Th« Pontiac Prett Saturday, Nov*mb«r 23 SATURDAY SATURDAY MORNING 5:05 (2) TV Chapel 5:55 (2) C News 6:30 (2)C Sunrise Semester 6:55 (4) C-News 7:00 (2) C - Woodrow the Woodsman (4) C “ Country Living 7:15 (7) C - Rural Report 7:30 (4) C — Oopsy the Clown (7) C - TV College 8:00 (2) C - Go Go Gophers 8:25 (9) Warm-Up 8:30 (2) C — Rugs Bunny-Roadrunner (7) C — Courageous Cat (9) Toby 9:00 (4) C — S^liper 6 (7) ’€ — Casper (9) Ontario Schools (50) R — Wells Fargo 9:30 (2) C -- Wacky Races (4) C — Top Cat (7) C - - Gulliver (50) C — Coiizzin Cyrus 10:00 (2) C — Archie Show (4) R C — Flintstones . (7) C — Spiderman (50) R —■ Jungle Jim 10:30 (2) C — Batman — Superman (A) C — Banana Splits (7) C — Fantastic Voyage (9) C—French Schools (50) R — Movie: “The Chinese Ring” ( 1 9 4 7 ) Roland Winters, Louis Currie 11:00 (7) C “ Journey to the Center of the Earth (9) DTberville 11:30 (2) C — Herciiloids (4) C — Underdog (7) C — Fantastic Four (9) A Place of Your Own SATURDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) C-Shazzan (4) C — Birdman (7) C — George of the Jungle (9) Trans World Team (50) R — Movie: “Angels With Dirty Faces” (1938) Nominated for three Oscars James Cagney. Pat O’Brien, Humphrey Bogart, Ann Sheridan 12:30 (2) R C Quest (4) C - iSui>er Prc' idcnt (7)C — American Bandstand (9) Country Calendar 1:00 (2) C-Mobv Dick (4) C-At the Zoo (9) CBC Sports 1:30 (2) R — Movies: 1. “Blondie Goes Latin’’ (1941) Penny Singleton. Arthur Lake. 2 “Devil’s Messenger” (1961) Lon Chaney (4) C — High School Bowl (7) C — Wide World of Sports ~ National Motorcycle Cham-pionships, World Parachuting Championships 2:00 (4) Beat the Champ (9) CFL Football: Toronto vs Ottawa (50) R — Movie: “Sitting FTettv” (1948) Robert Young, Maureen O'Hara. Clifton Webb 2:45 (7) C - College Football Today 3:00 (4) C-Car and Track (7) C - NCAA Football: Nebraska at Oklahoma 15 3:3PPf)^^Ji|liTlil" ^ (50) R — Movie: “Planet of Blood” (1966) Basil Kathbone. John Saxon (62) R -- MacKenzie’s Raid(‘rs 4j,D0 (4) C~George Pierrot — “Congo Conquest” (56) R - 4*H TV Action Club -- “32 and Falling” (62) R — Sea Hunt 4:30 (4) C — Huckleberry Finn (9) C — Marvel Super Heroes (56) Animal Trackers (62) R C — My Friend Flicka 4:45 (56) Time for John 5:00 (2) C—Job Opportunity Line. (4) C ~ Outdoorsnian (9) R C — Monroes (50) C-Hy Lit (56) Children’s Fair (62) C — Big-Time Wrestling 5:30 (2) C — Gentle Ben (4) C -- College Bowl (56) R - Hans the Pup-petmaster 5:45 (7) C - College Football Today \o«»’ r.\ I HOi\ — Formerly L & V — WE SPECIALIZE IN QUALITY HOME MODERNIZATION AT HONEST and MODERATE PRICES (Over 20 veara experience aervin/f Oakland Coiml v) No Pavmt'iit Is Due I ntil MARCJD 1969 rV/ Awnings Porches and ^Patios Dormers Cement Work Roofing Gutters Insulation Siding Storm Windows and Doors Garages Attics Fences I WRITTEN GUARANTEE • LOWEST PRICES , QUALITY WORKMANSHIP • FHA BUDGET PAYMENTS • NO MONEY DOWN I FREE ESTIMATES WITHOUT OBLIGATION L- ___________________________________ "L &■ ('. — i !\anu> Von ('an Trust" Kitchens Bathrooms Room Additions Family Rooms Window A Door Replacements Ceilings Paneling Carpeting Floor Covering Air Conditioning Heating Gas & Oil Attic Fans 1 I I I j L & C IIO’VII. i\ii‘Hov i;\u;m I6.'i Vt. Montralm, i*<»tilia<' Call 3:^5-2102 / iy isn o O/VU£ R Y - 'w a;*""*' \ ^ t *■ 1 :i m ,V'*' J *-• h • j*. *■ \ t 1 ’A 5*' f 1 r k * 'f/L ‘L^,...*;,l^i.,.:t;,,j!.>.':- ’. Riverside‘S Glasbelt iO A WORM SQUIRMS, TIRES SHOULDN'T 2 fiber glass belts stabilize the tread so it won’t squirm like ordinary tires do. Gives 40% longer wear. 2 cross plies of nylon cord increase stability and resistance to heat, impact, and flex-fatigue. 30-month treodwear guarantee. FREE MOUNTING NO MONEY DOWN * SECOND TIRE ONLY With first 6.50-13 blockwoll of reg. price plus 1.81 F.E.T. eoch. TUBELESS BLACKWALL SIZES 1ST TIRE REG PRICE EACH ! SECOND ' TIRE ONIY PLUS FET EACH 6.50 13 $20- $10.00* 181 7 75/7 50 14 7 75/6 70 15 $25- 12.50* 2 19 2 21 8.25/8.00 14 8 15/7 10 15 $27* —1 13.50* 2 35 2 36 8.55/8 50 14 8 45/7 60 15 $29* j 14.50* 2 56 2 54 'With trade in tire off your car Whifewolls $3 more eoch. Home Edition 210 DMZ Abuses THE fo £/7em/ PONTIAC PRESS Fntm Oor Newt inret SAICKH4 — The Comn^unists hav« violated 210 timet their agreement not to abuse Vietnam’s Pemtiitarized Zone (DMZ) in exchange for a halt in the bombing of North Vietnam, U. S. head* quarters said today. Red Negotiator Charges U.S. Bpcking Down PARIS (UPD— Hanoi’s top strategist at the. Vietnam war talks fledr in from Moscow today and accused the United Stat^ of backing down On an agreement to 'let the Vietcong into expanded negotiations as a s^arate delegatim. ~ Le Due Tho told newsmoi at Ld Bourget Airport the United States must join expanded negotiations now or the Communists will fight until final victory on tile battlefield. j WWW The seventh-ranking member of North Vietnam’s politburo said Washington originally agreed to four-party negotiations, with Saigwi and the Vietcong’s National Liberation Front (NLF) to have separate and equal voices. Now, however, the United States is claiming it agreed only to two-sided talks in order “to suffocate the role of the NLF, which is the authentio representative of the South Vietnamese people,’’ he said. ‘FULL RESPO{4SIBILITY’ Tho, the top strategist in North Vietnam’s talks braintrust, vowed the United States must bear “fuU responsibility” for the delay in beginning expanded negotiations scheduled for Nov. 6. Tho just completed six days of talks with Kremlin officials in Moscow. He went home to Hanoi Oct. 14 and spent one day in Peking reviewing strategy and planning far expanded talks. ★ , w ★ Tall and bespectacled, his face was grim as he read a prepared statment. Xuan Thuy, Hanoi’s chief negotiator, and Mrs. Nguyen Thi Binh, the Vietcong’s top representative, were at his side.' The possibility of separate NLF representation at expanded negotiations is the reason tor South Vietnam’s refusal to j(^ the Paris talks. The SMgon government driiiw to; isnth Vietnam alone. Diidimiatic sources in Paris have said lately that Saigon would be willing to negotiate on an “our slde-your side” basis seating Saigon representatives in the U.S. delegation and NLF representatives in the North Vietnamese delegation. Perfect Weekend Forecast for Area A perfect weekend is in store tor Parently will be out of step with the rest of the nation next spring when it comes time to turn the clocks ahead for Daylight Saving Time. k k k A just-completed, county-by-county check of the Nov. 5 state election returns spells apparent defeat for Daylight Savings ’Time by «Jy 412 votes. /' k k k The unofficial tally of the votes cast Nov. 5 showed the DST question approved by a margin of some 25,000 votes. But the secretary of state’s office yesterday revealed its almost official count shows the measure defeated, 1,402,414 to 1,402,0^. ★ ★ ★ If the State Board of Canvassers ap-iwoves the tally Monday — usually only a formality — and if the final outcome survives any recounts that might be demanded, Michigan will stay on Standard Time year around, an exception to the Federal Uniform 'fime Act which sets the day for the time switch for the nation. The vote reversal apparently was caused ^y an error in the total from Jackson County which on election night showed the proposition passing 20,059 to 1,828. k k k The final official return from the county placed the vote at 24,104 yes and 22,854 no — meaning the “no” side picked up more than 20,000 votes, enough to make the difference. ★ ★ * “We’re sure of our figures,” added State Elections Director Bernard Apol. Secretary of State James Hare noted backers of daylight savings time could petition for a recount of the vote. The deadline is 48 hours after the returns are certified by the Board of State Can- Any citizen may petition for a recount, but must pay $5 for each p^inct rechecked, Apol said. A statewide recount thus would cost more than $30,000. If the recount reversed the election outcome, the money would be refunded. ★ ♦ ★ The time question in Michigan has a stormy history that dates from passage by Congress of the Federal Uniform Time Act of 1966. The federal act decreed savings time for the entire nation from the last Sunday in A^ril until the last Skinday in October, but (nnvided that a state could exempt itself from fast time by using its legislative p Michigan — joined only by Hawaii among the states — exemptol itself by legislative act in 1967, but backers of savings time circulated referendum petitions and put the issue w the ballot Michigan has been on savings time for the past two summers. ' it TllK PONTIAC/PRESS. SATURDAY, XQVEMBEJl 23, 1968 Death Claims Retired Dentist Retired Pontiac dentist Dr. William A. Gordon, former president and charter member of the Oakland County Dental Association, died yesterday. He was 74. Sendee will be 3 p.m. Monday at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Surviving are his wife, Helen; three daughters, Mrs. Robert Boyce of Pontiac, Mrs. Jack Mills of Ann Arbor and Mrs. William Bowman of Indianapolis; two sons, William A. of Warren and Robert N. of Lansing; two brothers, Lee E. Qnrdon and Howard N. Gordon, both of miton; and 12 grandchildren. ★ ★ ★ A practicing dentist in the city for 37 yea’s, and a resident since 1926, he served as president of the Pontiac Exchange Club and Hi Twelve. He was instrumental in the formation of the Oakland County Dental Association. A member of the First Congregational Church, he also was a life member of the BPOE and a member of Lodge No. 21, a member of the Child Guidance Clinic Board, a member of the Oakland County Historical and Pioneer Society and served on the Urban League Board and the Police Trial Board. 7ons of Stone Used to Fight Mine Fire DR. WILLIAM A. GORDON DR. C. G. DARUNG JR. Hospital Official Is Dead at 69 Dr. Cyrenus G. Darling Jr., 69, who served as chief of surgery and chief of staff at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, died last night of a heart attack. A memorial service will be Tuesday in the Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co. Birmingham. Surviving are his wife, Aubrey; two sons, Cyrenus G. Darling III of Birmingham and David P. of San Francisco, Calif.; two grandsons; and a brother. Dr. D. B. Darling of Los Angeles, Calif. Dr. Darling of 401 Lone Pine Court, Bloomfield Hills, was a graduate of the University of Michigan Medical School. Dr. Darling served as president of the Oakland County Medical Sqciety and was on the staff of Pontiac General and William Beaumont hospitals. He had also served as a medical director for Generaf Motors Corporation. A fellow of the American College of Surgeons, Dr. Darling was a member of Phi Kapa Psi and Nu Sigma Nu fraternities, Orchard Lake Country Club and the Old Club. Memorial tributes may be made to the Surgical Education Fund or the Heart Fund at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. MANNINGTON, W. Va. (AP) -Although termed a dangerous move, tons of big limestone chunks drop^d down two air shafts today in another' effort to fight the flames trapping 78 men in a coal mine. The roaring fire has deified all efforts to bring it under control since a series of explosions ignited it before dawn Wednesoay and trapped the men. The other 21 miners working the midnight shift managed to get to the surface or were pulled from air shafts. • ★ ★ There has been no word from the 78 since the first of the explosions which apparently shattered the internal communications of Mountaineer Coal Co. No. 9 mine. Mine officials hold little hope that the men are alive. The decision to fill the two shafts with the limestone blqcks came last night. John Robots, a public relations official of Consolidation CoaPCo. Mountaineer’s parent firm, said the operation could take hours and would be an “extremely dangerous’’ task. ‘GOING LIKE BULLETS’ “They’ll be going out like bullets,” Roberts said, if mine pressures blow out the big blocks. Workers finished dumping the 1,000 tcHis of limestone down the air shafts at 3 a.m. today. it it it Five minutes before the last truckload of limestone was dumped another small explosion shot a puff of smoke and some fire into the air at the main portal where the original bldst occurred. Consolidation Coal’s publicity director, Janies McCartney, said the “puff’ was not targe enough to cause alarm and not important enough to even wake company officials to tell them. McCartney said be had not determined whether the latest explosion—the first since 4:90 a.m. Friday—was related to the dumping of limestme. Consolidation offleiah said earlier they did not want to risk other lives in the rescue efforts as long as the fire raged or there was the possibility of more explosions. A blast early yesterday sent treinors all the way to the company store, about four miles away, and shot flames streaking skyward. Roberts explained that engineers want at least 12 hours, and preferably 24, free of explosions and stable fire and gas conditions befote rescue squads will be permitted to mter the shafts. For Secretary of State NEW YORK (AP) - Richard M. Nixon’s search for a secretary of state is described by an associate as “still Wide open” but the president-elect is said to be thinking now in terms of naming a career diplomat to the most prestigious post in his Cabinet. Sources said Nixon is not close to settling on a man for the assignment. But the president-elect was said to be seeking a candidate with a reputati<»i in diplomacy and a long baejeground in foreign service. * it it Nixon is soliciting advice now on men who might meet his specifications. He talked about it yesterday with former Pennsylvania Gov. William W. Scranton, who once was rated a likely choice himself. Scranton said he had made it clear that he would not take a full-time government position but accepted some special assignments. Robert D. Murphy, 74, now in a State Department liaison assignment for the president-elect, has been ruled out as a Cabinet selection because of his age. The names of the men under active consideration are known only to Nixon and his innermost circle of advisers. Scranton said Nixon had asked, and be had agreed, to work with two of those Japanese Plane 'Crashes' Safely Into Frisco Bay Recipient of Second Heart Dies HOUSTON, Tex. (IP) - The longest U.S. survivor of heart transplant surgery, Everett C. 'Diomas. 47, died today of problems which developed after he received a second donor heart. “His condition deteriorated steadily Friday night, with bleeding problems and diminishing kidney function culminating in irreversible cardiac arrest at 4 a.m.,” a St. Luke’s Episcopal Hospital spokesman said. Thomas, an accountant from Phoenix, Ariz., received his first transplanted heart May 3. Only Dr. Philip Blaiberg, 58, of Cape Town, South Africa, who received a new heart Jan. 2, has lived longer tiian Thomas following transplant surgery. NORMAL ROUTINE Thomas was discharged from St. Luke’s last summer and worked as a trust consultant. He was able to drive a car and once flew home to Phoenix for a short visit. His wife and two of their sons came here to live with him in an apartment. His second heart transplant followed by hours the first implant of a second donor heart into a person. Physicians at Stanford University Medical Center said Darrell Hammarley, 56, underwent two heart transplant operations within sbe hours Wednesday. Hammarley was reported progressing satisfactorily. it * it Also making satisfactory progress is William Karraker, 49, of Stockton, Calif., who received Stanford’s ninth heart transplant Friday. REJECTED HEART Thomas was dismissed from the hospital here in July and began working at a bank. He reentered the hospital Oct. 9 however, with signs of rejecting his first transplanted heart and physicians said he failed to respond to antirejection drugs. Darrell Hammarley First to Get Second Heart SAN FI\ANCISCO (^)—The 107 persons aboard a Japan Air Lines jet can thank the highest tide of the year and a cool pilot for their “one-in-a-million” survival of a crash-landing into San Francisco Bay. They didn’t even get their feet wet Friday when the DC8, arriving from Tokyo, bellied into the foggy shallows of the bay, a mile short of tee runway at San Francisco International Airport. ★ ★ ★ A 10-man investigation team from the \ National Transportation Safety Board today begins probing the crash. Artec point of impact, just off Coyote Point, 18 miles south of San Francisco there was a rising seven-foot tide—the highest of the year. MISSED RUNWAY The plane’s pilot, Kohei Asoh, 47, of Yokohama, with the airline 14 years, said his plane cut through tee fog at 11 feet and settled into tee water at a speed of 177 miles per hour. A spokesman for the National Transportation Safety Board here said the plane was guided to tee runway by an electronic beam and the pilot has to make corrections if the craft makes a faulty approach. ★ ★ ★ But Asoh said the plane’s mechanical system was functioning normally. Suspended NY Official Speaks in City The Weather Fight for School Site Urged Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Mostly cloudy and mild today. High 53 to 58. Partly cloudy and not much temperature change tonight, low 35 to 40. Sunday sunny and pleasant. High 50 to 56. Monday outlook: Increasing cloudiness and mild. RTnds southerly increasing to 12 to 20 miles per hour today becoming westerly at five to 12 miles tonight and Sunday. Probabilities in precipitation: 10 per cent today, 10 per cent toni^t, five per cent Sunday. Today In Pontiac One Year Ago in Pontiac LownU. tomporaturo precodlng t a.m, 39 Hinh».» At 8 a.m.; Wind Velocity, 3 m.p.h. Dlroctlon. South Sun ntt Saturday at 5:06 p.m. Is Sunday at 12:22 p.m. las Saturday at 8:19 p.m. Friday in Pontiac (as racordod domitownl Highest tamperatura <9 Lowast tamperatura .............. 36 Mean temparaturo ................ *2 Weather—Sunny, beautiful. HIghott and Lowrost Tomperaturas Thit Dale In 96 Years Weather—Partly tunny. Friday's Temperature Chart Alpena 63 27 Detroit 51 35 Escanaba 66 39 Duluth 37 29 Flint 67 36 Fort Worth 75 57 Gd. Rapids 68 36 Jachsonvllla 67 60 Houghton 39 31 Kansas City 69 50 Houghton L. 62 62 Lot Angeles 76 53 Jackson 52 38 Miami Bch. 70 60 Lansing 51 39 Milwaukee 51 35 Marquette 63 36 N. Orleans 67 60 Muskegon 65 38 New York 56 60 Pension 62' 28 Omaha 66 38 S. Francisco S' ' S. S. Marie S Washington 6 NATIONAL WEATHER — Showers are forecast for tonight in the Pacific Northwest and in a band from southern Texas to southern New England. There will be mix^ showers and snow flurries in western Montana and upper New England. It will be colder throughout most of the nation except Florida. Some 250 Pontiac parents were told last night by a suspended board member of Brooklyn’s Oc*an Hill-Brownsville experimental school district to “stick together” in their fight for a high school downtown. Most parents attending were Negroes. it it it Mrs. Elain Rooke talked on the monthlong New York City teachers strike which ended this week in the absence of Rhpdy McCoy, the district’s unit administrator, who was scheduled to speak at Bethune School. “I just wish I’d lived here for three months,” commented Mrs. Rooke. “I’d get me 10 parents together and you can rest assured that school would be built where the blacks want it.” Ocean Hill-Brownsville, a Negro and Puerto Rican slum area of Brooklyn, is an experimental school district under community ciJntrol. It was the focal point of three New York City strikes this school year and another last spring. “Keep on fighting,” Mrs. Rooke, advised. “If parents stick together, someday you'll get exactly what you want. ★ * ★ She explained that the Ocean Hill-Brownsville School District was started because parents were “sick and tired of the white power structure telling blacks what to do.” When the Pontiac Board of Education decided to put the super high school for 4,500 students adjacent to Pontiac State Hospital rather than in the Negro area around Orchard Lake Avenue and Bagley, threats were made of black control of schools. STAYED BEHIND McCoy, who was reinstated as unit administrator Wednesday, stayed behind to handle the continuing trouble, otherwise “all eight schools would go up in flames,” according to Mrs. Rooke. Community control of schools is coming because parents feel central control doesn’t meet the special needs of their children, Reginald Wilson, associate dean of testing at Oakland Community College, said after Mrs. Rooke’s talk. is to be done fcH* students,” he said. “Tihe schools and school personnel are “Boards of education are only accountable for what happens and what answerable to themselves.” Birmingham Cabinet Choice in Doubt advisers, John N. Mitchell and Lt. Gov. Robert Finch of California, in seeking personnel for the State Department. Scranton would name no one, saying only that they had discussed “lots of 'very good people.” In other developments: Scranton said he had agreed to take on special assignments for Nixon in a variety of fields, beginning with work on housing programs and the problems of the Appalachian region. Finch was reported to be on the verge of accepting a major administration post, probably in the Cabinet, but was said to be delaying because of disagreement with Gov. Ronald Reagan over who would be chosen his successor as lieutenant governor. New W. Maple School Set tp Open Tuesday Oxford Twp. Gl Killed in Combat An Oxford Township soldier was among the recent combat deaths in Vietnam. Killed at Da Nang Nov. 20 was Pfc. Donald P. Evans, whose wife, Sharon, lives at 1375 Indian Lake. it * * Evans was an Oxford area resident and attended schools there. Both his parents are deceased. He was an apprentice electrician before being drafted into the Army this March. SINCE SEPTEMBER Evans had been in Vietnam since September serving with Co. D, 5th Battalion, 7th Cavalry Airmobile. His wife said she and Evans had been married one day before he left for induction. He had two leaves prior to shipment overseas, she said. it it it His body is to be brought back to the area for burial. BIRMINGHAM -- The new West Maple Junior High School, Inkster and Maple roads, is scheduled to open 'Tuesday, pending final inspection of the building. The principal is William Blackwell, and tee assistant is Robert Olson. it * it West Maple students will not attend classes on Monday, while administrators and teachers make the necessary preparations for moving into the new school. Classes will resume Tuesday at 8:30 a.m. * it it All classroom areas and school offices will be ready except the gymnasium, cafeteria and swimming pool. These are expected to be completed about the first of tee year. $3-MILUON SCHOOL The cost of West Maple is 13,160,000, including construction and equipment. The school, with a capacity of 825 students, was designed by O’Dell, Hewlett and Luckenbach, Inc., Architects and Engineers, Birmingham. ★ 1* ★ West Maple is a team-teaching, flexible schedueled school similar to Cov-fngton Junior High. it * it This fall West Maple students have been attending Covington Junior High-on double session. Students at Covington will resume regular school hours, 8:30 a.m.-3:40 p.m. on Monday. EWALD BLOOMFIELD H^LS - A former area resident will return to this city Monday to speak at the opmiing of tee Cranbrook segment of the 14th annual forum of tee American Institute of Ariihitects. WilUam R. Ewald . Jr., a 1940 graduate I of Bloomfield Hills ^ High School and onetime member of the ^ D e t r o i f Planning Commission, will be the speaker for tee ^ program which be- Ijd gins at 9:30 a.m. at j the Cranbrook Gal-1 lery of Arts Hall. Topic for his pres- ■ entation, which will include a multicamera, multispeaker movie, is “A Future Full of Change.” * ★ * Ewald, a design consultant with offices in Washington, D.C., has served as assistant commissioner of the Urban Renewal Administration, senior vice president of Doxiadis Associates, Inc., and chief of development for the Arkansas Industrial Development Commission under Gov. W1 n t h r o p Rockefeller. ★ * ★ The forum, which opens today in Ann Arbor, will include representatives from student chapters of the AIA in 91 schools of architecture in the United States. it * * After the Cranbrook program, delegates will tour inner-city areas in Detroit, the General Motors Technical Center in Warren and the Ford Motor Co. plant in River Rouge before returning to Ann Arbor. V' HIGH SCHOOL SITE — Surveyors for Arthur W. Gillespie Associates, consulting engineers, in Birmingham are preparing topography information for construction of the Pontiac school district’s new super high school on the grounds of Pontiac State Hospital. The surveyors began at the site — Elizabeth Lake and State — Wednesday afternoon. The school board approved the site selection Monday. Jerusalem Is Quiet After Bombing JERUSALEM (iP) — The Arab sector of the Holy City remained quiet under a tight curfew today while Israeli in- vestigators probed yesterday’s market blast teat killed 12 Arsons and injured more than 50 including at least 17 seriously injured. ★ ★ ★ The curfew, imposed at 8 p.m. yester- day, was to remain in effect indefinitely. it it it Border troops and police patrolled the narrow streets in the old wall^ cite nnd the wide thoroughfares of the new business sector. Others stood , guard at the entrance to the Arab quarters, stopping all Arabs trying to return to East Jerusalem. Traffic Survey Says Women Heed Law Best SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP)— Wom«i drivers oibey the laws better than ioien,i a surv^ shows, with (Hie excej^on: Women are nun-e stubborn about yielding the ri^tKif-way. The CalifcHnia Hi^way Patrol, after compiling statistics of 1987 traffic accidents involving death or injury, said 42 pm* cent of the state’s drivers are females. But of all death or injury aocidrats invoiving women, more than 28 per cent involved failure to yield ri{^tK>f-way. ★ ★ ★ Only 19.5 per cent of the men violated rightHif-way rules. From there on, however, the ladies had all the best of it: • Of men involved in such accidents, 23 per cent had been drinking—against 9.6 per cent for the women. • (hie-third of the men were driving too fast, one-fourth of the women. • Of 101 drivers Involved in an accident udille passing on a curve,'15 were women. BICYCLE ACCIDENTS Going further, the patrol looked into bicycle accidents. Some 3,000 males were injured on bicycles in the state in 1967 and 34 were’ kiUed, compared with 662 females injured and 11 kiUed. THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATl^lDAY, NOVEMBER 28. 1908 ^ ^-------------------------------------------------- A—8 Pooches Get a Free Rein LONDON (iR — The pooches of Britain have been given the freedom of the nation’s pubs. A high court judge made the ruling that a man popping a pub for a pint need not be parted from his pooch at the portal. ★ ★ * The court reached its decision because, seven years a g Eiizabeth Carroll fell over tubby boxer in a tavern called the Load of Hay and broke a leg. Mrs. Carroll, 54, sued the dog’s owner and the pub’: landlord for damages. After years of waiting, her case finally came before the court Tbursday. CLAIM DISMISSED ’The judge. Sir Gilbert James Pauli, dismissed her claim and spoke up for customers who enjoy the company of their while drinking. “In my judgment,” he said, “there is no general principle on which a licensee or his wife ought to forbid customers to bring in dogs, provided the dogs appear to be well behaved. ★ ★ ★ “Undoubtedly there are some people who would not go into bar when out with a dog unless they could take the dog in with them. “I see no reason why people should be forbidden to do so as a general principle of law.’ ALMOST IMPOSSIBLE Nor should a dog owner have to keep “a constant eye” on his falthfid friend even in a crowded tavern. “This would render conversation at the bar almost impossible,” the judge ruled. Nor did he agree that p on and off. Repeats every 24 hours without resetting. Easy to read dial. Handsome woodtone or white finish. Protective shatterproof lens. Sundries—Main Floor Tough durable heat-proof porcelain enamel roaster cooks better and cleans easier. Will hold a 22-lb. foul or 25-lb. roast. Your holiday fowl will be fit for a king when rcxisted in this enamel roaster. Regular 62.10 for 10-lb. fowl or 12-lb. roast......1.SI - 2nd Floor Be A Smart ^IMMS ‘BARGAIN GRABBER’ On These Specials SATUROAY-MONDAY 36x36-lnch Woodgrain Finish Utility or Game Table Sat. & Mon. lithographed woctograin finish with bronzetone legs. Ideal for game room and extra guests. Folds to suitcase size. Regular $5.99. Housowores-2nd Floor Complete with Training Cup & Spoon A r Heat& U.L. Serve Baby Dish As shown — a complete feeding seb, training cup, cold food tray and 2 spoons, Teachiis little ones to feed themselves. Drugs — Main Floor Authentic STAUNTON Design ‘Gallant Knight’ Chess Set Sat. & Mon. thenttc Staunton design, custom crofted chessmen ore fully weighted ond have felt base. Magnetic Travel Chess set 88b and 2.95. others to 10.95 Sundries—Main Floor tihildren’s Heavy Gauge Steel Blazon Snow Coaster Sat. & Mon. enamel finish. Has safe rolled edges and plastic handles. Aluminum Snow Coaster ..................3.88 Sporti — 2nd Floor Polident Tablets $1.95 value, pkg. of 84 individually foil wrapped Polident denture cleanser tablets, soaks dentures clean and odor free. |2li For Extra Dry Skin Jergens Fonmila 62.00 value, 12'/j-oz. Jergens extra dry skin formula stops dry -skin discomfort; all over. Drugs—Main Floor I Brushes Up and Down Automatically Cordless Hygienic Sunbeam Electric Toothbrush A-Brush Model Cordless rechargeable toothbrush brushes up and down automatically. Gets teeth cleaner than ordinary hand brushing. 4-indMdual brushes for the family. Drugs—Main Floor New from Eveready-lt’s at SIMMS Eveready Convertible Lamp Converts from AC to Battery and Wall to Table Versatile table lamp, can be used anywhere. Converts from table to wall simple by giving the stem a half-turn. Converts from regular current to battery power just by pushing a button. Smartly styled to fit any decor. Sundries — Main Floor Ease Muscular Tension with Electric Massage Pillow Relaxes Tired Muscles Refresh yourself. Ease muscular tension, lie on it, sit on it, or put your feet on it. Sooth-^ ing relief from the strain of simple over exertion and fatigue. Deep tone massage. Sundries — Main Floor Sturdy Lightweight Aluminum Garbage Can Tote Cart Complete with Two 20-Gal. Cans Sat. & Mon. straining, no lifting. Easy rolling tote with rubber tires, complete . with two 20-gallon garbage cans. Hardware — 2nd Floor Unusual Stocking Gift Batteiy Operated Back Scratcher Simmt Price Just Battery operated back scratcher uses two 'C' size flashlight batteries at slight extra cost. Long handle reaches just the right place. Comes with carry case. | Sundries — Main Floor* Adorn Hair Spray $2.25 value, 13.7 ’ or. Toni Adorn hair spray. Your choice of regular or extra hold. Self styling hair spray. F Sat. & Mon. Extra Strength Excedrin Tablets $3.69 value, Pkg. of 375-Excedrin the extra strength pain reliever tablets for those extra tough headaches. Drugs—Main Floor 2 > TOM’S HARDWARE .?^. 905 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 5-2424 Jana fwotbcts vouit homk NO TOOLS RKQUIRKD There are NO doorwalls currently being made that can be positively locked against unwanted entry. This new doorwall {am now remedies this problem. . It fits over runner in bottom of track. It is easily stored in the doorwall frame out of sight. And, this unique and invaluable home accessory is available now ONLY AT: KEEGO HARDWARE #1 3041 Orchard Lake Road 682-2660 Monday-Sat., 1:30-6 P.M.; Sunday 9-2 P.M. HOOVER SWEEPER AUTHORIZED cmL FAaORY TRAINED MEN BY HOOVER - SAME DAY SERVICE OUR GOAL IS CUSTOMER SATISFACTION PARTS & SERVICE ON ALL BRANDS SWEEPERS PARTS For All Vacuums • PAPER lAOS • SWITCHES • HOSES • CORDS • BELTS • bags • BRUSHES • ETC. FREE PICK-UP A DELIVERY v BARNES A HARGRAVES HARDWARE 742 W. Huron St. PARK FREE FE 5-9101 Across from the Post Offico GET READY FOR WINTER SNOW FENCE Available In 50 foot Rolls also Steel POSTS KEEGO HARDWARE #1 3041 Orchard Lake Road 682-2660 Monday-Sat., 1:30-6 P.M.; Sunday 9-2 P.M. at THE PONTIAC MALL Women^s World Series will not be held Wed., Nov. 21th Happy Thauks^i JK Final 5 Dav»! NOW thru WED., Nov. 27th SUN. II A.M. to 6 P.M. Weekdays 9:30 a.m. to 10:00 p.m. Winter Art Festival 75 well known areawide artists and craftsmen displaying and selling Y their Original Art!_ THE PONTIAC MALL Telegraph at Elizabeth Lake Rd. That Love May Live GIVE Support Your Pontiac Area UNITEP FUNG "Ldi Tolii Tidu^ 2135 DIXIE HWY. at TELEQRAPH FURNITURE CO. MON.,THUi».,Fm.,’wi-Tiia,wto.uT.iHi BUSTER BROWN CLOTHING FOR CHILDREN BLUE BELL WEARING APPAREL FOR THE ENTIHE FAMILY We Carry a Complete Line of end SIMPLICITY GOODS PATTERNS Art E234 - Washable Colors COATS and CLARK’S RED HEART KMITTING WORSTED 100% Virgin Wool -Mothproof — Tangle Proof — Ready to Knit - Pull Out Skein $|19 UHAN’S VARIETY STORE 1415 Baldwin Ave. at Walton FE 4-3348 Open Daily 9 A.M. to 9 P.M., Sunday 10 A.M. to 6 P.M. SHERWIN-WILLIAMS SUPER KEM-TONE $R39 ll Gallon (White and Regular Colors) use the Work Skipper $5 Saturday, Sunday, Monday ONLY 39 Gallon HUDSON’S PRO HARDWARE 41 EAST WALTON . . NEAR BALDWIN MON. and TUES. ONLY HOFFMAM’S FAMOUS GUARANTEED TENDER DUTCHER DOY STEAKS 10-ib. COc Limit Please CHERRY RED ALL BEEF HAMBURGER 3 lbs. hr 9-lb. Limit Please U.S. Government Inspected FANCY HEN TURKEYS 33 lb. We Reserve the l{if;lil to Limit Quantities HOFFMAN'S PONTIAC FREEZER MEATS 526 N. PBriy FE 2-1100 UOWNTOWN STORE ONLY Made By General Electric f' : HANDY HANNAH U PERCOLATOR ^ Reix. 10.86 Brew.s up to 8 cups ★ ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★A" 7 69c vnltte FIRST QUALITY CANNON BATH TOWEL Colton Torry Butli Towel in .Slripos, Solids ★ ★★★★★★★★★★ Kiiyon nieii.l , .. ™ willi FriiiK.;. Twin. Ltoiililu Sizo. C.ol(ir>. JUST WONDERFUL reg., super A 38* SUNDAY ONLY THE PONTIAC PRESS CH*aa* pnnfifl#* 48 West Hurotf Street Pontiac, Michigan The POWER of FAITH ..woo«. ff SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1968 ClMlnBU o( the Board b^uUva WwStSSldfBt aad Idttor RiMr J. Bna Court Gives NY Killer Just Desserts The Press has consistently expressed approval of the administration of stern though equitable justice for those convicted of criminal acts, and criticism of prescribed punishment that bore the stamp of undue leniency. For a case in point, reference is made to a report datelined New York that appeared on Page One of yesterday’s, edition of this newspaper. It relates to the sentence handed down by State Supreme Court Justice Francis Bloustein against a defendant convicted of dragging a middle-aged woman into his apartment, and subsequently raping, robbing and strangling her to death. Convicted on two counts of first-degree murder and one of second-degree murder, the court passed sentence of life imprisonment each on the first two counts and 20 years to life on the third. Moreover, it was stipulated that the sentences were to be served concurrently, thus precluding eligibility of the prisoner for parole after serving 26 years on a single conviction of first-degree murder. In America’s continuous fight against its lawless and criminal elements, a severe, undeviating precept of punishment by the judiciary against the enemies of society is essential in effectively supporting the work of law enforcement agencies and providing maximum protection for the law-abiding citizenry. ★ ★ ★ We heartily commend Justice Bloustein on the sound and uncompromising punishment he imposed on the perpetrator of an atrocious crime, and point to it as exemplary dispensation of justice meriting the profound consideration of the Nation’s judicial establishment. Medical Science Swats Hong Kong Flu Bugs Thanks to alert Medical scientists, the invasion by the Hong Kong flu bug has not—and probably will not —reach an5dhing like the proportions of major influenza pandemics of the past. A pandemic is a super epidemic. The wave of influenza that killed 550,000 Americans and about 21 million people around the world in 1918 was the worst pandemic in modem times. Influenza pandemics seem to follow 10-year cycles. In 1967, it was Asian flu, this, year it’s Hong Kong flu. Both of them are much milder than the 19.18 flu, but vaccines that were developed against the Asian and other types are ineffective against the Hong Kong variety. ★ ★ ★ The reason is that viruses have a nasty habit of mutating, of changing their basic genetic make-up. Periodically, the outer shell or “overcoat” of the influenza virus undejrgoes what is called an antigenic shift, which makes it immune to existing vaccines. ★ ★ ★ A major shift, as has occurred in the present case, corresponds to a major style change in the virus’ overcoat. Then, like a woman with a new wardrobe, it’s ready to travel. That is how it is described by Dr. Thomas Francis Jr., a University of Michigan professor of epidemiology, who is credited with sounding the first alarm in this country about the Hong Kong virus, and by Dr. Fred Davenport of the U-M School of Public Health. Fortunately, the antigenic shift was detected in time to allow commercial vaccine manufacturers to go into production with a new vaccine that penetrates the Hong Kong bug’s overcoat. Forecasts indicate that millions of doses will have been made by the end of December, enough to significantly reduce the spread of the disease. Another Hianksgiving Day Is upon us. We have many things fw which to give thanks, among them the heritage of tiie day itself, for it represents faith and hope. As St. Pteter was told by Jesus that “. . . uplwrs-Hill Symllcit*) Smiles An old wolf is a fellow looking forward to his pension fun. W. J. DONNELLY, M. D.. 909 WOODWARD Tha AsMclatad PraM la antltlad axetinivaly to tlM usa for republl- Tha Pontiac Prass 1a dellvarad by carrlar for ao cents a weekt where mailed In Oakland, Oenasaa, Livingston, Macomb, Lapeer and Washtanaw Countlas It Is S1S.00 a ----- In Mchlgan and I In tha United lar. All mall sub-Jla In advanre. n paid at tl Optimists looking for work should apply for jobs In the/, discriminated against, calendar industry — where they print the product two years in advance. Question and Answer When one talks of being prejudiced, to whom are they referring? I’m under the impression the police department is hiring only Negroes. If this is true, white people are being REPLY An old-timer is a fellow who can recall when you didn’t need a prescription to take a trip. * * it By the time you can afford steak for breakfast, all you’re able to chew is oatmeal. ’THE BETTER HALF ‘‘Remember, the butcher shop closes at 6 p.m.” We talked with Mr. Santawan of City Personnel, who said the recent ruling by City Manager Warren says the department must hire any qualified Negro who meets qualifications, whether or not the police force quota is filled. It would be a matter for the Michigan Civil Rights Commission to decide whether such a policy is discriminatory, should the matter be taken before them. Question and Answer Why do we pay for a dog warden? You can never get to talk to him, and he won’t return your call. Will you please use some influence of The Press and my tax money to at least get that dog warden to call my home in the morning at 332-6839? FED UP • REPLY We don’t know if it was Press influence, your tax money or just that Don Sheridan at the Warden’s office was a good guy, but he promised he would call you as soon as he finished talking to us. He also promised to call again if he couldn’t reach you then. Hope you were nice to him—he was awfully nice ahmt your request. r THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1968 Vfl A-JT ^ ‘ ^ May Affect 40 Million People Report Warns of SST 'Booms' WASHINGTON (UPI)-Sci^n-tists weighing the sonic boom problem of supersonic transport plahes Of the future esiiimte ttot for up to 40 piUlioi) Amer-foans it would be like pusimf I an oncon^ truck on a super-highway'-^ often as SO times a day. , Twelve prominent scientists, in a repwt entitled “Noise and the Sonic Bocan in Relation to Man,” this week urged the government to supersonic flight over populated areas until experimental studies determine the effects «i mankind of the boom. boom was an environmental problem as well as a technical The report said; “The luimber of supersonic transport planes expected sometime after 1975 would subject between 20 million and 40 million Americans under a path 12% miles on either side of the expected flight tracks to five to 50 sonic booms per day.” A sonic boom is the shock wave produced by a plane flying faster than the speed of sound, about 640 m.p.h. at sea level, pushing air aside as it moves through the sky. The result is a sharp sound like a thunderclap, sometimes forceful enough to brSak windows and crack plaster walls. Dp>ACr FACTORS The size of the plane and its weight, speed and altitude combine with weather conditions determine the impact of the boom. The report resulted from a study ordered by Interior Secretary Stewart L. Udall last Dec. 20 on the basis that the sonic The Federal Aviation Admin-isbution, commenting on the pbrt,Said: ^ “The secreta^ of transpcnrta-tion and the administrator of the Federal Aviation . traticm have said publiciy and repeateiUy that commercial flights at supersonic speeds over the United States will not be permitted if the comwquences of the sonic boom are ju^ed to exceed public acc^tance.” As of now, indications are the FAA wiU limtt SST flights to overwater routes. NOT UNTIL '72 The United States’ SST is not scheduled to make its first test flight until 1972 and tiie plane will not be delivered to airlines Compassion of Greenville Officer Told before 1976. But the British-FVench supersonic Concorde is undergoing test f%hts and is scheduled to be delivered to airlines in 1972. ^ llie scientbts’ T^rt said the booms created by the SST “woiild be percdved by its hearers as equivalent in anndy-ance to the noise frm a large truck traveling Ut 60 miles an hour at a distance of about 30 feet” Ihe report said that an additional 36-65 million persons within 12.5 to 25 miles of the flight would be subjected to “one to 50 booms per day of someeiiat lower intensity.” The boom is a cone-shaped wave of sound that trails the plane. Those closest to the fUitot path are subject to the loudest noise. GREENVILLE (UPI) - This is a story of police compassion. It involves Officer Lynn Wickeriwun, 27, a four-year veteran of the Greenville Police Department, who, toils at a salary of about $6,000 annually. It also involves his wife, Bonnie, 27, who is a substitute teacher in the GreenvUle school system, and their 18-monjh-old son, Bryant. Recently two little boys, Keith Edwards, 22 months old, and his brother, Kirk, 7 months old, were left with a baby sitter. The mother, Mrs. Kathy Edwards, failed to return. Mrs. Edwards, who is only 18 years old, was sentenced Wednesday in Stanton to serve 45 dails in jail for neglecting her children. A warrant has been issued in Greenville charging the father, Keith, with child neglect. He is believed be in Tennessee. NO CARE AVAILABLE When there was no innmediate care available for the children after temporary arraigements were made, Wickerham and his wife took the children to their home. Mrs. Wickerham said Thursday she and her husband want to keep the two boys who seem to feel at home in the Wickerham split level home in Greenville which the family is buying and recently remodeled. “We have two bedrooms and a basement with bedroom facilities and my husband and I are trying to figure out how we can keep the two little boys,” she said. The children are currently wards of the Montcalm County Probate Court, which has granted temporary custody of the children to the Wickerhams. “We now have three boys, all under 2 and all in diapers,” Wickerham said. BOTH STORES OPEN SUN. NOON TO 6 P.M. HEALTH AND BEAUTY AIDS Nutri-Tonic permanents in 2 styles, home or body ■ Easy to use! Gives body and manageability to hair styles. Anocin tablets Large bottle 1 of 200 tabs. I e# m Ora Fix tube 67< Prell shampoo Lysoi spray 99c 1.17 Crest toothpaste, family size 59< Reduces tooth decay. 6 ’^oz. wt. SPEOAL SALE OF CANDY and CIGARS Schrafft's 2-ib. box m A A of assorted chocolates | e dr Jr 79ld James R. Bayley, son ot Mrs. John W. Bayley, 229 E. Walton, will be 1 p.m. Monday at Voor-hec8*S{de Funeral Home wiOi burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. The child died of a sudden illness yesterday. Surviving are his parents; two brothers, Jeffrey and John, at home; and grandparents, lUley Hickman of Pontiac, Mrs. Earl Season of Waterfm'd Township ,and Mrs. Isabelle Bayley of Pontiac. Pontiac Prtss Photo UNREFRESHING PAUSE — Firemen scale ladders to get at a blaze at the Coca Cola Bottling Co., 1130 W. Wide Track. The fire broke out around noon yesterday in a second floor storage area in a building adjacent to thei main plant and was brought under control about 1 p.m. Fire officials said they will make an official damage estimate after inspecting the area Monday. CLASSIC LOOK . . . Classic Comfort, Whip - smart in black, brown, bone'or red. Mrs. Wilma (Earvin invi her many friends to vi her in her new home. BLOOMFIELD PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER (Corner Maple and TeleKraph) MA 6 2566 char gw AceotuiU, gfCnrtw **We’ve Grown Big by Staying Small’* Traffic Victim's Funeral Slated Elliott Furniture Co. of 5400 Dixie Highway, Waterford Township, died last night after being struck by a car. Funeral service will be 1:30 p.m. Monday at the First Baptist C3iurch. His body is at the Huntoon Funeral Home. Mr. Elliott, 58, lived at 210 Oneida. He was a member of the First Baptist Church. Deaths in Pontiac, Nearby Areas James R. BayJey Home with Masonic graveside service at Roseland Park Cemetery, Berkley. Christopher, a retired Chrysler Corp. employe, died Thursday. Surviving are his wife. Fern; three daughters, Mrs. Dorothy Schultz of Clawson, Mrs Charles Beacham of Troy and Mrs. D. Z. Rutledge of Warren; stepdaugher, Mrs. Lee Giroux of Margate, Fla.; a stepson, L. Jay Clark of Waterford Township; five grandchildroi; stepgr andchildren; four great-grandchildren; and nine stepgreat-grandchildren. Mrs. Oliie R. Branham Service for Mrs. Oliie (Beulhh) Branham, 50, of 11)62 Olson, Waterford Township, will be 1 p.m. Mimday at Donelson-Johns Funeral Home with burial In Ottawa Park Cemetery. Mrs. Branham died yester- Surviving are her husband; a daughter, Mrs. Edmund Adams Waterford Township; r, Mrs. Earl Hook Waterford Township; and granddaughter. Mrs. John C. Bushart Service for Mrs. Jrfm C. (Dorothy) Bushart, 50, of 4861 Pontiac Lake, Waterford Township, will be 11 a.m. Monday at Peace Lutheran Church with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy, by Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. Mrs. Bushart died yesterday. Surviving are her husband; a daughter, Dorothy, and a son, John, both at home; and a brother, Memorials may be made to Peace Lutheran Church. AVON TOWNSHIP - Service for Mrs. Clare L. (June Tlenken) Magoon, 52, of 719 Apple Hill will be 2 p.m. M(hi-day at Pixley Memorial Chapel, Rochester, with entombment at Mount Avon Mausoleum. Mrs. Magoon died this morning. She served as chairman of the fund-raising committee for Roeper City and Country Day School, Bloomfield Hills; and as member of the Rochester Cotillion Club and'Town and Chunty Guild of Firs Cmgregational Church. Surviving are her husband; : son, William J. a student at Phillip Exeter Academy, Exeter, N. H.; and her mother,; Mrs. William Tienken o f Rochester. OXFORD — Service for Manfred J. Seabrook, 58, of 145 Minnetonka will be 11 a.m. Monday at the Bossardet Funeral Home, with burial in White Chapel M e m o r i a' Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Seabrook, a farmer and a Harley Davis Sr. Service for Harley Davis Sr. 85, of 249 Edison will be 3 p.m Monday at the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home, with burial White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Ross A. Elliott, part owner of He died Friday. Mr. Davis was retired from Fisher Body Division, and a member of the Calvary Missionary Church. Surviving are his wife. Rose; two sons, Harley S. of Hale, Rev. Weldon E. of Toledo, three daughters, Mrs. Fred Peter of Romulus; Mrs. Clyde Petty and Mrs. Marvin Lucas, both of Pontiac; 14 grandchildren, and one great-grandchild. Surviving are his wife, Wanda, three sons, Peter, Mark and Robert; four brothers, Harold of Ortonville, Dodge of Clarkston, Leonard and Stewart, both of Waterford Township, sister. 1-75 Crash Injures Local Woman, 45 Service for Charles S. Enfield, 65, of 258 Auburn will be 10:30 a.pi. Monday at the Voorhees-Siple Chapel with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mr. Enfield, a dry cleaner, died Monday. Surviving are a brother, William Enfield, and a sister, Mrs. Christine Karnoogian, both of Pontiac. A Pontiac woman was injured 1 a traffic accident near Midland last night and is in critical condition today a t Midland Hospital. Mrs. Mae E. Jaruzel, 45, 94 E. Longfellow, was involved in two-car crash on 1-75 in Larkin Townsipp about 7 p.m. She was alone in her car. The driver of the other car involved was hospitalized, but not apparently with serious injuries. Service for Elbie Williams, 44, of 277 Osmun will be 11 a.m. Monday at the Frank Car-ruthers Funeral Home with burial Wednesday in New Orleans, La. Mr. Williams, a construction worker, died Thursday. Surviving are his wife, Kathalyn and his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank B. Williams of New Orleans. YOUR CHRISTMAS DECORATION HEADQUARTERS IS URUNNER’S IN FRANKENMUTH Select your Christmas Decorating needs from Bronner’s two Salesrooms in Frankenmuth, featuring America’s largest year-round display. Christmas Decorations make fine gifts. Gift ceritficates are available. BRONNER’S MAIN SHOWROOMS feature Nativity sets, candles and a wide Variety of indoor and outdoor Christmas decorations for commercial and home use. BRONNER’S “TANNENBAUM SHOP” (directly across the street) features the largest selection of hand-blown glass ornaments from around the world; over fifty life-like trees comj>letely decorated to a theme and unusual decorative lights. Bring your friends, neighbors and ontHif-town guests to BRONNER’S for the happiest Christmas ever. SHOWROOM HOURS: Mon. thru Sat. 9 • 5, Thurs. eve. until 9; and Sun. 2 • 5 until Christmas. For most convenient shopping, please visit weekdays. CLOSED THANKSGIVING DAY BUY! SELL! TRADE!... USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT AI^S Charles S. Enfield Elbie Williams Andrew Christopher TROY — Service for former resident Andrew Christopher, 81, of Margate, Fla., will be p.m. Tuesday at Price Funeral Made to Measure Draperies 200 Samples to Choose from Delivery Before Christmas sh^l The Pontiac Mall 682-1191 member of the Michigan Farm Bureau, East Orion ChDup, died yesterday. Surviving are his wife. Lucille; two scms, Wesley of Pcmdac and Gerald of Oxford; two brothers; two sisters, and seven grandchildren. A^s. Clare L. Magoon Henry H. Spencer OXFORD — Service for Henry H. Spencer, 79, of 1429 Roy will be 2 p.m. Monday at the Bossardet Funeral Home, with burial in Ridgelawn Cemetery. Mr. Spencer, a custodian, died Thursday. He is survived by one brother. Six rezonlng requests will be considered by the Waterford Township Board of Trustees at their meeting at 7:30 p.m. Monday at the township offices. Highland and Crescent Lake roads. Also on the agenda are two lot-split requests. The word for cattle in Gaelic is “feah," which ultimately became the English word fee. Jess W. Tippett OXFORD — Service for Jess W. Tippett, 50, of 91 East, will be Monday in Bryson City, N. C. Mr. Tippett, service station attendant, died Thursday. Surviving are his wife, Regina; three sons, Johnnie and Claude, both at home, and Ernest of Pontiac; g daughter, Mrs. Charles Hahn of Detroit; two, brothers, Fred Tippett of Pontiac and Ralph Tippett of Waterford Township; two s' ters; and four grandchildren. His body will be at the Flumerfelt Funeral Home tonight. Waterford to Bye 6 Rezoning Plans Hunter Wound* GLADWIN un - Lewis E. Thomas, 26, of Gladwin was shot and wounded accidentally Thursday by his brother-in-law, Allen Dran, 28, also of Gladwin, while they were deer hunting in northern Gladwin County. A rifle bullet hit Thomas in the KATHY PRATT Is Now At La Vatuna't Huron 15 ROOM BRICK - WEST SIDE Approximatoly 11,000 iquary loot of utablo oroa idoal for officos, doctors clinic, unior. hall, church, otc., propoity boing in oxcollont condition. Spacious rooms on first and socond floor, contor and tido ontrancos, front and roar stairs, 4 lovotorios A both. Full bosomont, olovotor. Extra lot for parking. $99,500, forms. WE WILL TRADE ANNFTT INC REALTORS 28 E. HURON, PONTIAC, 338-046b Office Open Evenings & Sunday 1 to 4 Manfred J. Seabrook Philip Tribelhorn BIRMINGHAM - Philip Tribelhorn, 80, of 951 Ruffher died yesterday. His body is at Manley Bailey Funeral Home. News in Brief Rummage Sale, Sun. 24, Mon. and Tues., 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., Congregation B’Nai Israel, 143 Oneida Rd., Pont. —Adv. ^€ome ^ue SEo'm Q)€€ifticrul A diamond for Christmas is the gift that is forever . . . the favorite way to say 'Happy Holidayl Set in a cluster with the fiery white sparkle of diamonds that seem to twine around her finger. To wear alone or with a solitaire, the glamorous wide diamond wedding band. Most effective — One of the loveliest choices you can make — Remember the beautiful contrast of Blue Sapphire, precious emeralds, and deep red rubies — With the icy glitter of diamonds. styles From $100 Layaway • Mit^higan Bankard ORfN FRIDAY EVENINGS JEWELERS DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Comer of Huron and Saginaw Stroet FE 2-0294 SHOP SUNDAY 12 TO 6 QUILT-LINED VINYL SUEDE CARCOAT..A KNOCKOUT BUY! I The car(»at that sells out as fast as we put it in stock! Dashing suede vinyl with notch collar, covered buttons, panel front, belted back. Plus a warm quilted rayon lining. And only 5.88. Fall tones; sizes 10 to 18. only 88 LONG SLEEVE TURTLENECK ACRYLIC KNIT SHIRTS full-fashlonml for bettorfitl Stick your neck out in style... wear our handsome acrylic knits with mock or full turtlenecks... handsomely tailored and extra-value priced! Solids, stripes, contrast trims ...S-M-L-XL (14-17.> BOTH TTO'-.ES OPEN SUNDAY NOON TO 6 P.M. PONTIAC CLARKSTON 200 North Saginaw 6460 Dfxiu Highway Frta Parhing |uit North of WaHirferg Hill • For Abova Avarago Sixa and Exceptional Valuo, Visit Our Big Men'i Shop at 16051 Grand Rivar or 8800 Van Dyke A B—« THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1368 Future Is Uncertain for Greek Prisoner ATHENS (AP) — Alexander Panagoulis, whose death tence for sedition and deserting 'the army was postponed Friday but not lifted, might face a grim future of never knowing whether he will bd shot. The army-backed Greek regime apparently had no plan today to grant the 30-year-old defendant an official pardon. Panagoulis, convicted of trying to assassinate Premier George Pa-padopoulos, could be executed at any time. Sources close to the government said however, Panagoulis would not be shot but that the sentence imposed by a court martial Sunday would remain In effect, possibly as a warning to other antiregime forces. Hours before the execution scheduled at dawn Thursday, the regime called it off, apparently yielding to appeals from Pope Paul VI, U N. Secretary General U Thant, the United States and other nations. * * ★ The condemned man, who told the court he wanted to die to justify his struggle against the regime, was transferred to a prison on Aegina Island, one hour by steamer from Athens. Reliable sources said he was under heavy guard to prevent a possible suicide attempt. Car Crash Fatal MUSKEGON iSi - Lucille Wells, 15, of Muskegon was injured fatally Friday in a two-car crash in Muskegon. THIS MAN HAS A PLAN ... Thgt will provida living dollars whan you ratira or whan accident or illness prevents you from working and aaming. LAWRENCE J. SOWTER JliTJI, S020 Highland Road [) VhONE 673*-309l* ----------- Res. OR 3-3681 Winner of the 1964 NIRC Certificate Of Superior Knowledge the mystic elegance of a bright, fresh. Clean Carpet can be yours Yonr Genie's lamp is Your Telephone. But rather than rub it Dial FE 2-7132 PVEWWAY RUG and CARPET CLEANERS 42 Wjsnrr Street, Pontiac TOM SEMPERE Busy Student Chosen Teen of the Week Pontiac’s Washington Junior High School has selected Tom Sempere as Teen of the Week. Tom, a ninth grader, Is president of the student council and has a B-plus average. ★ ★ * His other school activities include male chorus, noon guards, science club, band and yearbook photography staff. * * if s interests are science, bowling and skiing. Tom plans a carrer in science. SOUND ADVICE Tom is the son of Dr. and Mrs. Charles R. Sempere, 1940 S. Hammond Lake, Bloomfield Township. He advises teens to set high goals for themselves and to strive to reach them. "Sour Singer Arraigned in Detroit Traffic Case DETROIT (AP) — Nursing a broken left leg received in a boat accident in Hawaii, “soul” singer Aretha Franklin Friday let her attorney do the talking during her scheduled arraignment on charges dt reckless driving and having an expired driver’s license. She stayed out of Detroit’s traffic court Friday, while her attorney, Stanley Wise, entered a plea of innocent. A hearing was set for Jan. 15. * ★ ★ Miss Franklin, the 26-year-old Detroit singer who skyrocketed to fame with her singing style, was arrested by Detroit police Thui^ay morning. Officers said she will have to answer to charges of speeding, driving on the wrong side of the street, forcing two oncoming cars to the curb and driving her 1969 Eldorado on a license that expired in March. CLOCKED AT 50 M.P.H. Detroit PaUDlman Robert' Dean said he clocked her at SO' miles per hour in a 30 m.p.h.j zone. Miss Franklin was not available for comment. However, her, brother, the Rev. Cecil Franklin, said she denied the charges.! AnENTHW! mRTHEM OAIUID COIMTV HIIHS1IUS CIEMIM ROUSE Those feeling the need of Christmas, assistance must moke personol opplicotion of . . 29 W.\ Lowrence St., Pontioc, Miehigon Applicotions will be token from Nov. 11 thru Dec. 13, 1968; Mon. thru Fri. from 9:00 to 4:00 P.M. Christmas Committee Another service of the United Fund Food-Stamp Counties OK'd WASHINGTON (AP) - Secretary of Agriculture Orville L. Freeman has designated 11 counties in Michigan to join the Food Stamp Program this fiscal year. The counties are: Calhoun, Cass, Ionia, Livingston, Marquette, Mecosta, ominee, Montcalm, Presque Isle and Tuscola. ★ , ★ The program enables eligible low-income families to their food-purchasing power by buying food coupons (stamps) from the federal government. The coupwis are spent like cash at retail food outlets authorized under the program. Make Your RESERVATION EARLY! Small or Lar^e Group Phone Today! Mi 4-7764 Dining and Fun for Everyone . . . BLOOMFIELD HILLS PONTIAC MALL Stop in today . . . we're sure you'll be pleased! WOODWARD AT SQUARE L4KE ROAD 108 N. Saginaw, Downtown Pontiac FE 3-7114 Sleeping Space for Your Holiday Guests^^^H|| ROLL-A-WAY BEDS 1 MONDAY-ONLY SALE 30-in. Width • Rugged steel frame • Thick, comfortable mattress • Use it anywhere for extra sleeping space —home, cabin, cottage, etc. • No Money Down. LOWER LEVEL FURNITURE DEPT. 48-In. Wide ROLL-A-WAY ., 39-In. Wide ROLL-A-WAY .... ^49^^ ISSBCS! ,459 95 PARK FREE IN WKCs Lot at rear of store ■ 1 hour in Downtown Parking Moll in ^front . . . Have ticket stamped at Cashier's office! Open Monday 9:30 am to 9 pm^ THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, XOVKMBKR 23, 19(>8 B—9 Families Give Thanks, Share Food, Clothing PURCHASE CHURCH-Brig. John Grin-dle, leader of the Pontiac Salvation Army, is shown at the door of the new Salvation Army headquarters in Clarkston. The Army just Serves Salvation Army completed the purchase of the old Methodist Church. Brig. Grindle will be in charge of the Clarkston building. Old Methodist Church in Use When upon life’s billows ^ You are tempest tossed, j When you are discouraged Thinking all is lost, Count your many / blessings Name them one by one, And it will surprise you What the Lord hath done. — Rev. Johnson Oatman Jr. "Hie strains of the old Gospel hymn “Count Your Blessings” will reach the rafters of many city and county churches throughout the nation as families gather to sing praises to God on Thanksgiving Day. ★ ★ ★ Everett A. Dell, minister of Pontiac Unity Church, believes “nothing will make you so thankful as an awareness of the many blessings which you have already received. “If you will count your blessings a smile will cross your face, happiness will fill your soul, health will manifest in your body, and you will prosper in your affairs. ’ ■k * -k “No other single mental attitude will do, or can do, so much for you in a personal way as to sincerely ‘Count your blessings’ for this will bring all good things into your mind. And you will have a new appreciation for your friends, your family and your church,” he said. FOOD, CLOTHING Ministers and priest are asking members of their congregations to bring food and clothing to services for the unfortunate of the world. The ^th annual Catholic Bishop’s Clothing Drive will begin in the Detroit Archdiocese tomorrow. Not only clothing but blankets, shoes and bed linens iwill be of use to Catholic relief Services. Baptist Church will be in charge I of opening services. T. Warren Fowler Sr., a city commissioner, will read President Johnson’s Thanksgiving proclamation and Mrs. Lewis Raing will direct the Macedonia Choir. * ★ ★ Guest speaker will be the Rev. Walter T. Ratcliffe of First Methodist Church with the theme, “Thanksgiving Everyday.” The taped service will bei Ibroadcast at 11 a.m. Thursday! over radio station WPON. Grace Lutheran Church. Holcomb and Blue- „ . . . grass. Clarkston. Tom Scott will be the soloist when the choir of Grace Luther- 1-awrence Kaiser, an Church sings “The Beati-j assistant pastor of Our Lady of tudes” by Evans on Thanksgiv-'^^® Lakes Catholic Church, ing Day at 9 a.m. 'Waterford Township, will The Women’s Choir will pre-isent “Praise the Lord” by Mandon Lake IHaydn. Pastor Richard C. _ Stuckmeyer will preach. Community The Mandon Lake Community. St. Daniel Catholic Church. Umon Lake, will ob- P as tors of Independence serve its annual Thanksgiving Township will hold a service of Day .service at 9 a m. Thanksgiving at 7:30 p.m. The Caroler and the Adult Wednesday in St. Daniel Catho- choirs will provide special mu- sic. Pastor Dorr W. FocHer will preach on “The Need for Humility.” Bloomfield Hills Baptist I Vegetables and fruit will grace the Communion table during the candlelight service of Thank.sgiving at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in Bloomfield Hills Baptist Church, 3600 S. Telegraph, Bloomfield Township. Pastor Elmo Tahran will conduct the service of Holy Communion and give the meditation. Items will be distributed in The Salvation Army has remodel the sanctuary to Brigadier John G r i n d 1 e , 70 countries without regard to purchased the old Methodist'preserve the original mode of director of The Salvation Army race, religion or color. Church, located at Church &'the hnildinp northern part of -The following churches are Buffalo streets in Clarkston. uuuumg. Oakland County, stressed the reporting Thanksgiving serv- For over a year The Salvation welfare and|ices: Armv has been workine in the' The Salvation Army will transient relief will be handledj The Pontiac Area Council of a youth pr.„a.. b, the Pont,ac O„ioe. !ch„,ch.s^M,, « has bought the building and the'religious services, and plan to * * ★ Wednesday in M.nedoma*^ adjoining property. :operate a Day Care Center for The program in Clarkston williBaptist Church where the Rev. ^ * * * children of working mothers, be geared to the needs of the L R. Miner is pastor Plans are underway t o and a Golden Agers program. ;immediate area. Dr. Emil Kontz of Bethany Ettward R. Nabid .. COLLECT CLOTHING -- Chris Cornin of 690‘2 Killarney and Helen Cosgrove of 2364 llempsted, both of Pontiac Township, carry shirts, coats, shoes, .scarves, bonnets, socks and other warm clothing to Sacred Heart Catholie School. Fam- annual Thanksgiving troit Catholic Diocese ei s, here and overseas Calhoiic Church are joining in the clothing collection drive of the Dein giving good used clothing for oth- News of Area Churches M::* Providence The Celestial Choir o f Providence Missionary Baptist Church, 311 Bagley, is sponsoring the musicale at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow. Tywanda Cummings of Messiah Baptist Church and Mrs. Carolyn Tanner of Bible Way Baptist Church will be featured .solosists. Mary Jean Cummins will be heard in terpreted through music an, ideas of t h e contemporar; theater. The public is invited. Aldersgate 'he program tomorrow ■Christian .Social Ke.sponsi- '''‘''’"’8 “Benevolence bility- will be the theme of Missionary Work of the First Congregational discussions at the 7 pm, .serv- Detroit Conference, United “Mercy Not Sacrifice” will be ices tomorrow through Dec. 22 Methodist Church” will include the sermon topic of the Rev. at Aldersgate United Methodist reports, discussion and the Malcolm K. Burton when he Church, 1536 Baldwin. showing of filmstrips, preaches at First Congrega tional Church at 10:30 am. tomorrow. and Mrs. charge of recital. Moses Mickens Willie Reese are ii arrangements. Messiah Baptist The Rev. Odell McGlothian and congregation of Our F’ather Baptist Church in Detroit will be guests at the closing service of the lOth anniversary of Messiah Church at 3:30 pm tomorrow. The Chancel Choir will present “The Lord Is Good” with Richard Canfield singing' the solo. “All Praise to God Eternal.” Choir, Orchestra Perform Opera First Baptist 'I'he tkmgregational Cluirch ol * * * Birmingham, Cranbrook and The Thanksgiving revival will Woodward, Bloomfield Hills, begin at 7:,30 p.m. Monday with will pre.sent “Amahl and the .the Rev. C. L. Moore, blind Night Visitors" on Dec 6 and 8 evangelist and a.ssistant pa.stor at 7:30 p.m. I at Burnette Baptist Church. * * ♦ I Detroit, preaching the sermons. performed by members of the church choir will be accompanied b\ a full Troy orchestra. .James Hohmever is Dr. Lehman Strau.ss, former conductor, pastor of Highland Park Baptist ★ * ★ Church, will preach at the 11 The hour-long otiera wrilten a m. and 7 p.m. services originally for television, in 1951, tomorrow in First B a p t i s t has been performed bs jiro-Church, 2601 John R, Troy. fessional and semiprofessional A * * groups during the Christmas Dr, Strauss has just returned season ever since from visiting missions overseas Donations for adults Children under 14 years d will be admitted tree Revival Slated for Rochester FOOD FOR THANKSGIVING — Mrs. Charles Smalley of 5247 Sashabaw, Independence Township, brings canned and packaged food to Sashabaw Presbyterian Church for Thanksgiving baskets planned for the needy. Daughter Susan picks up cans dropped by Cindy Rumsey of 5248 Sashabaw. The children and Mrs, Smalley attend Sunday School and worship services at the church. and American Vietnam. ! Besides his teaching anc preaching ministry. Dr Straus: has written 11 books. Trinity Waterford Township The family night dinner of iTYinity United Methodist xhe Kev. Wesley Wibley of jChurch, 6440 M a c e d a > , Prudenville, former pastor of Waterford Township, is set for First Assembly of GiKi in Pon 6:45 p m tomorrow. tiac, will preach at the evan * * * gelistic services in Bethaivv Methodist Youth F’ellowship of Pentecostal Tabernacle. Fii st Highland-Clyde United and .South Ca.stell, Rochester, Methodist Church will present a beginning Tuesdav modern worship service entitled ♦ * * “'The Gospel According to Meetings will (ontinue Broadway.” through Dec. 8. Services are The Word of God will be in- .scheduled for 7 p m. MIKA( I.F DKLlVEHANt K The Rev A M. Miller is h\ the steps of the newly organized Miracle Deliverance Church of God in Christ, 223 Ferry Worship services are at tl 30 am and 7 .'iO p.m. Sunday .School starts at 10 a.m. .Meetings are slated for 7 30 p m. on Tuesday and Friday. B—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 28, 1968 YOU WILL BE M CORDIALLY WELCOMED P I Make a rule, and pray God to help you to keep it, never, if possible, to lie down at night I without being abib to say, have made one human beings at least, a little better Charles Kingsley, poet. AUBURN HEIGHTS FREE METHODIST a5SS.SOUmi»LRD.i HfNItr SCHMIDT, PASTOK SUNDAY SCHOOL....10:00 AM. MORNING WORSHIP...IOMS AM. iVENINO WORSHIP.......7:00 P.M. WIDNiSDAY PRAYER..7:30 PM. First Baptist Church Walnut at Fourth Rochester SERVICES FOR YOU; Sunday 10:00 A.M. Sunday School 11:00 A.M. Worship 5:45 P.M. Youth Groups 7:00 P.M. Worship Wednesday 7:30 P.M. Prayer Meeting Nursery Provided In Fellowship With GARBC M. Donald Currey, Pastor First Congregational Chureli E. Huron and Mill St. Rev. Malcolm K. Burton, Minister 10:30 A.M. Morning Worship and Sunday School Church of the Mayflower Pilgrims APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF CHRIST 1410 University Dr. Saturday Young People 7;30 P.M. Sunday School and Worship 10 A.M. Sunday Evening Service 7:30 P.M. Tues.and Thurs. Services 7:30 P.M. Church Phone FE 5-8361 Pastor's Phone 852-2382 Sing Sunday The Wondering Travelers will sponsor a musical program at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow in New Jerusalem Missionary Baptist Church, 429 Central. Other singing groups of. the city will perticipate. Pastor R F, Humer said the public is invited. FELLOWSfflP CHURCH - The congregatiMi of Fellowship United Methodist Church, 4050 Coolidge, Troy presents the drawing of the new church to be constructed in 1969. Ground breaking is scheduled for March and members hope to be worshiping in the new building by Christmas 1969. Merritt, Cole and McCallum of Farmington are the architects. The Rev. Edward I. Duncan is pastor. List Thanksgiving Services The Rev. Tom S. Wilson, asso-i date pastor, will speak. Members of the choir and congregation will sing and read the MARIMONT BAPTIST CHURCH - 68 W. WALTON BLVD. - SUNDAY SCHOOL.............9:45 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP.....11:00 A.M. EVENING SERVICE...........7:30 P.M. Rev. Robert F. Richardson, pastor CHRISTIAN CHURCH of DRAYTON PLAINS Tamporaiy Maating Plqc«: /MASON SCHOOL 3835 Wol^ Blvd. (^t. Sashabow and Silvar Lak* Rd.) ____ WORSHIP 9:30 A.M. BIBLE SCHOOL 10:45 A.M. WBFG-FM-DETROIT 98.7m 1:4S P.M. Sunday* "Tim Chri«tipn Haul" MtonillH.loEw.Mi«Mv j^itb Sapttet Church 3411 Airport Road Services Sunday School ... 10 A.M. Worship Service ... 11 A.M. Evening Service . 7:00 P.M. Wednesday.........7 P.M. Doof Always Wolcom# LARRY H.AAALONE Members First Unit The congregation of Bethel United Church of Christ, 6650 Elizabeth Lake, Waterford Township, will dedicate the first unit of the building program at ■ p.m. tomorrow. ★ ★ ★ Participating in the dedication service will be the Rev. A. H. Meyer, pastor of the church from 1936 to 1952, and Dr. Duane N. Vore, Michigan conference minister of the United Church of Christ. SPIRITUALIST CHURCH OF THE GOOD SAMARITAN 4780 Hillerost Drive, Waterford 623-1074 Sunday Morning Lycaum 10 AM. SERVICE 7 P.M. - GUEST SPEAKER from AAilford WATERFORD C0MMUNI1Y CHURCH Airport Road — Olympic Parkway Rob«rt D. Winn*, Pastor K«n On, Youth Diiwctor WELCOME TO A FRIENDLY FUNDAMENTAL, BIBLE PREACHING CHURCH • Sunday School — 9:45 A.M. • Worship Service — 11:00 A.M. • Youth Groups — 6:00 P.M. • Evening Service — 7:00 P.M. MEL JOHNSON Outstanding Youth Speaker and Counselor, Radio Personality and Author, will be our special speaker for both the 11 A.M. and 7:00 P.M. Services. ANNUAL THANKSGIVING BREAKFAST Thursday, November 28 8:00 P.M. Everyone it cordially invited The Nursery it open for all services — The Union Lake Baptist Church, 8390 Commerce, will hold its annual Thanksgiving Day service at 10 a.m. Thursday. “Seven Nights in December” is the title given to a week of special meetings scheduled from Dec. 1 to Dec. 7. Among the speakers will be Dr. Harry Love, the Rev. V. L. Martin and the Rev. Frank Mills. Sunnyvale Chapel Dr. Jhn Mercer, well-known evangelist throughout the United States, will preach tomorrow in Sunnyvale Chapel, 5311 Pontiac Lake, Waterford Township. Services are scheduled for 9:45 and 11 a.m., and again at 6 and 7 p.m. The congregation will gather a Thanksgiving service Wednesday evening. Some 30 young people will attend an all-day youth conference i Southgate on Nov. 30. Orchard Lake Mrs. John Olson, past president of the Women’s Association at Orchard Lake Community Church, Presbyterian will assist in the installation of new officers during morning worship tomorrow. Named president for the coming year is Mrs. Milo McClin-tock. Mrs. Christian Koch will serve as vice president; Mrs. F. P. Schimmel, secretary; and Mrs. Robert Hadley, treasurer. Other leaders of the association to be installed include Mrs. .Thomas Bertrand, Mrs. Gene Smaltz, Mrs. Carroll Appel, Mrs. Francis Dickie and Mrs. Wayne Helfrich. All Saints Episcopal ! There will be two services on Thanksgiving Day at All Saints Episcopal Church, Pike and Wil-|liams. A celebration of Holy Conununion is scheduled for 8 .m. and a family festival service at 10 a.m. At the second worship hour Elder M. J. Watkins to Be Honored Members of the Church of . r'omnofo God, 296 W. South Blvd., will celebrate tomorrow the 22nd | anniversary of their pastor, The Golden Cup Jubilee Elder M. J. Watkins. scheduled for Mt. Olive Baptist Elder Keith Lane of Detroit Church, 458 Central, at 7:30 and his congregation will belp.m. tomorrow consists of a guests at the morning worship j musical contest between the hour. [Wondering Travelers, Pontiac Dinner served after t h e Spirituals and Gosplettes, all of Ascension I Music for the 7:30 Thanksgiving Eve service at Ascension {Lutheran Church, Waterford Dedicate of Church Dr. Vore will preach on Overweight.” NEW ORGAN A new organ built by members of the congregati(Hi will be played for the first time tomorrow by Ray Ebey, church organist. The choir will sing ‘Jubilate Deo” by Purvis and ‘Go Not Far From Me” by Zingarelli. istor Don Gabler will speak ‘A Vision Justified” in the 10:45 a m. service. ★ ★ ★ The congregation will bring gifts of food, clothing and offerings for the children at Deaconess Hospital in Detroit and residents at Detroit Evangelical Home for Children and the Aged. The choir will sing ‘‘I Will Thank 'Thee, 0 Lord” by Moir. FOUNDED IN 1926 Founded in 1926 the'eongrega-tion worshiped at Auburn and Mariva until the property was sold in 1964. FamU friends met at Waterford Township’s William Beaumont School before moving into the new church March 3. The present first unit is located on 30 acres of land adjacent to the William Beaumont School. NEW MINISTER-The Rev. Eddie M. Bain, brother of Pastor J. J. Blackshere, will preach his trial sermon at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow in Mt. Calvary Missionary Baptist Church, 95 Mariva. Vocal Groups service will be followed by a program at 3:30 p.m. when the pastor and congregation of the Church of God in Flint are guests. Groups from Detroit also will participate. Ollie May Britton iis general chairman. FIRST NAZARENE 60 STATE ST. “Where all the Families Worship Together" 9:45 A.M. Sunday School Hour Evury Clast Teaching The Bible Story 1 1:00 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP "Will We Know One Another In Heaven?" "What Kind of Life Can Wo Expect?" 7:00 P.M. EVANGELISTIC HOUR John Burton Directing the Church Choir, Althea Burton at the Piano, Noomi Boughey at the Organ. Teen Orchestra. COMING DEC. 3 - DR. MENDALL TAYLOR JAMES AND ROSEMARY GREEN Township, will be provided by the senior, youth, boys’ and girls choirs under the direction of Mrs. Edward Meyer. Pastor John E. Cooperrider will preach on “Healing Through ’Ihanksgiving.” The Sunday School members under the leadership of Walter Brutzer will decorate the altar and chancel area of the church. Orchard Lake Community Ildefonso Remalona, a Christian businessman from the Philippines will .speak at the 10 service on Thanksgiving Day in Orchard Lake Community Church, Presbyterian. Remalona has been in the Detroit area for two months as a participant in the Presbyterian program of response to crisis the nation. First Presbyterian Good used clothing i blankets will be received by the deacons for shipment overseas through Church World Service. The congregation will observe Thanki^ving with the Pcmtiac Area Council of - Churches Thanksgiving Eve in Macedonia Baptist Church. Appreciation Day Honors Assistant The congregation of Macedonia Baptist Church will honor the Rev. James R. Fleming, assistant pastor, with an appreciation day service at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow. ★ ★ ★ Guest speaker will be the Rev. J. W. Perreen, associate minister of True Love Baptist Church, Detroit. A social hour with the presenting of gifts will follow. The Rev. Mr. Fleming, member of Macedonia Church since February 1921, has served as the assistant pastor for eight years. He also teaches Sunday School and serves as a chaplain at Pontiac General Hospital. With his wife, Gertrude, he makes his home at 432 Howland. Mrs. Jean Cantrell and Mrs. Evelyn Robertson are cochairmen for the Appreciation Day. Five Points Plans Puzzle hr SS Pupils Members of the Sunday School at Five Points Community Church may be busy tearing huge turkeys apart on Thanksgiving Eve but tomorrow they will be just as busy putting them together. This week pieces of a turkey were sent to all members of the Sunday School. Completely Inedible, the parts sent are portions of a giant jigsaw puzzle shaped like a turkey. * ★ ★ Elach member is asked to bring his piece Sunday to fit into the puzzle. Pastor Gordon Lindsay will greet each scholar and pre^nt him with an attractive printed Thanksgiving message. ★ ★ ★ At 6:30 p.m. tomorrow the young people’s band will play under the direction of Robert Women of the church and community will get together at 10 a.m. Tuesday for study of the Book of Romans. FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH Disciples of Christ 858 W. Huron Street R«v. Lawtenc* C. Bobbitt PHONE: Office 332-1474 Paraonage 335-9723 BIRMINGHAM UNITARIAN CHURCH Woodward at Lena Pino Bloomfiold Hilb-647-2380 Robort Morghall and Stanloy Stefanic, Minitten ^THANKSGIVING OPTIMISM" 9:30 and 11:15 A.M. WORSHIP SERVICES and CHURCH SCHOOL (Nuwury thru 12th Gtodu) BLOOMFIELD HILLS BAPTIST CHURCH 3600 Telegraph Rd. 9:45 A.M. Sunday School 11 A.M. Morning Worship 6 P.M. Evening Sorvieo Wodnetdoy, 7:30 P.M. Prayor Mooting TO GOD For His Abundant Blessings And His Abounding Grace. COLUMBIA AVENUE BAPTIST CHURCH 64 W. Columbia Ave. (A Southom Boptitt Church) "Whara thu diffufunc* ii srarrii tho dittancu'' 9:45 A.M. Sunday School-6:30 PJN. Tratning Union " '.M.WorshipSoivico-7:30PJM.Evoning^ivieo Wodnosdoy Night Soivico 7:30 P.M. THE ALLIANCE CHURCH M-59 at Cat* Lake Rd. 9:45 A M. 7:15 P.M. Wednesday Prayer Meeting .Church Phone 682-9520 11 A.M. "HIGHER THAN THE LAW OF LIFE" 7 P.M. "MAN'S"LONG HOME" REV. L. L. 8ROOKER, PASTOR THE GOSPEL TABERNACLE 25 East Blvd. South MR. SHEFFIELD JUST RETURNED FROM A SUCCESSFUL REVIVAL WORKINGS OF CHRIST JESUS. A WARM WELCOME TO ALL Sunday School 9:45 - Worthip 11:00 - Y.P. 6:00 Evangolittic Hour 7:00 - FRIENDLY GENERAL BAPTIST CHURCH UL 2-1155 3454 Auburn Rd. 334-7407 (next to the Fire Station) - Robert Gamer, Pastor THANKSGIVING REVIVAL Rev. Zana Hanley of Flint will Speak Wed., Nov. 27 throug Sun., Dec. 1 Each Evening at 7:00 P.M. SPECIAL SINGING - PUBLIC INVITED SUN. SCHOOL 9.-4S A.AA.-MORNING WORSHIP 11 AM. EVENING SERVICE 7 P.AA. - WED. PRAYER 7 P.AA. All Saints Episcopal Church Williams St. at W. Pike St. The Rev. C. Oeorie Wiidifield, Rector The Rev. Tom S. Wilien, Attociele 8:00 A.M. HOLY-COAAMUNION 9:15 and 11:00 A.M. Morning Prayer and Sermon By Mr. Wilson Church School THANKSGIVING DAY too AM. Holy Communion 10OO A.M. Fnmity Fo*ll*nl Swvkn KEEGO HAR80R BAPTIST CHURCH 1712 CASS LAKE ROAD Sunday School 10 A.M. Worthip 11 A.M. Training Union 6:30 P.M. Evening Worthip 7:30 P.M. DAVID HOTT, Pattor Affiliated vith Southern Baptist Convention CtuAcfc • SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:30 a. m. • MORNING SERVICE 10:45 a.m. • WQTE BROADCAST 11:00 a.m. • CJSP BROADCAST 4:00 p. m. 6 YOUTH FELLOWSHIP 5:45 p. m. • EVENiNfe SERVICE 7:00 p. m. • MIDWEEK PRAYER SERVICE — Wednesday 7:30 p. m. • WBFG-FM Wed. 9:00 a. m. MISSIONARY CHRISTAAAS 7:00 P.M. Presentation of Missionary gifts from each DoparN ment and Adult Close of tho Sunday School. Guest Speaker: DR. OLIN HENDRIX of Far Eastern Gospel Crusade OAKLAND and SAGINAW Rev. Robert Shelton 9 Pastor HoMiiit taotte Wort »t Uto IIMO iMi-iiioMg«»o ran Sopettcteiuii BETHEL TABERNACLE Fint San, Schoal TO a.m, W«nhip 11 a.m, iVANOlUSTIC SERVICE tan.. Taai. oikI U«in.-7:30 P.M. Rav. aiui Mn, E. Crouch 1348 BoMwIfi Aya. FE 5-4387 The Pontiac CHURCH OF CHRIST U80 N. PERRY WORSHIP 10:30 and 6:00 P M BIBLE CLASSES 9:30 A.M. SUNDAY Mid-Week Bible Class Wed., 7:30 P M Plan Program Friendship Missionary Baptist jChurch, Williams and Lorraine, jis sponsoring an organization I program by candlelight for the jMatrons’ Group at 7:30 p.m. I tomorrow. The Rev. Alvin Hawkins of Liberty Baptist Church iwill be guest speaker. Mrs. Virginia Jones is president of the Matrons’ Group. The Rev. E. a. McDonald is pastor. GOOD SHEPHERD assembly of god Umporoiy Location Leggett Elementary School on ELYRIA RD. oH Pontiac Lake Rd. Waterford Township Sunday School 1 0:00 A M Cla....lo,AIIA9., Morning Worship 11 A.M. Evening Service 7 P.M. Pastor John Dearing 335-5313 Central Christian Church 347 N. SAGINAW 11 A.M. Morning Worship-9:45 Bible School 6 P.M. Youth Meeting —7 P.M. Gospel Hour Mr. Ralph Sherman, Minister FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH A Downtown Church Huron at Wayne, Pontiac WORSHIP & CHURCH SCHOOL 10 A M. Infant Nursery Ample Parking Near Church Pastor —Rev. Galen E. HersWey Asst. Pastor-Rev. G. F. Pope Independent, Fundamental, Evangelistic NORTHSIDE BAPTIST CHURCH 2024 Pontiac Road Located Between North Perry and Opdyke Road Sunday School 1 0 A.M. Church Service 11 A.M. Sunday Evening Evangelistic Service 7 P.M. Midweek Service, Thursday 7 P.M. Nursery Provided For Transportation or Information 335-5590 __________Pastor — Rev. Jack Turner Women Lead at Service on Sunday Thank Offering Suni^ay will be observed tomorrow in Auburn Heights United Presbyterian Church with women of the church leading the service. ★ ★ ★ Bringing the morning message will be Sue Althouse who spent 13 years as a Christian education missionary in Japan. Women participating in the service include Mrs. Frank Pretz-now, Mrs. Clayton Woodward, Mrs. Milton Patrick, Mrs. Norman Winter and Mrs. Ken Davis. ★ ★ ★ The lay recruitment committee will meet at 3:30 p.m.. Junior High Fellowship at 6 p.m., and Senior High Fellowship will ■ meet at the same hour in the I lounge for discussion. Anyone wishing to donate to the Pontiac Area Council of Churches blood bank Monday may call Mrs. Hazel Stephens or Mrs. Jody Burmeister for appointment. Hours are 2 to 8 p.m. in Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian Church. * * ★ Anyone without an appointment may donate between the hours of 3 and 6 p.m. Monday. ★ ★ ★ Friends of the Family, an interdenominational women’s group, will gather in the lounge itor a time of fellowship from 10 a m. to 1:30 p m. Wednesday. THE PONTJAC PRESS. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1968 B—11 Tears are often the telescope through which men see far into heaven., — Henry Ward Beecher, Amerifan clergyman. CRESCENT HILLS BAPTIST CHURCH 9:45 to 10:30 Sunday School 11-12 Church Servico 2274 Cretcent Lake Rood Drayton Plaint, Mich. 673-7200 FIRST SOCIAL BRETHREN CHURCH 316 Boldwin-FE 4-7631 Sunday School-10:00 A M. Sunday Worthip- 1 1:00 A M. Evening Worship-7 30 PM Wednetday Prayer -7:00 P M WINS AWARD - The Sunday School of First Baptist Church won third place trophy in Class A of the Michigan Sunday School Association contest. From left are Verne Ernst, general SS superintendent; the Rev. Charles Reed, minister of youth; and the Rev. Robert tl. Shelton, pastor. The Rev. Robert C. Messner. minister of Christian education, was unable to attend the banquet held in tiazcl Park He was on a speaking engagement at Calvary Rible College. At Farmjngton, Orion, Troy Snow Flakes' Topic Interfaith Services Slated 1st GENERAL BAPTIST CHURCH 249 Baldwin Ave. Sundoy School...........9:45 A M. Morrring Worship........11 00 A M Evening Service.........6 00 P M. Wed. Bible Study........7 00 P M. Rev. T. W. Blond, Paslor - FE 4-7172 - 673-0209 .V first for the Farmington nois, between Square Lake and will preaeli with InrflrnrltP \Wrjrr| suburban community will be South Boulevard at 7:30 p.m Charles K. SchutI, Ul muulllUIG »YwlU!,phanksgiving Eve Interfaith Wednesday. qfficiant. Service at the First United' * ★ * Pastor Robert Franklin of Methodist Church, 33112 Grand: Larry Farnham of First Incarnate Word L u t h e r a n River, Farmington. Bapti.st Church will be guest Church, Bloomfield Township! The program is scheduled for soloist, will give a children's sermon 7:30 p.m. The Rev. Albert C. ★ ★ ♦ jentitled “Snow Flakes’’ at theiKolch, pastor of St. Alexander^ The Rev. Richard Snoad, beginning of the 11 a m. service'and the Rev, W. Leslie Williamsipastor of the American Baptist of Holy Communion tomorrow, iof the host church will conduct Church of Troy, will be the Children will be invited to the the service. evening speaker. Refreshments altar rail to receive a special * * will follow in Fellowship Hall, blessing. Music will be by the choir of JOHN LUTHFRAN ★ * * Our Lady of Sorrows Parish; The Incarnate Word Church Choir and the Boy's Vested "ROCHESTER Thanksgiving .services will be c Building Fund Raised $9800 by Grants Pastor Jack H. ('. Clark aird congregation of Norih Oakland Christian Church arc walking this week. The\' just Church of Christ 87 Lofayotte SF. SERVICES: Lord's Day, 10:30 A.M. and 7 P.M. Wed. 7.00 P.M. 682-0042 "L*t th* Bibl* Spook" will hold its annual Thanksgiv-;Choir. This will include organ; ing observance at 8 p.m.;and brass instrumental ac-Wednesday. Parishioners arejeompaniment. asked to bring clothing to the ★ * ★ u n- church so women of the con-j other churches joining in the sgiving ay^ ord late Wednesday held at St. John Lutheranithat a grant lor $.'>,000 was Church in Rochester at 7:30 awarded the church by the p.m. Wednesday, and at 8 a m. board of trustees of the United Christian Missionary Society in cooperation with the New Church Advance Committee of the United Sociel>. The gr; FIRST CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN 46 Roselawn Dr., North of East Pike Sunday Schaal I 0 A.M. — Richard Greene, Supt. Morning Worship 11 A.M. - Evening Service 7 P.M. Rev. Hubfrt U. Ilooirr .{.<2-2 F12 gregation can send donations to worship include SI. Gerald, St , ,, Lutheran World Relief Inc. Clare First United senior choir will sing * * * Presbyterian and Nardm Park 'I’hank Thee ’ Wednesday special sire. Ih.s is,„„„ep Melhodial. rreLir'l.C^a.Id™ Praise the Savior" Thursday ^ , c i onn n ‘ Another grant ot .M.800 will r.,, t rzf begin Jan 1, 1969. The capita* at Oakland Community College,^ pas,or Richard L, Schlecht g^ant begins imniedialely along placed on the need for blankets and children's clothing. ORION AREA Vaughn Whited, i Bring Gifts and an ordained Methodist . . minister, will speak at the for Missions Thanksgiving Eve worship service at 7:30 Wednesday in Youth and adults of the Sun- ‘he United Methodist Church of day School at First Baptist [Lake Orion 140 E. Flint. Church will present Christmas | The mterfaith service is held' gifts for missionaries supported lender the auspices of the Orion ................. V.V.V.-.V.V...V.-., by the church at the 7 p.m. Area Pastors’ Association. "" ^ cervifc tomorrow Members of the group stress m Guest speaker will be Dr.,the common beliefs of the State Choir will present its se-01m Hendrix of Far Eastern [various churches rather / (lOspel Crusade. Pa.sfor Robert [the differences. Shelton will preach at the 10:45 jj^qy x:;:;: morning service. State Choir Sings Saturday Evening The Norlheaslern Michigan addition to the pastor' salar>. The congregation will gather tomorrow to give thanks tor the many ways in which it has been blessedX CENTRAL UNITED METHODIST 3882 Highland Rd. REV. CARL PRICE 9:00 A.M. and 10:45 A.M. Broadcoit < Rev. Carl Price n WPON, 1460 K - 1 1:15 A. FIRST UNITED METHODIST S. Saainaw at Judson ‘The Church with a Heart at the Heart of the City 9:45 A.M. 11:00 A.M. Church Schaol Morning Worship "Thanksgiving Is Living" ST. PAUL UMITED METHODIST 165 1. bquur. Lake Rd., Bloo.ali.ld HilU-FI 8-8233 ond FE 2-2752 CHURCH SCHOOL 9:30 AND 1 0:45 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP 10:45 A.M. - Somu.l C. S ELMWOOD UNITED METHODIST 2680 Crooks Road Sunday School 9:30 a.m. Worihip 10:45 o.m. Evening Worihip 7 p.m. ALDERSGATE UNITED METHODIST 1536 Baldwin FE 5-7797 Rev. Cleon F. Abbott Worship 9:45 a.m. Church School 1 1 a.m. vilt po»tor ^, CLARKSTON METHODIST 6600 Waldon Road, Clarkston CHURCH SCHOOL 9:45 A.M. WORSHIP 10AM j Frank A. Cozadd, Minister .v.v Adelle Thomas, Director of Music ix;:;: ^ St. James United Methodist Chiirch I 451 W. Kennett Rd. ' Opposite the Alcott Elementary School -X-:-: Sunday School . . . 9:30 A.M. Worship Service 1 1:00 A.M.-Nursery Provided I rev. RnRFpr SECRIST. MINISTER :::v:- TRINITY UNITED METHODIST Or morning WORSHIP 8 30, 10:30 ;i:i CHURCH SCHOOL 9:15 Timothy Hickey, Minister , United Presbyterian Churches AUBURN HEIGHTS 3456 Primary Street F. Wm. Polmer, Paitor Sunday School....9:30 Morning Worihip.11:00 DRAYTON Cor.Sashabaw at Monrog St. W. J. Teeuwissen, Pastor Bible School..9:45 A.M. Morning Worihip ..11 :00 A.M. Youth Groups..6:30 P.M. Wednesday Prayer and Study Hour....7:00 P.M. OAKLAND AVENUE 404 Oakland at Cadillac Theodore R. Alleboch, Pastor Audrey Limkeman, Youth Director Worship 8:30 and 11 A M. "Sunday School .... 9:45 A.M. Youth Fellowship . .. 5:45 P.M. Worship.......7:00 P.M. Wed. Prayer...7:00 P.M. WATERFORD LAKELAND 7325 Maceday Lake Rd. Roy F. Lambert, Pastor Sunday School 9:30 A.M. Morning Worthip 1 0:45 A.M. CHURCH OF ATONEMENT 3535 Clintonville Rd. Waterford Twp. Church School 9:30 and 1045 Worihip Service 10:45 A.M. Crea AA. Clark, Poster than cond annual Thanksgiving Musicale at 8 p.m. on Nov. 30 in Macedonia Baptist Church, 512 Pearsall. The annual Troy Community * ★ ★ Thanksgiving service will be ^he John.son Temple Choir, held at the First United Cohen Community Singers Methodist Church, 6363 Liver- Gosplette.s will be featured with John Robertson, REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST of Latter Day Saints Pontiac Congregation now meeting at 1990 Crescent Lake Rd. also 5353 Liver-nois, Troy. J, A Outland, Pallor 651-0732 the Billie speaks to you CHRISTIAN SCIENCE RADIO SERIES SUNDAY 9:45 A M. W Q T E 560 on your dial CHRISTIAN SCIENCE Subject: SOUL AND BODY Sunday Service 1 1 A M Sunday School 1 1 AM Reading Room 1 4 W. Huron FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 1 64 W. Lawrence Pontiac and soloi.sts. Mr.s. Ruth B u Others participating iiuhide Mr and Mr.s. Walter Moore. Mrs. C. B. Moody will .serve as mistress of ceremonies. President of the group is Kcnnie llutchons. "AN AMERICAN BAPTIST CHURCH' BETHANY BAPTIST CHURCH WEST HURON AT MARK Nov.mb.r 24, 1968 SERMON: THE LUTHERAN CHURCH INVITES YOU THE LUTHERAN CHURCH MISSOURI SYNOD CROSS Of CHRIST ,4 Rd. (M 59>, Po... o THE AMERICAN LUTHERAN CHURCH "THI LUTHERAN HOUR" tad. Sjndoy Study-7:30 P FIRST SPIRITUALIST CHURCH 576 Orchard Lake SERVICE 7:30 P.M. Kaye Cation, Speaker For Ilij'orninlion call 334-3715 FIRST ASSEMBLY of GOD Perry at Wide Track Sunday School 9:45 A.M. Everyone Welcome 11 A.M. "TRIED BUT TRIUMPHANT" Wayne Shoneyfel*, M'lKonoryToTh. D«of In th« Philhpin*! "THE CHURCH ON THE MARCH" ^ Silvercrest Baptist Churen In 2562 Dixie Highway, Pontiac & 9:45 A.M. SUNDAY SCHOOL A m 11 A.M. "THE BAPTISM OF THE M HOLY SPIRIT" 7 P.M. "THE INFt|LiNG OF THE SPIRIT" 673-3022 Nursery Open at All Services Pastor John Hunter 0/3-9274 THE SALVATION ARMY CITADEL 29 W. LAWRENCE SUNDAY SCHOOL 10 A.M. Teen Age Fellowship Hour As Announced MORNING WORSHIP 11:15 A M. EVANGELICAL MEETING 7 P.M. TUESDAY PRAYER AND PRAISE MEETING 7 PM. d Mrs. John Gnndle, Comm ' - /’r, You Are Invited g Offici ic/ii, FIRST WESLEYAN CHURCH 1 9 W. Fairmount Sunday School........9:- Worship..............11: Wesleyan Youth........6:1 Evening Family Gospel Hour 7:00 Wednesday Prayer and Praise 7:00 Rev. WlliomLyons FIRST MISSIONARY CHURCH 149 North East Blvd. - FE 4-1 811 Rev. Kenneth L. Pennell Sundoy School 10 A.M. — Worship 1 1 A M Sunday Youth Fellowship — 6:00 P.M. Sunday Evenihg Worship — 7:00 P.M. Emmanuel Cku/ick 645 S. Telegraph (Near Orchard Lake Rd.) DR. TOM MALONE, Pastor A Fundamental, Independent, Bible Believing Baptist Church X BIBLE SCHOOL 10 A.M. ; Departmentalized Sunday School for All Ages . .. with NO Literature but the Bible HEAR DR. TOM MALONE teach the Word of God, verse by verse, in the largo Auditorium Bible Clou, broadcast on WPON 1 0:1 5 to 1 0:45 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP 11 A.M EVANGELISTIC SERVICE 7 PM. PRAYER MEETING Wed.7:30 PM Christian Service Brigade Monday 7 P.M. BUS SERVICE CALL FE 2-8328 ::: Doof Closs and Nursery — All Services SPECIAL MUSICAL SUNDAY Gospel Singers & Musicians Child Evangelism PUPPET BIBLE STORY at the Sunday School Hour f SPECTAU and take core of your printing or mounting How many times have you returned from that VACATION or SPECIAL EVENT loaded with exposed film and too short of cash to have it processed? The film lays around the house for weeks or you process it one roll at a time as you can afford it. As a member of the FILPAC-A-MONTH CLUB, this is not necessary. Each month you will receive your film along with invoice for the size and amount ordered. All processing (Developing - film buying, processing, automatically. Join the Printing or mounting) has been paid. Fast service (in our plant less than 24 hours) Mammoth sized prints 4'x4'' or 4'x5'' (depending on film size) and SATISFACTION IS GUARANTEED. Your Leatherette Photograph Album with 10 pages will be sent to you with your first set of prints. You can accumulate your Kodak Film (all film dated and guaranteed 1 year) and use it as desired. Save 6 rolls or more and use them all at one time, then send them in. No need to hold them, everything has been paid. REMEMBER, All film is FIRST-LINE KODAK FILM-developed with KODAK chemicals and printed on KODAK paper. Your SATISFACTION IS GUARANTEED. AS A GIFT FOR A fmmo OR RELATIVE Send us this Gift Certificate application. The same prices and conditions listed on the regular application form prevail. If Pre-Paid for 12 months, the Photograph Album will be sent immediately along with their first roll of film, then a fresh roll of Kodak film will be sent each month to insure freshness,otherwise we will bill you monthly and the Photograph Album will be sent to them with their first set of Prints. Either way you give a gift that is a continuous reminder that YOU CARE. □ Ch«ck I—I Bill M» EncloMd 1—1 Monthly CHECK THE FILM SIZE AND FILL OUT THIS APPLICATION TO START YOUR KODAK FILM COMING RIGHT AWAY MAIL THIS COUPON TODAY TO: FIL-PRO A MICWGAN CO P. O. BOX 804 MT. CLEMENS, MICH 48043 CHECK BELOW THE SIZE FILM DESIRED □ VM26 $1.49 [H VP-1271 □ VP-620^*’^’ Kodocolor-X for color prints I I CX-127 □ CX-6 □ CX-______ I I CX-126-20 S6.40 :X-127 -| :X-620 [- $4.2. :X-126-12-I □ KX-126 1 I I KR-135-20J Kodochroma II 8MM Color Movi* Film I ,1 KR-459 outdoor -i □ Y $3.84 KRA-459 Indoor J □ KA-464 indoor $4.24 outdoor If more than on* roll of film dasirad, writa quonity haro_ Availing Addrass _ City---------------- _ Chack Color of Album Datirad —LH Brown OGraan Cl] Ivory --------------Zip------------- I wish to moka application for mambarsh'ip in the FILPAC-A-MONTH CLUB. Sand ma aoch month for 12 months o trash roll of Kodak Film indicated above. I understand that I will be billad each month whan I receive my film for the price listed above. This one price includes the Film - Developing - and Printing or Mounting. I also understand that my Photograph Album will be sent to ma with my first set of prints. I must be satisfied or my money will be refunded. Firet Weekend of Qualifying Under Way One Pin Looms Big for Pontiac Open 'Target' Score One pin can mean the difference between qualifying or not qualifying and when it comes down to the finals it might mean the difference between $1,000 and $600 in the Pontiac Open Bowling Championship which gets under way at 10 sites tomorrow. The bowlers stand to gain the extra pin on the basis of fte 70 per cent handicap of 600 for three games. Scratch is 200 per game, however the percmtage during the tournament will be based on three games. The target score for qualifying is “600” which includes the bowler’s 3-game handicap and once this target score is reached, it’s all a matter of sitting back and waiting for the big semifinals and finals to arrivie. however all 10 sites are qualifying tomorrow. > Some of the local establishments are .qualifying today because of the conflict of leagues at certain times on Sunday, Participating establishments include Airway Lanes, Cooley Lanes, Huron Bowl, Howe’s Lanes, Lakewood Lanes, North Hill Lanes, Sylvan Lanes, Savoy Lanes, 300 Bowl and West Side Lanes. The squad times were listed in yesterday’s Press, however bowlers can phone the sites to arrange their desired squad time. ‘ . ’Ihe tournament features the largest guaranteed purse in history, starting with $1,000 and continuing down with $600, $400, $300 and $200, with another 200 prize positions eiqpected to follow. Any sanctioned bowlers of the ABC or WIBC regardless of average can enter the tournament and as has been the case in the' past, winners have included bowlers with averages ranging from 209 down to 108. Without s|ny extra entry fees, bowlers Will also be able to win prizes in the Mix ’n Match doubles and Mix ’n Match team event. The “doubles” must be a man and woman partner who must bowl on the same squad and same house, but not necessarily on the same lanes. They must indicate the name of their partner on the blank at the time of entry. Failure to do this will void the “doubles” team. The same holds true for a $-boWler team,' which can be made up of men or women. They must list their “team” members mi the back of the blank at the time of entry and must bowl on the same squad in the same hotise. Ilie semifinals will be held Dec. 15 at Huron Bowl. The finals are scheduled Dec. 22 at Airway Lanes, with the Actual’s Invitationals slated the same day at 300 Bowl. Defense lo Rest Lack of Offense, 3-Day Break Applying Pressure DE’raOIT (UPI) - Just because the jury is still out on Detroit’s skinny mathematical chances for the National Football League’s Central Division title, it doesn’t mean the Lions’ defense can rest. In fact, the gutty defense of the Lions will have to work even harder as Detroit plays the New Orleans Saints Sunday and gets ready then for a Thanksgiving Day game with the Philadelphia Eagles. HOLD OPPOSITION Detroit, in last place in the Central Division by two and one-half games with four left on the schedule, has limited some tough opponents to just 13 points per game over its last six — but the last four in a row have been losses and the one before that was a tie. FAMniAR FIGURE — One of the big thorns always In the paws of the Detroit Lions for more than 10 years of pro football has been Doug Atkins, one of the great defensive ends of the Chicago Bears who is now playing for the New Orleans Saints, Atkins will lead the Saints’ front' foiu* against the Lions Sunday in ’Tiger Stadium. Of course the Saints haven’t exactly been enhancing their image as winners either. ’They’ve lost four in a row, too. New Orleans has recently suffered from the same malady which has infected Detroit, a disease which translates from the Anglo-Saxon into “poor offense.” Bill Munson, remembering perhaps a Dayton Drops PGA Meet Cancel Contract for Aug. 14-17 Golf Tourney DAYTON, Ohio (^ — The Professional Golfers Association’s split vidth tournament players has resulted in cancellation of the 51st PGA championship here next summer. The Executive Connmittee of the Day-ton Area Chamber of Commerce decided Friday to cancel its contract to h(»t the tournament next Aug. 14-17 because it could not be paranteed that top-name pros would participate. The cancellation was another setback for the PGA arising out of its recent split with the tournament players, who have formed their own association, the American Professional Golfers. Brothers Have Goals Big Grid Menu for Gablers TORONTO (AP) - If fate smiles on the Gabler household in Royal Oak this weekend, on# son will throw passes in the Grey Cup here Nov. 30 and another may catch them in Pasadena, Calif., New Year’s Day. Quarterback Wally Gabler, 24, must first get the Toronto Argo nauts past the Rough Riders in the second of the two-game, total-point Eastern Football Conference final at Ottawa Saturday, while his brother, flanker John Gabler, 20, is hoping to help get the Uni- versity of Michigan past Ohio State on the same day and gain the trip to the Rose Bowl. “My parents will come to the Grey Cup and I’m sure they will go to the Rose Bowl to see John if he makes it,” Wally ?aid. ’The Argonauts, 6%-point underdogs in last Sunday’s game after being outscored 100-33 in three regular-season meetings with Ottawa this year, took advantage of a muddy field and the cold for a 13-11 victory. TAKE ACTION Dayton chamber President William P. Balthrop said the committee took the action “because of our inability to obtain unequivocal parantees of the participation by the leading tournament players.” ’The action came after chamber officials met separately this week with PGA and APG officials. PGA President Leo Fraser, contacted by telephone in Atlantic City, said he was shocked to learn of the cancellation. In a letter to Fraser the chamber said the breach existing between the PGA and APG prevented the sponsors from being assured of a representative field of top golfers. “We cannot and will not attempt to sell the project to our community as a star-studded tournament when we both know there is a very substantial possibility that the leading tournament players will not participate,” the letter said. Clippers Clip AHL Lead Red Wings Crush Farm Team, 9-2; Play Leafs Tonight Other scores for the Red Wings were by Gary Unger, Nick Libett, Dean Prentice, Danny Lawson, Bruce MacGregor and the brothers Mahovlich— Pete and Frank. BALTIMORE (ff) — The Baltimore Clippers edged out Hershey 2-1 Friday night to inch closer to the top of the Eastern Division of the America Hockey League now shared by the Bears and Providence. All Other teams in ttie league wqre idle, AP Wirtphoto Packers Call Rookie BULL HEADED - Chicago Bull’s 7-foot center Tom Boerwinkle gets a closer look at the basketball as it banks off the backboard. ’The Bulls lost a 114-107 decision to the New York Knicl^ last night. (NBA details on C-2). little too well that an Injury cost him his job as quarterback of the Los Angeles Rams three seasons ago, drags his pained body into action again for the Lions. THE PONTIAC PRESS SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1968 C—1 His opposite member on New Orleans’ side is a name once regarded around these parts as Detroit’s -great quarterbacking hope of the future — Karl Sweetan, who has been ailing himself with a twisted ankle. disposed toward passing than running, understandable when you compare their runners with their receivers. INJURED GENERAL Bill Kilmer, the Saints regular field general until he suffered a hairline fracture of his ankle three weeks ago, may see action. Don McCall is the Saints top rusher with 449 yards while the other names in the backfield are Tony Lorick, fm-merly with Baltimore, Randy Schultz, Tom Barrington and Ernie Wheelwright. 'Their top receiver is flanker Dan Abramowicz, who has caught 36 passes for 591 yards and five touchdowns. The split end is Dave Parks, former San Francisco discontent, and the tight end is Monte Stickles, who also played with the Forty Niners and is best known in Detroit for his ability to get on linebacker Wayne Walker’s nerves. 'Die Lions will be going with much the same sterling attack which has netted just one touchdown in its last 19 quarters of NFL play — admittedly against defenses which could be ranked a few times more powerful than that of the Saints. LAST MINUTE BUCK - Jim Stanley (center), 3773 Hi-Villa, made one last effort Thursday morning near Wakefield in the Upper Peninsula before returning home. The departure was delayed because it took Stanley, his son Ron (right) and Coy Sadler considerable time to drag the 200-pound buck a mile and a half. It is the new leader in The Pontiac Press Big Deer Contest. New Orleans, 3-7 in the Century Division and safely out of contention for Detroit, which hopes to gobble up two anything, is a 12 point underdog to victories before 'Thanksgiving Day is over. The Saints, plagued with punting problems, Friday signed Jim Fraser, retired from the American Football League, where he was the top punter for three years. Fraser played with the Denver Broncos of the AFL from 1962 through 1964 and led each of those years in punting. He was traded to the Kansas City Chiefs in 1965 and to the Boston Patriots in 1966. Tigers Expansion Schedule Is Listed The Saints have had punting problems since Tom McNeil was placed on the inactive list. Rookie Ronnie South punted in the last two games, averaging only 27.6 yards. A total of 81 home games in 77 dates will be played by the World Champion Detroit Tigers during the 1969 baseball season. On the home schedule are 45 night games, including one twi-nighter and there are four doubleheaders, including two on Sundays and one on a holiday, July 4 with Baltimore. 10-Minute Drought In the new expansion schedule, which has the American East and American West divisions, the Tigers will play nine home games against each of the East division rivals and six against the West division teams. Also planned for the 1969 seasm is an increase of 958 box seqts which will put the seating capacity at 54,220, and an increase of reserved seat ticket prices from $2.50 to $2.75. The box seats remain at $3.50 and general admission $1.50 and bleachers $1.00. Starting time for games will remain unchanged with night games getting under way at 8;:00 p.m., twi-nighters at 5:30 p.m., Saturday afternoon at 2:15 p.m. and other afternoon games at 1:30 .♦ TIOER HOME SCHEDULE HAMILTON, Ont. (UPI) - The Detroit Red Wings defeated their Hamilton, Ont., farm club, 9-2, Friday night in an annual exhibition game. Gary Bergman led the way with two goals and Pete Stemkowski collected five HOUGHTON (AP) — Michigan Tech got three goals in the final period to gain a 7-7 tie against Wisconsin in a nonconference hockey game, which the coaches decided to let continue iti a 10-minute overtime that proved scoreless. OTHERS IN DIVISION In the East with Detroit are Baltimore, Boston, Cleveland, New York and Washington. In the West are Chicago, California, Kansas City, Minnesota, Oakland and Seattle. 25 (n), 26, 77 . Bsitimor* NHL Market Active . Washington .. Now York Boston Detroit, which meets the 'Toronto Maple Leafs tonight, had goalies Roger Crozier and Terry Sawchuk split time in the nets. Complete Waiver(ing) Deal The Red Wings roared out to a 9-0 lead before their amateur farm team could get the puck by Sawchuk. Hamilton goals came off the sticks of Buster Harvey and Gary Coulter. MINNEAPOLIS-ST. PAUL OP) - Montreal, Minnesota and Pittsburgh approved a three-way National Hockey League deal Friday to implement a trade nullified by NHL P r e s i de n t Clarence Campbell. It all started out last week when Minnesota dealt defenseman Larry Hillman to the Montreal Canadiens for left Wing Brian Smith. But Campbell ruled that Hillman first should have been put on waivers, and ruled him ineligible. Finally, Montreal purchased the 31-year-old Hillman from Pittsburgh for $30,000 and an unnamed minor league player. TO PLAY TONIGHT Hillman will play against his former mates, including brother Wayne Hillman, tonight when the Canadiens and North Stars meet in Montreal. National Boat Show at Cobo Hall, Feb. 1-9 GREEN BAY, Wis. UP) - The Green Bay Packers reactivated rookie defensive end Francis Winkler Friday as they prepared to travel to Washingtotv for Sundayis National Footl^all League game against the Redskins. So, the North Stars put Hillman on waivers and the Pittsburgh Penguins paid the $30,000 waiver price to Minnesota. 'The North Stars then paid Montreal $^,000 for Smim, Minnesota officials disclosed. / The three-corner transaction was completed before the 72-hour waiver limit expired. Pittsburgh had the first choice at the waiver because of the Penguins’ last-place standing in the West Division. Hillman was not allowed to play for Montreal 'Thursday /night against Philadelphia. TTie 7th annual Michigan National Boat, Sports and Vacation Show will be held at Cobo Hall, Detroit, February 1-9, 1969. The Michigan National Boat, Sports and Vacation Show is dominated by the traditional inboard cruisers, houseboats and sail yachts rather than by nlnaixmts and other small units. THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 28, 1968 #ro Baseball Swinging for Seats Against Football Special Playoff Slated Because of New Teams NEW YORK WV—Major league baseball, swinging its biggest bats at pro football, has sharpened thft battle lines between the two sports with a tradition-breaking schedule that extends the season further into fall. The schedule—first under the new 24-team format—encompasses the normal 162 regular season games, but stretches the season approximately another 10 days through a best-of-5 playoff series and the World Series, The Associated Press learned Friday. That Was confirmed by American League President Joe Cronin, who said in Boston the schedule had been “signed and sealed --------------------- in August,” although it apparently was not going to be announced until the annual meetings beginning in San Francisco, Dec. 2. But Cronin denied that baseball was making any attempts to move into pro football’s season. “We’re not moving into their season," he said. “Heck, they’ve moved Into ours. They start their season in July now." The schedule, however, points to the fact that baseball is employing its major weapon— World Series games on national NFL Standings WESTIRN CONRCItENCI CENTRAL DIVISION W L T Pet. PP PA AAInn«»otB ......« 4 0 .m lU — Chicago .........5 5 0 .500 IN Groan Bay ... ...4 5 1 .444 103 DETROIT ....... 1 t 1 .331 1M COASTAL DIVISION W L T Pet. PP -. . * 1 0 .wo 393 in ...i 1 1 .n* 117 131 ________________ 4 S 1 .444 107 110 Atlanta ........I' I 0 .EM 130 200 EASTERN CONPERENCB CENTURY DIVISION W L T Pel. PP PA ...7 3 0 .700 »! 301 . ..S 4 1 133 130 ..3 7 0 .300 in 241 . . .1 7 I .322 115 2n CAPITOL DIVISION . i! W L T Pet. PP PA Dallaa ..........0 3 0 jn 311 144 New Vorlt .......7 3 0 ..TOO ZO 200 Washington ......4 4 0 .400 107 — PhlladaTphIa ....0 10 0 .000 111 SUNDAY'S OAMES New Orleans at DETROIT, 1:15 p.m. Atlanta at St. Lovit New Yorlc at Lot Angeles Philadelphia at Cleveland San Francisco at Pittsburgh AFL Standings EASTERN DIVISION W L T Pet. PP PA New York ........7 1 0 .700 209 127 Houston .........5 4 0 .455 213 "■ Miami ...........1 4 1 .333 180 Boston ..........3 7 0 .in 141 Buffalo .........1 9 1 .100 151 WESTERN DIVISION W L T Pet. PP PA Kansas City ....9 2 0 .018 277 150 Oakland .........0 2 0 .00-------- - San Diego .......0 1 0 .00 Denver ..........4 4 0 jH Cincinnati ......3 0 0 .27 SUNDAY'S GAMES Buffalo at Denver Miami at Boston New York ----------- NHL Standings Montreal .......... 11 4 3 25 59 40 New York .......... 12> 5 0 34 54 38 Boston ............ 10 5 3 22 55 37 Toronto ............ 9 4 3 21 40 33 Chicago ............ 9 7 I 19 40 58 Detroit ............ 4 7 3 15 54 51 West Division St. Louis .......... 8 4 4 20 58 38 MInnasota .......... 4 9 2 4 42 50 Phlladalphia ....... 4 9 2 14 35 52 Los Angeles ........ 4 10 l 13 34 54 Oakland ............ 4 12 3 ii 38 44 Plttsuburgh ........ 3 12 2 8 41 43 Friday's Rasults No games scheduled Today's Oamet Minnesota at Montreal Detroit at Toronto New York at Boston Chicago at St. Louis Oakland at Philadelphia Los Angeles at Pittsburgh Sunday's Oames Toronto at Boston Oakland at New York Minnesota at Chicago Loa Angeles et Philadelphia NBA Standings Eastern Division Won LostPet. Bi Boston .......... 13 4 .765 - Baltimore ....... 13 5 . 722 Cincinnati ...... 12 5 .706 1 Philadelphia ..... 9 4 .492 Detroit .......... 8 9 .471 ! New York ......... 7 13 .350 Milwauke ......... 4 il .267 i Western Division Los Angeles 13 5 .722 - San Francisco . 9 9 .500 - Atlanta .......... 9 lo .474 San Diego ....... 8 10 .444 Friday's Results —- 121, Baltimore 1’ 4, Chicago 107 Boston IJ3, i-hoenix 104 San Francisco 100, Loa Angel San Diego 124, Seattle ill . Today's Games Detroit et Baltimore Philadelphia at Cincinnati Phoenbe at Milwaukee Boston at New York Atlanta at Chicago .273 Is at San Francisco Chicato al television — at a time when pro football begins to reach a peak of interest. The most important facets of the new schedule call for best-of-5 playoffs between ttie division winners In each league beginning on a Saturday and a Saturday World Series opener— a major deviation from tradition that Is the big bat waved at pro football. The Saturday World Series start will provide baseball with two Saturday and Sunday national television spots for its premier attraction, instead of the usual one, if the Series goes seven games as it did last season. Sunday World Series games, which directly battle pro football for the attention of sports fans all over the country, consistently have been television attractions unmatched by any other sports programs. Of the top rated all-time televised sports progranw, seven of the 10 have been of World Series games. This past season, the Sunday game between Detroit and St. Louis was seen in lied 28,610,000 homes, making it the No. 1 sports at-tractilHi in television history. Under the new schedules, the season will open Monday, April with the Los Angeles Dfidgers at Cincinnati and the New York Yankees at Washingtrai. The regular seasim will end Thursday, Oct. 2, instead of on the previous weekend as in the past. SET PLAYOFFS The playirffs between the Eastern and Western division winners in each league will begin on Saturday, Oct. 4. The first two games will be played in one city, then the next three (if all are necessary) in the other city. The World Series will begin on Saturday, Oct. 11. There are two divisions in each league in baseball’s new format and each team will meet teams In its 6wn division 18 times and each team in the other division 12 times. ★ -A- ★ In the American League, the East consists of Baltimore, Bos-Cleveland, Detroit, New York and Washington, and the West consists of California, Chi-Kansas City, Minnesota, Oakland and Seattle. In the National League, the East consists of Chicago, Montreal, New York, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh and St. Louis, and the West consists of Atlanta, Cincinnati, Houston, Los Angeles, San Diego and San Francisco. The expansion teams are Kansas City and Seattle in the American and Montreal and San Diego in the National. IT’S NOT SOCCER - John Havlicek (17) Boston Celtics, used his leg trying to intercept a pass from George Wilson (21) to his Phoenix Suns’ teammate, Larry Armstrong, left, shown grabbing the ball as two Celtic players, Tom Sanders (16) and Bailey Howell (18), watch, in the second period of their National Basketball Association game at Boston Garden last night. Boston won, 133-106. By tile Associated Press Defense could b^ the name of the games in Baltimore, Chicago and Los Angeles Sunday when six National Football Deague contenders face fwmi-daUe tests. In Baltimore, the Colts, whose defense ^ackled St. Louis last week for its,second shutout of the season, entertain Minnesota’s fierce young Vikings in a meeting of Western Cimference division leaders. Minnesota, which has risen the top of the Central Division behind a rapidly-maturing defensive unit, holds a one-game e^e over Chicago. Baltimore, riding a four-game wiiming streak in which it has yielded just 20 points, leads Los Angeles by one-half game in the Coastal race. The Bears meet Dallas’ Capitol front-runners in Chicago, with each club expected to rely heavily on defensive strength in Celtics Gain Front Row Musical Chairs Continues in NBA With Cincinnati sitting on the sidelines, the Boston Celtics and Baltimore Bullets continued their game of musical chairs with the Celtics back in their accustomed front row seat , the defending National Basketball Association cham-}ions, retook first place in the Eastern Division with a 133-106 rout over Phoenix while the visiting Bullets were losing to Philadelphia 121-110 Friday night. The victory put the Celtics a half game ahead of Baltimore and one game in front of idel Cincinnati. The New York Knicks jiulled away from Chicago in the final minutes for a 114-107 victory in the opener of a doubleheader at loston. San Francisco squeezed past Los Angeles 100-98 and Elvin Hayes scored 45 points as San Diego routed Seattle 126-111 the night’s other games. In the lone American Basketball Association game, Los Angeles whipped New York 106-96. Bailey Howell and Larry Siegfried played the tune for the Celtics with 15 and 11 points, respectively, in a first half blitz that put Boston ahead 63-45 at halftime. From then on it was breeze to the Celtics’ 13th victory in 17 games. Howell finished with 28 points and John Havlicek 26. Siegfried had 16. Philadelphia, behind Bill Cunningham and Hal Greer, pulled ahead 86-81 after three quarters and then broke it open with a lead that readied 16. Ties for Cajun Lead Golfer 'Stung' to Action LAFAYETTE, La. ting zapped on a finger by an angry bee is an odd way to sharpen your putting. But it works for Paul Bondeson and he was willing to try it again today. He needs the money. After getting stung on the fourth hole of the $35,000 Cajun Classic Friday, Bondeson came up with four straight birdie putts to tie shaggy haired Ron Cerrudo for the lead. ★ ★ ★ They each had six-under par 66s over the 6,555-yard, par 36-36-72 Oakboume Country Club course. I hope that bee’s around Saturday,” said Bondeson, who hasn’t won a tournament this year. Neither has Cerrudo, one of Roll 250 Gomes Women in Keg Spotlight ABA Standings Houston diana at Miami iw York at Minnesota Sunday's Gama m Angalas at Houston mtucky at Naw York Two local women and a 700 series by a man took some of the spotlight away from the high-average men this week bowling. Tony Ledesma hit the 700 mark with his final delivery a 258-228-214 display Wednesday in the Huron Bowl Nile Lifers I.,eague. Dan Cherry had 22.3-218—650, Vern Wilkerson a 234 and 233s were rolled by Bill Halverson and Dave Schumacher. The uass A Men followed at Huron the same evening and they were paced by Dave Moreno’s 202-213-615, Breeding’s 204-204—605 and high games of 233 by Bill Stillwell, 230 by Jerry McLeary, 229 by Armond Giglio and T Bowler’s 227. WOMEN’S GAMES Among the distaffers. Barb Pickett’s 254 (.579) actual in the Airway Lanes’ First Women’s ! League, and Suzanne Smarch’s 2.50 ( 560) in the Lakewood Lanes Women’s loop Wednesday night boosted them into fifth and sixth place among the women’s high games this year. Emily Mecum’s fine 232—574 was overshadowed by Mrs. Pickett in the Airway circuit, and Phyllis Hackett had a 213. Millie McArthur paced the Ortonville women at Howe’ with 200-205-592. Meanwhile, Monday night’s West Side Classic circuit recorded highs of 221-213—638 by Olin Broadwater and 257 by Jerry Perna in the 6:30 p.m. action, and 265 by Irv Lohr and 6.3.3 by Perna in the later more established league. o mfield Landscaping’s team blasted a 1050 game, while Pontiac Piston and Ron’s Roost each had one above the 1020 mark in the later league. Burl Markland rolled a 243 add Don Koontz a 234, while Al Papazian had a 622 series. the top rookies wi the circuit. One stroke behind them as the third round opened were Dave Stockton, rookie Bob_ E. Smith, and Dewitt Weaver, all with 136. The cluster at 137 included first-round leader M i H e Barber, who slipped to a 72 on his second 18; Dan Sikes; C3iarlie Siffprd; Dale Douglass: Chris Blocker; Don Massengale, and Herb Hoop. Among Michigan players. Bob Panasiuk of Knollwood hadi 69-76-145, Chuck Matlack 73-72—145, Jim Picard of Tam O’Shanter had 76-71-147 and Bob Gadja of Forest Lake, 76-74-150. Cunningham pumped in 29 points. Wes Unsold kept Baltimore close with 20 points and 29 ■rebounds and Kevin Lougherjr had 27 points. The Knicks managed only their second triumph in eight games by breaking a 102-102 tie with 10 straight points in the final three minures. Dick Bar-lur of the points, breaking _________'points, second to teai^^H^azzie Russell with 23. JHP^shington had 28 for the Bulls. Hayes’ production game the rookie center 554 points for the season, 21 more than Seattle’s Bol^ule. The two had been tied for first going into the gam^. Diego held a 13-point edge at the start of the final period, but Seattle cut it to 103-97 with 5:40*1611. But then Hayes drilled in a 15-footer and Hambone Williams followed with a pair of layups to give the Rockets control. Jim Barnett of San Diego scored 21 points and Len Wil-had 25 and Rule 24 for the Sonics. O^Irt'wMver '' “ issfrngaj* Dan Sikes c Boyntor Wilcox Bill Johnson ‘sy Botts )bby Mitch 69>6^135 66- 70-136 67- 69—136 68- 68—136 65 72~137 7oifcl37 66- 71-137 67- 71—138 66- 72—138 72- 66-138 69- 69—138 69 69—r" 67- 71—1 69- 69-U. 70- 69—139 73- 66-139 71- 69-139 71- 72—143 72- 71-143 71-72—143 73- 70-143 74- 69-143 Peanut Berth Filled LIVINGSTON, Ala. (AP)-Liv-ingston University has accepted a bid to play in the Peanut Bowl at Dothan, Ala., Dr. John Deloney, Livingston president, announced Friday. Defense May Rule in Key NFL Games ihe wake of injuries 4o key offensive players. if it it In Los Angeles, the Rams’ Fearsome Threesome—Lamar Lundy is out for the season foL lowing knee surgery—takes on the New York Giants, whose defensive crew came.of age in an upset victory over Dallas two weeks ago and a 7-8 squeaker* most of the season with injuries, over winless Philadelphia last CAPITOL SCRAMBLE New Yfflrk trails the Cowboys one game in the CapM Cleveland, leading St. Louis by games in the Century Di-i^ion, puts its fiv&game winning streak (hi the line against visiting Philadelphia while Atlanta is at St. Louis, Green Bay at Washington, San Francisco at Pittsburgh and New Orleans at Detroit. Baltimore’s manunoth defen- OBJECT OF PLANS - Earl Morrall, who has led Baltimore to the top spot of the Coastal Division, jsn’t really holding his head in tiie shower in anticipation of the tough defense of the Minnesota Vikings he must face Sunday. The Vikings who have hit the quarterback mwe often tlm any team in the NFL also have plans for Morrall. “The front four plan to meet at quarterback,’’ said Viking end Jim Marshall. sive line-Ordell Braase, Fred MiUer, Billy Ray Smith and Bubba Smith—has put tremendous pressure on opposing quarterbacks while helping the Colts win nine of 10 starts, uilt pa»er Etfrl MorraU, filling in brilliantly tor ailing Jtdinny Unitas, leads the league with 2d touch-'myn passes. But Morrall could be hard pressed by the Vikings’ front four. Jim Marshall, Alan Page, Gary Larsen and Carl EUer have dumped quarterbacks 38 times, 18 in tee east three games, with a basic approach to tee Job. MEETT AT QB “The best plan ts fw tee four of us to meet at tee quarterback,” says Marshall Jack Concarnim, sidelined most of tee season injuries, is set to start at quarterback for the Bears, who have lost Gale Sayers and rookie signal caller Virgil Carter for the rest of tee year on successive Sundays. Don Meredith, the Cowboys’ quarterback, who tore a ligament in his left knee against Washington last Sunday, is a doubtful starter foe the first Bears-Cowboys scrap since 1964. The Rams, stalled by last Sunday’s 20-20 stmidoff at San Francisco in their bid for tee Coastal title, have been hurt by injuries to running backs INck B^s and Tommy Mason, as wen as tee loss of Lundy. ' Second-year pro Gre^ Schumacher, however, has proved a capable stand-in for Lundy at defensive end alongside Roger Brown, Merlin Olsen and Dea-c«i J(»es. New York has won all five games inside its division this year, but hasn’t beaten a Western Conference foe since 1063. The Rams mauled the Giants 55-14 in 1966, the last time they met. POTENT C(HdBO The Browns send their potent pass-run combination of Bill Nelsen and Leroy Kelly against the hapless Ea^es, who have dropped 10 in a row. Pfailadel-iteia reinstated rebellious receivers Mike Ditka and Gary Ballman after suspending tee pair earlier in tee week. AFL Game Comes First Huck in Big Trouble By tee Associated Press Huckleberry Finn is in big trouble this weekend ... and the New York Jets may be too. Huckleberry occupies the time spot right behind the American Football League game SITTING TfflNGS OUT - Star running back of the Chicago Bears is taking care of business as a stock broker these days after his surgery two weeks ago on tom ligaments in his right leg. “I expect to be back next season, in fact I’m looking forward to it,” he said. The Bears were contenders in the Central Division until his injury and a wave of injuries to three quarterbacks. * between New York and San Diego on Sunday night’s National Broadcasting Company fwo-gram schedule. You can bet that after tee Heidi fiasco of last week, Finn wtm’t see any air until tee clock has run all the way out on tee Jets and the Chargers. The Jets hope when that happens that they’ll be a step closer to their first Eastern Division title. A victory would reduce tee magic numbier for Qlinching to one over defending champion Houston, which is idle this weekend. But for the second successive Sunday, New York finds itself PP against one of the three clubs iHffldied in the AFL’s Western race. The Chargers are tied with Oakland, one-half game back of front-running Kansas City. In other AFL action Sunday, Miami is at Boston, Buffalo at Denver and Oakland at Cincinnati. Two touchdowns in tee final miiiute last Sunday—vteile NBC’s audience was watching Heidi —. gave Oakland a last-gasp victory over the Jets despite Joe Namate’s finest day of the season. ★ * ★ Namath had 19 completions for 381 yards. Don Maynard, the only receiver in the AFL to go over 200 yards in a single day, did it for the secmid time with 203 and Jim Turner, the league’s leading scorer, kicked four field goals giving him record-tying 28 for the season. San Diego survived a mud-bath in Buffalo and John Hadl tossed two touchdown passes, giving him 20 for the season. Ne wYork won tee first meeting against San Diego on a last-minute touchdown by Emerson IN GOOD HEALTH Oaklahd’s Daryle Lamonica, out the week before because of back and leg injuries, returned to good health against tee Jets with four touchdown passes and hopes to continue that trend against the Bengals. The Raiders lead the league in sc(»ing with 339 points. Cincinnati halted a seven-game losing streak by beating Miami last week, giving the Bengals three victories for the : seasiHi, as many as any expansion team has ever had. Tough- ; running Paul Robinson gained 134 yards and has 839 for tea season. * ★ ★ The Boston-Miami matchup ; provides a head-on collision tween two ex-Syracuse fullbacks, Jim Nance of tha Pa- ' triots and Larry Csonka of the Dolfteins. Csonka had missed the last two games but is expected back f(w this one. The Patriots opened with a quick lead against Kansas City last week, turning fumble recoveries by Doug Satcher and Jim Hunt into 10 fast points. But the Chiefs eventually wore tee Pats ; down and maintained their -half-game lead in the West. Injuries have completely depleted Buffalo’s quarterback : corps and the Bills will use handyman Ed Rutkowskl to call the signals against Denver. The Broncos have quarterback woes too with Steve Tens! hurt again. Marlin Briscoe will probably get the call. Cards' Back on Sideline ST. LOUIS (J4 - The St. Louis Football Cardinals announced today veteran defensive batf Jerry Stovall has been placed on the injured reserve list. The Cardinals activated rookie defensive back Max Sauls of Southwest Texas State to replace Stovall. Stovall, who was on the injured list earlier in the season, reinjured his leg in Sunday’s to the Baltimore Colts. THE PONTIAC PRESS SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 23, 19H8 C—8 plastic Tent, Blower Used to Dry Gridiron coos BAY, Ore. (AP) -Marshfield High School used a giant piece of plastic named The Tent and a dozen blowers to dry out its football field for the state semifinal ganie Friday night. The high school wanted a field with go^ footing for the big game, so decided to cover most of the field with a piece of plastic to protect, against the November rains in this wet coastal city. But local longshoremen had better idea. PIECED TOGETHER They pieced together enough plastic—100 by 55 yards—to cover the entire field, then borrowed a dozen warm-air blowers from local stevedore firms. The plastic was anchored on four sides of the playing field and the blowers forced warm air under the covering, creating a giant bubble which rea ' height of 20 feet at times. When it became taut, some of the anchoring material was removed and the air allowed to escape. Temperature under The Tent Road Races Set for Riverside 350 Cars in Qualifying Heats Today reached into the 70s, while it was 50 degrees or below outside. Students and community volunteers prepared the field ^with power mowers and rollers. After four days under The Tent, the turf had dried out and was described as solid andiustn Officials said it was in ideal condition. The Tent was removed a few hours before gametime so the field could be marked. ★ * Both teams benefited from the firm footing in the contest. Marshfield defeated David Douglas of Portland, 23-14. Windsor Raceway FRIDAY'S RESULTS Ilf—F»e», Mlltl 2:#» 4-5! Tommy Dlrefl 4.90 3.70 Isobel's Chalet 3.90 3.20 Roxl* Ko San ---- 2nd—Pace, milt; 2:07 4-S: Northco Scofty 4.60 3.91 Dorothea Wick • 5.71 "oHow Moe Daily DouMa: (^4) Paid 114.00 14.70 4.30 5.40 RIVERSIDE, Calif. (AP) Seven national championship races were scheduled in the American Road Racing Championships at Riverside International Raceway today with seven more set for Sunday. Nearly 350 cars went through qualifying heats Friday with Jerry Hanse of Minneapolis, driving n Lola Formula A Chevrolet, clocking the fastest speed —108.523 miles an hour. Ron Aylward of Wichita., Kan., piloting a McLaren Chevrolet in the A sports racing category, was second at 105.330. Gerry Gregory, Pasadena, Calif., pushed a Stingray to 100.318 m.p.h. in the A production class and Bill Pendleton of Eugene, Ore., was 98.747 ir Cougar in the A sedan class. Drivers were Invited after earning points in races all year. Shornr Tanks 4tb—Ptca, mlltl Ned A. Abbe Pembraw Bill Bert Mar-MIc Sfb-Paet, mile; 2:Mi Johnny MIsner Champlandele May Champ Exacta: (3-5) Paid $4, -Hv-Paea, mile; 2:10: Pam McDonald Smashette Prince Hal Ttlk-Pace, milt; 2:09 3-1 Miss Mighty Quick Prince Khan "r. Whiskers Exacta: (M) Paid SH Otb—Pace, mile; 2:04 4-S Willow Prince Miss Triple E Pillbox 9tb-Pace, mile; 2:05 4-5 Maryellen Hanover Lady Ohio Easy Sara 10th—Pace, mile; 2:00 4-Dot's Girl RENT A CAR Only ^050 Per Day Minimum 6 days Call for details SHELTON Pontiac-Buick-Opel 855 Rochester ,Rd. Rochester 651-5500 SNO-CAPS 4 FULL F»LY 2..*irs tO-Menth Reed Haieid Baarentee FAST MOUNTING | a:i: 2-*2l ‘ UNITED TIRE SERVICE 1007 Baldwin Ave. 3 Min. From. Downtown Pontiac 4.90 2.40 2.20 '■Exeelw!“o-2) Paid $150.10 ^ Attendance 5,043; total handle $415,41 SATURDAY'S ENTRIES Ist-$1200 Claiming Pact) 1 Mile: R^ewin Bug Ey« Wee Lady Gee Jim Ricky i^SH^&Tond. viking Pick Buternut Lad Davey Lee Doc Rogers Edgewood Bert Rick /Vdlos Pete 3rf^t10e Cond. Pace; I Mile: Sisal Hanover R. Demon Quean Von Creed Robbie North Superhoss Argyel Archie Miss Tammy Creed Lucky Knox CAMPUS STAR — The campus at the University of Detroit isn’t the same these days. Students are all detouring to their classes by way of the basketball arena to get a glimpse of Olympic star Spencer Haywood who is expected to lead the Titans to cage glory for the next three years. Hayw'ood, a sophomore, was the outstanding player of the Olympics’ basketball last month in Mexico City. Haywood Is Reason Frazier Takes Top Spot in New WBA Ratings SYLVANIA, Ohio (AP) - Joei Friu^r of Philadelphia, already! recognized as the heavyweight champion in five states, has moved up to No. 1 contender in' latest rankings released! Sunday by the World Boxing As-j sociation. | Four fightersT-middleweight Doyle Baird of Akron, Ohio, junior middleweight Stanley “Kitten” Hayward of Philadelphia, lightweight Ramon Blancos of Venezuela and featerweight Dwight Hawkins of Los Angeles —shared the boxer-of-the-month award. * ★ ★ ■ ' Frazier, who holds the title in New York, Pennyslvania, Mas-suchusetts, Illinois and Maine, which do not recognize the WBA Champ, replaced Jerry Quarry of Bellflower, Calif., behind WBA titleholder Jimmy Wilis ofj Louisville, Ky. ' DROPS TO THIRD Quarry was dropped to third because of inactivity and Oscar Bonavena of Argentina took second. George Chuvalo of Canada returned to the heavyweight- rankings at No. 8 as the only new addition. Raul Soriano of Mexico became the top challenger behind champion Curtis Cokes in the welterweight division as Ramon LaCruz of Argentina dropped to fifth. ★ * * The only other change in top rankings put Rene Barrientos of the Philippines up one place into the top spot behind junior light-1 weight champion Hirosha Ko-bayashi of Japan while Jaime i Valladares of Ecuador fell to sixth. Baird, sixth among the mid-dleweights, fought champion Nino Benvenuti to a 10-round draw to earn his share of honors while Hayward, ranked second among junior middleweights.i won a close decision over former middleweight champ Emilei Griffith. Blancos, who took the 10th. spot in the lightweight division,' lost a hotly contested bout to top i contender Ismael Luguna and Hawkins, third in his division, knocked out Frankie Crawford. heatingSALE REMEMBER LAST WINTER? be ready for this one ^[1001 (WINTER SPECIAL) 24-HR. SERVICE FURNAOES-BOILERS “Completely Installed” $479 ^ NO MONiV DOWN <«HEAT DURING INSTALLATION’’ ALL wVrkGUArVnteED HIGHLAND ENG. GO. 3952 ORMOND RD. 624-5926 WHITE LAKE TWP. 887-5077 U. of D. Campus Stirs a Gay Brliac Ctiamp Casbmsn Old McDonald A Little Scotch Dixie's Honey Direct Ensign 4tb-$2SG4 Clai............. . Trefoil Kathy Volante Hal Bobby Axiand Prospectus G. Lady Bird Johnston Frenchle ^nkae Luck Lemuol 7tt>-$25G0 CoiHt. Paco; I Milt: Terrytime Queen's Ransot Red Blue Weese Speedy Tera Direct Ruth « Yankee Bye Time Tam Time 9th-$5S00 Praftrrad Handicap; 1 A "s Knight Hope Time Card J. H. Dandy DETROIT (AP) - It’s almost brand new and qompletely untested, but built around Olympics’ hero Spencer Haywood, the University o|, Detroit basketball team i becoming a legend among fans. The arrival on Haywood, a 6-foot-8% sophomore, has conjured up images of post season tournaments. And it’s more than aweek before the Titans open up their season. “We want to go to the NCAA,” admits the usually-modest Haywood, who skyrocketed at 19 years of from obscurity to naticmal fame when he led the United States basketball team to a gold medal at the Olympics last month. STIRS CAMPUS It’s caused a stir on the campus of the coeducational Jesuit school. Students make detours so they can glimpse a bit of practice. The Rev. Malcolm C a r r o n , university Leg Injuries Hinder Rams LOS ANGELES (AP) en-year veteran flanker Pat Studstill injured a hamstring muscle in his left leg and might miss Sunday’s National Football League game with New York, the Los Angeles Rams announced Friday. * * ★ Studstill suffered the injury in practice Thursday. Regular flanker Bernie Casey, suffering from a thigh injury, is also listed as doubtful and Coach George Allen said two-year pro Wendell Tucker from South Carolina State would probably start at the flanker spot. Studstill might, however, be able to punt. He is the Rams, No. 1 punter. Lacrosse Draws Franchise Bids OSHAWA, Ontario (AP) -President Terry Kelly of the Eastern Division of the National Lacrosse Association announced Friday that Boston, Philadelphia and New York are seeking NLA franchises. Kelly also said that the eight teams in operation last season will all be back next season. Beautifully Constructed 2-CAR GARAGE AND 50-FT. ASPHALT PAVED DRIVEWAY NO MONEY DOWN-FREE ESTIMATES 13 Yearg Experience CALL US TODAY 900 OTilA ADDITIONS VWO"« 1411 REMODELING AFFILIATED BUILDERS Offices in Pontiac, Flint A Fenton T9 Baldwin^ ClarkStOnLicenaeelGeneralCantrartors KITCHENS DORMERS BATHROOMS president, formally announced plans Tuesday to make Detroit a top basketball power in the country. We have the potential to be the outstanding team in the history of the University of Detroit and . a top basketball power in the country. ★ ★ ft “We have the potential to be the outstanding team in the history of the University of Damascus Worth $2.5 Million as Syndicate Forms PARIS, Ky. (A P) - Damascus, 1967 Horse of the Year, is being syndicated for $2.5 million and will stand at stud at nearby'Claibome Farm. The syndication, being handled by Claiborne’s master, A. B. Hancock Jr., calls for 32 shares valued at $80,000 each. Mrs. Edith Bancroft, Damascus’ owner, is retaining six. Damascus scored 21 victories in 32 lifetime starts for earnings of $1.17 million. The only time he finished out of the money was his last race, the Jockey Club Gold Cup last month, when he bowed a tendon that ended his racing career. The colt by Sword Dancer-Kerala now is at Laurel, Md., recovering from the injury. Detroit.” says Bob Caliban, who is^ in his 21st year as basketball coach. ‘But, we still have to prove it,” he adds. And of Haywood, he says He’s got the best potential of anyone we’ve ever had.” A native of Silver, City, Miss., I Haywood played his freshman j year at 'Trinidad Junior College Colorado and then won a place on the Olympic basketball team. j Haywood, however, wanted to return to his hometown. He was! interested in the university’s! curriculum in radio and television. GOOD SPEED “He has excellent speed for a man his size. He ha s great jumping ability and agility,” exudes Caliban. “He has all the attributes of what you find In a; smaller type man.” Haywood will play the pivot' position, and his role will be| playmaker rather than gunner. , Certainly, we’re going toi look for points out of him, but l| think he’s the type of player that is very unselfish. I think | he’ll pass the ball and help his' teanunates. He doesn’t want all the defenses collapsing on him. He wants to take advantage! of the abilities of some of our| other boys,” the coach said. “We have good players withj one great player,” he added. Lewis, Detr< ■ 7, Busier 0, Boone nan, seanie, wasn. . Light Heavyweights—Champion, Angeles. 9, Jimmy Ralston, But Middleweights^hampion, Nino Spn-venuH. 1, Don Fullmer, West Jordan, Utah. 2, Luis Rodriguez, Miami Beach, Fla. 3, Emilie Griffith, Nr Carlos Duran, Argentina. .. The Netherlands. 4, Doyle Baird, Ohio. 7, Adny Heilman, Fargo, Carlos Monzon, Argentina. 9, Paul Rondon, Venezuela. 10, Fn HUDSDN’S PRO HARDWARE 41 E. WALTON FE 4-0242 Weekdays 9-6 Fri. 9-8 Sun. 9-2 SALE FRIe, SAT., SUN, Share the best he guest. The Canadian Clubman’s Code: Rule I2 Canadian Club is "The Best In The House"® in 87 lands. And the best .in the house in your house. No other whisky tastes quite like it. It's the one whisky that's bold enough to be lighter ^than them all. fcjt Practice the Canadian Clubman's Code, Rule12: Share the best with the guest. SHELL FRANCHISE AVAILABLE Pontiac or Rochester # Paid training • Financing available Call Mr. Krach Days 535-8500 Evenings ar Sunday 268-2679 /lAOIVTGOAAERY BY HIR3M WALKER IMPORTERS INC . DETROIT. MICH. WARDS WOOD PICKET SNOW-FENCE $1488 I M SO FT. ROU. REGULARLY 14.99 Use as a temporary fencing for snowdrift protection, etc. Galvanized cables; red oxide paint finish on laths. 48" high. STUDDED HEAVY WEIGHT T-POST .1.39 USE THE WORK SKIPPER $039 Gallon VOOLUMBIAN ENAMEL ROASTER SPKIU Family size. Will hold a 15-lb. fovYi, or 18-lb, roast. Built-in gravy well. Easy to clean. Contains 14VixlO" aluminum c(»kie sheet and five aluminum cookie cutters. 30-CUP ELECTRIC PERCOUTOR SPECIAL r Ideal for entertaining. Completely automatic. Signal light glows when coffee is ready. Urn shaped easy clean polished aluminum shell. Cord included. %" DRILL •NC YEAR WARRANTY Ij SALE Q99 SAVE PRICE 0 $5.00 ing bronze b«af^gs a armature for better %t type trigger switc Pontiac Mall Phone 682-4940 Telegraph at Elizabeth Lake Kd., MAKE YOUR CHRISTMAS SHOFFINQ EASIER USE OUR LAY-AWAY PLAN member pro hardware stores BUY! SELL! TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! C~4 mmm THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 23, 1968 Now, give a big boost to that Christmas shopping budget. And enjoy a January without bills! Fill your Top Value saver books faster than ever with the help of Kroger’s big stamp bonus. Save extra cash with Kroger’s discount prices, too. And remember—you get Top Value Stamps every time you shop at Kroger—for the niftiestv^giftiest shopping of all. Only Kroger offers both DISCOUNT PRICES and TOP VALUE STAMPS! Why settle for less? Shop and compare bonus! Get 300 EXTRA Top Value Stamps with these Triple Header coupons Coupons A & C arc worth 200 stompt on o purchase of $20 through $24.99. Coupons B & C are worth 250 stompt on o purchase of $25 through $29.99. Coupons A, B & C ore worth 300 stomps on o purchase of $30.00 or more. Worth 50 EXTRA This coupon may b* eMChangsd lor 50 oxtro Tup VoIu« Stamps with th« purchos* of $5.00 through $9.99, or comblnsd with other TrIpU Htodsr coupons. lor os many os 300 bonus Top Volut Stomps-(Excluding Bscr, Wine or Cigarettes.) eOOD SUNv NOV. 24 THROUSH SATv NOV. SO AT KROOIR PnROIT ANP CASTIRN MICHIGAN. Top Value Stamps * COUPON A Worth 100 EXTRA This ooupon may be etichanged for 100 extro Top Value SiompR with the purchase of $10.00 through $ 14.99. or eemblned wlHi other Triple Header coupons for os many os 300 bonus Top Value Stomps. (CNchidino Beer, Wine or Cigorattes.) eoop SUN., NOV. 24 THROUGH SAT., NOV. 30 AT KROOIR PITROIT AND lASTlRN MICHIGAN. Top Value Stamps * COUPON I Worth 150 EXTRA I This coupon may be exchanged for 150 extra Top Volue Stompt with the purchase of $15.00 through $19.99, or combined with other Triple Header coupons for os many os 300 bonus Top Value Stamps. (Excluding Beer, Wine or Cigarettes.) GOOD SUN., NOV. 24 THROUGH SAT., NOV. 30 AT KROGER DETROIT AND EASTERN MICHIGAN. Top Value Stamps COUPON C THE PdNTlAC PBESS. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1968 ^ \ PRKB AND iriMS ffFECTIVE THROUGH SUNDAY, NOV. 24, THROUGH WIDNiSOAY, NOV. 27, AT tROGR M PONTIAC DRAYTON PIAINS AND UNION UKE SERVe M' SAVE Sliced Bacon 59 m nf TO 600 TOP VAIUE rULLSHUIKHALf Smoked Hams 49. COUNTRY CLUB SLICED OR Arooir Star Bacoa....t.,77* CORDON'S 1-LB LINK OR GORDON'S ROLL Perk Snsoga.......2 ROLL 79* U.S. CHOICE Chock Steak........... 59* FRESH LEAN Vi Pork Lola.........l.67* Comp€ur0 anywhere! You’H And nobody but Kit^er. in this entire area, otters you this outstanding cornbination of savings and service features... *Top Value Stamps—the extra savings feature that offers you a no.>59* U.S. GRADE A STRICKLY Fresh Terkey sizes •.. WISHBONE BRAND YOUNG Dackllags...........59* 3-LBS AND UP FRESH RoastiH Chlckeas..L.39 Philadelphia Cream Cheese SMOOTH SPREADING Kraft Mayonnaiso............ SH, 55* ALL PURPOSE Krogor Flour...........25 a.' *1** 20c OFF LABEL _ Ivory Liquid..............Sk55l^ JIFFY BRAND Pio Cruel Mix.............<,'r-fhW ASSORTED TOILET TISSUE Family Scott...........4 28* MORTON FROZEN MINCE OR Pumpkin Pio CHOICE OF GRINDS COFFEE Maxwoll Houso..........3 »»*1'* IDEAL FOR STUFFING kollogg’s Croulollos FOR FAST REUEF Bayor Acplrln.............’fa^SP* KROGER LABEL Mandarin Oran«0S..ewV#Nl9^ STORE HOURS Opm Till 9 PeMe Mone a Tvaie Opan 8 AeMe To 9 PeM. Wode Nove 27^ CLOSED THANKS0IVIN0 DAY THUR8.. NdV. 28. SwupUde “Pnedfuef JUMBO 18 fill ICEBERGS 24 SIZE FRESH ROASTED Spetlieht CoHee .“4V LIBBY S Pineapple Juice 14-OL CAM 2V KROGER LABEL , i . ii or Canned Pumpkin..............."L...18* WITH THIS COUFON ON ANY2-PKGS FORK CHOPS OR t/4 PORK LOIN ■ VmM Thw Sat., N*v. 30, I960 “ At Kiogar Pat. A Baal. H WITH THIS COUPON OH ANY 2-JARS VLASIC PICKLES ■ Vefid Thta Sal., Nav. 30, J»M "I At Kroger Do#. A EaahMlelu Wm^HIS COUPON ON _ i 2-PKGS CUT-UP FRYERS ■ ■ 2-PKGS FRYER PARTS OR ■ u 2-ROASTING CHICKENS ■ ■ V.W Tfcrv 5o#., Nay. 30. 1969. pJ ■ At Krogor Oat. A Eaat. Mieh. K.W GREEN KITCHEN SLICED WITH ONIONS ^ Green Giant Beans.................“.l13* Frozen Libby Squash.:::?LlO* FROZEN QT Birds Eye Cool Whip.....”".49* FOR WHITER WASHES Roman Bleach.. lAftTOP VAIUE r A TOP VALUE 109 STAMPS 3V STAMPS WITH THIS COUPON ON ANY TWO \6-GAL CTNS KROGER LABEL ICE CREAM ANY 2-LBS SLICED BACON BVaMThni 'Sati, Nay. 30, IN8 ^[VallA Thru Sat, Nay. 30. IMA , La# Krogor Dot. A Baal. mlah. IS A# Krogor Dot. A Soar. Mieh. n ■■ ■ ■ nu eem U ni.niniuBahM ■ ■ ■ n ■ aim ■ niHi ee eeal Fruit Cakes IILLCREST LABEL I COUNTRY CLUB 4»?r 12~’2” " --^-•-*hAratt and Baalam Mhkltam An \ PASCAL CELERY STALK Ocean spray HEAD LETTUCE 23 -|3 Fresh Cranberries...':^‘29* YOUR CHOICE RED RADISHES OR 113 SIZE CALIFORNIA NAVEL Greea Oaions2''°''29* Oroagas....«>««T9* U.S. NO. I MICHIGM FLORIDA MARSH SEEDLESS Potatees...20.7.87* 6ropafralt...B w 99* U.S. NO. 1 LOUISIANA ZIPPER SKIN Caady Yens 2u>29* Taagelos 5,%B9* MELLOW RIPE Golden Bananas 1" -IS- -mJE <■ 1- »—*r. ».»».««.tu THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23. 1968 Bridge t ricks From Jacobys NOKTH (D) EAST AQ964 V97 ♦ 852 VAK64 ♦ AK ♦ A8765 WEST ♦ A875 VQJ1085 ♦ 43 ♦ Q9 sotmi AKJIO ♦ QJ10976 4.32 Both vulnerable West North East South . 1 Jit Pass 1 ♦ Pass 1 ¥ Pass 2 ♦ » Pass 3 NT. Pass Pass Opening lead—*? Q By OSWALD AND JAMES JACOBY George Coffin lists today’s hand under “Q for Quandary.” He points out that once in awhile you will be faced with a pure guess. He doesn’t show the East and West hands as we do, but you get to three no-trump and the queen of hearts is opened. You win the heart lead in dummy, cash the ace and king of diamonds and lead a spade toward your king-jack-10. His comment is, ‘‘Don’t ask me what to play. See a voodoo doctor!” We don’t want to go that far. Somehow or other you can fipd some reason for almost any play and in this situation there is a slight percentage in favor of playing the 10 or the jack, rather than the king. If you choose the king play and it works, you will make 10 tricks. If you choose the jack Or 10 plaiy and it forces the ace, you will make 11 tricks. Thus, when you play low you are giving yourself a chance for an extra trick. One extra trick doesn’t mean too much at the time but over the years extra tricks mount up. Then, there is another reason for playing low here. Some bad players hate to hold back an ace and there is a chance that if East did hold the ace he would have played it. On the lother hand no one would go up with his queen if he did not have to. This hand also brings up an interesting point in play. Some years ago some nameless play-invented the ‘‘queen over the jack” theory. The idea is that due to imperfect shuffles, signs of the zodiac or something, the qusen is more likely to be back of the jack than in front of it. There is nothing to the theory but it has an advantage for the unlucky player. If he al- ways plays the queen over the jack, he will be right half the time. If he tries to guess, his percentage of success may go down. M- Waterford Board Agenda Is Light The Waterford Township Board will hold its regular meeting Monday at 7:30 p.m. at Waterford Tovmship High School, 1415 Crescent Lake. No major business is scheduled for consideration, according to Supervisor Elmer Johnson. The only agenda items are requests for lot splits and the approval of payment of bills, Johnson said. More than half a million tourists visit Morocco each year. Daily Almanac 10 rouow. The moon new phase anc The morning stars are Mars and Jupiter. The evening stars are Saturn and Venus. On this day in history: In 1903 Italiian tenor Enrico Caruso, made his American debut in ‘‘Rigoletto” at the ‘‘Met” in New York City. ROBIN MALONE By Bob Lubbers Q—The bidding has been: West North East Sonfli 1* Pass 14k Pass 3^ Pass 3¥ Pass 3A Pass 4db Pass 4 4 Pass .? You, South, bold: 4Q108S4, VAIO 453 «7654 ■What do you do now? A—Pass. If your partner doesn’t move past game yon don’t want to. TODAYS QUESTION You hold the same hand. West opens one club and your partner doubles. What do you do after East passes? Answer Monday B* ‘strolojrfcal Forecast ■ ■ia* ' .7; '*»* By SYDNEY OMARR For Sunday .... wisa mm controls his destiny . . Astroiogy points tlin way." ARIES OWoreh 21-Aprll 19): Accent oi people who want to be triends. Keep------- mind. Fine for entertain'— ■■ Gracious gesture on you. .... ------------ 1 of Inimeasurabla value. Pleasant ____lude Indicated. TAURUS (April 30-May 20): Your of Important oblective may not be Take time to be analytical. Stress .. . your ambition. You can't skip detail! Key Is to bo thorough in approach. Toi people will observe. GEMINI (May 21-Juno .... _ long-distance calls, messages. Plan Fulfill obligations to those at a dl------ Gain shown through reading, writing. Publishing, advertising plans should •“ outlined. CANCER (Juhe 21-July 22) general public Is spotlighted. Ybu gain ’’'vIrgO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Strive to solidify relations with associates, ----■--- neighbors. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. --------- Breakthrough indicated. Some details — made easier to comprehend. Co-operation gained from those close to you. Neighbor makes request. Strive to grant if. Change will be beneficial. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. on possessions. Income potei will but listen to family -gain. It Is not easy, but It structive to bury false pride mature, you emerge victorious. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fob. )8)_^ hlgh^Gp THE PONTIAC PEESS, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1968 C—7 HEY... LOOK! rac.n« 363-9191 9099 HMcWiw M. Union Uko T/ppy Test &me recipes call for egg whites beaten to a soft pna|r This means the egg irtiitM should have peaks that tip over slightly when the beatw is COMMERCE Friq Sat. San. Union Lk. at Haggerty Rd. EM 3-0661 . Children Under 12 FREE! Showtime Fri. and Sit. 7:06 Sunday Early-Bird Shew |iS6 FIRST RUN BIB. USLY HITS TOWill ijfciMMair ...wlwra the end of Worid Warli began! COLUMBIA PICTURES PreswiU AOINO D£ lAURENTBS PROOUCTIOH s»,iMiBEBXMmHini :211111a* ® PANAMSION*. TECHNICOLOR*',® 6/asf Rips W. Virgmip Building Disorders Close 3 Colleges By the Associated Press Racial disorders have closed three of the naticm’s colleges at least until after the Thai^sgiv-ing holidays. Security forces guarded all Ediroaches to Bluefield StatB ollege in West Virginia wliich was dosed indefinitely after a bomb blast ripped part of the ^sical education building. it 4* * No one was allowed on campus without a police pass. Classes were canceled and the school’s 1,400 students sent home following the Thursday night explosion, the latest in a series of incidents induding death threats and vandalism. Wendell Hardway, the first white president of the formerly all-Negro college, said damage from the blast was estimated at $80,000. DEMANDS RESIGNATIONS Shortly before the violence increased, Edgar James, a former paratrooper who dairag to speak for all the school’s 450 Negroes, demanded Hardway’s removal and presented a list of 35 grievances. The president of Oshkosh State University in Wisconsin has suspended more than 80 per cent of the school’s 111 Negro students Mowing a demonstration that ended with the wrecking of administration dfices. President Roger E. Guiles took the action Friday against 92 Negro and tom* white students as he ordered a pruna-ture start of the school’s Thanksgiving recess. More titan half those suspended were still in jaU. Guiles said “there are risks involved” in the actitm'and stated: “We have no desire to be-C(Hne an all-white unive^ty. We have other colored students who were not involved.” ALTERNA’IlVES The white president of the Come to our house for the Holidays! This year, let Mom take a holiday from cooking. Come to our house for a delightful old-fashioned holiday smorgasbord. All the delicious food, all the warmth and friendliness, all the comfortable surroundings you could ask for. Golden brown roast turkey, spicy dressing, glorious gravy, cranberries...plus sugar glazed ham, our own Swedish meatballs, salads, much more. All you can eat. All for one low price. Even lower prices for children. So bring the whole family. This Thanksgiving. Or New Year’s day. Or any day during this busy holiday season. Party facilities available, too. (beverage and detsert extra) Look For Our HouseAt^ 755 Baldwin at Montcalm Shrimp Special open i days a week Every Tuesday hours: Family Night ^ a.m.-2 P.M. and 4:36-6106 P.M. Daily $!:J9 DinS" fsmoi^asbord f Sundays and holidays $1.79 Sundays -----------11 A.M. to I P.M. and Holidays your hOuse of hospitality from coast to coast. 11,600-member student body and the ranking Negro faculty member both recommended alternatives that might lessen the pos-sib^iUty that the school would be of all but a few of its Nepo students. -David Frank of Milwaukee, the student body president, said the vidence indicated a gap exists between Ne^o stuctents and the administration and added: “By suspending the students, the questi(m of closing the gap Since October the demonstrat- ing students and sought an administration pledge to expand ofterings for Negro curriculum, allocate space for a Negro student center and recruit more Negro faculty merpherS. The rampage in the offices began after Guiles rejected their demands. Authorities at San Francisco State College halted regular classes again until Dec. 2 and planned a three-day convocation to discuss issues behind a student strike led by the Black Stu-’ ‘ Union. U. of Colorado Regents Ban SDS From Campus BOULDER, Colo. (UPI) The University of Colorado Board of Regents voted 3-2 yesterday to dismiss the school’s Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) chapter from the campus. ’The vote denies SDS the use of any university facilities and terminate its official recognition. ★ ★ ★ The action came after the SDS held a national council at the Boulder campus Oct. 11-13. At the st(H*my meeting, television news cameramen and tape recorders were barred by SDS in defiance of the regents ruling for unrestricted news coverage. Regent Daniel Lynch Boulder voted against passage of the “disaffiliation” motion, saying it was “stupid and insane” to outlaw the group belt would strengthen its support “tenfold.” He said the move would gain sympathy for SDS from other students and draw charges of totalitarian tactics against the board. FAVORING DISAFFILIA'nON Voting for the measure were Regents Joseph Coors of Golden, who said SDS isn’t “interested academic freedom,” and Robert Gilbert of Greeley and Dr. Dale M. Atkins of Denver. Voting with Lynch against the motion was Fred M. Betz £ of Lamar. ★ ★ ★ Advising against expulsion of SDS was the CU Vice President for Student Affairs, Dr. Rolin Rautenstraus, and Don Mar-turano, student body president. They agreed the move would “play into the hands” of SDS. Bruce Goldberg, president of the SDS chapter, later said the “loss of affiliation status means a severe hardship for us. Two Say U. S. Errors Aided China N-Arms The China Cloud By, William L Ryan and Sam Summerlin Little, Brown By CORENNA ALDRICH The cloud rose over the Takla Makan Desert In 1964—a giant mushroom announcing that Red Oiina had detonated an A-bomb. By 1967 China had the H-bomb. Many experts didn’t expect such progress until the late 1970s. ★ ★ ★ Did U.S. blunders catalyze China’s nuclear development? Authors of “Hie China Cloud” are convinced of it. They offer evidence that Communist “witch-hunting” drove U.S.-trained scientists out of the country and back to Red Oiina, where their knowledge greatly accelerated the nuclear program. included are detailed stories of two Caltech alumni—or China’s leading rocket expert and the other director of China’s Atomic Energy Institute. ’They were among 80 Oiinese experts in nuciear physics, aerodynamics and metal research trained in U.S. universities, then, according to the authors, driven out of their jobs here by investigators of the “Communist spiracy.” WORK FOR AP William Ryan is a special correspondent and foreign news analyst for Associated Press. Sam Summerlin is a world news editor for AP with more than 12 years experience in AP foreign thifiowltaii (M-59&Elizab«thLk.) 682-9788 PRESENTS Pontiac's Own THE SKEE BROTHERS POLICE DISTURBANCE The campus had reopened Wednesday after being closed six days following disturbances between police and students. After more minor disruptions Friday the faculty voted to hold the convocation instead of class-! next week. San Francisco Mayor Joseph Alioto offered the convocation plan saying, “there is admittedly educatiwial value in the issues which are being presssed.’ ★ ★ ★ A main student demand which touched off the trouble is for reinstatement of Black Panther George Murray, a graduate student and part-time instructor, who mas suspended after reports he urged Negro students to carry guns on campus. Fathers naturally want the best for growing children. In food, the best means steak. Fathers can feed the family steak at Bonanza... for a decent price. You get big steaks cooked to order, steaming-hot baked potatoes, hunks of buttered Texas Toast and fresh green salad with your pick of dressing. Children get the best at Bonanza... where fathers can afford it. W mmm. TUESDAY "LITTLE JOE SPECIAL" Taxas Toast, Bakad Potato WEDNESDAY FISH FRY Luncheon Speeialt Every Day roetMod Undar Oentinuaus U4. Oovamaiaa Kmart GLENWOOD PLAZA North Pony Straat, Oomor of Olonwood Barry Dot Availabla Opta T Dan * Waak It JUL • • rjl, FiL a Sat >011. Oaaa Saaday IN I rat. IKEECO •mr NO ONE AOMITTED EXCEPT at tha START of COMPLETE SHOWS SUN. AFTERNOON. COMPLETE SHOWS START AT ISilS - 4;n - S:00 THE FATE OF THE WORLD HANGS IN THE BAUNCE AS KING KONG FIGHTS THE KING KONG ROBOT! ...Two King Kongs fight J BUY, SELL, TRADE ... USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADSl HELD OVER for 3rd MI6H ITIHM Direct from its reserved-seat engagement, msysi RICHARD VANESSA FRANCO PRICES This Engagemont Only ■ I I. W»d.,$of, M-~2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 28, 1»68 Large Informal Area in Cape Cod Plan Colonial-day homes had many things in common, most of them necessitated by the conditions in the New World at the time. Most important of these was the large kitchen. It was always the most spacious room in the to the family ro(Hn is reached from the side porch. It contains a laundry, lavatory and a large storage closet and is directly accessible from the two-car garage. Modem in every rcsepct, the a kitchen portion stresses ef-n ficiency and features an island counter-top range with a s decorative metal hood. Hie dinette space is partially e secluded into a windowed bay, house — the gathering place ofj which enhances the exterior asj This entire complex is at die the entire family. j well as in the inside. ■ front of the house and to the left * * * ! * * ★ of the entrance foyer, which Each member would do as he| The family area has a j rises up from the slope of the pleased as an individual, but fireplace, sliding glass doors!roof, there was always a feeling of I leading to a covered side porch togetherness, long before that!and an abundance of built-in There are two clothes closets word came into common usage. | cabinets and shelving. in the foyer, a welcome relief to The concept of a large in-| Exposed rafters give the | those families which never formal family area has been space more height and reflect seem to have enough closet carried into this Cape Cod by the early American charm. j space when there is a house full architect Samuel Paul ★ ★ * | of company. * * All in all, the expanse is! * The space has* been divided delightfully inviting and certain j U-shaped stairs which Into smaller sections to meet to bring together members of | terminate at the second floor specific functions but still the family far more than would have a balcony overlooking the maintain the feeling of one otherwise be the case. j foyer, large roortl. A service entrance adjacent^ At the rear of the house the living room, dining room jand master bedroom. ★ The living ro«n and dining room flow together for a distance of 30’. Both rooms have sliding glass doors to a patio. ★ * ★ Between the double-closeted master bedroom and another bedroom is a com-partmentalized bathroom. Upstairs — which can be left unfinished if there is no immediate need for the space — the plans call for tlum additional bedrooms and another compartmentalized bathroom. ★ * ♦ As in most Cape Cod houses, there is a world of storage space on this floor. Wooden shakes around the house provide a typical early. American flavor, which means that everything looks comfortable and homey. • I NEW ENGLAND CHARM is evident in this modern version of the traditional Cape Cod, with its wooden shakes on every side, multi-paned windows, fairly steep gabled roof and almost undefinable all-around feeling of warmth and hospitality. * BEDROOM BEDROOM <;= BEDROOM U'0>13'4**^ I4*0*N10'(r i 12'0*xI3'4*' > <.2 < Z-68 STATISTICS Design Z-68 has a living room, dining room, kitchen, dinette, family room, foyer, two bedrooms and bathroom o. NVESTMENT C( AARON D. BAUGHEY OWNER - BROKER 332-1144 How to Build, Buy or Sell Your Home Full study plan InfOTmatkin on this architect-designed House of thfe Week Is included in a 50-cent baby blueprint. With it in hand you can obtain a contractor’s estimate. You can Downtown Pontiac 'Mud' Standards Revised, Published Revised specifications covering the instailation of ceramic tile with piHtland cement-mortar (“mud” in the trade) have recently been published. ★ * * Approved by the United tates of America Standards Institute and published by the Tile Council of America, they are USAS A108.1-1967 for glased wall tUe, USAS A108.M967 for ceramic mosaic tile, and USAS A108.3-1967 for quarry tile and pavers * ★ * Published in one booklet at $2 a copy, they ai^ available from the Tile Council of America, Inc., 800 Second Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10017. For Convenience ' ' 'Nn'' Plan Your Shelves Easy to Get Hang of'Hang It Air Hang it all! You can do Just that — on a woodgrained panel wall that’s both functional and Few houses have enough Will the shelves also be used shelves. Builders seldom pro-for records? A 12-inch shelf is vide thb extra material and ngt big enough for the ordinary) „ you need a olace for de^ the time needed for 12-inOh/long-pteying record. adequate shelf space. Allow another qu^-inch in JSrJom Stting up a “SlnS Ewjugh shelves; well-plannqd,;both depOi and l^ight. ^ gobd'“starter” p^ will provide plenty of shelves. SUPPORT For fixed shelves, an ordinary butt joint is amazingly stimig. Glue and a few nails forou^ the vertical support and into the| edges of foe dielves will hold all but the heaviest load. If you care to take foe time and trouble, you can use dowels j by measuring and drilling matching holes in foe support and shelf edges. | ★ ★ ★ A cleat, simply made from scrap lumber, provides extra support. Fasten strips of lumber, to foe vertical supp^ and rest foe shelf on foem. Run another j along the back support or the wall for extra support. Geats are easily used in closets. | Using cleats is foe easy way to tie a shelf or several shelves to a wall. Nail a cleat to the studs. Place foe shelf on the cleat and nail. Put a couple of brackets of wood or metal underneath for suppwt if it is a lone shelf. If more than one, add vertical supports by nailing to both cleat and shelf and continuing. FIXED In a free-standing unit of I shelves remember that fixed shelves will help keep it ligid. Adjustable shelves will not. In foe latter case, make a frame that can stand by itself. Free-standing unifo, even with fixed shelves, may lean of foe unit into wall studs to ^ve it strength. Use economy grades lumber for catch-all dielves In a garage, shed or a closet.-Use better wood for exposed shelves or part of foe furniture especially if they are to receive a clear finish. Shelf stock is generally one-inch lumber. You can use thinner stock, but that' needs support. slots in the random grooves of the panels. Prefinished shelves go on foe brackets. Simple, what? For further information on a living wall, see 'your lumber dealer or write Masonite Corporation, Box R, CMcago, HI. 60690. DIXIE^GARAGES f! Ml imr- MODERNIZATION Attics-Rec. Rooms Additions-Bieezeways worki Alimiimim Siding-Insulation DIXIE GARAGE'“TT”, 5744 HIGHLAND ROAD (M-59) Between Crescent Lake and Airport Rds. Take Airport Road ~ Easton M-59 . OR 4*0371 Open Daily and Sunday 9 A.M. 'to 7 P.M. LOVELY NEW HOMES IN CHOICE ... LAKEVIEW ESTATES west on Walton to Clintonville Road, to Lake Angelas Road, left on Costa Mesa. Shown by Appointment FOX BAY — “oil the Huron River” .west on Elizabeth Road, right on Perry, left on Fox Bay. OPEN SUNDAY 1 to 5 P.M. Model as pictured $31,950 including site (Fox Bay) CHOOSE YOUR HOME PRICED FROM CAREFULLY The home you’ll build, or buy . . . will play an important part in your family’s future. Choose it carefully to serve your needs for a lifetime. INCLUDING SITE A LOT OF HOUSE FOR THE MONEY! HURONDALE SUBDIVISION from M59, left on Williams Lake Road, right on Vanden, right to Rene. OPEN SUNDAY 1 to 5 P.M. WESTRIDGE OF WATERFORD north on Dixie Highway to Our Lady of The Lakes Catholic Church, left on Ledgestone to Connemara and Smoke Tree Way OPEN SUNDAY 1 to 5 P.M. OUR NEWEST MODEL IN PONTIAC 1052 N. Cass Lake Road Will duplicate on your site for $19,400 OPEN DAILY 9 to 9 Sat. and Sun. from 1 to 5 P.M. O’NEIL REALTY 3520 Pontiac Lake Rd. Office Open Sunday 1-4 OR 4-2222 WHAT IS KLINeELNUT FACE BRICK SIDING? It is tli9 MulR-Piirpose Brick Siding that does so many jobs~BETTER ________If l» bomM to H L_ paiwU b, «lli •xchntv* pi««n d*-Klingdhut. Thb^wcn on inwial. • dives year-round insulation • Reduces fuel costs • Beautifies your home, increases He value • Resists fire • Ends repair and maintenance bills — no Economical to install «p to 7 yan to pay Phone 673-7507 2503 DIXiB HWY. PONTIAC MODERNIZATION Across From Silver Lake Rd. FREE HOLIDAY FOR TWO !! I MIAMI BEACH! DINSEYLAND! LAS VEGAS! SAN FRANCISCO! Everyone purchasing a mobile home from us this month will receive at no extra cost, a **DISCOVER AMERICA** Holiday, 3 days and 2 nights for two! (Without Transportation) D»a)VER AMERICA Choose from 12 all different models on display f or order from 100 plans available, from $2995. CttlllfiRYSIDE LinNG MOBILE HONE BILES & SERVUE 1(^ Oakland, at Viaduct, % Mile South of Telegraph >09 open daily and Sunday until dark I JOIN THE MOVE TO JAYNO 3018ST.JUPE OPRN SUNDAY 13 to 6 p.m. We are featuring a brand new model home in boautiful Jayno Heights. Home has immediate possession, 4 large bedrooms, extra nice and large family room with fireplace, attached 2-car garage, patio, situated on a paved street with paved drive, lake privileges. Home is in an exclusive neighborhood of very attractive homes. We will duplicate this home or any pne of several other models under construction in this fine subdivision. Still many choice sites available. DIRECTIONS: Walton Blvd., northwest from Silver Lake Road to Shawnee Lane, to St. Jude. Watch for open signs. : WATCH THE NCUSE DETECTIVE 2 ■ 0NCHANNEL4TVfrom10amto12noon ■ ■ each Sunday for color films of ■ a JAYNO HEIGHTS and 1WIH UtKE VILUOE ■ McCullough realh fidfiO 674-2236 Highland Road 682-6309 THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1968 D—ft Htme MedeniliatloH ! We Will S^pply and Install, ALUMINUM SIDING • ROOFING • STORMS AND SCREENS • PATIOS • COMPLETE KITCHENS • IRON RAILINGS • ADDITIONS • RECREATION ROOMS 4 ATTIC REMODELING • GARAGE DOORS* FLOOR AND WALL TILE • CEILINGS • INSULATION • AIR-(iONDITIONING • GAS AND OIL FURNACES • SOFTENERS AND HEATERS • HUMIDIFIERS • DISPOSERS • AIR CLEANERS • BATHROOM REMODELING • INCINERATORS • CARPETING • DRAPES • FENCING ; Call for FREE Estimate, 682-4940 ^ YEAR-'ROUND COMFORT with the touch of CRANE YEAR- ROUND COMFORT CONTROL HEATING Cram yaar-arouiul haaring. A touch of $fi70 W PER f PER WEEK No Money Down O’BRIEN HEATING 371 Voorheis Rd. FE 2-2919 Our Operator on Duty After Hours WANT To SELL SNOWMOBILES, TOBOGGANS, ICE SKATES? USE A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD---TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 332-8181. DINING STORAGE — Superb storage duo for a formal dining room combuies a built-in sideboard with full-height shelved closet. Marble-topped sideboard is backed by a screen of spaced western hemlock Ixls which repeat color, texture of hemlock flush-joint wall paneUng. Qoset introduces color accent. Houses Lack Quality in Storage Units the biggest bug-a-boo in any house. But it’s not quantity that lacks so much; it’s quality. What everyone needs is the type that makes rooms work. There’s the dining room, for istance. Along with the kitchen, this is one room in which built-in storage is the only true problem-solver. Sure, grandmother’s hutch looks great, but is it good for more than plate display? And if the buffet you bought for the last house doesn’t fit into this dining room, welcome to the crowd. ★ ★ ★ One of the best possible dining room storage designs teams closet with a built-in sideboard, or buffet. Built to counter height and topped with a slab of marble, the buffet makes a perfect server for all occasions. -wise, it’s a dream, too. Drawers hold not only the carving set and flat silver but also the myriad small that, on a shelf, usually are in an impossible jumble. Individual salt-and-peppers, small ash trays and the again-popular nap-rings are in this category. LINENS Linens are another item for the built-in sideboard. Whether you use tablecloths, mats, or runners, they’re best stored'on pull-out trays enclosed by doors. Each cloth and set of mats should have its separate tray. With its 18-inch depth, the buffet can also stow the “impossibles”: soup tureen, turkey platter, and silver wedding-present trays. The closet is another thing entirely. It shouldn’t be more than 13 inches deep, but adjustable shelves from top to bottom gracefully handle dishes, glassware, the sauce boat, candlesticks and flower containers. Any need to stack is eliminated and contents remain wonderfully accessible and visible. LEAVES A special niche should be included for table leaves. To make built-ins look their best, coordinate them with the room’s architectural elements and let the dining set and floor carry the decorating lead. ★ * ★ With today’s need for flexibility and the universal popularity of colorful table settings, a wood like western hemlock is perfect for both built-ins and wall covering. When finished clear, its muted but warm champagne coloring is delightfully complementary to favored furniture woods, but vertical grain flush-joint boards introduce no competing pattern, only texture. With metals and plastics, the wood provide: needed contrast. Both buffet and closet doors can be built of softwood lumber to match wall surfaces. Or closet doors could be painted one bold color to pick up a shade from rug or draperies, leaving walls and buffet to form a team. If the buffet is designed IDEAL FAMILY HOME!! Country atmosphere and a "park-like" setting, moke this a marvelous place to raise your family. Located on a "one of a kind" community offering private park, beach and marina facilities, Community house, Library, Tennis Courts, Private ice skating lagoon, and its own volunteer fire dept. You'll love the comfortable two story charming home. It hos a large living room with bay, family room with a fireplace, St. Charles kitchen, three large bedrooms, numerous built-ins and loads of storage space. Includes all curtains, drapes, carpeting, plus many extras, inioy winter's scenic beauty from this lovely setting and get reedy for the outdoor fun next summer. You'll be all set with the large covered oatio with bar-b-que, and the swimming fun at MIDDLE STRAITS lake! Priced at just $39,900. CALL FOR YOUR APPOINTMENT TODAY TO SEE IT INSIDE AND OUT. MAX BROOCK, INC. 4139 Orchard Lake Rd. at Pontiac Trail AAA 6-4000 444-4890 a room divider, a screen reaching from countertop to ceiling can be included. A pattern of vertical hemlock Ixls spaced an mch apart is simple but stunning. SNHDINO THE HOLIDAYS BY THE FIREPLACE Can be a wonderful experience shared by your entire family in this magnificent new 4-bedroom colonial in beautiful Lake Angelus Lakeview Estates. It is nearing completion and you still have time to pick your colors. It features a paneled family room with fireplace, formal dining room, built-in self-cleaning oven and range, dishwasher, sealed glass windows, ceramic baths and driveway. Prices start at $36,950 including lot. Once you've seen Lakeview Estates, everything else is second best. KiUMPSEN REALTY A BUILDING CO. 1071 W. St. 334-0921 Three extra large bedrooms; two full baths, each with double lavatories; kitchen-family room; basement, oversized two car garage. Complete in 30 days — Call for appointment. Select your lot now . . . Prices start at j^,500, still a few lake front I sites left. Sales Exclusively by Waterford Realty 4540 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains 673-1273 HUNTOOH SHORES 5 lake front homes remaining starting at $29,130 to $32,440. 2 Lake-privilege colonials — 1 immediate occupancy, 1 30-day occupancy. Priced at $25,650 and $29,700. LAKE FRONT TRI-LEVEL, 3 BEDROOMS, $29,780 Lot Includod PLEASAHT LAKE Tri-Level . . . Ranch ... Quad-Levels Nearing Completion, priced from $28,625 MODILSOPEN at Huntoon Shores Mon. - Thurs., 4 p.m. Vil dark. Sat. and Sun., 1 p.m. to 6 p.m. or call 674-3136 or 544-7773 for an appointment. D—« THE IPONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1968 Record of Transactions for Week on Stock Market NEW YORK (AP) -Exchange tra<«n^fof * Abax Cp 1A« 1S2 _ - ^ w am* 25» in » 48 ,r 83W 7214 8214 — *k ' 2114 20'A 20'4 —114 ■ " 51V4 sm —m . " -m J,- 12« 76V» 2SV9 -f Amfac AMK Corp AAAK piP3.20 AMKCp Pf3 *4 Inco Fd K-1 Grth Fd K-Hl-Gr CmS-1 :nlckrbck Fd ./nlckrbck GrF Lexingtn Inc Tr Lexing Rsch trfhUk Life Ins Inv McDonnell Fd Mut Omaha Gth Mfge^jl^.39 “"12.30 12.22 12.30 1 2.24 12.07 12.01 12.07 12.00 11.65 11.53 11.56 11.65 Competitive Cp Composite BAS Composite Fd 12.33 12.26 12.33 1 19.37 19.26 19.37 1 Convert ^ur Fd 13.ii 13.04 13.10 12.86 Corp Leaders .............. Country Cap t '"rown Wt*" 1 s Vegh A de Vagi..... - Decatur Income Delaware Fd ■. Dividend Shrs / Dow Tblnv Fd 1 Drtxel Equity 21 Dreyfus Fund 1< Eaton A Howard: 15.43 15.12 15.43 15.10 8.92 8.88 8.92 8.80 83.51 83.12 83.45 83.53 14.62 14.58 14.62 14.59 18.25 18.04 18.25 18.00 18.56 18.45 18.56 1 Employ Grp i"n5^^%d Equity Fund Equity Growth Everest ind fa« ^F^d ^ Farm Bur Mot Federat Gr Fd Fidelity Cap Fidelity Fund Foursquare Fd Franklin Group: Com Stk DNTC Inc Stk Fund of Am Gen Securities GrouV*^«'‘>**«» = Aerospace-ScI Common Stk Fully Admin Growth Indus Gryphon Imp«rl8l Grth Income Found Incon^e Fd Bot Mutual Inc Stock Selective Variable P nveet Resea Istel Fund li 0459 6.51 6.59 6.52 29.82 29.64 29.82 29.62 1792 17.(0 17.22 16.91 9 30.03 30.49 30.09 4 23.50 23.74 23.50 . . jnds: 21.21 21.07 21.00 21.22 10.43* 10.39 lO.S' 10*39 9.73 9.70 9.73 9.74 7.93 7.90 7.93 7.90 7 14.53 14.67 14.55 13.35 13.28 13.35 13.26 18.07 18.01 18.07 17.98 16.53 16.03 16.03 16.11 26.58 26.48 26.54 24.27 23.83 24.27 23.90 I 14.5 14.34 14.24 National Securtt Qceanogphc Omega Fd 100 Fund One WMKam St 5.87 5.69 5.86 I 8.56 8.64 8.57 I 6.56 6.58 6.56 12.28 12.22 12.28 3o!96 30.*61 30>6 3o!^ 12.07 12.04 12.07 12.03 32.00 32.00 32.00 32.00 16.58 16.44 16.58 16.*‘ 18.13 18.04 18.07 17.L. 18.26 18.25 18.26 18.23 10.45 10.24 10............. 10.28 10.09 10. 18*05 18*. 0.45 10.25 0.28 10.07 7.93 17.71 ........ J8.** 3.77 22.33 23. 9.91 9.70 9. 10.43 10.34 1039 24.52 23.89 14.52 2 16.16 16.42 16.16 20 Most Active Stocks NEW YORK (AP)-Week's twenty most active s Yearly Week's High Low Saks 1/ 7% Lionel Corp ................ LOeOJOO 55% » Occlden Pet ............... S07.H00 7J% 4< ChiYSler .................. 777,»00 M% 38% Gulf Wn /In ............... 574.MI0 58% 48 Am Tel Tel ------ “ ’■ Spartan Ind Sinclair ^cus Textron 10% Am Motors 12% Glen Akf 33 Signal Co 24% Twent Cent 80 Ling Tern V 33% Allied Chem . 31% INA Corp 20% Curtiss Wr Low Close 58% 56% 41% 38% ^l!8; ay +1% 61% —2V 54% 57% +2 /'ila 1^ 14% 40% +2% 37% —1% 87% —2% 36% +2% 45% —2% i +4% > ^1% (hds.) High Lew Last Chg. W8 22+i 1200 20% .... .... x34 57 55% 55+4 1138 49% 67 67% 80 50 48% 49% M% 32'^ M% +■% 95 22+. 22^ M% + % 159 23 22 % 22+s + •' 83 53 51 52 — 1097 19 18% 18%— . 339 28Vj 26% 28% +1% % 234% 246%+14% 210 34% 33% 34 — 1840 80 78% 79 —1 I 38% 40 +1% ... ... - j 37 37 1.60 x174 38% 36% 37 - • -'S 77% 75% 751% ) 37% 36+. 36% 422 1 1 18% 18+. - 39 33% 32 32% —1' Case pfA1.44 CastleCke .60 CatsrTr IJO "arodt . . ptl.25 Ceco Cp .f" CelaneseCp Celanase p Celan pfA4 Cenco (ns .oo iio jo : CenFdry ,40r 255 32 29% 3 Can Hud 1.48 173 30% 29 3 CentllILt 1.24 x590 25% 25 2 ' IHLt PI4.50 Z430 77% 76 1 -enlllPS 1.12 340 25 24 3 CentLaEI .88 69 27% 26% 3 CenMPw 1.08 162 21% 21% 3 . 22% + % I 27 + % 0 45% 43% . -9 38% 36% 3 12 38% 36% 3 Ches Ohk Chesebro ChIcEast ChIMII SI. . ChMSPP pf 5 x36 „ „.j 84% 85% 20 26% 25% 25% 325 45% 43% 45% +1% 424 20% 19% “ 27 45 44% ChRlP ctNW ChlTltleTr 2 ChockFull .60 Chris Craft 1 CCft cvpf.lOr 222 44% 42% 43% - 58 16% 15% 15% - ..ft, ts 59 —. 81%-1% x63 32% 30% 31% —1% 578 46% 44% 46% +2% 16 25% 24% 24% " 20 23% 23 67 23% 23 IS 63% 62 A + % 1 18+4 + 38% — % 37% — % prpf 1 177 20% 19% 19% + % ChrimaT.66 71 K 53% 54% + % , 779 66 59Mi 61~2Vi 185 31% 30 ZV/2 +1% 2300 77% 75 75 2440 67% 66% 67% Chrysler 7 1 CinnGE 1.40 CInGE pf4.75 3 On GE r' ^ ' CtnAAllI 1 in GE pf ^InAAHI ' '' CITFIn CIT F Cities i 62% 57 = pf5.50 3071 49 —3% /2 ^W/4 121% /» 61% 63% 202 202 - . 108% 109 —1 2421 74’' f pf B2 vStrf*^25e 35 21% 21% 21% — 1^ Eq i .20 X3M 34% 33% 34% + Clark Oil wl ClevCIlff 16" ClevEUII I'.~. " ’spl" MO S% M% S ’ -3% Clevl% 2.20_^ “ ” ^ ■■ jTsJ M% 16%-' 36% 35 35 —1 26'A 25% 60 58% 60 — 81% 40% 40% + % Plt„3;50 7230 56% 5^ ' +3% ClevISa Pt2.50 Clorox .50e CluettPea .80 CluettP pfi CstSfGs 5.”* CstSGs pfl ( 76 73% 74 —3 Coca Col 1.20 349 73 70% 72% +2 163 36% 32+4 36 +3 361 53 “ " ' IgP pf3.S0 7790 W. goinnAlk 1.20 703 42% CollinRad .80 628 M% Cololntit l.r Colo Soupf „„ ir’ W' 41™ +1 52% 50'/4 SOmrf 30% 29% 29% + .. 32% 31% 32% + % X287 51% 45% 45% —5% 720 57 57 57 „ 459 65% 63% 64% pf4.25 125 98% 95+4 97% .......... ” CBS pfl — J 41% + 'l.68 106 47% 46% 86%- a. ComE pfl .70 ComSolv .70a ComSol pt.90 ComwEd 2.20 426 2 I 36% 36% -I 27 29% + I 20% 21% . I 49% 50 — % ConFrelght ConNalG 1. ConsPwr ' 96 23% 23% 23% I x67 59% 57% 58% + I 1031 34% 33% 34% + 51 107% 103% IOT:/! +3% 386 41% 38% i 145 74% 69+4 1 22 ^44% ^j^% ; 38% 38% — ; 7 ilw i+n 1 Steadman Funds; Fiduciary Science Stein Roe Funds: r/XR^"App Technologi I8;61 18.43 18.61 18.44 3 28.33 29.13 28.27 11,24 11.00 10.50 |6.35 pf4',52 7980 75 etCan pt3.75 i Coot Copp .70 etCop pfl .25 , 64% 64+4 + % , 24 27% +3% J 75% 78% +1% 1 55% 57% ■ •' v„„„Od 1.60a 55 38% 36% 1 CookCotf .50 x1B8 47% «% ' Cooperln^T40 2M 50 48% - COOPT ptl.25 31 » 28% 2 Copeland 1.20 50 47 4^4 ^ CoppRge .50b 43 45 • 44 ^ CopwlStI 1.20 x83 25^ 23H 4 CorGW 2.50a Corng pf3.50 Coronet .44 Coronet wl 156 299W 787'/2 2S 250 81 Va 8V/1 e 31 66 62V^ 6 26 33V4 31% 3 n"?A“S5Xk' 13,42 13.36 13.40 13.37,, 15.32 15,26 15.31 15.20^'rSS^"| ",.5tf 14 15 13.57 13.57 14.09 crowC pfl.20 ,!SlC''own Cork lA) High Law Last Chg. M6 25% 24% 24%—1% 34 94 92 93% +J‘ 6a 28% 21% 28% + Cudahy Co Cudahy pt Culllgan .28 Cummins .8t — .. — .. CurmDri^^.70 M% 28% ^ Curt Wr Cutlar H 1.20 Cyclops 1.80 Dan RIv 1.20 DanaCp 2.20 DaycoCp 1." 32U m 28% ^ +4% 306 41% ^ ^ • ” 316 48% 45 77+4 ^ —1 1 42ii 42 156 20+# 20W 20'A EckerdDg .28 88 O W. -1% Edit Bros .85 x141 53'/!i Sl'A 52 EGAG .10 575 52Vi 49'/i 52 ElMusIc .09s 1933 7’/. 61S 7 ElMus fn.09e 14 6 5^ i!ertS^1*!St *88 29H WVA 28 Elgin Watch 62 IBVA 17H 18' El asoNG 1 “"'Ilf- mrEI pfl' meryAlr ..ipDist 1.60 n"fflh,'“50 1.80 321 11 60'A < ndjohn pf4 7180 ngelM .60b c^utGas 2.’“ SB Inc „ -_ - + 'A 355 37SS 36% OVh + % 3.50 7110 54% 54% 54% .. 1.20 xllS 30% 2814 »% — I «+4 +1 56% +2% 378 52 48% 52 +3% 362 19+. 18% 19% + 289 36% 3h% 35+t H _F— 262 57+4 56% 5614 - 563 84% 8014 81% - 128 27% 25% ^ 5514 50 55% +5V. 97 35% 34% 34+ ' 258 29 27% 281 -uoik inu aou _ +1% 139 29 .. - . - - 1197 36% 33% 34%—1% 212 1 ( 14% 15 + % FleldctM 1 Flltrol 1.40 Fin Federetn Firestne 1.50 FstChrt 1.68t FstNCity 2 ' * -at S 243 30% 29V4 30V4 -67 45% 44% 44% - Fst Nat Strs .... pfA4.50 ’ Flint pfB2.25 Flintkt 4pf 4 Fla E Coast Fla Gas .40 I 31% 32% — ' Foote CB .80 Foxboro .60 GAC Cp 1.50 -■,C Cp pfl „.,F Corp .40 GAF pfl.20 92 38% 5 2519 58 ! 878 38 3 ..!? L/. b 30% 31% — 1 1 9?% + GenMot 4.30O : (hds.) High lew Last CIM. Ga Pacific lb 218 93% 91% 91% — * GaPac pf1.64 34 65% 64% 65% +1% iGaPae pfl.40 16 49% 49 49*+: Gerber 1.10 493 38% 371% 37* + GettyOII .72e 453 97 93 94* +l Getty pfl.20 81 19% 19% 19% — % Giant PC .80 84 17% 16% 16% — % Gibralt Fin 425 30* 29 30% GKU Law .80 535 26 24% 25% +1% Gliletta 1.20 404 ojss ^.15 15 JV3 198 _____ iRarM 603 39% 36% 38% +2% GlobeUn .80 142 22% 22 22% + % Goodrich 1.72 1511 46% " Goodyr i.SO 440 59% GordJwly .48 59 70% GordJwly.......... I 54* 53% 54* + % GlonAI , GlenAld' GlenAI ' Global GouldNB____ GraceCo 1.50 Granby .60a GrandU AOb +1% saw sevs —1% 63* 70 +6% _ .... 32% 36 . . ., 114 53% 51* 52% + % 493 49* 47% 48* + " X572 35% 31% 33 +2 _________ 241 28% 28% 28% — ranCSt .65p 853 23% 21% 21* —1 ...I.... > ..ft MM, m MIA +2 -1% Grent^.iv *// an Grant pf 3.75 z20 62 '■’W If " " GtAAP 1.30a 1266 36 —“-Ir 1.35a x270 18% i« ].40 142 74* ^0 JfNoPau ... GfNorP p#.40 Gt Nor Ry 3 — Wael FInl WnUn ■ - 62 t % - ,. 47* + * 32* 35% ______ 16* 16% — f2.50 2100 37% 2V/7 37% +r' Hawn& 1.20 118 35% 34% 34%—1 Hayes Alb 1 110 29% 26% 27%—1 Hezeitine Cp 206 26% 24% 25% —1 HeciaMng .70 285 36% 33% Heinz HJ 1.50 374 66% 64% ^%— ....---A 3^5 4e Helene Curt 453 19% 17% 19 +1%. Hell Coll .60 109 24% 22% 23 HellerWE .60 689 22Vj 21% 22% Heller pf4.07 65 94% 91% 94% HelmePd lb 80 37 36% 36% Helmrch .lOe x251 24% 23% 24% + Hemisph Cap 221 10% 10% 10% + ' Hellnc .76e 71 10% 10% 1(H' Herclnc 1.20e 469 54 52% 54 HercnA 1.65 5 179% 178% T'" HershFd Mo x607 33 HessO&C .30 590 62 Heublein .75 100 39% HewPack .20 250 90% .... High Voltage 586 38% 33% 37Va HiltonHot^ 621 58% 56% 58% '' 364 41% 38% 40% 8 37 35% 36 — % 52% —2 74% 5 —1% ilidylnn .35 >llySug 1.20 >mestke .40 1 Houd hF 1.10 200 48% 47 _____: Pf4.40 26 144% 143% 144 - HousF _pf2.37 88 72% 69Va 70% - HoustLP 1.12 598 48% 45% 46% - .. HOUSINGS .80 126 57% 54 57% +2% ---- -hn .35e 549 57% 55% Sm +1% >et .70 399 38% 37% 37% iB 3.40a 22 73% 72 73% 100 34% 32% 34% + % ______________ JOOO 41% 38% 39% .. Honeywl MO x344 1 26% 119% 126 +7V4 o. s .set. set* ^ 4^^ 42% % 48 41% 43 ->1% 17 15% 17 +1% 25 23% 23% — % 34% 34% 34% — 26Vd 24% 24% —1 J ^1% ) M% : >w pf2.21 Z40 35V» 34% 34Va —2% 'W pf2.13 Z70 35% 34 35% ' w pf2.04 z500 34% 32% 33 Imp CP Am 818 16% 15% 15% INA Cp 1.40 3236 48Vi 44% 45% Income Capit 106 17 16% 17 InCCum .67e 33 10% 10% 10% •idlanHd .60 396 46% 44 46% Id Hd pf4.5a 34 169 160% 165 Id Genl .80 280 40% 37% 39% idPisPL 1.50 164 30% 30% 30% a6 PL pf6.25 6 112 110% 112 InElMex .5ie 224 13 10% 12% Ind Bancp 2 4 71% 70% 70% IngerRand 2 536 53% 50 53 IngerRd pf 6 zlO 119 119 119 inland Stt 2 765 36% 35% 36 InsprCop 2.40 89 40% 39% Intrchm 1, _____n pf4.50 zl80 74 Interco .90 187 45% -‘erlkSt 1.80 124 34 % +3 -1% Int Pop pf 4 Rectif Salt 3.40 IntSlIv pfl.75 IntSlIv pfA.75 Int T8if ,95 -. IntT&T pfB 4 Z610 ^ InfTST pf0 4 IntTAT pie 4 IntTAT pfF4 lntT8.T pfH4 ItT pfl 4.50 lntT8iT pfJ4 lntT8iT pfK4 InTT pfL5.50 Int Uhl 1.40 Int Util A Interpace 1 •-‘erpee pf5 Baker .90 142 erDStr .60 jrsPw 1.24 10 32% 32 32% -f J82 61 .610 203 z200 201 Z320 202 zlOO 183 1 168%_____ .. 117 115% 11 113 111% 11 . 112 109 11- 16 1(M 103 103% -f 305 44% i I 22% 4 63% , ib +1% 1067 i 39 26% 25% 26% I 70 29% 27% 29% 192 32% 31% 32% 05 27% 26% 26% 79 29Va 27% 28 — % 365 19% 17% 17% -1% X359 39 33% 36% +5% 666 99% 93 94 —2% 3 140% 139 140% +2% —J— I 35Va 29% 34% “ 17% 20% 47 116% 106% 116% +9% ..75pf2.37 ZlOO 39 _____Cem .80 82 26% 26 : KaisC Pf2.50 2 56 56 : pfl.37 20 26% 25% : ____CPL 1.92 x227 38% 36% : KCPL pf4.50 Z220 73 71 ; KC PL pf3.60 Z60 62 61% < ------»lnd 2 xl37 43% 41% f ' ^ ' 21130 16% 15% i KaMHar 1.» ^ timUmm Ifwl 1 1X1 JOTUm 4LA XtlX XXIA Kelsey W7 51* S'* «* +if. n 34 322 MtFuelS 1.68 53 34% 34% 34% - •‘"StTTT 1.24 132 24% 24 . . . .... 107 51% 49% 51% +L urphy 1.20 225 31% 30% 30% - % ....ft*...- KA ,3Q 25V^ 24% 25% + f' 322 48% 40% 48% +0 33 121 114% 121 * ’ —N— 153 62% 60% 62 5 40% 40 i 796 42% 40% ^ 2.10 385 4 59% ~ 4 +2% Dairy 1 58 55% 54% 54% 604 122% 117% 120% X42 64% 63 63 - % 600 43% 43% 43% ....... ..ft., ft.... ...w 697 43 38% 42% +3% NDist pf4.25 Z490 69% 67% ......... NDist Pf2.25 6 37% 37 - * Fuel 1.68 247 29% 28% Genl .20 1095 51 47% -.- Gyps 2 375 70% 67 NGyps pf4.50 z590 75 73 /3 A... .... 23,^ 22% 23 70 +2% Natind I 22% 2 Natind pfl.25 28 23 22% 23 8j I -wjd * *c- J503 3Q 75^ 79^ 58% 56% 58% +2% 57% 61% ■ 58% 58% 7ea *80* NatUnEl .Ma 267 16% 15V4 15% - I Week's 10 American Leaders NEW YORK Yeerlv (AP)_W.ek-. ten Ar ner Sales AMm^e% , 983,100 j% F Royal Amer Sis M fl% Synfex " 3^'4oS low 5% 8% 4^* BrW Pet TST Ind Baruch Post 299.800 . 282e800 . 251.700 Closa Chg. 13% +2% (Msfll^Law Abib^ i^rTrfns'^f M,’;? oS »* SIS 384* Owanelll pta 1 74* 73* 73* . OxfdIndA AO 86 33* 23* PaePwL 1.20 PacSvtAIr .60 1 PaeTAT 1.30 _ ______ PacTAT pf 6 Z570 104* 104* 11 Pac Tin ,60a x174 14* 13* j PsnASul 1.m 707 37 34*. Pan Am .40 3071 37* 25* PanhEP 1.60 X417 37* 37* ~sparcrtt .44 62 37* 36* argat .60 157 38* 27 argas pRA4 36 78* arkaDavIs 1 1674 31* 37* arKHan 1.40 27 57* 56* . ark Pen .80 xlOO 34* 31* PeiwCen 3.40 2030 62* 40* ----"Ilx ,60b X400 35 33* Fruit 100 17 18* .....' pf3.34 710 88* 38'A Penney JC 1 676 45* 44* Pennsit 1.20a 114 60'A 57 “--lilt pf3.50 4 70 00* Co pf4A2 7 80 87'A . . _.»wLt 1.54 148 33* 32* J PaPL pf 4.50 7830 74* 74* 1 “aPL pf 4.40 7240 73'/4 72 7 >ennz(in .80 X3062 63* 50* i PenzU pfl .33 X1027 07 02 I PeopOrg 1.10 x47 31* 27* 3 PaopGas 1.76 400 43 40* 4 PepsiCo .70 524 47* 47* 4 PepGBot .aOe 537 25* 23* 3 Perfect Film 253 67'A 62* 4 Perkin Elm 407 55* 52* 3 Pet Inc 1.10 271 37* 37 8 ~ - Inc pll 13 22* 22* 3 w 60* ■- t Inc pf.80 t 21* 3 PetePaul 1.20 33 33* 32* 3 ) 75'A 74* 75 + * Pike Corp .20 Pike Cp pt 1 Plllsbury 1.25 Z2W 62* 42 i I ^ 60* 65* 6 ... -ft.., J 158 53* 52* 52W-' PItfFtW pf 7 7320 112 “'eol 387 IPA ptA5 What Wall Street Did NEW YORK (AP) - The stock msffket this week weathered the international monetary crisis aw>arently with no great 1 effects. The week could be counted in the plus column for Wall Street, but by a very narrow margin. ★ ★ ★ The Down Jones industrial average this week rose 1.18 to' 967.06, a small advance for this I closely watched indicator. * ★ ★ On over-all statistics, howev- r, the New York Stock Ex- change was clearly on the upside. Of 1,716 issues traded during the week, 927 advanced and 651 declined. SMALL GAIN The Associated Press average of 60 stocks had a net gain this week of .4 at 359.8, also a small rise. ★ ★ ★ Volune for the four-day trading week was 63,286,986 shares compared with 62,871,330 the previous week, also four days. Incidentally, the exchang voted to continue to four-day trading weeks through December and then have shortened sessiixis in Januray. The . work l()gjam is a stubborn one to break. ★ * ★ niroughout the week, the stock market showed varying reaction to the currency jitters in Europe, at times seeming to back away nervously, and at others shrugging it off. kr ★ ★ The opinion of one Wall Street observer, B.J. Londoner of E.F. Hutton & Co., seemed worth noting. DOLLAR STEADY "Despite what happens in rope,” said Londoner, “we do not expect any change in the dollar of in the price of gold. The dollar has been remarkably steady throughout the last few weeks, reflecting the first quarterly surplus in our balance of payments since 1965. Although there still will undoubtedly be some bear raiding on the dollar if the franc and the pound go, it is unlikely to reach anyting near crisis proportions. * ★ ★ “We doubt very much whether the international problems will have a material effect the stock market. Some initial jitters might well be expected if a devaluation does occur, but we do not expect them to be long in duration. NEW YORK (AP) - Bond prioes continued to (lecline this past week amidst the intematin-nal monetary crisis. Some, corporate andmunicipal bonds were at their lows or near lows for the year, accordhtg to Salomon Briers & Hutzler, national investment firm. ★ * ★ Government bonds did better [than other departments. Most governments remained at least 2 points above their previous lows for the year. Treasurs bill rates advanced a little and then closed slightly on the week. Most other short-term .rates were higher. NEAR HIGHS New issue yields on ewporate bonds rose to within 15 basis points of their highs for the year, and attracted good inves-tftr interest. Seasoned corporates declined to about their previous price lows for the year. Municipal bond prices were steady to a little Iwoer. Some long-term issues were at new lows, about 2points below tiieir lows of May, whole other still about a point above these lows. * * ★ An underwriting group announced a public offering Friday of $35 million General Telephone Co. of Florida sinking fund debentures 7 per cent, series “A” due Nov. 1,1993 at 99 per cent. Another offering was made of $40 million Northern Natural Gas Co; 7 per cent sinking fund debentures due Nov. 1, 1988, at 99.50 per cent and accrued interest, to yield 7.05 per cent. The following competitive issues also came to market last week: $85 million South Central Bell Telephone Co. 6* per cent debentures, due 1999, priced to yield 6.85 per cent, nonredeem-able for fiv years; $25 million Harford Etcric ligh Go. 714 per cent bonds, due 1998, priced to yield 7.10 per cent without call protectiong $50 million Boston Edison Co. 6^ per. cent bonds, due 1998, priced to yield 6.80 per cent, and $50 million Florida Power & Light Co. 7 per cent bonds, due 1998, rpiced to yield 6.83 per cent. The Federal Housing Assistance Administration in Washington accepted a record annual net interest cost of 4.8239 per cent in selling 34 issues of local housing authority bonds, totaling $110.7 million. The interest topped a previous high of 4.7218 per cent incurred by the agency in selling 37 ieeues, totaling $144.36 million, last May 22. Week in Stocks aqd Bonds Following gives the range of Dow-Jones closing averages for the week. STOCK AVERAGES 40 Bonds 1st RRs 2nd RRs Utils ..... Indust Inc Rails Inc Rails . 963.70 9i)7.06 963.70 271.35 272.46 271.35 140.31 141.30 140.31 345.65 347.05 345.65 BOND AVERAGES 76.02 76.02 75.73 64.07 64.07 63.75 76.47 76.47 76.01 80.26 80.68 80.26 83.28 83.28 82.67 66.08 67.82 66.80 140.34 346.77 75.86 63.87 -H0.20 -m.20 82.67 krC.35 +0.93 .66.80 67.82 66.80 67.82 +0.93 THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 23, 1968 D—7 Week's NY List (Continued from Page IM) S*l«a N .. *•'#" >■•«* ‘-•It ch e tt Stt pf5.M ruo 74 73 7S>/4 -H : 1.20 1 27% - 23% -^Vt 21% -H3/4 49% -H% Talcott N< Talley inc Tan^EI W., .................... raktronix 111 SOVi 57 „ . re edyn 2.791 1582 05% 97% 105 -t-7% 91% +2 i ^ PotOmEI .......... „„ Pot ei p«244 / 20 49% i>P6lnd 2.80 145 92% PremlM .80 x13 44, Proctr e 2.40 410 M% Pub^Crt 1.06 SIS 28% n-m tivt PSvcEG;1.44 x424 38 34% 34% , .. ‘“'''3 ’“Vi fS S “ 8S% 04 + % G pJS.05 z300 82 80% 81% ■ ' G pt*M ZlOO 72 72 72 G pf4.18 Z700 ............. - pffM V630 , pfl.40 x2S Sxind 2 7S »d pf3.S0 Z280 S6V. S4% 54 - nd pfl.08 2400 ITVi 17 PSInd Pf1.04 Z420 14% 14% Pubikind .751 372 14V. 13Vi Publkr pf4.75 yl20 72% 49% . „ Pueb.Sup .48 250 48 44% 47% PR &m 1.10 xl42 25% 24% ■ ” PuoSPL 1.48 129 37% 34% Punimn 2.80 241 52 50% PurexCp .80b 407 34% 35% Purex pfl.35 7 44 45% Purplatf 1.60 44 58% 54% OuakOat 1.30 291 53% 51% 52% -I- % GuakStOII 1 84 41 37% 38 —R— 8 47% 47 9 2.80a 938 87% I Efrn 1.40 281 33 GaST 1.« X183 40 6$ pf1.M X44 39% . —GSul .40 1981 31% ____ . .. Texai. Ind 1b 214 34 31% 32% —1% TaxasInst .80 329 101% 98Vi 101% -I- % Tex on G .10 143 84% 81, 83 —1% TexPLd .40e 52 T" ' " ' • Tex urn 1.40 744 i Textron .80 3800 t TranWF .801 Transam 1b -----pf4,80 188 48 44% 44% -1% 297 24% 25% 25% -1 580 48% 44% 47% - % TRW pf TSC Ind ..V TSCInd pf.70 RussTog .60b _ RyanAero .20 114 50 RydarSy. .80 270 47 Safeway 1.10 StJosLead 3 ; SfJosLP 1.04 StLSanp 2.20 San'ISGi* .94 ■ Sanders .30 SarMamo .40 SaFelnd 1.40 SFeInd pf.5o I.) Mtah Low usi Cha S 32% 29% 32% -1-1% 1 29'% 27 27'A —V I 96'% 93 94% -1-2 3 204 200 204 ) 2840 2 ’% 19% 21% -1-1<% .94 129 44Vi 43'% 43% — 145 1071/4 104'% 104% 74 50 49'% 49% 4- .. 184 42'% 41% 41Va —1'% 72 82'% 79'% 8 2 20'% 20% 2 48 37 34<% 34% — TRW P1A4.25 pf4.50 9 300 294 300 n .70 17 39% 34'% 38'% -1-3% ______.-on 459 14% 13% 13% -- YlCont 2.72e 535 34% 34'A 34% + ' pf2.50 14 41 40'% 40% — ' 1.20a 34 34% 35'% 34% — ' 1C 1 913 44'% 45'% 44'A -1- ' [4.50 58 94 94% 94 -1- ' “ 72 108 104 107 -1-3 I 280 280 280 -1-11 Z2fl0 80'% 78'% 80'% -1- ' 181 321 31'% 31% — 49 24% 23 23% -1- '% 3343 40% 37% 37% —1'‘ 34 34'% 33% 34 — . X333 31'% 29Vi 31'% -H'% x410 25% 23% 25% -1- *'■ 114 15% 14% 15% -1-14 ' 33 32'A 32'A — x7 34% 35% 35'% ... 456 55% 53 5S'% -1- 2013 471% 44% 47'% +: X455 24'% 23% 23'% -I-z20 102 102 102 —1 UnCamp 1.72 Un Carbide 2 Elec 1.20 El pf4M0 El pf4.S0 ■I pt3.70 z90 58 El pf3.50 " ICal 1.40 )l pf2.50 54'% 54'% -i 43'% 45'% -f2 UnlonPacIf 2 34 54 53% 53% — % OnPac nt.40 1538 9% 8% 9% -1- V UnTank 1.08 247 42 40% 42 . Uniroyal 1.20 X170 44% 44'A 45 — 1 Uniroyal pf 8 y5140 128 124 124 -2 rilshops .50 x255 59% 57'% 57% -H'% nllAIrLIn 1 943 45% 43% 44'% — % nllAlrc 1.80 x811 75 71% 73 -■ nit Cp .40e 224 13% 13'A 13% -1- n Enoa.F 1 57 25% 25 25 nit Rn Cal 205 24'% 22'% 24 4 n Fruit 1.40 1719 771 74'% 75'A -I- .20a 404 17 'Minutemen' Propaganda Is Aimed at Wrong Place WASfflNGTON (AP) homemade mortar, aimed at the White House and loaded with anti-Communist that have descended on three othe,r cities this month, misfired and hit a toolshed. The device expicded harmlessly Friday several hundred feet from the White House. j Unitind pf.42 ■'-'•MM 1.20 Nuclear I 37% 34% 37% - V Unit Pk A............. US Borax 1 xIOl 29% 28% 29'A 4 USForS 3.04a 19 41% 40% 41% 4 USFraIgt 1.25 144 50 48% 49'% - X2740 31% 29% 31% 42'% » IA1 48 45Vj 44% 41% 37'% 33'% 37'% 42'% US Lines ,5C 'Ipe 1.20 Play 2e USPIyCh 1.1 USPCh pf5.i USPCh pfi.; US Shoe .81 US smelt I USSme pf5.[ US Steel 2.. 1 42% 41% 42% 4 . 9 74'% 71'% 74% 41'/ 0 90'A 90'A 90'A 4 % 6 40 37% 39% 42'A 4 37'A 31% 37'A 45'A 1704 41'% 40% 4 Cl 115 28'A- 24'% 2 .84 832 33% 32 • 1 28% 27% 28'A 4 % ) 40% 54'A 59'% 45'/ 1 0 19'A 19% 4 ! 54% 55'% 54% 4 % I 43'A 41% 42% 4 % 478 34% 33% 33% - SanFeInt .30 xl78 ' SavnthE 1.08 SclMiiley 1.30 Schniey pf.50 Scherlng 1.40 ar...... USLIFE .40 ISM Cp 1.40 ISM pfi .50 Itah PL 1.72 Valva Cp .30 •'anlfyFalr 1 'araCorp .80 f 85% 81% 85% 4 Resrc \999 25% 23% 25% -f I 31% 31% - 9 ylllM 1.40 Scovni pf2.50 199 i i 51% i 58 —1 ..........j 45 —1'% ScrewBt .10a 234 14% 15i% 14 — ’ ScuddrD Vst 510 9 8% 9 4 Scuddr pf.48e 144 9 814 8% - SbdCStL 2.20 341 50 47% 49'% 4 Saab Fin 1.20 1024 34% 33'A 34 42 SeabF of 2.75 15 8 74'/i 82 44.. Sbdworld Air 584 38 34'A 34% —//• Saagrve .50b 298 51?.... ie*SU®’'l.J6? x7^?3^ iJ'. » ‘ VIetComp .45 ''■llagar .50 wia lEII^ 1.08 VaE8iP pf 5 y990 82'% 81 .. , VaEP pf4.80 Z450 78 74'% 74'% -2'% VaEP pf4.04 zlOO 47'% 47 471 42 VonGroc 1.20 x42 27'A 24'% 27'A 4 ? Vornado 1021 28'% 25'% 28 421 ysi Corp .44 45 34% 34 34 —4 Vulcan Mat 1 x295 27'% 25'% 24% _w—X—Y—Z— Z20 72'% 72'% 72'% -t'% 79 38% 34% 38% 41'% 17 37'A 34% 37'% . . 1 37'% 37'% 37'% .. 139 41'% 38% 38% — ', 1 48 48 4 8 43 Sarvmat .•. SharonSt 1.50 Shelton 2.30 ShallTr 1.13e ShelT tnl.13a I 22% 20'% ; 82 53% 51'% 51% -rii SIIA 58%- A 41% WabR pt4.1. ‘•'ilgreen 1 ..jlkrH 1.20a Walk fnl.TOa WallMurr .80 WallM pfi.70 WallTler 1.10 Walworth Co WardFd l.30t Warnaco 1.20 Wamc pfi .50 Warnc pfi .22 Warn Co 1.44 230 Shulton .80b SleOal HI .48 A 108 111'A —2' Slgnode 1.25 30 48'% 44'% 47 -1% SlW .21k, 1077 32% »% 3^ -H; SImmn 1.40a x43 55'% 54% 54% — Sinclair' '.80* 4U7 114% 111'A 115% 45% SlngerCo 2.40 x424 84" ' Singer pf3.50 xll8 111'. - Skelly on 1 517 49% 47 Skll Corp .90 22 42'% 41% -j 1 40 99 48^8 47^/4i UVa IS'thlmi .30 139 34'% 34% 34'% SmlthK 1.80a 2174 52 49'% 51'% smucker ."■ “ “ solaBasIc IcirEG^I'T 414 M'% 33% M'A SC EG pt2.50 14 « 39% 40 « 9*.A 2 % M'A Se i“ 479 M% 37% M'2 sSSth S 1 14 1407 29% 28% 29 ^ 24% 27'% 42% Sou Ry pf 1 ’JS ! Swast PS .44 788 1 spartan Ind 48W 5 SparryR .40e 1710 Sprague .40 *497 SprlngsMIir 1 Square .70a Squibb 1.50e SquIbbB pf2 StalayMf 1.40 584 23% 2 714 49% 4 27 53'% 5 OPd .80 412 41% 38% 4 923 42% 58'% 41% 42% 222 37 34% 35 - 173 48 42'% 48 4 e450 25% 25'A 25% -370 38% 34% 37% 4 —V— 241 33'A 30% 32% 4 84 40'% 39% 40'% 4 .. (348 24'A 23% 23% 4 % 1931 30% 27% 30% 42',' 170 57% 55% ■ i 44'% 43'% 44'% 43 138 21% 19'/k 20% 4 WarLam p WashSfl WasWat 1.24 xl75 24% 23% 24% Watkin Johns ....... “ WayGos 1.40 WayG pfi .40 Webb Del n pfAl.24 57'% 59 -1% 58 58% -1% 18% 18% — % 21'% Jl% 4 'A 13'/(i 13'A WestTra .25a 30 30'A 29'A 29'A - WPP pf 4.50 Z570 73% 72'A 72'% - WPP pfB4.2o z310 48 47 47 !i(’’.E.i''C4.10 Z140 44% 44 44'% - 47'% 48'A - WstVaPulp 1 294 33% 33 33 - -'"SO Z30 79% 79% 79% 342 45% 43% 45'% 41 27 34'A 35% 35% - 129 38'% 37% 38'% 4 % 794 39'A 37% 38% • Wn Un pf4.90 11 99 97'% 9 WestgEl L8^ 950 ^ 74 7 Weyberg l.2o 23 44% 43'A 4 -irhr 1.40 398 75'A 74'A 7 -Jig Steel 273 30 27% 2l Whirl Cp 1.40 484 40'A 53% 4 White Con .40 1097 39% 37% 3 QUESTION: Where does a lake come from? ANSWER: Lakes are merely good-sized depressions in the land that have been filled with water. The depressions may have resulted from the shape of the countryside, or they may be in valleys cut by running streams, perhaps blocked by a man-made dam at the lower end. Again, they may have been gouged out by the slowly moving rivers of ice called glaciers (upper left) which once covered much of North America. Such glaciers pushed masses of rubble ahead of them, and when they ceased moving, the rubble often acted like a dam, holding back the water when tiie ice melted, thus forming a lake. Lakes get water in other ways, too (upper right). Streams may run into them (1); the rain helps (2), as well as seepage from groundwater (3) and discharge from underground springs (4). Lakes lose water by evaporation from the surface (6), seepage out (5) and spillover outlets (7) which often act as the headquarters of streams and rivers. Lakes are extremely useful. They hold water back, enriching the soil; they give us wonderful swimming, fishing and boating. And what’s so beautiful as the shimmering surface of a lake? (You can win $10 cash plus AP’s handsome World Yearbook if your question, mailed on a postcard to Junior Editors in care of this newspaper, is selected for a prize.) Police said the leaflets were crammed into a vegetable can and launched from inside a trash can with explosives. Officers said the projectile, which was to split sipart with a second explosion, would have gone into the Ellipse behind the White House or onto the White House grounds if the first explosion * * * hadn’t tipped the rubbish can. The leaflets were signed LAUNCHING ‘Minutemen,” an organization . described by the FBI as “se-/he projectile was launched; cret, extremist and anti-Com- the corner of 15th Street .. and ConstitutiOT Avenue be-; I tween the executive mansion I and the Washington Monument. It tore into a plywood toolshed several hundreid feet from the j White House. j Similar shots were more jcessful in Dallas, Tex., Monday land Kansas City and Wichita, Kans., Nov. 6. In those cases the 'cargo showered over busy areas. Justice Dept. Eying Late Expense Filers Liberty Trail-Now Open in Pennsylvania By National Geographic Society WASHINGTON - A 160-mile motor trail known as the Liberty Trail has been opened in southeastern Pennsylvania. The 160-mile trail winds through Philadelphia and four nearby counties. History and scenery blend along highways and back roads that the route follows. ★ ★ ★ In Valley Forge, for instance, a 2,200-acre state park spreads over fields and forests where George Washington’s army endured the bitter winter of 1777-78. Another stop on the Liberty 'Trail, Washington’s Crossing State Park, borders t h e Delaware River where the general led his flotilla across on Christmas night 1776. BUILT IN 1683 Not all the attractions on the Liberty Trail date from the Revolutionary War. The Caleb Pusey house near Chester, built in 1683, is the last remaining house in Pennsylvania that William Penn is known to have visited. The leaflets bear a United Nations symbol with crossed bones and the message: ‘‘How much longer will the American people stand idly by while their constitutional rights and freedoms are bartered away through secret treaties and U N. commitments made without their knowledge {* or consent?” ^ The FBI, the Secret Service and Army bomb experts all ex-' amined the projectile, trash can and leaflets. The device seemed to be skillfully designed, said police. $14,900 • 3 Bedrooms • Aluminum Siding • Oak Floors ALSO: We have lots available on blacktopped roads with Clarkston Schools and telephones. JOHH S. VOORHEES, Builtferfs^ MA 5-2814 rmrirsrrsrvrmrrirrBinrrr^^ Cow Kingdom Museum Theme The most beautiful sight on 1900. LUBBOCK, Tex. (AP) - An architectural museum of the old West will rise on 10 acres of the| Texas Tech campus, showing! ‘‘typical ranch headquarters” of! the period of the really great cattle kingdoms from 1875 to WASHINGTON OP) - The Justice Department says it is studying late filing of financial reports by 21 campaign committees, 20 of them Republican, but has not decided what action to take. With a change o f ministrations less than months away, that decision was expected to be left to Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark’s successor. ★ ★ * The late reports were sent to Clark’s department by House Clerk W. Pat Jennings who said the Federal Corrupt Practices Act — which requires reports 10 and again five days before the election — had been violated. The maximum penalty for willful failure to report campaign fund sources on time is a Aerolvt .50a 279 Air West 442 Alax Magnet 31 HIgll Low ^st C^. 19 17% 19 41'% 39% 34% 39% 42% 17% 18% —1'% Felmont Oil 305 23% i WIckesCorp i Williams Bro WInnDIx 1.54 ’•■'-EIPw 1.32 P^s'vc 7l0 ....CO Ch .92 WlfcoC pfl.45 WolvWW .50 Wometco .52 Woods Cp .48 Woodwd 1.40 > SfdBrd p13. ItfeViVp 449 a St Packsjng 458 19% 1B'% 18% - X714 “o'% M% “ t lKd'’l.f J0 ^32 27% 2l% 27%- StSnWksY.40 88 53% 51'A 52%-- StauffCh 1.8( StaufC pfi .80 SterchlBr .80 StoneCont .34 80 19% 17% StorerBdcst l xl34 55'A 52'A . StudeWorth 1 385 57 54'A 5 StuWor^^fB5 34 99^^ 98 5 llbWoKs 48 243 23% 21% i sub Prop 1.40 M 41% 40 % ' SuCrest 80 <2 19% 181% SunChem 40 M7 31% 29% 3 Iw Oil Pf2.25 751 »'% 57% : ..-.-Id Alrwy Wurllhor^'oO XeroxCp 1.40 Zap Oft Sh Zayre Corp ZanllhR 1.20 i 39% 39'/?! 39% >9 39'% 38'% 38'% - I 40'% 44% 44'/g I 41'% 42% -l: Gull Am Cp HoemerW .82 Husky O .30a Hycon Mfg Neisner Bros 153 54'% 55'% 54 ...... '^‘z^ale?1n%ll^'’* Unless otherwise noted, rates of --.jds In the foregoing table are ai disbursements based on the last quarteriv semi-annual declaration. Special or rations Other securities 7,639,061.99 441,000.11 Fadaral funds sold and ss-curltlas purchased and under agreements to resell.. Other nans and discounts . 500,000.00 64,108,04122 Bank premises, fumiturs and lixturas, and lothar assets reprssantirtg bank premises 1,926,578.91 Real estate owned other than bank premises . . Customers' liability to this bank on acceptances out- 1.00 non« Othar assata 924,112.75 TOTAL ASSETS ........... *123,040,109.30 LIABILITIES Demand deposits of Individuals, partnerships, and corporallms .......... » 32,666,«32.a7 Time end savings deposits of Individuals, partnerships, and corporations 57,967,781.20 Deposits of United States Deposits of States and political subdivisions ...... 21,426 of commercial I deposit Total oemand deposits . 8 38,918,061 (b) Total time agreements to rspurcl Other liabilities for rowed money Acceptances execute for account of tt and outstanding stock — total outstanding .......209,3) Surplus.................. Undivided profits Reserve for conflngencle TOTAL LIABILITIES AND CAPITAL ACCOUNTS 8123,040,109.30 MEMORANDA Avarhg* of tofal deposits for tM Is calender days ‘nO-, Ing with call date . . ti 15,090, Average of total loans for the GERTRUDE L. OTT, Notary Publk ' commission expires October .. .... People of the State lU are hereby notified said petition will be o'clock ir V. County Center Drive, Pontiac, chlgan, 1967 Dodge W-Ton Pick-Up, hide Identification No. 1181 736521 will sold at public auction for cash to the Ihert hidjier. Truck may be inspected -•4 Death Notices DAVIS, HARLEY SR November 22, 1968; 24 9 Edison; age 85; beloved husband of Rose L. Davis; dear father of Mrs. Fred (Virginia) Peter, Mrs. Clyde (Louise) Petty, Mrs. Marvin (Margaret) Lucas, Harley S-and Rev. Weldon E. Davis; also survived by 14 grandchildren and one greatgrandchild. Funeral service will be held Monday, November 25 at 3 p.m. at Voorhees-Siple Funerd Home with Rev. Daniel Havens officiating. Interment in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. Mr. Davis will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours, 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) pofiTUcniBS CLASSIFIED ADVERTISme INDEX RWil«E JUM 21,1965 NOTICES C?rd of Thanks ........... 1' In Memoriom .............. 7 tnnouncements..............3 Tortets .................3-A Funeral Directors .........4 Cemetery Lots ...........4-A Personals ...............4-B Lost and Found.............5 ELUOTT, ROSS A.; November 22, 1968; 210 Oneida; age 58; beloved husband of Wanda Elliott; dear father of Peter, Mark and Robert Elliott; dear brother of Mrs. Jane Roberts, Harold C., Leonard, Stewart and Dodge Elliott. Funeral Service will be held Monday, November 25 at the First Baptist Church of Pontiac at 1:30 p.m. with Pastor Robert Shelton officiating. Mr. Elliott will lie in state at Huntoon Funeral Home after 7 tonight. ENFIELD, CHARLES November 18, 1968 ; 2 5 8 Auburn Avenue; age 65; dear brother of William Enfield and Mrs. Christine Kamoogian. Funeral service will be Monday, November 25 at 10:30 a.m. at Voorhees-Siple funeral home with Rev. Father Diran Papazian officiating. Interment in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mr. Enfield will lie in state at the Voorhees Siple Funeral Home Sunday from 7 to 9 p.m. "That part of Belt ^jne^RallrMd ring south of Plat No. 110, . .. ______ .Jne Section 3, Township, north of V* sec- OLGA BARKELEY City Clerk November 231 1968 Death Notices ALLAN, JOHN G.; Suddenly November 21; beloved husband of Ruby; dear brother of George, Mrs. Irving Garrett and Mrs. Anson R e i t h. Funeral Service at the Harry J. Willix Funeral Home, 25450 Plymouth Road, Mcmday at 1 p.m. Interment in Rf^land Park Mr. Allan was a past president o f Multi-Lakes Conservation Qub. GORDON, WILLIAM A., DDS: November 22, 1968; 122 Dwight Street; age 74; beloved husband of Helen M. Gordon; dear father of Mrs. Jack (Patricia) Mills, Mrs. Robert (Gerry) Boyce, Mrs. William (Sally) Bowman, Robert N. and William Gordon; dear brother of Lee E. and Howard N. Gordon also survived by 11 g r a n d c h i Idren. Funeral service will be held Monday, November 25 at 3 p.m. at Donelson-Johns F u n e r a' Home. Interment in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Gordon will lie in state at the funeral home after 7 p.m. tonight. (Suggested visiting hours, 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) BAYLEY, JAMES RAYMOND November 22, 1968; ^9 East Walton Boulevard; be love ' infant son of John W. and Barbara Bayley, beloved infant gradson of Mr. Riley Hickman, Mrs. Earl Beasor and Mrs. Isabelle Bayley; dear brother of John Junior and Jeffrey W. Bayley Funeral service will be Monday November 25 at 1 p.m. at Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home with Rev. Edmond Watkins, officiating. Interment in Perry Mt. Park Cemetery. James will lie in state at the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home. (Suggested visiting hours, 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) ________ BRANHAM, BUELAH iT" November 22, 1968; 105 Olson; age 50; beloved wife of Ollie R. Branham; dea mother of Mrs. E d m u n Adams; dear sister of Mrs. Earl Hook; also survived by one granddaughter. Funeral service will be held Monday, November 25 at 1 p.m. a Donelson-Johns F u n e r a Home. Interment in Ottawa Park C e m e t a r y . Mrs. Branham will lie in state at the funeral home after 7 p.m. tonight. (Suggested visiting hours, 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) *44,649,545.90 BUSHART, DOROTHY November 22, 1968 ; 4861 Pontiac Lake Road, Waterford Township; age 50; beloved wife of John C. Bushart; dear mother of John W. and Dorothy Jo Bushart; dear sister of Fred S c h r i n e 1. Funeral service will be held Monday November 25 at 11 a.m. at Peace Lutheran Church, 5825 Highland Road. Interment in White Chapel Cemetery. Mrs. Bushart will lie in state at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. (Suggested visiting hours, 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) llie family suggests memorial contributions may be made to the Peace Lutheran Church. | SEABROOK, MANFRED November 22, 1968; 145 Minnetonka, Oxford; Age beloved husband of Lucille Seabrook; dear father of Wesley and Gerald Seabrook; dear brother of Mrs. Eunice Hogstead, Mrs. Jessie Hought, Hillman and Emmet Seabrook; also survived by seven grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Monday, November 25 at Bossardet Funeral Home, Oxford at 11 a.m. Interment in Whit Chapel Cemetery. Mr. Seabrook will lie in state at the funeral home after 7 p.m. tonight. SPENCER, HENRY, November 21. 1968; 1429 Roy Road, Oxford; age 79; dear brother of Ira Spencer Funeral service will be Monday, November 25 at 2 p.m. at Bossardet Funeral Home Oxford. Interment ii Ridgelawn Cemetery. M r Spencer will lie in state at the funeral home after 7 p.m. tonight. TIPPETT, JESS W.; November 21, 1968 ; 91 East Street, Oxford; Age 50; beloved husband of Regina Tippett; dear father of Mrs. Charles Hahan, Johnnie, Claude, and Ernest Tippett; dear brother of Fred and Ralph Tippett and Mrs. Grace Mathew and Mrs. Thelma C o g g i n a ; survived by f g r a n dc h i Idren. Funeral service will be held Monday, November 25 at the Bill Moody Funeral Home, Bryson City, North Carolina. Interment in Oak Grove Cemetery, Bryson City. Mr. Tippett will lie in state at the Flumerfelt Funeral Home, 0 x f o r tonight. WILLIAMS, ELBIE; November 21, 1968 ; 277 Osmun Street: Age beloved husband of Kathalyn Williams; beloved son of Frank and Lillie Williams; Funeral will be Monday, November 25 at 11 a.m. at Frank Car-ruthers Funeral Home with Rev. Roy C. Commings officiating, after which time Mr. Williams will be taken to New Orleans, Louisiana for burial there on Wednesday. Mr. Williams will lie in state at the funeral home after p m. tonight. EMPLOYMENT Help Wanted Male...........6 Help Wanted Female......... 7 Help Wanted M. or F. .... 8 Sales Help, Male-Female...8-A Employment Agencies........ 9 Employment Information ...9-A Instructions—Schools.......10 Work Wanted Male ..........11 Work Wanted Female.........12 Work Wanted Couples ... .12-A SERVICES OFFERED Building Services-Supplies... 13 Veterinary.................14 Business Service ..........15 Bookkeeping and Taxes......16 Credit Advisors .........16-A Dressmaking and Tailoring.. 17 Gardening .................18 Landscaping..............18-A Garden Plowing...........18-B Income Tax Service.........19 Laundry Service ...........20 Convalescent—Nursing ......21 Moving and Trucking........22 Painting and Decorating....23 Television-Radio Service...24 Upholstering.............24-A Transportation ............25 insurance ......... Deer Prodessing .... WANTED Wanted Children to Wanted Household Goods...29 Wanted Miscellaneous.......30 Wanted Money...............31 Wanted to Rent ............32 Share Living Quarters......33 Wanted Real Estate.. RENTALS OFFER Apartments—Furnished.......37 Apartments—Unfurnishei" Rent Houses, Furnished ....39 Rent Houses, Unfurnished...40 Property Management... .40-A Rent Lake Cottages.........41 Hunting Accommodations 41-A Rent Rooms ................42 Rooms With Board..........43 Rent Farm Property....... Hotel-Motel Rooms ...... Rent Stores ......... ... Rent Office Space..........47 Rent Business Property.. .47-A Rent Miscellaneous .... REAL ESTATE Sale Houses .......... Income Property....... Lake Property . Northern Property .... Resort Property Suburban Property ..... ....53 Lots-Acreage Sale Farms Sale Business Property . ....57 Sale or Exchange FINANCIAL Business Opportunities . ....59 Sale Land Contracts ... ....60 Wanted Gontracts-Mtges...60-A Money to Lend Mortgage Loans MERCHANDISE Swaps Sole Clothing Sale Household Goods........65 Antiques.......... Hi-Fi, TV & Radios Water Softeners...........66-A For Sale Miscellaneous .... 67 Christmas Trees . Christmas Gifts ..........67-B Hand Tools—Machinery, Do It Yourself..............69 Cameras—Service ............70 Musical Goods...............71 .71-A ..72 ..73 ..74 ..75 ..76 ..77 ..79 ,79-A ..83-A ....84 Music Lessons Office Equipment....... Store Equipment........ Sporting Goods......... Fishing Supplies-Baits .. Sand—Gravel—Dirt ....... Wood-Coal-Coke-Fuel . Pets-Hunting Dogs .... Pet Supplies-Service .... Auction Sales ......... Nurseries ............. Plants—Trees—Shrubs ... Hobbies and Supplies ... FARM MERCHANDISI livestock .......... Meats ............... Hay-Grain-Feed ... Poultry............. Farm Produce........ Farm Equipment .... AUTOMOTIVI Travel Trailers .... Housetrailers....... Rent Trailer Space ... Commercial Trailers .. Auto Accessories .... Tires-Auto-Truck ... Auto Service ....... Motor Scooters...... Motorcycles ........ Bicycles ........... Boats-Accessories .. Airplanes .......... Wanted Cars-Trucks........101 Junk Cars-Trucks.........101-A Used Auto-Truck Parts New and Used Trucks.......103 Auto-Marine Insurance ...104 Foreign Cars .............105 New and Used Cars..........106 Dial 334"4981 or 332-8181 Pontiac Press Want Ads , fOe FAST ACTION • NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS ADS RECEIVED BT 5 P.M. Tht*Pontiac Press 7, 17, 21, 25, 57. Huntoon VoorheesSiple '^""■‘FETolsr' 50 Men Wanted MONDAY 6AM KELLY LABOR DIVISION AN EG^uVTp^TtLnITY t MUSKY YOUMfl tor f thn« dfllvtry e( vi^tr .*o«“ Abri TO liicbM;------------- part natcm# car at 1346 W. ADJUSTOR P^SO^INEL MGR. Farm Bureau lAsuranqe Group P.O. Box HS. LAittIna. Mich. A PART-TIME JOB V marrM m»n, *1-34, to worl Kxirs por ovoning. 674-BSIO. ( Acxiday 4 p.m.-t p.m. $200 PER MONTH A PART TIME JOB DRIVERS EXPERIINCCO IWAN to wtiMl RMitn man cm .maka at mucn at $4 an hr. ManfiaW Auto Salat* e^RIEtiClD SE^I DRIVER. ■ flex-cablI’ N*«d* Production Work«r* For day ihlft, drill prass or punOr FITTERS FOR STEEL PLATE trlng#'banefits, apply at c., N20 Indianvvood, Lk. Fabrication4.ay-Out Must tia able to lay out macblna basis, list and fixtures end ell custom fabrications. Exc. rates ■nil benefits, /^ly Artco Inc., I Indlanweod No., Lake Orion. FURNANCE SERVICEA6AN somo knowledge of -'-ditkmlns. Call n7-l661 be GAS Station atiandant, full or part •, OR 3-1145 or Jerry, Antenna Service loads or more of fl WOAAACK ROOFING CO. Free Estimate ‘ Boats and Accessories BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER Starcraft, Mercury _____ drives. 1245 Bnilding Modernixation Carpentry lA CARPENTRY — ni x:i iNTtRIOR AND EXTERIOR Family rooms, rough or licensed. Reas. Call after 48M)448._________________________ XDDITIpNSpAND^ ALTERATIONS of Janitorial Service MAINTENANCE AND GENERAL Janitorial work, c o m n--- residantlol, 334-4229. 24 BY JOURNEYMEN i, garages work. '^No ..... ......... ..le job. MIRACLE MODERNIZATION 335-1218 HEINRICH. TUISKU, HIBBLIN, INC. We are looking for work, all phases of remodeling, no lob too small too large. Specializing In^.roj additions, rec. rooms, kittf remodeling, aluminum p a t enclosures. We do all wc ourselves. Phone day or night, 7 3927, 349-5714 or 349-5144. Interior finish. paneling, 40 years experience, FE 2-1235. CARPET INSTALLATION, i Carpet Cleaning KAPPER carpet SERVICE < ^ement Work A-1 CEMENT WORK o1 FrGG GStImatG. 335-3389._ “ BRICK FRONTS, STONE WORK ■ BASEMENT FLOORS Ted Elwood. Licensed, bonded ce-—ntcontractor^MOT^ bLOCK AND CEMENT » tlac, 391-1173.__________________ “block and cement work. Licensed and Insured. 442-4044 £1mENT FLOORS, new 8. repa Pontiac, 391-2500. _________ CEMENT, BLOCK AND REPAIR 473-7278 or UL 2-4571. ■ commercial, INDUSTRIAL and residential. Block and ceme GUINN'S CONST. CO. GOOD DRIVEWAY GRAVEU 5 SIO Delivered. FE 4-4588. SAND, GRAVEL, dirt, reasor Floor Tiling TALBOTT LUMBER 'fWj ______dGlIvtry. 681 -07^^_ SHORT RUN PRObUCtiO machine work on small precisic parts, OR 3-2853. Mail Box Posts Moving, Storage SMITH MOVING CO. Your moving specialists. FE / Roofing fing. Free > Roofing, ihingles, 24 hi 2. Dutton, F ___^ond—(^vel— FILL SAND LOADING DAILY 50 cents per yard, 450 Wllll Lake Rd., Union Lake, AAA 4 or EM 3-3514. INTERLAKE SAND AND GRAVEL CO. Secretarial Service MANUSCRIPT AND statistical ing, shorthand, ----------------- notary. Person! Service, FE 2-411 eographing. Secretarial jSnoMfjnowing 51-1474 or 451-4534. SNOW PLOWING, DAN ! ^Tree Trimming Service 1-1 TREE SERVICE BY B 8. ... Free estimate. FE 5-4449, 474-3510. i-l TREE SERVICE, stui removed, free It we take dowi tree, free estimates, 334-9049. REMOVAL & trimming. Apartments, Unfamishad 38 ALL CASH For homes anyplace In Oaklan county. AAoney in 24 hours. YORK VE BUY ME TRAD! >R 44)34’ FE B-7171 713 Dixie Hwy. 1702 S. Te< carpeted and draped "— landscaped. 473-7118. OPEN SUN. 1-5 MIDDLE STRAITS Lake Privileges 3 bedroom ranch, full bas« country kitchen, recently attached 2-car garaga shaded lot. Only 818,500. ROYER FAMILY LIVING ' Here Is a home designed for oMClous family living. 'tlM |T located near Adams. Rd. and South Blvd. Attractive features: e convenient step-saving m'wSht'SIiifln SiiiU 3S;^ln KSd ' iXIT....... RENT WITH OPTION to buy, 2-badroom, paneled living room and kitchen, alt for SlIMOO. SO ,down, FHA, call Ray today, agent, 474- RAY WHAT A BUYI You can have this magniticlent all brick home, with stone turret front now. SO* lake front, gives access to Cass, Otter and Sylvan Lake. Plenty of extras, sandstone fireplace, 2 large bedrooms with lighted closets, coved ceilings, marble sills, living and dining room has new carpeting. Full finished basement with TSxIS cold storage, fenced dog run. FHA Call R IS t18,900. SYLVAN LAKE Sam Warwick has 2 brick, unfinished attic, swi CY. 482-2820. 4748103 ■piATE OCCUPAN- SPECIAL ranch you'll love with 3 family room, dining iw,,, a,iu charming den on large corner landscape, shaded and fenced lot. UNDERWOOD develop personality --------- ranch, full basement, with plenty of room for "teen8ge" rumpus room, VA car garage. 85'xl7S‘ site out West a ways. $19,900 — Gl terms. HAGSTRDM, Realtor 900 W. Huron MLS OR 44)358 Evas. FE 4-7005 pane)ed dlnlrmlL Large fenetd TUCKER RtALtY CO. 903 PONTIAI^I^ATa BANK NELSON 6LDQ. to. Wisner School District 2 bedroom. Enclosed porch Modern except furnace. 60 ft. lo $8,500, only 11,500 down. Ur 4040 Echo, between Green Laki " Richardson Rd. 681-0760 Orchard Lk. bedroom, dining n BEDROOM HOME n( Plains, gas heat, ft Near school. Reply t Pontiac Press. BEDROOMS WITH FULL BASEMENT, near downtown Pontiac. Gas heat. Immediate possession. *"• “'0 on land contract. BACKUS REALTY EAST SIDE SPECIAL Brick terrace. Full basement, ■ ----- ------------ 2 to chooi $82 per. YORK WE BUY FE 8-7174 1702 S. Telegreph 4-H REAL ESTATE LINCOLN JR. AREA — Sharp 3 bedroom, possible 4, dining room, basement, gas heat, paved street, water and sewer, lust decorated. VACANT. Price $12,500. Approx. $1300 dovm, payments $79.44 mo. BACKUS REALTY 332-1323 or 338-1495 1,000 DOWN—OR TRADE for equity in newer home. 15 r family with 8 room apt. for o M^0790* *"*** ~ * ment, fully Insulated, family size kitchen, on your lot. YDUNG-BILT HDMES REALLY MEANS BETTER BILT Russell Young, Bldr. r Pontiac Northern. Brick and ■ "ng. Newly decorated, carpeting, full finished with rec. room Id at only 819,1 --KUS REALTY 132-1323 or 338-1495 AUBURN HEIGHTS, 3-bedroom, living ____ _________ full basement, wMI take trade, OA 8-1928, evenings. $10 Deposit WITH APPLICATION 3-BEDROOM HOME GAS HEAT LARGE DINING AREA WILL ACCEPT ALL APPLICATIONS FROM ANY WORKERS, WIDOV4|, I OR DIVORCEES. PEOPLE WITH CREDIT PROBLEMS AND RETIREES ARE OKAY WITH US. Near Baldwin REAL VALUE REALTY For Immediate Action Call FE 5-3676 642-4220 BY OWNER, 3-BEOROOM brick, best west side location, lake privileges; I'/j bath, fireplace, carpeting, draperys, water —' tener. Incinerator, gas h finished recreation room, ----------, decoratad. Immediate possession. Land contract. 423-0451 off- ' RAY BY OWNER — BEAUTIFUL bedroom bl-lev«l In Milford Subdivision, $2,500 equity out, assui^ $143 per month, payments, surance, taxes Included, Immedli occupancy. Phone 485-2493. BEAUTIFUL 2 BEORDOM COMMERCE, 3148 FISHER, (. . miles W. ol Haggerty, oft Oakley Park Rd.) Completely remodeled Paneled, carpeted. Stove, refrlg-Basement. Lake privileges. Priced to sell. Easy terms. Open Sunday _1^. LI l-)927 lEveS^ BEAUTY RITE HOMES HUNTOON SHORES 8 homes remaining starting $25,650. Located )Vj miles nortt. -M-59 on Airport Road. Turn right Thornr----- Open Monday-TI •'ark, Saturday a _ _ 0 6 p.m. Call 474-3134 o or cotnplete information^ BY OWNER bedroom. Large living roor iirh.n «>.„ carpeting, oak -oughouf, electric y and Sunday 1 plastered tl l*"ecre'“$32,500,”$7,i)o“ 4 pet. lend contrict. 343-0 FOR LARGE FAMILY Big 5 bedroom stone home wl full besement and 2 closed porches, located on M-15, S. Ortonville, $14,900. $4,000 down. C. PANGUS, Realtors OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 'lA AA.1« OrtG L COLLECT 627-2815 cosway”” WYMAN LEWIS REALTY WATERFORD AREA Lovely brick colonial in turesque setting. carpeted, natural lli.^_ ______ closet In home completely cedar lined with automatic lighting. Living room s on Crescent BRAND NEW 4 bedroom colonial, excellent location, full basement, bullt-ln gas appliances, first floor family room with fireplace, 2 car garaga. Only $34400. SYLVAN MANOR 3 bedroom brick on large lot, carpeted living room, VA ceramic baths, large covered terrace and carport. Only $2,500 down. COSWAY FIRST IN VALUES Cease RENTING $78 Mo. RAY YORK WE TRADE GAYLORD IS between Pontiac and Flint new proposed Freeway. ... ----.. .(trough property. Be first In this private twlipmlng pool, with diving board, filter and lifts. 4 bedrooms, finished upstairs and basement, all aluminum, 2 car garage, $23,700 terms. ALL RAY TODAY!__________674^102 PONTIAC 3-bedroom broad front ranch — Large utility — decorated like new - nice lot — vacant - $450 nfioves you In on FHA mortgage — for Ar, Cohen______________871-0110 PRICE REDUCED, 3 bedroom AT LAKE ORION Older 2-story frame home, 4 bedrooms, new bathroom. Exterior rerainted and Interior redecorated. $17,900. Immediate possession. COUNTRY HOME on 1 acre. A 2 bedroom frame ranch In fine condition. Full base- ir garage. $24,900, terms. YORK WE TRADE V FE 8-7174 r^Hwy._____1702 5- Telegraph H....AREA. " Beautiful, “ 1 Spanish ranch I country lot, VA tiled 1. large Mdrooms, cathedral thermo windows 8. many other 1 throughout, E.Z. YORK PRESTON BILT-HOMES AND REALTY ___ 673-8811 __ RAY Move right Into this 3-bedrc brick ranch with 2 car gari beautiful kidney shape pool < large lot, prime location Drayton Plains. all Ray todayl 474-; RANCHES COLONIALS TRI-LEVELS 3 and 4 Bedrooms 1, l’/2 and 2’/2 Baths Priced from $14,300 to $30,800 plus J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor 3438W10«5 Hl^hlandJld.^W-SV) rmpare our quality i will build on your lot Ml 2-2821 or FE 8-949 OPEN $20,400 etd 4 bedrooms, all on id Mr. Fann decided tt » In the family room w under construction < WE CAN REDESIGN FOR YOU DAN MATTINGLY AGENCY the Loudest Noises The Babbling Brook schools end the serenity of 1 area. 3 bedroom, tri-level, 1 baths, large living room, 2 < garage and large lot. $24,990 GIROUX REAL ESTATE RAY 'Lazenby 'RHODES INDIANwbOD LAKE - Excli llreplece. Separate dining room. Full basement, 2-car garage. 304 by 305 tt. lake frontage. A real buy at $43,000. A. J. RHODES, REALTOR =B 8-2304 258 W. Walton FE 5-4712 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE LAKE PRIVILEGES bedroom ueautlfully Ledgarock a In large , B dining room, attra ceramic tile beth, ni ■> „.|. atteched — large cai-peted living room, new kitchen, finished tun porch, paneled recreation room In full basement, nicely landscaped yard. Good location. Only $4^ ROYCE LAZENBY, Reoltor 4426 W. Wellon — OR 4-0301 TIAK PONTIAC FUE8S. SATURDAY. NOVEMBEK 23, 1908 §1PM m § JPM H 371 OPEN 2470 W. WALTON BLVD. OPEN 1536 SABLE OPEN Sun. 2-6 ..SUN. 2-5 ----....JS-.’SUTVSSL, H I; SHINN “r.r DAILY REALTY 'liclf'rlncir"‘S™bli WHY RENT? gar.8., with overh..'d door, ; VETERANS Qpgj^ SUNDAY 2-5 ro%M7”‘ ! o_. r 6135 GORDON OPEN 6747 SCOTCH LAKE RD. OPEN 1356 AVONDALE _«j* D—ll QLEb"'’*von ‘ OPEN 'CLARK open’ open ...... ..............:SUK. 2-5 RM. ^^GREAT^PRIC^^ ®§’ OPEN KINZLER OPEN SUNDAY 2-5 6110 WATERFORD HILL TER. .....WE'RE NOT FOOLIN' ||?>j'~r'H?S ' ii? «2, ARRO ITrv s'iivsMr.r.r-’ - J .^wix. Frushour sr' OPEN Sun., 1-5 p.m. tr',e.,;orcl^r.s?on- .\N' M Jal. HoUSeS OPEN sign"”" PHONE: 682-2211 *privl1^g«^W700, I TRADITION ‘'^’OO « CROSS . “ R.cl„ S l„,..™„. C, McCullough realty g^^H,gb,.ndRd.CM-S„ 674-3105 ft ■------------------------------------- .4^3^ "IT'S TRADING TIME" OPEN 2512 WOODLAWN # OPEN SUNDAY 2-5 P.M. OUR OFFICE WILL BE OPEN SUNDAY 2-5 2035 PHILLIPS IND OPEN 1147 JAY RD. SYLVAN MANOR ' sissS OPEN 8075 REESE RD. (CLARKSTON) "I Want" ot a Is Easy-The Bateman Way DO YOU WANT PEOPLE TO LOOK AT YOUR HOME OR BUY IT! ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES i S®'— •'-"-■'Hr 1071 W. HURON STREET MLS FE 4-0921 AFTER 6 P.M. AND SUNDAY 681-0992 ^WMiig35>= ““ “iSirr ROYER BRICK RANCH FOR ACTIVE LIVING ■ ‘ ™°"' r£ l?Kil£'Sf vfSr PONTIAC "9y’sq*'fT a'r"ea*’plS5"^^uM WE BUILD-TRADE ESoS”piSxld"liH".% ROYER REALTY, INC. ?;a''vlnr7he,r'"*r.7Tg.V.'.o'r” .... Wideman ' ... "S-OEL,, ^ Times Realty ................... “‘a&- )PEN hV^thi GI-0 DOWN ciiKinAY 1-4 £S ii"SSrE£KC€i?r'5 iHaw crSJiir i®mSyXs«Vn SMELL THAT TURKEY? I. 0. WIDEMAN, REALTOR i HALL :iiSS OPEN Sunday 2 OPEN •.iSS: “-Sr-'' MODELS OPEN DAILY 3 to 8 P.M. rise. SSLS%uSnHii? FOR SALE-RENT-LEASE ■z:~. CALL: LLOYD WALLACE Phone 673-7837 TED'S TRADING 674-2236 OPEN SUNDAY 2 TO 5 9490 STEEP HOLLOW SUNDAY 12 TO 6 P.M. WATCH THE HOUSE DETECTIVE FOR COLOR FILMS OF TWIN LAKES OPEN 3018 ST. . naMiiM OFFICE OPEN SUNDAY 2-5 R-71 ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES R-21 MOVING TO Fi S3§I^ R-16 $13,500 McCullough REAL ESTATE H60 Highlond Rd. (M 59I 674-2236 682-6309 § -P-18 THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, NOVEMBEB 28, 1968 BRIAN vd-u-W; Sal* HMntilvM 6**ds 63 M What you'o bxpbct to pay 3 ROOMS , brand new furniture $297 tiso Nr wMk tITTlE JOE'S bargain house 14(1 Baldwin at WBllon,FB Acras of Frw Parking Evas, 'fll»; Sat. 'til 4. EZlarmt i5 PIECE OVBRSTUFFED LIvIni RoQitt Set, axe. «nd., raaionabli for quick sale. (W-SS07. T CHROME DINETTE SET. alto Of; alio cnaira, conea and tablea. CountrysMa Living, 1084 Oakland Ava. 334-l30». ? GAS STOVES ISO. All 338^27 and mira of all lypaa. 34M341, " CARPETING WarehOiiM ovsrttoclcad gaiy^V^j£Sa“i chairs. 851-2454, aft. PHYFE walnut dining P«0 Zag ' Portawi^ Perll^amb” Fur' coat! ffl%.m"Trr“*- ^’“".mets gSltorSi.es:’‘^l!er"c.s.'rbnnd .............. tHROM/oiNETTE SETS, asSOTble Kj^uie’ii’TMal gHance'wgJTpSrtablS^ BUY Y,.... ------------ l69*9? veliJe'**l29 95 '^i*-*'* H9 00 cablet or terms ol_$5,00| ennounceinenh^ ol discount _lrorn, -^*“*'96( des bVehard' 'Lk'.','*1=E 48toZ'-33~ AAirhlaan Flourescent, 393 ^ FURNITURE COLOR TVs STEREOS NEW LEFT IN LAY-A-WA 76" Sofa with Floral Mr. and Chairs, all 3 pieces Scotchgi with reversible cushions, 15 ___ guarantee on construction, sold for *349.88, belance due S197 cash -(10 monthly. 6 pleca walnut bedroom su... mattress, box springs, double dresser, mirror, 4 drawer ' and bookcase bed, sold to balance due (176 cash < WHITE AUTOMATIC ZIG-ZAG Sewing machine, deluxe features, maple cabinet, "Early American" design. Take over payments ol: $5 PER MOtJTH OR $49 CASH BALANCE UNIVERsVl“sEWI*nT CENTER 2615 Dixie Hwy.___ FE 44)905 Walnut console stereo, AM, FM .radio, 6 speakers with remote (peaker provision, auto, r changer, plays all sizes, sol: (199, balance due (154 cash, o Zlp^red ifb*rd'' .0?" sola and matching chair, reversibla cushions, 15 aranlta on construction, (189.88, (106 cash or (10 Colonial Sofa end matching chair Scotchguarded deluxe reversible cushions, sold for (379, balance due (357 cash or (15 monthly. system with diamond m all size records, remc outlets, sold for $279, I »22, cash or (10 monthi ish or (10 monthly. Long Danish Modern console ereo, I speaker system with mote speaker outlets, AM, FM, ze records, sold lor ice due (286 cash or Color portable with roll aMul and, all channel, sold for $379 USED KIRBY SWEEPFR with accessories, $22, baby stroller ESTINO HOUSE ELECTRIC RANGE, built In ............. cellent condition. ( VEST BEND P HUMIDIFIER, $30. YOUTH BED OLD TELEPHONES, and one verv. verv oli 623-1410. A-l ANTIQUES, estates, art glass wanted. BLUE BIRD AUCTIONS, 336-D742 or • days 10-4:30, W.SO, bel- Antiques For Christmas Many new things. "Early Shoppers Get The Goodies" Hove coffee and browse. THE WOODEN PEG The Carriage House 69 S. Main—Clarkston TUES.-S Channel, 2 year guarantee on p ture tube, sold for (519 belai ,ftue (386 cash or (25 monthly. HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE H Ellz. Lake Rd. ^ ^ 335-9283 (Near Telegraph Rd.) IQUE CHSSTSz marble tope uvdis, squares and rectsngul.-. tablOs, gato-lag and drqp-laat tables, chairs, leva teat. Period furniture. —-i—- — . ________ ___tlque gla .....- Antiques — nio L; George Rd., Rochaetar. 65t-l9q. It condition, 635-1129. BUFFET, ITALIAN, CHERRY, i clothing. 67451 ■Igeratc 5169, BROWNIES-HARDWARE FLOOR SANDERS—POLISHERS WALLPAPER STEAMERS BLUE LUSrRE SHAMPOOERS COMMERCIAL UPRIGHT K CELLO, GUITAR AND SKIS 363-3276, Ask for Dave. » monitor. 334-7491. CHRISTMAS SHOPPING?? CHAIN SAWS NEW MCCULLOCH MAC 6 6- LB. $149, OTHERS 1110 ED LAWN TRACTORS, S39S UP. Downtown Rochester CHIPPED BATHTUBS, $_-O A. THOMPSON, 7005 M-59 W DIAMOND RING FOR SALE. 1 carat, blue-whita. All day Sunday, after 5 weekdays. 682-1877. OG HOUSES. ALL ~ ~ Orchard '' ~ ENCLOSE YOUR SHOWER over th bathtub with a beautiful glass tu enclosure, aluminum frame, wit • ■ - ran design, 12Sl9! 7005 M-59 W. ■piXTUtlES W‘ Kay Furniture 37 S. GlenwoixJ. FURNACES^ ®Fa^‘’|nite!iat!on'*' GARBAGE OisPOSAL, OARAGE DOOR 7 X steel, S70. 646-IB24. GAS SPACE t ngle, good c vard. Clerks GARAGE SALE: many I Latimer, Hniar-Gtoer i Nov. 23. OARAGE, POiC PLUMBING BARGAINS, F R E . Standing toilet, $22.95; 30-gallor heater, $49.95; 3-pleca ---- $59.95; laundry tray, fi shower stalla with trim, bowl sink, $2.95; lavs., S2.95; (20 and up. Pipe cut SAVE PLUMBING , $19.95; RUMMAGE SALE, SUN. and Tuas., 10 a.m. to Congregation B'nall Isr Oneida Rd„ Pont,________ RIDING MOWER, 1 owner, ___________ reelo^owar, snowplow, chains. RUM/WAGE SALE: FrI, Sat. RESALE AND EXCHANGE: new Items, gifts, furs, mutrs, dues, china, glass, (ewelry, trunks, old violins, c o p p . . . wreaths, desks, chairs, cradle, lav-a-way for Christmas, 16 W. n tank, $45, 363-26! RUMMAGE SALE, miscallaneo RUMMAGE SALE: By Bloomfield, Tue.-Thurs., Dec. 3, 12 noon ^ p.m., Dec. 4, 9-5, Dec. 5, 9-3. Royal Oak Woman Club, corner of 4th and South Pleasant. HARMONY ELECTRIC $50. 338-9012.________ JUMBO FOLK GUITAR, v SEARS GAS FURNACE, 123,0 10 year guarantee, nav ' used, (100, FE 4-1420. repaired. Cone's, f SNOWTHROWER FOR Wheelhor •- l.p. tractor. Slightly use -- ■ 626-3979, _________ SEARS CUSTOM tractor, 4-spee --------- —, SEE THE NEW Evinrude 23 I Bobcats, light weight, fast ; features a portable gas tank i — - complete Una IfLES T TEP LADDERS, tools, storm v dows, ladles coat-size 20, dres: 33 Moreland Ava. ----VADOR REFRIGERATOR, SdtgttyTrS"' ............ 887-911' TONEMASTER EYE GLASS hearing TOYS, GIFTS, JOKES, NOVELTIES. LIBERAL BILL'S OUTPOST, 3265 DIXIE, OR 3-9474. THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE 118 W. LAWRENCE ST. !arg urnlture. THERMAL DRAPES, 84x204' used 3 months, «■! x Saturday or Sunday. gold -m6. TOILET, ROUND bowl, Everhot Rosterette, etc. teakettle. Presto pressure cooker, all never used. Oak table, ir— and lady's clolhing. MA 6-3714. w blade, chains ei USED AND NEW Office dei choirs, typewriters, a d d I machines, draftlim tables, cabinets. Forbes Printing and flee Supply, 4500 Divi. u-Jrayton, OR 3-9767. WATER SOFTENER, DEEP : WASHED WIPING RAGS, a beams, plate, pipe, sed metal garage doors. Meal signs, tamp, shedv etc. boulevard supply 500 S. Blvd. E._____ 333-7161 CHRISTMAS TRIM SHOW ■MBER 20-30 Iraftsmen d.„. exciting things have assembled for your gifting. Hours are 11-( daily. Sun. 1-4. THE TREASURE CHEST, Gifts, antiques, Imports, 3231 Union Lake Rd„ Union Lake. EM 3^1242. Hand Tooljt—Machinery 68 END FORD TAACTORp parts or can be used. Dozer, (3500; HD-3 — "----- 1375 Indian Dozer, $3500, WOOD PLANER, single phas 626-76S3:. COMPRESSORS, ____________ —* "'Idi''*''**' Pontiac’' Motor University Drive, 3 ^ulpmen SEMI-TRAILERS, several si priced to sell. 6,000 lb. Hl-low, condition, 01100. Blvd. Supply. SOo *i. Blvd. E. 333-7161. ___ SEARS 10" TABLE s bench and extras, —■ WANTED - trans 240 volt, -- “ 5-9902. COMPLETE 35 MM OUTFIT i« at « uu i«-s, 626-9704. -IDE PRO- JECTOR, 35MM, vary | PRACTICE DRUM SET, Ilka n with sock cymbals, OR 3-2523. "string VEGA BANJO, Ilka new with custom case, cost S325. * " CHORD, SILVERTONE Organ ind bench, (100. 625-2693. I Farfisa duo compact ______________otter. 3343900. iatre-Tr« It $1191. By Kate Osann BEFORE WINTER SETS In, now the time tor get your grading back-filling done, or If you nee fill dirt, clay, gravel, beach sen., w stone? We have that too. OR 3- 8935 (6 e.m.-ll p.m.)______________ C(90WN SAND, GRAVEL and tqp WoodCoaKoke-FMel_________77 A-l OAK WOOD, DELIVERED, 391-2709.______ WOOD FIREPLACE _____________itackad. 335-3247, NEW SEASONED white pine lumb •' length 1x10 also Iw plained, also Chrlstm P>tS-HBIltlBg Dog« “And while I’m never speaking to you again, let me tell you something else—’’ BARGAINS IN USED PRACTICE PIANOS Uprights and grands, all cloai tuned and delivered. Morris Music < S. Telegraph FE MI567 Across from Tel-Huron I Shopping Cantor Spartiwg Gaods____________74 DELUXE M-l CARBINE. 200 rounds ammo. Slop. 651-9157, DEALERS WANTED FOR CORNET, (85, excellent a CORONET, EXCELLENT condition $125 cash. 681-0906 after 5 p.m. ELKHORN E FLAT Alto Saxophone, ESTEY MAHOGANY S , $400. 931 Brooklewn, MERCURY AND YUKON KING SNOWMOBILES — $695 UP. Kor's Boots & Motors W. Clarksfon Rd. Lake Orion ___________MY 3-1600 A6ASSEY FERGUSON SKI Whiz FLUTE, ARTLEY (70 FENDER STRATOCASTER, Vox Jaguar Organ, used 1 $375. sTivartona 60-watt tv.... .. amp, (115. Standal Echo. (95. Seth Elect. Metronome, (15. Mike stand, *---' 2 mikes, (25. 692-6961, X, (10. OA 8-2650. GRAND PIANO, mahogany, e leas. 334-4864. NEW SAVE $$$ l.p. Ski Daddler, $795 I. Ski Daddler, $895 Track 20 h.p. Ski Daddler $1,041.58 Track 24 h.p. Ski Daddler, (1,214.96 .p. Ski Daddler (032.50 . Ski Daddler, $1,061.95 . Demo Ski Daddler, USED SAVE $$$ i6 h.p. Diablo Rouge, CRUISE-OUT, INC. Walton FE : Dally 9-6, Closed Sundays MOVING^ Organ, A-1. 682-1910. ORGAN AND SOME PIANO AND ORGAN SALE Trade-Ins, slue ’riced to sell-that s Priced from $295 Shop us betor ( you buy GALUGHER MUSIC CO. 10 S. TELEGRAPH FE 40566 PONTIAC I MON, AND FRI, TILL ROTH VIOLIN OUTFIT. Call after - m. 620-2789. ____________________ Rent piano — buy later as low Smiley Bros., Music 119 N. SAGINAW FE 4-4 ' Wed., Thurs., Sat., 9:30-5 p, ------------" FrI. 9:3»9 p.m. UPRIGHT PIANO -________335^28 USED ORGANS Choose from Hammonds am well known brands, prices as (209. GRINNELL'S Downtown Store UPRIGHT PIANO, J Lines, SNOW FLAKE -........ Light, eomMct, 10 h.p., 40 mph. Sporfereft tMQ. 4160 Foley, 6234>450 2534. 1-A BUCK DIRT Ballard, 623-1410; ‘~ -AAA SAND AND gravel, alt areas dellyered. 673-5516, Waterford. SAND AND gravel a > AND gri aS'^zes.*'Testod''^'to«” II areas del. 396-^. paneling, p trees, 887-49 30(S 5. Lapeer Rd., Pontiac. 1-A DACHSHUND PUPS, AKC, ESTEI HEIM KENNELS. 391-1889 A POODLE GROOMS, (3 u 1-A GROOMING Edward's Poodle Salon, Po^ie .... ..... ..... ..vd. from p.m.-lO p.m. Thurs. through '~''**'"33j’-5259 POODLE GROOMING, txqulslta ...n— —.—■—. Christmas Grooming. I App'ts. by protosi (6.50 up. 3! 3349309, 9 compartn 5-9120. THINK PETS Puppies, monkeys, birds, kittens, tropical fish and supplies. Uncle VERY PLAYFUL Siamese, 2 months old, 334-7141. ________ MINIATURE SCHNAUZERS pups. International champion stock familiar with kids. 603-3735. MONTH OLD Bassett Dura bred, no papers, female, (40. 673-3168. AKC white toy POODLE Pups. 363-8073 or 363-9551. SCORPION SNOW MOBILES The Proven Snow Mobile 15", 10" and 23" track Stop In and Inspart quality. STACHER TRAILER SALES, INC. 1 Highland (M-59) ____ _____ SETTER _____ ________ until Christmas. Stud. 052-2647. Akc GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS, shots, keep 'till Christmas. 363- B & B AUaiON EVERY FRIDAY....FJR. WB BUY - SCLL - YlUOl CONSIONMShI%'l^^E CASH PRIZE EVERY AUCTION PiONEfR CAMPER SALES Traltorl: JvMIm Glebu Star m-mt B & B AUCTldN Sat. Night, 7 P.M. Sharp, Nov. 23 Jock Myer Again with his grocery on wheels DOOR PRIZE-BEAUTIFUL SHETUND PONY > PONY SALE, Saturday. 30, I960. Starting at 12 ------ird. Call 664- It LapMr Btodeyard. w re»ldanca <78-253 color TV, om outllti, ‘ ptt . Clarkston Rd., Lake ARABIANS FOR SALE. Double D.C. ----Farm, 625-3550._________ ARABIAN FILLEY and horse trailer ARABIAN FOR SALE. Double D-C Arabian Farm, 625-3550. GOING IN TO SERVICE, mu -ixcallent Western pleasure ___ lorsa, will make good 6-H horst, 9 ;rr^%«°a?ona&rj^"!^ HORSES BOARDED, I TRAILER RENTALS FOR Fieri TRAILERS--CAMPERS- COVERS, ♦/•"•T .(toragu-, Ooodell Trailer 3M9 S. Rdctwator Rd., $S2- WINNEBAGO New '69 Modelt- uata tr^lers, _^pick^ Ffancl(co, Les 'Vegas, Disneyland, days In San It, Olsneytand, " Oraw-tna ^ E. HOWWHD SALES Skamper-Pleasura Matta Truck Campert ALL 1969s NOW ON DISPUYI YOUR DEALER FOR - SPORT TRAILER, GEM CORSAIR AND ROAMER TRAVEL TRAILERS Corsair and Gem pl Ellsworth Trailer Sales 6577 Dixie Hwv. REGISTERED HACKNEY MARE, Shetland & foal, well broke, will hold for Chrletmai. 62S-5499. 89 1 OF THE^ LEADERS Mobile Homes Early American-Modern RICHARDSON LIBERTY MONARCH DELTA OXFORD Perk Space — Immediately Available COLONIAL MOBILE HOMES FEM657 ^^^2^1310 r CENTER - Home allty and appointment ■0 PL 2-2941. Open 7 1 WAY TO SAVEI FREE HOLIDAY BONUSI JUST ARRIVED; Tha°Blue Fawn^’*’"’*' 12 X 50 Academy, $3,095. Ol^Y 4, 1968't left at Discount up to -10011 Such at: 60x12 Elcar, all catted, S4.S9S PONTIAC'S FINEST DISPLAY Trade's NaededI Trailers, cert, boats, torn. COUNTRYSIDE LIVING 4 Oakland Ave._________334-1509 ' SUPERIOI! HAY FOR SALE, also i - y. Phone OR wes. BEAGLES WANTED. Must b SKI DOO ■ SPECIAL Over 60-1969 machines in stock COCKER PUPPIES, A APPLES-PEARS Icintosh, Jonathan, Spy, Cortland and others. Bargains In utility grades, sweet elder. Oakland Orchards, 2205 E. Commerce between Burns and Duck Rds., 1 mile east of Milford. FOR SALE AT Middle t( , BEAUTIFUL table per case, now ja.yj. New 1969 double s n o trailers, tilt and swiv capacity, $169. New 1969 Shoreline CUDDLY PUPS, W Malamuto, father? V DOBERMAN P the crate while tf.„, ,o„. Open 10 to 9 weekdays 10 to 6, Sat. & Sun. JIM HARRINGTON'S SPORT CRAFT Va ml. E. of Lapeer City llmin \NT LIVE TEDDY BEARS? log puppies, af-ayful, they will be SKI - DADDLE SNOWMOBILE, 1! h.p. I960 used. Also I |7V( h.p. brand new, 1968, never used. Clot Ing out sale. Can be seen Leonari Station, M-24 and Drahner Rd. WANTED; GOOD Upright piano, 338- Pulaneckl. OR 3-5596. ANNOUNCING AT GALLAGHER'S MUSIC We have a new Electronic Organ Teaching Studio, private organ lessons In a group. $1,50 per lesson. You do not have to own OPEN MON. AND FRI. TILL 9 CLASSICAL GUITAR L E S S O Ponllec Music . - ------- 6680 or come to 31S44 Rye.._______ 131/1 Mile Rd.. This ad worth (5 toward purchase of any machine. Dealer^ Open^to A.M. to 9 P.M. Sportii^ ^0^ ___________ OF SIZE 7 Boy'z Sk boot. (15. 61 1st SEE THE SNO-JET snowmobiles (by Glestron). Save now. TOM-HARDWARE, 905 Oi-rh.rrf I I Dally 9-6, Sun. 9-2. FE PAIRS SKI boots (boy's size 5,6,7). Ladles size 9; never been worn. Boys' ski pants (size S, 10, 14), winter lackat. 57" sklls, never been used. Ladles lackat and ski pants, tall size 16, black and white. BOWS AND ARROWS—334-6349 GENE'S ARCHERY-r' — GUNS-GUNS-GUNS "skl-DOO'S FROM $695 County. Browning, !, Winchester, Remington, — — Smith-Wesson pistols, scopes, sights. We do our own 13 to tracks > line of I 30 Machines li We have a com cessorles. suits, boot.. .... custom covertd b doublel STOP OUT THIS WEEKENOI Cliff Dreyer's Gun and Sports Center 15210 Holly Rd. ------ ' - Qpsn Dally SKISy HEA SNOWMOBILE SKI 000 SKI DADDLER SNOW JET MERCURY SNOWMOBILES CRUISE-OUT, INC. I E. Walton FE S-4402 Dally 9-6, Closed Sundays SNOWMOBILES SEE THE RACY ONE SKI ROULE ALSO YUKON KING-SNO PONY PRICES START AT $520 DOUBLE TRAILERS AT 1179.00 SINGLE TRAILERS AT $146.00 WHOLESALE PRICES AVAILABLE OAKLAND SNOWMOBILE CENTER 2434 Dixie__9-8 334-0500 mIXlE AMERICAN ESKIMO I MALE AND FEMALE peka'm pups SNOWMOBILE TRAILERS, 1 of the - - - itet. Singles 0. Wholesale 1. 651-1271 or SKI-DOO SNOWMOBILES KING BROS. FE 4-1662 FE 4-703 PONTIAC RD. AT QFDYK6 RD. See The Hot Ones ONLY SNO-SPORT Wakes Up Winter for the family fun -The racing enthus From 12 h.p. ui Elec, start or manuei Priced from $695 op OVER 50 MACHINES IN STOCK CHOOSE YOURS EARLY AT PRE-SEASON PRICES Trailers and Sleds OF DIFFERENT TYPES WINTER SUITS, BOOTS AND GLOVES FOR men, women AND CHILDREN - In stock. ENGINE MODIFYING RACING EQUIPMENT Oakland County's Largest Snowmobile Dealer "WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL" 2 locations to serve you. MG SALES & SERVICE 17 Dixie Hwy. Dreyton 673-6451 MG COLLISION 103 E. Montcalm Pontiac FE 3-7975 ll 370, FE 4-1462 SNOWMOBILE DRASTIC SAVINGS h.p. elec. Ski Ooo, reg. (1020, no\ h.p.' (kl Doo, reg. $190, now (695. Y h.p. 1967 Ski Doo (395. /i h.p. 1967 Ski Doo S550i h.p. 1966 Fox S3S0. h.p. 1966 Fox, sharp (395. ^.|i. Diablo Rouge 1967, like ne« CRUISE-OUT, INC. E. Walton FE $-4402 (rr. Ksrv........ Also unusual I French herding ORchards; __________ potatoes. All day 1510 Predmore, Li phone, 683-0959.____________________ POTATOES, 335 W. Silver Bell Rd. Bring containers. JI7 2 FORD TRACTOR AND SCOOP. JOHN DEERE TRACTOR- t65 PONTIAC CHIEF HOUSE TRAILER, 10x46, 2 bedroom*, partly furnished. $2500. FE (-346*. IW^ONTIAC CHIEFyTo by 3-7445. ACTIVE 12 X 52 on lot, ox-condltlony smsil down. Tsko S yr. mortgsoo. FE 4-6t33» m? PARKWOOD/l2x5«y 3 bodroomy comp. torn. Skirting. Sat « Cranberry Lk. Vlllaae. Immt occupancy. 673-3061, 602-5227. ENGLISH SPRINGER S Puppies, 12 wks. BIk. AKC, registered, w shots, 642-9720 FREE FLUFFY K I housebroken. 673-1970. FEMALE SCHNAUZER, nNAuzcK, sen ana months, housebroken. FREE PUPPIES, MIXED GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS, AKC beauties, some black, UL 2-1657. GERMAN SHEPHERD pups, A GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS, ; GOLDEN RETRIEVERS, A GERA4AN SHEPHERD FEMALE, "•-'k and fan, 1 yr. oM, AKC reg. d breeding background. 693- IRISH WOLFHOUND p( LONG HAIR HOUSEBROKEN klt- MIXED PUPPIES WANTEI German shepherd, Labrador poodles. Mixed preterred. We b PEKINGESE, MALE, AKC, POODLE CLIPPING service, FE 8-3631. POODLE CLIPPING AND shampoo ^^appointment. FE 2-1537 or 625- APACHE CAMPERS from $495 to Snowmobiles, $795 PUPPIES, POODLE I terriers, mixed, (— ea. FE 8-2659. PUREBRED GERA6AN SHEPHERD own both ths fathtr and mothar $30. Milford 664-0225. REGISTERED BLACK POODLE, loves children, 175. 852-1I31. REGISTERED e ^^^fWDdlai SCHNAUZER MINIATUR8 registered, stud table. 332-1590. .KR5 SMALL TOY P(30DLES, reasonable _F E 4-1405._______________________ SIAMeIsE KITTEN, IIS. 6 month ST. BERNARD, AKC. 6 weeks shots, I male ar" '-- — ■" TOY POODLES i WEEKS, Pet Supplies-Service vi GROOMING Complete all breed grooml;^ by Shop, 3324513. LARGE OOO HOUSE, $25. 0 Crescent Lk. Rd. cessorles, clothing B & B AUCTION Sun. Afternoon, Nov. 24 2 P.M. Sharp Complete clean-up of anflquei, tools, groceries, ’'malfrettet. new and ---' furtilfure, candles, nuts, toys, all kinds of Christmas gifts SPECIAL SALE 7-HORSEPOWER, WHEEl' :p roArrOQ with RECOIL " ROTARY WITH NEW ........ own*,*. new CHAINS. , TOTAL PRICE, $69940 KING BROS. I FE 4-1M2 FE 4^734: ______Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke ' running condition. SUSP. '673-381* Travel Trailer*_______ 88 FROLIC, 1 TRAVEL TRAILER 16 ft„ gas toval refrigerator, heater. Sleeps , extras, good condition S$7S. 6^ 1969 STARCRAFT TRAVEL TRAILERS CAMPERS INSIDE DISPLAY CRUISE-OUT, INC. I E. Walton Dally 9-6 FE M4( CLOSED SUNDAYS APACHE CAMP TRAILERS AIRSTREAM LIGHTWEIGHT TRAVEL TRAILERS ice 1932. Guaranteed tor life. S< im and get a demonstration i irner Trailer Sales, 3891 V ...ron (plan to loin one Byam's exciting cerevent a Travel Trellers 625-1711___ ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL ’ lust celebrated 21 years In es. It was so successful we are ending to you this unique offer. LOOK I AT THIS NEW 1969 DETROITER, SLIDE-A-ROOM 2 full baths, 2 master bedrooms, huge living room, silent heat. hit one. Only 16995. Bob Hutchinson's Mobile Home Soles, Inc. Open Dally 'tll 8 p.m. Saturday and Sunday 'tll S DRAYTON PLAINS 4381 Dixie Hwy. (US-18) OR 3-1781 1967 NEW MOON 12x60, deluxe Interior, set up In new park, skirting snd shed. Csll FE (4im.___ Michigan Exclusive MARLETTE DEALER SPECIAL; 12x50 Marlett* st $4995. Marlette Expsndot on display Free delivery and set up within 108 On Display at: Cranberry Lake Mobile Home Village d at Clinton AAanor BOOTH CAMPER COVER with be -------------1, t3oa. ss2.s7)5. BRADLEY CAMPE8 - ... , — -------- Dreyto 673952*. MIDLAND TRAILER SALES Featuring Parkwood, Holly Perk and Denlth tr h King. ~ l'2x60, 2 Bedroom, S4S9S 12x44, 2 Bedroom, (3595 12x60 3 ----------- Check our deal on -SWISS COLONY LUXURY TRAILERS FROLIC TRAILERS AND TRUCK CAMPERS SKAMPER FOLD-DOWN CAMPERS 13 to 2S ft. on display at — Jacobson Trailer Soles 5690 Williams Lake Rd. OR 3-59II CAMPER COVER tor lata model -----1> CENTURY YELLOWSTONE TRAVEL TRAILERS QUALITY AT ANY BUDGET LIFETIME MOTOR HOMES STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. 3771 Highland ' ‘ (?lxto *Hw Oxford Trailer Sales Belvedere, Stewert, O a r d n a Hartford. Latest modelt, 2 o' bedrooms. Early *-------'— Phone N Orion r Perk Rent Trailer Spaai NEW LOTS AT VILLAGE GREEN MOBILE ESTATE 12SS Brown Rd. Sorry no tchpol children.___________ FOR RENT MOTOR home sleeps 8 ...........-t, AAA Insured, 36328*$. Johnson's Travel Trailers 517 E. Walton Blvd. - fE 4-5*53 That's where you'll find Ihe TROTWOODS OAKLAND CAMPER dwest cavers end sleepers. -I -—- - ■tome carnpars. leepers. Perti Metercycle* furniture, .... all kind! too numerous DOOR PRIZE EVERY AUCTION OR M7I7 *74-3143' skAMPiS~FOLDING travel trailer, good condition. 3630011, dir. STEEL " frame PICKUP ileepen and tops. Cab to camper boot. Sportcreft Mtg. 4160 Foley Waterford. 62»86».________ TRAVEL TRAILERS WEST WIND WOOD LAKE ii^ 'wheels. "i^RKET* TIRE. 2635 Orchard Lsks Rd., Ksego. A^ Service — Repair 93 MOTORS FACTORY REBUILT, cart, trucks, 8(9 up. High psrlormanca spsclallsts. Tsrms. t 6S0CC, hek jongrtoVSIS. 1961 HONDA 65 ..............um”S4&f^ Take AA-59 to W. HMlMWl, Right td HIckwv Ridge RdT to Osmwto Rd., left end follow^ sign* to OAWSON'S SALES At TIPWCO LAKE. Phone 639-3179. I D—14 THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 28. 1968 tiiUMd JM»tnck Ms 1M 1965 TRIUMPH BONNEVILLE 650 CC Engine lust recently rebuilt by PAPPY'S MC SHOP r payments of $36 52-2178 AFTER 5:30 1M6 HONDA SPORT 50, excellent condition, 2 helmets and car car-rler $300. 684-7635.__ Motorcycle Sale SPECIAl PRICES ON ALL MODELS Anderson Sales & Service 164S S. TELEGRAPH _ WINTER PRICES AT PAPPY; $125. 1967 Yahan I 305 I , $425. 1967 Yahama 100 < trail bIKe, good condition, $22 Winter motorcyle storage. Pappy Motorcycles Sales and Servic 2573 Dixie Hwy. Open 4 p.m to p.m. weekdays and all day Salu day. 673-0560.______^__________ Bicyde$__^ 14' DUMP STAKE BED ¥ $13$. EM 3^. 19^4 IMt>ALA BODY, I I, with *1 par&. 3 ft floor ihitt. I 1, 673-$659. 1964 PPRO 353 engine. $100. 196$ Ford 352 engine. $150. 337 engine. $150. 2W Ford engine, '4^'64, rebuilt, $1M. New and Used Trucks DODGE WRECKER, first $200 BI it, can be - --- .-^.— Rd. Oxford. 1955 CHEVROLET WRECKER. I, Canfield wrecker, 24V 1104 S. Woodward - jna_______ i960 BUICK, RUNS GOOD . condition. RONEY'S H. AUTO SALES h overdrive, custom cab, ri 4 EL CAMINO, $1,500. Exc BOY'S SCHWINN ’ Boots-Accessories __________^ 15' LONE STAR BOAT & Gal heavy duty trailer, $350. 363^782L 17 FOOT CHRiS CRAFT with : cubic Inch Chevrolet ^gine, power, depth finder and tandei axle trailer, full canvass, $10i Firm, 673-0560 after 4._______ Chrysler and Johnson Boats and Motors PAUL A. YOUNG, INC. 4030 Dixie Hwy. OR 4-0411 TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS CHEVY 1/2 ton, 8 ft. fleetside 6, dard trans,, radio, fresh air , one owner, new truck trade-in. 5. Over 75 other cars to select 1. On US 10 at M15, Clarkston, 1966 Dodge V* Ton Utility With rear door and step bumper, and Stahl body. Is fully covered, V-8, radio. West coast mirrors. John McAuliffe Ford 277 West Montcalm NMr ami Ut«l Cara 106 NEW FINANCE PLAN. If ydu havi been gamistiaied or bankrupt, o ----------------------------yy, yrti -------- credit proMgmt, W. try to re-a$tabllsh jour cn again. Call Credit Mlnagar, LUCKY AUTO 1940 W. WIda Track DOC'S MOTOR MART rtie nation's landing Jeep dea DATSUN complete line of sports i Ians, pickups, plus a cornu.-, vice department. Motor homes, vel trailers and pU'--------- ...nches and make vehicle. "i. woodward 447-3113 w&tar*’t insportatiM, $500, i -9477. Attar 4 p.m,. BUICK RIVIERA 1963. Id condition. FE 4-3175. HAROLD TURNER FORD 3 BUICK SPECIAL COUPE Naw and Ustd Cara 473.I659, ____ IMPAUA, nardtop, blua with blacU ... tarlor, 283 stick, $495, sharp, must sail. 681-0473 or 481-0215. WE FINANCE CALL FE 8-9661 1964 Chevy 3-Ooor ' $595 with payments of $6.10 weekly 1964 Pontiac 2-Door Hardtop $695 with payments of $7.08 weekly 1964 Ford Falcon $595 with payments of $6.10 1963 Chevy Wagon $495 with payments of $S.ll 1963 Grand Prlx $795 with payments of $8.19 weekly 1962 Cadillac $695 with payments of $7.0 1961 Lancer 2 Door $195 with payments of $2.0i 1961 BUIck Hardtop $195 With payments of $2.06 w 1961 Ford $145 with payments of $U 1963 Chevy Wagon $395 with payments of $4.06 weekly Star Auto . CALL FE 8-9661 „ _____..... MONZA. ! Automatic trans. Radio If you are looking for lice one, look no forth* price. No money JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 338-9238 630 Oakland Ave._______FE 5-4101 1964 Buick Electra toor. Sharp condition. $995 Bob Borst 4 CHEVY BEL / ), $700; 1965 Chivy I 1 cvl. stick, rad 1. 363-2463. 1964 CORVETTE CONVERTIBLE, silver with black vinyl top. 327-365 H P. 411 pos. traction. 4 i---- Chrofne wheels, new red llnei dLOSE-OUT PRICES ON all i TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS |7 CHEVY 14 TON CST, cab, Steury Boats Grumman Canoes MIrro-Craft Boats Dolphan Pontoons Evlnrude Motors ^‘"bOaVsTORAGE AVAILABLE Take M-59 to W. Highland. Right to Hickory Ridge Rd. - ------ LAKE. P la 629-2179. MAKE YOUR RESERVATIONS FOR WINTER STORATE NOW I AT: HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS Larsen Boats Grumman Canoes _ "Your E^nrude 332-0033 PINTER'S Thompson—MFG—Starcreft SAVE $$ 1968 MODELS Boats, Motors, Travelers and Campers INSIDE AND OUTSIDE BOAT MOTOR STORAGE CRUISE-OUT, INC. 63 E. WALTON FE $-4402 Dally 9-6, Ctosed Sundays TONY'S MARINE For JOHNSON MOTORS 2695 Orchard Lk._Sylvan L Aii|ilaiie^ Waiited Cara-Trttcks 101 EXTRA Dollars Paid FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Car Especially 4 speeds and corvettes. "Check the rest, ttum get the best" Averill's FE 2-9$7$ 2020 Dixie FE 4.6$96 Mansfield AUTO SALES 300 MANSFIELD AUTO SALES 1104 Baldwin Ave. FE 5-5900 FE 8 top DOLLARS FOR SHARP, I ^MILEAGE MITOMOBILES._ _ RD 'A TON PICKUP, 11,000 _________$1425. Call 673-8659. 1968 FORD PICKUP, 4-wh ------- FORD Vi ton pick-up r _,_utltul boxwood green wi engine and standard - —!■ axk fnr Wa........... 623-0900. 65 BUICK LeSABRE, 2 door hardtop, V8, automatic, powe steering, power brakes, $1495. FLANNERY Motors, Inc. (Formerly Beattie Ford) Waterford ________ 623-0901 1965 BUICK RIVIERA with beautifu silver blue with matching interior full power, and all the goodies Clearance special only $1788 tuh , , ■ price, lust $188 down, and $69.37iFE 4-1006 TRUCKS ARE OUR BUSINESS 1964 GMC Tandem Dump, 8-10 yard body, 5 speed—3 speed I960 INTERNATIONAL Loadpacker, full air brakes, 17 yard Leach Garbage Body. I9'66 GMC 6 engine, 1:25-20 tires Ira nice trucK, $1875. 1967 GMC transmission, full air b speed axel, 9:00-20 tires. 1966 GMC brakes. 9:00-20 tires. 1964 GMC 1963 GMC Diesel Tractor, 6-71 engine, sli cab, pusher axles, slider 5th w 1966 GMC Diesel Tractors, 8-V-7I engine speed fuller transmission. Tan Drive, Tilt cab, cast spoke whi GMC Factory Branch 675 Ookland Avenue FE 5-9485 .... ___________ ,,j.92. Call W Parks credit manager at Ml 4-750 HAROLD TURNER FORD M S. Woodward Birmingha 1965 BUICK Skylark Sport Coupe with power steering, radio, heate whitewalls, I«^V295"'’- pedal only $1,388 full price. Just 188 down and $53.07 per month. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 630 Oakland Ave. ______FE J-4 », $1095. 446 Harvey, FE 8. ransmission, $650, 853-4380 1965 CORVAIR. 110 Corse hardtop, $750, 731-8593._____________________ 1965 CHEVELLE DELUXE 300, radio, heater. Sharp. 338-1441, TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1965 CHEVY IMPALA Super Sport, automatic, power brakes, radio, ater, whitewalls, tan finish, with !ck, vinyl top, $1295. Over 75 other rs to choose from. On US-10 at M-Clark! 2 door hardtop LUCKY AUTO V tires, radio, priced to sell. aodUMdCatt 108 1963 OLDS 88 DYNAMIC WA73-8342. Cadillacs. We are prepared to make you a better offer! i966 nsu Ask for Bob Burns. 35'*l3('i ^ WILSON I--W" CRISSMAN CADILLAC '104T A I rCTiKI' lJC A 1 \/ e..,! lisn N WtvirtuuAr/4 AAI 1 lOtrt 196? AUSTIN HEALY Spri 1310JJ,J/Voodward .Ml 4-1930, $1,350. 651 We w 0 u I d like to buy late ji968 mg midget, convert model GM Cars or will ac-1 m^res,^'sha?p. 6?l5698^"** cept trade-downs. Stop by ^ DUNE BUGGY today. Buggy In Town. camper" BUS, with t 100 actual ml., 363-9421. 'mUST Sacrifice, first $ ^'^nd^tV^*^$p2 5 OR SUNBEAM'ALPINE. n pTCp-upR I J. IkJVO'l iJ_li L STATION WAGON, 80 BUICK , Power, riuaaphT m condition. Only $4987. TAYLOR CHEVY-OLDS 968 CADILLAC CALAIS, C„... Grecian white, exc. cond., 13.008 ml., power 8, elr, 84.550. FE 2-'-— CHEVY: WHEN YOU I 2 Chevy's 8 and 4, Inquire at 2335 Dixie, 1955 CHEVY, 2 door t rust, extra clean, $75, , parts. FE 5-3516. 5 CHEVROLET, 265 engine, I 64 Mercury, convertible, $895. 64 Impale, hardtop, $695. 65 Impale, 2 door, hardtop. $995 66 Impale, 2-door, hardtop, $1,095. 67 Impale, 2-door, hardtop, $1,495 Select demo's to choose fror 1958 CHEVY 2-door, V8 illc sale or trade, FE 8^9004. 1958 CORVETTE everything n per cent complete, must sel 1959 CHEVY CONVERTIBLE, V- Sido , exti>5, $95^335-5577^_ 1959 CHEVY, 2-door'hardtop, 348 860 S. WOODWARD Ml 7-5111 HAHN Chrysler-Plymouth 6673 Dixie Hwy. MA 5-2635 1966 CHRYSLER NEWPORT 2 door hardtop, medium green w black vinyl roof and match bucket seats, V-8 automatic, rac heater, power steering. $1695 BIRMINGHAM New and Used Cars T 06 DODGE 1967 MONACO, 4 door. . medium blue, full power, tilt wheel, air, stereo, 8.55 x 14 tires, 82,150. 646-1935.____________ 1968 DODGE R-T HARDTOP. Power and automatic. Full price $2395. $39 down, payments of $18.75. Call Mr. Parks credit manager at Ml 4-7500. HAROLD TURNER FORD 464 S, Woodward______Birmingham lanager at Ml 6-7500. HAROLD TURNER FORD 464 s. Woodward______Birmingham Inyl roof,, power steering, new car 'arranty, $99 down. $2,399. HUNTER DODGE 499 SOUTH HUNTER ---- BIRMINGHAM 1968 DODGE CHARGER, 383 - 168 DODGE CHARGER. Power steering, brakes, buckets, tack. Loads of extras. $2550. EM 3-7631, DELUXE sedan $200. I FORD, good local FORD, GOOD I 36 Blaine, Pontiac 0473 or.681-8215. ) from. From FLANNERY Motors, Inc. 1967 FORD CONVERTIBLE. Power and automatic. Full price $1799. $39 down, payments of $1392. Call I r steering, disc 1968 FORD TORINO w 'K Now available '69 Oldsmobiles all Models and Body styles. P.S. Still a good selection of 68's, new, used and demos. Save . . . Save . . . Save BEST Oldsmobile, Inc. 550 Ookland Avenue FE 2-8101' 1966 BONNEVILLE, 2 door hartHop, power steering and brakes, hydramatic, poattractlen, radio and reverb, tinted glass, phonograph and whitewall tires, 26,800 miles. $1,850. 334-5776 or 33a-8001.______ 767 POktlAC, id 1 390 Cl ■erirjg. radio, heater, disc ------- _.-tlc white ___________ stripes, 13,000 miles. Clerance special -* only $2588 full price $188 down, t new car warranty. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 630 Oakland Ave.________FE 5-4101 $600 firm, 33^507, after 3 p. 1965 OLDS 98 LUXURY SEDAN, beautiful car. Full power, hi every accessory Olds offers, li eluding air, $1595. Call 651-4075. FOR SALE BY owner 1966 OM converfible Cutlass $1000 363-2984. automatic i 4.4026 before 6 p. 1962 FALCON FUTURA 2-door, "-•10, good condition. 693-1659. 1962 FORD FAIRLANE, V8. automatic, raido, heater, power I onT;'$§i8oSuir DrTcr$iM‘"Sow;r’ tom RADEMACHER JOHN MCAULIFFE FORD 630 Oakland Ave. ._______FE 5-6101, brakes, radio, heater, WItItewi 3l95“'ove7*75 other'’cBr$'to''ch' nlles?**TOw'”'caH^°P'^ •* Clarks $2388 full prrce.'"Just*$188*'downlll968 CUTLASS S, lew car warranty. ---- ■ — SMcAULIFFE FORD ________id FORD GALAXIE convertible, d condition $275. Call after 2:30 1963 FOitD 4-DOOR, 289 V-8, dard shift, $200. 682-8880 a ' Soft Water.________________ payments of $6.27. Call ^ rredi, "'»"»^®''jj|*^j2.328 '•I ; Phone 642-7000 1967 CHRYSLER NEWPORT ic, radio, heater, power PONT! A P'"^2195 NKJiN i BIRMINGHAM AutomatICr V-6. Payments of $6.27 Full price $895. Cell Mr. Frosi credit manager at 642-3289. AUDETTE PONTIAC 1968 NEW FORDe Mustang, T-Bird, year end savings, trades accepted. McKenzie ford 651-6803 s, vinyl top. double pow< —J., 6 months old, rpusl Reas. 398-1851._____________________ AVE MONEY AT MIKE SAVOIE CHEVY. 1900 W. Maple, Ml 6-27$3. FORD GALAXIE Ian, 10 passenger wagon « , automatic, radio, heater, po' CHEVY IMPALA SPOS Irdnsmisslon. Radio, h steering. This Is automobile men call 766 CHEVELLE MALIBU Sport Coupe, 6 cylinder mgine, standard condition. This and kept Ilk special only $1 full price. Just oo uunii oiiu mt.,4 per month. JOHN MCAULIFFE FORD Oakland Ave.________FE 5-4101 MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1966 Chevy 4-door sedan, V-8 itl radio, whitewalls, sharp, c $1,195. 677 M-24, Lake Orion, /» 2-2041. 1966 CHEVELLE HARDTOP. I i IMPALA HARDTOP SS. Power nawer at Ml 4-7500. HAROLD TURNER FORD 464 S. Woodward $ CHEVROLET CAPRICE, 2-door ‘---power steer . 338-2900. S CORVETTE CONVERTIBLE ipe (both tops) 4 speed. * mTkYsAVOIE CHEVY i« CORVAIR 2-boOR, automatic, radio, heater, whitewalls, extra sharp, RONEY'S AUTO, 131 Baldwin Ave, FE 4-4909. ____ “MILOSCH^"" CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1967 Chevy 2-door V-8 stick, radio, whltew^ls, %]^95. 677 M-24, Lake )67 "chevy sITbIjFba'nI 9 passenger, V-8 stick. $1,995, 338- 4833^___________ __________ )67 CAMARO RALLY " SPORT, marine blue, with black vinyl top, low mileage. FE 2-1809._ i9"67""CHEVY IMPALA "SS, 327, 275 “ , 4-speed, post., buckets, black black Interior, very poor" _____lltlon, must sell. $1750. 752-2958 1967 CHEV‘y IMPALA. 2 doo top. V8 auto, transmlsslor tie power. Sharp. $1,650. AALIBU CONVERuVlE. ne\ , low mileage, good conditioi 7 CAMARO SS350. $1,995. Phone 642-7000 MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1967 CHRYSLER NEWPORT 4-l,, sedan, automatic, power steering and brakes, radio, whitewalls. TOWN & COUNTRY CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 651-6220 price, $6,21 Zieberted » KESSLER'S DODGE CARS AND TRUCKS Sales and Service ----- . , . ------ No $ down, payments of $6,92. Call Mr. Parks, credit manager at Ml 4-7500. HAROLD TURNER FORD 464 S. Woodward_____Birmingham 1967 CHRYSLER NEWPORT hardtop. Cordovan 'nterior. “ - — r, power $2295 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 0 MAPLE RD. TROY, MICH. 764 DODGE POLARA, good < ditlon, good tires. $850. 338-6776 338-3763.______________________________ low tires. Bucket seals. _________heater. 1,050. FE 5-6245. 1966 DODGE DART. Red. Excellent 6 DODGE POLARA 2-door lardtop, V-8 auto., power steering, ow mileage, dark blue with light )lue Interior. Wife's car and In >xc. condition, $1795. 363-9388, afl- 1966 DODGE DART, l shift, extra s s per gallon. I CORVXiR MONZA, between 4 end 8 p V 852-1954 544 S. WOODWARD _______64^-5600 ! Junj^orijTrucks 101-A t-2-3 JUNK CARS - TRUCKS, free tow anytime. FE ,2-0666. fn JUNK CARS, PAY FOR SOME, tree tow. 682-7080. ALWAYS BUYING j^K c; ■ 5-0201. TOP QUALITY NEW AND USED IMPORTED CARS & JEEPS ARE FOUND AT GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 OAKLAND AVENUE New and Used Cars 106 - New In the area ' - Garnished? -7 — Divorced? - SAVE MONEY AT MIKE SAVOIE CHEVY. 1900 W. Maple, Ml 4-2735. 1962 CORVAIR MONZA, eutomafic good condition, I bad lender, FE 8 CORVETTE^ASTBACK 327 FI St otter. 682-1504. TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS CORVAIR, automatic, radio ' '$595. Over 75 Other cars li :l from. On US 10 at M13 On M24 in Lake Orion MY 2-2411 7 CHEVY bTsCaWE. C 7 IMPALaV 2 DOOR hard MIKE SAVOIE CHEVY 1968 CHEVY Sport Coupe 1968 DODGE LAST CHANCE Many body styles, colors and equipment. Prices start at $1945 . LOOK AT THIS 964 T BIRD. Power and automati payments of $8.92. Call Mr. Par)( "'^harFl'd'turner'fo'rd or go camping it', Clearance special only $2888 fi price. Just $188 down. JOHN MCAULIFFE FORD FE 5-411 5 JEEP, CJ-5, 4-wheet d 1966 PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE station Wagon. Copper . matching Interior, v-8 automatic, radio, heater, power ' ' $1295 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH )0 MAPLE RD. TROYa Ml< Phohe 642-7000____ ^^JEEPSTER^^CC>MMANOO, I snow plows, 19M ‘ 4 doors,' r--- ering and bf itang conv. V8, pi S-1682r Milford. Buick LeSabre, 1 FORD HARDTOP. Power HAROLD TURNEIi FORD 4 S. Woodward______Birmingham MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 967' Plymouth Sports Fury con-reiilble, automatic, power steering ind brakes, dark green, black top, adlo, whitewalls, $2,095. 677 M-24 ■eke Orion, MY ^2041.__ IB ROAD RUNNER, autometlc. PONTIAC: When you Ouy It MARKET TIRE give it a safety check. 2635 Orchard I SAVE AUTO 1962 COMET SPECIAL 2 bucket seats, real fn, Riggins, Deafer. 1965 FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE 10 passenger wagon, r automatic, radio, hea steering, brakes, powe power seal, factory dltlonlng, this ur....... You'll Save Real Money IF YOU'LL HOLD OFF BUYING A USED CAR Until Monday Itoof gad llsyi Cora 106 I96S PONTIAC^ CAT7W.IKW, 2 door, ?SS!*tiea$Jv*$1295. 67W$S2’*i5Seif . PONTIAC TEMPEST 6-aas-sengar Italian wagon, 326 v-s engine, autometlc, clean, almost like brand new and has low ?aE£»?*?nSJ-Kk®f, EM 3-4155. 1966 PONTIAC EXECUTIVE. Air 6 GTO CONVERTIBLE, Ilka n< oaded, good buy, must sell, ' lerel Mr. Bennet, 6$14»34 o 1966 PONTIAC swing"' o^r 21,000 mM*>- Km: 651-9749 I 19^6 Pontiac GTO Automatic, full power, factory air, -J,..-.-,-.- CHEVROLET 1966^^EMPEST CUSTOM ' station 967 CATALINA 4 DOOR. Double power, automatic, radio. Sharp. $1895. 68> 967 GRAND PRIX, $2,550, air cond., power steering and brakes, FM stereo and tape, hydramatic, B windows, HO 420 engine, seels. 334-6108 after 5 p.m. LUCKY AUTO 1940 We wide Track FE 4-1006___or_____FE 3-7854 1967 TEMPEST CUSTOM WAGON, —f clean, make offer. Call 627-> (Collect). _____________ r, tinted windhsield, excellent. 1967 PONTIAC Catalina Sport Sedan Automatic, power steering, brakes, radio, heater, whitewalls, fender skirts, factory warranty, Granada gold finish. Only — $2295 967 BONNEVILLE 4 967 CATALINA STATION conditioned, double ir, 626-5710, after 5 p.m. I CATALINA VENTURA. 4r»'' 8,%2m FE ' LUCKY AUTO I960 LeMans hardtop demo ... Sava 1960.Catalina 2 door hardtop....$2495 1966 Bonneville hardtop coupe.. .$16?S 1967 Tempest custom 4-door ....$1595 1945 T-BIrd conv..............$1550 1965 Chevy Impela conv...... SII95 1965 Tempest conv. .. 6 975 KEEGO PONTIAC KEEGO HARBOR______________ 682-3400 1962 TEMPEST, EXCELLENT c< 1942 PONTIAC TEMPEST, $150. Also r steering, r, 59,000 ml. 0. OR 3-9144. HAUPT PONTIAC On M-15 at 1-75 Intersection Clarkston 625-5500 1963 RED LeMANS Convertible. Be sure to see our big ad, gSkJI. wcenem conamon. in that edition of The Pon-! .................................. ♦ D-dser ^’63 PONTIAC CATALINA, e TIOC rress. condition, reas. 391-3089. ^ ^.$5,000 down, *and $56.37 *per month. 'Bla Trade Allowance. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD ! 638 Oakland Ave.__ _____FE 5-418111250 dJv "iftef 1 ADKINS“AUt0~SALES ____[738 Oakland Ave. 332-4230 1963 Mercury Coupe, autc ---- 1963 Bel Air epe, 8 stick, 1962 LeMans Coupe, auto 968 FIREBIRD 480, powtr steering and brakes, hydramatic, cordova top, custom Interior, 1,500 miles, $2,600. 651-3639 after 6. MUST SELL, 1968 Pontiac GTO, e cellent condition, 628-1865. )968 PONTIAC GTO, new tiref ar —............ 6}4-U70 1968 FIREBIRD CONVERTIBLE, 350-3 speed, console, bucket seats, power top end brakes, low mileage. 33^552. 1963 RAMBLER STATION WAGON, 9600 Elliabeth Lk. Rd. 363-0349. 1968 JAVELIN 6 cylinder, standard trans., exc. condition. 796-3515 HILLSIDE Lincolp-Mercury cylinder, $700. Call 1965 FORD CONVERTIBLE. Power 7500. Perks credit manager at 5 MUSTANG, $895^ i 1945 FORD LTD 4-door hardtop, ---er brakes, steering windows air conditioning. 674-1915. HUNTERS SPECIAL completely outfitted both in excellent starting as low as $1395. AUTOBAHN 1965 COMET 2-Door stick, very good ditlon, radio, heater, whitewalls, i full price. RONEY'S AUTO, Baldwin Ave. FE 4-4909. 1966 FORD WAGON, 390 engine crulse-o-matic. double power, elec tailgate, $1,40o, 673-3039.____________ 7 Ford Custom 51 latiCs I wKite' 1965 PLYMOUTH frracuda, 2 door. special only $1788 full price. JusI $188 down and $57.80 per month. JOHN McAuliffe ford 630 Oakland Ave.________ SHELBY GT 350, 4 ET Mags, 4 Bd, call 363-9315, Steve. FALCON SPORT COUPE, ket seals, automatic, 31,000 es, new tires. $1345. McKENZIE FORD 2_[5^ Main St._ 651-6803 TOM RADEMACHER Chevy-Olds 1966 FORD LTD, 4 door, hare V8. automatic, power steering, pc black vinyl top. 1 owner, new trade. Over 75 others to ch from, On US 10 at M 15, Clark! Stick on the floor. Performs II__ well-trained Mustang should. Take over payments or pur^chase er--“- Original owner drafted. Cal?* nOTn Sun^y. 335-7943. 1966 FORD STATION WAGON Spartan Docige SELLS FOR LESS 15 Oakland Ava. $1395 BILL GOLLNG VW OK Maple Rd. (15 Mile) )96) Catalina > auto. Only $)95 1 MERCURY STATION wagon, latic transmission, double ■, FE 2-9557.____________________ 1963 PONTIAC LeMANS. FULL price $695, $0 down, $4.V e week. Cal' Mr. Frost credit manager at 642 3289. AUDETTE PONTIAC East of Birmingham In tha Troi Motor Mall, across from Ber; Airport.______642-86(X $895 Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Sales 5 MERCURY Con of $12.92. CHEVY. 1900 VV 1964 BONNEVILLE 2-door ht ‘Inted windshield, double | aoo, FE 5-7461 a"- ' M TEMPEST, V-8 HAROLD TURNER FORD S. Woodward B>rtn[nghan 1967 COMET 2-DOOR. Beautiful arctli while with blue Interior, sharp a 8 hounds tooth. Clearance specia only $1,488 full price. Just $8: "joVn‘‘mcMTfk'’f6rd 0 Oakland Aye^ _ FE 5^10 67 MERCURY COLONY Park,~lov 3 Auto, 681-0802. _ 1960 OLDSMOBILE. 4 door. No rust *' / tires, gke new, $300. 852-1141. "winter specials Plenty others, true from, ECONOMY CARS, 2335 sleerlng^^tlnled MERRY oHiYmO DEAL MERRY OLDSMOBILE 528 N. Main ROCHESTER, MICHIGAN . $750, call 682-1098._ LOOKING FOR A BARGAIN? try the PONTIAC RETAIL STORE FE 3-7951 964 ' L e M A N S CONVERTIBLE BeautKul original red finish with beige lop. 8 cylinder, automatic. $1195 (ull price, $0 down, $4.88 weekly. Call Mr. Frost, credit manager, at 642-3289. AUDETTE PONTIAC llrmlngham I 1964 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX, $995. "0" down, payments, 88.92 week. Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold Turner Ford, Birmingham. TEMPEST WAGON, IO^TIm motor, spotless, no rust, 29,000 miles. Original owner, $745, 882-6440. 5 BONNEVILLE BROUGH"/^, oor hardtop. $12M. 646-3534._ PONTIAC CATALINA AUDETTE PONTIAC East of Birmingham In the Troi Molor Mall, across from BerL ^j!lP?'’t^ ^ _ _ 642-8600 1966 PONTIAC TEMPEST, overhead earn, 1 owner, low mlltagt, condition, 8UOO, 432-6716. "AUTOBAHN YOUR VW CENTER tba greater Bloomflald-Ponllaq FE 84531 Tc. Factory Official Can Demonsfrators Personal Cars 1968 JAVELIN SS-T Hardtop. Matador red w black vinyl top. 6 cyllnr automatic. Radio, heater, whi walls and head rest. DEMO. $2298.40 1968 REBEL 770 4 door. Bahama bel| matching Interior, vr - --* power steering and b heated and whitewalls. OFFICE MANAGER'S CAR $2248.10 automatic, power steering. Visibility and light group. SERVICE MANAGER'S CAR $2287.70 1968 AMBASSADOR DPL Hardtop, 8 'automatic. Air con- Reclliilng seats, whitewalls and light group. Rally green body. Meadow green top. Luxury trim. 540 actual miles. Save over $1200. FACTORY OFFICIAL CAR $2864.10 1968 AMBASSADOR DPL Hardtop, 8 cylinder, automallc, power steering and brakes. Radio, heater, whitewalls and light group, SALES MANAGER CAR $2577.60 1968 JAVELIN SST Hardtop, vinyl root, rally stripe. 343 V8 4 barrel command package. Automatic, power steering and brakes. Deluxe Mag wheel covers. $2788.30 The above listed cars Include all taxes. (Michigan sale tax and ax- ’ DELIVERED DON'T SHOP STOP VILLAGE RAMBLER 666 S. WOODWARD 646-3900 THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURPAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1968 D—I« WILSON Bobby Morse and TV Wife Don't Agree on 'That's Life' By EARL WILSON NEW YORK — On this particular afternoon, Bobby Morse was gushing optimism about his TV show, “That’s Life,” which had just been renewed, and he was frank to say, “Are we glad to see you! We really need publicity. A lot ofi people don’t know what Bobby Morse is doing on his shbw.” This was rare humility for a star but Bobby and little E. J. Peaker, who plays his wife, elaborated on_jt sitting off in a comer of the ballroom of an older Broadway hotel used for rehearsals. “TTie checkout time here’s 3 a.m.,” Bobby laughed, and E. J. smiled though she didn’t look old enough to understand. The refreshing thing was E. J.’s doubts contrasted with Bobby’s optimism and his handling tlighl has amp lO-fl. cord that plugs in your cigarette lighter.Fi gertip on and off Adds n Makes your home more comfortable ii ter. Compact desi| eluded. Save 6.62. ling & Heating Dept. i§i weater Cl4»seoat ASSORTED KNITS Monday Only MISSES’ CARDIGANS, PULLOVERS A choice collection of bulkies and flat knits in a variety of classic and novelty styles. Choose from wools, wool blends and orlons, in a host of colors. Cardigan or pullover style. Misses’ sizes 34-40. 477 Women's Sports Long Sleeve Sweat Shirt 1.5 137 Warm sweat shirt with raglan sleeves is a warm blend of 95% cotton and 5% acrylic. Soft, fleece-like inside. Basic colors. S-M-L. Girls’ Cotton Corduroy Pants Were I 4.99 . 197 Wide wale corduroy pants for girls are per-■fect for playing or casual wear. Versatile basic colors in girls’ » 14. Seamless Mesh Panty Hose 99® Seamless 15 denier mesh hose have reinforced heel and toe. Beige,, sunset . and mocha col. n Petite, Average and tall s UmitSPair, Hosiery Dept. Just wind the key at her back and she moves! 14” tall, she has washable vinyl arms and legs, shiny saran hair and cuddly cloth body. DeuM Runner Skates 1.41 Save! Ice Skates HOCKEY AND FIGURE SKATES FOR ALL AGES Hockey akates in boya’ aizea 13-4, men’s 5-10. Figure akatea in boys’ Cm4*7 and girls’ sizes 13-3, men’s 4-il, * women’s 4-9. Beginner’s single run- , ners in sizes 12-3; double runner akates in 10-1. f0 8.99 Boys’ Hockey Skates.....6.97 9.99 Men’s Hockey Skatos.....7.97 7.99 Boys’, Giris’ Figure Skates ... 5.97 79 4 8.99 Men’s and Women’s M Figure Skatos..............8.97 ^ Beginner’s Single Runners...3.47 Beginner’s Double Runner........ 3.47 ChargB It! Sporting Goods Dept. Boys’ Perma-Prest® Wide Wale Cordnroyw 2»7 Regular and tlim models in caffless Ivy styling. Polyester blend, needs no ironing if machine washed and tumble dried. Fash-ion colors in sises 6-12. Boys' Apparel 3-Piece Set of Starline Luggage 29®'* Includes a Cosmetic Case, !1” Weekender, 26” Pull-man. All have long-lasting vinyl covers, gleaming brass-plated hardware, quilted interiors. Mist blue, mist green, French Kenmore 2-Speed Blender Reg. 24.99 Smooth blending from fluffy omelets to heavy bailer. 4-cup heat-resistant container, stainless steel blades, chrome-plated base. 400-W motor. al Applioi Sears Corded Electric Knife Ii 11^ Serrated stainless steel blade cuts most foods effortlessly, smoothly. Kasy grip chrome-plated plastic handle. 8-foot cord. 10.99 Knife . 8.88 Mini-Priced Goldmine Wallets 1®7, A great gift idea with space to spare. 4 fun-lo-carry styles; Bonanza classic Goldmine, the mini-GoIdmine and the triple-play. Exciting Holiday colors. I Transistorksed AM Clock Radio 24.1 6 19®^ Features instant aound solid state chassis, lighted clock face and alarm indicator. Handsomely alyled plastic cabinet with front mounted controls. Television & Radio Dept. Swivel Rocker 69«» III your ohoica of old fashioned country patch-work' or rustio tweed. Reversible cushions, sag-less springs. Mapla flnisb Wood trim, button-tnfled Holiday Shoppinit; Hour*: 9 to 0 Mon. thru Sat. Downtown Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171 SEAR.S, ROEBUCK AND CO. • Rides horse or trike. • 5 ■ • And she walks tool ' • Does many more things. * ■„ • Doll, horse and trike. PAGE 2 S'toPisethen'wdiking. • Kiss ear, she talks. • Says 11 f>hrases. < • On roller skates. DOLL DISCOUNTS FIH)MlWllHI!flF PAGE 3 E^VtSCOONTS AT YANKEE PAGE 5 FonUMNlV CHRISTMAS MORNING PAGE 6 HOW SANTA SAVED AT fitlK PAGE 7 DISCOUNT! PAGE 8 FUN N GAMES AT SA\fflllSllPB Forag«8tpoelult. : • Games galore in one package. • Roulette. Chess and Checkers. • Dice, Chips, Michigan Rummy. • Put & Take and Game of Mill. • Complete instruction booklet. PAGE 9 PAGE 10 PAGE 11 %iiNTA SAVES AT YANKEE PAGE 12 BI6 OPERATORS. BIG DlSWOmSi / PAGE 13 PAGE 14 YANKEE NAS MAnEl HmmSi \ W ' ' ' . ' V-' \ ■ \ V'^- ^ ^ MATm TOG’L sn NO. 200 99 • Build great toys that move. > With living-action blocks. • Hinges open, shut and bend. » Each block happily colored. 4 ay BLE EDIBLIS I rm ^06 # CHOICE # (XJpOY CX>OPERS Jit' ' A • AAake gumdrop critteriiS^^^^ i KOOKY KAKES^ • Make yummy %t Extra ingredients MAnEL TALKING HAND PUPPETS 99 YOUR CHOICE 4 • Your favorite characters • Hours of make-believe fun. Off To See The Wizard, Popeye, Dr. Dolittle and Bugs Bunny. MATTEL SEE’N SAY RIDE-AWAY TOYS FIRE ENGINE or RIDE-AWAY • Ride-on toys. • They talk too! • 12 road sounds. • 8 tire sounds. YOUR CHOICE 9 99 PAGE 15 PAGE 16 DISCOUNT ON FAMOUS MiSfWK ijv 6mw M -J KtMM0« in#' ItiAm Qiwtiifli.«n«wh9rik'‘>UW. /V>lr>r jOplor«IMb«. ,.jrSAIPEIWlW«%i.. ________ PAGE 17 ELOP SKIUS, REMCO IWIRPOd COMPACr TRAP DRUM SET 24 84 • Bass, snare, tom-tom. • 2 sticks and 2 brushes. • Snare throw-off, stand. • Factory tuned heads. • Foot pedal, bell block. • Adjustable tension lugs. PAGE 18 TOYS TO TEACH AT SAIMflSi f OPPa’S JOHNNY TOYlUNffll ' RmSostic iwwtoy concept. • Mokes cars, boats. • tt mokes toys thot-workl • Customize and paint nt them. 8»* wj,« ^ i, IMNAir lEADCItAFT ems :O*6EA0S TILE BEAD KIT '\p Jewelry kit. • Ceramic pictures. “IXIE PUPPETS FUN WITH FELT ‘ir» Cut-outs, board.. PAGE 19 PAGE 20 ,,, Wini jRAiNift £^S^fftdlS(6ryipp«p;^ trww f'dforiftsr. '>&ne fflocl«l engiiw, 31^'it.^W lnd«jd«ft to^modal frock. ^ PAGE 2’ M WtREE at YANKEE SAVINGS . A ' ' PAGE 22 DECK THE HALLS AT SKWReSt PAGE 23 .SAVE AT YANKEE! For Week of November 23-30 FRONT AND CENTER AT AAACrS PARADE Betty White and l..orne irreene attain will team up as eo-ho8ts to describe the pafzeantry and stellar entertainment at the 42nd annual Thanks-fdvin^ Day Parade. Coverage also includes exclusive colorcast of th^ st>ecial show to be performed outside of IVtacy’s in New York City. Movies on H 1^- SATURDAY 19:39 luii. (50) The Chinese Ring 12 noon (50) Angels With Dirty Faces 1:30 p.m. (2) 1. Valley of the Zombies; 2. The Incredibly Stra.nge Creatures Who Stopped Living and Became mixed-Up Zombies 2:00 p.m. (50) Sitting Pretty 3:30 p.m. (50) Planet of Blood C:30 p.m. (6^) Caged 8:30 p.iii. (G2) So This Is Love * 0:00 p;m. (4) Companions in Nightmare 11:00 p.m, (62) No Safety Ahead Utl5 p.m. (9) The Eternal Sea 11:30 pjn. (2) Anatomy of a Murder 11:30 p.m. (7) Days of Wine and Roses 1:35 n.m. (7) Secret Mission 2:00 a.m. (2) Atom-Age Vampire SUNDAY 11:30 a.m. (9) Uttle Miss Broadway 12 noon (56) Kentucl^ 1:00 ^.m. (2) Jason and the Argmauts 1:00 p.m. (9) Jcdinny Tiger 3:30 p.m. (9) McHale’s Navy 4:30 p.m. (62) So This Is Love \ 5:00 p.m, (7) Follow the Sun 6:30 p.m. (9) See How They ..Run' fi30 p.m. (62) Fate Takes a Hand 8:30 p.nt. (62) Four Bags 7:30 p.m. (56) Behind the Full Front 0:00 p.m. (7) 55 Days at Pn>- (62) Desert Peking Furlough 11:00 p.m. (62) Highway to Something (or aLmielyMan »« ll'jeQp.m. (62) Breakthrough 11:36 p.m. (2) Only the Valiant 11:36 p.m. (2) The Nun's Story 11:30 p.nL (9) Odd Man Out 1:30 a.m. (2) Manfish MONDAY 8:30 am. (7) My Sister Eileen 12:30 p.m. (50) Mr. 880 1:00 pjm. (9) m Get By 4:30 p.m. (7) Zorro the Av^ger 8:30 p.tiL (62) Breakthrough 7:36 pum. (9) The Breaking Point 8:30 p.nL (62) Striptease Murder 11:00 p.m. (62) Two Wolves at One Wedding 11:30 p.m. (2) My Fodish Heart 11:30 (9) Crime in the Streets 11:30 pjn« (50) Immortal Battalkm TUESH>AY 8:30 a.m, (7) The Miniver Story 12:30 p.m. (50) Blood and Sand 1:00 p.m. (9) Dallas 4:30 p.m. (7) Mr. Hobbs Takes a Vacation (Part 1) 8:30 p.m. (62) You're Only Young Twice 7:39 p.m. (9) And Now ftQguel 11:30 p.m. (9) The Prisrain commissioners and highway department representatives. Highway officials have pointed out it is up to township officials to call for formation of an as.sessment district. The drain improvement could also b e assessed at large as a benefit to the entire township, it has been pointed out. Owner of Store Is Killed by Car A Waterford Township businessman was killed in front of his store when he was struck by a car while crossing the street yesterday, according to township police. Dead is Ross A. Elliott, 59. of 210 m Oneida, Pontiac, part-owner of Elliott Furniture Co., Inc., 5400 Dixie. An employe at the firm said Elliott was coming back to work after eating across the street at Steak and Eggs Restaurant, 5395 Dixie, and he was killed directly in front of tile furniture store. ★ * ★ Police said driver of the car which struck him was Thomas J. Miller, 35, of 6624 Koselawn, Independence Township. The accident is still under investigation today, police said. Pontiac Div. Sales Set 10-Day Record Pontiac dealers had the best mid-November sales period in their history, Thomas L. King, F’ontiac Motor Division’s general sales manager, announced today. King said sales totaled 32,059 for the November 11-20 period. This compares to the 25,448 new cars solij. in the same period last year and represents a 15 per cent increase over the old record of 27,866 set during the middle of November in 1965. Russia Warns NATO Colorado^ Flu Epidemic CRASH SURVIVORS — Tense passengers from a downed Japan Air Lines jetliner fill a large life raft as it approaches a dock, a mile south of San Francisco International Airport. The raft was towed in from a half-mile off shore by a Coast Guard boat. All 107 persons aboard the plane were rescued. Tire plane was coming from Tokyo. (See story. Page A-2.) MOSCOW (UPI) - The Soviet Union warned the West today it would take “proper measures” to guard the Communist community against any moves of “the NATO war bloc.” ★ ★ * The statement released by Tass. was the first official Soviet reaction to the NATO Council’s warning the Soviet Union would face “grave consequences” if it carried our further Czechoslovak-style invasions. DENVER (UI’l) - Colorado is e^xpori-encing one of the most widesprefeid flu epidemics in its history, a state health official said yesterday. More than 100,-000 persons may eventually contract the influenza. Dr C S. Mollohan, of the state health department said the outbreak may equal the 1957' epidemic when :a,00() cases were reported and in which as many as 100,000 persons may have had the disease Check Shows Daylight Savings Time Loses From Our News Wires LANSING — Michigan apparently will be out of step with the rest of the nation next spring when it comes time to turn the clocks ahead for Daylight Saving Time. A just-completed, county-by-county check of the Nov. 5 state election returns spells apparent defeat for Daylight Savings Time by oniy 143 votes. * * ★ The unofficial tally of the vote? cast Nov. 5 showed the DST question approved by a margin of some 25,000 votes. But the secretary of state’s office yesterday revealed its almost official count shows the measure defeated, 1,402,414 to 1,402,002. * * * If the State Board of Canvassers ap-a formality — and if the final outcome proves the tally Monday — usually only survives any recounts that might be demanded, Michigan will stay on Standard Time year around, an exception to the Federal Uniform Time Act which» sets the day for the time switch for the nation. The vote reversal apparently was caused by an error in the total from Jackson County which on election night showed the proposition passing 20,059 to 1,828. * * * The final official return from the county placed the vote at 24,104 yes and 22,854 no — meaning the ‘no” side picked up more than 20,000 votes, enough to make the difference. ★ * * “We’re sure of our figures,” added State Elections Director Bernard Apol. Secretary of State James Hare noted, backers of daylight savings time could petition for a recount of the vote. The deadline is 48 hours after the returns arc certified by the Board of State Canvassers. Any citizen may petition for a recount, but must pay $5 for each precinct rechecked, Apol said. A statewide recount thus would cost more than $30,000. If the recount reversed the election outcome, the money would be refunded. * * * The time question in Michigan has a stormy history that dates from passage -^y Congress of the Federal Uniform Time Ac( of 1966. The federal act decreed savings time for the entire nation from the last Sunday in April until the last Sunday in ^October, but provided that a state could exempt itself from fast time by using its legislative process. * * ★ Michigan — joined only by Hawaii among thq. states — exempted itself by legislative act in 1967, but backers of savings time circulated referendum petitions and put the issue on the ballot. Michigan has been on savings time for the past two summers. 1, A—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. SA l’l RDAV, XpV-EMBER 28, 1908 Death Claims Leading Dentist Retired Pontiac dentist Dr. William A. Gordon,' former president and charter member pf the Oakland County Dental Association, died yesterday. He was 74. Service will be 3 p.m. Monday at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Surviving are his wife, Helen; three daughters, Mrs. Robert Boyce of Pontiac, Mrs. Jack Mills of Ann Arbor and Mrs. William Bowman of Indianapolis; two sons, William A. of Warren and Robert N. of Lansing; two brothers, Lee E. Gordon and Howard N. Gordon, both of Fenton; and 12 grandchildren. ★ A * A practicing dentist in the city for 37 years, and a resident since 1926, he served as president of the Pontiac Exchange Club and Hi Twelve. He was instrumental in the formation of the Oakland County Dental Association. A member of the First Congregational Church, he*^o was a life member of the BPOE B^a member of Lodge No. 21, a member of the Child Guidance Clinic Board, a member of the Oakland County Historical and Pioneer Society and served on the Urban League Board and the Police Trial Board. 7ons of Stone Used to Right Mine Fire DR. WILLIAM A. GORDON DR. C. G. DARLING JR. Hospital Official Is Dead at 69 Dr. Cyrenus G. Darling Jr., 69, who served as chief of surgery and chief of staff at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, died last night of a heart attack. A memorial service will be Tuesday in the Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co. Birmingham. Surviving are his wife, Aubrey; two sons, Cyrenus G. Darling III of Birmingham and David P. of San Francisco, Calif.; two grandsons; and a brother. Dr. D. B. Darling of lx)s Angeles. Calif. Dr. Darling of 401 Lone Pine Court, Bloomfield Hills, was a graduate of the University of Michigan Medical School. Dr. Darling served as president of the Oakland County Medical Society and was on the staff of Pontiac General and William Beaumont hospitals. He had also served as a medical director for Generaf Motors Corporation, A fellow of the American College of Surgeons, Dr. Darling was a member of Phi Kapa Psi and Nu Sigma Nu fraternities, Orchard Lake Country Club and the Old Club. Memorial tributes may be made to the Surgical Education Fund or the Heart Fund at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. MANNINGTON, W, Va. (AP) -Although termed a dangerous move, tons of big limestone chunks dropped down two air shafts today in another effort to fight the flames trapping 78 men in a coal mine. The roaring fire has"defied all efforts to bring it under control since a series of explosions ignited it before dawn Wednesday and trapped the men. The other 21 miners working the midnight shift managed to get to the surface or were pulled from air shafts. There has been no word from the 78 since the first of the explosions which apparently shattered the internal corh-munications of Mountaineer Coal Co. No. 9 mine. Mine officials hold little hope that the men are alive. The decision to fill the two shafts with the limestone blocks came last night. John Roberts, a public relations official of Consolidation Coal Co. Mountaineer’s parent firm, said the operation could take hours and would be an “extremely dangerous’’ task. GOING UKE BULLETS’ “They’ll be going out like bullets,’’ Roberts said, if mine pressures blow out the big blocks. Workers finished dumping the 1,000 tons of limestone down the air shafts at 3 a.m. today. * * it Five minutes before the last truckload of limestone was dumped another small explosion shot a puff of smoke and some fire into the air at the main portal where the original blast occurred. Consolidation Coal’s publicity director, James McCartney, said the “puff’’ was not large enough to cause alarm and not important enough to even wake company officials to tell them. McCartney said he had not determined whether the latest explosion—the first Mnce 4:30 a.m. Friday—was related to ' the dumping of limestone. Consolidation officials said earlier they did not want to risk other lives in the rescue efforts as long as the fire raged or there was the possibility of more explosions. j A blast early^yesterday sent tremors all the way to the company store, about four miles away, and shot flames streaking skyward. Roberts explained that engineers want at least 12 hours, and preferably 24, free of explosions and stable fire and gas conditions before rescue squads will be permitted to enter the shafts. For Secretary of State Cabinet Choice in Doubt NEW YORK (AP) - Richard M. Nixon’s search for a secretary of state is described by an associate as “still wide open’’ but the president-elect is said to be thinking now in terms of naming a career diplomat to the most prestigious post in his Cabinet. Sources said Nixon is not close to settling on a man for the assignment. But the president-elect was said to be seeking a candidate with a reputation in diplomacy and a long background in foreign service. Nixon is soliciting advice now on men who might meet his specifications. He talked about it yesterday with former Pennsylvania Gov. William W. Scranton, who once was rated a likely choice himself. Scranton said he had made it clear that he would not take a full-time government position but accepted some special assignments, Robert D. Murphy, 74, now in a State Department liaison assignment for the president-elect, has been ruled out as a Cabinet selection because of his age. The names of the men under active consideration ^re known only to Nixon and his innermost circle of advisers. Scranton said Nixon had asked, and he had agreed, to work with two of those Recipient of Second Heart Dies HOUSTON, Tex. m - The longest U.S. survivor of heart transplant surgery, Everett C. Thomas, 47, died today of problems which developed after he received a second donor heart. “His condition deteriorated steadily Friday night, with bleeding problems and diminishing kidney function culminating in irreversible cardiac arrest at 4 a.m.,’’ a St. Luke’s Episcopal Hospital spokesman said. Thomas, an accountant from Phoenix, Ariz., received his first transplanted heart May 3. Only Efr. Philip Blaiberg, 58, of Cape Town, South Africa, who received a new heart Jan. 2, has lived longer than Thomas following transplant surgery. NORMAL ROUTINE Thomas was discharged from St. Luke’s last summer and worked as a trust consultant. He was able to drive a car and once flew home to Phoenix for a shwt visit. His wife and two of their sons came here to live with him in an apartment. His second heart transplant followed by hours the first implant of a second donor heart into A person. Physicians at Stanford University Medical Center said Darrell Hammarley, 56, underwent two heart transplant operations within six hours Wednesday. Hammarley was reported progressing satisfactorily. Also making satisfactory progress is William Karraker, 49, of Stockton, Calif., who received Stanford’s ninth heart transplant Friday. REJECTED HEART Thomas was dismissed from the hospital here in July and began working at a bank. He reentered the hospital Oct 9 however, with signs of rejecting his first transplanted heart and physicians said he failed to respond to antirejection drugs. First to Get Second Heart Japanese Plane 'Crashes' Safely Info Frisco Bay SAN FRANCISCO (4>>-The 107 persons aboard a Japan Air Lines jet can thank the highest tide of the year and a cool pilot for their “one-in-a-million” survival of a crash-landing into San Francisco Bay. They didn’t even get their feet wet Friday when the DC8, arriving from Tokyo, bellied into the foggy shallows of the bay, a mile short of the runway at San Francisco International Airport, ★ ★ ★ A 10-man investigation team from the National Transportation Safety Board today begins probing the crash. At the point of impact, just off Coyote Point, 18 miles south of San Francisco there was a rising seven-foot tide—the highest of the year. MISSED RUNWAY The plane’s pilot, Kohei Asoh, 47, of Yokohama, with the airline 14 years, said his plane cut through the fog at 11 feet and settled into the water at a speed of 177 miles per hour. A spokesman for the National Transportation Safety Board here said the plane was guided to the runway by an electronic be^m and the pilot has to make corrections if the craft makes a faulty approach. ★ ★ ★ But Asoh said the plane’s mechanical system was functioning normally. advisers, John N. Mitchell and Lt. Gov. Robert Finch of California, in seeking personnel for the State Department. Scranton would name no one, saying only that they had discussed “lots of very good people.” In other developments: Scranton said he had agreed to take on special assignments for Nixon in a variety of fields, beginning with work on housing programs and the problems of the Appalachian region. -Finch was reported to be on the verge of accepting a major administration post, probably in the Cabinet, but was said to be delaying because of disagreement with Gov. Ronald Reagan over who would be chosen his successor as lieutenant governor. Suspended NY Official Speaks in City The Weather Fight for School Site Urged Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Mostly cloudy and mild today. High 53 to 58. Partly cloudy and not much temperature change tonight, low 35 to 40. Sunday sunny and pleasant. High 50 to 56. Monday outlook; Increasing cloudiness and mild. Winds southerly increasing to 12 to 20 miles per hour today becoming westerly at five to 12 mUes tonight and Sunday. Probabilities in precipitation; 10 per cent today. 10 per cent tonight, five per cent Sundhy. owntown Ttmperatures IS rtcordad downtown) Lnnsing 51 39 Milwaukee Muskegon 45 30 N^vv^York NATIONAL WEATHER — Showers are forecast for tonight in the Pacific Northwest and in^a band from southern Texas to southern New England. There will be mixed showers and snow flumes in western Montana and ^upircr New England. It will be colder throughout most of the natioi^xcept Florida. ^ . * Some 250 Pontiac parents were told College, said after Mrs. Rooke’^ talk, last night by a suspended board member “The schools and school personnel are of Brooklyn s Ocean Hill-Brownsville accountable for what happens and what experimental school district to “stick ^ together” in their fight for a high school downtown. Most parents attending were Negroes. Mrs. Elain Rooke talked on the monthlong New York City teachers strike which ended this week in the absence of Rhody McCoy, the district’s unit administrator, who was scheduled to speak at Bethune School. “t just wish I’d lived here for three months,” commented Mrs. Rooke. “I’d get me 10 parents together and you can rest assured that school would be built where the blacks want it.” Ocean Hill-Brownsville, a Negro and Puerto Rican slum area of Brooklyn, is an experimental school district under community control. It was the local point of three New York City strikes this school year and another last spring. ‘ Keep on fighting,” Mrs. Rooke, advised ‘If parents stick together, someday you'll get exactly what you want. .She explained that Ihe Ocean llill-Browrtsville School District was startl'd because parents were ' sick and tired of the white power structure telling blacks what to do " When the Pontiac Board n|f Education decided to put the super high school for 4,,'jOO students adjacent to Pontiac State Hospital rather than in the Negro area around Orchard Lake Avenue and Bagley, threats were made of black control of schools STjlJjfED BEHIND •McCoy, who was reinstated as unit administrator Wedne.sday, stayed behind to handle the continuing trouble, otherwise “all eight schools would go up 111 flames," according to Mrs. Rooke. Community control of schools is coming because parents feel central control doesn't meet the special needs of their children, Reginald Wilson, associate dean of testing at Oakland Community 0 ^ HIGH SCHOOL SITE — Surveyors tor Arthur W'. Gillespie Associates, con.sult-ing engineers, in Birmingham are preparing topography information for construction of the Pontiac school district's new super high school on Ihe grounds of Pontiac State Hospital Tlie surveyors began at the site - Eli/abcHi Lake and State — Wednesday afternoyn. The school board approved the site selection Monday. Biltningham New W. Maple School Set to Open Tuesday Oxford Twp. Gl Killed in Combat An Oxford Township soldier was among the recent combat deaths in Vietnam. Killed at Da Nang Nov. 20 was Pfc. Donald P. Evans, whose wife. Sharon, lives at 1375 Indian Lake. Evans was an Oxford area resident and attended schools there. Both his parents are deceased. He was an apprentice electrician before being drafted into the Army this March. SINGE SEPTEMBER Evans had been in Vietnam since September serving with Co. D, 5th Battalion, 7th Cavalry Airmobile. His wife said she and Evans had been married one day before he left for induction. He had two leaves prior to shipment overseas, she said. His body is to be brought back to the area for burial. BIRMINGHAM - The new West Maple Junior High School, Inkster and Maple roads, is scheduled to open Tuesday, pending final inspection of the building. The principal is William Blackwell, and the assistant is Robert Olson. * * -k West Maple students will not attend classes on Monday, while administrators and teachers make the necessary preparations for moving into the new school. Classes will resume Tuesday at 8:30 a m. All classroom areas and school offices will be ready except the gymnasium, cafeteria and swimming pool. These are expected to be completed about the first of the year. $3-MILL10N SCHOOL The cost of West Maple is $3,160,000, including construction and equipment. The school, with a capacity of 825 students, was designed by O’Dell, Hewlett and Luckenbach. Inc., Architects and Engineers, Birmingham. West Maple is a team-teaching, flexible schedueled school similar to Covington Junior High. This fall West Maple students have been attending Covington Junior High on double session Students at Covington will resume regular school hours, 8:30 a.m.-3:40 p.m. on Monday. is to be done for students,” he said. “Boards of education are only answerable to themselves.” BLOOMFIELD HILLS - A former area resident will return to this city Monday to speak at the opening of the Cranbrook segment of the 14th annual forum of the American Institute of Architects. William R. Ewald Jr , a 1940 graduate of Bloomfield Hills High School and onetime member of the Detroit Planning Commission, will be the speaker for the program which begins at 9:30 a.m. at j the Cranbrook Gal- | lery of Arts Hall. Topic for his pres- • entation, which will EWALD include a multicamera, multispeaker movie, is “A Future Full of Change.” Ewald, a design consultant with offices in Washington, DC., has served as assistant commissioner of the Urban Renewal Administration, senior vice president of Doxiadis Associates, Inc., and chief of development for the Arkansas Industrial Development Commission undff Gov. W i n t h r 0 p Rockefeller. The forurn, which opens today in Ann Arbor, will include representatives from student chapters of the AIA in 91 schools of architecture in the United States. After the Cranbrook program, delegates will tour inner-city areas in Detroit, the General Motors Technical Center in Warren and the F’ord Motor Co. plant in River Rouge before returning to Ann Arbor. Jerusalem Is Quiet After Bombing JERUSALEM U’l — The Arab sector of the Holy City remained quiet under a tight curfew today while Israeli investigators probed yesterday’s market blast that killed 12 persons and injured more than 50 including at least 17 seriously injured. The curlew, imposed at 8 p.m. yesterday, was lo remain in effect indefinitelyv Border troops and police patrolled the narrow streets in the old walled city and the wide thoroughfares of the new business sector. Others stood guard at the entrance to the Arab quarters,, stopping all Arabs trying to return to East Jerusalem. t A—4 S33V(i H3A0 im THE rOXTIAC PRESS. SAT^U1)A^^ XOVKM MKH i i, HXiS Gag Rule Lifted in Crash Investigations WASHINGTON (AP) - The National Transportation Safety Board, charged with probing all fatal air crashes, has lifted a rule that sealed the lips of investigators for more than a quarter century. The board confirmed Friday that an order put into effect without publicity Oct. 23 instructed its 11 field offices make public promptly any factual information about aircraft accidents in their area. I ★ ★ ★ The field men—those closest to the accident, and therefore the best informed-heretofore; All field chiefs have been| is the collection of useful infor- the NTSB took over its investi-, have been almost completelyjbriefed on the new procedures, imalion as to aircraft acci- gative duties two years ago felt under wraps. and provided with a fact bookidents, ’ O'Connell told the field it had to play iLs cards so close Uunder the old--'part 311" of on how to release information!men. This information is nojto its vest, and to restrict the regulations of the Civil Aeronau-and the extent to which theyigood unless we disseminate it.jrelease of accident information tics Board, they were allowed j may go. ^ The gag rule is inconsistent with j so tightly only to tell newktnen the name: / * * * concept of accident' O’Connell CAR rhairman of the pilot identify the plane as . In effect, instructions fromiprevenUon ' ,350 to type and say whether the ac- saWy Board Chairman Joseph;CALLED IRONIC investigators commonly became cdent was fatal. J. OConne I Jr are to give the; pjeid officers are instructed so preoccupied with finding the DELAYED INFORMATION f^cts openly, freely and in an j,ot to wait to be queried about causes of accidents and with Beyond that they could only above-board manner but not tojan accident but to telephone!pinpointing blame that they ov-refer questioners to CAB head- gel involved in speculation as to news media immediately onierlooked the need to distribute quarters in Washington, a proc- what happened or as to the' such an occurrence. the information to make it of ess that could delay detailed in- causes of an accident. O’Connell said it was ironic any use. formation on crashes for days. ; "Our business in investigating that the CAB for 25 years before' He said the Federal Aviation! Administration, with the delegated authority to investigate nonfatal light-plane accidents— 80 to 85 per cent of the total accidents are in this category—all along has had a more liberal policy permitting field men to give out accident data. BIBLE REBINDING CHRISTIAN LITERATURE SALES 55 Oakland A\e. fE 4-9591 LOVE LICENSE — Mrs. Elsie Steeh, an employe of the State License .Bureau, found license "Love-Me” when she opened a shipment of new plates at the Warren bureau. The shipment was from Southern Michigan Prison at Jack-son. Prisoners make about nine million plates annually, and each year a few odd messages find their way to the outside world. Sheriffs' Schools EAST LANSING lyP) - Some 40 newly elected sheriffs and deputies are expected to attend the 15th in a series of “schools” held for them at Michigan State Police Headquarters in East Lansing. The session, planned for Dec. 2-6, is sponsored by the' Michigan Sheriffs Association ^ and the State Police. ' Legendary Career Ends SEATTLE (AP) — Near the most community, recalled on a s Seattle visit Friday that his I 1- long-time friend was a “quiet” - hero with steel nerves and thei V ability to fly into dangerous] Arctic ice areas where few e others dared venture. “He had an eye for judging; J thickness and character of ice, g which gave him confidence to| f land where few others would,”! e Brewer recalled in an interview.' I “He was almost an artist with y his plane.” top of the world, yrhere the days are dark and below-zero all winter, Robert J. Fischer lived— and died—doing what he knew and loved best. For more than a decade, the 37-year-old bush pilot’s daily routine often involved life and death. Thursday he died, along with six others, in the crash of his twin-engine plane near the frozen Barrow, Alaska, airstrip where his many daring mercy missions made him a legend in the Great North. Since Fischer first started j * ★ * Hying in Alaska in the early; He was headed out of Barrow 1950s, after moving from with members of the Alaska Wilkes-Barre, Pa., he was in-Governor’s Employment Advi-jvolved in dozens of rescue mi.s-sory Compaission when his]sions and credited with saving plane developed engine trouble]n^any lives, and went down near where hu- * * ★ morist Will Rogers and aviator In 1960 he conducted three Wiley Post died in a plane crash emergency rescue operations in 1935. jfrom Ice Island T3, operated by ★ ★ * jthe Air Force off Alaska’s north One of the men who knew]coast. Fischer best called him “one of HEROIC EXPLOITS the great Alaska pilots,” a spe-! " , , ' , cial breed among themselves. \ was E ischer s ability as a pilot which permitted him to STEEL NERVES | jgpd on the ocean pack in the, Max Brewer, director of the month of July. He rescued one! Arctic Research Laboratory at man in an emergency and 12 j Barrow, Alaska's northem-jdays later returned to pick up' EARN 4 75"/“ I !K YEARLY... The Highest Legal Return on Passbook Savings! Passbook savings earn the highest permissibie iegai return when you place reserve funds here. Don't take iess for your savings! Encourage Community Growth — SAVE . . where money works for you and your city. CAPITOL SAVINGS & LOAN 108 N. Saginaw, Downtown Pontiac, EE 3-7114 Monday Only Special - Save ^10 on KAYTONE 16-TRS. AM VHP (POLICE) Portable Radio another man who lost an arm in] an accident. ★ ★ ★ For this Fischer was awarded' the Distinguished Service Med-i al, the highest award the mili-! tary can bestow upon a civilian.] In October the same year, Fischer was called to help in a] rescue mission when a man was! badly injured in an explosion on! the Ice Island. Fischer also flew risky mis-! sions in the 1950s into the Arctic ~ Circle for government survey teams who were mapping what was to become the Dew Line early warning system to spot enemy aircraft. In 1958 he became chief pilot for Arctic Research Laboratory; —a position he held for 8'2 years until forming his own firm, Barrow Air Taxi. POLAR FLIGHTS i He also flew biologists into far reaches of the polar ice cap to study the behavior of polar bears. E'ischer is survived by his widow and six children who live] at Barrow, just south of the po-| lar cap. Reg. S32.88, Seller — Now • Solid state 16-tronsistor radio with AC/DC built-in adapter • Deluxe performance • With earphone, battery and UL approved cord • No Money Down • Easy Credit Terms. $2268 PARK FREE IN WKCS Lot at Rear of Store or 1-Hr. in Downtown Parking ^Moll in Front— Have Ticket Stamped at Cashier's Office OPEN MONDAY 9:30 a.m. to 9 p.rri^ 1$ Qnneui ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY ^ REDUCED MON., NOV. 25 THRU SAT., NOV. 30 ONLY! OUR HANDSOME FASHION MANOR® TOWELS IN BATH TOWELS REG. 1.75 NOW HAND TOWELS, REG. 95^, NOW 77' WASHCLOTHS, REG. 55<^, NOW 44‘ Redecorate your bath for the holidays! Solve your gift problems, tool All these towels are color coordinated. They’re dense luscious pile to make drying ofF pure pleasure. You’d think they cost much morel Colors from potent to pale. Hurryl Don't miss these fantastic saYingsl JACQUARDS, FLORAL PRINTS, DECORATOR SOLIDS. FAME’ versatile solid color towels with dobby border in colors to complement patterned towels. Moss green, honey gold, blue, white,, bittersweet. ‘INSPIRATION* Posh flowers in woven through jacquard weave. High fashion colors —like honey gold, greening, persimmon. ROSE GARLAND' beautiful floral screen print that reverses to solid. Bath and hand towels ore fringed! Choose baby pink, yellow, hyacinth. INFATUATION’ Woven jacquard cotton terry towel ensemble with fringed ends. Colors gold, pink. DAISY DELIGHT’ Screen print reversible to solid color cotton terry towel ensemble with fringed ends. Gold, green, rose. PENN-PREST CONTEMPORARY TABLECLOTH SET WITH THE LOOK OF LINEN Tablecloth and matching napkins of Penn-Prest Avril* royon/coftpn that’s oil beauty and no work. Handsome leno weave. Just machine wash, tumble dry and never ironi White, antique gold, olive, beige, tangerine. 52"x70" ^4 52"x52’ ^3 60"x90" ^7 set of 4 matching napkins ^ ^0 ‘FESTIVAL’ TABLECLOTH IN HIGH FASHION COLORS PENN-PREST NEVER IRONI WITH SOIL RELEASE! Imagine a toblecloth fhof you never hove to iron. Never worry about spills either! Penn-Prest to machine wash and tumble dry. With Soil Release to aid in the removol of most stains. Set a beautiful table in Sumptuous colors like honey gold, moss green, tangerine, white. 51“ X 7(T *6 . TlliaMM I S«. USf SHOP EARLY NOW AND SAVE . . . CHARGE IT! . s ysH ■Ttf 6CTx9(r 59 • \ THE PONTPAC PRESS. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1968 nwc UNREFRESHING PAUSE — Firemen scale ladders to get at a blaze at the Coca'Cola Bottling Co., 1130 W. Wide Track. The fire broke out around noon yesterday in a second floor storage are*a in a building adjacent to the main plant and was brought under control about 1 p.m. Fire officials said they will make an official ' damage estimate after inspecting the area Monday. “BFc’uc Grown Big by Staying Small" Traffic Victim's Funeral Slated Ross A. Elliott, part ovvner of Elliott Furniture Co. of 5400 Dixie Highway, Waterford Township, died last night after being struck by a car. Funeral service will be at 1:30 p.m. Monday at the First Baptist Church. His body is at the Huntoon Funeral Home. Mr. Elliott, 58, lived at 210 Oneida. He was a member of the First Baptist Church. ★ ★ ★ Surviving are his wife, Wanda, three sons, Peter, Mark and Robert; four brothers, Harold of Ortonville, Dodge of Clarkston. Leonard and ^ewart, both of Waterford Township, 1 sister. Deaths in Pontiac, Nearby Areas ’■ J!"* ‘ « Cl'- 1-75 Crash Injures local Woman, 45 A Pontiac woman was injured in a traffic accident near Midland last night and is critical condition today Midland Hospital. Mrs. Mae E. Jaruzel, 45, 94 E. Longfellow, was involved in a two-car crash on 1-75 Larkin Township about 7 p.m. She was alone in her car. The driver of the other car involved was hospitalized, but not apparently with serious injuries. James R. Bayley e r v i c e for two-month-old James R. Bayley, son of Mrs. John W. Bayley, 229 E. Wilton, will be 1 p.m. Monday at Voor-hees-Siple Funeral Home with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. The child died of a sudden illness yesterday. Surviving are his parents; two brothers, Jeffrey and John, at home; and grandparents, Riley Hickman of Pontiac, Mrs. Earl Reason of Waterford Township and Mrs. Isabelle Bayley of Pontiac. Mrs. Ollie R. Branham Service for Mrs. Ollie R. (Beulah) Branham, 50, of 1062 Olson, Waterford Township, will be 1 p.m. Monday at Donelson-Johns Funeral Home with burial in Ottawa Park Cemetery. Mrs. Branham died yesterday. Surviving are her husband; a daughter, Mrs. Edmund Adams Waterford Township: sister, Mrs. Earl Hook of Waterford Township; and a granddaughter. Mrs. John C. Bushart Service for Mrs. John C. (Dorothy) Bushart, 50, of 4861 Pontiac Lake, Waterford Town» ship, will be 11 a.m. Monday at Peace Lutheran Church with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy, by Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. Mrs. Bushart died yesterday. Surviving are her husband; a daughter, Dorothy, and a son, John, both at home; and a brother. Memorials may be made to Peace Lutheran Church. Harley Davis Sr. Service for Harley Davis Sr., 85, of 249 Edison will be 3 p.m. Monday at the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home, with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. He died Friday. Mr. Davis was retired from Fisher Body Division, and a member of the Calvary Missionary Church. Surviving are his wif6. Rose; TO sons, Harley S. of Hale, Rev. Weldon E. of Toledo, three daughters, Mrs. Fred Peter of Romulus; Mrs. Clyde Petty and Mrs. Marvin Lucas, both of Pontiac; 14 grandchildren, and one great-grandchild. Charles S. Enfield Service tor Charles S. Enfield, 65, of 258 Auburn will be 10:30 a.m. Monday at the Voorhees-Siple Chapel with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mr. Enfield, a dry cleaner, died Monday. Surviving are a brother, William Enfield, and a sister, Mrs. Christine Karnoogian, both of Pontiac. Elbie Williams Service for Elbie Williams, 44, of 277 Osmun will be 11 a m. Monday at the Frank Car-ruthers Funeral Home with burial Wednesday in New Orleans, La. Mr. Williams, a construction worker, died Thursday. iving are his wife, Kathalyn and his parents, Mr, and Mrs. Frank B. Williams ofl New Orleans. | Andrew Christopher TROY — Service for former resident Andrew Christopher, 81, of Margate, Fla., will be 1 p.m. Tuesday at Price Funeral Made to Measure Home with Masonic graveside service at Roseland Park Cemetery, Berkley. Christopher, a retired Chrysler Corp. employe, /died Thursday. Surviving are his wife, Feni; three daughters, Mrs. Dorothy Schultz of Clawson, Mrs Charles Beacham ot Troy and Mrs. D. Z. Rutledge of Warren; a stepdaugher, Mrs. Lee GiroUX of Margate, Fla.; a stepson, L. Jay Clark of Waterford Township; five, grandchildren; stepgrandchildren; four great-grandchildren; and nine stepgreat-grandchildren. Mrs. Clare L. Magoon AVON TOWNSHIP - Service for Mrs. Clare L. (June Tienken) Magoon, 52, of 719 Apple Hill will be 2 p.m. Monday at Pixley MemorUl Cht^l, Rochester, with entombment at Mount Avon Mausoleum. Mrs. Magoon died this morning. She served as chairman of the fund-raising committee for Roeper City and Country Day School, Bloomfield Hills; and as a member of the Rochester Cotillion Club and Town and County Guild ’of Fir Congregational Church. Surviving are her husband son, William J. a student at Phillip Exeter Academy, Exeter, N. H.; and her mother, Mrs. William Tienken of Rochester. ManfretTj. Seabrook OXFORD — Service f o r Manfred J. Seabrook, 58, of 145 Minnetonka will be H a.m. Monday at the B o s s a r d e t Funeral Home, with burial in White Chapel M e m o r i Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Seabrook, a farmer and a member of the Michigan Farm Bureau, East Orion Group, died yesterday. Surviving are his wife Lucille; two sons, Wesley of Pontiac and Gerald of Oxford; two brothers; two sisters, and seven grandchildren. Henry H. Spencer OXFORD — Service for Henry H. Spencer, 79, of 1429 Roy will be 2 p.m. Monday at the Bossardet Funeral Home, with burial in Ridgelawn Cemetery. Mr. Spencer, a custodian, died Thursday. He is survived by one brother. Jess W. Tippett OXFORD — Service for Jess W. Tippett, 50, of 91 East, will be Monday in Bryson City, N. C. Mr. Tippett, service station attendant, died Thursday. Surviving are his wife, Regina; three sons, Johnnie and Claude, both at home, and Ernest of Pontiac; a daughter, Mrs. Charles Hahn of Detroit; two brothers, Fred Tippett of Pontiac and Ralph Tippett of Waterford Township; two sisters; and four grandchildren. Philip Tribelhorn BIRMINGHAM - Philip Tribelhorn, 80, of 951 Ruffner died yesterday. His body is at Manley Bailey Funeral Home. 6 Rezoning Plans Six rezoning requests will he ccmsidered by the Waterford Township Board of Trustees at their meeting at 7:30 p.m. Monday at the township offices, Highland ,ai)d Crescent Lake roads. Also on the agenda are two lot-split requests. The word for cattle in Gaelic I “feah,” which ultimately became the English word fee. News in Brief Rummage Sale, Sun. 24, Mon. and Tues., 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.. Congregation B’Nai Is 143 Oneida Rd., Pont. — YOUR CHRISTMAS DECORATION HEADQUARTERS IS BRUNNER’S IN FRANKENMUfTH Select your Christmas Decorating needs from Bronner’s two Salesrooms in Frankenmuth, featuring America’s largest year-round display. Clirislmas Decorations make fine gifts. Gift ceritficates are available. BRONNER’S MAIN SHOWROOMS feature Nativity sets, candles and a wide Variety of indoor and outdoor Christmas decorations for commercial and home use. BRONNER’S “TANNENBAUM SHOP” (directly across the street) features the largest selection of hand-blown glass ornaments from around the world; over fifty life-like trees completely decorated to a theme and unusual decorative lights. Bring your friends, neighbors and out-of-town guests to BRONNER’S for the happiest Christmas ever. SHOWROOM HOURS: Mon. thru Sat. 9-.'),| Thurs. eve. until 3; and Sun. 2-5 until Christmas. For most convenient shopping, please visit weekdays. CLOSED THANKSGIVING DAY BUY! SELL! TRADE!... USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS 200 Samples to Choose from Delivery Before Christmas The Pontiae Mall 682-1191 Waterford to Eye Hunter Wounded GLADWIN m - Lewis E. Thomas, 26, of Gladwin was shot and wounded accidentaUv Thursday by his brother-fn-law, Allen Doan, 28, also trf Gladwin, while they were deer bqnting in northern Gladwin C()unty. A rifled bullet hit Thomas to the thigh. KATHY PkATT Is^Now at La Vergno't Huron 15 ROOM BRICK • .»r. WEST SIDE Approximatoly 11,000 iquaro foot of uaoblo oroo idoal for offices, dMioni clinic, unlor. hall, church, otc., proporty being in oxcallont condition. Spaciouo rooms on first and second floor, center and •Ido ontrancas, front and roor stairs, 4 lavatories 4 both. Full ■ lot for parking. $59,500, terms. WE WILL TRADE ANNEH INC REALTORS 28 I. HURON, PONTIAC, 338-0466 Office Open Evenings & Sunday 1 to 4 SHOP SUNDAY 12 TO 6 9’/i^’dSEcve A (diamond for Christmas is the gift that is forever ... the favorite way to say 'Happy Holiday! Set in a cluster with the fiery white sparkle of diamonds that seem to twine around her finger. To wear alone or with a solitaire, the glamorous wide diamond wedding band. Most effective — One of the loveliest choices you can make — Remember the beautiful contrast of Blue Sapphire, precious emeralds, and deep red rubies — With the icy glitter of diamonds. styles From $100 Charge • Layateay • Michigan Banknrd OPEN FRIDAY EVENINGS JEWELERS DOWNTOWN PONTIAC I Corner of Huron and Saginaw Street FE 2-0294 •f QUILT-LINED VINYL SUEDE CARCOAT..A KNOCKOUT BUY! The carcoat that sells out as fast as we put it in stock! Dashing suede vinyl with notch collar. CTOvered buttons, panel front, belted back. Plus a warm quilted rayon lining. And only 5.88. Fall tones; sizes 10 to 18. only 88 LONG SLEEVE TURTLENECK ACRYLIC KNIT SHIRTS f ulf-feshfonod for better Ml Stick your neck out in style... wear our handsome acrylic knits with mock or full turtlenecks... handsomely tailored and extra-value pricedl Solids, eOTh STO''ES stripes, contrast trims open Sunday ...S-M-L-XL(14-17.> PONTIAC CLARKSTON 200 North Saginaw 6460 Dixie Highway Free Parking Just North of Waterford Hill For Above Average Site and Exceptional Value, Visit Our Big Men'i Shop at 16051 Grand River or 8800 Van Dyke