer /i:5EIKEECO restex'ing land that the United.^ ' ina the CivUf* War when the ------------- marking Rio Grande changed j course. t MHHITI MNHiTI Mil 2 Raytl HURON T0NICHTATIF.M.ONLY TbeMiistPepiiiirPiGhireOfOurliiMl WINNER OF i ACADEMY AWARDS RODCERSiriHAMMeRSTElN'S B0M»Tyi9E j«u*AM)REWS •“*“w»«*PlUMMER WED., SAT., SUN, at 1i30~4i4ll->i;00 IMON., TUES., THURt., FBI. fit 8 P.M, Only Starts WED. '^DOCTOR ZHIVA60” BOX OFFICE OPENS Z OO P M SIEVE ANN-. :McQUEENMAR6R£I‘ YOUR NEWS QUIZ PART I - NATIONAL AND INT6RNATIONAL Give yourself 10 points for each correct answer. 1 Once again the question of Inflation Is being, discussed. One definition of Inflation Is a sharp general (chooae one: rise, drop) In prices. 2 The govemnumt’s Census Bureau announced that the United .States population will pass the. million mark in November. a-179 b-200 c-225 3 News stories discussed Britain's attempt to beconiw the seventh full member of the ..... a-UN Disarmament Commission b-Southeast Asia Treaty Organization c-£uropean ConunOn Market 4 The British Prime Minister’s residence was linked to the Kremlin in Moscow through a communications "hot line." What other two nations have "hot line" connections with the Kremlin? 5 A scientist told of the discovery of another ^‘Dead Sea Scroll." The scrolls are ancient religious writings from the area that was known a-Palestine b-Gaul c-Persia PART II - WORDS IN THE NEWS Take 4 points lor each word that you can match with ita correct meaning. 1... a-hold oneself baick fgom doing something 2... b-glft to be used for some purpose 3.. o-harmlng another to get even 4.. d-meeting to discuss something 5.. ...parley , e-yearly PART III - NAMES IN THE NEWS Take 6 points for names that you can correctly match with the clues. 1..Abe ForUs 2.....Nelaoa BockefeUer a-President, United Arab Republic b-Premiar, Israel 3...Gamal Abdel Mas- o-Governor ofNewYork 4...,.Vaao« Bartke 5....Levi Eshikol VOL.XVII No.8 d^Asaoelate Juetlee, U.flL fii^reme Court . e-Senator from Indiana >VEC, The Pontiac Press Monday, Oct. 30, 1967 Match word clues with their corresponding pictures or symbols. 10 points for each correct answer. nsq Prince Norodom Sihanouk la leader here USSR Is building Its first one anniversary of Protestantism’s beginning Is being observed i- United Auto Workers President Walter Reu-ther NAURU site of new fighting between Israel and UAR 6.... Senate group to study Insurance practices for the^e 7.... ' V this tiny land will become nation. It was announced Soviets prepare for anniversary of Communist Revolution Undersecretary of State Nicholas Katzen-bach 10....i return of this area to Mexico ends dispute with U.S. HOW DO YOU RATE? (Ss«elMb8ldserQulaSs#.»tely) 71 to 90 pelnis - OeoA 9)te100peln>t-TOPSCORE! 61 to 70 |winH - Calr. 91 to 90 point* - Excollont. 60 or Undw7?7- tfnmi! FAMILY DISCUSSION QUISTION Syou kgree with Piresldent Johnson’s plan to se taxes? Why or why not? THIS WIIK’i CHALLENGE! MO ICOil' The Federal Reserve Board’s main Job involves the Armed Forces reserves. True or False? Save This hroctice STUDENTS Valuable Reference ANSWERS sMJINMTIVir.) (I-OI *:)*6 if)-i *V'S II Y. ‘f Z M l :/I(l6'IOt||4iAK ‘l*S *‘»'Z ‘III XMVrl ‘II J,MVd y-g isJists’ |WI«|/1 ‘jJuiu.4-1 loina-1 t| THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1967 C—9 D.C Battle on Caltfoinia Curbs Auto Exhaust Fight Smolders WASHINGTON (AP) -A proposal'to curb Cdifomia’s special authority to set stringent rules against auto exhaust pollution has generated a bitter battle on Capitol Hill. The dispute has been waged tion, during a two-week perioii in which southern California had three “smog alert” days. TIm station broadcast a 40-part documentary on smog. “I feel sure," said Rep Rsinecke, R-Calif., verbally for several weeks, | the congressmen see that 15 of mainly between congressmenjus (all from southern Califor- HALLOWEEN PLEA—"§ring us bs"k alive” is the message this group of masked trick-and-treaters depict to motorists who will be on roads Halloween night. The Automobile Club of Michigan points out that on Halloween, almost every school-age youngster in the state will be exposed to traffic during hours of darkness when most fatal accidents happen. Children caught up in excitement will add to the usual nighttime dangers as they carelessly dart across streets. from California and Michigan, and is expected to move onto the House floor next Thursday. ★ ★ ★ A curious coalition of states rights Republicans and liberal Democrats is lining up against the proposal by Rep. John D. Dingell, D-Mich., which is part of an otherwise noncontrover-sial air pollution bill. As a symbol of their determination the Californians plan to dump an estimated 215,000 letters from their constituents outside the House Wednesday. The ietters poured in to South Is Closing Gap in Racial Equality By WHITNEY M. YOUNG JR. Executive Director National Urban League Slowly but surely, change is coming to the South. Many of file overt signs of segregation vanished with the passage of the civil rights laws, and the battle for true equality is coming more j and more to resemble the fight for better living conditions and an end to de facto segregation in the North. One significant sign of change came recently with the conviction of the murderers of three I civil rights workers in Mississippi. For the first time, a Mississippi jury brought in a conviction against racial terrorists, indicating that the people of the South will no longer allow the ex-I tremists in their midst to speak for them. I Another indicatiMi of change is the number YOUNG of new Urban Leagues in file South. This is an important indicator of change because an Urban League can only be formed by an interracial codimlttee of local people. In g^er to form Urban Leagues to help close the racial gap. I recently visited Columbia, S.C., to help inaugui-ate the new Urban League there, and I saw for myself the change in attitudes — and some of the problems — in the new South. -e -w Perhaps the biggest change in attitude is in the business community. The South has always been poorer than other sections of the country, and there is an awareness of the importance of attracting outside industry and its skilled manager and technicians can only be attracted by cities with good schools and a good racial climate. STOP BRAIN POWER DRAIN I met with Columbia’s business leaders and was Impressed by their understanding of the importance of racial progress. They know that the South will always trail the rest of the country so long as its bright young people graduate from its colleges and then move north to take jobs in New York and Washington. Economic and racial progress can keep these young people home, and it can stop the drain of manpower and brain (Mwer to other regions. A high point of my trip was the tour of two predominantly Negro areas. They are proof that the new South will have to deal with some serious problems before it can move ahead. I saw rotting shacks with peeling roofs and walls — conditions worse than some of the villages I’ve seen in Vietnam. No country can call itself civilized and still permit people to live in such squalor. Despite the intolerable housing conditions of the city’s poor, there is very little public housing. No housing has been built by nonprofit groups, although the federal govenunent has programs vdiich will advance such groups money at very low interest rates to build new housing for low-income families. •k -k In fact. South Carolina and the rest of the South are far behind in making use of federal money and programs to which they are entitled. nia) have been getting so much mail against the amendment, they’ll know it’s a serious matter.” ★ ★ ♦ The Republican Policy Committee last week endorsed the Senate-passed bill, which thorizes $428.3 million in federal speeding over the next three yeare DingelTs amendment, adopted by the House Commerce Committee over the objection of two California Democratic members, would withdraw Senate-passed provision permitting CalHornia to cimtinue its KLAC, a Los Angeles radio sta- separate, stricter emission enacted a year ahead of the federal ones. The ^endment would require C^omia, if it wants stricter standards, to persuade the secretary of Hedth, Education- and Welfare to prescribe stricter standards. But the secretary would retain adnllnistra-tive control over the state’s program. “The House committee has run for cover under attack from the auto industry,” charged Rep. B. F. Sisk, IKlalif., when the bill was before the House Rules Committee last week. “I resent very much the charge that we have run for cover,” replied Chairman Harley 0. Staggers, D-W.Va., of the Commerce Committee. “We thought we were being very fair about it.” Later in the week, Rep. Lionel Van Deerlin, D-Calif., accused car makers of trying to reduce (xpitrols to a minimum. “For far too long,” be said, “the automobile industry, swaggering through our House office buildings with high-handed lobbyists—some of them paid up to $100 an hour—has sought to impose auto management’s selfish interests over the judgment of the American public.” * * * Van Deerlin and Rep. John E.: Moss, £>-Calif., plan to seek removal of the provision and have been joined by the rest of California’s delegation. k k it Noting the hill states, “The prevention and control of air pollution is tlw lyimary responsibility of states and local gov-ernmrat,” they asked in a statement appoided to the (fommerce Committee report: “Are we now to tell California that we don’t quite trust her to run her own program, that big government should do it in-' stead?” I Measure any distance accurately at walking spaed Mon., Tuot., Thurt. and Fri., 8:30-5. Wad. 'HI 8 P.M. BLUE PRINT GO. 1034 W. Huron, 2 BIkt. W. of Tolograph MEET SOME OF FARMER JACK'S LUCKY CUSTOMERS WHO PLAYED AND WON! "ITS nAcm& vurm CASH FBIZE ISnHmiS! Get into the gamel Thousands of big cash prizes are still to be won! Start now! WATCH THE THRILL-PACKED Horse Races On TV Channel 9 EVERY SATURDAY NIQHT ^ AT 8 O'clock • Free Qamo Tickets from Farmer Jack • No Purchase Needed • Thousands of prizes— You Can Win, Too! 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Can 10« make A Farmer Jacic'a U.S. CHOICE CHUCK ROAST LB. 49f SMOKED PICNICS ^ 39* *'^48* BeMon Style PORK BUTTS Small loan SPARERIBS GRADE A, TENDER BONELESS TURKEY ROLLS LB. f 78^ fdtsH produce^ FLORIDA THIN SKIN FUL-O-JUICE ORANGES i= 49^ o- SMMaldFienn A 1-Lh. e«ae OCEAN PERCH 3 FRieeS KFFUTIVl THRU SUN., NOV. • Sorry, No Sal»$t0 DmmUrt 4 FARMER JACK'S IN YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD MOST STORES OPEN DAILY 10-10 SATURDAY 9-10 SUNDAY 11-5 SOUTH TELEGRAPH At Square Lake Road SOUTH GLENWOOD At Parry—Pontiac PONTIAC MALL On South Telegraph DIXIE HIGHWAY Drayton Plains ‘ c—10 TWTii T>nvTTAP. phwrs. MriNTiAV. nr.TnuRR an. loor I Jacoby on Bridge NOKTH SI «A108 V J109753 ♦ ASS ♦ 2 ^ST EAST 43 4K7S2 4K86 VQ42 ♦ Q3 4X1096 4QJ107654 4K8 SOUTH (D) 4QJ984 ¥A ♦ J742 ’ 4A93 East-West vulnerable West North East SonU 14 Pass 2 V Pass 2 4 Pass 3 4 P«ss Pass Pass Opening lead—4Q By OSWALD AND JAMES JACOBY Oswald: “How about some columns on typical good rubber bridge Jim “For start here’s hand I watched recently. It was the second hand of the rubber. East and West had made game on the first JACOBY Oswald: “North and South bid Iwautifully. North tried to get to game, and South looked at his 12 high card points and quit at three — which is all he make.” Jim: “Actnaily Sooth made on overtrick and asked i whether he or his parti should have bM Bie game.” Aslrolosical ■r lYDNSV OMARK Sir TsmSSV "ms sriM mtn csninli hit Snlbir . . . atfisligy sttaw Ihs wty." ARIES (Msr. 21 - Apr. M): Tenslor continust io dominsts. You mty flnO vpurtsi* boemnB expsrlsnct, sulhorlly^ Pull hi your homt. Litton, tmllo ~~ wilt your lum. Otin thoum If you th ^fSjRoS ■ Oswald: “Where did the defense slip—or am 1 overlooking something?” Jim: “You haven’t overlooked anything. The defense did slip. South won the club lead with his ruffed a club, returned to his hand with the ace of hearts, led his last club and ruffed with dummy’s ten. “East overruffed and led a trump. S 0 u t h was in dummy with the ace of trumps. He cashed the ace of diamonds led a second diamond. East clattered up with the king to drop his partner’s queen, and the jack of diamonds became the tenth trick for declarer.' Oswald: “East’s play of the diamond king is tjiiical of what I call rubber bridge carelessness. East could see that declarer was sure of his contract and had lost interest. “A duplicate player would Q—The bidding has been; WMt North 14 Pass IV Pass 2V 7 You, South, hold: 4AJ76 ¥2 4KQ43 4K(kl09 What do you do pow? A—^Double. There was a time when this would be a double. Today have—a hand with which yon did not double earlier beeanse yon held noth- have seen that he had nothing gain by playing his kh^ of diamonds and would have let the trick ride around to his partner’s Jim: “A really good duplicate player would. I am not certain that the same play wouldn’t oc-at some tables if thip hand were played in duplicate.” i^NT'lSlSyl*'- Ju^‘ 20): You 1 ?srJri3“w“ AwwTHk ”8»!ce, •uNiorlty-----—-r. -------i sonw of owsrtfMu pulli you lliroyoli minor erUlo. Accanf on homo, wurlfy, lonfemim Wrt-noj*^ K c.^uy louriMy witnout knowh _ 22): Financial art m ipottight. Agrat-manro undaritandlna nacaasary bafw^ "*ull82' ISopfc 23 - Oct. 22): Pronuiy In finnocflon wllh tonal monouvtr l> poooiEto. Bo calm, Daal with oklar pcr-•ont. Raallia aoma may ba Ml In thair wayt. Don't try to cnanpo tho world “''ftolfAo (Oett 21 - Nov. 2m Rorom-mSSIVaRIUS (Nov. Squirrel Hunter Kills Mountain Lion Pa. (AP) -John Gallant went hunting squirrels Sunday and came home with a mountain lion. He flushed two of the big cats from beneath some brush, killed the smaller one and wounded the larger. Albert Simpson, the district game protector, said it was probably the first mountain lion killed in this northwestern Pennsylvania region since the animals were populous here 100 years ago. The one Gallant killed was 5 feet 3 inches long and weighed 48 pounds, Simpson said. Hunt for Boys on Raff Ends Close to Home ise tof- '^WELL HOPEWELL, Va. (J’i -Robert Williams and Lacey Hall, both 14, pushed off on a raft into the James River Friday morning and didn’t come ba^ that day, nor the next. All day Saturday, Civil Air Patnd plaiies and rescue squad-men searched the river for miles around. Sunday they were joined by the Coast Guard. And, at 10 a.m., Robert Lacey turned up—three blocks from their homes here-wondering what all the commotion was about. w * ★ Why, said the boys, th^y had merely floated their raft to a ■mall island and stayed two nights. Then they rode the raft homeagaiii. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1967 d-11 Doctors Learn Lessons Treating Riot Victims WALK UGHTLY, CARRY A BIG STICK - Two window washers tackle the delicate task of washing the glass in the overhead enclosed walkway connecting the Hilton and May EWtF department store in Denver. The building in the background is the Denver mint. iPeople in the News By the Associated Press Norman Thomas, six-time Socialist candidate for president, says he expects “to shut down an active life’’ by the end of the yc^r. But Thomas, who will be 83 next month, told an intepa-tional student-travel conference in New York yesterday that speech was not his last public appearance. Practically blind and suffering from arthritis and heart trouble, ’Thomas’ voice was vigorous once he took the podium. He said demonstrators should be washing the American flag, not burning it. “I don’t like the sight of young people burning the flag of my country, the country I love.’’ Thomas criticized U.S. policies on Vietnam, race relations and antipoverty programs. March of Dimes Child Named Four-yeaiM>kl Timothy Fa«s, who wants to be Tarzan when he grows np, is the Nattoiial. March of Dimes child for 1968. The blond boy, from Whittier, CaNf., was bom with an open spine and clubfoot and has been treated at a March of Dimes birth defects center since birth. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Faas. Strike Postpones Ebon TV Interview Israeli Foreign Minister Abba Kban called off a television interview yesterday rather than cross picket lines of the National Association of Broadcast Employes and Technicians. Eban, in New York to attend U.N. sessions, had agreed to appear on “Issues and Answers,’’ an American Broadcasting Co. show. When informed by a member of the Israeli U.N. delegation that NABET was on strike against ABC, Eban told the network he was postponing his appearance. THOMAS We recommend caiaiine sportswear. (irs only fair. They ncommond us.) So do a dozen other leading clothiers. They know our exclusive Sanitone process will make their clothina look better longer. How about giving us a chance to earn your endorsement, too? Today. CHICAGO (AP)-It isn’t good planning to put a wound^ rioter in a hm^tal bed next to a woimded pMcunan. That was one of the lessons a group of doctors said they learned iti treating victims of last summer's Detroit riots. ★ ★ ★ There were no reported instances of actual aggression between wounded rioters and policemen inside the hospital W the doctors became wary when, in making bed-to - bed checks. they heard rioters express hostile remarks. ★ ★ A . Then the practice was fol-fowed of keeping apart as much as possible any patients’ who had animosity or potential animosity toward each other. EXPERIENCES REVIEWED Seven physicians from the Wayne State University School of Medicine who served at Detroit General Hospital during the July riots gave a review of their experiences and their rec- ommendations for the future in an article Sunday in the current Journal of the American Medical Association. They concluded that the usual hospital disaster plans must be revised to meet the special circumstances that arise in a riot. * ★ * The Detroit hospital’s emergency room treated 1,475 patients July 23-28, including’ 121 patients with giUishot. wounds, 332 patients with lacerations or stab wounds and 275 others with such types of trauma as blunt instrument injuries or burns. The remainder had nonsurgical problems. Another lesson learned from the riot was that a hospital’s emergency supplies must be gathered early. Once a civil disturbance gets into high gear, there’s no leaving or entering the hospital located in the trouble zone. SUPPLY PROBLEMS Another significant development was a “rapid and fairly sudden influx’’ of patients with diabetes and epilepsy, after the first 48 hours of rioting. The doctors attributed this to the inaccessibility of various drugs and personal neglect during a period of danger and excitement. Unlike such disasters as tornadoes or major fires, the Detroit hospital was under the threat of potential sniper fire and in need of stronger internal security measures during the riots. KROGER BRINGS BACK If Pontiac^sOnly AuthorizedSANITONE Service Center MORE’ urn PRICES PLUS TOP VALUE STAMPS! USDAf’”' U.S. CHOICE < OR STEAK SMALL LEAH GORDON’S ROLL PORK SPARE RIBS....'.;S9' SAUSAGE...2..1.79* JUHBO POLISH SHOULDER CUT SAUSAGE........'.’59* LAMB R0AST,..'.'.59* CENTER CUT RIB PORK CHOPS LOIN CHOPS OLD FASHIONED BONELESS HAM SERVE N’ SAVE WHOLE Oft HALF BACON 59 Limit o«. 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H67 1?^ at Kragar Dat t Boat Mleh MORE HALLOWEEN CANDY ■ Valid thru Wad., Nav. 1. 1967 at Kragar Dat t Boat Mleh .d KROGER STORE HOURS MON. THRU WED. THURS. THRU SAT. OPEN 0^ IWSeM. OPEN 4^ 7a.m. C—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 80, 1967 HASTINGS-ON-HUDSON, N.y. (AP) -'Showman Billy Rose was laid to final rest Sunday in a costly granite mausoleum along with mementos depicting his rise from a shorthand reporter to a Broadway impresario and benefactor.* Some 60 persons stood outside in windswept Westchester Hills Cemeetry to hear Rabbi Edward E. Klein eulogize Rose as the embodiment of the Ameri-an success story.” VIEW CHILDREN’S BODIES - Mr. and Mrs. James Richardson, assisted by friends, view the bodies of their seven children who died from poisoning Thursday at Arcadia, Fla. The children werfe buried yesterday in a mass funeral. 7 Young Poison Victims Are Buried ' ■ t ARCADIA, Fla. (AP) — Seven, Funeral Director Eugene; surance company said Richard young victims of insecticide poi- Hixson said the costs of the fu-json did not have money for the soning—whose life insurance'neral, including five hearses I premium, about $4, and was unpolicies for |1,000 each were not | and burial plots, was $2,000. | able to borrow it. The agent in force because their father | About half that amount has said the policies were not in ef-couldn’t borrow the $4 pre-been donated to a fund, includ- feet until the premium was mium—were buried Sunday aft-jing $189 from a Saturday night paid. er a $2,000 funeral. As their'high school fOMball game. i ----^----- small white satin-covered cof-| goth Richardson and his wife paternal grandmother, Ma^ar-^g—died Wednesday after eating! ST. CLAIR SHORES (AP)—A et Bivens of Jacksonville, Ha., a lunch 9f grits, beans, rice and fire of undetermined origin S.StiXSSl started in the front room of a home Sunday About one-fourth of the 6,000 of Sheriff Frank E. Cline anJjfjJ people in this small southwest State Atty. Frank . Schaub have Florida citrus and cattle town questioned 30 persons in an at- hack bedroom, police said, crowded into the sweltering tempt to learn how thf children high school gymnasium for the obtained the deadly insecticide cried: ‘‘Goodby, little darlings Goodby, little darlings! funeral. Iparathion. RAdCACHE& * * * I able said Richardson had James Richardson, 32, father given him a sworn statement in TINf |ON »inui;v ibbitatiimi of the children, a black cloth which he told of arranging for common Kidn?' " nia*"er urS! heart sewn to his jacket sleeve, sobbed loudly during the service. His wife, Annie Mae, 29, stared blankly at the semicircle $1,000 double indemnity policies tloni make many men and (eel tenae and nervous from frequent, burning or Itching urination night and day. Secondanly, you may lose sleep and have Headaraie, Backi burning or Itching urination and day. Secondar‘ on each child's life Tuesday night. Richardson believed the policies were in effect, Cline of coffins, each toj^ied with a said, spray of carnations aqd roses. However, the agent for the irf-eSfinV™rn.Ge?cYSTraa““™^^^ ________ . CYSTEX’usually brings relaxing comfort by curbing Irrltn------------------------quickly OPEN MR. - FBI. il 9 PJH. Carpet your kitchen! Town ’n’ Terrace Carpeting ^ ouPMnMir*^^ Ozite introduces the soft, warm, quiet tile that never needs waxing or polishing . . . because it's carpet! 16 colgrs. Simple to install. CERAMIC TILE 1x1 39® sq. ft. 4Vix41A 39® and Up Plastic Wall tile PAINT SPECIAL ' MAC>0-LACfjlil.'‘M ’5s!i. ^41!.. •2a. CEILING TILE 12x12 plain . . . 1IK.. 12x12 acoustical 13®.., 12x12 styrofoam . 15®.., MAC-O-LAC LATEX ROYAL BOND UTEX ENAMEL iiND SEMI-OLOSS OWENS CORNING FIBERGUS CEILING TILE (pebble whits) 15 Solid Vinyl Tilo 12x12 . Afic SPECIAL/SI® rIibberRle I >«• 13l Showman Billy Rose Laid to Final Rest I 075 W Huuui St Phone 334-9957 If You Don't Buy From Us, We Both Lose Money! TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! Among those at the simple ceremonies were Rose’s two sisters and their husband, actor John Payne, author-director Elia Kazkn, song wiiter- p]ayWright HaroM Rdm e and playwright Paul Osborne.- No one was barred and a number of sightseers were present, w * * Rose died Feb. 10,1966, at age 66, but his $50-million estate is still in litigation.' His body had been in a temporary vault in an Rose’s sisters,' Polly Gottlieb of Beverly Hills, Calif., and Mir-argument over the cost of his memwial. iam Stem, who lives here, are omtesting the leaVing of the bulk of ^ estate to the Billy Rose Foundation, wUch he established in 1968. Last July,'Surrogate S. Samu: el. DeFalco ruled Rose Was within in his rights'in leaving the money to the foundatipn. The sisters have filed an appi^. SAVE 50% ON PORCH AWNINGS PORCH AWNINGS INGLUDI SNOWLOAD GUARANm PORCH AWNING $TO70 COMPIITEIY mSTAllED Now Pnly your home a AWNING NO R«9. $97.50 SAVE $43 MOST COMPIITI SniCIION TO CMOOIB PROM I Him • AN FOLDING^;,;!-" PICTURE WINDOW ^;»S9 ALUM. AWNING - Buy Now . . . Save! No Money Down-Pay Nothing ’til Spring! Your credit is good at Sun Control 48" S-100 Aluminum DOOR CANOPY 20' Drop—38' Projectiog smsusb $24.70 Mifwls Fiimh Ahiminimi VIIDOVS IN B04IS Will never pit, rust or tirnish «ML Giant Size 8' x 2(T S-100 TRAIIIR AWNING *®*t Installed with 4 decorative vlQQsO white aluminum columns Only ■ # # Let us show you wlw Sun Control is by far your best biw. Como in, er call today for a FREE, no obligation homo I ya«r supply •* REYNOLD'S ^ 1ai«m. foil laVteilors ROOFING • GUTTERS • STONE, BRICK AND CEMENT WORK OPEN MON. thru FRI. 9-8 P.M. SAT. and SUN. 9-5 P.AA. FE 54452 ^400 W. Eigtit MHt Rd. IKi Mile West of Talepaph QUAMYT • DHTIPIQnWI |!i!l'I i IM EastSida , Detroit I Downriver I Birmingham Southfleldl Toledo | Patoskey PR. 14910)444-12111AV. 5-3Sf5| Royal Oak El.7.2700|CH,M3611347-9442 BUT DIRECT- We Desiqn • We Manufacture • We Instoll • We Guorantee it "tHAT At!" iNCHnat-up ON TOUT At any aga, you nood rttuior, daily oxarciaa to halp you koap tha trim, eonfidaiit loo.h of euccoes. You cpn got it AT HOLIDAY HEALTHI CALL THE HOLIDAY SPA NEAREST YOU NOW OR DROP BY TODAY . . . visitors welcome ITS FUN TO KEEP FIT! LOOK GREAT aiid FEEL GREAT WAKE-UP REGARDLESS OF YOUR AGEI eliminoite the "middle" mdn LOSE - BAIN .. RE-1HIBPBRTIGN THE SPA (HYDRA-SWIRL POOL) AREAi EXCLUttVK DIroci from Europ* and Palm Springs. Raldx In apKiol aaolf while hot whirling mineral water explodes against you to gM the very Finest in ' Modern Hydrotherapy. StimulalM entire muaculor and circulatory system. Offers relief from arthrlHs, rheumatism. OPEN II to II DAILY 3432 NIGHUND - Nbw Location Phoiw 334-1591 •f , the PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. OCTOBER 30, 1967 "T""7.......... Weekend Journey to Son Fraricisco H- Sports Adventure: Lions' Westward Jaunt Press Photog Shoots Flight It was a long but successful trip for the Detroit Lions over the weekend to San Francisco. The Lions whipped the San Francisco 49ers, 45-3 in Sunday’s NFL contest and after such a victory the 2,100 mile trip back to Detroit was a pleasant one. ★ ★ ★ The Lions left for the coast late Thursday afternoon and worked out for two days on the campus of Stanford University in Palo Alto prior to Sunday’s game. ★ ★ ★ Pontiac Press photographer Ed Noble shot these pictures of Lion players as they took to the road and also the AIRPORT MUNCHERS-Milt Plum (right) grill before getting on the United Charter to game p i C t U r e S in the and Gail Cogdill enjoy a snack at the airport San Francisco. sports section. FRISCO DASH-(luarterback Karl Sweetan (14) enjoyed his finest game in leading the Lions to a 45-3 victory over San Francisco. Sweetan ran the bootleg play three times, one for a touchdown. Charlie Johnson (72) of the 49ers gives chase. LUCKY SHINE — Head coach Joe Schmidt never misses TRAVEL GEAR — Assistant coach John North heads for CHARTER SERVICE — Rookie guard Chuck Walton T’WAS A HAPPY TRIP Linebacker Ernie C I a r k gettiM his pi?S shine at the airport The Lions also the plane with his luggage and a handful of sheets which he gets first class service from United Stewardess Nancy Pru- phones home to say ‘1 m back in Detroit. It was a pleas- fSned in SarFiSScisco wiS a Ss-S victory. goes over with the Lion receivers. deau of Chicago who made the charter flight to Frisco. ant trip after the 45-3 victory in San Francisco. READING MATTER FOR TRIP - Lion airport for the 3% hour charter flight fo END OF LONG DAY-Head coach Joe Schmidt sits quieUy aboard the come as the Lions evened their record at 3-3-1 wi^ *‘*7''®'''® ' players Lew Kamanau (right) and Ron Goo- San Francisco. Most of the players read or chartered flight enjoying a cigar on th^ trip back to from ^n Fran- the 49ers. This is Schmidt s first season as head coach, vert pick out some reading matter at the play cards during the flight. cisco. Schmidt was hoarse from the game, but he was pleased with the out- 1 ‘ V D—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 80, 1967 The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by Slight Loss for Stock Market them in wholesale [»ckage lots. | Quotations are furnished by the' NEW YORK (AP) De^reu^u 'T as It declined irregularly early this afternoon. Trading was Produce Cortlai^ by............. Is Apples. CMer, 4.gp|. case Applet. Mclnteah .......... Applet. Narthern Spy. bu. Applet. Red Dellclout. bu. Appiet. CoMen Dellclout. J;S 1:S fairly active. Losses were a little more numerous than gains. vtoaTABLas Beelt. I bch. Cabbage. Curly, bu............ Cabbage. Rad. bu.............. CabbIS.*5S>dard^arlaly. bu. Carrots, di. bnch............. Carrots. Cello Pab. Mi........ Carreti, The list showed a firm tone at the opening but soon turned mixed and gradually began to display a lower trend. The market had little on _ which to base a rally after five in weeks of general decline. A ’" drop in machine tool orders was reported for September and indications from union leaders were that General Motors may face a long strike. Meanwhile Chrysler resumed negotiations with the United Auto Workers. Chrysler was off nearly a point while GM was a fraction lower. The Associated Press average of 60 stocks at noon was off .7 at 320.3 with industrials off .5, rails off .6 iind utilities off .7. The burst of strength shown by the growth-glamor group last week seemed to have dissipated. E. G. & G., despite higher earnings, was off about 3 points. A comment in Barron’s financial weekly gave a cool appraisal of the stock’s action. Prices were irregularly high- er on the American Stock Ex-chat^e. Trading was active but not as heavy as on Friday. Burma Mines was active as it eased fractionally. Apache Co. rose about 2, Hydrometals nearly 4 and Edo Cimi>. a full pctot. Fracticmal losses were taken by Reeves Industries, Continental Materials aiid Carreras “B. Romney Hits^ LBJ Harder t Attacks Sharp«n on Tour of New England Ymt Ago . 1M7 High . By The Associated Press Michigan Gov. George Romney, seemingly picking up the tempo and stiffening the tenor of his attacks on President Johnson, continues today his five-day swing through New England. The Republican governor, iS’ js! Ill paneling Alw PLYWOOD - Byrne ni!t ?s.j je.i «.o ly opened tripled facilities at 2400 Cole, Bir 18:1 S37.» J13.» 170.5 30*.7 30IUI 113.0 130.2 2W.4 The New York Stock Exchange cy, rested in that state Sunday after launching two strong ver-| assaults on Johnson. mingham. Wholesale plywood and paneling products from thrift lines to exotic luxury woods are available, according to James J. Byrne, company ix-esident, founder and general manager. The display center is open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. I Lnr UM CIM. 33'A P»nh EP 10 UV< I6'.b li'/h — Vb PirkeDav In a speech at Burlington, Vt., Romney told an audience of 1,500 Saturday night that John-| son’s administration is “dis-. trusted and discredited at home and its lack of credibility at oist.) Hjgh Low uii ch^. homc' is eroding America's Prices Forced Upward hI'AiPtnnDix .SO ■“.................iSJii" '"5 2» It.) High it 27^ im liS credibiUty abroad.’ ” w/A 2614 ::: Earlier Romney told a meet- 17 mU low wt + vb '"8 officials in Manches-| i8 nation is headed » 38 vvi 38 + w for trouble because it has “a iM 73^ 73% 75vt + 86 leader who doesn’t 14 7m 70% 70% •> % 4p,,ih ” 54 »% awfc + w wuin. 4i v52v«% tm om-1%1 VI 47% 21 61% 60% 61Vb —W NO PLEDGE 14 M'A 17% 17% . truth in that old maXim that all Meanwhile Sen. Frank that glitters is not gold is being Church, D-Idaho, who described proved again in this prosperous-Johnson as a “deep personal! modern j,gg -phe glitter may be 9%....friend,’’ nevertheless said he from silver. ”7 1% couldn’t pledge right now to prosperity and technological back Johnson for reelection. de m a n d are “That depends on who is run- j ^ j „ 43 40 39% 39% + 14 ning against him,” Church said .. . ‘t '?k 'iS% + Sunday when asked at a meet- prices high- M «% U% %% i % '"K of ‘he Idaho Press Club in er. Larger and J Boise about backing Johnson in 1 a r g e r or- S 2% 2% 2% - % 1968. ders are com- 6^ ir+ioH * * ♦ [ing from the ^ RiiV Phiip/*k n nAroicVont urar p h 0 10 gTflphy 16 47% 47 —R— 135 64% 63% 63% 4 25 34% 24% ~ Silver Glitters Again By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business Analyst NEW YORK (AP) and space dustries, from c a n d 1 e s tick I many as they can befote that date. More than $350 million are The outstanding. When the currencjr dealers first began advertising for silver certificates this year they offered premiums of 10 to 12 per cent. These gradually have risen above 20 per cent as the price of silver rose. The reason for this is that the certificate holder is entitled to buy the metal at $1,293 an ounce. If the market price is around $1.80 an ounce, as it has been, a handsome profit can be made on a resale. Few people, however, desire to take their silver certificates , . „ . , to the U.S. Assay office for a lit- makers and flatware manufac-iy^ ,3^^^ ^ dust. ^rs,_and from medicine andjp^/^^^ thing, the silver dust is difficult to resell. 60 +10% ” 57 29% 2i% 20% ii%' But Church, a persistent war 53 2% 2% 2% I critic, ruled out one GOP candi- % date.i —S— I “I can tell you what I’d do If *9 2% St 8% - % nominated Nixon,’’ Church 30 S% 5’* + % ®“*^ ®^ I**® former Repubficah, _ iu ^ ^ ^ + %ivice president. “He’d just get us'dentistry %!ln deeper.’’ % WALLACE ON TV | Adding to the upward pres- MIDDLEMAN DEVELOPS ” ^ 57% George Wallace the ex-iSU™ is a large element of specu- Resalable bars of silver cart 73 50% r r = a Alabama governor’ who says'‘I«‘th® wiU con-!te obtained however, by thoM ‘9 m''* 31% 3?% - % he’ll run for president on a third hnue. Silver dollars are being holding large amounts of certifi- 66% 64% _V4 party ticket if neither major Pi'rchased for $1.50 and half dol-cates. Therefore the middleman — % party builds a conservative plat- i®*^ I®*" cents even.though the has developed to buy whatever ^ % form, talked on national televl- iaw forbids melting coins for certificates you mi^t have in ' Sion of being threatened. ‘heir silver. the attic or shoe bokes, 16 31% 3i% 38% “ He didn’t go into detail about * * * This middleman turns the « ^ M% M%_„ the threats but said he’s re- Silver certificates; which are bills in for $1,293 silver and then 1!.. ^ ceived them from “revolutiona-iU.S. bills of |1, $5 and $10 that|resells it, as one did this ment froze the price there by selling the metal from its own stocks. Demand Continued to exceed production and so the Coinage Act of 1965 was passed, permitting the minting of silverless coins. Bans on silver exports were instituted, and melting was forbidden. On July 14, with mounds of silverless coins in circulation, the Treasury abandoned its fixed price. No longer was there danger of a coin shortage, but the melting ban continued. Soon after the Treasury action, the price of silver soared to nearly $1.90 an ounce, reflecting the laws of supply and demand. Now, however, there is some question that the price will remain there. By ROGER E. SPEAR Q — 1'am a vfidew, age 52, with about $50,000 in assets. I and can be redeemed for silver gran-for $1.84,. giving him a gross _ %!Communists—the same peoplejules or bars, have been bring- profit of about 9V4 cents after bought Flying liger nt 35i Gon- m wb +m!who want us to lose the war in ing premiums of 30 to 35 per adding the 35 per cent premium 14% 14% + U Vietnam.’’ cent above face value. to expenses. ^ Wallace blamed the nation’s PREMIUMS OFFERED * . * ^T%|riots on Communists, anarchisU nrp cnnH ‘“B i» ® dangerous business, and activists. “There are no un- . “ said the dealer. “The margin is 'i Z denying causes to bum down a ^ deaUs arfgaTertn^ Ts '•®!K®': smal' and the market is tinental Air lines at 29; Amer-icatf Tdaphone at II; Toiiiaca . 43 34% 33%, 33% )M m, 30% 30% + % cRy unless you don’t love your ■17 2^^25% 25ii - % ‘‘® ®®‘‘*- 45 50% 51 51% +1% unemployment have nothing to .!! 132% 1M% + % if. 22% 22% S% i % I He was interviewed in Port-57 m% 12% 18% O*'® ' I®'' I**® CBS televi- 7%r‘®" P'‘n8*'ani Face the Na-”!tion." High Ford Exec Set to Retire volatile. You can take a loss if you don’t get rtd of your purchases quickly.’’ For the moment, silver certificates are eagerly sought, al-i though the premiums likely will I drop this week when purchasers of government silver at 39. As soon as I bonglit^iwe' Btoeks they began to fall i___ have been eick at heart. Shonlif I sell and take my loss or hold nntil they come back and then run to the safety of a bank? I Treasury Position partially unrefined product instead of salable metal. Charles Patterson, who DATE BACK TO ’ll came to the United States and I The almost incredible condi-joined Ford Motor Co. as a die ‘ions that have made silver the maker, retires glamor metal, of the year go Wednesday as h«ek at least to 1961. an executive' I” I**® 8®venunent , .j ^ knew that the growing demand vice president I shortages, so it be- of North Amer-;gau replacing silver certificates lean Automotive Operations. Henry Ford II, chairman of _____ the board, said: PATTERSON “Mr. Patterson’s open-minded approach to new ideas has Insplr^ and produced technological. progress throughput our operations.’’ “It is no accident that basic oxygen furnaces for steel-making and float processes for glassmaking were introduced during his tenure,’’ Ford added help - S. F. A — You boijght genbrally good stocks and If mirket fluctuations, which are f,common-place, make you hearisick, perhaps you shouldn’t hold stocks joined Ford at '.'5 and than n yenr became a sh fore- 3» IJ% 9% 10 + % n 2% 2% 2% + % *4 3% 3% 3% - % 15 37% 37% 37%-% 62 3$ 37% 37% 4- % 6 44H 44H 44H f H JO 818(1 81'9 8l8h -I- w 7f 3686 35H 5H ~ 8t 18 388b 37% 38 Th« Aibocitttd Pn |r%Uck RR, * Falrch Cam ---- PBirMIII .1W iFiiutagl Oadgrag Fmowi JO Ml. g« Ray. FtaOSIr I.7D K«9 riaa Racara aait Fad 6^ | jg STOCK Ftrrg^l.20 CrayOrug tlra 2^ .11+ 1 -II FiMrol 1.40 Or.yOrg«naw'3\V 12-22 1-2 '» l.'ii? n..M,«W "•2"7^''o ,1.15 ,2.1 i'j6 •rowffl It Shtrp* .. .31 Q 18-4 13>15iPI« PU 1.44 75 4586 45 45 ..... 60 133 131V6 131% --I86 ; 18 3086 30% 10% - % 14 1486 14% 24% ^ V6 "S ?7% ^ I /36% M% 26% - % 25 sIJi 37% iTii S'* Sent to WiUow Run during World War II to help speed production of B-24 bombers, by 1944 he was superintendent of all assembly operations at that plant MvTSiir?:' ______________________ 454 90% 97 90% +2% a-RaU Ihlt yaar. dividtnil AnlHad, dt- 15 14% |5% 25% - % tarrad or no octlon lakan at laat dWidand 25 22 21% 21% -. % maallno., r-Oaclarad er paM In 1944 plus In 1951, Patterson of 232 Harlan, Bloomfield Hills, was named group executive of En gine and Foundry. In 1958 be was elected a vice p at all. I believe, though, that after you have lived with the stock market for awhile, you will become accustomed to its vagaries and that you will find the ownership of stocks a rewarding experience over a period of time. There is only one issue. Flying Tiger, which a person in your dr^ius^ces should Iprobably not h ay^^: with Federal Reserve notes, the! bought at all. This Itbck jTP^e- kind presently in your wallet ★ w ♦ As the demand grew the price of silver began rising from about 90 cents. By mid-1963 the price was $1,293 an ounce. To protect its coinage from being melted or hoarded, the govem- Arfists of Area sents « leading cargo i^rrier and has, I believe, good man-' agement and potential. However, it is heavily dependent on business from the Military Airlift Command, which lowered rates earlier this year. This is a reasonable holding for a businessman with a diversified portfolio. Variations in MAC make It, in my ion, unsuitable for a person like yourself. I would switch tlijs' one Now Have Shop 'stock, into Chesehrough-Pbnd’s, , which I believe has a more as- to Display Work A shop specializing in artifacts m^e by area craftsmen and artisans recently opened at 2487 Orchard Lake, Sylvan Gifts, accessories and barrel Klture are also sold in the , according to one owner-agnr, Mrs. Howard Thor-aon, 2467 Yorkshire, Binning- 13 81% 21% 21% -* % SSTSyL*" aU In flock during | vaHM an ax-dlvMtnd' 2 34 2 33% 33% 33% + % • -- — +,% 34 30% 3g% 2 47% 7tk 23% 23% 4 21% 21% 21% 67% 67% % RjCOtt 1.4J RacRwL 1.10 14 24% M 14% - %J cM-Callad. »-Sx dlvldand.^Sx dM-21 52% n% H% - W dtnd and talat In MH. x-dif-Ix dialrlbu-_p__ \ Han. xr-¥x rlgMi. ma-WHKool war- acaHranhla or Ha lankrupicy 79.J 90J 11.7 The idea of a shop evolved from the need of area artisans basic manufacturing group of for a place to dUp[)Iay their 168 11% 18% 18% 81 2886 88% 12% 8 U2S vKIn bMikruRtcy -Mno rMrgwiM Ufh_____ .... Acta or socYirttlM otoumoj I 817 83% 85% 85% ■ 2SS5?-. 77.14 Uncli 47.34 Undi 74.9g-«.0I i0J»-0.07 11.71+0.09 I five divisions and the manufacturing services staff. Patterson was elected executive vice president in May 1963. In that position he directed Ford’s North American Automo- goods, according to the other Drescher, 421 West Bloomfield Township Shop hours are' 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m- Tuesday through Sat- sured growth outlook. I would hold your other stocks, all of which have satisfactory longterm potential. (Roger Spear’s 48-page Guide to Successful Investing Is nvnll-aUe to readers. For yonr copy send $1.10 to Reger E. Spear In care of The Pontiac Press, Box 1118, Grand Central Sta-Uon, New York, N.Y. 10817.) (Copyright, 1N7) News in BrieT Herbert Cross, tf, of 111 Webb reported to Pontiac police yesterday that his home was biai|l|$ritod and $110 stolen. clothing, 221 Michigan. 9 to 4. Oct. 31. r, —Adv>:| ■TgE POJ^IAC PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1967 Oxford Vandalism Probed by Police Archery Club Fire Destroys New Building Oxford Police are investigating vandalism at the Oxford Lake Ski Club on Lakeville Road at the easterly limits of A fire of undetermined origin the village. I last night destroyed the ftoyal A report that a portable build-j Oak Archery Club, locaM at ing was broken into and that *e rear of 2780 Oriwi, Orion eight 22:daliber shots were fired I Ta^sWp. into 174oot outboard motor! Fire Chief Jack Caylor said and boat stored there was re- the relatively new building was ceived the department yesterday afternoon. It was not yet determined what had been taken from the building, police said. Officers are also investigating the overtttnilng of several toml> stones, in Qkford Cemetery over thei^kend. In ft; Matftr o( .... Ing J'C^n Sears aka Shephem, Minor. TO: James Sears, father of said minor Child: Petition having been comidetely gutted by the time his departoent appeared on the scene at 9:43 p.m. Calls were placed to the Gin-geUville Station and to the Oxford Fire Department for as-! sistance. Firemen remained on! the scene until 12:47 a.m. to-' day. I The one-story aluminum-sid-| ed building was unoccupied at^ the time of the blaze. Caylor this court ggjjj jjjg department would in- comes within arSSndSd, iS vestigate. No figure on dam- Complled Laws of iather of iaid minor chlld ls-un-knowni ^ges WaS rcleas^, but it WaS chiid.has viqiatpd a lew of the | believed the building was val- Court. State, and that said child should be con . . . „ - - tnder the lurlsdictiqn of this UCd lU the neighborhood . ... 0* 0' fte State $17,000. M Michigan, You are hereby notified that the hearing on said petition will be held at the Court House, Oakland County Servica Center, In the City of Pontiac in said County, on the »th day of No- ' 1947, at nine o'clock In Pontiac Area Deaths Cathy D. McCulloch I Mrs. Stephen J. Odor SeWice for Cathy D. McCul- AVON TOWNSHIP - Service loch, 16, of 1859 Warwick, Syl- for Mrs. Stephen J. (Ruth H.) van Lake, will be 2 p.m.jOdor, 46, of 2372 W. Auburn .tJWednesday at St. Trinity Luth-jwill be 2 p.m. tomorrow at Pix-]eran Church. Burial will be in ley Memorial Chapel, Roches-.Oakland Hills Memorial Gar-'ter. Burial will be in Christian dens, Novi, by Sparks-Gr if fin'Memorial Estates Cemetery. Funeral Home. 1 Mrs. Odor, a member of the Miss McCulloch, a student at Church of God, Detroit, died West Bloomfield High School, Saturday. She was a former em- died today, Surviving are her parents, I William McCulloch and Mrs. Betty Smith McCulloch, two ploye of Michigan Bell telephone and a former WAC as a staff sergeant. Surviving besides her husband sisters, Darcy and^^ Margo at j are a daughter, Denise at home; home; and grandparents Rus- a son, David J., Pasadena, sell S. Marsh of Pontiac, Wil-Calif.; four brothers, William liam McCulloch of Bay City and j Cardona of Milford and Dean, 'Mr. and Mrs. Homer Smith of|Carl and Richard all of Pontiac; and five sisters, Mrs. Marie Cooley, Mrs Thomas Danger-field, Mrs. Glenn St. John and Helen Cardona, all of Milford, and Mrs. Clyde Clement of Holly- Harman B. Oren ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIOS County, on the »th day of No-* " —7, at nine o'clo ‘ ' you are hereby haaMiW ■PI"*'' P*™nally at saio It being Impractical to make personal service heraoC this summons and notice shall be served by publication of a copy one )j*ek previous to said hitaring In The Pontiac Press, a ncwspap# printed and circulated In said County. Witness, the Honorable Norman R. Barnard, Judge of said Court, In the City of Pontiac In said County, this J7th day of October, A.O. 1967, A true copy. (Seal) NORMAN R. BARNARD, Judge of Probate I A. BALLARD, ~ ■ Regl - . orv .. . Oct. 30, 1947 County Center In Pontiac, the extension of the sanitary : system at the, Oakland. Count^^Serylca the ’ following approximate of 12-Inch concrete NEIGHBORING HELPING HAND-Mem-bers of the Ferry Street Block Club Saturday participated in lending a helping hand to a crippled resident, Wade Evans (center) of 344 Ferry. The group painted and cleaned the home. Mrs. Evans is hospitalized. Ready to begin chores are (from left) Dave Ca(T of 6884 Desmond, Waterford Township, Mike Duggleby of 307 W. Huron; Art Dunlap of 410 Central, and Mrs. Albert France of 349 Ferry. The project was jointly-sponsored by the American Friends Service Committee. What Is a Monument j Moirameiit is fsr more [ then I mesns of mork-I iniE the reslinp place of individual or a It ie ■ tymliol of devotion. It is a tangible expression of the noblest of all liuniaii emotions—Love. It should not reflei-t sorrow iiut rather the long years of warmth and affection typical of the American family. A monument is built because there was a life —not a death: and with intelligent selection and proper guidance should inspire reverence, faith and hope for the living. As an essential part of our American way of life, a monument should speak out as a voice from yesterday and today to ages yet unborn. INCH MEMORIALS Inc. 864 N. Perry Engtnaarlng I North Telegraph Road, Building “E", ' c, Michigan, on and attar October 17. A deposit check In the amount W .wlll be required for each set of the Plans and SPKifIcetlons. which wjll od*cond!S!onf Detroit Teen in 1-75 Crash A Detroit teen-ager escaped serious injury early yesterday Hearing Set on 2 Holdups of Area Motel Camp, Schools to Cooperate Waterford Township. Memorial contributions may be given to the St. Trinity Lutheran Church building fund. Mrs. Carl Edwards OXFORD Service for former resident Mrs. Carl (Ethel Mae) Edwards, 75, of Akron j HOLLY-Service for Harman will be 2 p.m. Wednesday at the b. Oren, 71, of 312 N. Saginaw Bpssardet Funeral Home. Bur-yiil be dl a.m. Wednesday at iai will be in Oxford Ceme-the Dryer Funeral Horae, with tery. burial in Lakeside Cemetery. Mrs, Edwards, a member of! Mr. Oren died yesterday. He the Seventh-day Adventist was a member of Amel Church of Vassar, died yester- Schwartz Post 149, American I day. Legion. Surviving besides her husband! Surviving are his wife, Mil-!are two daughters, Mrs. Reva'^’'®'*^ ^ Harman Jr. of Harris of Walled Lake and Mrs.,GiWerland, N.Y.; and a brother. Mildred McNally of Waterford A preliminary Court hearing will held Nov. 16 for a Pon Oakland Will Handle Waterford Dropouts Elmer S. Evans Sr. within ten (IS) deyi Propouli ehell be ujbmitted on provided by fte Owner. A bid boi______ certified check In the amount of 5 per | in PAntiju. Tnwnqhin when he cont of tho bid 111011 occompany each!*" ronUHL lOWiiMiip wiieii lie propoeei. Check, ehell ^m rn^^^^ajbie lost Control of his Car, hit an-|tiac man charged with armed iCTwy''p*oria?mance careened 200|fg|)i,ery and attempted armed Bond and Labor ami'Md%rlal Bo^!”each yards Off an exprCSSway and ,.gl)|}0pY of a Bloomfield Town- ■, . ‘ hnHv i« at the r I r.nHharrit In the amount ol 100 per cent ollhe Corv fi_- iwuuc.y o ____gram for SChOOl dropOUtS Will ■’ 'J«Hmarai tract. Tha CO.I ot the bonds will ba paid caugni lire. ghlO motel On tWO OCCaSlOnS. ®________________, , r Pnnoral Hnmo IfoDon UarbAv by the accepted bidder. The County Board nf AikIMots will ceive the seated bids until 2:00 P. ESTr Tuesday/ November 7, 1967, at Township; a brother, Clare Wix-om of Lapeer; a sister; seven grandchilclren; and 18 greatgrandchildren. BIRMINGHAM - Service for Mrs. Frederick (Louzelle) Schultz, 87, of 519 W. Brown will be 2 p.m. Wednesday at the Manley-Bailey Funeral with burial in Union Corners Cemetery, Troy. Mrs. Schultz, a life member of O.E.S. 220 of Birmingham II iw • n H tail operate in cooperation with •’’“oeral Home, Keego Harbor, died yesterday. Held in Oakland Lounty Waterford Township schools, iti Mr. Evans was a former en-; Surviving are two daughters, WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP-Elmer S. Evans Sr., 80, of 9723 Camp Oakland’s training pro- Honnie Briar died today. His Mrs. Frederick Schultz I Balow Cqmqtqry Prici yeuVe ready for college when your child is! n Bryan L. Mackinnon, 19, was in lieu of for each ^ announced yesterday at g'"eer at the Consumer Power Ellen at home and Mrs.^Ester ’ the annual meeting at the camp'^P- ^ member of the VFW Kellogg of Metamora; one son. Fng?nM?lng'"DI%ter’12M '’y for offense Is raph Road, higan, at which reckless driving and not having 25, of 233 S: Marshall publicly opanad_____ aiyoperator’s license Police said he was traveling over 100 miles per hour on 1-75 near M-24, failed to negotiate a curve, hit a second car ; guard rails on toth sides ‘u .-jijj.j whitney began the highway before cashing „ „„ through a guard rail and demol- “ * ishing the car. The other charge was brciught against Dawkins after Whitney identified him as the bandit who held up the motel on Oct. 15 near Oxford. No. George H. of Royal Oak; one He was treated at Pontiac General Hospital and released. Dawkins is accused of at- officers also were reelected Surviving are three sons, Ed-jgjgjgr; and one grandchild, tempting to hold up CharlesLith Carl 0. Barton, president, sell S. of Riverview, Elmer L. Whitney, 61. owner of the St. and Circuit Court Judge Arthur of White Lake Township and Thomas Tioran Christopher Motel, 3915 N. Tele- e. Moore, chairman of the Stephen J. of Waterford Town-^*l'egraph, Friday afternoon. The.^gard, gaining their fourth term, ship; 10 grandchildren; and AVON TOWNSHIP — Mrs. m n.ul mhaw IVliKnnv lw>0nn four sistcrS. The new program will involve Waterford Township youths ages 14 to 17. They will take part in a prevocation training at the schools. Ferency to Speak to OU Dem Group !Thomas (Margie K.) Tioran, 45 .. o u ii. 2^20 Grant died yesterday. Murray G. Holtzman Her body is at the Harold R BRANDON TOWNSHIP-'Davis Funeral Home, Auburn Service for Murray G. Holtz-1 Heights. . A ,, J I man, 71, of 2400 Allen will be' Surviving besides her husband After leaving Camp Oakland, IJ Wednesday at C. F. are her mother, Mrs. Nellie the youths will serve as ap-,sherman Funeral Home, Or-|Ranek of Florida; three sons home bv Pontiac nolice after tonville. Burial will be in Or-Thomas and David at home anc they received the license num-^”™"’”"'*^' ' ^ * tonville Cemetery. Masonic Me- Richard at Fort Hood, Tex.; I her of the suspected getaway director William J 7 p.m. I two daughters, Diane and Jo- car XX J tomorrow at the funeral home. Anne at home; one grandchild; ______ expteined. Up until now, Holtzman, a retired Ford a sister; and a brother. Buddy .COURT APPEARANCE we have prepared these youths j^gtor Co. employe, died yester-1Ranek of Pontiac. „ , _ . . .He was arraigned Saturday on to be auto mechanics or wood- ^ay. He was a past master of| IK 'Charges before Bloomfield working .socialists. But when ortonville Lodge No. 339, F&- Mrs Row A Whittaker the Michipn D e m o c r a t c the Peace they left they were too young ^ 32nd Degree Mason Whittaker party, will be the speaker ; ARce Gilbert. ‘o be hired for this work. They gf the Ancient Scottish Rite LAKE ORION - Service for Dial 334-4981 or 332-8181 Pontiac Pro»t Wont Ad> POft FAST ACTION NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS ADS RECEIVED tY 5 P M. WILL BE PUBLISHED THE FOLLOWING DAY4 Clotine t lulor ogot* type «» 12 o * CASH WANT* AD RATIs" I Day 3-Doyi 6-Da $2 00 $2 46 $3B4 !? 9 5 49 9.72 15 12 0 6)0 10 80 16.B0 An additionol cIxiJO* oF 50 cent The Pontiac Press FROM 6 AM TO 5 PM. LOVING MEMORY Fredrick Stocker So many things I heve precious memories cannot touch Of the one I loved so. much. Sadly missed by your loving wiie, children andjraiMcMIdren.____ iN MEMORY OF GORDON DALE Knickerbocker, who passed away Oct. X, 1944. ' We mourn for him in silence, ' But many a silent tear Is shad. White others are asleep. Sadly missed by Mother end sis- \ BRIDE TO BE? WBDDINO photography by Profeulonal Cour Free broctiure. 33S.9079, anytime. Call 334-7477 or 391-2471.__ HALL FOR RENT, RECEPTIONS. IMjes, church. OR 3-32112, FE 3 LOSE WEIGHT SAFElV WTTH Dex-A-Olel Tablets. Only 91 cants at Simms Bros. Drugs. ___ MAKE YOUR HALLOWEEN PAR-ty a successi Buy all party supplies and masks from Hollywood at the Pontiac Coins and Novelty Shop, 14 N. Saginaw Street. "OVER X" CLUB FORMING Single people only Write Pontiac Press Nox No. C-20 WATERFORD REALTY WILL BE clossd Mon. due to dMIh of Wilson J. Paiailnl. I BOX REPLIES i I At 10 a.m. today there | j were replies at The Press ) \ Office in the following ! j boxes: ! 1 3. 4, 5, 10, II, 20, 28, 31, | ; 32. morrow at a meeting sponsored by the Oakland University Young Democrats. The 1:30 p.m. meeting will be held on campus in the Oakland Center building. ★ ★ ★ A resolution Commending Ferency for his recent criticism of President Johnson has been —-------------- could only find jobs such as vaRgy gf Ogfroit. Mrs. Roy (Naomi) Whittaker I carry-out boys. j surviving are two sisters and,84, of 318 Bellevue will be 1 rir Hite Train ‘ An additional teacher and s^ f^g ^rg^Rers. pm, tomorrow at the Allen’s L.ar niTb l FUin,,cial worker wilneedtobehired., Ip^ag^al Home, with burial in ^ . , , , ‘’“y" Mrs. John Horanko iRoseland Park Cemetery, Berk- ririwar Hurt the camp we can give them , uriver nun supervision and direction which! WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP wRHtaker died Saturday ,we did not have the staff to do Service for Mrs. John (Evelyn)] Horanko, 68, of 3732 Overfield' ^‘^viving are one daugmer, will be 1 p.m. Wednesday at An Avon Township youth is in before.” be held VILLAGE OF WOLVERINE LAKI NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Notice of public hearing to be November 13, 1967 at 7:30 p.m. at village hall, 425 Glangary Road. i Amandmenf to Zomng Map of the | ^llageo^Vl^lvarina Lalta. property to ^ tVe N. '/t of the S.E. v* of Section 22, T2N, RBE, baginhing at the N.W. corner of the N.E. of SE Ve ■ Section 22; thence S... " t along the 14 Sect 1® 15' W. 33.0 feet f ISO.O feet thence N. IT 45' W. 690.0 . Li.,.1 K I..K ..nfii fair condition today in Roches-] Camp Oakland, an organiza- tabled by club members until Branch, Crittenton Generaltion to aid troubled youth, is Its next meeting. |Hospital, after his car struck aisupported by county service train at 8:20 p.m. Saturday. jclubs, the United Foundation, ^ It' Stephen J. Hopkins, 17, of 1423|the county Probate Court and Ljwner of / roy ChrisUan HUIs, was injured by individual contributions Section when his car struck a New York Central train stopped at the crossing at Tieken near Liver-nois in Avon Township, sheriff’s deputies reported. An investigation indicated point of beginning. Namely lots SB, trainmen had Stopped in the of 5^'stuart''9^a? St. Clair Lawrence Jr. of 1301iarea at 6:42 p.m. to eat, accord- to bf re-zoned R-M Multiple I TrowbrtdgB, Bloomfield Hilts, a ing to deputies. \ Dwalllng lots 74 and 75 of Stuart's ^ rrvrv., __________ Island Subdivision. --- IRENE SAVICH, 20' E. E. 640.0 :e s! 15° SB' 45' W. 690.C 113 feet to lots 58, Business Is Dead at 54 Clerk Oct. 30, 1967 Oarl Oy. CPoneli One of the Finest . . . ... In all Southeastern Michigan, the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home is in every way outstanding. It provides for Pontiac many exclusive features and facilities. You are invited to inspect this fine community institution, and to know the great warmth and beauty that is present here. 'Phone federal 4-4511 Paticinti On Oar 'Premues =„ $55 WEST HURON ST. PONTIAC member of the Troy Chambei of Commerce and owner of Lawrence Enterprises in Troy, a direct mail advertising firm, died Friday. He was 54. Service will be 9 a.m. tomorrow at the Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co., Birmingham, with burial at White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Surviving are his wife, Patricia H,; two daughters, Mrs. Edwin Osser of Cypress, Calif., and Mrs. Joseph Odien of South-field; one son, St. Clair III at home; one sister; one brother^ and three grandchildren. Lawrence is also a member of St. Hugo of the Hills Church and the Direct Mail Gub of Detroit. Rochester Blaze Blamed on Stove A faulty heating stove in s greenhouse attachment was credited with destroying a $1,500 frame garage and $3,00i) in contents Saturday noon in Rochester, Tlie contents included a 1965 car and tools, according to Fire Chief Lyle Buchanan. \The building was owned by Mr. and Mrs. Fank M. Adams, 157 Drace. Train workers said they thought the train was stopped clear of the road. However, witnesses said the train had been blocking the crossing for about two hours, deputies said. Police Action Pontiac police officers and Oakland County sheriff’s deputies investigated 150 reported incidents the past 48 hours. A breakdown of causes for police action; Arrests—10 Felonious assaults—2 Vandalisms—31 Burglaries—13 Attempted murder—1 Larcenies—24 Auto thefts—5 Bicycle thefts—3 Disorderly persona—6 Assaults—4 ShopIiftings-1 Armed robberies—4 Unarmed robberies—1 Attempted arson—1 Obscene phone calls—2 Property damage accidents—32 Injury accidents—8 County Schools Get October Aid: $10.3 Million Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Milford. Burial will be in Highland Cemetery, Highland Township. Mrs. Horanko died yesterday. Surviving besides her husband are a son, John E. Kilpatrick of Highland and four grandchildren. Bethamy Kroninger OXFORD — Service for Bethamy Kroninger, infant daughter .. . ii- of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Krom Nearly $10.3 millio^or 17 Perijgger, J344 W. Drahner, will bel cent of the state s ^tober ap- 3 ^ Bossardet Fu- porUonment of aid fonds^ Home Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Gardens Cemetery, Troy. Mrs. George Rail of Orion, and a brother. Lake Funeral Directors COATS FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS 4744)441 Huntoon 79 Oakland Avt. FE^2*0lW sparks-griffTn FUNERAL HOME '•Thoughtful ServIcB** FE B-92B8 Voorhees-Sipie FUNERAL HOME. 332-8371 Establlthtd Over 40 V66rt Death Notices EVANS. ELMER S. SR.; October. 30, 1967; 9723 Bonnie Briar, White ^Ip; age " Dll $., »ep Elmer L. Evans Jr„ at of Mrs. Ann LePard, Mrs. Hazel been released to Oakland County school districts. Figures released by County Treasurer James E. Seeterlin show that Waterford Township district received the highest amount of funds, $950,680. Monies for other large area [districts are: Pontiac, $861,140;| WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP -Farmington, $712,210; Walled Service for Louis H. Mowery, Lake, $456,960; and Oakland gf s37 Farnsworth will be 10 Bethamy died yesterday. Surviving besides her parents [are three brothers and sisters. Louis H. Mowery vived by 10 grandchildren. Funeral arrangements are pending at the C. J Godhardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor, where Mr. Evans ited visiting houn Ro4d, C irother C. F. Schools Intermediate District, $71,400. Man Robs Gas Station a m. tomorrow at St. Patrick’s [Catholic Church. Burial will be in Mount Hope Cemetery, Pontiac. by Elton Black Funeral [Home, Union Lake. I Mr. Mowery, a pattern maker at the Buick Division of GM, Idled Friday. He belonged to St. [Patrick’s Church and the Pattern Makers Association of America. Funeral Home, 135 Ortonville. Funeral service win be held Wednesday, November 1. at 1 p.m. at the funeral home with Rev. Kyle Ballard officiating. Interment In Ortonville Cemetery. Mr. Holtzmann will He in state at the funeral home. JOHNSON. EDNA $.; October 28, > 1967; 3694 Lorena Drive, Drayton Plains; age 81; beloved wife of John N. Johnson; dear mother of Florence M. and Doris M. John state at the funpral Cemetery Lots MEMORIAL GARDEN CEMETERY. GET OUT OF DEBT ON A PLANNED BUDGET PROGRAM YOU CAN AFFORD TAILORED TO YOUR INCOME SEE groom. 674-1535._______________ AMELIA VIDOR HAS MOVED to Pardee Beauty Chop, 2411 Voor-hel^ FE 2-0598. __ ANY GIRL OR WOA4AN NEEDING a friendly adviser, phone FE 2 5122 before 5 p.m. Confidantlal DEBT Alb. INC., 718 RIKER BLDG. FE 2-0181, Rater to Credit Ad* 0N“AN b“AF f E"R“tH I E“dc- tober 30. 1967, I will not be responsible for any debts contracted by any other than myself. Leslie Thompson, 259 Cllttord Ave., Pontiac, Mich.________ SLIP COVERS CUSTOM MADE. free est. ^L 2-2793.__________ START PLANNING NOW FOR your scout group, church, club FALL I McCULLOCH, CATHY DALE; October 30, 1967; 1859 Warwick; age 16; beloved daughter of Betty Smith McCulloch and William Me* Culloch; beloved granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Homer Smith, Russel S. Marsh and William McCulloch; dear sister of Dan Margo 8* “ " * " ice will ' mOES. Enloy a horsa-drawn rida through fields, woods, followed by a home cooked spaghetti dinner. For reservations 628-1611. UPLAND HILLS FARM 00 YOU HAVE A DEBT PROBLEM? We can help you with a plan you can afford. DEBT CONSULTANTS OF PONTIAC, INC. $14 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. FE 8-0333 Lott and Foand Margo McCulloch ice will ba held yemtwr 1, at 2 p. Funeral serv-Wednesday, No- at th Shelby Township Police today] are searching for a man who „ . . . . . . ,, robbed Maza’s Shell gas station]^Surviving is a daughter. Mrs.i at 5133 Auburn last night gf|Clarance Ayotte of Union Lake. $85 while threatening owner Joe Maza’s sister, Mrs. Elizabeth; Prysly, 67, with an ice pick. Police said that Maza told them that a young white male] entered the combination gas sta tion party store at 8:50 p.m Trinity Lutheran Church ment In Oah............. Gardens. Cathy -parki Home. (Si Memorial Sparks-Grlffin Funeral I call FE S-3110 visiting hour; ■d^ober'27. I displaying an ice pick and demanding money. He rifled the cash register of $80 in cash and a $5 check before fleeing to a waiting car. Break for Elderly KENNEBUNK, Maine (AP)[ — Town officials said Sunday they are taking under consideration a proposal to give a $100 tax credit to persons who reach the age of 100—provided that the centenarians paid taxes to the town for at least 25 years. 3________________ MOWERY, LOUIS 1947; (37 FarnsvmrIh, White Lake ;hlp; age 68; dear father of Clarence MLoretta) /Ayotte. ‘osary ^wlll be at the Elton l^k _Funeral Horne, 1233_ Union Recreation area. Township; Mrs. Clan Recitation of ‘light ‘ * R d Funeral service win be held Tuesday, October 31. at 10 a m. at the St Patrick's Catholic Church. Union Lake. Interment in Mount Hope Cemetery. Mr. Mowery will lie in state at the funeral home. Pointer. White and liver color. She has brown kiather collar with attached. Vicinity of oslyn TIORAN, MARGIE K.; October 29, 1967; 2920 Grant Street, Avon Township; age 45; beloved wife of Tom Tioran; beloved daughter of NeMI6 Ranek; dear mother grandchild. Funeral ar-nfs are pending at the Harold R. Davis Funeral Home, Auburn Heights. Reward. jJ3269iq._______ LOST: GERMAN SHEPHERDI black and ymite, male, vicinity of Christian Hills, Rochester. Reward. 65V4133-.OSt: male < end hound. Oi ward, $75. FE B-1843. D—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. OCTOBER 80» 196T 1 DEPENDABLE MAN MarrM. ». OiMrantMd UO par Call batvMan 3:3M p.m. 314-J771. $400-$600 INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL UN W. Huron «SN AND UP PilR MONTH Standard oil Sarvica Cantor $500-$650 PLUS CAR SALES TRAINEE? INTERNATIC PERSONNEL 334-4971 $4800-$5200 FEE PAID FINANCE TRAINEES FIRST AND SECOND SHIFT . Turret Lathe Operator ExptrltfKtd on MNip and dpora tions of No. 3 W. and S. or Hare inge. Sonnen Hone Operator M. C. MFC. CO. d Rd. Laka Orla ^9^37H 111 HOT WATER . Call : 6|Holp Wonted Mole PORTER New—Used Cars Iringa banafito. Pla Mr. w"lHl,_______ 14!50 OAKLAt^D «!■. Id aalary. FULL TIME SHOE SALESMAN EX-cellenf earnings/ fringa benefits, I paid vacations, 50 North Saginaw, Age 2I>23. High school grad. i p INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL_ pyg ””'$1.75 an PRODUCTION WORKERS ALL SHIFTS WAREHOUSE HERK gr^^P^ A Ja#nr U and 4. welPers AiJ5 ;*Hllift, MfTAL wondeEful 'SpraRTUNiTV ME ilgkarjiaylng claulftea-l a« 3A45. Apply 9 A.M.i FrI. Mutt hava own 334.4971 A marrlN^™nI*3L34.^to^work 4 CAS STATION ATTENDANT, EX- ^ •^'jw jcaii dTSsao.l Gulf, Tal al rafarancas, full or $200 PER MONTH aluminum SIDING INSTALLERS work In Oakland Cly- area. Mutt be txparluncad on racevar work., To S19 par tquaro with oxcIuiIvoigAS STATION ATTENDANTS tubconlroclor bonut plan. Or bo- Mutt bo txperlenced. Full or part come an omploya with full com- lima. Top pay. Sunoco Stollon, pony bonafltt. Coll tonight otter *' Tologroph at Mopla Rdt.__ ■ T73-3S44. 660D OWORTUNITV f6R OIGHT Accountant "office mana- gar, axpartonetd panoo for Chryt-lor dealonhip. Oakland Chrytlar-Plymouth. 734 Oakland Ave., 335-9434. An Equal Oppor- ALUMINUM SIDING APPLICATORS. Raiidonllol. All winter work. Crowt or Individuolt. 474-3134. Call • a.m.- iflto Includtd. Boatt. 925 Apply at Saa N. Lapaar Rd.,___________________ HAT BALER AND SIDE DE-llvery rata. For talc or twap FE 44I35S.______________________ HEAtmG SERVICE MAN — EX-iced gat and oil, top wagat, around g^loymont. Bird A traniporto' Allen Real Estate Salesmen I AAall. Ona In Oakland Industries, Inc. i M'S johIt ^,w?„*arT«pj5s8j.Nitr- EX-CAREER GALS SECRETARY CLERK-TYPIST COMP-OPERATOR DICTA-TYPIST TELETYPE OPERATOR PBX OPERATOR WITT GIRL pari-tlmo. E?rn whila you Itarn, 642-3055 869-726S toarn.|642-3055 HblL j n yogr own hand- ' canvatting — Pon- frlnga bantfitt, olaatant tur-roundingt, rotato Sun., and Hbll- I'rKtVn tiac Tal - 12 S, yaai GrII SALES EMPLOYMENT C 0 U N-talgr. Do you Ilka ■ challongot Wo will train It you hovt tha gift ax^lollatlv hl5h''?arn'rnM S?yr*worklng"oo«lSto^ ETK*^4!?;'.'?n.bA"*iL.^'g>i Tjjt'aTlranr^H^.!;.!! saleSasan, sharp, exci oeeortunity for man wit.. ___ ability $4,700 call Kathy King, 334-3471, Snalling A Snalling. Can KatNy King Snalling A Spaurne. phYs»:tAN^|^8iResj»e~FOB~.V.~i^ P.M. I M7I, tnolllng A SnoHInp.___ A4ondoy-Frl -------rd- SITTER. U N ION LAKE area. 3 or 4 ' . - after 4, 3434429. Watorford-oftar 5 p.m. 330-107T. B A — GENERAL HOOSEWORK, TUES- J? I day and .Friday. Mutt hovo own trantp. Local ref. Moreland Ava. on Univertity Dr. Phone Friday y. 34 p.m. FE 2-0717._________ BABY SITTER, 3 HOURS A DAY llvo In. 33A0142. __________ AND LIGHT wooovmiro ana tmong urv Btoomflnld Hills. CT'___X_ _ .be.cun.ty call Kathy King, 334-3471, Snsllli MANAGE! call. FE A7940. nUiHTeNAhcd' MAN F6k Md- BABY SITTER. ALSO LIGHT houtawork. PE 04513. BABY SITTER - HOUSllKEEPER, llvo In, 3 tchool chM andt on. OR 3-3339. BAKER SALES GIRL, FULL FOR AUTO WASH Department has an intriguing full time position ifor well groomed olert, mature individual experienced ini ^ dealing with people pre-l _^^h«nl;^^ ferred. Excellent employee ■*«»w,id also wait benefits including purchose' Auburn r?^)!w a<^ discounts. cT¥ wonderful opportunity for public contact S390 call Ruth OIbbt, 334 2471, Snalling A Snalling.__ GENERAL OFFICE Intorttllng varlaty of work In a 4g1rl offlca. Mint ha Intolllgant and pinatant with aoma ottlca txpartance. Agt 2S40 pratorrod. Call Mon. hot. 9-S for appolnt- lo 0 p.m. and 11 p;m.-7 a.m. Exc. pay. Mra. Indlih. Avon Canter HotpHal. 451-9301. salEs employment C 0 U N S b-I A Snolling. Adam, 334-3471, Snalling A Snell- SECRETARY, A VARIETY OF DU-tlet and a parmanant ipot for a tharp gal, MO caN Fran LUtk, 334-3471, Snalling A Snglling. secretary to oirectoK in varlad dutlat, public 33 call Helen Adanu. 3343471, Snalling A Snalling. MECHANIC CLARKSTON AREA Machanic, pratorably Doid vocationc be a hostess for sara cov- 1’ JSr vacations „„ rk,i.._ »«"•» holidays. Insurance and mat, 435475A 4334H7A AFL Wa are accapting appllcatlont lor, /-to ■ r.vSr’E'nWK' Secretary flit at paid training, purchate dit- ^ j. j Wanted Man or Woman FOR MOTOR ROUTE IN Bloomfielci Hills Area at Once Apply to Mr. Stier PONTIAC PRESS ICIrculatlon D TELLERS e opening Excellenl poriunlly, talary and OcnafHt. Ap-- ----------------Bank,' MEN - WOMEN - COUPLES MOTEL CARVERS AV^U^'blV' WauW yaw Ilka a now ixcltlr* career M the grawnig 4 rskis?r Miami. Flwlda, UNIVERSAL MOTEL SCHOOLS 1173 nW.'i Florida REALTY, 03A0S75 p55rt*T?ka *ffont**tut • M^^pi Eaally, OR 41«S ee-. "to’TSlT*-'“aiW9'^?S WiKK CASH FOR YOUR BWIty or land contra-. Clark Real ENMa, FE 3-7000. controcl. Colt MALL fARM OR Woops Wl'tH * pond, or email lake Oar ftufil chUx OR^OTttiiR! F^^lgufcK^AC^Otl CABINETS, FE 3-5990. carpentry,' mAsonry, CHIMNEYS CLEANED AND paired, wallt wathed, roofing 1 ropoirt. FE 40710 or FE 04174. prlvoto bath and ontranca, month. FE 4-1559 attor 5. ROOM AFt. CLEAN AND CHEER-ful tor lady on pontlon. Raatonablo' Ront to right party" FE 4-7714. 2 ROOMS AND BATH, ^_________241 Stole 2 ROOMS FOR MATURE WORK- ODD JOBS-CLEANING AND LIGHT . howling. Coll Bill, FE 3-1W3. ‘ 2 room BATH, CLEAN, UTILITIES S30 weakly, 030 dtpotlt. FE i Y®GNG man with chauffeur ' 9 ROAM apartaaf^kit cii'wpisv ll«n«. w.„,. ,» 3 ROOM FURNISHED APARTMENf/ W^Bf k WaiitEd FeeieIe U A-I IRONING. ONE DAY SERV-FE 4M47™'''**' “=Cowon. ironing wanted, joslyn and IRONINGS WANTED. WEBSTER- _ my HOME, AC- curoto. 433431$. T^ffG, EN\7BLOPE“st¥FFING, Cndlt AdvUors 16-A GET OUT OF DEBT .rafoYfp?------- WITH no dMhkortrto Falrgrovo. ROOMS AND BATH, CHILD welcom. S35 per wk., with S7S-dop.. Inquire at 373 Baldwin Ave. Cell 330-4054. 2 LARGE ROOMS, BATH, PR1v IILM497*""' "“““'"•F'"* * CLEAN ROOMX corpotod, oduHi. FE S-5II3. 2% ROOMS, BATH, IDEAL FOR V ----- or working ulrl. No dlH-, Rrtroncas. S25 weakly. SSB, L 14 Plnogrovo. 343-3534. . 3 ROOMS AND BATH. WEST SIDE; 1 baby wolcowiad. pf mm - 4 Rootos”phiVAtE. d«X 3:30 p.m., 4514174. ■ TOP'npliTil* private BATh; ‘ NO limit “ -I arhount owad and nufflbor or eradi-4 .KOOMS' BATH, $30 WEEK tort. For thote who roollzo. "YOU **#; F*P- « AUGUSTA MA SAHXAPRROW YOURSELF OUT -MXL______________ OF'DlB‘f""? LICENSED AND BONDED Appolnt^t Gladly Arranged required. 1330 Creekt Rd. ^ ptnsion progroms. HUDSON PONTIAC MALL flRVIcE MANAPEE hftEStlOE tringt bananii, lalary — bate ax-porlonoa. Call Kan Johnaon, Rutt wailington, FahHcalort Inc., 34 Yatot Rd., Utica, Mich. Plm 731-0300.__________________ draftsmen trainee $400 UP 31 up, high tchool or colltga drattlnoj^xijiirtonM holptui INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1000 S. Woodward, B'ham. 442-0304 DRIVER FOR GROCERY STORE, ti^vltlm, 110400 call Ha Mam, 3342471, Snalling A I SERVICEMEN Wt will train ft around work with Poet Control Company. “0 S-TtoO or SHINGLERS Exporlanced, lop wogot and bena-tlh tor ttoady ytar round work. 425-3779. SHOE SALESMAN For managorlol potltkm In I floe orao. Top talary, bo committlon. Good rttorenct. EXPERIENCED STATION ATTEN-danl, 539 E. WoNon Blvd. ExPERiENtEb PpErator for EXI work. Good ^wln. Ponttic. EXPERIENCED OUTBOARD ME- plan. FE 04403. FACTORY WORKERS 34117 Grand River Htip WantEd F.~ OIL COMPANY IS LOOKING FORA GENERAL SALESMAN familiar with Service Station Operations — Experience preferred but not essential. We also will consider Gas Station managers for this position. Please Send Complete Resume First Letter to Pontiac Press Box C-5 Pontiac, Michigan ol6er man or AMBTrious High school boy — Janitor, stock and miK. work. Part tiniTt. I5^ 404r___________ _____ ^ART TIME BIKE MESSENGER, r ti j 14 or ovar, $1.40 hr.. AAonday Full time ond port time jpSd*c'ond*fiin.*'*w^ 11 schiidules. Apply now to BAPT Titte-------'Supplement income PART time ^Christmas. 391-3334, BBTWEEN 5 P.M. AND SINGLE, MATURE MAN TO WOR and cart lor horsts. Exca living facllltlot. 43S-3331. STABLE GROOMS 5 TO i A.M. ^ 44435S1. Bloomflald Opon Jirifj'iufir filet Pat - Ml M3S3 I Botty - ---------- opeW employment OFFICE Personoble, capable worn-, BEAUTY OPERATOR. IxPeRI-encad, to laka ovar twinuina 3709 Elliaholh Uka Rd. Sfol. 'ALhEKn • Fathtom. a*tm. liONS-NiEDS y6 IS OR BTYLIBT-I or 335-1091 bookkeeper full Muitl-corporaflofi. Vary LI $-7711 or CASHIER Ledlot II or ovar lor Orchard Lk. oroo drug sloro. Full time., Oayt end evenlngt. Earn up 01.00 *PP'r '’■"Or P™gt. 3334 Orchatd Lk. Rd. Orchard ' _ _ . _ on- Good typing and short' LJT TTY^(^]V[ **''***' handle PONTIAC MALL and dattvor Fwllar Bruth ar-I near home. Bam I2J0 up -rlV. N. of M59 ptWM Mr. Kreto 3344401 $. ol M59 phone Mr. Owen. A4A 44193 HOUSEWORK, Days, 1130 N. Woe Mich. LI 7-3710. HOUSEWIVES AND MOTHERS Earn your own sot of tha CASHIER FULL TIME-RETAIL ly OP Sunday CASHIER thtfl, mutt No Sundoyi i RottaUranf, S '“LYkIi Stock Bo'ys Orderlies ClEANING LADIES encod — 30 ncadad ru homot -443-7900. - EXPERi for Blrmlng-01.50 to b CLERK. PART TIME. EvEniNGS ollw 4, rotoronco. Exportonce pratorrod. Loo Drug. 4390 Olxlo Housewives Turn your spare time into extra money by applying for CHRISTMAS EMPLOYMENT NOW! Full time, part time and on call schedules. emPl^ment'office HUDSON pOntiac mall parts MAN OVER 11 EXFERI-onco htiplul but not nocottory. Kaogo Salat and Sorvica, 3M0 Or-chard Laka, Kaago.___________ pianist for omPel oOAAtet. FE 54354 or UL MSOT PORTER. FULL TIMI thitt, unllonn and m alto BIwt Crott, The Wattornar Beet Buttof. 4105 W 4344757. PORTER sr o-fiv^' ru" sfirHSj: Wonted M. er F. THE OAKLAND COUNTY MERIT SYSTEM announett tha lollowing OPEN COMPETITIVE EXAMINATIONS Appllcafton .. ... ilKn II r t, V CO^INUOUS EXAMINATIONS f,500- 11.000 latar than Toe t 10 latar than 5: l.fOO Appllcatlont lor that# oxamlnationt may I Accountant Accountant Trainee Junior Appraltar AWo Chlldran'i Suptrvlaor I Child WoKoro Worker I Civil Engineer I Civil EngkMor II Civil Enginoor III Clark I Clerk II Court Clerk Court Reporter I Court Raportor II Cuelodlal Worker Dental Clinic Aialttant I Garage Aftondant General Stott Nuria Kay Punch Opwrator I Kay Punch Oporalor II Licaniad Practical Nurta Programmar II Public Haalth Clinical Dantlit Public Health Nurta I Public Health Nuria II Public Haalth Nurta III Sacrafary Social Worker I Talatypa Operator 4,Jfl»- Typltt I 4,00g- Typltt 4,00^ APPLICATIONS MUST BE OBTAINED FROMi THE PERSONNEL DIVISION OAKLAND COUNTY COURTHOUSE 1300 N. Tatogroph Rd. , Pontiac, Michigan 41053 \ EMPLOYMENT OFFICE BaMmcnl HUDSON PONTIAC MALL details accurately. Position includes unusual job interest along with more routine duties. Excellent program of Employee benefits includes paid vacations, holidays, insurance and pension plan. Brief resume of work history and salaiy expected. Reply to Pontiac Press Box No. CIS. SHIRT PRESsEE. APPlV ■ MAIN STENOS-SECRETARIES $425 - BIRMINGHAM AREA ’.iJ». INTER Voodward, B'ham. 44; iSaro ability and your koyt to a bright call Fran Luak, 334 HEEDED RECEF-9 p.m. talat ixpir-, call bifort 1 p.m.. Beauty Salon, r 4 p.m., at I I Elfabalh LI It ™ISl'"r.ii" IMMEDIATE OPENINGS • in 444 nursing dept. AU SHIFTS AFTERNOON AND MIDNIGHT SHIFT DIFFERENTIAL REGISTERED NURSES SUPERVISORS 1470 -$504 REGISTERED STAFF NURSES SURFACE ORINDBR~TtAWs.|CO°'i- SHORT ORDER, EXPE^ Tralnoot wolcomod. All banotna.l halplul but will train, good ^ortlm. Equal Tool Co. 434-' full tim, EM 3-0411 oftor TV BENCHMAN, EXPERIENCED COOUtER LADY, FULL TIME, NO iSST«YM UNION CARPENTERS irtim. Flnhhort end roug I botwuun Iho'hourt uf 5 p.r I 10 p.m. 3344744 or 353-911 Marking and HlIng. Full llm. ply In . porter ------- - 405 Ooktond i Grothom Cloanort. WALLED LAKE AREA, 1 DE- ______________________________ pendable mon, part time,rai2 nSSi*'ini^iltPatoto.^Sl over 21, guaranteed $501 oe s-tits._______ per week, call, 624-5365.1 CURB GIRLS WAREHOUSEMAN OppwlSlI^fer’OTbiKlS!! RMuIrt Mllltory Strvlca be com-plolo. Orlvor-t itonae (noodad tor tpocloi dollvtrlkt). High tchool graduato pratorrod. Watt DetroN Olott of Fonlloc Inc. 715 Auburn Avt. ________FE MI353 WASH ROOM HEL tortort and llghi or part «m. Rat Fanflac Laundry. S40 S. Talagriph.' M. or F. WAITRESSES TELE-TRAY OPERATORS BIG B^Ve^A^ANT Tol-Huron' StwipptnBCantor DRUG CLERK WANTED, tIm. Cunnii ' Huron Ctntor. uTi 'oV Experienced Secretary —........ Itgal or root . Mutt bt an Id • Salary ( , 330^4. I/MMEDIATE FRINGE BENEFITS; 1-Pald LHa Int. 3-Pald Sick Oaya BBN’EFnS AFTB<*1 YEAR: 1-Pild Elua Cron 3- 3 imki paid vacaIMn ^ANir 5 an. I % vacation 4- Pta m«ny olhar fringa hang CONTACT AT ONCE: Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital 50 N. FERRY ST. PONTIAC CALL 3U-7371 eYt'rb insurance ilo Inturanca, d filing. FE 5-7157. KELLY'SERVICES ^ 125 N. Saginaw ava. tor_3_or 3 hrt. SUBSTITUTE TEACHERS FOR PONTIAC'S PUBLIC SCHOOLS Apply In Person 104 Monday through Friday PERSONNEL OFFICE ADMINISTRATION BUILDING 350 Wide Track Drivi BACHELORS DEGREE OR EQUIVALENT REQUIRED NO EDUCATION COURSES NEEDED LPtruEEtiie . riS77*‘'Sii%isr___________ 3471, Snalling A Soalling._ t-v' iM pEksan. 55ATURE WOliiiikN V6 tA6V Ilf yarn 5 .pirn. to^lljlS |km. Own 8va*to?^ IP 'C6MF Sant girl will land Ihto part tim recopflonlit ipoL S117, call Joy Long, m*m, SnaHItw E Snolling. medical OFFICE ASSISTAlfr WAITRESS WITH SOME COOKInTg “----*--- part time dish' Grill, 930 Univer' 5171 Dixlo Hwy. Wanted Mem or Woman FOR MOTOR ROUTE In Romeo Armada Area at Once Apply to Mr. Stier PONTIAC PRESS (Circulation Dept.) Want A Better Job? IPS It Iho largott portonnal tarv-Ico In thla irai and will provida Iht beat aarvica for you. Many potlMont. Foa paid. Mr. Moraan INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL IM S. Woodward, Bham 443-5345 _ I PfKeretiwg 23 A_LADY INTERIOR DECORATOR, Papering. FE H314.__________ LADIES DESIRE INTERIOR PAINT-Ing In Witortord area, free ai- PAINTINO, PAPERING Tuppar, OR 3-7M1 PAINTING AND P A P E R 11 You'ra 0494. AINTI Orvol GMcumb, 573- 10 AND DECORATING 24-A AGED FURNITURE in now at lings' alto Call 335- Iwm**”' yov’ Wanted ChiMreii te Board 28 CHILD TO BOARD. DODGE PARK area. 4I^3419. 1 ROOMS AND“"BATH~PRTvXfE antranca. FE 5<4to. ___ 3 ROOMS, BATH. GARXGE, PRT-Vito. Now carpet. Ooco ratad. Clean. Adults. S30 wk. FE $- ROOMS, NEWLY DECORATED, privito bath — antrinct, couple onfy. 3B Norton Streol. ROOMS. PRIVAfE BATH. POri-tine city, W»dt73. ROOMS. tlOO A MONTH, curify dtp. $75. Coll btiwoo noon and 5 p.m., FE 5-7515. Wanted HeuseIioM Ceadi 29 CASH FOR FURNITURE AND AP- -■■■'p’fe------------ CASH FOR GOOD USED HOUSE-Mv'l-’twi*' HIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR good furniture and applloncet. Or whof hav# you? B & B AUCTION DIxl* Hwy. OR 3-2719 3 ROOMS AND BATH. POR Appointment CPU FE 2-2727 betwftn «OOMS, ;iton. Utl wfeST SIDErCLOSE-lN. ______. ____ _ _E. ( CIton. Ufimiot turn. Carpotod. Prl-vato ontranca. Coupla only. 45 Nor-inn. FE 45419. 3 ROOMS AND BATH, CHlIb WEL-coma - 532X0 par weak, 375 da^ l^lra at 273 Baldwin. ^|l 331- ROOMS AND BATH,<':%MXlL bilby wakanM - no paM,to35. par nqulra gt 371- ROO^, liT floor, cnirpnet/ utill^l depotH. 33Mbr WlVAfi Wanted $ DELUXE BACHELOR APARY mont. Atlrictiva and ceniplotoly furn. Including utlllftoi. Boot of everything. Qblet. On Elliobtfh, laK, frord. tllB monthly. 413-3410. _______________! ADULTS ONLY, 3 ROOMS, BATH, COPPER, BRASS; RADIATORS:! now unlit. 33»374g. Dix-i bachelor JRoSSl private nice, te-4375. 1 CALL, THAT'S ALLI CASH FOR antiques, qualify lurniture and guns. M. H. Billow, Holly, 437-5193 , OR 3-5349.______ _________ SuiuUv i.iA4nn a # tit HOUSEwIFE WOULD LIKE USED BEDROOM, Man or Woman ---------' FOR TY^^fNGANDGEN-let, ^kaoplng oxMrtonco sand ratuma ttaling age, _ , - lead and nurlfal tlafut ft; bAEV tiT E PilJ^ E. Boulevard and Parry. Y6VK KIM(MM.iMk 6E t^lOOftis and togal ability will win Hflt Do you tova an AVON Ripmanta-tivi calling on you roguiarlyT It yooldon'l pir^ If It an opon torrl^y which could oftor you m axcollunf naminn oppurtunlty. Start now lor big Chrltlmat ^Itt No axpartonca ntcaatary. Part tlnw. Call FE 40439 M write PO| I Help Waated Hi or F. $2.00 PER HOUR “ WI-3202. AF>LiatlONi NOW tAtC- fJtSXaSffSilla*Dr?:t ATtENTION Salvation army naadt 111 , Chrlthnai allont ihli year, ?E bLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED nM ■ DORRIS Business Is So Good That wave gxpandlna and n lilng our aniot Mr Ifit tioMid this yaar. wa naad txpar REALTORS MOTOR ROUTE IN Troy Ro^al Oak Area at. Once APPLY TO Mr. Stier PONTIAC PRESS (Circulation 0^.1 SePe mip Male4eaiale M CAN YOU SELL? ay. Rial Ettato tmtorlanci halnli but net nacittary. Wl hava a goad aulldint pragrim and an itfrac-tlva cemnnlitlon tchadula. For torvlaw call — Mr. Taylor, REPRESENTATIVE Tp.MlI on qualiriid laada In your Pontiac Press WANT ADS ARE FAMOUS FOR "ACTION" PROFESSIONAL COUPLE, 1 CHILD Laata newer 3 or 3 badroorr home. 3175-SW Watt tide. 334 5959 dayt. 4IMy avaningt. Shm Uviiig OtortBrs 33 GIRL TO SHARE NEW country homo with 1 oihur glrlt, prlvato hodroom. MA 5-1555. WORKInA girl TO LIVE IN AND Mark axMtaa with tame. FE 5X710 batora 4 p.m. WORKING GIRL WISHES to iharo N 335X419. 1 TO 50 svikj'a»'uKSw,®i WARREN STOUT, Raoltor Opdyka Rd. YORK we BUY we TRADE gifim Hwy. Dray^rpW. CASH 48 HOURS LAND CONTRACTS-HOMES WRIGHT ! Oakland Ava, FE 3X141 Wl^cjlH^ Fot*^A*^iVArt ?o"un^^^ICl Wn“? YORK AT 574tMI LAWYERS REAL ESTATE S3 to nags of ^ 689-0610 niKsw tion data Oct. 31. For tha hui profattlonal man or woman Ihi needs al the conVanlaneat, Dirlin Court Apartmenit hava fumIMl tach ipartnwnt with the fellewTni IndtoMual room control aloe, hti Central unit alr-conditloning GE Combination wathor-dryor Garage diapotai GE Etoc. range with 1 13 cu. rtirig. Laiy Sutan pantry. Thiia or I ^ Loon Blochura, Ganarol Contrac-tof. 4743134 3 a.m.X p.m. oom __________MY MTU. EFFICIENCY APARTMEN utllltlat, adults. 33^7333. EFFICIENCY apartment 390 N. Paddock. FREE ROOM RENT FOl'"BAE'i^- MIXED AREA Ettoclency apartmint $25 par wok.» Slovo. retrlgarator, and utilillM -turnlthag. FE 2-9141. BEDROOM, UTILITIES paid dduHt, 10003 OlxIo. 535-2540. WEST SIDE. WeIl EUkNlShED'; iSRsr^’sT^nrAii-rsJsii . i".r*S: 007-5715. Apartuli, Uiilanililied~M BEDROOM APARTMENT, 5120 monthly, carpotod, heat, ilr-con-dmonlng, atova and mfrlMrator ;warga.todU!^^i^ Sto, PurfliNMd or mo.p $n BOB. $74-1341. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 80, 1967 D—a » fepl*S ^i) bAth, stoVI aMB r*h»r«tw, «H utmtlM, fW chih *-tn Of pWl. auMi. kfMwu$iH,vamtMi$i U llMMi, Finibhad iEAUTIFUL PANORAMIC V I t W I HI top Lmurlowo, 2-h#*oom, •plll-lcvtl, «t 0 V 0, rofrlutratof. washof, Jfwr, i twid. OR 3.|W4. only—Wotarjord ijgd~aS.it: i ROOMl STOVE" AHd ftEPRlS- MBAtED, AIR COlJbi tidnad, 2 bedroeim, adults, no pots H*y, Jst, near Jiopplno canters I ROOM, BATH, STOVE, REFRIO-orator, MtllltlW, 130, FE K179. i-RpoM dOKex, excellent lp.fn._______________________ BLOOMFIELD ORCHARDS APARTMENTS Idaalty altuatad In Bloomtlald-I mrnghsm area, luxury 1- and ^ bedroom apartments available lor liTtmaelato pMMulon from $iu per mei............ Hotpoint, pltancoi swlmml ind large > ancos. large imming pool i All utTlItlas L__________________ . dbtall of luxury hai been ovar-lookad In Bloomfield Orchard Apt. locatad on South Blvd, (M Mila Rd.), W' ......................... --isaaray. (day, Is i; UN ; $,#770. AMERICAN HERITAGE APARTMENTS I and 2 bedroom. Oil me venlencas, carport, and 0 tncludOd raidT No cl^ 330S Watklni Laka Ri tonagar on Pramhas fFF rc I EkltV■"AMAtMtl EMBASSY EAST APARTMENTS One bedroom, air condltl par mo. Sea earatr wa.t Apartmant., Rd,t Waterford Twp. LAKE VISTA AI ~ 3 room, and bath, IVINS LAROE LIVI fir; water furnlNied. Wait .Ido loca-«M100. ItOOM, bath, antranoe, itionad, heat. conditioning: *«»'l775. SPACIOUi 2.BEORI OpM GARDitf-aleony, frort-fraa rafrigarater, dtluxa atdva, dip >17S par mo, FE 4-S472, iYLVAN ON THE LAkR* 1 aRd CABIN. COMPLETELY OaODERN. a to a. %»m FE P2337. COrtAliE - SLE fWL Masan. 3ll,3i27. (Rra^I youiM marrlad. or *itF . „ THE HOLPFh. smith S33-7S4a._____________________ I, ill! M0HVH plus Ufa, u ' basamant, 1 ' CLARkiTON area Immediate occupancy, 3 badroom ranch, tamily room, ivs baths, full basement, 2 car garage, large let, many extras, exc. terms. $31,-500. Other homes and lots i able. L.H.R. Corp., 474-2343. Crestbrook MODEL OPEN DAILY 12 S-badroom, family room and 2-car garaga, priced at only 114,400 plus lot. Locatad In new i StTwater.'^'lSr^vaoutAMO to eras'-cent Lake Road, turn right to crestbrook Street and medal. GIROUX INSTANT HOUSE NEED A HOME NOW? Hera's, a goodie — 3 bad._- -newly decorated ranch out West of town. Full basament, comfy oil heat, $4 X 157' sits — ITS VACANT — you can move right In. 22500 down on land contract - 115,100 total. IT FEELS LIKE HOME The minute you step through the front door of this wall arranged one floor home — 3 badro^s, a modern kitchen and bath, pleasant softly carpeted living roam, utility room, gas heat, community water, vinyl siding, 3Vi car garage, large lot. SiTsOO. FHA terms. CALL ANY TIME. HAGSTROM REALTOR 4*00 W. HURON MLS OR 4-0351 FE 1-3041 Sds H—«•« 49 0 doWn payment, m baths, II1,770'ON YOUR lot. ART DAN- lals Rea^, 31000 Ford, KEI---- or KE 7-7220.____________ AND FREE CLOSING COSTS IN THE CITY Drivt ihr. ttiii older three bed one# Inclede •ck yard - cerptfftiB,, TUCKER REALTY CO. and is near downtown. Leceted M3 IN THE COUNTRY IRWIN SEMINOLE HILLS; Vary attractive, 4’,ti room, 1<4 room, m baths. Brick home. One bedroom down — 2 bedrooms INCOME HOME; _____________ The turnished upper apartment consists of living room, kitchen, l badroom and bath. Private entrance. BUYING OR SELLING CALL JOHN K. IRWIN & SONS 313 West Huron — Since 1*25 FE *-*444 After 5 P.M. FE 54144 LAKE FRONT boat dock - bar-b-que pit low down payment. Land ( trict. EM 34703. 3 BEDROOM — Garage — lake S1000 - -ftrms. Em"3-^ 3 ACRES WITH 1 BUILDING, high rolling - nice neighborhood — 214,000 with $5,000 down. EM 3-5477. COMMERCIAL — possible 3 all lor $4,000, or ' — ' Main rd. This 2 I un home Is lust the tt you. It Is on s large Iva out Ortonvilla Read (M Glass Road, turn right I E. Glass Road. OR 4-2222__________ NOfiTH SIDE New vinyl siding with 10 yr. { antec will make you a proud ar ot this 2 badroom home gas heat — garaga — closa to Fisher Body — $12,500 — nagotla- Undorwood Raol Eitalo ORION TWP. This Is a vary dlno YORK OXFORD AREA kitchen with NO. H-11 — 3-badroom ranch. Larga with carpeting. ‘ siding and 2’,ystzo bodroomta mb noat. Ren> tiac Northarn DlMrm. CarpMIng In living room and hallway. Baau-tlfui covartd Mflo with barbteua. Built In 1964. Only $12.90. Uppsr MiddlB Straits Loke Charming ranch home. Large 2D.4'x17.lV living room, 2 bedrooms, oil heat, brick fireplaca, nice yard. Plentir ot shada trees. LOW taxes. See It today — you'll VON REALTY GEORGE VONOERHARR. Raaltor In tht Mall MLS Room 110 $16,190 Rrivtlegaa. Wideman WEST SIDE w both fixtures. . FA heat. Larga garage. Cental High and Pontiac General area. CALL FOR APPOINTMENT. WEST SliBURBAN $78 Mo. Excluding taxas and Inturanca ONLY $10 Deposit WITH APPLICATION 3-BEOROOM HOME LARof ^INlfiV^ ARRA WILL ACCEPT ALL APPLICATIONS FROM ANY WORKERS. TED McCullough Rtaltor divorcees. PEOPLE WITH CREDIT PRO^ CASH FOR YOUR LAND LEMS AND R---------- CONTRACT OR EQUITY O^AY WITH US. APPROXIMATELY I ACRES. Only|°'’^oR'cOME TO°I*0*KENNETT^^' a few miles from Pontiac. 3-bad- NEAR BALDWIN room aluminum tidad home, fire-l real VALUE REALTY g!,1ft!in'Vr'?nd'Tni.'^!.^ard;! For Immediate Action Coll kitchen, m eargaraga.fl*,*00. | 5-3676 626-9575 BEAUTIFUL LAROE WOODED LOT on land, contract I ___ Main r * “ 363«6703. LAKE PRIVILEGED RANCH - 628-2548 423 3. Lapear Rd. (M24) mOYER - Tarms. 363-7700. HIGHLAND AREA - Bultdina sites — Duck Lakt — $2,100 - low down payment. 363-5477. 20 ACRES — Highland Twp. -$18,500 full price. EM 3-6703. 4 BEDROOM BRICK RANCH ~ V/3 car attached garage » Ar-tlslan well water — alum, storm Office I '8, 9 1 larga living room, ensatt galore. Pull basement, gas FA heat. AIM a 4-roem home at rear currently ranting for $100 per me. SEE IT TODAY. 1. 0. WIDEMAN, REALTOR 412 W. HURON 334-4526 EVES. CALL 62M059 WYmUn LiWfS RiALTy^ heat - Call for apMintme Full price only $19,m. EM 3-7700 LIVING QUARTERS WITH BUILT-IN BUSINESS — Party store ^ beer and wina - 1 house rented — 1 store rented — apt. up and down — garaga 1,140 ALUMINUM SIDING. ROOFING IN |l-A BACKHOE AND DOZER, SVC.| CONDRA PLUMBING I HE^NG 651-4576 ...........‘Superior" — VOor[ Sewer and Septic Installation ! Sawar, water Unas - FE S-0643. 'ppmt ncctrcft-^ei< ~xMn servlets. Condra. FE 14443.1 To; oxnni P'*'* '"".ry room, ii»- 731-84001 clous glassed-ln porch, garage with water and gas, lake privileges. H2,7SO. Terms. 6 I L CONSTRUCTION, SPiCIAL In vinyl ilT ■ 9R 3^179. Rent BttiinMS Property 47-Al ASFhaLT - PAVING - FREE ES- ASPHAL^-^UNt FAVlflgTd Residential or commtrclal. No |M tod small Cf larga. PE S-74S*. _ _ ASPHALT PARKING LOTS ANDS. Lucas Waterford rdadwayt. Samt location since ^ ..... 1*30. Also tailing asphalt and seal-ar. Ann Arbor Construction Co Lake — Talegrapha < _______________________________ JACKS DRIVE INN ^tfe tlalds,'dry wells. FE ___ SEPTIC FIBLDSi DRY WELL, TRENCHING, WATER LINES aterford Sewer Cons 673-0240 BROWNIES HARDWARE FLOOR SANDERS-POLISHEPtS WALLPAPER STEAMERS -POWER SAV RUG CLEANER- 20x50 MODERN STORE. IDEAL tor any lypa of business. Plenty of parking. Talagraph frontage. Immediate possession. A. JOHNSON A SONS Realtor 1714 3. Telegraph Rd. FE 4-2533 57*4 MAYBEE RO., AT SASHABAW, existing bldg., excellent lor Med-cllnlc or beauty shop. Immediate ent with option to 473-34SS or 334-4222. PHONE; 682-2211 5143 Cass-Ellzabelh Road OPEN DAII Asphalt an6 StAL-coAfiNG, PONTIAC FENCE CO. ■ 'Srs:-FsrE »M^*'*-Hwy,--------------42jjo« PONTIAC ASPHALT PAVING seal Coatln* Free iHImatn Fast Acfkm Ft 54*t3, FE 4-4511 TAG ASPHALT PAVING IMMEDIATE SERVICE FE 5-1573 BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER Your family boating headquarters, starcralt aluminum and llberqias ihali Lake and l.M.P. fibarglas. 1245 S. Woodward at Adams Road.i Ml 7-0133. ___ I Irick a SlKk Sinrfct DAL CONSTRUCTION. BEAUTI-ful While Birch OR 3-0179 A-1 NEW, REROOF - REPAIRS Cali Jack ‘ * ----- OR 3-9590 A-1 BULLDOZING, F I N I I 682 6*45” ***** ^*** BACKHOE, Cook. T^P CARL L. BILLS SR., NEW AND XX- Mndlng. PE 3-I7S*. n. w. SliJVQElirTrLTOr DWNG sanding and finishing. FE S45*3. ^ Floor Tiling ^ CUSTOM FLOOR COVERING. LI-noleum, formica, tile. Carpeting. * ■ ‘ Perry, FE 2-4090. , insoroncB BRICK, BLOCK, STONE, CEMENT FARMERS INSURANCE GROUP, work, firtplactt specialty. 335-4470.1 rgtes, aut»-homeownars. Mir- firepTac'Iis, wRrfrkN ouaran | _.ci^iia, 334-4W7. _______, Plowing tae. EM3447*. '_______^-------] Lnndtcnpino i~ - r. commercial and RESIDENTIAL - . ™ £mnnnn‘’'*H!i'w*^4"sf^r*"f'"fl COMPLETE LANDSCAPING Ewta iPama'irmg in ,pgj|g„„ng p„ken concreTe.i ..r....,-_________________________ ---1—r.------ I retaining walls. Free astimalas. Jj i-A SNOW PLOWING, BY JOB OR Montcalm. 332 *271. Jack -'ostloMlIih to suit tei 25,200 SQ. FT. ■cent bldgs, aero; Ic Hospital. Will ttnant or will Roofing 140. Contact Bruce Annett parser Annett Inc. Realtors Save the leek. 33B-411S,^‘—Huron_Sf. AT UNION LAKE BRAND NEW 3 bdrm. ranch home with full hesement on a lot I20'x- LEGES. SItM down. $11,590 BRAND NEW. 3-bedrm. ranch, on your lot, full basement fully INSULATED, family kitchen. No money down. MODEL. YOUNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER BILT Russell Young, 334-3t30 53V5 W. Huron St. I Open Evenings I, ! then AT ROCHESTER Bi^borhood Is important Frushour BRICK RANCHER harp as It bedrooms, petmg am oom In tht . . mic b carpeting and finished om the city. $ cost* fl TOO SMALL on FHA. Trade Monthly payn Selling for $10 JACK FRUSHOUR, Realtor 5630 Williams Lake Rd. MLS 674-2245 QUALITY NEW HOMES BY ROSS Buy at toda^'^kas and iava BEDROOM HOMES RANCHES-COLONIALS SPLIT LEVELS FROM $28,700 Inci base lake prlvlltge lot Lake Lois from $7,000 OPEN dally, tun. 1-lj).m. .LAKELAND ESTATES brick ranch — axcallent In ev- a r- - n • j I ery way - I car oaraoa. -| A Fine Residential Community Off Dixie Hwy. 4-10 ml. past Walton Blvd. Shoralina Drivo Call 423-0470 ROSS HOMES 1*41 S. Telegraph Rd. FE_4-05*1 MfcWs^Vr:; RETIRING special .................. - lull price 537,500. Trrms. -iNaat and clean ranch with full Additional 12 acres avelleble.' basement, new o*s furnace, n~ 343-5477. .carpeting, 2-cer garage 15x23 Ing room 0 down, al»ul S70 WIXOM AREA — 4 bedrooms month. Owner's agent. 474-14*! - g.,ag.,n...acr.H- RHQDES ENT BEATER, bri CLARK CLOSE IN WEST SUBURBAN -Near Mall. tl3,*M an Ot.. o, F.H.A. tarms. Clean 2 bedroom ■ wllli lar wooded setting — only $24,500.1 343-4703. 21,000 DOWN - 3 bedroom basemtnf — Ftnced yard — Land contract. 363-7700. priced to sell — lor Intorme- 3 BEDROOMS fireplace -- garage Full overlook- ing Union Lake. 223,*00. 343-5477. WILL BUILD TO SUIT HAVE LOTS FROM 21,11 4703. LIST WITH HACKETT and start to peck It Hackttt ReaHy Offices Pontiac end Union Laka this Reasonable. 40>7S14. SAND, GRAVEL ALL KINDT^TOP soil, reasonable prices, chei prices, last delivery, 473-004*. 55,000 SQ., FT., FOR INDUSTRIAL or warehousa with 110,000 cemented parking lot fencad. 4415 Dixit Hwy. or old 5R bwjg. MA 5-2141. HOP RIGHT OTER To Bloomfield Miracle Mile Choice etoreroomt now evelleblet SS'xISiy — I WIckes. 750 per mo. Pi store - $300 vceiie coi I Lynch, 33B-2442. 1 NDUSTRIAL BUILDING 2300 SQ.I ft. Near Pontiac plant and hew Suitable badroom brick bungalow that' near schools, shopping and church Easy farms, $27,W. SHEPARD REAL ESTATE 451-7175 tor Inspection AUBURN HEIGHTS 4 bedroom, I00'x344' lot with trull end berries, full basement, oil heat, aluminum elding tiorms, screens, Vft baths, 2 cai; garage, beautifully lan^scaj^ yard. REA°GAN REAL ESTATE 251 N. opdyka _________ 332-0154 iGAYLORD Walton. Nice brick 5 oil heat, 6(7 shaded lot, 2 blocks from bus line. Only $10,000. $2,800 down, balance on land contract, rage, dog kennels. Only $10,000 down, balance lai $30,000, MR. BUSINESSMAN n's acres with nearly new brick ranch home. 900' waterfront on Indian Lake channel. Price drastically reduced for quick sale. Call MY 2-2621, ,FE 6-9693. LAKE FRONT seven walk-out b IV} baths is the tir See this i-CAR OARAGES, 20'X20', M75. WE •r* iM-xi builders and build any work. Free aetlmalas. CBtallly work since 1*45 NOW IS the bast time to pl.n .. rtmodql - prices are lowetll Additions—Recreetlpn rooms Attic roomi - Aluminum etorm Wln^s - Siding end trim. 14 N. Saol/iaw GSiM FE 2-1211 FrH aetlmatae_________ Terms AobfchNiYI-ALuMlNOM^ LidINS, Seles, 435-1501 435-3537. season. 333-4**3 or 453-2473 __ trM Trimming $arvic* H, Waltman. 3M-0314. __ MAULING AND SODdING, ALSD tinish grading. FE e-Sjn. MERToN BLUE SOSTpiCK UP OR . , ____________ delivered. 4443 Sherwood, 42e-2000. A-1 TREE SERVICE BY BS.L MARION BLUE SOD, PEAT, plete landscaping. Tamarack Sod'A-1 TREE REMOVAL, REASON-Farm. 740 Lochava Union Laka walk-put basement to buy lake property. . . . Call MY 2-2021, FE 8-9693. GAYLORDS INC W. Flint St., Lake Orion 6Y 2-2821 FE 8-9693 A. J. RHODES, REALTOR FE 1-2304, 254 W. Walton, FE 5-4712 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE LAKEFRONT HOME Rochester - 4~BfoioOM bun- ---- Basement. Garage. Shaded Wllhin 4 minutes ot 1-75. Family, togetherness is Important. You and ‘ ^ your children can swim on thlil -- SCHRAM Has garage and 3 carpetad rooms and 2 baths. Coma oyr and sea for yourseff. $24,900. Tarms. / C. PANGUS INC., Realtors open 7 DAYS A WEEK | ‘ " Ortonvilla, 7-2415 I living ullll- it water heat. Carpatim Includ-. IAAMBDIATB POSSefSION. east city — Low Down Payment us Mortgage Costs. Large 7 om home with aaperalo dmlng sm, larga kitchen, hill basa-tnt, gas heal. Carpating In llv-) and dining rooms and drapes :ludad. Quick poasaulon. Full 2Vi car attachad garaga. Baauti- i|!U‘"N,r'S;.rn^X"^hS."t': 224,*00, 10 par cant down plue HALL north side city locatlor bedroom ran clean and neat S manufacturing, ware- 2-cer garage, 6740334 or 402-1452. 635 It. lot. Don't ED WINTER STORAGE, campon and ate. 13,000 sq. Rochaster, Lakt Orion. OL DO-IT-YOURSELFERS, PLAN ahead for this aprlng. Plan to Install your own underground lawn sprinkler eystom. Hava your system axDOrtlv dosignad and angl-Sprlnkler Dastoi Service of Pontiac. 473.3403. HARDWOOD LUMBER ding, 7653. A-1 INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR -Femlly roume, rough or llnlshodi dormers, porchit, recreation, , rooms, kitchens, bathrooms. State! fencing 626-7693. 4M-"^; ‘ ZTT^LBompvipR CARPENTRY AND PAINTiIig' New and repair, FE 5-1331 Carpentry, new 'an6 repaTS "DALBY & SONS" stump, tree, removal S-3P05 PIreplaet Wood PE 5-3035 . 'and removal Enfarprleai, SBOOSSS, rREE CUTTIN Tod BIwood I Trucking -1 LIGHT MOVING, TIkASH hauled r4otoniblo. FE 4-1353._ CAREFUL ENClSSEO AAOVING. delivery. Fraa eetlnnatea. HAULiNG AN6 RUBBISH. eu^gll, iNTEklO frA.*_________________ 0714. Mniibox Poftt MAILBOX POSTS INSTALLED CEMENT WORK ALL TYPES, SPE. Cement ond Biock Work GuInn'e Conetructlon Co. PE 4-7477 Evas. 3*1-3471 DreMmnldng, Tnileringr ikTTY JO'S gftELsfljLkiWS- ------------Itloni. 474-3704 ;Nb kLitU floni. FE 4413*. A-1 PAINTING I PAPER HANGING SPtfCISL PE ^77I3. itxPBiCr ~FATirrit46~~Aj«5' >AFIr hanalnd. Call HarWg, 471,47*0. PAINTING, PAPERING, WALL claaninq, Npar removal. B. T. Sam dusky. FE44S4I. UL ^31*0. SUXCitV'y^R k'XirutiB’6:' pATN't- wrTng, wall washing, 473- Mts GUTTER CD. COMPLETE hKmb OK. HAULING. BEDROOM ^ICtT^ANCH, 2 car attached garaga« backyard fancfdj clo$e to schools. 674-2989. YORK WE BUY WE TRADE ?7?3lph;S Hwy. Drayton Aa?w . BALDWIN AREA YORK Gl SPECIAL I Clarkston araa, o sharp 2 bedroom, aluminum sided home, with full Basement. Lake privileges on Walters Lake. Selling for onfy $10,-1 500. "0" down to tha ex Gl call YORK WE TRADE DR 4D363 Drey ton Plains Immediate occupancy. 513,*eo. Best ] down plus closing costs, FHA COUNTRY LIVING ,4 p./s»j4 I 2-bedroom ranch with full base- cSfSfo.'^fio •"<< '*'9* Ij' Needs e college, SIS,- bendy G. I. Only lig,*56. OPEN EVES. AND SUNDAY List With SCHRAM And Coll the Van ,OSL 363-7188 REALTOR HIITER NEAR FLINT - Neat 4 rooms bath. Plosterod walls. Braezeway. Attached garage. Aluminum siding. *0 X 4sg ff. lot. Ils.sog. Terms. Includes carpeting, draperlaa gerator and rango. 5l50e down 0 doting cost. Call OR 3-1564. > answer DA l-ieei. Lauinger 1 JOSLYN AVE. FE 1-9471 .TOR MLS Serving Pontiac 18 Years _ STRUBIE ROCHESTER-UTICA AREA 3-bedroom rancher, largo 13' kitchen, carpoled living room, 24' family room and l'/>-car garaga, eat-tlng on 3 lots for a total of 134' frontage. Priced at 5l4,*gg with Gl terms. ; LAKE PRIVILEGES 3 MODELS OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAY Drive out MS* lust Lake Rd. to CandeletlCk. Directly '3gSSg™”«-r»-t LIGHT HaUlING AND MOVING > MATTINGLY reasonable, FE 5-7443. I fronHiad'loidlng. PE aSi03. M TRUCKS AND LOADER lor hira. 473-1614. Trvck Rental Trucks to Rent IWTon Stake Vy-Ton Pickups TRUCKS - TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT Dump Trucks — Seml-Trallert Pontiac Farm and Industrial Trocter Co. S3S S. WOODWARD FE 4-4441 PE 4-1443 Open Dally Including Sunxigy Water Softeners SALES AND RENTALS BCQQMPIELO WALL CLEANERS. WalU eiaanad. Raae. £itiaf«ctlan guaranWid. Inaurad. FE 3-UM PioEtEring SErvice ^ 5 L L DRILLING. WELL PLASTERINO. FREE ESTIMATES, points changad, pump tarvica. D. Mayart. 34L*5*S. I 3-1S31. ^ t " 'I { Y"" i bEdroom RBDECORATCO I on larga lot. II0,3«, 12400 --------- • ■A’.'«7WBa Lakt'Rd., Clarkatgn. 4*k417. Land contract, FOR THE HANDYMAN — this 3- . WE BUY WE trade! OR 4-0343 OR 4-0343 J, '"9,1, '9a7a9« . 4713 Dixie Hwy.___Drayton Plains BIRMINGHAM-BLOOMFIELD SAVE! Realty Comm. By owner. Lg. new $12,200 — wE BUILD — w... ranch homt. Biiata _ilta ranchaci with oak floors, vanityLAKE PRIVILEGES. This 3 In bath, full basamant. Gai heat.l bedroom, full basemenL Waterford KAllf\ CTDIIRIP On your lot. To sea tha model Only $11,000 on land iVULU dlKUoLt CALL B. C. HIITER, REALTOR,I contract. REALTOR 3792 ELIZABETH LAKE RD. FEl 2-0179. AFTER 8 P.M. 682-4653. OFFICE OPEN 9-9 SUN. O/H-OI/J OPljN---------- ----------------- land contract terms Offarod on Itils 1 bedroom homo. (Could easily ba ' locatad In Hally living rtx>m. Yard; lered wall* througlwut. Good starter home or retirao homa. Oftarad at 510,754 with 41500 down. SoMart will considtr oflar. WATERFORD AREA ^ ^ New 3 bedroom ranch with brick front. 3 large bedrooms, with plon-tv of clostt room, family sized kllchan, with loads ot cabinets. Clean gat heat, community water, $13,*0O total price with 51400 down plus closing costs. Let us show you this boauty. B. HALL REALTY 454* Dixit Hwy. *-*^ily 435-411^ KINZLER INDIAN VILLAGE Near Pontiac Mall. Save a fl.OW as price hat lust been reduced to $15,*00 with only $1,600 down on this Immaculate 3 bedroom, m bath homo with modorn kitchon and recreation peting and drai raga. Immadlata- ALL BRICK RANCH Near all Clarkiton tchoolt and ahopplng. Has country kitchen and basement lor racraatlon, 3 cor garage with e lactric NEW RANCH HOMES All white axiarlor with attachad 2-car garage. * delightful rooms and 1'^ baths, walk-out basamoni 3 BEDROOMS with large living room e... ... room, finished basamant, 2-car ga-rej^northtlda location. For only! the Rolfe H. Smith Co. Sheldon B. Smith. Rtellor 244 S. TELEGRAPH RD. 333-7141 ____ Office Open f-l B^OhoOM WDmI; 1W' BATHS, McCerroll School arte. FE 2-41^ 3-BEOROOM. DINING ROOM, place ceramic bath. Stool In bi ment. Gas boat. Service lor ^ or electric range. 4 blocks Ir 3 Bedrooms LOW DOWN PAYMENT NO MORTGAGE COSTS MODEL OPEN * 57* COLORADO 1:30 to 5 p.m. — 4Hlty week WESTOWN REALTY’ 10% DOWN NEW HOMES 3-BEDROOM TRILEVEL, finished lemlly room, I'/k-cor gkregt. 213,-400 plus lol. 3-BEDROOM RANCH l ment, 2-car garaga, Ing, 415.700 pTus lot. 5-BEDROOM BRICK TRILEVEL. ivy baths, 3 - car otriM, larga kitchen, dining area. SlCSOO, plus lot. 4-BBOROOM COLONIAL, 31/. bathe, Alumavlsw wlndowe, 2 Dixie Hwy. WatarteS. 51-A 74' TITTABAWASSEE $3000 Includes I 00 ACRES, 5 ROOM HOUSE, Hally furnished, western U.P., $100 per acre, OR 3-1900. ____________ KALKASKA AREA, 10 ACRES IN restrictad hunting camp, I" wooded, close to am d: $1,250 tor— - NOTHING DOWN. TAKE OVE payments. 025 mo. Lots I25'x150', Highland area. 20 min. Pontiac. OMn Sun. BkKh Bros. 623-1333, FE 4-4509. 5660 Dixie Hwy. ' Dj^WMDED $279 down. PrIviHe sand'beach large lake. Fishing and boating. Dear and partrMga hunting. Northern Davalopmant Co., Harrison, Office on But. US-27 (F7S) Wilson State Park. Oi bar or Commorcs). •o,°cTan Suburban Propsrty A COUNTRY HOME 3 bedroom brick ranch on 1 Ceramic baths, dining room, large enclosed patio, full bei ' tached garage, $20,000 quick possession. MILTON WEAVER, INC., Realtors In the Vlllego - - -10 W. University Lots—Aertugu ACRES LOTS ON BLACKTOP ROAD Clerkston schools — 12,750 -percent down. BUY NOW BUILD IN SPRING Real Esteto agricultural. 625-2615 COUNTRY LIVING: " elr aplenty ot living er Freeh aq. ft. 3 bedroom brick with extra <4 both ' _ orth luburl Clerkaton end Orion blacky street. Even new carpeting at "Prlcad-To-Sell" of M6,- tO ACRES FOR PRIVACY, PLEAS-I ure, investment. FE 2-2144. ; Smith. ________________________ LOTS AT PINE LAKE- SI 500 aero. Terms. ARCHITECTURALLY Speeklngthlt house hat e of'^'lend, 2 I $26,900. FOR THE LARGE FAMILY 9n Iho move we have en ell br I bedroom Capo Cod home that NO. 17 3-BEDROOM RANCHER" CITY WEST SIDE; with fu way, garage and a draplect. excellent ntech tacllltles. price, 019,500. Terms or trade. A WORKMAN'S COMPENSATION It partially a nice home ft family with ads SON-ili g-m Corner ot Scott Lake I kine Lake Rd. COLONIAL, TRI-LEVEL •’■O'NEIL’ Jrch«; WHY NDT TRADE? '$60'ST;! WEST SUBURBAN Spacious alum, ranch In line clote-|ln location. Footurlng extra large Hying room with fireplace, formal Idining room, thro# nice badroomt, plus tun parlor end breeklett nook. Lf lace, full lUte-large lot. Full lend contract Warren Stout, Realtor ) n\ Opdyk* Rd. FE M165 Multipld Ltsling S«rvic« DBlIy tiri TIMES............ FDUR BEDRDDMS, SYLVAN LAKE PRIVILEGES DXBDW LAKE Privileges ottered with the pur. chase of this quad level brick only $20,900. Terms ee of otlractlvo homes BATEMAN REALTDR-MLS PONTIAC ORION-OXFORD BR. FE $-7161 628-4211 377 Telegraph Rd. 1120 Lapeer Rd. ROCHESTER Br. UNION LAKE Br. OL 1-151$ EM 3-4171 730 S. Rocheiter Rd. $175 Commerce IncoHM Prop^^ ^ SO STARTING SOON — NEW I UNIT deluxe eperlmenl apartments i the Pontiac Mall, mooo reoul Call Leon Blechure. general tractor. 674-3136. Motel el south 01 Walton Blvd. e law of the tint eppointmanls offered here. Call lor your ap-polnlment. ARE YDU Going to buy e template a futui act? Why not ‘ thit 3-bedrw ranch homo building pro|- FHA terms. REAL CDMFDRT that's whet you will enloy In 3-bedroom home located north have fhe kav and wa can aell up to be a nica homa or incoma. If lo quelltite veteran Sr lero ?•" '“'•7 •! W-W: down. Approxtmafely $500 closing A costs. Call for yoiir appointment , usT With D'neil realty WHEN YDU SEEK OUR SERVICE For 3 Good Reosons "JOIN THE MARCH TO TIMES ■ ■ , _ , And oof Hit of good prospects Times Realty j Vay reauy $10,750. C. A. WEBSTER, Reolty 692-2291 620-2515 "Buy direct from Beouty-Rite and Save" BEAUTY-RITE HDMES COMMERCE LAKE 50X200' IDEAL FOR V OUT BASEMENT. $5500. HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty UNION LAKE FRONT Lovely 50' excellent beech, dock, 7 etetely trees on 0. _ Everett Cummings, Realtors ing°3 lou. privat 2583 UNION LAKE ROAD wr EM 3 3208 ______M3.7ill year ROUND school system, 5 ACRES, A littia touch of country and a lIttIa touch of city con-vanianca. School, hospital, ihbp-ping. $3995, $650 dovi ~ 10 ACRES, axcallant pouiblUty pond, bMUliful hillilda bull silt, oak and pint 15 i^r cant dowm. uliding $7,m 7.2 ACRES, Clai 10 miles north ot Orlonville, Ce PANGUS, INC., Realtors OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK ortonvllia baw Rd. Nica HARTLAND AREA 18 acres of vacant land, h bulld^^ sitas naar expratsw Town & Country, Inc. Highland Branch Ofllce PHONE: 313-685-1585 “I have to redecorate—these are all my last year’s boy friends!” Lat*-Acreage KENT ESTABLISHED IN 1914 Twe adloinlng lets each 50x200. $1,000 each. Terms. Nice lot 105x157. BeauHlul surroundings. Near 1-75 and M-15 Interchange. A real buy at $4,500 SEMINOLE HILLS - Lot 100x150. Only $3,000 with $500 down. Floyd Kent, Inc., Realtor 2200 Dixie Hwy. at Telegraph FE 2-0123 ■ or FE 2-I9S4 age by 140' — alee ulldlng and outdoor grill. Only $7,500 — $1,000 down lo settle estate, K. L TEMPLETDN, Realtor 2339 Orchard LAKE DAKLAND 75' frontage'by 140- — alto small building and outdoor grill. Only $7,500 — $1,000 down to settle estate. K. L. TEMPLETON, Realtor $1200 ft $2400 - 120^ building sit« -> Clarkston school area. WESTWAY DRIVE Nrar Longfellow School. Nica lot. $930, 10 pet. down. BREWER REAL ESTATE PE 4-5I$1_________724 RIkar BldO. Sale Farms 56 80 to 800 ACRES iwer Michigan. Dairy, graliv or hogsl Name your farm -- ‘ at one of Real Eilate _______ 58 WANT: . . . REAL ESTATE PROS-lams. HAVE: . . . Ability fo solve them Tom Bateman, Realtor FE 8-7161 Business Opportunities 59 BAR LIQUOR. BY OWNER. HOME phone 796-6952. Arrt Bar, — Replde. Mich. BARBER SHOP < 18x30 ft. building. Equip-' ' ' ' Excellent lo ' ROYER 628-2548 823 S. Lapeer Rd. (M24) Office Hours, 9 to 9 excel Individual uulred, call Carl Schroeter, Dearborn, ____________ gon. Area Codo 313. Logan 5-0a»4. ilgan't" alar. Ml: Write or call 517-27$-2377 - days Headquarters - Dean Realty Co., or 517-28S6127 _ nights. Don't Read This Unless You Want Money HAVE STATIDNS WILL LEASE In and around Poitlac area w« have soma excellent high gallon ago gasoline stations for leasa -with or without bays. Small In vestment only — will give finan clat aeslstanca. CONTACT; GUS CAMPBELL OR LARRY TRE PECK. 674-3134. DISTRIBUTOR WANTED: AUTO- I malic beer dispenser. Endorsed OAKLAND COUNTY — 120 SCE- Beer Dlsfrlbulors, bars, and — acres-fenced, flowing spring, ^ buildings. $850 PER,' 6BA dlscowds. Earl Carrels. MA . LOANS community L^ CO. 30 E. LAWRENCE FE KM21 LOAND TD $1,0DD Usually on firet viilt. Quick, fri ly, helpful. k FE 2-92D6 I It tht nurrrtMf to call I DAKLAND LOAN CO. LOANS 825 to $14)00 Insured Payment Plan BAXTER A LIVINGSTONE Finance Co. RCA TV.4-7'x3' COMBINATION W CMC 5 YARD DUMP TRUCK, ^d condition. Swop or eell. 62> 19^-eiRD d6u6LE POWfeR. AIR lo<* mileage. Swap for okter car end take over peymente. 6736745. NAP - ON FRONT END ALIGN-nient, l-PolyoHum under - coating rraehine, 1-heavy duty steam eirtv nv - 3 7^17 truck tires, 1-smell oil circulator, 1-1961 Chevy 6, truck engine, I960 pick-up 3 speed trans-mlnlon. Will sell or swap? Standard Station, corner Orchard Laka-Mapla, 626-0525. 391-2147. F. Clark. Sola Clotiiing toft iltwtIitM titiilf. 6i FULL SIZE SEALY MATTRESS and box sprInM, Good cor S48. Ph. 674-16ge«ir 3 p.m. GAS STOV#, FULL-SIZE, COpA^R tone, used a mo., 1149. G. A Thompaen, W05 AM9 west. AS WATSC HEATtk, its. stove, S45. 01 pMe twin misc. G. Harris. Ithwesher, 5-» S45. Com pk 5-3766. 3^26, _ HDUSEHDLD SPECIAL A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OF 'URNltURE — Conslf tnnerspring mattress and matchint box spring and 2 vanity lamp S-plece dinatta set with 4 c chairs and tpble. All for $399. cridit Is good at Wyman's. WYMAN FURNITURE CO. 17 E. HURON FE KIRBY SWEEPER EXCELLEN-r CONDITION - $50 FULL GUARANTEE Kirby Service & Supply Co. 2617 DIXIE HWY.____________674-2iB KENMORE ELECTRIC STQve refrigerator, washer and *8aka offer, 674-1415. LINOLEUM RUGS, MOST S3.49 up. Pearson's FurnIti E. Pika St> FE 4-7aai._________ LUGGAGE, DISHES, GLASSWARE ...... .. ________________ Hems. 323 N. Alice St., Rochester NORGE GAS RANGE, 2 YEARS •M, like new condition. $75. 335 1782 after 6______________________ TLON SOFA, dHAIR AND OTTO-man. ReerMtion room sofa. Gai NORGE Point wasi ysar, like r 673-6158. WDULD LIKE TD SELL FUR CDAT Mink Style Muskrat SIZE 14-16 PHDNE: 673-5979 Pontiac Resale Shop Buy-Sell iques,.furniture, g I a s s w i c. 00 Latayette, first street pas land on WMa Track. 33S-693T REBUILT VACUUM CLETNEWS Other appllencea. MICHIGAN APPLIANCE CO. 6oo6s 65 S WHAT YOU'D EXPECT TO. PAY 3 ROOMS BRAND NEW FURNITURE $277 $2.50 per week LITTLE JOE'S Bargain House Baldwin at Walton, FE 2-6042 Acres of Free Parking ___'III 9; Sat, 'til 6. EZ Terms DUNCAN PHYFE DINING ROOM —$49; secretary, $65; sec $49; 5 piece ----------- — BARGAINS AT STONEYS PIECE LIVING ROOM SET, 1 «mga chair and ottoman, 5 piece formica and chrome set, 1 window air conditioner, 682-69S7. davenports,~2 baby beds. secretary, best c potantla 1953 - bl ACRE. TERMS. SECLUDED ROLLING ACRES fenced — 30 acres of woods, Ing In middle at farm, lals, ranch house built Mdg., 24x00' with Bcneo laxeu' shed, $ horse tie lie. small tack room 60x66' poie Mings. Meal tor horses or bool tie. $794100. TERMS. 25 ACRES — Beautiful building site in wooded area on hill. 13 acres ol woods — 12 acres In hey, big sprliu, easy to mak# li $23,000. TERMS. These properties ara located Oakland County, 40 miles N< ol Dotrolt, off Rochesler Rd. miles Irom Matamero Hunt Club, SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT -BY OWNER - NO SUNDAYS, .. - - profitable. Exclusive territories now jboing appointed for BEER BOY in your area. Initial Investment of $2,000 for equipment. Call or write Lansing Associates, higan (517) : D MACHINE GASOLINE AND FUEL OIL TERRI-lory, malar oil company, good year round volume, oxc. potential, Pontiac Preas Box, C-7. : KAMPSEN Detroit, off SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT — BY OWNER - NO SUNDAYS, NO BROKERS PLEASE OA 8-^.______________ ________ SPECIALIZE In all SIZES' Cali Root Realty, Otitvliie, 631 2805 or 631-8065. Salt BusiMts Property 57 1.000 SQ. FT. BUILDING with II ft. clearance, end ---- -****— O'Neil Reeity. OR DRAYTDN PLAINS 493' on paved road, irntaly 2 acres, ^zom AL PAULY 4516 Dixie, rce OR 3-3SW Ev I light $25,000 8000 SQ. FT. BLDG. HI-VILLAGE Hurry tor your large country tilt lot. Wt have only 12 under fhe $4,000 price rai gain can you buy Id winding roe to choose 0 - $350 I Rd. 2'/5 mllet velds' as $3,350 $350 down. La LADD'S OF PONTIAC 3^ LAPEER__RO.____391-330 HOWARD f. ' KEATING 22060 W. 13 Mile, Birmingham 46-1234 566-79J IT PERKS Lot No. 350 In Drayton Wood: Subdivision No. 2, comer o Oakdale end Edmore. tV wMe X ISO' Ung. Beautifully svoodad. City water, gai, tine nalghr hood. Park test accepted. $2, REDUCED IN PRICE Brandon Township, 70 aerts, ( ed unrecordad subdivision, i vty mate by a raglstarad aur-vayor. Price reducaf tampor^iy acre to $750 6 Iona street. City sewar 8. water, naw gas fired ho6L Ing plant, adaptaMa lo many other uiet. Contract terms with $14,500 down. Annett Inc. Realtors Huron St. 338-0466 Office Open Evenings 1$ Sunday 1-4 l-24"b)TFbR^DT^^ S^cT6uT~2-tfory home formerly used as doctor's office, 4 offices and recep- nees location. Offered at $19,500. GREEN ACRES 1469 S. Lapeer Rd., Lake Orloi MY 3-6262 _ PARTRIDGE "IS tHE BIRO TD SEE" 150 FT. ON M59-STORE At mein Intersection lusr rigm Tor many uete, plus ft. deep lot. Large area paved parking, for your own um or an invostment you should Invostloate possible. Ideal for warehousing or smell manufacturing. Located In Waterford Township. Priced $29,900. Terms. 1071 W. Huron Sf. MLS FE 4-0M1 LAKE AREA TAVERN Located In fast growing area. Has Warden Realty 3434 W. Huron. Pontiac 3 3-Rooms Furniture BRAND NEW $288 $2.50 WeekI PEARSON'S FURNITURE 210 E. Pika FE 4-78$ Between Paddock and City Hall “ " - - • “ I 9 p.m. REFRIGERATORS AND RANGES- DESK, EXCELLEN SINGER DIAL-A-MATIC ZIg zag aewlng machint. broiters, appliquas. buttoi ate. — lata modal, ichool Iradt-ln Terms of $6 PER MO. OR $59 CASH Now machine guarantee UNIVERSAL CO. FE 4-0905 SINGER "Touch and Sew'' Used vary little. Auto, bobbli winds direct from needle. Zli zagger for designs, hems, buttoi holes, ate. Must collect $78.1 SEPTEMBER SPECIALS Maytag Wrillgar Washer 1 FrigMaIra Rafrlgarator I reconditioned saml-auto sottan Floor model dishwasher CRUMP ELECTRIC 3465 Auburn Rd. Auburn Heights FE 4-3573________________I52-30W Singer Walnut Cabinet Sowing machine. Excellent. i claimed lay-a-way, balance $28.18 M?n Sewing'475974!?" ' * 4-PIECE BEDRODM SET (Brand Naw) $2.50 Weekly 9x12 Linoleum Rugs $3.89 Solid Vinyl Tile 7c e< Vinyl Asbestos Hie .......... 7c ei Inlaid Tile, 9x9 7c e< "Across From the Mall" No attachment! . 1967 SINGER Used only 5 months. Dial zlg-z “ ..............• heated I blind hen lance of oi S50.M cash or $5 month claims' 10 year guarantee. 3359203. House hold AppTlonca. _____ apartment size eIectric rengo $25. Soto beds $29. Elec OPPORTUNITY National Packaging Co. noadt Help Full or pert time. Guy clean wort Restocking iturchandlse. Not vam Ing — no direct selling. Leeie plan available. Investment rA quired. Write Pontiac Press C-11, Pontiac, giving Name, Address, Phone No. and qualifications. PARTRIDGE "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" COIN-OP CAR WASHES Existing car washes in excelk troll areas. . ASK FOR BUSINESS GUIDE PARTRIDGE REALTORS >50 W. HURDN sr. FE 4-3511 - DPEN WK, NITES TIL 9:00 PRIVATE DE'TECTIVE AGENCY Partnership avallabli to rlghr parson — male or tamale. $7,500 to $11,500. Write Pontiac Prea Box C-12. 11 Ml. RD. MADISON NTS. MJ'x'tO', I" this very choice location. Ideal small shopping canter alte. Pertert lor a. modern reetaurent. Price Id sell II ASK FDR BUSINESS GUIDE PARTRIDGE REALTORS 1050 W. Huron St. FE 4-3511 DPEN WK. NtTBS TIL 9: GI? NO down peyrSSt lake LOT FOR^SALE, Bf FERN - • data Siraal, Sylvan Vlllagt. 50-wide lot next n Oakland County Boat Club, 2 big boat wells, elec- 2, 4 barrel carbureters, with 1967 Vence Englnierlng Trailer equtped then n*8aurt. %lnS^lce*t4,S00. Confect J. Klein, OL l-teTO. Hon. $25,500 terms.. OTHER ACREAGE AND LAKE PROPERTIES AVAILABLE C. NELSEY, Agent, Devliburg 31^25-329$ er 315637-5730 Evening Cells Welcome Sulu or Exchusy 51 16 UNIT APARTMENT Seven veers old, BIrmInghem aree. S27,bM Oroes. $100,000. Equity, will consider exchange for cony merclel bldg, or warghouse. RESORT Northern Mich.; has bar, 16 cot-tages, 70 rental boata. restaurant. Owner III end can't epereti. will consider trite lor other MTEMAN commercial DEPARTMENT 377 S. Tilagrapn Rd. 338L9641 After 3 call 334-1)09 . SMITTY'S MARKET, ON 4 LANE with large 40x40 building, furniture end appliance reel tey at $10,500. wn, balance COMMERCIAL GARAGE, Salesroom and service erai. Separate burnt shop plus plenty of parking space, frontage on 3 strepls. Only S47.00( T’j. RHODES, REALTOR __________PE 0-2300_________ Sfl* Laud CuiHrutti ITOSO LAND CONTRACTS Uite^y needed. See us bale 'warren stout. Realtor 1450 N, Opdyto Rd.__ FE 53165 Wanted CoRtrKt(-Nlt|. 60-A 1 to 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urg^tht needed. See ua bitr ''warren stout. Realtor «0 N. Opdyke Rd. fr mi6S Open Eves. HI l'p.m. Land Contracts Wonted C. PANGUS INC., REALTY ^,^^EN7 0AY.AWE« CALL COLLECT NA-7-2III AUTOMATIC ZIG ZAG $5.50 PER MO. FOR 8 MOS, OR $44 CASH BAL. chairs, and mIsc Macaday Lk. Rd., Watarlord,_ BRAND NEW END ANlTTOFFEE tables, $5.05 ea. BUNK BEDS Choice ol 15 styles, trundle triple trundle beds end bunk . complete, $49.50 and Up. Pearson's Furniture, 210 E. Pike. CARPET Add enloyment to your I wall to wall carpeting STSsKCV ■ CHEST OF drawers (NEw) 8I8.9S up Maple, Walnut and WhHr PEARSON'S FURNITURE COLOR TV's THE 68's A11E HEREIl Open Friday 'til 9 p.m. COMPLETE HOLLYWOOD SFO, DUNCAN PHYFE DINING ROOM. Alio mitc, fvrniturq. 616-3185. DftcxiL DINING ftoo6r~surrE; WAthut, contemporary. Excaltant conditlan. 842S. iSl-m. * SINGER SLANT-O-MATIC The best Singer Sewing Machl ever made. Amazing Zfg-Zag ai fancy stitcher. Will sell for co tract balance, 8109.70, or $9.00 p month. Dealer, OR 3-9746. _ SINGER PORTABLE LIGHT WEIGHT SEWING MACHINE Zig-zag equipped. Pay accou balance, S29.S0 or will accept par month. Call Northarn Sawln 673-9746.__________ STOVE AND REFRIGERATOR $30 USEDJ^Vs, $19.95 WANTED TO BUY ad glass lamps i lamp shades. FE 4 GstdwN cabi¥e scratched. 42" model $46.95 while they lest, terrific values on 54" and 66" models Michigan Fluorascant, 393 Orchard Lk. FE 4-8462 — 5. 65-A CUSTOM ANTIQUE REFINISHING Specializing in fina antique finishinga furniture repair ol typasa ail work guaranteed. Hi RIchardsona 363-9361. Mpn.-Frl. HW. TV a Radios 66 SILVERTONB TV, $60. UL 2-3397 Walton TV, FE 2-2257 I" RCA CONSOLE TV, L I K naw, $120. 3656744.___________ 30" .Solid state stereo cqi sola walnut. Used vary imfe. apaakari with laparata chinm controls. First $80.41 cosh toki M59283, Housi hold Appllanco. AMP£5rCASiTtE STEREO ‘ NOW IN STOCK I provision for 335-9M3 COLOR TV BARGAINS, LITTLE Joe's Bargain Home, FE 58042. FISHER SfEREO, AM AND FM SIJMW neW. Will sacrilice for $39$. The console is 60" long of RECORD PLAYER NEEDLES RESPONSIBLE PARTY TO -fAKE over payments of 811 per month nr n $209.16 cash lor 2 mas. old jorgeous walnut console stereo AM-FM-AFC. Slide rule tuning Record storage space with bar. Sold now lor $319. 335-9203, Houso hold Appliance._______ ROBERT SfEREO TAPE, 720 AaOD-el; Ampex 80S tape splicer; Kni(^t KA-25 ...................— t!sr lanuel turntable; 7 pre-S tapes; Robert stereo head 2 Fllmora spaaktri. 332- WANTfeD: RCA COLOR Tv NEEO-Ing malor rapelri. 623-0524. FWSduMiKdIaMMi a Ik^OFF - ON SPECIAL BOXED yna. Dixie, Drayton. aleciric stove; JIJISi. *F^* 1-9639 or FE BRYANT 125,000 blu GAS FORCED elr furnace. Installed lo present duct work . . .S46S. Pontiac Hc'atlng 1735 N. Williams Lk. Rd., (M-59) R, 13$. WASHER, $25, APT. 25169 refrigerator, $29. TV sat, $35. G. Harris, FE 52766. -------- ELEC. STOVE TIRES, SIZE 6.50 USED 5 MOS.. $12. CALLL PyS«luld|Mll«MWH 67 7S GALLON COMMERCIAL CAS tut weMf lueter. ,l3"_Ark ftoo? ^1^, V yr. oW. OR 57301 al- 1063 foAD' ec6n-o-ling V a R and building mainlininoe equipment. OR 5lH5, 1967 ZIG-ZAG SEWING MACHINE Yours tor $54JO, balance Dr pay S5.90 per month. O-wM. Norltiern Se<|i*lng- I05JM0 BTU NEW GAS FURNACE. ------ with ducts, evg. $595. Also mtelled, reas. , 625-2537. I Sales, 625-150), ANCHDR FENCES NO MONEY DOWN FE 5-7471 BABY BED, HIGHCHAIR, STROLL-er, rockers; chairs. AIM antiques. Cone's. FE 56642. BABY ^RIB, MATTRESS AND < pair French doors. FE 4-1017, basement SALE: Oct. 31, 9 TO P-m. 22) Mlchlgen. BASSINET, ALSO BATHINETTE, drapes, sterilizer. Meke'ofter. 1125 BLDWERS FOR SNOW SUNBEAM ELECTRIC McCullough chain saws Ml units on Sale ..... .. From $97 HOUGHTEN'S POWER CENTER $45 It taken at once, 6255040. BARN WOOD AND RAILROAD ties. Various sizes. FE 59120. BRIDES — BUY YOUR WEDDING announcements at discount from, Forbos, 4500 Dixie. Drayton, OR 59767. BROKEN CONCRETE. 4" UNI-lorm. J, H. Woltmen 3355314. COLONIAL WING SOFA; GIRLS Maple bedroom suite; Ice skates; all exc. condition, 6266910. COMPLETE KEYSTONE MOVIE outfit, $125. Sony Tape Recorder. $50. 3656744 after 5. CUSIONS POR DANISH, COLO nial and Contemporary chairs inn sofas. Special prices on closa-out 3351700. CEDAR RAIL kENCE, 125', $100. 651-3254. DON'T FAIL TO ORDER VdlJR DuraSanI Automatic Toilet Bowl cloanar today. Call FE 5)152 or FE 53371,_____________________ DUO THERM OIL HEATER' WITH DUOTHERM 53JIOO BTU OIL (umaca. 333-7445. _ ENGLUSH PRAM FROM ENGLAND $15. Excar ------- Excallant. FE 26079. FLOOR MODEL BAT I Carry with, 7005 MS9 W. G. A. ThompsonA FOR SALE, HIOE-A-BED, 3346101, 41 E. Walton. For The Finest In Top-Quality Merchandise Shop At Montgomery Ward Pontiac Mall GIFTS-GAGS-JOKES AND NOV-eUlas. LIbtral Bill's Outpost, 3765 Olxlo Hwy. OR 59474. HOT water BASEBOARD RADI-ators, $1.39 per lineal ft. G, A. Thompson, 7005 M-59 W. BOHN CONfEX AUTOMATIC CAl-culalor, hardly used, 1105, 334- RITCHEN DINETTE SET, 30 GAL-lon goa water hgattr, 3 place lac-tlonal. Bast oHar, 332-6Sa, altar KIRBY VACUUM, 3 YEARS,, WifH attachments $70, bland baby crib, dresser, S25. FE 50037. LAVATORIES. COMPLETE, $24 50 value, $14,95, also bathtubs, toilets, shower stalls. Irregulars, terrific values. Mlchleen Fluorescent, 393 Orchard Lake. FE 46462 -^1. VIEVER USED ANYTHTFIO LIKE 952 Joslyn. _____ I A k L A N D park METHODIST Church on Glenwood and Montcalm lo bo demolished, Surpkie to S59.95; laundry tray, trim, S)9.9S; shower stalls with trim, $39.95; 2-bowl sink, $2.95; lavs., $2.95, tubs, $20 and up. Pipe cut ar I LIKE NEW POWER CAR WAlH^R, ' coin opareted. $600. OR 55730. Tlyin.» , V rvix cinuLKUm Ruoa,' S3.9S EA. ‘ Plastk wall Ilia ic m. celling tile - well paneling, die^^ I BAO Tile, FE 66957. 1075 W. Huran tte. $225 or will trade for shaper vlgj^or teyuul agulpmmt. FE BELL A HOWELL' REOUUR $ movie camera, wKh zoom lent, regular $ proleclor light bar, end carrying case, $155, OR 53054. -V THE PJ^NTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 80, 1967 AT GAUAGHER'S LOWREVORANS ALL SIZES AND STYLES se* tnd Itur thrnew Milton wtth bulH-Tn rtiytlwn section. You owe It to yourself — to hear this ^lefore you buy. ;iriO S. Teleareph Fg 4.05s< V4 mile south at Orchard Lake Rd 9;SH P. ' ~ A LARGE cornets, fireplace ^6b D, $is; asforliMnt pen, troitibones Tneti, tlutas, Ir BASE, VENICE, a shifts, with case 1125. also 12 base with casa, $35. 231 Oneida .OND TRANSISTOR SPINET .IF YOU WANT TO SELL YOUR PIANO? CALL MR. WOOI^AT GRINNELL'S PIANOS- RENftMTMfURNS" studio use — excellent conditions. . New ouaranfie — savings up to half —I limited numbers. Grinnell's — Pontiac Mall — open evenings till- » p.m. - 482-0422. loLio aAahogany GRINNELL censelo piano. $82-3073._ Used piano, choose FRO/iOrp- rights, grands, spinets and consoles. Uprights from $4». . «37-a70i, or ara-asM. instructions and INSTRUMENTS. JACK HAGAN MUSIC 469 Elizabeth Lake Rd. 332>0S00 1192 Cooley Lake Rd.____363-5500 YES, WE RENT INSTRUMENtV FOR SCHOOL BAND AND ORCHESTRAS S5 per month tlO for Saxophones MORRIS MUSIC 34 S. Telegraph Rd. Across from Tel-Huron FE 2^567 Mtwic __________________ 7hA accordian, guitar lessons Salas-Sanrloo, PulaneckI, OR 3-5596. Storajqul^ 73 t lO' MEAT CASES, 1 4' DAIRY no comprasser. 303-5790._ i WHOLE FLOOR MODEL, DRY he«t steam tables, exc condition. station, all form'ca. FE iportiBg 6Eod»_________ 74 S-V GUNS-720 W. HURON. 334-7651 Exc, eelactlon of used gum. $5 REMINGTON PUMP, MODEL 14 tIS. EM>4746 after 4 p.m. 100 SAVAGE WITH POWER SCOPE, case, 1 boxes of shells and sling. 77 APPROXIMATELY IS CORD OF D-^T OR 3-347a or OR'3-3501. ^CE WOOS «f5, PE. MAKES OUR SEASONEI warm friends. „ handy. 391-1813. SEASONED HARO WOOD—$13" A dellyared. 674-3444. WHITE BIRCH FIREPLACE WOOD. SI8 a cord — picked up, $22 de-livered. 3085 S. Lapeer Rd., 6 Mi. N of Pontiac on M-24. Cell 391- PORD TRACTOR ACCESSOR good condition. 332-4993. CLARK'S TRACTORS AND AAA-cfilnory. 100 ' ers, dozors. 1 AKC B0|T0N TERRIER 1711 Mon. Mile !ll*/-^’n CARNIVAL By Dick NnrnillMd TiMkt 103 fiMr wi IM Cm 106 ‘That dance was wild, Dad! Could you she steps again, without the skate?” This means we are overstocked the point where we must sail ; NEW AND USED mobile homes. ALL AT A LARGE DISCOUNT FOR EXAMPLE — • 50'xir. list Ex-rce $5.1S5 ---------CE: S3J95 miss this Also Boats - Acwforlts ir STARCRAFT ALUMINUM BOAT, motor, traiiei*. Complete canvas. Equipment. OR 3-2247._______ 1968's IN STOCK Glastrons-Mercurys SAVE-SAVE-SAVE Foil discouhts now 1967 Close-outs Winterize and storage SKIOOOS-SEDADDLERS CRUISE-OUT, Inc. 63 E. Welfan Dally 9-6 FE 0-4402 GLASSPAR - S^TEURY — MIRRO Craft — Grumman — Kayot — Evinruda — Pamco. Dawson's SALES AT TIPSICO LAKE — Phona 629-2179.______________ MIDLAND TRAILER SALES open 9 to 9 7 Days Weak 2257 Dixia Hwy.________331-0772 Kittens. FE 2-5319 1961 Lake- winder. ________^________ ..w CAIRN TERRIER PUPSi iWCC’,1 inbs - rnua ftM-^^INRUDE $NbWMOBiLES.I^|g;^^;^^ 5e*Slcl!? *'S'.Z,"ns?;air 'r, 0*^^! “^aSa°or"'siil.%t Place your order now. Take MS9 FREE TO GOOD HOME. 3 MONTHS 3255 Dixie to W. Highland. Right on Hlckoryl old female Tiger Kitten. FE, Ridge Rd. to Demode. Rd, Left! 2-6055, ___■ ixle^'IIt T?;?s?co'LA^E'i'l.h^^i; I FREE BLACK TOM CAt, 9 MONTH 0x24' fR0TW006n96l. GAS HEAT, old. to good home. Ml M609. twin beds, battvshower. Excellent, I------^cppV-iriTTW<---------I OR after 5 p.m. OR 3-7722, ** W 7-S5f^ TRAVEL TRAILER. AliUM. 2073 other guns. FE 5-2054,--------------------------- Nortonlewn, Rochester. 872-1591. American, Traditional or REESE AND DRAW-TITE HITCHESisoece i Sold and installed | extra HOWLAND SALES AND RENTALS ■ “(vy. OR 31456 $$«$$ ICKUP CAMPER Also i Star Park, the famous lightweight Winnebago Trailer OXFORD TRAILER SALES ___ _ OPEN 9-0, CLOSED SUNDAYS REASON- 1 milt south of Lake Orion on M24 ________ MY 2-0721 ________ ' RICHARDSON - DELTA — MONARCH — DUKE - HOMETTE — LIBERTY. "MANY BEAUTIES TO CHOOSE FROM" 693-1430. male, 3 months GUNS AND GUNS Winchester, Remington, Sa end others. Scopes — amrSo-ac-l______________________________ ctssorlts. SPECIAL ON CLAY GERMAN SHORT HAIR POINTER, PIGEONS $2.45 PER CASE. SeU| excellent, 852-3467.____________ GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS, AKC. MG SALES & SERVICE U?.'*- Worm«l. $50 *nd up. 424- 4MJ^^I» Hwy. • Drayton Plains GOOD SELECTION. USED SHOT fluni tnd rules. Ben's loan < 5 N. Saginaw. FE J5I4I. GUNS—GUNS—GUNS tered, best otter. OR 4-1421 One of the largest selections In MALE ' 3-YEAR-OLD OOGT LONG Oakland County. Browning, Waath-: haired, shots, license, $5. 674-2005. rnV'$ml'[h-wU*son ViHil?,'“«owsI>'?V , '"Pn'-^Gre’en' Lake'^^teV sights. We do our own repair work.: union lake. Please call, 363-6953! Try befort you buy on our rangt.lMALE AND FEMALE ENGLISH 10' EXCELLENT CONDITION, FE IGOR. AKC MALE, PEKINGESE, MALE GREAT DANE REGIS- RANCH Must sell — it's an extra, ^best o«er. 6^2151.______ Al RStR EAM L IGHtWE IGH t TRAVEL TRAILERS Since 1932 Guaranteed for I i get a demons Trailer Sales, : Colonial Mobile Homes FE 2-I6S7 623-1310 250 Opdyka S460 Dixie Auburn^Halghts S. ot Waterford SACRIFICE 50X12 RICHARDSON, cash or taka over payments. 623- W. Huron (plan TOWN & COUNTRY MOBILE HOMES CLEARANCE SPECIALS INSIDE WINTER STORAGE KAR'S BOATS Oi MOTORS 405 W. CLARKSTON RD. LAKE ORION - MY 3-1600 MAKE RESERVATIONS FOR winter storage and motor tune-ups. Evinrude Dealer HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS 1899 S. Telegroph FE 2-8033 SAVE NOW - ACT pinter;s "Quality Marine Merchandise" STARCRAFT - THOMPSON - MFG. JOHNSON MOTORS — SNOMOBtLE STORAGE-TUNE-UPS 1370 N. Opdyke 9-4 FE 6^0924 (1-75 at Oakland Univerilty Exit) WINTER STORAGE Boats and motors. Closa outs all 1967 boats. Johnson and Chrysler motors. Alt Johnson snowmobiles In stock PAUL A. YOUNG, Inc. 4030 Dixie Hwy., Drayton, OR 4-0411 ____Open Mon-Sat. 96_________ 99 Used Auto-Truck Parts 102 speed transmission, $130. 625-474$ 1967 PONTIAC 4-BERREL CARBU rater and manifold. $60. FE 2-6057. BRAND NEW 1968 JEEP wlMol drive. udiNawall LOOKING tor that extra tpoclol NEW JEEP DEAL? Chock our price and term Special 1962 GMC Scow-Type Rubbish Dump 1966 CHEVY 9 Ft. Stake 1962 GMC 9 Ft. Stake , GMC Factory Branch Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485 maculate 'STrei^^L^goinb^’tor omyl Many with Air Conditioning Foreign Curs 1969 VW, GOOD TRANSPORTATION 1941 SUNBEAM ALPINE CONVER tibia, very good condition. Besi offer over $400. 363-7948. 1961 VW BUS STATION WAGON “RENAULT, R-a. ECONbMICAL insportatlon. $575. 33M377._ VOLVO S44, GOOD RUNNING 673- BRAND NEW 1967 FAIRLANE CAR RADIO. CALL AFTER 5:30. 332-, 1964 VW GHIA, FULLY QUIPPED, 30,000 ml., $1,000. 644-380r 1965 VW 2 DOOR SEDAN, 21,000 miles, $950. 651-1511.___ 1965 VW SUNROOF, RADIO, HEAT-WHITEWALLS, - PRICE CHRYSLER PARTS FOR SALE, PONTIAC - DUAL QUAD SET USED ENGINES. TRANSMISSION. ng, body partSr i Sales, OR 3-5200. WHEEL RIMS, ALL 2 1-TON STAKE TRUCKS. GOOD condition. $500 takes both. 625-2674, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Assume weekly payments of $10.80. CALL CREDIT MGR. " - • HARO 4-7500._______________ HS MGB CONVERTIBLE, RED WITH Black top. $1445 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham. Ml 4-2735. IfU CADILLAC 4 DOOR SEDAN, 0191 Buy Hera — Roy MaWel Motors 251 Oakland Ava. FE g-4B79 959 CADILLAC. 4-DOOR HARDTOP Lika brand new. Priced right. LUCKY AUTO 1963 CAOILl UPE. VERY kDIbLAC I, aulomal matching ownar.x vi Nnr nd Uee4 Core 106 1NTIMPALA »OOOII HARDTOP, t 1967 CHEVYS Sava up To $1200. BIRMINGHAM \ Chrysler-Plymouth 1965 CADILLAC. COUPE DE VILL? land, 333-7863. I dream car. $3195 1966 CADILLAC SEDAN DavILLE rlglnpl pasitivaly l3J6g ml., ewner. Ml 4-3111. MIKE SAVOIE Birmingham's New CHEVROLET DEALER 1104 S. Woodward Ml 4-2735 NOW Is The TIME To Save 631 Oaklond Ave. FE 44547 Chevy's good running $36 Many others—Few trucks—All ECONOMY CARS 2335 DIXIE BILL FOX CHEVROLET 755 S. Rochester Rd. AL HANOUTE Chevrolet Buick 'Pn M24 in Lake Orion \ Ml 2-2411__________________ CAMERO RALLY SPORT COUPE, powerx Steering, end brakes, vinyl top, tl)ited glass, 6.500 mi. extra clean. LJ 5-5941. KESSLER'S ^ODGE CARS AND TRUCKS 1966 CHRYSLER Nawpert 2-daar hardteb, < conditlen. V-g, autemXlc, deubla power, radio, whilewallj, low mlla-aga. only $2095. \ OAKLAND \ CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 724 Oakland Ava. PR 5-9436 1966 CHRYSLER \ Newport idoor With V-l, buto. matic, power steering, brakes,, radio. whitewalls, beautiful cohdl-tlon. onlv — ^ . only — $2095 OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1966 RENAULT 4 SPEED. EXCEL-lant shape. 3$ m.p.g. 17480 miles, $775. OR 3-5048. _ 1966 FIAT Roadster, 4-spaad, radio, heater, whitewalls, full price $1282 with $49 down and weakly paymanis of $10.8$. HAROLD TURNER S-OOOR, GOOD TIRES 2-DOOR IMPALA, 8497, Capitol Auto 312 W. Montcalm (Just East of Dakland) 961 CDRVETternS^ JTkE't, 1955 FORD PICK UP _________________________________ 1955 CHEVY 4 TON PICKUP. $150 ______________F E 0-1622___________ 1955 FORD BUS. GOOD TIRES, running condition, first $150 takes. Call, 651-4640._____________________ 19S6~?4 TON TRUCK — $100. 1360 Doris Rd. IRMINGHAM 1960 >/s TON PICK-UP TRUCK, 657 Homestead Dr.___________________ I960 FORD TRAtrroR, 634 ENGINE Iwin-scrow, ouxIHary trans.-nlislon FE AbS63 bat. 8:W a.m.-4:30 p.m. 961 cheW«. ton pickup, good TON PICKUP. sleepers and for deer hunting cabins NEW UNITS sirtaldt:'!?:*!®: Suncr.lt OR 3-9528 ” IS of archery equipment. NIN6 BOOTS—ALL SIZES SKI-DOO'S —Complete Stock— FROM $695 PEDIGREED apricot trade tor Clippings—AKC Pups—Stud Service Cliff Dreyer's Gun and Sports Center pet suppiies^2j4oi OXM2-0927 15210 Holly Rd. Holly, ME 4-6771 POODLE, CHOCOLATE, FEMALE. _ Open Dally and Sundays , 1 yr. oIcL AKC 624-2215. _ ' headquarters poodle clipping and_ sham- Drayton Plai CENTURY YELLOWSTONE FOR '68 INSPECT THE MODELS ARRIVING DAILY We have 2 1967 Yellowstones end one 8 sleeper Wheal Camper camper) left. 12‘x6(t' Suncraft. colonial Suncraft, bath 8. half . $5100' A.A. APPROVED SCHOOL our instructors teach you I ADI Inc.. Pontiac Airport. $4500' ___________________- H!i!: Wonted Cars • Trucks ___________FE 5-3743 _______ 1962 FORD PICKUP ECONOLIN^ '/g-too 3415. 363-0061. Dealer m2 CHEVROLET BEL AIR WAG-MI 4-75M ON, AUTOMATIC V-8. POWER STEERING AND BRAKES. LIKE 1967 ALFA ROJAEO. G.T.V. COUPE. NEW $795 COOPER'S Extra Clean Used Cars 4278 Dixie Drayton Plains ‘ dally FE 5-9436\ DON'T . WAIT FOR WINTER Replace that old car now! Many one owner trade ins included In our SELECTION of fine carsl 724 Oakland FE S-9434 1963 DODGE DART. SLANT 6. EX* cellent. FE 3-7542. Dealer. passenger, automi er. V-8. luggage RENAULT SPECIAL CLOSEOUT On all 1967 FIATS Ne fair after refused SPYDERS & GT COUPES Bank financing—Easy terms. GRIMALDI CAR CO. .900 Oakland ____ FE 5-9421 w, 1966, Square BACK. rJe_d, Alter 6 p. c. canditlan. 644-3138, 713- - LET or"!!: 1962 CORVAN. I960 '/(.-TON CHEVY. 12-X60' Bahama $53001 for Rupp Sno-Sport Polaris, Scorpion SNOWMOBILE USED UNITS 10'x48' Suncraft 1^66 ..$29(K 10'xS2' Suncraft 1966 $325( 12'x52' Suncraft 1966 $345( i DELIVERED AND SET UP TELEGRAPH AT DIXIE HIGHWAY Mon. and Tues., 9 A M. to 8 P.M.j 334-6694 'it?: 9"A“M.^te' 5’ Pjw!' ciMrt ^Sm.; WATERFORDSALES STACHLER TRAILER ! EXCAVATING, REMODELING SALES, INC. i S:'iy™3‘’‘'Un',’ ......... 3771 Highland (J6») _FE 2-4928 hi by “OTOR ADKINS AUTO SALES > need cars nowl Buyer Waiting, rive in for appraisal. 738 Oakland ve. FE 2-6230. PUPPIES. $6 AND $15. . $5.800.J63-M8. OAKLAND CAMPER Karibou. Toor-a-Home. (Across PontU Aluminum < $195 and I months, loves children. 335-0503 jSTUb SERVICE, TOY" SILVER 3^34 IwANT; P00DLE”mALE7 APRICOTi PICK-UP TRUCK CAMPERS I or blart. Ken-Lcn 627J792. | Over 20 diMerenI models JSKIE BEAUTIFUL Eskimo malt pup. pa-4667 Olxlf Hwy. Drayton Plains I pers, l100^67J2«t^allt^^ I Supplies-Sarvice 79-A Put Fun Back in Winter ■ .... - - Snowmobilas are one at the fastest DOG HOUSES INSULATED. MOST growing sports and family funi sizes. 748 Orchard Lakt Ave. mobiles to come along. Why noti A..-a2^ C-U. BA loin the crowd. Everything in stock AUCflOII Balet BQ from .11 h.p.-20 h.p. Speeds for the| ^ . October close-o sily (Don't delay) coma ay and lay yours away. EVAN'S EQUIPMENT 6507 Dixie Hwy. B & B AUCTION EVERY FRIDAY EVERY SATURDAY iEVERY SUNDAY Closed Sun. Polaris Snowmobiles PERRY'S LAWN A GARDEN , 5089 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-2n7 7665 Highland .......' ^^PERkrNYSALE-SERVICE, Skidoos-Skedoddlers CASH PRIZE EVERY AUCTION Auctioneer from. Our "“bill coller Gooden. 3200 South Rochester Rd J52-^._____ _____ __________ PLYWOOD CAMPER. $35 62^5006___________ PIONEER CAMPER SALES ' BARTH TRAILERS 6. CAMPERS TRAVEL QUEEN CAMPERS MERIT FIBERGLAS--------- (B"-27"-35" covers) ------------- FE 2-3 PICKUP COVERS, $245 UP. Rent Trailer Space 90 VILLAGE GREEN MOBILE ESTATE; — New and different. 2285 Brown' ,1 Rd^Nwr 1-75 and M24. 335-0155. j iTires-Auto-Truck 92 2 SNOW TIRES. SIZE EXTRA EXTRA Dollars Paid FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Car Averill AUTO SALES l 2-9878 2020 Dixie_ C^ale McAnnally's VW CENTER 85 To Choose From -All Models--All Colors— —All Reconditioned— Autobahn AUTO SALES MOS., 112. CALL 1-PAi California. Texas and parts shipping to Oklahoma. 1180 Auburn Rd. SALE THIS WEEK SPECIAL, CUSTOM paint lob. $85. Free pickup and delivery service, satlsfactloa guaranteed. Excel Paint and Bump, Ortonvilla. 682-0173. INDIAN MINI BIKE CUSTOM. 685- Motorcycles SNOWMOBILES BUY NOW AND SAVE I CRUISE-OUT, INC. «3 d. Wallen, Dally 9-6, FE 9-. ‘^SNOWMOBILES Quality, priced right i 313-635-9400. Swartz Creek! - i • Plants-Tr.e».Shrub^81^ L. F«lj,^'nventory Reduction^^ ! ......r uPRiGHTs,ilj: jTijJisr 10 trees $15. You dip. 12 21' Travelmaslar .. $3,595 of Pontiac. Cedar Lane 24' Bolas-Aaro ---- Farm. 6970 Dixie Hwy. 1964 HONDA DREAM. 305 CC. $250.^ __________J52-i519. "1967 BSA MAlRKlnr $1100..... ' ’ E R G R I $5,875 625-19 TRUCK CAMPERS N^tof^r.^ake OrJon^693-^32. 1967 HONDA SCRAMBLER! NEwj paint. Under payments of 1450. 626-1033 SKI-DOO'S 1968 MODELS ON DISPLAY ONLY $695 KING BROS. PONTIAC RD. aY OPDYKE _4-0^__ SNOWMOBILES EVINRUDE TRIUMPH (TIGER SEE THESE VALUES TODAYl CUB), ideal for i__ ______ 11967 TRIUMPH TR-6C. LOW AAILE-I HELP! Wa nfcd 300 aharp Cadillacs, Pontiac., Old. and Buick. tor out-of-•lata markit. Top dollar paid. MANSFIELD AUTO SALES 1104 Baldwin Ave. ! ^_5J900 _______FE 8-8825: High Dollar Paid 1959-62. FE 8-9661 Star Auto “STOP HERE LAST M(ScM ___OR 3-9602. _ t9W F-250 FORD pTcKUP.^A Nl'CEi truck, for only $695. JACK LONG FORD | Roct^.^r_____________' I 1963 F-adO FORD TRACYOR, WITHl lull air, power .taarlng, axcellent! condition, $2,195. JACK LONG FORD Rocl^ster OL 1-9711 I96J CHEVY GREENBRIAR, BUS built In camper, OR 3-8153. 1963 FORD PICKUP, F-100 CAMPER, Motor. Inc. good condition, FE 4-8735.. ...................- 1964 CHEVY % TON 11765 S. Telegraph fE 8-453t Pickup, fully equipped, hei ty only 20,000 miles, only $1295 BILL FOX CHEVY |D0 YOU NEED A CAR? GOT A PROBLEM? BEEN BANKRUPT? little rau divorced? GARNISHEED? REPOSSESSED? NEW IN THE AREA? Coll Mr. White at FE 8-4080. King. MILOSCH owner . new car Iraa. m CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH GRIMALDI JEEP Oakland___________JE W42I ^ ments to 7 M-24, Lk. Orion MY 2-2041 New and Used Cars 106 ___ good rubber ____ _ . - er unit. Full price $1095. HHN side Lincoln-AlWrcury, 1250 Oak-land, 33>7863. _ ■ 1965 FORD Custom Cab, V-8 engine-390, urand 1965 CHEVROLET ^-TON PICKUP with snow blade, exc. condition. 673-9667.__________________________ 1965 CHEVY PICKUP, LIKE NEW, FE 4-4124. 1966 FORD PICKUP, Small Ad—Big Lot 50 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM We buy or MARES AND SADDLE. Gregory Rd. 391-0910. ___ FE 4-1662 ’-YEAR-OLb quarter 4161 ,Aito 75 used and trailers HORSE, _________________3^2747 I ANGUS COWS, 12 CALVESi and 1 bull. Can buy 1 or all.| North of Rochester, off Rochester! 2 1966 demos Rd, 625 E. ^ell Rd^_ i . A.,- 'GEWlE'r/g^YEAR' OLD.' REGTs-| LAKE AND SEA MARINE I tered quarter horse flMy, $325 FE 4-9507i Must sell. FE 4-5971._____]4160 T^oley THrcRE^^ rcho^°;?d pfi^.^*ibo^ut* ^ fRAllER’SUPPLIES SCORPION I to 450 lbs. In weight. OA 8-3696. ] AMn ArrCCCflDICC HWSESFORSALi. $100-$1M ---------S73-7657 AT JOHNSON'S . Walton at Joslyn — pastora. 651-1fE_4-(M10 _________F^4-M53 TRAVEL TRAILERS 624-1656 Sun. __ 175. FE 4-5561 67 YAMAHA 305 BEAR. I miles, perfect, Jacobson Troiler Soles 90 WMMams Lakt Rd. OR 3-5981! Open Mon.-FrI., 9 a.m.-8 p.m. Sportcraft Manufacturing PICKUP SLEEPERS AND TOPS |g f K| ______ I We pay more for sharp, late mod- A-1 TRIUMPH ROAD BONNE vllle. Pay off. FE 2-OW. HONDA' S-90. EXCELLENT CON ditlon FE 5-7955. SALE! 1150 Oakland at Viaduct GLENN'S 1967 Chevy '/2-Ton Fleetside Pickup, with radio, heater, ligt blue, only — $1750 HOMER 'MIGHT FONTIAC-BUICK-CHEVROLET ’ Motors, Inc. On MU In Oxford. MlCh. I OA 8-2528 I 1968 GMC’ i-Ton Pickup j, WOULD YOU BELIEVE NO GIMMICKS—NO GIVEAWAYS JUST RIGHT CARS AT RIGHT PRICES 1964 Chevy pickup .... $99 1963 Impala Cpa .......$S9 1962 Pentlac Cpa ......$S9 Falcan. panel i»oi Tempest 4 dr. .....siv 1957 Chevy 4 dr.........$i. MANY MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM OPDYKE MOTORS 2230 Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke FEJ-9237__________ FE 8-9231 1961 SKYLARK, 8 CYLINDER"AUTO' matic. power steering. oower brakes, radio EY'S AUTO., 4U909 ______ 1963 BUICK ELECTRA"225~4-"DOdR hardtop. Jilt to perform and endure the' lost rugged terrain. ORDER EARLY AND SAVE ' STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. S7V Highland rM-S9) FE 2-4921 WE BUY, sell; trade (SUNS. Browning — winchester — Rem-Ingten. Opdyke Herdwere, FE $- '*Tn T B 6r~6WD~0W(T~AND San4-6raTO»--Dlrt 76 1-A SAND AND GRAVEL, ALL ereee delivered. 673-5516, Weler DtyjBLE D. 6»7< __ HORStS BOARDED. ROCHEST^^R; PONY, BRIDLE AND SADDLE- Ortonvllle, NA 7-2487.______ WELSH MARE. WELSH GELDInG. Genie. Teke for best alter. 625- Hay-Gralii-F««4 S4 good quality second cutting alfelfa hey, also strew, 4575 Oak-wood Rd., Ortonville. 628-3863. HAY AND straw. 50 CE'iiTS bale. North f ----- Rochastar Rd. ( Your ( Farm Produc* S6 black DIRT, TOP SOIL, FILL! ' ’ - : dirt, road gravel. DeMso POUNDS NO. 1 POTATOES. S1.39.I pumpkins 15 cents and. FE M485. ________ , DARK RICH FARM CLAY ALUME top loll, also block dirt, S yards • cvmx » to? tit At del. FE A6SI8._______i P^es S3» Pontiac lake buIlders sup- • - gravel fill dirt. OR 3- ALSO CORSAIR PICK-UP CAMPERS NSW SERVICE OEPT. Ellsworth Trailer Sales 6577 Dixie Hwy. 625-4400 WE cTsTry the riAMOUS Franklins—Crees Fans—Monitor ThunderBird, Ritz-Craft Travel Trailers Ail used motorcycles m. Buy now and save. Ei ANDERSON SALES 8. Telegraph SUZUKI CYCLES GREA-rtlY duced. 50CC-250CC. Rupp bikes. Cycle accessories, taki to W. Highland. Right on Rd. to D------ ■ follow sigr S TO TIPS 629-2179 Bicycleb 96| BOYS SCHWINN DELUXE STING-I FOR "CLEAN" USED CARS FE 4-7371 fe 4-1797 Heoter, defrosters, backup regre^^ seat belts and re- • model GM Cars or will and 2 padded visors, emergency flasher lights, direc- Rd. Lett DAWSON'S cept trade-downs. Stop by today. FISCHER BUICK 544 S. WOODWARD 647-5600 14' BOAT, MOTOR, AND TRAILER,'i„-L r_r«.TrHpkc oood conditinn. call 4J44IS06 J»n» wrs-l 101 AI by W CARS AND TRUCKS. FREE _____any time. FE 5-9844._ 1, 2 JUNK CARS-TRUCKS. FREE ITa^ trucking-sanO, oravR. Otl. a*l {ireat!°»«^,”628-2563 recentlyt IR Watwtdrd l _ ^ al All pricad SENSIBLY I yau. OR $«3S. lb. Ytilaw dellclaus ai ^ T®1e: Skamper end PleasureMate Campers-7 & 8 Sleepers Chryiler. Weilpart, with ■ tt.,' “ beam. 150 HP Merc-Cruliar. Chack| J?' our price. 1, 2 JUNK CARS-' We carry all Chrysler, Lone Star,| tow anytima. FE ^2666. £l;i;:”"Rlv“r? cSSTseV *.?-.«”I'>LWAYS BUYING. JUNK^ CAR S Jon boats, alum, tlahlng tew. FE 5-9948.1 415 Tipsico Lake Rd.; Holly Travel Coach —4,______ ____________ 15218 Holly Rd. Holly, ME 44771 ^TON ORCHARDS AF- Open Daily and Sundays - WOLVERINE TRUCK CAMPERS and tiatpare. Naw and utad, $395 Sat. and Sun. Potatoes and apples. : IS^^P^mora Rd. Lake Orton. iUY VbUR ClbEfte APPLES AHD Jacks. Inftrcoms, talatcQping, bumpers, ladders, racks. Lowiv “----------- * • pital k Hospital I M81. Spara d.p Union Laks. EM sarvkf [COPPER, iry outboards' Marc-Cruisar authorized dealer. GRUMMAN CANOES DEALER Cliff Dreyer's Gun ond Sports Center 15218 Holly Rd. ME 4-6771 Open Daily and Sundayf BIO DISCOUNT AT TONY'S MARINE, 31 YRS. REPAIR EXPERIENCE. 2695 ORCHARD LK. RD., SYLVAN IaKE elika trucA, S75. my 2-1321. BRASS; RADIATORS; starters and generators. C. Dlx> son, OR 3-5849. __ _________ iWireAR4^:rw)CrPAY FE 5-36.8 JUNK'^RS and TRUCKS, FRfi low. 682-7888.______________ WANTED JUNK CARS OR TRUCKS tional signals, 2 outside rear-view mirrors, full rear width window. $1955 including oil taxes PONTIAC'S ONLY EXCLUSIVE TRUCK DEALER GMC Factory Branch Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485 heater. RON-Baldwin, FE VOIE CHEVROLET. Birmingham. Ml 4-2735.______________ NEWEST15)EA'lER in PONTIAC Vandeputte BUICK-OPEL 196-210 Orchard Lake FE 2-9165 I 966"BUICK ELECTRA, 4 bOORi hardtop, cuelom, alr-conditlaning, double power, tilt-wheel, cruise top, air, power i 674-2257 1962 CHEVY ^ HARDTOP. VERY 333-7542d Riggins Daalar. 1962 CHEVY 2, AUT(3AAAtlC. VERY clean. $345. Sava Auto. BY OWNER 1963 Chevy 4 straight stkk. 335-7900. Runs good. $450. TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1963 CHEVY Bel Air station i with V8, automatic. Inq, radiev heater, cally owned new car tr On US 10 at M15. Clart 5-5071. :. power ste whitewalls. 1983 CHEVY M 4 DOOR. AUTO, very citan. runs good. $500. FE 4-9380._________________________ 19M IMPALA. POWER STEERING ‘ brakes. Clean. 1 owner. $1,095. 1963 MONZA CONVERTIBLE speed. Private owner. $500. 5-9512. 1963 BEL AIR WAGON. $695 AT MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET. Birmingham. Ml 4-2735. 1963 CHEVY IMPALA SPORTS Coupe. 62»B333. 1963 CHEVY II CLUB COUPE, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO. HEATER. WHITE-WALLS. FULL PRICE $695 ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN Assume weakly payments of $6.92 CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD 4-7500. ! tOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS i 1964 CHEVY wagon. 6 cyl. -slick shift, solid rad finish, one owner.I new car trodai Only $995 On US lOi 1966 PODGE 6 cylinder, etendard trenimle. alatively new tirei, going tor . $1395 BIRMINGHAM ‘ Chrysl#r*Plymouth I S. Woodward Ml 1962 FORD- WAGON, FULL POW-er, lull price $495. Buy Here — Pay Hare I Marvel Motors 251 Oakland Ave. Ft $-4079 1962 FORD THUNDERBIRD LAIT-vinyl 1250 Oakland. 1962 FORD GALAXIE. AUTOMATIC power tteering. new muffler lye-tem $475. EM >8164. MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham. Ml 4-2735. 162 FALCON DELUXi CLUB WAG- SOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Aeiuma waakhr paymanta of 16.93 CALL CREDIT MGR. Mt. Parke at HAROLD TURNER FORD CLEAN 1962 FALCON, LIKE NEW tires, comet engine, $258. 363- tope. Exc. condition. 7262 Hatchery ' 1964 CHEVELLE 4-DOOR AUTO-metlc, radio, heater, $1)95 MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, •ningham. Ml 4-2735. 1964 CHEVY IMPALA, CLEAN KEN-tucky car, 3944W18. _ liiS CbRVAIR MONZA, GOOD traniportatlon, a real good ru JACK LONG FORD Rochoeter______________OL 1-9711 19M CHEVY 4 DOOR, 6 CYLINDER auto., vary claan, naw liras, FE 2-7221. i64 CORVETTE, NEW TIRES, PER-fact conditlen. OR 4-2910. TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1964 CHEVY Impala 2 door On US 10 at'MlS. Clarkston. MA MATIC. MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Blr- rningham. Ml 4-2735. _____ -door 6 AlftCF 1963 THUNDERBIRD, VERY G005 HEATER, WHITEWALLS, FULL $7.88. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7588. 4 FORD (Convertible, 389 en-glno, naw shocks, tiras, ^ system, paint and rebuilt $1100 call 647-2124._ 1964 Ford XL 4 door hardtop with 352 V8, power steering, brikee automatic, burgundy with black $1395 BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER SInca 1930" On Dixie In Waterford at the double stoplight _ 623;W00 ____ ^TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLOS 1965 FORD Galaxie 500 4 doof hardtop, with V8. automatic, power steering, radio, heater, whitewalls, very low mileage, top condition. $1495. On US 10 af M15. Clarkston. CHEVROLET SAVOIEi CHEVROLET, AUTOMATIC, wl! 1965 CHEVY IMPALA, 1965 CHEVY _com^_Plke_and Paddock, ____ 1966 BUICK SPORTS WAGON, 'f! Jwner! passenger auto., double power, ra-i us 10 dip, heater. $2,395. OR 3-3707,_ 5-5071. 1966 BUICK SPORT WAGON. 6 T965~CHEVY~2"dWR HARDTOP 674-3859 TOM RADEMACHER chevy-olds rVY^4 door sedan, stick, radio, heater car trade! $119 Ml 5, Clarkston, terior, $1588 full price. $54.19 per monlh, 5 year or oo,-000 mile new car warranty available. John McAuliffo Ford 630 OskI.nd A«, FE 5-4181 HASKINS , , AUTO SALES . 1965 MUSTANG Fsstbsck, 2-plu»- - 2 '’ally equipment, low mileage. I excellent condition. $1495. At 669S Di^e Hwy. Clarkston, MA ^5071. T96“5 Ford Galaxie 5tf0' 4 door Interior, 289 1965 CHEVY" $1195. On 0995. factory air condition, double radio, lop condition. 651- 1966 SKYLARK convtrtlbl*, automatic 8 cyllndar, polo wbllo with r— —- $1988 FISCHER BUICK v-a. Good condition. $1,475. Vinyl Inltrlor. $52-454$, botwoan 5 and 9. Ntw «i4 Ustd Cart 106 65 CHEVROLET BISCAYNE WAG ON, automatic, power steerlnt $1495 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVRO-1 LET, Birmingham. Ml 4-2735. ■I965 CHEVY IMPALA 3257"Rlb, ; exc. cond., $1,480. FE 2-7131. 11965 CHEVY IMPALA, DOUBLE I power, balance, 67^9234. . Call 3 Used Aato-Tnick Ports 102 HYDRAULIC LIFT GATE FOR 544 S. _ _ _ ,1967 BUICK ELECTRA CUSTOM" I door sedan, like new. 83,050. F 5-8929. _ __ _ LATE MODEL CAOILLACS' ON HAND AT ALL TIMES lEROME MOTOR SALES 1980 Wide Tjack_Dr^_^ CONVERTIBLES 1963 OLDS 1963 PONTIAC VB. automatic, power $1495 BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" On Dixie In Waterford at the double stoplight 623-0900 1965 MUSTANG 2-PLUJ-2 Fa5T- hava v-89, ona 4 i LUCKY AUTO 1940 W. Wide Track 1964 PONTIAC STANDARD AUTO 109 East Blvd. (S.) FR i-403» ;1965 IMPALA 2-DOOR HARDTOP. 8 AUTOMATIC, powtr stMring. 1 $1695 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham. Ml 4-2735. CARS 106 __ ____, ___ ____ CHEVROLET 1966 BEL AIR 4-Steering, $1795 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth 60 S. woodwtrd Ml 7-3214 967 CAMERO SUPEft SPORT, Call 334-7694. automatic, axtra ffarp throughoull $1,495. JACK LONG FORD Rochester________________OL t-9711 1965 FORD 18 PASSENGER WAGON, V.8, automatic, radio, haatar, paw-, ar ttaering, brakas, power rear window, chroma luggage rack, $171$ full price $$$ down, ooi $61.41 per month. 5 year or 50,* 000 mile new car warranty avail* 1965 FORD LTD 4-0(5bR, HARtt booulilul Ivy gretn with block ny-oil $llk Kolly groan In, «$ down. terlor, $171$ lull prica $61.41 per month. S-ytar or 800 ml 10 new cor werranty avalb John McAuliffe Ford 638 Oakland Ave. PB 5-4181 D-« THE PONTIAC ^RISS. MOKPAY. OCTOBER 80, 1967 iiwr iBf On* Cm 1M Mtw w4 IM Cm Wllwr Cm 1M Nm mI 5^101 ____ 4-b6oi 6-£yLINOER •me. t)147 full priet. LUCKY AUTO 1f« W. WId* Track PE a-iaiit Of Fg i-m* 1»«5 FALCON blliLUXi CLUB WAG-on IIHMMtnger. big t cyl. A baaufyal onlvlt^5. JACK LONG FORD 1965 Falcon 6 possingar wagon wiHi a cyl. aulomaflc, radiO/ hai ar, only— $1095 BEATTIE RD DIALER DIxIa In Water ba doubla atop 623-OTOO "Your FORD DIALER Since i On DIxIa In Waterford at tea doubla ttoplIgM Chrysler - Plymouth - Jeep Rambler Oakland County's Fastest Growing Deoler '63 Plymouth Balvadaro II 4^r tedan, V-S, auto., power tteerlng, brakec. Lika new teroughout. $795 1966 Chrysler Two-Door Newport. A tine car, ready to go. Two to choose trom. $2295 '63 Plymouth Fury atotlon wagon, wHh full power. Including higgaga carrier. Real tharpi $895 1965 Ambassador Four-boor 7iya. A FINE SELECTION OF l554-5Sd5 CONTINENTALS . / priced BOB BORST LINCOLN-MERCURY 475 S. Woodward, Birmingham Ml 6-4538 BRAND NEW 1967 Mercury Sport Coupe six cylinder gnglna, all vinyl Intarlor, carpeting, 7.35x14 while wall tiraa, AM radio, doluxo wheal covars, compicto Ford taftty pack- $1995 A rtrs epperlunlly tor a wondtr-lul buy. HILLSIDE LINCOLN-MERCURY 1250 Oakland 333-7863 1551 MERCURY ^DOOR, I AUTO-matlc, in excallant condition. RONEY'S AUTO., 131 Baldwin, FE Cm m BRAND NEW 1967 Mercury Monterey Two Door Hardtop 350" V4, vinyl root, totocFof transmiulon, s.4S x tlra% power ataerlng and I raid, factory air “ $3197 brakes, ditionini selech group. A rtro opportunity ' HILLSIDE LINCOLN-MERCURY 1250 Oakland 333-7863 1545 MERCURY HARDTOP, AUTO-msllc, radio, hsatsr, power staar-Ing, brakes, silver blue with black nylon top, $I5SS full price, SSI down, and SS7.I0 por month, 5-yoar or 50,000 mils ntw car warranty. John McAuliffB Ford FE 5-4101 555 MERCURY MONtCLAIR. Automatic, radio, hoator, power steering and brakaa. An Ideal family car. Real savings, ranly. IS55. Hllli BRAND NEW 1967 Mercury Cyclone 2 Door Hardtop "350" ve, 7.75X15 tirss, AM rsdls, compMla Ford satety par- bucket saata. $2295 HILLSIDE Lincoln-Marcury 1250 Oakland 333-786.3 1966 COMET MARBfADUKB By Anderson and Leemlnjc NM» and Uiad Cm 1M 1966 BONNIVItJJE r Convertibles block liwMe bnd eut. f^lnpa br^i brtn* fevydfetofysr hW^ It,Sts mlfai, 01435 1557 BONNEVILLE, “For Pete’s sake, SOMEBODY get him sMne water!’’ BANKRUPT? CREDIT PROBLEMS? We Can Finance You- Juat Call ___________McAulltfa _______ 1553 OLDSMOBILB STARPIRE CON-vartlble. All nd with rad bucket aaats, full Reilly dtfti caln-Marcur EATER, WHITEWALLS, -ULL PRICE SI5S, ABSOLUTE Y NO MONEY DOWN. Aa uma weekly payments at S5.M :ALL credit mgr. Mr. Parks I HAROLD TURNER FORD. 51 4-7500. Nays gild Used Cm 106 *a PONTIAC STARCHIEF 4-DOOR. Pawtr steering, brakaa. S1050. Call attar 4 p.m. OR ^1351. . MERRY OLDSMOBILE 530 N. Main ROCHESTER, MICHIGAN 1964 OLDS Super SO Hardtop, hli full I and It ft raaaonabla, ban nanclng, easy terms. GRIMALDI CAR CO. FE S-5431 I^ ^LDr>‘ .HOLIDAY SEDAN, 'Rff?*Bh HAROLD TURNER BRAND NEW 1967 Mercury MONTCLAIR Tvito Door Hardtop "350" V-S, atitchshiff sutoreal . transrslaslen, white akto wall tlras, power iteerings AM retfloa tinted wlndthleM. $3029 HILLSIDE Lincoln-Mercury 1250 Oal^and 333-7863 LOOK AT THESE! FACTORY AUTHORIZED SALE OFFICIAL'S CARS AND DEMOS SOVB Up to $1500 1967 MARLIN 2-door hardtop, big V-8, $1888 1967 AMBASSADOR 2-door hardtop, V-8, power equipped. $2088 1967 AMSASSA'DOR 4-door sedon, $1777 MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM VILLAGE RAMBLER 666 S. Woodward Birmingham 646-3900 SHOP & COMPARE AT PONTIAC'S ONE-STOP TRANSPORTATION CENTER 1967 OLDS .......................$2195 P45 with V4 engines eutometic trenimiulena and It Is elmoet like new. 1966 OLDS .......................$2195 Luxury Sedan, hai full pewar and this ana II all ready to so. 1964 OLDS .......................$1095 etoe'lngl*'e5ie vSltowalftlraa** •''•''•'’’Itilen, pewar brakaa and 1964 OLDS .......................$1295 Starflrs CenvartIbM, hta full powsr. It It loaded with many exirsa. 1965 T-BIRD .....................$1995 CenvartIbM with full powtr, Thia car la really sharp. 1965 BUICK...................... $1695 WIMeat Csnvartibit, power brakaa and itotrlns. 1964 OLDS .................I..;...$895 as ConvsrllbM wHh nowtr brakes and power stbarbif, automatic, radio and whIMf all tf^ 1967 BUICK........................$3395 RIvlara. aiitomallc, radio, haator and whitowtil tirat. Oeubto powtr. DOWNEY OLDSMQBILE, INC. 550 Oakland Ave. FE 2-8101 I 1550 PLYMOUTH WAGON. C condition. S75. 503-5050 or 73I-0S75. 1551 valiant ^DOOH AUTOMAT-1C, LIKE NEW S35|. COOPER'S Extra Cleon Used Cars 4371 Dixit Drayton Plains Opsn 5 to 5 dally 574-3357 1967 PLYMOUTH power stearins _______ iiclpal car, 2 of which to $1395 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth 1967 VALIANT lory warrtnty.^0^ — OAKLAND I chrysler-flymouth ! 734 Oakland Ava.___FE 5-5435 1554 PONTIAC Catalina t-door hardtop, with automatic, power steering, radio, heater, whltawalli. Ideal Itmlly carl Only 11355. On US 10 at M15, Clarksten, MA 5-5571.________________________ 1554 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE CON- to> radio, Keater, power ttoarl and brakes. This Is a very i pealing Oar. 01255. Hlllalda LInco Mercury, 1350 Oakland, 333-7053. 1554 ►ONTIAC CATALINA 4 001 Vanlura, sharp, 11,050. After npon, 333-5541._________________________ do6r, aiA- condltton, powsr wiiidswt, storae THfNfW AUDETTI PONTIAC NOW SERVING Troy—PontiK—Blrmlnghom Arta 1030 Mopla, oeraf jtemeofs Airpertl 1547, Ct^LjlM »bOOA. TWO- poolnr. Lovy..»TLe<88, gsr?t075*'^' fS57 TEMPEST LEMANS 3 DOOR hardtote vinyl top, bucket seats, consols: OR i5405 attor 5 p.m. 1551 liAMBLdR AMimcAN STA-tlon wagon, «55. FE T7S& Dealar. 1963 RAMBLER Clawlc 44toor with V-0 angina, automatic transmlaalon, power ataer-Ing, best attar. GRIMALDI CAR CO. 500 Oakland__________FE 5-5431 1553 ramAler CLASSIC wIth 4; pricad to sell. ROSE RAMBLER, Union Lake, EM 5-4155. 14 RAMBLtR, CLASSIC STAtibN wagon, 5 cylinder angina, stand-1 ard shift, radio, haator, rar" --top, tirts llkf newt pria Mil. ROSE RAMtUER, 1964 PONTIAC Bonneville 4-doer, hardtop, with power steering, brakes, windows, radio, whitewalls, vinyl roof, let black with matching interior, only ~ SI453 OAKLAND chrysler-plymouth 724 Oakland Ava. FE M4I5 1555 POI^TIAC eXyU^A 4 DOOR attar 4, 535-3303. 23 NEW RAMBLERS READY FOR DELIVERY PETERSON AND SONS JEEP LAPEER 664-4511 1545 GTOiS1475 FE 5-5735 1555 f>OhTIAC BONtIkviLLE, door hardtopo rod and whlttp o ownarp baautya $1797. KEEGO PONTIAC KEBOO HARBOR 1565 PONTIAC vegan. I brakaa. automatic, chrome B carrier. Need lota at Hart It Is. $1555. Hillside i-Marcury, 1350 Oakland. 333- 1553 PONTIAC LaMANS CONVERT- 1545 RAMriLER CLAsilC, WHITE finish and a 2 door aedi cylindtr angina, standard radio, whitewall tires, _prle sell. ROSE RAMBLER, Union Lake. EM 3-4155._______________ 1966 RAMBLER American 2-door with much exti features, 1 owner and extra GRIMALDI CAR CO. 550 Oakland_________FE S-5431 1553 STUDEBAKER, 4-DOOR. ALSO factory OFnCIALS CARS And Low Mileage Trades, All With Full Power, Air-Goo^ ditioning and Most With Vinyl Tops. All Sold With Remainder of the 5-year~-50,-O’OO Mile New Car Warranty. '67 Elciorado '67 Cadillac Coupe, tpsclal flre-mlst palnl, alr^ondtllonad, FM radio, pewar <|oqr locka. Only 5,M0 miles. Looks at new a> 5 155$ modtil a.n7'DU’ii! tell ana. *67 Caciillac DaVlllt convsrtlbW, dssirt '67 Cadillac Sedan DaVllla,.wl)lta with blua balga with malchins laatear Interior, lull power, tin and telescopic wheal, FM stereo radio, alr-condlltonad. Lika nawl xsx! FTste't.'sr.'nd^sfif 0^\7M*'ac}'ual *rnllM,“raaliy MANY, MANY MORE SHARP LOW MILEAGE CARS TO CHOOSE FROM CADILLAC of Birmingham Ask for Rich Kroll 1350 NORTH WOODWARD PHONE Ml 4-1930 ISIJ- broket. Raal savlnga on this ana owner biauly. 01595. Hlllalda Lincoln-Mercury, 1350 Oakland, 333- 1545 I^ONTIAC CATALINA. S-OS: hardtop. Powtr slaaring, brakes. 1 owner new car trada-ln. 51457 LUCKY AUTO 1540 W. WIdt Track eg 4-1105__or FE 3-7154 545 PONTIAC GRANb PRIX 3 door hardtop with beautiful blue finish and black vinyl root, buckat seats, automatic transmis- ury at raal 01755. HIII-y, 1350 Oak- 1967 PLYMOUTH Fury III wagon, V4 automatl power, dark blua $279$ BIRMINGHAM Chrysisr-Plymouth Ml 7-3214 1555 PLYm6UTH iATALITE 2- FE 4-7150 attor 4 p.m. 1555 PONTIAC! BiST OFFER. ______________574-II743 __________ 1550 PONTIAC CATALINA, 3 DOOR excellent condition, call alter 5 p.m. 3M-15II. ________ 1M0 PO^tlAc CONVERTIBLE, 4- - " tri powor. 03IB. FE 3-5057._ PONTIAC, real CLEAN MY 3-5553 I $357, 03.13 psr I call Mr. Dan at: FE 8-4071 Capitol Auto 313 W. Montcalm (Just Bast at Oakland) 1553 PoftfiM L6nvertIble I AUTOMATIC power staerlng 01055 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Blrmlnttiam. Ml 4.3731 ifaj-p Vk f 1A C 16NHBViLLf 4 door hardtop, Ixmm and whlto, power wlndowa, air 'conditioning, AM-FM, toadad, one ewnar, 01475. KEEGO POHTIAC KEEGO HARBOR__________ 003-3400 1553 PONTIAC BONNBVlLLk. 3.0R. hardtop. Black with Blua Interior. Just Ilka now. Con ba purchased 1965 PONTIAC station wagon. 5 pasMngtr, a dltloned, power equipped, heater, whitewalls, auh full price 51055, only 045 down ond weekly paymantt of 013.53. HAROLD TURNER I FORDp INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM____Ml 4-7500 Vacation WITH Air Conditioning HAUPT PONTIAC •fix, tul rinyi root 1547 PDNTIAC Grand 1557 PDNTIAC Catalina 4-door hard-1 top, power slaaring, brakes, automatic air condltlonli«. $2555. 1557 BDNNEVILLE 44toor hardtop, automatic, power itaarlng, brakes, air conditioning $3355. 1555 CATALINA 3-door hsrdtop, ing, brakes, root, 52,555. Safe Winter Driving! 1964 CORVAIR MONZA wail.'Xl'y L-**' $695 1962 RAMBLER Wagon Clastic wHh automatic, 5-cyl. $795 1966 CHEVY IMPALA CONVERTIBLE Doubla pewar, V-a, autemalle, $2295 1964 BUICK Convertible wildcat with double pewar, white with rad Intertor. Only— $1095 19$6 PONTIAC Catalina StetlM Waatik with Hydramat-ke powtr Mttrlng. Onp«wntr. era^r^-Tiater. whRe- $2295 1967 PONTIACS Exacutlva cart. Catellna, Orand Prbit. Exacuttvaa and Banna-vlllat. Sava Up To - / $1788 mm Mumin PONTIAC-RAMBLER Ask for Chuck Moriarty, Jim Barnowsky, Arnold Donison Optn Daily 'til 9 P.M. On M-24 in Orion 693-6266 TRADE-IN "SWEEPOUT" WHY WOULD ANYBODY BUY A USED CAR FROM ANY DEALERSHIP, OTHER THAN THE 1966 Tompest Custom Wogon. Chroma roof rock, automotic, with power. Lika new. $2195 1964 Falcon 4-door sedan, sharp red ont. Only 24,000 miles. Yes, automatic, too $995 1964 Catalina Station Wogon. A real sharp red new cor trode, only $1095 1966 Cadillac Coupe DeVille. Like brand new. Must sbb this one. Has everything. $3695 1966 Catalina Station Wagon, 9-passenger, 3-seatar. Only 15,-000 one-owner miles. $2495 1967 Catalina Coupe, full factory equipment with air-conditioning. SPECIAL $2795 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE WITH OUR 25-MONTH WRITTEN USED CAR WARRANTY PROGRAM Corner University Dr.-E. Wide Track (Downtown Pontiac) DRIVE A LITTLE Save A Lot! 194S RDNTIAC 1965 VALIANT 2-Boc Ing for tom«thlng loriAbl*# too. Thii Irtffrior .......... l.r"wh!!“rJ ......aim 1557 FIReeiRD Canvsrttbls, 400 cubic Inch sngina, batulHul maroon wHh black top. Rtady to a* 1555 CORVETTE Convsrtibis, 4 spaed trsnsmisslon, met slivsr, with black top and Mack Issthsr buckat saali. Lot's go first class. car factory warranty .....S3355 1557 PONTIAC BannavMI# 4 door 1555 BUICK LsSabra 3-daor hard- ready and Ilka new drive and buy...... lAPEST Wbgan. Yea foikt tor something Inaxpan-nlca? ThIt It It. .. S455 1543 HONDA S-50. This littit baby hat lots and lots of "go'' pawtr. Do a "wiwtlla" tut la atMton's and boy today ...............$155 1547 PONTIAC Catellna 3^loor hardtop, power ataerlng end briket. eutometic. Like redT^t 1553 LINCOLN Cpntlnen lory air, full pewar, leea Ilka brand iwwl Only .. Ml, tae-1 owned, ...31755 1557 PONTIAC BONNEVILLB Broufliwm Hardtop. Adppr, factory air, full ,P^r. Mraiiutton'a awn ptrtonel damo. Yu, folka, tea loadadi two to ctwon trom. Only $3551 1M7^ PONTES, 3-Or. Har^. wa have 5 Dtmoa., anil all dlltar-ant colors to chgtu Tnim. Auto-units. Only $3755 1557 PONTIAC Catalina 4 door tadsn, beautiful dark aqua with Mack trim, ntw car factory war-rpnty SatSS 15U PONTIAC BOimeVILLe, canvartlbto. powtr ttotrbig and brakaa, automatic. Whlto with black top. Thli one you mutt IM $3355 1^555 PONTIAC Catalina l4tonr 1555 PONTIAC. Adoar tadsn, white finish wRh Mua Intarlor. 1 owner. Bought htra ntw. .. $1555 1555 BUICK Btoctra 335 convsrtl-bla. This llttla baby la lull M pewar and custom intarlor. 17,000 actual mliai. Go tlrtt clau In tela twauty $3755 Go first clau SIS55 1555 BONNEVILLB Brauatum. Yta talks this It Ilka buying a Cadillac. Sava a bundit. ... aitSS 1555 PORO COUNTRY SROAN WAGON. Yai, tolkt. hu all tea goMlu, and It Ilka Mand new, Wahava 3 to ciuom trom. Prkad at only 11055 tm BUICK usabra iHtoor hardtop. Power ttoerine and braku, automatic, bMullful red llnith JMU hes metehing Mather Intortor, One owner 1175J Pot Jorvis, Darrell, Tommy Thompson, Soles Mgr. PCNTIAC-BUICK 651-5500 O^ENi MONDAY ond THURSDAY TILL 9 P.M. 655 5. RochMtor Rd., ’/t Milo South of Dowt|towh Rochester THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 80, 1067 D—0 i ^ —Television Programs— piogramt fumithcd by stations listod in this column ara subjoct to chango without notico Chomwii! 2-WJBK-TV, 4-WWJ-TV, 7-WXYI-tV, 9-CKlW-TV, 50-WKBP-TV, 5<-WT>^ n'si TV Features FAME IS A FOUR.LET-TER WORD,’ 9 p.m. (4) PACKERS VS. CARDINALS, 9:30 p.m. (2) HOT SEAT, 11 p.m. (50) - ‘ i TONIGHT •:N (2) (4) News (C) (7) Movie Yuma” (1957) Ford, Van Heflin, Felicia Farr. ■ | (9) Pat Boone — Adam West, Jackie De Shannon and Jack Carter are guests. (C) (50) Flintstones (C) Friendly Giant 1:15.(56) Sing Hi, Sing Lo •:30 (2) News — Cronkite (C) (4) News—Huntley, Brinkley (C) (50) McHale’s Navy (56) Magic Door) 7:06 (2) Truth or Consequences (C) (4) George Pierrot — ‘‘Holiday in Rome” (C) (9) Gilligan's Island (C) (R) (50) I Love Lucy (56) Creative Person 7:39 (2) Gunsmoke — Two Army deserters are waiting for the opportunity to kill the sergeant who is following them. (C) / (4) Monkees — The boysi hunting for treasure on a desert island, are hunted by a mad Britisher and his man Thursday. (C) (7) Cowboy in Africa — Hayes and John Henry have been kidnaped and are held for ransom. (C) (9) Movie: ‘‘The Gallant Hours” (1960) James Cagney, Dennis Weaver. (50) Perry Mason (R) (56) Legacy 1:19 (4) Man From U.N.C.L.E. — Solo and an heiress-artist hunt for Ulya In a 10-block condemned area of Manhattan, while a killer, with a vendetta against U.N.C.L.E., and his pet cheetah kalk the _______ pair through the booby- 3=«0 <2) Harry S. Truman trapped rubble. (C) (56) Beyond the Earth 9:39 (2) Lucille Ball daughter. (C) (7) Big Valley — An escaped murderer takes refuge in Audra’s classroom, holding her and the children at gunpoint. (C) (9) Front Page Challege (C) (56) Playing the Guitar 10:36 (9) Don Messer’s Jubilee (56) Glory Trail 11:06 (4) (7) (9) News --(SOT Jtot &at - Lou Gor-/ don’s guestsv, include / Pearl S. Bucli^and ihe president of her foundation which aids illegiti mate children of GIs in Asia. 11:30 (4) Johnny Carson (C) (7) Joey Bishop (C) (9) Movie: ‘‘The Prisoner” (1955) Alec Guinness, Jack Hawkins. (R) 12:30 (2) News (C) 1:00 (2) Movie: ‘‘Untamed” (1955) Susan Hayward, Tyrone Power, Richard Egan. (C) (R) (4) Beat the Champ (7) Movie; ‘‘Abandon Ship” (1957) Part 1. Tyrone Power, Mai Zetter-ling, Lloyd Nolan. (R) 1:30 (4) News (C) (9) Window on the World 2:15 (7) News TOMORROW MORNING Robert 6:00 (4) Classroom Goulet guest stars as a I 6:15 (2) On the Farm Scene slightly broke trucker; 6:20 (2) News (C) who Lucy persuades to! g.jj ,2) Sunrise Semester -enter a Robert Goulet Russian Literature (C) lookalike contest. (C) | ,4, gd Allen (C) (7) Rat Patrol - An at- (7, Treasure (C) tractive Irish t e a c h e r, ^ ^ ^ . (Pippa Scott), who isj Woodrow the Woods- combatting ignorance. man (C) among the Arabs, is Tpday (C) drawn into the war when '7» Morning Show (C) the Germans abduct her! 7:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-prize pupil. (C) ' Round (50) Honeymooners (R) g;00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (C), (9i Barney Boomer | 8:30 (7) Movie: ‘ The Canter-1 ville Ghost” (1944)[ Charles Laughton, Robert Young. (9) Bonnie Prudden (C) 9:00 (2) Merv Griffin (C) (4) Gypsy Rose Lee (C) (9) Bozo the Clown (C) 9:10 (56) Let’s Read 9:30 (4) PDQ (C) (56) American History 9:55 ( 56) Spanish Lesson 10:00 (4) Snap Judgment (C) from Oklahoma” (1954) Will Rogers Jr., NaHcy Olson, Lon Chaney Jr. (50) Movie: “Possessed” (1947) Joan Crawford, Van Heflin. 12:35 (56) Tell Me a Story 12:45 (2) Guiding Ught (C) 12:50 ( 56) Let’s Read 12:55 (4) News (C) 1:90 (2) Love of Life (C) (4) Match Game (C) (7) Fugitive (R) 1:10 (56) Children’s Hour 1:25 (2) News (C) (4) Carol Duvall (C) (56) Arts and Crafts 1:30 (2) As the World Turns (C) (4) Let’s Make a Deal (C) 1:55 ( 56) American History 2:00 (2) Love Is a Many Splendor ed Thing (C) (4) Days of Our Lives (C) (7) Newlywed Game (C) 2:20 (56) Book Parade 2:36 (2) House Party (C)* ;(4) Doctors (C) (7) Dream Girl (C) (50) Topper (R) .2:45 (56) Spanish Lesson •2:55 (7) News (C) 3:00 (2) Divorce Court (C) H) Another World (C) (7) General Hospital (C) (9) Marshall Dillon (50) Make Room for Daddy (R) (56) British Calendar 3:15 (56) Mathematics 18 3:30 (2) Edge of Night (C) (4) You Don’t Say (C) (7) Dark Shadows (C) (9) Swingin’Time (C) . (50) Captain Detroit (C) 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (C) (4) Woody Woodbury (C) (7) Dating Game (C) (56) Business Roundtable 4:36 (2) Mike Douglas (C) (7) News (C) (9) Bozo the Clown (C) (50) Three Stooges (R) (56) What’s New 5:00 (9) Fun House (C) (50) Little Rascals (56) Misterogers 5:30 (4) George Pierrot (C) (7) News (C) (9) Dennis the Menace (50) Superman (R) (56) TV Kindergarten Foul Play Ruled Out in Six Iowa Deaths Nevada S5 Isaac’s mother (Bib.) 27 Black widow. 9 Suirix 10 Low h^funt IZCamelotl^jr 1 Takes hold ot 20 Bicycle part 2Vai|eyiB Argolis SCoralisUtid 4 Small pastry 5 Health resort 6 PUme surface 33 Shakespearean spirit Short article in 8 Luck foot 20 Gave money for 30 Uncooked 32 Greek geographer 38 Seasoning 37 Game of chance 21 Dry 38 Let 22 Defense group 39 Forbidding (ah.) 40 Affirm . 23 Definite article 41 Loud noisee 24 Ceremony 42 Bruin 25 Pleasing to the 43 Moist taste 44 English river 26 CuckooDint 45 Greek letter 47 Unit of energy 27 Forefather 1 2 3 4 5 J r r" r" 16 rr T1 IJJ 16 Id _r 28^ 55“ ■T 33 w 55“ 66 44 IT’ 47 43 j t 1 56 r n r 30 Humpbery Tours S. Viet Lauds Signs of Freedom Expo Closes; Soviet Show Most Popular MONTREAL (AP) - Expo 67 closed its 185-day run Sunday in a blaze of flags, fireworks and tributes, and its computers showed the Soviet exhib^ was the star of the Canadian centennial fair. Russia’s swept-roofed pavi lion, the costliest of all at 312 million, attracted about 13 million guests. Canada’s exhibit drew 11 million. The geodesic sky bubble of the United States was third with 9 million visitors ★ * While the Soviets concentrated on their achievements in science and industry, especially in aerospace, the United States show^ a potpourri of Americana from space capsules to pop art a la Andy Warhol and Elvis Presley’s guitar. GRIPE: U.S. TRIVIA Some viewers complained that the U.S. pavilion was mostly trivia; others liked the informal' low-pressure approach. Fifty-three per cent of all visitors to Expo were Canadians but Americans flocking up to Montreal constituted 45 per cent of the sightseers. * * * The skyrocketing attendance reached a climax Saturday when Martha Racine of Montreal walked through a turnstile to become the 50 millionth visitor. Mrs. Racine, 39, won a trip to Osaka, Japan, to see Expo 70. Expo’s attendance clipped the old record for world fairs of 42 million visitors set by the Brussels Fair of 1958. SAIGON (AP) - Vice President Hubert k. Humphrey made a whirlwind visit to South Vietnam’s embattled countryside today and praised a Vietnamese official who told him corruption is hurting one of the major government programs aimed at winning the war. * * ★ “Here’s a man that can talk frankly and openly, which is exactly why Americans are here, so that the Vietnamese people can speak freely,” said Humphrey of Maj. Nguyen Be, the commandant of the Revolutionary Development Training Center at the seaside resort city of Vung Tau. Central Intelligence Agency subsidizes the program, whose specially trained teams try to cater to the needs of contested villages and develop loyalty in them to the Saigon government. .* * * “What I liked about the statement, Humphrey told newsmen later, “is that a man can stand up and say that. This proves it is a free society. I bet you that can’t be said in North Vietnam and I know it can’t be said in Communist states.” GOOD OMENS The vice president said he found good omens in Vietnam, particularly in the Revolutionary Development program DAVENPORT, Iowa (UPD—j Humphrey stopped off at the Police have ruled out foul play in the deaths of six persons found in a Davenport home Saturday. Authorities had feared foul play after finding newspapers and a blanket stuffed into the ventilation system of the furnace in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Roger Feisner. center during a series of field trips that took him to see troops of the U.S. Riverine Force in the Mekong Delta and a model Vietnamese village. * ★ ★ The vice president arrived in! Vietnam Sunday to represent President Johnson at the inau-g u r a t i 0 n Tuesday of President-elect Nguyen Van Thieu. Four teen-aged children of the Feisners and their mater-'n.l and a graaliPLEDGE REAFFIRMED (9) Mr Dressun from carbon monox-1 Humphrey expressed (50) Yoga for Health apparently two dence found South confi-Vietnam “will Sion” and said he brought Police said it was a family!reaffirmation of the solemn (56) NET Journal — “Report From Cuba” blends views of life on the island. Interviews with political figures and observers and conversations with the people of Cuba. 9:99 (2) Andy Griffith - Opie and a friend secretly tape-record a bank robber’s confession, but it won’t stand up in court. (C) (4) Danny Thomas — “Fame Is a Four-Letter Word” follows a lady press agent’s battle against the blackmailing publisher of a scandal days before the bodies w e r e persevere in the face of aggres- sheet. Carolyn Jones, *5®'Of Cabbages and u„ i----- •<„ Barry Sullivan, Richard Kings Conte, Aldo Ray, Michael 1®:25 (4) News (C) Rennie, Gerald lne;19:30 (2) Beverly Hillbillies (R) Brooks. (C) (4) Concentration (C) (7) Felony Squad-Three! (71 Dateline: Hollywood jet-set gamblers are (9) Friendly Giant sought in connection with I (50) Carlton Fredericks the murder of a fellow! (C) poker player — who bet 16:35 (56) Children s Hour his life and lost. (C) 10:45 (9) Ontario Schools • (50) Movie: “Love, Hate 10:55 (7) Children’s Doctor (C) and Dishonor” (1963) The 11:00 (2) Andy of Mayberry (R) supposed suicided of a (4) Personality (C) pregnant girl is found to[ (7) Honeymoon Race (C) be murder, Peter Bald-1 (50) Dickory Doc (C) win, Virna Lisa. (R) 11:05 ( 56) Interlude 9:25 (9) News 11:15 O) Canadian Schools 9:30 (2) Pro Football - Green;H;30 (2) Dick Van Dyke (R) Bay Packers meet thej (4) Hollywood Squares (C) Cardinals at S t. L o u i s. (7) Family Game (C) 111:45 (9) Chez Helene S K the! TOMOIlBn* AFTERNOON Century ^2) News (C) - (56) French Chef | M) Jeopardy (C) 19:00 (4) I Spy - While search-| (7) Everybody’s Talking Ing for saboteurs in a (9) Take 30 small Greek village,! (50) Dialing for Dollars Kelly and Scott have a 112:25 (2) Topps in Fashion (C) run-in with the town’s] 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow mayor who is ready toj (4) Eye Guess (C) shish-kebab Kelly for an! (7) Donna Reed (R) Imagined affront to his (9i Movie: “The Boy Congress Urged to Stay Until War Is Dealt With policy or parts of it, most of which originated in Congress. “To the best of my knowledge, each is entirely different from anything tried by tbe administration,” Findley said. “None corresponds directly to any of the 28 separate peace plans which the Secretary of State says the United States has supported.” WASHINGTON (AP) - A call for Congress to stay in session until it deals with the question of war policy in Vietnam was sounded today by three House members. The suggestion from Reps. Paul Findley. R-Ill., F. Bradford Morse, R-Mass., and William L. Hungate, D-Mo., comes at a time congressional leaders are predicting that with a little luck the 1967 session could wind up around Thanksgiving Day. “Our men in Vietnam cannot adjourn the war,” Findley said, “and I do not think the Congress should adjourn until it has dealt squarely with the question of war policy.” The thnee are among 57 House A'TLANTA, Ga. (PA) — A sponsors of a resolution calling tour of the Yerkes Regional Pri-for congressional hearings toj mate Research Center, home of determine if “further legislative a huge orangutan collection, action is desirable in regard to! was on tap for Prince Ranier of Southeast Asia policy.” ! Monaco today. MANY IDEAS Findley contended there are many ideas on how to resolve the Vietnam conflict. In fact, he said, he has found some 26 separate alternatives to present Ranier to Tour Primate Center in Atlanta Visit Slaying Follows Subway Insult NEW YORK (AP) - An insult to a girl resulted in a battle Sunday aboard a Brooklyn subway train and the stab-slaying of her 29-year-old boyfriend. 'The victim, Martin Gilliard, a private guard for a supermarket, was sitting with his girlfriend, Barbara Satchel, 25, on a speeding train about 4 aim. STA-ns-ncs spun Among other statistics spun out by the Expo computers: The free transit system, “"‘jj Expo Express, rolled over ’ 374,600 train miles. 25,463 youngsters turned up at the misplaced children department. an indecent remark to the young woman. Gilliard rebuked the man, the two argued, then scuffled. Police said the stranger pulled out a knife and plunged its five-inch blade into Gilliard’s chest. Gilliard staggered from the train and collapsed and died on (he platform of the Lafayette Avenue station. When the fight started, other passengers fled from the car CASHIER HELD 'i A jI cl • i Seized by Transit Authority Uetroit AAOn o/Ofn; patrolmen was Albert Davis, 28, a night cashier. Davis was 1, DETROIT (AP) —Police to- charged with murder and held Whether or not it is all going day sought the slayer of a 63-i,^ithout bail for a hearing. —25,463 youngsters were happily turned back to parents or guardians. —5|931,578 hamburgers were gobbled up. —33.5 million Ice cream cones were licked. The prince, who comes to Atlanta from Memphis, Tenn., is to tour the center, then leave later in the day. Officials of Emory University, in charge of the center, said Rainier will make no public appearances or meet with any government officials. Rainier is not accompanied on the trip by his wife, former movie star Grace Kelly. During his stay in Atlanta, Rainier will be guest of Dr. Sanford S. Atwood, president of Emory. AVOID GARNISHMENT Ut M help yMi .. . We eae gat we a fraeh etart bv eaa-solidiiMag yaar debts inta aaa payMant yea aaa afford. Mo Hmlt to the aiaoeiit awed or iraaWor of eradHora. Nat a Debt Consultants of Pontiac, Inc. Open Sat. 9 to 12 exactly according to Harvard year-old poolroom owner who University standards or the was founci dead with a bullet in standards of the University of the back of the head. The vic-Califomia I do not know” he time, Lee A. Jackson of De-s a i d. “I tell you they’d go troit, whose pockets had been mighty good in South Dakota rifled, was found in an alley on or rural Minnesota.” Detroit’s West Side Sunday. practice to stuff something into a vent between the furnace and a nearby incinerator to keep fumes from the incinei^ator from getting into the house’s duct system. pledge of American support for the Vietnamese people and their new government.” Maj. Be, a former Communist battalion commander who came over to the Saigon government, told Humphrey that the biggest prfiL’em that the massive, expensive Revolutionary Development program faces is lack of Actors in Politics understanding at the provincial and district levels. Lancaster Likes Two Guests Steal the Party Planned for Tony and Cyd By EARL WILSON NEW YORK—The Party of the Night was flung by the Joseph Norbans at El Morocco for Tony Martin and Cyd Charisse ... but it was sort of stolen away from the principals by Cary Grant and Joe DiMaggio. “Nothing formal,” they told me ... so only 150 of us came. When Grant came in wearing his hom-rims, bowing a bit to get down to the size of the less-talls, he completely dissolved the women folk who gushed right out to the powder rooms to have a good cry. “Home of tho Bottomless Cup of Coffoo** Open Daily 11:30-9:30 - Fri. and Sat. til 19 P.M. ELIZABETH LAKE RD., OPPOSITE THE PONTIAC MALL Childs' Portions Avoilablo WILSON HOLLYWOOD (AP) Burt; run for political office “if they;^“*'^"8 °ur program are hone.stly motivated and '’'^e president. 'The U.S. want the sense of power to apply it wisely.” • ^ Lancaster, an active figure in civil rights work, told newsmen recently he doesn’t want to leave acting for politics. "I like my work,” he said. “1 don’t feel I have reached the zenith in my own line of work yet” Taiwan is reported to have the highest automobile death rate in the world, with a rate of 50 per 10,000 cars in H — Ratdio Programs— *Mus*lc“all "’•‘-"J'’- News. Sports, WwT N^w'^Swi”'Music W^^Rat Murptiy He kissed the hand of' Mrs. Joseph Levine, of Mrs. Hy and Patrice Uchitel ... he made no big secret of his residing for the moment )odv 1 , tne; told!ness ... not toward her, but lo discussing it. Joe DiMaggio even stood up to greet him and introduced with Bob Tapljnger ... and when anybody mentioned his wife Lancaster says actors should . Corruption at these levels ”is,Dyan Cannon, about to open in a show, they noticed his chilli Vandals Spray Acid on Autos his lovely blonde girlfriend, Sharon Fenster, of Columbus . Tony Martin got to kidding with everybody about Pat Boone now i owning part of a basketball franchise and said, “That would be like Joe DiMaggio conducting a symphony orchestra!” ★ * * Joe Pasternak, the veteran Hollywood producer, won the distinction of being the only gpest at the party who left early. It was like 1 or 2 a.m. when he decided to leave. He had already met Cary Grant years and years ago, so that part didn’t matter I with him. MIAMI. Fla. (AP) — Owners It was quite a night. I didn’t hear Eddie Fisher, Frank of 55 automobiles in a 75-block!Sinatra, Mia Farrow or Connie Stevens mentioned even once, area of northeast Miami awoke _ ii.rNkj,^LJT p.p, Sunday to discover that vandals” /VMUNKjMI cARL ... had mutilated their autos with] The producers of “Henry, Sweet Henry,” have high hopes acid. I for their show doing very well . . . Gene Wesson will co-produce * * * with Richard Lewis the first Marcello Mastrolanni picture in The \ars, all new models'^^e U.S., “Murder, NY Style,” in the spring. parked along curbs, were speck- Frank Sinatra’s “Detective” film has a new, tighter schedule led with quarter-size blobs of some N.Y. locations (like the Groceria) deleted . . . Secret acid an inch apart down their A beautiful film star’s an LSD fancier, and the studio Is left rears and left sides. Un- she may not finish her current role, touched were weather-beaten! IDDAY’S BEST LAUGH; Norby Walters’ wife complains autos and those in apartment!she seldom gets out of the house: “The only way I know the and motel lots. i seasons change is when the baseball players on TV commer- Damage was estimated at eials are replaced by football players.” more than 35,000. WISH I’D SAID THAT: “I like to see politicians pray. * * * It keeps their hands where you can see them.”—Bob Hope. Police tentativelv labeled the CARL’S PEARLS: Shelby Friedman admits that his habits ‘‘baZy acid DumnSl oS of "P oaiiery acia, pumpea out 01 j toiu nf tho hir,r,i« u,hn .0., pressurized container ent mative for the vandalism. 1 Carol Lawrence tells of the hippie who saw a sign, “Keep New York Clean,” and protested: “Now they’re trying to d That’s earl, brother. (eubUshR-t-Hall Syndic*)*) In a Hurry? Start your Stran building TODAY! Thi* 30,000 iq. ft. building was racantly compldtad for BURKE LUMBER CO. *» 4301 Dili* Highway. Drayton Plain* The modern Stran method of construction allows many time savings for you. Excessive pre-planning time Is eliminated because Stran buildings are available In more than 2,500 basic designs. Stran building components are pre-engineered to fit right and go together faster at tha building sita. It is not unusual for Stran buildings to ba ready for occupancy within 60 to 90 days. We can provide this fast, efficient construction service. Call us for an estimate. We can start your job TODAY! NEWMYER Constructien Ce. 61 Squirrel Road Auburn Heights 852-3240 itre^^eel FRANCHISED BUILDER D—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 30. 1967 Senators Open Public Phase of Ribt Probe WASHINGTON (AP) - A Senate subcommittee opens this week the public phase of its probe into the causes of the nation’s riots. * * * The Senate permanent subcommittee on investigations, headed by Chairman John L. McCteUan, I>-Ark., wiU bold its first public hearing Wednesday, a * ★ In the next three weeks, said McClellan, the panel’s hearings will focus on “a group of cities which show a cross-section of riot activity.” The opening session Wednes- day will involve testimony about a May 17 riot at Texas Southern University In Houston in which a policeman was killed and three people wounded. Riots in Newark and Plainfield, N.J., Detroit and other Michigan cities and Nashville, Tenn., also will be studied in the three-week Committee investigators have been gathering data' on the riot-hit towns since the Senate authorized the probe Aug. 11. McClellan said the hearings Initially “will ba concerned with the hnmediate or precipitating causes of the riots” and later will look into social and Oconom-if factors of slum Ufe. * ★ * Since January 1965, the panel noted, about 140 U.S. cities have been hit with outbreaks of mass violence. PLEADS FOR HOME — A South Vietnamese Woman pleads to U.S. soldiers to spare her home during an opera-ion in a small village near Tam Ky about 350 miles north northeast of Saigon. Units from the U.S. 1st Air Cavalry Division spotted several Vietcong guerrillas from helicopters as they flew over the village, four guerrillas were killed in the action. Congress Districting Bill Challenged by Sen. Baker WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen Howard H. Baker Jr., R-Tenn. chalienged the constitutionality of a compromise congressional redistricting bill today and urged Its defeat by the Senate. He said its enactment would make statewide at-large congressional elections more likely in 18 states than if there were no bill at all. ★ ★ ♦ The prohibition against at-large elections in all states except Hawaii and New Mexico, he said, is Inseparably tied to a provision be termed clearly unconstitutional—that no state be required to redistrict until a special federal census is made. “When be census provision is declared unconstitutional, the at-large elections pridiibition will be, too," Baker said. “If the legislation were to be ruled unconstitutional some time next spring, some courts might find it necessary at that late date to require congressmen in severai states to run at-large,” he said. * ★ * Baker promised to offer separate legislation, as an amendment to some pending bill, to ban at-large elections in ail states. The compromise hill was passed by the House last Thursday. Baker called the 241-105 vote evidence of growing bipartisan opposition. The bill, he said, is an attempt “to delay fair redlstrictlng of congressional seats for five years.” Baker’s statement came in a speech prepared for Senate delivery tdday. OHW YOUR QIWN HOME Without Increasing Your Current Payments OUR TRUE OPEN-END MORTGAGE PAYMENTS INCLUDE: • PRINCIPAL • INTEREST • TAXES • INSURANCE Your Equity Increases in Value with Each Payment You may pay up your mort{;age at any time, or pay any additional amount, ’without advance notice or penalty. You can increase your mortgage at a later day for improvement or additions. You may pay principal or interest in advance to suit your own convenience. Terms on our conventional open* end mortgages run up to 25 years. Come in and talk with one of our friendly representatives today. 761 W. HURON STREET DOWNTOWN PONTIAC - DRAYTON PLAINS - ROCHESTER - CI.ARKSTON - MILFORD - WALI.ED LAKE - I.AKE ORION - WATERFORD fr:- -■I •• .iii'Jfvmo r.- ■•': '~u ^rr : ' Police are searching for a hit-and-run car which killed an 11-year-old Waterford Township boy over the weekend, one of the wdrst traffic fatality weekends in Michigan Uds yea^ ^ Highway ToU in 'fi7 Highway 86 Waterford Township police suspect a metallic gold or white late model Cadillac struck DareUe J. Desotell, 739 Scott Mdce, while he was walking on an edge of a road near his home Saturay evening. He died yesterday afternoon in Pontiac ggvener al Hospital. A witness to Uie accident told police the hit-and-run vehicle stopped momentarily a f t er-striking the boy on Tests fwm chrome and glass on the roadway ,and from the boy's clothing and inloitaation from a witness tipped police off, on the description of the car. Police ,ask that anyone htat has information deeming the accident, which occurred at 7:29 p.m., to contact them. in the area after the accident. The hospital reported a w(»nan came in three hours later to check on the boy’s condition and then left in .a hurry. Scott Lake Road near Pontiac Lake Road but then sped off. A woman is a possible suspect in the case, according to police. Other witnesses say they saw a woman driying a car fitting ^e description Desotell was walking a few inches on to the paved roadway when hit by the car, according to a friend, ,n mShastel, 11, of 2863 Chrysler, Waterford Township, who was walking beside him. The boys were walking south on Scott Lake Road and the car approached from behind, police said. Desotell was wearing dark clothing. Paint on the boy’s clothing and headlight glass and chrome fo^ at the scene were analyzed by the State Police crime lab in East Lans^. The Desotell boy was among at least 23 persons killed in fraffic accidents in Michigan oyer the weekend. Five victims were pedestrians, II dieii when their cars ran off the road and eight were killed when their autos collided with another vehicle. The weather Showers, Cooler (Oalalli Pat* » THE PONTIAC PRESS other traffic deaths were: Armado Diaz, 35, of Saginaw, who was hit by a car Sunday on M47 in Saginaw County’s Swan Creek Township. Benjamin Czukowski, 63, (d Detroit, victim of a hit-and-run driver while crossing Van Dyke on Detroit’s Bast Side Sunday. Robert R. Kelly, 23, of Rockford, pas-' senger in a car which struck a wood fence in Grand Rapids Sunday. , night on Port Hope Eoad in Huron Coun- # ty’s Huron Township. , Chester E. English, 31, of St. Johns, hiibwi Sunday (m a two-car crash on M21 in Clinton County. John Robert Bates, 28, of Athens, whose car rolled over Sunday in Calhoun County’s Burlington’Township. Shirley Ann Jenkins, 42, of Uvonia, killed Saturday in a two-car crash in the Detroit suburb of Livonia. Charles Lynn, 23, of WesUand, killed Friday night when his car ranuned a truck parked on Michigan Avenue in Wayne. Gilbert D. Perez, 25, of Toledo, Ohio, fatally injured Friday nighl on U.S. 223 at Sterns Read in W^teford Township, Monrow County, when a truck hit his car as he turned left oH U-S. 223. Rose Weber, 64, of Harbor Springs, killed Friday night when her car left 1-75 in Bagley Township, Otsego County, and rolled over. VOL. 125 NO. 228 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1967 . ■ ' f ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ UNITED^PUsV^mTERNATIONAL ---44 PAGES Verlin Gordon Thomas,,41^of Carson City, whose car hit a tree'in Hubbard-ston in northeast Ionia Cbunty Sunday. Robert Amos Jefibrs, 60, of Harbor Beach, whose cat overturned Saturday Jaipes Alphe Finley, 35, of Dearborn Heights, and Naomi Casey, 57, of Taylor, killed Firday night in a two-car collision in Taylor Township. (Continued on Page A-2, Gof. 5) GM Board New'Chief to Pick Today Holly Balloting Gun Death Left on School Bonds NEW YORK un — General Motors, world’s largest corpwation, is expected to name a new man today to head the mulUbillion dollar auto building empire. GM’s board of directors meet in New York to decide wbo wiil replace Frederic G. Donner, wbo has reached the retirement age of 65 and is expected to relinquisli his post of chief executive officer as reqiifred by the company’s I Holly School District voters today are ^ding a $5.2-million bond issue to fi-tence a new |3.8-million junior high school and additions to the present high school. Donner also may give up his position as cbaiiman of the board. His salary and bonuses tofrri Some |7D0,000 a year, plus stock benefits. If he wnis to stay on aa Mard chairman, however, such a jdecedeat was set by ^ late AIM P. Stoaa. who conflaued at Us nest natil IHS Rolleft, 97, 760 K^V- operations since 1966, add-'former gefi- it it it -n« !><»,< tv -ith . all of these, howevCT, and come up vjith ®f <5,S0d would pay 124.75 a year m add-a darkhorse. > ed school millage if the proposal passes. One gnest said later: “It looked to everyone like a skit. When the man fell down and was moving and mumbling on the floor we all thought, gee, this guy is really putting It on.’’ He said Lindstrand, a salesman, appeared at the private party in this Los Angeles suburb about 1 a.m. not in cos- * This Is Judge Frump Terrified Bride Held by Formed "Suitor He danced with a few of the guests, then left. A few minutes later he ran back into the room, followed by a stocky man carrying a gun. LOOKED LIKE tOY “It looked like a toy,’’ said another guest, Bruce Cane. “I saw the flashes.’’ 'There were two shots. One struck a wall. .. .and you’ll find out if he’s o “hanging judge” like they used to have m the Old Wild West as you read the hilarious comic strip CLEVELAND, Ohio (» - A tesrrified young bride abducted by a former boyfriend the day after her weddtag remains a hostage, sometimes with a pistol pointed at l^r head. Police said Robert Batch, took Lida Caldwell, 19, to his apartment after shooting her husband Chvles, who is 18, in the newlyweds’ apartment Saturday afternoon. The Caldwells were married Friday. Police said they went to Batch’s apartment about 8:40 a.m. yesterday to talk to him about the shooting and discovered the girl was there. Officers said they did not know how long the girl had been there. Police were ordered from the apartment by. Batch, who threatened to shoot Mrs. CaldweU if they did not leave. The guests watched and laughed as Lindstrand writhed on the floor for several minutes while his assailant fled, virtually unnoticed, according to a woman guest who would not identify herself. She said, “A girl sitting next to me said, ‘I see blood coming out of his mouth.’ “! told her, ‘It must be a capsule he has inside.’ Tumbleweeds About 4 a.m. today, police said, three ihota rang out from the apvtment on the top floor of a tbree-stoiy suburban University Heights house. One shot every day starting today on the comic knocked out a searchlight set up « Officers returned to the kitchen of the apartment and talked with Batch — often using Mrs. Caldwell as an intermediary — until they again were ordered from the apartment about mid-afternoon. “But she went up to him and it was blood. A guy went up and tried his pulse and shouted, ‘He has no pulse. This man Is dead.”* page. inThe Pontiac Press »•«“ side the house and the other two shots for. Six more shots were heard from the house a^ut dawn. In Today's Press Detroit Lions Team is pictured in San Francisco. — PAGE D-1. Surtax Sen. Mansfield sees no passage this year. PAGE A-16. Tax Havens Congress -probes group that sets up foundations. PAGE B-ll. Area News ............... A-4 ...if........ C-19 ...C-ll .... D-9 C-16 ...A-6 ... D-2 ... D-3 C-l-G* G8 igramB ... Earl Pages ...... B-l-lM * After the first shots a few policemen were allowed into the apartment by Batch. They reported that they talked briefly with Batch, who sM on the floor in his bedroom with the pn lying over his lap. He held his pistol at her temple part of the time, the policemen said, but she appeared to be unharmed. Yesterday, Batch threatened to kill the girl if police attempted ts rescue her. Police Chief Donald J. Stehlik said she had one good chance to. run from the apartment last night but apparently was too frightened to move. CROWDS GATHERED Crowds gathered in theja r ea around the house thropgh the night. ITie house’ . ... ■ .T was dark inside, but fpolice played searchlights on it. “l|f yon don’t get oat, I’H shoot Iwr,” saying in answer to pleas yesterday that he release yoang Mills. CaldweU. Roman Catholic priests and relatives of Batch also tri^ unsuccessfully to talk the young man bito ending the hours of terror. Relatives who talked to him. were a brother, sister and brother-in-law. CaldweU, wounded in the face, was taken to St. Vincent Charity Hospital from the couple’s East Side apartment He was reported la fair condition. Police said be identified Batch as tte’per- soo Mm shot him. POLICE SURVEILLANOB Cleveland detective Dan McDonald i gun at windows of a third floor apartment where Robert Batch, 23, holds i girlfriend captive. Police say the girl, Lida CaldweU, 19, was abducted f honeymoon apartment early yesterday after Batch shot the girl’s husban PARENTS’ DAY GREETINGS-Frederick Hill (right) of 8965 SuncTest, Utica, chairman of Oakland University’s Parents Day, welcomes three of more than 500 parents who attended the fifth annual ^ogram on the campus Saturday. Getting acquainted with campus life and progranu are (from left) Mrs. Edith Blocher, 699 Blaine, and Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Stahl, 1631 W. Square Lake, Bloomfield HUIs. Lindstrand in the side, the other hit Younger Goblins Ready Consider yourself fortunate, Pontiac and Waterford Township residents, that you have to face only a brigade of bright-faced moppets and tots playing make-believe while celebrating Hallo-night. “pranks” consisted of tearing fences stopping chinmeys so that smoke and soot made the nondonor wish be had been freer with his largess. Cane’s wife, Gale, said that as the guests waited for police “there was just quiet, shock ai....... In medieval times the celebrators were grown men and women who went from door to door requesting food and drink in order to carry out the proper festive mood for Halloween celebrations. From that practice springs the familiar “trick or treat” refrain heard from small fry these days. Refusals were frowned ( TCck - and - treaters wiU be out tomorrow in Pqptiac generaUy after 5:30 p.m. until dark and after. Showers Likely to Dampen Area Showers arid possible scattered thundershowers late this afternoon are expected to punctuate the area’s peek at Indian Summer after the weekend recovery from Friday’s squaw winter. The rain will likely continue through the night with lows set to fall in the 40-to-46 range. Tomorrow will be cooler with rain Iftely in the early morning. Sunshine Is expected la return to Onk-land County by Wednesday cansing temperatures to warm slightly and remain within the season’s normal high range of S^to44. Precipitation probabilities in percentages are: today 60; tonight 80, and * * ★ U>w mercury reading in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. wac 46. By 1 p.m. it registered 60. News Flash MOSCOW (AP) - Hw soviet Unh said today it had mccessfnliy joined I ' ( r first Itf I rr ■ 9*Ptece Dining SHite Sold for $300 ... “Our very first Want Ad and what a wonderful job It dlti. First caller bought.” Mr. J.P. E DtNING ROOM SUITE. EX-« cMMRliNi. CMm eiMnW, I, tabto, « stairs, sm PRESS WANT ADS iron out the probleBis of selllfaig unneeded Heme. So for responsive action and satisfactory results, put a Want Ad to work. Dial 332-8181 or 3344981 ---— d ‘MYSTERY TREATS’ PLANNED In order to ensure that celebrants are off the streets early, the Pontiac Department of Parks and Recreation and the Pontiac Area Junior Chamber of Commerce are sponsoring a “myftery treat” contest. Prizes will be awarded to selected senior high, junior high and elementary school pupils‘if they answer their home phone after certain designated times. Times are 9 p.m. for elementary school children; 10:30 p.m. for junior high students and 11 p.m. for high school students. Prizes will be furnish^ by the Jaycees. In Waterford Township, trick-or-treat hours win be from 6 to 7 p.m. (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 5) Oxford-Orion Representatives Consent to Sewer Planning By JEAN SAILE Sewer service for the northerly Oxford-Orion communities hail drawn a step Resolutions, to be signed by the governmental bodies of the areas, will be sent out this week for fwmal action, nearer. according to R. J. Alexander, DPW Representatives of Oxfotd and Oxford director. Township, Lake Orion and Orion Town- ~ , ... , ship, after a meeting with the County De- The plans for the extension of the Paint partm^nt of Public Works, have signified Creek Arm of the Clinton-Oakland Sew- a willingness to proceed with plans. er Interceptor are based on a recent report prepared by the Waterford Township engineering firm of Johnson and Anderson Inc. The report was rejected by Oxford Township and the Village of Oxford. It provides for extension of the arm north from Rochester through Avon and Pontile Pro»« Photo Mr. And Mrs. Henrik Hansen Of Denmark Visit Here Danish Woman Visits Son After 34 Years Out of U.S. WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP — A woman who had lived in the United States only idne years came back recently for a visit after being away 34 years. Mrs. Henrik Hanson, mother of Alfred Hansen, 8421 Cooley, was bom in Denmark, came here to marry her first husband and returned in 1933 after he died. The second husband, with whom she came back, bears the same name and was bom on the same date as her first As they both sat in the living room of her son’s home on Cooley Lake, they looked quite American. But Mrs. Hansen pointed out that her blue suit and her husband’s shirt and slacks were completely wash-and-wear — products more common in Denmark than in the United States. w ★ * Mr. and Mrs. Hansen also appeared relaxed after 10 weeks visiting relatives and friends and touring Michigan. They are now on their way home with a stopover in Iceland planned. MAJOR CHANGE Mrs. Hansen immediately cited prosperity as a point of difference between the two countries and one of the major ways the area has changed since 1933. She looked out the Hansen’s ample living room window and saw the new houses, stores and cars she didn’t see 34 years ago. Her first husband was a foreman at the Borden’s Creamery, formerly in Pontiac. They lived at 57 Augusta, Pontiac and in Juhl, the Danish settlement in Michigan’s thumb area. Al, who has an insurance business here, is the only one of Mrs. Hansen’s three children to have returned to the United States. ★ ★ ★ During the first three years of Mrs. Hansen’s return to Denmark, she operated a bakery. She then moved to a farm with her second husband, who was a woodsman. FIRST VIEW OF U.S. For Hansen, this trip was his first view of the U.S. and the beginning of his retirement. He returns to several gardening jobs and his own vegetable and berry garden. Mrs. Hansen will continue embroidery work, she says, pointing to the wall hanging she made for her son’s home. THE PONTIAC PRESS MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1967 A—4 MHIews 'Gentle' Pressure Applied Group Battles War Toys Does a “gentle” pressure group have a chance? ^ Designed to do away with the sale of war and horror toys, a new Oakland County group has found a spokesman in Celia Alderson, 1081 E. Hamlin, Avon Township. “I wonder if gentle pressure has a chance these days?” asks Mrs. Alderson whose informal mrganization is committed to the idea that taking the action toys away reduces the bloodthirsty demand as the supply is reduced. “No War Toys” is a nonprofit organization financed by private contributions and the sale of lapel buttons, bumper stickers and sweat shirts. It was begun by a Los Angeles artist. Petitions circulated by the group reject “all toys whose themes are war, homicide, cruelty, destruction, horror, hate, death; all treatments of violence as entertainrilent for chil- dren; all toys that cannot be used by children except to pretend to hurt and kill; and all toys that are replicas of the weapons and habiliments of war and crime.” COMMEND SOME It continues, “We commend toy manufacturers and retailers who accept these responsibilities, making it their business to provide materials for environments wherein children may develop creative, exploring, sensitive, harmonious personal-iUes, confident and al)le to deal reallsUcally with life.” ★ ★ ★ The petitions condenrm the manufacturer, sale and distribution of such toys and pledge a boycott of such firms who do. Mrs. Alderson wpuld be more in favor of the promotion of such items as U.N. dolls. ^ Oakland Townships to the northerly communities at a total cost of $3,447,888. SERVICE FOR FUTURE As planned it would provide service for the communities until the year 2,000, according to engineers. Avon Township, already a part (rf the; Clinton-Oakland plan, is not expected to 1 participate in the new arm, though -Alexander said it is his intention to interview Oakland Township officials regarding their desire to parHcipate. As originally planned the entire cost -would be borne by the more northerly I communities, and capacity could be sold later to Oakland Township. ★ ★ ★ Alexander said proceeding immediately with the arm would mean an increase -in the size of the Clinton-Oakland Interceptor from Rochester to the point where it is proposed to hook into the projected ■ Macomb County Interceptor. EASE IN CHANGE SEEN Alexander said such a change could -be accomplished easily. He said that ' such alterations would 'not involve any rewriting of Clinton-Oakland contracts held by the six original townships involved. It was pointed out during Friday’s n\eeting that the interceptor sointioa to Lake Orion’s pollution problem would prove cheaper than construction of • sewage disposal plant there. There was a chance that the village of Oxford might also get by more cheai^ ly with the interceptor solution, it was noted. Lack of Cash Keeps Yiking' Landlocked COG Debate Near in Orchard Lake ORCHARD LAKE — Tonight Orchard Lake residents will hear .about the controversial Southeastern Michigan Council of Governments (COG). This public meeting at 8 at the West Bloomfield Junior High School, 3380 Orchard Lake, has been set up by the City Council. The council has been considering joining COG, an association of government units and school districts in the six-county Detroit Metropolitan area. Speakers at the meeting have been selected with the aim of presenting both sides of the COG issue. Robert Farley, executive director of COG, and William L. Mainland, chairman of COG’S by-laws committee, have been asked to appear by Councilmair Frederick S. Strong Jr., who represents the city in COG. SENATOR INVITED Sen. Robert J. Huber, R-Troy, has been asked to appear by William A. Allen, a resident who has voiced opposition to COG. By ’The Associated Press COMMERCE TOWNSHIP (AP) — Ross Morphew quit his job, sold his house and got rid of his car, — all for a homemade sailboat he planned to cruise the Bahamas in. But now he faces a Great Lakes winter with no place to berth his 36-foot, 14-ton craft. The 24-year-old Morphew, who with his blond beard looks every inch a Viking, and his wife sold everything they had last June when the weather was They planned to beat the cold winter of the Great Lakes area cruising in the balmy Bahamas. ★ ★ * “But that terrible commodity,” Morphew reflects, “money. Money is the only thing holding us back.” Morphew, now living with his wife and 8-year-old Auburn Heights Lions Brighten Halloween With Flares, Parade Flares sold by the Auburn Heights Lions Club will illuminate the streets for Halloween beggers at 7 p.m. tomor- I Lots of Shopping Dollars Women Like LSD Trips By L. GARY THRONE Assistant City Editor —Suburban I am an admirer of women which is no more unique among us males than being able to walk upright. Admittedly, those men who honor women are legion, and I am but one of the multitude. Despite this typical male frailty, which dictates that women be cherished as Bisters, wives, lovers and mothers, there is much about women that is laughable, if you ignore the pain. The woman who keeps my house is addicted to shopping, which, my office colleagues lament, is a common affliction. The habit begin; sometime after the honeymoon and is never arrested or fully satisfied. ★ ★ * • ITEM: The shopping sickness can normally be kept to one onslaught per day, providing proper amounts of anger, outrage and scorn are administered by the husband. • ITEM; The amount of time or money permitted has little affect on the victim. A woman can devote three hours to a tour of area shopping centers and return with only^a 46-cent plastic bucket. Also, the amount in a checking account has no bearing onihe amount of checks written. • ITEM: The degree of marital harmony has a good deal to do with the frequency of severe shopping attacks. An unhappy wife is a shopping wife. Eventually, the longer the disease lingers, the more permanent damage is inflicted on the brain tissue. Proof of this is provided by the following patient histories. CASE NO. 1 — Victim has strong desire to purchase shoes for self and T-shirts for 2-year-old child. Said child has 3(1 such shirts, all of which he will outgrow by Christmas. CASE NO, 2 — Commencing shortly after the honeymoon, victim has bought a phonograph record nearly every week for the past 15 years. Note: subject does not own a phonograph. ’ , CASE NO. S — Victim has passion for plastic, purchasing place mats, buckets, doormats, (lishes, drain tiles and other miscellaneous knickknacks — most of which are of no practical use. The foregoing are case histories secured in casual conversation. For obvious reasons, the complainants have to remain anonymous. ★ w ★ All of this could be en^ on a positive note. The only hope, however, is that a husband’s earning power can somehow surmount his wife’s buying power.—(Editor’s note^HA!!) . ^ Cecil F. Denison, publicity chairman, said this is the 20th year the club has sold flares and then sponsored a parade and teen dance with the proceeds. ★ ★ ★ The fire whistle at 7 p.m. will signify the start of festivities. A parade starting at the corner of Auburn and Cherrylawn will proceed to Auburn Heights Elementary School. A teen dance is to start at 9 p.m. at the American Legion Hall, Churchill Road. son, Peter, at his parents’ house at 1405 Van Stone, figures it’ll take a year before he gets the hermaphrodite brig Meka II ready for the high seas. TO LIVE ON CRAFT In the meantime, he says, he and his family plan to live aboard. That is if they can find a place to put it in the water. It seems not too many ma^as are fond of the notion of a family living in a boat tied up in subfreezing water in the Detroit River. The name Meka, incidentally, is a Hopi Indian word meaning “loyal, stout companion,” Morphew says. Meka I was a somewhat more frail craftv a 28-foot cruiser Morphew built when he quit high school in nearby Walled Lake. Meka broke up on the edge of a hurricane off Norfolk, Va., while Morphew and his wife were on their honeymoon. Morphew, a man with saltwater flowing in his veins if ever there was one, has been hounded by troubles ever since. FORCED TO MOVE He was forced to move from Dearborn Heights, a Detroit suburb, last June. A town ordinance prohibits back yard boats more than 18 feet long. To top it off, on her shakedown cruise Saturday on a snowy, sleety Lake St. Qalr, Morphew discovered the battery to start his auxiliary motor was dead. A boat the size of Meka II is nearly impossible to guide into a dock under sail, and Morphew had to take a tow from the Coast Guard to avoid being swept against a Detroit River boat house. Living aboard Meka during the winter months, when shipping shuns the Great Lakes, shouldn’t be too bad, Morphew insists. Meka is equipped lyith a small cast iron fireplace and a propane heating system. HEATED AIR Morphew plans to use a pump to bubble heated air through the water to prevent ice from forming around Meka. So far, Meka II has cost |21,000 and has taken 4,500 hours of work. Morphew figures on another $3,000 to complete the interior before she’s all set for her maiden voyage. ★ * * "I guess I’ll have to look for a job,” concedes Morphew, a draftsman by trade. “But when we finally get going,” he adds, “the sea is my life.” Annual SmorgasbortJ Planneid at Church COMMERCE TOWNSHIP - Commerce Methodist Church Woman’s Society of Christian Service will serve its annual smorgasbord dinner from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Saturday at the church. Tickets are available from Mrs. Don Steinbrecker, ticket chairman. Other dinner chairmen are Mrs. Russell Thompson, Mrs. Ross Trainor, Mrs. Robert Herrigan, Mrs. James Allen and Mrs. Fred Hering. Both communities have been warned by the Michigan Water Resources Commission and Lake Orion has an early December deadline to come up with a . solution to its problem. COURT ORDER POSSIBLE “If you don’t have an acceptable plan by that time,” Alexander said, “it is quite possible that the court could order you to sell bonds whether you are prepared or not.” Orion Township has been warned regarding pollution in its area and Oxford Supervisor Lee Valentine admitted it would be only a matter of time before his township would receive like warning. “There have been sewage problems at DeLima College,” he acknowledged. DeLima is a privately Iim church college now in the process of expansion in Oxford Township. ★ ★ ★ By joining in the interceptor plan. Lake Orion will forego a ^1,000 fund reservation made by the Federal office of Housing and Urban Development for construction of a sewage disposal plant. Another grant of $167,046 is pending. PROGRAM FEASIBLE Long - range economics would still make such a program feasible, Alexander assured. Rapidly rising construction costs have in some Instances outdistanced pending government grants, he reported. While the DPW director said application would be made for assistance on both the interceptor arm and for the individual communities’ internal systems as well, Alexander advised against putting too much reliance on such help. ★ ★ ★ Plans are that the cost of the interceptor, as in the case of the Clinton-Oakland, would be paid for on a tap-in 5, , tmm * ■;? ^ > n*- ’■ ■ V'.: vC-C ^ ■■ Treasurer Group Picks New Officers Arno Hulet, Bloomfield Township treasurer, is the new president of the Oakland County Association of Township, City and Village Treasurers. Completing the new slate of officers are Lathrup Village treasurer Bernice Gruse, vice president; Oak Park treasurer Elizabeth Hicks, reelected secretary-treasurer; and Troy treasiiter tlor-ence Robinson, director and retiring president. • The association elected its officers at its recent annual fall meeting. The group also raised dues from $5 to $10 per year. ★ ★ ★ Luncheon speaker was Mrs. Florence H. Willetts, a vice president of the Bir-mingham-Bloomfield Bank and former Birmingham mayor. Hqr topic was family living principles in the business wbrld, public office and service. Commander Named BINH THUY AIR BASE. South Vietnam (AP) — Lt. Col. Charles E. Baker, son of Mrs. Sarah M. Baker of Royal Oak, has been named commander of “C” flight of the Fifth Air Commando Squadron at Binh Thuy Air Baab. 4 ROAD CLOSED — A grade crossing on Davisburg Road Western Railroad maintenance workers. The road was dot just east of the village is being reconstrftcted by Clrand Trunk last week wUte tt|^'9rew. worked on the croasing. fflwjnMnni a 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1967 I News of Engagements and Weddings Fills Air Mr. and Mrs. Hilding Norman of Hospital Road announce the engagement of their daughter, Mary Ann, to Pfc. Michael James Fil-bran^JJSA^iss Nor-marPs fiance, the son of the William Filbrcmdts of Lakeside Drive, is currently stationed in Germany. The engagement of Christa Regina Rust to Ronald E. Coffmon, both sophomores at Ferris State College, has been announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Rudolf Rust of Rochester. He is the son of the Arnold Butterfields of Lapeer. Vows are slated for mid-December. Early December vows are planned by Gloria Seaman and Larry Bertrand. Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Elwood W. Seaman of Clarkston and Mr. and Mrs. Alexander G. Bertrand of Alpena. Mr. and Mrs. Clare M. Smith of Rochester announce the betrothal of their daughter, Lindq Lee, to George Jafnes Terry. The son of Mts. Carmen Romano of Madison Heights, he has attended the University of Detroit. The engagement of Michelle Diane Court to Harold Robert Roster is announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Pierre D. Court of Huntington Woods. Miss Court and her fiance are graduates of Oakland Community College. The son of the Jac C. Rosters of Lake Orion, he will' begin graduate study at Wayne State University in January. Vows are slated for August. MRS. J. A. PELOQUIN MRS. R. A. MIHOLER MRS. D. R. RISSICR MRS. F. L. O’HAVER Following a northern Michigan honeymoon, Lance Cpl. James Arthur Peloquin, USMC and his bride, nee Lm Ann Coppersmith, will make their holme in California where he is sta- Vows were spoken Friday ning in Our Lady of the Lakei Catholic Church. The bride, attended by Kath-lyeen Golembeske and Mrs. Gary Vieu and Mrs. Thomas In an evening ceremony Friday at the Oxford home of the Rev, Fred dark, Susan Marie PeWrs and Richard A. Miholek werb united in marriage. The bride is the daughter of Mn and Mrs. Herschel Peters of liweville. Parents of the bride-gn>om are the Andrew Miholeks of Glaspie Road, Oxford Township. For the vows, the new Mrs. Miholek was attired in a day Petrie bridesmaids, carried length white satin ensemble, ac- The engagement is announced of Ruthann Rilgus and Sylvester V. Quitiquit, son of Sylvester Q. Quitiquit of Desmond Street and Mrs. Leno Orencia of Rockwell Avenue. Miss Rilgus, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Rilgus of Peck, and her fiance are students at Michigan State University. white rose buds tipped in per-: Simmon. She was attired in white peau de soie accented with reembroidered Alenccm lace and seed pearls. A cathedral train of the same material complemented the A-line sheath. Her veil, five tiers of silk illusion, w(as held with a match’ ing lace headpiece. Best man for the ceremony was Thomas Petrie with ushers Robert J. Coppersmith and Kent Powell. Following the vows, members of the bridal party and parents of the newlyweds, the Victor C. Bentleys of Ortonville Road, Independence TownsWp and the E. James Peloquins of F" Court, received guests at the Rotor building in Ortonville A Canadian honeymoon followed a reception at the First First Federal Savings of Oakland for newlyweds, the Donald R. Kissicks. Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. WlUiam*Easlick of Lacota Street, Claire Ann Easlick was attired in white peau de soie styled with a batteau neckline, fitted bodice and long tapered sleeves. cqnted at the bodice and sleeves with lace. A crown of pearls held her short illusion veil. She carried a colonial bouquet of white carnations. Maid of honor was Billie De-Line with Steven Travis as best man. Following a reception at the home of the bride’s parents, the newlyweds left for Niagara Falls. They will make their home in Oxford. The First Methodist Church was the setting Friday for vows exchanged by Delores Ann Kar-lish and Francis Leroy O’Haver. A pearled crown capped the bride’s shoulder length veil. The gown was frosted with French lace. A floral headpiece, trimmed with seed pearls, capped her elbow length veil. She carried white carnations and roses with baby’s breath. Mrs. Gregory King was matron of honor. Her gown of peau de soie, featured a Chantilly lace bixlice and long lace sleeves with a Sabrina neckline trimmed in sequins and pearls. Matching lace panels accented the gown’s A-line skirt and detachable Watteau train. The bridegroom, son of Mr. and Mrs. Osborne R. Kissick of Myrtle Street, was attended by best man Ronald McNally of Saginaw. Ushers for the Friday evening ceremony in St. Benedict’s Catholic Church were Frank Easlick and Joseph Cobble. For her bouquet, the bride carried white carnations centered with Sweetheart roses. Honor attendants were the bride’s sister, Carolyn, and the lier of the twidegroom, James. A winter 1968 wedding is planned by Hazel Mae Shoemaker and James John Edgette. The bride elect is the daughter of the Augustus G. Shoemakers of North Roslyn Street. Her fiance, sdn of Mr. and Mrs. James Edgette of St. Clair, received his BA degree from Michigan State University. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Van Gilder of Dill Road announce the engagement of their daughter, Carol Jean, to Ronald Gen Van Gordon. Miss Van Gilder and her fiance, the son of the Gene Van Gordon. Miss Scotch Lake Road, West Bloomfield Township, are both students at Oakland Community College. May vows are planned. COBURG, Germany (UPI) — The world-fnmed Hummel figurines of little children in Bavarian costumes were the brainchild of a young artist who later became a nun. The figurines, made by a porcelain manufacturer near Coburg, are named after their creator, Berta Hummel, who was bom May 21, 1909, in the Bavarian village of Massing, outside Munich. Two Bank Accounfs Are Better Than One By MARY FERLEY Money Management When two middle-age people marry, the marriage ought to have a lot of good things going for it — emotional maturity, a practical outlook, a sense of values. Yet, 1 find many such nuuriagesl run head on' into ^uble over ffloney And not for the lack of it. image ought to :ood things going I MARY FEELEY The problem, as I often hear it, can be summed up in two sentences — He’s “set in ways” and sbe’s “sticking her old habiU.” So the budget gets fouled up like a ca the crossing where the sign says stop and the light says go. I talked to two such frustrated couples recently — one in their 50’s, the other in their 40’s. For Mrs. A, 51 years old, this is a first marriage. She’s accustomed to thinking savings first Caution is second nature to her, conditioned as she is to depei|fl-ing on herself alone. It’s Mr. A’s second marriage — and at a time of life when he feels he can relax a bit, coDsideiing the retirement program he has built up. So he says "Now, let’s live it up.” Hw updMt of it is, Mrs. A adntito ihe’s developing a guilt cpmiilex If she so much as puts a diin^ in' the collection pl^. Mr. and Mrs. B, recently married, have the same hassel over money, only in reverse. It’s Mrs. B’s second marriage and she always had it easy. She ’t have to worry over where the money came from or how it went. Mr. B, on the other hand, is a confirmed money-watcher. He always dimed at saving |1 for every $2 spent. And as a baphelor he was free to work at it She can’t sell her husband on her point of view — but neither can she resist saving his mon-' ey! Even though she has to sneak it from here and hide it over there. Her question is: Should she nag him or deceive him? be fldnks his wife Iti, wildly extravagqnt if she wants two scoops of Jc^ream in the sundae instead of So what to do? Flexibility, let's admit, is not the chief characteristic of our middle years. Everybody’s “set in his ways” to some extent. But there are some techniques of handling the income that can help ease the conflict. Establish q specific bill-pay-ing province for each partner For example, he pays the ma- she pays the ly running ex-has the reaa-feeling that cm ire being mn "the right Define her. househirid allow- ance, to be turned over to her regularly — the only string attached being that she stay within that total. How she does it is her business. If she can filch a few dollars out of the grocery money and still run a blue-ribbon household, okay. Let her cram her gains in the bank. Or let her buy another hat. Have separate checking ac- Variety Club's Hydraulic Buses for Crippled Kids ST. LOUIS (UPI) - Edwin D Dorsey fighta a personal war to provide transportation for crippled children around the world. Dorsey is a prominent Variety Club member who has helped raise f u n d s'^’ for “Sunshine Coaches,” big special vehicles made with hydraulic lifts for wheelchairs. The buses are used to transport crippled children to parks and picnics, to camps and CITS', to Dorsey Is chief barker of Variety Club No. 4 in St. Louis, one of 37 Variety Club tents in the United States. He said last year the 37 tents raised gl4.5 million for projects involving children. Variety Club members have built 210 “Sunshine Coaches” for crippled children, and by next ygar the goal is 300L Its, and don’t look over each other’s shoulder at the check stubs. Neither partner can play too many tricks, after all, since income tax time guarantees annual expose of mutual opera tions! And a fight once a year is better than one every payday. Have separate savings counts, separate bonds, separate investments. Discuss the main target for the income. This needs to be put into words. The very young can envision all sorts of goals with a lifetime to shoot for them. But the most meaningful objectives narrow down with the years. The most important one is easier to spot at age 50 than it is at age 20. Talking abont it in earnest may reveal an underlying agreement. If both partners are really stirving for the same thing, but going at it in different ways, each may may gain a more sympathetic understanding of the sRuation. Compromise is more comfortable than feuding. ’There’s' an old saying that “each partner should go 90 per cent of the way in marriage.” Well, if you can hit 00-40, you’re doing fine. Nun's Artistry Reproduced in Porcelain By POLLY CRAMER DEAR POLLY — Brides making out guest lists for their weddings would do well to put the names and addresses on recipe file cards. Put a check on the card by the name when an invitation is When she was 16, Berta left her home to attend the Munich Academy of Fine Arts. ’There she became friendly with two nuns and decided to take the vows herself. She took the name Sister Maria Innocentia (her initials on every Hummel figure) and lived in a convent in Sies-almost on Lake Constance Polly's Pointers File Cards for Bride also took these cards to my bridal shower. One of my friends added, at the bottom of the proper card, what the gift was that I had received. When had written the thank-you note, I put a check in front of the gift listed. I also had the addresses right at hand to address the envelopes. By filing these in alphabetical order they become real time savers. Also good for checking off thank-you notes for wedding gifts and, too, you have yodr Christmas card list started for the next year. — FRAN to its appearance. DINE BERNA- DEAR POLLY - 1 would to know how to bring the finish back to a wooden cnttiag boaril. A red hot glass baking burned a black circle. How can we remove t!—(USOA)—Egg pried paid ear doian by tint racalyari yi'/TlS; amall, It-UW. CHICAOO (AP) - Chicago AAarcantlla Mr Kore AA *6i fj A Eggt Irragitlarj neholatala buying pi unchanged to I Iowan 71 par cani batter Grade A whitat M-MWi mixed CHICAOO POULTRY I prices elal tad Wt CHICAGO (AP)-Graln Open Friday: ____ _______ Idav: ..... .....I.S»»-'A; March. May iai July l.tim-vyi Sept. l.«3W. ------------- ‘—......................... 3 Men Burned in Gas Blast MOUNT PLEASANT (AP) Three men were burned about the face and hands Sunday when gas fumes in a 36-inch pipeline under construction near Mount Pleasant exploded in tower of flames visible 25 miles away. Reported in fair cpndHlpD in a Mount Pleasant hospitak»were OUs Hall, 28, Waterloo, Ala.f Roger Smith, 24, Freeport, La., and Jerry Morris, 33, Ashland City, Tenn. ★ ★ * Morris told State Police the crew was moving a cleaning device through the pipeline with the help of gas pressure when (he device got stuck. As the pressure built up, gas fumes began to accumulate. BUNDING EXPLOSION Morris said he started his truck engine, intending to leave the area, when there was a. blinding explosion. “I don’t remember anything else,” he said. State Police said their) first report of the fire came from' Mecosta, 25 miles from the scene, where flames were observed shooting 300 feet into the The fire was extinguished by shuttin goff the gas supply. A nearby fire department put out a grass fire ignited by the explosion. The blast occurred in a segment of a pipeline which eventually will stretch from the Upper Peninsula to Sarnia, Ont. The New York Stock Exchange —A— 5 47*A 4Vk 47'/4 +, 17 33% 33 ' 47 47V. . .. 95% 94 — % 3 JVV4 39 39 — 5 30 30 30 ... 3 40% 40% 40% — >w 14 85% 8S% 85% +1% 128 45 44% 44% ' — —I— 7 29% 29% 29Va 15 17% 17% 17% 26 7% 7% 7% 5 44% 44% 44% n M44 33% 33vi 58% 58% 20 59 .... i 29% 29% + % 13 599% 991% 999% +2% 15 34% 34% 34% -F % . 18 28% 28% 28% ' " 9 107% 107% 107% I Pap 1.35 90 24% 24 r TAT 1.70 12 120% ir" kO + % 23 45% 44% 44% 11 28% 28% 28% . . 8 73% 73% 73% % 2 47% 47% 47% + 18 82 - * 49 33% 33 33 22 84 83% 83H . .. 25 42% 42% 42% +1% 7 34% 34% 34% 2 53% 53% 53% 3 54% 54% 54% BrIafMyer 1 * ram /o'm toy Brunswick 27 10% 10% 10% Budd Co .80 23 22 21% 21% Bleva .70b 7 30% 30% 30% Burl tnd 1.20 15 42 42 42 Burroughs l 10 147% 144 144 - % Rye—Dec 1 27V^%, Livestock Cal FinanI CalumH 1.20 CampRL .45a Camp Soup 1 ::rTif“« CartarW 40a Casa Jl CalarTr 1.20 ICarMeed .80 CassnaA 1 m CFI StI .1 Chas Ohio -ChIMII StP 1 ChPnau T“-Chi Rl f 7 S% 5Va 5>/« 1 39% 39% 39% 9 ia% ii% 18% t — % .. - % 27% + % 27 21% 20% 21 - % 9 17% 17% 17% + 48 44% 43% 43% — 4 47% 47% 47% + 14 ^% 47% 47% — ^ JK \ OITROIT LIVeiTOCK DETROIT (AF>—(UtDA) - CuttM ISi cbivu IS; cliolM »S0.|1N pr ----------- •Her* M.ys-17.7S; mixed go_____________ M.OO-M.7S; pound! ilougMer hoHeri Chet Ohio ChIMII f‘“ ChPneu Chi Rl . .. ChrltCraft lb Chrytler 1 ______CIT Fin 1.1 lughter CllletSvc ‘ cMce ClevEtlll • IS-IDS 1 ie.0O-ie.7S; 2 to 3 e CHICAGO (AP) _ (USDA) - Hogi S.SOO; butcher! SO to l.OO higher; M I9D-23S Ibi le.M; M heed el T».3S; 1-3 2I0-2S0 Ibe 17.7S-)lili lowi 2S lower; 1-3 J3IM00 lb IMO-I7.00I 1-3 eoo-eso ibe ie.gg-le.SO; »-3 ^SOO Ibe ISJO-ie.lO. .™.. ...-------------- eleughter lien ilronp .20D.I.3S0 ib 0-VMi high choice end prime ISP- -.^'X.Wsrchotr8.Lrf Sheep 300; woo led ileughter lemb ewee itoidy; few loll choice end .. 70-llS Ib wooled lleughlnr Iambi 33J0- American Stock Exch. _NEW YORK (AP) - American Slec Exchange aaleetad noon prkn: (hda.) High Low Latl Clx Aorojot .300 3 37% 37W 37H -1- ^ Am Potr .esg 30 IStk ISW 1SH -H I ArkLObt LSO 30 37 % 102 17% 17% 17% -8 % 22 35% 35 35 - % 2 7% 7% 7% f % 33 44% 43% 44% f 1% 241 8% 1% 8% 4- % 100 2% 2% 2% .... 21 3% 3% 3% ... 57 37% 38% 37 * % 91 38% 37% 30% -F % 8(4 ShT'h Scurry Signal < statnaib inei CopyrlgMtd by Th# AMOciatad ^taa 1987 3 40 47% 47% — > 13 17 17 17 . 10 88 68 88 — V. 17 42 41% 41% .-1% • 43 43 - • - 20V4 20% 2 43 1 20% 0 34% 38% 38% 81 53% 52% 52% ~ 23 32% 32% 32% . CocaCola 2.10 2 38% 38% 38% - 18 103% 102% 103% - % 43 55% 55 55 I 24% 24% 26% 7 31% 3P 1 34% 34* 9 31% 31% 31% - % 14 34% 14 45% 27 45% w -r 30 33% 33% 33% + 13 40 39% 40 + 20 28% 28% 28% . 9 40% 40 40% ~ . 2 30% 30% 30% + % 45 25% 25 25% -F % 12 49% 8% 49% + % 8 S2% 52% 52%- 20 15% 15% 1 5 85% 84% I 6 42% 42% . 10 23% 23 8 14% 14 2 14% 14% % t.% % 4- % 10 28 25% 25% ... —D^— 10 22% 22% 22% ... 3 41% 41% 41% ... 3 28%.28% 28% ... 4 81 81 81 — 2 37% 37% 37% ~ 12 108% 108 108% —1 10 18% 18% 18% ... 11 27% 27% — 3 17 17 11 32% 32 •F % + % &■;? Draaslnd I.Ss DuktPw 1.20 duPont 3.750 1 53% 53% 53% .. 1 42% 42% 42% -F 2 05 05 85 .. 92 34% 34% M% + 7 31% 31% 31% .. %nitaal iSSSfrfro —E— 37 45% 45% 45% -F % 15 133. 133 133 12 30% 30% 30V 93 44% 85% 85V 5 52 52 52 7 24% 24% 24% -- % 72 23 22% .22% -F % 4 17% 07% 87% - % .... ^ ■' ex. ., 37% 37% . ^ 27% 27% 27% — % 1 20% —F— 27 07% 87% 87% -F1% 8 21% 21% 21% - “ 1 82% 82% 82% — 8 34% 38% 38% 8 72 “ “ ^9^ OBG .10 IBondS 1.72 lactron Sp IPaaoNO t mar El 1.M Johnson Lack RR , _ , — fl Cp .80 12 37% 37% + % 30% 4 1 47% 47% . 4 23% 23% a 3 21% 21% a 2 41% 41% 4 JSttS } II SI SI SI S) MM » MM . .. 11 71V! TIM —V! SI 37M J7M 37M - “ 3 SOM SOM 1 3 30V! 30'/! 30M + W ! + V! iv -Mg il % SimlA UmSAGan Tira .80 5 S2% 22% 22% ~ % 18 81% m 81% ' 7 109% 1W% 109% -. .10 71% 71% 71% + % ^4 32 32 32 26 05V^ 85% 85% - T. 18 71% 71 71% +1% 5 4% 8% 8% — % 18 28% 28% 28% - 51 43% 42% 43% * 11^ 88% 28% 26% 5 28 28 28 — < 4 55% 55% 55% -F ’ 4 89% 89 89% + < 1 58% »Vi 58% 8 54 55% 54 - „ „ +% 3 24% 24% 24% + % 14 31%, 30% 30% + *' —K— 32 39% 38% 39% + 4 13% 13% 13% .. 30 8% 8% 8% .. 3 38% 38% 38% 4 14 49% 49 49 - 4 IS 14% 14% . . TransWAIr 1 Transamer 1 Transitron . Tri Cont .43g TRW 1.40a TwanCen 1.40 UMC Ind .40 UnCarMda 2 ■ Un Elac 1.20 22 22% 22% 2 UnOilCal 1.40 * inPac UOa JnTank 2.50 Untroyal 1.20 UnItAirLIn 1 UnltAlrc 1.60 33% 34 117% 117^- .. . 9% 9% . .. 41 58% 57% 57% 4 % 24 125 124 12' ‘ 11 18% 18% 1 1$ 24% 23% 2,., . 27 25% 25% 25% — (0 119% 117% 117% ->2% UnIvOPd 1.0 24 87% 84% 87VI Marathn 2.40 21 TO'A 89% 70'/4 24 24% 24% 26% . -, 2 57 54% 54% -r % 28 44 45% 45% ‘ 4 75 74% 74% MIdSoUtll .74 MobilOil 1.80 V— ____ _____ 41 33% 32% 32% — % Vando Co .40 31 27Vi 27 27Vi ee.-eP!... . ,e 30 39% 39% 39% —w— 30 42% 42V4 42% + % • - „ 23 — Monsan i MontOUt it 1.52 13 14% 14^w .wvw - 27 6% 43 43% + 13 20V4 20 20V4 ' 30 48% 47% 47% • 2 29% 29% 29% 7 29% 29% 29% . _ 35 22% 22V4 2% + V4 15 44% 44% 44% 4 14 141% 142 -N— 43 47% 47 47 . . 4 35% 35% 35% — % 4 124 124 89 35% 35 „ , . , 23 40% 40% 40% — % Nat FutI 1.68 1 29% 29% 29% * Nat Goni .20 141 19% 19% 19% . . Nat Gyps 2 7 43 42% 42% - % “ Laad 2.2ta 19 63% 88% 83% It Staol 2.50 3 47% 47% 47% + It Tta JO 12 15 15 IS + iwbrry .45g 5 27% 27% 27% + Eng El 1J6 19 25% 25% 25% . rcant 3.12a 13 72% 72 72 - NatBIsc 2 Nat Can .50 ^latCash 1.20 .J Dairy 1.50 Nat Dist 1.80 — % 14 98% 97% t. 33 35% 35% 35% -F 5 48% 48% 48% .. 18 54% 54 54 - 8 29% 29% 29%- 13 38 35% 35% + 12 42% 42% 42% + % 41% 41% — % 297 97% 97 97% +1« 10 28 25% 28 + 1 10 22 21% 21% — 1 3 20% 20% 20% ... 21 74 73% 73% — 1 22 27 28% 28% + 3 23 41% 41% 41% - 1 58 28% 28% 28% —IV 10 52% 52% 52% - 4 —P~ 39 32% 32% 32% . 8 27% 27% 27% .... 19 51% 51% 51% 117 75% 75% 75% 12 70% 70% 70% 30 29% 29% 34 #2% 91% 91% Polaroid .40 ProctrO 2.20 '42 59% 59% 59% 20 n 71% 72 14 81% 40% AML I 12% ti!J 12% 12% i28 220% . 17% 17% •t 9 33 33 33 3^7% 47% 47% leading Co I IIM IIM IIM -f M fiiSMlStiJS Rtvion 1.io 5 72% 72% 72% .!—.. ,,0. ee 33 33,^ xw.g.. r.tm. ,x!x ..er 44% 44% 44% RtynTob 2.20 103 44 43% 43% RoanSa 1.87g 197 10% 10*A 10% RSir Cp .M 32 29% 29^ 29% RoyDut l.90g 43 44^ 44^ 4av» RyderSys .60 18 29 28% 28% . 1.10 55 23 . 2.80 5 42% F 2.20 5 50% Safeway StJosLd StLSanF StRagP 1 Sanders Schanley 1.80 »d’^S SCM Cp Mb Scott Paper l Sbd CttL i.30 SeartGD ).3b Seers Roe la Seeburg .M tReTDI^llJ ShallTm .MB SharwnWrnl' Sinclair 2.40 •'igerCo 2.20 wx..irthK 1.80a SouCalE 1.40 SouNGas 1.30 Sout Pac 1.50 South Ry 2.60 Spartan Ind “ - 10 64% 44% 44V4 + % 23 133% 132 132% —1 17 58 58 58 12 40% 40V4 40% - 121 ,22% 21Va 21% - 10 48% 48% 48% — % 14 58 . 57% 58 — % 31 32% 32% 32% — V 8 38% 38% 38% + 1 37 28% 28% 28% — V 28 49 48Va 49 ^ 39 18 17% 18 — V 315 55% 54% 55% e- 23% 23V 37*.^ 32 Std Kolis .50 StOCal 2.50b StOilInd 1.90 StdONj 3.450 StOilOh 2.50b St Packaging Stan Warn 1 StauffCh 1.80 31 52% 52% 52% — % 280 68% 68% 48% +1% 5 78% 78V4 78% + % 4 14% 14% 14% .. 33 49% 49% 49% — % 11 88% 44% 64% — % 37 34% 33% 33% ... 73 30% 30% 30% + % —T— 11 25% 25% 25% — % 42 58% 58 58% 5»’/! + ' 21 52V! 52 52M -I _u— M 20M 20 201! IT 41V! IM 4I/4 — M 3 M'! 31'! 31V! + 'A 9 30 29 66'! —)'A •X—Y—Z— _______________ 9 31M 30M 30M - Zenith R 1.20 52 M'! MV! 61'! — Copyrighted by The Aesocieted Pre« 19 Sale! figures are unoHIclel. Unless otherwise noted, rates of di' _ends In the foregoing table are anns dlsbursemenfs based on the last quarter., -r semi-annual declaration. Spacial or xfra dividands or payments not deslg-■ted as regular are Identlf— ■- •— illowing footnotes. a—Also extra or extras. —-—.. rale plua stock dlvMand. c—Liquidating dividend, d—Declared or .paid in 1967 ------------------------------ . paid *-Pald la la in node during IVa/, value on ex-dividand i dal*, g—Oaclarad or pi ir. h—Daclarao paid this year, ..llh dividends In________________ p—Paid this year, dividend omittad, d tarred or no action taken at last divider meeting, r—Declared or paid In 1966 pli siKk dividend. 1—Paid In stock during 1966, astimated cash value on ax-dIvIdend or ax-dlslrlbutlon i-Salas in full. cld-Callad,. x—E and and sales In on. xr—Ex rlgl..., —---------------■ .ants, ww—With warrants. w(5-Whan ... Irlbuted. wl-Whan lituad. nd-Next day DOW-JONfel STOCKS ■ 30 Induetrlalo S.'v. .... .. 133.9H0.M| CUNNIFF Wallace blamed the nation’s riots on Communists, anarchists and activists. “There are no underlying causes to burp down a city unless you don’t love your country,” he said. “Slums and unemployment have nothing to do with it.” He was interviewed in Portland, Ore., for the CBS television program “Face tae Nation.” \ REAGAN’S J^AW Gov. Ronald Reagan of California, suggested meanwhile a| national law cracking down on' antidraft, antiwar demonstrators. “There are plenty of laws to cover them if we were technically in a state of war,” said Reagan. “Perhaps there would be a possibility of legislation to| implement the same rules regarding giving aid and comfort I to the enemy.” * -k -k Reagan spoke to newsmen in Sacramento after returning home from a GOP fund-raising tour to the Midwest and South. By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business Analyst NEW YORK (AP) - The truth in that old maxim that all that glitters is not gold is being proved again in this prosperous-modern age. The glitter may be from silver. Prosperity and technological de m a n d forcing sil-| ver prices higher. Larger and I larger o r-ders are coming from the! photography and space industries, from! candles tick makers and flatware manufacturers, and from medicine and dentistry. Adding to the upward pressure is a large element of speculation that the shortage will continue. Silver dpllars are being purchased for $1.50 and half dollars for 52 cents even though the law forbids melting coins for their silver. Silver certificates, which are U.S. bills of $1, $5 and $10 that can be redeemed for silver gran-jules or bars, have been bring-|ing premiums of 30 to 35 per cent above face value. PREMIUMS OFFERED These certificates are good only until June M, 1968, and so coin dealers are gathering as many as they can before that date. More than $350 million are outstanding. When the currency dealers first began advertising for silver certificates this year they offered premiums of 10 to 12 _ cent. These gradually have risen above 20 per cent as the price of silver ♦ ’The reason for this is that the certificate holder is entitled to buy the metal at $1,293 an If the market price is around $1.80 an ounce, as it has been, a handsome pr(tfit can be made on a resale. Few people, however, desire to take their silver certificates to the U.S. Assay office for a little plastic bag of silver dust. For one thing, the sliver dust is difficult to resell. MIDDLEMAN DEVELOPS Resalable bars of silver can be obtained, however, by those holding large amounts of certifl-cates. Therefore the middleman has developed to buy whatever certificates you might have in the attic or shoe boxes. This middleman turns the bills in for $1,293 silver and then resells it, as one did this for $1.84, giving him a gross profit of about 9% cents after adding the 35 per cent premium to ment froze the price there by I selling the metol from its own stocks. Demand continued to exceed production and so the Coinage Act of 1965 was passed, permit^ ting the minting of silverle! coins. Bans on silver exporti were instituted, and mdtin ] was forbidden. On July 14, with mounds « silverless coins in circulation,!'] the Treasury abandoned fixed price. No longer was there ^ if a coin shortage, but« the melting ban continued. Soon after the Treasury ac-; tion, the price of silver soared, to neariy $1.90 an ounce, reflect-'* ing the laws of supply and demand. Now, however, there is some question that the price will remain there. High Ford Exec Set to Retire Treasury Position WASHINGTON (AP)-The cosh position of tho Troosury comporod with corrt. •ponding ditt o yur ago: Oct. 14, 1967 Oct. 14, 1944 Balanco— _ .$ 1.907,591,954.W $ 7,174,951451.21 DtPOfllt Fiscal Yaar July 1- Total ^M|6a,611,694.09 327406.759,023.U 114044M409.I5 13,254,405,241.35 fe"£''S»uS¥’TSIi},®‘-” UOCK AVBRAOBS 1967 Low ... ...-.5 +.2 -.1 . ..484.0 187.t 138.4 331.2 ...484.5 187.9 138.2 321.3 ...489.9 189J 139.9 324.7 ...488.0 201.1 148.3 338.1 .. 421.4 158.4 148.9 293.8 .. 493J a09.8 199.1 342.8 . 413.4 199.4 1*9 9W i ...537.9 213.9 388.0 130.2 289.4 lOND AVBRAOat by Tlw AtowiRM Frau MM 10 19 II RalM Jisg. UHL F|r. L^d ^4 Charles H. Patterson, who came to the United States and 'joined Ford Motor Co. as a die maker, retires Wednesday an executive vice president of North American Automotive Operations. Henry Ford II, chairman of __ _ _________ the board, said: PATTERSON “Mr. Patterson’s open-minded approach to new ideas has inspired and produced technological progress throughout our operations. " “It is no accident that basic oxygen furnaces for steel-making and float processes for glassmaking were introduced during his tenure,” Ford added. Patterson, bom In Scotland, Joined Ford at 25 aad in less than a year became a Sent to Willow Run during World War II to help speed production of B-24 bomberU, by 1M4 he was superintendent of all assembly operations at that plant. ★ , ★ In 1951, Patterson of 232 Harlan, Bloomfield Hills, was named group executive of Engine and Foundry. In 1958 he was. elected a vice presi-............. isibillty for the ‘“It is a dangerous business,” said the dealer. “The margin is rather small and the market is volatile. You can take a loss if you don’t get rid of your purchases quickly.” For the moment, silver certificates are eagerly sought, although the premiums likely will drop this week when purchasers of government silver receive a partially unrefined product instead of salable metal. . DATE BACK ’TO ’ll The almost incredible conditions that have made silver the glamor metal of the year go back at least to 1961. In that year the government knew that the growing demand would cause shortages, so It began replacing silver certifleates with Federal Reserve notes, the kind presently in your wallet. ★ ★ ★ As the demand grew the price of silver began rising from about 90 cents. By mid-1963 the price was $1,293 an ounce. To protect its coinage from being melted or hoarded, the govem- 67.3 19.3 : . 313;99-:-«iM|WHfc igo : ;674 9oi 79,9 iii . _'AAonHi ago . M.5 90.1 ’ IK3 92.3 2.3S+0.02 V6.r ojp . 714 90.4 11.4 91.4 M.M 11967 high .. 73.0 95.6 14.9 92.5 ..., H.M-I-0.04 1967 loJ . , 67.3 19.1 79.6 90.5 II .7: -......... ,4, ,j, 79.3 9(U Mj' . 10.70 XIV yv- »♦( basic manufacturing group of five divisions and the manufacturing services staff. Patterson was elected executive vice president in May 1963. In that position he directed I Ford’s North American Automotive Opei^ations. Artists of Area Now Have Shop to Display Work A shop specializing in arti-facts made by area craftsmen and artisans recently opened at 2487 Orchard Lake, Sylvan Uke. Gifts, accessories and barrel furniture are also sold in- the shop, according to one owner-manager, Mrs. Howard Thor-son, 2467 Yorkshire, Binning-■■am. The idea of a shop evolved from the need of area artisans for a place to display their goods, according to the other owner-manhger, Mrs. WilUam Drescher, 4209 Normanwo West Bloomfield Township. Shop hours are 10 a.m. 5:30 p.m. Tue^ay through Saturday,, 7 I'-'Tm. # #' % By ROGER E. SPEAR Q — I am a widow, age it, with about $S6,0M la assets. I boaght Flying Tiger at 15; Cm-tiaeatal Air Liaes at >9; Abmiw, Icaa Telephoae at IS; Teaaeost^ at 32. As sooa as I boaght OesC ley began to tall aad T have been sick at heart Should sell and take my loss gr bgM until they come back and then run to the safety of a bank? I need advice and hope you can elp-S.F. A — You bought generally good stocks and if market fluctuations, which are commonplace, make you heartsick, perhaps you shouldn’t hold stocks at all. I believe, though, that after you have lived with the stock market for awhile, you will become accustomed to its vagaries and that yon will find the ownership of stocks a rewarding experience over a period of time. There is only one issue. Flying Tiger, which a person in your circumstances should probably not havu bought at all. This stock Ivprdf. sents a leading cargo carriei*' and has, I believe, good management and potential. However, it is heavily dependent on business from the Mflitaiy Airlift Command, which lowered rates earlier this year. TUs is a reasonable holding for a businessman with a divenifled portfoUo. VariiUoiiB In MAC business make it, in my opfai^ ion, unsuitable for a person lib yourself. I would switch this one stock into Chesebrough-Pond’s, " ' ~ believe has a more assured growth outlook. I would hold your 'other stodcs, all of which heve satisfactory long- (Roger Spear’s 46-fagu OaUe to Successfol lavestlBg Is available to readers. For your copy •end ll-M to Roger E. Spear la care of TIm Poattac Press. Box 1618, Oraad CeMral Sta-thm, New York, N.Y. 1N17.) (Copyright, 1917) News in Brief •os, 41, of Ilf Webb reported to Pontiac policy, yesterday that his home was' burglarised and $110 stolen. Rummage, miscellaaeous aad clothing, 221 Michigan. 9 to 4. • - ^ -A#r THE PONTIAC/PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER Oxford Vandalism Probed by Police Oxford Police are investigat-ini vandalism at the Oxford Ski Club on Lakeville ' Rded at ifhe .easterly limits of the village. A rqxnt that a portable building was brcdcen into and U^t ei^t 22-»liber shots, were fired into a l7-foot outboard motor and boat stored there was received by the department yesterday afternoon. It was not yet determined what had been taken from ' building, police said. Officers are also investigating the overturning of several tombstones in Oxford Cemetery over the weekend. Archery Club Fire Destroys New Building A fire of undetermined origin last night destroyed the Royal Oak Archery Club, located at the rear of 2760 Orion, Ori<» Township. Kre Chief Jack Caylor said the relatively new building was completely gutted by the time his Apartment appeared on the scene at 9:43 p.m. - In the Pi IT of Oaklar STATE OF MICHIGAN bata Court for ttia County Juvanlla Division. In t*>« Matter of foe Pefitloo concerning J'Owen Sears aka Shepherd, TO: James Sears, father of said Patitlon having been filed In this Court alleging that said child comes the provisions of Chapter 7I1A of Compiled Laws of Itif as amended. ... that foa present whereabouts of the father of said minor child Is unknown and said child has violated a law of the State, and that said child should be - -tinued under the jurisdiction of Court. In the Name of the People of the ! of Michigan. You are hereby notified the hearing on said patitlon will be ...... at the Court House. Oakland County Service Center. In the City of Pontiac In said County, on the fth day 6f November. A.D. 1M7. at nine o'clock In the forenoon, and you are her«- - ~ mended to appear personally hearing. It being Impractical to make service hereof, this summons ai.. shall be served by publication of a copy one week previous to said hearing In The Pontiac Press, a newspaper printed and circulated In said County. Witness, foe Honorable No Barnard, Judge of said C< City of Pontiac In said i________ 27th day of October, A.D. 1V«7. (Seal)”**'^' NORMAN R. BARNARD, I ELIZAliETH'’jL'BALLARa' Calls were placed to the Gin-gellville Station and to the Oxford Fire Department for assistance. Firemen remained on the scene until 12:47 a.m. today. The one-story aluminum-sided building was unoccupied at the time of the blaze. Caylor said his department would investigate. No figure on damages was released, but it was believed the building was valued in the neighborhood of $17,000. ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS lad Proposals will be racalvo( .... Oakland County ■<“"* «• »■“ for the extension of system at the Oakli Center In Pontiac, M consists of the foil d notice I said County, this What Is a Monument onirtneni is far more eiTe means of mark- It is a symbol of devotion. It is a laiisible expreseioii of the noblest of all human t—Love. It should not reflect sorrow but rather the long years of warmth and affection typical of the American family. A monument is built because there was a life—not a death: and with intelligent selection and proper guidance should inspire reverence, faith and hope for the living. INCH MEMORIALS Inc. 864 N. Perry Branie Plotss lor Memorial Pork Comolorios ol Bolow Comotory Pricss IS and Specific!......... .... St the office of foe Oakland Facilities Engineering Division, ________ North Telegra^ Road, Building “E", Pontiac, Michigan, on and after October good condlllon, within ten (101 days after bid opening. PropcMis shall be submitted rovlded by the Owner. A bic irtIfM check In the amount proposal. Checks shall be made pnyal to the Oakland County Board of Auditoi. The accepted bidder shall be ragulred to furnish a satisfactory Performance Bond and Labor and Material Bond, each amount of 100 per cent of the Con-...... The cost of the bonds will be paid by the accepted bidder. The County Board of Auditors --------------------------------- -----jering Division. WOO North ' graph Road. Pontiac, Michigan, at w flirw the bids shall be puMIcly 0|X youVtt r«ady for collogo whon your childiti M. E. DANIELS District Rgpresgiitativg 563 West Huran PONTIAC FE 3-71II d County S hlgan. The <30 lineal fe sewer pipe 370 lineal feet of i pipe 2 standard manhol It of IMnch c A deposit check Is •nd County, Mlch^an lANIEL T. MURIWY ROBERT E. LILLY JOHN B. OSGOOD VILLAGE OF WOLVERINE LAKE NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING lo°foTnl d C-l. no Ml Part of fha N. Vj of fha S.E. Section 22, T2N, R8E, baginnlno N.W. corner of the N.E. % ^ ere. .. of Section 22; thence S. ST 45' E. 440.0 feet alona the % Section line; ---------- S. 15'V. 33.0 feet thence S. .. -r. E. 150.0 feet thence N. IT 45' W. 490.0 feet thence N. 1<> Tfy E. 113 feet to the point of beginnlno. Nemtiy lott 54. 5fr 40a 41s 62, 43s 76, 77, 71 and parts of $7. 44s 45 of dlvliion. Dwel!R!plots Island Subdivision. /9 ana parrs Oak Island Sub- to bt rt-zontd R-M Multiple A. ,a yj ^ Stuart's Oak IRENE SAVICHs Clei. Oct. 30s 1967 Garl Oy. 3)oneliOH 3L ^ohm 111 One of the Finest . . . ... in all South^stem Michigan, the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home is in every way outstanding. It provides for Pontiac many exclusive features and facilities. You are invited)to inspect this fine community institution, and to know the great warmth and beauty that is present here. ^kone federal 4*4511 ^ivtlanif Oh Our . W 855 WEST HURON ST. PONTIAC ^ Pontiac Area Deaths NEIGHBORING HELPING HAND-Mem-bers of the Ferry Street Block Club Saturday participated in lending a helping hand to a crippled resident, \Vade Evans (center) of 344 Ferry. The group painted and cleaned the home. Mrs. Evans is hospitalized. Ready to begin chores are (from left) Dave Carr of 6884 Desmond, Waterford Township, Mike Duggleby of 307 W. Huron; Art Dunlap of 410 Central, and Mrs. Albert France of 349 Ferry. The project was joint-sponsored by the American Friends Service Conunittee. Detroit Teen in 1-75 Crash A Detroit teen-ager escaped serious injury early yesterday in Pontiac Township when he lost control of his car, hit other auto and careened 200 yards off an expressway and caught fire. ★ A ★ Bryan L. Mackinnon, 19, ticketed by State Police for reckless driving and not having an operator’s license. Police said he was traveling over 100 miles per hour on 1-75 near M-24, failed to negotiate a hit a second car guard rails on both sides of the highway before crtishing through a guard rail and demolishing the car. He was treated at Pontiac General Hospital and released. Ferency to Speak to OU Dem Group Hearing Set on 2 Holdups of Area Motel Zolton Ferency, chairman of the Michigan Democratic__________ party, will be the speaker ^ P morrow at a nleeting sponsored by the Oakland University Young Democrats. The 1:30 p.m. meeting will be held on campus in the Oakland Center building. preliminary court hearing will ^ held Nov. 16 for a Pon-Uac man charged with armed robbery and attempted armed robbery of a Bloomfield Township motel on two occasions. Held in Oakland County Jail in lieu of $20,000 bond for each offense is Abraham Dawkins, 25, of 233 S. Marshall. Dawkins is accused of attempting to hold up Charles Whitney, 61, owner of the St Christopher Motel, 3915 N. Tele-egraph, Friday afternoon. The bandit fled when Whitney began struggling with him. The other charge was brought against Dawkins after Whitney identified him as the bandit who held up the motel on Oct. 15 and escaped with $55. Dawkins was arrested at his home by Pontiac police after they received the license number of the suspected getaway car. COURT APPEARANCE He was arraigned Saturday on Camp, Schools to Cooperate Oakland Will Handle Wa1;grford Dropouts Cathy D. McCuliocIi Service for Cathy D. McCulloch, 16, of 1859 Warwick, Sylvan Lake, will be 2 p.m. Wednesday at St. Trinity Lutheran Church. Burial will be In Oakland Hills Memorial Gardens, Novi, by ^>arks-Griffin Funeral Home. Miss McCkilloch, a student at West Bloomfield High School, died today. Surviving are her parents, Williapi McCulloch jmd Mrs. Betty Smith McCulloch, two sisters, Darcy and Margo at home; and grandparents Russell S. Marsh of PonUac, William McCulloch of Bay City and Mr. and Mrs. Homer Smith of Waterford Township. Memorial contributions may be given to the St. Trinity Luth- -an Church building fund. Mrs. Carl Edward OXFORD — Service for former resident Mrs. Carl (Ethel Mae Edwards, 75, of Akron will be 2 p.m. Wednesday at the Bossardet Funeral Home. Burial will be in Oxford Cemetery. Mrs. Edwards, a member of the Seventh-day Adventist Church of Vassar, died yesterday. Surviving besides her husband are two daughters, Mrs. Reva Harris of Walled Lake and Mrs. Mildred McNally of Waterford Township: a brother, Clare Wix-om of Lapeer; a sister; seven grandchildren; and 18 greatgrandchildren. Camp Oaklahd’s training program for school dropouts will operate in cooperation with Waterford Township schools, it was announced yesterday the annual meeting at the camp near Oxford. Officers also were reelected with Carl 0. Barton, president, and Circuit Court Judge Arthur E. Moore, chairman of the board, gaining their fourth term. The new program will in- 01 v e Waterford Township youths ages 14 to 17. They will take part in a pre vocation training at the schools. After leaving Camp Oakland, the youths will serve as apprentice trainees, working in the community. Camp director William Matus explained, “Up until now we have prepared these youths to be auto mechanics or wood- A resolution commending Ferency for his recent criticism of President Johnson has been tabled by club members until its next meeting. Owner of Troy Business Is Dead ot 54 Clair Lawrence Jr. of 1301 Trowbridge, Bloomfield Hills, member of the Troy Chamber of Commerce and owner Lawrence Enterprises in Troy, a direct mail advertising firm, died Friday. He was 54. Service will be 9 a.m. tomor-)w at the Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co. " mingham, with burial at White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. ® Surviving are his wife, ^Patricia H.; two daughters, Mrs. Edwin Osser of Cypress, Calif., and Mrs. Joseph Odien of South-field; one son, St. Clair III home; one sister: one brolher; and three grandchildren. Lawrence is also a member of St. Hugo of the Hills Church and the Direct Mail Club of Detroit. Rochester Blaze Blamed on Stove A faulty heating stove in a greenhouse attachment was creditetl with destroying a $1,500 frame garage and $3,000 in contents Saturday noon In Rochester. The contents included a 1965 car and tools, according Fire Chief Lyle Buchanan. The building was owiled by Mr. and Mn. Fank M. Adams, 157 Drace. the charges before Bloomfield working specialists. But when Township Justice of the Peace they left they were too young ........... to be hired for this work. They could only find jobs such carry-out boys.” An additional teacher and social worker will need to be hired Matus said “After boys leave the camp we can give them supervision and direction which we did not have the staff to do before.” Camp Oakland, an organization to aid troubled youth, is supported by county service clubs, the United Foundation, the county Probate Court and by individual contributions. Car Hits Train; Driver Hurt An Avon Township youth is in fair condition today in Rochester Branch, Crittenton General Hospital, after his car struck a train at 8:20 p.m. Saturday. Stephen J. Hopkins, 17, of 1423 Christian Hills, was injured when his car struck a New York Central train stopped at the crossing at Tieken near Liver-nois in Avon Township, sheriff’s deputies reported. An investigation indicated trainmen had stopped in the area at 6:42 p.m. to eat, according to deputies. Train workers said they thought the train was stopped dear of the road. However, witnesses said the train had been blocking the crossing for about two hours, deputies said. Police Action Pontiac police officers and Oakland County sheriff’s deputies investigated 150 reported incidents the past 48 hours. A breakdown of causes for police action: Arrests—10 Felonious assaults—2 Vandalisms—31 Burglaries—13 Attempted murder—1 I Larcenies—24 Auto thefts—5 Bicycle thefts—3 Disorderly persons—6 Assaults—6 Shopliftings—1 Armed robberies—4 Unarmed robberies—1 Attempted arson—1 Obscene phone calls—2 Property damage accidents—32 Injury aeddents—8 County Schools Get October Aid: $10.3 Million Nearly $10.3 million, or 17 per cent of the state’s October apportionment of aid funds, have been released at Oakland County school districts. Figures released by County ’Treasurer James E. Seeterlin show that Waterford Township district received the highest amount of funds, $950,680. Monies for other large area districts are: Pontiac, $861,140; Farmington, $712,219; Walled Uke, $456,960; and Oakland Schools Intermediate District, $71,400. Mon Robs Gos Station Shelby Township Police today are parching for a man who robbed Maza’s Shell gas statibn at 5133 Auburn last night of $85 while threatening owner Joe Maza’s sister, Mrs. Elizabeth Prysly, 67, with an ice pick. Police said that maza told them that a young white male entered the combination gas station party store at 8:50 p.m. displaying an ice pick and demanding money. He rifled cash register of $80 in cash and a $5 check before fleeing to a waiting car. Elmer S. Evans Sr. WHITE LAKE TOWNgHIP-Elmer S. Evans Sr., 80, of 9723 Bonnie Briar died today. His body is at the C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor. Mr. Evans was a former engineer at the Consumer Power Co. and a member of the VFW No. 1008. Surviving are three sons, Ed-sell S. of Riverview, Elmer L. Jr. of White Lake Township and Stephen J. of Waterford Township; 10 grandchildren; and four sisters. Murray G. Holtzman BRANDON TOWNSHIP-Service for Murray G. Holtzman, 71, of 2400 Allen will be p.m. Wednesday at C. F, Sherman F\ineral Home, Or-tonville. Burial will be in Or-tonville Cemetery. Masonic Memorial services will be 7 p.m. tomorrow at the funeral home. Mr. Holtzman, a retired Ford Motor Co. employe, died yester-daiy. He was a past master of Ortonvllle Lodge No. 339, F&-AM, and a 32nd Degree Mason of the Ancient Scottish Rite Valley of Detroit. Surviving are two sisters and two brothers. Mrs. John Horanko WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP -Service for Mrs. John (Evelyn) Horanko, 68, of 3732 Overfield will be 1 p.m. Wednesday at Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Milford. Burial will be in Highland Cemetery, Highland Township. Mrs. Horanko died yesterday. Sriviving besides her husband are a son, John E. Kilpatrick of Highland and four grs^chil-dren. Bethamy Kroninger OXFORD — Service for Beth-amy Kroninger, infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Kroninger, 1344 W. Drahner, will be p.m. today at Bossardet Funeral Home. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Gardens Cemetery, Troy. Bethamy died yesterday. Surviving besides her parents are three brothers and sisters. Louis H. Mowery WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP -Service for Louis H. 68, of 837 Farnsworth will be io i.m. tomorrow at St. Patrick’ Catholic Church. Burial will be in Mount Hope Cemetery, Pontiac, by Elton Black Funeral Home, Union'Lake. Mr. Mowery, a pattern maker at the Buick Division of GM, died Friday. He belonged to St. Patrick’s Church and the Pattern Makers Association of America. Surviving is a daughter, Mrs. Clarance Ayotte of Union Lake. Mrs. Stephen J. Odor AVON TOWNSHIP --Service or Mrs. Stephen J, (Ruth H.: Odor, 46, of 2372 W. Auburn will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at Pix-ley Memorial CSiapel, Rochester. Burial will be in Christian Memorial Estates Cemetery. Mrs. Odor, a member of thd Church of God, Detroit, died Saturday. She was a former employe of Michigan Bell telephone and a former WAC as a staff sergeant. Siu-viving besides her husband are a daughter, Denise at home; a son, Daviil J., Pasadena, Calif.; four brothers, William Cardona of Milford and Dean, Carl and Richard all of Pontiac; and five sisters, Mrs. Marie Cooley, Mrs Thomas Danger-field, Mrs. Glenn St. John and Helen Cardona, all of Milford, and Mrs. Clyde Clement of Hol- ly- Harman B. Oren HOLLY—Service for Harman . Oren, 71, of 312 N. Saginaw will be 11 a.m. Wednesday at the Dryer Funeral Home, with burial in Lakeside Cemetery. Mr. Oren died yesterday. He 'as a member of Amel Schwartz Post 149, American Legion. Surviving are his wife, Mildred; a son, Harman Jr. of Giklerland, N.Y.; and a brother. Mrs. Frederick Schultz BIRMINGHAM - Service for Mrs. Frederick (Louzelle) Schultz, 87, of 519 W. Brown will be 2 p.m. Wednesday at the Manley-Bailey Funeral Home with burial in Union Corners Cemetery, Troy. Mrs. Schultz, a life member of O.E.S. 220 of Birmingham, died yesterday. Surviving are two daughters, Ellen at home and Mrs. Ester Kellogg of Metamora; one son, George H. of Royal Oak; one sister; and one grandchild. Mrs. Thomas Tioran AVON TOWNSHIP - Mrs. Thomas (Margie K.) Tioran, 45, Grant died yesterday. Her body is at the Harold R. Davis Funeral Home, Auburn Heights. Surviving besides her husband are her mother, Mrs. Nellie Ranek of Florida; three sons, Thomas and David at home and Richard at Fort Hood, Tex. two daughters, Diane and Jo-Anne at home; one grandchild; a sister; and a brother. Buddy Ranek of Pontiac. Mrs. Roy A. Whittaker LAKE ORION - Service for Mrs. Roy (Naomi) Whittaker of 318 Bellevue will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at the Allen’s Funeral Home, with burial in Roseland Park Cemetery, Berkley. Mrs. Whittaker died Saturday. Surviving are one daughter, Mrs. George Rail of Lake Orion, and a brother. Death Notices 30. 1M7; 9723 B . Lake TowniMpi age M: peer lather of EPtell nephen J. and Elmer L. Event Jr„ deer brofoer ol Mr«. Ann LePard. Mr*. Hazel Bigger, Mri. Nellie Henderson and Mrs. Ruby Crimas; also survived by 10 grendchlhtren. Funeral arrangements art pending at foa C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor, where Mr. Evans will lie In ‘ state alter 7 p.m. tonight.^ ^Sug^sted ^ visiting hours HOLTZMANN, MURRAY G.! Orio-ber ]f, 1M7; 2400 Allen Road, Or-tonvlllei oge 71) dear brother ol Mrs. Clarah Schwanz, Mrs. Mary Goodwin, Clarence and Harrison Holtzmann; also survived by several nieces and nephews. Masonic memorial service will be Tuesday at 7 p.m. el foe C. F. Sherman Funeral Home, 13S South Street, Ortonvllle. Funeral service will •Jlfo' tftv" Kyl« Bi In Ortp Break for Elderly KENNEBUNK, Maine (AP) - Town officials said Sunday they are taking under consideration a proposal to give a $100 tax credit to persons who reach the age of lOO^rovided that the centenwians paid taxes to the town for least 25 years. JOHNSON, EDNA S.: October 21, 1*47; 3494 Lorena Drive, Dravlon Plains; age II; beloved wite ol John N. Johnson; dear mother ol Florence M. end Doris M. Johnson, Mr. J. Newton and Mr. c. Vernon Johnson; also survived by two grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Tuaidgy, October 31 at 11 a.m. at foe Oonclson-Johns Funeral Home. Interment In Perry Mount Perk Catnetery. Mrs. Johnson will lie In state at the funeral home otter 3 p.m. Sunday. (Subsided visiting hours 3 to 5 end McCULLOCH, CATHY 'O"/^T^c-tober X, 1947; 1M9 Warwick; age 14; beloved daughter ot Betty Smith McCulloch and William McCulloch; belovad granddaughter at Mr. and Mrs. Homer fonlm, Russel $. Marsh and William McCulloch; dear sister of Darcy and Margo McCulloch. Funeral service will be held Wednesday. November 1, at 2 p.m. at the SI. Trlnlly Lutheran Church, inter-ment In Oakland Hills Memorial Gardens. Cathy will lie In stale at foe. Sperfct-Griflln Funeral Home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 end T to 9.) MOWERY, l6UIS H.) October 27, 1947; 137 Femtworth, White Lake Township; age 41; dear lather of Mrs, Clarence (Loretta) Ayotte. Recitation ol the Rosary will ba tonlghl at S p.m. at lha Ellon Black Funaral Home, 1233 Union Lake Read, Union Lake. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, October 31, at 10 a.m. at foa St. Patrick's Catholic Church, Union Lakt. Intarmant In Mount Hopa Camaltry. Mr. Mowary will II# In stata at foa tunaral home. TIORAN, MARGIE K.; OctofieTly, 1947 ) 29X Grant Street, Avon Township; ago 45; befovod w«o ot Tom Tioran; btlovad doughlar ot Mrs. Ntlllo Ranak; dear inolhtr ot Thomas, RIchara, OavW, DIam and JoAnn Tioran; also survl^ by ona grandchild. Funaral ar* rangamanfs ara ponding at foa Harold R. Davis Funaral Hoina, IN LOVING ME) Knickarbockar, No ono can sat us But many a slltnt Whita ofoars aro Sadly mlsstd by son J. Paiazinl. I BOX REPLIES ( I At 10 a.m. today there | I were replies at ’The Press -I Office in the following j j boxes: 3, 4, 5, 10. 11, 20, 28, 31, ^ Funorol Directors COATS FUNERA DRAYTON PLAINS C. J. GODHARDT Kaago Harbor Huntoon 79 Oikland Avo. SPARKS-i M FOR COMP. groom. 474-1535.____ AMELIA VIDOR HAS to Pardeo Baauty Chop, 2! hals. FE 3-mt. ANY GIRL OR V-- ward. U1-4ISI.