m • Pontiac Press Wsdnssday October 8, 1969 WEDNESDAY R—Rerun C—Color WEDNESDAY MORNING 5:50 12MTV Chapel 5:55 <2) C — On the Farm Scene 6:00 (2) C — Sunrise Semester 6:25 17) C — Five Minutes to Live By 6:30 171 C — Woodrftw the Woodsman (4) Classroom i7) C - TV College — 7:00 (4) C — Ted ay — Eddie Albert. Dr. Christiaan Ba rn a rd and Ceear Cha Barnard and Cesar Chavez, leader of the California grape workers’ strike, guest. 17 > C — Morning Show — 7:20 (9) Warm-Up 7:30 (2) C - News. Weather, Sports Friendly Giant 7:45 19> Chez ilelene 8:00 <2> C — Captain Kangaroo (9) C — Bozo 8:30 (7) R — Movie: “Two Smart People” ( 1 9 4 6 ) Lucille Ball. John Hodiak (56) R — Modern Supervision 9:00 (2) R-Mr. Ed (4) C — Dennis Wholey (9) Ontario Schools 9:15 (56) Children’s Hour 9:30 (2) R C — Beverly Hillbillies (56) R — Listen and Say 9:45 ( 56) R —• Science Is Searching 10:00 (2) R C — Lucy Show (4) C — Sale of the Century (56) R — Thanks A Million 10:30 (2) C 44) C'l ■> — Della Reese — —Ho i 1 y w ood Squares (7) C — Galloping Gourmet (50) C — Jack LaLanne (56) Once Upon a Day 10:45 (9) C — News 11:00 (4) C — It Takes Two (7) R — Bewitched (9) Take 30 (50) C — Jack LaLanne (56) Reason and Read MODERNIZATION FAMILY ROOMS - DORMERS ROOM ADDITIONS - BREEZE-WAYS - ALUMINUM -KITCHENS 5744 Highland Rtf. (M-59) OR44371 LI 1-4478 DIXIE GARAGES Brick • Block • Frame free Plans, No Con fusing Pncos. Buy Direct , from Owner and Save1 CONNOLLYS Jmel OF THE WEEK t v Hie Jewel In Your Lite A Ivby And Diamond Rmg ■* The Deep, Deep Red O* Ruby Boguetts In Confrcip Wilh The fiery White SfHirliif; 01. Brilliant Cut Dio-mondi Here i\ A Ring Of Beouty And Dittmctioii — A Gift To Be I 'eowt d forever $2,200.00 t htir/te-l,aramtv-Mtrhlfan HnnknrJ DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Coma* Huron and If Nta Gtraati OeiN fRlOAV IVININOt M 1-0294 11:15 (56) Misterogers 11:25 (4) C—Carol Duval 11:30 (4) C—Love of Life (4) C — Concentration (7) R C — That Girl (9) Mr. Dressup (50) C — Kimba 11:55 (9) Wizard of Oz WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON 12:00(2) C — News. Weather, Sports (4) C — Jeopardy (7) C — Dream House (9) R — Real McCoys (50) C — Underdog 12:05, (56) Americans From Africa 12:25 (2) C — Fashions 12:30 (2) C - He Said. She Said (4) C — News. Weather, Sports (7) C — Let’s Make a Deal (9) C — Tempo 9 (50) C—Alvin 12:35 (56) Friendly Giant 12:55 (56) R — Art Lesson 1:00 (2) C — Search for Tomorrow (4) C — Days of Our Lives (7) C — Newlywed Game (9) R C — Movie: “The Blob” (1958) Steve McQueen, Anita Corseaut (50) R C — Movie : “Agent 8%” ( B r i t i s h , (1964) Robert Morley, Dirk Bogarde 1:10 (56) Tell Me a Story 1:25 ( 56) Interlude1 1:30 (2) C — As the World Turns (4) C — Doctors (7) C — Dating Game 1:40 ( 56) R — Reason and Read 2:00 (2) C — Where the Heart Is (4) C — Another World (7) C — General Hospital (56I R—NET Journal ■ 2:25 (2) C — News 2:30 (2) C — Guiding Ligftt (4) C — Bright Promises (7) C—One Life to Live 3:00 (2) C—Secret Storm (4) C — Letters to Laugh-In (7) R — Bachelor Father (9) R — Candid Camera (56) Consultation (62) R — Movie: “The Child and the Killer” (1957, British) Patricia Driscoll. Robert Andress 3:30 (2) C — Edge of Night (4) C — You’re Putting Me On (?) C — Anniversary Game (9) C—Magic Shoppe (50) C — Captain Detroit (56) Memo to Teachers, 4;00 (2) R C — Gomer Pyle (4) R C — Steve Allen (7) C — Dark Shadows (9) C — Bozo (56) Pocketful of Fun 4:30 (2) C — Mike Douglas (7) R C — Movie: “A Time to Love, a Time to Die” (1958) John Gavin. Lilo Puiver (Part 2) (50) R — Little Rascals (56) Once Upon a Day (62) C — Bugs Bunny and Friends 5:00 (4) C—George Pierrot — “Welcome to Belgium" (9) R C — Flipper (50) R C - Lost in Space (56) Misterogers 5:30 (9) R C — Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea (56) Friendly Giant (62) R — Leave It to Beaver. 5:45 ( 56) Merlin the Magician WEDNESDAY NIGHT 6:00 (2) (4) (7) C - News, Weather, Sports (50) R C — Flintstones (56) Americans From Africa (62) R — Ozzie and Harriet 6:30 (2) C — News — Cronkite (4) C — News — Huntley. Brinkley * (9) R — Dick Van Dyke (50) R — Munsters (56) C White Pine Story (62) C — Swingintime — The Flamin' Embers guest. 7:00 (2) C — Truth o r Consequences (4) C — News, Weather. Sports (7) C — News -Reynolds, Smith (ft) H - 12 0'Cltfektftglr (50) R — I Love Lucy (56) What’s New 7:30 (2) C — Glen Campbell r-Tom Jones, Totie Fields and Jackie DeShannon guest. (4) C — Virginian — Clay Grainger enters politics, discovering the stakes run high. Barry Sullivan and Andrew Prine guest-star. (7) C — Flying Nun — Sister Bertrille tries to help a young secretary who shows up at the convent with a baby she says belongs to a friend. Chelsea Brown guest-stars. (50) C — Beat the Clock. (56) Making Things Grow (62) C — pf Lands and Seas 8:00 (7) C — Courtship of Eddie's Father — Eddie decides . Mrsr Livingston ip lonely and brings home a 5-year-old Japanese boy to be her son. (9) C — The Travellers --(50) R — Hazel (56) Free Play — Detroit candidates for city clerk land city treasurer will be interviewed. 8:30 (pC — Beverly Hillbillies — Granny hawks Elly May at the backwoods fahv (7) C — Room 222 •— Liz gets Jason an art job at a department store — and he steals a coat for her. (9) (Special) — Dulcima — Drama based on a short story by H. E. Bates tells of a young girl (Jackie Burroughs) who tries to escape the drudgery of her life. John Col-icos costars. (50) C — To Tell the Truth Tht Pontiac Pro** Wodnosday October 8 ONE COLOR 13 (62) ft — The Nelsons 9:00 (2) C — Medical Center — A wounded college student under the influence of drugs staggers to the hospital's emergency entrance and touches off a p o 1 i c e investigation. (4) C - Music Hall -Host Wayne Newton welcomes Terry-Thomas. Michele Lee, and Hines, Hines arid Dad. * (7) C — Movie: “Two For the Road" (1967) Two young people fall in love while touring the French Riviera. Audrey Hepburn. Albert Finney (50) R — Perry MasGti (56) International Magazine. Topics: 1. Nationalist Chinese on Formosa, still trying to reclaim China after 20 years in exile; 2. Interview with President William Tubman of Liberia; 3. Interviews with White Russians who have lived in exile since the 1917 revolution. (62) R — Movie: “Las Vegas Shakedown" (1955) Casino operator refuses to bow to the demands of the s y n d i c a t e. D e n n i s O’Keefe, Coleen Gray. 10:00 (2) C — Hawaii Five-0 — A false tidal-wave alert diverts attention from the kidnaping of a famous genetic engineer. (4) C — Then Came Bronson — The lone resident of a ghost town asks Bronson to remain to carry out her last wish — to be buried beside her husband. (9) (50) C — News. Weather, Sports (56) On Being Black — 10:30 (9) C - What’s My Line? (50) R — Ben Casey (62) R — Sea Hunt 11:00 (2) (4) C — News. Weather ^ (9) r __ Movie: “Luck of Ginger Coffey” (Canadian. 1964) Robert Shaw, Mary Ure (62) R — Highway Patrol 11:15 (7) C—News. Weather. Sports 11:30 (4) C — Johnny Carson Pamela Tiffin guests WEDNESDAY (50) C — Merve Griffin —. Orson Bean and John Simon guest. (62) R'-Movie: 'Drango” (1957) Major tries to gov-— Pamela Tiffin guests. (50) C — Merv Griffin (1957) Jeff Chandler. Joanne Dru 11:35 (2) R - Movie : “Bengazi” (1955) Three men and a girl in search of hidden gold are trapped in a lonely desert rrfosque. Richard Carlson 11:45 (7) C — Joey Bishop — Fran Jeffries guests. 12:24 (9) Viewpoint 12:30 (9) C - Perry's Probe 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ 1:15 (7) R —Texan 1:30 (2) R-Naked City (4) C — News, Weather 1:45 (7) C—News. Weather. Sports 1:55 (7) C — Five Minutes to Live By BEAUTIFUL' ALL OUTLOOK CARPET. SALE! SUPER HEAVY DuPONT 801 NYLON R.g. *7.95 «« *4«» £ FR AYERS 1108 W. Huron Call 681-2700 OAKLAND COUNTY’! FASTEST GROWING CARPET, CUSTOM DRAPERY AND UPHOLSTERY OOMPANY WASHINGTON (AP) - The Treasury Department said today that any unemployment “is an unhappy condition and one that we will constantly seek to correct.’1 The department issued a statement seeking to ease the impact of testimony yesterday by its boss, Secretary of the Treasury David M. Kennedy, that the administration finds a 4 per cent employment rate “acceptable” in its “This administration has already taken vigorous steps to increase the employability of people without jobs,” the department’s statement said, The government’s economists generally hailed the unemployment highly constructive and much needed supplement to the anti-inflation program of this administration,” the Treasury During yesterday's hearing, Sen. William Proxmire, D-Wis., asked Kennedy to . set an unemployment figure which would trigger alarm within maladministration, but the secretary said he had no “magic figure” in mind. Sens. Proxmire and Stuart Symington, D-Mo., made it clear they don’t share the view of some economists that last month’s increase of unemployment CITY MEETING—An over-capacity crowd jammed CKy rm* Hall last night, with most opposed to a proposed new housing hallways. Standing to voids his objections is Edward Keehn code. Over 400 persons filled seats, standing room and the of 183 Pingree. Related Story, Pago P-6 figure—up from 3.5 per cent in August—as a sign the anti-inflation pro- Indian Powwow Xgnww, Hlckel to address looting - PAGE A-14. There's a chance of scattered light frost In the Pontiac area tonight. The low Is expected to dip into the high 30s. Partly sunny and a Jlttie wanner Is the forecast tor tomorrow; the high climbing to the mid-to-upper 80s. Partly cloudy hnd a little warmer is Friday’s pmdic- The (lye-day forecast calls tor a warming trend' tomorrow and Friday and cooler again Sunday and Monday. Precipitation will total about one-half to three-quarters of an inch In shoWen about Saturday. Kldt Look In Instead Of Out In ClarkitOn Year-Round Schools Considered, but Not in Reform . WW) — The Governor’s Commission on Educational Reform consid- em but did not Include in Its report the question of 12-month school terms because Thu wnildn'f solve the immediate problems,” a commission spokesman says. James pimps, assistant director of the commission,, said yesterday the question of 12-month school sessions was “considered by the commission at great length. But It was the opinion of the group that the major problems right rfcw are based on budgetary considerations,” said Phelps. j u* , budgetary structure Is changed in Michigan tiie feasibility of year-* round schools is somewhat limited,” he said. -— «lso said the holding of classes 12 months a year “is not the cure — although It might appear to be on the surface as far as some educational problems .areconcerned.” .............. .. -T;- ■ He.said tiie apparent economic advantages of using a school building 12 months a year instead Of nine are blunted by the fact air-conditioning would be needed for summer classes and other maintenance costs wouldiwincreased, K ... O' . 0 - s‘ ■ "Many Who advocate holding'year-round classes say less building space would be needed if only 84 of t)ie children were in school at any one time,” he said "but if that is the situation, you have many otiier problems. } / WWW ’ - “In small schools, spreading the enrollment over a longer period would cut down on the curriculum by having less students available at any one time.”7 presented to the commission Indicates "society doesn't want to get kids through school any faster than now.” S , Phelps said until the current state aid formula, which pays schools only for 180 days of school per year, is changed, school districts will be deterred from 1 As far as having all children in school for 12 months, Phelps said, testimony order, "The commission members realize this is a potential sitting there,” Phelps paid. “The teacher time and building time are available. / “Once the more immediate problems are taken care of, the state could serve in a function to give incentive to schools who institute exploratory programs. “It's an important issue,” he said, “but it has to be dealt with in the proper Tho Woathor_____________ U. S. WMHMr Suruu forte.,I Light Frost Tonight THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition VOL, 127 ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY* OCTOBER 8, 1069 r«DS^«TflLtTB*5ATIONAL —-68 PAGES 10® Treasury Dept. Eases Its Chiefs Testimony New Housing Code Assailed closed inquest Sought for Ted ByEDBLUNDEN you’d have to be More than 400 persons jammed, the City Commission chambers and adjacent hallways last night to join In a chorus opposing the city’s proposed new housing code. Hie code was called everything from Communistic to immoral. Opposition was whipped up in the last three weeks by advertisements, handbills and door-to-door canvassing by a group called Homeowners Protecting Their Private Property. The code was not passed last night, and the public hearing will be continued in three weeks, Oct; 28 ait 8 p.m. Hie code had been revised prior to last night’s hearing, and more changes would be mam to incorporate specific objections, city commissioners said. CODE PUBLISHED Hie commission ordered the revised form to be published in-its entirety in a legal advertisement in Hie Pontiac Press. The original proposal appeared in the 8ept. 9 edition. • * A a The hearing lasted for two hours with about 25 speakers talking at varying lengths. A sampling of the comment: Edward R. Bigger, 248 W. Yale, labeled it “communism all the way.” i a a a Edward Keehn of 183 Pingree.who came wearing a tea bag, compared the struggle against the housing code to the Boston Tea Party. “The commission has an obligation to us and not to HUD (Housing and Urban Development) in Washington,” he said. ! L. G. Black of 187 W. Ann Arbor said, “If our house is good enough for us to live in, it’s pod enough.” TOO MANY CHILDREN? Chick Hagerman of 236 W. Beverly, speaking of the per-person living space requirements, said “What if you had one In Today's Press Jot Hits Homos Copilot dies in Oklahoma crash - PAGE A-10. Now Roc Area Land purchase approval in Holly Township sought by state - PAGE 04. Area Nows A-8 Astrology .. Bridge rv. Crossword Pa site ... ... J.D4 D-ll Comics D-8 Editorials v A4 Feed lection C4, C*7 Markets D4 Obituaries . ...... A-lt Smoking Series c-ti Sports .01-04 Theaters TV aid Radio Programs D-ll Vletaem War News.. A-8 Women's Pages ,.B»1—B4 too many kids awful careful.” . Most of the speakers alluded to the failure of the city to develop the 27 acres of bare urban renewal land downtown, apparently a sore point with many. * * * ■ Speakers {pointed out HUD was demanding the city enact the code as piart of the city’s Workable Program. 0ty Affairs, Page A-5 (The program is a requirement for all federal grants and aids.) However, the apparent failure of the HUD program downtown was cited ,as evidence of tile futility of following federal promises. Identifying himself as a representative of the homeowners opposing the code, Robert Verhine of 110 Rosshire, said, “The code is looking more like we want it to.” He urged further cooperation from citizens and the commission in drafting amendments to be sure present homeowners are protected, • No one voiced objections to a new code applying to new housing. At the meeting three weeks ago a representative of Pre-Built Homes in Detroit, a firm which is expected to supply manufactured homes tor developers in PontiSe, objected to some provisions. 1 * * ; * ; Flash Officials said these articles — con-cerning bathrooms and storage areas — t ; . S v A* ill* 1 ,I,had been changed. Late in the hearing two leaders of the# - - opposition indicated the code was being rewritten to a more acceptable form, a . a ■ a Clark S. Davis of 26 Rose Court said, “a lot of private funds and shoe leather” had been expended to fight the code. However, „ the amendments and the decision to delay approval for more study was “a step in the right direction,” he said. Davis urged the commission to see “how much freedom We can get from HUD” in any code finally adopted. The Blrmingham-Bloomfield Bank branch office at South Woodward and BOSTON (AP) - Sen. Edward M. Kennedy's attorney asked today that an inquest into the death of Mary Jo Ko-pechne be closed to the press and public and that all witnesses be Subject to cross-examination. Kennedy’s counsel, in arguments before the Massachusetts Supreme Court, contended the inquest would be “an accusatory proceeding which could result in criminal action.” , , . '" 0i A . A! j Edward B. Hanify, counsel for the Massachusetts Democratic senator, asked the full bench of the state Supreme Court tp declare the state’s inquest law unconstitutional or lay down a new body of restrictions on the proposed inquest in Edgartown District Court. Hanify, who spoke for a full hour, also called upon the court to quash a ruling by District Court Judge James A. Boyle which barred witnesses’ lawyers from the courtroom except while their clients were testifying. Hanify further asked the court to order Judge Boyle to disqualify himself from the forthcoming inquest because he was a party to today’s appeal. gram is working. Kennedy told the SenateHouse economic subcommittee that the program “must be continued because It is designed to head off what would otherwise develop into a renewed boom that would almost certainly lead to a later conomic. bust and mass unemployment.” ......* • * The Treasury statement said “many hundreds of thousands of jobs are now vacant because workers with the needed skills cannot be found.” It cited steps the administration has taken to remedy this, such as increases in training programs. _______ “These manpower policies are thus a was a good sign indicating a slowdown in the inflationary trend. a a a Symington asked: “Are we planning for a recession to reduce inflation?” Kennedy replied: “No, we must now watch tiie timing to make sure that doesn’t happen.” The Nixon administration earlier this year assured labor leaders it would not. use unemployment as a weapon to bring inflation under control. But only last month organized labor’s chief economist said government anti-inflation steps threatened to bring massive unemployment. 2 Top GOP Senators Join Opposition to Haynsworth From Our News Wires WASHINGTON - Both the second- and third-ranking Senate Republicans today joined growing opposition to President Nixon’s choice of Clement F. Haynsworth for the Supreme Court.-Despite the adverse developments, the White House said at noontime that President Nixon still stands by his nomination Clarkston Teacher Pact Talks Stall By NED ADAMSON Negotiations have stalemated between the Clarkston Education Association (CEA) and the board of education following a CEA demand yesterday to reopen previously settled issues. The action was prompted by what the teachers’ negotiators termed “another no-progress negotiating session on salary differences.” -a • w a ' However, there were indications the negotiating teams would be called back to the bargaining table today by either a state mediator or Oakland County Circuit Court Judge William R. Beasley. The move to reopen settled issues appears to further complicate negotiations between tiie school board and CEA, but It also opens the door for court intervention in tiie talks, observers said. MOTIVE FOR REOPENING CEA President Thomas Brown said the move “wins prompted by the immovable posture of tiie board of education. Its position on the salary schedules seemed to forestall an early settlement of the contract,” he said. No further negotiations were scheduled as of this morning. However, both bargaining teams are subject to recall at anytime by a state mediator who has been sitting on the sessions this week. It is expected that yesterday’s circumstances will prompt Judge Beasley to take court action today to order further talks in the eight-day-old strike by Clarkston teachers. Following a Monday morning hearing on an Injunction filed against the CEA and the board of education by Clarkston school district resident James Peters of Waterford Township, Judge Beasley said no court action would be taken unless another impasse in negotiations occurs. The issues called tor reopening by the teachers yesterday include class size, duty-free lunch period, payment for credits beyond the bachelor’s degree and relief of teachers from non-teaching duties. (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 3) of Haynsworth, and in Greenville, 8.C., the beleaguered jurist said once again he would not withdraw. Sen. Robert P. Griffin of Michigan, the GOP whip and No. 2-ranking Republican, issued a statement describing the selection as an “unfortunate mistake” and saying it would be a mistake for the Senate to oonfirm the nomination. - Sen. Mararet Chase Smith of Maine took the floor soon afterward to say: ’’This nomination will not restore confidence in the Supreme Court.” She is deputy GOP whip. 'WILL BE CONFIRMED’ Presidential press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said Nixon feela the nomination would move out of the judiciary committee to the Senate floor and that Haynsworth would be confirmed by the Senate. On the other hand, Sen. Edward M. Kennedy of Massachusetts, the assistant Democratic leader of the Senate, said he thinks there is a “serious question” whether Nixon’s choice can be confirmed. a -a ★ The Griffin decision threw Republican forces into, some disarray since, as whip, or assistant leader, he had been In charge of nose counting for the GOP. “I don’t know what we’re going to do,” said Sen. Hugh Scott, R-Pa., the Republican leader, a a a Scott said Griffin could have some Impact on other senators. Mrs. Smith, in her floor speech, said opposition to Haynsworth was "more substantial among Republicans than was generally realised.” Chance of Frost in Area Tonight A—2 THK PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 8, 1969 Sergeants Dealt Own Firm Swag Senators Told t V WASHINGTON IJP> — A corporation set up by a group of top-ranking sergeants running NCO clubs in Vietnam did $1.2 million in business the first year it was formed, a Senate -investigator testified today before a Senate subcommittee. Carmine S. Bellino, an accountant and Senate investigator, said 8? per cent of the corporation’s business was with the club systems operated by the sergeants who owned the corporation. The ’‘Mafialike’’ operation, the Investigator said, contacted suppliers of recreation clubs in Vietnam and told them they had to do business through Mare-dem Corp. if they expected to continue doing business with the clubs. Bellino testified William 0. Wooldridge, then sergeant major of the military dom-mand in Vietnam, received and was credited on the Maredem books as of Dec. 31, 1968 with a total of $34,822.87 as the result of an investment by him of $14,880. WOOLDRIGE’S STORY Yesterday Wooldridge told reporters he has received only $3,500 from his Maredem investments. Bellino said two principal owners of the company ran club systems in Viet-. nam. He said Sgt. William E. Higdon ran the NCO and enlisted men’s clubs in Lang Btah and that Sgt. Marvaez Hatcher ran the clubs in the First Infantry Division area. Bellino said that when the company was formed In Hong Kong the at first wanted to call it ‘‘Aburg Brothers.” All of the sergeants involved in the company had formerly run clubs in the 34th Infantry Division stationed at Augsburg, Germany. Military Investigators have testified all were under suspicion of alleged irregularities in the running of NCO clubs in the Augsburg-Munich area._____________ ‘GENERAL LIED’ * Chicago Police Supt. James Conlisk yesterday said former Army Provost Marshal General Maj. Gen. Carl C. Turner lied when he testified before the committee that city authorities knowingly gave him 397 confiscated guns for his personal use. Turner Is a central figure in a Senate subcommittee investigations of a probe info charges a ring of enlisted men was engaged in a large-scale graft ring. ■ *...* •* In his testimony, Turner was quizzee! only on charges he obtained the confiscated guns under pretense they were for Army use and then sold some of them for his own profit. He said, however, Conlisk knew he wanted the guns for his own collection, atthough“he slgneeTstatementsatthe time affirming the weapons were for the Army. Conlisk said in Chicago yesterday Turner’s testimony was “untrue ” The superintendent also supported testimony given by police Lt. Paul T. Dudlman yesterday. Pontile Prill Photo by Son Untornahror Seagulls Find The Oakland County Courthouse A Good Meeting Place Four Men Rescued Sub on Pacific Floor Freed SAN DIEGO, Calif. (UPI)-Four men, trapped for more than 12 hours on the ocean floor in their research submarirfe Deep Quest with their oxygen steadily running out, were rescued in the predawn hours by a two-man minisub. The 40-foot. 50-ton Deep Quest reached tltt surface at 3:50 a.m. PDT under its own power after the tiny Nekton dived 432 feet to the bottom and cut a nylon line which had become tangled on the experimental sub’s propeller. * * * Robert Worthington, 52, a retired Navy captain and pilot of the Deep Quest, and the three others aboard were reported to have suffered no ill effects although they were hungry and chilled after their long wait for rescue. Hie moment Deep Quest reached the surface, the good news was flashed to their wives who had stayed at home while Lockheed Corp,, owner of the research sub, and Navy and Coast Guard personnel supervised the rescue. HERO OF RESCUE The hero plaudits went to the Nekton, a 4,006-pound craft operated by the General Oceanographic Co., which was brought here from Los Angeles by highway in a trailer, lowered in the water and towed five miles offshore to where the Deep Quest was trapped. Speed in the rescue was vital because the Deep Quest’s self-contained system had an oxygen supply for only 48 hours. The sub had dived at about noon, and it was 15 hours before it reached foe surface again, Hie sub was’ on a routine training mission to spot a 1,875-pound cylinder and bring it up. But foe heavy synthetic line became fouled in the sub’s propeller, It was not immediately known how foe accident occurred. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Variable cloudiness and cool with chance of brief showers today, high 58 to 65. Partly cloudy and cool tonight with chance of scattered light frost, low 37 to 43. Thorsday partly sunny and becoming d little warmer, high In foe mid to upper 60s. Friday partly cloudy and a little' warmer. Winds southwest to west at 19 to 20 miles per hour diminishing by late tonight to 5 to 12 miles per hoar becoming southwesterly 8 to 15 miles Thursday afternoon. Probabilities precipitation: 20 percent-today, 10 per cent tonight, near zero Thursday. , Tuttoiv in lt» rttirM i High,st tomptrotur* . Lowut limpnralur) ., Mean temparalura Eicanaba 59 41 Dalroll Lowest temperature Mean temperature . Weather: Sunny Thu Date in 97 Yeare 69 SO Miami Beach 04 77 6] A Milwaukee 61 44 65 si New Oritnns if 7f Sanlnaw 66 49 Phoenix 95 68 Traverse C. 71 51 PltlebUr«h S» 4S Albuquerque 71 43 St. LOUIS 7S 41 Atlanta 76 65 I. Lain City 71 40 Bismarck 51 14 {. Francisco 70 56 Boston 71 so s. Ila. Marla 60 44 Chicago 71 40 iaaftia 64 si Cincinnati .70 47 Washington 70 66 Senators Hit Pullout Pace WASHINGTON (AP) - The Republican call for a moratorium on war dissent suffered another blow today with the introduction of resolution by two Senate Vietnam critics urging withdrawal of American forces from the battle zone within a “reasonable time.” Pension Hikes Gain Support WASHINGTON (DPI) - Bigger pensions are in foe works. For Social Security recipients, it may mean 15 per Cent extra, raising the average monthly payment for man and wife from $150 to about $172.50. For congressmen retiring or defeated in the next few years, it means as much as several thousand dollars, a year extra, for total pensions up to $34,000 a year. Government workers generally also will get a better break on retirement, along with built-in protection to be provided also for congressmen against cost-of-living increases. it it e House Democrats in caucus yesterday went on record unanimously for a Social Security boost of “at least” 15 per cent, to be effective “not later than” Dec. I. President Nixon has asked for a 10 per cent boost, to take effect April 1. The House Ways and Means Committee starts work hearings Oct. 15, with aproval of some increase by Congress a certainty, either this year or so drawn as to be retroactive. for foe congressmen, their increase was wrapped up yesterday with House acceptance of Senate amendments to a bill liberalizing pensions for all government workers. What the bill does is let government retirees figure their pensions on foe basis of their three highest paid years. The payment can total 80 per cent of. this figure, plus ‘cost-of-living adjustments. Unlike two earlier withdrawal proposals, foe one submitted by Sens. Frank Church, D-Idaho, and Maik O. Hatfield R-Ore., does not propose a deadline for an American pullout. WWW Instead, their resolution criticizes the pace of withdrawal set by President Nixon—and asserts that foe continued presences! U.S; forces can only postpone “the political accommodations essential to ending foe conflict.” The Church-Hatfield measure, and the two other withdrawal proposals, appear to have no chance of Senate approval. STARTING POINT But together, the proposals are foe starting point for a new inquiry into war policy planned by Sen. J. W. Fulbright’s Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Its hearings, foe first on Nixon’s conduct of foe war, begin Oct. 27. * * ★ Secretary of State William P. Rogers has agreed to* testify in open session, although no date has yet been set. ‘ The committee also has invited testimony from Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird. In a speech prepared for foe Senate, Church said foe United States has no vital interest in preserving foe Saigon government of President Nguyen Van Thieu—or even in foe preservation of a non-Communist government. “From the standpoint of ourJnterests, we have been fighting an unnecessary war for five long years, making it possibly the most disastrous mistake in the history of American foreign policy," Church , said. "It cap never be vindicated, it can only be liquidated.” f “ * ★ ■ *' * 1 Democratic Sens. Harold Hughes of Iowa and Thomas F. Eagleton of Missouri yesterday proposed a resolution calling for U.S. withdrawal unless foe Saigon government undertakes major reforms within 60 days. The Church-Hatfield and Ijughes-Eagleton proposals would be expressions of Senate opinion with no binding effect on President Nixon. Birmingham Area No Loan for Waterford State Denies School Plea An excepted Betback came yesterday in one of the attempts of ‘ Waterford Township School .District officials to secure the funds needed to put some 18,500 students back on full-day sessions. The State Municipal Finance Commission refused to allow foe district to borrow $1.25 million. * ★ * Acting Supt. John Pagen said foe only way court-ordered full days could now be reinstated is if voters approve a one-year, 9-mill property tax increase Noy. 25. ' Then, at best, foe quickest elementary pupils could go from a yearly average of Teacher-Pact Negotiations Reach Impasse in Clarkston NATIONAL WEATHER — Rail is predicted for tonight along the Atlantic Coast fromjhe Florida panhandle through Maine. Rain also is sxpsctM for the northern GrgHflxiket region and tor an area extending from foe Pacific Northwest to the northern Rocky Mountain region. (Continued From Page One) A CEA spoilsman said the teachers previously acceeded to foe fact-finder’s recommendations on those issues as a means of quickly resolving a contract settlement. ★ * * “We have demanded that the Issues be reopened with foe utmost reluctance — but at this time we find no other recourse. The CEA has given the board an ample opportunity to agree to an equitable settlement,” foe, teacher spokesman added. Salary differences have been unable to foove past what board negotiators view is a total $33,000 gap. hTe CEA says fob difference is $31,000. BOTH SIDES FIRM ) - Both sides have Mid firm in their arguments on financial differences. The board is attempting 'to avoid what it terms “further deficit financing” while the CEA contends foe fact-finders salary recommendations are within the board’a budget limits. Thai CEA charged yesterday that foe school' hoard' is attempting to force teachers into a settlement by standing pat 00 Its deficit-financing argument. Assistant Supt. 61 Sdtooli Floyd Vincent, a member of foe school bargaining team, has continually maintained foe school district has expenditures of $150,000 annually over its income. In answer to a question on the speculation that the board of education is attempting to “bust” the teacher’s union, Vincent maintains the board has made offers highly comparable to all surrounding school districts. “We have made every effort,” ha said. Vincent said an earlier snag in negotiations — foe personal leave question — was caused by erroneous information given foe fact-finder. .# it 'it He also claimed the presence of a. Michigan Education Association representative on foe CEA negotiating team has made a difference to foe progress of negotiations. ' Vincent said foe teachers handled the negotiations themselves to previous years.-The Michigan aseodatlon is the CEA’sx parent organization. four hours of school a day to foe normal five hours — and secondary students from five to six hours.— would be January, according to Dr. Pagen. ‘CAN’T BE REPAID’ The three commission members said they couldn’t approve foe loan because foe district can’t repay the tax anticipation notes. “Frankly, I would have been very surprised If foe commission did approve the loan,” Pagen commented. “But I’m sure they would approve it if foe millage passes on our anticipated income.” ★ ' it it Meanwhile, foe district’s stay and appeal of foe court order is pending before foe Michigan Court of Appeals. School days were shortened this year as a cost-saving device because voters turned down three millage Increase pro-posals foe past two years. Oakland County Circuit Court Judge William J. Beer had given the district until Noy, 3 to begin full-day classes even if it means going into foe red, which Is against state law. Top Botanist to Lecture Saving Lakes BLOOMFIELD HILLS - Can Michigan lakes be saved from pollution? "Yes,” says Dr. V. J. Chapman who has been researching foe lake pollution situation while serving as a distinguished scholar at the Cranbrook Institute of Science. The noted botanist from New Zealand will report his findings in a color-slide illustrated lecture Oct. 17 at 8:15 p.m. in the Cranbrook School Auditorium, 550 Lone Pine. “While much has been done about foe pollution problems of the Great Lakes.” Dr. Chapman said, “relatively little work has taken place concerning deterioration of Michigan’s smaller lakes. ‘EXISTENCE THREATENED’ “As homes move In with septic tanks and fertilizers, the lakes are contaminated and their existence is threatened," he added. This past summer, Dr. Chapman oversaw conservation work at Sodon Lake in Bloomfield Township. Dr. Chapman is In the final month of a 10-month term as the fifth distinguished, scholar at foe Institute of Science. The program was initiated to 1966 to, bring outstanding scientists and educators to Cranbrook to conduct research, write and teach In conjunction with area and national universities. Dr. Chapman has been on sabbatical leave from foe University of Auckland to New Zealand, where he Is chairman of foe botany department. He received his degrees from Cambridge University to England. AT HARVARD TDr. Chapman was a fellow for 10 years at Gombiile Caius College, Cambridge, and was Henry Fellow of Botany at Harvard University for one year. Dr. Chapman’s lecture Is free to Science Institute members. The public will be admitted ,at $1.50 per person. Katherine Wunderlich has been named assistant director of public affairs tor the Cranbrook institutions. Miss Wunderlich Is a graduate of foe University of Michigan and attended Cottey College in Nevada, Mo. N«w ZonHh '»M«r fui mab III* fun Ogoin. OtmIiIm emfM| ! MI«t*-UHilc* circuit!. Weigh. *nly 1*6 ounce and mlM 1*6141, Cam* lafgra damon ttrotlon of Zcnlth'i now ZonSOfo. If Resea Vowed WASHINGTON HI - Sen. William Proxmirt. D-Wls., said today ha will Introduce legislation to require future government-financed research to be relevant to federal contracts and needa. T6» gooff iy #•»« labfWlb s Pontiao Mall Optical A Muring Aid Oiirtir ••Mill In Holly Activities Center for Youth Planned HOLLY — An organization developed to provide rural youth an activities center and “an atmosphere designed to get them thinking about themselves and the world" has been formed here. An enterprising group of local residents and the north County unit of the Office of Economic Opportunity (OEO) have organized the nonprofit corporation called Youth Action Inc. (VAC). Carl Childress, executive director of the organization and an OEO staffer, said YAC was prompted because of the laokof^htng* tft rin far ynmtg people, in the Holly area. “Our immediate goal is to provide adequate recreation facilities for the total young community. We hope to create an atmosphere conducive to constructive and creative ideas and to project an image that young people in other communities might follow," Childress explained. Childress says YAC will need about $8,000 to get in full swing. Plans call for a Halloween music festival Oct. 26, art and boutique sales and other projects in an attempt to raise funds. In addition to providing an activity center for Holly youth, Childress sees the ha organization as having possibilities as a forum for discussion of contemporary problems. Counseling will also be available by school personnel and local ministers. ‘UNDERGROUND’PAPER ...Preliminary plans also call for organization of an “underground" newspaper oriented to critical thinking. “I think that kids in the Holly area are generally unaware of contemporary problems. YAC will provide the facilities and personnel needed to help them become more aware of the world around them. IMPATIENT PUPILS — The children qf Clarkston are more and more showing their impatience. Everyone is wrapped up in his own version of financial concern: their parents, the taxpayers, their teachers, bargaining for higher salaries, and the members of the school board, keepers of the taxes. To some children, THEIR concern seems ignored: education, the business of their parents, their teachers and their school board. SOCIAL PROBLEMS One of the organization’s primary For W. Bloomfield Schools Firm to Review Policies WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP - The school board approved an $8,500 expenditure for the hiring of a professional consulting film that would aid in developing a master education philosophy for the school district. Croft Consulting Services of Detroit will work with faculty and administrators, assimilating thoughts on controversial matters such as taxation, sex education, attendance rules and curriculum. areas in the district and concentrate on those quickly, according to Witham. The consultant firm is to review present undefined district policies,.with recommendations for updating and revising operating standards to formulate a comprehensive educational program. A unanimous vote was recorded on the recommendation of School Supe. Dr. A. P. Witham, who said, “We’ve been trying to develop policies during a busy year, and we haven’t done very well." ‘NO MORE SPINNING’ Croft Counsulting Services, specifically, would be employed to coordinate the recording and consideration of policy it Witham thought among school personnel, preventing what termed, “spinning our wheels for lack of a professional aid." The consultants would report national educational trends to the district. They will work with the administrative teams and groups of principals and teachers to define the critical Historical Society to Meet Tomorrow ROCHESTER — The Rochester-Avon Historical Society will hold Its monthly meeting tomorrow at 8 p.m. at the Municipal Building, 40d Sixth. The Historical Society- was formed as an outgrowth ol the recent centennial. WIXOM — City police have no new leads In yesterday’s armed robbery of the Wixom Credit Union, 29100 Wixom. An estimated $8,000 was taken by two bandits — who may be the same men who robbed the credit unionof $8,000 on Sept. 19, according to manager James Price. , Price said the suspects, both armed with automatic pistols, entered the bank The car wqs recovered shortlyafterlhe robbery on th The planned $40-million line will take the county’s sewage from a tie-in at Avon Road and Dequindre to the Northeast Sewage Pumping Station near Seven Mile Road in Detroit. Users will pay for the 12-foot, 9-lnch line through their sewer taxes, Detroit officials said. Another leg eventually will have to be constructed from the pumping station to the sewage disposal plant but for the present, Detroit Water Board spokesmen say, sewage will travel through existing Detroit Systems. Completion of - the two-county interceptor, designed also to serve Macomb County, is expected at the end of 1970 — just about in time to catch wast from th Clinton-Oakland Interceptor which should be finished about that time, according to county officials. In its initial phase the Clinton-Oakland is to serve portions of Avon, Pontiac, Orion, Waterford, West Bloomfield and Independence townships. Also in the planning stages is the Paint Creek Arm, to provide service north from Rochester to portions of Avon and Orion townships, all of Oakland and Oxford townships and the villages of Lake , Orion and Oxford. When complete, the system will cover about a third of tin county, accoriling to Don Ringler, deputy director of the Oakland County Department of Pubic Works. Highland Firemen' Celebrating Week Nature Studies Set This at Kensington No ledcls in Holdup shortly before 11:30 a.m., walked to the rear of the counter and ordered the teller to empty the contents of a cash drawer into a brown paper bag. One of the men ordered the teller to have Price — who was in the rear of the office — come and open the safe. They took the bills froth the safe’s cash drawer, This is a relatively, new concept in planning, according to Supervisor John Doherty. He explained that developers previously would show plans for parks, but would run short of money by the time the development was finished, thus not building' the park. The new amendment assures money for the parks. HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP - The twonship volunteer fire department is celebrating National Fire Prevention Week by visiting local-elementary schools with talks to the children on fire prevention this week. Saturday thf firemen will be at the East Highland Shopping Center, M59 and Duck Lake roads, to answer questions on fire protection and prevention in and around the home. Two special programs are featured this month at the Nature Study Area of Kensington Metropolitan Park near Milford. Nature hikes are scheduled for ? am., GETAWAY CAR STOLEN Hie robbers fled in a sedan which police say had been stolen in Detroit. For Band Concert Marines to Invade' Troy TROY — The U.S. Marine Band will perform in concert Monday at Troy High School.- - -——=——-’Hie band has played in almost every part of the world since it achieved fame 78 years ago wider the direction of John Philip Sousa. J. L. Hudson and Grinnell stores at the Oakland Mall. The Troy performance is part of a 1969 concert tour authorized by President Nixon. All proceeds of the two appearances, at 1:30 and 8 p.m., will be used to buy new uniforms for the Troy High School Marching Band. The concert Is sponsored sby the Troy FOR INAUGURALS The band was created by an act of Congress in 1798. Since that time it has played for every presidential inauguration beginning with Thomas Jefferfqn’s. For the benefit concert, the band will be wearing the full-dress uniform of blue trousers and red coats decorated with black braid and silver epaulettes, .the same uniform worn during concerts and Sill High School Band Boosters. Tickets may urcnasi be purchased at the high school, on Llvernols north of Big Beaver, and at the patriotic occasions Washington. In honor of the event, the City Commission has cancelled its regular meeting. Center Building of the park. The theme is “Nature in Autumn." Park naturalists trill conduct the early-morning hikes. Highlights of the tour wUl include autumn color, waterfowl migration, bird feeding stations and preparations for winter. * * ★ ’ Persons should bring a notebook, binoculars, cameras, and field guides, according to Miss Patricia Eising, supervising naturalist at the park. Youth Group Leaders are Invited to attend a nature study workshop Oct. 25. The workshop will be held from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Visitors should bring their own lunch. Persons participating in the workshop should bring a notebook, hand lens, binoculars, pocket mirror and field guides and wear clothing appropriate for the weather. - - The purpose of the workshop Is to demonstrate activities that youth group leaders can use to promote, an understanding of the natural environment. There is no fee, although persons are requested to contact the Nature Center to register. To help guide people to the Naturae Study Area persons may request a Metropark Guide or Nature Center brochure by contacting the Detroit Office of the Huron-Clinton Metropolitan Authority, 1750 Guardian B ull di n g, Detroit 48226. Marine Band Concert Monday In Troy ... '-j THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8,1969 BIGGER-MORE-BEAUTIFUL-THAN-LAST-YEAR’S No doubt about it—we've got an even bigger, better, more beautiful selection than last year. Again we got together with our favorite dress-makers, picked out their nicest new fall-through-winter things, then priced them at marvelous Jr .# v savings for this delightful event. Hurry in...be sure to take advantage of these [fantastic fashion values right awayi Bonded knits by a famous maker from Hudson's Detroiter Shop, Misses' Dresses SALI 11.97 Two softly shaped two-tone knits fron^fliidjkAn's Detroiter Shop, Women's Dresses DALI 12.97 A bright young collection of wool double knits from St. Clair Shop, Misses' Dresses 9Ail 27*97 Three-piece knit suit by a famous maker from the St. Clair Shop, Women's Dresses SALI 39.97 Polyester knits by famous makers from Hudson's Pontchortrain Shop, Misses' Dresses, SALI 1.9*97 exciting assortment of popular action knits from our Home and Town Dresses SAU 9.97-12.97 Fast-paced kftits by Shaker Square and Wdtden Classics from Home and Town Dresses SALI 7*97 HUDSON’S Pbfltiic Mell, Elizabeth Lake Road, and Telegraph •in. itmps1 Aft ' - \ ' ,1 A-a ' THff PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1969 Hit legality of three scrap yards In southwest Pontiac will be questioned by tiie City Com- At last night’s meeting a hearing date to determine if licenses would be renewed was set for Nov. 4, at 8 p.m. * * ♦ Sr. The yards are: Munson Scrap Metal, Wessen and Congress; Pontiac Scrap at Hess and Branch; and Bagley Auto Parts at Bagley and Irene. The yardl have been operating without licenses since June 1967 when a new ordinance governing scrap yards was passed by the commission. ‘A DISGRACE’ None of the operations meet requirements, It was reported. Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. called the operations * * is Warren Fowler said he was not hi favor of forcing them out of business. He said the Negro people opposed tiiielr original placement, but that he was not going to support their removal now. want no part of trying to force them out of business," he said. HARAMBEE PROJECT Fowler also was opposed a proposed apartment complex between Branch, Warner and Gillespie. The plan is a project of Harambee Inc. which proposes a 10-story, twin-tower on the land just north of Lakeside Homes. He based his objections on placing 200 units next to the 400-unlt Lakeside development You can’t control that area ow,” he said, referring to the crime problem. Fowler charged Harambee development plans were a plot by "the establishment” and The Pontiac Press to put all black people in the southwest portion of the dty. “Then if any trouble breaks out, they can push them into the lake.’’ he said. ' ' * Fowler cast the only vote against holding a public hearing on the project and the motion passed. The hearing was set for 8 p.m., Oct. 28. Hearings were set for I time for two Harambee developments to which no opposition was voiced. The projects call for 80 multiple dwelling units on Distron east of Bagley and 38 units on the southwest comer of Bagley and Wesson. REZONING DENIED In other business the cotft-mission: - ' • Denied rezoning from light to heavy commercial for a Shell station on the southwest comer of Parry and Glenwood on a split vote, 4-3. Voting for denial was, Robot F. Jackson, district 5 and F. Jack Douglas, district 4, James H. Marshall, district 7, and Taylor. Let SIMMS Help You Discover Lower Prices During Our the proposal was presented, i rezone for multiple dwelling use Plan was to cover the boulevard I the northeast comer o f section with a surface to relieve Ypsilantl and Karen to the larking problems f or nearby planning commission. • Rejected a proposed park' ing lot for the median on Raeburn east of Saginaw. At tire public hearing eight parsons along the street objected and a petition with 90 signers against DOWNTOWN PONTIAC w Rezoned the east side of. —, r%. Paddock from Grandview to 340 o/fClGS Of L/6GG Gl N. Paddock from residential to 9 commercial. Are Recovered * * * I • Delayed consideration of a beer and wine take-out license for Perry Pharmacy, 1245 MM, for one week. Deferred consideration of rezoning from single family to multiple family the south side of Dearborn from Woodland to Kennett. WARREN (AP) - The Rev. Robert Escb of the First Cumberland Presbyterian Church of Warren said Tuesday that he has recovered some of the stolen slides of his son, who was killed in Vietnam in 1966. Last week he made a public appeal for the slides to be re- fo—:A.—-*_■ - ItMWWMl He xnlri Set a public hearing”fori45 of the 132 slides were found sidewalk construction on the|by two children north side of Wilson between Offers FREE PARKING OK THE PONTIAC MUNICIPAL LOT (CORNER SA6IHAW and HURON) FumUhed by the Following Merchant*: OSMUN’S MEN'S WEAR 51 N. Saginaw St. CONN'S CLOTHES 73,N. Saginaw BOBETTE SHOP 16 N. Saginaw St. THEPQNTIACPRESS 48 W. Huron St. Sanford and Going for Oct. 21. Cost- was estimated at 13,000 with $700 to be assessed. • Referred a requiest to Foreign tourists spent $230 j million in Denmark in 1968, an increase of 12.5 per cent over 1967. WANT TO SELL LAWNMOWERS, POWER MOWERS, ROLLER SKATES, WAGONS, BICYCLES? USE A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED At). TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 332-8181. mmmmmmmmm Discounts Ail Over the Store-Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. 3 Big Discovery Days — TNURS. 0 am to 0 pm, FBI. 9 am to &30 pm, SAT. 9 am to 0 liteovered America and in 1934 Pontiac discovered the low prices were at Simms, and still toddy you will discover Simms has the lower prices. Compare these special the store. PACK 1 HOUR FREE in DOWNTOWN HALL-Have Ticket Stamped at Time of Purchase “V? aoswsent Heavy Dul Kitchen Towels i it* Your Chtffeo towels • ®(| cotton Ifnen • ,.r" co»on I 16x27 printed terrycloth dish tow-— Basement I® m The Finest Quality-Available Now at SIMMS Rockwell 14-In. Electric Drill Formerly ‘Porta-Cable’ Power Tools With lta. Hsrtwssi Frame 14x50” Door Minor 12x12-lnch Terry Cloth Dishcloth or Oven Mit Super size printed terry doth dishcloth or quilted oven mit, reversible In attractive design. Your.choice. Mix or match. — Basement Regular $14.95 —Save $5.00 Hear. $3.95 hardwood —2nd Floor platejL dustprool bock. * Model 70 Rockwell electric drill is the hem 015 drill you can buy now under $10.00. Fea-tures 2.3 amp motor, 2000 rpm speed, quality 3-jaw chuck, contoured handle for greater drilling leverago. Double reduction gear drive for more flower. Double insulated, selfaligning gears — if they should get damaged, there is over-the-counter guarantee. Power Toole—2nd Floor Easy and Ready to Use Antiquing Kit Regular $4.49 — Give your furniture a charming antique flnlxtu Includes base coat, antique finish and protective sealer. With instructions. Red orwhite. —2nd Floor — Fast Colot Cottons 'SSasa*efgr Whits — ft iSSSSSSSSBt m maaifcPmeT V' ft*.} a Solid color o«4 (or dresses. . curtains, _h ).98e value, j ^ Druu»-Main Floor met Quart Deodorant1 | Reg. \$7.h Drugs-Main Floor "'•'•-2nd'floo. Quilted Put Holders or Polishing Cloths Qulltsd tost color pot hold* •rs to protect your hands or 17x18-Inch flanntl polishing cloths. Your choico. Mix or match. White Rain Shampoo $1.09 value; Toni While Rafo shampoo Ip new lemon, lotion or crystal dear formula. Visine Eye Drops 92 $1.50 value, .5-oz. size Vislnd in plastie or glasscontalner. Drugs—Main Floor Instamatic Wtndproof Butane Cigarette Lighter Regular $2.49 'Instomotlc' butane gas cigarette lighter has adjustable flame, polished chrome finish, windproof. ^ Tobacco-Main Floor 2-Key Wind-Up Style Lux Alarm Clock ''Regular $2.49 —/Lux "UpoIloJ wind-up alarm clock has separate key to wind alarm and time. Decorator white case and loud alarm. #250-0). Sundries—Main Floor K 100% Cotton Rain’n Shim Coat Delightful Children’s Prints 2-Pc. Boys’ Pajamas] Luminous Dial UNDEN Travel Ahum Clock Reg. $1.88 eg.91.ii Value With Decorative Fiberglas Shade! Ashe Portable Lamp 12-pc. style cotton (lonnel po|omqs with o children's toy print, non-slip feet and button front on top. Sizes boys' 2 A 6, Girls' 3 A 4. -Main Floor Reg. $3.95 Ohdsn trawMohN? , and 2-toy Sundctes-M*ln Fleer Reg. $3.95 T Ashe cordless portable lump operates \ on 6-volt battery., ideal for camping, xr power failure. Battery is extra. Sundries-Moln Floor \ Y \Y THE PON 48 West Huron Street HOWARD H. FITZGERALD II Pabli.hw JOHN A. RIIIY' C PRESS Pontiac, Michigan 48056 RICHARD M.SAUI Managing MW Newspaper Week This is National Newspaper Week. Across ‘ the Country, some 3,000 daily and 10,000 weekly publications observe this significant period with fitting acclaim nr product display. The Prsss is publicizing the Week with information booths and a miscellany of product art in the Pontiac Mall. Since the formation of the Republic, newspaperdom has unremittingly striven to preserve the freedom of the press, guaranteed by the First Amendment to the Constitution. Over the years, the unrestricted dissemination of news Sieen assailed from many ata^- President-FranMn-velt would have brought news reporting under his Depression-born NRA (National Recovery Act), which would have imposed a regulatory code on the industry. The administra- tion attempt was successfully opposed by the publishers. Government agencies have sought to clamp a lid on significant news the public-is entitled to under the guise of security or diplomatic privilege. The judiciary and the bar associations have advocated restricted news coverage of criminal cases before the bar. Despite it all, reputable American journalism is still free in the legal and philosophical concept of the word—a patent denied the peoples of the generality of other hations, where publication of news is subservient to state control, partisan politics or oriented to special causes. _* ★____dr it Let each of the 62,535,394— subscribers to the Nation’s daily newspapers and millions more to its weeklies, give thanks for the priceless, democratic— boon that Is thetrs—the boon of a free press. Voice of the People: School Board. Dimmed hyDeader I attended the Clarkston school board meeting September 30. It was my understanding that this/ Seating was galled to explain the board’s position id try to answer questions the public might have. I believe the majority of people there were rude and out of line—shouting and name calling. ★ ★ ★ We all agree we want our children back in school. If the teachers’ demands are met Clarkston can afford it for one year. At the end of the year, additional millage will be needed. What will happen if this millage is voted down? Will we be on half days? If this happens, rest assured it” will be the same rude adults attending another school meeting and dfemaiiding fun days, but not offering" suggestions as to how we pay for them. Waterford schools started their financial setback in just the same way and look at the mess they are in. JUDITH A. BEACH 10250 REESE, CLARKSTON Once And For All, We Hope! Charles Bartlett Rocky Backs Arms for Latins To the Clarkston school board: Did anyone tell you that it’s “back to school’’ time? AN IRATE STUDENT OP CHS ‘Appreciate Assistance in Finding Lost Boy’ We express gratitude to a young man who found and took good care of our little boy when he got lost last week. We appreciate Uhe policeman who entertained him until he could find his npuse, and to all the wonderful neighbors in the vicinity _ whom we don’t even know as we just moved here — for helping us look for our son .until he was found. It’s idee to know that there are people like this around here;—;-— MR. AND MRS. MICHAEL TANNER 694 LEDYARD Plants Can’t Stand the Racket WASHINGTON — Nelson Rockefeller’s report on Latin stamped “top In the unlikely event that anyone is worried about running out of things to worry about, a warning from three scientists at the North Carolina State University in Raleigh contains enough crisis content to fill in any anxiety gaps that may appear at odd moments. Their theory is that, since noise pollution is harmful to man, it ought to be harmful to plants as well,vSince both are biological systems. And if noise is harmful to plants, it may well be doubly harmful to man, since he eats plants. The scientists reported to the Acoustical Society of America on tests they conducted with tobacco plants, which were chosen because their normal growth rates are well-established, especially hi North Carolina. ★ • Twelve plants were allowed to grow in peace and quiet for two weeks in an indoor plot at the univer- sity. Then loudspeakers were turned on, blasting random? noises 4 about 100 decibels, or the level of noise city dwellers are exposed to every day. By the end of the next two weeks, growth rate of the plants had decreased by an average of 40 per cent. , ★ ★ ★ The scientists are alarmed at the untold stress we may be subjecting our farm crops to, what with tractors, mechanical pickers and all kinds of other machinery, not to mention jet airplanes flying overhead. So don’t blame the job for your indigestion. That salad you had for lunch may have been a bundle of nerves. Come to think of it, though, wd’ve been conducting our own experiment this past summer by subjecting the lawn to periodic blastings with a power mower. Didn’t slow the growth rate one bit. Rockefeller’s of military assistance puts his report at complete odds with liberal prescriptions for the development ol Latin America. He wants the Latin governments to do it for themselves, with the help of American trade and investments, and he advocates a weapons supply to assist them in keeping the lid on while they are doing it. Rockefeller’s “law and order” policy for the Latins will strengthen the hand of President Nixon, who must defend his dealings with increasingly repressive military regimes, particularly . in Brazil and Argentina. Political heat is dissolving the hypocrisy which formerly Discusses R.O.T.C. Training in Colleges Where are our future officers to come from if the R.O.T.C. is to be removed from colleges and universities? I prefer our sons to be under command of four-year college graduates who have also received proper prescribed training in all phases ... found beneficial by the military. Men should also be able to nshrouded—m 11 itary—follow this chosen career jitet as any other offered. If a college cannot publicly support its country’s army, 1 feel it should not be eligible for any Federal money. HAPPY TO BE AMERICAN Bruce Biossat Bob Considine American Revolution Has Revolting Aspects NEW YORK — Did a piece some time ago, after seeing a ■hairy hippie playing a reed pipe in Central Park, and got a bit angry about people of this sort in general. The mall was generally in agreement. The most interesting (or arresting) retort came from a San Francisco reader, Raymond L. T. Nelson. I give you Mr. Nelson: “In your article you said that if the boy with the long hair, his dirt, and his reed had tried to join Sam Adams and Paul Revere at the Boston Tea Party, ‘they would have thrown him ovelboard — and saved the tea.’ ★ ★ ★ “Perhaps. But if Adams and Revere were men up with the normal fashions of their day, both must have worn long-queues of hair that reached below their shoulders. ■ “Standards of personal cleanliness were not high. The Saturday night bath came in in mid-Victorian times. Pigs root- assistance OLD PRACTICE The old practice was to give the Latin governments what was needed to keep them friendly in the name of “hemisphere defense.” Now U.S. officials concede publicly that their arms policy is aimed at enabling able gift can we give our children than a well-rounded edu- ‘Support Waterford School Board Efforts’ Our parents paid taxes so we could have a high school education. We should do as much for our children so they in turn can properly educate their families. What more vriu- CONSIDINE TTTf • ■ ti cij. if r ry ■ •11 ■ ry_ ■ ■ • Saturday night bath came m in mid-vtctonan times. ngs rooi- Whlte House Staff 18 Still Sputtering ed atrartl °f m* colonial dtto. forming the sanitation WASHINGTON (NEA)-Presldent Nixon may be well on the way to discovering that in this tangled era there may be no nice way to be president, nor to run the White House establishment. The pressures ire building nmosAT against him ®I0SSAT to move faster to disengage this country from the Vietnam war. Ahd knowledgeable sources say a still-rampant inflation weighs almost as heavily on his mind. —As if all this were not enough, he has to face the fact that his huge White House staff may be functioning less smoothly today than in its early shakedown months. * * * When in a short time five members of Henry Kissinger’s National Security Council staff hand In their notices, the matter cannot quite be dismissed as the ac- cidental conjunction of five plausible individual plans. Several sources believe the Kissinger staff has suffered an embarrassment of riches. Says one source qualified to judge: "There has been a collision Of too many talents. As a result there are a lot of bruised egos on that staff.” One Insider who agrees says the problem is complicated by the fact that some overlap occurs in NSC job functions. by experts for failure to winnow out Important matters from among the flood of requests and problems the lawmakers dump into White House channels. FLOW OF COMPLAINTS Scratch most any GOP congressman or senator any day and you can get a flow of complaints — political, personal and otherwise. Some appraisers say the White House staff as a whole is much too Mg, too “heavily layered,” and mat many staff people do not know each Efficiency s distant dream. Verb?! Orchids The inevitable clash Is made worse, some close watchers say, by a circumstance which really constitutes a second major problem r- Kissinger’s frequent extensive absences from the White House and the lack of a real deputy to take ' . _ ., his place. Mr. am* Mr*- Charles F. Lloyd Kissinger is away often of 129 Kemp; because he shadows Nixon 83rd wedding anniversary, closely - at the President’s Mr. and Mrs. Charles B. MarteD wish. But with no substitute quarterback on the White House scene, the h 1 g h • powered NSC aides qre generally rudderless in d WHIPPED, HANGED “As for the young man’s ideas about pacifism, or anything else, whether or not he could say them depended on which colony he was in. Massachusetts was a theocracy that whipped and hanged Quakers. “Every substantial patiW from Maryland and points below that I have ever heard of was a slaveowner. “What about the Loyalist families? They were driven from homes and harassed by Sam Adams’ and Paul Revere’s Liberty Boys. Where do you think the modern revolutionaries learned their trade? "I have put in a few of the grimy details. There was much heroism, some examples of sublime courage, some ideals that still shine, but this was done by men — not twodimensional cardboard figures in the intellectual pablum that our history is written In.” , BERRY’S WORLD-By Jim Berry the Latin governments to suppress violence wMle they press for economic progress. Military assistance to Latin America has raised two main issues. One is that it encourages the diversion of scarce resources into an arms race. The second, more basic issue is that the arms supply may facilitate the military’s repression of political change. A total of 16 coups since 1961 has lent new meaning to tiie old warning that Latin America is being occupied by its own armies. * UNDER THE GUN More than half the Latin population is now subject to political power derived from “the barrel of a gun.” But the Rockefeller task force was impressed in its travels by the ruling generals who asked, “If not us, who?” ■ W - :★* it . The visitingexperts found it hard to dismiss, in country after country, , the generals’ argument that they are more hopeful instruments of progress in terms of training, background, and unselfish patriotism, than the politicians and businessmen. The United States has accepted the military solution as a last resort against the turmoil threatening Brazil. ___Now there are nine of these governments, all beleaguered by troubles, and Washington’s only alternative is to back their struggles to ward off cation? This cannot be done without a full day of school elementary and secondary. As a temporary solution, our Waterford school board is asking for a millage increase of nine mills for one year. This is the least possible increase to keep our schools operating. Support our school board members and help them do their best for our children. A CONCERNED PARENT Another Shopper Says Mall Needs Carts I am also unhappy about not being able to use a cart et the Pontiac Mall. I have polio and using a cart helped me to walk. I am not able to carry very much while ahotytag. J suggest a system of chargng a deposit on carts, which would ■ be returned when the cart was brought back in good condition. That way people wouldn’t leave, them all over the parking lot. ' ; L. R. BARNES DAVISBURG ‘City Will Benefit From Group’s Efforts’ I wonder how many now regret the loss of Charles M. Tucker as commissioner of District 1? Mr. Tucker would have been a valuable asset to our City had he been elected. However, Pontiac will still profit from the foresight, intelligence and understanding of Mr. Tucker and Harambee. All of Pontiac should be proud of such a wonderful group of people as these who choose to “let us work together."- MRS. JOYCE HOOD 388 ELM ‘Suggest Renting Hall for Voicing Opinions’ It Is fortunate that your editorial Influence is continually Himinshing. The suggestion that school board meetings last indefinitely so that everyone can voice Ms opinion—“more than once if necessary”—reaches a new height of absurdity, Why don'tyou rent a hall for these who like to express their personal opinions—over and over and over—and then perhaps, the school board members can proceed with the order of business for wMch they are held responsible without the, Interruptions of those who are less informed and less responsible, J. T. PETERSON WATERFORD ClUll • ft moo • year, .1..- ;ii ii repeatedly In Some conflict, i BRIGHT CONTRAST Nevertheless, Kissinger's tough . command has been a bright contrast to the long-uncoordinated White of Tlroy; Mth wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hoskins of u Park: 57th wedding anniversary. MM. W, II. Williamson of Winter Park, Fla., formerly of Pontiac; a 182nd birthday.' Mrs. Floyd H. 8 took well Sic sphere.0"* ,n ** ** of 140 W. Hopkins, 82nd birthday. There is not now nor ever Mrs. Annie Gray has been a genuine domestic of 37 N. Johnson; 91st birthday, coordinator. • Mrs. Grace Blount The congressional liaison staff, biggest In hlattrf, crucial to the PreaUtafi **■ legislative hopes, la criticised of 964 Voorheii; 82nd birthday. Questions and Answers (Q) Why does the City need a brand up scraps of paper off the streets?-Not only that, but they have two men on the track. I would think a small truck could do the job as well and more cheaply, and I doubt they find too many pieces of (Q) My Hl1^ u to drey out of college to “make some money before he gets too old.” Somewhere I’ve money a college graduate make! In a track Is IK. PONTIAC TAXPAYER of 83Mb Matthews; 91st birthday. ■ “Don'tchu youpg people realize that marijuana la VERY BAD for you?” (A) The truck is ofre-ton, not two, and a smaller truck would require many trips back and forth to the land-fill site. As it is, the truck can usually hold a full daft load, except, on very busy days, when it's necessary to unload be* fore completing, dir day’s work. Two men art now used because it’s unsafe for ihe driver to step into traffic, mull controls will soon be put on the truck, so the driver can be on the right Mi, and then only one man will bf used. so I can fry to keep him from bring a WORRIED (A) Recent figures estimate a u man with four years of high school makes $841,000 during his work- * inf years, compared to $508,000 | for a man with four years of coir lege. (Q) I knew Rw real name, but 1 can’t find the clipping tbit told hit whole lame. Can yen help a falling memory? ’OLD FAN (A) Rodolpho Alfonzo RafOelo Pierre Filibert Guylielmi di Valentina d’Antonguolla. And whose memory wouldn’t fail on that one? THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY) OCTOBER 8, IMP n_________.______ , A—T | People in fhe News I By The Anoclated Pre»» H Dr. Samuel H. Sheppard’s German-born second adit, who says she spent a fortune helping clear him of a murder conviction/ was granted a divorce yesterday in Cleveland. She charged gross neglect. Mrs. Sheppard, this former Arlene Tebbejohanns, and the osteopath were married In July 1964, two days after a fed* i eral court had freed him from the Ohio Penitentiary. He had ■ served nearly 10 years of a life sentence on a conviction of bludgeoning his first wife to death. .★............ „ Mrs. Sheppard, a Dusaeldorf heiress who corresponded with Sheppard while he was in prison, said she spent nearly $200,000 on legal expenses and supporting her husband until he regained his license to practice osteopathy. Sheppard now practices in Columbus. STEP THIS WAY OXFORD FASHION FORMEN Our Reg. 6A4 JM 113 Day Only]. iP1 •Mlc S^relrt oxfords ferthestyfo jrindad I» «« HOUSEWIFE HEARD - Mrs. Ross DeLorenzo, a Levit-town, N.Y., housewife who is leading a meat boycott, talks with Rep. John W. Wydler, R-N.Y., yesterday at a House subcommittee meeting in Washington, D.C. Mrs. DeLorenzo engaged In heated exchanges with congressmen over the causes of meat-price rises. ★ ' ★ . ★ , The child, Michael Deon Brown, Is a year old. Brown also agreed to pay Miss Brown’s lawyers 632,76$. 1-Day Police, Fire Strike Ends in Montreal;! Killed Star* Hynted for War on Pollution MONTREAL (AP) - Police gnd fire protection returned to normal in Montreal today after a one-day strike by more than 6,000 police and firemen seeking pay raises threatened Canada’s largest city with chaos. A provincial policeman was shot to death during a battle be- tween rival groups of drivers. A mob of Die Quebec provincial legislature met in emergency session late Tuesday bight and ordered youths roamed the streets Tuesday night, smashing Windows and looting stores. j Ten bank robberies and nearly a score‘of other thefts were reported. About 800 provincial police were rushed to the city to aid about 200 senior police officers who stayed at their posts, A skeleton force of firemen also remained on duty. Several hundred army troops were Down Into the area but did not enter the city. 12:01 a.m. today. Union Members of the 6,700-man police force began quitting their posts at 0 a.m. Tuesday. They were joined shortly afterward by most of the city’s 2,400 firemen, who are also involved In a wage dispute with the city. Eddie Albert, veteran of stage, screen and television, says he hopes to enlist acting stars such as Paul Newman and Burt pollution. r~~ Albert told a news conference in Washington yesterday the Idea was to get people into action have the opportunities to NEWMAN *et on teIevtoton" tnd add- LANCASTER ed: “Science will give us the script, so to speak — give us the facts — and we’ll put them into language appropriate for TV.*’ Bowling May Be Down Pat'* Alley The policemen, who are not permitted by law to strike, seek a $l,900-a-year increase in salaries now averaging 67,300 a year. They rejected an arbitration board’s recommendation of a $1,100 hike. The firemen have rejected an arbitration award of a 61,090 annual raise, which would bring their pay to $8,000. They seek $9,000. Pat Nixon says she plans to take up bowling seriously so she can oUtscore her husband in their games on the presidential bowling alley in the Executive Office Building next to the White House. Mrs. Nixon made her disclosure while accepting a lifetime membership in the Women’s International Bowling Congress yesterday In Washington. “I love the sport,” she said. iWf BACK IN THE SADDLE — Police motorcycles left rider-i by a strike in Montreal yesterday were in operation today as the Quebec provincial legislature ordered police firemen back to work. NIXON Warmth Without Weight! Women** Warmth Wifhout Weight! FUR LOOK AND PILE COATS FUR-LOOK COATS 3 Daya Only Our Reg. i 7.88 Reg. 13,44 • 28.84 1444 HHR Charge It The name of the game Is: Air fabric suburbans that look twice the prical 659b Acrilan® acrylic. 85% Verel® modacrylio with polyester backing. The nocare, fur looks that travel everywhere in high atylel 6 to 16. Our Reg. 1*39 3 Day Only 1.33 Dm Purvel*. vinyl with a FVC- sole for addsd tupportSnd leather*] comfortable walking. Versatile, oolorst black, brawn. 614-12. Women way to atyle and coaifort in this filmdow Antiqued er-Hke Vinyl period Penny Mae. In Cobbler Tan. on’s and Tsan’s slats 6-10, 1 ' Charge Ilf Thank You for Shopping at Kmart! i unusual, cardiologists said, twins would both have heart GLENWOGD PLAZA . North Perry at Glenwood 6 & M & ELLIS Sine* 1945 a in n. tafiMw CEMINT WORK • PATIOS GARAGES • ADDITIONS 80 U.S.Boats SAIGON (AP) - The U.S. Navy will transfer 80 river patrol boats to the'Vietnamese Navy Friday in the largest sinr gle turnover of naval materiel in the war, South Vietnamese mllitairy headquarters announced today. A U.S. Navy spokesman said the turnover is part of the U.S. program to “Vietnamize” the war so that more American forces can be withdrawn. A South Vietnamese spokesman said the 80 boats would be divided equally among four fiver patrol groups which will form a task force to be commissioned at ceremonies Friday. The turnover will bring to 229 the total of U.S. Navy craft transferred to the Vietnamese. since June 1968, or about 40 per, cent of the 550 American boats patrolling South Vietnam’s inland waterways. The Other 321 are to be turned over during the next nine months. MW-MAN CUT The U.S. Command a«iy> 33,800 American Navy men now are in Vietnam. President Nixon has announced, a 5,000-man cut for the Navjr ar piit ^ 'the 35,000-man withdrawal scheduled to be completed by Dec. 15. Meanwhile, Premier .Tran Thien Klein predicted today that, there will bd no “breik-through” in the war until g new supreme leader emerges in He-noi. Asked about Senate Republican leader Hugh Scott’s statement Monday that there might be a breakthrough in the war pi the next 60 to 90 days, Khiem replied: \ “Now Jtoere is a collective leadership in North Vietnam, and there must be before anyone, can maty»4 sion. It depends on emerging *s the ’ Vietnam?’ pated In the wake of President Ho Chi Minh’s death to crystallize for some months. They believe the contest will be between Le Duan, the pro-Moscow first secretary of the North Viet namese Communist party, and Truong Chinh, another poiitburo member who is pro-Peking. Khiem, speaking to newsmen during a hospital dedication in Saigon, said the government Is expecting ’ another sharp in crease in enemy attacks. “We are waiting for another high point,” he said. “The enemy is weak, but despite this he has the capability to create disturbances, so everyone must be on the defense.” The national police in a weekly summary reported 148 confirmed. acts of Vietccng terrorism during the week ending Oct. 1. The report said 98 civilians were Wiled, 138 were wounded and 36 kidnaped. The week before, 283 incidents were reported, with 163 civilians killed, 328 wounded and 94 Wdnaped. Again only light and scattered ground fighting was reported as the general lull continued. A? of January 1968, the U.S. government had 200,544 civilian employes working in foreign countries, a 50 per cent increase since 1963. SAVE 50% A MORE! Spectacular saving! now on men's 14.99-16.99 Dunhllls 8.84 a. Reg. .16.99 D-Ring genuine handsewn ilip-on hat hidden gore. Black 6r brown, sizes to 12. ' b. Reg. 14.9^ 5-4yelol Bal ttyle saddle oxford has Goodyeor weIt, smooth block/bronzo combo, c, Rog. 16.99 handsewn smooth black sllp-on with braided Interweave strap,, sizes to 12. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1969 Famous maker knit coordinates reg. $7'*16 Seasonably appropriate, stylishly correct.. .these Acrllan® acrylic double-rknlt separates put together a sporting look that's super. Choose deep, rich brown, luscious burgundy, hunter green or gold. 10 to 18. • Tapered pull-on pants; solids. 5.99 • Slim pull-on skirt In solids. 5.99 • Solid color sleeveless shell. 3,99 • Striped cardigan |acket. 8.99 > Solid color body shirt. 4.99 Solid color V-neck pant top with stripe trim. 6.99 Not oil colon available at all i Take advantage of savings... credit's the modem way to shop. POWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS TII% FONTIACa PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1969 A—O Cuba Retrieytf ^AIG; Pilot Stays in U. S. HOMESTEAD AIR FORGE BASE, FI*. (AP) — A Russian- built MIG fighter which eluded aircraft, carrying loaded can U.S. defenses and landed near non and machine guns, was able President Nixon’s Air Force to breach a supposed security One jetliner has been flown network at a time when the back to Cuba. i presidential plane was waiting In Washington the question was raised in Congress how the to take Nixon back to Washing-1 ton from his Biscayne retreat, j ' *'/: * * A Defense Department spokesman said Tuesday that the fighter, piloted by a defecting Cuban pilot, flew too low most of the way to be spotted byi Seconds later two sleek F104 ground radar, and added that {jets streaked IntothealrUTgive radar picket planes normally aloft were not in the air whan the jet fighter slipped in Sun-da*'. The Miami Herald said the picket flights had been canceled for the first time in eight years lenses, because of a military economy PENTAGON QUESTIONED Rep. Charles E. Bennett, D it close escort out of American territory. On the floor of the House of Representatives, Rep. Paul Rogers, D-Fla., asked what was being done to tighten UJ7 de- drive. PLANE FERRIED BACK A ferry pilot attired in a Cuban military Uniform arrived with five Cuban Air Force personnel aboard-a Cuban commercial airliner'Tuesday to fly the MIG home. The pilot edged the snubnosed fighter Into the sky at 3:45 p.m. Fla., a member of the House Armed Services Committee, said he has asked the Defense Department to find out why the Cuban plane wasn’t detected more promptly. -The Pentagon said Monday the defecting pilot, Lt. Eduardo | Guerra Jimepez; evaded U.S. I radar almost until landing by flying at altitudes of 30 to 40 feet. j “We have known for some time that our ’ low-level radar capability is somewhat limited,” said Jerry Friedheim, deputy assistant secretary of defense. Guerra’s plane wad seen once on radaf, 13 minutes before his landing, U.S. radar spotted him then only because he rose to 1,000 feet to get his bearings before dropping down to the low altitude he maintained throughout the rest of the flight. -•Guerra, who was granted political asyium, was being kept at an undisclosed location at his own request. He said his family is still in Cuba. K^Y PUNCH, 6 months experience BOOKKEEPER, 1 year experience £? FIGURE CLERK no typing, will train EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY with fringe benefits Apply in Person K MART ENTERPRISES 3000 W. 14 Mill of Cool.dg. Royal Oak Interviews: Week Days 8 a.m.-4 p.m. $at,9a.m.-Z p.m. An Iqu.l Opportunity Employer WANT TO SELL LAWNMOWERS, POWER MOWERS, ROLLER SKATES, WAGONS, BICYCLES? USE A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. TO PLACE YOURS, C£LL 332-8181. MiG's Guns Bared As AF Mechanics Check It Out Tests Called Step to Cure White Cells Kill SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Scientists have reported first tests showing that white blood cells from a cancer patieht can kill that patient’s cancer cells. They say thq tests might lead to a new way of treating malignancies. A team of researchers from the University of Washington Medical School said Tuesday they cultured tuiqor cells from 12 patients with neuroblastoma, a cancer of the nervous system. When disease-fighting white cells called lymphocytes were taken from the same patients’ Mood and placed in the culture, they said, the number of tumor cells was reduced 50 per cent. “The results demonstrate for the first time that live tumor cells taken frofn a patient and grown in the laboratory can be killed by lymphocytes obtained from the same patients,” Dr George E. Pierce said., SURGEON’S CONVENTION He spoke at convention of the American College of Sur cytes against tumor cells outside the body is similar to/the role they play in attacking heart or kidney transplants or other foreign material in the body. V ★ * ★ In cancer patients, however, there apparently is some Unknown factor which interferes with the lymphocyte action and permits tumors to grow. “It someday may be possible to alter tumor immunity to lymphocytes in such a way that this can be used in the treatment of some malignancies,” he said, GRUEN WATCHES 29.88 17-jewel roan's and women's watches Watches dll have reliable shock-resistant movements with unbreakable mainsprings. For women, choose 'Gay' with two diamonds, or ’Morion’, oval-styled with matching band. Men's self-winding 'Fleet' Is water-resistant; 'Ocean' records date. BRIDAL SETS 49.00 Former special day Lovely bridal sets Include engagement ring with matching wedcllng ring. All are UK gold. Select :from various styles. 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Plan ororycobinot in wind ueode.S|iei.iuHorlbil enteot big pricn reduction._ *484 Free off-en THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1069 A—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1969 Deaths in Pontiac, Neighboring Areas i, Lonnie B. Farmer Service for Lonnie B. Farmer, 61, of 304 Crystal Lake will be 1 p.m. Friday at the Davis-€obb Funeral Home with burial in "OaTHflt Cemetery. Mr. Farmer, a retired employe of Pontiac Motor Division, died Saturday. Surviving are a son, John W., of Mississippi; a sister; and two granddiildren. IBs body may be viewed after 6:30 p.m. tomorrow. Pontiac Township and Mrs. Eugene Avery of Lake Orion; a brother; 13 grandchildren; and 10 great-grandchijdren. Mrs. Margaret C. Hunter Mrs. Margaret C. Hunter, 76, of 4545 Waterford, Waterford Township, died this morning. Her body is at Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. Faith H. Malcolm Graveside service for Faith H. Malcolm, infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Malcolm of 900 S. East Blvd.,, was to be this afternoon at White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Arrangements were by the Voorheea-Siple Funeral Home. The day-old infant died yesterday. Surviving are her parents; sister, Hope M. at home;. and grandparents Mr. ana Mrs. West Branch died yesterday. The body is at William R. Potere Funeral Home. The body is At Pries Funeral Home. Bell Executive Killed ii Donald E. McGaw, vice David A. Haddow Mrs. Russell Vanluven TROY — Service for David A. Haddow, 84, of 1151 Hartland will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at Price Funeral Home, with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. Mr. Haddow died yesterdajy. He was a retired machine repairman of the Packard Motor Car Co. of Detroit. Surviving is one son, Henry A. of Troy. president of planning for Michigan Bell Telephone Co., died / as a result of injuries received .yesterday in an auto accident in. Sens, France. He James Malcolm and Mr. andj Mrs. Rick Thompson, all of Pontiac, John J. Meiers Frank A. Jones Lelah S. Thorpe Service for Frank A. Jones, 72, of 3300 Sashabaw, Waterford Township, will be 1 p.m. Friday at COats Funeral Home, Waterford Township. Mr. Jones, a real estate Service for Mrs. Lelah S. Thorpe, 89, formerly of 117 University, will be 11 a.m. tomorrow at Sparks . Griffin Chapel with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. salesman, died yesterday. Hei Miss n,*,* who had Uved to was a member of Won)Pontiac all her life.jtted Community United Presbyterian yesterday. She WAS a member Church. ! 0f First Presbyterian Church, Surviving are his wife, Har-the 0akland County Humane riett; a son, Leslie of Seminole, Soclety and Oakland County Okla.; three daughters, Mrs. Pioneer and Historical Society. Gordon Smith of Clawson, Mrs. Joe Kelly of Englewood, Colo., and Mrs. Arnold Groves of Waterford Township; two! ROCHESTER — Former sisters, Mrs. John O’Connor of I resident Everett Casey, 65, of AVON TOWNSHIP - Service, for John J. Meiers, 82, of 2805' Norton Lawn will be 2 p.m. I Friday at Pixley Memorial Chapel with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Tlroy. Mr. Meiers' died yesterday. He was a retired dairy farmer. Surviving are his wife, Myrtle; two sons, Floyd* of Rochester - and Harold m l Cadillac; one brother, William of Rochester; one sister, Mrs. Mjldred Bliemaster of Rochester; seven grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren. PONTIAC TOWNSHIP* -Service for Mrs. Russell tJennie) VanLuven, 77, of 432 Slocum will be 1:30 p.m. Friday at Auburn Heights Presbyterian Church, with burial in White C h a p e 1 Memorial Cemetery, Troy, by Harold R. Davis Funeral Home. Mrs. VanLuven died yesterday. She was a member of Auburn Heights Presfryterian Church. Surviving are one daughter, Mrs. Hazel Rose of Pontiac' Township; one son, George of Pontiac; eight ^grandchildren; and 10 great-grandchildren. was 51. Surviving , are his wife, Em- ma, who was also injured in the accident; one son, Donald D, of East Lansing; and his father, Joseph A. of Berkley. Gunman Robs Service Station Active In civic affairs McGaw of 733 North Valley A lone guman held up the Clark Service Station, 157 Auburn, early today and escaped with $72. Funeral arrangements h»ve;chase .Bloomfield Township notyet been made, 4 in 4-H Contest EAST LANSING (API-Three girls and a boy will be representing Michigan Monday at the national 4-H dairy cattle judging contest in Columbus, Ohio. Michigan’s entrants include Dana Sue Hazle, 17, of St. Johns; Marcia Krhovsky, 17, of Corunna; Natalie Thacker, 18, way national director of Junior Achievement Inc.' and president and director of Junior Adiieve-ichlgan. ment of Southeastern Mid He was a board member of the Michigan State University Business Alumni Association, a member of the Finance Committee of the Michigan Council on Economic Education, the Vocal Rehabilitation Project Committee of the United Community Services, the Economic Statical attendant Dory Nitzschke told Pontiac police that the robber entered station about 2:40 a.m. on the pretense of getting change. Nitzschke said that as he was opening the cash register, the man produced a sawed-off rifle and demanded that Nitzschke turn over all the cash. of Coldwater; and Bruce Pec- Club of Detroit and the Greater kens, 17, of Howell. Detroit Chamber of Commerce. The history of the existence of man has been traced back 20 million years to a time when a primitive man ape lived in Africa. Brandon Market Break-In Probed The theft of 61,500 And am undetermined amount #1 merchandise from b Brandon Township market, was under investigation today by the Oakland County Sheri fjMi Department. Deputies said that burglars entered Tom’s Super Market, 465 South, by chopping A hole in the roof. The break-in was discovered yesterday. ' * * A In addition to the cash, deputies were told that the stolen goods included wrapped freezer meat, a quarter side of beef, beer, wine and cigarette. Some 80,000 babies each year born in the U.S. die before their first birthday. Everett Casey Dudley B. Smith TROY - Dudley B. Smith, 56, of 476 Beldale died yesterday. Finch Sees Shakeup in FDA WASHINGTON (AP) — The foods containing cyclamatesi The FDA has ordered prod-Food and Drug Administration’s with extreme care unless fur-pets containing cyclamates to handling of studies on the artifi-1^ 8tudles removed a'u. doubts ** labeled wlth the amount con‘ cial sweetener cydamate may about thelr | tained, but the regulations have lead to reorganization of the 7 ... not yet become effective, agency, says Secretary of ; Ley hes emphasized the stud- * * * Health, Education and Welfare Robert H. Finch. "I am not at all satisfied with the present situation there,” Finch said in an interview Tues- ies still are tentative and that effects of the sweetener on {lower animals might not be the same as its effects on man. IN WIDE USE day. “I think it’s just inevitable^ Cyclamates are found ht such that we’re going to have some foods as bheoo, chewable vita-rather substantial. reorganize- mins for children, medicinal sy-tion of procedures and person- rups, gelatin and frozen deserts nd” in thp,FDA. j as well as diet foods and soft * * drinks. The FDA estimates_______ Nearly a year after FDA stud- consumption will exceed 21 mil-les indicated cyekunates can ]jon pounds this year, with sales cause genetic breakdowns in estimated at nearly $300 million rats, FDA Commissioner Her- a year. bert L. Ley Jr. announced last —— ------------™r---------——— week the agency was initiating a hurry-up study of its effects on other anjmals The order followed a study last December by the nongovernmental National Academy of Science which concluded it had no "serious suspicions” about the sweetener’s effect on humans, but recommended maximum intake levels for adults and children. Ley said last week the FDA wants a reassessment by the National Academy. With its completion in 30 days, Ley said, the FDA then will determine if restrictions' are warranted. Finch said the FDA had come up with varying assessments of side effects on the estimated 175 million Americans who take the sweetener in products ranging from bacon to diet foods and drinks. Arab Refugees Need Aid Cash “We have appeared to waver UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. provided by UNRWA must con-on it,” he said. “Some have (AP) — New fuel was added to’tinue. been overzealous, saying‘Sure, the Middle East debate today as He said the services now this may not be final or conclur the U.N. agency for Pales- being given “cannot be substan-tine refugees warned that Ually reduced without bringing Arab-Israeli fighting and a father hardship to many hundreds of thousands of persons already on the verge of destitution, adding to their feelings of desperation and setting in train widespread repercussions that would exacerbate the inflamed and dangerous situation in the Middle East.” Commenting on the running battle between Israel and its Arab neighbors, Michelmore sive ... but we still ought to run up the flag and sound the bugle,’ and others have gone too far the other way.” Finch referred to a widely publicized experiment conducted by Dr. Jacqueline Verrett, an FDA scientist, in which 15, per cent of chicks hatched from eggs injected with cyclamates had birth'defects. shortage of financial contributions threaten it with ruin. Laurence Michelmore of the United States, comi general of the U. N. Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees, (UNRWA) called on the - members of the General Assembly to increase their con-, tributions for the care of near-Dr. Verrett was quoted as ad- jy 1,4 million Arabs in his or-vising pregnant women to use ganization^s refugee wimps. said Arab 5^ thrust8 and ^ Michelmore cautioned that raelicountemeasures had "im- any reduction in aid would in- P°sed ,ex‘ra 8tralhs on . flame the Middle East further. «*«"«* »*■«• The agency is receiving In the Gaza Strip, he said, in-538,287,902 this year, 522,200,000 of it from the United States. Michelmore in his annual report to the assembly said he would probably end the year with a deficit of 53.3 to $3.8 million. He forecast a similar deficit next year and said his agency "is thus faced with the threat that Its cask reserve will be exhausted—perhaps early In 1970.” Nursing-Home Unit Reelects Avon Mon I An area man who is an authority on the care of geriatric patients has been reelected president 0 f the Michigan Nursing Home -Assoeiation,--- Basil F. Boyce, 947 Hem p s t e a d, Avon Township, was elected to his first term as association president a year ago. He recently testified in lngs on Medicaid held by the U.S. Department of iHealth, Education and Welfare. Boyce was the chief author of Michigan’s graduated costs of paUent'care and has insisted on per diem cidents of violence “were an almost continuous feature of life there, and the agency cpuld not escape some of the consequences such as the arrest, detention and imprisonment of staff for alleged illegal activities outside of their official duties.” 54 ARRESTED Michelmore said 54 members rNEED CONTINUES’ of his staff had been arrested “It is obvious,’’ Michelmore fr9m ^u,y 1968 June 11969 a"d that as long as the prob- some of them were sentenced to lem of the refugees remains unsettled, the need for the services BOYCE Mac Rec Dept. prison terms He said the violence had hammered the agency’s educational program. If the program were curtailed further by lack of funds, he said, “the horizon of the refugees would be even more limited and a valuable form of technical assistance to the Arab wbrld would be lost.”' Meanwhile, diplomatic sources reported that Gunnar V. Jarring, the special U.N. representative for the Middle East, Three courses for adults will be offered by the Pontiac Parks and Recreation, beginning tomorrow evening. ... .. ., _ . A proponent of better and' ★ * * was returning tonight to his post more comprehensive care, he Classes in oil painting for as Swedish ambassador in Mos- was on former Gov. George beginners, men’s physical cow a*ter Another apparently Romney’s and Gov. William fitness and cake decorating will fruitless round of folks with fpr- MilKken’s committees to set begin at 7 p.m. at Kennedy eip ministers who came for the rates for the state’s nursing; Junior High, 1700 Baldwin. ! assembly opening homes. Boyce is taka, Pontiac. administrator of 632 Orchard The two-hour courses will last eight weeks, and the cost is $8 for each activity. Jarring was expected sums his U.N. mission whenever there is a prospect ment forward. KjfJ PUBLIC NOTICE FURNITURE AND APPLIANCE SALE STARTS 10 A.M. THURSDAY ASSETS PFI OHGmato atlas furniture and discount FURNITURE CITY THAT WERE AUCTIONED OFF BY THE OAKLAND COUNTY SHERIFF DEPT. BY THE ORDER OF THE COURT CASE NO. C.C. 69-56613. SALE AT 20 NORTH SAGINAW NEXT TO PONTIAC STATE BANK ALL SALES FINAL MERCHANDISE SOLD AS IS F.O.B. STORE FIRST COME FIRST SERVED. NOTHING HELD RACK. A PARTIAL LIST of approx. ’100,000 worth of FURNITURE and APPLIANCES LIVING ROOM BEDROOM AND BEDDING APPLIANCES Rust Twsed Colonial Sofa and $77°® chair, wood maple trim...... . II 100% Nylon Sofa and Chair, foam SCQOO cushions. Choice of colors..... 03 Sleep Sofa, $1Q00 All Colors.........................IJL______ French Prov. Cold Sofa $COOO foam zipper cushions ....i.......... VO Swivel Rockers $1000 All Colors................... IV 3 Piece Brown Sectional $1OROO with attached tables........... ■ Sofa Bed and Chair. $CQ Choice of Colors............... OW Walnut 3-Piece Suite Solid Walnut Crasser Mirror, Chestwnd Bed. $4000 OQ00 Wringer Washer. Washer......... Bunk Bods, Guard Rail M 000 and Holders, French Provincial Dresser $4 onoo Chest and Bad................. 109 Dryer... Refriger- Odd Dressers. Odd Chests , Odd Bods. $I500 $|Q00 $000 LAMPS ’2” Innerspring Mattress or $1488 Box Spring ..................... IA 60 Assort* DINETTES Posture Built Dutton Free Mat- $2000 trass or Bax Spring, extra firm. All Styles TABLES ..*4" .......*23°° 7-Piece $4700 Dinette.................... OI Odd $R00 Chairs........................... V Wood Dining Room $ 14C00 Suite, complete............ I Aw China $Ef|00 Cabinets........................ 9U Odd Wood $9f|00 Dining Room Tables............ All Odd Formica $11100 I................ t- MM » and Box Spring. *8D" MISCELLANEOUS CHAIRS.. $10°° Record Oabinats $11100 ajj v ™ mirrors. Large pic Tour Oho All Colors, *000 .*39" Artificial Plant $000 Floor Model...0 V,, BRING YOUR TRUCK OR TRAILER WII0AD OPEN DAILY 10*9 10-5 PUBLIC SALE 20 NORTH SAGINAW DAILY 10-0 ' , l , . .14 I1BRWJ.RMM5 : Y ' " , ' Yfe V' .. ;■■■■ ‘ V. Z 1 SALE.., Hugo selections of mini-pictures and mirrors Repeat of a sell-out! Dramatize your walls with interesting groupings* Choose from a large assortment of mirrors and reproductions of famous artists paintings. All have gold color accent frames. Approximately 5x7 and 6x7-inches. Have several now at big savings! .lomps—Hudson', Budget Store!— SALE well-known Restonaire firm button-tufted mattress Talk about extra comfort! Well-known Restonaire for dependable quality. But-ton-tufted style with green and white cotton .cover. Extra-firm pre-built borders won’t sag. Tempered kteel coils for restful sleep. Twin or full. Matching box springs. .. . . . . i 34.88 Bedding—Hudson's Budget Stores- MTRODUCTORY SALE! sensational new al puniose indoor-outdoor carpeting The new carpeting you’ve seen advertised in leading home magazines! Now exclusive at HB$ ip the Detroit area! Won't wear out. won’t rot and ignores effects of weather... its stain-free* fire-free, fade-free. Marvess® olefin pile with loc-tuft back. A desirable color selection* too... heathertone shades of seatone, forest, gold, Scotch* Irish and autumn. Have this new discovery in and out of your home now at savings! Carpeting you can use anywhere cap be yours! see samples in your own home we're broadloom authorities, here's Call your toll free number jdHhj why.. . we've years of leadership Budget Carpet Control Center will. Leader,ship in (lie hiuaiHfiud market. In fuel. 'hCjyjr we're proud of the peoeratioA*'of Mushed '' k* ^appy lo send a broadloom ‘cspert to ■8 customers «e have. Isn't it nice to knot*' that jjl jpj your home with samples to assist ' our prices are competitive plus vou fft the assurance of our famous dependability* — 5TL you In making your selection. ,.;\w g % fg #1 H - > -S'a \ $3 new things for yoursoT«ieco0t HudsonTs Budget Store Shop ’till 9:00 p.m. Monday, Thursday, Friday, and Saturday at the Pontiac Mall, Telegraph and Elizabeth Lake Road. / . , v ? T ■ 1 * ^ V • ' / i i % 1, §| A—14 TIIK PONTIAC PRESS WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1069 Indians to Hear • ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) ■— Two top officials of the Nixon 1 administration seek today to 'mollify American Indian leaders grown restive under federal ! guardianship. Vice President Spiro T. Ag Many delegates demanded an easing or an end of federal su* pervision. ' In conyention speeches Tuesday, Democratic Sens. Edward M. Kennedy of Massachusetts and Joseph M. Montoya of New new and Secretary of the Interl- Mexico pledged their support or Walter Hickel were designate for revising the bureau and pro-ed to carry word, of Washing*' ton’s future policy to 400 dele- viding more money for Indian education, health and housing. MORE CONTRACT The senators also saM Indians should have more control over governmental functions affecting them. federal supervision of lndians without their consent. The administration's position has been to resist attempts to end federal trtisteeship because taxes and other economic pressures then might cost the Indians the land on which their Montoya suggested an end to culture and heritage are based gates at the National Congress of American Indians. The Bureau of Indian Affairs, which operates as part of Hick-el’s department, came under sharp criticism during the first two days of the convention. State Capitol's , News at a Glance TEDDY ADDRESSES POWWOW — Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass.; addresses the National- Congresr~of American Indians yesterday as Wendell Chino, chairman of the Mescalero Apaches and president of the congress, listens intently. Kennedy pledged his support for revising the Bureau of Indian Affairs and providing more money for Indian education, health and housing. THI GOVERNOR Said elimination of the traditional ixampt status of elate i tonde "would bo dlaaatrous to micmgan :lean water bondlnk program." . TnW'AaVi ADMINISTRATIVE BOARD Approved a low bid of 1.0 par cent orest for the sale of the first MO mill n water pollution abatement bonds. THI SENATE Wat recoued. until tomorrow. TNI HOUSE Passed and sent to tho governor: HB2074. Pearl. Exempt certain yrt enewal prelects from Citizen council i iroval. SB344, Fleming. Authorize w a receiverships fa SB44I, Plemlr ileas In er ’ HB32I0. nlng. Permit nolo ilnaT court cases, ant. Modify sei Insurance (jet-Rbll lit tine- wifki ou/ti Aeledlnq Ihsi/v nm . .... . utt tuial cwjjtomm utko* om Sufla-^2piik/ lk& fuw Atfjfuig aid uxviWiwkip wkiehi Iioa built om eamdoipm rtcputoliott/ { a7«4U which will ho told for chare*. 90 doyt from ohovo l.g.l notlca. i Octobar I, *, 10*0 the lagging birth control campaign. ....... Or. 'Haifa ShanaWany, director of the Egyptian Family Planning Association and a graduate of Cornell University, said the goal is to reduce the birthrate from 2.7 per thousands to 2.1 per thousand in mor ~ * * * The government has set up 2,700 family planning clinics throughout the .country where birth control pills are available (or 21 cants. Doctors and nurses also provide Information on use of the intrauterine device called , the loop and on sterilization, .JLjW iif ' * ■ a . In a country where a man may have several wlves.and the size of his family Is a mark of how prosperous he is, birth control is not easy to sell. For a while, (here was resistance from Moslem religious leaders, but Dr. Shanawany said they hive been convlneedihat popu-lltlcm must bo curbed if Egypk is to prosper. LEGALIZED ABORTION Dr. Shanawany also advocates legalization of abortion. In addition, she feels the government should do away with the policies that encourage child bearing — cease — taxing single persons more than married persons, reduce paid maternity leaves and cancel tax exemptions for parents. ----— ' * 'w In addition to Us birth Control program, the government has reversed' a long-standing policy against emigration to other countries, freeing many Egyp-tians to go to the United 8tates, Australia or Brazil. However, some economic planners feel the emigration is robbing the country of techni- cians and producing a "brain drain," During the first five months of 1960, for example, 2.044 persons emigrated, ana of these 61 per cent were university graduates. Almost half the emigrants went to the United States. * * ★ While they admit the loss of -intellectuals and technicians is a serious problem, other government officials claim that en- couraging emigration reduces pressure for jobs, brings in hard. currency sent homt to relatival, and sends put persons to build up support for the Arab Cause against Israel. New" York City Is testing the use of paper and plastic bags for refuse disposal instead' of garbage cans, to see If collection is speedier with less noise, odor and litter. Sears X.S.T. Snow Tires • Rugged winter tread to pull you through the toughtest going • Full 4-ply cord for smooth riding comfort • Guaranteed by Sears to wear a full 36 month period • Plus lifetime tread guarantee XST Snow Tire Sears Regular Law Mai Fadaral Cieite Til 6.68x13 Blackwell IMS 1.19 7.00x13 Blackwell 21.88 1.14 I 1 % i 20.98 1.98 7.31x14 Blaokwall 22.18 247 1.11x14 Blaekwall 24.18 2.28 1.28x14 Blaokwall 21.18 2.38 I.BBx14 Blaokwall 3M5 241 BJBxlB Blaokwall 21.16 1.18 l.lBxIS Blaokwall 24.18 2.21 B.1BX15 Blaokwall 21.16 241 1.48x18 Blaekwall 11.98 241 Star* Tire I Studded Winter Tires et Slightly Cxtre Cost. Whitewalls in meet sixes $S More For Tire Use Sears Easy Payment Plan FRESH START RATTERY SALE 36-Month Guarantee 13-Volt Batteries Rag. 17.96 and 19.96 With Trad* 88 • Gives 50% faster starts than most stand-' ard-design automobile batteries • Straight-through-the-partition cell connectors deliver'more usable power • Energy generated in each cell travels .direct . . . with little power loss Fast, Free Installation of Batteries Free Potter Team Test of Starling-Charging System Sears 18-Month Guarantee Battery \ with trads 095 cw Kit. Buick La Sabra 636H 300 A 340 cu. in.; Special A Skylark V-H 63-68; .Moil,Chevrolet 55-68; Mod Dodge 36-58; Mod Ford 56-64; Mid' Mercury 56-64; Moul Plymouth; Mod l’ontiac 56-50; Mod OW«moi>il« J*tdar 88 and F-85 8 cyl. ell 64-68; AH Rambler 36 to S8. Open Monday. Thursday* Friday, Saturday 9 to 9, Tuesday, Wednesday 9 to StSO SeaiS .Downtown Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171 SEARS* ROEBUCK AND CO. Puritron Non-duct RlOgl Hood With Mltlb plate. Activated charcoal filter* cookiog odor*, grease. Install* easily in minutes- HMo speed, quiet motor, balanced fan blades. Whit* or copper-tone. Small Electrics. special HM ■n Shop 'till 9:00 p.m. Monday. Thursday. Friday, and Saturday at tha Pontiac Mall. Talograph and Eliaab*th Laka Road. Sunbeam Solid-State Blende* with 8 pushbutton speed, touch-on control. 5-cup glass Jar, removable measuring cap. Removable stainless steel cutting blades for enter cleaning. Hudson's Small Blectrics. 3-day special mm \ m AMC Sweeper Vac with 2-speed motor, adjustable power dial. Lightweight lor quick clean-ups on hard floors or carpets. Swivel noizle with triple position brush, crevice tool, drapery nozzle, adapter. Cleaning Supplies. Proctor Silsx 2-sllce toaster with electronic y color control, - gives you exact shade of toast avary time. Snap-out crunb tray for ll|* cltaning. Hudson’s Small Electrics. Antiques Forum Slated at Ford Museum The tenth annual Midwest Antiques Ponim at the Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn Oct. 20-24 will examine the question of quality. Through a series of outstanding illustrated lectures, panel discussions and exhibits, the Forum Will explore the theme, “Collecting Americana: The Craftsmanship of Quality.”'. The 13 recognized authorities who make up this year’s panel of speakers will discuss the standards of workmanship, design, materials and in* genulty that result in quality. " # , * ; * . " * Their aim wUIl be to present to participants a primer of basic knowledge to assist both the beginning and the ad* vanced collector of antiques. In its ten*year history, the Midwest Antiques Forum has become one of the most outstandlag in the country. Participants come from all over the midwestem United jitates and Canada and even as far away as 'California to take part. The highlight of the week will be the special exhibit, “A Decade of Collecting," which stresses the additions to the collections of Greenfield Village and the Henry Ford Museum since the first Forum. It Will Include outstanding objects from each of the categories to be discussed by the speakers. Sr '* ' A As an added feature this year, Forum participants will be invited to attend a reception-and banquet commemorating the 40th anniversary of the Village and Museum on Oct. 21. In this atmosphere, participants have an opportunity to meet the lecturers and the other participants and to ask questions and exchange ideas. Through this widely varied program, the Midwest Antiques Forum achieves its goal of increasing the knowledge and broadening the horizons of ail collectors. For additional Information about schedules and fees or for advance registration forms, write Midwest Antiques Forum, Henry Ford Museum, Dearborn, Mich. 48121. Joe Weaver, special events reporter for WJBK-TV, will address the volunteers who help out at Pontiac State Hospital at the annual tea to be held in their honor Oct. 22 at 1 p.m. in the hospital's snack bar. Weaver is also a producer and narrator of documentary films and serves on the Detroit Area Council of the Boy Scouts of America and the Lutheran Laymen’s League. Mrs. Richard Nixon holds a blue bowling ball, a gift from the Females' Rights, Topic President, after accepting a life-time membership card in the Woman’s International Bowling Congress in Washington. The presentation to the first Lady was made in the Presidential bowling alley in the Executive Office Building next door to the White House. Mrs. Nixon slumedLreporters her bawling ball as she told thent she loves the sport but declined to discuss her score. * Birmingham Couple Returns From Scandinavian WASHINGTON (AP) - Women lawyers ran claim victories in recent Pussycats Claim Toms Lap Up Purring Approach federal court cases testing female job rights but say they won’t be satisfied until the Supreme Court fully guarantees their rights. "I expect to be living when the Supreme Court looks down at a woman lawyer and says'Hie constitution protects you also,’ ” Rep. Martha Griffiths, D-Mich., said at a conference of the National Association of Women Lawyers Monday- On this gala occasion, nearly 400 invited guests — leaders in education, industry and government —• will help focus national attention on the educational contributions the institutions have made to Americans in all walks of life since their dedication in 1929. Rounding out the week’s activities, the Forum will also feature informal panel discussions and teas, tours Of the Village and Museum, special tours to homes which exemplify the theme, and the Forum banquet on the final evening. By SHIRLEY GRAY Jean Walters and her husband Bill, of -HUMdeh-Drive in back from a great three-week tour of Scandinavia. The only fly in the ointment is that they weren’t able to arrange a visit with their soldier son Tom, stationed in Heidelberg. The culprit was Tom’s baseball schedule. Hie young Spec. 4, a Seaholm grad, signed a contract with the Cleveland Indians farm team before he was drafted. He is looking forward to spring training next year in Sarasota as soon as By PATRICIA McCORMACK NEW YORK (UPI) - Males, according to funnies and television comedy, carry around pea-sized brains. That makes it easy to lead them by the nose.' V Males, according to females militant about gaining equal tights, require karate chops to bring them into line. Nix on eitter view. purr (bunders of the Pussy** League, which prefers to have women talk to males hi soft rather than shrill tones and treat them as love objects rather than hostile competitors. “We, bplleve that file jamb chop is more powerful than the karate chop and that the way to achieve a better society is with men not against them," Jeannie Sakol, one of the league’s three founders said In an interview. IQ 1$ HIGH Miss Sakol belonge to Mensa, the society that admits only geniuses to membership. She said her IQ is 192. She is a New York ad agency consultant on the sexual attitudes of men and author of a new book, “Gumdrop, Gumdrop, Let Down Your Hair." (Prentice Hall), Producer David Merrick describes it as “sexy, wlfty> incisive.” The other pussycat founders are Lu-cianne Goldberg, a magazine writer and former Washington lobbyist, and Joan Eibaum, Harvard Law School graduate age of’founders: Over 30; average dress size, 14; average height^ five feet, eight inches. Miss Sakol said pussycats Relieve in some of the causes militants advance, such as abortion reform and day-care centers for children of working mothers. But they won’t use the shouting, sign-carrying way to advance these causes. Rather than Ht legislators over the head with propaganda and pound their ears with shrill chants, pussycats intend to get their arguments across while doing womanly things for them. "It will be much easier to approach tHem while sewing on a button or shining their shoes," Miss Sakol said. “This is the pussycat way," “You become a member by simply deciding to be one," Miss Sakol said. “No dues or fees." Miss Eibaum, the lawyer founder, says it makes sense, i , "I never won a case In court wearing space shoes and a snarl." A pussycat alsb must believe: “Looking, cooking and smelling good for men are our major responsibilities and the result' is more equal rights for Annulment in Cards for These Two Gin Partners February. Of course, he must keep that left pitching arm in playing shape. Hence the importance of his Army team schedule. Several phone calls took the place of a visit, and the Walterses went on to hit the Scandinavian high spots. They. traveled with a group of AAA officials following a convention in Chicago early in September. Jean, relaxing from her duties as publicist for the Colony Town Chib, found herself most taken by the rugged Norwegian scenery. Also, she said, “everywhere you go you find such good white bread.” By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: I recently met a very charming 73-year-old widower In Florida. (I am a 70-year-old widow.) It was a whirlwind romance and we married shortly after. Herbert is very well-to-do, but that is not the reason I married him. about “disgracing" anyone. See a lawyer about an annulment. You. hav^q legitimate grounds. A 5 4 - CONFIDENTIAL TO LILA: Beware of that guy wife the “intoxicated kisses.” He could be mixing Ms-drinks. No Set Rules Cover Situation Such as This The problem is that Herbert gave me no hint at all that he had had surgery six years ago,, and all he could offer me was “a lovely home and a gin rummy partner." X.J Please don’t get the idea that I think “sex" is everything |p marriage, but I am a very youthful 70, and I was looking forward to a little more than a lovely home and a jin rummy partner. I don’t want to disgrace my children and grandchildren with a divorce. Herbert laughingly said, “If you got yourself a boyfriend, I wouldn’t divorce yqp as long as I didn’t find out about it." What should I do? MISLED DEAR MISLED: Most women of 70 who marry a man of 73 would be content with a lovely home and a gin rummy partner, but If you are not, don’t worry DEAR ABBY: I am writing this for myself and a lot of my girl (riepfis., , There is a woman If married and has small'.children. iter husband works nights, and while he is working this lady runs around with other men. (We know this is true because ohr parents have told us so.) This lady calls me or one of my girl friends just about every night, asking us to baby-sit for her. We can use the money, but our parents have told us to turn her down. No matter how many times we turn her down, she calls again. We think maybe if she can’t get a baby-sitter she’ll stay home, If you put this in your column she might see It and take the hint. HOPING DEAR HOPING: Assuming your parents are right, it will take more than a “hint” from me, and repeated turndowns from a long list of sitters to make this lady stay home, if she’s inclined to run around. Everybody has. a problem. What’s yours? For a personal reply write to Abby, in caitiffPoatiSc Press, Dept. E-300, P. O. Box 9, Pontiaac Mich. 48056, and enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope. Hate to write letters? Send gl to Abby, in care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P. O. Box 9, Pontiac Mich. 48056, for Abby’s booklet, “How to Write Letters for All Occasions." But Jean missed some of the things taken for granted at home, like fruit juice for breakfast and ice water. The posh and lovely home on Rolling Rock Drive, until of late the pride and joy of Marianne and Maurice Barnett, now .of Scottsdale, Artz., Is In the appreciative hands of William and Mary Horgan, who lived in this area five years aft ar ea until BUI was transferred to Puerto Rtoo. Now they’re back In town to stay and with them are .Nicola, five, and is getting UMd to the easier weather slowly. “Every day we buy some more woolen things," says Mary. Christmas, with snow, will be very special this year, she adds. “The holidays aren't much fun in the tropics. Christmas People go to the beach on Day — it just isn’t the same.” Calendar of Events THURSDAY Past Noble Grands Club of Welcome Rebekah, lodge No. 246, noon, Pythian Show Unbareable Swimsuit Designs By ELOABETH L. POST Of The Emily Post Institute Dear Mrs. Post: One of my (barest friends is presenting a problem. She is alone with very little family ground — and she does not work. Fortunately for me, I work and have many relatives near by who demand a lot of time and effort. My husband and I travel quite a bit, too. ,.t .w*.,,., The problem is reciprocation. When we entertain my friend, she immediately invites us back. Frankly, we can’t afford to entertain her oh a bi-monthly basis. When several weeks (or months) go by and other obligations keep me from returning her Invitation, 1 feel guilty. * * •* Are there any rules to abide by In this? She is most charming ahd I don't want to Offend her. However, from little things that have been .said, I’m sure she keeps track of who owes whom. — Mrs. H. B. Dear Mrs. B.: It is probably true that your friend, because as a single'woman she must work harder to keep from being aloha and lonely, Is more sensitive than you, or other married Women, about “who owes whom." ' It is also true that married people BytOUISE COOK NEW YORK W — American women who’ve been baring their bosoms at cocktail parties will be covering them up again at the beach. Swimsuit styles shown here recently for winter resort wear and summer beach wear often include more cloth than the average evening dress. Almost Ml of toe major bathing suit manufacturers have commissioned top-name designers to do part Of their collections. Geoffrey Beene, Jacques Tif-feau and Donald Brooks are among the newcomers to the field. The non-designer parts of the swimsuit collections were more prosaic — and considerably more practical — than the high-fashion lines. One-piece tank suits and other styles aimed at the girl who actually intends to do some swimming featured half-hearted attempts a t glamour. Hall. Luncheon honoring Past Noble Grand Association of Detroit. Webford Club, 12:30 p.m., Porter Road home of Mrs? Harry Tribble. Sawing of cancer pads. Birmingham chapter, Michigan Association for Children With Learning Disabilities, 8 p.m., Midvale School. Mrs. Dorothy Jens will speak on “Development Learning." Group n, North Woodward Area Alumnae of Alpha Chi Omega, 8 p.m., Creative Craft Shop, Adams Square Mall, Birmingham. Creative home; arrangement workshop. North Suburban,CM Omega Alumnae Association, 8 p.m., Southfield homo of Mrs. Eugene Joy. Demonstration meeting. FRIDAY Women’s Christian Temperance Union, 19th District union. 9:30 a.m., United Presbyterian Church on Oakland Avenue. Cooperative lunchepn at noon follows business meeting at this annual convention. Beene’s swimsuits for Roxanne were, extensions of his dresses — featuring uncluttered, tailored lines and simple touches like tab pockets, contrasting trimk^md little belts. The sweater look was Beene’s favorite creation. * W *• When he was hot showing a sweater, Beene liked cut-outs and halter straps that could be rearranged to change the whole look of the suit. often find It difficult to fit their single friends into their entertaining schedule. toppers Hffeau, designing for Catalina, paid Women’s Wear Daily sketches one of the costumes for the upcoming “Coco,” musical due to open on Broadway Dec. 18. '’There’s quite a bit of Balenciaga in those Cecil Beaton costumes said the noted publication. It seems to me you have done all that you dould do to maintain your friendship. There is no rule — just go oq as you have and continue to Invite "hw occasionally even'though she may “q^e" you. Amt I repeat the plels I have made before to married couples — do try to include your single friends as often hs you can. No matter how full their lives, they are still lonely at times and the comfort you afford by merely offering a little amount of happiness. almost as much attention to the dusters, caftans and shirts topping his suits, as he did to the swimwear Itself. Bright prints were featured in almost ail the styles and coverups looked as good as regular dresses. Underneath, Ttffeaii showed itsy-bitsy bikinis'* that managed to .convey a little girl look rather than a sexy impression. Brooks also stayed away from nudity In his swimsuit collection for Sinclair. Although he showed some skin-baring Vtyiab,' ha generally preferred the covered-up look, pairing long-eleeved bolero tops with tbu^ trunks. Swimsuit styles shown in New York recently included: (from left) sweater outfit of white cable knit with long sleeves, shirt collar and zippered front; long-sleeved gray slotatshirt suit with ribbed white cuffs at wrist, thigh and neck; fringed lace dress topping a bikini, providing outfits for patio and pool; and art deco print maillot suit thatching shirt-jacket (carried). First two are j Geoffrey Beene for Roxanne; last two from < lina. ’ ' ‘ i £*! TWIN OR FULL SIZE MATTRESS BOX SPRINGS • 837-Coil innerepring construction! • Luxury cover, quilted top end bottom of mattress! o Weight-Balanced Center, reinforced coils for support! e Seat Edge Construction with heavy edge coils for proper support and sleeping comfort! • Intuio Spring Cushioning with quilted felt and muslin intwl«tin| pad over innerspring for superior sleep surfaces! • Locked Edge Inner Roll keeps edges andsurface well upholstered! Open Thursday, Friday, Monday tyl9 Convenient ConiMltqtlon 1680 S. Telegraph Rd. Near Orchard UiKfWd.' Free Parking Front and Slda ft Star* FI 249 TO THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1988, 1 Oh, It's Just Something Whipped Up on the Way monotony of the diet and the tastelessness'of the food. The! wet packs” and “spoon bowls” developed for Apollo have been a considerable improvement, I but left much to be desired, i ■ Astronauts, food experts, and Dr. Charles Berry, medical director, have been pushing hard for better eating on space flights. For the even longer space flights planned for the future, the psychological factor of good dining is considered even more vital. Concepts for both the space oven and freezer could lead to evolutions In the future for Although space foods have j equipment for home use improved considerably since the CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. -Apollo astronauts will be able to “cook'* their meals on trips to the moon starting In 1970, reports Supermarket News. • The Apollo 14 spacecraft, to be commanded by astronaut Alan Shepard, probably will be the first to have “galley” using a space oven and apace freezer. With the new equipment, the astronauts will be able to prepare dinners frozen In a packaging somewhat similar to the TV dinners can be purchased In retail food stores. sed In retail * *./ toothpaste tube “baby food” quality of the early Mercury flights, the astronauts have complained for years about the Barbara Zgetlner, 19, shows heir diamond and ruby engagement ring in Johannesburg, South Africa, after revealing she will marry heart transplantsurgeon Christiaan Bdrrlard. No date has been set for the wedding. The process used in the oven promises more far reaching effects than in the cooking field. Potential application of the resistive coating developed by 3 M can be used anywhere closely controlled heat level is needed. Potential application appears unlimited. TESTED Special dishes using the new techology have been tested by American Airlines with good results. The 3M dishes used were like an airline casserole dish with a porcelain steel In tcrior and outside of high grade tough plastic. Neither the walls of the dish nor the air gets hot in the process of heating the frozen food. The same concept will be used for the Apollo astronauts. The food Will be shaped to fit the 3M dish and then frozen. These packs will be placed inside the dish to be heated and then eaten. One meal at a time can be heated. The food will be stored in a “freezer” that can handle 24 packets of food for up to 10 and one-half days. Total weight of flie freezer is 70 pounds with the food. The freezer, being made by Cryenco under a $40,000 con-, tract for five units, resembles a thermos flask lit principal. If the cost could be brought within the reach of toe average pocketbook, the thermos freezer would be ideal for people going exploring or on long camping trips* A June wedding is being planned by Michigan State University students, Elaine Joanne Bacow and Beryl David Simonson. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell L, Bacow of Birch Harbor Street, West Bloomfield Township and Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Simonson of Cynwyd, Pa. Meadow Brook Theatre Sets Productions for the Meadow Brook Theatre's opening bill of two one-act plays, '‘The American Dream” and "Black Comedy,” nave been announced by Artistic Director John Fernald. The Meadow Brook Theatre's fourth season will open Oct. 18 at 8:15 p.m. and continue through Nov. 2 at Oakland University. These two one-act plays will then continue a run of seven performances at the Detroit I Orion, Richard, Cur n o c k, • Houghton Lake wbare hewasiE. the theatre. This is the case n__i___ n_____ ... j:___I.. m n #i with “TV,» Amerlran DrMm." Bryne and Mr. Tompkins will be making their Meadow Brook debuts. The other members of the cast were members of the John Fernald Company last season. MORE AFFLUENCE “Black Comedy,” by English playwright Peter Shaffer, is not a play about race. It too Is i satirical comedy about the InsUtute^ofArtoTheatre Tj^uent society» in England. beginning Nov. 8 at 2:30 p.m. Edward A1 b e e' s “The American Dream,” a satirical comedy about the “affluent society”, will Include the following players: Elizabeth Newlyweds Honeymoon The chapel of the Pontiac First Presbyterian Church was .the setting for the recent exchange of wedding vows of I Pamela M. Dean and D. Laing Humphries; [["Following the ceremony the couple was honored at a reception in the Holiday Inn of Pon- The Phuoc Thien orphanage tla£,ly Butterfleld and Brian Vietnam Shelter Is New Project Barbara Bryne, Mike! Lambert!the .artistic - director and and Toby Tompkins. Miss COproducer. Referring to “The Dream,” Mr. Stlmac said: “For a play to be truly great, it must be all the things very good play are: entertatolng, moving, Illuminating, _h a vp something serious to say about the human condition, plus (and this is a big plus), contribute something to the art form It is a part of 4-I. The American Dream i ★ *.......... Amorimn The sets* costumes and lights American for one-acts will be designed by Richard Davis, Ross B. Young and Bennett Averyt, respectively. Tickets are available at Hudson's (all stores), the Meadow Brook Theatre box office and at the Detroit Institute of Arts box office. in An Khe, Vietnam, has been adopted as a new project by district 12 of the Jaycee Auxiliary, at its annual fall meeting held Tuesday in All Saints Episcopal Church. . W The meeting Included workshops and was attended by Jaycettes from Auburn Heights, Ctarkston. Davtsburg, Holly, Orion area, OYtonvllle, Rochester, Waterford and the hosting chapter, Pontiac. Early Decor Aid Did you know that wallpaper iras invented by the Chinese as early as 200 B.C.? They used rice to make paper In those days. Wallcoverings have come a long way since then. Today, you can have prepasted, scrabble and strippable wallcoverings by famous designers from United-DeSoto of Chicago. Fisher performed the duties of maid of honor and best man. ★ ★ ★ Parents of the newlyweds are Mrs. Arthur Dean of Crystal Beach, Fla. and the late Mr. Dean and Mr. and Mrs. Donald M. Humphries of Dixie Highway. McLane-Mather | St. Andrew’s-Catholic Church was the setting for the recent | wedding of Diana Lynn Mather and Keith Michael McLane. They were attended by Janet Douglas and Larry Mather. Following a reception in toe Auburn Heights American Legion Hall, the couple left on a honeymoon trip to Niagara Falls and Canada. Parents of the newlyweds are Mr. and Mrs. Harold Mather of Parke Street and Mr. and Mrs. Vernon McLane of Harrington Street, both Avon Township. The cast for this second one-act play will Include Toby Tompkins, Bonnie Hurren, Barbara Bryne, Mikel Lambert, Jeremy Rowe, Richard Curnock, Marshall Borden and Christopher Ross-Smlth. Anthony J. Stlmac will direct “The American Dream” and John Fernald will stage “Bl&ck Comedy.” _ * Hr * Stlmac, 27, a graduate of London’s Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, has directed! several professional productions in England before returning to his native New York where he staged productions Off. | Broadway at the Provlncetown Playhouse, at the McCarter Theatre In Princeton and at the Overseas Press Club, Most recently Stlmac completed a successful summer season at toe North Central Michigan Playhouse at sale custom tailored DRAPERIES - 20% off CARPET save 30% FABRICS save 10% Use Your [§Q |HH 3234 Auburn Rd.» Utica ASPARAGUS - t . *A FLOWER* Asparagus, a well •‘•••3D* vegetable, would MI very funny to us as a decorative flower, but yet It Is. It le probably most used by farm* ora’ wives who use It exten-lively to decorate their lu leaves, which are proper* |y termed branohoie are threadlike. As the flower prows older, it becomes dee-orated with round, aearm harries. The small green-yah low flowers ore six parted, and the name comes from ancient times. Wo offer flowers for any oc« casion which are the finest where. Whenever the need arises, we rill be more the# happy to serve yon. Wo srs1 fait as close as your tele, phone. Cell FE 241127. „ PEARCE FLORAL CO. 5S9 Orchard Lake Ave. RENT. SELL, TRADE ■ - ■ U8E PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! PBE-SEASON SALE OF WINTER COATS 49.90 Starting Thursday. Sava on just the coat you've been looking fori Flared or fitted ... dressy or casual, Jf It's new and exciting, it's here In this bigfcottectlom3rheadstart savings. Shetlands, plaids, shadow gabardines, tweeds in oil the colors fashion loves. Sixes'7*13 and 8-18. And remember, every coat we sell has our traditional guarantee. PONT Mill OUT ON SAVINGS, USE. YOUR HADLEY’S MULTI-CHARGE Pontiac Mall (We’re N°. 1 store Inside Elisabeth Lib bit.) e Ann Arbor e Ypsilanti e Jackson e Monroe • Toledo REPEAT OF A SKM^IIIT! Stearns & Foster 837-Coil Firm Quilt-Top Mattress and Box Springs SALE per SET SAVE. TOO, ON LUXURIOUS QUEEN AND KING-SIZE SETS! 2- Pc. 60x80 MATTRESS & BOX SPRINGS-Queen Sfate \ *149 Set 3- Pc. 77x80 MATTRESS A BOX SPRING SET-Kisig Sine *199 Set BARGAIN CORNER SALE! SAVINGS UP TO 50% AND MORE! Be (nr* le brewae through thU »peci«l comer of our stare. Spec laired action* hi Furniture, Lamp#, AceeMorle*. Etc. li Sis mm June wedding plans are being made by Carol Ann Shelton and Cecil Robert Martin Jr.1 Parents of i the engaged1 couple are Mr. and Mrs. Cecil A. Shelton of Berkely Avenue and Mr. and Mrs. Cecil R. Martin of Euclid Avenue, HE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1069 B—8 m Mr. and Mrs. Vernis p. Whitehead of East Chicago Street announce the engagement of their daughter, Jo-Ann May to Walter Eli Leslie. The couple is planning May wedding vows. He is the son of W'"" Mr. and Mrs. Walter A. IP " v • WmM Leslie of Gary, Ind. Emj ■ February 14 ie the date set by Paula J. Sauter and Gary R* Sears for their wedding. ,Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. George W. Sauter and Mr. and Mrs. Raymond J. Sears, all of Holly. The bride-elect has attended Oakland Community College. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Beliefeuil of Mary l as to ne Street, West Bloomfield Township announce the en-gag e m ent of the ir daughter, Linda M. to Frank H. Kopesky. He is the son of Mr. ahd Mrs. William K. Kopesky of Doremus Street. Costs Will Increase as Grows Older By ANNE TAYLOR , I realize you have estimated .believe you should place tooimarrlage, others are unat-AP News Feature (your medical costs but I would]much reliance on these in your tached and happy about it. Young couples expecting the like to make a few notes planning. I Miss M.M. of Oak Park, III hirth of their first child usually nevertheless. Some people have ! For one thing, 1 believe you asks: How should a single budget wisely before the baby is Insurance plans, others do not. will find that many of the | woman underjio budget anet . They accurately estimate Some babies are healthy, others the medical costs, the exeppses'require a dozen or more visits of mother's wardrobe, the costs to the doctor in the first year of moving to large quarters. And the same might be true for the mother also. GIFTS Although it Is very likely that Often, however, they don’t look far enough into the future, into the first year after the "J reCeive clothing baby is born. That is the time fliftg for the infant| j when the budgets of new families can be shattered through lack of foresight. articles might not be suited for use by the child if) the first few months as in the later, crawling and walking stages. Some of the gifts might be duplicates. And others will have symbolic rather than practical value. What can you expect to lay income of $450 a month? In answering, 1 am assuming that Miss M.M. has furniture but neither a car nor a fiance. Here is a guideline budget Housing (Including utilities and upkeep) $150; food at home $65 clothing and upkeep $55; sav . out for the baby’s furniture andj«»g* W personal ^allowance equipment? The minimum for a (lunches, transportation) $50; M H ■ 'medical costs $15; recreation- erlb, stroller, playpen, Johnette Mae Roberts and Michael Jr Carnes will marry next August. Her engagement is an-nounced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Roberts of Scott Road, Springfield Township. Her fiance, who attends Flint Junior Communu, ty College, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald ' Carnes of Holly. ■ httfi'ctwlr would Wm*M». «“““ •**•**• "TS Here is a letter from one mother-to-be who is wisely planning ahead: Dear Miss Taylor: We are expecting our first child in January, and have already estimated the medical costs we will face before and im-mediately after the baby comes. But we would like to have a budget for other expenses such food, clothing, baby equip- Looks Backward but I believe you^houldn-t plan on 65 Years on anything less than $125. If my assumptions are wrong BINGHAMTON, N.Y. (AP) -“women don’t retire, so I’m keeping the house,” said Mrs. Elwin Dibble as she and her husband celebrated their 65th wedding anniversary. * * * Luxiwies so®" become ^ for a car> 8ubtract for acesslties in America, and so I ^ jjance necessities believe you would want to use a diaper service. Figure o n paying between $4.20 and $4.75 a week for this service in New York. A consolation: You’re gettihg a tax deduction of $600 for the new member of the family. And (You can write to Anne Taylor in care of this newspaper.) Lots of Hardware for Any Window _________ ... ... . . . Ita 86-year-old Mrs. Dibble many of the itemB you buy now nieht and furniture, personal takes care of a 12-room house wm ^ reusable when the sec-c$re items and so on during the herself. Her husband, a n nn(j cbud Comes along, bpby’s first year. undertaker here for 40 years, Among tbe more difficult * Mrs. C. M., Bronx, N.Y. has been retired for 26 years. person* to devise budgets for home furnishings experts at the I ★ www are those in the single-and- University of Nebraska, .'Dear Mrs. C.M.: Some family “When we were married, in under-30 category. There is no such thing as a lem window, according to counselors in New York feel you can budget as little as $6.70 a week for food, some small articles of cothing and items of personal care. I think that is much to low; at least $10 seems more like the proper figure. 1604, we lived on $7 a week and paid $10 a month rent,” she Ufe styles vary widely among recalled. “Pork chops sold for 14 cents a pounr bread was five cents a loaf and milk five cents a quart. In those, days there cars, some not. were no taxes.” — p a o pi e this age. Some are swingers, some are conservative. Some have furniture and while many a v 1 n g for Even the smallest curtain and drapery department is apt to carry- an extensive line of metal and wood-type curtain cafe, and traverse rods, guaranteed to fit any type of window or the wildest decorating scheme. LOOK WHAT $090 WILL BUY fife/dwtei plain’n’pretty pm! Regularly *15" With so many diffsrsnt looks in fashion today, —it's refeshing to find ono simple shoo that goos beautifully with everything. Made by Life Stride Nylon, Lycra11 Spandex and rubber fab-J ric. Beige. S. M. 1. Introductory Offer.. Pantie and Hose for B—e THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1969 row Old ? t0r Johnson looking for a bar with Aretha I race while in Europe as a young i0 e(t Pride t0 screen tour Franklin on the jukebox, just;serviceman. UUU to prevent embarrass- follow an American service- * * * ■ ment for the black traveler and man. He’ll get you there every | "Always the black face wmthat he dwjil not mls, ^ts time. {missing, said Johnson. 1 I ____________'«k. of black Interest. These ore some of the tips forjsoon -dawned on me that tne „you ^ him on a sight-the black traveler from Pride, a black man and woman "'as ao-;^. tour and then he asks, black travel agency established sent because he was protecting • are the broth- here two inonths ago by Mel himself ^om the numerous JJJ*Jers?,said Johnson. “You Johnson. evitahle social and personal io*. h h mf»nns |f*- Most of Pride’s first tours are going to the Caribbean, which, Johnson said, now gets about 95 per cent of the black' tourist trade. Miss Givens justi finished checking out a Las Vegas - Honolulu • San Francisco tour. ■ a a i' And Spain, she believes, is on! the threshhold of becoming 4] popular place for black travelers because it is relatively 1n,ex- *We are nqt saying the| SOUTH AFRICA OUT Johnson said the only place to. _ . . , f 1 "e I J h ‘ t . “hlch he won’limyge 1 tour 1 More Thing to Tax;|S»”iSS5Hf i TourTmagihation them where the black people Hive in London—and—spectat are. the I {southern American states, because Johnson feels he can't guarantee, an embarrassment-; lh!Dht hek^hlbfUM,,artlSt Wha*ree trip. He said he may ar- .'By DICK WEST «Hrt out .llh . crlaln kind {KrifpSd"*"- J WASHINGTON flJPO - In a levy, say a real estate l«-«"d2e Macks are notushered S MoSor recent column paying tribute to, keep adding to it. Each tlme lnferior tables ln restaurants,JJJJJSu! to a the ingenuity of government more revenue is needed, weto-|refuged a room ,n a hotel of A 1 officials f«wMiWthlTWlwtatrtar,-^ received coolly.l^*^trip^oA*ica * the tax buildup comes in layers, j me atop the.other. ANOTHER SYSTEM........ The other system of taxation Is the horizontal, or stairstep, concept, which looks like this: X XX XXX Here again we start out with David Johnston, assistant editor a certain kind /of levy of the Milford (Conn.) Citizen,^ (represented by the first X on who accused me of prophesying the left on the bottom'row). But retrospectively: , rather than add to it as more • ★ ★ - ★ revenue is needed, we enact a- “Lyndon B. Johnson beat you different kind of tax. to it,” he wrote. “He called it a , , 4k * * surtax.” ' i As ope tax takes its place A good point! But technical y fte next, we get a inaccurate. As I shall presently horizontal buildup With the tax COMPANIONSHIP SURE . | one of the functions of the But most important, Johnson, agency will be to arrange meet-said, a tour with qther blacks ings of travelers with black offl-j assures them of having compa- cials in other countries who hold, nionship. |positions dominated by whites, • A personal friend of mine went on a tour of Mexico with a white group for 16 days,” he recalled. “No one asked her if she wanted to go out. They politely ignored her. It ruined her trip.” in America. “It’s a strange sensation toj see jobs occupied by white pie in America occupied by! blacks,” said Johnson. “Think of the sensation.” demonstrate. THERE’S A DIFFERENCE To understand the difference between the taxation tax and file surtax we must recognize that there are two basic concepts, Or systems, Of taxation. First we have the vertical, or Inverted pyramid, system, which looks like this: X XX x : -XXX X X X structure Vising like stairsteps. All dear? V?ry well. * ★ \ * j The surtax mentioned by Johnston was indeed a tax of a tax, but it whs placed atop another tax (in this income tax), which made it a pyramid, or vertical;, tax, . *! * * On the other hand, the taxation tax I had in mind would be a horizontal levy, taking its place at the end of the line and taxing many different types of The taxpayer should think of himself as standing beneath the I trust this explains the dif-i iottomX. ference to everyone’s satisfac-} In the vertical system, we! Urn. TICKETS NOW ON SALE Box otlices . . . Cobo Arena: Hudson & Grlnnell Stores BWonlcE created, s,.g.d .nd WORLD FAMOUS ICE SPECTACULAR Directed by Donn Arden Holiday on Ice proudly presents its Silver Anniversary Edition. Beauty, Pageantry, Hilarity—The greatest family entertainment |n America. It’s the Fastest, Funniest. It’s Fantastic. PERFORMANCE SCHEDULE: Tues., Wed., Thura., 7:30 pm; Pri., Eat. 8:00 pm Mata.-Sgt. 2:30 pm; 8un. 1:30 & 8:30 pm Ticket Prices: $5.00, $4.00, $3.50, $3.00 Jn. under 16, Vi price, Tues., Wed., Thura,; Sat. 2:30 pm TUESroCT. 14 thru SUN. OCT* 19 For special group rates call 963-1521—Info, call 965-2929 Order by Mall, Send check and stamped sell addressed envelope to Holiday on Ice. Cobo Arena, Datrott, Mich. 45226. COBO ARENA / * Now! Special Savings on ^ Sears. Entire Line of INSTALLED TV Antennas Sale Price 49«8 Other Model* Sale Priced from 34.88 to 149.88 INSTALLED a Sears has antennas tailored to your specific TV reception needs ; including fringe areas • Sears assures a better picture or your money back a Come to yottr nearby Pontiac Area Sears Store or Phone 3354171 Sale Color log-periodic VHF/UHF/ FM stereo antenna for brilliant pictures oh any channel. Just hold down bar on rotator to turn, antenna. Start TV and Radio Dept, Ask About Sears , Convenient Credit Plans Color Antenna with Electric Rotator 1I95# &rsl Downtown Pontiac Phone FE 5-4171 CMIPfIS NOSE t 28* THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1969 WED., THURS., fRl.,SAT, Solid , color, cotton -knit shirts with mock turtle, placket, V front and ring necklines. Sizes 6 to 16. JUVENILES', BOYS' COTTON PAJAMAS 1.27 96‘ No-Iron Acrilan® acrylic knit shirts with mock turtle, turtle and fashion collars. Sanforized®. 4-7. • Chomstrood Corp Ra« TM Boys’cotton knit pjs.,6-16... 1.27 Juvenile boys’ ski pjs, 4-7.. ■ 96c 7x35 BINOCULARS 24.77 LEKTRO BLADE 6 Reg. 21.88 VQ O JL 4 Day Only f7#79 Shaver with three big shaving heads: Comfort Control Disk Cord. 7 power magnification; 35mm objective lens; center focusing. Case, included. IMtwi Quantity - Nm SolS t, 0.al.» Rsf. 67e - 4 Day Enameled twin pins with mock pearl. Charge ft Men’s long sleeve Dacron® polyester and cotton sport shirts with button down or regular collars- Choose solids and cross dyes. In men’s sizes. S-M-L-XL. Save. •euSMiue.TM MEN'S NEWEST CHOOSE 10x50 or 7x50 BINOCULARS "DECORATIVE" KITCHEN CLOCKS Our Rtf. 2.47 V 4 Day* Only WDM M Dress, casual hats,in wool, cotton, rayon. 'Latest fall ■">«» dfe# s A. 50mm objective lens, 7 power magnification, crystal clear optics. B. 10 power for night viewing, 50mm objective lens, Fitted case included. Our Reg. S.96 4 Day Only Battery operated, clocks in Sumy Coffee Mill or C SAVE! SLEEVELESS "BIG WHEEL” STURDY ‘RIDE-SHOOTER’S VEST SPORTS CYCLE ’EM’ FLOWER Cl .2.47 10.66 1.86 lBWx]4IAx7U"iiM- FLEXIBLE 18-IN. DOLL IN INFANT POLY FOAM DOLL CARRYING SEAT 1.96 . 2.73... ELECTRIC CHORD ORGAN Choose Space Canter, Kit Rtf. 8.88 - 4 Dny Arthur’s Castle. Coplsr Pairs Choice of $ dolls With Slfaplni ftfiftonysnljifr eve*, rooted hair. Oat Rtf. 78*-4 Day Only UMuiici|,» ,«blc model organ features 3 octave,; 37 full Convenient travel tin tamot eiae white and blink key*; 12 chord key*; volume control; Silly in your pocket Borne instruction book, 29xl$Vfc*8 1 ilia. Walnut color pmtic un lo 4 nooDliO.. flnlali , Rtf. 2.96 - 4 Day* Rootnl hslr, sleeping eyes. Dressed In warm sleeper. Reg. 8.9^ -$ On* Play music by (lumbers. t’sea v volt transistor battery.* •SutfeiveetkokiSsS Rtf. 8.96 - 4 Day . AninmteiV fir* engine rider has play fire host W|ln nosala. Sketch yom family pay checfe- Start theXmtott GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD YOUR CHOICE ATLANTIC & ATCO LABELS EACH MFGR'S SUGGESTED LIST SHOP OUR STEREO RECORD DEPARTMENT AND SAVE V • Aretha's Gold • Best of Bee Gee* A stimulate Intellectual diver* President Harold Brown said Tuesday the California Institute of Technology—a male enclave of engineering and scientific, studies — will admit 25 women in September. Another 25 will arrive in 1971, and ultimately the campus will have 70 females—about 10 per cent of the undergraduate enrollment. MFACT is DEVASTATING! A THAT SHOULD SUN! SffiSWSgK > conviction r»._ Bicyclist Killed KINDE* (AP) - Elwin N. Witherspoon, 8, of Kinde was killed Tuesday when he -was struck by a car while riding a bicycle on Kinde Road east of Kinde. DENN1SH0PPER ip me down BONUS SAVIN" MFGR’S STEREO OVERSTOCK FIRST TIMS OFFERED O $11 • Msncini show tunes • Roger Williams • Nat King Colo* Roy Orblion j ca • Connie Francis e Smothers Brothers EAB .* • Herman's Hermits • Peter and Cordon ■“11 "IAwI .(HELD OVER Jack Lemmdn and Catherine Deneuve ; n 30 ite House Beat: Busy/ Exciting Job By FRANK CORMIER Associated Preu White House Correspondent WASHINGTON - Should the president of the United States go to Rome to see the Pope? Sit reporters who cover the Whito Housewere asked this question in 1967 by Lyndon B. Johnson, The president stated he would abide by their advice. Hot every day are White House newsmen consulted on matters of state but it has happened. In this instance, the reporters advised Johnson to make his own decision, which he did. He |iw Pope Paid. , ir. * k As the case of President and Pontiff illustrates, being a member of the White House press corps can be exciting, glamorous and even a bit romantic. Johnson put his question to the six reporters, for example, aboard Air Force One during a flight around the globe. Circlhng the earth is a thrilling experience under almost any circumstances. Yet the Johnson Journey, however ex-citing, was extremely demanding of both President and press. JUST 6% DAYS Together they circumnavigated, the planet in just 4% days — and spent only a single night in a hotel Two members of the press corps collapsed and were left behind along the way, one In Australia and the other in Thailand. The ration of excitement that goes with the job of White House reporter must be balanced against the hard work Involved. Running for' helicopters and motorcades. Testing your strength against that of a crowd pressing in from all points of the compass. Taking off on short notice, sometimes without baggage, for a distanct city. Itng, in spprtsthat seem to pild up in clumps, working for abmmmal periods of time while retiring an ability to dictate major, fast-breaking news elements instantly mid off the crisis, be extended into the following day. Between starting time and the * >bld,>,raportj|rs and photographers sometimes are permitted to witness and record at least parts of the Nixon day. u he’s makbtg a public ap-pearance, everyone normally is granted “foil coverage.” But if it’s a formal speech, those taking newspictures for newspapers may be sh away after a few minutes, lest a candid shot embarrass chief executive. KEEP ROLLING On those occasions, more frequent in the Johnson years thart now, television and movie FRANK CORMIER Wien President Nixon circled thq*globe this summer reporters who accompanied him lived through > three working days that aipproached, and even exceeded It hours from wake- One of these was capped by a policy-stating news conference on Guam and another by a memorable welcome to Communist Romania. 1 DAY FORGOTTEN When comparing notes later on their most arduous days the job, reporters tended to same island of Guam with a Vietnam summit, in 1967, and ended with a marathon flight back to Washington during which the press corps witnessed two sunsets. Even Key Biscayne and San Clemente, far all their attractions, can with time have their minus points. Especially with the wife and youngsters back home. After making several dozen trips to the hill country of central Texas, spending a month and trying to find challenge and excitement in a sparse, postoperative diet of news becomes a mind-dulling experience One reporter found his own prescription for fighting '‘Let’s go out and watch a few haircuts.” FOLLOWS PATTERN Although president’s spend luch time away f r o m Washington, with the press necessarily tagging along because whatever chief ecutlves do or say Is of; Interest to someone, most days find them at the White House. For reporters, the weekday routine there — with periodic and noteworthy exceptions follows a pattern: they < gregate in the reception lobby in the “West Wing” of " White House, where presidents have their oval office, about ' m., usually an hour or two before Nixon’s first announced appointment. ★ St The length of the working day is dictated by the president’s schedule and an from the press office that there’s nothing else is expected. The Lid” can come as early as ping away after the “still” cameras have been banished. If the president is meeting someone in Us office or in the rose garden, reporters and photographers may or may not be invited. - * ★ ★ Some of the most newsworthy sessions go unrecorded. When Nixon held a Vietnam policy conference with key advisers in September, for example, the press office said no photographs would be permitted. At the )ast lent, a limited number of cameramen and reporters were let in for 40 seconds only. No participant in the meeting, despite the enormous attention It had attracted, talked to any reporter at the White House Those cornered elsewhere were FRUSTRATING JOB Because the White House staff is small and directly under the President's orders,—reporters often find that attempting to pry information out of assistants to a chief executive is more frustrating than onllghtanlng If ever there was an caption to this general rule, it of John F. Kennedy, whq rounded himself with talkative, articulate and, in manj stances attention-seeking In the main, that has not been the case in the Johnson and Nixon admfiiistrations. D r Henry A. Kissinger, Nixon’i national security adviser ordered members of his staff not to talk to the press d most of 1969, although the busy Kissinger couldn’t begin to meet demands of his own time and, to the press at least, was more forget the one that began on ttie|4:S0 p.m. or it may, in a time of Because the Whito House la “tight-little island,” many major newsbreaks in this and other administrations have come from knowledgeable people in federal agencies Or on capitol hill, CAPITOL SAVINGS NOW PAYING DAISY DIVIDENDS From the Oats of Deposit to the Data of Withdrawal cAFmusAWNOso WAN ASSOCIATION 75 W. 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Offset Jegs let you adjust table for sit-down ironing.Folds for storage. Reg. 188 Board Pad and Cover Set... 1.57 ^ nun mui| 2oi -78 Your choice of quality 6%"long envelopes. 100-Ct. plain or 75-ct. blank return-address for. all your mailing needs. Buy severaland save now! la. Kmart® H gal. egg, castle or emerald green shampoo or V* gal creme rinse. Save now! THE PUNT!AC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1969 Super-Right'1 Quality Ideal for Baking Fried Ocean Perch POUND BAD RED DELICIOUS Apples Fresh Swordfish Steaks “ 99* IACORN OR BUTTIRPIUT Squash.. VI9* ) llACHli Prestone This Weak: ! BIS SIZE j Full 8% x 11 I Over200pages ■ Complete and unabridged | Hard cover. fttU color Rise Shaving Geam ™ MOZIN—In Cwoot onu lour louco Chun King Meat Balls....... rboular and sxtra mold LustreCream Hair Spray 111 eW lobol—Ro»ulor, Mm or MwiHwl Palmolive Rapid Shave FROZIN—1 VARIITII* Jeno's Piss* Ralls.-------- FRANCO-AMI RICAN Spaghettio's ............ 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OU l-U. ■ A* Tomato Juice... 3 &S9 Fruit Cocktail.. 3«Sr MEDDO-LAND FREESTONE PEACHES GIANT SIZE 34,1. aA( SAVE AT ASP Oxydol Detergent Wider the onslaught e< Mao •totmm Tse-tung' : * Taipei haa grown from a unail administrative capital with water buffalo in the streets to a sprawling industrial and commercial center of million, with broad avenues subject to traffic Jams. American aid has an but stopped, after pouring a biniion dollars worth of military and economic support into the island’s economy. » AID MISSIONS Instead, Formosa now has its own aid missions in 29 African countries, one in Saudi Arabia and three in South America. The Nationalists are buying their own military equipment now, to the tune of $58 million a year. | The government remains un-dor the nrsonal control of 82-year-old President Chiang and bis son and heir apparent, Chiang Chlng-kuo. They and their advisers in the inner Cabinet of the riding Kuomlnatlng party make all major government decisions, and their decisions art final. Strict anticommunism, support of Chiang's government and verbal support of the long- Eised return to the main-are demanded from everyone.' DISSENTERS’ CHOICE Many who dissent leave the island or wind up in prison. Within this framework the government has built a growing, liberally run economy with buU- Slse tax and investment B. !’ '■ ★ ★ ★ ■ This economy has propelled the Island into a position more Independent and more confident than the Nationalists have enjoyed since well before World Warll. Government spokesmen still seek to keep Communist China out oIf the united Nations, but there is no longer a desperate tone in their voices. They are sure they have the votes te deny Peking a seat for some time to come. UA PLEAS RESISTED And tha island’s textile manufacturers, with government port, ape resisting u.s. pleas for liuAlnniapv rActriMinna*’ Ml 11 everyone k n o w s tha Working-man is getting a questionable share. . ' . ■ WAGES CURBED While the government Is aware of the disparity, it has so far not allowed wages to rise, It has preferred instead to let the rich have large Incomes that can be reinvested in new factories and housing projects. Officials are a about a trend toward Japanese control of Formosa’s economy. v %4|f * “The island was controlled by Japaii from 1885 to 1919,” one official noted, “and from the number of Japanese tourists in hotels, and the number of Japanese cars and motorcycles on the streets, it looks as If they’re trying to get it back again.” More than one-fifth of Formo-sals exports go to Japan, and officials are worried that any shift 'voluntary restrictions on For-moss’s clothing exports to the United States. Despite this confidence, the government knows it faees dial lenges new and different from those of the last 20 years. One is the problems of prosperity Though a worker’s take-home pay is the third highest in Asia, it is still less than one-third of UsJapanese counterpart. ■; ★ , wl * The gross national product— the total value of alt goods and services produced in a year— has trebled In 20 years, tit worker's Income has only doux T&ere is no ptiblic complain-'SHIFT BY YOUTH- ’ ^ ing about this, nor would any bej Formosa’s youth, With more allowed by Formosa's govern- money to spend than ever be-ment-sponsored unions. But for- fore, are undergoing some shifts tunes are being made here, and'of their own. in Tokyo's policy toward Peking would deny them a market for a large part of their exports. Meet lu« studious, wearing uniforms to schools where they study hard for university entrance examinations, time, with few scholarly ambitions, taka to triple-exhaust motorcycles and long hair. About once a month, the Taipei poBoe run a dragnet and provide soma of tha youths With free haircut*. Under such strict regulations, many highly educated youths leave the Island as soon as they can. Conversations with students often lead to references to friend* now studying In tho United States and planning to remain there. The government last year considered restricting Formosa’s brain drain, but op-position to the plan was so powerful the Idea was quickly dropped. The nationalists are concerned about a possible American withdrawal from Okinawa under Japanese pressure. WITHDRAWAL FEARED Okinawa Is the southern link in tee Japanese section of tho U,S. perimeter confronting Communist China. An American withdrawal, the Nationalists feel, would seriously affect their security. 10-Q& net. wt. 1-Lb.' Cob Danish Bacoi Reg. 78c _ Ready to be A Ql cooked. VOl ________________ SAVE 10* on FriskiMj MIXorSAUCIC a US6 PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS CHARGE IT" AT KRESGE'S The bigger the/are the harder the/ fall for Friskies The big dog dogfood. f rind Him Sandwich On Toostld Bin With Coffee or Coho?a701 value......589 Double Dip Hot Fudge Sundm FrJc^y^^nl^GrwSpeTiM Macaroni and Cheese Loochnoo COd :ingmeal.A70dValue. ........... vOr A tantalizing meal A 70# Value.......... wOf Ton Salad Saidwich Will Froo Coffee Or Coke*........................509 Saturday - Only Grill Specials! Hot Torkoy Soodwkh Wbh Whipped Potatoes and Orovy, An so# value.... 889 Chocolate Of Vanilla Mdhgfa^f rie Coffee Or Coho*.. .2S* It’a Urns to go through tho mailbag which la uauaily at capacity (it this time of the year. ; Of course moat of the mall haa the aame tone, aa to "Why do you give them more and us Jess?”; or “What do you have against our team?” We've answered many personally, we've "filed'' many of those with* out names or addresses and we herein print aome of the couple hundred which have come to our desk the past few weeks. Dear Sir, I am a student at Lake Orion High and I would like to know why la it aa long as I can remember the only time we get any pictures on the sports page is when we lose. Marsha Lake Orion Dear Marsha, If you could let ns know before a game when we assign oar photographer whether yonr team Is going to win or lose we might be able to cornet this situation. WWW Dear Mr. Sports Editor, Even though we lost the game to Lamphere, I don’t appreciate the one paragraph mention of the game you gave Rochester. In fact, I never appreciate your constant use of the humiliating words “outclassed" "out-played" or “run out of gas.” in my book it takes more guts to be a good loser than to criticize a team for losing. Mrs. J. A. Lanier Avon Township Dear Mrs. Lanier, Yon most endorse the adage " Tis better to have played and lost than never to have played at an." There's also another one which goes, “Show me a good loser, and I'll show yon a loser.” WWW Gentlemen, I ask you, was that equal coverage you gave Kettering's first win In last Saturday’s paper? You hardly found the space to print It. Shame! Mrs. Helen Kline ZZ ' Waterford Dear Mrs. Kline, That was the same question We received from some Clarkston fans and they lost, 42-0. ' w Dear Mr. Kearns, You finally admitted something In your column last Saturday of which most of the other schools around have complained about. That was what you said about Pontiac Central always getting the No. 1 spot, win or lose, on your sports pages. Are you awakening to fair space for Waterford, Kettering, Walled Lake, Clarkston and the others whom you Imply are always complaining? Martin Priestly Waterford Twp. Dear Martin, Yon are correct about one thing, onr admission that Pontiac Central had been given preferred position but you miss the use ofjhe tenses, “had” and "has," “awakening" and "awakened.” In fact yon mlssii the gist of the column on Pontiac Central and the Saginaw Valley. ) w w w Dear Mr. Kearns, Do you actually believe there is an attempt being made to get Pontiac Northern to go into the Saginaw Valley? I hope The Press keeps watch of this and keeps the people alerted. Central has muffed Its position in the county, they needn’t drag Northern into the same boat. Irvin Jones Eastsider *8oms people at Central are uMsgljfefthy" “,d* payers, would have something to^SSpWMUt' tt” if Northern should be lured into the Saginaw Valley. Up to now Northern has withstood thf, pressures of leaving local '(tal smartly so. %. >• • -Vi Dear Mr. Kearns, r.V; 52,;.'v Your article on the procrastination involving the building of a stodlunt here hit the nail on the head. Why doesn't the city toll the Tigers and ' Lions to go Jump into the Deta^Rfver if they want to be hypocrites about it. I’d say it was a matter pf '*Ad' gifts’’ to fight Detroit city hall! W p : Troy Dear Tom,,v., That’s what Just might bappead had there won’t be ANV stadium at all. there.ate some who think that John Fetoer might he thinking of selMiig, me Tigers, using present Tiger 8todium as a lure in the Im Of the decision tor pulHag out el the down- • ,,, • • W 1 ■ W ,,',W i 5 “ To the many other' fans from the area who have written to complain about the coverage we “don’t" give their respective teams we just ask that you re-evaluate our coverage of the local teams in its totality You may then rerevaluato the criticisms ................ mmm Colts Promise to Seed Lansing START OF SKIRMISH — Charlie Bums of the Minnesota, during Tuesday night’s game. The initial push started a mass North Stars heads for a crash landing in front of the Minnesota donnybrook between both teams which halted play temporarily, net after being pushed by Red Berenson of the St. Louis Blues but the Blues went on to win, 4-0. THE PONTIAC PRESS WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1960 C—1 mis With Mots' Hurlers Orioles Not Impressed BALTIMORE (AP) - Brooks Robinson of the Baltimore Orioles has read a lot in recent weeks about the New York Mets and their ace pitchers, Tom Seaver and Jerry Koosman. It makes nice reading, but It doesn’t phase; the veteran third baseman who faoeSy Qie Mets in the World Series starting Saturday. “I.don’t believe in that team of destiny business," Robinson said of the Mets surge to toe National League pennant. “Dick Hall and Clay Dalrymple Just came over to us from the other league and they both say we’re better than the Mets. That’s good enough for me." As for Seaver, who won 25 games, and Koosman, a 17-game winner, Robinson tried to put them in the proper perspective. “I hit against them in spring training and in the All-Star game,” he said, “and they’re terific pitchers—as good as anybody in our league. —-------T-— Mets Test New System in Series Against Birds NEW YORK (AP) - The New York Mets who scored 27 runs on 37 hits against the Atlanta Braves won’t all be in the starting lineup against Baltimore in the first two games of the World Series. While nothing may succeed like success, Manager Gil Hodges of the Mets Firebirds Get Boost in Morale From Dayton A photo call from Dayton and the hopes of getting a new quarterback has boosted the morale of the Pontiac Firebirds who expect to get back'on the winning track geturday bight when they play host to the Detroit Cowboys at Wiener Stadium. The phone message came yesterday from Dayton coach Ed McCracken who told Pontiac coach ToM Tracy, TDooV give up now. We have a score to settle with Lansing and we’re, gonna beat them In two weeks.” ♦ McCracken said he was Shinned at the news of the Firebirds’ IW .loss to Lansing. "But now you know;how we felt when you beat us 414 a few weeks ago. AT FULL STRENGTH ’ The CoUs are back et full strength again after, being ripped ydtit Mernal problems prior to their gatnq'ln fftbitiac with Buich Schneider agahrSetiRng the pace as the. top peaser in the MFE. and Chuck McEfllgdtt again, holding thf .top the practice', field Jest night, angry and embarrassed, but received the news that former HilUidale quarterback Pat Brown would be signed to a contract thls week. Pat Is no relation ' to the former Dayton playg at Flint next Saturday night, while Southwest Michigan Boats Lansing and Grand Rapids toy at Lackawanna. £ i . ' * ★ (pg IgaSs Dayton has whipped SW Michigan IM4 and Grand Rapids 35-6 since Jiew ownership took contort of the elub.,?fl|)6 Colts hold • 14-13 decision to Linaiito fa* their first meeting protesting-that victory came on a touchdsdm2iflnr an Illegal whistle by an rtfteaiMUndttt' was disallowed. ■ . v EXPECT NEW QB Meanwhile, the Firebirds wore back to .Cage Wqr Starts Again as ABA Signs Hawk LOS ANGELES (UPl) - Just when the war between the two professional basketball leagues seemed to be ebbing to a .kind of uneasy truce, the Los Angeles Stars staged a lightning guerilla mid'and came away with a.prize National Basketball Association center. The SJ«n of the rival Amerloan Basketball Association announced Tuesday the signing of Atlanta Hawks' all-star Zelmo Beaty to a four-year con-toact, beginning in thq 1370-71 season. The 6-flsgfrtf 235-pound Beaty became the third ffBAwayer in recent months to Mi.wlourth, Luke Jackson of a, ’ hung up between the isuse of signed contracts with and the ABA’a Carolina Cougnii^ • Beaty, yO. a *cy member of the. Hawks fdft|««ah seasons, said he wa« at the midway pdirti, >of hlk' career and two things prompted his decision to Jump. Earlier this summer,. BUly Cun-nlnghato^a teammate of Jackson's , at Philadelphia,1 sighed a contract to join the Cougars in two years, and Dave Bing of Detroit Inked a pact to Join the Washington Capitols, also In two years. Ferndale quarterback Mike Brown who ' played at Iowa dhd later wlti* the old Pontiac Arrows. Pit led the Mt, Clemens Arrows to thy i MFL championship in 1367 when the Firebirds finished second a# a nCW franchise. . *• ’ With Doug Hrtcbmb sitting out the Lansing game because of a shoulder injury, BUI Harrington went ail the way and was unable to move the team. “Our defense, With the early key injuries, had to play about 75 per cent of the game,’* noted Tracy, “tlus is tough to do.” ’ W ■■ * ★ ; S t According to the statistics, t h e Firebirds had the bail for only |7 offensive plays compared to 67 fix Lansing and much of this whs due to the tact the Firebirds gave up the ball seven times on fumbles and interceptions. Three of the fumbles were to thlto own end zone, Holcomb is expected to be ready to play again possibly for the Flint game, Opt.ll.< - • SPIRITS UP 1 i.f ” "Our spirits am up again,” said Tracy, “should Lansing lose a game and force our division toto a playoff, we’ll be ready. The team is just aching to get another shot at them.” it * * Saturday’s game wUl be considered the Cowboys’ home game. When the Cowboys lost their home site, the league ruled that all of their games wUl be played on the road, >J*2l Firebirds’ season ticket holders will be able to buy their regular season seats for one dollar. All other adult and student tickets are $2 and $1. Kickoff Is 7:90 p.m. "k has his own method of achieving it. It’r called platoontog. So, with Baltimore opening the series Saturday and Sunday with left-handers Mike Cuellar and Dave McNally, Hodges has decided to counter with his right-handed lineup oT Ron Swoboda, Donn Clendenon, Ed Charles and maybe A1 Weis. Of the four, Weis was the only one to get toto a game against Atlanta’s three right-handed starting pitchers. He was a defensive replacement and went hitless to one at bat. Replacing them on the bench will be: Right-fielder Art Shamsky, the top hitter to the series with seven hits to 13 at bats after hitting a powerful .300 during the.rmnitor season; .'LA^k^Wd^A ■ Second tomeifran Ken Boswell, a late Mad(m ’hCW4f)pB;hlt .270 and then was 4* for-12 against the Braves, including a two-run homer ind run-scoring single to the ftoatei; Third baseman Wayne Garrett, a .215 hitter during the regular season who came through, with 5-10M3 against Atlanta, including a two-run homer that put' the Mettuhead to stay, to the “I don’t mind telling you, I was a Uttie scared going out to (day the Los Angeles Dodgers to the 1966 World Series. But we beat those two guys (Sandy Koufax and Don Drysdale), and these guys can’t be as good as them.” Robinson said he is no longer bothered by the publicity given New York players, whereas he wquld have been five or six years ago. * h * ..."After you’ve been around awhile," he said, “you realize that being to New York a player gets the best of it. Some of them aren’t as good as they’re made out to be.” Baltimore’s American League champions have been installed as the 64 favorite. But, Robinson discounts this, too. . ; “Being the favorite doesn’t mean anything,” he daid. “You’re the favorite became they look at what you did before. Rod Carew was the American League batting champion. How many hits did he get to the playoff? One?" INFIELD HIT Carew, who hit .332 during the regular season, beat out an infield hit to his tint at-bat in the playoffs and then went 0-for-14 as the Orioles swept three games. Robinson, a .234 hitter during the season, rapped seven hits to 14 appearances in the playoffs and made Us usual standout stops at third base. "I think the World Series will create a lot more interest this year than to a long time because of the Mets,” Robinson said. “It’s a natural match-up. But I don’t think too much about the Jets beating the Colts'to the Super Bowl, or the Knlcks beating the Bullets in the basketball playoffs. That doesn't carry too much weight as far as we’re concerned.” Phils Deql Rich Allen to St. Louis ST. LOUIS (AP) - The St. Louis Cardinals announced a seven-player trade today in which they obtained controversial outfielder Richie Allen from Philadelphia and sent outfielder Curt Flood to the Phillies. WWW The Cardinals also obtained pitcher Jerry Johnson and infielder Cookie Rojas from the Phillies. They sent catcher 11m McCarver, outfielder Byron Browne and relief pitcher Joe Hoerner to Philadelphia. Allen, whose salary with the Phils reportedly was 500,000 a year, had bisen la; the club’s doghouse for missing games and other antics. He was suspended tor almost a month this summer for missing a doubleheader with the New York Mets. Allen, who will be 28 in March, hit .288, drove in 80 runs and had 32 home runs in 118 games with the Phillies tills season. He was a member of the National League All-Star team in 1065,1966 and 1967. AVERAGE SUPPED . Flood, who win be 32 in January, led the Cardinals in hitting with a .335 average in 1967 and .301 in 1968, but slipped to .285 during the past season. In his 12 years with the Cards, Flood hit over .300 six seasons. The Cardinals finished a disappointing fourth in the Eastern Division after winning the National League pennant to McCarver hit .280 and had 51 runs batted to and seven home runs this season. The 33-year-old Hoerner won two and lost three and was credited with 15 saves to 45 relief appearances tor the Cards. He had 2.00 earned run average. Browne started the season with the Tulsa farm club to the American Association and was called up July 12 after hitting .340 for the Oilers. He drove to seven runs and batted .226 to 23 games with the Cards. The 26-year-old Johnson won six and lost 13 for the Phillies this year and had a 4.29 earned run average. Rojas hit .228 to 110 games for Philadelphia. Joe Gordon Quits as K.C Manager KANSAS CITY (AP) - The Kansas City Royals announced today Joe Gordon will not return as manager of the Amerian League baseball club in 1970, and wUl be replaced by Charlie Metro, director of scouting and instruction. WWW Gordon, 54, said he was stepping down at ids own request. He wtU remain with the Royals as special scout rad liaison man with the club’s farm department. * Metro, 50, doubled for the Royals in’ their tint year as director of scouting and minor league instruction and a field coach for Gordon the tost five weeks of the 1969 season. Clark Eluded '70 State PGA Head Elected president of the Mlchigan Section PGA tor 1970 was Jack Clark, head pro ati Gowanle Golf Club, at the organizations fall meeting yesterday at Washtenaw Country Club. * * * The new president’s brother, Bob, head pro at Monroe Country Club, was elected secretary, while another Clark, Don — no relation — was named treasurer. The latter Clark is pro at Battle Creek's Binder Park. And first bkfeman Ed Kranepool, a .239 performer during the season and 3-for-12 to playoffs. Swoboda, in right field, was another hero dawn the stretch, finishing with 6 .285 avenge) thriving in 52 runs to only 327 at bats. Clendenon, at first base, hit .248 with 16 home runs and 51 RBI to only gll at bats. . Weteiat second base, hit only .218 with BMtiUwer, and Charles, at third base, managed only a .207 average. However, Hodges said today that because Cuellar throws a screwball that makes him very effective against righthanders, be might make a platoohlng exception and etlck with Boswell instead ofmhtogtbWeis. Like' ill but one of the Mets, the four would be starting their first* World Series. Only reliever Ron Taylor has played In the classic, with the 1964 St. Ixute Cardinals. That, however, does not toqPte.Hodges and the coaching staff.-was in seven series as a player Yogi Berra was in 13 as a ptoyer and one as a manager. Coaches Ruber Walker and Joe Ptgnatano were In one each. A STAY AT SHEA - Andy Miles and Bob Thalman, a pair of teen-agssa huddle under a canvas windbreaker outside Shea Stadium waiting to be first to line for World Series tickets which go on sale Thursday. The Mets and grittowre Origaa will play the third, fourth and perhaps the fifth game of the Wo|Ul|«|li|to|HMp York.* C*—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 8, 1969 -Big 8's Advantage Hit Non-Conference Record Is Embarrassing for Big Ten CHICAGO (AP) - The Big Ten’s slip is showing again and some of the coaches are asking for football equality. A preconference record of 12-16-1 including last week when conference teams posted a 3-7 'record on Black Saturday, has brought on the cry of "What’s wrongwith the Big Ten?" Coaches and those dose to the situation know that the Big Ten’s higher academic require- ments, a lower number of football scholarships and the rule against "Red Shirts" is the cause of the decline. The biggest disadvantage is the rule against the "Red Shirt" a practice where players can be withheld from competition for a year without losing any eligibility. UNBEATEN MARK________ The Big Eight Conference red shirts and as a result has a 6-0 record over the Big Ten this season and is 1IM) over the Big Ten the last two seasons. In the last three years, the Big Eight holds a 12-1 edge over BigTehteams. Although Commissioner Bill Reed claims the Big Ten is far from a football disaster area, some of the coaches would like the rules changed. "I’m in favor of one rule for everyone," said Coach Jack Mollenkopf of Purdue’s undefeated and ninth-ranked Boilermakers. "I think we should follow the NCAA rules which are strict enough. I'm all for a football program to be as strong as it can be." /★ ★ a IlIlnola,JlmVaIeksdd,nrm for red shirting and more scholarships, Personally, I would like to see the entire nation work under the same rules in- cluding the same number of scholarships." WANTS EQUAUTY Northwestern’s Alex Agase flatly said "I want the same advantages that are enjoyed by the people I’m competing against. Nothing more." One dissenter was Woody Hayes, coach of Ohio State’s top-ranked Buckeyes, who is all for the limitations placed on the Big Ten members. Hayes’ formula is selectivity in recruiting on both the athletic and academic levels. "I don’t believe you need too many good players to have a good team," laid Hayes. ‘‘Remember, you can price yourself out of football. The object is to keep under the academic standards." Big Ten is a disaster area. Everyone Is making a lot of this year’s record. We usually have two teams In the top ten and Ohio State and Purdue are there. Reed, taking heart from Hayes' commentsrsald “I don’t-think by any means that the ‘"So we lost 16 games," said Reed "but remember three of our teams who are In rebuilding programs lost nine of those games and we have no patsies on the schedule." Lions Holding No. 1 Position DETROIT (AP)—The Detroit yards a game rushing but have Lions defense had a "bad" day | been tagged for 222 yards a Sunday, giving up 21 paints in'game by opponent passers. I the 28-21 victory over the Cleve-j Last week Detroit also had land Browns. 'the best defense, allowing 212 But Lions still remain the top yard a game. i defensive team in the National { Offensively the Lions arei Football League according to fourth from the bottom among statistics released Tuesday. Detroit defenders have allowed just 229 yards a game in total offense: 91 oi^the ground and 138 in the air. The Dallas Cowboys have given up only 51 NFL Statistics team ewnm. An Av» A»» YareiawMof p■ 1 w Mackay. B.l .... Warfisid# Clt ... IS ill I | Former Farm Boy Reaping 1 llGrid Honors at Richmond Jerry Hendren of Idaho is the top receiver with 38 catches, and Jim Braxton of West Vlr-ginia has 66 points as the scoring leader. TOTAL OFF INI! Ralston Quits Net Tourney Favorites Advance in $50,000 Event LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) -“It’s my hand,” muttered Dennis Ralston. "Foot fault!” l. Stanford .......* sto* iT«t So?# (shouted the umpire. The two * ” i3B ...................... §!•?: unrelated statements led to two 9. Iowa ..............I ail I. Houston ..........3 171 1415 531.3, . .... *■ Ohio $t...........i iw 1.M7 «J.J unusual moments In the open- i. Idaho* .•? va 49*7 Jng round of the Howard Hughes i ® \% J?’1®! In more conventional play the Frontier Hotel courts Tuesday, seven of the eight seeded men advanced to today’s second round. 393 1,451 3*4.5 313 liOFI 343*7 3 139 093 344.0 .. _________ __________3 130 104 34341 I. Houston .............1 193 3 110 3 174 3 129 _____„..................3 120 10. Missouri .......... 3 193 172 210.7 944 299.0 545 292.5 P 84 937 271.0 FORWARD PASSING OFFENSE Eighth-seeded Fred Stolle of Australia will play his . first match today against England’s Roger Taylor. It wag delayed {« g <|g 1-®} »4> * day due to darkness. The OS SI 0. Richmond ...110 S3 9. Air Porco ...1|| 40 10. Davidson ... 92 54 .597 779 TOTAL ORPINS! O 1. Phippi, Purdut .....3 it so '!m1 IS nil women’s singles begin Thursday J7I no mo'* with the tourney ending Satur- .547 910 306.7 >|9V HO 290,0, av Top College Likes Own Style "We’ll have to keep away from penalties," Mildren said. “They have a good defense. I played against HalseU (linebacker Glen) in high school. We shoulda lettered him. He played in our backfield all night.” LONG SERIES It will be the 64th meeting between the bitter rivals with Texas leading 40-21-2. It's the first time both teams have come Into the game undefeated since 1963. Oklahoma Is CINCINNATI (AP) — One of mostly to strengthen my leg. I the nation’s top college kickers jean see where they get the|e,gnui'ran^ * * # doesn’t think soccer-style kick- power, but I question if they’re i . D u RoyaI ers are any better than toe-to-more accurate. I’d say I can ‘cx“. uatA?-the-ball hooters. !hit 5 out of 7 from 40 to 50 I don’t think the soccer!yards and they aren’t muchlj'aj^Vk® 8P°^i . **. . kickers are that much better,” tetter than that Ja“"? on 8 te,ephoM h0okup said Jim O’Brien of the Univer-1 “H I miss from there, I’m Tuesd>y-sity of Cincinnati, the nation’s doing something wrong.” leading major college scorer inj O'Brien scored 142 points last 1968. "They just stand out year, but 72 of those points more. !v |c a m e on 12 touchdown passes *Tve tried kicking that wsfy.jhe caught from Greg Cook, now a rookie star with the professional Cincinnati Bengals.' SHOULDER INJURY O’Brien suffered a shoulder separation before this season began and has teen limited to a kicking role. He has booted 4 of 8 field goals and four extra! r> ■ ■ » r M points to lead the Missouri Val-| nflZIGf, K66Q JpUl Pioneer Runner Erases Record as OU Romps lifike McCartan’s Ume of Fairbanks said not enough good things had teen said about the Texas defense. "You hear a lot about Texas’ offense, but their first team defense has allowed only two touchdowns in the last nine games,” Fairbanks said. Royal, of course, had something nice to say about Oklaho- ma. 73 J7S 4. Mannli LBADINO SCORERS By the Associated Press jplayed at 230 a year ago) senior. Love at first sight, is the waymade 16 unassisted tackles and sle Haupt recalls his first helped out on three others asj j-the Spiders held Virginia Tech ' without a first down until late in the third period and Lo a mere 44 yards rushing In the game. BEFORE BALL meeting with Dick Irvin. "He was all dirty, unshaven and big-looking. I was ready to sign him on the spot,” remem- Cox, Minn .. Hawk Ini, Ph. COlilm, Cl. M.rrmmn, N' Johnson, Cl. . IKS Tos po pat tf University of Richmond football *«> B team. 4 0 • 34 “He was getting to the ball-t |4i””^^ carrier before the ball was,” J \\ That first meeting occurred in said Head Coach Frank Jones. J U Hastings, Fla., a farm town— “He was really getting across 9 "n cabbage and potatoes—and Ir- past the pulling guard. A few * *’ ' .tix _ .amIam .6 UamSImm- llls.lt Mmaa Isa nlwiAni nnt tl,A linnsl tanning. 3 149 ky_(^niei^nmliiscoring with course recordund; * or’BHSmwt ‘ on lsl KfljckS PflSt PlStOllS paved the way for Oakland of ^ fleW goalg and 31 of 34 if 5737 j Ralston, the pro from Bakers- ^”lver8,1^8 victory in > extra points to go with his 12 .. I 239.3 field. Calif., was obviously off krian^larXcross country meet,touchdowns. His 142 Points last PA^RSON, N.J. (AP) - i his form as Pierre Barthes of a6ain8t Schoolcraft and Monroe year were the fifth highest total The Detroit Pistons took an r&iSanSdr^^ , „ In NCAA history. T j early lead but were unable to first set of C match In the McCartan’s first place time) mg field goals In 1968 pro-[hang on Tuesday as they lost ^iSoo tournamen™ [ttave the Pioneer Harriers pjduced three Cincinnati victories'a National Basketball Associa- 9. Dummlt, UCLA *42 Ralston’s play deteriorated tlnal total of 35 points against Und one tie, and so far this year HIUuah a. mmnnwi »ha Monroe’s 40 and Schoolcraft’s his field soal was the maridn as he dropped the ^ I first game of the second set, 1. Nottingham, Kant 2. Davit, USC ..... 3. Grotham. W.Va. . 4. Moor*. Missouri . 5. Marlnaro, Corntll 4. Doughty* Mich. .. 7. Braxton, W.1 M( NMo Then he walked off the court, • i I. J»m«, NM.XS9 f. H.rrli, Schoolcraft’s Doug Darr finished second with a 22:08 time followed by Mark Dutton, Oakland, 22:17; Tim Towne, Monroe, 22:23; Tom Towne, Monroe I his field goal was the margin of victory in a 17-14 -win over AFL Statistics San C flow I OFFENSE — Av. Avf.—^Ava. YarOsRutMna 390 Id! o rmrmym. defaulting to Barthes. ^ NO FEELING Jo? I "It’s my hand,” he said. % I "There’s no feeling In the hot* ______3 x.” »t"r* two ’fingers of my rightl^hdolcraft, 22:M. vin, a senior at Hastings High times he almost got the hand- io. Thomson, wi..i tf is7 hand. I can’t feel the racquet, i ottier placers in- | School, was on a boxcar loading off ’’ ! forward mmino he SJiid. eluded, Randy Petipren, ninth, potatoes when his coach camei «we didn’t block fevin all' i.oiNM,sew»Earlier in the day, Rumanian Mike Morrison, 10th and Ed and told him Haupt had arrived.jnjght," lamented Jerry Qai-! ?! h?xTS5,%mIw"..: 5 IB ’’ffi Davis Cupper Hie Nastase «P-|cammanan, 12th, Four years later, Irvin stilt is borne of Virginia Tech. s MwRingfW s « B m? peered to be on the verge of,...,,-...1.— ui defeating No. 3 seed John New- Xavier A 22-year-old senior from Cincinnati who stands 6-0 and weighs 192, O’Brien first went to the Air Force Acadeipy, but Larry Cooper,{developed an ulcer and received a medical discharge. He says now, however, he’s tion exhibition to the New York Knicks 124-106. Howard Kotnives led Pistons’ scoring with 16 points and Jimmy Walker was second with 15. Walt Frazier and Willis Reed were high men for New York with 23 points each. The Pistons have now lost 4. B.xler, AP 5. Manning. Mi»t ... 3 Vs?" big-looking—especially to Rich-j ft was sweet revenge for lr- ?: ?icg&?kFi.s9 3 u ^ ....____________________. . .. gj jmond.’s opponents, and Virginia)Vm a sociology major. - j J- aw, .... > s «5»,comte of Australia. . -----id! si**., learned to handle pressures and [four In a row and five of their would like a fling as a pro klck-|last seven. The Knicks are 5-2 er. 1 in exhibition play. Miami Houston BUM .. Jff Tech In particular. For his play ns 1 in Richmond’s 17-10 victory over! is. Tech Saturday, middle guard lr-iln1 vin was named college Lineman! of the Week by-The Associated *vf- Press. 14s The 5-foot-10, 206-pound (he i ft a in Not* York.........774 Cine! 5inv Yard. 0*ln TOS *t. Ill i.S OU Goalie Hurt as Pioneers Drop 4-2 Soccer Tift LEAPINO PASSERS Cook, Cln .. N.nutk, N.Y. HmI* S.0......117 44 UvImSm.KX. ..44 33 PRWN^KC. .... 54 31 la manic*. Oak .. 139 *5 U.ka, Dan. 41 film b*». . ii7 ■ ^wRiard, Hou. .. 117 si MIM7, N.Y Road. Hoy. R: LBADINO SCORERS 9 J Coach John Scovil of Oakland ? i University may wind up with * ‘ more soccer players on the in- jured list than he’ll have on the it«k field. 4 ’tm The latest casualty among the | OU soccer ranks was goalie j Barry Braeham of New York, who suffered a mild concussion lie .the Pioneers (0-5) were ipping a 4-2 decision to Schoolcrkft yesterday. Braeham; j was expected to remain 'lb; ? {Beaumont Hospital for a couple of days. » ♦ * * -‘That makes nine kids we’ve ibst because of injuries,” sighs Scovil. “We'll take a count and re* »§ rat rp use who is left bgiay.” Talal Rabiah, a junior from Aflad. and Paul Neeaon of !e scored for OIL. Tito ,*34 7351 Nastase was leading 3-2 in the third set after splitting the first two. But the umpie called a foot fault on a Nastase sixth-game serve, the baseline judge said the serve was a clean one and a five-minute discussion be-gar. they eventually told Nastase ire {to replay the point - but the H Rumanian's game disintegrated Oxford, Orion Triumph PNH Wins Redford Harrier Meet Pontiac Northern’s Huskies155 points, Midland Dow .with 70'Paul Moffitt (?) ; and Ron streaked to the school’s first points and PCH with 89. i Stanley (8). and^ Newcombe^ ~withou^k»inBiinvitat,on?,, cross-country vie- Kevin Reabe and Dave Jeff Bowen took second for another game swept to a l-g jtory yesterday by beating out 19'Myerhofer ran one-two but Itj Avondale, while teammates Bill r« H ’ other ‘ teams to tile Redford1 wasn’t enough as WaterfordjHarrlson and Jay Bowen placed Union Invitational, I Kettering dropped a 2 7 - 2 8 four-five. The balanced Huskies came'decision to Walled Lake Cen- 6-3, 5-3 victory. College Meet Won by Grand Rapids Unbeaten Grand Rapids raced to crass-country victories over Highland Lakes and Concordia yesterday in a Michigan Community Junior College Athletic Association meet. Rob Cool of Grand Rapids 01-0) set the pace with a time up with 93 points and they were followed by Farmington (106), Redford Union(127), Hazel Park (135), Garden City East (152) and Livonia Stevenson (153). Hazel Park was def endlng Individual honors went Stevenson’s Doug Kurils. Setting the pane for I were/George Pickering 0] Turnbull (14), Mike Taylor (Si) of 20:50 and his twin brother,{Jack Barnes (28) and I second Rapids tral. WL Central took three-four-five with Tim Howe, Tony Searing and Mike Wozhlak fitting those spots. TWo new course records were established as Oxford rolled to a 10-45 victory over Romeo. Oxford took the first four of five plate® with Jim Good-fellow, 10:03, and Dennla Clack, 10:20 pacing the runners. Bpth Goodfellow and . Clack's Bloomfield Hills Lahser rolled past Utica, 19-38. Lahser, which is 5-0 In the Oskland-A league and 7-0 overall, will face Rochester Adams (0-0) thuraday. ; www Steve Young of Lahser crossed the finish line first in Tuesday’s moot In 12 minutes followed by Kent Corbin, Utica, 12:02; Jay Kershenbaum, Lahser, 12:04; Mika Mans, time were new records fotj the Lghser, 12:05; Jeff Shanks, Romeo course as Oxford ran Its Lahser,' 12/12; Rick R y a if, Grand Rapids downed! Highland Lakes, 16-39, and took Individual honors Concordia, 16-47, while Highland quadrangular Kevin Kline <4 Flint CnHnl ...........- *• ”- COUHffli RBCOKD meet held In TOP PERFORMER - Mississippi quarterback Archie Manning and cheerleader Karen Cope are all amllea after Manning’s selection as college football Back of the Weak by the Associated Frees.' Manning brake five Southeastern Conference records last Week as Mississippi fell to Ala* bama, 33-32. ■ti whipped Concordia, 17-59. John Nadolnl led Highland Lakes (7*2) with a fifth-place time of 21:40, followed by Ron Beegle (6), Julian Gloomls (7), Scott VanNorwick 00) and Randy Igreae Pontiac with a winning time of 10:06. Team honors, however, want to Midland with 21 points as the Chernies swept the next four ptaees. Flint Central wai aaeond With ORION WINS I Bavo Moffat craekad his own Lpkt (Won evened its reowd course record tat leading at M with a 2544 daemon evar Charles Hopper leg lire Dragons with a find place lima of 11; 16, followed by Ray Wataon (1), Jerry Jonea V\V\^ ' _1 „• \ ' 1 T ' ' ' ^ ■ ’"A ^ A •'* '' A:^\ ^ \ 1 '\'». '* \ , THE PONTIAC P11KS8, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8, I960 (Wg) • .* Otenrlck' IM> ».oo Mt nti^|Cmn« » yardtj liUW * Wild Na4l ' i7.W ll.40 1.40 Rlm» Royal 7.20 ZJj B¥Md(W) ROW ™ Attondanco I(Mtl MU handlo *75740 Hazel Park Results TUBfDAY't RESULTS HI—Troll mltoi li» ,.A „„ Margaret Adloo 4.00 SO} J.{}| Sudan's Special S.00 }.*} Carla Song 34t 2nd—Paco; mile: IlM M , • Upland Liz U.I0I1.W I.4S. D. W. Yales 1S.0S 7.M CUSTOM 240 6.95-14 Blackwall, tubclea* Plus .48 Federal Excisa Tut No tradf-in require on snow lire*. 46(8.18) The Club that belongs to the world i|HH§P Falcons 60-64, Darts 63-66 W MOST MODELS Fords, Chavrolsts...... Plymouth*, Dodges .... [KTINSTALLATION AVAILABLE. When you order Canadian Club, you automatically join the world's most popular club. Because C.C. Is world' renowned as "The Best In The House"* in 87 lands. Smooth as the wind. Mellow as sunshine. Friendly as laughter. It's the one whisky that's bold enough to be lighter than them all. • -te. . FEATURING BUILT-IN BURGLAR ALARM Fully automatic with exclusive fine tuning. Thumb wheel controls for safety. 12 watts of power -per,channel, dual balance controls,Illuminated channel indicator. Plus Speakers. ****** RMP .46-8106 Amariean-made, U.L. approved, automatic circuit breaker. KeapabatteigJ^^ Racing Ends for Trotter Nevele Pride NEW YORK (AP) - The racing career of Nevele Pride, tht world's fastest trotter at one mile with a 1:54 4-8 clocking, to believed over. The New cork connections of the Harness Horse of The Year for 1967 and 1968 were not available for comment Tuesday night on the report from Montreal that Nevele Pride had pulled up "larnB'ttTterrrwprkont.------------ will ha made at a press confer- tional Trot at Roosevelt Race- Mike MacCormac, director of racing at Bgue Bonnets, said Ndvele Pride had been withdrawn from a $25,060 trot at the Canadian track scheduled for Sunday, Oct. 19 because of the mishap. "It came as a complete surprise to us,” MacCormac l "Stanley Dancer called me and said that the horse pulled up lame and, In the best Interests “oTlhe horse, it was decided lo retire him immediately.’’ It was expected that official announcement of the retirement eftce Thursday, _________ Dancer, of NOW Egypt, N.J. B the driver rod trainer of Nevele Pride owned by the Nevele Acres rod Lou Resnick of El-lenvUie, N.Y. MISSED GOAL They had planned to campaign the colt for the remainder k-lhe- year wlth lhe hope of-hit -becoming the first trotter to win million dollars. The son .ol Star's Pride-Thankful, was scheduled to be retired for breeding purposes after the 1969 campaign. Nevele Pride's current earnings are $871,738, second to the $885,171 hung up by Su Mac Lad before his retirement five years ago. Cardigan Bay, a pacer, be. came harness racing’s first mil llonaire last year before his retirement. Nevele Pride was upset by Une de Mai, a French mare, In the $100,000 Roosevelt Interna- way In Westbury, N.Y. at IV* miles fait August 23. It was eight days later, Sunday, Aug. 31, at Indianapolis that Nevele Pride went for the world mile trotting record In a time trial—and made it. AAU Harrier From Milford leads Field ' Jim Menlove of the Motor City Strlders club led all run- Oxford Keglers in Lead The lead i In tl Oakland All-Star ners In capturing the Michigan Cooley i men'sIVanDeVelde of Hazelton’s with tails ta* - _ * „ _ , changed hands this week as Cooley’s 1105 was goodfor the Oxford Merchants vaulted intol night's high team games, while first place replacing deposed a combined total of 3171 Barons Win, 3-0; Record Now 64 Bloomfield Hills Lahser made it six shutouts in a row as the Barons soccer team swept past Ferndale Tuesday, 3-0. John Cviengros scored all three of the Lahser goals in leading the Barons to a 6-1 record overall and 4-1 league standing. AAU annual Senior Cross Country Championships Tuesday at Rouge Park. Menlove. a resident of Cooley, despite racking high team games and series at home Monday, slipped to second place while last week's third place meter race with a time of 34:50, 23" seconds ahead of Pontiac’s Larry Bridges who crossed the line at 35:13. John Garza and J o h El warner representing the Motor City Strlders, placed third and fourth with times of 35:31 and 36:18, respectively, while Ed Kozloff of Southfield, 57119, and Bill Stewart, also of MotorCtty,37:29, followed. OLMS Falters Holds Early Golf Lead Horse Race Results Tom Dalasso took first In 10:43 but he and bis Orchard Lake St. Mary teammates dropped a 22-27 cross-country decision yesterc^y to Alphonsus. St. BELLA VISTA, Ark. (AP) -David Lee of Hot Springs, Ark shot a two-under-par 70 Tuesday for the first-round lead ip the South Central PGA Golf Tournament team high series also. ITANMNM Oxford Marchanta ,., . Coolay Lonoa ..... flfth as Herk’s Auto moved into the open slot. Other team changes Autobahn Motors break a four team tie for fourth place and take sole possession of position while Redford Trophies slipped from sixth place last week to seventh. Ron Cotner, with Cooley Lanes,-rolled the high game of the night Monday with a 259 pin total followed by Hazelton Lettering’s Art Pearson with a 257. St. Louis Blues Blank Minnesota ST. LOUIS (AP) - The St. Louis Blues blanked the Minnesota North Stars 4-0 Tuesday The same combination, only night in a National Hockey reversed recorded the night’s high series with Pearson at 704, ami Cotner 696. Rollie Krause of Crown Heating rolled a 679 series followed by Larry League exhibition. St. Louis closed out its preseason schedule with a 7-3-1 record. Minnesota la 7-4. NON-FERROUS METALS No. 1COPPER » 50* No. 2 COPPER "*• 45* BRASS . . .> RADIATORS »2S* ALUMINUM f 8* Orchard Pontiac Scrap Co. 135 Branch Entrance m Bast St, 332-0200 SALES DAYS WED, THURS. Fftl.> SAT. OPEN DAILY 10 to 10; SUNDAY 11 to 6 DEPEND*#,, uohomv Windsor Entries WBDNMDAY'l ENTRIES Why Wait? Charge it! list Our Convenient Credit DRC Results TUISDAY'S RESULTS maian cigar -• 11.09 a.«o 5.00 Hay Hawlor 19.20 9.00 740 Kid Franco 14.10 7.00 5.00 FISK RUBBER OR VINYL AUTO FLOOR MATS 377 VINYL: Transparent-Full Front or Full Rear • Twin Front or Twin Rear . ‘ ► RUBBER: Full Front or Full Rear or Twin Front —■*-»— 1 GLENWOOD PLAZA- PERRY AT GLENWOOD c-sr THE, PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1969 Seeks Initial Ldnd Purchase Approval DAW? Steps Toward Holly Township Recreation Area By DON VOGEL flooded gravel pit and all of I Grange Hall, Eddy Lake, The Natural Resources Com- Spring Lake. Tinsman and Fish Lake roads, mission wlllbe asked Fridhy to Other lands in the 1,313-acre Although located in approve the first step 1 n proposal are under long term northwestern Oakland County, creating > state park andupttan. Dickinson, Mud - ane made within the next couple of Several established subdivisions within the proposed Change Made in Ammo Bill Mallards to Dominate Early Duck Shooting Duck hunters opening the season Friday iA Southeastern Michigan should see plenty of targets. Unfortunately, most of them will be mallards. 1 ' ' The basic dally bag limit of four ducks can include only one mallard. Thvw are other spade restrictions and early and late bonus ducks- . ^ ^ atarttM time Friday will be 10 ajn. Thereafter, tbq shooting hours win be 7 a.m. to 5:25 p m. through October and 7:45 a.m. to 5 p.m. during November. ■ The dude season doses Nov. IS and goose hunting Nov. 30. boose hunting has been legal in Northern Michigan since Oct. 1 and Southern Michigan’s season starts Friday. “I’m nptimintle about file coming season,” said Howard Greene, district game supervisor for the Department of Natural Resource’s Pontiac Lake office. IMPROVED WATER CONDITIONS "This Is based on the present water conditions, which are good, and die number of ducks using this water.” Greene said that the local duck population is up 10 to 15 per cent and goose numbers about 10 per cent. The population at the St Clair Flats is mostly mallards and blue-wing teal with a scattering of redheads and scaupqn the open water. "There won’t be any real good (fiver shooting until the flights comedown,” said Greene. Si 1., Tom Nederveld, game habitat biologist at Fish' Point, reports good ccoceatraticna of ducks along Saginaw Bay, but “75 per cent are mallards.” * » In addition to the restriction on mauards, not more than one Moot duck, one redhead or canvasback and two wood ducks can be included in the daily bag limit BONUS TEAL TIME A „ From Oct 10 through Oct #, hunters may take two bluewing teal over and above the limit of four. Two extra bluebills ihe Department of Naturahpasstog an examination of the /_____\___1_____u ikA kwMvVAif 1.1ft in 17 nmoa nrminn . r : I . ______ . . L m a_*. ____ (scaup) can be included in the bagNov. 1-18 in 17 areas around the state. ‘ < — Mallard, throwing toaT «adPwwfftNfcJMltnh*** appear to be Mghar in the Oakland County area this fall. Results, however, should tail off rapidly after the first weekend. • W W ‘ ★ Heavy pressure on state lands will push the ducks into protected Sreas and to waters on private lands not frequented by gunners. A cold snap could send the teal and woodier winging , south. , Greenwihg teal are beginning to appear at Saginaw Ray, but the bluewings apparently have moved out, said Nederveld.' “We had quite a few bluewings around earlier, but I've seen very few the last week,” reported the biologist. He also stated that few^aldpates or pintails have arrived and that the current goose population ‘‘Is rather lean.” FOOD LOCATIONS CHANGE “The location of food will be more of an influence this year than in the past,” Nederveld pointed out. “High water on the Bay has hurt fopd growth in many areas. This means that areas that were good for hunting in former seasons may be poor this year' SUCCESSFUL ARCHER - Hector Morales, 28, of Clarkston bagged this seven-point buck last Thursday morning while hunting near M46 east of Saginaw. He used a 45-pound bow to take the deer which was hit at 38 yards. Morales was unsuccessful last year, in his first season of bow hunting, He was hunting with Joe Flores of Clarks- Not Mandatory Until 1971 WASHINGTON (UPI) - The ponsor of a bill exempting most ammunition sales from provisions of last year’s Gun Control Act has bowed to the opposition of Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, and agreed to alter his proposal substantially. redrawn, when it comes before the Senate, possibly today. WILL RENEW FIGHT “It was either eliminate the .22 caliber ammunition or face no bill at all this year,” Bennett wrote his 46 cosponsors. He promised to renew the fight to attempt .22 caliber bullets later. As rewritten, the legation opponents of the Bennett bill offered by Sen. Wallace F. registration procedure Bennett, R-Utah, and c0'inhibited people from buying sponsored fry 46 senators — ammunition to commit crimes, almost half the Senate —will retain the law’s requirement of ammunition record the name, age and ad- by several development companies. Seven Lakes Impoundment was created by flooding over several other bodies of watsr, notably DeCou and Big Lakes. One of the stipulations In the purchase agreement with L & C is that the corporation will have the right to buy back part of the lands It Is selling should the Legislature fail to appropriate the necessary funds to complete the total acquisition, The DNR currently administers six. recreation areas and several state parks all or part of which are in Oakland County. The recreation areas ate Holly, Pontiac Lake, Highland, Proud Lake, Rochester-Utica and Orton-vtlle. dress of the buyer of .22 caliber Egrly Hunter Training Planned that program since it was Introduced hi Michigan In 1960. Resources is pointing toward DNR which will test their com-july, 1970, to start the state’s petence in the safe handling of niw "mandatory program ofjflrearms- and knowledge of hunter safety training f o r hunter etiquette, youngsters which was enacted * * into law earlier this year. I Firearm licenses will also be Launching of the program'^ m i971 to youths under 17 will provide more than a year.who j,ave successfully com-of lead time before Sapt. 1,1971, p]£t£d DNR voluntary hunter when Michigan youths will IjfeUjfety training programs. Some • * to have completed)^ qqq youngsters have passed however, youths will be able to, But registration will not be required for most ammunition for shotguns and rifles. Originally, XL caliber ammunition — accounting for 79 per cent of all ammunition Sold — was to have been exempted. But Sen. Thomas J. Dodd, D-j Conn., chief author of the Gun, Control Act of 1968 and the, chairman of the, Senate’s juvenile delinquency subcommittee, and KennedyD-Mass., were preparing to fight Bennett’s bill. ★ ★ ★ A XL caliber bullet killed Sen. Robert F. Kennedy. TACKED ON Bennett bad attached Us proposal as an amendment to a measure extending the interest equalization tax, Which expired Sept. 30. h ★ ★ . The tax was intended to block the flow of U.S. dollars abroad by raking R just as expensive to borrow money to the United States as abroad. The Treasury anxious to see the tax extended, urged Beitaett to modify Us They argued that requiring no registration of sales by the dealer would nullify the law’s provisions forbidding the sale of rifle and shotgun ammunition to persons under 18 and the sale of pistol ammunition to .those But Bennett called am munition sales registration “i harrassment to the legitimate sportsman and a farce t deterrent to the criminal.” UNITED TIRE, INC. ‘ Under those provisions of Act, 43 wUch take effect 90 days; . • . . .. after the yet-unschediiled final The amendment threatened to adjournment of the St at etto the legation up f^reks Legislature, youngsters under ■ A UwHl no longer be aUowed tohewouidcor^eto ffcht B^ buy firearm or frehery hunting nett 8 amendment, even aS| As in the past, gAVE MONEY ON USED We're Now Buying Scrap H COPPER-BRASS-ALUMINUM (We Also Pick Up Junk Cars) pSc FE 2-0200 A -Awiaumeiiit' N0W-REWNGT0N FACTORY AUTHORIZED ElECIWC SHAVER SERVICE and SALES WE SERVICE Alt OTHER BRANDS—-GENUINE FACTORY PARTS and PRICES While-You-Wait Service such' training or meet other alternatives to qualify for buying firearm hunting licenses. *- * * The DNR, is seeking instructors to train, working out administrative d e ta i 1 s and generally gearing up for the first year of the compulsory program under which it Few Bruins Taken in L. P. hunt on their own premises iwtthout licenses. The new law sets a $2 fee for the training course and a $1 charge for the examination whldi will serve as one alternative to taking hunter Safety instruction. > * ★ The DNR Is seeking out ex* perienced hunters which it Peninsula, but success continues nee<]8 as voluntary instructors good above The Straits where to launch the training program this special season is open until 'n^t July.: These Interested ta Nov. 5. joining Its ranks of trainers are ★ * * I urged to contact conservation Known bear kills to the Gay- officers to their local areas. Less than 25 bears were'es-timated taken during the Sept. 10-14 Season to the Lower Cropland flooding has started at Fish Point and the ducks |to reach about 128,000 youths are moving out of the refuge and Into these fields, most of thernlwfth a four-hour course or open to hunting. hunter safety schooling. ★ ww - _______I Aside from passing that.ro- “Ohe barley field was black with ducks Monday," said‘quired course. there are several Nederveld. other ways that youngsters Large concentrations of ducks are reported at the ! from 12 through 16 can become Shiawassee state game area near St. Charles. They began pour- eligible to buy 1971 firearm tog in as the croplands were flooded. hunting licenses und$r terms of lord District totaled 11. ’ An- .This is a management area Where dally permits are required Act 43. other two • were confirmed to and special bag limits will be to force. , jthe Mio District. The brief -----=----------------;---------------------------s--- PREVIOUS YEAR ^ason ended a four-year j Each youth to this age pt f • *■% • | bracket may also qualify, for a rishina Uominaresii»7iiicen“‘fhecan,pr!seDta license from a previous year {which proves he has had past hunting experience. In that lease, he will not be required to have completed the mandatory Coho Fishing Northern Lake Michigan bike along on a hunt to Wyom- hunter training course, tag.may be easier on the legs,' As a substitute for but doesn’t necessarily spare training requirement ability to show proof of past berry and Baraga dl hunting experience, youths may Head the way with over 00 Coho salmon fishing continues to dominate the fishing picture to northern Lake Michigan, but steeiheads and smallmouth thepocketbook. black bass are holding forth in WORTH 14 Lake Huron’s Saginaw Bay ,Kor ^ eig^ g^aigM year al“ tor lOTlHcen^ bleach. Cohos are being taken f^om d*er Platte Bay around\the mitt to L^’ *•* Urhe Whfle hunting Lake Charlevoix. The Chinook ^1® Schmidt Ranch between ..tofffiitaner nffj | BUls and Lance Creek. the 220-pound ide on the bike time. 8o, he No bear hunting will be permitted to the Lower Peninsula during the Nov. 15-30 deer sea-However, it will be open during that time to the Upper. An estimated 300 black bears already bave been taken to the the U,p. Dogs can be used during thejthe special season. The New districts bruins Solunar Tables The schedule of Solunar Periods, as printed .below, has been taken from John Alden Knight’s SOLUNAR TABLES. Plan your days so that you will be fishing to good territory 4,*-*; AO V'Vv^A V " 'l' "N ’ ’' 1 , aXV. . \ J -.....r?..^2^T . N_________THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1989 ^ ' 1__________________,______ C-tJ S.D.A. WHOLE FRESH iRADEA' RYERS Ttait Sj&Ujon Breakfast Soosoge Hyqrade Boll Part SIM Bologna gy |4c1' ^Trwh fc|pa*'Bwf ‘ '’*^0 sopsawasow .^^oas* t«^ Bwg«r$ t &. ■ > P% '*»• * J £|^fOg lamM3£ro*t. < >^A>s<4; 0 . SkMMsWiwrt . l5» TihiSSM Nostle’s Oorty * Maado^*l*^rfT\V Aunt Nallia^io-^aF* t;\ - tirnttk B»«cuit m~ '•&& g ROBIN llOOP^ \ I ft VaaOwnp ToioJ£ $}&|S% CANE SUGAR THIS COUPON WORTH $1.00 toward tha purchata of a "Amarican Row" or "CarrousaT' ' 2-9" Lincheon Plates Regular prlca ...............MV Lota coupon .............. 1.00 THIS COUPON WORTH $1.00 toward tho purchaso of • "American Roto" or "CanoMaT [I VoDyU ^ 3g| pUm M.* HOME OF LOW LOW EVERYDAY PRICES 0—6 Try New Way of Fixing French Toast THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER. 8, 1069 A tropical paradise fori Brunch, that meal that comesientertalning time. It often! brunch? Yea, that’s what family midway between breakfast and wonderful opportunity for truly and gueats win enjoy with fruit-luncheon, has during the past I elegant breakfast menus. And, topped golden tout Sliced!few years become a popular | it means ease In preparation oranges are shown here, but equally delicious la Hawaiian Toast topped with sliced pineapple, Mandarin oranges or sweetened canned cherries. Choose any fruit that’s compatible with the orange and honey custard that tops off the special brunch menu. food Buying CanBeTaught What quality guides can you look for when you shop for celery or cantaloup? What’s the best grade and cut of meat for Sunday dinner? What's the difference between egg sin and egg quality? These questions plus m more are answered in a new packet Just issued by the Government Printing Office, and is for sale only from GPO for HAS. It is not available from the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Prepared by quality specialists in USDA’s Consumer and Marketing Service, the packet contains nine leaflets with useful tips on buying, storing, and using i wide range of food products. Topics Include: How to Buy Beef Steaks, How to Buy Beef Roasts, How to Buy Fresh Fruits, How to Buy Fresh Vegetables, How to Buy Eggs, How to Btoy Poultry, How to Buy Butter, How to Buy Cheddar Cheese and How to Buy Instant Nonfat Dry Milk. ★ * ★ For each easy-to-store packet of “How to Buy Food,’’ send $1.29 by check or mooey order to the Superintendent of Documents, Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C. 20402. dress with to the Opcode. Superin tod ent DiC. 20402. Please include your return address with xipcode. land service if you choose to serve a baked french toast such as this. HAWAIIAN TOAST * eggs 14 cup milk 1 tablespoon honey 44 teaspoon salt 44 teaspoon vanilla 1 tablespoon soft butter 6 slices bread 44 cup fine corn flake crumbs 0 drained pineapple slices or 2 cups welftflelned sweetened canned cherries or Mandarin HAWAIIAN TOAST — A glamorous yet easy brunch menu includes Hawaiian Toast. This nutritious golden toast is baked then topped with fruit and custard. Bake Buttery Lobster in Foil Encasing rock lobster tails in foil, with the sauce elready in-and baking: than in the coals is an especially nice way to barbecue this delightful seafood. Once the wrapping has been done by the hdst or hostess (in the kitchen, of course, long before the party) there is really nothing whatever to do. The guest even does his own unwrapping. And enjoying. Foil-Baked Rock Lobster 3 pkgs. (9-oz. ea.) frozen South African rock lobster tails 44 cup butter 44 cup finely chopped mushrooms 2 tablespoons finely chopped 2 tablspoons finely chopped pitted black dives 1 teaspoon paprika 8 slices lemon Run rock lobster tails under lukewarm water until slightly thawed. With scissors remove the thin underside membrane. Place 2 tails side by side on a 12-inch square of heavy duty aluminum foil. Combine remaining ingredients except lemon slices and shape into a roll. Cut roll into 44 inch thick slices. Place slices on meat Surface of rock lobster. Add a lemon slice to each. Wrap foil tighlty around tails and seal. Place packets into gray coals. Cook for 10 minutes on each side. Butter mixture can be made the day ahead and sliced at the last mintue. Yield: 6 servings. Custard sauce Combine eggs, milk, honey, salt and vanilla in mixing bowl; beat slightly. Spread soft butter over 13 x 10 x 1-inch pan. Dip bread slices in egg-milk mixture; drain and coat well on both sides with crumbs. Place in buttered pan. Bake in hot oven, 400 degrees,- 5 minutes. Turn slices and bake until hot and crisp, 5 to 7 minutes. * * * Top each French toast slice with 1 slice pineapple or 44 cup fruit and spoon 44 cup custard sauce over fruit. Makes 6 servings. Costard Sauce: 44 cup honey 2 tablespoons flour 44 teaspoon salt 2 cups milk 3 eggs 1 teaspoon grated orange rind Mix together honey, flour and salt in saucepan. Stir in milk. Cook over low heat, stirring constantly, until smooth and thickened. Combine eggs and orange rind in mixing bowl; beat slightly. Gradually add hot mixture to eggs, stirring constantly. Return to heat; cook 2 or 3 minutes until eggs are well heated and mixture coats spoon Makes 3 cups custard. 'Beet' the Game Ever add finely chopped cooked beets to mayonnaise tb be served on wedges of lettuce? A little minced green onion should also go In. Just a pinch of turmeric In a white sauce will give it a lovely golden color — nice for creamed chicken or turkey. You Need Soft Water to Do a Better Job mil ItY a Ms, loft, wonderful world for your whole family with 44iL17flfr .«ff.n» VI.(- owil .VIm loot uaAum aHakuee... k 209.95 Automatic “0-90” Water Softener Oxidising Filter remove up to 20 ppm. red or clear water iron. iritall in He|.Law 1AQ05 water line ahead of softener. Prise JiweP Iron Removal System for automatic softeners only. Aids in removing "clear water” iron deposits. See it at jSean. PAN STYLE COUNTRY PORK SAUSAGE 59! MICH. #1 GQADE RING OOLOGHA 531 CHICKEN PARtNI^ SPECIAL!! LEGS or BREASTS A lit ! CS1 — cot.wmppad if □LB.! Wm onal Delivered PRBB i usM Choioe Bast '(•sad) (CMce)‘ FULL FULL 63: Si t an an ansa ea sum sum as ha m m mmm awaamae-paawanJ Plumbing 8. Hooting Dapt. Downtown Pontiac # Phone FE 5-4171 HOFFMAN'S OAKLAND PACKING CO. aaa ml wit at. wontiac pis-iim »< fawlsg tea Ikaalar laMsad foaMeo Aw for Imr 19 Tears ms T THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1960 Beat Food Budget Blues wizard with the food budget. But you can do it. And I’m here to give help whenever I can. The Pontiac Praia Challenges were a dime a dozen last week at the food editors conference. It seems as if every other speaker challenged us to provide more or better information to you, our readers. In contrast to many speakers who Just mouth glittering generalities, Drv Philip L. White had some specific suggestions. They are so good that I’m passing them along to you. Dr. White is secretary, Council on Foods and Nutrition, American Medical Association. He will take a leading role in the December White House conference on food and nutri- they taste this man dish. PARSLEY’D APPLES *N CHICKEN 1 (2Vi to 3 lb.) frying chicken, cut into serving pieces % cup flour % cup shortening 1% cups water -% cup sugar 1 teaspoon salt 2 tablespoons lemon juice • Wlnesap apples . 1 cup liquid (reserved from syrup) 3 teaspoons instant chicken bouillon 2 tablespoons butter 1 tablespoon cornstarch Vi teaspoon salt tt.cup finely chopped fresh parsley Dredge chicken pieces with flour and brown in shortening. Blend water, sugar and 1 teaspoon salt in a large skillet Simmer 5 minutes, stirring occasionally. Remove from heat and add lemon juice. Core and peel apples; simmer in the syrup 15 to 25 minutes, basting frequently, until trader. Place the browned chicken and whole poached apples in a large baking dish or casserole. MAKE SAUCE CHEESE nonfat dry milk powder. But it still save on the milk bill. Cheaper cuts of meat tenderized in one way or another may npt be porterhouse steak. But they can be elegant eating. • Finally, be ingenious, says Dr. White. And he pays us the compliment of thinking we can use our Ingenuity successfully in this. way. I’ve never said it was easy. It takes time to-be ingenious. It takes, effort to prove, you’re a Fight Now Brewing Over Fat in Milk Milk Products are under attack from makers of synthetic milk substitutes and filled milks. A filled milk is any milk to which a fat or oil other than butterfat has been added. Natural milk is an inviting target because of its highly saturated bu t t er 4-a-hnow recognized to be undersirable in the Set on any large scale. On the other hand, the advertisers of filled milks, who make much of the need to replace butterfat in tire diet with unsaturated fat, mostly^ try to replace it with coconut oil filling which is also highly saturated. NATURALLY, list of their favorite foddf. No two families eat the same way so you must draw the pattern. • Consider frivolous foods, Froan Foods might be eliminated or replaced by less expensive food items. We’ll bet that, since the advent of television, the proportion of the food money sprat for snack food has increased mors than any other single item. .Take a sharp look at your family’s snack habits. You may be'surprised. • figure out what you can eliminate in buying food without cutting out all .the favorite foods. • Bone up on nutrition. It’s no| a complicated highly technical subject. 0 Bone up on nutrition. It’S] not a complicated highly technical subject. If you include the following essential foods in your dally meal pattern, you can be sure your family will not suffer: mdk or milk products; meat, CHEESE SPREAD cup and dissolve the chicken bouillon In the liquid. Set aside. Melt butter and blend in cornstarch, and Vi teaspoon salt. Remove from heat and gradually add bouillon' mixture, stirring until smooth. Cook over medium heat, stirring constantly, until mixture copies to aboil; boil one minute. ‘Remove from heat; stir In % cup chopped parsley. Pour the sauce over, the chicken and apples, Cover and bake at 350 degrees for SO to 40 minutes or until tender. Garnish with additional parsley before serving. Makes about 6 servings. SNACKS. When snacks contribute to the well-being of the child, they’re perfect. Cookies need not be just empty calories — that is, only a PILLSBURY BISQUITS . .4- 39 GRADE ‘A’ SMALL EGGS 3^99 BIG C MILK ........ .o-93 two extras, cereal and fruit. So, serve them for breakfast if you like. BANANA OATMEAL COOKIES Its cups sifted enriched flour 1 cup sugar % teaspoon baking soda 1 teaspoon salt Vt teaspoon nutmeg Vi teaspoon cinhamon % oup lard 1 egg, well beaten /■ 1 cup mashed ripe bananas (2 to 3 bananas) 1% cups quick cobbing oats tt cup chopped nuts (optional) Sift together flour, sugar, soda, Sait, nutmeg and cin- nuts.' ’Beat until thoroughly blended. Drop by teaspoonfuls, about i Ilk inches apart, onto ungreased cooky Meet. Bake In a hot Oven (too degreea) about 15 minutes or until the cookies are US. I No. 1 1 I 1 Michigan Potatoes i 10-lb. fife 1 BAD Of | Golden Ripe Bananas 1 !: 25° 1 I Crisp Cello Carrots 1 \ Mb., BAD to# y TTTTC PONTIAC PRESS. WEDXESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1969 Give Generously THE UNITED HW SUGAR PRESERVES MISSION STAR-CROSS TOMATO SAUCE FRANCO AflltlRfCAN_ SPAGHETTI CHIU with BEARS ' CAL ^AL YELLOW SLICED CLING PEACHES CnHAk LIGHT TUNA Chicken of the Sea iKpikr coffee TOlATC CATSUP LUCKY DOG FOOD RIALEMON LEMON JUICE White Yellow or Chocobte 19-Oz. Pkg. mb eft mI'Muwb ve Iv|IaCII ulttlrd PETERS Saok*d« Fraih PETERS SflM ARMOUHITMI SKINIUS FACIAL TISSUE TOWN ★ PEOPLES ★ FOOD TOWN ★ PEOPLES ★ FOOD TOWN ★ PEOPLES ★ FOOD TOWN ★ PEOPLES ★ FOOD TOWN TOWN ★ PEOPLES ★ TOWN ★ PEOPLES ★ FOOD TOWN ★ PEOPLES ★ FOOD TOWN L PEOPLES ★ FOOD TOWN ★ PEOPLES ★ FOOD TOWN ★ PEOPLES ★ c—10 Ws -V ■ \ Vp ' • {\W: ' . ' V. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1969 VW Faces Stiffer Competition DETROIT (AP) - Germany’s Volkswagen, while still way out in front u America’s best sell lng foreign car, is going through a sales slump and faces new competition from two auto mak ers in Japan and two in Detroit During the first nine months of 1969, Japan’s Toyota has ‘ creased its U.S. sales by 94 per cent over the same period Tn 1968 and has leaped into the No, 2 position among imports, replacing "General Motors’ German-made Opel. ■drV; *r\ ★ On the strength of an estimated 58 per cent increase in its sales during the first three quarters of this year compared with last year, another Japanese make, Datsun, has taken over the No. 4 spot. Fourth ranking had belonged to British Leyland, marketers of MG, Austin, Jaguar, Rover and Triumnh. James Ryan, Toyota’s assistant national sides manager in the United States, attributes Toyota’s move upward to dealer expansion programs, more extensive advertising and “better quality” In the car line. Chrysler, and sells mora than four times as many cars as Its nearest foreign competitor. “We feel it’s not valid to arate the imported car market from domestic sales," says Arthur Railton, vice president of Volkswagen of America. “We’re all competing for the same auto-mobile dollar." ON STEADY RISE Railton said Volkswagen’s share of total U.S. car sales has been steadily increasing. In August of this year, he said, VW captured 6 per cent of the total U.S. market. The first quarter of current model year, the VW official said,"was marred by long dock strikes on the-U.S. Eastern and Gulf -Coasts, causing-a- sales drop of 25,000 cars for the quarter. ★ Ur • ★ ■ By the time the current model year is complete on Oct. 16, Railton said, VW sales are expected to number about 537,000, S than 1,000 above the com-le period lastyear; ' Railton said it could be expected that as more imported cars are brought into thq U S. as domestic producers manufacture more small cars, VW will hold a smaller percentage of the small and imported car market in the United States. counted for 827,300 sales In America. Last year through September sales were 767,700, The imports accounted for 11,6 per cent of the total American sales this year compared to 10.9 a year ago. Maverick was Introducedlast spring and has sold about 90,000 units. Geherall Motors expects its minicar to be on the market bV next summer and Chrysler has plans for marketing a minicar in summer or fall of ___ more competitive “The. small-car id a rkot Is more competitive," the Volka- can’t expect to gq op having in-creases of 100,000 (cars) a year like we did. We would like ta bs able to sell in the Japanese market,” I he added. The Japanese market is closed to foreign makes. “They have notbecome a factor in Germany yet, but the country is quite wide open." ■: tr fr , And if the American manufacturers thought they hadprob-j. lems with .imports taking more than 10 per cent of domestic sales; Germany is even worse off with more than 20 per cent of sales going to imported cars, including some from America. Htrt'j how ulos' of tlw top U.S. cori ond Jop foreign mokot^conMurad dur-1H* INI through toot. funeral Motors PILLOW FOINT-An anti-population group In Um San Francisco area is seeking 866 persons to spend a week without food in a lO.OOOoquare foot plastic pillow, shown her# partially Mattf. in order to make their point. The participants will be given only water and entertainment. One problem is to find an appropriate place where the experiment will be permitted. The number of dealers handling Toyotas, said Ryan, has increased from 728 on Oct. 1,1968 to 752 on Oct. 1, 1969. More important, he adds, the number of dealer’s handling Toyotas only GREAT EXPECTATIONS has gone from 329 to 406. The strength of the dealership networks of Detroit’s Big Three auto makers is considered one of the biggest sales obstacles to foreign makes. ★ ★ * Volkswagen’s position Is also threatened by two American hr the 82,000 mark. Ford’S Maverick has an average manufacturer’s suggest ed retail price of $1,995 and American Motors' Hornet goes for 91,994. One factorb Toyota’s growth, says Ryas, u th6 introduction of a new, low-priced line, the Corolla- soles, whose four-door sedan has an average UtS: price of $1,790. The average manufacturer’s price for a four-door sedan in Toyota’s bread-and-butter aeries, the Corona, Is $2,000. STANDARD VW The price of a standard Volkswagen Beetle In New York Is $1,791. Officials at Volkswagen, whose sales slipped by 0.2 per cent during the first nine months of the pear, .do not appear worried, however. h ★ Ur Volkswagen still ranks No. 4 In foe competition for the Ameri-lcan car buyer’s dollar, behind But, he added, he expects numerical sales to increase and he expects the percentage of Volkswagen’s share of the total U.S. car market will continue to increase. ha addition to the dock strike, VW officials attribute the sales dive of their cars more to timing of than to competition from other makes. Last year Volkswagen introduced its new lines In September and established a record of 53,620 unit sales. Ur Ur i Introduction for Volkswagen this year is scheduled .for mid-October. A Volkswagen spokesman discounted Ford’s Maverick aq serious competition at presti for the flagship of the firm’s American fleet, the Beetle. HOLDING UP WELL “We feel our Beetles are holding up very well,” be “The Maverick Is more competition for our fastback." The homely Beetle normally controls about 75 per cent of Volkswagen’s American sales which reached 396,993 by foe end of September compared to 437,209 a year ago. Uf Ur So far this year the lmporta-lncludlng Opel, Fiat, Volvo, Mer cedes Benz, Renault, BMW, Sim General Motors, Ford and lea, Saab and others—have sc- $50 Million for State? Tax Loopholes Are LANSING (UP1) — Senate] At its next meeting, Oct. 27, Taxation Chairman Harry Demaso says foe state could pick up $60 million annually by ending tax exemptions he terms “indefensible." The Battle Creek Republican has been working for months with a special committee reviewing an estimated $1 billion In state tax exemptions. ★ Ur ★ Demaso claims the state can the special committee will review exemptions allowed for personal and real property. Demaso plans to introduce legislation to close the loopholes his committee recommends. Included in the $50 million. In exemptions Demaso said should be withdrawn are: • Nonprofit organizations , churches — $6 million. Materials and equipment avoid a whopping tax hike next uged in production of certain year if the list is stripped of klnds of prlnted advertisements antiquated and unjustified * _ $5 million. ‘‘loopholes/’ ^ | • M a t e r I a 1 s and supplies Already, the signs are right used ,n con»truction of schools foi a tax boost to finance Gov. William G, Mllliken's educational reform program. LOST $415 MILLION . Some $415 million Is “lost" to the state In sales and use exemptions, Demaso’; committee reports. Of that amount, the state could pick up $50 million, Demaso said. An estimated 85 million Is lost In sales and use taxes, each year because of exemptions for such nonprofit organizations as “foe Michigan Rabbit Breeders Association" and the “Broken Aces Flying Club," Demaso1 said. > I and other tax-exempt structures - $10 million. SAM ft WALTER Delicious SausagaB Oarry Oete — N1-IMS welcome V - Frash or Saltwater Fioh Bibstar Tail — Frog Lego JS) FINER FOODS 9125 Orchard taka Rd., Kaego Harbor 682-2646 5 Convenient Locationst PONTIAC—46 E. Telegraph of Huron PONTIAC—5046 Highland Rood SYLVAN LAKE—2375 Orchard Lako Rd. UNION LAKE—8040 Cooley Lako Rd. ROCHESTER—1495 North Main PICNIC STYLB WESTERN DREVRARTLETT . MR HIM . nTciRUUKS D|L MONTE SLICgp A HALVES mn. TUHATORS wn soup ...s2? d j*2P ■ CHEEtl OR BLUE RIBBON FACIAL TISSUE ...IDP-iy DELICIOUS 1*62 CAN , „ , HANDAKINIBASGES.. 19 MEADOWDALE sum. 1 silujes MRS- MARY ALWORTJf SAYS d .life wSlglw oad tew te««tert-. TW (tali fat llriH teach**, “Dtftenaf xAVP ^odhuets .59 oaihiow trout .79 IHOUCTON OUICK PROZCM 4.4.. iHEADED SHRIMP fc-99 itsMpaexaH SEA SCALLOPS _ .*1” FALL aica. MIST , aaa APPLE CIDER » 99 MlllYrUMNIMM mm DONUTS . . **59 iicirninisilO^y riiiimm.. iimmn...1049* U.l. HO. I FANCY BOLDIN OK RIO A DOKIOUS APPLES 3»59 mioi onions 10**9 Hillaii Bilks "49£ FANCYIUTTIIWUT OR PEPPER SQUASH... J9 MUCH ms* crop pane ...» 39 mushrooms ..,-39 PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8, I960 Grfflh ) 2-Year Flying Vet Recalls ' Baroti AUGUSTA, Maine (AP) - A World War I flying ace, veteran of battle* against flw squadron of the lamed German fighter pilot, "Red Baron," Is still flying daily in Maine at the-age of 70. He Is Earl F. Crabb of Augusta, who has been flying for a living for 52 years and says "It come* second nature to Royal Crabb with von Crabb said his squadron dueled "at least four times” with the baron’s and broke about even. ....j, “That plane was just made out of wood, fabric and wire,” Crabb said of the SE ( he flew during World War I, ■____ Genesee to Vote on College Levy FLINT (AP) - Genesee County voters will rule Dec. 0 on a proposed 1.4-mlll levy for operating the new Genesee County-Community College. Voters approved establishment of the college and elected a board of trustees in June, but would not approve funds tor run the facility. The miilage would raise about $2.7 million. He now flies daily as an air tbxl pilot for the Maine Instrument Fight School here and says the flights take Mm to Boston, New York and points in Maine. He was bom March 27,1809, In Delhi, Ont. He left the Canadian flying corps In - France - after-"" eight, months. He was then _a captain and had been awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross. BARNSTORMING NEXT "When I returned from the war, there was no flying in -Canada,” he said, so lie came—~ to the United States In 1921 and took up barnstorming, flying to local fairs and putting on stunt flying performances. He came to Augusta in 1929 and became the first pilot for the Maine Forestry Depart- ment. He flew for the state for 29 years. . He had a second tour of military duty during World War II. He joined the Air Corps in 1942 and flew a CHS as air inspector for the Western Technical Training Command.. After--three- years,—he.. was, discharged as major. Crabb’s two sons followed him into the aviation field. Robert was a navigator during World War II and now Is an ' and Space Administration in Houston, Tex. —Donald flew transports and helicopters during the Korean conflict and now is a pilot for Executive Jet in New York. PILOT AT 79-Earl F. Crabb of Augusta, Maine, who has been flying for a living for 52 years, sits at the controls of a plane. H* was a World War ,1 flying ace. Quit Smoking, Diet One Step at a Time (EDITOR’S NOTE - Here it the ninth in a 14-part series on how to. stop smoking and not gain weight. The Newspaper Enterprise Association series offers a double-pronged solution to the problem. It is written by Julius Fait, novelist, medical editor and mystery uniter.) — By JULIUS FAST________________ , NEA Publications The important thing is to approach flie problems of smoking and overeating step by step. There are just seven steps. We’ll start with just five. STEP ONE - I Will Not Smoke, IWU1 Grow Thin: This step is one of decisions. At what moment do you decide that you have had enough? That you refuse to be a statistic any longer? That even if death Is Inevitable, why hasten it with constant exposure to tar and nicotine, by layering your body and organs with unnecessary fat? i i i There must be a time of decision and this can only come when you are properly motivated. How does a person become so well motivated that he will take the necessary steps to, atop smoking and lose weight? The best motivation is intelligent understanding combined, with outright feat. |K§f * . ★ Know the dangers of smoking and obesity. When you have thoroughly convinced yourself that both smoking and excess weight are deadly, then you are ready to start. - * ★ a....... If you are married and have children, your motivation can be strengthened by the realization that you — a parent — are the beat example your children have. Is the best good enough? Teach them by taking the first step yourself. STEP TWO - Know Yourself and Why Yon Smoke: Determine what kind o t smoker yor are; Set hr motion the process of self-analysis that will reveal why you smoke, what needs it answers, how important tobacco is. Probe into your conscious and subconscious motives and classify yourself. it it it Only by understanding why you smoke can you understand how to atop smoking. 8TEO THREE — Decide How Much YoaH Lose and at What Rate:_____________ Face yourself and reyeal the comfortable truths about your weight. How muclv should you take off? ★ ★ W These truths about yoUr own self-image will allow you to select a rate at which you can' lose. STEP FOUR — Set a Day to Stop Smoking: You know the type of smoker you are. Make a program and a time goal. ■ ■ ★ w 1 If you are quiting cold turkey set a definite date for withdrawal. W-Day. In f or m your friends and fa mil y. Oversmoke and take the plunge. If you are going to taper off get a large calendar and mark how many smokes you will have every day. Prepare a special cigarette box. it ★ * If you chose another method, get all your substitutes In order Choose a time to Mart and a time to finish. STEP FIVE — Set ■ Day te •tart Dieting: Prepare a program for dieting. Start this the same day you quit smoking. (NEXT: The Remaining Steps.) n)ln« fo grit ir'l doloil.d I Stop-Smoking Book I I ole The Pontiao Prase a Dipt* ABB * , F.O. Box 411, Radis OHy Station I Raw York, N.Y. Itoll I Plraunml....copy (copt.t) of “How I 1 lo Slop Smoking ond Uio Wolgkf" 01 | |) ooch to, * NAME....................... I ADDRESS................... ■ | CITY..........'........... | I STATE.......ZIP........ ■ * (Moko chock* poyobto 10 "Wop-Smokirg * | look.- Allow 3 wook, for doliwory.) ■ | USDA CHOKE-SAVE UP TO 34* A LB. T-BONE STEAK...............IVs BONELESS TOP ROUND STEAK OR * ■ m lONUISS RUMP ROAST........ JV' IKFJIANK STEAKS............ BIO ’O’ BRAND / Mi CORNED Biff............. — —. vmhki OR ■ 99* SLICED BOLOGNA ■CRRICNM.B.ALLMBAT SMOMM PACK OS UIF hyOhADI CILIO CHUNK AAA SM0R6US PACK... ’!S:99* /UWR SAUSAGE... .59* cordon's puae Pork a a a a ROLL SAUSAGE.../2&W Pilniife Li|iM 490 BATH SIZE BAR Palmolive Gold wj FAMOUS MARGARINE ■ fflPU........p® BANQUET BEEP. CHICKEN. TURKEY / ROMB-aV MEADOWDALE FROZEN / «JlIE......*17* info It’s saiarti It's. ^ »uch • practical way to ktap cape neat- ■clSl^.li] ly oforod. Yot right within roocM KUu!e« With $2.00 ar mat* load Purchato and caapan balow. Knm JDDBEEEHDHHl t*o>. Bt.oiogo Sloo DIXJEc 02.00 ormorofoodpowhoto. Oood mm Ooi. 11. 1*09. Lloili on. pioooo. . miGi.Br rms poods J 7-Oia Bfla Vi tails Liquid ond IMO opiigoo.OHor good V thru Oik U_ LWoll 0*0 pioooo . WBMUtr HUB raoos a WBBSSOBBBBStB 3-lk Coo Rog, Drip or Homo Porii Rills Iris. Csffee l wHoury erne rooos —/ % 1 4hmu gk go. ot C om lot Frisk lilitli Silait Heads if Lettuce 1 god (III* ooooon. 01 lor food MW Out. H, Lloili *00 pioooo V wsiglky rme rodos 7 " 2*Ik. pkg. ol Frisk Tmatsss . muj . WtUOLMY PINS rooos —d Bib IllKSlIlt i THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1909 PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY OCTOBER 11,1969 glSHll tW* C4sjn Grapefruit VIOLETS Delicious Squash Cabbage flaw Light Crisco Oil Pineapple Juke FRESH DELICIOUS WITH 12 OZ. FREE SYRUP AUNT JEMIMA ReOULAR OR QUICK Quaker Oats RICH AND CREAMY Kraft Mayonnaise FARM l$AID ASSORTED FLAVORS Instant Breakfast RICH TOMATO TASTE Colgate A Cold Power [Toothpaste h Detergent [ 6% OX. TUSI 5 LB. 4 02. BOX Northern Towels Chase & Sanborn JVI ^Jttrl-PLY Scot Tinuo town PrMo Foil 13x13 JUMBO Scatt Napkins for'sabies ibo ct.1 p)£29* Sliced Hard Salami or A FRESH FROZEN A'OOe FARMMAIO MR, PITTS HONEY LOAF OR SLICED — Oy Akals Bagels '. f 28* Orange Juice SS&59* Now York Luncheon 8 OZ. WT. FKG. SOZ. WT. FKG. SOZ. WT. FKG. 65* 69* 69* 77* 98* 69* YOU SAVE AGAIN! MAKE CENTS HERE! DISCOUNT PRICES! CHOCOLATE COVERED IQI IUJ LQJ AiiMiFBM uim MORTON FROZEN S* AMERICAN OR PIMENTO QUAKER MAID I lip \W Ice Cream 1 Pumpkin or A Farm Maid Bars h Mince Pies nCheeseSlices y J I LB. 4 OZ. WT. PKO. * v m no ■■WWW of nse 12 ct: PKO. 6 OZ. WT* PKO. 66 EVERY DAY SAVINGS! MR. PITTS DUTCH, PICKLE, SPICED, BEER A COOKED SALAMI SLICED Luncheon Meats 0 14 OZ. WT. PKO. 29*177 NUYtV,WD0VMHltoWAMCONSTOR • MB oqldEN oloSALAD I m Jkz NAtRUALSLICBD m ^A Quaker Maid Sander kkei*48' Bird. Eye Jello w”10* Krolt SwL. Chee.e ‘£49* 3 FLAVORS ’ r ' 'V tm* ' ’’>M ■■A;WHi|Mlill; ajaz WITH ICING 9 jm Quaker Maid Sundaos K 55* Farm Maid Wafflos 10* Morlco Cinnamon Bans m? 49* " i ' •' PKOB. CAPTAIN CRUNCH. WELCH GRAPE JUICE BARS OR „ JM FRESH FROZEN MM. SPECIAL LABEL am. Heath Ico Cream Bar* •OUvTree.w#et Orange Juice V' |/C Alliweet Margarine >$: 24* __ji UOA SARA LEE PECAN ROLLS OR 10HOZ ODOUdk SWIITMILK PR BUTTERMILK _ n, jAz 9 49*Coffan Cake x 4 \ * 79* Puffin Biscuits S 8* QUAKER MAID ASSORTED POPSICLIS OR PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY, OCTOBER 11,196* i With Discount Prices I ANTI * INFLATION. I PRICE 1 If ANT/. < INFLATION' 1 PR/CE J MEL-O-SOPT FRESH 114-Lb Loaf Sandwich Bread MIX OR MATCH KROGER FRESH KROGER BAKED Fresh Donvis « AJfl MATCH ™ m wILDgRNgss apple COMBINATION SUGAR OR CINNAMON LOAVES wKm ___ ____ . ______>rcw* KROGER LABEL ■ KROGER SALADS ■ KROOERLABELI SKIMMED MILK I * ' I SOUR CREAM Valid Thru Sun., Oct. 12. 1999 ■ ANY 2 PKG& KAHN'S m LUNCHEON MEATS, ■ LINKS OR WIENERS J Vwild Thru Sun., Off, 12,1H9 £ ANY PKG ■ KROGER JELLY ROLL *Vulld Thru Sun., Out. 12, 1919 m Valid Thru Sun., Oat. 12, 1999 At Krogor Dot. & Boat, Mich* WITH THIS COUPON ON ULBU-OZCTN' KROGER LABEL c3zfoG££HEI$E VulldWMtm., tiff. 12, )W At KnturVut. t matt. Mich. ■ ANY Mi ' I ANY2-PKGS i SK. s •« N0V“ri« J Valid Thru Sun., Oct.-12, 1969 —J Valid Thru Sun., Oct, 12,19*9 I At Kroger Oct. t Fact. Mich. OSAf Kragmr Dat. t.Eact, Mich, ANY two %-GALS KROGER BRAND , ICE CREAM Mts&asm maaaaaaaaaaaaal UVLSasSEpBiil iSOas ■ ■ ■■■■■■■iliiMO r Center Cuv^ Pork Chops Bacon Braising Strips L,< 99 Roman Bleach Drive KROGER TART PITTED Red Pie Cherries Crisco Oil TOP VALUE STAMPS TOP VALUE STAMPS TOP VALUE STAMPS TOP VALUE STAMPS TOP VALUE STAMPS TOP VALUE STAMPS TOP VALUE STAMPS rHE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8,1969 C—14 u:s. CHOICE TENDERAY 4TH S STH RIBS U.S. CHOICE CHUCK ROAST OR GORDON'S FRESH Pur* Pork TASTY Ball Park or Circus WlUaars FULLY COOKED Semi-Bofialass Hams Chuck Beef Rib Sausage Links Staak Roast 89 WHOLE COUNTRY CLUB POINT CUT ____ Cornell Beef*............lb 79* BLADE CUT Lamb Chops........ 79* FULL SHANK HALF Smoked Hems • ••••••at* LB sr BIG N' BRAWNY Kahn’s Wieners .....m 79* MARHOEFER'S Canned Ham.....10can98** U.S. CHOICE Boston Roll Roast...• $|09 'DidcouHtd all ‘Tlcalti & otaultf rfiddl DECORATED Scott Towels 2 ~39 SPECIAL LABEL Pepsedent Toothpaste -59 6%-OZ «IT TUBE BATH SIZE nil .....•••BAR ml 29* PACK PERMANENT WHITE, PINK OR GOLD. Dial CHORE REDDY FUSTIC Pot Cleaner ...*3 CHORE GIRL Pot Cleaner.... 3 mc* 28* SCOTT WHITE OR ASSORTED COLORS Bathroom Tissue $1# FOR THE FAHILY-GILLETTE Right Guard Deodorant m OZ CAN G WORLD'S MOST FAMOUS HAND CARE Jargons Lotion ozbtl •i” LOTION OR CLEAR SHAMPOO ■ whit* Rain........o^rr.66* JUBILEE Ugly Duckling Panty Hose Iff* H ASSERNONTV CHECKS WETNESS-GILLETTE ANTI-PERSPIRANT Right Guard Deodorant WHITE RAIN NORMAL OR HARD-TO-HOLD Hair Sprayr....... oz can 88* PEPSODENT ADULT MEDIUM OR HARD Toothbrushes sees each 89* SUNSWEET BALLON contain! 9 tom \ SPECIAL LABEL Ivory Liquid 45 IN SWEET i SOUR SAUCE-CHUN KING Frozen Moat Bslls»..»rwoM* WITH CHEESErHOLLOWAY HOUSE FROZEN STUFFED Baked Potatoes ..... WTPKQ 39* 5 VARIETIES-FROZEN lone’s Pizza Rolls...nFpko 55* TREESWEET FROZEN Orange Juice. CA TOP VALUE CA TOP VALUE dV STAMPS 21V STAMPS 2-LBS BOB EVAHS ROLL OR Z GORDON'S LINK PORK SAUSAGE THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1969 Compares kroger’s overall prices are as low or lower THAN ANY OTHER POOO CHAIN...ANY DISCOUNT OR CONVENIENCE STORft».ANY DAY OP THE WEEK. PrOVOl NOBODY BUT Bebedy 8AVES YOU MORE* ON YOUR TOTAJ-POOD BILL. WEEK AFTER WEEK , THAN YOUR KROGER POOD STORE. CAN YOU AFFORD NOT TO LET KROGER HELP YOU FIGHT INFLATION WITH LOW DISCOUNT PRICES EVERY DAY OP THE WEEK? RICH TOMATO FLAVOR VAN CAMP'S fmLa HsinzK«tchupIa-07BrL39< Pork G Boons K BORDEN'S NON-DAIRY CREAMER KROGER LABEL INSTANT Cromora... ••••••• • • • jar 55* Broakffast DRINK SrjSci KROGER LABEL CLOVER VALLEY Fruit Cock tall.. ;-oz~c!!n 19* Poanut Butter 3 jar «■* ww¥m oavo lof coupon ASSORTED FLAVORS Btlfy Cracktr Cake Mix FRESH 3 LBS A DORN —WITH THIS COUPON REG. 16$ Safeguard REGULAR SIZE I Beige Bar faap WITH OUTCOUPON I6t | Vo!Id Thru Sim., Oct. 11 1969 At Ktopcr | Dm, | Meet. Mich. Limit One Coupon. All Meat ‘WatT/tefMo. Franks boneless Ham Belts vllle Turkeys 3® 76 Valid Thru Sun., Oct. 12, 1969 At Krofr Dot. I Boot. Mich. Limit One Coupon.— SEA PAK GOLDEN FRIED Fisk Sticks.... SEA PAK FROZEN fish & Chips U.S. CHOICE CHUCK U-OZ WTPK6 KROGER BRAND SERVE N' SAVE Sliced Bacon ^cUntf 0pt4tme&! KROGER FRESH Homogenized Milk ^2" 99* SMOOTH CREAMY Kraft’s Mayonnaise DINTY MOORE KROGER FROZEN BEEF, TURKEY OR Chicken Put Pies RICH'S DESSERT TOPPING Spoon N’ Serve MORTON FROZEN Mince°* Pumpkin Pie DR.«.Y»I0 Mrs9 VARIETIES Yogourt 4 THIRST QUENCHER 99* Gaterade............••an. < ORCHARD PRIDE OLD FASHIONED 99* Apple Sauce............cW JEWEL BRAND ASSORTED FLAVORS KROGER BRAND Tomato Grapofruit ^^Kidd^ Saute Sections Drinks * JIFFY CREAMY OR CRUNCHY r~°Kc 21* Peanut Butter.... PET 99 SKIMMED ’rM 29* Kvaporat.d Milk HAYPO INSTANT pic 39* Oat Caraal.......... SUNSHINE DELICIOUS VSr 75* Krispy Crack.ri. BREAKFAST TREAT-BAYS- Bngllsh Muffins......... ALLSWEET BRAND Margarine............... SPECIAL LABEL-KRAFT FARKAY SOFT Biut Margarine........ INSTANT Upton Tea............... Utt-PL ... 01 CAN U-OZ W TPM FRESH CRISP Blhli Lpttute.....ij 49* U.S. NO. 1 MICHIGAN 1 Yellow Onions3s(Ac39* JUMBOS SIZE Nonoydewi ...... BA'59 INDIAN SUMMER Apple Cider VALUABLE COUPON VALUABLE COUPON Pear Halves Semi-Sweet Morsels Kroger Coconut Sno-White 1 Cauliflower KROGER you yi*}eK yawjuu&i \ NON-DAIRY COFFEE-mr M Tea B ■I THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1966 A heart surgeon with the code name Abunldal ' (Father of Struggle) is the Action Commando's spiritual leader, - jerks, then comes hand-to-hand 1 combat and the assault course i on which live ammunition u . tired within inches of the re* t cruits as they crawl beneath barbed wire and electrified i fences. .J , "Our organization has IS,000 i men and cubs on the waiting list t who will be accepted in turn ii , they pass mental and physical < The Action Commando is the 1 toughest of the guerrilla squads. Its members are known here as tile “Jordan VaHey Ghosts,” a reference to the .area where they do much of their fighting and the quiet way they move. Its strength is estimated at several thousand. The leaders are well-educated men and retired officers from Arab armies. FIRST RAIDS The group, formed late last year in a breakaway from Pttah, staged its first anti-Israeli actions early this year. It claims to have blown up Israeli ROftAH imported doctrines. | "We reject the Palestinian! Arab-Jewish secular state because it is an act of treason 1 against the 2% million homelem refugees in the rotting camphJ Wo insist on the establishment of ah Arab Palestine state jl where all Jews who were theroi] before 1949 can five happily with I equal rights and obligations.” liquidate the Palestine cause and we shall fight peaceful surrender schemes,” he said. “We have no political or regional ambitions in any part <5f the Arab world. Our target ts to liberate Palestine. We do not allow Interference in our affairs. ARAB UNITY "Our strategy la that all Arabs should share in this liberation and not Palestinians alone. Abu Youssef, who speaks with an Iraq) accept, said: “Our organization has graduated more than 2,000 cube—young fedayeen aged 0 to 16—and trained them undet strict military discipline. They ire given instruction in the use of all weapons from grenades to ground-to-air missiles. “This has always been accepted as part of the price that has to be paid for efficient guerrilla fighters,” adds Abu Youssef, code name of the commander of too Action Commando Organisation for tha Liberation of Palestine. tests and tests for revolutionary Faulty electrical wlrtn-caused 144,000 fires ip 1967. SAVE *20 ... Our Famous Luxury Sears-o-Pedic Foam Regular 99.95 and Innerspring Mattresses These mattresses are scientifically designed to give yon the ultimate in sleeping comfort, AND at the same time, provide the firm posture support you need. The innerspring mattress has 1,000 coils in the full eize, 680 in the twin — all quilted to a cloud-soft Vt-inch Serofoam top. The dense 6-inch foam mattress has a specially comfortable dimple top. Choose the scientifically-matched box spring to add to your comfor| and SAVE *10 on Sears 5-Inch Foam Latex or 720-Coil Innerspring Regular 69.95 You’ll fall asleep more easily, awaken refreshed when you choose the right mattress and matching box spring. The dense 5-inch foam latex features Sears exclusive dimple-top; the cover is sanitized treated for hygienic freshness, The innerspring mattress has 720 coils in the full size, 504 in the twin, for the firm posture support you need. Save! , •-* , / SAVES** an ills Quetn Sat . SAVE III on the King Set *-mj| Two-piece Mt Include* one 60x Bag. ISMS nwu_Mg. zifcw 15988 SESSt£ 209s innerspring. innenpring. Adapt, Your Present w Bed to a Queen Sice With Sear* Convert-a>Rails only 4.99 pr. Hollywood Bod Outfit , CHOOSI VINYL OR MAM-FINISH HIADBOARD Save S10 On this complete set In- R0gularll.il elude* a 160*coil innenpring mot- m/\op Maple-Finish Bunk Bed A RIAL SfACI IAVER, CONVIRT* TO TWINS mr W on tWt (tardy'bunk RagU|ar IfUl outfit /Includes two 4-inoh -rn •am mattrwwet, two link I tf lltH Colonial Studio Couch MAKIS A COMFORTABLE BOO FOR TWO ADULTS ive 120 and add extra deeping Regular 119,11 >ace in your fimily room or deit. iXAXQQ Tofoam mattress. Colorful print cover. . v, Scars Vinyl Divan Bed SLUM TWO, Mas IAiy-CAIU wimxuan cover Save $30 on this convenient di- Regular Sg van that pulls out to a full-rise -■ bed. Has Sero-foam cushions I tJ|J end miiireu. . JL S zipper Ask About Sears Convenient Credit Plena Open Monday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday 9 to 9. Tuesday, Wedneaday 9 to 5tSO Downtown Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171 wmwm THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1909 MT 0CT0*U « ocroaiii ti antron* SHELLS AT 2.97 STOVE PANTS SKI JACKITS IN REVERSIBLE m QUILTED NYLON II 100% nylon quilt JackotiwMi poly* i COTTON FLANNEL /■me U PAGES ■ OF SENSATIONAL SAVINGS i EACH OUR REC 34.97 TERl INC. HEIGHTS DOWNRIVER THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1869 PROCTOR- I] SILEX la BLENDER l! 2M=*zZ^Z1sWIVEL-TO 9SHLPSEliSLASS vacuum cleaner KNIFE SHARPENER .Lock-on attachment. HALLOWEEN COSTUMES SPECIAL PURCHASE' " PHONO-RECORD MIRRQM YOUR CHOICE FUR-LOOK TOP METAL ^ DECORATIVE PEACOCKS 12-OZ. GOLD BEVERAGE | GLASSES SHOE-BOOT CADDY QT. MIXING BOWL WOMEN’S PRINT FABRIC ■ LUGGAGE gpy 2 «8 3«» 4»« FRUSTRATION IDEAL’S CLAN PLAID LUGGAGE WELBY DECORAT CORDLESS Jm CLOCK ill ! •niiwInifcww.Waahipakia^^j BUDGET BOOSTER ON SALE WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 8 THRU SATURDAY OCTOBER 11 • A great assortment of favorite characters • Complete with full mask and plastic IricK or treat bag • Flrosafe rayon taffeta • Allsizes BETTER COSTUMES • OUR REG. 1.62... .1.33 If ■ REG. 1JG • Heavy duty plastic Tight-fitting lid • Lock-Ud handles • Break lasistanti tustpreef 20-30 GAL. TRASH CAN LINERS; 12 PER PACK . .OUR REG. 66c... .54c COLORFUL HALLOWEEN LAMPS Attractivly decorated Heat resistant For mixing, serving, storing 1 full quart size • Cat and pumpkin lamp makaa a great decoration • Blinking light bulb • Colorful orange and black 144^ ■ OUR ■ REG. ■ 1.97 e Transparent ball with 8 little cups inside to catch ball q Test your skill f Great for kid or party fun MONEY BACK GUARANTEE ALWAYS ON EVERYTHING YOU BUY AT YANKEE ' s i r INDOOR TV DELUXE TV TV TROUBLE TRAPPER Attache* to any TV In minutss LAVATORY FAUCET a 12 INCH KEROSENE IS’ TROUBLE ROOTO DRAIN CLEANER WSSKK?*' FLAPPER TANK BALL BASKET SINK STRAINER • Pits all types • rhrnma nlatfld M..Y Handy off/on switch DUPLEX RECEPTACLE TOGGLE SWITCH DOUBLE-O-LET 8 OUTLETS IN I PORCELAIN LAMPHOLDER DISCOUNT DEPARTMENT STORE HOUSEHOLD FUSES ^ ,f ".. \1 ^ J .. s ^ ^, ; i I , ________ THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBE^i 8, I960 >AY, OCTOBe\i 8, DISCOUNT SALE W 3 WIRE ADAPTER FAMOUS BLACK & DECKER • Converts 2 wira to a 3 wira ground outlet • UL approved for safety 9* EXTENSION CORD, OUR REG. 47c... .37c 16' EXTENSION CORD, OUR REG. 63c.. .53c * Powerful 1 HP motor delivers top power M * Blade end depth adjusts easily * Cuts 45° at 1 7/8 inch depth H * Backed by Black & Decker's quality guaranH * Designed for home carpentry, construction® and maintainance jobs • Heavy duty cord with molded cap • Black vinyl covering • ULapproved PVC VINYL TAPE ■i OUR REG.-- 50c * it" x 60'she * Durable vinyl * Excellent adhesion quality KITCHEN FAUCET • 8" deck type RV 00 • Solid brass; B OO -----m OUR REG. 6.87 • 4 inch solid brass • Chroma plated Safety flasher Throws wide beam Use* 4 “b" call batteries • Easy swing spout YOU’LL LIKE THE SMILE AND THANK YOU WHEN YOU SHOP AT YANKEE THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY*, OCTOBER 8, 1969 HI New BUDGET BOOSTERS MEN’S CARDIGAN PLUSH NYLON SCATTER RUGS ANTIQUE SATIN DRAPES DISCOUNT DEPARTMENT STORES JACKET TIRUNG HEIGHTS DOWNRIVER DETROIT PONTIAC TI1F, PONTIAC 1’RKSS, WEDNKSDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1969 Bridge Tricks From Jacobys CAMPUS CLATTER By Larry Lewi* WHAT AM AUSPICIOUS MOMENT, MM- JONES— VOOR DEBUT AS PROFESSOR Of POLITICAL. SCIENCE.' By OSWALD AND JAMES JACOBY You don’t "win the finals of the National team championship event without some luck but this year “The Dallas Aces” seemed to do a lot about making their own luck. The bidding started o u t and, if West had let Bob suffer,iruff one diamond in dummy. All tamely enough. Bob Hamma'n’s one-spade overcall was normal expert American practice. East and West were playing the so-called negative double East had to pass. Mike Lawrence passed also he wpuld surely have been set one or two tricks but West reopened with a take-out double. East was delighted to pass but Mike rescued to two hearts. he needed for his contract was to find West with the ace of clubs and reasonably good diamonds. -Junior Editors Quiz on- WATER Bob’s hand looked mighty good in support of hearts and, since It is well worthwhile to bid a vulnerable game in IMP competition, be raised to three hearts. Mike had almost nothing but his six hearts and 8-4-2-1 distribution looked so good to hlmthathe went on to game, He won the heart in his own hand and led his jack of diamonds. West's king forced dummy’s ace. Since East dropped the nine. Mike was able to play dummy’s 10 and establish his eight. That didn’t really muter. If the nine had not dropped, he would have come back to his hand as often as,he West doubled and opened the wished by ruffing spades. ace and another heart. This He did use that procedure to didn’t worry Mtke at all. Since get to ead a club toward dum-; East followed to both hearts. my’S king and wound up scoring Mike was going,to have time to P°ints' At the 0lhe‘.ta*,le’ the Dallas West played two. NORTH 0 4A9.872 VK84 ♦ A104 ’ 4K2 WEST (D) EAST AS AKQ10543 ¥ A10 ¥32 ♦ KQ763 ¥9 *AQ1054 4J986 SOUTH .73 QUESTION: Why is water wet? Both vulnerable West North East South 10 U Pass Pais Dble Pass Pass 2¥ Pass 3 ¥ Pass 4¥ Dble Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—¥ A ANSWER: All matter is found in one of three states; gaspousnUTor^^ The gaseous state of water or water vapor (upper left) might- fill the container, but its rapidly moving molecules would spill out and become part of the surrounding air. Except on very humid days, you wouldn’t feel such water vapor on your skin. clubs and made three for a 1 point, or 14-IMP, gain. V*CHRD Sendee Pass i ♦ Pass 14 Pass 24 Paaa 7 You, South, hold: 4KS7S ¥At ♦KQ4 41888 What do you do now? A—Paaa or bid two diamonda. Wa have a alight preference for the paaa but would have no criticism of a two-diamond ealL TODAY’S QUESTION Instead of hiddlng two clubs, your partner has bid two dla- What do you do now? THE BETTER HALF The liquid or fluid state, which we call water, does not have-solid shape, but it is denser than the gas and will take the shape of the container it Is in, clinging to the part it touches. This clinging of a fluid to some shape is what is meant by wetness. Now we turn our article" over to Harry, the smart character under the shower. j“On the surface of water,” says Hairy, “the millions of little molecules cling together in a thing called surface tension. Plain water clings to your skin, bub the surface tension keeps it from clinging as close as it might. “Soap and detergents break up the surface tension, so that the.soapy water you are stooping around in clings tighter, washes you better and feels wetter.” “You know, you don’t look so bad In pants— from the waist up.” OUT OUR WAY By SYDNBY OMARS Far Thursday ____BUYS tonight ara luxui. oblacta ol beauty which can bring tailing BEST BUYS tonight ara luxury llama, ‘ ol beauty whlc' - *■^ aribs (March S&grll* It): Ua tow. Play walling gama. Bait to llniah i than Ml biigln projects. Toko time thorough. Reputation could be at i Fine for gaining TAUUUS (April 30-Mary ao>: Study ARIES mmaga. Complata baalc chorea. —— Inn tn trem liml lsr gsim if,lorn*parioha Siva aflanllon lo GEMINI (May Jl-Juna 20): (Mod iipact tonight coincide! dam lime --------- :roitlvd endeavor! auccood. Romance li n lha alri your parional magentlir loan. Ba vital, dynamic. Nothin CANCER (Juno 21-July 22): Alter early : on fusion, condition! utile. Tonight con- iomefhfna'"tor^lhtwJ'bamjlv * member» tetalls. Tendenty li to ecpttar forcei. Chock manages moat relative I ■vanlng for dlnlr calls. Grant ra-aka today. Fjna (Aug. "22-Sapl. 22): You gain iwfierfi, wV — Scorpio (Oct. as-Nov. silt you do won’t fijiprmalldn you ara not euthorlied v, 22-Dac. 21); Stnaee wMgJ1 •em ahlp prolort mlgM .raqulro ^pdlttonwt fi-nancing. Roallii tltty-end act according-tv. Combine knowledge wjh one who .haras your IntOMl. Rut oildu Wily on-noyences. . . . IF THURSDAY JS YOUR RIRTHOAV you altraoToften la you wim ihalr prob-ff™,. You Rsvymww sfi»v BOARDING HOUSE Amendment Push in Traverse City TRAVERSE CITY (AP)-Pe-tltlons calltrig fdf in amend-to the city charter to permit re-, call of the city manager by voters are being circulated tin Traverse City by a group which calls Itself Citisens for tax Reduction*. . e Sr * A spokesman said the move* ment is not aimed at the. present city manager, but is designed to mike the holder of the office responsible to the voters. AFTER T COMPLETE: W ASSIGNMENT FOR ATTY. CRUMWELLy T..MAV BECOME A FULL-TIME GENEALOGIST l YOU'VE NOTICSP THE BOOMING MARKET IN ANTIQUES ¥ EVERYONE IS TRYING TO CLING "TO THE PAST IN THESE UNCERTAIN RAMS -•'‘•THEY'LL ALL WANT ANCESTRAL. CHARTS/* BUT WHAT HAPPENS IF THE MORSE . FINISHES OUT OF THE MONEVT RIGHT/ FOR EVERY 'PUKE> YOU FIND} TOURS SURE TO LOCATE A TAKE HOOPLE/ (SlfenaStu*. >>MGtmwtn>.baYMN»namT IHf l , ©'NE IK EVERY, FAMILY* By Carl Grnbert THE BORN LOSER By Art Sansom l MO,OF COURSE I OUT ?miB he khedj mm WG *= A BEE IM THEM IMHEM HE \ me THEM TO ml... Vs g @ d&w- By V. T. Hamlin CAPTAIN EASY PONT ft* AS5URPI flU ji UBM M bm EEK & MEEK % Bowie Schneider ____ NANCY RAKE YOUR LEAVES-j DOLLAR AN HOUR SOMETHING MUST BE WRONG WITH MY SALES TALK TUMBLEWEEDS By Tom Ryan I DON'T HAVE ANY... ITS MY GRANDE'S HOUSELGRANDRAWB AWAY A UONG, UONG TIME AG0...HE SAID HE'D BE BACK IN 2 DAYS... HE NEVER DID COME BACK! (GULP!) WELL NOW, HONEY... HES PROBLY JUST BEEN [DETAINED ON BUSINESS.. DONALD DUCK By Walt Disney nr u. xw ry T\ iPi? 1I D-*6 1'HE FDNTIACiPHESS* 'WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 196© The following aw top pries* covering sales of ncally grown produce by groweru and sold uy them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as o| Tuesday. Stock Market Drifts Lower AFL-CIO Hits State Senator Job Tally Significant if ThereYNoTVfhf NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market drifted lower ear- Produce Some analysts said that if the Dow industrials closed below ty thirafternoon, wlQHhe Dowtthe l9g9 1owrit xould trigger a Jones industrial average hover- steeper decline that might carry ing Just above its closing low of as far down as the TOO level, the year. , broad DECXJNE At noon the Dow industrials , . had lost 3.50 at 802.73. The clos- . Jhe setback was 2-43%-42%- 42% 21% 20% 20% + 24% if 8% 32 - 22r 41 71 34 14% 14% 10% + % 143 30 34% 27 —1% 83 31% 31% 31% — % 41 34% 34% 34% — % 31 51% 51 51% —1% 44% 107 29% 21% 29% - % 32 27% 27% 27% . . 77 42% 42% 42% + % 31 40% 40% 40% 4* % 101 20% 20% 20% — % 39 30% 29% 29 - % 210 10% 9% Sill .ICS 32% 32% 21 10% msr 10% 273 20% 20% 20% ■■ . 42 St gggj Afl» Tat 2.40 1314 50’ * ■ ‘ ~ 140 271 42 S3 52 44% . 84 28 27% 27% + % Poultry and Eggs 85 27; broilers and Iryara, 1 AA #> n A *7to<7to; Eggs: prices paid dtllvarad to Chicago 1-towar to 2 higher; so par cant or bettor grade A whites 45-48; medium White sxjri* 45to-*2t standards 42. Livestock OBTEOIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (AP)----(USDA)—Hogs 200. barrows ond gilts U-S. 1-3. 200-230 pounds. 2*50-27) 220-240 pounds, 26-24.50; SOWS )0 pound, OO-600 pounds, 2IJM125. .Cattle 400, slaughter steer -M.W) SO 23.2524; : 50 lowori modi ftlrtv octlvoi shl 225 lb butchers 1 Veolers 100, high choice ond prime, 42-44; choke lM2j good, 34-3*. Sheep 400, chofei ond prlmo *0-11# Pound, wooled slaughter lambs. 21.90-29.50; cull to good slaughter owes, 4-10. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK Chicago. (AP) - (uida) - Hogs re-3500; butchers were toratoly active agrly, hlppisrs took 2,700; I---------------------1 2600-27.00) 325 hood «ni« «; 27.00; i-3 MMSglb* 26.00.24.25> •OWS (toady to 25 lower; fairly active; 1-3 3»400 lbs 23.75-24.25; 1-3 400500...........lbs 2350-23.75; 2-3 500400 lbs 22.50-23.25; boors 20.5-21.. Cottle 2,00; calvot none; slaughter steers rather slow, steady to 25 lower; heifers moderately active, steady; cows steady; taw loads high choice and prime MEM,250 lb slaughter steers yield grade 3 and 4 30.25-30.50, two loads at 30.10; choice 950-1,200 lbs yield grade 2 to 4 21.75-30.25; miked good and choice 79.00-29.75; good 26.50-20.00. High choice ond prlmo 900-1,050 lb slaughter helteri yield grad* 3 and 4 29.2M8.50, thro# loads at Tho latter price; choice 825-1,000 lbs yield grade 2 to 2J.S0-25.25; mixed good and choice 26.50-27JO; utility and commercial cows 19.50-2I.M; tow lilgh dressing utility 21.25-21 JO; ---------1 and ctfttsrs 17.50-20.00. Stocks of local Interest FlOUret after decimal points or# eighths OVER-THE-COUNTER STOCKS Quotations from tho HASP or# repre- .. Mntatlve Interdealer prices. Interdealer duPont 3.75fl markets chonpo throughout tho day. Duq Lt 1.44 Price* do not Includo retail markup, DvnaAm .40 markdown or commission. 42 32% 31% 31% — % 114 10% SO 50% - % 140 27% 27% 27Va — % 3 jfi 52 52% + % 43% 43% 27% 27% 47% 47% * 22% 48% -_ . _ 24% 3 45% 45% 45% ■■■■l I M 34% 3714 I ___ Oil 1.20 238 32% 31% 31% — Vi AssdDG 1.20 .......... Atl Rlchfld 2 Goodyear .85 OrocOCo 1.50 Granitic Sti GrantW 1.40 Gt AAP 1.30 Gt Nor Ry 3 Gt Wait pint GtWnUnlt .90 GraanGnt .94 Grayhound 1 GrummnCp 1 Gulf Oil M GulfStaUt .94 GuHWIn .40a Raytheon .40 RCA 1,_______ Reading Co , RaichCn 41 13% 13% 13% — % 44 41% 48% 48% .. 183 27% 27% 27% ... 13 43% 428/ 42% - % 72 24% 24% ‘ 22 45% 44% 23 30% 29% 29% iS ]»« ]W ]Ih + *i|Rydar$y, 2.50 1 Rayn Mat .90 i«9ftT8 vote was the flrst on nicuiuu wuuiu uc uactu. u. .. q 11,6 av«rage workweek in the c|ear ,ssue of whether ^ current search for a settlement; ■VI ■ PP| . ■ wey I manufacturing rose to 40/committee 'intends to put out * * * P» m* -i* fh°uld irtclude fhi®ntion of) hours from 40.6 hours in August. Nixon>s lan or Dulskr/ those members of the Legisla- .nir-rirtMe Tho »ni. was nn & mi 111 249* 24U 24U- 37 34% 34% 34% - 1. 51 47% 44% 44% —1% 24 20% — B ‘ I 195 m II 2V IS5K6 m9 ’J? I ■ M . I !LBriS3Us? \mm-mr* M 3 StauffCh 1.80 137 34to W StorlDrug .70 20 Zto 40' ItoUJjj^JtJO .to 45>A 45 BX1* IwiSrco Syttron 48% 49%-% I ■■ 92% 92%—1% lo 11% ii% ir% 33% 34 •» TaxG 20 »% 25% 85% 11 29% 23% 23% —T— 23 20% 20 20% +1% 17 M 44% 47% + % 252 38 37% jf% —1% 101 »% 23% 23% ’ill lh 0 Mm m TlmesMir JO TlmkRB 1.80 ToddSHp 1.20 TrnWAIr job Transmr .50b 25% - % n i» izm* 124% — r 4 18% If J8 — 40 28 27% 27% — a ^ 11% 11% 11% 14 dft 40 15 31% 31 TrlCont 3.15g TRW Jnc 1 UMC Ind .72 Un Carbide 2 Un Elec 1.20 UnOMCal 1.40 UnPec cp 2 UnlonPacIf 2 Unlroval .70 UnitAlrc 1.80 Unit CP .70o Un Fruit 1.40 i —% . . 43% ^%—*% 37 28% 28 21 14f 24 23% 23% 1 4% 4% 4% 31% 81% 31% $ 24 36 35% 36 —u— 217 21% 27% 27% -.24 14% 10% 16%-101 41 40% 40%- 97 18% 17% 18 -B p « 45%- 61 50% 49% 49% -24 «% 43% 43% . 36 19% 19% 19% -147 4% 2 42% - 19 11% 10% 11 - 2 47% 47% 47% 0 28% 28% 81% 421 67% 44% 44%-1% 84 W............. 9 33 i- % US mil 2 UnlvO Pd Upjohn 1.61 8 28% 121 47% 54 24% |4_ 9 39% 39% 30% — % 34% 34% |4% - % 78 21% 21% 47% i +1% Varlan / Vendo C VaEIPw —V— asp 78 30% 30% 30% — % • JO 7 17% 17% 17%.... 1.12 104 23% 22% 23% +1 W—X—Y—Z— 1.10 317 44% 45% 64 - ^ WestgEi i*.ao Wiyamtr .80 Whirl Cp 1.40 White Mot 2 W ’<% NorlolkWSt 6 AMT Corp. . AukI.IM Truck Cltltont uinitial a CHIi.ni Ulllllln B Ootr.x Chamlc.1 . fjOjiliOBB Cryit.l ... K.lly iorvloi _______ Wyandott* Chemical ’. Bid Asked East Air ,37p urn. l>«k. Noon Wed. Prev. Day is* m & 6^5 418.5 180.1 131.3 201.f 4»J 151.1 131.7 283.2 f, 150J 131.2 283.2 IM mMi .9..M1.9 14J.5. j m m ew ift 822 J0 55to « ____ 65 38 J7U 379b 9 55U 55V. 55U ■ 43 34to 33U 34 — ' 7* 219k 21V* 21V* — V* 57 32U 32 32U + U 130 37V* 37Vk »to —, to 407 97*4 96V, 07U — V. 0 48U 48U 48U + VI 99 43to 43V, 42V* —1 Zale Corp .54 ZenlthR 1.40 Copyrlghtod By Tho 0al« flgurot art unofficial. Uniats otharwlia noted, rafts of dlvl-dendt In the foregoing MM, ore annuel dliburumanfi baud on fha loot quarttrly or taml-annual declaration. Special or oxtro dlvldtnda or payments not datlg-nated as regular art IdantMod In tot following togwowo. a—Also extra or extra*, b—Annual rat. Plus stock dividend, c—Liquidating dividend. d-Daclared or pokTin 1959 plul •tock dividend. a-Pald loot war. f—Payable In stock during 1959. estimated cash value on ox-dlvldiind or tx-dlitrlbuflon date, g—Declared or paid ao fai year, h—Declared or paid after dividend or aallt ud. k—Declared « n&fe mltted, deferred Paid this 1 PorMcK .75 Preeplul 1.40 FruenCp 1.70 34 14% 16% 16% .. . 138 14% 14% 14% —% 22 20% 29% 30% — %! J.S&'Sto &* + » 12 17% 16% 16%—,% 108,49% 49% 49% — % 42 25% 25 25% + % 271 32% 32% 32% + % 65 52% 51% M 21 15 14% 14% 47 11% 07% 87% - % 44 47% 47% 47% ■ 71 24% 24 24% + % ’i pr no action taken at Ing. r—Declared or paid stock dividend. t-Peld In 1948/ estimated cash value i ‘ Ibutlon date, lull. x—Ex dividend, y—e s In full, x-dls—ffx d x rights, xw—Wlthoul With warrants/ wd-Wh z—Seles In full. furlna fldond SJE S5“- Act, a panlat tarait altod r’ Yfti SBSi High 44.3 91 0 11.4 Low 43.0 85.8 70.3 91.4 74.3 91.0 76.4 m w till 8:21 ture that are on the direct payroll of the CIO,” he added. Zollar said three bills dealing with migrants had not emerged from his committee during this year’s legislative session. Two, he said, WoUld' have accomplished actions that were taken care of by other legislation. The third was "Impossible to do anything with,” he said. That measure involved housing for migrants at rest camps in Michigan, Zollar said, “and there were no federal matching funds available.” i CONTRADICTIONS The vote was on a motion by Both of these findings seem to.^eP- Morris K. Udall, D-Ariz., contradict some generally ac cepted notions about the employment scene and are bound to occupy economists and analysts for many hours in search of explanations. First, black workers generally hold the least-skilled jobs and therefore have the weakest pip on employment. In the pest, such workers generally were among the first to be laid off in slack periods. The rise in the average work- Mutual Stock Quotations NE WYbRK (AP) —TH» following quotations. supplied by the National Association gf Securities Dealer*, Inc., are > prices at which Fid Fund 15.7515.31 Fid Trnd 25.5) 27.15 Financial Prog: Dynm 6.7) 7.35 Indwt 4.14 4.53 incom 6.31 iJO Vent (3» 9.63 Nat Invit 1.16 IJ2 Nat , Socur Sar: ssssr ms Dlvld 4.26 4.4# Orwfll 9.82 9.93 Pf Stk 6.85 7.49 5.48 3.20 ^<1 lili Rato rlod Record oblo chief House sponsor of the corporation plan to substitute the first section of Dulski’s bill with language expressing the opinion that postal reform can best be accomplished through the independent corporation concept.___v____ American Stocks NEW YORK (AP) - American Stock Exchange selected Barnes Eng BrescanLt I« inTRtt .47g Campbl Chib S3?*c Dynafactn»°rP Eqult Cp .05* uJw$].P,30 ids.) High Low Last Chg. 5 11% if ii% .. 5 19% 19% 19%-% 10 31% 31 31 13 94% 24% 24% 16 32% 32% 32% 2 9% 9% 9% 2+ 25% 25% 25% . 14 4% 4% 8 6 5% 5% — % 7 6% 6% 6% — % imperOII .50 iTi Gorp , m HI !■ Kaiser In .40t 34 19% 19% 1t% Mich tug .10 ” *“* MldWFInl .20 Mohwk Data Moiybdan 11% 11% 11% - % 16 15% 15%. 7% + % 9% - % 7% 7% 7% +% 5 10 1/ 11% 8^ 71%- 9 35% 35% 35% . j 1|\ 15 29 1% -3% 3% Ormand Ind RIC Inti Ind iaxM mdim Statnam Inst Wn Nuclear Copyrighted By 35 11% 11% 11%-% 1 4% 4% 4% + % _L M , f__1% + % mp p 76%-% 1 31 31 31 - % 231 77% 74% 7j% — % 240 21% 19% sm^iyi 5 ■"* The spokesman added Egypt would continue to insist that any settlement must be based on the U.N. Security Council resolution pf Nov. 22. 1967. News in Brief The Chicken Joy Restaurant, 756 N. Perry, was burglarized yesterday and $110 stolen, lt was reported to Pontiac police. Mom’s Rummage, Thors., 9-12, Indianwood and Baldwin Rds. -Adv. Home and family study club, garage and bake aide, Oct. 9,10. 9 a.m. to 4. 2555 Bender, Drayton Plains. —AdV. Fall Rummage Sale — St. Joseph Parish Hall, Beebe at Shadbott, Lake Orion. Fri., 9-5, Sat. 9-12. -Adv. Moving Sale—Thurs. and Frl. Starts 10 a.m., also Sat. morning. Oct. 9-11. Furniture, household items, misc. 3616 Lincolnshire, off Cass Lake Rd. —Adv. Rummage Sale, Guild to All Saints Church, Gct. 9.and-0et. 10, Exchange St. entrance, 10 a.m. ' —Adv. Rummage. Sale. First Presbyterian Church, Birmingham, 1060 W. Maple. Thurs., Oct. 0, 94; Frl., OotrlO, 94. -Adv. ''•(9.755 * Inv m mm•»"«: B, ROGER B. SPEAR Q—I’d like you to Ust about five medium-sized good-quality relatively safe growth stocks for long-term holding. I feel is whot the average Investor Is looking for. —H.T. A—Your request is, as you assumed* representative of many others. Before presenting such a list let me emphasize that no stock should be bought, put away and forgotten. The selected Issues have relatively thin markets and will require a reasonable amount of follow-ingr- In each case, sales run well below $160 million, earnings show a well-established pattern of growth, and dividends, though modest, have been increased H. B. Fuller, selling under 20x estimated fiscal 1969 ror suits, Is my second choice. This industrial adhesives manufacturer has recently announced it would introduce a line of adhesives for the retail consumer, Another growing company, Ozito Carp., la a pioneer In the development of nonwoven carpet ing. Six months 1969 sales showed a 20 per cent gain with earnings at 91 cents up 15 per cent year-to-year. Ozite’s new process to produce polypropylene at its own plants should help widen margins. Reece Corp. manufactures industrial buttonhole and pocket-making machines. Sales were up 36 per cent In the first six months of 1969. Full-year net from time to time. All have ■amended In past My first selection, Concord Fabrics, appears to " participated In the blooming home sowing market estimated at $2.6 bIHion. About 30 per cant of Concord’s isles go to this market, the remainder apparel manufacturers. First- and supplemented with stock ““W reach $1 JO for a multiple of 18s. My ifiiial selection, Taylor Wine Co., has a particularly strong financial position with times current liabilities as of December, 1968. Net was up 14 per cent to $$.|09 a share, In the fisckl year ended June 30,1969. (To order Roger Speaks 69- half of 1969 sales wore up 32 P5l, paa, Guide tn Ruceeasful in. tta Util printing), sand It with Sam* Mid address to Roger E, Spw. The rp|tlas Press, Box 1*1$, Grind Central Statloa, New York, N.Y. 19917.) T 39 per cent to 96 cents a share. Salas tbit year ara projected by management at $88 million and wa look for sandnei of $1.60 a ahare for a currant of llx. . ■ IS THE PONTIACfrRMSS, WE il 4 m m Ell)NKSDAY, OCTOBER Negro 3rd in Atlanta Mayoral Primary ATLANTA, Qa, (AP) - A lib-1 Horace Tate. the lone Negro In | was pulling steadily ahead of Demowa md a moderate^ race, who finished third. Republican will vie in,a runoff I. „ election for mayor of Atlanta] ORDER Oct. 21 as the bid of the first Ne-1 Conservative Alderman 0 gro In modern times to seek the Everett MUlican, 72, who ran:and^Millican"lT 481 office fell short, second before the predominantly • Negro attorney, Negrp precincts Film Nun Urges the Country to Go on'KindnessSpree' Aldermgn Milton Parris With all 149 precincts report* Ing, Massed had 29,871 votes to 25,830 for Cook, Tate had 22,193 NEW YORK ■ and a member of the Atlanta I David Abernathy, head of thelresentatlye, ran with the back-sChool board, apparently was southern Christian Leadership ing of the Atlanta business com-the victim of a split in the Ne- Conference; Coretta Scott King, miinity which supported Mayor gro vote. Also, voters turned out widow of Dr. Martin Luther Ivan Aden Jr. in fewer numbers than had been'King Jr.; add some other prom-' > > + * * — expected. inent civil rights leaders. Allen, who is stepping down BLACK SPLIT * after twofour-year terms, did Maynard Jackson,'has won the in,"finished fourth. MUlican had "’wo’ 150,000 votes but the total aP- However. a group post of vice mayor now held,run on a law-and-order plat* 3 ALSO RANS peered to-be around 100,000. At- e**™ including state Sen. who he woul(UavQr ^ the run. “• Sephardic * I by the leading mayoralty can- form. | Three other candidates in the lanta has about 200,000 regis- Leroy Johnson supported Mas- off he gald he had m decided should be done&s dldate, Sam MasselL | Jackson, who ran against U S. j mayor’s race plcked up a few tered voters, 40 per cent of them »elL MUlican is a retired oil com- ,n ki„d*£l ‘So™" says Miss Morrison “In- S “ Herman Talmadge last! hundred votes among them. [Negroes. L “”!eLh.l,erVed tW0 terms executive who ha. _held ,te5 0f I Jackson led Parris 50,619 34,315. By EARL WILSON n are we going to get rid of, all the mean* ness in the country? Easy, says Shelley Morrison, who plays the Puerto Rican nun Sister Sixto, in “The Flying Nun." Everybody should wear pins saying ^Kindness.” . It has such a nice sound to it that it would! Massell, 42, rode a surge of NeppvotertoThe .top of tKe seven-man ticket ahead of Alderman Rodney Cook, 45, the only Republican In the nonpartisan election.. /Massell picked up many Negro votes counted on by Dr. year, was the first Negro to! Tate, 48, head of a statewldel Tate has received the an- as vice mayor. . ; city and state legislative offices g0 cold and harsh. why not ’IF YOU FIND seek the vice mayor's post. He|organization of Negro teachersIdorsement of the Rev. Ralph| Cook, who is also a state rep-,for most of the past 40 years. lYOURSELF IN THIS LANE. PLEASE TURN ' "" ...r'"'....." “rim"" ‘RIGHT’?” Of Possible Soviet Action Citizenship Prize j ■ Ittii “ ‘ A. LANSING (AP) - The Michigan Council on Crime and Delinquency has reminded state citizens they are eligible or can make nominations for a $5,000 ... . . J I . award to be given by the Na-I^ shaken by what many to-rvn—n *- JL —J r,. terpreted as inspired rumors in Moscow that the Soviet military China Sounds Scared By WILLIAM L. RYAN I mmmmmmmMWummmmm Peking suspicious that AP Special Correspondent J Kremlin planted the rumor. It could be that Peking was > KJau/e AhdlvsiS iken by what many in- tional Council on Crime and De-terpreted linquency. The award is given yearly by the national councU for “an outstanding act of good citizenship in support of law, law enforcement or the courts.” C0HSTIPATED? --Mir VA I MUM-fkr- r A ftA..■ - ■ The 41-year-old Louis,, also ggliggjygggy^ggggljgiknown as Vitaly Lui, is a Soviet citizen with remarkable access to high places in Moscow. Wesb era sources say he has connections with the KGB, the Soviet intelligence service. Peking would recall that late last year Louis made a mysterious journey to Nationalist Chi- “Should a handful of war maniacs dare to’ raid China’s strategic sites in defiance of world condemnation, that will be war, that will be aggression, and the 700 million Chinese people will rise up in resistance and use re- brass was weighing the possibility of action against Red China, perhaps even a preemptive strike against China’s burgeoning nuclear arsenal. Peking’s statement Tuesday on the border situation suggest-1 volutionary war to eliminate thejna, the first Soviet citizen to do ed fright atlhe idea that there war of aggression,” Peking so legallyJn^ 18^' Moscow cared to admit. There The statement was presented the Chinese Nationalists. #Sww»iMilrll I.RRAir seemed en agitated “don’t you in the form of a letter to the SIGNALLING THAW? #iwwee>pjpv fiu. unnn |dare„ note in the statement, FOR LEASE PRIME WAREHOUSE SPACE For Light Manufacturing 12,000 square feet—New Building_j • Heat • Light • Plumbjng • Parking Walton Boulevard-Baldwin Avenue Area — Immediate Occuparicy Call Honry Haberkorn - 682-8700 E. E. Powell, General Contracting Co. Kremlin agreeing to new talks Di |omatg in Europe and Asla at he deputy-foreign-minister g ^|ated that the visit might level to seek measures to pre- .fT., . preserve the status quo along the nervous China-Soviet frontiers. The talks are expected to start within the next two weeks. ‘NO WAR INTENTIONS’ The statement hastened to assure Moscow and the world that signal a thaw between Moscow and Chiang Kais-shek. The fact that Peking would be furious about tiie visit didn’t seem to bother the Russians a bit. -Until Premier Alexei Kosygin visited Premier Chou En-lal on Sept. 11, the Red Chinese were China has no warlike intentions1 all belligerence. In recent and does not even seek the re- weeks, while they still have turn of land it has long claimed been prodding the Russians as was taken by. unfair treaties in ‘ social imperialists,” they have Russia’s imperial days, lowered their voices noticeably. Moscow has denounced the ru- China has sets off 16 success-move was ilul nuclear explosions andprob- being weighed. But one source of the rumors was Victor; Louis, writing as the Moscow correspondent for a British newspaper, and that is certain to make ably has a fair-sized stock of weapons which could do serious damage to Soviet targets. But China would hardly have prayer against Soviet power. LISTENING IN — Running the gamut of facial expres--sions is former child movie star Shirley Temple Black as she listens to debate at the United Nations. Mrs. Black, appointed to the U.S. delegation by President Nixon, appears pensive when she notices she is being photographed (lower left). In upper photos, she fiddles with her hair. ‘‘And now let’s get the hell out of Vietnam’1 _____ masculine voice as the New York Film Festival audience wa|. giving a standing ovation to “Oh, What a Lovely War" at Lincoln Center. It shook-up the staid black-tie audience. Several VIPs said they hope to try to get Presldent Nixon to see the picture; believing it might hasten the end of the war. Broadway. Is so calloused that one character, hearing that Tony Bennett’s wife is suing, charging that Tony has a girl friend who's expecting, exclaimed: “Do you mean to tell me that’s grounds for divorce in N.Y.?” THE MIDNIGHT EARL iron Jason watched estranged Elliott rorside Park, then had lunch together efcsed with co-star Robert Redford.in invited him to join First Artists, the company* isand and Sidney Poitier. at Max's Kansas City almost every week . . . Martin Poll, producing “The Magic Garden of Stanley Sweetheart," couldn’t locate Andy Warhol for his scene in the film__Lionel Bart was replaced by two other writers on the incoming Broadway show, “La Strada.” ★ ★ * TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: The Rainbow Grill’s Jack E. Leonard announced that the Royal Box’s Phyllis Diller “was supposed to be here but, when she was home teasing her hair, ft bit her,” .» WISH I’D SAID THAT: Joan Rivers gets annoyed at pilot# who point out the sights: “If he’s pointing out sights, he’s not looking straight ahead.” REMEMBERED QUOTE: There is the greatest practical benefit in making a few failures early in life.—Thomas Huxley. EARL'S PEARLS: The Gavel’s chef is so precise, he makes an alphabet soup which includes hyphens. "I went to a town so small,” said Jackie Gayle at the Copa, “the all-night diner closed at 2 ... in the afternoon.” Jack Nicholson at the Ground Floor described his role as an alcoholic lawyer in “Easy Rider”: “I play a member of the bar~ . With both elbows on it.” . . . That’s earl, brother. (PubliilMr*—Hall syndicate)_ ________ Avon Crash Death Notices Hospitalizes 2 Fall Savings Are Here Down Holds Your Biko tolootion In Lay-Away Till December T Boys’ 10-Speed Spyder Has “Billy” „ Handlebars and Wide Rear Tire Regular 74.99 These smart Spyder speedsters feature “Billy” handlebars, bucket seat, dual stick shift, dual rear brake, slim front tire for speed* with wider back tire for better traction. 64’ Girls’ 5-Speed, 24-Inch Spyder Styled Bike , , Regular 69.99 Exclusive 24-in. Spyder has bucket banana seat, chrome plated handlebars, front and rear hand-brakes, and a snazzy brightly colored frame. negwar oo.oo 5997 Ail Bikes at In-lhe-Carton, Taka-With Price. Use Seare Easy Payment Plan Precision Telescope Reg. 89.99 69.99 Boys’ 5-Speed 24” Spyder............. 59.99 64.99 Boys’ 20” 5-Speed Bike .............54.97 49.99 Girls’ 20” 1-Speed Bike..............44.97 54.99 Boys’ 3:Speed 20” Spyder.............49.97 54.99 Girls' 3-Speed 20” Spyder............ 49.97 44^9 Boys* 1-Speed 20” Spyder...............89.97 44.99 Girls’ 1-Speed20”Spyder...............89.97 118.99 Boys* 90” Jr. Bike'..............1... 82.97 38.99 Girls* 20” Jr. Bike.................82.97 29.99 16” Jr. Convertible Bike.............26.97 1.99 Spyder “Sissy Bars”............... 1.48 1.99 Chrome-Finish handlebars ......... 1,48 1.99 Bike Chain and Lock.................. 1.48 Scan Sports Canter Bike Sale Ends Sat., Oct. 11 1 \ M Dual knob focusing. Slow-motion altitude controls. Magnifies tip to 233 timet, hei 700mm focal length. 2 different power oculars. I 99.99 Magnifies 450 times, 79.99 199.99 Magnifies 600 times, 169.99 Zoom Binoculars R«g. 64.99 49" Aootnpiete binocular with sensitive camera-like diaphragm that! gives' sure, instant control while changing powers. 35mm 'objective for general use, Jewelry Department 25.99 7x35 Binocular. 15.99 7x35 Binocular., 24.99 7x50 Binocular. 19.99 13.99 19.99 Sears Downtown Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171 Brazil's Head Vows Return to Democracy Two persons were admitted to Crittenton Hospital, Avon Township, early today following a two-car crash at Auburn and Dequindre in the township. Listed in fair condition are Mrs. Donald F. Walters, 23, of Detroit and Ralph V. Vansaw, ____________________________________ 56. of 5410 N. Rochester, Avon1 r^LLY, FLOSSIE F.: October by 13 grandchildren and 10 great-grandchildren. Funeral, service will bo held Friday , October 10, at 1 p.m. at Coats Funeral Home Drayton Plains. Interment in Ottawa Park Cemetery, Waterford Township. Mr. Jones will lie in state at the funeral home after 7 tonight (Suggested visiting hours are 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) Township. RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) — j Mrs. Walters was a passenger Gen. Emilio Garrastazu Medici, |jn a car driven by her husband, the new president of Brazil, waiters, 33 was treated and promised Tuesday night to released after the 2:20 a.m. ac-bring democratic government > cident. Vansaw was alone in his back to South America’s largest!car. country with politically moder-j ate guidelines. He said he would | tolerate the violence of the NOTICI TO BIDDERS MM proposal, will b. r« ■H MMH ... . Bo.rO pf County Ro.4 Comp ' , -;r---------- o( th. County of Oakland »Hh»fr < extreme left or the conserve-m» Romik l*x. Row. ewjj.e. - .. , . . . . I loan until 11:00 O'clock A.M., Oclol and will In publicly opmw at 11:00 o’clock A.M. of fha tor tho following: p.stong.r and Truck Tim and —i Month'o rooulromont. Tho brand* fo bo conildi | ‘ ilroval, Rlroi Ik alist oligarchy. profWMli II ird It In th dvanlao* Of L “At the end of my mandate I expect to leave-ttomoefScy de-1 j^eSfcatfenihd flnitively installed,” Medici said obtjjhiod upon In a television and radio address miM*onupbiddU *aTew hours after the mllltaiyjSM’— jhigh command chose him to re-l ™**£jjrlr£ [place ailing President Arthur da|«jjJ» aecojrt g |Costa a Silva. [wy mg I “I know what the people think;counted and feel ... that Brazil is still! of ma far from being a developed na-j tion, living under a regime that J I we cannot consider fully demo-Icratic,” he said. One of his first steps, the 63-year-old Medici said, will be to FARMER, LONNIE Death Notices open talks with leaders of all social strata. MILITARY CONTROL He also pledged to limit the government’s participation In tiie economy. But he was expected to continue the tight control the military lias maintained since It overthrew President Joao Goulai't, Brazil's last popularly elected president, In 1964. A military junta took over the presidential powers after Costa' e Silva suffered a stroke on haTTIG HERMAN; October 8, Aug. 31, bypassing Vice Presi- ^g. Seymore Lake dent Pedro Alelxo, 68, a civilian. Road| Oxford; arrangements * + * are pending at Bossardet Informed sources said Medici Funeral Home, Oxford, had offered the vice presidency October 4, 1969; 304 Crystal Lake; age 61; dear father of John W. Farmer; also survived by one sister and two grandchildren/ Funeral service will b« held Friday, October 10, at 1 p.m., at Davls-Cobb Funeral Home. Interment In Oak Hill Cemetpry. Mr. Farmer will lie in state at the funeral; home after 3:30 p.m. Thursday. -______________________1 6, I960; Miami, Florida (formerly of West Bloomfield Township); age 71; dear sister of Mrs. Clada Brown, Mrs. Mabie Cadwell, Albert, Hubert, Robert and Elmp Crosby. Funeral service will be held Friday, October 10, at 1 p.m. at C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor. Interment in Pino Lake' Cemetery, West Bloomfield Township. Mrs. Kelly Will lie in state at the funeral homi •ffiaifwora. z I-after 3 p.m. Thursday, ^ (Suggested visiting hours are 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) fiL*Kir°cti- MALCOLM, BABY FAITH HELENA; October 7, I960; ooo East Boulevard South; beloved infant daughter of James and Sue Malcolm; beloved granddaughter of Mr, and Mrs.. James Malcolm, and Mr. and Mrs. Rick Thompson; beloved great-granddaughter of Mrs. Evelyn Malcolm; dear sister of Hope M. Malcolm. Graveside service were held today at 1:30 p.m., at . White Chapel Cemetery, with Rey,. Theodore R. Atiebach. Arrangements by Voorhees-Sipla Funeral Home. MfehH th* Board r» of tha __________ County Rood Commlulonor* ----’ ot Oakland. Michigan RRAzlR W. STAMAN SOL 0. LOMIRSON PAUL w. McGovern to Navy Minister Augusto Rade-[maker, one of the junta mem-ibers, but that the admiral de-'dined. ♦ * 4 w | Sources close to tha military government said a move might be made shortly to reopeii Con. gyess, closed last December by Costa e Silva after it refused to ! turn one of. Its members over to the military for trial. The sources said the purpose would be to approve the change In the presidency and possibly to give assent to the amended constltu* Itlori that was being prepared when Costa • Silva waa strtck- HUNTER, MARGARET C . ; October 8, 1969 ; 4 54 6 Waterford Road, Waterford Township; age 7 5; arrangements are pending at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. JpNES^FRAtiK NpL V'l N; v October 7, 1969 ; 3 3 00 \ Saishabaw, Drayton Plains, age 72; beloved husband of Harriett Jones; dear father of Mrs. Gordon (Francis) Smith, Mrs. Joe (Katherine) Kelly, Mrs. Arpold (lone) Groves, Mr. Leslie Jones; d o a r brother of Mrs. John O’Connor, Mrs. Eugene Avery, and Russell Jones; also survived THORPE, LELAH S.; October 7, 1069; formerly of 117 Untversity Drive; age 89. Funeral service will be held Thursday, October 9 at 11:00 a.m., at Sparks-Griffin Funeral home. Interment in USk Httt~"Ccnwtery.—Mtsa Thorpe will He in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours are' 3 to 5 and 7 to 0.) ______________, VanLUVEN, JENNIE; October Y, I960 ; 452 Slocum, Auburn Heights; age 77; dear mothoir of Mrs. Hazel Rose, and George VanLuven; also survived eight' grandchildren and ten great-grandcht ldren. Funeral , Service / ♦icqtlon of such orror it mod* by fbot limit, It Will bo ouumtd thf od it torroct, Th* Praee ottum*t no to* tpontibilily for orrort ,otk*r than to cgftcfl tho char got for that portion CASH WANT AD RATES (whon coth occompaniot ordor) 1*0 l-Doy 3-Dayt 6-Doys I $2 00 $ 2.57 $ .1.99 I 2.00 3-7Q 5.81 I 2.51 4.00 7.52 I 2.83 5.70 0.12 > 3 76 0.84 10.94 f 4.39 7.98 12.77 I 3.02- -903 14;59 > 364 10.26 16.42 0 6.27 • 11.40 18.24 An odditionoi chorg* of 60 c,*nti II bo mad* for mo of Pontiac Praia The Pontiac Press GEORGE CROCKETT NOW working u 4*3S Kilt* DojTnA* •btfh btko Ed LOSE WilGHT MTflV With Die 1 T O o i l t ». Only 91 Slmm‘« drot, Print, Funeral Directors COATS FUNERAL HOME CRAYTON FLA INS 4I4 044I C. J GOOHARDT FUNERAl MOM» Kftpo Harbor. PH. 313-1200. DONELSON-JOHNS ______FUNBRAL "HOME ---- Huntoon SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOME ____ihtful SorvlA** PE Mill VcorheesSiple FUNERAL HOME. 332-8378 Eatabllihod Qvor 45 Vf rt Cemetery Loft 4*A • 4 LOTS. WHITE CHAPEL, 8800. Grace, Christian AAtmorla! Garden, Novi, Mich. 5 graves, : »fttr, 4; 36 Pm ------ BOX REPLIES At 10 e.m. today there were replies at The Press Office in the boxes: CC, CM, CM7, C-40, C-44. 2 IN LOVING MEMORY, of Paulina Roil, pauatl away Oct. I, 19JJ. Sadly mlwatl. fondly ramambarad. Lww by all. Family and trlandi. IN LOVING MEMORY a* our fathar. Gaorga H. Wilson who Pauad aw«r 7 years ago Oct. S, 1981. Gona but not forggttan. Sadly inlstad by The Wilson family. IN LOVING MBMORY'ol Jerome Webber, who Miaad away i years WOW A DIRECT LINE FOR PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADS DIAL 334-4981 We Repeat DIAL 334-4981 FOR ffASTER iRViCE BILL PROBLEMS I-CALL DEBT CONSULTANTS_______338-0333 Catering service " l'V‘warehouse man, good opportunity for ad* vancement, apply 563 N. Saginaw. BOILER OPERATOR Full time position In hospital, power plant. Licensed or able to obtain llcanta In * months. Ex* cellent frlnoo benefit program. Including paid blue cross and life Insurance. Apply St. Joseph Mercy call tor appointment 338*9111 oxt. Ronan Kennels, no —- found lend and shepherd puppy. 9 mot. old. Whlta on chast and front feat. Wearing choke chain. C!lil^cr!!. P«l- Reward. 335-7615. LOST: BLACK MINIATURE poodle, continonal haircut, wearing orange collar, with 1968-69 tags. Answers to tha name of Newere. 338-4233. Carlisle and Kannatt vicinity. Reward. Help Woiitdd Mala 6 83.50 FER HOUR, experienced duct Installer and fabricator. Time and • half for ovor time. Steady work. Must have own tools. O'Brien Heating. 371 Voorhtls Rd. __ 10 BOYS WANTED Tuesday • Wide Thursday AFFtY IN PERSON i LYLE McLACHLAN Mill Rohm' THE PONTIAC PRESS 25MENWANTiD~~ EVERY .DAY 6 A.M. DAILY PAY ■ O.nsr.l Labor-Groundskmplng W.rshou.s - Factory • J.nltorlal OFEN 6 A.M. DAILY-REFORT FIADY FOR WORK An Equal Opportunity I CHRISTIAN RECORDING and Saras Ca. naads part tlma halp im-mrdlatoly. Guaranteed salary, no axp. needed. 1-756-3634 Warren, Mfehlwm.__________________________ CARPENTERS Rough and finish 391-3241 or 391-3271 or 391-0413 CONTRACTORS General Contractor — Accepting Bids From Sub-Contractors On All Trades. 190 Unit Apartment Prolact. P. J. Mason Construction 5798 Highland Rd. _ 673*1291 CUSTODIAL AND MAINTENANCE openings for full or part-time work In shopping confer. So mo ^fQ9i^6nlcat ability. stfons, ant office P_____ _____ dally except Management ■i ability , helpful. Good opportunity -with paid ’ uranca coverage, etc. Offica Pontiac Mall. CHECKERS DETAILERS Special Machines Automation KTB \ Opportunity t < ' fringe' benefit., overtime, steady yaar around work. An Equal Op-partunlty Employar, .CLYDE CORPORATION. IMP w. MAPLE RO.r TROW DESIGNERS . CHECKERS \ LAYOUT MEN 't DETAILERS T, TRAINEE !? ’■ m ,, Eu"ldlrig. ' 56 hours par wiak, fhlnlmum irhsduled—fringe banaflft. Phono Mr, Brawn at 666-1211 or apply— oa Tf now, koltanvar engineerino co. 5M Mapia Rd> Troy Employment office open *tll 5 p.m, dally for hiring bltAPTtMAN wIYH ixFiRfEfici c ”*"* **ck,n**r Deputy Dbg Worden $7,300 TO $8,200 Position Involvss. enforcing Oakland County; plaints, petroling, ate, t, In thii class are _____________, Outstanding fringe banatlts. Oual-Iflcetlons l Residency In Oakland Counly, High School graduation, 2t to 60 yaar* old. Michigan Driver's L leans#, dear criminal racord. good driving Good steady iob with advancamant lai. Pot potential. turthar Information appllCaliOn] contract: Equal Opportunity Employar bRIV^Ri Wli*lKs, p*rt tlm#, Ml tlmi. 1*9 We Huron._ Draftsmen, Layout Inspectors. Electricians, Hone Operators- Set-up experience required. Excellent benefits, steady employ* M. C. DIVISION KELSEY HAYES CO. IIS Indtanwood Rd., Laka Orion, 693- Baskat Shop, 111 N. Hunter Blvd., Birmingham, 6444333. DISHWASHER FOR night ahift. Ap. ply In parlan. Country Kitchen, Auburn and Opdyka. PRY CLEANER AND IpOttar, ax-parlancad, igoad pay, holidays, and vacations. Call for appointmant 338-9209. Fathar B Son Dry Cleaners. 936 Joslvn, Pontiac. DESIGNERS ^ Autom*tion-tools*Dles 333-%fi)_~ I DBTfcolT EhEinySltefc' motor route man wanted, (Ingle copy dallvary In Iha Highland ,iM Millard area. ISO bond required. 334-2469 or 3364)766.__ DO YOU WANT A good future with good pay and working conditions? Auto Mechanic naedad call Mitch. 33»7S44, ' DISHWASHER, DAY WORK ONL.V, no Sundays or Holidays. Birmlnp-v ham. *46*4333. DESIGNER Special Machines Automation Opportunity to ibocome prolact laadar. Fringe banatlts, overtime, steady year around work. An Equal Opportunity Employar. CLYDE CORPORATION >Rd„ Tray UoTtoI EXPERIENCED SERVICE MEN tor haatlna. year round amploymant. Insurance, paid vacation rlnga benefits. Apply In I HOPtlng Br Ceqllng Co. traph Rd., Pontiac. ELECTRICAL WIRBMAN with iparlanca, steady SIM Dixie Hwy., work. inlri'iHt Waterford.___ ELDERLY BAR Inc. 2Mt Williams Dr..-'Pontiac. Mich. _ JEXPERIENCED LAND3CAPE h»ip, srtadv. work, S62-97M. ________ EXPERIENCED WELDERS a nd general laborers needed. Apply at Mlchlpan Transport Trallara, Inc., higan I Dixie EXPERIENCED TOOL maker tor tool, |lg and llxtura work at pro-duclon machine shop, ago ho barrier II qualified, good wage*, fringe benefits, and working xon-ditont, plant employing approximately M people, loos tad 4 or call 132-3400, ask tor Mr, Coon. EXPERIENCED MAN naadsd far home cleaning service. Will eon- quallfled person Master. 333-4111. EXPERIENCED SERVICE men alr-condltlonlng,^ year vacation and 'ath paid va benefits. Heating Telegraph I EXPERIENCED JANITOR, nights. Also general help. Avon Sail Bants, 0649 E. Hamlin Rd., Rochester, Michigan. EXPERIENCED, RELIABLE, sober men. mechanically JncUned _ta_ assume building engineers lob in largo office building In Pentlie. Write Pontiac Prats, Box C-44, Pontiac, giving resume at work axnierlanca and background. EXPERIENCED SIDERS, tun.^m|_ work, top wag#', Hlnga banatlts, ~ 332-3231 _______. ELlCTWNICS ENGINEER Machine fool axporltnco To work with R. and Please send resume 1 Press. Box C*47. Pontiac EMPLOYMENT COUNSELOR » fho ebl-Mh.peopl you have salat or public, contact experience, we will train you, Exceptionally high aarnlngt first year. Shelling and Snalllng. Call Dava Lea. 334-M71, for appolnlmant. _ iLECTRiCAL WHOLESALER*needs were house help, steady work with e future, oepartunlty for advancement, apply 171 S. Saginaw St. E X PER I E N C E'b FURNACE Inatallara, yaar round amploymant, hospital Insurance, paid, vacstlona and other frit --------- parson Kail I Sio s. Taiagri FAfT6lfV WORK Tn imai’rchamicel company, Laenard, Mich., area. Advancamant based an ability ter lesdarship, 431-2421. ’ FOREMAN'S' ASSISTANT, fonTa mechanical background, apphf at Sashabaw Pradueli, 4440 Sashebaw Rd., Clarkf rlnga banatlts, Apply In Htatlng t Caellng Co, iraph Rd., Pontiac, for small machine shop operation, tu'rei lathes, engine lethai and T 0. TRERICE CO. 1749 wait Lafayatta Detroit. Mich, Phona 96^1017 PULL TfMB SERVICE station, ax* parlancad. 8130 to start. *48*1385. 1 Birmingham area. PULL TIME STOCk boys wanted, good starting tilery with generous banatlts. For datalli Inquire al W, T, Grants, Union Lake Shopping Cantor. GAS STATION ATTENDANT, ex‘ Gulf, Telegraph and Mapfi? $un Emith, must nova' machine -------------Write I Pnntl a. C-lf! Pontiac, Mich. .rose. | GM PARTS MAN, experienced only, Chevrolet Oaeiirshlp preferred. Must be rallabla. Wan Camp Chevrolet. Milford. 414-1025. Bill Spain. \? STGunBIkIMR Full time position avellehel for experienced greundtka.par In meintenenca dept, aI local hospital, we offer an excellent salary and irl5fl^abTlnVr^hnn.r51rp1! If, Jostph Mtrcy Hospital. 90d woodward, Pontiac. Or .call far aaealimanf iSdlTT axt. Ml’ . GAS STATION aftandant wan xMJn*v*3r IMeW.lil.4IM. General Foundry Laborers Wanted i experltnce necessary. Systemation 23444 Novi Rd., Novi. An Equal Opportunity Employar 349,3230 HANDY MAN, PART TIME, To sarvlca axchanga type water tofttneners, regular route. Heady yaar ‘round work, apply In paraon, Pontiac Soft watar sarvlca Co- 34 Chamberlain. HELP ”WANTED FOR OI*rk off station at M-59 and Cau Laka Rd. Full tlma and nart tlma avallabla. ■ ■ on, 3n s. HARDINGS CHUCKER. some experience or trainee, plenty ef overtime, good wages and fringe benefits Including -.fully paid Blut Cross, aftarnaon shift. Apply at Benton Division, 2170 Industrial Row. Troy. HAVE ' OPENINGS tor" 2 security guards. Must apply In person. 363-881t or 313 N. TtltErbph. IMMEDIATE OPENINGS $11,200 ___Minimum It qualified “RETAIL STORE MANAGERS MANAGER TRAINEES MANUFACTURING REP, SALESMEN Nationwide appliance company# with challenging and rewarding positions, opening in this area*-needs aggressive naat appearing, seif starting individual, to tarn top ToS many other 1 company fringe benefits. Strong salts background necessary. For confidential in- and assistant > manager. K-mart. 338-4057. Mr. Schroedar or Mrs. Glddlnoa. . _ Industrial Personnel Dept. needs axparltncad man far Interviewing, tasting and p of hourly and salaried t Soma college or dagraa. I position with all fringe Call tor Int.rvlow 3344I3I4 JANITOR Fart tlma, i No rxp.rl.nc _______ Janat Davis Cleanurs JANITOR-HANDYMAN 100 unit a par I'm ant, Wayna Untv«rslly—arts.—A pa rt man t furnlshad and ilvablt salary. Call JANITORS (CUSTODIAL WORKER II) Several Immediate Openings $2.88 Hr: to $3.08 Hr. Icants must bp ( isldanta from 11 to f vary good physlca condition. For Oakltnd County Court I 1200 N. Telegraph Rd c, Mlchlgai portunlty Employar laborers - no Experience necessary. Education no barrier. Raqulramanls Include) good work performance and rallabTlity, Exc. oanafIts pravldad: -, , Steady amploymant Good ttortlng ialary with opportunity tar advancamant. Fair management policies Paid vacation, holidays A Insurance. Apply at PAW Engineer, Inc. —ism Williams Or., pontlao E oual Oppertunlty Employar avallabla. Liberal callent fringe benefits. A] Personnel Office, , CffITTENTON HOSPITAL 1101 W. Unlvariity Dr. LATHE OPERATOR Must ba Interested Steady positions with benefits. Days <_ I Industrial Rowe, Trpy. betweei (13 Milo Rd. off Coolldga Hwy^ LATHE OPERATOR Some axparlanca necessary. rertime, days and iBpjy at Ban ton Division,. AMBAC Industries, 3*70 industrial Row, Trgy, Mich,, Between 14 end IS Mila Rdt., oft OboildBa Hwy, ______ lSnd suI?1Y0r“ ■Id and drafting axparlanca. ■■■■■ / petition with fast growing modular home •manufacturer. call Mrs. Davidson 172-6102 With For supervisory -----no moduli LATHE, MILL and Ihapar hands progressive diet, steady It weak, all fringes, 334-4321. LATHE OPERATOR --MILL OPERATOR ' ■ acend shift only, top retas, all Ingtt. steady nonstaionah mployment. apply In parson, ylai Industries^ S5990 Wlxom Rd., 7>9piK CITY OF TROY' 03.1043.33 FEE HOUR • prove 1 years qmorwncti ^Trial maintenance, machine ilatlon and repair. All banatlts supplied, good working condition and evartlme. starting rata 14.39 par hour, and M.M~«tartjhp Oct. 20. AMny Avon Tuba Division. Hlgbv Manutacturlng Co., 4th ana Water Sts., RochaatarTMICh. 631- wk. 610 MANAGER TRAINEE, SMALL loan cem^an......a 21, high icheel MODERNIZATION SALESMAN -B " a: must ba- at laaat ____SS Epst Fjk*. _____ MAINTENANCE MAN Full tlma and part tlma. Many frlnga benefits. SACKS Slh AVE. Big Baaver at Coolldga, Summar-sel Mall, Troy Apply In parson, Partannal OWIca,___ MAN WITH MILITARY ObllgatlMI Highway, Farmlhgten. PART TIME SERVICE" ,A|BI!'lV Orchir? Laka PAINTERS WANTED, axparlanc 6474234, i PONTIAC PRESS' Want Ads ARE FAMOUS For Action IUST CALL 334-4981 Halp Wanted Male 6 Help Wanted Male 6 SKILLED OPERATORS AND TRAINEES ★ Grinders ★ Mills • ailllYr. r":- gjg * . . ★ jLathes LYND GEAR, INC, 1 Subsidiary of Condic Corp. PHONE 651-4377 Or Apply of • 361 S. Streot, Rochsster 37 Turk Strut, Pontiac Ion Want Ads Dial 334-4931 MACHINIST FULL OR port lime, day, Orion Automation and Engineering Co. 4701 25 Mil# Rd. _naar Shalby Rd. 631-4100. __ MAiNTENANCl^CHIEF for private electrical and plumbing systems. Jack of all trades, 332-6323, Mr. Grlllln. MACHINE OPERATORS iyiodtrn factory and aqulpmant. Immadlata opanlngx. on lathas, grlndaro, automatic screw machine and production shapers. Will train man wKh soma axparlanca. Day and afternoon shifts avallabla with overtime. Apply In person between 9 a.m. • 3 p.m. to 2921 Industrial Row, tray, between 14 and 13 Mile Rd., aft Ceeiwoa I4w», ‘ MOTEL' DEIK CLERK. ovar 23, dapondabia 3214861. ________ MAH WANtEO TO WORK In store, steady work, apply In parson. People's Fish A Poultry Mafkat, 377 S. Saginaw. MALE AMD FEMALd. HfeLP.wantad for canitructkin work In .Troy, 335-9935, call avamngs attar I p.m._ MEN TO DO JANlfORIAL Work In offices end Khobls. In tha City of Rochester and Birmingham. (3.00 10 32.30,per Jir, l p.m. Call 347.2637. Married Person With soma background Selling exparM^.Mfarra To sail naw aha used aulonr ONLY HARD WORKING -----DILIGENT PERSON NEED APPLY Guaranteed Salary IMMEDIATELY 10 SHARP MEN * 18 TO 25 Mr. Roymer at 332-3639 NEEDED AT 0NCEI Youna man to do dun up# parti chaser and station work for now car daalanhlp. 1 Saa In parson *r-.Mr. Kan Johnson, Russ Johnson Fon* __tiac, 89 M24 in Lake Orion. FARTS CLERK AND Ilia PORTER needed, car daalarihip «• perienca prafarrad, AWWVf POT* TIAC KEEOO SALES I, SERVICE, KBBGO HARBOR. Production Workers WIDE VARIETY OF JOBS AVAIL. Machine Qparateri, Freight Handlers Assemblers, common laborera TRANSP. AVAILABLE EMPLOYERS Temporary Service, Inc. - FERNDALE 7320 Mitten Rd. REDFORO 26617 Brand Rlvar CIAWSON 43 S. Main CENTER LINE___, .-1361.1. Id Mila An Equal Oppertunlty Employer' lexff::\6 PLANT ATTENDANT , t * Te operate and maintain blah prastura boilers and wark v In Sanaral miTntananca,, mu»l, have Delroil Boiler Operator Llcente. Salary depend! on MP end axparlanca. Excallant frinda Pontiac Oanaral Hoaplfal, Samlnhi* al W. Huron. Pontiac, Mich. Phan* 3M-471I Ext, did. , porut * To work tram il p.m. to 4:3d d.m. W*' ILIA* BROS, . BIG BOV RESTAURANT Ttlaaraph t Huron___ iiAL 'ESTA'tJTOISSMAN "Hdad ,to sal" air*, i* you Sri intarajlad In making 123,010 d year phona (100) 292-3414 tnoToll). Stan Loomtt 1 BAMec. real *sTA+irr. RESORT SALESMAN ______ SELL NORTHERN LAND AND LOCAL LAND. WE HAVE OVER* SO MILLION DOLLAR IN-VENTORY - HELP _US MOVE this froduct. draw and EXPENSED TO SUIT . Y 01) . PHONE MR. MARSHALL d»-1>M. RESTAURANT MANAGER: Opening axparltncad -callent toad Vpiral 132-81 'REVOLUTIONARY NEW AUTOMOTIVE PRODUCT ■' Introduced In tha Mid, Watt, opportunity lor adit. Earning potent I a I unlimited. Oualitlad distributors applications ME 'v'c'Sl, 1320 or 443-1377. Aik far Mr. REAL ESTATR SALBMEN Commercial, Invaitmant, Butli Opportunltlaa and Land. Wa art hlgh-callbar vat, prafarab' real astata Wa have training program. Ovar Two Hun- ting progr, Million ra In . The at Hating aarvlct J.S. Publlahars of lit# Michigan M Investment Guide. All Inqulrlts strictly canfldanfial. Ask for Gant or Ward E. Partridge 1030 W. hone 401-ltH.___________ 333-7156 Miller Bros. Realty RETIREE FOR PORTER WORK / Evening Shift Bio boy’drive in / 3490 Dixie Hwy. RELIABLE MANOR COLLEGE STUDENT For > dallvary, full or part tlma, days, excellent working conditions, excallant salary. Apply Sherman Help WanfEd Mala ' V PHARMACIST Modern suburban store, atarttnl laiary. 5314IJ0. Sporting/ Goods Salesman ■Is ill Etmm in naming for hT«n With |inSrtfiurJjng’^jS i 4 p.m. •Mpleymant Office Hudson's Pontiac Mall SALESMAN agsrostlva, n« N sail largo ticket luxury Commission plui many banatlts. Call FE 3-3440. SERVICE STATlAN , mechanic tar 20 yr, excallant'opportunity man, 931 Umvaraliy, i - Lae._____ SERVICE STATION _Mkmi|M STOP1 aax SERVICE STATION . needed full and part S man Heeded to raplaca I man *Mr.MVowafi • itandania rt time, must ba naat, nunesi, enu reliablt. Apply 493 South St, Ortanvltle. Mich. , SECURITY GUARDS FOR”thalkoft-llac area, S2.9S, par hour, plui fringes, lull and part-time. ?ell Oatroll, 371-9030. _ OiRVlC^ITATION' ATTENDANT, lull Hint, over 21. banalHs. Rochastdr area. 63I-9M9. _ IuRFACi~~dRINOER-, HANOS. Ior progressive diet, sleedy so hour weak, all trlngM.»l34-4323.__ Turret Lathi Oparotor Wats Division, fWBAOndujlrlH, 3070 indusftlal 'Ray. Yroy, BatwaOn Ji and IS Mila Rda„ aH Coolldga - Hwv. ______ TRUCK bRIVER FOR par to, required. Marry N. Main it., 1ST- TRUCK DRIVERS, MUST be ax'-perlenced on. double JMPhilL hauls. Bald Mountain araa. Con- WELDERS & HELPERS Flat welders $3.58 per hour, helpers $3.28 per hour: 9 paid holidays, paid Blue Cross,-Blue Shield, paid sickness and accident insurance. Wa will teach you welding after 30 days employment. APPLY PORTECHNS— PARAGON- DIVISION ' 44000 Grand River Novi Assemblers and Production Machine. Operators No Experience Necessary Pontiac Motor Division General Motors Corporation Pontiac, Michigan Employment Office Open 8-11 A.M. 14 P.M. Monday thru Friday An oqual opportunity amploytr Wanted Male 6 Help Wanted Male TELEVISION TECHNICIANS RCA Immediate openings for television technicians, experienced and traineei. These are career positions offering excellent salary and fringe benefits that include paid vacatloni, holidays, sick leave, medical insurance, life insurance and a modern retirement plan. Additional earning posslbilitiei, planned advancement, company-provided vehicle and tools. Extended training program in advanced electronics. > CALL MR. BARRETT FOR INTERVIEWS 335-6118 9 A.M.-6 P.M. MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY an Equal opportunity employer For Wont Adi Dial 3344981 Klip woimtl Mils ■ I' r train TRAINEES Cin trim lo bacoms taml-skliied machinists In stabls medium ilud Troy prop plant, i Mull Of llMtfy worker fe good physical condition • Excellent lob tor Votoroni • Full hontflto tnd coit oi liv> • vylfl ro-troln Irpm other oe- WoiHad Mill ^ liHtip Wontod FbwgIg i 7 Haig Wantad Ftimlo THE PONTIAC PJIBSS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1969 V 7ilMy Wwhl 7iiinKi 7 Holp WmM huh 7|Hilp Wonted FhigIb PERMANENT POIITION, thSm WMWnVtt raf‘A TEWHONE CANVASSER' _IhS onor *7 ’ 7^1 ■ SUPERVISOR/ O ByiWBB?r|gM>/ion. Offi froo, hi AneqiMt pfeiL/ffiy Pull tlmo end port time, fringe bonoflti, SACKS WTt M -WANTED TRUCK MECHANICS i I Gas or dioitl. Liberal pay, —• |insurance furnished, retirement and full bihiflts. Set **nyiMr. tCo#, 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. {Monday thru Friday^ GMC Truck Confer Oakland at Cass HOul*M*N l ' Too Salary tor right dor » IWJWKJr drift I 030-0440, 'Mondoy ISIS* . Balk*, tut . phono ■ noon only, Mr. Brooks. - , ' Ar WOMAN ORWOMAN to live In. 4lS457l" m . ... AdfilNPOW 'LbflT”l«' ily employer, , charge. Also nurse's eld*. Ex-' perlence helpful .............. 1, luc counter OIPL, apply In parson before noon, Push cleenori, lit W. Huron. .r , :;f, ~ Tlonlet, Well PloorrtfloW township, full lima, experience preferred bit not ■heaBapry,^ «*-ftoo., .____ on ill "and mill operetor, ex-perlence necetsory, excellent op portUnlty for ouotlfled Write Pontiac Prow Pontiac, Mich. 41054. C-19,' Good DAY COOK, M P.r lundoy end holldt PHONB CALLS epply fobt Alift"' MoBlF' Maftr, must hove ley out oxporlOnce, Fringe beneflti end excellent working __ . .... conditions. Write Pontiac Preu FE ,5-9485 Pox C-lt, PontlocrMIch, 41050. . | MECHANIC AIDE $6,960 - $7,300 $3.30 - $3.50 Hourly excellent Beneflti it minlngt end positions irtunlty to -------- ore •erlii of ltd., ecron from Clonteton mom. WAtfTBDl MIN 45 to It uppr for porter work. Oey end evening from, iten per- policy end benefit!, A cledn one eleeient eo-bed nursing home. Come In end check Itlll out,, , _ , ta. far ADMITTING CLERK HmIWM 0 EARN MONEY TOI Drive on day eniM.j e iiw.wi mmtmrT w"* 1 tut Pereonnel Office. ■■■■■■PIPOIGPM Hoipiiel. Pocheiler, *51-4000. fringe beneflti. PHONB 333 04*7 A"ufoa‘Afi'WdTi_________ Apply in perion; ejl*?*»roi, £lp| BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED Rh Pdtlllve 17.50 ceii-jAM RN Net, wed,, 1.£ Thurt. l Town Country Furniture/ 4107 Teiec Rd , at Long Lake Rd. ■, .“Receptionist “ ’ Personnel Consultont $5,000 UP / Preillge pirmlnghem^ nfflce, TNT^RNATmNAL PEIISONNEI I Co , 10 W, Huron, Connolly No'- In Pontltc PB *0747 •«0 *!^Woodwerd B'hem. e4J.|J4l 1 tlnnei BuMdinp, Room JJ1. 1M7 Wide TrecK Or.. W *»->*-----wAifReirwANfeb, i e.m. iliifi,I _______... eeply In eenon, Crecker eerrel i_.'’/*»•, wed,, Thurt. IH Hel| Winted M. oe lL ,J puR^iTuiieiALetMTO Pdf' new depertment store, top commlMion, peld uPOPtTohI, ceunft/ aacailent chanca far ndo vane ament, should Hava ioma sales Lh:i\ necessary. . 9PHf! --- ^—BlfBHK m voted. *i.40 nar Hour plus com-'Onea mission and aenua to start. Apply i Sterling Building . ... Vlata*< so t(. wftjji no news, Mltforq art#/4f»lWa. MICHIGAN COMMUNITY BLOOD CBNTM PEOPLE CONTACT To 17.300. to train for pa Interviewer—poitfton.—Cat Nardy r “ INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL ah-I ioo io*o w. Huron RECEPTIONIST — PERSONNEL office/ personable person wltH ln*| In Public Centeel tame tva.1 U/tian Lake. WAITRESSES KITCHEN HELP wmmm.. , Jeck'1 onve-m contact some lye- H W. Mnnlceim,_epe(y AiTRissEs'expeRie Income end fringe Icenee end pood eeoeerence.l be able to Thuridey, Friday. fereif eppeerence ey, Friday, Saturday, Birmingham area. Cell 447.5445^ SECRETARY EXPERIENCED In I purchailng preferred. IMJfll. ...SECRffARY ADVERTISING AOBNCY North Woodward brae. Interesting person. _ I WAITRESSES EXPERIENCED, good banafits, mutt holidays. Mrs. Goodwin, [Can You Sell? If id, wd have immediate opening tor hep reel ettpte eeiee people, Interested In, miking money. Bx- WIH train, plenty of floor tlmo end attn minion achoduld. For Intorvlow, ■......... ovlor, OR 44I CM 3-7S4I. fo"1n >y w I porion i XPERIENCED HOUSEKEEPER roqulrod. . . , P,fes S, Adorn* PleioXRm. 124 . „ __________Jplr Pltdni 441-3055 Blrmto good pay eng working condition*. Peld hoieltelllithm. cel] y to 5. In/Sriantllu tire nnu wookdeye, Hi-toio. Detroit. .......inciMniity, we poy vvANTFn- juati' APAai^fe1' Aft Holldayt/ Vacations, Banutaa SB S counfy I My*.ri?; «r KiStoli,- iM ImI IMhevevjlS benolltt, Inlorotltd? Cell PB 5- W/f en n r.MiJm: \ gyggTiKEi>~naffcE _ Mlchloen'* "Brivere Ltcense.; Thlpl 5M0. _____ BARMAID, DAYS. NO Sunday*, ex- typing and iwltchboerd lor privet* arntnatlon Tg befng, announced to YOUNG-MAkk IE 6 MAW, tkli'le e perlence notneee»*ery. Anply-in club. 1:10 to 5 p.m. Tue*.-Set., 331- tnbiiihed and eligible ItStS to fill; wonderful builnpit opportunity tor| perion at Dell'e Inn, 3411 Elliebeth 1323, Mr. Biatle*._i_ an-the |ob training ft ln*urence LakeRd. -_______ EXPERIENCED UVB IN laleimen. We will Ireln end eMIit BABYSITTER. CLARKSTON area, heutekeeeer. 5 dy*. Including Set. v°u In every w*fo 5..« ' M i nv. in or out. 515-4557 eftor 5. i night. 500, end ell eoclil eecurfty APPLY MONDAY 1-5 P, M TUES. FRI. 7-11 AM. OR 5-5 P.A 15 THE REASON IT'S GOOD 'wSS! 550^ rtf. required, Rochetter, <51 HOUSEWIVES EARN 15.50 an hour up, nick up end deliver Puller Bruin Order*. Call Mel Mandefl, V 5, 353-2144, 7-9 375-5172. hSuSEKETpER, 5 day*, Ipvfly home, good wogoi, paid Blue Croia, mutt have awn traniporti tlon. Cell collect 1 -545-51 51 between 7 end 12 a.m. notice end may be . . ^ ' Dlytllon-- Oakland County Court Houit 1200 N. Taloeraph Rd. Pontiac, Michigan . A Merit eyatem end equal opportunity empleyor TRUCK DRIVER . Alio responsible tor shipping end receiving, neet end dependable. Apply IMPERIAL MOLDED PRODUCTS, 2331 Oakley Perk Rd., welled Lake. — " USED CAR PORTER Mult- have 'driver! license and experience preferred. OAKLAND CHRYSLBR-PLYMOUTH CLARKSTON 525.4557 after 5 SITTER "POR lubslltute ed diversified poiltlon lor 'OMAN NEEDED POR1' MOTHERLESS NOME,_<25 t755._ WOMAN UNSKILLED, WILL TRAIN PULL TIME c°oos?L^rjs?o5°«NT*» ?l5*ilnt working .tmolphor* and S?*ner. c‘" Wl *•'*“•!_____**** tlrm?neh'em*P * An Equal Opportunity Employer WANTlb'RELIAELE LADY to live] SAEtS OilCTS SELL'boko good*; . Quollty Homo. PE 4-1141.__IwgMENJj do^eftenlng work^ln^djj Taylor. OR 44304. Bv*l BEAUT Programmers Immediate Openings $9,600 • $12,800 Minimum of one vaar of retarf programming •*parlance raquirad Mult Hava had experience win edboi end-or 380 esssmblei For further information C 1300 -Hi SHIRT PRESSER tic** and ichool*. voetmont, 3344770. CLAIMS ADJUSTER For a large moving comp male or tomtit, opportunity and Equal On- cepeercreft portunlty employer_______ dvJ-Ne in- Dishwasher. DAVS,' iS yepri old ___________I or ovtr. good condition, *OOd pay, Ireniportetlon. re Reeteu'"- polntment.___ COUPLBTuLL TIME lor working manager- of -apartment complex in WjMjita .....Mil. Ex- iintenonct ply el Home, l Orchard Like i Pontlec. No children Belom cabinot poK| to *1.1 IIP547-2 5 day* a wk. *;l»l month. Call Mr. Coonoi. 174-7351. a* ; tu/n iu «;w. Willlnms Lake 7 19 per day. *73-7424^ BABYSITTER LfVE \W* IY1C..JD MR after 4/ 334-! -part—Hmt-worK ,,*STENO'S — SECRETARIES TYPISTS — KEYPUNCHERS GENERAL OFFICE WORK Pontiac, Bloomfield, Rochtstor arte. Top rales plus benefits. MANPOWER 331-5314 cent commlMion. Call A WOMAN POR GENERAL < work, ploeiant surroundings congenial people. Typing riqi Write Post Office Box <5, Pontlec giving complot* Information. __ AT ONCl position wAth dry deentrs in Birmingham, MA 5-7207.__ 0ur fabulous new f AR RHOU SI ASSISTANT hours full time pay, " r. wk BABYSITTER, live home then weget, no on Llnceln St., PE reliable. To tfiscuit further call Pert ‘time ®ABY SITTER Wanted. Mon.-Prl., 335-454?. West lor interview, Cell 1354251. “_______ ALTfe^ATiOfiS - WOMAN ■ WANTED BRUNSWICK pin lumper I lor „ port time work. Fully Also lanltor. Apply 114 Oracherdl perflonced. Hlmelhoch, l<5 ■ ■ t Ave., Pontlec. i-collectlhg. Car babYSItterwanTED from* e.m,1 eblllty, sery. Coir Mrs. . 3 p.m. for light housekeeping »nd ply m 3534114. I J school aged children who go Id 28990 W * - ——-nj 7) white—— *- “ Maplf. Birmingham. Ml 4-3000. 6 Help Want id Mala Production Workers NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY JOURNEYMEN PIPE FITTERS AND JOURNEYMEN MACHINISTS All of the GM Benefit —“ Programs will accrue as you enjoy-■— Top Earnings with a winning team Makfe Application at.., Our Employment Office 8 A.M. to 4 P.M. MONDAY THRU FRIDAY FISHER, BODY DIVISION I BALDWIN AVE. Phohl (113) 332-0351 AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER morning, ’insr e p.m. BEAUTICIAN WANTED PULL or port tlmo. 330-1343 or 3324517. BEAUTICIAN Modern shop, good clientele, salary plus commlMion. 574-1101.__ BAGOE E P6r DtfY clotnlng nlSiT. 'one* nocessary. Birmingham Cleaners, BARMAID ixperience neceiser Good wages. 3534190 BUFFETERIA HELP EXECUTIVE It. If you hava Initiative, goad judgment and tha • u a a r I o r sacratarial skill that come with txparlanca and maturity. An Elactronlcps Co., with axcitlng future nadda an axacutiva Mcretary — tom# ont Jo fill a key position. Floasa aond resuma ,PiDIRECTOR OP PERSONNEL ini/gy Conversion Devi*— : jy. moo . 'pile CLERK For general office work, aalary commonM/ato' with experience and liberal fringe eenetjt*; ,gp»_ Sy«WilserMi?to^lUe^W, m.tur. Relent alter T p.m, Cell collect 1 ten 9 end ll e.m. Homemakers Yeur skill* et e homemaker could be added lncom*~ for you. We ore l presently accepting applications tor our part time selling schedules. III you ere available devt or evenings, com* In ^np discuss a selling Employment ottice Fiudson's Pontiac Mall INTERVIEWERS TRAINEES II TO 35 *135 PER WEEK Mutt ba high school .grad/ naat •ppaaNng, abla to convtraa STAR0t"wORK IMMEDIATELY. Contact: MISS NEWELL AT 332-3439 IMMEDIATE OPENING girl, apply In per 2-4 p.m. Biua / paid not HR vacation/ Elita Claanart, _____I_____________ . Woodward, Royal Oak.______WAITRESS/ full tlmaz nlghtt. Horborj SUPPLEMENT YOUR INCOME I .J»»tr Need eomeone to assist me In my i WOMEN TO M last growlno business. Choose your earn easy spending money own hours. Earning unlimited. For 3 mornings a week, an Interview appointment, cell 3M- person 9 *.m.-2 p.m wMkda 0374. Mondty-Friday, » e.m.-V:3ol Bowl, 100 5. Cess Lk. Rd. YOUNG WOMEN 7-13M. Mrs. Zotys. . , „ Jl-fjf Chudlck* ol Birmingham. | Local national firm now ,. VSjzsAm—;—— young women tor p I • * SEAMSTRESS ! porsonal Interview work. W EXPERIENCED ONLY PULL OR PART TIME APRLV ALVIN'S , Huron «) Telegraph - | egtT Mr. Petore bolero 2 p.m. 335- CARETAKER COUPLE. FULL for larga apartmant prolact at 957 N. Perry Wlfa to CtOOn/ hutband, PHARMACIST Pert time afternoon eoek p.m. to is p.m., retofri liberal salary end B*r nolle)•■- Apply For Crlttonton Hospital, I SEAMSTRESS, Bridal—experience OOKS, WAITRESSES, kitchen holp, any milt, clock Roetaurpht. 23350 Telegraph noer e-MIJt, .354-! TRAINEES IN PONTIAC AREA _ 15 TO 21 YIARS OP AGE M4.504115 PER WK. Call Detroit 963-0088 Registered Pharmacist parsonality Immadiata earning for abla to start \ Excaiiant qualify. No 1315. typists Expprtonced, Must b* abla to type m__..j gg c 40 words pir mlrv-^n eloctrlc HEtp WOnWB IIU Of E. meehlno. Excellent itgrtina selpry, . - - M RRknf you qvellty. please cell Welter Pender at 545- 7100, 9 e.m. to 5 p.m._________ WOMEN 1 WANTEi tor pert lime work In cord end gift shop. Apply In parson, 1215 5. Blvd. it Squirrel Rd., Auburn Heights. WAITRESS, dev or night shift, aee8 gos. Cell eftsr 4 p.m, end ask ' manager. 425>377P. ACCOUNTING MAJOR SOUGHT Local firm seeking tcesunflng afttr Wff include phene number, letter of salary from 1750 per IIHiMU|tnted tor experience: fringe benefits, extras. Contact Bex c-54, Pontiac Press, Pontlec, 4N55. •t?.i, DESK CLERKS J lasing 1 Full and part-tim* positions opan ^ p'^!‘i,i'^ml!y-?*ll Solacf RongB $904-$ 1,085 to Mrs. Shanks, Waldron; nor mo. i Hotair 36 E. Flka It./ Mic, . ..... V ... Mich. 3344ro7._ __________ Additional 50c p«r hour for I ^Uhlvtrslty Or, Rochastar, plus $2.50 for ROCh 8 Hour gm, Rochester, 55i-i5*i,______!Excellent f r t n g a banifitl HHIIIIICIB DRAP1RY Pr°flr°m' COntOCtl t draperies rV'll7PPs/! I P«r*Omwl D*pt. Ava., Blrm., Mich. 544-1 PonlioC GenBral Hospital s.minoia gt w. Mums Sts. Pontiac, Mien. Its ». , 32*4711 . I Equal Opportunity Employer FULL TIME CUSTODIAN, EXPERIENCED COLLECTOR must have credit. experience, salary plus commission. 5454427, EXECUTIVE SECRETARY 1 be able to lypq electric 7 1200. Mrs. Zetye. Assistant Managsr Cashier H Good oMortunltv tor oxporlonced Rtrtaurimt'.'w^io^end' Rd. , ",' | mature women. Excellent cempeny GENERAL LAUNDRY banafits. PERSONNELV DEPT. 2nd FLOOR Montgomery ’ Ward PONTIAC MALL Ah aquil opportunity amployar prafaranca. CALL^uS)? BABY SITTER Jn . - diys. Cilt-pftoHS'pim-;-S7S4a03i BEAUTICIAN WITH SOME u GIRL TO WORK ON counter at Mkerv, > nee do frensportetton-Cashiering, bexlno,—selling add serving some food Items, fl e.m. to 4 P.m., Tues.-Sot. gt.Sb Pdf hr. to start, 01.75 in 2 months. Ml b 2555 tor appointment. , _______________ GRILL COOK, NIGHTS, full time. apply Ricky’s. 510 Woodward. GIRL WANTED FOR P«rt~W» housework, will train, FE 5-7034, housekeeper, alio Nurse• aides. C*li tor is no In* men t between 0:30 end 3. 5514422. HOUSEKEEPER/, FOR beauiY Wonted M. or P. BHtlp Wanted M. or F. ACCOUNTING- Satisfying and rewarding careers for REVENUE AGENT REVENUE OFFICER TAX AUDITOR WITH THR ■ Internal Revenue -Service In Michigan, vacancies exist in metropolitan Detroit/-Pontiac, Flint, Mt. Clemens, Ann Arbor and Jackson. Vacancies also exist' throughout the U.S., especially in New York. Ipy p sense of purpose end sells-lelery, merit advancement epper-e career in the Federal service. RIVfNUf AGENTS -professional accountants specially examine Tax returns ot cprporallons, partnerships, Indl; Others Ip determine _Pld»ril IPX liability, entrsnce sel from 17,413 to 111,233 depending en educational bockt number of years of progressively responsible acocuntlna experience. Approximately 5085,01 elf Revenue Agents earn from 511,359 to 521,049. itEVRNUR OFFICERS-responsible tor collecting helping taxpayers understand end meet their Ipphpror'i degree .(any m*|or) *r egproprlele exi starting salaries 54.174 to 57,439 dgpindlna on your qualification*. Ovtr 40% ot ell Revenue Officer* earn 5ft, .TAX AUDITORI-—Identify end expliln tax Issue* tp taxpayer* (by ■ " —T snd act ti igeclellits In reaolving tlx quixttons that it • ^ ! ’ protesslenel accounting lisues. Bachelor's dogrot Hmy motor) approprlot* oxperlonct roqulred. Storting tplarltl *4,174 or *7,4 depending on ^our quallflcotlons. Supervisory end mld-manogams high lavtl position* paying 111,133 Mid up. ACT NOW Call, Stop In or Sind your risumt Mr. lyla Russell INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE Fediral Bldg., Huron and Ferry Striets Pontiac, Michigan 4805B Phone i 338*7101 An Equal Opportunity Employer ' apply overly ■ IMMEDIATE"' OPENINGS REGISTERED NURSES Licensed Pratical Nurses., ny id cpr* for ovr; £"*" 7 11 . iia* iind nmtlimfln. M«k« 3 D.m. tO 11:30 Do ITU Shift} botlon In mining by .. ^ . 7 « m ehifu lie who nt«.« adding machine. Many company Mneftts. Apply PERSONNEL DEPT. 2nd* Floor Montgomery Ward PONTIAC MALL WOOD window. ALL BRICK RBPAIRI, chimney. 1 I porches, violations corrected, ---------*.«nS3S----------- tuekpolntlnifc roof SIDING . Reasonable, W5-34^J. .: ALUM. VINYL AND ASBESTOS i CEMENT WOEK, DRIVES, pellet, AWNING-PATIOS | ”1 SCREENf p-_IN_9R_ .L -SS cEMEW'WOIT^HAT cannot 6* —... ... ^ , I excelled by Bert Cpmmlnt, 3*1- ai*S LAWN MAlNfiWAHcE, iprlnil 2500. I and fail clean ups. Cutllnp, ‘ ' CEMENT AND BLOCK WORK, tree | repaired, 574-1541, ,L ’.SS INCLOSED EAVES TR0UGHING COMPLETE LANDSCAPING. Lendtceplng.pl SIM. MERION BLUE Snd, on Peat, 51 dgttVWM GRAVEL. ALL kind*, to* Mil,' fill *53=3?^ : screened.black qilf ATgiil W* Bring Factory to PAST SERVICE -.DUALITY WORK ..... ......— TERMS ........ CALL NOW - DAT O R I.IGHT—451-2300—TM-wS ' DEALER—ASK FOR BOB OR RE^ Kitchen help full time, over II years. Roc Blxl Highway._______■ ANTENNA SBRVICj-lnstPtled and repaired. OR 3-1095. j. RCHETT B SON ANTENNA Serv- IEVERLV MANOR OFFERS R.N.’t. L.P.N.’s, NURSES AIDES the opportunity to cart for eur nu Menor Convelescont Lake Avenue. Street (Pontlec Orchard Johnson Hospltel) ______ IARMAID Ako wphmmm full and pert time, night sniff, If or over, will train, apply in person eft. 4 fa(.hdtfw£r‘- IAR WAITKbss, NIOMtS. excellent wages, Centra^Bar, 21 I. Pike St. COMPltlNY WOMAN, general housework, g days. Mult family, COUNSELOR, all you noad it ability to work with tht public. Cell Angle I Rack. 2324157. COUNTER HELP. PULL OR part quality dry cleaning t it 1-Hour Mertlnli- nra plant. Apply' ing at Mira* Cantbr or bill •very 2 W—K>. 634-9403. CA5HIBR—CLERK, PULL limp, pftirnpens. Ruts’ 3 tor*. 450u Eljipibwth Lek* CLERKTYPI5T Experienced typist tor customer order dtpartmanh apply Rochester Peper Co., Mill Street, Rpcnester, CREDIT WbMEN Credit werk end collectlant tot retell store. Alt phetet el retell credit. See Mr. Lwtor. KAY BAUM 15* W. Maple, Birmingham CtlkK TYpisT CITY OF TROY 15.000 TO 05.150 High tchedl graduate, good typist, IhterMtTnp, dlversltlM work, gape oeeertunltv tor career In municipal Can tact personnel me CASHIER TELE-TRAY OPERATOR CURB GIRLS KITCHEN HELP mmkim iJr* __ 3M cleahWr t\p fir* Ati housekeepers. Blrmfnghem, c pllowenp*. 542-7fW, CHRllTMAVi'ELLINO I EASON it i'her* with AVON. Us* tp’e time to earn 31 In. y a i . npMnkgrMx neighbors, fabulous III 4-0419 or u O. Bex Ok fbuNTEEr JEffigQBtoS Tdrafite inriT£RRi" ' Ixebllcnt working condilloni, S or [JliVI wnlk. bttractivo iplbry. IM I luptr Chltf. Fi 2-6131. lov* Ifvlt • TOP SALARY REGISTERED NURSES $650. to $787- par mo. Licensed Practical Nurses $496. to $607. par mo. Shift Differentials REGISTERED NURSES 3 P.M. TO llt30 P.M. $3. PER DAY 11:00 P.M. TO 7.30 A.M. $4.50 PER DAY Licensed Practical Nurses 3 P.M. TO 11:30 P.M. $2.50 PER DAY 11:00 P.M. TO 7:30 A.M. $3. PER DAY Excellent Fringe Benefits PAID LIFE INSURANCE 12 PAID SICK DAYS PAID HOLIDAYS ‘ Paid Individual Employe's Blue Cross After 1 Year 2 week paid vacation after 1 year 3 weeks paid vacation afttr 5 years ADDITIONAL BENEFITS TWO 20-MINUTE COFFEE BREAKS IN ONE DAY MEALS AT COST FREE GARAGE PARKING PLUS MANY.OTHER FRINGE BENEFITS. Our hospitol has many other benefits for our •mployse's. We art proud of our staff And fail that we have the friendly atmos- -phere that makes our nospital a good place -to work. We offer you security ■ with a bright f,uturo. Contact! Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital! SO N. Psrry Pontiac Phi Personal Office 338-72711 Ext. 262 or Assistant Director of Nursings Miss Clifton Ext. 383. ERTISING AGENCY North woodward urn. Rxetllen opportunity for txperltncei operetor. Dev shift, CALL Ml 4 1000, Personnel. An Equal Opportunity Employer KEYPUNCH OPERATOR Ttmp. Afplyimanti. *11 ahlfbs . Call Jean Johnston 442-3055 American Girl 10573 Woodward **t 7_MII*__ LADY FOR DAY’ carp ot "Invalid week of Oct. 20. Call attar 4:20 p.m. 5254570, LINK-IN BABY SITTER tn r.arr tor ♦ vr. Old child, own room, more WiadP, 1914127. aim repair. Mi-3174. Asphalt Paving A. JAY ASPHALT Driveway Specialists, Free Estimates, FE 54710 A-A-A ASPHALT Paving and Seeling FE 5-332* Free Estimates ASPHALT DISCbUNT,' Pdvjft' Wp ~~wg(r7iwr»stiniatit;“PB Srtio^ DOMINO CONST. CO. 674-3955 COMMEKcTaL, INDUSTRIAL and resldentlel brlck and cement werk. DRIVEWAYS, SIDEWALKS, basement lloert, patios, nlain and color. General Cement Contractor*. tortintma ehd sareylnq. *7sS»i$'. COMPLETE tBPTlC WORK, sew COMPLETE LANDiCPlNF ,n<' wMr m ^ 1 IAFRATE B GRIMALDI. CO. Speclallilng In pettos, driveways end tWewalkt. Free estimates. 35*-0737. __ POURED BAIIMBNT «nd ,toun-datlons, will give Immediate urvlce. 3334*01 or 1-5354054, THT" to or now. Free est. 47*4341 DOZERS. BACKHOE. LOADER Soles & Rentals Used- Bobcat Loaders TOWNSEND'S SI nrpim torttllilng, lews delivered MCRPt shL UnTquE LANDSCAPE designs, or tellvered mum ^ifPAIRf Spwyiag t«Mw DALBY h SONS TREE SERVIC NOW ELM SPRAY. 373457S. VAN'S NURSBRY SOD, Merlon tod. or field pick up. 10M7. Rd., S. ltrKroff. 517-534. TALBOTT LUMBER . Glass service, wMd cr eiumin..... Building and Herdwtr* auppllea. IMS OeWand ft 445*1 MbHBbx Poets BOX POSTS Mtot flag peln perch enclosurs, electrical end HTVTfT'HOM'E IMPROVEMENT, (big or Free hem* pickup. smell jptg), 0f. MODBRNIZAfToN ^VAddlttoni ol ell types, cement work, «*•«»._ 0BY WAU service, MOTEL MAID OVER 25. dapMd- able. 3354051. ____________ MATURE DEPENDABLE woman to baby sit In my home, I *.m.4 p.m., mu»t Ilk* children, own transportation, 674-3494, afttr 4 OMHf 3W*n and and tact lot hospital, hrs. In ••riy aitornoon, yor m*, ... -formation call coitact 193*7139/ bot.j a.i interior and exterior Family raomi, rough or finish dormorl, Chlldrsn's Shop, 39”T. Ttlsgraph _ _ _ sMiing driveweyt, Burton Equipment Co. parking tots. 335-12)4 or 3354333. 3774 E. Auburn Rd 252- Basement l Garage Ciitem Draperies AA MOVING X,l4,odnJrnL1’,».r^‘nC‘ 334-5103 t CTVf~lF 377 E. Pike. w sm*f, irgnt l-7«47. neutewilrK. 395- LADY to LIVE IN end cere Basemen! S. Garage Clei -------Light Hauling FE 3-3392 j 1-A ALTERATIONS, SUITS, COATI, Mich.' MAIDS ns open for mptds, good end fringe benefit*. Apply Kin to Mrs. Shanks Waldron 35 E. Pike St. Pontlec, A.1 ADDITIONS. AND garages, co- Altaratlons 1, Dressmaking 9 e.m.-7 p.m. 332-4435 Prlver'e Twtoiai ACADEMY qp driver training •ree home pickup. PI 1-Nil ALL TYPES ALTER ATI ON5^^ TUR& WOMAN, PlftMARtNT REMOOeLlNG, db'>*J’r*n,Vol*!1,|'tC,','( *u*r,n,**a' MS‘ nd pert time work, must be neat, Jifl'CsSSr5, ‘,orm'r*' cnmpteie 332-5013. ___________________________ nd dependeble to Instill end col-1 lab. 573-U71S.------------------,— I Pisuntlrnanhiiin Carpentry tie p._________ ___I women doth**/ Ttl-Muron NURSES AIDES • Training Program W* will be sterling f nurses' training program Oct. 27, IN*. Must be 12 years of eg* or ever. Must be a niah school graduate. References will be chicked and must be satisfactory bated Upon previous work record to b* accepted lor employment, willing to wark any ehllt. Starting salary 32.31 par hour -Excellent fringe benefits. Pontlec Osteopathic Hospital SO N. PERRY PONTIAC 315-7271 EXT. 251 NXMlTWuROWfr hours, 3.days'a' weak, 3 houra * day. J3.W an hour. Light daUvary. *11-3137__ night WAITRESS, del day,and holldayt. gooo PHONE CALLS-APPly IP Town a, country Rtttaurant, 1727 8. Taltgraph, Ponttae. _ RBat516'"iAS/ ilTYBR—tor youn( rooms, kltchant, balhraomt. Stats lldantad. Rais. Call attar 5 P.m., 012*0541.___________ CARPENTR^AND CEMENT wink lr*a earlmattt. 552.5352.___ Cflf»>iNT»V'AT*lf3"l*il, kilchans, baths, and rac-roomt a specially, call 34347111 or *74-3555 ■“gXRinWWWIfKrXll types PB 2-1191 FE 5 3579 CDMP Cl'Y B~MODEhNrZAVTON, Sio Eavostrooghing ' M & S GUTTER CO. —LTCENSE D-BONDED---- mpieto eavoslrouphlng sarvl Frit atl. 473-4144, I733453 ADRIAN'S PROMPT ELECTRICAL I 5-9191 ______________rales. 473-2712 "mcCorMICIT tfOKWiC RtSIdtnttol Wtrlng-Sarvlca talifwln __________ PI Excavating M-YETR'i'DXPEWiNCErpaMn*, Free e3!‘ Orval Qldcumb 5734595 A-r Mijigrlair and, axtarler Pdntjny, „. PAINTING AND >APBR HANGING ... THOMPSON ____________273-1111 GEORGE PRBRICKS Twg THmwgIi isttte A-t TREE REMOVAL Wd light hauling, fra* astlmates. Pi 54Xtt. k-i aC!ktfAuoH;s stumps removed free. If w* tike down the fra*. Free estimate, fully Insured. 3154t«7. _ BILL'S TREE TRIMMING AkP Remevel. Very lew rate. 5*24*43, >6K ji6as tree rMMvft. pr** astlmates. Insured. MY MSIA BalDRI ■ eetlmet^ ’ A-t LIGHT MOVING. TRASH haute* reasoned*. PE »im ai Li6'NT HA^LtW^nd edS juK— RBA^«5TRW^r AFTER 4 P.M^iytif hpuUng~ cSUalitV- woIk assurIdi _ (ft ,fl72*‘P*r*nP1 W>l W,,hnPi ' * IpRaV AAiMTiKA' *52-194* PlastaringSarvica 1-A PLAITRBING. NEW WORK or pitching, tree «Him*Hi. 353-5407 Plumbing & Hooting 1-1201 tiRViCI~BAiiMINft, sapnc Free 1 Ilcenstd end ln*ur*d, commercial or reiMenllel, for a custom |ob you will be proud ot. Place’s Modernliatlen Company, 543-01*9, CARPEnY*?....... INTERIOR FINISH, dtehent pending, 50 veer *xo#rlenc*._fB l-tlll. ______ IA CARPENWv "and rdoifhg, Ira* .ULLnolINO *ttlm*t*t._334vH79._________ reliable, tree astlmates. 573-1155 ADDITIONS AND ilterailons. perch sdlro, - Basements. 474.M39. PB I CONOR A PLUMBING Sewdi ' Trucks to Rent ” yr*- Ci w-™1 a.tracVcJss ,UM AND EQUIPMENT _______garni Trailers __ Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. p. ,;W6“0WA% P144. Open dally Indudltn I Upholstarlng Evas, and Sal. 4114145. . FE 5-1231. CARPET CLINIC WAREHOUSE. Big savings on carpal. 413-1095-CARPIT*. filli' Afib llnolaums expertly Inslalled. Free eat. PI 5-5749.__________________ Carpet Cltaning_____ CARPET! AND, UPHOLSTERY ^ciepnad, Par law ratoa, TaHTN. Csmsnt Wark AAA BLOCK AND CIMiNT ihP Wl loads of fill. 62I-373S. BULUbbilNO. * BA£kH6l work bmrrumt# priding, 683 3043, PI 2 t BuckiMor” nflmttft * Faming A-t CHAIN LINK f*n<*. Instilled dr I repaired, en* weak service. Ira* 1 at). 331-0297 or 57442*1. _ ffiSTsTTiWR'Tiffi'Clfio Installed ™&2S8f8£LVHar l heating! upholsTERiNG BV RlCNARb- PB 5-0443. Outlltv Ftbrlci^tto^work, pick I o'A l” PLUMBING » HBAf ilsior Lal| “ iDa if. 573-M77. R«staurants I BIG BOY DRIVE Telegraph j Roofing | Will Claanart___________ ! BLOOM?IBID WALL ClIANBRI, Wtlii citontd. Rmi, Sfifiifactloh poarant««d. Insured. FB 2-16JI. _ 'WALL WA SHI Nd,~l5jppr room and I up, alto carpal clfanlng, Intar lor SllnuOSt 6ll«tt4l. | II. BUTTON ^iNOLINli lOWMf I 674-2530. . _ .. ~T "ITh RbOl11 NO. Praa oaflmafai. a, Sand-Gravgl-Dirt ATCHISON'S WBLDINO 1S3 W. Howard CANNBL COAL r^?s=riici^; Wood, Coal and leaf.______________________________ Floor Tiling_____________ COVERING I CHbfCR iHlIDDlp Alack dlrt, top llrepl ,1110, Carpatlnp, sell, clay teg sell. 4 yards, lit Paint ign, 435-2100. I daiYvarid. Also aeiing. Pi wmii. I Lake. CUSTOM FLOOR • linoleum, formh _ I 5930 M-IS, Clarkstpn. |MH Ifual. Wal all coal flrapiacA ■■ 6pmi PB 54IS91 mzm _ . jemplala coke ana it Oakland. I tH i 45 Thomaa tl. rilF. PONTIAC PKKSS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1068 For Want Adi Dial 334*4981 IMP m. arl> I Registered X Ray , ... Technologist Salary Range $5714685 per mo. Additional 50c per hour for afternoon and evening shift, plus $2.50 for each 8 hour shift worked on weekends. Excellent fringe benefits program. Contact! Personnel Dept. Pontiac General Hospital Sales Hetp Mule Fewle 8-A A CAREER IN REAL ESTATE ftiViV* MANAGER! Trainee, go right to toe topi Tbit career it fir youl Today it me eeyi araeti Hk cin Oava^Las, M4-147I. ..mailing and MAKING REPRESENTATIVE $12,000-FEE PAID Experience of but Inset me .Mm ATWHAL^H^ WARflb: Good MALE HELP WANTED CAREER POSITIONS OPEN • MANAGEMENT THAI Nil • ENGINEERING and Dll • CHEMICALS • ACCOUNTING . ADMINISTRATIVE PROGRAMMER TRAINEE $8,300-$10,500 NATIONAL PERSONNEL — lose to. Huron PUBLIC RtlATlQfoS $7,000-CAR—BONUS Ml SCI sflonal DeeeraWfH 1TINO, WWiffcb: E. Auburn arte. V-TS to Woodward and Jtiiorton. * z — CoHiWp.m. only, SM4SI1. naipwtalbto driver 1 oil Pontiac Banin, Arltona, leaving novllto to Tucson, Arln Pontiac tola October or Novomb Pr” Wl ARE -READY TO BUILD, Mil wo need iota. Cean lor nutted tola or acreage to auppurt our on* Furnished 37 Apartmeirte, Unfunriehed 38 IW APARTMENT COMPLiX IN hat I vicanclM avail- 0totoNc.rp.VW?]W.^» INI iw KoS Tdrotonl JSSSJ&aJ WALTON SQUARE ARTF Atfomt Rood, to Township, e mltoe to RBOhqatofi * miio> to Pontiac. I miwe 6 Wl. Partition to suit your noodi. Paved £5................... tsAcn. i. •Ido Ot Birmingham. AMI, ground floor, ample porklng. Pgr In- pnvnd parking. Sale Hemet e knit. DOnT MCDONALD LICENSED BUILDER OR 3-2837 IM WfelT TBNNYION voctnt 1 ...» -.— in (S’ HOUSE. *9,995 Rough in on your lot. I Construction Co. 3M-itn nr EFFICIENCY APARTMENTS, utilities lurnlihsd. 535 par wk. plus . ui sac, dtp. Phone saJioao, APARTMENTS , 1 ’ "m . I 1675 f.«"V hd. North BEDROOM ' APARTMENT on HOURS 12 • 7 Mnollno cerpetlhg, . nri^ra- d^rSiSSimd^lr« 8-1606 373-1400 mtiemmfn ............... ^-*?:™6iS6iircAWfi6rrin.id P-R-l-v-i-E-w HIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR good wtlcoma, 338-4504. Rftilt BmllMtl PrOOartV 47-A lormlca top, vanity In bath, utility '•i-Mto._____ ' Sale Houiee ILIZABETH LAKE FRONT [isr.&rfe’iS „ KLTB.* s-gysui; doer, ^aiw^cjfpod. By gegelnlmi LOVELAND WATERFORD 49 tele Heueee ,! PONTIAC HEIGHTS " Brick end eabeetoe SWtJj™ WE BUY OLD furniture. WANTED TO Buy trance, near Pontiac MW]y 44426. ___________________ ROOMS Apartmant*, ranca. baths, parking tacllltiasr — from $32.3 2 ROOM. INQUIRE AT 2 AND 2 ROOMS i fumishadr adults < " Brush 'or&r*. Call *Mai II, 9*5, 353*2144, 7-9, 2984172. RIAL 1ST ATE I aoarasslva aalas paopla oi talespaoplt starting every Saturday at * a Call Mr. tegar or Mr. Schram ePBWBBWWIt. IVAN W. SCHRAM, Realtor Naadad by credit firm to help establish now account,. S1 JO weakly guarantee to man maatlng swranp-------- “ BOX 4117. WANTED!!! YORK It on tna lookout for <44MWiI6 solf-startara with outgoing paramllHaa. If you maat this description, Exparianca Is not nacassary# wa will train you to aarn a rawardlng carter. Join fha action taam at YORK REAL ESTATE RECEPTIONIST 33 1 I Wanted to Rent (1 BEDROOM FOR woman ! yr. old daughtor. Ro Out ot City. 452-1491. .An” arflfiw ai Thick carpeting a included In your I OCCUPANCY FROM LATE SI PROM tlU. WITH APPLIANCES BY FRIGIDAIRE VALLEY PLACE APTS. 1 bedroom, I baths U|| OPEN EVERY DAY CALL! 651-4200 WILLING TO 434*1371. MS-1140. A SALE IS ONLY AS GOOD AS YOUR FINANCING • your Motor Lot H - I Aaron Mtg. & Invst. Co. - ' ■ —-riiMM ______ BY OWNER. MILPORB.-trHovol. bedroom, ponolod family roof attachod breaiaway and 3 ci garage. Call attar 4, 4*5-1744. BY OWNER 3 bedroom 3 cor garage, 79‘ X IS lot, bock yard fenced, ahrub rt Rnnt Houses, Furnished 'UP1* J ROOMS, 39 EXECUTIVE LAKE FRONT, wail * Pontiac, MTS monthly. 147-5334. AND 3 ROOMS, oxcollont < INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1100 S. Woodward, BTiom. 4*3-1301 SUPBRVHOR: -Ciggn good furniture, redecorated, pyt. only, no Dots. 335-3594. anfranco, jtoth, parking, children wolcomo. 334-3005. * ROOMS, woodhulL BOAT AND Motor Included i r beautiful wooded 1 acre' te located In Florida's lake LAPEER 49140, M MSlMK SETUP, box stalls, While board tonced. .yoorround live •troom runi through prth porly, 103 ocroi and modern I bO y-“du-1" Land CALI EVES. 734-3370. ■WATERFORD,--P-UJ.tP.m- buiit all brick ranch with llxll’ living room, natural lira place, large kitchen can be yours 154,490. Land c o i available. CALL 4 4 Msmnftdi YORK )■ 4-0343 1 pij R^HlSTlOYWN'lir-. ROCHESTER "ARlXr brick ranch, nn 3 acr». large tamlly room, coun ry_klKhan with built-in*, 3 flriplncoi, lull bniemont, 3Mi car g«rag4,J_mijt iXlLBSL yafubJ&nFLn?^»^!T!, RENTING SMOlvIO. Excluding T and I- 1 badrooma. Inrgu. clota.ts, fr»u beach, carpets and big kltehon. MAINTENANCE prei MOVE IN FAST Widows, •1540 ’international personnel 411*1100 1000 W. Hurt SECRETARY: Hay, career gala! Family grown up and, gone? This reputable firm needs you now I Pull bonoflto. M40. Coll Carol Brant. 334*3471, Snolling and 1 DAY CASH FOR YOUR HOUSE OR LOT NO COST TO SELL PAST. FRIENDLY SERVICE Aaron Mtg. & Invest. Co. 333-1144 wpmo. It you hovo those qualifications, wo hovo too pool Nona avalloMo. North luburbai ora*. Paa Paid. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL IMP g. woodward, ETtam. 44M3* •KJ "ana. pmtol'SM. Call Carol Brent, parlancpfTroad^lHnga Banjul pi gram kidudlnB company car ai txpanaaa. Applicants mud have toast 3 years collage credit. Prevlo allied tolas exparianca helpful. Call Mra. TWUB: J^Pa'tTqnalp^sonne^ Work WflRtea Male A-1 CARPENTERS Mr. Thomas M. O'Meara Divisional Salat Manager The National Drug Company Dlv. of Richardson Morrall Inc. --------T126 Burr St;—r Jackson, Michigan 49201 Alliance of Pualnoasmen WwomaiP‘to^aoH ] Hoovar'klSttoc! S3 par hour: Mgggg phone 3334371, Thursday, Oct. » from » a.m.-4 p.m. imployment Aganciat 9 1 i^AAWT,WAWC,-f .s^wygg* rafirat we 1 com#, $4,000. Jim Rno, Assoclotaa Poraonnol. 333-91J7, i SECRETARIES, EXCELLENT typist, talk Anglo Rook. Atsoclatos Poraonnol. t&fiSJ._______ I GENERAL.OFFICE poollloni, light typing, $300, Anglo •too PorooniwMnClK: ADJUSTER TRAINEE $7,800 PLUS FIE PAID No tip. necotury, car plus bonus. C|^NfclMl^'LpRibNNEL 441-1100_________IBM W, Huron Clerk? HMBW PUELiq enntoct for ftoxlblo gull WowT *300. Call Mj^n^rMgg, 3344471, Snolling poaltli ' ftrmli._ BmBb,______________ EXECUTIVE SEC. Mafuro young, top shorthand or AW° AT A PAIR PRII •tfc’ garogoa, XI ■‘co&uifosr or 3 p.m. ond 3 p.m. 4744WO. APPRAISALS FREE GUARANTEED SALE 30UAYLISTING— Wn guarantee toe auto of y homo In 3B day*. LAUINGER 744314 __________473-3143 BUILDER NEEDS Vacant lota with or without water end-or ttwor. Any ana OK. Put ctoo> Ing, no commltilon charged. MR. FRED 393-7903 . EEHINO IN PAYMENTS? Avoid ' j legal costs coll agon! today 474- 6lim fEANSPllRRED. nood to Mil Imimdlaniy. tor cash In 41 houra, call agent. 474.1131._I 1 TO 50 40MUS, LOTI, ACREAGE PARCELS, FARMS, BUSINESS PROPERTIES, AND LAND CONTRACT. WARREN STOUT. Realtpr 1450 N, opdvko r ---- Urgently ntod n ) 3-ROOM, DEPOSIT required, 334-4410 end deposit. 334-4404. _______________ YEAR OLD 3 bodroem home BATH, Inquire at 373 FLATTLEY REALTY 433 COMMERCE RD. 343-4911 3-stokY bUngalow, twturing 3 ROOMS Dwight Ik___________________ I ''ROOMS, PONTIAC East alda, 4 ROOMS AND BATH, U ROOMS AND BATH, 137JO par week, 373 Boldwli Includod until Juno lit.. LA 4-S7S3 nftor 5 p.m.. ckil collect.____ 4 ROOMS WITH BATH, swimming pool, lama aardan spot, 1300 a and rot. Still rent only ! I . . 3 bedroom , ranch, no bnonmonf. S44-1J33. 139 MONTHLY, M09 1430 DOWN, S4M drooms, botomont, _______ model, 1337 Chorrylown, MMBBI 339-4171 I ICLARKSTON M-15 S14S m6. PHA ! NEW LAKE FRONT 3 BEDROOM - BRICK! BUILT-INS. EXPANDING SST-MSO^_____427-2135 1534770 24BDRpOM^ jICNGALOW j Jn ____ ____________ n torro IfeMllliH GMPC, 1125 • mo. •hopping, | ty room, kitchen, bath, patio, large is, double 2-car garage with paved drive, possession, brick borbocuo, fenced In lot 50* x on land contract discount 140,. Priso 417,040, call nlttr 4 tor casn, 473-400f or OR 4-1445. p.m., 451-1430. _ 9~BEDROOM$ clarkston schools . - f, OCUKUUmi Very nice 3-bedroom Ranch alyto home, 2to cor gorogo, Mocodoy Lake, privilege!, large Hying room, fancad In. Land basamant. garage and fl Contract Tirms. braeiaway. 521,500. OJ or Con- 3 BEDROOMS I vonlionol terms, 425-5W. __ ygyhsgyrfiS ^Ife|KgNT probloms.-OK will Look lor model oton on I Lake Rd., bolwMn Common Caoloy Lake Rds., or cilt wilt show you too toodtl.— BROKER ROOMINESS ^..•81 EOROOM. Ino arta, plus a wal mant on acra Davisburp. $23,400 palntad lii Ik-out ban VACANT*YOU1 CAN Movir wroHT in. 1-2-3 t m bath CALL RAY TOOAYI finished with' paneling. Large i shade tree in fenced back yard. Call Sfarking Real Estate, 664-2919, ~~ Lapaar, ----- ------------—:— ■ CLARKSTON, Assuma tha mortgaga for $2,200 on fhia frbadroom, aibattoi ranch, naw carpeting, garaga, only $13,900. R-6. CALL RAY TODAY 1 _____674-4101 ., Inquire I 338-4054. NEW LAKB FRONT 3 BEDROOM IfiCK ----- USuHiig attic, 374040 «F*T_ BLYS, 5. room terrace, JWISn^^SmT pSrt&l j frrauirad:_47»«3f, __ ‘ffiy.K'VnpAvi RAY ■ RAY $12,000 FHA. I landlords, a Arf Daniels I 373-1111 MULTIPLE ally YHI LISTING SRRVICB Orchard Lake Rd. and Telegraph. $180. 390-5632. PONTIAC/ 3 BEDRdOM BRlCk FAMILY HOME. CHILDREN OK, buMlacfrlc, i;or 2_yaar fflmFZ&S"™0- >1M PBR YEAR AROUND LAKE FRONT home, adults, rat. $145 a mo. $100 dap. 338-7938. RAY CARROLL LAKE Shiny new 1 bedroom beauty, lake privileges, spacious kitchen, deluxe carpeting, ponellng. 51,400 • you In — In la days. mlM r — i 1 Don’t I for your, dollora. you wont for lurtoor ;"?aI*l’ 4444540 IVES. 7344370. JOHN A. ROWLING, Ific. REALTOR 127 W. GENESEE, LAPEER MONTEREY BLVD. Attractive homo With 5 rooms I both, In quiet roeldon+l neighborhood, got hot air furna Utility room also hot a Muari income Cportmant which hot •' living room, kitchen badruom a bath ranting tor $130 Mr mon secures mortgage for bolanco. CENNETH O. HEMPITEA Realtor 111 ELIZABETH LAKE RD. PF 4*8204 __ Model Close-Out No potMttion problem — You c have possession of this brand n 3-bedroom HAGSTR0M, REALTOR 4900 W. Huron OR 44JM MLS Attar 0 p.m. PE 4-7005 SYLVAN LAKB PTIViLIgIS. bedroom, dining ra aiding, 5700 down PI occupancy. OH-7417. _ fWO~FACTORY BUILfTtOUSES tor •sally transported and erected on your propurty. Each houao hot 950 •quoro tout, both Olid O Mlf, sun deck, built-in kitchen Including stove and rofrlgorotor, walnut cabinets and decor. Coil for In-tormotlon 7134734 or 54I4314. TRI-LEVEL, ATTACHED gorogo, 411,990 on your lot. Art Donlult, Pontiac. OR 4-4)21, oordtn CHy I-GA 1-7140. TUCKER REALTY REALTOR 903 Pontiac Stott Bank Bldg. I______ 354-1541 | $100 MOVE IN Walled Lake, Immaculate bungalow, with 2 bedrooms, possible third, loko privileges, only 114,700. P-77. CALL RAY t6DAYI 474-4101 RAY •nlranco. bath. From 032.40 Sac, deposit. FE 4-1001. OMPLETELY PURNtSHED. dep., adults. Pontloc Protr - CAR PAINTING, RUST tokon out: PE 14044. EXPERIENCED CUSTODIAN wants office cleaning, avanlnnt. Cull 394-0291a LIGHT HAULING, ate. PE 54931.____________ MBrKLA5TBk.NO, ifflSBffi rataa, ill work guorontood, PE 4- BY PRIVATE PARTY, Principle! onlj. 3 family Income wanted. 434- CASH NOW Move later. No points, no com-misslon, got our prlco FIRST. MARK REAL ESTATE COMPANY 1703 1. Telegraph ~ CLOSE TO DOWNTOWN, now furniture, private entrance, carpeted hallways, pvt. parking, both. Chlldran welcome. Must saa to approcloto. From $53.50 wk. 335- M BEDROOM, FIREPLACE, boat float, swimming tor year-round laku lover. Furnished No POF LARGE 1-BEDROOM, utilities fumtihod. Ill Parry, qulro apt. 4, 132 P week, deposit, no children. ___ ROOMS FOR RENT BY weak for door hunters, Idudods Mrs. Floyd Warner, R. R. No. It RE 4-5749. Michigan 49431. A-1 IRONING, Idw service, Fl IRONING, i Stay service. Mrt. MCCowon. 3344047. PROMPT, COURTEOUS SEE VICE BRIAN REALTY Wa Sold Your Neighbor's Homo Mulflpl# Listing Sarvlca Waakdayt 'til 9 Mm 5210 Dixit Uy iim 623-0702 BABY8P I _ waakdays or nights, i Walton, batwaan Joilyn ai IXpBAiINCID DOUBLE WM. MILLER, REALTY _____ 3314143 recant experience,' DELINQUE Brought i utilities turnlohod, parking, facilities, controlfy " aged preferred, pota. Phono FE 1-7 tfEWLY DECORATED, 2 rooms both, married couplo, no chlldl Call PE 5.1705. TWO 2 BEDRI I Francla 11. Pontiac aaa-xere. i 'TWO AND THREE ROOMS, naw I furniture, private both, entrance, carpeted hallwayo, washing facilities, 2 chlldran welcome. Prom 132,50 wk. Sac. deposit. FE 4-1103. t 1 AND i ART DANIELS, PONTIAC OR 4-4110, OARDEtTClTY, i^GA 1-7MI). 3 BEDROOM lot, pavod street, a full buoamant, gara Land—Contract 391-K 1 BEDROOM BRICK FRONT, 2 car garaga, largo lot, buy uquliy ■Ml Oasumo 5to par cant murtgagu. 3100 mu. Ind, tax and Inauronco. , MILL'S REALTY . For all your Root Estate NEW LAKE FRONT 1 BEDROOM BRICK. BUILTINl. EXPANDINr ATTIC. 1304040 437-2025_331471 Cali Keating To see tola 3 bedroom (posslbl 4th) bungalow In too dty of Poi floe. Ideal location - largo lot • 2 car garaga. Ideal mortgage to atsumo. 117,303. Phone for dtfalli. 851-1666 HOWARD T. KEATING CO. •xtra feature* such ai: counter top, family room \ waiting for 120 days WAffc# 9*0*6 f b W it $ H I H IH ......I j bedroom, IVb both, family r basement, garage, $0 X $22,000. Cash to $15,000 mi NEW COLONIAL Pick your colors — pick your fli lures. Thli brick «nd aluminum l tachad garaga. Only 127,790. VON REALTY \l$ 3401 W. Huron 60B8MML. -----Max WATER FOND RANCH# bedroom big, kltehon# gat ltd 50' x 167' lot, Zero down \ Only $11,900. CALL 6014078. GMC mealed,, middle- HAVE 1 COTTAGES FOR RENT, II » chlldran er, wm ,i„p |, i will ataap 4, by ”L______________ wtok er 2 week*, between Cadillac1. Office* Lake . Orion and PEPeiHIIPII Lapaar . weak*, between Cuilllac 4934171 and Read city. 49S4B17, . 3 BEbROOM HOME, carpeted, dim NURSE — Compaq duly cam, no liv< ratorancaa. 331-3731. DRMER MEDICAL____________________ desires amploymant In pbyalclan. dantiat office, or clinic, Drayton Plains, Waterford...area, goad ganaral off lea akllla, type 50 words par mlnuto, itala dutiot, houra, M salary, reply P. O. Box 101, Drayton Ptolna. Mich. kY WORK WANTED and Ironings, •ransportaflon naadad. Call 4734079 er 4744193: ONINAt ANG BABY SITTING, t-Ei _! fe , VERY NICE I and deposit. Dick Veil ROOM CARPETED, kltchan prjvHegea, quiet trap, 775 Scott I BEDROOM AND KITCHEN privileges for middle agad woman, F111452. _________ ATTRACTIVE, qiitaf rooms for man. > Close In, parking. Ill EM 3-3544 or OR 14139, LARGE ROOM, 1 OR 2 man. General Hospital area. 334-4943, NO DklNKERS, man or woman, I good raf. PE 4-7475. at, gar _ — . shaded Close to collagas and Xwvay. In Auburn HilgMa, 533,900. Caah, *'1-3441 terms, avallablu. UL 3-5334. yhaatfOoM brick ranch, bath and Vs, Iliad full basamant, fully landscaped, largo fireplace with glass Sneleaura, living ream, dining roam and kllclwn carpeted, 3to car Course. Enter from N. Eaton and Algonquin. . IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY 3 bedroom ranch ........ 433,759 3 bedroom frll-aval ..... 535,730 BROOCK 4139 Orchard Lake Road EJZABETH LAKE imp WATERFORD* TOWNSHIP. Vacant 3-bedroom, potalbla 4, 2-story noma, paneled living room, MW vinlly and bath, lata of storage space, built-in range and 3Va-c«r garage, to acra At Pentlec Trail lot. Call Ray Today 474-1401 MA 6-4000 ; 4444890! NEW 2-BBOROOM ranch," A,4ti under PHA, 44W total dawn, Includes cost. 343-3431■ Reed a large home? This is if, 3 bedrooms, dining roam, full bMtmtnt, oahum,..gu hut ii mora. Just $13,080 FHA/ 1 Call Ray Today P-53 674-4101 RAY Fancad yard. Tullt In oven rlgarator. 23 ml. Shal Lana Estates, Ullca Apartments, Unfurnished 38 rent BEDROOM. SECURITY FE ' Cato. AMnt: W«93:i iss, I, 1st floor flat, pats, one child Euclid, Pontiac. IRONING IN MY ir, you pick up vlda (torch and I deliver, SSf.1.......................... IH6N1W6' " DONE IR MY home, north and, call 1144171. LADY WOULD LIICV EX-SERVICE MAN LOOK? factortot SSLSK Building SarvicBS-Supplits 13 4- hra. management positions. Call Mrs. pqg.pAg GAR International personnel | 1rm 9. Call PERSONN 1990 W. I I I | her « • for local city III Amt Carter, 334-2 ' Construction Co. AVON-TROY CARPET WAEBHpUIB •mating Installa^-claanad. 1 MLVda. car gat in stock. M SIGN8rsm.li quantities. 4f4- JUNI0R DRAFTSMAN $550—FEE PAID Excallant opportunity tar high •choal gradusta to work up In anglnaar dapartmant, Call Mra. IVfIRRATIONAL PERSONNEL 681*1100_______ 1888 W. Huron Legal Secretaries For llrmlnghim aiuf $outhflaid •reus, outstanding firms art offering! fop salary and flna opportunity* for aovancemanf. Faa paid. ACCURACY PiRIONNIL 642-3050. | PTn. Par north auburban M. D. Congenial attics, nice houra. Adame 2 Adamt__________447-OMO Apartmonts, Unfurnished 38 Apartments, Unfurnished 38 LIGHT H^L G 2 O DECORATOR! infgrl Wall washing, nalnflg, wall repairs. 2 Exterior rug shampooing, papering, minor Prop Estimate RIDGEMOMT. TOWNHOUSE APARTMENTS • 0n«, Two and Thraa Bedrooms , • Roper Gas Ranges! • Hotpoint Refrigerators • Carpet and Drapes • All Utilities Except Electric 6 Air-Conditioning by Hotpoint • Swiming Pool and Pool House NO PfTI ALLOWED CNliORiNO.K. Between last Boulevard ond Madieon-2 blacks from MOkifOte of- Pontiac Motors. A Hrbi St. . Phone 332-3322 open Dally IS AM, except wednaaday I Will Buy «Your. House Anywhere, any condition, r points, no commission. CASH NOW MOVE LATER Cash Investment Co. 51to w. Huron 333-7156 11 IRDROOM. 7-7309._______________________ scBEynro—-wtX7MT;.-^-_jrwrr i rooms, coo kino, Pentlec 953-4937. SAGAMORE MOTEL. TV Of uutsd,1 I lalonhonu a teak. /991. 945 a par wk. plua utilities am 11.1 child welcome. 4*24340 3 BEDROOMS, ADULTS. S*C., tslaphona, maid OR 2 GENTLEMEN, lovely room. rafrlf ountry 31-7909,_________ BEDROOM HOME with tar •creation room, lust outside cl mmad. poos. Cain to mortgaga or | md cenlraci terms to' qualified' uytr. 529,950. Will faka smaller I ama, land contract or Income' ..M^ln trad.. Tama, PE 5-3424 3 BEDROOM 1L(, fRICK RANCH, JIM tq.^ _______’gfiBofu! contract larma. Nothing Down I Vt# beautiful landscaping., r iy. Just $23,900 with ttrmsa1 ... ^ IDhCU DC a i tv i A"V°M ftf^y^oBTaiif- ^I ■ call 363*8660 682*3920 FARRELL Ndrthern High Area i felamlly owaning located on Coat alda at Pentlec. Rant from upstairs apartment . will almost make mortgage payment. Includes 2 bedrooms and bath on each floor, --•aparato—untrancaar—I E6Ht Wp*Rfc«6. cVrpa*lng,*r 431.50 par weak, tU» - - *”d**!_-------- st#w»^.. ; 44 4 ROOM BRICK DUPLEX, partly 3353 ORCHARD LAKB RD., 3049 an.' fUrnlahad, full baaemant, all .............. utilities paM, 1171 P*r month, 1175 C0SWAY REALTORS 681-0760 FARRELL REALTY ! OPEN fMiA, B. PnnflMr X—^ 4. 4—1. X 2-Cir garaga, < lack privilege*. 1 RAY ODAYI ft. or part, plr 1 •d, Incl. 2 ax carpeted, goad marchantlla.—E traffic flow In ping a 73-3481 4 ROOM LOWER, I Bgdraom, ItoPt, water, $150 aae. dap. 33o a wk. 79 1. Francla, Pontiac, N. of Auburn, W. of Euat Blvd., call attar 7 p.m., 1794144 or 951-1771. Sylvan 413-1 FOR LEASE - STORE' with proxlmately 3,999 aq. ft. if-San $109 PER MONTH WALTON PARK MANOR U n p racadontad opportunity-tor famlllat with laaa than 919409 Income. 1, 2 and 1 Mr townahouMt, tdlacant to 1-75. 14 min. to downtown Detroit, dally and Sunday 12 to I p.m can! Thura. For mora Inform 8 OFFICES High traffic volume, Wl au^fflirS.% I NOW lbasiRo. prime RAY •iDROOM f6l*LKViL# ath garage, counfry klfchen# 12' x 18' CSTtoiSia P^oTtoM FIRST IN VALUC8 RENTING WE ARE NOW WATERFORD—- Alum, tided ranch, 3 badrooma, full divided baaemant with walkout daurwall, carpeting In living roam, vaallbula and center hall, doorwall from living room to captains walk. FHA appraised only 11709 down - 121,999. CALL GMC 414,799, Dearosm nricx, tun basamant, car and half garaga. Hurry! .. HurryTHurryl, % "o DOWN” — Bail Naw York!? st„ 2 bad roam ranch, 3 car oarage, with attached screened Milo, earner lei, completely, fancad, some furnltura Included. FHA approved at 117,509. 9 A.M. TO 8 P.M. 2284 WILLIAMS LAKB RD, >r.; Drive west -on M-59, turn rth on Wllliemf Lk. Rd. i droom ranch, large family rooms II basement? $16(990. On your lot. throughout* family room with' fireplace, 2 cor oarage, Waterford Twp. 6054 Gordon Rd. Buy direct from bulldar, caifi to exTstlng, mortgage, or land Contract. $ovor $3,000 only $96,900. 611*1428. 1 1702 8, MARK Raal Estate Company Ml WATERFORD AREA, 1 badrooma, full basamant, 3-car garage lust painted an to* outside, city water, naw aaptle (laid. FHA appraised 111,500, nn down. CALL 491-0170. terms. CALL 411- dinette, Sana I hall, Il'xICy let, »UjMM4.JOO PHA HOMES SyTj$orkYriV^oowI PEOPLE WITH CREDIT PROBLEMS AND RETIREES ARE OKAY WITH (J), WILL PRt.^ . OR 6|V asst GMC Opdyka Squire Shop-' , » . ping Cantor, any alia up to 10,999 NIX REALTOR •quire feat, Excallant pi ------------------------ 4-BEDROOM RANCH 9 KUUWJ, BA in, I will —i ookino f ere _______ no pete. 362*5649. Pontiac area, h.», APARTMENT FOR' Rant oi -king couple. OR 24951. c“!i aabyauar- seracsi'uir JOHNSON 1794 1, TsHoraah PE 44*33 AMERICAN HERITAGE APARTMENTS and 2 badraam, all conveniences, lr-condltlonad, alt uHHIIat In- with parti- r 3:39 p.m E-<^! wfr WILLI BUY! mpSG1 you'•Taltor wlmVoV (BEK OUR 1BRVICR "JOIN THE MARCH TO TIME!" Times Realty Cantarpury Apartmonts oppqalto Si. Joseph Hospl' ' And The Naw lharaton fni ihrAsii 1> and -bidroam, apts., bai tend, lorry no chlldran or PE 44990. M gimmickd ■ HD COLONIAL VILLAGE ,°Biiaifl II dark DAILY I Prwpya „ Wirtf H® 8PINDCN iWii.1 f*rnlshad0axcept alpc. 6m309. , dung. , Road narto at South Blvd., ^for'?a 1 ■ast pivq, i/4-aa.____■ - DOWNTOWN PONTIAC 1191 SO. FT,•OFFICE ' Second flour with elevator. and fyatar turnlihed, 1150 n* 3400 SO. FT. Entire ascend floor .. flonad off leas, law and water Included l 10,400 IQ. FT, OFFICE Entire IdCond floor, parfltlanad ottlea apace with lavatorial, passenger elevator. 11.15 g iq. tt.l Includes half and water. After 4 p.m. call M29071 Annstt Inc, Realtors | 28 E. Huron St, 338-0466; Pontiac Press Want Adp For Action ; IUST CALL ’ 334-498i BEDROOM, Ito BATHS, famll room, carpatod living ream, dlnln roam and den with llraplaca, ful basamant, 1 car garage- tamlnal Hills. By ewnar. wrma-1314411. I BEDROOM COLONIAL. 2 full baths, dtobig ream, 19* kitchen, carpeting, and Blr conditioning, basement, gat baseboard heat, Ito car garaga attached. PHA ajjjyplfCd at 433,500. CALL 9(1 GMC REAL VALUE REALTY i For Immodiato Action Call I FE 5-3676 - 642-4220 J HEARTHSIDE1 r| LAKE FRONT OWNER FLORIDA BOUND, lm-IMdlPt* occupancy. Deed family home an a beautiful tot with ever, 109* ul take front. Large carpeted living ream, natural Iltoplac*, t baths, family room, ito attach garaga. COMB IEE — 934,909. REUTOa HALLMARK •craans, gas heat, lanced back yard, ^all Cliy^^vantoncja. Till 335-4177 $10? PER M0NTH WALTON PARK MANOR ■ CB DENTED . OP-i CITY - POE .families! 474-4133 4111 Hlghlam ____(M*59) Naxl la Airway Lam JOSrpH SiNGLETON REALTOR “IT'S TRADING TIME" DONALDSON. PARK Thla Ihrsjl hadrdom Com Cad In • prime residential arts with toFMijwa«> '••luras ifrgg carpeted living room, Iqrmal dining room, family sited kltchan, large radraallan ream with wet bar, garage and braaiawav. situated on n roomy let. A raal toiv U Only 124,990 with FAIT POSSESSION. " 1 * SUBURBAN LIVING, Can ba mail-pleasant It you own a noma such •• this In ton ' LTnlgto Lake area. This Ihraa badraam trl-lavai hams has iamlly < JUST A FEW OF YOU? , Large living roam and kltchan, carpal and drauan RSSFIJS" PICTURESQUE COLONIAL UNION LAKE AREA , i Surrounded by slataly trees, Large living ream, formal dIAIna : SKTLS.I."!lASSSr, ®L**U?TSj5S mjrrori., CAN tl PURCrtAlko tfit LAn"“ NT7U?f anT* Wj£”Mm TOWNHOUIES ADJACENT TO. Lj KEEGO HARBOR IpacidUS roams, farmnl dining B}«l£3sS3 *Vri OTTAWA HILLS COLONIAL NEW PHA, TBRMt—an this walking^ dlslansaja m EL’ / ymtoum sidad thraa taambiy ,_____________ tormi V assume-q 4W martgego, - m m f"* YORK ,m 1071 W. Huron St. MLS 611*1000 - \ For Wont Ads Dial 334-4981 48 lob Houses 4* lob Housn OPEN Two Models m ,ntSV,,v "u ” HAYDEN REALTY --wVMCTllwis Malty IH Auburn 335-M25 1 YOUNG-BIIT HOMES REALLY MOANS BETTER SILT Rusull Yauno, Bldg. 334*3630 — S3M W, Huron St. -■ ...WiuiTm: ' BREWER Cash For; Your Equity HACKETT 363-6703 "BACKUS PERRY PARK 1 ItHki UteSKaSbn BACKUS REALTY 3-1333_ H0-U6 AVON SCHRAM LAND CONTRACT {iah.nWrs-rJifo.ra furniture and appliances. IVAN W. SCHRAM mm ntm Tim VOa LIM’ PHK8S WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1080 t Hoorn 49 lob Noosos 49 lob Homo* D*-«j Wideman EA^T SIDE KINQ-PHIPPS ORION TOWNI ORION* LAKE FRONT - Nice 3 (lory non), with 6 room --- apartment, 6 rooms down basement, gat hoot. Asklni KING-PHIPPS AGENCY ion S. Loooor R(, * 426-3545 | PRIVILEGES ON ELIZABETH LAKE / ■» TT" ITT O NEIL hiving t had room*, lilting OKCoilont /Area with 1 Inti completely ropalntod. Aval on PHA tirmi. Bull f mm. SPACIOUS LIVING IN—THtS-BBAUTI FOi- -4M house, having 3 lull hath I, full baiemcm. STRUBIE * OFF PERRY wm *T POINTMENT. I. 0. WIDEMAN, REALTOR imsa?™ m IRWIN NOT TRADE? THIS CONTEMPORARY BI-LEVEL la parted for antartalnlngi it'i In Hit lummar with It'i control air iaHwWro&til MlinCM tegjjgb-JI+L...JB1 i ihab^Rd, 674-3105 LEACH GILES BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP Beaytltul t bodroom ranch, custom mag* fireplace in spacious living room, Mth and M, large glass peren which la wed as a family roam, call Webster-Curtis ' yOxford-Orion M J04I /Thomas If., B«rkl#V, mov« right In, excellent itrodm heme phn • beth, unfinished aecend floor, toll i basement, get hut, plastered walls, aluminum storms end screens, 114,500, 03,500 down, lurnlfure eve lie Me. for appotntmanh — 5 ACRES IN WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP : Just off M-56, nnr Alpine Ski Ledge, cute little 2 bedroom homo, .newly united end new ulllng tile, walk-in ckiaato, priced at only sis,too, mown by appointment only. EAST SIDE Furnished 1 rooms and bath, uer 1 Oxford, large let, lake privileges, , *15,900. torms. lOA 0-3519 696*343 Lika Property ~fi CEDAR ISLAND LAKE, Golden , Shore SuMMsIm tat 7S' x in', SUM down, take over lend con-fract. 333-37M. t»tor 5. _ 6 room 3 bedroom heme, with toll basement end jm hut, uat end «N*» > «H(- faffllyTuM tertwr 110400 ««20, carpeted T.V. room c,mn» VETERANS Aubum Haights araa, Is the location of this rawly IMM I bedroom with stairway to ghfinniMriM otorv, poulblo 4 bedrooms. This property is Largo 3 car garage, r $17,600 and may hi .1. or P.H>. terms, fofXBjOO. PHA. NORTH SIDE — Aluminum and ,2 cor lor your 3 BEDROOM — Aluminum ranch "JOIN THE MARCH TO TIMES" « Times Realty Ij ho price I urchosod IF YOU MUST HAVE LOCATION 674-3126 355-7900 IT Mnonlmov own utllltlu. Lend contract terms. WATERFORD TWP. ERICK , . , Charming English Manor colonist with panoramic view A hooch on Sylvan Lake. 4 one clou* PROnt, lake privileged!----------CLARKSTON AREA - = DEER LAKE - 4 wooded lets, over frtvncaoa. djo Straits, Big Lakes. Fowler, (m. 4iW4B4. S6M66S, few of the fine srage an features. i 3 baths. Could cant. I „_„ __... msnt. 621,600. 01 or PHA ■« cat B. C. HIITER, REALTOR, IIMU' r:,r ring n lichen. ■■■ Family i brick flrcplac*. m garage. Total price only 111 Don't wall on this oral LET'S TRADE B. HALL REALTY, EoaHora 7150 Dixie Hwy. 4254 49 Sals Houses 1 0 “ESTABLISHEDT930" Ml3 HAVE YOU ALL KINDS? We hove all kind* of houui. Pul the toddler* and their Ltlly room, the tunogora ^r^^non MOTHER AND FAMILY Will Ilk# flila mol Lovaly SS'xlf floors, plastarod walls. IWrai Sown up, 1st floor utility th boy windows, d-1 larga dorm ai^Mptie''wstiim,' oh"a comer lot FROM STREET TO STREET an on thi A Moral ranch homa with 3rd bedroom torod walls. Slid SM fir ' HERRINGTON HILLS Tirmi no problfm In Ih hill basement with gas hast, « garage, locatad within walking ping. Call now for price and li Itchen and and shop- D0RRIS-3.-S0N-REALT0R---------—- ?536*Dixie Hwy. MLS OR 44)324 "BUD APPEALING & GRACIOUS . Uvlna -raetiL;—wftl>- - ff — fuurKiemei5^Sj L*« Val-U-Way TOWNHOUSE featuring: fbodroomo, m^a living room and dining room. Convenient SE6-® ,o wi' 2 family. Waal far rytlrad a 3 noma and bath for your Own use atid 1 room apartment for spot. City location, S14J0A torms . can Im arranged. NICHOLIE-HUDSON Associates, Inc. 1141 W. Huron Bt, 681-1770, after 6 p.m. FE 4-8773 Brown s bedroom i tlropr imlly i rp will Guarantee the sale of your home PRIZE PACKAGE ALL BRICK BUNGALOW In LAKE FRONT—$18,900 COXY PEACIPUL HOMlgl a arlvata lake. Peetures ir scenic, natural sattlne with a view at two laku. CALL TO-(4AVII ■' W "OLD ENGLISH RETREAT LAKE OBlON laka front foa- turhig an ancloaod poreh With ,U0 striking view af the laka. B DELUXE LAKE FRONT NISTLBO AMONG Iha 'stOtO- 100 YEARS OLD CBNTENNIAL HOME l With plenty of CHANMI NEEDS WORK BUT THE BIO JOBS hivo\ol- five new models or OPEN SAT, 6. SUN. M a.m. arJ rnLONIAL AND MIDH-EVELl West Huron at Voorhels Ed. KEYLON RANCMEE AND,TRI-LEVEL: Miller Rd. it Ksylon Dr. AVON RANCHER: Avan Rd. lull east at Crooks Rd, ; :: \ J REALTOR PdNTIAC CLARKSTON ROCHESTER UNION LAKE 3)8.7161 , 625*2441 , 651-8518 3684171 SPACIOUS LIVID colonial with 2 i carpeting in Tan no molntonanco. Extra lot on Mace- day Lake goes wir--- Priced ot only 629,900. EXCELLENT BRICK l> ALUMINUM --TRI-LEVEL—-bed roomi. large family room, 1 Vi baths. This homo hu many extras - lot us show youl Prkod at only 627,600. . 4 BEDROOM BRICK - Parmal M5«r,,w"fpr" mrwissR Pontiac ana far SB yean. SPECIAL THIS WEEK ONLY go- BBLnSf •«,ci 411-1164 Since 1939 Self Housss ively fenced yard, haatad 2Vi car rage which Is a dream ter the guy io likes to tinker. See this today I FE 2-0262 I W. HURON OPEN 9 TO 9 heat. Move in ter $450. VACANT- NEAR GMC ‘lot.'plwlyef aiSut■"? garden ana. nLRV. res. Shown Bvap- Terms arranged YOU CAN TRADE FOR ANY HOME Wl HAVE FOR BALi Val-U-Wav Realty and Building Co. FE 4-3531 S Oeklend Ave. °P*n IRWIN NORTH SHIRLEYt Shawn By CLARKSTON AREA. dawn plus clralnB sw» BUYING OR SELLING CALL JOHN K. IRWIN & SONS p/wttnmffu NO MORE TEARS Whan paying rant, own your room home. On PA hoot, real nice lot, fMMd yard, excel neighborhood. Waterford Schoo price 11,600. Can be purchased on Land Contract, immediate NEW MODELS rural Laka An l-^'and M Weslrldgee Behind OuruSyof Lake* Church); Pox Bay Batatas Bill. Lake Read A Williams Laka Road RAY O'NEIL REALTY 3520 PONTIAC LAKE ROAD OR 4-2322 MLS 363-0331 CLARK •»rassuftu** this on* It'* a honey. bedroom brick nnch hat ■ full, •iOr«tBs jgfksS garage ■STATE 4« M.L.S. ARRO 3 BEDROOM Story and a half heme, hardwood floors, and plastered walls tell basement, sun porch, Wor gerage, locatad on pavad itraet ctose lo slwpjilng and school $19,000 calf Ibr 75 ACRES Near Holly Greens golf oouru, and 3,000 acres of state land. *735 par acre. Land contract torms esll ter details. 682-2211 MARGARErMcCULLOUGH 5143 Cas&llnboth Road OPEN OP MLS Sun. 3-S A&G OPEN DAILY 12 'TIL 5 --- SUNDAY 12 'TIL 6 -----1970 MODELS___ SKYBROOK COLONIAL 4 bedrooms, dining room, largo fi&nwbrmS windis>£%m».TE WESTFOREST RANCH SBodraom, dining room, living room, kitchen, m balks, merbte sills. SMI glass windows, tell baumant and Bear attached ,,r*%MB ON YOUR SITE DIRECTIONS: Weet on M-» tom right on Ormond Rd. and go It mil* to medal* an ML ANDERSON & GILFORD Building and Realty SSSl Highland Rd. (Mdf) 6*2-9000 OTTMteirth!t*h52JCte this deslreblo formal OR, tottott room 5 raT’i ^r.M!W•5SS^,', WE WILL TRADE Realtors 28 E. Huron St Oftlco Open Evenings A Sundays 1- 338-0466 MACEDAY LAKE Cottage with 2^ lots, scrot tram out lot to beech, only i FE 5-8183 NO DOWN PAYMENT On this thru Bpdroom ranch East old* of Pontiac, carport, fenced rear yard, ot Closing i tola vaunt horn*. OFF BALDWIN jchker ___ >IA approved, vacant. SEMINOLE HILLS Four bodroom brick and framt garaf^iUfe Nicholie-Harger Co. FE 5-8183 Partridge “IS THE BIRD TO SEE" 29 ACRES. With 1300 feat on Lake Huro Sandy Beach. 24x30 Cabin. wl •omo tormtof*. A natural i •mall marina, bah shop and wide potential. Terms avallabl Only S49.SIM. Ask for No. 14401 EXECUTIVE RETREAT 300 foot Sand such on Block Lcko in Cheboygan County. 11 room year 'round ranch homo, 2-car Inched garage. Over 2 at landscaped yard. Roved 655,500 on terms or wlll cu... Florida homo •• port payment I *M0.' BOB WHITE REAL ESTATE 0055 S. MoltuClorhsten FARRELL loe Twp. I of ostoto I y Wn^MKX^* 3134654400 or SlSdOATOW PASRTR?DGERRE AL*ESTATE 60mV~T*r3lrUm KAMPSEN LAKE ANGELUS LAKEVIEW ESTATES SPECIALl 10 TO 00 ACRRS WITH yur ,_________ cabin. On Hwy. 33, north of Mlo. trade. Tom's, PI A m 00 ACRES, downtown < 663-0724 after 4, -JW. KINZLER SPLIT ROCK BEAUTY STOUT'S —Best Buys —Today— MINIATUNRE ESTATE- spotiess brick ranch home, that is axtromahr good looklngr custom built NT the present owner* in park Ilk* _• located clou to Adams R( tra doop basement with gas Attaehad 2Vi car garaga. Th* Val-U-Way Realty and Builaing Co. FE 4-3531 345 Oakland Ave. Og UNIVERSITY AREA- Brlck and aluminum constructed 2 family unit uned ewnnir—‘ on paved road clou to Oo Unlvaralty and Community Coh log*. Fast grwtng arm eontalra 54 room and hath with full baumant. Idee tract, YEAR ROUND LAKE FRONT bathf, txtra .. . fp^ HifcM . 'jsa% ORION LAKE FRONT gpjwatMW* k^ir 825 S. Lapier Rd.# Oxford 628-2548 GOODRICH OFFICE ORTONVILLE WATERFORD TOWNSHIP jjpggii flrui HOLLY VILLAGE •JXSgrJUE!' 2 ACRES HOLLY “ S. State Street ’ GOODRICH 6864211 i 6344204 wlndows. Gos hut end township wetar. Truly j m»i vaira at 636,600 Oh MGIC Of PHA or 01, JOHN KINZLER, Realtor BUY IN BIRMINGHAM! HUMWoOmnaM c Well taken ear* of newly painted family homa, J.Mdroomi, raat modern kitchen, caraated living room and dining room, iorgo bath, eniv $14,*50, 01 er PHA. 674-2245 FRUSHOUR REALTY REALTORS - MLS 5730 Williams Laka Rd. MLS 6744171 TED'S -Trading 674-2236 MACEDAY LAKE PRIVILEGES PHA or 01 term* ait thlo.3 bedroom ranch cull* In a quay neighborhood. Featuring kitchen built Bite carpeting in Itvina room, carport, covered R,M»TWH.*W°r,,,'"f FIRST TIME OFFERED! Gracious elder home, with bedrooms, IM be tbs. tolly caraetet large family ream with flflMMt, car garage. All thte located on large lot in Waterford Towmhlp. OLE' Excitement I* built Into thte Spanish heclondo on the canal to Scraeihouu Lake, This heme ettore S bedrooms with e possible *4lta—I—fS*IT half baths, S fireplaces, callings, plush eerpetlng sr throughout, CALL TODAY I PLUSH TOUCH MODERN 1 ' BEDROOM, Bl Croeslne. U, P. 644)00.6S1-15B4, prlvtiegee welltendugradi. heat flrSi^ln*tomlly r«Jn?*cs.B*r*" custom drape* and Indnar rMTEB!»r?b5Hi.gr BRICK RANCHER Sacrifice for Cash IB ACRE CAMPER BITI. Last remaining piot In Starvaflcn Lake sun., Kalkaska, Grayling era*. IliOO. Call Tad Andrus. BAYVIEW REALTY 114 E. Front It. Travtru City it' GREEN LAKE-LAKE FRONT Over M acre clip MUIty suited for walkout basement. ISO It. an CLARKSTON AREA S exultant building *Hu tn-*an era* of now tom*. IS* x IS* ft. m.»xm«.-T|Wri¥4 1 ACRE ON CASS IAKB NORTH OP M4f FLATTLEY REALTY B COMMERCE RD. 363 216 WOODED ACRES .ru.-prle.fiSr AL PAULY OR SUM Eves. OR 34273 T”aC1*$" •nt, recreation teem, yard) Mwly dMOfltBOt irlhsldi. PHA Mil today. ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES You can't afford to mlu this, attractive 3-badroom, aluminum lldod family home, on a nictly shaded double M with latte artvnegoo. flreplac*. bullt-lns, toll hasomenf, 2 ur garaga, carpeting, drapes and •tovaTall at ttsa price of en.soo. TROY AREA Hare la a'raal Mu 3-bedroom ranch ------- —mr lML mm has ev*nIn* lM«ar MODEL OPEN 2 TO 6 REDUCED TO $40,800 PRIVATE LAKE 72 ACRES 900' COMMERCIAL FRONTAGE ^dTcTntrTt« LOCATED IN WHITE LAKE 9R,,n?fiflSB Call* Welcome EA, SMX1320'-I mtea. Pan-Tama. 45 ACRES. HIGHLANb .Hally area, 1320‘x133e', tconlc, railing, hortei OK, Uf.fOO. Terms. SHELDON. 635-68S7. 165 ACRES. Mtwun Detroit end Flint. PE 3-2144. P.O. Box 235, BIOomHOM Hills, 4M1S. 100x150'16T WATKINS LAKE PRIVILEGES. Only on* loft, ox col lent established araa ot nlu homos. PrlU 64,(M. 4-H REAL ESTATE, 423-I4M, OR 3-0455, OR 3-2361. _ ro”XCRES. CLARKItON, Khools, axealtent building lit*. 612,500. EDUCED TO $4 haft«». .•SSM lion, com* u* us today, toltaw m wffleUrawBM ss.terwsv%68HHfeLT9 ALSO otters Madraam ranch wnr toll baummt, IM baths and mam other extra* from $17,*M bn, you McCullouah Rfaltv, Inc. S4M HIGHLAND RD. 674-2236 624-2400 Pontiac Wq|l«d Laka I REALTOR N|LB REALTOR Phone 335-3141. ACREAGE rolling good yltw. |i*f wwr ACRES, fusF Earth slightly relllrtgj.tefoa' s^acrbs* *5*?^ Ortonylfl*. hilly soma trus, and nlu country sol ting. SIM ur acre. C. PANGUS INC., REALTOR „rmv,*wfc. ■ALL COLLECT 427-3115 KKF® Sola Feubb 56 HOWARD T. KEATING CO. “Will you . please stop talking about taxes! You're driving me crazyl" -said the psychiatrist I to the man lying on tht couch. Beautiful 171 acres, rttonnlnf otraom. Small IlM lit tut of sandy mtg ttg Is. Bathing for • on I gravel tek*. Parmtwwu g*M6.uvfral bedrooms. Thera , are buthtlnga kitchen. All equlamu* »M Miltord - About 10 mfloTfrem ^!e*nrfteau”'dV . ------------- —- — —-* — -.6, sole Alencon lace and » .t&bw ,NVESTMENT '♦ J,1^FUR-?iUt, worn one. I Olib It* 8300. 339-1719, after 6. EM 3-7188!M«r* BUCKJ-fcATWR^“aJTT5!^; CLARKSTON Ideal lot tor.»m.ii i*u.nw. —i Main St. 512,900, form*. jC. SCHUETT BALDWIN AVE. FRONTAGE M” C°”"l*lHTRd'------Unl0?rH!<»; 850. ^aMa m\ ft. frontage, corner Lk-________________________________I >23, 6lt«0Q55 A^oeiu* 7rom 1757 BUSY RESTAURANT- ] 550,000. term*. | Locs(td ln Auburn Height* arse.! M-59 A TELEGRAPH AREA , I This ottering Includes property M Mining, 200 ft, trontaoa on 4 and lane hwy. close to Khool* 1>; for •hopping. 1175 front ft. jJL] DIXIE HWY. FRONTAGE , god. Itid floor aparfmant.' Garago worn. pneo. coat JjOJ^ DINETTE SET CLOSE-OUT — All 1909 MoAte f-t torme.------ Llttla Jot's. latllaldwln. PE HW DRYER, OUi REFRIGERATOR 115, 11" TV._835, bunkbads, apprtmant afove. tail nrilae.. O. Harrla, FE DARK WALNUT DINING ROOM 4 chair*, buffet. ■P MALI SUIT*. Tw. - HPI ■ good condition. 1125. FE 5-0142. MISC 67 DANISH .MODERN SOFA and Chsl -------------------------673 9682 M|| ^p'^Si fo^ot^oV WARREN STOUT, REALTOR may bo rtionad lo HgM In-1 —duatrlaL SO&OO&.toFgu- . Other Commercial P report lo* Annett Inc. Realtors 28 E. Huron St. 334-0466 Office Open Evening* A Sunday 1-4 AMERCIAL CORNER, bulfolngf^ ylCTdrPrlght.„R**»wi»b!» forma. Tstophons 682-3056 or 682- Professional Building Very nlca 24x40 cpmmart building. Hat cbntral. walling^ with lrooms I I. A.iKi.pn M.inhi. i St. Jama* Church. 355 W. Maplt. ELECTRIC STOVI, 525, Oa*. Stove, Thi.,^,,l?in^ ^nTliin*i hrr-irT-*v Birmingham. 9:30 til 4:10 Tuts., HI, Rofrlgarator with top treeier, and* bultoi*. focfoU.’. Th„r, . Frl. 9!30 til 1:» S»L_^ Sj», Wrlhpjr weMier. 140. O. H.r- tor IN cart and now overacts WEDDING DRESS Size *. 110. | 200 meal* par day In growing: 471-1197, _____, FOOD-O-Rama rolrlgeretor a nd 41x59 Bbwixiiifrofflifc!MBTsiHnry— rtmanl. Garage] tftlon, drv.r, MU? 62A1721 l Floor Models 1450 N. Opdyk^RiL H| t 171-11 ll ja|# Household Goods 651 ( ^Frljildelrs portable dishwasher --------TLAT-GARb---------- W WHAT YOU'D EXPECT TO PAY DISTRIBUTORSHIP CAN YOU QUALIFY? MOST AREAS OPEN Do you think you could op* your own WHOLESA business? Would you Ilka Solo Household Goods A WHAT YOU'D eXPECT 1 3 ROOMS Par S*Ib Mlscall«nBeus 67 (mil • BenrUe 70 tpartlR* Beasls OARAOI SAL* - Oct. 9, 9. 10, 9-3, ■■i i $ howell 16mm.# Mbdal 70* twin bads* 1 .regular# 1 .extra Iffltt mlsc. Items. IW. Exmoors Rd.. ■IIMbelh Labs Estates. *WSL mqyte wmereu Tur^.heed wlth h lentee etto cara. vSrlob tens. Good condition, *43- L® HlW PalJrati '"lSS.Ilo.'MI- 1719 aftar 0. ...11 l_ POLARpIO 230 "•*' with flesh junlnend leolhar carrying case, US.I 130 Emerion ll. 1- Pontiac. HOu»fn&5^P^!I" h-ffiMtePbi iKlWiyj’.hOw «" OARAGE SAL*: Sat. octobar 11, 9 'til A at 3142 AhMlus Dr., oft walten Blvd. CloKilno all .alira, housshold Items and olher mlsc, OARAgR -BALe -'tovi, oemes and assorted clothing, Frlgldere Ironer, etc. l”«, WranasdayVr|day, 4171 Kempt 'll., Drayton Piolni, elf Hlekory RIdoe ■itrB'BW'As'WNi^Ry^fnife lolld color** or fhetti fjwea djflat from minufectureif Fhoao 63M0M. HU NT I NO., CL0THBI f I Crabappla. Clarktton. to Almond Lana to Cr# Saraoi . I f tii 7 i household Horns, pal SJKaAw r\*‘ apple. ■ ACCORDION, Mka now, 110 b iiSnfnt"!,* 1115. »M 3-02M, .._ dryor llS*---Baldwin Concert Organ a nd 25 PEDALS., 61 naia keybo etc,. 3800 Excellent condition. ^^T^^torTv-c^rk . r g I aaSp*- Plain*____________________. Xl A G * lALi“^"AOULT and I children's clothing, book*, fowelry, prlct M odd* and and*. Ironar, waihar and * dryerr-roa*for, talrlgtraior, Thur*. ..... cu Oct. wi T »,m|f. TP», ctiq,' SMILEY tonvilla Rd. to Mann Rd. and -fWt. MM*”; | pw.M ArirSinMir nl.no, lyr*. 0 A Marihail, 0ld» perfect condition, bait- oilar, FE 2-4572. FE 4-4721 GARAGE SALE, 50 atarfo Woda T-5. OARAGE SAL'eTBOAT, Irallet, old china eablnal, lot* at clothing, Wod.-Sat., 3530 Dill Rd. otr Walton. ■ i-F_______ _ _ • GARAGE SALEt Ssi Wr Iroquois, *4 i gmrXfodnoedaY- Thursday, I Clothing, antiques. ~l GARSGlE AND BAKE~lALirierge, Oct. E *, TO. 15 Seotl Lexe Rd.. GARAGE "DOOR OPENER5, dlscon. nevIrTIi rb," 22^Hu>Tp»p rllla and «nells-6IMMI. “ JOHNSON SKI HORSE M0T0 SKI SNOWMOBILES YOUNG'S MARINA Oaan dally 9'Ml A Sunday T91* A - - 4030 Dixit Hwy Drayton Plain* IBSON GUITAR and, amolltfoivl yr. old, txc. condition, 171. M2- YOUR CHILD CAN Sc's. than It’s time ihi ■r do. re, ml's. Plans MORRIS MUSIC 24 S. Telegraph Rd., acrote tram Tel Huron. FE 2 0167 LUbwiG'^NARE DRUM axcallanl _ OR 641611 NEW 1975 SKI-00W COMB IN AND PICK OUT THB MODEL YOU DESIRE WMi THE SELECTION IS OQOD. PRICES START AT only i ALSO WE HAVE A GOOD STOCK OF RICONDITIONEO USED SKI* DOO'S. ALL PRICfiOlTO SILL. KING BROS. 373-0734 j , Pnntlec Rd. at Qpdvke ft FIFTY DEALER ACCOUNTS alroadj^iat u^Jor^you?^Would you j alia kitchen.! pand your buelness beyond this doctor's or dantlal'- ft “ COMMERCIAL BUILDINGS mMJBmSks- GROCERY STORE jftS ySf: apartment and »• home. $39,900 total 1 17500 down. LIQUOR BAR In Indpendenee Townthlp on NORTHERN BAR ily bar In Chippewa Township. Grosses *70,000 per year, wife - • mant andlt state 155. point? Art you Int four-figure $297 LITTl! JOE'S BARGAIN FURNITURE 1461 Baldwin at Wbltpfl FE 2-6842 Acres of Pi Evot. Mil 9; Sot. i provlncial 24 W. HuronAt Pontiac Store only, „ 9 Inp -r^ W w^b»^“' OT^ ^CTPT^rXnOE, “hi,'kind of Ph0n‘ t7^ PRE-SEASON DISCOUNTS POLARIS MASSBY-FEROUSON SNOWMOBILES 12 HP FROM $595 Perry lawn & Sport Equip. 7605 HIGHLAND RD. (M-59) *73-4W4 RUOER 46 MAONUM^EIaCk Hjptj^ grade rifle 300 .. $180. 187-9396._ REMINGTON 12 GAUGE SHOT | 28” barrel* full choke, 2 fwr» old. with 4 boxes of ihelli. iw. Also 12 gouge reload shells, S2 per box. Ft 5-3M1 at 120 Enter-eon St. Pontiac. RED WING Hunttre. MOST334-414. Impact purchase 1 of the nation's _ ,s who buy our ditifibutanT would Equipment, Dealers, and your men ability? Do you have good credit? Can you fumlati references? Can questions YES", AIRMAIL your reply, Including excellent condition. Hamilton Oae dryer, gag. 252-113?. ____________ OE WAtHkh PlMne ZENjTH CJJLOR ..Meple^TV, Extra| AP*CHB_ CHIEF: Colt.^M^ir, 100, IW LUDWIG PINK _ _ . _ I .... . __ foitic Pipe, 11041 rnr 100^0^A., gt.,cgmpjata wim.cymtg).,,WO.| QtNe'3 ARCHERY.ljl IS^I DGO* SCRAMBLER .nn grnnenwxw - i--. ' KbCUNU PLAT CX WII * “* -- Bag **---•-‘ — to 2 hp.a priced from 882.50. G. A. | call after 6* OR 3-7128, AKC nnnmp* ThompBon and _Son*J?/1 TENOR $a3(, Selmer ____ fMliSrncS metaToaraob nlw. uted l,wk. Coel M?5, 7c M. ROOMS OP FURNITURE Vinyl Aibastot flip ....... 7e aa. I elate of: Inlaid Tlla, 9x9 7e ea. • Floor Shop-2215 Elliabath Lake “Across From the Mall" I Jn^xV ii CUBIC FT., 1967, upright freetar, Innaraprlnq mattrate and matching APARTMENT MOTEL Located 15 tnlfoa south ot Dayfona In ^^Mutltul New Smyrna^ Beach, anlclanclaa and' mala*. 720 SQUARE FEET Would make an Ideal office, located In Waterford Township, built In 1941, tii.9M with forms. CONTACT.. OtMLPutrall Or fqb Bprfolbaugh McCullough realty, inc. 1440 Highland Rd.___474.2136 Partridge “IS THE BIRD TO SEE" A TAX-FREE INCOME ....... • to choice tenant* nra, variety , atop 4 apartment* phi arclal broperty fe ™* ,r*® 1 •nd hai ai growth mtwtiaiUfhot* j unmatched By another areo. S87,o( FREE CATALOG MARKETING DIRECTOR P.0. BOX 20591 DALLAS, TEXAS 75220 OR CALL AC/214 638-3552 '^.V „kt nm,, 334-3750._____________ box"Vprlnq and 2 vanity lamps. 1969 USED SINGER S-plece dinette set with 4 chrome GOLDEN TOUCH AND SEW KijTiijF"wTri— rcgistara, 539. Sates, 919.5 0 J mattress, old dishes and ml»c. 335- VOX CONTINENTAL oortafoa c ------ Cabinet., 559.30, Film. 6641. 443 Pike. Ponllec.____________, ,?^bSf25iS4EXC<’' * PLUMBING BARGAINS, FREE------------------ '7'rn' standing toilet. 539,93; 30-gallpn wut IV EICIIVIIV9* pwpi vui u TWPH* Mf Ml—3-PitCV bath Mill ________ _________ cators. 814.99., 348*6404. 231 W. 9 $59.95; laundry tray* trim, 819.93; Mile Road. Batter Business._____ shower ftallt with trim. $39.95; 2- ACCORDION* GUltAR, LESSONS. AUTOMATIC WASHER 8. Kenmore bowl link. 829.95; 1^$.*^ 829.95; $a|fs.servlce. dryer, chMP^ need mpalr, electric tubj.^0 *An5liu'‘pLUP^Bl^' CO°J^^| | 841 Baldwin. FE 4-1316. RUMMAGE AND ANTIQUES. TV* TRAIL BOSS USE IT ALL 12 MONTHS EVAN'S EQUIPMENT 625-1711 Clarklten-------421 4507 Dlxto HWV. . Open Men.-Frl. tram 9 a.m.-l p.m. Saturday til I p.m. JUST-IN - A lop dresser attachment*, 3- Be your own boas and csptlonally high earn! financial aacurtfy In a ht SUNOCO Mrvlct atatlo Pgntfoc Are*.___ SUNOCO OFFERS: • PAID TRAINING _ INDUSTRIAL AT ROCHESTER 90' x 125‘ wtth older house. ONE ACRE WITH SEWER AND WATER 3F FI__ . BUILDINGS. Office In Rochester SAGINAW BAY GROCERY A tins no competition aters on main highway In good re*ort area. Just 52,000 piu* dock dmm. Call - or atop In for detail*. An A-l buy- WARDEN REALTY 1434 w. Huron, Pontiac 4*2-3920 ______It tie antwor, 383-4660 TIMES 10,000 SQ. FT. OF WELL CONSTRUCTED COM MERCIAL BUILDING, await* your Immediate impaction. Over 4 acre* of corner commercial property, cycloned lanced for your looking 4? g^agqiyTuwre cbll today to learn the detail*. Days—Tom Flahar-44jM674 Eve*.—Jim Banner—44*0141. iMalL viBemo' mXc! business, nickel and machine*. 473-2925. Texaco Inc. Ha* excellent bull ness opportunities In the .Pontiac area. For mire Information CALL 292-4000. Aek tor Mr. Burloion EVES. 471-2474. . TO BUY. Mll, BUSINESS Ft 37(41 WAJ6T TO SELL TOUR BUSINESSV Pontiac, Oaflnltaly. Realtor Partridge payment* ot 14.34 — No IP Call Capitol Credit Maneg a.m.-» p,m. If toll call collect PHONE 729-4410 1969 USED SINGER TOUCH AND SEW feature* do blind hama, buttonixilaa,_li designs ate. Cabinet Inc Compare new, over 8200. Full 442.43. Phone Midwait Appi ■334-3312._____________ 1969 SINGER ZIG-ZAG Slightly uaad tawing machl stylish cabinet. All controls bi to make buttonholes, saw at tana, overcasts, blind Item dr fancy stitches, ate. S-year parti and labor guarantee. CASH 147.10 TAX INCLUDED Or pay 44.79 down and 9 peym* ot 14.79 _per. mo. No .carry PHONE 729-6410 A - PLENTY OF USED aaihar*, »r.^r^r-tjSfo’r« «.HpT2^L^ APARTMENT SIZE electric 60" go* range, itarao c rafrlgtrator, Mlsc. Black Orchard Lake Rd. .. 1260 Wagner. Oct. 9-10-11.101 461. Call after 5:30 p,m. KIRBY SWEEPER EXCELLENT CONDtTION-S6S PULL GUARANTEE Kirby Servic* & Supply Co. 2417 DIXIE HWY._______474-22314 LINOLEUM RU08t M<»T^ giZlg M.49 up. Paarion't Furnllura, 446 Auburn Ava. PE A7I4I.__________ LEFTOVER Carpet from large commercial protect. Pieces largo onough to do 40 yard lobe. Ideal lor heavy traffic area. Free Estimate*. Call Ron 334-5697. LIVING ROOMS. BRAND new. about Hem*, rolaxrzl*or.etc. ROUND OAK pod* loaves, 475. oak I cabinet, 6125, 1 BARNWOOD, HEWN beams, RR delivery, call between 4 n„ 23M120. BRIDES - BUY YOUR WEDDING announcements at discount from, Forbes, 4500 Dixie. Drayton, OR 3- ICack CHICAOD Mate and cue, alza 3, sio, enuo's . — 3 place drum sal, 915, one 24th SALE — FRI., SAT., SUN., Oct. scale slot car, 45' track, 435. ' -• ii. : oft all Antlqui Pontiac. 338-3035. 10, 11, 12, 12 to 4- p.m. 20 pet. Attic Antique*, 2140 S. Telegraph i¥ price. IJHie PE 2-4842. joa’a. 1441 Baldwin, IHI-Fi, TV and Radios LIKE NEW. Electric stove, metal cabinet link, and metal wardrobe ctoaet. FB 5-0610, call before 3. Overstocked Furniture Bargoins Walnut bedroom suit, double dresser, mirror, 4 drawer chest USBD TV ,15 E. Welto.., *vMi». J - ..., waTfon tv. Pi 2-2257 dean 9-4 ii" R6a CdLORED TV, Mahogany cabinet good color, t years, will deliver, set up 81 guarantee. $150. 623-1136. i floral i _____ ________ -_. Jd revc----------- cushions, $279 value, unclaimed 1 chairs, zlppered reversible S*l« ton* Contracts 60 CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS 4540 Dixie HWfT-till 2-1355 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently needed. See us before you deal. _ . Warren Stout, Rtaltor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. 272-1111 Open Ives. *tn $ p.m. Wanted Controcts-Mtg. 60-A large OR SMALL land contracts, quick ctoelnp. Raaaonabfo dlicount. Earl Garr.lt, MA 4-5400 or avaa. I S MILLION Sawing machine. Rapes sailed, i960 ■Fashion Dial,' modal In walnut cablliaf. Taku over payment, of: $5.50 Per Mo. for 8 Mos. or $44 Cash Balance Stilt Under Guarantee UNIVERSAL SEWING CENTER 2415 Dixie Hwy. FI 6-091 A HOUSEHOLD BARGAIN * pc. living rm. grow, (sofa, chair 3 beautiful tables,. 2 lamps); 8 0 bedroom (double drawer, chart, b* mattress, springs, limpal) 6 plat bunk bad — F Place dinette. Any Item Sold SaM/tfote All tor S199 — 910 Monthly | KAY FURNITURE k Mart I Lima Joe's, 1461 1 hydraulic chair, 334-7638. CRIB, PLYFEN BEDROOM SBT COMPLETE, 2 easy chairs, dressing table," coffee table, 24" Reel power mower. Ice skates, mlsc. Ml 7-0037.___ BASEMENT SALE: 45 I COURIER 23 CB RADIO, Frl. Oct. 9-10, 9-5 SALE, Thurs. Pulnncckl, OR 3-5396. ORGAN TEACHER, beginners, method for adutts, morning, 8:30 to 7 p.r 5-7305. RUMMAGE SALE—'Thursday, Frl* RUMMAGE SALE: clothing for mer children, all tizes. wed.* Thurs.* Frl. J WANTED: Plano and gi for beginners. 335-1463. Store Equipment - 24" WELLS ELECTRIC TENT, GUN CABINET, THE ALL NEW 1970 SKI-D00S NOW IN STOCK-nSHOP EARLY 1CIAL a H.R. SNO-JET .... 1499 USED SNOWMOBILE TOO CRUISE OUT, INC. 41 E. Walton PE t-4401 Dally 9-6; Sat. 9-5t Claaad Sun, YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZES SKI-D00 DEALER BILL G0LLING SPORT CENTER Juit off Maple Rd. (11 Milt) "I Between Crook* A Ceowge RCl Trgy Meter Mall Shopping Canter. REFRIGERATOR FOR delro»t. 3354917.____________ RUMMAGE SALE '"""sored bv Royal Oak Rotary _____ ,F. Hall.j, 433 _E. II Mite, 2 pi_AC Sporting Goods 74|al 1 USED CHAPBRALL 30 hp, recoil A~ •tart. 1495. EVAN'S EQUIPMENT 425-171 2 PLACE TRAILERS, SI49.S0. Sport* Recreation Corp. 335-7354. 1 BROWNING 12 5*V GUNS *150 ___________ ,m. to 2 p.m. proceeds to charity."________ RUMMAGE SALE: 222 Rutaell oft I winchester Auburn, Tuaa., Wed,, Thur*. __Im.h Trap ................. . ytza ROYAL TYPEWRITER, 14" cpr-|720 W, Hur«n movie lltlar; 4*3" 6 CAPACITY GUN CASE, original *50. 4T4-H12. 4 aiiti.tlP.lHj Wl DIRT, -dBB Wtlca and bag; Pr. drapes, Gold, 96"x60" (new); pr. draptt, belqt, 120"x*4" (new); 16 qt. Cook rite pressure cooker; dining room labia (limed oak), 4 upholstered chair* end table pads. 4494 Cau-Ellzabeth Reed, call ifur 3:30 p. Repossessed 4 HP Roto-Tiller Terms Available shells 4125, 12 io gauge ivy' 2 boxr ft ft Ithaca dsobte Hi . - 16 gauge double hammer 130, itetnlasa steel mod*' ■■ . we**en..tty, OR., GRAVEL AND sand, kind*, dallvarad. 373-1415. EXCELLENT TOPSOIL, black d and fill loaded and ddlivarad a leveled. 62H751 aft. 4 BJW. ISANP, »4av*L. AN6 dirt. LHh *53-11 Precast Slone 452-2920 ".IB I AND GRAVE. All gravel dirt, cruiheu iimanon*. n-i black dirt. Phene 194-0041. ■a dallvarad. 623-0006, ____________i______ 12 GAUGE BROWNING Pump, *60.1 •uga Saar's automatic, 675. I RB BKHIB ~ hJlCK 1 dirt . 452-5462. SPECIAL - LIME oversized stone,. «4i* 30-30 RIFLe. WITH SCOPE, call I” ' 4:10 PE 44719. credit available Many almllar savings. FREE DELIVERY C6l6B TV BARGAINS. LITTLE ■ T *—‘n Houta. PE iCTRiC SfA’fi call PE 2-1927. LIKE NEW REBUILT color TV, guarantatd. biack and^whjte^^.20 aUfe.. •rage, or what havt you. Thlir re party lies 2Vi miles from the 1-15, 1-75 Intersection. Only 1800 SQ. FT. OF PROFESSIONAL SERVICE BUILDING Which Includtl part; residential rental. The rental potential at preMnt is In axcati of Iota or acraaqa outright. (fa-?.0** SiV W/.l terobe. 852-1754._________I JR n*aCt TED MCCUL lffr*Rnc'llVALNOf_d^ conference table* B'x*', original cost* $500* «all $150. 338-1617. BLENDE If LIQUTFIER 5000 speed* (M-59) Ii/ils I original cost $60* tailing for $45. 674-2236 McCullough realty 5466 Highland Rd. (M-59) „;_ Open 9-9 _______ 474-3236 JSri.' 1 to 50 LAND contracts Unwntlv needed, lea ue 1304 attar 6. bunk beds Choice of 14 alyl**, four triple trundle bade and I before: complete, 149JO i triple trundle complete, Warren Sout, Realtor I basement. salI' 12 UNITS , i,45° N'o«^l!vaiR'tii i p m OP EXCELLENT RENTAL PROP- ;-.----------— ERTY. lata than 1 year old. Ap Money tO Loan cP^Xr'A.ryun!.V^n,^ronyVry.l.n; , - «U«n«d .Monay Landar. lease basis. Prime location — call i*iAUC for full particular*. 4270,000 wllhi LUANS opportunity to ataume the 7 per 125 to 61,000 i||BBlBteMi||g||terairt *n »o-‘ Insured Payment Plan, _ BAXTER - LIVINGSTONE cant land contract F* 4-71*1 _ _ _ _ thureday Friday 8 Sat., Avon for Chrlitmai at dieeeunt. 413 Jordan, Pontiac, 61 BIG JOE D6RAN tails direct from warehouse ot vy the profit, 167 - - Walton at Jotlyn, 373-5560. HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE 441 Elizabeth Lake Rd. (Near Telegraph) 4gi-32l3. ^10* dally MUST SELL 40" Prigldalra afoya and rofrlgarator, oren^a choir and j cherrywood chord organ, 1150. OR 3-7752, _______. MAYTAG WRINGER CYPRESS PRIVACY PENCE, S' sections, 5 and 6' height, 87.50 par __Mellon. _ 2 Electric built In range tope, 1 stainless Mi, *[ each. TALBOTT LUMBER 1025 Oakland PE 4-4595 CHANNEL (2 CRYSTALS) walkle-talklael Haver uaad. Coat 1125, sell nil 3 two channel y ........... plug Into wall aeckstl cost 110.50, .Mil 145. 1 cerater, uusad vary Condition, 265. Call after 5:3p; 4*2- Goodyear Service Stare ----------ISTOWkte-Treek-------- Pontiac, Mich. PHONE 335-4)49 RUMMAGE SALE: CAI building.!. JTI' ---------,,, ■ -«■ L - sponsored by Waterford Garden 19*4 SCORPION Snow mobile. 20 h.| _______________»52-)790 119*7 10 HORSE JLO Sno . 1400. PEJ-1449. Wood-Coal-Coke-FMl FIREF^BWOOD _____Aciv 61. 373-5449, XTBIHScI-WOOD, delivered. 683-1415. — —-- SEASONED OAK Plreplaco~wobd, Club. 10 1 10. 'til 2 I Frl., Oct. | OR S-1499. wireless I Just 1-A AKC CHOICE In- 10 1 III ? RUMMAGE SALE, fishing tac* clothing and mlsc. Oct 14, 9 ? : Dresden A»a., Pontiac._______ STALL SHOWERS COMPLETE « STEREO WALNUT OR MAPLE CONSOLE - Diamond Naadlas BSR 4-Speed changer $89 Or $5 par month UNIVERSAL 1615 Dlxle^tlwy. ier with i Dally tqsIS-G FE Sat. 10:15-6 original* bait offerpl36»5490. inow tire*. 775x14* $35 square aluminum iud ana Kenmore new COLOR fvT», priced-from DROP LEAF TABLE# CANE chain* 4937.____________________ _______ _ !i^tTl9JirverJ34-977B.- — I fJZt. Big Joa'a Ap p Me pea, SJPerocker* *,d®5fi*rdv lJ3,,ql12f;! SUBMERSIBLE AND upri^it MAYTAG WRINGER Waihar* In; Warehou»a* 567 E. Walton. 373-5560. Nichols, off South Blvd. near Dumns. told, reoalrad. i condition* reasonable. FE 5- ^rehouse SALE o^en to wtMg pmhTA^i4gr entlre Invontory of rww Zenith*'ENCYCLOPEDIA, 196$, good 3670. moving^Dutof ♦he following Itor dining room outfit* tablt and buffet II Itamt: Sorrell finish 840. 603-3746. ONE MONTH OLD COUCh i chifr* modern* 8175. 693 7363 offer 4:30. PLAYER~ PIANO* 8450; IRONRITE di8po»al. 336 S. Telegraph. CHIPPED**BATHROOM fixtures for m A. Thompson 6. Son* 7005 salt* G. A. Thompson I. Son* 71 j M-69 Wa _________ DARK BROWN PALI.* Lo RCA and Motorola. TVs. color TVs* sold—gvory T7 ■ --- ELECT Rid fYREWRltkfci reoyai. $75. IBM $100. Olympia $100. $. C. M- f p«: jfk3eW.y Co., 24123 W. 10 ForSak Mlsceil*n«ou» 67 Vy INCH COPPER WATER PIP*. 21 cent, a ft. and M Inch capper IpoST-A to caXat I 275. 1 RANGER TltACKTQR, power* with Plym< tires* i highly rated* never ■Ag—i. 543-1459. sand blasted Ewan design* 121.964 G, A. TtWmpSW* 7005 M-59 W. OR "A lob well done feeling,' clean carpets with Blue Lustre. Rent electric pumps, sold* repaired* Cone's PE 8-6643. __ 8PP ED-SAT IN PAINYsTwARWICK j^ly'y^g^rd Lake, m- BROWN I N^fi^ H ER Q^jN 8 plus STATION OR GARAOB^ EquIpmenf j R^Jk, Oxfohf ^Spen 9 p.m., .1970'S NOW. DISPLAYED TWIN. CYLINDERS SPRINT BY BOLEN'S THE SNOWMOBILE EVAN'S EQUIPMENT *25-7111 Clarkston 425-2516 Open Mon.-Frl. from 9 a.m.-6 P'.tn. Saturday till 5 p.m. 1-A HEALTHY, FRISKI* DACHSHUND'S, ARC ESTELHEIM'S 391-1M9 1-A bOQDLE STUDS, grooming ST.Si MR. pupeias, 234-6430 or 3324129, A POODLE CLIPPiliO an d grooming, alia tiny toy puppies. , 9 • r t| «5T wJd.fi buUn..., 36Ml7l attar 1, call *U-\ iR^TNo ';i2 ;bMf' STEEL WINDOWS.- motors, sheets, l^t; 3x4’s. 435-3546. shelving, a prr Mt. Must Mil, I._______ _774? Auburn Rd., Uttea. 73l-S4ao. , THE’SALVATION ARMY' 1 RED IMIELO STORl 1953. . PUREBRED Mali German Shephards, I large silver, m-yr.-eld, would make excellent watchdog or companion to couple with no children, 950, 1 black ancr ten 4 OF THOSE HEALTHY, happy rascals Isft. Father smart llttla BIG JOE DORAN'S AdmlraL YOU "JOIN THB MARCH TO TIMES" Times Realty 4990 DIXIE HIGHWAY 423-0600 REALTOR Open 9-9 Dally OHIO. Opwi lunay 1-5 ■ EXCEPTIONAL Y-KNOT AfRIqus 'qaSlnLwtt,*1*' — Carry 6ul "ltuMflo chicken, rlb*. bataurant faatui •h, or pizza, t Pontiac Press Want Ads For Action JMgT(3ALL STOP ' YOUR HOUSE FORECLOSURE , Stop the bill collector — tfop all your credit problems — wa have millions of dollart for mortgegas — widows, dlyercaas, and' people with bad credit are o.K, with vi. AnyRIsk JVorl^aiwCo. (Call now - tot IVtb. 5 62 NEED UP TO $5,000? You may be surprised how cheaply you can add new rooms, repr “ remodel vour present homo vy o* Admiral, Motorola color profit. BIG JOE DORAN has brand „ ______________________ „ _ _ Everything fa moot your fieidf rear end*'FREE FOR SEA wall patio and ate. Clothing* Furniture* Appliances Ironar* $50. 6I2-9024. I end trackkor tires* snow blade and Concrete slabs and pitcas. Ml 4. UTILITY TRAILER WITH i PRIVATE ^ARTY WANTS good us^ 2 utility Kallsrs. $585. 852-3530._____________ ...................... .......... ; cabinets* $125. 4t4 N. Johnson. ad Spanish living room furniture. fW tN^tTfCAlfTc dram pipa and ^CUORESCENte ^LJgMTS* IDEAL uf^lllfY^ TRA»Lli7f^Wx#s* i Call attar 6 p.m. 68I-0673. fitting** no need to throad pipe; For kitchen-cabinets, underi high tides* suggested for c anymore* It goos togathor with vslancei* work banchet* large 24" ehnirs mlsc aso w Huron glue, all you need Is a hack-saw Mphts* 87.95 value* 53.95* Bcretched and cnairs,_misc. 990 w. wuron. bru|r. ^ VG £ AAichlgen Fluorescent, 393 Orchard Son,* 7005 M-59 lihorso ■ it cor I aftor 6* GUNS-GUNS-GUNS One of thq largest Mlactlo Oakland County. Brawn Weatherby; winchester, R Colt and Sn Me. I Puppy, shots, >20 each, 6934113. 13 LABRADOR Hunting OoeiT”ix-captianal breed, in, air ehots. Balore 5, Sfl-Mit, attar 5, 4364441, 3 BlXOtlSbL m*6 Barm-an Ihtphard puppies, 1 rhele, 2 temple, barn Aug. 20, 125 apiece. | _Phona *73-2129. . |“ * bOBERMAN PINICHIiR Pupi” eyluanto REFRIGERATORS, Stoves, tables, it vy the and chairs, mlsc. 350 W. Huron. 4CA7c6r0R7iV'rCQM5OLE, $10*, 9" heaters at Vi the profit. ! Teeters, 1 ell burner, trailer house ....,___ _______I, Pblfco i Admiral rafrlgaraters, r'aha• washers, dryers, TV's tnd Ifsr for vy ins profit. BIG JOE DORAN'S washouM trade-in refrigerators, ranges r&ch.rsb,^.,^ait- _____Baldwin, PE 3-6843, BEDROOM SUltl, gray mahogany, 890. 651-1484. BRONZE OR CHRSmB blNjSTfB Mia, BRAND NEW. Large and email tlM (round, drap-taaf, rectangular) tab lee In S-, a- and 7-pc. i ^VpARSolipL FURNITURE | for fnelerlels. Whateverfessignally "with ............"DC. MckC0llffrGE"oorl^blslstereo,,ui! 2 AL~UMINUM~c b w B I N A'T I 6 N FURNACES, GAS OR porleblt ’ sewlng mechlne 83J, JDOOR5 ----------------- B|b*-------------------------' Royal portable typewriter 111. 3' x 4* W Solid coder wardrobe 6' hteh x 4*. covered Wide 1100. Underwood typewriter 'trisran ~nra«e . *45, Bumper pool table *307 Flee- 2..4' SLIDING OLAJS ooort, r trie stove 30", 815. 333-0223. thermo pone. 035 each. *02-0464, Rfi^irAT^ROTTiiiHWTCIRlRr, ^'..BROKEN CON^RETirdallvarad, dryart, washers, renget. crate Clay, iMm, toPMlLJ. damaged and Mratchad models. Landecaplng, 3710666. Fully guarantaad. ferritic ravings. * HORSEPOWER. Crst Terms. lawn mower, used 3 CURT'S APPLIANCE , 2434. v 4404 WILLIAMS LAKE RD. 474-1101 !• Jj-1BtCinEiCAL--h-M,|!fi^s?fr 80PA, EXCELL|N_f condition, very I X1" f|cj'|| I,r *02-1104. furnace, 5411 SED STEEL dews. Good tor caMn. bast attar, USED STEEL crenk-out dews. Oat . ; PE t-vn._________________________ Inyl PINE ANTIQUE KITCHEN range! utEO RAILRGaD TIES. ter cabin up worth. 458-9002. i 2M0 Gailaway Ct-> Patitiac nqyaWIra.i U|ib wqf WMfja Waltman rtf. fllbf i—GAGS, 1 JUKMSI npnirm.i Lsy-a-waye. Liberal Bill's Ohlpost, is mentm aw. 3245 Dixie Hwy. OR S-9474,,, ~ . wttT *iC«U OARAGE SALE, OCT. 9-11, ------- 6, 074 ........ Voss & Bucskner, Inc. 1400 Pantlac stale Bank Bldg. 334-3267 tw*y» _ L ___________________63 1931 A 4-DOOR SEDAN, partially/ restored, running. Mil ter 9400 or whet hava you. 4*2-1794. 6-9 p.m. iiniph with 9473. Allis I sttschms ' BNM-Vms *shsm-your horns But cltsn. from A Id Z Rental Canter, 2527 Dixie Hwy,, 474-4)66._________ S9PFIRT0NB silrlgaratar a n d ssn’M, | CARFET INSTALLATION* alio good ARPET INSTAt m) SfoVi *M7Te7t rlgarater-fraanr 1 HmOl. ■rot sli good condition, redoing 'ktteha Good cabinet TV, make attar Mi bad Mads recovering (Prral mis Items. MM9S7, alter *-p.m, SINGER DIAl-A-MATIC Zlg Zag sawing machine - embroiders, ' appliques buttonholet, sdc. Lata medal7 Khool trade-in. Terms of: $6 PER MONTH OR $59 CASH New Mechtna Guarantee UNIVERSAL SEWING CENTER 2614 Plate Hwy. PE 4*0905 i»aiw«nriWOT'Ti'o‘Mi'Vherd iou&t11, cell after Tib GALLON OIL bfcllM 472-mr 9 .HI PIRFORMANCE (JAM, 1945 Musteng V6, never, used. Make reesoneble offer. Cost 9470 new. 391-3150 slier 4 p.m. 410 PUMP iH&fQUt/.* exira' shells 'iiell aft. 4 p.m. OR 2 13*1. ' X 50,000 BTU OIL FURNACE, 0307* 4071, _________■ I05,000*BfO GAO PURNACEnrOm-Installed to praMtlt duet Tac Haetlng, 074- Bam and Cam toXoct; ii7o WAN" ws~mPr ____ teAftTilp” Demeettc Gas Conversion ?L 1-1904. Stanfield Co., Idd. 4444233. GARAOB ’GUT. wlG, cusiwn drapes, end- tables, baby furnllura, boy end glrle clothing, 4970 Felton. GARAGE SALE: Furniture , ip- !«Bh <5tl,o«h.BrdpeL.kewiid. to: MuTbsart: MewertTto 1340 Wegner. Oc(. %\i\ iMK*' Krl^l I ■.........■■■ ____ II, )»)0 4. 7 : University Drive. Pf 3-6104 sump pump; building leeks; heavy OARAGE SALE, 444 ?ourth 'ifj, off e'AEEHoln duty freiler; lee? Yam one Joslyn Oct. 9-10-11. 1 yard buci Percy King Or., Waterford. FERGUSON 903 bsckh: GARAGE SALE: 5 ftmllles, 444 **R*W«»R. SkJM Marion. Blizebeth Lake Rd. Across mm Huron Bew.r - Items ot sil 6 p.m, Thurs. u II. I, sigh work. SKI-DOO'S 12 to 40 H>. 15", lr', and 20" tracks 10 machlnss In stock nowl We hove • cemptele line of oc cesserles. Speeao. tech, sleds suits, bools, hairnets, gloves custom colored trelleri, single eru doublet STOP OUT THIS WEEKEND! Cliff Dreyor's i^eiSMI plIleTs: * ApOhABLG heauhy Ve do our own kittens, llttsr boxed trait good home, IS3-M9. O-WEEK-OLb AlC nprlc Ak(fV61IEiHIirTeMTiriupefa7 ; elso i temeie I yr, old, stood . gpeder. Shewn by appoTntfflfnL 1 w.H, w..,.,. 1 ijy^MijBn^ErTaXe* mWBf un and Sport* CantBr \ Twtlki. H«aVe,tewJte"W,l\r» ’* 9004 1405, f ontlae 1*1 uk* waihar* boin iak« an offer. 681 2635 Buyers — Sailers Meat thru jPress Want Adt. iBSALir'wad., thurs, #rl. SASAfifi mij Mt. ? ihrough ii 2407 CulMrtoen, on Auburn roite bBtwotn Big Quindar and Jahh R, MWAlfl?r7adfo 335-1722 before 1 p.tr _____ „ . . p.m. HOUGH"HS'I6A6iR; fa jgwf M3-IM9. EVINRUDE SKEETERS BOBCATS '700 HERE NOW Fabulous snowmobile comp trailers lake a. SB a MAR if! ^ EARLY BIRD SALE I YAMAHA SNOWMOBILE .bxcit^sNbw *1 */•i._«|v<2- si ,Ssjlnew Want, Ads For Action a w CYCLE 2436 AUBURN iw iooRABLi fiRWiinrwwirw- b' hmals Issi PKrJ AKC wfik ISmBli AK< yBASt|f •himurn line, SM, 441 9509. pC5, 6136331. GERMAN SHEPHERD PUREBRED masm-tim. —— -----------— AKC. beautiful GERMAN SHEFhErD, fomaloT . mo. old, AKC registered, too. 335- ORE AT DANE TOPE aTTC roplotorod, oxeollont bloodline., further Into. Coll 752-1364. Romeo, IRISH WOLFHOUND PUPPIES 4746331, 474-17SS_____ dttU tiAiEkb kitten*, froo, 2 mo. I TSKl, trained. WS-lift. ________ LABRADOR RETRIEVER, Female, oM.' 'Wirrh^'lhU* wor'.'viel1 RICK ..YOUR OWN dnotod. No paper.. S7S. 4I2-44U.. | %Xth!!!ZL.!Sy ifS* LABRADOR pop, IIS, fomolo. MINIATURE FEMALE DACHS-hund, I month., pood homo pot, paper, and ribbons, ISO. Call Chtck our dial on — SWISS COLONY LUXURY TRAILER! FROLIC CAMPERS* * * AN° rtiUCK SKAMPER FOLD-DOWN CAMPERS IS n 23 on display at — Jacobson Trailer Salts 13*A1 HAS Williams Lako Rd. OR S-ttH JOHNSON'S TRAILER SUPPLIES DEAlSRW:** 14; TROTWOOD WAG-N-MASTERS----- YEaVEl TRAileR, good con-B tell Wtrado for Pord troctor , M7617I Orchards, of Fonlw BUSHEL CRATES 13c TO SOc. Apple Valley, MM Hummer Lako, SVb f oast of Ortonylllo, 627-3M1. ihr;-Mn»^ i Is No. S In motor Price* start at to.175, « 1 AND ALL HAVE MODERN DECOR Early Amor Icon ■ Mediterranean CAMBRIOoi DELTA LIBERTY . MONARCH « 21-1143. • x mHoMMOYte, pood condition, sat uS on lot, unfurnished. 431-1341. o S r trio mprh Countryside LI K p M'. MQBILB HO/ shape, 1st SUM. 4W2 Drayton Delivery errem Northern property. 1x4 .LaNDCRU tSBR,* cl shed. Cranberry Lake; > x so CAMBRIDGE, IMS, all dltlonlnp, skirted and otMr a: 36 Sparrow Hill, Villas* Groan Batatas, Petit. S73-M14. ' H lf O ACAJDEMY^ .BRAND riFT, Oil heal electric HOUSE TRAILER , oos Move with oven, ralrlgori hunting TIZZY By Kttt Otann SslNl W V / WtHttd CEn-Trtcfcs 1*1 TOP $ PAID All Cadillacs, Buick Electro 225s, Olds 98s, Pontiacs ond anything sharp With air con- 35' ALCART, SELL or trods, | SHOW). I I»3S PALACE RANCH HOME. S1S00. Nothing doing, Renfrew! The minute we start being frank with each other you’ll be tolling me all my faults!” WILSON CRISSMAN CADILLAC 1130 N. Woodwsrd _Ml 6-1 MO ink"CowTlrEcts ~~10l4 um -»m PETJUNSTOmB - TRUCKS, froo tow anytime. PS 3-S666. iijjUNK SOR SOME Fsrelga Cars VW'S 13 rtlnp at SIM, AUTOBAHN 1743 S, TolMroph Pi MSS 1MB VW, S,6M nil. 1 owner, sharp SM66M, ottsr 6 p,m. C&r NaW and IliM Can 1,700. PE SiR hUNI bugUy ALWAYS BUYINO JUNK CAR! tcron, we tow, 1736600, JuNk I, 1, l junk core. FrieTlow Used Auto-Truck Parts IteTVw l-DOOir-SE6an7 4-speed now ear warranty, S1SM. AUTOBAHN US. Tploernph_PS 0-6811 New and Used Cars 104 DEMOS ! have o fine selection or 1060 i Company Demonstrators tor Inspection ond appro Caprices, I m p o I a a, Clw FORD no Engine, compltt TEMPEST MALAMUTE yrt„ or Lovable Pomelo. Spoyad. ARIENS AND TORO snowblowers on Oloplay. Layaway nowl Tom's Hardware, ooT.Orchord Lake Ave. FES-3614. STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. 3771 HighlandI (Mft) x 6SS0660 FOR h'uNTINQ 'trips, bostofter, FIBERGLAS thtlCK S3* BERNARD PUPPIES, AKC. STUD SERVICE, AKC regl.tsrcd CHAIN SAWS NEW MCCULLOCH CHAIN SAWS PRICEDAS LOW AS $119.95 RECONDITIONED MCCULLOCH CHAIN SAWS PRICED AS -------- AS S7S. KING BROS. 373-0736 Pontiac Rd. ot Opdyke polio TRACTORS, Parmoli, Chalmers, trailers, loaders. Mi Ferguson on rubber, Model 1 •II In vary good condition, p to stllo 70S Cltrktlon Rd., Orldn _______ FORD 7-N TRACTOR, blade, disci, 2 _______________________________ (im M7-J0S3. *T.t..BERNARDS,. AKC, twtetendlng FALL CLEARANCE SALE 1MF3135 tractor. Landieoporo IsIFfilfVrictor. Landscopom ipoclal DEMONSTRATORS Inquire tit* Dixie Hwy„ Apt. 3. STARTED BEADLE ■ months old SSS, After 6 p.m, I3M6W.______ SAMOYBD PUPATES, PURE brad W ^ 7 dw 335-5259 XT POODLE GROOMING S3 31S-63& ANTIQUE AUCTION, aim, Rrnod glass mb Ion, battles, _ •S3!ln?i.p,«^r« MM Flint, MldilHn, corner ot Hill and Torroy Rd. I* ml. W. of U.I. S3 Expressway on Hill Rd. Proprietor A. Schindler. Auctioneer, Charlie Smelter. B fc B AUCTION ■VERY SUNMY ........1:00 P.M a. WE BUY - SELL - TRADE ^NSIOiNMENtX WELCOME PRlbAY, Dot. 10 it 1 p.m. Solllm the balance of the Prod F. Slovene homo furnishings. Located of 11 N. . Wtehlngton St., Oxford. Consisting of glotsworo,. linen., boddlng, j droplesf tobies, etc. Frea r Steveni, Pro tvrAMctlw ^o'sSgw^Mt QUIPMENT. is h.p. tractor an mowora. Snow throweri, snow blades. 7 h.p. recoil tractor and mowers. PONTIAC PARM AND TRACTOR Cy or Dove Loekhard HI South Woodward PE 6-0661 ________FE 6-1462 bAVIS MAbHlMiAV, your HoiiMlito ■ Chain Sow, "Dealer'', John Doora and Now Idea parte r ORTONVILLE, NA 7-3»l. HAY BAILER soi-awo Mtor I WANTED! 3.BOTTOM Plow, ^owtr Tom's. PE £■ illy Traval Coach, Inc. Holly, Holly_MB 64771 EMADi" S' WCkUF "«dnAr. ond lock, for 3130, SlMiNl. hunters spifiAU'W’IniMigdo, travel trailer, good condlnon sleeps 6, mirrors and Room hitch 2032 Klnmount, off JosTyn. 0730. kibhUbHT TRAVEL frollar wlih odd-o-room and bottle got cooking, sits. t7sme.__________ HAVE YOU siEN THE ALL NEW OMEGA Motorhome Chevy “ loorlnt ___duel-ree completely MiPcontafnot • tv with Doge chasei iso cu. in engine. Only at Holly Travel Coach, Inc, 1SS10 (tally Rd., Holly-MB 44771 Opdn Dolly and Sundays ynSjs«m •Wof" wombs, all mr:, m-talnod, Indian If*, ataopo 6, 31713 Island 34', 1041, 1 leaps «, loodoc with extras, 311,700, Travce, 1162 27', WMS, pick up umpon, top pore and Were, 335-1002._ McClellan Traval Trailers silo Highland Rood (M-91) PHONE 474-3163 Close Out on '69 Models • Woof Wind • WOOd Lake , - :SH CAMPER Juki a taw loft to choooa froml SELF-CONTAINED FORD CAiU^lk, IR ‘ltlon, now DETROITER AMERICAN SUNRISE PARK KROPF Double Wktao, Expandd Cuttam built to your oral Pros Delivery and Selin Within 3M Miles AT SOB HUTCHINSON MOBILE HOME SALES 4301 DIXIE HWY. 673-1202 DRAYTON PLAINS IF? Srvor: Ceil si _ Twill wiTYbUi— ANNUAL CLEARANCE BvwuTto'» ROYAL—OR—REGAL Anderson's Best Buys Newt 90cc Honda ... .$339 New I CB 350 Honda*. .$695 Newl Honda 50 .....$239 Newl Honda Mini ....$268 Newl 650cc BSA ... .$1095 Newl BSA Enduro ... .$850 New 650cc Triumph $1095 Newl 750 cc Norton $1195 Newl 250ce Ducatti . $495 MANY MANY MORE! 300 CYCLES IN STOCK CLEARANCE 1969 Boats, Motors, Trailers COHO SPECIALS Got torn* |utt right for Coho Id' now Olum. boat .....$340 id* Owontp 40 h.p. Woitbondp tralltr .............1795 If* Glaitron Tri-Hull, 60 h.D. Johnson, traitor ......$1395 WINTER STORAGE Cruise Out, Inc. 63 E. Walton . ....PE 34402 Dally 74) lot. 1-3i Closed Sun. CLOSE-OUT 1969 CHRYSLER A JOHNSON MOTORS DUO A GLASSPAR BOATS Wlntor boat A motor storage YOUNG'S MARINA Open dolly 7 til 4 —Sunday 10 to 4 6010 Dixie Hwy. on Loon Lake troytan Plolno 0114-06 ■bit SALE, 12* aluminum toot. 10 horse Mercury motor, lilt ok A FALL clearance ON MOTORCYCLES _____4734364 MW!________I „Jl'AYH'R I Vofkewooen. 632-1374._____ PLYMOUTH, 426 WEDGE, com, toko manifold, and comp left not Stage 2, 373 or bast otter. Paul. M jntrH, low mljoago. 4-2100, attar 4 p.m. // JEROME ' CADILLAC CO. 171 I, leglnow It. PE A7011 1110 CHEVY, Llki'hEW chroma, ^sswtr>'/aa $m 1 '•■ CORVETTE, EltaiNl n-oode body; WOO. 4762100 wagons, with ol Fully e condltloi This Is ot eubetontloT savings. IBB THEM TODAY AT matthews-hargreaves 631 Oakland Ave, ...Pontiac "17R5ffir^»lSWN6A,L* Waterford Standard Auto 3400 UlMbath m,M. dt1«H004 0 1fd2 BUICK. BEST OFFER. _ d73»dl74 IWBUldk. tott offtr. d7^4$74. 19d3 BUICK Bptclal, $400. 4734034 BUICK WILDCAT, dtop, double power, i luded. 625-3617. HtW. M». Coll 333-7276. 1164 BUICK IKYLARK TURBO HYDROMATIC, ................. New end Used Trucks 103 3, 1*61 FORD ECONOLINES, 1, Hi Ford >0011011110, Indoponden business selling service vohlcloi oil must go, supervene, heavy duly package, auto, oxc. condition. Coll . 273-3030 or 271-3020 batwson 1:30 i "* TO *“■ " CHEVROLET WAQON, Blade i condition. Call i42-12t1. AUDETTE PONTIAC TOT £hEVy IMPALX Slot Io n •. automatic, radio, hooter, whltawall tiros, power steering and brokos. Pull price 3113. 1273 W. Huron, <42-2041. Pooler. IW-CHiYV^lLlkf rum good, 3H0. PB M771 1J«3 CHBVY if, i floor, d stick, oxeollont ( awv__ liM CHtVV II, Ilka now, MU. ____ Interior, 333 Wildcat englns, V4 1764 CHIVY IMPALA, V? radio, hooter, tiiui tixa now wh" horn cor in mint condll.. SPECIAL $1295 BILL FOX CHEVY shepe^uii. 34A44N.' betoro I ojn. 11^ CHEVY, % TON, pickup, 1760 FORD PAitEL Truck, by the Edison Tosmshlp Fire Dept. " 620-1760 ter Intarmotion. 1965 Buick LaSabra 400 6door, automatic, power steering and brakes. Ohs owner. $988 PE 61002 ____BenolH 175cc Brldgoet Benolll 1964 INTERNATIONAL Scout, 4 wheel drive 31015 GRIMALDI CAR CO. i Oakland Avo._PE 8-1621 MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH ^Wd^iSK'iSISi: S ta ton OMC. ond ce cob. vi ins; heavy duty, host offer. 611-1473. 1166 P»RDJ B< Suburban Olds 860 S. Woodward Birmingham Ml 7-5111 reverse wheats. (371 047-4344. !W w. Maple Rd. Tr MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH-tap, tlnhShmuTldSary p**" wlndr— - t-i-j- AUDETTE PONTIAC gw, em*. m ting vlmi a. Call mm. AUDETTE PONTIAC USD W. Mapl* Rd. Tray 67638Mtaiwo*i6iwd’o p.m. field, Drayton Plaint. 4736611. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 1166 CHEW Impels Hardtop, with va radio- hooter, automatic, power stoering, brake*, tasytHM motollto tout with matahin) Mortar. McAullft* spoclal Only — 3I0M. Pull PrlCO. P.S. We've Moved! w Mil* N. of Miracle Min ■jiff ' Pin i tap. Factory air. mil**. Coll 6434331. AUDETTE PONTIAC SPECIALISTS IN AUTO INSURANCE Homtownor* Insurance Lew Ratio — Term* Insuring Pontiac (MM ifll ANDERSON 4 ASSOCIATES PE 64133 truck foot $199 and Up 4 H.P. AOOla MINI-BIKE PE 36667______________ 1163 RUpP S HORSE mlnl-illk*. Mt- WINNEBAGO 'u,ll,8'WWJSra: 0-4127 Mfllor Rd,, w*«t of Flint Purnituro - opplloncoe 1 Plawt>-Tre>!4lirub« 81«A BLUB IPRUCa. M^GAIN IALE MtdliG M W&jfmiF APACHE If Vou Evtr w#otid A auallty Camper* Fully WniMiTwr ONLY i MESSA III SAVE HUNDREDS IVAN'S EQUIPMENT «M7. Dixit Hwy. pen Mon.-Prl. from 7 e.m.6 p.iffT Saturdays 'III 3 p.m. ABiSrti’1r~£WP traitor" Roy, Taur-o-Hom* and I nmr tndTnetaUed r*w*™^ Hitahoe sold F. e'howland service 13 DlXtO Hwy. OR 3-1433 —dKIH'PSK ---------- SPORT TRAILER, OEM AND CORSAIR TRAVEL TRAILERS Coraalr ond Oom pickup compere. Ellsworth Tralltr Solas 3177 Dlxlo Hwy. 323-6601 AIHSTREAM r^ getolii LOWRY CAMPER SALES 1313 I. Hospital Rd, Union t-iko J EM 3-3681 qpon only on WNkondi ^ Turoftar Nov, l. Mobile Names ______________ 19 1 New From Holiv Park to Sinleh t^g^roo1 Stoilvojy’ wlfliln Me MIIOO. Will trad* for moet 1136) hond* ifb CC Oraom, iieo. hm' harlby sportsteR, 1 iebRGLASr“fKI"""fcotf, Motwf, jmotar,_ iomptoto 1 tfOJitr m. ,»3-ii7(, ......... VA AND FAA APPROVED W* otter all rotlnoe, privet* pilot through to olrllno tror ' 01M Highland Oakland Pontiac 1 Pontiac MIc stHmI Wnnted Cnrs-Tracks EXTRA Dollars fold FOR THAT EXTRA Shorp Car Tl4l^uWBUOOY^SihSir 602-1374. il42_fRfUMPtrtR4 LUCKY AUTO otter? HONDA 37 I— Cosh, or toko over nor mo. 3266030. / SHte 1W 'iN'TXwAiki, tilCtotaWta, 4 moo. oM. MW. PB 143W. Pontiac Press Want Work Wondsrs. fla Dud# tralltr, *p##d prop, akll* and axtraio $400, Call after 5. lli-3$45, _ ’ v A Ftw Boats Left for Closa-Outl lAVh Shall Lok* With 13 H.P, More, power trim, fondiim traitor, tall cehves ond modrine cover, 31313. 13' Lereon with 4o H.P. Bvlnrudo, tall convoe anil trailer. MM. - ue* It for Winter too ... A ver-etll* emphlbloui Drive Your Atfox right' Into w* Mtntuvor with eat*. MERCURYS^'-CHRYSLEn OUTBOARD MOTORS CLIFF DREYER'S MARINE DIVISION Holly Rd., Holly Ml 36771 BOAT STORAGE RIA60NABLB 2724207 Corvettes, OTO’e, Firebird* and Mi't. ( "Chtck th* reel.^then got Ih* boot" Averill's PE 24172 2022 Dixie ,*E 640H Mansfield AUTOf SALES 300 (harp Cadillacs. Pontiac, Old- end Bulckl for out-of-etet* market Too dollar eetd, MANSFIELD AUTO SALES 11N I 1965 MG "I1M" 2362 GRIMALDI CAR CO. 100 Oakland Avo. PE 2-142) [(is vw sAuabb bAck, moo Before 1 p.m, 622-7130. 1133 VW, iX4(trCIMf~6ndition 3344133. ______ ’ 1136 VW, IN GOOD condition, 1715. 672-1731. ~TRAF3>blYAfi6N^iciAL-- 1966 FIAT Station Wagon, 3313 v GRIMALDI CAR, CO. v ' p!s w*'vt Moved! W Mile N. of Mlroclo Milo 1145 3. Telegraph Ed. PB 3-4)01 iferpWtaWljiw etiiion wegon, MrpM jjondTiion Mil or bait attar. 134- McAULlI 1063 FIAT i||K fop DOLLAR PAID” GLENN'S FOR "CLEAN" USED CARS 1 SIATA SPRING RQADSTER. right yellow with block IntorTor. lira wheel*, whltowoll rodltl ply NM AUDETTE PONTIAC I W. Maple Rd. Tray IMS euick skylork, 2 door hard Dark brawn With black ylltvl Air. 11,0M mlloo. Coil oom*. AUDETTE PONTIAC 1968 BUICK ELECTRA 225 24oor hardtop. Silver finish with black Interior. Power steering ond brake*, factory air condition, AM PM radio. A rool SHARP CAR I Pull prlc* 32022. FISCHER BUICK SIS I. Woodward Birmingham ____________647-1600 tin Buick Skylark, 4 door. Dork green with light green root. 21.000 COll 642-32*1. AUDETTE PONTIAC IMP W. Maple Rd. _ _ Tray i960 ELECTRA 225 LIMITED 4-door hardtop. Full pow#r. factory •Ir condition# AM FM *t#r#o. SHARP I A cautious buyer delight. Full prlco $339$. • FISCHER BUICK '' SIS I. Woodward Birmingham ' 6424600 1161 BUICK 2 door hardtop, silver bill* Interior. Pull power. Air. 24.000 milot. Coll 642-3289. STE PONTIAC ____________Rd. Tray 1762 BUICK Rlvlor* With bdwtltul matador red with white cordovan JOHN McAULIFFE FORD top, tall power, i.ooo actual mlloe. P.S. We;ve Movedl ,1243iw4i,fl'yhMidi 1761 fuick Le Sabre, low ml tenge. fMlWLtAC,' 4 DOOR "beVTC . runt good 371. 332-2340. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 1164 CADILLAC Coup*, OoVlIlt with lull power, and f conditioning, run* Ilk* b ilk* b mliitota McAuiift* only SMI tall prlc*. ' P.S. Wi've Moved! Vh Mil* N, Of MlrocM MHO 1343 3, Telegraph Rd. PE 16101 ■% rawer, > dr. tlSM, PE 36240. 1236 BEL AIR Chevrolet, good condT-lion, 301-1412, 2123 Wollmeloy, Lek* Orion, corner of Weldon ond i76e* bH«vR6L»T IMPaU, con-vertlble, rad, dxe. condition, 374-2533 otter I. If47 CHEVY CAPRldi. 44oor air, doubl* power, tilt udwol, ox-col lent, tiwb. Coll 3W43M. 1167 CHIVY Moor, 3 cylinder, eutomettc, radio, oxc. condition, Mil. 473-1311, itranohon. ------Al HAN0UTE — Ctwvrolet On M24 in Lake Orion 693-8344 l15 CkHYY IMPALA 4 door hardtop, Power eteorlna ond brekoo, automatic, now. fiqorglat* lira*, vinyl tap, low rnllMI*, 363- rdiep iik tor 1161 CAMAlto, 127, outomotlc, power steering, maroon, vinyl tap, now llrti, 25,ooo mTiim, coil SSS41M betoro 3 (fid 3334041 Otter 5:20. flM IMPALA 2 66oA Kerdtop. Custom. Yellow with black vinyl top. 11,000 mllte. Cell 642-12M. AUDETTE PONTIAC ii50 w. Mepit Rd.__Troy DEMOS mlleago. This » s once • yeer chance to buy in exceptlonol car et substantial loving*. , see THOM TODAY AT MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES 331 Oakland Ave, / 1 PonUoo P5R SALE 1163_Cory*ite «ony*nlbio, 1161 OdliVhTTE, 627, 2 tOPL.J Htf iHlV^Ij'iipeetl' iOMT^ Sovs SM o? Mike Savoie Chevy 1900 W. Maple Ml 4-2735 PutA Pfass Work - Profitably. D—14 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1069 For Wont Ad* blot 334-4981 Now wwMM Ctr* ;; 104 iWW Conreit* 350, 3 top,, low milt: $4495 1967 Catalina hardtop, doubt* po* "W"M$1795 1967 Tempest I-dr., hordtop. I. I oorlru^vln^op. oh VAN CAMP CHIVROl.IT On N. Milford Rd. iw and Used Care a FORD FAIRLANB, II jr ............ *74-005*. Alklng MI-4412. imi p6rO. v* obob tlo, 1115, euto. 451-1314. 1943 FALCON PDgFlSipSr tx-client condition, $195. Buy her*. P«y here. AAorvol Motors 251 OifctWWd f 1 8-4019, 106 New and Deed Care ; IQOjNew and^lh^d fan eon-IMt PAIR LAME soot 0.000 octuot ir or milts, S door hordtoft oktovor T » TT tt t with| poymontt. Phono FI 4-3*?*. . \A/ U Vy EPOSSESSION. Sontry ACMPtOhCO V V 1 1 A 1 spJvrsLS'iiWfc ** MUSTANG sport* root, radio, "ML 7]“ *< hooter, power tteortag. 01c. Toke| ww "to*t-overpayment*. 8*40 octuot nr MARMADUKE By Anderson and Learning BUY A LEFTOVER ’00 "STAN" THI MAN C JOHN McAUlJFFi FORD , ,N0 fORO rAl^^y^jsSO Oohlond Avo, ...... _____mttaiti • buck Interior. V-8. automatic, power steer clearance special at only HIM * P.S. We've Moved! of Mlrocl* Milo Tom Rademacher Chevy-Olds On US 10 at M-15 Clorkston__MA 5-5071 tOOO CHlVY KINGSWOOD EOtoltl itotlon wogon, *lr. Mw ."Jlloogo, take ouor oovmanta. 1-432-7172. 1*4* CHEVELLE t door hordtop. 35< cu. In, * anted. Vl'wlml. 447-2*31. Ha 6iRmiR VI automatic, cylinder, automatic, AUTOBAHN 3 S TolWOPh PE *~*H11 m •LAtk GALAX IE. 3 dH Pay h#m, Marvel Motors, Oakland. FE 1-4079._ 1947 JEEPSTER. 3 speed. with wheel driva. deluxe tap, $1595. AUTOBAHN IMS S. Tolpgroph __FE HWI ollvor groy. Mock vinyl top. sooo “ j966 |.jnco|n > cylinder, ollck. SMS. AUTOBAHN 65 >. TaUgraab Ft 1-4531 1970 OLDS I hardtop, good condition (358 335- |J,‘ I ford 3*04 Wagon"&*iaxi*~ioo. power otoorlng. outo., 1 owner, *041035 one, condition. Ml AMIS. 11004 FORD GALAXIE. 613-035? offer MUSTANG otoorlng, low mil****, *(2- on. | 1966 Chrysler Newport t*** mustang convertible Adoor sodon. Light bgigt with [automatic. with -■- * Hi motchlng Interior. V-I automatic, radio, hooter **“■ — brokoa. Full i with motchlng Interior, \ outomotlc, radio, hooter, po otoorlng, broket and wind! Factory olr condition. All this 1005 FORD 0. root good ahope, a N. I only *• _ ^TQQR 100} FORD GALAXIE SOS, Moor 1 vj v_/\_J MslSS BIRMINGHAM i SAVE. ■WSKS AUTOBAHN $1195 BIRMINGHAMl CHRYSIER-PLYMOUTH tioo MopM Rd. Tray. Mh 642-7000 CHRYSitR NEW YORKER, door, power brakes, otoorlng, wl dews. 0 way power seats,oTr co dltlonlng, roar window dotrooN one, condition. VMS. M2-1M4. FE 1-4331 39,000 actual Mue. utM.coii FOR SALE: INS MustMO, 4 op lor Information cell UM43I, HAHN cHY^sr.-f®UTH 6673 Dixie Hwy. Mrfv KESSLER'S ’fiwii MUSTANG FASTtACKp blue, 3 spatd, AM-FM_____ ffl YUrD, $75, taka o va payments, 3344460. 1947 GTA — FASTBACK Mustang 394 - spacial custom job. 1945 For V-8 Italian wagon, 299, with aufc Irons. $495. FE 4-5417. top. and Intarlor, v-8, heater, power steering, brakes truly on* In g million, dr-------- special only SI7N full prlco. P.S. We've Moved! ti Mil* N. of Miracle Mlk S. Telegraph Rd. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD iYtii K^H5«laf.cs».« ell vlnyl .lnlerler. V4,_radio. la ______642-7000 T*(1 MERCURY. Vary transportation, SMS. Alio 4 wheel,; FE <-9194. i*42 COMET,' cSrome St 75. 393-9313 19M MBRCURY MONTEREY, steering, power brakes, S500. WTC 1406. 1945 COMET CALIENTE 2-door hardtop, V-8, stick, radio, hsatar, $450 or best offer 852-1494._ m6 MERCURY, PARK Lane, power steering and brakas, black Vinyl 1943 OLDSMOBILE 98a $495. FE 4-0189. 1944 OLDSMOBILE F steering and brakas, 674-2810. 1944 OLDS 91 4 power, factory whitewall tires. 3875 W. Huron, I hardtop, full radio, haator, II price $495. r. 482-2041. 1944 DODGE DART, 4 door, sedan, 6 cylinder, ^MrtomatlC, with power ’autobahn 5705 Tolpgroph FE 1-4531 1967 DODGE Monoco "900' hardtop, > door with low mlteago. full power, olr con-dltionlna. excellent condition, solo priced at only $1,895 1965 FORD GALAXIE "SO" with Vt outomotlc, power •taarlnnl brakes, a groat fondly **'■ $695 TOWN & COUNTRY^ ' CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH ROCHESTER 1001 N. Main St. ______*51-4220 1900 DODGE CORONET, RT M, 4 ' double bowor, new tlraa, ■ OUOR 003030. CORONET OVER 50 SHARP CARS LARGEST MOFAR INVRNTORY PONTIAC DICK CANAANS Motor City Dodge JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 1948 FORD Galaxie 500 Hardtopi dove top. v-8, radio, powtr steering. brakes, factory air condoning, Claartnca Special only P.S. We've Moved I Vk Mila N. of Mlrado Mila IMS S. TdtadradffRd, FE SMIOI JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 1900 FALCON 1 door wHh beaut metallic lima goid ftnloh 'y blade cordova top, * eyl automatic. rSdio, .hgnaf'AllgiaiRgi opoclal at only sl«N lull P.S. Wa'VE Moved! Vi Mil# N. ot Mlrado Milt ----- jj-g 1966 Olds Toronado Loaded with all tha extras Including factory air conditioning, 1 to choooo tram, ~;$AVE Suburban Olds 860 S. Woodward | Birmingham MI7-51I^ 1966 OLDS 442 Glooming blue flnloh, block Interior, radio and haatar, radllna tiros, factory 4 opted. Sura It taitj and MOW! "Hbllo Woodward"I Sea this on* before you buy cor you mo^ belaying hundreds too much. DET A "STAN" THE MAN DEAL STAN ELLIS OLDS 550 Oakland Av. FE 34101 $3293. MERRY OLDS SIS N. Main St. OVER 50 SHARP CARS LARGEST MOFAR INVENTORY PONTIAC DICK CANAANS Motor City > Dodge IS Oakland Avo. S3I-431 1*9 LOADEb TORONADO, [NexttoOur New Cars Turnerized Used Cars Are Best!! * 1965 Mustang Economy engine. Radio, heater whit* wall tlras. Priced to tall at $585 1966 Country Squire root rack. Our low low prlci $988 1966 Bonneville Hardtop. Air ‘We sent him to an obedience school and he organized their first campus riot! ’* JOHN MCAULIFFE FORD PMMlMMI Interior, McAullffe Special Only—SI4M, lull price. P.S. We've Moved! . ofMIrecleMlle ail IU. FE YOUR vw CENTER 70 to Choose From —All Colors— -All Reconditioned— ^ Autobahn Motor* Inc. Authorliad VW D**l*r Vk Mil* North of Mlraclt Mil* 17*3 S. f«1«grapn .Ft S-4531 19M MUSTANG GT, IlmlfM pro-duction, 438, ran air, 4 spaed, many options, muscle parts, call New and Used Car* 106 New and Used Can 104 1968-1969 Luxury Sedan Both In «xc*(l*nt condition, with lull power end *1, conditioning. 1968 _______$2895 1969 .... .$379,5 Boh Borst lincoln-Mercury Sales iwe w. mm re., Tray mi «-smo MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH $100 UNDER . DEALER COST! 1969 CHRYSLERS 1969 PLYM0UTHS ALL NEW1 IS to chooio from, tome with olr. *77 M-M, L»kd Orion, *91-13*1 BEEN BANKRUPT? Naad a or? Want to ‘ _W»Jo, (daaler), 482*2041 choose from. Call 1966 Ambassador Wagon $885 kmbassador \ war equipped, trantmltsion. Priced at only $785 1968 Torino Fasthack GT "190" engln*, 4 speed. R heater, wlslt* wall tires. TUR priced at $1995 1968 Ford Fairlane equipped, radio, heater. Our ton every day TURNER PRICE. , $1595 THUNDER BIRDS '64 Thru '69s Many to choose from. Soma have air. All bava power. 8x,mp,*: 1966 T-Bird Powtr, automatic, radle ant heater. Full price A-l SPECIALS 1967 GMC Camper Special $3195 19*8 PONTIAC . Catolina Hardtop loor with powtr (taarlng, aka*. VI, automatic, burgun-’ Itntih, blade Interior, only $2295 1968 FORD Fairlane GT Torino . power altering, brakes, buckait' console. $2395 ' 1965 COMET Colonite Hardtop Meer with yi, 4 spaed, rad with black vinyl top. Mock Interior, . on|y ’ — $1095 . '5988 CHEVY ■ Impalo Hardtop v 4-door with power steering. $795 1967 CHEVY Impala Hardtop v with V-l, automatic, i $1495- 1967 FORD issenger Wt Squire, with V Idio, heater, oh $1795 1967 FORD 9 Passenger Wogon 1968 FORD XL Convertible ’ with V-t, automatic, nowoi windows, power steering brakes, green with * black top $2395 1985 FORD 4 door with Vi, automatlai, powoi steering, blue with bid* In-terlor, only $895 1969 FORD ' Fairlane 500 Ranchero steering, brake*, with matching Inftrl oner at now car warranty. $2695 FLANNERY FORD On US 10 (Dixie Hwy.) I ^VMTERFORD- 1966 Olds 98 Luxury Sedan Full power, factory tlr condition, t way power, vinyl top. Full prlco $1595 Suburban Olds 860 S. Woodward Birmingham |MI 7-5111 JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 1M« OLDS 'll" LS 4 door hardtop, beautiful matallc burgundy with black, cordovan top, Tull p • r. qondlt|onln^. jfflhft f guest and MMulitt* 1I4S S. elol poly *1,111. Full prJca. P.srWe'vt Movei ' AUDETTE PONTIAC f. Maple Rd. Trey INI CATALINA' COUFE. Vallow i black roof. Air. Call «4bim*. AUDETTE PONTIAC Tray jow and Used Cers OVER SO SHARP CARS LAEGESt ^{^p^NVENTORY DICK'CANAANS Motor) City . Dodge UM, New and 1M Ctf* IMP PONTIAC 104 cAtalina, TUROUOISE Powar windows, new lire.,t Coil 443-33M. 131 Thorp*. 1 1**3 PONTIAC, powtr TloorTng and ' automatic. *300. *73-3432, S pan. 1**0 EXECUTIVE 4 DOOR, Vardaro groan. 13,000 mlltl. Air. Call *41- AUDETTE PONTIAC 30 W. Maple Rd. _______. . Tray *n, Factory olr. con 442-3 AUDETTE PONTIAC i W. ElapH Rd. Trc I f6n'TIAC OTO. 3 ipaad till *r ira shift. Full power. Many « as. Mult toll. 3*3-0475, alter ,m. _ • CATALItlA * PAtSENGB tlor -----—1 U| ilhi AUDETTE PONTIAC ,. Mapla Rd. Troy 1H0 CAfALINA, StilllNO, New ond Used Core 106 1#43 PLYMOUTH fUHY f p«***nger w,^, good Mlchtlln flratp $275. 1966 PONTIAC TEMPEST. 2 door* 4 Stick. 48,888 miles. 8658. Com-merce TewnshlUr 3634M9. 2**4 PLYMOUTH 2 DR. hardtop, *550. can ba toon at. 24 Nawbarry. 1M4 PONTIAC 2 door, hardtopT^i 1 apaad transmission, radio, boater, ] excel lent condition, (1*3. NORTHWEST AUTO SALES 288 pixie Hwy. FE I-2S24 “JOHN McAULIFFE FORD , IN* FONTIAC Cdtallna con-vertlblo, with beautiful matador : rod with blMk interior and top. 1 Full powtr, and all tha eqodleo, save plenty on this ana, McAullffe Special Only 41441, Full Price. P.S. Wb'vb Moved! ^ v* Mile N. of Miracle Mile 1845 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 5*4181 1966 PONTIAC EXECUTIVE* 2 door 7 hardtop* full power, one owner* 1 excellent. 625-5508, or 363*1271 esk for Kon, | 1**4 PONTIAC TlMPiST, 4 cylinder, stick, with radio, (7*3. AUTOBAHN 1 1745 S. Telegraph FE 4-4531 , | IMS PLYMOUTH BARRACUDA,"full sport* package, *734070. IMS PLYMOUTH FURY Station Wagon. Whitt with rad vinyl In-- terlor. VS, automatic, p a w or (taarlng and brakes, radio, haatar and wnttwall tlraa. Full price *4*5. 3275 w. Huron, *42-2011, Daater. IMS PLYMOUTH FURY 1 2-door. Chaatnut color with matching Interior. Automatic, powar ttearing and brakaa. radio, haatar. Full nrlca *5*5. 327S W. Huron. «43-24iR »Njirlne. ' disc, ^brakw, ewlo* Irenimliwen, eey^r. f )*** FONTIAC FACT0RY..0H|tJij SfiSr CONDITIONING. C*ll WWW. ,, AUDETTE PONTIAC 11511 w. Mepl* Rd. .Jffl JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 1*44 RAMBLER Amb4.lldor. ®hrSwMai«m special. Only 1777"lull price. P.S. We've Moved! AUDETTE PONTIAC m'FZEEI!™"*^HIB 1150 w; Mapla Rd.__Troy. S3 the dependable IN* GR AND MIX. Oroon With I USED CARS" groon top. Full powar and factory. Pontiac Sir. Attornoy'a cor. Coll *42-521*. ruiniuu AUDETTE PONTIAC Tray 1*50 W. Mopl* Rd 1*4*, LaMAN* 2 ' OOOR. MNitog. Green with Mack top. Call *42-32**. AUDETTE PONTIAC 1IS0 W. Mtpte Rd. _Troy RUSS JOHNSON Si Call *42020*. —AUDETTI-RONTIAC---------- ISO W. Maple Rd. ______Troy I Ml BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE. Slivor blue with black top. 2*,ooo mllao. Call (42-320*. AUDETTE PONTIAC 1130 W. Mapl* Rd. Troy POtlTIAC BONNEVILLE con-•tlble, now tlraa, sterao tape :k, many olhar extras. 02250. PONTIAC TEMPEST On M-24 Lake Orion MY 3-6266 GRAND PRIX 2 door " 1*40 FIREBIRD CONVERTIBLE 1*40 TEMPEST, It* with black Intarlor. 22.000 os. Call *42-322*. AUDETTE PONTIAC NO FIREBIRD. 4 SPEED, V roof. 21,000 milts. Coll *42-320*. AUDETTE PONTIAC ISO W: Mapte Rd. 1 M0 CATALINA 2 door hardl White with Mack vlnyi top. , 22,000 mlloo. Coll 442-32**. - AUDETTE PONTIAC block vinyl root. Factory "tlr.eompony-porr-G*IM42^2l*--- AUDETTE PONTIAC 1*50 w. Mopl* Rd. - Tray IN* CATALINA 4-DOOR hordtop. Dark blue, blue vinyl top. Factory tlr. Call 442-32**. AUDETTE PONTIAC 1050 W. Mtpl* Rd. Troy 1*4* CATALINA 2-DOOR hardtop 'with factory air, and full power, T4WB mlim. «2iBJ. ciili 23WN1. 1*** Gr«nd Frlx ........ *A*j| 1966 Bonneville * dr.......I12M IMS Chavy Biscoyne ..........17*3 IMS Mercury 4 dr.............si*s 1M2 Mercury convertible .. . *1*5 1M2 Ford convortlblo...... *1*5 KEEG0 PONTIAC SALES KBEOO HARBOR *32-3400 1M* GTO CONVERTIBLE. 4 tPMd. Powtr steering and brakaa. Judge identification. Call *82-3289. AUDETTE PONTIAC uso W. Maple Rd. Trey 1M* BONNEVILLE, AIR, cruiiil control, Cordova top, power disc, brakas, powar ttearing, *000 ml., FR 3-7055 or 412-77*4. Standard Auto M2 Oakland Avo. FE 2-40)1 BEEtTBANKRUPT? Need • COT* want to rooitobllih your ctaoltf 100‘s to chooio from. Coll Mr. Al idoalor), <0MM1. ' This Week Specialsl 1969“ JAVELIN 2-door hardtop, V-0. ^oulomotlc, radio. Factory air condition. Still In warranty. -$2795 1969 AMX 3*0 V-0, Go-Pack ,4-ltTtM BONNEVILLE. 4 door boat radtonabte otter, 3*1-340*. CATALINA 2 door IwrdtM. Ith gold vinyl mot. 22,000 i Oil *42-32**. AUDETTE PONTIAC r. 20.000 mild. Call 442-320*. AUDETTE PONTIAC i W. Matte Rd. _________Tray Vardaro groon with Mack vinyl Interlnr. 12,000 mlloo. Call *42-320*. AUDETTE PONTIAC ISO W. Mopl* Rd, Troy 300 BONNEVILLE COUFE. Goid wnh br«k vinyl MA^actory atr. Call *42-320*.________---_ J AUDETTE PONTIAC . _____ Air, crultt control. Company -*rdf, -Call- 642-3389. -----AUDETTPefiDHTTAC-------- 1IS0 W. Mania Ry. Troy 1M* GRANDPRIX .Champagne color. Factory air. Sliding sunroof. Damo. Call 442-33**. AUDETTE PONTIAC 1850 W. Mapla Rd.________Troy 1969 .BONNEVILLE 4-DOOR hardtop. Dark brown with whlta vinyl Inferior. Factory air, power windows. Call 642-3289. AUDETTE PONTIAC nso W. Mopl* Rd.__________Trey 1»«» TEMPEST CUSTOM | Convertible, * cylinder. 12,040 mile*, auto. 2*14301, alter 3:10 $2995 j 1965 RAMBLER Classic?^ 4-door itotlon wogon. * cylinder, automatic. W $595 -1 $i095 1966 Ambassador loor sedan V-8# automatic itaring and brakes. $895 1969 CATALINA* •Ir cond 674-1771. powtr equipment. 1963 RAMBLER Classic— 4-door station wagon. ( cylinder, outomotlc troMmlaalsn, power Mooring. $595 Open oil day Saturday, * to * p.m, VILLAGE RAMBLER 666 S. Woodward Ml 6-3900 New and Used Cart 106 New and Used Can 106 1*4* PONTIAC CATALINA l door pfelXi Blue with blue Full powar. Air and lory official car. Call vinyl tag, ttoreo. fi *42-224*. AUDETTE PONTIAC 1969 FIREBIRD 400 HARDTOP. Air. Powar. Rally wheel*. 8*000 mile*. 1969 BOHNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE dove brown with black vinyl . 6 way Mat. Call 6424209. AUDETTE PONTIAC W, Maple Ed, _____Tray LeMANS, LOADED, 42,454. 243- BRAND NEW 1969 OLDS CLEARANCE \ 1969 OLDS 88 2-Door Hardtop .... 13174s with automatic, powar steering, brakar, radio, haatar, whitewall** covers. ...$3302 1969 OLDS 88 Hardtop, 4-Doer with automatic, powar itlrlng,, wheal cover*. MERRY OLDS ■ 528 N. MAIN ST. ROCHESTER 651-9761 New and Used Can 106N«w and Ustd Can 106New and Und Can 106 1968 Olds 98 Luxury Sedan powar, factory i ig, vinyl top, crulM $2995 Suburban Olds 860 S. Wdward Birmingham 1969 Olds 1 Hardtop 1968 Chevelle Malibu Wagon Air condition, power equipped automatic tranamlaalon, r a d I o haatar, white wall tlraa. Balance o new car warranty. T u R N E * priced at only $2065' 1966 Buick Riviera Hardtop. Power, automatic, radio heater. Needs a llttto loving $1285 Factory Official Cars P a le on t—Torlnoa Oalextaa-LTDVr Bird* • station Wagons Sadana A Hardtop* $ave payment schedule $3795 Suburban Olds 860 $. Woodward Ml 7-5111 MI 4-7500 N*W location at ! TURNER FORD Frail Birmingham Many Fine Trade-Ins dn“I97CTMERCURYS 1966 PLYMOUTH Belvedere II Sedan Canary yellow In eater with, matching Interior. .... V4, automatic, power ttearing and brakps, tr, whltewbl 1 ---- Itawalle. A linn , owner car. 1968 COUGAR Two Door Hardtop Silver blue In color with matching Interior, ‘ netlc, powar (tearing and brakes, baited ' whitewall*, radio, haatar. Balanc* el 1968 PONTIAC Tempest Station Wagon cuifom medal. Automatic, radio, haatar, whit* wall*. A real economical mllaaga car. 1966 MERCURY Monterey Breenway sedan, v-i, automatic, powar (tearing and brakaa, vinyl tog, radio, heater, whltawalla. An "a* la" apaclal at only 1965 FORD Country Sedan Station Wagon 14 paiMnMr, V-i, automatic, powtr (tearing, radio, haatar, whitewall*. A Una roomy family ear. 1968 MERCURY Monterey Marauder •tearing 196$ MERCURY Monferey Marauder Hiiw " n b*ig* ti ..................... $ 995 $1095 $2295 $1895 $ 995 $ 995 $2095 $ 995 bale* in color wHh matching vinyl SALES OFFICE NOW OPEN EVERY SATURbAY1 /CARRY SHEEHAN'S HILLSIDE llncoln-Mtreuiy 333-7863 The Color Season's Here But No Off-6olor Deals at Jack Haupt Pontiac ; NEW1 1969 Catalina 2 door, HT, it's nicely equipped with turbo hyd„ P-B, radio, de-luxe”wheel discs, FS, 8:55xr5 "wHite-walls. Stock No. 9977. $2850. • ___ DEMO! 1969 Pontiac Catalina 2 door HT, 5,000 miles. Beautiful yinyl covered seats, turbo hyd., radio, rear seat speaker, deluxe wheel discs. P-S and P-B, 8:55x15 —whitewalls. -Stock No. 9827. $2695.— FACTORY EXECUTIVE USED! 1969 Pontiac Bonneville 2 door, HT, just right for the' most discriminating driver with its F-windows, tilt steering wheel, AM FM radio, rear speaker, tinted windows, factory air, Cordova top and more. It spotless car for $3595. A ! So com* on out J look ot th»*g or ahy ot the others of 40 quality used con ready for immediate delivery. P. & W# hove th# Beautiful 1970 Pontiac* ready and rarin' to goll , f HAUPT PONTIAC OPEN MONDAY, TUESDAY, THURSDAY TILL 9 P,M. OPEN WEDNESDAY, FRIDAY TILL 6 P.M. — OPEN SATURDAYS — On MIS ot IfS MA 5-5500 Clarkiton Poisonous Plants h Prato* Paul* SB Agclnit the mut (iicut) „ I ___ . '",41 ftSme ■■ ;.. mmmim , 8-— WMd 46Trimmed IS Expire ..Jjwt) ; 13 Forbidden JTfJetHpe (ver.) II Concerning 14 Love god UMilp'e meat UDlatinet thlngi “ Burnish 17 Mountain/ MTrammit re®*14 sssfiru 18 Deadly DOWN nightanade 14 Holm oak SS Yogi SI Smell hone ........... 30 Cranial paina 7 Capital of 33 Turns from a ancient Elam purpooe 8 Sparing in 15roam _ , , < worda 36 Ruhr city 9 Forebodings 17 Solitary .(ver.) 29 Breaks el eat of com 30 Monk's cowl 31 Girl's name r“ T~ r r- 6“ 7 | r" & !T TT IT" IS vr nr l| 1r J in 19 u SI a IT Z7 g zr F 41 3T fir 20 mm sBT Vi r J I r fT II U r nr wz vr - IT u r ST 5T E r BS 5T 85 i 66 1 A Look at TV NBC 1-Shot a Bull's-Eye THE PONTIAC PBES8. WBDXESDAY. OCTOBER *, 10»» -V'tv -Television Progrdms- Programs furnished by stations listed In this column aro oubjoct to change without notlcel R — Rerun C — Color WEDNESDAY NIGHT tiM (1) (4) (7) C - News, Weather, Sports (80) R C — Fllntstones (80) Americans From Africa (62) R — Ozzle and Harriet 6:30 (2) G - New* -Cronkite (4) C - News - Huntley, Brinkley (9) R — Dick Van Dyk* (SO) R — Munsters (86) C - White Pine Story —Tour of the White Pine Mine in the Upper Peninsula explores die process of converting ore into refined copper. (62) C — Robin Seymour the Flamin’ Embers guest, 7:00 (2) C Truth o r Consequences (4) C — News, Weather, Sports (7) C — News — Reynolds, Smith (9) R - 12 O’clock High —Gallagher and a washed-—up. ex-commander- beat back an enemy attack. (80) R — I Love Lucy (56) What’s New - When family and friends discover Tom Sawyer and Becky are list in a cave, the town starts a search for the pair. 7:39 (2) C — Glen Campbell —TOm Jones, Totie Fields and Ja e k i e DeShannon nasB TV Features By CYNTHIA LOWRY AP Television-Radio Writer NEW YORK - “From Here to the Seventies’’ Tuesday fright was a massive, one-shot effort by NBC News to provide an over-view of the direction and quality of life during the past 10 years and a preview—often a bit frightening-of the peat decade. .* * * , It was a bold, almost pres1 imiptious project, attempting to cram the significant events and Strends OL1960-70 into 2V4 hours. Most of the subject matter was familiar. But it never seemed warmed-over, although individuals might argue over the handling of some events. It seemed to hustle through the Vietnam conflict while it lingered on and kept retunring to youth in revolt, * * * It covered everything from the Pill and pollution to the Bea ties and the Berlin Wall. It found time to examine porno- Ex-Pontiac Man Writer of Play Tonight on 56 ; A former Pontiac resident is (the playwright tor a drama to he presented at 10 p.m. tonight ;on the educational television Channel 56. ! # ★ * ’ The writer is Rufus Dean, 38, son of Mrs. Letha Matthews of 365 Rockwell. Dean attended Pontiac schools and later went to Chicago. For the last several years he has been acting and writing in New York. mttsm---- ft —•*---* In the Pontiac area he was associated with the Will-O-Way Playhouse. *> * Si Written under the name of Phillip Hayes Dean, tonight’s work is "Johnny Ghost,’’ in the Channel 56 series “On Being Black.’’ The play concerns a champion boxer who tries to save the sport from a challenger believed to b e unworthy of the title. Channel 56 will rerun the drama Saturday at 8 p.m. graph and the nudity vogue, and minutes later flashed a solemn roll call of major public figures who died during the period. The theme was biblical— ‘There is an appointed, time for everything*’—and in l keeping with these country-music times, there was often, In the background, the sound of a group singing a ballad, “Everything . turn, turn. There is a sea son, turn, turn, turn.” PULLED INTO FOCUS NBC commentators popped up in each segment with carefully prepared pieces that helped pull the wildly assorted subjects Into some sort of focus. Ed Newman spoke of the new permissiveness on stage and in literature while standing on Broadway ; Aline Saarinen talked of protein-starved millions from a marketplace in Colombia; Jack Perkins philosophized about youth while standing in a pasture amid the debris left behind the Woodstock rock music festival Paul Newman, presiding, narrated with professional skill and clarity. * ★ - ★ -Toward the end, David Brink-ley had oome thoughts about television's role. ★ t w “What television, did. in the sixties was^o show the American people to the American people," he said. "H i.. showed society that was in many ways looking better than any other but in other ways was not working at all. It showed a need for change and it showed the changes not being made.’’ FREE PLAY, 8 p.m/ (86) DULCIMA, 8:30 p.m. (•) MOVIE, 9 p.m. (7) , INTERNATIONAL MAGAZINE, 9 p.m. (56) ON BEING BUCK, 10 p.m. (56) MOVIE, 11 p,m. (9) One wished the program could have been shorter, that its editor had used a lighter hand with the tricks and tricky photography-interesting for those with color sets but disturbing and in-terruptlve for those with black and white1—and that the commentators had not sounded so piously preachy, Bui it was altogether a magnificent job that accomplished something Important in summa-rlzlng the period. More than that. It gave the viewer a look at the fprest of the 1960s at a time when most of us are too close to see more than a few familiar trees. (4) C — Virginian — Clay Grainger enters politics, discovering the stakes run high. Barry Sullivan and Andrew Prine guest-star. (7) C — Flying Nun — Sister Bertriile tries to help a young secretary who shows up at the convent with a baby she says belongs to a friend. Chelsea Brown guest-stars. (50) C — Beat the Clock. (56) Making Things Grow — Plants for film places are shown. (62) C — Of Lands, and • Seas *- Miami sequarium is visited 8:69 (7) C - Courtship of Eddie’s Father — Eddie, decides Mrs. Livingston is lonely and brings home a 5-year-old Japanese hoy to be her son. (9) C — The Travellers (50) R-Hazel (56) Free Play — Detroit candidates for'city clerk and city treasurer will be interviewed. 8:30 (2) C — Bever 1 y Hillbillies - Granny hawks Elly May at the backwoods fair., (7) C — Room 222 — Liz gets Jason an art Job at a department store — and Tie steals a coat for her. (9) (Special) - Dulclma — Drama based on a short story by H. E. Bates tells of n young girl (Jackie Burroughs) who tries to escape the drudgery of her life. John Col-icos costars. . 1 (80) C - To Tell the Truth (62) R — The Nelsons 9:69 (2) C - Medical Gen-—ta* - — A- wounded col-lege student under the influence of drugs staggers to the hospital's emergency entrance and touches off a polios Investigation. <4),C - Music Hall -Host Wayne Newton welcomes Terry-Thomas, Michele Lee, and Hines, Hines and Dad. (7) C - Movie: "Two-For —the Roid” (1967) Two young people fall in love while touring the French Riviera. Audrey Hepburn, Albert Finney (50) R—Perry Mason (56) International Magazine. Topics: 1. Nationalist Chjnese on Formosa, still trying to reclaim China after 20 years in exile; 2. Interview with President William Tubman of Liberia; 3. Interviews with White Russians who have lived in exile since the 1917 revolution. (62) R - Movie: “Las Vegas Shakedown’’ (1955) Casino operator refuses to bow to the demands of the syndicate. Dennis O’Keefe, Coleen Gray. 10:80 (2) C - Hawaii Five-0 — A false tidal-wave alert diverts attention from the ___kidnaping of a famous genetic engineer. («)-G — Then Came Bronson —■ The lone resident of a ghost town asks Bronson to remain to carry out her last wish -* to be buried beside her husband. (9) (50) C - News Weather, Sports (86) On Being Black — \ Tonight's drama, written by former Pontiac rest-dent Rufus Dean under the pen name Phillip Hayes Dean, Is “Johnny Ghost," about a champion boxer who battles a foe he be-. lieves to be unworthy of the title. 19:30 (9) C - What’s My Line? (50) R — Ben Casey (82) R —Sea Hunt 11:99 (2) (4) C - News, Weather (9) Movie: “Luck of Ginger Coffey’’ (Canadian, 1964) Robert Shaw, Mary, Ure (62) R — Highway Patrol 11:15 (7) C-News, Weather, 11:30 (4) C — Johnny Carson Paneta Tiffin, Lon Chaney Jr. and Shani Wallis guest. (50) C - Merv Griffin -Orson Bean, Tony Martin, Sly and the Fismily Stone and Dr. Christian Barnard guest. (82) R—Movie: “Drango” (1057) Major tries to govern a small Georgia town after the Civil War. 11:35 (2) R . - Movie: “Bengasi" (1955) Three men and a girl In search of hidden gold are trapped in a lonely desert mosque. Richard Carlson, Victory McLaglen. 11:46 (?) C - Joey Bishop -Fran Jeffries and the 12:26 (9) Viewpoint 12:39 (9) C — Perry’s Probe 1:09 (4) Beat the Champ 1:11 (7) R-Texan 1:39 (2) R-Naked City (4) C - News, Weather 1:45 (7) C—News, Weather, Spqrts 1:55 (7) to Live By.7T~.r’rtiT" 2:30 (2) C—News, Weather THURSDAY MORNING 6:59 (2) TV Chapel 5:55 (2) C - On the Farm Scene 6:99 (2) C - Sunrise 6:25 (7) C — Five Minutes to Live By 6:89 (2) C — Woodrow the Woodsman (4) Classroom — “See for Yourself: 25 Amps" (7) C — TV College -“Conquest-of East Africa (Germany)’’ 7:09 (4F C — Today — Former Secretary of State Dean Acheson and author Andrew Tully guest. (7) C *- Morning Show — Jerry Chiappetta —discusses elk hunting.- 7:20 (9) Warm-Up 7:30 (2) C-News, Weather, Sports (9) Friendly Giant 7:45 (9) Chez Helene 8:90 (2) C — Captain Kangaroo (9) C — Bozo 8:30 (7) R - Movie : “Young Man With Ideas” (1952) Glenn Ford, Ruth Roman 9:00 (2) R — Mr. Ed (4) C — Dennis Wholey (9) Ontario Schools 9:10 (56) Come, Let’s Read 9:39 (2) R C-----Beverly Hillbillies (56) Singing, listening, Doing 10:60 (2) RC-Lucy Show (4) C — Sale of the Century ' (56) Pocketful of Fun 10:30 (2) C - Della Reese -The Dirties, Jackie Gayle and Mary Costa guest. (A)C — Hollywood Squares (7) C — Galloping Gourmet (50) C — Jack LaLanne (86) Once Upon a Day 10:45 (9) C-News 11:60 (4) C - It Takes Two (7) R - Bewitched (9) Take 30 (50) C — Strange Paradise (86) R - Tell Me a story 11:15 (66) Misterogers (vail 11:80 (2) C — Love of Life (4) C — Concentration (7) RC—That Girl f (9) Mr. Dressup (80) C - Kimba 11:55 (9) Wizard of Oz THURSDAY AFTERNOON 12:91(2) C—News, Weather, sport* (4) C — Jeopardy (?) C — Dream House (9) R — Real McCoys (50) C - Underdog 12:25 (2) C-Fashions 12:39 (2) C - He Said, She Said (4) C - News, Weather, Sports (7) C - Let’s Make a Deal (9) C—Tempo 9 (80) C- Alvin 12:35 (56) Friendly Giant - 12:56 (56) R —Singings Listening, Doing 1:69 (2) C - Search for Tomorrow (4Tp — Days of Our Lives (7) C — Newlywed Game (9) R C — Movie: “Quan-trUl’s Raiders” (1958) Steve Cochran, Diane Brewster (50) R - Movie: “The Two Mrs. Carrolls” (1947) Humphrey Bogart, Barbara Stanwyck 1:15 (56) R — Children's Hour 1:39 (2) C - As the World Turns (4) C — Doctors (7) C —Dating Game (56) Ready, Set, Go 2:69 (2) C - Where the Heart Is (4) C — Another World (7) C — General Hospital (56) — News in Perspective 2:25 (2) C — News—--2:39 (2) C-Guiding Light (4) C — Bright Promise* (7) C-One Life to Live 3:96 (2) C-Secret Storm , (4) c — Letters toLou^- In--------------Tift (7) R - Bachelor Father (9) R — Candid Camera (56) French Chef -“Chicken in Wine” (62) R - Movie: “Backfire” (British. 1960) slnia -Virginia Mayo, Gordon MacRae 3:39 (2) C- Edge of Night (4) c — You’re Putting Me On (7) C — Anniversary Game (9) C — Magic Shoppe (80) C—Captain Detroit (56iR — Sesame Street Preview — Glimpse of program for preschoolers which begins Nov. 10. 4:99 (2) RC-Gomer Pyle (4) C — Steve Allen — Mort Sahl, Jerry Van Dyke, John Stewart and Red Smoot guest. (7) C— Dark Shadows (9) C-B06O (56) Pocketful of Fun 4:39 (2) C - Mike Douglas • — New York radio personality Barry Grey and Harpers Bizarre guest. ___(7) R — Movie: "The Great Diamond Robbery" (1954) Red Skelton, Cara Williams (50) R — Little Rascals (56) Once Upon a Day (62) C — Bugs Bunny and ' Friends 5:69 (4) C—George Pierrot — “Belgium Today” (9) RC —Flipper (50) R C — Loot In Space (56) Misterogers 5:39 (9) R C - Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea (56) Friendly Giant (92) R — Leave It to Beaver --------- 5:45 (56) R - German Budget Approved FLINT (B - A public improvement budget of 61A million has been approved by the Flint City Commission which is splitting the money among park and recreation projects, the airport terminal, and streets. / —Radio Programs-- Vuimyeo) wxyzo aro) aawtooo) wwj(»50) wcarq i 30) wponq seoi wjko ioo) WHri-PM(V4.jl m»m* b Ntwidiei WhSiI* Don*Alcorn Un"' y&rt.irr.p.r.. RMF IHURIDAY MONNINO urrv W?Jp 6»wi, Tomcrrcw'l liiHWjY, lunnviW* ASMS liJC-WJX, IHCWUM, CIOM- »,« -%(», showcH, Miner. "car NcSTenrhcMii cklW. Jm boptra*. wroN, Nrwi'gMK Wifrw .««H¥C.rl^ IlitwlSi SunnyilM, Mu»ic iMH—wlar n.w. _ MS: TO,new* fsWi&'J!)! o.vii WCAS. N.WI. W.yn« Phillip* TwT&m WXy/|^N*w*. Jnhnny Rm. wpon. Ncwc, Otry Puree* •cop* TMURfcOAY AFTERNOON '‘iKWm iPffcw iiB&h^ncc - ml. NflWii Dlmtndan again and again and again fenL Tnk# i quint hf**k. Move Into the quMir world of the aleek new Ford with • \ oomputer-deelgned 8-frame and a unique new suspension aystem. The ride le eo smooth and vibration-free that you have to teeNfrivolt to believe It, , Torino. All now dear through. Torino la the moat oompletely changed oar of the 'year. New aarodynamlo styling. Longer wheelbase. Wider traok. smoother ride. And aparkad by abt great V-#*a up to the big 4894V Oobra Jet Ram-Air V-*. , , Maverick. Still $1898% The Slmpl* Machine. The oar that held the prloa lines le the beat-selling oar of the seventies. Maverlok already hat more Rian 150,000 it them... aai how almple Ufa oao be. v SSJSSr FORDM Ford givesyou Better Ideas. His the Going Thing! TEST-DRIVE A1970 AT YOUR FORD DEALERS NOW! P-—16 4 in France Get Move U by Pompidou, a Foe of Executions ‘Gotham”—Fitted Style Bedspread Now on SfflCE Soft, Absorbent Bath Towels Regular $2 ea. SIMMONS A MAGNIFICENT KING-SIZE BED THAT'S ALSO 2 COMFORTABLE TWINSI for a limited time, Thomas brings you special savings on 'Beautyrest twin King* ... a luxurious new concept in super-size beddingl 'BeautyresfTwin King' used with a king-size headboard and spread gives you the glamor of a king-size bed. Remove tfte spread and you have the advantages of twin beds. Each sleeper enjoys a choice of regular or extra firmness, the amount and type of blankets preferred pigs true single bed comfort. Act today and save $59.95 on a complete ^pleedeetl PONTIAC 36/ 9. 8AOINAW-FE3-79011 I DRAYTON 4945 DIXIE HWY‘ OR 4 0321 OPEN MONDAY, THURSDAY. FRIDAY 'til 9 V OPEN MONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY 7119 !* N the rbNTiAc press, Wednesday, October b, iW \ PARIS (UPI) - All the death cells in French prisons are empty, and official reports say Prwldent Georges Pompidou beliefs they should stay that wey. Pompidou, using his power as the supreme Justice in France, has commuted the death sentences on four men who were awaiting execution on the guillotine when he was elected! in June. Sr ★ ★ Officials close to the president say Pompidou is opposed to capital punishment and will his powers to commute most if not all death sentences passed during his seven-year term. * * af The officials emphasize that Pompidou will, not take any steps for the formal abolition of capital punishment so that the executioner’s blade can still act as a deterrent to "professional" criminals. different types The four men who were awaiting execution in July represented three very different types of killer. Andre Vegnaduzzi, 25, battered and knifed his mother and his father to death while in a mentally disturbed condition over money problelms. #; w. w Alexandre Viscardl wanted to ahoot a mistress who had left him. He did not find his former mistress at her mother’s home but shot the mother and two other women with her. The mother later died. Noel Marucd, 27, and Serge Bar any, 38, killed a bank employe and a policeman during a holdup at Bordeaux. Each accused the other of firing the fatal shots. A A . * ■ .★ All four were given life sentences under Pompidou's clemency orders. This means they will be considered for parole every five years until they are Judged ready fOr release. Heavy, slub-textnred acetate spread quilted over Sears exclusive Dura-Puff polyester fiberfill has elegant self-cord trim. Many solid colors. 18.98 Twin Size... 15.88 27.98 Queen... 23.88 29.98 King... 24.88 9.98 48x63” Draperies 8.88** Sears All-Cotton Quilted Floral Spread Throw style spread has polyester fiberfill. %" jumbo cord around edge. Twin Site..... . . .. .... 18.98 Queen Site..... ..27.98 Kim Sbe...............29.98 48x63” Draperies. 9.98 Assorted Throw Pillows Chooie your favorite style in n,., 4,93 your favorite fabric... whether It is cotton, corduroy or vrlvr-teen there's one to provide the perfect room accent. There are colors galore- Rcfo Price Full Size Drapery Department Reg. 19.98 Dry Ion Solid Towels Luxurious towels in perky dolors. Made of 70% cotton and 30% rayon. 20% more ab-sorbent than any all-cotton terry. Save! Fingertip, reg. 65c............57c Drylon Jacquard Weave Exciting 2-color Jacquard weave in a rich baroque pattern. 70% cotton and 30% rayon. Reversible; fringed ends. Fingertip, reg. 65c. 57c SALE! Solid Color Bath Mat Screen I Print Towels Sheared terry looks and feela like soft velvet. Gay floral screen print of 70% cotton and 30% rayon adds beauty to your bathroom and savings, too. Hand Towel, reg. 1.23.. 97a Wash Goth,rag.SSe....47e v \'i- . 1 . ■ , < SALE! Wrap-Around Rath Sheet 1S7 L bath towel -Beautiful shades in a cotton and rayon Mend with pucker-proof borders. Big 20x34-in. size. Both Shop Reg. 2.50 Oversized 3x6-ft. towel is perfect for hath or beach. Plush cotton and rayon blend. Sale Ends Saturday, Oct, 11 Open. Monday, Thuraday, Friday* Saturday 9 to 9, Taeaday, Wed—day 9 to SlSO Sears! Downtown Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171 naan goaaucx Aim coi • __ ‘ \________, ' ______ on a Beautyrest Twin King by Simmons! GET 2 EXTRA LONG BEAUTYREST MATTRESSES PLUS 2 EXTRA LONG BEAUTYREST FOUNDATIONS 4-pcs. reg. *399.90 now SUPPLEMENT TO THE iraiat! PONTIAC PRESS Wednesday, October 8, 1969 SALE ENDS SATURDAY OCTOBER 18, 1969 Feature-pocked, high quality Signature* and Airline* appliances ore yours at fantastic savings, now during Wards gruat once-a-year sain... gat In on the value, today! ENJOY MORE OP WHAT YOU NEED NOW-USE WARDS CHARG-AU CREDIT PIAN-JUST SAY "CHARGE ITT YOU CAN WIN 1 Or 9 NEW HORNETS— AMBUCAN MOTORS EXCITING COMPACT! You may also wbt one of the many other prizes that am available. Just register at any nearby Wards siom. No purchase I* necessary. Void where prohibited by law. Model 7/9139 CHOOSE ELECTRIC OR GAS TWO-CYCLE DRYER PORTABLE COLOR TV-NOW SPECIALLY PRICEDI & $199 • 11-indi diagonal screen • Powerful chassis pulls in sharp color pictures SAVE $10—AUTOMATIC PM/AM CLOCK RADIO ONLY T | IT • Big family-size capacity dries wash faster, more wrinkle-free • Cycles include heat and air • Dryer slop* whsn door Is opened • Wake to news of the day • Doze off to PM—night switch turns off musk • SoRd state, 6* speaker • Convenient fast-freeze control Mon- thru Sat.—10 A.M.‘ to 9, Sunday—12 P.M. to 5 P.1V Telegraph at Elizabeth Rd Phone 682-4940 PONTIAC, MICH /VXONTCiOAAERYl GREAT AUTUMN APPLIANCE *U2kBH ■■HB 30-INCH IMS OR HECTWC HANOI CASY-CUAN OVEN UNIRS INCIUI b*m SALE I70ma«<. . • Automotic bufMf main • Ovehi Ism on, off os | tains temp, onds boms pre-set—you can relax H - ' - --^ ^-a^k - ^ ■«—A-E-- < J ’ ' Phelps said 'until the current!, state aid formula, ivhich pays schools only for ,180 days of school per year, is changed, school districts will be deterred from expanded sessions. < it it it “The commission members realize this Is a potential sitting there," Phelps said. “The teacher time and building time are available. "Once the more immediate problems are taken care of, the state could serve In a function to give incentive to schools who institute exploratory programs. “It’s an Important issue,” he said, “but it has to be dealth with in the proper order." The Weather U. I. WmIImt Bureau ParlHIl Light Frost Tonight THE PONTIAC PRESS VOL. 127 __________ NO. 209 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1909 _____ uNiTep^RiyfSfisRNATiowAL —08 PAGES _____________________10° 4 Pet. Jobless Rate OK-Treasury Chief LARGE TURNOUT—An over-capacity crowd jammed City Hall last night, with most opposed to the proposed housing code. Over 400 persons filled seats, standing room and the hallways. Standing to voice his objections is Edward Keehn of. 183 Pingree. New Housing Code Assailed - WASHINGTON (AP) - Treasury Secretary David Kennedy says the Nixon administration finds a 4 per cent unemployment rate “acceptable” in its fight to curb inflation. But he won’t say how much higher the jobless rate could go without causing a change in anti-inflation policies. Kennedy was one of several administration experts quizzed yesterday by worried members of the joint congressional economic subcommittee. Sens. Stuart Symington, D-Mo., and William Proxmire, D-Wis., made it clear they don’t share the view of some asked Kennedy to set an unemployment figure which would trigger alarm within the administration, but the secretary said he had no “magic figure” in mind. Related Story, Page D-6 By ED BLUNDEN Over 400 persons jammed the City Commission chambers and adjacent hallways last night to join in a chorus opposing the city’s proposed new housing code)*, The c he code was called everything from Communistic to immoral. Opposition was whipped up in the last three weeks by advertisements, handbills and door-to-door canvassing by a group called Homeowners Protecting Their Private Property. The code was not passed last night, and the public hearing will be continued in three weeks, Oct. 28 at 8 p.m. The code had been revised prior to last night’s hearing, and more changes would be made to incorporate specific objections, city commissioners said. CODE PUBLISHED The commission ordered, the revised form to be published in its entirety in a legal advertisement in The Pontiac Press. The original proposal appeared lii the Sept. 9 edition. The hearing lasted for two hours with about 25 speakers talking at varying lengths. A sampling of the comment: Edward R. Bigger, 248 W. Yale, labeled it “communism all the way.” L. G. Black of 187 W. Ann Arbor said, f our house is good enough for us to e in. it’s good enough.” 10 MANY CHILDREN? Jhick Hagerman of 236 W. Beverly, eaking of the per-person living space firements, said “What if you had one > many kids ... you’d have to be rful careful." Host of the speakers alluded to the In Today's Press Indian Powwow Agnew, Hickel to address meeting — PAGE A-14. Jet Hitt Homes Copilot dies In Oklahoma crash - PAGE A-10. Hew Rep Area, Land purchase approval In Holly Township sought by state - PAGE C-4. Area News ............... A-8 Astrology .................D4 Bridge .....................W Crossword Puzzle ........D-15 Comics .................. D-5 Editorials ...............A-8 Food Section ........C-8, C-7 Markets/....:'............ D4 Obituaries ..............A-lt Smoking Series ..........C-Il es .................... 01—04 tors ................B-IO Tv and.Radio Programs . .D-lt [Vietnam War News......... A4 Women’s Pages .......B-l—B4 failure of the city to develop the 27 acres of bare urban renewal land downtown, apparently a sore point with many. O * * * * Speakers pointed out HUD was demanding the city enact the code as part of the city’s Workable Program. (The program is a requirement for all federal grants and aids). However the apparent failure of the HUD program downtown was cited as evidence of the futility of following federal promises. i ★, ★ Late in the hearing two leaders of the opposition indicated the code was being rewritten to a.more acceptable form. Edward Keehn of 183 Pingree who came wearing a tea bag, compared the struggle against the housing code to the Boston Tea Party. “The commission has an obligation .to us and not to HUD (Housing and Urban Development) in Washington,” he said. from citizens and the commission in drafting amendments to.be sure present homeowners are protected. < Void Law, Asks Lawyer for Ted economists that last month’s increase of unemployment from 3.5 to 4 per cent was a good sign indicating a slowdown in the inflationary trend. Symington asked: “Are we planning for a recession to reduce inflation?” Kennedy replied: “No, we must now watch the timing to make sure that doesn't happen.” No one voiced objections to the new code applying to new housing. At the meeting three weeks ago a representative of Pre-Built Homes in Detroit, a firm which is expected to supply manufactured homes for developers in Pontiac, objected to some provisions. Officials said these articles — concerning bathrooms and storage areas — had been changed. RIGHT DIRECTION Clark S. Davis of 26 Rose Court said, “a lot of private funds and shoe leather" had been expended to fight the code. However, the amendments and the decision to delay approval for more study was "a step in the right direction,” he said. Rights Move Opposed BOSTON (AP) - Sen. Edward M. Kennedy’s lawyer asked the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court today to declare unconstitutional the state’s inquest laws and to disqualify Judge James A. Boyle from presiding over a planned inquest into the death of Miss Mary Jo Kopechne. Edward B. Hanify, attorney for Kennedy, asked the five justices to rule that Kennedy’s rights would be prejudiced If the planned inquest were allowed to proceed under the EdgartoWn District Court judge’s ground rules. The Nixon administration earlier this year assured labor leaders it would not use unemployment as a weapon to bring inflation under control. But only last month organized labor’s chief economist: said government anti-inflation steps threatened to bring massive unemployment. “What they are trying to'do is bring down the rate of price increases by slamming the brakes on the economy, which can only result in a further increase in unemployment," said Nathaniel Goldfinger, economist for the AFL-ClO. During yesterday’s hearing, Proxmire Kennedy noted that prior to the Vietnam conflict, unemployment rates ofter ran over the 4 per cent level. Proxmire acknowledged this but said, “We can’t go back to that." Budget Director Robert Mayo told the congressmen that should there be a sudden upsurge In unemployment, manpower programs could be speeded up. The administration spokesmen also said that*, although there was no emergency plan, other steps could Include restoration of federal construction and enactment of family assistance and unemployment insurance measures proposed earlier. '* Kennedy and Mayo urged the members to work for extension of the surtax at 5 per cent after Jan. 1 and for repeal of the investment tax credit to keep up anti-inflationary pressure. They said there are signs that govern-’ ment measures to stop inflation have been effective, but Mayo added “prudence requires that fiscal restraint be continued." ' Davis urged the commission to see “how much freedom we can get from HUD” in any code finally adopted. WASHINGTON UP) — The Nixon administration, opposing an appeal filed by private civil rights lawyers, has asked the Supreme Court to hold up judgment “until the situation clarifies” in 33 Mississippi school districts given extra time to integrate. Identifying himself as a representative of the homeowners opposing the code, Robert Verhine of 110 Rosshire, said, “The code is looking more like we want it to.” He urged further cooperation Solicitor General Erwin N. Griswold said in a memorandum to the court yesterday the U.S. Office of Education is proceeding “with dispatch” to formulate plans to desegregate the districts by Dec. 1. Hanify asked the high court “to quash the order of the respondent,” Judge Boyle, “which substance excluded everyone from the proceeding but the press and limited counsels’ rights" to cross-examine witnesses and sit in on all testimony. In the event the court upholds the inquest law as constitutional, Hanify argued, it should send “directives” to all district and superior courts which would result in “an infusion of constitutional vitality into the skeleton of the structure” of inquests in Massachusetts. Sen. Griffin Now Opposing Nomination of Haynsworth WASHINGTON OB - Sen. Robert P. Griffin of Michigan, the assistant Senate Republican leader, announced today he will vote against confirmation of the nomination of Judge Clement F. Haynsworth to the Supreme Court. Clarkston Teacher Pact Talks Stall Griffin said he told President Nixon of his decision in a letter Monday. It could strike a severe blow to the administration bid for approval of the embattled nominee. Griffin declared that “legitimate and substantial doubt has been raised” about Haynsworth’s sensitivity "to the high ethical standards” required of a justice. Griffin is known to have urged Nixon to withdraw the nomination. REASON FOR REVERSAL He had announced earlier he would By NED ADAMSON Negotiations have stalemated between the Clarkston Education Association (CEA) and the board of education following a CEA demand yesterday to reopen previously settled issues. TTie action was prompted bjM&hat the teachers’ negotiators termed “another no-progress negotiating session on salary differences.” to the bargaining table today by either a state mediator or Oakland County Circuit Court Judge William R. Beasley. The move to reopen settled issues appears to further complicate negotiations between the school board and CEA, but it also opens the door for court intervention in th talks, observers said. However, there were indications the -negotiating teams would be called back MOTIVE FOR REOPENING CEA President Thomas Brown said the move "was prompted by the immovable posture of the board of education. Its position on the salary schedules seemed to forestall an early settlement of the contract,” he said. ' No further negotiations were scheduled as of this morning. However, both bargaining teams are subject to recall at anytime by a state mediator who has been sitting on the sessions this week. It is expected that yesterday’s circumstances will prompt Judge Beasley to take court action today to order further talks in the eight-day-old strike by Clarkston teachers. Following a Monday morning hearing on an injunction filed against the CEA and the board of education by Clarkston school district resident James Peters of Waterford Township, Judge* Beasley said no court action would be taken unless another Impasse in negotiations occurs. reluctantly support the Haynsworth nomination. He indicated that disclosure of. Haynsworth’s business interests, while serving as a U.S. circuit judge, had led to his reversal. REOPENED ISSUES The issues called for reopening by the teachers yesterday Include class size, duty-free lunch period, payment for credits beyond the bachelor’s degree and relief of teachers from -non-teaching duties. - (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 3) Meanwhile, Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Ind., the leading opponent of the nomination, said today there was a “clear conflict of interest” when Haynsworth ruled on a case before the 4th U.S. Coutt of Appeals in 1967 involving W. R. Grace Co. Bayh said Haynsworth owned thousands of dollars worth of Grace stock at the time. Bayh’s latest charge is the third such case in which Haynsworth has been accused of conflicts of interest for making a ruling while holding a financial stake in one of the parties before his court. In addition, .the judiciary committee also was handed a demand by Sen. John J. Williams, R-Del., for more information about Haynsworth’s participation in a real estate deal with Bobby Baker. Chance of Frost in Area Tonight There’s |B chance of scattered light. frost in tne POntlac area tonight) iThe) /1 low is expected to dip into the nigh 30s. Partly sunny and a little warmer is the forecast for tomorrow, the high climbing to the mid-to-upper 60s. Partly cloudy and a little warmer is Friday’s prediction. «tl Jug pi 'f. 'I.1' s Kids Look In Instead Ct/ Out In Clarkston i . / " • , -A, ■: A The five-day forecast calls for a warming trend tomorrow and Friday and cooler again Sunday and Monday. Precipitation will total about one-half to thre^-quartdrs of an inch in showers about Saturday. \ The low in downtown Pontiac befora I a m. was\49. fho mercury had jtanpfd to* ; 62 by Ij2:& p.tn. / { A—t te H1A0 HVW M^V|A\ nri • i 1HK PONTIAC l’HKSS. \VKDXKSDAY, OCTOWKH 8. 1W» Police Boss Says Gen. Turner Lied About Guns Gift gp ’ n g «y> §§§g From Our New* Wire* WASHINGTON - Chicago Police Supt, James Gonlisk says former Army Provost Marshal Maj. Gen. Carl C. Turner lied yesterday when he testified city authorities knowingly gave him *397 confiscated guns for his personal use. • Turner is a central figure in a Senate subcommittee investigations of a.probe into charges a ring of enlisted men, including former Army Sgt. Maj. William 0. .Woolridge, was engaged in a large-scale graft ring. five sergeants, including Wooldridge, boosted their - take by forming a 'California, corporation that racked up $1 (Bullion in sales before it was 11 months old. Its customers were Army service clubs, sometimes managed by the sergeants themselves, investigators said. In his testimony, Turner was quized only on charges he obtained the cocn-fiscated guns under pretense they were for Army use and then sold some of them for his own profit-He said, however, Conlisk knew he wanted1 the guns for his own collection, although he signed statements at the time affirming the weapons were for the Army. WOOLDRIDGE DUE FRIDAY l " "■ Wooldridge, scheduled to testify Fri- day, told a reporter he will invoke the ,/V - V~ v 5th amendment and refuse to answer questions. His attorney said he advised Wooldridge to refuse to testify because he did not believe he would be given a fair hearing by senators. TESTIMONY CALLED UNTRUE Conlisk said in Chicago yesterday Turner's testimony was ‘•untrue." The superintendent also supported testimony given by police Lt. Paul T. Duellman yesterday. The main thrust of the subcommitteee probe had been into allegations Woolridge and a band of career sergeants had looted Army recreation chibs, manipulated currency, smuggled liquor and bribed officers. Senate investigators have learned that In his testimony yesterday, Turner admitted that in 1968 he signed receipts four times at Chicacgo police headquarters stating that confiscated guns he had personally selected were to be used for Army training purposes. And he testified he sold "the cream of the crop" to a North Carolina gun dealer and pocketed the money. ONLY A FORMALITY He said Conlisk had assured him the receipts he was asked to sign were only a formality td meet the letter of the law. . . Illinois law says all weapons seized by police are, after being used as evidence, to "be either destroyed or given to the armed forces for training or other purposes. By Rescue Craft Sub on Pacific Floor Freed SAN DIEGO, Calif. (UP1) - The Nekton, a two-man mini-submarine, fred a research submarine Deep Quest early today from its entanglement 430 feet below the surface of the Pacific with four men aboard. The navigators of the Nekton used a mechanical arm to sever a thick line which was caught on the propeller of the Deep Quest and entangled with a 1,500-pound metal cylinder on the bottom of the ocean. Nekton first settled near the craft, it stirred up silt and it was not until an hour later the two navigators could see the binding synthetic rope to cut it. RADIO CONTACT The Nekton surfaced first followed by the Deep Quest a few minutes later at 5:55 a.m. (Pontiac time). The four men in the craft, which was trapped for more than 12 hours on the bottom of the ocean, were reported in good condition, although cold and hungry. The Nekton spent one hour and 30 minutes below the surface attempting to cut the Deep Quest free. When the The four men in the 40-foot, 50;ton craft were in radio contact throughout their ordeal with their mother ship Trans Quest. The supply of oxygen in the craft was limited to 48 hours. The submarine went down at 2 p.m. (Pontiac time) yesterday. Two Navy ships, a Coast Guard cutter and another specialty civilian submarine, the Beaver, were at the scene and aided in the rescue. Lockheed Marine Laboratory, which owns and operates the Deep Quest, said the men aboard were all experienced undersea navigators. Irrr: , - v' ■ The Weather . Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Variable cloudiness and cool wlth- chance of brief showers today, high 58 to 65. Partly cloudy and cool tonight with chance of scattered light frost, low 37 to 43. Thursday partly sunny and becoming a little warmer, high in the mid to upper 60s. Friday partly cloudy and a little warmer. Winds southwest to west at 10 to 20 miles per hour diminishing by late tonight to 5 to 12 miles per hour becoming southwesterly 8 to 15 miles Thursday afternoon. Probabilities of precipitation: 20 per cent today, 10 per cent tonight, near zero Thursday. y*llotl*y 10 m.p.r Tunday in Pontiac (at rocordod d lighest temper a turn Thursday at Wednesday i i Thursday i Weather; Rain .5 Inch morn Downtown Temper,atyre 4? M a.m/- 52 12 30 p.nr Jackson Marquette Petition Saplnaw Traverse C. Albuquerque afternoon Temperatures 2 Detroit 6 Fort Worth Jacksonville s City nqeles SO Miami Beach i ..... aukee Orleans Kansas City .oulsvll | 1 Miami L... 6i 42 Milwaukee 62 42 On 49 Phoen Date In 97 Years Atlanta Bismarck Boston Chicago Cincinnati 75 SI Pittsburgh 71 43 " ‘ ‘ 76 65 52 24 _ 71 59 $. Ste 71 40 Seattle 70 47 Washington 3 St. $. Lake city 5, Francisco S. Ste. Marie Seattle Pontiac Press Photo by Ron i Seagulls Find The Oakland County Courthouse A Good Meeting Place Senators Hit Pullout Pace WASHINGTON (AP) - The Republican call for a moratorium on war ’ dissent suffered another blow today with the introduction of resolution by two Senate Vietnam critics urging withdrawal of American forces from the battle zone within a "reasonable time." Unlike two earlier withdrawal proposals, the one submitted by Sens. Frank Church, D-Idaho, and Mark O. Hatfield R-Ore., does not propose a deadline for an American pullout. Pension Hikes Gain Support Instead, their resolution criticizes the pace of withdrawal set by President Nixon—and asserts that the continued presence of U.S. forces can only postpone "the political accommodations essential to ending the conflict." The Church-Hatfield measure, and the two other withdrawal proposals, appear to have no chance of Senate approval. WASHINGTON (UPI) -pensions are in the works. For Social Security recipients, It may mean 15 per cent extra, raising the average monthly payment for man and wife from $150 to about $172.50. For congressmen retiring or defeated in the next few years; it means as much as several thousand dollars a year extra, for total pensions up to $34,000 a year. Government workers generally also will get' a better break on retirement, along with built-in protection to be provided also for congressmen against Cost-of-living increases. STARTING POINT Bigger But together, the proposals are the The committee also has invited testimony from Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird. In a speech prepared for the Senate, Church said the United States has no vital interest in preserving the Saigon government of President Nguyen Van Thieu—or even in the preservation of a non-Communist government. "From the standpoint of our interests, we have been fighting an unnecessary war for five long years, making it possibly the most disastrous mistake in the history of American foreign policy,” Church said, “lt can never be vindicated, it can only be liquidated." Birmingham Area Top Botanist to Lecture on Saving Lakes starting point for a new inquiry into war policy planned by Sen. J. W. Fulbright’s Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Its hearings, the first on Nixon’s conduct of the war, begin Oct. 27. Secretary of State William P. .Rogers has agreed to testify in open session, although no date has yet been set. Democratic Sens. Harold Hughes of Iowa and Thomas F. Eagleton of Missouri yesterday proposed a resolution calling for U.S. withdrawal unless the Saigon government undertakes major reforms within 60 days. The Church-Hatfield and Hughes-Eagleton proposals would be expressions of Senate opinion with no binding effect on President Nixon. BLOOMFIELD HILLS - Can Michigan lakes be saved from pollution? "Yes," says Dr. V. J. Chapman who has been researching the lake pollution situation while serving as a distinguished scholar at the Cranbrook Institute of Science. The noted botanist from New Zealand will report his findings in a color-slide illustrated lecture Oct. 17 at 8:15 p.m. in the Cranbrook. School Auditorium, 550 Lone Pine. - "While much hks been done about the pollution problems of the Great Lakes." Dr. Chapman said, “relatively little work has taken place concerning deterioration of Michigan’s smaller lakes. No Loan for Waterford House Democrats in caucus yesterday went on record unanimously for a Social Security boost of “at least" 15 per cent, , to be effective “not later than” Dec. 1. President Nixon has asked for -a 10 per cent boost, to take effect April 1. The House Ways and Means Committee starts work hearings Oct. 15, with aproval of some increase by Congress a certainty, either this" year or so drawn as to be retroactive. As for the congressmen, their increase was wrapped up yesterday with House acceptance of Senate amendments to a bill "liberalizing pensions for all government workers. What the bill does is let government retirees figure their pensions on the basis of their three highest paid years. The payment can total 80 per cent of this figure, plus cost-of-living adjustments. State Denies School Plea An excepted setback came yesterday in one of the attempts of Waterford Township School District officials to secure the funds‘needed to put some 18,600 students back on full-day sessions. * The State Municipal Finance Commission refused to allow the district to borrow $1.25 million. four hours of school a day to the normal five hours — and secondary students from five to six hours — - would be January, according to Dr. Pagen. Acting Supt. John Pagen said the only way court-ordered full days could now be reinstated is if voters approve a one-year, 9-mill property tax increase Nov. 25. Then, at best, the quickest elementary pupils could go from a yearly average of ‘CAN’T BE REPAID’ The three commission members said they couldn't approve the loan because the district can’t repay the tax anticipation notes. "Frankly, I would have been very surprised if the commission did approve the loan,” Pagen commented. "But I’m sure they would approve it if the millage passes on our anticipated income." ‘EXISTENCE THREATENED’ “As homes move in with septic tanks and fertilizers, the lakes are contaminated and their existence is threatened," he added. This past summer, Dr. Chapman oversaw conservation work at Sodon Lake in Bloomfield Township. Dr. Chapman is in the final month of a 10-month term as the fifth distinguished, scholar at the Institute of Science. The program was initiated in 1966 to bring outstanding scientists and educators to Cranbrook to conduct research, write and teachr in conjunction with area and national universities. Dr. Chapman has been on sabbatical leave from the University of Auckland in New Zealand, where he is chairman of the botany department. He received his degrees from Cambridge University in England. AT HARVARD Teacher-Pact Negotiations Reach Impasse in Clarkston (Continued From Page One) A CEA spokesman said the teachers previously acceeded to the fact-finder’s recommendations on those issues as a means of quickly resolving a contract settlement. “We have demanded that the issues be \rcopened with the utmost reluctance — but at this time we find no other recourse. The CEA has given the board an ample opportunity to agree to an equitable settlement,” the t e a c her spokesman added. Salary differences have been unable td move past what board negotiators view is a total $33,0000 gap. The CEA says the difference is $3l\000. team, has continually maintained the school district has expenditures of $150,000 annually over its income. In answer to a question on the speculation that the board of education is attempting to “bust" the teacher’s union, Vincent maintains the board has made offers highly comparable to all surrounding school districts. “We have made every effort," he said. Vincent said an earlier snag in negotiations — the personal leave question — Was) caused by erroneous information given the fact-finder. Meanwhile, the district’s stay^and appeal of the court order is pending before the Michigan Court of Appeals. School days were shortened this year as a cost-saving device because voters turned down three millage increase proposals the past two years. OaklandrG'ounty Circuit Court Judge Williaqp J. Beer had given the district until Nov. 3 to begin full-day classes even if it means going into the red, which is against state law. Dr. Chapman was a fellow for 10 years at Gombille Caius College, Cambridge, and was Henry Fellow of Botany at Harvard University for one year. Dr. Chapman's lecture is free to Science Institute members. The public will be admitted at $1.50 per person. Katherine Wunderlich has been named assistant director of public affairs for the Cranbrook institutions. Miss Wunderlich is a graduate of the University of Michigan and attended Cottey College in Nevada, Mo. NATIONAL WEATHER --/Rain js-predicted for tonight along the Atlantic Coast frfm the Florida panhandle through Maine Rdih also )s expected/ for the northern. Great tLakes region and m an area Oxtcrfcling from (he Pacific 'Northwest to«thev northern Rocky Mountain region. BOTH SIDES FIRM Both sides have held firm in their arguments on financial differences. The board Is attempting to avoid what it terms "further deficit financing” while the CEA contends the fact-finder’s salary recommendations are .within the board’s budget limits. The GEA charged yesterday that the school board is attempting to force teachers into a settlement by standing pat on Us deficit-financing argument. Assistant Supt. of! Schools Floyd Vjnceq'., a member of the school bargaining He also claimed the presence of a Michigan Education Association representative on tpe CEA negotiating team has made a difference in the progress of negotiations. Vincent said the teachers handled, the negotiations themselves In previous years. The Michigan association is the CEA’s parent organization. ohIh ly 1/6 ounce and good IOf milt mild Ioiioi. Com# In tor • domonitrotlon of Z#nlth'« now Zonotto. II may b* jutl right tor ygul Research Bill Vowed WASHINGTON Of) - Sen. William Pjoxmirc, D-Wis., said today he will introduce legislation to require future government-financed J research m bp relevant to federu contracts gnd needs. ( The quality goes In before the name germ Pontiae Mall Opfloatf It Hearing Aid Canter 682-1113 , 1 ’()NVj\u\’ MK WKliN A) AY, OCTOBER 8, 1009 VTT A June wedding is being planned by Janfit Kay Updegraff and William P. Kimball. Announcing their daughter's' engagement are Mur. and tyrs. Frank M. Updegraff of Grosse. Pointe.. The prospective bridegroom attends Michigan State University, his fiancee’s alma mater. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Clarke R. Kimball of Ogemaw Road. Polly's. Pointers Noise Disturbs Sleep DEAR POLLY - Many readers must be light sleepers. Our apartment Is on a busy street. While I am conditioned to the general noise level, it Is the sudden noise of sirens, motor bikes and drag-race-type dirvers who wake me. How have- you other readers coped with, this? - S.M.R. DEAR POLLY - I would not miss your wonderfully helpful column for anything. When I fed my kittens out in the yard, the big cats got all the food before the kittens had a chance. Now I turn a clothes basket upside down over the kittens and their food to make a pen that keeps the others away. Be sure to use an openwork basket so the kittens get plenty of air, can see out and not be frightened. I have used this method for both kittens and puppies and now my neighbors are all doing it. — MRS. C.R.R. WWW DEAR POLLY - To loosen the elastic in men’s socks, Mrs. C. F. R. should lay the band of the sock over her left hand with the inside out. Slip the point of manicure scissors under the elastic thread and clip. These elastic threads usually will show up, as they are heavier than the sock threads and not knit into the sock but stitched across. Do no clip the rows straight down the sock or you will lose all the stretch but have the clips run diagonally or scatter them. Numerous washing usually will loosen them but some stretch will remain. — TRACY WWW DEAR POLLY - I keep my pinking shears in a plastic bag with just a drop of oil on the hinge. This works well on my scissors and the bag is just put in the sewing box. — GRACE. Ed. Note — Grace is Pontiac’s own Mrs. Lewis Shockey who won a Polly dollar for her pointer. Alimony Cases Threaten to Fill Egyptian Jails CAIRO (UPI) - More than 67.000 .Egyptians face imprisonment for failure to pay alimony, according to the iMinistry of Justice. The ministry said a majority of divorced women here ask for imprisonment of their former husbands .who fail * to pay alimony decided by the courts. In addition to the 67,000 males who already face imprisonment on charges brought, by irate former wives, the ministry said 43.000 other women were deciding whether to follow this course. As of May 1 there were 2,019 men in Egyptian jails for nonpayment of alimony. For Heart qf Gold OVRfAGES B—a Groups to Cite Volunteer A search is on throughout Wayne, Oakland and Macomb Counties for women with proverbial hearts of gold. Forty-two women’s organizations comprising the Heart of Gold Award Council are joining forces to single out those who have made unusual and outstanding volunteer contributions to the Metropolitan Detroit community. Working in cooperation with Women for the United Foun-dation (WUF), the Council is planning its third annual award ceremony and luncheon for Feb. 10 in Cobo Hall. * "* * The event, a- tradition inaugurated on Valentine’s Day, 1968, provides community-wide recognition to those women who have made significant contributions as volunteers during the preceding year. Its purpose is to call attention to the importance of voluntary citizen participation in community affairs and to encourage others to take part. Plans for the third award luncheon were announced by the council’s chairman, Mrs. Joseph L. Hudson Jr., of Groose Pointe. Her vice chairman is Mrs. Aa^on Gershenson, of Detroit. NOV. 1 DEADLINE Any organized group or individual in the tri-county area Chalk up high fashion for the fall with this striped draib string tunic top that matches perfectly with these fit 'n flare pants. From Dal-tonte new James Kenrob collection, these knit-mates have plenty of dash for almost any campus activity. Shoes May Tell Tales on Job Seekers BURLINGTON, Vt. (UPI) ‘‘Putting your best f o forward” means wearing the right shoes when applying for s job. Clothing specialists in the ex tension Service of the University of Vermont say that potential employers can tell a lot about a prospective employe by the cut of his or her shoes. The specialists offer these tips to job hunters: — Women should w e a simple, low or mid-heeled pumps, ties or slingbacks. — Men should check shoes for necessary repairs to scratches rundown heels, dirt marks and lack of a shine. Sneakers are two-prong sore spots — they’re defintely ‘‘out’ for interviewers and can hurt feet on the job because they usually lack proper support. Trim, neat, and well-polished footwear Is a plus. No matter how dressed otherwise, a job hunter looks sloppy with shoddy or soiled shoes. Solids, Patterns in Knits for 1970 Knits for 1970 will be solids and patterns, reports one fabrics house. Watch for argyles, foulards, vertical stripes in two of three colors, ombred or heathered and art deco geometries. If pattern isn’t your bag, so for textured. Tight, grainy boucles and dimensional knits will abound. HUTTOPCHERS, KERNS, N0RVELL, INC. 10Q7 W. HURON ST. 681-2100 New Horizons of Oakland County, Inc. has selected this attractive Christmas card to benefit its projects this year. The cards are priced at a minimum figure of 16 cents each. Mrs. Richard McClear, 411 Hanna, Birmingham, Mich. 48009, is taking orders. may submit a nomination prior to the Nov. 1 deadline, Mrs./ Hudson said. Only previous Heart of Gold winners will be ineligible for recognition. Mrs. Hudson said the council will honor a group of six to twelve women volunteers at the 1970 luncheon. Twelve have received Heart of Gold awards at each of the two earlier ceremonies. Any woman in the tri-county area may become a Heart of Gold nominee providing her volunteer activities involve one of the following: • Child and family services including care of the elderly I and work with teens or retirees. • Church, cultural, educa-| tional, political, health-related or war-related activities. • Involvement in citizens’ groups. • Fund-raising, budgeting or planning for the United Foundation or its federations, United !Community Services and1 Michigan United Fund. I • Unusual act of personal heroism, moral ’ courage or simply being an unsung heroine. ★ ★ ★ A nomination must be made in a letter of 200 to 500 words outlining the volunteer’s activities with emphasis on contributions made during the past lyear. I Letters must cont ain specific-information, giving ways in which the service is outstanding or has benefited the community and include both the name of place, address and telephone number where the work was done. The nominee’s name must be omitted in the letter but included along with her address and telephone number on a separate slip stapled to the letter. The name, address and telephone number of the organization or i n d i v i d u a 1 making the nomination also must appear on a separate slip. OBTAIN FORMS Forms for nominations may be obtained from the Heart of Gold Award Council, 152 8 Woodward Ave., Detroit 48226 All entries must be submitted by Nov. 1.. Colors Compete Make no mistake about it. Black for late day and evening runs stiff competition with color come fall and winter. Black runs throughout the elaborate evening collection of designer Ferdinado Sarmi. All nominations Vill b e acknowledged by the council. Entries will be screened in November and judged during January, Special consideration will be given to1 community benefits resulting from volunteer’s efforts, amount of personal effort involved, results of service, special demands on the individual, uniqueness of service and sincerity of motivation. o/a J ^JJuron direct Sa ton 1062 West Huron Phone 681.1330 Located only 2 block* from Pontiac Mall, next to China City Restaurant A. Fine Furniture Since 1917 liitMnVmmlkq iWuftoiuM Mistakes In decorating aro tho most expensive mistakes you can make. We at Stewart Glenn advise you to etart with a plan, based on your way of life, your interest*, your hobbies. We’ll help you draw a plan, correlate your colors far carpeting, draperies, wallpapers. Well do your leg-work, arrange picture walls and save you time at well at money. Furl Hi I mo n Phone: FI 2-1292 for ah Appointment 1680 S. Telegraph Rtl., S. of Orchard Lake Rd. Free Parking Front and Side of Store. JUNIORS' Young, Kicky Coats ... WITH THE LEAN, LIVELY LOOK New directions, new styles, Exclusively You Coats to reflect your personality. So warm and cuddly, you'll look forward to Winter. Sizes 5 to 15. from ’40 Coat Salon — Second Floor Special Introductory Offer We give you o pair of FREE HOSE I trip leglino < ’ v v ; 8^:4 - No garters or binding cuffsl The elastic is knit right into the satiny smooth Power Nylon, Lycra1-1*1 Spandex and rubber fabric. Beige. S. M. L. , Introductory Offer.. Pantie and Hose for G—10 m -nk:% Groaning. 1 Jonathan, . Northarn Spy, bo. Oraptl, Concord, Paari, Bartlatt, 14 bu. Paara, Boic, bu. ....... Plum,, Stanley, V, bu. VBMTABLBS Stam, Green Round, bu. .. . Boon, Kentucky Wander, bu. Morf Mixed, Trading Moderate NEW YORK (UPI) - Stocks opened mixed today in moderate turnover. Market averages again are flirting with late July lows, and there appears to be little In the news budget to force a change in direction. Still, some analysts believe a short-term rally, possibly for technical reasons only, could be in the offing following an almost uninterrupted two-week slide. Shortly after the opening, the UPI marketwide indicator was off 0.03 per cent on 360 issues crossing the tape. Of these, 133 declined, and 126 advanced. Motors were mixed, but steels backed off. Oils moved in both directions, as did electronics. American Telephone eased tow 50Mi. Polaroid fell Vk to 134%, but Reynolds Metal tacked on % to 31% following a boost in aluminum prices. In the motors, Ford gained % to 43%, while Chrysler picked up % to 37%. But, General Motors gave up % to 71%. Chemicals showed a steady tone. Du Pont &nd Eastman Kodak both held unchanged at 113% and 72% respectively. U.S. Steel dipped % to 36%, while Armco gave up % to 27. Bethlehem lost % to 28%. OILS MIXED Mobil fell % to 55% in the oils, with Jersey Standard down % to 69, and Standard of Ohio off % to 93%. Atlantic Richfield, however, climbed 1% to 192%. Natomas fell 1% to 91%; froecoll, dz. bch. ................... 1.M cabbage. gwrly, bu....................1.75 Cabbage, Rad, bu.................... 1.75 Cabbage. Sprouts, bu................ 1.75 Cabbage, Standard Varloty. bu.......2.50 Carrots, dz. belt. ....1.50 Carrots, Cello Pak, 1-dz............. 2.15 • Carrots, Topped, bu................. 3.15 Ciullf lower, dt.................... 4.00 Calory, Pascal, di. stalks .....2.00 Coisry, Pascal, 2 to 5-dz. ctn. ......3.75 Calory Hearts, Cello Pak, dt. bags.. 2.00 Corn, Sweet, Mi. bag ..................JJO Olll Site, VS bu. Pickle Site. M bu. ers„ sneers, bi Olll, d*. bch........... Eaoplant, bu........... :.. i$ Onions, Groan, dt. bch......... Onions, Dry. 50-lb. bag ....... Onions, Pickling, lb. ......... Parsley, Curly, dt. bch........ Parsley, Root, dt. bch......... Parsnips, Vk bu. .............. Parsnips, Cello Pak, dt. Peppers, Cayenne, pk. bskl. .. Peppers, Net, bu. .. .......... Peppers, Sweat Rad, pk. bskl. Peppers, Sweat, bu............. Potatoes, 50-lb. bag .......... Potatoes, 10-lb. bag .......... :":S Radishes, While, dt Squash, Acorn, bu. Squash, Buttarcup. Delicious, bu. ...............2.50 Hubbard, bu. ............. 2.50 I. 14-lb. bskl. ...............2.00 Vk bu........................3.25 Collard, Bu.......... Endive, by........... Escarolo, bu......... Kale, DU, ........... Lettuce, Bibb, pk. bs Lettuce, Boston, dx. Lettuce, Leaf. bu. .. Lettuce, Head, dt. Lettuce, Romalne, bt mustard, bu.......... Sorrel, bu. ......... Spinach, bu. ..... Swiss Chard, bu. i Turnips, bu......... Poultry and Eggs ORTROrr POULTRY & DETROIT (AP> - (USDA)—Egg prices paid per dozen by first receivers (Is—■-* Ing U.S.)Grade A (umbo 51-5)14; 13. US?/'"" m*dlu,n 4,VW4' .CHICAGO (API — (USDA) - ' . Eggs: prices paid delivered to l iower to 2 higher; 00 par < 40Vk-42; standards 42. Livestock __ DETROIT LIVESTOCK ■ DETROIT (AP) — (USDA)—Hogs __________ ■borrows and gilts U.8. 1-3, MO-330 pounds, 34.50- 17; MO-240 pounds, 34-34J0; SOWS U.S. 1 and 3, 300-400 pounds. 23.2M4; ~ ~ 400-400 pounds, lUO-2125. Cattle 400, alaughtor steers cholco 110 pounds, 20.7530; one load aro 1100 pounds at 30; mix good and cIh M.25-11.15; good, 24.7M8.25; helferi OtH 750-000 pounds, 24.75-27JO; good, 25-24.75; cows and byMs utility 30-3) .ToT Vealers 100, high choice and prime, 42-44; choln 30-42; good, 34-34. Sheep 400, choice and prime 00-110 Pounds wooled slaughter lambs, 38.30-20.50; cull to good slaughter awes, 4-10. CHICASO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO JAP) - (USDA) - Hogs receipts Tuesday ware 3JOO; butchers were .25 to so lower; moderately active early, later fairly active; shippers took 1,700; {• 2 105-125 lb butchers 2L0O-27.00; 125 heed Sorted at 27.00; t-1 200-250 Ibt 24.00-24.25; MWs steedy to Mlower; fairly active; 1-1 350-400 lbs 33.75-24.25; 1-3 400-500 lbs 13.00-23.75; 2-3 300400 lbs 22.50-22.25; boars 20.5-21.. Cattle 2,00; calvot none; slaughter alters rtlhtr slow, steady to 25 iowor; holtars moderately active, steady; cows steody; fin; loan high cholco and prim# 1,150-1,250 lb ifigghtor steers yield grade 3 and 4 30.25-30.50, two loads at 30.“ choice 050-1,200 lbs yield grade 2 to 25.7530,25; mixed good emf cholco 28.00-38.75; good 24.50-2S.00. High cholco and prime 000-1,050 lb slaughter hellers yield grade 3 and -4 28.252t.Sp, three loads at tlta latter price; choice 8251,000 In yield grotto 2 to 27.50- 28.25; mixed good and cholco 24JO-27 JO; Utility and commercial cows 10.50-21.00; Mw high dressing utility 21.2521 JO; cannare and cutters 17JM0.00. Sheep 100; wooled slaughter lambs tloody; couple lots cholco and prime 105 115 lbs 20.00; port dock good and cholco 04 lbs 27.00. Stocks of Local Interost Quotations tram tilt NASD ore representative intoraoalor prices. mlordMior markets change.............. Prices do not 3-4 4.0 .113 11.? 23J »:! h AWT Corp. ...... Associated Truck CTllloni Ulllltles I Citizens Utilities I ' Delrex Chemical . ttSTWHST.* The New York Stock Exchange NEW YORK (AP) • New York Stock i Exchange selected morning prices: Salts Not [htft.)Mlgli Law Lat9 Cltg. AbbtLab 1.10 4 74H 74% 74% .... ............ 71 78 78 —1 17% 17% 17% — % 93 43% 43% 43% + % Ms.) HHfh Law I 24% 24% GtWnUnit .90 14 45% 44% ‘ ...........30% 90 Gt West Finl 16 17% 17% 17% v 26 27% 27% 27% — % QuifWIn 7 43% 2% 42% - AlliedCh 1.20 31 26% 92 91% 91% 91% — \ 30 - % ____ » + w Gulf Oil 1.SO 42 34Vk 33V. 34 + 'A GulfStaUI .94 1 3044 3044 }OH + to .......... 21 3114 MVk 20?k — Vk —H— Halllburt 1.05 24 48Vk 48V. 48V, - Vk Harris Int 1 6 69% 69% 69% ... HoclaMng .70 Hare Inc 1 14 32% HawPadc .20 HoarnWal .82 Electro ylnn .20 Brands 2 ...West 1.60 Am Can 2.20 ilpw 1.50 A Homa 1.40 Am Hasp .22 BmMPdy .90 - - ,e 30^ 29% 30% ......■ 17 10 9% 9% AmNatGas 2 x53 32% 32% 32% Photo .12 16 10% 10% 10% ............ — 28% + % 28 27% 27% 27% — % 36 52 | V:S A Smalt 1.90 jjtwV AMK AMP m AnchHock .80 AiieorpNSv i ArchOan 1.60 rmcost 1.60 iimstCk .ao •hid Oil 1.20 itidpo 1.20 Af( R lent Id 2 Atlas Cham i Atlas Corp Avco Cp I Avnet I nr Avon Pd 24 29% 28% 29% • 8 32% 32% 193 50% 50% 17 44% 43% 43% • 94 20 27% 27% — % 19 48 48 48 •' 1 22% 22% 22% -2 41% 48% 48% — % 204 27% 27 27% . 21 87% 87 87% • 191 102% 102 102 Avnat Inc .40 15 12% 12% 12% — % 21 161 158% 160 +3 37% 37% 37% a Brunswfc .07g BucyEr 1.20 BUM Co 3b Butova W .60 1 55% 88% 55% — 1 3 67% 67% 67% — \ 6 44% 44 44 +1 2 81% 81% 51% .... 80 18% 17% II — ’ 31 20% 28 20% — 1 67 32% 32 82 — % 30 70% jf% 70% + % 33 94% 24% 24% — % 17 25% 25% 2116*-% 1% + % 27 156 154% 32% 154% - CampRL .45a 1 22% 22% 22% + % CampSp 1,10 x8 29% 29% 29% + % Cap. CKtM Bd. 3 28% 28% 21% CaroPLt 8RB CarterW .40a Nasa Jt CastlsCkt .60 NaterTr 1.20 Celanasacp 2 Cancolns .30 CantSW 1.80 Ctrro i.60b Ches Ohio 4 ChrlsCft eOSd cnTtin i.BO CltlM Svc2 ClarkEq 1.40 Cloviiin 2.04 CocaCol L33 Cola Pal Tjo CollInRad .00 Cololntst 1.80 CBS 1.40b CoJuOat 1.80 CoMlOlv .40 ComwEd 2.20 com&n Con Edl. 1.10 ConN SSFt.ri ConsPwr 1.20 ContAIrL JO CWItCM 2.20 Coni CP 1.80 ContMof .top COM Oil 1A Coni Tel .72 control Data Cooper In 1.40 CorGW 2.50a - + * 94 29% 29% 29% 4* % 21 29% 29% 29% 25 14% 14% 14% 13 27% 27% 27% — % 21 43% 43% 43% — % [07 40% 59% 60% .. **24 43% 43 43 — 5 37 37% 37 + % 20 24% 28% 23% — 1 3 23% 23% 23% ... 8 25% 25 25% + 1 3 57% 57% 57% — « 45 12% 12% 12% — 1 38 87% 37% 87% + % 48 40 40 40 44 49% 49 49% + % 7 42% 42% 42% + 1 1 45% 45% 45% 10 36% 36% 36% + % 13 42% 42% 2% — % 4 25% 25% 21% — % I 17% 17% 17% - t * T » + % Cowles CoxBdca Crown Cork CrwnZalf 1.60 P m DaycoCp 1.14 PaytnPL 1.60 m.f°i% DelteAlr .40 PtfiROr 1.10 ■Mia 1.40 2 47% 4% 47% , 44 27% 27 27 9 2 41% 42 x13 26% 26% 26% & M 32% 32% 67 12% 12% 12% • 9 73% 73% 73%- 2 20% M% M% — I 42 28% 28% 28% ..... 10 22 21% 22 + % 20 1#% 142% 142% —1_ 7 25% 25% 25% + % 6 278% 278% 278 — % 20 2 10% 10% 10% I .50 2 45% 45% 45% • 1.70 16 33 32% 82%. 5 21% 21% 21% . 13 16% 16% 16Vs . 14 37% 37 37% . 9 II II II - —D— 14 14% 14% 14% + % 6 25% 25% 25% 7 35% 85% 35%-1% 3 27% 27% 27% + % 4 30 30 30 —% 1 17% 17% 17% — % 14 22% 22% «% + % 5 11% 1195 1195 .... 11 20% 20% 20% .... mm r B -i 13 13% 13% 13% — \ DowChm 2.60 25 67% 67% 67% . 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I mm 29% 29%—% 1T3% 118 113% 24% 24% 24% — % 1 11% 11% + % 3 22 II 12 29 12 27% 27% g% ■ 95 98% 98% 96% -2 27 27 . 37 « 13 10% 10% 10% ■ Scherlng .1 SCM Cp .1 SCOA Ind ShellTrn .73o mm SlgnalCo 1.20 Housahp mo HoOstLP 1.12 ingarRand 2 Inland Otl 2 rlkSt 1.80 12 24 tt% 24 17 136% lS% 185% -2 —I— 1 28% 28% 28% — * 7 12% 12% 12% — 1 6 32% 32% 32% — a 13 40% 40% inoorCo I I mith KF 2 SCar EG 1.19 SouCalB 1.40 South Co 1.20 iouNOat 1.40 Sou Pac 1.80 louRy 2.80a Spartan Ind Sparry R .47g SquareD .80 StBrand 1.50 StdilNT 2.70b StdOllOh 2.70 luara Start Drug 75 844 348 343% -2% Int PiD 1.50 28 37% TAT 31 11% « .... 35% 35%-% 37% 37% - % 56 55% 55 55 — % 1 36% 36% 36% .. 33 68 67% 67%—1 iWn 1:8 JohnJhn .80a JonLogan Kan GE 1.36 KanPwL 1.11 52% 52% + % i + % 2 47% 47% 47% 14 38% ’ll 33 15 148 145 145 8 52% 52% JonaLiu 1.35 4 20% 20% Jostans .60 1 38% 38% 33% Joy Mfg 1.40 9 21% 28% —K— Kaiser Al 1 117 34% 34. 34 — % 5 21% 21% 21% 7 20 20 20 1 12% 12% 12% II 27% 27% 27% 16 44% 44 44 -% ImbClk 2.K20 LaarSlag ,5( Lahmn 1.61a LlbOPrd 2.00 > MCN L I My 2.50 \W 1.33 LoawsTha .13 LonaSCam 1 LonaSGa 1.12 LonglsLt 1.30 LucRy itr .00 Lukans Stl 1 LVO Corp LykYng .I5g Macke Co .30 MacyRH 1 Mad Pd 3.56b Magnvox 1.2o Marathn 1.60 Marcor Inc 1 MartlnM 1.10 MayDStr 1.60 Maytag 1 McDonnD .40 MGM *60p Mlcrodot .30a MldSoUtil .88 16 17% 16% 17% + % 50 22% n 22 + % 3 46% 46%-% 22 1% J% l% + 9 4 24% 34% 34% + % 9 36% 35% 35% 55 45% 45% 45% 9 22% 11% 21% -V 18 30% 30% 30% — J 11 23 23 23 — % 47 fl 17% II ... 10 23% »% 23% + 12 g 29 g% ... 2 27 27 27 ... 5 8 0 8 +1 30 14% 14% 14% — —M— 2 17% 17% 17% + 4 35 35 35. - 29 27% 27% 27% ... 24 41% 41% 41% - 1 8 37% 37% 37% — 36 46% 46% 46% — ] 17- 19% 19% 19% • MohtDUt 1.68 Mont Pw 1.68 Mor-Nor .80 Motorola 1 Mt St TT1.24 NatCash 1.20 Naf Distil .90 Nat Fuel 1.60 Nat Ganl .20 NatOyps 105 Natlnd .467 2 28% 28% 20% + % 2 26% 26% 26% + % 23 34% 34 34 — 104 141% 140 140 -3% 6 21% 21% 21% ‘ —N— 5» 2w 2 WVk + Vk 27 1«Vk U4V. 144% —1 12 17% 17% 17% + Vk 1 W* 7 21% 21% 12 2SVb 24% 28% i y% f% » 38 30% 29% 30 Nat Stool 2.80 38 41% 41% 41% - % Natomas .28 135 »2% 21% »2% - % NevPow 1.01 tl 42% 42% 42% + % 22% 22% 22%- NtngEI 1.40 Nawmnit 1.04 NlaoMP 1.10 NonolkWst 6 Norrlslnd .80 NorAmPnll 1 x, M NoAmRock 2 37 26% 18 25% 25% 25% + % 28 17% 17 17% • NortSIm 1.227 ctdntPet i loftdls 1.50 _:)• 01 i.oo QkiaNGs 1.12 OllnCorp .80 Ejbr Oufbd Ma ‘ OwensCg Owens III 1 21 42% 42% 42% < 20 42% 42% 42% * 19 24% |4% 24% ■ 1 37% 37% 37% ■ 62 30 29% 30 ■ 218 26% 25% 25%-' 24 25 24% 11 19% 19% 10 19% 19% )M* t vt 19V. -I- Vk 14 30 MVk MW ■ 7 02 81V. M Oweniltr 1.38 133 69'/. 40Vk 4fVk —P— 34 31 30Vb SOW - PacGEI 1.50 PaeLtg t.60 Poe Pat .Mo PoePwL 1.38 PacTAT 1J0 PanASul .77n ran Am .30p Panh Kp 1.60 ParkoDavIt V PtnnCen 3.40 MioinDix .80. PannzUn .00 PaptlCo I Phil. II 1.64 Philip Morr t Phlll Pat 1.30 PltnayBw .60 PPoTnd i32o ProctGa 2.60 PubSCol 1.06 PtycBO 1.6 Pubficind .457 Puab Sup .21 PUfllPL 1.68 Pullman 2.10 Si 36 21% 21% 28%-% 12-19% 19% m 6 19% ltU .. I 21 14% 16% 16% + % 34 14% 1 14% . ir30 2f% -*• TtpSibliU 3 17Vb I7Vh 17*k 33 491k 49 V. 49V, 46 35Vk 38 38 ISB MVk 3310 Hit + H 48 JJjk StH BVk + Vk U 1SH 1440 1440 - W 35 88’k 81 8140-V0 34 ifto 4740 4340 - Vk 57 3440 34 341k 33 381k 31 i(Vk V , 108 374k 3640 37V0 \ r 374k *m jm „ 100 13448 13340 1334* -Ilk ft 34W *4 34^ + W 88 MW »4* MVk - 1* 1 1* If if ..... 38 M4k 344k 364k ■ 4 144 844 844 ■ 4 30Vk 30VO 30Vk - if MVk 44™ 44V4 ' J alotonP .60 aneo Inc ‘.93 aythaon .40 twj^ltl 3J0 SKA*- Vd ohr Cp JO oyalOut 3d tsKaiff Sch.nl.y 1.40 I 23% 28% ) urn 6 89% 19% *] P fk 1344 iMffi 44 3)4k 3144 3)44 + 40 97 43VO 43Vk 4IW - ' 54 41k 444 41k 4 3}W 3)4k 314k — 1 41 43Vk 431k 4tVk + 1 —s— 30 M44 3614 '3414 - 1 ilfk; 11 % b- 10 341k 14 fl - Vk riT! •n 2 87 16% — % 66% - % 2 33% 33% 33% — % 16 53% 53 S3 37 26% 26% 26% 43 73% 72% 72% 23 37% 36% 37% — % 13 24% 24% 2496 .. 21 31% 31% 21% + 56 24% 24% 24%....... 11 40% 40 40 17 36% 36% 36% — % 35 47% 46% 46% —1% Job Tally Significant if There's Mistake to Meet Today 3 12% 12% 12% + < 74 55% 55% 55% — 17 52% 52 M% + 1 95 69% 68% 69% — % 40 94% 92% 93% — % 7 11% 1196 1196 + % ‘ — + % 19 34% 34% 34% StavansJ 2.40 05 m w* Tannaco 1.32 Taxaco 140 TaxETm 1.40 TaxGSul .60 Taxoslnst .80 TaxPLd .45g Textron .90 ThlokoJ 90 44% 44% 44% • 1 53% 58% 53% -28 7 *^6 7 • 1 25% 25% 25% -3 23% 23% 23% . —T— 19 301k 10 MVk • 34 4614 461k 4644 119 37V0 37V. 37Vk — Vk 84 3314 331k 3314 1848 311k 3014 31 Vk 10 33Vk SMk 331k -I- Ik 47 3SVk 3SVk 351k 71 136 1244k 12414 Closed Session Eyed; Polley Post at Stake LANSING (AP) - The strife-ridden State Board of Educa tion — split over philosophies and loyalty to seif-deposed superintendent Ira Polley — today faced the troublesome task of picking a new chief school officer for Michigan. '# # # Before the scheduled session, however, the office of Atty. Got. Frank Kelley was expected to advise members on whether they could bar the public and press from proceedings, as had been discussed. ★ ★ ★ The meeting was to begin at 2 p.m. Board member Leroy Augen stein of Holt Tuesday cited s closed “executive session” held last week and asked Kelley if such a meeting were legal. TO DISCUSS RESIGNATION The board planned to discuss Polley’s abruptly tendered resignation, a successor to the su perintendent and its own po sition on Miiliken’s education reform proposals. Polley did not plan to attend the session. It h 4r “I don’t think I could add any- Jng,” said the superintendent, who quit rather than face the ever-increasing possibility of being fired. He blasted the board failure at the same time, TodoShp 1.20 TmWAir JOp Trarnmr .50b Transltron TrICont 3.15g TRW Inc 1 TwenCnt JOp UAL Inc 1 UMC Ind .72 pnGorlNte 1 ECU* UnlonPacif 2 Unlroval ,70 UnltAlrc 1.00 M 1114 111k 111k — 6 48Vk Ilk 4S1k — 6 3Uk 31 31 ... 7 4314 431k 431k — 15 38’A M 3S — 60 34 Bh mfc — 30 41k 41k 41k ... II iTW 311k »1k + 31 4 SMk 358k + 14 3014 30>k 30V. ... —u— 73 2814 3«'/k 311k ... si TiW 50% — % f:; II 11% ^ 2 #6 47% 47% — 6 28% 28% 20% — % 10 P% 67% 67% — % 27 24% 24 24 ..... 2 33 3296 93 + % 4 39% 29% 29% —1 02 34% 26% 26% — % 62 21% 21% 21%— UPlonn 1.60 18^47% 47% 47% + Varlan Amo 49 80% 80% 80% — Vando Co .60 2 17% 17% 17% VaEIPw 1.12 64 28% 22% 28% + _w—X—Y—Z— WarLam l.io 233 66% 65% 66% — m ‘.20 7 20% 20% 2006 ... Op 4 26 26 26 ... .30 122 87 36% 36% - 10 M 46 M96 46 + 00 37 55% 55 KVk + % 33 37% 37% 37% 2 55% 55% 55% 36 84 38% 8366 46 2196 2166 2166 109 g% 27% 37% 10 810 97% 96% 97 44 7 48% 40% 4066 + % 0 68 43% 42% 42% — % by Tha Associated Proas 1969 ub Smalt Ui |N»I \ UnivOPd WnAIr L ragular i RIR00 fooinofos. a—Alio axtra or axfrat. b—Annual i dock dlvldand. c-LIquidatina | d—Daclarad or paid In 19B stock dividend. o-Paid last your. | Treasury Position >arad to (apt. **< «" Sollara): Balance . — 9,900441,131.43 D^,l,,feUMy4Vtt4.343.4«.84 W"hdr,*Stoi»»S5 80J34.15M7a.t7 T0,*x—343,114,850,139.80 357,181 Jt1,344.03 °°ld ,"*M47,M(M44J7 10.347J34.43S.t0 X—Indudaa 434JMJIS.71 debt not lub-|9ct to itotutoiv limit. It's in the Bag DETROIT (AP)—A bank robber handed a teller at the National Bank of Detroit a note which said, “I have a gun.” Police are still searching for the Svho walked out of thp bank ay with a brown p«per bag filled with about $2,000 in $10 and $20 bills. Sailor Is Killed WASHINGTON (AP) - Navy Building Constructionman Darrel G. Battin, son of Mr. and Mrs. Earl D. C. Battin Jr. of on, Mich., was killed In action in Vietnam, the Defense Department reported Tuesday. By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business Analyst NEW YORK-Did Uncle Sam goof? As everyone learned in the second grade, it’s quite easy] to err in adding a column of figures. And that’s Just what some observers think] the government didin compiling the unemployment statistics for September. If there are no serious errors, then the figures are loaded with significance. The Labor Department nounced that joblessness for the calendar month rose to 4 per cent of the labor force, a sudden and very large jump from 3.S per cent a month earlier. SURPRISING FACT Making the jump even more surprising is the fact that for the past year the figure had re* mained around 3.5 per cent, showing no real trend, and that in August it had even dropped a bit. The September percentage could be correct, but some economists can’t easily forget that in the past the government has changed some figures after totaling them up a second time. week poses a problem because logically it should have gone the other way. If employers are slowing down their ^activities, why should they be increasing the workweek? WWW There could be explanations, but it will be some time before they are revealed. Meanwhile, considerable doubt will remain about the validity of the statistics. ★ Sr ♦ Suspicion that changes may yet be announced In the Job figures is based partially on recent experience with other economic statistics, such as for wholesale prices. Legislators Awaiting School Reform Plan LANSING (UPI) - House and Senate members today td up paper work and bided their time in committee meetings waiting until tomorrow when Gov. William G. Millikan is scheduled to release details of his education reform plan. Formal floor work for the 110 House members was scuttled after they labored In a day-long session yesterday to dear away leftover legislation from the summer session. Hie superintendent declined to speculate on the Identity of a MENTIONED FOR PORT Names mentioned for the post include those of: Dr. John Porter, amodate superintendent for higher education, who said earlier this year that he did not want the job; Ladislaus Dom-browskl, board secretary; and Alexander Kloster, acting state superintendent prior to Polley’i appointment Vh years ago. There are other surprises • Unemployment for white workers rose more swiftly than for blacks. The rate for whites went to 3.6 per cent from 3.2 that for blacks rose to 6.8 per cent from 6.5 per cent. • The average workweek In manufacturing rose to 40.7 hours from 40.6 hours in August. CONTRADICTIONS Both of these findings seem to contradid some generally accepted notions about the employment scene and are bound to occupy economist* and lysts for many hours in search of explanations. First, black workers generally hold the least-skilled jobs and therefore have the weakest grip on employment. In the such workers generally were among the first to be laid off in slack periods. The rise in the average work- Only one bill, outlining membership rules for local housing commissions, was approved 96-10 and sent t Milliken for his signature. Other measures wound up in Senate-House conference committees when the lower refused to accept Senate amendments to the bills. IN RECESS The senate, Which finished routine floor work Monday, has been in races* since. Chairmen of the House and Senate education and taxation committees were busy drawing up hearing schedu Miiliken’s educational overhaul Mutual Stock Quotations NE WYORK (AP) —Tha following quo* plan. Both chambers agreed to set aside next week for hearings and behind-the-scenes work on Miiliken’s program. “I think the people have a right to speak out on his ideas and we’re going to be listening,” said House Education Chairman Rep. Lucille McCoilough, D-Dearborn, “\fte want to get as many opinions as possible on the governor** plan.” Rep. George Montgomery, D-Detroit, head of taxation, said the two House committees are trying to coincide their schedule and will try to visit as many as 10 cities. He said the groups may be forced to hold half-day meetings in each city, in an effort to cover the state as thoroughly as possible. bond AyaaAeai log by Tta Aoooctotog Rraao ft W W II Weak Ago . so, Month Ago Year Ago 1949 High . 44.3 17.0 ♦49 Low M l M.3 74.5 INI High . 44.8 91.0 11.4 1944 LOW 43.8 88.8 7SJ \ *4 m si in \ m » 7m 79.' 8i MJ lH Hi 90.2 (2.8 News in Brief The Chicken Joy Restaurant, 756 N. Perry, was burglarized yesterday and $110 stolen, it was reported to Pontiac police. Mom’s Rummage, Thors., 9-12, Indianwood and Baldwin Rds. - •ncbmsi r'iwi Boo tty na Fa Race 1.00 a 10-14 II Inv. .30 Q 10-13 IO-3) 4* .30 O 10-17 IM American Stocks garage and bake aide, Oct. 9,10. 9 a.m. to 4. 2555 Bender, Drayton Plains. —Adv, Fall Rummage Sale — St. Joseph Parish Hall, Beebe at Shadbolt, Lake Orion. Fri., 96, Sat. 9-12. -Adv, Moving Sato—Thurs. and Fri. Starts 10 a.m., also Sat. morning. Oct 9-11. Furniture, household items, misc. 3616 Lincolnshire, off Cass Lake Rd. —Adv. Rummage Sale, Guild to AB Saints Church, Oct. 9 and Oct. 10, Exchange St. entrance, 10 ,m. —Adv. Rummage Sale. First Presbyterian Church, Birmingham, 1669 W. Maple. Thura., Oct. 9, 94; Fil., Oct. 10, 94. -Adv. By ROGER E. SPEAR Q—I’d like yea to list about for long-term holding. I feel is whot the average Investor Is looking for. —H.T. A—Your request is, as you assumed, representative of many others. Before presenting such a Uat let me emphasize that no stock should be bought, away and forgotten. The selected issues have relatively markets and wilt require a reasonable amount of following. In each case, sales run below $100 million, earnings a well-established pattern of growth, and dividends, though have been increased end supplemented with stock from time to time. All have mmended In past My first selection, Concord Fabrics, appears to have fully participated tp the blooming home sewing market estimated at $2.5 billion. About 30 per cent of Concord’s tales go to this market, the remainder to apparel manufacturers. First-half of 1969 sales were up 31 per cent with net Income gaining 39 per cent to 95 cents a share. Sales this year are projected by management at $68 million and we look for earnings of $1.60 of Ux. H. B. Fuller, selling under 30x estimated fiscal 1969 results, la my second choice. This industrial adhesives manufacturer has recently announced it would introduce a line of adhesives for the retail consumer. Another growing company, Ozita Corp., is a pioneer in the development of nonwoven carpeting. Six months 1969 sales showed a 20 per cent gain with earnings at 91 cents up 15 per cent year-to-year. Ozite’s new process to produce polypropylene at its own plants should help widen margins. Reece Corp. manufactures Industrial buttonhole and pocketmaking machines. Sales were up 35 per cent in the first sli months of 1969. Full-year net could reach $1.90 for n multiple of 18x. My final selection, Taylor Wine Co., has a particularly strong financial position with ent assets more than four times current liabilities as of December, 1968. Net was 19 14 per'cent to $3.09 a share, in tha fiscal year ended June 30, 1909, (To order Roger Spear’s 49 page Guide to Succeisfil la-vesting (recently revised aad In Its Uth printing), tend $1 with name and address to Reger B. Spear, The Pontiac Press, Baft U1S, Grand Cealral New York, N.Y. $9917.) ICisnpM