By DICK ROBINSON The Waterford Township Board of Education will ask fir reconsideration of a court ruling that it restore full-day classes. This was decided last night at a 514-hour meeting at which the board also announced It would schedule a millage and bond issue vote in November. Instead of asking for a stay of the court order and then appealing, the board authorized its attorney to ask for reconsideration of the ruling. This means half-day sessions will continue for now. A millage hike was called the only workable method of financing education in thy school district. A no-tax-increase bond issue. would provide for building another junior high-school. ★ ★ * * Date of the election was set an Nny. 2ST No dollar amounts were established for the proposals. Voters have turned down two millage issues in the past 10 months — three in the past two years. SEPT. 29 DEADLINE Oakland County Circuit Court Judge William J. Beer said a week ago that the The Weather school district must restore full-day classes for its 18,500 students by Sept. 29. School Attorney John Rogers said he-will ask for a rehearing in a motion to be filed with Beer today. It is expected to be heard Wednesday. If it. is denied, Rogers said he could aSk Beer for a stay of the •order pending appeal. If that’s, not successful, he would ask for an extension of the two week time limit or a stay and appeal in a higher court., THE He said the board has 20 days after the formal entry of the Judge’s order, also expected Wednesday, to appeal to the . Michigan Supreme Court. TAKING MEASURES * *' In the meantime, Rogers indicated he Home Edition PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, VOL. 127 NO. 193 —48 PAGES 10e hopes tp convince the judge the school district is taking measures to comply with his order. Preliminary plans are being made to restore full-day sessions, according to acting Supt. Dr. John Pagen. The board decided to seek approval from the state’s Municipal Finance Commission to borrow $1.25jnillion. ★ ★ *’ Rogers recommended that the board see what happens on his motion for a rehearing and in a similar Livonia case being appealed to the State Supreme Court before deciding on an appeal. New trustee Billie S. - Famum, a former congressman and state auditor general, proposed the millage election. He indicated this is one of only two ways to finance education permanently The other is the State Legislature, which (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 4) No November, December Draft Calls -----WASHINOTON Iffl — President Nivnn today canceled all November and December draft calls and ordered that thfiL29.000 men scheduled for induction in October b$ called over a three-month period at a monthly average of less than 10,ooomen:— Reading a statement to newsmen at military manpower requirements — due in part to Vietnam troop withdrawals — made It possible to cancel programmed draft calls for 32,000 men in November and 18,000 in December. L The action came very close to an outright two-month suspension of the draft. However, Nioxn said that the 29,000 men originally slated for induction in October would be called over a three-month period ending Dec. 31. —The President also announced that if Congress fails to act on the draft reform legislation he proposed on May 13, he would issue an executive order aimed at sharply reducing toe number of years during which young men ftlce the un-certainty of possible induction.- •LEGISLATION IS BETTER*_________________ He said, however, that no executive order Could accomplish his objectives “as clearly and effectively” as toe proposed legislation. Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird said at the White House one plan being considered would make 19-year-old toe most vulnerable to induction. Another alternative that could be accomplished through executive action, he said, would make prime draft targets of 19-year-olds apd men in toe 20 to 25 year age bracket with expired student deferments. Asked how the October draft call of 29.000 would be spaced, in terms of in. ductions, Laird said toe matter was not finally decided but Selective Service officials had indicated to him tifat they favored calling up 10,000 in October, 40;000—in—November* December. He said the January Draft call, now programmed for 35,000 men, would be reviewed in December with a view toward a possible cutback. 3IW WITHDRAWAL The December decision presumably would hinge in great part on a possible third-phase withdrawal of troops from Vietnam. The administration has set no timetable for making its next decision on potential withdrawals. Laird said that, barring legislative action, Nixon would try to achieve draft/ reform through an Executive order that" would become effective next Jan. 1 or as -sow thereafter as practical,--- Laird said toe aim is “to remove toe is 19, by whether he is serving or not.” This, Laird said, would do away with “keeping toe draft over his tiead for seven method, man for draft purposes, who has been deferred for college, will be 19 when he finishes college^ regardless of his actual age. MSU Pact OK'd; Opening Set From Our News Wires EAST LANSING - Striking maintenance workers today approved a contract with Michigan State University and acting President Walter Adams said classes would be able to start Thursday, as previously scheduled. Late orientation freshmen students were asked to report Sunday afternoon. New undergraduate transfer students were asked to report Monday night. The general fall registration will start on Tuesday. * * * Dormitories will open Monday, and there will he a gradual opening of dining halls. The MSU board of trustees voted “applause" to Adams and MSU Secretary Jack Breslin who had been working on the contract negotiations. OKAY ON 3RD VOTE “That’s only as much as you expected of us,” Adams said. Herbert Hill, president of Local 1585 of toe American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employes, AFL-CIO, said contract approval came on a third vote tois morning. ■it * . * He said1' of the voice vote “You could sav it was unanimous-" _______________ Hill said the union members agreed to the new contract after a “clarification” of toe hospitalisation section of the contract. Armed Pair Gets at Wixom Credit Union The Wixom Credit Union, 29100 Wixom, was robbed of an estimated $5,000-6,000 this afternoon by two armed bandits. /* :/ * * James Price, manager of toe credit union, said thO gunmen entered toe facility Ipcateq in a trailer across toe road from Ford Motor Co.’s Wixom plant about 12:30 p.m. // it it ' it , Price said he and three employes, two7 of them women, were standing at the counter when toe bandits walked in brandishing pistols and announced “This 4s a stickup.” / / + it it I The exact amount of money taken was 7 not immediately known, said Price, who noted, however, that about $5,500 to $6,000 had been on hand When they / opened and that several withdrawals h * been made by customers. ★ * it The robbers were Negroes, Price Paid. The pair fled in a car but the ytetims were unable to give a descrip ' ★ * it Wixom police are handling tiie investigation. APART ON COVERAGE “We were’apart on toe exact coverage of toe hospitalization section^ he said. “We submitted some language to them which we felt toe section should include this morning and they accepted the exact language.” /■ Hill said toe members/were “very happy" with toe contract: ★ ★ /it He said the contract covers two years but has economic /provisions ’ for only the next year. / 1 ■ ;------------- “For toe second year, if we can’t agree, the contract provides for arbitration,” he said: “This is something new in public employe bargaining.” PICK ETS/REMOV ED Hill spud pickets were taken down immediately at the Big Ten school after i^til said the some 1,2Q0 striking work-i were told* to report to their Job niisdrs for assignments. TO RETURN IMMEDIATELY ‘A good many of them will go back to work immediately,” he said. “They were told they will be given a full eight hours pay if they go back to work.” ★ ★ it 1011 said he thought with the strikers back to work toe university could be geared up to accept students coming in to register after i Nixon had promised, at toe National Governor’s Conference in Colorado Springs, polo., recently: “We shall have some directives that will be issued in toe very near future that will accomplish” some/of the goals concerning what he caUPd “the unnecessarily long period of *■ uncertainty that now hangs over the >e lives of millions of our young people.” 2 Bandits Rob Clarkston Bank CLARKSTON — Two armed bandits held up the Community National Bank Branch office, 5801 Ortonville, at 11 a.m. today. They locked four employes and six hank customers in the vault and escaped with an unknown, amount of The gunmen were described as heavy-set Negroes between 35-40 years old and 6 to 6Mt feet tall. Both wore blue-striped overalls, and at least one had a stocking mask covering his head, according to FBI'agents at the scene. They said the amount of money taken from the bank has not yet been determined. The pair put money from tellers’ windows into canvas bags and forced the 10 people into toe vault at gunpoint. No one was injured. The Oakland County Sheriff’s Department, State Police and FBI set up roadblocks surrounding the area. The getaway car was described by a witness to be a medium-blue Pontiac. It was last seen heading north on Dixie Highway. The sheriff’s department said no shots were fired by toe bandits during ^the robbery: CARE-A-VAN GIFTS — Howard M. Nelson (right), chairman of the Pontiac Area United Fund (PAUF) commercial division, presents David Richard of Boy Scout Troop 29 with gifts while his “camel” looks on. The Boy Scouts were a special feature during the PAUF commercial and manufacturing divisions kickoff luncheon, conducted with an Arabian motif, yesterday at the Elks Club. (Story, page A-2.) Southfield Stadium Appears Doomed Barbara Gets 7 Teachers Spurn Contract. Reputed Detroit area Mafia chieftain Joseph Barbara Jr. was sentenced to se to< of BIRMINGHAM - Members of the Birmingham Education Association (BEA) refused to ratify a tentative agreement with the board of education last night, 345 to 280. ★ ■ * ' ★ The BEA will meet Tuesday night “to determine a future course of action,” according to Donpld Cameron, the organization’s executive secretary. Cameron said a strike vote win be held and other possible alternatives discussed. ★ ★ ★ Classes, meanwhile will meet as scheduled throughout the district! Teachers have been reporting for work since classes began as scheduled Sept. 3. it h ★ - / Differences over the salary range In the middle part of the pay scale were considered the principal factors for rejection of the contract ★ ★ ★ , Under terms of the tentative contract, the salary scale ranged from a $7,460 minimum to a $13,800 maximum. on * .★ it Barbara, the president of the Tri-County Sanitation Co., was found guilty tty a jury Aug. 13 of extorting ,$4,000 from Delores Lazaros while her husband was in prison for a fraud conviction. . it h h The, incident, along with toe alleged rape of Mrs. Lazaros by Barbara, is reportedly toe reason Lazaros began telling authorities about underworld activities. Lazaros. was released from prison last October while his case is being appealed. THREATS OF VIOLENCE Ziem noted that while it ia within his discretion, it has been his practice In cases of intended violence or threats of violence not to allow appeals bonds. f 'V . * Ziem said he saw no reason why he should change his policy in this case. EXTORTIONIST JAILED—Joseph Barbara Jr. (right) an alleged Mafia figure in the Detroit area, ia booked in Oakland County JaU today by Sgt. Frederick Scbolz. Barbara was sentenced this morning to seven to 20 years tat prison by Oakland County Circuit Judge Frederick C. Ziem for extorting $4,000 from Mrs. Delores Lazaros, wife of underworld informer Peter Lazaros of Troy. Barbara later will be transferred to state prison at Jackson. , A Southfield site for a domed stadium for toe Det|pit Lions and Tigers apparently was doomed yesterday in action by the Southfield Planning Commission. The move left a proposed location on Pontiac’s eastern boundary very prominent in consideration. it it it Last spring, spokesmen for both teams indicated the Southfield- site was preferable if a downtown Detroit site' proved unfeasible. However, Southfield’s planning commission voted a recommendation last night to rezone the proposed 360-acre proposed location near 1-696 and Telegraph for entirely different uses — residential, office, educational and research building development. GOING TO COUNCIL The recommendation will go to toe City Council in November. There was considerable opposition to toe proposed -stadium in Southfield including that of Mayor Norman W. Feder. A ballot proposal set for next August would limit any stadium construction to less than 12,000 capacity, if passed by voters. This latest incident in the quest of toe two teams tor replacing aging Tiger Stadium could spur action toward nam- A downtown Detroit site has not yet been ruled out. The Detroit Board of Commerce has commissioned an eco- Weekend Climate to Continue Cool There’s a chance of showers tonight, and temperatures will continue cool over the weekend. The U.S. Weather Bureau’s official day-by-day forecast: TODAY — Mostly cloudy and cool, with a chance of light rain this afternoon and evening. High 63 to 68. Cloudy and not much temperature change tonight. Low 50 to 55. TOMORROW—Partly cloudy and a little warmer, high of 65 to 72. SUNDAY —Partly cloudy and warmer. ____ Probabilities of precipitation: 30 per cent today, 30 per cent tonight and 20 per cent tomorrow. /,) J ' The low recording before 8/a.m. fb downtown Pontiac was 52. The mercury was at 50 by 2 p.m. ~nomic possibility study. Aprellmary re-port issued early in August apparently left toe teams unimpressed. Pontiac last January appointed a Stadium Authority to carry out plans and negotiations with the teams. The. authority has announced it1 has an economically feasible plan to build a $65-million, domed, twin-stadium complex for the teams with revenue bonds (no millage called tor). Spokesmen for. the Lions said they were going to announce a decision the week after Labor Day, but this deadline passed with no word. News Flash The Michigan State University Board of Trustees agreed today to accept responsibility for operation of an osteopathic medical school if offered toe {project by the state board of education. The state board, under terms of a bill passed earlier this year by the Legislature, Is to decide by Nov. 3 about offering the school to one of the state’s universities. In Today's Press Strange Bedfellows ~— rorfiwrmive naner dbiger liberal Troy Dems’ questions— PAGE A-4. Green Beret Trial Two will testify against the other six charged in murder— PAGE A-16. Space Goal? It’s a matter of national de- — bate-PAGE A-8. ArOa News . N--------- A-4 Astrology .............B-S Bridge ............... B-8 Crossword Puzzle .....D-li Comics . ............. B-8 Editorials ............A-8 Farm and Garden . C-7-C-1I Markets .............. D*l Obituaries ....... . . B-5 Sports ........... 04—C-8____ Theaters .........B-16, B-U TV and Radio Programs . D-ll Vietnam News ..........Art Wilson, Earl ......... B41 A—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS* FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER: 19. 1969 School Board Ignores Ple in The Pontiac School Board last night was asked to change its mind on the hiring of an assistant superintendent. But the board .took no action, adjourning its meeting amid the audience’s increasingly bitter denunciations. The board announced Sept. 4 it had selected a Virginia man, Dr. William Edmonds, director of the Virginia State College Graduate School, Petersburg, Va., for the ppsition. The recommendation of the board’s citizens committee on human relations was fo* John F. Perdue, director of school-community and human relations. A one-day boycott protesting Edmonds’ selection was held Sept. 10 with over 400 teachers reported absent. The human relations committee asked the board to reconsider last night. After about one hour of discussion on the issue, the board abruptly at 11 p.m. called for and passed a motion to adjourn. s Another committee member, Frank Johnson, reminded the board'of past recommendations concerning appointment of the assistant superintendent. He said the Michigan Civil Eights Commission (MCRC), in its report on the! city in January, recommended the post be created and filled by a; man “sensitive to minority gfoup problems in the community.” stormy meeting. While a majority of those making statements were opposed to board actions on agenda items, several stood in support of “respect” for the Z*03 one woman predicted more white people will be attending future board meet- In choosing Dr. Edmonds over Perdue, Johnson said, the board was ignoring the MCRC, the human relations committee, the local 90-citizen Equality of Educational Opportunity Commisjson (EEO), and the majority of teachers and staff members at the schools. Related Story, Page 8-9 ings. The audience was about orte-fourth black, and many identified themselves as teachers. ” • _________,_l LIAISON DESTROYED The chairman of the human relations committee, Charlie Harrison, warned that unless the hiring was reconsidered, the committee’s role “of being a liaison between the board of education and the community has been destroyed.” RECALL CAMPAIGN After last week’s boycott, a recall campaign was initiated against the four members of the seven-member board who voted for Edmonds — Russell Brown, John K. Irwin Jr.. Mrs. Lucille Marshall and Mrs. Elsie Mihalek. At last night’s mee RESIGNATIONS DEMANDED The board was vilified in a statement read from the Voice of Oakland County Action League (VOCAL). The statement called members “incompetent, chaotic, disgraceful... ignorant... undemocratic.,,.” recall petitions»had been obtained. More than 6,000 are needed. At least 200 persons jammed the small administration auditorium for the The VOCAL S bers who had voted, in effect, a g the resignation of the mem- Blue Shield Asks 1 Personnel at HQ Hit to Raise Rates 1 LANSING (UPI) — Health * I insurance rate increases averaging | i $2.43 per family have been re- | 1 quested by Michigan Blue Shield | I for the first three months of 1970. | I Citing inflationary medical costs | fl as the reason for the request, Blue | I Shield officials asked " the rate- 1 I regulating State Insurance Com- | I mission for the hike yesterday at a | 1 public hearing. ----*---4r---*• If approved, the average in- | crease of 16.7 per cent of the .base I rate would affect those coniracts 1 -first of the 1 | year through March 31, 1970 -- f I about 274,000. If the hike is ex-!. tended to cover the remaining | three quarters, almost all other 4.5 i million insurees would be affected. j [ Not included in the hike would J be policies for supplemental 1 Medicare coverage. Drastic Shakeup Jars OEO WASHINGTON (AP) - The Office of Economic Opportunity is about to undergo a drastic shakeup of headquarters personnel. The disclosure left nearly 100 of the antipoverty agency’s employes without specific duties and facing an uncertain future. The shakeup disclosure was made suddenly—and apparently without warning—Wednesday in a memorandum from OEO Director Dpnald Rumsfeld to all 1,100 headquarters personnel. Attached to the memorandum was a list of about OfiTpeopIe who will have definite new An OEO spokesman denied that these people were on “a blacklist,” but stopped short of guaranteeing that all would have jobs when the reorganization is complete. Specifically, the rate raise would j I mean single persons would pay an ; average of 45 cents more per year, j | a couple $2.10 and families $2.43 j | annually. Those not on the list, many in the $15,000 to $20,000 salary range, were told they were being put in a pool, to be used wherever they were needed, until thelF future was decided. Sources within OEO said many of the 100 people left In professional limbo had been associated with the antipoverty agency’s more controversial programs. BLACKBALL LIST SOME FEARFUL Some expressed the. fear they were being eased out of the agency entirely. Birmingham Area Hearing Is Set on Proposal for Condominiums Referring to those not on the list, the memorandum said: “If your name does not appear on the lists, supervisory personnel and representatives of the personnel office will contact you directly and discuss assignment possibilities. Until you reassigned, vouswilLh^ retained in present title, grade and salary, in unassigned status, V loan to any of the OEO offices and divisions where your services can be utilized.” One top OEO official who asked not to be identified referred to the ftp * personnel as being on “a blackball list. “They’re dumping us into one big pool according to Rumsfeld,” the official said. “To me that pool looks more like a bottomless pit*that drops right into oblivion.” BLOOMFIELD HILLS — The City Commission and the planning commission will consider a proposal by the Woodbury Construction Co. to build condominium and single-family residences on . lhe_ northwest corner of Hickory TJFoVC and Lahser Roads. The hearings will be at 7:30 p.m. Oct. 14 at the city office building. The problem concerning the construction plans reportedly centers on whether of not there should be a condominium-type development in the city, according to Commissioner Louis G. Colombo Jr. Woodbury plans call for construction of 100 detached condominium units of two or three bedrooms in the $70,000 to $90,000 range. 2 Units Kick OH PAUF Drive TURNABOUT — Oakland University Chancellor Durward Varner was the object of student demonstrations last night and today. No, they don’t want to get rid of mm, they want to keep him. A rumor on campus last night reported the committee seeking a chancellor for Michigan State University was going to draft him. This sparked demonstrations calling for keeping Varner apd this sign at QU’s gate shown by Marion Milne of Mount Clemens. BIRMINGHAM - Mrs. Velma M. Ruhly has been appointed principal at Westchester Elementary School. She replaces Dr. Francis R..Goetz who was transferred to the princlpleship of Harlan Elementary School. The commercial and manufacturing divisions of the Pontiac Area United Fund (PAUF) began their campaigns yesterday with a luncheon at the Elks Club, 114 Orchard Lake. This year’s total goal for the two divisions is $365,814 out of-a general campaign goal of $1.24 million, Howard M. Nelson, commercial division chairman told some 200 volunteers. at a deficit" Poole said. He added that there is no resetve to fall back on for immediate need. Last year’s goal was set at $1.13 million and contributions totaled about $1.7 million! Poole said, volunteer solicitors have a real -challenge before them and expressed hopes that the enthusiasm and dedication they have displayed will en-' courage the people whom they contact. Frederick J. Poole, president of PAUF, said money collected in this year’s campaign again will be used to support the 55 United ~Fund Fund agen-cies and will be dispersed on the basis of need. “For the past two years the PAUF drive has failed to reach the goal set by its directors, causing agencies to operate people and money make them happen, referring to volunteers from all over the country who arrived to help in cleanup and other aid along the 55 miles of coastline damaged by hurricane Camille. He presented a vivid picture of the disaster and said 18,000 homes were destroyed and another 26,000 were damaged. . “The Red Cross met Camille head-on,” he said, “and 662 trained volunteers were sent into the area.” Waterford Schools. Want Rehearing, Set Miilage Vote Mrs. Ruhly of Beverly Hills holds bachelor’s and master’s degrees from Wayne State University and is com- . pitting work on a doctorate in education. She has 12 years experience in the Birmingham schools' as an elementary teacher, arithmetic consultant and diagnotician. Mrs. Ruhly has also taught classes .in child, end adolescent psychology at Wayne State. The volunteers heard speaker . John Greenwood, assistant regional manager -for the-American National Red Cross in Wisconsin, Minnesota and Michigan, talk about action of the Red Cross during the recent hurricane along the Gulf Coast. Greenwood’s speech entitled, “Things Just Don’t Happen,” pointed to the fact Commercial division volunteers will call on area retailers, educational, professional and community leaders fur donations. Small manufacturing firms and companies will be contacted by manufacturing division volunteers headed by Lawregce Wlsemsjp. The PAUF general campaign this year starts Oct. 4 and Is to run through Nov. The Weather (Con tinued Front Page One)----- can’t be counted upon to come up with funds. “It’s about time we talked to the State Legislature to do something about this,” he commented. Stantejr-Kurzmanraparent in.the school district and one of three attorneys for parents who took the school board to court, praised Famum’s miilage proposal as “thaonlyresponsible solution.” “I hope you will go forward aiST implement full days,” he told the board. “If the supreme court reverses the -decision, you’d be in the same boat next year anyway without more money.” However, parents who hired the other two lawyers indicated to them they won’t support more miilage.______ ... ~ ~ One emotional mother in a crowd of nearly 200 people, Mrs. William Schmidt of-583L Elizabeth Lake, told the board “miilage exploits the poor and is only Etchwork to take the pressure off the Em Members of the Birmingham Senior Men’s Club were scheduled to see a film ~ tltled “Goif a Go Go,” showing the ‘Uvlne most beautiful holes in the United » States” at their meeting this morning in the Community House, 380 S. Bates. Dlscussiontoplc tor the day was “Should wage and price controls be applied to the national economy ip .order to check inflation?” Senate Fate Uncertain Frill U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY-Today mostly cloudy and cool. Chance of a little light rain mainly this afternoon and evening. High 63 to 68. Tonight cloudy and not much temperature change. Chance of occasional light rain, tow 50 to 55. Saturday partly cloudy and a little warmer. High 65 to 72. Sunday outlook: partly cloudy and warmer. Winds east to northeast 8 to 18 miles per hour today, easterly 5 to 12 miles tonight and southeast 5 to 15 miles Saturday. Probabilities of precipitation are 30 per cent today, 30 per cent tonight, and 20 per cent Saturday. House Passes El Reform TMtoy la Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding I a.m.: St At 1 a.m.: Wind Velocity I m.p.l>. Direction: NsrtMMt fun sets Friday at 4:37 p.m. Sun rises Saturday at d: IS a.m. Moon sots Friday al 3:04 p.m. Moon rises Saturday at 1:87 a.m. ....B :MM. .. One Year Age in Pent lac weather: Rain .1 inch' ail day'' WASHINGTON (AP) - A proposed constitutional amendment calling for the direct, popular election of the president has been approved by the House in such an overwhelming fashion that even the measure’s supporters are surprised—and I In (Ml 80 In I tot 84 50 Das Moines 48 84 J. n K" - ^ 88 50 ml - -.---i if S Angeles 77 43 -.......ami figged 18 75 47 41 Mllwaukeo 42 88 -» 38 New Orleans V 7t 5» 27 New York . 41 51 Saginaw 43 41 Ptowtlx n 71 S. Sts. Marla 5» 37 Pittsburgh M 48 Traverse C. 41 41 ft. Louis . 74 82 Albuquerque 12 4t s. Lake City 14 44 Alttnta r: . ft to f. Francisco 43 84 Blimarclc 72 57 Seattle W'm- loston 42 41 Washington 71 84 The size of yesterday’h Vote — 339-70—raised backers’ hopes that the proposal can win Senate approval, state ritification and become the 26th amendment to the Constitution. Instead of voting for electors who then cast their ballots for the president, citizens would vote directly for their candidate. And instead of counting up the electoral votes of the states to determine the president, the winner would be the candidate who got the most individual votes in a nationwide tally. However Senate prospects for the pro--posal are uncertain. There is strong opposition in the Judiciary Committee, where the question of electoral reform is now stalled. The House vote disclosed solid bipartisan support for the-'proposal, which would scrap the system used to elect every President since George Washington. A candidate would have to get at least 40 per cent of the popular vote to win. If none did, there would be a' runoff between the top two. Opponents charged the 40 per cent provision could lead to a minority president, but Rep. Emanuel Celler, D-N.Y., manager Of the bill, countered by pointing out that 15 presidents have been igislature.” —“You-shoulcLcromuthe bridge when you come to it. If you face bankruptcy or annexation, go to the voters and tell them they’ll have to vote ‘yes.’ ” The miilage issue was approved by the board 7-0 and the bond issue 6-1 with Eldon C. Rosegart opposed. Trustee Louis Schimmel Jr. said 800 students would have no school to go to in a few years if a new junior high school was .not built soon. The school bond issue, defeated last March, will cost taxpayers about $1 million more now as construction and interest costs mount at $100,000 per month, according to Pagen. When Kurzman learned the board was considering a delay in restoring full-day sessions, he withdrew his pledge to work for a miilage increase. A motion to ask for a stay and start appeal procedures were defeated, 4-3. Voting against it,, were Schimmel, Famum, President PhiHp M. Hampton imd Mrs. Peggy L. Wood. I Board officials said if they did restore full day classes, the district probably would rail out of money about February and it would be difficult to borrow money because the board couldn’t repay Birmingham-Bloomfleld area residents will' have an opportunity to take the Peace Corps entranee e x a m l n ati oil tomorrow at 1:30 p.m. at two locations. The exam will be given in Room 222, Federal Building at Fort and Shelby in Detroit and in Room 1 of the Federal Building at E. Huron and Perry in Pontiac. Persons interested in taking the exam must present an application to the tester before the exam begins. Forms can be obtained from any post office. Soviet Report Claims Talks Set With China MOSCOW (UPI) - The Soviets today circulated an unconfirmed report that they will receive a top-level Communist Chinese delegation in Moscow within three weeks to. discuss their border quarrel. There was no official confirmation of the report, which spread through WestertLand neutral embassies. it. If it ran out of money, It probably could get a loan from the state like -elected with less than SO per cent of the^ Inkster did last vear but If it doesn’t popular vote. That includes President balance the TWgeMmmedlately the Nixon, who got slightly more than 43 per district could be consonS cent. another, school officials warn. , The report said Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin had persuaded Chinese Premier Chou Eri-lai in their brief talk at Peking Airport last week to send a delegation to this capital to discuss the border troubles which have caused at -wlttL^ least five pitched battles in the past six Orion Jetport Plans Jeopardized A politically aware Oakland County Board of Supervisors may be inclined to settle for less than a frilly developed Jet-type airport in Orion Township. Those were the indications yesterday as a motion to recommend a $250,000 Orion Airport budget appropriation squeaked by the county aviation and transportation committee op a vote. A previous motion to deny funds, to carry out me airport's master plan, NATIONAL WEATHER — Showers are forecast tonight for the Southeast, Southwest and Northwest. Cooler temperatures are expected in the Great t-vImr passed by a 6-1 vote, with chairman Wallace Gabler, R-Royal Oak, in lone opposition. First-stage development of the mastep plan is estimated to cost more than $20 million. The appropriation, as passed, has yet to gain approval of the county’s finance committee and the frill board of supervisors. As provided in the motion by Mahlon Benson, ILWatorford Township, the recommended appropriation would provide for cost studies on paving the existing north-south sod runway, leveling and paving an east-west strip, and construction of T-hangars for rental to plane owners. Voting with Benson were George Grba, D-Pontiac, who seconded the motion, Gabler and Frank „ Richardson, R-Waterford Township. Opposition led by Niles Olson, Township, chairman of tee ten D-Orion rqe-man airport board charged with administration of county airports, noted that the money, once in the budget, might be spent by the airport board in any way it saw fit. Voting with Olson against the measure were Philip Mastin, D-Hazel Park, and Dennis Aaron, D-. Huntington Woods. Olson’s fellow members on the airport administrative board are Benson and Gabler. Several representatives from Orion Township, were present to plead that some action be taken by tee county — either that plans for airport development be abandoned or that a. definite indication be made that the county will proceed. A land-use study of the area surrounding the airport, prepared by Vilicari Leman Associates of Southfield now engaged in preparing a township master plan — was presented to the committee. Other figures made available by Township Supervisor John Less!ter i showed $5 million of recent development on area included within the master plan — land which th* county would have to ' A Lake Angelus homeowner, Jama H. Klipfel of 830 Lake Angelus Shores, vowed that some 200 business and community leaders of his area would fight development “in any way possible.” THIS PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1969 ,A—i. Viet Fighting Light; B52s Raid oh Border Simms Bro$.-98 N, Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac Take a good look Simms Camera Dept, for more • EXCITING SELECTIONS •MORE EXCITING VALUES and MORE^j EXCITING EXTRAS! jfiE Simms — the friendly one with the action discounts for every* one. Stop in and see Simms for the best discount in town. JiS&fv P.S.: Are you having trouble with camera? Stop in and see one of our Camera Experts for FREE ADVICE. SUPER 8 AND REG. 8mm * MOVIE REEL & CAN SET 200 FT. 400 FT. SETS SETS $29.95 Value 'Mali* short 25-ft. motor iSSRsss built-in pistol grip. $2.95 Value V- KENCO Mi MOM. PROJECTOR TABLE uJam-proof rofo-trays In choice' "of 80-slid Kodak or . 100* Sawyer trays. Limit 5. ,\i $10.95 Value $21.95 Value Set has cqlorfllm, batteries, and flashcube. Instant load camera. Layaway far Christmas.—— j|p140 POWER TRIPOD TELESCOPE ST. MORITZ YOUNGSTERS WALKIE-TALKIES $49.95 Value — fin*; quality telescope to open O 5ew . worjd of excitement for you. Empire model 631. EACH DELUXE ‘WEST1M6H0USE PORTABLE STEREO PH0H Model 1104 walkle talkies, with a range of up to V* mile. With battery. i|l 29.95 |Value Model iTP31 ^ Model PS63D28 MfW f deluxe pull down pic speakers. Charge It at . I • • CASSETTE TAPE RECORDER SONY CUBE-SOUND AM CLOCK-RADIO Value 1-, Model 6RC-Z3 . f ,l * Realtone #7609 'battery oper« ated cassette recorder with AC adopter. About the only tiding we couldn’t add to our regular tile was warmth. We tried. But even Armstrong couldn’t do it. So, we started making carpeting too. * It comes In 16 textures, 232 colors, pnd just about any style you could ask for. All beautiful. All warm. But none delicate. < Jt’s magnificent. But then, just look at the beautiful family It comes from. And now, you can find Armstrong carpeting at your nearest dealer. Armstrong SAIGON TAP) - The U. S.| waves cf the big bombers at-Command today reported only tacked North Vietnamese base BgW scattered ground fighting camps in an area three by sev-in Vietnam, but American BS2 en miles * located 100 miles bombers dropped 1,200 tons of north-northeast of Saigonf Part bombs, along the Cambodidn of the target was within a mile border northeast of Saigon. [of the border The new raids came on the bailie Uii me heels of a report from U.S. offi-. dais in Washington that the Nixon administration is pre-~ paredToTiegotiate an end to the the ^lorth Vietnamese and Viet-cong de-escalate the war. U.S. headquarters said eight In the ground war, a Viet-cong force upset a U: S. Marine ambush early today, then attacked the patrol after it re- bT; r, an ena 10 me tacked the patrol after it re- J®”-3 *” S°uth Vietnam if treated, killing two Marines and the*N<srt.h Vipfnnmotto anrl ■** ^ The fight took place 26 miles south of Da Nang.. As the Amarines waited in hiding, the Viet-cong shelled the patrol, indicating they knew where the Marines were! The attack caused no casual-^ i ties, but the Marines went scur-' rying back to their base. Half an hour later the Vietcong attacked them. ~ “ r~~' North Vietnamese troops at- tacked a night bivouac position of the U.S. 1st Air Cavalry Divi* in 58 miles northwest qf Saigon, wounding eight Americans. The enemy soldiers were driven back by artillery and helicopter fire, but their losses were not known. , U.S. headquarters reported '31 enemy rocket and mortar ay lacks overnightTn which eight Americans, were wounded. SIMMS OPEN T0NITE ’til 9jSS SAT. HOURS; 9 am to 9 pm wounding 11. Headquarters said, "Enemy losses are unknown' at this time.” "TT^TTHORTILU FAUIUHT WS1HWUWR Reynolds Softeners Dealers Suing Mobil Oil DETROIT (UPI) - A $10- Mobil Oil, Corp., charging the! AUTOMATIC /)l-AUTOMATIC SEMI SALES-RENTALS ^RlflCE— TRADE-IN YOUR PRESENT SOFTENER million damage suit has been filed by 14 Detroit area Mobil gas station managers against Jesuit College Unit Has a Lay Majority BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) the first time in its 100-year history, Jesuit-run Cahisius College has ^laymen on its governing board, and they form a majority, A ★ ‘ I The Very Rev* James M. Demske, Canisius president, an-1 j nounced Thursday the seven lay appointments to the board of trustees. He said he and four other priests would remain on the body. ■ ★ ★ * ,| Father Demske said the rest; lot the 25-member board—10 IffiOre laymen and three Jesuits —would be appointed next I month. . .____________ company with rigging wholesale prices of oil products. * ★ *___________ Filing the suit yesterday oh I behalf of all Mobil dealers in the state, the managers charged Mobil has “intimidated various of the plaintiffs as well as other Mobil dealers with the threats to cancel their leases, arbitrary and capricious refusal to renew and by threatening to raise leases as they come up for renewaT to an unconscionable percentage.” The suit Was filed in'Wayne County Circuit. Court. The 14 managers said they were acting on behalf of Vail members of the public who are affected by the illegal and discriminatory pricing policies” of Mobil. PRESCRIPTIONS AT MY COST PLUS A MAX. 1.50 PROFESSIONAL FIE DELL'Sbhbbb prescription center 219 Baldwin PE 4*2620 Introducing new, improved Armstrong flooring. With hair. For pooplo who sit on the floor. .Residents in Independence Have Water, Gan t Use It THE PONTIAC PRESS FRIDAY, 'SEPTEMBER 19; 19«9 A—4 ha News : INDEPENDEN6E- TOWNSHIP -Residents living in the Woodhull Lake area of the township are ^suffering from contact the jfrater has with sa^fd or any of the equipment in the construction area can throw the testing off/’ The water is there, but they cannot , have it. * * * * The 'approximate 30 property owners Mth dry wells are waiting for, the Oakland County Health Department to lethplete tests "n watpr that is being piped into the Pinedale, Clinton, Lake- !iew and Hillcrest Street district via enjporary pipeline. 1 ; Initial samples taken from the new Jibe have indicated that*the water is not gpt suitable for drinking. Further tests Ire to be taken today. *OK UNLIKELY TILL MONDAY’ Township Clerk Howard Altman said he does not expect the Health Department to approve the water for public use intitMunday morning:----------- “This is not to say that the watep is contaminated. In the testing process, any “Contrary to rumors we have not turned on the water and will not until we have complete apprval from the County Health Department,’’ Altman noted. Altman also/asserted that residents living in the adjacent Pelton Heights subdivision who have charged that' their water supply , is being strained are misinformed. AUTHORIZED USE The" temporary line installation has been tapped off the Pelton Heights water system. “Before we constructed the temporary line the State Health Department authorized using wateF from the Pelton Heights subdivision. There is enough water in that system to supply 100 additional homes ~ — don’t own that water system. They only pay for services from it and cannot control it. The township is the owner and controlling authority of the water Heart Repair for Oakland Twp. Lad, 8 “The residents have to realize they system," Altm Construction crews have completed the laying of about one mile of pipeline.-About 600 feet more is needed in order to ~ service all homes without water in the district, WATER FROM TANK Residents have obtained water from a tank furnished by the County Department of Public Works since wells went dry nearly two weeks ago. Altman said that the bill for the temporary line project, which he estimates will be in the $6,000 range, will be presented to the County l)PW. ___“The county has made arrangements to finance the Waterford Township water relief projects and there is no reason the county can’t do the same for residents in Independence Township,’’ , A11 hi a n declared. Boy Faces Rare Surgery Politics or Fear of Nude Movies? Plan for 3rd Theater Snagged By NED ADAMSON •BIRMINGHAM - The City Commission is either caught up in a little ~ pbHucal pressure or is Ifriid America's gHIt nudity drive plight invade Birmingham,— A Detroit investor,» Stewart Gorlick, who wants to establish a small theater hire, which he insists will not show “JHide specials” such as “I Am Curious (fPoW)," believes the problem is pities. > 'The difficulty stems from Gorlick’s • attempt to remodel a vacant auto-dealer showroom into what he calls a “small, intimate cinema operation that would present selected films in good taste and npqpbjectionable to Birmingham rigjdents." •fhe city fathers reportedly have told (Sbrlick they have delayed action on his request in order to learn more about the intended filmfare and appointments of tap theater. Naws Analysis “It is obvious that owners of the other two theaters are putting pressure on the commission to keep us from putting in OAKLAND TOWNSHIP - Michael Hewitt’s mother will not wake him up for school Monday. Instead a nurse will begin to prepare him for his second major heart operation. — Mike Hewitt is-# years old. His operation wifi be dif--ficult. It’s the first time such surgery has been performed at Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit. If it succeeds, Mike will M*? be normal and will MICHAEL be able to run and play”like other children. Mike, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hewitt, 1435 Gunn, was bom with four major heart defects. He’s been in and out of hospitals since he was 14 months old. * * * His first operation was corrective to reroute the oxygen through his heart, which has a hole in it. Six years ago, doctors didn’t know how long the surgerv Would keep Mike alive. They knew it was possible for Mike’s condition to reverse itself at any time. The city has had a moritorium on issuance of building permits because of revamping of the ordinances concerning helghLof buildings in and near the community’s central business district. * * * Gorlick maintained at a recent commission meeting that his proposed alterations Would not increase the height of the existing structure. ‘t h h “Our plans for the building are in complete conformance With the present commerical zoning. I am sure that the only reason the commission has held up action on the building permit is because of pressure from owners of the two existing theaters in Birmingham,” Gorlick declared. DOWN THE STREET The other two thegtersv in the city, owned by United Theatres InC. of Detroit, a division of ABC-Paramount, are just down the street from Gorlick’s proposed new cinema. * * * Gorlick said his proposed theater would—be similar to the Studio chain operation in' metropolitan Detroit which specializes in foreign and American think-type films, ★ t ★ “A theater of thjs type is needed in Birmingham and would prove to be very beneficial to the community,” Gorlick said.; Birmingham’s two exisiting threaten specialize in generai-interest-famlly fare. DOING IT OVER Monday the doctors hope to perform the first surgery over again and to correct all the1 other defects. It’s possible now because last spring (Dr. Eduardo Arciniegas came to Ford Hospital. He’s the only surgeon at Ford capable of performing the operation. Ford ls> now the fifth hospital in the country equipped to handle such a case. * w w Mike will live with a heart pump throughout the entire operation. His small body’s vital signs will be checked and rechecked while doctor’s delicately piece together a heart that should function as any 8-year-old’s does. ★ :■ ★ ★ Money isn’t the only problem for Mike’s father, a Consumers Power Co. credit representative. The hospital wants the family to arrange a way to resnpply the blood used during the operation. It takes 12 pints of blood just to prime the heart pump. NOT ALL CAN HELP Mrs. Hewitt has asked neighbors to halp give blood, if they can. As usual some are willing, but many are reluctant or, because of illness, find they cannot give blood. Though Mike understands a little of the operation, he’s thinking-of what Officers Elected by Avon's School for Leader Dogs AVON TOWNSHIP - Basil M. Briggs of 900 Brood wood, Birmingham, was elected president of Leader Dogs for. the Blind recently at the school’s annual board meeting. Sr * * Briggs, an attorney with Evans, Boyer, Luptak and Briggs of Birminghtum, replaces Carlton M. Hlgbie of the Higbie Manufacturing Co., Rochester. Higbie will remain ah active trustee of the organization, a United Fund Agency, .★ * * Other recently elected officers include Harold L. Pocklington, vice president; Martin S. Hayden, secretary; and William S. Hickey, treasurer. LeadecDogs for the Blind, 1039 ,S. Rochester, graduated 172 leader dogs during the fiscal year ending June 30, 1969. * * Future plans call tor additional kennel, space due to an increasing demand for leader dogs., German shepherds, Labrador ami golden retrievers and malamutes, 1 to 2 years of age are accepted lor training if they qualify in a carefully conducted screening test. he’ll be able to do after he comes home from •the hospital, * * * “Mike’s just thrilled with the idea of being normal and being able to fun With the other children,” said Mrs,, Hewitt. “He already has plans to go horseback riding as soon as he comes home/’ if ★ if A few months ago Mike’s father bought him a minibike to ride around the house and visit the neighborhood children. * *-■' *.... • Before, If. Mike had to walk over to their houses he’d have to lie on the grass a while and build up his strength tb walk back home. With the minibike, he scoots over to his friends easily and has even worn a path by riding around and around the house for hours on end. SOMETHING TO PULL FOR His mother said the minibike also gives ‘ Mike something “to pull Mr" during and after the operation. * * A Mrs, Hewitt said Mike’s-personality has undergone a change because he spends so much time in the hospital. “He worries a lot and cr|es and sometimes is irritable,” she said. “I. think it’s hpransp he’s tired and wonders if he’ll be put back in school.” ★ ★ ★ Mike’s in the: third grade at North Hill Elementary School, Rochester. Even though he’s been In the hospital "at least four months each year,” he’s managed to keep up with his classmates. But this year looks difficult. Mike will need two weeks to recpvef In the hospital and at least two week* at home if the operation is successful. A tutor will come to the house for the last two weeks. ★ ★ ♦ Mrs. Hewitt- said Mike loves to get cards. There’s a bulletin board in the children’s wing at Henry Ford Hospital. "Mike feels just wonderful when there's a card with his name on the board,” she said. Sen. Huber Faces Democratic Club Members Conservative Confronts i . . By T. LARRY ADCOCK TROY -r- Robert J. Huber, the noted conservative, and some 25 members of the Troy Democratic Club, notably liberal, last night staged an approach-avoidance confrontation of ideology. Huber — the fire-eating conservative who represents the 16th District in the Michigan Senate (Royal Oak north to Rochester, Bloomfield Township east to Clawson) — proved disappointing to some, but always genial. Lightly taunted by his political foes, Sen. Huber generally gingerly avoided answers to direct questions. Haws Analysts Probably the only positive declaration made by the senator , waa^’Roaer Crate (D-Dearborn. an outspoken liberal) and I are the only two men in the Senate who stand for definite ideologies. CfBCAL REFORM "I’m not like a former governor who campaigned on ,the ‘fiscal reform’ theme. What does ‘fiscal reform’ mean apyway? To the senior citizens on fixed incomes, it is designed to mean ‘111 get some tax relief/: To the giant cor-' potation, it means ‘I’ll get a fair shake,’ Huber said; /'‘The term ‘fiscal reform’ is designed .to mean so many (kings to go many people that It has become meaningless. I’m S guy — and so is Roger , (Craig) ** who puts, his ideas <• Straight on the table. Everyone knows the rules of the game when I campaign,” Huber said. Huber, the owner of six industrial plants in six states and a six-year mayor of his home city of Troy, recently bolted the Senate G0P caucus. :___/‘I walked out of that Republican caucus because it no loader reflected the will of the majority,” Huber explained. "I’m hot thewnly one who quits caucuses,” Huber said. “A full year before I quit, Sen, Basil Brown (D-Hlghipnd Park, a black liberal) dropped out of his Democratic caucus. He hasn’t gone back and neither will I. -■ “I suggested to Basil that we form the Afro-American Bund caucus,” Huber said. The most important principal of politics he believes, is the condept that power is held by the electorate. “That’s what .1 believe In above all else,” be expounded, “power to the people.” PANTHER SLOGAN An audience member noted that “power to the people” was not only a “Huberlsm,” but was also the slogan of the revolutionary Black Panther party. , “Do I look like a Black Panther?” Huber exploded, refusing to answer the accompanying question: “Do you agree then4 with the philosophy 6f the Black Panthers?” .... * w. ........ ......... Huber chopped away at his familiar targets: Oakland University Chancellor Durward Varner for his alleged allowing of “immoral” activities on the OU campus,, “Hie protest bit,” and sex education in public schools. “I do not believe that just because you have Van Cliburn on the one hand, you can burn the flag on the other,” Huber said, referring fo militant campus demonstrations. ‘JUST CAN'T ACCEPT* “I simply cannot accept the philosophy of a university chancellor (Varner) who says he will ‘tolerate anything on campus until someone complains,’ ” Huber declared. Huber Claimed that students in the OU fine arts department were in the habit Of creating plaster-of-paris male sex organs and that this was part of the “age of permissiveness” tolerated by Chancellor Varner. * * Prompted to explain an apparent contradiction — his “powpr to the people” philosophy and his objection to Varner’s “toleration of anything until someone complains” tenet — Huber said;, * , “1 think we can change things by our greatest power — the 'I Never Agreed With The Korean War And I Don't Agree With The Vietnam War. Nd One Voted Whether We Should Send Our Boys Off To War, And I Think That Vote Should Be Held Nationally' —State Son. Robert J. Huber. vote. We don’t have to protest in the streets or destroy property to change philosophies.” ‘LET PEOPLE DECIDE’ Huber suggested that the people decide what heretofore the politicians decided for them, in keeping with his “power to the people” theme: “We should vote by referendum on all matters of policy — the state income tax, the open-housing question and property taxes,” Hubert declared. , ★ a * Asked If morality could be decided by referendum, Huber said, “Yes. There would probably be one questiomper year — and I’m sure the majority would vote it down. *T never agreed with the Korean war and I don’t agree with the Vietnam war. No one voted whether we should send our boys off to war, and I think that vote should be held nationally,” Huber said. NON VOTERS HIT 1 “Anyone who sits home and doesn’t vote, who doesn’t become politically jplve, can’t be an Intelligent citizen.” be said. . Huber said that .majority agreement was the road to change. * ★ ★ “Sen. Huber, would you abide by w majority referendum decision that you be executed?,” asked a long-haired aq-dlencp member. "Ask me something sensible’’ Huber snapped. ‘DOES IT TRANSCEND?’ “Then you do agree that sometimes a minority right or morality transcends majority rule?;” the questioner persisted. On his activity in the Special Senate Committee , to Investigate Campus Disorder, Huber said: “I never wanted the committee assignment. It just came tome. It’s very difficult — especially as a conservative — to run a committee like that. You get the McCarthy-heaHngs stuff, thrown aj you right away.” Huber said he had assembled “the best brains In Michigan” on the committee, which will soon make -tycoirv mentations on legislation — or no legislation — to respond to campus disorders. “One thing we do know,” Huber commented, “is 'that we cannot allow violent, revolutionary-minded groups % take over our campuses.” ON SEX EDUCATION On the sex education attack, Huber pointed out: ^ i “In California — which is not exactly a neanderthal community — they have banned SIECUS (Sex Information and Education Council of the United States, which s<*Se have labeled a Communist front group j.!- • / . “I fail Jo see why we need a totally integrated sex education program in grades kindergarten through 12. THfe sex education bill —* which I voted was designed to cooperate with parentai wiM. . t> “The parent was supposed to fit able to pull his chiU from the sex education'class if he wished. Hwidoep g, parent pull his child from a totally integrated dex education program without completely removing him frofn school?” Huber askpd, / , . > t ‘ . .Huber declared that he would rfot accept Republican nominations for either the Michigan gubernatorial race qr the upcoming U.S. Senate contest. * V , < THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1969 A—5 Armstrong carpet! ng is new tough, soft, clean. And in vour neighbornood now $•• page A-3 The Floor Shop 2255 Elizabeth Lake Road Pontiac — 682-4421 A Look at TV Networks Starting to Viewers busily loaded in a special to conflict with them. It was called “The Time of Man" and was based, up to a point, on some unusual film and commentary obtained through the Afnerican Museum of Natural History. — By CYNTHIA LOWRY AP Television-Radio Writer NEW YORK — Network television now is overfeeding its viewers as extravagantly as it starved him during the summer famine. With ABC-and NBC present-;' -ing on Thursday night the sea- The P0^ ot H program was sort premieres of some of their that man is in danger of bring-most popular programs—“That'ing about his own extinction by Girl,” “Bewitched,” “Dani^his intemperance—hardly a nov-Boone” and “Ironside” — CBS'el TV theme. The' program began by ex-lqges-old ritual of warfare and plaining the' chemistry pf the reprisal, so pld that it has lost! world’s creation and moved, step! Its meaning, by step, through the age of dino- The program made its point saurs. The program was most'about the futility of war. But interesting when4t lingered on then it moved on to a portion^ sequences showing the tribal that seemed to belong to characteristics of some primi- other program. This was aj-tive African tribes. - montage of old and recent film CHILDEN TURNED OUT clips that in a few minutes ran Some film showed one tribe in ^ou8h h.istory fr°m the time film was invented until the as-1 which each man and woman tronauts-stei YOU CAN ALWAYS FIGURE ON SAVINGS FROM FRETTER EVERYTHING IS READY . Hurry now, every store is stacked full of new 1970 appliances, TV's and stereos all priced to sell quick, immediate delivery easy instant credit! Installation and service included in all prices. OLLIE FRETTER Cvorantmlwr Complete Solilfatliti t*29995 *T99 FAMOUS MASK II1* PORTAILE TV. Inti ill 0*. Front Contrail, Tolo-•co,o Ant......................... *99" "st29 is - HOTFOIUTI1ICTAIC1AHQE, SoH, cloon, white, Start onO Stop' Timor............... s *99*® ZENITH Early American STEREO. Maple Finish, AM-FM Stereo Radio, Solid I---------- *59“ SS2M5S..SSIS SOQ95 lyiiralohod................... Uil WHIRLPOOL ELECTRIC DRYER, 1- *89** takes care of his own needs without any feeling toward his! * * * fellow man and where childrenj, Its*sudden change of style and] turned out to fend for them- message suggested there was selves at the age of 3. An-just not enough museum film to j other tribe was shown in an i fill the hour. . ! People in the News’ By the Associated Press Debbie Reynolds, who quit her new television series because the network ran a cigarette commercial, accompanying its premiere, has decided to carry on i/fter all. She said yesterday NBC had explained to her that it could not jettison such commercials because it had a contractual commitment with the American Brands Co. The show had its premiere Tuesday night. Miss Reynolds quit the next day, citing the cigarette ad. “I was especially concerned because of the’ number of ^ildren viewing early time-slot programs,” she said. Her contract calls for 24 shows, of which 10 have been taped. 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In. porioW* color TV) 21.S00 v*l»f •» A.F.Crfotttomatl* fin* liming control), grained hollo, price, »olid »ioio/lubo chot.it, 2 otago IP plcluro power to pull In thoradi.tont .tottoni, walnut tlnldi cnWnol. 25,000 twin ol pkluw power, omelifi.r, dipolo ulutoplng rn‘1--------. 22,000- UHF-VHF lor hill TV viewing and itaytot volume 2 clog* IF amplifior, illumlnalod opol III* dialc. volt. of ntalura powor. ranlrol.*il.t cl«-.lcfc.l«. *199 MRliirlpool 2 CYCLE 6AS DRYER 2 drying cycloo for regular or ponnanont, pr.u fabric*, damp dry ratting. l*yo forgo FRETTER’S FRETTER’S PONTIAC SOUTHFIELD FRETTER’S OAKLAND Mfv S. Telegraph Ad. . On Ttlegrdph Road HIM* loot* Ot (TOkor* Ufc* M. Joot loot* oMIMi* M. 411 W. 14 Mila Road •*0*0*1 fottoo* Moll FE 3-1051 358-2880 ■go* Dolly IM, loada* IM' •F** »*il* IM, looOojr IM 585-5300 In* 8*% tit* 1-s.ra.y »1*7 JAILED 37 YEARS BY MISTAKE—Pardoned i>y Kansas Gov. Robert Docking, Frank Sawyer (center), 70, walks from the Kansas State Prison yesterday at Lansing, Kan., after Serving 37 years for a 1932 bank robbery which he did not commit. At right are his nephews, Bill Sawyer and Wayne Sawyer (right) of Odessa, Tdx., where Sawyer will make . his home. DEBBIE Sinatfa Family Plays Las Vegas Strip' A father and two of his children headline different shows tonight on the Las | Vegas strip. Their name: Sinatra. Frank opens a three-week engagement at Caesars Palace. Nancy is finishing at the International Hotel. Frank Jr. is near the end of a stand at the Frontier Hotel. By juggling their hours, each ' NANCY will attend the others’ shows. FRANK Singer Reports $94,000 Theft Singer Connie. Stevens says someone stole |94,000 in jewels from her room at the Landmark Hotel in Las Vegas yesterday while she was performing. She told police she lost a $17,000 diamond 1 bracelet,' a $10,000 necklace and# $5,009 gold compact, among other items. COrfNIE Barrymore Faces Trial on Drug Charge Actor John Drew Barrymore has been ordered to stand trial. In Indio,' Calif., Superior Court Oct. 7 on charges of possessing marijuana and barbituates. The trial date was set yesterday. Barrymore, 37, is free on $1,250 bail. He was attested Aug. 4 after an auto accident near Palm Springs. Police said they found packages of the drugs under a seat of his car. Astronaut Joins LA Brokerage Firm Astronaut Alan Shepard has joined the new Los Angeles' brokerage firm Of Thomas, Power & Coogan as a non-voting partner. He said in an interview many astronauts are going into side businesses that do not conflict with their duties as spacemen. He will have no regular work With the firm but will drop in occasionally to look after His investments. “We’ve got to look ahead to the time when we’re too old to be flying around in rockets," he said. Shepard hecame the nation’s first sub-orbital space flier when he rode a Mercury capsule, 116.5 miles, above the earth on May 5, 1961. He is slated to command the future flight of Apollo 14. VERY PROPER PICKETS’— Typically British bowlers, umbrellas And well-polished boots toark tills picket line in London yesterday as insurance office staffs protest working -conditions at the Guardian’ Royal Exchange Assurance Group. SHEPARD She Gets Custody, Alimony—No Divorce Thp daughter of former Venezuelan President Marcos Perez Jimenez has been granted custody-of her two children, alimony and child support—but.no divorce from her husband. Margott Brook, 23, was granted custody of Margo Alejandro, 5, and Lee Marcos, 2, plus $75 a week in payments by her husband, onetime Miami Beach carhop Lee Brook, 24. The unusual “alimony without divorce” arrangement was ordered by Miami Circuit Court Judge George E. Schulz because the couple did not meet Florida’s six-month residency requirement. They have been married since July 24, 1963. SUDS FOE TARZAN — Earl Pottinger, foreman of the nearly 1-year-old lion, the soap-and-water treatment. * ';r/, f *»• * Art Buy Takes Imagination NEW YORK (AP) — More eluding Beatle John Lennon, his than 200 art patrons and-celebrl-1 wife Yoko Ono, actor Richard ties are being offered the Burton and financier Howard chance to buy an object d’art Hughes, which they will never see, which There actually will be an ob-will never be described to them! ject and it will be placed some-and whose creator Will never be ( where, aPrrish hastened to as-identified to them. ‘ sure an interviewer. A signed' | "We want the' owner to be certificate from a lawyer attest-! free to imagine what the object tog to this will be placed to a Is,” explains Tojn Parrish*, 27, bank and the buyer* will get a spokesman for a gjtoup of young hill of sale, artists, who thought up the '* * * Isqheme. | Then it is up to the owner.‘‘It * * - | is going to create for the owner The group mailed out letters a new sort of identity withevery Monday soliciting bids on tile object,” said Parrish. “It’s pos-nevoNo4)Moon>j»y-the-b u y e r stole for him to think every ob-t art from a variety of persons in- ject is his at one time.” BOAT OR BUOY? — This round sailboat that can navi- » gate itself for a year without being touched by man is being developed by RCA for oceanographic And other missions. The unmanned craft, which looks more like a buoy than a sailboat, has rigid plastic foam-filled sails and is capabla of remaining at one point at sea for up to a year until a mooring. It is called a SKAMP — Station Keeping and Mobile Platform. ’ ' THE PONTIAC PRESS Pontiac, Michigan 48056 8 West Huron Street FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1969 HAROLD A. FITZGERALD Fublnhw 1*36-1*66 RICHARD M. SAUNDERS Municipal Bonds Slump The malm"of finance is~ subject------ - to many and diverse pressures a barometer of which is to be found in the ebb and flow of the bond market. Currently municipal bonds, which governmental units rely on to fund capital improvements, seem to be going begging. A local offering of $9 million to build a new jail, and two others in nearby communities totaling $1.430'million found no bidders. Wayne County has been unable to. sell $69 million in bonds for airport improvements. The rate of interest on the unsubscribed securities was a tax-free 6 per cent—the maximum permitted by State law. ★ ★ ★ Investor indifference to what would ordinarily be considered excellent investment opportuni-—ties is attributable to the sea«.T-~ ty of money, the higher interest rates paid on industrial bonds (eyen though , they are taxable) — and the 9-10 per cent interest financial institutions—the prih- -cipal bidders on State and municipal bonds—now charge on commercial loans. -significant, is the uncertainty concerning final action the Congress will take respecting the elimination of tax exemptiori for municipal bonds, one of the provisions of the House-passed tax-reform bill now before the Senate. Should the upper house go along on this point, state and local governments would have to raise the interest ceiling, on their bond offerings to keep competitive for investment capital. Until final version of the'tax-reform bill clarifies the tax status of such securities, capital funds for public projects are likely to be hard to find. ✓ Like Charity, it Should Begin At Home! ___It is a reasonable assumption, however, that before ibe bill be-comes law, the Senate will have-rejected House action on the controversial exemption issue, thereby restoring public ac-ceptance of State and municipal securities and making available the dollars continually needed by divisions of government. David Lawrence Saysr Nixon Puts Challenge to U.N. WASHINGTON - President Nixon in his speech yesterday laid before the United Nations Maps Chart Landscape Shift Next tactile daily newspaper and the telephone bookr^the-publieation-most used and most often taken for granted as a source of instant infor-mation is probably the lowly road map. The above profundity is inspired by one of those usually useless press releases with which the incoming mail is always stuffed and finds its way to newspaper editorial desks. Somewhere on every road map is a town or place that doesn’t exist. The imaginary name is put in to foil copyright infringements, according to travel authority Lester B. Dill. J#'; . ★ ★ ★ All right, let’s consider the-____lowly road map and how it has grown. ★ ★ ★ i* . Maps have come a long way since oil companies began handing them out in 1918, and an even longer way ried such instructions as: ‘‘Turn left at blaeksmith ahop and proceed two_ miles to crossroad at white fence near old sycamore tree ..— Today, more than 300 million maps are printed and distributed free at gas stations every year, and the average modern map contains 20 categories of supplemental information besides the necessary colored lines, route numbers and place names. Another profound thought occurs: A collection of all the maps published in the past half-century would con-stitute an unusual and-graphic record of how the nationaUandscape has been transformed by the automobile. Some people save old license plates. Surely someone must have a chronological set of road maps for his home state. . * ★ ★ Now, if only they’ll come up with a self-folding map—THAT will be worth an editorial. to live up to the purposes of its charter and find a way to end the war in -Vietnam—.___J Nixon emphasized that it is the right of the people of every country “to determine their own destiny without outside interference” and that “as tong as we live with die threat of aggression, we need physical restraints to contain it.” in a collective effort to bring peace? Will the United Nations take over the main responsibility through the supervision of elections and the maintenance of a peace-keeping force? ‘ v The occupation of Eastern Europe by the Russians is a; tragic example of the futility of the U. N. and the failure of the free nations to unite in preserving territorialintegrity and political independence. * * * Will the U.< N. now do ^-something to unite the world on this issue? President Nixon has posed the question at an opportune time. lyrtthl. »♦**. Publishtn-Htll Syndlcalal LAWRENCE Bob Considine Asks: Will Survivors of Viet Share Fate of Old Vets? Yet the United Nations is NEW YoRK ~ There were doing nothing in that direc- Pieces in the PaP®rs the other -31 *—ss----------------: z us-------»---A At- -m-A-----i— -t World Wars and the one in Korea could ever get old and, tion. Even the exercise diplomatic influence is at a »standstill as most of the countries of the world. have adopted an attitude o f aloofness. They mistakenly believe their own safety Jies in such a course. Nixon pointed out that, while the United States at the end of World War II “assumed the major responsibility for world peace” because it had sufficient strength, the Miniskirt Seen as Driving Aid Tha^ miniskirt, while it may fall short in some respects, has won the praise of an insurance company as a safe-driving costume. The miniskirt gives a woman greater leg freedom for easier braking and acceleration, says Aetna Insurance and Casualty. The actuaries now,join millions of male pedestrians who have long been giving nods of approval to miniskirted motorists—usually when viewed from jb high curb as they stop for a light or round a corner. Okinawa Still Thorny for US., Japan Hay about the171st reunion of in gome eases, tiresome.— the veterans -------- Nguyen Cao Ky (with the consent of his boss, President Thieu) must have gotten' a kick out of upsetting the carefully laid plans of Presi-dent Nlxon and the U S. 'brass in South Vietnam, on the matter of the new troop withdrawal plans. - Ky scooped Washington and Gen. Abrams by about 24 hours. Nixon was described as LBJ used to get when there was a “leak” in a story which he was looking forward to releasing with a' flare of bugles and the ringing of church bells. * * * Ky (and to a perhaps lesser degree) Thieu just doesn’t like the way we’re running this war. He thinks that if we ‘ insist on fighting a limited war we should have stayed home and let the South Vietnamese try to win it. He has the odd notion (best expressed li active interest in peace in ha<l studied, anout ms war, Nawleon^ Ma^R^ “elc 1" Vietnam now take an active which in effect made America ^ V.u U ,CAvnur’ Vietnam now take an active _ ,,,_________^nr nnH that the best way to get out of Voice of the People: Waterford Sc Have Support of Reader I cast a vote , of approval for the Waterford school board, and particularly to the administrative leaders. I have a child on half-day sessions and certainly would like him on full days; however, I blame the antimillage voters and not the above mentioned groups for Waterford’s present dilem-zfflfc Let’s help our school system by intelligent criticism and not inane stone throwing. MRS, JAY BERES 3003 ST. JUDE, DRAYTON PLAINS Voices Objection to Human Relations Meet .1 express objection to the so-called human relations meetings and feel that the public and decent teachers are due an apology. Those who found fault with parts of the program were branded “Birchsrs.” Those who objected to the vulgar language were told to get out if they didn’t like it, while others who disagareed were tabled white racist. The sensitivity type of program and the high pressure coercion are a part of the procedure used by the Communists to break down morals. ★ ★ ★ Teaching and working with Pontiac schools and their employes, I find it a fine educational system. I doubt the “ per cent agreement figure quoted so often about those who favored what went on In the meetings. The students and parents for the most part did not represent the students and parents I have taught and worked with, black or white. Tfiere are things in our society which are not right. The problem is still sin and the oply cure is a personal relationship with Jesus Christ. \ ‘ ’ NORMAN CLOTHER \ YOUTH FOR CHRIST DIRECTOR -tParcprtff~Sholuld Stop Bickering on Schools11 Are parents concerned about their children’s education and ability to get aIong\with others? For the most part, the answer is an emphatic nq. Parents are concerned only with their own greedy desires and personal prestige. We should be ashamed. We bicker when our children are unable to attend a new school or aren’t bussed to school, while others are. Most aiarmlng is the attitude-kparentswhen. their children ~~ are to attend school with thoseNof a different color." It is time parents learn and pass on to their children the talent of being tolerant of others. Until tiuar is accomplished, this bickering will never diminish. \ SHARON CASCADDAN 3&W. COLGATE ‘Will Urge Support for Judgeflay ns worth' I am a member of the UAW and have said nothing about the nomination of Judge Haynsworth of the UJS. Supreme Court, Therefore, the people who released that news should speak for themselves or check with all of the UAW members first. If the UAW and the NAACP are against Judge Haynsworth, he must be a Rood man, so I am writing the two #ena-tors of Michigan asking them to vote in favor of him. I hope a jot of other peoplp will do ih«» same. Row many UAW mem-bers had a voice in the $500,000 that Walter Reuther gave to Marshall Tito? \ HAROLD A. DAVIDSON JR. \ Question and Answer In a previons answer you stated that legally a divorce cannot be canceled over the telephone, but had to be done In writing. II a divorce suit was (topped over the phone after papers were served, can It be reinstated to action without paying an additional fee to the lawyer? B. LEE REPLY ----—W_g don’t remember making any siirh <tfnte. ment about canceling divorce actions. Furthermore, fees charged by attorneys would vary from case to case, and we cannot advise you on legal matters such as this: time has come for peoples everywhere to realize that one nation cannot do It all. REMINDED U.N. Nixon reminded the general assembly that the United States halted the bombing of North Vietnam nearly a year ago and that troop withdrawals on a large scale have been started. The lack of response from Hanoi, he argued, “makes it urgent that the U. N. members — those ill this room — who have long takep not Kennedy. The gaffers, all in their 80s and 90s, sounded off in a ciear cackle. i * ______it “Adventure,” one old guy ” answered to a reporter’s question of why he had volunteered. “It didn’t have a damn thing to. do w ft h patriotism- It was the excitement and the adventure.” Another veteran was miffed because Ike had stopped a group of high school students and asked them what they had studied, about his war. By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign News Analyst On the issue of O k 1 n a w a both the United States and Japan are practicing diploma tlc| brinkmanship. Prior to the! arrival of Jap-1 anese Foreign! Minister Kiichil ~T8r~Bnr~WfliiP'| ington meeting! with Secretary! of State Wll-I liam P. Rogers! it had been hoped that conditions for the return of Okinawa to Japan could bo settled between the two, needing only th e formality of approval by President Nixqn and Prime Minister Elssku Sato in NEWSOM Instead, nothing has been settled and Aichi has. predicted frankly that final terms probably, will not be settled until the last day of the Nixon-Sato meeting, scheduled In Washington for Nov. lttl. The difficulty to that, while agreeing Okinawg must be to Japanese io two ap- proached the problem from different angles. DEPENDENT ON RETURN The Sato government has staked Its life on the return of Okinawa in 1972 and approaches it as a political problem. Okinawa is the United States’ most strategic base to thi Pacific and the United “‘•State)! tberdfofrfe approaeirerir as a military problem. ★ ★ ★ Japan agrees that the United'States may keep its bases on Okinawa hut demands that they be governed by the same rules u$ are American bases to Japan. These riiles would require that the United States consult with Japan prior to the dispatch of U.S. forces from Okinawa on an offensive mission and the removal of nuclear weapons from the bases. FREE USE The United States says it Must have “free” use of the bases if ft to to carry out its obligations to defend Japan and the rest of Ana. Reportedly, ft would be .willing to remove its nuclear weapons to peace time but demands tpe right to return them to the event of a threat to Formosa, the Philippines or South Korea.______ ★ ★ * The Japanese hold there to no possibility of ah outside threat to the Philippines and they fear the effect of their relations with Red China if they agree to toe inclusion of hand in achieving it.”' * * dr So Nixon is fully justified to calling for active participation by the United Nations. He did not specify any military moves or offer any proposal for collective action. While the United States has a few allies to Vietnam, the President made a broad appeal to the U.N. for its cooperation. Without the help of the rest Fftrmffis In ths anu oi e a r Of, the world in Vietnam., the def^eperi^terT^hey to an-international power, and none of them had ever heard of ft. The' U.S. suffered 385 battle deaths during the four-month span of the conflict. t: * ★ ★ ■■ The veterans had two things in common: their yellowed newspaper dippings and their strong disapproval of today’s anti-Vietnam youths. “What’s wrong with them,” one said, “to that they’re afraid to face the bullet.” a bloody war is to win ft. I’ve paid for a correspondence course through Modern Upholstery Institute, P.O. Box Ml, Orange, Calif. I enrolled in Juno 1H4, bat through circumstances beyond my control I didn’t finish the course. It’s been a long time, toil l*d still like to finish. Would this be possible without paying % ft a second time? MRS, N, A. 1719 t# „REPLY The school director regrets there is a time limit of three years, and says several letters were sent to you asking you about completing the course. However, he still has your file, and said he would examine it to tee if some payment at-jamaementMightht mud* an ym rnn complete the course more easily. You can expect a letter from him. Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Old Chutes Philadelphia Inquirer Considering the vast amount of effort that has gone forced to land wherever the winds may carry him. The Naval Air Development Center at Johnsonville, Pa., says that It took the combat In the past, Congress h4s given the military carte blanche for its expendHnres. Fear of Russia and the need to oppose communism prompt- smara would permit ft to the case of South Korea. Bee o min g inextricably .bound up also to the U.S.*. Japan negotiations over Okinawa to the equally thorny problem of economic relations between the two. , ★ a ★ For the return of Okinawa and the other Ryukyu Islands captured to World War H, the United States wants, other than purely military concessions. For Instance, ft , .wants Japan to impose self-restrictions on sale of textiles, electronic items and steel. It also wants Japan to lift its own restrictions on U.S. investments to Japan. Both sides know that eventually a compromise must be reached. But neither so far has budgad from its tough to withdraw virtually all of its forces within two or three years. COLLECTIVE EFFORT Will the other countries join Verbal Orchids Mr. and Mrs. Winfred Sellars of West Bloomfield Township; 53rd wedding anniversary. __ Charles Crowe of Utica; 96tb birthday. Henry W. Axford Sr. of Rochester; 91st birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Will the veterans of Vietnam ever get that old? Will they ever sit around In, on or off their rockers, trying to get the young people of the yews 2040 to hold still long enough to tell ’em what it was really like around Da Nang and in the Mekong? Hard to believe ... just as - „. it was hard to believe thatthe ?^npt developmenttoreaenTyears ft is somewhat ironic that crewmen of military aircraft must still depend on the same basic style of parachutes that ’’■"Wore available from the earliest day of aviation._ The Navy to to be congratulated, it seems to us, In being the first to make a to find brave lads who came home proudly' from the two big of 143 Thorpe; 52nd wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Bert Frank of Kacheeter; 60th wedding anniversary. “something better. •k Sr * , . Its award of a $100,000 contract for development of an airplane <ejectioo seat that can fly itself for 50 miles after separation from Us aircraft may well be a landmark to aviation science. The specific aim of the device tin Navy has in mind is to enable a pilot whose plane is seriously damaged in n combat area to reach some specific point where rescue to provide flying crews wifli the means to remove themsives from the vicinity of- the downed aircraft.” Perhaps so, but the need was observed in both World War II and Korea, and nothing as important as this was ever done about it. Possibly the developer will not be able to come through on schedule with a practical device. If sb; we hope the project will not be abandoned prematurely. In an ago of huge aircraft something more than parachutes, is needed. Logical Steps Ludington News The U.8. Industrial-military alliance has made the United States the best armed country in the world. *11118 of course baa been accomplished at tba feasible rather than being taxpayer’s expense. wy: .......... The policy of fighting a defensive war to Vietnam, that seemed designed to placate the enemy tostped of forcing him to surrender, has disgusted the American people. They rightly believe that it to futile .to waste lives and treasure on a war that cannot be won, because of the policy of our State and Executive Departments. Reducing appropriations for military equipment, is1 a logical next Stop. There is no “doubt that frbm1 flVe to ton billion dollar's can be cut from the fat of our defense budget. Congress should insist on such * cut and should also look with a jaundiced eye on any proposals for mterptenatary space exploration. Thera are too many domestic problems that need financial aid not to effect such economics. . THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1969 a—r His Name Is Zwach; He's Always at Back WASHINGTON (AP) - With a name like Zwach, a man’s got to have a sense of humor. And when he’s a congressman, like Rep. John M. Zwach, he also needs infinite patience. , The Hon. John Zwach of Minnesota Is the last man on the “It could," said Zwaqh In a.. interview, “but almost always. I vote on the first round. So I’m not among those who might get some pressure.” The roll is called twice. Those who misBed both~cgiln stand in rnn pTnK°«nhf«H the wel1 of the House and signal the'Hon., ae^t Jz.uK: £& r"og"l“<i *“ ,ot*; of Wisconsin and Roger H. Zion of Indiana. —Sometimes by the time the clerk gets around to calling Republican Zwach, such fortunates as Watkins Abblt of Virginia-the No. 1 man—and Thomas Abernethy of Mississippi, have voted and gone to lunch. There are a few things the House of Representatives loves more than roil calls as seniority 1 —but not many. TIME CONSUMER No device is used more Ire-quently, although not always for counting votes. It’s a handy time-consumer, vote-staller and mind-changer. It’s a fine irritant to members who approve or disapprove certain legislation but who’d rather not be put onreeoFd.—————— * * * JJ voting first.’’ He adds Its as handy as a pocktknife jif it’s ever done.” ~ In a Boy Scout s palm to mem- pnuiRi *»,... --.bers_wiw are dettJmits_uses— and most are. They’ve been 154 ■. • • • "MrrPoUock Mr. Mikva ... Mr. Miller of Ohio ... Mr, Miller of California ,. . Mr. Mills. AN ADVANTAGE Is there an advantage, from a political standpoint, to knowing which waya vote is going? “Ostensibly, yes. But seldom for me,” said Zwach. 9 of 100 roll calls, I already know how I’m going to vot.er TN 99’ The Minnesotan has little hope of ever moving up from the bottom rung. In the previous 90 congresses—and in the Conti-nental Congress, for that mat-ter, there were no House members whose place would be low Zwach. “I’d just as soon have a reverse alphabetical roll call,” he said. “I wouldn’t object to it—to ......................‘I doubt already this year: I Mr. Powell ... Mr. Preyer . Mr. Cabell . Mr. Cafferyl^ Pr‘ce of Illinois • . Mr. Cahill... *! Price of Texas. Congressman Zwach, pro • nouneea swack, has to endure the calling of 434 names before |t’s his turn. If everybody is there at roll-call time—a rarity like the whooping crane— Zwach’s moment might come as But when the leaders of the House decide to give missing ..memberstimetoget to thefloor from their offices or wherever, the reading clerks use their —most mellifluous v o l c as and slowly roll out the names, savoring every syllable, pausing majestically at every opportuni-! ty. DRAGGING IT OUT Mr. Galifianakis ... Mr. Gal-! lagher ... Mr. Garmatz .. Mr I Gaydos .... Mr. Gettys .. Mr Giaimo ... The clerks repeatj “aye.” And drag out the nooooo. Being the last man out gives I 434 members a chance to get to Zwach on a close vote. Is there' ire pressure, arm twisting? i -V----------------;--------- ISfateGh-Diein Combat in Vietnam WASHINGTON\(UPI) - Two Michigan soldiers were among 28 U.S. gervlcemen\killed in re-1 - cent" coWbStirVldWtfn, t h e Defense Department\said< yesterday. A third Michigan soldier* died but not as a result of hostile action. \ Ail three were in the Army. The two killed In combat wWe: • Spec. 4 Joseph A. Hooker, son of Mr, and Mrs. Aldred L. Hoeker, Spring Lake. • Pvt. -James B. Stockdale, son of Mr. and Mrs. James C. Stockdale, Detroit. Pfc. Louis T. Mills, brother of Mrs. Louise, M. Bland, Detroit, died not as a result of hostile action. 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The second and third alternatives would keep the annual cost at the present level for the next two fiscal 'years, rising to $5.7 billion in 1976. The second alternative would increase the budg- Now the goal has beenj^8 of about $8 billion in achieved and this nation has J??0’ a" he would like to start receiving something for his space dollar. NASA sees the earth-orbiting space station as offering the best hope , for economic return. It could serve as an observation platform for weathermen, astronomers or geologists searching for earth’s hidden riches. Scientists cite the attractions to medical men, biologists and en- of crop disease, weather fore-| casts and a search for arable! laifd. Even with this outside monetary help, NASA estimates that with present space vehicles, the one-year cost of operating a 50-to-100-man space station would be well over $1 billion. If the go-ahe&i is given for an expedition to the Red Planet, the spaceship would be delivered in sections by shuttle to the space station where it would be assembled and launched by reusable nuclear rockets. A 12-man crew is being considered Ifor such a flight, with , half of It is here that the United them to land on Mars while the States confronts the most serf- 'others orbit above. point on where space-faring cast bNlion in the same pe-gine"ers to conduct experiments 0us obstacle now limiting space! nod- + . . ! in a true vacuum and in weight-exploration-the high cost of1 News Analyst* Americans should go in the fit ture. President Nixon soon will make his choice, but this time it will be debatea—in uongress and across the land. A national debate already is under way on proposed goals, Whether Nixon includes Mars mission in his master plan will depend on the outcome of public debate. But most observers believe luTwill approve otlr er major task force recommendations. These are to develop a huge multipurpose space station itnhe ’mid-1970s and to build, a reusable airplanelike shuttle vehicle to service the station. Theimtial station would house getting into orbit and the diffi-The station also could serve culty of retrieving things sent' as an orbiting platform for mili- up. especially on whether U.S. as- six to 12 men, Would Increase to r ... . .. ii-A ________i _______u.. mo a tary missions, Astronauts could i conduct dally reconnaissance over every part of the globe, spotting missile bases, aircraft, submarines and troop movements,.________- mercial applications. Insurance companies which pay storm That is why the task force has recommended development of the shuttle to service space stations orbiting both earth and moon. They would ferry crewmen, scientists and supplies and The station would nave com-would return to earth with ex- periments, photographs, military information and possibly Test-sit 16 textures and 236 colors of new Armstrong carpeting damages might support im- specialized items manufactured tronauts should aim for Mars. 150 men and women by 1980 and|proved weather forecasting. Oil the vacuum of space. The National Aeronautics and to 100 a few years later.______[companies might finance explo- The development of the space. Space Administration welcomes nuclear ROCKET (ration by trained geologists station antith^shuttle would be the discussions. Administrator Nixon also is exoected to backl^T* th.e Platfor"™- Owners of .applicable to a manned Mars; Thomas O. Paine says: WSSSSSSmZ fire!m,ss,on- Thus’ N,xon gjjj wa,l: “The i question of the immediate future of the space program now lies before us. In my view it is a question of pace. The directions are clear. NASA. will move ahead on several fronts in a bal- Nerva nuclear rocket, which could be operational in the late I 1970s. The President may hold off a I decision on whether to propose! a base on the moon or a moon-j Farm organiza-, several years before making a tions might support surveillance!decision on Mars. | See png* A-3 Custom Floor Covering 5918 IN-18 Clarkiton - 628-2100 . , , . d UdSC Ull tile iiouvn vi a muim-j «np^_prqgra^_ij!CjjLa ireience,—applications, explora- the united States has conducted tion and new technology. additional moon landings in the PROPER DEBATE Apollo program. Nine morel “Rut how vigorously we want! landing® of two-men teams have to pursue the space program is been funded for the next three -the-question that Is now the sub-1 years, with each visiting a dif-ject, very properly, of national ferent area oflbe mooii. debate." Paine was a member of a task force which on Monday submitted to Nixon possible directions for the U.S. space program. The group gave the President three possible alternatives, with the main differences being the The United States spent a total of $21.1 billkm.on operations leading up to the Apollo 11 moon landing in July. That price tag included all flights in the Mercury and Gemini programs, the unmanned moon explorers like timing for a manned Mars, mis-j the Surveyors and lunar or-sioiL . . 'biters and construction The first option calls for a of launch facilities, manned Mars landing in 1982,1 It also included most of the the second-in -1986 and-tha-third hardware fnr the fnlloMfcpn Apol; sometime after 1990. COSTLY OPTIONS Is anyone wilting to take a chance? The Carstairs Crowd. They know how to mix it up. ...Dior VevsreivdrFsihsT wRobbt:------ We understand why you love to raffle , off Cadillacs, T-Birds and Continentals. They draw the crowds. 6ut consider the poor soul who wins. ____• He hot 10 P0V about $1000 in Income tax. At least $425 a year for gas. And" who knows how much for oil and antifreeze. Now think how charitable it would be to. raffle off a Volkswagen Fostbock Sedan. It needs only about $420 for income tax. About $150 a year for gas. —~-No~onHfreezet And, it takes- pints of oil, not the usual quarts. Now you may ask, what makes this Volkswagen fancy enough to raffle off? poling. Front seats that adjust to 4? position!. Fold-down arm rests in the rear.— Ah electric clock. And, ps options: a three speed fully automatic transmission and air conditioning. So, if you're thinking of raffling off a fancy car, lift up your eyes. And behold. The Volkswagen Fostbock Sedan. lo flights. Thus, the total cost of nine additional Apollo man-on-„ | , ( . the-moon landings will abe $3.9 Under the first and most ex- million—or about $433 million pensive *u“ -------- option, the annual NASA budget would climb steadily from the current $3.7 billion a year to about $8 billion for each fiscal year from 'MM each. WANTS RETURNS But it is the $21-blllion figure that bothers the taxpayer. And Carstairs Whiskey |3£(V Join the Carstairo Crowd. The Volkswagen Fallback Autobahn Motors, Inc. 1765 S. Telegraph Road OVERSEAS DELIVERY AVAILABLE BUY! SELL! TRADE! . USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! TURN ON WITH A GNB AUTO LOAN The quickest easiest way to turn oh a 1970 automobile is with a 1970 CNB Auto Loan.You don't even need to leave your dealer’s showroom, He’ll take care of the details while you wait. Of stop in at one of our 21 convenient offices. Either way you’ll be on your way in nothing flat. So remember. When the 1970's turn you on, tell the man you want Community financing. That’s the key to the situation. A—9 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1969 AAONTGQ/l/lEF WARD iii ■iii.titijtf. — 5atd9t30«.m.te 9 p.m. Sun. 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SEPTEMBER 19, 1969 2 Green Berets Will Testify Against Other 6 LONG BINH, Vietnam (AF) same barracks at Long Binh Several of the military de- phone their families when they Two of the eight Green Beret with Rheault and the five other jfense attorneys accused the were informed, of the charges in officers under guard, hut he was] A^my judge advocate’s office of] July, but were told the families moved out shortly before the lack of cooperation. ' could read about it in the news- others were notified at 9 p.m. * * * • papers. Thursday that they would be They said they had asked that] Berry said an officer from the tried This morning a military the men he permitted to tele-1 judge advocate’s office told mHitafyIpolieeman-went la the building]-------- 1 and collected a duffle bag and men charged' with murdering a Vietnamese agent are not being brought to trial because the Army is arranging for them to testify against the other six Spe-rial ~ Forces - men-, sources said today. him: “What ever you can ar-|even contact their attorneys at, range is all “right, but not at government expense.” Berry added that the only telephone in the building where the prisoners are held is “Class C,” a line over which the defendants can’t — Tho tnnrrnf twn men, uniform Belonging to Boyle. • Chief Warrant Officer Edward A-U,S. Arm^ spokesman said M. Boyle of New York City and Boyle and Smith “are no longer Sgt. l.C. Alvin L. Smith Jr. of,under confinement but are Tn a Naples,,,Fla., will be given iip-!parole status:*1 However, he munity from U S' prosecution,! said the two men must remain • and the Army now is talking on the Long Binh base 15 miles with the Saigon government to i north of Saigon “so that they "arrange for immunity at that will, be readily available,’^ Corporate Approach Doomed? Nixon Postal Plan Near Test WASHINGTON (AP) W The| Eight- postal unions saying]break even partly through keep- another military exchange: The Army still refuses to make any details of the case public. But other sources have Reported that the man killed was a Vietnamese working for the Special Forces in Cambodia who was discovered to be working for North Vietnam. The body-reportedly was dumped in the South China Sea and has not been found. KITCHEN CARPET 99% Ft This Price Includes Hi-Density Rubber Back and Labor TUSON CARPET SALES & SERVICE 4494 Dixie Highway Drayton Plains 674-tOll Geo. Tuson Nixon administration’s postal, they represent more than corporation plan is scheduled to 700,000 of the nation’s 750,000 He said Boyle has been as-get its first—and possibly last—postal employes urged the 26 dav that Chi Robert"^ Rheault hit S ^'congressional test next week members of the House Post.Of- 43 of Vinevard Haven Ma-r. 1 °r&’ — 6 m, a aon~and even the proposal’s backers flee Committee by telegram r. ,len’J!!!f!-ilpo!nmiss,oned Officers’ bar- hoid little hope for lts approval. Thursday to vote against the ing wages low. And, they say, without the right to strike employes would be at management’s mercy.\ ; *, ★ ★ -—~^ commander of the Special r ir*HBBW^^^n,W^ “'*'~ noia i^ue noPe for lts 0PPr0val' ^nursaay to vote against tne They favor a plan by Chair-Forces in Vietnam when the aCKS * * * corporation concept. The com-man Thaddeus J. Dulski, D- agent disappeared and five of « ^hea“’t and the othe,t fiv^ of- “The postal unions haven’t mjttee is slated to vote Tuesday. N.Y., that would give the Post his staff officers ’would stand , CnerSj.,“fel|< de‘??rted and ,b£ agreed to it and it’s unlikely right fb STRIKE i0ffice more businesslike control trial before an Armv court on^ ed "he" |he.v were;told that anybody will try to run r . over its operations but keep • ——j------j—.may jvould be tried,^one mili- roughshod over them,” said The unions say they would not wage-setting and ' labor prob- 3 charges of murder and conspir- tary defense counsel, Capt. John Rep Morris K. Udall, D-Ariz., accept the plan without thej ]ems in the hands of Congress. An Armv sm>kesman_also an-:5 ^erry"Said' ~ -- Jhe plan’s principal House spon- right to strike—a condition they: * * * nounced that^charges against‘ALL 0UT RUNNING’ sor- 1mow-neither CongFess noF-thel if the corporation plan loses Bovle and Smith were being! He added that Rheault "has * . * *, , ;administration wil agreei to. as expected in committee there held In abeyance pending trial‘assumed leadership and Is de- lf the un,ons real,y 8° to' The unlons contend the self-|13 still a chance, particularly if of the other cases, fto explafla- termined not to let their morale work and Pul aU lheir muscle,supporting, government-owned the union? and administration tiori was given. • mink. This morninn ho hart th«m into it. we won’t get very far.” ! postal corporation would try to] reached some compromise, for | it to win in the end. I tiori was given. • ! sink. This morning he had them .Boyle had been living in thcrrnll out running:”—-,- jONE COMPROMISE I The best prospect for such a] compromise appears to be some • provision for automatic compul-. sory arbitration on wages and : benefits in lieu of the right to -strike— ...—. j BELFAST, Northern Ireland would not be removed^until! But no such compromise is re-: LondonderryCatholics to Demolish Barricades ported in sight after weeks of | negotiation between Postmaster | Tjgn. WlfftorrM. Bluunt and-un-j-ion representatives. PROTECT YOUR HOME AGAINST THE INVADERS.. DUST, DIRT AND POLLEN! install an ELECTRO-AIR •Isctronic air cleaner Remove* up to 90% of the dirt particle* that paa* through your forced air heating or cooling system. ■ ". . iticTiioj For moro Information: EAST Heating and Cooling 580 Telegraph Rd. at Orchard Lake 338-9255 Record in Nevada (AP) — The Roman Catholics of]Monday because the Rev. Ian -jt-rndiTnflfrry. thr town where1 Paisley, the Protestant militant, [the Catholic-Protestant war .is scheduled to hold a meeting erupted last month, agreed To^in Londonderry Sunday, “and jdayto demolish their barri-]perhaps a few of his followers ]cades Monday. - “.inlglit ‘try They ^will be replaced by thin into the Bogside.” white painted lines to keep the “1 -would advise them against feuding Protestants and Cathol- this,” he added, ics apart. * * *. if ' * if British Defense Minister Den-; Seah Keenan, chairman of CARS0N CITY, Nev. (AP)--j Derry Citizens’ Defense As.so~ keeoine peace in Northern ire- patrons at Nevada’s gambling! ciatiop in the Catholic Bogside j. . . leaving a Cath- casinos lost 8 record $457 mil-] district told newsmen after 24 S8ection of Belfast,* scuffle ,ion durin« the 1969 fisc8l year.! hours of talks with the British broke out between 200 shouting‘he state says. Armyinai. I people and the Tear men in The Nevada Gaming Commis- | • The Northern Ireland ,gov-1 Healey’s armed army escort. ;^ion reported Thursday the ernment’s largely Protestant] jj0 injuries were reported, but-gross from casino play, prlmarl-| police force will stay out of Bog-(one soldier was pushed against ly in Las Vegas, Reno and Lake j3ide- • a Jeep and another’s steel hel-] Tahoe, was $69 million more • Military police will not try | met was knocked off. than the last fiscal year. to arrest anyone in Bogside for | The army said 39 barriers had The state’s share was $33.3 j anything done before the barri- been taken down in the past two million, derived from taxes and! cades come down. days in Belfast. i license fees. I • Military police will be al---------------------------------------------------»■—- -——|— ,lowetLto enter the area in an-, swer to emergency calls, but other troops will stay . out. a The BogSiders’ vigilante police force will continue A operate in the district. ' Keenan said the barriers fljt Jute Molt SUNDAY, SEPT. 21 TWI& Pun Mulch/ inside the Mall Hentries from 11:00 A.M. JUDGING for obedience and conformation at 12 Noon RAFFLE DRAWING at 4-00 P.M. vSh/HiP (on Telegraph Road under the Pylon sign) ^TNTRIES , L ... from U A.M. to 12:30 P.M. y_____JUDGING ^ for obedience and conformation_ Promptly at 1100 P.M. SEE MICHIGAN'S AMERICAN AND CANADIAN CHAMPION • Dog Cart Rides • • Raffle • Refreshments • Parade The Pontiac Mall Shopping Center Telegraph at Elizabeth Lake Road Big Chief at Ritter! Says: “HEAP BIG SUPPLY FALL DECORATIONS” IN FOR OUR 0UST0MERS • Indian Corn . • Turbans j • Gourds i many others^ Honey Rook MELONS Vine Ripened qf Our CLARKSTON <TOH BULK LAWN SEEDS—QUALITY DISCOUNTS » Kentucky Blue, 98% Pure.. . .............. 59c lb. > Creeping Red Fescue, 96% Pure ...... 49c lb4. yPerennial Rye Qrass,50lbs.$13.99.....;....29clb. FIRTILIZKR SPECIAL G & F LAWN FERTILIZER GATEWAY 20-10-5 M-lb. Bag Covers 10,000 sq. ft....... 5.95 Reg. 2.95, 5,000 sq. ft. 1.95 RITTERS FARM MARKETS 1121W. Huron-MI-0144, 6684 Dixie Hwy. \ MNBnmilPHIflHT COLD BEER, WINE, PICNIC SUPPLIES OLAHKITON / BIG PICTURE CONSOLES NT TABLE MODEL PRICE! Ik ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★★★★★★ ★ ★ IT ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ * + + * + + + NO MOREY DOWN * 36 MONTHS TO PAT ' ,. • PLENTY OF FREE PARKING TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER -- FE 3-7879 1650 UNION LK. RD., UNION LK. - 363-6280 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1969 A—11 I found a retirement income which most people seem to conside necessary to Insure reasonably adequat postretirement living standard. Currently this level Is about $4,000 a year. Test-sit 16 textures and 236 colors of new Armstrong carpeting See page A4 Stewart-Glenn im South Telepaph PoatlM - FI 2-1141 smaller cars. 70 Nova. Nova has smaller cars squirming principally because it doesn’t makeyou squirm. f The not-too-small Nova Coupe seats five adults. Sedan,,six. : And you get windows instead of portholes. A bona fide trunk. And a wide-stance ride onva 111" wheelbase. Further, you have a happy choice of six engines and five trans* missions (including low-cost, no clutch Torque-Drive). And Nova is anything but dowdy. See above. / Certainly, little cars have to beanore than a little uneasy about Nova’s easy price. V / It simply doesn’t cost that much more to own that much more car. ___ Putting you first, keeps us first. Ovt The Move. Climbers Plan to Scale Yosemite Height Despite P™S p**1 T.NATOlNALiscaled granite walls - evenithe 2,200-foot south face of Half avvumvs - , ’ J.' Two ,°f though one now is laid up with a Dome next week. It’s the famed mu cUmbfr°ken »eg. • granite hulk here that looks as1 ers plan a third assault on one) Warren Harding and Galen,if part has been chopped off of the nations toughest un->Rowell had planned to tackle!with a meat cleaver. I But Harding, 45, of West Sacramento, Calif.—who in a decade of rock climbing has never been hurt seriously—is in a Sacramento hospital. His left leg climbers and National Park Service officials rescued them with the aid of a helicopter. The vertical north face of Half Dome, at the head of Yosemite . WILL IT BE CONQUERED?—This is the south face of Half Dome in Yosemite National Park, one of the major unsealed granite walls in the nation, which three American rock climbers had hoped to conquer next Looking Aheadj to Retirement? was broken in two places wheit Valley, is familiar to tourists he was struck by a car while working on a construction project. II happened Wednesday 20 minutes before quitting time, after which he .and Rowell, 29, of Albany, Calif., were to begin assembling equipment for the climb. ‘WOULD HAVE MADE IT . “I think very definitely we havte made it,” Harding go next Harding, Rowell" and Faint; What he wants to do is elfmb will have to “engineer” their Half Dome's south face. Why? way up this area, averaging an “I was fascinated by the angle of 75 degrees, by using the face,” says the wiry 5-foot-6, most advanced techniques of(140-pounder who was on the and has been climbed by several routes. But visitors rarely see the south face on the “back” of Half Dome. It’s always been one of the big, unsolved problems of The Valley” said Harding. To climbers around the world, “The Valley” means Yosemite. The upper 1,000 feet are virtually devoid of the crack systems that enable climbers to on how the!scale seem»ngly impossible rock ; walls. week. The dotted line indicates the route which Warren Harding, Galen Rowell and Joe Faint planned to take up the 2,200-foot wall. The attempt will have to be delayed since Harding was struck by a car this week. Said Rowell: “I’m not going on that climb without him.” . .. * * * Thpy were to be joined on the approximately 10-day climb by Joe Faint of San Francisco. Before the accident, Harding talked about the plans in an * terview. TRAPPED BY BUZZARD Harding and Rowell passed the halfway mark on the smooth rock face of Half Dome on attempts in 1966 and 1968. During the 1968 climb, in November, a jf Mk~6oil— ’ ’ , Susan J. Stringer, Trov Marriage Licenses Georg. G. Richey Jr., Troy and Lelsa A. Barton, Rochester Orren H. DeReamer, Union Lake end >orothy M. Woolley, Harrison Raymond R^, Juzysta,_ 1M Jefferibn and Thomas M. Johnson, 3044 Durnl sllev F wyzgoskl, 38 Smith V. Lee, Milford and- AAa blizzard trapped them high on1 waJHI _. the rock wall after six days of; las* M' Glad! climbing. Fellow Yosemite1 snapp?°uni Davis, Detroit David A. Kaplan, Detroit and Dear S. Shanabrook, Drayton Plains Kenneth J. Van Dam, 310 Fembar and Judy A. Medley, 5168 Sparrow Woo Robert A. Dougherty, Giarkston ai Saundra K. Webster, Waterford Scott W. Fowler, Columbus, Ohio a L ‘“ 1*™Ingham Prudenvllle a Shafkind, Farmington and. rock climbing. * * In the past, much of the climbing was done by the laborious process of drilling holes in the rock, then standing in nylon slings attached to expansion bolts. ★ ★ ★ Harding has developed speedier process. He drills a! shallow hole and places a ‘cliffhanger” in it. This is a |3%-inch long piece of metal i with a curved point on one end and an eye in the other. | 1 Harding jams the sharpened point of the-hook into the rock,! the eye end hanging down.; Through the eyes goes a carabine—an oval aluminum snap-link. Through the carabine/ goes the inch-wide nylon slings in which he stands; and climbing rope that would hold him in case of a fall. WHY THE CUMB? . Some mountaineers scoff at such* “rock engineering,” but1 Harding said, “If it's something I want to climb by bolting all the way, I damn well wilj. It’s all a matter of what you want to Ido.” team that made the first ascent, of Yosemite’s El Capitan in 1958, the first of the so-called I “big wall” climbs in The Val-' ley. Clock Repair • Antique Clack Specialist* • Sales & Service itme^lfnp 151 S. Bate*, Birmingham 646-7377 ~~ CLOSE-OUT SPECIALS on 1968 and 1969 COLOR TVS RCA - ZENITH MOTOROLA ADMIRAL - GE AAAANA ELECTRONIC RADAR-RANGE OVEN now on display HAMPTON ELECTRIC 825 W. Huron FE 4-2525 FLAGS OUTDOOR • INDOOR ALL TYPES CHRISTIAN LITERATURE SALES 55 Oakland Ave. FE 4-9591 ANN ARBOR (UPI) -J Retlrement is a time for travel, sports and Robbies, and many Americans are seeking this easy life at earlier ages, ac-! cording to a University of Michigan study. Financial factors, primarily expected retirement Income, are of major importance in the. retirement decision, the sutdy >ays. * * * Health, on-the-job satisfactions, ability to enjoy leisure activities, and social attitudes toward retirement also are significantly related to retirement planning. Based on Interviews with older automobile workers and a representative sample of the population as a whole, the study was published recently by the U-M Institute for Social Research and supported In by a grant from the Department of Health Educa-t ion and Welfare. “During the last five or six years, there has been some tendency for early retirement planning to become more common,” wrote Richard E. Barfield and James N. Morgan of the Survey Research Center. “It is likely that more and more early retirees will be people who planned for early retirement and are financially prepared for it. “The result is likely to be an Increasing discrepancy between those who retired as they had planned to and those retired unexpectedly, often without planning and in most cases with inadequate retirement Incomes.” Barfield and Morgan to the early negotiated by Workers union A—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1969 It's an exceptional event and the sayings are great! Only twice a year do you have an opportunity like this. Hurry to Hudson's Pontiac or shop by phone. Masculine, durable cotton corduroy carriage coat with warm lining Such a low price for so much cootl toother Superb savings opportunity on this traditional herringbone sportcoat The three-button styling and center vant for grant casual styling that's sporty but versatile. Its rich, deep wool fabric is outstanding at this sal# price, and gives you long-wearing value for your money. In shades of grey, olive, or browni in regular, short or long men's sizes. Sport not Sale 44.99 Also sea our fine woof worsted sport coats in various muted patterns all at savings now, too. sputum Sole 54.99 New fall suits, priced right to keep you dressed fashion-right In handsome neyr shades and patterns with two-button styling .and side vents. Long-wearing, high quality wool^worsted In grey, brown, and blue plaids. Hudson's own Aldrich suits ore ■ tailored to rigid 'specifications to give you net only quality, but long, economical wear. Regulars, shorts, longs. Extra pants, $14. Suits Sale 69.99 The bush coat, fall fashion news for men, now makes low price news Here's a jacket far warmth and comfort, with right-now good looks and a low price.. This FortreP/cotton, Orion® acrylic pile-lined jacket is great for outdoor or anywhere wear, in tan. Good workmanship and detailing like the belt and the four-pleated pockets add to the value. Men's sizes 36-44. Bush Coat Sale 24.99 Get your permanent press wool flannel dress slacks for less now Save on slacks done in traditional style with belt loops anti a1 plain front, pro-cuffed for your convenience. This is the conservative yet dressy look that you need on so many occasions. Do-it-yourself coin-op dry cleaning lets you pop them out fresh and ready te wear. Choose grey, charcoal, olive or brown in a wicjp size range. Dross sLuks Sale 14.99 Carriugoeout Solo 30.99 Versatile British tan cotton jacket that's so practical qjl year round Removable lining, knit waist with stand-up coHarand twin pockets te help withstand the chill. " Save now; look great in milder weather, too. zipjMk,t Sale 26.99 All Mui'e Foil Sale items can be found at That Kind of Ultimatum Shows His True Motives] Joining the “arty” set are from left, artist Mrs. are sorting out works for the art rental project, Paul Schafer of Birmingham and Mrs. L. R. Buzan “friends in the Arts” at the new Bloomfield Town-of Betsy Ross Drive, Bloomfield Township. The two ship Library. Artistic Projects It's a Whole New World Are Highlighted Wi||iam Bradley Hampton at New Library Yne tneme at Broomfield Township Library uiis season is “Friends in the Arts.*’ ' • In addition to the art rental project, the Library will offer programs with speakers on painting, architecture, literature, theater and opera, all with related exhibits. The rental project 14 a cooperative venture of the Library and the Bloomfield Art Association. Of special interest to students as well as adults will be the Oakland County Children’s Art- Show arranged b y Barbara Hallman. The show will Open Monday. „ SHIRLEY GRAY . State, Ren, and Mrs. William P. Hampton of Bloomfield Hills welcomed thfir first son and second child, Sept. 10. His name is William Bradley. Mrs. Hampton, the former Betsy Bradley of Pontiac, arrived home from William Beaumont Hospital this week just in time to bake a cake in celebration of little Mary Elizabeth’s first birthday Wednesday. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. James H. Bradley of Spokane Drive, and the Verne C. Hamptons of Bloomfield Hills. * ★ ★ It’s old home week for Mr. and Mrs. Henry R. Nolte Jr., whose most recent address was London, England, where Henry toiled for . Ford Motor Company for two years. Mr. and Mrs. Bernard A. Goode are waving goodbye to the house on Lone Pine Road, opting instead for carefree apartment life. Hie new address is Kingsridge Apartments-HUNTERS BACK ^ Two area big-game hunters are back in town after forays out West. Maynard Andrieae alternated trout fishing with vocalizing with his barbershop singing group, the Buckaroosters, somewhere in the, wilds of Montana. By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: I am writing to you for some practical words of advice to pass on to my 16-year-old daughter. She is a fine, pretty, intelligent girl with high ideals. Popular, too, and respected by her classmates. I have Instilled the “old-fashioned” virtues in her and we have had some frank discussions—about sex. She's always believed that it paid off to be “nice,” and went with one of the most popular boys in high school. They enjoyed a decent, fun relationship and considered themselves “in love” as most kids do. She wore his “friendship” ring and he wore hers. ★ * * She told me that lately he was trying to get her to go a little bit further than -she-wanted to go; but she managed~To ~ keep him in line.______________________, Last, week he gave her an ultimatum, 1 and when she refused to cross the limit line, he dropped her and went back to his old girl. (He had told my daughter that-he’d been intimate with that girl, —and-Htave-reason to believe he had. I am not knocking her, but she has had no supervision, having lived with a divorced mother who has a poor reputation and is never home herself.) Now my daughter feels that being “good” did not pay pointment and jealousy 16-year-old eyes she’s played life’s game honorably and lost, while the other girl did all the “wrong” things' and won. What can I say to her? HER MOM DEAR MOM: You can tell her that. -J1hffr’s game?L is hardly over at age 16, -and a boy who would give her such an ultimatum is no bargain. Tell her, too, that before the game is over, she’ll realize that though she may have lost one boy friend, she won much more. A. * ... * DEAR ABBY: Some very good friends of ours have a son who has gone the hippie route. When we inquire about their "children,’’ (they have others who are married and one is in the service) should we inquire about their hippie son? Or should we just not mention him, like he„is “dead?” We know that they are pretty sick about the life he leads. NEEDS TO KNOW DEAR NEEDS: Knowing 'that your friends wouftHie hurt or embarrassed by the mention of their hippie son, don’t mention him. DEAR ABBY: What’s wrong with me? I was crazy about this man who was wonderful company and a great guy. The only thing wrong with him was that sometimes he drank toomuch Then hi» got quarrelsome and moody. He wanted to marry me, but I was afraid of his drinking arid kept putting him off. He got tired of my stalling and married somebody else. ★ ★ ★ I hear his wife sold him on A.A. and he hasn’t had a drink in a year. I can’t get this guy off my mind and now I’m eating my heart out. Can you help me? LONELY IN A CROWD ★ * * DEAR’ LONELY: Quit eating your heart out with thoughts of what might have been. The one who got away always looks best. And should you ever meet another “wonderful guy” whose only-weakness is Joy juice, try tosell him on A.A. and if you succeed, then marry him. i • What the Women Say Charles Wilson . Jr., sheep in Idaho. stalked bighorn The Noltes are back to stay, looking at On Wednesday well known area —painter. Virginia Schafer of B1 r m--------houses in the Birmingham ari ingharri, will lecture at a meeting opento In the interim, they'd"’ be hohOI the public. Setting for the 8 p.m. meeting guests at a small dinner party this will be the Green Room in the lower evening at the home of Wfiliam and Kit- level of the Library. ty Davenport in Bloomfield Hills. J Woman Makes Changes I in White House Deco ■—I- Are Your Ki MADISON, W1s. (UPI) -Experiments in kissing are planned at the University of Wisconsin this fall. It’s all In the interest of science, of course. Dr. Elllot Dick, associate professor of preventive medicine, and Dr. Donn J. D’Alessio, an assistant professor, want to determine the role of kissing in the spreading of common cold viruses. The plan is to ask for volunteers who will be given the virus. Then the participants — blindfolded — will kiss for one By GAY PAULEY Jo mtatoprM,. ^ ' UPI Women’s Editor “Of course, anonymity is important NEW YORK — “Always remember to pay just as much attention because our objective is to see if direct to an order for a slipcover as to an order to do a whole house. You contact with someone spreads cold never know where it will lead.” vlru8e8’ 116 “J- * * Lunch Rewards Busy Secretary-in Consulate By ELIZABETH L. POST Of The Emily Post Institute Dear Mrs. Posf: My husband took some business correspondence to the •German Consulate in our city for translation. A secretary' there assigned to help him and did all the necessary typing. The Consulate refused payment, so my husband asked the secretary out to lunch as a way of Thanking her.------•---- The words were those of a rug salesman to Sarah Jackson Doyle when she first started * decorating career. She heeded and eventually the advice led her to the White House. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Doyle for the^past several months has been commuting between her New York office and Washington where she helped Mrs. Richard M.' Nixon decorate the family rooms of the Executive Mansion. And while the first family was in San Clemente, she redid the President’s Oval Office in the White House. Just what new decor awaited Mr. Nixon when he returned hasn’t been annhunced. Mrs. Doyle leaves such matters to presidential press secretaries. But what she did for the family quarters is known—such as a red, white and blue scheme for President Nixon’s bedroom. ACCIDENTAL It was just accidental, that the scheme was so patriotic in feeling. Mrs. Doyle said the President likes blues, so she put in a cornflower blue carnet, the bedspread has a white background with red and blue figurei, the walls are fireplace. “Hie blindfolds will prevent later contact among participants. We will even lead the subjects down the elevator blindfolded to further ensure no' one meets each other.” ■ * ★ A Dick was ashed why the kissing will be limited to two minutes. ★ ★ * “Hie whold thing could be shot if we didn’t,” he said. “It could go on all night.” Governor Accepts Post Gov. William G. Mllliken is honorary chairman of the 50th anniversary sponsors’ committee for the United States League of Women Voters. “1 almost feel personally about the riots. IPs as though you've had a family quarrel. You’re ashamed when you go to visit lyis Uccello, mayor of Hartford, Conn., commenting on recoil racial riots there. Was it‘necessary for my husband to personally thank the secretary? If so, how? I doubt the propriety of the lunch. - Mrs. S. * * * Dear Mrs. S: Yes, your husband owed the girl a “thanks.” An invitation to lunch is an accepted way of saying “Thank you” in the business world. Unless your husband saw the secretary socially more than on this one occasion, there was no impropriety. He could equally well have sent her an impersonal gift, but many men have difficulty in finding the right thing and the luncheon was a simpler solution. MATRON OF HONOR Dear Mrs. Post: I recently read in a marriage notice in. our newspaper that the bride chose her mother as matron of honor. Is this considered etiquette? — - Rosemary. ANTONIA UCCELLO “The suppression of opposition is what made dictatorship and all its evils inevitable”—Svetlana Alliluyeva, daughter of Joseph Stalin, who defected to the West, in an interview. Dear Rosemary: The bride’s mother’s place in the wedding is that of hostess and mother — not as “best friend”. Maids or matrons of honor should be contemporaries of the bride. By having-The anniversary fund-raising drive has her mother as her attendant,- the bride * I deprives her ofihe dignity and honor of era-----a-mothar’a more -mature position. -SVETLANA ALLILUYEVA WowenA • Mrs. Nixon made very little change ip the color scheme, mostly yellow, that Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson had used in her bedroom. She did bring along from the Fifth Avenue apartment in New York some Small French chairs and personal mementoes—“she leans to French, to clear colors and pastels,” Mrs. Doyle said. ★ ★ ★ As for Tricig’s bedroom, it’s in her favorite pinks and white. “—One of the items added of which Mrs. Doyle is most proud is the new gold synthetic carpeting, 340 yards of it covering the rooms on the second floor, and another 200 square yards in deep n the‘“red carpet treatment” in the grand hall and on the case. AU were the gift of Eastman Chemical Product*. Loaned to the family rooms are several pictures from the Metro politan Museum of-Art PEOPLE’S ‘HOUSE* “Mrs. Johnson went off beautifying America, an interview. “I think Mrs. Nixon will continue to beautify the White House. It belongs tq the people. It ought to have as many treasures as Buckingham Palace ... the greatest of American furniture.” Through the years, Mrs. Doyle has done the homes of many of die prominent, although she doesn’t like to name-drop, and done eh tire offices for many big companies. She was the first woman ever asked to do the Plaza Hotel ballroom. VALENTINA TERESHKOVA —,JI’m a woman firstr.xLJiasmQ‘-naut second,” said Valentina Tereshkova of the Soviet Union, world's only woman in space, upon receiving a gift of false eyelashes1 from, American Women for International Understanding, “There are a lot of aspects of education^ Involvement in activi-~ties is important. But it's not the— only thing. Learning in the classroom is important, too.” -—Barbara Marshment, 16, After her appointment to the California State Board of Education—the first student advisory member on the board. BARBARA MARSHMENT B—2 'l l I K PONTi AC DRESS. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1969 Q. Please fell me how long I eveo better, hold the bade erect have to exercise in order to get and hold the books in front of results in improved figure. I you. When one hip read somewhere that one should than the other, it Is usually due do exercises for an hour a day, to a spinal curvature. You in order to see any difference. | should see a well-trained person A. If you thnnght that you!and take corrective exercises probably turned into ah earnest clock watcher. No! An hour is not necessary. In fact, women have had nice results even when coining to my classes several tiroes a. week for a 35-minute exercise period. However, your results will be much better if you exercise every day. while you-are,, still young enough to improve the A half hour, counting short rest periods, is sufficient if you do the best exercises correctly, do not give up or be Q. Is it proper for a girl who wears rim glasses to wear earrings? A. The girl who wears glasses should be cateful about wearing earrings. The whole combination is apt to look “fussy.” Anyway do nut wear elaborate ones, the button type is best. Q. Do you think it's really fr&nciscaLrr whitestone ware MISS DOWNEY MISS ST. DENNIS MISS SANDERS MISS-WISE~ Wedding Plans Announced by Parents dismayed, but do them EVERY-wise to add a great deal of hair day. all at once? Wouldn’t it cause * * * ^embarrassment with one’s Q. I am only 21 yearn old and1 friends and family? have a couple of definite lines | a. That is up to you to decide, on my forehead. Is there if you think you would like to anything which wotrtd help me,do it gradually until you and |lose them? 'your friends and family get us-! | A. Since you are so young it ed to it, we are happy to give jls apparent that facial ex-you your weave in stages. Ipressions and mannerisms have — caused these. You evidently lift fr* * paas*. wap. > your eyebrows-when you talk, i First, you must overcome this 11 w alL_of the corrective ^ measures will be of little avail. 1 Remember to keep yout Bl eyebrows in place. Then apply ! gli cream each night. 5 Massage ALONG the lines, using your third finger in 45-Pc. Service for’8 Pure White CLOUD Nil #2995 OPEN STOCK •52.60 DIXIE POTTERY 5281 Dixie Hwy. 623-0911 A June 27 wedding date hasiMrs. Henry Giroux of Orchard!is the son of Mr. and Mrsjthe-senef-MFT-and-Mrs^Meddle! been set by Cheryl L6e Andress Lake. NOV. 22 vows are planned‘ Martin Downs Jr. of Tull Drive. I I.p Bresh of Dearborn Street I -gnd her fiance,TIarold ArfL-Mr.lby the couple;-------i_. ---------- I Avon Township. and Mrs. Norman E. Andress of I ‘ ~ u 2 Meigs Street announce their1 Ravd-Hnnnn Downey-Martm daughter’s engagement. ooya-nogan „____ A Sanders-Erickson rotary motion. After massaging! for a while remove cream andli] place cutouts over "the” lines,! L, after smoothing them out.1 Lepve these on all night. A delightfuT way to enjoy Sunday morning Breakfast! Bayd-Hogan - r .- . .. —.—___________________ Mr. and Mrs. Payne ... The prospective bridegroom! Mary Elizabeth Boyd and,Downey of South Lapeer Road,! Late fall wedding vows are! who is the sop of Edwin Arft of Clarence M. Hogan will be wed ririnn Tnwnshin annnnnrp thp Koine? nlannorl Kir DaIHi P Romeo and the late Mrs. Arft, is a graduate of Central . Michigan University. The bride-elect attends Eastern Michigan University. Benkert-Giroux on Nov. 28. Mr. and Mrs. Joel Boyd of South Anderson Street have announced their daughter’s marriage plans. . The prospective bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Hogan of Houston, Tex. Kwiek-Downs The Fred Benkerts of Pom-, pano Beach, Fla. announce the engagement of their daughter,! Bonffie Kwiek and Lawrencej Christine Martha to Scott'Downs will repeat their'mar- ; Giroux. The bride-elect is a graduate of Palm Beach Junior College and Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton. riage vows In Sept., 1979. Her parents, Mr. and Mrs! Walter Kwiek - of Highland, are nouncing the engagement. The bride-elect attends Orion Township announce the engagement of their daughter, Kathy Sue, to Rick E. Martin, Both-are students at Central Michigan University. Kathy Sue is in her junior year and Rick is a senior. The prospective bridegroom is| the son of Mr. and Mrs. Russell E. Martin of Union City, Tenn. , l July 11, 1970 wedding vows are being planned by Regina M. j Wise and Spec. 4 Gordon L. Mary Ann St. Dennis and, Peters;USA. being planned by Betty Sanders - and Norris A. | Erickson. Parents of the engaged couple are Mr. and Mrs. James Sanders and Mr. ami Mrs. Harrold Finn, all of Fourth Avenue. Wise-Peters Q. My eyelashes are In-, m significantly light brown. The || space between my eye and brow is fat. When I wear, mascara, it comes off!||n my lid and looks as though I have had a punch in both eyes. What can Ido? A..Why not use oine of the waterproof mascaras? I think you would find that this stays on the lashes. SUNDAY BREAKFAST BUFFET 9 AM. to 12 NOON Scott Is the son of Mr. and | Oakland University. Her fiance Wives 6f Michigan Lawyers to Meet for Detroit Confab The annual meeting ' o f Lawyers Wives of Michigan is| scheduled Sept. 24-25 at the Sheraton Cadillac 'Hotel, Detroit. currently, will conclude the affair. Ann Landers will be the principal speaker. St. Dennis-Lo Bresh Wilfred Le Bresh are planning to repeat April, 1970 wedding Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. David “A. Dennis of Boston Street announce their d aught ejr engagement. The prospective bridegroom is Parents of the couple are Mr. and . Mrs. Arthur Wise of I Opaline Street and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Peters of Circle Drive, Independence Township. The prospective bridegroom is stationed at Eort Lewis, Wash. Q. Is there any way ovecome one-sideness? One hipj | is more prominent than the 11 ethetv-probabty—from-catrying f books. SAUSAGES, SCRAMBLED EGGS. SILVER DOLLAR PANCAKES. JUICE, SWEET ROLLS. TOAST, BEVERAGE, ETC. feda A. This may very well come from carrying books. Young people shou'd remember this and carry books3 first on one side and (her on the other, or Ml 4-7?64 Woodward and Square Lako Rds. BLOOMFIELD HILLS mm Michigan's Fin* Jewelers Wrirriatchet d for Among those attending from the Oakland County Bar Association Auxiliary are Mesdames: William E. Lang, John Jt. O’Brien, Barry A. Kushner, Robert A. Parent!, Gerald Bartush, Gene Schnelz, Robert C. Anderson, Tom Reese andFranels X. O’Brien. Wives’ activities win begin with a meeting of the Cotincil on Wednesday, followed by luncheon and a fashion show at the Detroit Yacht Club. Carillon Recital Set for Sunday [Unsurpassea wdr Value! Carol Jickling, a junior at Seaholm High School, will make her first solo appearance at the carillon of Christ Church Cran-brook at 4 p.m. Sunday. A resident of Birmingham, Carol, during the past two summers, has studied Interlochen’s National .Music Camp and the High School i Music Camp at the University of Kansas. A joint luncheon with members pf the^State Bar of Michigan, whose annual meeting will be held con- The public may enjoy the recital while sitting in their cars or on the church lawn. Programs may be secured from the mirthex of the church. True Expressions of Your Love "Lw€/ DIAMONDS 4'SALLY BRENT CLEANERS You don't need a fortune to toll hor of your level Choate from those precious diamond bridal sots... magnificently styled In 14K white or yellow gold ... priced to please every budget. BUDGET TERMS AVAILABLE We Apologize for the inconvenience durv ing our remodeling period, at our Elizabeth Lake Store. We will be open for business as usual... Please come in. nauor touch of excellence for precision ___ipSft See those outstanding values MAN'S WITTNAUER..49.95 LADY'S WITTNAUER 69.95 24 N. SAGINAW Men* Thurs« FrL Till 9 Commercial Nylon Tweeds— m CARPETING 6 Decorator Colors Hi Density Rubber ‘‘SAYONERIE,, bv Vanda Weave Kodel® Polyester $Q95 ^ y3 : SALE Special Selling front a Well Known Carpet Mill PATTERN NYLON CARPETING V/tpo • 5 Colors ^Shaglfyfoir-4--Heavy Orl ° J by Lee’s by Wunda Weve Random Sheared NOW #9 95 AcrilanP Pattern C5RPET“ by Lee's 3795 • aq.ya yard Open Mon. and Fri. *dl 9 P.M., Sat. *tU S P.M. 3511 Elizabeth Lk. Rd. 682-9581 4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1969 B—3 ? -it Open Mon. thru Sat. 9:30 to 9:00 /?. tO/\ How to wear plaid and stay individual The OU V^ekend ueeze. uuni \zi unappen. Buy extra milk for the weekend. American dairy association* When a suit pattern becomes as fashionable as plaid, everybody and his brother turns up in one. .—..--------------■ — „ i But that needn’t bother you. You’ll be wearing ' a new shadow plaid, or windowpane plaid, by Designer Hammonton Park... one of the many really new plaids in our collection. And, as the saying goes, true originality cannot be copied. Your individuality is safe. Come in and “get that Hammonton feeling!" *125 *140 Bloomfield Miracle Mile Telegraph at Square Lake Knits Are Versatile Fall Fabric I all times and use oldest j packages first. ! Washington, D.C., led the na-I tion last year in the number of I robberies reported to police. purchasing knits with a severely twisted out of Une. In a swise print, the design should be at right angles to the lengthwise ribs of the fabric, not the fold.. ★ * * Many double knits do not need an underlining. You should, however, u n d e rj {n e lightweight jerseys with a soft silk-like fabric to prevent them from sagging with general wear. It is also necessary to line slim skirts to keep them from losing their shape. Certain areas of your knit garment will need to be stabilized to prevent stretching.-On the shoulder seams, pin pre-ahrunk seam tape along the seam line before stitching, then include it in the steam. Reinforce button holes and faced' edges with interfacing. * * ★ To maintain the crispness of the hem in an A-line or slim skirt, interface the hem allowance with bias strips. THREAD When stitching a^ knit fabric, use a cotton covered polyester thread. The cotton covering makes the thread sew and look like cotton thread, but the polyester core provides strength and elasticity necessary for knit fabrics. ___________* * * Stitch with a fine machine I needle, a loose tension and J2-15 stitches perdnch. A very small zig-zag stitch also provides a certain amount of stretch to the seam that will prevent the threads from breaking when the garment is worn. ____________■»' w Before yQh construct the garment, experiment with various stitch lengths and tensions to find the best one for your fabric. ' W. Goebel, manufacturer of the “Hummel” figurines is sponsoring the annual $1,000 cash award, and ten runner-up prizes-for the best photographs of children most closely resembling “A Stitch in Time” (above) or any one of the “Hummel” figw rines. More than 275 \ “Hummel” figurines -can- be used-os -models-for a *living’ “Hummel.” Entry blanks may be obtained by writing “Hum^ mel” Look-Alike, 1 East 57th Street, New York, N.Y. 10022. The contest Jdoses Dec. 31____ Label Packages UNIVERSITY PARK, PS. (UPI) - Mrs. Ruth Buck, | Pennsylvania State University Love 'Em Tender OTTAWA, Canada (AP) J extension foods and nutrition j Farmers here have been iirged j specialist, advises freezer by officials to treat chickens with tenderness before they kill them. Stress, they say, produces lactic acid which makes I the meal tough. owners td label egery package of food put in a freezer with name of contents, how prepared and date packaged. Keep a record of all food who*want.® SS 1J0me SaSli Me« Carter, sewing expert for’ That aI wh raC!iVe Plothes The McCall Pattern Company, .and says, “By using- the correct ---' —••• v«*b; mi iiiaivc dim easy to care for? Then, knit fabrics are ideal* for you. Sup-ple. versatile and resilient, fall and winter, single and double knits come In a variety of weights and textures. . uouig UIC vUUOUt sewing techniques, you wiU find that knits adapt to most pattern To begin with, the lengthwise rib of a knit is the straight of grain. Therefore, avoid Everything^ coming up skinny for the sew generation. Skmny fit.. Skinny styling, skinny fabrics. Pictured are skinny dresses that are wore than dresses when worn over matching pants, A total look just right when made in your favorite knit fabric. Left: McCall’s Pattern No. 2010. Right: £ polo shirt silhouette to'He worn . over pants as* shown but just as great with a, skirt or as street length as a one-piece dress. McCall’s Pattern No. 2093. A program on “The-Human-Use of Urban Space” will be presented by Mesdames: Q. J. Odell, Gordon Hagenbarth, Don Donigan and Wendell Strait. Any interested college graduate in the .urea may attend the meeting. "Mrs. James Malin of Buffalo Street, COm- in Home Freezer frozen, including size o f | package and date frozen. Check .off packages as used so you, | know what is in the freezer at AAUW Autumn Season Kicks Off for Three Rochester Three branches of th elmerce Township is membership! American Association of chairman. University Women will meet next week. Waterford ; A trip of speakers, -Charles Wetehr-Mrs. F. A membership coffee in the Warner and Mrs. John BiUs, Oakland University F a c u 11y will talk on “Know 'Your Club house will open the 1969-70 Waterford” at the Thursday season for Rochester branch,1 meeting of Waterford branch AAUW on Thursday. 1 AAUW. Mrs. William Chapman will, The 8 p.m. meeting takes lead the group as president. $he place in the Forest Drive home-will be assisted by Mesdames: j of Mrs. John Bills. Larry Hummel and Hans Pfiff- * ★ * ner, vice presidents; Edward j a review of the book, Birch mid William Burns, “Lakeland’s Paradise,” by Mrs. | secretaries and George h^artin,! Richard Wunrow and reports of treasurer. | the Chicago national convention Area women holding bac- j by Mrs. Daniel Skeen, will also calaureate degrees and in- be on the agenda, terested in memberships may ; Cohostesses will be Mrs. John attend—the 8 pm. meeting, gaum and Mrs. Dennis Forster. Further information may be women who hold BA and higher! obtained from Mrs. Pfiffner of degrees from various universi Utica or Mrs. Eric R. Ellison,i ties and colleges may attend. Rochester. . _ , —-...... . ■ Union Lake Mrs. Frank Dickie, president! Union Lake branch will open her Ward’s Point Drive home for the first fall meeting I Thursday at 8 .p.m. Cohostess will be Mrs. Harold Hill. Hugh KINNEY SHOES THE PONTIAC MALL Open Sunday 12 noon to 5 P.M. - ANNA DELUXE Style 302 Wiglet TWest quality 100% human hair ' highlights this lightweight versatile wiglet. Weight: 1 ,VS ounces Length: 6"-8" Base: 2W Oval DRAYTON WIG ' DISTRIBUTORS COIFFURE PAR ANNE , 4666 W. Walton, Drayton Plains 673-3408rd73-07l2 B—*4 Til E PONT!AC: ]»RK8S. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER* 19, 1969 Old West Lives on Modern-Day Cattle Drive A Scene From The Past Is Re-Created As- Cattle- Are Driven To Summer Pasture In Colorado (EDITORS NOTE; The Old West is gone, but the cowboy is still out there. The cattle business has moved somewhat into the Jet Age—or at least the age of the highway and railroad -— but, it seems on a cattle drive there’s no substitute for a man on a horse.) . By JOHN T. Wheeler AP Newsfeatures Writer ALONG THE CONTINENTAL DIVIDE, N.M. - The ratters mostly are gone now, and the Indians drive ^usty pickup . trucks. Instead of facing almost modern horse thief owes society no more than Hie man who steals a portable television set. Old-timers talk wistfully of the Old West as a living thing strangled by millionsof miles of barbed wire, an invention they equate with the use of heroin. ★ * * Where once huge cattle drives slo\yly wound their , way to America’s dinner plates over the Chisholm and other fabled trails, cattle now move by rail and superhighways when they travel any great distance. Well, not all the time. MODERN DRIVE In one of the largest cattle drives of modern times, cowboys—and executives—of the Great Western Land and Cattle Co. drove some 600 head of Charolais yearlings out of New Mepddft's flatlands, along. America’s spine on the Continental Divide and into summer pasture in southern Colorado. The 192-mile trip took 14 days. The comparative frills for the drive brought leg-slapping guffaws from those whose days,, aboard horses reached back to near the fOfh of the century. * * ★ "My gawd," said one sexagenarian, “You don’t mean they’re even taking an electric deep freeze for the chuck wagon. And tents. And one of those radid telephones in an air-conditioned station wagon! And pillows! Now, don't that beat all?" "It’s a good thingraostolihe ^old-timers are gone," said an-other -old-timer,—“Because if -they could have seen this they just naturally would have died anyway.” QUITE A SIGHT When the drive pushed, off, one cowboy said, “I guess we do make quite a sight, what with all these dudes along.’’ . " The “dudes" mostly were stockholders or friends. Some, knew nothing of ranching or the ROUGH, BUT GOOD—What old-timers would have considered frills can do little to case the life of the modern cowhand. His: basic diet remains beans and beefj beef, beef. A pillow is a better headrest than £ saddle, but aching muscles still find little solace on hard, rocky 'ground. cattle business except what they saw on annual financial reports from Great Western. —w-"‘~ * * A Most of the dudes didn’t stay for the first full day. By the end of the second, the herd was under the control of hard-core cow-punchers and horse wranglers. Even what old-timers considered frills did little to ease the life of the modern cowhand. UP AT 4:30 A.M. The workday was about the same as a century ago. Up at 4:30 a.m., a quick, heavy break-last and then Into the saddle by . 6. The average day meant about 12 hours in the saddle and a boredom only occasionally relieved by trouble with the herd, including in this case one ministampede set off by an Indian boy’s barking dog. ★ * * Diamond Smith and his chuck wagon with deep freeze probably were the most welcome bills to the drive. Diamond is a professional outdoor chef who boasts he once cooked a ceremonial dinner of six whole buffalo for 1,500 Southern Ute Indians. The traditional fare for drovers-beans, sourdough bread and beef, beef, beef—was replaced by a menu of Mexican food, ham sandwiches, fruit pies, beans and beef, beef, beef. The first days of the drive were rough even for the most seasoned cowboys. Many were used to working three or four hours a day dn horseback. But for days, their leg muscles were knotted just as tight and their.. knees were just as concentrated a collection of shooting pains as 'Mhe novices reported. SOCIAL CENTER Diamond Smith’s cook fire was the natural social center of each flight’s camp. There were no spngs except for the mostly sad country-western tunes that blared from the cook’s transistor radio. Until muscles regained their tone several days out, each morning was a special agony of straightening limbs and starting them functioning again by walking stiff-legged to the campfire for a breakfast of eggs, bacon, pancakes and scalding coffee. This would have to last the seven hours until the inevitable sandwich and fruit lunch was brought along the trail. - A At the steel corral each day, a tired voice would call ......out, “Okay,' turn ’em loose,” and with a few shouts and waved arms from the cowboys, -the herd would slowly begirr~t© snake but. One rider took the •lead as a cowboy Pied Piper and the other hands wordlessly took positions along the flanks of the herd that sometimes stretched out more than a mile, sometimes bunched up in less than the length of two football fields. There were only two tasks for the next to 12 to 14 hours: Keep . the herd together; keep it moving. WELL-COINED The expression “herd instinct” was well-coined. If the outriders permitted, one or two yearlings would turn aside or stop to graze, and soon hundreds behind them would be doing the same. An orderly line of cattle pointed north to Colorado one minute could become a mass of confusion that could take half an hour to sort the next. So small a thing as one of the lead heffers turning around at one point doubled the entire herd back on itself. The Indian boy’s barking dog sent the cattle into a ministampede with about 50 head, representing $15,000, plunging towafd the edge of a cliff. One cowboy who helped turn back, the racing Cattle said if they were sufficiently “spooked" the cattle would have followed one another off the cliff to their deaths if they had not been caught in time. * * * Today's ranch hand earns from $20Q to $400 a month and found—food and a bunk. The work is among the worst in terms of pay, hardship, hours and needed stamina. Half-hearted attempts at unionizing the highly individualistic cowhands never left the ground. CoWboys have a hard time explaining what it is that draws them to the range. A common answer—especially to outsiders' —is, “This is all l know.” But in less guarded moments, some talk lyrically, if laconically ref— the beauty^ the desert flower- _ ing in the spring. Or of the massive red sandstone mesas. Or of being “on top of the world" on the Continental Divide where rainstorms are cleaved to feed rivers running either ~ easf or west. FEELING OF PRIDE *=* One of the things that holds men to ranch life is a feeling of pride that they have met and— matched repeatedly a rugged test of manhood, • This in turn seems to leave their egos at rest. Early in the drive, the cowhands rode horses that hadn't known the pressures . of man, saddle and bridle for many months, leaving them half-wild. So many men were bucked' off that one noted wryly -the second night, “It sure as hell is raining cowboys around here.” ' ....it * * If any of those bucked off was embarrassed or sensitive about the fact, it didn’t show. This applied to vice presidents and the toughest horsemen. Many words were spoken about the various mounts men drew from day to day during the drive. Few were complimentary, and none reflected that love the fictional cowboy is -supposed-to feel for hls-mount. _ TEENS ALONG “Even the jackass has more sense than a horse,” said one wrangler. Another to a man bucked off a horse with a bad reputation: “Why don’t yog just ' buy that thing, and then you at least could have the pleasure of shooting H.” Three teen-age girls and one boy accompanied the drive. Each was an expert horseman It's Easy To Relax After A 12-Hour Workday and each enjoyed adult status around the campfire. * * * “Generation gap?" one cow-boy father said in answer to a question. “Weli. sure, I guess we have some trouble with our kids. But nothing like you read about in the papers or see on television. Hell, a boy don’t have to prove himself a man by going up against his father out here. He can prove himself in the saddle.” Den Wilder, 35, left a job with the California Auto Club In Lps Angels to return to the life of a cowhand. The former school teacher gave his children as one reason. BETTER LIFE “I want my kids to grow up in this environment. It makes for a much better family Ufa; like we’re all closer together. The kids have chores to do now. In that Lbs Angeles apartment my only job was to make his cowgirls, who lived in a pickup truck camper with indoor plumbing, were a bit hard to wake up in the morning, but rode just as hard, ate as much dust and could rattle off as many blue oaths at erring cows and horses as the male cowhands. But at the same time they could be demure and even shy around men. A feisty blonde who uttered a comparatively mild curse at a heifer clamped her hand over her mouth when she realized a male outsider was within earshot. She said “Oh, I beg your pardon." low-keyed compared to the past when raiding parties repeatedly attacked trail herds to drive off cattlelor Indian stew pots. Rustlers are fewer, but mechanized. Because of strictobrand laws, It is virtually impossible to move cattle by truck for any distance without, a state, county or local check. Each head of cattle sold also requires inspection, said Ron Wilder, executive vice president of Great Western. The modern rustler, therefore, drives onto a remote section of a ranch, catches, kills and dresses out several head and then hangs them in a deepfreeze truck which normally can go about its business on the highways unhindered, w a * Wilder is typical , of the new breed of cattle baron. The former Texan spent his youth around ranch animals but went to school at UCLA and later sold insurance and securities. He is part of a management team that includes Kenneth Eubanks, former dean at a university and now company president, and Bill Hollis, vice president for finance and former assistant university dean. A A:.'-.’ it Great Western In fact is a land and cattle .company which owns no ranchland and would prefer to own only a small percentage of the cattle In its care, The company leases land from ranchers and pays them to care forcattlepurchased mainly by the well-to-do. LITTLE CHANGE SEEN I But if the Old. West is gone and the cattle business now is into the field of modern irstructura, 1 B—5 authority to deal with the major areas of crisis.” ' “The President placed Vietnam at the doorstep of Hanoi. Let the critics of the war now turn to North VietnanA for a response,” continued- Broom- Congressman William S. Broomfield of Royal- Oak, a former delegate to the United Nations, praised Preside at Nixon’s speech before the U.N. yesterday as “one of the finest’’ - ever delivered to the world body by “a chief of state and especially an American p resident.” “For the first time, America has put the issue of Vietnam squarely before the 126 member nations of the U.N. General Assembly, ’’ said Broomfield, a Broomfield, a Republican, said if the U.N. is ever to fulfill its purpose as the world’s that the U.S. has no such fears now. It is sincere in its determination to find a n honorable solution to the war.’’1 Gun FaJkr Jkes; Tavern Owner Is Shot in Back 1 Hospitalized A gurf-tofing bar owner is in “poor to fair” condition at Botsford Hospital, Pennington, today. Novi police said his pocket derringer slipped to the floor and shot him in the back, just above the left hip. Clarence W. Leonard, 40, 2475 8. Commerce, Commerce A two-car crash at Rochester Hooper A Huddleston Funeral | ■nit Auburn roads in Avon Home, CookevfQe, Tend., with I Township yesterday at 1:10 burial in Creettown Cemetery, I p.m. injured four persons, one I of them severly. Carl t Imum * In tair condition at Cflttenton-----± Jon“ li Hospital, Avon .Township, is Service for Carl L. Jones, 63,1 Mrs. Thelma Hiscock, 58, of of 253 N. Saginaw Wtllbdlp.m.1 troubles in his Bast Shore Bar, Detroit, She was a passenger in Monday at SparkfeGriffia Chap-and 14 Mile, Novi, He a car driven by her husband, el with burial in Christian Hills loaded Ms 38-caliber derringer Victor, 66. ,* Memorial Estates, Rochester, and put it in is back pocket last He and thf two persons in the Mr. Jones, a self-enmlpyed night, officers fold. { other car, the driven Edna auto mechanic, died yesterday. As he sat on a stool at the Guimbnd, 58, of Groase Pointej Surviving arahis wife,.Nina;j baf, ths cocked pistol dropped'Woods, and Donna Weiss, 34, of a sister, Mrs. Lola L. Toionen to the floor and discharged, ac-jSt, Clair, were treated and of Waterford Township; and a cording to Investigators. I released. Ibrother. j TOE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY;, SEPTEMBER 19. 19G9 Judge Eases Restrictions j After Newsmen Arrested Deaths in 'Pontiac, Nearby Areas CHICAGO (AP) - The chief judge of U.S. Disrict Court in Chicago has modified his sections on news coverage in and around the Federal Building. The action came after 10 newsmea were arrested for defying the limitations. Judge William J. Campbell j Doehrer and Skolnick were released on recognizance bonds after a preliminary hearing be- Area Father of 5 [Cookeville. Local arrangements | funeral and location of burial a father of five was killed [were by Roth’s Funeral for|has not yet been determined, [yesterday morning when he; to Stay Through 70 agreed to ease the restrictions somewhat Thursday night after meeting informally with Don H. Reuben, representing the four major daily newspapers in Chicago. The Chicago Newspaper Publishers Association Mr. asked for the modification. The restrictions were imposed Wednesday by Judge Campbell. Under his directive, cameras and tape recorders werebanned Inside the building, on an adjoining plaza and on sidewalks around the downtown building on three sides. ___The modification will allow one room of the building to be used for news conferences and permit cameras and tape recorders to be operated in any nonjudicial office. ORDER BEFORE TRIAL Campbell issued the order a week before the scheduled trial of eight persons charged with violating a federal antiriot Jaw in connection with police-protester clashes during the Demo- BLYTHE, Ga. (AP) and Mrs. Jack Padgett got rid of a huge nest of yellow jackets in their attic, but it was a painful victory. Half a dozen members of this rural community’s volunteer Joseph L. Andrews lwprp nv *“in s Tor n I 4yester!?ay IK? "nen "e Dr. Rockwood W. Bullard Jr. i for his administrative duties in Mrs. Miller cued this morning., tripped and fell under the!Park. t akp riarkstnn *• ... . , She was a member of OES and|wffi? of/a dump truck after ofjS®" Wlth the dcpart‘ the White Shrine of Royal Oak. [ the truck’s parking brake failed Lnother vear t pontiac General1 ment' w it | | , scnutt runerai nome, 7 wnn Romeo A&P Supermarket. She is survived by her hus- to hold, according to Farm-Hosoital NURSING DIRECTOR * YellOW. her husband; band iind one sister. _ ington Police reports | Dr. Bullard’s term was in- Dr. Roger Nelson, newlv ao- ^isary will be said a -30 two daughters, Mrs. Henri . _ _ w Killed was Donald J. Kills, 35, creased from one to (wo years pointed administrator p.m. Sunday at the funeral Paulson of New Hampshire and Mrs. Forrest |.E.. Moyer of 117 Maudlin, Walled Lake. He g ................. Service for / Joseph L.' Funerals, Romeo. Andrews, 63, of 203 Auburn will] Mrs. Bartlett died Wednes-be 11 a.m. Monday at Melvin A.[day. She was a clerk for Jhe Schutt Funeral Home, f with Romeo A&P Supermarket. Nest Removed —Painfully home. Mr. Andrews, owner of Joe* Barber Shop, 371. N.‘ Saginav died yesterday. g Surviving are his wife, Mary, and two brothers. fife department wqjre badly stung when, they climbed into the attic to hose down the yellow jackets’ five-pound nest with carbon dioxide fire-freezing gas. That only stunned the insects. They struck back as one fireman carrying part of the nest out of the house In a plastic bag inadvertently released them. He tdssed the bundle Into a cotton field and fled down toe road. hospital’s^ board of hospital, reported the search for Mrs. Hilda Shelly of Union [ BIRMINGHAM — Service for was employed by the Fm^' directors adopted new rules andla director of nursing continues. Lake: one son, Normanof former resident Mrs. Forrest E. ington Department of Public bylaws iast night. Bullard will! Reorganizations Hie (Violet L.) Moyer, 56, of Garden Works. j serve until Dec. 31, 1970. [emergency room as a clinical City will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at * ■ * • * j" * * ★ [department in the hospital, j Pontiac; and 14 grandchildren. Donald J. Ellis Mrs. Charles W. Draper Service for Mrs. Charles W. (Helen M.) Draper, 64, of 4811 Rossiter, Waterford Township, will be 1:30 p.m. Monday at the WALLED LAKE - Service for Donald J. Ellis, 35, of 117 Maudlin will-be 1 p.m. Monday at Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, with burial location undermined; Mr. Ellis died yesterday dur- Manley Bailey Funeral Home,' &*»rding topolicereports, ... / T . / — , ® . » i ITIlie Karl narlrorl tho nPW triirlr with burial in Roseland Park Ellis hpd parked the DPW truck Cemetery Berkley jon a steep hill on Farmmgton Mrs. Moyer /ed "yesterday. |jtoad south of 10 Mile in Farm-She was a member of Pythian^®"-Sisters Temple 94, Birmingham. When the brakes of the truck Surviving are her husband; apparently failed to hold Ellis two sonsT Forrest Jr. and'^mpted to jump into the Mb carry an impeachment clause other departments, was okayed Huntoon funeral Home, with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery; Troy. Mrs. Draper, a member of the ^United Methodist Church in Monroe, Wis., died yesterday. Surviving are her husband, four sisters and two brothers. The body may be viewed after 3 p.m. tomorrow. mi. ElllIS U1CU jrcotciuajr UUI-I IWU 9U1I9) «UIU T ., .. . CAlStCU jllCVH teg a worlr accidents He was! Charles, both of California; one ^ the truck and stop the vehicle ^he boar' employed by the City of Farm-[sister; and one brother, Virgilj3;„„v2i 1 o„^P ^®;iDr.Shelby Bi The new regulations also j giving it the same status allowing removal of a hospital officer on a two-thirds vote of the board and permitting the board’s executive committee to name a successor. No such rule ‘existed previously: confirmed Baylis’ appointment by the board. , alJU VUC Utvwfr, viftgu , — , - - __ .jiiciuv uajiu appumiiuvii. E. Morrow of Birmingham. [reports indicated, and was as a part-time chief of surgery. ~ crushed bv the wheels of theio______i______ Surviving are his wife, Irene; i crushed by the wheels of tjie;He wm be paid $10.000 a year two daughters, Gay and Cheryl, Mrs. Harry H. Pattison [tn,ck-both at home; three sons. The restructuring, allowing Other department chiefs'a say jn the administration of toe department, will permit the acceptance of emergency room specialists, according to Dr. Robert L. Tupper, director of medical educatipn. ORCHARD LAKE — Service Albert F. Games James, Donald and Terry, all at for Mrs. Harry H. (Dora home; one sister; one brother; |pattis0n, 63, of 5960 Pontiac and his mother, Mrs. Hazel j Trail was yesterday at Sparks-Ellis of Royal Oak. 'Griffin Funeral Home, Pontiac, _ . e ii l* - |with burial in Dak Hill Primo r. Men [cemetery, Pontiac. TROY - Primo F. Meli, 72,!. Mrs- Pattison died Monday. Grandson Means Vote for Legislator LANSING (AP) - Rep. Wil- kt 9-uu v Ri„ Rpnopr Hipd She was past president and!ham Fitzgerald, D-Detroit, says Service for Albert F. Gtanes, treasurer of the Women’s;he probably won’t rdn for the J75, of 110 Dover, Waterford The body is at Price Associatloh o{ the Fif Bt!Legislature in 1990-but if he cratic National Convention in August 1968. L. W. Samters, an emp oye of(Townshi w|„ ^ u a.m. Mon. Funeral Home. h0S^8 ’'day at Voorhees-Sipleehapel. nally dislodged the rest of toe ^ graveside %ervice -* Mrs. Harry E. Miller The arrests Thursday followed an attempt by Sherman Skolnick, a self-taught legal re-searcher, to hold a news conference in toe building to announce he had filed a suit challenging the judge’s order on grounds .it was unconstitutional. Padget, 60, who has been blind for 17 years, said the yellow jackets had been flying into the bedroom at night and stinging him and his wife while they slept----------------- White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy, will be under the auspices of Roosevelt Lodge No. 510. An Elks Lodge of Sorrow will be conducted at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the funeral home. His body will be at the funeral - home after 3 p.m. tomorrow. Soon afterwards, Skolnick also was arrested when he allegedly took a photograph of a U.S. marshal on; a sidewalk near the building. The 10 newsmen arrested were Michael Rollins, a WCFL radio station reporter; Charles Doehrer, a Resistance Press photographer; Arvid Carlson, a WGN-TV cameraman; Leonard Walters, a WBBM radio reporter; Waftton Wright, a WFLD television cameraman; and Stanhope Gould, John Lawrence, Tom Cosgrove, Charles Quinlan and Del Hall, a CBS television crew. Rollins was released on a 6250 signature bond by U.S. Commissioner James T. Balog, who continued his case to Sept. 25. Eight of the others were freed also, either because they took no photos or made no broad-cast footage, or because^ they were outside the area of the ban. Doctors' Insurance Going Up 110 Pet. INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP— Service for Mrs. Harry'E. (Thelma) Miller, 70, of 5149 Stevens will be Monday at Case Funeral Home, Saginaw, with burial in St. Louis, Mich, limp of the Presbyterian Church of Pontiac1 does, he’ll be counting on one and past chief of MizpahLadditional vnte. --'-^3 r\r\\Kr Temple, No. 7 of Pythian Fitzgerald says that vote | lwW* Sisters. - V “Twoulff came from TimothjrPat- Surviviving ate three sons,J rick Fitzgerald, his first grand-Richard of Orchard L a k e ,1 child, “without question, the Eugene of Alma and John of [greatest grandchild everborn." Maryland; one brother, Alvin The baby was born recently to R. Booth of Birmingham; ^nd[Fitzgerald’s son Timothy 'and -five grandchildren. | daughter-in-law Karen. Armstrong carpeting is new tough, soft, clean. And in your neighborr B & G Tile 1075 Wist Huron Pontiac — 681-1075 'Mr. Games, a retired tool and die maker at Fisher Body plant, died yesterday. He had served the company 35 years. i • A member of First Congregational Church, he also belonged to Elks Lodge No. 810,1 LOS ANGELES (AP) - An American Legion, Cook Nelson insurance broker says the pre- Post No. 20, and Low-12, A mium that southern California ;charter member and past corn-doctors pay for malpractice gander of American Legion coverage will go up an average |p®8tJn Calamus, Iowa, he was of 110 per cent on Oct. 1, life member of Roosevelt [Lodge No. 510, F&AM, John Allen, president of Net- Mr. Games had attended Iowa tieship Co., ly all malpractice insurance in southernTblifornia, irid Thursday the Increase is because claims per doctor have doubled since 1958 and the cost per claim has gone up sixfold. State College. Surviving are his wife, Myrie G.J 8 son, DeVe?e W. of =j Orchard Lake; and four 1 grandsons. The family suggests any memorial tributes be made to the American Cancer Society. If you have the idea that electric heat is too rich for your blood, you’d be surprised at the number of average people Who are putting it in their homes. Their present homes. You’d find—just likeihey—a clebner house than you’ve ever experienced. A quiet, even heat, completely worry-free. It’s also more comfortr able-never desert dry. If you’d like an estimate on installation ai^d operating cost, send us the coupon below. We’ll ask an Edison Approved Electric Heat Contractor tocallyou.No obligation, ofcourse. - Don’t wait for your next house to enjoy electric hbat. You can afford it right now. Honest. DREAM HOME YOUR HOUSE WITH ELECTRIC Allen said toe lowest premium" for doctors in toe highest .rate ^r$ Mary M. Garnham scale—orthopedic surgeons,' ' Service for Mrs. M. Garnham, neurosurgeans, plastic surgeons and anesthesiologists—will jump from $1,591 to $3,452 for 51, of 19 Cooley will be 11 a.m. Monday at St. Benedict Catholic coverage of $100,000 per clalm Chureh wito burial at Mt. Hope up to three claims a year. He Cemetery by Donelson-Johns said most physicians carry coverage up to $1 million. Rep. Broomfield Praises Nixon's Speech at U:N. Funeral Home. Mrs. Garnham died yesterday. Surviving are her mother, Mrs. Joseph Zisler of Herman Gardens; three daughters, Mrs. JoAnne Adams and Mrs. Suzanne Yables of Pontiac and Edith at home; two Joseph of Pontiac and James of Osbore, Ohio; one brother; sisters; and three “This big erfd farmhouse of ours has electric heat," said Albert Foege of Plymouth, u “We heat both floors— nine big rooms— and the cost is cheap. Runs us only a little over $300 a year.” HEAT. EDISON Service Detroit, l*m still nervous about the cost. Send the man anyway Just send literature. Don t want to talk to anyone B—6 THE PONTIAC P11KSS. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1969 Polls Show Many W. Germans Undecided as Election Nears BONN, Germany (AP) '£■ With West Germany’s general election nine days away, opinion polls say a large, percentage of the voters are undecided and either major party has a chance Jo Come jn ahead. One poll indicates 1$ per cent of the 38 million voters haven’t made up their minds. # ★ * * The two parties. Chancellor Kurt Georg Kiesinger's Christian Democrats and Foreign Minister Willy Brandt’s Social Democrats, are partners in the preserft government. But they are going into the election Sept. 28 as rivals. ’ Each would like to win the largest number of the 496 voting seats in the Bundestag, the lower house of Parliament,. and Thus make its leader West Germany's next chancellor. 1 MUST SEEK PARTNER None of the pollsters gives the major parties a Chace to win a majority in the Bundestag, meaning that the party winning, the most seats must seek‘a partner to govern. The leading party could seek a partnership with the Free Democrats, now in opposition with 49 Bundestag, seats, or the Two major parties could continue the present “grand coali-. tion.” ★—* ★ Tiie Social Democrats want to form a government with the Free Democrats. The Christian Democrats want to prevent this and are for continuing they present coalition until the next election, in 1973 Two other parties are InJ^ie race nationally—the ultrarightist National Democratic party and the Action for Democratic Freedom, a union of the extreme left including the newly constituted- Communist party. Neither is given much of a chance of capturing enough votes to enter the Bundestag. POLITICAL CAPITAL . __ Leaders of the Christan Democrats and the Social Democrats are trying to make political capital out of the country’s labor unrest. Political analysts believe that a series of wildcat strikes earlier this month, in-which some 50,000 miners and steel workers and 8,000 shipyard workers demanded higher wages, hurt the Socialists most. The public tends to hold them responsible for the Workers’ ac-tions. wee In an effort to counter this, top Social Democratic leaders held a news conference Thursday and demanded that Kiesin-ger call a Cabinet meeting to ^discuss wage demands by some 1.2 million public employes. "Garbage collectors in some communities had ^already left their jobs and the public employes’ union was meeting in Berlin to formulate demands. 'A Although1 no more Cabinet meetings had been scheduled before the election, Kiesinger, in Hamburg on a campaign tour, agreed to hold the meeting: The top Social Democratic leadership, including Brandt, Economics Minister Karl Schiller, German Affairs Minister Herbert Wehner, Justice Minis- ter Horst Ehmke and Helmut Schmidt, the Social Democratic leader in the Bundestag, appeared at the news conference. 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FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1969 B-7 Arab Guerrillas' Claim of ** Fatah claimed its guerrillas made their heaviest attacks ever on Israel Thursday night but Israel reported . only one 1 , skirmish in which it said four Arab saboteurs and no Israelis were killed. A spokesman for Fatah, the largest Palestinian guerrilla organization, said in Amman ~—that hundreds of commandos at. tacked44 positions along a 30-mile front in the Jordan Valley. A later communique said the raiders wiped out two Israeli observation posts and three ad- vance posts in the central valley. * ^ *. ★ The spokesman said the raiders used a variety of weapons, including heavy mortars, and that the Israeli air force was forced to send in jets for night strikes against them. “This must be a joke,” said -the Israeli aiyy spnkesmnn, T.t Col. Srubavel Shalev. “Maybe the Fatah can run air sorties at night when they can’t even see the targets but we certainly cannot.” Shalev said there had been only four reports of light arms and mortar fire in the area, with me . Israeli soldier slightly wounded. Later the Israeli command reported a skirmish after midnight 25 miles north of the Dead Sea. It said an Israeli patrol killed four Arabs near the Dam-iya Bridge across the Jordan, and “More bodies might be found later at the scene of the encounter.” There were no Israeli casualties, he added. Biggest Attack on Israel Disputed , A Jordanian army spokesman reported Israeli mortars and machine guns fired on some Jordanian positions in the southern Jordan Valley, but he said there were no Jordanian casualties. , In Cairo, President Gamal Abdel Nasser replaced the Egyptian army's chief of staff and the -navy’s commander without explanation. Nasser is in bed with What has been described as a case of acute influenza, but informants said he has set up an office in his sick- room and is running the country from there. INTELLIGENCE CHIEF The Middle East News Agen-V cy said Nasser had appointed Lt. Gen. Mohammed Sadek, chief of military intelligence since 1966, as his new army chief of staff, while Navy Col. Mahmoud Fahmi Abdul Rahman was made commander of the navy. Sadek replaces Lt. Gen. Ahmed Ismail, last heard of when he addressed graduates of the Egyptian War Academy Sept. 9. Rahman succeeds Capt. Faud Zikrey. the Israeli government announced tough new commerce and travel regulations for the city of Hebron, on the occupied West Bank. A spokesman said the new rules,forbid residents to work in Israel, to travel either in Jordan or Israel and to trade in either.of the two states.. He said the restrictions were ordered because of a growing number of sabotage incidents in the city* including the attempted assassination of the military governor three weeks ago and an attack bn a police patrol four days ago in which five Israelis were wbunded. The Israeli army loaded the bodies of two Egyptian pilots on an" International Red Cross launch and sent them across the Suez Canal-to Egypt. The pilots were shot down over the Sinai Desert last week during a big air battle. last 2 weeks PLAY WIN! W NO PURCHASE NECESSARY! Got Details at any Topps’ Store! SNPf sturdy talwlar stool stand WALKER/JUMPER adjusts to 3 positions WELSH STROLLER tots’ tfcgntol BLANKET SLEEPERS loti’ slits 1-4 GRO-SLEEPERS CARDIGANS &PULLOVERS CHAWl|RS —Snoo crotch for oosy (ftoporlnfl; 13-18-24 month CHIX* PRE-FOLDED BIRDSEYE DIAPERS - ig-buy and seval adjusts to 5 positions! - INFANT-SEAT— SPKIAII CHIX* 97T-T.09 FRIED 100* COTTON CMS r*§ular4.ti-f.9t M Easy-care acrylic sweaters In-. elude new long-length slip-ons With belts, with mock or turtle necks . . . cardigans have It • fancy detailing. White, pink, M+ blue, yellow, navy, beige. Sizes 36 through 42. LYCRA SPANDIX PANTY GIRDLES mmQ Compare at $2 jn mini or short lengths. While, pink, blue, lime, I Soot belt, foam paddbig, playtinm balls. TINY T PULLOVER COnON UNDERSHIRT -3/1.88 VALUE -Watur-ropallont 'dkipor tap—. 6-3< mot. PLAYTEX* WATERPROOF b&t pr. LIVING BABY century fokUng-typo DRESSING TABLE PLAYTEX* NURSER KITS WITH 6 HOLDERS, Whitt, Avocado, Pinaappl opps GREENFIELD RO. I 8 MILE RO. I WILDWOOD t EORO RD. I EUREKA A DU-T0LE00 HWT. | SCHOOLCRAFT I TELEGRAPH ROS. WESTLAND I SOUTHGATE ! REDFORD TWP. PONTIAC WARREN ANN ARBOR B—8 Bridge Tricks From Jacobys NORTH IS 4QJ32 VJ4 A108742 ♦ Q6 WEST EAST 494- 4)10 V10 853 ¥97 ♦ K6 ♦ A J95 ♦ A10852 4)K J9743 SOUTH (D) 4) AK8765 VAKQ62 ♦ Q3 ♦ Void Both vulnerable Wert North East South lA Pan 2 A Paaa 34 Pass 3 ♦ Pass Part Pass Pass 64 Opening lead—4 K By OSWALD AND JiAMES JACOBY Today’s hand is taken from an early round match in the 1930 Vanderbilt Cup tournament. South was the late Philip Hal Sims, the greatest auction bridge player of all time and one of tiie titans of those early days of contract. North was Willard S. Karh who was destined to win tiie 1931 Vanderbilt -with Sims and Oswald Jacoby 1 and David Bruce. Bruce held the West cards and was then a rather unknown young player. Sims’ one-spade opening and Kam’s raise to two spades were about the same Bids that would be made today except that a lot of players would open the South hand with a forcing bid of some sort. ★ ★ ★ Sims’ hand was so strong that he decided to bid six once Kam raised him. His 1930 style would be to jump right to the slam but he saw no harm in trying a little deception. He stopped to bid three diamonds! Kara went bade to three spades. He didn’t , know what Sims’ three diamond bid meant except tl\gt it was a force and all Ids hand warranted was the most minimum response * he could make. This deception boomeranged. Bruce was unknown back then but he was jilready a great player and he said to himself, “Sims was going to six anyway. Maybe he wanted to stop a diamond lead.’’ Out came the diamond king and Sims was one down^before he could get started. Neither the Sims team nor the Bruce team won the Vanderbilt that year but Sims was so Impressed by ihis lead that he asked r Bruce to join the team he Was starting and to play with Jacoby. The Sims, Kara, BtiUce, Ja- coby team won everything in 1931 but broke* up shortly after while the Bruce-Jacoby partnership continued as the base of the famous Four Aces team that dominated bridge from 1932 to 1941. THE PONTIAC PRESS, Q—The bidding has been: West North East Sooth 1* Dble 24k IV Pass ? You,-South, hold: 4AKSS4 VQ65 4AK144 +2 What do you do now? A—Bid four no-trump. You are going to six hearts if your 'partner shows an ace. TODAY’S QUESTION What is your opening bid with: *2 VAK1098 44 AAKJ854 Answer Tomorrow I (Newspaper Enterprise Assn.) THE BERRYS By Carl Grubert' By SYDNEY OMARR Par Saturday TEEN DATINO HINTS: Earthy ■■ , Ideal .aharli “■thut ____ _________ _____ ...tphatlt ... I. This It not a particularly good “ - - the ethereal. CANCER I _____ a permanent rolatlonahlp. SA6IT TARIUS may bt concerned about budget ---------------------------------, PISCE! chock. vir&O _____ _________ _______ baa marvelous time, confidence It rebuilt. AQUARIUS hot romantic availing but may have doubts about trua toolings. ARIES (March 21*prlM»>: Accent I an achievement. Thla It lima to utllii Innate aanaa of originality. Ba a pioneer Break wim tradition. Laid the was Elevate yourself — community protect. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) t Empbatla " it In travel. Your general pattern * ~ M........■ more llax- communr-"— --Wakl .... __,Jt of nitur MNI (May ll-Juno 20).......... .. _____Jl sublacts dominates. You strive t gat t* bottom of myatorloa. Key ■- *- *■ flexible. Look from various angli .... to check details, alternatives. Lie low and Plara#S5»0. euard t by avoiding extremes. Keep rospli .. . concerning axorclsa and diet. Cfrworkers ——».u in., t. hattar undaratan* ____ »): Cupid' la mark. Nothing pent halfway) ,h* northing. You took graelar i kiSaa.naa'STTw crisis should arise. You .may wilt to have more I risnontibintltt "scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Taka tart ~ that ywLir " id a«w.1s»icai8y fhiaja a~ daj signature, floats cou Daily Almanac By United Press International Today is Friday, Sept. 19th, the 262nd day of 1969, with 103 to follow. The moon Is between, its first quarter and full phase. The morning stars are Verms and Saturn. The evening stars are Mercury, Mars and Jupiter. ★ 4 ★ On this day in history: In 1777, American soldiers won the first battle of Saratoga, New York in the Revolutionary War. In 1863 Union and Confederate soldiers met in the Battle of Chickamauga, Georgia. The rebels won the following day. In 1881, American President James Garfield died In Elberon, N.J., of gunshot wounds Inflicted by a disgruntled office see ker on Ji# 2. In 1980 Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev received a cold reception when he arrived in the Uriited States to attend the United Nations General Assembly. A thought for the day: President James Garfield said, “The nation is too great to look for mere revenge. But for the security of the future I would do everything.’1 Marriage licenses A.Tsp.wjer**™* Phillip W. Sltapard, 1257 Cloverlawn si Mary Lou m. McNgil, Ml Rafts* . 5rP 1 Wotverto THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1969 B—9 Policies OK'd on Conducting School Board Sessions tThe Pontiaq School Board recommendations of committees adopted a set of policies on conducting board meetings last night amid objections by many members Of the audience and one board member, Dr^ltobert It Turpin. Board President Russel. Blown explained the rules were plus .advice of legal counsel. Brown said. He said Schools Supt. Dana Whitmer had prepared the final wording, a ★ a Dr. Turpin objected to adoption of the rules on short notice. He insisted the rules should His was the only negative to their temporary nature. It vote heard and the rules were adopted. However, die regulations are only to serve on interim basis, according to Brown.- He .^said the board wishes to see how the rules work before they become of* was observed that rules had also been changed twice since April and that citizens in attendance had a hard time remembering which rules were in effect. fdftned ffom existing policies first be formally presented and ficial policy. Audience participation is included In rule four “Members of the audience may speak to agenda items which are of direct concern to the individual during the board meetings upon recognition by the presiding officer. “The presiding officer may cent of the cost of residential property Acquired and 10 per cent for commercial property. erty acquired and Annett 6 per I areas. Peery admitted the pro-i SHOP DOWNTOWN PONTIAC The proposal recommended that Annett retain the services of Joseph Singleton, a black realtor, for the project. Some audience members said they felt Annett was retaining gram had not done so, insofar as test results had shown, but that attitudes had been proved. 5 ★ * +: In other business, the board I ratified the contract with it$| Food Service Employes Union, Local 719, AFSCME. Set up in the guidelines are formation of the agenda items, request., each speaker to state a add allowed broader participa-then voted on at a following OBJECT TO RULES public notice of meetings and his name and address prior to f< titm by the public in board meeting, as called for in the! Some members of the au-1 definitions of public and ex-speaking and may limit each Singleton only to meet state re-[ . . , The board u sed bylaws. . dience objected to the rules and ecutive sessions. speaker to one appearance for qu ir e ments for «on- ,J~min«» if ,.nntrnn^n,,rlJrl each agenda item.” discrimination in his firm. 1 blasts cofild be safely used to; . «-r=ii^‘T""S open underwater channel! and OPQ'JOl [Q|5j|-!SSr',5f harbors. •__________________>»«■ Hampton Gives Preview of State Education Crisis •A preview of the coming! throw stones on the whole pro-crisis in education in Michiganjgram. if ever we needed sup-to be faced by the State port, it's now. I hope we can Legislature was given by State; get together and achieve re-Rep. William P- Hampton, R- form,” Hampton said. Birmingham, yesterday. I EXPLAINS VOTE Htf gave a report on the „ , ..... UtflUtur, h> tta. Rotary ***• luncheon. | against parochiaid, “I want to v w ! see the-public schools put in j order financially first and to Jhe key to the attempt at* encourage a dual system now is educational reform will be Gov. | beyond our means.” MpUken’s proposal to be an-. * *■ nOunced in about two weeks,) Hampton also provided the money.) HartiptfiiT Bald. TV ptupusaHs- Rotariaus wlth~ background oni expected to include proposed!legislation that killed the slate constitutional establishment of a state college amendments. * of osteopathy in Pontiac. Hampton gave what he con-, ★ • a * sidered would be important: In July the State Legislature factors in reform: . provided for a college of p Reorganization of the State!osteopathy for the first time,! • Lifting of the 7 per cent mortgage ceiling Providing for a budget surplus expected to be over $10 million by next June. • Passing a bill establishing compulsory arbitration for police and firemen. (This bill has a two-year limit and is described as an experiment. Hampton expressed personal reservations about giving arbitrators power over tax Brown spasmodically .observ-1 The board tabled a contract ed this last night, but did notjagreement with the Pontiac recognize all speakers who area Urban League? The league, wished to speak on each item, since 1966, has been providing Calls for votes on the question I wide-ranging services aimed at at hand often cut discussion promoting incentive in the short. 1 _____poorer sections of the school HEP. HAMPTON PROVISION FOR HEARING Also in the rules is provision for hearing at the and of a meeting -from pcBrops- oir sub-jects not (Hi the agenda. This ‘discussion period” lasted for about one hour but was curtailed by an approved motion to adjourn at 11 p,jn. William Knudsen was retained as appraiser and Bruce Annett as realtor in acquiring property for the proposed new I high school and C r o f o o l I Elementary on West Hiiron. ! Knudsen is to get $175 per prop- district. FEDERAL MONEY The contract would, have proved $16,000 for continuation| of the program which has a I total cost of $19,961. The $16,000 is federal money under Title I, it was explained. Presenting the program renewal request was Hiievon Peery1, assistant director of community action programs under Title I. Blacks in the audience questioned whether the program had shown any results in raising the intellectual level in the target1 Armstrong carpeting is new tough, soft, clean. And in vour neighborhood now. Winglemire Furniture 104 N. Saginaw Street Holly"— 634-8731 Board of Education as it now : exists — elected en-a partisan basis — to either an appointed board or One elected on a nonpartisan bads. ;• Abolishment of the Intermediate school district system, which handles special education and administrative duties, and replacement with regional school districts (from 12 to IS). Reduction of districts, elminating by cotv idUdationthosc not offeringl42 grades. This would reduce total districts from 640 to about 300, but not change the essential structure. • Changing the system of financial support. •OUT OF DATE’ On this last item, Hampton said, “School financing on property taxes Is out bf date.” He pointed out in some district each pupiiHr-supported ~hy $4,000 valuation and by $40,000 irC others. He suggested either a statewide cqroe tax. but specified it must be located i -at an existing campus- with- a medical school. .a ★ a._________ | “Members of, the Legislature! felt that creating a separate: facility (in Pontiac) would forget a division between the two fields (osteopathy,! allopathy) ... and many of1 them feel eventually the two syill merge.” • * school UNFORTUNATE FOR CITY He suggested either a ~ property tax or This is unfortunate for Pontiac,.Hampl6frobserved,after $500,000 had been raised by the public to purchase land to the Michigan College of Ostepathic Medicine (MCOM). ♦ it "The people in Pontiac should have sat down with professionals” before proceeding with MCOM, Hampton said. ★ , it In reporting on this legislation session, Hampton gave these exjunples of accomplishment. • • Creation of the osteopatjiic illege. • Implementation of the two $100 million for recreation. vote miUage to better their own AppSpIS^ $100 million for low-income housing. district, Hampton' The entire Legislature will concentrate on the problems of schools when the current recess ends next week, Hampton said. He called the proposals by Milliken to be placed before them, “the most bold and imaginative ever seen. “Undoubtedly when it comes ' out there will be some things in it you won't like . ,, but don’t Ford Promotion DETROIT (APHE. F. Coll has been appointed executive assistant for dealer affairs in Ford Motor Co.'s Uncoln-Mer-cury Division. Coll has been central region sales manager for the division. The bottle of Bourbon you can’t buy for love nor money. : At the Beam distillery, there’s some Bourbon we bottled in 1911. Our chemist asked for a sample to (Compare it $dth the Jim Beam Bourbon we make today. Well, we gave him a drop, and he found toftay’a Tim Beam has the aame food light taste that our 1911 Bourbon had, And our 1911 Bourbon tastes as good as it did in 1795. That* because the Beam formula has been part of our •ecretrfamily art for six generationa. We don't mind proving it acieptif. ically. We just don't like using our only bottle of 1911 Bourbon to, dp it. ‘‘World's finest I# • shopping at the store . ’ with the SPARTAN on the door/ Gerber Cereal Carnation Milk Ballard Biscuits RICE, 16-OZ. WT. BOX 37c INSTANT, DRY, 8-QT. PKG. 89C 8-OZ. WT. TUBES — 3/29C OREO COOKIES NABISCO, 16-OZ. WT. PKG..... 49c HYDROX COOKIES - •—ci ikicuikic iz rvt pten. zLOc— SWIFT'S PREM ■ SHURFINE SYRUP . 12-OZ... 59^ WAFFLE,32 FLOZ.... 53? DOG FOOD ■ SHURFINE BEETS 0,0c uv oATinhj, lODAo? kia^7 1 1/5 SLICED. 16-OZ.... 5/3/5® PECAN SANDIES AMMONIA 1Q SPARTAN FOIL ■ KEEBLER, 14-OZ. PKG 45° BLUE RIBBON, QT 19c ALUMINUM, 12"x25'... 25* POTTED MEAT ARMOUS'S, 3-OZ.... 2/31* VIENNA SAUSAGE r MODESS - Reg. MODESS - Vee Form 12's... 43* HORMEt CHILI - WITH BEANS, 15-OZ. *. . 37* PRINCE SHELLS | LARGE, 16-OZ. PKG.... 29* scotties FACIAL TISSUE—White & Ant., 2Q0 Count.. 29* shurfine TOMATOES WHOLE, 19-OZ.. .. 27c SHURFINE TOMATOES STEWED, 17-OZ 25* SHURFINE MACARONI ELBOW, 32-OZ. BOX.. 43* BALL PARK FRANKS “ HYGRADE, 1 POUND PKG.... 89* DIET SOFT IMPERIAL MARGARINE, 16-OZ.... 47* good luck Margarine 3e OFM6-OZ. 27* PILLSBURY BISCUITS COUNTRY STYLE, 8-OZ.... * 3/29* PILLSBURY BISCUITS BUTTERMILK, 8-OZ.... 3/29* Perch Fillets RMEN, 16-OZ. W 49c 4-FISHERMEN, 16-OZ. WT. PKG. Fishsticks lEN, 18's, 14-OZ. 59c 4-FISHERMEN, 18's, 14-OZ. WT. PKG. Dry Milk ON INSTANT, 2C “ 1.99 CARNATION INSTANT, 20-QT. PKG. . SHURFINE NOODLES^ SHURFINE shortening PURE VEGETABLE, 3 POUND . .r 71® shurfine Pear Halves „„ BARTLETT, 16-OZ. CAN :.. 37* CHILETS ' BEANS W/CHIU GRAVY, \6-OL... 2/33* SHURFINE BEANS oc WHOLE GREEN, 16-OZ.... 25* SHURFINE FLOUR 5 POUNDS .-.. 4r. BLUE BONNET g MARGARINE - QUARTERS, 16-OZ._31c “SPOON^SERVE—— RICH'S, 11-OZ. CARTON ... 44* EGGO WAFFLES. CHICKEN POT PIE SPARTAN, 8-OZ.... 2/35° CHICKEN DINNER oo SPARTAN, 11-OZ.... 39c SHRIMP, 26-30 CT. TREASURE ISLE—Peeled & Deveined. 14-oz 2.09 “Shop the store with the SP the B—10 THE PQNTI-AC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, I960 The Gourmet Adventures of *nder>. With dry drinks like Martinis it’s best to servs suftariess canapes. Most crackerq collapse when covered with moist spreads, so serve them “with" not “under" and let your guests serve their own. Scatter bowls of salted nuu, chilled raw vegetables in ice, and olives around your table. Make at least two or three different kinds, including one non-fattening one. Your guest will enjoy pre-meal drinks- when delicious 'canapes accompany them. Enjoy selecting your dinner from the many entrees on the menu at JAYSON’S, 4195 Dixie Highway at Hatchery Rd.. Drayton Plains, 673-7900. Food specialties featuring famous Jayson’s Prime Ribs L°d'frois,lelg*l,J*’cC. Heard Trio! Singer Helen O'Connell Never Ages . . . but Fans Do By DICK WEST when I fell in love with her corded “Green Eyes," “Ama-ence tonight,’and anytime Miss standing ovation. Which isn’t WASHINGTON (UPD -— After: about 30 years ago. jpola’’ and “Tangerine.” | O’Connell appears before a easy to do with varicose veins. Others say Miss O’Connell fiddle-aged audience the nos- number of years in semi- retirement, Helen O’Connell, j she still has the same j keeps herself packed in ice I taigia^"ge”s~so~deep"we *have effervescent eyes, blonde hair [when she is" not on stage. Still | pump it out.” -unsullied by dishwater gray and {others claim/she does it with! * * * dimples darting in and out of’ who rose to stardom as a pop vocalist during the big band era, Has gotten her career into high gear again. The amazing [thing about this is that Miss |0’Connell looks almost exactly like she did Make Us Your jOne-Stop Food and Entertainment Center Excellent Cuisine — plus ~ Ronnie Wolfe and "The Runaways" PONTIAC LAKE INN 7880 Highland Road 673-9988 cheeks virtually unfurrowed by 'the plow of time. And she is still hitting every note right on the tonsil. It’s all kind of weird. How Miss O'Connell has managed to avoid growing older along with the rest of us is one of life’s deepest1 mysteries to her contemporaries. | STARTED YOUNG ' Some say it’s because Miss O’Connell started young. They [say she began singing with Jimmy Dorsey’s orchestra when she was only 3 years old and was barely 4 when she first-re- iirrors. - If jshd' didn’t have to appear * * * in living nostalgia, Miss O’Con- Hoping to^eam-more about nell probably could be making a the matter, I dropped in the fortune as a rock singer, which other evening at the Shoreham 'js where the big money is. She Blue Room, a local concert hall has what it takes to be a hit where Miss O’Connell rently appearing recital. As I was being shown to a table, I noticed an odd noise in the room and asked the waiter about it. ‘NOSTALGIA PUMP’ “That is our nostalgia pump,” the waiter explained. “We have a middle-aged audi- cur* iwith the teen -nightly 1 today. When I finally got a word with Miss O’Connell, I asked i how she had maintained her I , youthful appearance. She professed to be baffled by it, too. “If I, know how I dld.it, I wouldn’t be singing for a liv-| ing,” she said. * * A “I’d stop and give preserva- t nitwits of i twn lessons.” STANDING OVATIONS But everywhere she goes, she reclaimed by the teen-age nitwits of yesterday, who insist that she lapse into “Green Eyes,” “Amapola” and “Tan-gerine.” ! twice on the night of my visit, the audience gave her a Highway Week ! LANSING (AP) - Gov. Wil-| iiam Milliken has proclaimed, next week as Michigan Highway I Week, calling the state’s roads 'the finest In the nation. “Our Hospital Periled by Fund-Drive Lag PLAINWELL (UPI) — Pippi lost if the hospital loses its i Should Pipp Community close, Community Hospital, a 40-bed license, Campbell said. jarea residents wou,d be forced facility that serves southeastern “As the situaion exists, the Allegan County is in danger of hospital is less than 90 days to t?Ve ,10 ™Les t0 *ala”T losing its state license because'from ceasing to e x i s t, ’ ’ pr 35 ““l®8 to Gran“ ”®Pkta-.for a $1-million fund drive to 1 Campbell said. | hospital care, upgrade it is foundering. M NOW! growing reliance on adequate, modern roads and streets em-izes the importance of safe,! efficient highway transportation expanding Michigan’s economic growth,” the governor! said. Peanut Cellar 363-9191 » HUTCHINS RD., UNION " Union l<~ ‘ _IU . Mil !! iiirfOHtt** I 11 &. ^1 I LIZ. o LK. RD. y\ i |l • 1 1 COOLEY 1 LK. RD. wz AL MAYW0RM on Mw Piano and Organ GIRDER and hnr Banjo DIXIELAND 'oatwiag Con.y liland Washboard Band SUNDAY 7:30 to 11:30 PM SlephenBoyd * Dionne Warwick * Ossie Davis w2r COLOR by Movielab-Released by BIRMINGHAM^ BLOOMFIELD CHARLTON HESTON in <fN0a ONE” m Mon. thru Thurs. till pm only Frl. and tat. lilt and 10 nm Sunday Ml • M0 - lilt plus STEVE MoQUEEN in THOMAS CROWN AFFAIR H Mon. thru Thurs. Till only Fri.Alnt.li1l only Sunday Si5l • 7i4S Beit Picture of the Year Academy Award Winner, “OLIVER” Shown Monday thru Sat. I avonings I P.M. Sunday Evnnmgs 1 P.M. Matinee WistL, Sat.! Sum 1P.M. Man NAS CONQUERED THE MOON WITHTHE EPIC APOLL011 FLIGHT! NOWTAKE WM MOMENTOUS JOURNEY Uourikyidthe! With lqss than two weeks to go to the Sept. 30 target date tp raise the.money;- only 10 per [ cent of the needed money has been pledged. ★ ★ ★ “There seems to be a general laqk of interest and understanding of the dire consequences that will result if the program fails,” . Wayne Campbell, chairman of the [hospital board of trustees, said fyesterday;— I “Everyone seems to be {waiting for the other person to make the first move, and'time is running out,” he said. BEGUN. LAST JUNE The fund drive was begum last June to raise 1600,000 to lm-[ prove the 8-year-old structure to {bring it into compliance with ! state health and building codes. Another $400,000 was sought to I add a 30-bed wing. | To date, however, only $100,000 has been pledged. *. * •* Repeated inspections of the hospital by officials from the Michigan Department of Public Health and the State Fire Marshal’s Office have pinpointed 29 deficiencies or non-compliances with state codes and regulations. i Hospital officials said that the upgrading of codes with the advent of Medicare and Medicaid programs outdated several aspects of the structure, which complied with existing codes when the hospital planned in 1959. WOULD LOSE JNCOME Since the hospital derives more than 80 per cent of its business from insurance, Medicare and Medicaid patients, all of that income will be Haircut Ordered for Band Director CAMP HILL, PH. (AP) -Backed up by the school board, ~ told the 24-year-old high school band director, Reese Llewellyn, he would have to cut his hair as he was setting a bad exai for the pupils. “It was not because his hair was not well kept,”1 Simklns said. < “It was not a lack of I grooming. It was just long.” * * * Llewellyn, who said he has worn his hair the same length since joining the faculty three years ago, called “this whole thing ridiculous.” But , according to Simkins, he agreed to a haircut. HURON NOW! THURS., FRI., MON., TUES. at 7:00-9:25 SAT.-SUN.-WED. at 1:00-3:45-6:30-9:00 NOW APPEARING ‘Tki Arbors’* O - a . . • : raff Nttely thru Sept. 28 FIREBIRD Except Monday 9 • +"+*****"*** And for your listening 1 JM AIJP^ and dancing pleasure 1 J|il|P|^ Jerry Libby Trio —na n—ar 2626 ELIZABETH LAKE R0. PHONE 681-2525 METBOCOLDWYNMAYER presents A SPECTRUM PRODUCTION itimn| JIM BROWN DIAHANN CARROLL JULIE HARRIS. fchc Splsfc «..«»««GENE HACKMAN JACK KLUGMAN WARREN OATES JAMES WHITMORE ERNEST BORGNINE Watch this couple outwit a computer, embezzle a fortune, and live happily ever after—almogtl V-*rG.i|»yn Mj>f. 4 V • b-1 f r.*wf Awr* Production- Peter Ustinov. Maggie Smith Karl Malden BobNewhart SUNDAY MATINEES tee eemplete sliewe starting at IS - 1i48 - Ii21 SUNDAY EVENINQS lee oenpleti shews ctnrttNg atTNI A Ml C0NNERCE drive-in theater UNION UKE AT HASCnrrr NO. OPEN NIGHTLY I FIRST SHOWING AT DUSK ““““ FRI., SAT, end SUM- ONLY INKBMMHttIMU .............. BOBm £ mmiN Presents HOT ROD ACTION 1 BOX OFFICE W J Ski Pmtlac HI OIKIf HIGH ORIVf IN THEATER ft 5 4500 —V WAY (US lOj 1 BLOCK N UUGRAPH RD THE PONTIAC PitKSS. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19. 1969 B—11 Lab in Woods Cuts Traverse City Dropout Rate ByTREDERICK H. TREESH United Press International ' P°"ds* Plants, animals. What education value have these things that America has in such abundance outside, its urban centers? * Holding'power, according to school officials in Traverse City. The school system in the northern Michigan city credits its pioneering outdoor education program with keeping many boys from dropping out before they get their high school 'diplomas. Nr ■ ★ ★ Since 1966, about 50 teen-age students have spent half of every day working and learning at the Traverse City schools’ field laboratory, a 212-acre woqded tract 20 minutes by bus from the high school. These boys — about 5 per cent that school officials are convinced otherwise would drop out—spend their mornings at the field laboratory, cutting timber, constructing nature^ trails, building bridges and small building and learning to operate the tools and equipment at the school’s own. sawmill. In the aftemdon, the youths return , to the classroom for academic subjects. BOOSTS OUTLOOK y “This kind of outdoor work provides a faVorable experience for the boys and gives them a better outlook toward school,’! says Allen Lockman, a veteran teacher who directs the outdoor education program. Lockman sa^s that in addition to learning vocational skills that will serve them well after graduation,' the boys often profit by gaining confidence and self-esteem. “When the kids give speeches on how to run the sawmill the other students find them as interesting as the boy who scored the winning touchdown in Friday, night’s, football game, and this gives them great confidence,’’ Lockman said. Although the field laboratory primarily is intended as a work experience to keep potential dropouts motivated, its value doesn’t end there. Other students from the district visit the preserve' and learn about nature and conservation in a way that could not be duplicated in the classroom. MW W. Maple «■*- Walled Lake KHaggarty Rtf. H- ..’y,. W.WMI' Dancing and Entertainment "CROUP THERAPY” Friday and Saturday Nights v at the HHTHWtiOUIISI (Formerly Club Tohoa) , OR 4-4222 4169 Dixie Hwy. Phone In the Airway Lounge THE ROAD SHOW -"-for* reservations phone- 674-0426 4825 W. Huron (M-59) fipeiiat EVERY TUESDAY AND SATURDAY NIQHT IS |f rr'S't) 7Bar-Stander7 Earl Wonders About a Brandy for a Dandy By EARL WILSON NEW YORK — It was immediately clear to me as I sat downrat the Sherry-Netherlands bar and ordered an aperitif that the huge man next to me was John Jacob Astor, known in set as Jack, of which-he-has-a 4ot-- Should I say hello? What did we have to! talk about except the money he has and the money I don’t?. I kept quiet. “Courvoisier,” he said. He asked for it in a smaller glass than the barman had brought, and with less ice. The barman shrugged. He didn’t know, nor did anybody in the room — but me j— that this was one of the great rich names of the world. ★ ★ ★ ■/ i Through the mirror I suddenly saw Jack WILSON j Astor groping through breast pockets, pants pockets, hip pockets — for money! . Fl My turn had come: “Do a good turn daily” from the Boy I IM/Watte* hanrihnnlr ■- --_____ ______ ' _ I “Mr. Astor,” I suddenly spoke up, “I’m Earl Wilson.” . “AM I GLAD TO SEE YOU!” he exclaimed. “I seem to] i have lost my wallet.” i “ Grandly, I whipped out my own. His tab was $2.1 generously “I guess I can reach you . tt," he said. * I gave him my address, i Jack.Astor sipped his brandy meditatively. He lives mostly I in Miami now, has become a bit of a recluse, he said. “I must have left my wallent Reuben’s,” he went on. “You ! know, I usually carry two wallets.”, “Two? Why two?” j'. “In case I lose one,” he explained; ★ ★ * It was after I left that I got to wondering whether this was really John Jacob Astor or somebody resembling Urn whod hooked me for $10. Anyway, 1$ would make a yarn for my memoirs — John Jacob Astor had to be bankrolled for a booze by •Earl Wilson because he’d lost both of his wallets. THE MIDNIGHT EARL ... Joanne Woodward’s reported expecting (her fourth) and thusi likely to miss Paul Newman's “Butch Cassidy”' premiere at] Yale next Tuesday . . . Secret Stuff: One of the best-known female stars (a swinging Single) is openly wearing maternity out-, fits and just doesn’t seem to care, '> , Dagmar, who’s lost 50 lbs., wore a miniskirt at the Pen « Pencil and cracked, “That’s the first time anybody’s looked below my wfisHn years” ... A young actress miky be going back to her husband, because her movie’s finished and the co-star she’s been romancin| is going back to his wife. OXBOW LAKE PAVILION DANCING FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHT 9 P.M. 'TIL 2 A.M. COUNTRY WESTERN MUSIC BY THE COUNTRY IMAGES STARRING BETTE DEE 363-9253 9451 Elizabeth Lake Rd. Union Lake September Special BIGBARNEY Fihench Fries & Coke If you haven't had a Big Barney, you don't know what you're missing! Two delicious hamburger patties, cheese, jettuce, pickle, and our own special sauce on i double-deck roll. Try it with French fries and a Coke todayT .CLOSED MONDAYS Now Open SUNDAY t PM. to 9 P.M. Complete Menu Selection SUNDAY SPECIAL! steS,$2#0 Potatoes, Vegetable, SUNDAY LIQUOR NEW PHONE 311-1111 Perry at Pontiac Road NEW OUTSIDE CATERING SERVICE! Catering to All Types of Parties! Open Sunday for Banquets Only Now Specialising in Italian Dishes Bring the kids, grandpa, everybody. To the most mouthwatering dinner buy in town, Our featured special of the week, '• plus many other delicious meats, vegetables, ccisp salads, and much, much more. All tor this unbeatable low price. And go back for 2nds and 3rd*. Even / lower prices for children. Beverage and dessert extra. Eat leas expensively than you can at home at: Opan 7 Days a Weak HOURS: 11 A.M. • 2 P.M. and 4:30 - 8 P.M. Dally Wn’lW Opan Sundays 11 A.M. to 7 P.M. 700 DALDWIN at MONTCALM - 330-0000 Your house of hospitality from coast to coast. Where it’s fun to eat 445ttlZABfTH LAKE RD. (Acraea from Pontiac Mall at Telegraph) 752 BALDWIN at MONTCALM "Mutio for Everyone” Wed., Fri., Sat. Nita WISH I’D SAID THAT: It Isn’t what teenagers know that Tien parentv-it’^ hnw they found It out.— Evan Eaar. EARL’S PEARLS: An elderly optometrist said at Downing that his business has changed: “Once people complained they couldn’t see the print in the Bible. Now they complain they can't read the racing form." Bob Hope explained why he gave up boxing as a career: “1 found I wasn’t even making hospital expenses.” ... That’s earl, brother. (PvMIslwrs—Hall Syndic.:.) SAVE MONEY on this SPECIAL OFFER from ROCHESTER JUNCTION for the finest infood or the finest in atmosphere, visit the people that specialize in both! Appearing Every Fri. and Sat, Nights the **4 Miracle Men** Bloomfield Miracle Lounge 2325 S. Telegraph 335-8060 Delta I tin. Corner Elizabeth Lake And Cass Lake Roads LI |i, ; 1 BLOCK'WEST OF HURON tnnem I* tko Fmbmlmu "LOST AND FOUND”• Pontiac’a Groat Now Music Sensation, B—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19; 1969 New Chairman of Arts Council to Lead by Consensus NEW YORK m — Within two days after President Nixon nominated her to be chairman of the National Council on the Arts, Nancy Hanks got 400 messages from well-wishers. The important part for her was ‘‘almost everyone of them said they’d do anything they can to help—and I’m keeping a record of that." ★ # * Miss Hanks, a chic, astute operative for 16 years in influential corridors of public service and private philanthropy, believes in getting things done through cooperative effort and committee consensus. “I really enjoy it and I benefit from the views of other people. With the Rockefeller panels I’ve hhd good training. I Jiaven’ . been able to do things in any other fashion." 1 HAS NO OPPOSITION As head of the arts agency, for which she must yet be confirmed by the Senate—there is no detectable opposition—the ready-smiling Miss Hanks will be both the arbiter of federal assistance to culture and one of the administration’s top-ranked women. “Well, I don’t know about that,” she responds to suggestion that feminine charm may enlist congressional gallantry to support aesthetic etforc open legislative purse-strings. “Well” is a favorite cautionary prologue to almost every answer she makes after meditating on any question about h»r| new job. i .........★ * ★ - Does she expect tangible official support to advance tile federal- arts-support program? "Oh, very definitely,” she said. “I don’t believe in attempting to do a job unless you have a chance of doing an effective one. I’m convinced the administration is interested in the cultural development of the country. I had a very good talk with the President, and his understanding of the problems was wonderful.”' PROBLEMS WORSE Miss Hanks said that in the four years since she supervised publication of a survey by the Rockefeller Brothers fund called “The Performing Arts: Prospects and Problems” the nandal problems have worsened. “But things are better in many areas that We approached," she added. “I fed that the arts institutions are increasingly better administered. Andinl965 therewas verylittle cooperation in the arts. Now they are cooperating marvelously in many communities. I just feel___that arts are much strengthened in working with each other.” , ★ ★ Is there such a thing as a “culture explosion”? “I’m quite certain—you 'can’i document this in statistics or anything—I’m quite certain there is a growing interest on the part of the American public Marriage Licenses Michigan and Pamela L. J......... | Ogemaw Garald L. Zlozlot, Midland and Nancy L. Dlwrow. Holly Leonard L. Smalley, Oxford ond : Crandall, Lako Orion Tommy It. While, Lako Orion JUdHft I. Barker, 041 Baldwin , Louie S. Rood, Troy and shal Flnsllvor, Troy _ Lloyd D. Raich, Troy and Martha K Buchanan, I Bluebird Hill James R. Champlln, Mil Norma J, Buelle, Milford Michael J. Pmlllpe, Union I Patricia L Kllno, Walled Lake Jay W, Jansen, Rochester a D, varcak, Troy Willard D. Burton, Union Lake Lynda 0. Button, Union like John Jatlonowlcz Jr„ Warren Blame J. Nice, 44J Lakeside Andrew L. Gustafson. Elma, N and Pamela Blade, Farmington Cornelius M. Harper Jr., Birr......_______ . -and Lucille R. Kromrty, Pomdale i Jamas C. Bailey, m Woodland and Dianna At, ponOilen, ciarl—— Arnold Vlx, Lako Orlor Below, 1740 Hamilton in the arts," she said. “You cannot document whether the increased interest in the amateur arts—people just enjoying music and dance—has already shown an increase in professional activity. But there’s no question in my mind it will. No question at all.’* i SHE SPLITS CASH As chairman of the national council and its collateral facility, the National Endowment for tiie Arts, Miss Hanks will supervise assistance next year of about $7V« million—the sum hag passed the Senate bui awaits House action—for symphony .orchestras, dance, opera, theater and supportive activities. “At the moment,” she said, i adversely affected the agency’s 1‘I’d be unable to say what I work, jhought the federal government EXTREMELY EXCITING should give or what state gov- ; ... . , . erhments should give so that we When } of how could have a really strong de,|"e v£ ct01?e “ 1°™ ^/s-thj? velopment of the arts in this 8 wh,at 1 ^"k has been ex-country. I am, however, highly tremely exeiUng, ’ she said nntimicfir* >> ’ . | “I don’t mean to be Pollyana p about it, but given from where we started, I don’t think we’ve done too badly. I think if we see The Council-Endowment program was set up four years ago, the first direct federal commitment to air aesthetic endeavor, with about $2Mi million. h|iss Hanks’ predecessor w£ts Roger L. Stevens, real estate magnate and Broadway producer, whose term expired last major changes and interest develop in the next four years as we have in the past four, we should all be very pleased." * * * Miss Hanks at work fits the image of a' successful Woman in March. She does not believe j business: reddish-brown hair that the hiatus in command has I carefully coiffed, quietly modish costume, a voice all confident modulation.' Her city residence is in a smart Fifth Avenue apartment house, and there’s a weekend home at socially correct Southampton where horticultural relaxation concentrates on dahlias and tomato plants. Her background might have been specifically designed to prepare for the.limelight of responsibility, although she says! “I certainly did not go to college with all this in mind.” DAD" AN ATTORNEY She was born Dec. 31, 1927, at Miami Beach, Fla., the daughter of Bryan Cayce and Virginia Wooding Hanks. Her father, now residing again in his home state of Texas, is a utilities attorney long active in New York and Florida. Miss Hanks completed high school at Montclair, N*J., in 1945, studied for a summer at the University of Cplorado, took ,and A.B. degree magna cum laude (plus a Phi Beta Kappa key) at Duke University, then journeyed to further study At Oxford. * * ★ During 1951-52 she was on the staff of the Office of Defense Mobilization, in 1953 joined the office of Nelson A. Rockefeller who was serving in various advisory capacities to President Eisenhower. The arts became her particu- lar interest when the Rockefeller Brothers Fund initiated the first depth-study of professional performing organizations. She also worked on a survey of museum needs and last year became president of the Associated Councils of the Arts which coordinates and focusses state-level endeavor. * ★ ■* Miss Hanks will sever that affiliation upon confirmation to federal office, and must determine whether any conflict of interest attaches to such duties as a council member of the American Association of Museums, a trustee of Duke University, Robert College in Istanbul and the Museum of Primitive Art. NANCY HANKS Kathleen A. Piper, Farmington Almon W. Bridge*. Like Orion I Vicki A. Hezlett, Lake Orion ---Peter M. Grant, Bloomfield Merljp L. Roger*, RoyalOek Test-sit 16 textures and 236 colors of new Armstrong carpeting IwpafiM Custom Floor Covering IM0M-1S. Olsrkftoa - S2B-21M OPEN MON. and FBI. FROM 9 to 9 TUES.g WED., THURS. and SAT. 9 to 5:30 ORCHARD FURNITURE 104 ORCHARD LAKE AVENUE, PONTIAC 2 Blocks West of South Wide Track Drive • Budget Terms Available • Free Parking • Free Parking next to store • Good Service DEAL DIRECT - PAY At THE STORE NO FINANCE 00. INVOLVED New Season, New Look for M, MSU Hie phone won’t ring as often in the sports department of Hie Press anymore, and it won’t be as noisy at the -state tournament basketball games, especially if Pontiac Central is playing in the regionals or quarterfinals. Clell “Mutt” Morse was buried this morning and with his passing, local athletics has lost one of its most rabid boosters. It was almost like clock work for Morse to dial Hie Press every Saturday morning or Monday morning to find out how the local teams did, or how the Saturday night college games turned out. Hie pros and cons of sports, of past records or scores were daily court, someone knocked Mutt of / balance. Of course it was too crowded for Mutt to fall, but in the spur of the moment the official quipped bade at Mutt, “As sure as you’re standing, huh?” NJPLLOWING YEARS . In recent years Mutt held down his enthusiasm to some applause and a few cheering comments from the stands. Most local folks will remember Mutt from his sparkling days as a softball pitcher in city recreation When Shaw’s Jeweler’s teams were the softball powers in the city and district in the early 40’g. Morse was the pitcher who had local and state foes in utter frustration. One of his most bitter rivals in the city was the GM Truck team, whom Mutt enjoyed beating more than anyone. Old clips from Hie Press Sports pages gave it top page attention when the GM team was able to gain one of its rare victories from Mutt. ★ ★ ★ Later in the 40’s he pitched for Torridheet and in the early SO’s he knocked his old team, Shaw’s, out. of a state tournament while pitching for Pfeiffer’s. There is no exact total recorded, but during Ms pitching heyday Mutt was supposed to have had 23 no-hitters, six of which he lost. conversation pieces at Mutts’s famous hamburger house the Triple XXX on West Huron. "TO bet you five bucks that it was .. .’’ Mutt’s voice would carry through the screen doors and almost down to the railroad tracks. He was a giver and taker of all . bets and with his knowledge of sports he was more often a winner. We will never forget a basketball game one night in Saginaw when Pontiac Central, fighting for the Saginaw Valley title, was beaten late in the game on what PCH fans say was a shot by a Saginaw Valley player following a travel violation. As the gun sounded, with the Chiefs losing on the argued shot, the first spectator on the floor pointing a finger in the officials’ nose was Mutt. “That was a traveling before the shot as sure as I’m standing here.” Mutt proceeded to yell. With the standing room crowd jamming and pushing around the A quote from a P r es s s t o r y called him the “unlucklest no hit pitcher” in softball.______ In a state tournament game-aeainst Lansing one time, Mutt pitched a no-hitter, struck out 18 batters and still lost the game. ' In state tournament play at Escanaba one year, Mutt pitched in three games in one day and gave up a total of only three hits, and it was in one . of those losing . no-hitters that his team was knocked oift of the tournament. LAST APPEARANCE His last appearance, which he called an honor, was to pitch against the famous touring softball _ quartet, the King arid His. Court 4n 1964 at Wisner Stadium. The King and His Court did appear in Pontiac just a few weeks back, and although Mutt was now totally “retired” from softball, he did look back and say that his stint on the mound five years ago “will be one of my fondest, memories ... rd say it was my swan song.” It will be a long time before those who can remember, will certainly forget some of Mutt’s years as king of Pontiac softball. Schembechler Makes Debut as Michigan Coach NASHVILLE, Term. (AP) - Though the series itself is old, dating back to 1906, the emphasis is on the new when Vanderbilt takes on Michigan in the opener for both dubs Saturday at Ann Arbor. , For Vanderbilt, there’s a new offense, the triple option, a new defense jriilch features a fourman front lind, and a new idea as far as Commodore football is concerned—winning. Coach Bill Pace guided the Commodores to a 6 41 record last year in Ms second season as head coach, and it was their first winning campaign in a decade. Vandy hasn’t won more than five games In a single year since 1955, when the record was 8-3. ■ NEW COACH For Michigan, there’s a new coach in Bo SchembecMer and,a new synthetic turf playing surface in the Wolverines’ 100,000 seat stadium. “Our main concern is to go up thei*e and keep from getting physically overpowered,” Pace said. “They have quite a size advantage, and might just decide to line up and run the ball right —at us. That could make it mighty rough in the fourth quarter, since most of our depth is young and inexperienced. “But we hope at least partially to make up in quickness what we lack>in iiwawnamMiwiTsrtwiiniiiiiii Michigan’s Schembechler, who will be making his coacMng debut as a replacement for Bump Elliott, says Ms worries are along the same lines—size vs. quickness—but on the other side of the coin. “They’re very quick and well coached,” SchembecMer said of the Commodores. “And I think they can be a very good passing team. Their backs are very quick. It isn’t a power offense.” INJURIES HURT The' Wolverine , defense will b e -weakened considerably by the loss of Phil Seymour, an All Big Ten defensive end who will be out for qt least the first three games with an Injury. And sophomore defensive back Dave Zuc-carelli, who had been pegged for a starting job, is out for the season with a broken ankle. ★ ★ The last time the two teams met, in 1923, Michigan came away with a 3-0 victory, The closest in nine games Vandy has come to beating the Wolverines was in 1922, when the teams battled to a scoreless tie. POfltlK Pr«» Photo NEW FOOTWEAR—You can’t tell by the feet but the new cleated football shoe being Worn by both Michigan and MicMgan State this season is being modeled by former Royal Oak Shrine player Paid Seymour. Seymour is a sophomore end at MicMgan. Both state schools open their season tomorrow on their newly installed Tartan turf gridirons. Lions Can't Assume Steelers as 'Cousins' Firebirds at Grand Rapids Second Half in MFL Play ----By BRUNO I., KEARNS-________ Sports Editor, Pontiac Press There was a time in the past when playing the Pittsburgh Steelers, the The second half of the Midwest Football League schedule starts Saturday and the Pontiac Firebirds are hopeful it will be a repeat of the opening game of the season. — ★ it ★ yT In the season opener seven gam^s ago, the Firebirds whipped GramjJRapids, 36-6, while Lackawanna-"Was trouncing Lansing 31-13. it it it Tomorrow, the F-Birds travel to Grand Rapids and Lansing faces the Lancers in Lackawanna. ------ «*? ________ The Central Division race continues in a deadlock with Pontiac and Lansing at the top, and the Firebirds are now hoping the tie will be broken Saturday. However, Lansing showed it wasn’t ready to let the Firebirds back into any title when the Stars defeated Dayton two weeks ago and then put the pressure on the F-Birds, who ultimately also whipped Dayton last week. * * * One tiling coach Tom Tracy has to fear tomorrow is the possibility that the Firebirds will be looking ahead to the big encounter with Lackawanna next Saturday. The Lancer scouts who watched the F- * Birds defeat Dayton were impressed with the improvement of the local grldders, but they apparently weren’t convinced that the Lancers could be challenged by anyone in the league. , ★ * ' Tickets for the -home game with Lackawanna-next week are available in advance at VFW Post 1370, Bob-Ken’s, Osihuns, Griff’s Firebird Lounge and Coleman’s furniture. Hie record crowd of 5,987 setr against Dayton could be altered in the Lackawanna contest, Vikings Sideline Green Bay's QB Lions Also Given Nod Picks Baltimore Over Los Angeles Rams ----By JACK HAND---------- NEW YORK (AP) - Let’s see. Allle Sherman is out. Vince Lombardi is in Washington. Joe Namath has sold out Bachelors III. Andf John Unitas and Gale Sayers are back. The new National Foothill league season opens Sunday with a staler—Los Angeles at Baltimore—and the American Football League already is heading into a second week. Baltimore 24, Los Angeles'17—Unitas b bade and the Colts have won six straight in the exMMtion season. A couple of tough defensive dubs. Rams have Lei Josephion and Larry Smith to' run but miss Bernle Casey as a target for Roman Gabriel Terry Colon, filling in for Jerry Hill, has a knee problem ao Unitas had better be hot. ■ " it it it Green Bay 17, Chicago 13- Packers’ offense started to dick when Travis Williams took over. Bart Starr healthy and rebuilt offensive line improving. Gale Sayers could break it open. Backers better than In 19-9 loss in ex- Cleveland 24, Philadelphia 14—New Astroturf won’t help Jerry Williams’ Eagles, although Browns are hurting in defensive backfleld. Loss of Gary Pet-tigrew Mow to Eagles. Leroy Kelly ^primed for fast start with rookie Ron Johnson to help. Minnesota 24, New York 21— Could be an upset if Giants are keyed up to “show. Allie”. Vikings Won exMMtion, using reserves in second half. Fran Tarkenton would like to do a job on hb old mates but the Giants have lost 14 straight to the West. St. Louis 27, Dallas 21—Hie Cards to upend the Cowboys, especially if Craig Morton can’t go. Charley Johnson’s tosses to Jackie Smith Should do the job. Loss of Bob Hayes cripples Dellas but rookie Calvin Hill looks like an exciting runner. it W( ★ ■ Detroit 21, Pittsburgh 10-Md Farr probable despite virus and now fully recovered from knee surgery; Lem Barney in the secondary and the Lions’ rush line will give Dick Shiner a rough afternoon. Washington 17, New Orleans 14-Sonny Jurgensen should be enough to give Vince Lombardi Ms first win as Redskins' ' coach. Lions bombed Saints in final exMMtion. However, New Orleans . holds 2-1 edge over Washington In series. San Francisco 28, Atlanta 17 —Wlnleas 49ws who lost all exMbition games must go all out against Norm Van Brockhn’s charged-up Falcons, who have been get- ’ : tri' . ting strong efforts from Jim Butler and JuMor Coffey. AFL Oakland 35, Miami .21 (Saturday night) — Raiders opened with 21-17 win over Houston and will be making second straight home appearance. Miami always dangerous with Bob Griese passing but Oakland has too much pass rush. New York 23, Denver 17— Even if Joe Namath can’t go Ml tile way, Jets should be able to sneak past Broncs, who always give them trouble. Don’t forget, Denver beat the Jets last year 21-13 and also won last meeting In 1967. Kansas City 35, Boston 14— CMefs can call the score in this one after romping through exhibition series and opening game with 'San Diego. Kansas City ball hawks can make life miserable for Mike Taliaferro. Houston 30, BuffMo 14—Oilers’ only worry b O.J. Simpson on those kick raturns. Jerry Levias new threat In Houston attack. San Diego 28, Cincinnati 14— Greg Cook’s passing won’t be enough to match Chargers’ scoring potential San Diego won haiglily in both 1968 games although offense was flat against Chiefs in the By the Associated Press Forget about Minnesota’s tough front four, the Vikings front office has forced an opposing quarterback to the bench and tiie National Football League season hasn’t even started yet. The quarterback is veteran Zeke Bratkowskl, who retired as a player Thursday to remain with the Green Bay Packers as an assistant coach. it it it - The Packers had hoped to clear Bratkowskl, who will be 38 Oct. 20, on waivers so he would be availaMe for emergency duty behind Bart Starr and Don Horn. But Minnesota claimed him. Viking General Manager Jim Finks said letting Green Bay clear Bratkowskl would be Bke giving the Packers an extra player. ~Mta^whemGreen~Ba]ropenrthe regular-season at home against Chicago Sunday, Bratkowskl will be on the sidelines but not In uniform. MORRALL BENCHED Another veteran who will be on the bench Sunday, but in uniform, will be Earl Norrall, who signed a contract with the Baltimore Colts Thursday. Morrall led the Colts to the NFL title last year but has lost the No. 1 quarterbacking job to Johnny Unitas, who will start against Los Angeles Sunday. Joe Namath, whose battered right knee took a heavy blow in the world champion New York Jets’ victory over Buffalo in an American Football League opener last Sunday, worked out Thursday and appears ready to star) against Denver. In other, developments, the NFL Atlanta Falcons signed veteran receiver Gail Cogdill and cut three rookies; the NFL Dallas Cowboys waived veteran „safety Dick Daniels and the NFL Washington. Redskins waived quarterback Harry Theofiledes. The Redskins had to dro|t a man'after signing veteran quarterback Frank Ryan; cut by Cleveland, to be backdp to - Detroit I Jons mnld almost automatically chalk up a victory. This hasn’t been the case in recent years and the bad part of it, the Lions always seem to play their poorest games against the Steelers, who have never wop an NFL title. The Lions took It on the chin 24-14 in 1967, were beaten in a dull encounter 17-3 in Pittsburgh in 1966. In 1962, when the Lions had probably their best team of this decade, they routed the Steelers 45-7. A real sleepy affair was the 10-10 struggle in the rain In Pittsburgh’s Forbes Field when Bobby Lane, who had been traded the previous season to the Steelers, called the slgnMs against the Lions. , Michigan State Hosts Hus at E. Lansing EAST LANSING (AP)— Razzle dazzle plays and long breakaway runs can be expected from both teams when MicMgan State opens its football season against WasMngton Saturday in Spartan Stadium. Washington has enjoyed artificial turf at home for a. season. MSU has been practicing on its synthetic grass all fall. Hie turf favors the fast man, and both have sprinter runners. It will be the first football meeting between the two schools. The last time MSU played a Pacific Northwest team__ was in 1954, when the Spartans won 54-6 over Washington State. SIMILAR OFFENSE Both teams will be using a triple option offense, calling for intricate ball handling by the quarterback. Any back or end is a threat in this type of offense, first used with great success by Texas and Houston. ★ it ★ Washington is starting out with what could be considered a suicide schedule. After the game with MSU, the Huskies move down to MicMgan, then take on Big Ten champ OMo State at Seattle. Washington coach Jim Owens set up— the schedule himself when he was attiletic director. "You have to play good teams to attract top talent,” he philosophized. —Hie teams are Mike also in wanting tn get off to a flying start after poor 1968 performances. Washington was 3-5-2 won,- lost and tied and MSU broke even with a 5-5 record. . JUNIOR QB Hie Spartans will be led by junior quarterback Bill Triplett, an equM threat at the run or pass. Washington coaches must have had a fit of horrors when they saw movies of the Spartan spring game. - * * ★ ■ Coaqh Duffy Daugherty's1 top offensive and defensive units shut out the reserves 82-0. Workhorse hMfback Tommy Love is recovering from a minor injury and win see service. Spelling him will be sophomore Eric Allen, who showed off with a 95-yard scoring sprint at tost intersquad game. BIG END Hght end Jim Nicholson of Hawaii, 6-feet, 7-inches is a towering pass target. —Flanker Herb Washington of Flint has a track star- background. Both am sophomores. Hie Spartan defensive line is much heavier and more experienced this season. Junior quarterback Gene Willis has been outstanding in early drills for Washington. The bread and butter back is fullback Bo Cornell, who scored six touchdowns last season. Washington also has a classy looking split end, Ralph Bayard, a junior college transfer from San Francisco City CoDege. A fellow named O. J. Simpson came from the same college. Attendance for the 1:30 (EST) kickoff is expected to be around 50,000 despite a strike by maintenance workers that forced the cancellation of the start of MSU classes. Up to that point the Lions had won 11 of 15 games. Now the over-all series stands 124-1 for the Lions. Sunday’s game will be the last between the two teams under the NFL alignment as it stands. Pittsburgh, along with Cleveland and BMtimore, will be moved into the AFL divisions for the 1970 season. Hie Lions, after a 5-1 exhibition season, have the break in the schedule in the earty janes as compared to the other teams In thelCenfral Division. ★ ★ it ' The Packers must play the Bears, 49ers and Vikings in their first three games; the Bears must meet the Packers, Cardinals and Giants while the VUdngs have the Giants, Colts and Packers as starters. Hie lions have the Steelers, Giants and Browns in their first three, but the team which has the tough grind is the Giants who face Minnesota, Detroit and Chicago In that order. At any rate, coach Joe Schmidt makes his second visit to his hometown as head coach, having been victimized by the lowly SteMers in 1967. TOUGH DEFENSE Defensively, the SteMers are considered among the better teams in the league, and have the 4th best runner in the NFL last year, Dick Hoak. It will be Bill Munson at quarterback against Dick Shiner of the SteMers. Chuck Noll has given the Steelers the new look as its head coach and he is grooming former Notre Dame star Terry Haqratty for the quarterback’s slot. Kickoff, Michigan time Sunday is . 12:15. The Lions are presently 8-point favorites. t First Round 66s by Bolt, Furgol Leading Seniors — IAS "VEGAS, Nev (API—A ymir agn, Tommy BMt was the loneliest man on the golf course. Today he’s just one of the crowd. Bolt and Marty Furgol each fired scores1 of four-under-par 66 to grab Thunday’s first round lead Inthe$70,000 U.S. National Senior Open Golf Tournament. Twenty-four other golfers are within four strokes of the leaders. — - it Or ★ - .... Last year, Bolt, from Sarasota, Fla., shot a brilliant 62 to take the opening-round lead. It was enough to prevent any serious challenges as he romped to a nine-stroke victory with a 262. He carded a 33 on the front nine of the par-70 Hoplcana Country Chib course, then duplicated it on the back nine. Furgol, of Moorsetown, N.J., had a first-day 34-32. ★ '* it This year’s first-place prize is $7,500. The 13th annual tourney is being played on the paf-71 Winterwood Golf dub and Bonanza Country Club courses as well as the Troplcana. One stroke,off the peec are Jack Mann of Calexico, Calif., who Bred his 67 at Winterwood, and Herman Keiser of Barberton, Ohio, who played at Tropicana. ★ ★ it Three players—Chandler Harper of Portsmouth, Va., Jack Koennecker of Palm Springs, Calif., and amateur Chuck Roods of RoyM Oaks, Mlch.-aro tied for fifth with 68s. C—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, Southpaw Would Like to Pitch Saturday to Search for 19th DETROIT (UPI) - Nothingl greedy about Mickey Lolich. All he really wants is two more victories. "I want to start Saturday if I can,” The Detroit Tigers' southpaw said. “I mean i (Earl) Wilson is hurt and can't ^taksrltfs turn. ★ ”1 wouldn’t want to bump him out. But if I can, I’d like to start Saturday.” ★ * Lolich 1s volunteering to pitch with two day’s rest because he only went four innings Thursday and was denied his bid for a 19th win. BOMBED EARLY Instead, Mickey was tagged with his ninth loss of the year as the Cleveland bombed him for five runs in the first inning and went on to a 6-4 victory over the TigOrs behind the 13-strikeout pitching of Sam McDowell, who is now 17-14. Lolich Wants Added Turn in Search of Two Wins Indians Tag Mickey Early in 6-4 Win Playing-Out-String-Time Cant Tell September Stars By the Associated Press Vera Geishert ... Mike Hed-lund ... Johnny Ellis. It’s' playing-out-the-string time in the American League, and sometimes you can’t tell the September stars without scorecard. Geishert, a 23-year-old fast-bailer recently promoted from the minors by the California Angels, left his mark on Minnesota Thursday, saving a 5-2 triumph over the West Division leaders with 2 2-3 innings of strong relief work. his first complete game in the majors, trimming the sinking Oakland Athletics 6-1 for a 3-5 first-year record. Ellis, at 21 one of the New •York Yankees’ brightest pros- Romo. Seattle and the Chicago White Sox were idle. Geishert, called up from California’s Hawaii farm club last month, replaced Angel - ace Andy Messersmith in the seventh inning with one out, one run in and the bases jammed. The rookie right-hander threw a double play pitch to Craig Nettles, ending the threat, and yielded one hit—a ninth inning homer by Cesar Tovar—the rest of the way, preserving Messer-smith’s 16th victory. Aurelio Rodriguez and Bill Voss delivered two runs apiece The Twins remained nine games ahead of second place PATTERNED WALK — Cleveland Indian catcher Ray i Fosse (8) bring up the rear after his homer drove in Ken 4'3 w th Harrelson (40) and Tony Horton (11) in yesterday’s game at P ng . Cleveland where the Indians defeated the Tigers, 6-4. Cleveland batboyand umpire Larry Barnett were the home plate welcome. Oakland in the West, but their magic number for nailing the division crown dipped to five as Hedlund tamed the A’s cm seven scattered hits for his first victory since Mgy 15. WASHINGTON NEW YORK - ti bl — »h 29 Clark* - .10 Kinney .. FHoward rf 5 0 0 0 Blomberg ab r h bl 2 0 1 0 Kinney is * 0 Blomberg n j u i Firnandz ph 0 0 0 - — - . . . Wood! If 0 10 BAIIan 3b 3 0 10 Murcir cf 4 13 rBrkmin n 4 10 0 Tepedlno rf 4 0 3 . ri|jch c 3 0 0 1 MDonald lb 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Stroud ph BMoori p 1 5 0 5 Cox W Knowles p 0 0 0 0 Munion e .... **—“* -*■ ’ 0 0 0 Boihmer 3b 3 0 3 l Stollmyri p t 0 0 o 34 2 Total 30 412 4 ....010 002 00 0—3 1 1 0 000 ofx—4 ......icDonald. DP—Washl— York 1. LOB—Washington 0, — ---- "i. Allan, M> I—Epstein York 7. 2B—Uneor, B.AIIen, Munson, Boehmer, Murcar. HR—Epstaln (22). SB—Tepedlno. S—Stottlemyre 2, Clarke. RE-1NJURES KNEE — Willie Mays grimaces and grabs his left knee which was previously injured as he sprawls at the plate in the game against the Houston Astro’s. Mays swung and missed a pitch before he went down. He left the game and as result his 609th home run try will have to wait. Beats Montreal, 2-0 pinch single. ORIOLES SPLIT | In the other AL action, Balti-1 more’s East Division kings split a twi-nighter with Boston, win-ming 6-4 hehinrt Mike Cuellar he-fore bowing 5-0 to Vicente Seaver Adds Warmth to Mets Ryder Cup Lead! Do 20 wins actually mpan that much to Lolich? Well, does a basketball mean anything to Dave Bing? ★" * * I I "That’s what separates the SOUTHPORT, England (AP) timistic spirits that much higher men from the boys,” Lolich |— Britain’s Ryder Cup Captain 'after the British wound upL.Tg!*! ----By the Associated Press On a cold September night in California —Minnesota Manager GU Hodges r h bi and his New York Mets were too thankful they had their Tom Kliiebrew 3b i °jo Seaver around tov keep them 12 ijwarm. “ ~ i 0 i 2 Mitterwid e i o o 1 The brilliant young right-han-34 0 1 2 THelu?’ “fooo der.keP‘ the red-hot Mets pen-? JI! PM!*r ?h ® ® jj ® nant drive burning brightly with p_ oooo a five-hit shutout in a2-9 victory loooiover Montreal Thursday night victory and San Francisco took, St. Louis nidged Pittsburgh 8-23-72^ shutout the Expos the night be-* * ™ fore, have been the mainstays Seaver struck out nine in in- of a staff that has now produced , , , creasing his season total to 200 U shutouts In New York’s last The Giants, however, hold and kept ^ flve hits weli 35 games. over the top spot by heating 7 in the other NL game. Houston 9-3. Perrnotkl p 0 0 0 0; said, untypically using the cliche to illustrate his feelings. "It’ll make all the difference in the world. "If I win just 18 or 19 I’ll still level.” MAY CHANGE Manager Mayo Smith had tabbed Pat Dobson to start Saturday’s game since Wilson has a strained muscle in his -pitching shoulder. But Lolich will likely get the call if willing, which is like asking Cinderella if she wants to go to a ball. Lolich wouldn’t have through all the extra bother if he could have done something about that atrocious first in> ning. Jose Cardenal started It off by hitting a 2-9 pitch for his llth homc run. One out later, Larry Brown and Ken Harrelson singled and Tony Horton doubled home one run. Ray Fosse, who normally couldn’t hit )Wlly Moses’ fast ball for a home run, smacked a Lolich curve for his second home run of the season to make it M. WILD, PITCH A single by Frank Baker, wild Lolich pitch and a single by Larry Brown produced the final Cleveland run in the fifth. ★ ★ w The Tigers kept pecking away at McDowell, who will put a team back in the game if any pitcher can, scoring single runs in the first two innings on a single by Willie Horton and Ike Brown’s fifth home run. * * * Don Wert knocked in another with a sacrifice fly in the sixth and McDowell wild-pitched home the last in toe seventh following a double by Dave Campbell and single by Al Kaline. ■ * ★ .McDowell, who induced Campbell to ground out with the bases loaded and two out in the eighth, increased his lead over Lolich to 19 in the strikeout department He now has 268 in his quest for a fourth "K” title in flve years. ■■—■ir The Boston Red Sox come in today to open a three-game .set which pretty well should settle second place. Ken Brett, 44, opposes Denny McLain, 23-7, in the first game tonight. . CLEVELAND ^ DETROIT THorfon lb 4 111 WHorlon If 112 1 Sim?(§i 1 0 0 0 Wert’S * 2 0 0 ) ijw MDow. 11 p 4 0 i 0 Lolich p 2 0 0 0 Taylor • 0 0 0 f Price air . foil Read p o o o Redmond ph 1 0 0 I Sparme p 0 0 0 37 4II4 Total 24 4101 sL!r^ro,}r-iirro?Bi «r^*MT?R-cc*:r« w# mesa tv/# I.Brown (OK SF—W®rt. . M Dowell (W,17-14) 0 It B4 §*$ .♦ * P - ■ -0 I 0 ......... I ] 0 s . . T—4:43. A— 4,740. Eric Brown, scenting victory!Thursday’s foursomes with 4% over the Americans for the first!points to the United States’ 3H.|canfernla' time in a dozen years, patted! American Captain Sam Snead (iij^wf his youngsters on the back but said he was undisturbed by 34 5 11 S Total ....... 0 0 0 1 0 0 2 0 0 ________ .... 0 00 • *• E—A. Rodriguez * " 2, 9------- that helped New York boost" its j ”-sJ I lead back to five games in the * National League east. Dodgers and the Braves, while ter to the Mets’lantastic pitch-fourth-place Cincinnati is just ing during their pennant drive, two games off the pace despite Seaver, who won his eighth straight pushing his record to . L'uri"*0‘ - ____"___* [have wonN29 of 36 games—in- Met pitchers haven’t yielded a home run in the last 2T called on his veterans today to try to widen a slim but important lead. "In this four ball (better ball) competition, it is experience that counts now,” the jubilant Scot said, his own naturally op- Nervous Ashe Begins Davis Cup Playoffs trailing thisjearly in the game but like Brown said it would be experience that counted in today’s eight matches. BALTIMORE BOSTON ab r h bl ( a Salmon js -4 2 3 0 OBrlen 3b. 4 112 DJonas ph f 5 0 3 3 Andrews 2b _________ ____________________ 3 0 0 0 Yllrmskl It years of age, have won a million SrSSSZ, "b I o^ Kp2»TcJ?!,iiel* DJohnson 2b 4 0 0 0 AConlalro rf "And all these boys are truly experienced,” he said of the 12 Americans who average 5. HR—Tovarl Masersth (W.14-9) . Geishert ........... ..... T.Hall (L.B-6) ......3* , BRobir and a half dollars this year andj°,J»5^-” -- iii6 8cV„ I | altogether have triumphed in 5#,*J2lrmt d 515 o Nagycp 'about 130 golf tournaments overIsutord pn ....—— the years. . H,H 9 111 l^Snaw>1 ’ “I th»nk we’ll play a Utile beJ5SiBr; .Jj,® U*bU ter now, more used to this LOB-Baltlniore 9r Bo»ton 7, 2B—Sl..— . ' t ii 12/ R.Smith. PetrocelM/ D.Robinson. HR— CLEVELAND HEIGHTS, course especially these Motion (6). sF-Scoit. Ohio (AP) - There’s a bi-greens which are rtally tough to Ctt,„ar (W,23-10, , H R ER BB SO S 2 S ■ ,0 0 0 0 . / 7 3 3-3 1-2) 2 4 3 1 3 . WP—Nagy. Balk—Wagnt Sam, Arthur Ashe Jr., America’s top Davis Cup ace, said .. ........ --------------kki Thursday. The eight fourballs are fol-!Bu(ord ,b 'Soi" Muur ib 4000 "When I’m playing Davis] lowed by 16 singles matches onjBaiwgwM 4 010 ft 11» » Cup, I get very tense pnd keyed Saturday in a unique competi-BRobinw » 3006 ®®»® up,” the 26-year-old veteran of tion started by a British seed Moitonjt 4010 ATvarado»» 000} 13 cup matches added. “It’s a merchant, Sam Ryder, in 1927. |^tVnmd ct 4 ot 0 Bcmij[ro S'-’ big responsibility. "When I am playing a tournament on my own, I couldn’t care less. I am loose and related. In DaVis Cup matches, the pressure is tremendous. '’You lose it and you don’t get a chance to redeem yourself for a year. It’s like the blade of an axe—all the weight tapers, down to that one fine edge where , you almost stake your tenbig world in two hours of play.” The edge of the axe comes up for Ashe again today when he faces Hie Nastase, Romania’s sensational 23-year-old giant-killer in the opening match of the 1969 Davis Cup ChaHenge Roundr-— The . three-day, five-match series decides the residence of the 69-year-old silver bowl for the next 12 months. It has 00 No Soccer Decision for Groves' Squad Birmingham Grovfes soccer team still is looking for its first win ... or loss . . .of the season. The Falcons played their second straight tie yesterday in a scoreless duel with Cranbrook. A rematch is scheduled next Tuesday. * * * Bloomfield Hills Lahser broke into the win column for the first time with a 8-1 victory over Livonia Stevenson. Bruce McKellar, John Cdengros and Barry Kovach scored for Lahser which has a record of .1-never gone behind the Iron 1 and will meet Grosse Pointe Curtain. iUS next Tuesday . 31 3 7 4 nr Hardin'P 2 0 0 0 OBrlan 3 Powell ph 10 10 Moaae e Leonhard P 0 0 0 0 Romo p h Total 33 0 0 0 ■- Total - Baltimore ....... 00 0 00 0 00 0-; Boston ....... 1 f 0 1 Ol-IO E—S E—B.Robinson. Belengrr. DP— Baltimore 1, Boston 3. LOB—Baltimore. 7. Boston. 3. 2B—Belanger, - Petrocelll, Bulord. Moses, B.Conlgllero. S—Romo.^^ Hardin (l>4) ...... 4 5 3 2 3 Lopnliorg ..........2 2 2 2 3 *tomo (W.7-10) . . 0 0 0 0 1 T—2:10. A—20,430. OAKLAND ^ KANSAS CITY ah r h hi ah r h I it BH Lahser Harriers Top Romeo, 15-45 The Oakland A cross country season got under way yesterday ' “I had to work fast in the last couple of innings beca started to feel the cold,” said Seaver of the 50-degree weather that was almost as cold as the Mets’ only serious challenger, the Chicago Cubs. The, Cubs dropped a 5-3 decision to Philadelphia in an after-1 with Bloomfield Hills noon game—their 12th setback | taking a 15-45 victory at Romeo, in 15 games—in falling six Lahser moved in for the first games back of New York in the five {daces led by Jeff Shanks loss column. The Mets* magic'in 10:53 followed by Steve number for clinching the divi- Young, Jay Kezshumbaum, sional title was reduced to eight.'RickByan and Mike Manz. STILL SCRAMBLING j' ^ * * * ' , ..■ m 1 In the Inter-Lakes Pontiac Meanwhile, the West Division race remained a« ocramhlpH a. Noirthern and Southfield Cap* «CT«mpleo us u r ed impressive victories, ever aS Los Angeles knocked At- oinir«rin» «« eluding 13 ,of their last 14—in roaring from 9Mi games back of the Cubs on Aug. 13 to their present comfortable lead. About the only one who isn’t conceeding the title to the Mets is Cub boss Leo Durocher. “I’m not going to give up, I’ll tell you that,” barked Durocher after Cookie Rojas’ homo* in ~ . .|the eighth touched off a three- Walled Lake Western nipped jm,, r#jjy that gave the Phils Livonia Churchill 24-35. Jim their victorv “This thin® Kurtis of Churchill was first wer^t W^ ius^avi^L irtth three WaHed Lake ranaer. C’TlKy following. Walled Lake Central X oZ' nlti „i topped Waterford 23-36. Steve !ii£f » "eXt foe) and pIay Moffet of Waterford oft Waterford finished first in 10:11. lanta out of first place with a 5-2 George Pickering of Pontiac Northern set a course record as Northern rolled to a 19-38 i over Livonia Stevenson. * on* ii ............. ■ . Boswell 2b 4 0 2 0 MJonai Plait 3b 0 0 0 0 Labov | —-----* ib in e a.i.L r------ lb 0 . . „ Swoboda rf 4 0 1 rstoneman p . . . - , _ .. Oral* c 4 0 0 0 McOInn p (0 0 Oils 9:49. 1 2 2 Bateman e 4 0 10 Total 33 2 7 2 Total Brook! r l 5 0 1 0 Kelly rf ... 4 0 0 0 Flore lb 310 4 12 0 Klrkptrek ef 11 j 4 0 0 0 Plnlella X 401 2 010 Foy 3b 301 4 0 10 Adair u 3 11 4 0 10 Campnls c 4 0 4 10 0 1 Alcaraz 2b 3 1 1 0 0 0 0 Hedlund p 3 0 0 Naw York I. Montreal 7. hr—Ki R ER BB SO Sfoneman (UIO-ll) 7 1-3 4 2 2 3 10 McGinn 2-3 * “ 1 1 • ■ .Robertson . 1 T—2:23. A—13,200. Cincinnati ia . . ” ab r h bl ...WW 4 Rosa rf 4 0 3 0 Arota 2b * S 2 4 l .■ 5 0 0 0 RFana i» 4 i i 2 3 0 0 0 Dean si 100 0 Jim Goodfellow of Oxford set ,8 ? o the old course record of 9:57.8 | g ® ®, last week, Pickering new mark 1—, is 9:49. Doug Kurtis of Stdvenson placed second followed by four Huskies, Bill Turnbull, Dave Cudnohufsky, • 'lob- Jack Barnes and Tom Barnes. Jack Hiatt slammed a three-w , w w run homer and a run-scoring Waterford Kettering’s Kevin S*? Reabe may have established a SSta°l new course record when his 'TSSj^lSf^tfT' sUnU ^ school ran against Milford in a^g^Jf?i,AtJ“ta; ^ clatan cross country meet Thursday fir8tfr- afternoon, but it was the1 ?as.es' Redskins who came out on topil0®?^ tr p‘e‘n °!e ^ ‘nnin8 v and Jim Lefebvre’s ainala ItpvaH when the final points were I “d J,m s‘nf,eukeyed tabulated---------------t-------ia four-run Dodger sixth that \ + + produced the triumph. Milford, the defending Wayne- Philadelphia Chicago Oakland league champs, was ffTior 3b 4920 Popowiih ii'soo1!} Tofan cf edged out of first and second bylcalnun Reabe and Don Meyerhoffer. "A"** LMay fb ill! vkX 3b io HI Roger Strader‘was fourth for u-|mi 2b 4 0 I O Splezk) 3b 2 01 0 Mntt KXtwrd m 3 0 10 Moral*! If 2 0 0 1 auclip ph 1 0 0 0 Gaoton cf 4 0 0 0 — Iloney p 2 0 11 Cinnlzzro e * • * * ackion p 0 0 0 0 HME I - eie o t i so Spraout p 0 0 0 RJocklon ph 1 0 1 Talbot p 0 0 0 i-k-L----ph 1 o 0 AJackaon p OOOO Kirby p Rlbanl p 0 0 0 0 CarDo pn I 0 0 0 “ulwar p 00 0® lawarl ph 10 10 Total 311 0 1 Total 34 7121 .IiicIihmH ......oooioooob*—' San Dlaga ........*0* 1<* * O x— ' CSi 7 1 Total 20 0 * 000 100 oIo — *02 3 1 * SOX — LOB^Oakl!nd^ IP H R ER BB SO NMIonay IU1M) A-Jackion m Golf Classic Still Unable to Pay Carty ... ... Copada lb 4 12 1 Arka 1. CBoyar 3b 4 0 10 Crawiord rf 4 Didler c 4 0 10 Lelabvr* 3b Garrldo m 2 0 0 0 Hallwr c *“•— ^ 2000 or ------------- DETROIT (AP) - One of the sponsors of the disastrous Michigan Golf Classic said Thursday he still doesn’t know when the tournament’s golfers will be paid because "we’re Still trying to put our figures together.” Phil Lachman, a Detroit trophy manufacturer who cosponsored the event with business, man John Brennan, said that “every day we have a new problem facing us.” * * * The four-day tournament was won Sept. 7 by Larry Ziegler and an hour after the victory the Professional Golfers’ Association announced the Michigan Golf Classic, Inc. (Lachman and Brennan) could not pay the prize money. Ziegler was supposed to take home a 820,000 top prize of the 8100,009 new tournament. "We had quite a mess,” Lach- man said. “Trying to figure out what we have coming in and what we owe ia quite a job.” Lachman and Brennan held press conference the day after the Classic ended and said it would be seven to 10 days be* fore they could say where they stood financially. MONEY ADVANCED The next day Joe Dey, commissioner of the PGA Tournament Players Division, advanced $50,000 out of his office’s general fund and mailed the money direct to the players. Each player got half of Ms original prize winnings. Dey’s office said it haa hired a lawyer and “hopes to get the money back.” Meanwhile, Lachman said tournament director Marshall Chambers has been fired from his $408*-week job. “The job Marshall was originally hired to do wasn’t done and only John and 1 have ^knowledge of the things involved,” Lachman said. “So we can’t pven hire anyone to work “We’ve received a lot of phono calls and I've received letters that reassured me that people had no question of our integrity in this thing,” he added. ★ a He' said he cgn’t say how much longer it will take before the Michigan Golf Classic, Inc., has things straightened out. In a side note, Lachman aaid someone telephoned him after the tournament and said he wanted to pay for his parking. “He said he sneaked into toe lot on a marshal’s badge that I’t his," Lachman said. Gary Andrew set the pace for Southfield in a 17-46 romping over Waterford Mott with winning time of 10:27. Brad Holft, Christ Sorrenson Jaan Tuulik gave Southfield four of toe top five runners. . abrhbj lackari 26* -■ 1 i u dWIIIami If 3 0oo Santo 3b * 3 0 2 2 Kinki lb b 1 t • Hickman rf win the meet 26-30 on overall: gm^im p 4 0 ? 0 RuSofprhpPh 1800 points by picking up the third,| hK'A J fourth, fifth, sixth and eighth R*g*n p 8888 places. I ______ Colaorn PL »0 0 0 Reabe, who’s time of 10:____ clipped the course record by 13 seconds, was fbllowed by teammate Meyerhoffer, 10:45, and Milford’s Ron Morrison, jUJiiHJ-i Jhkai* .. ........ w E—G./ackion. OP—Chlei„ ___________ '"-'sago 4. HTl-Ro|ai (4). IF H R ER BB SO 4, Chid (W,13-14) l4 'i V lagan ‘wfC MTackar. T—2:17. A- i,m. P H R ER BB iMfH? 1-3 0 0 0 1 3 4 0 0 1 LOS ANOILBS *6r hi IT z 1 I 060 l.^SanrJrtM^in,r Slwmort. HR—Ctpoda (21). Wotton/ Mw/OiffWo. P.NI«kro (L,20-13) Sutton (W,17-10) .. . I . m _ •” P.NIakro (W.Davla). T-2:03. 4 2 2 0 Morgan 2b 0 0 0 0 Putntai 3b 9tm c *11* Hunt 2b jAkiu rf 4 1 j 3 May* cf • - . - feA liifmOfi Guinn p too* McCovay 1b 3 f T f !IS?» 3 0 0 0 Bond! rt | Vatklm p l j}| —1 . , 331 nip lioOLanlaru 40 1' 41 If /1 0 1 0 Bryant p 4 0 01 "ir p * 0 a 0 McMahon p OOO l inilar (L,11-14) 8r ...eyi i Bryanf (W,4-2)' !;;! 71-3 5 13 4 *®7«k.ni. 1 THE 1970's ARE HESE - ™ 50 ISN’t MUST BE SOLD AT THE PRICE AND BEAL YOU NAVE BEEN WAITING FOR! VflllD TAADE-INWILL never be worth TUUlf MORE THAN IT IS RI8NT NOW! AND... SEVERAL DEMOS ANN OFFICIAL’S CARS -2— BeLOrDE4tER 'CMST! Example: 1969 Buick Special 2-dr. took! You gst all this equipment in your mw Buick! • Convenience Qroufy • Electric Clock » Whitewall Tine t Deluxe Mouldings . * Deluxe Stooring Wheel e Tinted Windshield e Deluxe Wheel Oovere Opaq Saturday. FULL FRIGE: $2388°° Buick-Qpel Inc »/*»( ^c woqks west Or n TELEPH0NE133B>6121| THE POftTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1969 C—8 CARWASH UJitL Goa, 18 gals. FREE 17 gals. 25c 15 gals. SO*5 10 gals. 00 6 gals. H50 KUHN Auto Wa$h 149 W. Huron St. Pontiac Major Colleges' Start Play Kentucky Tests Rose Sniffing Indiana By the Associated Press Associated Press Sports Writer I Indiana has the potential, Penn State has a puzzle, and Southern California has a problem as most of the nation’s major college football teams open [the 1969 season Saturday. 1 Indiana’s power-packed Hoos-jiers, most everyone’s choice to represent the Big Ten in the I Rose Bowl this year since Ohio Armstrong carpeting is new tough, soft, clean. And in your neigf now. State cannot repeat for the trip, plays at Kentucky in their curtain-raiser. ' / ★ iv* ★ Penn State, ranked No. 2 in the qation last year, faces “an unknown quantity” in Navy, according to Coach Joe Paterno And Southern California, which lost to top-ranked Ohio State in the Rose Bowl last year, meets Nebraska with the possibility that No. 1 quarterback Jimmy Jones will be on the shelf. Giffin Floors Inc. 3329 Auburn Road Auburn Haights — 879-6213 Coach John McKay of Southern California says that Jones, a highly touted sophomore has been troubled the past several days with muscle spasms in his back and may not play at all. ★ , * ★ McKay said a final decision will " not be made until game time. With two other candidates ailing, the job may fall to the No.4 quarterbaekyGreg Briner, another sophomore. “There’s no sense in taking a NEW COACH Kentucky will be eager for a successful start under new coach John Ray, formerly with Notre Dame. But it appears that the hot shot Hoosiers have too much power with the passing of Harry Gonso and running of John Isenbarger and Jade Butcher. Paterno says Penn State’s game with Navy is the most difficult opener he’s faced. “We know so little about Navy,”, said Paterno. “They have a new coach, new system and new staff. They’re an unknown quantity.” X The Middies, who meet Penn State at Annapolis, Md., are under the guidance of Rick Forza-| no, formOT~coacir oftTonnecttcut and an assistant with the Cin-Lp.innnt.i Bengali of the American R| Football League. chance with Jones,” Said McKay. “His future is too bright. Ohio State is the only team in the Big Ten delaying its start until next week. The Buckeyes' make their season debut home against Texas Christian University on Sept: 27; i uul>a; Kansas si lawyer for Refs ~and Knnsns nt Tc* " • Nntrp Damp wV uation, plans" to stick more to “Theismann proved in the fi-| the ground than usual and rely nai three Barnes last year that! on the power running of fullback hg can ^ ^ ba]1„ says NoJ Jeff Zimmerman and halfbacks . D CoaehAraParseelF! Denny Allan and Ed Ziegler. ,re UaDmf Loach Ara Parsegh Joe Theismann, a scramblingian- "But now he doesn’t have! quarterback, will direct the of- any experienced receivers toj fense. „ work wjth.” ^3 a bribe from Iho world's largest maker -of fibroglaaa runabouts dealer's 1970 buelneie le We're offering a 3-way bribe to We boater* who will own a 1970 filaaapar (on display now). Buy or trade now and you'll get: 1) weak* of ute on your 1970 modal when everyone elae still has 1999'.: >) a better deaf, because your 9) and a free Panasonic 9* TV oi am-fm n Take advantage of this bribe now at Young's Marina Offer Expires September. 30, 1969 DAILY 9-6, SUNDAY 10-4 YOUNG'S MARINA * “Yqur Glasspar Dealer” -■ - 4030 Dixie Hwy. on Loon Lake OR 4-0411 WANT TO SELL LAWNMOWERS, POWER MOWERS, ROLLER SKATES, wsnnNsi Rirvn.Es? use a LOW COST PONTIAC to Meet NHL Over Dispute TORONTO (AP) - Charles ’ Mulcahy, vice-president of the [ Boston Bruins, met Thursday . night with Joe Kgne, lawyer fori 20 National Hockey League ref-! erees and linesmen who are re-; fusing to sign 1969-70 contracts until the NHL recognizes their The, 13 referees and seven ! linesmen walked out of a train-; ing camp in Brantford, Ont., Monday, demanding official rec-: ognition for their National Hockey League Referees’ and Lines-1 men’s Association. The holdouts, which ‘include ! veterans Bill Friday, Vem But fey and Bruce Hood, also are seeking an improved contract . Other top games Saturday find; Northwestern at Notre Dame; Purdue at TCU, Washington State at Illinois, Oregon State at Iowa; Vanderbilt at Michigan; Washington at Michigan State; Oklahoma at .Wisconsin; Texas at California and Iowa State at Syracuse. * * Also Oklahoma State at Arkansas; Houston at Florida;! S^arGloF^iT^riMj Carolina at North Carolina itate;—Alabama—at—Virginia Tech and these night games, Texas A&M at LSU: Pitt at UCLA; Kansas State at Baylor! jPeeh^ Notre Dame, which lost quar-1 terbaek Terry Hanratty to grad- ior iar-1 mit* everything you need for HUNTING - FISHING • CAMPING SPECIAL __ ALL TERRAIN VEHICLE IPfSi MUD PUPPY %095.00 CLAY PIGEONS QE Outdoors i nan SPOR T CEN TER 6487 Hirilaid M. ftoie S73-36M - Div. — Toyota of Pontiac ATTENTION! PERFORMANCE CAR ENTHUSIASTS You are invited to a Special Premiero Showing of th# 1970 Dodge Scat Pack Performance Car*, featuring the all-new CHALLENGER R/T. Challenger R/T 2-Door Hardtop. ——SPECIAL SURPRISE—; Come and see the new Dodge Charger Daytona that qualified at Talladega at 199.466 MPH; placed 1st, 2nd, 3rd and 4th at the Talladega 500 last Sunday. SPECIAL PREMIERE SHOWING SUNDAY, SEPT. 21st, NOON TO 8 P.M. TMmWmtlLQYD LLOYD BRIDGES SB Dodge "* 1010 W. MAPLE HP. (16 Mile Rd.) w 624-1572 j WANT TO SELL LAWNMOWERS, POWER MOWERS. ROLLER g l PRESS CLASSIFIED -AD. TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 332-8181., G OODpYCAR WST SERVICE system, increased salaries and ,_________nenslon and medical insurance CLASSIFIED AD. TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 332-8181. | plans paid in full by the NHL IF WE SOUND ENTHUSIASTIC ABOUT DUNLOP TOTAL PERFORMANCE TIRES - WE ARE! THIS IS IT Ut'eToko A Look At the Product... Gold Seal Belted, for extra because of the tread supporting fiberglass belt; or tho Dunlop Elite premium, indestructable, the ultimate In safety against blow-outs; ortho Dunlap high performance Radial Ply for the guy who's really Into motoring whether It's for work or play — the meet efficient tire available anywheral The complete line of Dunlop total performance tires Is available at convenient Dynamic Tiro Salas. FREE HIGH SPEED WHEEL BALANCE WITH THE PURCHASE OF EVERY TIRE •on B.BO-13 MACK TUBELESS 16.09 WHIT! TUBELESS 18.18 no. ix TAX 1.19 — 7(00-13 *— 8.98-14 -iT38— 17.56 1 - fjpjj 19.42 1.94 1.96 7.36*14/15 18.22 ^ 21.00 2.0T 7.75-14/18 18.88 22.42 2.20 8.28-14/18 21.31 24.88 2.86 8.55-14/15 22.61 26.96 2.6T 8.88-14/18 28.lt 2.19 9.00-18 80.84 2.89 9.18-18 * 30.84 3.01 • WIDE OVALS •DYNAMIC BALANCING • RADIAL5 e FREE INSTALLATION • GLASS BELTS TERMS , • TRUCK TIRE SERVICE • MICHIGAN BANKARD DYNAMIC TIRE SALES “DEDICATED TO HATJt SPIRALING COSTS” JOE STAMELL’S DYNAMIC TIRE SALES Mil N. Woodward iSwlMto M« \ See Jim or Ev Phoiw M1-MM I Royal Ook, Pfc. S4S-7IM i DYNAMIO TIRE SALES NORTH, INC. MS Main Strati We adjust brakes on all four wheels, add brake fluid if needed and road teat Also clean, inspect, and repack front wheel bearings, align front end, correct ^amber, caster and toe-in. Rotate all four wheels. TAKE YOUR CAR WHERE THE EXPERTS ARE USE OUR EASY PAY RIAN GOOD-YEAR NEW TREADS A*t mmm tars. Standard U.S. care $10.95 Reg. $13.95 Ada *2 If disassembly and reassembly of aolf- DelUXi U.S. Car* $12.95 R«g. $15.95 adjusting bratcss Is nasdad. ... AN parts axtra. Lubrication A Oil Change net. *11. jr50 > ireese t labsr. * . k Xid *lTf prsss*. la Mead , Our car can axparts use only , top quality oil and grease to service your ear. Don't watt .. bring your car in today I 10 point Auto Safety Check For the Safety-Minded Motorist Bnkaa, a tearing, front k rear lights, tires a horn, exhaust, __ washer glass, wlpara, mlr- RHP row, teat bait*. GaaOYEAR 1370 WIDE TRACK DRIVE Pontiac, Mich. — Phono 335-6167 525 ELIZABETH LAKE RD. Waterford, Mich. — Phone 338-0378 C—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1969 f '1 \ 51 m erosion. Under normal Operating conditions, Perma-Gap plugs (an* other Mercury exclusive) will last the Nfe of the engine. " Thunderbolt ignition and Perma-Gap spa^ plugs prevent spark plug foul* fng and pre-ignition due to lead deposit. . ..so you can take advantage pf regulgr automotive gasoline tor every 1970 Mercury. Both Thunderbolt systems are capacitof-discharge type and have the incredibly fast Thunderbolt rise time, which zaps up to 40,000 volts to the-spark plugs kV microseconds. With Thunderbolt, Mercury 'continues to have the hottest spark, the fastest' start In boating-dor every Mercury in the. line. More news: Perma-Gap spark plugs on ail '70>MereS: A new super-tough metal alloy Ibr the center M ac trade resists spark Test-sit T6 textures and 236 colors of new Armstrong carpeting page A-3 Custom Floor Covering 8*30 M-1S filerkSton - 625-2100 Pre-Season ADVANCED SALE MERCURY SNOWMOBILES New 1110 SILVERLINE BOATS Inboards t Outboards Accepting Winter Storage RESERVATIONS NOW for BOATS A MOTORS BOAT CENTER 1265 S. WOODWARD atAdems Road imm Today's Garnet Oakland (Dobson 14-12) at (McGlothiln 8-15), night Chicago (Peters 10-14) at (Drago 10-11), night ber 3-5) at AAii Boston (Brett Ml at Detroit (M< 2M night York (Kekich 3-5) at Baltii ----JUG WAITING-—The Littto Brown Jug- is waiting for Laverne Hanover driven by -Billy Haughton in the passing classic for three year olds -at Delaware, Ohio. Second laverne Sets Pace Chicago ...........,17 St. Louis ......... 80 Pittsburgh ....... 79 Philadelphia ...... 60 ‘ tel ......... 48 D1T1 .AWARF nhln (AP) ■ I Shotput Mark I j by Russian Gal ATHENS (AP) - So far at European Track and Field i the women! all the work, of the six-day Russian girl put to a world [record. Nadezhda Chizhova a university student at Leningrad set the mark at 87V« feet after a | thrilling duel with her East Ger-| man rival Margitta Gummel. * * * I On Thursday at Athens* Ear-aiskakls Stadium, it was muchl the same tune, with France’s Nicole Duclos, n petite French; secretary and Collette Bessom, a physical education teacher I from the Bordeaux area. ——_________________________an wirophoio | Both girls surged to a world| is Kat Byrd. Haughton set a record in win- record for the AOO meters,! ning his fourth jug victory. It had a purse clocked in the same time of 51.7. of $109,731. ; ____________ | A * * ' They both think the mark can | be lowered and in a few years, a I woman should run the distance tin 50 seconds,” said Miss Besson, who usually beats her com-| patriots in the event. AAA But on Thursday, Miss Duclos finished-with a last burst of speed and threw herself on the' tape to win a photo finish. to givo you service, and Dodge High guy the aspirin,, cars and the DICK CANAAN’S MOTOR CITY DODGE 855 Oakland Ave. 338-9222 Jug Victory /Never in Doubt' Cincinnati ......... „ „ Houston _____To» 72 Son Diego .. 41 102 ---------ThursUey's Result! Now York 2, Montreal o PhlladelpMs 5, Chicago 3 st. Louis *, mnsbutiT7 , San Francisco 9, Houston 3 Los Angelos S, Atlanta 2 arked the eighth straight success for Laverne'and his 17th victory in 21 starts. Laverne now ^moves into the favorite’s Tole fur the third leg of the triple—the Cane Futurity ik Veteran harness race driver Customer. He is consistently [ Billy Haughton never had any good week after week.” Haugh-j doubts that Laverne Hanover ton-won the Jug last year with would win the 24th running oi ! Rum Customer. —— the Little Brown Jug. | A A A j Diego ?, Cincinnati 1 ! “The colt raced exactly like] Murphy, who bought LaverneiYonkers Raceway Nov, Pittsburgh (VM*£*2®27nd w.lk.r w) 1 knew he would,” Haughton .to a yearling sale for $20,000, Lightning Wave, whose first! 2iwi,"tah"dr,w ** *nd c,rd i8aid Thursday after he guided {has seen his investment pay division victory was worth $16,.1 Philadelphia (Wise 14-11 and James 2-0) the brilliant bfOWn Colt to ain» mnr« than t-nfnlrl 5 »J5J2A w°° g ,nd RdBk0’‘ 'IracOoff triumph in the paQing|.: Laverne’s victory Jiere:. was - 4iS*Chicw «^f8s»im»j classic for 3-ycar-ol # X&fnfiRtT (Merritt 16*18) it Houstoftj ^ G( KAR’S BOATS and MOTORS 4SS W. ClarkitM R4., Lain Ori<* MY3-160* THEY’RE HERE! SHIM AT... CRUISE-OUT Inc. opwi Dally N fat. »-5 — Closed Sunday ---636. Walton,--- Pontiac FE 8-4402 , Lin Angelas (C...... . cisco (McCormick 104), Saturday's Pittsburgh at New York Philadelphia at Montreal ■ St. Louis at Chicago -Cincinnati at Houston, night Atlanta at San pleOo Lo. Angalgjj at-ian grajcttcg olds. Houston1 1 UPP ttifii confident alt ,• r,,„„ wet>k tong. J felt there were two . L !_ horses to boat—Kat Byrd and jraj^lanW'amjjj^ ^ejam?r attorney, and a former NFL quarterback for the Colts and a back judge official, of the NFL. I The 45-year-otd Haughton, who now hda won more than $3 'million in purses, made it look TniffsV ’ ieasy with the Tkr Heel son odt st. Louts at Chicago ! of Lavish Hanover, Cincinnati at Houston . . jj .. .. . Atlanta at son biego Laverne, racing in his usual Lo» Angelos at saw Francisco1 [style, came from behind with ., . „ , _ „ . a strong stretch drive to cop Adrian Burk, now a Houston the sec*nd dlvislon by worth a record $43, padded her season bankroll to well over $230,000. record crowd of 44,721 watched the Jug, with Its record purse of $109,731, under cool temperatures and cloudy skies, contrasted to Wednesday’s heavy rains. THMIEHERE! me/rcu/rv 459, was trying to duplicate the triumph of her. lather, Shadow Wave, who won the Jug in 1058. Blues Defeat Toronto | OTTAWA UR - Third-period j goals by Al Arbour and Ab McDonald led the St. Louis!] Blues to an uphill 5-3 victory Laverne’s two major challen-|over the Toronto Maple Leafs in gers, Bye Bye Sam and Kati« National Hockey League ex-Byrd, did not fare too well. Bye hibition game Thursday night. ! | Bye Sam, winner of the Messenger Stake last May, the first I leg in pacing’s triple crown, fin-ished fourth in the first division and then was scratched because of 103 temperature. Kat Byrd, racing mostly in the East, finished fourth in the second, heat and made a bid in the raceoff before Laverne caught and passed him. * ;*■ * ■ | Lightning Wave, a 12*1 shot, was the upset victor in the first! division. Driven by tynre Ferguson, Lightning Wave nosed UNITED TIRE, INC. , WHITEWALLS > 4 FULL PLY! AMT SIZE 1 6.5li I] - t.95a 14 - U5.ll M6.I4 - Lila. WIDE OVALS ir ns UNITED TIRE, INC. Rkara Pr,o«. Art Onciuntat-kol Quality-1002 Baldwin Ay«. i annum fsom oowrrowa .oktiac COUPON SPECIAL LEE BROS. EQUIPMENT 923 University Phone 338-0215. HOMELITE SNOWMOBILES Demos or New *69 cn^ 70s A STEAL 10 hp. SALE Reg. $795- $495 A BEAUTY 18 h p. SALE Reg. $995 *745 A WINNER 23 hp. SALE Reg. $1295 $945 POWER 28 hp. SALE Reg. $1395 $1295 CLIFF DREYER’S SPORTSCENTER, INC. iS2ll N. Holly M., Holly *34-1111 or 634-1300 lengths over stable entry NAr-dins Grand Slam.- Haughton didn’t wait that long In Die raceoff about an hour later directing Lavern^ to the front just before the three-quarter pole and cruising home' Vh lengths ahead of Kat Byrd. Laverne covered his first mile around the Delaware Couhty Fairgrounds in 2:004-5 and romped the raceoff in 2:002-5. RECORD WIN Haughton, racking up Msittot Geing-ltiini-by a head. The! fourth Jug triumph, a record,{bay colt, owned by Double Z. & was lavish in his praise of La-jp. Stables of Middletown, Ohio,' Verne, owned by Thomas W. | relumed: $20.40 to his backers -. Murphy Jr., a stook broker but finished dead last in the j . JF.i-om blew York City. raceoff. THE BEST BUY YOUR CAR WILL i mWO Mercury Now with Thunderbolt ignition across the line. New Thundert^olt ignition in every 1970 Mercury I Breakerless Thunderbolt (no points at all) from the 135 down through the 40 hp. Mercs from SO through the 4 hp heve new Maker-Point Thunderbolt: the spark plug is fired by the points making contact. This reduces arcing ‘ and, increases point life. Result: pdinto used in the Meres from . hp down last the life of the engine.' excluding cement and garage door iYou can now purchase everything you require to erect a 20'x22' garage -including nails r p FOR ONE LOW PRICE KIT! BURKE LUMBER 1 4496 DIXIE HIGHWAY I DRAYTON PLAINS OR 3-1211 Open Weekdays Mon. thru Fri. 6 A.M. to 6tM P.M. Saturdays from 6 AN. to 4 P.M. THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY; SEPTEMBER 19. 1969 C—5 Northern Regrouping Forces for Invasion by Mott Grktders . The Huskies of Pontiac Northern will have the friendly Confines of Wisner Stadium tomorrow night as they make their home debut against Waterford Mott. g ■ Northern was toppled by North Farmington last week, 28- RENTACAR $QA month 1970' Chevy Nova ALL MAINTENANCE INCLUDED Equipped with a V-l angina, auto tronw minion, radio ond haotar, powai il'taring, *i"Vl top, whilawoll h,,, ^ C.A.R. RENTAL t LEASE, Inc. Phone FE 5-4161 12, and coach Dave Schmidt Is hoping to, regroup his forces for the contest against Mott. The game is one of a hahdful on the Saturday night schedule. IkAKERS HOME In a pain of Northwest Catholic League games, Ham-tramck St. Florian visits Water%d Our Lady of Lakes with kickoff slated for 7:30 on the Waterford Kettering, field, while Utica St. Lawrence entertains Farmington Our Lady of Sorrows in an 8 p.m. scrap on the Utica High School field. ★ * * I In an afternoon game, Detroit I Country Day, a 6-0 winner over I Byron last week, visits Colum- bus Academy._____ | NO SOFT TOUCH I Mott is no soft touch and Schmidt-knows it. He was on ihand last Friday as the i Corsairs came from behind in the final minute of play to whip; that’s likely jto bother the ing, the veteran PNH mentor township rival Kettering, 14-7. Huskies, since pass defense!came away impressed with the The Corsairs pass a lot and! isn’t one of the things they do [passing of junior Bill Ziem and) particularly Well. ' 1 jthei-eceivir[g of halfback Terry NEW LINEUP Ruffatto and end Bob Schup- Survev Starts 7*® PNH defense, With ex-Hi* ;.u _ 4 ' ! ception of tackles Mario Castillo | 8ame marKs the first nil* I f and Dave Guy, is new and! meetinB between Northern and OH on OCnOOllSdhpirdt attributes the loss to Mott. The Corsairs replace , North Farmington primarily to Altering on PNH’s schedule, j Dcr DpAnK/Nynr the greenness of that unit. f * * * Kec Programs for .a halt, trailing 8-6 at m.co0c __ge perry is oh-How does the recreation pro- termission, but thereafter it was j gram stack up? all North Farmington. “We That’s the question officials didn’t have the ball,” lamented are trying to answer in a Schmidt. “We had it for only 16 survey now under way in the plays in the second half,” I WANTED NON-FERROUS METALS No. 1 COPPER ">• 50* No. 2 COPPER »> 45c BRASS . . . 25* RADIATORS 25* ALUMINUM *-8* fries Subject to Changa Pontiac Scrap Co. viously optimistic as he views I the ’69 season. LAKERS SHARP Coach Joe Sharpe and the | Lakers of WOLL were impressive Iqst week in their 38-01 romp past St. Rita, and they aren’t expected to have more than token opposition from St. Florian. The Lakers, sparked by halfback Jim Tracey, were a pre-season pick to battlej Ferndale St. James for the Northwest championship. The I Lakers were the only team to | down St. James last season. 1 RENT AM ECONO-CAR *AtiT from *6 + 6« j DAY , Mill Air rmMtidagAwmUmUu ECONO-CAR OF PONTIAC ball 332-0102 SPECIAL WEEKEND KATES Hotting like dis in old country Bloomfield Hills School District. ..- .... ★ ■* h A three-page questionnaire mailed to residents of the district this week by Bloomfield Hills Recreation Commission asks for opinions concerning existing recreational programs and facilities in the district. Recreation officials say the results from the survey will be used in planning for the recreational needs of the district. The school district provides the budget for administration of the recreation program and makes facilities added. Usually, a team will have the ball for 3(M0 plays a half. ! CAUSES WORRIES And the passing game of Mott does worry Schmidt. In watching the Corsairs down Ketter- Swim Coach Is Selected PHILADELPHIA (UPI) -Clarence “Chick” Webb was named head swimming coach at Uf^fty-Jhursday.,. The only thing good enough to cover Armstrong tile is new Armstrong carpeting^- A-l Tile and Carpet 8T70 Cooley Lake Road Union Lako - EM 3-3298 budget is self-sustaining through a schedule of fees and charges. Broncos Face Strong Pacific STOCKTON, Calif. CAP) -Western Michigan’s new offense has passed its first football test but Saturday it may be tttfe ! Broncos’ defense which is under1, fire. Using its new triple option formation, Western rolled over Central Michigan 24-0 in its season last Saturday. ★ * ★ This Saturday, the opposition is more imposing. The Broncos take on University of the Pacific on the Tigers’ home field; Pacific fell before Texas-El Paso 14-10 in its own opener last weekend but the Tigers should thoroughly test Western’s comparatively inexperienced de- . fensive unit. The Tigers lost only 10 letter-men through graduation after a 7-8 season in 1968—their best in a decade. Thirty-two lettermen are back, including the entire backfield, and the Tigers are two deep with experienced players at most positions. Bailey Joins Bruins LONDON, Ont. (AP) — Garnet Bailey, third-year professional from Lloydminster,1 has signed his 1969-70 contract with the Boston Bruins of the National Hockey League. succeeding Joe Verduer. Webb coached at the city’s George Washington high school "six yeaf3~and produced five undefeated teams. We Hova Yolir.,: NEW PARTS For Briggs, Tecumseh, Reo, Lawn Boy and Clinton MOTORS AUTHORIZESSERVICECENTER Hand, Power, Ride You'd better believe it. Scandinavian design 12-ounce beverage glasses ^re free at your ! Ashland station. Get one free with each $3.Q0 purchase of Ashland gasoline. It matches the 16 and ! 9-ounce glasses offered previ-\ ously. Start collecting beverage glasses today at yourpar-1 ticipating Ashland Dealer’s. Ashland. —-tfliim in nwif lot IIM lcnntn vnnr ngpffn" McNABB SAW SERVICE 13AB Baldwin FE 241382 ASHLAND OIL & REFINING COMPANY ehd of simmer cmmuioE T0R0 7-hp TRACTOR **• • DELUXE SEAT « • URGE TIRES • COMPLETE WITH 36" MOWER Reg. $599.95 SPECIAL $47495 WHEEL-HORSE 7-hp TRACTOR • DELUXE SEAT • URGE TIRES • COMPLETE WITH 32" MOWER 94999S * SPECIAL YARDMAN 21” REEL-TYPE MOWED SPECIAL *109%, Ho* *I49.%5 WHEEL-HORSE 22” ROTARY SELF-PROPELLED MOWER Reg. $159.95 SPECIAL ’1293 ami Lawn Fertiliser 10,000 Sq. Ft. Bag $8W SECOND BAG .... 1* BOTH... *8% -WE HAVE ON DISPLAY- TORO SNOW PUPS froatMM" • Also ARIENS SNOW BLOWERS - LAY AWAY NOW 4*11- HOLDS TOM'S HARDWARE JOB Orchard Lake Ave. DAILY 9-6 FE 8*2424 X 3-DAY ■ale FROM THE NO. 1 TIRE COMPANY GOODYEAR LOW, WIDE 4-PIY NYLON CORD HUEIY flllWEffTHffi TIRE m Compared to feet yeat*. "Safety All-Weather" ««W: • Improved the Tafaya rublrar QQtopnaad to batter toei WMt i • Designed a aew Aagfe Grip Tread • Unrated to profile lor Improved stability rad baadUag • Widened to tread to pat mom labbaa aato mad a Oar baat selling 4-ply ayloa tad Mr. Mato am y>PHo» Blaotanl MlMlI ss VMomMI NraM 7401U $21J9 $24.99 6LM $79-14 tomw 7J0U4) $22.99 mu $2.41 F7M4 tomm 7.79.14) 62458 $2750 6154 I I 1 $215$ $2*58 $258 179-19 tow 7JkN| $2259 62U0 62.41 F70-15 mtoto 7.7*15) $2459 6>75S 62.45 SALE ENDS SATURDAY NIGHTI use our easy pay plan • free mounting' aatmvBm 1 SERVICE i STORES 1370 WIDE TRACK DRIVE 525 ELIZABETH LAKE RD. Pontiac, Mich.—Phona 335-6167 Watarford, Mich.—Phona 338-0378 226 MAIN STRECT^^®/;,3 Rochettar, Mich.—Phona 651-4007 [ C—6 THE PONTIAC PftKSS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1969 BRIDGESTONE HOTTEST IN ITS CLASS Performance you’d expect from a 250 cc or bigger ! Dual Rotary valve 20 HJ*. twin ’--delivers explosive acceleration. Five speeds, fully equipped.. Bridgestone 175 Dual Twin sJ^ggss nwnn tana m mmmt ---BONUS SPECIAt TWs week-Buy a Bridgestone 175-and get a set of custom molded FIBERQLA88SADDLEBAQS-a $30.90 value—for only $11,901 SAVE $28,001 WHEELS, INC. 121* H. MAIN STaaBT NOYAL OAK, MICHIGAN PHONE. MI-1141 Horse Race Results Hazel Park Results 1* DRC Results THURSDAY'S RESULTS 1st—$1 ISO Claiming Trot; Wise Bell Stella's Denise | Continents 9.00 5.00 nM"bto 5.201 Rebec0 J‘ 5,60 fSWwWM........... -______— Maumee Claiming Paeti 1 Milt: J Troplcaf^dg. 7 <# si" |.«0 HIM HhSS Little Piggy 15.60 11.40 5.601 Dally Double: (11*12) Paid $32.10 BBHB .... „ .. 3rd—$3200 Claiming; 6 Furlongs: EOSM** l°l' Wlllum 4.60 3.00 2.60 3rM-^iM_CgiiM^jPgcgi_j Milot j ^ 340|g. Faejlne________4.80 4.00 .20 2$ 12.60 84 Hickory Lassie O Jan Solano Gold Water 4th—$1400 C Fairlam Hicko Odoni Sth—$ Tlmtl,______ . Pastime Eloise Jorinda's Choic -$1700 Cf“J r's Quee it Tona l Furlongs: Jet Har Per#eL_............... 7th—$2300 cond. Pace; 1 Captain Breeze Black Malastic Hf B 36# 15^3^5 P 3.40 2.80 2.40 3.60 2.60 SpMd w,„r 5-20 2S® Sth—$2500 Claiming! i Furlongs: 2-*° Tom McEwon 12.00 0.00 . on t u, Bornostorm . 7.20 '8tt i fi ? « Half Plato 7 00 Optional Twin: (0-2) Paid $110.10 ... 3 20 6th—$2200 Claiming! 6 Furlongs: !w 1 m 9 m Red Applan 7.00 3.10 —I •°° $20 0«n Flro CMikor 12.40 $.20 ?-S Don Bayou — 3 ZQ 7th—$3200 Allowance; 6 Fut 'Roman Crooner I Action Coritinuey'rolling right i along iri the fail bowling leagues wifh several high individual games and1 series making a I" for season honors already. Jim Knapp, competing in the Sylvan flnys pnd Flnllo League at Sylvan p o s t e d the week’s highest individual' series with a (l-$) Paid $22.20 —gwM I------------- Captain Bi Black Ma| CUpper^ChljJ^ Joe's Don Juan 14.80 7:66 Sandy Knox »th—$3000 Claiming Paca; 1 PIxle Dew 13.*v ----PS Sparx 6.60 6.00 Mighty McKlyo 10th—$1700 Claiming Pact; 1 Daring Dan * Frontier Marshall JeanT.Adlosl ~r.40 Per tecta: (7-6) Paid $56.80 Attendance 4,787; total handle $437,546 3.80 2.60 3.20 .20 4.20 .80 7;00 5.20 ' 13.20 7.60 4.40 6.60 6.IT 5.4 :a; 1 Mila: 9.00 3.80 2.4 2.60 2.80 2.60 2.40 6 Furlongs: 19.00 5.— HL. 2.80 240 Double: ($-2-5-3) Paid $6,516.10 * ......„oo Claiming; 1 Mila 70 Yards: Klntlz 7.10 3.80 4.40 4.00 0.20 Princess Jo Jo : (5-3) Paid $67.20 Hazel Park Entries Attendance 9,448; total handle $840,336 DRC Entries SATURDAY'S ENTRIES lit—$2400 Claiming! 6 FtlriMigt: wild Nall Oallrlout - EnlUjhtenmant---Th» Blby___ The Firebird Ladies Classic, formerly the iWon Ladies Classic, featured twovexception-al high- series bowlers in Dottie Senter and Shirley Pointer who each rolled a 588 high. \ Over in the Lakewood Women’s league at Lakewood Lanes, Mary Emsley rolled to a 182\all spare game, while Normam Dietz, competing for the firs^ time in the Wednesday night Men’s House league at 300 Bowl, hit a personal high of 158-222-223 —603 series. Buddy D. Hal Sam Dandy Whisby Ernest Rhythm Billy Chief Holloway Senator Eric Ko Anna Cash Red Acres Mori's Pride I Paca; 1 Mile: Cottonwood Mist1 Grand Jubilee Vera's Boy Bobby Freeman Nasty Na Cara's B< Guido Torrid G. 3rd—$1700 Cond. Paca; 1 Mile Sir Arthur Pick .Pop's Adi Hickory Daloris Karan's F Tess Lady Harold Ac Cousin Cazeaux Double R. Mr. D. K. Pot's L Wedge 2nd—$2 _ Arrc Flash Child mm Tip Ml Prince Reaper . Mr. Mlco 1 1/U'Miles: Besuch Magnagraph Brumby Old Col. *ish Loom w^h—$3000 £jg Wabush El Mansur War Peace Sail's Pride Salute Ric Lady Missile GavSam AfRiTiF " Deveda's Girl Baron of Amboy Janie Brook 5th—$3500 Claiming Paca; 1 Mila: Dazzllum , . Brady Adios Spring Fi Dr. BriVtaf niDDiv v Shadow Sim Briar Li OWlfFKnight Boy Dill •th—$5500 Preferred Trat; 1 oaHf'isr k Grow slormi ion*—«130« Claiming Facgi 1 Mllti Dark Damon wall Away Kay Maid Flttl'a Flash J.elr Duchess Lady Diradnlk Diamond Dot Cool Customar POLARIS CHARGER! Wow... what a snowmobile! Zips along liko a sports car. Speedy. Easy to handle. Aluminum or special LTW steel body. Feat urea new Polaris all-rubber track With Sno-Grip tread, or rubber with eteel-taloned track. Choice of Powertrain engine options. Quiet new Polira-tone muffler. Lowest prices. PERRY'S Lawn ft Garden Center 7615 Highland Rd. (M59) 673-6236 - Armstrong tile grows up. Now, test-sit Armstrong carpeting. See page A-3 Welled UkefloorCwNNtof 129 North Ponli.o Trod Walled Lake - MA4-1MI G ft M ft ELLIS Since 1945 CEMENT WORK"* PATIOS GARAGES e ADDITIONS COMFLETN BUILDING teNVICfl TERMS PI 2.1211 SAVE MONEY ON USED . . . AUTO PARTS Scrap COPPER - BRASS - ALUMINUM (W» Alio Pick Up Junk Cart) FE 2-0200 Scrap ISO Branch JOY THE BEAUTY OF. inn IN YOUR HOME This Week «T PANELING . . .... ....*3?! 4'x8’x 3/4 G. 2 S. BIRCH .... *1285 FREE DELIVERY OF 10 PANELS OR MORE! SUSPENDED CEILING 25* Sq. Ft. 2/0x6/8xl% H. C DOORS $065 Complete Line of AceetBorlot For Room Remodeling PONTIAC PLYWOOD 1400 Baldwin FE 2-2141 miry 6 Furtsngi: K.r.n Hlllt -i no ko.1 w..i-----Sony Morn--------- Rusty Rock Foncy Brltchos ■-Hard Lick Clam Would Jim Buck Proud Dusty 1-Spldor's Quoin a-ErwIn-L. P. Smith gntry 6th—$3000 claiming! I Furlongs: Ruliah Rullth ■ ‘ nno J.C_______ H. Van Borg Fireworks Due in Golf Play Senior Amateur in Quarter-Final Round WICHITA, Kan. (AP) - The opening quarter-final match between bavld Goldman of Dallas, Tex., and Bob Cochran it. Louis was expected to produce the most fireworks today in the United states Golf Association’s Senior amateur tournament. Goldman ia the tournament medalist and the world senior champion. Cochran, 57, ex-Walker Cupper and former four-time amateur champion of Misaouri, is noted for his tenacious shot-making under tournament pressure. * * Hie quarter-finals were being played this morning and the semifinals this .afternoon. Three national champion! were in the quarter-final field. They were defending champion Curtis Person of Memphis, Tenn.; Raymond Palmer of Grosse fie, Mich., the 1987 titlist; and Merrill Carlsmith of Hilo, Hawaii, champion In 1962 and 1963._____ Palmer was matched against Robert Loufek of Rock Island, 111.; Carlsmith against , Alan Howard, Dea Moines, Iowa; and Person against Len Bjorklund, Edina, Minn. Burton Scores Decision PORTLANp, Maine (AP) -Willie Burton of New York scored a 10-round decfidbn over A1 Banks of Dallas, Thursday night. Burton, who was penalized four times for low blows, weighed 190 and Banks 19$. K. Y.ung, <19; <13! L. Thompson, MS. High _________ ........N ,h,dt’ ! iliac General Heenltel High Sorio Anderson, 477. HURON BOWL 22$.%... ow.ll, 618. High D*.ton, 191. High Duton, 521. ■mn — EsthW T.np.hlll, 210; idry, 200. High Strles NORTH HILL LANCS Monday Night1 lama—Handle; aria Hoffman, $16i Iran. Action Heavy in Keg Classic Crown Heating Leads County League ....h StrlM —William Hewitt, 570i Ct-clll. Smith, 559; Bob Buth, $3$. I AIRWAY LANCS BRODY-BILT CONS™u'TION Action continues hot and heavy in the Oakland All-Star Classic with seven teams, out of a total of 14, tied for various positions in the latest standings. W?bw, m’Wh,G.,m.r,B"(ll«*5i°.':| _ * * * Ron M.™ni.t»., 2i#. split c°nv«-«ion»- Crown Heating, which had I * —been leading the pack for most of the competition, found itself ~.w., ... in a tie for first place with ...... s.ri«»”—"Jo Schmidt, s$si Giori*I Hartford Roof, each team with KruckMbgrn, SIS, High Gnmw — JAlte - “ “TV. Fllka, lVa^V899-2^«599^/a*1299 - ,¥7' 20x22-42.20 Kll IXCMIHX. IHKT.rtg “ GALL NOW FOR FREE ESTIMATE—FE 8-9584 ______ Sl0t,T24. High S.rl.s — Dottli Senter, 5$t: Shlrlny Pointer, Sit) Marvel] Szot, $72. High Turn Series — Airway Lanes, 2454 plus 245—2700. Firebird Lane-1 WESTSIOt LANES • Wastsida 4:30 Monday Night ! gh Games—VIC Cemp. 224! Al Laird, SYLVAN LANES Sylvan Gaya and Dolls Jim Lonborg Is S/de/ined by Injury BOSTON (API - Jim Lon-borg, who has had nothing but trouble since the glory days of 1967, may be sidelined for the rest of this season as a result a break injury. The tall right-hander suffered a badly lacerated foot when he slipped while racing through a heavy rainstorm Wednesday night, and a club spokesman said Thursday it appeared he might be through for the season. ★ ★ ★ Lonborg had driven home om Fenway Park after a game against the Baltimore Orioles was rained out, and reports were that he was wearing sandals and no socks. When he got out of hia car In the parking lot of hia apartment building he sprinted for the structure, but slipped. Hie accident was only the lat-it In tiie long series of troubles which have plagued Lonborg ever since he pitched the Red Sox to the 1967 pennant with a 22-9 record, won two more games in the World Series, and was named the AL’s Cy Young Award winner as its top pitcher. Aw nff-RFGcnn Injury that year followed by other problems in the spring and summer reduced his effectiveness in 1968, which he finished with a 6-10 record. This year, again plagued by a series of physical ailments, he had fashioned only a 7-11 mark. 124 won-lost point record.' * * + The Hartford team, behind Ed Gibbs’ 648 series, high for the week, recorded a combined total of 2946 as compared to Crown’s 2666 total last week, Tony Ledesma and Bob Chamberlain aided Hartford’s winning-edge with series of 594 ! and 602, respectively. Beaman, Paul Rod- - * * * aj' schumpSacb'sM;j Vincent Sanders, of Redford, Trophy, led all bowlers last sq ( Gen. week in the high series with a 709 total followed by Ed~Gibbs, I 648; Jim Milford, 621; Mo! Moore, 612; Rich Toles, 609; j Bob Chamberlain, 602; and Ed1 Jostock, 601. Schmidt, lW^I ____ Series — Bob~Putman, <32! Thorne, <11. High Gamas—Bob Putr 249! Bill Stockton, 234! Bill Young, Z Pontiac Motor Tempest HlflH Series—John Helrtt. 589; Bill . — $711 Tom Arthur, 554. High Games Thrasher, 227! Al Msnganallo, 219; Strles—Norman Dietz, 223—403. . Thursday Ladles Tile Hlgh\Series—Shlrlee Gibson, 539) Bar MadUN||MM2n Lots Anns, $14. Night Mixed Keelers Even a quiet car like Toyota Corona likes to make a little noise once in a while. Yeal— Road Tilt Magazine delivers groat gat mlfoaga. named Toyola Corona lm- The choice Is no surprlsa. porfid Car of th# Y«ar. But the law price may be. With an angina that goes from 0-to-60 in 16 seconds. Tops 90 mph. And IZKMIaI iundny Night l rlas—Tad Jab _________Si Lionel Thu.............. Gamas—Jerry Smlddy, 243; Jim Parr) “■ Kov-----**’ MAPLE MASTERS High Series—Meryl Taulbee, <Sli BUI]Crow Itdrlch, 626; Paul Rutkowskl, 619. High Hart!.,, .amea—Harold Hawkins, 244i Bill Died- HazeliM rich, 223, Bud weaver, Don Proems- “ "*• Team High Game—Oanlelt, it High Sarla*-4}anlels, 2*30. Black Hawks' Star Suffers Mild Attack CHICAGO (AP) - Kenny Wharram 37-year-old rightwinger for the Chicago Black Hawks, Buffered a slight heart attack Thursday night, the dub announced. Wharram entered Henrotin Hospital Monday with pericardi-tis—inflammation of tiie' membrane enclosing the heart. Attendants said his conditloh wax satisfactory. Wharram, from Ferris, Ont., has been a Hawk regular since 1958. He scored 30 goals last season. His best season was 1963-64 when he scored 39 goals and was named on the All-Star first team. Laker Sold to Bucks MILWAUKEE (AP) - The Milwaukee Bucks announced gelea Lakers. The only thing good enoughtocover Armstrong tile is new Armstrong carpeting. SOopogo A-3 Advance Floor Decorators ^ 4712 West Walton Blvd. Drayton Plains-674-0421 • Individual high game honors also went to Sanders with a 277, j Bin | follower!—by—Ka r 1—Van*! dermoortel, 250; Sanders, 231; Lau- Ed Gibbs, 226; and Rock Klein, —Monday night the Oakland — All-Star Classic will resume competition at the Savoy Lanes TOYOTAOfPONTIAC •417 Highland Rd. 6TI4811 Japan’s No. t AirtowobUt Manulaoturer yin Pontiac, and Yorba Linda les, Royal Oak the following fonday. TBAM STANDINGS ; Joyce's 645/ BUI Smith, 2SMM. ■ utob 259; John Caapara, 231; Har- O Bj •“ Foafar, 2371 Trua- R W INSTALL your Mklas Muttlor Is I as loop at you own your ifco auto. Replaced, If noc-at any Mldaa Shop for a charge only. Come Out and See THE SNOWMOBILE for 1970 ••. ARCTIC CAT PANTHER ^ Boss Cat • Trusty Cat • Preoision Cat SALES and SERVICE F Other Makts... New and Used ART HICKSON 435 5. SagiMW 3 Blocks Smith of Wide Track Dr. MONEY SAVING BUILDING ITEMS FOR OUTDOOR TIME! STOPS LEAKS WHEN APPLIED DIRECTLY TO STREAM OF WATER WATERPLUO, s quick set hydraulic cement, 13 lb. eaa...... $5.42 TH0R0SEAL, a heavy cement basefSrwuternroefiiittlft the... 8.22 Ooloru (Ml Ibc.)... • 8.90 QUIDK SEAL, a cement base paint ovar Tboroseal (8 colors) 18 lbs..........at..................... 12.65 TM0R0R0ND, e bending agent for concrete and plasNe 1 gallon.............................................. 10.44 Noon. 8>lb. ean ■ DRAINAGE TILE CUmlESUIR POSTS an .... 4-Line. 4” STEEL 3736 WMlllvyW 01 CEL Sgjjgg PRICI Polyethylene PLMTIO COVER ■rs* 2" I LISTED ARE YARI ROOF eOAtlMOS •tt.* ASS lirnn ■§ PRIDES BASRMRT POSTS T' 7*5 re* I METAL PIONIO THOLES $18.H oad GeRMteteUta map tWW 148 aq. 2”x16” 1H sq. 3^16” 71 sq. Metal Saw Mont Brackets—Sat of 2 lege 4x8 Antique Biroh 3x4 841. Specials ••a 461 Mahogany Paneling IWnFF, 1» Thick Bboh For Cooler Snmmers - Warmer Wnlart- HMULATI HOW! 4ft HYP0-X Lubricating Oil - for home-shOf-offioe-farm-boat-auto 15* Can HEATING and C00UNG DIVISION SALES WHiamson SERVICE MSI I Mill BENSON LUMBER CO. Building and Rornimclmling Supplioi and Materials 849 North Saginaw Strait ■RMBhltr*1- FE4-2E21 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1969 C—7 To correct overshading, prune to open the crown of a tree to sunlight. Thin out excessive branches, cut back wayward ones, eliminate cross-over branches rubbing against, each other, and eliminate hazardous branches overhanging sidewalks, drives or buildings. BUY ONE at the Regular Price GET ANOTHER toONLY 1 cent 0RTH0-6R0' lawn food ORTHO-GRO Lawn Food 22-4-4 A formula recommended by turf experts, containing fast-sellno end long-lasting plant nutrients. Fast dissolving pellets will not burn with rain or water after application. >,000 eg. It. $4.0s, 2nd pkg. U , 10,000 aq. H. $8.95,2nd pkg. 1* ORTHO LAWN GROOM Controls most lawn woods, such at dandelion, chlckwood, plantain, oto. Kills woeds-roots and elL Contains fast acting and long-lasting plant nutrients. 2,500 sq. ft. $3.95,2nd pkg. 14 •,000sq.n. >0.05,2nd pkg. 14 10.000 sq. ft. >12.05,2nd pkg. 14 ORTHO-GRO Lawn Food plus Insecticide Contains Jwo powerful Insactl-cldes-SevIn and Chlordane— for control of lawn and soft Insects. •t000eq.lt >8.05,2nd pkg. 14 10.000 sq. ft. $12.85,2nd pkg. 14' ORTHO Crab Grass Control plus Insecticide-Far^ tilizor Controls turf Insects such at Japanese beetle grubs, white grubs, ants, etc. Controls crab grass and poa annua by preventing spring seed germination. 2,500 sq. ft >7.95,2nd pkg. 14 >,000 sq. H. $14.15,2nd pkg. 14 AT YOUR ORTHO DEALER NOW Limited Time LATE SUMMER LAWN SALE NOW is the time to kill next year’s j dandelions and weeds. Apply lawn fertilizer and weed killer now! Special This Week! 1 WE DO Rc*“ior*-9s ' $£95 10,000 Ft. Coverage IN lbs. only mo your u the BIST miBSS! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT AUI Harvestifrie Festival Planned andi Emphasis will be placed on I Belle Isle Casino, Detroit, will ■, chairman, Tuesday from 8:30 to| Department of Parks jbe the setting Sept. 23-25 for the;i0:30 a.m. -Recreation of Detroit. imagination and creativity {Harvesting Festival. ikmtrv 1 imit ! Also featured will be special Standard show rules, season and the theme must be {ENTRY LIMIT . ,• Sponsored by the Michigan; participants^ are permitted Rn»nn|rai rinh^nH Jh- liatnrp acaau" *UIU me meme must De H^cultura Soaety it will be.onl one>entry in each^( ^ jo Botanica C ub ^d the Nature observed Colo ha open Sept 23, from 2 to 8 p.m.; cla^ses. ♦ Study Division of the Depart- proportion shou)d ^ JA- in Sept 24, from 11 a.m to 8 p.Tfn. | Judging ls based on the stan-!ment of Parks and Recreation‘ mind, and Sept. 25, from 11 a.m. to dard Sy*ten, DIVISIONS i Elmore W. Frank is chairman p' ‘ * * . I ★ * > * 1 Divisions include Artistic of judges for the Growing for The Society’s Awards Com- Design. Mrs. William S. Dehm Showing division. ■There is no admission charge, mittee will give recognition to and Mrs. Richard Steiger are I Area committee members are Entries are open to everyone any prize-winning school class chairmen of the In Orbit Mrs. Harold F. Brown, judges and Will be taken in order of gardens under the supervision and Eagle’s Junkyard, respec- and Mrs. Charles Pollock, en- registration ‘with the class of the naturalists of the'tively, in this category. ' |tries. OPEN DAILY 10 to 10; SUNDAY 11 to 6 FRIDAY and SATURDAY ONLY A Civilian mi the S. S. Kreogo Company HEY, UP THERE — Anybody home? David Stewart, 3, heard the story of “Jack, the Giant Killer” in nursery school and he’s just a little bit leery of what might be lurking at the top of the sunflower in his backyard. About 14-foot high, it grew two feet during the last week. David is the son of the Jack Stewarts of 3700 David K, Waterford Township. Heavy Shade Can Hurt Tree That tree providing abundant shade from the hot sun may be giving too much shade for Its own good. A tree expert says “if a tree’s crown ijs too thick, twigs and branches die for lack of sufficient sunlight. And , heavy tree Is a push-over when gale winds strike.’*" Overshade cuts off needed air and light to grass and plantings nearby. Too much shade induces growth of mildews and mold* on leaves of plants'and garden furniture. ■ GRAY MOLD Gray mold, fostered by heavy shade, attacks lilacs and other shrubs, causing leaves to dry up, stems to curl and twist. £!Sm» raASAswmaSSfi^ The formula golf courses use for that green color, rich textuml 0 ft P LAWN FOOD givee that "Greene and Fairways" look to tho homo lawn. Food your lawn tho bast... OAF... this weekend 1 A Pretty Planter ~ Two large clay pots of 18 or 12 inches make an attractive chairside, planter. Simply glue their bottoms together, and run a dowel through both drainage holes. The top of one pot Will sit solidly on the floor and the other will hold the plant. Fall is the time to improve your lawn If you're let* than proud of your fawn, right now Is tho naturally right time to do something about it. Days are growing shorter, nights cooler, and the weather pattern !e right for grass. So follow Mature’s lead and fix upyour fawn now — while all the odds are In your favor. NEW CROP GRASS Kentucky Blue Grass... Delta Hue Grass . . . . Newport Blue Grass . . . Danish Blue Grass Merlon Blue Grass . . Creeping Red Fescue . Chewings Fescue... Penn lawn Fescue . . Kentucky 31 Fescue . Astoria Bent Grass.. menial Rye Grass.. SEED •‘- 59' * 79* •‘79* ‘Talk. JH .k 49° «• 79* M9- ik. 99« •‘29* 10 lb*, or more at lower prices SEED M'XED TO ORDER - NO CHARGE We are authorized distributors of Scotts, Greenfield and other Lawn Care Products -•/ We Deliver —• Phone OR 3-2441 REGAL Feed and Lawn Supply Co. 4211 Bixia Highway-Drayton Plains, Mioh. 8 Miles North of Pontiac_ Immediate Delivery! power LAWN TRACTOR Kmart Regular *397°° Value 2 Days Only •J'nltiaed One Piece Rigid Frame • 5 Poiition Height Adjustment and Tool Lift Control • Automotive Oar Type Steering With 6.4 to J ratio for Anver Steering o Deluxe Hood _____- ... _ / ; , • Visual Gai Gauge Indicate# (iaa Supply at a Glanee • Big 7 H.P. Engine for a Man-Siaed Yard Jok • 13x5.00 Pneumatic Front Tkeela * • Floating Front Sutpeneion • Exclusive Pirk-l'p Body Styling with Drop Head End Gate e 16x6.50 Pnenmatie Rear Wheela • Twin Bladed Full 32“ Cutting Width on Fall FlooUng Deck • Blade Clnteh o Speed Auto Type TVanamlmion yithPreelafawtOeart ■■ -—-— • Tranatnimion Safety Brake • Single Pedal Brake and Clnteh for Added Safety and Operator Charge It At Kmart! Patio and 5-LB.' “CAMPUS GREEN’’ SEED 97* Reg. 1,17 — 2 Days 5-lb. bag gnat aeed ia ideal an a atartrr grata. Charge It. POTTED EVERGREEN SALE Discount Priced at ■ JH ON 2 Days Only 50-LB.' Kmart MICHIGAN PEAT 78* Dicount Price—2 Days Weed-free. Exrrllent toil eon-ditioner to lawn, garden. 204B.* K-GRO FERTILIZER 3.27 Our Rag, 3,88 2 Days Only Kmart'* brand “K-Gro” premium lawn fertiliser. Lightweight KMART 10-6-4 FERTILIZER Discount Priced . V 2 Days Only |$0# An effective formula fertiliaer for lawn and garden. Feed* and none-iaheu lawn* to a luxurious growth, beautiful greenne** and enrirhe* aqil to a more productive garden. Charge it. -Oavata LIN M-tbuM GLENWOOD PLAZA . North Perry at Glenwood C—8 pontiac, Michigan;, Friday, September ig, 1969 Purchasing Top Qualify Bulbs Insures Good Results An especially nice way "to cure winter blues is the indoor blooming of forced daffodils, hyacinths or tulips. : Bulb varieties recommended for forcing are large, firm and! perfect. It’s not a good idea to! economize on bulbs, for when! you buy top-quality, you’ll be sure of good results. Garden soil rich in humus and sand is good for bulb forcing. , Fill the pot with soil, leaving about three inches of space to the rim, and place the bulbs on the soil bed with about a halfinch of space between them. Fill in soil so the necks of the bulbs remain slightly out of the potting mixture, and press soil down firmly to eliminate any large air pockets. Leave some space between the rim tiff the pot and the top of the soil to facilitate watering, Then thoroughly water each pot. After soaking,, cover each pot with an inverted clay pot of, mulch. Temperature' in the cold-frame should remain constant at about 40 degrees, BEGIN FORCING About ten weeks later root structures shoudl be formed inches’ of-soil over the tops of you can begin forcing. Check the pots add then cover with a I this by digging up one pot and kept well-watered, and thick layer of leaves or salt-hay gently knocking the soil balllblooming period will begin. the same size to protect flew shoots as they grow. Next, place each pot and its covering in a deep trench or coldframe for an 8 to 10 week rooting period. Fill from the pot to see if it is covered with a network of roots. If it is, bring the pot into a 50 to 55 degree north window until shoots turn greem------------- It can then be moved to sunny degree location, with soil Bring several, pots in at the une time for a lavishly colorful display, or force your bulbs one by one in succession, to spread out the blooming period. ■fc___*■ ★ If you plant your bulbs by: October 15, your home will be) ! alive with the lovely colors and perfume of springtime during January and February. The farmer who improves the fertility of his soil is truly- a. public servant and will leave mnre frit* nnstpHt.V t.hSfl TurfB# ALL YOU rt RIGHT OUT QUESTIONS OR DE Patented Windsor mixed with a faster sprouting seed to give cover until the Windsor takes over.. GARDEN GATES Choose the right kind ofi quality container, too. The low squatty red clay pots known as bulb pans are recommended by expert professional growers. A-four- or five-inch bulb pan will accommodate one hyacinth, one or possibly two daffodils and two or three tulip bulbs. A 6- or 7-inch pot can be planted more extensively — with three’ or four hyacinths or daffodils, and four to six tulips. Use the -same-variety in asingfepot-so— all bulbs in one pot will flower j at the same time. READY TO PLANT When ready to plant, cover the drainage hole of each clay bulb pan with a fiat or concave piece of broken flower pot, and fill in a half-inch of pebbles. -Hardy Bulbs Fall Planted bulbs is in the fall — this includes tulips, dafodils; hyacinths, crocus and similar bulbs either for formal beds field use. Peonies and similar hardy roots can be planted in the fall, as can daylilies. * * ★ Perennials may be planted in the fall or spring. A good rule to follow is that known hardy plants and bulbs of . all kinds can be planted in the fall, as desired,. Nurserymen are the principle sources for the quality bulbs and perennials. RELIABLE SOURCE Avoid undersized bulbs and perennials. Purchase them from •e reliable source if you wish RANK'S NURSERY SALES^ am^'iSStfSSSk PAT TERN-453 A BEAUTIFUL GATE can be a distinctive feature of your yard or garden. Pattern 453 gives directions and ac- -tuai-size cutting guides for the here. So, somewhere on your grounds, make a path with an entrance gate. This pattern is 50 cents. It also is in the Yard and Garden Packet No. 59 which is full of’ ideas for garden lovers — all for $1.50. The Pontiac Press Pattern Dept, P. O. Box 50 New Windsor, RY. 12550 Bulbs range in size from small bublets for a coupls of cents to 20 cents or more each for the best quality. The latter will produce numerous flowers, compared to one, ornone, from -the bulblets. - Even for hybridizing the larger bulbs are often prefer-red. There are many kinds of -daffodils and tulips. * * ★ Ask your nurseryman to show you color photos of them, or select them from your favorite mail order nursery catalogue. Green Will Be Very Big in Fall Green will be, a very big color this fall, especially plants. Visit your local florist oi grower and flee the many different clay-potted foilage plants avilable. They’ll range from small cacti- in 2-inch clay pots to a large specimen palm or philodendron that will decorate a corner of theiiving room. * * * Make sure you select quality green plants, grown and conditioned in red clay pots for ■your local environment. A LOT OF LAWN hardy TURF BUILDER 997 OUT OF EVERY 1,000 WERE COMPLETELY SATISFIED They enjoyed duck, grata, heellhy md weed-few km with the we of Seeds prefects. Bat wfest e< GREENS UP A SUMMER-TIRED LAWN FASTER AMD BETTER the recently appfied prodai*. M efer mm mm drought took its toll. These awtewws eopasmsd 545 9.95 5,000 SQ. FT. BAG. THE OTHER 3 CUSTOMERS Apprcnmuieiy w* customers tm ec every omssot smgK a refund on Scotts products freasFnmkfr. IB acaqrawawy received their money back in fall... ptimsnllj. eowtsawly ■nri rrithmit rniib«rniinin| questions. <e Assays. Jwt ss w> 10,000 SQ. FT. BAG. f so-o-o-o, *WE’RE BATTING fOOO%! 13.95 15,000 SQ. FT. BAG. BAMKARB AT IRARTI AMT TIME Givetout grass, a frdl feeding of Twrf Builder, the trcWmcnt Amt’s a real treat for summer-tired lawns. It makes fine turf multiply through the roots . . . helps fawns grow to carpet thickness. Charge yours at Frank’s today 1 SAVE *7 on No. 35 SAVE ON Scotts SAVE1 or WINDSOR SEED 2,800 SO. FT. BOX 1A AJPf REGULARLY 11.08 IUt7j f AVI «•* on 1,000 M m m * SOL FT. • REG. 4.95 HtH J SPREADER* Reg. 19.95 rwMM22etpw^P"*' 12.95 wrmntADt Btaagnws so good it's patented! Proiaees s thick turf carpet of bluegreen. SAVE *1 on BLEND 70 2,500SO.FT.BOX A Aif RIGUURtr 9.95 Os7J 2,500 SQ. FT. »OX Q i RIGUIARIT 9.95 Oo SAVE BO* on 1,000 SO. FT. • RIG. 145 3.95 Scotts TURF BUILDER Plus 2 I Scotts TURF BUILDER Plus 4 3/000 SQ. FT. I 10,000 SQ. FT* Afcht grass amktpiy to Cirpet thickness I Gives a Ml Tsaf Baiicier feeding, controls 2300 SQ. Ft. « AAA en «• mm BLP ^ m DDPB *** a Ml feeding ci Tmt Bultfcr while ■ lm& iaseem, Ms feradlraf mi vioing _ ZZ 7*95-114.95 J 9.95 18.95 IMIMBBwERAMKf NURSERY SAkEGwwSBBaB 5919 HIGHLAND ROAD (M59) at AIRPORT ROAD 31590 Grand Rivotv Farmington • 6575 Telegraph at Maple Rd. • 14 Milo Rd. at Crooks Rd. THE PONTIAC PRESh, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1969 C—9 Nang Up Your Hoe: Cleaned and in Tip-Top Shape DAISY-QN-WICKER rffAAy r Make-Believe FLOWERS Beautiful Now you cut fill your home with die colorful beauty of table arrangements from Frank’* at giant half •price savings! In our cnotmoM collection of imagtattive. floral aestkms you’ll find' just the right ones to suit your taste and deem:. 'Die selection is right... die price is tool Large Floor Planters are at Reg. Low Prlcof Take Home an Armful Today At Terrific Savings! US[ YOUR CREDIT AT FRANK'S Tradition , says it’s time to^ First be sure all are free of! over the cutting edge of allparts with an oil-soaked rag tosand where they store their [water in wet weather, and from bdhds of luminous paint is ideal parts such as rotafy lawn hang up the hoe, but don’t put it I caked mud and soil. An old shovels, hoes,, etc. If you have[pTevent rqst tools and every time they use! getting too dried out during for this. Then if you mislay or.shears need a spot oj os any other tool away dirty.'trowel is good for scrapingtan emery whe,el *• -hold teem[ ' HARIT oner they just jab it into the|d*0U?Jht times. Wooden ladders i leave tools ta the you can I penetrating or machine oil on This doesn't mean vou .should: thorn nff «•»«.. * . against, results are even better. * .. I Should also be treated with .. .. . . o . "the pins on which they work make a fetish of it. Hbwever, if dirty, Ui'ey will become rustiS'1" ftther ca8e' **» wil1 English gardeners have ffS.Hnn linaeed oil Periodically^ such marking are also ?.nd aU moving parts. ., . - dirty, they will become rusted1 . . , . , „ you take a little more time nOw and hard to use i surprised how much more efr a habit which we would do well your tools will be clean, sharps ★ * * ficiently sharp tools work. to copy even if our climate is and feady to do .a good job for iffc also a good idea to run a '■* “* * not as wet as theirs. They keep you wnen you need them again, sharp file or sharpening stone: Finally, wipe off all metal a pail or small drum of oily cleans and oils in one operation. , ;Ught. Such markings are also ^Kn^r If tool handles haven’t been: ’’ * * * hattdy if you live in «^aSed tWs treated for several years, rub! Haveyou considered painting neighborhood where other- ’ them with linseed oil. This will your tool handles with some borrow your tools. 5 replace them keep them from absorbing identifying mark? One or more Garden tools with movable p ■ ---- -------- —....... ----- ----------------- TIP-TOP SHAPE also a good time to remove the old ones and apply for a CREDIT CARD FRANK S NURSERY SALE always greater VALUE AT FRANK’S Mo. N-2018 O 1960, Frank's Nuntry Sales, Inc. fv. MADONNA 8^ 2.97 SEPT 23 Finally, don’t just toss your tools into a comer your [cellar or garage. Stand mem up where they can be seen.or hang them on pegs in the wall. This will keep your newly cleaned land sharpened tools out of any i water that nfey spill on the j floor and free from most dust [ and dirt. Your tools will be in [tip-top shape when you need Ithem again,. Tulips Must Be Planted in the Fall Inexperienced gardeners often make the mistake of planting tulips in the early spring, expecting a beautiful display that same year. The fact is, the tulip — as well as the daffodil, crocus, and hyacinth — must be planted in the tall to ensure their emergence the following . spring. When planting these hardy varieties, gardening experts recommend removing five' to six inches of soil from the planting area (depending on the size of the bulb) and setting the bulb in place. Mix equal, parts of soil and horticultural vermiculite and fill the hole with the mixture. Once introduced Into tbe soil, I vermiculite remains as a permanent conditioner. Heavy [ clay soijs are aerated and broken up. Sandy soils are given new body wiih vermiculite. Moisture is oonr trolled and released to the plant as needed. After planting, the bad a should remain untouched until the frost has penetrated an Inch or two. At this time, spread two or three inches of vermiculite over the bulbs as a mulch. Because of its insulating prop-s, vermiculite prevents the -frost from penetrating too_______ deeply. ! IN SPRING | In spring, before the first growth appears* above the surface, the coarse portions of the mulch should be removed- These hardy spring-flowering bulbs will add greatly, to the beauty of any ganfen as long as they are planted in the fall and then protected through the winter. na&«P«tANI('S HimSUtY SAIESwbBBB 5919 HIGHLAND ROAD (M59) at AIRPORT ROAD 31590 Grand River, Farmington * 6575 Telegraph at Maple Rd. • 14 Mile Rd. at Crooks Rd. Apple Harvester Aids Efficiency, Lessens Bruises A mechanical apple harvester with a new catching frame has been tested in New York State. To minimize braises and improve handling efficiency, the new frame consists of two wings with eight built-in conveyor belts that occupy the entire surface of the frame. These conveyors transfer applet— more rapidly and efficiently. ★ * ,1 Jr Two layers of nylon-fabric strips are stretched above the conveyors to catch aiut—ftiter apples as they are shaken from the tree by the arms of the machine. Cross conveyor belts at the end of the frame fill , thy collecting boxes with apples. False, padded bottoms in the containers move up and down to take in apples gently. 4 The machine can harvest ISO to 200 bushels per hour, tee developers report. ’ ’ Armstrong tllg grows up. Now, test-sit Armstrong carpeting. C—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1969 Good Gardener Keeps Vegetable Beds Full Production You can always tell $ good gardener by the way he keeps his garden busy growing something. No space is wasted and after the yearly crops are1 out something else goes in. So, even the smallest gardens can be highly productive. ★ ■ _* . In general, if appears better • to fbllow leaf with root crops and vice versa, nitrogen-fixing types like beans and peas with non-nitrogen fixing ones,-etc. j A' little known plant that makes a good second crop is! Chinese cabbage, which can be,know it, It’s a white tumip-eaten like lettuce or cabbage. In I shaped vegetable that grows fact, one reason it is not well- just above the ground and known is the fact that it does tastes like a very mild cabbage. not do well planted early. Don’tm „„„ u„ „ . . , , even try to plant it before mid- " Saad® july * | or the slices cooked in soups or Still another which makes fast s*ews^ growth and does well planted! WINTERING OVER late is the kohlrabi. If you don’t ! Finally , in September spinach I and com salad can be planted] for wintering over. And, of course, farther south, like Tidewater Virginia, greens and similar plants are sown to stay] out all winter. * * , ★ However, even though thej garden was dug up in the 'spring, don’t count upon that! again. Turn the soil over with a spade or fork once more working in another two or three pounds of" a good vegetable fertilizer and a little compost per 100 square feet. Then rake it smooth again before planting. •k ' k k If the season is dry, it often helps to soak the larger seeds over night before planting or to I pour water in the furrows before covering the seed. -Another practice that works very well to. speed up| germination is to cover thel rows with boards, newspapers) or old burlap bags until Ifhej seedlings show above grdund. After that, water and cultivate' to keep down weeds necessary. PULL OLD CROPS Finally, as space becomes empty late in the season puB out the old crops, loosen the soil again and .sow it with winter rye to put humus back into the soil when it is spaded in next spring. The winter rye is sown at the rate 6f % pound per 100 square feet. ‘Conservation ; of souls and conservation of ( soil are inseparable — what is good for the land is good for man,” — Morris E. Fonda,| “THE LORD’S LAND.” FRANK’S NURSERY SALES» always greater VALUE AT FRANK’S! mIBUYand PUNT EVERGREEN Dahlias and t u b e r 0 u s begonias, like so many of the rehlly colorful plants, are just too tender to survive a winter! • outdoors. This goes for cannas, caladiums, and gladiolus as •well. Gardening ‘ experts at W, R. Grace & Co.’s Zonolite Division recommend lifting the roots, tubers and corms of these • plants shortly after the first! killing frost, and storing them ----- for the next year.1 —__—_ k k k 4 Dig far enough awSy from the base of the plants,! and deep-enough to avoid injury. Leave ■> the soil clinging to dahlia tubers and canna and caladium roots. - Store them in a dry spot until : ■ the soil dries and falls away • from the roots. Shake off re- • mainlng soil and cut away the • dried stem, • Also cut away diseased or soft ] ’ spots, and dust the cut surfaces with sulphur or captan. SECOND LAYER Pour some horticultural; ', vermiculite in a box. Rest the! tubers or roots in the box and! completely cover them with a . . - second layer of vermiculite. Store at temperatures between , 40 and SO degrees. Vermiculite’s insulating properties will pro-. ■ tect roots against moisture, ... mildew and severe temperature changes. kkk Treat begonia tubers and . gladiolus corms the same way. . But store them at temperatures not lower than 50 degrees, . Roots should be~trhecked] periodically for drying or rgt-ting. If roots begin to shrivel, . moisten vermiculite slightly. Ffortbundcr Now Factor in Flowers The Floribunda rose Is an evolution from the smalll Polyantha through Intermediary! sizes to ‘ the present size] Floribunda rose which i s1 becoming jso much a part of the flower world. —r— It was hybridized from varieties which had hardinessr firmness of color and general shapeliness in plant and flower. k k k Hie flower itself is Invariably a small Hybrid Tea and it has some features which make it, Very outstanding over other) types of roses. "» ‘The plants remaln clean and are very disease resistant, have the tendency to resist bladkspot and other diseases which has helped to” retain their foliage down tothe veryground.—.— INTENSIVE EFFORT In fact, the Floribunda rose is the result of intensive effort to ' have roses for every door yard which require little care and have a great amount of bloom. ' The present Floribunda is i emerging that way and is going Oto stay as a definite factor In ‘ the rose family. It is going to be an influence in the use of roses-just like the early French foses which bloomed only once in the <f ‘ .days. •»_____ . • *.' * * The Floribunda rose is going to be one of the major items of ; decoration for yards, gardens - and parks for many generations to come. Feed Cut Mums Chrysanthemum fanciers who ^ exhibit, make certain .their * prize-potentials will keep their excellence duririg a show by, , placing two teaspoons of Sugar! [ with a tablespoon of liquid bleach in the display vase| • before filling it with water. YOUR BEST GRASS SEED BUY... GARDEN KING SPECIAL SALE! 5 POUND* PENNLAWN FESCUE Regelar 3.99 2.99 THRU THURS. SEPT. 25 ONLY Save now and plant a beautiful lawn of fine bine-green -turf. Thrives In, tun or filtered shade. Emeunr for planting under efoet. Charge yourd ALL TRIPLE CLEANED FOR HIGHEST PURITY A QUALITY Fraftk’i has a seed foe every need .. blue-, grasses, feacne% ryes and mote! And aB Garden King aeed is extra Ugh In parity and germination percentage too. Charge id CREEPING RID FESCUE 1 LB. 99° • 3 LBS. 249 KY.BLUE SUPREME 1 LB. 99* • 5 LBS. 4.79 MERION BLUEGRASS 12 OZ. 1.29 • 3 LBS. 449 Perennial Rye, 5 lbs. 1.69 ASTORIA BENT, 1 LB. I.S9 Choose from: SEVERAL VARIETIES OF SPREADING YEWS • HATFIELD AND HICKS UPRIGHT YEWS • GLOBE t PYRAMID CYPRESS • CHOICE OF SEVERAL SPREADING JUMPERS • IRISH JUNIPERS • COLORADO SPRUCE • UPRIGHT BOXWOOD •CHOICE OF EU0NYMUS What a selection of lush evergreeens! Wlmt a low pried for so much beauty! Choose from shades of green and blue and varieties to meet every landscaping need. Each is a superb specimen, grown to Frank’s ■' exacting standards of quality. Plant now and save! • mu-2011 Ct 19BB, Pranks Nwwnr 90m THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19. Now's Ideal Time to Kill Annual Crabgrass, From now until mid-September is an ideal time for homeowners to knock down annual bluegrass and-crabgrass with a single punch. A treatment wjth one lawn herbicide will get them both. * * * Everybody hates crabgrass, but homeowners may ask: Who; wants to kill bluegrass? If you have annual bluegrass you should want to control it, according to lawn-care experts at Stauffer Chemical Company. It is a far cry from its desirable turf relatives, the perennial bluegrasses. Annual bluegrass, scien-i tifically named Poa annua, actually., is a weed common to! 4awns across the country. The real hot spots,/ however, for reasons too complex to explain, are the New /York, City metropolitan-suburban area and Oklahoma! Why is annual bluegrass i bad? Golf course and park superintendents will telf* you that it germinates and flourishes in the cool weather of the fall; then generally liesi dormant over the winter months (in the north). . In the spring it competes! vigorously with desirable lawn* grasses. Then the characteristic1 pale yellow seedheads appear { and the seeds are {spread easily ! to other turf areas. As soon as hot, dry summer weather arrives, the Poa annua dies out, and large,, ugly bare spots are left in the lawn. If 'you have Poa annua in your lawn, chances are you are just helping it wipe out good grasses in the spring when you go out there early and pour on the lawn fertilizer! Crabgrass, the other villian of this story, comes on a' little ‘later,, but it is the all-time I champ when it comes to taking over an area. GOOD CHANCE The lawn men at Stauffer point out that homeowners in and around New York City and Oklahoma have one goodj chance left this year to control J next year’s Poa annua andj apply for a CREDIT CARD PRANK'S NURSERY SALES . ALWAYS GREATER 1 VALUE AT FRANK’S SPECIMENS THIS WEEKEND! application of betasan* herbicide, a unique product. As a- pre-emergence herbicide, Betasan stops annual bluegrass before It .starts by destroying 'germinating"seeds, j However, it allows the desirable {perennial bent, fescue and j bluegrass varieties to fill in during their period of most I rapid growth — cool Weather. * * ★ Betasan herbicide is available from Scott and Ortho lawn product dealers in the New York area and across the country. Just follow directions on the label for controlling both annual bluegrass and crabgrass. The herbicide can be applied as a granular material in a conventional lawn spreader, or as a spray. SAVE *1 WINTER GREEN A full feeding of Winter Green plus the extra ingredients needed to eradicate hard-to-kill fall weeds in your lawn. A two-way product for a better lawn now and next spring. poor America’s favorite hedge has plant Privet has rich green die leaves and thrives tinder . almost any condition. 5919 HIGHLAND ROAD (M59) at AIRPORT ROAD 31546 Grand River, Farmington • 6575 Telegraph at Maple Rd. •• 14 Mile Rd. at Crooks Rd. Box of Grass Seed FREE with Purchase! iesteurlawrr 3 Fall Wee<^ WHITE PINE OVER 4 FT. TALL Greenfield. WINTER GREEN Beautiful evergreen pyramids with gracefully sletfe tier branches and soft, pale green needles. large brown cones add an ornamental effete. Ideal for specimen and background planting or windbreaks. Winter Green is the fall fertilizer with the special 10-18-1 ©fail: formula that's guaranteed ... to keep grass greener longer this All, and to green up your lawn earlier next spring. Winter Green’s high phosphorus and potash formula also promotes a thicker lawn with a deep root system ... more resistant to winter damage and disease. Spread it now. NORWAY SPRUCE, OVER 4 FT. TALL Xnsh evergreens carefully •beared and shaped during growth. These are finest quality plants, useful in many landscape applications inrhiding lawn specimen plantings or as hedges and screens. Charge yours. FRANK'S LANDSCAPE PLANT GUARANTEE RED BARBERRY PRIVET HEDGE 3-5 Eye PEONY •r GOLDEN VKARY *«fc«M0 Ptanu Seed, any bare spots in your lawn now with this blend of €0% bluegrass and 40% fescue. It’s a free gift now when you buy a hag of Winter Green. , Fortifies Your Lawn I All Winter Lang FREE! WITH YOUR PURCHASE Evergreens Keep Color All Winter Any home property in the temperate zone can be drab and -dmry~~m--the-~ winter months -when lawns are dormant, unless there are generous plantings of evergreens which m a 1 a ta i n their color all winter. Red-berried trees and shrubs can provide warmth. * * * In snowy climates, snow and evergreens go beautif u 11 y together, adding a Iive-In hospitable look to the property. The hemlocks, yews, junipers, spruces and arboryitae add varying green coloring from the deepest greens of the yews, to the gray-blues of spruces like koster, Coorado, and Black Hills,' and Pfister junipers; the lighter green of Arbor vitae. WELCOME COLOR A mixture of evergreens provides most welcome color. Holly, rhododendrons and other plants may be evergreen to give variety of leaf structure, while the barks of deciduous trees and shrubs may excite considerable winter interest. * * ★ Birch, beech, Enouymous alatus have interesting bark structure. The branch structure of fruit trees can be intriguing against snow, providing there are, splashes of green foliage to offset the deserted ,look of winter browns, grays and whites. SUGGESTIONS — Nurserymen have numerous suggestions for winter color and warmth which can serve in Other seasons as well. Shady Spots -Need Color Do you see shady spots before your eyes? If so,- brighen them with a multicolored show of tuberous begonias in Individual red clay pots from five to 10 inches in diameter. They can be put Out any time after danger of frost is past. * Indoor Gardens Cure the Blues End of the summer blues can be partially cured by bringing a portion of the garden back indoors this fall. Some of the clay-potted plants that have been “plunged” in planter box or garden soil nay have outgrown their old homes. If plants do need repotting, larger than ,the one the plant is in now and soak new day pots in water for an hour or two before using. Test-sit 16 textures and 236 colors of new Armstrong carpeting C—12 mmon THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1969 Outlook for Michigan's UP. Generally Favorable By United Press International I lead to a new era of prosperity Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, and stability, with a long history of economic Although there are some boom or bust, is going through bleak spots, the general outlook a period of transition that could | for Michigan north of the -Junior Editors Quiz Strait* of Mackinac favorable. ★ w, ★ Diversification is the key ss reliance upon hard mining and lumbering, the two industries that built the U.P. but also have been responsible for i mercurial economic history. The U.P. comprises about one-third of MlcMgan’s'Tand area, but only 3 per cent of the state’s population. As a consequence, the U.P. often comes out on the short end. But this is changing. STAKE IN U.P. As Gov. William G. Milliken recently said: “All of Michigan stake in what is happening in the Upper Peninsult. just as all of Michigan has a stake in what is happing in the more heavily populated areas.” Tourism is one of the important new contributors to the economy. — w ' w ★ With its vast areas wilderness, hundreds of miles of shoreline and clean, clear air almost everywhere, the Upper Peninsula is beginning to! m QUESTON: What makes us yawn? ANSWER: Please don’t fall asleep while we’re explaining what a yawn is, as all the people in the picture seem to be doing. Although we don’t catch yawns, as we might some illness, they certainly seem to pass from person to person. This is caused by suggestion. If we see another doing something, we often want to do it. too. Scientists do not.know the whole story about yawningT They are not certain about what section of the nervous system controls it. They say it is1 an involuntary reflex, something you do without consciously meaning to do so. Once started, it’s difficult to stop. You can close your mouth, but the contraction of muscles inside goes on. Yawning, caused by drowsiness, is a kind of warning telling Us we need to sleep. At the same time,' by opening your mouth wide and stretching the muscles you are getting more air into your lungs and helping .the blood circulate. This tends to keep you' awake until you can get the sleep you need. People probably, cover their yawns With their hands because they know they’re not very pretty while yawning." ' ~ r----------------------- discovered,jtourism alone is not enough. ^ Nearly I million persons came to the Soo this summer to visit the new Poe Locks and spend more than ever. Yet the historic city has fallen on hard times, and things probably will get worse before they bet bet-sr. The city is feeling the shockwaves of the defense department’s decision to close nearby Kincheloe Air Force “ase by October 1970. The base contributes mightily to the economy of the tricounty area of Chippewa, Mackinac and Luce vvith 12,000 airmen, 400'civilian employes and an annual payroll of $2t million. Loss of such a resource is a heavy blow, partlcularly_tc city without any jfjndustrieslo take up the slack. COOPERATION The state and—f ed era 1 government are cooperating with the counties to find industrial tenants for the $72-million Kincheloe facility, but there is great concern. “The people are scared and lure new industry and stimulate growth of existing plants. Under this program, a firm could receive up to $12 million in assistance for expansion or location. ECONOMY HURT The economy on the Candian de at present, however, has been damaged by a complicated labor dispute at Algona Steel Cbrp., the city’s largest employer. About 8,000 workers were off their jobs for more than six weeks. Both cities have reaped benefits from the Poe Locks that have made the Soo seaway the busiest in the world. But more advantage could be taken if either city had a port to permit shipping on the giant freighterg thatr pass by empty. TF * / "dry Fortunately for the eastern U.P., the least-known mining activity — limestone quarrying Pine. And 2,600 persons are employed. The forestry industry also is enjoying a resurgence. In the last four years • paper and lumber firms , have invested more than $400 million in 13 new plants and expansion of 10 others. The industry will spend $150 million more iri* the next few years. There has been encouraging development of secondary industries, some of which are dependent on ore and lumber but many which are not. * ★ ' ★ The , Chamber of Commerce | recently reported that in the f last four years, $20 million has f been invested in general manufacturing. I The northern beef enterprises | demonstration center near J Chatham in Alger County is an :• example of efforts to diversify ? and make fuller use of natural $ remoteness is being turned to advantage as urban centers become more congested, the air and water more polluted and the streets less safe. H«lps Sohr* 3 Biggest FALSETEETH Worries and Problems : mjrinklad « your' denturM doM all thus <1 Donturofl t) health. Bee your dentlet reguiany. Get FASTKBTH etalldrufoounteM. realize its potential tourists’ playground — summer and winter, - This past summer was the best on record, and the lowering of the tolls on the Mackinac Bridge to $1.50 one way is given much of the credit. NICE WEATHER The weatherman also cooperated, bringing the second warmest August on record and j , , .■ . . „ ieefUngTstnfall „ a hUnlmu«L “ ™?,e *• ® me Michigan Employment '“gm CTM"d' Security Commission estimates i CANADIANS ENVIED that tourists generate $1 of! People on the Michigan side justifiably so,” said Cevl Darnell, executive director of tfre Sault Ste. Marie Chamber of Commerce. i Robert McDonald/ director of privately funded industrial council, is cautiously optimistic that new occupants, for Kincheloe will be found. A group of promoters, he said, “has three or four (You can win $10 cash plus AP’s handsome World Yearbook if pour question, mailed on a postcard to Junior Editors in care of this newspaper, is selected for a prize.) every $3 of retail sales in the Upper Peninsula. And the Upper Peninsula Michigan Tourist Association reports that $190 million annually-is added to the economy. * * i The tourist association says if the U.P. is to increase its share he competitive tourism dollar, it will have to spend Hundreds of millions in the next decade on advertising and development of new recreational complexes. But as Sault Ste. Marie of the Soo have some reason to look with envy on their Canadian neighbors in Sault Ste. Marie, (hit. Bill Drapper, secretary of the city’s chamber of commerce, foresees “great expansion of secondary industry” ■ — pension that is being couraged by the Canadian government. -Ik Canada classified the area as “development area" and therefore eligible to u s a — continues to flourish with three operations in Chippewa and Machinac counties prolimestone each year, during about 10 million tons of] center will bring new jobs and 18 In the western regions, copper] new dollars to an area whereof and iron ore, the mainstays of both are in short supply, the U.P. economy for 100 years, resources. Financed in part by a $104,20 grant by the Upper Great Lakes] $ Regional Commission, t h el §f enjoying minor booms, despite setbacks such as the dosing of the Calumet mines 13 months ago. MORE EFFICIENT The expansion of educational g facilities has provided a, g: stabilizing force. Building pro-] ;§ grams are under way at •SS Michigan Tech at Houghton and \ at NorTham Michigan-University at Marquette. The H o u g h t on-Hancock economy would have been hurt much more than it was by the closing of thfe Calumet mines had it not been for the growth | „ — and steady paydays — of 8 Michigan Tech. ]S The development of winter) g Although the number of iron ore mines will have declined from 36 in 1950 to nine by the end of the year, those that are operating are doing well through more efficient operations. Modern “pelletizing” plants on the Marquette and Menominee ranges are producing a higher grade of ore. Through the years more than 1,000 mines operated in the Z!d3l«21I copper country on Keweenaw | T . ... V J Peninsula, and until the turn of ., - , Ari S' century Michigan ranked STh.'£2*2 sports activities is bringing new money to the Upper Peninsula. No. 1 in copper production. ★ ★ * Today, there is only one active copper mine — at White Pine, some 75 miles southwest of the heart of the copper country. Some 25,000 tons of ore, with 22 pounds of copper per toil, are government grants and loans to! being mined daily at White WITH THE MUSICAL MIRACLE AOC A magnificent25 pedal theaterorgan that will bring you —unlimited Pleasure. A traditional theater etvie ooneale '_ with a multitude of special effects and matchless tone and power. Built In Leslls speaker. Superb wirings. •The musical miracle of Automatic Orchestra Control unlocks musical techniques and harmonic affects that you think are physically Impossible... even turns one note melodies Into throb- or four-note melody chords. Try a Lowrey yourself. , SPECIAL ON STUDIO ORGANS TRADE-INS, Priced from . . *399 this winter, and will be host to the first International Ski Flying Meet in the Western Hemisphere. -While the general ^picture forjg; the U.P. is bright, age-old prob- 8 lems persist: a sparse and | & declining population, distance ^ from markets, inadequate! §j highways. j g But even the U.P. 1710 S. TELEGRAPH Vs Mil* South of Orchard Lako Avo. lots of Freo Parking FE 4-0566 Daily Til 9 P.A/L Sat. Til 5:30 PM. COLEMAN S FURNITURE MART... FIRST IN FINE FURNITURE LOWEST PRICES EVER! N0VV... SAVE *150 FRI., SAT., MON. ONLY Selling out remaining riook of new, decorator styled Hany decorator Color* to Choose From COMPLETE OUTFIT... Including Big 90” SOFA or SOFA BED, Matching LOUNGE CHAIR • Loothor-liko Vinyl Covering—Polished *' ’"dhH^ pdnTporod tiled IlfllhAr -----Also Available in 100% Nylon____ • Double Spring Construction — Hand find springs and tempered dolls for durability • Thickly Foam Padded 5oat»-Backs-Ann»-Re- ^ ward yourself with this extra comfort • Zipporod Foam Chair Cushions—Reversible for double the wear' srod Foam Padded Arm Tops—Makes Dad a perfect pillow for his snooxss • Ball Caster Front Legs—Mom can easily move for re arranging er cleaning NEVER BEFORE ATTHIS LOW PRICE FIRST COME... FIRST SERVED THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1969 D—1 MARKETS Trade- Moderately .Active BNNMmMmi Tlie following ■> are top prices covering sales of ncally grown produce by grower:; arid sold uy them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as ol Wednesday. Produce ----PRUIT* — Apples, Chenango, bu....... Applet, Graham Spy, bu..... Applet, Greening, bu. Apples, McIntosh, Early, bu. Applet, Wealthy, bu. ...... Applet, .Wolf River, bu.... Blueberries, 12-pt. an. Cantaloupes, by............ Nectarines, Vi bu. Peaches, Elberta, V, bu. Peaches, Fair Haven, Vi bu. Marf Inches Slightly Higher Hare Is Eying Education Post* J|Weather Ignorance Costly Business NEW YORK (AP) fe-J Tile stock market inched slightly higher in moderately . active trading early this afternoon, with gains leading losses by a bit better than ISO issues. tious by the approaching Week- rails up .1, and utilities up .4. end as well as "waiting to see if Oils, some of which had been the market would be able to hit by profit taking recently, penetrate the 840 level of the I were mixed, Dow industrial.” ---------—"Bs, ~—~ | They said that “to get a sus- j Texaco, third most-active on this winter Retiring Secretary^ .0 entire Won't Quit Politics iMiddle and South Atlantic region will have LANSING (DPI)— A thinner,] a mild and open The Dow Jones industrial! tained move the market has to the New York Stock Exchange, o^n^hp^^rpUrv of State’s W'.?^er' * average at noon was up 0.47 atjpush through the 840, and thiswas up $ at 31%. Occidental % g Q Stothe last 15^°^ t might bring in a lot of the cash Petroleum was off IV* at 26%; yearS( and wants a younger ceive substan-currently sitting on the side- Natomas. up l% at 98%;_Ash-!mantoreplacehim. .^Hy below! ?«i Anaiysts said the market was lines." land Oil, up 1% at 35%; Stand-i “A guy who’s had a couple of n0f ma 1 nre- ...'.....K •PtUn* ,some ear,y buoyancy The Associated Press 60-stock ard Oil of California, off % at heart attacks does not have the!pi„itatinn t„ta.s piumi, Obmion, ioo frol!n.seec.^ve buying but added average at noon was up .3 at 58; and Standard Oil (Ind.), up stamina to run day after day,”.anv snow Marked drvness Plums, Prune. V7 hu oiXllhat im/nc+rtrc waves **.0*4* I onn c «*.UU leWwSAealfcliff .m n \hl ** feniA __ ... J J any» SHOW ... IVldlKeU aryiiebi* 'land Oil. up V/h at 35%; Stand-j / a that investor^ were made cau- Watermelon, bu........also!” 1 " . . ;;. i VEGETABLES i Beans, Green Round, bu. ---- 0.6, with industrials up .3, % at 54%. The New York Stock Exchange ' By JOHN CUNNIFF ample feel confident in Septem-j Heavy rairis can bog down AP Business Analyst her that fewer snow tires will be trucks. Early frost, can make NEW YORK — "A trend inineeded in Richmond, Va., next'earth-moving difficult. Snow Can recent years to cool weather February? immobilize every man and ma- in the Southeast will be broken] Through the years business-chine. men have lost billions of dollars Retailers, farmers, air-condi-by failing to understand how timer manufacturers and others weather changes their markets, have from time to time made Like others, they do a lot* of efforts greater than flipping a talking but little else. coin. A pharmaceutical compa- CURIOUS ATTITUDE_____________|uy sends copies of long-range .... . . . ji , forecasts-by Weather Trends The attitude lS a curious one^ Inc doctors. And many for healthy businesses fflAusines3es consult Dr. Irving overlook chances for reducing Kfick o{ Palm S i Calif losses by employing the skills .riunn mf*- and machines of science to re-j DESPAIR, IGNORANCE duce variables and lessen risks. ' Often, however, the attitude of Highway contractrs, for ex- business is one of despair and ample, use seismometers to es- ignorance, timate the' cubic yards of cuts “Businessmen don’t know how and fills needed before making]or to what extent their busi-They measure distances nesses are operationally weath-exactly. They check prices of er-sensitive,” says Dr. Hurd C. equipment. Andjhen they flip a Willett, professor emeritus of Hare told a news conference antj warmth in the Florida pen- ti yesterday/ — .. insula suggests an ideal winter a : * * * , tourist season ...’’ ■ But Hare, whosejiame has * * ★ become virtually synonyinoPgin-j croft;—businessmen— benefit] e Michigan with nis title; jb4ftom such long-range forecasts, . dicated his political career does ]gCietifically made four to six not end here. He said that.j^Q^g g^ead of time? Could>a Often it is this very factor * » * —Q— ...instead of seeking an eictlitti, urianufacturer^ of^ tires, for ex’-1 that forces them to take losses, j It is Willet who signed his imV) High low Lost ch« 1 ,erm>'be may run for one of the - — 1 Jr————-------------------------------—:-----: name to the forecast- lor-tha ii i8* igvs is” + % statewide education posts where * ! lower East Coast states, now —R— h-v can still be in pub*c service ^ being distributed to clients of a I Institute of Technology. .but. under less pressure. * * * The 59-year-old Hare spoke of his “disappointments” in failing, to win passage of legislative programs in recent years and to enact , a “public disclosure” bill to require political candidates to report sources of income. SET AN EXAMPLE w administrations are placing “too much emphasis” on simply pourings more money into programs that aren’t working-well, the pipe-smoking More Unions Seek Tie to ALA, Reuther Says DETROIT (AP) — Despite an, AFL-CIO threat to expel the International Chemical Workers for joining, Walter P. Reuther says several other unions have applied for membership in the Alliance for Labor Action—ALA other 121 unions that they can’t have one foot in his camp the other in Reuther’s. The ouster move will come next month at the-AFL-CIO con* vention. “It’s a hajd decision _____________ but there’s no choice,” says one secretary said. “I dieftry to set j —formed by his United Auto high AFL-CIO official. Meany an example in my own depart- Workers and the Teamsters. views the alliance as a competi-aient by reducing the budget by * * * -• | tive organization, damaging to several million dollars,” he While he declined in an inter-j the trade union movement. sa*d" 7 . . ’ view to name the applicants, CHARGE DENIED Two severe heart attacks - Reuther said, “We will be act-j ing on those shortly and will announce them” when they are voted in. So far the Chemical Workers is the only AFL-CIO union to join the ALA, and AFL-CIO President George Meany wants their 110,000 members expelled as a lesson to the federation’s the latest in 1968 — prompted Hare to say, “I feel that my successor should be a younger man, hopefully dedicated to those same programs and able to devote the necessary 60 hours a week to the job that it requires ... “I was putting ih 80-90 hours a week and l just can’t do that anymore.” Sff . Hare was asked if state law requires he resign from his present position to be eligible to run for an education post in 1970, “If it comes to that you can forget the education post,” he Reuther, on the other hand, says this isn’t so, that the ALA “Is not a dual labor organization.” If those who apply for ALA membership want to stay in the rAFL-CIO, that’s all right with us,” Reuther said. “If they do not choose to remain, that also isO.K;” Smallest Hike in Prices Set by Chrysler 57 27 26V* 26V* - to io 160 24% 24 121 33% 33 raw 25 39M» 38to 39'/% 71 30Vb 37% 38 , 19 115 Hto 23to 24to — to 41 45to 44Va 44% — to —V— 183 29to 28% 29 + to HSR 10 Tito !7to 17to VaEIPw 1.12 340 2Sto 24to 25to + V* —W~X—Y—Z— Wirlam I.IO 137 63% 62to 63% +1 Was Wat 1.29 15 Mto 22to 22to + to WnAIr L .50p 20 25to 25to 25to 4- to Wn Banc UO 76 llto 38to 38»/4 WnUTel 1.40 200 4lto 47% 48to + WaftgEI llO Mm MBfr ' Wovarnir .80 M .... . 1 Whirl Cp 1.60 16 W0 54% 55-----to Whjft .Mot 2 10 35to 35% 35% - to wKltvokor 553 24 23 2m — to alto t to ■ Mi — S S6to 56to —ito rhsr .80 132 38to 3lto 38to + M gJ1| ............ " -efif J . I X.roxCp .M 2088 101'/. »7 101V. +3% — - m up/t 4W4 48<ta .4-LV8 ffl a 4114 42Vi +TO Griffin Bids Tor Post os GOP Whip ; WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. Robert P. Griffin, R-Mich., has declared himself a candidate for the job of minority whip in the U.S. Senate. Griffin announce^ Thursday ilso that1 he would not be a candidate for minority leader. ★ ■ ★ No one else has declared for the No. 2 spot but Griffin is among six who have been mentioned by Sen. Hhgh Scott, R-Pa., the present whip who is running for the Senate Republi* can leadership. ——*■' ♦ The others are Sens. Charles H. Percy’ of Illinois, “Our movement is not designed to divide the AFL-CIO, just to revitalizelt.” Accusing the 75-year-oM Meany of being dictatoriali ignoring the AFL-CIO constitution and of permitting the Igbor movement to “vegetate,” the 62-year-old Reuther pulled his r.7-mtllton member United Auto ! DETROIT (AP) — Chrysler| Workers out of the federation iCorp. has posted the smallest last year, j price increase of the Big Three] automakers, but the No. 3 car A few months later he joined producer is also spending less the 1.9-million-member Team-' money than Ford and General sters Union in forming ALA. i Motors to convert previously op-1 The Teamsters were kicked out tlonal equipment to°standard!of the AFL-CIO' on corruption ! items on 1970 models. charges in 1957. Chrysler said $28 of the $107] Increase in the sticker price of its average car wpuld come from making items such as fiber-glass-belted tires, which were optional on 1060 models, standard equipment on 1970s. newly formed, Boston-based company called Statistical Weather Information. * * ★ 'Even those who subscribe to long-range forecasts misuse them, perhaps turning them over to the comptroller,” said John Prohaska, a meteorologist. Willet, Prohaska and Dr. Donald DeVorkin, all with MIT backgrounds, are founders of SWI. ASSEMBLE DATA After years of research the three scientists have assembled 400,000 bits of weather information. The mass is fed into electronic computers for statistical relationships that become the basis for forecasts up to six months ahead. ★ * * The data, collected from Weather Bureau, private and military records covering thousands of square miles and several decades, are staggering. it ft it To determine what the temperature will be at a given point six months hence, for example, atmospheric pressure readings for 30 years at 132 locations from England to Japan and Mexico to the Arctic are analyzed. Stocks of Local Interest markdown or cuvnvniiai AMT Corn. . ........... Associated Truck .... Cltlions Utilities A ... Citizens Utilities B ... Dotrox Chemical ...... Diamond Cryatal ...... Kelly Services Mohawk Rubber C. .. Seiran Printing ..... Scrlpto . Wyandotte Chemical • 24.5 25.1 ..2)2 24.2 ...jM 11.4 % Successruhfnvesffng ill# V wsmmmm By ROGER E. SPEAR own CPC International, Edison and Sterling Q- I Detroit Drug, all bought at high prices. Ford said roughly $55 of its $108 increase went for this purpose and GM allocated $40 oil its $125 increase. All three auto makers said the biggest previously optional item was figer-glass-belted tires, which will be standard on all i _ . _ ,, . .. GM models and on most Ford A- Be,or® maklng further and Chrysler products.-----------tijurphaaes it la ImportgnL 'decide on your investment ob- joettaft. Yni! hflvn twn inwwni. Is this a good time, now that they’re lower, to add to them? — W.E. ITEMS VARY IMt DlUl _________________ '. IJ-Pgy- ... stock during 1848. ntlmaitd cash value on ex-dlvldand or ax-dlatrlbwiwn g—Dadarad or paid 8a far this n—Declared or paid altar (lack — -*■'* up. k—Dtclartd or - The other now-standard items vary from model to model but they include power disc brakes on all Chevrolet Chevelle eight-cylinder station wagons ($61) and on Ford LTD’s ($69). ‘Genuine walnut interior ae- on accumulative Pearson of Kansas, Jack Miller of Iowa, Howard H. Baker Jr. of Tennessee^ and Roman L. Hruska of Nebraska. BIGGER LEAD Scott claimed Thursday a steadily widening lead in the cents,” an optional item last three-man race for the Senate'year, are now standard on] minority leadership—a vacancy] Ford’s $6,822 Continental Mark created by the death . of Sen.'HI. Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois. I “That’s real wood,” explained Baker and Hruska are fighting] a Ford spokesman, adding( he Scott for the post. holdings, CPC and Detroit Edison, whereas Sterling Drug UAW Restates Offer to AMC is a growth issue. While each class has merit, the success on a financial program depends on setting goals and making investments accordingly; If you need additional income, then by all means add to CPC and-or Detroit, both of which yield over 5 per cent. Sterling Drug has excellent long-range growth prospects—well—suited—to—a person building toward retire-ment io to 20 years away. it it h (For Roger Spear's 48-poge | Investment G u 1 d’e (recently 'revised and in its Uth printing), I send $1, with name and address [to Roger E. Spear, The Pontiac Press, Box 1618, Grand Central Station, New York, N.Y., 17.) j 26V*. S'!* 2«k I in, 19% 1 l^to 17to 17to ’» 82 mm fib k %Vv 41 14 1|to 13%-' 8 g* ± » trlbutud. yf-K’ bankruptcy W r«c«lver»hlp or MM roorgunlzud undor Iho Bankruptcy Ad. or aacurltiaa auumad by auch.com-pamai. In—Foreign laauo lublact to In-foroat aqpalliatlon fax. , Treasury Position parad fa lapt. .17, INI (in dollaral: 5,304.173,631.00 2,440,170,223.48 P DW,,,,^ lffl52!4M7IV W4.20728 J Withdrawal! fJtcal yt«r Tdold^^’^ 4 X-.nc ict to atalutory limit. / Scott said, “We’re just stapling everything down, just getting insurance votes.” Scott said a caucus is slated for next Wednesday where a new leader and assistant leader wipjto elected. wasn’t sure what the-walnut trim cost as an option. Vmmmm 114,142271^80.821JJJJ High lltd. Roll! Util. Slsokt .. +.3 4.1 4.4 4.3 • 4Ml4 IMS 135.3 290.4 .. mj 53.4 134.8 290.r 428.8 1B3 135.4 Mi . 438,5 Jy 139.4 »R! . 494.4 U.7. 149.3 344.1 ...ij).S 17.7 159,1 140/ . 422.1 40.0 114.7 304.1 .. 831.1 117.4 140.4 M0.I .. 435,4 148.4 135.1 299. RACINE, Wis. (UPI)----------- Negotiators for thp United Auto Workers reiterated their de-. mand for an 11-month contract witli American Motors Corp. yesterday and spelled out the' wage increases they are seek-j big. In the third b a r g a 1 n 1 ri*g i . .... . session since Aug. 18, union at the home of Willa L. Wlnton,;negotjBtorg toy representatives! 30, of 63 Victory, according to Lj ^he auto maker they want Pontiac police. wage increases totaling 30 cents! Flea Market, Sat., Sept. 26,1 an hour for production workers] 4. First United Methodist fnd 54 cents for .Church, Saginaw at Aubprn. News in Brief A Persian Iamb coat valued at $1,000, a portable television and $102 in cash were reported 3tolen in a break-in last lOplMrr 1 7* 21 27Vb 2) + V aml pfi larofd .12 254 134’4 115V8 134% + * I'A IVk JVk 4 V . 31V* 21 21Vk 4 1 11 28 27)4 28 4 V 14 45H 4JH 45H - 1 Friday*, lit OlvIdUMto Duel*rad F8- Ilk. •» Pay-Rut# rlod Rtcord aMb OMITTRD nl.rpholo Cp _ STOCK Fnel O.n.r.1 % 1M 1H5 cFK.»Sy* Js MSi Origin*18 .075 S 1647 .1021 itlll St BAT Boil .40 Q 840 *Wfy I r*ii» ind. uilj. tayjLVd. Nut Changt NoOnFrl, 40,4 01.0 77.5 Pray. Day 40.4 1.1 77.4 ti. Waek Ago 60.5 (1.1 77.1 81. Month Ago 40.7 MA 77.4 81. Ytw. Ago 44.0 MJ 80.1 ft. 1848 High 44.2 |7.0 78.1 82. 1848 Lott .4014 30.7 77.3 88. ... 1848 High ,40.1 81.0 11.4 80.3 |l3 1842 LOW .43.1 05.1 71.1 12.0 Baked goods. Luncheon. Mlsc. —Adv, Rummage, Four Towns United Methodist, cor. Cooley-Loch-aven, Sept. 20,9-12 noon. —Adv. Garage Sale, Sat., Sept. 20, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. 908 Voorhees, cor. Draper. Pontiac Business ami Professional Women’s Club. tradesmen. * * ★ AMC did not budge from Its* previous offer of a package! valued at 47 cents an hour over a two-year period, or 23 cents' thw lirst year and 24 cents the' second, a union spokesman said. The talks were recessed again until Sept. 30. Tlie .current two-] year contract expires Oct. 16. NEW MOBILE HOME PARK! / With Windmill Villas* of American Francis* one-third ranted GOING BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY Paved st*. - pool - playground -laundromat - cablt TV. Off ic* Modern —4 All Utilities Underground. City water, sewage and fire protection. ' ■ STABLE FLORIDA CITY LOCAL! Close-In to shopping, schools, universities, bus. 18% CASH — BALANCE 15-20 YR. FINANCING HURRY! CAU. OR WRIT! TO: IAYSHORI CARDINS PARK SALtS MGR.. P.O. Box 8579. D—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRID SEPTEMBER 19, 1969 Pornography Distributors Target of Administration WASHINGTON (AP) — Thei “Hie prosecutive efforts of Nixon administration, respond* the department . . .he told ing to public demand for a Blount, “are aimed at bringing crackdown, has quietly mounted to trial at the earliest possible an extensive campaign against dates the large mail order huge mail-order distributors of | distributors presently under inpornography. idictment. As a result, 20 persons and 22 ( companies have been idicted or 1 arrested during the past eight months on charges of distributing obscene materials. reaching persons - who don’t want to get it in the mail. * * * The attorney general said this legislation should provide the! government with “important1 new prosecutive tools” and that! “Jri addition, we will provide he feels confident the joint' expeditious review of the| justice-post office efforts “will A new round of prosecutions: Is expected in the next two weeks, and Justice Department lawyers are evaluating results from 14 investigations to determine if grand jury action should be sought. .....The antipornography activity. — a joint effort by the Justice and Post Office departments —I followed two years of little acj tion resulting from broad in-terpretations of Surperae Court decisions on obscenity. DIFFERING VIEW But Atty. Gen. John N.| Mitchell differed with the previous administration interpretation of the opinons and he ordered more vigorous prosecution. ★ * * ' In a letter to Postmaster General, Winton M. Blount, Mitchell laid down his views on prosecuting smut peddlers, emphasizing the main thrust of enforcement should be against bit interstate distributors. vestigations completed by the postal inspection service, and, where appropriate, indictments will be sought ”; PRESENTS PROPOSALS Mitchell presented to Congress earlier this summer two new proposals aimed at protecting minors and stopping questionable material from contribute greatjy to reducing| the problem of ols mails.” In deciding to start new test cases, Mitchell particularly! emphasized, the need for amplification of Supreme Court opinions which banned publications that might be “harmful to children” although not legally obscene for adults. ★ * * Department sources said about six new cases are ready for presentation to grand juries, possibly within two weeks. CORPORATIONS LISTED Among Those already being prosecuted or u n d e r investigation, the department claims, is “the vast majority of large-scale dealers in pornographic material.” The officials list “about 20 to T large corporations”, that traffic in pornography. Clothing Increase Denied ADC Mothers Told: No Funds LAPSING (AP) — Gov. Wil- yond the present level appeared ken's decision and reasoning, liam G. Milliken says there can i to close the last door of appeal be no increase in the $22 a year for some women receiving Aid children’s clothing allowancejto Dependent Children (ADC) in Awarded welfare mothers be- the Detrojj and Lansing areas DON’T LOSE bad debts “There is no money. “I am constrained by the fiscal and legislative facts surrounding this matter,” Milliken said. “Neither I nor the social services department director (R. Bernard Houston) can act contrary to those facts. contained in a five-page analysis, as “sleight of hand;” Ryan, who championed thei cause of the ADC demonstrators | in Detroit, said he had urged! them • t<J delay a contemplated demonstration at the Capitol. ■* * “I can’t say what they’ll do who have sought increases to as much as $75 a year. Milliken met earlier Thursday with representatives of the Detroit welfare recipients after demonstrations there led to closing of some state welfare |n°w” Ryan said after reading offices. I Milliken’s decision.. “It’s hard whether GALS GO GREAT GUNS — Every year, the Kalamazoo County Sheriff’s Department holds pistol ..qualifications, and the women deputies are not exempt. They came* this week with cotton in their ears and determination (Hi their faces. In foreground,^Deputy Myrtha Beardsley bites her tongue as she draws a bead on the. elusive target. STATEMENT BRANDED ........- . , , , , go to jail instead of sending Milliken s decision not to in- House Speaker William A, their children to school.” crease clothing allowances be- Ryan promptly branded Milli- Fuzzy View: Rough Winter Reefs StepJUp Attacks on Nixon Peace A Michigan’s basic ADC appropriation this year is $159 jnil- t AMrAOTFR p» I lion, Milliken said, but £f‘,(APL H Legislature took deliberate’Wb,tpr wlU hit Suddenly and be steps to carve out $3 million!rough from beginning to end if! PARIS (UPI) — The Com- Assembly yesterday. He asked*withdrawals, reactivation Of B52 and no more” for the nersonal. you be,ieve in the forecast of munists at the_ Vietnam talks U.N. members to pressure.bombing missions and recently iand clothing expenses of school woo*y 1)ear caterpillar. I have stepped up denunciations j Hanoi to show a more flexible'the new drop-by-drop pullout of nirAPnnnM „„kn« children I This prognostication was of U.S. peace moves in an ap-! position. jtroops all have been denounced DEARBORN (^TOe treasur-eduction sidelines for public| • made Thursday by Herbert B parent campaign to makei * * * by world public opinion.” er pf the state board of educa-schools; O'Neil said he was pre-A MANDATE vUT. „ , j A President Nixnnannear at least! to. James F. ^NeU’ Proposed paring a letter explaining hisj In addition, he said, “the Leg-,netsLn wh^Sds^uclfS'as ^gh as former President * UnRed Nat,ons has noi Sex Ed on TV Proposed DEBT AID, INC « St. fl Mill 1 ZIUDIbJ ninth and final hearing of sex 1 Armstrong carpeting is new tough, And in your A* neighbo now. rhood ft l said that contrary to their tradition of caution, Hanoi the Vietcong have lately been We are sure that each day more countries will come to support our demands that the United condemning-JNixon!s-JVietnaml States will end its war and pull ' pplicy within minutes after eachiout its troops unconditionally.' U S. pronouncement. | TALKING ABOUT PEACE 'GoldfingerL Bondmobile. LONDON (AP) - James Bond’s 150-mile-an-hour Aston Martin is for sale, complete with ejector seats, bulletproof windshield, machine guns, smoke machine, oil slicksptay, revolving license plates and ra- Shell Floor Covering 3330 Dixi* Hwy. Pontiac — 673-1209 7 RAX?.!JkE5ZSZ.'JS JS Car tor Sale: sariersstf „ * * h ‘ Michigan 8He said the program should supplement aid for clothing for ,<Th woo]y bear ls roiunK moves toward deescalating the to say on the issue: {primary responsibility of par- allowances although the social Krone said that black seg- . .p . . . against American ents. He said the real reason services director might define |ments on the caterpillar indiparents are failing to provide i “emergencies” for funding pur-lcaf® 8 hard wintry period . . I the instruction to their children* Poses. . [brown segments indicate mild Ts that ihey themselves haven't ~ V -winters, been taught. , J Ryan contended Milliken’s re-1 * * * * * * fusal of further aid overlooked! Krone said of the coming win- I The State Board of Education.a forrnula put in the welfare,^. “There will be no mercy. It member said parents could then bud*et by the filature under| will be cold straight through. decide whether they wanted to wb’ob s,ate funds would be Around Christmas either comer teach their children themselves used to match additional coun- the snow shovel supply or lopk or use the materials shown on ty welfare appropriations. yourself in for a long stay.” television. That formula, Ryan said, was -- ™f‘„ ,n ‘“'even made a lyrical allusion to Also speaking at the n e w s intended to supply aid above the Tannerv *n rUc* American publlc- traveling on wings of peace. said Kl H Lu_ap?mbe-White, the conference wpro Rnhorf Tohn $3 million supplemental for 1 Ulintity TO IfOSg COMMUNIST AIM . _ * * * ; son, president of the Detroit Ed cTothing. BOYNE CITY (API — Tile' Diplomats said the ucation Association, and Mrs. NO Lillian Barlow Price, president ; of Parents United for Responsible Education. Both blasted a j handbook for high school teachers and counselers on sex edu-I cation. The price ls 912,000; the pro- filed officials said the Com- . . Msumed his Sa^S\ordelUmeUOnhopmg8htheir1 offlcial functions ~ since ducei% Vr W mwie’“^ldfim ultimately wUl stir up more A antiwar ’sentiment ta t»15?= SSL**' Sn pag* A-3 WINKO'S OPEN 24 HOURS Under New Management BEST FOOD IN TOWN ""' //)* “Come in and try us — — It will become a habit” 2322 Orchard Lake Road 682-9949 “It’s been tremendous fun,” said K. H. Luscombe-White, the owner, “but I think it’s a lux- BOYNE CITY (AP) - TBe* Diplomats said the Com- »In his recent trip to Asia, “^Jhad s^ppedTI^rrarHor Howes Leather Co., the state’sj,Punif*® aim was to establish!Nixon also spoke a lot about the Bondmobile. Milliken said his analysis sole-leather tannery, is sched- . *dea mat one U.S. ad-1 peace. But even official U.S. showed the Legislature “intend-! uled to dose down in mid-Nov-1 maa ““ LITY ed to rule out even the bllity of any payments for clothing other than those for which it expressly made provision.” vember. Established Jn 1901, the tannery once was one of 22 in Michigan. ministration was an unyieldinghave Vtated"that Nlxon| Luscombe-White said he nev-on the war as the other. follows in Johnson’s footsteps, er used the old slick or the - * * * I * ■ * + I smokescreen — "They’re tempt- The latest example was Nix- His * recent moves, the ing sometimes, but one might on's appeal to the U,N. General Is uspension of t r o o p| be rattier unpopular.” Saw No Blood on Mary Jo; Police Chjef Says Tht Mt Rainier 24'x4i’whM#x24"’L SIMPLE INTEREST FINANCING (AHmalfircMtogiRait) EDGARTOWN, Mass. (AP) — Dist. Atty. Edmund Dinls de-| Arena, who was present when Police Chief Dominick J. Arena dared Thursday he had infor-'a skin .diver recovered the body,! says he saw no blood on Maryjmation that there was blood in said: “When she was in my! Jo Kopechne’s body when It was | her mouth and nostrils and on artns, waiting to put her on the1 removed from Sen. Edward M. her clothing. He raised the ques- j boat, I saw no indication of Kennedy’s submerged car last tlon whether this was “consist- blood.” July ...._lent with death hy drowning." | Dr. Donald R. Mills, medical! Packaies. You can even gat ft.___________ ______ new Capp-Meme. You SAVE1 by doing the eaey finishing work. Dent wish In 1970 you had built In 19C9I Beat rising costs! Oat started today. YOUR CARP-HOMES MAIL THU COUPON TODAY REPRESENTATIVE IS: Chn. McCraw 1609 Crana Court Midland, Mich. 41640 | Phone (517) 435-1 *64 COPS AND,CABLE CARS - The 2nd Platoon of the Francisco Tactical Squad marches down Powell Street from Bob Hill last night Mowing protesters who were harpaaing the International Indurtrial conference in the Fairmont Hotel. examiner for the.district, who.Court of Wilkes-Barre, Pa.,, certified the cause of death as where lie is seeking, exhumation* drowning, declined to comment of Miss Kopechne’s body for an on the Dinis statement. autopsy. The district attorney made his * * * assertion in an amendment to a Judge Bernard C. Bromlnski petition in the Common Pleas set a hearing on the petition for | Sept. 29. for the 28-year-parents, Mr. and opechne, who op-exhumation, said Dinls would have to “pgesent evi-to show thafnls aver-are true.” , in his amended petition Dinls also told the Pennsylvania court that Kennedy had given dlffer-versions of the accident in and a subse-roadcast. * * Dinis said that each version omitted “many important details of file accident and the Immediately preceding and following R.M ■; * .* * * Sources dose to the case said an Edgartown undertaker’s a»-sistant had tdd attorneys for Kennedy he found no blood around Miss Kopechne's nasal passages. A comneticlan at the Plymouth, > Pa., funeral home where the body was prepared tor viewing prior to burial In nearby Larksville was said to have made a similar statement.' ♦" ★ ♦ P The sources said a pathdogisti however had told the Kennedy lawyers that scraping of the! body as it was pulled through a -window of- the car could have caused an oozing of blood. ■* . *■ In his amended.court petition Dbils said without giving the source of his information that: “There appear on the white shirt worn by Mary Jo Ko-pechne 'washed out' -reddish brown and brown stains on the backs of both sleeves, the back and collar; that these stains give positive benzidrine reaction, an indication of the presence of residual traces of blood; that said residue si of insufficient amount to make further test as to specific origin or typer “That investigation has revealed there was present a certain amount of blood bi both Mary Jo Kopechne's mouth and Dinis said, “Tbr public inters est in general and the proper administration of justice to particular require that Dr. Mills’ determination of the cause of death be verified as definitively as possible.” , * ft h He added, “The only way to ' which this can be done la through an autopsy.” ♦ ♦’ An Edgartown inquest into the death ordered by Dinis has been postponed until the Massachusetts Supreme Court rules on procedural questions tailed by jcouniel for the senator. B«Uaed8ap.lt ■_. / • - . t for Wont Ads Dial 334-4981 Coeds Organize | Braless Friday of Iowa College j CEDAR PALLS, Iowa (AP) - Death Notices Monday, September 22, at! PONTIAC KBS 1:30 p.m. at the Huntooni Funeral Home with Rev, CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Mark Caldwell officiating. INDEX Interment' in White Chapter #- 'Is your girl up tight and irrita-1 Cemetery. Mrs. Draper will! *•»>•* Juneu, mi ble? Throw your , support to lie *n state at the funeral NOTICES Braless Friday.” home after 3 p.m. Saturday. So reads an invitation distrib-,tefa # Thanks ............V uted to men’s dormitories on PwTufrf ,n Memoriam ............... 3 University of Northern Iowa , ,1969’ 117 Maudhn, Walled Announcements ...............3 Lake; age 35; beloved lms-r Florists .................3*A band of Irene Ellis; beloved Funeral Directors . . . . . . .. . 4 son of Mrs, Hazel Ellis; dear Cemetery Lots...........4-A father of James, Gay, Cheryl,: Personals 4-B Terry and Donald Ellis; deaf! Lost and Found....... 5 brother of Mrs. Vera Waid _ and Jack Ellis. Funeral EMPLOYMENT ihwtsipit; giuumuh. ----- service wilj be held M«yJ Help Wanted Male ..............6 We don’t have any plans^orR^1"?61, % at rp nQLthg Help Wonted female .. a mass disposal of bras in the R>ch«r^n-Bird FuJiTalTnelp Wanted M. or F. .... 8 pond,” said one coed, “but voul H°™!- ^a,,ed Lake' Mr. Ellis, Soles Help, Male-Female...8-A never-can tell what some Of the1 w 11 *ie state .at the funeraV Employment Agencies....9 students might do.” ! home after 7 tonight. | | Employment Informotton .. .9-A —I-------\-------:GAMES, ALBERT F.; Sep-| Instruchons-Schoo's ....... 10 ^fNg^KgwW6 I tember 18, 1969; llff Dovbr Work Wonted Male .........................11 THE PONTIAC PltttSS. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1969 Help Wanted Male 6 i Help Wanted Male_6 IN, DAY PORTER. Squirt Lake COOK - FULL OR part time. Apply D—3 campus by coed leaders of a sort of freedom demonstration today. ★ ★ * The affair will reach a climax at 10 p.m. with a rally at Prexy’s Pond, a shallow pool on1 the university grounds. ' To Buy, Rent, Sell orTrode Use Pontiac'Press WANT ADS Office Hours: • 8 am. to 5 p.m. Cancellation Deadline 9 a.m. Day Following First Insertion ' , /■ Huron. MONDAY 6 A.M. * KELLY LABOR ^ 125 N. Saginaw, rear intranet DAILY PAY jL General Labor-Groundskceplng Warehouse-Factory-Janilorlal PluS many more OPEN 6 A.M. DAILY 1 , REPORT READY FOR WORK physically healt CAREER MINDED . SINGLE MEN Large International Corp., has openings in Pontiac area for several SHARP YOUNG MEN, over l* yr%. of age. 7 FULL AND PART-TIME servl references required. Apply in porson. 4754 Male Hwy., Clarkston. FURNACE INSTALLERS experienced only—top WE OFFER: 1— Complete company trar 2— No lay offs 4—Incentl profit s Road, Waterford Township; I SSSatSSaSSCES lZi"< Work Vta«<l Couples ....124 BOX REPLIES At 10 a.m. today there were replies at The Press Office in the following boxes: —02, 03, C-9r C-13, C-15, C-21, C-27, C-33, C-34, C-38, C-40, C-41, C-42, C-44, C-45, C-50, C-55. In Memoriam 2 IN MEMORY OF CHARLES S. Simpson, who passed away Sept. 19, I960, by his daughter, Mrs. George Killen. I have only your memory,' dear To remember my whole life throuoh. lut the sweetness Appliance Salesman Experienced In selling radios and TVs. apply Yankee Dept. Stora, ■ 1125 N. Perry, Pontiac. See Mr. Sandler.____________________ ATTENTION WOODWORKER who Is —familiar with latest methods end techniques In wood furniture or cabinet manufacturing. Also latest r~"” s Rivers collect a ...ct to Risldmtla. ,u. Parcel A—Description of 1.274 Acres —In Section .25, Springfield Tnvm.hlp. Oakland County. Michigan for Charles' Kelly—Part of tho N.E; V. of Section 25, T4N, R8E, Springfield Township, Oakland County, Michigan Is described as beginning at a point on of Section 25.' thence continuing dui nuivivcu uy sum gianuauua.. .. . - Elks Lodge of Sorrow will be; -Saturday—evening at. 8 ■ " ** )t work. 484- Credit Advisors the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home. Funeral service will be SSH. 17 held Monday, September 22, ° d Tailorin9--]J at 11 a.m. at the funeral home gfiSgggg------ 18 with Rev. Maurice 0. Dirctte .Description ot 1.514 Acri i Section 25. Springfield ...18 call SMILEY BROS., FE 4-4721. GRAND OPENING. Sit and Knit Shop. 4870 Highland Rd. across from Airway Lones. auspices l the Lodge No: ^ 510 at White Chapel Cemetery Mr. Games Paintinag Qnd Decorating....23 will he in state at the uneral Television-Radio Service.....24 home. (Suggested v siting Upho|st,ring..................24-A hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) Thfe Transportation ............25 family suggests memorial; |osuronc,.......................26 contributions may be made to Deer Processing !!!!*! the American Cancer Society.1 *...........* Envelopes are available at WANTED the funeral home. „ : Wanted Chitdran to Boord..28 • Wanted Houenhi rpWanted Mfscefla Convalescent-Nursing Kelly—Par! of the H. E. ’< of Section 25, T4N. R8E. Springfield Township, Oakland County, Michigan Is described as beginning at a point on the 6. A W. vSe line of said Section 25, distant due east along said E. & W. V4 Una 791.55 ft. from the Center of Section 25, thence continuing due •ait 100.0 ft., thenes N. o°08'40" w. 659.42 ft., thence dut west 100.0 ft., thence S. 0°08'40" E. 459.42 ft. to the point of beginning containing 1.5141 ..21 .22 i. Free coffee. 10 a.m i. Omy 98 cents. Call Thrc 273-3575 1____ . -.... „„„ „ p.m., after 5 p.m. call Mr. Art Wise at Elkhart, ind., 219-875-5228. AUTO MECHANIC Chrysler product experience. Wilt pay. 40 per er-* and holidayt. I 3481, Milford. - ATTENTION Young men —We—need—men,—1& /Train —management;—Pleasant—InN work to start, leading Immediately. appointment cell: intlng part rung worn, caH Mr. 5919 Highland, Pontiac, ! ■ APPLICANTS: 1— High Schobl grad 2— Neel Ih appearance 3— Available to start work ftn-mediaiely • To arraitge personal Interview THE' MERIT INC. 334-9427 CARPENTER”- Journey men-roughers needed, iteady, townhouses end aparl-rtients. 424-4131 or 343-0748. An Equal Opportunity Employer CUSTODIAL AND maintenance openings for full time work In shopping center, some mechanical ability Helpful, good paving opportunity, paid vacation. Insurance coverage,, etc. Managing Office, Pontiac Mall, 9:30 a.m. 4:30 p.m. dally except Set. _ .. CARPENTERS, ROUGH, A-l, steady work. Greenleaf 441100, Credit Investigators To train for executive position li national organizatioB^iiiwigliil grad or better. M General Foundry Laborers Wanted Systemation 25464 Novi Rd., Novi. An Equal Opportunity Employer , 349*5230 a rganlzatim. High school better. Most nave car. ry plus expanse allow-y Liberty Loan Corpora- For inter 332-3826. __ AFTERNOON SHTFT, tion, 1219 W. 14 Mile Rd., Claws^. Shopping Center. ____ CREDIT MANAG'ER Administrative office of multi-stale concern in Madison Heights. Seeking experienced man. excellent working conditions, new, modern of id salary : C 28, Font >, GARNHAM MARY MARTHA: I ihflM Gondk.. 25, distant due east along said E. Vj , W. % tint 191.55 ft. from tha Canter! of Section 25, thence contlnutnci due east 140.0 ft., thence N. 0°08'40" W. 659.42 ft., thence due west 100.0 ft., thence S. 0°08'40" E. 659.42 ft. to the point of beginning containing 1.514 acres more or less. 2. Garland F. Cbancey, 190 Linden Rd., Pontiac, Michigan requests zoning of tha following describedn prop e r t y to be changeo from Residential IV district ^to Multiple district: 175.09 feet thence S. 89'0 51' W. 656.64 feet thence N. o*° 09' w. ISO feet thence N. 89 0 51'J:. 566.23 feet to beg. and Supervisor! Plat No. 8E. 400 feet of ouflot 2 Town 4 North, Ranoe 0 East. Section 10. Part of N.E. V* Sec. 10 Book. Page 41. 3. Theodora H. Korff, 13101 pottalea Lake Road, Davtsburg, Michigan requests zoning of tna following described property: to be changed from Agricultural-Residential l district to Residential I district: -—--.Port of the N. E. 14 of the N. E. Va Township, Oakland County, Michigan described as follows: Bsglnnlng at ( point on the North line of Section which burs S. 89°48'I5" W. 556.90 fi «rom fhd^N. C. Comer of Section 7 (Co S. 0°l2'15" W. 645.32 ft. rN° • S. 19041'! 5" W. 135.00 O^Tj'IS” E. 645;32 tt, the North Ikte of salo avci •9°40*15" E. 135.00 ft. to the Containing 2.00 A easements and Wavs al racorq. 4. Mrs. Ruth Smith, 8883 Andarsonvllla. Road. ClarkatoA, Michigan raquasts toning of tha following dMCrltMd property !?aMVC%3rkt to’RasS fe" ivmrt'rlo^ GODFREY,—BERTHA pert of the, N. W. 14 of S. W. V* Section 36, T4N, ROE, Springfield Town, ship, Oakland County, Michigan dt^ Section 36, thence S. 0°35'30" W. 300 ft., thence N. 7^8,20" W. 100 ft.,i thence N. 0°35'30" E. 300 ft. to the! center line of Andertonville Road, thence S. 74°50'30" E. along cantar line of Andarsonvllla Ro*rf tan ft tn tha point of baginnipg line of Anderionville Road t East 1311.74 ft. f-J ,.arlng, ................In S. W. 314.29 ft. and N. 74°50'30" W. 310.07! ft. from tha Wast V* corner of said i Section 26, thence S. 0°35'38" W. 300 ft., thenca N. 74°58'30" W. 100 ft., thance N. 0*»35'30" E. 300 ft. ‘ center llr~ 1“r“‘—ttfig thence 9. ter line<01 n«w-., to the point of beginning. Conte 0,86 Acrea « •— Notice Is ’ ■ -fjve fiMt _ Ordinance to be a September 18, 1969; 19 Cooley! Street; age 51; beloved Wanted Money ...........SI daughter of Mrs. Joseph Wanted to Rent ..........32 Zisler; dear mother of Mrs. Share Living Quarters.......33 Jo Anne Adams, Mrs. Suzanne Wanted Real Estate..........36 Yables, Joseph, Edith and RENTALS OFFERED James Garntjam: dear sister Of Mrs. ^Jeanette Kennedy, Apartments-Furnished.........37 Mrs. Virginia, Garner, Mrs. Apartments-Unfurnished .. .38 Lorrle Yurkanus. Mrs. Betty R*nt Houses, Furnished ....39 Crosier, Mrs. Ruth Smith and R«nt Houses, Unfurnished...40 Joseph Zisler; also survived Property Management....40-A by three grandchildren. R®n* lake Cottages........41 Recitation of the Rosary will- Hunting Accommodations 41-A. be Sunday, at 7:30 p.m. at the! hooms ..................42 Donelson-Johns Funeral: Rooms With Board ................43 Home. Funeral service will be R»nt Farm Property........44 held Monday, September 21' HPtchMotel Rooms.............45 at 11 a.m. at the s t. R®n! •H®.1’®* 46 Benedict’s Catholic Church.1 R®n* Space.................47 Interment in Mount Hope 5*n! .B.?sin,®,ss Property. . .4M Cemetery. Mrs. Gamham will k®n^ Miscellaneous...........48 lie in state at the floral REAL ESTATE home. (Suggested visHTng hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) i *°'® Houses ................49 ^—_! Income Property ..............................50 M.;| Lake Property ........51 September 18,- 1969 ; 2831! Northern Property ........51-A Sunderland, Waterford; age' Resort Property ............52 77; dear mother of Mrs. Har-' Suburban Property..........53 ry (Tressa) Luxon, Mrs. Lots-Acreage ....................54 George (Catherine) Beechum, Sale Farms ..................56 Charles, Glen, William and. Sole Business Property ,...57 Morris Godfrey; dear sister of Sale or Exchange .........5ft Mrs. Nettie Walker and EikiAKiriAL Clarence Harveyj also . survived by 25 grandchildren Business Opportunities.....59 ,itrf and 10 great-grandchildren.' Sale Land (Contracts ...... .60 Mrs. Godfrey will lie in state. Wanted €ontract$*Mtges...60-A at the Coats Funeral Home, Money to Lend .............. 61 Drayton Plains today. She Mortgage Loans ...............62 Home, Alpena Michigan; vwops .......................... .63 tomorrow for services Sunday Sole Clothing .......,... .64 Funeral Directors 4 COATS FUNERAL HOME TRAYTON PLAINS_ K 674-0441 C. J. GOOHARDT FUNERAL HOMS K««gp Harbor. PH. 682-0200. DONELSON-JOHNS FUNERAL HOMO Huntoon FUNERAL HOME * “ Hi ■ SO voort FE 2-0189 Chrysler 6673 Dixie in person only. Clarkston. _ AUTOMATIC SCREW machine operator, tracer, type billing machine operator, full benefits, escellent conditions, Bernal, Inc. T450 Souter Blvd., Troy.________________ “ATTENTION ist Beef is l< >itious man 7 p.m. to 2 a. Bi-1175 m SPAR^-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOME IhWul Sorvlco** FE VcorheenSiple FUNERAL HOME. 332-8378 EstahllshsO Ovsr 45V>»rs Cemetery Lots 4-A Arby'i Roast Beef Is looking for a young ambitious man to work tho hours of 7 p.m. to 2 o.m. Coll Bob Click. 681-1175 bolwaan hours 9-S I Lutheran,,, section 4 CEMETERY LOTS Chapel, 8500. 624-4046. TWO SPACES IN Cutha. Oak land Hills, 624-0147. WHITE CHAFE L, 4 lots. Brothorhood Gordon. 373-4140.. Personals lip 4-B anVone knowino the whereabouts of Charlene Opel Craig (missing) 520 Jatson, please contact the State Police or Pontiac Police of. Nancy Nagel, har mother. FE 5-6593. Or Ruth * BiTl!»rmlem^T-caliT*" DEBT CONSULTANTS _ 338-0333 FREE WlO, WIG parties, Wigland. FE 5-2953, 674-4423. * ' _ HOLIDAY HEALTH Spa contract for saitT 335-2308.____________ Clarkston M I c -----ARC-WELDERS-------------- :or light gauge sheet metal sbrlcatlon, all benefits. ' THORESON-McCOSH, INC. if I O N A _ Is 2 man for Pontiac and «... M w-J0 par month salary to jitart plus fringe benefits & commission. 674-2272 or 602-5321. AUTOMOBILE DEALER NEEDS 2 car porters, exc. opportunity, with fash growing dealer. Blue Cross, life insurance, paid vacations, pension plan, paid uniforms, and plenty of ovartimo. Apply in . person only, 5806 Dixie Hwy., ^ Waterford, ask for Milan. ACCOUNTING Cost accountant; supervisor cost section, must be familiar with |ob order costing, overhead analysis, profit morgin analysis. We want a man who will handle the complete cost relatad function lor tha con-troller. Degree not necoesary. Apply or sand resume to Benton Division. AMBAC Industries, 3(70 1 Industrial Row, Troy, Mich, between . 14 end IS Mlfe Rd., off CoolldflQ Hwy.___ ACifRT YtJUNG r— *“ —*--------- work and spa 1 cell 674-2393. CARPENTERS, ROUGHERS, and crows, for housework, call alter, 6, 674-2888. CARPENTERS, construction helpers and sheet metal and roofing combination men. Call 628-3155 or 628-3)59 alter 4 pirn. DISHWASHERS transportation. Apply In person °n|VHOWARD JOHNSON TELEGRAPH at maple rd. _________BIRMINGHAM DlE DESIGNERS. Elliott Engineer- Ing. 373-0337.-- big OESIGNER FOR progressive —dies, top row, 58 hr. week, plus on fringe tMnefite. Corbet Corporation experienced, BHi, 338-7983. HAR~PiNGE CHUCKER, sori SZLIVBHV AlUH Wl+H own c.r over IB full time or B.rt time Llltle Ceaears, 41 Glenwood Pleia. DISHWASHER from 12-4, 6 dayTper week, Morey‘8 Golf and Country HELP WANTED aclay at a time 4 a.m. to 4 p.m. EMPLOYERS Temporary Service, Inc. DIRECT LINE tor d special deliveries, pi Rd„ Pont., Mich. Ilcultles? Go to Debt Aid Inc., 10 W. Huron, Psntloc. Thty ore personal financial counselors. It will cost jrou nothing to see what AUTOMATIC SET-UP OPERATOR TOP WAGES, ALL FRINGES 333-7903_i_ FE 2-0181 BIG BOY RESTAURANT DRIVERS. WIPERS, part time, full time, 149 W. Huron.__ DRIVER FOR delivering propane cylinders, good opportunity-tor- well— qualified man, good benefits, Imperial Propane, 682-3000. ___ Display Helper Stock Men Dock Supervisor APPLY PERSONNEL DEPT._ Second Floor Montgomery Ward ASSEMBLER. Experienced trainee. Plenty Of overtime, good wages and fringe benefits, In-eluding fully paid-blue €FOsSr=Day “‘“'“. Apply at r AMBAC Industrie Row, ■ “ enton Division Equal Opportunity INSPECTOR Experienced' prelerred. Machined fringe' benefits. Precision Automol-Ic Ports. 366 (. Blvd. 6. Pontloc, HOUSEMEN - Full lima positions available In housekeeping department ot local hospital, experience prelerred but not necessary. Storting roto ot 82.55 an hour plus exceMont fringe benefits end working conditions. Apply 9 a.m.-12 noon. Porsonnol Dipt., if. joseifli Morey Hospital, 9MT Woodward, Pontiac or -call tor appointment. 338-9111 axl. 238. ' HYDRAULIC LAB ASSEMBLER. Experienced or trainee. Plenty of ovartimo. good wages, and fringe benefits. Including luMy paid blue crossv Day shift. Apply at Benton Division AMBAC Industries, 287C Industrial Row, Troy. Equal Op pprtunlly Employer. INSPECTOR. EXPERIENCE preferred, or win train. Mutt be able t< teed b!ue prlnhL ehlW- toS^lM^ulliT pe/d Btot^Croee! • Apply al Benton Division AMBAC Industries, 2870 industrial Row, . Troy. Equal Opportunity Employer. Hi's TALC A T I ON MAN FOR mechanical application of CC TV, also electronic repair man In- PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADS DIAL 334-4981 MAVIS KINO PLEASE .... ..ING Pi ________CALL 625-57 MOVING -^ MEMBERSHIP TO THE afternoon and- burial Hillman Cemetery, Hillman. ...... Sorlnolleld Towns Clark's Office. 4(51 Ormond Road, Dav .-------------------------------------------------... !sr.?l am Monday « P?!S.cj HAZEN, MYRTIE M.; Sep-------------------- teinbw w. 1M9; m4 pont,ac h Friday I I ha Public Hearing. PAV16 H. FIELD, Springfield TmtfMhlR Clerk Death Notices Trail, Walled Lake; age beloved wife of Clyde E. Hazen; dear mother of Gerald E. and Leo R. Hazen; iole Household Goods ...*...65 Antiques ............... 65-A Hi-Fi, TV & Radios........66 Water Softeners......, .66-A For Sale Miscellaneous .... 67 Christmas frees........ .67-A Christmas Gifts ........<6741 Hand Tools-Machinery......68 i Do lt Yourself .....,,,....69 survived by eight Cameros-sVrvica’Y.Y.'.Y.70 grandchildren and one great- Musieol^oods .,,........,71 grandchild. Tuneral service Music Lessons ...........71-A will'be held Saturday, Sep- Office Equipment...........72 tember 20, at 1p.m. at the Store Equipment............,73 Rlchardson-Bird Funeral Sporting Goods.................74 Home, Walled Lake with Rev. Fishing Supplies—Baits .....75 Horace Thurston officiating.; Sond-Grovel-Dlrt ........76 ANDREWS, JOSEPH E September 18, 1969; 203 Auburn Avenue; age 63; j ' beloved husband of Mary T.l Andrews; dear brother of Robert and Alfred Andrews. Recitation of the Rosary will; interment in Walled Lake; Wood-Coal-Coke-Fuel ....77 be Sunday, at 7:30 p.m. at the1 Cemetery, Walled Lake. Mrs.! Pets-Huntipg Dogs ....79 Melvin A. Schutt Funeral! Hazen will lie in state at the Pst Supplies—Sarvlc*....79-A Home, Auburn Ave. Funeral, funeral home. . Auction Shies ...........80 service will be held Monday,,rAni y . cunt-mh-r Nurserlw ...............,11 September 22, at 11 a.m. at North Sww! Plonts-Trees-Shrubs ....814 .ul t„nn,.t kAmo Tntorment 18> 1869> NWtn Mginaw |>nhh;.( „j 09 the funeral home. Interment. In Mount Hope Cemetery. Mr. Andrews will He in state at the funeral home. (SuggestedI visiting hours^toHhandThto^ I) Street; age 63; beloved bus-! band of Nina Jones; dear brother of Mrs. Lola L. Tolonen and Clarence Jones. Funeral service will be held Robbies and Supplies.....82 FARM MERCHANDISE Livestock........ 83 Miats .................83-A Funeral service wm oe neio r..j Q. ________________________________Monday, September 22t, at 1 *"*.......JJ CASTOR, ORVAL P.; Sep-| P-m. at the Sparks-Griffin Farm>rVduce ’!!!!!!!!!!! 186 •__ «n ,iuin. 11, Cn.l IP. innfnl Untn. Inf orrvi pn t in. . , T Y ON AND AFTER THIS dlf(, Sep- y any olhor than myitll. August } at 11:45 o.m, 1961 Orgy Plymoulh and. 1 Bulck, black top, womot chlldftn, coll 601-0900._ jii GERM ------- vklnlli .. 32 Mlto'M- Idontl.,_______ ... id. 1-781-3426. •______________ FOUND: 1968 Watortord Kottoring dost Ring. Girl's. Groan stont. silver sotflng. Must Identity tho fnliioU. Coll (324181. 1x1. 257. FOUND — 1 FERSONAL CHECK. 332-1335 LOitl REWARD, S l fVir Coll 363-4154.___________ BUMP MAN WANTED? Hourly wages, also painter's helper. 3123 Lapeer Rd., Pontloc, 373-1422. ask for OrvllU. _____________________ BENCH BURR HAND. Soma experience ■ necessary. Days and afternoons. Plenty of overtime, good wages, end fringe benefits. Including fully paid Blue cross. Apply at Banton Division AMBaC Industries, 2870 Industrlol Row, Troy. Eqiiol Opportunity Employer. b6ys wanted, -full time-, landscaping. 338-2002.___________ Birmingham area sorvlco station mechljnC’ port time ^evenings till wages iu non, men, nine end a hall and double time, Blue Cross, guarontaad year round work, 24-yr.-old. company, tor Interview. Coll 363*4184. . BOV TO MOW' LAWN ’’regularly. ,_____,___ ____ Sury, rhinestone collar, Orar- ir. Orange ( 335-8526 of 33 LOST VICINITY or Orchard Lake and Tolograph Sept. 11, tomale Brittany Spaniel. 301-3992. lost: 6 month old kltlon, Iona prey heir with 4 white leaf, Vlclnlf- - ---------- " ----------1 lly ot cl owr Crescent Lk. If found LOST-BLACK LABRADOR retriever, male since Tuot., oast of Clarkston between Maybe and Waf-Hi 625-2465. Ehtln Celverly, Wal- ward. 602-7319. LOST: LADY-HAMILTON witch ot Hudson's Saturday. Keepsake, Reward, thor* Market, 2 415. . Voorhels. COST-SEPT. 5th, Norwegian Male ! Elkhound, 2 yrs., choker chain A brown leather leash. Blind min's dM..it toimipi— own mower. 3D4-I7I2, ^ _ BAND NEEDED NOW, also Now Year's Eve, contact L. Thomson or J. Thomson. 45I-9S74, eves. BRIDGEPORT -OPERATORS Excellent .opportunity to Win ■ tost' ' growing company, In the field of automation, with a long range program. Outstanding fringe Mneflts, with excellent pay and ovortlmt. Bouel Onnortunltv Smpgym YDE CORPORATION tember 19. 1969; 113 East; Funeral Home. Interment in ^Cornell; age 78; beloved hue- Rochester. Mr. Jones will lie band of Lola Castor; dear! in state at the funeral home, father of Mrs. Luana (Suggested visiting hours 3 to Slaughter, Louis, Roy, Lynn. 6 and 7 to t.) and Jack Castor; a 1 so T0MINgKI( utHEL; Sep-survived by 18 grandchUdren tomber 17 1B69. Bervflle, *n<*i liia6 V * V nili* *0^1 Michigan (formerly of Pon-grandchildren. Fun«al ar- ^0;^ 79. deair mother ^ rangem^a we^pentogjit Mrs j0hn McGuigan, Mrs. the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. _ , DRAPER, HELEN M.; September 18,1969; 4811 Rossiter, Drayton Plains; age 64; * beloved wife of Charles W. Draper; dear sister of Mrs. Georgianne Schroeder,, Mrs. Sally Leichti, Mrs. Pearl, Hording, Mrs. Julia Mulligan, Harold and Ketohel Rinehart. Funeral service will be held! Form Equipment ..........87 AUTOMOTIVE Travel Trailers............88 Housetroiiers .,........ .89 Rent Trailer Space........90 Commercial Trailers ..,,. ,90-A Auto. Accessories.....,,...91 Tires-Auto-Truck Auto Service .... Motor Scooters . . Motorcycles...... Bicycles Boats—Accessories .......92 Frances Johnson and Charles Strevti; also survived by one1 sister. Funeral service will be kield Saturday, September 20, .. at 1:30 p.m. at the Harold R. T . Davis FunerafHome, Mburn Sr1.« WklCkl Heights! Interment in Mount Camjrucks Hope Cemetery. Mrs. Hh 25 Torrdnski wiU lie In state at fl?.d.!li<-d.!ruck>■ • vlS! /the funeral home. (Suggested! ln^Ur0nC• visiting hours 3 to S and 7 to| ffi^liied Vott' .!*; I |]q| BURGER CHEF RESTAURANT SEEKING NIGHT MANAGERS MANAGER TRAINEES nrI^aerdYWYqS;lti8pn. PORTUNlfy employer, for iNTpavtiw CAiiC OTir ni?y TER„ 119 >1. TELEGRAPH RD. 481-lMO BETWEEN 10 i 3 FAS. BAKER-OVEN AND BlitCH work, 8 BRINEY MFG. CO. 1165 S«ba Rd. off W. M-59 674-0436 An oquol opportunity tmplovtr. EMPLOYMENT COUNSELOR: It you Save tho ability and do»lro to Work with poopio and'novo had ulis or public contact experience, we will train you. Exceptionally high' oarnlnge flret veer. Snelllng end Snelllng. Call Dave Lee, 334-2471, tor appointment. EXPERIENCED WATER HEATER, dryer, lamp, and goa appliance men. good pay. Coll 543-2564: ! EMPLOYED MAN. Repair port time. Work with Cgmpony irslni. Local imvrview. Write, Box 2 5, Glenshaw. Pa. EkyEWiENCED—'CLEXn~up~~rhanT with light bumping and painting experience helpful, Coll MV 34266 Run Johnion, Pontiac, toko EXPERIENCED DUCT Inatollir end. fabricator. Top wages. Steady work. Must have own tools. O'Brien Healing, 371 Voorhels Rd. EXPERIENCED LANDSCAPER With chauffeurs license. 673-7269. EXPERIENCED MISCELLANEOUS machine operator. Crescent Machine Co., Inc. 250) Williams prr, Potittoc. Mich. ----—f- EXPERIENCED DRIVER for (tollvory of furniture and appliances, Pontiac and surrounding ortos. 373-0688.___________ ELECTRICL WHOLESALER toads warahouse help, steady work with o tutor#. Opportunity tor ad-vancameni. Apply 17S S. Saginaw EXPERIENCED SiRVici-WRTtE up. Call Paul, sarvlco manager, 651-7000. BIII Fox Chavrolat. - ELDERLY BAR portorT^efoody) reliable, ehorl houre alter 2:10 o.m. 601-1653. tor right mon, Blue Croie. Apply in pireon to Stoak A Egg Roetourant, 5395 Dixie Hwy., btl. 9 ro 1415 S. Tolograph, I Sorvlco, Pontloc. ___ ENGINEERING ASSISTANT CITY OF TROY 12.95-33.80. Loam or utlllte your experience In drafting or surveying Ih rapidly growing onglnotrliig deportment. Challenging on d —■- —jjjed opperlunlly- I. Excellent xecnege. Apply 10 - Dept., 500 W. Big ■oovor, Troy, 609-4900. ._. EXPERIENCED SERVICE-STATION $ $ $ $ $ Sales opportunity tor S direct eeleemen. Prefer men 19 to 35, no convening, plenty Of leads, Blue Crpee. Call 636-5003 for. op- 1 pofntmoot. ’ ; AUTOMOBTijE F a k Vs company ; needs experienced counter men. 1 Good pay. trlrige benefits, chance ! tor edvencemetoT 380-4224._] Pontiac Press Want Ads For Action company, p rotor *x-ffgrloweBd man, but ' willing to train, lor Ultorviow, Call Mr. Wright, 33400*. Mutual Finance. CLARK OIL IS looking for ambitious — in' being Iholr own l several excellent ^usYobiAljis waNtId. days, Sundays oft. Ceil mi 7-Htiio. EXPERIENCED, FART TI ME-, men’s clothing soiesmsn, svas., contact Mr, (chwortlf Lion's Itoro Inc. Miracle Mil# Shogplng Center, ini »■ Tsiegreph, __________ FURNITURE SAlMImAN TsTr Ward's Home Outfitting Company, salary and commission, coll Harold Psrks tor oppototmogt. 334-2900. FOREMAN FABRICATING - WELDING Local division of largo In------|n|i iotiroi og- _ First old oxp. hslplul. 334*9C3._) Janitors — Part-Time MORNINGS Top pay 8, fringes, steady year round, work. Apply K Mart Department store7olenwood Plata. JANITOR, LTOHT KITCHEN work, day shift, Idaal tor retiree or elderly couple. Paid vacation, 62H587 SUn' B,00m,iel<l Canopy, JOUlfNEYMAN- ELECTRICIAN or experienced helper, residential or commercial. P E 4-9959. LABORERS FOR CEMEHT craw. Evenings. 682-3373. LUBE MAN FOR nlghr shltt, Bald Mountain area, call Joe Dameron 873-1010. . --- LATHE, MILL and shaper hande~tor —progreesivg -dleer" etoady li he.— week, all fringes. 334-4323. _ r LATHE OPERATOR Some experience - necessary, ax-ceiient wages end fringe benetlls. plenty ot overtime, days and afternoons. Apply at. Be n 1 o n Division, AMBAC Industries, 2870 Uiduafrlal' Raw, Troy. Mich,, Batman-14 ami IS Mile Rde., off Caolldne Hwy. _________________ LABbUiRS - NO EXPERIENCE necessary. Education no barrier. Raqulramanle include; good work ---performance and reliability. Exc. __ benetlls arevldad: steady employment Good starting salary with opportunity for advancement Fair managtmtnl policies Paid vacation, holidays £ Insurance Apply al oiiW Engineer, Inc. 2501 Williams Dr., Fanllac. An Equal Opportunity Employer LABOR WORK, STEADY, day shift, tor man over 30. Apply 217 Central . near Saginaw St.__________ MILL OPERATOR DRILL OPERATOR _ LATHE OPERATOR ASSEMBLY MAN Needed for tael growing, middle-tfeed^ company, top ratal, alj employment, * apply liT 'perton! «• Pyles Industrlee, 1990 Wlxom Rd., wlxom, Mich. An Equei Op-“—‘nyar: E AVAILABLE akland County and Can make over stoo _ sam Oeltch, collect area code HS#I 7-4000. Farm MECHANIC—LAWN MOWER repair, etoady employment, thoroughly Txpr pplrvyi“Fr Miliar Co., i»S S. Woodward, Birmingham. ** tor Carl Hawm, 447-7700; An Equal Oppertunlty E—mm We Repeat DIAL 334-4981 FOR TASTER^ SERVICE MAINTENANCE ELECTRICIAN . CHURCH CUSTODIAN, full lime for abtoTbodiii man. Call 444-0040. I ‘ CARETAKER COUPLE - :So b er, reapoaelue, married couple tor maintenance at grounds, buildings SUNNEN 'HONE OPERATOR Stimg experience required. MECHANICAL TECHNICIAN TRAINEE High School graduate wllh some location, lubmtt 1—..... ., .. parlance end salary to Pontiac Press ..fax. C-38. An Kauai -Op-portonlly imploysr. .______ family man with chauffeur's apartment. uMlltlws and toed. 356-<|ft1 — 10 a.m. to 4 p.m, NO SUNDAY CALLS. EXCELLENT BENEFITS and Steady employment. * MX, DIVISION OF KELSEY-HAYES CO. , 111 indianwood Rd., Lake Orion 693-831 > An equal opportunity employer D—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, For Want Ads Dial 334-4981 Help Wanted Male ^61 Help Wanted Male 6 Help Wanted Male 6 Help Wanted Male machlnt shop background on lathe, ^grinder* and drill press to jdc general shop work. Phone Mr ylzkelety, 341-2221, Ext. 11, Wo,J Detroit Envelope Co. 14700 Dextt Rd„ Detroit. MECHANICS to assemble machinery, electrical wiring —■ — | MANAGER For now service sta dependent oil company, si MACHINE OPERATORS Apply In person. Clarkston Mobile MAN NEEDED FOR supply con pony, must be able to use cutftn torch, and drive truck. Blvd. Sui ply Co. 333-7161. MECHANIC*. MECHANIC Helperi -MODERNIZATION—SALESMAN-------- Qualifications: must be at least j rneyman with 5 years building* — PLUMBER Opening available, for ei plumber In expanding hospital. Steady work, salary $724.53 minimum — *7*7.47 , monthly depending on experience plus excellent fringe benefit wm pram. Apply 9 a.m.-12 n________ Personnel Dept., St Joseph Mercy Hospital, 900JNoodward.^ontlac or call for appointment, 338-9111 ext. Excellent i opportunities tbr young men with mechanical backgrounds management/ Jpieaaent Interview work to start, leading t o positions. Must be high uate, 18-25, and be able rk Immediately. . per hr. to Start lew appointment call: 338-2198. 330-3529. gw, ww. between 14 and 15 Mile Rd„ oft Coolldoe Hwv._______ m, a i ntena nce—janTtorT Middle age man to work aft —nnon-evenlngs.—In—Blrmlngha Good starting salary. Call Wall Connolly's ., □□ .. Saginaw, Pontiac, between 9 a.r m —- —ie calls please. OPERATORS and trainees for, • LATHES -•-MILLS • GRINDERS: Lynd Gear Inc. Phone 6514377 361 South Street Rochester, Michigan An equal opportunity employer MODEL MAKERS-WOOD PLASTIC LAMINATORS PLASTIC FIXTURE NEEDED PORTER Men needed .for light "janitorial person. Bet. 2 and 6 p.m. PONTIAC MALL , 257 Telegraph Winkelman s 341-22217ext.' IT. ATTENTION HOUSEWIVl* _ Turret Lathe Operator Set up end operate aircraft qui . excellent wages , and frlr... benefit*, plenty or overtime, days and afternoons. Apply at Btnton Division. AMBAC Industries, 2170 Industrial Roy, Troy, between 14 and IS Mila Rds„ oft Coalldge SELL TOYS I. GIFTS, PARTY Excellent MmmMHIHPMPMIIIIP ting. No Delivering, >N* Investment. , Cali or writ* "Santa's Conn, 0 60 0' s/ffi) BOOKIN' ALSO BOOKING PARTUS.'1 BAR MAID, also bar waltrtss, part time, 4*2.9*42 or 353-4432. 1 BABYSITTER WANTED TO llv* i_ ...... .... .. ->Chool, 5 or a H»lf» Wanted Parnate ENJOY WORKING IN your neighborhood—It you Uk* to talk to People and can type 35 to 40 wpm's—wa will consider you fbr a lob that offera an excellent future. GENERAL .PUBLIC LOAN CORP., 333-71SI. * EXPERIENCED WAITRESSES I j ‘■irtander, HU *. 4*1-2*27 FACTORY WORKERS . MANY JOBS REQUIRE NO PREVIOUS EXPERIENCE APPLY « a.m.to 6 p.m. PORTERS DISH- WASHERS HOUSE- KEEPERS Excallant wages and . f r I n l . benefits, morning I e.m. 'til 4:30 p.m. Evenings * p.m. 'til 2:*0 a.~ or night sifts, 11:30 pm, til I e. available, lull Or .pert , til employment. Apply In pereen cell: MACHUS RED* FOX Halp Wanted Paaiala 7 SECRETARIES CLERK TYPIST / immediate openings at • Oakland COmmubltir College, axcaTlant salary dm) fringe benefits. Contact |—-—• Dept. Oakland Cohn- h O. Penny Co. An Equal Opportunlty Employer OPPORTUNITY FOR YOUNG MAN tor dry cleaning route, guaranteed wage plus commission and benefits. Apply Fox Dry Cleaners, 3 hours alter school VILLAGE RAMBLER u,— ---- Ml *3N0 EXPERIENCED PREFERRED Apply at: KEEGO PONTIAC SALES ______3000 Orchard Lake If you are Interested tn precision! dlyr.'^k^M^'^li 5h‘ EMPLOYERS dfeef^ra^e "ntolteffig! BABYSITTER' to live too* *out,' JemRprOry Service. InC. flood health, can start you on an!______625-5451.___________ FERNDALE 2320 Milton Rd. interesting career. It you are'BABY SITTER NEE’DEdT'in my SffiESSP 2M17 *!v*ri Interested, In college, ask us about home, two pre-schbol girls* start $ibis s,vAfi,,n rri mi- • .... _ - education jlen. It's not too early, _ leave early. Union Lake cfNTER J-INE 1561 E..1B Mile TELEGRAPH RUT AT 15 MH.E this tarm. For In- 6rea. Call 363-5020. i _ a*, Taby’sittbr a k An E€>Uil Opportunity Employer! 626*4200 WANTRD^tor U PE 4-8*7. lata to etart tl TRUCK DRIVER, know Detroit a doors supervising boys 12 to 16 years old. 40 hour work weak with good starting salary and automobile allowance plus top lob PRODUCTION CONTROL i Excellent opportunity' for reliable man familiar with machlng tunc-1 **.%***..*«#•« , ,v.M tion and willing to learn variety a;-;q of duties including shipping small SERVICE man exper precision tools. Immediate open-1 ^ colored and black Ings, 15 MMo-Coolldgo area. I 6grt' wages. Lapeer ________ CALL 1-542-7432 - TOOLMAKER with fixture axparlanc* day shift Liberal Age Consideration Apply in Person, Between 10 a.m. and-3 p.m. REES Div. of Avis Industrial Carp. 1524 East 14 Mile Rd. Kfadison-Heightr ’SITTER WANTED to Ctot* GENERAL OFFICE, TYPING, tl good opportunity, some * x p , desirable, call 338-61)3 M r a Williams. _______ GENERAL OFFICE — High schoo graduate with bookkaaor-' knowledge, full and p— || ~9*land Inc., Clawson BABY SITTER' foR 5 <tty«7 2 children In my home, 332 BABYSITTER, MATURE, HOME, Crescent Lake arts car, 682-8588.____ BABY SITTING IN my hoti years ot — «•»” BABY SIT I tlm*. GIRL OR WOMAN TO S... country horn* near Rochester to 5:30p,m, 5 day* a weak 9 mllas.f Tor SITTER, DAYS, from 10 a. n. 2 preschool children 1 alia . old. <26-8552,. Orchard Lake GIRLS Who want a Man's income and ar*1 i.m.-l willing to work for It. Aftafmtoh nd 2 and evening salas promotion work LIABLE WO ■wusawork. 3MM*fB. RECEPTIONIST - PERSONNEL office, personable parson TOmST* cont*ct* RETIRED LADY With nui p*rl*nca,_c"- ' . J2 parson) net. .... _______Box C-31, Pontiac Press. "it heAL SHARP glrl barmald and ■ waitress, steady work, vary good pay, must bo reliable. See Ralph for Interview, Chalet Inn, 79 c OWNER OPERATORS Aen with GMC tandem’ tree boy trailers nee delivering fo Jersey, Del. en 659-7522. " F. J. BOUTELL DRIVEAWAY CO. INC. L An Equal Opportunity Employer ORDERLIES pey and nig'hi'^shlll. best -rates,! ■ .fit1.1 .ggW-JgjjMga^ElMLM?. on fringe benefits, overtime, new hfDL .^i.? ,ernoo1 sh/f,s' •*#}* bB plant. FORMATIVE PRODUCTS h,oh sch0Bl oraduate. Annlv 9 jjjL 140T Piedmont Rd., Troy,i PORTERS DISH- WASHERS HOUSE- KEEPERS WELDERS ■_________________________HP For steel tanks, 1V4 overtime over; “^SITTER, LIVE IN or eut, S 40 hours, presently working day we<K> cal1 363-5612.___ hours, paid holidays, Insurance, BABYSITTER IN MY home, 7-6, 1 work clothes, and equipment, child, call after 6, 674-1821.* “• beeline STYLIST EARN prafi? praduaSs* an^'abla to sfart work Jiwngdiatahi.- Earnlnda. bonusaa. work schedule, etc. discussed dur- —-------—_________ Ing paraonar Interview; For ap- RECEPTIONIST, DOCTOR'S polntmant, call HUMU ---------------- baiorf lore 1:30 p.m. GENERAL OFFICE woHT-typing/ «6o3.knOWl,dM M r dart tima Small rh* n MA~ui! betwean 8;3D and 3, 651-4422._____________________ ■ day*, toyaly paid Blue I HOUSEKEEPER, t rbsTonsible AND _______________ parson lor avanlngs for 2 children! In my home. <234841._______ Clawson Tank Co., 525 I Elmwood. Clawson._____ WANTED:' AUTO PARTS dark, I must be experienced In sailing new and ra-bulll parts for all cars. Baldwin1 Ave^Ph^ A*""' ™ ------ *17*—i——,-----«—:---------gwya 6 p.m. 625-3200. 10 Wickes -Lumber go. J ----------— I i«BV V.OPITBI, uax P«rx, 545-8181. •'« '< i»n & Bui ding Supply ! rhoJrN»?T?^CTc0h™«fl0for p.*dV: ,|^™f3iQLS' _______ yyant plumbing, heat ng and elec- yancemant. Call 335-9249. ib p,„,E Royal Oak, Mich, trlcal .alesmen. Full time. Ex- L .bRTMTtT^ bSwffiV'»n^^?"BC *r**‘ 33a oM7 —-------------------------- Martlnizlng. 2305 S. Talagraph call 332-1822. Aak for Mr. ,.,.jra. , " salad WOMAN, 6 Stenographed FULL TIME ■ EMPLOYMENT , FULLY PAID LIFE tNSURANCB H0SPITALIZAT6N AND OTHER ' ---- EENEPITS Salary commensurate with akUl 642-3055 APPLY Consumer Power Company :1030... Featherstone Pontiac AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER 1. 10197 Dixie | tiS8^b^nCiii6r^S»»SriSi»i’ SirlitSHiwZ < 10020 capital.'Oak Park, 545-8181. RN'S-^LPN'S , 4 to 12 part time. Apply in parson. *'—“—r Convalescent Horn* Mile, on Greenfield - (1-75 and Rochester Rd.) . MORNINGS, DELI VE RYTboy, over 18, apply In paraon, Parry Drugs. 3417 Elizabeth Lake Rd. 1 men?, jjb-viil ext. 238. Opportunity Need Part-Time Work? W* have an opening tor a yaur jnan 2* to 3* years of age wll management ability and * gener knowledge of accounting. Must bs able to meet the publ and some idles ability. Do you notd^ko tarn soma extra money? Wa have schedules In the following departments: Building Maintenance , * a.m./‘:3B*pjn. A general" knowledge of purcha i jng. accounting background ar | hdlplul. SALES IB a.m.-2 p.m. ‘ io a.m.-3 p.m. i If Interasied. sand a resume < yourself, Including martial an draft tlalus, education and a: perienca to Box C-17, Ponlle Prai*. , APPLY PERSONNEL DIPT, second Floor Montgomery PARtS DRIVER C H AU F F'E'Ul license raquirad, axparlanc* halpft but nol neceuary, *2* N. Main S Rochester. Ward PONTIAC MALL An equal opportunity employer PART TIME aarvlc* station ah wrecker, axparlancad, 373-6334. MTSTtm GARDENERS and wit dow washers wanted. Malntansnc Inc. 647-6254 ar 642-3486. etiis, morning o e.m, 'III 4iao 'nc«' salesmen, fuii time. Ex- .cal i. Evening 6 p.m. Til 2:30 a.m S?ller,i wages. Company paid.) or night-shifts 11:30 p.m. 'Iit-O—{tenants. Apply .In parson. Crooks t aYf prafarra Union L SECRETARY ADVERTISING AGENCY North Woodward area,. Sharp, mature g|rl to ms*t public. Stanogfaphlc skills ■ raqulramtnt. Call Ml 6-1000. Personnel. ' ' An Equal Opporfantty Employer SALESGIRLS „_.INARD WIG SALON SOMERSET MALL Young woman who cl accept raipohalMlItYi pleasant working conditions, excellent Temporary. Work 1 AMERICAN GIRL 70S S. Adams, B 1 Wr4Msf"'*■' in edrn *7.00 on bailors con. 682-0650, 363-3121.- ___________ WOMEN ll AND OVER to work on feiephont In modern, air ‘conditioned office. No experience necessary, must havi pleasant volet, Si .SO per hour plus commission and bonus to atort.* Apply 9 a.m, 1o S p.m. Storllnt Building Co., 10 W, Huron, Connolly No- WANTED A MATURE woman 1 stay with elderly- woman nights c live In. 363-4980, r WAITRESS FOR WEEK ETTiST Thurs., Frl., Sat., 9;30 p.m * a.m. Apply in p*‘“" 3982 Auburn Rd„ itowoht, iiv i„ call far m waTtress, FULL TIME, WAITRESSES, DISHWASHERS I ply at 929 W. Huron, Eatm< Restaurant. waitress With some cookim AE cooking I, Interested •Ttant, we train In MACHUS RED FOX TELEGRAPH RD. AT 15 f representatives, preferably licensed now in real aatato am We have rogram. Over . HUP ion Dollara In listings ^^8Nwiwi the state. The only non-] residential^ multiple ll|tlt^ service tra nhw Period, good future, salary— and olhtr company banatlts, rtf. req. Apply In person,*! Nelsnars in Pontiac. 42 N. Saginaw. Ask tor -Mr.-Boroor. ,** WANT TEMPORARY WORK? WANTED TRUCK MECHANICS JT RdVo'r 363-0611"'______, BOO KKEEPElC EXPERIENCED with ,GM dealership, Keego Sales1 and Service, 3080 Orchord Lake Rd.. Keego Harbor. the Michigan Business BEAUTY OPERATORS HH w» vi uicoci. liubiui udv.^W™ Colfforos. All locations, vestment Guide. All Inquiries , • . ■ Vuc.lul Pu7< Beauty operators, shampoo girls '?L„Ga,:,y trooroncp furnished, retire- m*n!curi........................... - E».fAr,r.lS.BS:..'0S0 w- t..n L______iu. r_- , Your skills at a homemaker could bo added Income for you. We ar* w%,v Itlon wl... -----Apply In per: 10 o.m. to* ( Employment Office Hudson's Ponlioc Mall SWITCH BOARD TYPIST Required Immodlotoly by new ■uto, dealership In Southfield. 353-1300 Bin. 10. ILK PINISHBR. good salary Tlus Insurance program, Birmingham 6 Help Wanted Male Production Workers ;■ NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY , lBi All of the GM Benefit “ Prograraiv Top Earnings with a winning team Make Application at Our Employment Office 8 A.M. to 4 P.M. MONDAY THRU FRIDAY FISHER BODY DIVISION' 900 BALDWIN AVB. PONTIA Phono (3U) 332-8361 AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER i si., Phone ABi~am. _ ... RETIREE "" FOR PORTER WORK evening Shift . Apply at BM BpY DRIVE IN L 2490 Dixie Hwy, SERVICE STATION ottendaniTei perlenced,, lull or Pari llmi Walled lake area, 424-9777. __ Sporting Goods Salesman Full tlma opening for man .WlnlSS?? Is l?**hun*,ng',and' fishing. Pay commensurat* with YOUNG DYNAMIC Plastic background and exPOrlane*. requires general mar1'" I lathe experience, stall cellent employee benefits in-| benefits, good starting • ment ond full benefits. See BWficm~'o'uTmrrreB'p J‘ Mr. Coe, 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. — “ “ “ —* Monday thru Friday. j GMC Truck Center Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485 equal opportunity employer WANTED CHOIR OTB EC TOR" United Methodist Church of Llki Orion. Contact Or. Robert J Hudgins. 692-4022. WANTED: MAN ■aornlng Marine ir 2t years elderly couple. Shreid. 332*9270T ~~~ ——§Sll|7. COUNTER GIRL FORTbRY cleaning KITCHEN HELP, plant, axparlanc* preferred but not ■ essential, will train, full tlma, paid holidays and. vacation. . Apply Douglas Cleaners. 900 “ ■■ ward, Birmingham. COOK AND WAITRESBTI time. Apply in pars Spaghottl Houso, tooBW. COUNTER GIRL FOR QUALITY dry doanars, Waterford Township am, only 16 or ovor need apply. ' hr. Mortlnlsing. 3397 Ellzob* Lake Rd. or coll 4*2-8910 oik 6 orjpo‘.-: CAPABLE flSnfi 55year*oW, and evening - - Big Boy | ; COUNSELOR, oil yi '6T¥T -------- Jim-—- -allowonc*. o42-790dr_ Cashier-Waitresses Tele-Tray Operator Curb Hostesses Bus Girls Kitchen Help If ability Anglt ALSO Phono 673-1215. Steady y work, good wager ■ and vacation. Blue Cro ____ supervise Supervisor*. N< mri miwi vffiw of Dempsey K Punch Service, KIND, RELIABLE woman to tal car* of Infant and child Stenographer Good aolory; good benofllti ox-' collont working conditions. Sound too good to be true? It you don't believe it, then call and find eut abut our opening for a sleno bar* *1 ' the Farndale Research Laboratory. We havo a challenging, gal who tor a * So w.p. IRA.t a ihorthondi Coll- ETHYL 1 CORPORATION 1600 W. Eight Mila Rd. F*mdal*,Mlch. 4*220 ! __Ah Equal opportunity employer ! r SURGICAL NURSE (RN). Part-time1 ■’ orjfull tlma, on It p.m, to 7:m .LARGE RETAIL STORE hes ... | tractlv* positions tor ambitious I vouna woman Interested In a t position with All boneltis charge salary *717 W 1*91 I Part-time salary *4.37 1 hr. Beginning um education, tralnl Hudson's Pontiac Mall' Dipping and receiving h< Town end Country Fumilur*. 8822 * have a debt tree Christmas? Wort •vtnlr^ *“* *'“ “——* J play 642* layhouse Toy Company Toys adorable, prlcea great Top hostels plan, topjaarty plan No delivery, no cotlocting ■ree training, auppIlM ai ' Tarrltlc ar—'— - CLEANING & KITCHEN Excellent working condition*, i M*|j» weak, attractlvo solary. EM zm Nurias Ragfslry. 10 and *. _______ LAiiNolv PRESS OPERATORS', "“arlencO fmt nacauanj. Pontiac ;* Rd.. Kaaoo B6*rbo . Inn p. J88WHIHH ahltl, experienced. Tapa-tronlc* -Inc., 4413 Parnlaa, Royal Oak. Sandy Buekly service STAT40N AttandanfiTluJi cl. 4-?63?___________________. time, Standard Station, 13 Mil* E' soulhtleld, Birmingham. A LADY WANTED FOR 2nd SERVICE STATION MANAGeFlori !Sld ........■ ■ —’lee station,-----Mr " COUNTER GIRL Apply Uberly Cleaners. Ai inM. LADY FOR SEWING cashTerkilerk, Russ's Country St 673-S160 Elliobtlh Like Rd. CARETKER COUPLE PONTIAC MOTOR DIVISION Has immediate openings for • Draftsmen • Designers • Layout Men • Detailers To work in body, chassis or engine drafting. Excellent benefits and opportunities for advancement. Apply or send resume along with salary requirements to* Salary Personnel Deportment Gjenwood at Montcalm Pontiac, Michigan i . or Call 3324111 Ext. 7004 only, hospitalization, retiremei paid vacation, paid weakly, apt Hudson Servlet station, 867*. Db Highway. Watarlord._____ . OWgle MATTFofe general car*'oil horses and atablas, modern' living quarters available. Rad Bob farms, 1MJ Ray Rd., Oxford, call 1 b*,°r* 4 pm" ,,t,r * P.M. iERVICE'MAN — AND aarvlc* manager needed tor growing LP Gas builnass. Muat be abl* to __relocate In Central Michigan. Sand iplele returns and your salary iWHiUta- Pontiac t >X Cd, .— c.ioiYWiP—^ ATTINDANt pifth ELBUklTV woman, confined to whaaf chair, L]V* In. Lovaly. apartment. Light ’ • 5 pin* - ttr,ntAPB^hl dlabelt 851-0655. SECURITY GUARDS vat b !• and u how to handle peopf*. Hava o UBUHM "or Friday* and Sat . to 2 a.m. top wag unltgrms, days. 9 p.l Apply — ELIAS BROS. -----BIG BOV RESTAURANT ------ Talaaraph A Huron SiRVICl STATION AfMMIIti, .... part tlma, axparlancad. *2.3* Halp Wanted MaU per h L*k* i —P maintenance of gri iterestad call FE 2- and aquIpnNiit. N m3*- 1 pets, salary plus I _________________________apartment, utilities N t To UE S, ART OL K S * , 2j5U' '0, fm. ta 4 JEWELRY, EUROPEAN im-I...MY CALLS. PORTER. Retired or soi 1 ‘ •"* lu------- ——Janet Davit Claanara, 64 >r part tlma, MAID TO AttlOT porter an ora, 4500 cleaning at'woman'* tint HIM _____•. store, Chudlka at Birmingham. Ml -rr—I 7-13W. Mrs, Zaive. couple tor MATURE PERSON, 1-10 a.m, a Ida, building I 4 p.m. In mv-Anma in * children art Vlllaea. iU-wmW __ 6 tSS!"S8I, MOTEL DESK CLERK NO IUN- Will train, apply 1101 S. Talagraph HOLIC*-' *“" almospheri Knowiadga art* giasa ant t necessary In business. ATTENTION ATTENTION HOUSEWIVES 0*11 toys, gift*, now lor _____“SANDRA PARTIES" cant Amerlcar —Supplies furnished -y by United Parcel, ■ Id With orders. HMBTHHni IR, SHOP AND COMPARE! CALL BETH WEBER ______or 602-1774 6Htlp Wanted Malt Assemblers ' and , Production Machine Operators No Exptriinca Necessary Pontiac Motor Division. General Motors Corporation Pontiac, Michigan -Employment Offiea Open 8-11 A.M. 14 P.M. . Monday thru Friday LEANING woman FOR oentral MaVurI WOMAN FOR housework, i - day, mug be PM jo^r ** — CUM GIRLS NEEDED tram 11 a.m. to j jt.m. 5130 par hour plu~ ■ Up*. Drayton A B W. 4734944. CAREER MINDED SINGLE WOMEN Large Intornattonat Carp., Itaa ^openings In Pontlac ana tor • I SHARP YOUNG WOMEN. oyar ll^n^flt age. FfsSr I jy, rams APPLICANTS: ign school grad. MLInMMWMm^ ygy* la atari, work im-r*ng* personal Interview TRE MERIT INC. 334-9427 •HOP HELP, weak. 2 adults.’Own Iransporial’lnn* 6*26*53 "***' l(M|MVIVl,, •r**' WitJEii HOUtiiKtlHKR" wanted. 2 children, no laundry, light cook- cd*( company training “* -alary and profit (hiring HOLIDAY INN ~ AN F5R hi,. 4:30 PM, * Model-Sales LaadMIg woman'* taihlon chat •ala* girl*, tor an ^‘attrlS^r'aiJ? n*.’ ilVi'soo axL n Equal Oppoi Liwrtnctg personal Klngalty MM iiHabatirLak* Rd.~" fcTiTOCRIdKFtl6Hl»t xtolaiant, “ — necessary. Prater mature Hours IB-7. 62KB*; ; NURSES FOR CORONARY & CARDIAC ARRYTHMIA CENTER A structured aducallonal program I* being offered to pretoialenal nurses to prepare them for the «ffh^a^**t|C*°n,l0"c7rtlfStlwrdw*h Laarn as you aam Dental Receptionist 1 tgr bm don... p.m.. SfjlgriqHII Parsonnol Oftlc*. ^. ^Crlttenton Hofpitgl. NURSES AIDES Earn whlla veu learn. FrB* ■ guaranteed ipltaj. t '6514000 ,Dining Room Waitresses DAY OR NIGHT SHIFT I Furnished tranapertatton ar llv* In. . OwfeblNli UNIVE RtITY [ tt.,vasjKi»nw. zssm- parjen only, TED'S BLOOMFIELD HILLS_1 EMPLOYMENT t COUNSELDrT fj - uzssusa »* win preSIr . panar..___. .... i larvica, 4744336. — —sir, Il» MV..U,"" “ axe. tips, call PE -----. ^eungti. PRBUEinvXNTBb for d hic contact axp*ri*nep-wa win presser wanted tor dry claan- rtM,j“iL>v« pfirgfplah-,.MCTK»iwr^ c?yn**lors, hlghast commission WAttREBB,.,. tap paid, no Invaslmanl this season or wbiM «mhm. next. Exciting fashion (tot. For cfttaH!, call Jfrt flr Fran tU1h*m. EXPERIENCED MEDICAL a: -JCRETARY f&it'vr,^, a i#^u.^r,hi?1x«;,'S„,,vp^: poriunltv, salary, and banatlts. i Apply Rlrmingham-Blaamtlaid Bank. 103* E. Maple Rd., Rlrm. Ingham. An Equal Opportunity Emoteyar. • | MANAGEMENT TRAINEES If you qre a young man who has a degree in Marketing, Business Administration or related fields . . If you have sincere interest ’in Retdiling . . . If you wish to train-for a management position with a national company in a structured program . . . If you are a young woman, college graduate with on interest in Fashion Retailing . . . COME IN TO TALK WITH US ABOUT OUR MANAGEMENT TRAINING PROGRAM Personnel Department, 2nd Floor MONTGOMERY imiHij PONTIAC MALL' An Equal Opportunity Employer t Wanted M. or F. SHelp Wanted M. or F. I APPLICATIONS' NOW BEING ACCEPTED With This New Fast Growing Corporation 33bnd<# thru Eriddy 10 A. M. to 3 P.M. - ★Area Managers (Salesfloor) ★ Service Manager ★ Office Manager ★Cashiers (Full and Part Time) ★ Porters ★ Cashiers ★ Stock Boys - ★Receiving Manager APPLY IN PERSON A wonderful world of toys, games, hobby ond croft, supplies, recortjs, books, Sporting, goods, juvenile ik furniture and party goods. 1235 S. Telegraph Locoted in Bloomfield MiftKlt Mild Shopping Center For Wont Ads Diol 334-4981 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1969 D—3 mm#. » YB. OR older. WOMAN FOR , admitting^oerk SMfiBBVWjtt ternoon Ihift: t ihar.i ■Mlu --'-17 ana ■PP'v Ptrsanntl—attics Hospital, Rochester, 451. Jwy c I • enTng bookkeeper who i« ■ Ki **%,& sz “?r &*&&’■*w?a-h BLOOD DONORS I URGENTLY NEEDED AH gh Positive ITU AW RH Nef* with positive aefUE’4S«*w-^ IS * ">. Kreige Co.,i _ MICHIGAN COMMUNITY torem, Mich. 1. _ BLOOD CENTER Sv ffj _ Pobiklt# Union Lake. 363-9112 # W2K*'?-.T0.W0BK IN auto, recon-Tiourly ratiif, mniv 'comb's. 3i2a i 'W«bteREMr»~,imi!p,rlw'c*<!'. Bepend- - ore/jff MlltoPd «?«:' JxaV310' birth IHelpWnntedM. er F, . 8 Sol«i Htlp Male-Female 8-A| Work Wanted Feinele 12|Wflnted8enltstnte 36|Apnrtments, Unfurnished 381 Apartments, Unfurnished 38 . 532 Orchard Lake Ave. FREE CLASSES Meh or women wanted. Earn wt.... yoy learn. Wc have 8 offices, MO MleOMMie who can't M wn— MILlIr BROS. REALTY 333-7156 POOO CHECKER-CASHIER. I Jo “Mrs. Parr. Kingsley Bloomfield Hina. Ml 4-140ofo polntment. MILLING Manufacture located - ... Lake has Immediate openings for' persons With mechanical ability. Milling experience delsred, but not essential as we will train. STEADY EMPLOYMENT GOOD STARTING RATE, FULLY PAID CO. BENEFlts APPLY AT: VALENITE METALS 3295 HAGGERTY RD. WALLED LAKE RNS AND LPNS excellent opportunity, will fit hours to your Manor Con- valascent Center Ci V°{JNO LADY FOR downtowTT SvttiPrti pff; teTc.34Tm* ,0 Pontl,c _VS»!P®i£DV.PARVlm# 'Of Sat. ,Sun- ,"‘4 telephone answering for real estate office. 11.71 per hour. 333-7115,_ Htlp Wanted M. or F. 8 aptliancTTaT^ female* excellent opportunity tor advancement, paid vacltlon and holidays, guaranteed solar" y. T. BRANT CO. 1342 Wide Track Dr., W. . _ Mon., Frl. H i — Tuat., Wad., Thurs. 1m CAKE DECORATOR. Good—Kr »^C-&a.YP,nAg P0nt,ac Pr‘ Grinding .experience desired, but not essential at wo will train. STEADY EMPLOYMENT Good, starting rate FULLY PAID CO, BENEFITS. APPLY AT: VALENITE METALS ___3295 HAGGERTY RD.______ WALLED LAKE -----1 opportunity Employer Carr You Sell? tor two reel estate ___________ „ Interested In making money. ,h«lp,«il- but not necei Will train, plenty of leads ana ™jjr time and attractive com-mission schedule. For Interview, “N Mr. Taytor, OR 4-0304. Eves. Salesperson, good salary, ape Irvlim Kay Draperies, 2S7 Woodward Ave., Blrm., Mich. H INHALATION THERAPY theraplsl| wlSmlrffmum exp.. Liberal salary (, benefits. 4“hf Personnel Office. Crittenton Hospital Inhalation Therapy Supervisor le opening for Inhalation therapy supervisor, must ( | registered, or registry ell Liberal salary and benefits, ; Personnel office. Crittenton Hospital Rochester 451.—** BLOOMFIELD r’?avor"te"moviaI ^ ' I polntment. ON YOUR NIGHT OFF, apply In SERVICE STATION AttendittlsTlull HflM —an 1 and- 4 p.m. or part time, new station, it Theatre, 2158 Waterford area. Call after 4. 412- WANTED!!! YORK It on tna lookout for con sclentlous self-starters with outgoing personalities. If you meet this description. Experience Is not necessary, we will train you to earn a rewarding career. Join the action team at YORK REAL ESTATE Call Mr. Foley at. 47441343 LICENSE SALESMAN—to sol st area. 332-0055. 1 BEDROOM, NO children Ref. Heat furnished, a a P.m. 130 Seminole. Apt. 1. LOTS - WANTED IN PONTIAC 1 BEDROOM, AIR ' nediate dosing. REAL VALUE MMUMM kLTY, 442-4220. only, • 002I spot Cash call UL 2-2877.__________ bOM, SECURITY Deposit, i uent Houses, Famished EVE- j liiTdiHB Senrkes-Snpnlies 13 call 'now: hagstro —.-,55---------------------REALTOR, OR 4-0358 RESIDENTIAL DESIGN SERVICE! NINGS FE 4-7005. S°w»;E!j™ not exceeding 2500,sq.j TRANSFEREE -r Lookh ft. 332-3743. ___________ house In the Ptfntiec i 15 furnished or unfurnlslSd/MS-IWI. * [3 BEDROOM NEAR PONTIAC, until ie from 2Vk to 140 STYLIST Experienced hair stylist must be capable, of all phases of MiM dressing, Including hair p Excellent opportunity tor management minded Person with Na-..—----- c(n for interview, Kingsley Inn. 444- Good draw and ..J| Plenty of leads, lots SHELDON REAL ' FULLER 425-5557. 20 min. Pontiac. BusinessjServica^ A VON-t RO Y C AR Pi t over your An Equal Opportuolty Employer. Orion. Contact Dr. WANTED- > j Adult or High School . CARRIER-------- v Downtown Business Section of Contac Mr. Skinner Circulation Dept. THE PONTIAC PRESS WAREHOUSE ~ ! TRANSFERRED? ___Carpeting Inetalled-deened. 17.00o! hau" “* r&aTWSPM«:! p^ede’;<arpa*,n *,i>ck' ______|... (between 2 contracts; as sisoo expertly Installed.' Free Esf.' F'E 4-1 Bown payment on a house. 493- roe, have 4 ROOM NEWLY decorated, coui will like and small child only. 4244437. Coll my 4 room APARTMENT upstarls, r —X— | , and dep. required. eh-4146. $109 PER MONTH WALTON PARK MANOR ROOMS, gas hoat, a 4747 Mapie»'ew m GnSfr Rd. t TWO BEDROOM LAKE FRONT, | breeieway, ami gara^a, ^spotless. ROYER 4749. School of tho o................ .... Classes .start soon. For a career real estate call Mr. Davison In ' -Oxford office - or Mr. wart 18 „ •stale. Training both-—------------" WE WOULD LIKE I ^ Thts^^mp’r “J ■ l^r^f^iWAtyED; GARDENING, trimming,1, The opportunity t°^ »PHnd a few call 33S»S171. mation ; 1-BEDROOM, SMALL I ■ Moving ond Trucking_____22 j LIGHT HAULING. Cali, inytlim Need 4 aggressive sales people ... our staff. Licensed salespeople preferred, but will train. Classes IVAN W. SCHRAM, Rei FE 5-9471 - REAL ESTATE SALESMEN— Painting and Decorating 23 Salary or drawing _____________ available. Commensurate on ablll-ty, PENN. LI 8-1900. convenience, if you art having a problem with sale of your prop-' -erty or propurttut -= not only, do '—s of all d—- CUSTOM INTERIOR PAINTING EXPERT PAINTING, FIRST CLASS painting, I .......... .at wo also provide the typo financing that fills your needs or wo will pay cash for your ’ If this bo your desire. Don't I | r-st _______jir* ■ to you - , -..at of the i______ solL the accural* ap- ._____ ..uro, polnfs, lit'-------* rates. Me, Don't dolay — ci AMERICAN HERITAGE APARTMENTS and 2 bedroom, all convenlenc sway 8. Baldwin. 474-1445, only. 473-3148. And The New Sheraton fr I- a n d -bedroom, apts., balcony, swimming pool, carpeting, heat, hot water Included In Rent. Air cond. Sorry no children or pets. FE 4-8900. .3-BEDROOM BRICK ranch, full basement, drapes and carpMli«: fenced yard, 2'^i-car garage. 8400 sacurlty pap. and good ref. required. Close to shopping anq schools. 8185 a month. Wolorford G & G DECORATORS LADIES DESIRE INTERIOR palnt-, ., ,h. Inq near Waterford area. Fret n North oEtSZi' estimates. OR 3-8304 or OR 3-2854. Co. Complete broker assistance I PAINTING INTERIOR, EXTERIOR | given sifts personnel reoardlnal Reas, rates. PE 8-3531, Free eel. | WANTED . LISTINGS: Tistino* nr *4l§8. All '>M*Ihh rinn* n'k ikiMiaiu auu n • a U u i u j*>~ I clients for income ir office Including FHA and Gl ' Don't feel left out as, — loin • firm whore ruu become part of a group of I dedicated man and woman. Call, the broker for your PAINTING AND PAPERING, residential and commj------- •praying, Orvtl Gldcumb | COLONIAL VILLAGE - 1----Now -renting I bedroom apts. OPEN: 1 Mil dark DAILY Closed Fridays. On Scoff Lake Road, 1 mile Off Dixie Highway ■ ■ ■ 473-844* DELUXE 1 BEDROOM ial ' ' 3880 DIXIE HIGHWAY i apartment with swlmmlna 423-MOO REALTOR Opan 8-8 Dally Couples only. Lease. 424-3833, Office Open Sunday 1-5 DRAYTON AREA, 5 spacious i Including stove, drapes, carpeting and YOU __ ..._ MARCH .. Times Realty j 3 BEDROOM .HOUSE ORF Commerce Lake. $145 per month. Partially furnlshad. Until Juna I, 1870. 1085 Rldgemont. Cell LA 4-5753 after 5:30, cr" MU I collect Detroit. 40 NORTH TASMANIA Income and single homes. We will be glad to1 BW.— vour property, if-you »r* thinking of selling, call usl^' pets, 845 a weak, 3100 si deposit, apply 482-8024. __ EMBASSY WEST itlliflas — ' a Dir ir ic a>e| 6/J-U4yo. . _ . - _ _ auaaiuw i^^^MQHNSON' S? •*- HIGHEST PRICES PAIO FOR good , __J .. NEW t , Vicinity-- Mall. •■MRF, phis utilities. Security deposit and rM. required. OR 3-2434. ~ COMMERCE TWP. AREA. Times Realty HIGHWAY kEAIYoBT WHEN YOU SEEK OUR SERVICE YOU "JOIN THE MARCH TO TIMES** E 1704 S. Teltgipfi HIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR good furnlturo and appliances# Or '*~~A have you? B & B AUCTION I Apartments, Furnished 5008 DIxftHwy. OR 3-2717 ----—' T WANTED—DCBpiiteBraTDPa ’■EFFICIENCY ON 1651 Playsted, i available, will I FE 4-2533 " 37 cipt childrer _ ____ rant, tag, dip, ragulrad .288-4543. flrepiace! FREE RENTAL SERVICE tor sir ' coh-l landlords, good tenants welting, ,1r. tor! Art DenlelsTtSlty, 405-1347. 30 Pontiac, 12* OR 14' DUMPING FLAT bed, FE 1 rled couple only. UL 2-1105. This Is your opportunity to gM In 5 or UL 12513 on tho grouiw floor. GMC Real -ir*4” or uL ”1* 1 r g a SMALL 1 BEDROOM iHopt^SOxtOO lot In Wt'--*— ' wk. bIus utlllflas. Estate have openings tor 3, will COPPER, BRASS, RADIATORS,1 troln beginners. Terrific pay plan,! end generators. C. Dlx- . hospitalization, monthly bonuses, >0", OR 3-5141. I UUt’' “— *'— —Hi WAftThb: SMALL commercial meat grinder, used. 343-3401. 1 draw to qualify. Call Mr. NURSE AIDES Pontli 8240, Mthy Fisher, Personnel, 332-8157. | 3 LIGHT FACTORY positions, 3 332-8117. Associato* SIDING ALUM.'VINYL AND ASBESTOS AWNING-PATIOS 3CRECNCD-IN OR >L \SS ENCLOSED EAVES TR0UGHING Continued Saamlass nvastrnighlng. Wa Bring Factory to YW FAST SERVICE - QUALITY WORK - TERMS - CALL NOW - DAY O R NIGHT—481-2500—TERMS DEALER—ASK FOR BOB OR RBD Antenna Strvke eiRCHETT a SON ANTENNA Sarv-Ica. Also repair. 338-3274. WINTfeRIZE—REPAIR AND INSTALLATION ALL WORK GUARANTIED - WINTERIZE NOW -CALL 152-5221 311 ROOM WITH _______________ bath, mam floor. M Clara.____________1 BEDROOM, PRIVATE BATH, utilities. Reference and Dep. re-| qulred. Call between 5-4 4MS,., ; ATTENTION INVESTORS — Need 11-BEDROOM, 2 available, 1 child end money for compIMton of a 121 welcome. FE 1-4504. i family apartment house now under ; . AP-e 'aarikki—Sbiua-tb--------1 .conMrucftm- 441-1428. , _ j wMklng dJMence' B WALTON SQUARE APARTMENTS 1675 Perry Rd. North HOURS 12-7 WILL LEASE YEAR AROUND laka front, 3-bedroom brick ranch, 2 baths, baseboard—liW8f,'paTtly“ furnlshad, garage, $200. Raft, required. LI 1-7543 or write Pontiac Fran Box C-12. ’ - «*-|FE 8-1606 373-1400 Rent Rooms v 42 P-R-E-V-l-E-W■ " l-Huron, private an or petit “ I. 3M-d744. - i’to downtown or jt. 1 1 mind a llttla dust,! Impact iplatad. ;r482-780f." CEMENT WORK -THAT' axcelled by Bort Con CEMENT WORK. DRIVE! patios,!A-1 MERION BLUE sod. layed and porches, etc. Licensed and bonded.! delivered. Complete landscaping. Phone Pontiac, 381-3814._| Fret set, 442-7187 I CHIMNEY, REPAIR, Smell masonry A-1 f COMPLETE LANOSCAPTni BMrTjaDBBBktr"*.’.'......... ! Lendscaplng. 373-0444. ___ I A-l MERION BLUE job, CEMENT AND BLOClTwbRlOril p,r d,IM esllmele, 481-40M. 1 COMMERCIAL, INDUSTRIAL i residential brick and cement wc GUINN'S CONST. CO. 381-3471 DRIVEWAYS, sTDEWALKS, mini floors, patios, plolfi Ml M —wal Cament Contri 1-A LAWN CLAY r^p|l ag&aaraijS *" d"‘?d" J. H. Walfmoti'GRAVEL, ALL WWW,' AUTO PAINT COLOR I I for ma|or company-tftl lo^'ton,. salary ooan.,,. CLEAN, COMFORTABLE ROOM for —■-'-leagtd gantlaman. FE 24878 3 PM. ,, (TERPORD VILLAGE, llaao-.... room, no drinkers, ref. ex, changed, 423-0484. x J ijrr dellyery. Phone 44^7S27■ Ing lady, neoi . entrance, no ( W^Bd^toRBIIt___________32 » TOul. ■ R.L ";-nd"'3.c. I r^t^nic^^^inr*^ __________________________ 2 BOYS (5-4) AND FATHER ne»d J ROOMS. PRIVATE bath, working!Y?ultvmcomollS A Young Lady Over 40 room bo.ro. c.n 334-3710. M °c foupto. 192 w^mpton. * | gjjg,,,*rndaH;& fe0l7. qa TO S7 20A to train tor oersonnel COUPLE WITH 2 chlldran desire 2 1 AND 3 ROOM apartments, no: design and you WT'1- Interviewer ,0posmon. ,°AUsPerHardy Pr 3 bedroom partly furnished -PEl!Pr«_n. caH after 3 p.m., 335-8804. of your apartrr 481-1100. I homo, Troy or Rochoeler arts. 451- % ROOM AND BATH, kitchenette,' moving In. Th — 1 -----" " ------em.'iiatnr 3378-______ utllltlos furnished, garage and throughout, plus — ... RAMILyT6f-3 lookino for house in washing facilities, ref. and deposiuhot water are Included ln_your ran Suburban pont|ac lorfl™ a momh^sael Middle-aged person. 425-2321. , ^OCCUPANCY FROM LATE SEP1 :E"PAID _4854-____*___ 2 ROOMS AND both, Utifltles paid, ,u,tu tnniuum sv I "______447-8880 LARGE FAMILY BTffSTh II L3‘ 453 Orehard Lk. WITH APPLIANCES BY This onaj, tor yen,11 .^hthouje^r largo homo In coun- ^KWairT^- ..TllmrJ FRIGIDAIRg ________1 NICE LAKiPggYrgi7pgtp f. VALLEY PLACE APTS. ' ' Rochester i LOVELY ROOM tor Hr Thick gorpetlni I_______^are'IncludttHn SXf rJm! " ♦ OCCUPANCY PROM LATB StPT. LARGE CLEAN_ ROOM Call Jim ' ami 8w .BOOK - -- ________MIDDLE-AGE COUPL.it nice"cleiin i, 334-2471, Smiling i house, Drayton orta, good raf. 743-I 7417, collect. furnished, 832.50 E E P E Conscientious THE RESOURCE1 CENTER, Dm, jl^ctoan COMPLETE LANDSCAPING e Tank Sarvica 354-3481 APARTMENT, i tAI!?5CAp'N®' repa,r* an,‘ EXECUTIVE SECRETARY lor no suburban architect, unusual 1 portunlty, 1 girt gfflca, S day*. adams 4. adams | * Sham Living Quarters 1 WOMAN TO SHARE homa teen-age girl and mother, I welcome, 332-S418. . BEDROOM floor, private *t_......... •moll children or pets. 140 pa plus dap. call between’ S p.m » 10 p-m. FE 2-4248. , 2 ROOMS AND BATH, turn, h rag. 48 Florence, 473-8831. « 2 8. 3 ROOMS, PRIVATE ent 2 bedroom, 2 bathe S1U OPEN EVERY DAY CALLi 651-4200 * It 18-25. I I, Call 81 ROOMS tor 2 retired 01 MASON, BRICK, STONE, A. JAY ASPHALT DRIVEWAY SPECIALISTS, FREB1 PATIOS7 DRIVES. G ESTIMATEfc PE 4488G ■ — AADC0 ASPHALT ______ _________ _______GES. SLAB! 40 cants Sq. ff. FE 4-2874, POUftBO FOUNDATIONS' Spraying Service DALBY 8. SONS TREE SERVICE UNIQUE LANDSCAPE ( complete landscaping, treatments. 338-3304. NOW ELM SPRAY, 373-4470. Free estimation ASPHALT' biitflUNT, paving, I cap,!ret aattmatoe. FEWiaTi ASPHALT CURBING 1 Driveways, parking loti. A. G. Koslbo Construction 4194FH - , ASPHALT rARN^NG LOtS ___________ roodwayie »am* location slnca Itao, alto tailing aiphalt ft* •aalar. Ann Arbor Construction Co DOMINO CONST. CO. 674-3955 Pontiac Asphalt, Paving Residential contractor' 473P411. Ke'LIABLI ASPHALT Contrecfora. Frag eelbiiaiai. .— — “ patching and saal ... parking tote. 333-1214 or 33M733. DOZERS, BACKHOB, LOADER - Soles & Rentals Used Bobcat Loaders Burton Equipment Co. n Rd. lit* LAWN SPRAYING, fertilizers, end weed killers. Call tor fraa estimates. 425-4018, 474-4448, ant; rec. C fH Spraying. I !» WHITES CUSTOM lawn cutting,! -■ tortlllxlng, lawn gpraylng ■'“n up. Phone 482-5457 or TALBOTT LUMBER is sirvlca, wood or alumlr ding and Hard war# suppllaa )akland _______________FE 4^593 © Meviai, Sterage A-A MOVING .....H or 739-5600 A - OWENS CORNING Suspandad calling William Lannofi - 4&2193. EXECUTIVE TRAINEE S6.500 FEE PAID EX-SERVICE MAN S500—FEE PAID 1 TO 50 Pontiac Press Want Ads For Action SLEEPING ROOMS . LARGE ROOMS 4. BATH, -ARPETED, attractively decorated, no cnlldron or pots, 3lX »>tek. 788 t. Woodward- r^«?„wr woo< 7842. J AND decorated, ROOMS# I B 'V L Y JUST CALL 334-4981 1 OR 2 GENTLEMEN, lovely room, oood^food,.mtSST NICE CLEAN ROOM, homo cooked tree Trimming Strvice GENERAL OFFICE S525 AND UP Avarago typings, tome bgokka PROPERTIES, AND LAND CON- t TRACT. I dt------ --- ____________ 1-WARREN STOUT. Rtoltor .1 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. 373-1111! 832.50 pgr wggk. FE 4-1892, 40 ■ Urgently mad tor Immadlato salai , Douglas Street. , , t—------ ojH'jJjf, _____ 2~R(xwjw; PRIVATE >ATH. uppar. Apartments, Unfurnished 31 Anarfments, UnfbrnlshEd 31 1 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVIC» *" '* I. 335-1678. Working . 1 or 2’ 3 utilities turn. 225 Voorhols. W . Deposit end references. BILL'S TREE TRIMMING AND OAKLAND TRIMMING SERVICE Tree Trlmlng and Ramoval Fully InsuratLFree estimates ________424-4485, Walled Lake TREE CUTTING, FREE, animate, APPRAISALS FREE GUARANTEED SALE 30 DAY LISTING drewas. <M4W7. A * accounts desired. 451-9077. ALL TYPES ALTERATIONS - pick " - _____up — ddllvary. 47X194. „ SWAMPED TO THE GUNWALE ALTERATIONS, ALL TYPES, KNIT evar the boat? For complotol dresses, laathar coats. 482-8533. rtflnlihlna wood or fiberglass, call «. • * a 451-oopi. Limited storaga, pick-up ACADEMY OP DRIVER TRAINING DrywaH ‘ SMITH MOVING CD- Your r “ specialWi. FI 4-4844. lowing Serv WEED MOWING '-fa and acreage, i iano Tuning reasonablt. PE 4-1353. ’ At light HAULING am | FE 5-4224 iLl.LIOHT Hi LIGHT H---------- FE 80382. LIGHT HAULING il reasonable' rates'.w^ Adams & Adams 447-IM0 PURCHASING AGENT 37400 National manufacturer will train young man with tome collage. Call: INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 01-1100 1010 W. Huron Salts Representative $7,200-Fee Paid Represent national corporation will train. Co. cor plus bonus Call: INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL - 481-1 }00 1080 W. Huron SECRETARY: Top t LAUINGER jS a ennm pa mem parKINQ . Bath, and entrance, sound proof, must sat to appreciate, 1 child welcome. 444 Auburn Ave. 332-4858. 3 ROOMS, ADULTS, DAY wgrkar,! no pgti,.no drinkers. 401 N. Pad-' deckT LOVELY ROOMS mid batfiu utilities and garaoa, lots of destti, northslda, No children or pats. 2 I ground. Prefer older cou-. par weak, tiog dap. FE 2-1 1 DAY CASH FOR YOUR HOUSE OR LOT NO CQST TO SELL PAST FRIENDLY SERVICE Aaron Mtg. & Invest. Co. 3321144 < ' CASH FOR YOUR I---- 1 LARGE ROOMS w . no drlnkgre. FE 5-5102.' RIDGEMONT TOWNHOUSE APARTMENTS * One, Two and Three Bedrooms * Roper Gas Ranges * HotpointRefrigerators * Carpet .and Drapes * Swiming Pool and Pool House * All Utilities Except Electric * Air-Conditioning by Hotpoint dTi.1 B%8?Lfi!hja R«0MP?rSDTUURUT"B0"uTs,,ERV.C. |3 OTjgjhTHIR1*' - ...It ookton chancel aD around ddiam be a I tv 3 S!?.A good skin it all you naadl 8590, BRIAN REALTY JMSA-TO. Call Ann Morris. 334-2471# Snwlllng - “ ------- i. FB »009i ..^N0,w,^SEMENT3 ^ANOfAVY^pckTOg Shipping—Receiving $6,000-Will Train Porion tor thli opening mut BRIAN REALTY Wa Sold Your Neighbor's Hu.. Multiple UetlM service Weekdays 'fll 8 Sunday PIxIoHwy, pricinrciif ail enr Imm 1 way only and that le flip correct way. John Vaorhees, Bldre. Inc 7170 Dlxla Hwy. Clarktlon W 425-2474 ^ ** CmHitry _ ■termers, .perelwe, jjtrt •ijon 1J ^trerar. r rarsrp M & S GUTTER CO. ~ LICENSED-BONDED Electrical Services mmimii Ak.. work el ■onable prices. 312-5490 ate? >. _________________ S7i PAINTING GUARANTEED. Prig i rji’i . Dave LOO, 134-2471, NTINO AND Klrlng-Sarvlco^ dPSdN . .1 , J GEORGE FRERICKS interior and exterior painting, relwnwll, Free attlmatas, work ~ ^«3-57^3. V,t' W- CaM •LITY WORK ASSURED, Paint-it Paparmei wall Washing; kPRAY PAINTING ............ __________________ SfiUSSi This is the n TRASH, MOVING, CLEANUP. ■tttr 3:30 P.m. FE 4-8224. TRA3II HAULINO, FE 4-181 Traek Rental Trucks to Rent arty. Call us tor UrT < 3 ROOMS. PRIVATE BNTRaHCE. parking, bath, prlYMB patio, Biiny turn., muet sa# to appreciate, 1 child ^welcoma.^r— - 3 ROOM AND BATH,~t7| S35 wk, 381-1858. r 3 ROOMS AND BATH, 837.50 pgr "*S dtp., 1 child welcome. Between East Boulevard-and Madison—2 blocks from main gate of Pontiac "Motors. 957 N. Perry St. Phont 332-3322 Apartments, Unfurnished 3S Apartments, Unfurnished 38 ' SECRETARIES $450 TO $550 m, shorthand It wpm. these qualifications, l positions available “ -“l.fia Pifi. ’ERSONT SSTtSSErMi? IxcuvuHag A-l BULLDOZING. Finish Grading, Bickhoe. Besemanls, 474-2438. FI 8-1201, ■ ieubI Semi Trailers Pontloc Form ond— Industrial Tractor Co 825 WOODWARD . t M441 , FP 41 ___Open dally Including Si If you wa hat Vniernational’personnel 480 S. Woodward, B'ham., 442-S248 TRAINEE: Driver. W and grab Ihft enal i__ . Move quick I Laam fasti 88,100. ami enaitingL,a' 3n*»|tte | ■ NTS -your credit L rental If strait pairing, air 'conditioned,' si! 8548, no calls attar 8 p.m, 3 ROOMS, PRIVATE BATH and « Bloomfield Manor West Divorce—Foreclosure? I ___________________ eel ‘Z*®3'* Leulnetr 473-218* •» COUPLE~wiYH 8L0Q0 dawn dastras BULLbOZING, BACKHOE work, - BULLDOZING TRUCKING, rei a raliabia, frag gitlmafas. 473-1)48. ;-agftrpet <*i>1|l! 1-A PLASTERING. NEW WORK patch lng,Trea igflmitfH. 343-5407 'ffirnwr*' aH W,K"' H> Plumbing 8 Heating CONDRA PLUMBING A HEATING Sewer, wettr lines - Ft M443. ■ LUMBINO A HEX De It, itt&n. Restauront* I, BIO BOY ORIVE-IN DIXIE . AT 6 Silver Lake ■■ Talaareeh at Huron ACTN0WI rtiuphoittgred. 335-1700, 'iri# "estl- mafts. Evas, and Sat. 425-4545. * , UPHOLStERlNO BY RlCliAhD -Quality Fabrics and work, pick up ASSI3CIATED TAX ____SCHOOL e . SECRETARIAL INCOME TAXES MICHIGAN KH““ | " * Huron It, I. ROOMS AND ..BATH. C welcome, $37.50 pgr walk, \ dep,, htqulre at 2n Baldwin A Pontiac, Can 3r jjU nbOMS AND 17 Baldwin, . ROOMS AND BATH, utilltlwa ... turnlelied. 373-1242. Waterford 4 ROOMS AND BATH, 1 ELDERLY COUPLE NElbS home 4" 137JO par w a af 273 BtN t, Mol! IN A QUIET RESIDENTIAL AREA 2 BEDROOM APARTMENTS FROM. $180.00 MONTH MANY QUALITY FEATURES FOUND IN $50,000 TjOMES Sot., Sun. 1 to 7 P. M. Daily 8=30 to 8:30 P.M. Officet UN 4-7405 BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS, Wills cleared. Rue. Sa"’---- eoarentea!'iMuradT P E 2- . Work Wonted Mole^____ a* A-1 CARPENTER WORK AT A FAIR PRICII mil *—“7 looms, kitchen AXES .Will pay all cash. Agent, 481-0374.1 stove. 3140 glut sac. dep,. unilttes. » ”a3» I Will Buy YouV House | A-1 CHAIN LINK tonee, Install*) or repaired, one wpek eervlce, 'tree ejTlBWfrWGtol. WATER SOFTENER problemf Por —tic* only call Warren Softener sir. 4734782 or 3M-I445. Floor Imdinf ROBERT PRICE Roofing, hot J 80 otliingMt, 1 it JOHN TAYLOR. Plggr tending - .......... - WELL DRILLINO, wall I CASH NOW MOVE LATER • Miller Bros. Realty 53W W. Huron --- 333-7156 ___ . repairs. 884404. CARPENTER WORK, ROUGH hgjrehffi*rewlrff calMritiT'' COMPLETE DRYWALL WOAk, new or remgdil, JO years experience, work guaranteed, reasonable ram. can 3M4218 mm-un. HOUSE PAINTItio, Inside and out, f 1 experienced, call Solomon Pitt- 1 man, 373-9424. flAjfeVlcKlP T*uai!. wlH cWan attics, baaemant,- 1— I 473-1475.________ LIGHT HAULINO. hi town work. 483-TOM. SlW^PLOWiNG, conlreetTwantSi: Want Ads For Afction IMMEDIATE CASH For homes in Oakland County, no polnte, no commission, stay up to 3 34 hour*. YORK lilt,______ Are YOU Looking for a lovtl, .... carpeted Immtculalo, quiet, treflv mated . aparlmtnt with washing facilities and parking, utilities fumlthed and raaseneblef We Are • Swimming Pod! • Carpeting-Drapes • Hotpoint Oven Range -•Hotpoint ' Refrigerator • Dishwasher • Disposal • Heat . • Full Dining Room • Air Conditioned Apartments, Unfurnished 38 Apartments, Unfarnhhod 31 1* to llv* In mis aj parsons th. HOME IN OAKLAND COUNTY. CALL AGENT, LOVELAW LISTINGS WANTED Leona Loveland, Reoltor ' 2100 Call Like Rd. ....< 482-1255— — -- OR 4-0343 BEDROOM AND KITCHEN apart- ■■■ . T.2. AND 3 4734B47 Of OR 3-1114, l^LLjiMlTMlNT^b^ Single man. Phone FE 4-M41. .TWO ROOMS ANbn<rfCHKNBTT¥. Beverly Manor Convalescent. Center 532 Orchard Lake Rd. ounces! immediate Openings Far Focd Service Aides iiood Working Conditions — Steady Employment Apply in Person An Equal Opportunity Employer D—« THE PONTIAC FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19. For Wont Ads Dial 334-4981 Rent Stores I COMMERCIAL STORE 1 Orion. On# b MOO* sq. 19 Highland Road, lT'xSr, $100 pi no. naat tarnished. <73-<730. 44 Sale Nooses _____ ^$100 MOVES IN YOUR CHOICE OF 3 ON EAST SIDE OF PONTIAC 3 bedroom bungalow, with formal lings. Lake 49jSrto Howes 49 Sdlo Hotfti Rf’Silo Houses 49!Sale Houses 49 Sale Houses ivan w. £23ptet!!Xi thiTstor" i full basemtnt, ce, $12,500 P-63. proximately 1000 sq. If. at Service Rot Office Space, APPROXIMATELY 77}. I OLOOMFlfLO HILLS RAY IS**?’ UM?Ml!?fSir*!>ieu !oe?.tion- call RAY TODAYI _ “■ $1600 DOWNTOWN PONTIAC So. Ft. Offict econd floor with elevator . water furnished. $150 m BRAND NEW large utility r lots. VACANT# house and garage lust painted on the outside, City water, new septic field. FHA approved# $16,500, zero down. CALL 601-0971 GMC EXTRA NICE { A sharp 3-bedroom home with natural fireplace# formal dlAIs 674-4101 room attached gar— — : lot In Weferfon , sprinkling system# . can be purchased on eriA verms. tr.nch.,;; Miller Bros." Realty 333-7156 or 333-7245 SCHRAM I N0RTHSIDE i tO rooms, 3 apartment Income, i Completely furnished. Recreation room In bastmant. 2 car garage. | ' gas forced air heat, on a 75k 1M It. j to*. C0II tar more particulars. carpeted, garage, 85 ft. landscaped j- RENTING a1,98l»gL-' S from OPEN $140 MO IVAN W. SCHRAM LIST WITH SCHRAM AND CALL THE VAN Dir.: Drive west c M-59, turn 3 bedrex VON tinum sided ranch. Remodeled. KING-PHIPPS north on Williams Lit. Rd. 3; I bedroom ranch, large family room, 1*9471! tall basement, SU,9fO. MLS BEAUTY CRAFT HOMES 674-42211 1 NO QUALIFYING [ beach, carpets and big kitchen MAINTENANCE FREE MOVE IN EAST family room. Gas r ranch with a itir# second floor K- - YOUNG.BILT HOMK REALLY MEANS BETTER BILT ELIZABETH ____________ Russell Young, Bldg. cozy 2 bedroom, lot a 334-3830—53Vs W._Huroh SI. 1 city water, basement, with- ^‘tariff attractive's bedroom "home with tor SI 35 a so ft ci,y wa,«r and garage,.located lust ■ ,q "■ a few blocks from n Waterford Mott - with right party, after i - - - - acres. Large i NEW TRI-LEVEL HOME, al modern kitchen, H7 baths, gat bedroom, 90x100' lot, 3 to 5000 baseboard heat, 55;x50' garage | down on land contract. 394-0025. and 20 x30 born. All this and-------------------------------------- more at only $24,500. “FHA TERMS on lhls neat and clean ^-bedroom horn* fln^ Orion. Commerce and 7-i P.M ■ Nyman, 353-9315. After 6 P.M. call <02-9072 -----Annett Inc. Realtors 28 E. Huron St. 338-0466 only $125 f „ th 52,500 ELIZABETH-LAKE---FRONT____5— _J. Payments bedrooms, 3V4 baths, 2 complete s plus taxes.; kitchens, lake level family room, 1 —rpetlng, drapes, 2VY car garage electric doors, work shop. FURNISHED. APPROXIMATELY 400 sq. ft., 2 restrooms. Heat *—nlshed. Ample part 935 Orchard Lake, Owner.' 334-4227 or 335-2506. AT TTVM Kips ELY; /\ \ / I 1 l\ I polntmant cal ijn? -LX. V \JL\ ' ^filing NJn' ,ph->: Featuring 4 landscaped, shown by i KELLER OPEN SUNDAY . .. Waterford# Cambrook Lana on " , Dixit to N. Rainbow Lana. AL PAULY U <73-3300___EVES. <73 92721 OPEN 2 MODELS VON REALTY ® 3401 W. Huroi ____<82-5000__ Marotta BROKER Soto Hootbb OPEN i SYLVAN SHORES : > P.M. - Beautiful rlvlleges — — "fti car garage-iher — garbage disposal. uai woodbine off Voorhals Rd. — Land contract farms. GIROUX REAL ESTATE 5338 HIGHLANOhRD. . 673-0200 • TUCKER CLARK DOHSLSON PARK autlfully ca r attached upboards. carpeted irge kitchen with •II rooms ere P except kitchen# 2 room, beautiful shaded let, fenced Ploy arta, near school, ttaras and golf court#, this contemporary redwood ranch hat attached car port and la located on a large landscaped "DRAYTOIjf PLAINS" ig 4 bedrooms, IVY ditioned. Can remodel to *-----1. Phone <73-1000. SINGLE. OFFICES, 4540 Dixie. $35 end up. OR 3.1355. Rent Business Property 47-A S: CUSTOM COLONIAL lull 3 bedrooms, IVY baths, GE range and dishwasher. 2 c. I jjj inched garage, lull finished 17x11 ft Zoned lot 100x300', .... H kitchen, family size dining excellent location Mr fruck-landscaping, etc. business.: last long at $19,900 with; Choose from Ran Colonial designs. I MM E D I AT E OC- ai is Mtte. All improvement, paved road, ample off street parking < second story can be converted Info: _ "ddfllonal offices. <09-0470. 40' x 10* CORNER STORE~ln small shopping center, northern Pontiac Available approximately Nov. 15, Existing tenant building.' larger store In seme center. 547-0133, ask lor Don or your broker. —CLARKSTONAREA .........Jlno available 627-2825# 60 CUPANCY. HOMES BY WEINBERGER 1530 CROOKS RD. OL 1*0222 AUBURN HEIGHTS .J 4 bedroom brick on 75x159 fen bedrooms 2VY car garage, lots ot n- trees, a must to sell. P-76, t C*Lk**Y TODAY B74-4I01 EXECUTIVE HOME 3097 W. Huron St^'Ml-lOM or <f3-0792l Sharp 3-bedroom 70 x 2* brick LIKE h“M* j| Novl^ with naw carpeting alumii Open Daily 5-7 except Fri. Sat. and Sun. 2-6 ESTATE ztary, part — overlooking lake. 111,100. LOTS OF SMALl~ ACREAGE” PLOTS with or without homes, or win build to suit, give us a CALL , ‘ MILLS For All Your Real Estate Needs! NEED 4 BEDROOMS? ] New bi-level, IVY baths, formica! kitchen with eating■ space, 2 car attached garage, good residential:EAST SIDE erne. Wolverine Ik. privllesies, LARGE TWO-STORY - 3 bedroom family home, living and dining —room, full—bastmant#—nlca—lofc ----------------------------------1. 850 down on tarmi. includes carpeting# owner will Idar trade. CLARK REAL ESTATE 1362 ST. <82-8850 * 30 days# financing KELLER REAL ESTATE IT'S A BEAUTY WATERFORD 2 bedrooms, largt family kitchen# heated front porch# full basement# 2 car garage, landscaping extra nice# Approx $1#200 down FHA. FRANK MAROTTA 8. ASSOC. 3)93 UNION LK. RD. Elizabeth Lk., with • large picture window, viewing entire lake. WaMOMitagfii describe thii well . setting leaf tty— full i—- landscaped— ..... . -jmpletely carpeted, lull beseem, J.’®* *1- "• of living arta. vallablt on new mortgage for s; GAYLORD * throughout. L i with firfcplaci car garage. Baaumui ihu " iot ror 01 h apple trees. LOW# LOW CALL RAY this home because owner----------------- ily $17,850. TODAYI HAVE YOUR OWN LOT? Choose from severe priced from 117,100. OFFERS LAKE FRONT HOMES teral home designs CUSTOM RANCHER, with deluxe l) ' 100. I |ealures Including carpeting, builf- 3 _.. ______ ms In kitchen, pantry, rv> bath*,If 222"! ^Excellent financing available w2'500- wetenord - — 1 at $28,000. FHA's v 0R0S ANDERSON HAYDEN REALTY 363-M04 10735 Highland Rd. (M-59) ‘ I of Oxbow Laka Rlty. <73-1273. WALLED LAKE SCHOOL District.! Beautifully^ landscaped on VY acre,, 2 bedrex 2 bedroom On M-1‘5. modern building _____________ AT ROCHESTER 3040. 353-0770. Michaels Rlty. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION.- DIXIE AND HOLLY Rds.. 30'x70*. 3 bedroom brick ranch, nniy ----antT 20'X40' commertlel bldfls <25- dlshwashser. -luH- base- 2546. v ment# ga* hunt, hnm* *ir mn. tSE~ffjTbyT*0"**7building .aum' M-59. Stgrfe frdnT, overhead lr uI**rl®?elS5P.?V.k.,nB- IN THE COUNTRY - this 3 bedroom brick1 ranch, beautiful family room with fireplace, kitchen, bullt-lns, large braezeyway tachad to e 2VY car garage. $29,1 Office In Rochastei NEW COMMERCIAL BUILDING -- 35 x 60 or 50 x <0, air condlilufied, -------------------------------1 at 2534 unltt, 2 a h. 053-4343. A SALE IS ONLY AS GOOD AS YOUR FINANCING. — selling your home? Let us ^ENTiNe - WE— —ARf~NOW TAKING APPLICATIONS FOR HOMES VILL ACCEPT ALL APPLICATIONS) FROM ANY WORKERS, WIDOWS OR DIVORCEES. PEOPLE WITH C REDIT PROBLEMS AND R E T I R E E S APE OKAY WITH US. OPEN DAILY. AND SAT. AND /" "S "K K /^~N _Va mile Watt of Oxbow Lake GMC OPEN ICE HAKI AND Shorts Sub. "■ * room with fireplace# forr area, caroatlno and ‘ Excellent condition. ........... occupancy. $37,950, $8,500 down. id draperies stay. GMG 296 W. Kannett Rwi» MIsctllanBom 1# Low 3-car GARAGE FOR rent, for! AarOfl Mtg. & IllVSt. CO. storage only. Available Ocf. 1, 22 _____332-1144 REAL VALUE REALTY beautiful 3 bedroom ranch, For Immediate Action Call lease on full basement# 20x40, swimming — - - -id Dixie _P.ool, move In now# 363*6631. Open. SAT., SUN. 1-S P.M. NICE RANCH HOME in ax-~ _cellant. _ -neighborhood_La ke privileges, 3 bedrooms, alum, siding. , DIR.-;—Sor-Commerce—Rdq—to Glengary, West to Los Aboles So. to property. CALL MILLS For All Your Real Estate Needsl Offices In Lake Orion and Lapeer TERMS HIP LAND? YES!! lartlally t to 75 Acre parcels, v 1 rlnwn. IVY Acre. 2 bedroom * WILLIS M.' • BREWER REAL ESTATE __ W4 Rlker Bldg. 2 W. Fll WYMAN LEWIS REALTY----------<93-1333 383-. Auburn__________ 338 8325 . 838,588 .. 518,5881 522.988) . 514.888 .513,888;" 119.8811 2 Acre, 2 bedroom 512.588 18 Acres, 3 bedroom ' 5 3"** LAND CONTRACT TERMS GAYLORD INC. Lake- prior OPEN 9-9 .............b tall Ik.. gas heat, carpeting In living and dining room, araptt, kitchen itova to stay, 1 car garage. SOUTH SIDE 550 DOWN for 3 bedroom ranch home, near Church and schools —auto.,—heat,—alum;—storms ani •wnlngs, nlct yard.- PONTIAC KNOLLS 5500 GOWN- -AYMEMT-For a . bedroom brick ranch home, ful basement, gas heat, carpeting and drapes, large lot. fenced rear yard TUCKER REALTY REALTOR 903 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. 334-1545 LAZENBY Independence Twp. 3 bedroom brick ranch styla home spotless condition. Carpeted kitchen, has a T j car | FE 8-9693 WALLED LAKE PYlVlItgta. Immaculate bungalow, - ram)— *. jjj -BUD'-' BUILDING FOR RENT or lease o Drayton Shop- ’ l cm. the corner Mwy. acre.. . Ring canter. Call OR 3-1262. Florida Propartla» 48-A DELTONA 3 FLORIDA — $10,900 B ' ' TOTAL CASH PRICE ! frfPp. SHL. r,nch bom# with i 5;pj?w,Ktah«"'.MI« bath, acreaned porch, landscaping, city water s ' •ewara. Located In m«de... carefully planned community with outstanding facilities 1 n c I u d I n o ahopglng, c h u r c h a a , recreation fantar . with Tull time director, '"•p!S*LonJrlp ,or duallfled buyer provided hv nwn.r. Call 355-3400. AD67L«10»-S_ Sola Houses 49 BY OWNER 4 bedroom bi-level Near Baldwin 8. 1*75 CALL 391-2522 Y OWNER - ALUMINUM ranch, Including aluminum sel.'-storing, storms and screans# marble sitJs#, large family siza kitchen with bullt-lns. Carpeted throughout# in-, eluding kitchen and bath. Fun! walk-out basement on large c< FE 5-3676 - 642-4220 FARRELL LAND CONTRACT uminum ranch, lass than 2 y< t. 3 bedroom# full basem ke Orion Schools. Just $3 LAKEFR0NT A sparkling 3 bedroom ranch' with attached garage on beautiful Duck, Lake. Safe sandy beach# dock# attractive lot# carpeted living room! with fireplace# family room# ’built-’ Ins In kitchen# Huron Valley School system# the best In suburban living tor lust $26,900 with terms. WARDEN REALTY 3434 W. Huron# Pontiac 682*3920 ___ If no answer call 363*8660 __ L/bedroom *K bMck^ ranch HTSnew carpeting throughout# f, i n I s h e d basement, garage# lake privileges# S27#200. immediate possession, $15,000 down to existing 5 per cent OXFORD - bedroom, 2 story bunt full batha, ail newlv __ formal dining—room,_fully cerpetad, on largo 75' lot, $23,880 P-93. RAY :ALL RAY TODAY <74-41 OPEN WOLVERINE LAKE PRIVILEGES 4-YEAR-OLD, 3-bedroom ranct l’/j-car garage. 526,580. WEST BLOOMFIELD SCHOOLS----------- 4-BEDROOMS. 7-YEAROLD" L story home. 114 aero lot. $29,988.; Land contrdfct.- | FHA—$13,650 TWO-BEDROOMS — Mandon Laka privileges. Immediate occupancy. UPPER STRAITS LAKE PRIVILEGES, 2 vacant lots, 113' x S28‘. HO' x 528' - $7000 . Contract termi. I EAST SIDE , I 3 bedroom home# g Full basement, . aluminum storms < Incoma. Priced (ringing In i it $16#SO0.00 NICH0LIE-HUDS0N Associates, Inc. 1141 W. Huron St, 681-1770 after 6 p.m. FE 2-3370 mortgage-avellfblt. -----Home With Aereoge In Clerkatan are# — baa aluminum ranch, rambling iltuatad on U4 aero lot, Thla home l> only 2 years old and has large rooms throughout; Spacious living room. Country style kitchen, 3 large bedrooms. tVk baths. Also hat full basement. This can be yours on FHA terms. Only 523,400. R0YCE LAZENBY, Realtor _ Open Dally t-9 _ _ 4426 W. Walton - OR #4)301 _ ARRO Available oi '534,000. Independence Twp. 2 BEDROOM BUNGALOW with privies on Woodhull Laka. This home Is In parfact condition and almost completely furnished. Easy forms at 510,708 on land contract. 2-Bedroom Lakefront SITTING ON WOODHULL LAKE will* „«xcelt*nf view—Having carpatlng ln living room, fun basement, 2 car garage, an underground sprinkling system. fYaltab1* «n now mortgago at 520,080. Lake Oakland Shores Dr. BEAUTIFUL 4 BEDROOM COLONIAL in an excellent Jica- -tlon with lako privileges on Laka Oakland. Included with home are: living room, soparafo dining room, bullt-lns In kitchen, tv,_ bams, family room with fireplace, tall passman! with attached garage. Available on land contract forms. Full prlca CROSS ANNETT OFFERS CLOSE TO K-MART --- ^'-bungalow 8nly*W Ill'Sx dormitory lypo room, 14x24 finished In knotty pine on second floor. Full bOMmtnt, gas hiaat. Foncod In back yard. $19,750# COSWAY • STRUBLE Call <74-2029.______ BY OWNER, Rochester area, bedrooms, largo living room, util ty room, kltchon, bath, patio, laro 7 car garage with pavad drlvi brick barbacue. fenced lot " Prlca 517,080. Call attar < p.m. 152- ract. 59,800 down, <73-4505. mant on 3 at n Pontiac Town- BY OWNER, SEMINOLE HILLS, 3 -bedroom brick, 2'A baths, large, llvlno room and fireplace, screen full basement, 2 car brick bese- .......... T( 1 Kitchen racantly remodi pum-ln pvwi and range, r-living room, B37.500. FARRELL REALTY 3405 N. Opdyke Rd. Pontiac P0NTIAC, DRIVE: New 3 373*6552 i bedroom aluminum ranch homo — '-------------------1 on crawl space. Lake Orion . schools. Only $19,900 with $2,000 down onFHA terr" LEACH WILL BUILD 3 bodroom family room tw hath. '____________581-0760 FAMILY HOME 2-car garage, trl-level, only lia.988 YE*R AROUND 3 bedroom, hast- A real nlca brick home. Has tall, on your lot. I m«n(, and shade, will consider basement, 4 largt bedrooms and' modern mobile home at part down third floor could be finished with 3 DIRECTIONS: Highland Road (M-59) p?.y"**nt' on Knd contract. 363- more bedrooms. A large living •a feea».s i a—s _.i mi9. 1 I room with firtolace and a formal! room. Art this convoniont a Crescent Lake Road# right V4U • ranches and colonials as low: is *16,990 plus lot. finance, 3334 Loon Lake Shores. 1 BEDROOM COUNTRY Home, lake BY OWNER, 3 bedroom ranch. Otter Privileges. 112.900, by owner. Im-I Mill sub, family room, den. at-madlefa possession. <<<.2334. tached garage, sub pool, call altar 2-STORY BiiMftAiaw,-tiA..u^-! ____' Storm's bedrooms, carpeting, dining room by owner, 80' Lake Orion iron-1 paved sire and living room redecorated, walking '“90. 3 bedroom, IVj baths, 57.000 5600 moves storage attic, tall basement, enclosed down to existing, a per cent con-porch, garage and price reduced fortract with 590 a month payment; <74-4123 quick idle. P-53. no agents, <93-2850. (AA-59) Ni TODAY_____«±515l BY OWNER. Wgodhuin.aka h HALLMARK sandy beach and docl patio a GIROUX REAL 5338 HIGHLAND_________ <73-7837 <73-0288 QUAD-LEVEL I ONLY 5 YEARS OLD, sparkling brick and alum., has attached Rfraga. beautiful farm kitchen, 3 Ig bedrooms ahd bonus 4 th bedroom, don or dining room, gas Fenced Vr'tot,'nter^h^HlVh/ina FINANCING IS AVAILABLE Rotation area Orta Bopie Lake. M,hL.*nn.dsRd 5925 HIGHLAND RD. (M-59) Bptis of pontT^ 391-3300 HOLLY VILLAGE LovELY^ioso'ttocHESTER'bi-ievei, ROCHESTER NEAR ADAMS RD. '*, --—■——-r— — l dining roor lonlals as low IVAN W. iffiha m«le'lr 1 'SGHRAMlR I ROAD XX Lx lyj, YOU} . This could LAND CONTRACT lencsd bsckVard. tall large lot with live stream across roar — 511,500. Tarmi. MENZIES REAL ESTATE <55-5483_______ It no ans. <35-5013 2 BEDROOM | Ideal for rottring,i It walk-out basement, 1 yog full price only 512,500. foroddon*jan'd conttact^OnlJ'Vs.SlO 0RT0NVILLE LAKE FRONT SMhibaw <7W7'fo tnr V»! Cu»* “ “ charming yo.i sasnapaw. <73-5778 for ap- around 2-hedrnom ranch nn „ir * bgj.nlta.*?11- °Pap Sun- 3 III 5, | sized lot. Good beach and fishing'. BY OWNER: Older homo on largo >4x14 tt —**—•' -—- - wooded lot. With Welkins Lake “ privileges. 3 badror~ I—" convenient kitchen ____ jng numerous extras. I — 579,900. <51-8768._ yyy; MpbBL^PeM^-^^USfbj^^ftl car garage# i mant. $65,ooo. Call 651-1936 aftVr'"5 and bath on ireh. $6,500 STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE I 391-2000 ___. 343.34321 3, 3 AND 4 BEDROOMS, newly mk --------------- —I IVi bath, basement......... •imlly room. <23-4408 slier 5 p. 228'V priced ‘lo"seif,' by owner, ”852- realty, ing. $$#569 1° assurha mortgage. OR 3* HoMvr Ch iu'lnu y’””r •»pv.» ...v 5096. & .....................$34-8204 income apartment Y OWNER# UNO^ontract~335- __Mturni 3939 after 6 p.m. ..... ART DANIELS REALTY# 6653 Highland <M»39). 674-4128._ aXonWrey BLVD. 1 “ m Attractive home with 5 rooms and Nlx. Rta rhooS# gas hot air Turnaca. [ IVAN W. SCHRAM Li$T WITH SCHRAM AND CALL THE VAN 1111 Joslvn__FE 5*9471 realtor .... ~Mty HALL i YOUNG AT HEART Iroom# full base-j a 20'x20' garage 5925 Highland Rd. (M-59) to Frank's Nursery 674-3175 i Wideman ~~AtC0TT SCHOOL AREA 1 Ranch home, step-saving kljchen, with .mole cupboards, dining all, vlng room, 3 bedrooms, ..... .... ONLY 5500 DOWN -FHA TERMS. CALL TODAY, SPACIOUS LOT i ..With 3 bedrooms brick and frame ranch In txpellahi condition. Brick: fireplace In living room 36' rear I porch. 2 cor garage. Underground: 500 gallon fuel tank, fruit trees, pertly fenced yard. Excellent neighbor hood. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION On thie lovely naw 3 bedroom brick end aluminum ranch. Over 1050 square.feel of living. Spec*. Hardwood floors, loads Si closet epic*, ivy baths, thermo-pane windows, tall besomtnt, get heat. 3 car garage, specious lol In nlco uo tree with taho privileges. Close *6 a T*AJ?a shopping, ceil for details. | Realtors 28 E. Huron St. IVY ceramic baths, • Clf to. garage, water l> •ewer. Owner I r a n s f a r r a d . 867,800, farm*. ... After 3 p.m. call _ SUMMER HOURS M 338-0466 5143 Casa-Ellzabeth Road 682-2211 SPECIAL! Southwest large lot. ONLY TERMS. CAI WEST SUBURBAN Side . Like New Model 403 Harvey St. - ] bodn s 3 acros, near I-< u living taom, with „„ one end, nice kitchen w : cupboard, huge br------ iery kind of boi ot. Call and lol ui tell •hel < belh /anting for 5128 per mont Requires substantial down peyme - . “1.' Buy.: thle large _3507. N General ................. Write Pontiac Press Box C-13. 3 BEDROOM HOME, fireplace, hot «------ ...... carpeting, pood location. Call R. i family room. <25-4408 altar 5 p.m. i . — — — .'BACKUS RAY .jjLtar. ____ _ . prlca of 5i7,ooc lecures mortgago tor balonce. KENNETH G. H E M P S T E A I Realtor 185 ELIZABETH LAKE RD. FE 4-8254 POSSESSION ............. bedroom .brick home. Natural fireplace, large dining room, 2 ' '' '“II basamant, and ~ ranch foalurlng large carpeted living room, i» Hied baths, plus *"1 car garage. Large lot. Ottered! only $21,900 with smell down ymonl on fha forms. Call r— landscapi CALL FOR APPOINTMENT. I BE^OO/iTHOME. NEAR "si . ,, ., . call ray today <74-4101 METAMORA-DRYDEN Near Pontiac Northern npta hoiks ....... WIIIB Lovely S-bedroom home within ftp fl RTT-TQTP)P rwlng,. pood Ideation. Call R.i walking distance to schools, large XXXj/lil, 1 XlLOiL/Lj .... ,1; iSCADDAnTrEALTY, <81-31)30. kitchen with built-ins, lanced 3801 HOLLY CORNERS 3 STO^S^n, targe "ARTIALLYI story, full ^wment. ^large { _. ...... I sided ranch with 3 bedrooms,' 1V3 i story farm h balhsL on (jmosf an acre of land. | 30 rolling acr .... .... ------- ...j a large,WILL BUILD—3-bedroom aluminum! I n WlflFMAW DFAITOD 2Va car garage. 828.500 FHA ap- ranch home wjlh full beeemenl, J» u' YYlUcrWAri, REAL I UK . provM. Only52400 down. hardwood floors. Thormo windows l^W^HURON ST. HH5®*1 CHECK THIS OUT with screens, 514,950 on your lol. EVE. CALL Bppner ^vnii biiv th.,. CoM lor moro Information. i BEFORE. YOU BUY — Sharp1 LET'S YBADw ------- "■**“ with 3 bedrooms, finished B *H\LL REALTY/' Realtors ,T.ny ef.r,£’•H?Ch*d 3 7150 Olxle Hwy <»4t16! t. lerae ot. FHA tirmt rt... rt.ti.. ft n — - . 333-OMf; -......beet, Tdfal; cost fo^^move In only 1450, Fail ^ SWEETY PIE wll kept that. I h, gas irago, « right i t. FHA forms, opei MARK BEAL ESTATE COMPANY 11702 s. Talagr^ Dally 9*9 JOHN K. Sat. 9-4 A&G Vol-U-Way Realty and Building Co. FE 4-3531 Lot ut show it to GM Proving Grounds — Alumln REALTY I t RETIREE'S SPECIAL • r-*HgW 1 BEDROOM, possible 2, glassed; In porch, tool Shod, lake.privileges _ . - on 2 lakes. 8KL900 on land con.) Rd. (M-31). 620-2892. i fracf. No elating coat*. : BY dvifNEll 3-BEDROOM house, FLATTLEY REALTY .... _.SUNDAY 2 TO 5 WCOMMERCjRD,----------WWMl ^N 1*^ tSSyffWliSf1 in '•(!! I ....—REALTY — ' —rntfRajSImi «Ln nl!iCnn,lnn,,nd rtdhfiVe'i'i-c?xr-P^d w* ,oW VOUr neighbor's home car e«ra«h siwara ]n, water eff ™ cut ' Multiple Listing Service {.'rsaf. 32W00. W. on Orchard L. Weekdays ‘ttl 9 Sunday90-4 SJlv ,,B, Woodrow Wilson, loft RESTORED, 3 it, 4-5,, bedrooms, 2 barns, 2 small JBY OWNER 5 Mi.. ................. ad; ranch homa, garage and 24x<o as barn near Lapaor, 3425 Imlay City in-1 Rd. CM-2H. <25-2593. I OPEN and Hoanar Rd.. ling coats. CALL 481-8378. Mae pixla Hwy! •6782 2434 Lafey. 4 BEDROOM, 2Vk BATH. COL.i ontal ’/j acre lot, baeuiltui," quiei) subdivision, laka prlvltagea, iv> years old, by owntr, 539.900. 343-i CRESCENT LAKE I REALTOR LKC9LCNI LAKE j,<7 ORCHARD LAKE RD'. radiate possession, 2 bedroom, 334-3593 _ 334-3594 H ““ t,n,X» «43 LANCASHIRE LN. ;JPJi■■ M^fifflr-Now borne, aluminum -sldlng, -3 i'°?£ bedroom, 2 baihs, largo kitchen i lo and: dining, area, utility room, walk I ui eiosai, carpeting, met ist; fha ^UMMInp, low down payments, . SNYDER,-I KINNEY & bBENNETT SH IRWIN •otte 5 assoc. L ¥ f XX 9 Kanch WITH full your tot, 8i5,m. available, Frank Mai.... . 3)93 Union Lk, Rd. Stt-TWI. SYLVAN VILLAGE SEE THE NEW custom "AMERICAN 8" for a growing ai bedrooms, JVY _______, ... ..... services. Air lako prlvIMMt. 1815 Stratford, 843,750. Flnanclnp arranged, alio 1 other Eltoahath houses- Open Sun., 3-5 p.m. CALL kavs AklV TIMF^ M9-MSO. ”y*' HOMI LAND CONTRACT: < room, 3 story frame horn*. Naw bath up. Full baiamant, gai heat, 1 car garaga. Available an Land Contract wlm $2,500 down. — — Evelyn, Cl. near Rd. Wa have the »tlhe;Il. MODEL . STEF-iPP,- . . CELLENT QUAp-LEV [ bedrooms. IVY baths, room, 3 car attached garaga. flnlihtd basamant, has many | extras on th* plus lid*. 100x1# NEAR NORTH PERRY: < room, 3 story tramp pMH Naw bath up. Full basamant, gas haat. 1 car garaga. Avallabla o'Land Contract terms. BUYING OR SELLING CALL TWIN BEACH LAKE FRONT 345 Oakland Avt. Solo Houses 3710 E : Claude McGruder Realtor highly staled throughout, iiwna kitchen, secluded room, 3 natural |——* i living wimTtair- KKS5 3 BEDROOM COLONIAL * *“i‘ baths up. living raon kltchan, dining room; break)* nook, family room 13x34* andoaa second story patio, finished wall out tweamont with garbage dlpoaa Dishwasher, cerpaflng, ale. Ca today. ANDERSON & GILFORD Buildind and Realty pe 5-9444 Attar 5 FM FS 5-4844 13811 Highland ltd. (M-59) 4 BEDROOM BI-LEVKL, naw carpated throughout, family wMhlttajti on’"land eonlrecr or isllng mortgage, w trade. 538,50ft Call <81 ....._, 4 BEDRbOM HOUSE. basemenl/I'Y car garaga, carpated living —“ ' dining raomt and u*“‘ ifiaDl lake and private close to jehMl, K. L. TEMPLETON, Realtor sriiiiM'»rvtc^''i’iLraxr' » -r , _ i New Ranch! xillibn GMC 49Sale Houies PfhGffiR- « privileges, owner, <32- 5 BEDROOM C0L9HIAL, 3 full baths, dining room, carpeting, air conditioned, large kltchan, XHtaaixam, 4*0 baseboard heat, 2 . Car attached garaga, 2 lots. 122,580. FHA. 11750 down. CALL ,811-0370. GMC 15 ROOM COUNTRY ESTATl “—‘“kina landscaped 4, ani I, flowing atrggm, millpond itorfoll, 7 lerf* *-*—*'*** * PERRY PARK SUB edroom neat, newly carpeted drepee Inc. 3 car garage, nice FHA approyed_$l9,500. J5ggta__ ROOM bungelow, ‘100 Sown 8 m • -. lot, FH/ CUt4 3 wiMFIWI land cont <7A4li7. . CLARKSTON SCHOOL Very nice 3 bedroom home Macaday Laka prlvllegas. basrmant, garage, » breezeway. liljn, u/kct cm nuun. —J.._______ '. j tu»iiann,..uiLpajuwin. Big < rooms W< rL^.B«7a qkiin pSJi*1’Lon' NMl 'end tll* bath, spacious kitchen and 5. '“Tl ,n.l!.b»ll,»J.lrta»lacai brick dining room, birch cupboards. For-and slum. 517,900, Gl or FHA, mica counter, shining oak floors, „ ,..... L . gas haat. high and dry full base- nhm£?E Mrnro Hhi.!Si* .e ?*ri■?*:?'' 'nen,• p,en,y «' raeraatlon room - SPSS' •c). tarmsi space. Full prlca ALSO 50 ACRES — I room iihad, Including modern home, barn with water In, tn.soo, 8708 down t all aqulppad for farming, near, J .« Lapeer. 139,900; contract farms. ---- CRESCENT LAKE PRIVILEGES -. with this 4 rooms and bath, tun-porch, nice lot. 815,500, Gl or FHA. 1 Call B. C. HI ITER, REALTOR. • 3792 Ellz. Lake Rd. a2-80lo, after 1 s p.m. 483-4437, IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY , , NO QUALIFYING 1345 Oakland Ava. Open 9-9 p«r , SYLVAN LAKE ISAM WARWICK. - HAS 3 BRB. ROOMs, brrek, ttiiwtainOT services, leke privileged. 1910 Warwick. 121:500. Immediate oc- jra^r&TV ,rm*' CALL Val-U-Woy Realty and Builain^Co. ; FE 4-3531 SCHUETT WATERFORD RANCH 3 bedrooms, dlvldad and t basement, atfachM garage, I privileges on Huntoon Lake. Prj Uhd« 320,000 0A FHA, VA Of I C. SCHUETT EM 3-7188 Wttmorca Ed, uitia FRAME HOlill ONLY higtoighT'this Cash For Your Equity raciOUM noma. Located 3 0 t *p or rr-in ri l ilnutei from downtown Dqtrolt, a I T A f'TsTP1 I "M1 Ixford. 1315 ^ivimipr id. only n Ml #\ r r I y.aoO. wHh laijd cy»ffc> farms. «*- J-TlVlvij 1 1 363-6703 .......... JSaiid and Aeeoclelao, 543-9702. • $10? PER MONTH WALTON PARK MANOR XJJI PR EC EDENTED decoartaa. nk* comer lot. ronnec Northern ar*a. 01,300 to assume NEW 3 BEDROOM Aluminum ranch, present mortgage. , hot water hut, fast occupancy. ' |I500 moves you In, Frank Marotta On this nlca 2-bedroom aluminum k_Aitoe. *“* fj| tided bungalow. Encloseq front ch. Nfet living room. Full as you In, Frank 3195 Union U(. I ^k* ^~ioirphon*?>y»!f offtr/ff^: jjfT. Mf. Off, ElilL-|i^y? ' jyil T*OY, s-BEDROOM brick ranch, vecumh cloanar, many axtrte, 137,900. Assume 544 par cam mortgago or conventional FHA. ClIXWT- OF- than maolPPXIHMI Come, i, 3 and i bedroom . loceied .... TOWN HOUSES ADJACENT TO I-1 Course. Enter ■■nr' pKyP '1*1 WIN. TO Algonquin. jjQHfifTOWW ,JBCTItOiti OPEN] ■ IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY DAILY AND SUNDAY 13 TO I 3 badrpom ranch _____ 12; * " --- ^ “ 133,730 IMLaTciYV - 431*1. Flftti Jtrggt, dwalling south of M2I off MS. NIc* f room of Pom PM._ EXCEPT TMURS. ------- MORI INFORMATION CALL 335-j ROOM HOMl, naw ,choo,‘' *,s® down' Clorkston School Ana VyALTEP'S LAKE PRIVILEGES,] houi*, WlihM f..,,.. __ _________ Cierksli Golf I -fyard, laroa lot 9&350. Back 150 n N. Exton and could JM sold, C-512.' Holloway Rea|ly.^l3-MWB9|, 3I3-734-5540, | 3 bjdriom ranch" TTg "122,730 .. JOSEPH SINGLETON 3 bedroom t-"-*—* **• •» • porch. Nlca living room, Full din- r T ,i , t*x ’ g '~^,Fu" *•«"•"* f"» »■ Nothing Down1 LAUINGER i need it a good credit a steady fob, and you in this modern J located on Best side ment. InciuMt 2 basement, corner lot. For 1572-3455 SYLVAN 351114 ■ TOUCH OF LUXURY! YOU'LL STEP INTO. THIS' HOUSE and know It la Ilia bom* you have always wanted. This' .[^w rwfldwtaBunt grtoi. Iront :n caramtc utiins, anacnao z for garage, walking dfataMd to Valklni Laka with privileges on irlvefo Jake front park. 141,580. HAGSTR0M, REALTOR 4950 W. Huron QB 4-83.H MLS' 1 Affor'5 p.m. FB 4-7oS LAKE FRONT FHA 133.950 already tporali (lying r, garag "GO WIST YOUNG MAN"------------------ ---------’ That's txaetty what the owner did, now ha wonts to Mil Ihli outstanding California contemporary, 3 bedrooms, 3VY bathe, 3 fir*-placat. liY ear garaga, and an a wooded lake front lot. tsa.ooo. DON'T MISS Another lummar on the water, Ortanvllla art* an Laka Leula*, •wa.dK.,1 amminum 3 bedroom ranch with 3 tall --------------“ -'n a lagan ■“-----— a I beech. Jtolng room elegant living room, glaaaad In porch, 3 car gprag* and YOU'RE SURROUNDED id privacy, corner lei 150x150 In fha Clarktton arta, o I. aluminum ranch, 3 bad.raOfnt, fmlih«nMHHiitnf « llrat floor family room, and 3 car attached -garaga. Watkins Laka, priavey and tarmi that can't b* -T-.-y,-. -Oil hOUM on a lot ov#r 180x408, modernized kllch-•patad living torn, tool shad included in th* prlca ef 015,950) t land contract fame. ■ DORRIS & SON REALTOR 2$36 Dixit Hwy. MLS OR 4-0324 Open 9-9 Multiple Listing t< 49 Salt Houses 813-5720 Open 9-9 It WE WILL GUARANTEE THE SALE OF YOUR HOME INVESTII THREE UNI# INCOME: Ex- furniture Included. Lund Can-tract terms, low down pay-JBUBLSPQP RETURN I CALL TODAYI I ' Gil LARGE FAMILY? DELUXE NINE ROOM, four bedroom, >rlck renchet. Over 1800 aq, tt. ef ilvlng area In- ON THE EAST SIDE LAROB well-melntelned older LAKEFRONT COTTAGE: ideal' for weekend or lummar tan. Beautiful laka with terrific view, includes break-wall, barbecue pit, and fenced yard. Taka aver txieting Land Contract. CALL NOWII #81 BARGAIN HUNTERS 1962 TRI-LEVEL In gead can-dltlon, priced it lust 819,980 with Contract fa IMMEDIATE______ POSSESSION FOUft BEDROOM COLONIAL priced at 837,958. Eullt In 1955, •n with built-in,, doorwall to na'lo, and a 3VY car attached parage, a/ct quickly I FIVE NEW MODELS OPEN-SAT, and SUN. 3-d P.M. er by appointment COLONIAL AND MID-LEVEL: Watt Huron at Vaorh*l*.Rd. KEYLON RANCHER «Ad TRI-LBVILi Hiller Rd. *1 Keylon Or, AVON RANCHBN: Avon Rd. |uel u PONTIAC CLARKSTON ROCHESTER UN, LAKE 338-7161 625-2441 651*8518 3634171 For Want Ads Dial 334-4961 THE PONTIAC PKKSS. FRIDA?, SEPTEMBER 19, 1969 Sal* Houses 491 Sale Houses D—7 491 Sale Houses _ ___ _ • ■ - | ___ 49 Sol* Houses 49 Sal* Houses 491 Northern Property Wmm IRWIN BrownlFE 5-8183 [MILLER LIKE HORSES? TW*,!!L!®rJ P*,,«W would nr requirement of a genii rancher. Located lust l mile ® on Teggerdln* Rd„ Clarkiton schools, plus ment, ges heat, 1V, c X||a house could be yea 0. Consider tradln ENJOY LAKE PRIVILEGES Qn Elizabeth Lake with this 3 bedroom home on large lot, 300 tl. deep, near excellent shopping area and schools. Cell lor more Information; COUNTRY LIVING 3 Bedroom home located on ed lot. Beautiful kitchen will "YES, WE TRADE!" !open Saturday. , to 4 sMhJrAUBURN' & SHIRLEY AREA 1 }SSSXllllli MRrafK 7224; Thret bedroom two story older IT'S ftniNft IIP cact $ Bedroom home.- Living |$ dining rooms.!..... ¥VV. I Buirwii UP fAST [2^1 Targe family room. Kltchenf Fulf basement. Gas HA condition. Carpeted living room,! 1 5RverVjh,nfl but the price thet Is, !Lirp!ll!S ^. family, living and din-1 heat. Possession on sale closing. | large kitchen with eating area, tiled our 3-bedroom model. Over M..Jf°™8 ?8 we,l •• Wtt halls. 2 Easy FHA terms available. . bath, family room plus fids-----------1 1000 sq.: ft aluminum Sided, fUll STiSJ? fir?!?i?5?8' ceramic baths, BALDWIN & COIIJMRIA Large lot and ready To gc baserMnt, hardwood floor™.eelM 5!SV1,SL°“',?ac,.?nd anc. & LULUm° A with "0" down on FHA. glass, windows with screens, mar- deludes a nice lot on Maceday AREA / ble sills, ceramic bath end WfcTeltffi® Prlcai •' 232,000.00, wef! to™. h.rt,nnm r.nrh 4 BEDROOMS, WEST of city. Large, price Is still $14,300 on yourlof, ™ I reproduction .costs. Only fflj* r”°r°°J?-',n<:h ...c»r®.».tdd carpeted living room, full besmlS YOU CAN'T beat mf . .d6n#t a34?’00 d®wn. Take Dixie Hwy. to ■ L-l-P buHt-jfi community water, sewer. Large DELAY, CALL TODAY! Cal|/any■^H?®r50nv,1, * **•« l,f* to sign, ap- lot' lull besmf., 2-car garage.' “• — —"**J '' ■ to? pro*. * miles. . " «■ «>"“<* y*rt- C om, to schools and stores,’’fiy.Jso: Oniy >1,000.00 down plus dosing on^FHAJerms^Thjs Is a very 1 AARON BAUGHEY REALTOR Vooms'. i WEST SUBURBAN ranch In ________mpiK off the beaten path and only miles from deer wintering yard. Reserve a place for your camper | forever. >900.00 with only >50 Down I end easy terms. Travers* Bay Realty 1 j ltd E. Front St. | Traverse City, Mich. 1-946-3010 or 1-947^4104 ... IFOR SALE, 40 AC*iS, 46,000 i! trees, flood huntlna. adioinlna 51-Alots-Acreo"* 5 TO_________.......... cash. Sr 3-3762. /E WANT LAND. Platted lots or acraaoe with Inte n# road frontage, irging building high r J mjm MRIinQ m Hi rla L i 674-03241 I Business OppertunltleB 591 Sways ATTENTION, INVESTORS hs2E39 „. f*. eon:| talkies, dlnnette set s 2 I You Can't Miss , GB FURNISHED OLDER CABIN, 16 lies S. of d fishing. Gladwin, a___| IRHP $2100 cash. Cell FE FeT DKCMimnu SUUM, SUUU VESTMENT AND EN* ----|-----_ - end fables. growing I SEE *WPP *" p,ekup *l**p*r' Hw'lomTct *Ro^rt"'sartlebeugh,I M kHvASAKi 250CC, Jusf Ate Commercial Exchange Dept., Me- new, Iw, mileage, S47J Includes Cullough Rhy. 674-2236, | «^e^J0r trade for good used ear. SSikSYSTONE i MILLIMETER movie ■a*. eouioment. $100 or iwm for ten a IAUTIFUL NEIGHBORHOOD grocery In lake eras. Beer and wine license. Plenty of perking. Grocery I wine Cell now for appointment. Uniqu "— West of Pontiac., Shopping Center. -----stlons. 1-JI7- Party ...... 18,500 down. ..........,,,. , partnership or family luipment, Stoo or swap tc. 1 up,qu., recorder. 673-7065._________________■ Pontiac. PICKUP CAMPER StofU torjsSSil *" 1 motorcycle or make otter. UL 3* • qualified selYspeopl's ’for CITY FARM jg* XJWffirBSi'W S closing costs room. In baths, 2 car gareoe f- — excellent suburban area? Call i home! See It today! FURNISHED CABIN In Beaverton I 363-7716, or 674-2913, oft. 3 p.m 1 143-6334. / "-RBIRE'V" une-_ 3L' wf*P-6™und enclosed Iron! Porch and modern kitchen, slluated on approx. 2 acres. H— I—*--and good garden space. iMT!;?,L^^(jAYLORD OFFERS d paymentl s Pointmen 681-1144 >ms. Kitchen. Full basement, carnetad llvlna S HA heat. Garaoe. Possession ."Y!20 . HARRISON—2 bedroom cabin fast1 private lake. My equity * the — ....... ______%..... 3-bedroom home.______________ opm with cozy LOVELY 2 BEDROOM Since 1939 !Tj 2?uie cBfiliS^pffi: ?SSSI!!2h 'wSeT lefge'kitchen with 00^0,^:^^LCedv, financing. *"d "ew ceWnete. Full hwj.1 klthouTe ^lSOI r.VL- worh .mpm, gereoe ...... . ass. my equity o> lose _ ince. of $2500 el >30 per home, 9 m 9 ACRES - n 7Vs ACRES - Scenic land crown ROOFING DONE FOR CASH- ----— i ooything of volu*. 624-1329 wond. ,r*^h It jfifatid. Has partial hrlrl, YP®;- front andls close to GMC truck Bjpisafl,or ,,4'bm " ‘•tOHGtIRWIN, REALTOR >17,800. PHA don't welt. 363-8303 674-3126 33S-7900 OPEN HOUSE Sunday i-s p.m____ 1— 2068 ALSUP ST. UNION LAKE, BEHIND MOREY’S GOLF COURSE. 2- 9000 COOLEY LAKE RD. UNION LAKE - COOLEY LAKE FRONT. . ARTISTS NGMC, MB, PONTIAC LAKERD. 4- 5021 GLEN EAGLE ST. PONTIAC TRAIL TO ARROW ' 1 HEAD RD„ to GLEN EAGLE ST. LOVELY 2 STORY COL-. ONIAL, ALL THE EXTRAS YOU NEED, 2 FULL BATHS, TWO HALF BATHS, WOODED LOT, LOVELY PRESTIGE AREA. 5- 5732 TEQUISTA ST. GLEN CAGLE ST. TO TEQUISTA ST., SHENONDOAH ESTATES. CARPETING, DRAPES. BUILT-INS, RANGE, ---nVRN AND FAMILY ROOM. KINZLER OPEN SATURDAY 14-637 HOGARTH Don't fill to see the best In th -dsIlghMul nsw ranch home. Elizabeth Lake area. Has 3 only s bedrooms, plus stairway to heated fttlc, tor 2. more bedrooms. Carpeted -living room W It h ewe, flreplace, formica kitchen cabinets, end highlight basement for.3 8333 recreation. Ges heal end township .-. *eler. Drive out Elizabeth Like *d. then left on Cess Lake Ref., 1 'hen right on Sloan to Hogarth.' Natch tor open signs. Your hotlsss is Mrs. White. . MULTI-DWELLING SITE I And commercial frontage, right on I Dixie .near 1-75 Expressway. This -Parcel Is. over AOO* Jean plus front-1 age ■ on a good fishing Isks in] rear. Nest 2 bedroom m»'l*"> home, end 2 car garage and -----LAKE FRONT ON--------- Lake Orion, Is a 5 room home with walkout basement, city water end gas heat. This home Is very neat, with new kitchen, bullt-ln range 1 and oven. This could be the home you have been looking for, call fori PONTIAC KNOLLS Three bedroom bungalow. Living & dining area. Kitchen. Fun ®*,y **' basement. Gas HA heat. Two to choose, from. Easy terms. Eve. call MR. ALTON, FE 4-5311 Nichotie & Harger Co. 53W W, Huron St.______ PE 3-1183 'living end horse exposed basement, National Product. Rental i_____ N. of Oxford, >6,995. building, equipment, parts etc. FINANCING AVAILABLE I, 4 miles1 Reply to Pontiac Press Box No. 7. - fiTGH PROFIT, 3 year old sm. I bottom chest complete % west of Oxford, for country j] TmichTnoiKQniTn^wWim MOBILE HOME. 60 x to, 3 bedroom, 10 ACRES — Hilly wooded lend,1 materials, 11 — In park at Oscoda, >3,900. 33S-6966. 1 where mobile homes are permitted counts. Can r. „ .____ NEARLY 1 ACRE,-eh beautiful Lekagtf|lkri|||taU||to -• — ...... FE 2-0262 ; Mlramlchl, — HURON OPEN 9 TO 9] EJ®*1 KnWE?^ rWly»U:>- '”<■>» KBAL4VK | islV 673-6339. necessary tools, down 1 •* reps and ee- _»>7. —METAMORA ■ long Lake privileges iVith this 2 bedroom log cabin lome partly furnlshade lust a short GAYLORD INC 1 combination _____ only S23r500 on land < STOUTS Best Buys Today NEAR OAKLAND U- SmaU farm size prop h excellent 3 b ne with fi" '7 car garai _ ada tn— SI8,500 m 7—MODEL M-59 AND DOLANE DR. (EAST HIGHLAND RD.) NEAR WHITE LAKE TWP. HALL. FOR INFORMATION CALL; EM 3-6703 -—LIST WITH HACKEJT-- STARf TO PACK IT 7750 COOLEY LK. RD. UNION LAKEi MICHIGAN | Val-U-Way property 160x24o . bedroom f•m,," ... basement. Gil LOON [LAKE PRIVILEGES 1 A ranch baautv and one of the ...«»6. bast values that wa have seen. 6 .__ basement Cand % ttlssy 2roocT; BIRMINGHAM BUNGALOW oeraoe. Plush carpeting, draperies efiir extras. »Ktidr fttM lor 80'x270' with variety of fruit, berries end flowers. Owner tranferred. This is one of a kind. Better see todayt —SUBURBAN 1-ACRE. available. Call 664-8568- aval. 664-6117. HUNTERS PARADISE -1125 acres, graded as No. 1 door hunting area, in lowar —Michigan,-—by Conservation Dept., 5-bodroom h u n \l n g lodge with alec., heat, nrge springs to make artlttcal lake. 1205,000. Call 564-8560 eves. 680-3526. CITY OF LAPEER - 69411,™] excellent 2-bedroom home on largo lot, attached garage, full basement, carpeted, cell <64-8560 eves. 623-4963,___ N E W B E R R Y—3-bedroom home on 3W acres, partially paneled, ceramic bath, right In the heart of dear country. Call 664-8560 tVM. 793-6946. MULLER LAKE, 3-badroom home, walk-out basement, with recreation room, frontage on like. $18,900, Only 10, minutes from Lapeer. Cali TEDS: Trading 674-2236 ■ inch In West Bloomfield Townslilp. s'uminum storms and screens, new-painted throughout, ample closets d cupboard -------- *------- I, above - Lake, $5,980, $1,500 miromicni, / mues Tram even., -r .... I Priced tor quick isle. Will tell on C. PANGUS INC., REALTOR itSSm6*" llUr * P-,n‘ MM7t7 >r OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK U 623-0002. ____;----------- 630 M-15 Ortonvllle Sohurbaw Pr*p*rty S3 call collect sir-nu -7620 BRIDGE — MACEDAY LAKE' " CLARKSTON SCHOOLS SHARP BUNGALOW; nice comer, lot with beautiful lake privllegesl 3 . bedrooms plus paneled den, gas heat, attached garage, many ex-' GI OR CONVENTIONAL TERMS $22,900.00 __________ LADD'S- OF PONTIAC 391-3300 JT~ACffPS. HOUSP, — Been_____By Hally rec. counts. Can work out of home.1. ■ w ,r.— Terrific potential for right party. Sale Clothing Everything goes for 515,060. forms ~ - ■ evalleblt. Other Interests forces' j PULL LENGT NEW MOBILE HOME PARK One-third rented Franchised Windmill Village of America 1st time available In stable Florida city locale, dose to IMMEDIATE POSSESSION On this extra sharp 3 bedroom brick ranch, huge family room, double. fireplace, 1V5 ceramic baths. 1W car heated garage,. slate foyer, paved street and drfve. nice lot. Walled Lake area. $30,900. I COUNTRY LIVING With city conveniences In this 2 .bedroom aluminum home, basement, j parade,^erjie^^aytjfull^lamlscaped AREA OF PRESTIGE Harper Woods, 3 bedrooms, brick f ledge"—1* ** • •*— Lots-Acreagg OF THE MOST beeulltul lakes In! Michigan Is at your door step at this Ctdar island Lake Prop. I Building restrictions, with beautiful i homes surrounding It. Will, show lake by boat If desired. Must sell/ 1 ACRE ON CASS LAKE ROAD NORTH OF M-59 FLATTLEY REALTY 0 COMMERCE RD.____363-6901 1.4 ACRES, P^e^^W^^WmTier—norttv^W Clerkston. easy terms. 62M774._, 2 CHOICE RE5IDENTIAL vacant 80 TO 800 ACRES In Lower Michigan. Dairy, grain, I beet or hogsl Name your term needs, we have It at Oean's; ''Michigan's Farm Real BsteteT Headquarters," 220 .N. Michigan Ave^Coldwater, Mich., Ph.t 617-1 8 ACRE FARM, new barn, natural j gas, good well. Imlay City area. Contact owner, 338-6072, 1 utilities,'Including cslris T^n ° “ " LOW CASH DOWN -BALANCE 15-20 YEARS PRINCIPALS ONLY FULL LENGTH wedding dress, A-LINE WEDDING gown, 46 sleeves, chapel train, size 9-10, 642-4856. _ t-Loi nriS. high fsshion, • , reasonable, >52-3440. Sale Household Goods 65 14 WHAT YOU’O EXPECT TO PAY ^GGMS- S795 AN ACRE; 240 acre country ' gentlemen's term. stately 5 ________ _________________ _r_. bedroom plus 2 bedroom tenant lots, Bloomfield Township, corner house, good barns end out- Kensington Rd. and Charing Way, buildings. 140'x17J', 175'x165', $9,500 seen. 4914 acres with well-kept 4-bedroom FE 4-2537^625-2517. farm house, large horie barn and I 2Vj ACRES. SQUARE, In Highland outbuildings, spring-fed fish 56900, 437-2587, attar 5 p.m, blKkto" road"® -5^-' tract, term*. i Highland —irr,—i---------blacktop "nHSl” $591)00, lend1 eon- 2»/a Acres- Oxford — — -Good location near 14 Mile and Woodward and offering attractive METAMORA—49573* excellent 4 room and bath with full base-, building site, I00'x200' lot# NEAR ADAMS RD.- Streamllned brick ranch home with i building eves.'j»IM742r IglirockTench,”cuitom*klichen Beautifully' wiodod *200x485' with ,8 .Acre>- wooded ravine with II— uullt-lns, slaie toyer, ceramic privileges on Indian Lake, Cash or **r,am nor,h o* Rochester, $15,000, i, 2<4 car garage, paved streets, Contract terms. > *berp, ' LAPP'S OF PONTIAC----------391.3300 5 LOTS. SPRINOPjELD TownshlpI Partridge “IS THE BIRD TO SEE" INVESTORS It you're looking lor more tncom but less taxes, you need to sse u. We hive a business that requirs LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE 1461 Baldwin at Walton FE 3-6 Acres of Free.Perking i. 'til 8) Set, 'til 6. E-Z ter 1 STOOL AND TANK, $10. ..—:—: PB 8-3392_________:____ 2 SECTIONALS. 1-3 pliCO, other piece, alto end tablet. <51-9238. well. $2,250. Cell <64-1560 JOHN A. ROWLING, Inc. REALTOR 129 W. GENESEE LAPEER NEAR GMC Country living In the CRT- t-ei tpecioui brick end alum, hon Located on huge beaut If landtcapbd lot, plenty el thede < Irult trail, garden area. Br barbecue, tW-cer garaoe; alto I ceil'rlghl .... ■-—a It a full bes<- ■ Toots, or retirees, &ar garage end nl. garden spot. This one should si on sight. Cash or 01 terms. JOHN KINZLER, Realtor* 5219 Dixie Hwy:---Eta------62T0335 r.,., W 4-1, a on Multiple List Service Open !:30-8:30 ONLY $11,990- ■ - For -fhrr—4—teems end. bath located just off Pontiac Lake Rd. Part basement, 2'4 car garage, fallen* neighborhood.* First time MAGIC MOMENTS q«tred. AWAIT YOU 1 A!nTrHhR£?,C.rt.rd 4 BEDROOMS- bed*Oom°U In “ToSSiSfuf ♦o Our Ladv mfht lLaSct SharoS Unusually, sharp 4 brdroom brick AnoeUJ4^Maad°w5. It has 2000 TIMES ONEIL WHY NOT TRADE?- JUST "THE FACTS—---------m twr u,i)i. Ttuns. ON THIS WATERFORD HILL ________________ BEAUTY, 6 bedrooms, cerpetod <0 ACRES. family room, 3 full batht, largo pooi, from Holly - - bullt-lns, fireplace, attached garage, acre, 20 per cent down. IS? |dwt*hro5SSr KIM REAL ESTATE 673-3400 decorated end lendsceped.prlced it 5-10 ACRE RIVER AND stream $59,900 IMMEDIATE POSSESSION. I acreage, Wopdod and roll’— Fowler Realty, 3633322, 6(5-1 3 BEDROOM CUTIE 1 -------------- beat thr rent rap-and grab this 3 bedroom seat si-*- h-“" full basement, dining A*reHM| seduded country home stte.”WrfiOOr— Terms. Ven Reel Estate, 561-6217 extras, $11,750. ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES -ovely—3 bedroom brick end ilumlnum ranch with full basement, 'end screens', paneled''dining' 'room "and kitchen, r isifr^l*®** ,0n Eltub*ttl Lake, •*“11*"* *°r 6 ACRES, Clarkiton area near 1-75, wjlljMi '»lfewedt olMred, S>t4S> — >1500-830 me. SHELDON, 635^557. <0 TO SO ACRES; 20 mlnutet Pen-tlic, roiling, wooded, corner parcel, with 4 bedroom house. 4000' road frontage, asking 014)00 per dcre. Excellent terms. SHELDON 625-5557. , * TO 160 ACRES, Clakston near l- 77 acres at 9507 Smith Rd..1 Argentine Twp. Genesee. Cr—■ Must be told for the hlgl amount obtainable. For mot. lormetlnn cell M<L66li nr S1T-7W. FARM 33/2 ACRES trees end Irult trees surrounding home. Near ortonvllle, $23,950, FARM 17Vi ACRES A TAX FREE INCOME 4 stores rented to choice tenants: a bank, drug store, variety etore, and TV etore. 4 apartments plus additional cmimrmTjtniperty for further development. This area Is ■■appreciating at e, tromeiufom pace and has a growth potential that l$ unmatched oy other erase. $87,000 wflti $20,000 down. Additional financing arallOtM, Cell today for an appointment! No. 14-6174-IP. rJ-RODMO-«f-furntture-.for--* Chamberlain. ^x12 Linoleum Rugs $4.95 Solid Vinyl Tilt ...... 7c ta. Vinyl Ashealoe tile ...... 7c ee. Inlaid Tlie. 9x9 ...... 7cm. Floor Shop—225S Elizabeth Late "Across From th* Mqtr— treezer, woo. FE «a- gentleman. Younger more ‘llraplace, dining room, nice wood and alumlnu semi finish*— ___ baths on 1st floor . Ges heat^iawii techsd 2 and drape it home wllh of marvelous ■ level. 114 carpeter d >4 down, living ri ....... .. ->-,nc4> ■ Irigere mlly r MODEL OPEN 2 TO 6 88 ACRES, fertile soli, no | fireplace, 1'4 b d with- heme is sepersu ^dining JlWy Near Maceday Lake style JUfchei^ plui many mom On_e large fenced If* HH disnoul rn'ulii, etteched 214 car garage, excellent < ftrinlJr. utm X beach 'unities antf eras qf dlstinc-> I__________________I tlleePbeths. ebum » S’USnfSi S”SSt& WARREN STOUT, REALTOR 2u*.n,C*snd°InaC'0h‘o'™ TPr*lcid 'to^selP moT.' 1450 N, Opdyke Rd. »3-1111 S ,*5MdNoB 5-1°™' PrltPd *° ! McAlLOUGH RIALTY ALSO s features. Shown by ap- rambling ranch featuring: sing room, only — so cell eerlyl l corner lot. Oas! ebS! KEATING Slrmlnaharr. 565-7959 FHA TERMS immediate possession. Watkins tlec Estates. I room bi-level Ing 3 bedrooms, lit baths, ..... selling south ot Holly. Ten rooms of-1 full 100x150' LOT ■ WATKINS LAKE PRIVILEGES. Only ono . loft, axes [It established l ment. Large living room wllh dir Ing #r9«, gat hot, oak floors Only *650 naadfd to mova If o FHA ttrms. VACANT. Val-U-Woy Rtalty and Building Co. - Fi 4-3531------------1 145 Oakland Ave. Open 9-9 Sal* Hoaus 49 Sal* H*uc*s 122060 W. 13 Mile ■■MPi T, While we appreciate F*fiUbJihs, 'tiripiece mi our wonderful country -.rr0SJ’r'«.S**.na"I:.qVa Bo you sometimes feel fhli__brick^ai>d aluminum j it takes more work and so intelligence to fill out th* tax forms than it does to earn money in the first place? Price 14,000. 4-H REAL ESTATE, 623-1400, OR 3-0655, OR 3-239). 155 ACRES, betwooh Dotreit-Flint. PC 2-2144. P.O. Box 190x450 N. OP LAKE Orton, 26x45 - l *i««4iment, with brick fir — —* f. 17900, 624IOO dtoWI. Shown by appointment only - beauty Is offered Shown by ------- cell eerlyl I WHEN YOU SEEK OUR SERVICE YOU "JOIN THE MARCH TO TIMES" basement, 114 baths extras from $17,990 on your w. BHSBW Wsr e«tmh MCSlU|lt4LANSltRVOADnC- setting south ot Holly. Ten rooms Ini.-. 5460 HIGHLAND MW room, herdwend flnnrs nlottororl 674-2236 624-2400 -,.,6. aiwJa.%WncSlPonti« W5IliaTO-BE^JjmL:PNES- Prlced at (16,900. No. 344 - 'MLS REALTOR MLS “,,h ,hU ROSE CENTER -------------- Ineeme Property SO WiSAinreRS ^rR^Pc.ocN.i.&Hpron sotting south of Holly. Ton rooms In - n**r P0,t ottlco. coll 673-8891. DlllinCDC CDCriAl I' all. This home can be used as a BY OWNER, lovely duplex Income BUILUtl° >r®LlAJ.I' single residence or a two family, Hot homo, 12 largo rooms, 6 rooms. Ideal setup tor smell wafer baseboard heat end on a large bath and 14 on each side. 2 car or models. Locatsd Wnnm ■ mu* lot wllh nice treat and an oversized oarage, nicely landscaped yard of Holly on - paved road. Pour 2 car garage. Only a block from next to good, schools, churches, and sites 168x200 each. Greet ecceu good lake privileges. 521.900. M- - t.i.u...—. • —.-i—. — *- . -• .4 acres of VMIIHIPVIIliphPiolitna mm . tryslde In Orion Townsnl vletr for nr'11-end choice! wnsnlp. 1 differs Near Ortonvllle, lust oft main PARCELS AND FARMS with buildings, some vt .llPiR acres, 30 acres, 40 acres, 79 aerss W0*^I7J9 uit... -***nlte» fit 9 _ SAGINAW BAY GROCERY A tips no competition store In excellent location, room to expend. Just 12,000 dye stock down. Call or step to oDlce for defailt end appointment to see. An A-1 buy. WARDEN REALTY 434 W. Huron. Pontiac 682-3920 If ne of--------- BUY. SELL, A BUSINESS Nottonef "iSSTtius Webster-Curiis Want to Sell? Oxford-Orion METAMORA AREA corner <0 l .stable, out buildings, septic an j. In very nice area, 140,000. business. Qualified buyers waltl Call tor free appraisal. WARDEN REALTY 3434 W. Huron, Pontiac 4SK If no answer cell 3634460 Times Realty | 5890 DIXIE HIGHWAY NEW LISTING 2 bedroom bu listed with Iski . Lake and Ells. r lull cererr'- kg* m m------- ...-jplng. Furnished o unfurnished. Call FE 0-3330. Laka Property - ranch lyet - ~ ’ .!J 2 ACRES ON 2 lakes, 900' frontage, JLim *»'S®o cash or sio.ooo .land con-:ell’drapes,! Holly area, 6y owner. 634- “ on Lake Neve.! —l oft Bogie cil ~ Rd.,1 must sell, make an offer. „ Hdule, stible, »a(g 4.amt Contracts 16-cubic-fOOT upright freezer. 642- -^JTfle r-———- - t^' AFARTMENT SITE stave, good condition, fig. tnUm.___________ 1969 USED SINGER GOLDEN TOUCH AND SEW Automatic buttanhole maker, pushbutton bobbins, fancy designs, monograms. Comes wlhh console, lull price $139.95. Call Midwest Appliance. 9-9 dally, 336^312. 1969 ZIG-ZAG Sewing machine slightly used, blind nems dresses, sews buttons on, makes buttonholes, monograms, overcasts, fancy stitches, saws wllh t or 2 r— mints needed# J ■ $33.60 CASH# TAX INCLUDED. Or pay 13.36 down and 9 Intaraat fret payments of S3.36 ee. Call Capitol Sewing Machine credit Dept, until • p.m. . , 729-4610 'Til 9 p.m. 1969 SINGER SEWING MACHINE Zig-Zag slightly used. Blind hems dresses, saws bottom on, makes fancy stlfchao. no lHtodiiTienti needed. S year parts and labor a$56?6 TAX INCLUDED Or pay SS.6I down and 9 Interest free payments of 15.62 ee. Cell Capitol Credit Depf. uhiil 9 p.m. PHONE 729-4610 e have a few nice ecr triage pari l rolling « 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS :nrap(ic^,,A^.chM",06rw. T'wsU^W®^^ I attractively landscaped. Priced •! fifif ini Lefas Trade. No. 3-38 i xurii counrry lining wun ivoo .«... gallon septic svstom Installed to OA - _ 693-8343 county snecs. 55459 with terms. ,8ale Baslmee Wmperty Prank Meratta < ., 363*325. LISTING - SILLING - APPRAISING - BUILDING TRAPPED? in tha city? Why net Tint beautiful 2 bed roc Has an attached perig* am# » snuai** w (7l*x27l) • steel at only <21,980. LAKE FRONT LOTS IN INDEPENDENCE Wa have many laka front lets blacMagaid (treats, everteeklni 19,500 to 012,500. course, priced' to s 5 BEDROOMS -L 2 ACRES Need w* say mere, other than tide Township and priced to sail at 127 COTTAGE! WILLIAMS LAKE PRIVILEGES Will shaded lerpe corner let, 2 bedrooms, paneled ' shaped. Living rpom-kitchdn combination, an Ideal horn lend contract terms. Price 010,950. ^ FRUSH0UR REALTY REALTORS - MLS 674-2245 3730 Williams Lako Rd. 674-4161 Daily til I I Clarkston Area Near 1-75 Extra large choice building sites In restricted subdivision. 625-5442. dd rooms on second partment rental, priest choice building sites, I Older Home Remodeled us.9m.’ Maybee Road, Clarkston school S ........ ■ I OESIRABll LAW FRONTS' 75 intranet. Lass thin 2 mllat off • ■ • a nuvUD ctdaitc ■ bi.* U.S. 10. Plumbing and wiring ax- Haven't you laid fhla about tho ^22* i »eeiZniJl1!? cal lent. Furnace, now got. 3 homo you intand to buy? No ona will i imi!-..* 2 f,r#p,#cf#' bedrooms at present, IVi baths, have to m II It to you< you'll know I I '•vai. *30,500. ----- ----- ‘ lltd*!' SUitl^VaVton and won't iStlffor COMMERCE LANE — AH brick. 3 3mor»! r.r.V,,tt rWouTh,’. iSi'eV S g?™™' '"<• ___ .loor or bedroom home, all brick ranch, full 673-3488 Sylvan 682-2300 __ ______ anllra yJlurr8 ^nrii*nti( CSlrP'toniltffnffi'^iented 150 FT’ op RIVER FRONTAGE - CHOICE A PARCEL, 4(4 ecrei, roll- ySSirtiSiTnt nl MlftM tU.r1 r»rS*Vrlrs titMn ,pn “i Largo brick ranch. 4 bedrooms,i Ing, wooded, 10410 Dartmouth Rd., Saahebew Rd4 ifiltenf'tor clinic ' 'ull besomant, swimming pool. | crerKiton, DA $.2835. _____ «r£’W',l r,,<!’ n9' N* Bn,<,;CLARKST0N SCH00LS------------lp" ,or| CLARKSTON AREA 0Z7ul. Davichnrn HoV7CC»hViS R^ANKS^Mltvl R«^.L?^crs Jet. n*er 1-75, Older Home—Davisbura you buy a larga home In th> cm MMIflH Needs rapairing end f u r t h • r for theml With MOM you can bu modernizing. Needs a new root, acre of lend and a roomy I L__u__ __- i ______,1.: wllh. A iwIrMimv m bath and I 9 ROOM OFFICE BUILDING, MW end wiring. Also w bldg.. 2! Forbes, O .r- si- bsl BBfl •«*<, large corner let LoMelTerms cwi ^urc^8^! ^56^* bW,MI"8' *- DAviseufeo, too x 42t tot. wPw, i BALDWIN & 1-75 Warren Stout, Realtor I4M W. fipdyke Rd, 373-1111 Open Bves. »tll I p.m. CASH FOR LAHb CONTRACTS H. J. Van Welt r---r-, 7---- ........... . .... 4540 Dixie Hwv.. — OR 3-1355 nSth**!. pro,’?rtv«,tfu" am75 THIS CONTRACT originally sold for D?rt!»_t* --M..1nh $7,850 with $2,808 down, 7 par cent Intereet and MS per month. Wiil discount SLUM. Other lend contracts available at good Cell and ask for Chrale C. PANGUS INC., Realtor OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK It M-15 Ortonvllle L COLLECT 627-Mill 1969 T0UCH-A-MATIC New sewing machine, does fancy stitching, makes txittehhMM,.efc. Sold tor $124.50, balance only $29.50 or pay M.IOper week. Cell day or MM MODFI SlNGER~zia-Zag. sow- fi machine In stylish cabinet. fancy stitches. 5 year guarantee. •* peymente Machine street parking, converted Into 609-0478. 5433 DIXIE HIGHWAY frontage of 44*479' rfaan 7, AM .. - II I price tirm. Pay it u> M.7I, Corp. If 1969 USED SINGER TOUCH AND SEW. control* for buttonholes, zig-zag, fancy designs, etc. .Smooth, steady state PNmirag for daoh touch button oearaHon. Deluxe model comae comptet* wllh ..v-cia — z=------pun h good 6 ms. Call Oldpr Store Building In Small Town Excellent far antique shop •hop. Good condition. Secon unfinished. Would make « living quarter* above. Reai priced. By tppolnlment onl> Davisburg. 1M Bigelow M ft. reai 180 ft. dieorjuaf otTUS'lol'IKt fwliMa'i far to 1-73 Intersection. Price car gari country kitchen and a I i- Call $76*2222. No. 7-17 ;LAKE FRONT PONTIAC LAKE ■ Hurry on this sharp 3 bedroom plum, sidtd home with bullt-ln oven mend rang* and with wall-well Z1 carpeting throughout plus IVi ear I garage. Imagine only $28,988. for this J lake front home. No. 5*15 WATERFORD KETTERING ranch clean as a living room, extra L-sstUBy room, gee fenced lot with 2Vk 682-0799. FARRELL harp 3 bedrm fhlstie. Carpel -age. 0 . No. $- INCOME PROPERTY early occupancy oA this splc end epan 3 bedroom, m bath ranch.! Sltuatgd on 131 ft. of lovely lake front. Large living room end family room, both with natural pice kitchen with eating '—Hid in ear i---- 11 __..._____ J. an Cass right on. Beechlend, nn on Wyman. -----REALTOR “ 2167 ORCHARD LAKE RD. ' 334-3393 J ' 334.3594 .nr, " pgOtjt HqMkS Are* ot estate homes. FARRELL REALTY 2405 N. Opdyke Rd; - For 373-6552 I FUTURE H0MESITES CLARKSTON AREA DEER LAKE - 4 weeded tots. < w acre each, laka privlle Si, ooo to $11,580. BALDWIN & 1-75 24 acres, excellent sit* Industrial or Motal. Owner a to trad* ter tncama preparty. " RETAIL SHOWROOMS Excallent location In town qn i,.*n highway, northern part or Oakland S°MU>rPr&hrwX\*li sms: &w\'LvM,rr BATEMAN 1 to 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgantlv needed. Saa ua be you deal. Warren Sout, Realtor 150 N. Opdyke M. 373-1111 Open Ever - — Lilted at SI2JMP cash. May keep Good 3 family brlnps in $268 per mp. j. l. Dally Co. EM 2*71161 T-i/^.t-1 t i tt TTinr-i Good Ur*tovPs,tori1n$)4?W pHA*or ^ mlTOh'. BOB WHITE 49 Sol* Home* r DovieBurfl btsutHul lots on*Dlxle Lake,'! be sold in paeksga of 3. f $22,800. . In Davisburg Area $13,900 cosh. NO. 4-49, . ilEW MODELS uii^V^ll'u* tf1l1lnfonvfl*>l‘{tns(l ontlec off DMe H ms, oarage, flreplice 5Q‘x3a>' iot. $21,508. 62 r, LAKE PRIVILSGEDI Mtin. tfrlBo. T T ^-- - rfnWMn- nhnna BET 4.TMA REAL ESTATE 5854 s. Mein, Cterkito 625-5821 ,, 1 MILLION Dollars hee been ■ us jg purchase $_.....__ contracts, mortgage* or buy Hem**,, lets or acreage outright. g^jssiecr^s mi 674-2236 McCullough realty INVESTMENTBc666MEgC,AL CO.SS!nW,,,nd “* “^ 377 Rd' i LARGE OR SMALL land contracts. _______|_I _. ;srpet Must sefil Kitchen, cmMfqinwOHM, nylons; and carpet from $1.69 per yd. and up. Cain or craiflf. On* of Rochester's largest carpet Mimwi. 1658 E" AubuffL ltd, (M-59) Rechetter Bet. John K and Deaulndra. (52*2444. AUTOMATIC ' WHIRLPOOL washer, >35, good condition, 6264521. ANTiOUe CHVSTr1 CORNIP cabinet, lOfa, WfH*. tables, chairs, 91 dwmMdher, picture, Pri., iaf., Sun. 11 AM-4 PM. 3241 Woodllda Court, corner of Greenfrae, vie. of UM lile ana Aaeme. ARE YOU A CONllOISIEUR of an* tlques and okt Items? You'll fait* greet arid* at tha owner of this Continental gas stove. Is in perfect ....... end mechanical condition. 338-9641 m. 4 Sunday cell 628*29611 CLARKSTON tor small busi st. turn farms. on-Meedows M-15 Clarkston "IT'S TRADING TIME" - 18 aerss. 59,956, 2 — . 12.66 acres. 112^50. 10.09 aqras aiolM. Alse ltlt. acres. Jibon.. Near Fsnien. Ihiawmea Rwh narfn —-t— ' Lake- Privilege iay BALDWIN AVE. FRONTAGE , - 371 ff. frontage, corner , sell' Angelus t (A mil* from M-59 $ TELEGRAPH AREA I #*h —>-g, joo ft. frentei* on 4' tlaea th Ithnnls A, DOUBLE DUTY wo bedroom hous# on Bald I n M-15. This cute ye*r-*roun •nl from the store ^nep mil pen yeur awn small bu*ln*is h n * Land Contract wim a sut it en* of our teles people tel A HOME WITH CHARACTER h beth 1 fleer. C. NELSEY, SALES AGENT RAY O'NEIL REALTY 3550 Pantin' i*«* OR 4*2222 [f-3r -I J**8" ' * 363-7212 PlInDERf LAKE " ..ORCHARD LAKE .. ^ ORCHARD LAKE charm iM found In fed-.. first floor: Two studio type ms in ihe second floor. Th*. bdamcitf le JfSWWlV fin 11 had with pimM Willi ind 4 compliti Mth* AIR CONDITIONED I 8tOV«p rofrlgwrator, washer and dryir alrt, T ‘'"toTto flrnlcipsi condffloh pndjn * choice west side k *9—. || |3i(9oo with extra tot. BRQOCK 4125 Orchard Lake Reed At Pontiac Trail MA 6-4000 4444890, \ ORION - II LOfl ON ! LOT, LBHIOH__________ •t cost, 334*5605. LAKE LOT, Commerce SOIL PE 4-51I7. ■ LAKlZ^URQN .PRONTAQE.‘~xB'1_ —-------------------m S'eS site, 426*9765. MOTOR PART* ! M,980 LOT ON LAKE NEVA Cenel, fn Induetrlel, autjmetlve parts 4 .. $5,950, Likewcad Vlttege, (O’ r 25P. ex* «V?pHw*. Eweltent 18 x 10 tt. . $6,900 cellent perk, uth inly, 3824*95. '**x>*0 «• Pmperty (■ •• LbT Mxfa,' N/b*' Pentlec. >1-400 bShSU $.“to,*,» bkto **" •T4.S00 All uillltles. Ml 645M, ""^TplOlt OXFORD AREA I chjru. im»w Choice building site, 1(0 x 600 ft. w E Huron si R 7Tt «.ff quick closing. Ei Mass*"__________________ Memv te Loan 61 ___(Licensed Money Lender) ‘ LOANS — 025 to $1,000 Insured Payment Plan BAXTER*— LIVINGSTONE _ Finance Co. 481 Pentlec slat* Bank Building . FE 4-1538-9 physical_______ $150.00. 354-1712. A - PLENTY OP uslo washers. ttre^fi** SSle*"®! r»,^ri4j?.ldwln wpi- APARTMENT SUE retrlgeretor, rtd condition, (25. 373-14U after PJIk^:__,__^______ .—. AMANA DOUBLE deer refrigerator. Frigidsir* doubla oven electric •love, Norge ges dryer, 1 piece formica table, Mr. end Mrs. chairs, floral royal btua pattern. 0*33249. AUTOMATIC ,________ZIG ZAG Sewing machine. Repose*seed, 194* "Feshlen Dial," model In walnut cabinet. Take over peymente of; $5.50 Per Mo. for 8 Mos. or $44 Cash Balance STOP A HOUSEHOLD BARGAIN - we have I pc. llvlna rm. group (sofa, chairs, ----------1ttfuT tablet, i lemaalt • pc. 't (double dretser, cheat, bad. ptodpi V • 398-^4 ‘ I < ICjjl-IPY—-..to®, * ««uw*nti.i| a"eTv siiDMiTtmT^ with an additional epirtr i ecra a. lend. Full beeewwnt, 2Vk >b*ths, e ». To be wld PHA or orwith l minimum di FHA - GI TERMS This Eire* bedroom ranch Is titrated tore* living ■ Hurry Out, this on EXECUTIVE HOME-BRICK COLONIAL Close to schools end ^ofiplng. Lerge llylng room, large kitchen with ataye. refnaera $iS»Iw,^KSWWP* * first fipr. Tr* " Wfo8?ret WE HAVi MORTGAGE MONEY AVAILABLE TO HELP OUR BUYERS FINANCE . CALLING ASK. FOR ANY ONE OF_CiUR QUALIFIED ULES .C: Dave Bradley. Emery Butler, Ford Bird. Olet* Howard. WHEN CAL PEpPLEiTl Dick fryatl, 1071 W. HURON ST MLS .681-1000 OXFORD OFFICE JN THE HIGHLANDS ear oid, sprawling brick ranch house, ih* vlpw from the bow dew Tn Hie Itvlne room er thru the walkout depr in tha family .„.m is nwmaR(ng, .The country kHchen has loads ot room for the whole family but Is especially designed to suit mother, mailer bedroom sum boasts aver 288 sq. ft. with walk In closets and separate bath entrance, n car garage, full basement with ges heat, to mention lust a lew ot the featuras, all this ter only S3i,900. we , feel It Is below duplication price .. . whet do you thlnkf Ask tor tli-B, - 4 STOP LOOKING, HERE IT IS Cathedral celling*, adore Hi* living room end family ream, brick flreplei*. lull basement, gas, lake privileges en beautiful Davis Lika, 2Tx2T 2 rar garage, breezeway with skylight, matura trees and shrubs, ell this lor eniy 127,580, ask for 305*1. LET'S TRADE. 823 S. LAPEtR ROAD 628-2548 TOM REAGAN REAL ESTATE H N. Opdyke 273-0154 "'■■'R TRAN(PiR*Wb, lain ever! tents, Ip peril, will eell ail or ; toss Hian 2 hrs. tram Pon* 1 Wooded retrain on country easy access, 15 mitt, warn (• 15 mo. tlka itsi Thle 1 ‘ 623-13 ________ TAKE OVER PAYMENTS, acreage •he, dose in tor year around or recreation, mutt tell, call Owner, w»ii»r __ VACANT LAND ran. .... living site m Mil1 BLOOMFIELD TWP, toraM°?e7o^?S^3>3Pflmi m ■ SSral “^"w.toJt* ttkrVoid EXCELLENT BUSINESS, •lee offices, h pad, fenced. 33*4127, 3 QR (ALE 6r toae* — 1708 eq, ft. 2V, acre fenced yard. Near GMC Truck and Coach. 233*7141 er 663- RESTAURANT n the cltv of Keego Harbor, seats sa? ..............m ntdftjwye l BE Its FOR THE PAST 42 YEARS Voss & Buckner, Inc. 1481 Pentlec State Bank Bldg. Hava been loaning *1000 la tsooo to homeowners en 1st and 2nd mortgages for repairing, additions, consolidating Mils, etc. Into on* imell monthly payment. Bator* you borrow on yeur home see er phene us et: 334-3267 KAY FURNITURE — Next to K Mart In GI i washers, dryers, TV's and Stereo* tor VS the profit. big JOl DORAN'S warehouse has SISL0CK & KENT, INC. 1109 Pentlec State Bank Brig. 23M294______________ 331-9293 iTAPiP '-DVER PAYMEfn'S, MUST < Pryttty ^ 51-A COMMERCIAL BUILDINGS !?w"^—.— ____________________ Comlstlng of a^ftft^shop, hardware 4 wheel DRIVE JIGGER for •tora, beauty stmt add a real, ip hrs. running time. UOO ar t •stats office. Prim* frontage on lor good VW. MY 3-1452" h^|hW*y‘ 15' WOLVERINE WAOEMAKER, perfect cendltion,. with electric start. Mooring l,._. traitor, tor snowmobil* in so ms condition. 3244464 en*r 4 p.m. | i960 fo*d. '42 tomppato -tos bars ■5> CadlitafcTfa7;'tT iu4Ml, dir1 IM! MiiCUjlY, turnltura. sail 1 1962 CADILLAC CONVEttTIBLE I V, ten Van. 673-11112. iujtUtil. )(4, 2MCC7 •red* to refrlgeretors, range* and washers cheap, tb Hie print. 567 E. Walton at Jeetyn, PMIB. BIG JOE DORAN Mils direct from —anew* at W the prollt. ;W ■. Ion at Jeetyn. 37341#. BEDROOM SUITE ‘ McCullough realty, inc. « j44* Highland Rd. 674-2236 t iesmets OppertoaHjes g EQUIPMENT HOE 3 chair hdrbar unclaimed balance >149. FREE Payments as lew as tit per month. HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE Vh-8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1969 For Want A^di'Oial 334-4981 Sal* Household Good* 65 Sal* Household Good*____65! Water Softeners MAYTAG ELECTRIC DRYER, $30.1 w 335-4200 after 3, 1 loveseat; other wobd wor'— ___!, 10441 Tam oft Davlsburfl MODERN TURQUOISE CHAIR, ( inalti$t live plants I Bargain Prices Furniture—New Walnut bedroom suite, double dresser, mirror, 4 drawer chest, and full all* bed. Unclaimed balance $97. Lovely sofa end matching chair, ilppered reversible cushions. Unclaimed balance $115. Hollywood bed set. complete with; mattress, bMg|||Hbd||Bewg| 5* high lovers t—... redwood pots. 343-0306, MOVING SOUTH — Medflerranea Sofa, Table and Chairs, Cherr bedroom set, Washing Machlnu, Odds A Ends; 7410 Gale Rd. 674- «(ie 53x62, 474-2899.' > INCH COPPER WATER PIPE, 2S cents a ft. and M Inch copper water pipe, 39 cants a ft. GT*. Thompson A San, TOM M-89 W. <S NATURAL MINK, like new, sacrifice, 473-4404.__________________ 1 ELECTRIC FAN, 2 speed, $15, 1 auto, bathroom heater, $15,1 Arvln ...— _rgt _ regular $5.95 now only $3.47 sq. yd. Household Appliance 481-2383____________ Unclaimed balance *118. Spanish bedroom suite.—triple dresser, framed mirror, 5 drawer chest and panel bed. Unclaimed balance $1(4. —Maple bunk _bed, mattress, ladder a Unclaimed balance $95. REFRIGERATOR*. DISHWASHERS' dryers, washers, ranges, crate damaged and scratched models. Terms°Uar*n,**d. Tbrr'"* “v,nat. ‘TuRT'S APPLIANCE 44$4 WILLIAMS LAKE RO.4744)0T SEE STONEY FOR your needs. 109 North Cass. Walnut chest of drawers, $29,95 cash and carry. Colonial sofa-with matching Mr. and Mrs. chairs, self-decked, with r everslble cushions. Unclaimed balance. $277. ---------- — ----------—4------- Colonial maple bedroom double dresser, mirror, 4 di chest, panel bed. U n c I e 11 Free delivery, many similar sav. HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE 441 Elizabeth Lake Rd. (Near Telegraph) 481-2383 10-9 dally *10 JOE DORAN'S warehousi BUNK BEDS Choice of 15 styles, trundle beds, frlple trundle kids and bunk bed-complete, $49.50 and up. Pearson' m INCH PLASTIC draRMPipelRP fittings, no need to thread pipe anymore. It goes together with glue, all ypu need Is a hack-saw STEREO, LIVING ROOM Wand breakfast suite, S piece dining room suite, electric range, upright piano, plus mlsc. ltems. 333-7089. SALE SEPT. 21st and 22nd„ cottl of 10 room house. Electric pi lances, bedrooms, living n color TV 25", rug loom with c__ rug material, tool shad, no Lake caiis or sales. Slrtl " SPECIAL PURCHASE -----NEW 1969 ZIG-ZAG IN CABINET Does everything without attachments, makes .buttonholes, sews on buttons, overcasts, blind hems, etc. 5 year guarantee. PAY $4340 CASH , Or $4,34 down and 9 Interest free payments of $4,34. 2 BAG PLASTER mixer needs m $125. 10x11 wall tent with floor $30, UL 2-1740. _____________ 2 WAY DOUBLE PANEL, acto a sign with flashr- ---------hta 7944 or 4$2-4702. -BUNK-BEDS, __________FOAM mattresM be used as twin beds, $50, . Is, $5 each, apartment size |tad2ltad|tahlda-a-b*<r ' $5, 474-3153. BRONZE OR CHROME DINETTE sale, BRAND NEW. Large and small size (round, drop-leaf, rectangular) tables In *-, 5- and 7-pc. sets, $24,95 up; ---—pearson7s FURNITURE----------- (40 AubUm PE 4-7151 CARRIER DEEP-FREEZE, 22" sq. 34" high, 24" Internal depth, 2 yrs. old, $95. 3539 Walbri Dr., Bloom. 1140. i. Call bet. 4-4 p.'m. COLONIAL WINGBACK. BROWN tweed couch, $40, a I u m I-------- louvered Windows and door, offer, 334-3477. COMPLETE set of Strolla-cltalr baby furniture with 4 yr. crib. Exc. *—““H, $45. FE 5-4214. tOUCH OC . ..... after 4:30, Monday, 1 Wednesday, 652-9535. COLONIAL WING back I couch,$40.3r- lasher.Call furniture. 473-8957. cither b a b Carpeting Sale tiUNCAN PHYFE dining room, with 4 chairs, .buffet and I hutch, good condition, $171 335- DINETTE SET CLOSE-OUT All 1949 Models. E-Z terms. ■ to Joe’s, 1441 Baldwin, FE 2-4542 DRYER, *35f RtPRIGER ATORS25; 21" TV, $35; bunkbeds; apartment stove, *35; mlsc., G. Harris, FE 5-2744._________________________ EARLY AMERICAN 42" round t with T leaf, formica top matching Windsor back chairs "'■"lltlon. Elec. bultMn oven is stainless steel. 391-0445. END OF MONTH SALE —Must clear out ell 1949 and used merchandise between Sept. 20 and BOtts. Sacrifice Prices This will save you $$$ Goodyear Service Store Antiques .... Wringer .. rlt, FE 5-2744. FRIGIDAIRE Refrigerator, freezer combination. Excellent — 5150. 473-4581. 1501 Floor Models • 1 Frlald»li 1 Frlglaalr* 1 8,000 BTU air conditioner 1 15 cubic foot choat freezer Crump Electric riibiilMf' «*sro GEDISHWASHER, 125. Klfctwn chrome «et with 4 chair*, 83f* Duncen Ptiytotabto 521 402-3174. GALA GARAGE SALE Home furnishing*, largo eelection — — $ intents wear, china, children i furniture, I------I ....... Thun. Frl., Sat., Sept. ... 724 Westvlaw Rd. 2 blocks ‘ - •j.ofLotwLske. -20, 9-4. fW. of ,---GAB rAfRIGERATOR 436. 1044 Crescent Lk. OR 5-2477, GOOD REFRIGERATOR BUYS Alio Cl<-- fi| "— ---- Baldwin. FE «4»O. HUDSON DOUBLE I Mr- m m HOUSEHOLD SPECIALS UROOMSUOF fXiTURB - Oh slits of: l-ptoco living room outfit with 2-pi living raom suite, 2 slip tables, 1C” H 7-plece bedroom suits with doubl drssier, chest, niii-elza bed wit Innersorlng mattress end matchln ' ^Bflt!WheL JP* 1 vanny leftwoi i-pleca dlnotte eat with 4 dp. chairs mid table. All tar saw. Your, credit is good at Wyman's. WYMAN FURNITURE CO. 17 1. HURON FR KENMORESitoniG MACHINE, 10. 2G2-31I3. KELVINATOR RafrtgarstoG lS eu. KITCHBNETtl SET WITH ax nandabla table and 4 chain, ex Call 451-70* SINGER DIAL-A-MATIC Wc., Late model school trade-in. Terms of: $6 PER MONTH' . OR S59 CASH Now Machine guarantee UNIVERSAL SEWING CENTER 2415 Dixie HWV._____ FE 441905 TWO I7XI41 BROADLOOM carpets FE *4721. ISBD KENMORE GAS dryer, condition, S». UL 2-3240. RADIO AND APPLIANCE INC. —I W. Huron __________ 334-5477 WESTINGHOUSfe > CU. FT. rofrlg-orator. 473-9110 avss. WESTINGHOUSE washer, H—ll'~-gas dryer, $50, or 3-0759. WAREHOUSE SALE oi No roes, offer refused, ten today and tomorrow 10-4. HtLF APPLIANCE CO. 2414 14 Milo naar Cooiidge For Sale Miscellaneous 67 682-1304. r, $ gal. 040. Call attar 4, For Sole Miscellaneous 67 FURNACES, gas or oil, fast Installation, farms, 338-6 966. First U n I ted -Atotttodlst Church. By Kate Osann FIREPLACE WOOD. Ramovli porch, ba there, 9-20-69, 338-2779. f GARAGE SALE: Furniture, clothing, I. and So). I7i W. ling al t. Gte< lilt, 545, 1 Homaflte vos generator, $75, I la w n spreader, *5, small fan motors, S2 each, knitting machine ft|| *“ 4'X4'6" .ALUMINUM door wall, $50, 1 9 light aluminum, approx. -f'x4*- picture window. $4l FE , ’. Reasonable, 332- T~WHEEtr~TRAILER7-3- point hitch, also oil and mlsc. service statlo, accessories. 452-9329. " " BROKEN CONCRETE delivered. Clay, loam, topsoil. J. H. Walt:— Landscaping, 37M444. Co. 474-2411 and 452-5574. 12' FIBERGLAS BOAT, 3Vi tap. motor, $225. Refrigerator, $75. Apartment size gas llova, $2* “* 20" DIAMOND GEM SAW and a lot -* —ti material. *93-1277. 24' MUSKIN POOL, SAND filter, dock, strainer, mash cover. In capacity. FE 5-9120, 14' OVAL POOUWNNIII 8. DHF, $75. 334-7441,________ 4" CHAIN SAW, washtr and drear discgrlnder, and mlsc. tools. OR 3 3742, _ Bctricstove, ...frlparator, dura tub gas fired. Luxalre, counter ffr'"1 '-------- 24123 W. 10 Mile m Telegraph Ith back, Swedish ”modernv,’cha,‘‘ lounge chair, canvas pain chain, 4 Eames I I jnfl, chairs, steam Iron, gardar tools, hoses, wheelbarrow, 442-7752 YOUNG MARRIEDS .—... N, Rochtsler. Rd. CUSTOM ANTIQUE Specializing lr *—1 Anna table. Wing and Victorian chairs, plna llama, prlmll1-— books, etc. II Illinois, 335-0244. SPLIT R>ILS, SI. Lamps, round oax chairs, commode, mlsc. ID NALL- VIC t je _____ excapt'''' Mon^" su AKA I MS TAPE Recorder 3 head CLEARANCE ON ALL -49 model -“s, lave up to *175. Obtl TV, 7 BlTzaboih Lake Rd. 4$2-l$2Q. color Televisions NEW SHIPMENT JUST arrived. Zenith, Admiral, Fhllco, RCA, ate. Your choice ** — ' . .iailibM, ABC APPLIANCE , 41125 Van Dykt Tuas. 'tll 4______ 755-90H COLOR TV BAROAINI, LlffLlf Joe's Bargain House. FE 2-4042. CURTIS MATHIS COMBINATION color, maple f stsrao, 2 yrs. ok KIRBY SWEEPER ,xcfcucffl°r Kirby S«rvicB & Supply Co. 2417 DIXIE HWV. 474-2214 Aiiborn Avo. fr 4-7iii.__ LIKE NEW AQUA La6y Kanmora FE 44905 m------- — h Dally 10:15-0 , TMlr Bit. ...... _.B5r IAle LA»AVtf "Hl'gwt 1' "‘anna, plus power In-lnconvartar. p-raw:"--------——"'i 5i3o.* *"*>»* + MODIRH dHESt qi1 drawers wllh'Niw COLOR TV's priced IronTnaT FACTORY SPECIAL SOLID STATf---- STEREO AM-FM MULTIPLEX SO WATT PER CHANNEL REGULAR 0249JO SPECIAL $169.50 LIMITED QUANTITY UNIVERSAL __ 7 MIS Dixie Hwy. line poets, 0212. 473-0949 attar, 410 GALLON OIL lank, 4 lags, and all other- equipment. 40)7 Jamr-Rd. off Brown Rd. SOI GlVtOrAWAY TIME et Avon-Troy Carp*) Warehouse. Carr-4 — ped and deluxe Install------------ •i sq. yd. Hurry—ihls Is a once-ln-a-lifatlma offer while merchandise Is avallablel 1450 E, Auburn Rd. (M-59) Rochester, bat. John R an" Daqulndre. One of Rochester largest carpet warehouses, ovi 17,000 to. yrdt. In stock, 552-2444. 1949 SINGER ZIG-ZAG Slightly —- —'—------------*“— 1 stylish c tons, ovtrcatts, blind hams, fancy ItltaMO, Cash 547.80, GARAGE SALE: 4130 Alii 10,000 GALLON STEEL oil tank. Contact Robert Woodruff, 474-3193. APPLE CRATES, GLADIOLlA flats. *"■ S. Blvd. W., Troy. UL 2-3110. GARAGE SALE — F u r'n 11 u -‘-■tilng, mlsc. 4573 Plnedolo oaoiiabsw Frl.-Sat. 9-7 OARAGE SALB. M-S9 ta'SHfRITS 3413 Cone. 9:30 «,m. to 7 p.m. A WOOD BURNING cooking range sq. 225 I, 330-4944, Jrottlnd tobies, mlmsogrss. m sawtniBor at 2inp(r"eL ,. .... Forbes Printing and Office Sup-Plles, 4500 Dlxlo, OR 34W7. ANTIQUE LINCOLN rocker; 2 l ... .. —.... tables, - < :. FE 5-4441. 443 ANTIQUE FURNITURE rUHWWO* ..u _ »,v Mtrr^Rd.. off Pontlr- BRIDES - BUY YOUR WEDDING innouncamanls at discount from. :orbts> 4500 Dixie. Drayton, OR 3- 707._______ BE GENTLE, BE expansive carpet, ____ Blue Lustra, Rant alsctrlc sham- pooer j|, ---- -- E. walto BASEMENT SALE, SEWI... machine, tape racordar, stereo, ^ol table, —' BASEMENT SALE -520, gaa rang# 120,. chair «5, 7 odd kitchen choir* 75 cent* each. 4 yr. crib and -mattress complete Ilk* now 120. Power lawn - wwiwr >1i * *>la COMMERCIAL MEAT A Bon* bnnd ^tf^jj^ABid tan. I4 t -.... 330-1097. TOUCH, CHAIR, CRIB, hlgh-chalr, and twin bad, 4730020. COMMUNITY QMUGB SALE — only now or slightly Hama, ir .tank. Wide salacllon, Thursday Friday, and Saturday, 1* AM tg PM. N41 Vlncant St. M Pontla CULLlOAN WATER SOFTENER, cabinet I, 2 ham 473-79B7. 25 card* par JRHL .... price, auortmant of 200* I Forbes Printing end MHgg pile*. 4SW DI)iS OR 2-9747T rfcsar»S coMPLbti W0M6JB 0HAIR and youth crib, FE 5-707A atti Pontiac Press Want Ads . For Action • Appllanc* ton. 335-9724. En^Rfc^tfBiNartSKhirta K Frldan calculator Ills, Comptomotar 150, Royal portable machine, 5145. Savarly'i, 7745 i.i----kj ' ?l*MfO- GARAGE SALE, furniture, toysTtape recorders, rugs, clothing, men’s size 44, aramen't size 5, mlsc. 4740 Quarton Rd., between Franklin and Lake BaT________________ I LE. Children's ....... S flood condition. Fr). and Sot. Frankwlll, Clerkston,—oft Maybee Rd. ____ GARAGE SALE. Friday and Saturday, 9 to 7 p.m. 4031 Edmore, Drayton Plains. Children's clothing, TV, sofa, tent, tools, toys. Lots of extras. . __ ARAGE SALE—14 gallon fish aquarium complete $25, 1941 Ford *150- sewing machine *12. mlsc. 201 Greensnleld Rd., off M-24, Lake Orion. GARAGE SALE: BEDROOM suite, fireplace tot, and mlsc., Frl. and Jo’-i y.Pw> 1W1 Lakeland, oil Orchard Lk. GARAGE SALE Sapf. 17-20, 8 hors* Simplicity garden tractor and attachments, recllner chair, electric _ stove, mlsc. articles tin Court, 7 Harbo°s, White L GARAGESALE. _Frj, and Satj 9-4. SNOW SPORT, 1475. Also trailer Pets Hunting Dogs________ MIXED PUPPIES, S5, RIFLE SCOPE. IntematlonBl L-....—.. - — - . power. Almost naw, *35. Call 442- SKI POO, SCRAMBLER 4. Trail Boss. For tlta finest service and w to JIM HAR- Lapeer > 44-2822. 5129.50, doubles $179.50, 4 place NORWEGIAN^ELKHOUND PUPS, 4 monttis, AKC, shots* champion blood lines and background. 332- 2420.________________________ NORWEGIAN ELKHOUND PUP-PIES, AKC regIstored. sllver-gray and black, 9 wi*k»- 9*7^254. 4385 Oakguard, White PERSIANS CSA, ADULTS for sale or free on breeding terms, kittens also. Studs. 425-4384. POODLES, AKC, 12 weeks, let block males. $45. 493-4138. PALOMINO FARMS, H HORSES AND TOP bT4nds Ofaquip. New-used. Up toSO par crtit oft. CHntonvMleRd?,UPonttac^473-7457*9 ------ " - ‘“II Pitad, bought, RABBITS, LARGE- 4742. Bofor* noon._____ ______ RlGlSTERED BLACK QUARTER horw, stud, II yr«.< well mannered, 5325. 9 yrs^ J/teWao male, spirited Ladles horse. $175. 42G3339. "REGISTERED AppelooMei SNOWMOBILES, CALL AFTER 5 ' PART COLLIE-GERMAN shepherd; grand champion, call 451-3170 •'* 1 anytime. _________ PUREBRED QUARTER HORSE 332-4274 ----THREE RIDING HtiRSBS 451-4532 ACRIFICE SALE, M949 Sklroule,! REGISTERED BLACK 4 TAN 440CC.JM949 Skjroules 3Mce, l-1949 hound. 187-5717.___________ , I * -STOCK. ANO WATCH DOG puppies, " roughbrsd English Shepherd, 520, 8-2914. Lk. Rd. off M-59. Friday after 4 Sat, and Sun. a“ dau SKI-DOO'S____ USED SKI-DOO'S 10 HP UP TO 24 HP ALL LATE MODELS IN A-1 CONDITION. PRICED FROM $495 AND UP. TERMS AVAILABLE, r-- . KING BROS. 373-0734 SAMOYED PUP, CHAMPIOtFsIr Pick of litter, pur* white, fer sled or show, 428-1444.______S SEAL-POINTE SIAMESE klttf weeks, SID. 474-1434. TRAVIS FARMS Horses bonded 150.00 month. I arena. Over 300 * ft sale: co-up r a 11111 v, Ing, household and mlsc. I. Wigs. Sept. 19 ana-20 9:30 ,3710 Breaker. Lake Oakland lung must go, 402 L-;-—-,”,——. Bloomfield Orchard Subdivision. Fri.-Sat. 9-4. GARAGE SALE. 90 East C« t-1 c-» -ng gun, 9-6 - garage sale: Bedroomni stove, m1-- "" ------- iashaba: ind Set. RUMMAGE SALE . 144 Mechanic, Tor 2 weeks. RUM5AAGE SALE—some __________ tape recorder, RCA record player, dishes, clothing, mlsc., Mon-Sat., 3144 Auburn Rd., 104 p.m. r RUMMAGE SALE — Si S September 20, 10 a.m. to -[ YWCA, 249 W. Huron. SMTSashahew Iron-rite, mlsc. __________ wAhAQE SALE. Saturday sept. 20, muat mlD,i1 y Pr,“' Everything OARAGE SALE - Furniture-, •jtaltang and mlsc. Sunday, Sapt. Sh F,,m Rd- oW Pontiac Lk. GARAGE SALE Kllclwn things, golf dubs, knitting machine, play pen, and other baby Items. Linens, ate. Must dispose of " ■ — - - onry, 9.4. ra? r"". ™ Long Lake Stratford Lana. Bloom* Shawnee Lane, ®f'w-Walton Blvd. Sat., 0:30-5:30, Ind. men's overalzaii dnth»« GARAGE SALE — Saturday $nd Sunday, 20 and 21 of September. Luggage, good clothing, tape recorder*. —steroo console,—g0|f -flOffit-MWC. household Items. 4618 VeHeyvIew Dr., Orchard Lak*. 851 “4130 Airport R wig, clothos; oh S south Aylesbury. 413- GARAGE SALE - family, hudt L Pjljow »lflfi'»"triim',HiLLER* 'ED: Brown ten-Midland oil Pike St. ln"Foltl WANTED - TINY BREED 1 PUP. 451-1304._____________ Pet Supplies-Servic* Sand-Gravel-Dirt 9 'til 0 Thurt., Fr RUAAMAGE SALE: 9 to 0, Frldey-Set., Sept. 19-20. Clothes, lurnlture, “ - —■---------- —-------- 100S1 M-IS, FE 4.4721.__________ BEAUTIFUL GRAND PIANO, like $495. H. B. Smith Moving CO, end till ______ TefoiM, oawysB-ow. JWWB FREE DIRT APPROXIMATELY 4O-"^RSjMmG-GUARANTEE0 50 loodt of Grevol, send, day, *3.00 up. poddter-etud service. < must have equipment to movo, colors, no eppolntmont hocessar Dixie Lake 4251755.________| 31 N. Midland oft Plk* S*. bedspreads, little clothing mlsc. Friday and Saturday 9-5, n~d|k| •ale. 5250 Tubbs, Community Hell.- * COMPLETE DRUM SET, exc b,S* JPWHta, make 473*1307 or 474-aB47. ______ CHdCKMAVd AMPUFitlK, tremlo washing machine, baby and floor butter. RUMMAGE SALE - September 19, welcome, Saturday, Septambar 20. Oakland County Boat Club, 2330 Farndale, Sylvan Lak*. 9 a.m. til? V°UK CHILD CAN a*y htr H|j| 1 “te th* learned Plano rontals, abe's, than It'i tl her do, r 332-0547. MORRIS MUSIC 34 s. Telegraph Rd., across fr ■ Til Huron, FE 2-0547 ‘ LIKE NEW, CONN ALTOlix 7f.A Farm Produc* 3 RUN BARTLETT PEAR*, 12.50 --- bushel. Sergenl Cider Mill. ' N Rochester D" - 1-A GROOMING (-A BLACK DIRT, top soil, ••"*' j BlMmtield" br,,d•• 7 d,y * _________335-5259 ....■ ... ■ 373-1485. j AKC TOY POODLE Stud Servlc* I French Orchards* 1288 Stata Rd., EXCELLENT TOPSOIL, bladv dlri,______ FE 5-3431_______—------------------------------ ......lOlfl " dellvsred end dog HOUSES, MOST sizes. 7411 BARTLETT PEARS, bring con- * “ ~ i Orchard Lake Road. 1 ........." M “““ 124 McIntosh, you pick. mHPOPpick your ....... ... Dutton Rd., Rochester■_ BARTLETT PEARS 5391 Coomef Rd., Pontiac 412-0101 BARTLETT PEARS, SMALLER ilZI, exc. lor canning, 52.50 b u. Peabody's G r a n v I a w Orchards, SCREENED BLACK DIRT «, PEAT DELIVERED.------ SPECIAL - p LIME ttont, ii-A stontJ stone, road gravel. *Bri Sashabaw, MA S-2I4I Auction Solee AUCTION SALE Sat.9 Sapt.9 20th ^ lt.„ ..... Located at 6350 Datrolt St., Ottar -i- 12041 Fanton Rd., Fan ton. Wi CANNING PEACHES, $3.75 Prune plums *2,75 1 ast W GERMAN SHORT HAIR, Vt Colli* PUP, *10, *17-4339,____ • . j i AKC REGISTERED St. Barnard, . $100. Fdmala, FE 5-4339. wheal trallar,. uua ....... ......., Laptar County tiank A Trust Co. nicuic Orchard & Cider Mill dark Arthur L. Schott-prop. Omr *',e™ * ~7;tl°ra, lger m Lake — 793-4997, Bud Hlckmoit- 1475 Ranch Rd. — Ganaral Auctioneer, Oxford — 421- * ml, *•*•»$•? 2159. _____Just off Mlltard Rd._______ ’ KALHAVBN AND Rj|D Skin peaches; i EVERY SATURDAY AKC CHOICE M Orchards, 4205 I M| afternoon*.__________ ,| NO. 1 POTATOES., 52 Open Waterford cornet, 473-5095. .....__unit with oven stove, slnK and refrigerator *100. Also kitchen -jpboards with formica counter ip, sink, countertop stove and islit In ovan $250. Used 4 burner Hinler top gas stove, Calling icessad light fixture*. Oid ou^'"‘ jus* - shutters. -Chairs, .taw i td ends; Sapt. 20 and 21, 9 -------—* -outh I raws.. RUMMAGE SALE: 544 Third, 1 4 p.m„ except Sunday. RUMMAGE SALE. 97 Poplar Sept. 19-20-22, 9 to 5 p.m._ REAL GARAGE SALE — Car a: "" garage for sale. Good SACRIFICE SN tractor with euburi LUDWIG' P'iNK Champagne dr sal, complete with cymbals, *: Pontiac Music A Sound, 482-3350 PIANOS—ORGANS GOOD SELECTION NEW ANIL USED ---— ..SWNETANO CONSOLE PIANOS PRICED FROM: $399 BANK TERMS -FREE DELIVERY Shop ui before you buy GALLAGHER'S 1710 TELEGRAPH FE 4-0544 Open Mon. and Frl. if- Saturday 0:30 'til 5:2 SUNN 200S, AMP. EXC. I-A DACHSHUND PUPS. AKC,. ESTELHEIM KENNELS, 391.1800 Rd., Clarksten. 423-1254. _ PEACHES — KALHAVEN and Radskln, you pick, 3wt. 20 and 21, ------1 —'■ 129$ St 5 A-1 AKC DACHSHUNOS, 3 months old, *40 each. (79-4950, $710 Clair, Troy. dlllon, 8275, 3333840. UPRIGHT PIANO. I i- Also stud sarvlco. FE 4 1-A PQODLE STUDS, grooming $1 reasonable, M7S-24M. -WEEK-OLD poodlaa—473-0949 'a ___ ( MONTH OLD Siberian purebred, vary friendly. I S7M. otter S PM._________ ADORABLE LONG floppy M Ml ---------- " »K'r.£u! iprlcot , Husky. *50. 334- ^ CpNSIGNME^TSJWELCOME *OR 3° 7171 Prsnchn'Orcherdih 12%” Stoie 'Pd. B & B AUCTION IJMM.--------------------- BIG AUCTION pears! PLUMS. APPLES FRI.r SEPT- 19 , Cortland_epplts now on plC_k-your- 7 P.M. SHARP Burns and Duck from 9-5, Olklond Orcherds. AKC DACHSHUNDS ,UkC SHETLAND I model S I o V * s , refrigerator*, washers and dryart, bedroom eulte. living room eulto, color TV, stareos, dinette pets, tools and trolls, skill saw, record players, some antiques. Much more merchandise, DOOR PRIZES EVERY AUCTION SOS* Dixie Hwy,________OR 3-1717 B&B AUCTION ’fK! SAT. NIGHT, 7 P.M. SHARP SEPTEMBER 20 Such as colored TVs, stereos, bunk PICK YOUR OWN t. W. out of i* marl* male. lee. 8. SEE snotFpjK. GARAGE SALE: GARDEN •mel appliances, household____ clothing, toy*,-oomosr5$0 Homtttoir Rd. Bloomfield Village, Birrh-Ingham. Sat. $«pt. 20, 9 til 5, GARAGE SALE: OLD bookiT "‘“■Ing. 7420 Sweet-Acres, GARAGE SALE — Sat. 9,jTv phalli ilrlua kIL. Crooks ojitADE SALE: Co-op, antiques, children* clothes, men's sizes < and 42, woman's alzee 10, 12, ar 14, puppies. 3403 Bay brood C^yton-Thurs. S im o.prLw GARAGE SALE — clothes an ■kMfi--------Itoms. IS) Exmoor HOT WATER HEATER, 30 gal. ges Consumers spproved $09.50 value, *39.95 ond 149.95 marred. Also aeclrle and butene heaters. t*r-rifle values, Michigan Fluorascant, 393 Orchard Lake. FE A8442 14. HARAMEE MOTHRBs for Better Living — Rummage at St. Joseph Church, 400 S. Blvd. 9 a.m. to 4:M P.m;, Sot.., Sept. 20. Proceeds tor Needy Children's Christmas presents. ________________ LOOK — LOOK! — LOOK ‘"'■'c savings on now and used , Will toslall. 4M-5474,___ ■ SPRINKLING avstoms, 4 Inch plastic Dip*, S3J5 par 100, 1" panto pipe, 5J1 par 100, 1'A p ast e pipe, *1.51 par -100, !W plastic pipe. *10.01 par loo. G. A. Thompson t Son. 7005 m-59 W. r timers. 173.1277, __________ lOVlffB SACE:’1 Ml«c. Itoms, bsr i •Ipoli' yortf topi*, toys, girl's and MhijtlciHi iAiitftfil' LAtai' marrad * cabinets will lara* si wmwul rifle buys. Michigan' Fluor** 293 Orchard Lk.. FE 4-8488 — l MISCELLANEOUS iTBMS. furnace, mattrfta, eld* i Ihermo-pen* picture window, (tovt, large tea. - k..t i, $78-114$. NEVER WORN, *ngag*m*nt~ri — bandjfwld $140 will sail OH, FURNACE. .H»^>0 single a healer. $ MARKlt, 12 H*ie» eun. aapr- 31. 1 “11 5 p.m. 90 E. MMIfB Lak* M, LIVPmMa, Troy. Rain dato PLUMBING BARGAINS, FREE (landing Mist, $29.95; SOgallon nibs, ilo and up. Ftp* cut (m Ihreeded. SAVE PLUMBING CO., (41 Baldwin. FE 4-1114, TCVoThTlV llflb a^Jn-F! cmpoyi&w _______tdltton, $175. 332-- NCLOSE YOUR SHOWER over 1h# bathtub with a Mautiful plats tab a^, Wttfi jraflG Grand piano, twin bads, tomo antiques. 3440 Glddlnga Rd. 9 PUMP MOTOR, penal ttoor, twin matfrass 4 rug, *1* each I, mlac. 5240 Hm Lak# Rd. W. of I Tolograpff between Lotto Fine 8, Qua rfr* MJ9, Highland Rd., by Ponfloc SERVICE STATION equipment for .sole, Poll offer s, UL 34244.- SUBMERSIBLE AND upright lump pumps, sold, rapblrad, ranted, Cane'a FE $-4442._____________ SPRED-SATIN PAINTS, WARWICK Supply, 2471 Orchard Lak*. 412- SUBURBAN GAS apses I never used, bait oftor, 33 bat. 3:30-4:30 p.m. jWRFLUl OFFICE CHAIRS AND faction of Original coif. BOULEVARD SUPPLY 500 »■ Blvd. ~ shallow well PISTON PI THGSALVATIONLARMY RED SHIELD STORE _ 11* W. LAWRENCE ST, Evarylhlng to mast your — Clothing, Furniture, Appll WALNUT DESK, 2 chalra, 'Korder, lolnar-planar, xerclsor couch, - mlsc. I J. Flko SI.________. YARD SALE. Frbo coffea,_______ draam, size 14-1SVS, ladles shoes YARD SALE: lot. 10 tl mile, housef"-' "—-block W. of of Lincoln. tyertlHg 6**6* 2 VW OFF STREET Dufw Bugglss Hand Tool*—Machintry DRIVE SNAP-ON SOCkOl AIR COMPRESSORS, lubrication •qulpmant, Hydraulic, lacks, --- SlMftori. .WtMliw' MUtomoni Pontiac Motor JtaiM ■, Unlvortlfy Drive. FE 2-6104 CRAFtImAH, 10" tadlal sow, table LATE MODEL production drill presses ana mlsc. BBiitan—‘ LeFortsf Tool B Machlne ^ St. John* St., Highland. 445-2437. HACK! SKILL SANDiR, | il’"B~g|(e{rk m&ssrJB.ae h.p. Limn trwior, sot of pipe dr~ motors, seporato. ja*rMWGii§k__________________ ENLARGER, DURST 404 txcoltonf condition. Naw pries ||K — ElDttmi-Ayyk MMM 22 In. cut llanilwgG tuSfk. RAILROAD TIES t siding, hawn beem, »ery. FE 5-9120. SUPER I CAMERA Wtth zoom h and proloctor, tlOOWFE 4W74, Pontiac Press Want Aids For Action Only 879. All t_I__ Hill Pbwr 68M688*- AKC REGISTERED Silver toy poodlf ■ •—■■•••ww* —v puppies 8r 2 AKC yovno rneii MBtatown brands. Prices as low| Pekingese. 132-4523. 1_ _ “ GRINNELL'S A*“ ®”BrpmbrP pw DOWNTOWN STORE 27 S, Saginaw FE 3-7I4S AND ptokuj Kntlac”(rad)r‘i All day *■“ ‘ 2t.Aito and 25, Oxford i Coats Ra. Turn n. ro wjiimi m. w. on Granger 1 mlto. Or N. out of Pontiac on Baldwin approx. It miles, to Granger W. on Granger 1 milt. Cleon Middleton, OA $- ~ —TOMATOES * 2340 Devondal* LAST HOUSBr NORTH OF AUBURN tomatoes, by ftw bushel. l4fi~W. 71-A ACCORDION GUITAR, LESSONS, Salet-sarylcf. A too plr— Pulaneckl, OR 3-5594._____________ ENROLL NOWI For all music lotsont, on our fall ballroom, tap, balta typo dsnees. Music Saginaw. FE 4-4700. LESSONS: *1 PIANO STUDENT WITH txparlanca Store Eqaipment_____73 “^WBITRJF^iR£5: .chairs. 1 tvoilNi Good Mtocflon of used ....„ 720 W. Huron ____________________214-1754 tat VaMAhA tnowmabl quick machine, usad 1 Call 473-78(0. $750. AkFa ........JG pools. I Call today for dotalls. RHODES POOLS Pint Browning Archery d Qun Rr—- (KBIT jir/WSf to W. Highland, right to ffidHiry Rkio» Rd. to Damod* Rd., tott and fgjlSw signs ffDAWSON'S SALES, TlFSITO LAKE, Phon* IlMI/t. GUNS, ammunlfk Opdyk* Hardware ________3734414 GUNS, 900, na*r, usad mSdar *"'lqu*. Buy. r-" “ *—■-i Shop, m M-ll, “ GUNS—GUNS—GUNS f tlto largest selections “ “fMM- t--------- - f Inchest* SKI-DOG'S . Ip madiinaa bi stock.___ fa hava a complat* line c oh,*Ph!!Ltt,,*ghi o 3QJ1mIu2. TtlZ. >lot* line of ac-sleds euioreu irpuere, air”1” —- STOP OUT THIS WEEKEND! Cliff Dreyer's Gun and Sports Center 15210 HoHy^Rd.it _ Holly, Ml 44771 AKC Miniature s-tfffWOiZERS. sett and pepper, 4 weeks old. Cali attar 4:30i 752-2934. AKC BEAGLES, 7 MONTHS, S20-S25. miniature, while, $45. AKC TOLLIES, ______________ _____ end tomato, sable end trl. 428-249$. AKC POOOLE PUPPIES, I WEEK*, APR ICOT TOYS. 8444(49. AKC foV poodles, itad, iltasr, black, brown ond aim all cotorad AFGHAN FEMALE, 1 yi registered with paper: All black, good show i LI 3-1975, M, AKC 5 shell. iy, $200, l terrier, 815 tech. E puppies ar FE 5-1027. room suites, dishes, lamps, docks, powsr riding lawn mowers, tools, and antiques. Door prize every auction. CASH PRIZE EVERY AUCTION 1019 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-2717 |l5cKs clocks ~ Deceased collector of old docks tslato to be told af Bluebird Auction. The dock •» told Sal. night. Set Further notnlcatjM ... RR of salt ef eetoto to he mede in paper on a later dato. Clock led Ion contains 1371 c I o c I BEAGLE PUPS., HaUtiAUL AKC, poodle, 1 pocket si; cokir, both $ro bra stud poodle, win sal —homorw-1997,---- BEAUTIFUL TINY 10 mpagno llnyRiy BEAUTIFUL KITTENS, FREE' FE 44174 i champion COLLIE PUPS, AKC, Sablo and Trl, - COON 1....,— 142* Force Rd., A He*, h 5. *70-9242 and 49S475S. Devoted pets, idUAl wafeh-dogs. Doberman pups. AKC rag. 8100-1150. 32B-1713. excellent rabbit 66g, ir*il, $45 or trads (no dogs) attar 5 p.m. 482-3492._________■ MilE ORiy'ANb' whft good home. 4WH07.. FREE KlTTEMJ”lWr monttis old. FE 44424. FOR SALE, 2 AKC ragtotorod beagles, trnlMd on rabbRs and pheasants, also 2 AKC , beagle ¥Twmns 'im k H, 3481 Welkin* Lake Ri —MBF"- FREE PUPPlEl _________ OR 14*15___________ GERMAN SHORTHAtRiD Pointer, Held dw; weak* old, impkm stock, AKC, 7 germaH SHEPHkKBT'MALK, i moa. Black and ton, $95. 3434403, GERMAN SHEPHERD pupptot AKC Mjlil.. 852-2$94 IRISH SlTTER PMPPIESf AKC champion alftd, papers "" 1 wolgfil, spring, chlmo,. mutlcaX kitchen. Cuckoo, wall, mental, Japanese andE C toti p r * " e b • Lovely carer" ---------IM daw si brass weight pendufui Open oil day Sat., Sapt. 20th tor ln-tpecilon from 10 a.m. Sato will start promptly of 7 p.m. iLUiBlRD AUCTION , 14147 Dlxto Hwy. (US-10) Hplll 14 Milas N, of ForMr- jUj TRUCKLOAb OF PEACHES by II Suthal, Boros Country AAarkof. 22; Dlxto Hwy. TOMATOES, YOU FICta, U~ bushel, honey extracted or com Form Igvlpwent HoiJv ____________ 4344831 HOLSTEIN DAIRY CATTLE MM equipment auction, Monday. Sapt 2 t* I P-T:: located 2 mltas weal of Imlay City on M21 to Youngs “*• mltas north, to tin Consisting of a Rd., 2n l Capac Savings Bank dark, LaVarn S. Ostrom, proprietor, Imlay — 724-1482.' Bud Hlckfnofi, ge aucllenaar, Oxford 428-2159.,________ IMPOUNDBO VEHICHLBS Which hava been declared abandoned ar* tharetor* tchtdufod for sail at euOlIc aucfloni purtuon* to aoctlon 252 of ids 309 oi puttie acto of 1949 (C.I., SfC. 257, 212) HV til* Ponllac Folic# Dept. At Sim Allen A Son*..Inc., 50* .Colitar Rd. Pontiac, Mlchlapn. *■'- -* —u.-T-win be fiewon living r Auction, 705 W. . Lake Orion, 993-1S71, _________ SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER »riM0 Heddrlll County Homo Sold — *752 Brlghom _ jtd.. .NoHhtoef of AnttgiM fllpHHI ............ _ Relic* Limes — Clocks — Household Perkins Sato Sorvlc* Auctioneers Ph. Iwtrtz Croak___________43544c WEDNESDAY SEPTfMSIiT 24, 2 Market Llqul: — & Flint' cjl I JOHN DEERE CHUCK W*Bm!~ Flotation tiros. John Door* No. 34 chopper with hoy end corn hoods. 1 Gehll teed grinder. 1 Gehll silo tilling btowor. FTO drly*. AIM944 models, oxc. condition. Days Ft *■ - Pdf- 5m. 427-3$7t. _______ 3 PLOW DIESEL TRACTOR, 18#! Loti of ootlont, S2J95. Coll otter i p.m. OrT|071. ' 503 GALION GRADER. Ixcoltont 53750, EM 34402. 104S. JACOBSEN TRACTOR. *1*3 equipment, like now, $924001. CLOsiJOiit FLOOR MODEL — Wheelhorse tractors and mowort. We will ndt bo undersold. Lowest prlcss. Tom's Hardworo, til Orchard Lk. Ay*. FE 5-2424. your Hi ORTONVILLE'rNA ^3292. FARMALL CUB WITH lltOt bsst oftar, 473-1441. INE sICOND^UTTIHO alii Hold, 50 dallyarre ■ ranp*d.$974957. II attar S p.m. YE I N T E RNATIONAL HARVESTER tractor F-cubcMM. 343-2319. ROTOTILLER, MASSEY, Farguion, SUMMER CLEARANCE USED LAWN IAND GARDEN Tractors with mowers CUB CADETS - WHML HOflia - BOLENS - SIMPLICITY -SPRINGFIELD, AJ.1 RECON- KING BROS. 1734714 » Pontiac Rd. at Ocdyk* tbA 1 4-7909 attar 3. HOLSTEIN VEALBR'1 calvaa, a; PrwTll8-l9B ft»r«P-9ta4. m POOP riding hofses wii •addle*. Ksatlngton Antlqu Vfllana 2149 Jaenm.. I -k. Mu. tlto Bl ARABIAN GELl_______ - 14.1 hands; S-yMr-old . waiklno horaa, gaidlng. D C. Arabian Farm, 4253550. Champ, *495. Eaiy « 4' trAVBL TRAiLBR, Keep* i, Riam hitch, mirrari, lack*, and Naw liras, oxc. YOUNG'S MARINA ^taJ-Hwy.diUojU^ ____ „,JBi MB' Pto^bgr^aa*.^! JOHNSON SKI HORSE" ------------- “OlOSf1.SNOWMOBILES ■--- 324-2125. 4 ' l MUST SGLL.' AKC poedl* pupa. liAft e*rd ttwl^* vtoltors 'welcomt. - Pinna 425.27M, , t." ' - P6fc lALl-;12 nil BRED HIM Want Ads ‘-Tor Action For Wont Ads Dial 3344981 THE POftTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER t9, I960 D~~9. ; STRiAMUNE 2*' Air_ »*» PARK -AOYALE XAMPER (IMPS 6, auto, gat heat and In, tercom. Mounted on 1969 V-8 — 307 . * CIW>» WOQvy duty springs, . auto, transmission, radio, many . axtrai. Only 4,000 miles. Best otter. Cost 64240 In Mtrcr w* 363-*372. 4969 STARCRAFT TRAVEL TRAILERS * INSIDE DISPLAY ; CRUISE-OUT, INC. 63 I. Walton Dally »-t PE 8-4402 ■ CLOSED SUNDAYS AIN s tream international, 1*61. 30* twin, air. reeca hitch, ex. , Ires. 4301 Joslyn Rd. at l-7i. 1 AND ALL HAVE MODERN DECOR -arly Amerlr--CAMBRIDGE Available Immediately—park spa UColontal Mobile Homes 2-1657. * 674-4444 w&ah* aaDwv^ APACHE MESSA II SALE ' ALL BRAND NEW 1969 SEMI-AUTO CLOSE------------ , -SP* «b*» tha bads coma In a ’ tha top poas down. . Beautiful dinette sot, sleeps < - load* ot storage, torsion-bar tut pension. Also limited number of Masse III And Ramada's. SAVE HUNDREDS EVAN'S EQUIPMENT *25-1711 Clarkston 625-2316 <M7 Dixie Hwy. Open Mon.-Frt. from * a.m.-o p.rr Sundays. 664-2822. _ Century camper, iv seif... —talned, GMC truck, V-8, automatic double powar. 61»433l. CENTURY YELLOWSTONE TRAVEL TRAILERS QUALITY AT ANYBU DGET STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. 1771 Highland (M-891__682 966 —Chock' our deal on — SWISS COLONY j9 j Motorcycles 1*67 CZ, 361 ec Motorcroft, all n*« engine, 1650, call 852-1270, 1*67 HONDA SM, Scrambler reasonable. 626-5160. HORNET, 6J8 CC/l btdfpom’ HILLCREST, Witt $3900.r332-8o3^335-18li. ~r£JL A.CA«MY, BRAND new. SB carpeted, .... awning. 791-3095. 1,??, s5‘,BERT.Y 12x55. Llkii’Dew: Utility Sitea# carper, j Largo kitchen. 332-0617. 1**7 MARLETTE, 3 bedro bedrooms, ..... washer. On lot I.. WR-,__________ • assume payments 628-1071. LUXURY TRAILERS -------- FROLIC TRAILERS AND TRUCK .CAMPERS. SKAMPER FOLD-DOWN CAMPERS .'Isis'®— ----- JOHNSON'S TRAILER SUPPLIES A ACCESSORIES ________DEALER FOR: . TR0TW00D WAG-N-MASTERS Wallon at JoeWh ___FE 6-5*53 ’ EXPLORER MOTOR HOME ‘ 21', 23'. 23' MODELS See this Calltr-'- T- whlch Is No. I96I CHAMPION, 12X<0, on lot. 2 bedrooms, new furniture. 682-3738. ADD-A-ROOM TO YOUR mobllo homer Countryelde- LlvIno, 334-1509. CHARLAMOR 10x50, furnished SUNRISE PARK KROPF Double W Ides, Custom built to Froo Delivery 1 Within 30T AT BOB Hutchinson MOBILE HOME SALES I--4301 DIXIE HWY. 6734204 DRAYTON PLAINS . Coen Dally 'III * p.m. Saturday and Sunday 'III » i WILL SUIT YOlJl “~ ANNUAL CLEARANCE • --.HONDA SOS Scrambler, iplles,. exc. condition, *450: 2 11 helmets, S25. 373-0035. Boats-Accessories J7| CARNIVAL By Pick Tumei Foreign Can 1961 CENTURY I7', 627 cu. It '“‘rrceptor motor, complete equli nt, 62 total hr*., tape dec!I idem Moody Trailer. Cell <82-0, between 9-4 p.m. 1969 BSA. LIKE-NEW, UlOO-fnlles, leaving slate, must sacrifice. 8600. 676-6276. > 611-0666. A Few Boots canvae and mooring cover, 819*5. 1*68 TRIUMPH 500 SCRAMBLER, many extras, S758, *66-1792. ATTEX WNBA 1W.SCRAMBL-BR 2600 jh# Go-Anywhere Fun Vahids miles, alter 3. 625-1360, 1*61, 305 HONDA 673-71*2 1*68 SUZUKI, 118 CC, 600 mil**. Ilk* ». 1250. 6-6, 333-7163. A versatile amt Drive Your AttOx rlgl. Maneuver with 1*60 CIMATTI, 50CC, SI 15 or best otfor, coll only otter 5:30, 3*3-5029. 1*68 500 CC BSA, 2,300 miles, exc. condition, 8700. 8*0 Tennyson St. Before 2:20 pjn.________. 1*6* HONDA,175ec, holmot, locket included, woo. 335-2669, 1*69 TRIUMPH 500 SCRAMBLER, Riverside. 8516. 260 c CLIFF DREYER'S MARINE DIVISION 15210 Holly Rd., Holly ' BEAUTIFUL 16' RUNABOUT with trailer, mahogany dock, extras, for trad* for good late modal, imoll outboard motor. 731-7506. BOAT STORAGE REASONABLE 373-5307 5, excellent condition. COHO^SPECIAL ___..jfiar, InMd'taJfs! Kar's Boole and Motors 6*3-1600 81050. 650 Malchlots, rebuilt nMAten|Mtena|rt with ex- 1475, 315-T969 TRIUMPH SOOT* mo. old, stilt YOUNG'S MARINA Open dally * 'til * Sunday 10 to 4 _ 4030 Dixie Hwy. on Loon Lake Drayton Plain* " 1 FISHING RIG 10 hp Evlnrude, 14' molded ply, full fibergloe, ------------- 1 — wheel trailer, -, S375. 642-9701 Eve 1968 TRIUMPH TR4 BRAND NEW, - SAVE $1,000 GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 Oakland Aim. FE S-9421 1*6* FIAT. DUNE BUGGY, TANGERINE, metal flake, <1200, or beet offer, *51-5521. FOR SALE It# AUktlk 'Neeley, reasonable. FE MW after 6. “Nothing much happened. The first coupla weeks the teacher and class just spar around and feel each— Wanted Can-Trucks 101 . J. VAN WELT Junk Can-Trucks 101-A Vi-1-2, Junk cere, free tew anytime. til JUNK CARS, PAY FOR'TDM tree tow. FE 5-6079. New and Used Tracks 103 1*67 GMC VO TON AND Sportcrotl , Sleeper, 673-911* eves. 1*6* CHEVY VS V0 ton pickup, ax-cellant condition, radio. SI bumper, other extras, 625-2869, 1*6* FORD Van, V-8, ladder rack A 105 3 and 7:30 p.m., S5& S1700, bi 100's to el____ ______ ________ (dealer) 662-2061._____________ 1957 BUICK SPECIAL. Now 1 1*63 STING RAY, 327, 4 I__________. customised front and rtor, radial tiros; 4*3-4651. CHEVY !tr_t*63 In alt Ion, $350. Coll Si Clarkston. 625-4075. dltlon, $250. M7-93S3. I WAGON. Fair eon- 1962 BUICK LE SABRE 2-door, vary nnnri. 1 num.r UUlMI. Hip $1095, Suburban Olds bins. 676-1356 attar 5. f**» is ton chevy pickup, 5000 Birmingham miles, power steering and brakes, --------------- posl-tracllon, 822*5, MA.... 860 S. Woodward ___Ml 7-5111 BUICK New end Used Can 106 1962 CHEVY Wagon with radio, hooter, auton...... power steering, good transportation, at only — $445 1964 PLYMOUTH Sport Fury 2-door hardtop# radio* heater, V-8* power .steering* excellent condition throughout. Drlva likt — Only — T $745 TOWN & COUNTRY ' CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH ROCHESTER 1801 N. Main St. ______*51-6220 1*63 CHfeVY IMPALA station wagon, jood condition, auto, tfans. radio md healer. 1325. 666-170*. 1*61 CHEVY ... Stick/ excellent —_______________ Ogee - p*y here, Marvel Motors, 251 end, FI * 6826660. >66 V-8 CHEVELLE station wagon, beet, otter. 336-5512. _________ 1964 CHEVROLET IMPALA STA-TION Wagon. V-8. automotlc, power steering and brakaa, whitewall tires. Full price $4*5. lerlor, vinyl top, all tinted win- 1**5 CHEVY, SUPER, SPORT, 1086 Oakland ~ "336-180* LIKE NEW 12,XS** MAhLfTTE Fine 1969 homo, |ust taken c trade for 60'. An excellent buyl . SELECT MOBILE HOMES OPEN HOUSE I A-l Motorcycle Insurance FARMERS INSURANCE Agoncy i_ Pontiac across from Anderson’s Honda, Phone 336-45*7. Bodily In-jury, properly damage tar I Anderson's Best Buys beautiful mobile home. Marvelous furnishings I See the Marlette et Maw I QOrr Hnnrln Menn^^PeopJe*^FurnHure*wMmer wew* YUCC WOnog,. California .. I No. 2 In moior non . Price* ttert at 19.993. up. STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. 1771 Highland (M-5» ----- Holly Travel Coach, Inc. 15210 Holly. Holly ME 4-67 ; HAYDEN CAMPER SALES On M-5*, VS Ml. W. Of Oxbow Lk. 363-6604 . SALE — SALE — SALE We're Making Dealt; Now Is The _ TJm* , To Take That NSW Trailer Or Pickup Camper Home Prices Slashed UfKi Ntw, POP-UP Jont-tralter McClellon Travel * Trailers ; . 6820 Hlghtand Rood (M-5*) PHONE 476-1163 Close Out on '69 Models 8 West Wind • WHEEL CAMPER Juft * taw toft to choose Iroi PLEASURE MATE-” 1870 Model on Display *30 E. Wellon near Joslyn 373-5350 Closed Sunday Sprint by Bolen's THE SNOWMOBILE ■ I van's Equipment, 6587 Dixie Hwy. Cl^rketon. : SAVE * $50 to $300 ' EVERY TRAILER ON THE LOT Marked Down d;riy,3-To''Sund.% New! CB 350 Honda ..$695 se^ctmobili^hoves |Newl Honda 50 .....$239 New! Honda Mini ... $268 New I 650cc BSA : r: $T095 Newt BSA Enduro ... $850 New! 650cc Triumph $1195 New! 750 cc Norton $1195 New) 250cc Ducatti . $495 _G-3053 Corunna Rd.* f_ ROYAL—OR—REGAL " ACTIVE 2 or 3 bedrooms . li'xl*' living room 30-Gel. get hot weter healer Marine Storage WINTER'S Mike your “HOI MC k* (1-75 loots NOW ON DISPLAY Glastron, Sea Star North American AlunflT Craft, Mirro Soil-fish,. Sun-fish Mercury & Merc Cruiser Cruise Out, Inc. ....... Closed Sun. FE 1-6602 I, Mon.-Frl., *-3 S*« | ALWAYS BUYTNG~Jt7..JVai ecrap. we tow., FE S-2000. JUNK 1, i 3 Junk cars. Free tow anytime, FE 6-1671. Used Auto-Truck Port* ' 109. 4 CHROME MAO TYPE wheels with GMC TRUCK [IS CENTER It.’SB LUCKY AUTO New nod Used Cert 106 96* CHfVY KINGS WOOD. * Mat FE*?M06.M B>^CU,fr• “f' **5. , power brwteg" and a 19 CHEVELLE, * PASSENGER wagon, 1 cylinder, automatic, dou-...... ..........miiaaga, ttm. .. -----..IT. Df»arT matching Inlawlor. ing and brakaa. : transmission, radio. clean. SI.OOQ. 335-5363. blue. V-8 autmatlc, radio, h power steering and brakes, mm windshield, whitewall tires, end many other extra*, ONLY. $1495 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 2100 Maple Rd., Troy, Mich. ___642-7000 969 CHRYSLER TOWN and cawitry wagon, 10 passongor, dual elr, posl-traction, disc brakes, car top carrier, low mileage. Ilk* new, $3,700, 626-6095. "KESSLERS O* 8-160I POLARA 4 door. * .... ...rk. Full price 11*5. . Auto, 3273 W. Huron. 6110*02. 1*4* PODGE POLARA, d-doo Sot. A Son. 8:rl.to 12:00 Saturday 701 Oakland Avenue _______335-9731 1*4* FDntIac catalIna, mii oil - port. D-------- ---' line, 36 MOTOR-CITY DODGE 1*651 BUlcrf GkAND' SPORT, tour- $988 Suburban Olds v—. I Auto Insurance-Marine 104 n. 860 S. Woodward oi —-----------------------Js* Birmingham Ml 7-5111 TOWN & COUNTRY MOBILE HOMES, INC. Ttligriph st DIxIn Hwy. 334-6694 , Polly'till Sot, 4 suh. 'tn * RICHARDSON MOBILE homo) 1*65 10x50, In CeMog* Heights Perk. . si. soo. cosh or t financing costs alone. Let us I pleln horn* financing to you. SELECT MOBILE HOMES ____0-5055 Corunna Rd., Flint. TRADE YOUR CAR, b0*IT“ anything of VOlUt on * now bedroom homo. Ready to occu today. S50O cash or trad* do*.... Low at 111 ptr month. Stop by North Lon* Mobil* Homos Pork, Afmont, or cell 7*S-l2*4 for eiK oolnlmenl, __________________■_ WILL BUY USED TRAILERS. Pontiac Mobile Pork 7S4-1W4 WHY? • MANY MANY MORE! 300 CYCLES IN STOCK LOW DOWN PAYMENT EZTERMS (All prlctt Plus Tax) ANDERSON SALES & SERVICE 1*65 S. Ttlegraoh_PE S-7102 CUSTOMIZED 1967 Honda’ 305, lots of chromo* txc. condition* lots of extrai, 1300. 67MI02. _ Looking? FOR THOSE SPECIAL FALL SALES] New Yomohos New 1969 305 CC .. ■ .$439' New 1969 50 CC__$199 K & W CYCLE 2436 AUBURN UTICA-- — —73t-02»8l MICHIGAN'S OLDEST EXCLUSIVE YAMAHA DEALER SPECIAL YEAR I remaining Glasspar* Staury, h craft boats* Grumman and Do pontoons. Take v\-59 to W. Highland* r SHARP* 120 HP* 674-4167. . SAilboat, ...___RM condition, Sim. 4IM42I. __ SUMMER CLEARANCE I BOATS.MOTORS TRAILERS ---- tSSS-SAVE-im—~ Harrington ,Boat Works 1899 s. Telegraph *' HOLLY MOBILE HOMES not I oilers * wide rang* and eelectlor “--"t homes, such at: RkMrdi ____ Moon, Brood Lino, Reg i Champion and others, but also of I the lovlltsf choice of tilts to pi your now Mobil* Homo ... In .... beeullful. peaceful OAK HIL L ESTATES located'In * secluded-------- tar your privacy and convenient WHY NOT MAKE THAT ONR STOP SALE . VILLAGE TRAILER SALES 1170 DIXIE HWY. CLARKSTON ry, 4254217 ’ 5ALES-SERVICE-RENTAL* STORAGE OP ALL TRAVEL TRAILERS $5 Monthly Rent Trailer Spacs PRIVATB TRAILER SPACE ... medium or tmoll traitor. 6276 SBKr*—- wgs; Cobto comporooot. SPORTSCRAFT MFG. <161 Foloy W34650 Waterford bumpers, spar* tire sorrier*, hjery oatolln* tanks, ttabfll shocks. Cab M camper-bools. LOWRY CAMPER SALES 1125 S. Hospital Rd. Uhlen Lake EM 3-3681 •WINNEBAGO Motor Homoi—Trailer* ----Camper Coechet . Reas* And Draw-Tit*. Hitches sold wleitad SPORT TRAIL!*, OEM AND CORSAIR TRAVEL TRAILERS Conelr and Oem pickup camper*. Ellsworth Trailer Soles VP Dixie Hwy. - AIRSTREAM Sms w. Huron 1 New From Holly Park md dining row OAK HILL ESTATES HOME OF HOLLY MOBILE HOMES DIXIE HWY. AT OAK Hll^r' RD. S P.m IliZUKI MOTORCYCLES, 50cc. .. 500-cc., oil Inlocllon, 12 months or 12,010 mllw warranty. Cyclt ac ce.sorles, Rupp's Mlnl-blket. TAKE M-59 to W. Hlghtand, right ti Hickory Ridge Rd. to Demode Rd., left and tallow signs to DAWSON'S SALES, TIPSICO LAKE. Phone 618.2178,________ TRIUMPH SOO, 8700, Yamehe~llo, take over peymonls, OR $-3111. SEPT. SALE 1969 SUZUKI 500 cc TITAN Rig, 8785 SALE $799, del. mot. or 1X000 ml. Warranty MG SUZUKI SALES Aute Accessaries 91 DRAGSTER ENGINE, 427 Chevy gel, 1750; 18H Comet eet-up — Bulck engine, $350; elm n Chevy roclng P«rtt.:6l*4318. FORD 312 ENGINE, PULL roct cam. Malorey Ignition, .Hood— haadtrs, high rises with Sued, rebuilt. 165 - Y«H take oul of 4 14" Hollywood min tar For Mopsr, roeomblee et nwg* — -~ Wllh wheel locks. 19*1 Mustang 3- speed transmission With. Hurr‘ slncrolock. 150 complpta, *26-3066. THUNDEREIRD ^IRI WHEIlI, 334 7923. 92 YAMAHA - KAWASAKI a Season savings, all modi mploto selection of omluro't. • Financing Available CLAYT'S CYCLE CENTER On M4t 1 mu* sett of Lapoar 666- SCHWINN PEA-PICKER, 4 weeks all slits, also reconditioned blkee, MA Mil ' Boeti-Accesseries Tirsi-Aute-Truck REPAIR, MOUNT, end belenc* meg md gfMmi wheel*. New end used diMl*. Me^yAmerken ET. Creger, i^^arkM7lm„Cort*U Ofehirt eke Rd. KeiflO. '■agaSu'ML,,'- _ 4?! J? complete*4 euto^servk* Including mKMM MOP eorvle*. Matthews HtfirMvet Service Dept. 611 Oakland. ____ TUIfl-UPS Sim aff, nnlr, soo Mllw. Will maet May bill* Hwv/' i H P i.km-im— jSr.*m°*l TACO ^ftll-BIKE. 1 hp. sjtom ui' fusttfM- CRA'pfr plywood, 35 here* otactrlc me— —' 1351. Coll 304349, LONE STAR I860 liberties, nopy tap, eld* curtains, IS hp ireury motor and trailer, *25- ir CHRIS CRAPt. infaonrsl iM h.n.. m$$ZSo secrltlc* et StMB. MT-16M ettar 1. 17V0' SBA-RAY, Inboard-Outboard. tijQO. 682-116*. If PONTOON BOAT mi IflltaF, Silk Ml-iflk IS' INBOARD CABIN Crutofr on traitor,. extra Ogulpmont, - sturdy. Meal tor cmftaMni nil Hodtoy, Mich. 797-6166. IV ALUMINUM STARCRAFT. Mercury motor, I yr*. mi IN BOAT 22, 40 n motor, electric. SI .00 FORD HI-PESf 390 heads milled HI matching aluminum i n t. aid. Rebuilt Holley 4 B-n,,r*'»ign Lars ‘—lings, 336-9639. --- HOLLEY 950 CFM 4 B-ll, near new 850. Now Sun tech 6000 RPM 125. ir MI7-0133 1*'^ See. Rey^ convertible top. ItM0. fER Water Cot. exc. LOW Rates luring Pontiac since 1913 3ERSON X ASSOCIATES 6-35351 excellent condition, automatic j WE FINANCE NO MONEY DOWN '** Chevy 2-door . r. MOTOR CITY DODGE ' 4 Pontiacf convortlbta ...... *595 '64 Tempest convertible .... *595 Doaler FE 5-8939 from Union Holt ■____________________________ RED CORVETTE STING Roy con- 1764 BUICK HARbrbO. Birmlnohemi vertlble, 18*1 350 horse, 4 speed, iraSm nn, -u.—, ■>—— steering! mint condition, 82795, 475-9366. 1954 AUSTIN HEALEY, classic, 100 — 4, best ol 19*2 vw SEDAN, NEW engine, condition, $650. 335-3895._____ f9i3 VW CONVERTIBLE, good run- [ QR 3-5100 --- 6734366 New and Used Tracks 103 VS TON 1967 FORD pickup, S18S0, 1964 MG $495 GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 Oakland Ave. FE 5-9421 SPITFIRE, best oftar. 62X1721', TERRIFIC DICOUNTS On all boats, pontabns and canon. AT TONY'S MARINE m- 31 "I ton. Doslgnod lor car loading/._______________ $35- bulldozlng or heavy equipment. 11965 VW BUD. Nil I $708 Verne illyeeu, 2000 h t H All Dunwoodie St. Bald Eagle Lake OR 3-520Q 1967 Buick Wildcat Convertible ______ radio, shop*. only 8,000 ml. In nut 2 veers. Cell and brakes, air. conditioning and 19*5 CHEVY i-66oS *utbm*1!e — ready for the winter. Juet 1161*;' perfect conwtion.. ““ fi---|n tan tx-le*. Fischer Buick, 515 $. never had any poll Woodward. Birmingham. Ml 7-5411.1 body damage 1775______________ 19M BUICK SPORT WAGON, vXT. CHEVYI965 IMPALA convertlhiev'. PJfsenpr. good condition, *1,100, toto LS^i^P00W h»r^' «Bn rBUiCK loSAbrE, cimneT-19*7^BUICIC HARDTOP. Showrrn^ trad*. Power steering and bmkosl Powor windows, air ^ conditioning. “ “ sis 1. H| CHEVY IMPALA 1966, 2-doo hardtop, auto. Irons., powor st**) Ing^ original owner. 11195, <23-1025 166 CHEVELLE MALIBU 2 hardtop M3 V-8 $1150, 391-2321. 966 CHEVY IMPALA, I hardtop, automatic, powor MHM and ttoorlng, exc. condition, 132- IMPALA, 2-DOOR hardtop, 9 to, heater, elr condlftonlnr r,, tody's car, $1200, 692-6238. 1966 CHEVV CAPRICE, Ilk* new, Svlven Lake USED BbATS w CLEARANCE Outboard*, 1-0'*, Speedboats inboard Cruiser*, Outboard AAotare Many to Chooe* From < LAKE X SEA MARINE , Blvd. at Saginaw----FE 4-9587 yyjjjf 1959 PICKUP, RUNS ...JPBli Save Auto FE S-3279. FORD >A TON.Ibo^' YEAR-END CLEARANCE On All 1969 Stock! low 1970 boots end inowmebllwl I BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER 1265 8. Woodward et Adame 761 FORD PICKUP, *XC< dltlon, 56.000 actual mlk M95| 1SI-WS6. _____ Ml CHEVROLET, GOOD 162 CHEVY, VS TON, big box, 1395. LLOYD BRIDGES DODGE, Phono; 634047X Welled Lok*._ 1963_ CHEVROLET tt-ton pickup. Wonted Con-Trucks 101 attention' EXECUTIVE 1966 VW $795 GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 OoklondAvs. FE 5-9421 1911 VW, EXCELLENT candllton. '♦MY99 BUS, clean, runs good, CTO, CAMPER bn, full factory mi, liun, 1943 VW PANEL ti 1963 FORD, VV-TON PICKUP, g —*650. 4234139.___________________ ...,F,°gg.D«9lCyNe V*"' 1 1964 GMC VV-t6n pickup 25,OOg ““■mile, good condition, 8550. 1964 DODGE, D-310, 1 ton stake, V-t, 4 speed transmission, nod condition. I7H, LLOYD BRIDGES DODGE, Phono: 426-1472, Waited Lik*.---------------------------- chevV, it Ton, v-x * ' 9 LLOYD BRIDGES DODGE Phono: 624-1472, V EXTRA Dollars Paid FOR THAT. EXTRA Sharp 'Car Corvettes. CTO's, Firebirds « eel's, "Chick the rest, then get the test Averill's MW pixie Mansfield AUTOSALES 300 Sham Cadillac*, Pontiac, Olds end Buickt tor out-of-state market. Tee dollar paid. Snicks. Emnamv-jars. 23M t^xt**' "TOP DOLLAR PAID" GLENN'S LEAN" USED CAE t * cyi. stick (tr*L good tires m throughout I ol $895 HviQMx Stiii reliant condition tnr Sptcloljl BILL FOX CHEVY __ $1988 i Suburban Olds auto salesI 860 S. Woodward H||~ Birmingham Ml 7-5111 1967 SUICK LA SABRE 400H iloor HH| HI ----breksw gewn ■ cleen, tree, *3100., 473-1716. 4-»pmli„. point, me 1*66 VW, GOOD condition, 1900. Coll otter 1 p.m. ISSdtai. 19*7 VW, SUNROOF,~ dlton.-tt»i"<lt4i9«. 0*0®™ radio, call 495-2 BUG. b*la*, whitewalls, roof tiros Included, cl*— — dltlon. 332-3179. dlltonlng, buck vinyl too. tOAmr 199 bUick 'snantE. v»9e^'iiirfe tree, tide over wholesale. 651-9529. 19*2 cadIlLac convertible, SI7, Mi 1963 VW EXCEPTIONALLY CLEAN EXCEPTIONAL VALUE GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 Oakland Avt. FE 5-9421 iLIMW. Privete. isi-msi - M-JI$OP, HKlI^ I....I I. 651-7122 eftar 4:30 p.m. WH CADILLAC COUPE B0VHI0'6 DODGE VAN, rononobl*. 334-bobGE, VV TON, < cylinder. dltlon, 11,195. LLOYD airion, ICES DOI Wollod L* INI JIIP UNIVERSAL Want Ads / ir - --^^;n&.3HgMasa ***f,i iCWBatm For Action TOP $ PAID All Cadillacs, Buick Electro 225t, Olds 98s, Pontlacs and anything sharp with air cori' 36' OHLSONYAWL, racing or crule- ditioning. ta^tall invon’fery, me. Cond. 67X| WTTCON CRISSMAN 1966 CHEVY Vt TON Pickup, red finish, V4, automatic gomr steering, power brakes radio, heater, defrosters, deluxi rear bumper, S beautiful tire* ether accessories, local triMR SPECIAL $1495 LUCKY AUTO 343-S3Sl**B*' *XC’ condl,'on' S',450.' I96S OPEL LS very dean, 31,350. “ 1968 VW SUNROOF with r«do, Whllewollt, an* owner new cor trade, ton finish, only — $1195 MERRY OLDS US N. Main St. <114941 __ ROCHESTER 7 Volkswagen Specialsl 1N7 VW Bus .*1499 TD9 Intomollonel dour. PI ^ ^cdEvV^^OH pickup. XsElhg lN7 CHBVkOLET yj TON timsld* ggiX-*- ---------- steering, power ,—brakes, turbo hvdi r#0U>. Jto V4, *734615. 1967 CHEVY Vk TON Pickup, good condition, newOrn, >i279. fc-liM. 19*7 ji Ip. j4Kr'%e f6n, rb«x, < wheel drive, 4 speed frantmimpn, big 1 cylinder, 7' Myers hyrdo-plow, 1 iooo actual mites. ikMi, , LLOYD BRIDGES DODGE Phone: 626-1672, Welled Lake. 1**y bbrorVWWMandord 12700. Exc. condition. 338-2036. JU»* •"J? ten , price, plecher 111 S. Woodward, Blrm- L 673-7561._____________ |9 BUICK eLECTRA 221, custom 2 ir., vinyl tap, < way power eeate, lower window*, electric door locks, — wi jwwftiowine- 19*7 BEL AIR 6 stick, clean, mllwg*. 6W4I4S. 1967 CHEvV Impels convertlbl*. _. eg. In., 271 hp., mag wheels, radial lira*, stereo tap* Flavor, powor liewing and brakes, 24.000 mites, exceptionally clean, asking, 31,700. Cell 425-2768. 1 1*67 eoRvirre, e x c e l l e" condition, call PB 2-69N attar 6 l%7 CWIVY lMMU.'' hardtop, good condition, ti.500, 336-IQM^CORVETTE^ C0UPC~427O7l. 1946 CADILLAC CONVERTIBLE Must nil, 473-0675. CADILLAC COUPE DoVllto, good Meko n {111. T Sports Von, Xgastenger. I960 CHEVROLfT IMPALA Sopor 335-1539. INI COUPL __________ green with vinyl Timed glass. Air. New po[y lire*. 22,000 ml. Very clean. Private. 14400. 3634311 business. 3*3-4955 home._______ 1»M ELbbitADO. elr, I3.0M. 33X2194 >r *12-0990. r«9 CADILLAC COUPE OeVllle, ' ■—f-‘ •*“ -‘■Hp vinyl — -------------S914ia,’^^™ caBilUC;- 19*9," 1febAN"b*Vlll*'. gold, btock vinyl tap, air, luli power, exc. condition, 15500, owner, 1674979'. ... , 1969 EL DORADO,' AIR, STEREO, fully equipped, <814666.___ 19 CApILLAC b 651-9216. 1N9 CADILLAC 4EDAN DdVIlta, blue, post, hardtop, AM-FM, elr xmdllloned, goto, leveling, crule* control, UNO. <51-3253. IaTe model cadillAKTon HAND AT ALL TIMill JEROME I CHEVELLE MALIBU 2 door *“1Mp. Power eteerlng r -J in. Whltawpll tires. itiM oftar. <31-116* oftar 4 p.m. On M24 in Lake Orion 693-8344 olr.S3.700~ <76-1690. I, *114241 — 33A Save$$$ of Mike Savoie Chevy 1900 W. Maple Ml 4-2735 fcRivIc MOTOR-GITY DODGE MOTOR CITY DODGE September Month of Bargains GIVE US A TRY BEFORE YOU BUY! 1969 PLYMOUTH FURY III 4-door oedan. V4 engine, Torque-tilt* tran*mlesion, radio or" power steering, ' window detag-utltul NUB vinyl rarranty, guy if too many extras to It *920 I7X778I, Colt <734174 attar IM9 CHEVY 6 AaSSINOEA etotlon wagon, ■ V4, full powlr, -- * car, will trad*. *6/4694. 1*4» CHiVY II S*” 39X350 H.P. tjjta Tom Rademacher Chevy-Olds On U.S. 10 at M-15 Clortoton ftjlA 5-5071 Mock trim, 42rfMhydro., 'power wife® CORVETTi. CbNyiRTIBLE 600 hp. Block with leddle 636-1992.________________ 1969 CHEVY N<I)VA,_I C) IIP Buyers — Sailers Meet thru Press Want Ads. I 1969 Chevy II Novo Coupe With VI, PowirglKta, power steering, radio, heater, wnHgwolh, jgnlte vinyl tog, garnet rod finish. ”'$2495 i Matfhews-Hargreaves 431 04klend Ay*. "" ' per, wni.._nme... Interior, new cor warranty, flit dayl Only - $2588 1968 Chrysler 2-door, hardtag, t blue beauty with matching vinyl Interior, with Mock vinyl tog Only. —L. $3395 1967 CHRYSLER Custom .Newport 6-door seden, abeelutely sharp, throughput. Only $2195 1968 CHEVY Comoro 2-door hardtag, so* and drive this ■into rod beauty only $1795 1966 BUICK Skylork 2 door, hardtop, this it on extra sharp m* In X out. tatty equipped and only $1695 1966 PLYMOUTH VIP $1495 1967 PLYMOUTH Fui Station watjon. _____JL-s power, a nice one. $1495 1965 CHRYSLER 2-door hardtop, this gold btauty I ready and only $1195......... 1964 T-BIRD Hardtop 2-door with block finish, grfcod * only $995 1965 MUSTANG 2+2 Hardtop* vinyl to* with autamatl driva, taa »hit ana tor only $695 -W 1965 FAIRLANE %w 1964 FORD 1* V4, eutemallc, $595 MPERIAL Hi tb and drive 1 $395 I BUICK Ele ', § tail steal • $595 Oakland PI <4167.724 baKtend Av*. Chrysler-Plymouth D—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1969 For Wont Ads Diol 334-4981 New and Used Cars 1061 New and Used Can 106 New and Used Cars 1968 DODGE POLARA 9 psisenger Wagon JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 1967 FORD Country Sodom 'wagon, I BfififUg white finish, i h beautiful Arctic < an vinyl interior, . I ..... - heater, automatic, power steering. MOTOR' CITY ,p’e'*1 on,v• muiAJC, p.s. We've Moved! 1? I 9 V* Mile N. of Miracle Mile lJwLyVjTjL H4SySt Telegraph Rd. FE 5-4101 * 855 OAKLAND AVE- ■ Pontiac____________FE *“ 1931 FORD WITH CHRYSLER heml '*»! onq. 338-4353. Power brakes and steering. 1940 *F OREL Good shxDe! S350- Ph".! B??.*?!!???' -*V'50°'. <*« H 391-0437. new tires, FORD COUNTRY SEDAN, ►*«•*«* brakes and steering, air. 9 passenger, $1,500, 1965 Plymouth! Belvedere, power brakes, steering/ __________ $800, 642*9685. 19f?resF2?vH'r i& ?75°338 oiSr i ^67 MUSTANG, GOOD CONDITION, r P°w®T_AteGrIn?'J75• 338 0108. i $1400. After 5 p.m. 674*4460. T.9.RD.. STATION wagon, $75. 1967 CONTINENTAL 2 - D~ O O R! *-—**-- 23,000 mi., factory air, FE 68? 3838 after I960 FORD, 6 CYLINDER automatic, 4*2177^27567___________ good transportation, $50. 335-5829 1967^ MUSTANG FASTBACK, 1960 THUNDERBIRD, GOOD con- automatic, power steering. 338-' ditlon, 2 dr„ white. 1$0 University. I | 196? FAIRLANE. V-8, 4 door,' power 3. power brakes, clean, $200. •YOUR VW CENTER’ 70 to Choose From -All Models— -All Colors- ... —All Reconditioned- Autobahn •1967 Mustang K-’S'iie iuuuiuu^ | steering, dual rear speakers, wide 2 Door Hardtop^ $85. Call 887 5623 1963 FORD GALAX IE condition. 602*3120. 1964 FORD gXlAXIE 5 0 automatic, full power, exc, c< artlon, $475, 3*3-4487. T964 FORD FAIRLANE, sharp stick, $500, 673-6247 or 674*30?4. 1964 FORD 9 PASSENGER excellent condition! Only • $1795 Flannery Ford il belted tires, r - MS JOHN McAULIFEE FORD 1969 FORD Torino faitbi beautiful metallic lime gold 1 black Interior, V-6. radio. It power steering, brakes, mint ditlon, clearance special only New; oad Used Care 106 1967 BONNEVILLE Brougham, , sharp, $1150, 1967 BONNEVILLE 2 DOOR hardtop, - - condition, mult ■, days FE 5-1*4 •power steering & brakes, vinyl top, New and Used Cars^ 1967 BONNEVILLE, Moot 1963 2 DOOR HARDTOP, i 18,000 ml:, $1995, FE 8-4800. 1961 BONNEVILLE STATION wagon, r air, full power, cruise control, $2,600. 673-4115. 2 DOOR, 106 New and Used Can 106 ikes; fach after 5. —.-----Bi 1969 BONNEVILLE 6 DOOR hardtop, factory air,double power, cruise control, real sp.aktrand d.toOfler, air shocks and tlntad_ ..Blass, Verdoro preen, $3100, EM 3-0*85. _ TW^ATALtNAUSTATION WAGOtL — brakes, stearlno. tlnted Ir shocks, etc, $2875, *82- tnable double power, vinyl, 363-4439. __________ 1967 PONTIAC BOWEVILLE. 4-< hardtop, power, cruise control, wheel, safety-t-tract, air with ai temp, control, immaculate Chi pagne finish. $2250. 651*0317. 3 Bonneville StasIJ air "shocks, etc. 1 Convertible hsvVontiac "Ventura wagon; Verdero green with black leather, 10,000 miles, loaded •ccessorles, trlM, factory air conation, tape JJggfy ale. stereo, $$8900. 624*3013 deck, AM-FM stereo radio, full, after 6 p,m.. control, SCal *«!•' Factory w.flon, air, pw.rstwr.ng ficial car. Like r condition, 673- $2795 Pontiac retail ). 4-dr. $1295 1967 PONTIAC, tike—r Woodw H.........■ Just $1898 full price.__ 1967 Olds Convertible Full power and air condltlc wheel, AM FM radio. 1965 Chevy 1966 GMC Handl bus ... ’j” FE 3 7954 ,MS Gf,"d *£? 5?rd?Xr ' " $895 FE±7»54 .966 Chevy Bel Air, 4-dr. $B95 1962 Mercury convertible / $195 V -h ll.no 1 KEEG0 P0NTIAC SAlES .. -...-... I door hardtop, _„Q harb0R *82-3400 i»8M^i858r a s lw70Nt]AC^H^.^r; brakes,9»“o„ good condition, ad- 1969 GRAND_ PRIX^oubla powar, *5 Uni________ $1450 <96$ , BONNEVILLE, -* ", dovan lop, white both. " 673 9364 dltkmlng, $2,600. 39I-3434. BLACK H auto 5Ai dovan top. whT OR 3-5200 ' $ ° 673-9364 dilkming, $2,600. GETtTnG NEW CAR, 'have 1967 1968 CATALINA. Pontlec 2 door hardtop, ell power,! and factory air, excellent eon- transmission.-^ ditlon. FE 4-3511. j 196$ BONNEVILL---- 1967 PONTIAC FIREBIRD, 400 con- °r*?tn ’SHE condition, an- >TO, RRMPJIRRHHi onnd^cnnditlnn' tixnn dltlowi M, » .Ir.^her extras. 625-2141, _ good condition. $1$00. $$2-307$._| 2884. i...» onuTiar CATALINA itatlon FIREBIRD -* IBM ---- 0 m $1995 <967 FIREBIRD SPRINT 2 door ' hydromatic transmlHlin, $300 i h.rdinn whit. uii.K M.ni, inta.in. oyer payments. 673-6910, .69 Pontiac catalina, passenger, waoon, a u I o m a 11 —— -•—ring and brakes, ri , $79-6560. •_____ hardtop. White with black Interior. NjUah performance engine. Floi t. Immaculate, Call 642-3219. AUDETTE PONTIAC i V. Maple Rd. Troy _ id' power. Air conditioned. 9,000 ml. _1 $3,450. 651*3743. , 1 1963 RAMBLER CLASSIC, 1200,* 628- CONVERTIBLE, I “I’m your MASTER! Can I help it if I don’t know the password for tonight?!?’’ P.S. We've Moved! . “ » |--------1------—1——?-------------—Si— ------------—- . ________________!____ Olds Npw and Used Cars 1061New and Used Cars 106 ^1^' S^ase. _ ue bot* rORD 860 S. Woodward 1968 barracuda fastback, 3401963 pontiac bonneville, 21**7 pontiac bonneville,- *4 doub,# Pow«rd Ventura, m- 1963 RAMBler wag”wgjp V^ Viity, ...ther in.: ^ 'SStnS^SSU? r» Birminghom Ml 7*51 H SVlio,4 ,peed' r,d,tl hirr^t8rv lQ<d,,k ' T"' 1 ....1 1J........I' "T " M YA-utfflli?-..l!Sg!Kh- ----------1963 GRAND PRIX............................................d..n ISTiW PONTIAC 4 door "Tempest special only $296$ f 1968 oids 98 11968 Plymouth i NEW FINANCE PLAN working? Need i cer? We arrange tor almost anybody with good, bed, or no credit. 75 cars to chooaa from. Call credit mgr. Mr ------ — * ‘‘*1 »r FE 3- "~|tSs5 RAMBLER WAGON, MS# g. heaTer, cleaFance P.S. We've Moved! teclal at only $168$ full price. I I* Mile N. of Miracle Mile P.S. We've Moved! ■ i# or’besrottefr 651: 1845 S^-Telegraph1 Rd.l^lCl, FE*S-410I . T965 MUSTANG 2-DOOR sports ^door^H*^ $^5^391-1545 coupe, vinyl hardtop, $$95. 651 $760. — ,>v.:Ti^ -h “. .T. rnVn*VAT»~^ miles, deluxe upholster • T665 FALCON WAGON, excellent Luxury Sedan- power, factory <.m ting, vinyl top, cruise control ir sleerlrigi power brakes. 3*31“ $2995 S3'r Suburban Olds $2095 power steer- PONTIAC, 2 PLUS 2, con-wmH,enr»tn ve,r,ible' V-®' •utumetlf, good con-wood grain t dilion, $395, Buy here. Pay here, ■ larvel Motors, 251 Oakland, FE 8- 4 dooi hardtop, power, dean. $1995. OR 3-5907, ' _____ 1968 PONTIAC CATALINA. 2-door 1968 FORD GalaxlQ 500 Here 1845 S. Telegraph Rd. " FE~5-4101 1969 FORD~BtO. 10 passenger »iAi« “*agon, . *«*n cruise r------------ „ ,, , . ---------- and locally owned. You Ip.: e7ter'05. 860 S. Woodward Motthews-Hargreoves 0 Waterford - ThELTON Pontibc-Buick th» '*3V6Ep.Jt-l,CONDITION, Birmingham Ml 7-5111 «.1,.0&^.i!Wfe......___________________ otancicird. Auto MS S-.Rochester Rd. *51-5500 19 GRAND PRIX—Excellent ( diton, air conditioning, po< steering and brakes, vinyl I chrome wheels, radio, hea $3400. 602-0192._ 1969 PONTIAC CATALINA, _ 391-3377 _ , Clearance Special ( radio ond heater. " .... —**•—— ***-”' 1967 JEEP WITH PLOW _________682-^56 1939 LA SALLE, 3256 Warren 1345 8; TeVegropir Rd. FE's-4101 Fr«mbes, after 4 p.m. “CONVERTIBLE 1968 WRD TORINO GT, - red, £3 CONVERTIBLE. st„iijhf stick, wide ovals, Milford, steeH.HS «ne 37,000 —,.w.. Trans After 5, 673/1003. MUSTANG* cilRonin $2288. P.S. We've Moved! Transmission, 673*1251. $ ditlon ■ *12,000 miles, transi power brakes, conditio... -— — od tires. Selling 1065 Nokomls or 682*4030.__________ II 625*4472 after 1958 PONTIAC 2 DOOR, New 1 ----ust. 26,000 actual jwfiijd h Lk. Rd. HAH AUTO SALES 1968 CATALINA, DARK BLUE, vinyl r, lust 1 veai oidBL$u2«ovi334! Standard Auto , _______ $795. King Auto, 3275 \ 'I Huron. 6814)802. ' 19*3 ;'R AAA B LE R _ CL ASS IC 4 n do. Ih 343 engine,^ tX?W#?'steennq. radio and heater, $l995.ShR05E" RAMBLER-JEEP, Union Lake, EM 3-4155.______ 1963 STUDEBAKEft J-pOOR, 4 like ...- ;---------------^Nia^k Firebird hardtop, stick shift, AM- 1969 PONTIAC CATALINA, 4 6 res. ___________ 673-9364 FM radio, polygless tires, exc. sedan, power brakes end steer 1964 CATALINA SPORTS"coupe $~450'J condition. 31995. 625-3124. isenger w< brakes, r Call 363-117*. . 196* FAIRLANE 500 convertible, V-0 JOHN McAUUFFE FORD auto., power steering. Holly 634*1 loxa flC<V after 6 Frl. all day 1 — 626*5140. 1966 MUSTANG. SHELBY CobPa.j i 1952 COMET, RUNS GOOD, naw 17,00) Whitt, AM-FM, ______________________addition. $475, 625*772 after 6. 19fi- «2!?TIAC' ,,4°- Gp0d conttf,*on- 19*4 BONNEVILLE BROUGHAM. 4 vista cruiser, 674-204*. , *______| g00r hardtop, full power. «-way . seat, AM-FM radio, factory air, UaUtt |gf« 674-1970 after 4 r. 682-1972. 106 New and Used Cars , goad body, automatic. Clorkston .... Red. excellent "condition, r 8,600 miles. $1,550. Call alter m. $79-1877. 106 New and Used Cars 106 JOHN McAllLIFFE FORD 1967 FORD Galexle 500 Hardtop, with beautiful Arctic whtta finish, black Interior, end black cordova top, V$, radio, heater, power steering, brakes, clearance special ll at only $1888 full “ We've Moved! ^ Mile N. of miracle Mila 18 full price. >¥...w ______............ I _________m_____________________$650. Call 1845 S, Telegraph FES-4101 owner, 363*0394. 1969 MACH I, 351, black with red’1965 MERCURY, 9 passenger, Colony stripe, polyglas, 9,000 miles, 682*1 Park Wagon, 390 V*8, auto., power HH 1 steering and brakes, fine condition. Vi Mile N. of Miracle Mile 1 1845 S. Tdlegraph Rd. FE 5*4101 HARDT X 651-8013. special only $1788 ■■___ P.S. We've Moved! V5 Mile N. of Miracle Mile 1845 S. Telegraph Rd. FB 5-4101 { 1969 FORD LTD. 4-door hai conditioning, tinted glass. Interior, vinyl root, power orakes, powe- —• $3150. 626-449$.___________ JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 1969 Olds 98 Hardtop power, factory air ring, vinyl 2 to choosa fr $3795 1962 CATALINA 2-door, '' 1962 PONTIAC, GOOD transport tlon,f drafted, must sell, 887-4427. 1962 CATALINA, $200. Runs great. 1965 PONTIAC j 1962 TEMPEST, ___^ JHHPVNHMHHH-MOsd&zzzLzzz'« , ' , , , 'Xn.ii?^rYvV.i..TM.'7s*a: pa we've Moved! j T^si;cM0NTCLAIR’J,ke Suburban Olds special at only $3188 II.. I_ P.S. We've Moved! vy Milt N. of Mlrad* Mile. 1845 5. Telegraph ____FE _5-4ll lW^f-eiRD LANDAU, air, fu New and Used Can 106New and Used Can 106 "CREAM OF THE CROP" TRADE-INS ON 1970 MERCURYS 1968 MERCURY Marquis* two door hardtop, Exacutlva blua with matching blua Interior. "390" V-S, •utometlc,.power steering, power disc brakes, vinyl top, AM-FM stereo tape (hr> 4AC system, all tlnlad glass, naw whitewalls. Simply |])/4Hj gorgeous. ^ 1969 CONTINENTAL Mork III two door hardtop, Sahara gold with matching leather Interior. White vinyl top, factory air. lull power crplte control, AM-FM ateroo. And plenty 1969 MERCURY "X-100" Marauder two door hardtop. "428" V*8, automat... UPP steering, power disc brakes, vinyl top, style steel "mag" wheels, AM-FM stereo, heater, glass belter1 whitewalls. 1969 MERCURY Cyclone "CJ" fastback two door hardtop^ "428 RAM-AIR1 four speed; Style steel "mao" wheels, powar disc 1968 PONTIAC Bonneville 1967 CHEVROLET Caprice . two i door hardtop. Medium mieNPUPmillVIVIPP custom Interior, vinyl top, V-8, automatic, power Mooring, radio, heater. Whitewalls. 1966 MERCURY Monterey Marauder ---two door hardtop. Beautiful silver blua wllh a.. v-8, automatic, power steering a 1967 CHEVROLET Station Wagon Looking for real savings? Hare It U. V radio, heater, whitewalls. Plenty of rr~ v-8. automatic, $3495 $3195 $2895 $1895 $1295 $1395 LARRY SHEEHAN'S HILLSIDE .. ----w-3 iincoln-Mfreury-.. 1250 Oakland 333-7863 '*«..^?L.cf^vERTiBLE, M? 860 S. Woodward bast/offer, can Birmingham Ml 7-5T11, 1969 TORONADO CUSTOM, air, stereo, chrome wheels, every power option. 10,006 miles. $4,500. 673*9638. ,_ __ l"969 OLDS 98, 4 door, vlnyrtop, air, power, cruise control, MA 4*2134. 1969 OLDS CUTLASS^S-conveVtible' i seble brown, whlto top, radio, dual power, tinted glass, decor groupe, Immaculate. 651-0311.__ ' NEW CAR SHOWING 1970 OLDS All Models" On Display BEST OLDS automatic deluxe engine and tires in good condition.* Returning to college. Prcled for quick sale at $490. Call 651*9111 or Bob Borst _ j 1950 W, Maple Rd„ Troy Ml 6*2200 JOHN McAULIFFE FORD | 1967 COUGAR XR7 hardtop, with, beautiful Arctic white finish, buckskin Interior, full power, and1 factory air conditioning, clearance special only $2095 full price. P.S. We've Moved! V? Milt N. gf Mlradi Mile 1845 S. Teloraph_________FE 5-4101 1*67 COUGAR GT. baautiiul red. new polyglas tlras. sport 'wheals, exc. cendltlon, 31690. 373-5254. 1962 PONTIAC WAGON, tit* _____682 1168._ Next to Our. New Cars Tumerized Used Cars j Are Best!! 1965 T-Bird dinon. Pr,c" , cell 651*0149, 1965 BONNEVILLE convertible steering, ’ A-1 condition. 76 San derson. 1965 CATALINA, *1 OWNERf 4 door r, $995. 651-8760. 1967 COUGAR, BLACK, l $1799 F E 2-8101 * BB88 beautiful, factory air, tinted glass, doubla power, many; extras. Just ovar wholtsala. Ml 6-1 17388,___________________ 1983 OLDSMOBILE, 4 DOOR, power Steering and brakes, radio and. heater, excellent condition, 8325. . 335-8337,_____________________! Po(lf|ac 550 “■hi*™1 * ' ™dltlonln^42MUHV^?Me*ndWar' ^irvAUAW CONVERTIBLE, flood fertord MtOTI w* I condition, alter 3:30. OR 3-*2<15. ------'--------1944 PLYMOUTH STATION Wagon. md hrJkM Automatic, radio and heater. Full ! 1725 644-' price $195. King Auto, 3275 W. 646 Huron. 661*0802.________________1 • dpw^ 1966 PLYMOUTH CONVERTIBLE, With matching vinyl in-' clean, V*8, auto., power steering terior. Full power, radio% and ®rid brakes, console, buckets. 674- healer. Full price $295. King Auto,1 __052J _a,l_5_P m;_ 3275 W. Huron. 681*0002. 1967 PLYMOUTH GTX, 440 aufo»| 1965 OLDS* 442, 4 speed, poslfrack.1 Mafic, $1550. 673*6980. ____ J?*-!??*:______________ 196ZJ>lymouth Fury III $1799 1966 Ford Economy special, 4-cyl, to sail. 19*4 OLDS FIS, wagon, power steering new tires, good conditio g»7.____________ 19*4 OLDS SUPER 1966 OLDS VIST A CRUISER, air conditioning, power windows and seats, $1995$ 2819 Leach Rd. off Auburn, UL 2*4883.__ 1966 OLDS. DELTA 88$ 4-door hardtop, power brakes end power steerlng$ exc. condition. FE 4* 3801. ______ ^ 1966 Olds Toronado Loaded with all lha extras Including factory g|r conditioning, 2 to choose from. $ave an Olds. 860 S. Woodward Birmingham Ml 7*5111 with latching steering end brakes, tinted windshield and many axtras. $1295 1 BIRMINGHAM! CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 2106 MAPLE RD., TROY, MICH.! 642-7000 Village 1967 Olds Cutlass Coupe, V-8, automatic, powar steering and brakes.' Like new. 2 to choose from. $ave Suburban Olds 860 S. Woodward Birmingham Ml 7-5111 New and Used Cars 106 Naw and Used Cars 106New and Used Cars Rambler T Used Cars | Today Special 1| 1965 American I Convertible 236 6 cylinder engine, automatic transmission, powar stearlna. ra.!' dlo and heater. $699 1967 VW "$799" Lemons Ho of, stick shift, $999 1966 Chevrolet . Impale Sport Coupe. $1295 1966 Ford Wagon Country Squire, 10 passenger |H— "tulpped, a.ulomell $1388 1967 Cougar GOP HAUPT PONTIAC Save—Save—Save CLARKSTON ‘_____MA 5-5500 19*5 PONTIAC TEMPEST 2 door, i- Green with black vinyl to0. i Automatic, radio and htatar, whitewall tlras. Pull price >495. King Auto. 3275 W. Huron. *>1-0803. 19*5 TEMPEST1 4-DOOR' V-8. 1- — I owner. Hydramatlc. Powar brakes and steering, 8*95, 882-5443. _ Priced 1W* CATALINA VENTURA, 2 dr 1 hardtop, black vinyl, automatic, powar steering and brakes, AM radio with echo master. Mack leather Interior. Naw tires. REAL . SHARP 335-9010,_ 19*5 PONTIAC STATION WAGON HtH AUTO SALES OR 3-5200 _ _ *73-9364 194* PONTIAC CATALINA" cor varflble. auto., power brakes an steering. Bargain. *51-1310. 1944 TEMPE5TTDOOR7M50 _______.. 8 335-1511 196*" BONNEVILLE, extra shari xn 727* r*dl° r>v*rt>' *u« P°wa T9**“"p6ntI ac~^6aYau11 a“V" paa_. ----- ------ whitfwalls, 11 ISO. ...____..JEVILLE Conyerllblo. *744)334. 19** PONTIAC CATALINA *13007 5-23*4. 3* Blaine, MUST SELL 1087 Bonnavllla, loaded, 18,000 mlloa. 482-4121. Aulomsllc transmission. $1688 1965 ^Catalina Wagon Air conditioning, power -transmission. Like ntw. $1144 /a>. Mike Savoie- ^ Chevdet OUR CUSTOMERS ARE SATISFIED! ... ARE YOU 7 1969 Pontiac Bonneville $3695 4 door hardtop. 4 way power, factory air conditioning, 11,000 miles. Car .is like brand new with factory . warranty. 1969 Pontiac Firebird .... $2895 Green with black vinyl top. 9,000 miles. Powar steering and brakes, rally wheels. 4 speed trans* 1969 Pontiac Ventura ..... $3195 2 door hardtop, power steering and brakes* factory air. 8,6ti0 miles. Showroom condition. T969 Chevy Caprice .; .$2795 2 door hardtop. Burgundy with black vinyl1 top. Beautiful c#r. - 1969 Pontiac Catalina $2495 2 dogr hardtop. Gold with black vinyl top. Powar, factory air conditioning. Sharpl 1968 Chevy Impolo Custom Cpe. $2295 silver with black vinyl top. Automatic, powar staarlng and brakes, factory air conditioning. J 968 Buick Skylark $2195 * Grand Sport, Black and white leather trim, power steering and brakes, automatic Transmission. 1968 LeMans Custom $2295 Hardtop. Power steering and brakes. Automatic. New condition. * 1968 Javelin . . .. $1895 2 door hardtop. Rad with bucket stats. Automatic, power steering and brakes. 13,006 milas. 1968 Impolo Super Sport —. .$2395 Hardtop. Bucket seats, console shift, 9f6 engine, power steering and brakes. Muft sat to appreciate. 1968 Chevrolet Impalo Custom . $2195 Coupe Yellow with black vinyl top. Automatic, power steering -ana brakes. Sharpl 1967 Impola Hardtop ..$1795 2 door. 13,000 actual milas. Must seal Like new. 1968 Ford $1295 4 door. 427 angina, power steering and brakes. 1967 Malibu Hdrdtop $1795 Automatic, power snaring and brakas, vinyl top. 1967 Impola Hordtop ."$1895 4 door. Power steering and brakes, factory air. 1965 Pontiac Catalina ..$1195 2 Boor hardtop, powar staarlng and brakaa. Mutt see to aooreclate. 1967 Molibu Station Wagon .. . $1795 Power steering end automatic transmission. Sharp! 1965 Bel Air $795 4 door. Cloen. 1967 Pontiac leMans Custom . $1795 2 door hardtop. Blua with black vinyl top. Power, air. conditioning. Sharpl 1965 Monza Hordtop —$995 4 speed, bucket seatse 140 onglno. Sharp. 1966 Olds Vista Cruiser ..... $1595 Station pWeoon. 9 passenger. Red paint. Powar steering and, brakes, factory air condition. Sharpl 1963 Mercury Hardtop $545 2 dodr^ .Power steering and brakee. Automatic 1968'Chevy Sports Van $1695 V-S automatic. CLKANI 1968 Chevy Vi Ton Pick-up .., $1595 Mike Savoie Chevrolet 1900 Maple Rd.^Troy MI 4-2735 Phone Ml 4-2735 for directions to Mike Savoie Chevrolet Open 8:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M. Mon. and Thar. Open 8 A.M. to 6:30 P.M. Tubs., Wed., Fri. and Sat. New and Usad Cart 106Naw and Usad Can 1Q6Naw and Used Cars 106Naw and Used Can 106 0 HAHN TODAY'S SPECIAL , 1969 CHRYSLER Newport .$3495 Cuetom 4-door hardtop, factory official car, factory air conditioning, full powar, loaded with 20 . factory options, Reduced. 1967 M6 2 door $995 2 door sedan, with radio, haatar, axcaifant condition. 1967 CHARGER Hardtop $1895 Automatic, full powar, daap broraa, black vinyl Intarlor. Muot see to oppraclato. 1966 PLYMOUTH Wagon $1295 Bolvadart It with full powar, luggaga rack, naw tlrae, must too to appraclatal 12 used jeeps to choose from, yours for os low os $295 1965 MUSTANG Hardtop $995 with radio, haatar, powar staarlng, Idaal back-to-school car. 196 CHEVY Impolo $1295 | 2-door hardtop, oconolhy VI, lull power, excel- j lent condition. Naw car trade. ; T969 JAVELIN SST $2895 2-door hardtop, factory afr conditioning, official car, law Mlleaeo, full warranty. 1960 VW 2-door ...$ 295 •edan, runs like new, needs minor body work. \ Chrysler-Plymouth-Rambler-Jeep v Clark§ton * 6673 Dixie Hwy. „ MA 5-2635 ~$795~ 1968 Bonneville Convertible I power. Slock P12S7. ’ $2595 1968 American tor lodon. 4 cyllndor. I :k 1271. $1195 1967 Chevrolet Itnpala Convertible. VS automatic ““ steering, AM-FM radio. S $1495' 1969 Americon 2-door. $ cylinder, ai Radio. Full prfoo. $1495 Special On All Rambler Wagoits 9 to Choose From! Open ell day Sat. f to * p.m. VILLAGE RAMBLER 666 S. Woodward Ml 6-3900 $1995 1968 Rambler SST ’ Hardtop. Air condition, vinyl roof, power. Automatic transmission. $1895 Transportation Specials 1964 Voliont Wagon Automatic, radio and heater. 5544 $644 1966 Pontiac Catalina convertible. Mae whaala, Power and automatic tranimlsalon. $1188 MI 4-7500 ' Ntw location of TURNER FORD From ilrmlnsliam 1970 PONTIAC : WtdbrTracksi NEW CAR SHOWING -NOW ON - THURSDAY-FRIDAY-SATURDAY-Stop By Look 'Em Over ! FREE REFRESHMENTS — We Need Your Used Car-^Top Dollar Paid PONTIAC-TEMPEST • Open Daily f ill' 9 P.M. 7 Open Sat. Till 6 P.M. On M-24-Lak© Orion MY 3-6266 THE 'PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19; : D—11 -Television Programs- Programs furnished by stations listed in this column are subject to change without noticel Birds Channels: 2-WJBK-TV. 4-WWJ-TV. 7-WXYZ-TV. 9-CKLW-TV. SO-WKBD-TV. 56^WTVS-Tv" 62-WXON-TV R — Rerun C — Color FRIDAY NIGHT «:0e (2) (4) (7) C - News, Weather, Sports (50) R C — Flintstones (56) What’s New — Tour of U.S. Capitol (Part 2) (62) R — Ozzie and Harriet 6:30 (2) C News -Cronkite (4) C — News — Huntley, Brinkley (9) R - Dick Van Dyke — Rob and his writers get in trouble for adding insults to an Allen Brady script. (50) R — Munsters —. Eddie iinds a huge jewel while playing in the attic. (56) Cancion de la Raza — Spanish soap opera (62) C — Swingintime 7:00 (2) R (T - Truth or Consequences (4) C — News, Weather, Spbrts (TJX _ News -. Reynolds, Smith (9) R C — Movie: “Sword of Lancelot ’’(British, 1963) Love story of' Lancelot and Queen Guinevere. Cornel Wilde, Jean Wallace (50) R — I Love Lucy — Tennessee Ernie Ford moves into .the Ricardo apartment because he feels they are “family.’’ (56) Great Books Discussion of “ The Brothers Karamazov" is 7:39 (2) R C - Wild, Wild West —' The disappearance of guests from a hotel room leads West to a beautiful girl and her mansion. (4) C — High ChapaiTal — Billy Blue is faced with weighing his pride against his safety when a known gunfighter challenges him to a shoot-out in the first show of the senes’ third season. James Mitchum guest-stars. —(7) C ■ ■ Let’s Make-a-Deal (50) C — Strange Paradise (56) R — Action People — “Laboratory Training — The New Seeing I ’ ’ features a microlab and a critique of the demonstration, including tcp quality value! 1990 pK w. compact color Decorator-Compact table model with vinyl clad metal cabinet In-grained Walnut color. $3|088 with AFC Automatic Fine-tuning Control AFC let* you tune tha sharpest color picture at the flick of a finger. You flip the switch once and forget It. Because the AFC keeps every channel-even UHF channels— „ perfectly tuned. . ■■ ■pap1 ^SERVICE SPECIALISTS HOD’S tv FE 5-6112 110 ORCHARD LAKE AYE. 1 comments on laboratory education. (6^) C — Of Lands • and Seas St Horse breeding training and racing from New England to South America* are shown. 8:00 (7) C - (Special) Ethics in Congress — News documentary probes aspects of ethics in Congress. Among the distinguished guests are historian Henry Steele : Commager; Wright | Patman, D-Tex., chairman of the House Bank and Currency Committee; and Willis Alexander, president of the American Ba nking Association. (50) C - Beat the Clock 8:30 (2) R C - Gomer Pyle — Carter’s wish comes 1^ true when Gomer applies for a transfer. (4) C — Name of the Game — Series opens second season with publisher Howard cheeky ing whether the happy marriage of his friend is a fcover-up for her fear and guilt. Janice Rule guest-stars. (50) C - To Tell the Truth - (56) Portrait In — Mrs. Ruth Neikirk, teacher for the Columbus Association of Childbirth Education, is » profiled. (62) R - Nelsons 9:00 (2) R C - Movies “Made in Paris” (1966) Fashion buyer is sent to Paris and becomes Infatuated with dashing d e signer. Ann-Margret, Louis Jourdan (7) R C r- Judd for the Defense — Judd defends a European-born importer — who distrusts governments — on a smuggling charge. (9) R ■ Secret Agent (50) R — Perry Mason (56) R — Book Beat — Author Harry Golden discusses his autobiography, “The Right Time.” (62) R — Movie: “Yoqng Widow” (1946) War widow shuts romance out of her life, but one man is persistent. Jane Russell, Louis Hayward 9:30 (56) R - NET Play-house — Robert Shaw liar 6 in August Strindberg’s “The Father,” which Jocuses on the battle for power “’between sexes, 19:04(4) C - <Debut) Bracken’s World — The characters who inhabit “Bracken’s World" are, introduced in this new series about the behind-the-scenes story of a Hollywood film studlo . —Eleanor—Parker;—Peter-Haskell, Elizabeth Allen and Dennis Cole star. (7) C — Dick Cavett — Ruth Gordon (of Rosemary’s Baby”) and David Schoenbrun guest on the last show W the series, (9) (50) C — New st~ Weather, Sports 10:30 (9) C — What’s My line?' (50) R — Ben Casey — Dr. Casey clashes with an attractive pediatrician —ever the treatment of, a stricken infant. (62) R — Sea Hunt 11:00 (2^ (4) (7) C - News, Weather, Sports (9) R C — M 0 v1 • : “You’re My Everything” (1949) Debutante runs off with a dancer and becomes a Hollywood star. Buster Keaton, Anne Baxter (62) R — Highway Patrol 11:30 (4) C — Johnny Carsqn TV Features Tonight t ACTION PEOPLE, 7:30 p.m, (56) ETHICS IN CON-J GRESS, 8 p.m. (7) "I BRACKEN’S WORLD, X 10 p.m. (4) DICK CAVETT, 10 p.m. (7) Tomorrow COLLEGE FOOTBALL, 12:45 p.m. (7) BASEBALL, 1:15 p.m. I (2), 3 p.m. (4)' WIDE WQRLD~6F~ SPORTS, 4 p.m. (7) — Zsa Zsa Gabor, Robert —Culp,—Pat Boone, David Steinberg and Monti Rook guest. (7) C p-j Joey Bishop — Hines, Hines and Dad and London Lee guest. (50) C - Merv Griffin -Aliza Kashi, Pat Cooper and Sha Nana guest. 11:35 (2) R - Movies: 1. “The Pride of St. Louis” (1952) Biography of Dizzy Dean. Dan Dailey, Joanne Dru; 2. "‘Sword of —GFanadaAHSpamshrl966J~ Three adventurers unite against a common enemy. Cesar Romero, K a t y Jurado 12:24 (9) Viewpoint 12:30 (9) C - Perry’s Probe — “Rape” 1:60 (4) Beat the Champ (7) R — Movie: "The Thin Man Goes Home” (1944) Myrna Ley, William Powell SATURDAY MORNING 5:50 (2) TV Chapel 5:55 (2) C-News 6:00 (2) C — Across the Fence 6:30 (2) C—Black Heritage 6:46 ffl C — Rural Report — “4-H Here and There” 6:50 (9) Warm-Up 6:53 (4) C — News 7:00 (2) C-Jetsons \ (4) C — Country Living — —“Services- of—Michigan Agriculture” (7) C — Casper (9) Ontario Schools 7:30 (2) C — Woodrow the . Woodsman (A) C — Oopsy (7) C-Smokey the Bear 7:45 (9) Sound ’69 8:00 (7) C—Cattanooga Cats (9) Window on the World 8:30 (2) C — Bugs Bunny- Roadrunner --- (9) All Around the Circle 11:30 (4) C-Jambo (7) C — American Bandstand The Creed-ence Clearwater Revival guests. (9) Country Calendar S ATURDAYAFTERNOON 12:00 (2) C - Monkees (4) R C — Flintstones (9) Lost Peace (50) R C — Movie: -—’-American Guerrilla in the Phillippines” (1950) Tyrone Power, Tom Ewell 12:15 (2) C — Tiger Warmup 12:30 (2) C - Wacky Races (4) C — Red Jones (7) C — College Football Today (9) D’Iberville 12:45 (7) C — College Football: Indiana vs. Kentucky 1:00 (2) C — Tiger Warm- Up (4) C - At the Zoo (9) R — Movie: “Back to Bataan" (1945) John Wayne, Anthony Quinn 1:15 (2) C — Baseball: Boston at Detroit ■» 1:30 (4) C — George Pierrot — “Montana Adventure” 2:09 (4) C— Outdoors (50) R — Movie: “Cry Danger” (1951) Dick Powell, Rhonda Fleming 2:30 (4) C — Red Jones -49)R—Jtawhide—-------- 3:00 (4) C — Baseball: Los Angeles at San Francisco 3:00 (9) C — Marvel Super Heroes 3:30 (9) C—Magic Shoppe (50) K — "Movie: “Cape Canaveral Monsters” (1959) Scott Peters, Linda Connell 4:00 (7) C — Wide World of Sports — Canadian Grand Prix from Mosport, Ont. (9) C — Bozo 4:05 (2) C — Baseball Scoreboard 4:15 (2) R—Movie “Jalopy” (1953) Bowery Boys 4:30 (9) C — Skippy (62) R — My Friend Flicka 5:00 (2) R-Mr. Ed (9) C — Time Tunnel (50) R — Combat (62) C-Wrestling 5:15 (56) Chimney Corner 5:30 (2) C — AlLAmericaif College Show . (7): R C — Wackiest Ship (56) C — Brother Buzz 28 Organized 1 Small wading M gx»up (ab) bird 30 Fruit drink 5 Sacred bird 31 Month (ab.) of Egypt 32Seracs 9 European M (2 w°rds) capital (var.) 38 That woman 10 Isomeric 39 Debate a point hydrocarbon 40 Cardinal’s 12Coeurd’----, insigne Idaho » 41 Bondman (suffix) 13 Treatise by 43 School subject 6 Nocturnal Aristotle 44 Rail bird mammals fnUta 15 Ancient 45 Phenylamine 7 Having to do 29 Unproductive Chinese 47 Kind of bear with beginning 30 Border upon 1 musical 48 Kite 8Parrying 31Greek , instruments 49 Mountain position mountain 16 Thrice crest _ (fencing) 33 Storklike bird (comb, form) 50 Old Irish clan 9 Prepared a 34 Plume-famed 17 Greek portico 51 Have existed cake , bird 18 Girl’s name ; DOWN ,10 Musical 35 Ire 19 large wading ' ‘ drama 36Formof bird 1 Experience 11 French painter hand-to-hand Bridge to Reopen LANSING (AP) g The bridge carrying U.S. 141 over th,e. Menominee River at the Michigan-Wisconsin border—closed sfiice July for deck repairs—will be I reopened Monday, the State Highway Department has an-j nounced. Traffic has been detoured on U.S. 2 and U.S. 8 via Norway. 21 Adjective suffix 22 Hopeless 24 Commotion 25 Sea eagle 26 French pronoun again 2 Places of exertion 3 Hostels 4 Civil War 5 Follower 14 Farinaceous ’ fight food 37 Look intently 16 Gull-like bird 42 Flutter 19 Rupture 44 Painful 20 Sewing tool 46 Interest (ab.). 23 Footlike part 47 Quadruped’s 27 Constellation foot 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 18 14 18 16 17 18 19 Su «• 22 24 2b H5o [26 27 28 29 31 |Sj 34 36 3^ 38 39 40 41 42. 43 [44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 19 9:00 (2) C — Archie Show (4) C — Here Comes the Grump (7) C — Hot Wheels (50) R-Wells Fargo 9:30 (2) C — Dastardly and Muttley (4) C- Pink Panther (7) 0 — Hardy Boys (9) Belle, Sebastian and the Horses (50) R - Laramie 10:00 (2) C - Perils of Penelope Pitstop -(4) C-H. R.Pufnstuff IV) C - Sky Hawks----- (9) Chansons 10:30 (2) C — Scooby-Doo, Where are You? (4) C — Banana Splits (7) C - Gulliver (9) R—Three Musketeers (SO) R — Movie: “Invisible Stripes” (193 9) Humphrey Bo gart, William Holden 11:19 (2) C — Archie Show (7) C—Fantastic Voyage (9) Ballads and Chansons Cat Survives 28-Day Trip in Bedsprings FT. CARSON, Colo. (AP) -Traveling in the bedsprings of a double bed, a female cat made | it from Augusta, Ga., to Colorado Springs in 28 days. _______* * A Snowball, a year-old kitten belonging to Janice ‘ George, daughter of Ft. Carson’s new deputy p6st provostv^narshal, began the ordeal whenTmovfers arrived to pack the couple’s belongings for the trip to Ft. Car- Apparently frightened, the cat hid in Die bedsprings and was taken away unnoticed by the movers. *,, ★ * After three days of searcl the Georges gave up. But when the van began unloading at Ft. Carson, Snowball turned up— thirsty, hungry and exhausted. ..4r____*____★______ The family said a veterina- rian advised them Snowbay SALES and SERVICE DISCOUNT PRICES 68M515 • Color and B 6k W TV • Stereo* • Radio • Tape Recorder* Up.n J _ACV -BDUe • TV Antennas Fri. Til t P.M. EA5T TEHMS RCA and ZENITH Authorized Dealer “Oiar years of experience it your atturance of satisfaction** Sine* 1932 1151W. Huron/3 Blocks West of Talagraph/Pontlae DEDICATED TO TOP QUALITY TV SERVICE TESA of OAKLAND COUNTYS WANT TO SELL LAWNMOWERS, POWER MOWERS, ROLLER SKATES, WAGONS, BICYCLES? USE A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 332- “ Blake Radio t TV . 9024340 1141W. Huron, Pontiac Condon Radio-TV FE 4-9136 711W. Huron, Pontise OtVTV . FE 24111 Holfo Radto-TV 1114112 , I FE 14569 4t E. WaHen, Penliae . OR Mill 1M7 Elizabeth Lk. Rd., Pontiao Al Hooding TV FE 4-1615 11M W, Clarkston Rd, Lake Orion SUfantki Radio A TV 681-1515 SwaeFs Radio ATV FE 446TI 422 W. Horan, Pontiao TeohTVStrvioo ^ MI-MIS Mil Waal Auburn, Roehaatar Troy TV-Rndio TB MM IMS LWornoIa, Tray Voiko’s TV 815-1165 111 R. Mai* MRford Waited Uc. Elaotronlos 624-2222 1111E. Waal Haste Hd, Waited Uka Walton Radlo-TV II 24111 811W. WKO, Inc., Sonrico 614-1119 iiH Total national health care expenditures in 1966 came to $45.1 million, 6.1 per cent of the gross national product. GALVANIZED STEEL RAIN GUTTER ALREADY PAINTED! Don’t ba misted by softer motariol* lot will not aland up to winter ico am will dent with loader against It. ALSO Custom Mad® Shutters T Colors to Select from -___WhHa you Painting this gutter ha* already been done for you — a the factory. Glistening white enamel la baked on am 7 ID.vaar praranteed for 10 yean. We alio cover overhung and facial ’ / trim lo eliminate coally painting. Gel 2 eatimain — theil 11 guarantee, call me. I GUARANTEE I will save you money. For the J " moat trusted name in eaveatroughiag....*. >. Famous\ PHONE TODAY 673-6866 or 673-5662 MILCOR \ LICENSE BONDED CONTRACTOR Quality 7 M & S GUTTER CO. / 4162 West Walton, Drayton Plaint AUTO- SCAN POlicE MONITORS DEPENDABILITY • 6-Channel Receiver Modal FR-105 POLICE MONITORS 1-YaarWamaty O STATS POUCI NEW! 2-Channel POLICE RECEIVER aTan Translator • Tunas 14#-1TS MHZ o Talaseoplng Antenna a 19-Oay Warranty $49*5 COMPLETE STOCK OF* POLICE RECEIVERS BASE and MOBILE ANTENNAS • CRYSTALS 2-WAY RADIO EQUIPMENT JjOWTl & COMMUNICATIONS (fcounlrij Mm " m pHONRCPaetm. HOURS: 9 A-M. to 6 P.M. TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY AND SATURDAY OPEN 9 AM. to 9 P.M. MONDAY and FRIDAY / 1 D—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, Do You Hove Prestige? Here Are Some Ways to Tell NEW YORK (AP) — Hatfel The wife of the boss you given yourself a prestige that you dance with .her at least checkup lately? if not, why not? Millions of Americans now get some kind of/ annual medical checkup. This is good as far' as it goes, but! it doesn’t go far enough. .-/TmedicaT checkup only determines the state of—year-physical health. —It lets you know how much wear and tear your body is showing and whether you still have muscle tone or have gone flabby. ★ * . What you need to know in ad dition is the state of your social health. Competition is not only .. the jlife of trade, it is also the life of our buSiness-oriented so- clety.___________t_____________ Are you still clawing your way up the ladder of success or, unknowingly, have you begun to zoom on a toboggan path toward Nonentity Swamp? Only a regular 'prestige checkup can give you the answer. YOU CAN DO IT In time, of course, these checkups will be given by computers. But there is no reason why, if you are one of those do-it-yourself guys^ you can't figure out yourself the state of your prestige. You can congratulate yourself that you’re doing okay if— twice at the annual office spring get-together. Instead oty your getting an occasional dunning letter from the alumni office, /the president of your college suggests having lunch with you when he drops into town. breakdown and emerged from it I could afford, now dislike ydu be-successfully. cause you bought one cheaper You have been asked to headman they can afford. They subs'charitable drive in your com- Pec* such attempts at tact indi-munity, even if it was only to cate ydu’re getting rather smug raise funds to wipe out chil- anc* condescending, blains among the Eskimos, j The shoeshine man who goes halls and spend more time at country clubs. DON’T WORRY —When you drop into the bank to' explain how your wife overdrew—your-joint—accountp^the banker no longer looks at you in chill disbelief. He calls you by your first name—or, better yet, by your initials — and says not to worry about it until the bank does. On a business trip you don’t Well, the truth is, you are, aren’t you? But you’ve also got something else, too—prestige, one price of which is always; I envy. from floor to floor in your building is now willing to trade stock You quit hanging around pool [market tips withyou because he * " J J " ‘ figures you piay have almost as much inside knowledge as he does. You no longer can waste time the barbershop leafing through naughty magazines while awaiting your turn in the chair. Your secretary now arranges your haircuts by appointment. j If you want to kill a dull workday afternoon by taking in a! movie, you are free to do so. feel it necessary to wash your!The office underlings will only own socks in tHe hotel wash-! assume that you’re at your club! bowl; at home your wife has!conscientiously losing a golf quit ironing your shirts and now I game to a major contact. _ J sends them to the laundry Your neighbors, who would At least one member of the dislike you if you bought a new! family has had a small nervous car more expensive than they i ———-------------------------------------*-----1 12 Soldiers Killed in Vietnam Action WASHINGTON (IB - The Pentagon has announced the names of 12 persons killed in -aetion in- Vietnam The list—includes two Midwestern men. Killed in action: ARMY — BIS Ewatd Jr., In term ohio — Sat. HURON BOWL WINNERS OF jap®* -41*^, ALL EXPENSE PAID WEEKEND FOR TWO IN LAS VEGAS FIREBIRD LINES 2525 Elizabeth Lake Rd. 681-2525 formerly Huron Bowl FALL VALUES Whitewall B.F. Goodrich Custom Long Miler SALE! Sizes 7.00-13, 7:35-14, 6.85-15. 5.60-15. 7,35-16 whitewall tubeless, plus 11.76 to 42.08 Fed. Ex. Tex end trede- 8.25x15 White Silvertowns \ ~ and 8.55x15 White Silvertowns (they're not seconds) FULL GUARANTEE SPECIAL 4-8.16x15 Black Take-Offs $8925 COMPLETE includes all taxes and balancing Also Available at DEATON’S MARATHON SERVICE 531 N. Main, Rochester, Mic¥. 651*1223 Opposite Tel-Huron rmnmaiw 60 S. TELEGRAPH PONTIAC FE 2-0121 ,n'*I™i;ni,T#,K HOURS; Mon. thru Frl. 8 to B P.M. Pe°P,e Saturday Morning Opon at 8 A.M. • **•*»•***»••••»••*•*»••»»••■••••••••••• Living Room Carpet ‘501’ NYLON Completely Injstqlled 12'xl5' Room only *149 Price Includes: • Sponge Rubber Pad • Tackless Installation BEDROOM CARPET 100% Nylon Cut Pile-Velvet Texture Meets FHA Specifications \ 12 Colors to Choose From Reg. 8.95 4 87 NAME BRANDS-1st Quality Carpel KITCHEN CARPET 100% Continuous Filament Nylon Space Dyed Tweed—Flat Level Loop 40% Sponge Rubber Back Reg. 9.95 5 87 YARD NEVER KNOWINGLY UNDERSOLD NYLON-SHAG Super Heavyweight 2” of Luxury Carpet Tweeds and Solid Colors IS Colors to Pick From Reg. 14.95 7 87 1075 W. Huron St. Phone 334-9957 H You Don’t Boy From Us, Wo Both Loso Money! TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! SAMPLE SALE THOMAS FURNITURE'S 'BUY-OUT' OF A-F-AMQUS MANUFAU LJKblf S FNTIBF SHOWPOOM SAMPIF cm 1 FfTlfthti- everything at least 1/3 97 CHAIRS reg. *9? to *214 . 18 LOVE SEATS reg. $151 to $470 48 SOFAS reg. $239 to *696 NOW ^101 to $464 It's the upholstery savings event of the year! A sale so large In scope, so Important it took six months of planning and preparation! Thomas Furniture has bought out the entire showroom sample collection from one of America's finest manufacturers of quality-crafted upholstery. Every item is a 'top-of-the-llne showroom sample advertised nationally at many dollars morel Jf you dfct now, these 'cream-of-the-crop' sofas, chairs and love seats can be yours Ot a fraction of their intended worthl Hurry to either Thomas Furniture store....Sale ends Saturdayl PONTIAC 361 S. SAGINAW• FE3-7901 j I DRAYTON 4945 DIXIE HWY* Of* 4-0321 BOTH STORES OPEN TONIGHT TIL 9 - SATURDAY TIL 5.30 r m Class-Day Rehearing^) Be"SW(jtift By DICK ROBINSON The Waterford Township Board of Education will ask for reconsideration of a court puling that it restore full-day classes. This was decided last night at a 5V4-hour meeting at which the board also announced it . would schedule a millage and bond issue vote in November. Instead of asking for a stay of the court order and then appealing, the board authorized its attorney to ask for reconsideration of the ruling. This means half-day sessions will continue for now. A millage hike was called the orfly workable method of financing education in the school district. A no-tax-increase bond Issue would provide for building another junior high school. ★ ★ ★ Date of the election was set as Nov. 25. No dollar amounts were established for the proposals. Voters have turned down two millage issues in the past 10 months — three in the past two years. SEPT. 29 DEADLINE Oakland County Circuit Court Judge William J. Beer said a week ago that the school district must restore full-day classes for its 18,500 students by Sept. 29. School Attorney John Rogers said he will ask for % rehearing in a motion to be filed with Beer today. It is expected to be heard Wednesday. If it is denied, Rogers said he'could ask Beer for a stay of the order pending appeal. If that’s not successful, he would ask for an extension of the two week time limit or a stay and appeal in a higher court. He said the board has 20 days after the formal eptry of the Judge’s order, also expected Wednesday, to appeal to the Michigan Supreme Court. TAKING MEASURES In the meantime, Rogers indicated he hopes to convince the judge the school district is taking measures to comply with his order./ Preliminary plans are being made to restore full-day sessions, according to acting Supt. Dr. John Pagen. The board decided to seek approval from the state’s Municipal Finance Commission to bp* row 91.25 million. ★ * * Rogers recommended that the board see what happens on his motion for a rehearing and in a similar Livonia case being appealed to the State Supreme Court before deciding on an appeal. New trustee Billie S. Famum, a former congressman and state auditor general, proposed the millage election, He indicated this js one of only two ways to finance education permanently. The other is the State Legislature, which (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 4) $ The Weather W. *. Waathtr lurni mmmm mKBKh T3 ££& : VOL. 127 w NO. 198 PONTIAC. MIOHlGAN.gpLlDAY, SEPTEMBER 19. 1969 ncmwATMMtt* —PAGES 10* Health-Research Cuts Widen Gets 7 to 20 Years WASHINGTON (AP) - The Nixon administration has extended its controversial health program cutbacks to five projects that apply research gains to patient treatment for chronic diseases, including cancer. Budget authorities in the Department of Health, Education and Welfare have ordered drastic cuts this year and termination next year of the chronic disease programs involving cancer, respiratory ailments, diabetes, arthritis, heart and stroke and neurological and sensory disorders. Dr. Stanley W. Olson, director of HEWs regional medical programs service, confirmed that five of eight units in ids chronic disease division will lose more than half of their funds this year. Current plans are tp drop them next year, at a savings of $8.7 million, he said. The latest , cuts follows announcement Of plans by*the National Institutes of Health to pare 5 to 10 per pent from medical research outlays and to eliminate up to 19 small clinical research centers across the country. Hie new budget restrictions are expected to increase already vocal protests from the medical community and some congressional leaders. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy o f Massachusetts, the Senate’s No. 2 Defense Critics in Senate Pledge to Continu Fight WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate critics of defense costs say a new era has opened in public awareness of Pentagon spending despite, their crushing defeat on attempt after attempt to trim a 520-billion bill for military hardware. “We have made a good fight,” said Democrat William Proxmlre of Wisconsin, a leader in the two-month battle that ended last night with passage of the bill. “But,” he added, “this is merely the opening shot in a larger effort. The critical review will go one” " “A defense system which for years has operated without sufficient public and private checks has now b een exposed to the sunlight,” said Republican Edward Brooke of Massachusetts. The Proxmlre and Brooke comments came as the huge appropriations measure finally passed on an 81-5 vote. Although it passed virtually intact.— only $70 million was chopped out — it took 39 full days of debate over the two-month period. Pentium backers had to throw back more than a dozen attempts to delay such major programs as the Safeguard missile defense system, a new nuclear carrier, mammoth new battle tanks, squadrons of superjet fighters and a new manned bomber. ★ ' w t, • The bill that finances all the United ‘ States’ military hardware for fiscal 1970 now goes to the House where far easier going is expected. The measure, however, must again go, through the Senate for appropriation of the actual cash. Democrat, spoke out against medical program cutbacks last night in a speech hi Boston. “Hie impact of the cuts will be felt in medtcdl Schools, universities and research centers throughout the nation,” Kennedy said. The retrenchment in g o V e r n m e n t health programs results from President Nixon's order to chop 93.5 billion from the federal budget in die fight against inflation;——^ The latest five affectqd units are the major source of federal, funding for the transfer of research breakthroughs in-chronic diseases to everyday medical practice, Olson said. - - The cancer control program, for example, has arranged for more than 1.3 million women in the post 3% years to receive the latest in diagnostic tests for tumors. Government sources say the American Academy of General Practioe probably will have to end the cancer-test program if federal support is withdrawn. Rehabilitation programs for chronic lung disease at the University of Colorado Medical Center in'Denver and at Mt. Sinai Hospital in Minneapolis wiU be “seriously affected” by the cuts, the sources said. Four field stations of the heart disease 'and stroke control program—in San Francisco, Columbia, Mo., Washington D.C. aand Atlanta—will be forced to close, one official said. Flash EAST LAMING (AP) - Striking maintenance workers today approved! a contract with Michigan State University on a third vote and agreed to go back to work. A union spokesman said the contract was accepted on a voice vote. Reputed Detroit area Mafia chieftain Joseph Barbara Jr. was sentenced to seven to 20 years-in the state prison today foe extorting $4,000 from the wife of underworld informer Peter Lazaros of Troy. Hie 33-year-old Barbara will begin serving his prison lerm immediately since Oakland County Circuit Judge •I..*.* Frederick C. Zlem BARBARA refused to free him on bond while he appeals his conviction. ★ ★ W i Barbara, the president of the Tri-County Sanitation Co., was found guilty by a jury Aug. 13 of extorting $4,000 from Delores Lazaros while her husband was in prison tor a fraud conviction. The incident, along with the alleged rape of Mrs. Lazaros by Barbara, is reportedly the reason Lazaros began telling authorities about underworld activities. Lazaros was released - from prison last October while his case is being appealed. THREATS OF VIOLENCE Ziem noted that it is yrithin discretion of the judge to grant appeal bonds, but that it has been his practice in cases of intended violence or threats of violence not to allow appeals bonds. Ziem said he saw no reason why he should change his policy in this case. ★ * ★ On Monday, Ziem denied a motion of defense attorney Ivan Barris of Detroit that Barbara be granted a new trial. Ziem ruled that Barbara received a fair trial and was found guilty by a jury. CARE-A-VAN GIFTS - Howard M. Nelson (right), chairman of the Pontiac Area United Fund (PAUF) Commercial Divifflbn, presents David Richard of Boy Scout Troop 29 with gifts while hiS “camel” lodes on. His Boy Scouts were a special feature during the PAUF commercial and manufacturiig divia$amat kickoff luncheon, conducted with ah Arabian motif, yesterday at the Etta Chib. (8toiy, page A-2.) Southfield Stadium Appears Doomed A Southfield site for a domed stadium for the Detroit iLons and Tigers apparently was doomed yesterday in action by the Southfield Planning Commission, The move left a proposed location on Pontiac’s eastern boundary very prominent in consideration. ★ * ★ Last spring, spokesmen tor both teams indicated the Southfield site was preferable if a downtown Detroit site proved unfeasible. However, Southfield’s planning commission voted a recommendation last night to rezone the proposed 360-acre proposed location near 1-896 and Telegraph for entirety different uses — residential, office, educational and research building development. GOING TO COUNCIL The recommendation will go to the City .Council in November. There was considerable opposition to the proposed stadium in Southfield including that of Mayor Norman W. Feder. A ballot proposal set for next August would limit any stadium construction to less than 12,600 capacity, if passed by voters. This latest incident In the quest of the two teams for replacing aging Tiger tadium could spur action toward nam-ig the oPntiac site as preferred, w ★ w A downtown Detroit site has not yet leen ruled out. The Detroit oBard of Commerce has commissioned study. A preliminary report issued early in August apparently left an economic feasibility the teams tihimpressed. Among other factors it reported the land available would allow only about 5,000 parking spaces and that fans would have to use parking spaces elsewhere in the downtown area. VALUE OF PROPERTY It has also been indicated that the New York Central Railroad has valued its property along the riverfront needed for the stadium at $38 million. Pontiac last January appointed a Stadium Authority to carry out plans and negotiations with the teams. The authority has announced it has an economically feasible plan to build a $65-mllUon, domed, twin-stadium complex for the teams with revenue bonds (no millage called for). WWW Spokesmen for the Lions said they were going to announce a decision the), week after Labor Day, but this deadline passed with no word. • Weekend Climate io Continue Cool No November, December Draft Calls WASHINGTON (AP)-President Nixon today canceled all November and December draft calls and ordered that the 29,009 men scheduled for induction In October be called over a three-month period at a monthly average of less than 10,000 men. Our Newswires WASHINGTON — Sources say President Nixon may announce today plans to slash autumn draft calls to 10,000 or less a month. WWW They add he probably will stop short of an outright temporary suspension of the calls. Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird had announced earlier that 29,000 men will be inducted in October, no change from the September call. The year’s high There’s a chance of showers tonight, ind temperatures Will continue cool over the weekend. The U.S. Weather Bureau’s official lay-by-day forecast: TODAY — Mostly cloudy and cool, with a Chance of light rain this afternoon end evening. High 63 to 68. Cloudy and not much temperature change tonight. Low 50 to 55. TOMORROW—Partly cloudy and a little warmer, high of 66 to 72. SUNDAY. - Partly cloudy and warmer. Probabilities of precipitation: 30 per cent today, 30 per cent tonight and 20 per .cent tomorrow. The low recording before 2 a.m. In downtipm Pontiac was 51 The mercury was at 62 by 12:30 p.m. was 33,700 in Feburary, the low was 22,300 in Juty. Nixon scheduled a public statement today on future plans for the Selective Service System prior to a Laird, news conference at the White House. But unless the administration decides to completely suspend the draft few the last three months of this year, it appears that the total number of men drafted for 1969 Will be about the same as last year. Hie administration was expected to couple the announcement with a plea for congressional action on draft reform legislation. By the aid of this month, 260,000 men win have been drafted into the armed services, compared with 296,000 for aU of 1968. Thus only a complete suspension, or something dose to it, for October, November and December would leave the'RXHTtotanower than last year’s. Laird told a news conference Wednesday that troop withdrawals from Vietnam as well as mUitary economies at home will have a “very significant effect,” on the draft. ACTION PROMISED Nixon had promised, at the National Governor’s Conference in Colorado Springs, Cblo, recently; '“We shall have some directives that will be issued in the very near future that will accomplish” some of the goaty concerning., what he called “the unnecessarily long period of uncertainty that now hangs over the lives of millions of our young people.” There had been much speculation but no certain information about the direction Nixon planned to take in accomplishing this goal. Earlier this week, White House Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler acknowledged that outright suspension of the draft for at least a month or longer had been under discussion. However, administration sources said later such a move was not under consideration for the immediate future. Factors pointing toward lower draft calls included the promised cutback of at least 60,000 men in the Vietnam fighting force between July 8 and Dec. 15 plus a general anti-inflation economy directive from the White House ordering a reduction in defense spending — to be accomplished in part by deactivation of military units and ships. 43 3 m LI Bl j u )i V H THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19. 1909 V l? m5r ™ m p J IS U'm •' — - . , School Board Ignores Plea in Hiring Hassle j! The Pontiac School Board last night was asked to change its mind on the hiring of an assistant superintendent. But the board took no action, adjourning its meeting amid the audience’s increasingly bitter denunciations. The board announced Sept. 4 it had selected a Virginia man, Dr. William Edmonds, director of the Virginia State College Graduate School, Petersburg, Va., for the position. The recommendation of the board’s citizens committee on human relations was for John F. Perdue, director of school-community and human relations. A one-day boycott protesting Edmonds’ selection was held Sept. 10 with over 400 teachers reported absent. The human relations committee asked the board to reconsider last night. After about one hour of discussion on the issue, the board abruptly at 11 p.m. called for and passed a motion to adjourn. LIAISON DESTROYED The chairman of the human relations committee, Charlie Harrison, warned that unless the hiring was reconsidered, the committee’s role “of being a liaison between the board of education and the community has been destroyed.’’ Another committee member, Frank Johnson, reminded the board of past recommendations concerning appointment of the assistant superintendent. 7 He said the Michigan Civil Rights Commission (MCRC), in its report on the city in January, recommended the post be created and filled by a man “sensitive to minority group problems in the community.” ★ * ★ In choosing Dr. Edmonds over Perdue, Johnson said, the board was ignoring the MCRC, the human relations committee, the local 90-citizen, Equality of Educational Opportunity Commisison (EEO), and the majority of teachers and staff members at the schools. RECALL CAMPAIGN After last week’s boycott, a recall campaign was initiated against the four members of the seven-member board who voted for Edmonds — Russell Brown, John K. Irwin Jr., Mrs. Lucille Marshall and Mrs. Elsie Mihalek. At last night’s meeting it was announced that more than 3,000 signatures bn recall petitions had been obtained. More than 6,000 are needed. At least 200 persons jammed the small administration auditorium for the stormy meeting. While a majority of those making statements were opposed to board actions en agenda items, several stood in support of “respect” for the board. One woman predicted more white people will be attending future board meet- , Related Story, Page B-9 ings. The audience was about one-fourth black, and many Identified themselves as teachers. RESIGNATIONS DEMANDED ' The board was vilified in a statement read from the Voice of Oakland County Action League (VOCAL). The statement called members “incompetent, chaotic, disgraceful... ignorant... undemocratic...” it k ir The VOCAL statement concluded by demanding the resignation of the members who had voted, in effect, against Perdue. Blue Shield Asks to Raise Rates LANSING (UPI) - Health insurance rate Increases averaging $2-43 per family have been requested by Michigan Blue Shield fpr the first three months of 1670. Citing inflationary medical costs as the reason for the request, Blue Shield officials asked the rate-regulating State Insurance Commission for the hike yesterday at a public hearing. ★ ★ ★ f If approved, the average increase of 16.7 per cent of the base rate would affect those contracts renewable from the first of the year through March 31, 1970 — about 274,000. If the hike is extended to. cover the remaining three quarters, almost all other 4.S million insurees would be affected. Not Included in the hike would be policies for supplemental Medicare coverage. ★ ★ ** Specifically, the rate raise would mean single persons would pay an average of 45 cents more per year, 12.10 and families $2.43 Personnel at HQ Hit Drastic Shakeup Jars OEO WASHINGTON (AP) - The Office of Economic Opportunity is about to undergo a drastic shakeup of headquarters personnel. The disclosure left nearly 100 of the antipoverty agency’s employes without specific duties and facing an uncertain future. The shakeup disclosure was made suddenly—and apparently without warning—Wednesday in a memorandum from OEO Director Donald Rumsfeld to all 1,100 headquarters personnel. Attached to the memorandum was a list of about 900 people who will have definite new Those not on the list, many in the $15,000 to $20,000 salary range, were told they were being put jn a pool, to be used wherever they were needed, until their future was decided. Sources within OEO said many of the 100 people left in professional limbo had been associated with the antipoverty agency’s more controversial programs. SOME FEARFUL Some expressed the fear they were being eased out of the agency entirely. An OEO spokesman denied that these people were on “a blacklist,” but stopped short of guaranteeing that all would have jobs when the reorganization Is complete. ★ ★ ★ Referring to those not on the list, the memorandum said: “If your name does not appear on the lists, supervisory personnel and representatives of the personnel office will contact you directly and discuss assignment possibilities. Until you are reassigned, you will be retained in your present title, grade and salary, in an unassigned status, available for detail or loan to any of the OEO offices and divisions where your services can be utilized.” BLACKBALL LIST One top OEO official who asked not to be identified referred to the unassigned personnel as being on “a blackball list.” “They’re dumping us into one big pool according to Rumsfeld," the official said. “To me that pool looks more like a bottomless pit that drops right into oblivion.” 2 Units Kick OH PAUF Drive The commercial and manufacturing divisions of the Pontiac Area United Fund (PAUF) began their campaigns yesterday with a luncheon at the Elks Club, 114 Orchard Lake. This year’s total goal for the two divisions is $385,814 out of a general campaign goal of $1.24 million, Howard M. Nelson, commercial division chairman told some 200 volunteers. it k k Frederick J. Poole, president of PAUF, said money collected in this year’s campaign again will be used to support the 55 United Fund Fund agencies and will be dispersed on the basis of need. “For the past two years the PAUF drive has failed to reach the goal set by its directors, causing agencies to operate at a deficit.” Poole said. He added that there is no reserve to fail back on for immediate need. Last year’s goal was set at $1.13 million and contributions totaled about $1.7 million. Poole said, volunteer solicitors have a real challenge before them and expressed hopes that the enthusiasm and dedication they have displayed will encourage the people whom they contact. * ★ ★ The volunteers heard speaker John Greenwood, assistant regional manager for the American National Red Cross in Wisconsin, Minnesota and Michigan, talk about action of the Red Cross during the recent hurricane along the Gulf Coast. Greenwood’s speech entitled, “Things Just Don’t Happen,” pointed to the fact The Weather Full UJ3. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Today mostly cloudy and cool. Chance of a little light rata mainly this afternoon and evening. High 63 to 68. Tonight cloudy and not much temperature change. Chance of occasional light rain. Low 50 to 55. Saturday partly cloudy and a little warmer. High 65 to 72. Sunday outlook: partly cloudy and warmer. Winds east to northeast 3 to 18 miles per hour today, easterly 5 to 12 miles tonight and southeast 5 to 15 miles Saturday. Probabilities of precipitation are 30 per cent today, 30 per cent tonight, and 20 per cent Saturday. TMay in mnllnc Mt ttmpwi • m.: Wll ThurrtjjMn NATIONAL WEATHER — Showers are forecast tonight for the Southeast, dhwest and Northwest Cooler temperatures are expected In the Great Lakes people and money make them happen, referring to volunteers from all over the country who arrived to help in cleanup and other aid along the 55 miles of coastline damaged by hurricane Camille. He presented a vivid picture of the disaster and skid 18,000 homes were destroyed and another 26,000 were “The Red Cross met Camille head-on,” he said, “and 662 trained volqnteers were sent into the area.” k" k k Commercial division volunteers will call on area retailers, educational, professional and community leaders for donations.' Small manufacturing firms and companies will be contacted by manufacturing division volunteers headed by Lawrence Wiseman. The PAUF general campaign this year starts Oct. 4 and is to run through Nov. 7. (Continued From Page One) can’t be counted upon to come up with funds. “It’s about time we talked to the State Legislature to do something about this,” he commenced. Stanley Kurzman, a parent in the school district and one of three attorneys for parents who took the school board to court, praised Farnum’s millage proposal as “the pnly responsible solution.” “I hope you will go forward and implement full days,” he toldthe board. “If the supreme court reverses the Senate Fate Uncertain House Passes Electoral Reform WASHINGTON CAP) - A proposed constitutional amendment calling for the direct, popular election of the president has been approved by the House in such an overwhelming fashion that even the measure’s supporters are surprised—and The size of yesterday’)! vote — 339-79—raised backers’ hopes that the proposal can win Senate approval, state ratification and become the 26th amendment to 1 However Senate prospects for the proposal are uncertain. There is strong opposition In the Judiciary Committee, where the question of electoral reform Is now stalled. The House vote disclosed solid bipartisan support for the proposal, which would, scrap the system used to elect every President since George Washington. Instead of voting for electors who then cast their ballots for the president, citizens would vote directly for their candidate. And instead of counting up the electoral votes of the. states to determine the president, the winner would be the candidate who got the most Individual votes in a nationwide tally. * * ★ A candidate would have to get at least 40 per cent of the popular vote to win. If none did, there would be a runoff between the top two. Opponents charged the 40 per cent provision could lead to a minority president, but Rep. Emanuel Celler, D-N.Y., manager of the bill, countered by pointing out that 15 presidents have been elected with less than 50 per cent of the popular vote. That includes President Nixon, who got slightly more than 43 per cent. Birmingham Area Hearing Is Set on Proposal for Condominiums BLOOMFIELD HILLS W The City Commission and the planning commission will consider a proposal by the Woodbury Construction 6). to build condominium and single-family residences on the northwest corner of Hickory Grove and' Lahser Roads. The hearing will be at 7:30 p.m. Oct. 14 at the city . office building. The problem concerning the construction plans reportedly Centers on whether or not there should be a condominium-type development in the city, according to Commissioner Louis G. Colombo Jr. k. k k Woodbury plans call for construction of 100 detached condominium units of two or three bedrooms in the $70,000 to $90,000 range. TURNABOUT — Oakland University Chancellor Durward Varner was the object of student demonstrations last night mid today. No, they don’t want to get rid of him, they want to keep him. A rumor on campus last night reported the committee seeking a chancellor for Michigan State University was going to draft him. This sparked demonstrations calling for keeping Varner and this sign at OU’s gate shown by Marion Milne of Mount Clemens. Waterford Schools Want Rehearing, Set Millage Vote BIRMINGHAM - Mrs. Velmg M. Ruhly has been appointed principal at Westchester Elementary School. She replaces Dr. Francis R. Goetz who was transferred to the principleship of Harlan Elementary School. * ★ ★ Mrs. Ruhly of Beverly Hills holds bachelor’s and master’s degrees from Wayne State University and is completing work on a doctorate in education. She has 12 years experience in the Birmingham schools as an elementary teacher, arithmetic consultant and diagnotician. Mrs. Ruhly has also taught classes in child and adolescent psychology at Wayne State. decision, you’d be in the same boat next ear anyway without more money.” However, parents who hired the other two lawyers indicated to them they won’t support more millage. One emotional mother in a crowd of nearly 200 people, Mrs. William Schiidt of 5831 Elizabeth Lake, told the board “millage exploits the poor and is only patchwork to take the pressure of the Legislature.” > “You should cross the bridge when you come to it. If you face bankruptcy or annexation, go to the voters and tell them they’ll nave to vote ‘yes.’ ” ' The millage issue was approved by the board 7-0 and the bond issue 6-1 with Eldon C. Roscgart opposed. 800 students would have no school to go to in a few years if a new Junior high school was not built soon. The school bond issue, defeated last March, will cost taxpayers about $1 million more now as construction and Interest costs mount at $100,000 per month, according to Pagen. When Kurzman learned the board was considering a delay in restoring full-day sessions, he withdrew his pledge to work for a millage increase. ♦ k ★ A motion to ask for a stay and start appeal procedures was dfeated, 4-3. Voting against it were Schlmmel, Farnum, President Philip M. Hampton and Mrs. Peggy L. Wood. Board officials said if they did restore full day classes, the district probably would run out of money about February andiit would be difficult to borrow money because the board couldn’t repay it. If it ran out of money, it probably could get a loan from the state like Inkster did last year but if it doesn’t balance the - budget immediately the district could be consolidated with another, school officials warn. Members of the Birmingham Senior Men’s Club were scheduled to see a film,, titled “Golf a Go Go,” showing the “nine most beautiful holes hi the United States" at their meeting this morning in the Community House, M0 S. Bates. Discussion topic for the day was “Should wage snd price controls be applied to the national economy in order to check inflation?" Blrmingham-Bloomfield area residents will have an opportunity to take the Peace Corps entrance examination tomorrow at 1:30 p.m. at two locations. Hie exam will be given in Room 222, Federal Building at Fort and Shelby in Detroit and in Room 1 of the Federal Building at E. Huron and Perry in Pontiac. k k it Persons interested in taking the, exam must present an application to the tester before the exam begins. Forms can be obtained from any post office. Soviet Report Claims Talks Set With China MOSCOW (UPI) - The Soviets today circulated an unconfirmed report that they will receive a top-level Communist Chinese, delegation in Moscow within three weeks to discuss their border quarrel. There was no official confirmation of .the report, which spread through' Western and neutral embassies. ★ ★ ★ The Report said Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin had persuaded Chinese Premier Chou En-lal In their brief talk at Peking Airport last week to send a delegation to this capital to discuss the border troubles which have caused at least five pitched battles in the past six Orion Jetport Plans Jeopardized A politically aware Oakland County Board of Supervisors may be inclined to settle for less than a fully developed Jet-type airport In Orion Township. Those were the indications yesterday as a motion to recommend a $250,000 Orion Airport budget appropriation committee on a 4-3 vote. A previous motion to deny funds to carry out the airport’s master plan, passed by a ,64 vote, with Wallace Gabler, R-Royal Oak, in lone opposition. First-stage development of the master plan is estimated to cost more than $20 million. The appropriation, as passed, has yet to gain approval of the county’s finance committee and the full board of As provided in the motion by Mablon Benson, R-Waterford Township, the recommended appropriation would provide for cost studies on paving the existing north-south sod runway, leveling and paving an east-west strip, and construction of T-hangars for rental to plane Voting with Benson were George Grba, D-Pontiac, who seconded the motion, Gabler and Frank Richardson, R-Watorford Township. Opposition led by Niles Olson, D-Orion Township, chairman of the three-man airport board charged with ad- ministration of county airports, noted that the money, once in the budget, might be spent by the airport board in arty way it saw tit. Voting with Olson against the measure were Philip Mastln, D-Hazel Park, and Dennis Aaron, D* Huntington Woods. Olson’s fellow members on the airport administrative board are Benson and Gabler: Several representatives from Orion Township were present to plead that some action be taken by the county — either that plans for airport development be abandoned or that a definite indication be made that the county will A land-use study of the area surrounding the airport, prepared by Vilican Leman Associates of Southfield now engaged in preparing a township master plan — was presented to the committee. Other figures made available by Township Supervisor John Lassiter showed $5 mulion of recent development on area Included within the master plan — land which tha county would have to purchase. A Lake Angelus homeowner, James H. Klipfel of M0 Lake Angelus Shores, vowed that some 200 business and community leaders of his area would fight “in any way possible” development. Reg|0\MitiA0 ftftfRpendence Have Water, Gan t Use It INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP — Residents living in the Wdodhull Lake area of the township* are suffering from acute frustration. The water is there, but they cannot have it. ★ ' ★ * Tlie approximate 30 property owners with dry wells are waiting for . the Oakland County Health Department to complete tests on water that is being pip^d into the Pinedale, Clinton, Lake-view and Hiflcrest Street district via temporary pipeline. Initial samples taken from the new line-have indicated that the water is not yet‘‘suitable for drinking. Further tests are to be taken today. ‘OK UNUKELY TILL MONDAY’ Township Clerk Howard Altman said he does not expect the Health Department to approve the water for public use until Monday morning. , “This is not to say that the water is contaminated. In the testing process, any contact the water has with sand or any Of the equipment in the construction area can throw the testing off.” k k k “Contrary to rumors we have not turned on the water and will not until we have complete apprval from the County Health Department,” Altman noted. Altman also asserted that residents Hying in the adjapent Pelton Heights subdivision who have charged that their water supply is being strained are misinformed. < AUTHORIZED USE ' Hie temporary line installation has been tapped off the Pelton Heights water system. “Before we constructed the temporary line the State Health Department authorized using water from the Pelton Heights subdivision. There is enough water in that system to supply 100 additional homes. ★ ★ ★ “The residents have to .realize they don’t own that water system. They only pay for services from it and cannot control'it. The .township is the owner and controlling authority of the water system,” Altman declared. Construction crews have completed the laying of about one mile of pipeline. About 600 feet more is needed in order to sendee all homes without water in the district. WATER FROM TANK Residents have qbtained water from a tank furnished by the County Department of Public Works since wells went dry nearly two weeks ago. Altman said that the bill for the temporary line project, which he estimates will be in the $6,000 range, will be presented to the County DPW. “The county has made arrangements to finance the Waterford Township water relief projects and there is no reason the county can’t do the same for residents in Independence Township,” Altman declared. Politics or Fear of Nude Movies? P/an for 3rd Theater Snagged ;« By NED ADAMSON HR^QHAM - The City Com-mission is either caught up in a little political pressure or is afraid America’s great nudity drive might invade Birm- A Detroit investor, Stewart Gorlick, who wants to establish a small theater here, which he Insists will not show "nude specials” such as “I Am Curious (Yffiw)," believes the problem is politics. 'iJhe difficulty stems from Gorlick’s attempt to remodel a vacant auto-dealer showroom into what he calls’ a “small, intimate cinema operation that would prelent selected'films in good taste and nortobjectiooable to Birmingham reiiienfSr” The city fathers reportedly have told Gorlick they have delayed , action on his request in order tq {earn more about the intended filmfare and appointments of the theater. News Analysis The city has had a moritorium on issuance of building permits because of revamping of the ordinances concerning height of buildings in and near the community’s central business district. k k k Gorlick maintained at a recent commission meeting that his proposed alterations would not Increase the height of the existing structure. ★ ★ * “Our plans for the building are in complete conformance with the present commerical zoning. I am sure that the only reason the commission has held up action on the building permit is because of pressure from owners of the two existing. theaters in Birmingham,” Gorlick declared. THE PONTIAC PRESS FRIDAY, SEPTEM HER 19, 19(59 A—A Aw News Heart Repair for Oakland Twp. lad, 8 1 Boy Faces Rare Surgery “It is obvious that owners of the other, two theaters are putting pressure on the commission to keep us from putting in another theater,” he said. DOWN THE STREET The other two theaters in the city, owned by United Theatres Inc, of. Detroit, a division of ABC-Paramount, are just down the street from Gorlick’s proposed new cinema. ' t * * ★ Gorlick said his proposed theater would be similar to the Studio chain operation in metropolitan Detroit which specializes in foreign and American think-type films. ■ k k k “A theater of this type is needed in Birmingham and would prove to be very beneficial to the community,” Gorlick said. . Birmingham's two exisiting threaters specialize in general-interest family fare. OAKLAND TOWNSHIP — Michael Hewitt’s mother will not wake him up for school Monday. Instead a nurse will begin to prepare him for his second major heart operation. Mike Hewitt is, 8 years old. His operation will be difficult. It’s the first time such surgery has been performed at Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit. If it succeeds, Mike will be normal and will MICHAEL be able to run and play like other children. Mike, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hewitt, 1435 Gunn, was born with four major heart defects. He’s been in add out of hospitals since he was 14 months old- * * * His first operation was corrective to reroute the oxygen through, his heart, which has a hole in it. Six years ago, doctors didn’t know how long the surgery would keep Mike alive. They knew it was possible for Mike’s condition to reverse itself at any time. the family to arrange a way to resupply the blood used during the operation. It takes 12 pints of blood just to prime the heart pump. NOT ALL CAN HELP Mrs. Hewitt has asked neighbors to help give blood, if they can. As usual some are willing, but many are reluc-^ tant or, because of illness, find they cannot give blood. Though Mike understands a little of the operation, he’s thinking of what Officers ElectejJ by Avon's School for Leader Dogs DOING IT OVER Monday the doctors hope to perform the first surgery over again and to correct all the other defects. . It’s possible now because last spring Dr. Eduardo Arciniegas came to Ford Hospital. He’s the only surgeon at Ford capable of performing the operation. Ford is now the fifth hospital. in .the country equipped to handle such a cdse. ★ * ★ Mike will live with a heart pump throughout the entire operation. His small body’s vital signs will be checked and rechecked while doctor’s delicately piece together a heart that should function as any 8-year-old’s does. <o it it it Money isn’t the only problem for Mike’s father, a Consumers Power Co. credit representative. Hie hospital wants AVON TOWNSHIP - Basil M. Briggs of 900 Broodwood, Birmingham, was elected president of Leader Dogs for the Blind recently at the school’s annual board meeting. ★ * * Briggs, an attorney with Evans, Boyer, Luptak and Briggs of Birmingham, replaces Carlton M. Higbie of the Higbie Manufacturing Co., Rochester. Higbie will remain an active trustee of the organization, a United Fund Agency. ★ ★ ★ Other recently elected officers include Harold L. Pockllngton, vice president; Martin S. Hayden, secretary; and William S. Hickey, treasurer. Leader Dogs for the Blind, 1039 S. Rochester, graduated 172 leader dogs during the fiscal year ending June 30, 1969. • it, ’ ★ ir ‘ Future plans call for additional kennel space due to an increasing demand for leader dogt German shepherds, Labrador, and golden retrievers and malamutes, 1 to 2 ..years of age are accepted for training if they qualify in a carefully conducted screening test. he’ll be able to do after he comes home from the hospital. * l k *1 “Mike’s just thrilled with the idea of being normal and being able to nth With the other children,’* said Mrs. Hewitt. “He already has plans to go horseback riding as soon as ,he comes home."* ! . * * * A few months ago Mike’s father bought him a minibike to ride around the house and visit the neighborhood children. ★ ★ * Before, if. Mike had to walk over to; their houses he’d have to lie on the grass a while and build up his strength to walk back home. With the minibike, he scoots over to his friends easily and has even wohi a path by riding around and around the house for hours on end. SOMETHING TO PULL FOR His mother said the minibike also gives Mike something “to pull for” during and after the operation. ★ * Mrs. HetVitt said Mike’s personality has undergone a change because hej spends so much time in the hospital. “He’worries a lot and cries and sometimes is Irritable,” she said. “I think it’s because he’s tired and wonders if he’ll be put back in school.” , ★ ★ ★ Mike’s in the third grade at North Hill Elementary Schobl, Rochester. Even though he's been in the hospital “at least four months'each year,” he’s managed to keep up with his classmates. But this year looks difficult. k k k ■ Mike will need two weeks to recover in the hospital and at least two week,} at home if the operation is successful. A tutor will come to the house for the last two weeks. ★ ★ it * Mrs. Hewitt said Mike loves tit get cards. There's a bulletin board in the children’s wing at Henry Ford Hospital. “Mike feels just wonderful when there's a card with his name on the board,” she said. IS 11 i f i Wr&§ Is. Sen. Huber Faces Democratic Club Membi Conservative Confronts Liberals in Troy By T. LARRY ADCOCK TROY — Robert J. Huber, the noted conservative, and' some 25 members of thq Troy Democratic Club, notably liberal, last night staged an approach-avoidance confrontation of Ideology. - *“i' Huber — the fire-eating conservative who represents the 16th District in the Michigan Senate (Royal Oak north to Rochester, Bloomfield Township east to Clawson) — proved disappointing to some, but always genial. Lightly taunted by his political foes, Sen. Huber generally gingerly avoided answers to direct questions. News Analysis Probably the only positive declaration made by the senator was: “Roger Craig (D-Dearborn, an outspoken liberal) and I are the only two men In the Senate who stand for definite ideologies. 1 FISCAL REFORM, . “I’m ifpt Rke a former governor who campaigned on the ‘fiscal reform’ theme. What- ddes ‘fiscal reform’ - mean anyway? To the senior citizens on fixed Incomes, it is deigned to niehp T11 get some tax relief.’ To the giant corporation, it means Tl] get a fair shake,’ ” Huber said. "{The .temj ‘fiscal reform,* is designed to mean so many thiagrto1 so .many people that it has become meaningless. «I’m a iuy -r and so ll Roger (Craig) — who puts his ideas straight On the table, Everyone knows the rules of the game when I campaign,” Huber said. Huber, the owner of six industrial plants in six states and a six-year mayor of his home city of Troy, recently bolted the Senate GOP caucus. “I walked out, of that Republican caucus because it no longer reflected the will of the majority,” Huber explained. *Tm not the only one who quits caucuses,” Huber said: “A full year before I quit, Sen. Basil Brown (D-Highland Park, a black liberal) dropped out of his Democratic caucus. He hasn’t gone back and neither will I. “I suggested to Basil that we form the Afro-American Bund caucus,” Huber said. The most important principal of politics he believes, is the concept that power is held by the electorate. “That’s what I believe in above all else,” expounded, “power to the people.” PANTHER SLOGAN An audience member noted that “power to. the people” was not only a “Huberlsm,” but was also the slogan of the revolutionary Black Panther party. “Do I look like a Black Panther?” Huber exploded, refusing to answer the accompanying question: “Do you agree then, with the philosophy of the Black Panthers?” ★ * ★ Huber chopped away at his familiar targets: Oakland University Chancellor Durward Varner for his alleged allowing of “immoral” activities on the OU campus,, “the protest bit,” and sex education in public schools. “I do not believe that just because you have Van Cliburn on the one hand, you can burn the flag on the othe,” Huber said, referring to militant campus demonstrations. ‘JUST CAN’T ACCEPT’ “I simply cannot accept the philosophy of a university chancellor (Varner) who says he will'‘tolerate anything on campus Until someone complains,’ ” Huber declared. I Huber claimed that students in the OU fine arts department were in the habit of creating plaster-of-paris male sex organs and that this was part of the “age of permissiveness” tolerated by Chancellor Varner. ★ k k * ■ 1 Prompted to explain an apparent contradiction — his “power to the people” philosophy and his objection to Varner’s “toleration of anything until someone complains” tenet — Huber said: “I think we can change things by our greatest power — the '1 Never Agreed With The Korean War And I Don't Agree With The Vietnam War. No One Voted Whether We Should Send Our Boys Off To War, And I Think That Vote Should Be Held Nationally' —State Sen. Robert J. Huber vote. We don’t have to protest in the streets or destroy property to change philosophies.”, ‘LET PEOPLE DECIDE’ Huber suggested that the people decide what heretofore . the politicians decided for them, in keeping; with his “power .to the people” theme: “We should vote by referendum on all matters, of policy — the state income tax, the open-housing question and property taxes,” Hubert declared. k k k Asked if morality could be decided by referendum, Huber said, “Yes. There would probably be one question per year — and I’m sure the majority would vote it down. “I never agreed with the Korean war and I don’t agree with the Vietnam war. No one voted whether we should send our boys off to war, and I think that vote should he held nationally,” Huber said.. NON VOTERS HIT “Anyone who sits home and doesn’t vote, who doesn’t become politically active, can’t be an intelligent citizen,” he said. -Huber said that majority agreement was the road to change. , • ★ ' “Sen. Huber, would you abide by a majority referendum decision that you be executed?,” asked a long-haired audience member. “Ask me something sensible 1” Huber snapped. ‘DOES IT TRANSCEND?’ “Then you do agree that sometimes a minority right or morality transcends mapority rule?,” the questioner persisted. On his activity in the Special Senate Committee tq Investigate Campus Disorder, Huber said: “I never wanted the committee assignment. It just came tjo,me. It’s very difficult*— especially as a conservative — to ruin a committee like that. You get the McCarthy-hearings stuff thrown at you right away.” Huber said'he had assembled “the best hrSlns in Michigan” on the committee, which will soon make recommendations on legislation — or no legislation — to respond to campus disorders. “One thing we do know,” Huber commented, “is that we cannot allow violent, revolutionary-minded groups tq take over our campuses.” ON SEX EDUCATION On the sex education attack, Huber pointed but: “In California — which is not exactly a neanderthal community — they have banned SIECUS (Sex Information and Education Councii of the United States, which soma have labeled a Communist front group). "I fail to. see why we need a totally integrated sex education program in grades kindergarten through 12. The sex education bill — which I voted for — was designed to cooperate with parental will. “The parent was supposed to be able to pull his child from the sex education class if he wished. How does a parent mill ‘ his child from a totally integrated sex education program , without completely removing * him frond School?” Huber asked. . ‘ ’ “ T Huber declared that he would not accept Republican nominations for either the Michigan gubernatorial race or the upcoming U.S. Senate contest. HIE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1969 m IM :—s * Armstrong carpeting is new tough, soft, clean* And in your A Look at TV neighoorr now. The Floor Shop 2255 Elizabeth Lake Road Pontiac - 682-4421 Networks Starting to Overfeed Viewers By CYNTHIA LOWRY AP Television-Radio Writer NEW YORK — Network television now is overfeeding its viewers as extravagantly as it starved him during the summer famine, y With ABC and NBC presenting on Thursday night the season premieres of some of their most popular programs—“That Girl,” “Bewitched,” “Daniel I Boone” and “Ironside” — CBS I busily loaded in a special to conflict with them. It was called ‘The Time of Man” and based, up to a point, on some unusual film and commentary obtained through the American Museum of Natural History. ★\ * ★ ' The point of the program was that man is in danger of bringing about his own extinction by his intemperence—hardly a novel TV theme. YOU CAN ALWAYS FIGURE ON SAVINGS FROM FRETTER EVERYTHING IS READY Hurry now, every store is stocked full of new 1970 appliances, TV's and stereos all priced to sell quick, immediate delivery easy instant credit! Installation and service included in all prices. OLIII FRETTER Gvoronlfts Your Complete Satisfaction ADMIRAL COLOR CONSOLE, UHF,$9QQ95 VHF Galor Fidelity Walnut Finish. (bUw > FRIOQETT REFRIGERATOR It-PJ Aasnc Cu. Ft. With Push Hutton Datrost, 4 f /M33 Walnut Trim . 1 ZENITH Early Amarican STEREO. emasne Mapla Finish, AM-FM Stereo 5KQ95 Radio, Solid State (Oamagad).. Vw TOF BBAN0 COLOR F0RTARLE TV) EMM Slate Chassis, Dipole Tala- 41 Oil taasa Ant. IWV HOTPOINT ELECTRIC RANGE, Salt»4 AAOe clean, white, Start and Stop 91 KU*S WESTINflHOUSE DISHWASHER, aaabe Toploader tl-Flaea Setting, Slight- 50095 ly Scratched Uw FAMOUS MAKE IS” FORTAILE TV. Instant On, Frant Controls, Tala- wQQUa scops Ant sill HOT POINT CAAQK HEAVY DUTY WASHER, Willi99 WHIRLPOOL ELECTRIC DRYER, Z- 80Q95 Heat Satting, Fully Quarantaad. Vw HARDWICK 30 INCH GAS RANGE Built-in styling, lilt-up. lift off Ov.n door, smokeless broiling decorative " back- *99 OVER 3,000 PORTABLE TV'S COST LESS AT FRETTERS TOP BRAND PORT. TV Brand MW larger screen. Super compact site with UKf VHF. Como In today and take advantage of this FANTASTIC RCA 15" PORT. TV Mai ruggad cabinat, telescoping antonna. *2 chann.l UHF/ VHF lunar, high efficiency 5" speaker with 12S iq. In. rectangular picture area. PORTABLE COLOR TV COSTS LESS AT FRETTERS Top Brand COLOR TV RCA 14" COLOR ZENITH 18".... COLOR Natlenally wld tap brand Mar IV at a Mi low BCA 101 tg. in. perMble c.I.r IV. 21,SOO volts .f A.F.C. (automatic fin* tuning c.htr.l), grained mttw price, »elld-etate/tuhe chauii, 3 ling. IF picture paww ti pull in those diclont stations, walnut tiniih cobin.1, 25,000 vultc at picture power, amplifier, dip.1. lelesceping antennae, 11,000' UHF-VHF far full TV viewing and etny-Mt velum. j ting. IF amplifi.r. Illuminated, "ipet til “ FRETTER’S FRETTER’S PONTIAC SOUTHFIELD S. Toltgraph Rd. On Telegraph Road FI M0S1 358-2880 l»e« »«<lt tM, joeOey ta-T ONI »e» tM, tuodey tM FRITTER'S OAKLAND 411 W. 11 Mila Road w l-Seadey tits? The program began by explaining the chemistry of the world’s creation and moved, step I by step, through the age of dinosaurs. The program was most! interesting when it lingered onj sequences showing the tribal characteristics of some primi-' tive African tribes. CHILDENTURNED OUT Some film showed one tribe in which each man and woman takes care of his own needs without any feeling toward hisj fellow man and where children; are turned out to fend for them-1 selves at the age of 3. Another tribe was shown in an lages-old ritual of warfare and reprisal, so old that it has lost) its meaning. ® The program made its point about the futility of war. But then it moved on to a portion that seemed to belong to some other program. This was a montage of old and recent film clips that in a few minutes ran through history from the time film was invented until the astronauts stepped onto the moon. * ★ | Its sudden change of style and message suggested there was just not enough museum film to I fill the hour. I People in By the Associated Press Debbie Reynolds, who quit her new television series be* cause the network ran a cigarette commercial, accompanying its premiere, has decided to carry on after all. She said yesterday NBC had explained to her that it could not jettison such commercials because it had a contractual commitment with the American Brands Co.' The show had its premiere Tuesday 1||§I night. Miss Reynolds quit the next day, cit- IBP ing the cigarette ad. “I was especially concerned because of ■' ■<y the number of children viewing early time-slot programs,” she said. DEBBIE Her contract calls for 24 shows, of which 10 have been taped. Sinatra Family Plays Las Vegas Strip' A father ■ and two of his children headline different I shows tonight on the Las I Vegas strip. Their name: I Sinatra. Frank opens a three-week engagement at Caesars Pal-I ace. Nancy is finishing at the International Hotel. Frank Jr. is near the end of a stand at the Frontier Hotel. JAILED 37 YEARS BY MlSTAKE-Pardoned by Kansas Gov. Rqbert Docking, Frank Sawyer (center), 70, walks from the Krfnsas State Prison yesterday at Lansing, Kan., after serving 37 years for a 1937 bank robbery which he did not commit. At right are his nephews, Bill Sawyer and Wayne /Sawyer (right) of Odessa, Tex., where Sawyer will make his home. By juggling their hours, each will attend the others’ shows. FRANK Singer Reports $94,000 Theft Singer Connie Stevens says someone stole $94,000 in jewels from her room at the JLand-mark Hotel in Las Vegas yesterday while she was performing. She told police she lost a $17,000 diamond bracelet, a $10,000 necklace arid a $5,000 gold compact, among other items. Barrymore Faces Tritbl on Drug Charge Actor John Drew Barrymore has been ordered to stand trial in Indio, Calif., Superior Coart Oct. 7 on charges of possessing marijuana and barbituates. The trial date was Bet yesterday. Barrymore, 37, is free on $1,250 bail. He was arrested Aug. 4 after an auto accident near Palm Springs. Police said they found packages of the drugs under a seat of his Car. Astronaut Joins LA Brokerage Firm Astronaut Alan Shepard has joined the new Los Angeles^ brokerage firm of Thomas, Power & Coogan as a non-voting partner. He said in on interview many astronauts are going into side businesses that do not conflict with their duties as spacemen. He will have no regular work with the firm but will drop in occasionally to look after his investments. “We’ve got to look ahead to the. time when we’re too old to be flying around > in rockets,” he said. Shepard became the nation’s first suborbital space flier when he rode a Mercury capsule, 116.5 miles above the earth on May 5, 1961. He is slated to command the future flight of Apollo 14. She Gets Custody, Alimony—No Divorce The daughter of former Venezuelan President Marcos Perez Jimenez has been granted custody of her two children, alimony and Child support—but no divorce from her husband. Margott Brook, 23, was granted custody of Margo Alejan-dra, 5, and Lee Marcos, 2, plus $75 a week in payments by her husband, onetime Miami Beach carhop Lee Brook, 26. The unusual “alimony without divorce” arrangement was ordered by Miami Circuit Court Judge George E. Schulz because the couple did not meet Florida’s six-month residency requirement. They have been married since July 24, 1963. VERY. PROPER PICKETS - Typically British bowlers, umbrellas and well-polished boots mark this picket line in London yesterday as insurance office staffs protest working conditions at the Guardian Royal Exchange Assurance Group. ' ■■■* I*P wirepltere SUDS FOR TARZAN — Earl Pottinger, foreman of the Madison Vilas Park Zoo in Madison, Wis., gives Tarzan, a nearly 1-year-old lion, the soap-and-water treatment. Art Buy Takes Imagination NEW YORK (AP) - More than 200 art patrons and celebrities are being offered the chance to buy bn object d’art which they will never see, which will never be described to them and whose .creator will never be identified to them. We -want the owner to be free to imagine what the object eluding Beatie John Lennon, his| wife Yoko Ono, actor Richard Burton and financier Howard Hughes. \ There actually will be an object and it will be placed somewhere, aPrriih hastened to assure an interviewer. A signed certificate from a lawyer attest ing to this will be placed in a >is,” explains Tom Parrish, 27, bank and the buyer will get a spokesman for a group of young {bill of said. artists who thought up the # * * Bcheme- Then it js up to the owner. "It The group mailed out letters Monday soliciting bids on the hever-to-be-seen-by-the.-b u y e r art from a variety of persons in- is going to create for the owner a new sort of identity with every object,” said Parrish. “It’s possible for him to thbdc every object is his at one time.” BOAT OR BUOY? — This round sailboat that can navigate itself for a year without being touched by man ia being developed by RCA for oceanographic and other missions. The unmanned craft, which looks more like a buoy than a sailboat, has rigid plastic foam-filled sails and in capable of remaining at one point at sea for up to a year with a mooring, it is called a SKAMP — Station Keeping and Mobile Platform. V Joining the “arty” set are from left, artist Mrs. are sorting out works for the art rental project, Paul Schafer of Birmingham and Mrs. L. R. Buzan “Friends in the Arts” at the new Bloomfield Town-of Betsy Ross Drive, Bloomfield Township. The two ship Library. Artistic Projects Are Highlighted at New Library The theme at Bloomfield Township Library this season is "Friends in the Arts.” In addition to the art rental project, the Library will offer programs with speakers on painting, architecture, literature, theater and opera, all with related exhibits, # * * The rental project is a cooperative venture of the Library and the Bloomfield Art Association. Of special Interest to students as well as adults will be the Oakland County Children’s Art Show arranged b y Barbara Hallman. The show will open Monday. * * * On Wednesday well known area painter, Virginia Schafer of Birmingham, will lecture at a meeting open to the public. Setting for the 8 pm". minting will be the Green Room in the lower level of the Library. It's a Whole New World for Willliam Bradley Hampton SHIRLEY GRAY State Rep. and Mrs. William P. Hamptojvof Bloomfield Hills welcomed their firsrson and second child, Sept. 10. His name is William Bradley. Mrs. Hampton, the former Betsy Bradley of Pontiac, arrived home from William Beaumont Hospital this week just in time to bake a cake in celebration of little Mary Elizabeth’s first birthday Wednesday. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. James H. Bradley of Spokane Drive, and the Verne C. Hamptons of Bloomfield Hills. It’s old home week for Mr. and Mrs. Henry R. Nolte Jr., whose most recent address -was London, England, where Henry toiled for Ford Motor Company for two years. * * Jr.., The Noltes are back to stay, looking at houses In the Birmingham area. In the interim, they’ll be honored guests at a small dinner party this evening at the home of William and Kitty Davenport in Bloomfield Hills. Mr. and Mrs. Bernard A. Goode are waving goodbye to the house on Lone Pine Road, opting instead for carefree apartment life. The new address is Kingsridge Apartments. HUNTERS BACK Two area big-game hunters are back in town after forays out West. Maynard Andreae alternated trout fishing with vocalizing with his barbershop singing group, the Buckaroosters, somewhere in the wilds of Montana. Charles Wilson Jr., sheep in Idaho. stalked bighorn Woman Makes Changes in White House Decor By GAY PAULEY UP1 Women’s Editor NEW YORK — “Always remember to pay just as much attention to an order for a slipcover as to an order to do a whole house. You never know where it will lead.” The words were those of a rug salesman to Sarah Jackson Doyle when she first started a decorating career. She heeded and eventually the advice led her to the White House. ★ ★ ■ , ★ Mrs. Doyle for the past several months has been commuting between her New York office and Washington where she helped Mrs. Richard M. Nixon deCftrate the family rooms of the Executive Mansion. And while the first family was in San Clemente, she redid the President’s Oval Office in the White House. Just what new decor awaited Mr. Nixon when he returned hasn't been announced. Mrs. Doyle leaves such matters to presidential press secretaries. But what she did for the family quarters is known—such as a red, white and blue scheme for President Nixon’s bedroom. ACCIDENTAL It was just accidental that the scheme was so patriotic in feeling. Mrs. Doyle said the President likes blues, so she put in a cornflower blue carpet, the bedspread has a white background with red and blue figures, the walls are white, a red rep Wing chair sits in front of the fireplace. Mrs. Nixon made very little change in the color scheme, mostly yellow, that Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson had used in her bedroom. She did bring along from the Fifth Avenue apartment in New York some small French chairs and personal mementoes—“she leans to things French, to clear colors and pastels,” Mrs. Doyle said. ★ ★ ★ As for Tricia’s bedroom, it’s in her favorite pinks and white. One of the items added of which Mrs. Doyle is most proud is the new gold synthetic carpeting, 340 yards of it covering the rooms on the second floor, and another 200 square yards in deep red plush for the “red carpet treatment” in the grand hall and on the grand staircase. All were the gift of Eastman Chemicel Products. , Loaned to the family rooms are several pictures from the Metropolitan Museum of Art and a piano from Steinway. PEOPLE’S ‘HOUSE’ “Mrs. Johnson went off beautifying America,” said Mrs. Doyle in an interview. “I think Mrs. Nixon will continue to beautify the'White House. It belongs to the people. It ought to have as many treasures as Buckingham Palace... the greatest of American furniture,” Through the years, Mrs. Doyle has done the homes of many of the prominent, although she doesn’t like to name-drop, and done entire offices for many big companies. She was the first woman ever asked to do the Plaza Hotel ballroom. Governor Accepts Post Gov. William G. Mllllken Is honorary chairman of the 50th 1 anniversary sponsors’ committee for the United States League of Women Voters. ★ * ★ The anniversary fund-raising drive has a goal of $11,000,000 of which $5,000,000 will be contributed by League members. WomnA That Kind of Ultimatum \ Shows His True Motives j Are Your Kisses Sick, Sick, Sick? MADISON, Wis. (UPI) - Experiments in kissing are planned at the University of Wisconsin this fall. It’s all in the interest of science, of course. Dr. Elliot Dick, associate professor of preventive medicine, and Dr. Donn J. D’Alessio, an assistant professor, want to determine the role of kissing in the spreading of common cold viruses. * ★ * The plan is to ask for volunteers who will be given the virus. Then thp participants — blindfolded — will kiss for one to two minute periods. ★ * * “Of course, anonymity is important because our objective is to see if direct contact with' someone spreads cold viruses,1’ he said. WWW “The blindfolds will prevent later contact among participants. We will even lead the subjects down the elevator blindfolded to further ensure no one meets each other.” . w w w Dick was asked why the kissing will be limited to two minutes. WWW “The whole thing could be shot if we didn’t,” he said. “It could go on all night.” By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: I am writing to you for some practical words of advice to pass on to my 16-year-old daughter. She is a fine, pretty, intelligent girl with high ideals. Popular, too, and respected by her classmates. I have instilled the “old fashioned” ' virtues in her and we have had some frank discussions about sex. She’s always believed that it paid off to be “nice,” and went with one of the most popular boys in high school. They enjoyed a decent, fun relationship and considered themselves “in love” as most kids do! She wore his “friendship” ring and he wore hers. w w w She told me that lptely he was trying to get her to go a little bit further than she wanted to go, but she managed to keep him in line. Last week he gave her an ultimatum, and when she refused to cross the limit line, he dropped her and went back to his old girl. (He had told my daughter that he’d been intimate with that girl, and I have reason to believe he had. I am hot knocking her, but she has had no supervision, having lived with a divorced mother who has a poor reputation and is never home herself.) Now my daughter feels that being “good” did not pay off. In her disappointment and jealousy and through her 16-year-old eyes she’s played life's game honorably and lost, while the other girl Lunch Rewards Busy Secretary in Consulate did all the “wrong” things and won. What can I say to her? ... HER MOM DEAR MOM: You can tell her that “life’s game” is hardly over at age 16, and a boy who would give her such an ultimatum is no bargain. Tell her, too, that before the game is over, she’ll realize that though she may have lost one boy friend, she won much more. * * ★ DEAR ABBY: Some very good friends of ours have a son who has gone the hippie route. When we inquire about their “children,” (they have others who are married, and one is in the service) should we inquire about their hippie son? Or should we just not mention him, like he is “dead?" We know that they are pretty sick about the life he leads. NEEDS TO KNOW DEAR NEEDS: Knowing that your friends would be hurt or embarrassed by the mention of their hippie son, don't mention him. DEAR ABBY: What’s wrong with me?-I was crazy about this man who was wonderful company and a great guy. The only thing wrong with him was that sometimes he drank too much. Then he got quarrelsome and moody. He wanted to marry me, but I was afraid of his drinking and kept putting him off. He got tired of my stalling and married somebody else. ----^ ★ * * I hear his wife sold him on A.A. and he hasn’t had a drink in a year. I can’t get this guy off my mind and now I’m eating my heart out. Can you help me? LONELY IN A CROWD ★ * ★ DEAR LONELY: Quit eating your heart out with thoughts of what might have been. The one who got away always looks best. And should you ever' meet another “wonderful guy” whose only weakness is joy juice, try to'sell him on A.A. and if you succeed, then marry him. What the Women Say By ELIZABETH L. POST Of The Emily Post Institute Dear Mrs. Post: My husband took some business correspondence to the German Consulate 'in our city for translation. A secretary there was assigned to help him and did all the necessary typing. The Consulate refused . payment, so my husband asked the secretary out to lunch as a way of thanking her. Was it necessary for my husband to personally thank the secretary? If so, how? I doubt the propriety of the lunch. — Mrs. S. WWW Dear Mrs. S: Yes, your husband owed the girl a “thanks.” An invitation to lunch is an accepted way of saying “Thank you” in the business world. Unless your husband saw the secretary socially more than on this one occasion, there was no impropriety. He could equally well have sent her an Impersonal gift, but many men have difficulty in finding the right thing and the luncheon , was a simpler solution. MATRON OF HONOR Dear Mrs. Post: I recently read in a marriage' notice in our newspaper that the bride chose her mother as matron of honor. Is this considered etiquette? — Rosemary. ..., ( * £ - h Dear Rosemary; The bride’s mother’s place in the wedding is that of hostess and mother — not as “best friend”. Maids or matrons of honor should be contemporaries of the bride. By having her mother as her attendant, the bride deprives \0ot the dignity and honor of a mother’s more mature position. AP Wlraphotoi ANTONIA UCCELLO “I almost feel personally about the riots. It’s as though you’ve had a family quarrel. You’re ashamed when you go to visit another toion.” —Antonia Phyl-lyis Uccello, mayor of Hartford, Conn., commenting on recent racial riots there. “The suppression of opposition is what made dictatorship and all its evils inevitable.” —Svetlana Alliluyeva, daughter of Joseph Stalin, who defected to the West, in an interview. “I’m a woman first, a cosmonaut second,” said Valentina Tereshkova of the Soviet Union, world’s only woinan in space, upon receiving a gift of false eyelashes from American Women for International Understanding. SVETLANA ALLILUYEVA “There are a lot of aspects of education. Involvement in activities is important. But it’s not the only thing. Learning in the classroom is important, too.”—Barbara Marshment, 16, after her appointment to the California State Board of Education—the first student advisory member on the board. VALENTINA TERESHKOV# BARBARA MARSHMENT THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19. 1969 Judge Eases Restrictions " After Newsmen Arrested ».! Deaths in Pontiac,Nearby Areas Farmington Truckl Chief of Staff dt PGH Mishap Claims CHICAGO (AP) — The chief, Doehrer anti Skolnick were rejudge of U.S- Disrict Court in leased on recognizance bonds Chicago has modified ,his re- after a preliminary hearing be-strictions on news coverage in^Hj and around the Federal Build-1 ing. The action came after 10 newsmen were arrested for defying the limitations. Judge William J. Campbell agreed to ease the restrictions somewhat Thursday night after Cookeville. Local arrangements funeral and location of burial were by Roth's Funeral for.has not yet been determined. Area Father of 5 j A father of five Was killed yesterday morning when he to Stay Through Mrs. Miller died this morning, tripped end fell under Dr. Rockwood W. Bullard Jr. of 6745 Parke Lake, Clarkston, Service for Joseph L. Funerals, Romeo. JHHHPMIMH _________________ Andrews, 63, of 203 Auburn Willi Mrs. Bartlett died Wednes-jShe was a member of OES and|wheels of a dump truck afterlW,i? , I , ! Hi I be 11 a.m. Monday at Melvin A.'day. She was a clerk for the the White Shrine of Royal Oak. the truck’s parking brake failed will ^main as chief of staff for 1 She is survived by her hus-'to hold, according to Farm-'^f!/681, at Pontiac General . Schutt Funeral Home, with Romeo A&P Supermarket. Vp nw Inrlcnf burial in Mount Hope Cemetery. Surviving are her husband;'band and one sister. • IK~'YY Rosary wjU be said at 7:30 two daughters, Mrs. Henri according ington Police reports. meeting informally, with Don Reuben, representing the four major daily newspapers in Chi-1 cago. The Chicago Newspaper lflH asked for the modification. "r—Painfully p.m. Sunday at the funeral prison 0f New Hampshire and Mrs. Forrest E. Moyer ,nf u7 Maudlin, Walled T,»!»»’ Hp ^ea^d fr.on[* °n^rto )”° yeara home Mrs> Hilda shel‘y of Unio" BIRMINGHAM - Service for was employed by the Farm^irectirs adopted new rnles and one son, Norman of former resident Mrs. Forrest E. ington Department of Public'E?'K Killed was Donald J. Ellis, 35,' I „« unwi.u at th*> Mineral Now Hamnshirp nnri mrs. rorresi c. mover creasea irom Nest Removed I t Mr. Andrews, owner of Joes Lake; 0ne son, Norman of former resident Mrs. Forrest E 'ington Department Barber Shop, 37l N. Saginaw, Pontiac; and 14grandchildren. |(Violet l.) Moyer, 56, of Garden!Works, died yesterday. ' i . , . I City Will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at * w ★ Surviving are his wife, Mary. Donald J. Ellis iManley Bailey Funeral Home, According to. police reports, BLYTHE Ga. (AP) — Mr.'and two b 1rothers- ; WALLED LAKE — Service) with burial in Roseland Park Ellis had parked the DPW truck Publishers Association "had | and Mrs. Jack Padgett finally: M Charles W. Draper for Donald J. Ellis, 35 of 117| Cemetery Berkley , |°" a s‘e®P isked for the modification. (got rid of a huge nest of yellow r Maudlin will be 1 p.m. Monday! Mrs. Moyer died yesterday. Koad south of 1° Mile in Farm- * * * jackets in their attic, but,it was! Service for Mrs. Charles W. at Richardson-Bird Funeral She was a member of Pythian ington. The restrictions were imposed'a painful victory. .(Helen M.) Draper, 64, of 4811 Home, with burial location’Sisters Temple 94, Birmingham. [ When the brakes ofthe truck The restrictions were imposed, v | | | Rossiter, Waterford Township,undermined. ! Surviving are her husband;[apparently failed to hold, Ellis Hospital. Dr. Bullard’s' term was in- bylaws last night. Bullard will I serve until Dec. 31,1970. Wednesday by Judge Campbell, Under his directive, cameras Half a dozen members of this, will be 1:I The new regulations carry an impeachment clause allowing removal of a hospital officer oh a two-thirds vote of the board and permitting the board’s executive committee to name a successor. No such rule p.m. Monday at the Mr. Ellis died yesterday dur- two sons, Forrest Jr. and attempted to jump into the cabuvigtpf| nrovinnpiy ineral Home, with jng a work accident. He was Charles, both of California; one,®‘ gSE and stop the vehicle -rbe board confi u.b M .—--- — --------------------— —v ii» « , . , . i me uudi \a v u u 11 r in c u rrm 3 Pe employed by the City of Farm-lister; and one brother, Virgil ^J^P^jDr.Shdby Baylis' appointment «n eUwMkoj'^tttng when they climbed into:Memorial Cemetery, Troy. ington. & Morrow of Birmingham. reports indicated, and was; joining piaza™:s,df,S|the attic to hose down the yel-j Mrs. Draper, a member of surviving are his wife, Irene; . crush, around the downtown building^ jackets> nve-pound nest:the United Methodist Church in two daughters, Gay and Cheryl, Mrs. Harry H. Pattison truck- and" tape recorders were banned j rural community’s volunteer! Huntoon Funeral inside the building, on an ad-1 fire department were badly burial m White joining plaza and on around the dc 0IThp ^modiffcation will allow I ^ dioxid® fire-freez-j Monroe, Wis., died yesterday. both at” home; three sons,; ORCHARD LAKE - Service. The modification win allow ing gas 1 surviving are her husband, James, Donald and Terry, all at fo. Mrs Harrv H (Dora B)i one room of the building to be; * * ★ four sisters and two brothers. home; one sister; one brother; Pattison' 63 of 5960 pontiad used for news conferences and j That only stunned the insects. The body may be viewed -^d his mother, Mrs.- Hazel Traji was yesterday at Snarks- permit cameras andJape re-j They struck bbek as one fire- after 3 p.m. tomorrow. Ellis of Royal Oak. ' Griffin Funeral Home, Pontiac, corders to be operated in any man carrying part of the nest, „ _ « iwith ,hllrja| in Oak Hill nonjudicial office. lout of the house in a plastic bag Albert F. Games Primo F. Meli Cemetery Pontiac ORDER .BEFORE TRIAL inadvertently released them He. Service for Albert F. Game?, TRfW Primn F Meli 72 Mrs. Pattison died \ Monday. • Campbell issuedthe order a) “ ^ “ *"to *nC?tton 75. of 110 Dover, Waterford nfT^J i PST ‘ week before the scheduled trial f,eld andf,eddown lhe'ro d' Th«,rt«hin »ni he itygm. Mon-0 . i.. P,g eight persons charged with; ■ w Sander8> an employe of «£ * voor^p.^.^ ^ jruaera, Home . .. . . ... | as a part-time chief of surgery, crushed by the wheels of the|He Jll be pald $10000 a8yeayr for his administrative duties in connection with the department. NURSING DIRECTOR Dr. Roger Nelson, newly appointed administrator of the hospital, reported the search for a director of nursing continues. R e o r g a n i z a t i o n of the emergency room as a clinical department in Che hospital, giving it the same status as other departments, was okayed by the board. WWW The restructuring, allowing other department chiefs a say in the administration of the department, will permit the acceptance of emergency room specialists, according to Dr. Robert L. Tupper, director of . medical education. Albert F. Games Ppmo F. Meli _ ............... LANSING (AP) - Rep. Wil- .„, of 110 Dover, Waterford e ^ie”Beaver"died she was Past Presi£*ent and i>am Fitzgerald, D-Detroit, says! Township, will be 11 a.m. Mon- ” tprHav (rup unriv pri„e treasurer of the Women ’ s he probably won’t run for the! day at Voorhees-Siple Chapel. Euneral Home * Association of the F i r s t Legislature in 1990—but if he service at r Presbyterian Church of Pontiac! does, he’ll be counting on one Grandson Means j Armstrong carpeting Vote for Legislator! *s 2,®^ tough> r.ANsiNn up. _ p„ w,j sotti clean. And invour vtolaUng a federal anUrlot tew; fr: The iraveside ,S£ . , , -------------H--------- , I in connection with police-protes-!n „ dj l dg d th r s^ f’the,White Chapel Memorial ^rs Harry E. Miller and past chief of Mizpah additional vofe. i ter clashes during the Demo- SwiifSiS Sav Cemetery, Troy, will be under ! Temple No. 7 of Pythian Fitzgerald says that vote! cratic National Convention in nest W1,n inseci spra>. the auspices of Roosevelt Lodge INDEPENDENCE TOWN-Sisters. would come from Timothy Pat-' AnoiKt iq«n - ■ , * * u *u u No. 510. An Elks Lodge of Sor-SHIP — Service for Mrs. Surviviving are three sons, rick Fitzgerald, his first grand- 8 * k * Pad8ct’ 60’ wh0 been row will be conducted at 8 p.m.iHarry E. (Thelma) Miller, 70, Richard of Orchard L a k e , child; ‘'without question, thej mu . ~ t„i !, Ind. , *'7®*”' said . y®*' tomorrow in the funeral home.1 of 5149 Stevens will be Monday i Eugene of Alma and John of greatest grandchild ever born.” The arrests Thursday -jlow jackets had been flying into bad w{.j| be at the funeral at Case Funeral Home , Maryland; one brother, Alvin The baby was born recently to! lnwori an attemDt bv Sherman!this hnrirnnm at nipht. and stine- 1 „ , w with burial in St.'R. Booth of Birmingham; and Fitzgerald’s son Timothy and Mich. Time of the five grandchildren. daughter-in-law Karen. die maker at Fisher Body plant, neig now. a in vc hborn ood 1..U j His body will be at the funeral ^ Cas lowed an attempt by Sherman!the bedroom at night and sting- home af^er 3 p m. tomorrow. Saginaw Skolnick, a self-taught legal re- mg him and his wife while they M Games a retired tool and Louis searcher, to hold a news confer-slept, ence in the building to announce he had filed a suit challenging the judge’s order on grounds it was unconstitutional. Sm paga A-3 B & G Tile 1075 West Huron Pontiac — 681-1075 Doctors' Insurance Going Up 110 Pet. died yesterday. He had served the company ,35 years. A member of First Congregational Church, he also belonged to .Elks Lodge No. 810, American Legion, Cook Nelson Post No. 20, and Low-12, A charter member and past commander of American Legion Soon afterwards, Skolnick also was arrested when he allegedly took a photograph of a __ , U.S. marshal On a sidewalk L0S ANGELES (AP) II1CUIUCI near the building. insurance broker says the pre- p6st jn qaiamuSi iowa< he was The 10 newsmen arrested i"lium that soufthern California a j.fe imember 0f Roosevelt were Michael Rollins, a WCFLidoct°rs Pay for . malpractice Lodge No. 510, F&AM. radio station reporter; Charles “^erage will go up an average M« Games had attended Iowa Doehrer, a Resistance Press of 110 Perfnt on Oct. 1. state College, photographer; Arvid Carlson a WGN-TV cameraman; Leonard,. .. _ ..uL h-1 a son’ DeVere w- of Walters a WBBM radio report-,f,esb P Co;’ whlch handles near- Qrchard Lake; andf §o u r ™ .j ,.7 u. t.;r-ir. ly all malpractice insurance in _Ponjcnna er; Walden Wright. a WFLD sou(hern California, said Thurs- g Thp fami|v SUBaests anv television cameraman; and d tf)e jncrease js because mi) lrjbu*cs be made to Stanhope Gould, John kaw-i_i„jm„ npp rfnctnr haVo dnnhlwi memor|al tributes be made to tence.Tom Cosgrove, Charle,;™™’ lhc AmmcBl'OnMr *dety. SSon^er 8 CBS |oneups™rold. Mrs. Mary M. Garnham Rollins was released on a $250 ,Allen said the lowest premium Service for Mrs. M. Garnham, signature bond by U^S. Commis- for doctors in the highest rate 51, of 19 Cooley will be 11 a.m. sioner James T. Balog, who con-> scale—orthopedic surgeon s, Monday at St. Benedict Catholic: tlnued his case to Sept. 25. Eight neurosurgeans, plastic surgeons , Church with burial at Mt. Hope of the others were freed also, i a n d anesthesiologists-wllP Cemetery by Donelson-Johns either because they took no i jump from $1,591 to $3,452 for. Funeral Home, photos^ or made -no broad-1 coverage of $100,000 per claim Mrs- Garnham died yester-cast-footage, or because they i up to three claims a year. He day. . | were outside the area of the said most physicians carry cov-l Surviving are her mother, ban. erfige up to $1 million. Mrs. Joseph Zisler of Herman! . .____________________j----------------------------------Gardens; three daughters, Mrs. : JoAnne Adams and MrsJ Suzanne Yables of Pontiac and | Edith at home; two sons, Joseph of Pontiac and James of !osbore, Ohio; one brother; five sisters; and three grandchildren. Mrs. Frederick Godfrey If you have the idea that electric heat is too rich for your blood, you’d be surprised at the number of average people who are putting it in their homes. <> Their present homes. You-’d find—just like they—a cleaner house than you’ve ever experienced. A quiet, even heat, completely worry-free. It’s also more comfortable—never desert dry. If you’d like an estimate on installation and operating cost, send us the coupon, below. We’ll ask an Edison Approved Electric Heat Contractor to call you. No obligation, of course. Don’t wait for your next hous§ to enjoy electric heat. You can afford it right nbw. Honest, j DREAM HOME YOUR HOUSE WITH HEAT ELECTRIC Rep. Broomfield Praises Nixon's Speech at U N. Congressman William £ Broomfield ,of, Royal, Oak, former delegate to the United ' e n t authority to deal with the major j Service for - Mrs. Fredrick areas of crisis.” 1 (Bertha M.( Godfrey, 77, of 2831 “The, President placed Viet- sunderland Waterford nam at the doorstep of Hanoi. I Township, will be Sunday af- “This big old farmhouse of ours has electrlo heat," said Albert Foege of Plymouth.> 'We heat both floors— nine big rooms-and the cost is cheap. Runs us only a little over $300 a year." Nations, praised Preside Nixon’s speech before the U.N. yesterday as “one finest” ever delivered to the world body by “a chief of state and especially an American p resident.” “For the first time, America has put the issue of Vietnam squarely before the 126 member nations of the U.N. General Assembly, ” said Broomfield, a delegate to the U.N. in 1967 thq issue of Vietnam _to comejR^ekah’Lodge, HUlma. Let the critics of the war now I ternoon a t Wackterhduserj turn to North Vietnam for a Funeral Home, Alpena, with response,” continued Broom-j burial In the Hillman Cemetery,! Wj-’ 1 Hillman. The body is now at “I have been urging such a Coats Funeral Home, Waterford! step since I served as a prin- Township, cipal delegate to the United) mns, Godfrey, a teacher atj Nations. Pine Knob School, Independence At that time, despite myj>p0Wnship, died yesterday. She ur gings, the Johnson.was a member of the Sashabaw Adm mstrat on refused to allow. Presbyterian church a n d under the administration. J oh n s on|before the world body,” the)“suTvivinT^re two"dalighters, * * * 1C°"TheS8man8a f ih- it Mrs. Harry Luxon of Jackson! Broomfield, , a Republican, members would condemn the u/aterfnrH TnwnsW^fnMrTnns^ said if the U(N. is evbr to fulfill U.S. for the bombing of its purpose as the world’s Vietnam." ' peacemaker, the "superpowers . * * * Caiifornia. G en of Alpena and will have to allow it the! “The president’s speech Morrla 0 pHill!Ti^ ---------------------— yesterday clearly demonstrated,""® “n£fSC“ldren; that the U S. has no such fears |.and 10 great-grandchildren. honorable solution to the war.” | WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP -I Service for Mrs. Woodro Gun Falls, Fires; Tavern Owner j Is Shot in Back 1 Hospitalized,**-°n‘mn by Area Crash A gun-toting bar owner is in “poor to fair” condition at Botsford Hospital, Farmington, | toddy. Novi police said his pocket derringer slipped to the floor and shot him in the back, just above the left hip. Clarence W. Leonard, 40. 2475 S. Commerce, Co.bmerce Township report'edly was disturbed by some recent troubles in his East Shore Bar, Eastlake and 14 Mile, Novi.,He loaded his 38-caliber derringer and put it in is back pocket last night, officers said. As he sat on a stool, at the bar, the cocked pistol dropped!Woods, and Donna Weiss, 34, of! to the floor and discharged, ac- St. Clair, were treated ‘and , cording to investigators. I released. Mile will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at. Hooper & Huddleston Funeral Home, Cookeville, Tenn., with burial In Crestlawn Cemetery, A two-car crash at Rochester j and Auburn roads in Avon! Township yesterday at klOi p.m. Injured four persons, one of them severly, In fair condition at Crittenton Hospital, Avon Township, is, Mrs. Thelma Hiscock, 58, of! Detroit. She was a passefiger in a car driven by her husband, | Victor, 66. • • people 'ecoop"|m ’ «n<i'"«ppr«cli._ He and the two persons m the fcg-fl- Sgl ffJBU**". h4‘ other qar, the driver, Edna). bryjv w|lh o*»rsi« s*wt aw. Guimond, 58, of Grosse Pointe un*!ng for hi* »uecfi?Iiw'» wtra amiwi. i dinner. . ■ THE iicRITAKY OF STAVB munced thel he tNdOld Ml nek en ■ • tiitiLSOnlnMi ± TMi LKOISLATURE In recess until Oct. t. Capsule News | of State Leaders I ■ By The a Modeled Press THE GOVERNOR Said there would be no increase In the; !2 clothing atlowanM that Micjilgan wards Its Aid hi Dependent Children! iclplenls, ,. .Reiterated »-,wilre not to Involve Imsen In petrettTMiyaral cempeian. < Commended Tti* Research Au«|et)dn Arpslsllla THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19. 1969 mmx i ii« •. • , mance Tlie following are top prices covering sales of . ocally grown produce by growers and sold uy them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets ss of Wednesday. Produce Appln. Graham Spy, bu. Apples, Greening, bu........ Apples, McIntosh, Early, bu. . Apples, Wealthy, bu. Apples, Wolf River, bu. ... Blueberries, U-pt. ctn........ Cantaloupes, bu....... Nectarines, % bu. Peaches, Elberta, v, bu. Peaches, Fair Haven, V bu. . VEGETABLES Beans, Green Round, bu. Beans, Kentucky Wonder, bu. Beans, Lima, bu. Beans, Roman, bu. . . Beans, Wax, bu. . . . Beets, dl. bch. Cabbage. Sprouts, bu. Cabbage, Standard Varieh Carrots, dt. ben. Carrots, Cello Pak, 2-dz. Carrots, Topped, bu....... t, 54t. bag . DIM stse, % mi Cucumbers, Pickle Site, % bu. .. Cucumbers, Slicers, bu. . . Dill, dt. bch. Eggplant, bu.............. Eggplant, Long Type, pk. bskt. . Gourds, pk. bskt........ Kohlrabi, dt, bch. . Leeks, dt. bch. ......... Parsley, Rosin di. bch....... Parsnips, % bu................ Parsnips, Cello Pak, di....... Peas, B lackeys, bu. .. Peat, Grodn, bu. Peppers, Cayenne, pk. bskt. Poppers, Hoi,, bu. Peppers, Plmlento, pk. bskt. Pumpkins, bu. Radlshbs, Rad, dz. bch. Radishes, White, di. bch. Squash, Acorn, bu...... Turnips, di. bclL ''. Turnips, Toppao, bu......... OREENS Endive, Bleached, bui NEW YORK (AP) ® The stock market was mixed in moderately active trading early today, with the Dow Jones industrial average at 10:30 a.m. off 0.06 at 831.51. Advances led declines by about 100 issues. An 18,200-share block American Telephone & Telegraph traded at 51, unchanged. Other early blocks included: General Motors, 5,500 shares at 75Ve, off */«; Polaroid, 2,100 shares at 135%, off 2%: Atlantic Richfield, 3,300 shares at 104%, Moderately Active Mart Mixed up %; and General Electric, 1,600 shares at 84%, off %. . Opening prices included:. A. H. Robins Co., off V* at 35% on 47,500 shares; Benguet, up % at 20V4 on 14,100 shares; Sperry Rand, up % at 44% on 10,700 shares; Hilton Hotels, off % at 58% on 10,400 shares; and Control Data, off % at, 143 on 10,200 shares. The market worked its way higher Thursday with the Dow Jones industrial average gaining 5.01 to close at 831.57. The up move enabled the DJI to re- cover almost all of the 5.08 points it lost Wednesday. The Associated Press 60-stock average was up 1.1 to 290.3. Analysts said the market “appears to be in a base-building phase between 800 and 840 on the DJI,” adding, that penetration of 840 could “bring in significant buying.” Prices had a higher tone on the American Stock Exchange. Making fractional gains were Alaska Airlines, Allen Electric, British Petroleum; and Home Oil Class A. The New York Stock Exchange NEW YORK (AP) - New York Stock Ixchange selected afternoon prices: —A— Sales Nat (Ms.) High LOW Las) Chg. ibbtLab 1.10 5r 71% 70ft 71 + ft CF Ind 2.40 123 46V« 45% 46Va + % 26 26ft 26ft 1 26ft -oodyear .85 6) A&P 1.30 15 26ft 26ft 26ft — ft Wes) Flnl ......... fif GlWnUnt) .90 GreenGn) .96 Greyhound 1 AllledCh lr20 Mes|^.07jj ...Brandt 2 AmBdcst 1.60 Am Can 2.20 EmCyan 1.25 AmEIPw 1.58 Am Enka 1 5 17ft 17ft 17ft -2 42 42 42 4 18 20ft 20ft 20ft - I 33ft 33ft 33ft — ft 21 28ft 28ft 28ft 4 38 31ft 31 31 - 40 27 27 27 4 33 44% 43% . 3 33ft 33ft BN 27 18ft 18 * 18 — ft 10 26% 261' 60 36ft 36 5 22«/4 22l Ml 89 21ft 21ft 21ft . —H— .___HP 11 49ft 49,, HeclaMng .70 24 28% 28ft 28ft 4- ft ftwPack .20 lldylnn .20 •IlySuo 1.20 ...mestke .40 Honey wl 1.20 4ous)LP 1.12 5 39% 39% 39% 4 AmMFdy .90 21 20ft 20ft 20ft AAAatCI nl.40 25 31ft 31 31ft - Am Motors 31 9ft 9 9 - AmNatGas 2 21 33ft 33ft 33ft - A Smell 1% Am lid 1 Am T4T 2.40 AMK CP 30 Ampex Corp Anacond 1.90 AnchHbck .80 AncorpNSv 1 ArchDan 1.60 47 lift lift 11 Allas Chem 1 Allas Corp Avco Cp 1.20 Avne) Inc .40 | Avon Pd 1.80 45 28ft 28 12 38ft 38ft jo'/S t 407 51ft 50% 50ft — . 27 28ft 28ft 28ft 4 ft 72 45ft 5ft 45ft 4 ft 33 lift 28 . 28 2 43ft 43ft 43ft 1 21ft 21ft 21ft 6 43ft 43ft 43ft 4 116 28 28 28 — 5 . 48 48 48 - 43 37% 37% 37% .. 56 3|ft 35ft 35ft 4 19 47 46% 46% — 82 104ft 104ft 104ft 4 Jewel Co 1.50 JohnMan 1.20 Johnjhn .80a JonLogan .80 Josiens .60 Joy Mfg Poultry and Eggs ft,. H 13% 13% + % It 14$ ISO 160 I 1.36 t 22% 22'/. 22% + % 1.70 1 31ft 31ft 31ft 4 * S 1 5 36ft 36ft 36ft 4 n .50 3 55ft 55ft 55ft ~ CanPwL 1.18 Cenncolt 2.40 8 ff Sf%' ]% 61% + % t Stl .10 31 30Vh 26 30Vb - ? 1 "»» poultry: Heavy .‘mil. h'Be roasters 2S- tillers and fryars white 22-22% . P*!*?.1* JAPj. (USDAI—Prices paid B*S )Y°"n by ’lr*1 receiver* (Including ,„G|'*de A lumbo 54-55%/ extra large . CHICAOO JOTTER AND EGOS , ^ JAP —(USDA) Thursday Bul- teusyskss pf,c§* ft io "ft M^hari 93 score AA 70ft; 92 A 70; 90 B )o Chicago — rw- cent or bet-49%J0%;. medium Britt My .... Brunswk ,7g BucyEr 1.20 BulovtW .60 r 1.25 13 25ft 21 10% 18ft 18ft — 5 20ft 20ft 20ft 4 6 36ft 3*ft 36ft 4 .. 35 10ft 10% .10% - ft 1 35ft 35ft 35W* 4 ft 20 156% 155% 156ft 4 m mlxe8r extras 4l%-4?; standards'^-45.1 Livestock „.T__DBTROtT LIVESTOCK tbUM. *lsy#h,,r •tMr* and halters y“!«r« «• Not enough for market test: r°6» Mj Not enough for market test. Sheep 25. Not eflowlt for market tut. ,_____CHICAOO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP) - (Usda) -- hods receipts Thursday ware 4.000; butchers wore uneven. 1-2 200-235 lh butchers fully t*Wi others maw to 23 lemri fairly - WWt EllppOfl took 34)00; 1-2 |)MH lb “Wen 26.50-26.75; is head at 26J5 and ff head mostly Is 215 lbs 27,00; 1-1 200-250 'b» MJIWOO lbs 25.50-26.00; Cop. Clllos BC CaroPLt 1.42 CerrlorCp .60 CartsrW ,40a Casa Jl CastlaCka .60 CelarTr. 1.20 CalanaseCp 2 Concolns .30 Cant SW 1.60 Cerro 1.60b CusnaAir JO CPI Stl .00 CMs Ohio 6 ChIPneuT 2 ChrlsCIl JM Chrysler 2 CITFIn 1 JO :mujvc2. riarkEq 1.40 :wv(nn 2.04 Soeacoi 1.32 .jig Pal 1.20 ColilnRad .10 ^MlMM 1.60 JIO 1.40b MR ColuGas 1.60 17 26 11 1160 1IV0 1160 . I 34 30 2»% 29 Vj — % 2 271A *7% 271* - % 10 2960 29Vi 29 Va . . 17 30 “ .ah Val Ind HemiAo .J 2.00 Ibb McN L log My 2.50 Jmtv 1.33 Limn 1 jot Jvlngstn Oil LocknoA 1.20 .oawsThe .13 ■onaOCem t -oneSGa 1.12 m I'io -ukans Stl 1 LykYng ,15g ZomwEd 2.20 WlWI — Edit ,1.00 .... Foods 1 ConNatG 1.76 - - ---. .66 36.25-24.757 •clival 1*3 *350-400 1^ M**r24.0oJK,*-3*40U 450_ lbs 22.75-23.30j <,-3,450-500 lbs 223B* Cattle 4 slaughter - SjWlly ______ , choice 000450 J^sleyghter heltersn ^ wl!lghnd Sheep 100; . Iprl steady; small lot p; lots choice 90-105 lb American Stocks NEW YORK (AP)']- American Stock Exchange selacted n erolat .50 m PoP',4 (Ms.) Hkph Low Last 3 1560 15V0 1560 34 1260 I2V0 1264s 4 32 3166 3160 + }* Wit CP f.00 miMof .Ito _jnt Oil 1.50 £om'-f*L.72 Control DIM Si P CPC .ntl 1.70 Sind 1 " 1.511 Cork crwnZall uo Cudahy Co CUrlhsWrt 1 Dart ihd .3o8 ML&Ao DelteAlr .40 DotVais i.4o Dutjtoal job Diasham 1.40 Disney .30b Dlvarsln .24b hu Campb*1 Cht°b Cdn Javelin Cinerama Crtola 2.60a Data Com Dlxllyn Corp Dynalectrn Eqult Cp ,05a Fad Rnrcu Felmont ll Frontijr Air Gan Plywood Giant Yal .40 Goldfield Of Batn Pot Husky Oil .30 Hycon Mfg w •*# Ktlttrln .48f w) :» 334 34% 23ft VHk w 1ft | J ... 1 1W l*ft 19ft | 59 lift 15 lift 162 16ft lift lift . z, 42 ift 8ft MA+3-H 8 13% 13ft 13% 4 ft If 11 18ft 11 4- ft 2 33 32% 32% — V j Ift jft Wmmm - 71 sift 29ft Mft —1 14.1 f • .... 27 % 4ft 4ft 4- 1 26 6 . 5% 5ft .... 70 lift lift lift ..a. 4 (ft 1ft 1ft.... 1 7ft 7ft 7ft — L 21 lift 12ft •iHS lit. 5% 6ft m 19 7% 7ft 7% 43 16ft 15ft 15ft MtlBfMf Bros Ntwldrla AAD . NtwPirk Mn Ormand Ind Saxon Indus) , Scurry Rain imipii Copyright.!^ by lil’ 18 7ft 7ft 7ft + % 12 10ft 10ft 18ft f ft «£ i Sll 11 136* 136* 1M If Ji J* +W i '£ kit Inr Pi* 126 726* 71 f»b4. ft 10 11 10 10 —ft J6 1160 ill* 116* + ft The aj—*—■■ mm** *vi"a#m 8 BONOS ip HlghJr grada rail* 18 Sacond grad# rails ......•> 10 PtSic ullllllas .......... •18 Jnduatrialt............ 7877540.10 7i.54--0.81 8 1ft 1ft 1ft .. 10 27 27 37 — ft 86 45 45 45 8 70ft 70% 70ft 21 37% 37% 37% 12 39% 39% 39% 10 Mft 23ft 23ft________ 3 27% 27ft 4 ft 4 22ft 22% 22ft 4 % 4 60 M 60 4 % 11 34ft lift 34% 11 28 14% 14 14ft 73 40 40 10 37% 37ft 25 (Oft SOft 2 32ft 32ft 32ft 4 33ft 33ft 33ft II I 44% 22%^ ft 3 40% 40ft 40% 4 c 12 *2 i MM MV* 26V*-Vb 1 3264 32'/i ! 13 MI .Ntt 1 > 71V* II 61 42ft 42ft 42ft 1 18ft lift lift 57 29ft 29ft 99ft .. 204 22ft 21% 161 143% 142% 14l% —1% 47 204ft 286ft +2k ■ 3 10ft lift 10ft 4 % 1 § Rt f--U 9 326* 3266 326* 1 “ 21 166* 166* 166* 20 35V* 35V* 35V* Hi* 1)6* fflipP 13 156* ll'A 1*6* + 14 DowChm 3.60 Dyne Am .40 etonVe 1.40 GAG ,10 fPOIONO J “roCp 1.20 ..jorEwc • l siexlnt 1.20 2‘ 15V* 15V* 151* + V* 29 4664 46'* 46'* + V* 7 256* 256* 256* + 1* 31 251* 211* 25'* — V* 14 30V* 31 36 + '* 21 276* 276* -276* — V* 3 33 Bn* 33 — V* xl4 23 »6* 226* - 1* if i36* iivt -ifVktf 5 221* 226* 226* 2 9'V* 941* 941* 3 146* 146* 146*--------- 3 57V4 57'A 57V* - V* . 396* J96* + 6* i 120V* 120'* — 6 I 25 25V* - V* I 121* 131* 121* .. It 196* 19'* 196* + 67 70'* 706* P* ... 16 41 4m* 41 + 5 34'* 34V* 34'* ... 21 Tift Tift MW + 7 fit* 24V4 26'* .., 5 516* Hi* lift ... 3 346* P* 346* + 6* I 246* 246* 246* - 14 3 47'* 4714 47V4 — 103 20 1f64 1964 + —F— 130 1014 79'* Ml* +164 9 14V* I I 24 316* 3 326* . 40 536* 5264 5 ■St: PltChrt 1.401 235 4*6* Ml* 4 FordMo) 2.40 IfM .75 IfO 10 tub lit* 2614 — 1 1 47Vf aVf 4714 .... 191 « *764 *0 + 69 31 2164 22'* + 1 I 216* lift lift + ' 56 4*1* Jf* 4* + 1 32 2714 0ft 27V*..> PllHM 2.60 ft Iff lift MW + Sen Mi 2.60 12 Tift Tift 75ft . Gan Mills J* 13 34V* 34 36V* - S®£lCI II Mi I 34% 34% 34% 4 mm M«rji» as 27 loodrkh 1.72 14 34 13 15ft 15ft 15ft»+ 7 49% 49% 49% — l SbCLInd 2.20 - HR fiaarl gd 1.30 15 36% 4 35ft 35ft Uft - 5 26ft 26ft 26ft .. ,J 12% 12% 12% -12 16ft 16 16ft + 27 32% 32 » 55 349ft 349% 349ft f 1 20 27 26% 27 + 1 52 14 lift' 14 + ft 41 38% (Ift (SftL 4* % 15 39 384L 35 53ft 531 38% 39 u 2 20ft 20ft 20ft— 22 60% 60% 60% . 2 SOft 50% 50% 4 2 34ft 34ft 34ft - 18 28ft 28ft 28ft - —K— 13 33ft 33ft 33ft 4 % 1 20% 20% 20% - •' I 13ft 13ft 13ft - 160 26ft 26ft 26ft 4 26 27ft 27 27ft -12 45% 45% 35 29ft 28% 28% Searsp IH Shell Oil 2.40 SherwnWm 2 SignalCo 1.20 SlngerCo 2.40 * Smith KF 2 SCarEG 1.19 SouCalE 1.40 South Co 1.14 SouNGas 1.40 Squ Pac 1.8Q SouRy 2.80a Spartan Ind Sperry R .47g .80 op.,-.-.id 1.50 Std Kollsman StOCal 2.80b StdOilOh 2.70 St Packaging StauffCh 1.80 SlerlDrug .70 29 69ft 69% 69ft — 8 38% 38ft 38ft -10 25% 25ft 25% 4 i 84 32% 32% 32% 4 % 20 47% 47% 47% 4 % 4 23ft 23 23 — 138 45ft 44% 45ft 4 87 22ft 22ft 22% 4 18 46Vs 45% 46ft 4 % 12 13 13 13 4 | 12 13% 13% 13% - ft i 18 20ft 20% 20% 4 —T— 16 (Oft 20% 20ft — 22 iOft 60ft 60ft — 204 35% 34ft 34% 4* TlmesMIr .50 26 37% 37 Vs 37% .. 4 17 17 17 ... 1 7ft 7ft 7ft'4 1 .........M 15 21% 21ft 21ft — 1 .IbOFrd 2.80 15 47ft 47ft 47ft 4 1 izz aZLa. . 3 Ift 0ft Oft . 1 34ft 34ft 34ft 4 5 5 38% 38% 38% - 1 33 46% 46% 46% 4 U 2 8% 8% 8% f ft 16 23% 23ft Sift 4 *• Uniroyal .70 UnltAlrc 1.80 4,“ll Cp .70o Fruit 1.40 - .. . Unit MM 1.30 8 27 Maralhn 1.60 23 4X ** ireor Inc 1 100 49% ; H5r Mid i.do a m 9 MarllnM 1.10 MayDSlr 1.60 MiVlOB 1 McDonnD .40 Mood Corp l MelvSho 1.30 Mirck i.80a EifflOB MldSoUlil .88 MinnMM 1.60. MlnnPLI 1.20 MoMIOII 2.20 iAonsan 1.80 5 29ft 29ft 29ft 4 12 15 14% 15 4 —M— 8 17ft 17% 17ft . 13 26ft 26ft 26ft 4 % 151 46ft 46ft 46ft — V 65 30ft 30ft 30ft — 13 25% 25% 25% ... 8 66ft 66% 66ft 4 « UfGyPtl.. ~ X .-.r, US Indus) .45 119 24% 24 US PlyCh - .84 12 33ft 33% 33ft 4 ' US Small lb 13 39ft iift 38ft —» US Steel 2.40 34 38ft 37% 37% — 1 ■•-’ OPd 40 40 U 23% 23% —1 in 1.60 19 45. 44ft 44ft - ’ —V—. n Atio 133 29ft 28% 79'A 4 % t CO .60 5 10ft 17ft 18 • * *w 1.12 206 24% 24ft 24% _w—X—Y—Z— 47 63 62% 63 4 % * au*., rfw 22^ 4. v* 96 41 i 96% 96% . 99 m 40ft 40ft -r 1 i 21% n 21 — n —i fl 21 31 .... ViToft UOft 110ft 4 % 1 20 29ft lift — % 62 57ft 57% 57% 75 fm 1 27% trill 27% •32J“Wi »i* ..— 30 142V* 143% 143'* +11* 1 22'* 22% 22% .. —N— Was Wet 1.28 WnAIr L .sop Wn Banc 1.30 WnUTel t.40 WutgEI uo Wayarhir JO Whirl Cp 1.60 "“■He Mel 2 ....It taker WlnnDIx 1.12 Woelwth i.2o Xerox Cp .60 mart# 2 55% 55% 55% .. 7 35ft (5% 35% — ! 27 24 Wk 23% — 1 5 33% 33% M% 4 \ 70 36ft .36% 36% — 271 97% 97 97% .... 49 48ft 47%> 40ft 41 ............. 84 42% 41% $% 4 1 Copyrighted by The Associated Press 19< figures are unofficial. 1 1.20 158 148 146% 14 Nat Distil .90 Nat Fuel 1.68 Gent .20 2J0 Natomas .23 “-‘V*iid.Mh Ind .4dF ...wbarry,‘l° NEngEI 1.40 Nawmnt 1.04 N|m MR 1.10 Norrliind jo » 17% 17% 17% + 8* 7 25% 25% 2S% — 76 B 22 22 - HUAmRmi T NoAmRock 2 NoNGas 2.60 Nor Pac 2.60 NoStaPw 1.60 Northrop 1 NwstAIrl .45 Norton 1.50,. Nortlim l.22t t 31% 31V* 31% + ■4 10% io toy* + .. 27 U% 13% 13'* + '* 1 26% 26% 26% ' ■' 7 23% 23 H% 104 26% 26% 26% 36 17 14% 16% 12 20 1»% 20. . „ 13 90% 90 00% + % 21 55 54% 74 27% 26% 27 $ 44 43% 44 I 43% 42% 42% 35 23% 23% 23% 20 »% 37% »% . .. 95 M% 31% 31% + % II 34 33% 34 . 7 43% 43% 45% + % somi-annual declaration. Special »tra dividends or payments not dasl atad as . regular are identified In ti ■Mowing footnotes, a—Also extra or JU* Stock rilulrlunr dm), d—Di OccldntPet i OhloEdls 1.50 HMlf $X OklaNGs 1.13 Olln Corp M Otis Elev 2 Outbd Mar 1 OwensCg 1140 Owens) ll 1.33 PacGBl 1.30 P«UAt’:25e ll PanASi* — 461 37% 76% 26% 1* 24 9% 23% 6 20'* Bih 20% ... I im 11% 10% — % 35 22% 22% 22% r- % 1 44% .441* 44% — % 6 35% 35% 35%- % i n 77V* 7* + % 21 66% 61 61 — “ —P— so 34 33% 33% — L 6 2*'* 2*'* 2*% + '* i r ?°^ rta 1 .in* in* in* + v* 60 15% IM Ifik .-s 13 29% 29'* 29% - % 412 33 31% 33 + % )9* 40'* 40 40%-% it if% m p 42 53 aw 33 16 27 24% 24% 193 34% 33% 34% 17 DV* 47V* 47% 25 14 13% 13% v 23 M «5>A I* + % *” 57 45% MU + % 25% 25% + V* W 27% 27 imniw Jf p« & ProcIGa “ “ PP« EssSc’1 Pullman t 35% + % I 40%-'* ) jlw + % a 22% 22% 22% If 20% 28% 5% 33 Ink 33% ~m{z 61 40% 4W Ti m* in it 14% 1? n m e* 3i% 57 »% 93 93% •t -9e 31 33% 31% 31% t m 4111... Cp .80 5 29% 29ft 29ft — ft Ola .M 9 lift lift lift-'ft I 27 46ft 46ft-ft lys .50 38 48ft 42ft Mi -1ft » 22ft 22ft 22ft 4 «9 25ft 25 25ft 8 128ft 128ft 128ft 4 1 19ft 19ft *19ft 4 69 28ft 27ft 28ft 4 14 13ft 13ft 13ft 4 6 45ft 45ft 45ft 4 *5 32ft 32ft 32ft — 3 42 Hare Is Eying Education Post Retiring Secretary Won't’*Quit Politics Weather Ignorance Costly to Business LANSING (UPI) - A thinner, older James M. Hare is bowing out of the secretary of state1 job he has held for the last 15 years, and wants a younger man to replace him, “A guy who’s had a couple of hear), attacks does not have the stamina to run day after day, Hare told a news coneerence yesterday. * . *■ * ... But Hare, whose name become virtually ’synonymous in Michigan with his title, indicated his political career does not end here. He said that, instead of seeking an eighth term, he may run for one of the statewide education posts where he can still be in pubic service but under less pressure. * . * * The 59-year-old Hare spoke of Is “disappointments” in failing to win passage of legislative programs in recent years and to enact a “public disclosure” bill to require political candidates to report sources of income. ET’AN EXAMPLE New administrations placing “too much emphasis” on simply pouring more-money into programs that aren’t wdrking well, the . pipe-smoking secretary said. “I did try to set an example in my own department by reducing the budget by several mil|in dollars,” he said. * * ★ Two severe heart attacks -th latest in 1968 — prompted Hare to say, MI feel that my successor should be a younger man, hopefully dedicated those same programs and able to devote the necessary 80 hours a week to the job that it requires ... By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business Analyst NEW YORK - “A trend in recent years to cool weather in the Southeast will be broken this winter. In fact, the entire! Middle and South Atlantic region will have a mild and open winter. Coastal stations will receive substantially below _ IRRRH normal pre- CUNNIFF cipitation totals with little, if any, snow ... Marked dryness and warmth in the Florida peninsula suggests an ideal winter tourist season Could businessmen benefit from such long-range forecasts, scietifically made four to six months ahead of time? Could a manufacturer of tires, for ex- ample feel confident in September that fewer snow tires will be needed in Richmond, Va., next February? Through the years businessmen have lost billions of dollars by failing to understand how weather changes their markets. Like others, they do a lot of talking but little else. CURIOUS ATTITUDE The attitude is a curious one, for healthy businesses seldom overlook chances for reducing losses by employing the skills and machines of science to reduce variables and lessen risks. Highway contractrs, for example, use seismometers to estimate the cubic yards of cuts and fills needed before making bids. They measure distances exactly. They check prices of equipment. And then they flip a coin about the weather. ★ * * Often it is this very factor that forces them to take losses. More Unions Seek Tie to ALA, Reuther Says DETROIT (AP) — Despite Ian AFL-CIO threat to expel the 12 6ft 6ft 6ft ; . | 16 30ft SOft 30ft .. 54 37ft 36ft 37ft 4 I » 50 21ft 20ft 21 - ft —u— 47 32 31ft 31ft ... [ 5 15ft 1(ft 15ft 4“ [ 68 42ft 42ft 42ft — ► 17 18ft 17ft 18 — ( 25 SOft SOft SOft — ! ’65 SOft 49ft SOft 4- * 5 44ft 44ft 44ft — 15 21ft 21ft 21ft - ft a week and I just can't do that anymore." Hare was asked if state law requires he resign from his present position to be eligible to run for \n education post in 1970. 4<If it comes to that you cao forget the education post," said. 5 74ft 74ft 74ft - ft I 22ft 22ft i_,, . 10 25ft 25ft 25ft ... 21 3§ft 38ft 30ft 4- 1 ** 3 • 47ft 47ft — \ _______ ________rat* e—Liouktatlna dtvl-__ jr paid in 190 olui »—Paid lair year. (—Pay-irlng 190. estimated caih ■ ... ______;ldend or ix-dlsiributlon t. g—Declared or paid to far this h—Declared or paid altar Mail dend or ipllt up. k—Declared or year, an accumulative issue dendt In arraan. tv—New Issue. 190* 2—Sales in’ full. cld-Callad. x—Ex un ild In 1 dividend, v—Ex divl- ww—With warrants. wd—When dls- ______d. wl—whan issued, nd—Next day delivery. v|—in bankruptcy or recalverihlp or batng reorganized under the Bankruptcy Act, or securities assumed by auch companies. fn—Foreign Issue aublect to In- Treasury Position .WASHINGTON (AP) - Th# caih not Ion of the Treasury Sept. 15, 190 *{011 .,905,655,716.61 11,314,701*17.67 . jls fiscal year < 48,05,151,898.75 45,310,805,746.61 total debt _ X—362,5*7,433,566.99 355,473,406,100.56 Gold assets .. 10,367,010,358.0 10,367,030*14.01 Stocks of Local Interest Figures alter decimal point* or* eighths OVER-THE-COUNTER STOCKS . jotations from the NASD art representative interdealer prices. —*—■- -.hange “■—■-— .„ noi l markdown ~ — ^*ATftr#. ......................8 „ Associated Track .............II* lfj cbiiati* Utilities A .........24J 35.1 '"liana Utilities B ........ 13.6 24J Irex CNrmlcal* —............IO* 11* imontf Crystal .4............MJ 22.0 lly Services ■■■•luM......36.0 37. ran Printing ?*: ........34 3! Thursday's DMdap^Dy.arjd INCJ Conti M<E Inv “ “I was putting in 8 International Chemical Workers for joining, Walter P. Reuther says several other unions have applied for membership in the Alliance for Labor Action—ALA —formed by his United Auto Workers and the Teamsters.1 * * * While he declined in an inter-, view to name the applicants; Reuther said, “We will be acting on those shortly and will announce them” when they are voted in. So far the Chemical Workers is the only AFL-CIO union to join the ALA, and AFL-CIO President George Meany wants their 110,060 members expelled lesson to the federation’) Griffin Bids for Post as GOP Whip WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. Robert P. Griffin, R-Mich., has declared himself a candidate for the job of minority Whip in the U.S. Senate. GrifQn announced Thursday Iso that he would not be a candidate for minority leader. ♦ # , ★ No one else has declared for the No. 2 spot but Griffin is among, six who have been mentioned by Sen. Hugh Scott, Pa., the present whip who is running for-the Senate Republican leadership. ■k k k The others are Sens. Charles! H. Percy of Illinois, James B. Pearson of Kansas, Jack Miller of Iowa, Howard H. Baker Jr. Tennessee and Roman L. Hruska of Nebraska. BIGGER LEAD Scott claimed Thursday a steadily wldeniitg lead in the three-man race for the Senate minority leadership—a vacancy created by the death of Sen. Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois. Baker and Hruska are fighting Scott for the post. • Scott said, “We’re just stapling everything down, just getting insurance votes.” Scott said a caucus is slated it next Wednesday where new leader and assistant leader will be elected. Smallest Hike in Prices Set by Chrysler DETROIT (AP) — Chrysler |Corp. has posted the smallest I price Increase of the Big Three automakers, but the No. 3 car producer is also spending less money than Ford and General Motors to corivert previously optional equipment to standard items on 1976 models. Chrysler said $28 of the $107 increase in the sticker price of its average car would coi from making items such as bef-glass-belted tires, which were optional on 1969 models, standard equipment on 1976s. ★ * ★ Ford said roughly $55 of its $108 increase went for this pur-and GM allocated $40 of its $125 increase. All three auto makers said the biggest previously optional item was figer-glass-belted tires, which will be standard on all GM models and,oh most Ford and Chrysler products, ITEMS VARY The other now-standard items vary from model to model but they include power disc brakes on all Chevrolet Chevelle eight-cylinder station wagons ($61) and on Ford LTD’s ($69). “Genuine walnut interior accents,” an optional item last year,, are now standard on Ford’s $6,822 Continental1 Mark III. “That’s reaLjWood,”. explained Ford spokesman, adding he Wasn’t sure what the walnut trim cost as an option. A few months later,he joined the 1.9-million-member Teamsters Union in forming ALA. The Teamsters were kicked out of the AFL-CIO on corruption charges in 1957. Compiled by Tin A 15 Net cha Thur. +.3 . 431.3 10.3 134.7 3M.i 429.8 153.0 i35.3 W 430.1 152.0 136.2 M9. 431.1 154.5 133.9 294, 494.4 201 1 149.4 343,. .... .............513.3 fl?.7 159.1 S6QJ INI Low ....... flU 144 134.7 jB,1 •a High ........ 331.1 217* •“ • £“ LOW .......... 435.6 165.6 Month Ago Year Ago ! 181 »: MW The Auoclated Praia —.3 Thur. 40.6 80.9 M Day M.| 00.9 77.7 Ago 40.S 01.0 77J m M z ■ High .6*4 (7.0 7*4 *2.2 190 LOW ? 40.5 (0.7 77.1 0.1 76.0 j*6| Nigh 0#.| 91.0 ft* 90.2 ife 190 LOW 63.1 (3.1 70.3 (0.0 Year A flJ 77.6 M.I 76J 0.9 04 News in Brief A Persian lamb coat valued at $1,000, a, portable television and $102 in cash were reported stolen in a break-in last night at the home of Willa L. Winton, 30, of 63 Victory, according to Pontiac police. Flea Market, Sat., Sept. 20, 4. First United Methodist Church, Saginaw at Auburn. Baked goods. Luncheon. Misc. —Adv. Rummage, Four Towns United Methodist, cor. Cooley-Loch-aven, Sept. 20, 0-12 noon. —Adv. Garage Sale, Sat., Sept. 20, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. 998 Voorhees, cor. Draper. Pontiac Business and Professional Women’s Club. —Advs other 121 unions that they can’ have one foot in his camp and the other in Reuther's. The ouster move will come next month at the AFL-CIO convention. “It’s a hard decision but there’s no choice,” says one high AFL-CIO official. Meany views the alliance as a competitive organization, damaging to the trade union movement. CHARGE DENIED Reuther, on the other hand, says this isn’t so, that the ALA “is not a dual labor organization.” ‘If those who apply for ALA membership want to stay in the AFL-CIO, that’s all right with us,” Reuther said. “II they do not choose to remain, that also is O.K.” k k k “Our movement is not designed to divide the AFL-CIO, just to revitalize it.” Accusing the 75-year-old Meany of being dictatorial, ignoring the AFL-CIO constitution and of permitting the labor movement to “vegetate,” the "-year-old Reuther pulled his 1.7-million member United Auto Workers out of the federation year. / Heavy rains can bog down trucks: Early frost can make earth-moving difficult. Snow can immobilize every man and machine. Retailers, farmers, air-conditioner manufacturers and others have from time to time made efforts greater than flipping a coin. A pharmaceutical company sends copies of long-range, forecasts by Weather Trends Itic. to 60,000 doctors. And many businesses consult Dr. Irving Krick of Palm Springs, Calif. DESPAIR, IGNORANCE Often, however, the attitude of usiness is one of despair and ignorance. “Businessmen don’t know how or to what extent their businesses are operationally weather-sensitive,” says Dr. Hurd C. Willett, professor emeritus of > meteorology at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. k k k It is Willet who signed his • name to .the forecast for the lpwer East Coast states, now being distributed to clients of a newly formed, Boston-based company - called Statistical Weather Information. “Even those who subscribe to long-range forecasts misuse . them, perhaps turning them over to the comptroller,” said John Prohaska, a meteorologist. Willet, Prohaska and Dr. Don-DeVorkin, all with MIT backgrounds, are founders of SWI. ASSEMBLE DATA After years of research the three scientists have assembled 400,000 bits of weather information. The mass is fed into electronic computers for statistical relationships that become the basis for forecasts up: to six months ahead. The data, collected from Weather Bureau, private and military records covering thousands of square miles and several decades, are sf To determine what the temperature will be at a given point six months hence, for example, atmospheric pressure readings for 30 years at 132 locations from England to Japan and Mexico to the Arctic are analyzed. Studies have shown, the scientists claim, that atmospheric i at particular places and times are related to temperatures at other locations at later dates. Similar relationships between precipitation at a given location and temperatures at other, often widely separated locations, have been shown. These historical relationships, they tain, permit forecasts i made seasonally. be By ROGER E. SPEAR Q. I own CPC International, Detroit Edison and Sterling Drag, all bought at high prices. Is this a good time, now that they’re lower, to add to them? — W.E. ★ * A. Before making further purchases it is important to decide on your investment jective. You* have two income holdings, CPC and Detroit Edison, whereas Sterling Drug UAW Restates Offer to AMC is a growth issue. While each class has merit, the success on if financial program depends on setting goals and making investments accordingly. If you need additional income, then by all means add to CPC and-or Detroit, both of which yield over 5 per cent. Sterling. Drug has excellent long-range growth prospects well suited to a person building toward retirement 10 to 20 years away. ★ k k (For Roger Spear’s 43-page Investment Guide (recently revised and in its ilth printing), send $1 with name and address to Roger E. Spear, The Pontiac Press, Box Ills, Grand Central Station, New York, N.Y., 10017.) RACINE, Wls. (UPI) — Negotiators for the United Auto Workers reiterated their demand for an 11-month contract with American Motors Corp. yesterday and spelled out the wage Increases they are seeking. kkk In the third bargaining session since Aug. 18, union negotiators told representatives of the auto maker they want wage increases totaling 39 cents an hour for production workers and 54 cents for skilled tradesmen. k k k AMC did not budge from its previous offer of a package valued at 47 cents an hour over a two-year period, or -23 cents the first year and 24 cents the second, a union spokesman said^ Thfe talks were recessed again util Sept. 30. The current two-year contract expires Oct. Iff. NEW MOBILE HOME PARK! With Windmill Villas* of American Franclia , one-third ranted GOING BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY Paved its. • pool - playground -laundromat - cable TV. Office Modern —' All Utilities Underground. City water, sewage and fire protection. STABLE FLORIDA CITY LOCALE Close-in to shopping, schools, universities, bus. 18% CASH — BALANCE 15-20 YR. FINANCING ..... Principals only ..—. HURRY! CALL OR WRITS TO: BAYSHORI GARDENS PARK SALES MGR., P.O. ten TIIE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1960 -Television Programs- Programs furnished by stations listed in this column are subject to change without noticel Channels: 2-WJBK-TV, 4-WWJ-TV. 7-WXYZ-TV, 9-CKLW-TV, 50-WKBP-TV, 56-WTVS-TV, 62-WXON-TV 11:30 (4) C—Jambo (7) C — American Bandstand — The Creed-ence Clearwater Revival guests. (9) Country Calendar SATURDAY AFTERNOON R — Rerun G—Color FRIDAY NIGHT 6:00 (2) (4) (7) C — News, Weather, Sports (SO) R C — Flintstones (56) What’s New — Tour of U.S. Capitol (Part 2) (62) R — Ozzie and Harriet 6:30 (2) C News — Cronkite (4) C — News — Huntley, Brinkley (9) R — Dick Van Dyke — Rob and his writers get in trouble for adding insults to an Allen Brady script. (50) R — Munsters — Eddie finds a huge jewel while playing in the attic. (56) Cancion de la Razd — Spanish soap opera (62) C — Swingintime 7:00 (2) R C - Truth or Consequences (4) C — News, Weather, Sports (7) C — News — Reynolds, Smith (9) R C — Movie: "Sword of Lancelot ’’(British, 1963) Love story of Lancelot and Queen Guinevere. Cor-( nel Wilde, Jean Wallace (50) R — I Love Lucy — Tennessee Ernie Ford moves into the Ricardo apartment * because he feels they are “family.” (56) Great Books — Discussion of “The Brothers Karamazov” is continued. 7:30 (2) R C - Wild, Wild West — The disappearance of guests from a hotel room leads West to a beautiful girl and her mansion. (4) C — High Chaparral — Billy Blue is faced .with weighing his pride against his safety when a known gunfighter challenges him to a shoot-out in the first show of the series’ third season. James Mitchum guest-stars. (7) C — Let’s Make a Deal (50) C - Strange Paradise (56) R — Action People s-: "Laboratory Training — The New Seeing I' ’ features a microlab and a critique of the demonstration, including 191© TytlTk isr. 4 compact color Decorator-Compact table model with vinyl clad metal cabinet In’gralned Walnut color. *379" with AFC Automatic Fine-tuning Control AFC let* you tune the lharpeit color picture at the tllck of a finger. You flip the twitch once and forget It Because the AFC keeps every channel-even UHFchannels— perfectly tuned. . . 51MW* SERVICE SPECIALISTS HOD’S tv 770 0RCHAR0 LAKE AVE. comments on laboratory education. (62) C — Of Lands and Seas — Horse breeding training and racing from New England to South America, are shown. 8:00 (7) C — ( Special) Ethics in Congress — News documentary probes aspects if ethics i n Congress. Among the distinguished guests are historian Henry Steele Commager; Wright Patman, D-Tex., chairman of the House Bank and Currency Committee; and Willis Alexander, president of the American Banking Association. (50) C — Beat the Clock 8:30 (2) R C — Gomer Pyle Carter’s wish comes true when Gomer applies for a transfer. (4) C — Name of the Game — Series opens second season with publisher Howard checking whether the happy marriage of his friend is a cover-up for her fear and guilt. Janice Rule guest-stars. (50) C — to Tell the Truth (56) Portrait In — Mrs. " Ruth Neikirk, teacher for the Columbus Association of Childbirth Education, is profiled! (62) R — Nelsons 9:00 (2) R C — Movie: "Made in Paris’’ (1966) Fashion buyer is sent to Paris and becomes infatuated with dashing d e signer. Ann-Margret, Louis Jgurdan (7) R C — Judd for the Defense — Judd defends a European-born importer — who distrusts governments — on a smuggling charge. (9) R — Secret Agent (50) R — Perry Mason (56) R - Bode Beat -Author Harry Golden discusses his autobiography, "The Right Time.” (62) R — Movie: “Young Widow” (1946) War widow shuts romance out of her life, but one man is persistent. Jane Russell, Louis Hayward 9:30 (56) R - NET Playhouse — Robert Shaw 8 tars in August Strindberg’s "The Father,” which focuses on the battle for power between sexes. 10:00 (4) C - (Debut) Bracken’s* World — The characters who inhabit "Bracken’s World” are Introduced in this new series about the behind-the-scenes story of a Hollywood film studio. Eleanor Parker, Peter Haskell, Elizabeth Allen ' and Dennis Cole star. (7) C — Dick Cavett — Ruth Gordon (of Rosemary’s Baby”) and David Schoenbrun guest on the last show of the series. (9) (50) C - News, Weather, Sports 10:30 (0) C - What’s My line? (50) R - Ben Casey -Dr. Casey clashes with an a 11 ractive pediatrician over the treatment of a stricken infant. (62) R - Sea Hunt 11:00 (2) (4) (7) C - News, Weather, Sports (0) R C - Movie: "You’re My Everything” (1M9) Debutante runs off with a dancer and becomes a Hollywood star. Buster Kelton, Anne Baxter (62) R — Highway Patrol M:36 (4) C — Johnny Carson h TV Features * Tonight ACTION PEOPLE, 7:30 I m. (56) ETHICS IN CON- I , 8 p.m. (7) ,, 1 BRACKEN’S WORLD, 10 p.m. (4) , DICK CAVETT, 10 p.m. Tomorrow COLLEGE FOOTBALL, 12:45 p,m. (7) BASEBALL, 1:15 p.m. (2), 3 p.m. (4) WIDE WORLD OF gPORTS, 4 p.m. (7) — Zsa Zsa Gabor, Robert Culp, Pat Boone, David Steinberg and Monti Rook guest. (7) C — Joey Bishop — Hines, Hines and Dad and London Lee guest. (50) C - Merv Griffin -Aliza Kashi, Pat Cooper and Sha Nana guest. 11:35 (2) R - Movies: 1. “The Pride of St. Louis” (1952) Biography of Dizzy Dean. Dan Dailey, Joanne Dru; 2. “Sword of Granada” (Spanish, i960) Three adventurers unite against a common enemy. Cesar Romero, K a t y Jurado 12:24 (9) Viewpoint 12:30 (9) C — Perry’s Probe — “Rape” 1:00 (4) Heat the Champ (7) R — Movie: “The Thin Man Goes "Home” (1944), Myrna Loy, William Powell SATURDAY MORNING 5:50 (2) TV Chapel 5:55 (2) C-News 0:00 (2) C — Across the Fence 0:30 (2) C—Black Heritage 6:45 (7) C — Rural Report — “4-H Here and There” 6:50 (9) Warm-Up 6:55 (4) C — News 7:00 (2) C — Jetsons (4) C — Country Living — “Services 1 o f Michigan Agriculture” (7) C —Casper (9) Ontario Schools 7:90 (2) C - Woodrow the Woodsman (4) C — Qopsy (7) C—Smokey the Bear 7:45 (9) Sound ’69 8:00 (7) C—Cattanooga Cats (9) Window on the World 8:30 (2) C — Bugs Bunny-Roadruimer (9) All Around the Circle 9:00 (2) C —‘Archie Show (4) C — Here Comes the Grump (7) C- Hot Wheels (50) R —Wells Fargo 9:30 (2) C — Dastardly and Muttiey (4) C— Pink Panther (7) C — Hardy Boys (9) Belle, Sebastian and the Horses (50) R — Laramie 10:00 (2) C — Perils o f Penelope Pitstop (4) C — H. R. Pufnstuff (7) C — Sky Hawks (9) Chansons 10:30 (2) C — Scooby-Doo, Where are You? -(4) C — Banana Splits (7) C — Gulliver (9) R—Three Musketeers (50) R - Movie: “Invisible Stripes” ( 1939) Humphrey Bogart, William Holden 11:09 (2) C-Archie Show (7) C—Fantastic Voyage (9) Ballads and Chansons 12:00 (2) C — Monkees (4) R C — Flintstones (9) Lost Peace (50) R C— Movie-*-, “American1 Guerrilla in the Phillippines” (1950) Tyrone Power, Tom Ewell 12:15 (2) C — Tiger Warmup 12:30 (2) C — wacky Races (4) C — Red Jones (7) C — College Football Today i (9) D’Iberville 12:45 (7) C College Football: Indiana vs. Kentucky (4) C—Baseball Pregame (9) R — Movie: "Back to Bataan” (1945) John Wayne, Anthony Quinn 1:15 (2) C — Baseball: Boston at Detroit (4) C — Baseball 2:00.(50) R — Movie: “Cry Danger” (1951) Dick Powell, Rhonda Fleming 3:00 (9) C — Marvel Super Heroes 3:30 (9) C — Magic Shoppe (50) R — Movie: “Cape Canaveral Monsters” (1959) Scott Peters, Linda Connell 4:00 (4) At the Zoo (7) C — Wide World of Sports — Canadian Grand Prlx from Mosport, Ont. (9) C — Bozo 4:05 (2) C — Baseball Scoreboard 4:15 (2) R — Movie: “Jalopy” (1953) Bowery Boys 4:30 (4) C — Gadabout Gaddis — Maritime provinces in Canada 1 (9) C — Skippy (62) R — My Friend Flicka 5:00 (2) R — Mr. Ed (4) C — George Pierrot — “Montana Adventure” (9) C — Time Tunnel (50) R — Combat (62) C — Wrestling 5:15 (56) Chimney Comer 5:30 (2) C — All-American College Show (4) C — College Bowl (7) R C — Wackiest Ship (56) C — Brother Buzz 1:00 (2) C — Tiger Warm-Up (4) C — At the Zoo (9) R — Movie: “Back to . Bataan” (1945) John Whynfe, Anthony Qulnh 1:15 (2) C —Baseball: Boston at Detroit 1:30 (4) C — George Pierrot — “Montana Adventure” 2:0Q (4) C — Outdoors (50) R — Movie: “Cry Danger” (1951) Dick Powell, Rhonda Fleming 2:30 (4) C — Red Jones (9) R — Rawhide 3:00 (4) C — Baseball: Los Angeles at San Francisco 3:00 (9) C — Marvel Super 3:30 (9) C-Magic Shoppe (50) R — Movie: “Cape Canaveral Monsters” (1959) Scott Peters, Linda Connell 4:00 (7) C — Wide World of Sports — Canadian Grand JYlx from Mosport, Ont. (9) C — Bozo 4:05 (2) C - Baseball Scoreboard 4:15 (2) R-Movie "Jalopy” (1953) Bowery Boys 4:30 (9) C — Skippy (02) R - My Friend Flicka 5:09 (2) R —Mr. Ed (9) C - Time Tunnel (50) R- Combat (62) C - Wrestling 5:15 (56) Chimney Corner 5:30 (2) C - All-American College Show (7) RC-Wackiest Ship (50) C — Brother Buzz GALVANIZED STEEL RAIN GUTTER ALREADY PAINTED! NOME OWNERS Custom Made Shutters T Colors to Soloot from While you WaH_---' Painting thin gutter has already been done for you — ai\ the factory. Glistening white enamel i* baked on and \ fl ID.ymmr guaranteed for 10 year*. We alao cover overhang and facial ’ If/ ,v ™ trim to eliminate costly painting. Get 2 eatimatea —'then JlgWintU. caU me. I GUARANTEE I will gave you rndney. For the "» moat truated name in aaveatronghiag.. . FamOU8\s PHONE TODAY 673-6866 or 673-5662 MILCOR V LICENSE BONDED CONTRACTOR Quality 7 M & S GUTTER CO. 7 4162 Wait Walton, Drayton Plains Bridge to Reopen LANSING (AP) - The bridge carrying U.S. 141 over the Menominee River at the Micbigan-Wisconsin border—closed since July for deck repairs—will be reopened Monday, the State Highway. Department has announced. 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