T TTTTTF^TW The Weather 0.1. W**th*r >urnu ForxMl Overcast (Dalalli pi«» t) v THREE COLORS THE PONTIAC PRESS m ‘f; emorial Day v Edition VOL. 126 — NO. 98 ★ ★ ★ ★ THE *PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1968 10« Message Spurs Hunt for Submarine Radio Call Hoax? NORFOLK, Va. (AP) - The massive search for the atomic submarine Scorpion and her 99-man crew centered off the Virginia capes today after receipt of a radio signal from a sender identifying itself as the missing craft. A patrol plane and six ships reported picking up last night a “very clear" signal. But a Navy spokesman said early today, “It could be a hoax.” ★ * * Cmdr. T. L. Ingraham, public affairs officer of the Atlantic Flee its submarine force also t61d a news conference, however: "The Navy still maintains hope.” The submarine, missing since Monday, is the object of the greatest air sea search ever mounted by the Navy — 10,000 men, 55 ships and 30 planes. NO FURTHER MESSAGES The radio message was picked up when the patrol plane receiving it was 110 miles east of Norfolk. Search units were concentrated in an area stretching from 110 miles to more than 300 miles east of Norfolk. But no further radio transmissions were reported. The sole message said: “Any station this network. This is (and then gave the code name for the Scorpion).’’ ★ ★ ★ The Navy said the code name has been repeated numerous times in c6m- munications among the search force ships and planes Ingraham said the Navy did not definitely believe the message came from the Scorpion. He added it could have come from a shore radio. CAUTION URGED The Pentagon previously cautioned against overoptimism that a dramatic development had occurred. I^ike Ingraham, the - Pentagon said the message could have been a hoax. Na^y sources said one of the craft picking up the message was the nuclear submarine Lapon, which was 300 miles east of Norfolk. They said the Lapon took a bearing of 075 degrees east northeast of the signal, which would place' the transmitting point farther out to sea. . „ Ingraham said, “It is extremely doubtful that a transmission of this type could be originated by a submarine that may be submerged or bottomed in that vicinity”—the general area where the signal was heard. jj. . He said the Scorpion “certainly would know a search was in progress for her” and “she would be on the surface” transtnitting. Ingraham reported the ocean in the general area where the signal was heard is 12,000 feet deep. This is well beyond the continental shelf, which extends some 70 to 80 miles seaward. Explosion at Day Nursery Kills 7 Children, 2 Adults Memorial Day-and Another War By Newspaper Enterprise Association It was in 1868 that John A. Logan, ommander in chief of the Grand Army f the Republic, directed that all G.A.R. osts set aside the 30th of May “for the. urpose Of strewing with flowers or therwise decorating the graves of com-ades who died in defense of their coun-ry during the late rebellion.” At first, and for long afterward, called decoration Day, the day was later hanged to Memorial Day and came to >e a time in which to honor the dead of ill wars, not just those of the Civil War. Today, thp heroes’ graves we would strew with flowers have multiplied by the tens of thousands- and lie scattered about the entire world. In the 100 years since that first Memorial Day, five more wars have called America’s sons to fight and die in places far from home, places whose once-strange names are indelibly etched into history — San Juan Hill... Belleau Woods . . . Bastogne and Iwo Jima ... Missionary Ridge ... Khe Sanh , . , * * ★ Reckoning the Vietnam conflict from 1965, when massive American involve-ment hegan, 1968 marks the 14th year that Memorial Day, a day bom in the aftermath of war, has been observed in the midst of war. Fourteen years of war as opposed to 86 of peace — or what passes for peace in the affairs of nations. * * * Mathematically, peace would seem to have the best of it. Each new war, however, and each between wars period, -has seen thejdevelopment of ever more terrible engines of death. The present “limited” war has witnessed the routine employment of more concentrated destruction than even dur- ing World War II. The brief desert battles in the six-day Arab-Israell war eclipsed even the mass tank warfare of 1941 and ’42 in numbers of vehicles engaged and destroyed. Yet, men have managed to limit war, compared to what they could unleash. (Though What soldier killed this morning died a “limited” death?) County's Viet Casualties (EDITOR'S NOTE — The following is a list of Oakland County servicemen who have died in Vietnam this year. Any names that aren’t included were unavail-able at the Oakland County Department, of Veterans’‘Affairs.) Serviceman and Month of Home.Town Death Sgt. James L. Mcllroy, Army South Lyon ' . January Pfc. Joseph C. Wiar, USMC Royal Oak January Pfc. Donald/L. Perkett, Army P Femdale January Pfc. Roy D. McGeej Army Oxford January 2nd Lt! Patrick R. Wolfe, Army Waterford Township January Pfc. Gary D. Roerink, Army Pontiac y January Lance Cpl. Patrick Murphy. Army. Southfield ) February Cpl James F. Baucom, U.S.M.C. , Lapeer February Sgt. Michael .A. Grieve Hazel Park February Spec. 4 William A. Sawder, Army Rochester1 February Pfc. Gregory J. Evans Union Lake February Pfc. David E. Wedhocn, Army Union Lake February Cpl. James R. Hedger, USMC Pbntiac 7r~7 , February Pfc. Dennis P. Clancy, Army Royal Oak February Pfc. Patrick'C. Mcllroy, Army Pontiac March A Pfc, Thomas L. Taffee Union Lake. March Bui. 3 John F. Peek, Navy - Pontiac; March Spec. 5 Thomas Levpque, Army Pontiac March Lance Cpl. Voyd E. Tidwell, USMC Pontiac March Pfc. David C. Moore, USMC Pontiag, Staff Sgt. Jack E. GorbeyfArmy Pontiac March Lance Cpl. James Thomas Sutton Ortonville ——— .---------April Sgt. Jerry R. Dundas, Army Oak Park < April Pfc. Gary A. Ryden, Army Pontiac - ---------------- April , Spec!. 4 Robert L. Caswell, Army Pontiac * April Spec. 4 Russell j. Heliker, Army .Walled Lake May SJpec. 4 John M. Michalskl Hazel Park May Spec. 4 Thomas A. Barrett, Army ' Pontiac May Pfc. Leslie Aputen, USMC Pontiac There may be wars and rumors of wars as far ahead as we can see. The graves will multiply, so long as the ideals for which the first American soldier died require the extreme sacrifice of succeeding generations of brave men. But one day the last soldier’s grave will be filled. This wjj must believe. And on that day, perhaps a new verse to the beloved “Taps” will tell all those who rest in honored glory that their deaths were not in vain, that — War is done, : , Stilled the guns, O'er all lands, on the seas, in the sky, All is well,, ' Soldier-rejL_________ - ’• • i God is nigh. ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) — 4 flaming gas explosion wrecked a suburban day nursery yesterday, killing nine persons, seven of them children, 16 months; to 4 years old. Three other children were injured. Two women employes of the nursery in suburban Hapeville perished while trying to save the young children in their care. ★ ★ * “When you’re crawling around and you hear babies pleading, and you can’t find Income Tax Hike Near-Certainty WASHINGTON (UPI) — It appeared almost certain today that President Johnson would get his long-sought income tax increase, but he will also have to swallow an unwanted $6-billion cut in federal spending ordered by the House. Passage of the 10 per cent income tax surcharge was a virtual certainty after the House yesterday defeated attempts by liberal House members to reduce the cut to $4 billion. ★ ★ ★ Congressional leaders expected passage on June 12. The Senate, which already has approved the tax increase and spending cut, was also expected to pass the House version and send it to Johnson for his signature. The compromise hitching the surtax to the spending cut originally was worked out in the Senate when the tax-writing House Ways and means committee refused to act on the tax increase. ★ ★ * The big spending cut was the price Johnson had to pay to get economy-minded congressmen to okay the surtax. Sun Replaces Rain for Holiday Events At last. the long-awaited sun arrived, just in time for the, holiday parades. Rain clouds, which brought a deluge to the area for the past four days, were nudged into the horizon early this morning. • The expected high temperature today will be between 62 and 6C degrees. - * / lie entire May Lance Cpl. Dale C. Andrews, USMC Pontiac May western monetary systchr' could collapse because the French franc had become "practically unsaleable” despite efforts by the United States to save it. SwilsfjfliM’s ,‘ibig five” banks issued Orders to all Its branches to stop buying francs. A “We make no exceptions^ for any sellers,” a Zurich banker said. r-J * in Frankfurt, the West German Central Bank also stopped buying francs. Yesterday's high was 61 degrees at 4:30 p.m. Rain probability today is 20 per cent. The forecast for tonight is mild but cloudy. j ^ * • V You should be able to see. Old Sol again tomorrow and enjoy even warnier temperatures. .,J . • The. low temperature, prior to 8 am. was 48 degrees. > ■ f- them, it hurts,” said L. F. Redwtne, who works nearby and plunged Into the shattered building to help rescue the children. Fire Chief J. P. Nunn said the explosion occurred after the operator of a bulldozer struck a gas line in front of the building. The escaping gas filled the basement of the nursery and was apparently ignited by a water heater flame or other spark, Nunn said. AT HOME Nunn was at his home in the same block as the nursery when he heard the explosion. Police said the nursery manager, Mrs. J. M. Gardner, 50, of Hapeville, died In the flaming building after going back inside to try to evacuate the children. it ★ ★ Also killed was Mildred Reeves, about 30, of Atlahta, a nursery employe. The immediate efforts of nursery employes and nearby workers kept the death list from rising higher, witnesses said. The children were taking their daily nap when the gas line was broken, a rftirsery employe, Mrs. Willie Lee Reeds, said. Employes started taking one group of children to an adjoining house, then the explosion came. It was hours before authorities could identify the seven dead children. * ★ ‘ * But after checking with the families of every child registered at the nursery, Hapeville police said only seven children were still unaccounted for. Police identified the victims as Gall Cumby, 4, Hapeville; Roger Buckley, 2, Hapeville; Denise Emphries, 2, Hapeville; Julie Whidby, 2, Forest Park; Ronnie Wilson, 3, Hapeville; Shelley Little, 16 months, East Point, and Michael Kingston, 2, Union City. In Today's Press Outing in Orion 275 Scouts commune with nature - PAGE A-12. Baseball Scene { Peep tournament starts today =-] PAGE D-l. *WTHb Chl Mrnh ■ Peace hopes may rest with _ simple hut complex man — PAGE A-19. Astrology 6-14 Bridge B-14 Crossword-Puzzle D-It Comics . . . /........ B-14 § Editorials — .............A4 Obituaries .............Ml. Sports .............. M—-D4 Theaters »■: • B-17 Television Programs ... 2, Radio Programs Ml Wilson, Earl Mi A ' Worn fife’s Pages . B-l—B-7 ’•u. mss* > ’ m ) A-^2 THE TONTIAC PRESS. TIIt RvSDAV, MAY 30, 10(18 News Briefs off the Wires PARIS US — President ,Charles de Gaulle returned to the Elysee Palace today (dr a cabinet meeting that may decide his own political future and that of the government in the midst of France's strangling wave of strikes and social upheaval. De Gaulle presides over a meeting of the Council of Ministers this afternoon. A decision is expected to be taken at that time on whether the president should resign or stay at his post. Morse Appears Victor PORTLAND, Ore. — Sen. Wayne Morse of Oregon hasn’t*claimea victory, but he appears today to have' won renomination in the Democratic primary. Morse, 68. had 49 per cent of the vote with 97 per cent of. the state’s precincts reporting. His chief opponent, Robert B. Duncan, 48. had 47 per cent of the vote. Busy Day for Johnson AUSTIN, Tex., (JPi — President Johnson launched a busy Memorial Day sojourn to his Texas ranch today, calling for prayers for peace and conferring with his Vietnam military .commander and an Asian ally. Gen. William C. Westmoreland and Australian Prime Minister John G. Gorton flew to join Johnson at the LBJ Ranch. The three were to appear on a nationally televised and broadcast news conference in the ranch plane hangar at 1:30 p.m., (EDT). Loan-Truth Bill Signed WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Johnson signed into law yesterday a measure which will require sellers to fully inform customers of the charges they impose on installment and other credit purchases. ★ ★ ★ The disclosure on interest rates, service charges and other extras will be mandatory starting July 1, 1969. Review of Case Urged ^ Killing of Jimmie King legal' DETROIT Eugene McCarthy’s upset victory over Sen. Robert F. Kennedy in the Oregon primary, backers of each presidential candidate stepped up efforts to win support for their man among Michigan delegates to the Democratic national convention. Supporters of McCarthy claimed his victory over Kennedy should keep delegates chosen at this weekend’s state convention from stampeding to Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey. Kennedy forces, obviously stung by his defeat Tuesday in Oregon, yesterday trotted out a new Labor for Kennedy group headed by presidents of two massive United Auto Workers locals. Rain Adds Road Peril By the Associated Press Rain slicked highways had posed a hazard to motorists in many parts of the country today as thousands filled- the nation’s roadways on this first full day of the extended Memorial Day weekend. Hie toll climbed slowly and reached 20 early this morning. A coroner’s jury yesterday found that Jimmie King, 17, was killed in the “act of fleeing from police in the commission of a felony’’ and that there was no unlawful act involved in the shooting. ★ ★ ★ The jury, however, recommended that because of conflicting testimony the Oakland County prosecutor should review the case. King was fatally shot the morning of Dec. 7 by Pontiac police after a chase in a stolen car. r,0 ★ ★ A coroner’s jury, called on the order of the Oakland County Circuit Court judge, heard testimony yesterday from four witnesses, two police officers and two clerk-dispatchers of the police department. REFUTE TESTIMONY The dispatchers both testified under oath that one of the .officers involved in’ The Weather >4%Vffifpwwrwy?, Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Partial clearing this afternoon. High today 82 to 18. Fair to partly cloudy and mild tonight. Tomorrow mostly sunny and warmer. North to northeast winds 5 to 15 miles per hour today. Precipitation probability today: 20 per cent. Today In Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding 8 a.m At 8 a.m.: Wind Velocity 010 m.p.h. Direction: West-Northwest Sun tots Thursday at 9:02 p.m. Sun ritOf Friday at 6:00 a.m. Moon sets Thursday at 11:4© p.m. Moon rises Friday at 8 09 a.m. 8 a.r ’ f.r 10 a.r One Year Ago In Pontiac * Highest temperature . . 70 Lowest temperature 46 Mean temperature ................. . 58 Weather: Sunny Wednesday in Pontiac (as recorded downtown) Highest temperature ........ 61 Lowest temperature................ 48 Mean temperature ................. 54.5 Weather: Showers .5. WEATHER BUREAU - ESS A FORECAST Bflim Show Low Temperature* Exported Until_Friday Morning bololed Precipitation Not Indicotcd— Coniull local Forecait NATIONAL WEATHER-1 "hundershowers are forecast tonigjit for the central plaint. Warmer weather is predicted in Jhe Mississippi Valley'and the southern plaint while it will be coqler in the Southwest. •' ’ v ! l the chase knew that it was King they were chasing before they shot him. ★ * ★ The police officers testifying yesterday, however, refuted that testimony. Members of the coroner’s jury said that the case should be reviewed because, of the conflicting claims. ★ ★ ★ “It is apparent that someone is lying,” one juror said. OFFICERS’ TESTIMONY Chief Assistant Prosecutor Thomas G. Plunkett Jr. said, after being informed of the jury’s decision: “We will be happy to review it any time evidence brought to our attention in this matter and would respect the request of the inquest to do so.” ★ ★ ★ According to testimony of officers Travis A. Lively and Dennis MutrynoWski, both 27, — taken last week — they shot at King while they were chasing him driving a stolen car and after he abandoned the car and was attempting to elude the officers on foot. Both officers testified that they had no idea of King’s identity before he was felled and they saw him lying on the street, bleeding from the wound which eventually killed him. * * * Testimony of the two police dispatchers — both Negroes — was that either Lively or Mutrynowski had radioed to the main police station that they were chasing King before he was shot to death. IMPLICATION The implication of that testimony is that the officers knew King— a juvenile — and shot at him with that knowledge, Mutrynowski and Lively testified that they had arrested King about a week before in connection with another stolen car. ★ ■*; Whether or hot the^officers knew that it was King they were chasing likely will not change the fact that the Oakland County prosecutor has declared the shooting a justifiable homicide, observers acquainted with such proceedings said. ' f According to Michigan law, any police officer has the authority to shoot at a person fleeing a felony if that person refused to stop for police. According to Dr, Bernard D. Berman, Oakland County health director and the county’s medical examiner, King was killed by a. bullet from Lively’s police service revolver. it . ★ ★ Lively said he fired after repeated warnings and was aiming at king’s'legs in an attempt to halt his flight. According to an autopsy of King’s body, he waS killed by a bullet which entered hi right buttock and severed a femoral artery in his right leg. ■; - ' H* . • ' • .. "• | i ■" ... •' 6 • “ ■ ■ "f ' l. Birmingham Area Registrations for Summer School Start BIRMINGHAM — Registrations may be made now for this year's summer, school program in this school district. Stjudents may register from 8 a:fff.-51 pm. weekdays through June 7. Registration forms are available in school offices and at the office of the added education department in the Hill Building at Chester and Merrill. * * .* All elementary1 and secondary classes will begih June 18. Elementary classes will meet daily for six weeks, ending July 26. The junior high program will, meet for six weeks and the senior high program will meet for seven, ending Aug. 2. This year, for the first time, secondary students will be permitted to audit any course- awarding credits, with the permission of a counselor. MAY PARTICIPATE Those auditing may participate in class activities and discussions, but no progress record will be maintained and ho grade will be given. Secondary classes will meet at Groves High School. Most elementary classes will be held either at Pierce Elementary School, 1829 Pierce, Birmingham, or Westchester Elementary School, 3003 W. / Maple, Bloomfield Township. Pontiac Pros* Photo by Edward R. Nobio LEST WE FORGET — Despite the holiday air surrounding Memorial Day, traditionally the signal for the beginning of summer activities, lies the understanding that this is a solemn day. In the Pontiac area, as across the nation, many a prayer and gun salute will resound to honor those who died defending our country. This World War I fieldpiere under a lowered flag at Perry Mount Park Cemetery, provides a symbol of the day’s basic solemnity. Two area resident have been promoted to new posts in the American Motors Corp. John C. Secrest, 45, of 923 Waddington, Bloomfield Township, has been appointed to the new post of vice president-corporate staffs, with responsibility for finanqe, personnel administration and international automotive operations, except Canada. Secrest, formerly vice presiden t -finance, joined American Motors in 1962 as director of purchase, analysis. Lain M. Anderson/ 1295 Chesterfield, Birmingham, has ''been named vice president and contrhller. ★ ★ ★ Anderson, 37, joined the company In 1963 as director of purchase analysis** and was named operations director-finance in 1965. He was elected to the office of controller in January 1967. BLOOMFIELD HILLS - Gilbert F. Richards, 411 Goodhue, has been appointed president and general manager of the Automotive Division of the Budd Co., Detroit. Announcement of the appointment was made by Philip W. Scott, corporate president. # ★ ★ Richards succeeds Robert J. Kalbfleisch, who was named senior vice president of the corporation. The new division president joined Budd in 1957. He is a member of the American Manufacturers Association, the Society of Automotive Engineers, the American Ordnance Association, the Greater Detroit Board of Commerce, and a director of the United Foundation. ★ ★ ★ Richards is currently chairman of the finance committee of the Meadow Brook Music Festival. BLOOMFIELD HILLS The Congregational Church of Birmingham-United Churth of Christ, will sponsor a program on. race relations Tuesday at 3 p.m. The program will be entitled “Truth Forum — Second Session,” and will be held at the chufch, 1000 N. Cranbrook. ★ ★ ★ A panel including Edward T. Rivas, director of the Pontiac area Office of Economic Opportunity; Dave Simmons, of Big Brothers of Oakland County; Dan Bauder, director ~of-_the Pontiac regional office of the Michigan Civil TTfgfttjr'Com-mission; and Pontiac resident W. T. Richardson will discuss problems of race relations. The program, sponsored in cooperation with the local OEO office, will be open to the public. Robber Abducts, Slugs City Man A Pontiac man was abducted, held Bojr an hour and 4p minutes, hit on the head,, and robbed of $8 last night, according to Pontiac police, * * * The viefim, James D. Craig, 38, of 182 Vernon, was seized in his car in the paekipg lot of Perry Pharmacy, 689 ft: East Blvd., at 9:2ft p.m. He was ordered to drive to 1-75 near the Holly ’area where the kidnaper hit him on the head took $8 and left on foot about 11 p.m.. police said. ’ *v According, to police reports, Craig and his son, James, 12, visited the store. When they returned to their car, a man was in the rear seat and he grabbed Craig and ordered the son to leave the • car.', ★ * ★ The ktdjifapfer kept an object, believed to be a *'gtin; pressed against Craig’s neck, police said. The victim reportedly was not seriously hurt by the blow on the head administered by the kidnaper. ■ * mm I • ■ - TOMORROW MORNING 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Be Mere When the Doors Open at 9 a.m. LOOK tor These Specials Plus Many More Specials for 3V2 hours only — then back to regular prices — So come on, bring a friend and neighbor for a reaj money saving trip to Simms. Park FREE in Simms lot across from the County Jail. Rights re- > served to limit quantities. mUMMSBBWS Pk|. 16 Tobloto Alka Seltzer 65c Value Package of - 25 . Alka Switzer tablets to relieve excess oddity from overeating N and Overdrinking, Drugs—Main Floor 9 A. M. to 12 30 ONLY , 4'/4-0i. Silt Bottlt Bromo Seltzer $1.00 Value Relieves stomach upset ood| nervous tension Fast acting. Drug*—Main Floor 57? IN Single Edge Razor Blades Package of 100 Marlin dustrial type tingle edge razor blades. Drugs—Main Floor 9 A M. to 12 30 ONLY Tuba Qlllatta Men’s Hair Groom $1.00 Value Heads Up hair groom gives natural, effective hair control all day Drugs—Main Floor California Hand Print Table- cloth 11% Rayon ' 28% Caftan Ren. $11.98 I Uliie fomous Coronet tablecloth ol 75% rayon and 75% cotton in a Malaga print, in gold color 60 x 84-Inch size. — basement 57* 9 A. M. to 12:30 ONLY 13-Oz. Aqua Nat Hair Spray Regular, Super Hold or unscented hair spray, holds and holds. 46? 9 A. M. to 12 30 ONLY Drug*—Main Floor] I Famous Grands Deodorants $1. OIK Value four choice of stick, roll-on or cream form of fomous brands of deodorant* Drugs —Main Floor 36? 9 A. M. to 12:30 ONLY Card ar Cordless . Norelco Shaver $39.95 Value Model 450, rechargeable triple head floating head shaver with sideburn trimmer Sundries—Main Floor 9 A. M. to 12:30 ONLY Model 18 CT Norelco Electric Shaver $32.95 Value Men's Norelco triple floating head shaver with sideburn trimmer Shaves closer and :aster Sundries—Main Floor 9 A. M. Fo 12:30 ONLY Modal 28 Nartleo 10x14-ln. or Round Story- land Puzzles Ref. 49c Valuee Up to 96 pieces interloci ing large puzzle pieces in children’s storyland puzzles. Keeps children occupied lor hours — basement Flip Top Shaver 14s* $22.95 Valu Norelco flip top elec-shdyer with 2 -floating heads- Give* ggntlf .close jhove^ Sundries -Main Floor 9 A. M. to 12:30 ONLY Sunbeam 8-Bladt Electric Shaver f29.95 Value Model SM7S 6-blode twin head Sunbeom shaver with zipper travel pouch Sundries —Main Floor Eaaasn I8« Wind Proof Johnson’s Insect Repellent Handy aerosol can ol Off by Johnson , Keeps mosquitoes and flies away for hours — 2nd Floor 9 A M. to 12:30 ONLY 166% Nylon Ladies’ Half Slip Simms Price All nylon lace ovgr nylon net with elastic waist. Black or white. 9 A. M. to 12:30 ONLY Anartod Colors Yard Goods Si mm. Price Assorted plaids and orange or block solid colors yard goods for play clothes, quilts, etc — Main Floor! 9 A M. to 12:30 ONLY Asserted Group Ladies’ Sportswear | Value$ to $2.9$ assorted styles In shorts, blouses Ond slacks Sizes 8 to 12 only While they lost 9 A. M. to 12:30 ONLY Asserted Group Ladies’ Dresses Value, to $3.9$ Styles Include polka do* swiss, orange shifts, blue sailor style, pink shift ond others. Broken size rang* — Main Flaorl 9 A. M, to 12:30 ONLY lt"xll" Oonnon Dish Cloths Pkg.oflO Mesh cotton dish-cloths in kitchen designs. Limit I pock. 9 A. M. to 12:30 ONLY Gannon Tarry Dish Towels Irrs. of 35e Value* Assorted colors and L prints in Cannon ter- U rycloth dish towels. |Qr All Purpose Carpet Squares At Simms Assorted colors and I y fabrics with non-skid backs. Protects for floors and carpeti — Basementl 9 A. M, to 12:30 ONLY For Radio - FM - TV Antenna Wire 50-Vt. Rail For indoor and outdoor use. 300 (3hMs im-pedance. Hear the difference in sound Ghd reception Cigarette Lighter $1.50 U»t Storm King'wind-proof ghter mode Ifi "USA ** Comes with pipe tamp- Tobacco—Main Floor EDE 4-BI«de Scout Knife 98 c Value Seoul knife with regular blade, leather punch, screwdriver and bottle opener Heavy duty Boxed Sundries — Main Floor 9 A. M. *o 12 30 ONLY Men’s Self-Wind Wrist Watch $19.95 Value Men's Marcel -wrist watch .that winds itself, with calendar, sweep hand ond chrome metal band. Factory guarantee Adhesive Plastic Shelf Cover Adhesive plastic shelf cover sticks tq wood, metal/ glass, etc Nc peeling, white only. 11 %-inch fc 20-foot size. — 2nd Floor Bronzetone Frame Record Rack ^$3.98 Value J AA Holds up 100 LP ol- | Mil bums. Lets you see ond ■ IF W choose your favorite j album , -2nd Fla BUBOBBEMEMfll l-Qt, Club Aluminum Saucepan Simmu Price Heavy club aluminum saucepan with DuPont black Teflon finish inside. No-stick, no-scour cooking 9 A. M. to 12:30 ONLY 25-Ft. Tube Typo Sprinkler Hose At Simms Hancock triple tube sprinkler hose, holds its shafte under pressure 25-foot length Oocorotlvt - Useful Coffee Mill Slmm. Vrlr. Beautifully finished With tiny, drawer and copper bowl tor collee Steel Attoehoi to Mower Insect Fogger Kit Simms Price Kills mosquitoes, flies, gnats, etc. Just attach it to your power lawn mower Gal Insecticide 4 75 Closed Today Store Open Friday 9 am to 9L3Q pm SIMMS..®?... 98 Nortli Saginaw St. 9HH f ■ m m 1 m if i m / - /- ■ > * THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1968 A—8 SUPER SIMMS CLOSED TODAY FOR MEMORIAL DAY-OPEH FRIDAY 9 a.m. to 9:30 p.m, Park FREE in SIMMS Lot near County Jail 98 North Saginaw St SIMMSJf Downtown Pontiac 9-Gup WEST BEND Electric Coffee Maker At Simms W&st Bond aluminum colfeo maker makes 9 ’ cups of delicious coffee. With cool bakelite handle. Model 9360. Ideal for parties, fomily gatherings, etc. -2nd Floor m 4 \1 ‘DURABOND’ Non-Stick Teflon 10” Club Aluminum Frypan lit-it-$9.95 note vonly Heavy club aluminum with bonded, porcelain finish outside, new Eurobond' non-stick Teflon inside. White only. Heat-resistant Siamese Teakwood handle. — 2nd Floor 8-Inch‘ZERO’ Electric Fan f Small convenient S-mch Stxe, . can be moved from room to I room- tteovy duty Induitftol type motor, extro heavy weld* 83 25-Ft. Flexible All Purpose Trouble Light * Heavy ‘ irtsOiotpd cord on thii troublf hghtn for use -in the garages home.'factory lift, "Tor indoor and " outdoor u»e — 2nd Floor §3) p yJffiks-Lb. Kemucky Blue Sm Brass Seed 7 5-lb, of Kentucky Blue Grass seed spreads rapidly 'lo^.fblfn a thick' fin# textured sod. Germinates It* si To 3 weeks. 2 tit ‘Agrico’ 10-6-4 Lawn Food \ O-k. ^‘^ion-burning, fret flowing grfinu* ^ jtlar lawn fbod With 25% nitrogen 4 ,'A^ XlL^y\\ content. Will cover 5000 »q. *\V fool lawn. * ‘ wk — 2nd Floor A—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 80, 1068 New Vista® Color in a compact portable Horw it RCA Color TV "on tho go"! Lightweight and low in price, this portable tett^the pace for on the move Color TV viewing. New Vista picture quality. Beautiful vinyl finishes. EASY terms 14' dm*.. 102 •*. In. »Ki»n Daylight Screen for outdoor RCA Color TV Vivid color viewing, inside or out, is yours with this lie featuring "snap*onM daylight 'Personal Sound" earphone in- lightweight portable featuring "snap>onM daylight picture booster, eluded. Thn HACLiOUIN MUM IL-.24 14* Sin*., 102 •*. In. ^ktwn Meu>Ce*defo ELECTRONICS INC. EASY TERMS Bloomfield Miracle Mile Shopping Ctr. FE 8-9607 THE <@lb jWiU Catiern -^ciubOaMeM' Style Shows Every Friday During Luncheon Featuring The Latest In Spring and Summer Fashions By The Penthouse Fashion Shop Luncheon Served from 11:30 For Information and Reservations Call 623-0060 5838 Dixie Hwy. Waterford, Mich. Calories Don't Count At U. S. Military Academy West Point Menu: Food Galore BUY! SELL! TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! SAVE 50% WEST POINT. NY. Iff! — That trim, well-conditioned cadet at the U S. Military Academy consumes more calories than a coimbat soldier—and almost twice as many as a civilian. He and his 3,200, West Point classmates annually go through 135.000 loaves of bread, 80,000 pies and cakes, 800,000 cups of ice cream, tons of meat and vegetables and more peanut butter than you’d care to count the calories for. * ★ ★ The academy’s menu board does the caldrie counting for the cadet, and £ach one averages between 4,500 and 5.000 calories per day. ‘‘Five thousand calories seems like an awful lot, but believe me these cadets run it off.” says Maj. Jerry L. Hearn, officer 119. Save >S9M calories go very fast. As the dietitians figure it, a cadet uses up 4 calories per pound of weight per hour of running: 4.5 calories, swimming: 1 calorie, typing and even .7 calories eating, j Cadets gain or lose as much jas 20 pounds when they arrive I as freshmen, but after about two months the weight-gaining evens out. They end up with an average gain of eight pounds for the ehtire four years. I “Nutritionally, with 5,000 calories, you can’t miss,” said Capt. ! Bonnie Moscatelli, the chief of [food srvices' division at the academy’s hospital and a member of the menu board. The real 'problem, she said, is pleasing the individual tastes of 3,200 cadets who have “immature stomachs.” i pizza and steak are their ifavorites, with asparagus, brus-j [sets sprouts and liver at....the] opposite end of the popularity j 'scale. I A big event for the cadets Js j the traditional Wednesday steak; night. I “If I didn’t have steak on Wednesday night,” said Hearn, “I’d have a riot on my hands. Besides the cadets have a strong argument—they say Pershing and Eisenhower had l it, why change it. They had it and look how they turned out.” On a typical Wednesday the cadets begin the day with chilled apricot halves, assorted dry cereals with light cream, scrambled eggs, crisp bacon, hashed brown potatoes, hot raisin muffins, toast, butter, assorted jams and jellies, coffee and milk. For lunch, they might be served pork chow mein with mushrooms and bean sprouts, steamed rice, fri°d noodles, cottage cheese, jubilee salad, bread, butter pineapple sheet cake with butter cream icing, iced orangeade and milk. -...With their .sirloin steak for dinner, they get french fried potatoes, buttered succotash, chef’s salad bowl, garlic bread and butter, blueberry pie a la mode, coffee, iced tea and milk. w & I Large 8 ft S-100 WHITE Aluminum PICTURE WINDOW %, AWNING -ROW j uvtmso am 14 BeeuttfiM veiance cDkws jrfr* to cftotM Mom Prepare Comfort N0VL BIG SAVINGS "'JL Patios and Awnings It's the beautiful Sunlura FUN ROOM Come in, or call us, we'll show you why we believe we make fhe finest patio enclosure in the world. The Suntura is superior in style and workmanship, § I i I Gunt Size f i 20' S 100 Aluminum White TRAILER AWNING Instilled with 4 decorative white aluminum column* N 1444 £;$199 $1” ,1 ■ per week y/j INSTALLED Wi 7/ 71 NO MONEY ’% ! DOWN %. LONG, EASY TERMS Bring in All Your 'MEMORIAL DAY’ Films For Fast, Quality Development at SIMMS . Bring in all your photo developing to Simms . . . it's fast, it s quality work and it's at the lowest prices. All specials for Mon., Tues. and Weds. ___-______■ H Valuable Coupon Set of Extra SUPER SIZE PHOTOS With Each Roll of Black ’n White Snapshot Film Brought to Simms! Bring this coupon and a roll of black 'n while film to Simms for processing and you'll get an extra set of SUPER SIZE PRINTS FREEI Offer good on 620-120-127 and VP 126 films only in 8 or 12 exposure roll. Why pay for extra prints when you get 'em free at Simms. Coupon good Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday only. • Aluminum Siding and Trim Alum. Windows and 'Doors Roofing • Gutter* ■w OPEN SUNDAY 10-6 P M - {an Control IMrtPf imm r ltd Side iFodiSO jDoewiver I Bum N. 141101K. 5-0453 j AV. 5-35*5 I He,1 Phone FE 5-9'X52 26400 W. 8 Milo Rd. J IV' MdtiWest oMaiii'ipfc ■im Souf^-eid | lowdo - «l. 7-2710 J W14G05 We Design • We Manufacture • We Install • We Guarantee Save On Beautiful Color Printing Regular 27c Prints 3Vzx3Vi Square 223 Superb color developing and printing at this lower price and you get a free photo album to hold 'em. FREE Flip-Pace Album With K0DAC0L0R PROCESSING Bring in your 12-exposurb roll of KODA-COLOR FILM to Simms for developing and printing . « . and when youpick 'em up, you'll get a free flip-page photo album. Regular 32c Prints SVixS Rectangular Each Get a free photo album yvith your developing and printing made expressly for the rectangular size. KODAK PROCESSING MOVIE SLIDE Mailed Back to Your Nome Genuine EASTMAN KODAK Color Processing for 35mm-20 Exp. 8mm movie roll. Super 8 film plus 127 of 126-12 exp. slides. Limit IQ mailers per pdrson. 150 SIMMS DISCOUNT ANNEX 144 N. Saginaw St you’ll find wheel toys for the children’s summer fun at big savings at SIMMS annex open Friday 9 am to 9:30 pm, Sat. 9 am to 9 pm jr. size Honda authentic-ruggad mustang ride ’em car authentically detailed $4.88 value sharply styled • extra rugged plastic body is authentically detailed * the stick shift really moves * oversize husky wheels supports ovpr 100 lbs. sit ’n ride flipper unbreakable-wipes clean $4.33 Value , tv's favorite dolphin • made of tough durable Irvinoi polyethylene • unbreakable • handy wooden handles • no^mar wheels. $6.99 value styled Just Ilk* th* real thing • authentic,cream and red color * high Impact plastic body • easy-grip handlebars • ruggad, durable. sit 'n ride locomotive with bell and whistla $4.9S Value « sturdily built with realistic molded: polyethylene body • steel frame and axles • steering handle • no mar plastic wheels. chrome framed walker trudy tag-along doll on $7.77 value, trudy tag-along is trying to walk * pulls easily with attached cord • trudy is 15" tall with long lashed eyes that close • movable arms and legs • walker has tray and 3 plastic; wheels. famous 'RADIO’ children’s wagons radio tot 20Vax11x3 £)89 radio jet Z' 341/1x16x41/1 799 radio rocket 099 radio flyer 9" 34. boys’ and girts’ ‘COLUMBIA’ deluxe 20-in. convertible bike • deluxe appearance at low cost • black Jnnertube tires • triple-plated feeder* • Columbia design full length chain guard • ball bearing construction/ + baked on fwortoat enamel finish ^strong trainer attachment. 3288 98 North Saginaw Street SIMMS"*. -Camera Dipt* P -Main 1 Jloor .,! L - J SIMMS i DISC OUNT Am ■lEX N. Saginaw Si §§ KM1 Wl i Coho True Temper spinning set includes an eight foot 2-pieo© Hollow fiberglase fishing:rod, plus, heavy-duty spinning reel with 3V4 to I,gear ratio and lull Uil piolwp. Hplds 300 yards of 13 lb, mono line .. .39.98 — i1 ■ . e-dsn Greet *0V.d»V4lJMi 'gear ratio, and fuil bail pickup • t^nltn * j « Spin-n-Glo 4 • Mooselock Wobbler ■ • Flatfish eKoho King | i Salmon Seeker^'< * Rippie Thln ♦ Knobby Wobbler"]j!^yt Plug * . Manistee " ] Coho Wobbler J ^ • UttleCleo Hudson's has ell the terminal tackle yon need • lines ~ S tackle boxes SPS® irimagis jgwpffg^epRWi i» ims isspja' Keep cool/ look fresh in Van Heuson Vanopress® dress shirts The fabric: summer weight, wrinkle resistant polyester/cotton that keeps its good looks washing after washing and needn't be ironed. The style: a contour fit, short sleeves, spread cbll&r. White, maize, blue, green; 14^-17. Men's Furnishings. J Permanent press walk shorts with flat fitting Ban-Rol® waist These Amcrest walk shorts in crisp poly-ester/cotton witfP^r^SIease needn’t be ironed. Ban-Rol® waistband holds them flat against your middle without a “rollover”. Belt loops. In navy, pewter or gold. 32-40. Men’s Sports Furnishifigs-. Roblee sandals: cool, sporty after-hours footwear for men Enjoy footloose freedom in these rugged waxhide leather imports. Note the smart continental styling, with toe ring to secure them on your feet, smart harness bit decoration on the cross strap. In sizes 7 to 12. Hudson’s Men’s Shoe Department. New stripes, plaids in short sleeve Amcrest sport shirts 4.50 A. Spread collar with classic checks of blue, maize, green. Perm, press polyester/ cotton. S to XL. Sports Furnishings. ^ B. Button down collar, perm, press cot-ton/polyester chambray._ White on blue, gold or olive grounds. S,M,L,XL. * DOWNTOWN DETROIT . Woodward Ava. and Grand River NORTHLAND CENTER 8 Mile and Northwestern EASTLAND CENTER 8 Mile and Kelly-Roads WESTLAND CENTER Warren and Wayne Roads PONTIAC MALL Telegraph and Elizabeth Lake Road THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 30, 10fi8 A—« Have a wonderful holiday weekend • ^Hudson's stores will be dosed Memorial Day, Thursday, May 30. Shop at Hudson's Friday, and Saturday: Pontiac Northland, Eastland, Westland, open till 9 p.m.; Downtown open till 5:30 . , . ■- - • • v. * M . % • ' • * V THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 West Huron' Street Pontiac, Michigan 48058 THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1968 Karols A. Kitiormir CMlmiM •( She Board Howard K. Fireomie. II Prealdtnl and PublUhtr John W. Frreomie Executive Vloa President and Editor Harrt J. Hess Manaitag Editor John A. HURT Secretary and AdverUelnd Diraclor Richard U. Pmeetsie Treasurer aid Flnaaca Offlcar Pay Tribute to Servicemen Who Died for Our Freedom (EDITOR'S NOTE: In keeping with our policy of publishing gue§t editorials from time to time, our Memorial Day editorial has been written by Lieutenant Commander Herman L. Zeller, Commanding Officer, Naval Reserve Training Center in Pontiac.) By HERMAN L. ZELLER, Lt. Cmdr. Memorial Day is here once again and to the great mass of working Americans it will be just another day off during the week. Quite probably thei most significant! event will be the big] race at Indianapolis,! or the bastballj games. Some of us may! go see the numerous] parades in this area] or even be so patriotic as to participate ZELLER in them. We may even be blessed with decent enough weather for a family picnic. But how many Veterans’ grayes are decorated with flags and flowers this day? How many of your neighbors are flying the American flag in front of their homes? ★ ★ - ★ One must go back to the days of the Civil War to arrive at the origin of Memorial Day, or Decoration Day as it was originally known. Times, we say, were different then and the national feeling ran closer to home. We were engaged in a tremendous struggle and it seemed only fitting and proper that a day be set aside to honor the fallen soldiers and sailors of that war. During the course of the following century we became involved in two world wars and numerous other military actions. American soldiers and sailors fell in every one of them and still we honored them and glorified their Country. ' Yet, today we say things are different. Different from when? Different from what? We are still Americans with the same guaranteed freedoms. Our pace of life may be accelerated and our conveniences more numerous, but there is no basic difference. We are essentially a peace-loving people who only wish other people the same peace. It is a simple thing for those who have not lost a loved one to ignore the deep significance of this day. The attitude of revelry soon overshadows the real meaning of Memorial Day. In our community we have widows and parents of young loyal American servicemen who have given their lives in Vietnam. This day will not go unheeded by them for their memories are still too fresmto forget. Let us all* young and Old alike, reflect a moment through the course of American history and give praise and thanks to those soldiers and sailors who have passed on in the name of freedom that we today may enjoy the privileges of watching the big race, the ball games, the parades and the picnics as free Americans. U.S. Maritime Might Is Leaking at the Seams It wasn’t so many years ago that the U.S. might well have been called a coastal nation. Its inhabitants lived largely near the sea. They built ships and sailed them. The people understood ships, they were proud of them. The U.S. Clipper ships were known around the world. Today, it is a safe bet that you couldn’t name a U.S. cargo ship. As a nation that depends on ships to move its products of farm and factory to countries around the world, we are largely dependent on foreign vessels. Since we are a maritime nation, this is sheer folly in peacetime and holds the seeds of disaster in a military emergency. a ★ ★ ★ ‘ High military and civilian officials are calling on Congress for a strengthening of the U.S. Merchant Marine in the most forceful language they can command. Leading steamship line officials, most notably those from a group of 13 companies operating 270 regularly-scheduled vessels in U.S. foreign trade from all coasts, are doing one of the most important selling jobs in this Country’s history. They are working to Show that we are a maritime nation. They travel from city to city showing different regions, with cold figures, its dependence upon foreign trade. They have developed a Trade Expansion Program tailor-made to national needs at a time when increased exports have become a necessity. They are working to reawaken pride in the U.S. maritime tradition. The Clipper ships have passed into history, but underestimation of our maritime needs could be the Achilles heel of U.S. security. Justice Black’s View Change MOLEY By RAYMOND MOLEY The convulsions that are so shaking what we choose to call our American civilization .have finally revealed the essential inconsistency in what only a decade or two ago was called ‘'liberalism. “For the modern liberal," unlike the liberal of a century ago, favors a greatly expanded, centralized authority hut at the same time he loosely sustains all forms of personal freedom under the Bill of Rights. * * ii* This conveniently overlooks the necessity that there roust be civil order if there is to be any • freedom for the individual. Indeed, the distinction between liberty and freedom should be very clear : liberty is something . ordered and limited by authority; freedom, unlimited, is lawless The bitter harvest of that inconsistency is what we are facing today. Our Constitution sought effectively to reconcile civil order and personal liberty. For it is at once a charter of liberty and a> pattern of public r order and security. AGE, MATURITY One of the modern liberals who with age and maturity is now seeking to recover that constitutional balance is the venerable Justice Hugo Black. As a senator before his 193T appointment to the Supreme Court, he was a howling scourge of big business. And for many years he adhered, sometimes in the majority and sometimes in the minority, to those earlier prejudices. , if' it it More recently the flavor and implications of his opini-nions have revealed a considerable change in outlook. This change he ■** has . documented in three lectures at the Columbia University law school aS late as March 1968. He gently reminded the court that its governmental function is to interpret rather than to make laws. For he said, “The founders wrote into our Constitution their unending fear pf granting too much power to judges." MAJOR DISAGREEMENT On two points especially he has disagreed with recent decisions of the court. One is the habit of applying the rule of “reasonableness" to laws of Congress or the states. Here he believes that the court, by applying its own idea of reasonableness, is rejecting the guided by their own ideas of reason. ★ ★ w He also rejects the court practice in recent years to create a new right of “privacy. He said in his lectures, that since no such right i s guaranteed by the Constitution the court has no power to create it.' * * * He now. says that in the interest of public security an individual’s privacy may be invaded by various forms pf police eavesdropping. (Cepyrlehl. I MI, lm Anpelet Tlmeel And May We Never Forget! Due to Feud With Russftr Fidel Forgotten ‘Rebel Prophet’ By LEON DENNEN NEA Foreign News Analyst NEW YORK — Fidel Castro, once the idol of the New Left, is no longer a revolutionary hero even to students in Latin America. In Paris, West Berlin, Rome and New York, rioting students urged revolutionary action in the name of Trotsky, Mao Tse-tung and even Ho Chi Minh. Some remembered Che Guevera and long-forgotten anarchists and terrorists like Bakunin and Nechayev. In Communist Czechoslovakia and Poland, on the other hand, students and intellectuals fighting for freedom cheered the American flag. Soviet writers, on trial for their liberal views, based thejr right to dissent on decisions of the U. S. Supreme Court. But no one, East or West, remembered that Fidel Castro also considers himself a revolutionary “prophet." Even in Latin America, Cuba’s bearded Lider Maximo has become the forgotten man of the world revolution. RENEWED CALL To remind the world that he still is in the revolutionary business, Castro recently issued a renewed call for guerrilla struggles in Latin America under the slogan, “Arms, money and teams of guerrillas to liberate Latin America." But his call, was ignored, primarily because Russia, for the moment at least, is more interested in profitable trade with t h e Latin-American capitalists than in world revolution. ★ * ★ As a result, the conflict between pro-Soviet' and pro-Cuban Communists In the Western Hemisphere has become more intense. The most striking examples of this are In Venezuela and Guatemala, where a handful of pro-Castro guerrillas have recently been expelled from the official pro-Russian Communist parties. Similar conflicts are now raging in Brazil, Nicaragua, Chile, the Dominican Republic and other Latin-American countries. TIED TO FEW There is no doubt that Castro’s eclipse Is due to his quarrel with Moscow. The existence of his dictatorship depends on Russia’s economic aid. But he believed that he could defy the Kremlin leaders.’undermine their influence in Latin America and still get their help. Castro has perhaps gone further than any other national Communist leader in exploiting for his ,own purposes the political possibilities opened up by Russia's break with Red China and the fragmentation of the Red monolith. ★ * */ But the Russians were not Verbal Orchids James Crew of 197 Seminole; 83rd birthday. Frank I-aLone of Pontiac Township; 82nd birthday. frightened. They met Castro’s challenge by applying a calculated measure of economic pressure. This found expression in the prolonged and tortuous negotiations over a new Soviet-Cuban trade agreement. The Russians never made a secret of the fact that they consider economic aid primarily as a p o 1 i t a I weapon. FINALLY AGREED They finally agreed to a flow of aid and trade to Havana sufficient to preserve Moscow’s role as the mainstay of Castro's regime, but not enough to meet Cuba’s rapidly expanding needs. The Cubans must meet their growing economic problems with a series of belt-tightening austerity measures. WWW By applying economic pressure, the Russians obviously want to keep the Cuban dictator busy at home. But Castro Is still fighting back. He is still trying to meet- the Russian challenge through “political judo.’’ Even the failure of Chfe Guevara’s military adventure in Bolovia has not abated Cuban efforts to keep the pot boiling in Latin America. But for the present, at least, Castro’s star is ta-eclipse. Even revolutionary dictators must^ed their hungry subjects. Voice of the People: Serviceman in Vietnam ; Sends Message to Youths (Editor’s Note: "Buzz" is the son of Mrs. John Palcsak, • 3534 David K, Waterford. The letter below was recently received by Buzz's sister.) My dear sister, you asked what I would say to your friends who will soon graduate from high school and have their service time ahead of them. I would tell them not to worry about Vietnam until they are sent there:. Not everybody goes—just the more fortunate ones. All my buddies in the Army—in the real action—write that it*s bad, real bad, but they know as well as I that we’ve a job to do and someone has to do it or get overrun with Communistic lies and treacheries back home. If it’s war, let’s fight if here dnd not wait for it to reach oui* loved homes iji our own wonderful country. Your friends lived through the Detroit riots, didn’t they? With all the riots and turmoil back home, which is worse —home under distress or Vietnam? I’d tell them to think about our homes, our loved ones, the great nation we live in, the rights and freedoms we have, and then let them think and worry about Vietnam. ★ ★ ★ I don’t like the thoughLs of dying any more than anyone else, but I have faith in my country and love and respect its people. ★ . ★ ★ If I must die to help protect their rights and' freedom, I will. I never want anyone to tell me what to say, read, or study; that I cannot pray; how many children I can or cannot have; how I must raise them; what job I must do; or if I could attend church or not. Would that be living? Not for me, sis, and I know it isn’t for your friends, either. I thank God I can fight for freedom and our own rights in the hopes of permanent peace. “BUZZ” BUZZ Bob Considine Soys: 2 Retiring Footbail Giants Owed Much to Marshall Do Parents Know of Children's Vandalism ? It’s too bad parents don’t know more of what their children are doing. Our mailbox was destroyed by a, firecracker. I wonder how parents of vandals would feel if their belongings were destroyed. MRS. D. McSKULIN 4420 OAK VISTA, DRAYTON PLAINS Resident Reports Seeing ‘Echo’ on Travels Just returned from a 25,000 trip of two and one-half months to New Zealand, Australia and quite a few South Pacific Islands. Read in your paper of Echo which seems like a friend as we used to watch it circle two or three times each night. For two years we have not seen it. Coming out of our hotel in Auckland, my wife happened to look up and it was in a perfect sky for observation. We spoke to quite a few people and they are smarter than most Americans as they all knew about it. We watched for it nightly thereafter but were unable to see it again. FENTON R. MATHEWS 5900 N. ADAMS. TROY NEW YORK — People . . . places . . . pros ... The professional football world has been sorely diminished by the retirements of George Halas of the Chicago Bears and Sonny- Werblin -of_. the New York Jets. Each created a dy-i nasty.: -E a c h presented su- H5VS structure of a sport that has soared past baseball as the “national pastime-” ★ ★ ★ Both owed a lot to George F’reston Marshall, who owned the Boston Redskins and 31 years, ago, moved the franchise to his home town, Washington, D . C ., and renamed the club the Washington Redskins. ★ * ★ One week, many years ago, the Redskins beat Halas’ Bears 7-3. Two weeks later, Halas’ Bears beat the Redskins 73-0, George shrug- ged and said, “Well, can't win ’em all.” SHOWMANSHIP Marshall gave to pro football the showmanship that had bee,n the exclusive property of the a m a c h o o r s : bands, glamor, cheerers and high-stepping people. *» * . . He added more, such as Santa Claus arriving on the 50-yard line at Griffith Stadium by helicopter, his wife (George’s),' film star Corinne Griffith, “The Orchid of the Screen Pass,” wrote "H((il to the Redskins’’/ to no less stirring a tune than “Yes, Jesus Loves Me.” George is ill now and his place as president of the Redskins has been taken by the famed attorney Edward Bennett Williams. But what he contributed to sports is not likely to pass from memory. .Bill Corum, observing the Raskins and their followers spilling into New York one happy day in the long ago, commenced a story with something like “George Preston Marshall and his 15,000 Redskin fans slipped quietly into town yesterday behind a 75-piece brass band and paraded up Broadway to the Polo Grounds.” Question and Answer I’d like to know where I can get a job working with crippled or mentally retarded children without going to college. LOVES CHILDREN REPLY Lapeer State Home for crippled and retarded children takes employes who can pass the civil service exam for Attendant Nurse B. This does not require college training. For more information about the exam, contact the Michigan Employment Security Commission, 332-0191. In Washington: Paris Talks Are Respite for Ho CROMLEY among North By RAY CROMLEY WASHINGTON (NEA) -From detailed informatioti this reporter gathered in his recent trip to Southeast Asia, there is no doubt that Ho Chi Minh is in deep trouble. He is facing dissatisfaction —and a jittery population—at home. He is plagued with m anpower shortages. Great dissatisfaction exists Vietnam's mistreated minorities. His officials daily bring him longer lists of work slowdowns and growing nonco-operation with the government by farm-■ ers and factory workers alike. Animosity is growing between the guerrillas of South Vietnam and the North Vietnamese invasion troops. Sometimes this dislike verges on hatred. Reports circulate of quarrels within Ho’s own inner circle. Considerable grumbling occurs Within the middle hierarchy of the North Vietnamese Communist party. Food is short. Comforts are scarce. * * * Ho's army is. plagued by a growing shortage of experienced officers and men. In his political underground, Ha ha* nnt hern nhle to replace adequately the topflight men he has test through death, desertion, old age and discouragement. A growing tiredness pervades his junior-executive, political and economic organizers. Meanwhile, Ho is running up a heavy debt to Red China and Soviet Russia for arms, Chinese labor and supplies that he can’t afford. A 4 ★ With heavy a i d commitments in Cuba, the Middle East and Africa, the Soviet Union is likewise feeling the pinch. So Ho needs some sort of a respite to enable him to continue his war against South Vietnam. j Thus the Paris talks. ★ it it " Just by agreeing to talks, Ho has persuaded the United States to continue a bombing cutback that has relieved Hanoi, Haiphong and most of North Vietnam’s o t h e r populated areas from the harassment of daily bombing. This redtices his domestic strains. It has made it possible for Ho to step up the infiltration of troops and materiel into South Vietnam. It has sparked suspicion, infighting and division within the South Vietnamese government. Ho’s first objectives would be achieved by continuing, these talks as long as possible so that the United Slates would continue its bombing holdback. Communist doctrine would call for making uncostly but p a y chologically significant concessions — such as freeing U. S. flyers — when necessary to keep the United States from resuming heavy bombing of the Hanoi • Haiphong area and other key regions of North Vietnam. Meanwhile, under cover of sensational raids, Ho’s mem in South Vietnam will attempt to rebuild and strengthen^Jheir underground political structure in the hamlets and Increase their organizational network In the cities. For this IS what the* war is all about. ★ * * This means the United States, while talking in Paris, had better make certain that its’ civilian pacification work, its building of South Vietnam’s ‘ democratic political u n d e r s tructure and its training of the South Vietnamese army moves ahead how at an accelerated pace. Th* Associated Pres* It entitle exclusively tp the Me tor republ cetlon of ell local newt printed I this newspaper es well at all Al newt dispatches The Pontiac Press Is delivered b carrier for M cents a week! wher •nailed In Oakland, Oenesee,* Llv (notion, Macomb, Lapeer an --- ------- . |t Eiiu Washtenaw Counties „ ,» reari elsewhere in Michigan a all ether places In the Unit Mates. *14.00 a year. All mall at etylptkxu payable In advats Pottape has been paid at the 2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MAY 80, 1908 New ME A Boss Backs Teacher Power SAGINAW (AP) — The]mediation and fact-finding are president-elect of the Michigan!encouraged by the MEA if no Education Association — Gene agreement Is reached. R. Duckworth of Delta College I * * * — has a term for a fast-growing' "Hopefully this won't be a influence in school systems trough fall ... but if it is it will throughout the state. be only after we have done all He calls It "teacher power"iwe can to get fully negotiated and says education f o r agreements," he said. "If there Michigan children will be are any interruptions of service, greatly improved because of it. it will only be as a last resort, j v * * * We don't use it as a threat or ai On July 1, Duckworth willckib.” take over the reins of The problem, as Duckworth leadership for the IN , 00 0-:sees it, is school finance, member MEA representing the .C0LUS10N COURSE’ majority of Michigan s 84,000 public school teachers. “I fee' we afe on a collision During a year’s leave of course with the property tax,” absence from his assistant pro-he said. “The MEA has taken a fessor of speech post at the stance on taxation. I think the community college 1 o c a t e d property tax just can’t do the north of Saginaw, he will head job. The income tax should the association representing have helped us more than it teachers in 529 school districts did. It . turned out to be just and five other two-year col-j another tax.” leges. » The MEA position on. state! 'RESPONSIBLE APPROACH’ financial support i s: “im-How does he view the MEA’s mediate attention to the need role in teacher negotiations ■ for adequate financial support which resulted in strikes last of public schools by the state of| fall in 37 school districts across Michigan with wide variations the state and at the five com-;in local ability to pay and in niunity colleges? (current investment per stud^it Duckworth said the MEA will among school districts, the state continue “a responsible ap- must provide greater equaliza-proach to teacher militancy.” ition of financial support..." ' “There is a difference! Duckworth feels the state is between a militant attitude and [undergoing a “teacher revolu-acting responsibly,” he said. ti0n” and the development of ■fHBT ‘teacher power” which will I A number of factors have |comfa|ined to create the teacher [movement, Duckworth said. “The tremendous demands on jchools have caused a need for more money which hasn’t been numbers. When a teacher needed something there was a web of administration and complexity to weave through.” t t t Another factor which led1 to available," he said. “There also:the teacher movement for has been an increasing sense of recognition is the number of teacher frustration because of men in the profession who were bureauracy in school systems.” |more Interested in it as their life work The MEA president-elect is a graduate of Jackson High School. He received bis bachelor of science degree In speech in 1952 and a masters degree in speech education in 1953, both from Northwestern DISTRICTS DECREASE He said there were over 125,000 school districts in the early 1930s throughout the United States. Now there are 24.700. Michigan had 7,000 in ! 1912 and now has just below 700, he said. .. , ■ .... “Larger school districts had! nver Y-!to have increased staffs,’ ’|LECTURER Duckworth said. “This led to I He was a lecturer in dramatic increased impersonalization and production at Northwestern for teachers were lost in the two years , and worked ast technical director of the Children’s Theater, one of the nation's leading e h fJ d r e n ’ s theater enterprises. He served for three years in the Air Force and taught from 1955 to 1965 at Mount Pieasapt High School. He then came to Delta. Duckworth has been active-in the MEA since 1955. He. has worked on various committees, was president of the Mount Pleasant MEA District, represented Region 12 for five years and was on the MEA executive committee for three years. He lives with his wife and two daughters in Mount Pleasant. Giant squid can attain a length of 55 feet and weight of 1,000 pounds. “The MEA treats the law'with respect and uses the legal process to test thd law if there is an area of dispute. This will continue.” “The Holland case had significance throughout t h el! United States,” he said, refer- bring about changes for the better in public schooling. “Increased sajaries aren’t the purpose of negotiations,” he said. “There is a credibility gap in that the public doesn’t United states," ne ““j. re«r-|understand what can be ac- !?g S, through negbtia- the Michigan Supreme Codrt There has been an entire dissolving an injimetion upgrading of the educational teachers in the Holland school ,, system backto work, ■ • ENCOURAGING —He said the teachers’ main AGREEMENTS igoal is to provide the best The opinion said that the fact (education for the children of teachers are on strike doesn’tjMichigan. automatically justify court' “We have to get people to orders forcing them back to:understand the legitimate ex-work. ipense of today’s modern Duckworth pointed out that (education so they can meet the MEA is e n c o u r a g i n gjthose expenses,” said Duck; agreements between 1 o c a 1;worth. “Initially this will be associations and school boards;expensive but in the long run by June 6. He added that lit may be less expensive.” luxury is craning to Rochester for the first time. The charm of this lovely suburban area of rolling hills and wooded landscape is the setting for the newest and most unique luxury apartment community in the greater Detroit area. Visit Bedford Square for a preview, showing. 1-2 bedroom apartments from $17S include carpeting and all utilities except electricity Village Club House Swimming Pool • Tennis Courts _______udMFte.--- BEDFORD SQUARE -------<*a*e*>---- A PARTMENTS Tienken Road, just west of Rochester ltd. in City of Rochester. Rental Office phone-651-8000 _ Washday’s over sooner! Prigidaire spins out more water than any other automatic! Saves dryer running time so it saves electricity, too! Saves you heavy lifting, leaves many garments ironing-dry. MORE JET ACTION FEATURES! ■ Ooop Action Agitator. Clothes plunge deep into tub whara cleaning's thorough yet gentle. ■ Jat-Away Rinse and l int Removal So thorough theia s no imt trap to glean! • Jet-Simple Mechanism No Balta! No Gaaral No Pulleys! So dependeble.it carries this .. 5-YEAR NATIONWIDE WARRANTY backed by General Motors See your Frigidelre dealer! Frigidelro bothers to build In more help 2133 Orchard Lake Road Pontiac, Michigan Phone 333-70S2 Where Quality Furniture i» Priced Right!**' The 10th Office of First Federal Savings We are open new in our mobile unit on the site of our 10th office. We are Wry pleased end proud to become a part of this fast-growing community. It it our intention tp servo the financial needs of Union Lake 01*00 os wail as to become a part of it’s civic and business life. We are anxiously looking forward to the oompletion of our new and modern-office building here in Union Lake. Meanwhile, this office is completely eapable of handling your financial needs. Savings Accounts Home Improvement Loans Mortgage Loans Save-by-Mail Money Orders Savings Bonds Travelers Checks> > FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS UNION LAKE BRANCH OFFICE 7110 COOLEY LAKE ROAD AT HOSPITAL ROAD Horn* Office - W. Huron St.. Pontiac - Downtown Pontiac-Clarkston- Drayton - Rocheater- Leke Orion-Walled Lake-Milford-Waterford 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 80, 1968 ' • ; y, ' ■ \ “ ' , ' ' j - l I , Watch Racket Plagues , Maker By LOIS FRIEDLAND A stranger In the plant or office approaches you flashing what is apparently a gold wrist watch.' | He may open the conversation with any number of approaches such as “I won this Hamilton in a card game," or "I need money quickly It’s real- ly a $125 or $150 Lois Friedland watch but I'll let you have itiflowing script, turns out to bejbelieve they're gettingicounterfeiting of money the! for... how about $25?” Longune or Lonjiri. something for nothing,” com-police don't worry too much) * * Iwrmrn, enwwKA-nn. men ted Finney. labout counterfeit watches, he ★ * , said. The peddler lets the customer 0,16 counterfeiter, after his! snow the arrest- l0'® a court clerk that he stayed in the business! , BUYER CHEATED This scene with minor varta- _ , . . . . u tions is being, reenacted every- L ^ buyer has been suckered where in the U.S., according to ^ Don Finney, manager of Connolly's Jewelers of 65 N. Sag- inaw. At first glance, the watch appears to be an authentic brand, but when examined carefully, the fine writing on the face which appears to say Hamilton actually says Hormilton; what appears to read Longine in Light Armadillos Shed on Factors in Heredity By Science Service WASHINGTON - Since the beginning of the century, the gene has been regarded as the only carrier of heredity — the process that makes eyes blue or brown, people short or tall Now grave doubts are being raised by well-known scientists and a battle rages. At the forefront, oddly enough, are quadruplet armadillos. Molecular biologists have believed that D N A (deox yribonucleic acid), the material of which genes are made, is the master of the cell. Learn how to control the master, therefore, and you might control the development cl cancer or be able to produce better human beings. MUDDIED SOMEWHAT This bright picture is being muddied somewhat by recent characteristic of bearing litters of quadruplets. While most animals that bear Hitters produce several eggs, each egg developing into one fetus, the armadillo produces one egg only. Very early in the develop with “a simple clock movement!commit himself. He’ll show the and no jewels in an aluminum watch to a prospective buyer or alloy case. The watch is who usually will say, “Oh worth $7 to $12 at most. I that’s a Longine! The peddler An increasing' number of never says yes it is — or no it people have been coming to!*snt- jewelers to have these watches I There are a combination of fixed. They say the purchases!reasons why the counterfeiting were made in a plant, a bar, or'hasn’t been stopped, according a bus station, and that the! to Finney. First, the laws timepieces stopped running a covering this type of fraud are few weeks later, according to! weak. These laws, which control Finney. i the peddler, but not the sup- * * + : plier, are difficult to enforce, he “There is no service on these! said. watches because there are no EXPENSIVE TO OBTAIN parts available. There isn’t! • C|vil injunction anyplace to send the watch to because it was so profitable. $20,000 PROFIT He explained that he bought! watches for about $4 apiece. He sold 5,000 a month easily and made about a $20,000 profit. He said he got anywhere from $15 to $50 a watch depending on the| market. Jewelers have learned to I recognize these watches quickly by studying the usually altered! or misspelled trademark. ★ h ★ procedingsl They also look for the keyi words "astromatic1 ’or ... j „ ,11 | can be instituted against., HR . be fixed, explained Finrley. |distributors and manufacturers “agromatlc * since they appear Jewelers suspect the watches ibut th are expensive t0 obtain 0" 1^ of,the dlals are coming from the Chicago an(J rare, can a manu£oCturer! The trade-name companies obtain damages from the reP°rtedly are suffering, distributor. Thirty states have adopted area ‘RACKET THRIVING’ Finney explained that the ment of the fertilized egg it I the watches because they think splits four ways and each sec racket is thriving because there counterfeit trademark statutes are always people willing to buy that help. • * * ★ i tion develops into a fetus Thus each of the young has exactly the same, inheritance, the same genes as all the others. Like identical human twins they could be expected to be very similar in appearance. ★ ★ ★ They aren’t similar. Drs. Ftorr and Williams found wide variations between littermates. The researchers theorize that when the original egg divides four ways while the nucleus and its gene-bearing nucleic acid divides evenly, there is an unequal division of the egg’s Hundreds of these counterfeit watches come back to| legitimate factories for repair. MANUFACTURERS BLAMED The owners are told they have! they’re getting a good deal. ! Another major problem is the purchased a counterfeit and! “The easiest person to fool in uninterest of various en- they immediately blame thej the world is a person looking f o r c e m e n t authorities, ac-name manufacturer who, the, for a bargain. He or she will cording to Finney. With such;owner claims, should have, believe anything as long as they problems as marijuana and the stopped the fraud. findings which indicate that the! cytoplasm among the four sec rest of a living cell may have a | tions. lot of influence on the decisions Since the genes in each sec of the master. I tion are identical, the wide A recent development — and variation between littermates quartet of young armadillos — at the University of Texas ip Austin may provide food for thought for participants on both sides of the battle. Drs. Eleanor Storr and Roger Williams reported the results of a study of armadillos recently to the National Academy of Sciences in Washington. Armadillos have the useful must arise from the difference in the cytoplasm, a clear argument for some form o cytoplasmic, non-DNA, control over gene expression. Thus while the DNA may be the source of all the information on which the life process depends, several factors may determine the extent to which its orders are carried out. The Casual American... the man, the look and the Clipper Craft suit If you respect tradition, here it is in the authentic “University” model... born of the Ivy, nurtured wherever men of taste foregather. It’s collected, correct, cool in a breezy blend of 55% Dacron polyester, 45 % wool that comes on bright and bold and stays and stays and stays. 34” stitching edges the 3-button front... and it has a hooked center vent, pockets and a newly notched lapel. And there’s one extra-nice surprise. The price. *59.95 Monaftelt MEN'S WEAR Bloomfield Miracle Mile Telegraph at Square Lake Rd. Open Evenings 'til 9 P.M. USE YOUR MICHIGAN BANKARD OR SECURITY CHARGE I CHAIR SALE Just in time for Father's Day! y> Vr Sitting Save $30 and give Dad real comfort with this special purchase 129.88 rediner $ 99 *.(>• par This deluxe rediner reflects the custom appearance, the deep-seated comfort you'll be proud to own. Supports you naturally, adjusts with just an easy movement. In black, green, oxblood vjneile cover for beauty and durability. A rare value to add dashing accent to any decor. Save nowl a. Regular 69.88 rocker or rediner Three-position rediner or full turning rocker in smart black, olivo or beige vlneile cover. Luxurious, durable. Wipes clean for easy care. 59 b. c. Regular 69.88 T-bird swivel rocker *59 I DO par Ift*. Regular 99.88 rpeker or rediner Smart design and deep-down comfort of this foam padded rocker -make it doubly anjoyable. Covered in black; ivory or olive supported vinyl. Beautifully crafted rocker turns full, circle, re-diner adjusts to 3 positions. Padded in deep ure-fhSne foam, covered in rich green or gold fabric. *79 OPEN 10 A.M. TO 9 P.M, (Sot. 9:30-9) Drayton opon Sunday Naan tw 0 p.m. (Domtiotm Weeee Tees, red, m 4 pmj DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS* THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1908 A—9, I sleeper-stroller 16.97 Repeat of a selloutl Save 5.021 Padded bucket-type seat. 3-position back rest, adjustable footrest, cushioned troy. OPEN 10 A.M. TO 9 P.M. (Sat. 9:30-9) Drayton open Sunday Noon ta 6 p m. (Downtown closet Tties., Wed. at 6 p m.) DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS SUPER SPECIALS ON TOILETRIES 4.25 'Heaven Sent* cologne Rubinstein's 3 fluid H n AA ounce size cologne. Windsong by Matchabelli $5 value cologne plus A AA free bottle of perfume! » 'Chantilly' Boutique set Eau de Toilette and ^ AA shaker bath powder! 79c Dee-lighttul bubble bath Two 16-oz. wt. bagsl 119 Delicate scent. * Regular 1.25 bubble bath 52 packets per boxl QQc Bathe in luxury and save. ^ ~ (\ot shown) 17.87 10.87 14.87 26.87 SALE Ready to finish clear ponderosa pines furniture Smoothly sanded ponderosa pine furniture is sturdily constructed with wood set in backs and drawer bottoms. Go creative with antique kit, varnish or paint to suit your fancy. Correlated ponderosa pine bookcases a. 8.98 and bookcaae, S.87 a. 14.9S, 30” bookcaM, 11.87 b. 12.98 24" bookcaM, 10.87 d. 1S.9S, 39" bookcaao, 12.17 0. 14.98 cornor bookcaM .... 12.87 SALE Jumbo width, white rayon antique satin draperies 60x45'* pair Snowy white antique satin traverse draperies hang *ull from deep pinch pleats. Easy care window beauty it completely washable, needs little 'ironing. Available in sizes to fit mosf windows. Hurry alhd just say, "Charge it". 60x63"..!. 3.00 pr. 60x84"....4.00 pr. 90x84"...8.00 pr. 120x84" .. 10.00 pr. 180x84" .... 13.00 pr. 2.50 Embroidered Tetron® ninon tier sets White Tetron® ninon ruffled curtains ^ 3.44 6.49 70x36" tier, 70x11" valance. Washable Tetron polyester ninon. White. $Wx63" pelr Easy-cpre-Tetron* polyester ninon. $Wx81” 6.99 pr. DWxSI" 13.99 pr. TWx81" 22.99 pr. Reg. 6.99 colorful print cotton quilts 5.88 80x84" floral, modern or patch quilts. Washable cotfbn’. Save I J' SALE Long wearing room-size nylon pile rug 19.88 816x1 l’A-ft. easy-to-clean nylon rug with cushiony foam rubber backing. Serged all around. Colors. FuH, 12x15-foot rug 47.99 Dacron® bed pillows in 3 popular sizes Easy-care cotton chenille bedspread 3.00 21x27* lira 488 Dacron* polyester fill, cotton tick. 21x31"....4.00 21x37" 3 00 Twin or full size closely tufted chenille. Four styles, many colors. Save! Reg. 3.99 thermal breeze blankets 2 *7 Perfect yeor 'round. 72x90" fits .*wm or-double size beds. Savel OPEN 10 A.M. TO 9 P.M. (Sat. 9:30*9) Drayton open Sunday Noon to 6 (Downtown closes Tues., Wed. et 6 p.m.) , -r -\ ■ , \ m DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS lm' -■ i i . A—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS* THURSDAY/MAY 301 1908 India Greets Spring With Ho//, a Festive Bit of Madness somewhat more realistic. Theyi A dispute over water throwing posted signs in the major hotels'jn Allahabad disintegrated into advising foreign tourists to remain witjiin the hotel compounds during the day of Holi. it it it a communal clash in which two young men were stabbed to death. * ★ ★ But generally, the celebration (EDITOR’S NOTE — Spring rites vary a good deal from country to country, though they are all generally happy festivals to welcome the u>flrm weather. In India, there is something called Holi, basically a Hindu | Two Russian women tourist? festival. It's not for the meek who decided to see for and mild, this touch of spring themselves nliade it barely one-iwas lighthearted merriment, madness.) half block from their hotel) ^oH is belived to have By JOE MCGOWAN JR. Ibefore giving ujr^*"8,originated in the days of Aryan *DHneA’ Indians^!rTd ulg'e"^1’ water and6 their!invasion of the,subcontinent and themselves in a touch ofhair»nd faces smeared With is thought to have been a madness - a festival called! tightly colored powders. iharvest celebration. Even now, Holi. * * * celobrators put on their very Throwing off the shackles of I Foreigners were told the oldest garment on Holi so the winter boredom, Indians spend! ^estlvjties ended jtt sundown, coiored water harms nothing the night of a full moon burning) and the followlng day wou,d ^ valuable. And the next day, new effigies of evil gods and all the1®3^ for travel But thls word spi.ing ciothing is put on, much next dav dousing each other!dldn^ reach one village about) jn the fashion of the Christian a family will gather At a Thandal, it has a milk base toi grandparent's home for a< which Is added ground cucum-i private celebration In a n ber seeds, melon seeds and) enclosed courtyard. [hemp juice. After fermenting * * * for a little while, the mixture One reason the celebration j1becomes ^ P°werful-often gets out of hand is a * RIENDS EMBRACE homemade drink usually Late in the day, while some of prepared for Holi. C a 11 e d the heavier imbibers sleep it off, others walk through the streets exchanginging greetings, Old friends will embrace, wish each other prosperity, and apply a dab of colored paste to each other’s forehad. Although Holi is basically a Hindu festival, it is offbn celebrated as well by Sikhs and ferences and come together. Moslems. iThey throw off the veneer of * * * I formality and free their spirit As one Indian writer put It by singing, dancing and daubing this year, “Here, at least for a one another’s faces and few hours, people sink all dif- clothes." Get acquainted... with buckets of colored water ori6® mdes west ^8™, where) world’s Easter. smearing each other with dye *heu barricaded the powders stirred Into clinging!hl^way the day after Hob. paste. j * * * * + * They drenched passersby and. The timid and the meek in the case-of one car carrying wisely stay indoors during Holi, j two Americans, they smashed and only the extremely brave, or uniformed foreigner ventures forth. Because the merry-making often gets out of hand, authorities in New Delhi this the windows and threw colored water on the couple when they declined to get out and be) "entertained.” Rowdy students EFFIGIES BURNED On the eve of Holi, piles of firewood are placed in key intersections of villages and cities. Effigies of the evil gods are erected atop the piles and after sunset, they are burned, it it it , The next mornig, some young I men roam the streets with long willow switches flailing at pass- Vpnr invoked emergency! In New Delhi- rowdy studentsling bicyclists or pedestrians, regulations prohibiting thest°PPed afnd demanded (This is supposed to be an act ., J; nf nninrJlri nrntnr contributions of money to buy,of driving out . .whatever evil . unwilling tnlsweets. Thev threw colored!spirits were not binned the dyes on anyone unwilling to . J , . , ,i . .. . , take Dart | water on those who refused and night before. P ‘ ibeat up some young men who) * * * SIGNS POSTED tried to protect their girl Few women brave the streets, Authorities In this city were!friends. ‘but instead all the members of with the fascinating history ot your Dotrolt Btvar. You’ll lov# MI Bs one ot tht first to sn)oy ths return of forryboat rldas to our magnificent and historical Datroil River. From Delroil: Boats leave dally from 9 AM to midnight from west end of Cobo Hall on Civic Center Drive. For additional Datrolt Information, call (1-313) 983-SBSS. From Windaor: Boats Issvs daily from 9 AM to midnight from the foot of Ouellette. For additional Windaor Information, ceir(1*81t) 798*2117. enneu lA/AV/Q Cl DOT miAIITV " ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY END-OF-MONTH FOR WOMEN 25 Women's Repriced Sweaters \l 00%Acrilancardiganhand *v ‘ washable in fashion shades. Save now! 488 24 Women's Belts Repriced! Many stylos and sizes in new _ ^ fashion shades. Orig. $2.00. ^a~V Now! 45 Women's Repriced Shifts Choice of solids, patterns, stripes, M 0 0 in sizes S, M, L. _ Now Only! 40 Repriced Women's Skirts Straight and A-Line styles in moq mostly broken sizes* Save Now! 80-Pr. Women's Jamaicas Choice of colors in most ^ sizes, plaids and solids ma- "y for chine washable. $5 200 REPRICED WOMEN'S BETTER DRESSES... AT TERRIFIC SAVINGS! • Your choice of fabrics & colors for many summer occasions • Jr., jr. petite, misses and half sizes. • Save now ... Orig $6 to $14. Now $4_$6-$8 500 yds. 100% Cotton PRINTS AND SOLIDS SAVE! machine washable in 36" widths sanforized far- long-wear Now Only! 38 c yd. 300 yds. Print and Solid SAILCLOTH REPRICED! • 38" widths and easy-care wash N' wear e Sanforized for minimum shrinkage. Only! 68; 200 Yds. Repriced Bonded ORLON/WOOL BLENDS! e 100% acetate lining in solid colors e 80% orlon/20% wool at terrific savings. 1 88 yd. FOR BOYS 110 Boys' Dress Shirts Long*sleeve stylings in a choice of colors and most sizes. Orig. 2.98, new 1.88. Also 100% cottons. Save New! 1 66 20 Repriced Boys' Suits Repriced to dear in most boys' _ ^ Q Q sizes and favorite colors. Orig. lf|00 12.98 - 14.98. Now! INFANT SAVINGS! 5 Infant Bathinettes Metal frame/padded top/plastic tub and safety strap. Orig. 19.98. «P 1 Now! 24 Infants' Knit Dresses 100% cotton in pink or blue only. Broken sizes. Orig. 3.50. Now! 1 88 48 Infants' Cotton Playwear Brother and Sister Sets in sun-suit ^ q 0 or dresses. Orig. 3.98. *Joo Now! 100 Women's Tricot Slips FOR GIRLS 100% nylon satin tricot in assort- ed colors and broken sizes. Orig- 0|88 inally $4.00. Now! 40 Girls' Repriced Sweaters Fisherman knit sweaters in short *\qq sleeve or sleeveless 100% cotton. rjOO FOR THE HOME 22 Repriced Table Lamps 2188-2988 FORMENI 30 Women's Pendant Watches Gold or silver styles with assorted mmQ q designs and patterns. Orig. 8.88- JOtS Orig. 3.98. Now! Modern, traditional, provincial efytat'pri.ced to clear orig. 24.98-34.98. 20 Men's Repriced Pajamas 1 00% Cotton in handsome shades ^ Q Q for men. Broken sizes. Orig. 4.98. Too Now! 9.99. Now! 100 Women's Repriced SUMMER SHELLS 288 Orig. 3.98 Now! 100% nylon in assorted styles and patterns in women's sizes S, M, L. Save now at Penneys. 50 Repriced Swimsuits 100% nylon with funny face motif, ja qq Complete with bucket and shovel. 18 High Intensity Lamps Perfect for student desks or for £ _ home reading. Telescope arms. *P K Orig. 6.88. Now! 25 Men's 'Rpjison' Shavers Electric razors with ; stainless _ /■> Q Q steel cutters and side trimmers. | ^88 Now! Orig. 5.98 Now! 60 pcs. Girls^Sportswear Slacks, skirts, sweaters, tops, irt|l wide selection of colors. Orig. 2,88. Now! 88 30 Repriced Scatter Rugs 100% Viscose rayon pile in decorator brown/orange. 36x60 Oria.^8 J98 Now! trig.- mm 27x48 Orig. 5.98 Now! $6 $3 100 pcs. Jeans, Jamaicas most girls' sizes with attractive print. 144-1 88 50 Repriced Walkie-Talkie Transistor with % mile range with telescoping antenna. $ 1 Orig. 12.50 Now! •a. 34 Men's Repriced Better SPORT COATS „3488 Orig. 39.95-47.95 Now! Repriced to clear, wools, rayons, and wool blends in regular or long models. Many one of a kind. Save new at Penneys. 60 Women's Head Scarfs Triangle shape in solids and pat- ~ ^ terns at terrific savings. Orig. $1. ikAC Now! 150 Pcs. Blouse SANSSCT 100% Antron nylon in short sleeve styles and assorted colors. Orig. 3.98. Now! 18 Cordless Knives Rechargeable with stand and 1-yeor guarantee. Orig. 15.88. Now! $io 75 Repriced Sport Shirts Plaids, solids, stripes, .in as- A sorted styles. Orig. 3*98-$5. O Now! 60 Pcs. Repriced Jewelry Pins, earrings, in a rainbow of summer shades. Orig. $2.00. Now : n 15 Wicker Sewing Baskets 50 Pr. Tier Curtains Choice of*styles^with at w/6 legs, aqq In assorted color and styles. WO© Now! 100% cotton with matching val-anco. 30" and 36" lengths. Orig. 2.44. Now! 1 88 Men's Casual Slack Broken sizes and colors—Assorted styles. % - , ' Now! 2/$6 OPEN MON. THRU SAT. til 9p.M. AT TELEGRAPH & SO. LAKE RD. IN BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP... MIRACLE MILE CENTER! 1 i'll THE'PONTIAC TRESS. THURSDAY, MAY do, ]00R A—11 Studies Aim at Large Space Station CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. UR -The Defense Department Is conducting three major studies that could lead ultimately to a large multipurpose military mir.ned space station. The studies concern escape devices, a reflyahle spaceship that could land like an airplane, and the station itself, a a a Col. Francis X. Kane, director of development planning, Space and Missile Systems Organization, Air Force Systems Command, discussed them here last week at the annual conference of the Aviation-Space Writers Association. Before any of them could become actual programs their usefulness and cost-ef-fectiveness must be demonstrated, he said. COOPERATION Kane reported the Defense Department and National A e r o n a u t It s and Space Administration are cooperating on proposals for space rescue and escape systems. "For the time being," he said, "we are continuing to use reaundant critical systems to assure as much reliability as possible as a means of avoiding space emergencies, ★ - f ★ if t "But we chn forecast that emergencies might occur in space in the next 10 years, so we're looking into the problem, . detailing the most critical possible emergencies and determining the best way to escape from them.” Kane said major emergencies would involve explosion, meteoroid puncture and fire. MULTIMANNED He said that any approved escape vehicle probably would be multimpnned in case of injury to one or more men; “We also are asking such questions as: How many men should each vehicle carry? What subsystems should be aboard? How will they communicate with the ground? Should they be rigid or expandable?” Discussing the reusable, maneuverable spaceship — the socalled lifting body — Kane said: "We've concluded that with a lifting body we can steer to a variety of landing sites with all-weather capability. We’re looking at pop-out wings so the craft can operate like an airplane after it has reentered the atmosphere from space.” Under consideration, he said, are craft that could be flown as many as 50 times and that both manned and unmanned versions are being studied. They Could be used for ferrying astronaut crews and supplies between earth and large space stations. MUST PROVE UTILITY "We can build a multipurpose space station,” Kane said. “But we must prove its utility. At present we are studying logistic requirements, life support systems and the like. We’re asking how big the crew should be — 6, 9,12 or more men? “How often should we change the crew — every 30, 60 or 90 days? Or should we leave some of them up there a year or more? Is it better to have the station -above or below the Van Allen radiation belt? If we're in the belt, what protection is needed?" ★ h "is He said many of tbe answers will come from two small space stations being planned — NASA’s three-man Apollo workshop and the Air Force's two-man manned orbiting laboratory. Both are expected to be flying In the early 1070s —• one to pursue military, the other scientific and peaceful goals. * * ★ If they prove the feasibility of a large station, a go-ahead may be given. Then there will arise this question, already under discussion, whether the military and NASA programs should be combined into one or more national space stations. There are some $2,000 independent drugstores as well as many chain drugstores in the United States. SALE! TUSSY Alberto VO-5 £ HAIR DRESSIM6 Reg. 1.09 Tube $ 69° ! CLINI-TEST TABLETS Reg. 2.25 hsk jmjg Bottle V *§*§ SUCARYL LIQUID 20-oz. Size, *• Non-Calorie Sweetener. ^ Reg. 2.98 159 AT REDUCED Save on jaunty Jamaicas and complete a fun wardrobe! Solids, reg. 2.98 ea. NOW Plaids, reg. 3.98 ea. NOW 2 f°^5 now 2 Plan on having**! Jamaica holiday all summer long in these cool and breezy Care classics! Striking solid toned favorite*Take shape in a polyester/cotton oxford-blend or western look cottdn/nylon Qretch denim. Newsy woven plaids » of polyester/cotton complete this breezy shdh story. Best of all it the Way they machine wash — need just touch-up ironing. Choose yours from this fantastic collection — save plenty I Misses' sizes 8 to 18.. SHOP TILL 9 P.M.. . . MON. THRU SAT.! e 13-Mlli a WOODWARD • ItLtGRAPH I. SO. LAKE *12-Mllt AVAN DYKI • 7-Mllt Noithweed Shopping Or. (loomftold Town.hlp ' Toth Plata Shopping Or. Oraitt Men's'Young Gentry' Penn-Prest' casual slacks with Soil Release Now Reg. 5.98 4.99 These bright and lively looking oxford weave slacks orb a study tn perpetual motion! No time Out needed for ironing or dry cleaning. Just machine wash and tumble dry and they're ready fo go again. The crease nevor steps, either . •, it's permanent. No miracles; jutt'our wrinkle-bottling Penn-PrOst® blend ofw 50% Fortrai® palyester/50% cotton;'And, because-of Soli Reloase, strain» no longer need be o blight on your life,-Most of them will come out In just one^. washing. Get yours In Grad style, with bMt loop*. Waist sizes 29 to 4£: Now's the timet- k MACK Saint* Wood. a 15240 GRAND RIVtR Ea,t at Oraenllald a FORT-.A iMMONS Lincoln Park Plata . CHARGE IT! TONI ADORN HAIR 1.5Q Size •- Regular ibr Hard fo~ Held <*lf-ityljng hair spray. 1 I n§ C0TY SPRAY COLOGNE 2.80 OOD ‘ Value £ " ©rtce-o-yeor special! * Flacon mitt of L'Aijnewt’* Em«rond, L'Origan, Paris ■ - WHITE RAIN .SUAMP00 li.ee-" C9c - Value Ow 14-OX.-botSf*. Clean* -'and give, hair new vitality. . PAMPERS DIAPERS Reg. 1.09 77' Ditposabla, flui abla night timepo pari. Pkg.-of 12. DRUG STORE |C A PACKAGE M 4895 DIXIE HWY. 10 M LIQUOR STORE [jg! City-Wide Frse Prescription Delivery. Have Your D6cfor Cell Your NoarejU THRIFTY for Prompt Free Delivery Samoa. have r\np*r "Vk | FILLEO BY US Y0UH xf I/ Jp I (I li\| QUALITY QRUGS NEXT |l\LVd >u\iri iv. J| LOWEST PRICE 4895 Ome Highway 140 North Sag r.aw Huron Street SDO Po. ka.|. 1 i • Si. A—13 <7 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1968 275 Scouts Participate in Outing Some 275 boys spent a weekend with nature recently while attending the Pontiac District Camp-O-Ree at Camp Agawam, the Boy Scout camp in Orion Township. * ★ * The campers, 19 troops split into 36 patrols with five tonight boys each, came to the camp Friday evening to set up their camping equipment for the weekend. After spending the night in tents they had set up, the boys got up to cook their breakfast lover a camp fire and eat on tables they had built by cutting down tree branches and lashing the wood together with twine. * * * ' The scouts spent the morning working on gateways and cleaning up camping areas. 114 ACRES | Camp Agawam, which was., purchased in 1918, contains 114 i acres of the shore of Tommy’s Camp-O-Ree spent the afternoon Lake. jparticipating in games and a ★ ★ * ' gold rush. _ . , ..... | The goldrush is an adventure 1 Each summer 1 000 “ trail created by a scoutmaster tend the camp, coming in one', with various trail-solving prob-week shifts. The summer term iems. is seven weeks long. The camp BROKEN BONES is used for weekend camping j ^ follow the ^ and for the winter and as facilities | , . fp for adultare checked on how they for training courses Scouters. ★ ★ ★ The Scouts attending Other tasks include reading (like Indians and tap new trail signs, map work and using I members, a compass. | Each Scout in this order has The boys also are judged dn been elected by the members in how they sterilize water for I his own troop. Requirements drinking. They take muddy include having spent 15 days water and run it through a and nights living outdoors, hankerchief to strain out the1 The Scouts returned home mud, boil it and then aerate it. (Sunday after services. * * * Howard Bone of 16 3 4 The evening’s entertainment Inverness, Sylvan Lake, was perform. Such emergencies as a person pretending to have' a the broken arm or leg may arise. was an order of the arrow callout. This is a cer^tflony where order-of-the-arrow Scouts dress chairman- of the camping and activities committee which organized the Camp-O-Ree. Rope Tricks, Anyone? Pontiac Press Photos by Roll Winter Scouts Set Up Temporary Camp Site For The Camp-O-Ree Weekend At Camp Agawam Food Cooked In An Oven Never Tasted So Good Terry Wilton Of 2117 Lakewind, West Bloomfield Township, Guts Wood Scouter Practices First Aid On Mock Victim Hey,- Mpm, Cgn I Build You A Table? THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 80, 1968 f DOUBLE 1 BONUS! King or Queen Size QUILTED BEDSPREAD PLUS King or Queen Size HEADBOARD (not as illustrated) with Your Purchase of Any L King or Queen Size * IL Sleep Set. DOUBLE BONUS! King or Quaen Size QUILTEC BEDSPREAD Plus King or Queen Size HEADBOARD (not as illustrated) with Your Purchase of Any King or Queen Sire Sleep Set. ' double 1 BONUS! Beautiful Plastic Heed* board (not as illustrated) and Matat Frame with Casters with the Purchase of any Twin or , \ Full Size Set! / A—18 |I f 'Galloping Swede/ 76, Hits the Montana Campaign Trail Again HELENA, Mont. (#1 — HugolAmerica and I discovered Aronson, the "Galloping Swede" I Columbus," Aronson said, who rose from penniless lm- He parked hla clothes on a migrant to governor of Mon tana, is galloping down the cam paign trail again at the age of 76. The big, strong Swede who ■till speaks English with a heavy accent is. roaming Mon tana’a vast mountains and plains trying to obtain the Republican gubernatorial nomina tion for hla friend, Lt. Gov. Ted James. Aronson also is Richard M Nixon’s Montana campaign chairman despite the fact that Nixon has endorsed James’ opponent Gov. Tim Babcock, in Montana’s mJime 4 GOP primary. Aronson Is just as rough and tough as in the days when he bounced oil trucks labeled "The Galloping Swede" down dusty depression oil-field roads in the 1930s. , WORN OUT? "I thought maybe the name of J. Hugo Aronson might be getting worn out like an old shawl," he said. "But when got to campaigning I found the people are just as kind to this immigrant boy as they ever Were.” The grand old man of Montana politics still expresses disbelief at what has happeneed to him since he stepped off a boat from Sweden in 1911 at the age of 20 with $25 in his pocket and |Ul English vocabulary that consisted of three words: “Ham and eggs." ★ ★ ★ He worked in Boston until he picked up enough English to order something else to eat Then he rode freight trains across 38 states until, on a hot July day in 1914, a brakeman kicked him out of a boxcar in the southern Montana town of Columbus. "Columbus discovered Scientist Cites Early Tool Use By National Geographic-Society WASHINGTONDr. Louis S. B. Leakey has unearthed evidence that a bone-smashing African ancestor of man used a crude stone hammer 12 million years ago. "This discovery marks a very Important milestone in our understanding of man’s evolu ti'on as a toolmaker," the British anthropologist explained. The prehuman h o m i n i d , Kenyapithecus w i c k e r i, apparently hammered open animal skulls and bones to reach the brains and marrow Dr. Leakey found fossil bones of animals with evidence of deliberate fractures. The new finds were made at Fort Ternan, Kenya, with support from the ‘National Geographic Society, a long-time sponsor of Dr. Leakey’s search for early man. ANIMAL FOOD "It is possible to say," Dr. Leakey reported, “that as far back as 12 million years ago our prehuman ancestors in Africa had started to make use of animal food to augment their vegetable diet. In order to do this they had begun to inake use of stones as hammers. “Amongst the discoveries at Fort Ternan is one of the stones which was used for this purpose. It clearly exhibits considerable damage along two angular edges, as a result of usage." fence and Went for a swim in the icy Yellowstone River, only to emerge to find a mule chewing up his pants. He wandered into town in rags and somehow wrangled a farm job pitching hay. From there he went to the Montana -Wyoming border where he e * t e b 1 i • h e d a homestead on which he still pays taxes. He got into the oil business, building rigs, and figured out a way to move 85-foot derricks without dismantling them. That was a milestone in the industry. After Army service In World War I, Aronson moved to the booming northern Montana oil-fields around Cut Bank. He got his nickname because he ran as he worked, and his oil business flourished. He started his own company and founded the oil towns of Ollmont, Gallup City and Santa Rita. He became president of a bank in Cut Bank and bought a 4,000-acre ranch, but continued rig building, trucking, pipelining. ELECTED JO COUNCIL In 1934 he was elected to the Cut Bank City Council, then in 1938 to the Montana House, and in 1944 to the state senate. VWhen they wanted me to run for governor, I told them I didn't have the qualifications," he said. But he ran in 1951 and won, and won another four-year term in 1955. ★ # * > Since his retirement from active politics in 1960, he has lived on the shore of Flathead Lake in northwestern Montana, but he can’t get off the campaign frail. He feels Nixon will be nominated and will be the next president. "This ‘Galloping Swede’ is sincere when he says he’ll never even be able to repay the interest on the debt he owes his adopted state and his adopted country," Aronson said. "You people born and raised In this country take too damned much for granted," * * ★ He was asked if he thought an immigrant today could accomplish what he has. “That,” said Aronson, “depends on the immigrant.” Art You Looking For \k PUBLIC *DDRESS( SYSTEMS MICROPHONES? MpPUFIERS? ACCESSORIES? lovi a varied and > Supply of every- ^ it takes to complete combo. AH famous | AND THE PRIOR IS RIGHT Liberal Trade Allowance Liyaway Convenient Terms , Edwards, • N. Saginaw Downtown Pontiao ALL STORES CLOSED TODAY (MEMORIAL DAY) SALE STARTS TOMORROW 10 A.M. MEMORIAL DAY Save on Kings and Queens... Twins and Fulls! Buy direct from the nation’s largest mattress chain! Greater than ever discounts plus our famous Double Bonus! Twin or Full Size Mattress & Box Spring Fabulous tow pricel Heavy duty cover. Good looking. Long wearing. 2 DAYS ONLY mmmeeivuiBir damiic Huge 7 «mI long, 6 feet wide Mattress end Box Spring HERE'S WHAT YOU GET: • King Size Mattress • 2 King Size Fieldcrest • King Size Box Spring Percale Sheets • King Size Metal Frame • 2 King Size Pillowcases with Casters • 2 King .Size Pillows • King Size Mattress Pad 2 DAYS ONLY 145 INCLUDES DOUBLE BONUS Home of the famous Double Bonus, gives you sensational super savings! Twin or Full Size, Quilled Button-Free Mattress & Box Spring Quilted luxury, finest quality. Long wearing, deeply cushioned comfort. Attractive, extra-heavy cover. 2 DAYS ONLY INCLUDES DOUBLE BONOS GENUINE ORTHO MATTRESSES ARE SOLD ONLY AT ORTHO STORES, THE MATTRESS SPECIALISTS 12 Pc. King Size Sleep Set Lmmrlnuu, quilted button-tree! 7 ft. long, 6 ft wido mattreee end 2 box eprlnge! HERE’S WHAT YOU GET: King Size Mattress 2 Box Springs King Size Metal Frame with Casters King Size Mattress Pad 12 King Size Fieldcrest Percale Sheets 2 King Size Pillowcases 12 King Size Pillows 2 DAYS $ ONLY 174 INCLUDES DOUBLE BONUS 12 Pa Queen Size 60 In. wide, 80 In- long mattreee and box epringl HERE’S WHAT YOU GET: • Queen Size Mattress • Queen Size Box Spring • Queen Size Metal Frame with Casters • Queen Size Mattress Pad • 2 Queen Size Fieldcrest Percale Sheets • 2 Queen Size . Pillowcases • 2 Queen Size Pillows 2 DAYS ONLY INCLUDES DOUBLE BONUS EXTRA FIRM TWIN OR FULL SIZE Mattress & Box Spring Extrafirmforaddedsupportl heavy cover. Handles antj*' Deeply cushioned tempered ventilators for easy turning, steel coils. Attractive extra long lasting comfort* ^ 2 DAYS ONLY 66 INCLUDES DOUBLE BONUS Open Daily 10a.m.-9p.m.» Sat. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. * Sun. 12-6 p.m. (Livernois Closed Sunday) • Phone Orders Accepted*No Cash Down, Up To 24 Months To Pay! 2211 S. TELEGRAPH, PONTIAC WE HONOR MICHIGAN BANKARD and SECURITY CHARGE MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER • MIRACLE MILE STORE ONLY, OPEN SAT. TIL 9 P.M. PHONE: 332-2227 FREE PARKING AT ALL ORTHO STORES Other ORTHO STORES in Detroit, Livonia, Lincoln Pork, Roseville, Dearborn ai?d Oak Park 1 A—14 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. MAY ao, 1968 Tale of New Student Twists / * Princeton Grips Today s Tiger PRINCETON, N.J. OB —faculty and administrationjserved as president of Princeton Princeton prompted Moorman Princeton University, which meetings, and a study is nowf in‘60 years ago. The system re-to call it '“the northernmost gave the pame the Silent Gener- progress to determine what the ceived nationwide attention in Southern school.” atlon to the students of the role of the students should be in J1957 when surveys disclosed j * * * 1950s, has shucked that image in running the university. that three-quarters of the reject-! protest, at Princeton has so this year of campus unrest. j Goheen, Class of 40, seesj^j candidates were Jewish. J far been unmarked bv violence In the past year: no radical change takmg place. * * * |or vehemence. A member of the radical * * _ * The outgoing president of the Students for a Democratic So- ‘ Princeton is always chang-cietv was elected president of inj.” he noted in an interview, the student government. The 49-year old president who A * * I favors tweed sports jackets and 2. A Negro was elected presi>w “es; acknowledged how-dent of the sophomore class. |*ver'1 .hat,tod“:v;fs Pr®ceton un' ‘ 3. An SDS-organized stration tor student power drew „students the„ were ,egs di. 1,000 students to the office of ^e| versjfjedi jess prepared and university president. ’ jnot as competitive as today’s 4. Thirty students were arrest- are.. he sajd ed while protesting an on-cam-; i Defense Department re LESS WELL-HEELED search installation. . In past years, Princetonians Iwere a well-heeled group, with (most coming from preparatory 222 YEARS OLD Princeton SDS had considered student body, Marc Lackritz of|a one.(jay sit-in at Nassau Hall, Cleveland, Ohio, favors the club,^ ^e p|ans were canceled at system, but says the social al-j^ urging of the “social Demo-ternatives at Princeton needlcrajs.» jn gpg as one student broadening. | |put it “Interestingly enough, as so-. . .. „ cial alternatives have expanded, ,, ’ ... . . ,1 . , ... . ./president, believes that what the student body has changed. ■_ .. Four club presidents, including happened at Columbia could oc-Lackritz, are Jewish. VoraPrmceton. A few radical revolutionaries CLASS PICKS NEGRO would be very happy to see the Elliott Moorman of Newark, university brought to a halt,”! one of about 50 Negroes among Goheen said. “But ft’s a very the 3,200 undergraduates, is small number—even of SDS it-j president of the sophomore j self.” League member. * ★ plush green campus in central New Jersey. Eating clubs, long a symbol of Princeton’s exclusivity, line tree shaded Prospect Street where upperclassmen dine and dance in 19th century elegance. IMAGE CLUNG TO Most of Princeton’s shaven, well-starched OPEN FRI. 9:30 A.M. to 9 P.M. SAT. 9:30 A.M. to 6>30 P.M. and Mon. 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. Man 2 Diamond Solitaire with 4 Diamond Matching Wedding Ring...... Diamond Solitaire with Matching Wadding Ringj............ Diamond SoUtairo with MatoMng Diamond Wedding Ring ...... Diamond Solitaira with MatoMng Diamond Wadding Ring....... Diamond Solitaire with MatoMng Wedding Ring ............ Diamond Solitaire with MatoMng Wedding Ring., These were among changes|jj^|WOjgi Today, 60 percent of class. He chose Princeton over! The SDS chapter, meadquar-the 222-year-old Ivy League in-^ undergraduate come fromjHarvard, Yale and Notre Damejtered in the basement of a stu-stitution underwent in a school jp^j^ high scj,oois, and half of because at Princeton there was dent activities building, num- year in which rebellious stu-|au studen^s receiVe some form “the challenge of changing atti-bers about 100 students and sev- dents seized university buildingsij j-nancjaj assjsjan(,g hides." * eral hundred more* sympathiz- on dozens of campuses across :• BRIDAL SET HAS '/4-CT.* DIAMOND *82 Ref. 112.48 - 3 Day Sparkling solitaire in Florentine band of 14K white or 2-twie gold. 'Total WsigM CORSAIR BY SMITH-CORONA Discount Price Charge It A) Full-size manual typewriter by Smith-Corona® in pica or elite type, with carrying case. ROYAL MERCURY PORTABLE 36“ SWIRL SET HAS FINE SOLITAIRE *112 Reg. 158.38 - 3 Day .28 carat* Diamond in Florentined-aho-ii Ider bridal set. I4K' gold. Our Reg. 44.74 4 Days Only B. Full-size office keyboard model with touch regulator, two-color, ribbon, stencil cutter and case n ft ’ WI of 8 DIAMONDS *66 Reg. 88.92 - .1 Day* 1 diamond engagement ring interlocks with ^ diamond band. Save! 'Total Weight Enlarged To Shew Detail GLENWOOD PLAZA . North Perry at Glenwood Sears SEARS. ROEBUCK AND CO. jflHj Fathers Day Remember Dad on His Day-Sunday, June 16th Craftsman 9" Radial Arm Saw A COMPLETELY NEW AND IMPROVED DESIGN 1%-HP direct drive capacitor motor delivers full power at all times. Automatic thermal protector. Key lock on switch. Color coded controls. Power unit carriage glides on permanently lubricated and exceptionally accurate ball bearings. Built-in hard steel tracks for wear resistance. NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan Reg. 169.95 *119 Craftsman 78-pc. Socket Set EXCLUSIVE QUICK RELEASE FEATURE Vi" dr. ratchet; 9 12-pt. sockets, 2 extension bars. %” dr. ratchet, 7 12-pt. sockets, extension bar, handle.! V\ dr. 9 6-pt. sockets, handle, extension, bar, box. Other miscellaneous tools. Hardware Dept. Reg. Separate Price 69.26 Home Auto Repair Specials Torque Wrench, reg. 9.99.....6.99 Super Duty Tool Box, reg. 17.99 14.99 Metal Mend, reg. 1.69 . ......« 1.22 Propane Torch, reg. 5.99.....4.88 Tune Up.Kit..................5.49 Feeler Gauge............ 1.69 Gap Gauge .................. 49c Piston Ring Compressor ...... 2.49 Cross Rim Wrench ............2.59 ' ' ' d Brake Spring Plier ........... 2.99 Briake Adjusting Tool.......... 99c Gear Puller.............. 1.. 4,89 Distributor Adjusting Tool Set.. 5.19 Battery Clamp Spreader . . . . . . 3.29 Distributor Wrench .*........2.69 1 S^-inch Drill Press *109 Beg. 129.95 Arc Welder Set *119 Reg. 139.99 Vl ith 6‘* spindle travel. Full-length hell guard adds extra safety 3„V/8** high I Welding Outfit 99*8 Reg. 122.98 16 heats from 40 to 230 amps. Industrial twin carbon are torch. Slide switch. 1 stage oxy-acetylene outfit with rutting torch. Cuts up to 6 inches thick. Home and Shop Vac-AA" 59.99 Prrmanex hose won’t chip, peel or crack. Clean, wet . or dry area... 27 .gallon*. Air Impact Wrench 99" Rag. 119.99 >l-pc. Atato. Creeper 12" Reg. 14.99 Adjust torque from 20 to ] 60 fl. lb*. Uge* Vi" tfqiiare drive rocket.. Reverse control. 49.99 .Air Impact Hammer . 39.99 Permanex body won't crack, chip, peel. With tool trough and lrayvSofl head rest. 2-dr. Tool Chest Rtg. i arae 11.99 Idea) for mechanic, repair-- man. ,Hravy-gauge .feel. 2 deep drawer*. Tote tray. 1 Ton Hoist IB"® Re*. 24.99 1.1ft*, pulls' Mrelche*. 15. J leverage jet portable, J Ton, reg, 34.99..........25.99 Open .Monday, T h u r * d a y, Friday, Saturday 9 to 9. Tuesday, Wednesday 9 to 5:30 SEARS. ROEBUCK AND CO. Downtown Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171 I f V ft THE PONTIAC PKtibSf T11UKSDAY, MAY 80, 1968 A—17 Theater Stage Tor French Revolutionaries PARIS W> — Young Frenchmen trying to make a revolution insist they have no single headquarters. If they did it would be the 24-hour-a-day political meeting installed in the Odeon: Theater a few blocks from ihe Sorbonne. The iqeeting goes on in the orchestra, boxes and balconies. Behind the scenes—literally—is the headquarters of the Odeon Committee of Revolutionary Ac tion. ★ ★ ★ "The purpose of the revolutionary movement,” it says, “is to create a revolutionary situation . . . consequently, thr only action that is effective and useful to the revolutionary movement is an action of de- struction, permanent fight against the present society.” The committee has no visible chief, and its members do not like to give their names. But leaders are clearly emerging. One is a blohd, 27-year-old journalist who wants to be known only by his first name—Alain. OPPOSES ORGANIZATIONS Alain says the committee includes people who belong to several revolutionary parties, Communists among them, but no one is allowed to join as a representative of a party'or a trade union. The committee opposes all such organizations as part of the society it wants to destroy. Similar committee* exist at the Sorbonne, at ah anr^ex on the Rue Cqnsler and at the University of Nanterre, where Daniel Cohn-Bendit, best known of the student leaders, was a student. He has now been expelled from France. * * * More attention is being focused on the Odeon, because of its central location. Nanterre is in the suburb*, and the Rue |Censier is some distance from the city center. Alain insists there is no question of leadership by one committee, and that there is close contact among them. The students pride themselves on being individualists and the anarchists’ black flag flies over the Odeon and other occupied buildings. Next to it is usually a red flag, which in Europe is associated with all leftist movements—not justthe-Commu-nists. SEIZED MAY IS Young revolutionaries' seized the Odeon on the night of .May 15. As the last spectators emerged from a guest performance by the Paul Taylor Ballet, an American group, the first small groups of students and actors went in. There was no resistance. Almost at once the nonstop political meeting was on and the committee was at work in the offices. , * * ' * Someone painted the word “ex” in large letters before the name “Theatre de France" above -the arcaded facade. In the lobby over the old box office a sign says: "The ex-Odeon Theater is no longer a theater, but a revolutionary political speakers’ platform.” A If ^ The stage Is not used except for a few spectators. * * * The chairman walks up and down the center aisle of the orchestra, giving the floor first to someone in the orchestra, then to someone in the second balcony. One recent morning he was a middle-aged man in a dark blue suit with short sleeves and necktie. That afternoon it was a younger man in a bright red cap. * , * Entrance is free and the meetings are usually packed, with a long line waiting outside. One reason is that all the Paris theaters and many movie houses are closed, while television is giving nothing but a news program orice a tray. Space Talk Set Dr. Willy Ley, a pioneer space authority, will talk on “The Universe Around Us” at 8:30 p.m. June 6 at Southfield High School Auditorium, 10 Mile at Lahser. The lecture is sponsored by Oakland Community College and the Cranbrook institute of Science. Public admission is $1.50. ADVIRTISfMINT How You Could Make Money With Your Ideas Evjrr thought about how you could make something heller than it is now? What about that new product .you’ve hud in itiiiid? Maybe it’* just an idea that, if •properly whrked out and marketed, could make money for you! Well, if you have, there in a company in Detroit that may he of considerable hr Ip to you. Thin firm, Rene arch to Reality Inc., it the largett and oldest idea development and new product placement organization of itz type in the world! The proceti it timple: The firm evaluate* your ideas. If they have merit, they are developed so the end results are professionally designed, intriguing, product*. Theta are then presented to preselected manufacturers for production and distribution mi a guaranteed royalty basis. | for information on how this 12 • year • old company can help you cash in on your ideas, write your name and add rest on a postcard and send it to Research to Reality, Dept, PPK, 1260 Library Place, Detroit, Michigan 48226. •WO***"*"*"'" Satin Semi-Gloss 6W Rag. gal. Ons coat oil-base enamel it washable, spot resistant end colorfast lVz” Trim Brush Ra* 197 ilf X Appjies maximum amount of paint to sash or small areas. Nylon. 4.4* 4” Irtish ... 3*7 ONE < acb Flows on fast to a beautiful flat smooth finish. Brush marks, lap marks and touchups won’t show. This heavy bodied paint leaves a tough, uniform acrylic film that resists blistering and peeling; stays free of hairline cracks. Colors and white stay bright regardless of burning sun, pelting rain or snow. You can even paint over fcarly morning dew or between rainfalls while surface is damp. Self priming on all-sound painted areas. Save 2.53 on every gallon now at Seal's. 4Charge all your paint supplies at Sears and color-richness- outstanding 5Stes. mJ*' W001* and aluminum siding, asb6$W* ^i„i'ii^rY brick, stucco OMt CAUJJ GUARANTEE * If one gallon fails to cover | with just one coat when applied at a rate not to ex- || ceed 450 sq. ft. per gallon, or fails to be colorfast for § 3 years from date of sale, ?f we will furnish enough ad- p ditlonal paint to correct ! ■■ the condition or if you pre- p fer, refund the purchase | price. SAVE l72 Guaranteed One-Coat, Colorfast Latex Flat Reg. 6.49 4 77 Gallon Painting walls and ceilings was never easier with once-over application. Brush and roller drag almost disappear. Silky smooth finish is colorfast; dries in just one half hour. Smooth, dripless formula makes for pleasant painting. Tools and brushes clean easily with just soap and water. You save 1.72 a gallon now! Fills cracks, expansion Joints In asphalt, brick and concrete areas For asphalt driveways. Black, flexible compound in easy to use cartridge. Dripless, C olorfast Latev Flat This paint’s thick consistency makes it completely dripless . . . even when painting the ceiling. There’s no mess, no splatter: Fast drying rooms can be used again ir» just 30 minutes. TQugh resins make this paint durable ... can be washed repeatedly and still keep its brightness. Colors will not fade out. Easy soap and water cleanup afterward. Sears Paint Dept, (all stores) SAVE I52 Reg. 5.49 3 87 Gallon Open Monday, Closed Today, Friday, Saturday 9 to 9, Tuesday, Wednesday 9 to 5:30 Sears SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO. Downtown Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171 j THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 80, 1908 MEMORIAL DAY ‘TAPS’ - A bugler sounds “Taps" at the Tomb of the Unknowns, Arlington National Cemetery, during Memorial Day ceremonies in 1961. The wreath is AP Ntwiphoto from President John F. Kennedy and was placed at the memorial by Georgia Sen. Richard Russell. Tragedy Gave Birth to 'Taps' By ARLEEN ABRAHAMS Associated Press Writer It never made the Hit Parade but over the past century its plaintive notes have been heard by Americans again and again. And on May 30, when most of the country wilt mark the 100th official anniversary of Memorial Day, tt>e playing of “Taps,” as usual, will sound the keynote of the observance. * * * ' “Taps,” that melancholy bugle call which signals both the close of a soldier’s day and the end of his life, came out of the Civil War at about the same time of the first unofficial observance of a Decoration Day. * * * In July 1862, the Union Army of the Potomac was engaged in a series of exhausting battles near Harrison’s landing, a small Virginia town on the James River. One night, Capt. Robert El-licombe, of the Union Army, was aroused by the moans of a wounded Confederate soldier in the no man’s land separating the .Union and Confederatej forces. He decided to rescue! the man. SHOCKING DISCOVERY Crawling cautiously, Elli-j combe made his way to thei wounded man, pulled him to the,' Union lines. But the trip was. too much for that Johnny Reb. By the time Ellicombe completed his mission, he was dead. ★ ★ ★ Examining theHrody by the dim glow of a lantern, the captain suddenly went cold with) shock — it was his own son! | "(Another version holds that it was his nephew.) The boy had been studying music in the South and without telling his father had enlisted. ★ ★ ★ . The heartbroken father received permission to give him a military burial behind the Union lines. As a final gesture of farpwell, Ellicombe had aj bugler play a few bars of the handwritten music found on a piece of scrap paper in the boy’s. pocket. The music'“was the original notes for “Taps." .★ * * A few days later that piece | of paper came into the posses- j sion of Gen. Daniel Butterfield, Ellicombe’s commanding . officer. i HEARD FIRST TIME Gen. Butterfield summoned a bugler named Oliver Morton* and instructed him tp arrange the notes for a new bugle call which would replace the old; “Lights Out." i * * -That night “Taps” was heard for the first time as the official number, heralding the close of day. * * ★ The call was quickly picked up by other units. By May 1868,: when Gen. John A. Logan, com-mander in chief of the Grande Army of the Republic, issued the first official proclamation! setting forth May 30 as a day! “for strewing with flowers thei graves of comrades who died In defense of their country in! the late rebellion,” “Taps” was the official military bugle call. j OBSERVANCES Known as Decoration Day until 1882, Memorial Day now marks tribute paid in the United States to the dead of all its wars. • . \ p A * * Observances include military] and civic parades, decorating! with flowers the graves of i American servicemen in for&ign known Soldier in Arlington! cemeteries, water services .for National Cemetery. Fittingly, those who died at sea and cere- these official observances close' monies at the Tomb of the Un- with the playing of "Taps.” j OAKLAND COMMUNITY COLLEGE AND CRANBROOK INSTITUTE OF SCIENCE announces a jointly-sponsored lecture by DR. WILLY LEY ‘THE UNIVERSE AROUND US” Thursday, June 6,1968 at 8:30 P.M. Southfield High School Auditorium Ten Mile and Lahser Roads, Southfield, Michigan Fee: $1.50 Call 642-6211 Turtle Necks Short & Long Sleeves *1" 4o *595 Sta-Press Slacks $595 to $995 Nylon Warm-Up Jackets Many Colors ^6“ Tuxedo Rentals — Prom Prices 3 IJiC CLOTHES ill V 71 N.Saginaw Model Clearance...-, - - - i*®** *** 1 , ,U5 seig95 1 HOW OW-T ® --- (Worlds Most Automatic Color TV RCA VICTOR MARK I COLOR TV WfTH AMAZING TOUCH-BAR POWER TUNING This beautiful cabinet houses the most automatio color tV ever. No need to fine-tune each time you change channels-automatic fine tuning does it for you electronically. Change VHP and UHF channels just by touching the channel bar selector. dfc THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN ELECTRONICS ALWAYS 0ISC0UNT PRICES SWEET’S RADIO & APPLIANCE ^ i 422 West Huron FE 4-3677 | | Open Monday and Iriday livening* 'Til 9 P.M. | "..............“"I........... 30 RAYS SAME AS CASH Sears Will Be Cloned Thursday for Memorial Day Tire Sale Sale Ends. Saturday fc Sears Hi-Way Special Full 4-PIy Nylon Cord Tires' 88 9.99x13 Tubeless Blackwell 12 Plui 1.11 Federal end Old Tire • Contoured safety shoulders for easier, safer handling • Built-in traad dapth safety indicators • Flat-wide tread is equal in depth to the average of new tires Whitewalls Only *3 More Per Tire Fast, F ree Allstate Tire Mounting NO MONEY DOWN MI-WiytMtlil Tubalasa Slaokwall Tires Guaranteed tu Wear 24 Month* SALE PRICE with Old Tira Pill* Federal Exoita Tax 6.95x14 Blaekwall 10.88 1.95 . 7.35x14 Blaekwall 12.88 2.06 7.75x14 Blaekwall 14.88 2.19 8.25x14 Blaekwall 16.88 2.35 7.75x15 Blaekwall 14.88 2.21 Superwide Tred Tire FTO-14 fits 7.75-14 Q795 • W m Pius 2.50 F.E.T. and Old Tire Available in white stripe or red stripe. Extra-wide tread |(ivrs superior traction, 2 extra fiberglass belts resu It in extra strength, mileage stability. G70-14 fits 8.25-14, 39.95,2.63 F.E.T. G70-I5 fits 8.15-15, 39.95,2.71 F.E.T. , rrrinnrrifTrrirrroTrrrirrroT^ ; i ALLSTATE Passenger Tire Guarantee » Tread Life Guarantee Tread Wear-Out Guarantee ■>r ill- Guaranlrnl Agaimttt All fail lira remitting from normal road defect* in material or workman For llow I-on*: For the life of the original \\ hut Si tread. Whut Sou re Will llot Repair nail ;itine» turrit at no charge. In the ra*e of failure,in exchange for the lire, replace it-charging only the proportion of rurrenl regular helling price plus Federal Kxritte lax that (miaruiileril Againelt Tread wear-out. For llow Longi The number of ntonlha HOMdsIfieol. ___r» Will Dot In exchange for the place »•. charging the current rngti-r celling price pluu Federal Tax 4M the following alldWancet Month* Lwarniilrcel Allowance U»% OUUH jum Bet inimtmmmi 1LOJLOJUUL)UUUUL8 Sears Auto Tires Dept. ‘Express’ Truck Tire 1644 No trade-in required. Express .‘{■Rib small truck tires. 6-ply rated nylon cord construction. 7.00x15 BW 22.44,2.09 F.E.T. 6.50x16 BW 18.44,2.66 F.E.T. - Plus 1.41 F.I.T. 6.70x15 Tubt-Typa Blaekwall Heavy-Duty Mufflers Allstate Batteries GUARANTIED FOR AS LONG AS YOU OWN YOUR CAR SAVE 12% to 15% T44 Regular 8.49 Mo.tstM Falcon-Comet • Designed to last longer, perform better than most replacement mufflers • Steel end caps are up to Vj thicker • Extra-heavy-gauge steel inner and outer shells ; OR FASTER, SURER STARTS .,. MORE POWER 43>Nonth Guarantee Sears Low Price 2188 ■ with old SSSSt1 -BBb bottory in trade I’iH Must Gars Li-nted Below Regular Price Salt! ijnee Y,.'t-66 Dart * 60-6."> Valiant 8.49 7.44 51-6 I .Glievrolrl 11.99 10.88 62-65 (lltcsy II 10.99 9.88 O 1 -07 GlirtcHe Y» 1-67 C.licv 10.99 9.88 60-6 1 1 old 11.49 10.88 (r2-6ri 1 lodge 8 cyl. 62-65 I’lyinouth 8 cyl. 11.99 10.88 6 1 -6 I I’onliae L3.99 11.88 65-67 Dodge —6.7.67 Plymouth 12.49 11.44 Mulllcr Guarantee If muffler fuils flue to fleferl* in materialit or workmankhi|i or blowouts, rust-out or wear-out, while original |iiirrha*rr owns (he ear. it will he re|»laeeil upon return, free pf ehurge. If,the defective ipufiler was iiiMialle«l hy Sears, we will inMuK the new muffler, charging only for bracket* anil holts,, if neeilefl. »• • Extra power for 50% faster starts... cranks engines faster, cranks engine longer .... . more reliable in sub-zero or extreme heat • Every Energy Cell battery has 984 factory tests to assure you of finest quality + A'* • Fits 96% of most 12-volt cars ... Fords, Chevrolets, Chryslers, Plymouths, Cadillacs* Ramblers and oth-.ers. Chances are that your car, even if it’s an import, is included East, Free Installation Free Power Team Cheek Lot Soars check your oloctrical system, including generator V (alternator), voltage regulator and battery. 48-!Vfonth Battery Guarantee No charge t*e|>liie4‘iitetil williin ’>0 tiny* of |mrclu.iHC, if loillcry pnfwit ilcfcclivc. After 'XI fitly*, we replace I lie hutteiy, if fleleelive, ami charge you only fur the |iei‘iotl of fiwuei>hi|» hu»r«f on llio rrpilur |it ire less 91’iMlf•-‘iVi af ,1 lie lime of rcturo, |M‘o-rule«l over inimher iftoiilliH of guiiruiiler. Si .*• J f S Auto ;A< c 1‘V.OI ius l)t!| it. - (Closed Opr n Monday, Tliunuluy Friday, Saturday 9 lo 9, Tuesday, Wednesday 9 lo 5 i30 MAll, ROEBUCK AND co. Sears Downtown Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171 TliE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1908 A—19 Ho Is a Simple, Yet Complex Man RED ENIGMA BY WILLIAM L. RYAN AP Special Correspondent Chances for, peace in Vietnam and Southeast Asia may Test on the frail shoulders of a spindly old revolutionary who j u s t turned 78. What manner of man is he, what manner of Communist? History may one day find that President Ho Qhi Mlnh of North Vietnam was one of the most widely misread and misinterpreted leaders of his era. His legacy is likely to Include a never-ending quarrel about what might have happened if Americans, French, Russians, Chinese and all the rest had read him differently. ir it ★ Those who take the position that the French, and then the Americans, blundered in their dealings with Ho point out that he neither acts nor talks like the stereotyped Communist of the Soviet Union or Europe, that he seems to have little in common with thp fpnatical men who run Communist China. What other Communist leader calls his people his “nieces and nephews," or even, at times, “my children?" What other Communist leader avoids the complex cliches of Marxism-Leninism and talks instead in the homely, simple phrases of the peasantry? SIMPLE, COMPLEX , Those who have known Ho well over the years picture him as a simple man who is extremely complex and who, when the occasion demanded, could be hard as nails. “Uncle Ho" seemed to have a faculty for exercising a hyprotlc power over those with whom he came, into direct contact. He had a way of acting shyly and charmingly clumsy ih the presence of visitors, particularly foreigners. He would go out of his way to be polite aqd considerate. His translucent features would be wreathed in a saintly smile, his reedy voice soft, his clothing crudely simple even to the sandals made of old rubber tires, his favored footgear for padding about noiselessly in his modest Hanoi cottage. ★ * * At the same time, this apostle of violence also could be and often was an advocate of peaceful solution. The saga' of Ho spans more than half a century of con- spiracy, revolution and war. His personality has been Idelibly stamped not only upon the North Vietnam he has ruled as president, but upon communism in all Southeast Asia. FATHER FIGURE Indeed, had it not been for the physical presence of “Uncle Ho", the war in Vietnam might have been a different story. Ma% — friends and foes alike — say it has been the father figure of Ho which provided the cement holding the guerrilla movement together in South Vietnam. With the single-minded intensity of a crusader, Ho .intruded himself upon the history of Southeast Asia and played a large part in its development. He took on one adversary at a time: first the Japanese occupation forces in World War II, then the Chinese occupation forces, then the French, then the Americans. ★ ★ it While preparing for war with France in 1945, Ho talked of peace. He would, he insisted, have been willing to see Vietnam within a French union if that had meant independence within that framework, and he even risked the condemnation of hjs own party in this. Perhaps it was only strategy. But It required all Ho’s extraordinary persuasiveness to sell the idea to his owit Viet Nam Doc Lap Dong Minh Hoi *• League for Independence of Vietnam, or Viet Mlnh for short. t ★ ★ Perhaps if the tfrehch had accepted, Ho’s Vietininh eventually j would have ruled all Vietnam. But in any case, it was the French whose stony position prevented agreement and who bombarded Haiphong at the end'of 1948, to start the war. 50 YEARS A RED Ho Chi Minh has been a Communist for at least 50 years, as a youth, traveling around the world by working at a variety of occupations, he rubbed elbows with some of the luminaries of the movement’s early days. He belonged to a Added Storage To obtain additional bathroom storage, lower the ceiling above the shower stall or bathtub to make an overhead closet. school of nonorthodox Communists of revolutionary days, men who professed faith in dogma but declined to be bound by doctrinaire shibboleths. Through it all, he was the son of his father, an Annamese village aristocrat who was a violent nationalist, a man who hated colonialism and hated the French colonists. Perhaps Ho embraced communism mostly as a tool to further his own nationalist ambitions. Perhaps he I would have wound up a nationalist Communist, probably I keeping both Moscow and Peking at a arm’s length, had his devolution succeeded in taking I all Vietnam. it it it , Now that Ho is 78, it is possible that Americans and others .are attributing to him more I power than he really has. But it seems likely that Ho still has I enormous influence in North Vietnam, that he remains the I inspiration and the leader-figure. Should North Vietnam now choose a road to peace, Ho will be influencing that decision at ■ the expense of his life’s dream. I— a Vietnam united into a I single state with himself as its I architect. AP Wiraphoto RED ENIGMA — Ho Chi Minh, shown,.speaking with children in Hanoi, is the guiding influence of North Vietnam. Arty Setting-^ Hemlock Panels Western hemlock paneling In la vertical grain, tongue-nnd-groove flooring grade, makes a perfect background for a fine collection of paintings.' Hemlock's charppagne coloring and the texture supplied by its straight graining provide the richness needed for an Important gallery wall. 50 New Patterns WALLPAPER I GOOD STOCK Travel Posters of Foreign Lands Tremendous Savings on DISCONTINUED PAINTS $088 SI 00 £> Gal. I Qt. Complete Line of NYLON BRUSHES 1" to 4" Vary Low Pricwt ACME PAINT 3 N. Saginaw Open rriday 'til 9 Sears SEARS. ROEBUCK AND CO. NATIONAL U ome ’mpAxwement Sale Ends Saturday, June 1st Sears Carries A Complete Line of Front and Rear Mount Attachment for Tractors 10-cu. ft. Steel Dump Curt Save 60BS! Powerful 10-HP Electric - Start Tractor With Heavy Duty Cast Iron Engine Regular 599.95 •539 Tractor Only 4 forward speeds and reverse. AH gear transmission; auto-type gearshift lever and steering. Adjustable foam-cushioned seat. Big diameter tube-type tires. Key start switch, dual headlights, tail light. 38-inch Mower Attachment.......124.95 Sears Price 74 95 30x48x12” deep. Handy for hauling wood, gravel, fop-soih'fertilizer, etc. Sturdy 42-inch DozerBlade Sears Price Removes snow, grades dirt and gravel. (Hears 42” strip when straight. 6-H.P. Roto Spader Attachment fit ooaBs Self-powered, 6-H.P. Grafts man engine. Guts strip 32 wide, lip to 6” deep. Sears 3-Gang Reel Mower Sears AQA95 Price lor estates, golf courses, institutions. Cutting height adjusts 1 to 3”. MO MONEY DOWN Use Sears Convenient Monthly Payment Plan Sears Rugged, New 4-H.P. Deluxe Roto Spader igular 154.95 I’ll is versatile roto spader is ideal for preparing seed beds, mulching fertilizer, and peut moss, tilling and cultivating. Tines adjust from 26 to 24 or 13-inch swath. Renter con trol panel. Open Monday, Closed Today, Friday, Saturday 9 to 9, Tuesday, Wednesday 9 to 5t30 Sears Best!, 7-H.P. Roto Spader That Shifts Gears Regular 239.95 Sears “Coachlight” 7x10’ Lawn Building Regular 279.99 2i»»» Low gear for deep digging, high gear-to pulverize top soil; shifts Into reverse gear (stop release lever for safety). Powerful Craftsman 4-cycle engine. Compression releuse makes recoil sturling 50% eusier. « ' v' ■ I're-I'uhricatod wall and roof sect ions—with extra heavy reinforcements riveted on — iliukr building extremely rigid. Deeoruted doors swing open 66x68” high. Chrome-plated 5 tumbler hundle/loek, with keys. Floor extra. Seor, Buildingf Moterlals Deportment (all ttprei) Attractive 8’x6 .VI-Foot Steel Portico Building Regular 124.99 m This sturdy steel storage building adds beauty to your lawn uud provides outstanding weather proteelion from rain and snow. Features Sears 5-step weather-proofing. 7x5-foot interior. Save $25. (Floor extra.) Downtown Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171 SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO. ft THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY,* MAY 80. 1008 Ci PORTABLE I COLOR E TV | WINNER | FOREST E. WARNER W USDA CHOICE ^ RUMP OR ROTISSERIE $20.00 WINNER JUDY PEREZ CENTER RIB CUT HOLLY FARMS GRADE “A” Double Breasted Fryers SWIFTS 1-Lb.v Cornish Hens PASCHKE’S-Pride of Miehifan ' Boneless Hams Nal> VENDEN 2-L1 Nam Lea 0 a a . « a . Tin BUDDIQ’S SMOKED '*• Slieed Meats SPARTAN SLICED M Cooked Nam * HYDRADE'S BaN Park Franks » 2 lb. , Tin Rogular or Drip U.S. No. 1 Hothouse TOMATOES Coffee Creamer 11 oz. Jar jawtmcow® Florida Sweet GREEN PEPPERS GREEN ONIONS RED RADISHES CUCUMBERS r NEUMANN'S ^ Mayonnaise Jumbo Towels Asst Colors White Decorated 0 GREEN GIANT > asparagus Spears fB'A'Ot. Can ir'xm' EVERYDAY LOW PRICES CAMPBELLS MIX or MATCH Pork & Beans . ■ ■ a FRANCO AMERICAN | Ilf Spaghetti 11 Miracle Whip PENN DUTCH Piaeat A Stems Mushrooms.. SPIC A SPAN Cleaner........ SALE DATES: May 31 Thru Wed., June 5 H TisWfw®* 1 Awa^6 ^ f ** Drinlr . Mil 1 FRENCH’S ''ft - “ Mfl|C Mustard & 29 including Sunday, June 2 We Rbserye the Right to Limit Quantities .... r MICHIGAN BEET Savor SPARTAN Salad Brassing *39( SPAM Luncheon Meat »44$ SPARTAN Meriariaa *| JUr "I, UPTON’S Black Tea Bags * 84° NESTLES Qaik tfigc ZION Fi^pa ^3 go vWW' ' — x -—" -AtlftA L. 2*.- 20 E. Walton Lake Orion Mon. thru Sat. Mon. thru Sat. 9‘til 9 9 ‘til 9 Sunday! 10 to 5 Temta/ ISOS 3515Sashabaw Ortonville Rd. Mon. Thru Sat. Man. Thru Sat. 1 9 ‘til 9 9‘til 9 _________________ OVEN FRESH ; Angle Food Bar Bake OVEN FRESH Lumker Jaok «*** BreS? Pampers BAYTIME $138 OVERNIGHT CAPRI Bath Oil wr 75' «• 59* After some time there Mrs. Bay and Mrs. Schou motored to visit friends In California, Arizona and Springfield, 111. before returning to the Hills. Mrs. Bay will be spending the summer with the Schou? expect for a few weeks to be spent in the Scandinavian countries this summer. SUMMER RETURNEES Mr. and Mrs. George W. Walker have come back to their apartment in the Burlington Arms after a long winter at their Delray, Fla. home. Presently they are spending a few days at Harbor Springs. The historic charm of sunny Spain is captured in this skillfully designed Spanish bedroom with 9-drawer triple‘dresser, crystal clear mirror, 6-drawer chest and beautiful headboard. We think it's exceptional and bet that you'll shout ole' at the price. Only $299. But, you expect buys like this from'the better bedroom people. The Better Bedroom People On Telegraph Road house of £ bedrooms 1716 S. Telegraph Rd., Bloomfield, Between Miracle Mile and Orchard Lake Rd. STORE HOURS: MONDAY-SATURDAY 9 TO 9 • CAU 334-4593 Mrs. Carl E. Schou has returned home after weeks of traveling with her sister, Mrs. Charles H. Bay. Mrs. Schou flew to San Francisco where Mrs. Bay was visiting her son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. George H. Bay and their two children. On June 12, Mrs. Stuart A. CogSdill will honor her debutante granddaughters at an afternoon tea in Orchard Lake Country Club. Or you can sleep a lifetime in Spain for only $299 Personal News Choice of Wedding Cake Is , According to Recent Investigation From Area Mr. and Mrs. Ben D. Mills of Bloomfield Hills have Just bid farewell to houseguests gathered ip their, home for a family reunion. ' Cpmlng from Clovis, N. M. for the event were Mr. Mills’ mother and sister, Mrs. W. W. Mills and Mrs. Homer Worthington. Also Joining the family get-together (the first in 18 years) were another sister and her husband, Dr. and Mrs. J. R. Rackley from Pennsylvania where he is provost at Penn State University. * * k The Maurice Barnetts are entertaining Mr. Barnett’s sisters and brothers today. Mrs. Barnett had planned an outdoor barbecue and croquet contest, but with the weather having effectively stopped those plans, thp group will substitute some indoor activity. ★ ★ * A potluck supper in the William Freyermuth home on Fair Oak Drive will be shared today by the William Belaney family of Rochester and Mrs. B. E. Brattland, Mrs. Freyermuth’s mother, who is visiting them from her home in Waukegan, III. * * * The Jack Brannacks of’ Lakeward Lane are entertaining Barbara's fiance, John Stewart, and his mother, Mrs. l^eonard Stewart of Detroit, today. With the wedding date approaching, June 22, they will liave lots of things to discuss. it it if Benjamin Jones, nephew of Dr. and Mrs. Donald Martin (he’s medical superintendent of Pontiac State Hospital) will arrive this weekend to spend the summer with the Martins. Elen is a graduate student at Unversity of Pennsylvania. GOING TO EUROPE The Martins are busy at the moment getting ready for their extensive European trip scheduled for about July 8. Countries they plan to tour include England, Wales, France, Spain and Italy. * * * Eighteen members of a potluck group which has been getting together on holidays for 40 years or so, are gathering today at the L. H. Cole home on Vaughn Road. Mrs. W. R. Eames of Ottawa Drive is attending this party. it i iit The Robert Eldreds of West Iroquois Road are looking forward to a day of golf and dinner with friends at the Holly Greens Golf Course today. Mrs. William W. Donaldson will spend the day with he# daughters, sons-in-law and grandchildren while her Pontiac postmaster husband is off in Chapleaij,. Ont. on a fishing trip. Her hosts are Mr. and Mrs. Don Balzarine. PARADE Don is a member of the Naval Reserve and the family group will see him march in the parade before repairing to the Balzarine home for the day. The grandchildren are Angela and Andy Balzarine and Shelly and Julie Scott, children of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Scott. Mr. Donaldson’s fishing cronies are Carl and Elwyn Bird and Charlie Dugas. They will be gone a week and are hoping tor a good catch. ★ ★ it The A. C. Girards of Rudgate Road are spending the weekend at the Old Club at Harsen’s Island. .Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Goad of Lone Pine Road are meeting their breakfast club friends at Bloomfield Hills Country Club today for golf and cards. By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: My younger sister Is being married soon, and she wants to have fruitcake for her wedding cake because it can be made earlier and will keep better. Others we've asked say that the traditional wedding cake should he Sis says that Luc! Johnson had fruitcake at ABBV her wedding, so there can’t be anything Wrong with it. Who's right? SIS ★ , * ★ DEAR SIS: Having recently researched the history of wedding cakes, I can tell you there is no such thing as a “traditional" wedding cake. Your sister may properly have anything she wants. * ★ ★ DEAR ABBY: I am engaged to a very nice fellow front Italy. We have been dating fpr four years now. He came to this country when he was only 16 years old. He is now 28. He makes good money and he speaks very good English. He never mentioned the possibility of his going back to Italy to live until a few months ago. I always thought he liked it here so much. Now he tells me he would like to live in Italy. Do you think I should give up my family and my country for thisf man? WONDERING DEAR WONDERING: If you have to ask, the answer is no. b .#■ # # DEAR ABBY: After 10 years of a childless marriage, my husband and I adopted a beautiful baby girl. We were—and still are—on cloud nine. She was a gift from heaven because a year later we were blessed with our own little son! And the following year, another Son. We should be happier than ever, but here’s the problem: My husband’s father, who was against our adopting the little girl in the first place, goes out of his way to hurt the child. He favors the boys with gi^ts and treats, and leaves the littte girl standing without—hurt and plwding for recognition Behind our backs he refers to the girl as “that illegitimate b—- John took to raise.’’ She is a sweet and adorable child, and much prettier than his own “blue blood" granddaughters. •k k k We don’t want to cause trouble so we make excuses for Grandpa’s slights, but how can I stand by with my blood boiling and say nothing? When we leave his home I promise I’ll never take the children there again, but I always weaken and do, hoping he'll behave better. What can be done? NO NAME, PLEASE k ' k k DEAR NO NAME: If you subject your daughter to Grandpapa's cruel treatment you are as guilty as Grandpa. Let him know that you will tolerate no more of his unfair and unfeeling cOhduct. Deny him the. privilege of seeing all your children until he agrees to mend his ways. He may never agee, which will be his loss. CONFIDENTIAL TO "WASTED THREE YEARS IN MIAMI:’’ If a man is admittedly a “playboy” who doesn't want to settle down with one woman— that's HIS business. But he shouldn't do huslness with a 22-year-old girl who has marriage in mind. ', ★ ★ ★ i For Abby's booklet, "How to Have a lively Wedding,” send $1.00 to Abby, c/o The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P.O. Box 9, Pohtiac, Mich. 480&6. . ’ Pontiac Proto Photo by M Vandorworp Seems like old times when a group of Pontiac High School grads get together. All members of the 1943 graduating class, (from left) are Mrs. Robert Pack of James K. Boulevard, Mrs. Donald Lloyd of Tilmor Road and Robert Anderson and Wesley Stewart both of Silver-side Street. Plans are in the' making for a 25th class reunion June 29 in the CAI building. Beginning at 6 p.m. there will be dinner and dancing to the music of Charles Lundgren. Mrs. Pack is taking reservations. You can take a 14-day excursion flight to Madrid for *394.30 Kathryn Kramer Fife is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Fife of The 100th birthday of Mrs. Margaret Messer, a resident of Glen jSloomfield Hills and Cynthia Ann White Acres Nutting Home on West Silver Bell Road, will be observed with hi the daughter of the Gene A. Whites of a j^je par(y an({ a birthday cake at the home today. Still quite active, recently returned home Mrs Messer spends her dime in hand-sewing quilt pieces, and in read-after spending the winter at MiamPSurf *n0 her Bible. Nursing home personnel say she also likes to recite Club In Florida. poetry and Bible verses. Are Wed in Coral Gables, Fla. An evening wedding Wednesday in the Church of me Little Flower, Coral Gables, Fla. united Winn Elizabeth Lyon and Ens. Charles George LaPella, USN. The bride is the daughter of Mrs. Robert W. Emerick of Birmingham and George A. Lyon Jr. of Coral Gables, Fla. Ens. LaPella’s parents are the Charles LaPellas, Phoenixville, Pa. k k k Ington, Va.; Katherine Barnes, Elm City, N. C. and Patricia Pearson. -Susan Lyon and Karen Hain, sisters of the bride, were junior maids. ★ 3 ★ ★★ Assisting the bridegroom were best man, Arthur MacDonald -of Cincipnati, Ohio; Richard and Robert W. Emerick Jr., G. Albert Lyon III, David Broderick, Miami Springs, Fla., and Thomas Green, Coral Gables, Fla. Miss Lyon's ivory peau de soie and Alencon lace gown was designed with a scoop neckline and elbow length sleeves. Her matching full court train fell from a back bow. JUNIOR USHER Timothy LaPella, brother of the bridegroom, was a junior usher. ★ ★ ★ PETAL CAP A cluster of re-embroidered lace petals held her elbow length veil of ivory silk illusion. She carried Stephanotis, white orchids and ivy. Matron of honor was Mrs. Herbert E. Taylor III of Lexington, Va. Bridesmaids were Mrs. Robert W. Emerick Jr., Atlanta, Ga.f Mrs. Michael Coss, Arl- Boby's Christening Is Followed by o Family Dinner By SIGNE KARLSTROM At Christ Church, Cranbrook, Martha Gerken Williams, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard G. Williams, was christened recently. After a reception at Riviera Country Club, the couple left for a honeymoon in the Bahamas. They will live in San Diego, Calif, where Ens. LaPella is stationed. Personal Notes Mayor and Mrs. William H,-Taylor Jr. of Ottqpa Drive will entertain for three other couples over the holiday weekend at their summer home in Port Albert, Ont. Guests will be the Phillip Rowstons, the Harold Goldbergs and Mr. and Mrs. Aleck Capsaiis. £ ★ ★ ★ The holiday weekend will be devoted to getting the summer home ready for seasonal occupancy by the Bruce J. An-netts of Sylvan Shores Drive. Their sons, Bruce and Roy, are traveling with them to Horican Lake, which is a little south of Gaylord. ir ■# , H Godparents are Mr. and Mrs. Peter Hoffman and Mrs. Joseph Hardig. k k k Following the ceremonies, Martha’s grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin J. Anderson, entertained members of the faipily and Martha’s godparents for dinner in their home. While no real plans have been made for the holiday at the Joseph Warren home on Cherokee Roadi the Warrens won't be too surprised at any turn in events with daughter, Barbara, home from Albion for the summer. MRS. CHARLES G. LaPELLA Winn Lyon, Charles La Win?) Elizabeth , Lyon and Ens. Charles George LaPella, USN spoke vows in the Church of the Little Flower, Coral Gables, Fla. Wednesday evening. Their parents are Mrs. Robert W. Emerick of Birmingham, George A. Lyon Jr., Coral Gables, Fla. and * the Charles LaPellas, Phoenixville, Pa. Pella Wowm -Section S' ' \ \ . \ \ X I THURSDAY, MAY 80, 1968 x . ®—b B—2 THE FOXTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 80, 1908 TALL »• SHOP sprightly print skimmer. . . textured knit nylon In o wide array of wild prints ... to shape with a self tie if you so desire From our 'In' collection. tall sizes 12 to 24 WkT. Waited Lake Is Scene of Recent Vows ! Patricia Lynn Karner became the bride of Brian Scott Matthews recently in St. William’s Catholic Church in Walled Lake. For the evening ceremony, | the bride chose a bouffant gown of Chantilly lace over satin with 'cathedral train and pearl head-! piece capping her illusion veil, j She carried a bouquet of white roses. ■>The daughter of the Allan Karners of Halstead Road, West Bloomfield Township, was attended bv her sister, Gayle, as ma>d of honor. Bridesmaids were Mrs. Dennis Atwell. Margaret Andrews and Diane Russell. ★ * * l Best man for the son of Mr. jand Mrs. Eugene C. Matthews of West Maple Road, West (Bloomfield Township was iRussell Lozzi. Ushers were Dennis Matthews, Michael Karner and Roger Cook. I A reception in the home of the bride’s parents preceded a honeymoon trip to northern Michigan. Resetting Screws Great-great-grandmother Mrs. Cleve E. Eaton, here for a recent visit from Grover Hill, Ohio, completed this local five generation group. She is holding five-week old Michael, son of Mrs. Michael Ka-sargiaii of Beverly Island Drive. Standing at the rear are baby’s great-grandmother, Mrs. Robert C. Frayer of Middle Belt Road, West Bloomfield Township, and grandfather Don R. Frayer, also Beverly Island Drive. * Ordar by mil or phone 182-7500. Add 35o (or dolivory, plus tOo for C.O.D.’* and 4% tax The Pontiac Mall BUY! SELL! TRADE! ... USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! 1 Screws and bolts which sun-; port weight such as doors or cabinets frequently loosen with | age. Here's a solution. Instead^ of just tightening the screw back into place, apply plastic | I steel in the hole, then replace | the hardware while the glue is still wet. Case No. F-587 Second Wives Beware CELEBRATIB TEARS OP SERVICE IMS , SPECIAL PURCHASE SALE! Decorator Etageres Hand-crafted, handsomely designed etageres to add a decorative note to your home ... , ETAGERES AVAILABLE Hj SIX FINISHES > • Antique White • Terra Cotta • Dark Transitional • Bern Green ^Transitional • Gold Some FinishesfTo Special Order Decorator Console and Mirror ’ Graceful accent for your home in distressed Maple with fruit-wood finish. Console has antique brass pulls, adjustable inside shelf. 22"Wxl 1Dx29" H. Matching 42"H Mirror is wide. , $7950 Console, Mirror, *39'>0 Beautifully proportioned Eta-gere adds a charming note to your room; perfect for displaying a hobby collection! Tapered Etagere with shelfi display is available in\ six finishes. Open Friday, Monday Evenings 'tit 9 INTERIOR DECORATING CONSULTATION CONVENIENT BUDGET TERMS 1680 S. Telegraph, S. of Orchard Lake Rd Free Parking Front of Store. FE 2-8348 I By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE F-587: Evelyn Z., aged 28, was a widow. “But a year after my hus- Vietnam,” she wonderful man 9 who teaches in high school. JmkeL “We dated for six months M| and he Bm asked me to fl “I debated LiR r E for a few weeks; then accepted. “And we have been very happy the past two years except that after the baby arrived, my husband has been caustic and fault-finding; “He also criticises me before guests and doesn’t show me any affection at all in public. “Yet I think he still loves me. But, Dr. Crane, why is he so cruel and hypercritical?” BEWARE! Girls, if you have ever been married before and then take a second husband, beware! Widows are not quite as likely to be treated like Evelyn as are divorcees. ] But both types of women must cqnsiURHy~keep In mind the ’fact that their new husbands • are “testing minded.” And by “testing” minded,” I mean they are trying to find out if their wives carry the torch for the former mate. Alas, most wives don’t even; realize that they are being tested. So they act like the usual, relatively frigid wife, especially after the first’baby arrives to divert most of their attention. But the average male, even in this late stage of civilization, has a false concept about a woman's eroticism. * New summer sportswear for juniors teas presented at a recent fashion show featuring Marty Hirsch (right) as commentator. Separates were the order of the day in easy care fabrics. The two Styles shown above are available lochlly. QUALITY REPAIRS ON ALL MAKE HEARING AIDS Loantn Available PONTIAC MALL OPTICAL i HEARING AID CENTER Phone 682-1113 Jb3W% “Living Sound" ^HEARING AIO DEALER^ BLOOMFIELD HllLS 0 0 llfl.iHff.IA Mill. 1IM N. W«.S-..J.t S,. Late «.h4 - lil f M4 • IH-TIH protect your children's feet by fittings from the most complete range of sizes end widths known to the shoe industry HACK’S experienced shoe fitters don’t ever have to eubstttuto size; they have the correct lizo available. HaCK SHOE COMPANY 236 Pierae Birmingham "Every woman is wildly j passionate,” runs this weird notion, “especially if she really, I loves a man.” i But the typical husband’s idea of “wild passion” is decidedly [different from what the [normally happy wife demonstrates. For though wives are ardently ;in love with their mates and are quite happy, they still subconsciously avoid and evade (their husbands on many occasions when the latter seek erotic satisfaction. i Alas, the wife’s evasive tac-| tics and procrastination just play into the huband’s growing suspicion that she is fonder of jher first husband, j So the new husband tends to i become jealous. *4 | For he thinks he occupies a 'secondary place in her af-j Lections, It tisuailv isn’t true at all, but | he is POSITIVE that it is! j Since you second wives don’t [even dream of the dangerous [ideas percolating through your [husband’s mind, you are innocently swept nearer and [nearer to the “Niagara Falls” of your second marriage. Join the Wet Set. New Swimsuits 1 and 2 Pc. ’Colony * Beach Party to 12* Jr. & Keg. nixes Bobette Shop 16 N. Saginaw Downtown Charge Acctmnts FREE Personal CHECKING ACCOUNTS If You" Maintain A Minimum Balance of $300 Or An Average Balance) of $500 AT ALL 12 OFFICES OF , Pontiac vState Bank Main Office Saginaw at Lawrence-Open 9 A.M. Daily M&mber Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation \ \ What’s Special Friday Night? SHRIMP FRY Served Family Style ALL'YOV R A NT” BROILED SHRIMP; served with Drown Butter. DEEP FRIED ■SHRIMP, with home-mode Snoppy sauce. Hup* TOSSED SALAD. Choice of POTATOES, Hot HOMEMADE Bread. EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT 5 to 10 P.M. in Bloomfield Hills Woodward at Square Lake Rd. THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MAY HO, 1908 Mrs. John Orosey Is President of Sorority Chapter The president’s gavel was presented to Mrs. John Orosey by Mrs. Robert Williams, outgoing, president of Beta Chi chapter, Epsilon Sigma Alpha iorority at a recent meeting. The. final meeting of the season was hosted by Mrs. Orosey of Kratage S t r e et, Commerce Township with Mrs Gordon Irwin assisting. * * ★ The business meeting was concluded with a display of awards presented to Beta Chi at the State convention for time devoted to volunteer-projects. Mrs. Harry Rhodes and Mrs. Peter Neill reviewed the chapter’s endeavors. Plans were also announced concerning the 1969 State convention which will be hosted by the chapter with Mrs. Fred Mueller as general chairman. Ticket Sales Soar at OU Meadow Brook Theatre reports that advance sales of tickets for ita 1968-'09 season are up by approximately 900 per cent over the comparable period of last year. . "Early Bird" season ticket sales passed 2400 last Friday View on Basics of Farm Problems / By BETTY CANARY My apologies to farmers both in and out of the^NFO. Several farmers said they thought I had, in a previously written column, tried to depict them as, well, less than intelligent. That was not my intention. As for my my Interest was more than academic when they discussed egg production. it it ★ v When my newspaper beat was county news, I not only took pictures of the first tomato of'in order to feed their families, the summer and had a squash i the others have had to take "not understanding the farmer’ajthat looked like a pan plunked either full-time or part-time prol lems,” I’p nbt gbing to'down on my desk, but I! sat jobs in nearby cities through many a long meeting | while farmers worried aloud j about their problems. I am sorry to say that in that same county there are now only j TWO full-time farmers because,' says managing director David {pretend that I do, even though Bishop. The theatre had sold ’ilSdhat might give him a laugh or{ Redcap Recalls Career Highlights BALTIMORE, Md. (AP)-Re-tiring after 42 years as a "redcap" at Pennsylvania Station here, 60-year-old Melvin L. Red dick recalled helping dozens of world-famous people with theirj luggage during that time, but added that the number of celeb-1 rities and wealthy Baltimoreans traveling by train-is diminish-' ing. One unforgettable occurrence, during his career was the time he was handed a baby. "This woman turned to me one day," he said, "and asked if I would hold her baby while she went to the ladies’ room. She never came back." "VThe engagement is announced of Cynthia Louise Byer and Jerry S. O’Hanlon. The bride elect is the daughter of the Allen Byers of Detroit. Her fiance, who resides on Bass Drive, Commerce Township, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. George M. Webb of Port Richie, Fla. The couple is planning a June 29 wedding. Miss Williams Sets the Date advance season tickets by the close of its first season last May 28. ♦ * * After the curtain falls on the final performance of "The Sea Gull” Sunday evening, the theatre will be dark until October. The repertory group takes their current play to New Hampshire for five two, which he could certainly use right now. it it ir I am not a farm expert, only a writer, and I cannot type out In neat little lines solutions to his problems. Frankly, I doubt that a farm expert can come up with tidy solutions. ,* * ★ As for what one gentleman I performances, their first away]ca|ls my “urban attitude,” from the Oakland University know what he means although I home. Group Travels to Wedding cannot agree that I have it. This "urban attitude" is what a woman had when she asked me once, “What is that?” as we were floating down the Mississippi river during a tour Mrs. Lyndon Johnson made of the Midwest. I looked at the A group of Pontiac residents attended the recent name tag the woman wore and wedding in Wayzata, Minn, of aread Voice Of America former Pontiac r e s i d e n t. Would you believe "that was a Charles Watson, son of the;8ra®n elevator? Stanley Watsons'married Sally| * * * Sawyer of Wayzata. I She wasn’t joking and, once I Those traveling from here realized it, I explained to her were Charles’ grandparents, the the simple mysteries of a grain I High Watsons of Bannister, but elevator. Then I stood watching Rosella Parcells of West formerly of Pontiac; the Dexter the murky water and wondering R F flg J! Kennedys of Bloomfield Hills; how this writer could hope to an un jjr anjj ^rs p u..w Rigged Out In Nautical White Stag Hit the decks in Summer's Super Sailcloth jackets and pants' in sturdy Fortrel® paly* ester and cotton with Stag-Prest® no-lron finish. Just machine wash and dry; you're ready and set to sail! f&s. \ jfv yll 10 to IS. $14 ** Jamaica or Bermuda Shorts In green, white pink or blue. Sizes 10 to 18. From $7 Walton Boulevard the betrothal of her sister, Alberta Williams, to Richard E. Sheriff. They will wed Sept. 7. ★ * * Parents of the prospective bridegroom are the Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Sheriff of Durant Street. Hub- interpret the- feel, the wonder, bard; Mr. and Mrs. Watson and Mr. and Douglas Watson and daughter Nancy of Birmingham. Add a few bread crumbs to scrambled eggs to improve their flavor and increase their portions. Park the life of this country to others Mrs. | if she had never seen even a picture of a grain elevator. To the farmers and their wives who wonder if I have heard such terms as "parity” and “soil bank” and "subsidies,” the answer Is, yes. When I ate homemade coffee cake in farmwives’ kitchens, ie 25th annual Michigan Music Feslira'. he world's largest piano concert, is June 9Ih at U30 p.m. in Cobo Arena. Among the hundreds of young pianists, ranging in age fr/nn eight to 18 years, will be Donald and Barbara Norton, children of the Richard Nortons of Penna Drive, West Bloomfield Township. Free tickets are available at all Grinnell’s stores. Grinnell’s supplies all the instruments for the performance and cosponsors the concert with the Festival'Teachers Association. Select Wedding Gifts Of Lasting Beauty And Value From Wiggs9 Large Collections Practical-minded young homemakers will be delighted in this new dining set in Mediterranean styje. Chair backs are molded of high impact styrene that looks like carved wood. Metal chair frames and legs are finished in matching walnutone. The 41-inch round table with a matching leaf is melamine plastic in pecan finish. Fabric-backed vinyl upholstery is Spanish looking. Available in the area. our own princess summer | our vary own Idea ol f lottery for the fuller fuflur*.., morvalous fe * fH In o perfectly balanced design; Noteworthy details! daintily piped built-up shoulders, feminine draped bodice, »mooth side shirring ond comfortable under-working.. Quick-dry supple nylon toffeta In block or navy. specially priced! *20 Sizes 40 to 52 White Stag % Southhampton Pants, While, blue, navy, brown, green. Sizes 8 to 18. $9* Stripe cotton terry top in coordinating colors. $10 Order by mall *r pbena MI-TIN. Mi Me for delivery pk» Ho ter 0.0.0.’s end 4% tex. The Pontiap Mall A. “Fruit Sampler" 42 • pc. dinner-ware. Quaint colonial pattern of cross stitch on granite-like grounds. Fruit centers. 8 each: dinnerplates, soups, bread/butters, cups and saucers. I vegetable dish, 1 platter The set % 37.95. B. Elsinore Swedish contemporary crystal in smoke color. Open, stock grouping with other pieces. Goblet, sherbet and wine glasses as shown, each 3.00. C. A large collection of milk glass includes—candy dishes, vases,—ash— trays, hens on tne nest and compotes. Many elegant pieces to choose from, priced from 1.50, Basket shown 2-95. PONTIAC 24 WEST HURON ST. In Downtown Pontiac FE 4-1234 Daily Till 5:30 P.M. 6 Ethsn Alien Furniture, Chins, Crystal and Arrrssorlrs WIGG Pjiul Revere pitchers in several sizes. Your choice of pewler or cop-per. Pilcher shown, 2-quarl size in copper 12.95. 2-quart size in pewter 19.00. K. Fraser's staiules, flatware make, a treasured gilt. Choose from four open-stock patterns. 5-piece place settings as priced: “Shadowpoint,” 5 pcs.........1U.UW "Laurel, 5 pcs..... .......10.00- "Murray Hill,” 5 pcs.........» 1-00 . "Pilgrim,” 5 pcs. . '.......11.00 F. Salton 'Hotravs are at Wiggs in many sizes, Individual hoirays a» ~ shown for keeping a casserole, roast or pot of coffee warm has walnut trim, priced just 6.95. BLOOMFIELD HILLS 4080 TELEGRAPH Rl> At l.otig l.eke Rd. 644-7370 Mon., Thun. A Fri. Tilt 9 Complete Furniture, China, Crystal and Acceaaoriea PONTIAC MALL — Thurs., Fri., Sat,, Mon. 'til 9 BIRMINGHAM — Shop Thurs., Friday 'til 9 B....'4 THR PONTIAC PllKSS, THURSDAY, MAV 80, 1988 shades Betorrm Teii of Wedding) pjnancjaf Plaque Dooms Future hr Ypsilanti Greek Theater _ u:~LI:~L*r Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Hall w * Decor Highlights Shades are winning more ipularity with th^ new methods of laminating your own. Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Hall of Edgeorge Street announce the recent marriage of their daughter, Carolyn Marie, to Louis Alan Payne. He is the son fabrics to them or painting (of Mr. and Mrs. Calvin N. them to fit your decor. iPayne of Erie, Pa. * Pair shades with draperies or | curtains or trim them with all! A dry white wine, a rose wine manner of fringe or braid. They or champagne all make excel-fit modern to the traditional lent accompaniment to baked Standby. ham for a company dinner. YPSILANTI (UPIf ■*- The JYpsilanti Greek Theater ap-I pears doomed. The theater will never put on another season, according to William E. Anhut, a director and president of the Industrial Development Corp. which handled the YGT’s finances | until earlier this year. "This tlijng has been dead," he s#id. "People just refuse to| Reviewers came from New believe it." (York, Boston, W as h I n g t on, Philadelphia, the West Coast 1 v and Canada,\ from Chicago’s The theater seemed a three main papers and from smashing success when it (dozens of other cities in opened in lfHi6 with Dame Michigan and surrounding Judith Anderson in Aeschelus’|states. "Oresteia” and the late Bert! * * * Lahr -in Aristophanes’ “The I A few of the reviews were Birds." [mixed, but most of the critics liked both productions, were amazed that a relatively small community could bring off such a big endeavor and were lavish irt their praise of the Greek theater concept. What few' apparently , were aware of, even among the directors, was the spending of money which should have been set aside for Social Security and| federal income tax withholding of YGT employes and cast members. DEBT A recent Chamby of Com' merce accounting showed the theater is faced with more than $500,000 in debts, after spend ing more than $1.1 million. The debts include $55,000 to OPEN MONDAY, THURS. & FRIDAY 'til 9 P.M. 4 COMPLETE FLOORS Of HOMI FURNISHINGS - IlIVATOR SIRVICI TO KACH FLOOR (m? QjffitM} & • PROVINCIAL • COLONIAL • TRADITIONAL • MODERN All By America's Leading Manufacturers! 17-19 S. SAGINAW ST. Downtown Pontiac A-k. walnut contemporary BEDROOM 90 DAYS Same As Cash NOT EXACTLY AS PICTURED FOR STYLE CONSCIOUS HOMEMAKERS Mar and Stain-Resistant Plastic Tops Lavishly beautiful walnut bedroom suite of distinctive quality. All drawers dovetailed and center-guided. All pieces completely dust-proof. Includes nine-drawer tripfie dresser, framed plate glass mirror, large roomy shest of drawers and full size panel bed. Reg. >249 Budget Terms *199 Complete CHOOSE FROM 4 BEAUTIFUL DECORATOR STYLES ... DOUBLE DOOR COCKTAIL or OCTAGONAL TABLES TABLE TOPS OF GENUINE CAREFREE FORMICA Tops in style, tops in durability! Masterfully designed fables bring grace and useful space to any decor, in rich wood finishes. Mediterranean Cabinet: Cocktail Table with sliding doors. Formica top. 60"x20"xl7 high. Finish: Distressed Pecan. Contemporary.: ■» Sleekly sculptured detailing *5995 Early American: carved panels and turned legs. Mediterranean: Door panels in pierced fretwork. $599s No Money Down Months to Day You Must Be Satisfied—This We Guarantee99 Free Delivery—FE 2-4231 $80,000 which the Internal Revenue Service Is demanding, $270,500 in loans, $2,055 interest on the loans and $147,214 in unpaid bills — not including debts written off by various merchants and individuals as contributions. * ★ * Week after week the theater seemed in danger of closing because; of an Inability to meet the payroll.' But it survived the full season due to last-minute contributions and the Ill-fated discontinuance of payments into the tax escrow accounts. Every fund-raising attempt since the fall of 1966, from public .appeals to benefit performances to the hiring of a fund raiser, has failed to make either a significant dent in the debt or bring in enough money to make a second season likely. TREVINO-GARZA A wedding trip to Mexico and the San Antonio, Texas "HemisFair” followed vows Saturday for Mr. and Mrs. Ray Trevino, nee Angelita Garza. For the rites in St. Michael’s Catholic Church, the bride chose a bouffant goum of Spanish lace highlighted by a four-tiered veil. She carried an all-yearl bouquet from Mexico. Mariz Garza was maid of honor for her sister, heading a list of eight bridesmaids. Steve Trevino was best man for his brother, heading an usher corps of seven. Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Jose M. Garza of Scott-wood Street and the Juqn Trevinos of Houston, Texas. A reception in the CAI building followed the ceremony. CUPPER ' “Q” -17 jewels. Automatic. Waterproof. 449.13 Class Leader. Bulova for Graduation Always tops in design, performance and dependability ... Bulova is the straight-A gift that’s got class! IEADINC UtDT “IT" — 21 jewels. Incised and ap* plied markers, stiver dial. $69.95 BANKER “BIT-17 [•wets. Yellow. Roman numerals and stick markers. $69.95 When you know what male* a watch lick, you'll live a Bulova ' FREE Engraving on All Purchases Miracle Mile Shopping Center 4-PAY PLAN Lay-A-Wiy, Security Charge, Lou-Mor Charge, Mich. Bankard Jewelers B—5 TIIE PONTIAC PllKgS. Till'KSI)AV, MAY ;io, i'0«h These Worriers Need Our Reassurance By MURIEL LAWRENCE DEAR| MRS. LAWRENCE: Out- 17-year-old son is In the hospital with severe injuries resulting from a car accident But, as the doctor assures us that he will recover from them, this is not the problem. The problem is my mother-in-law. At any family crisis, she goes to bed with “heart flutters.” Asi if my husband weren't worried enough about the boy, she calls him every night to talk about “poor Al,” how wrong the doctor may be and how Al may be an invalid for the rest of his life. She is so selfish . t. ANSWER: Let your husband try saying this to her: "Al'i accident Is not\ your fault. Nobody could possibly blame you for It. You Weren’t therlp to prevent It.” t J It may not work. On the other! hand, it might. It just might geti her out of bed and over those j "heart flutters” and badgering behavior. People who carry on like this when any family trouble occurs blame themselves for it. They go to bed, not with "heart flutters" but witH fury at trouble’s presumption to occur. For such people are Absolute Power-Claimers. When circumstances get out of hpnd and produce a grandson’s car accident, they hhve an awful time with themselves. Whatever concern they feel for the grandson is swallowed by horror of the possibility that they're not Absolutely Powerful. Which is 'why they need so much (reassurance of blamelessness. ' If we don’t know this about LAST 2 DAYS - FRIDAY and SATURDAY END-OF-MONTH SALE SAVE 20% to 50% them, their carryings on cun drive us almost as crazy as they are. Actually, they can't help this badgering. It is the consequence of cruel childhood* training Which made them so ashamed I of any weakness in them that they oould only deal With it by denying its existence, so they endow themselves with the power of God to so organize the world that it appears consistently "good" and obedient to I them. They look “selfish” but they’re not. They’re just furious at the circumstance which has suggested that horrifying helplessness to them. If we can convince them that their helplessness is O.K. with us, we can sometimes make it a little more comfortable for them. JILL SANSOM NANC1 CLAY LOOKING for CARPET? THEN BE SURE TO VISIT (ttlitttmt’fi Hillagr (Sarjtet There*» a Good Rea*on ! 139 Romeo Rd. Tel. 651-4612-3 Saturday evening will see the installation of Jill Sansom (left) as Honored Queen of Clark-ston Bethel No. 25, International Order of Job's Daughters, in Davisburg Masonic Temple. Jill is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Sansom of Paramus Street, Independence Township. On the same evening, in Roosevelt Masonic Temple, Nanai Clay, daughter of the Frank Clays of Claudia Drive, will be installed as Honored Queen of Bethel No. 40 of the same order. In Rochester Mon , Tuti., Wed , Thwrt. 9:30 to 3 30 Frl.TlIOiOO - Sot. Til I>00 Polly's Pointers • FLOOR SAMPLE GROUPINGS THAT MUST SELL IMMEDIATELY • LIVING ROOM, BEDROOM, DINING ROOM and OCCASIONAL FURNITURE • NO LAYAWAYS • IMMEDIATE DELIVERY • ALL SALES FINAL Decorators at Your Service Open Friday Evenings FURNITURE fclAtlNAV IT. At OICKAI0 LAM AVI. mi-1174 PONTIAC Budget Terms of Course Plenty of Free Parking Student Excels in National Exam William Strait, a student at Interlochen Arts A c a d e m y 1 placed among the top two per cent recently in the National Merit Scholarship examination. In recognition of his achievement, the son of the Jack C. Straits of West Iroquois Road was awarded a letter of commendation. Hong Blinds, Wash Outside When cleaning Venetian blinds, clean the cloth tape as well as the slats. An easy way to do this is to hang the blinds on two nails on an outside wall. Commence by scrubbing onel side of the closed slats and j small hojes in carpet that were tapes with a scrub brush dipped caused by cigar or cigarette into detergent suds. blirns, I.run the vacuum over ★ ★ * the1 rug and take a bit of the I Then hose off the blinds with,nap from the sweeper. Put a clear water. Turn the blind .little glue at the bottom of the around, keeping the slats closed, hole and insert this nap into it. and do the same thing on the Flatten out the surface with other side. Let the blinds dry]your foot and the hole will not with weights on the bottom to be noticeable. —r MRS. P. N. Mend Scorched Carpet DEAR POLLY — I suggest that Mrs. J. M. McC. remove the scorch from the top of her carpet by shearing it off with sharp scissors. I have done this and it is scarcely noticeable. Of course, the type of carpet and its weave would have something to do with the success of this method. — MRS. M. H. ★ ★ ★ DEAR POLLY - To patch stretch the tapes. .Too-high heat or too-long cooking is the chief cause of liver becoming hard when cooked. PROBLEM DEAR POLLY — How can one soften the bristles on a hair brush? Those in my recently purchased dresser set are as stiff as wire Another question !! is: How to whiten a white mink ij collar that has yellowed? — : MARY ELLEN DEAR POLLY - Just': recently I started to make a: batch of cookies and was rushed j • for time. To my despair, I:; found that my brown sugar had;; dried hard as a brick.' I brought a pan of water to a boil, removed’it from the heat,': placed a lump of brown sugar : in a colander on top of the : boiling water (not touching the : water) and covered with a • towel. After a few minutes, the!; sugar softened until I could ; : easily crumble it with my : j hands. It was soft and moist as :: ibrown sugar should be. — MRS. Ij V. McC. I DEAR GIRLS - Hiked using!: 'a strainer better than a col-i; ander so if the sugar should start to crumble none would fall , through as easily. — POLLY | DDD0DD0ODD©* the two-piece look of new shirtwaist dirndls ... . . . feminine shirts with ruffles, tucks, lacef . . . prettiest on soft, full dirndl skirts cinched in shiny patent. Here, in sheerest self-lined Fortrel® polyester and cotton voile, lefti ruched collar In black .or grey with white, rights mandarin In grey or brown with white. AP Wirephoto Maria Christina Diligenti, quintuplet from Buenos Aires, Argentina, and Dr. Robert B. Zimmerman smile as they step from St. Mark’s Catholic Church in St. Paul, Minn., where they were married recently. Dr. Zimmerman, 25, met Maria in Dallas, Texas, where he was an intern and she was an airline stewardess. The couple will live in Rochester, Minn., where Dr. Zimmerman will take a residency with the Mayo Clinic. sizes 16V2M to 26VaM Order by mail or phone 992-1900. Add 3Be for delivery plus lOo for C.O.O.'s and 4% tax. Ths Pontiac Mall _ We Will Be Closed During Our Building Remodeling WATCH For the Grand Opening of Living Rooms )»y Gilbert’s Gilbert s Furniture 6959 HIGHLAND ROAD Terms Arranged 90 Days Cash Phone 614-3149 SPRING COATS Were „ $50 *23 *33 SPRUNG SUITS and COSTUMES Were to $80 47 *57 DRESSES 8 77 Were to $30 1277 1677 1877 Were to $50 2077 2677 SPORTSWEAR 88 SHORTS Were to $5 2 SPRING SUITS Were to $22 15 CASUAL COORDINATES Were to $25.88 ^15®° ACCESSORIES SPRING HANDBAGS j Wele to $12 *6** SLEEP GOWNS $088 Were to $5 O YOUMG FOLKS DRESSES $088 $fiT88 Were to $8 O O SUITS Were to $1 1 $ 7 *9 FOUNDATIONS Long Line RRAS Were to $10.95 millinery $0 $/fl $K Were to 12.98 O ‘T . & oo B—6 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MAY 80, 1968 Cook a Batch of Buckles for Belts, Booties frightfully “In,” you’ll make up smaller matching sets o f buckles for your shoes. They’ll give last year’s models '68 pizazz so you can trip brightly through summer with a whole* new wardrobe of shoes. Here’s the) procedure, starting with the of a clay concocted of baking I clay: ' 1 soda and cornstarch. I In a saucepan combine 2 cups * * * [baking soda r ribbon. For a 24-inch waist, you’ll need a 30-inch length for each belt. For added stiffness sew on a corresponding length of canvas or similarly tough fabric that you may find in . your mother’s scrap Pontiac Prat* Photo MR: AND MRS. JOHN KLEIN Kleins Feted on Anniversary Mr. and Mrs. John Klein of Auburn Road, Avon Township, will celebrate their golden wedding anniversary Saturday. A breakfast at Sylvan Glen Inn and Golf Club, Rochester, will follow a special Mass at Sacred Heart Church in Auburn baR.! Heights Sew a half inch wide strip of j * * * velcro to each end of your lined; Their six children and spouses ribbon for the closure. will host the festivities Joseph of Long Island, N.Y.; John M, Jr., Michael F. and Thomas E., all of Rochester, Mich.; and Marguerite, Mrs. Garvin Mosser of Milford. A buffet in Mrs. Mosser’s home is slated from 4 to 7 p.m. the same day. The pair was married June II, 1918 in Seaforth, Ont., and came to this area in 1928. There are 15 grandchildren &c $3r!w HERE’S PERFECT FIT Sixes 5 to 11 Medium (B-C) Wide (D-E) X-Wide (EE-EEE) Foam Pillowed VTCI KIDSKIN ‘SOFTIE’ SLING Made excluiively for Lane Bryant byDESCO ^"•SMARTER and FLOORS Nylon Carpet Installed 8.50 per sq. yd. Kitchen Carpet Installed 9.95 per sq. yd. Installation On Any Selection By Our Own Custom Mechanics “Custom Made Draperies Large Selection of Fabrics to Choose From McCANDLESS CARPETS ^ Corner of Perry and Pike 1 N. Perry Open ’til 9 Fri. FE 4-2531 w w Now for the painting — use water colors, tempera, o r whatever you have on hand Pick colors that go with your wardrobe, and the more madly you mix them the better. Then dip buckles in a panful of shellac for a ceramic-like finish When thoroughly dry, sew each [onto its ribbon with nylon [thread; and lastly paste mirrors back in place with' white glue. ★ ★ ★ To plant buckles on shots, take two hajf-inch wide strips of adhesive tape, each about five inches long, and anchor them onto the inside of shoe toes at opposite sides so that the two pieces cross as they emerge from shoes. Fold over the top of toes. Fold back again so that sticky side is up, and press on buckle. They are: Jeanne, Mrs. John Conlon of Rochester, N.Y.; Dustpan, Broom in Combination A snappy new idea to make it easier for a woman to keep the house neat is sweeping into popularity. The idea combines the best features of the household dustpan and the kitchen broom. ★ ★ ★ The dustpan and broom stand 16 Inches high for easier use, The six-inch-wide broom snaps inside the dustpan for compact storage. Big crumbs and small spills in the kitchen or the patio are removed quickly. Will Wed in Fall A Sept. 7 wedding is planned by Patricia Ann Klobnock and Faye Franklin Vanderpool. Their parents are the John D. Klobnocks of Emerson Street and the James F. Vanderpools of Fourth Avenue. Lively-striding wedge of soothingly soft vici kid ... cut out for coolness and heel-to-toe foam-cushioned for your walking pleasure! Style — quality — comfort ... no wonder theae rross-strap favorites sell out,by the thousands! In black, bone, navy, white. Order by mall or phene MJ-7PM. AM Mo tor daliv pirn IM tor 0.0JI.’x and 4% tax. TNI PONTIAC MALL BUY! SELL! TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS/ GLOBE FURNITURE 3ft. &ed,Afett&mia*d SPECIAL Summer Sleep Shifts 6.00 Light end airy, lace-embellished gowns of cool cotton blends ore specially priced so you enjoy savings. . .ideol for groduotion gifts ond your own travel wardrobe. Pink, blue or maize in P-S-M-L. 336 West Maple Birmingham Thursday and Friday ’till 9 & ■ li • *0^/ m 1 THE TONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1008 B—7 Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ramin of June Street, Avon Township announce the engagement of their daughter, Loretta of Farmington, to Clarence Strong Jr. He is the son of the senior Clarence Strongs of Briggs Street. A July 13 wedding is slated. Holiday Includes Two Celebrations Mr. and Mrs. Ralph 0. Allen have Lnvlted relatives to their Cooley ^.ake Road home today to celebrate the fifth birthday of their twins, Scott and John. * * * Grandmother, Mrs. Clarence Hardenburg and Mr. Harden-burg of Durnham Street, will be there along With Mr. Allen's brother and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Allen, from Milford, and their two children, Jeff and Greg. The Allens’ other three children, Sue, Chip and Jim will complete the gathering. • Sisters Comprise Bride's Court With her fopr sisters as at- with four rows of lace appliques. tendants, Gladys Irene Carter recently became the bride, of William Dennis HeJIigenthal Connie Served as maid of honor, Nancy an bridesmaid, Joyce and Janice as flower girls. Their parents are Mrs. Marie Carter of Dewey Street and Her- She carried a cascade of roses and carnations with trailing ivy. The son of Mrs. Raymond E. Heillgenthal of North Tasmania Efficient Closet Idea To keep a neater clothes bert Carter of Richmond Street, icloset and to prevent coat hanger hooks from interlocking, separate them with a four-inch Street, and the late Mr. Heili-genthal, was attended by David Beaupre, a cousin, as best man with ushers Daniel King and David Thompson. Jeffrey Hooker was ring bearer. Following a reception in the Roosevelt Hotel, the couple left for a honeymoon in Niagara Falls. Speak Vows Mr. and Mrs. Richard Parsall of Clayburn Avenue announce the recent marriage of their daughter, Pamela Sue, t o Airman 1-C Gary H. Jacobs, son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Jacobs of South Shore Drive. Airman Jacobs is stationed in Libya There dre ab<»ut 206 named bones in the human body. Don*t be just a beautician • • • be a (^highly trained Hairstylist by the famous instructor LOPEZ. PABLO’S School of Beauty Inc* 4823 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plains OR 3-0222 ATTIRE For the evenings vows In First (^pneral Baptist Church, the bride chose a full length organza gown with tiered overskirt and long sleeves. Her court train was accented diameter disc cut from stiff cardboard. Cut a center hole large enough to slide easily on the clothes rail, making a slit in the bottom so that you can slip it over the rail. Chapter Has May Social Mrs. William Long opened her Island Park Drive home Tuesday for the May social of Xi Beta Beta chapter of Beta Sigma Phi. Heading the evening’s agenda was the installation of officers for the coming year with Alice Jackson as president and Mrs. Don Griffin, vice president. * * ★ Other new officers are Mrs. William Killen and Mrs. Thomas Mosley, secretaries and Mrs. Thomas Ogden, treasurer Mrs. Don Griffin was also awarded the Exemplar degree and a special service award, the Order of the Rose, was given to Mrs. Ray Slaughter and Mrs. H. R. Richardson. ,« * * * The club is planning a Jufie picnic at the Oxford home of Mrs. Perry Kelley as the last event of the year. inf juutiuiWku^l Add warmth, texture, color to den, bedroom or bath with a sturdy, cabled area rug. Quick-knit cable rug gives decorator look, costs so little to I make. Use cotton rug yarn or old nylons. Pattern 778: rug, lid j cover. ★ ★ ★ Fifty cents in coins for each! pattern — add 15 cents for each] pattern for lst-class mailing j and special handling. Send to I Laura Wheeler, The Pontiac | Press, 124 Needlecraft Depi j Box 161, Old Chelsea Station, j New fork, NY. 10011. Print! Pattern Number, Name, Address, Zip. * * * Send for Big, Big 1968 Needle-craft Catalog — hundreds of | knit, crochet fashions, embroidery, quilts, afghans, gifts, toys. ] Plus 6 free patterns printec' * side. 50 cents. '* *, * NEW BOOK! “16 Jiffy Rugs" — knit, crochet, weave, sew j hook rugs for all rooms. 50 ( ' cents. ^ t Book of Prize AFGHANS. 12! • complete patterns. 50 cents. Museum Quilt Book 2 — patterns for 12 quilts. 50 cents. *|j ••* * Bargain! Quilt Book 1 — 16 complete patterns. 50 cents. Book No, 3 - Quilts tor today’s Living. New, exciting col-1 lection. 15 complete patterns. | 50 cents. LONGINES THE WORLD'S MOST HONORED WATCH* RETURN tol” THE SQUARES "Squared-off" dress watches by one of the great names in time—Longines, Full fashion favorites for men of every age.... unmistakably Longines, with meticu* lous attention to every detail... precision that is built-in for years, of faithful performance...and Longines styling is years ahead of its time. With black,'blue, lilt or White dial, M?.m PARK JEWELERS and OPTICIANS 1 N. SAGINAW (CORNER PIKE ST.) FE 4- \ 889 Closod Friday Evening, 7 P M. Opan Saturday 9:30 to 5:30 *>taeHIIED JEWELER FOR LONeiNIS & WITTNAUIR WATCHES $02.10 B-* THE "PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 80, 1968 Michigan's Pickles Star During Special Week ter. By JANET ODELL Fond Editor, The Pontiac Press Gov. Romney has declared this week “Michigan Pickle GLAZE Week." It is appropriate for a, combine mayonnaise state that ranks first In the L ( pfckle m|x Jand spread over molded auart mold Chill 2 to 3,to this point and refrigerated! Turn Into p re p a r ed pan,.off wax paper. At once spread I parsley and the filberts and roll) room temperature this, H ,, L . . , h4,fnr- «»r« Isnreadins evenly. Bake in a with deviled ham mixture, the frosted roll in the mixture, before serving, hours. Unmold on serving plat-until ready to heat before s«rv_'______________„nHi Pi,ra «Uv». sinno wunrh It in oentlv: lot stand at! Makes 8 servings. fish 1 production of pickles At one time the amount (*j| mjxture Garnish with gherkin pickles sold topped in dollars all u s as desired other vegetables. Surprising,1 but stop and think how often ed in centerjand roll up from 10-inch edge;, — 8 to 10 cool. •v-spreaaing eveniy. Dane m a wiui ucvncu iwu uuahuc. urc uuokm ... .' preheated 400-degree oven until!Place olives along 10-inch edge patting it in gently; let stand a| mg.) Warm sandwiches ^ ------- ... ---------------- j comes out clean a n d minutes. Makes 8 sandwicnes. (minutes. ■ * * * FILLING i Cover with transparent plastic Dil pickle, liquid gives bar- Meanwhile, ‘in a small bowl,j^ap; chill. Frost roll with pi-becue sauce a teasing sharp- ml* together the deviled bam ^ . ness. Use it to baste a rolled|and P^e^rel.sh. fJBwU? | shoulder lamp roast you cook I — • • *- * * you eat pickles. At our house,| what's tuna fish salad without on the outdoor grill it’s often. the addition of sweet pickle * * * I relish? Cheese, eggs and dairy Molded salads are a cool thing sour cream add more protein to serve in warm weather. It’s! and a tangy taste to these fun to purchase a fish mold fori hearty sandwiches, a molded fish salad. Use your1 imagination when you start to garnish it. Here, pickles can be a help too. ■ This recipe calls for expensive canned mackerel. Pickle Mackerel Loaf 1 can (15 ounces) mackerel, drained, boned and flaked 1 cup milk 2 tablespoons prepared horseradish 1 cup drained sweet pickle relish Vi cup melted butter or margarine Vi teaspoon dry mustard Vi teaspoon paprika Salt and pepper to taste 94 teaspoon Tabasco 3 cups mashed potatoes Vi cup mayonnaise 1 tablespoon sweet pickle liquid Sweet gherkin slices for garnish Combine mackerel, milk, horse-radish and sweet pickle relish. Mix with electric mixer. Tuna Bunwiches 8 sandwich buns, split '4 cup C4 stick) butter, melted Vi teaspoon garlic salt 1 can (7 oz.) tuna, drained and flaked 3 hard-cooked eggs, chopped' 1 cup (4 oz.) shredded Cheddar cheese % cup chopped green pepper >4 cup chopped celery [ft cup chopped pimiento-stuf-fed olives 2 tablespoons diced pimiento 2 tablespoons minced onion 1 talbespoon sweet pick relish 1 tablespoon lemon juice % cup dairy sour cream Mix garlic salt into butter; brush on cut sides pf buns. Place on baking sheet and toast under broiled until lightly browned. ★ -k ★ In a bowl toss together tuna, eggs, Cheddar cheese, green I pleasing taste, of course pepper, celery, olives? pimiento,I onion, pickle relish and lemon juice. Gently fold in sour cream, blend well, spoon fnix- * * With a small spatula, loosen your I-cake” from sides of pan; turn rotisserie. It’s different. |out'onto a clean tea towel: peel ) 5-pound boned shoulder of lamb, rolled and tied 1 teaspoon whole cloves Vi cup salad oil 2 tablespoons dill pickle liquid cup fir,mly - packed brown sugar t4 cup finely chopped dill pickles 1 teaspoon salt teaspoon allspice Stud lamb with cloves. Arrange lamb on spit. Cook in rotisserie or on outdoor, grill about 2 to 2 Mi hours, or until meat thermometer registers 175-180 degrees (depending upon desired degree of doneness). y. ★ ★ ★ | • Combine remaining in-jgredients; stir and heat to boil-®I ing point. Baste lamb frequently I with sauce while cooking. Makes 8 servings. HORS D’OEUVRE If you’re in the market for a great new hors d’oeuvre, here’s the place to start. Bake a sponge roll, similar to, but less sweet than jelly roll cake, apd fill it with a delicious deviled ham mixture. Pickles add to the Add butter, mustard, paprika,! fure onto bottom half of each salt and pepper. Tabasco and I bun (approx. Mi cup per bun). Deviled Ham Sponge Roll potatoes to mackerel mixture; mix well. ★ ★ ★ Turn into oiled fish mold or WRAP Wrap each sandwich i n aluminum foil. (If desired sandwiches may be prepared up Tuna Bunwiches ■ 4 large eggs, separated I % teaspoon salt 2 tablespoons sugar 1 tablespoon minced parsley Vt cup sifted regular flour 2 cans (each 4 Vi ounces) deviled ham 2 tablespoons slightly drained sweet pickle relish Large pimiento-stuffed green olives 1 tub (4 ounces) whipped pimiento cream cheese, at room temperature Vi cup coarsely chopped parsley xk cup coarsely chopped toasted filberts Grease a jelly-roll pan (about 15 by 10 by 1 inch) ; line bottom with wax paper; grease paper. ★ ★ ★ In a large mixing bowl, with electric beater, beat the egg whites until foamy; add salt and sugar; beat until whites hold stiff against peaks when beater is slowly withdrawn. At oncd, without washing beaters, beat the egg yolks until they begin to thicken and are lemon color; fold into the beaten egg whites with the minced parsley; gradually fold in flour. Pickle Mackerel Loaf the: PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MAY 80,,1968 B—9 OPEN MON. THRU SAT. 9 to 9 SUNDAYS 10 to 5 Jl’s a Pleasure to Shop and Save at OPEN MON. THRU SAT. 9 to 9 SUNDAYS 10 To 5 FOOD TOWN SUPER MARKETS PEOPLES FOOD MARKETS 1SSS Highland Rd. M-St Pl.t* 88*81 it Willi.m« Lk. Rd. OPiN SUNDAYS 1200 Baldwin Ava. I 0290 Coolay Laka Rd. Corn.r Columbia I Union Uk. Villiia OPEN SUNDAYS I OPEN SUNDAYS 2000 Highland Rd. HYLAND PLAZA COR. DUCK LAKE R0. OPEN SUNDAYS 203 Auburn Ava. CLOSED SUNDAYS 480 E. Pika St. OPEN SUNDAYS 100 Auburn Ava. ’(OPEN SUNDAYS [IN Orchard Lk. Rd. I OPEN SUNDAYS Elizabeth Laka Rd. I at Huron St. OPEN SUNDAYS'^! East Blvd. Corn.r at Parry OPEN SUNDAYS Everyday Low Prices • friendly Service • Go »JB» ‘(i&% Banquet CREAM PIES 14 Ounce J Pies Meadowdale Ass't. Flavor CANNED POP 12 Oz. Cans H IJM * V\ m .v \ \ STEAK lb. Boneless Rolled RUMP ROAST ic iya -___ Boneless Rolled HEEL OF ROUND lb. GBOUHD BEEF ROUND STEAK 1 i luTiTppj I i ( dr ______...J* ®.........*' r« r.i.rc. (ha right to limit quantltiei. _.n In Order To Give Our Employees CLOSED TODAY A Well Earned Day Off for Memorial Day yFHi.*tPj, DOUBLE STAMPS J"***,m prvMPj 6'/,.0l. Can WITH THIS COUPON and $10 Purchase ^^tlwn^t^nlnfQD^iwtwnntnbfndiUii^ftwofnfiuiwiwnfiwiMiWiwiwiwtwiwtWii^^ Y^ittMlWMfWWWWMlwWWrtUMlWWIWMyWMIfWWMWWWfMfWGfWV^TfMM'f^feyt Feed Town-Peonies Benut Stamp Oeupen DOUBLE STAMPS with "mis Coupon and $10, Purchase Coupon (spIruB Sunday. June 2,1968 NoneSold to OtamoBf Minors With This Coupon and $10 Purchase AAORfD, ***** 3 lb. *oz. pkg. Ay Feed Tewn*P«eple’t Bpnua Stomp Coupen j FREE GOLD BELL Stamps With Purchase 10 L'b. Bag of Potatoes Feed Tewn-Peoelea >onu» Stamp Oeupan FREE GOLD BELL. Stamps With Purchase of 20 Pound Bag of CHARCOAL v M^Baamasias - -esagBsaaMSBeBBggBsas! . lair IfF Food Town-Paoalat Banua Stamp Ceupen .Ill istl FeedTewn-PeeplteSanaajMMMLdtCMft.JI M III Til Nwi.ZoMt.PWf.immw. iWS8»S»SraSSBBafesk> Coupon Eipirey Sunday, June 2,1961 None Sold la Deolors or Miners II • 211 Iff m it «s -if #O^MWWl>ftWlWtWtUrt ‘ fDMIl|MWMWWWIWW_ Fend Town Paonlet Banua Stamp Oeupen FREE GOLD BELL Stamps With Purchase 3 lb*. HAMBURGER ill ii) If} (fieupln iMpirerSundoy. Juri* 2» 19Wl" Nohe Sold to Dealers or Miners . W.WW-W'U'V Mfree gold bell Stamps With Purchase! 3 Pk'gs. COOKIES Coupon Expires Sunday, June 2, .1*961 None Sold fa Dealers or Miners liXiuiitiuiui (fKmiMtfunu... Vuiemrv*' i 1M Feed Town-Peealee Senua Hams Canaan Mfree gulp bell Stamps With Purchase CUBE STEAK Coupon iNpires Sundoy, Juno2, I960 None Sold to Deolert er Minors B^—IO THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. MAY 30, 1968 February Date for 20th Bake-Off Atlanta, Ga., will be the site of the 20th Pillsbury Bake-Off. Feb. HI, 1969, officials of the national baking contest announced today. > A' * .• w * An Increase in prize money will result In tjiree Bake-Off champion recipes, each winning $10,000. One of the champion recipes will receive an additional $15,000 as best of Bake-Off, for a total of $25,000.-★ ★ ★ Along with the three Cham- j pions, runners-up Will be named j in each category: convenience mix, refrigerated fresh dough and flour. They will each win $2,000. A $2,500 junior award will be given to the best cook between the ages of 12 and 18. Each of the 100 finalists will have their entry certified by a receive an Americana P-7 oven GE dealer wilf receive a spe-range from General Electric, 'cial appliance prize, an expense-paid trip to Atlantal * * * and $100 cash. Finalists whoj This year for the first time 'contestants will not be required I to submit an official* entry blank _ ,, _ | j with the recipe. Entry rules Roll Out and Cur will be available in late summer in food stores, from local Hambura Pattiesi General Electric dealers, or by ^ writing to .Pillsbury, Box 409D, When entertaining a bunch of Minneapolis, Minnesota 55460. friends at a hamburger fry, try | WWW tolling out the hamburger steak I Headquarters for the Bake-to the desired thickness with a Off will be the new Regency rolling pin, between layers of j Hyatt House. The hotel has waxed paper, so that it will not been acclaimed for its unique stick. Cut with a biscuit cutter. | architectural features, includ-You will find this method much | ing a courtyard lobby which quicker than the usual way of stretches 21 stories high, and is making patties. 'filled with greenery. (j(M Mtojdcuj too), fa) ^oooC Picnic i lvalues with great from City Side Super Market Laandry Detergent S lb. I oz. Box Vt Gal. Val-U-Pae Potato W Chips 39* 14 oz. Bag, Bog. 59e Velvet Brand Ice Cream Assorted Flavors oat. 419* Spartan Salad Dressing 37‘ Qt. Jar Van Camp’s Pork S Beans 22' 1 lb. 15 oz. Wt. Smucker’s Fresh peeked Kosher Oill Pickles Froneh's Push Button MUSTARD 0f fayger Pop Assorted Flavors Fliptop 12 oz. Can 1 Remus 1 1 BUTTER 1 1 1 59* 1 1 I 92 Score 1 1 Limit 1 With Coupon 1 Sun. Hr$. 10-9 OPEN ! SUNDAY I Maxw.ll Hous. I I COFFEE l ! 59* 1 i 1 lb. Can I | limit 1 With Coupon | \ 1716 Joslyn Open 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. SUPER MARKET 3 Blocks North of 440 Wglton Blvd. WC V°9 COT*** HILLS BROS. COFFEE Felice Campbell's PORK & BEANS 1 Lb. Can Breast-O-Chicken Family Size 40 40 LIGHT CHUNK $•/« 0z. JIIC TUNA *9 PEANUT BUTTER 3 - 99° Luncheon Meat PREM ffiAAC Can Aqua Net HAIR SPRAY 13 Oz. Cnn Gala PAPER TOWELS 2-36 Salada TEABAGS "tt ,mC King Size AJAX Detergent QQc "n. 99 Famous Red iQt. OflC HAWAIIAN PUNCH AO Orange Crush SODA POP 6s49c Hellmann’s MAYONNAISE % 58c Sweet, Hot Dog or Hamburg iro oz. W Q c Wolght I wfl Jnr HEINZ RELISH Oven Fresh Old Style BREAD OMOM IN PERSON! From CANADA DRY 1 P.M. FRIDAY, MAY 31,1968 Miss Ginger Cash Win INSTANT CASH up to $100.00 No Purchase Necessary FELICE USDA Choice STEAK Sale ROUND STEAK -89* USDA Choice Rotisserie BOAST u>. Fresh All Beef Lean HAMBURGER I*. Hygrade’s Sweetnized Sliced BACON Banquet Ass’t Varieties CREAM PIES Banquet Chicken, Beef or Tuirkey POT PIES Rusette Hash Brown POTATOES house TOMATOES 39e U.S. Ne. 1 Texas Yellow ONIONS 3 Lb. «AC Bag q|y U.S. Ne. 1 Golden BANANAS U W 1116 W. HURON STREET Nationally Advertised BRANDS at Money-Saving Prices \ ' RIGHTS RESERVEOtO LIMIT QUANTITIES May 30 Thru < June 5 B—11 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY MAY 30, 1908 SPRINGTIME SALAD BOWL - Every day in the year brings ua lettuce as crisp as Iceberg dressed with Lemon Garlic Dressing and garnished with cheese strips. Garlic Flavor High in Spring Salad “Ho! Tis the time of salads!” This is one of the lines from “Trlstam Shandy,” a novel written about two centuries ago. Then, unlike today, green salads weren’t taken for granted. * * * In England — and throughout the temperate zone generally — there were months without a spear of green. When; finally, the northbound sun warmed cottage gardens, the first bowlful of greens marked a red-letter day. “Ho!” was truly an expression of surprise and delight. SPRINGTIME SALAD BOWL 1 small clove garlic, crushed 2 cups soft bread cubes tablespoons butter o r 3 tablespoons butter or 1 small head Iceberg lettuce V4 medium-sized head curly endive 2 fresh scallions, finely chopped V4 pound American cheese, cut into Vi inch strips Tomato wedges Lemon Garlic Dressing Saute garlic and bread cubes in butter until bread''is golden brown. Set aside for later use. Wash lettuce and endive; dry thoroughly and tear or cut into bite-size pieces. Toss in salad bowl with scallions. WWW J Arrange cheese and garlic croutons on greens. Garnisht with tomatoes. Just before! serving toss lightly with Lemon-Garlic Dressing. Lemon Garlic Dressing . Vt cup olive or salad oil Vi cup fresh lemon juice 1 clove garlic, finely minced 1 teaspoon salt Vi teaspoon sugar Vs teaspoon ground black pep--;per . ■ ; I . -r. Place all ingredients in jar Q. Where does it come from? j with tight-fitting lid. Cover and How is It identified? {shake until well blended. Yield: A. A lamb shank comes from 6 to 8 servin8s the front leg' of lamb. It con- Q. What’s the name of this meat cut? A. Ldmb shank. tains two fore shank bones, and part of the arm bone. Layers of meat surround the bones. All of the cut is surrounded by a thin, parchmentrljke covering called “fell.” This is to be left on during cooking. Q. How are they prepared? A. By braising'or cooking in liquid. After they’re cooked un- Familiar Salad Has New Taste Kids are so fond of carrots and raisins that they are sure to go for this slaw variation, flavored with American blue cheese. Combine 2 cups grated raw carrots and 1 cup seedless til done, they may be boned raisins. Mix together 1 teaspoon and stuffed. They are also SUgar, Vi teaspoon salt, Vs cup served with the bones left in. j mayonnaise and Vi cup (about To braise lamb shanks, they ,3 ounces, crumbled) American are usually dredged in seasoned ![j]ue cheese. flour, then browned slowly in stir the dressing into carrots lard or drippings. After the jan * 'To *1 B&M Baked Beans i 29* Hawaiian Punch... i 29* Libby’s Tomato Juice ® 29* JANE PARKER WHITE SANDWICH BREAD 4 99c Mad. From Flow Potatooi SAVE 10c - JANE PARKER POTATO CHIPS 59* l-LB. BOX HEINZ HAMBURGER Ml Men 4C 1-QT. 11 Vz-OZ. JAR *,SU#ER-RIGHT" LUNCHEON MEAT 2 W 89 Ice Milk Bars CHOC. COVERED Peanut Butter Paper Plates Napkins Ketchup Cane Sugar .. FKG ANGEL OF SOFT • • G G G O 200 ANN 14-OZ. PAGE •••### BTL SHANK HALF 45 lb SUPER-RIGHT" k QUALITY Semi-Boneless HAMS WHOLE MomitJ jEcONqTWs! T B—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1968 National World-Wide a THE PQNTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 80, 1968 B—18 The only way to find out how good Dynachrome film really is is to find out! And save up to 25% REGoodrich YACHT SHOES Indispensable Town Dress I CMrit Accounts I TiwMcd Michigan Bankards Honored Security Bank Credit Cards Honored Betas “Comfy” ^ SLEEPING BAGS 8mm Outdoor............$2.19 8mm Indoor.............$2.19 126 Instamatic........... $1.99 35mm-25ASA 20 Exp....... $1.19 35mm-25 AS A 36 Exp...... $2.69 35mm-64ASA 20 Exp...... $1.99 Price* Include Processing 90 Day* Sam* At Cath Trim and tailored . . . Rek town dress with double breasted paneled yoke, highlighted with jet buttons and patent leather belt. Dacron® polyester/cotton. Size. 10 to 18. Grey, beige, blue. • 3 lb. Dacron St filling, tested to 25* • Full ..porating xlpp.r (pair model) • Doubt, air motfr.it pock.t • "B.ngalin." Cov.r-Wat.r rop.ll.nt, tough a Gam. Bird Flannel lining • S.wn In .nap. fir liner • Full finiih.d .iz. 34"x78" • Include. Reg. $4 flann.l liner .heet IDEAL FOR MICHIGAN CAMPING JR. CAMPER’S CUB BAG . r.b.4.99 a Jr. Siie-Waterpreef bottom • Great for camp-out. 5.99 OUR OWN SPECIAL BAG • 3 lb. Dacron 88 filling . • Water repellent covering • M fhe • V' 4, ,Vw - t Colorful fining *. .. • Full length separating xipper g 7,99 OVERSIZE “COMFY” BAG For tho man over 6’ tali e Extra tough water repellent covering • 6-lb. Dacron SB filling • Full xipper plu. all deluxe feature. • Tetrad to 0* .. The. Comma Mant IFE A-G259 nortnWOOD Tel-Huron florsheim 21 S. 3339 N. Woodward Telegraph LI 1-1144 BU our cobvebiiiit umway fun oBEuBm MOUNTAINEERING BAGS-Extra light • 1 -lb. Gooz. Down filling e Mummy .tylo • Rip.teck Nylon Covering e 214 lb. wgt. — ted «-».WS* 8x7 RUBBER GROUND SHEETS FABRIC AIR MATTRESS mam of jacket for a little money! Birmingham 289 Hamilton Row Ml 6-3971 Opon Thurt.p Fri, til • Livonia Wondortond Contor Plymouth and Middloholt GA 7*6311 Opon Nitoly til 9 mBUI Rich, maaty Chili Con Cam* heaped over a mound of tinder spaghetti — it's hot V hearty with a zesty tang. Complete with toasted, buttered Both arc full size, top quality plastic hose — choose whichever suits your needs best. Modo with Solid brass couplings. STORE HOURS: 9:30.to 9 wicker and straw bags TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER Smart summery styles in black, white or natural. Silver Lake Rd. and Dixie Highway 20 S. Telegraph , Across from Tel-Huron MODELS SWINGING STRIPES Avuilubl«t In Tapered Sizes 8-12 and Necks i:i-l5 W.'v. got a group of famous-maker lightweight iliorl-l.ngth jacket* that you can choose from at a great tavlngl Select wator-rnpdliinl mirad# blend*, Including Dacron-cotton In lin'd’or unlined models. Lot* and lots rmtl lot* ol color*. Sizes 3('>-46. snap-front nylon jacket Vtduvs In *111.9,) TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER \ Phon. 335-5471 A great casual look in navy or brown, S-M-L MODELS PRESS > 2 DAYS ONLY! Fri. & Sat. May 31 & June 1 Tel-Huron Store Only! a part ol Pontiac since J93J , STOnCS FOS MEN & VOUN# MSN ■ Downtown Pontlae Open Fri. #tll 9 .» PONTIAC MALL TEL-HURON CENTER ■ Tel-Huron Canter in Pontioc Open Every Night 'III 9 Use Veur Security Chari* or Mlohlian Bankard iMpdrSlBmBBn V' \ \. \ MS 4 I i 1 1 B—14 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1068 IWIKWWWPHWIPW W III UK Jacoby on KOBIN MALONE By Bob Lubber* n6rth ♦ 2 VKQJ107 ♦ K Q 6 3 ♦ 984 WEST ♦ KJ974 V 988 « 95 ♦ QJ10 - SOUTH (D) ♦"A 8 5 V A4 32 ♦ A82 +AKJ Both vulnerable SO EAST ♦ Q 10 6 3 V 5 ♦ J10 7 4 ♦ 6532 Wett North East South 1 N. T. Pass 2 V Pass 3N.T. Pass 4 V Pass 4 N. T. Pass 6 V Pass 8 N. ft Pass Pass Pass > Opening lead—♦ Q again\ When -South jumped to i was not going to get to play three no-trumf), North went the hhnd and should have glveVi after 100-honors in hearts and jorofln j*. upnanii u/o ««vui rebid his nice suit. When South persisted with no-trump, North Leon D. Layman, II W. Longfellow William E. Royal, 471 OaSota Nelson L. Wooley, 374 E. Blvd S. up at three no-trump. True, the heart slam was there since playing at hearts William B. Darnell, 44 Alllagn Leonard H. Williams, 1147 N. Cass Lake Roscoe J. Dann, 1131 Irwin Anthony J. Sauro, 410 Kenilworth Richard H By OSWALD and JAMES JACOBY Today’s hand was played in the early days of contract. Not | then. He is still mad 35 years decided quite properly that he cou|d ruff hls fourth dia-South held all the aces. North imond w^at good is a heart bid a heart slam. Islam when you aren’t going to * * * be allowed to play in hearts? It did him no good. South: I Newspaper Enterprise Assn.) went right on to six no-trump---------------------- -------■--------- and North gave up the hopeless struggle. South played with perfect technique. He won the club opening and led a low spade[ to set up a possible squeeze if diamonds did not break. Un-1 fortunately for North and South j the diamonds did not break andj the squeeze didn't jnaterialize. South got his 150 ponits for the aces but game, slam and rub-: I her had gone into limbo. ★ i it ... I Oswald Jacoby was mad JACOBY exactly this hand, but one simi lar enough so that the result was the same. South was one of the first great contract authorities.: North was young Oswald Jacoby. The game was rubber bridge and the stakes quite high for those Depression days although they would mean little in today’s inflation. South liked to bid no-trump and his opening no-trump bid was an indefinite sort of strong hand with no-trump distribution. Needless to say, four aces and a king filled the bill nicely. As you can see North responded with a two heart call. He knew that South would bid later but with the passage of time some of his anger is turned against himself. He knew that his partner liked to play no-trump. He should have realized that he V+CflRDJf/t/fA* Q—The bidding has been: West North East South !♦ Pass 1 N.T. Pass 2 V Pass 3 V Pass ? You, South, hold: ♦108765 VAK943 4KQ +2 What do you do now? A—We have a alight preference for a- four-heart bid, but no criticiim for a pass. Let your conscience be your guide. TODAY’S QUESTION Instead of bidding one no-trump your partner responds two diamonds to your opening spade bid. You rebid two hearts and he jumps to four hearts. What do you do now? Answer Tomorrow £_ . * * M f^A8^1agGal.Fyfe<»k hit By SYDNEY OMAR It Friday "Tht wit# man controls destiny . , . Astrology points way."____ ARIES (March 21-Apr!l 19): Greater freedom of thought, action is Indicated. But beware of tendency to lump In where wise persons fear to treedi In any social event tonight, stick to factual attitude. Keep feet on ground. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Cantar activities around home base, if possible. Check costs. Study real-estate proposals. prolect. And rnany now pay attention to your opinions, statements. Be gracious. ★ ★ ★ IF FRIDAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you are filled with energy, possess much Intellectual curiosity and may be due for change of residence. ★ ★ ★ GENERAL TENDENCIES: , for LEO. Special word to tANCEfi original methods pay off. (Copyright T-M 1968, General Feature Corp.) older prove Talks with beneficial. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): As evening approaches, you desire change of scenery. Could lead to loumey. Be with relatives who are concerned about your welfare. Finish prolect. Be sympathetic to one who airs problem. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Take Initiative In gaining what you desire. Add to possessions. Be creative. Break away from usual pattern. Speak up. Study opportunity to make money. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): By afternoon hours you find puzzle pieces falling into place. Your direction becomes clear. You can take initiative. Cycle is high. Circumstances turn in your favor. Don't n together with those who share erest. Avoid a loom. Be active In club or group affair. Good news due. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Excellent for getting out of emotional rut, meeting people, going places and doinp things. Accent on friendship and excitement of romance. But avoid eccentric action which could prove costly. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Build — take constructive action. Put In extra time to complete important mission. Study communications. Express yourself. Permit actions to speak for you. Higherup expresses appreciation. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Accent on domestic situation. Key is understanding, , maturity and diplomacy. If planning vacation loumey. take family member Into confidence. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Lunar accent on accounts, money, possessions of mate or partner. Be realistic. See persons, situations as they actually exist. I Say no to Individual who spreads foolish rumor. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Others tend to set pace. Don't oppose moves of mate, partner. Show that you are flexible. Set example by acting in responsible manner. Member of opposite sex shows more than mild Interest. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): if you serve, help, then you receive feeling of lob well done. You are due to complete a Daily Almanac By United Press International Today is Thursday, May 30, the 151st day of 1968 with 215 to follow. This is Memorial Day. The moon is between its new phase and first quarter. ★ ★ * The morning stars are Saturn and Venus. The evening stars are Mercury and Jupiter. On this day in history: In 1431 Joan of Arc, maid of Orleans, was burned at the stake in Rouen, France, at the age of 19 after being found guilty of sorcery, ★ ★ * In 1883 an unfounded report that the Brooklyn bridge was about to collapse caused a panic in which 12 persons were trampled to death. In 1937 a total of 10 persons were killed and 90pounded in a battle between police and strikers at the Republics Steel Corporation tryyig to shut down a' plant in South Chicago. * -★ - ★ Tn 1964 A. J: Fdyt won the Indianapolis 500-ipile auto race, in which drivers Eddie Sachs and Dave McDonald were killed on the second lap. GOODYEAR THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1968 good/Vear B—U SERVICE STORE’S Rotomatic 18" Mower Fay atlUUaas IL2S par week '29" You get a dependable 2Vi bp engine, 18" cut, adjuetable cutting heights, 1-1 gauge steel deck, rear baffle at this low. 20* Portable Fan 3-speed Ian tdeil lor double hung windows w4 liVEuyi 'Easy terms Use anywhere! Modern steal case has front & rear safety guards. Dependable motor uses double steel supports. * ' mm New! jotter Pen resliuas a perpetual $129 cslesdar on the barrel X Famous Parker quality. IU* white barrel with easy-to-read black date letters and brushed chrome cep. Now! 16 lb. capacity and Mini-Basketftoo! From big loads of denims, to little loads you’d normally wash by hand... does all your washables perfectly! • 2-Speeds, 3 Cycles, 3 Wash and Rinse Temperatures! • Exclusive Mini-Basket—extra tub for little loads up to 2 lbs.! • Big regular washbasket—-for up to 16 lbs. mixed, heavy fabrics! • Special Permanent Press Cycle —helps reduce spin-set wrinkles! • Filter-FIo Washing System— effectively collects lint-fuzz in the filter! 2-Speed Filter-Flo® Washer •350 W Weekly THE PAIR Drying Temperature, Soft Clothes! High Speed Clothes Dryer Automatic Control. Moisture in the load adjusts timer — no under-drying, no over-drying! Variable Time Dial Control. Lets you select drying times for degree of dryness desired. • Big Family-Size Capacity • Permanent Press Cycle • Safety Start Switch • Fluff Cycle • Big Capacity Lint Trap UP TO 36 MONTHS TO PAY AIR CONDITIONERS Prices Start At $16995 •1“ Weekly 24" Huffy Riding Mower Automotive-typn steering •‘Z Easy Tamil Has heavy-duty SV» h.p. Briggs ft Stratton engine with recoil starter. Forward-neutral-reverse gear box. Twin Tyrolean Lamps Old world charm lor any decor FREE Open, reopen or add to present account a new purchase of $31.95 or more and we’lf give you this lovely pair. REFRIGERATOR Big Capacity! Low Cost! defrost 12' ^rt“e„lor Freezer holds up to 64 lbs. £ Chiller tray ideal for meats, soft drinks, desserts. Huge vegetable bin. 17995 Just S1 50 Weekly NO MONEY DOWN Trousseau Packaged I ^ ~^ ~ ifc■JUi?r-N*. ^ | 60-Pc. Homemaker Ensemble FREE Restock your linen closet with famous Cannon quality I Includes: 8 pot holders, 8 dish cloths, 8 dish towels, 12 wash cloths, 8 guest towels, 4 bath towels, 8 white pillow cases, ft 4 std. size white sheets. Choice of combination solidJsPrint pattern sets in pink, blue or bronze. ' ——- -------1__*_■_____‘'__ Free with Utajor Purchase of $325 or More on any Appliances, Television or Stereo. 2-Gal. Gas Con For cars, mowers and motorboats $100 A dearly marked, S-color gas can. Features a deluxe plastic air vent and 0V«" reversible flexible metal spout. Tonga Torches Usal far gardea arpatia $088 Vi pair Outdoor lighting for outdoor living. 1-qt gold anodized aluminum containers with black 6-ft steal poles. Twin Bamboo Baskets ' A useful pair lor any home 10 For both Made of strongly woven bamboo. Has easy to carry handles. Holds up to abuahal each. 19" dia-15" deep. Imp. 20* Boys* Polo Bike Ill-Rise handlebars 4 deluxe saddle Easy tarmft Sturdy 4-bar cantilever frame construction. Goodyear tires. Chrome-plated rims and fenders. Gold finish. A Front-Load Portable Compact styling, rolls anywhere ... and loads from the front 1 Portable Dishwasher Spotlessly elean dishes without hand-rinsing or scraping 1 3-Level Thoro-Waah with Built-in Soft Food Waste Disposer — just tilt off huge or hard food scraps! Convenient rear-mounted controls! Essy to see, and reach! Fully-Automatic Binse-Glo Dispenser! China and glassware come out sparkling! Exclusive Stabilizers Keep dishwasher from tipping when open, retract completely out of your way! just 5000 WeMy $ 19995 THE MAGIC OF COLOR CONSOLE COLOR TV Prices Start at ®349#0 Just $000 Weekly ♦Model No. M 268 CWD — 1 only 30-60-90 DAYS ON APPLIANCES, TV & STEREO SAME AS CASH BLACK & WHITE TV Just 88°° 1370 Wide Track Drive good/Vear SERVICE STORE For G.E. QUALITY or Just*]25 Weekly v / A ■ Buying is Believingi 335-6167 B—16 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1968 ±BJ Travel Drive Only Somewhat Successful LONDON* 10 - President Johnson's “save the dollar" campaign Upholding down the flow of American tourists to Europe and luring more European visitors to the United States. But the campaign to reduce the U.S. tourist deficit by $500 million apparently has not been as effective in either direction as Johnson wanted. * * * Travel agents in some European countries report more Americans than ever will come this year despite Johnson’s appeal for them to spend their holidays — and their dollars at home. The increase, however* would have been bigger if the President hadn’t spoken, they say. big increase - Experts like Juan Trippe, retiring chairman of Pan American World Airways, say European tourists visiting the United States will increase by as much as 40 per cent and reduce the deficit substantially. The Commerce Department’s "Visit U.S.A.” campaign is attracting thousands of Europeans for a Stateside vacation, but American travelers still outnumber and outspend the Europeans by a fat margin. Some Europeans appear to helper cent of the guests in the frightened off by the violence of the past few American summers. One Swiss travel official said: "The publicity about race riots probably njakes some people think twice about visiting the United States." We are booked full for the summer,"' said one London hotel operator, "but if President reduction is predicted this season. BIG ATTRACTIONS N More French tourists — possibly 200,000 — will visit the United States this year, many attracted by the fair in San Antonio and the Olympic games ....... Travelers can take jin Mexico. , . , . ... $120 out of the country. Most ITALY: Officials.predict the!ast. year \igU[ies fo[. he British visitors to the United'same number of Americans willlsprlnR show 8 dec ine More Savoy are American." The U.S. Consulate reported 65,654 Britons have applied for American visas so far this year — only 155 more than last year, but increases are expected. WITH RELATIVES British hotel spokesman said some cancellations were expected. Fetver Swiss are going to the United States, and America’s disturbances are given as ope reason. ★ w ★ AUSTRIA: In February 17,243 Americans came, 5,000 more have virtually abandoned the Arab countries since last year’s war. Travel to Israel, however, is up. Scientific basis for diamond synthesis was not established until 1797. HOUSKRAISIN* • FOUNDATION WALLS LEVELING • PUNS • PORCHEI eSAOKID AND SASSINt BAWMCNT WALLS mmimd, aipuoc, WATtsPHoena TTICS • REC. ROOMS • WMSSTSSpa •ItlASSISWV .raUISTUUTK KAR-VAL 12 S. Mill St. FE 4-9779 Austrians i.mmiim! v■ xv Yviiii inMiivra. i nnmo inic v*»sar bc in iun/ sa might hurt business though, the talk of ,~A™eTica"* I Americans visit Russia yearly! cheaper .prices in Spain and!are. stl!A> Sffyi.ng.hasn 1 had anyjand Moscow is clearly ex-jYugoslavia and reduced most' effect at an. ipecting more this summer. Aj through-traffic to Greece and 4,000 MORE chain of special "dollar stores" j the Middle East because Country by country, tourist has been expanded, stocked I tension there. with goods Russians can't buy.j * * * Johnson passes his travel tax itjsVates'stay'with relatives.7'"'1 come ThTyear In 1*7. •iJMstr!aM are aPPlyin* for SOVIET UNION: About 20,000]non-boom year. The reason: :Amer,ca'? v)9as* but trips the.re too expensive for * ★ * of NORWAY and SWEDEN: The ' Norwegian Travel Association and Swedish officials .expect the New hotels are going up, and1 GERMANY: L u f t h a n s a same number of Americans this cities formerly barred to Airlines and hotel officials iyear as last- The Scandinavian tourists are open. : report traffic from the United1 Airlines System foresees in- * * * States is steady. More Germans creased travel in both directions HOLLAND: More than 250,000 are visiting the Unite to 4 Open Daily and Sat. 9 A.M. to 0 P.M. THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 80, 1968 ONE COLOR C-~l MALL PONTIAC THE Friday-Saturday, May 31-June 1 IT'S OUR BIRTHDAY! Come and enjoy the fun and entertainment and shop in our beautiful, enclosed, weather - conditioned Shopping Center. PARK FREE, near one of our many entrances, in our 7,000-car parking lot surrounding the Center, and shop at any or all of our 60 stores. MEL SNYDER ★ With hi* Fabulous Creations cf* featured on ABC-TV — CBSrTV. He intrigue* his audience as he sculptures Inflated balloons into unusual animals, unique characters, all in a rainbow of striking colors. DARE DEVIL FIRE DIVER . . . See the sensational high fire dive, Fancy diving, comedy giving by THE WORLD'S GREATEST. WORLD of PLEASURE SHOWS On Our Parking Lot . . * Be sure to get your FREE Tickets from any store In The Mall to save 10e on each carnival ride. ' - .»-■ TELEGRAPH at ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD SI C—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1908 Seek to Free It From .Portugal ________________L_________________: i Rebels Fight for Mozambique DAR ES SALAAM, Tanzanlal "We only attack armed men,[dispute became a melee involv-iDaily Nation, circulated in Ken-(f)—The former professor eyed usually at close quarters, and jng knives and clubs. ya, Uganda and Tanzania, suspiciously the door of a hotel count them when they fall. We Five were injured two «isri Poised Mondlane editorially as suite. jare extremely structured. Nojousl? a7d jsTrSed'^VoSJ‘‘a man who ^ ,ike,y ,0 contro1 "J m«y an,y f,h°°tS d0eS ,S° Without|lane who was out of theicountry the there .Will be victory, said Ed- d.rection." . ' M the time, said none of those rle"'l uardo Mondlane, 47-year-old Arms come from sympathetic |who attempted to smash their' 5, , ' leader of an East African group countries, including CommunistL.av in wprp Freiimn memhern 1962, and some think it! Guinea on the west coast. Portu- j*s t‘me f°r a change, gal denies they are colonies THEY MUST SERVE and says the ^ opportunities of; students at its Mozambique! Portuguese citizenship are open institute know they must serve! to all the people. I at least three months in Freli- HARVARD-EDUCATED ’ mo’s military arm sometime be-! tween the age of 18 and 22—usually after graduation; from the American financed! Some students have opposed! Mondlane is a native of Mozambique who was educated in South Africa and at Harvard and once taught anthropology at Syracuse University in New York. The Portuguese admit to having an army of 42,000 in Mozambique. Mondlane says the figure is closer to 65,000. “It is not the soldiers we are concerned about; it is the airplanes,” he says, adding that antiaircraft weapons are expected soon. * ♦ ★ ★ this recently, and others opposedj use of the Portuguese language in the institute and the employ-1 ment of Portuguese teachers and doctors. The institute, closed since March because of disputes, is expected to reopen soon. « j One day this month it tooki scores of steel-helmeted riot police, augmented by fully armed soldiers of the Tanzanian Field His group claims control of j Force to restore order at Freli the northern province of Niassa|mo headquarters when a verbal —“We control the border. The Portuguese army is in garrison and comes and goes by air.” Mondlane says. He says he was In Mozambique in mid-May and his men also are active in the provinces of Cabo Delgado, Tete and Zambe$ia. 1 "Whenever the Portuguese consider a town not to be on their side they bomb it with antipersonnel weapons. They count all dead as freedom fighters,” he adds. Dress Up Hall With Paneling* The easiest way to dress up an entrance hall is to panel one or more walls using solid lumber to provide the distinction this area deserves. Western heihlock, cedar and ponderosa pine are good! choices. ' j 3 Day SpecialI The going is breezy in a bright Italian-made sun-sandal. Hands of white leather cross in front, wrap sling-style in bach, with an elastic gore for easy-on. Sure on this stand-out ralue! BURTS © THE PONTIAC MALL Elizabeth Lake Road at Telegraph CELEBRATION Friday and Saturday—May 31-June 1 at THE PONTIAC MALL Exciting Free Entertainment ★ MILKY the CLOWN With His Magic Tricks! ★ MEL SNYDER the "Balloon Man" with his fantastic Balloon Creations ★ LUCK WEST The Flaming High Diver with His Death-Defying Jump! SCHEDULE of EVENTS: FRIDAY, MAY 31st Milky The Clown at 4:00 & 7:00 P.M. Mel Snyder at 5:00 & 8:00 P.M. Luck West at 3:00 & 9:15 P.M. (In The North Mull) (In The South Mull) North Telegraph-Hd. Park ing Area) SATURDAY, JUNE 1st Milky The Clown at 1:00 - 4:00 - 7:00 P.M. Mel Snyder ** at 5:00 & 8:00 P.M. Luck West at 2:00 - 6:00 - 9:15 P.M. COMING NEXT TO THE PONTIAC AAALL • June 6th — 7th — 8th... The Mall is going fo the "Cats and Dogs" SEE The Blue Bloods of the Feline World in the South Mall and on the 7th and 8th of June SEE the Aristocrats of the Canine World fih the North Mall ■*- June 14th through 22nd The MARCHRIS MARIONETTES will be back with a new show, "Shower of Stars" 1 THE PONTIAC AAALL SHOPPING CENTER TELEGRAPH at ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD - OPEN DAILY 9:30 A M. to 9:00 PM. Select From More Than 200 Sample Summer Dresses EVERY NEW, WANTED COLOR, STYLE AND FABRICI JUNIOR, JUNIOR PETITR, MISSES' SIZESI ~.M if New, Washable Acrylic One-and-Two Piece Rerf. 1199 to 19.99 KNITS p Reg. $23 to $30 IJM Sharp, Tackle Twill m\m RAINCOATS Reg. 14.98 to 19.98 >7 Door-Buster Special! Limited Quantities! BUMS SHORTS \\ft\V. $6 to $7 While They Last! 99! Assorted Styles and Patterns! Dressy or Casual SHIFTS ViftYi'. Reg. to $13 399 Mini-Rib, Cotton Knit Turtle Neck T-SHIRTS 99 Reg. $7 Famous Maker, Assorted Print SUMMER aaa SKIRTS *«*' Reg. to $8 WYtV K99 Famous Maker, Print or Solid PANT SKIRTS" *■ * _ Famous Maker, Finest Quality Opaque PANTY HOSE |By ASSORTED BRAS Reg. $2 to 4.95 WOW! 99 up OPEN AN ALBERT'S CHARGE! Brand New/ Colorful Cotton SPRlIVlr PATIOS Reg. to $5 288 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 80, 1988 C—8 3 DAYS ONLY: FR1., SAT. & MON 3'*‘, if f,'fi i &&'<*■( i. %4-J? MAJOR SAVINGS ON NATURAL SHOULDER AND REGULAR SUITS IN SUMMER DACRON-WOOL Don't stand in the back of the crowd and simply admire, get with it. The most-asked-for summer fabric—Dacron-wool —ishere at a large saving. Choose from 2-button fashion models, 3-button traditional, solid hopsack blazers, Glen plaids, checks and windpwpanes. No problem with "fit-a-bility" and QC85 no charge for alterations » . . Ov Looking for the right style, the right fabric, the right fit? It's probably in this collection— and priced at a sizable.saving. Yqlj'I.I find both three-button Charter Club natural shoulder models as well as Montclair two- and three-button regular styles. The fabric is a summertime favorite—cool, wrinkle-resistant Dacron-wool in a fine tropical weave. Choose from solids, stripes on plaids in an excellent range of proportioned sizes. And, of course, there's no charge for alterations. Don't JrpsitatQ* this special price is for this Friday, Saturday and Monday. Holiday savings on some of our bestselling summer slacks: light-weight Dacron#-and-wool with a permanently-pressed finish. You'll „4find this plain front model in black, medium grey, brown, whiskey, blue and olive $10 shades. No charge for alterations. 11 "• V 11^ OUR PONTIAC MALL STORE IS OPEN TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY TO 5:30; MONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY & SATURDAY TO 9 P.M. TELEGRAPH & ELIZABETH LAKE ROADS \V , C—4 TIIK PONTIAC PKKSS., THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1908 Custom Party Trays Made to Your Specification Frorff to ^1 per person Anniversary Special FRIDAY AND SATURDAY BOILED HAM....ibl” Natural Cosing BOLOGNA ... .ib 79c WEEKLY SPECIALS THUR1NGER SUMMER SAUSAGE BLOOD TONGUE SAUSAGE GERMAN SOUSE HEAD CHEESE . CHICKEN LOAF U! SaMa*d7&a4te* “7\/.. „ c aUehciouA ^Daudaye The Pontiac Mall Telegraph at Elizabeth Lake Rd. It's Time to Hit Up the Old Memory Bank By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK UP) — The great est reward of age is memory. It alone makes growing old worthwhile. The young delight in fantasies of the future; their busy minds paint pretty pic? ture fables of life as t h e y dreatp it may be>. ” But memory is the master painter in the calmer minds of those who have been longer touched by time, It presents colors not the scenes of what-may-be but the scenes of what-has-been. Memory makes the past not an enemy but a consolation. ★ ★ ★ You’ve trudged many a far step along life’s highway yourself if you can look back and remember when — ★ ★ ★ Some unknown classmate penned an unsigned inscription in yqur high school yearbook “Roses are red, violets are blue, somebody loves you — you’ll never guess who.’’ Every kid in the family hated th£ chore of having to go down the basement on winter nights and bank the coal fire in the furnace. Who knew what terrible demons lurked in those terrible cellar shadows? Before he fell asleep a small boy would spend a delirous 10 minutes scratching^ the marks left on his legs by the elastic bands he used to keep his long black stockings up. The height of devil-may-care for a lad was to put his cap on backwartls and ride down long "hill on his bicycle without holding on to the handlebars. You could drive out of his mind every grown-up within two blocks of your home by putting a tin penny whistle in your mouth and blowing; bird calls on it from morning to dusk. TRIP TO WOODSHED Any "war between the generations’’ usually ended in a trip to (he woodshed, from which youth limped oiit later a weeping loser. Only poor people were on diets, and they called it “doing without.” Home didn’t seem quite home ih the occasional summers when a wren failed to build her nest in one of the front porch eaves. The traditional symbol of a grandfather was a long white beard, and the surest way to throw ohe of these old gaffers into a tantrum was for a smart aleck to ask him, “Grandpa, do you sleep with your whiskers under the covers or over them?” His usual tart reply: “That’s for me to know, sonny and you to find out." Those ’ were the days Remember? SPECIALS BUY! SELL! TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! Anniversary Special 00* I One of Miami's Famous Cake*. X Made with Pure Creamery Butter Chocolate Crea™Qc UTOCOiai®----pA torte CAKE 4“ We Specialize in the Finest Bakery Goods WidMi Bake Shoppe THE PONTIAC MALL Telegraph at Elizabeth Lake Rd. THREE-PIECE SUMMER SUITS One of those wonderful, go-everywh*ere classics. The fabric is a lightweight rayon. The style is double-breasted with & slim skirt. The colors are navy or grey, with contrasting collar. And the shell is sleeveless. Sizes 12-20. 22.90 Pontiac Pro«t Photo VISITING — Mrs. Lawrence Bentfield of 615 Melrose meditates by her husband’s grave in the Veteran’s Memorial Gardens plot at Perry Mount Park^ Cemetery. Bentfield, a fireman, died at 42 Jan. 12. Bentfield was an aviation structural mechanic stationed in Chicago, 111., and Hawaii with the Navy during World War II. Ki KINNEY SHOES Your Family Shoe Center Celebrates Our 6th ANNIVERSARY at The Mall EASY-CARE DACRON DRESSES Pure Dacron dresses that never need ironing, keep their press forever. Choose from a variety of styles in navy, white, pink. Misses sizes 8-16, junior sizes 3-13..16.99 FAMOUS-MAKE 3-PC. WEEKENDER A jacket, plus an interchangeable skirt and slacks. Choose from two styles,- both in wrinkle-shedding Fortrel-cotton. Shown: single-breasted in blue br gold Glen plaid. Also: double-breasted in beige/brown win-dowpane checks. Sizes 10-16...____24.99 Our Pontiac Mall Store Is Open Tuesday & Wednesday to 5: Monday, Thursday, Friday & Saturday to 9 P.M. Telegraph & Elizabeth Lake'Roads THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1968 C—* i m "\V '4' ; IRREGULARS " ' V \\ Stevens no-iron • print pastel and white sheets 3,69 twin , Whether snowy white, one of the soft pastels or dainty prints, the fabric is 50% polyester, 50% , cotton with a durable press finish so they’re smooth even without ironing! Irregularities are so small you probably won’t find them, and they can’t affect wear. Standard cases, 2 for 2.98; bolster cases, 2 for 3.29; full sheet, 4.69; queen, 5.29; king, 6.99. Hurry in to Hudson’s Sheets. \ IRREGULARS Fieldcrest sheared terry towels in assorted colors 1.97 bath towel The famous Fieldcrest colors... deep, rich tones that weren’t possible in your Mother’s youth, delicate pastels, too, and the lush medium shades. All Lustre towels of cotton terry that’s sheared to a velvety softness on one side, left loopy on the other for traditionalists. Irregularities are slight: can’t kffect wear. Hand, 1.47; wash cloth, 57>i!\6feec^e now at Hudson's Towels. CLEARANCE Shower curtains 3.4943.99 Plastics and fabrics ... dainty sheer ones, crisp sleek ones... in pastel and brilliant solids, prints of every description. All reduced to prices so low you could plan some extras for the cottage, or simply a change of scene whenever the mood occurs. All 6x6'. Some matching draperies avail-able at the comparably low prices. At Bath Shop. W' 0 Morgan Jones’ Chalet textured-weave bedspread looks far more expensive than It now is. The deep, dimensional pattern, the matching color fringe are proof of its quality. Yet with that, it's practical. Machine wash and dry. Full, 9.88; queen, 12.88; dual king, 14.88. 8.88 TWIN SIZE * S' iJlj TWIN SIZE BEDSPREADS AND COVERLETS 2.68 to 18.88 Choose from textured weaves, heirloom-types, children's tailored styles. Also fitted and throw styles. And most of prints, in a wide variety of colors and moods, including the coverlets can be matched up with dust ruffles, cafes, both solid colors and patterns. Quilted and unquilted Some canopies, draperies and valances in some patterns. FULL SIZE BEDSPREADS AND COVERLETS 4.88 to 25.88 Opt for floral patterns or solid colors, textured weaves or *For cafes and dust ruffles that match many of the cover- heirloom-types. For quilted or unquilted. For tailored, lets. For matching draperies in many bedspread patterns, fitted or throw styles. For matching canopies or valances. And opt for them at prices that make a trip worthwhile. King and Queen sizes, limited quantities, only a few styles. DOWNTOWN ONLY, CUSTOM ORDER BEDSPREADS 26,88 .o 107.88 These are some of our finest, a fabulous selection from twin, full, even hard-to-find queen and king sizes! Some famous manufacturers. Fine coverlets and bedspreads. In are slightly soiled or damaged. But be sure to come early prints and solid colors. Woven and quilted styles. And in because each of these elegant bedspreads is one-of-a-kind. 4.88 66x90’twin Insulaire II blanket by Morgan Jones Cotton thermal with nylon binding Won’t shrink; machine wash and dry Also 80x90' full, 6.88; king, 9.88 ■ Modem print floral quilt-coverlet ■ Cotton batiste with acetate filling ■ Practical... reversible and washable ■ Extra long: full, 12.88; dual, 16.88 ■ Contemporary Paisley Print coverlet ■ Machine washable, dryable; no-iron e Cotton; Fortrel* polyester fiberfill ■ Full, 9.88; 36' pleated cafes, 2.88 pr. 10.88 Twin,size a Our bright Scotch Check bedspread a Has two-tone raised woven pattern a Cotton, machine wash and dry, no iron a Also available in full size for 12.38 a Martex* revolutionary Luxor blanket a Bound on all four sides, gift boxed ■ Machine washable, machine dryable a Full, 13.88; 108x90' king, 20.88 18.88 to 36. a Fieldcrest discontinued print spreads a Screen printed designs, all fringed a Choice of patterns for all the family a Pre-shrunk, colorfast, and no ironing 4.88 «o 43.88 ASSORTED BLANKETS Blankets and throws of natural and man-made fabrics. Flat weaves and thermals. Some imports and tartans. Buoyant filled print comforters, patterned cotton quilts. Fieldcrest and General Electric automatic blankets, variety of colors, in twin 1-control, full 1- or 2-control, dual 2-control, Hudson automatic blankets, king in pink only HUDSON’S Remember! Friday is Month-end savings at Hudson PONTIAC MALL Telegraph and Elizabeth Lake Road NORTHLAND CENTER 8 Mile and Northwestern EASTLAND CENTER 8 Mile and KeHy Roads s WESTLAND CENTER Warren and Wayne Roads DO\/VNTOWN DETROIT Woodward Ave. and Grand River ;-'W C—6 THE PONTIAC t’RESS, THURSDAY, MAY 80, 1968 ' Riot Rules for Soldier By JERRY BAULCH Associated Press News Feature WASHINGTON — What should a young soldier do when he is called on unexpectedly to face a mob? jfor one thing, he shouldn’t have to decide too much, because the fundamentals have been spelled out for him in a new Defense Department pamphlet. The publication is for general use and not merely for those troops who are getting actual training in situations where snipers, arsonists and looters are confronted. The emphasis is on "techniques of control and application of required force without endangering the lives of innocent civilians." The 17-page document, long in preparation, came out as rioting and unrest erupted across the country, triggered by the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. ★ ★ ★ For the young man who may some day find himslef in uniform with a rifle, facing a crowd of his fellow Americans, the booklet gives this advice: "Acts of violence may be committed by either crowds or mobs. A crowd is merely a group of angry and unorganized people. As a group, they lack unity and courage. A mob is a determined crowd that is no longer afraid of the law or the consequence of lawlessness. When the presence of troops can control the group, it is still a crowd; when weapons must be used the crowd has become a mob.” BAULCH A FEW LEADERS GRAVE ERROR "By the same token, arrogance, viciousness, or an unjustified act of violence by a soldier is a grave error. Soldiers must realize that the group may try to get them to commit unjustified lets of violence. -"Occasionally, women and children may be placed at the forefront of the crowd to molest soldiers. They may try to seize the rifles of the men in the front ranks. Taunts, curses and other minor annoyances are to be expected and soldiers must ignore them. ★ ★ ★ "It is imperative,” the pamphlet says, "that a single soldier never be allowed to grapple with a single rioter. Since the mob usually will outnumber the soldiers, each individual rioter must be made to feel that his action toward one soldier will be opposed by all soldiers. "Acts of physical resistance by the crowd must not succeed. However, lawless acts, especially when committed by women and children, must be met with restraint on the soldier’s part. FELLOW CITIZENS "Soldiers serving in a civil disturbance operation must realize that the crowd or mob is composed of fellow citizens ... Thus, all soldiers must ftilly understand the requirement to use only minimum force to restore order." The pamphlet says National Guardsmen and active Army soldiers who are called to such duty will be given a card, with specific instructions, which they must carry with them at all times during the operation. It contains these special orders: • “I will always present a neat military appearance. I will conduct myself in a soldierly manner at all times and I will do all-1 can to bring credit upon myself, my unit and the military ■■service.-------------------------. 1 j - ★ . ★ ★ • “I will, if possible, let civilian police make arrests, but I can if necessary take into temporary custody rioters, looters and others committing serious crimes. I will take such persons to designated military authority as soon as possible. It is my duty to deliver evidence and to complete evidence tags and detainee forms in accordance with my instructions. • “I will not discuss or pass on rumors about this operation. AVOID DAMAGE • “I will avoid damage to property as far as possible. • “I will not load or fire my weapon except when authorized by an officer in person, when authorized in advance by an officer under specific conditions, or when required to save my life. • “I will be courteous in all dealings With civilians to the maximum extent possible under existing circumstances • “I will not mistreat civilians, including those I am controlling, or those in my custody, nor will I withhold medical attention from anyone who requires it. FREEDOM OF MOVEMENT * • “I will allow properly identified reporters and radio and television personnel freedom of movement, unless they interfere with the mission of my unit.” The pamphlet says “such service is seldom anticipated and > never pleasant, but all soldiers must be prepared to serve if the need arises.” Army doctrine, it says, "is readily adaptable” to dealing with such things as snipers, arsonists and looters. 37 Yanks Killed in Viet WASHINGTON (AP) - The Department of Defense has announced the lames of 37 men killed in action in ..Vietnam. They were: ARMY ARIZONA—Sgt. Robert L. Andrews, Phoenix. CALIFORNIA—Spec. 4 Timothy J. Rlznrdlnl, Ridgecrest. .,PELAWARE—CpI. George H; Coppage III, Dover. . HAWAII-Staff Sgt. ' Joseph R. Delgrieault, Schofield Barracks. INDIANA—Staff Sgt. Clarence H. Washington Jr,,Evansville. MICHIGAN—Sgt. Fred T. U'ren, Defnelf; Sot. Gregory A. Harper, Detroit. _ OKLAHOMA—Pfc. Larry K. Bryant, Richer. TEXAS—WO Tonimle A. Rolf, El Cempo; Spec. S William H. Morton, Houston. WASHINGTON—WO Charles C. Van Allan, Balllngham; Spec. 4 Allan M. Fhederlcksen, Seattle, Pfc. David W, Moseley, Seattle. WISCONSIM-Sgt. Richard H. Junk, CateviMe. NAVY K IDAHO—Hospltalman Samuel H. Rodriquez, Wendell. I MARINS-CORRS —.......... ARIZONA—Lance CpI. Larry J. West, Mo rend. CALIFORNIA—CpI. Richard C. Abbate, Santa Fa Springs; Lance CpI. Donald B. Jones, Lynwood,. Lance CpI. Gilbert H. Fair oakt. ILLINOIS—Lance CpI. John A. Gibson IV, Chicago; Pvt. Jimmy J. Jones, TEXAS—Lance CpI. Michael . . Burleson, Quitman; Pfc. Carson M, King, Alvin. WASHINGTON—Lance CpI. Oary Wilkins, Longview. Missing to dead — Hostile: ARMY CALIFORNIA—Pfc. Th«d B. Jesslman, Michael Stewart, Jack Morrison/ Oakland. KANSAS—Pfc Wichita. MICHIGAN—Pfc. Detroit. MINNESOTA—Spec. 4 Craig A. Rood, North Minneapolis. OREGON—1st Lt. Thomas S. Hughes,) Baker. Missing in action: ARMY Sgt. l.C. John H. Robertson, Staff Sgt. Gary L. Johnnie Carter Wltherell, Spec. 4 George It. Pope,'Spec. 4 Richard D. Mirtln, Pfc. Allen W. Vandarhoff, Pfc. Jerry A. Bockbrader-AIR FORCE Lt. Col. William H. Meson, Ma|. Jerry L. Chambers, Capt. James P. McCollum, Capt. William T. McPhall, Capt, Thomas Mitchell, Capt. William H. Taylor, S. L,_ Conn, S. Sgt Calvin C. Jgt. John ____________■ I______________ _ Glover; S. Sgt. Gary Pate, Sgt. John E. Albanese Jr., Sgt. Thomas P. Buhr, Sgt. INDIANA—Pfc. Richard L. Woznlak Hebert, I" -iM , MISSOURI—Pvt. Thomas H. Crook, Kansas City. OHIO—2nd L». Marcus G. Fiebelkorn, vniv— siri bi, ffioibus v. nvuviiwffi, [oJedes^Pte. R.opvls, “Southington; . OKLAI flleiple, Streetsboro. T’ ,ur,on' OREGON—Pfc. David M. Blanchfe O lend ale. 9 Robert A, Fink, Sgt. Thomai E. Knebal, Airman 1. C. John Q. Adam and Airman 1. C. Melvin D. Rash.- Captured or /interned: NAVY Lt. (J.G.) Edwin F. Miller Jr. Died not as a result of hostile action: ARMY ILLINOIS—Sgt. I. C. Robert A. Landry, North Lake; MISSOURI—Pfc. Larey McKeever, St. Louis. w AIR FORC* CALIFORNIA — Staff Sgt. Henry C. Fllppen, Parris. Missing not as a result of hostile action: **frWglnemA<| C. Ernttt K. Cola. Noting that ^ny such crowd has a few determined leaders-often professional agitators—many zealous active participants and. a larger number of spectators, the pamphlet says: "The spectators at first are harmless, being drawn in the group for many reasons such as excitement to witness a possible fight or possibly for a chance to engage in looting ... ★ ★ ★ “A mob always begins as a crowd and it is at this stage that the group is most easily controlled. "It is dangerous to allow a crowd to secure an initial success, for the prospect of victory can swing the sentiments of the spectators to the side of the rioters. /VI ONTGOMERY WARD This summer lot us help you COOL OFF! Automotive f g"{V oped duly » NOT Air-condition your car for summer and save! V 100530, WARDS SPECIAL AUTO AIR-CONDITIONER I $ ■ tfCOFIED., 149 AUTOMOTIVE l«R conditioning Installation Available ECONOMY AIR-CONDITIONER ‘179 i\ i association, INC. Dual 3-speed blowers and 4-way louvers circulate air in car. A SIP* m USE YOUR CHARG-ALL CREDIT Breeze through the heat this summer in cool, pollen-free comfort. This economical unit has movable 2-way louvers that circulate air evenly throughout your car. Maintains a constant comfort level. r Save 2.11 a pair on Riverside (D TOWN AND COUNTRY SHOCKS 5 44 Koch In pairs REG. 12.9V PR. Better steering control, smoother riding. Saves wear on tires. Stop quicker end safer. SUPREME LIFETIME SHOCKS Chrome plated rod AQO for longer life. V Retain control; holt ellie Y'l FRONT OR REAR LEVELERS Reduce front end 12” and tira wear. Each ia pair* 42-Month Super OE *17 Meets or exceeds specification of most original equipment batteries. Gives continuous, trouble-free service. 12 v each Reg. exch. $22 ______all ■N C teMISSWNj! Riverside* All-Season Motor Oil Rivtjrside® Heavy-Duty Motor Oil Wards Automatic Transmission Fluid & 34' QT. Reg. 34e 29 QT. Reg. 59c 39 QT. Riverside* 2-Cycle Oil... 6 Pack 219 REG. 2.49 Riverside* Heavy-Duty Oil Filters 119 REG. 1.59 1 Complete lubrication at ell operating temperatures. SAE I0W-30. Detergent type. Sur* passes auto makers' test standards. For top performance from your automatic transmission. Type "A". Scientifically - blended. Mixes thoroughly with gas. Runs cleaner. Exceeds original equipment for efficiency. Spin-en 2.49. . now 2.09 AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE SPECIALS JUNIOR TRAILER 1/2-TON CARRIER You'll find many uses for this handy trailer with a roomy, 12 cubic foot space. The easy-trailing roller-bearing wheels take the work out of backing end, turning. Has a rugged baked enamel finish. Comes unassembled. 'h ton, 14- cu. ft.. .$129 Giant 20 cu. ft. ..$199 BRAKES RELINED 44 88 WMfEL Alignment 8" COMPLETE REG. 57.99 Most Chevrolet* aid Fords OPEN MONDAY THUD FRIDAY 10 A.VI. To 9:00 P.M SATURDAY 9:30 \.M. TO 9:00 ]>.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO r> l\M. . 682-1910 ,1 WASHINGTON - Kamehame-ha Day is June 11, and all the islands of Hawaii will be In their most gala mood. ' , The 50th' state’s unique celebration recalls the memory of King Kamahameha I,.the “Napoleon of the Pacific,” a near-legendary fighre whose birthday is unknown and whose gravesite remains undiscovered. ★ „ ★ ■ ★ The four-day festival of parades, pageants, and aquacades ranks among the Nation’s most colorful, the Na tional Geographic Society says Many island towns and villages celebrate, but Honolulu enjpys the most elaborate festivities: The day begins with outrigger canoe, surfboard, and swimming. races. Whole pigs and leaf-wrapped fish are cooked in deep pits for the traditional luau. Natives perform ceremonial dances, and the audience joins in a songfest. BIRD-FEATHER CAPES Islanders don capes fashioned from o-o and iiwi bird feathers or cloth and paper substitutes. Horsewomen, called pa’u riders, wear- gaily colored gowns. Masses 'of 40-foot leis 'are draped on the revered statue of Kamehameha I, across from Iolani Palace, until only, the' head shows. A torchlight procession often precedes the luau. The leader, surrounded by men carrying torches of kukui nuts, represents Kamehameh*a (kaMA YhaMA Yha). Hawaiians have observed the holiday since 1872, when the monarch’s grandson, Kamehameha V, proclaimed June 11 La Hoohanao o Kamehameha I — literally, “to turn the thoughts bdck to Kamehameha I.” The initial celebration was modest: Special horse races were run in Honolulu. Six months later, Kamehameha V died, ending the dynasty. The reason for the selection of June 11 is puzzling. The great warrior wasiidrh on a stormy November evening, tradition says, in the Feudal village of Aineka on the island of Hawaii Historians place the date between 1737 and 1758. LAW CODE ADOPTED During his 24-year reign, the king upheld the ancient tabu system, but welcomed modem ideas. He built a strong central government, checked oppressive] chiefs, and adopted uniform laws. The colorful, six-foot-six, 250-pound monarch ruled from a native hut used as a palace. Upon his death on May 8, 1819, his bones were ceremoniously bundled and hidden in a secret lava grotto. “Only the stars of the heavens know the resting place,’’ islanders say. LSD in Cure of Alcoholics J Contradictory By Science Service BOSTON — LSD treatment of tlcoholism Is producing con-radictory „ results from aboratories. At least two leparate studies report Iramatic success with LSD herapy; an :equal number eport no special benefits to ustify use of LSD over conventional treatment for tlcoholism. Both claims may be true. ★ * * Contrasting reports turned up his week at a meeting of American psychiatrists where Jr. Arnold M. Ludwig of the dendota State Hospital in Madison, Wis., stated he is ‘forced to conclude from study )f 176 alcoholics that LSD is-no nore effective in rehabilitating ilcoholics1 than traditional ethods.” Dr. Ludwig admits to disap wintment., It would have been {ratifying to report significant gains, he says, but “unfortunately, our conscious vishes must yield to the iverwhelming evidence that lone of the LSD treatments’ work better than a hospital’s lormal methods of handling alcoholics. OFF THE WAGON One year after treatment, 80 to 90 her,cent of the patients had fallen off* the wagon,-says Dr. Ludwig. Arizona, Oklahoma and New Mexico contain nearly half the entire Indian population of the country. Everything's coming up posies when she's wearing this minifloral coat. A spirited companion come fair or foul weather. Water-repellent cotton sailcloth lined in silky acetate. Misses' sizes. "Charge It CLEARANCE WOMEN'S BETTER DRESSES *3 TO *10 •• VALUES TO 24.95 An . exciting selection of styles at real come-run-ning prices! One- and two-piecers in a variety of fabrics from miracle blends to travel-wise knits. Pastels to popular basics. Assortment of Juniors', Misses' and Half-Sizes. HANDSOME 8-PIECE ALUMINUM SET lets you entertain or relax in comfort. Inneripring chaise lounge has a five-position adjustable back for maximum comfort.... and a strong I - inch aluminum frame. Both chaise ana matching chairs are cushioned with 100% shredded Ward foam* covered in floral-splashed vinyl. Steel umbrella table with baked-on anamefrfinish . .. Sun-shading 7-ft. umbrella with strong 8-rib construction and aluminum base. L0<*a£d~ {9 Reg. 139.99 Redwood Furniture THRIVES ON SUN OR SHOWERS A. ADJUSTABLE CHAISE duigiwd for luxurious outdoor comfort with a back that adjusts 3 ways . . . and a vinyl-covered foam* cushion nearly 5 inches thick! Built of knot-free redwood that-s bean air-dried to prevent warping. Large wheels for easy moving. Rag. 49.99. ........................... now 44.99 B. 6-FT. TETE-A-TlETE handy table separates two foam*-cu*hioned seats. Convenient aasy-roll wheels. Reg. 69.99........now 59.99 C. 5-PC. BARBECUE. 54-in. round parquet-top table and 4 benches. Reg. 99.99... .89.99 D. PATIO UMBRELLA 7-ft. in. diameter, with an aluminum frame and triple-laminated plastic fabric. Rag. 34.99 ...Now 29.99 E. ADJUSTABLE ARM CHAIR plattib covered cushion is foam*-filled for comfort. 3-way adjustable back. Reg. 39.99. .Now 34.99 F MATCHING OTTOMAN has a thick vinyl-covered foam* cushion. Rag. 13.99. _____ ........... ...v.™. Now 11.99 G. COFFEE TABLE is convenient for snacks and cool summer drinks/Reg. l6,99, now 12.99 *Shrtdded urethane foam NO MONEY DOWN OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10:00 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M. SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 5 P.M. * 682-19 to .yfflsss •.. yjonQis JkJkju LO&uli- \$* OPm MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10:00 A M. TO 9:00 P.M. . SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 5 P.M. • 682-1940 C—*8 CHANT REEDS - Ten-year-old Bobby Ehlers finds him-self enveloped in tall reedis j during a preseason visit to (he beach on Fire Island, N.Y. 1 Pop Artist Hit With Tourist in Uganda ENTEBBE, Uganda (AP) -When sunlight strikes Augustine Kalyamagwe’s {collection of dolls and unclassifiable creations, it looks, like an explosion in a Christmas ornament factory. Nestled among the banana plants 4nd * trees along the Entebbe Road, the semicircular display of African pop art includes foil-wrapped figures, a gaudy carved turtle biting a gaudy carved man and an airplane fashioned from plastic rtrips. ★ ★ ■* Noise of greetings brings Augustine shuffling from his bricabrac-trimmed mud hut, set! back along a path in the flowers | and bush. With a few shillings’ encouragement, he’ll invite travelers inside to see oddly colored carvings, in g e n i o u s designs of plastic strips and magazine cuttings and scores of other such works. NOTES OF APPROVAL On rare occasion, he’ss ac-j company himself on a small stringed instrument and chant a Luganda tune on the marvels of gold. Then he’ll produce a tattered folder of even more tattered botes of approval left by * previous visitors. ★ ★ it There’s a letter from a French diplomat which reads: “Mr. Kalyamagwe is an artist: and what is marvelous is that he doed not know it. The silence which surrounds him is without any doubt the fruit of his inspiration ... it is our duty, visitor, to encourage this man in buying (items) he will one day offer for sale.” . Augustine has overcome the shyness indicated in the Frenchman’s letter. If a prospective buyer cannot speak Swahili or Luganda, Augustine indicates his prices by pointing to numbers on a curling calendar. If he considers the sale a good one, he’ll wrinkle his 60-year-old face to a whiskery «mily and recite his entire English vocabulary: “Thank you." ★ * * In top form, Augustine will lead visitors around back and a show them the sharpened chunk of metal wedged into a stick which is his carving tool. He also uses a rusted machete. He’ll sit, in bis long whitish robe and shower shoes, and with heavy chops demonstrate his-craft w unfinished pieces of work. STARTED IN 19644 He says he took up his art forms in 1954. The collection out front went up in October 1962 to celebrate Uganda’s independence. He left it there since and It has proven a breadwinner. Unmistakably, he enjoys the . attention it has brought him. though it is stilly slight. Old Uganda hands consider him tourists’ property. And tourists, who won’t find him in a guidebook, generally are in too much of a hurry to notice his strange roadside gallery. If visitors have been attentive, and generous, Augustine will walk them to the road and stand waving until their car is out of sight. After that to him they are not only patrons of the arts but friends as well. 9x9-in. pure vinyl tile *8* Reg. 14.40 Better quality — tougher, clearer, locks out dirt, stain. , Clear smooth or textured surface patterns. CARTON TILE SALE PER CARTON 9x9-in. solid vinyl tile *8 -Reg. llio Marbleized pattern with textured surface. Long lasting beauty that needs less care, is scuff-resistant. STYLE HOUSE 9x9-INCH VINYL ASBESTOS TILE REGULARLY 6.40 Vinyl atbettoi tils ii designed for good looks, longer wear and easier care. R#-sists fire, greats and moisture. In pat-ferns and colors for every room in your rhouse^ ond it can be used on every grade floor. Each carton will cover 45-*'sq. ft.' Save *61! Deluxe Walnut solid state AM/FM stereo 1 *258 Regular 319.95 O Genuine hand-rubbed veneers * Full-circle sound system Here's a stereo that'sengineered tb iound as beautiful as it looks! Two big ten-inch bass speakers and two treble horns provide thrilling, true tones. Deluxe changer and light-tracking arm pamper your records. Radio receives FM stereo with exciting realism. Rich walnut veneer cabinet. NO MONEY DOWN 3 for 34” * Rayon and nylon over sturdy core * In five rich color blends Yes, ell three . . . 103x139-in. oval rug (fits a 9x12-ft* area), 22x34-in. scatter and 24x ■* 72-in runner... to add Colonial charm to your homa. Long-wearing rayon and nylon Fibers over sturdy core tn 5 colors. Alt reverse for double wear. THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 80, 1968 Deluxe COLOR TV ' with 171-sq. in." screen 9x9-111. vinyl asbestos tile Reg. $S Embossed pattern has the rich appearance of handset mosiac. Hides dents, scuffs. Four subtle colors. s 297 Regular 359.95 • Brilliant pictures with Color Magic • Set *n forgot VHF fino tuning • Walnut-grained cabinet cabinet Move up to COLOR television the portable way . . . with this compact sat that's ideal for table or cert! Enjoy all of Wards fina quality COLOR features including: Color Magic that keeps colors sharp and vivid. Color Trac for 50% easier tuning. One-setting VHF tuning. Razor-sharp recaption with 2 built-in antennas. Keyed AGC gives rock-steady picture, no fade or flutter. Static-free FM sound. Modern case of walnut grained metal. +18-in. diagonal view TV STAND with easy-rolling casters ................... 19.88 Save 7.82! 3 reversible rugs for less than the room-size rug alone! TIIE PONTIAC PRESS, IHlHSDAY, MAY ;io, 19CR C—9 Sherlock Holds Tima Fails to Dim Interest in betectiye LONDON I'UPI) - The redoubtable Dr. Watson would have had just one word for it — “extraordinary." Few would disagree. Least of all Sherlock Holmes, the illustrious fictional detective whose exploits in the London of half £ century ago were immortalized in short stories by the late Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.1 ★ * * In the 37 years since Conan Doyle’s death, interest in his most celebrated creation has shown few signs of slackening. If anything, the contrary is true. . On both sides of the Atlantic, Hoipesiana has grown and flourished. In some instances it has become almost a cult. MATCHED IN FERVOR Organizations dedicated solely to the study and perpetuation of Holmes vary in technique and activities but match one another in fervor. ■ * ★ ★ Members of the Baker Street Irregulars, largest aggregation of Holmes followers in the United States, are often seen sporting the traditional deerstalker cap and smoking the Meerschaum pipes favored by the master sleuth. ★ ★ * ★ “We take our Sh e r 1 o c k Holmes straight,’’ says Julian Wollf, the society’s New York-based head. The organization’s London equivalent is slightly less flamboyant but none the less dedicated. About 600 strong, it meets four or five times a year for dinner and discussion. ALIVE TO MANY W. R. Mitchell is the businessman-head of the society, which has been active since 1951. It was instrumental in reconstructing the Holmes lodgins at number 221-B Baker Street as part of the Festival of Britain held the following year. To many around the world, Holmes is a real person and lives. Mail comes to London addressed to Sherlock Holmes at a steady clip»of four or five letters a week. ★ ★ ★ Some seek his advice oh personal problems. Some offer him jobs. Others offer him advice such as “you smoke too much” or warn htnr against- the evils of cocaine of which Doyle made him an occasional user. STOREHOUSE Just off Trafalgar Square, hard by the Strand, is the Sherlock Holmes pub, a storehouse of Holmesiana that attracts thousands of tourists annually and is a particular favorite with Americans. ★ ★ ★ Were Sherlock Holmes to return for a visit to the old haunts he almost surely would agree with his good friend Dr. Watson that the way the legend lives is, indeed, extraordinary. New Western Blazes Trail —in Bedroom By DICK KLEINER HOLLYWOOD (NEA) - “A Man Called Gannon" is, on the surface, another Western. But in its way it’s blazing a trail. What it has that no other Western has had is a couple of nude love scenes. It was inevitable, I-suppose, that the current trend toward nudity would mosey over into the Western field. it it it The only thing left is cartoons; maybe somebody will remake “Snow White” with sweet little Miss White cavorting naked with Dopey. But back to “Gannon." Judi West, the cookie of “The Fortune Cookie,” drew the assignment of making wild, passionate, unclothed love in this one. TWO SCENES There are two such scenes — one with Tony Franciosa, one] with Michael Sarrazin. They were shot in one day,] one following the other. Tony and Mike were full of praise for Judi. ★ ★ It is embarrassing, to say the least, for a girl to go through a day Uke that. Bui she managed, i they said, with good spirits. And •he didn’t even catch cold. ( SPECTACULAR LOW PRICE ROOMY 2-DOOR COMBINATION Save 42.95! Pontiac M OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10:00 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M. . SATURDAY 9:30 A.M, TO 9 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 5 P.M. • 682-4940 Montgomery WARD OPEN’ MONDAY THRU FRIDAY [0:00 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M. SATURDAY 9:»0 A M. TO 9 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 5 P.M. * 082-1910 ---~f----------------------------------------------; _* / a - I q_10 ______________________________________THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MA\r 80, I96B__________- ^ HONORARY DEGREE -Henry Whiting, a leader in the automotive industry and former executive of the Packard Motor Car Co., was awarded an honorary Doctor of Laws degree by North-wood Institute at its recent commencement in Midland. Whiting of 715 Lake Park, Birmingham, was recognized for his interest in the establishment at Northwood of the first certified automotive merchandiser program in the history of the industry. He was instrumental irt .bringing Northwood to the attention of the National Dealers Association. 120-Sq. Ft. Cottage Tent *119 Formerly $159 •.. y^HkOSb Skkju OJ&iA*- ; C8 : Many Agree: It's the Berries First Fruit of Spring Commands Esteem * 3 nylon-screened windows • Plenty of sleeping room for 8 A BIG tent that folds small enough to fit in car trunk. Aluminum exterior frame, zippered Dutch door, snug storm flaps and a bug-proof sewn-in floor. 8-ft. canter, 6-ft. high walls. FOOT-DEEP STEEL ICE CHEST Helds 40. 12-ox. bottles. Liner locks in cold to insure crisp fresh- m g am ness. Rag. M.W I I.TT SPACIOUS THESE* TEAT TACKLE BOX High-impact 2-tone plastic box. Removable top tray for extra con- ■ ■ veniance. I I.TT WASHINGTON,,— An Elizabethan physician’s opinion) of strawberries stands the test pf time: ‘‘Doubtless God could have made a better berry, but doubtless God never did " As the first fruit of spring in most temperate lands, strawberries still command esteem and mouth-watering affection, the National Geographic Society says. * * * In the United States the hardy plant remains the undisputed champion of cultivated berries. Americans consumed 275.000 tons of strawberries in 1967. The crimson fruit falvors ice cream, tops sundaes, fills pies, garnishes salads, swims in cream, floats in champagne, and dominates the king of summer desserts — strawberry shortcake. SAVE 231 6-HP SKA KINO* OUTBOARD MOTOR *266 8» ■Twin cylinders. Twist grip throttle, automatic rowind starter. NEW TUBE-TYPE AIR MATTRESS Rubberised cotton mattress is air tight.. I-beam inner reinforcement. ^ gg N- m» inflates easily. SAVE FLANNEL-LINED SLEEPING BAG 3-lb. "Dacron 88" polyester fiberfill. Water-repellent outer shell, jg gg to* ai.ee SAVE 2.61! TWO bUbneb CAMPING STOVE I-piece slotted burners supply direct flame. Burns only gas.' Easy operet- 1A QQ ing. Reg. 17.49. AMERICAN VISION Shortcake is more American than apple pie. The vision of a rosy tower of berries resting on a buttery biscuit foundation and topped by billows of whipped cream has been fatal t o generations of calorie watchers. Shortcake even tempted the Indians. They concocted an early version from wild berries and commeal. * * * The native North American strawberry, F r a g a r i a Virgi niana, was small, like its European counterpart, but more productive. Early settlers on the eastern seaboard marveled at the abundance and vigor of the plants. “We cannot set down a foot but tred on strawberries,” wrote a Maryland colonist. IMPORT HELPS A South American plant, however, helped to develop the larger varieties of strawberries cultivated commercially today. _ in 1714 a French engineer, Amedee Francois Frezier — whose name coincindentally was derived from the French word for strawberry, Fraise — delighted his countrymen by returning from a trip to Chile with plants that eventually bore fruit "as large as small apples.” European gardeners planted the Chilean and North American species in the same plots, and large, productive plants evolved. American nurserymen did not list the improved varieties until almost 1800. But Charles M. Hovey, a Cambridge, Mass, horticulturist, made up for lost time by developing a new species of strawberry from seed produced by cross-pollination. THE BEGINNING Hovey’s creation, introduced In 1838, marked the beginning of large-scale strawberry breeding in the United States. —American- growers have-kepL pace with new developments ever since. For instance, most of the bumper strawberry crop in 1968 will travel to market in sleeping bags. Growers place boxes of fresh strawberries i n polyethlene bags pumped full of a special gas low in oxygen and high in carbon dioxide. The gas mixture puts the fragile berrie|5 to sleep by virtually stopping decay and mold. Blur sqai Camp in off-the-ground vnVE Oil! comfort! 77-sq. ft.! • Fabric is treated with Vivatex* to resist dampness, retard fire • Three screened fiber glass windows allow fresh air circulation • Big 32-cubic foot storage bin stows gear out of the way Camping's great with this compact unit. Only , 525-lbs. (45 lbs. bumper weight) yet it opens to a spacious 77-sq. ft. tent that will sleep 4. Two roomy bed panels, large center well . . . vinyl covered floor keeps you dry ... up off the ground. Zip storm curtains. Metallic finish, completely wired 12-V system, 2 stop tail and directional lights. Save $100! 80-sq. ft. camper sleeps 6 Opens to 6 ft. 6 in. interior height, folds to 36 in. for easy . * * trailing. rio. $399 Sleep warm and dry in hardtop camper Aluminum hardtop in-sulates. Room for 6. Folds to 37(/2 in. for easy trailing. 442 REG. 522.98 ALUMINUM CAMP COT- IVa-in. thick foam mat-. tress. 1 -in. tubular alumi-, num frame. Easy to fold, carry. ROD AND REEL SPIN-CAST SET 17 99 SAVE $4! Reg. 21.99 6-lb. prespooled reel, 2-pc. tubular glass rod. Full race bearings. DOUBLE MANTLE ^GAS LANTERN Throws brilliant white light. Burns |2 pints of white or leaded gas up to oh 10 hrs. Reg. 14.94. 14.00 C—11 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MAY 80, 1908 AA ONTGOMERY WARD YOUNG LOOK—Ethel Kennedy wears a short skirt and patterned hose while attending a university speech given by her husband, Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, . . . THAT MONTGOMERY WARD IS PONTIAC’S LAWN AND GARDEN HEADQUARTERS! SHOP WARDS FOR COMPLETE LINE OP LAWN AND GARDEN PRODUCTS VSale! MIX OR MATCH ORTHO-GRO LIQUID PLANT POOD OR IVERGRIEN A AZALEA FOOD Capitol Story Is Published' for Foreigners WASHINGTON - Foreign vlsftors who “parlez francais” now can read the official story of the United States Capitol in “Nous, Le Peuple." “We, the People” the popular guidebook published by the United States Capitol Historical Society, has been translated into five major world languages. ★ ★ ★ Besides French, the profusely Illustrated book is available in German (Wir Das Volk”), Italian (“Noi, Popolo”), Portuguese (“Nos o Povo”),l and Spanish (“Nosotros, El Pueblo”). In preparation for two years, the foreign - language editions were published because of the phenomenal success of the English version and to answer the reqeusts of many foreign visitors to the Capitol for literature In their own language. 1.6 MILLION COPIES “We, the People,” produced as a public service by the nonprofit National Geographic Society, has sold more than 1.6 million copies since it was issued in December 1963. Foreign governments and embassies in Washington, D. C., have ordered the historical guide in large quantities. The United States Information Agency and the Peace Corps plan to distribute the translations abroad. “This undertaking is further recognition of the great need in this country for a combined effort to improve America’s image abroad and to send world,” said Congressman Fred Schwengel of Ipwa, president of the United States Capitol Historical Society. “As America’s best-known symbol of democracy, the Capitol is the vehicle through which the story has been told.” A new foreword by Representative Stehwengel and a special introduction by historian Allan Nevins emphasize - the contributions made by tike people of other nations to the development of the United States — contributions inscribed on the walls and built into the Capitol itself by architects, artists, and artisans from distant lands. GAMUT OF EMOTION Written by Lonnelle Aikman of the National Georgraphic Senior Editorial Staff, “We, the People, The Story of the United States Capitol,” evokes the sweep of the Capitol s history from the jubilation of the cornerstone laying in 1793 to the mourning at President Kennedy’s bier. The book’s 144 pages contain 175 photographs, historical paintings, and other illustrations, nearly all in color. One picture itself made history. The United States Senate shattered a long tradition by permitting National Geographic photographers to make its first official portrait while in session. .Copies of “We, the Peole” in any of six language editions may be obtained from the U.S. Capitol Historical Society, 200 Marvland Avenue, N. E., Washington, D. C. 20515; paper. |1.25, cloth, $2 75, leather, $8.50, postage included. The books also may be purchased at the Capitol, National Geographic’s headquarters., and the Smithsonian Institution. Spreading yews are ideal for new hedges! 44 Deep green yews grow tall for foundation planting. Thrive in almost any soil. Upright Pyramidal yews. 3.44, corners 3.44. 3 *4n off! Contractor’s husky wheelbarrow Heavy - duty, 5 - cu. foot barrow features a heavy, enameled steel tray that's welded to steel risers! Boltless tray resists rust better. 28 88 REQ. 32.99 Buy electric tools for Dad! YOUR CHOICE - HEDGE SHEAR OR EDGE TRIMMER 26 9 A. 12-inch shear. The easy way to cut hedges! Blade cuts on both edges at the same time, Vi-hp motor provides up to 52,000 cuts per minute. UL listed. Reg. 31.99. B. 6-inch edga trimmer. Lets Dad trim a full 6" wide path! 1 to 2" adjustable cutting height. Rubber wheels and roller protect lawn. %-hp motor; UL a^roved. Reg. 33.99 4.98 GAL. BUY 2N( GALLON FOR ONLY 1c Specialized formulas feed plants thru both roots, foliage. Save $1! ORTHO 15-gaflen lawn sprayer 298 Rcq. 3.98 Syphons, mixes, sprays at proper mJ proportions. ORTHO Systematic Rose & Flower Core 298 Six - week protec-t i o n. Fertilizes. 10-lbs...4.98 5-lbs. 20" self-propelled mower VACUUMS LAWN... YOU DON’T HAVE TO PUSH! Handy Garden Helpers WHEELBARROW : . . Easy to handle, widespread legs prevent tipping. 3-cu. ft. capacity. GARDEN CART . . . Reinforced steel sides, won't leak. Recessed wheels. 4-cu. ft. capacity. YOUR CHOICE! • Fast, easy-spin impulse starter • 2 instant height adjusters Lift- handle to go forward, lower to stop ... it’s that easy! Vacuum lawn clean as you mow. Whirling blade and deck create a tornado-like Suction that straightens grass for a smooth cut... even swoops up dippings. Handle swings up for storage. $20 off! 4-hp, 25" rider Save *1 each Weed & Feed or. all-new Turf Food 199 YOUR mu CHOICE! QfffM 20 lbs. Weld and Feed livens dull lawns, kills broad-leaf w#edjL_.._2?-Jb6. Turf Food adds nutrients, *sl«w-w releasing nitiogen for groon- Attractive new patio blocks—4 tor Red, green gray;-.ft A < 8x 16x2-in, size. w w off! 5-hp, 25" rider GET MOWING EASE AND A PICTURE PERFECT LAWN! *199” REQ. 219.99 o Rugged Powr-Kraft’ engine O Fast, easy-spin necoil starter • Automotive-type transmission Floating rotary blade takes tall grass in stride... while you relax In the comfortable cushion seat. Rear-wheel differential makes It as easy to handle as the family car. Positive dutch and brake - just step down to go, release to stop. PLENTY OF POWER FOR CLIMBING STEEP GRADES *239” REQ. 259.99 o Automotive-type transmission O Fast, easy-spin recoil starter o Rugged P&wr-Kraft" engine Floating rotary takes tall grass In stride . . . while you relax In the cushion seat. Rear-wheel differential and 2-speed stick shift give you that “sports car feel"! Positive clutch and brake -just step down to go, release to stop. m / C—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 80, 196.8 New*Limbs From U. S. Woman Legless Viet Boy Gets Help SAIGON (AP) — With tearslbleak for little Cao in the big, streaming down her face, the|strange city of Saigon, His Vietnamese widow expressed ichildhood home had been in the thanks for the $100 gift sent to her son, a 12-year-old buffalo boy who lost both legs after being hit by a mortar shell countryside in Hau Nghia, west of Saigon, where he rode the backs of the water buffalo as they grazed, or chased after the “I am grateful to you and huge beasts through the rice your help,” said Huynh Thi Gai.j paddies. 51. “My -home has been de-j But since the Tet offensive stroyed and I am very poor. It life for Cao had been one Chao-is very difficult for me to care I tier move after another. From for my'children. I thank you the rice field, where he was ★ ★ The gift came from a woman some 10,000 miles away in Missouri, who had seen a newspaper picture of young Truong cuperating in Saigon’s Cho Ray Hdspital shortly, after the lunar new year offensive last February. tending the buffalo when mortar fragments tore into his legs, he was taken to a U S. Army hospital at Cu Chi. In the hospital doctors found it necessary to amputad both legs to save the bov’s life. Then he was moved to Saigon’s Cho Ray Hospital. He was there in a crowded ward when AP WlrtplMlo WAR VICTIM GETS HELP — Truong Van Cao (left) recuperates in Saigon, after he lost both legs when hit by a mortar shell, and shows his mother (right) how he is learning to use artificial legs provided with the help of a $100 gift from Nancy Ashley Smith of St. Louis, Mo. The donor, Miss Nancy Ashley Smith of St. Louis, sent a check for the boy to President Johnson. The President in turn had it forwarded to Saigon, where the chief of the Refugee Division of the U.S. Agency for International Development, Johivf. Thomas of Minneapolis, Minn., made the presentation some of the heaviest fighting of th$ Tet offensive took place around it. After the fighting died down, room was found for Cao at the National Rehabilitation Center, a Vietnamese government institute where 90 per cent of the patients are civilians. The center has highly trained personnel Now Cao must learn to use his new legs, and like many of the other patients at the institute, it means a new start in life for him. ' . \ For the past month he has been doing his first walking, but must depend heavily on crutches. A strong sense of self-reli Mice keeps him going, and he tries especially hard to show improvement for his mother's visits to the center. She tries to see him for a' few days every month, when she can leave his five brothers and sisters. ★ * * Present plans Gall for Cao to go to schoql for two or three years and then to a trade School. Until now, he has never spent a day of his life in school. He will receive his education on a scholarship provided by voluntary relief agencies. Cao is more fortunate than many in Vietnam in the care that he has received, but many problems still are ahead for him. Doctors say he probably always will need crutches. Dr. Slguyen Huu Vi, director of the rehabilitation institute, n DRUG STORES LOOKED BLEAK land capabilities for making andjnotes sadly: “He will never be a Three months ago life looked^fitting new limbs. |buffalo boy again.” Never need ironing... you save $I0... hurry! WARD Imagine, This Low Price on a Summer Suit That Looks Freshly Pressed All Day! You get a breeze-weight blend of 50% polyester, 50% combed cotton that feels light in summer heat, yet wears and wears. You get the popular natural shoulder, 3-button model with trim-cut trousers for today's lean look. This low price for one week only. Regulars, Shorts, Longs. LIGHTWEIGHT COMFORT IN COOL SPORTCOATS SAVE $7 Reg. $25 NOW *18 You'll fool as great as you look in those colorful plaids 'n solids^ Dacrop or FortrelH) polyester with cotton. 12.50 permanent p/ess Dacron" polyester-wool slacks. Top shades. $9 IVY HOPSACK SLACKS... PERMANENTLY PRESSED Save 1.99 Reg. 6.99 You get the Casual good looks of fine-weave hopsack plus the lasting neatness of a wrinkle-shy, no fuss fabric: Fortrel® polyester andcombed cotton. Trim Ivy belt-loop model in this season’s fdvorite colors. 29-40. OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10:00 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M. SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 5 P.M. • 682-1910 ftie4cfUptuyyL, Speaui^cAt^ «» Anniversary Sale Valuable COUPON Valuable COUPON 29s - REQ. 55c ALKA SELTZER TABLETS „ LIMIT 1 WITH COUPON 39 COUPON 0000 THRU SUN., JUNE 2, AT CUNNINGHAM’S PONTIAC MALL STONE ONLY 1000’s -% GRAIN SACCHARIN TABLETS LIMIT 1 WITH COUPON 26 COUPON 0000*THRU SUN., JUNE 2, AT CUNNINGHAM’S PONTIAC MALL STONE ONLY Valuable COUPON Valuable COUPON 24’s - REG. 1.09 DRISTAN TABLETS IT LIMIT 1 WITH COUPON COUPON 0000 THRU SUN., JUNE 2, AT CUNNINGHAM'S PONTIAC MALL STORE ONLY I I I I I I J. 32-Ox. - REG. 99e VISTA FLOOR WAX 7T LIMIT 1 WITH COUPON COUPON 0000 THRU SUN., JUNE 2, AT CUNNINOHAM’S PONTIAC MALL STORE ONLY Valuable COUPON Valuable COUPON PERSONAL SIZE IVORY SOAP i BARS LIMIT 4 WITH COUPON 21 COUPON 0000 THRU SUN., JUNE 2, AT CUNNINGHAM’S PONTIAC MALL STORE ONLY I I I I JL 3-0Z. - REG. 79c BRYLCREEM HAIR DRESS 49* LIMIT 1 WITH COUPON COUPON 0000 THRU SUN., JUNE 2, AT OUNNINOHAM’S PONTIAC MALL STORE ONLY Valuable COUPON Valuable COUPON 63/4-OZ. FAMILY SIZE GLEEM TOOTHPASTE LIMIT 1 WITH COUPON 49 LIMIT1 WITH COUPON 5-0Z.-REG. 1.27 PRELL SHAMPOO 88c COUPON 0000 THRU SUN., JUNE 2, AT GUNNINOHAM’S PONTIAC MALL STORE ONLY . COUPON 0000 THRU SUN., JUNE 2, AT CUNNlNQHAM’S PONTIAC MALL STORE ONLY Valuable COUPON Valuable COUPON REGULAR 88c TOILET TISSUE LIMIT ONE 10 ROLL PACK WITH COUPON 10 ROLLS 63 250 JUMBO SIZE PAPER NAPKINS BUY NOW AND SAVE LIMIT 1 WITH COUPON 29 COUPON GOOD THRU SUN., JUNES, AT I . COUPON 0000 THRU SUN., JUNE 2, AT CUNNINGHAM’S PONTIAC MALL STOIti ONLY ^ CUNNINGHAM’S PONTIAC MALL STORE ONLY THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1968 V C—18 S. Africa's Unusual Plight: Too Much Money JOHANNESBURG* South|output each year can be ex-i This policy*4o unlikely to be Africa W> - With goW\p|llng up.pected for several years. Changed soon despite t h e and money pouring in pros-l Por years the u ha| ^ in galea. Some perous South Africa may. have to add gold to South Africa’s reserve bank when a surplus in external payments developed, otherwise sell moat of it for $36 to make some basic changes in economic policy. South Africa’s financial problems result from too much money. Foreign capital floods in. * * ★ At th^same time South Africa continues to stockpile its newly mined gold. The resulting buildup of internal liquidity is likened by economists to a massive head of steam. They say runaway inflation threatens unless the pressure Is eased. RESERVES AT RECORD South Africa’s official gold and foreign exchange reserves have reachea a record 674.4 million rands, or $944.1 ffiiTUon. They have grown almost 50 per cent in seven months. An immediate relaxation of controls on the exchange‘ of money is advocated by some experts as the only way to prevent the economy from being swamped by an oversupply of money. * A ★ These economists say South Africa is caught between the domestic need to reduce reserves and a desire to maintain the external strength of the rand, now traded at $1.40, during a period of international financial uncertainty. ★ ★ ★ F.L.J. Smith, president of the Federated Chamber, of Industries, has called for Increased investment abroad as well as an easing of exchange control. POTENT MEANS “The chamber urges the government to implement without delay a selective but meaningful relaxation of exchange control as a potent means of draining away excess liquidity,” he said. “At the present juncture it is essential that the investment of funds abroad should be strongly encouraged.” ★ ★ ★ Concern about excess liquidity was reflected in a recent order by the reserve bank which instructed other banks to hand over 40 per cent of their extra deposits. Ibis was a technical device designed to prevent short-term interest rates from falling in the money market. ★ ★ ★ Exchange control was introduced after faith in South Africa was badly shaken by the Sharpeville mass shootings of Negroes in 1960. Money poured out of the country until restrictions were slapped on. The controls worked well and money was kept in the country to help finance an industrial boom. Now some experts believe the measures have outlived their usefulness. MORE COMPLICATED Gold poses a more complicated problem. South Africa was notably chilly toward the two-tier system of pricing gold, believing instead that an increase in the pegged price of $35 an ounce was long overdue. Prime Minister Balthazar J. Vorster says gold should be “revalued at a realistic price and maintained as the true anchor of the international financial system.” ★ * ★ Finance Minister Nicolaas Diederichs announced in March that South Africa would not seH gold on the official or free markets “in the immediate future.” Actually, South Africa appears to have little room to maneuver. It produces about 75 per cent of the West’s gold. Last year gold was worth $1.05 billion represented 35 per cent of all South African exports. EXPORTS COULD DROP In other words, if gold were demonetized, this country’s exports could drop by more than a third. Another source of concern is declining production. Mines say the peak years, are past and that a 2 per cent decline in gold England. present hall economists think South Africa should resume selling some gold through thS Bank of Erigland and sacrifice the extra profit an ounce through the Bank of that might be gained in the still glutted free market. South Africa needs an assured and stable market for its gold ahd, would be distressed, if the Special Drawing Rights ‘ o f “paper gold” now being set'up forced it to rely permanently on the vagaries of the free market. Gold experts in Johannesburg say the free market is burdened with soriw 2,500 tons of gold bought since. November by speculators and hoarders. South Africa would depress the price if it tfied to unload much gold on the free market now. However, this country cannot hold its growing stock of gold indefinitely and no foreseeable surplus in external payments is likely to be big enough to absorb all the newly mined gold poured Into the National Reserve Bank. May We Express Our Appreciation to you as we celebrate our 6th Anniversary the Book Nook A 682t5920 Flexible Cable for Hand-ShoWer A hand shower unit on a flexible cable can be a great aid to families with small children invalids or elderly members The unit can be affixed to a wall faucet and mounted in a holder Jor regular use, or used on a showerless tub. Full use'‘Of *2feramic tile In shower enclosures and about the tub will., prevent any splashing problems. NATIONALLY SOLD AIR C0ND. $19 Inste-mount aid* panels. IIS volt. Prev. yrs. fl. models. WESTINQHOUSE AIR COND. $99 Zip-kit installa- HOTPOINT AIR COND.$99 EMERSON AIR CONDITIONER $99 WELBILT AIR COND. $100 6,000 BTU. Automatic thermo* •tot. Expond-o-mount. . WELBILT CASEMENT AIR COND. $149 EMERSON AIR COND. $199 WESTINQHOUSE AIR COND. $199 15,000 ITU. AdjuttabU thw matter. 'Intto-mount kit. PHILCO AIR COND, $229 16,000 BTU cool whole homo.. Inst a-mount lilt. Deluxe. PORTABLE TV TOP BRAND $69 42 sq. in. picturo. Handle, antenna. UHF/VHF. RCA VICTOR PORTABLE $93 ZENITH 12" DIA. Portable TV $99.19 Full 74 >q. In. 21 lb,. Hondlu and antanna. UHF/VHF. SYLVANIA 12" DIA. PORT. $00.95 74 sq. in. Handle and antenna. UHF/VHF. Deluxe. , «, > » RCA VICTOR 15" PORT. $93 125 sq. in. Front controls and sound. Antenna and handle. UHF/VHF. MOTOROLA 19" PORTABLE TV $95 Giant 172 sq. in. pix. UHF/ VHF. Handle, antpnna. Deluxe. ADMIRAL 16" WITH CART $119,99 172 sq. In. Instant play. Handle, antenna. Free cart. RCA VICTOR 20" TV LOWBOY $141 Giont 265 sq. in. wood lowboy. , UHF/VHF. Deluxe feo- ZENITH 22” DIA. TV Lowboy S1SS.S8 2S2 sq. Tn. pix. Handcrafted . chassis. UHF/VHF. Deluxe. RCA VICTOR 14" COLOR $24$ Portable 102 sq. in. rectangular. Hondlo. UHF/VHF. 90-doy service. ADMIRAL COLOR LOWBOY $211 265 >q. in. UHF/VHF 3 yr. color tube warranty. 90-day terivee GENERAL ELECTRIC COLOR TV $199 UHF/VHF. M.w “Hor.-f.rth' ph.tphori. 60 q. in. UHF/VHF ZENITH 18” DIA. COLOR $349 Portable TV. 180 sq. In. rectangular. UHF/VHF. 90-day RCA VICTOR 23” COLOR $411 Wood console. 295 so rectangular. UHF/VHF. doy service. COMBINATION COLOR TV $391 ADMIRAL COLOR COMB. $569 227 ,q. in. St.r.o hl-fl, AM-FM. 3 year color tube warranty. RCA 2S" COLOR COMB. $891 295 iq. In. Stoma, AM-FM, FM-stereo radio. 6 speakers. OE CONSOLE STEREO $99 Solid state. Instant sound. Walnut woods. 90-qley service. AUDIO STEREO COMB. $100 Stereo hi-fi, AM-FM, FM-steree. larly American. Ma-ple. GE STEREO COMB. $188 Stereo hi-fi with AM-FM radio. Solid state. Walnut. ADMIRAL STEREO COMB. $119 Stereo hi»fi, AM-FM, radio Walnut contemporary. Doluxo ZENITH STEREO CONSOLE $199.88 Solid itote. Contemporary in walnut. Free delivery, service. QE STEREO COMBINATION $191 Stereo, with AM-FM, FM-steree radio. Spanish. Pecan woods. ZENIGH "CIRCLE OF SOUND” $449 Comb', stereo hi-fi, AM-FM, FM-stereo. Reg. $595. Save, $146. \ OE 4-SPEED Record Player $19.8$ Solid stole—no tubes to burn ARVIN BATTERY PHONO $21.81 4 speed automatic. Play < batteries or A.C. REFRIGERATOR 2 CU. FT. $11 Ideal for offices, dentists, doctors, bars. Roomy. TOP BRAND REFRIGERATOR $100 Family site storage. Large top freexer chest. Storage doer. TOP BRAND 10 CU. FT. FREEZER $123 Stores 352 Upe. .Circulating cold feature. Free delivery. 13 CU. FT. CME3T FREEZER $133 Stem, 437 lb.. ■uiH-ln lock. Free delivery. 12 CU. FT. 2-DR. REFRIOERATOR $149 Freexer holds 86 lbs. Deluxe featutes. Free delivery. HOTPOINT 14’ All Frost prss $218.88 No frost top or bottom. 2 doer refrigerator. CTF-114. WHIRLPOOL WITH lee-Maksr $299.90 15 cu. ft. Completely frost-free. Automatic •tolled. TOP BRAND 20’ SIDE-BY-SIDE $298 33“ wide. 2 appliances in on Deluxe. Free delivery, WHIRLPOOL 21’ FROST-FREE $399 Giont 21* side-by-side c< bination. All frost free. Frost-Queen 5 Cu. Ft. Rsfrigsrator $94.88 Mice work top. Large freexer chest. Ice troys. Ideal for cot- HOTPOINT FULLY Auto. WA8HER $101 Prev. yrs. modeli. Free do livery, Installation end serv WHIRLPOOL AUTO. WA3HER $149 HOTPOINT AUTO. DRYER $11 Fully automatic. Prev. yrs. Free installation per Idison Co. HOTPOINT AUTO. WASHER $151 2 speed, 15 lb. capacity. Deluxe. Free del., installation, service. WHIRLPOOL AUTO. DRYER $99 2 cycle electric. Free Installation per idison Co.' WHIRLPOOL Wringer WASHER $18 6 vane agitator. Wringer rolls reverse. Free delivery, service. HOTPOINT AUTO. DISHWASHER $99 Automatic cycles for w rinse end dry. Portable. MAQNUS ORGAN ELECTRONIC $281 professional features. Solid state. Wood console. Reg. $450. w a l ■■ u.. » i « DETROIT JEWEL 16" 0AS RANGE $18 Oven control. Pull-out broiler. Free delivery, Mnrlcq. MA0I0 CHEF 36" 0AS RANGE $111 No drip, lift-up top, Free < livery, MiotgUatlen« PHILCO SO" INSTALLED $108 3YM. Tilt-tap. Free Installation 'par Idison Co. plan. SELF-CLEANING Electric Bangs $186 30". Ilectric self-cleaning. Free Installation per Edisort. •' ’ IB..... SUNRAY EYE-LEVEL GAS $148 Gloss even door. Adjustable racks. Lift-tap. Deluxe. WHIRLPOOL QAS EYE-LEVEL $149.90 Meal timer, clock, radiant heat broiler. 8ase opt. extra. ---— SBXMll -// HOTPOINT ELEC. SELF-CLEAN $199 Automatic self-clean ‘electric. Free installation par Edison SUNRAY 2-OVEN QAS $199 lyo-level “Riviera". Soke, broil together. Cl6ck timer. MA0IC CHEF 2-0VEN ELECTRIC $299 Eye-level. Deluxe features. Free installation per Edison Co. INSTANT CREDIT All major credit cords, bank cords or 4lore chords plates honored at Highland fo,r immediate credit. FREE DELIVERY AND SERVICE Frf* installation on electric ranges and dryars per Edison Co. pjan. Limited time only. 1 APPLIANCE CO. jSjo MONEY DOWN • 3 YEARS TO PAY PONTIAC MALL SHOPPING CENTER TELEGRAPH ROAD, Corner Elizabeth Lake Road OPEN DAILY 10 to 9 • RHONE 682-2330 SHDSL) SUNBEAM VA0. Indoor-Outdoor $24.18 IW cottages. Wards, Mia* me»t*. AC DC. He. VC-100. \ \ C—14 THE PONTIAC* PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 80, 1968 behind the scenes. He is rated, excellent as a negotiator. And) he hfls applied iiimself with almost unbelievable energy both during the conventional working day and in. building social con UNITED NATIONS, N Y. (AP) — There are dissenters, but most of Ambassador Arthur J. Goldberg’s colleagues give him an "A” rating for his 34 months at the United Nations. The dissenters g e n e r a 11 f tacts, compare the Sfcyear-old former SIGNIFICANT ROLE Supreme Court justice un- He also played a significant favorably with his immediate|roie jn Washington in predecessors, Adlai E -1 determining U.S. foreign policy Stevenson and Henry Cabot I jn aimost everything except Lodge — both as a public I Vietnam. As a dove, he fought a speaker and as a forceful losing battle on Vietnam, and figure. ★ * * Goldberg himself acknowl edges that he was no match for Stevenson either as wit. or an orator — he knew he was bound to suffer in comparison. TTie consensus is that he was only adequate as speaker and,, in the words of one diplomat, he was inclined to “com" rather than eloquence. What he lacked on the rostrom, however, he made up ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS _ Proposals will _ba received by the Oakland County Board of Auditors for the furnishing. Installing, and guaranteeing of Underwriters' |j j jji Laboratories, Inc. Master Label Lightning Protection System* on various Oakland County ^Build- ing* as designated by the . I Engineering Division of the Oakland County Board of Auditors. Complete in this was the major factor determining his resignation an nounced April 25. k k k He had § number of personal triumphs which stood but during his U.N. stay. When he agreed to take the post in the summer of 1965, the U.N. General Assembly was paralyzed by the threat of a U.S. - Soviet confrontation over arrears in payment of peace-keeping assessments. * * ★ , Goldberg gave top priority to this problem and eventually decided that the United States should bow to the will of the majority of U.N. members and wig salon by donnell formation on th§ r^mi»r si«, and toe,*1 remove the threat of trying to I&VVK5K!-£u»vXbi? aV'th![suspend the voting rights of the ifflCfi Pof tho Facilities - Division, Oakland County Service Center 1200 North Telegraph Road, "—Use Michigan. Tha accaptad blddar shall ba licensed by tha Undarwrltarl' Laboratories, Inc., raglstarad with tha Lightning Protection Soviet bloc and France. His Pontiac, j (irsi task was to convince both the administration and key Institute, and required to furnish a satis factory Performance Bond and Labor and Material Bond, each in tha amount of 100 par cant of the Purchase Order. The cost of the bonds will be peid lor by the accepted bidder E.D.T., June 7, i960 at the offices of the Oakland County Facilities Engineer Ing Division, 1200 North Telegraph Road, Pontiac, Michigan. ■ . I ^ Board of Auditors, Oakland Caunty, Michigan DANIEL T. MURPHY, ROBERT E. LILLY JOHN B. OSGOOD May 30, Juno 6, 1MB END DENTURE MISERY Mind* plastic DENTURITE refits loose dentures in five minutes. This "Cushion of Comfort" eases sore gums.Yon eat anything. Laugh, talk, even sneeze without embarrassment. No more food particles under plates. DENTURITE lasts for months. Ends daily bother of powder, paste or cushions. Just remove when refit is needed. Tasteless. Odorless. Money back guarantee. At aU drug counters. HE KEPT BUSY - Arthur Goldberg (top left), resigning U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, had a jam-packed 34 months in office. These photos show some highlights. He chats with Soviet Ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin (top rightt) during signing of treaty banning weapons in outer space; he meets with two former Vietcong nurses in Vietnam (center right). At bottom, he is in deep discussion with President Johnson (left) and Lord Caradon (at left in photo) during the Mideast Crisis. elusion of an international congressional figures that such,treaty banning weapons of mass MIRACLE PLASTIC r denturite REFITS FALSE TEETH a course was desirable. k k k Employing his skill as a jurist, he did such a thorough job that the United States was able to back down without criticism from Capitol Hill. Within two months after his arrival on the scene, the assembly was back in normal operation. BIG TRIUMPH One of his biggest triumphs was in achieving a cease-fire in the 1965 India-Pakistani conflict over Kashmir. Just a few months after becoming U.S representative at the United Nations, it came his turn to be president of the Security Council during the fighting. He credited his experience as a labor negotiator as being partly responsible for the achievement of the cease-fire. It was generally agreed that his persistence and patience played a major role. ★ ★ ★ Goldberg also was a principal figure in the successful con- destruction from outer spate. He spent hours in secret negotiations with the Russians as a prelude to the agreement. Next to his unsuccessful efforts to give the United Nations a role in Vietnam peace efforts, his most difficult assignment was in representing the United mittee for Palestine and even in| Goldberg attached much more the United Nations itself. In 1966 Syrian Ambassador George Tomeh read from a speech Goldberg had made backing complete identification between the ambassador of the United States and Zionism.” k k k Goldberg replied that he had made the statement in 1965 not States in the Middle East crisis.as U.S. ambassador but “in my during and after the June war 0Wn right as a private of 1967. 'American citizen.” WITH ISRAEL j “In any event,” he said, “I do' not apologize for that speech. I He found himself in the position ' of siding generally with Israel, whose military action was regarded by many U.N. members as aggression against her Arab neighbors. Although the United States had been considered by the Arabs for Zionism a year earlier. The have not brainwashed myself as an individual importance to social affairs than any of his predecessors. He believed that one of the big jobs of the U.S. representative was to get to know the delegates of all countries, large and small *19 *188 *6 GRETSCH "Country Gentleman" $4QQ R.g. price $715. Sav. $216 "tv V 3-Pc. Drum Outfit, Gold Sparkle Student modal. Reg. $169,99. Sava $70.95. OLD 45 RPM RECORDS R.g. 77c, Sav. 38c 16-TRANSISTOR POLICE RADIO lottery or AC, Reg. price $39.95. Sav. $7.95. *99 39c *32 Thps* values and many more special values not listed are at The Mall. Open Every Evening 'til 9 P.M. — Convenient Terms Available. Similar Values at 27 $. Saginaw Store. Shop Both Stores. 4^ “VICTORIA ROYAL” ANTIQUE SATIN Courtauld’s Color Insures Color Fastness, 2 Years 20% OFF PRICES LISTED BELOW!!! WIDTH Sinalo Width Ono and a Half Width Doublo Width H Two and a Half Width Triplo Width Quadruple Width J* Width Acrou Top Width Acimi Top Width Aero.. Top Width Aero.. Top Width \ Across Tap Width Across Top 48” 72” 96” 1 120” 144° 192” L E 36” 6.99 pr. 12.99 pr. 16.99 pr. N A 45” 6.99 pr. 13.99 pr. 16.99 pr. • u T 5 63” T.99 pr. 14.99 pr. 19.99 pr. H 84” 9.99 pr. 16.99 pr. 22.99 pr. 32.99 pr. 37.99 pr. 48.99 pr. 90” (fait pr. 18.99 pr. 23.99 pr. 33.99 pr. 30.99 pr. 48.99 pr. Pinch Pleated Valance AveHaWe 48wxl2" .. r. r; r... 3.99 ea. CHARGE ACCOUNT OAK PARK Gr..n-8 Shopping Center \ 21230fye.nfl.ld, 543-2331 M.n,, Tbiirt,, Fri. end tat. IM p.m. Irdcit shop; The Pontiac AAall Daily 10-9-682-1191 HAMTRAMCK, MICHIGAN 10016 JOS. CAMPAU S TR 2-8540 i. WM ' . I % ' I' / ' 1 ' : ■iTJLS , v? "'■'rr"i!"KT K THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 80, 1908 C—15 GOING UP — Central' Exposition Center *r ton&m at Cal-Expo is framed in the metal girders of the giant center’s industrial exhibit area. Fair Will Honor Itself California Builds a Monument (EDITOR’S NOTE — In a former sheep pasture about five miles from the state capitol, California is building the California State Exposition and Fair. The plan is to give a sampling of differing parts of the varied state. The theory: If out-of-state residents see nothing else of California, they should at least see Cal-Expo.) SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — Within a couple of years, tourists should be able to see all of California on two hot dogs and a couple of root beers. And, with a little extra effort, they can bet on thoroughbreds,' ride a roller coaster and see what miracles industry i s fashioning for America’s consumer society. The place is California’s $34-million monument to itself, the California State Exposition and Fair, being constructed on the banks of the American River. Officials hope this massive complex of steel, granite and aluminum will lure 4 0,000 tourists a day to Sacramento, eventually paying its own bills, and free state revenues for use elsewhere. 20-YEAR PLAN The complex was 20 years In development. The 1,040-acre site was purchased in 1947, about the time it was generally acknowledged that, the old State Fair site had outlived its usefulness. Original^ plans envisioned a new state fair on the order of the old one, but with better parking and modern facilities. Over the years, however, a group of men with Disneyland backgrounds convinced the legislature that the new fair should go beyond the prize bull and homemade apple pie competitions. ★ * ★ Hopes for the creation of a semipublic, semiprivate state | fair agency waned a bit with] Ronald Reagan’s election as governor. It was feared that-economy-minded Reagan might frown on government going into the entertainment business. But Reagan let the show go on, calling for more direct participation by private enterprise to make Cal Expo a pay-as-you-go facility. „ NEARLY DONE Workmen have almost completed Exposition Center, an eight-building complex to house displays depicting California’s wild and wonderful heritage^ Few of the exhibits arf finished, but thdre will be grea use of models, dioramas, an multiple-screen projection! synchronized with sound. ★ * ★ Visitors will see how glacier's carved Yosemite Valley, how landing in San Diego in 1542. how gold fever tmasformed a pastoral landscape into the crazyquflt of motion and emotion and emotion that is California today. Exposition California w 111 portray the California of the gold rush and the California of the freeway rush. SP ACE AGE It will tell the story of the state’s great railroad building era and of its entry into the space age. It will contrast life in California^ early missions with life today in the State’s crowded urban centers and sprawling suburbs. Elsewhere in the recreational complex, visitors wilj be able to take , rides in hollowed-out logs through giant redwood forests, descend in ore buckets into a make-believe gold mine, or wheel a sports car through a flowering California desert. ★ ★ ★ Part of Cal-Expo will open July 1. Most major exhibits won’t be ready for a year or two. * Cal-Expo General Maihager E. R. Lemmon Put Heat Ductsv Close to Floor , Since Tieat rises*, the best place to locate heat distributors is close to the floor on walls facing the outside of the house to create a curtain of warmth against the cold outside air. In a hydronic system, water is piped through finger sized tubing on the outer perimeter of the house. _ V FINGER'S of IDE MALL J1 x 14 SCRAPBOOK & PHOTO ALBUM ideal for keeping those treasured snaps • PLASTIC COVER • CRAY PACES • POST BINDERS Extra sheets can be added! Added Aoeessories for ANNIVERSARY WEEK ONLY! Regular $4.00 $198 Easpocially Priced... Just right for wmiritf.,. Don't miu this timoly solol 3 patterns — Floroi, Leopard, Chock. WEATHERVANE 0 thermometer O barometer • humidity Reg- 110.00 Pri0* $|95 FINGER'S of THE AAALL Fin Parkkll - Opn «|M Ml. M »H Ml. . Ili-HII WINKELMAN'S IS YOUR SUNSHINE PLACE FOR SUMMER FASHION AND VALUE. THESE SALE EVENTS ARE A CASE IN POINT. \ sale TAKE LIFE EASY IN SHIFTS, CULOTTES 4.97 You'll like the variety in this colorful group. Cotton and blends, embroidery and chain trims. Some shifts have matching kerchiefs. Sizes SML. mg “ Front Lingerie. J 2 for *15 THRU SATURDAY! SUMMER DRESSES iN THE LOOKS OF THE SEASON Save on this outstanding collection in the season's new shapes, colors and fabrics in misses' and junior sizes. You’ll find skimmers, shirtdresses, pleated styles in prints, checks, solids. The fabrics are easy-care — won't waste your time. 2 for 15.00 or 7.97 each. 2 for *7 THRU SATURDAY! SUMMER T-TOPS AND JAMAICAS AT SAVINGS Stock up now on this good-looking playwear that you can mix and match as you please. Choose print, striped and solid tops. SML. Team them with solid and plaid Jarhaicas. All are in'easy-care fabrics that play well and wear well, too. Any two for 7.00 or 3.77 each. V. PONTIAC MALL — shop monday, thursday, friday, salurday to 9 TEL-HURON CENTER — shop monday through Saturday to 9 V Charge it \ No Down Payment Many months to pay Bwtds AMERICA'S LARGEST CLOTHIER THE PONTIAC MALL , Woodward, 1525 Woodward, Detroit , Regional Shopping Center, 15 Mile' and Gratiot Madison Heights Shopping Center, 12 Mile and John R , RIO DE JANEIRO UP) — Nine tunnels cutting through more than five miles of solid rock have done much to relieve traffic congestion in this city of five million persons. The newest tunnel is also .the longest in any city of (lie world, and has cut travel time between north and south Rio by as much as an hour. * * ★ Like a glistening jewel set off by blue ocean waters lapping bn gleaming white beaches, Rio is scattered among steep green mountains and hills, remnants] of a prehistoric age when ( volcanoes belched fire and molten rock. The ancient volcano cones, today better known as Sugar Loaf and Corcovado with its towering Christ statue, created some of Rio’s worst headaches^ LONG BATTLE Corcovado slices between the city’s north and south zones. I The mountains trailing off at the base of Sugar Loaf isolate famed Copacabarta Beach. The battle against these natural barriers began almost a i century ago, when horse-drawn carriages first began dopping through the Alice Street tunnel in 1887. A ★ ★ ( Four years later another tunnel was completed, linking the icity center with pastoral I farmlands now covered by Copacabana’s shoulder-to-shoulder high-rise apartment buildings. Copacabana's estimated one million residents move in, out and about\their area through four tunnels, and the city government is talking about building at least one more. BIGGEST HEADACHE The biggest headache of all, hotVever, was movement between the north and south zones, long possible only through the already congested downtown business area. The first step towards solution was the Santa Barbara tunnel through Corcovado completed in 1960. It is eight-tenths of a mile long. ★ ★ ★ Now there is the new Reboucas funnel, which slips under Corcovado Mountain for .7 miles, constructed at a cost of 20 million. Motorists who use the tunnel can cut crosstown travel by at least 30 minutes, and as much as 60 minutes during jrush hours. UNIQUE TUNNEL While Reboucas is a significant milestone in Rio, a unique double-decker tunnel is reaching the halfway construction mark. With traffic flowing in one direction on the lower level and in the opposite direction on the upper -level, it will open up the beach-side areas now choked off by the “Two Brothers’’ mountains. Troubles, too, have come with the tunnels. A ★ * Citizens sometimes, complain that faults in design and maintenance lead to accidents. One tunnel had a rather infamous reputation until proper lighting made it less useful for robbers. “Persons' who entered it dressed ’ Rio residents used to say, “would undoubtedly leave naked — hut grateful for not also having lost their life.” urn. G’s Barber Shop In atldilion to our many •pprializrd service*, we ■(ill offer the regular haircut at the REGULAR PRICE. OPEN WEDNESDAY 5883 Dixie Hwy. WATERFORD c—10 • THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 30. 1008 ~~ 1 ~~ Not EVERY Homeowner Needs a CNB Home Improvement Loan Office* in Ookl|jpd and Macomb Count!** -tank .Community ., ■ Mftft peeoladql — Member-EPIC— Bond’s 2-Trouser Suits regularly ’63.50 *59 Look how you save on suits you’ll wear comfortably now and all year long! Bond’s crisp, wrinkle-shedding tropicals of finest Dacron® polyester with Wool Worsted. Or superb year-round Wool Worsteds in today’s top style silhouettes. All the color, pattern, shape so important to the “now” look. All the exceptionally fine fit and needlework you always expect—and get-from Bond’s. Tremendous choice (naturally, our entire stock is not included i. Save big right now! Regular prices again next week! All alterationi without charge Week Only! Bond’s 1-Trouser Suits regularly’59.50 *49 Rio Traffic Tunnels Cut Natural Barriers I If you just inherited a fortune you won’t be interested. But if you're like most of us there’s probably a garage to build, ’kitchen to remodel, porch to enclose, or some other project you’d love to tackle. And a Community National Home Improvement Loan is the perfect way to make it happen. Stop in at our Instalment Loan Office (15 East Lawrence), one of the 19 other CNB offices, or a Community National approved FHA improvement contractor. We’re dedicated to the proposition that every man’s home should be his castle. V THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1908 C—17 Ex-Fireman; 72, Reminisces (EDITOR’S NOTE - The following wot written for The Pontiac Press by Roy L. Dodge of Harrison.) By ROY L. DODGE John W. Bradburn, a [resident of HarrtBon, where he retired 15 years ago, is one of three living charter members of the Pontiac Metropolitan Club. Bradburn, now 72, joined the Pontiac Fire Department Dec. 11, 1018 and retired in May 1953 after 37 years of service, w ★ 1 * He and his two brothers, Bill and Al, now deceased, bad more than 1Q0 years’with the department, said Bradburn. “Things are a lot different today than they were hack in the jumper and shirt combo Ip navy blue, pink, yellow or lime with white dots. Buckled and pocketed tlim jumper In care-free cotton to wear alone or with a shirt. Sites 38 to 46.... Tuck - frent, roll sleeve broadcloth shirt, white. Sites 38 to 32........ Order by mail or phone 682-7500. Add 35c for delivery plus 10c for C.O.D.'s and 4% tax. The Pontiac Mall The Pontiac Mall Telegraph at Elizabeth Lake Rd. Assess old horse and buggy days," he recalled. BIG BtiLL 1 fire station," he said. '‘Every evening at 8 we used to ring the curfew bell and any children J ^ . under 18 years had.to be off the "When that big bell rang in gtreetg» the belfry at the old .Number 2 Station on Walnut back in 1916, we had the rig on the road withr in two minutes. That included dropping the harness on old "We used to plan weeks ahead to celebrate the 4th of July. We had . to stay on duty straight Tahd Nibbs." the teanr*I t*jrouBh holidays, but we drove on the aerial ladderg*8* (had open house at the fire stations with picnics, ice wagon. wee "We took off down the street with the bells ringing and the whistle shrieking on the old Stanley Steamer pumper and everyone in town stopped .what they were doing. It was really a big event!” In 1916, Bradburn was working with his father, thbn a teamster in Pontiac, arid they happened to haul cinders for Chief Austin’s driveway. When they finished the job that night, the chief asked Brad-burn to come to the fire station the following morning. That day he received his uniform and cream, fireworks and all/’ ★ ★ ★ Bradburn never was involved in any disasters during his long career, but he recalls one day he did have a streak of bad luck. # ■ if ★ “The alarm sounded about midnight. While we were making the run, the ladder truck I was riding collided with a doctor’s car at the corner of Lawrence and Saginaw. It knocked me off the rig and bruised me up a bit, but we made the run OK. BOOT CAUGHT “A few hours later another badge number iS, whichhe wore|alarm SOunded. I grabbed my pants and was still pulling them on when I slid down the pole. I for nearly half a century. STILL CARRIES Although a bit tarnished and worn, Bradburn still carries the badge and proudly displays it anytime the occasion arises. ★ ★ ★ “We had to pay for our own uniforms at that time,” he explained. “I didn’t receive any pay until I had worked a month. The uniform cost $29.50 and we only received $27.50 every two weeks. ★ ★ ★ "In 1916 there were only two fire stations in the city with a crew of 10 men.” ★ ★ ★ The first motorized fire engine in Pontiac was an American France with a 1,000 gallon tank, according to Bradburn. CURFEW BELL “There was a big bell in No. caught my boot in one pantleg and when I hit bottom I fell on the cement floor and broke my ankle. “I wouldn't have minded it quite so much but it turned out to be a false alarm!” ★ ★ ★ Bradburn, who never married, spends his time in the quiet of the woods where he and his remaining brother, Roy, live in a small cabin two miles north Of Harrison. Until the last few years the two brothers went deer hunting each fall, fished and enjoyed the outdoors. ★ ★ ★ For the past several years John has grown a flowing beard that matches his thick, snow-1 white hair. He plays Santa Claus for the children of Harrison and J surrounding areas. SALE WHITE | HATS | *2" Reg. $4—$5—$5.99 | SPECIAL SAVINGS! on | beautiful -new millinery | Be nice to your feet this summer in a pair of lightweight leathers Mr. Mansfields, mad© by Bostonian. The cool nylon mesh inserts add flair...make them remarkably light. Three handsome styles: a wing tip or moc toe.in black or.brown, and a U-wing in black. All styles in sizes 7 to 12. And be nice to yourself by buying them during this special holiday ^miHH H&W sale—-for just 13.99 OUR PONTIAC MALL STORE IS OPEN TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY TO 5:30; MONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY & SATURDAY TO 9 P.M. TELEGRAPH & ELIZABETH LAKE ROADS , QUESTION j How can you make heads from numbers? * * * ANSWER; For all those of us who have trouble getting numbers out of our heads, here’s a switch. This correspondent wants to know how to get heads from numbers. One of our artists knows all about it. She had once given chalk talks to entertain audiences and this was one of the stunts she used.. She would ask some one to give her a number and then draw it in a Targe size on the black board or demonstration paper. It would suggest some part of a face or perhaps some kind of expression. The audience would be amazed to see how fast she could whip out an amusing character from the lifeless-looking number. She had, she said, memorized a number of different heads for each number and she has drawn one group she used to use in our illustration. Why not practice this group of characters, get some of your friends together, ask for a number, and see if you can startle them? It’s a good idea to practice up a bit before you try the trick out on an actual audience. ★' ★ ★ (You can win $10 cash plus AP’s handsome World Year-., book if your question, mailed on a postcard to Junior Editors in care of this newspaper, is selected for q prize.) m To All Hearing Aid Users In celebration of our sixth Anniversary in the Pontiac Mall, and to show our appreciation to you folks who have made our growth possible, we are offering the following service at no charge. - 1, New Tubing 3. Sanitise earmold 2. Adiust battsry oonfacts 7 4. Determination of bsttsry Ilfs. 5. Hearing Aid cheeked to see if strongest output is being obtained. m To assure you of these complementary services please bring this certificate With you. paniiar ttutU optical Sc tearing aid ratter The Pontiac Mall mp « 682-1117 Becker’s Celebrates Anniversary with a Spectacular Our buyers GOOFEDI... what was considered the customers choice turned out to be a LEMON... we don't know why, we thought we made a flood selection. But, that's "Fashion Biz," our goof is your gain. The shoes may be a little sour — but the prices are sweet. Come See — Come Save. Open Every Evening 'til 9 • SECURITY CHARGE • MICHIGAN BANKARD Shoes The Pontiac Mall Telegraph at Elizabeth Lake Rd. J ----\—r- BUY, SELL, TRADE . . . USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS I / C—18 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. MAY 80. 1008 Two Day* Only TAILORED BLOUSES 88$ Smooth cotton with roll-up or short sloovos Bermuda, button-down or convertible collars. 8'x6'3"x5' Shed at a low, low price! STEEL UTILITY SHED 2 Day* Only Our Regular 2197c DURABLE PLASTIC HOUSEWARE ITEMS Your Choice Dish pans, utility tubs, Laundry baskets, pails and more! Choice of colors Sturdy aluminum frame Rugged non-skid floor 50” Double Doors lour Vnoice 44* The utility shed that gives you morel Flat roof A for more room. Undercoated to prevent rutting. In attractive green and white. With lock and key. Assemble) with a screwdriver in just minutes. $88 Two Day* Only TOT TOTER Baby Carrier Our Reg, 2.88 $199 FAMILY PAY CHECKS BUY FAR MORE AT KRESGE’S DISCOUNT PRICES 2 Day* Only Our Reg. 3 for 2.33 Men’s Combed Cotton TEE SHIRTS 3 - $t 91 Small, Med., large, x-large 2 days only Reg. 2.37 No Ironing! Wrinkle Free! MEN’S PERMANENT PRESS DRESS SHIRTS $J5 7 Short sleeves White dress shirts of polyester and cotton hold their fresh-pressed look, hour after hour. 3 Two Day* Only NYLON THROW RUG 21x36” 78* mm Two Days Only Two Days Only Men’s and Boys’ Crew Socks Stock up while quantities last 33* Reg. $i,a(t pair NEW STRETCH GARTER PANTY Puckered cotton rubber nylon. One size fit* all. 74* 2 Days Only Reg. 87c GAS FILLED BALLS Funifor all -age>4 Jumbo size, lighter than air, gas inflated vinyl balls in color tints wjth a choice of decorations. 58$ Two Days Only Reg. 2.97 "ALL-PRO" GOLF SHIRTS Knit polyestor/cotton permanent press shirts for golf, tennis, boating or bowling. White; blue, maize, green, melon,;navy. S - XL. $037 PONTIAC MALL 1 DOWNTOWN TEL-HUR0N -1 DRAYTON I 1 ROCHESTER V 1 PONTIAC CENTER 1 , 1 1 PLAINS — J /. PLAZA BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE nx S. S. KRESGE COMPANY '■■I i mi 1 at ■ " • ,r • 7' ' THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1068 *jj j'7?•‘y y / C—10 ......, | Short-leg, Short-sleeve Styles P Cotton Pajamas |- For Men and Boys -| I %9I |§ i3S if Men's: cotton broadcloth in red, blue, green :£•!;? or gold checks or stripes. Boys’: wine, $§ brown or blue plaids or stripes. ;ifeS With 20” Vertical Supports For Safety and Strength! 8-FooL Steel Wall Swimming Pool Our Regular 14.88 Weekend Only W" m Misses' Trends In Knit Wear Bermudas 'n Tops To Go Together Great fun for the whole family ... big enough for a refreshing, cooling dip. This pool is 20 inches deep, 8 feet across. Circular steel w-all, with firm steel vertical supports. Bonderized, baked enamel finish. Comes with Heavy vinyl liner and drain. Unique interlocking assembly requires no bolts or screws. A fun project for the whole family. 27" x 72" Air Mattress with Pillow....96* 20" and 24" Beach Balls...... 26* and 36* Ss Cotton knit tops, 24" long. Choice of neck* $:$: lines. Zesty color combinations. Cotton/ pi- nylon knit Bermudas in solid colors. 10-18. H •XjX 1 If m i i wmm msitUms™* u f Our Regular 7.77 2-Pt. Cabana Outfits Far Boys 4 to 7 87’* Weekend Only Crisp cotton poplin in solid colors, bright prints and gingham checks. Boxer-style pants have covered elastic waist. Our Regular 1.17 2-Pt. Blouse 'n Shorts Sets For Girls 4-7 Weekend Only Shrink - resistant, mercerized cotton in sunny summer colors. Pull-overs, crop-top and collar styles. Ruffle and piping trim. All Pieces Nest For Storage High-fashion Soft Side Vinyl Luggage ,15', 16' Paisley patterns in orange, red, green or blue. Floral pattern in orange, brown, pink or red. Solid colors in blue or green. Grey tweed-look with multi-color stripes. Lightweight, easy tq carry, easy to store. Reg. 11.44,3-Re. Set of Sturdy Vinyl Luggage Weekend Only Long bound vinyl. Vanity with mirror, 2,1" weekender and 24" pullman in, the set. Teen's,Women s, . Canvas Casuals Reg. 1.33 Weekend Only Striped gore or buckle. Cotton sail cloth. 5-10,. Triangles Reg.44t Weekend Only Cotton pique, dotted Swiss, organza, eyelet. Reg. 39t ea Each section is 17}A" high, Molded yellow plastic. 36" Ibrig. White prime. With handy top handle. ..........Choice of 3 Delicious Flavors 1 w Chuckles" Candy Our Reg. 33* lb. Weekend Only Fresh, chewy jellies... Spice Drops, Orange Slices or i|g Spearmint Leaves. Buy pre-bagged or by-the-pound, get 2 lbs. for only 5more than our regular 1-lb. price. S. S. KRESGE COMPANY Our Regular 3.88 Mini Pant Shifts For Misses S-M-L 288 Weekend Only New, now .. ..in cotton poplin! Square- or jewel-neck styles with puffed sleeves or sleeveless. Vibrant prints, solids. Our Regular 2.58 Bird Bath to Oranment Any Summer Lawn 226 Weekend Only Pedestal style,weather-resistant, sturdy plastic. 17" diameter, 25" high. Hollow bottom may be sandweighted. Our Regular 1.39 Darkening Window Shades Weekend Only 94* Heavy gauge white vinyl s.hsfdes shut out daylight. 37 * 2" x 6 ft. With roller.. m i m C—20 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1968 Kit Carson, Dead 100 Lives in Legend (EDITOR’S NOTE — Bornirecognition of Christopher Carton in 1809, the daring defiance man nicknamed Kit became a * * legend 0/ the Old West. This Memorial Day marks the 100th anniversary of his death and no-where will he be more remem bered than in Taos, N.M., where he added daring patriotism to his respected accomplishments.) TAOS, N.M. (AP) - The annual changing of the flag in the plaza of this antique village has a special significance this Memorial Day. It is 100 years since the death of the man who nailed the ban Kit Carson's The incident happened in the early summer of 1861 when news of the outbreak of Civil War reached New Mexico. Kit Carson was 51, His frontier exploits already had made him a national legend. He was embarrassed by all the fuss over him, wanted only to put both adventure and limelight aside and retire quietly to his ranch. REBEL SENTIMENT Sentiment in New Mexico was ner to its first cottonwood staff, Wy °n the side of the nailed it there, and quietly Confederacy The* territory had suggested that no one dare lay1**" a« of Me™° untl1 * 66 jt scant 12 years before, and his treasonous hands again. No one dared. ★ * * The audacious patriot was Kit Carson. ' With the- death May 28, 1868. of the explorer, trapper, Indian fighter, scout, soldier, rancher — few American folk heroes knew so varied a career — there, died a breed of man that was an American original, the Mountain Man. Their view of Kit Carsbn however, was one of undiluted respect. ★ ★ ★ They respected him as a friend and respected h i s deserved reputation with the rifle he held cocked and primed as he stood at the base of the flagpole. Southern sympathizers had ,, , . .. .,ripped the flag from its staff To the Mountain Man, rugged fh| vious day Whpn Kit Individualism was no mere Carson said ,ea|| u aIone it shibboleth, personal in- was ,eft aIone dependence no myth TYPICAL OF BREED He signed on as cook with a trapping party headed by Ew ing Young, a frontiersman of the first rank, and headed for the wilderness. When the party returned word got around that the leathery, freckled greenhorn had shot three Indians dumg an attack. His hand was steady his aim true. He had proved himself. REPUTATION GROWS For the next* 16 years Kit Carson trapped the mountain streams of the American West all the way to the Pacific and from border to border. As his experience grew so did his reputation among fellow trap-many citizens still viewed the pers. conquering bluecoats with less ★ ★ ★ than total admiration. His courage, his skill in the woods and his boldness in bat tie, soon earned the respect of even the veterans, men like Jedediah Smith, Jim Bridger Tom Fitzpatrick, Joe Meek — men who marked the trails that became the roads that later bore endless caravans of wagons westward. 'k ■ it it These were the Mountain Men. The less he said about himself, the more others said about him. Still it is unlikely his name would have become so widely known, his exploits so romanticized, had it not been for a chance meeting aboard a Missouri River steamboat in 1842. in a first lieuteant’s uniform I his neck. The injury* plagued only to discover that Congress|him for months. At length, the had not got around to con- man who had tempted danger m-N o n e typified the breed or added more to its romance than Kit Carson. On this Memorial Day, a dozen or so of Kit Carson’s descendants are gathering in the Taos plaza. One of them probably Kit Carson III, a retired trader from Alamosa, Colo., was to lower the tattered old flag that has flown day and night since last Memoria) Day and replace it with a new one. A small centennial celebration, more a family reunion, was to follow. ★ ★ The Taos flag Is one of the few in the country permitted by Congress to remain aloft continuously, a privilege granted in HELL-BENT They lived among Indians and took Indian ways and Indian wives and spoke a strange patois puctuated by wild sounds like „ , , _ . , , ’wagg!" and "sirree!” ■The people df^aos, had knoW| ^ Mountain Men lived by the slight, 5-feet-6 frontienman^ wi „ at a time, J w.th the steel gray eyes and d ^ freedom above a}, rusty hair ever since he arrived r Carson had been in SI. Louis to visit his daughter, who was staying with relatives. The girl was the only child of his first wife, a Cheyenne, who died in childbirth. There is no trace of his daughter’s descendants. On the steamer, heading back, Carson met John C. Fremont, the Army surveyor. Fremont needed a guide, someone who knew the Western wilderness he planned 10 survey. He tried Kit Carson. CARSON EXTOLLED Fremont’s official report of|F his two expeditions became a ' best seller. The government printed more than 2 5 0,000 copies. In the report, Fremont extolled Kit Carson, recounting feats of daring and courage. During the war with Mexico Kit Carson carried dispatches to Washington for Gen. Stephen W. Kearny. While there President firming his commission before the war ended and it was therefore null. Carson said it was his bitterest disappointment. During the Civil War however, every man In the First New Mexican Volunteers down to the regiment's last private petitioned the War Department to make Kit Carson their commander. The Army complied, giving Carson the rank of colonel. HATED ASSIGNMENT Carson led his regiment in one successful battle against the Confederates, then was given an assignmeft he regretted the rest of his life. He was told to round up the Navajo tribe, whose raids on New Mexican and death in the wilderness so pnany times died in his sleep He was 58. Home OctUpied for 236 Years * DARLINGTON, Md. (AP)-A 10-room house, built in 1732 and enlarged in 1750, has been occupied continuously since its construction, basically unchanged except for a modern kitchen built on the site of the woodshed. ★ ★ ★ John Clark bought the house in 1960 from Harold Jones, in whose family the property had been for three generations. He settlements had become mostjand b*s so"> f*^*|*P. ? irritating, and march them off to what amounted to a con-centration\camp. Reluctantly, Carson followed orders. He burned the crops and slaughtered the, sheep herds of some 9,000 Navajo tribesmen. Desitute, they surrendered. ★ ★ ★ After the war Kit Carson served as commander of Fort student at Harford Junior Col lege, are presently living there. It was originally built by Col. Nathan Rigbie, a tobacco planter and one of the wealthiest men of his time. Polk personally offered him »|Garland( Colo., and later as an temporary Army commission | int£|an agent. | had t0 be a During an inspection trip of the fort a rattlesnake spooked his horse. Carson was hurled Carson soldier. in the old adobe town in 1826 He was 17 then, hell-bent for excitement. ★ ★ ★ Taos, an ancient Spanish settlement which was a thriving community even before the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth, was at that time the southwestern headquarters for the booming fur trade. Young Christopher Carson — known from infancy as Kit — had heard about the swashbuckling beaver trappers who gathered in Taos and ached to join them. He returned to Taos proudly over an embankment, injuring else. They were a fraternity of individualists. A man might hire out to one fur company, disappear in the night and join Another. Or strike out on his own. They skinned their beavers and traded the pelts for pne big midsummer fling and enough powder and lead to see them through the next winter. SELF-EFACING Unlike his boisterours, yamspinning companeros, Carson was quiet, self-effacing, laconic, His deeds spoke for themselves, Volumes. Only four of every 100,000 people committed theft in Japan in 1966, compared with 662 for the U.S., highest in the world,1 and 500 for Britain. i World’s Newest House Paint! IF Guaranteed One Coat Covets a gallon Maybe you never thought of paying this niuch for house paint... But you could never buy a paint like this before! An entirely NEW brilliant white houle paint... with super quality... super durability. Covers jn one coat. Come in for full details. SHERWIN-WILLIAMS CO. 11 N. Perry FE 42571 Free Parking The Pontiac Mall 6821310 Free Parking having a Reg. 2.99 MOCCasin of softest unlined white glove leather, fringed and tied above gay multi-color beading. A remarkable value at regular price; now save even morel AP Wirephoto RESTING PLACE — Kit Carson, founder of the Masonic Lodge in Taos, N.M., rests within a fence erected around his grave by the Masons. His wife’s grave is also in the plot. Looking at the memorial is 12-year-old Delbert Trujillo of Taos. THE PONTIAC MALL Elizabeth Lake Road at Telegraph shoppers convenience! Scot’s Dining Room ... our popular Seat’* Room .accented by a unique, warm decor to compliment the rood food alway* served at Ted'*. Garden Court Cafeteria . .% “the Orange Tree” keynotes an atmosphere—freth, colorful ind spacious—for your pleasant dining and convenience. Tasty, Tempting Delicious! You’ll Love Our WEDNESDAY NIGHTER SPECIAL 4 ? ? can It Makes Wednesday The Night a ToShopThe Mall Complete ^ - FRIED CHICKEN DINNER Potato or Vegetable, Salad or Dessert Roll and Butter — Coffee-Tea-Milk *1.20 " ’ Children under 12 yrs. — .95 Every Wednesday Evening 4:30 to 8t00 Cafeteria only rK 2 Re to *8 1.99 to 3.99 Another Hadley’a fashion first ... nationally advertised cotton tops and pants (long and bermuda lengths) drastically reduced at the very beginning of the season. It’s all fresh Summer ’68 merchandise? They have been classed irregular—but you’d have to bye an expert to find the imperfections. /Choose from a bright array of styles in nautical navy, red or white/or if yon ' prefer the chic of Swiss chocolate and Bermuda bjue ... Of course pastels abound . . . yellow, orange green. Don’t miss out—come in today. When Hadley’s has a happening itVtruly a Happening. Sizes 6 to 16. Shop Monday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday ’til 9:00 Use your convenient Hadley’s multi-charge THE PONT1ACJMLALL—Uae Elizabeth Lake Rd. Entrance - ' ( I I THE PONTIAC PRESS THrUSDAV, MAY so, iwm D—l SPOUTS Heavy Schedule Highlights Baseball Tourney Today BEATS THROW BACK-Bobby Knoop, California Angels’ second' baseman, dives back into first base after a long lead on an attempted bunt by pitcher Jim McGlothlin in the third inning of their game last night. Dick McAuliffe was covering ^ AP Wlrtphoto first on the attempted bunt and he failed to make the tag on Knoop. The Tigers won the game, 3-0 to go back into a one and a half game lead in the American League race. An expanded slate of eight games features today’s belated beginning of the Pontiac Invitational Baseball High School Tournament at Jaycee Park. For the first time in the seven years of the annual county diamond tournament, the opening game was postponed and rescheduled as part of the big Memorial Day slate. Wet grounds yesterday caused the Pontiac Central-Royal Oak Kimball lidlifter to be reset for 10 a m. today. Eight teams from the starting, field of 16 will advance today into the quarterfinals Friday and Saturday. The title will be decided next Wednesday and the champion will move on to a regional four-team tournament June 7-8 at Wyandotte. Macomb County champion Utica (21-3) has already qualified for that tournament and will be joined by the survivors of the Livonia, Wyandotte and Pontiac tourneys. Smoke Bomb Incident Riles Tiger Pitcher McLain Denny Blanks California, 3-0, for 8th Victory ANAHEIM (AP)—Denny McLain Is winning his war against American League hitters but taking a drubbing in his vendetta with the baseball fans of Detroit. The Tigers’ ace right-hander revealed, for the first time here Wednesday night that his wife and infant, daughter recently averted possible serious injury after someone in Detroit placed a bomb in the family car. ★ a • A The Incident occurred 10 days ago, only a few days after McLain publicly accused Detroit fans of booing the team to such an extent last season that it cost the Tigers the American League pennant. They finished one game behind champion Boston. STOP FOR GAS McLain says his wife and daughter were drivjng from the Detroit stadium to their suburban home when they pulled off a highway to get gas. A A A "The attendant looked under the hood and discovered there was a smoke bomb wired to the ignition," McLain said here Wednesday night after he pitched a four-hitter and struck out 13 in a 3-0 victory over the California Angels. ★ ★ ★ . ■"If the bomb had gone off when my 1 wife was driving at high speed, she and the baby both could have been killed,” h« said.............. '....; ............ "But the bomb wasn’t wired properly. It was supposed to go off when she turned on the ignition. “If anything had happened, I’d have spent the rest of my life finding out who was responsible.” GOES ROUTE McLain. 8-1, leads the American League in victories, has gone the route in eight of his first 11 starts and has reduced his earned run average to a microscopic 1.92. A A * “I’ve been booed before, but never like that,” he said, “and I guess it made me press too hard.!’ Manager Bill Rigney and the Angels agreed that they’ve never seen the 24-year-old McLain throw as hard or pitch as well in helping the Tigers to increase their Americart League lead to 1% games. “It was the best I’ve thrown since 1965, when I hurt my shoulder late in the season,” stiid McLain.” AAA Dick McAuliffe slashed three hits Freehan c II 0 0 Mtncher lb A 0 0 0 ’* • j l l 3 Rolchordt If 10 10 1 0 0 0 Hinton rf 3 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 Satrlano. e 3 0 V 0 . / 3 0 0 0 Brgmeler p 0 0 0 0 § Oyler ii 3 13 0 Knoop lb 3 0 10 McLain P 2 0 0 0 MGIothln p 2 0 0 0 Krkpfrlck e 10 0 0 Coin 1b / Uiaot 1h Total 23 303 . Total . . W 0 4 0 Detroit oooooi 1 oo — J California .0 0 0v0 0 0 0 p 0 —O DP -«Dalrolt 3. CallforHTa 2. LOS— Dafroll 2, California 4. 2S—Satrlano. HR—W.Horton (13). SB-Raleharrll, knoop. S—McLain. ___ IP H R ER BB SO McLain (W.S-1) * 4 0 0 1 13 McOlothln (L.4-3) 0 4 3 3 v2 3 Burgmolr . 1 0 0 o o 0 HBP—McLain (Ralchardt). T—Bill. A -13,140. Racing Fans Await Piston-Turbine Duel AP Wlropheto LIGHTER SIDE — The seriousness of the upcoming race at the Indianapolis Speedway was replaced by laughter for a few moments during yesterday’s meeting of the 33 drivers. Bobby Unser can’t control his urge to laugh as instructions were given for today’s running of the ‘500.’ Taking part in the levity are Joe Lteonard (left) who has the pole position in today’s race. In background are Mario Andretti (left) and Roger McCluskey. INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. UP) — A horde of motor speed fans poured slowly into the waterlogged Indianapolis Motor Speedway today, optimistic that the weather would relent long enough for running of the 52nd 500-mile race. They were drawn by a showdown between turbine and conventional piston engines, started but unresolved last year. Rain which had fallen almost daily during the four-week practice and qualification period had left some of the cars incompletely tested. The limited running time may have added to the hazards of running at the venerable racing plant where 58 persons have been killed. AAA The rain certainly added to the hazards of the 300-acre infield, where 25,000 cars normally are parked during the race. It was a mixture of mud and puddles. FAVORITE Meanwhile, the writers and broadcasters voted Graham Hill of London, White Sox Halt Oriole Streak Ambassador's Horse Sir Ivor Is Epsom Winner EPSOM, England (AP) — Sir Ivor was the toast of racegoers and the pride of American owner Raymond Guest of New York for winning the English Derby Wednesday in a thrilling burst of speed: The American-bred colt — hailed by English champion jockey Ester Piggott as the finest racehorse he’s ever ridden — immediately was Installed as the odds-on favorite for the Irish Derby June 29. AN AMBASSADOR Guest, the U.S. ambassador to Ireland, won a total of $289,261 when- the 4-5 West Bloomfield in Track Victory A junior speedster won two events yesterday in leading West Bloomfield to its first Wayne-Oakland League^-track championship. Terry .Conley wotr the 100 "in 10.2 seconds and later grabbed the 220 In 20-flat as West Bloomfield rolled up 66 points, Defending champion Bloomfield Hills Andover was second with 46VU. WAYNE-OAKLAND LfAOUB MEBT Turn Standing 1. Wait Bloomflgld 44; 2.' Bloomflgld Hill* Andover 46V,J 3. Northvllla 44; 4. Milford 32l J. Holly 17; 4. Clartnotvlllt Ii. 7. Clarkiton 4; l. Brighton 4W. Long Jump-^Stgrr (Andovar), sniyvanbarg (Norlh-vMla), AMerion (Andover) 2W0JJ. ‘ Shot Put — Sanford (Milford), wttta, (Hollylr- P$*B*nJump0—'Clarion (Northvllla), Karlion (W, ^Pola^VauM*— *Tlm B*rennan (W. Bloom), A rand •aon (W. Bloom.), Harrlion (Milford) 12-0. Two MHa — Savlar (Clark), Evans (Andovar) Davis (Andovar) *:52.3. (Laagua Racord)gjS M0 Rally — Wait Bloomflald, Northvllla, Bloom (laid Hills Andovar 1i3l.35 tiaagya Raeord). MIN _ Kant (Clarancavllla). Oarlchs (Andovar) Schrader (W. Bloom.) 4:23.2, ... —, „ , .... I High Hurdles - bownlng (Holly), Bevlar (W Bloom),,, Gldtiner (Northvllla) ilS.4. . — .Mika imtrta, jAndovar), Neater (Milford) favorite came on with a rush in the last furlong. The winning share was worth $140,461 to Guest, who also won an additional $148,800 in bets. AAA Sir Ivor, a 3-year-old, finished ivi: lengths ahead of English-owned Connaught. Mount Athos was third, another 2Vi lengths back in the 13-horse field. The time for the 1 Vi mile turf race was 2:38.7. AAA Connaught went off at 100-9 and Athos whs 45-1. Guest watched the ytace on television before attending the opening of a park in Couhty Wexford dedicated to the memory of John F. Kennedy. Members of the Kennedy family were 'present to congratulate Guest when his horse won. The ambassador, shortly to retire, said: “This is great. I feel wonderful.” As for the fortune he won — “Well, don’t forget that federal taxes will take 77 per cent of it J* " * QUEEN ATTENDS Guest’s French-born wife led Sir Ivor to the winner’s enclosure at Epsom to the cheers of a crowd of 100,000 including Queen Elizabeth II. ★ ★ ★ “I thought the horse wasn’t going to make.it but Lester Piggott is a great jockey and knew what to do,” Mrs. Guest said. He was Piggott’s fourth Derby win. Sir Ivor, trained by Vincent O’Brien!, was listed as the 2-5 favorite for the Irislr Derby. . Horlen, M Combine Talents in Chicago Win By The Associated Press Chicago's Joe Horlen and Tom McCraw are keeping in step after a few false starts. Horlen fired a five-hitter and McCraw tripled two runs home Wednesday night as the White Sox beat Baltimore 3-1, ending a six-game losing string as well as the Orioles’ six-game victory skein. A A ' A The victory was Horlen’s fourth in a row after five straight losses. McCraw, who contributed to one of the Horlen’s setbacks by committing three errors in one inning, has driven in winning runs in three of the right-hander’s victories. ★ ★ ★ Horlen, who ran his scoreless innings streak to 37 before yielding a sixth inning rim, needed only 100 pitches to subdue the Orioles and halt Chicago's tailspinT HITS TRIPLE' . ...V ■ . McCraw tripled down the first base line for the first of Chicago’s three hits in the game, glying the Sox a 2-0 first Inning lead against Dave McNally. They added a run in the fourth when Buddy Bradford singled, stole second and tallied on a single by Ken Berry. ' A • A A Paul Blair doubled in the Orioles' sixth and scored the first run off Horlen in five games on a single by Curt Blefary. Ashby (Brighton) 1:57.9 440 ~~ Mlklt Sutton immoral. X!w Bloom.),. \Murrny (Andovtr) ^ :50J R* .TB- Pprry Conley (W. Bloom.),\ Ke#n«n (North vllle). Anderson (W7“«toom.1 :1a.2. (Conley ran 10.1 in prellmlnerles to tie league record), l Low Hurdles Simpson (Northvllla), <5lo1w§r (Northvllie), Downing (Molly) :20.0* 220 .A. Terry Conley (W. Bloom.), Andarson (W. Bloom.), KJimowle* fw. .Bloom.) 227. ■ Mila Relay — Mlltord, Northvllla, Bloomfield Hills Andover 3:30.6. . Boxing Career in Doubt NEW YORK Uft— The boxing' career of light heavyweight contender Johnny Per-, sol of New York appeared over today. The 27-year-old, ninth-tanked pounder is recovering in a hospital from an eye operation for the restoration of a detached retina In his left eye. Blair cf Btafaryrf Motion If / 4 0 0,0 Cull Powtll lb 4 0 2 0 Aparlclo si BRoblnsn 3b 4 0 0 0 Ward If DJohnson 2b 4 0 0 0 Voss rf Etchebrn c 3 0 0 0 Jos^phsn c Belanger si 3 0 10 McCraw 1b McNally CHICAGO „ _____ ab r h bl 4_1 J. it-Alomar 2b —3HMH) 10 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 10 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 3 10 0“ . . ^ ______ 3 0 1 V , 2 0 0 0 Kenwrthy 3b 3 0 0 0 Buford ph 0 0 0 0 Bradford rf ^ l 1 0 Watt p 0 0 0 0 Berry cf 3 0 11 Horlen p 3 0 0 0 Total 31 I 5 1 Total 27 fit Baltimore 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 — V Chicago - 2 o o i o o o o * — s SEir-ApaHclo. DP-Chlr.ago 2 LOB Aftlmort 5, Chicago 3. 28^-Belanger, lair. 3B -McCraw. SB Bradford. IP H RBR BBSO McNally (L.4-3) .. 7 Watt . 1 Mprlah (W.4-3) t 5 HUP—McNally (Ward), (Buford). T—1:53. A— 9,175. , The Pontiac Invitational is cosponsored by the city Parks and Recreation Department and The Press. HIOH SCHOOL TOURNAMENT PAIRINGS Today's Schedule 10 a.m. Royal Oak Kimball (7-10) vs. Pontiac Central (13-5). Noon-Rochester (8 7) vs. Waterford Kettering (9* 10); Walled Lake (9>7) vs. Ferndale (3-7), unitIghted field. 2;30 p.m.—Milford (11-7) vs. Clawson (15-4)# South-field (13-5) vs. Clarkston (7-13), unllghted field. 5 p.m.—Birmingham Brother Rice (11-6) vs. Madison (6-3); West Bloomfield (7-1) vs. Waterford Township (17-8), unlighted field. 7:30 p.m.—Bloomfield Hills Andover (9-9) vs. Pom 11ac Northern (8-8). Friday's Games 7 30 p.m. -Winners of Thursday's Klmball-PCH and WKHS Rochester games. Saturday's Games 2 p.m.-Winners of Thursday's Ferndale-W. Lake and Milford-Clawton games. 4 30 p.m -Winners of Thursday's Southfleld-Clarks-ton end W. Bloomfield WTHS games. 7:30 p.m.-Winners of Thursday's Brother Rlco-Madlson and BH Andover-PNH games. 1962 world champion and 1966 Indianapolis winner, a 5-1 favorite to win the 500 again in his Lotus-Pratt & Whitney turbine. In fact, the news media folk were so impressed by the Lotus turbines that they voted the three in the line-up to finish 1-2-3. TTie other two are driven by Joe Leonard of San Jose, Calif., who won the pole position at a record qualifying speed of 171.559 m.p.h., and Art Pollard, a sophomore at the speedway from Medford, Ore. AAA A possible crowd of 300,000, would not have shown up only for a turbine shoo-in. It was laced with long-time fans for such veterans as A. J. Foyt Jr. of Houston, shooting for an unprecedented fourth 500 victory: Mario Andretti of Nazareth, Pa., who has broken the 10-mile qualifying record three times, and chargers like the Unser brothers and international racer Dan Gurney of Santa Ana, Calif. AAA The hottest 1968 drivers in the field were Hill, fresh from winning the Spanish and Monaco Grand Prix events, and Bobby Unser of Albuquerque, N.M., winner of the last-three championship events on the U. S. Auto Club circuit. The field was unique in having sons of two -former Ifldianapolis contenders in the line up. They were Billy Vukovich of Fresno, Calif., whose father won the race twice, and Gary Bettenhausen of Stinley Park, 111., whose father was a perennial contender. Falcons Obtain End From Rams ATLANTA, Ga. UPI - The Atlanta Falcons announced Wednesday they have traded linebacker Bob Sanders and guard Jim Wilsoii to the Los Angeles Rams for end Bucky Pope. Pope, a three-year National Football League veteran, played his college days at Catawba College, Salisbury, N. C. A A A A parttime performer for the Rams, Pope’s career record shows he caught 34 passes, of which 13 were for touchdowns. He sat out the 1965 season with a knee injury. A A; A Wilson, a former All-American lineman at the University of Georgia, came to the Falcons last year In a trade with the San Francisco 49erg and appeared in seven games In the 1967 season. Wir.photo OFFICE MOVE — William (Scotty) Bowman was named coach ami general manager of the St. Louis Blues of the National Hockey League yesterday. 3 3 2 0 0 0 0 All-Star Tickets on Sale Monday HOUSTON UP> — The Houston Astros have announced that tickets for the 1968 i major league all-star baseball game will, go on sale to the general public Monday. The 1968 game wilL be played July 9 in the Astrodome. This year’s game will begin at 8:15 p.m. EDT, the first time the classic will be played at night. ★ ★ . ★ Tickets'will be sold through the mail only and ticket orders must be post-Vnhrke^ no earlier’thaK,June ,3, TTjgre will be a limit of four tickets pet; order. Prices will be $10 for box seats, $7 for reserve seats and $4 for reserve pavilion seats. • * 6 Savoy Bowlers Earn Slate Titles at YBA Tourney Savoy Lanes of Pontiac boasts one state championship team and contributed significantly to another Sunday in the Michigan Youth Bowling Association team finals at Owosso’s Capitol Bowl. The top Savoy prep boys’ team, captained by Jeff Heichel, captured its division’s state laurels led by Jeff’s 445r Prep boys are ages 8-12. His teammates included Tad Bigelow, Jeff Jones, Sam Iliades and Craig Barn-father. A ’ A A Sam’s sister Delina Iliades went to cheer for the boys, and volunteered to fill in on the major girls- team from Farmington Lanes which won its state title helped by her 425 (more than 100 - pins ahove iier league average). AAA The winners will receive their trophies at the YBA state gathering in August. —--------i------ Veteran Athlete to Be U.S. Olympic Trainer UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. UP) - Penn State will be sending one of its veteran athletic staffers to the Olympics in Mexico City this fall as a trainer. The university announced Wednesday that Chrles E. “Chuck” Medlar, a Nit-tany Lions’ staff member for two decades, has been commissioned head trainer for the U. S. team. Medlar had served on the training staff of the 1964 Olympics in Tokyo. This year, he wjll head a staff, of nine men and one worhan who will have charge of more than 500 athletes representing the .United States. , Takes Twins' Post ST. PAtJL-MTNNEAPOLIS (AR) -John Goryl was named a Minnesota Twins’ coach Wednesday to succeed Billy Martin. A A A Goryl was released last Saturday as 1 manager of the Twins’ Denver farm club and, tin Sunday, Martin announced he would .accept the offer to manage the Rears. Martin took over at Denver Tuesday. Pontiac Bowler Hits Howe's Best Series Pontiac’s Cliff Thompson set an all-time league high series for Howe's Lanes iTuesday in the Spring Mixed Doubles League when he rolled 268-211-279 for 781. Thompson hit strikes with his first nine deliveries in the final game, only to leave six pins on his 10th delivery. m D—9 THE PONTIAC PRESS. Till KSDAY, MAY 80, 1908 Ailing Defender Inks Bills' Pact BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) - De-, Buffalo Bills, ferislve left end Ron McDole, The American Football who suffered a right shoulder League team also announced dislocation in the next to last Wednesday the signing of regame of the 1967 season, has serve quarterback Tom Flores signed his 1968 contract with the; to a new pact. M-M Boys Add Zip to Giants IAJ0R LEAGUE standings HSU'S A REAL WINNER! Drive the exciting new BMW Car and Driver calls this newest BMW “the most spectacular bargain in the entire spectrum of imported cars I" A Cruising speed of 100 mph. Fantastic roadholding. And more. That’s the latest from Germany's famed Bavarian Motor Works, where racing victories are a 50-year tradition. Recent BMW triumphs include winning the last three races In a row at Spa Francorchamps in Belgium. For the driving thrill of your life, drive this new BMW today! The original M&M l^oys-^ Man- Minnesota nipped Cleveland 1-0,'M*nn«ou tie and Maris—still are around Detroit beat California 3-0' and but the San Francisco (Hants’ ,,. ,, . . . . jw. , „ , t . ... ... . . , Oakland turned back Boston 7-4. nlJsS* act of Mays and Marichal is up- otk'ma staging them . in the initial New ^or^ ^ ankees and Washington league — and doing all right in Washington had the day off. the National League, too. | * * * . Wonderful Willie and Juander-; Mark,hal stopped the Cards ful Juan combined their talents 415 111 .311 10 stopped the on six hits to become the NL’s Wednesday's Results Chicago 3, Baltimore 1 Minnesota 1, Cleveland 0 Oakland 7, Boston 4 Detroit 3, California 0 Only games scheduled. Today's Oamti Washington (Pescual 3-3 and Coleman — i San Francisco I'T J Atlanta 2V* Philadelphia 3 it. Louis Slfc 1 Chicago 6 ' Cincinnati. \ . ft11 Pittsburgh 61a Loi Angeles fiff HoustOh New York again Wednesday night and led first eight-game winner. Mays ■«{ N*" Vork r . , , DP San Francisco 1, St Louis 2. Columbus 3, Richmond 1, 10 lnn< night doubieheader, the Cubs LOB Sart Francisco 7, St Louis 5 2B-— Jacksonville 3, Louisville 0 , . „ A , Brock, Hunt. HR Mays (9). SB Flood.' Buffalo at Rochester, wet grounds aking the opener 9-2 and the S -Cline. Toledo at Syracuse, rain Lillies winning the nightcap 8- Marichal (w,8-2) 9 6 1 1B? s» * pacific coast league _ -a (Koosman 7*2 and Selma 3*0) Oakland at Pittsburgh (Veale 2-4 and McBean 5*3 i or Blass 1-2), morning, 2 Friday's Games I St. Louis at New York, night Cincinnati at Philadelphia, night I Atlanta at Pittsburgh, night Chicago at Houston, night j San Francisco at Los Ang g» *'£V* Cager Arraigned in Marijuana Case Angeles, night Cincinnati spotted Los Angeles a five-run lead, then rallied to edge the Dodgers 6-5. The New York Mets and Pitts-burgh were not scheduled. WINNER OF 8 In the American League, Chicago defeated Baltimore 3-1, 4) A- 25,412. CHICAGO Beck* BWillarm Santo 3b Banks lb Nen lb lJohnson Hundley c Eastern Division Won Lost Pet San Diego 24 1 7 . 585 — Oklahoma City 21 15 . .583 Tulsa Western Division LOS ANGELES CINCINNATI *2,597. " P.O.E. New York ntagsous European delivery for tourists. 5 13 0 Rose rf 4 111 Helms 2b 1 3 Culver p 0 0 0 0 Pinson ab FIRST GAME PHILADELPHIA ab r h bi ab r h bl Phoenix ss 5 2 I 0 Pena ss 2 1 0 o IndianApo! 5 111 TTaylor 3b 4 110 Denver f 4 2 11 RAllen If 3 0 0 0 5 2 2 2 Lock cf 3 0 12 Spokane 3 10 0 Joseph lb 4 0 0 0 Seattle ......... 20 19 .513 7’a 0 0 0 0 Sutherlnd 2b 4 0 0 0 Hawaii 21 22 . 488 81 a 15 112 Callison rf 2 0 0 0 Vancouver 19 20 .487 8Vfc 5 0 3 2 Ryan c 3 0 0 0 Tacoma 16 20 .444 10 ckfnan cf 3 0 0 0 CShort p 1 0 0 0 Portland 15 23 .395 12 Phillips cf 0 0 0 0 James p 0 0 0 0 Oklahoma City 2 3, Denver 15 Holtzman p 4 0 0 0 Hall p 1 0 0 0 Tulsa 2-3, Vancouver 1-7 Tacoma 10, — Portland 1 39 9 9 8 Total 27 2 2 2 Indianapolis 6. Seattle 1 101130003 i * I AP Wirophoto TOP CATCH—It took a tow truck crane to hoist this 162-pound sturgeon, which was caught with hook and 30-pound test line by Alan Kaneble (left) of Big Lake, Minn., while fishing in the Rainy River near International Falls yesterday. Largest sturgeon previously taken in Minnesota by angling weighed 93 pounds according to state conservation department records. With Kaneble, 28, a forester, * are Wallace Pritchard and Richard Bowes, friends who helped him beach the big fish after a 45-minute struggle. _ . h bi To**1 5*0 3 2 Chicago 4 0 2 1 Philadelphia 1 0 0 0 E—T.Taylor, 5 0 0 0 LOB—Chicago 200 000000—2 Pena 2, Lock, James.’ Philadelphia 1 0 0 0 AJohnson If 4 2 3 o Hundley. 3B—Beckert. HR —B.Williams 0 0 0 0 Perez 3b 4 110 (5). S—Pena, Bank* 5 0 10 Bench c 3 111 IP H R ER BB SO’ 2 0 0 0 LMay lb 4 2 2 1 Holtzman (W,4-3) 9 2 2 2 5 6 4 0 0 0 Cardenas ss 5 0 0 0 CShort (L.2-6) .... 4 2-3 4 5 2 1 3 Oak Park Hires Football Coach From B. Harbor in Pontiac mmmmmmmu* Versalles ss 3 110 Pappas p 0 0 0 0 James Popovich 2b 4 0 2 0 RLee p 0 0 0 0 Hall 4 1-3 4 3 3 1 2 Kekich p 110 0 RJohnson ph I 0 0 0 WP—Holtzman, James. T—2:24. Purdln p 0 0 0 0 Kelso p 0 0 0 0 ___ KBoyer ph 0 0 0 0 Pavletich ph 1 0 0 0 SECOND GAME Fairey It 10 10 Davidson p 0 0 0 0 CHICAGO PHILADELPHIA Whifield ph 0 0 0 0 ab r h bi abrhbi McCool p 0 0 0 0 Kesslnger ss 4 0 0 0 TTaylor 3b 4 110 ’ Ruiz 2b I 0 0 0 Beckert 2b 4 0 0 0 Roles 2b 4 0 10 34 5 10 4 Total 38 6 12 5 Santo* 3b ^ 3^0 0 Sutherlnd ss 1 I I 0 has been hired 3S Varsity footinning run scored Banks lb 3 12 0 Lock ct 4 0 2 0 005 000 000 — S Arcia or 0 10 0 Joseph lb 000 0)3 101 — 4 Nen lb 1 0 0 0 White lb Versalles. LOB-, LJohnson rt 3 0 0 0 Pena ss LOS ANGELES (AP) -gb Basketball star Lucius Allen of UCLA, a key player on the Bruins' national championship teams the past two years, was arraigned in municipal court Wednesday on two counts alleging possession of marijuana. # # # The 6 foot 2, 21-year-old guard, along with four companions, will return to court By The Associated Press | together Mike Page’s double June 19 for a preliminary! As far as (he Columbus Jets and Dave Nicholson’s single for hearing. Bail of $1,250 was con- are concerned, Jack Damaska’s ia run jn me eighth inning, tinued. first home run of the Interna-! ______________!_____ Timely Homer Lifts Jets A1 Ratcliff of Benton Harbor The group originally on i last Thursday. Total Two out when Los Angelos Cincinnati -Haller, Available At Los Angeles 8, Cincinnati 12: 2B—Helms, Hundley c 2 0 0 0 Callison Versalles, Parker. Fairly, Rose 2, Bench Hickman cl 3 0 2 3 Gonzalez rf -Gabrielson (2). SB—AJohnson. S— Nye p 3 o 0 H Dalrmple c perez. Regan p 0 0 0 0 Wise P ★ * tional League season came at! was arrested, an opportune moment, i traffic charge,'| ^amas*ca hit it leading off the ninth inning Wednesday night at * * * Richmond, sending the Jets’ en-1 IRHjjH Allen recently dropped out of counter against the Braves into ?12 o hall coach at Oak Park High school but had enrolled for the extra innings. The Jets won it IfllSci?,°° ,^fectiva■SeJ>tern^!;' 1 spring quarter. He still has a 3-1 in the 10th and moved to Blues Moke Office Moves II of ST. LOUIS (AP) Sidney ip PONTIAC SPORTS CAR 467 Auburn Ave. 335-1511 Kekich Purdin ............ 2-3 1 0 ; Billingham .... 2 3 1 .Brew-r (L,2-l) .... 2-3 1 1 ! Pappas ........... 2 1-3 5 5 | R.Lee ............ 2-3 0 0 j Kelso ............ 2 1 0 I Davidson ......... 1 i o ! McCool ..... 0 l 0 j Culver (W,4-3) 3 2 0 WP—Pappas, Kelso, Davidson. I— 6,975. H R ER BB SO 1 1 2 for eight years at Benton Har-jmains ,n doubt. basketball but his future re- ing Rochester. ? 1 Chicago o°o'* o i l*o- ! bor HS, and had an 84-33 mark i 1 PhE-feger. DP-chiclgV 2° Vol-as the baseball mentor for 101 1 1‘Chicago 3, Philadelphia 5. 2B—Pena' seasons. 0 1 Banks. Hickman, Wise. HR—Callison (4). . . , . . . o o sB-T.Tayior, Pena. s-L Johnson. | Ratliff graduated from Ander- 2 o Nye (L.3-5) ...... '7 *8 R4EI4B*s<3 son (Ind.i College in 1950 and -3 io3 w'?|n(w4-D » 4 3 3 2 J,has a Master’s degree from Ball ____Baik—Nye. T-2:3d. A-)8,i28. State (Ind.) in 1954. s Vl/o^i fo Enjoy (jouAy CHOOSE FROM WKCS BIG SELECTION of FUN PORTABLES day a complete restructuring of * * * the St. Louis Blues front office, In the only other game including the elevation of Wil-| Wednesday night, the Jackson-iliam “Scotty” Bowman to the Rockets Sign Hoosier jville Mets defeated Louisville 3- 'position of coach and general ;0 and dropped the Colonels two manager. DENVER, Colo. (AP) — The games off the pace. The Buffa- j * * ★ Denver Rockets announced lo-Rochester and Toledo-Syra-1 Lynn Patrick, former general | He was an assistant coach for [Wednesday they have signed cuse games were rained out. manager of the National Hockey four years at Battle Creek HS.j their sixth round draft choice,1 Although the two teams col- League club, was given the posi- Ratliff led Benton Harbor to Vernon Payne, a 5-foot-10, 155- lected 24 hits between them, Co- tion of managing director of the two football league titles. He will pound guard from Indiana Uni-'lumbus and Richmond were team’s, player development and scoreless until the Braves put farm system. teach mathematics at Oak Park versity. "GO-EVERYWHERE" * PORTABLE TV Lightweight (8Vi lbs.) TV plays indoors or out—AC or battery! Solid-state with 19 transistors, wide-range front speaker, 7" picture ( measured diagonally) with black screen to cut sun glare! With earphone. 114* Rechargeable battery optional. 17-Tr. Portable Radio Save $21.07. Police call, FM-AM-SW-MB bands. Operates on batteries or AC current. Reg. $79.95. 5888 Hitachi Radio-Phono Solid state portable combines AM radio and 2-speed manual phonograph with full-size speaker. 3295 Stereo Automatic Phono Symphonic solid state stereo portable record player with removable speaker. 4 - speed automatic changer. 3995 Portable Tape Player Compact Playmaster cartridge tape player, all-trahsistor solid state. Includes one pre-recorded play tape. Special. ] PERSON-TO-PERSON CREDIT ... • No Down Payment L|| • 90 Days Same as Cash * Up to 36 Months to Pay Craig Tape Recorder This portable tftpe recorder picks up sound perfectly up to 40 feet. Plays on batteries (AC adapter, 5-95i 3995 ^ A DIVISION OF ^AMDtlCAN MUSIC STORES. INC. G.E. Transistor Radio This G.E. AM 8 transistor radio offers excellent fine-tone reception! With case, batteries and earphone. '1 J 69i. 106 N. Saginaw St. - Our 44th Year in Pontiac OPEN FRIDAY 9:30 am to 9 pm SATURDAY HOURS 9:30 am to 5:30 pm PARK FREE in Lot at Rear of Store AUDETTE PONTIAC WILL SAVE YOU MONEY DURING THEIR MAY SALE Frank B. Audette THE GIANT who can really move P0NTIACS, “No Brag — Just Fact” 1968 CATALINA 2-DOOR HARDTOP Hydra-Matic, Power Steering, whitewall tires, 8.55x14, V-8, 400 Cu. In., 290 H.P., back-up lights, 121" wheelbase '68 CATALINA 9-PASSENGER STATION WAGON Hydra-Matic, decor group, dalux* stooring wheel, deluxe wheel covers, foam cushions, P.S., power rear window, tinted glass all windows, 121" wheel base (wide-track) *3323 72 '68 CATALINA 4-D00R SEDAN Complete decor group, deluxe steering wheel, deluxe wheel covert, deluxe seat belts, Hydra-Matic transmission, V-8 400 Cu.ln., 290 H.P., trunk light, foam cushions, back-up lights, 1 21" wheelbase (wide-track). ; 4».7*X- *2778 43 TEMPEST CUSTOM 2-D00R HARDTOP Automatic traps., full decor sfoup, deluxe wheel covers deluxe steering wheel, back-up lights, foam cushions. ' *2544 52 AIR CONDITIONING AVAILABLE ON ALL MODELS AUDETTE PONTIAC, INC. I860 MAPLE RD. (15 MILE) TROY, MICHIDAN fr» •«, >irp.rt) 642-1800 3 Minutes East of Woodward — 2Vi Minutes West of 1-75 — Out of Town Buyers Accepted TY] rm THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MAY 30, 19H8 D—8 Golf Meet Opened to Girls The girls have been included! y^ars of age (as of Sept. 1) are in the National Junior Jayceejeiigible for the local phase of Golf Tournament* which opens the tournament which is slated with district competition in to get under way at 9 a m. at Pontiac Monday June 17. !Pontiac Municipal Golf Course All boys and girls under 18 on Golf Drive. RENT A CAR * ' by the Hour by the Day by the Week by the Month „ by the Year Any time you need a car for any purpose • from a couple of errands to do oj* up to a month's vacation trip-rent a Pontiac, from a Tempest'’to a Bonneville, or a Buick, from a Special to an Electra, from Shelton Pontiac-Buick. Ail Shelton rental cars are new 1968 models, kept in top shape and rarin' to go. And you'll find our rentals most reasonable. * See How Much Lease-By-The-Year Can Save You A lot of car owners could save real money by leasing instead of owning their cars. It might pay you to lease-and drive a brand new ear every year. It depends on the amount and type of driving you do. Stop in and talk it over. We'll show you to your satisfaction whether a lease will save you money — or whether it won't. sheltion PONTIAC • BUICK 855 Rochester Rd., Rochester {% Mila South of Rochester) 6.51 -5500 | Competition Is slated in two divisions — open and novice — for both giHs and boys and the top two in each class will receive a trophy. * * * More Important, the top four in the open division will advance to the regional competition at a site still to be selected. Survivors In the regional round then move on t o Kalamazoo for the state finals July 23-24. The top four in the state competition will then bid! for the national crown at Tulsa’s Shamrock Golf Course! Aug. 19-24. Pro Doug Sanders! will host the junior golfers and! conduct a clinic at the Tulsa course. ENTRY IS FREE Entry in the tournament is free. Competitors may sign upj the day of the event or I preregister by filling out an application blank. The blanks are available at the city course and at the city high schools. | Z * * ★ A pre-tournament is slated for all contestants at 10 a m. June 13 at Carl’s Golfland 1 o n Telegraph across from Miracle Mile. Linksmen Have Twins to Gun for 70 Boswell Blanks Indians Nicklaus Shoots 71 for National Target ST. PAUL-MINNEAPOLIS (4VBoswell is a little wild, so'must have thought he was most he can remember having • In the absence of any of thelmaybe they think he’s throwing dreaming. jin a major league game, hitters doing anything to exgite;at them. So they throw at! There he was, walking off the j He did it all with only one hit, Ithe fans, Clevelahd pitcher somebody, and that’s me.” jOarkland Coliseum mound with a doubling home two in the first [Steve llargan and Minnesota! Cesar Tovar scored from,7-4 lead over the American an(l bringing In two others with [outfielder Tony Oliva supplied j third after the catch by Indianjbeague champion Boston -Red an infield out and sacrifice fly, ATLANTA, (14. (fl — Big fbe dramatics Wednesday night.jfirst baseman, Tony Horton ip Sox. \ ‘ i j B0,T°B. Oakland I Jack Nicklausinot a 71 yfednes-jThe Twins nipped the Indians 1- foul territory, about 50 feet past jt u.sua||y ta|tes the Athletics' day for duffpra around the coun-8 behind Dave Boswell’s three-first base. ja week to score seven runs, try to try/fo beat in a National hit pitching. Golf Da CLEVELAND Boswell ^ ,t MAy# If in-*- a fHrlmon 7b competition. Hargan, Oliva and ★ * were the principals The reigning U S. Open cham- threatened beanball war which niuFp pion fired the one-under-par got nipped in the bud by umpire round on the Atlanta Country,BiH Valentine. Club course in the pro-am tune-| Hargan hit Oliva with a up to Thursday’s start of the At-glancing blow off his batting lanta Classic. Nicklaus set the helmet, and Oliva made a move H.rfl.n p Golf Day standard by beatingto go after Hargan on the tt'r»h PGA champion Don January!mound in the second inning. j Tot*i MINNESOTA ArdPrMl THorton I Simp r DavaIIIIo Hunter, 5*3, started shakily •br h bl 1 Tartabull rf 5 I 2 0 Cmpnerls i Jones 2b 4 I 2 Q Kubiak 2b i Yifrmakl If 3 110 Bnndo 3b 1 H'relson lb 3 0 0 1 Paallarnl 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 k 0 14 4 10 3 Total 3 2 80 ; 3 19 0 3 0 14 ■4 0 0 1 4*0 1 0 f 4 0 0 0 4 110 who had a 74. When it was over, Hargan and Oliva both said they didn’t mean it. “I wasn’t throwing at him,”!H»roan <1,3-51 ul Smith cf 3 12 1 Cater lb _ _ r h bl w’m roy 3b 4 0 10 Rudl If i ooo Ro$*boro c 4000 and had trouble in the ninth in- Kagf.Bgg j 91 i BWg cl 3 0 0 0 i O 1 o - nownro c 4 0 0 0 Hpi shbgr 1000 Kiiiebrew ib 3 o! o fling hut was great in between JndriS* d ? ® - Hun,e 0 0 0 0 Oliva rf 3 0 10 »n Ln (hp PpH l /tnrlis n 4 0 10 Uhlarndr cf 4 0 0 0 dS r,e ot-dl ine Oliver ph 4000 to*'” ih ]i?" Hunter gave up three runs in lUKrTph 3 0 ? 0 SZXIi-'p 2oo? 'be first but only one was TMtlt f®JJ earned. Manager Bob Kennedy 5®»,on ............. 122° , 5 a o i 200 10 0000 of the As came out and talked g -H.r,hbero.r, Kubi.k op seven Jo 10 j. .. ,, . .__, , 1, Oakland I, LOB-Boalon a, Oakland 0000 I to him after Huntei loaded the 5, Y.strY.rmki, Hunter, r. smith. 0 0 0 0 SB Fey, Campanarl,. Bando. SP - Har- .. ----uaMra. raison, R. Smith, Cater. 30 °3 #0 oVo'o« Oakland first baseman Danny Lin'd?,00 L S3 2 S o 0 J 0 LOB-ClayVand’j? X&&tJ Catef dr0Ve 10 f°Ur runS ~ tfi* S& j tS i i ? S 33 7 11 7 SB—Tovar,; said Hargan, “but I'd be mad,! bosw«ii Competitors in National Golf Day play in the next three weeks can win a plastic bag tab from the PGA by beating Nicklaus’ score. [head. * * ★ j Oliva’s temper flared when he ATHLETICS WIN BIG Nicklaus almost eagled theiwas hit, but later he said, "ij OAKLAND DPI — Pitcher Jim par five 18th hole, when he think he did the right thing.(Hunter of the Oakland Athletics! slammed his second shot seven _ .... _ ........... ............... feet form the pin. the putt but still birdie, his third o side where he shot He missed; managed a n the back-a 34 after a 37 on the opening nine. . ATLANTA, Ga. (AP)--Htre It tha Jack Nicklaub-Don January card as they firad for National Golf Day: Par out *) 453 443 454—36 January out 454 543 544—38 Nicklaus out . . 463 542 454—37 Par In 454 344 345—36—72 January in 453 444 354—36—74 Nicklaus In 454 234 444—34 71 Leading Prep Track, Field Performances CAMPING EQUIPMENT DISCOUNT PRICED Milt TINT* 13x10 $119.95 2 Doors and 2 Window? 12x9 $99.95 10x9 $91.59 Both Tent. 1-Door, 3 Window. duty genuine DRI-1 Duck—finest tent fabric made. Waterproof nylon floors. Solf-sdlustln* frames. Screened, lipportd openings. FLEX-AIRE TENTS lino $13380 14*x10*—2 Room Qominl * S 167.50 I.Qkmsss,/ HEATt ila nntaman • 4 Models 3500 BTU$19.95 5000 BTU.....$23.05 3000 to 5000 BTU.$27.95 5000 to 5000 BTU.$30.95 Inflatable Boats 1- MAN.......$15.95 2- MAN......$34.50 4-MAN...... $49.95 6-MAN........$64.95 Aluminum Oars... $3.99 Pump, $1.99 JOE’S nm SURPLUS We Honor MICHIGAN BANKARD 19 N. Saginaw FE 2-0022 100 (10.0) 9.8— Bailee Reid—Ferndale 9.9— Bob Woodruff—Rochester 9.9— Dave Anderson—Blrm. Groves lO.i^Bob Bork—Berkley 10.1— Claude McCethern—P. Northern 10.1— Hardiman Jones—P. Northern 10.1— Tom Atwell—Farmington 10.2— Ed Helton—Clawson 10.2— Jesse Bennett—Pontiac Central 10.2— Bob Zeabit—'Walled Lake 220 (21.7) 21.6— Bob Woodruff—Rochester 21.8— Bailee Reid—Ferndale 22.1— Chris Brown—Farmington 22.1— Dave Anderson—Blrm. Groves 22.4— Bob Baxter—Blrm. Sea holm 22.6— Ed Helton—Clawson 22.7— Ken Hodgson—Hazel Park 22.8— Harold Perry—B. Hills Lahser 22.9— Claude McCathern—P. Northern 22.9— Bill Penoza—Waterford Kettering High Hurdles (18.7) 14.2— Bob Johnson—Pontiac Central 14.3— Tim Black—Madison , 14.5— Mel Reeves—Pontiac Northern 14.6— Bill Penoza—Waterford Kettering 14.8— Russ LaFevre—Farmington 15.0— Den Kirkowski—Brother Rice 15.1— Tim Willis—Waterford 15.2— Sandy Seay—Pontiac Northern 15.3— ^Ward—Birmingham Groves 15.4— Tom Agar-Ferndale Low Hurdles (18.4) 118.9— Bob Johnson—Pontiac Central 19.2— -Tim Black—Madison 19.5— Bill Penoza—Waterford Kettering 19.6— Mel Reeves—Pontiac northern 19.8— Dan Kirkowski—Brother Rice 119.9— Tom Agar—Ferndale ! 20.2—Sandy Seay—Pontiac Northern 20.2— Russ LaFevre—Farmington 20.4— Tim Willis—Waterford 20.4— Mike Phillips—Rochester 440 (50.0) 49.6— Walt Hughes—Blrm. Seaholm 49.7— Fred Grover—Blrm. Groves 50.0- ^iAike Suttorv-MTIford 7 50.0— Bill Middlekauff—Blrm. Groves 150.1— Dave Marr—Rochester 50.1— Rick Brooker—Blrm. Seaholm 50.5— Neil Marzelle—Birm. Seaholm 50.5— Mike Shepherd—Ferndale 50.7— Steve Potrier—Rochester 50.9— Harold Perry—B. Hills Lahser *80 Run (1:S5.t)----------- 1:53.9—Mike Imirie—B. Hills Andover 1:56.6—Bob Baxter—Blrm. Seaholm 1:57.5—Dennis Steele—Southfield 1:57.6—Jim Crosby—Berkley 1:57.9—Jon Costello—Pontiac Central 1:58.2—Brian Edgett—Oxford 1:58.6—Kevin Rea be—Waterford Kettering 1:58.7—Gary Williams—Farmington 1:59.0—Bob Thomas—Waterford 2:00.1—Bennett—Brother Rice Mile (4:16.4) 4:20.0—Dave Galloway—Waterford 4:20.9—Gary Williams—Farmington 4:21.5—Jon Costello—Pontiac Central 4:24.7—Rick Waggener—'R. O. Dondero . 4:25.7—Rick Randall—N. Farmington 4:25.7-LTom Combe—Ferfidale 4:25.8—Mike Koerner—Cranbrook 4:26.4—Jim Gerlchs—B. Hills Andover (4:26.8—Charles Craig—Cranbrook 4:28.0—James Keating—Brother Rice 2 Mila (9:43.1) 9:29i7—Warren Krueger—Hazel Park i9:30;fc»-Ldrry Williams—Farmington j 9:34.5—Mike Koerner—Cranbrook ! 9:39.4—Dave Galloway—Waterford j 9:46.1 —Butch Fenlon—Waterford 9 48.9—Larry Hurst—Pontiac Central 9:49.2—Mark Boch—Birm. Groves 9:49.7—Keith Wattles—Rochester ! 9:52.5—Gary Williams—Farmington 9:54.3—Bruce Evans—B. Hills Andover 880 Relay (1:29.9) 1:30.1—Birmingham Groves 1:30.4—Ferndale 1:30.6—Berkley 1:30.7—Rochester 1:31.4—Pontiac Northern 1:31.7—Country Day 1:31.8—Royal Oak Dondero 1:32.3-West Bloomfield 1:32.5—Farmington 1:33.0—Bloomfield Hills Andover Mile Relay (3:17.7) 3:23.0—Birmingham Seaholm 3:25.7—Pontiac Central 3:25.7—Ferndale 3:28.1—Royal Oak Dondero 3:29.0—Berkley 3:29.D—Bloomfield Hills Andover 3:29.4—Birmingham Groves 3:29.9—Waterford 3:30.2—Brother Rice 3:30.5—Oxford Shot Put (4V 8V*") 57*1 Vi"—Gene Pankner—Water. Kettering 56'2Vi"—John Grayson—Southfield 53#9Va"—Steve PIluelich—Hazel Park 527Va"—John Wallace—Cranbrook 52’ 3"—Eddie Morgan—Ferndale * 52’ V’—Bob Sanford—Milford 52’ 0’’—Alex McKinnon—Rochester SO' 8’’—Charles Yakemonis—Ferndale 49'9V4"—Dave Payne—North Farmington 49’ 3’’—Chuck Gallup—Farmington Pole Vault (14’ 0") 14'7’’—Larry Biskner—Waterford 14’V’—Welt Terry—Pontiac Central 13’6*’—Bob Glushyn—R.O. Kimball 13’3’’—Dennis Davis—Pontiac Northern 12*9"—Tim Mart In—Waterford 12’6’’—Roger Butler—Pontiac Central 12’6’’—Tom Farraday—R. O. Dondero 12'6"—Dave Bush—Farmington 12'6’’—Greg Wood—Birm. Groves Long Jump (22’ 3Vi") J2TO"—Rbine Garcia—P. Cinti’AI " ~l 22'4Vi"—Bob Johnson—P. Central 22’ 0"—Rufus Hannah—P. Northern 2V 11"—Horace Davis—P. Central 21' 9"—Chris Brown—Farmington 21 ’81/*"—Larry Adams—P. Northern 21'8Vi"—Tim Black—Madison 21 '614"—Larry Biskner—Waterford 21' 5"—Nell Blackner—Waterford 2V 5"—George Higgins—R. O. Kimball High Jump (6*4") 6'8,/a"—John Mann—N. Farmington 6' 2"—Tim Foley—B. Hills Andover 6' 2"—Rick Sherrel—Pontiac Central 6'1Vi"—Mel Reeves—Pontiac Nprthern 6' 1"—Dave Evaul—(Southfield 6* V}"—Bob Hartwick-»-R. O. Kimball 6’ Vi"—Tim Black—Madison 6' 0"—Jon Van Wagner—Novi AUTO... GOOD DRIVERS - SPECIAL RATES PERSONAL PROPERTY... HOMEOWNERS PACKAGE POLICIES Fire — Liability — Theft Jewelry — Furs—Cameras BOATS AND MOTORS - AIRCRAFT BUSINESS... INDUSTRIAL AND RETAILERS PACKAGE Burglary—Glass - Liability Fire—Compensation Boiler and Machinery BONDS - MALPRACTICE fE 4-1551 306/RIKER BLOQ. PONTIAC LIFE... MORTGAGE INSURANCE Saving.—Investment— Retirement Ho.pitaliiation “* Family Plan Lifa Incoma Protection SICKNESS AND ACCIDENT GROUP . OVER 35 YEARS OF DISTINGUISHED INSURANCE SERVICE H 527 UTTENLOCHER AGENCY INC H. W. Huttonlochor — Max Kami — Jama* Huttanlochar — Richard Huttanlochar — Chariot F. Hatter ’SPECIALS Trade Winds. crank-up hard-top camper catalina '• Slsups up to 6 • Doublu wings plus convsrtlblu dlnsttu for slseplngl • 42-In. gsllsy with rang* and sink, space for optional heater, leeboxl • Color-harmonized Interior! • Rugged welded iteel tramel Convenient t.rmil Crank-up top^N for quick, i-.ll easy set-upl JOHNSON AND CHRYSLER BOATS AND MOTORS PAUL A. YOUNG, Inc. 4030 Dixie Hwy. MARINA ON LOON LAKE Opon Daily 9-6, Mon.-Thurt. ‘til 9 and Sunday. 10-4. Call OR 4-0411 memorial DRY SUE ends SATURDAY FOR YOUR FUR IN THE SUN $]2°o Windbreakers In Many Colon .....from Slacks £- jfqo Bright colors in Dacron and wool. .from IJ Mock Turtle Shirts .. from *600 Gaucho Shirts . . . . . from! $695 Sport Shirts .... . . . from $595 Bermuda Shorts .. i. from *700 Sport Hats |........from *5 Sport Caps ....a... from $395 Saginaw at Lawrsnc* Downtown, Ponfiac Open Fri. 'til 9 " WE PAY THE PARKING 2X1 West Maple Birmingham, Mich. Open Fri. 'HI 9 JUNE — jULY — AUGUST CLOSED 1 P.M. ON WEDNESDAY fYEAR NYLON eee 6.50x13 blackball tubeless plus $1.81 Fed. Ex. Tax and old tiro Brand New ALL-WEATHER BE Whitewalls only $3.00 more • Your beat tire buy la • Extra mileage Tufayn • Track tested for 100 ita price range Rubber mile* at 100 miles par hour Any Ot These Sizes ONE LOW PRICE V.7S X1S 7.78x14 8.28x14 Blackwall Tubelaea SPRING SPECIAL WHEEL BALANCE AND TUBELESS VALVE $|»* Per Wheel “GOODYEAR NATION-WIDE ■NO-LIMIT* GUARANTEE” No limit on mantht. No limit on milat. Na limit as to road*. Na limit as to spaad. For tho antira lifa of tha traad. ALL NEW GOODYEAR AUTO TIRES ARE GUARANTEED Ofainat da-faet* in workmanl^P.And materials and normal road hazard*, axcapt rapairabla puncturas. This fuarantoo dot* not axtand to auto tiros us ad ah tniska or racing tiro* and tiro* stamped ‘Second,’ ‘Blemish,’ or ‘NA.’ IF A OO00YCAR TIM FAILS UNDER THIS GUARANTEE any of mars than 88JN Goodyear daalors in tha United Stats* and Oanada will, at our axpanta, aithar repair or make allowance On a comparable now lira baiad an arlginal traad dosiin depth remaining and^ Goadyaar’s printed “Predetermined Price far Adjiitt-mant” currant at tima at adiustmant, which price will falfty raprotant tha actual retail nailing prioa at tha oamparahla tiro it time lot adjustment. AREMCO TIRE CO. 4520 HIGHLAND RD. / IIlock W ext of Pontiac l.ukc ll PONTI ACS > TEMPESTS • FIREBIRDS Low Mileage And Demonstrators Out Th Go! rALSO ..-.. EIGHT 1967 MILEAGE Pontiacs • Tempests WHICH MUST BE SOLD HOW! Tremendous Savings! EVERY PITCH COUNTS! This is the time of year that you'll hear some great pitches. You'll see "Price-Ads" by the hundreds, all very tempting ... But Don't "SWINtG" For A Bad One! Some are high*. . . some are low . . . ■592$ j&s? Some are outside, inside, clipping the corners, fast pitches, curves, drops; screwballs or sliders... but, COME ON In and GET THE STRAIGHT PITCH ... From Our Team Of Experts On The New 1968 • FIREBIRDS • TEMPESTS • PONTIACS YOU'LL SCORE BIG NOW At Pontiac. Store 65 UNIVERSITY DRIVE Downtown Pontiac Turns Out Tennis Players I Eye Injury May End Ring Career NEW YORK(AP) — The boxing career of light heavyweight contender Johnny Persol of New York appeared over today. HAMTRAMCK (AP) — *3ane( Hpxie-coached players have The 27-year-old, ninth-ranked!‘Peaches'’ Bartkowicz, w h o won 293 U S. tennis cham-175-pounder is recpvering in a learned to hit her backhand pionships in 31 years and hospital from an eye operation shot with two hands, has there’s no end in sight, for the restoration of a.detached graduated from Jean Hoxie’s I But Peaches, recently named New Products From Hoxie's Factory retina in his left eye. Every minute and a half...someone calls AAMCO Ey.ery week AAMCO satisfies more than 10,000 transmission problems. You get free towing, a free road-check, fast, efficient service—most times in just one day. And with AAMCO, your transmission can be protected by over 500 AAMCO Centers coast to coast. Every minute and a half, someone proves . . . You can trust your transmission to AAMCOt | tennis factory. to the U.S. Wightman Cup I But Mrs. Hoxie, who by hoi* learn, ranks as the best. She jown admission has been coach-' learned to hit her backhand ing for ' about 100 years," has shot with two hands when she some more fruit ^n the. vines, jwas just a toddler because she * 4 * wasn't strong enough for the I "I’ve got a girl, Janet "lshot h [Lendman, 10. who hits the ball / P e a * h f * "on ™re as hard as a man." says Mrs. “urnKamen s than rest- “ Hoxie in her machine gun style'5 d ^.ave ,‘° *ay s*e was., he delivery. "If I told her to knock TO Mrs; H°x,e 1® ... lil u 'I, , I had other great players but a brick but of a wall, she 11 try r . h\ - , , ... ,,, “ . 11 none -that has had the opto knock it out. _________________, -2 . .. . , I ... .1 iportunity at the international j Mrs. Hoxie s base is Ham- ]£yej ^at Peaches has had." jtramck, a predominately Polish-1 \jjss Bartkowicz, who won the American toiqmunity of 50,000 wimbled0(n junior tule at ,5 completely surrounded by and tbe us jg an(j under girls’ Detroit. The main industries are sjngies and doubles titles three Chrysler Corporations largest years running, has reached the tramck’s public tennis courts trovert but she’s like a savage are crowded with young|on the court. When there’s a players, some sent, by richibad point, Plums will make a fathers, to learn the demanding!remark. Peaches will just give Hoxie style of play. lyoualook. Peaches! younger sister , “But these kids will win more Plums, is 13 and still develop-.championships than the country *n8 / 'club set, who are exposed to "Plums is an extrovert,” said [more tennis. They know the Mrs. Hoxie. "Peaches is an in-[game but they aren’t hungry [ assembly plant and tennis. Winnebago Motor Homes & Pick-Up Campers F. E. Howland Sales 3255 Dixie Hwy. 673-1456 World's Largest Trantmiuion Specialists 150 W. Montcalm BETWEEN Oakland and Baldwin DAILY 8-7, SAT. 8-2 334-4951 SEA RAY BOATS Factory to You Prices LAKE ORION MARINA M24, N. of Pontiac I age of 19. |cup MATCHES Now a sophomore at Miarriott College in Florida, Miss Bartkowicz is in London for the Wightman Cup matches. "She’s been under pressure ’.hat would make your hair icurl,” recalls Mrs. Hoxie. "But you’ve got to be hungry. That’s why I coach here in Ham-tramck instead of some country club. These kids don’t get tennis at home.” But they soon learn. They take i factory worker stamina and use it to endlessly slam a tennis ball off a board wall until Mrs. Hoxie decides "it’s time for a little competition.’’ Then it’s off to the tennis wars, gnd the championships. Summer afternoons Han- AP Wire photo SIC ’EM TIGER! — Janet "Tiger” Lendman, a 10-year-Hamtramck tennis coach Jean Hoxie. Players coached by old with a cannonball shot, is the newest protegee of veteran Mrs. Hoxie have won 392 national titles. 'Mono'Slows Distance Ace Jim Ryun May Miss Two Major Meets TOPEKA (AP) - It Is Improbable that he will be able to run in the NCAA track and field championship meet and there Is question whether he can compete in the,' -National AAU Championships. The NCAA, meet is June 13-15 at Berkeley arid the AAU championships at Sacramento June 20-21. The University of Kansas junior said physicians Tuesday positively diagnosed his illness * as infectious mononucleosis and recommended at least two more weeks of complete rest. “I just don't want to go into these meets without any preparation," Ryun said. "And the doctor said there is no sure way of knowing when it will be okay for me to start running again. "It might be in two weeks and it might be longer." GOING UP Ryun will trav.el to Flagstaff, Ariz., this weekend. He will spend the summer there getting acclimated to an altitude of 7,500 feet, comparable to Mexico City, site of the 1968 Olympics. An official of the U.S. Olympic Committee said Tuesday Ryun could be given a bye into the Olympic Track and Field trials at Los Angeles June 19-30 if his present illness keeps him out of the twt> qualifying meets. Ryun had1 been expected to compete in both the 1,500 and 800 meter races in the Olympics. DOUBLE YOUR MONEY BACK IF THIS TIRE FAILS ON YOUR VACATION M ONTGOMERY WARD Now you can really enjoy your vacation this Summer. Because if your RIVERSIDE H.S.T. Tire should fail during this period, at your option, Wards will refund double your money back or install a new H.S.T. Tire and refund your original purchase price. Refund will be made without question when you return your H.S.T. Tire with your sales receipt plus the sales card on or before October 1, 1968. Offer excludes repairable punctures which will be repaired FREE of Charge by Wards. 36’MONTH RIVERSIDE® HST $ 20 6.50-13,Tubeless Blackball plus 1.81 F.E.T. Designed for long, hard driving and today’s fast expressway, speeds. Special rolled treed edge gives top traction and stability. Strong, 4-pJy nylon cord body resists impact damage and punctures. Guaranteed to'wear for 36 months. Blackwall Tubeless Sizes Reg. Price Each Plus F.E.T, Each Blackwall -Tubeless Sizes Reg. Price Each Plus F.E.T. Each 6.50-13 J20* 1.81 8.25/8,00-14 8.15/7.10-15 $27* 2.35 2.36 7.00-13 6.95/6.50-14 $23* 1.92 1.95 8.55/8.50-14 .8.45/7.60-15 $29* , 2.56 2.54 7.35-15 6.40/6.50-15 $23* 2.05 2.05 8.85/9.00-14 8.85/9.15-15 $31* 2.85 2.97 7.35/7.00-14 $24* 2.06 8.00/8.20-15 ■ - $31* ‘ 2.97 7.75/7.50-14 7.75/6.70-15 $25* 2.19 .2.21 •With trade-in tires oft your car. Whitewalls $3 more each. ■■ . ALSO AVAILABLE IN STATION WAGON SIZES Designed for heavier load capacities. Contains 50% stronger nylon cord body.__ TUBELESS BLACKWALL SIZES PRICE EACH PLUS F.E.T. EACH 7.75/^50-14 $27* 2.56 1.25/8.00-14 $>** 2.71 8.15/7.1015 »a** 2.75 1.45/7.60-15 'With trtdtin tint off your cor. Whilowollt S3 mon. ~ NO MONEY DOWN FREE MOUNTING S VALVE STEMS era | ^ FREE With all Riverside H.S.T. tires v dsi ■ ■ fir ; ? '-Wm ■"’777'....■ ' THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1008 7^ 8K 7T D—ff Power Boaters Await Flag at Sylvan Lake l ^Dr!v^TnttlT-^avr^I^ Wn'ro rolaUrntinn Qnriit/l rnm* 4m An* kio The power bokts are coming to Sylvan Lake next week. The . 52nd annual regatta sponsored by the Oakland County Boat Club will mark the green flag for American Power Boat Association races in Michigan and Ohio this summer. ★ ★ W The first heat of the 48-cubic-inch inboard class at noon Sunday, June 9 will bedhe start of sanctioned power boat racing this season in Region VI (Michigan and Ohio). As usual, the Oakland County Boat Gub’s popular regatta is expected to lure a full fleet of approximately 70 boats. ★ * ★ Everything but the unlimited inboard class is planned and a significant Increase in the big seven-litre boats is predicted. The 48's run about nine-foot in length and reach 65-70 miles per hour during the 1% miles lap at Sylvan Lake. DOUBLE The seven-litres are double that length and, appropriately, achieve usually twice the speed. Each heat is five miles, or three laps, on the Sylvan course. In between the two extremes are the 145-cubic-inch, 150, 225, 266 and 280's. Two heats are planned for each race with the Chalks Up Golf Ace Chris Jenkinson of Union Lake accd the 135-yard, No. 7 hole at Morey’s last week. He used an 8-Iron and carded a 39 for the round. competition expected to finish around 4:30 p.m- A A A Following the final race and before the presentation' of trophies will be a water skiifig exhibition by the Lake Oakland Ski Ljcmons. ★ * * This is planned to include a kite act, barefoot skiing, trick skiing and mixed doubles exhibition. Several former state champions are slatpd to perform with the Ski Demons. There is no admission for the races. Refreshments will be sold on the boat club grounds along Ferndale Street. The Sylvan Lake Police and the Water Safety Division of the1 county sheriff’s departments are cooperating with the boat club. , * *' Among the more prominent drivers expected are Ed Morgan of Trenton, a three-time national champion, last year's high point leader Les Brown from Worth, III , and the highly competitive 'Ahne Lee Deuschle of Fort Thomas, Kans. BLOSSOM TIME sHlE today. FraV gift*. Fro* rafrash-menti. Daily door prizes. Enter our "Win YourMonoy t Back" contest. shelton PONTIAC • BUICK • OPEL • 855 Rochester Road, Rochester (Vs MtU South of Rochester) 651-5500 WANT TO SELL LAWN MOWERS, POWER MOTORS, BOATS? USE A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD - - - TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 332-8181. OPEN DAILY 10-10; SUN. 11 -6 IHiSiP j llfACTfON GUARANTEED' W Ififl MONEY BACK, i, | jijj' iihll.Jl.yU .ill I. MtoB !l. hlPJ THUR., FRI., SAT. mca A Division of theS. S. Kresge Company with Stores throughout the United States, Canada and Puerto Rico Big Discounts on Building Muterials COMBINATION STORM AND SCREEN DOOR Our Reg. 21.88 1777 Spring loaded three hinge design. Heavy tubular hollow aluminum, bottom vinyl sweep, reinforced corner. Screen and glass inserts, interchangeable. Fits 30”, 32” and 36” openings. M&ll Hi 1 PINE SHELVING 1 ALUMINUM COMBINATION WINDOW Triple track aluminum storm and screen windows. Both storm and screen included. Fits all standard sizes. 1x12.... 1 Th% ft. 1x8 .. . .. 14c ft. 1x6 . . 1 .. IOc ft. 1x4 . . . . 6!/2# ft, § 2x4's | 6-ft......59* § 7-ft...„..69* 1 8-ft......76* Add Beauty, Privacy and Protection to your home with READYMADE WOOD WEAVE FENCE 8 Ft. Section Mw 9 Ft. Post * 342 each 3' 8” Wide, S’ 6” High GATE .... *19“ , Everything needed to beautifully fence your home or patio — or for scores of other project# which will make your home a more satisfying'place in iwhich to live. Architecturally pleasing; engineered durability. Readymade Wood Weave fence adds, value to your honiQ1 — ease to your living. BY WIATHER-SEAL, INC. ALUMINUM SIDING SAVES PAINT COSTS INCREASES HOME VALUES Weather-Resistant Color-FaSt Finish Only 22*0 PER 100 SQ. FT. Wo*«s u,n. j| 4»x7* || 4W UNFINISHED LAUAN MAHOGANY 422 J66 89x693"x59 Shed at a Low, Low Price! STEEL UTILITY SHED Nutwood Goldtone Congo Lauan Vinyl Walnut Cinnamon Birch ^Natural Birch Brasilia Suntan; Traditional Cherry Plantation Walnut Imperial Cherry.. Harvest Pecan 2.98 2.98 4.98 5.68 6.68 3.68 3.66 4.96 5.67 6.35 6.35 6.96 6.27 6.27 6.27 6.27 The utility shed that gives you more. Sturdy aluminum frame, 50” double doors, and flat roof for more room. Rustproof. Assemble with screwdriver in minutes. <96 PLASTIC FINISHED PANELING—IDEAL tor BATHROOMS, KITCHEN and PLAY ROOMS 4x1 4x8 PINK VENETIAN LACE S.tT BLUE VENETIAN LACE 1.11 WHITE VENETIAN LACE 1.11 3 Days Only COMBINATION WHITE ALUM. DOOR Discount Priced 34 Spring loaded hinge design. Reinforced corner. Scalloped glass inserts. Wool pile weather stripping. Decorative black hinge. Strap and handle. Karly ' American Bottom panel fits 30”, 32” and 36” openings. OASDIN MVIDISI EASY-TO-USE 26"x8' PLASTIC PANELS p' 2.75 Dugphle plastic panels have many uses indoors and outdoors. Choose from three popular decorator colors: White, Green, or Y el low. 26"xl0-ft. . f . . 3.75 26,,x12-ft. ^. v 4.76 Asphalt Shingle ROOFIHG 2401b. T71 Self Sealing. Covers 100 sq. ft. Redwood Railroad Ties 4x6x6-Ft. $266.°ch WHY REPAIR BUY A NEW WOODEN SCREEN DOOR 2’8”x6’J" Size Shoe Molding........... 2'/2c ft. Quarter Round .... 3c ft. 3A”x%” Quarter Round .... 4c ft. %”x%” Cove Round........4c ft. 3/4”x%” Outside Corner... 4c ft. 2Y4 Tear Drop Casing....9c ft. 1 Vs Tear Drop Stop....... 4c ft. 3” Tear Drop Base...... 10c ft. Charge It Take advantage of : -this low, low price. Replace those worn- -i out screen doors t; now! Can be trimmed to fit most door- ■: ways. j’0”x6’i” ...8.67:; Our Reg. 81.11 GARAGE DOOR Light and sturdy fiberglass gla#s garage door. 9x7’ size adapts to most lVz car garages. White only. . Special sizes and other colors available at low prices. Charge It CEILING TILES Adds to the value, appearance and comfort of your home. Tiles are sound-absorbing,. smooth surfaced, easy to install, PIN HOLE ACOUSTICAL TILE ..... *12chach 4 Ft. X 8 Ft. PLYWOOD G.I.S. y4*»........ 3.22 ya”......... 4.22 Vi”...,......-5.22 %»»fS.........6.96 FIR PLYWOOD CUT-OFFS 13”x60”xY4” 6 5 c up 24”x48”xV4” 96c if f| P i 48”x48”xV4” 1.92 18”x96”x3/4” 3.24 I - j j 24”xst6”x%” 3.96 fill H Our Reg. 147.77 Fiberglass GARAGE DOOR OPENER REQUIRES NO INSTALLATION ON CAR - CAN BE USED ON ANY CAR FINGER-TIP CONTROL rf-l With All Safely Features JUST PUSH S BUTTON - - (ASIO stsu*^ ■ OPEN AND CLOSE YOUR DOOR FROM YOUR OWN CAR 16’x7” *122. CHAIN DRIVE $9997 SCREW DRIVE 729” BEAUTIFUL NEW KENTILE FLOOR TILE BOX OF 45 SQUARE FEET REDI-MIX CEMENT $115 M Per m Bag 45 square feet to the box! Special low Kmart discount priced! Kven at these low price, .you can nhientf it! GLENWOOD PLAZA-NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD 1 1 D—0 TUB PONTIAC 1‘KKSS, THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1968 Complete I Supplies Genuine Red Cedar CLOSET LINING 40-Foot Bundle $795 re-Finished V-Groove Lauan 4x7 Sheet-Honey/4xT Sheet Coca *2.88 1x6 Roof Boards ....SVzcl.f. 2x4’s —T-foot Lengths.49c ea. Formica Vanities.....$39.95 READY-MADE WEAVE FENCE EASY TO ERECT PREFABRICATED SECTIONS OF REDWOOD FENCE 4’ high *10-40 5’ high *12.95 6’ high $13.75 Standard Length is 8 ft. *2.99 Ye" 4x8. %" 4x8. Vi" 4x8. e A e Interior — Exterior — Semi-Gloss SutpnM CEILING TILE Washable PANELS for Kitchen & Baths 9.?3 Memorial Day Salt Fri., Sat. i Sun. $g5« PLASTER BOARD 1.45 1.65 1.90 WHITE ALUMINUM COMBINATION Pre-Hung FENCE POST *1.10 CEILING TILE PLYSCORE %"........$3.00 W’ Ext.... $4.15 %” P.T.S. . $5.10 Wood SCREEN DOORS $2695 SC80 FORMICA COUNTER TOPS $395 1 ALLEN LUMBER CO, i Running Foot Free Delivery 7374 Highland Rd. at Williams Lake Rjd> 4-0316 Airport in M-59 1‘lnxn OPEN SUN. 10-3 INSTANT CREDIT Sub-Midget Race Events Set at OCSC ! Q uarter-tnidget competition ! will return tb the Oakland 1 County Sportsmen’s Club on a regular basis starting Sunday. ! Time trials start at noon with the first heat race scheduled for 2 p.m. ★ ★ ★ “The competition is designed for boys and girls 6 to 16 years old,’’ said Ed Kruder, president of the Michigan Midget Racing Association. “Engines will be limited to three horsepower stock models.’’. Kruder, who lives at 6219 Waterfront, Waterford Township, said, “We are trying to revitalize quarter-midget racing at the sportsmen’s club. There is a fine tenth of a mile oval, |but it hasn’t been used much in the last four years.” TWO CLASSES READY TO ROLL - This trio of local driving teams is expected to compete Sunday in the quarter-midget competition at the Oakland County Sportsmen’s Club. They are (left to right) Charles Parlier and son Matt, Art Wilfong and son Jim, and Ed Kuder and son Larry. The sons do the driving. Qualification trials start at noon. Cogdill to Speak at Hi-White Fete Detroit, Lions’ football player [Gail Cogdill will' be the guest There will be competition ln sAPeaker,at the A^letic two classes every other Sunday jAssociation cerem^.es Tburs- through the summer. Novicfe class cars will have carburetor stops limiting speeds so that the cars take 20 seconds or more for one lap. j Hall to initiate the Association’s I athletic season. Following a parade at 1(Ta.nr, the athletic association will Horse Racing Slowpitch Has Four-Team Tie A (our-wav^e exist, today in the Walled Lak^ Industrial Slowpitch League after Imperial Molding rallied last night for a 9-5 win over Copper Mug. The win knotted the two teams with Wixom and Mills FToducLs at 4-2 in the league’s “A” Division. Wixom topped Mills, 9-6, in eight innings Tuesday. WWW Imperial’Molding’s 11-hit attack sparked it to five runs In the sixth inning and one In the seventh to overcome Copper Mug’s 5-3 lead. The losers managed only one hit in the final five innings. ★ ★ ★ Also last night, Carpentry En> gineering won a 7-0 forfeit from Kimberly North. Northville Entries TONIGHT'S ENTRIES 1st-MOO claiming Pact) 1 Mliai Regan way Marl's Pride Ellen B. Way Roadbusfer Bud's Valentine Mona Gold Hal's Spirit Meadow Tima and—If00 Claiming Trot; 1 Mile: Selby Volo Bedford Belle Princess Arnold Stella's Denis# Indian Colonel Tronla Lass Anna Ensign Bill G. 3rd—$800 cond. Pact; 1 Milai Big Dominion Krishna Dee Brook Rita Knight . Cottonwood Blitz Float Jolly | Rich Lady Al's Knight Out Reigning Court 112 The “B” cars run with open throttle. ★ * ★ “We hope to have enough cars entered to run two four-lap heats and one 10-lap feature in each class,” said Kuder. “Proper car handling and safety will be emphasized. “This program will be an opportunity for youngsters who have a quarter-midget in the’ family, but know little about them, to participate in com-petition under proper guidance.” Dates of the other , . . ,-_________ ... - ....ight meet at 11:30 at the township 4»h—siooo claiming pact; i Mite * Dart laiaN.la lot Cardinal Part hall and the ceremonies will bejRouii. h.i followed by 9 baseball and soft-I^Vorb.0/*""’ ball games, student strike. Stokers Blank Toronto CLEVELAND (AP) — The Cleveland Stokers scored two first half goals within three minutes to defeat Toronto Wednesday night 2-0 in a North American Soccer League game before 4,639. WEDNESDAY'S FIGHTS By Tin Ajsociated Prats com- SALT LAKE CITY, Utah—Don Full- petitions are June 2, 23; July S&'K' 21; Aug. 4, 18; Sept. 8, 22; andTlas*vegas,'tJev. Oct. 6, 20. Josedala Jet Arrow Iowa General Mary Carol Bit O'Gold 5»h—$1000 Cond. Paca; 1 Mila: Guy Reed Vera's Boy Edgewood Rex Sportster Rose Jayzoff Trefoil Kathy Captain Knox Rick Adios 4th—$1500 cond. Pace; 1 Mila: Hal's Guy Iona Bay Russet Creed Trudy Direct Pixie Dew . Special Express Aceway Stymie Chief Heather 7th—$2000 Cond. Tret; 1 Mile: Tommy Dorwood Lord Doyle True Valley Chris Dares Highland Pick Hickory Way Baron of Amboy Ith—$2000 Cond. Pace; 1 Mile: Lovergirlnik Top Gunner Cindy's Pride Copper Star Bobby Axiand Chief Andrew Sweep Up Dreamboat Relco 9th—$1100 Cond. Paca; 1 Mila: Adios Rip Splndletop Joan Senator Knox Mary's Joy Chuckle Boy Kahla's Grattan Doctor Cash Miss Mighty Quick 10th—$1200 Cond. Tret; 1 Mile: Argo Leo Julia iTr Ruler Phantom Colby Hard To Catch Kit Cab Rene Macias. 130, Bl,nd* Ann Margaret Adios Be Ready WHEN HOT WEATHER HITS! buy now... Hiring Cheirabts ligutlc ’68 savings MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES OFFER YOU THE YEAR'S BIGGEST Savings On Factory Installed During Our June Sale! ill to a a Deal with the Dealer Who Treats You the Way You Like to Be Treated! Be sure to stop in and see the automobile salesmen who write deals with* the sharpest pencil! Matthews hargreaves Satisfaction Service Savings 831 Oakland at Cass, Pontiac Michigan's Largest Volume Chevrolet Dealer FE 5-4161 Northville Results WEDNESDAY RESULTS Hng c . Pride 112 Nezhmat Real Lucky 117 Bump You 112 On a Stag# 112 Tigar Feathers 112 Cast Iron 112 Jacoiaena 107 3rd-62400 Claiming; 1 Mila: Tops in Pops 110 Route Road 115 Tie Go Go 110 Safa LU 113 Papadaro 113 Geelong 110 Worthabay*’* 115 Mr. Flops 117 4th—$$4M Allowance; 4 Furlongs: Minnie Marlah 104 Quean Sandra 113 Bien Mark 107 Motor Miss 111 Ocaans Ahead 114 Big Mouth Sam 114 I Run for Life 111 ! Sth—$2500 Claiming; 4*/: Furlongs: I Foxviaw 115 Spaca Colonal 115 jRas Paddock 115 King Carene 112 Tiger's Tune 115 Saline River 115 Wise Goods 110 Lady* Beth 110 4th—$5000 Allowance; 4 Furlongs: Dear Port 105 Silver Joey 115 Wise Issue 110 Amber Song 112 Tennessee Tom 120 Court Rule 115 James Shot 115 Mlnoma's Baa 115 Riptida Day 105 Maize 'n' Blue 112 7th—$4500 Allowance; 4 Furlongs: Hark the Herald 115 Taka Silk 115 Harvey's Pal 110 Step In Spaca 107 Old Sober Sides 115 Royal Senor 115 Sallv Tee 110 Ith—$15,000 Added Handicap; 4Vb Purlonat Carol's Witty 113 Naat 'n' Sweat 113 Tabbit 113 Hava Nice Day 113 Lyreb 113 Vicki's Choice 113 Polynesian Dr'm 104 Shenan 113| Anxious Age 113 Be Cagey 113 9th—$3500 Claiming; 1 Mila: William Stevens 115 Rob's Belle 110 Nepesslng 113 Esscay 110 Itsawonder 115 Vat's Kismet 111 Me Gemini 110 Hazel Park Results WEDNESDAY RESULTS 1st—$2500 Claiming; 4 Furlongs: Vivacious Blonde 18.00 7.40 3.20 Miss Decathlon 3.80 2.40 Whipplero 2.80 2nd—$2500 Claiming; i'/i Furlongs: Princa Buster 5.20 3.40 3.00 Toliovee 4.30 3.40 Lightheaded 3.40 Daily Double: (4-2) $95.00 3rd—52400; Claiming; 4 Furlongs: Latonia Mite 4.40 3.20 2.20 Ole C. O. 3.80 2.40 Cherion Lark 2.20 1st Race-$1700; Claiming Pace; 1 Mile: j4th—$3,000; Claiming; 4 Furlongs: Satin Grattan $.80 4.40 3-60,Gypro 13.00 6.20 3.40 Of' AflcKlyo 3.20 2.40 Brother Brud 4.00 4.40 Our Valley______ _ ....... _ 3-80 Kanis Road 6.40 1 5th—$3100; Claiming; 4Vfc Furlongs: _.. ... _ .. Carach 9.20 3.60 2.80 710 22 2 f! Uncle Cy 2.80 2.40 280 ?• fi1 H*rd:Rqck-Hannah 4.80 2nd Reca—$1000; Conditioned Pace; Mile: Cara Sorella Bourbon Way Delta Defense DAILY DOUBLE Cara SOraHa (1) Paid $29.40. Raca—$1000; Conditioned Pace; Mile: Fanny Will Whirlawav Pick Nature's Tune Race—$2200; Conditioned Mila: Pohlman Hanover Veda Little Lad ... <•*} Mh—*IM0» Claiming; t Furlong.: SJU.. 111 ,ndlsuzy M 4,80 3.00 I.S0 I Jr's Plato 3.60 3.20 j Lucky Punch 3.M 1 nn i«i! Oglloiwl Twin: (5-4) *21.30 > 00 3 00 J 7th—>3100; Claiming; tVt Furlongs II.ZU | Amrlor Til in on a Trot; I Quarter Til “YI Ipso Facto • AAorra XT I ini 10.60 4.60 3.40 4.00 3.20 Mecca Flight 4.401 1.00 4 00 3.«o c,»im,"o; 1 mho: 4 00 2 60 Wind 8.00 4.80 3.00 9‘2J|i Sword Lancer 3.60 2.80 ” I T1 ^AlnHiar C 3a0a ^ J Sword Lancer iffiJi - •"»' W '[ni^CMilmlng, , Oleymite 8.40 3.80 3.00! ^ValTer *‘PriceL 22 00 760 5 40 Sir Rex Pick 3.20 3.0o J.urk®v Foot Road 5.20 4.20 Tho Yankee Qtrl 3.60 ^ _................. 7.40 $2100/ Conditioned Pact; 1, Twin Double: (5-4-1-2) $144140 6.80 3.60 2.80: 4.40 4.00 3.60! Raco; Mila: Locket Kit's Truax R. B. Mo PERFECTA: (4-8) $37.20 Ith Raca — $3500; Conditioned Trot; 1 Milo: Demon Sam 7.80 3.80 3.00 Success Zora 6.00 3.80 Alshire's Abbe 4.40 8th Raco — $23,858; The Matron Stakes; Three Year Old Pace; 1 Mile: Batman 7.40 4.00 4.80 Rum Customer 3.40 Bye and Large 9tt» Race — $3500; Conditioned Pace; 1 Mile: Sunglow 12.60 6.00 3.40 Rythm Billy Starflite Sue 5.20 10th Race — $2200; Claiming Handicap Paca; I Mile: Mighty Knox 9.20 4.40 3.00 Tropical Wind 12.60 5.60] . Some Abbe A 3.20 i day PERFECTA: (!•!) $82.60 Ducat Sales Rise for Grid Broncos DENVER, Colo. (AP) - The Jo [Denver Broncos have sold 25,890 season tickets for their home ___American Football League sea- !6° |*jj son starting in an expanded sta dium this fall, General Manager Lou Saban announced Wednes- Hazel Park Entries Saban also announced the Broncos now have an entertainment director, Jess Gerardi, and will have a 60-girl dancing FRIDAY'S ENTRIES 1st—$2500 Claiming; 6 Furlongs: .. . , ... _ mop Bucket ti2 Biend of French no unit, to be called the Broncettes Our Leprechaun 110 Walsh Pride 11? c e , . Liviana 112 Royal Glamour ii? tor performances at home Cadet Com'ndar 117 Trusty Eva 110 Ragsan Uj games. THE RAIN TIRE RY.. UNIROYAL •Blackwells SIZE TIRE 7.35x15 $16.50 1.38x14 16.50 7.75x14 17.50 8.25x14 18.50 8.55x14 19.50 SALES TAX 1.89 1.81 1.89 2.06 2.40 |r Original Equipment on The Finest 1968 Automobiles! THE WILDEST OF THE WIDE OVAL TIRES Tiger Paw (SECONDS) i RED ir WHITE 0-70x14 24.95 0-77x14 Flm U0 M.T. /j, .-j F-70x14 22.50 en tM ri.T., r E-70x14 21.69 nm'tiWHf.. KING TIRE CENTER PI 3-7068 31 WEST MONTCALM, PONTIAC, MICH. WADRBARIERS FOR MRIROTAL TWER MW ARP WIDE DVALTIRM HOLIDAY SPKCIALS ;$688 Fun for the Rack Yard Badminton Set $eso Reg. 6.75 O Croquet Set $4||95 Reg. 13.75 III Jarts Reg. 7.95 Volleyball and Badminton Set $095 Combination Reg. J 1.00 M Tether eaan Balls 8495 Basketball S1T95 Backboard I Goal | f Volleyball Sat $4 A95 Reg. 25.00 19 Pogo Sticks $£95 Reg. 8.00 3 Stilts $E95 Reg. 8.00 9 Frisbee QOc Reg. 1.00 OO SPORTING GOODS 24 E. LAWRENCE, FE 2-2MI IN DOWNTOWN P0NTIA0 f!B Service DEAL YOUR CENTER AUT01MH WTIIS Every one of our mechanics is a graduate of the VW training cantor. That’s why you gef fash skilled workmanship an ovary service job. Drop off your VW any timo, day or night. Ask for our free coupon booklet entitling you to a special, no-cost get-acquainted offer. YOUR CENTER JUIIOMIHI mnn We're so nice to come bock to TELEGRAPH ROAD Just north of Sgolro Lake Rood 338-4531 1) T11K. PONTIAC' PKKSS, I 111 KSDAV.MAV :w, MAR - memorial. ~naiu^ AARON In loving mornory of Mrs. Dolia Aaron, who passed away August 9, 1165. Dear Mothar, you ara not forgotten Though on earth you ara no more, Still In memory you ara with us Aa you always wara bafore. Sadly missed by Husband Robert Aaron and family, and Lester Bennett and family.' ABUN In loving mamory of John A. Ablin Sr. who passed away June I, * 1955. I have only your mamory, dear father, To remember my whole life through, Bui the sweetness will linger forevep As 1 treasure the Image of you. Missed by children — Margrete, Oolores, Daisy, and Rick. ADANCZYK HAl L-l AWSON In loving memory of Mary Ball and George C. Lawson. , \ No pen can write, no tongue can tell My sad and bitter loss, But God alone has helped so wall i To bear the heavy cross. Sadly missed by sister Elizabeth' and brother John. BARNES In loving memory of Deanna, who passed away July 17, 1964. The depths of sorrow we cannot tell Of the loss of one we ' loved so well; And while she sleeps a peaceful sleep Her memory we shall always keep. —Sadly missed by Mother, Dad and Brothers. BARBE In loving memory of David A. Barbe Who passed away June l1 ____ away February 26, 1965. Till memory fades and life departs. You live forever In our' hearts. Sadly missed by husbatKf Joseph, sons Edward and Joseph Jr., and family._____ \L~ ADLER In loving memory of ChaiNes A. Ader, who passed away Jdly 7, ’ 1962. We cannot clasp your hand, dear Husband and father Your face we cannot see; But let this little token Tell that we still remember thee. Sadly missed by Ermle, Auston, Reba, Robert and Tracy^____* ALLEN In loving memory of our loved one, Alma Allen, who was taken , from us Oct, 26, 1956. No pen can Write, no tongue can tell Our sad and bitter loss, But God alone has helped so well To bear theheavycross. Sadly missed by the family. ADLER 1959. From our happy home and circle God has taken the one we love. Borne away from sin and sorrow To a better home above. Sadly missed by Ermle, and children.___ ANABLE In memory of Jeanette Anable, i who passed away in July, 1950. Time tufns away the edge of grief But memory turns back every leaf. Sadly missed by sister, Marguerite and family. ANDERS In loving memory of my husband j Herman L. Anders who passed! away July 31, 1965, and my Son> Warren who passed away October1 7, 1965. Time turns away the edge of grief Bbt memory turns back every leaf. Sadly missed by Myrtle Anders.__| ANDERSON In loving memory of Arthur Anderson, who passed away June 2, 1956. 7 ANDREWS A „ , ! In loving memory of Lance Cpi. Dale C. Andrews who passed away May 6, 1968: Peaceful be thy sleep dear son, It Is sweet to breathe thy name; In life we loved you dearly, , In death we do the same. Sadly missed by mother, brothers and sister.___________________ ANDREWS tn loving memory of Wesley R. Andrews who passed away Dec. 29, 1966; Just when hit days seemed brightest, . . . Just when his hopes seemed best, God called him from amongst us To his eternal rest. Sadly missed by wife, sons and daughters.______________ ARCHEY In loving memory of Wilma A. Archey who passed away Dec. 25, 1967. The depths of sorrow We cannot tell, Of the loss of one we loved so well. And while she sleeps a peaceful sleep, Her memory we shall always keep. Sadly missed by Beulah, Mahlan and Families. ARMSTRONG In loving memory of bur son and brother, Cpi. John A. Armstrong, who passed away January 25, 1945. Somewhere In France, In a soldiers grave, Lies our dear son, among the ----brave,______________________ He never shunned nls country sr call, But gladly gave his life, his all, He died the helpless to defend A faithful soldier's noble end. Sadly missed by Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Armstrong & Family._____ ARNOLD In loving memory of Alfred E. Arnold who passed away June 26, 1966. The depths of sorrow we cannot fell, Of the loss of one we loved so well. And while he sleeps a peaceful sleep. His memory we shall always keep. Sadly missed by Mrs. A. E. Arnold nllv 1966. You're not forgotten brother, dti Nor ever shall you be; As long as life and memory\LA«i We shall remember thee. /A/ Sadly missed by Sisters Loretta, Carol, Ruth Ann, and ,flyse and Brother Don. BARBE In loving 'tneWiory of Harriet E. Barbe who passed away May 9, 1955. 1 * Dear mother, you are not forgotten Though on earth you are no more, Still in memory you are with us As you always were before. Sadly missed by her Children —j Loretta, Carol, Ruth Ann, Elyse and Don. BASKETTE In loving memory of Eugene Baskette who passed away " January 5, 1968. Time turns away the edge of grief But memory turns back every leaf. Sadly missed by wife Ella and daughter Gail. BAUMANN In loving memory of Wallace E. Baumann, who passed away on February 27, 1945. His smiling way and pleasant face. Are a,pleasure to recall; He had a kindly word for each and died beloved by all. Some day we hope to meet him, Some day we know not when, To clasp his hand In the better land, Never to part again. Sadly missed by family and friends. BAXTER In loving memory of our dad Calvin C. Baxter who passed away October 4, 1956. You're not forgotten father dear, Nor ever shall you be. As long as life and memory last, We shall remember thee. Sadly missed by his son Calvin Jr. | __and Henry J. Baxter._____ BEALE In memory of William Loyd Beale,, who passed away on May 30, 1960. A wonderful father, husband, and aid. One who was better, God never made; A wonderful worker, so loyal and true. One in a million, that person was you. Just in your judgment, always right, Honest and liberal, ever upright; Loved by your Jriends and all whom you knew,” A wonderful father, husband was you. Sadly missed by wife Ruth and children, Marlene, Larry, and James. BEAMER In loving memory of Gerald S. Beamer, who passed away December 26, 1964. The depths of sorrow we cannot tell, Of the loss of the one we love so well. And why he sleeps a peaceful sleep, His memory we shall always keep. Sadly missed by Dottie and Children. BECKER, WILLIAM H. AND MAUDE T. In loving memory of our Mother, Maude T. Becker, who passed away Sept., 5, 1962 and our Father, William H. Becker who passed away April 2, 1961: Because God knows your work was 'oer Your children taught and grown He called you both to come and dwell ~ Where no more work is done, Where the golden sun does never set And the skies forever blue 'Tis there we hope in God's good time, Dear Parents, to be with you. BEUTLER In loving memory of Samuel Beutler who passed away Nov. 2/, 1959. A loved one from our midsf Is gone. The voice we loved is sfill, A place Is vacant in our home Which never can be filled. We loved him, yes we loved him. But the Angels loved him more. And they have sweetly called him To the yonder stflnlng shore. The Golden Gates have opened, The gentle voice said "come", I And with farewell unspoken He calmly entered home. Sadly missed by his wife -- Mary, Children and grandchildren. BIGHAM ~ L In loving memory of our Father] and grandfather, Lloyd L J Bigham, who passed away August 25, 1963. How tittle we knew, whe we awoke that morn What., sorrow the day would foretell; For it's hard to part with the one you love Without a last farewell. We think of you in silence And often repeat your name. What would we give to hear your., voice, And see you smile again. Some may think we have forgotten When at times they see us smile, But little they know, the heartache That smile holds all the while; So while you rest in peaceful sleep; Your loving memory we'll always keep. Sadly missed by Children and Grandchildren. BICKER STAFF In Loving memory of David Bickerstaff, Who passed away August 30, 1966. Dear Dad, you are no forgotten Though on earth you are no more, Still in memory you are with us As you always were before. Sadly missea by Wife and Family. BICKERSTAFF in Loving memory of Private . Hugh Bickerstaff, who passed away January 16, 1945. Til Memory fades and life departs You live forever in our hearts. Sadly Missed by. Mother and ■ BRANCHEAU JR. In loving memory of our dear son Ray Brancheau Jr. who was killed November 24, 1962. We do not need a special day To bring you to our minds. ' I For the day we do not think of j you 1s very hard to find. If all this world were ours To give, we'd give It, Yes, and more, to see The 4ace of our dear son, Come smiling through the door. Nd one knows the silent heartache j Only those who lose can tell; The grief we bear in silence, For the one we loved so well. Someday, sometime our eyes shall The face we keep in memory; And God will link the broken chain. Still closer when we meet again. —Sadly missed by Mother and Dad. BRENNAN In loving memory of Jeanetla M. Brennan who passed away June 25, 1965. The depths of sorrow we cannot tell. Of the loss of one we loved so well. And while she sleeps a peaceful sleep, Her memory we shall always keep. Sadly missed by Husband, Mother, Brother, Sons, Daughters and Grandchildren. DOWNS In loving memory of Cecil Downs who passed aWay March 21, 1954. We miss you dad, and days are long; It's not the same since you've been gone' Sadly missed by wife Lorene, family, and grandchildren. POWNS, KATHARINE E 8. LOR- CAMPBELL WOOD In loving memory of husband and father, Thomas Campbell, who passed away Sept. 79, 1967 and our son and grandson, Sat. Law rence J. Wood who was killed in Vietnam, Sept. 17, 1967. Sadly missed by wife Vlvetta and children, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Evans and families; mother and father, Mr. and Mrs. Leland Wood and grandmother. CAMPBELL In loving memory of Thomas F.1 Campbell, who passed away April 9, 1956. You're not forgotten father, dear, Nor ever shall you be; As long as life and memory last, We shall remember thee. Sadly missed by his daughter, Etta and son Kenneth Campbell. CASCADDEN—CHAMBERS H A WK INS-CAR MICH EAL In Loving memory of Grandma and Grandpa Cascadden and Son Hilton. Grandma Chambers and her grandaughtersM Jeanniene, Ruth and Gloria (Chambers) Hawkins, and Samuel Carmicheal, Father of Larry Paul. They are waiting by the river, Just across the silent stream, Where syyeeK flowers are evqn blooming And the. banks are ever green. Sadly missed, by William T. Tefend Sr. Family of Larry Carmichael. ng r father Mr. aand Mrs Otis and sister Margaret Hill. They are waiting by the river. Just across the silent stream, Where sweet flowers are ever blooming And the -banks are ever green. Sadly missed by Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Craig and family. CRAM, GEORGE A Who passed away May 17, 1965: Your memory is a keepsake With which we'll never part, Though God has you in His keeping We still have you in our hearts, Sadly missed by wife, Daughters, Son and Daughter-in-law. CRENSHAW In loving memory of Irvin T. Crenshaw, who passed away March 30, 1963. No Pen can write, no tongue can tell, My sad and bitter loss, But God alone has helped so well To bear the heavy cross. Sadly missed by Thelma Crenshaw. ING R Often a lonely heartache And many a'silent tear Rut always a beautiful memory Of the ones we loved so dear.<*.. Sadly missed by: children, grandchildren and greatgrandchildren. DUNCKEL In loving memory of my^Father Alfred O Dunckel, who passed away March 26, 1954. Your presence Is ever near us, Your love remains with us yet, You were the kind of a father Your loved ones would never forget. Sadly missed by daughter Marion Dorothy and family. DUNCKEL In loving memory of Alfred Dunckel who passed away March, 1954. Days are growing shorter, Years are passing by, Soon I'll be with you, In the near by and by. Sadly missed by wife Laura. DYE FOSTER In loving memory of Clarence a Foster who passed -away Feb. 28, 1961 and Nellie Foster Who passed away March 8, 1968, . They are waiting by the,river, Jusl> across the silent stream, Where sweet flowers are ever blooming And the banks are ever green. Sadly missed by granddaughters Sharrbn • and Beverly and Families. FRANCE In loving memory of Ernest S. prance who passed away July II, 1957. Your presence is ever near us, Your love remains with us yet You were the kind of a father Your loved ones would never forget Sadly missed by Beulah, France and family. FRY -In loving memory of Robert L. Fry, who passed away December 1^66 thy face, Haaiand, who paft*ad\aw*y April 28, 1959. The depths of Sorrow we cannot tell, Of the loss of one we loved so And while she sleeps a peaceful sleep, Her memory we shall always keep. Sadly missed bv children and grandchildren. HALE In loving memory of B. Frank Hale, who passed away on January 21, 1949. The lace we loved is now laid low. His loving voice is still; The hand so often clasped In ours, t. ies now in death's cold chill. We often'-slt and think of him. When we are all alone, For memory it the only thing, Thai grief can call Its own. Sadly missed by family and friends HALE lovir of Wiliian lily. BREWER In loving memory of our dea Husband and Father, James C. Brewer, who passed Away November 7, 1963. We'll always remember your laughter And we'll never forget your dear face; But we know you're resting In a peaceful heavenly place. Sadly missed by your family. BIGHAM In memory of my husband Lloyd Bigham, who passed away BREWER lovirlg memory of August 25, 1963. A wonderful memory, more precious than gold, / Of a husband, whose worth can never be told. Alone, unseen, he stands by my side, And whispers, "Don't grieve, death cannot divide." ' Looking back, with memories, along the path we trod, I bless the years I spent with him, And leave the rest to God. Sadlyjnissed by wife Edna. BJORK In loving memory of our dear brother, TEC 5 Conrad B|ork, who passed away December 16, ODr^„c 1952 — Sadly missed by Father, sisters and brother Richard Dale Brewer who passed away Sfpt. 18, 1966: , Although your gone, your nof forgotten We talk about you all the time. And some day Dear, in the hereafter We'll meet again, and stay together. There'll be no tears or sorry of our parting, We'll all be happy in God's Paradise. Sadly missed by Mother, Father, Grandparents, Brothers and Sister. BJORK In loving memory 1 of our dear mother, Grace B|ork, who passed away April 13, 1957. Sadly missed _by husband and children. BLACKBURN In' loving memory of Robert D. Blackburn who passed away August 29, 1966. It broke our hearts to lose you, But you did not go alone. For part of us went with you. The day God called you home. God gave us strength to bear it,' The courage to take the blow, , But" what it meant to lose you No one will ever know.1 When evening shadows are falling, And we sit here all alone, To our hearts there comes a longing If you could jitet come home am Sadly mf ssea by C"h 1 1 d r e n 7 Grandchildren and Family^ BECKMAN In loving memory of our Sons, Palmer, Howard, Warner Jr., Until memory fades and life departs. You'll live forever in our hearts. Sadly missed by\Aunt Marion and __family. BLACKBURN ,. In loving memory Of my grandson, Robert Blackburn-- who passed For giving us you for a while. You showed tremendous courage, The sun shone thru your smile. Sadly missed by your grandmother, Laura Dunckel. BLACKBURN In loving memory of Robert D. Blackburn who passed away August 29, 1966. Our lips cannot tell how we miss him, Our hearts cannot tell what to say, God alone knows how much. we miss him, In a home that is lonesome today. Sadly missed by Mother, Father, Sister and Family. loving memory of our dear son, Dennis R. Brooks, who passed away. May 15, 1964. God took him twme, it was His will-But in our’ hearts we love him still His memory is as dear today As in the hour he passed away | We often sit and think of him When we are all alone For memory is the only friend That grief can call its own. — Sadly missed by Dad, Mother, Sisters, Kay and Kyle. * BRUNEEL In loving memory of our beloved daughter, Kimberly Ann Bruneel, who passed away, November 18, 1965. A bud that the Gardner gave us, A pure and lovely child, He gave her to our keeping, To cherish undefiled. But |ust as it was opening To the glory of the day. Down came the Heavenly Gardner And took our flower away. Sadly missed by mom and daddy. BRUNEEL In loving memory of our beloved sister Kimberly Ann Bruneel, who passed away, November 18, 1965. The depths of sorrow we cannot tell, Of the loss of one we loved so well, And while she sleepy a peaceful sleep. Her memory we shall always keep. Sadly missed by Kevin, Raymond and Sandj. _ BUCHHEISTER, FRED J. In loving memory of Husband,1 Fred J. Buchhelster who passed away August 19, 1967: No pen can write, no tongue can tell My sad and bitter loss But God alone has helped so well To bear the heavy cross. -Sadly-___missed —by___Loving___wife Ethel. CAVERLY In |oving memory of Melvin Cairerly who passe away Sept. 9, 1939 I sigh sometimes to see thy face, But since this cannot be; I'll leave thee to the care of Him, 'Who watches thee and me, Sadly missed by Mother, Brothers and Sisters. CAVERLY * In loving memory of Merrill Caverly, who passed away March 30, 1950. Dear husband, out of sorrow Your absence has brought to my heart, Have grown fragrant flowers of memory, To bloom all the years we're apart. 1 Sadly mlsse Sadly missed by WJfo. grandchildrei CAVERLY CUMMINGS * In loving memory of Merrill: KIRCHMEYER Caverly who passed away March TINSON 30, 1950. ! ■ jm You're not forgotten father, dear, Ttor ever shall you be; As long as life and memory lath I shall remember thee. __Sadly missed by Kenny, Mona. CHRtSMAN In 'loving memory of Myrtle M. Chrisman who passed away March 17, 1967. Dear Mother and Wife, you are not forgotten, Though on earth you are no more, Still In memory you are with us As you always were before. Sadly missed by Husband George M. Dorothy, Katheleen, George R. CROOK In loving memory of Penny Sue Crook (Lynch) who passed away December 12, 1964. Peaceful be thy rest, dear mother, It is sweet to breathe thy name, In life I loved you dearly, - in-death. I da the. .same. Sadly missed by son Ricky Lynch. CROSS In memory of Freda Fay Cross, —who pAs&ey Wife and Family. I sigh sometime But since this cannor be. I'll leave thee to the care of Him, Who watches thee and me Sadly missed by his wNe Delphine . F'V- . . ...... FULCHER In loving memory of Ethal Fulcher, who passed away Dec. 1951. Your presence is ever near us, Your love rpmains with us, yet, You were the kind of a Mother Your loved ones would never forget. Sadly missed bv Husband and Children. FULTZ In loving memory of Buster J. Fultz who passed away Jan. 25, 1967; I dream of you, dear loved onth . And see yopr smiling face And know that you are happy In your Father's chosen place. Sadly missed by the Fultz Family. FURBY In loving memory of my Mother,’ Emma B Furby, who passed away June 20, 1936. Time turns away the edge of HALLETT RUMPH In loving memory of my husband Bert W. Hallett, who passed July 10, 1967. Also my Niece, Phyllis J. Rumph who passed away April 15, 1964. Sadly missed by wlfa and Aunt Ethel. HALL In loving memory of Bella Hall, who passed away August 24, 1963. -in- our home she 11 fondly remembered, Sweet memories cling to her name, Those who loved her In llfo sincerely, Still love her In death lost the same. Sadly missed by the Osborn family:_____ loving memory of Ava Steele Hale, who passed awqy on January 9, 1954. Through suffering, she breathed not a murmur,' For the • Comforter stood by her-side And whispered: '‘Fear not, I am with thee, With me shalt thou ever abide." On the river a pale boatman hastened, She heard the soft dip of his oar; Then from earth and sorrow He bore her, Across to that beautiful shore. Sadly missed by family «and friends HALLENBECK In memory of Howard E . Hallenbeck, who passed away March 30, 1967. ----- Your presence is ever near us. Your love remains with us yat, You were the kind of a t\psband and father, —-Your —loved forget. Sadly missed' by wife, daughters, grandchildren. would But rrv Sadly and GARCIA In loving memory of Pete S. Garcia who passed away January 17, 1966 Dear Brother, out of the sorrow Your absence has brought to our hearts Have grown fragrant flowers of memory To bloom all the years we're apart. Sadly missed by brother, sister and families. EDSON In loving memory of L. D. Edson who passed away June 4, 1966. Time turns away the edge of grief But memory turns back every leaf. Sadly missed by his Wife, Mothes**GAVETTE loving memory of Minta Gray, who passed away, Feb. 2, 1966. I sigh sometimes to see thy face, But since this cannot be, I'll leave thee to the care of Him, Who watches thee and me. Sadly missed by the family, Mr. and Mrs. Aubrey Spark*, and family, ten Though on earth you are no more; ! Still in memory you are with us As you always were before. -Sadly missed by their children and families. In loving memory of Gilbert ‘Collins who passed away February 26, 1961 Your presence is e iver neai r us. Your love remains with us yet. You were the kind of a father, , Your loved ones would never forget. Sadly missed by w ife and COMPTON In loving memory of Alford J. Compton who passed away December 23, 1965. So many things have happened Since you were called away; So many things I shared with you If you could have only stayed. I cannot bring the old days back Your hand I cannot touch; But I still have precious memories Of the One I loved so much. — Sadly missed by your wife, children a*td grandchildren. memory of Robert D. Cushing who passed away December 28, 1966. The Lord is watching over you Your star still shines above. We sadly miss you dear, Still shed our tears of love. Gone but not forgotten, When night Is drawing near. Our candle glows out in the dark, j To let you know we're here. God has taken you from us. But not our memory of you. I sigh sometimes to see thy face But since this cannot be, I'll leave you in His care. Till we all will meet again. Sadly missed by your father, mother and sister._______________ DAVIDSON In loving memory of Julia C. Davidson, who passed awey. Sept. 12, 1960. Dear mother, you are not forgotten Though on earth you are no more, Still In memory you are with us As you always were before. Sadly missed by daughter* and their families. and Faamlly. AUBERT, HENRY In loving mamory of Henry Aubert who passed a way Oct. 19, 1964: Till memory fades and life departs. You live forever in our hearts. Sadly missed by wife June, children, Peggy, Charlie, Bob., 8* Pam, and grandchildren. AUStThTFLORO In loving memory of Mother, Father and sister, Anna B. Austin who passed away Dec. 31, 1959, Charles H. Austin who passed avfray Nov.' 3, 1964 and Edith Floro who passed away Sept. 3, 1962. Today recalls sad memories Of loved ones gone to rest And the ones who think of them today Are the ones who loved them best. ___Sadly__missed__by—ciLi l d r e n , grandchildren, brothers and sisters — Beatrice, Blanche, RacheJ and Cjeorge. BADER In loving memory of Maude and James Bader Your presence is ever near us, Your love remains with us yet. You were the kind of a parenl, Your loved ones would never forget. Sadly missed by AAr. and Mrs. Lee Harris and Mr. and Mr*. B. Crowe. BAILEY “ In loving memory of our dear husband and fatherr Franklin (Merle) Bailey, who passed away January 17, 1966. Love And Remembrance Last Forever Sadly missed bv wife Mildred, daughters Patricia, Muriel, Natalie And Sandra, Sons-ln-Law and Grandchildren. BAKER...... , „ ... A In loving memory of Keith a. Baker wno passed away March 8, 1968. . ‘ ’ , The pearly gates were opened, A gentle voice said, "Come." And with farewells unspoken, He gently entered home. Sadly missed by wife DeVona, children Debora, Michael, ,Mark and John, -__ BAKER Beckman who passed away some years ago: No pen can write, no tongue can tell Our sad and bjtter loss, But God a tone has helped so well— To bear the heavy cross. Sadly missed by Father, Mother, Brother and Sisters. BECKMAN In loving memory of Floyd and Arthur Beckman. They passed away some years ago: You're not forgotten Fathers, dear Nor ever shall you be; As long as life and memory last. We shall remember thee. Sadly missed by, Children. BEGGS In me.myry, of Anna Begas, who passed away October 13, 1963. Dear mother, you are not forgotten. Though on earth you are no more, Still in memory you are with us As you always were before. Sadly missed by daughter, __Marguerite and grandchildren. BEJJSLE In loving memory of our mother and grandmother. Rose May BelJsle, who passed a way June'27, 1962 Your presence is ever near us. Your love remains with us yet. You were the kind of a Mother, Your loved ones_____would never forget. Sadly missed by her 3 daughters, 12 sons and grandchildren. BLAKELY + BELLENHUMER In loving memory of Susan Morris mirHupicTFR FRED J Blakely (Mother), who passed ^UCHHE^stJ away Dec. 21, 1962, and Nancy “ || jfiljfijfi Morris Bellenhumer (Sister), who passed away Nov. 28, 1966. The time turns away the edge of grief, But memory turns back every leaf. Sadly missed by family of the — deceased V, ON SHINE In memory of my dearest mother, BULL sisters Eva and Bea and brother Arden. Time turns away the edge of grief But memory turns back every leaf. Sadly missed by daughter and . sister, Ruth. loving memory of our Father, Fred J. Buchhelster who passed away August 19, 1967. You're not forgotten Father, dear Nor ever shall you be; As long as life and memory last I I shall remember thee. Sadly missed by Daughter and grandchildren. BELL In loving memory of Madeline Bell who passed away July 9, 1966. Till' memory fades and life depart*, You] live forever in our hearts. Sadly missed by husband Tamlly. _ BENTFIELD In loving memory of Lawrence R. Bentfield who passed away January 12, 1968.. can write, no tongue can BOATRIGHT In loving memory of Howard B. Boatright, who passed away May 14, 1951. No pen can write, no tongue can tell, Our sad and bitter loss; But God alone has helped so well, To bear the heavy cross. Sadly missed by Wife and Faml- .Jy.____ BOATRIGHT Ih loving memory of Howard B. Boatright who passed away May! 12. 1951. Dear farther, you are not forgoften, Though on earth you are no more, Still in memory you are with us, As you, always were ±>efore. Sadly missed by daughters, June, Roberta, Patsy and families. BOOTH frr iov 1 ng nmemory oT Nettte Boottr (DaDa), who passed away, May 9, 1968. Ffom this world of pain and sorrow, To the land of Peace and res}, God has taken you, Dear DaDa, Where you have found eternal rest. Sadly missed by all her family. n loving memory of Keith A. Baker wno passed away March 8, 19o8 Till memory departs* fades and life You live forever In our hearts. Sadly—missed by—mother and father, Mr. end Mrs. Ora Baker. tevlng memory of Mary ft*Alli The . depths Of sorrow we- cannot tell, , Of the loss of one we loved so well, • 'sleep, ' Hfcr mfmury we shall always keep Sadly missed by husband, children and grandchildren. BALL T*r~‘ ~ . In loving memory of Howard c. Ball, who passed away, Feb. 16-1966. The depths of sorrow w* cannot tell —Our-sad -and bitter loss, But God alone has helped so well To bear the heavy cross. Sadly missed by Wife — Jackie and C hHdren — Gary_and Lorry BERG In loving memory of Arthur L. Berg, who pased away January 13, 1968. "*.» • You lef( this world of sorrow And are free from pain and harm. And now rest In peace and comfotl* tn the blessed Saviour's arms. Sadly missed by His Wife, Children and Mother. BERG In loving memory of Julius Berg - who passed away on October 29, 1965. Treasured thoughts or one so dear Often bring a silent tear; Thoughts return to scenes long past Time rolls on but memory lasts. Sadly missed by his Wife and V Children and all of the Berg family. _ , B E ROOT In loving memory of Caroline Bergo who passed/away In 1921 BOWDITCH-FLIPPIN In loving memory of Lucille Bowditch and Virrlle Flippin who. passed away April 4, 1958. We dream of you, dear loved ones, And see your smiling face: And know that you are happy In your Father's chosen place. Saoly missed by Mary and George fa and Howard Bergo who passed away In April', 1925. Today recalls sad memories * tell, loved so the loss, of one WWI, And while he Sleeps a pf» -' ^fu« sleep, \ % . - HIA memory We shall always keep. Sadly missed bv hl| family, Of dear ones gone to rest; And the ones who think of them fodayr ' / Ar-e the ones who loved the best,' Sadly missed by daughter Ethel Ter»ry and cnildren. ^ BERQUJS1 ’ ' " ...T- _ • ■ j In loving ’memory of Ruby J. Berquist who passed away - Nov. 8, 964; and Hilding J. Berquist, who passed Aw-’y Ma'ch 5, 1967. Your presence Is eVer near us, Your love retrains with us yet; You were the-kind of Parents yoyr loved Ones would never forget Sadly misled by Junior, JoN«fc, Carroll and Families. Bowditch and family^ BOWSKI In loving memory of Audrey K. Bowski who passed away Nov. 11, 1967: Your gentle face and pallent smile, With sadness we recall You had a kindly word for each, And died beloved by all. The voice is mute, And stilled the heart. That loved us well and true. Ah! Bitter was the trail to part, From one so good as you, You ard, not. forgotten, loved one, Nor will you ever, be As long as life and memory lasts, We .will remember thee. We miss j'ou now, our hearts are As time goes by, we miss you more. Your loving smile, your gentle face. -No one can fill, your vacant place. Dearly missed by Mother, Daddy __and Tina. BOYL ~Tn loving- memory ^r my dear husband, Leo S. Boyl, who passed away Nov. 14; 1966. I seem to see in the soft dim light, A face I loved the best; And think of Him when the sun's last rays Goes down In the far off west, rmlss yeu do less as time goes by Than I did on the day of your going; For absence tan never close the \ttoor of my heart Anti The tamp of fpy love Is still glowlftg. Your heart was the Iruesi In all In loving and everlasting memory of our daughter, precious* Lori Frances Bull, who passed away. God called to Heaven June 29, 1965. A bud that the’SGardner gave us, A pure and lovely child, He gave Her in our keeping, To cherish undefiied. But iust as it was opening To the flory of the day, Down came Heavenly Gardner And took our flower away. Sadly missed and always remembered by Mom and Dad._________^___ BURDER In memory of Ada E. Burder, who passed away, January 17, 1965. Till memory fades and life departs, You live forever In our hearts. Sadly missed by husband and ^children._ BURT In loving memory of Mildred Burt who passed away May 30, 1966: The depths or sorrow we cannot tell. Of the loss of one we loved so —weffr—------ And while she sleeps a peaceful sleep, Her memory we shall always keep. Sadly missed by her husband and son. BUTLER In loving ' memory of Martin But lor, who paSsed away Feb. 20\ 1962. Till memory fades and life - departs, . You live forever tn^ourtiearb. Sadly missed by Wife and Family. Campbell who passed away /une, 1966. The depths of sorrow we cannot tell, of the loss of one we loved so. well, And while she sleeps a peaceful sleep, Her memory we shall always keep. Sadly missed by her husband and family. CAMPBELL In loving memory of Pvt. Chester Campbell, who passed away October 30, 1944. I drram of you, dear loved one, And see your smiling face. And know that your are happy In your Father's chosen place. Sadly missed by his mother, Violet Campbell, sister Etta, . brother Kenneth, In loving memory of our husband, father, grandfather and greaF grandfather, Allen Cooley, who passed away Oct. 29, 1962. You're nof forgotten dear, Nor ever shall you be; As long as life and memory last, I We shall remember thee. Sadly missed by wife — Mable, children, grandchildren and great- grandchijdren.__ COON In loving memory of Adrian R. Coon, who passed away Jan. 27, 1965. » I sigh sometimes to see thy face, But since this cannot be; I'll leave thee to the care of Him, Who watches thee and me. Sadly missed by his Wife, Bernice M. Coon. COOPER In loving memory of Horace and Charlotte Cooper, who passed away November, 1960 and December, 1965. Dear Mother and Dad: 'Til memory fades . and life departs. You live forever in our hearts. ; We think of you dear parents, | And see your smiling face. And know that you are happy, In our Father's chosen place. j Sadly missed by your chNdren. _ COSMA In loving memory of our clear husband and father, Ernest Cosma, who passed away April 3, i960. A __ Although it is 8 long years Since, you passed away and our DAVISON In loving memory of our Mother,; Venus and Father, Frank; Davison. . So many things have happened Since you Tjofh were catted away.—\ So many things we shared with; you. If only you could have stayed. We cannot bring the .old days back, Your hand we cannot touch. But we still have precious memories Of the ones we loved so much. Deeply missed by your daughters, Jone and June. DAWSON In loving memory of Clarence G. Dawson, who passed away two years ago March 22, 1966. Dear husband and father, out of sorrow • Your absence has brought to our hearts, Have grown fragrant flowers of memory. To bloom all the years we're apart. Sadly missed by wife and daughter Gertrude and Dorothy DEAN VAN NATTER In loving memory of William C. Dean who passed away May 26, 1963 and Viola M. Van Natter who passed away September 15, 1964. Sadly missed by Mom, Dad and __family.____ DENK “ ' ' , In loving memory of Anna Denk, who passed away January 20, 1964. No pen can write, no tongue can tell My sad and bitter loss. But God alone has helped so well To bear the heavy cross. — -Sadly missed by -Norm. ------—— DIAL tn loving memory of husband, our father and grandfather, Claude Dial, who passed away, March 11, 1968. It's not the same since you ve been gone, ttjree brothers and sister. ELAM In loving memory of LaVern Elam, who passed away May 26, 1962. Your presence is ever near us. Your love remains with us yet, You were the kind of a husband and father, Your loved 1 ones would never forget. Sadly missed by wife and son.___ ELAM In loving memory of Orville Lee Elam, who passed away Jan. 17, 1964. The years may wipe out many, things, But this they'll wipe out never, . The memory of those happy days When we were all together. Just when bis life was brightest Just when his hopes were pest God called him from among ui To a home of eternal‘rest. Sadly missed by Dad, Mom, brothers, sisters and their 'families. ELMY LE1NENGER In Loving Memory of Arthur Leinenger and Robert A. Elmy. Dad you are gone But never forgotten. Sadly missed by Mr. and Mrs. Morris Leinenger and Family.___ ELMY ’ In loving memory of tvaiine Elmy, who passed away March 25. 1968. You're not forgotten Mother, dear. Nor ever shall you be; l As long as life and memory last, I shall remember thee, j Sadly Missed by Daughter and ; Family._____ LELMY -------—-----------_ ~ ^------ In loving memory of William Elmy, who passed away November 1, 1932. Till memory fades and life departs; You'll live forever In our hearts. Sadly missed by Daughter and Family. _______________________ ELMY ~ In loving memory of Michael Lee Elmy who passed away May 9, 19677 The depths of sorrow wa cannot y tell. Qf the loss of one we loved so welt, And while he sleeps a peaceful sleep His memory we shall always keep. of loving memory Grandfather Marshall Gavette.' We sigh sometimes to sea thy face, But since this cannot be; We'll leave thee to the care of Him Who watches thee and us. —Sadly missed by Lanny and Family. GAY Ip loving memory of Eleanor M. Gay who passed away November 3, 1963. The depths of sorrow we cannot tell, Of the loss of one we loved so well. And while she sleeps a peaceful, sleep, Her memory we shall always keep. , Sadly missed by Mother, Brother,' Sister, Child Grandchildren. and HALL In loving memory of Gary Lea Hall who passed away Feb. 10, 1965: I dream of you, dear loved one And see your smiling fact, And know that 9ou ana happy In your Father's chosen place. Sadly missed by Dad, Mom, Brothers and SIsters.____ HALL In loving memory of Mother and Dad, Della and Willard Hall, Your presence is ever near us, Your loved ones would never forget. Sadly missed by children. May, LHa, Dorothy,-Floyd. HALL In loving memory of our precious mother. Ruby M. Hall, who passed away May 9, 1966. You'ra not forgottan mothar dear. Nor aver shall you be: As long as life and mamory last We shall remember thee. Sadly missad by son and dauahter-in-law-Burton and GanavTava Summers, and Grandchildren. GIBBS I .. loving memory of William H. HALL Gibbs, who passed away June 25, i960. . , . Time turns away the edge of grief But memory turns back every leaf. Sadly missed by Sons, Daughters-in-law, Grandchildren.-* GIRLING In loving memory of our dear mother Winifred Girling. Dear mother, you are not forgotten Though on earth you are no more, Still In memory you are with us As you always were before. Sadly missed by Edsel Girling and Mltty^Girljng and family.________ GRACEY In loving memory of Leonara Gerald Gracey who passed away Nov. 8, 1967. The depths of sorrow we cannot ---tetb---- Of the loss loving memory of my dear husband, William R. Hall, who passed away July 10, 1966. God came and stood beside you, And whispered "come to rest". You wished no one a last farewell, Not even say goodby. You had gone before wa knew It, And only God knows why. Sadly missed by his. wife Bessie and daughter Shlrlay.___________ HAMPSHIRE In loving memory of My husband Charles E. Hampshire, who passed away 6 years ago Memorial Day. God saw you getting weaker. So He did what He thought best. He came and stood beside you, and whispered come to rasi. You wished no one a last farewell, ell. of one we loved so he sleeps a peaceful his keep- mother and of Sadly missed by _ father. f“eatherston In loving memory Eugene E. Featherston, who passed away January 25, 1965. We will see you on the morning When they call the roll. Where the sunrise turns the ocean Blue to gold. Sadly missed by Parents and Family.____ FELIX * . * 1 In loving memory of Josephine M. Felix who passed away March 2, 1962. No pen Can write, no tongue can tell, My sad and bitter loss, But God alone has helped so well To bear the heavy cross. His memory we shall always keep. Sadly missed by Mother and Father and Family. _______________ loving memory of beloved son and brother Morrell Gray who passed away April 22, 1965. Your memory Is a keepseke With which we'll never part; Though God has you We still have you in our hearts. Sadly missed bv Mom, Dad and sister Roberta. green - h In loving memory of Mrs. 5«ran Green who passed away Jan. 10, 1963. _ . The depths of sorrow we cannor tell. Of the loss of ona we loved so well. And while she sleeps leep, peaceful You are sadly missed by your loving wife, Helen and devoted family.____ COVINGTON :: In loving memory of Lurea Clark 0,XON jj|h& r\M . loving memory of Neal Our love for you still shines bright, We'll loin you when the time is right. Sadly missed by wife, Emma and daughter Claudia and Annie and grandchildren; “ CAMPBELL -In loving Campbell January 21 of Claud the- rtd YoUr love tire bfM to ' For no one On oar Ih* Could take your place You are still the dearest o Sadly mlsseq \ by Wife Children and Grandchildr call; memory who passed . 1963. *- Dear Husband, out of sorrow, Your absence baa brought to my heart. Have—grown tragfOnt..flower! of. memory, To bloom all tha years we're j apart. Sadly missed by his wife, Mrs. ' Claud Campbell and family. , SAMPBELL In loving memory of our dear.ppe, Ear| V. Campbell, who passed away January 21, 1966. What would I- give to clasp your hand. Your happy face to see; To* hear your voice and see your smile That meant so much to ‘me I cannot road God's purpose But there will come a day, When God Will' make me understand Why you were called away. ; Sadly mlssnp by Mom. Wife, - Children and Grandchildren. . Covington who passed away Nov 19, 1965;-0 You, have left a beautiful memory, Arid'a sorrow tpo great( td be told. But to tis who have loved and tost you, Your memory will never grow old. No morning comes, no night returns, But what we think of you. Sadly missed by Bill, Carol and. children. COVINGT6N In loving memory of Lurea Clark Covintgon who passed away Nov. 19, 1965. It broke our hearts to lose you But you did not go alone For a part of us went with you The day God called you home. God gave us strength to bear it The courage to take the blow But what it meant to lose you No one will ever know. When evening shadows are falling And we sit here alone To our hearts.comes a longing If you could |bst come home. Sadly missed by her Mother and sister, Annie .Ruth and Pattle Clark and children Tawney and Gerald Jrr Covington COVINGTON ^lh loving memory Quietly remembered every day. No longer In our Hve's to share Tn Wr hearts, you are always there. Sadly missed by Aunt Jennie and Uncle Johnnie. COWLEY - In loving memory, of Danny Cowley, who*passed away July 9, 196.5. A little lamb too sweet and pure, Upon this earth to roam: An Angel came And took our dear Child home. Sadly missed . by Mother, Dad, Brothers and Sisters. \ who passed 1964. From our happy home and circle. God has taken the one we loved: Borne away from sin and sorrow To a better home above. Sadly missed .by Mr. and Mrs. William'Adamson and family. ith DOBSON „ In Loving memory of Percy B. Dobson, who passed away Nov. 8, 1949 with the U.S. Navy, World War II, and John L. Dobson who passed away Feb. 27, 1968. Time turns away the edge of grief But memory turns back every leaf. Sadly missed by their brothers and sisters. DODMAN In loving memory of our dear Husband and father, George A. Dodman, who passed away Oct. 19, 1965. Your presence Is ever near us. Your love remains with us yet, You were the kind of a husband and father, Your loved ones would never forget. Sadly missed by wife, children and gr a ndch ltdren. DONLEY In loving metnory of Cherles C. and Emma E. Donley., Those whom we love go out of sight, But never out of’mind; They are cherished In the hearts Of,-those they leave behind. Sadly missed by Children, Grandchildren and g r e grandchildren.. DOUGLAS , in loving memory -of Clarence Douglas, who passed away, July 17, 1967. > I sigh Sometimes to see thy foce, But since this cannot be. I ll leave fhee to the care of Him, Who watches tbee and me. '•Sadly missed by Emma Claudia and Ann and the GangbusterS. Sadly missed by husband Joseph ’ Felix, Daughter ■ Mary ■ vnitreal. and Grandchildren. FELIX ' ......~ 1 . . In loving mamory of Mrs. Susie Felix, who passed away March 18, 1962. Dear Mother, you are not forgotten Though on earth you are no more. Still m memory you are with us As you always were before. Sadly missed by daughter Barbara ___and family. v FERGUSON In loving memory of Norman Ferguson who passed away March 4, 1952. The depths of «sorrow we cannot tell, Ek . . __0f the loss or*one We loved so welTT | . , And while he sleeps a peaceful sleep. His rriemory we shall always keep. Sadly missed by wife, daughter, son and wife and grandchildren. FINK . , u _ . In loving memory of* John r. rinx^ who passed away April 9, 1967. Just a token of loves devotion That we treasure your memory Which we shall always keep. , Your friends Larry and G»hny Sutton. Her memory we shall always k®eP-Sadly missed by John Green and family. _________________.-— GREENE .. q In loving memory of Ellle B. Greene who passed away Dec. u, 1967. Your presence is ever near us. Your love remains with us yet, You were the kind of a father, Your loved ones wpuld never forget. , | Sadly missed by son — Jerry ana family- GREGORY-1—. . --qp- In loving memory of Wiliiani w. Gregory who passed away June i, 1966. ’ God took But i still; m home, it was His hearts we love him His memory is as dear today As In the hour he passed away We often sit and think of him When we are all alone. For memory Is the only friend That grief can call Its own. Sadly missed by his family. ^foSoving memory of our mother--Ardis Grice who passed away January 23, 1968: The depths of sorrow we cannot. tell i well Fischer, who passed away, gunDERSEN Of the loss of on« And while she sleep Her memory we shall always keep. Sadly missed by Dad and the kids. GRIMES -.ill - . In loving memory of Ruby Grimes who passed away, Sept 8. 1960 Dear Mother, you are not forgotten Though on earth you are no more, Still in memory, you are with us As you always we*« before. Sadly missed by daughter — Joan and And only God Knows why. Sadly missed by Wlfa and Children. HANEY In loving memory of Corporal William D. Haney, who passed away Aug. 23, 1967. Here in Commerce Cemetery, In a marine's grave Lies our dear son, and brother among the brave. He never shunned his country's call But gladly gave his life, his ell. He died the helpless to defend. A faithful marine's noble end. Sadly missed by Mom and Dad, Wife, Pam, Sister Donna, and brothers, Fred, Gerald, Robert, Dennis. HARMES In loving memory of . Francis L. Hornes who passed away Dec 17, 1957 and RqlandGlen Harme* who passed away July 27, 1965. I dream of you, dear loved ones, And see your smiling face, . And know that you are happy In your Father's chosen place. Sadly missed by Dad, Mothar end children^__ HARMES ~ In loving memory of Vern Harme* who passed away March 13, 1962. Your memory is a keepsake With which we'll never part. Though God has ydu in His keeping We still have you in our hearts. > Sadly missed by brother and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Harmes. . -HARRIS ~ In loving memory of our dear Wiley Harris, Jr., who passed away Jan. 29, 1968. Til memory fades and life departs. You live forever in our heart*, No pen can write, no tongue can tell, Qur sad and bitter loss, But God alone has helped so well. To bear the heavy cross. Sadly missed by his family. HART In memory of Jess N. Hart, who iss< You'n Nor ever shall you be; As long as life and memory last. We shall remember thee. Remembered by daughter and son, Deioris and Jesse. memory of Glory* Chambers Hawkins, who passed • away JvIV 10, 1965. Sweet memories will linger for- Tin cannot change them, It's December 10, 1967 Wr miss you mother, and days are long, , .. tt's not the same since you ve been gone, Our love or you still sbloes briaht. And we'll loin yoo when th# timo Is right Sadly missed by your and daughte children.--- FITZPATRICK _ _ In loving memory of Wimam n loving memory of wmiart Fitzpatrick, Who passed Feb. 1950, United Spanish American War Veteran. Till memory fades and me departs, You live forever 1n ovr hearts. Sadly missed by Wife, and Family. FLYNN» •V. In’* loving memory of our motner Adele Flynn, who passed away HAYNES October 7, 1958 and our father, John V. Flynn, who passed away May 17, 1958. Rest in peace, dear loving parents. Ten long years have Passed away, You are gone, but still ar* living fn the hearts of those who stay. Sadly mtssed by Daughters, Sons in-law and Families. loving memory of my beloved Wife Hazel IWr. Gundersen who passed away, February 19, 1967; I dream of you, dear loved one. And see your smiling face, And know that you are happy —tn your Fother'^ chosen place. | Sadly missed by Bob Gundersen. ' GUNDERSEN * In loving mempry of our belovea wtfe and -mother - Mabel Gun-J dersen, who passed away May 28, | 1946. The depths of sorrow we cannot tell, , . Of the loss of one we loved so: well, And while she sleeps a peaceful r sleep* - Her memory we shall always keep. Sadly missed by husband ^ f|pb, and children Robert and tois./ loving memory of our dea/ !wn and brother 1st Lt. Bill Haynes who was killed in a iplane crash-in Indiana, September 22, 1945. fill memory fades and life departs, fou live .forever In our hearts. Sadly, missed by Mother, Dad and Sister Gladys. \\ Years that may come cannot sever Our loving remembrance of You. sadly missed by Clayton and Diane Behiing and Son Mike. HELIKER In loving memory of James end Currie Heliker who passed away Nov. 9; 1942Jand Dec. 25, 1964. Till rhemory fades and life departs,1' Ypu.,J.lye forever In 6ur hearts. Sadly missed by Mr. end Mrs. Lewis Gillette end tether — James. 1--*-— .............- HELIKER " ■ ■ * ' In loving memory of Mae e. Heliker who passed away Feb. 11* T965I— The depths of sorrow we cannot tell, Of thev loss of one we loved -■ so well, And while she sleep* a peaceful sleep, Her memory we shell always keep. Sadly missed^ by husband James, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Glllett and • Family. HENDERSON In loving .memory of William M., Henderson, who passed away Fib. 1, 1956,. »* I sigh sometimes to see thy face* But since this cannot be; . I'll leave thee lo the care of Him, Who watches Thee and Me. •Sadly missed by Mother, Father* brothers, sisters. • THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 80, 1968 D- ?xmemanlolL ij*** m -- ~ hus- HENDERSON ! JENSEN ., In loving memory of our Husantfi Joy Jensen, February 2# 1967 and Father, Cnarles E. Men-, loving memory of my dear derson, who passed ,away July r_band — Marjorie. 2:^:,™™'' *" BsEpiU memory o, H«„ry whole llv March 8, But the sweetness will linger As we treasure the Image of you. Sadly missed by Wife Phebe and Children. Johnsen who 1949. You're not forgotten father, dear, Nor ever shall you be; As long as life and memory last, I shall remember thee. - Sadly missed by his wife, sor and grahddaughter. LAFNEAR In loving memory of our mother and wife, Eliza J. Lafnear, who passed away September 8, 1966. We miss you mother and days are long, It's not the same since you've been gone, Our love for you still shines bright. We'll loin you when the time is Mas •lohl. by your husband HESS In loving memory of William H. Hess, who pdssed away April 16, 1958. You're not forgotten, Father dear, Nor ever shall you be; As long as life and memory last We shall remember thee. Sadly missed by his Children and Grandchildren. _ HETCHLER ' . ^ In loving memory of Dennr JOHNSON In loving memory of Andrew E Johnson who passed away Aug 30. 1956 God sees when the footsteps falter When the pathway has steep too LANGMEYER In loving memory of my brother, Robert F. Langmeyer who passed away, February 8. 1963. Till *■ memory fades and life departs. You'll live forever In my heart. Sadly missed by Joyce Jacobs. MANNS In I6ving memory of my wife, Florence Manns who passed away July 24. 1967. You're not forgotten, Florence, dear, Nor ever shall you be; As long as live and memory last, I shall remember thee. — Sadly mlsseo by Guy Manns, i MEIERS tn loving memory of our Brother RUssell Meiers who passed away March 14, 1968. Till memory fades and life departs You'll live forever In our hearts. —Sadly missed by Bill and Mildred. He touches ttv And give His dear Sadly missed by ry eyelids LANKFORD Hetchler, who passed away April JONES 17, 1967. In loving memory of A. EarJ Jones Gone Is the face we loved so dear who passed Silent is the voice we loved to 1963 hear1; Too far away for sight or speech But not too far for thought to ,!?. reach loving memory of my dear Mom. Anna W. Lankford, who passed away January 17, 1967. Dear Mom, you are not forgotten Although time turns the edge of grief. As long as life and memory last, You live forever In our hearts. Sadly missed by The Frank _Redker Family. loving memory of Isaac Jones i_ANPHER MANNS In loving memory of Florence L, Manns, who passed away July 24, 1967. us, September 28. Sadly Missed by Wife and Sister Your love remains with us yet, You were the kind of a grandmother, Your loved ones would never forget. Sadly missed by great grandsons Billy and Chris. Sweet to remember He, who once was here, Who, gone away, is lust as dear. Sadly missed by Joanne and • Children. HEWITT In loving memory of David Hewitt who passed away Dec. 19, 1966. Your presence is forever near us, Your love will remain always with passed away, February 3, MERSINO POINTER In loving memory of mother Martha Mersino who passed away Dec. 25, 1962 and sister Beatrice Pointer. The depths of sorrpw we cannot tell, Of the loss of one we loved so well, And while she sleeps a peaceful sleep. Her memory we shall always keep. Sadly missed by Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Craig and family. _______ NEVAREZ In loving memory of John .Frank Nevarez who passed away search 10, 1965. A bud that the Gardner gave us, l A pure* and lovely child, He gave him to our keeping, To cherish undefiled. But lust as It was opening ■.............. wife and mother’ Mrs. Ruth Patrick, who: passed away May 18, 1963. •* I Peacefully sleeping, resting at last. The world's weary troubles and trials are past, In silence she suffered, In patience she bore. TUI God called her home to suffer no more. Sadly missed b9 husband, D. L. Patrick; mothfr Mrs. W L. Graves; children* Anna Lou. Bill, Barbara and Beulah. Nevarez. loving memory of Caleb MARCUM-JEWELL He flower too sweet for arth. You were the kind of a husband and father. The ones you loved so much will JONES never forget. In Ic Sadly missed by his wife, Naomi and family.__ HEWETT In loving memory of our dear wife and mother Vide M. Hewett, who passed away February 18, 1965. It broke my heart to lose you, But you did not go alone, For part of us went with you, The morning God called you home. God gave us the strength to bear Sent here but tor a while God marked him when He gave him birth And took him with a smile. Sadly missed by wife June, parents Mr. and Mrs. Wade Jones and family, and grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Michael and Mr. ,and Mrs. Lee Jones. Lanpher who passed away May 22, 1965. * Your presence is ever near us. Your love remains with us yet, You were the kind of a father. Your loved ones would never forget. Sadly missed by Mom, children and grandchildren. loving memory of Troy W. Marcum who passed away March 22, 1958 and James T. Jewell, who passed away June 19, 1960. They are waiting by the river. Just across the silent stream; Where sweet flowers are ever blooming And the banks are ever green. Sadly missed by Marcia Aulgur and Family. MEYER In loving memory of our dad and husband, Russell A. Meyer, who passed away April 7, 1968. God saw you getting weaker, NEWTON In loving memory of Lyman Newton, who passed away August 16, 1964v The rolling stream of life rolls on But still the vacant chair; Recall* the,,-love, the voice the smile Of one who once sat there. Sadly missed by Wife, Children and Grandchildren. of Edna ‘E. 1967. ’ill memory departs, fades and lifo it, The courage to take the blow But what it meant to lose you. No one will ever know. When evening shadows are falling. And I sit here all alone, To my heart there comes a longing. If you could lust be here. Dearly loved and sadly missed by her husband and daughter and kayga son-Irvlaw. floeKLEY In loving memory of Thomas Hockley who passed away Dec. 28, 1932. Sadly missed by wife May and Daughters._____________________ You live forever in our hearts. Sadly missed by Gloria Robb Jr. , JOYCE In loving memory of William P. Joyce, who passed away Feb. 5, 1967. . Dear husband and lather, out of the sorrow. Your absense has brought to our hearts, Have grown fragrant flowers of memory. To bloom all the years we're apart. Sadly missed by wife Margaret and sons. Ml IVJVMIV, IMCIMWI T Ul (Ilf iiw»wwi.», Frank Lang, who passed away January 31, 1968. God saw you getting weaker, so He did what He thought best He came and stood beside you and whispered "come to rest". You wished no one a last farewell, loving memory of Garrett Marks who passed away April 2, 1968. Some day soon we know we'll meet, And be together, Daddy dear. Until we do, our memory sweet Our prayers and thoughts are ever And whispered "come to rest," You wished no one a last farewell, Not even to say goodby, You had gone before we knew it, And only God knows why. v Sadly missed by your wife May and family. O'BERRY In loving memory of John L. O'Berry, who passed away May 31, 1961. --------- We Who loved you, sadly miss peaRCE PEARCE In loving memory of Diana Lynn Pearce, who passed away Jan. 2, 1966. r A little girl was needed To make our home complete, God sent you, little Diana, pure, blossomlike and sweet. But 'er His fingers lossep you. He had another thought. And back into His bosom our little babe was caught. Just why He charged the pattern ROBERTS Is not for us to know. We try to bear It bravely Since He had willed it so. We're thankful to have seen you. This perfect bud of ours, And know that God will plant you Among his rarest flowers. And though we cannot guide you, Your are our share in heaven, Until the ludgment day. Sadly missed by Mommy, Daddy, Steven and Lori. RICHWAY In loving memory of our Son, Jerome Rlchwey who passed away May 8, 1968: A bud that the Gardner gave us, A pur and lovely child. He gave him to our keeping, To cherish undeflled. But lust as it was opening To the glory of the day. Down came the Heavnely Gardner And took our flower away. Sadly missed by Mom and Dad, Gerald and Sandra Rlchway-ROBERTS ”7 In loving memory William Roberts who passed away Jan. 30, 1953. Each day of the year It's you we think of. Recalling your ways and recalling CCVTnK1 your love, btAiuw Remembering the things you used to do. But most of all remembering you. Sadly missed by wife Phoebe, sons lee SEE i In loving memory of Batty I who passed away Feb..2^, 1968. Till memory fades and lire departs, You live forever In our hearts. Sadly missed by the whole fatplly. SERVICEMEN > In remembrance of all the servicemen who geve their all, serving their country. They never shunned their country's But gladly gave their life, their They died the helpless to defend, A faithful Soldier's noble end. Nadine Teauge and Post 377, American Legion. Garnet, Wesley, William, Eugene, Kyle, and daughter Goldie.______ you. As it dawns another year; In our lonely hours of thinking, Thoughts of you are ever near. —Sadly missed by Wife Delbertia, Sons and Family and Daughters,; Doris and JoAnn. near. Phyllis Nick Mihalewich, who passed -away June 28, 1958 and my> Mother, Ketrin Mihalewich, who passed away May 1, 1963. ^ i Remembrance is a golden chain, Death tries to break but all in a in. iver, loving memory of George Kayga, who passed away January 15, 1965. Your presence Is ever near us, .aPEARL In loving memory of LaPearl who passed i ' 25, 1966. They are waiting by the i Just across the silent stream; Where sweet flowers are e blooming And the banks are ever green. — Sadly missed by Brother Sisters, Nieces and Nephews. aPEARL loving memory of John HOLCOMB-MANNS In loving memory of Frank L. Holcomb who passed away July 4, 1959, Claude W. Holcomb whoi «;YfA ^f.*^J:eb„rKU;rL.:!Si4 iffl l» loving memory of II. Kayg.. and father, Your loved forget, Sadly families. LaPearl who passed away May 25, 1966. Till memory fades and life departs. You live forever In our hearts. Sadly missed by wife and family. missed by wife, sons and MARKS In loving memory of Todd J. Marks who passed away March 30. 1963. Time turns away the edge of grief But memory turns back every leaf. Sadly missed by sister Phyllis,1 Clate and Family. MARTIN In loving memory of Thomas J. Martin who passed away March 29, 1951: Till . memory fades and life departs, You'll live forever in our hearts. Sadly missed by Mom, Dad, Verai and Len.__________________________[ To have, to love, and then to part Is the greatest sorrow' of one's The years may wipe out many things,1 But this they wipq out never The memory of those happy days When we were all together. Sadly missed by daughter, Olga and Stanley Jedrzeiezyk., loving memory of Gregorio Ochoa who passed away June 3, ■1949. You're not forgotten father dear, Nor ever1 shall you be; As long as life and memory last. We shall remember thee. Sadly missed by Zeke, Pat and Children. ones would never j Florence Manns who passed July 24, 1967. No pen can write, no tongue can tell, Our sad and bitter loss; But God alone has helped so well To bear the heavy cross. —Sadly missed by Osa, Mildred, Judy and Family. Bill, who passed away 5 years ago, Dear mother, you are not forgot- ■ ten. Though on earth you are no more, Still in memory you are with us. As you always were before. Sadly missed by children Grandchildren. In loving memory of L. Ruth Lare, who passed away March 9, 1959,1 and Earl Lare, who passed away| July 25, 1950. The depths of sorrow we cannot j tell. and HOLDEN In loving memory of my Thelma L. Holden, who passed away May 1, 1968. I have only your memory, dear wife? To remember my whole life through; But t he sweetness will linger forever As I treasure the image of You. ______ —Sadly missed by Husband, Floyd KELLY A. Holden.___ ______ KELLY . In loving memory of my Mother Anna M. Kelly, who passed away LEI ST May 28, 1956. Dear Mother, you ten. Though on earth you are Of the loss of ones we loved so well. And while they sleep a peaceful Their memory we shall always keep. Sadly misssed by Mr. and Mrs. Wally Lake. MATTINGLY In loving memory of Willie Mat-: tingly who passed away January: 19, 1967. So many things have happened Since you went away; So many things 1 shared with you, | If only you could have stayed; I cannot bring the old days back. Your hand I cannot touch; But I still have precious memories Of the one I loved so much.' Sadly missed by Wife, Palsy. MILLER In loving memory of Mary E. Miller who passed away, February 12, 1967. There's a sad but sweet remembrance, There is a memory fond and true; And a token of affection. Mother, And a heartache still for you. Sadly missed by her Sons, Daughters and their families. Loving Memory of Frank Oerkfitz who passed away Nov. 20, 1965. I dream of you dear loved one, And see your smiling face, And know that you are happy-In your Father's chosen place. Sadly missed by his wife and children. In loving memory of Donald K. Pearce, who passed away December 31, 1965. Sad and sudden was the call Of one so dearly loved by all; It was a bitter grief, A shock severe, to part with one We loved so dear. To love, to hold and then to parj It's the saddest thing of a human heart. Oh Lord, keep green the grave that lies Beneath the wide and starry skies. Keep sweet the sleep, and give him rest Whose hands are folded, o'er his breast. Forgotten to the world by some, you may be, But de*r to our memory, you ever loving memory of PFC Robert F. Roberts who oassed away August 5, 195S. Although we realize that you are gone Memories of you still linger on. We miss you true each pjsslng day. Remembering all your special ways. Sadly missed by mother Phoebe, brothers Garnet, Wesley, William, Eugene, Kyel and sister Goldie. ROBINSON In lovrng memory of Earl D. Robinson, who passed away 3 yrs. 3qo May 26fft. Till memory fades and life departs, You live forever in our hearts. Sadly missed by wife, mother, father and sister.__ RODGERS tn loving memory of my husband, Richard H* Rodgers, who passed; away May 21, 1966. No pen can write, no tongue can, ... loving memory of Agnes J. Sexton, who passed awas Oct. 4, 1965: The depths of sorrow we cannot tell, Of the loss of one we loved so well, And while she sleeps a peaceful sleep, * Her memory we shall always keep Sadly missed by Husband, children and grandchildren. SEYMOUR In loving memory of Florence L. Seymour who passed away June 8, 1943. Gone but not forgotten. Sadly missed by Stanley Seymour and Daughter Bernadlne Laturneau. SEYMOUR In loving memory of Laverna V. Seymour who passed away Sept. 1, 1953. 4 Stanley Seymour. tell i well be. not forgot- more, StillTn memory you are with us As you always were before Sadly missed by Willa W. Tennent and the Richard Kelly family.____ HOLTZ In loving memory of Mrs. Edna K. Holtz who passed away April 29, 1967. A wonderuil mother, woman and aide, One who was better, God never made A wonderful worker. So loyal and true One in a million, that mother was In loving memory of Jay D- Kelly, who passed away Dec. 28, i960. No one knows the silent heartache Only those who lose can tell; The grief we bear in silence loving memory of William C. Leist who passed away May 14, 1958: God saw you getting weaker, So He did what He thought best He erme and stood beside you, And whispered. Come to Rest. You wished no one a last farewell, Not even said good-bye. You were gone before we knew it And only God knows why. Sadly missed by Wife Ida and Children. you. In For the one we loved so well Some day, some time our eyes shall see The face we keep in memory; And God will link the broken chain Still closer when we meet again Sadly missed by wife and| ! chlldren.___________________________| your ludgment, always j k'f'llEY In loving memory of Ruth M.i Kelley, who passed away August, 22, 1966. God saw you getting weaker, , So He did what He thought best. He came and stood beside you, and whispered come to rest. t You wished no one a last farewell. Not even to say goodbye. You were gone before we knew It, > And only God knows why. Sadly missed by husband, children and grandchildren.________^________ Just right. Honest and liberal, every upright. Loved by your friends and all whom you knew. Our wonderful mother, that mother was you. Sadly missed by: Son and family. HOOBLER In loving memory of Lena Hoobler who passed away May 28, 1965: Your presence is ever near us, Your love remains with us yet, You were the kind of a Mother _________ Your loved ones would never kennFDY forget. _ Li i ____________ in loving memory of Wfcrren LINTZ In loving memory of William D. Llntz who passed away March 11, ’ 1967. Dear husband, out of sorrow Your absence ha» brought to my Have grown fragrant flowers of PEARCE memory, To bloom all the years we're apart. __Sadly missed by wife PauHne._____ UNTZ In loving memory of William D. Lintz who passed away March 11, 1967. Your presence is ever near us. Your love remains with us yet, You were the kind of a father, Your loved ones would never forget. Sadly missed by sons John and Dale. loving memory of Willie Mattingly, who passed away January 19, 1967. We miss you Dad, and days are long. It's not the same since, you've been gone. Our love for you still shines bright. We'll loin you when the time is right. Sadly missed by daughters, Shirley, Wiima and Family. MAZER In loving memory of our husband and father, Philip Mazer, who passed away 11 years ago, May 26, 1957. Till memory fades and life departs, You live forever In our hearts. Sadly missed by his loving wife,, Hazel M. Mazer and daughters, Lorena, Joyce and Geraldine.____ MAZUREK MILLER In loving memory of Walter M. Miller who passed away April 5,; 1968. You left this world of sorrow and pain. But you didn't go alone. Part of us went with you. Every day there is many tears, 'Ttl memory fades and life departs. You live forever in our hearts. Sadly missed by wife Catherine,, son, daughter and Brother-in-law. OERTEL In loving memory of Mary L. Oertel, who passed away June 8. 1966. So many things have happened Since you went away; So many things’ we shared with PORRITT you. If only you could have stayed. We cannot bring the old days back Your hand we cannot touch. But we still have precious memories Of one we loved so much. Sadly missed by Husband George, Children and Grandchildren. PEARCE ^ In LovinfPtnemory, of my brother, Donald K. Pearce, who passed away Dec. 31, 1965. It broke our hearts to lose you, But you did not go alone; For part of us went with you, ( The day God called you home. Sadly missed by Gene and Family. | My sad and bitter loss; But God alone has helped To bear the heavy cross. Sadly missed Jjy hjs wife, Louise. ROEHM John Roehm who passed away one year ago. May 4, 1967. Sadly missed I Daughter. ROE RINK In loving memory SHEARER In lovin'g memory of John E. Shearer, who passed away May 2, 1965. I dream of you, dear loved one. And see your smiling face. And know that you are happy In your Father's chosen place. We still have you in eur hearts — Sadly missed by his wife Charlotte, Niece Sue and nephew Bud. Wife, Sons, and SHUTT In loving memory of Daisy Shutt, who passed away March 10, 1962 Dear Mother, you are not forgotten Though on earth you are no more, Still In memory with you are .with ............... of PFC Gary- Roerinlc who passed Nov. 23, 1967 Vietnam. Away in the wilderness so bare Away from the mother's tender care, There rose a cry from the gates above And you entered Into the arm of SIUNIAK SIBLEY In loving memory of Nellie Sibley who passed away Sept. 8, 1963. Sadly missed by her husband, Hiram. MIRACLE In loving memory of Ward Miracle who passed away Oct. 16, >959. Till memory fades and lief departs, You live forever in our hearts. Sadly missed by wife and children. OLSEN In loving memory of Janet M. Olsen, who passed away September to, 1961. Nothing can ever take away The love a heart holds dear; Fond memories linger every day. Remembrance keeps her near. Sadly missed by Mom, Dad, Sister Joanne and Children. Tn loving memory of our daughter, Linda Carol Porrltt, who passed away March 21, 1966. God saw you getting weaker So He did what was best, He came and stood beside you ! And whispered "Come home to rest." You wished no one a last farewell | Not even to say goodbye, You had gone before we knew it | And only God knows why. You will forever be in our thoughts. Sadly missed by all her loved ones. love. As the days go swiftly by Our memories never dim. And what a blessing it Is to know My son, thou art with Him. Sadly RONSE l.i loving memory of Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Ronse Sr. . Dear Mother and Dad, you are not forgotten Though on earth you are no more. Still In memory you are with us As you always were before. Sadly missed by the children — Mary, Bernice, Ina, Dorothy, Eldon. Ivan and Clark. POWELL In loving memory of Ben i Powell who passed away Sept. ROSE* In loving memory of Viola I. Rose who passed away August 24, 1964. The depths of sorrow cannot MITCHELL In. loving memory of Doyle J. Mitchell, who passed away, Dec. 30, 1967. No pen can write, no tongue can tell O'REILLY In loving memory of Father Michael J. O'Reilly, who passed, away June 3, 1959. The years go quickly, Father dear j But thoughts of you remain, And you are with us as we walk j Down life's sweet memory lane. Sadly missed and remembered by the Carl Martin Family of Orton- tell. loved You live forever in our hearts. Sadly missed_ by wife Mary, peaceful Children and Grandchildren. Loving memory of Mother, Clare Mazurek, who passed away June 26, 1963. Son, Donald K. Pearce, who passed away Dec. 31, 1965. Granddaughter Diana Lynn Pearce who passed away Jan. 2, 1966. They are waiting by the river Just across the silent stream, Where sweet flowers are ever blooming and the banks are ever green. Sadly missed by Herb Elizabeth Robinson. Our sad and bitter loss. But God alone has helped so we To bear the heavy cross. Sadly missed by Mom, C Brothers and sisters, Donna Vickie, Ron and Gary._________ MOODY In loving memory of Francis rille. Moody who passed away August 30, 1965. j Till memory fades and life departs. You live forever in our hearts. Sadly missed by wife — Helen, Children and Grandchildren. ORENCIA In loving memory of my dear husband Phil B. Orencia who passed away Sept. 25, 1961. I dream of you, dear loved one, And see your Smiling face. And know that you are happy In your Father's chosen place. Sadly missed by wife Dolores, pruCHNICKI POWELL ' i In loving memory or Hubert Powell, who passed away August ROWE 14, 1967. Your presence is ever near us, Your love remains with us yet. You were the kind of dad and husband Your loved ones would never forget. Sadly missed by wife Joy and sons, Gary, Denny, Glen and Timmy.__________________ Of the loss of one w well. And while she sleeps sleep. Her memory we shall always keep. Sadly missed by Father, and Brother. loving memory of Nicholas M. Siuniak who passed away May 30th 1967 at the age of 6: Your gentle face and patient smile, With sadness we recall. You had a kindly word for each, And died beloved by all. The voice is mute and stilled the heart. That loved as well and true. How bitter was the trial to part, From one so good as you. You are not forgotten, loved one; Nor will you ever be. As long as life and memory lasts, We wiTl remember thee. We miss you now, oyr hearts are sore, » As time goes by, we miss you more. Your loving smile—your gentle face, No one can fill — your vacant place. Sadly missed by Mother, Father, Brothers and Sisters Mother Counsins Eliseo and Frank. Bill and who passed away, Dec. HOPPE In loving memory of Lionel Hoppe who passed away January 11, 1941. It broke our hearts to lose you,- * But you did not go alone: For parr of us went with you. The. day God.cailed you home. Sadly missed by -Mommie, Daddy and sister._________________ Howard In loving memory of Nathan Howard, who passed away December 2, 19661 You're not forgotten father, dear,1 Nor ever shall you be; As long as life and memory last, j I shall remember thee. Sadly missed by son. Jack W. Howard^____ HOWELL In loving memory of Gertrude Howell who passed away September 18, 1962. Dear mother, you are not forgotten, Though on earth you are no more. Still in memory you are with us, ! As you were always before. Son and family. HOWELL In loving memory of Joseph Howell who passed a w a y November 27, 1966. Your presence is ever near us, ; Your love remains with us yet. You were the kind of a father your loved ones would never forget. __—- Son and family. HOYT .“To lovffig ffiimory of our ion and brother Sgt. Victor R. (Ron) Hoyt who gave his life In Vietnam, Dec. 27, 1966. He is not dead who gave his life To make the world a better place. The memory of noble deeds The passing years-cannot efface. — Sadly missed by Mom, Dad, __Judy Beck, Dennis and Nita. HUTCHINS in loving memory of James E. Hutdhins who passed away May 4, 1967, Memories Under on____________:__ Though you are gone Sadly missed by Mom and eight __ brothers. hWcHISON ’ In loving memory of Jack Hutchison who passed away Jan. 7, Kennedy, 21, 1958. Your presence is ever near us. Your love remains with us yet, You wereThe kind of a father, Youil—ItWecT ones would never forget. Sadly missed by wife, son, daughter jand family._____________ loving memory of John Kent who passed away July 6, 1965. Dear husband, out of sorrow Your absence has brought to my heart . . Have grown fragrant flowers of memory, . To bloom all the years we re apart. Sadly missed by wife, son and daughters. KING In loving memory of our precious mother, Gladys M. King, who passed away March 15, 1963 and father, Neil H. King, who passed away Feb. 16, 1966. Dear parents, you are not forgot- LINTZ In loving memory of William D. Lintz who passed away March 11,, ---t96T.--- I ^ream of you, dear loved one. And see your smili.ng face. And know that you are happy In your Father's chosen place Sadly missed by daughter Joan. 1 LOSHY In loving memory of. our son Master Sgt. A. E. Loshy who passed away Feb. 16, 1967. I cannot say and I will not say That he hs dead, he is Just away. With a cheery smile and a wave of the hand He has wandered into an unknown, land. And left us dreaming how very MacLARTY In loving memory of Archie T. MacLarty who passed away March T8, 1958. No pen can write, no tongue can MOORE . i . ^ M . In loving memory of Pfc. David C. Moore, who passed away March 2, 1968. and Here in the States, in a soldiers grave, ■ Lies our dear son, among the brave. ■te never shunned his country s ORR In loving memory of our husband and father, Allen B. Orr, who passed away, July 31, 1963. When I'm sad and lonely, And everything goes wrong. I seem to hear you whisper, "Cheer up and carry on". Sadly missed by wife Helen and purdy loving memory of Ernest A.; Pruchnicki who passed away April 27, 1966: You're not forgotten Father, dear Nor ever shall you ba; As long as life and memory last, We shall remember thee. Sadly missed by Sons and Daughters. ____ loving memory of James and Lucy Rowe, who have passed away. They are waitirtb by the river, Just across the silent stream, Where sweet flowers are ever blooming And the banks are ever green. — Sadly missed by Dorothy, Stanley and Rickey Rowe._________j RUSSELL In loving memory of Lila Russell, who passed away Sept. 2, 1956: Dear Mother, you are not forgotten Though on earth you are no more,i Still in memory you are with us | As you always were before. Sadly missed by husband children. SLATER In loving memory of my daughter, Thelma M. Slater, who passed away March 27, 1960. The depths of sorrow wa cannot tell Of the loss of one we loved so well And while she sleeps a peaceful sleep. Her memory we shall always keep. Sadly missed by her mother. and family. all. tell Our sad and bitter loss, But God alone has helped so well To bear the heavy cross. ________ Sadly missed by wife Elva, MOORE But gladly gave his life, his all. -He-died the helpless to defend-A faithful soldier's noble encL_ Sadly missed by mother father, brothers and sisters. children and grandchildren. McCURRY In loving memory of Spc. 4 Arldreas McCurry who was killed in Vietnam on July 4th, 1967: These hands id scarred and roll worn, Tell the story of a man, ** Who sacrificed his talent fait It needs must be since he there. And you, oh you who the yeai lingers For the oldtime step and the glad Think of him faring on as dear In the love of there as the love of here. Think of home still as the same I Though on earth you are no more. Still in memory you are with us As you always were before. Sadly missed by children, grandchildren and (freat grandch lid ren.___j_________; KING In loving memory of our Mother, Mrs. Percy King, who 'Passed away May 20, 1966. Mildred King Campbell ' and Margaret King . .Stephen.___________________ KLING He is not dead, he is lust away. Sadjy missed by mother and fafher.__________ __________ LOUNSBERRY Man cannot understand, ________ But we must trust God's judgment mooRE And be guided by His hand. Sadly missed bv wife, Sharon, Mother and Father McCurry 8. family. _ McFEE In loving memory of Bernice McFee, who passed away July 25, 1953 Dear Mother,- you are not forgotten Though on fcarth' you are no more, Still in memory you are with me As you always were before. — Sadly missed by her daughters, Eleanor Blanchard ... loving memory of James R. Moore, who pased away, June 7, 1958. We do not need a special time, To keep you in our minds, TR8 days we do not think of you, Are very hard to find. They iay time heals all sorrow, And helps us to .forget. But time has only proven, How much we miss you yet. Sadly missed by Mom and Dad. ORR In loving memory of PFC Donald, Orr, who passed away July 16,, 1950. —Seldier- rest, thy warfare o'er,----- Slee^ the sleep that knows no breaking; Dream of battlefields no more, Days of danger, night of waking. Sadly missed by mother and i __Sisters.__________________________j ORR loving memory of my husband George Purdy, who passed away August 8, 1967. Time turns away the edge of grief But memory turns back every leaf. —Sadly missed by Wife Mary & Family. — ROSS In loving memory of Pauline Ross who passed away 13 years ago October 8. Your presence is ever near SMITH In loving memory of our Husband, Father and Grandfather, Lester H. Smith, who passed away January 18, 1968. God saw you getting weaker So He did what He thought bfst; He came and stood behind you And whispered "Come to rest." You wished no one a last farewell Not even said goodbya You were gone before we knew It And only God knows why. Sadly missed by wife Marguerite, Children and Grandchildren. loving memory of James R. Moore, who passed away June 7, 1958. In memory of Louella Lounsberry, MclSAAC In, 1967. The depths of sorrow we cannot teM, Of the loss" of one we loved so sleeps peaceful And whili sleep. His memory we shall always keep. Dearly loved and sadily missed by wlte,<~Nellie and children, Jack, Tennie, Mike, Paul grandchildren and KOROLDEN Kirby, and Diana, friends. HUTCHINSON In loving memory of Otis C. Hutchinson who pas3#d away January 13, 1964. You're not forgotten father dear. Nor ever shall you be As Idng as life and memory last , We shall remember thee, f f Sadly missed by Mary Lou, Daniel, * Raymond and Otis C. Jr. INGAMELLS In loving memory of John Richard tngamells who —passed—away January 13, 1949. You're not forgotten father, dear, Nor ever shall you ba; As long as life and memory l^ast, I shall remember thpe. Sadly missed by your .son John. JACKSON In loving memory of/Marjorie E. Jackson, who passed away December 4, 1965. In life we.loved you dearly, In death we do me^same. * 1 Sadly missed-by-herTamlly. JAMES Kiing 1963. Often a lonely heartache, . And many a silent tear, But always a beautiful memory Of the one I loved so dear Sadly Missed by Wife — Nina. _____ KNIGHT In loving memory of Cleveland C. Knight who passed away Feb. 14, 1967; You're not forgotten Father, Dear, Nor ever shall you be; As long as life and memory last, We shall remember thee. Sadly missed by Son, Richard and tarn i ly. _ _________cr: II. KOOP .............. " * I Si Tn loving memory of Agnes A. C. Koop who passed away Feb. 6, 1960. So many things have happened since you went away; So many things I shared with you, If only you coUld have stayed; I cannot bring the old da/s back, Your hand I cannot touch; But still have precious memories of one I loved so much. Sadly missed by husband — Fred, Children and Grandchildren. who and who passed away April 27. 1966. Dear mother, you are not forgotten Though on earth you are no more. Still In memory you afe with us As you always were before. Sadly missed by daughter. Sue Nelson, and Debbie Lounsbchry. LUCKES In loving memory of our deai —mother—Vera M_i-uek£? passed away August 29, 1963-A wonderful Mother, Woman, ’ Aid, One who was better, God never made, MclSAAC A Wonderful worker, loyal anc^ true. One in a million, That Mother was you. Just in your ludgment, always right, Honest and liberal, ever upright, Loved by your friends and all whom you knew. _ a wonderful Mother,. that Mother.. wilT you Sadly missed by husband, children, grandchildren and great-granddaughter. LUEBKE In loving memory of Gilbert Luebe who passed away January 21, 1968. The depths of sorrow we cannot In loving memory of our Son fcnd Brother, Thomas Edward Mclsaac who passed away September 20, 1961. They say time heals all sorrow And helps us to forget; But time so far, has only proved How much'we miss Him yet. God gave us strength to tight it j And courage to bear the blow Bot what it meant ta lose him,__ No one will ever know. —Sadly missed by Mom, Brothers, ° Sisters and Family.________• You're not forgotten brother, dear, Nor ever shall you be; I As long as life and memory last, We shall remember thee. Sadly missed by brothers and their families, _______________ MORLEY In loving memory of Sgt. James R. Morley who passed away August 15, 1966 in Vietnam. You're not forgotten James, dear, Nor ever shall you be; » As long as .life and memory last, We shall remember thee.------------------ Sa0ly missed by mother, dad, OTTMAR brothers and sisters. MORTIMORE In loving memory of Gertrude M. Mortimore who passed away Aug. 8, 1965, and Howard Mortimore who passed away Oct. 16, 1967. Time turns away the edge of grief Rut memory turns back every leaf. Sadly misSed by Sons^ Robert and Bill and family. m loving memory of Jerry Orr, who passed away July 13, 1962. Gone is the face we loved so dear, Silent is the voice we loved to hear; Too far away for sight,or speech But no! too far for thought to reach Sweet to remember him, who Once was here And who, though absent, is just as dear. Sadly missed bv Wife and _ ^Daughters. __ OSBORN In lovin^L., juempry of Mrs. Ada PURSLEY . . . # In loving memory of Robert Pursley who passed away June 7, 1966. We cannot forget you our loved one so dear. Your memory grows sweeter year after year. Your love remains with us yet. You were the kind of a mother. Your loved ones will never forget. Sadly missed by Family and Friends— RUTTERBUSH in loving memory of Charles J. Rutterbush who passed away July SNEED SMITH In loving memory of Thelma Smith, who passed away Feb. 1, 1965. Those whom we love go out of sight But never out of mind; They are cherished In the hearts Of those they leave BehThdT Children and Families. You cannot return so our tears in But in heaven we are hoping to meet you again. Sadly missed by wife, children and g r a ndchlldren._________________| 18, 1958. A wonderful father, husband and aide, One who was better, God never made. A wonderful worker so loyal and , true, One in a million, that person was you, Just in your judgment, always right, Loved by our friends and all whom! S,NEED loving memory of Raymond Sneed who passed away January 22, 1967. No pen can write, no tongue can My sad and bitter loss, But God alone has helped so well To bear the heavy erbss. Sadly missed by wife Helen, children and grandchildren. fondly Osbdrn, who passed January 13, 1963. In our ho'me she remembered. Sweet memories cling to her name Those who loved her. in life sincerely. Still love her in death lust the same. Sadly* missed by Mr. and Mrs. *-eRoy Ojborn and family. RADER In loving memory of Norman Marshall Rader who passed away June 8, 1955. On a bright and sunny afternoon in the late month of June, God took you by the hand and led you to his land. Darkness fell for us upon that sunny afternoon As we laid your body down In dark and empty ground. But the sun will shine again and peace will be thine, When we meet and greet again in His forever land. Sadly missed * by his mother, father, - brother, sister, and grandmother.______________________ you knew. A wonderful father and husband were you. Dearly loved and sadly missed by, wife and sorts and daughters.__ RUTTERBUSH In loving memory of Pvt. Victor! P. Rutterbush who passed away! January 7, 1945. You gave your life for our country,, But we know not why, For they keep right -on fighting, For what we know not why, But you gladly gave your life, , In loving memory of Raymond Carl Sneed who passed away January 22, 1967. Your presence is ever near us. Your love remains* with us yet, Your were the kind of a fathar. Your loved ones would never forget. Sadly missed by Clarence, Judy and children. and SPENCEk In loving memory of Sgt. Richard Kelley .Spencer, who was killed in action *on April 16, 1945. Your memory is a keepsake. With which we'll never part; Though God has you In His keep- ing, In loving memory of our Husband RAMIREZ and Father, Roy M. Ottmar, who B passed away August 8, 1967. We loved him, ah, no tongue can Mario tell. loved so sleeps aceful In loving memory of Josephine M Korolden who passed away March 28. |956. We do not forget her, , We love her7 too dearly For hei& memory to face lives like drean tn memory of Guy W. James, Who KRAUSE Our lips need not speak When our heart mourns sincerely : For grief often dwells Where it seldom fs seen. Sadly missed by her famjjy. KOSKI In loving memory of Adeline Koskl who passed—away April, ,21, 1964. Ldrearp of you, dear loved one, ! And see your smiling facp, And know that you are happy In your Father's chosen olace. ! Sadly Mjssed by Edward Koskl. • _ KOVALCHUK • In loving memory of Helen M. Kovalchuk, who 'passed away December 27, 1967. Till; memory fades and life departs, You live forever In our hearts. Sadly missed by the entire family. Of the loss of well. And while he sleep. His memory we shall always keep Sadly missed by wife Emma and Family .UBTtKE Irv loving memory of Barbara Luettke,,who passed away, Feb. 12, 1967 The depths of sorrow we tell, Of the loss of one we lov,ed so In loving memory of our Husband and Father, Sylvester J. Mclsaac, who passed away October 23, 1967. Gone Is the face we loved so dear Silent is the voter we loved to hear; Too far away for sight or speech But not too far for thought to reach. Sweet to remember TF ■" was here And Who, though absent, is lust as dear. » .... —Sadly missed by his Wife Gertrude, Sons. Daughters & Families._______________________ MCKINLEY . v, * In loving memory of viclo r, McKinley who passed away Dec. 3, 1958: -> Till memory fades and lilt departs, You live forever in our hearts. Sadly missed by Wife and Family MCLAUGHLIN loving memory MUNGER In loving memory of Mary Jane Munger, who passed away May 30, 1961. Dear Mother, you are npf forgotten Though on earth you are no more; Still in memory you are with us i As you always were before. 1 Sadly missed by daughters, Violet, Mary and Glenna grandchildren. Who on ce - M U R P H Y- Hpw much we loved him and how well; God loved him too, and thought it best To take him home with Him to, “rest. —Sadly missed by His Wife Lila and Children. loving memory of Sgt. Ramirez who passed away January 16, 1967, the depths of sorrow we cannot tell, Of the loss of pne we loved so welt, And while he sleeps a peaceful sleep, His memory we shall always keep. SiidTy missed by Monrco Ramlrez and family. SAVAGE In loving memory of Albert' Savage. I seem to. see In the soft, dim SPRAGUE and OMELIAN In loving memory of Mother, Sophie Omelian, who passed away Nov. 15, 1958 and Father, Patrick Omelian, who passed away Oct. 31, 19.57: The depths of sorrow, we cannot tell. loved so loving memory of Mr. and Mrs.1 Alfred Murphy who passed away some time ago. 1 ■ Till memory Fades ihd me . departs, You live forever in our hearts. peaceful Of the loss of ones, v well..— And while they sleep, sleep Their memories we shall always keep. Sadly missed by daughters, Helen Nurenberg, Elizabeth Francisco. RAMIREZ In loving memory of Sgt. Honorlo Ramierez Jr. who passed away June 23, 1966: He never shunned his country** call, , - „ But gladly gave his life, his all. He med the helpless fo defend. A faithful sollder's noble end. —Sadly missed by Mom, ~~ Chris. Dad and RAWLINS -fn loving memory of our dear soh, Donald fi 1 Rawlins, who passed light, A fate 1 loved the best. And think of him when the sun's’ last ray, Goes down In the far-off West. I miss you no less as the time, passes on. Then I did on the day of your —going.-------------*_______________1 •For absence can never close the door of my heart, And lamp of my love is still glowing. Your heart was the truest In all the wide world, Your love fhe best to recaft. • For no one on earth can take your place, You are still the dearest of all. Sadly missed by/wife Nora, chil-i dren, grandchildren and great- i children.__ SANDSTROM,JOEL ~ Jn loving memory of my husband i STAFFORD 1 Sadly missed by Collin Campbell and family., e , In tovHig memory of R. Ernest Palmer, who passed away Nov. 17, 1950. away March 17, 1961> Our lips cannot tell how miss you. McLaugfilln who passed away July, 1966. No pen can write, no tongue can ... loving memory of Larry Myre who passed away Feb. 24, 1966. Till memory fades and life departs You live forever in our hearts. Sadly missed by friends Annie Ruth and Patti Clark.____________ Lawrence NELSON annot tell ell, And while she sleeps a peaceful sleep. Her memory we shall always keep. Sadly missed by Mom, Dad, and B rother Leo.__ LUETTKE In loving memory of our uear wife and mother, Barbara A. Luettke, who passed away Feb. 12, 1967. The fairest llllies are the first to fall. The sweetest first to fade, The fondest, dearest, best of all at peaceful rest Is laid- . Where grows His fairest flowers, We know that we shall meet iaaHHj Our sad and bitter loss? But God alone has helped so well To bear the heavy cross". Sadly missed by his Wife Norlne and family.___ McLAUCHLIN In loving memory of William McLauchlln, who passed a*a y, June . 17, 1960 and Blanch McLauchlln who passed away Oct. —2V1955,------------------------ ‘ They are waiting by the river, Just across the silent stream, Where sweet flowers are e^ver blooming And the banks are ever green. Sadly, missed by Daughter, Edna and grandchildren. loving memory of our wife and mother, Mrs. Karen V. Nelson, who passed away December 23, 1952. Sleep on, dear good mother, It has been long years, - - Since you left our hearts filled with sadness and tears; Yours was a heart that was blithsome and gay, Scattering sunshine all aloriflf the: way; You know how we toved you, and yes, love you yet. Though „God took you from us, we cannot forget. fades and life departs,* You live forever in our hearts. Sadty missed by Ernestine Barns, Jacquelyn Lifter, Roberta Timrek^ PAPPENFUSS In loving memory of Karen Lynn PappenfUss, who passed away December 11, 1964. Time turns away the edge of grief But memory turns back every leaf. Sadly missed oy Mommy, Daddy,! Brothers and Sisters. PAPPENFUSS In loving memory of Walter H. Pappenf uss, who passed away April 17, 1967. Till memory fades and departs, You fiVe forever In our hearts. Sadly missed by Son Donald, Carolyn and Family. OOr hearts cannot tell what to say, God alone knows how we miss you In a home that Is lonesome today. Family. ' Sadly missed by Mom, Dad and Family. Joel Sandstrom who passed away Jan. 11, 1950! Till memory fades and life departs You live forever in our hearts. Sadly missed by wife, Harriet, daughters, Marilyn, Joann, ._granddaughters and slsjfers._ SAR K I In loving memory of Everett Sarki who passed away May 19,1946 Stafford who left us March 30, 1963. Your gentle face and patient smile, With sadness we recaltr You had a kindly word for each And died beloved by all. Sadly missed by Mom, Dad, • sisters, brother, and families.___ STOCKER- In loving ’ memory of My Dear Husband, George Fredrick Stocker, who passed away, Oct. 29, 1948. Gone is the face we loved so deer, Silent is the voice we loved to hear, REED In loving memory of Mickey Stan ton Reed, who passed away Dec 15, 1965. * CfHFMFI God saw you getting weaker so He You'll live forever In our hearts. Sadly missed by Mom, Dad, Vera and Len. Sadly missed ~ET tvosben* Anri Children. Victor A., Vern and “APPENFU55 — —----- In memory of Karen Lynn Pap- who passed away, October 10, 1954. Your presence is ever near us, Your love remains with us yet, . You were the kind of a husband and father, Your loved. ones would never ■Samy missed by wife and chl^di loving memory tof Frances M. Krause, who passed away March 24, 1968. D*1--r mot'ynu ire not forgotten, Though on earth you are no more, Still in memory you are with me, As you always were before. Sadly missed by daughter, Bobbee. Ji fairest bloom of ours. Very sadly missed by husband Dale and sons Kirk and Brian. -MACZKO In loving memory of my dear wife, Evelyn H. Maczko, ^'Vyho passed away July 23, 1965. My lips cannot tell how l miss MELTON In loving memory of Bobby Carroll Melton, who passed away January 4, 1968. God took him home, it was his will, hearts we Iqve him JN .tm. Her My heart cannot tell what to say; God alone knows how I miss her In a home that is lonesome today ^-Sadly missed by Husband,tPaur memory is as dear today As in the hour he passed away. We often sit and think of him When are all alone. . For memory is the only friend That grief can call its own. Sadly, missed by Mother and Dad dy. Lena and Thomas Melton. NELSON In memory of Jack Nelson, passed away April 2|, 1964. Dear Husband, out of the sorrow Your absence has brought to my heart, Have grown fragrant flowers of memory,. To bloom all tha years we're apart. rpcv Sadly missed by wife, Marguerite ,n , - and, children. NEWMAN ’ In loving memory of Percy G Newman who passed a w a > September 7, 1935. Time turns away the edge of gVlef, But memory turns back every leaf. Sadly missed by Daughter Gloria,, penfuss, who passed December 11, 1964. God has a child we loved so dear, Her presence is with Him, Ahd ner memory Is here, Did what He though best He came and stood beside you; And whispered "Come to rest." You wished no one a last farewell Nor even said goodbye, You were gone before we knew it And only God knows why —Sadly missed by friend Pat, life' RICH In loving memory of our Mother and Grandmothar Mrs, Nova Southards. The depths of sorrow we cannot tall, -Of the- loss- -of one wa loved so well, / And While she sleeps e peaceful sleep, Her memory we shall always keep. Sadly missed by the James Rich Family and the Bill Obel Family. In loving memory of Jerry L. July Schemel, who passed away 27/,1966. Here in Lakeview Cemetery In a sollder's grave Lies our dear son, among the; breve. He never shunned hit country's: call He died the helpless to defend. A faithful soldier's noble end. Sadfy missed by Mothar, Dad, and family. _______ SCH REISER in loving memory of Charles M But not reach, Sweat to remember him who once was here. And who though absent is lust as dear. Sadly missed by his wife, children, __and grandchildren. STOOPS In loving memory of Jack W. Stoops who passed away Oct. 21, 1965. if all the world were ours to give We'd give If all and more To see the face we loved so dear Come smiling through the door. To hear his voice, to see his smile To set with him and chat awhile So you who have your husband and dad Cherish him with care For you'll never know the heartache Til you *m. bis empty fibalr.'*’1 * I V Dearly roved and sadly missed by wife- Carlene and son, Jacklo. Schrolbpr Jr^who Tift us May 2,| strahn H.......... loving memory of Patrick H. her away. - Deeply missed by Ajjnt Phyllis pnd family. lovlhi Peek, w 1968. I dream of--.you, dear loved one, And see your smiling face, . And Know that,, you are Happy In your Father's chosen place. Sadly rrtlssed by Wife, Linda and children. RICHARDSON In loving memory of our son and brother Jimmy Richardsor. who passed away January 15, 1966. Peacefully sleeping resting at last, The world's weary trouble add trials are past In silence *he suffered/ In silence he suffered, in patience >ie bore Till God took him home to suffer * no more, Sadly missed by Dad, Mom end Mike. 1961 and Charles M. "Skip' Schreiber, III, who left us Nov. 27, 1,964. Our ’days go by and you're not here. But in our hearts you erf always hare, Sadly missed by their family, Mar |or It M., Martha C. and Vickie A. Schreiber. SEBASKE In loving memory of Joseph M. Sebaske who passed away May 13, 1961. You're not forootten father, dear, i be; Strahn, who passed away Feb. 1966. . No pen can write, no tongue can tell My sad and bitHr loss, But God alone has helped so well To bear the heavy cross. Sadly Missed by his wife Bula and Children/ STRINE As long as life and memory last/1 \ shall remember thee. \Sadly missed by D a u g h f • \Kathrynl,“ . in loving memory of Gerald Strine, who passed aw6y, Oct, 5, 1962. Your presence Is ever near us. Your love remains with us yet, You were the kind of Father, Your loved ones would haver forget.' ' Sadly missed by family. wife and - - n BhV \ - A- v ■ THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 3()[ 1W18* D—9 IULLIVAN In loving mafnory of our mother, Birdie Sullivan and brother. Jamas Sullivan. '‘Tho yaars may wipe out many fh'not# A But this they wipe out never, 9 The memory of those happy days, When we were all together. Sadly missed by the family. TAYLOR In loving memory of Sp. 4C David E. Taylor, who was drowned In Germany, June 10, 1962. Time goes on with many changes Joys and sorrows, smiles and But your memory still is cherished, With the passing of the years. Sadly missed by son, Dave, mom and dad, Yaylor Dear Father, you are not forgotten Thoudh on earth you are no more, Still in memory you are with us As you always were before. Sadly missed by Helen Delores, Hazal and Family. TAYLOR In loving memory of Russell Taylor who passed away January, 1946. In loving memory of WUIIam Leslie who passed away Nov. 29, 1967: This robe of flesh, I'll drop and rise To meet the everlasting skies. Sadly missed by his wife and ___family.____ TEETZEL In loving memory of Fred H. Teetzel, who passed away, August 19, 1965. No pen can write, no tongue can tell, My sad and bitter loss, But God alone has helped so well To bear the heavy cross. Sadly missed by his wife, VI. Arthur Terry. Take them In thine arms, dear Lord And ever let them be; A messenger of love Between our hearts and Thee Sadly missed by Son, Carl Terry and Children^ _ THOMPSON In loving memory of Charles H. Thompson who passed away May 27, 1967. Dear father, you are not forgotten, Though on earth you are no mior£ Still m memory you are with us As you always were before. Sadly missed by wife Bernadette and Children, Charles L., Glenn, Robert and Marilyn. THORNTON In loving memory of William J. Thornton who passed a way December 7, 1950. Dear father, you are not forgotten Though on earth you are no more. Still in memory you are with us As you always were before. ' Sadly missed by the Thornton family.____________________• TINSON In loving memory of Phebe Henderson Tlnson, who passed away November 15, 1963. I'll lend you for a little time, A child of mine/' He said. £or. you to love, the while she lives And morn for when she's dead. It may be six or seven years Or twenty two or three, But will you, till I call her back, Take care of her for me. She'll bring her charms to gladden - you And shall her stay be brief; You'll have her lovely memory As solace for your grief. Sadly missed by her Mother Phebe Henderson and Family.___________ TODOROFF In loving memory of Agnes Todoroff . who passed away 3 years ago: Dear Mother, you are not forgotten Though on earth you a#* no more. Still In memory you are with us As you always were before. Sadly missed by daughtsrs , Caroline and Dippy._____________ TODOROFF In loving memory of Agnes Todoroff who passed away Nov. 18, 1964. The depths of sorrow we cannot tell. Of the loss of one we loved so well, And while she sleeps a peaceful sleep. Her memory we shall always keep. Sadly missed by Todoroff Family. Todoroff In loving memory of George Todoroff who passed away June 18, 1955. Your presence Is ever near us. Your love remains with us yet. Your were the kind of a father, , Your loved ones would never forget. Sadly missed by Todoroff Family. Todoroff —tn—loving memory pf- Josephine Todoroff who passed away Nov. 21, 1952. Dear Mother, you are not forgotten Though on earth you are no more, Still in memory you are with us As you always were before. Sadly missed by Todoroff Family. Turnage In loving memory of Buford Juanita furnage who passed away Dec. 12, 1963. Dear mother, you are not forgotten Though on earth you are no more, Still in memory you are with us As you always were before. Sadly missed by her daughter Juanjta and famUy.___ Vanderworp . In loving memory of Edmund J. Vanderworp, who passed away July 3, 1961. They aay time heals all sorrow And helps us to forget; . But time has only proven How much we miss you yet. Sadly missed by his Wife Mabel __and family. Vanderworp In loving memory of Edmund J. Vanderworp, who passed July 93, 1961. You're not forgotten Father, Dear, Nor ever shall you be; As long as life and memory last I shall remember thee. Sadly missed by Children and Grandchildren. _____________ . Van keureN In loving memory of Wayne Van KeurerL who passed away Dec. 9, 1965. I sigh sometimes to see thy face. But since this cannot be; I'll leave thee to the care of him. Who watches thee and me,___ ^___ Sadly missed by wife, Agnes, Children and Grandchildren. ____ VERHEY Odessla (Reed) Verhey. Those precious memories of our daughter who departed from trs Dec. 7, 1964. As you left this cruel world of sorrow, You are free from pain and harm, You wished no one a last farewell, Nor even said goodbye. * You were gone before we knew It ’ And only tne good Lord know why. —But your tweet smiles and helping hands And deepest fatlh, Will be with us evermore. Mother, Father, sisters and their families. Your two daughteres and their fanitlles._______________ WALTER „ . In loving memory of Laurie Lynn Walter, who passed away Aug. 21,, 1965. Before the Throne of God Thousands of children stand. Children whose sins are all forgiven, A holy, happy band. Up there among the Throne, our Little Laurie stands Waiting for us to loin her In that Holy hapov land. Sadly missed by Mother, Father, j Ngncy and Karen. _ WATERS 7 In loving- memory of Michael Waters who passed a w«v December 24,. 1958 and Helen Waters who passed away July 16, 1966. x.____# Deep In our hearts there Is a picture of our loved ones laid to rest In Memory's frame we shall keep ...«■■ If because they were two of the besfT Jadly, missed by Del, Pat, and bby». -r ' • * Walker In loving memory of Alllea and Carl walker who passed away Feb. 3, 1956 and March 10, 1968. Till memory fades In our he vis. You live forever In our hearts. Sadly missed by Gladys, Jim. — Qreg end Jeff. 1______■ weatherbee" • In loving ‘memory of Robert Weatherbee who' passed away March 8, 1965: . .. . ' Your presence Is ever near us, * 1 Your love remains with us yet, You were the kind of a Brother Your loved ones * would never forget. *'■ Sadly missed by sister* Ethel Bailey.. _ \___________________' Weiss In- loving memory of -Geraldine Weiss, who poised away March 23, 1946. Peaceful be thy rest, deer Mother, It Is sweet 1o breathe thy name; In life we lovad you deeriy In death we do the seme. Sadly missed by Son end Grandson. Welch In loving memory of Enos Welch, who passed away July 30, 1967. I sigh sometimes to see thy face, But since this cannot be; I'll leave thee to the care of Him, WELCH In loving memory of Enos Welch, who passed away July 30. 1967. The depths of sorrow we cannot tell, Of the loss of ont^we loved so well, And while he sleeps a peaceful sleep, His memory we shell always keep. Sadly missed by children of Enos Welch. WELLBAUM In loving memory of EMmett S. Weilbaum who pasted away October-37, 1964 Dear husband, out of sorrow, Your absence has brought to my heart. Have grown fragrant flowers of memory, To bloom ell the years we're apart. Sadly missed by wife Mary. WHISENTON ^r tn loving memory of Ernest Whlsenton, who passed away October 10, 1964. Sunshine passes, shadows fall, loves remembrance outlasts all. And though the years be many or few. They are filled wltb remembrance, dear, of you. Sadly missed by Mother, Pearl Grandmother Sara Little and ___Family.____________ WHITE In loving memory' of Fred M. White, who passed away May 9, 1965. Your presence Is ever near us. Your love remains with us yet; You were the kind of husband and father Your loved ones Will never forget. Sadly missed by Wife Pat, Sons, Kevin and Keith. WILLIAMS In Loving memory of Lucille Williams, who passed away Aug. 12, 1965. Time turns away the edge of grief But memory turns beck every leaf. Sadly missed by husband and children. WILSON.... In loving memory of our parents, Mr. ana Mrs. Alonzo Wilson, who passed away February 19, 1949 and September 30, 1966. Time turns away the edge of grief But memory turns back every leaf. Sadly missed by their children, Harvey, William, Viola, and Ann. WILSON In loving memory of our only son Thomas E. Wilson Jr., who passed away June 26, 1959. Your presence is ever near us. Your love remains with us yet. You were the kind of a son. Your lovad ones would never forget. , _ . Sadly missed by Mom and Dad. WITT LANGE In loving merflory of Mae Witt who passed away January 18, 1966 and Mary Lange who passed away March 26, 1968. No pen can write, no tongue can tell My sad and bitter loss. But God alone has helped so well To be« Sadly WOLFF In loving mamory of Otto Wolff who passed ewey December 4, 1965. The depths of sorrow we cannot tell, Of the loss of one we loved so well, \ And while he sleeps a peaceful sleep* His memory we shell always keep. Sadly missed by wife, daughter, end family. WIX In loving memory of Beth Wix who passed away Sept 24, 1965. Sadly missed by her father, Hjram. WOT TON, In mafnory of David E. Wot ton, who died August 19, 1967. His life's troubles and conflicts are over. Remembered by his family. WAGNER In loving memory of Edward Wagner, who passed away March 24, 1962. Dgar husband, out of the sorrow Your absence has brought to my heart. Hove grown fragrant flowers of memory, To bloom ell ^the years we're apart. Sadly missed by wife and family. WARREN In loving memory of our dear dad, Louis J. Warren, who left us August 10, 1967. Sadly missed by his daughters, Betty, Madelyn and Lucillie YOUNG In loving memory of Charles T. Young, who passed away January 17, 1952. Time turns away the edge of grief But memory turns back every leaf. Sadly missed by Mom, Dad and Brothers. __ ZANDER In loving memory of Margie M. Zander who passed away, November 27, 1965. For all her loving kindness To your mother yeu can turn So all I can do dear mother Is to go and tend vour grave And leave behind a token of love To the best mother God ever gave. Sadly missed by Ceclia, Mahlon and their children. zarzorian In loving memory of our Wife and Mother Mary Zarzorian who passed away August 13, 1957. A wonderful wife and mother, woman and aid; One who was better God never made. A wonderful worker, loyal and Irue One in a million, that Mother was you. Just In your judgment, always right French Agog Over Twirlers 'Army of Charm' Idea Imported From U. S. Thomas A. Ogg,-29]-Ascot and-Kathleen1 b. fcdginton, 114 Riviera Terrace Franklin L. Nolle, NOs Lemoore, Calif, end Roberta L. Anderson, Bloomfield* Hills Willard F. Hartfield, Oak Perk Kethervn fc, O'Rourke, Birmingham Connie E. Fields, 577 Upland end Melva J. Murrn, 65] Markle David P. Goodnough, Franklin and Sntriey A. CUrran, Birmingham Winded D. Garver, 820 Parkwood and 996 bmerson ary E*--€emR, 214 S Merrlmac and and Gay it A. Sonens Gary E*--Camr. Brenda G Mock, Lake Orh Honest and liberal, every upright. Loved by your friends and i whom you knew; PARIS (NKA) — Majorettes may have become an integral part of American folklore. In France they are very definitely a recent acquisition to public life. There are today 3,500 majorettes in what the French so euphemistically call ‘‘the army of charm and smiles.” ★ ★ ★ The first group was formed around four years ago in Nice by Dr. R. Toussaint. He had appreciated the battalion of pretty girls heading a parade he had seen when on a visit to the. United States. 1 His idea caught on and, since then 80 groups have been' formed, each of 10 majorettes or more HAPPY IN LOVE - Nor- As in the USA; the time is way’s fairy-tale couple -coming when no celebration or So°ja Haraldsen, the mer-parade will be complete without! Rant's daughter and Crown its advance guard of uniformed girls. Recently in the Parisian suburbr or Saint Ouen the head majorettes of France held their first congress. ★ * ★ The average Frenchman who is inclined to think that the girls. in the gay musical-comedy uniforms are just out for a good time makes a great mistake. Marriage Licenses | Death Notices “■.•"‘■.WORKMAN, ELMER J.; May thorn,. A. ooa,m amoi (.nd KUiMe.n! 27, 1968 ; 5320 Waterford Road, Independence Township; age 87; beloved husband of Mary Ida Workman; dear father of Mrs. Alfred Selberg, Mrs Donald McKenzie, Mrs. Hubert Hicks, Edward. Elmer and Eugene Workman; dear brother of Mrs. Linda Sloane and Mrs. Zul Paris opera, and baton-j^e work at the request of thej financial news in a metropolitA twirling. |£omt Commission on Mental paper will familiarize you with According to David, whose ChlWren- which plans favorable-— and unfavorable—ambition is to contact an to ,nclude in a national report factors a f f e c t i n g industries, American group of majorettes, nex ^ear‘ companies and secruities. These their French cousins h a v e 4 TYPES OF PROBLEMS are some of the ways to train evolved a routine which differs! Dr. Glidewell says the study yourself to make good stock Slightly from theirs. jreveals no increase in malad- selections. I The French have introducedjjustment among elementary * * * ]more dance steps on the march schoolchildren during the 40 Q — Please give me your views and their own version of high years, although a number of “Recruiting is very selective,” pointed out Guy David, 28-year-old assistant director of the Fetes Committee at the Saint Ouen Town Hall. “The discipline is strict and the training equal to thdt of any amateur athlete.” , SPECS ARE OUT { No candidates wearing spec- in American schools; the boys tacles need apply. Otherwise are worse off than the girls; but the girls are expected to be many will get better with age, ]comely and graceful, stand at]even in the face of a shortage of 'least 5 feet 6 and be between 15 competent people to help them. gj| and 25 years of age. I These are the results of a After admission to the group !study || studies — some 50 a candidate is placed on trial!surveys made. °m *he Past 44 for a month. This is followed by ^ are, Jaclu?red ~ un: three months’ training to fipdldeh ^enn at the Umvers,ty of «..* ...u-tu— «*'■'. i- gifted for ° ^ Maladjustment serious enough Death’ Notices I BECKWITH, NORBERT H ; May 28, 1968 ; 8820 Wise Road, Comm rce Township; age 58; beloved husband of Alice Beckwith; dear father of Mrs. Howard Coleman, Mrs. John Ontalchik, Mr. William Ben-1 jamine, Mrs. Arthur, Sampson, Mrs. Leon Graber,! Mrs. Steve Skokan; dearj brother of Cecil Betkwith; also survived by 20 grandchildren and four great-grandchildren Fun e r a 1 service will be held Friday, May 31 at I p m. at the Union Lake Baptist Church. Interment in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Beckwith will lie in state at the Elton Black Funeral Home, Union Lake. DAVIS, GEORGE F.; May 29, 1968 ; 2001 20th Street, Zephyr-hills, Florida; age 70; beloved : husband of Lula M. Davis. Funeral arrangements are pend-1 ing at the Huntoon Funeral Home. In Memoriam ]out whether she is gifted for I use of its products, competitive |ba^on.^w2r|jng br 'the drums. A — You’re quite right. There are books and articles for in-vestors like yourself, to read and study if you’re willing to make the effort to learn about the country’s basic industries, the corporate enterprises developed by each, and what these corporations report about their earnings and future prospects. ERWIN, E. CARL; May 27, 1968 ; 83 Jeff, Pontiac; age 81; beloved husband of Margaret; dear father of Ronald J. Erwin, Mrs. Melvin (Lou) Hall, and Mrs. John (Carol) Sawyer; also survived by nine grandchildren. Recitation of the Rosary will be Thursday at 8 p.m. at the C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor. Funeral service will—be held Friday, May 31, at 11 a.m. at the funeral home. Interment in Mount Hope Cemetery. Mr. Erwin will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested vis-, iting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to! 9 p.m.) | HOUCK, HOWARD; Way 28, 1968; 10 Hovey Street, Oxford; beloved husband of Leila Houck; dear father of Mrs. Aileen VanVleet, Lois Lee, Harold and Grant Houck; dear brother of Mrs. Harriet Lenhoff. Also survived by 11 grandchildren and four greatgrandchildren. Funeral service will be held Friday, May 31, at 2 p.m. at the Bossardet Funeral Home, Oxford. Interment in Oxford Cemetery. Mr. Houck will lie in state at the funeral home. IN LOVING MEMORY of our Mother, Barbara • > \ Carry who pasKed away September 11, 1966. We do not need a special day To bring her to our rolndA For the day we do not think of her I a very hard to find. If all thlr'world were ours to give, We'd give It, yes. and more, To see the face of our dear Mother Come smiling through the door. Since this cannot be. We know God has her in His keeping, But we have her In our hearts. Friends may think the wound Is healed, ' But they so little know The sorrow that is In our hearts concealed, ]Ory we'll never part* Sadly mksed by children, brother, sisters and father. *' IN LOVING MEMORY of our husband and father, James A Taylor, who passed away February 4, 1968 I have oniy your memory, dear husband. The love a heart hokts dear, Fond memories linger everyday. Remembrance keeps him pear. Sadly missed by wife, Muriel, Jim and Ann and grandchildren IN MEMORIES OF Isaac Jones who passed away February 3, 1968 and Faye Ann Jones, January 8, 1956. Our beloved son and daughter, who have departed from us But the warm and precious memories are always with us. You two are very deeply missed by all the family. Love Mr; end Mrs. Wade Jones end family._____ IN LOVING MEMORY of Myrtle D. Moore who passed away March 30* 1952, and David Moore. As long as life end memory lays, I shall remember thee. Sadly missed by Paul. _ IN LOVING MEMORY of Walter Edward Henderson who passed away Aprlk 7, 1967. The depths of sorrow we cannot tell, Of the loss of one we loved so well. And while he sleeps a peaceful sleep, His memory we shall always keep. Sadly missed by Mother Minnie Dalby and nephew Ronald Gerber. IN LOVING MEMORY of Violet Louise Gerber, who passed away Nov. 13, 1963. The depths of sorrow we cannot tell, Of the loss of ona wa loved so well. And while she sleeps a peaceful sleep, Her memory we shall always keep. , Sadly missed by Another Minnie Dalby and son Ronald Gerber. IN LOVING MEMORY of Floyd L. Dalby who passed away May 7, 1966. Dear husband, out of sorrow Your absence has brought to my heart. Have grown fragrant flowers of memory, To bloom all the years we're apart. Sadly missed by wlfa Minnie Dalby and grandson Ronald Gerber. Stock are generally other studies have suggested an increase of emotional availablePIineSthe‘ larger'“ city |« Delhi Australian Petroleum, I stepping. ■ papers. As for mechanical gffien to me. Does it1 Majorettes stem mainly from disturbance among teenagers. white-collar classes but- “Maladjustment n-cl u d e s four types of problems: formulas or systems to apply to I stock selection, their use is a growth poten-the JR ■ highly professional operation. I jt,al- E- L- - there are a!Iso a good pers0nal distress, as revealed think you’d do better to study j \ — Yes, I believe it. factory workers, dressmakers *v_ and learn all you can about definitely does. However, in-rand others common stock investing on the asmuch as Australian oil com-] Last year an electronics ex-|fearfuiness and sleep troubles; basis of fundamental factors, panies do not enjoy great pert perfected a hi-fi drum1 that is, the company’s earnings, j popularity in the United States* (which precedes the ma- -----::-7'-—---------------*—jit might be advisable tp li-jorettes) which sends out quidate your gift and buy 100;marital music and is relayed by shares of Occidental on the Bigla tiny transistor hidden behind Board. These shares have ajthe drums, stronger following than Delhi ^11 the drummers have to do Australian and are attractive is mjme the drum beats. The for growth. They have shown|music is that 0f well-known! __________________§________■ good market action because of 0rCbestras and far superior,; all schoolchildren have some O c c i d ental’s y’d!ve^*“1caban naturally^ tjS any local brass trouble along these lines, but program. Earnings are ex'band. or|lv l® Per cen* are ser*ous pected to move up again this jn y,js area. at least, the]enough to justify clinical at- social ineptness such as apathy, withdrawal, or overaggressiveness; but not including delinquency; and problems of development, such as stuttering, bed-wetting and temper tantrums. ★ ★ ★ Something like 35 per cent of JONES, ELLIS: May 29. 1968; 272 Clifford, Pontiac; age 71; dear father of Alfred, Lafie, Lacie and Charles F. Jones and Mrs. Richard (Anna Belle) Spies; also survived by] two brothers, one sister and I 13 grandchildren. Funeral] service will be held Saturday, June 1 at 10 a.m. at the Coats! Funeral Home. Interment ini Lakeview Cemetery, Ciarkston. Mr. Jones will lie in state j at the Funeral Home after 7 p.m. tonight. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to ] 9 p.m.) BOX REPLIES At 10 a.m. today there were replies at The Press Office in the following > boxes: ( C-3, C-15, C-20, C-24, j C-25, C-26, C-28, C-30„ f C-32, C-35, C-36, C-37, | C-38, C-41, C-42, C-44, C-50 Announcements 3 "AVON CALLING" FOR SERVICE JN YOUR HOME, FE *-0,39. Mall VoR RENT? RE.CEPf*ONS. (cages, church. OR 3-5202, FE 2 3838. _ LOSE WEIGHT SAFELY with Dex-A-Diet Tablets. Only 98 cents at Simms Bros. Drugs. B EG IN NING J U N E 3 t ifr o O fl h August, Ben Powell Disposal Service will start the ■summer schedule of 2. pickups per wk. Pickup days will be the same as Im yr. ‘ 5470. for information, call 625- (COPYRIGHT, 1968) Ann Arbor High Suspends Classes ANN ARBOR (AP) - Classes were suspended until Monday at Ann Arbor High School following two fights between Negro and white students Wednesday. * * * ] It was the first reported violence since tension developed between whites and Negroes, who boycotted classes last Friday after charging racial discrimination in athletics, classes and extracurricular activities. French majorettes are miles tent'on. ahead of their American Between 40 and 60 per cent of jeounterparts, who march to the |tP^ children will get beat of a different drum. OU Asks Help Oakland University’s School of Education has extended an invitation, to all public schools ... . .. . • ;systems'J.n southeastern PEACE IN WAR A slat^ Michij>an to help the university of the Virgin Many stands ic - .. . . • - c framed by barbed wire In to expand i s in-servicMraining front of the Central Cathedral Iand Consultancy programs in better without psychiatric attention, exDlains Dr. Glidewell, and referring ' a child o f t e n stigmatizes him. WEIGH RISKS Teachers are aware of this; they weigh the risks against possible benefits and refer about 3.7 per cent of the children When facilities are available Facilities, howpver. are not always available. ‘T don’t want to leave the impression that there is no problem,” says Dr Glidewell. but it is not as large as the 10-per cent figure would indicate. “We are perhaps one-third to one-half understaffed for the problem.” irt Saigon, South Vietnatn. The wire, used to close off ihe street at night, in daytime is gathered in front of the statue. the next few years. \\ The Red Crescent Society in Turkey is similar to the Red Cross in this country. New Customers The American Gas Association reports that the natural gas industry, which presently has a SHOULD A GENTLEMAN? total of 39.0 million customers. Hi Apparently it’s all right to expects to gain an average of offer a cigar to a lady — es- 980.000 new customers each pecially if the lady is actress jyear between now and 1980. Janis Paige. Miss Paige is j ’———— , seen here, puffing awa^ at a About 10 per cent of all New York party given for An- Americans contribute to polit-gela Lansbury. lit-al campaigns. KELLY, ANNA K ; May 28, 1968; 994 Voorheis Road, Waterford Township; age 67; dear sister of Mrs. Mary Gerasco, Mrs. James TyinkJ Mrs. Alice Moore, Roy, Harry! and Charles Hansen; also survived by many nieces and nephews. Funeral service will be held Friday, May 31, at 3 p.m. at the Lewis E. Wint i Funeral Home, Ciarkston with1 Dr. Paul S. Vanamanj officiating. Interment in Ottawa Park Cemetery. Mrs. Kelly will lie in state at the funeral home. TISCH, WARREN BRADLEY; May 19. 1968 ; 7321 Bordman -Road, Almont Township; age 5: beloved son of Winston G ' Tisch; - beloved grandson of Mr.^and Mrs. Elmer Barg and Mr. and Mrs. Clare E. Tisch. I Memorial service will be] Friday, May 31. at 1 p.m. atj the Flumerfelt Funeral Homer,i Oxford. Interment In Munith j Cemetery, Munith, TISCH, BRENDA LEE; May' 19, 1968 ; 7321 Bordman Road, Almont Township: age 26; beloved ‘Wofe of Winston G. Tisch; beloved daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer, Barg; dear sister of Elmer B. Barg. Memorial service will be held Friday, May 31, at 1 p m. at the Fiumerfelt Funeral Home, Oxford. Interment in Munith Cemetery, Munith. SPECIAL NOTICE ADVANCED DEADLINES PONTIAC PRESS , CLASSIFIED Due to Early Memorial Day Edition THURSDAY, MAY 30th , THURSDAY'S EDITION Regular -Contract Display - 12 noon 5-29 12 noon 5-29 5 p.m 5-28 ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDING a friendly adviser, phone FE 2 M2? before 5 p.m. Confidential AVOID GARNISHMENTS Get out of debt with our plan Debt Consultants 814 Pontiac State Bank Building FE 8-0333 State Licensed—Bonded Open Saturday 9-12 am E X CITING S P Rl NG F U N FOR scout groups, church, clubs. Ride through fields, woods, ah horsedrawn hayrlde. Followed by home cooked spaghetti dinner. See newborn animals - lambs, pigletl, calves, chicks. For reservations, 628-1611. UPLAND HILLS FARM ...Gfc i OUT OF DEBT ON A PLANNED BUOGET PROGRAM YOU (AN AFFORD TAILORED TO YOUR INCOME SEE MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS 703 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. FE B-045S HOL I D A V “H E ALT H CLUB MEMBERSHIP, muJt »*ll. 47J-5M7 after 6 p.m. INDIANAPOLIS 500 TICKETS for sale, 30 tickets on home stretch, $15 each, cell 681-0212. bet. 3-5 p.m., after 6 call OR,3-2158. WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY BY protettifmai color. Brochure avail-able. WWW. Lost and Found S FOUND: SIAMESE CAT. Vicinity ot SaLhabaw and Maybee. 623-0360. FOUND: MALE BEAGLE Vicinity Ot Orchard Lake and Commerce. Has collar, no license. 682-2807. FOUND: BRITTANY SPANIEL, Orchard Lake area, 626-0213. Lost:..white male poodle, reward, collar with ID.. FE 4-6464. LOST: LARGE ALL gray part Siamese cat, disappeared Sunday Morning trom 1090 Crescent Lake Rd., please call OR 3-2094.___ LOST: LARGE SIAMESE CAT Roehester-Untversity Hill section Call 651-6171. Reward.________ LOST: WHITE FRENCH Poodle, red Rhinestone collar, vie. of K-Mart, FE 2-5873. ________________ LOST — 2 WHITE German Shepherds, bet. University Or. - Fcatherstone. FE 4-7129. ____ LOST: MALE SABLE and white collie, 6 months old. Answers to the name of Lad. Vic. of Oxbow Grill. Child's Pet. Please return _ Reward. 363-9790.____________ Help Wanted Male ^ 6 1 MAN PART TIME We need a dependable married man, over 2t,‘ to work mornings or eves. Call 674-0520, 4 p.m.- 8 3 YOUNG MEN -79 TO 29 Due to expansion, 3 men for full time work for a company who never had a strike or layoff in several years of operation. Have steady year-around work, $600 a month. Cell 674-0520 9 a.m. to 12 noon tomorrow only.___________ $750 PER MONTH We need 4 men who era willing to learn new trade. Earn $750 per month while training. Must be neat and willing to work. Call OR 4-0520 9 a.m.-12 noon — tomorrow only. ARCHITECTURAL DRAFTSMAN 3 years minimum, experienca# commercial and resdlential work call Ml 7-2022.__ A MAN IN GOOD HEALTH to.’Wl the position of material controller and stock man for a rapidly growing concern dealing I n electro-mechanical products, soma exp. preferred, Lebow Assoc., Oak Park. 566-8622.________• ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS, transign Inc. 34 W. Sheffield, Pon-tlac. _________________________. AUTO MECHANIC Helpers end parts ctarke. Must be able to work any shift. kEEGO SALES i SERVICE, 3080 Orchard Laka Road, Keego Harbor, 682-3480._______________* AUTO MECHANIC Need experienced Rambler mechanic for large volume dealer. Excellent pay and fringe benefits. Including paid vacation and holidays. Blue Cross and insurance policy. If you are interested in ' making money — cell Bob Niedermiller at Ed Bailey Rambler, 818 N. Main, Royal Oak. 548-1991._____________________ AUTO GLASS MEN, trimmeVs. Small shop experience. Top wages. Benefits. 21308 West McNkhols near Grand River. KE 3-1700. Detroit.__ ASPHALT PAVING FOREMAN, experienced driveways and parking lots. 682-5471._ AAA OPPORTUNITY Immediate opening fpr Real Estate Salesman. Fine opportunity end worth your investigation. All interviews confidential. Ask for Warren Stout, Realtor, 1450 N. Opdyke Road, Pontiac, Michigan FE 8-1165. By appointment.__ ATTENTION OPPORTUNITY Clark Oil end Refinery Corp. has available In this Pontiac area a station management position. 1. Must be 21 to 50 2. Excellent beginning salary. 3. Excellent beginning salary. 4. ' Experience not necessary. 5. No auto maintenance Involved. We deal in gasoline sales only. If interested call collect, Detroit,' JO 4-6546 after 5 p.m.; Warren, 268-6557.____________; ATTENTION Distributor for nationally known beverage, must be young and aggressive. Contact collect, KE 7-., 7100.___________________________ Appliance Salesman Top salary plus highest commission. All benefits including profit sharing. Best hours. Work close to home. Permanent. Experienced only. Apply Mr. Schultz or Mr. Fretter. Fretter Appliance 14985 Telegraph, . _ KE 3-9521 Arc Welders Truck Body Friday’s edition, 5/3i *. ! Spray Painters Regula Contrai Display 9am 5-30 2 p.m. 5 29 12 noon, 5 29 SATURDAY’S EDITION, 6/1 Regular - 5 p.m. 5-31 Contract — 2 p.m. 5-31 Display — 5 p.m. J-29 Cancellations For Thurs. 5-30 — Noon 5-29 For Frl. 5-31- 9 a.m. 5-31 Thank You. .. For Your : Cooperation HALL FOR RENT/ 3f W. Yale. FE .2-0072. After 6 P.M., FE 5 0316. OAKLAND COUNTY Singles Club -25 or over, write Pontiac Press Box C-50, Pontiac, Michigan. WANTED: YlANDMADE ITEMS on cbnsignment. Call 623-0237. Funeral Direclors 4 C0AIS \ FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS _ 674 0481 C. J GODHAROT FUNERAL HOME Keego Harbor, Ph. 682-0200 DONELSON-JOHNS FUNERAL HOMfe Apply In person feEMKE, INC. 28100 Grosbeck Hwy Roseville (Detroit, Mich.) ARC WELDERS $3.33 HOUR 58 HOUR WEEK LIBERAL FRINGE BENEFITS Bathey Manufacturing Co. - 100 S. MILL ST. PLYMOUTH BROILERMAN Apply In person, Machus .Red Fox, ~ 6676 Telegraph, Birmingham, Top wages and benefits. BOY OVER 1$ TO Work In Vtore and make delivery. 1081 West Long Lake, Bloomfield Hills. BUSBOYS, Steady or pert lime, well paid, private year around club. Call Mrs. Clews, FE 2-8323.\ BUTCHER, 'FULL TIME, fbr’strvlct meat department. Reply fg Pontiac Press Box Number ^ BARBER, MASTER~OR~ epprefltlce, full tlme^ 3965 Auburn Ed., Pomltfr BOY 16, STOCK rflD gipfftfnf Russ's Country Store. 4100 Elizabeth Lake Rd. 'm i ■ /■>/ ■W * D—10 H«lp Wiiitri Mato BARBERS WANTED. APPLY I Pontiac Trail, Wallad Lake. Tui through Set. 1:30 a.m. to frp.m. 5660. Cooley BARTENDER Nights. Apply In person, Lanas. Union take._____________ Bridgeport Operators Permanent positions with raplf expanding. company. f r I n a benefits, overtime, qood working conditions, Clyde- Corp., 1800 W. Maple, Troy._____ CHEVROLET ENGINEERING I Is Interviewing ' PLANT LAYOUT ENGINEER For plant engineering engineering offices. Exc. fringe benefits program. Apply at: Chevrolet Engineering 30003 Van Dyke Warren, Mich Mon.-Frl. 9 a.m. 4 p m -or call Salaried Personnel, JE 9 5000 ext. 4386. kN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER Help Wanted Male 6 Help Wanted Male 6 Chippers and Grinders, Schwarb Foundry Co. j 22522 Hoover Rd., Warren,. Mich. DRUG AND LIQUOR Clerk. 18. College student preferred. Russ's Country Drugs. 4500 Elizabeth. Lafke Rd ' COLLEGE STUDENT^*-SUMMER EMPLOYMENT 16 wks. work tor 18 students. First come, first served Cell Mr. Probst before 2 p.m. DIE REPAIR Nb~ess Maintenance OVER TIME-PROF IT SHARING Progressive Stamping Company ! 2725 Nakota Royal Oak T11E PONTIAC THKSS, THURSDAY, MAY 80, 19«8__________________—-------- 6| Help Wanted Male 6 Help Wanted Male _6 Help Wonted Female 7 Help Wonted Female_7 Helpe*ide Help Wanted Male DESK CLERK WANTED. Full tlm*. MAN WANTED FOR Farr tint* Must be dependable. 3j(M061 EXPER ilffclb DO-A L L surface grinder for grinding carbide end carbide tipped tools, overtime. Champion fool Co. 24060 Orchard Lk., Rd., Farmington 474-6200 EXPERIENCED COOKS wanted, attractive salary and be net 11» apply Elk's Club, 114 Orchard Lake Ave., Pontiac work. 3M-0730. 338-0350 CONTROL DESIGN Electrical control designer for diversified, automatic production machine*. Must also be familiar with pneumatic and hydraulic controls. "Ground floor*' opportunity in control group of rapidly growing organization. Ap DRIVER SALESMAN, wholesala Ice ; cream delivery. Capes Ice Cream,1 I Milford. 684-6885. ply per: to: Mr. R. Bohmler prtsser, full time, 83 per hr., Berg Cleaners. 425-3521. ___l_ E X P E R 'l l N CTS P L O R A L p. ... n r. . i DESIGNER. 8600 month to start. Drill Press Operators W r I g h t -Dtf anthaltr Florist. Permanant position with rdepict.y> Woodward at 12 Mila Rd. Ml 4- expanding company, f r i nig 1 7688. ' ________ benefits, overtime, good working EXPERIENCED EAVESTROUGHER conditions, Clyde Cocp , 1800 W.; and or sheetjnatal man. Ml^ 4-2511. Tr°v _____ ,FULL TIME "HARDWARE SALES ELECTRIC MOTOR REBUILD man.i clerk. Retell Store, good working 603-2872 from 7 a.m. - 7 p.m. | conditions, fringe benefits. MANAGER TRAINEE man between RGILl DETROIT CORPORATION EXPERIENCED MECHANIC, prefer > Crooks Rd. Clawson mAn Wjth tractor dealership exp., JU 8-1500 fxC pay and fr|ng0 benefits, 625- Si part time, 3245 for appointment. DRUG CLERK, over 18, part time, nights, lake Center Drug, 2387 Orchard Lake Rd. DELIVERY AND STOCK man 4-fo EXPERIENCED SHORT ORDER rook, 2* or older, top wages. Blue| Cross, Mnd other benefits. Apply In person to Steak & Egg, 5395 Dixie Hwy. between 9*5 p.m. Damman Co. Bloomfield Plaza Telegraph and Maple Rd. 626 3010 Factory Workers it you ere e young 22 and 35, here Is e greet op portunlty for growth end future with one of Americe's leading, men's end boy's discount chains. Our repld expension, local ly end nation-wide, assures you of a manager's position within a! reasonable short time. Experience helpful, but not ne/cessary. Broad company benefits. Must relocate. Apply at K«Mart Department Store, 7 S. Glenwood, Pontiac. Ask _Jor Mr. Middleton. NEW CAR Salesman Experienced, active floor, excellent pay plan, bonus and demo plan. - Apply In person only | SPARTAN | DODGE SERVICE MANAGER Marine llore. SSSSMO. SERVICE STATION, FULL time OasoIJn* attendant. 1 a.m 5 p.m Sundaye off. Student, need nol apply. Good starting pay. Call Ml 7-0700. __________L SALES C0RRESP0NDANT Immediate opening for e mature reliable young men with the ability to work with people directly and via phone. Experience in handling correspondence necessary. 2 yrs. college preferred. This is a permanent position with growth potential. Attractive benefits and working conditions. Apply Personal Dept. De VLIEG MACHINE CO. ■ 14 MHt-Nr. Coolldge___ s An equal opportunity employer „ I l.rge' ASSISTANT »OOKKB*PER .ndDRUG AND COS«ETICc.ark,tu|| HIGH JCHOOLJSRAD General Office. who Ilka, to work and part me, RUII coonw with figure,, ieme typing, pr«ter I Drug,. 4300 Elli,bath Leke Roed^ experience In conitructlon ettlce DRUG STORE CLERK. E«perlenee phone ,7*4)3,. ___ i I g| I OIRL OFPICE PERS6NAELE mature women, experienced, typ* Ing, working with figures, filing. ______ 1 WAfTRlSS. NIGHTS: Tull time. Good pay, tips. Paid Blue Cross, picky's, 819 Woodward. ATTORNEY Needs Housekeeper Take complete charge of home apd family so attorney can practice law. Monday through Friday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Excellent salary. mot ’tatior IP!_________ ^______ commercial course for sorting end posting Invoices. bookkeeping end office machine* helpful, cell FB 2-0114 •or appointment. KTtfHIN hALPT DAY^kftlb Evening shifts hospitalization, paid va-cation maals. Apply at; ELIAS BiOS. BIG BOY RESTAURANT Dixie Hwy. 1* Silver Lake Rd. KITCHEN HELP FOR Nursing ladles for WAITRESSES, TEL-TRAY OPERATORS AND tlon, UfllOfl Lk.. IM 341il. T CAR HOPS. Must be neat ap-LADY FOR WAITING ON paarlng and of good character. No! customers, marking end assembly, experience necessary. We train Apply at 379 E. Pike. Ogg you. Company paid vacation. Cleaners, health Insurance, life Insurance, l0UNG6 WAITRESS AND bar , h. .tii* hi'I melds, full end pert time exp. preferred but will train, tall prat. E»e«. 5-10 p.m Laa Drug,, 4M0 Dixit Hwy., Drayton._ Elias Bia Boy Family Restaurant lunch hour, meals. 5-6 days week Day uhlft end night shift. Ages 19-35 preferred. Interviews 9 to II a.m. 2-4 and 8-9 p.m. PM. 674 0424 or apply In person, children, cell before 4:30 332-1504.________|_______________ SERVICE-STATION ATTENDANT.; "BABY SITTER, DAYS, ,:J0 a.m. midnight «hlft, 10:30 p m. to 7| to » noon. FE 4-0001. ................ a m, 47 hour work weak, good BARMAID. M-3S. Utica araa. 731-pay, commission and bonus plan, | 2156. Days. company benefits, must be de-!—‘------------- pendable and reliable, contact John! Kozlaker at 644-7727. ____Telegraph end Huron Sts. Dixie Hwy. and Silver Lake Rd. BE A BEE-LINER Aluminum Bldg. Items Drywall till Painting nnd Decorating ALUMINUM SIDING, WINDOWS.! SPECIALIZED GUARANTEED Dry, A-l PAINTING AND roofing Installed by "Superior." wall, new and remodel. FE 5-1419.1 PAPER HANGING Call FE 4-3177 anytime. TmHavZmm iTHOMPSON_______ ____FE 4-8364 ------------- Dressmaking, Tailoring !a-.j painting, work guaran- teed. Free estimates. 6824620. ALTERATIONS. ALL TYPES. KN11 AAA' PAINTING AND DECORATING, I dresses, leather coats. 682-9533. - ... ---- BETTY JQ'S DRESSMAKING . | Weddings, alterations. 674-3704 .DRESSMAKING AND ALTERA TIONS FE 4-8139 Antenno Service Asphalt Paving 25 yrs. exp. Free est.. UL 2-1398 By day or week: Warehousemen; assemblers, machine operetors; material handlers; common laborers; etc. Daily pay. Report any time after 6 a.m. Employers Temporary Service Clawson 65 S. Main Radford 26117 Grand River Ferndale___________2320 Hilton Rd. FURNITURE FINISHER AND repair man wanted. Apply In person. People's Outfitting Co. Miracle Mile Shopping Center. 2135 _S. Telegraph. Pontiac. GOLF COURSE MAINTENANCE, 3 men, Morey's Golf and Country Club. 2280 UnlonLake Rd.__ GAS STATION MECHANIC, must be experienced in brakes, tune-up and minor repairs, local ref., guaranteed $150 weekly, day work,! also part time man for afternoon shift. Cookies Marathon, 12 Mila at Telegraph. SHARP YOUNG MEN 11-30 Tremendous Future No Experience Needed itart. 855 OAKLAND AVE. ________PONTIAC MULTIPLE SPINDLE SCREW machine operetor, able to set own lobs. Permanent, good working conditions and fringe benefits with SimpVlo1tack!flrowi7(g!!!fr Intornettonai firm, AAA-I Dunn andBABYSITTER. LIVE JN. own room, 209, Holly, Mich. 48442 N. of M-59 — phone 334-6401 of M-59 phone GR 7-9671 for large ORDER DESK AND office work. Industrial. Steady |ob for man 30 or over. Send complete resume and pay Information 'To Pontiac Press Box. C40. Bredstreet — The Richards Co., Is expanding our gfeet D a t r o I I Operations. You must be ex-1 baby ceptlonellv neat, ba abla to con1 varse Intelligently, be able tc devote 100 per cent effort to your children. ■I SITTER 5 DAYS, own transportation, call between 4 p.m. and 9 p.m. FE 5-2068._________________ devote iov per cam etrorT to your ■ —cet Zawu before 6 training end be aggressive enough I BABY SITTER, FE 4-9206 oerore a to move up the ladder with over I -ATj____________________—----------r-! *1,000 per mo. earnings within 4,BABYSITTER and light housework, bookkeeper mox Pronrnm Br.nrt Irfentlfintlan I Slav nlohts With 3 Children age 5 E X P ERIENCED BOOKKEE PER. Alrwiy Lane,. 4035 Highland Rd. MATURE WOMAN FOR babysitting. A7WW4------------------ MATURE BABYSITTER FOR 3 PRE-schoolers, light hot'Mtwork, 5 days, E y. p'e rTe iJc e d....waitress S*»* 4af!i44iar"' own lr*'”’ wanted to re private country club. For an appointment cell MY 3- MATURE LADY WANTED for 5331. ___ | babysitting and housework. Live EXPERIENCEb FOR- GENERAL ) \ In, 3 preschooler e, FE 4-M43-, Housework. No laundry. Live In. MATURE WOAAAN TO HOatiSS Own room, bath, TV. Top wages, j and supervise dining room. Must 626-7540. have restaurant experience, must be neat and have good character. Betty'LeCornu Hair Fashions. I '[<"8* benefits. Age 35 to 45 435-5477. preferred Elias Big Boy Family Restaurant Telegraph I* Huron Sts. MATURE WOMAN FOR FULL tlma receptionist-secretary In Laka Orion. Knowledgeable In accounts receivable, typing and dlspersements. Send complet e resume of qualifications a n.d references to Pontiac Preis Box C- Go places with BaaLlne fashions as a hostess or stylist. OR 4-1832. PIr„ ,®E.A diVuLerRofdeTrf lor the EXPErTeNCE6~BEaOTY OPERA Puller ^rush Co. M.50 per hr. to ,or- B*Mv LeCornu Heir Fashions EXPERIENCED MATURE CLEAN-ING woman, 2 days wk. own trans., 334-4294. EXPERIENCE RECEPTIONIST for doctor's office. Soma typing required. Send hand written resume of qualifications to Pontiac Press Box C-2. 16. mos. Program Brand Identification analysis office procedures, sales office procedures, sales promotion sales, ate stay nights with 2 children and 7 while mother works, rc 3154. Off Baldwin. Prefer' llve-in $600 OFF-SET PRESSMAN Excellent opportunity for good and experienced pressman on Harris or Meihle, head-up dept. Phone 965- ______________________^__________ Starting salary par mo., to those PART TIME A 8> P. Must be accepted after 4 day indoctrination thoroughly familiar with small i training program, aircraft such ,as Aeroncas, 172's, To arrange your personal Interview Detroit. Call Mr. Davis — 9 962-4346 work. FE 4-2867 A-l -SELHOST ASPHALT & Sealcoat-Ing. Free entimates. 363-7989, if no answer. 674-2920. ^ ; ADLER AND BARKER aspl‘ it paving, seal coating, resurfacing parking lots, driveways. Licnesed. free estimates. OR 3-6310. “AUBURN HEIGHTS PAVING i Tennis courts, parking lots, driveways. Guaranteed, pE 5-6983,; OR 3-0326. Drivers Training pay.. Vacation, Should be High School graduate. PAINTING, PAPERING, W A Lj. Shell Station. Woodward and Lonfi cleaning, paper removel. B. Sandusky. FE 4-8548. UL 2-3190. APPRO' school. • I pickup tavestroughing B & G SERVICE Alum, gutters and Alcoa siding SPRING SPECIAL complete price 85c per ft. for 5" white enameled heavy duty gutters ana downspouts ASPHALT DISCOUNT PAVING“Co.I —t*1—--------------------------------- 10 yrs. of satisfied service. Free M. & S. GUTTER CO. est. FE 5-7459. Complete eavetroughing service. Free estimates. Licensed — bond ed. 673-6866._________________ Piano Tuning Plumbing >& Heating Lake Rd. Bloomfield GAS~STATION ATTENDANT perlenced. Newcomb's Shell Service. -10 N. Williams Lake Rd., Su, Pontiac. GUARDS etc. Write Pontiac Press, Box C l. " PLASTICS FOREMAN Foreman needed for midnight shift to supervise Injection molding dept. Salary plus liberal fringe benefits Contact Personnel Dept.l JU 8-3700. A.M.T. Corp. 1225 E.i Maple RdT, Troy, Mich. LINE MECHANIC BABY SITTER, FULL time. 4 children. No housework. 338-6716. _ BABY SITTER — HOUSEKEEPER, live In motherless home, 3 school age children age 11, 8, 6, (1) 3 years old. 651-4317, 8 a.m. to 1 p.m.______ ______________ BEAUTICIAN , Guaranteed wage, Blue Cross-Blue Shield. Philips of Pont lac ._332-9279 through trial balance, dealership experience preferred, exc. pay and fringe benefits, 625-2245 for ap-polntment. EXPERIENCEb COOKS AND SHORT ORDER COOKS. NEED APPLY. DECENT WAGES. ASK! FOR MANAGER OR MR. R 1 C H A RDSON. RICHARDSON] DAIRY. 7350 HIGHLAND RD. ELDERLY" GENTLEMAN wants housekeeper. C. M. Doolittle. 4139> Lotus Dr. Waterford OR 3-8817. MOTHERS $80 PER WEEK And possible more. Must be married and over 21. PHONE 363-7159 FOR PERSONAL INTERVIEW. MIDDLEAGED LADY TO live' In and do light housework. 673-1747, aft. 2 p.m. INTERNISf- experienced preferred or will train,!----kvbkbisuren overtime and pleasant working CAPABLE, .EXPERIENCED^ conditions. Thredco Co., 2836 Industrical Row, Troy. 549-0820. j TOOL MAKER packaging located in Detroit on East side. Phone 923-3606. First class retired man seeking part time work. Call 887-4191 for interview. ASPHALT, SEAL coating, licensed. Insured. Free estimated, OR 4-0722 or 682-8377. ROCHESTER AREA Gutters, spouts, roofing. Free estimates. Call any time, 651-1794. Excavating ASPHALT PARKING LOTS AND roadways Same location since 1920. Also selling asphalt and ----------- — sealer. Ann Arbor Construction Co. a-1 BULLDOZING. FINISH gradlngv MApla 5-5891. __________________ Backhoe. Complete landscapina, C & D ASPHALT and Seal Coating. basements 674-2639, FE 8-1201, Free quotes. Call 332-4621. t after 5 Plastering Service Restaurants Roofing Evenings 7 p.m. to 12. Must be available weekends. . CITY WIDE SECURITY POLICE ; __________ 398-6421 GUARD For Utica, Mt. Clemens and Detroit area. Top Union scale Paid Blue Cross, Vacation and holiday benefits. Call us collect. Bonded Guard Services — 441 E. Grand Blvd., DETROIT. LO 8-4150. HELP WANTED TO operate amusement rides. Must be willing to travel, 21 yrs. or over. Apply Saginaw A Pike. Big City Shows. HIGH SCHOOL GRADS £55 res _ GIRL C'RL TO charge °'| Helpful lo know E.K.G. and ch.st FOR ACCOUNTING DEPART-' IjT. JJ?'X-rflv. but not necessary. Hun- aackit cMhBTHAND STATIST- bookkeeping, could be part time ?CALT'anS00GENERAL TYPING i«b Write giving full resume and EXPERIENCE NECESSARY, salary requirements, to Pontiac PAYROLL EXPOSURE HELP Press Box C-12. FUL. ATTRACTIVE SALARY, 4 HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATE with GIRL OFFICE. MAPLE AND bookkeeping and business course COOLIDGE. 549-7570. training. Permanent position. 6129 --- _ TRUCK DRIVER AND stock man. CAPABLE WOMAN TO care for new _Highland RoadJM-59). PORTERS i Must have good driving record, apartment In Birmingham area, 3 HOUSEkEEPER, 5 DAY week, 8 Full time positions available now, SWaam' ° b°* *' f°n 4 d"V*. own Iransp. 447- hour day plu> babvsiHing 2 or 3 experienced preferred but not —---------------L-’ ■—.—. >575. eves._____...______._! evenings, eve., position for some- necessary. Must have own tranip. TOP NOTCH ALL AROUND COUNTER GIRL, Applications are' one wno takes prde In themsell, Good salary and benefits. Apply! Mechanic, lots of work, good, acc,pted at the Doughnuti their work and likes small ^hil-f*B**■* _■ ","inY M »v. Martin Place Hospital East, 27351 guarantee, new dealership, ca l Bill center exp necessary, apply In dren, llva In or out, woman who OFFICE WORK. LADY over 23, ex. D^indre, Madison Heights. MS-1 Rurdy _at 4*4.1925 Milford, Van| oir»m » ft. Saginaw | can cook prater. 140 wk. 442-8587.1 periance not necessary. 335-0322 3505 ext. 307._____________I Camp Chevrolet.------------CAShTeRS AND SALESGIRLS for PLASTIC LAMINATORS, some ex-j WELDERS, STRUCTURAL AND j0hn R Lumber, 7040 Cooley Lake Rd., Union Like.__________ ary ting ton Woods area. 308-71^0. NURSE AIDES' ! All shifts. Good working conditions. Experienced and Inexperienced. Apply In person Tuesday and Wednesday from 9:30 to 11 am. Seminole Hills Nursing Home, 537 Orchard Lake Avenue, Pontiac. NURSES AIDES, experienced or "will I train, all shifts, must have own car, Union Lake Area. EM 3-4121. parlance necessary, apply 474 Saginaw, between 8 a.m. end 5 p.m. An equal opportunity employer. ___________________ POSITION AVAILABLE for mature man with a high school background Interested in furnace control and metallurgy. Schwarb Foundry Co., 22522 Hoover Rd., Warren^________________________ misc. Iron. 45 hour week. Must be top men. 815 Auburn Avenuo, Pontiac. AND BACKHpE, complete septic work, bulldozing, basement, dry wells. 682-3042 391-3519. A-l ROOFING. NEW AND old, fret estimates. BULLDOZING, BACKHOE. loading. Pontiac Roofing— --------------335-71 * roofing, CALL for our free estimates. Springfield Bldg., Co. 625-2128. CLARKSTON ROOFING CO. __ 673-9297^1 nsurance Repairs, or New ROOFS FOR OLD HOT ROOF shingles, 24 hrs., free estimate, re-— Pair roofs. FE 8-1725. “QUALITY'ROOF !NG ?'■'* [Free estimates.___ 682-7514 ACKER FENCES RE-ROOFING ~ ROOF 25 yr. experience, Pontiac area, eavestrouah. Free Fence repairs, prompt service 682- 4060 or FE 4-1969. __5482. A-l WATERPROOFING, cracked and CHAIN LINK leaky basements repaired. Free pests installed, free estimates, i estimates. Reasonable 651-7686._i week service. 338-0297- or 674-3961. CHAIN LINK AND wood. 1 week service. FE 8-3786. new office in 'Downtown" Pon?^.' I pLAST 1C_ SHOP r IH, TROY^.q^uIr,, Applicants must be able to main- TRUCK MECHANIC, 83.50 per hour. 476-7212, Farmington DOMINO CONST. CO. trucking. 425-1754. 473-8793. Asphat Paving. Free Quotes. 474-3955, pi,nnrmK,r. D.4t OR 3-1145 after DRIVEWAY SPECIALIST, 335-4980, 5:30 PM and weekends free estimate.__________________ END LOADING NEED YOUR PARKING area cleaned? Power broom service. Call us for large or small jobs. OR 3-6641._________________________ PARKING LOTS, DRIVES, etc. Ask about 2 years free maintenance. Fred's 338-3694. R. O. 547-7111. Basement Waterproofing BEACH SERVICES tain business appearance at all times and be able to start immediately, no typing necessary, we, will train: right men in all phases of business. Salary will be; discussed .in an interview with! manager. For personal interview . call Mr. Stout. 338-0359 INSPECTOR j Experienced on machined parts.! Good wages plus fringe benefits.! Precision Automatic Parts, 366 SJ Blvd. E., Pontiac._ _________ I estimate. 335- JANITOR WANTED, NO experience _____I_________11 necessary, call between 4:30 and ---- v WOMACK ROOFING CO. '■ 6:30 p.m., 1-861-8655.- FENCES, MAILBOX Fret estimates _H543 John R. LUMBER* CO. "has ah! opening for an aggressive Sand—Grovel—Dirt WATCH MAKER OR ESTIMATOR, hospitalization and retirement plen. Apply Connolly's Jewelers, 65 N. Saginaw St., bet. 9:30—12 noon. Ask fdr Mr. Finney. No phone calls please.____________________ WANTED!!! GOOD MAN — FOR GOOD JOB Dependable mature man for light clerical dispatching, telephone contact in Personnel type work. Excellent potential. Morning hours. Physically handicapped, early retirees, or part time man will also be considered. CASHIER TYPIST Permanent challenging position for high school grad with good grades. Age 20 or above. General office duties, Inc. typing, some figures and meeting public. Good starting salary, Mon.-Frl., air conditioned office, liberal employe benefits. Call Mr. McMurry, Dial Finance * Co., 10 W. Huron St., FE 4-0541. HOUSEKEEPER FOR 2 *mall| , *.tt8r J2..!l°on:—__— children. Live In. Cell after 6 p.m. OFFICE MANAGER 363-7929. 1 Marine store. 335-5660. I a r g i Help Wantad Male 6 Help Wanted Male Fencing repau versatile, experienced, wood model man in tool room to produce wood and plastic models, fig, and fixtures. Very interesting work in pleasant surrounding, permanent position, overtime, fringe benefits. Call 566-2424. We are ?n equal opportunity employer. ____ PRESS OPERATORS Men needed for permanent posi- CALL MR. MARCH tions in growing company. General wanted — BAR TENDER 5 nights shop experience preferred, but not a week no mjxed drjnks> Rep|y necessary We will train Ap-; Pontiac Press c,37. proximately 45 to 53 hours per - -------r-;———j— — week. Excellent fringe benefits in- YARD MAN FOR rental equipment, eluding a profit sharing program. _62 W. Montcalm. BEACHES CLEANED SANDED STEEL SEA WALLS Cutler Contracting 681-0300) TRAINED PROFESSIONALLY experienced divers available, t 0411._____________________ Boats and Accessories A-l BULLDOZING, FINISHED grade, gravel, top soil. M. Cook. I 682-6145. BLACK DIRT, VIBRATED porocess.i loaded and delivered, 7 days. 120 > . a.—.*. r~] Opdvke near Auburn. FE 4-1731 or< CARL L. BILLS SR., NEW AND! UL 2-5462. old floor sanding. FE 2-5789 PONTIAC FENCE CO. 5932 Dixio Hy„ Waterford_623-1040 Floor Sanding BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER Starcraft, I.M.P. S 11 v a r 11 n a. - FLOOR SANDING AND FINISHING. I expertly done, insured, guaranteed, j - fr?e .esti .w^~059ff-.^i^5^rrr_ LOADING TOPSOTl AND fill dirt FILL SAND, ROAD Gravel, fill dirt, black dirt, topsoil, reas. 623-1372 or 623-0396. 1 G. SNYDER, FLOOR LAYING 338-3102. sanding and finishing. FE 5-0592. Floor Tiling Marcury outboards and **Rrn’rim-rum cmnB rnvFRiNG drives. 1265 S. Woodward at rESl Adams Rd. TOPSOIL, THE BEST, driveway gravel, fill sand, stone, reas.| ! prices, fast delivery, 673-0049. Sign Painting teldgent young man manager. 7904 Cooley Lake Rd. Union Lake, Mich. INEXPERIENCED MEN TO TRAIN AS ARC WELDERS 58 HOUR WEEK LIBERAL FRINGE BENEFITS' Bathey Manufacturing Co. 100 S. MILL ST. PLYMOUTH Maintenance Mechanic R|dge. Mich. (OH 10 Mill Professional Employment Counselor A heavy business background or direct sales experience along with an outgoing personality will qualify you for this excellent position in the personnel field. Call: NITA STUART 334-2477 hour 1-476-7212.__ ; YOUNG MAN, full time grocery clerk. Experienced prefered. Reply I to Pontiac Press Box Number C-4. Help Wantad Famalt 7 ALBERT'S BEAUTY STUDIO. Shampoo girl wanted. 674-3166. VS TIME, FULL TIME waitress. Tenuta's Rest., corner Huron, Johnson, Opposite General Hosp. In person. ___________________ COOK FULL TIME. Days. Tenuta's Restaurant, across from General Hospital, In person. CASHIER All benefits. I Apply at: ELIAS BROS. BIG BOY RESTAURANT * •__ * Telegraph 8. Huron * | CURBWa I TRESS, must be 18. Apply In person at The Carousel, 1268 North Perry across from Madison Jr. High.___‘________ ____;_ CLEANING WOMAN Must have own car, top pav to right gal, full time, s o m weekends, EM 3-4121.________ COOK, EXPERIENCED, full time days. EM 3-0611, eft. 11 e.m.___ COOK Dobskl's Bar. Union Lake. EM 3-9112._______________________ DOCTOR'S HOME, GENERAL housework and laundry. 5 days, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., own transportation 855. 626-1036.__________________ DENTAL HYGIENIST Immediate full time or part time position for dependable and qualified person. Call 363-4410 for Interview appointment. Help Wanted Male 6 Help Wanted Male Breakwater Construction Garden Plowing SHEET PILING BREAKWATERS! di nuuiwr ixn INSTALLED. 334-7477. GUINN oSh°«t4nn CONSTRUCTION CO. ! grading. Reas. 625-4073, re a-or54 Brick & Block^Sirvice-1 Insurance ^AVAILABLE: SIGN SERVICE, other Requires First CIOSS Boiler,PhaRMACIST—Registered or Intern | Misc. painting. 473-1407, 333-3411. Operator's License. 40-hours 1 Stsduate. Opportunity wHh rMl^fu- Mt M SIGN SERVICE, llgn pain-,: ’| lure expanding organization. yard lnS "eon repair, 'reas. ralejjEfljoy benefits SUCh OS pur-i hav* abilItV ,,0,'71"e FE 5-7148, FE 5-3288. , 1 • . r $19,000 per yr. All fringe benefits Tree Spraying BRICK, BLOCK AND fireplace work. Call after 5. 493-1855. ANY KIND. Written Homeowners Insurance Anderson & Associates 1044_J°slyn___________FE_4r3535 Building Modernization Insect Control^_____^ GARAGE 20 x 20' — *875. Cement! MOSQUITO CONTROL. No lob too Work, Free estimate Springfield big or too small. Free est. C&H Bldg., Co. 425-2128. i ^praying, 474-3945, 428-1552. _ . - STOP DISEASE CARRYING IN- Carpentry . sects. l-A CARPENTRY-naw and repair 335-4529, 335-7585. A-1 INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR chase discounts, Life insur- i_ •. i* ,• . .• i moving losis ance, hospitalization, Tetire-j For confident any size, any type ment plan, paid holidays, J 8. E Spray Service __ 343-7295 and liberal VOCOtlOn plan. Tree Trimming Service APPiy in Person EMPLOYMENT OFFICE Outstate call Jack $19,000 per yr including company moving costs paid. ....... Interv Robinson collect: FE 8-0428 or EL 3-3385 Perry Pharmacy, Inc. S/tores in Pontiac, Birmingham, Waterford, Troy, Highland, Lake Orion, AND Landscaping AL'S TREE SERVICE, free estimates. _____682-1397^673-7160, 6280521.___ A-1 TREE SERVICE BY 88*1 Free estimate FE 5-4449, 674-3510 B&B TREE SERVICE Fully insured. Trimming, removal. Free estimates. 391-0488, 724-8611. TREE TRIMMING AND REMOV-Reasona\jle. 39U0538. Basement 0f wSSSffi: l-A ME R ION BLUE SOD. pickup del. 4643 Sherwood. 628*2000. dormers, porches, recreation; rooms, kitchens, bathrooms. State!---*- licensed. Rea*. Call after 5 p.m 1*A COMPLETE LANDSCAPING. 682-0648. I Specializing In broken concrete, rAODBufco—vaT/tdly-----p--.•retaining walls. Free estimates. C .? u.^TELl( H. Waltman/FE 8-8314. at It s best. Recreation rooms, | , ■ -■ '■■■ ~ M 1 — ,n u a i h iki *- ceiling tile, formica work, kltch- A-l MARION BLUE PEAT SOD, 40. HAUL.ING ens, roofing and siding, window; cents per yd. Delivered. 682-1904. replacement. Aluminum trim. 363*‘a-1 MERlON BLUE sod, top soil, LIGHT HAULING AND 2337 or 673-1728. 9 a.m. to 9 p m.j $andj gravel, bulldozing. 338-8201. • Reasonable. Phone 682-7516. -------------------------All LIGHT HAULING OF ANY kind and 1-1 LIGHT MOVING, TRASfc ! hauled reasonable. FF 4-1353. ED'S LIGHT HAULING service.! Reas, rates. FE 2-6648. AND RUBBISH. NAME i your prices Any tlma. FE 8-0095. moving. CARPENTRY AND G E N B R A L COMPLETE LANDSCAPING, house repairs. FE 2-9639. odd |obs. FE 5-4226. INTERIOR FINISH, kitchens panel Inq, 40 years experience, FE 2> 1235. •_________________ WANTED CABINET WORK of all kinds and repair work. OR 3-J402. work guaranteed. Merlon Blue peat . ______________ sod, delivered 42c yard. Stone—all .LIGHT HAULING, REASONABLE; types. We have a landscape; rates. FE 8-1266. architect if desired. Monroe]’—■, — Landscaping Co. FE 3-7438, FE 4969. SOD HAULED AND LAID. , -------~SOD—laying,' LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCK ING* rubbish, fill dirt, grading and gra el and front-end loading. FE 2-0603. TRUCKING, FRONT-END LOADING _AND B ACKHOE. FE 2-0808. Truck Rental VERN CRANDALLS mowing and garden cara. 682-3084. X~l^RT~SODl3ING, SEEDING AND Carpet Cleaning shrub»-4«2-i224. WmMm—, Lawn Service CARPET, UPHOLSTERY Machine; j _cleaned._Free est., reas. 425-4047._ | AL., DEPENDABLE lawn main-| , ^8nncuep.c»2'er"liz'no';prino! Trucks to Rent ' " i HAVE LAWN MOWER, will travel good *° cut your lawn. 651-0885. LAWN SPRINKLING PUMPS, pipe and supplies. 4686 Dixie Hwy. OR - -4-. 3 2121. . gp " LAWN SPRAYINGt^iRTiLlZER, carb grass killer and' weed killers. Call for free ' estimate. 674-3945. 628-1552. C. & H. Spraying. Carpet Installation Cement Work l-A CONCRETE PATCHING,; sidewalks, driveways etc., free estimates. 335-3744 • LOCK AND (t E MENT WORK. Pontiac, 391-1173. _ CITY "SIDEWALKS? Drives and So Forth, Phone Pontiac, 391-3516. CEMENt WORK" OF ALL types. Garage building. Room additions and modernization. C U SsJ O M CONCRETE COMPANY. 625 2249 CEMENT" WORK, PORCHES and Chimneys. FE 5-8983. * Cement work of all kinds. _____ UL 244751 CEMENT* WORK, GARAGE' floors, patios, driveways, sidewalks basement floors and small ad-ditlon Sea walls, 25 yrs., standing proof. 673-7548. _ CEMENT WORK. ALL KINDS.- ____332-J639 __ COMMERCIAL, INDUStRIAL and resldantlaf. Block and cement work. GUINN^SXONST. CO. 334-7677 or 391-2671 ►AT idS, ‘ DRIVES, GAR A G E ^ SLABS — 40 cents sq. ft. FE 6* 2*74, d8y«. Lumber RAILROAD TIES 'Ahfon Pickups l*/^-Ton Stake TRUCKS - TRACTORS ANO EQUIPMENT Semi Trailers Pontiac Farm and Industrial Trac4er Go 825 S. WOODWARD FE 4-0461 FE 4-1442 Open Dally Including Sunday for Hardwood lumber, all general use, 626-7653 TALBOl T LUMBER Glass service, wood or aluminum. Bui'ding and Hardware supplies I025_0aklend Mailbox Poets Water Softeners Wall Cleaners Hudson's i PONTIAC MALL MULTIPLE'SPINDLE Ip Screw machine operators, days and nights. Pinjcerton, 566-4794._ : • MACHINE OPERATORS j Immediate openings, days and afternoons. -Will train. Reliable men with some previous experience on lathe, mill or grinding ( Exc., year around working conditions nad„ overtime, interviews 9-5 daily. 2921 Industrial , Row, Troy. Bat. 14 and 15 Mila Rds. off Cool id ga Hwy._ MACHINE OPERATORS ond trainees We will train to run lathes, mills; and surface grinders. Soma shopi experience preferred. Good steady work in fast growing company.! Very good fringe benefits including a profit sharing program. Apply al, 6 Barber St. Pleasant Ridgt, Mich.; (OH 10 Mile Rd ) MAN TO WORK, MUST be ex-f perlenced as an Auto Parts Clerk. Apply Hoilerback Auto Parts, 273 Ba Idwir^ Ave. J^a 11 338-4054._ MAN NEEDED TO WORK IN OUR ’ "MATERIAL FLOU DEPART-, MENT." THIS IS A NEW 1 MAN DEPARTMENT. OF-| FERING GOOD POSSIBILITY; TO GROW WITH A FAST GROW-i ING COMPANY. PREFER HIGH; SCHOOL GRADUATE, DRAFT-FREE AND DEPENDABLE. EX--CFLL ENT F RINGE BEN EFITS1 INCLUDING A PROFIT SHARING PROGRAM. APPLY AT 6 BARBER. ST. PLEASANT RIDGE,1 MICkL (OFF 10 MILE RD.) MAN MECHANICALLY Inclined for! heating, air conditioning, pipe fit ting and duct work. Libera benefits, steady. 682-3TOO. PORTER AND HOUSEMAN, permanent position In private club, exc. pay, and fringe benefits, call Mr. Biellas, FE 2-8323. Plumbing and Heating Salesman We have a fine career opportunity for a man who has had some plumbing or heating background, to work Into a sales position with high earnings potential. Many company benefits Including profit sharing and Immediate discount privilege. APPLY PERSONNEL DEPT. SECOND FLOOR Montgomery Ward Pontiac Mall An equlal opportunity employer_ PART TIME Of I can show you $50 per week for part time evening work, would you be interested? Car required. Must be 18 or over. Call 852-1325. RETIRED" MAN =OR—parklrTg^loL 332-8688. FORD MOTOR COMPANY WIXOM ASSEMBLY PLANT HAS IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR: • Heavy Assemblers O Paint Sprayers • Metal Finishers • Arc Welders Apply Hourly Employment Office Wixom’ Road—Grand River Expressway WIXOM, MICHIGAN 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Monday thru Friday An Equal Opportunity Employer MICHIGAN BELL Has immediate full time openings in Pontiac, Detroit and throughout the Metropolitan area for: • DRIVERS • LINEMEN • INSTALLERS • ELECTRICAL TECHNICIANS • CUSTODIANS-andl more • FULL PAY DURING TRAINING • HIGHER STARTING WAGES • EXCELLENT BENEFITS APPLY NOW! Room A-l 72 — 1365 Cass Ave., Detroit Room S-175 — 23500 Northwestern Hwy., Southfield 19992 Kelly Rd., Detroit (near Eastland) MICHIGAN BELL Port of the Nationwide Bell System ‘ An {Equal Opportunity Employer Mosquito Control A-i wall WASHtNGr reasonable. Fg 2 9015- BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS. Weils- cleaned. Reas. Satisfaction guaranteed. Insured. FE 2-1631. MiLLS WALL WASHING and win-dow cleaning. David Mills, FE 4 , 7686. MEN . j wanted! Concrete ^assure pipe plant, has| permanent steady work available; for laborers. Union Scale. With fringe benefits. Apply In person 70001 Powell Rd. Romeo, f^lch. An equal- opportunity employer. RETIREES If you are retired with time-on your hands, Connolly's Jewelers can use 2 or 3 part time salesmen with some retell experience. Apply between ,9-1 ? noon, Connolly's Jewelers, 65 N. Saginaw. No phone calls please. _ RETAIL SALESMAN, e position' with a future. Must have some sales experience. Apply 146 W. Huron. See Mr. Gehan. Moving, Storage Will Drilling Credit Advisors SMITH MOVING CO Your moving Specialist*. FE I7Tl-7 Split, asc. salary, and working conditions, Mrs. Galas Avon Cantor Hospital, 651-031).__________ • " RESTAURANT WORK Aftarnoons or night, good solary and fringe bantflts, good future, uniforms and food furnlahad, experience not naodod. WHITE TOWER ______142 kl. Saginaw__ Help Wanted Female 7 Sales Help Mole-Female M iestruetlen»'S«hoel* BUILDER & REALTY ... WITT-AMERICAN GIRL *e-Wtl til I. Adams B'ham. “WAITRESS* Pull or part tlmo, gogd pay, axe. hpa, pleasant counter work. Bill's Telegraph ti Mepla, in Mila.) WAITRESSES nights/ ULMS31y ** ^ WAITRESSES^ Experienced Club or hotel work. Dinner shift. Pleasant working conditions. Excellent e t r n I n g s . . APP'v In persona beautiful Orchard 9 take Country Club. 5000 West _Shore Dr.» Orchard Lake. waitress Wanted, pUIl time employment. S100 guarantee. Apply In person only. Pranks Rastaurant,' Keeqo Herbor. WOMAN FOR LIGHT housekeeping Live In. 92 Summit. PE 5-4519 i VOLINA WOMAN FOR kItchen “nelp.j Must be neat and of good! character. No experience! necessary. Wa train you Ages II to 35. Good fringe benefits. Apply at: Elias Big Boy Family Restaurant „| ____ Telegraph A Huron Sts. Help Wanted M. ar F7 ARE YOU READY tor tha future? Call Mr. Foley, YORK REAL ESTATE. OR 44063, ARE YOiTREALLY living? 6r lust existing? Call Mr. Folay, YORK REAL ESTATE 474-0363. ___ ARE YOU IN A 4ut? Sail Mr, Folay. YORK REAL ESTATE, OR 4-0343. Hat .an lima opening for salesman with protaroblo oxparlonca In now and uaad homes. Call 474-3)41 or 474-2397. COLUMBIA VALLEY REALTY ANDERSON &JSILF0RD INC. NEED 1 WELL EXPElffEltCED Root ostoto solas parson now lor oach otflco. Hovo plenty of business, lorn 110,000-plus per year. 8400 Commerce Rd. Union Lk. 5280 Dixie Hwy. Wotortord Woodward at fo'/x Ml. Royal Oak C. SCHUETT Ml 6-8500 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MAY 80, 1968 Apartments, Furnished L D—11 10 ATTENTION AUTO MECHANICS Cleseel start June 10 Enroll now — Start training for ACTY-ARC WELDING HELI-ARC WELDING BODY FENDER REPAIR \ Day-Night School Approved under Gl Bill MICHIGAN'S OLDEST Trede School WOLVERINE SCHOOL 1400 Was! ForLDet. WO 3-0692 WorlTWantBd Mala 11 Wanted ta Rent 32 SUMMER COTTAGE FOR month of July by reiponiltye femliy, must be modern sleep 4 or 7# on or eo> cess to safe beech. 31 >-442-3254. WANfe'o BV~juMr )J, small furnished houee, west of Tel-Huron or Mlrecle Mila by responsible mature couple with dog Will laasa. Hava rofT Call W2 7439.__________ Wanted Real Estate ~ 36 1 MILLION Dollars have been made available to us to purchase end assume lend contracts, mortgages or buy homes, lots or acreage outright. your cell 674-2236 McCullough realty Receptionist Typist Immediate opening tor thorp girl to handle phono colli, matt and great vlaltora to otflco. Handle mall and correspondent:*. Thli It one of the fastest growing 'companies In tha area. Good storting salary plus other benefits. Reply to Pontiac Proaa Box C-3._______ SENIOR STEN0 For 4 month assignment Beginning 3-31-41. Pontiac Area. Lawn Mower demonstration Fridays and Saturdays for 2 weeks beginning 5-31-61 SENIOR TYPISTS STEN0S BOOKKEEPERS Convenient araaa end tlmo period!. Highest ratas. KELLY GIRL Of Kelly' Services, Inc. 125 N. Saginaw 338-0339 643-965 An Equal Opportunity Employtr. ROYER REALTY, INC. 628-2548 123 S. Lopeer Oxford Holly Plaia Holly, Mich. Ml5 Goodrich, Mich. Employment Agencies 9 ABILITY AND DESIRE to work with people wins this spot, $400, call Kathy King, Associates Personnel, 332-9157. All Paid MALES BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED All rh Positive r.so All RH Nag. with posltlva factors 17.50 A-neq., B-neg., AB-neg. til O-neg. $12! MICHIGAN COMMUNITY BLOOD CENTER in Pontiac FE 4-99471 1342 Wida Track Dr., W. Mon. thru Frl., 9 a.m.-4 p.m. ___Wed. 1 p.m.-7 p.m. BUY - SELL WATKINS PRODUCTS.! Fred Carr, FE 4-2211 . COUPLE WANTED to wo neighborhood bar. Apartmsnt furnished, references required. Call for appointmant. 684-5625 or FE 2- 5225. _________ _________ EXPERIENCED COOK, afternoons. . , L ..... 451-7100.___ ______________ Good Guy Wanted FEEL LIKE LIFE is passing you. Outstanding training program with by? Call Mr. Foley. YORK REAL large national corp., top manage-1 ESTATE, OR £-03*1.___________| ment In 1-3 yrs. Salary to $7200. FREE 'REAL ESTATE classes. Earn ' . _ . while you learn, full or part time. Electronics Trainee Art Daniels Realty, 1230 N. Milford Rd. 685-1567 Or 7030 Dexter- Pinckney Rd. 424-4496._________ FULL TIME BARTENDER, pert time bartender, cook, hostess, cashier. Apply In person. Hawaiian Gardens, 4501 Grange Hall Rd., Holly. Work Wanted remule 12 A-l IRONING, 1-DAY tarvlce. Maxine McCowan. FE 4-3847.__ home, 820 1 to 50 evening*. ___ Brirt,TiTt f .itf-------------!DRAG LINE' WORK. LAKH and REAL ESTATE SALES heckhoe work, itwer. basements, _______________________________________a perlenced or Inexperienced man excavating of all kinds■,»!“"{?? 5440 Highland Rd. (M-59) woman. Wa train. Wa ofler ln-| an^ bonded through tha elate. Mt-jopim 9°9 condition! and the chance to LIGHT HAULING”HAND dlgfllng, lawn work.j682-7049._ MASONARY PAINTING OF all typaa. bailment. taalad, waterproofing, no |obr to large or small, FJE_|.3841. _______________ PLASTER AND DRY wall repairs, prompt itrvlct. 384-3715._ SEPTIC TANKS I N ST* L Li 6 , backhoe and loader work, gra/el, sand, fill and top dirt hauod, 682- Outstanding ' opportunity tor pro- 5972 or 343-0538._________________ fesslonal real estate sales SAW FILING AND rotary blade raprasantatlvas. Full tlUne positions, sharpening, 684-7281.___________ now open. Only thoab with ex- wai ter CLAYTON, t r u c k I ng or lance need app'v, Call Mr. TopYji,, sand/Jravil. Odd lobs. 338-0533, FE 5-8974.____ 371 Rent Lake Cottage* 41 rooms LOTUS-MACEDAY lake front cottago for rant, 3-bedroom, furnished, n't' Available June 10 thru Sept. tO. n 1,1 .„ 0tp r(qU|rt<) 673-3528 etter ELIZABETH LAKE. Furnished cot: tege. Lot 74x340. By season to Oct. I. 11300.' Good beach end section. 4487 Motorway bet. Gateway and Cooley. 1-TO 1-4439. ONE BEDROOM a part me carpeted throughout,,. Stove refrigerator. Near Oakland Com-- moolly Collage. Oft Cooley Lika RdT*P-4333 after 3 p.m._______ OXFORD, 3 Rl w Kitchenette cottages. Pontiac Lake NEAR PONTIAC. Nice lake front Motel, 8310 Highland Rd. (M-59). — ------------- Apartments, Unfurnfshtd 38 cottage. 2 bedroom*, shower, safe beach, boat. Avail. Aug. 10th. 625* 4704.___ NEAR CA5EVILLE NEW "modern fireplace, 3 bedrooms, $75 wk. 391- Flrtf work 1 (hence to gfcw with a progressive company For e personal interview esk for I Mr. Deever af 428-2548. Royar Really, Inc. Oxford, Mich. Sales f' Representative beaver for personal Interview ah I* 2-BEDROOM. NEW. NEAR MALL — Carpeted. Aoollences. Air and _______ ________________ ________ sound conditioned, heated Rtc.! NEW HOlSiE,*2 bedrooms, furnTsh room. Adulfs, no pets. From 8140., ad, «as no weekly or $300 FB 5-8585. ___ . monthly, from June 1st, Walled l-BEDROOM, ROCHESTER, 651 44091 Lake, 624-4786 yltt j, _________ «, 1 fllW 2 BEDROOM YEAR around 2 BEDROOM TERRACE, n6wiy, home. Fireplace and 2 car garage ML Si decorated, gat heet, basement,! On Cess Leke. Seasonal rental 474-2236 close to plants. Ideal for working June, July, Aug. 82100. 682*2024. ----couple, dap, FE 4-3491 Salt Houmi 49 BEDROOM HOME ON Vi acre, $18,000. 2863 „ Frankson, 2 blocks East off of John ft., off M-59. 4 BEDROOM Near Welled Leke. 10 room* bilevel, home with fireplace. Ultra modern kitchen, 24' x 24' family room, 2 car garage, clrcla drive on large cornerlof with paved streets. Only 833,900. CRESCENT LAKE ESTATES with Sal* Houses ♦9 BRIAN'S BUYS OFF OAKLAND AVE. No Down Payment extra Clean, 2 bedroom with full basement, hardwood ook flooring, gas hoof, tocefed on cornor lot, Lincoln Jr, High School oroo. Best of BEDROOM, STOVE, refrigerator, all utilities turn., 8100 monthly, $50 HOMES. LOTS, ACREAGE FAR*I raqulrad, FE 5-3808, after CELS, FARMS, BUSINESS MOP-I _?•___________________________ ERTIES, AND ULND CONTRACTS 2 BEDROOM APARTMENT Newly WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5-8165 Urgently need tor Immediate Selei Pontiac Dally 'til 8 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE UNION LAKE FRONT. 30 min. from Detroit. Modern, completely turn., sleeps 12, fireplace, sc r e e n porches, boat, sandy b4ech. June, July, Aug. $150 wk. 2 wk. min. Lets by season. Also Sept, thru May, (Gas Heat) Only $150 mo UN 3*7627. 42 ALL CASH YORK BABYSITTING I weekly, 335-8463 4713 Dixie Hwy Building Services-Supplits 13 Buyers waiting all cash! sales. Call VAC-U-WAY REALTY for Immediate freak, appraisal of your property. FE 4-3531 Executive Mgt. Trainees Top-flight training program v AAA company, fast promotlc $7200 up plus commission plus and expenses. Use your service training or electronic schooling for top trainee pay of $7,200. ALL RECLAIMED BRICKS! Brickyard selling clean, reclaimed bricks, many recovered from famous old Detroit homes end churches. Buy a few for your garden, or enough to build a home, etc. You pick up, or will deliver within 100 miles. Al's Reclaimed ELDERLY COUPLE NEEDS home Bricks, phone WO 1*1420._J______ near Mall. Cash. Agtnt, 338-4952, STRUCTURAL STEEL AND design!HUNTING LOT AT Canada Creek drawings for 52x60 building. Best! Ranch, Atlanta, Mich., must offer over $600. Phone 566-1461, Mr. Ransier, or 644-2552, eves. WE TRADE FE 8-7174 1702 S. t><9p™Ph CASH Credit Advitori corated. Elec refrigerator. Fine neighborhood. 8150 mo. See Manager, 2403 James p„n4 DnAm« K Blvd. 682*9387. ______ BEDROOM UPPER. Private an trance. Utilities turn. West side FE 4-7850. ROOMS FOR CLEAN couple. 2 Utilities. Private. 3 ml. north fll: ™ JSSS Ml #nly- “ Pontiac. *100 depotlt. S35 per <894. cell after 4 p.m.____________________ weak. 391-1173. [ATTRACTIVE ROOM. Gantlemtn i________1.*.;----------------Use o< kitchen. FE 4-4034, 134:30 ’ROOMS 209 PARKDALE 4-year-old 3 bedroom ranch close {move In. to Fisher Body. Gas heat, $13,800 with 80 down. OFF AUBURN WALLED LK. PRIVILEGES 13 Bedrom, Full Bonmeint 3 txsdroom. on lerq*' lot, only Hers Is the Iw jom, in bqa 1 That's right, lust pay 8550 for clos* i Ing costs and move In, also feeturea 1 * rnr !ges heat, paved streef, city wqftr I AU\l end sewers. Lovely 5 room aluminum sided; ranch Built In 1964. Chicken shed OFF WIDE TRACK end tool shed. Close In. Only,r[T. fnr thl, sir son An l And contract 15 pot less Is the word for thie *17,500 on Land contraci. aluminum sldad dandy, laaturaa oat rrscis.Av dcai cctate heat, 3 bedrooms, full bailment, COS WAY KcAL fcblAlt formal dining area, large living 681-0760 room, no payment, full price, *14,000. 3379 Orchard Lk. tat Commerce Rd ) I RH S AND lo ACRE bullding sites near private Dryden, terms. 6 room house In Dryden, large lot, *6500 — tarmi decorated, adults, heat and weter BEDROOM AND LIVING BOQM for turn., -895 monthly, 23 Myrtle Ct„ 1 5*ch.*.lor; ^f0 coo,575] California, ail points. BR—25777 .. H,300 up mil Grand River,_________, Detroit *500 up DRIVE NEW CADILLACS to New *500 up, York. Oes Allowance. 363-9590 *xp: ‘iiooo up Wanted Children ta Board 28 g|||__________ ___________$550 UP —-----------------------A.------- Seieamen, car, expense* ..*5!0 up PHEASANT SURROUNDINGS In licensed home. 335-4576. MICHIGAN BELL Has immediate full time openings in Pontiac, Detroit ana throughout the Metropolitan area. • KEY PUNCH OPERATORS • CLERK-TYPISTS • STENOGRAPHERS • SERVICE REPRESEN-TATIVES-and more FULL PAY DURING TRAINING . • HIGHER STARTING WAGES - • EXCELLENT BENEFITS APPLY NOW! Room A-172 — 1365 Cass Ave„ Detroit ’ Room S-101 -23500 Northwestern Hwy., Southfield ; 225 S. Troy St„ Royol Oak / . MICHIGAN BELL Part of the Nationwide Bell System An Equftl Opporfunlty impfaytr n» . [Most of the above positions are employer fee paid. International Personnel 1880 S. Woodward, B'lxaiti 642-8268 Plan to Change Jobs? Come To Us FEMALES Wanted Household Goads 29 Apartments, Furnished 37 1-BEDROOM MODERN, uUlltlts, paid, adults, 10003 Dixie. 625-2546. 1-BEDROOM APARTMENT to sublease, avail. June 15, deposit, adults, no pets. 332-4134. CASH FOR FURNITURE AND AP* ^JI«ncesF-4~pl*caJU’_J«msifuL_?far; son's. FE 4-7881. WILL1 BUY OR S6tL your furniture. Tyler's Auction# 7605 Highland Road. 673-9534. HIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR good furniture and appllancas. "V what hava you? B & B AUCTION , 5089 Dixie Hwy. OR 3.5717 electric Wanted Miscellaneous 30 home in Waterford area. Agent. OR 4-1449.____.______ RAY REAL ESTATE Now has 7 offices to better serve your community. For best results SELLING TRADING BUYING Your real estate today, call: RAY REAL ESTATE 689-0760 or RAY REAL ESTATE 731-0500 SPOT CASH FOR YOUR EQUITY, Va, OR OTHER FOR QUICK ACTION CAIL NOW. HAGSTROM REALTOR. OR 4-0358 OR EVENINGS FE 4-7005.________________ We Need Listings ' Buyers Galore J. A. Taylor Agency, Inc. Reel Estate — Insurance — Building 7732 Highland Rd. (M-59) OR 4-0304 Open dally 9-9, Sun. 1-6 LARGE AREA, PLENTY of parking, raas. rates by the year. MICHEALS REALTY ! 627-3840_______________627-2825 IRent Office Space 47 service: Xerox, conference room, carpets, drapes, air conditioning, parking, swimming pool. 30233 Southfield. Saliie Eckert. Ml 7-1322. IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY Coral Ridge Apts. SECOND-WILCOX ROCHESTER 1 BEDROOM APTS. $145 Mo. Includes all utilities, except elec- ablE SECRETARIES have new ,riC6lflc. open dally 'til 7 P.m. ,0*W 0,,lc« rMdy 1* Ph.: 651-0042 INDEPENDENCE GREEN APARTMENTS Beside an 18 hole golf course — Included in rent — all for no charge, clubhouse. Indoor pool, full use of golf course, washer a no dryer In every apartment, pullt-ln vacuum, carpet and drapes, air conditioned, appliances, hedt, hot water — 1 and 2 badroom apartments, 3 bedroom townhouses, some furnished apartments available — from $155. In Farmington (Grand River at Halstead) children 17 years and older. N< pets. Week days 474-7284, Week ends 476-7874 or 476-4111. AVAILABLE NOW IN ONE Rochester's finest and newest of- . fice and commercial center. MedH ^ cal suites, general office suites and(4713 MODERN APARTMENT BUILDING 3 rooms and bath on bus line, adults, 40 yrs. or over. $92 mo. 682-8884._______________ NEW DOLLY MADISON APARTMENTS FROM $140 14 Mile Rd. at 1-75 Near: J. L. Hudson's and Sears OAKLAND MALL Includes: AIR CONDITIONING POOI__ ALL UTILITIES EXCEPT ELECTRICITY Model Open 11 a.m.-8 p.m. 585-1125 ORCHARD COURT APARTMENTS 2 bedroom apartments Adults Manager-Apt. 6. 19 Saimer NOW LEASING BLOOMFIELD MANOR FHA, 1 and 2 bedroom luxury aPirtments built-in Hot Point appliances, models open daily 1 to 6 p.m. 222-2390 Woodrow Wilson phone UN-4-7405. PRESIDENT MADISON APARTMENTS FROM $140 Between: 13 and 14 Mile Rd., on John R. includes: Air Conditioning Pool All Utilities Except — Electricity Model Open 11 a.m.-8 p.m 588-6300 ROOM LOWER AND upper, private and cleans FE 2-9634. 2 ROOM, ADULTS ONLY, ---------rPg-8-2944.--------- - ROOMS----AND___BATH, baby welcome, $22.50 per wk„ $75 dep. Inquire at 273 Baldwin Ave. Call 338-4054.______u._____________ ROOMS, CARPETED, new appliances, quiet area, 775 Scott Lk. Rd. 2 ROOM BACHELOR apt. Everything turn. Private bath, en- trance FE 5-7805._____________ 2 BEDROOMS, FIRST floor, near St. Mike's, no drinkers, or petsto Inquire 70 Chamberlain. 10 e.m. to 6 —frcTOv ........—------■ —— rflbDCD flDAc®, DAniATnox, 2 LARGE ROOMS, $20, older lady COPPER, BRASS/ RADIATORS/ preferreds no drinkers. FE 5-5182 ‘so* OR III** 3 ROOMS: PRIVATE~”entranee, NEWSPAPER 85c PER 100 LBS.S to delivered. Royal Oak Waste Paper* ROOMS, BATH, _u'!|:>.e^i,.clo5, ,0 and Metal Co., 414 E. Hudson. General Hospital. FE 6-291 Scenic View Townhouse 2 bedroom with lovely country view, private entrance, fireplace patio, balacony, alr-conditloning. washer-dryer, Hlllvlew Villa g* Williams and Elizabeth Lk. Rds 8185 Mo. EM- 3-2061, or 335-5120. SUB-LEASE 1 BEDROOM apartment In Rochester. Carpet, drapes and air conditioning. Call attar 6 p.rp UPPER APARTMENT, COUPLE —only/ utilities turn., *100 month. FE 4-5662. attached aaraae, full basement _________________ with extra room, new carpeting In BY owner, a-BEDROOM 2 baths, living room, gas heat, nice lot with b|.|tvel, bullt-lns, carpeted, drapes, paved, driveway. *27,500. JVj eir gar*Be, vlaw ot golf UNDERWOOD course, large patio, 534 par cent 8665 Dixie Hwy. 625-26151 mortgage. m20Q. 363-7245. —_ Eves. 625-1876 ________I BY OWNER, OXBOW L a k • aYiAd TAUfsifi iin I privileges, 3 bedrooms, 2 bofhs, AVON TOWNSHIP family room. Dual fireplace, 4 Potential 3 bedroom ranch, full level home, studio ceiling, built-lns, basement, dining room, large 2 car garage, 363-0881. kitchen, carpeting, plus carport. I BRIGHTON AREA, 3 bedrooms, big Gl, Zero Down. CALL YORK commercial spaces. Plenty of free, parking. Phono 651-4576 or 731-8400. Hwy. WE TRADE OR 4-0363 Drayton Plains BLOOMFIELD HILLS, Telegraph near Long Lake Road, ground floor available, free parking space, air conditioned, utilities furnished. 642- 8070.___________________________„ _ NEW MEDICAL BUILDING for lease, 1100 square ft. suite, fully carpeted, air-conditioned, basement storage, ample parking, i n Waterford Twp. 673-3002, 673-5409. OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT 800 Sq. Ft. Each Call FE 8-7161 Jack Ralph RECENT OCCUPIED „2 room lew office, prime location, convenient parking, completely paneled, carpeted, air conditioner, low' utility expense. Immediate occupancy. $85 per mo., 2931 Orchard -14c., Rd. near Community Nat'l Bank. 682-2810. ALMOST NEW bedroom aluminum ranch home Attached 2 car garage, walk-out basement on lake Tot 75'x245'. Highland area and GM proving grounds. Ideal country home for CO. 4432. HOWELL Town 8< Country Inc. Highland Branch Office PHONE: 313-685-1585 grounds. family. ATTENTION G.I. Nice two bedroom home with full basement on two wooded lots. Closing costs move you In. Lake privileges Huntoon Lake. $12,900. Call Ron O'Nell, 425-5071. _ .... Vacant. Will sail on land contract, LEASE with option to buy or taka other property In trede. 5884-700. i_______________________ COMMERCE LAKE 5 Room ranch. Includes, carpeting, drapes, natural fireplace, Jieated garage, CALL Land Contract Terms. YORK WE BUY FE 8-7174 1702 *. Telegraph WE TRADE FE t-7174 Pontiac CLARK ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES: 4-Room modem older home In nice condition. Wall to wall carpeting Id 22 ft. Living Room, plus Teonas see Ledge Rock fireplace. Uullt-lne In Kitchen. Gas heat, Hardwood floors, plastered wells, garbage disposal, pert basement, 2-c*r garage, cement drive; also close to lake. Price $21,500. Mortgage term*. AN OLD SMOOTHIE ligant 3 bedroom colonial Auburn Heights, w baths,: _____ formal dining room, sun porch, WEST 5UBURBAN: OVER M full tiled basement, fireplace In ACRES: 7-Room Ranch, built In 'SI, living room, carpeting approximately_ 1400 eg. ft. Carpeted Rent Business Property 47-A 30 X 50' BUILDING WITH iota 0» parking. West Huron. FE 3-7968 1,000 SQUARE FEET, fully carpeted, air conditioned, parking and lanitorial servica and heat Included for $170 month. Call 333-7325. RAY COME SEE : 689-0760 AUBURN GARDENS 5 room ranch, full basement with gas heat. New carpeting, Sarge dining room, new furnace, con* necting bath. F.H.A. approved. Zero down. About $470 closing costs. Owners agent. 338-6952._ BRIAN $29,000 to $52,000 2,000 SQUARE FT. 2943 Orchard Lake Rd. Professional or commercial use, ample parking, low rent, 363-3160 after 7 p.m.__ “BEAUTIFUL STORE all paneled walls, can be used for any business or office. Dowhtown .P®n* aQi ■ r\/ri tiac. One of tha finest locations.]CONTEMPORARY 5PUT-LcVtL For rant or lease. Phone FE 3’^853 j Beamed studio ceilings In all rooms Eves., FE 5*7303.______________ with Tacoma Cedar walls accent the FOR SALE OR least, 5,000 square contemporary theme. Burnt orange dock, tor carpeting are featured In the living room and up the suspended stairs to the master bedroom and bath. In the kitchen you'll find, built-in oven, range and dishwasher. A full wait fireplace and rich paneling set off ——; the lower level family room for 48 entertainment. The attached 2Vi car ___i side entrance garage adds length .«Jend beauty. Exterior features dark >' X 60' TENT. EQUIPTED with cedar ^nd brick siding. Priced at, lights and platform. Delivered and $29,000. set up. Seats 400. 674-2327. RESTAURANT FULLY Newly decorated. Downtown equipped. raewiv aecoroma. s^uwmOWn Pon- ^ ji.s,..,__6__r [Eve. FE 5*7303 Ph°n* FE ^78M'! I*-"2 -** **' Rent Miscellaneous Sale Houses 49 VERY CONTEMPORARY ELEGANT living is offered In this CRESCENT LAKE ESTATES | bedrooms? 1W decorator "Ijaths, 3 Badroom ranch, 1W baths, gas family room with fireplace, sunken heat, full basement, plus carpeting, kitchen I Z. Terms. CALL YORK Rent Houses, Furnished 39 1 BEDROOM. COUPLE only, FE S- 7019. ____________ LAKE FRONT nome, completely furnished,, 3 bedrooms. Available until Labor Day. Seasonal only. Also September through May. 68V __2260."__________________:______ ORION LAKE FRONT------------ year around 3 bedroom home furnished $55 per wk., utilities paid. 693-7792. WE BUY FE 8-7176 1702 S. Telegraph WE TRADE FE 8-7176 Pontiac _____ luxurious carpeting. In the , mammoth exposed * basement you find natural stonework on the bar land fireplace. Designed for the ex-1 ecutive who entertains/ Situated on a large terraced lot with a million dollar view of the surrounding area. Priced at $52,000. This homy is truly one of a kind. GAYLORD COLONIAL Indianwoods Manor Is the setting for this 5 year old gem on the water. 4 bedrooms and bath up with living, dining and family rooms down. Extras include fireplace, gas barbecue. -■ , intercom, bullt-lns and carpeting main road. Six room throughout. 2 bar attached garage. SIX ACRES _ ^ ____PP......... bi-level brick home. Built 1966. 3:pr|Cqd-at $45,000 bedrooms 1st floor. 2 bedrooms i terms, basement. Very, very nice con-in • panltnrc dition. Call MY 2-2821, FE 8-9693. jDriCin, KeOITOrS Rent Houses, Unfurnished 40 five acres, e room homo. Four bedrooms. Large gerage. Owner leevlng state *22,500. Terms. Call Living Room, IV* Beths, large dining area plus 19 ft. family room, cedar shake exterior, aluminum storms and screens. Walking distance to 3 Waterford schools. Quick posteislon. Only *18,900. Mortgage terms. Will' consider trade. CLARK REAL ESTATE 1342 W. HURON ST. 482-8850 Multiple Listing Service_________ CLARDSTON AREA. 3 bedrm. home, carpeted living room with fireplace, 250x100 lot with shade and fruit trees, 2 car garage with tool room. Beech prlv., near golf course and ski area. Priced to sell. Call for appt. 8-4:00 p.m.. 394-0123. Cash For Your Equity HACKETT 363-6703 Charming—Immaculate 3 bedroom brick ranch with full , basement end .fenced yard. In the city. Close to shopping and schools. Immediate possession. For detolls call 451-8588. Shepard Real Estate, Inc. Crestbrook MODEL OPEN DAILY 12-8 3-bedroom, family room and 1-car garage, priced of only 817,490 plue tot. Located In now sub with pavad Streets, curb, guitar, sidewalks and cW vafw. Ortw our MSOTo Crea-cent Lake Road, turn right to Crastbrook Street ino medal. DON GIROUX REAL ESTATE __» Silt Highland Road (MS9) 873-7837 Accounting Clerks Bookkeepers Gen, Office Girl Friday Car and expenses Dietitian (Adm.) Key Punch (exp.) Secretaries Statistical typist p Stones Switchboard oper. Royal Oak.-LI 1-4020. !3 ROOMS AND BATH, Private, call 1 OEOROOM, ADULT*. NO pets.] MY g-fot, FE 8-9493 IsiLVER'dEWFiatETirSrmSfei 334-3971 or apply at 24'Tacoma ct.| _deposit.J92-M6I. — 9350 up: for larger amounts. FE 5-4492. Pontiac. 3 BEDROOMS, SUbURBAN 8450 up silver CERTIFICATE - 3 days 3 CLEAN ROOMS# furnished,' Wist, cluse t© Khwls* - ■ m mafe 'it ..ch3 ot.*.]. m,ch*al$realty Sale Heuies land contract 623-0702 Waterford 491 DESIRABLY LOCATED Contemporary Rqnch with living/! 8400 up; 473-1711. _ $850 up THREE COMPARTMENT $400 UP . $450 up $400 UP $42 5 U $311 up ...........I Stainless I steel sink, NSF commercial, cal! 673-0496 after 6 pjrn. WANTED SILVER* CERTIFICATES. 5 weeks left to redeem them. Top cash price. Write or cell Northwood Coirs Shop, 2 2 2 Sherman, Royal Oak, Mich. 48067. 547-7910. _____ WANTED: USED TABLE for cutting . meat. 851-0555.__________________ WANT OLD FASH ION Eb tub with jags. In good'condition. OR 3-8048. WANTED 3 point, 2 row cultivator, for Ford tractor# *879-6842. WANTED ^ OLD Sftyl van for storage. OR 4-3567. utilities furnished, garage. 8419. 68_JNorton, ! CLEAN ROOMS, PRIVATf bath, utilities furn. No children or pets. FE 2*2416.______1_______________ i LARGE ROOMS AND BATH, utilities furnithedf $30 wk. 335-1261, eves. i ROOMS NEWLY d ecorated. Private entrance. From $60 dep. Pontiac from $30 wk. FE 5-9962. l ROOMS AND BATH. Close to downtown, prirate. 335-7942. ____ l ROOMS AND BATH, clean, on ground floor, naar downtown, no drlnkars, adults only* good rtf., 363-9894. ______ Most of the above positions are employer fee paid * International Personnel 1880 S. Woodward, B'ham 642-8268 Up, Up and Away ' "ftSrw. or w. < oRCjjg\uu° :BATH' ” Airline Trainee _ r zoom's"and_bath7~s5 wiiTiami Work for. a malor airline. Free WdVtTBd 10 Rent Ja. no drlnktrs. No pets. FE 4-6433. ♦revel, good saiary. ----*-/— -------------~r^|4‘ROOMS? WEST side, carpated, gals and guys with a high school j-BEDROOM HOUSE, furnlshbd or I garaga«?aclolt* only. FE 2-1523._ iftTERNATigtfAL^PERSONNEL | J£»onvi"e «rjj* J_S§gp. 8351*8' bn- Instructions-Schooli Day or evening class#*. MICHIGAN SCHOOL OF BUSINESS Huron 332-5498 Licensed by Mich. State Board of Education ClWkalon Area, /*2S-4j|)62._______^ !">iy/w6"a mo. M3-3269.______ in 3- OR 3/bEDROOM home_ In- ^Lak* gFFi'ClENCY apart- lw. OMon area, have ret.. MY 2-0601 ■ , m#nf( carpeted, single person,, . * ' 3 OR 4 BEDROOM. HOME TO rent, utilities turn., dep. $50. *75 per -wk. WEST j preter with option to buy. Woyld] fe 2-0918. _ ' also consider 3 bedroom *P'- efficiency APARTMENT NEAR 1-75 treeway and C I a r k s t Bachelors only. *25 wk dep 625-2615 or 625-3)25 2 BEDROOM. NORTHSIDE. utilities furnished. *100 dep. *40 per wk. FE 2-0918. "_______ 2 BEDROOM, CARPETING, drapes, stove and rafrlgarator. *144 mo., 8144 **c. dep. 1 child walcoma, no petl. 338-2554._______________ 2 BEDROOMS, CARPETING, drapes, stove, retrlg. SI 45 mo, SI4S sbc. dep. Adults. No pets 474-1361._____ 6 BEDROOMS, 415 bath, very luxurious horn* Would you Ilk* to llv* In a beautiful horn* with Income possibilities — have been ranting to collage students. Possible option. 8700 par mo.. Rochester area, 65M886 evenings. AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY 2 bedroom, gas heet, garage, 8145 mo. plus sec. Milford, 8*7-4035 or FE 5-4111, ext. 2567; bet; 8-3. FREE RENTAL SERVICE to landlords. /Reliable tenants wall GAYLORDS INC. 12 W. Flint SI.. Lake Orion MY 2-2821 ^ _ ' FE 8-9693 627 2825 j beDROOM WITH BASEMENT, I Lake garage area. S16,9(K 4271. *______ 2, 3 AND 4 BEDROSMS. nawiy decorated. *49 down. We buy homes. Art Daniels Realty, 1230 N. Milford Rd. 6851*67 or 7030 Dexter-Pinckney Rd. 426-4496. 2 BEDROOMS .COMPLEtELY remodeled new automatic gas heat, carpeting, patio, fenced yard, prlv., on Lower Straits Lake. $15,900. Owner. 363-6454. 2 BEDROOM HOME. 575 Nevada. Phone FE 8-4649 tor appointment. REGISTER NOW tor classes beginning June 17. , _------ ..... INCOME TAX Phone Mr._Stygar, 152-3300 __ Typing, shorthand, accounting, math, COUPLE. 1 or 2 BEDRM. home, business lew, busIness English. ] garage. 6 mo. leasa, option for yr Ing. Art Daniels Realty, 1230 N.j Mlltord Rd. 6851567 or 7030 Oexter-I Pinckney Jcdl 434-4496. ; _ - ■{ 5®E, 6 Toom brick, IV; baths, gas heat, basement and garage. 81 SO month and depasjl rkston ! ‘73-6339. ... - , 850 sac. MULLETT LAWS Large cottages,; I heated Summer cottage. 665-2297. Clerkston, Oxford. Pontiac. Sprint rlnq- i,15. fijefd Twp. On of about Juna 683-7667.____ RESIDENT PHYSICIAN DESIRES large home In Bloomfield Needed In July for 2 veer». Royel Oak. 585-6490. IF You -want a clean beautifully furnished apt. lb nice location, all utilities plus parking Jnd laundry feCllltlea paid call FE 2-7007. No children or pels. heated Summer cottage. 865 LARGE COTTAGE ON private lake, „ 3- acres of privacy. Lake Orion araa, hours drive from Detroit 2 bedrooms; large porch, sleeps 8, huge fireplace, complete bath, hot water, modern kitchen, SS50 month, 81400 a season. 647-4349/ > 3 Bedrooms low down payment ' j no mortgage costs > MODEL OPEN 510 California l 30 id S p,m. A’day-wwak " WE5T0WN REALTY FE 8-2763 days _ After 7:30 p m. - LI 2-4677 _ 3 MODELS OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAY Drive eiiit M59 lust west ol C«*s Lake Rd. to Candelstlck. Direct., behind the Den Mattingly Business Center. QAN MATf,N#|[v FE 59497 OL 1-0222 WELL PRICED 4 bedroom tri-lavel In Franklin. Custom drapes fhrou ghoul. Beautifully landscaped lot. 844,900. SNYDER KINNEY & BENNETT Franklin Village MA 6-9600 ^jfeAYTON PLAINS AMA 2 bedroom, 12 x 19 living room, attractive kitchen, full bittmenf# oil heat, 2 car etteched fftreod, x 240 ft. fenced lot. 116,900# Convenient terms. TOM — BEGAN _____________________c___ REAL ESTAT«_____ BY OWNER. 4-BEDROOM - 2 baths.;2251 N. Opdyke _____*35°t54 HOWARD cent mortoaoe- Price $25,90Q. 363-; 8141._ -• ._______________ b y owner, y bedroom home iarage an. ioos_____ By Kate Osann Sal* Houms CROSS NORTH PONTIAC Ranch home with brick front. , , beet, 2 car garage on large lot with shade trees. $450 down on FHA. WATERFORD t bedroom well kept home has large kitchen, hardwood floors, on| large lot with fruit trees. Noi money down to qualified veteran or $450 FHA. CROSS REALTY . AND INVESTMENT CO. OR 4-3105 MLS We pay cash for used homes lease - RENTING $78 Mo. Excluding taxes end Insurance ONLY * $10 Deposit V: WILL WITH APPLICATION 3-BEDROOM HOME GAS HEAT LARGE DINING AREA ACCEPT ALL APPMCA* HALL CLARKSTON AREA - 3 bedroom brick ranch with full basement. Home features gleaming hardwood floors throughout, ceramic bath, large Anchor fenced lot, 11* car garage. Priced to sell at $20,250. call early on this one. bedroom bungalow In the Clarkston school area. Featuring large living sroom, separate dining room, carpeted. Total price only $10,400. Don't vyalt on this one. LOOKING FOR A LOT In the Clarkston area to build vour new home? If so, stop In and tee us. We still have a tew choice lots left with terms to suit. Or we can! build your new home on your lot or ours. LET'S TRADE " B HALL REALTY, REALTOR 0569 Dixie Hwy. 9-9 Daily 625 4116 HAYDEN IGI OR FHA, 3 large bedrooms, family kitchen with dining area, carpeting, full basement, fenced lot. Northern High area. .All this [ . and more. Be first to call for your appointment. WALK TO WORK at Fisher Body, f icer 2 bedroom, clean as fenced yard, $2100 to assume a'5'* I percent mortgage and payments of1 $77 per month Including taxes and insurance. \ Sal* H*ut*t JOHNSON THINKING About building, a new home? Now Is the time. We have plans and lots or will build on your lot and use your plans. Call us today or come In and let a Sales Person help you. JOHNSON 1705 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 4-2533 KINZLER CAPE COD 1 ACRE All white alumindm exterior with 6 delightful rooms, breezeway and 3-car garage. Has 29' recreation room with fireplace. Gas heat. Too include property, range a*n d refrigerator. 1 acre site, 100x424 -nice shade, fruit and garden. Watkins Lake privileges. A perfect family home. Prompt possession. Call today. Phone Mrs. Hoyt, 625-1 1744. NEW HOME, $17,950 I Which includes lot. 3-bedroom all aluminum ranch home now under I construction. 1042 square feet. H«ls 11 a baths, family size kitchen with Formica cabinets, full basement. | Gas heat and water from Waterford Township. 10 per cent down. MGIC Phone Mr. Hedgelen, PEOPLE WITH CREDIT PROB-L E M S AND RETIREES ARE OKAY WITH US. WHITE LAKE PRIVILEGES. 5 rooms, enclosed sun porch, 3 nice OPEN DAILY AND SAT. AND SUN or come to 290 W Kennett Near Baldwin REAL VALUE REALTY Fred Pierce, Inc., Realtor For Immediate Action Call JM3 6604 _FE 5-3676 642-4220 FREE HOME DESIGN lots with plenty of shade trees and garden area. Land contract terms or could go Gl. J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor 10735 Highland Rd. (M-59) le west of Oxbow Lake ONE OWNER, exquisitely cared for colonial in beautiful neighborhood, 4 bedrooms, 2V* baths, family And planning service. Long room, carpeting and drapes, cen-i established national firm. Use one tral air-conditioned. j source for design-planning-building. | Write for tree catalog of homes CLOSE TO SCHOOLS — lovely stone: and Information to: front tri-laval with 3 bedrooms, m A| RPP HOMH baths, larga family room, large MLDCC nv/mcj breakfast room, kitchen with built-. 3513 Elizabeth Lake Rd. ins. Thermopane sliding door-walls,1 Pontiac, Phone: 682-3580 , 2 patios, beautiful garden. HOLLY AREA, 11540 S. Dixie Hwy., bedrooms, 2 baths, fireplace.; itchen buil ------------ . . — . „,any extras. ---------- B lot, beamed ceiling in family room,] prjce $15,000. Owner, no r< sots, 1 Ml 7*1414 Y0UNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER BIL1 Russell Young, 334-3630 53V* W. Huron St._____________ WEST SIDE 3 bedroom home on Chippewa With 2 larga lots. 2 fireplaces, 20 ft. living room. Separate dining room. I1/* baths. Includes carpeting, drapas, stove and refrigerator. Full basamant. 2 car garage. $24,500. Land contract at 6 per cent. BACKUS REALTY 682-7131______ Eves. 338-1695 WARDEN NEAR PONTIAC NORTHERN Price lust reduced for fast sale on this attractive elmost new 3 bedroom home on paved street. Has carpeted living room, all aluminum Florida room, gas heat, covered carport, paved drive. Just $13,900 with terms. Will Gl. WARDEN REALTY 3434 W. Huron, Pontiac 682-3920! Livonia._ HIITER NEAR CRESCENT LAKE - 2 acres with this 2 unit income. 3 rooms and bath in tach, workshop. All for $9,100. WEST SUB — overlooking lake. 3; bedroom brick rancher, 2 full baths, fireplace, full basement, 2’ a | car garage, blacktop street., $27,400, terms. EAST SIDE — 2 bedrooms and bath,* basement, IV* car garage. $10,250,;cACT cmp. Gl or FHA terms. CALL HIITERDll/C. Indian Village 5 BEDROOMS 2’/2 BATHS 2100 SQ. FT. PLUS BASEMENT IMMEDIATE POSSESSION $26,900 LAND CONTRACT TERMS FE 2 3829 IRWIN COLONIAL: West side location. Two story, 7, room In excellent condition. Large bath and kitchen. Fireplace in living room. New F.A. gas furnace. Glassed in porch*. Sun room and many extras. 674-291 BIG FAMILY HOME In Pontlac-Watkins Estates. All brick ranch with attached 2-car garage. Custom built - by an exacting owher. Has ledaerock fireplace In living room, farm size kitchen and finished recreation room. ToO include plush carpeting and draperies in all rooms. Landscaped lot 100x150. Home too large for present owner and may consider trade. Phona Krehner, 681-0091. CASS LAKE FRONT Delightful 7 room brick and frame family home — all in excellent 49 LARGE BUNGALOW Sal* Haul** 49 Near avarythlng. 3 spacious baarooms{ natural fireplace, dining 5EE jH(S RHODES room, full basement, gas heat and Xaraga. Needs some flxln'. Owners gent 674-1696._____________ BEDROOM BUNGALOW ln~ Pontiac naar Pontiac Motors anglnearlng, vary wall carad for home with saparata dining room, lull basement with ~ car garapi and pavad driveway nicely landscaped lot, walking distance to schpoli — $17,500 — with li „1 ______ _ ROOM aluminum IV* story homa today. *Mas wall to wall carpat, hardwood floors, full bailment — tiled, gas haet, water softener plus aluminum awnings, storms, scretnt, IV* car garage. An outstanding buy at $15,900. ti iuv.fi, 1 SAGINAW BAY, 3r trailer with lot. room, 2j wafer, electricity end septic. A land contract with larga down. MENSES REAL ESTATE . 4, Office 625-5485 SLE H0U£L?. After 5:00 625-2775 or 637-7146 real buy at $4,000. A/J. RHODES, REALTOR | FE 8-2306 258 W. Walton FE 5-67121 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE Sal* H*ui*i____;___49 TRADE-BARGAIN 3 family Income# located on Oakland Ava. $300 per month Income. Zoned Commerlca! Will trade for smellpr house. 40 ft. on Oakland Avo. WRIGHT REALTY 382 Oakland Ava. P* >-»l4l TIMES ARRO OUR BUYERS ARE UNHAPPY OUR SELLERS ARE GLAD WE'RE PLUM OUT OF LISTINGS WE SOLD EVERYTHING WE HAD WE CAN SELL YOURS TOO. SOUND REASONABLE? Due to our location, between Cass and Elizabeth Lakes, 2 of the most preferred lakes In Oakland County, wa have a great many calls and walk-ins for property In this area. So< if you planning to us a & . ... CNk MIA. Uc. T.M. lx. U S. h> OS6 i wonder what it would cost to rent a computer to handle my algebra?” be good business to glv call? HAVE A SAFE HOLIDAY PHONE: 682-2211 5132 Cass-Elizabeth Road , S REALTOR Open Daily 9-9 GILES DRIVE SAFELY MEMORIAL DAY See us Friday to list your home. We have many young families that ere looking for homes in northern Pontiac. List With SHfcAM And Call the Vbn OPEN EVES. AND SUN. fill JOSLYN AVE. FE 59471 REALTOR MLS ___Serving Pontlec *re» for 20 Vrs. PARTRIDGE "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" OTTAWA HILLS II wouldn't it Immaculate split leveKbrlck in Pon i Sale Houses 49 Sale Houses 49 LAKE FRONT , laimiy uumv — an m sSBTOiiiipe, I.RPnDOOM I A R f, F ondltion «J'd co|or'u^ d6min0l6 Mills ; pleasure there's a 20x40 Belaire' ... [swimming pool, Including all ac-Act now and enjoy living this! cessories. If you're looking for Furnished 2 bedroom: somethlng ‘'Special" be sure to see summer cottage on beautiful high Independence Twp. Glassed porch. All rooms tiled and paneled u/ATKIkJC I AlfE cpfiMT and In excellent condition. Only WA I KIND LAKt rKUN I $13,500 with land contract terms. just listed, 7 rooms, V/4 story bungalow. Beautiful view of the lake. $900 M°VES YOU IN k - MtSS Professional Service This 2-bearoom ranch with walkout ^eat, full basement. Taxes 150 ft. frontage near main post basement on 2 lots, very lar9e on|y $270. ah alum, exterior. Don't! office, including good home, living room with gleaming oak wajj on f^is one. By appointment < Ideal location for doctor's offices, floors, separate dining room, «>iease. No. 7-19 If clinic, etc. $55,000, terms. this one. Priced at $37,900. No 15-19 ARE YOU A Gl? If you are you can buy this, 2 family Income with nothing down and let it pay for itself. Full price only $11,900. You can't beatj a deal like that. ST. MIKES PAROCHIAL j Lovely 3-bedroom home, full; basement, closets galore, 2'*-car garage, many more features too numerous to mention here. This is a good family home In a good area. BRICK FIREPLACE In the living room of this 6 room bungalow, 3 bedrooms, full basement, large living room, permastone, and aluminum siding and aluminum awning*. Walking distance to K-Mart. Priced at only $15,900. This is a good buy. Claude McGruder j Realtor tiac's most exclusive section. Lovely landscaped yard with anchor fence. Ledgerock fireplace in living room. Above average sized bedrooms, full bath with vanity. Lower level features a panelled family room with full bath. Price includes washer, dryer, stove and refrigerator. $27,500 Terms. PARTRIDGE REALTORS 1050 W. HURON, PONTIAC j___334-3581 OPEN NITE TIL 9_ PONTIAC — HANDY MAN DELIGHT A little soap, water, paint, and I elbow grease, will make a nice 2 bedroom ranch, with large utility room. A steel at $10,100. FHA approved! Immediata occupancy. $0 down. RAY 398-7760 PRESTON BILT-H0MES AND REALTY __673-8811 Spacious New Homes by ROSS 4 bedroom alum, sided home In, excellent condition. Living room 221 Baldwin with fireplace, separate dining1 Multiple Listing Service room, kitchen, 2 bedrooms and,------------------y---------- ceramic bath on first floor, 2 bedrooms up. Full basement with rec. room and bath, garage. Carpeting and drapes included at $18,950, terms. cellent starter home.- Completely fenced yard. Easy terms. Priced at only $10,500 and take over mortgage. R0YCE LAZENBY, Realtor* THIS IS THE FIRST OFFERING Rd., Nelson Bldg. Co.! "ESTABLISHED 1930'' WERE SERIOUS: We have a desperate need for listings of existing homes. There are many prospects from our new home department as well as our rental units that either need quicker possession or lust simply prefer an axis" listing your home with us SUDDENLY: It's summer and you'll want trees, shrubs and lots of flowers, this homa has the green thumb owner and the interior of This massive 2 bedroom home, has the neat housewife that makes this homa truly sparkle. Well constructed aluminum sided home with oak floors, plastered walls, large ceramic tiled master bath. Impressive carpeted living room with fireplace, seperate dining room, seperate entrance to finished basement with fireplace, second bath and kitchen facilities, 2 car attached garage with solid cement drive, 823,500. EXECUTIVE LIVING: In the Red Barn Subdivision between Oxford and Orion with your own heated swimming pool, bath and half, brick and frame 2 story colonial with basement, sliding glass door wall off massive kitchen to patio and swimming pool, fenced comer lot and 2 car garage, $25,500. GETTING MARRIED? Here's a home that should fit your requirement to a tee. 3 bedroom, story and half bungalow in the Cherokee school area, oak floors, plastered walls, ceramic bath with glass tub enclosure, 9 x 15 kitchen, full basement with gas heat and anchor fenced back yard. $15,900. LOOK YOU TWO: A jewel, clean and cute is the best way to describe this wall constructed 2 bedroom bungalow in excellent location off Oakland Avenue. Oak floors, plastered walls, 11 x 15 living room, 8 x 16 kitchen, loads of closet space and a 60 foot lot. $12,575 on easy FHA farms with $600 total to move in. 2536 Dixie Hwy. Multiple Listing Service 674-0324 Lauinger and master bath. New carpeting, drapes, top quality throughout. $89,500. MAX BROOCK INC. 4139 Orchard Lake Rd. At Pontiac Trail MA 6-4000 444-4890 NEAR 0RT0NVILLE RANCH HOME and country living, a real combination and yet conveniently located to schools end has lake privileges. This 2 bedroom home has built-in oven and range and can be purchased by a qualified Gl with NOTHING GOWN, just closing costs. Priced for quick sale at only $7,500. CALL TODAY I No. 47 INVESTMENT PLUS * LAKE FRONT LIVING FOR FREE! This duplex Ms 3 bedroomi In each side. You can live in one half and let the rent from the other half make the payments for you. 2 new furnaces, and the furnishings stay, end best of all — this can be purchased on Land Contract with NO MORTGAGE COSTS. Total price is $18,900, so hurry, CALL NOW! No. 50 LAKE FRONT ON WHIPPLE LAKE: Clean and neat walkout basement. Practically 2 homes ir ig and the othei targe recreation room with throughout, and there's also _ _____ _________ _ _ | garage. Reasonably priced at $31,900 with best of terms. No. 94 BRAND NEW RANCHER JUST WAITING for that lucky family to move In end en|oy life end pleasant living. Loaded with built-ins and custom features, in an area of ell new, homes with blacktop streets and community water. A reasonable down payment will move you Into this 3 bedroom with basement and attached garage. Immediate possession. CALL NOW I , IMMEDIATE POSSESSION BUILDER'S CLOSEOUT: 3 bedroom brick,y ranch-type home, full basement, IV* ceramic-tiled baths, kitchen built-ins and specious dining area. There's e - 21/? car attached garage, wooded waterfront lot with lake privileges and just 2 miles to j-75, with easy driving distance to Pontiac or Flint. TRADING YOUR EQUITY will glv* you peace of mind. We’ll GUARANTEE IN WRITING th# eel# of your present home. NEW MODEL RANCHER: mem, wood seaieo-giess windows with screens, 2 car attached garage end gleaming-white carefree aluminum siding. OPEN SAT. and SUN. 1*5 p.m- Also shown by appointment on week days. ’Priced at yjst $18,850 plus inside 0ecorating and building site. Corner of icott Like and Watkins Lake Roads UNION LAKE EM 3-4171 JOHNSON WEST SIDE INCOME 8 family brick apartment on 125xT88 ft. lot, 2 car garage with good parking area. Gross rental last year $8,820. This property would be ideal for old people's rest home. Let us show it to you. Will sell on land contract. 3 FAMILY INCOME' ON WEST SIDE 1— 6 room apartment down and 2— 1 bedToom apartments up, full basement, 5 car garage, Ideal for owner. Live down and rental from 2 apartments will make payment on land contract. Call for appointment. RENTAL 4 room frame, 1 story on Lake — Geneva, 2 bedrooms 50x150 ft. lot $700 per mbnth. After 6 call Car-roll Braid FE 4-2286 Four; * bedrooms, two baths, family room j has brick fireplace with raised: hearth. Com p I e t e information, drawings and specs at our office.) $42,900. 'Swa°KdAL.^@ bedrooms*Va rge j ! AjfractYvely priced at*826,950. No. 10- fsmiiu ...iti. 11 r a n 11 r , assume 5 < per cent mofgege. •» family room with fireplace. nrvuuw to uctc i r a r g e ' l^Kum , - / ’ n. on water, men( |ocated in E||I Lake Estates, family room with fir e p I a c e J bedroom Walkout basement 1 Hare, your whole family can en|oy Dressing room in master bedroom LiSoestone fireDlace Laroe^e best in year around lake living. hath N.w r*rnetInn. cYXd^p'rch Exc nelgh^hMd Even a golf course nearby for Mom Deep .lake. Trout fishing, 10 and Dad. Nowhere could you locale minutes to Pontiac. Full prlcelyour family for more enloyable liv-$27,500. 1 ing at only $19,950. Call today to see HIGHLAND — 2 bedroom plus; It. No. 10-21 family room, IV* car garage, On, 100x150 ft. fenced yard. Many! IMMEDIATE POSSESSION blooming shrubs. Large garden _ ... . .. ____,_. space. In excellent condition. Lake!?" 8 ,lne west side. Semlnoe Hilis privileges. home, easy walking to Webster ana IDEAL BUILDING SITES — As low!Washington Jr Immeculate as $800. Waterfronts. Wooded. Lake, throughout with we, 11 to wall privileges. Terms. -carpeting. One bedroom and bath 0 DOWN TO VETS — Large 4- down, 2 bedrooms up; recreation bedroom. Full b a s e m e n t . room and lav. down. Garage has Fireplace. 2 car garage. Near! attached screened patio; shaded Pontiac Mall. ’(yard. Reduced to rock bottom at WALLED LAKE SCHOOLS —; $19,000. Let's talk trade. No. 1-8 Spacious bl-level. Large family’ room.'3 possible 4 bedrooms. Built- TWO FAMILY FLAT In oven and range. Carpet. A• • WU rttmiL! ri-«i lovely home. Full price $23,250. Be independent. Want extra Income. BUILDING 3 BEDROOMS a- —■ live rent free in this well kept Starting as low as $15,950 Including I home with living, room dining room, lot. Let us sell your property while! kitchen and 2 bedrooms, in each flat we build | also a 2 car garage. First time of- 674-0319 VE-FHA 673-2168 j,ered Price J18M0 No-’’•1' 1531 Williams Lake Rd.,»t M-59 <] 3.9QQ |S THE LOW LOW N. SAGINAW ST. |PR(CE carpeting, drapes, dryer, washer, elec, stove, 10 pc. dining room, double garage. $14,900, terms. Waterford Twp.—2'/*’ Ac. | Good 5 room home, 159 ft. front-, age on Voorhies Rd., 132 ft. an On this exceptionally neat home In j back street. Possible multiple Sylvan. Be sure to notice how the; dwelling site, church or other! professionally done landscaping sets development. $57,500, terms, this home apart from most you have Ire" SsSTtST UTlZT U REALTORS 28 E. Huron St. j tastefully decorated’ the spacious;WE WILL TRADE! Office Closed Memorial Day room, 3 bedrooms, dining room, and kitchen. Of course you Wide, probably already know about the 2 car!excellent lake privileges on Sylvan 338-0466 WILLIS M. BREWER REAL ESTATE 724 Riker Bldg. and Sundays__ MODEL OPEN DAILY 9-9 JOHNSON' wa* ^ * I Tasteful luxury and carefullv kampsen; "IT'S TRADING TIME" YOU CAN SMELL THE NEWNESS What is more exciting then moving into e brend new home that never belonged to anyone elul Thle four bedroom wlngiid colonial (nearing completion) has a spacious living room, formal dining room, Hugo paneled family room With sea through fireplace and barbecue grill and beamed celling. It comes complete. with 2Vj baths, concrete , Tasteful luxury end carefully plan-i ned conveniences that add up to 'elegance without extravagance" mean more In s "Frushour-Angell" built home. That's why you can still have that new home of your dreams, built on your lot for only $18,400. Why don't you bring your family over to Inspect our model at 1052 N. Cess Lake Road today. Sales exclusively by RAY O'NEIL REALTY 3520 Pontiac Laka Road 4-2232 ________MLS room with fireplace, bedrooms, full basement. Located on 2 lots in the Union Lake area. Easy to purchase on Gl terms. Don't miss this one. No. A27 = 4-5181 NEW MODELS AT 682-2073 WESTRIDGE OR WATERFORD, -------PRICED FROM $25,950, INCL. LOT, North on Dixie (U.S.. 10) to Our Lady of Lake Church, left on Ledgestone, left on Tipperary. FOX BAY, PRICED FROM $26,990. INCL. LOT. West on Elizabeth Lake Road. " TUCKER McConnell school AREA — ATTRACTIVE 2-story 3 bedroom home with living and dining room, family kitchen, TV* bath, full basement, gas heat, screened porches, $150 down. JEFFERSON JR. HIGH AREA — WELL BUILT 2l BEDROOM area home with plastered walls and hardwood' floors, very large lot with trees! and shrubs, quiet nice! neighborhood. Priced to sell with $150 down. MODERN BRICK RANCH —'3 BEDROOMS, carpeting, drapes, full tiled basement, neat and clean landscaped. $500 should move you in this nice home located near Pontiac Northern. TUCKER REALTY CO. i 903 Pontiac State Bank 334-15451 Mattingly COLONIAL 2 story frame Colonial. Has 3 large bedrooms, full bath up, fialf bath down, full basement, brick fireplace in living room, enclosed rear porch, TV antenna, storms, screens, full price $15,900. SILVER LAKE ESTATES 8 room brick ranch home. Has 3 spacious bedrooms, brick fireplace In family room, basement, attached 2 car garage, storms, screens, lake privileges on Silver Lake. Full price $34,500. ROCHESTER This distinctive brick ranch house is located in beautiful Christian Hills. 3 large bedrooms, 2’/* baths attached 21-* car garage, finished walk-out carpeting, drapes, storms, screens. 93 trees on beautifully landscaped lot. Full price for this lovely home is $50,900. DAN MATTINGLY AGENCY Office Model Rochester 682-9000 OR 4-3568 OL 1-0222 2 new ranch homes available soon. $30,900 623-0670 1941 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 4-059 ROYER MILLER AARON BAUGHEY REAtTOR driveway and ground floor laim-l$900 DOWN — 3 BEDROOMS, dry room. Por a bonus — self*. FIREPLACE, new kitchen, large cleaning oven, drop-in range, living room. Full basmt.# gas heaf. dishwasher and carpeting in the All city conveniences. Large livinr ----' - - sped Timberline Estates beautiful Green's Lake, at only $39,950. Call for pointment todayl ig room. Over 2200 sq. ft. of bedrooms plus sun room. Just •lous living °n a large lot In $16,900. FHA. overlooking ced WATKINS LAKE PRIVILEGES and ap- surrounded by beautiful homes. 4 rooms and bath, full basmt., new gas heat, 2 lots. Lovely view of take ................■ I lc RANCH MODEL AT 1052 N. CASS LAKE ROAD. OPEN DAILY 9-9. WILL DUPLICATE ON YOUR LOT AT $18,400. ALL MODELS SHOWN AT YOUR CONVENIENCE CALL TODAY FOR j 5739 WM||ams Lake Rd. Frushour WATERFORD AREA WITH THE SUMMER MONTHS lust ahead — you must see this 8-room home, with 4 bedrooms, IV* baths, family room with sliding glass doors on each side of the fireplace, fully carpeted and a 2-car garage. To top it all off. It has a beautiful below-ground swimming pool with a depth of 9VS' and diving' board — and a real nice patio. Call to see this beauty today1. $31,950. We will take your present * home in on trade. HOLLY HERE IS A SPACIOUS — 3 bedroom home, S miles from 1-75 that combines comfortable living with income property included.' The guest hou$e on this property rents for $115 per mo., thet,newness 'at this all brick rancty *and the many extras it has makes it a bargain at $31,900. Call today for more information and your appointment. JACK FRUSHOUR, Realtor 'TED'S ■Trading" LAND CONTRACT TERMS Excellent Investment, 4-bedroom home, good rental area, some repairs needed, seller will pay this expense. Full price $9,750. Vacant, immediate possession. DRAYTON PLAINS 3 bedroom ranch aluminum siding, LAKE FRONT Near Ortonvllle. Year around 3 bedroom home overlooking lake. Hot water heat. Nicely decorated. 50x250 ft. lot. $18,500 full price. CLARKSTON AREA 2 3-bedroom ranch. I1/* car garage. Well landscaped and fenced. lOOx-150 ft. lot. Home is in excellent condition. Has l1 a ceramic baths. Gas heat with power humidifier. Automatic water softner $16,000 full price. No. 247E. WATERFORD Brick and aluminum 3 bedroom ranch. Full basement. Ceramic bath, F.A., family room. Covered patio, H* car garage. Fenced yard. This home is in excellent condition throughout. No. 229E. TIPSIC0 LAKE Year around lake front home. Large 100x125 ft. well landscaped lot. Nice beach. Dock included. Home features: walkout basement, 24'xll' living room, family room, cutstone fireplace, new built-in stove and refrigerator in kitchen. Washer and dryer«*'-ftfs6L time offered at $25,200. -HOLLY AREA Beautiful 3-bedroom contemporary home. Deluxe features throughout including: natural brick fireplace, studio ceilings, water softener, dishwasher, oven, range and hood. Disposal. Carpeting. 2 car garage with automatic openers. 1 v? ceramic baths. Wooded corner lot bordering flowing stream Golf course across road. No. 292 E. OXFORD 60'x200' commercial frontage on M-24 just south of Oxford. 24'x26', IV* story Cape Cod home. IV* car garage. 3-bedrooms. Nice homa or could be used as offices or business. $13,900. $3,000 down on land contract. COUNTRY ESTATE NORTHWEST City ioc«tion lor this J room i bungalow with gas haaL wall to waif carpeting, 3 Bedroom*, partial brick sldlno Plus a'fencao backyard. Only $14,900 for thl*JI year old home, zero down to veteran. $500 down FHA. Cell today for your appointment. P.D.Q. And we mean lust that bacausa If you are looking for that family lake front home this one baa t® be e must for you to see. Having 5 rooms with an expansion second floor, formal dining room. 12x22 finished family room with walk-out to lake t • a t u r e , plastered walls, stone fireplace^ 20x24 attached garage, 100x275 of well landscaped yard with approximately 100* oe the water. And to make this home maintenance free the present owner Installed aluminum siding and permastone. Don't hesitate on this one they ere quite rare. (P.D.Q. — People Deserve Quality). DRAYTON PLAINS Has for your early Inspection this lovely ranch homa with full basement, 13x13 finished .family room, fenced yard and attached 2 car garage. Oh yes, also aluminum siding end • large 5 '* per cent $ mortgage that can be assumed. WHEN YOU SEEK OUR SERVICE YOU "JOIN THE MARCH TO TIMES" Times Realty 5890 DIXIE HIGHWAY 673 0600 — RMttor Op»n 9-9 d»ll/ "THFHIGH AND THE MIGHTY" 1 Mighty •ttractlv#, High? Not In I prlc*. This 3 bedroom brick rench In Modlson Heights will give you • feeling of prldo of ownership. Ceramic tiled bath, largo living room end family I kitchen. Only *15.500 on FHA. I RAY ____ 689-0760 Val-U-Way VACANT IMMEDIATE POSSESSION Dandy 3 bedroom home on Corwin St. off Oakland Ava. hat 15 ft. living room, eharp kitchen with plenty of dining area and cupboard!. 5 large cldeeti tiled bath, gas heat. Assume present owner's mortgage of 812,150, reasonable down paymont. No closing costs, no rad tape. EAST SIDE GOLD MINE Hera Is a homa that has everything to offer. 3 bedrooms with 4th to be finished, lerge living room, dining room, k 11 c h o n , ceramic flit bath, full basamenf with extras such as — finished recreation room with bar, fruit cellar, workshop end laundry area, has outside potential besides ell this with a 1V> car garage with patio, located on large well shaded lot, flowers ond shrubs. Very neat throughout. FHA terms. We trade. OFF BALDWIN 2 bedroom, basement, alum, tided homa with larga kitchen and dining area, confortable living room, tilt bath, gat heat, awning covered patio. Assume preient owner'* mortgage of $12400 with paymtnti of $108 per month. finished basement and farage. Built-ins In kitchen, unken living room. Carpeted throughout. Make you home with car garage, full basement with recreation room plus 4th bedroom. Enclosed patio, fenced yard. Call now for a careful explanation of how you can trade your present home and possibly not need any cash to purchase this lovely home. FHA OR Gl Fof a couple who needs 2 bedrooms but still plenty of liv- ing area, nearly^-Vj^OO'-sstwere feet, fireplace and atti&fred garage, on an acre of land for the folks who like to putter in the garden. Full pric« *16,990. You can trade. I MAIN OFFICE, *23 S. Lapeer Rd. $1500 DOWN HOLLY BRANCH: Phone 634-8204 On land contract terms tor this 3i-------------------Holly Plaza_____________ bedroom 2 story home near Oakland University. Excellent R. J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 345 Oakland Ave._____Open 9 to 7 WALTER'S LAKE AREA CLARKSTON SCHOOL DISTRICT Early .American ranch, bam red, *4 acre lot, 3 bedroomi, I1/* bath, natural firaplaca, 2 car garaga. . $26,500. ALL BRICK RANCH V* acra lot, 3 larga badrooms, p§ bath, natural firaplaca, paneled family room, with walk-out. slider, $29,000. COLONIAL 2000 sq. ft. of your wlldatt Imagination In California Contemporary plus 2 aerts. ,$35,000. All Immediata occupancy with excellent mortgage br land contract available. SYLVAN RLTY — 673-3488 or 682-2300. Wideman LOON LAKE FRONT Brick colonial, featuring 24 ft. carpeted living room, large family dining room and study — all carpeted. IV* baths, 4 bedrooms. Recreation area in basement, 2 car ..brick garage. 82 ft. frontage on pointment now and enjoy country | beautiful LOON LAKE With flood ng at Its best. No. 256 E. I beath. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION. WE BLfILD — TRADE ROYER REALTY, INC. PHONE 628-2548 RETIRING SPECIAL YOUR APPOINTMENT. List with o'neil realty For 3 Good Reasons We thing our sense of values Our list of good prospects And our tireless efforts Will make you glad you califed RAY O'NEIL REALTY 3520 Pontiac Lake Road OR 4-2222 MLS 363-0531 mCs! //T"\T TTN// GIVE YOURSELF A LIFT AND LET YHB WHOLE FAML LY IN ON IT, LBt thdm fM It)* plseasure of owning ■ practically brand new homa. Thay would lova this thraa bedroom split rock rambler with the Th garage land contract. Eaymutti of 8*0 month. Make your appointment and lust *11,450 on ' ' *f *80 it nowl NORTH SIDE RETIREMENT HOME In nlea rtpalr. 9x15 living room, naw bath, aluminum atorme and tcraens. as heat. Naw 2 car garage. Extras'Include built-lnt^'*: „ .... and rahae end water *7,950 on land contract, softener .Over 1700 sq. ft. of; luxurious living setting on ---- |H ' HI-HILL ViI lap FE 2-0262 670 W. HURON OPEN 9 TO 9 N.ow Is the ttme to buy yr + ces are higher—534,650. as MAGNIFICENT " And let theh whole family In on it. Let them’ feel the pleasure of owning a practically brand neyv home. They woulcjt ibve this three bedroom split rock rambler with the 2V* baths and the separate family roorrj, with fireplace. It has a full basement and 2’* car garage. Extras include built-in oven and range and water prices are heading higher — 834,650. | SAVE MORTGAGE COSTS on thl* near-tast_sWe_bung«Jaw.. It features three bedrooms, a full4 basement, IV? car garage, fenced yard, all new wiring, and thea carpetinq Is included. Full prjeeh T5,only;“ $11,200 and SI 7Q0 neede .to assume the present mortgeJ OUR GUARANTEED TRADE-1 PLAN IS DESIGNED FOR YOU', MR., HOMEOWNER WITHOUT IT - YOU MUST SELL BEFORE YOU BUY -OR BUY BEFORE YOU SELL CALL RIGHT NOW TO TRADE THE HOME YOU OWN FOR THE HOME YOU WANT! ASK for JoAnn Heenan, Dick Bryan, Ken Hall; Eileen Moyer, Leo Kampsen, Dave Kramer, Ah Gruner, Thurman Witt, Lee Kerr, Oleta Howard, Elaine Smith, Leo Bogert, Emery Butler, Bob Harrell or Dave Bradley. 1071 W. Huron St. MLS FE 4-0921 WE BUY OUR OFFICE WILL BE CLOSED OR 4 0363 FOR MEMORIAL DAY 681-0922!4713 Dixie Hwy MODEL HOME OPEN SAT., SUN. 1-5 ANYTIME BY APPT. 3 bedroom brick tri-level with 2 car attached garage HERRINGTON HILLS 3 bedroom brick, good condition, full basement, gas heat, electric hot water; features large* living room with beam ceiling, dining ell, convenient kitchen, tile bath, nicely landscaped yard, patio slab, paved driveway, priced at $15,900, FHA terms. BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP Two (2) tip-top building sites In desirable Colonial Hills Seb-dlvlslon, nice and level, tewer ! and water, 94'x200' each. NICHOLIE-HUDSON Associates, Inc. 49 University Dr. FE 5-1201 after 6 p.m. FE 4-8773 FE 5-8183 674-2245 4H «AirESTATE INDEPENDENCE TWP. — J room ranch furnished. 2 lots, fenced yard, laka privileges, close In. Price only $10,900, $3900 down. $75 per mo. on land con-tract. Open to other terms. 5844 DIXIE HWY. 623-1400 AFTER 8 P.M. __OR 3-0455 628-2678 673-8372 HOUSES FOR SALE, 49. PRIME COMMERCIAL PARCEL-HIGHLAND TWP., JUST UNDER 2 ACRES 6 'room ranch, plastered walls, full basement, attached garage, separate 20 x 30' Insulated partitioned bldg:, would make fine apartments, office shop, Beauty saton, or etc. The home has oil heat, gas, is on a paved county rd., low taxes. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION H0LLAWAY REALTY CO. VON family home, price, $10,800. this buy. TEDS CORNER full "Good will, like a good home, Is won by many acts and, lost by one." While always striving for perfection this Is still a very human world, we are always on the lookout for better ideas. Wa like to know what you the people of our area, want and expect from us as your realtor. It pleases us to please you. IT T$ what we don't hear that wa want to hear. Any suggestions are welcome, any subiect you may wish covered In this article will be. Please notify us by phone or mall, our office door is always open. McCullough realty 5460 Highland Rd. (M-59) MLS Open 9-9_ 1 2674-2236 STOUTS Best Buys Today BIG FAMILY MAN?-_ We -have, just the right home for you located In Auburn Heiqhts area Two floors and features 4 bedrooms, o'le being 20x20 in size Basement with qas heat. Sharp cerpetina included. Loads of square footage ~for the reasohable price. LOVE RAMBLERS? Then here'* your home located In choice Twin Lake*. Alt the goodies •— such as 3 bedrooms, 7 large closets, 2 baths, 2 fireplaces, family room. Carpeting throughout. Attached 2 car garage. Beautiful landscaping and much mora. CALL FOR APPOINTMENT. Neat and clean ranch with fullj I Q WIDEMAN, REALTOR basement, new gas furnace, new u.,DnM ^^^>—_— 391-3300 SQUAW LAKE HOME 1-40 2 family, Waterford area, currently renting at $255 per month. Excellent investment. Full price $15,500. Term* or trade. i Have a very, select Hit of terfanls that are looking for rental units of all types. We can assist you In the finding of tenants, sail or service your rental units. You can TRADE OR EXCHANGE for tax advantages. Call now for further in* formation. baths, fln-... From $19,4001 ams Laka Rd. 1 block north of j SE/VAIN0LE HILLS Union Lake Village. Also We Build bedroom trl-level with Vh car garage, $13,600 plus lot. ** bedroom 'ranch with 2 Car garage and full basement. $15,700 plus lot, bedroom colonial with* 2V* baths, family room, formal and Informal dining '’areas'. Basement, 2 car garage, $29,200 plus lot. „ _ , , dispose of. your present home. y^fST SIDE Story fend one half, brick, nea Three bedroom brick colonial. Vest entrance, 24 ft. living room, den, family dining room, large paneled family room with fireplaca, powder room, two full baths , on second floor. , Home completely carpeted, gas beat, attached 2 car garaga. By ap-polntement. and place you IH a new one this year. Hi C. HAYDEN, Realtor 363-6604 10735 Highland Rd. (M-59) ___V? mile west of Oxbow Lake NEED MORE ROOM? Sharp 3 bedroom layout with full basement, -gas ..heat, carpeting. Zero Down, FHA Term CALL Tel-Huron. Full dining room fireplace, enclosed luhiintr porch. Wall to wall carpeting, gas heat, completely modernized kitchen with built-lns. Three bedrooms, two fyll baths. Its nice. Call to see. FE-FI-F0-FUM AYi you looking for a home plenty of room? Here's the on you giants — this beauty is near'CM#RA/ WHITE shopping center and schools. A 2 - ^ car gdrafee" brick ranch on 75x150 Aluminum sided ranch home lot, 3 bedrooms. Sapcious kitchen with lots of cupboards. Wall to wall casting. Over 1800 sq. ft. of . paneled recreation area with 8' enclosed bar. $22,900 wHJ give you thil golden egg the chicken laid. Nice high shaded lot, with sprinkler system, home offers 3 bedrooms, living room with corner fireplace, -full basement, rec. room, laundry and furnace room, space for two cars, good beach, boating and fishing $28,500 and $5000 down. C. A. WEBSTER, Realtor ■■ ■■ 692-2291_ _ __ 6»-2stj McCULLOUGH REALTY SMALL LAKE FRONT house on 5460 Highland Rd. , (M-59) MLS i LaVe Orion, completely carpeted Open 9-9 674-2236 57 ACRE HORSE FARM with house, barn, other out buildings on Hill Rd. N. of Goodrich. Call 653-8330. Howard M. Poole, Sales Rep., Maxbroock, Inc., B'ham-92~AND- 98 PR ALL ST, houses used dormatorv's will net oyer $6,000 and just remodeled, with cabins ground. 693-8231 after 5 p.rr Owner — no agents. STRUBLE PRIME AREA Oakland University area that Is fektremely sharp throughout. Well planned home consisting of 3 bedrooms with extras Included'. Concrete drive to 2-car garage. Madison antf Pontiac Northern schools. variable EAST SIDE YORK Thkee bedroom bungalow, full < basement, gas heat, hardwood! floors, tile bath. Built-in oven and range. ' Completely! redecorated in and out. This cozy 2-bedroom aluminum sided bungalow . is Close to the! Pontiac Mall, it is on a paved street ..'and has city water and sewer. Located In an fpcetlant neighborhood. It's |ust« what newlyweds or a re tiffed couple would want in a home. Full basement. Lqw taxes. It's only $14,900. CONVENIENTLY LOCATED Yes It Is! Only 2 blocks to school and 1 block to bus stop. This 3 bedroom bungalow has a full basement. Formal dining room. Compact kitchen. Plus a fenced back yard for the kiddles. Call to-] 4AY on this. Just $13,900 on land Contract, with $3,500 down. A GREEN THUMB?— The perfect spot /\o keep busy on. your own little farm located close to Lake Orion. Built1 In . 1954 and features gleaming white aluminum siding' combinea with attractive 4 rooms and bath" Inferior, plus utility. 20x24 two-car garaqe. Carpeting and other extras in*: eluded. 120x236 lot that lays Just right. See this, it's |ust a little different. ONLY $850 DOWN- Plus closing costs on this compact bungalow which Includes 5 rooms and bath plus full basement and gas heat. IVi-car - garage. City j wafer and'sewer plus paved street $9350 total price. WE TRADEi OR 4-0363 Drayton Plains 53V Warren Stout, Realtor Eves. Call Mr Castell FE 2 7273 ^REAL^R^ Nicholie & Harger Co. In the M*lk*" MLS Room HO 14S0 N. opdyke Rd. > W. Huron St. FE >8183i 682-5802 If busy 682-5800 I. Dally'til 8 • V • i • 1 ■ WE TRADE $450 DOWN FHA Why pay rent when you can build your equity in a homa of your! own. This 3 bedroom home Is located on the N. side of Pontiac. It has a full basement, gas furnace. Pfjced at $14,500. JOSLYN AREA 3»bedroom lV**storv' family home# very close to Madlsop Jr. High and Northern High. Could use as 4-bedroom very easily. Full siza dining room and kltchan with plenty of cabinets, 2-car garabe, sitting on a 70' lot priced at $16,900 ~ terms. FHA or $1. REALTOR — MLS 5925 Highland Rd. (M-59) Next to Frank's Nursery 674-3175 SWISS TYPE CHALET 3 bedroom, full ba&ementA. gas heat, natural fireplace, ' formal dining room. plus, garaqe. Need', some painting. 0 down to qualified buyer Owners agent. 338-6952, annually, price at $29,500. Details avail. KENNETH G. HEMPSTEAD FE 4-8284-185 ELIZ. LAKE RD. CROSS INVESTORS First time offered. Well over 100 luxury wits located In fine neighborhood. All rented. Will accept other Income In trade. CROSS REALTY AND INVESTMENT CO. OR 4-3IQ§ MLS W# pay cash for usM homes , excelTent income West side. Four' 2 bedroom apartments. Also recreation room which could be u*ed ’ for another. Masonry bulTdlhgT 2 car garaga, nicely landscaped fenced Tot. Only $15,000 down, balance on LAND CONTRACT. ilCEETEE! S52K’ L TEMPLETON, Realtor I offer 4xp.m< <2339 Orchard . Lake Rd. 612-0900 ip I1- /;/:■{-' if ill n incoma Property N,?rth,rn_tr®P*5t1r S1-A [ Lots—Acreage THE PONTIAC PRESS. Til U R S DA V, MAV H§ I MR D—18 |40 ACRE FARM WITH 7 houses, several borni and oth.r our buildings plus good hdrdwood wood!, grlcod to ie(t. Coll 893-1330, Howard Poole, Salat Rap., Max-brooch Iqc.* B ham. I ACRES ZONED 'multiple,' all - ulllltlao* near Expressway. Call Dick Stlar, *74-313*. A STORE RESTAUR ANT ANO 1 apartments downtown Ponllac, 115,000 down. FE 3 7153. Evat. FE 5 7303. , IEAUTIPUL COUNTRY estate with ■55 acres ot cholca land located S. ot Davison. Beautiful horta barn with 3 box italla and othar out buildings, groundwork completely landscaped with trees and shrubs, a really beautiful farm home. Call 453-1330. Howard M. Poole, Salas rap , Mexbroock Inc,, B'ham. 54 Sal* or Exchangg ,2 BEDROOM modern home ipy acre 4 ml. 5 ot Clare, I ml. E. 13,500 cash. Alger Smock, alter* * or Pon"»c 473 0301 SECLUDED CABIN 500' ot winding Rifle River fronted* with beautiful trees and seclusion. Cabin with fireplace, E~r,c' «r ‘*'0# Jamlly, BIB,too, 53.006 down. C. PANGUS, INC,, Realtors Ain M ,°,PEN 7 DAVS A WEEK *30 M-15 Ortonvlllo __CALL COLJ-ECT^ *27-2815 VACATION HOMES Lake Property 51 | COTTAGES PRIVATE on Perry ^ B i Brandon Township, cottage KBSOf f rrODErfy —an 1 lotr ■MrOOOr 3 lots, *5,000. 24 — - ■ ■---- W- iots, 57»00.-» • : HAllOWAY, 3 SECLUDED ACRES, GRtfcN ALKtb trees, water frontage, swimming, 144* S. Lapeer Rd„ Lake Orion tx»'lnq. Columblaullle, less than 40 1 MY 3-62*2 miles from Pontiac. Terms. Phone to' ON POWlACSlSTE, 'furnlihed,- 7*3-*045,1--------------------- leg cabin cottaga, fireplace, good , , , send beach, owner, 433-uw. i Suburban Property 53 Tir FRONTAGE ON LAKE -------------------.------ 1 __aeWAB tlaalt, D Aa/4 iii I IS BEAUTIFUL ROLLING acrea and S3S00 A specious 34x33 "A" frame for •h*; ,Be» away from It a|l second noma. All erection and foundation Included. Gel details while prices ere low. To see Detroit model call 357-55*3. Builders. » LOT FOR SALE. Good Pare. PB 4 >>57. LARGf~wBo5f6 LOT7 Alienwood Eslalet, Clarktton. 455-1450 _ CHOICE BUILDING lott, MI0 at I-75. MA 55511.____ COM ME R CIA L D5T id#*? ft. aewer, water, gas, lust W. 'f Telegraph. Contact Leon Blochura, *74-3136. 51 CARNIVAL 340 X 150 - ELIZABETH Lake Rd., Watartord twp. 135,000. FE 2 2I44J.. Smith. BLOCK BUILDING 40 X 70 ofi'lot tS HOWARD T. KEATING 22060 W. 13 Milt, ’Birmingham 646*1234 566-795? 52 75 Acres Near Holly |75 acrtsL approximately 1,000 ft. on tha shlawanea River. Wood-ad, cleared, hills, level, tome marth. No Ingrass at present, one obtainable. Excellent for campsite, club, secluded home sites, rehabilitation center, nature lovers. *55,000, 29 per cant down, “‘6 per cent lend con- tract. Sherwood, trees, Sleeth Road. 684 4044.________________________ kuCKHORN LAKE* LARGE LAKE ■VV’ . ... aiAAC lift me Onan Case* 3 bedroom home and barn on main highway. 10 minutes North ot Oxford. Priced to sell Vast at $35,000, *7,500 down. Also 10 and 12 acre parcels. SHERMAN-PARKER REALTY 106 West St. Clair Romeo 752-2516 or 752-9714 front lot, 13,995, *40 mo. Open Sun. Bloch Bros., 623-1333, FE 4-4509, 5660 Plxlt HWy., Waterford. toTTAGB IN LEWIsfON, Michigan. Size* it 25x36 with 3 bedrooms, utility room, large living room, large kitchen, large bathroom with | tub and shower. Made of half longia^ plank and painted r e d w o o d , IOIS—Acreage aluminum windows, alt metal «'*'*** cabinels In the kitchen. Built 4h, 2, lu ACRE PARCELS, wooded years ago^ Location 111 block off | rpillng EM 3-9531, Fowler._ O Large LOTS IN Long Meadows Subdivision West of Livernois Waterford Township 110 acres on Nelsey Rd. lust off Andersonvlile Rd. Approximately mile road frontage, approximately V» mil# frontage on Lotus Lake. $1,700 per acre. *50,000 down, 6 par cent lend contract. 54 cl Eesl Twin Lake end 3 blacks tram the town of Lewiston. Reasonably priced wth low down oevment. If you era Interested call alter 7 p.m. 47*0w*:___________| COZY 3 BEDROOM on Walter's Lake, furnished. Immediate occupancy. »10.*00 cash or *13.900 on land contract. Sylvan — *83-2300 or 4730418._________________________ ~ Cabin or Mobile Homes FAMOUS RIFLE RIVER OR LAKE HURON Large wooded lots, *1995, *100 down For additional informal call collect or write for brochure off Tienken Rd. Paved street, gas, perk approved. $4,250 E a. Northglen Realty 421 Walnut Blvd. JRochester^ 651-9500._ I ACRES MILFORD Area.-Joins State Recreation land. Easy Terms. Owner. EM 3-7828, OR 3- 3671.__ 5 ACRES, 20 MINUTES PONTIAC. *500 down. Beautiful rolling land. Wooded and cleared. Open Sun. Bloch Bros. 623-1333. FE 4-4509. 5660 Dixie Hwy., Weterford._ ; It! ACRES WITH LAKE frontage, wooded and secluded, N. of Leonard, *13,000. C. PANGUS, INC. Realtors GREEN ACRES OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 1144* S. Lapeer Rd._____* MY 3-6262 *30 M-15 roLLect 427-Sl5°nV I40 ACRES WHERE THINGS' ARE ....-CALC COLLECT mjai HAPPENING. READY TO SUB- bUCK LAKE, modern 3 bedroom D|V|DE 0R SHORT TERM IN-year 'round Jake front nome,| VESTMENT. $6,000.00 DOWN. rtWoW* AL PAULY ~ *0LI XAB200H S?nKdrRteach.LOslulh'ORJ-380O45l‘ *^'E EVES' *73 *572 thore. SI5.000 terms. Also large lot 105x1*0. HI-HJLL VILLAGE vT Edge of Fenton 13.40 acres, 200 ft. on main hardtop road, north boundary on Shiawassee River. High and dry. *14,000, 11 per cent down 7 per cent land contract. OR 12.80 acres adlacent to above. Same qualifications. *11,000, 11 per cent down, 7 per cent land contract. North M road. FE 2-2940, or F0 4-1437, _af!er ^jmr._____ "FOR SALE OR RENT Ponllac. Contact BEAUtY-RITE HOMES, 3531 Pontiac Lake Road, *74-311*. HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty UNION LAKE RD. Western Auto. 34x60' floor building, 10 years old, full basement, 2 large apartments on second Ifoor plus commercial garage In rear, excellent business area, owner raflr- Ing, MULTIPLE AND OFFICE 135x304' Decker Rd. end S. Commerce, Walled Lake. Also has 2 bedroom home, basement and i garage, *20,000. COMMERCIAL 1 On busy Union Lk. Rd. High traf-! tic count, 150x255' parcel, with 3, bedroom rental home, lend contract terms. Everett Cummings, Realtor 2583 UNION LAKE ROAD EM 3-3208 363-7181 M-59, TELEGRAPH AREA 100x241* vacant. Choice location, M-59 end Telegraph area. Contact BEAUTY-RITE HOMES, 3538 Pontiac Laka Road, 674-3136. Near Pontiac Mall Lot 96x130 ft., 5 room home, lust off Elizabeth Lk. Rd., test growing area. Potential comm'l. *30,000, terms. By Dick Turner Sola Household Goads 65 Antiques piece COUCH ANO 2 CHAIRS, dlnlngjroom, *100. 3U-7448. CHAIRS, REUPHOLStlREb, save with bolt end materials. 335-1700. Coml. Upholstery Co. DISHWASHER. LADY KENMORE Delux, 1967 model, copperfone, top loedlry, *125. 628-2404. __ blNINO"TABLE AN0 5 "while nfugehyde chairs; hlghchelr end , baby strollar. jOR 3-7416._^ 4 DRESSER AND MIRROR, exc. condition MA >1171. r DRYER *33. DOORS 83 EACH. Apt. si/a refrigerator $35. Bunk beds. Mlsc., G. Harris. FE 5 2766 ELECTRIC"STOVE’ and rafrlgarator, Ideal for coftaga, 33%7942. ELECTRIC " STOVE. 125; GAS stove, *33; Refrigerator with lop freezer, 549; Wringer washer. *40. G Merrls^FE 5-2766. ELECTRIC RANGE *63, Flecfrlc Refrigerator *33, Good Condition, 2640 Colby, Bloomfield Hills 332 8828. FLOOR SAMPLE SALE 3 pc. Walnut Bedroom *69 5 pc. Dinette Set .... $45 2 pc. Living Room Set...... *99 KAY furniture K MART SHOPPINO CENTER______ FLOOR MODEL CLEARANCE 1 Frlgidalra F r o s t - P r freezer,.*219. f $ 1 Frlgidalra washer, 2-speeds, *189 65-A For Sal* MiscollanMot 67 ANTIQUE FLEA MARKET BY ALEXANDER SUNDAY, JUNE 2, 10 A.M. TILL 8 P.M. American Legion Hall Cor. 12 Mile end Rochester Rd. . Royal Oak, Mich. ADMISSION *1. CHILDREN UNDER AND SENIOR CITIZENS FREE. FOR DEALER INFORMATION CALL EL 6-8343 FANTASTIC GARAGE SALE Salatman'* Samplat — SO to 75 Mr cant off — Original carton*. Blactrlc Blandara — 12 Sgata. Lataat typa Electric Can Opanara — many with knlla aharpanars Electric knlvat Electric Broiler* and ■ lactrta Bee4 Grinder*. AIM — Gun*. Bike*, ruga, chair*, toy*, air horna and m u eh mlaeallanaout. Friday and Saturday, May >1 and June ), e a m. to > p.m. 47*5 Motorway Drive at Blliabeth Laka. E. L. Barker plfii npldalre rigidalra rafrlgarator with Ice maker, 525*. No Down Payment *0 dayi tame a* ca*h CRUMP ELECTRIC 346S Auburn FE 4-3573 Brandon Township 80 acres near Oxford and Orton-ville, about 10 miles from Drayton Plains. One mile off blacktop road, frontage on two roads. Perk test affirmative. Two story modern farm house.. *80,000 or can be purchased as 10 acre parcel vacant at *0,950. Or, 11 acres with house and barn, *35,000. 29 per cent down in each instance, 6 per cent land contract. Telegraph - Huron Area 100 ft. frontage on Huron, 240 ft. deep. Zbned C-1 suitable for many uses. 2 homes, office and other buildings, terms. ANNETT INC. REALTORS 28 E. Huron St. 338-0466 Office Closed Memorial Day C. NELSEY, SALES AGENT Davisburg across tha road from tha lake. ________ 334-0296. *4,000 WOOD REALTY 682-2410 "HIGHLAND MiLfORD I AREA „ 60'x 150' lake front, $100 down. Blk. top Rd. Near «xpressways. Open Sun. Bloch Bros., 623-1333, FE 4-4509, 5660 Dixie Hwy., Waterford. iblANWOOD . LAUEEE°NJ ,ot> $*»50 ca»h or terms, FE 4-2419. MCE FRONT ■ HOMES, new and used. J. L. Dally Co. EM 3-7114. iiKE ORION CANAL Front. *00 ft. to Like. $3498, $35 mo. Open Sun-jay, Bloch Brother*, 56*0 Dixie Hwy., Waterford, 622-1333.________ ,RGE FAMILY? Our home 1* cus-om built for you I 6 bedrooms. 3 laths. Family room. Many extras. >ius beautiful Hammond Lake ronlage. Exc. beach. Larga lot. 59,900. Call FE 5-9024 Thursday Lot Shopper 80 ACRES — Lake* and ttreamj, all electric ranch, magnificent terrain, Big Lake area. 33 ACRES — High rolling, wooded with 400' on private lake, will divide, 2 miles from Holly. 11 ACRES — Lake front homeslte, 1 mile from 1-75, 20 minute* from Pontiac. 3.2 ACRES — Oxford, 210” on road by 3*0' deep, excellent location. 313-625-8295 or 634-9825 Evening Calls Welcome RHODES LARGE COMMERCIAL BUILDING. 58x98. $30,000. Terms. GARAGE with sales lot. *47,000. A. J. RHODES, REALTOR FE 5-230* MLS M54, U. TM d.i tw~M FRIGIDAIRE IMPERIAL 2 door refrigerator. Bottom Fraater, 335-7418. GAS STOVE. REFRIGERATOR. *15;j.j WATT CUSTOM ANTIQUE PEPINISHING | Specializing Ih fine antique ! reflniiblng, furniture repair of all type* nand canting, hand carving, [*’ custom matching colors. All wont guaranteed. Harold Rlchardton, 363-9361. Mon.-Sat. 1285 Union Lk. Rd., Union Lk. ! PRIMITIVES. Y KNOf~Antlque» In Davisburg. Open 6 day*, _!030^-5:30.______ PLASTIC"WALL TILE o f | B8.0 Outlet _____1075 W. Huron SWEET'S, 10101 r EAGLE RD. Davisburg 5 M W. Dixie Hwy. 634-9656 ______ WATER PITCHER anil bowl sets marked. Round mahogany lamp table, Inlaid, carved feet. Paneled thistle collection. Charlotte Henry Antiques. 3210 Lake George Rd Laka Orion. 651-1942. F RI Gl DAI RE RErt'lOi'RAfSRTllJ] Satin bridal gown with pearl neckline, *75, iiza 12. Short pink formal, $10, size 12. Motorcycle helmet, $35, size m. 474-3591._____ far mall SUPER A TracforV’ In almost new condition, $$75. Admiral LowBoy TV, 23'* screen, looks like new, walnut cabinet, $60. Va horse electric motor and pulley, *0 394-0130 GARAGE SALE —" ANTIQUES! China, household Items, 30" hood for range, never used, various tools, shower enclosure, 4' fluorescent lights, undrtlled doors, bicycle, many more Items. Prl., Sat., Sun., 10 a m. to 6 p.m, 4392 Barchester Dr. In Vernor Estates off Lahser Rd. bet Lona Pina and Long Lake Rds., Bloom-field Hills.____________ GARAGE SALl: APARTMENT til* stove, refrigerator, gas dryer, chairs and couch, good for cottage, toys, elec, train sets, rag. size redo >g. size tracks for slot-cars, clothing, mlsc. Items. Walmut slim lint TV, black Hi-Fi, TV & Radios ‘‘1 CAN’T concentrate on my homework! With the hi-fi broken I don’t have anything to drown out disturbing noises!” walkie-talkie*. *25-2533. Business Opportunities 59 ZONED MULTIPLE MOTEL — ONE OP fha finest motels In Michigan and priced way below replacement cost. This outstanding motel grosses oyer *64,000 per year. Everything Tn new condition. Luxurious owners apartment. We specialize In motels and business opportunities. Call > Gaylord area code 517-732-2078 or write State Wide Real Estate. P.O. ____ __ ___________ Box 351, Gaylord, Michigan 49735. DEVELOPERS [3 Acres zoned multiple, close In. RF40 year old school- ____Multiple Listing Servlet A RARE OPPORTUNITY — suburban Utica area. Cocktail lounge, modern attractive building with ' excellent fixtures, large parking Iqt. Elderly couple has sincere reasons for selling. Shown by appolntmeh? only. 731-2156. BAR, OFFERED FOR the first time, by owner. Detroit* southwest area. Dancing Friday and Saturday, newly remodeled* one of the nicest in the area. Managed mostly by hired help. Living quarters at low rent. $40*000 at $15*000 down. P.O. Box 7612* 1901 Springwells* Detroit. CANDY S4JPPLY ROUTE Man or woman to restock new type coin dispensers with high quality package candy products. No selling. Dependable person can net VERY HIGH EARNINGS. Part or full time. Requires car* exchange references, *900 to $3500 cash secured by inventory and equipment. Write for personal interview* giving phone number to Inter-State Dist. Co.* 7262 Natural Bridge Road, Suite No. 2* St. Louis, Mo. 6-3121. dEy CASH AND CARRY DRY cleaning store, good going business, Drayton Plains, after 6:30* 674-2605.______ DEALERS WANTED FOR SNO-JET. Protected franchises available tc sell championship snowmobiles. For full Information Write; SNO-JET* P.O. Box 72* Green ville, Michigan. 48838._____________ DEALERS INTRODUCE and distribute home Portable Sauna's 682-2300 or 673-3488. DESIRABLE DIXIE FRONTAGE 30x40 business bldg.* like new. i room home* 60x550 ft. lot* suitable for many businesses. Price reduced, owner says "sell." *22,000, terms. Call B. C. HI ITER REALTOR, 682-8060, after • o.m. . 682-6427. . DRIVE-IN RESTAURANT 16 ACRES — of nice semi rolling land near Ttpslco Lake and proposed new freeway, trees. $15*600, *2500 down, can be divided. house, good condition Insulated, full j^ajn highway location near Pontiac, basement and memories of those I Attractive dining room, excellent good old _ school days, south ot j equipment, outside service with large canopy and order phones. An ex cellent opportunity at $8,000 down Lapeer. *7,995. Terms. 26 ACRES with extremely large hlM, | Real Mtal«*v«il«ble private and within 5 miles of 1-751 expressway near Sashabaw. $10,000 cash. 1 ACRE CHOICE PARCELS In Clarktton area. tree*, acenle rolling land. $9,950, termi. I ACRE TRACT N. of Clarkston, 55,950, 15 pet. down. Wa have several lota and amall acreage parcels In Oekland ..County. Call for details. UNDERWOOD AUBURN ROAD, NEAR Adams, 120 acres, owner, KE 3-3400. Eves. Ml 7-1288. BEAUTIFUL 10 OR, 20 acre parcel of Tana; aoffM woods gently rolling, lovaly for homeslte or small horse farm. Holly school district. V. Mile off Milford Rd., $300 per acre, 634-9012 after 7 p.m. 'DEER LAKE 2 wooded acrea with 75 ft. of lake frontage. Blacktop street. Beautiful building site. Full price 522,000. ’/* ACRE Wooded hlllslte with Deer Lake privileges. Blacktop ttrett. 87,950, Clarkston Real Estate 5856 S. Main___________MA 5-M21 Holly, Mich. Approx. 7Vi acres Inslda village limits, near new high school, water, sewer and gas available. $28,000, terms. 80 ACRES, only $175 per acre, large barn, solid metal shed, 15 mtles north of Lapeer. All good useable land and 10 acres of woods, *14,000, $8,000 down. C. PANGUS, INC., Realtors OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 630 M-15 Ortonvllle CALL COLLECT 627-2815 Sola Farms 56 30 ACRES WEST of Lapeer, Vk mile off M21. 4 bedroom home* completely remodeled, 1\6 baths* flre- electrlc heat. Newly painted barns border trout pond. Good location and beautiful view. $39,500* farms, by owner. 664-4382.____________________ 80 To 800 ACRES In lower Michigan, Dairy, gralrw beef or hogs I Name your farm needs, we have II at one of "Michigan's" Farm Real Estate Coidwater, Michigan. Dale A. Deen Farm Broker and Auctioneer. Write or call 517 278-2377 — days Headquarters — Dean Realty Cc.# or 517-288-6127 - nights.________ IRWIN S ACRE modern farm near Leonard. 0 ACRE farm good barns Lapeer, with your COTTAGES efxbrlcalpd, ereetpd sperty. Call'651-6701. 9 A.m. to ti. Nu-Trend Hom«». fne.______ TAGE ON LAKE, near Harrl«on, ntlng and filhlng, 33419824. -SALE. FORTY Acres end e use S.E. of Cadillac In exc. Deer rltory. 14008 cath or forms. See >yd at Johnson Hardware Co. dlllae Mich. Phone 775-504). THERN LAKE PROPERTY, 1W urs drive from Pontiac. Dance ill, cdfteaee. Trout pondi, trailer rk, >4 Ml. lake frontage. Lots as v as >500. Must llavlditi. MA <- 210 Acres—Metamora Area 20x24 CABIN, IVt lerr lot near 82500. >100 down. >30 mo. Kfwln 426-8601 CONDOMINIUMS. Ideally, ired for your summer and itdr activities. Bay shore m are situated on US31 rlookinq .life Triverse C«y ween Chnrlevolx and Retoskey. •nd 2 oadrocm* carpeted U'i|t4, rtished or uifurn!ihi*d. Prices rt at *8 900, low mnrlhtv terms. weekends 12 to 6 ,p m. Or te Four Season* Box 7 A, *Boyna Is, Mlch1_497‘Iljj SWAtTLAKE FRONTAGE on tha ifret«r, nicely wooded. Idw as *1000 with 20 per cent m. Lake privileged lots, *800 I'U0. Good restrictions, 12 miles it of Ithaca. ATEWIDE REAL ESTATE 100 163-3900 Romeo — 40 Acres Vacant corner parcel with over 2,000 ft road fronfaqa on 2 roads. Ilva stream, IV, miles from city. VS mile off M-53, Ideal site —for country home or development. $1,500 per , acre, term*. 3 bedroom modem home, dairy barn 52x70 with 32 stanchions. Highly productlvo toll,. Well located for future development. $126,000, terms. ANNETT INC. REALTORS 28 f. Huron St. 338-0466 Office Closed Memorial Day mVlton weaver 11.78 acra* — rolling. $12,000. 4 acres with stream. $17,500. 3.82 acres In the-hills. *22,000. 116 ACRE farm NW of Lapeer. 40 ACRES vacant near Lapeer 53 ACRES—on Baldwin, S. of Oakwood. Good-for subdividing. 5 - 10 Acre parcel* near Oakwood. Good bldg, sites. . GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 298 W. Walton __________F E 3-7883 ST R E AM- P AV E M E N T # 122 A State highway frontage between Pontiac and Flint In Genesee Co. 20 wide stream With couple of low spots Ideal to make your own private laka. About 15,000 Dina trees of variout sizes and varieties. Many beautiful building sites. If rezoned would be Ideal for a moblla home park, Only $750 per acre. Terms or WANT TO TRY country living? If so, we have 40 acres of fine farm land for sale. Beautiful building spot and well drained. Only three miles off Van Dyke (M-S3) and one mile from, blacktop road. Anyone Interested .please—^contact Ctatr Profttr R "No. 1 Box 162, Cass City, Michigan Y48726. SUBURBAN BAR Very active bar located on PRIME CORNER of 2 main highways In fast developing area. Property Incl. a nice farm home. Land, alone worth asking price of lust $90,000 with liberal terms. WARDEN REALTY 3434 W. Huron, Pontiac 682-3920 FRANCHISE AVAILABLE for Mies end service In Pontiac area. Complete line of International Motor Trucks. Reply Pontiac Press, Box C:30. FRANCHISES AND. ROUTES, c el lent opportunity, established accounts, fantastic profit, unlimited earnings. DC A Food Industries, Detroit 371-1554. GARAGE BUILDING WITH show room and bump shop. Near Traverse City Ideal for Used Car Sales end Service, snow mobile agency and Marina Sales end Service. Fine opportunity to get out of city. H. McClellan Realty Fife Lake, Michigan.______________ INVESTORS WANTED. Minimum Investment $2,500. 7.per cent on money. FE 5-7569. 9tS0 INVESTORS PLEASE NOTE — excellent Motel — choice location on Main highway near Pontiac, select cllentel. A-l condition, Immaculate, room-for expansion Is desired, low overhead, ex- cellent Income, Includes extra sharp owners quarters. Price $13,455.00 Terms. CALL FOR DETAILS (MRS, COOK) 4-H REAL ESTATE 623-1400 Oft 673- 8372.__________.___' _ RESTAURANT “fully . equipped Newly decorated tlac. For lease. Eves, FE 5-7303._______________ NEW OFFICE BUILDING for tale! or lease, In shopping center, 6001 sq. ft. carpeted. Ideal for general office. need A 11 o r n e y or Optometrist In this fast growing woman, age 18 lo 55, small investment, pleasant atmosphere, full or part time. Outstanding profit opportunity. Jacqueline Enterprises. FE 8-4181, Jack Parker. SUNOCO SERVICE STATION ROCHESTER'-LONG LAKE RD. FOR LEASE En|oy these advantages: 1— rapidly growing n residential neighborhood 2— moderate Investment For detailed Information call: SUN OIL CO. Weekdays — Ml 6-6674 Eve., Weed ends Mr. Jim Ronney 1-576-2785 Collect TIRED OF LAYOFFS AN& strikes? Own your own buslnessl Earn *10,000 to $25,000 yearly. Brand New Sharpening Franchise available, $15,000 with $6,000 down. Mr. Sharp, 722 Porter Street, Lansing, Mich. 48905 Phone: 517-489-1471. Sola Land Contracts 60 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently needed. See us before you deal.. Warren Stout, Realtor 1450 N. Ondyke Rd. FE 5-8165 Open Eves. *tll 8 p.m. Wanted Contracts-Mfg. 60-A 1 MILLION Dollars has been made available to us to purchase aod assume land contracts, mortgages or buy homes, lots or acreage outright. equity. Our appraiser your call at 674-2236 McCullough realty 5460 Highland Rd. (M-59) MLS Open 9-9 674-2236 CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS. H. J. Van Welf. 4540 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-1355. NEED LAND CONTRACTS. SMALL discounts. Earl Garrals. MA 4-54001 EMpIra 3-4086. QUICK CASH FOR land contracts. Clark Real Estata. FE S-7888, ras. FE 4-4813, Mr. Clark.___________________ 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently needed. See ut before you deal. Warren Stout, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5Jli65 ______Open Eves, 'til 8 p.m. 61 Money to Loan (Licensed Money Lender) LOANS $25 TO *1,000 COMMUNITY LOAN CO. LAWRENCE - FE 1-0421 LOANS $25 to *1,000 Insured Payment Plan B\XTER & LIVINGSTONE Finance Cq. 401 Pontiac State Bank Building FE 4-1538-9 Mortgage Loans 62 FQR THE PAST 42 YEARS Voss & Buckner, Inc. 209 National Bldg., Pontiac 20 NEW APARTMENT rentals, 3 acres for expansion* excellent terms., LAUNDRA-MAT 30 unit, excellent gross* adlotnlng frontage zoned for automatic Auto Wash goes with Laundra-Mat. Sewar* water. Milford area — terms. WHAT ABOUT A PARTY STORE? Beer, wine* reasonable with terms. 40 ACRES OR MORE near Walled Lake on Ponllac Trail. Ready for, .subdividing. __________________ ___ LUMBER YARD end hardware. Doing excellent volume. Owner retiring. West to Ponllac. Terms. have been loaning *1000 to *5000 to home owners on 1st and 2nd' mortgages for repairing, remodel Ing, additions# consolidating bills, etc. Into one small monthly payment. Before you borrow on your home see or phone us at: 334-3267 Swaps 63 > PIECE DINETTE, for malo Colli* puppy or 155 c»th. 682-7342 GLASTRON BOAT, motor and trallar, 1395, or trad* for mini trailer* vr rrau* rar nnm- bikea* or IS tip boat motor, or? 423-0346. 3 ROOMS BRAND NEW FURNITURE $297 *2:50. per week. LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE 1461 Baldwin a* Walton* FE 2-6842 Acres of Free Parking Eves, 'til 9; Sat. 'til 6. EZ farms. (2) RED DANISH Modern Matching Chairs* 681-0695. __________ PIECE DAVENPORT, aat of twin cocktail table, 2 table lamps and (1) 9'xl2' rug Included. 7-piece bedroom suite with double dresser, chest, full-size bed with lnnersprlng mattress and matching chairs and table. All for *399. Your credit is good at Wyman’s. WYMAN FURNITURE CO. 7 E. HURON FE 5-1501 KIRBY SWEEPER EXCELLENT CONDITION — 850 FULL GUARANTEE Kirby Service & Supply Co. 3617 DIXIE HWY. 674-2234 LINOLEUM RUGS, MOST SIZES, *3.49 up. Pearson's Furnlturt, 210 E. Pike St.* FE 4-7811 LEAVING “STATE — SACRIFICE sale — washer* dryer* refrigerator, twin bedroom suite* dinette set stereo* picnic table, plus many additional items. 642-6932* after ^6:30 p.m.___________________________ Walnut hard to find? Sat us — We have most ell kinds Johnson TV—FE 8-4569 ____45 W. Walton near Baldwin___ SALE: WAREHOUSE SALE: OPEN to public. Entire Inventory of new Zenith* RCA end Motorola TV's; color TV end Stereo's must bo told. Every Item discounted. Scratched sets priced accordingly. No roas. offer refused* terms. Sale: today and tomorrow* 10-9* HILF APPLIANCE. 2416 14 Mite Road, between Woodward end Crooks. Wot6r Softeners 66-A For Saio Miscellaneous 67 S HORSEPOWER IUMP pumps-Kinco submersible pumpt* also repairs. Cone's FE $-6642. (Licensed) COACH HOUSE Colonial Furniture 4405 Highland Pontiac H AMMOND CHOR D ORGAN* excellent condition, $400; 2 pillow back black leather chairs by Drexel, like new $250; Drexel secretary desk with high ladder back chair with black leather seat, like new* $400. 50" round coffoe table* dark wood* $40. 474-5246. HOLTON CORNET, $90. Plastic liner pool, 10* x 30", $20. Reel type power mower* $25. 332-6796._______ HPE SWIMMING POOL filter* cycle capacity 72,000 gallons* per day; 6 filter grids; 1 year old; $95. 546-. 1010. i________4 and KEEGO RESALE Quality Household Goods Clothing. 2965 Orchard Lk Rd 682-5620 ■ Mon. thru Sat. 104 JACOBSEN REEL TYPi power mower. B.S. engine* best offer. 674-2068. WHITE ALUMINUM SIDED camper cover* € ft. longx29" high $125. V pool table. $40. 1 set ot whitewall tires* size 560x13* Call 682-7779. LIVING ROOM TABLES, 682-8588* after 3. MATCHING MODERN walnut chest and vanity with mirror# axe. con- dition* 335-7942._______________ and MUCH USED FURNITURE mlsc. objects. 3354072 anytime. MAPLE JUNIOR DESK* $12; 4 dinette chairs* $5 ea.i kitchen stool# $2; coffee table, $4; day bed* $10; pole lamp* $5; babys chif-ferobe* *6; Sylvan Village* 682-3227. 3.5 CUBIC FOOT refrigerator for trailer or camper, uses gas or electric, like new, $73. 363-2923.___ HAND HEWED bam beams, 14" x 14" * 18', 815 apiece. Holly* , 437- 2492.________________________________ HORSEPOWER TRACTOR arid attachments. 2 boys 26" bikes. AAAHOGANY DINING ROOM set table# 6 chairs* buffet end China cabinet* $100. 232-7564. _______ NICE MAYTAG WRINGER washer. Pair maple chairs. Baby bed. mattress# springs. OR 3-9644. Marietta. PIECE SECTIONAL. Chairs. Lamps. Tables. Chest. Mlsc. Reasonable. 353-6060* Southfield._ room 8 PIECE WALNUT DININl|~ --------------------£ suite* exc. condition* 335-7942. 9x12 Linoleum Rugs $3.89 Solid Vinyl Tile . tc re. Vinyl Asbestos tile ...... 7c ea. Inlaid Tile* 9x9 .........7c ee. Floor Shop—2255 Elizabeth Lake "Across From the Mall" 1" ELECTRO-MASTER stove* after 4 p.m., FE 5-3584._ 0" RANGE; COMPLETE double bed, new; new dinette set, 21" combination TV* miscellaneous 623-0953. 1968 KIRBY VACUUM cleaner, attachments. Best offer. 625-3218 between 8 a.m. and 3 P.m. L — PLENTY OF USED washers stoves* refrigerators* and trade-in furniture bargains. Little Joe's Trade-In store* Baldwin at Walton Blvd. FE 2-6842. AUTOMATIC ZIG ZAG Sewing machine. Repossessed 1967. "Fashioned Dial" model — In ..walnut cabinet. Take ovt payments of: $5.50 PER M0. FOR 8 M0S. OR $44 CASH BAL. Still under guarantee Universal Sewing Center 2615 DIXIE HWY.________FE 4-0905 APARTMENT SIZE STOVE* $45; china cabinet* $39; desk* $15; bedroom set# $45; living room set* *59; dinette set* $15; refrigerator* $29; washer* *29; chesf* $16; dresser* $20; dining room set* *35; TV. M. C. Lippard# UU I Saginaw.___________________ APPLIANCES UNCRATED WASHERS, REFRIGERATORS AND RANGES We've made a terrific buy on al> uncrated and blemished appliances at Whirlpool warehouse. We'va no room In our warehouse so we'll sell at unheard of price*. Easy, easy terms. LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE Baldwin at Walton Blvd. FE 2-6842 BRONZE OR CHROME DINETTE sale, BRAND NEW. Large and small size (round, drop-leaf* rectangular) tat'es In 3-* 5- and 7-pc sets, $24.95 up. PEARSON'S FURNITURE 210 E. Pike FE 4-7881 BUNK BEDS Choice of 15 styles* trundle beds, triple trundle beds and bunk beds complete, *49.50 and up. Pearson'* Furniture, 210 E. Pike. Pontiac Resale Shop Buy - Sell Antiques, Furniture, Glassware Mlsc. 80 Lafayette, first street past Oakland on Wide Track. 3356932 Open Wed.-Sat. 10-5 p.m. Repossessed Merchandise Gas ranges. Tires Black and white TV*. Goodyear Service Stdre 1370 WW# TracK Dr., W#»t Pontiac Friday 'til 9 p.m. range, refrigerator, auto. washer, dryer, dishwasher. wasuci, VI IBI i r - Curt's, 6484 Williams Laka Rd. 674- 1101. _____________________________ door, REFRIGERATOR, G.E. freezer at top, axe. condition, $110, 626-4063._______________________ SET OF 6 MATCHING oak leather bottom chairs* exc. condition# 335-7942. _____________ LIKE NEW BOAT trailer, window air conditioner* table sew. 644-0466. LAWN SPRINKLING system available. Check our plastic pipe prices. 04" *3.65 Per hundred 1" *5.61 per hundred IVx" *8.51 per hundred IV7 $10.01 per hundred G. A. Thompson, 7005 M-59 W. Accordion and case. 402-1670, USED COMBINATION aluminum •form windows, 28" x 39W" *5 ea., 465 Bloomfield Ava.* off S. Blvd. w. HORSEPOWER ALLIS Chalmers riding mower. Never used. Best offer over $350. MA 6-7173. I) x 12 WALL TENT, used twice. 3 beautiful lamps. Reasonable. And miscellaneous. 647-1395. 14' FRIGIDAIRE REFRIGERATOR, Imperial Frostproof, exc. condition, $175. UL 2-17d0.__________ B&G Tile, FE 4-9957. 1075 W. Huron 6" JACOBSON ESTATE MOWER, exc. cond., $100, Scoffs spreader $8, porch rug $5, White love seat *25, Gold chair $15, pole lamp *3, after 4 p.m. 8151-1817. MOWERS — USED. We repair mowers and all air-cooled engines. < Taylor Equipment Repair. 992 University Dr. Open Sunday. < METAL KITCHEN table* 4 chain, chrome legs. $15; 21" Blond cabinet Admiral TV* vary good condition, $35; Olympic Blond Cabinet record Player# AM, FM radio* $35; 673-0349.__________ ■ NUMEROUS LARGE and sm.ll I-' B«.m», Ml-090 «ftf t p.m. OFF BLACK FALL, worn with/ or without hred bond — >70 coll Ml- , 4*41. '___________ PICNIC TABLES (5 SIZES) LAWN SWINGS, LAWN ORNAMENTS, GIFTS. GAGS, JOKES—LIBERAL < BILL'S OUTPOST, 32*5 DIXIR1 HWY., OR 3,474.___________ < 4" RIDING LAWN MOWER, (2) V3 hors, motor*, (2) V. hori. motor*, OR 3-8560. 19*1 COMET, *, AUTOMATIC, very good condition, recently overhauled 5200 also >14' wood boat 550. Romeo 752-3250._______ 105.000 BTU NEW gas furnace. Installed with ducts, Average 5595. Also aluminum tiding Installed. Reas. A. 8. H. Salas. *25-1501. *25-2537. ________________ \ NEW METHOD OF connacting cast Iron sewer pipe Is available by using stainless steel clamps with lifaflma rubber gaskets. i" Cast Iron sewer pipe 10' for 510.95 3" Cast Iron Sewer pipe 10" for $8.98 G. A. Thompson. 7005 M-59 W. SINGER DIAL-A-MATIC Zig zag sewing -machine. Embroiders* appllquss* buttonholes* •tc. — late model* school trade-in. Terms of: $6 PER MO. OR $59 CASH New machine puaranfee Universal. Sewing Center 2*n Dixie hwy.________fe 4-Q9Q5 USED TV's, 5)9 95 : USED COLOR TV, *149.95 SWEETS RADIO AND APPLIANCE, INt. 422 W. Huron ________334-5677 UNCLAIMED FURNITURE LEFT IN LAY-AWAY— NEW 4 pc. bedoom suite* mirror, double dresser,'' 4 drawer chest and bookcase bed. Sold for $149 — unpaid bal. *98. Sofa with Hit and Hers chairs* zlppered cushions# scotch guarded. Sold for *249 — unpaid bal. *187. AFM POCKET BILLIARD TABLE* 3’V x T Ivory balls* 2 cuss, rack* gold felt* axe. condition $495. Encyclopedia Brlttenlca, I960 year books through 1965* $200. 752-2524. ANCHOR FENCES NO MONEY DOWN FE 5-7471 ANTIQUE WALL CLOCK, violin, ukulele, cuf glass. 852-3458.__________ Bolens 650 Tractor Reconditioned No. 575 Simplicity Riding lawn mower 32"* $125 USED JACOBSEN 26" RIDING Mower 6 H.P., $100. HOUGHTEN'S POWER CENTER 112 W. University Dr. 651-7010 Downtown Rochester. BRIDES — BUY YOUR WEDDING announcements at discount from# Forbes, 4500 Dixit- Drayton# OR 3-9767. BATHROOM, VANITY CABINETS* *29.95 up. We make vanity cabinets* to your own size* colors and styles. See our large selection gold faucets, gold m td iclne cabinets, exquisite swag bathroom light fixtures. Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orchard Lk.# FE 4-8467-64. _____ _________ BROWNIES HARDWARE FLOOR SANDERS—POLISHERS WALLPAPER STEAMERS BLUE LUSTRE SHAMPOOERS $1 A DAY 952 Joslyn_____________FE 4-6103 ,COMMERCIAL WINDOW Walls" Approximately 48" x 96"# $25. $35 Sofa and matching chair. Sold for vented. $189—unpaid bal.# $136. | TALBOTT LUMBER ! 1025 Oakland f F E 4-4595 Hide-a Bed. Sold for *249 unpaid|*chAIRS UPHOLSTERlb, save with bal. *168. E-Z TERMS NO GIMMICKS BEAUTIFUL LIVING ROOM draperies for picture window. FE 5-5663. BIG MAN'S'LAZY B6y chair#' brand HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE new, cost $200, will sacrifice for Atm ri ihkiiti inr rn $150. 674-1972#lifted p.m. ' AND FURNITURE CO. CUSTOM MADE SPA NISH davenport j 465 Elizabeth Lk. Rd- ____ 335-9283 frame, 96" new, $175; 6266327. w A R E H*oTs t DISCOUNT CONTEMPORARY FURNITURE en, dining room, living room, bedroom also mlsc. Items. After 5 p.m. 7303 S. Shaker off Williams Lk. Rd. Near Hatchery. CUSHIONS—CUSHIONS Custom made for Danish, Colonial and Contemporary chairs and sofas. 20 to 50 pet. off on selected ?roup of fabrics. Call 335-1700. oml. Upholstery Co._ DISCOUNT prices ON SEWING MACHINES NEW 19*8 WHITE ZIG-ZAO HEAVY DUTY. 30 YEAR GUARANTEE. REG. *129. DISCOUNT PRICE $89. Investment price and pavad road frontage. Sale Business Property 100 acra* — Ideal and riba for daValopmtnt. Tarma. MILTON WEAVER INC., Realtor! In lha Vlllaga of Rocnaattr 118 W. UnlvaraltV 851-814) ATTENTION INVESTORS Ideal location for Pizza house, short order drive-in or professional business. Includes 122 ft. commercial frontage, building with 984 sq. ft. Near one of Waterford Twp's. busiest Intersections. Full, price* $25,000, terms to suit* For information call J. A. Taylor# Realtor# OR 4-030*. HUBBEL & ASSOCIATES 1102 W, MAPLE ROAD WALLED LAKE, MICH. 624-5800 Eves, or Weekends Colli 19*4 CONSTRUCTION KING BACK hot and loader tor land# small hotfii or ?. 334-7477. ____ T9&U&UICHTWILD CAT, full power, air, *650, FE 2-1779. ,_____ 1968" CHEVELLC. FMi AM, stick shift, sell or trade for* pickup. Call before noon, 334*0121. _ ... A HOUSE 1968 NECCHI DEMO, 7IG-ZAG PADDOCK & CHANDLER pou^ prVce $b?eq' pJt Large Living Room, Country Kitchen, 2 Bedroom. *140 mo. Income, i BROTHERS ZIGZAG USED. $49. *8,950 on Terms. Will consider .Va- ^ln,«,L?ndre 6: Jr’!R E-Z TERMS NQ GIMMICKS NEW WHITE DIAL-A-PATTERN. DOES EVERYTHING BY DIALING. REG. $189. DISCOUNT PRICE *139. sale—(brand new) 2 pc. living room set $67.50 up, 4 pc. bedroom set *79.50 up, Sofa beds *49.50 up, 3 pc. living room sectional *139 up, reclining cnairs *39.50 up* 4 burner apt. gas range, *79.50, 4 burner elec, range 199.50, 2 step tables, 1 coffee table *14.95 for sat. Mattresses for most everything# bunk PLUMBING FIXTURES SPECIAL 5' bathtubs $39.95 18" Vanity# $9.95 Toilets reverse traps, $24.95 Toilets B. grade# $19.95 G. A. Thompson# 7005 M-59 W. f r 11; 559.95; laundry fray, trim, $19.95, ’ shower stalls with trim, >39.95, 2-bowl alnk, 52.95, lava., 53.95,' tuba, 820 and up. Pipe cut and' threaded. SAVE PLUMBING CO.. 841 Baldwin. FE 4-1515. RUG AND PAD, gat atova, buffef, table and chalra, dreaaer, mite., 391-1259, after 4, UL 2-1150. RAILROAD TIES, NEW and Uttd.. rail fanca. OR 3-1972. RUMAAAGE SALE, FRIDAY May 31, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., CAI Building. 5*40 Williams Laka Rd. RUMMAGE SALE, LEAVING Stata, 987 Sunny Baach, Twin Lakaa Sub., off M-59. -_______ . ROUND 52" WALNUT tabla, spinning wheals — all sizes; wall phones. Parlsl Antiques. 2740 S. Rochester Rd., Rochester. RUMMAGE SALE FRIDAY, Setup day, Sun., from 9-5 PM, Whlttemore In back. _______ 169 RUMMAGE SALE; Houaahold furnishings and mlsc Itams. May 29, 30, 31. *121 Weldon Road. SPRED-SATIN PAINTS. WARWIClX Supply. 2*78 Orchard Laka. *82- 2820.____________________ SUMP PUMP GE MOTOR $79.50 value $29.95 marred. Terrific buya.> Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orchard Lk., FE 4-84*2 — 32.________________ THE SALVATION ARMY ' RED SHIELD STORE 118 W. LAWRENCE ST. Everything to meat your needs Clothing. Furniture, Appliances_ TRASH BARRELS, open and van-tllatad. FE 5-8974, USED AND NEW OFFICE DgjK& chalra, fables, fllfi, typewriters. adding machines, offset printing adding ---------— --------- .■ _ presses, mimeograph, drafting boards and tables, Forbes, 4500 *-i$..i_ n,.uten AB nr AAI Dixie# Drayton/ OR 5^747 or Ml 7-2444. ____________________ WASHED WIPING RAGS# •• low al .24 par lb. 25 lb. boxes to 300 lb. balqs., ■ . . . , Used Office Furniture — desks# chairs, ale. Priced to tall. New 5 hp# 3 phase air compressor* $550. New and used steel* angles/ channd beams* plate* pipe. Used metal garage doors* Ideal for signs* temp, sheds* etc. BOULEVARD SUPPLY 500 S. Blvd. E.____________ 333-7161. 1*739 Hand Tooli—Machinary 68 close-out fabrics. Call 335-1700. Cpml. Upholstery Co.___ CRIB, PLAYPEN* Bassinette 1267 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. CAN ,TOP VENDING Machine and 5 LIFT TRUCKS* good condition/ ice cream machine* good condition, J^asonebie. 542-1602 or 585-3660. r best offer* Shady Lane Mobile U HDRAULIC SHOVELS# Hy-Ho# Home Estates, 2709 Capitol* War-j685 ^ yd. less than 1 year old, used 75Zi844® __ „ ____ ______ very little; Insley 560# H yd. 1966 CHOICE RAILROAD TIES, | * J (gMMjfl beds* roll away beds* hide away beds end etc. Loads of other, furniture. PEARSON'S FURNITURE M _. PIKE FE 4-7881 Open till 8 PM. Mon., Frl., 1ttl 9 PM 210 WASHER AND DRYER PARTS MICHIGAN APPLIANCE CO. 3282 DIxle Hwy. _ __ 873-8011 WAREHOUSE SALE; OPEN to public. Entire Inventory of new top brand refrigerator!, freezers and ranges etc. must be sold. Every Hem discounted. Scratched Items priced accordingly. No reas, offer 9120. Free__ CO M M E RC I AL DISHWASHER, Frlgidalra units, coffee urns; also household Items, stoves, bed, etc. Selling for storage this weekend. 1057 Myrtle Ava, Tel-Huron.__ DOG HOUSES, INSULATED. All sizes, 748 Orchard Lk. Ava. _ -DEHUMIDIFIER, LARGE S I 4 E Thor, practically new $50. 848-8211. ENCLOSED 2-WHEEL trailer, 100 Lafayette. ENCLOSE YOUR SHOWER over the bathtub with a beautiful glass tub enclosure* aluminum frame* with sand blasted Swan design $20.95. G. A. Thompson* 7005 M-59_W._ ESTATE GATES, 1# •Iimninum78elf-openlng, new, cost *250 will sell Va price, phone at 12 noon or 6 p.m., OA 8-3696. refused. Terms. Sate: today and j EXPERT U-PH OLSTERING, tomorrow, 1(V9, HILF _ AP- reasonable prices, free estimates. A 8. B Upholstering. FE 4-2147 EXCELLENT, EFFICIENT of*- Pickup as down payment. Ciall Toddyl Partridge Real Estate, 334 3581 ______■ ■ HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE Mr. Hy.H^cS^^^.ut! Sk?8&l AND FURNITURE CO. 824-5)82 0111. 4*5 Elizabeth Lk. Rd. 535-92 PLIANCE, 2416 14 Mile Road, between Woodward and Crooks. WASHER,““DRYER, Freezer. Taka oyer payments. 335-0*30. t-A LION'S PAW pedestal round tabla and chairs; ball and claw piano stbol, hump trunk, ate.. Sat., June 1. 8:30 p.m. Auctlonland. A-l ANTIQUES, estates, art glass wanted. BLUE BIRD AUCTIONS, 134-0742 or 1-634-8831. .... 5252;' 2 dozer trucks, tandem and slngl* axla, 1957 Chevy, 5 yd. dump, 2*73. call ava. 381- DeVILBISS SPRAY BOOTH on tags, complete with exhaust fan and shielded light, alao, 2 gallon apray tank, hosaa and valvaa eomplata. OR 3-7313.___________________ FOR SALE Hobart Modal 50-14 1(5 H P., 1725 RPM SO Volt, I phasa all purpoaa saw, Matal Bench mounted. Reasonably priced, Vanoff's Restaurant. 223 N. Main, Romeo, Phono 752-2M1. SELLING OUT, WILLIAM*.. Vooil, Sockets, 14" te 1'* All brand new, L------- -- drlvt; pliers, hammers, chinas, etc, 25 per cant oft. 1-J oft on purchases of $50 or more. SO por 81 n , ...onomlcal,' that's Blua Lust -\ carpet and upholstery cleaner. Rent electric shampooer si. Hudson's Hardware, 41 E. Watfon. garage SALE. 24 x 30 garage. Must. be emptied. 8)ew, used, furniture end goodies. 51*0 Rockhaven. Off Auburn Rd. Frl, Set. Sun. until told. Highland Road. (M'St); SOUTH *BEND LATHE, 9" IWlfliaTI' bed, new (4 h.p. capacitor motor, > law chuck. Ilva cantor, many bit) t and access. *51-8282, r.n di suppilitfs."punCh-)* R ri OT. complete with v cam operated el# to elect parts. Bolster plates. Hold Uvf* i • v.i«a« i wireav r Toledo No. 5 A, 45. Ion OBJ, stroke, >1300. Blls« No. 21, Si ton, OBI, 3" stroke, *780. BIIm NO. 21, 35 ton, 3" stroke, no mater, 8250. Motorized coll cradle >250. Great Lakaa Hardwar*. 330-7111. t ■E i \ . A m PLUMBING BARGAINS. . -------------, standing toilet, >18.95; 30-gallon heater, $49.95; 3-pleca bath sett,, fZAAC. teau trim BIB OK a > 11 Bit iiu D—14 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, MAY 80, 1968 Hand Tnuh Mnciihiecy M PORTABLE WILDER end truck, will Mil eaperate. mint Mil. Ml- B . _ - JtlL DOZER,with ponv engine, he, 4' high end wide Wade. 625-4606. TRI-AXLE DollR trilBrp »>300. 4IM Dixie Hwy. _____________. Miiicil Good* 71 1 YeAR OLD LeBLANC Vito ' Clerlnet, good condition, with ceee end »tend. 335-7738.___________ 12 STRING GUITAR with cast. Like new. >100. 343-303).___________ AT GALLAGHER'S If you art In tha market for a n •r used piano or organ. THIS THE TIME TO BUY. Month end clearance prices on all floor models. _ IT WILL PAY YOU-TO SHOP US Pets-Hunting Dogi 79 ADORABLE POODLE PUPPIES. AKC, all colors. Snow and 0H stock. $50 up. Mlnlatura and toy stud service# all colors and alias. Martha Schwartz# 673-1147. AKC POODLE# $ weeks. Black,. 2 males. 2 females. Miniatures, 673-2425. ADORABLE PART POODLE female puppy, S wk|., $20. MA 5-5304._ 1710 W. Telegraph FE 4-0544 U mile south of Orchard Lake Rd. Dally 9:30-9 p m. Sat. 9 to 5:30 BABY GRAND PIANO, EBONY 332-7544_____________ BAND EQUIPMENT, VOX organ, (tender guitar, Hofner Bass, reverb., misc. speakers, 871-4914. BARGAINS IN ALL TYPES OF guitars. Used Fenders, shopworn and discontinued models makes. MORRIS MUSIC 34 S. Telegraph Rd. Across from Tel-Huron FE 2-0547 FENDER TELCASTER AND CASE 3 months old, call Bruce after 3 p.m. EM 3-0040. Full SET OF Ludwlck drums. Call after 4 p.m. 114 E. Howard. CES PAUL JR., guitar excellent condition $125. 482-9412. LUDWIG SNARE DRUM Hl-Hat with cymbols plus 20" cymbol. UL 2- 2812. ___________________________ MODEL 44 WURLITZER electric organ. Oak cabinet, MY 3-3581._____ PIANO AND ORGAN COMBINATION — Manufacturers sample. This Is perfect for small church or chapel. No special organ training to play. Will sacrifice — rather than reshlp. CALL MR. BAKER, FE 4-4721._________________ Both CELLO *4, special pegs, fine condition. Ml 4-4039._____________ STARLIGHT DRUM SET. brand new, must see to appreciate, 424-0154. AKC BLACK MINIATURE Poodle. Female. 7 weeks. 875. Call aftar 4 PM, 437-3744. Holly.__ AKC AIREDALE FEMALE, months, housebroken, bred good disposition, must sell, 7044. AKC BEAUTIFUL purebred collie pups, tri-colored end sables, ex ceptlonally nice. 451-8748._ AKC POOOLE 8 WEEKS. Black, 3 males, 2 females. Miniatures. 473-2425. KC? MINIATURE F EM ALE Dachshunds, FE 4-8853. AKC TOY POODLE PUPS, also miniatures. Cheap. 334-2747.__ AKC DACHSHUND PUPS MORSE______________________FE 8-2538 AKC POODLE PUPS for sale or trade. 2 males, 1 female, also white miniature female, for tala lease. 473-3743.___ AKC TOY POODLES, 3821 Pontiac Lk. Road, Pontiac.___ AKC WEST HIGHLAND terrier and Collie pups. Purebred German Shorthalr female. Best otter. 781-3371. Utica, after 5 PM. Auction Solos 10 NO AUCTION SUNDAY JUNE 1 Watch for ad next weak. Halit Auction, 705 W. Clarkston Rd., 493- 1871.______________________________ NO AUCTION THIS FRIDAY. Big sale May 31. Watch for details here next week. Tyler's Auction, 7405 Highland Rd.______________________ BEAUTIFUL APRICOT TOY poodle pups AKC champ stock, reas. 424-4008. BEAGLES, AGE 4 and 12 mo., purebreds, not registered, $10 each. 425-4945 after 4 pirn. SATURDAY JUNE 1, 10 AM Zwlerzynskl Farm Estate 10)84 S. Morrlsh Rd., Northwest of Linden. tractors, tillage tools, household and relics. Stan Parkins, Auctioneers f*H. Swartz jCjjtk_________ 435-9400 THERE WILL BE AN auction at 3 p.m. Sat. June 1 at Hall's Auction, _ 705 W. Clarkston Rd., 693-1*71 TYLER'S AUCTIOi' 7605 Highland Rd. (M-59) 6*3-9504 WEbNESDAY. JUNE 5, 10 Al Richard Ikenl Farm and Home Sold 5454 Oak Grove Rd., 5 miles North of Howell, 3 tractors Including Muck Cletrac, Oliver 550 JD 50. hay tools, tillage tools, truck, 1923 Model T. Roadster, wagon full of Model T parts, antiques, relics, safe, riding mower, rototlller, chain fall and etc. STAN PERKINS, Auctioneer Ph. Swartz Creek___________435-9400 Plants-freet-Shrubs 81-A Travel Trailer! BRADLEY CAMPER. PICK-UP sleepers end covers, spare tire carriers, 3259 Seebaldt, Drayton Plains, 473-9528. 482-9440 EVERYTHING IN PERENNIALS. 1000 varieties. Iris & Daylllies. Hughes Gardens 24333 Lahser Southfield. EL 7-1122. UPRIGHT PIANO, $40. H. R. Smith Von Lines 10 S. Jessie.____ USED ORGANS Choose from Hammonds and other well known brands, prices as low as $289. GRINNELL'S Downtown Store 17 So. Saginaw___ FE 3-7148 BOSTON TERRIER, AKC, for stud service, 1ft yrs. 425-2175._ BRITTANY PUPS MIXED 4 weeks, $5. 473-8197. wks. COME SEE MY AKC Collie puppies at 1218 E. Commerce in Milford, $25 without papers, $35 with papers. 3 males, 2 females left 484-4291. Music Lessons 71-A WURLITZER AND THOMAS ORGANS AND PIANOS INSTRUCTIONS AND INSTRUMENTS. JACK HAGAN MUSIC 469 Elizabeth Lake Rd. 332-0501 1192 Coolay Laka Rd.___363-5500 ACCORDION, GUITAR. LESSONS. . Sales-servlce, Pula neck I, OR 3-5594 Office Equipment____________72 S EXECUTIVE TYPE matal desks with wood grain top. 1 black executive swivel chair. 4 black leather chairs. Excellent for welting room. Prefer td sell complete, $250. 674.0743 after 5 p.m. ADDRESSOGRAPH — Multigraph. Model 85 printing machine W-light fixture, counter 3 yrs. old. $975. 674-2255 bet. 8-4:30 p.m._ MIMEOGRAPH MACHINE, late model, Gestetner model No. 340. Duplicator, 871-4916.______________ FOXHOUNDS FOR SALE Guaranteed to run or money back HUnter 2-1983 (Yos^lanti) between 7:30 a.m. and 1 p.m._____________ GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPPIES, AKC, 8 wks., permanent shots, wormed, guaranteed, parents X-rayed, outstanding quality at pet prices. 1-485-2444._________________ GERAAAN SHEPHERD Puppies. Purebred, no papers. 2 females left. $30. White and silver tip. 651-5275. IRISH SETTER pups. AKC. Temporary shots, wormed. $75, up. Field champion sired. 437-4742. IRISH TERRIER PUPPIES, AKC, shots, English blood lines. Ph. eves, or weekends, 1-517-452-8835. PERENNIALS, FIELD GROWN -Vegetables, flowers, geraniums, Indian wood Perennial Gardens, 3030 S. Lapeer Rd., Lake Orion. Livestock______________ _______83 HORSES FOR SALE — 6 year old Brown and White spot mare, $180. 5 year old sorrel mare, $250. Good family type horses. 391-1704. 1 3 YEAR OLD APOLOOSA, broke. 427-3479 4 YEAR OLD, green broke quarter horse. 887-5693. 5 YEAR OLD WELCH pony, $110, 625-5003._________________i____ 8 YEAR OLD SORREL mare, 6 year old bay gelding, both top horses in 4-H. Absolutely reliable. Anderson Peat Co., Imlay City. 724-2875 Closed Sundays.__________________ CENTURY YELL0WSTQNE TRAVEL TRAILERS Quality at any budget One 10ft' TRUCK CAMPER Was $2845 NOW $2395 STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. 3771 Highland (M-591 Check our deal on— SWISS COLONY LUXURY TRAILERS FROLIC TRAILERS AND TRUCK CAMPERS SKAMPER FOLD-DOWN CAMPERS 13 to 28 ft. on display ft — Jacobson Trailer Sales 5490 Williams Lake Rd. OR 3 5981 CAMPERS FOR PICKUPS PHOENIX AND WINNEBAGO Trailers REESE AND ORAW TITE HITCHES Sold and installed HOWLAND TRAILER SALES AND RENTALS 3255 Pixie Hwy. Pontiac OR 3-1454 Camping Private Lake Safe beach, flush toilets and showers, 1140 M15, Ortonvllle McFeely Resort. 627-3820 weekends or 965-5958 weekdays 9 to 3. 412 Empire Bldg., Detroit, 48226. COX CAMPER, never used. Sleeps 6. 451-3638. FORD CAMPER, FULLY equipped, call 343-4844 after 6. HARDTOP CAMPER FOR rent, sleeps 7, $40 weekly, 332-2244.____ Boots-Accessories BOARD - BUY — SELL - TRADE — or our specialty of training your horse to do what you want It to, only $3 a day. Terms available. Call or see Nashvilles Own Cowboy Nicholas at 20750 23 Mile Rd., Mt. Clemens. Phone 443-1424. DARK BROWN THOROUGHBRED brood mare, 6 yr. old, also proven, also good for pleasure or snow. 692-3984._______________ HORSES FOR RENT OR SALE. 3065 S. Lapeer Rd., Pontiac. Bald Mountain Riding Stable. JUNIOR EXHIBITORS, WANT to be in the ribbons? Extra nice chestnut gelding — lump, hack, first level dressage — $800. Also, Playboy'* for sale — 16.2 Bay Gelding -extremely well trained — excellent for either advanced or beginning rider, $400 — Prices Firm I 625-4559 after 4 p.m, NOW ON DISPLAY Travelmate 10 ft. Double Bed, Dlnnette . $1395 12 ft. Double Bed, Dlnnette . $1495 Pleasure Mate America's Custom Hardtop Only $1385 Holly Travel Coach, Inc. 15210 Holly Rd., Holly ME 4-6771 Open Pally and Sundays_ 20' NEW 18' WITH TOILET, shower, gas-electric refrigerator. GOODELL TRAILERS 3200 S. Rochester Rd._____852-4550 OAKLAND CAMPER BEELINE TOUR-A-HOME COVERS Parts and accessories Baldwin at Colgate 335-0434 “Him? He won’t bother you . . . He’ll just growl when you get close to where his bones are buried!" FOR SALE: 14* Fiber alas canoe, car 0(fi carrier. First 885 gets. FE 2 LESS WORK - MORi fun wlth th11 38* flbergiat 1945 Chrlicraft Com mander, twin 275's, exc. condition, luxuriously equipped Including euto. pilot end generator. Owner — TU 4-5252.___ NEW 48 TROJAN CRUISERS , ON DISPLAY SLICKCRAFTS Immediate Delivery USED BOATS 65- 24 Owens 225 h,p. Exp. hardtop 66- 25 Owens 185 h.p. Exp. hardtop 65-25 Owens 185 h.p. Exp. loaded 60-25 Owens 185 h.p. Exp. Loaded 60-25 Cavalier 185 h.p. Exp. Loaded 45-20 Badgers I/O 160 h.p. ALSO OUTBOARDS LAKE & SEA MARINA Saginaw at S. Blvd. FE 4-9587 _____Dally 8-6, Sun. 12-6__ PINTERS............ SPECIAL New 1968 16' Thompson Flberglas lapstrake with vinyl convertible top, side aft curtains. 45 h.p. Jcjfinson with battery and box, 1200 lb. Little Dude Trailerj plus elec trie horn, deck mounted mirror, fire extinguisher, 4 life preservik's. paddle, anchor end line. Regularly $3109.50. SPECIAL $2497 ’YOU SAVE $612.50 1370 Opdyke 9-1 Sat. 9-4 (1-75 at Oakland Unlv«r»lty Exit) 97 Wanted Carl-Trucks 101 WANTED Late Model GM Cars TOP $ PAID FOR EXTRA CLEAN CARS Suburban Olds 1___BIRMINGHAM____ We would like to buy late model GM Cars or will accept trade-downs. Stop by today. FISCHER BUICK 544 S. WOODWARD 647-5600 Junk Can-Trucks_101-A 10, 100 JUNK CARS - TRUCKS, free tow anytime. FE 2-2446._ *Vl JUNK CARS, f.*Y FOR SOME free tow. 482-7060. __ 105 Housetrailers 89 Oxford Trailer Sales 5 NEW MODELS JUST iN Priced right, built right. 52-40 ft. long. 12 wide, 2 or 3 bedrooms. Early American or modern. Phone MY 2-0721, 1 ml. S. of. Lake Orion on M-24. PIONEER CAMPER SALES Trailers: Jubilee, Globa Star rBarth Campers: Swinger, Maclnaw, Travel Queen, Carabou, Barth Covers: Stutz Bearcat, Merit 3091 W. Huron 481-0720 PONIES FOR SALE, 2369 Joslyn, Antique Village. PONY RIDES $1. an hour, stud service, also refreshments for sale At 2490 Newberry. _________________ MALE, AKC REGISTERED St. Bernard, very gentle, 17 mos. old, $200. Must have a good home. Dog house included. 673-0023. Store Equipment 73 RESTAURANT EQUIPMENT. MUST sell. Sacrifice. 424-2177 or MA 6-3411._________________ MINIATURE SCHAUZER PUPPIES, 7 wks., AKC reg.. Champion bloodline, 548-9450. REGISTERED APPALOOSA horses. Terms available. 1445 N. Coats Rd. Oxford. _______ Sporting Goods 74 1967 SPALDING PROFESSIONAL golf Ml. complete, like new, must .ell. S75. Lincoln 3-5405. Pro-Golf Olstr._____ ________________ j' x r pool Table, m *i.to top, like now, SS00, 493-13S7. SV GUNS. EVERYTHING for the (hooter. 720 W. Huron St. Ii'x42" MUSKIN POOL, INCLUDES filter, ladder, vacuum end skim mar. 623-1444. - " „ CARBINE AMO $8.50 Per Hundred Large selection rifles, shotguns, handguns, complete stock ammunition, eve. after 6, open Sat and Sun. Troy Gun Exchange Inc., 3064 Rochester Rd., Troy, 689-9691. Enrico ROSELLI ACCORDIAN, small professional model, 120 bass, white pearl, 332-8027._________________ GOLF MANUFACTURER'S representative, must sell 14 new 1967 sample sets. Complete, 60 per cent under list price. 542-4973. Pro- Golf Dlstr.____________________________ ItAIG ULTRA GOLF set, 9 Irons, 4 NEW WINCHESTER 94, Buffalo Bill Commemorative >129.95, 338-8501. k EM I NOTON SHOTGUN, MODEL 1100, never used, $140. FE 54492. Wilson golf clubs, 3 woods, e irons, complete with bag and cart. $40. 482-0483. PUREBRED GERMAN SHEPHERD puppies 8 weeks no papers $35 674-1217, evenings._______________________ REGISTERED GERAAAN SHORT Hair Pointer, female 5 years old, well trained, $75. 625-4274. SIAMESE KITTENS. Females. Blue Point and 1 Seal Point, each. 673-4451. SMALL MINIATURE DARK brown Poodle, AKC registered, 1 male, 1 female. 545-3705. SCHNAUZERS, MINIATURE, fet black, 8 wks., AKC, pvt. $125 up. 642-9847. SPRINGER SPANIEL, AKC, 4ft months old. Liver and White. 451-4341. After 6 p.m.________ AAALE Poodles at WANTED 10 gallon aquariums even If they are cracked or leak. WIN pay $2 each. FE 2-53S1 after 3:30 p.m REGISTERED ROMNEY OUTSTANDING Ewe lambs al90 some excellent ram lambs. Ideal to start a flock or show. Edw. Herrington. 7744 24 Milt Rd., Utica, Mich SPIRITED OR GENTLE horses for sale. New and used tack. Double D Ranch. 473-7457 STALLION, PONY $40. SS45 John R Rd. Troy. 079-0080.____ RENT? Or Pleasure Mates Only $45 per week Holly Travel Coach, Inc. 15210 Holly Rd., Holly ME 4-4771 Open Dally and Sundays SPORTCRAFT AAANUFACTURING Steel frame pickup sleepers 81 tops. 4160 Foley Waterford 623-0450. SPORTSMOBILE camper. Save plenty on this. Call 334-3132, after 5 p.m.________*____________ STARCRAFT CAMPERS SPRING SPECIALS FOR EXAMPLE THESE 194S'» 12'x60' 3 bedroom, $4795 12'X50' at $3850 I2'x44' at $3550 Also the Danish King, luxury for less, featuring exterior storage. Large savings on everything In stock. Free delivery and sat up within 300 miles. We will not knowingly be undersold. MIDLAND TRAILER SALES Open 9 to 8 Sun. 1 to 6 2257 Dixie Hwy. 338-0772 TOWN & COUNTRY MOBILE HOMES Fresh as a warm Spring breeze. The ultimate In luxurious living. See the all new REGAL EXTENSION, It will taka your breath away. TELEGRAPH AT DIXIE HWY. 334-6694 Motorcycle! 95 JUST ARRIVED SUZUKI new 1940 50CC cycle. 5 speed transmission See it today. Other models to 50C CC. Rupp mini bikes from $144.50, cycle accessories. Take M-59 to W. Highland. Right to Hickory Ridge R PINT TOY FOX Terriers, Schnauzers, Cockers, Poodle s , GROOMING Tropical fish end pet supplies, Uncle Charlies Pel Shop, 496 W. Huron, Vk Mile E, of .Telegraph. Pontiac, 332-8518, Open Sundays 1-4. v _______ U DOZEN BLACK poodle pups,, stud ' servlce, cllpplna..FE 4-4438. I-A DACHSHUND PUP$; AKC, ESTEI HEIM KENNELS. 391-1109 I ADORABLE PUPPIES, motherToy terrier, 810 ea„ 423-1044. ,_____ AKC COLO*. MALE tricolor, 11 months ISO. call 673-3141. * Auction TRAILERS AND campers for rent. 879-0714, Goodell. Trailers. USED TRAILER, 1964 Eagle with add-a-room. $495. 1944 Raven with add-a-room, $495. 1944 Wa*Wa, stove, sink# dinette, ice box, six sleeper, $595. 1964 Apache Mesa hardtop, $495. Evans Equipment. 6507 Dixie Highway, Clarkston, 625-2516. Hours 8 to 9 Mon. thru Frl, Sat. 8 to 5. Closed Sunday. Note: We will be closed May 30 and 31. June 1 8> 2. WOLVERINE TRUCK CAMPERS AND SLEEPERS. Factory outlet, repair and parts, new and used, rentals# Jacks, Intercoms, telescoping bumpers, spare tire carriers, auxilerating gasoline tanks. Lowry Camper Sales, 1325 S. Hospital Rd., Union Lake EM' 3-3681. Mobils Homes 89 1-A Beauties to Choose From WE FINANCE-TERMS RICHARDSON DELTA MONARCH ■ “ DUKE HOMETTE . LIBERTT COLONIAL MOBILE HOMES FE 2-1657 623-1310 25 OPDYKE 5430 DIXIE Auburn Heights 1 S. of Waterforc 2 X 57 RITZ CRAFT, 2 bedrooms, wall to wall carpet, very clean, owner must sell. 447-4944. 1953 NEW MOON, 8x41', carpeted, completely furnished, $1,250. 482-0592, after 6 p.m. 1959 ELCAR 10x45, $1695. 1963 Vln-dale 10x54 expando, $3395. 334-1508 afternoons, i 1959 CHAMPTON MOBILE home, furnished, [air beds, In park. 1960 NATIONAL 40' x W 2 bedroom, can be seen at 686 Crescent Lake Rd. $1950.___ 1964 2 BEDROOMS. Electric bullt-ins with extras. PH: 647-7092. 196$ PONTIAC CHIEF, 50x12, car-peted, furnished, lake lot. 673-4474. 1965 RICHARDSON, 10' X 50',~2-bedroom, skirting and shed Inducted, for information call 852-1721. Located I Sun., June 2, 2 at—12860 29 Mile Rd VanDyke, Romeo, Mich., af the Parkway Stables. Bowl and pitcher sets; sideboard; Edison phonograph; grandfather clocks and other Vienna wall clocks; round oak table; rocking Chairs, old secretary, numerous pieces of Carnival glass and signed North wood carnival glass, many other fine antiques and collector's Items too numerous to mention. Charlie McErlain, prop. George Younes, auctioneer. For Info PL 2-9271 or PL 2-9308 — Oft HO 3-0392. B & B AUCTION EVERY FRIDAY ..... 7:00 P.M. EVERY SATURDAY ... 7:00 P.M. EVERY SUNDAY .... 2:00 P.M. WE BUY - SELL — TRADE RETAIL 7 DAYS WEEKLY CONSIGNMENTS WELCOME CASH PRIZE EVERY AUCTION 5089 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-2717 Travel Trailers 88 15' ALUMINUM TRAVEL trailer, nice shape, $450. 673-5503._ 17' THOMPSON -LAPSTICk, 60 H.P. Mercury and trailer, overnighter top, 18 gallon cruise tank, many accessories, $1300, OR 3-3595._ 1945 21' TRAVELMASTER, self-con", talned, fully equipped, $1985, 625-5083. 1944 WINNEBAGO, 14', sleeps 6, afl gas, Reese hitch, electric brake control, mirrors, jacks, $1,095, 363-9874. 1964 17' CORSAIR, self-contained. Ilka new, $1700,^3984 Sashabaw Rd., Drayton Plains.^______________ BARGAIN PRICE ACL NEW 1968's DELIVERED 12 x 60 Elcar $4395 12 x 50 Academy.. $3995 12 x 45 Academy ... —. $3795 8 x 35 Rltz-Crat$2995 COUNTRYSIDE LIVING 1064 Oakland 334-1508 Best Mobile Home Sales Open Daily 9 a.m.-8 p.m. Marietta Champion Royal Embassy Regent Squire Laqdole Delta American Victor MARLETTE EXPANDOS ON DISPLAY FREE DELIVERY ANJJ SET UP WITHIN 200 MILES. 12 X 50- Marietta I960, 85,200.00 ON DISPLAY AT: Cranberry Leke Mobile Home Village » 9620 Highland Rd.. (M-59) 2 miles West of Williams Lk. Rd. 343-5296 473-1191 1945—28' AIRSTREAM, 84950. 482-2227. 3438 Orchard Lk. Jd._ 1968 VOLKSWAGEN SPORTSMO-1 . ____________________ bile camper. Save plenty on this 1946 PARKWOOD, 12x60, many Call. 334-3132, after 5 p.m, j Iras, like hew condition. 8 terms available. 652-2015. _ _ " HONEYMOON SPECIAL WE NEED TRADE INS FOR OUR CUSTOMERS TO TAKE NORTH NOW LET'S TRADE NOW SEE THE ALL NEW 60x12 DETROITER WITH SLIDE-A-R.OOM PLUS MANY OTHERS Free Delivery up to 300 ml. See the New Detroiters Bob Hutchinsons MOBILE HOMES 4301 Dixie Hwy. (US-10) OR 3-1202 DRAYTON PLAINS Open Daily 'til 8 p.m. Saturday and Sunday 'til 5 WILL BUY USED MOBILE homes. SL 4-1894. Pontiac Mobile Home Park. AuIb Accessories 9t Clarkston Auto Parts North Main k 625-5171 OPEN 9 TO 9 ' New and rebuilt auto parts Tires-Auto-Truck 92 REPAIR, MOUNT, and balance Maa and chroma wheels. New and used wheels. MARKET TIRE# 2635 Orchard Lake Rd Keego, Auto Service — Repair 93 FACTORY REBUILT MOTORS for cars, trucks#* $89 up. HI git performance engines. Corval specialist. Terms. MODERN ENGINES 537-1117 Motorcycle! 95 1952 HARLEY DAVIDSON, model 45, right for chopper, first $225 takes it. 682-4778. Bicycle! 96 LARGE SELECTION. YOU are welcome to look them over. Speed Seville. 2995 Lapeer Road, 2nd house N. of 1-75. Boats-Accessorio! 97 10- HYDROPLANE, 16 h.p. motor, A-1 condition. Must sacrifice. 673-7459. 12' ALUMINUM BOATS ........$108 Trailers $120. 15' canoes $169. Big Coho boats, 14'. $289; 15' $379. Big flberglas runabout ..... $595 Save $$$ at Buchanans' 9449 Highland Rd. 4' BOAT, 60 HORSEPOWER Scott, all controls. Little Dude trailer, complete units. $300 or best offer. 335-7890. 4' SWITZERCRAFT, BOAT, motor and trailer. Sharp. 335-4797 any time._________________________ 14' GLASTRON, 75 h.p. Scott engine, Alloy trailer, exc. condition# $885. 662-7108. 4' CHAMPION CRUISER# Mercury, trailer. $250. 334-1335. I' GLASTRON FIBERGLAS, windshield, front controls, trailer# 25 H.P. Johnson. 363-0081, Dealer. 15'11" THOMPSON LAPSTRAKE, 50 h.p. Evinrude, A|ax trailer, manyi extras. Completely refinished, exc. condition. Best offer takes. 651-5088. Chrysler Boats 1967 Chrysler Inboard AND Outboard DEMONSTRATORS At Terrific Savings Birmingham Chrysler-Ploymouth 2100 W. Maple Rd.# Troy 642-7000 SAILBOAT 19' FIBERGLAS, Flying Scot, No. 212, 647-0211. _ SEE GLASSPAk popular G-3 ski boat for 1968. It's wider, deeper, longer, sharper than ever. Rated for 90 h.p. Choose from the following used boats; 14' Duo, 14' Owen's, 15' Empire, 15' Steury. All fiberglass. 17' Winner, 16' Dumphy in wood 14' Aqua Swan In aluminum. Coma out and see why everybody loves our Ray Greene Rascal Sailtx>at. It's in the water and easy to sail. Glasspar, Steury, GW-Invadir, Mlrocraft boats, Grumman canoes, Kayot and Dolphin's pontoons. Evinruda motors, Pamco trailers. Take M-59 to W. Highland. Right to Hickory Rldga Rd. to Demode Rd. Left and folldw signs to DAWSON'S SALES AT TIPSICO LAKE. 629-2179. ALWAYS BUYING JUNK CARS and scrap, we tow. FC 5-0201 COPPER - BRASS; RADIATORS— starters and generators, C. Dlx* son, OR 3-5849. _______________ WANTED: JUNK AND wracked cars. Top prices. Free towing anytime. FE 5-9044, USED 15' SEA-RAY Runabout with 75 horsepower Scott. A bargain at $895. 1968 14' Glasspar flberglas runabout, windshield, steering, lights, lounge seats, 5 yr. warranty, $445. Our Ray Greene Rascal Is in the water and ready to sail. This 14' beauty has a tjeam and carries 127 sq. ft. of sail. Other models availabla from 10-foot. Glasspar, St e u r y , GW-Invader, Mlrocraft boats, Grumman canoes, Kayot and Dolphin's pontoons Evinruda motors, Pamco trailers Take M-59 to W. Highland. Right to Hickory Ridge Rd. to Demode Left and follow signs tc DAWSON'S SALES AT TIPSICO LAKE. 629-2179. Ilstd Auto-Truck Ports l02 1959 MERCURY FOR pern, aooc motor end transmission. 21 1 Chandler.____ I960 GERMAN FORD PARfS 682^2269, 4(1. 6 p.m:___ 1962 FORD 6 CYLINDER engine, transmission, rear and 835. 335 5275.______________'_________ 1963 FORD GALAXIE for parts. Wanted, 1957 T-BIrd. 651-S487. 1964 IMPALA 2 DR. All or parts. 335-5959 after 6 p.m.________ 1966 389 GTO ENGINE, rebuilt complete. New trl-power. No. 7 cam. Lifters. Heads. Reworked New rods, rings, mains, pump and polished, crank. 8350. 673-1708.__ A-1 TRUCK-AUTO anginas. Factory rebuilt, all makes. E-Z terms. MODERN ENGINES. 537-11)7.____ CHEVY PARTS, REASONABLE. FE 2-3345, ifl. 7 p.m. WRECKING 1959 Lincoln Capri for parts. FE 3-72)6. ____________ NBwandUfaJTw 103 .$300. 1960 CHEVY 5-YARD DUMP. 1964 Massey ' Ferguson tractor and loader. Reasonable. 780 Waterbury Rd., Highland. 887-4684. 1961 JEEP % TON, hubs, winch. $700 with winch, $500 without winch. 796-3340 or Box 152, Dryden. 1961 FORD Econollna Bus. 10 windows. 6 seats. Deluxe interior. Good running condition. FE 5-6957. 16' DURATECH ALUMINUM, 40 HP Evinrude, elec, starter and top 6 gal. gas tank complete. First $950. FE 8-3569 before 5 p.m. 16' GALSTRON DELUXE, steering, lights, seat, $395. Free electric 45 mercury motor and trailer Included. Must sell at once, moving 623-0346. I FIBERGLAS, MOTOR a n c trailer, like new, FE 4-5351. 17' CHRIS CRAFT with trailer. Lika new, 6 cyl.# 135 horsepower motor, only 300 hrs. New varnish Inside out. Bottom, copper bronze. Reas OR 3-2834. 18' SEA-RAY, 75 h.p., trailer, top, access. Bargain, $950. 391-2908 after 6 p.m.________________ 1967 305 CC HONDA Scrambler, chrome tenders, black frame, ailver tank, lust turned 1000 mi., $600, 626-5327. 1967 BSA 441 VICTOR Scrambler Metal flake paint. Like new. 2 helmets. 681-0644. 1967 TRIUMPH BONNEVILLE, excellent, low ml., lots of extras 682-9726. <9 1967 HARLEY-DAVISON Motorcycle, like new, $1800. Can be seen at 835 Melrose. FE 2-5694. 1967 HONDA, 450 CC, adult owned. Black leather leacket and 2 helmets. Call aft. 5 p.m. 752-3059. 1967 TRIUMPH DAYTONA, 500 CC, 1600 Miles, exc. condition, 651-1493. 1967 SUZUKL 2^000 miles' $525. 332-6559. 1967 HARLEY DAVIDSON, flee. glide, loaded, 1200 ml., 332-2755. 1967 SUZUKI 125CC, perfect condition wit|i helmet, carrier rack and straps, save $100, only $395. Ml 6-231L___ All 1968 Models NOW HERE!! BSA, TRIUMPH, HONDA NORTON, DUCAT I, AND MONTE SA ANDERSON SALES 8. SERVICE 1645 S. Telegraph _____FE 3-7102 y CHRIS CRAFT, 135 horsepower Inboard motor boat, newly refinished, trailer, skiing ’equipment included, reasonable, phone 517-546-9663 Howell. _ _18 FT. CHRIS CRAFT rebuilt engine, tandem trailer, beautiful condition, $1150, 674-0679. 23' 1966 PENN YAN sport cruiser with 2 berths forward 150 h.p, Chevy 1-0 Power tilt stern unit Used less than 30 hrs. Full canvas 9Va' beam $4500. Call 681-0130, Days or 623-1368 eves. 0' GALVANIZED STEEL dock, complete with 2 seats and ladder, wood decking, $450. 673-0349. 1958 30* CHRIS CRAFT Sea Skiff, fully equipped with twin 130's dinghy# ship to shore radio, snifter, depth finder, new upholstery, nautelex deck. Excellent Condition. Blue book price $5500. Ml 4-1945 evenings. 1964 OWEN'S FLAGSHIP Crusier, fully equipped, 1-357-2110 or 682-; 3057. ' 1968 — 17' SILVER LINE with 150 h.p. Chrysler’ I.O.# power tilt and trailer, $3395 complete. Kars Boats 8i Motors, 693-1600. ANNOUNCING THE NEW 1968 Hodaka 100 cc 5-SPEED TRAIL BIKE. The Bronco 50 cc 4-SPEED BIKE. MG SALES , 4667 Dixit Hwjfc# Drayton 7 673-6458 DAWSON'S SPECIAL 1968 2 0' Dolphin steel pontoon raft. Top, aluminum rail and trim. Steering and plastic covered deck, $775. 1968 24' Dolphin. Aluminum Pontoon raft. With same equipment plus mechanical steering. Front swin rail. Only $1095. See Glasspar's popular. G-3 Ski boat for 1968. It's wider, deeper, longer, sharper than ever and rated for a 90 h.p. Try sailing our Ray Greene Rascal sail boat. In the water and ready to go. Glasspar, steury, G-W Invader, Mtrrocraft boats, Grumman canoes, Kayot and Dolphin's pontoons, Evinruda motors and Pamco Trailers. Take M-59 to W. Highland. Right to Hickory Rldga Rd, to Demode Rd. l_eft and follow signs to DAWSON'S SALES AT TIPSICO LAKE. 629-2179.___________’ Do-lt*Yourself DOCKS Aluminum or Wood Larsen Boats Grumman Canoes HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS "Your Evinruda Dealar" 1899 S. Telegraph______332-8033 SEE OUR huga selection of tha world's finest boats and motors. Xhoosa from Grumman# Suvarllne# MFG, Glastron and Chryslar#j Chrysler outboards and Mercrulsar! motors. / USED BARGAINS 14' Century — 35 h.p. elec. Gale — lights, controls, battery, cover# $395 i' White House—35 h.p. elec. Gala ...................... $495 14' Fleetform-30 h.p. eiec. Johnson- alr buoy trailer ..........$595 V Shell Lake — 35 h.p. elec. Evinruda—Pamco trailer .... $595 15' Moulded Modern- 35 alec Johnson-traller ............$595 >' Scottie Craft-40 h.p. elec.- Johnson ................... $696 i' Borun-new top aft. side curtains- 75 h.p. Jxc- condition. 647-4305.___ _ 1966 JAGUAR XKE Roadster, sharp, stereo tape, chrome wire wheels/ Save a real bundle here. GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 Oakland Avenue 1966-1965-1964 Volkswagens Radio and heater, all reasonable GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 Oakland Avenue 1966 VW, $1295. $39 down, payments $10.92 week. Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500 Harold Turner Ford# Birmingham. 1967 OPEL KADETTE sport coupe'. Red and black, $1495. 442-9214. 1967 FIAT-ABARTH, roadster, marriage forces sale, make offer, 682-3945 or FE 8-4172. FORD PICK-UPS 1963 »/4 ton, $695. 1964 ‘/a ton, $795. 1965 Vi ton, $995. 1965 V* ton, $1095 1966 Va ton. Camper, $1595, 1968 Vi ton 4-wheel dr. $2295. Shuman Ford Sales Walled Lake ______________MA 4-4541 FOR SALE# 1952 pickup GMC also 1955 Ford pickup, 335-6408. 1965 CHEVY Vi-Ton Fleetside 8-Ft. With V-8, west coast mirrors, radio, fpotllght. Reduced to only— $995 RUN-ABOUT 14' AERO-CRAFT, H.P. Evanrude, trailer. $395, < 1193. SPECIAL 17' Glastron, 120 h.p. Mer Cruiser, Inboard-outdrlve. Alloy Tandem trailer. $3295 16' Carver, 75 h.p. Johnson Electromatlc Little Dude trailer. $1195. PONTIAC'S ONLY MERCURY MERC CRUISER DEALER CRUISE OUT INC. S3 E. Walton FE S-4J02 Hours: dally 9-8, Sat. 9-6, WALLED LAKE Closed Sun. John McAuliffe Ford 277 West Montcalm FE 5-410)_________________LI 3-2030 1965 CHEVY Vi Ton pickup, radio, heater, fleetside long - pox, one owner, low mileage, only $1195 BILL FOX’CHEVROLET Rochester________________651-7000 1965 FORD HEAVY DUTY Econ-o-van, $895 or best offer takes. FE 8-2610 or may see at 674 Stirling. 1966 CHEVY Vi ton pickup .....$1595! 1964 Ford Econoline van .....$695 1965 Chevy % ton utility ....$895 1962 Chevy ft ton pickup ....9495 TAYLOR Chevy-Olds Tony's Marine Service JOHNSON MOTORS Geneva GW Invader, Shell Lake,. Aerocraft alum, boats an.1 canoes.) Also pontoons. Terrific discounts 624-4501 KEEGO PONTIAC KEEGO HARBDR 682-3400____ 1968 VW, 1,000 MILES, like new, pvt. owner. 338-3612.________ 1968 TRIUMPH SPITFIRE. Rad convertible, $1,850. 3600 ml. 681-0487._____________________ DUNE BUGGIES $295 and up. Perry's Lawn and Garden Equipment, 7615 Highland Rd. (M-59 ) 673-6236. DUNE BUGGY PARTS AND ACCESSORIES FRAME SHORTENING BY BILLY DOYLE 5500 Elizabeth Lk. Rd. 682-9248 HILLMAN 1958 4-DOOR. Excellent engine. Little body work to put In. Top shape. A giveaway at $50. 646-6211.___ MGB 1965, going Into service. UL 2- 1926.___________________ SUNBEAM TIGER S P O R Tl Roadster, 1965, Michelort tires, V-8 engine. Also 1963 Ford Fairrane _ hardtop. 634-8694. TRIUMPH 1968 MODEL G T - 6 # fastback coupe, red sacrifice. >2,595. FE 5-2864._________J "Michigan's Fastest Growing VW Dealer" OFFERS A FINE SELECTION OF 100 PER CENT WARRANTED USED CARS BillGolling VW Inc. ’ 1821 Maplelawn Blvd. Off Maple Road (15 Mile Rd.) ACROSS FROM BERZ AIRPORT Just South of Pontiac Ml 2-M00 1M6'/j CHEVY, 12,000 MILES, stick,iTroy 34 ton, pvt, owner. $1750. FE 2-6935. ---- 1967-FORD PICICUP. V-8. Sha7p. 394- 0180. >VW KARMANN GHIA‘5. 10 to choose Full selection of colors and 1967 Chevrolet on all 1M7 motors and boats. 2695! Pickup, S' box, heavy duty springs. Orchard Lake Rd., Sylvan Lake. re^2.n.?. . . . „ . _ ------------------------ GRIMALDI CAR CO. Airplane! 99 1947 PIPER SURER Cruiser, good condition, price reduced to $2200 for quick sale, 549-5098.__________ LAKE L-4 AMPHIBIAN, edrp. owned. Late 65, 500 hours, 2 omnis, ADF, TB, artificial horizon, gyro, compass, heater, etc. $21,500 can finance. Mr. C. Langs, Pontiac, Mich. 332-9251. Wanfed Cars-Trucks 101 A LATE MODEL CAR wanted, with damaged or major mechanical problems. 1963 and up. OR 3-5200 H. & J. Auto Salen. BUICKS, CHEVY'S, PONTIACS, and more. H. G. Van Welt, OR 3-1355 — top pay for nice cars. MODEL, EXTRA Dollars Paid FOR THAT i EXTRA Sharp Car Especially 4 speeds and corvettes. "Check the rest then get the best" at Averill's •E 2-9878 2020 Dlxla FE 4-6894 Mansfield AUTO SALES 300 Sharp Cadillacs, Pontiac, Olds and BuIcks for out-of-state market. Top dollar paid. MANSFIELD AUTO SALES 1104 Baldwin Ave^ J' :E 5-5900 Pi 8-8825 900 Oakland Avenue 1967 FORD EC0N0LINE Catering Truck Only 6,000 miles, like new, |ust take over payments of $59.75 per month. Suburban Olds STOP HERE LAST M&M LARGE AUCTION. SALE consisting of Antiques, Household goods, farm ,-,#»#*' # - and garden equip., sat , June is» 1968 Starcraft Campers at 10 a.m., located 2V* miles N. qf r Metamora, to 2911 Metamora Rd.; rni iirr ir G.E, 14' deep freeze, chest type; 4 CRUISE OUT, INC. Mehagony1'bedroom*’ suite;P cL«!» E. W.llon ..Del.ty 9-4 FE g-4402 'lounge; plus other household goods; large amount of Antiques; Jewelry Wagon. 1st National Bank of Lapeer, Clerk Mr. apd Mrs. Ralph Newton. Proprietor, Bud Hlckmont, General Auctioneer, Oxford, 628-2159. AIRSTREAM LIGHTWEIGHT TRAVEL TRAILERS Since 1932 Guaranteed for I j f e. See them and get a demonstration at Warner Trailer Sales, 3098 W. Huron (plan to join one of Wally Byanvs exciting caravans). NEW 2 Bedroom 60x12 With 17 ft. Living Room F urn I shed—Delivered Ready to move In today I $4,795.84 Includes Sales Tax—Insurance Plus HOneymoon Specials Drive Out—See—Only $79.07 Monthly PEERLESS MOBTlE HOMES 13318 Dixit Hyvy., Holly 4 mllei S. of Grand Blanc FIBERLASS CANOES at low el *169 (Inhere, cQHO FISHING Headquerteri, transmission. Rupp Mini bikes everything you need Including ssn-rnD caicc from $144.30. Take M-59 to W. j boats, rods, reels, belt, etc., Now- MU I UK bALbl Highland. Right to Hickory RIdfle *t one location. Now at our new' location - - .---- _. —, Rd. to Demode Rd. left and follow' c - . W# oav more for sharp, late mod- 9°°d tires end bedy, new battery,'per Afll |CUtr» Afl AIM IA/C signs to DAWSON'S SALES AT OAKLAND COUNTY'S o I d • 19 > c*rs. Corvettes needed. *150, Holly, 634-4312 or 634-4325. CalMDLIjntU AUAIIN. Wt TIPSICO LAKE. Phono 629-2179. .Tn^.nTX^Ts Tn 5^:kV*'I "50 Ookland at Viaduct 1964 vW, GOOD CONDITION “ HAVE OVER 80 CARS THAT HARLEY DAVIDSON, 2 KlECMETS, | 80 USM 005 K ■ 33S-926I „ , _____; SM5.____ „ FE 5 0359 fail op b| IDfU A CCH tA/ITLI L,'jra,her tac,<*,s' and panfs.332- CORRECT CRAFT, 9 ’Models madeTOp .* 'FOR .CLEAN CABS OR; 1964 VW. Good Shape* - LAIN DC rUKLMAitU. WIIH GMC Factory Branch * OAKLAND AT CASS _________FE 5-9485_ FORD 3A TON 4 wheel drive with light camper, 44,000 ml., exc. con- dltlon, $995. 642-9854._ GMC 2 TON 1957, good motor and tires, make us an offer. 715 Auburn Ava. FE 2-0252. MILITARY DODGE POWER WAGON, new engine, winch, 7ft' Western snow Plow. 673-6170. SALE BUY NEW 1968 4 Wheel Drive FORD TRUCKS AT VVHOLESALE PRICES 12 to Choose From JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 277 West Montcalm FE Midi LI 3-2030 SPRAY TRUCK (mist blowor) mounted for trees and mosquitoes. FE 5-3005. Foreign Can 10S 1959 RED SIMCA ARONDE. Radio, white walls. Runs wall. $235. 647* Mercedes, Autobahn Authorized VW Dealer ft mile North of Miracle Mila 1765 S. Telegraph FE 8 7Q vw CENTER 85 To Choose From —All Models— —All Colors— v —Reconditioned— Autobahn Motors Inc. Authorized VW Dealer ft mile north of Miracle Mile 1765 S Telegraph T E 8-4531 WHITE 1960 AUSTIN HEAL Y _______, F E 2-3568 New and Used Can 106 Need a Car? New in the area? Repossessed?—Garnisheed? Been Bankrupt?-Divorced? Got a Pr6olem? Call Mr. White At King 681-0802 1295. 898-6542# Royal Oak. i I D—15 ______________________________THE PONTIAC i'KKSS, THURSDAY, MAY 80, 19HH_________________________ Ntvw and Ui«d C«ri 106 New and Used Cart 106 Niw and Uiod Car* 106 Naw and Utid Car* 106 Naw and (had Car* 106 Naw and U**d Car* 106 N*w and Uud Car* \106iN*w and Us*d Car* 106|N*w and Uud Car* 106 lc SALE BUY A NEW 1968 American 2-Door Sedan for $1888 AND HAVE YOUR CHOICE OF Automatic Transmission or Radio for lc NOW AT Village Rambler 666 S. Woodward Birmingham 646-3900 f*MBV*LLt STATION wego„, WV 442-9114. 1964 CHEVY Biscayne - W-'WW.I* v v t i muni •UIU'MII whit* with green Interior, Sherpl r $795 S** Ihli solo at our n*w location Maplo Rd. (is Milt) iVj miles ot W AL HAN0UTE Chevrolet •uick On M24 in Lok* Orion MY 2-2411 BANKRUPT? BAD CREDIT? REPOSSESSION? of Woodward BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth blue with matching Intarior Mint condition — Spring special only Slitt full, price. Just III! down and 143.35 per month. Big trade allowance. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 1,44 CHEVY MALIBU - 2 ■ DOOR 430 Oakland Avanu* FE 5-4101 hardtop,, only \ tlOM, WhaatonIimaIcoRVAIR MQN1a~. auto * 424T«r ,ymou'h' W,1"*a J 1044 CHEVROLEt-STATION wagon, td^VIWa. MIN. ,“iindirv.u»om«k'V.4nam'}Sut1 Standard Auto radio and heater, beautiful tllvar vs. auto., power fleering and I brakes, power rear window, roof reck Best offer 612*5619. 1964 CHEVY li six cylinders, stan-A very sharp Autobahn Motors Inc. Authorized vw Dealer '2 mile Norlh ol Mirada Mil* 1145 S. Telegraph_____ FE 0-4531 1944 CHEVELLE CLUB Coupe, S795l 391-2151_ 1966 SS 396 CHEVELLE 4 speed posl-treck. AM-FM reverb. Power steering, wire wheals, attar 5.30, 628-4523._ 1966 CORVETTE Convertible Red — 427 — 4 speed Brand Naw Conditlonl 13595 VAty CAMP CHEVROLET INC Milford 1-1025 r 1962 BUICK CONVERTIBl F, 625-4331 [?64 BUICK VISTA Wegon, S1295. $39 , down, payments $10 92 week. Call — Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold! 1965 CHEVY MALIBOU super sport. | 327' cu. in. 350 HP. 4 speed. Con* down, payments $6.44 Week. Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4*7500. Harold *urn?f Ford, Birmingham. CORVAIR MONZA, 1964, HARDTOP-, 47,000 miles, auto., >600. 673-2246. 1964 CHEVELLE 4-DOOR, $795T"0" down, payments $6.44 week. Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold Turntr Fprd, Birmingham.___ 1965 Chevelle fuper sport, 4 speed, 327 angina, sharp and ready, Reasonable. GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 Oakland Avenue 1966 CHEVY impale Convertible with V8, automatic, power steer Ing, radio, whitewalls, marina blue finish, black vinyl top. Only $1995 Matthews- Hargreaves four Turner Ford, Birmingham 1964 BUICK ELECTRA 2 d o or hardtop. Exc. condition. Full power. 36,000 actual mi. FE 4-4373. 245_Nelson._____ ______ t965 BUICK WILDCAT. 4 door. Double power. Low mieage. Very clean. FE 2-722$. __ 1965 BUICK GRAN SPORT, $1495. $39 down, payments $12.88 week. Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold Turner Ford, Birmingham. 1965 BUICK Skylark, 2-door, with automatic, radio, power steering, beautiful metallic aqua finish, with matching Interior. Spring special only $1068 full price, |usf >88 down, and $44.23 per month. BIG TRADE ALLOWANCE! JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 630 Oakland Ave. _______1sE 5-4101 1965 BUICK ELECTRA convertible, red with white top, low mileage, 1 owner, exc. condition, $1950 firm, 851-1151.___ {965 BUICK 400 LeSabre, 2-door vinyl hardtop, all power equip ment. $1500. 332-1892. [967 BUICK LESABRE, 2 hardtop, fully equipped, mIleagc, private EM 3-7441. 1967 BUICK Skylark four door sedan, automatic* power steering brakes. 6000 actual miles. $2488 door 1965 CORVAIR MONZA' convertible, 4 speed, exc., condition $795. call i 62*2677. 1965 CHEVY Impala Convertible,! With V8, automatic, power steer-1 ing, radio, heater, whitewalls, $95 j down. Finance balance of only $1150. Oakland CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 714 Oakland Ave, FE 5-9436. 1965 CHEVY BEL AIR. 4-door, V-«, automatic transmission, radio, heater, power steering. Beauliul burgundy with matching Intarior. Compare this value with any In town. Spring' special only (908 lull price, lust (88 down and (39.81 per month. . JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 630 Oakland Ave. 11FE 5-4101 1965 CHEVROLET payments $9.88 week. Call Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold Turner . Ford, Birmingham. 1965 CHEVY BISCAYNE dard, 631 Oakland Ave. FE 4-4547 TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1967 CHEVROLET Caprice door hardtop. V-8* automatic, power steering, brakes, windows, factory air, radio, heater, white walls. White with black vinyl top New car trade. $2695. ___75 TO CHOOSE FROM 1967 CHEVROLET- CAPR4CE, 4 door hardtop, V-8, Caprice cream and gold, exc. condition, low price MIJ-2630. 1967 CHEVY IMPALA convertible 396, full power, yellow with black top, exc., 334-3512 daytime. Ml 7-2360 after 4 PM. 1967 CAMERO, VERY nice, V8, automatic, radio, 682-9366. ’ 1967 BISCAYNE Station Wagon V8, automatic, power steering, luggage racks, radio, haater, whitewalls, marina blua finish. $2595 109 E. Blvd. (S.) FE 8-4033 1961 FORD 7 DOOR, RUNS nlc*. (135. (ay* Aula. FE 5-3371. 1961 FORD FAXcoN aik cylinders Pretty Ponies 1965 ond 1966 MUSTANGS MANY TO CHOOSE FROM Priced from $1295 As Low os $39 Down HAROLD TURNER Autobahn Motprs Inc. Authorized VW DKealer Vi mile North of Mlrgcle Mila 1765 I. Telegraph___. _FE $-4531 1961 FALCON 2-door, $295. $0 down, payments $3.18 week, call Mr* Petits, Ml 4-7500. Harold Turner Fowl, Birmingham.____ 1961 THUNDERBIRD BLACK beauty, ell power, $545. 549-2076, after 6. 1963 FORD STATIGITWaGON, 1477. $0 down, payments $4-42 week. Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. H»ro.d Jurn#r Ford, Birmingham; _ 1962 FALCON 4-door $345. $0 down, payments $3.88 week. Call Mr Perks, Ml 4-750C, Harold Turner _ Ford, BJrmlnghtm. 1963 FORD'cOUSTRY SquIra ilatTon wagon, $375. "0" down, paymants $4.42 week. Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold Turner Ford, Birmingham. '________________ 1962 FORD FALCON si* cylinders. ................ mi. Standard transmission. Autobahn 1962 MERCURY 9 passenger wagon, 1395. Cell Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold Turner Ford, Birmingham. 1963 MITKcCJRt 4 DOOR hardtop, double power, ipeed-O-ttert* $600. After 5 p.m., 398-3295. 1964 MERCURY SEDAN. $795. ''0" down, peymonts $5.8$ week. Cal Mr. Pern s, Ml 4-7500. Harol Turner Ford, Birmingham. powei $150. FORD, INC., 464 S. WOODWARD AVE BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-7500 1966 FORD COUNTRY SoulreV passenger wagon. Beautiful candy apple red with ell vinyl Interior, v* • euto. transmission, radio and haatar, power steering and brakes. Spring special only $221$ full price, lust $111 down and $75.15 per mo. warranty. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 630 Oakland_Av*. FE 5-4101 1966~>ORO CONVERTIBLE, (1595. (39 down, payment* (14.44 week. Cell Mr. Farka, Ml 4-7500. Harold Turnar Ford, Birmingham. 1966 & 1967 Mustangs M14-9165^ _ 1965 MERCURY^ SKY BLUE Sedan, like new Inside and out. $1,250. 338-8403 aftar 4:30 p.m,____ 1965 MERCURY 4-door, dark metallic green, factory air, power steering and brakas, automatic, $1395 or bast offar.jM6-1650. 1966 COMET 2 DOOR Sport Coup#. 6 stick. Red end black. Runs good $795. OR 3-5200. H. I. H. Auto tales. 1966 MERCURY -COME.T wagon power stterlng, V-8, auto. 674-0281. 1966 MERCURY 855 Convertible, TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1967 OLDS "91" tour door hardtop. Full power, air conditioning, radio, heater, whitewalls. One owner, very low mftleage. New car trade. Still undar warranty. Gold finish with black vinyl roof, crulsa control. $#95. 1964 CATALINA, 4-DOOft hardtop, exc. condition, OR 3-2247/ 1965 CATALINA VENTURA * door , W(| 1967 Firebird TOM RADEMACHER 75 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM 1967 OLDS CUTLASS, 4 door hardtop, V-l auto., double power, AM-FM radio, vinyl interior, exc., $2150. Ml 4 3651. CHEVY-OLDS 1965 PONTIAC Catalina 2 door hardtop. Automatic, power steering and brakas, radio, h a a t a r, whitewalls. Maroon with black Interior. New car trade, one owne^. $1495. 1967 0LDSM0BILE Delmont 2-door hardtop. Holiday 75 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM rand prbe $1495. 394-0161. 1965 VENfURA convertible $1695 coupe andUt li'’juirilka" brl^S |'*‘* * »'■ ,u" pow*r',*>[, new and priced only $2795 DQWNEY Automatic and sticks, ’alt are very1 reasonable. GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 Oakland Avenue adio, heater, power steering, brakes, best buy today at only $158$. Full price, lust $10$ down, and $50.51 per month. BIG TRADE ALLOWANCE I JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 1(30 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 Oldsmobile, Inc. S50 Oakland Avenue 2-8101 FE hardtop .... \ $1695 1966 Catalina 4 door sedan $1595 1966 Chevy Impala convertible $1550 1966 Bulck 4 door • • 61525 1966 Mustang convertible . 1965 Chevy 9 pass, wagon 1964 Catalina 4 dr hardtop 1964 CMC Value Van 1963 Ford wagon . . 1964 Olds F-85 1962 Buitk Spec. 9 pass. 50,000 mite warranty# automatic, power staarlrm ana power disc brakes. Cordovan top, truly beautiful car. Save a bundle. GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 Oakland Avenue 1*67 CATALINA 3 DOOR, 0IM, 435-MU. 1*67 PONTIAC CATALINA 3-dr. hardtop, low mileage, private conoltle Spotless condition. Vinyl fop, "Gold Bronze, redid, heater, hydrametlc. Power steering/ brakes, whitewalls. 647*3462. $1195' $ 850 $ 695 S 595 $ 595 $ 550 $ 495 1967 LeMans Sports Coupa i with 325 engine, buckets# redid# healer, whitewalls# India Ivory finish. Only — S2295 Matthews- Hargreaves 631 Oak land Ave. FE 4-4547 1967 Chevrolet $1095. $39 down, camaro, 327 V-8 engine, automatic, and! VANDEPUTTE BUICK-0PEL lc SALE JEROME CADILLAC CO. 1980 Wide Track Dr. F BUY A NEW 1968 American 2-Door Sedan for $1888 radio and heater, a 1 owner new car trade in. GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 Oakland Avenue Over 1968 CAMARO, TAKE payments. 685-1641. 1968 ' (IdRVETfE CONVERTIBLE, silver with black top, 3 2 7 horsepower, 6 speed posi-trac. 651- 3940._______i___________________ f968 CORVETTE, convertible, many extras, 682-9366. ________ 1951 CADILLAC 4 door, blue, radio, heater, auto, clean, runs well. Onlyj $395. 332-1385. 1959~CADIL L A C * VERY clean, best AND HAVE YOUR CHOICE OF Roches!er_,,_L offer over $350. 2-2334 or Ml 6- A , Automatic 1968 CHEVELLE Malibu Coupe, SS 396 engine, with hydrametlc, power steering, brakes, vinyl roof, factory official car, only 4,000 miles. Factory warranty. Discounted over $800 Motors Inc. Authorized VW Dealer ; > ? mile North of Miracle Mile 1765 S. Telegraph FE 8-4531 1962 FORD GALAXIE 500, excellent condition. $525. calf_MA 6-7162. 1962'FORD 5EDAN, $444'. $0 dVwn, payments $4.42 week. Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold r irner Ford, Birmingham.___ 1963 FORD 2 DOOR, V-6 like new. FE 8-7828 after 11 a m. or 674 1288 mornings. 1 owner; 1963 FORD~FAIRLANE wagon, "runs well, very dean, $550, 682-8690 1963 FORD FAIR LANE station wagon, with automatic, radio, heater, like new, beautiful silver blue with blue vinyl interior. Spring Special only — $688. Full price, lust $88 down, $26.56 per month. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 630 OaklandjAve^_______ FEJ^IOl 1963 FORD GALAXIE good con-dition. $475. 623-0953. 1963 FORD HARDTOP, $695. $0 down, payments $6.92 week. Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold! Turner Ford, Birmingham. _ 1963 FORD "GALAXIE 2 door, V8,j radio, heater, all vinyl interior,! spring special only $388 full price. No Money Down. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 630 Oakland Ave.________FE 5-4101 1963 FALCON WAGON, $595. "0" down, payments $5.44 week. Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold! Turner Fgrd* Birmingham 1966 FORD 2-DOOR, $1088. $39 down, payments $9.46 week. Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold Turner Ford, Birmingham. t 1966 FORD STATION jp a g on, automatic transmission, radio, heater. Be ready for fun in the sun. Spring special orlly ,S1688 full price. Just $88 down and $57.80 per month. This car carries a 5-year or 50,000 mile new car warranty. . JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 630 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 1966 FORD HARDTOP, $795. $39 down, payments $6.65 week. Cali Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold Turner Ford, Birmingham. 1966 FORD Fairlane 500 Convertible with V8, automatic, radio, whitewalls, tropical t u r q u o I s • finish. Only— «> $1795 J966 MERCURY COLONY Park, $2195. $39 down, payments $16.88 week. Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500.. Harold Turner Ford, Birmingham.- 1967 0LDM0BILE fine ca Luxury sedan, this everything from Factory air ditloning to power door locks price only $3695. KEEG0 PONTIAC KFEGO HARBOR Matthews- Hargreaves 631 Oakland Ave. FE 4:4347 PONTIAC 4 DOOR- sedan. DOWNEY 965 PONTIAC 9 PASSENGER Sta lion Wagon. Powar steering and brakes. T owner. Very good condition. 644-0123. 682 3400 1967 Municipal car. Can be purchased with no money down Matthews- Hargreaves ___6IH Oakland Ave. FE 4-4547 _ 1966 MUSTANG 2 plus 2 fastback; 8 cylinders, automatic, low mileage trade in, top condition. $1788 1937 NASH 4-DOOR aadan, original beauty, best offer over $400. 363- _m_____________________________ 1959 OLDS"98 4 door celebrity', radio, , heater, double power, factory air, Arizona car, exc. body and running conditioned. Make offer. 49 EH Tennyson. 1962 OLDSMOBIL E CON V E R T IB L E, $595. "0" down, payments' $5.44 week. Call Mr. Parks Ml 4-7500. Harold Tukner_ Ford, Birmingham. OLDS-1941, ANTIQUE, mint' condition, collectors delight 52000 original mi. 651-8786. 1963 OLDS F-85 Cutlass convertible, with V8, automatic, radio, heater,1 power steering, brakes, wonderful! second car, perfect for the ladies, spring special only $888 full price, lust $88 down, and $35.40 per month. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 630 Oakland Avt, ________FE 5-4101 1963 OLDS 4 DOOR HARDTOP, power and air-conditioning, $950. CaH_after 5 p.m., 682-7981. 1964 OLbSMOBILE F85 nardtop, $944. $0 down, payments $'.40 week. Call Mr. Parks, Ml - "»00. _ Harold Turner Ford, Birmingham. MtRR\ OLDS MO utAL Oldsmobile, Inc. Oakland Avenue FE 2-8101 1965 PONTIAC LeMans Convertible with V8, automatic, power steer ing, radio, heater, whitewalls. Fire engine red finish. Only- LUCKY AUTO 149$ Matthews- Hargreaves 1968 OLDS 442, JADE Green, black 631 Oakland Ave. FE 4-4547 tinted windows, f u I 111965 PONTIAC GTO hardtop, V-8, 4- power, AM-FM. $3150. 642-9395. 19.63 VALIANT V-200 4-door Oakland CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 724 Oakland Ave. __^ FE 5-9436 „0" speed transmission, radio, heater Beautiful candy apple red with white bucket seats. Sharp as a tack. Spring special only $1588 full price Just $188 down and $61.91 per mdhth. Big Trade Allowance. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 630 Oakland Ave. _ _ FE 5-4101 1956 PONTIAC STARCHIEF, exc. condition. $350. 852-4667. WE FINANCE Must Be Working Steady Have Down Payrt*nt< - 1963 Cadillac, Coup# Devilla, loaded. 1963 Cadillac Convertible, power 1963 Pontiac Tempest, automatic 1963 Rambler Classic, Automatic 1964 Oldsmobile, 88 4-door hardtop 1964 Olds, Cytless Convertible, 1965 Plymouth V-8, 2 door hardtop# 1965 Mustang 2 plus 2, fastback 1964 VW 2-door, radio, heater. GRIMALDI CAR CO. 906 Oakland Avenue AT MERRY OLDSMOBILE i7t N. Wain ROCHFSTtR, MICHIGAN 19(4 GALAXIE XL Hardtop. (945. (0 down, payments of $8.83 week. Cad Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold Turner Ford, Birmingham. 6102 or^ 646-0999, Aik for Dennis i960 CADILLAC convertible, motor! needs work, best offer. Sava Auto.,' FE 5-3278. _ 1962 ; CADILLAC CONVERTIBLE, Very good condition. $975. No| dealers, please. MY 3-2774.__ 1963 CADILLAC Convertible Black with a blact top, peartescent white inetrior, full power, many options. This car won't be her# long because it's priced at only: $1095 Sea this auto at our new location on Mapla 'Rd. (19 Mile) IVa miles East of Woodward. BILL FOX CHEVROLET ___651j7000 ttfAVE MONEY A1 MIKE SAVOIE CHEVY, 1900 W. MaPle, Ml 4-2735. Transmission or Radio for lc BIRMINGHAM) Chrysler-Plymouth I 1963 CADILLAC CINVERTIBLE, lull power, new transmission, engine paint job. Call 673-9680. 1964 CADILLAC SEDAN DeVILLE. Low mileage, sharp. Full power, air conditioning. Priced to sell. Call 363-6431 after 6:30 p.m._ 1965 CAD IL L AC, 4 door. fttull NOW AT Village Rambler’ 666 S. Woodward Birmingham 646-3900 1965 Chevy _ 1657. ' ’__ CHEVyT wften you buy it let] MARKET TIRE give It a frea safety check. 2635 Orchard Lake Rd. Kecgo._______ Save money at mike savoie CHEVY. 1900 W. Maple, Ml 4-2753. I960 CHEVY CLUB COUPE', $288. "0" down, payments $2.88 week Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold Turner Ford, BIrmingham. 1960 CHEVY 2 DOOR, hardtop, excellent. 2nd car. Economy Cars — 2335 Dixie. FE 4-2131. 6-Passenger Wagon 6 cyl., automatic, radio, heater, red with matching interior, Only — $1395 Beattie Ford "Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD 623-0900 1965 CORVAIR 4 DOOR hardtop, automatic, In excellent condition. RONEY'S AUTO, 131 Baldwin, FE 4-4909. CLEARANCE OF ALL makes of used cars — any re asonable offer' accepfed. ECONOMY CARS, 23351 DIXIE, FE_4-2131.__ [962 CHEVY H 4-DOOR, $595. V0" down, payments $5.44 week. Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold! Turner Ford/ Birmlngnam.__ 1962~CHEVY BEL AIR, real nice 682-9223, Riggins, dealer. cylinder, sitek premium tires, ranty. $995. 100 per cent war Autobahn full 1962 CQRVAIR 4-DOOR, $149 price. Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold Turner Ford, Birmingham. . 1962 CHEVY ' 2-door coupe, V-8, 3-speed $395 Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Sales 1950 W. Maple_ Ml 6-2500 1962 CHEVY ,'AUTOMATIC, bean wrecked. Will sell cheap. FE 8-1723. 1962-CORVAIR BLACK b e a u t y automatic $445. 549-2876, after 6. 1962 'CHEVY SUPER SPORT, burgundy with black top Motors Inc. Authorized VW Dealer Vg mile North of Miracle Mile 1765 S. Teteqraph_______. FE 8-4531 1965 CORVAIR, $795. $39 down, payments $6.65 week. Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold Turner Ford, Birmingham. .. »________ [965 CHEVROLET BEL AIR, 4 door, power steering, whitewalls, exc, condition. Must see to appreciate. Best offer. 338-1285.____________ *• 1965 IMPALA Sport Coupe with V8, power steering, radio, heater, Honduras Maroon finish, Only 1 $1595 Matthews- Hargreaves automatic, power steering, power brakes, like new. RONEY'S AUTO, 1131 Baldwin, FE 4-4909. [962 CHEVY II 4-dr. $395. $0 down, payments $4.62 week. Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold turner Ford, Birmingham------ SAVE MONEY AT MIKE SAVOIE CHEVV, 1900 W. Maple, Ml 4-2753. 1963 CHEVY STATION wagon, $792. "0" down, payments $6.62 week. Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold Turner Ford, Birmingham. *1963 CHE VY IMPALA convertible, double power, standard shift, Mahogany with white t o p. MILOSCH CHRYSLER -PLYMOUTH. 677 M-24, lake Orion. MY 2-7041. 1963 CHEVY IMPALA convertible, V-8, auto., pow(*f steering and brakes, good shape. $625. EM 3-0712. 1965 CHEVY Impala Convertible With V8, automatic, power steering, radio, whitewalls, turquoise finish, white top. $1595 631 Oakland Ave. FE 4-4547^__ TOM .RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS, „ 1963 CORVAIR Monia lour floor hardtop. Automatic, radio, heater. Ideal famhy or second car. $1095. 75 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM_______ 1965 CAPRICE Sport Sedan with V8, automatic# power steering, brakes, factory air conditioning, butternut finish, black vinyl lop. $1895 HAHN CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH RAMBLER AND JEEP 6673 Dixie Hwy. (M-15), Clarkston MA 5-2635 1963 IMPERIAL 4-Door hardtop, a black beauty with full power. Specially priced for a short tima only. $795 Sec this auto at our naw location on Maple Rd. (15 Mila) IVa miles East ot-Woodward. _—**1 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth 1964 FORD 500 Galaxla convertible with 4-way power, black beauty, white interior, $1295. Wheaton Chrysler-Plymouth, Welled Lake, 624-3192. 1964 FAIRLANE STATION Wagon, $795. "0" down, payments $6.44 week. Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4 7500. Harold Turner Ford, Blrm Ingham. ■ 1964 FORD GALAXIE. 2-door hardtop, V-8. 693-1312._ 1964 FORD Galaxie 500 convertible with V8, automatic, power steering, brakes, striking blue with blue top. Low mjleage. One owner. Only $995 VANDEPUTTE BUICK-OPEL 1964‘’Old's 98 This Is a sharp 4-door hardtop v.ith full power and factory air conditioning. Come in and see this ahe today if you are serious aboJ buying a good used car. $1395 196-210 Orchard Lake Rfl. FE 2-9165 1966 MUSTANG HARDTOP, beautiful Arctic while with black bucket seats. Spring special only (1408 full price. Just (88 down and (50.58 per month. This car carries a 5-year 1^^. . L—.. .nr^rYKt I it /--l or 50,000 mile new car warranty. O LUJUI JJU.11 JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 630 Oakland Ave._______FE 5-4101 Mustangs 2 to choose from V-8 — 6 Cylinder Automatic — Power Radio — Whitewalls 100 per cent Warranted Save Autobahn 1965 OLDS Cutlass Convertible Burgundy with a black tpp and matching Interior, V-8 automatic, power steering, radio, heater. $1495 See this auto at our riew location on Maple Rd. (15 Mile) IVa miles East of Woodward. BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth staTion 964 VALIANT 2i£>OOR, $595 down, payments $5.92 week. Cali Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold Turner Ford, Birmingham. 1965 PLYMOUTH station wagon, with V-8, spring special only $988 full price, |ust $88 down and $39.81 per month. BIG TRADE ALLOWANCE! JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 630 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 965 PLYMOUTH FURY I with V8, automatic, radio, heater, power steering, beautiful condition, silver blue with matching interior, spring special only — $1088 Tull price 1965 Pontiac Bonneville 4-Door SURE BEATS WALKINGl Good Cars—Low Prices Hardtop, with automatic, power steering, brakes, factory air conditioning, Only $1795 Beattie Ford 1961 FORD Country Sedan Wagon Only $495 Your FORD DEALER Sine# 1930" down, and $44.23 per ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD month. A9^-flQnO BIG TRADE ALLOWANCE 040 U7UU JM PONTIAC 4 lS Soiult'TS!#^ 1963 MONZA 4 spaed ........ 1965 FORD Van 1961 GMC Pickup .. 1966 IMPALA 2 door hardtop 1967 CHEVY Bltcayna 4 door 196$ CHEVY Va ton.......... 1964 DODGE 3/4t-on, 4 speed ' 1966 Catalina 682 5173 JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 630 Oakland Ave. _______FE 5-4101; 19$6 PLYMOUTH 2-DOOR, $1195. $39 down, payments $10.92 week Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4*7500. Harold Turner Ford, BirmIngham.__ 1966 PLYMOUTH FURY $1,395. $39 down, payments $11.92 week. Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold Turner Ford, Birmingham. 1967 PLYMOUTH FURY' sedan, $1895. $39 down, payments $14.92 week. Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold Turner Ford, Birmingham. PONTIAC: When you buy it let 631 Oakland Ave MARKET TIRE give It a free safety check. 2635 Orchard Lake Rd., Keeqo.______1_._ 1959 PONTIAC convertible . $75 ; Dealer 338-9238.____________ 1960 PONTIAC CATALINA, 4 door, double power, 682-5830, after 6 p.m. good .hap*, low mileage. i---------------------- 1967 Bel-Air 2 door 1966 PONTIAC 1964 MONZA, automatic GTO Sport Coupe 1963 FORD Galaxie 500 With 4 speed, double power, radio, heater, whitewalls, fire-engine red, white buckets. IT'S A MOVERII j $2195 air $ 499 $ 899 t 395 $1895 $1595 .$1499 $ 795 $ 795 $1495 $ 295 $1895 $ 795 $ 695 Matthews- Hargreaves Van Camp Chevrolet 2675* Milford Road, MIlford-684-1025 Motors Inc. Authorized VW Dealer 1965 OLDSMOBILE WAGON, $1365, $39 d o w n j payments $12.88 week. Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold Turner Ford, Birmingham. BILL FOX CHEVROLET ROCHESTER______________651-7000 1765 S. Telegraph 1964 FORD CUSTOM 2 door, transportation special Only $388 full price. No Money Down, See— JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 630 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 1965 OLDS 98 2-Door hardtop, full power. $1795 1964 FORD XL 4 door hardtop, with 390 automatic, power steering brakes, windows, $45 down. Finance balance of only ,$910 Oakland CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH power, bucket seat*, vinyl roof, A-l nt 0akland Ave._FE 5-9436 — TOM RADEMACHER Credit Problems? SEE US-WE CAN FINANCE Bankrupt — Receivership Just 21 Years of Age Been Divorced or Had a Repossession? Call Mr. Wyatt 1960 PONTIAC CATALINA. Completely rebuilt engine. Less than 3,000 mi. Good recapped tires. Good condition. Best otter. After 6 p.m., 651-3719 or 651-1718. 1961 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE, full power, 1966 AMPeg reverb amplifier. OR 4-3440._________ [962 PONTIAC Catalina 4 doer $350 Pearler 338-9238.______________ 1962 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX, full power. 334-7228.____________ 1962 PONTIAC, 2 DOOR. Tri-power, ^ i -I I posi-tract 4 speed. Newly rebuilt v-l 1 nl lrnPTTl ( 11 /H O motor. Call after 5 p.m. FE 2-6858. OUUUIUUIl aiUo 1962 BONNEVILLE, (550. BIRMINGHAM I _ 335-7909 __ . 635 S. Woodward______Ml 7-5111. it/,} PONTIAC CATALINA V-8, 1965 OLDS automatic transmission. Excellent 4-Door hardtop, powder blue with matching vinyl interior, V - 8 automatic, power steering, power brakes, radio, heater. $1495 See this auto at our new location on Maple Rd. (15 Mile) IVa miles East of Woodward lc SALE DE 4-4547! 1968 PONTIAC CATALINA a 2-door hardtop. Auto, transmission. Powar steering and brakas. Vsrdoro graan. 6800 ml. Attar 5, 651-1604. 1968 GRAND PRIX. Must Mil. Loaded, low ml. 334-7641. 196( PONTIAC La MANS, 7 door hardtop, 2-spead auto., full powar, AM-FM radio, stereo tap# deck, console, (2399. (47-5207._______ 1961 RAMBLER, (95. "0" down, payments, (1.56 weak. Call Mr. Parks. Ml 4-7500. Harold Turnar Ford, Birmingham. 1965 RAMBLER STATION wagon BUY A NEW 1 Ot~>n X • 11965 RAMBLER STATION wagon Hnrs A mpirir'rfn Classic, aqua and while, rack, J.C3UO nillgl ! reclining seats, (600. 682-5160. 2-Door Sedan far $1888 AND HAVE YOUR CHOICE OF transportation. SAVE Autobahn Automatic Transmission or Radio for RUSS JOHNSON condition. FE 8-1101. 1967 - 1968 CHRYSLER AND PLYMOUTH DEMONSTRATORS All Models Ready For Immediate Delivery Sale Priced Now At BIRMINGHAM Chrysler - Plymouth 2100 W. Maple Rd., Troy 642-7000 CHEVY-OLDS 1964 FORD Galaxie "500" XL convertible. V-(. automatic, power stearlng, tilt steering wheel, power windows, radio, heater, white walls, Maroon finish with black top, white bucket seats. (1095. 75 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM____ 1964 FORD 2-DOOR, (595. "0" down. Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold Turner Ford, Birmingham. 1964 FORD (-passenger, Stal'on Wagon, (995, (0 down, payments (8.92 week. Call Mr. Parks, Ml 7500. Harold Turner Ford, Birmingham,___________________________ 1964 T-Bird Full power* sharp* a new car trade, and a real right price. GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 Oakland Avenue 1965 CHRYSLER Newport 4-Door Hardtop* forest green with matching Interior, V-8 automatic# power steering* power brakes* brand new tires. $1395 See this auto at our new location on Maple Rd. (15 Mile) IVi miles East of Woodward. BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth 1966 CHRYSLER NEWPORT, 2 door hardtop, double power, new white wall tires* $1750* 335-6961._ CHRYSLErTnEW YORKER 1962, 4 dr. hardtop air conditioned* complete power Including windows and seat. 1 woman owner, $500. Call after 7. 642-4071. 1965 MUSTANG, VI transmission. Radio, after 5. 1965 T-BIRD CONVERTIBLE* air conditioned* double power* 1-owner. Full price $2*000. 682-5190. ~~~ 1965 FORD Galaxie 500 convertible, V8, automatic, radio, heater, power steering* black black black and black car. Black top* black Interior* whitewalls, be ready for spring — Only $148a. full price Just $188 and $57.49 per month. 50,000 mile or 5 year warranty available. OOHN McAULIFFE FORD 630 Oakland Ava._______FE 5-4101 1965 FALCON, 2 DOOR, sharp, 289 stick. 13 Lakeville, Oxford. OA 8- 3536. t_' V(______,________*3 1965 FORD CONVERTIBLE. Good condition, (1300 or best oiler. Ml 7-0732 "1965 MUSTANG 6 STICK, A-l condition, (1,000 or swap, FE 2-1779. 1965 FORD SQUIRE wagon, 10 passenger, low mileage, fun power. KESSLER'S Matthews- Hargreaves 631 Oeklehd Ave. FE 4-4547_ CHEVROLET 1965 BELAIRE, 4 door* fectory air, V-$* full power, new tires, 1 owner, $1345. 879-0732. Matthews- Hargreaves 63t Oakland AvtrR€-4*4547 _ M1963 CHEVY NOVA If, SS con vertlbla* auto., radio* snow tires* pine I. good COndl t)on, $625. 626-1494. 1963 BISCAYNE * ’■* 4 door sedan with V8* radio* heater* tropical turquoise* end Is Only — $895 1965 CORVETTE Convertible. Automatic* radio* nice condition. Only n $988 DODGE CARS AND TRUCKS Sales snd Servlet Oxford _______________OA (-1400 1965 " DODGE STATION WAGON, (1588. (39 down, payments (13.25 week. Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold Turnar Ford, Birmingham. 1965 DODGE PALARO 7 doer .. . condition, private party, after 5 p.m. during the week, 674-2315. 1965 Ford LID 4-4)oor Hardtop wth Vf* automatic, power steering, burgundy with black vinyl top* burgundy Interior. Only — $1595 65 DODGE PALARO 2 door I , t~i i hardtop. Standard transmission.! KorTltl^ r OTYl Price $1,000. See at 633 Glaspie: i. vi STANDARD AUTO 1304 Baldwjn__________FE 8-4521 1967-FORb Galaxie 500 4 door sedan, V8, automatic* power steering, radio, heater, low rrmwger -$T4* down. Finance balance of only $1850. Oakland CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH . 724 Oak land Ave.____ FE 5-9436 1967 MUSTANG GTA Beautiful heater, power steering, very low mileage, a new one is no nicer, spring special only — $2298 full price, lust $188 down, and $70.36 per month. Still Under new car warranty of 5 year or 50,000 miles. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 630 Oakland Ave.________FE S-4101 1967 FORD Ranchero Pickup with V8, automatic* radio, heater* whitewalls* s p a r k I I n g burgundy finish. ?• $2095 BIRMINGHAM! Chrysler-Plymouth 1965 OLDS CONVERTIBLE, $1595. $39 down, payments TTZIBB week. Call Mr. Parks* Ml 4-7500. Harold Turner Ford, BIrmjngham._ 1965 OLDS 98 CONVERTIBLE full power $1595. 451-4063, after 6 P.m. ____ condition, $1595. Includes sales tax* license transfer end title. LI 9-1698. ___________ 1965 OLDS power* aii good tires 98 CONVERTIBLE* ell conditioned* FM radio, $1795. 626-4727. ADKINS AUTO SALES 738 OAKLAND AVE. FE 2-6230 1963 Galaxie 500, 8 auto. Now . $575 1961 Chevy pickup, new tires $395 1961 Pontiac Starchief, only --$295 1960 Bonneville Convertible ....$295 _____ 1960 Ford Convertible, 8 auto $19511963 PONTIAC Motors Inc. Authorized VW Deafer Vj mile North of Miracle Mile 1765 S. Telegraph _______FE 8-4531 [962~PONTIAC V8 stick ... ." '$550. DeSler 338-9238._____________ ] 1962~TEMPEST LeMANS. Turquoise.. New whitewalls. Auto. 4 cyl. .-Radio:---Wtfe'r----carr--G o o d---- transportation._$375. 642-6751. 1962 PONT I AC C AT A LINA con-vertible, automatic, double power, Silver with Black " top. MILOSCH CHRYSLER - PLYMOUTH, 677 M-24, Lake Orion. MY 2-2041.___m 1963 PONTIAC CATALINA 2 door 1966 hardtop, auto., double power, light blue with blue bucket seats. MILOSCH CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH. 677 M-24, Lake Orion. MY 2-2041. 1963 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE, $695. "0" down* payments $5.72 week. Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold Turner Ford, Birmingham.____ 1963 TEMPEST convertible, 326 engine, automatic transmission, real sharp and in excellent con-ditioh* ^priced for quick sale. ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP, Unjon Lake, EM 3*4155. _________'__ AUTOMATIC, power lc PONTIAC-RAMBLER On M24 In Lak* Orton MY 3-6266 1966 AMBASSADOR . 4-door sadan. V-t automatic, powar •tearing, power brakaa. factory atr conditioning. A real sharp car. $1695 NOW AT Village Rambler 666 S. Woodward Birmingham Village Rambler 666 S. Woodward Birmingham 646-3900 646-3900 PONTIAC CATALINA 2 door hardtop. Exc. condition. $1850. MY 3-5511. GOi 1963 RAMBLER STATION wegon, It is extra clean, and priced for quick sale. ROSE RAAABLER-JEEP* Union Lake, EM^ 3^1155. _ 1964 RAMBLER CONVERTIBLE. Six cylinder, standard transmission* radio, new tires. Excellent condition. $695. Autobahn 75 Dealer 338 9238. Ith!l964" TEMPEST STATION "wagon, $1044. "0" down, payments ot $9.82 weetc. Call WIr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold Turner Ford, Birmingham. I 1964' GTO 3-speed, big engine $995 $5.o6 down $5.00 WEEK WE ARRANGE FINANCING . 1967 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX factory air, power windows, brakes, steering. AM-FM radio. Call aft. 6 p.m. Livonia, 261-R05. AUDETTE PONTIAC 1150 W. Mapl* Rd. Star Auto Xnrfi 1964 CATALINA, STICK SHIFT. Low -ir T mileage. Exc. condition. 682-4137. One 1964 TEMPEST STATION WAGON, $2295/ $944, $0 down, payments $8.82 : week. Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. 75 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM Harold Turner Ford, Birmingham. LUCKY AUTO I960 w. Wld* Track FE 4 1006 ____. _or________FE 3;7(5, 1961 MERCURY 2-DOOR, (95. "0" down, payments (1.56 wtak. Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold Turnar Ford, Birmingham. 19*1 COMET, V-0, 4 SPEED, axe. _ condition. 693-2863.__ 1961 . COMET. SIX CYLWbERS, automatic, transmission. Excellent transportation. $295. Autobahn engine with Crulse-O-Matic transmission. Must see to appreciate. PONTIAC RETAIL ♦STORE 65 UNIVERSITY FE 3-7951 Motors Inc; Authorized VW Dealer mile North of Miracle Mile 1765 S. Telegraph FE 8-4531 1961 MERCURY Convertible, beautiful red finish with matching Interior. Full price: $395 Standard Auto 3400 Elizabeth Ik. Rd. block W. of West Huron St.) 681 0004 Would You Believe .. ; a NEW 1968 CHRYSLER 4 DOOR for $2649°° ' ... You Will Believe It WHEN YOU VISIT BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER - PLYMOUTH 2100 W. MAPLE ROAD, TROY 642-7000 MEMORABLE VALUES FOR. MEMORIAL WEEKEND 1965 FORD Custom *; Two-door An all while beauty with red Interior. Auto- radio, heater, whitewalls. 1965 PONTIAC Bonneville Two-door hardtop. Silver greenjilth all whltf vJnyMnj $895 bucket seats, air "conditioning, power slMfThg, brakes, windows, black vinvl top, automatic, radio, heater, whitewalls. Simply gorgeous. $1795 1966 MERCURY Marauder Two-doet hardtop. Canary yellov $1695 1966 FORD Custom “500" An aii white beauty with blua Interior. Automatic, radio. beater, whitewalls. Nicest we've had in ages.1' Hurry S6Ll$ 1965 MERCURY Monterey Feast your eyes on this one-owner fawn beauty. V-8, automatic, power steering, radlo«.%)«ler, whitewall*. A. low "mileage, garage kept beauly. $1395 1965/ MERCURY Comet “202" vings? Then look over this $795 1966-COMET Capri $1295 1963 CONTINENTAL Sedan $1295 HILLSIDE LINCOLN-MERCURY Oakland 333-7863 D—16 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1968 Deaths in Pontiac Area George F. Davis Former Pontiac George F. Davis, 70, of Zephyr Hills, Fla., died yesterday. He was a retired Detroit detective. His body is at Huntoon Funeral Home. Saturday at the Coats Funeral Home. Burial will be in resident Lakeview Cemetery, Clarkston. Mr. Jones died yesterday. Surviving are five children, Alfred and Lafie, both of Clarkston, Lacie of California, Charles of Missouri and Mrs. Richard Spies; two brothers; a Memorial Day ACROSS 1 Today wo honor our war -7 Flags decora to their - — 43 Oleic acid ester 14 We--the memoryydf our departed swaa-a-ss* Astolat 33 Jewish month 34 Tom 33 Wheys of milk 30 Musical syllable 30 Within (comb, form)' 4Q Features on ' this day 43 Consume food Antwtr t» Prtvloui rutile Surviving are his wife, Lula sister; and 13 grandchildren. M. Howard Houck Ellis Jones Ml "OXFORD - Service for Service for Ellis Jones, 71, of Howard Houck, 82, of 1ft Hovey 272 Clifford will be 10 a m. will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at the ——. — Bossardet Funeral Home with .burial in Oxford Cemetery, Ox- Teens' Deathsford Hike Tension in Louisville LOUISVILLE, Ky. VPi - Po- Carl W. Nakkula WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — Service for Carl W. Nakkula, 63, of 3206 Wellington Court will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at William Sullivan & lice rushed reinforcements into S°n Funeral Home, Royal Oak.j the west end riot area early i Private graveside services will; today to disperse crowds that follow at Oakview Cemetery,! gathered after two Negro | Royal Oak. youths were shot to death. I Mr. .Nakkula, a retired; * * * superintendent of production The police and National j1control at General Motors -j Guardsmen continued on alert j Detroit Diesel plant, died Tues-after the streets were cleared day. of the crowds which began *to| Surviving are his wife, Suoma Lakeside^"homes WILD WHEELS — Shown are four of the attention-getting cars displayed at the 12th International Automobjle Show in New York City. At top left is the 1968 Rolls Royce. An experimental car with many “tomorrow” features, Dodge’s Charg- er III, is at top right. The Lamborghini “Islaro" 400 GT two-plus-two is at lower left. Last is the Excaliber 57, which closely resembles the Bugatti Marque sports car of the 1920s. City Day Care Center, Services Get Approval Mule-Lovers Stubbornly Like Critter Car Wash Gets Waterford OK 17 Abstract being 18 Sticky substance 80 Masculine nickname 21 Softens ir temper 23 Grafted (her.) 28 Depot (ab.) 27 Biblical name 31 Enter in t catalogue 32 Quartzlike mineral mammal 47 To a distance 80 Showed mercy to 62 Shore bird 64 Legislative body 85 Cylindrical 86 Expunges 67 Trapped DOWN 1 Stocking 2 Enthusiastic ardor 3 Soaks flax 4 Rowing *»* . implement 8 Storehouse 6 Calyx division! 7 Kind of green 8 Lease anew 0 Hawaiian . pepper 10 Blood vessel 11 Sea eagle 12 Progeny 19 Harden, as cement 21 Snare anew 22 Emporiums 23 Guido's high 47 Above notes 48 Festival 24 Brood of 49 Boy’s pheasants nickname 25 Russian ruler 81 Short- 28 Not closed napped 29 Disembark fabric 3rvirP „ tittio rarpir« ” ho pv- Permission was given to Hails 1 i 4 4 r“ 6 t 8 9 16 11 l£ 13 14 16 17 ■ 19 1 * 21 ST 23 , 24 25 ■ 26 ! 28 29 30 31 i m * 33 I m * 35 If 36 37 38| 39 '» 1 F 42 43 44 45 ■ 46 ■ 47 48 49 50 51 52 13 54 55 56 5i ao adult education A state legislative bill to give training programs got a little careless, ..c ^ g Sisk to keep two horses up to j- - 1 «,. . ...j I HHI . plained. When those ears g° f0tfr years on property zoned 6hotgun blast in the direction of school districts increased The new building would also s Authorized the business down, watch out. single family residential on five persons from a cleaningaidhorjty to borrow money house a Head Start program for manager to hire an architect to Kicks and harsh words may^Hospital Road near Highland, •hop which had been looted, the without popular votes appears preschool children, other com- s(ucjy jj0W mU5ic rooms and Pass between mule and man, Denied was a request of John police said. i likely not to increase taxes of munjty programs and agency remo(jeijng 0f the kitchen and but a bond of affectidn often j^unt to build six apartment most Oakland County residents, j services. cafeteria can be done at develops. “Mules and small units on Walton directly across Blue Cross Asks 2.18 Pci. Rate Hike The bill gives second-, third-| GOALS OF FACILITY Eastern Junior U'gh School. and fourth-claas districts power j Goals of the facility represent ----------------- to raise their bonding limit for| an interagency approach,to: construction without a public: « Fully meet the physical, vote from 2 per cent to 5 per;educational and emotional cent of the district’s state needs of the economically equalized valuation. deprived. * * * i * * * southern farmers have been from Curwood closer partners than man and ------------------ horse or man and dog,,” wrote Ralph McGill, the noted Georgia editor. Antioch Student r a __ _ u^l I IMPORTANT IN SOUTH From Area tield 0n some farms in the south, on $10,000 Bond the mule still is a most important animal, the National Geographic Society says. YELLOW SPRINGS, Ohio UPl The mule has been bred since ,. , — Kent Mathewson II, 21, of 671 pre-Biblical times. A cross lsj School officials say they g Long Lake, Bloomfield Hills, between a male donkey and a would try to get federal funds a student at Antioch College, female horse, the'mule com-! DETROIT (AP) - Michigan Blue Cross Wednesday filed for} Four of the country’s 28 school! • Supply services and state approval of a proposed 2.18 districts are currently below the facilities that will provide per cent increase in its base 5 per cent level and thus would means for the deprived to rid rates. !benefit fron the bill, which themselves of poverty. * * * passed the Senate earlier The request for an increase:week. the.h0SP,ltal.m' ,,Thu,bi11 n,OW has.t0 g0 back to for the project beyond the washeid under $10,000 bond^ bines the best features of both r^, rf,.rL th ^”use for concurrence with $io,000. day in connection with a parents. lt has the wit, sobriety, ofthisvear* ** Fa Senate amendment. OTHER? BUSINESS narcotics crackdown in which 13 endurance, and sure-footedness y + * OUTSTANDING BONDS I In other basiness, the board: persons were arrested Monday 0f the donkey; the strength and Michigan Blue Shield, the Pontiac School District would • Heard a $98,139 proposal to night bulk of the horse. It thrives on medical insurance firm, also probably not fall below the 5 buy nine buses to transport * * * poor food and withstands cold filed its rate proposals with theIper-cent level forfive or six:almost 1,000 students who live! The 13, who were nabbed in a or blistering heat. . State Insurance Bureau but they | years> according to school s| wjthin the city limits and at police‘ raid that climaxed 18 No tractor .ever...inspired the did not contain a request for an!Business Manager Vern jeast 0ne mile from school. No months of undercover work, are affection oner- North Carolina j Schiller. I action was taken by the board,} slated for arraignment next farmer had for his mule. After He said the district will soon!pen(jing availability of fundsTuesday or Wednesday. They his faithful partner of 20 years jhave $31 million in outstanding jater. t will enter pleas then. died, the man committed (bonds, about $6 million beyond, * ★ ★ * * * sucide. He left a scrawled note the 5 per cent debt limit. ! • Hired Joseph Sommerville, Six °f. *hose arrested were on a worn path: "My old mule I State equalized valuation of principal of Woodson Elemen- Antioch students, the others is gone. I am drowned in this Lawrence Thompson, 5ft, of 51 the school district is about $500 ---— ------------------ -—“ ^rere residents of Yellow pond.” inn nmn **,*Kl**w4 a/ tcUo ' L.. m ill inn Via eoirl increase. News in Brief Pine was robbed of $548 by million, he said t)|Fee men who overpowered O x f o r d , Berkley. Ferndale and beat him as he left the: and R°yal 0ak are said 1° be Auburn Bar, 378 Auburn, at 1:25: the only districts in the county, a.m. today,! according to Pon- who are below the 5 per cent) tiac police. . level and would benefit by the * . bill. Co-op Garage Sale, May 31,; 186IJberty, 8 am, to 8 p.m. TAX HIKES POSSIBLE —Adv Springs. Sylvan Lake Driver Thwarts 3 Bandits Gasoline-Sniffing Raised in Death County Health Dept. Eyes Hepatitis Case A Sylvan Lake man toldj NEW BUFFALO (AP) The Oakland County Health A Department is investigating a Romeo & Juliet Go Gotham as They Go for Lox & Bagels By EARL WILSON NEW YORK — Romeo & Juliet came ot lunch at Max Asnas’ Stage Delicatessen ... for lox and bagels ... not for tea and crumpets . . . and comedian Jack E. Leonard shouted at Romeo, Leonard Whiting, 18, from London, “Oh, hello, Romeo! I didn’t recognize you without your balcony.” Olivia Hussey, 17, who plays Juliet in the much discussed picture, didn't know what lox and bagels were, being from Argentina and England, and Romeo was also indefinite and mystified. “In England we call bread ‘bread,’ ” he WILSON who take advantage Pontiac police yesterday how De j youth whose body was found in single case of hepatitis that was Rumman Four Towns Meth- may have to increase thwarted a holdup attempt the;a w00(je(j ravine in New Buf-reported last week in the odist Church Cooley Lock- Prop?rty tax®s ord?r to Pay Previ°us night. fa]0 may have been sniffing Rochester area. riANT PRISM Tower oaisi enuren, wooiey, l«ck for mcrease(i borrowing, Rep.i: * * * Lasolinp New Buffalo Police * * * GIANT PRISM — Tower haven Rd. Sat. June 1st,^ CHfford H Smart R.WaUed| Curtis sluss, 21, of 2043 Pon- ^ie‘f Rgy Sieb^nmark said The infecled person is receiv-! ing^ feet over a small park __________________» Adv jLake, said. tiac said three men attempted. Wednesday. ;ing treatment and the victim’s! in Norrkopine’ Sweden- the School'ow'ric1? WcitVof Pontiac I Scho°1 districts which are to force their way into his car; * * * contacts are being checked, a; MicL'9.\n « „ . growing are not likely to fallwhile it was stopped for a Siebenmark said clothing worn health department spokesman District ot the city of Pontiac, Oakland below the 5 per cent level, signal at Telegraph a nd by David Lynn Baxter, 13, son said. tha^the^nriuaT Election*5 wm°heid which would then ^p e r m i t Orchard Lake about 11 p.m. of Mr. and Mrs. Carlton Baxter The disease, which can be to finance construction * * , ' (of near New Buffalo, bore an transmitted in water or food,} BMr/oT'EdScatton oMheTcho"Dw/irt!Proiects without voter approval. | Sluss grabbed. ? pistol and odor of gasoline and a can attacks the liver. It can occur! ur^endTnfl*June"30* wf! All school districts in Oakland fired over their heads and fhe partially filled with gasoline was in epidemic proportions, but wto jandrdafts n»m«d «$ follow*:1 County are either second-, third, three men fled, police were found near his body Tuesday yields -to-- modern treatment,! or fourth-class districts. told. ,night. health authorities said. Christopher Brown 7. Fred P. Crossman 3. John K. Irwin Jr. 4. Francis M. Webster Jr. Ahjf to vote for threp (3) members for the Board of Trustees of the Community College District of Parts of the Counties of Oakland, Washtenaw, Utvfngston, and Lapeer, Michigan (Oakland Community College), to be elected at large from the Community College District on a nonpartisan basis, the qualified candidates for the Board of Trustees being as tot** lows: For Six Veer Terms Expiring In 1974 1. Douglas J. Collins 2. Robert M. Colyer 3. Ledeen Floyd 4. David W. Hackett *. Gordon C. Henderson 6. Raymond E. Hoffmanh 7. Bernard S. Kahn 5. Sandra G. Landsman 9. Donald F. Loper 10. pavld M. Preston It. Harold Provlzer 12. Richard Alan Reynolds 13. Boyd C. Zacharies % v-Votlng machines and all other necessary materials for conducting the election will be provided at the following precinct locations: A—Baglay. School, 320 Begley B—Webster School, 640 W. Huron C-Central Sr. High, 2S0 W. Huron 0— Clot* St. Station, Close St. E—Lincoln Jr. High, 131 Hillside F—Owen School, 43 E. Columbia ^ rph School, 595 E. Beverly H—Emerson School, 159 Emerson 1 1- Baldwin School, 40 E. Howard.. -J—Longfellow School K—Wilton School, 511 S. Sanford L—McConnell School, 245 S.. Paddock M—Eastern Jr. High, 2$ S. Sanford H-Centrel School, 101 E. PIKe O—-Hawthorne Schools 1400 N. Telegraph PvJafferton Jr. High, 600 Motor » O—Willis School, 1834 Opdyke R—Washington Jr. High, 710 Menominee ■■ il, 2000 Orchard Lake Prisma, the world’s biggest glass sculpture, is made of 3.500 panes of window glass glued together to form a 33-ton obelisk. Artist Vicke Lindstrand created the $35,000 sculpture on commission from the city of Norrkoping. The process turned plain glass into a giant prism that absorbs, refracts and changes light, from all directions, dissolving it into all the colors of (he spectrum. "Shakespeare ain’t hot either,” muttered somebody in the back. *44 Tom Poston and Morey Amsterdam greeted the youngsters and Jack E. Leonard for once didn’t eat off people’s plates ), Jack E. Leonard asked who directed them in “Romeo & Juliet.” They said Franco Zefferelli, a great European directori . x „ “I once knew a guy with a name something like that, was a tire thief in Pittsburgh,” Jack E. said. ★ ★ ★ Juliet was a little giggly and Romeo pinched her, and I— if they could be romantic about each other In real life, and Juliet (ordering cheesecake) said, “Perhaps," and Romeo (over corned beef) also said, “Perhaps.” Is there anything you can see here hi New York you, can’t see in London?” I asked them since they’d bought tome mod gear in the Village. “Yes,” said Juliet. “The Statute of Liberty.” THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . f Philippines' First Lady, Mrs. Fernando Marcos, and a party of 14, were at El Morocco . . . The once-upon-a-tlme mansion of the late Thomas J. Watson at 75th and 5th shook as Bolshoi Ballet dancers and American fans did modern dancing to psychedelic lights. It was at a reception given by Rebecca Harkness and her ballet group, at one of the great parties. While some wealthy folks have peacocks around their pools, (the Yonka Troubtez-koys at their big Monte Carlo vi|la have penguins, and a special penguin pool . . . Charlton Heston was added to the new Miami Jockey Club honorary board of directors with Ted Kheel and Ivan Tors. i ★ ★ ★ TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Flip Wilson says his brother went to the draft boafd and volunteered: “They turned him down. Said they already had enough people on the draft board.” WISH I’D SAID THAT: Those election campaigns are very costly, and John J. Piomp writes, “Don’t be surprised if our next president’s an ex-millionaire.” — REMEMBERED QUOTE: “Things are always the last place you look — because after you find them, you stop looking." EARL'S PEARLS: A student caught tossing a rock at a teacher had an excuse — said he was studying geology, and Was submitting his homework. Bobby Kennedy’s so optimistic about his chances that he’s already looking for a vice-president who’s willing to babby-sit. That's earl, brother. (Publliti.ri H.il Syndic.!.) Radio Programs— WJR(760) WXY2(1270) CKLW Iron* v WWJ, News, Race Track Report CKLW, Tom Shannon WJBK, News, Tom Dean WCAR, New^Rick Stewart WJR, WorlyTonight 7:15 WJR,^Business, Sports WWJ,f Sportsilne, Holiday Traffic Reports 7:30—WXYZ, News, Dave Lotkhart WJR, Reasoner Report, CHorad Cavalcade 1:06—WJRr News, Dimension •:15—WJR, Panorama •:2f—WJR, /Campaign '61 •:30— WJR, Panorama 9S00— WHFI, Tom Coleman CKLW, Mark Richards WJR, News, Kaleidoscope Encore. 10:0t- WJR, News 1.0:IS— WJR, Focus Mncore n-.OO—WJR, News, Sports 11:30—WJR, Music Till Dawn WWJ, Death Notices 11:46—WWJ, Overnight 12:00—WXYZ, News, Jim Dev-is CKLW, Frank B rod Hr WCAR, Newt, Waynt Phillips WJBK, Nighttime FRIDAY MORNlhO 6:00—WJR, MUSIC Hall WWJ, News WXYZ, News, Martin A Howard CKLW, Chuck Morgan WJBK, News, Marc Avery WCAR. News, Bill DeJzell WPON, News, Arizona W«»-'• ton • / 4: JO—WPON, News, John Irons 6:J0—WWJ, Morrle Carlson 7:00—WHFI, Gary Pureca WPON, News, Bill King 8:00—WJR, News Sunnyside 9:00—WJR, News, Jack Harris - WHFI, Uncle Jay WCAR, News, Jim Davis CKL.W, Gary Mitchell WWJ, News , v v m frif-WWJ, Ask Your Neigh-bor 10:00 WPON, “tnW5rtr'**3lrry Whitman WCAR, 'New*, Rod Mllltr WJBK, ’ News, - Conrad Patrick WXYZ, News, johnny Randall 11:00—wjR, Newt, Kaleidoscope WHFI, Jim Zlnser FRIDAY AFTBRNOON 12:00—WJR, News Farm WWJ, News, Emphasis WCAR, News, Rod Miller WPON, News, Music CKLW, Jim Edwards 12:10—WWJ, Marty McNeelay, WXYZ, News, Don McNeill 1:00—WJR, News, Arthur Godfrey WWJ News, Emphasis 1: JO—WXYZ, Naws, Johnny Randall 2:00—WPON, News, Pat Ap-polson WHFI, Bill Lynch WJR, News. Music Hall i:0l~ wcar, Ron: • Ross WJBK, News, Henk O'Neil CKLW, Mike Rivers WXYZ, Naws, Dick Purlan 1:11—WPON, Lum 'n' Abner THE PONTIAC PKKS8. THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1908 D—17 : 16” RCA W5 17” RCA $24» 17” Sylvania $24*5 17” Portable $2995 21” Traveler $2995 21” Emerson *39“ 21” Philco *39“ 19” Portable *39“ 24” Motorola $4995 24” Admiral *59“ 30-DAY EXCHANGE PRIVILEGE FE 2-2257 WALTON TV 515 E. Walton Blvd. Comer Joslyn Open 9 to 6 —Television Programs— Program! furnished by stations listed In this column are subject to change without notice A Look at TV Chonnolsi 2-WJSK-TV, 4-WWJ.TV, 7-WXYI-Tvl 9-CKlW- TV. 50-WKlD-TV, 56-WTVS THURSDAY NIGHT «:00 (2) (4) (7) C *- News, Weather, Sports (9) R, — Dennis the Menace (150) R C — Flintstones (58) Friendly Giant 1:15 (56) Sing Hi, Sing Lo 8:30 (2) C — News — Cron-kite (4) C — News — Huntley, Brinkley (9) R — F Troop (50) R — Me Hale’s Navy (58) R — What's New 7:00 (2) C — Truth 0 r s Consequences (4) C — News, Weather, Sports (7) C — News — Reynolds (9 ) Movie: “Intrigue" (1947) George Raft, June Havoc ' (50) R — Munsters (56) NET Festival — A profile of Carlos Chavez, the Mexican composer and conductor who brought modern music to his homeland. 7:30 (2) R C — Cimarron Strip — Crown makes a cowboy deputy marshal of a neighboring town. (4) R C — Daniel Boone — Daniel lends a guiding hand to an orphan. PLUMBING DISCOUNTS I I all 3-Piece BATH SET | 5995 Whits or Prom Colored “B” TOILETS Frop 19“} FIREPLACE Gas Logs SUMP PUMPS VANITIES CABINET SINKS TUB Enclosures I EXTRA SPECIALS! I Laundry Troy and Trim....919.95 I Stainlu,,Steal Sinks.,...$22.95 ft Sadi Tubs, Irrag......$20.00 ua — SKawaf Stall with Trim ..$35.9$ I M-tsI, 19-Tor So IM Wtter Haatar $49,951 >i !Save PLUMBING! I 841 Baldwin g I FE 4-1516 or FE 5-2100 f 0»9W Mob. Set. »ill ML_| Wad. on! Fri. Evas. Til T F.M. * DEAL DIRECT WIbuilderTHE FREE PLANS and ESTIMATES-NO CHARGE SPE0IAL FINANCE PUN 1-HOUR ArmoVLU No Monliy flown Job* Stort Immodiotoly Up to 20 yaoro to pay! KITCHEN CABINETS 5-Ft. Kitchen $9£Q00 COMPLETE £U5 7-Ft. Kitchen $OQQ00 COMPLETE INCLUDES: Upper and Lower Cabinets, Counter Tops, Sink with Faucets, Formica or Wilson Art. I WILL COME TO YOU WITH FREE ESTIMATE AND PLANS - NO CHARGE 12 S. MILL Pontiac, Mich.. CALL FE 8-9880 Open Dally and Sum CALL DAY GR NIGHT * ADDITIONS* FAMILY BOOMS ALUMINUM SIDING COLOR ALUMINUMS hoofing—sums WOODFIELD CONSTRUCTION FE'5-9850 6 Montho Before First Payment , FINEST LOCAL CONTRACTOR TV Features NtT FESTIVAL, 7 p.m. (58) IRONSIDE, 8:30 p.m. I (4) TELESCOPE, 9:30 p.m. (9) LES CRANE, 10 p.m. (50) (7) R C — Second Hundred Years — Luke joins the Navy. (50)' R — I Love Lucy 8:09 (7) R C - Flying Nun — Sister Bertrille tries her hand at fish-spotting. (50) R C - Hazel (56) French Lesson 8:15 (56) France Panorama 8:30 (4) R C - Ironside -An unscrupulous advice columnist is threatened with murder. (7) R C — Bewitched — Endora induces an austerity program o n Darrin’s family and his co-workers. (50) R — Honeymooners (56) R — Book Beat 8:55 (9) C —News —Daly 9:00 (2) R C - Movie: “Palm Springs Weekend" (1963) The peaceful resort rocks with the Easter onslaught of vacationing students. Troy Donahue, Connie Stevens, Stefanie Powers (7) R C - That Girl -Ann and Don go sightseeing in New York. (9) R — Twilight Zone (50) R — Perry Mason (56) Rainbow Quest 9:30 (4) R C — Dragnet — A purse-snatching pooch is sought. (7) R C — Peyton Place (9) C — Telescope — A tour of the Royal Ontario museum in Toronto 10:00 (4) R C - Dean Martin — Guests are Eddy Arnold. Phil Silvers, Janet Leigh, the Mills Brothers and Jeremy Vernon. (7)R — Untouchables — Three brothers who hold —profitable—franchises^ at the 1933 Chicago World’s Fair are murdered. (9) R — Secret Agent — Drake traces a leak in military secrets to a —retired Britisheolonef— (50) C — Les Crane — Stan F r e b e r g and England’s David Frost discuss satire. (56) R — Creative Person 10:30 ( 56) R - No Doubt About It 11:00 (2) (4) (7) (9) News, Weather, Sports (50) R — Movie: “Seven Angry Men” (1955) Raymond Massey, Jeffrey Hunter, Debra Paget 11:30 (2)' Movies: jg “Alcatraz Express” (1962) Neville Brarjd, Robert Stack; 2. “‘Juvenile Jungle” (1958) Corey Allen, Rebecca Welles (4) C — Johnny Carson (7) C — Joey Bishop -(9) C — Twenty Grand 12:30 (9) C — Perry’s Probe 1:00 (4) Bowling (7) News 1:30 (4) C-PDQ 2:30 (2) R - Dobie Gillis 3:00 (2) R — Highway Patrol 3:30 ( 2 ) C - News, Weather ALUMINUM SIDING Kaiser Distributor Deal Direct Local Aluminum Contractor Sour^ Ends Painting 5194 Stop Roof Leakif. CUSTOM TRIM *■. GUTTERS - SHUTTERS FREE ESTIMATES WING ERVICE CO Carpet remnants — assorted odds V ends ....................... .......to 12'xl5*'Nylon patterned 'tone-on-tone' — olive....................;..» 12'x 18' Hi-Lo.Toop nylon roll end. Deep blue...... ALL SALES FINAL-NO RETURNS I Reg. • ^ALE1 *269vs *169°° $49995 *228°° $299« $19900 $22995 ^148°® *279” $198oo *219” $13300 / $69°° $38°° $19995 *128°° . $13995 $88°° *139” $7900 *5995 $40®° $304«s $179®° $41900 $299®° $49900 $34900 >45995 $359®° $9995 $2900 >209« $9900 ^7995 $4900 $899”; $59900 $]2995 $4900 *149“ , $69°® $27995 $19900 >249«> $129°® >3495 $22°° *69” $1900 *69” $1900 *34” *18®° *189” $9900 *6545 $1295 $H900 $5900 $14250 $89®° THESE BARGAINS AT DRAYTON STORE ONLY1 SOFAS - , Ultra-contemporary sofa chaise corner group from Craft. Black and white...:. 52" Traditional loose-pillow back loveseat. Blue/green floral.............. Danish modern sofa and chair. Walnut arms, olive cushions. Both pieces...... 6' Studio couch, jack knife style from Grand Rapids. Dark brown .......... Rowe 88" Spanish deluxe sofa. Luxurious green/gold patterned cut velvet.. 72" Traditional Rowe sofa, skirted, French blue fabric .................... _____CHAIRS * ’_____________________________ Large Burris resliner in olive green vinyl.................................. Genuine top-grain leather lounge chair and ottoman........... both pieces Pair of small decorator chairs. Carved frame with white Antique satin....... Green and gold tweed Colonial lounge.chair.................................. Modern swivel rockers. Choice of vinyl or tweeds........................... .• Selig contejqpowr^priot lounge chair. Olive floral pattern.................. pfcPRUUm Modern triple dresser, mirror, chest and bed. Pecan, cane and chrome....... Solid maple beds — twin or full size....................... . ............ Famous 'Equinox' group by Stanley in striking contemporary walnut’.. Massive Mediterranean Bedroom groups — choice of styles............... French, provincial girl's bedroom. Soft blue with white Formica........ Odds 'n' ends — bedroom group $%fhoyers — beds, chests, etc.......... to Captain's chairs. Authentically styled. Maple finish.................’.1;... Modern 9-pc. pecan group with chind"ao'dtu1^f.‘C^rWffe'Ond'cqtW|CltcentsV7/;'i;.i, . Stanley 'Equinox' in walnut. China, table and 6 upholstered chairs . ,.., ,:y;,.v Italian Provincial china. Rich fruitwood finish .,>..................... Colonial plastic-top extension tables. Maple finish-....................... Modern wa MfSeELtANEOUS- High fashion area rugs 44"x70" in five colors. Just 12............... Discontinued 27"xf 8" carpet samples . .......i.......................j0 Governor WinthrOp drop-lid desk with bookcase top. Maple.................... Assorted pictures and lamps. Many styles. Odds V ends ................to Famousmoker metal dinettes. Five- and seven-piece sets ... 7.......,.... to Assorted desks,consoles and tredenzas ................................ to 60" Formica bar with 3 swivel bar stools.. ............ jntinued top-of-the-line mattresses from a famous maker............ . AMPLE FREE- PARKIN©- Reg. SALE *639” $398°° *149” $90oo *289” $219°° *79” $4900 *459” $3290° $21900 $1330° *169” *85®° *379°° $249®° $9995 *55°® $1249$ (T *78°® *89” $59°® *114” *68°® $41900 $299°° $4495 $2400 *42900 $299°® *45995 *35900 *309” $239®° ■ $9995 $2900 *34” *22®° *694“ $42900 *738” $49900 *269” $19900 *69” $4900 *129” $9900 $2190 $995 *6” 79e $9995 *69®° *69” $1900 *189” $9900 *139” $3900 *25995 $159°® $7956 *5900 CONVENIENT tREOIT PONTIAC 36t 5. SAGfNA'W *■ F£ 3-7901 I DRAYTpN 4945 DWEHWY * OR 4 0321 ' =:».y -i‘Sv BOTH STORES CLOSED TODAY - SHOP FRIDAY TIL 9 P.M. The Weather U. I. WmMmt aurMu Mmnl Overcast , \ (Dtlllli N|i II VOL. 126 n*. NO. 98 THE THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 80, 19«8 -76 PAGES ASIOCIATID PRESS UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL Radio Call Hoax? \ NORFOLK, Va. (AP) — The massive search for the atomic submarine Scorpion and her 99-man crew centered off the Virginia capes today after receipt of a radio signal from a sender identifying itself as the missing craft. A patrol plane and six ships reported picking up Wednesday night a “very clear” signal. But a Navy spokesman said early today, “It could be a hoax.” A * * Cmdr. T. L. Ingraham, public affairs officer of the Atlantic Fleet’s submarine force also told a news conference, however: “The Navy still maintains hope.” The submarine, missing since Monday, is the object of the greatest air-sea search ever mounted by the Navy — 10,000 men, 55 ships and 30 planes. NO FURTHER MESSAGES The radio message was picked up when the patrol plane receiving it was 110 miles east of Norfolk. Search units were concentrated in an area stretching from 110 miles to more than 3Q0 miles east of Norfolk. But no further radio transmissions were reported. The sole message said: “Any station this network. This is (and then gave the code name for the Scorpion.)” ★ ★ ★ The Navy said the code name has been repeated numerous times in com- munications among the search force ships and planes. Ingraham said the Navy did not definitely believe the message came from the Scorpion. He added it could have come from a shore radio. GAUTION URGED The Pentagon 'previously cautioned development had occurred. Like Ingraham, the Pentagon said the message could have been a hoax. Navy sources said one of the craft picking up the message was the nuclear submarine Lapdn, which,was 300 miles east of Norfolk. They said the Lapon took a bearing of- 075 degrees east northeast of the signal, which would place the transmitting point farther out to sea. * ★ ★ Ingraham said, “It is extremely doubtful that a transmission of this type could be originated by a submarine that '’may be submerged of bottomed in that vicinity”—the general area where the signal was heard. He said the Scorpion “certainly would know a search was in progress for her” and, “she would be on the surface” transmitting. Ingraham reported the ocean in the general area where the signal was heard is 12,000 feet deep. This is well beyond the continental shelf, which extends some 70 to 80 miles seaward. Explosion at Day Nursery Kills 7 Children, 2 Adults them, it hurts,” said L. F. Redwine, who works nearby and plunged into the shattered building to help rescue the children. Fire Chief J. P. Nunn said the explosion occurred after the operator of a bulldozer struck a gas line in front of the building. The escapjng gas filled the basement of the nursery and was apparently ignited by a water heater flame or other spark, Nunn said. AT HOME ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) — A flaming gas explosion wrecked a suburban, day nursery Wednesday, killing nine persons, seven of them children, 16 months to 4 years „old. Three other children were injured. Two women employes of the nursery in suburban Hapeville perished while trying to save the young Children in their care. ★ ★ ★ “When you’re crawling around and you hear babies pleading, and you can’t find Memorial Day-and Another War r By Newspaper Enterprise Association It was in 1868 that John A. Logan, commander in chief of the Grand Army of the Republic, directed that all G.A.R. posts set aside the 30th of May “for the purpose of strewing with flowers or otherwise decorating the graves of comrades who died in defense of their country during the late rebellion.” At firgt, and for long afterward, called -Decoration Day, the day was later changed to Memorial Day and came to be a time in which .to honor the dead of all wafs, not just those of the Civil War. Today, the heroes’ graves we would strew with flowers have multiplied by the tens of thousands and He scattered , about the entire world. In the 100 years since that first Memorial Day, five more wars have called America’s sons to fight and die in places far from home, places whose once-strange names are indelibly etched into history — San Juan Hill... Belleau Woods , . . Bastogne and Iwo Jima . . . Missionary Ridge . . . . Khe Sanh ... ★ -V * Reckoning the. Vietnam conflict from 1965, when massive American involvement began, 1968 marks the 14th year that Memorial Day, a day bom in the aftermath of war, has been observed in the midst of war. Fourteen years of war as opposed to 86 of peace — or what passes for peace in the affairs of nations, ★ . ★ ★ Mathematically, peace would seem to have the best of it. Each new war, however, and each between wars period, has seen the development of ever more terrible engines of death. The present “limited” war has witnessed the routine employment of more concentrated destruction than even dur- County's Viet Casualties (EDITOR’S NOTE — The following is list of Oakland County servicemen who we died, in Vietnam this year. Any imes that aren’t included were unavail-tie at the Oakland County Department Veterans’ Affairs.) Sgt. Michael A. Grieve Hazel Park February Pfc. David C. Moore, USMC Pontiac March Serviceman and Home Town Month of Death Sgt. James L. McIJroy, Army South Lyon January Pfc. Joseph C. Wiar, USMC Royal Oak ' January Pfc. Donald, L. Perkett, Army Femdale January Pfc. Roy D. McGee, Army Oxford - . - January 2nd Lt. Patrick R. Wolfe, Army Waterford Township ■ January Pfch Gary D. Roerlnk, Army Ponti§c.\\ January Lance Cpl. Patrick Murphy, Army. * Southfield * , February Cpl. James F. Baucom, U.S.M-C., Lapeer February 1 " iV, i 'TOT Spec. 4 William A. Sawyer, Army Rochester February Pfc. Gregory J. Evans Union Lake February Pfc. David E. Wedhorn, Army Union Lake February Cpl. James R.. Hedger, USMC Pontiac s, ' February Pfc. Dennis P, Clancy, Army Royal Oak , February Pfc. Patrick C. Mcllroy, Army Pontiac . March Pfc. Thomas L. Taffee Union Lake Bui. 3 John F. Peek, Navy Pontiac . March Spec. SThomhs Leveque, Army Pontiac , 1 •- March Lance Cpl. VoydE. Tidwell, USMC Pontiac March ITGkWk r. ■ ■ M Staff Sgt. Jack E. Gorbey, Army Pontiac March Lance Cpl. James Thomas Sutton Ortonville • ^ April Sgt. Jerry R. Dundas, Army Oak Park Aprj Pfc. Gary A. Ryden, Army Pontiac April Spec. 4 Robert L. Caswell, Army Pontiac April Spec. 4 Russell J. Heliker, Army Walled Lake May Spec. 4 John M. Michalski Hazel Park May. Spec. 4 Thomas A. Barrett, Army Pontiac 'v , May Pfc. Leslie Aputen, USMC v, Pontiac May Lance Cpl. Dale C. Andrews, USMC Pontiac . A May ing World War II. The brief desert battles in the six-day Arab-Israeli war eclipsed even the mass tank warfare of 1941 and ’42 in .numbers of vehicles engaged and destroyed. Yet, men have managed to limit war, compared to what they could unleash. (Though what soldier killed this morning died a “limited” death?) it it if There may be wars and rumors of wars as far ahead as we can see. The graves will multiply, so long as the ideals for which Uie first American soldier died require the extreme sacrifice of succeeding generations of brave men. But one day the last soldier’s grave will be filled. This we must believe. And on that day, perhaps a new verse to the beloved “Taps” will tell all those who rest in honored glory that their deaths were not in vain, that — War is done, Stilled the guns, O’er all lands, oh the seas, in the sky, All is well, " Soldier rest, God is nigh. * Candidates to Debate NEW YORK (AP) - Sep. Robert F. Kennedy of New York and $en. Eugene J. McCarthy.of Minnesota, who Mil face each other in the California Democratic primary jtext Tuesday, have agreed to hohT a live television debate this weekend. The three Major networks said in separate announcements Wednesday that they would make network time available for joint appearances by the two senators, both of whom are on the California ballot, and' als6 by Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey, if he wished to participate. Income Tax Hike a Near-Certainty WASHINGTON (UPI) — Jt appeared almost certain today that President Johnson would get his long-sought income tax increase, but he will also have to swallow an unwanted $6-billion cut in federal spending ordered by the House. Passage of the 10 per cent income tax surcharge was a virtual certainty after the House yesterday defeated attempts by liberal House members to reduce the tcut to $4 billion. it it it Congressional leaders expected passage on June 12. The Senate, which already has approved the tax increase and spending cut, Was also expected to pass the House version and send it to Johnson for his signature. The compromise hitching the surtax to the spending cut originally was worked out in the Senate when the tax-writing House Ways and means committee refused to act on the tax increase! it it it The big spending cut was the price Johnson had to pay to get economy-minded congressmen to okay the surtax. Sun Replaces Rain for Holiday Events At last, the long-awaited sun arrived, just in time for the holiday parades. Rain clouds, which brought a deluge to the area for the past four days, were nudged into the horizon early this morning. The expected high temperature today will be between 62 and 68 degrees. Nunn was at his home in the same block as the nursery when he heard the explosion. , Police said'the nursery manager, Mrs. J. M. Gardner, 50, of Hapeville, died in the flaming building after going back inside to try to evacuate the children. ★ ★ ★ Also killed was Mildred Reeves, about 30, of Atlanta, a nursery employe. The immediate tfforts of nursery employes and nearby workers kept the death list from rising higher, witnesses said. The children were taking their daily nap when the gas line was broken, a nursery employe, Mrs. Willie Lee Reeds, said. Employes started taking one group df children to an adjoining house, then the explosion came. It was hours before authorities could identify the seven dead children. ★ ★ . But after checking with the families of every child registered at the nursery, Hapeville police said only Jjpen children were still unaccounted for.' Police identified the Victims as Gail Cumby, 4, Hapeville; Roger Buckley, 2, Hapeville; Denise U m p h r i e s ,- 2, Hapeville: Julie Whidby, 2, Forest Park{ Ronnie Wilson, 3, Hapeville; "Shelley Little, 16 months. East Pbint, ana Michael Kingston, 2, Union City. In Today's Press Outing in Orion 275 Scouts commune with nature - PAGE A-12. Baseball Scene Pi;ep tournament starts today - PAGE D-l. Ho Chi Minh Peace hopes may rest with jt simple but complex man — -s PAGE A-19. RISE IN TEMPERATURE Yesterday’s high was 61 degrees at 4:30 || pm. Rain probability today is 20 per .cent. The forecast for tonight is mild but | cloudy. . * I; You should be able to see OJd SoL | §j again tomorrow and enjoy even warmer temperatures. The low temperature prior to 8 a m. was 48 degrees. J Astrology ... .............B-I4 Bridge ...............T... B-14 Crossword Puzzle .......... D-17 Comtes .... ............. B-14 Editorials ................A-6 Obituaries .............. D-16 Sports .........i.....D-l—D-6 Theaters .............. B-17 TV and Radio Programs . .D-17 Wilson, Earl.........D-17 Women’s Pages .... B-l—B-7 GLENWOOD PLAZA . North Perry at Glenwood TIIE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1968 Increase Payments on Federal Debt Up 1 . .. v \ I More Than Expected OPEN DAILY 10 to 10. 11-6 THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY WASHINGTON (AP) - The cost of paying for the federal debt—already at record levels— will go even higher than originally thought this year because of the /Current period of tight credit/ The increase, however, is ex pected to be relatively small. ★ ★ ★ Interest payments on the fed eral debt are now expected to be close to $14.5 billion fQ&the fiscal year which ends June 30 or about $150 million more than anticipated last January. This would mean a year-to-year increase of about $1.1 billion from the $13.4 billion actually paid to carry the debt during the previous fiscal year. The cost of bqjrrowing money in the current inflationary period has increased rapidly even for the Treasury Department which can command the lowest rates in the country because its securities are considered the safest of all investments. ‘NO. QUICK' CURE3 The extent of that spiral was underscored Monday by Chairman Arthur M. Okun of .the Council of Economic Advisers, who said the nation is experiencing an inflationary epidemic that even a tax increase could not quickly cure. Until President Johnson’s proposed 10 per cent income tax surcharge is enacted, Okun said in a memorandum made public by the White House, “There will be growing strains on prices, costs, imports tnd financial markets at home and abroad.” But even with Higher taxes, Okun said the route back to price stability will be "long and difficult” .and will require the cooperation of the private sector. “It is crucial that ws begin the journey now.” w ★ ★ It wasr the latest in a series of urgent appeals from the administration for higher taxes. Only last week, however, the Treasury paid the highest rate since the Civil War to borrow $1.5- billion. And rates this week, although lower, are still close to the top of the scale. REFINANCING The Treasury borrows at least $2.7 billion each week to refinance part of the federal debt When the department reesti mated its interest payments last January for the current fiscal year, it used interest rates in effect last December. ★ ★ ★ Rates actually declined during the-early part of this year but in the last two months have shot upward. The $352-billion federal debt is composed of treasury securities held by individuals in the form of savings bonds and by Jjanks, savings and loan asso-’{ciations, insurance companies, corporations, state and local governments, the Federal Reserve' System and government investment accounts such as the Social Security trust fund. Some of these securities mature each week and the Treasury must borrow money to pay them off. ★ ★ ★ Part of the Treasury’s problem is Congress’ refusal so far to adopt the surcharge. The department had figured on $2.7 billion in additional revenues during the current fiscal year from the surcharge--and the speedup in corporate tax payments. It has been forced to borrow additional money to make up some of this loss. It absorbed the rest. For the next fiscal year, the Treasury figured interest on the debt at $15.2 billion. This figure could come close to the mark if taxes are raised, it’s believed. But without higher taxes, officials .won’t even hazard ai guess bn what the interest payments might be. n nt * vt of 8 DIAMONDS *66 R<7!. HH.92 - .1 Day J „ diamond engagement riii" interlocks with 5 diamond hand. Save! * Total Waight Enlarged To Shaw Ootail ROYAL MERCURY PORTABLE Our Reg. 44.74 4 Day» Only 0 B. Full-size office keyboard model with touch regulator, two-color ribbon, stencil cutter and case '/« CARAT’ BAND I OF 5 DIAMONDS I Re*. 78.7$ _ J Dny ' Lovely by itself! '/» cl. tolul weight bridal set is mounted on 14 R gold. LUIWIR « BIIILDIM SUPPLY SIMM ISM AUBURN HEIGHTS 191 SQUIRREL R0. ulT^rm CORSAIR BY SMITH-CORONA® Discount Price CR CR Charge It A) Full-size manual typewriter by Smith-Corona* in pica or elite type. With carrying case. BRIDAL SET HAS y4-CT * DIAMOND *82 Reg. i 12.48 — 3 Day •Sparkling solitaire in Florentine band of I4K white or 2-lone gold. 'Total Waight SWIRL SET HAS FINE SOLITAIRE *112 Reg. 158.39 — J Days .28 carat* Diamond in Flo re ntined-shoulder bridal set. I4K gold. EXTERIOR FLUSH Birch Mahog, 2-Sx6-8 1%” H.C.. ..$10.95. ..$ T.9S 3-0X6-8 1W H.C.. ...11.90. ...■8.25 2-8X6-8 1%” S.C.. ...19.45. ...15.20 3-646-8 S.C.. ...19.90. ...15.35 Door Liter Extra At Church's you will find a corn-plot* variety of oxtorior and interior doors to moot all your noods. Brand name steel garage doors at low, low prices. Prime painted door with track, hardware and installation instructions. 9x7 One Piece Door .. $5115 16 x 7 One Piece Door m. *999S Craftsman 9" Radial Arm Saw A COMPLETELY NEW AND IMPROVED DESlGlP*"^ l%-HP direct drive capacilAt- motor delivers full power at all limes. Automatic thermal protector. Key lock on switch. Color coded controls. Power unit carriage glides on permanently lubricated and exceptionally, accurate ball bearings. Built-in hard steel tracks for wear resistance. NO MONEY DOW \ on Wears Kas Reg. 169.95 *119 Craftsman 78-pc. Socket Set EXCLUSIVE QUICK RELEASE FEATURE inenl Plan CMFTSMRN Bench Model CRRrTIMRN Vi" dr. ratchet; 9 12-pt. sockets, 2 extension bars. %” dr. ratchet, 7 12-pt. sockets, extension- bar, handle. V4 dr. 9 b-pt. sockets, handle, extension, bar, box. Other miscellaneous tools. Hardware Depl. « , Reg. Separate Price 69.26 . 39" 13!4*incli Drill Press Reg. 129.95 *109 Reg, 139.99 IX ilh 6’’ s| pindlc travel. lull- 16 heats froi length belt guard adds extra Industrial Iwi ►afely- " high | "Slide switch. O pe n >lon day; Tftur» F riday * Sa turdav 9 t Are Welder Set *119 Welding Outfit 9988 Reg. 122.91 Home and Shop Vac- 44™ Rag. 59.99 Air Impact Wrench 99™ Reg. 119.99 n 40 to 230 snips. | stage ovy-acetylene outfit with in carbon arc torch, rutting torch. Cuts up to 6 inches thick. I-pe. Auto Creeper 12™ Reg. 14,99 Permanex hose won’t cbip,-peel or crack. Cleans wet or dry aregs. 27 gallons, v , Adjust torque from 20 to 160 ft. lbs. I «es yz’’ square drive shekels. Reverse control. 49.99 Air Impact Hammer . 99.99 Permanex body won’t. crack,, chip. peel. With tool trough and tray. Softhead rest. Tuesday, Wednesday 9 to 5130 Home Auto Repair Specials Torque Wrench, reg. 9.99 ... ... 6.99 Super Duty Tool Box, reg. 17.9^ 14.99 Metal Mend, reg. 1.69 ........1.22 Propane Torch, reg. 5.99 .....4.88 Tune Up Kit.......’......... 5.49 Feeler«Gauge................ 1.69 Gap Gauge....... 49c Piston Ring Compressor........2.49 L Cross Rim Wrench............ 2.59 Brake Spring Plier............2.99 Brake Adjusting Tool...........99c Gear Puller................. 4.89 Distributor Adjusting Tool Set.. 5.19 Bdttery Clamp Spreader .......3.29 Distributor Wrench .... . . . .. . 2.69 2-dr. Tool Chest . 1P9» 11.99 J.9 Ideal for mechanic, repair, inan. Heavy-gauge steel. 2 deep drawer.. Tote tray. 1 Ton Hoist 19™ Rag. 24.99 Lifts, pulls, stretches, leverage yet portable. 2 Ton, rag. 34.99 ........ 26.99 SgARS, ROEBUCK AND CO. Downtown Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171 Sears SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO. Father^ Day Remember Dad on His Day—S unday, June 16th STEEL GARAGE DOORS for the lowest prices in TOWN mm w m I Jacoby or * - » i Bridge | TIIK PONTIAC PllKSS Births THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1968 ROBIN MALONE •+ NORTH *2 V K Q J 107 ♦ KQ63 *084 WEST *KJB74 V 088 *05 * Q J10 SOUTH (D) * A88 * A432 ♦ A82 *AK7 Both vulnerable SO EAST * Q 10 6 3 ¥5 ♦ J10 7 4 *6532 West North East South IN. T. Pass 2 ¥ Pass 3N.T. Pass 4 ¥ Pass 4 N. T. Pass 6 ¥ Pass 6N.T. Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—* Q By OSWALD and JAMES JACOBY Today’s hand was played in the early days of contract. Not exactly this hand, but one similar enough so that the result was the same. South was one of the first great contract authorities. North was (young, Oswald Jacoby. The game was rubber bridge and the stakes quite Depression would mean ...Ration. South Uk6d to bid no-trump andNtir'opening no-trump bid was an indefinite sort of strong hand with no-trump distribution. Needless to say, four aces and a king filled the bill nicely. As you can see North responded with a two heart call. He knew that South would bid again. When .South jumped to 'three no-trump, North went after 100-honors in hearts and rebid his nice suit. When South persisted with no-trump, North decided quite properly that South held all the aces. North bid a heart slam. ★ ★ ★ j It did him no good. South | went right on to six no-trump and North gave up jhe liope-i less struggle. South played with perfect technique. He won the club opening and led a low spade to set up a possible cqueeze if diamonds did not break. Unfortunately for North and South the diamopds did not break and the squeeze didn’t materialize. South got his 150 ponits for the aces but game, sialn and rubber had gone iiuo limbo. ★ / ★ ★ Oswald Jacoby was mad then. He is still mad 35 years later but with the passage of time some of his anger is turned against himself. He knew that his partner liked to play no-trump. He should have realized that he was not going to get to play the hand and should have given up at three no-trump True, the heart slam was there since playing at hearts he could ruff his fourth diamond but what good is a heart slam when you aren’t going to be allowed to play In hearts? (Newspaper Bntarprisa Assn.) Roberto Candanoza, 332 ftaward Malvina*. Reid, 414) Qharrylawn Robert W. Balma, 1349 Murray Roger F. Deaver, 311 K. Columbia Lonnie V. Owens# ll S. Johnson Edwin B. Stevens# 5424 Heath Jordan A. Upham# 1974 Ascot Leon D. Layman# II W. Longfellow William E. Royal# 471 DeSota Nelson L. Wooley# 374 Blvd S. William 6. Darnell# 44 Allison Leonard H. Williams# 1247 N. Cass Lake RosCoaJ. Dahn# 1131 Irwin Anthony J. Souro# 440 I Richard H. Donald E. Carr# 13 Prall James P. Allison# 49 W, Beverly Robert C. Giza, Troy Edward M. Andries, Farmington Victory C. Doherty III# Blrmlnghf Victory C. Dodherty III# Blrmingna Gerald A. Brumm, Farmington Thomas J. Bliio, Walled Latte By Bob l&bbeni ,16 vmNBEAy fntactmw** DpriMimcouoinoMf" 1 rHE BERRYS THE BETTER HALF ® IWI H NIA *«■ By Carl Grubort I'M NOT DRESSING Up EITHER-JUST GRAB YOUR HATr^aj AND LETS BESIDES, WE WONT HAVE , TIME TO DO ANY SHOPPING, WE'LL JUST BUY THE THINGS WE NEED THE BORN LOSER “Furthermore, when I was young I wasn’t even a clean-cut American boy—I was a dirty-cut American boy.” BERRY S WORLD—By Jim Berry Q—The bidding has been: West North East South 1* Pass 1 N.T. Pass 2 ¥ Pass 3 ¥ Pass Kigh for those 'although they in today’s in- You, South, hold: *10 87-6 5 VAK943 +KQ *2 What do you do now? A—We have a slight preference for a four-heart bid, but no criticism for a pass. Let your conscience be your guide. TODAY’S QUESTION Instead of bidding one no-trump your partner responds two diamonds to your opening spade bid. You rebld two hearts and he jumps to four hearts. What do you do now? Answer Tomorrow i: By Art San»t*. ALLEY OOP By V. T. Hamlf Mb; * ^ hit By SYDNEY OMARR Friday "Th» wist man controls d a 111 n y . . . Astrology points way," ... ARIES (March 21-Aprll It): Greater freedom of .thought, action Is Indicated. But bewart of tendency to lump In where wise persons fear to tread. In any social event tonight, stick to factual attitude. protect. And many now pay attention to your opinions, statements. Be gracious. ★ ★ ★ IF FRIpAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you are filled with energy, possess much in* tellectual curiosity and may be due for change of residence. * t t WITH THAT ASTEROID GETTING CLOSER ALL THE Ttl»(E, THIS . WOULD BE A BAD TIME FOR THE TIME-MACHINE 1 TO CONK OUT YES, BUT IT HAPPENS ONCE IN A WHILE... NUTHIN TO/ WORRY f .jn-ABOUT l THOUGH OKAY DOC . I'LL I THINK ITS \ CRANK UP r TIME WE GOT O :) THE OLD t ENGINEER BAC / MACHINE i IMS hr NSA. lac. T.. niT.-i wn.1: HII 5- ao U S. #«. OH. > . CAPTAIN EASY Bv Leslie Turner 1961 by NEA, Inc. tURUS (April 20-May 2- Qskateboard.O mmm i.iri I & :rW'~ 5- JO' ,t THE PONTIAC PRESS, The only way to find out how good Dynachrome film really is is to find out! And save up to 2£ RF.Goodrich YACHT SHOES usable !• Accounts' Michigan Bankardt Honored Security Bonk Credit Cards Honored Deluxe "Comfy” SLEEPING BAGS 8mm Outdoor............ $2.19 8mm Indoor............. $2.19 126 Instamatic...... $1.99 35mm—25ASA 20 Exp...... $1.79 35mm—25ASA 36 Exp...... $2.69 35mm—64ASA 20 txp......$1.99 Prices Include Processing 90 Days Same As Cash * Trim and tailored . . . Rek town dress with double breasted paneled yoke, highlighted with jet buttons and patent leather belt. Dacron® polyester/cotton. Sizes 10 to IN. Grey, beige, Blue. • 3 lb. Dacron 88 filling, tasted to 25 • full separating zipper (pair model) *4 Double air mattress pocket • "Bengoline" Cover-Water repellent, tough • Game Bird Flannel lining o Sewn in snaps for liner e Full finished size 34"x78" • Includes Reg. $4 flannel liner sheet • Jr. Size—Waterproof bottom • Great for camp-outs OUR OWN SPECIAL BAG • 3 lb. Dacron 88 filling o'1Water repellent covering • full size e Colorful lining - _ 4 full length separating zipper 1 7«9% OVERSIZE “COMFY” BAG For the mars over 6’ tall o Extra tough water repellent covering O 6-lb. Dacron 88 filling e Full zipper plus all deluxe features • Tested to 0° aa Ar Tltfc COMJUUL Mofft FE 4-0259 NORTHWOOB Tel-Huron florsheim 29 S. 3339 N. Woodward Telegraph LI 9-3144, USE OUR CONVENIENT UVMttY ELEN TEL-HURON SH0PPJNG CENTER 55 S. TELEGRAPH FE 4-9567 • 1-lb. Goose Down filling 4 Ripstock Nylon Covering o Mummy style • 2Vi lb. wgt. —tested to 2$ 8X7 RUBBER GROUND SHEETS FABRIC AIR MATTRESS o Rubberized with pillow of jacket for a little money! Birmingham 269 Hamilton Row Ml 6-3976 Open Thurs., Fri. 'til I Pontiac Tol-Huron Contor 21 S. Telegraph FE 5-2212 •eee Mon., Tlwrs., Fri. till Livonia Wonderland Center Plymouth and Middlebelt GA 7-5386 Open Nitely til 9 Mail and Phone Orders SPAGHETTI CON CARNE Boys' and Girls' Hi*rise Rich, meaty Chili Con, Carne heaped over a mound of tender spaghetti — It's hot 'n' hearty with a zesty tang. Complete with toasted, buttered roll. le, top quality choose which-r needs best, solid brass STORE HOURS: 9:30 to 9 wicker and straw bags Smart summery styles in black, white or natural. Silver Lake Rd. and Dixie Highway 20 S. Telegraph Across from Tel-Huron MODEL’S SWINGING STRIPES Wo'vtt got n group of lontous-rmikcr lightweight short-length jackets that you can choose from cit a great !.aving! Select wcilor-repellent miraeje blends. Including Dncrori-cotloii in hn» WITH \STAIN CHASE 1 DAYS ONLY! Fri. & Sat. May 31 & June 1 Tel-Huron Store Only! a pari ol Pontiac since 1991 J V STOftfcS rON MIN 4 VOUNS MSN ■ Tel-Huron Center in Pontiac ■ Downtown Pontiac k Op.n Ev«ry Night 'til 9 Op.n fri.'»i! 9 PONTIAC MALL TEL-HURON CENTER Open Evenings *tii i p.m. Use Your Security Charge •or Michigan Stinkard THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1968 Drama Took Over in 67-6Broadway Year "(EDITOR’S NOTE — Onward rtjid upward with Broadway, Jifore new production, increased I grosses, higher admission prices. And, in this theater season, more dramas.) * - ■ - * By WILLIAM GLOVER * AP Drama Writer ;NEW YORK — Musicals, the special pride and joy of Broadway, took a back seat to (llama during the 1 9 6 7-68 theatrical year. ; Artistically, it was a season to commend rather than hail. Statistically, both activity and prices were up. During the production year that ends technically on May 31, showgoers will have seen - 73 new exhibits and anted up $56 million at the box office. In comparison, there were 64 arrivals in t|ie previous semester with an over-all take of $52 million. And-the year before that, the respective figures were 55 und $50 million. Tnh^steady increase in grosses has resulted tp some extent from, higher ticket prices necessitated by rising costs. RATIO UNAFFECTED One. statistic, the hit-flop ratio, remained stubbornly unaffected by all the creative endeavor that ranged from calculated shock to formula slickness. Several shows ranged 12 NORTH SAaiNAW IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC MATINEES DAILY OPEN llstt A.M. Show Starts 12:00 Noon Continuous—334-4436 PROOF REQUIRED WHIP’S WOMEN bovrnans women does one man need? “HONEY” MEMORIAL DAY OPEN 3:45 Continuous Oijly at MOREY'S GOLF & COUNTRY CLUB Will You See LIVE LOBSTERS AT SENSIBLE PRICES to the limits of vocal and visual frankness. Excluding repertory enterprises which are inexorably Committed to deficit financing and limited run ‘prestige” presentations, 59 commercial shows arrived. , Of these,! 11 already have paid off or give every evidence of eventually rewarding their angels. ★ ★ * Several other still-running entries could join the charmed circle. To. get the fiscal' picture of Broadway in proper perspective, two other factors must be mentioned. Nine holdover smashes from earlier seasons continue to pile up profits and five other long runs wound up during 1967-68 with a profit of over $400,000. HEALTHY ROAD YEAR Also, about a dozen touring versions of Broadway winners prospered during a healthy road year. 1 Standout performers we,re Helen Hayes, Joel Grey, Steve Lawrence and Eydie Gorme, Albert Finney, Zoe Caldwell, Ingrid Bagman, f Colleen Dewhurst and Melvyn Douglas * ★ * The palpable new. hits, now running, include “Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead,” the top prize-winning drama from England; Arthur Miller’s "The Price,” Neil Simon’s Plaza Suite,” and the blithe MAY SPECIAL Friday Unly-4 P.M. to I P.M. CHICKEN DINNER London trifle, “There’s a Girl in My Soup.” Of 13 musical ventures, only “George M!,*1 “Golden Rainbow” and “The Happy Time’ appear potential dividend reapers. Among the mos monumental disasters in the song-dance category were “Darling of the Day” and “I’m Solomon.” CLOSED PAYOFFS Closed payoffs include Marlene Dietrich’s fabulous in- State Gears for Tourist SALAD TABLE INDESCRIBABLE MICRO OVENS For Faster Service SEAFOODS You Name It We Have It • SING-AtONG PIANO BAR You'll Sing, You'll Soo 27 ° MOREY’S Q0LF a COUNTRY CLUB Phono 3634101 , UNION LAKE LANSING .— The Michigan State Highway Commission, recognized nationally for its travel information program, is ready to extend another welcome to vacationers. Some 800,000 persons are expected to stop this year for free travel counselling service at the Commission’s eight „ travel information centers, and increase of about 100,000 over last year. The centers are on main highways at six points of entry New Buffalo, Monroe, Port Huron, Sault Ste. Marie Ironwood and Menominee — and at Clare and Mackinaw Ci ty. By late summer, a ninth center will be in operation on I-69 near Coldwater. For several weeks, tot tenance crews have been busy repairing and redecorating the information center buildings and grooming the surrounding picnic grounds. racks Stocked Literature racks, filled during the winter with information on winter sports, have been stocked with summer folders, and literature storage shelves are being restocked, literally by the truckload. Last year, travelers selected and carried away more than 2.5 million maps, directories schedules, brochures and booklets telling about travel attractions, how to reach them and where to stay! It fs expected that the 1968 total will exceed three million TONITE 8:15 THE SEA DULL Oakland university, Rochester 331-6239 In Oalroil 962-0353 'T-^eotcWicA^... ® i* 4 i NEED WE SAY MORE? RED BARN 445 ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD Across From The Mall :332-6141 New Idea Aids Fresh Water t By Science Service In coastal areas, when fresh water is pumped in large quantities from underground water-bearing formations the pressure often becomes low enough in the aquifiers that salt water from the ocean can leak in and contaminate the -fresh. Several ways of preventing this have been tried, buP with limited success. ■)—Tfow two California inventors have patented an idea which may show promise.* It consists of pumping a dam down a well to block off the contamination. A series of holes is drilled in a line between the fresh water supply and the incoming salt water. * * * A slurry of clay or other noi& water-soluble material is pumped down the first hole while fresh water is removed from' the second in conventional fashion. Then the process is shifted so that slurry goes down the second hole and fresh water comes,jup the third, and so on until a wall has been built blocking the aquifier off from the salt water. person engagement; Eugene O’Neill’s somber posthumous piece, “More Stately Mansions, and by slim margins, - Peter Ustinov’s “Halfway up the Tree” and Edward Albee’s “Everything in the Garden.” Other quality assets of the season were visits by the Vienna Burgtheater, the Polish Theater of Poland and the work of the APA-Phoenix company., Worthy too are the still-running “Joe Egg,” “The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie” and the recently arrived “Soldiers.” ★ * ★ The Lincoln Center Repertory, badgered still by errors of omission and commission, gave evidence o f growing strength with “The Little Foxes,” “Tiger at the Gates,” “Saint Joan” and “Cyrano de Bergerac.” APA scored its biggest hit with “The Show-Off.” On the downbeat side, established authors, including Robert Anderson, Henry Denker, Harold Pinter, Gore Vidal and Tennessee. Williams, found the going rough. Even Bernard Shaw, in a one-man condensation “By George!,’ failed to please critics or populace. THEPAKry HARRY SAM TWIN- nSmnr nuranrcouhiMu MliAaCM KARLMALDEN New writers had plenty of opportunity, being involved in 22 presentations. The four that made the biggest impressions were Tom Stoppard with “Rosencratz and Guildenstern,” Terence Frisby who delivered “There’s a Girl irt My Soup” and Peter Nichols, “Joe Egg.” Britons all. The lone domestic standout was Mrs. Jay Presson Allen with “The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie.” * * ★ The public, as usual, proved tougher than the critics, speedily ignoring seven plays that won majority approval, and reversing the pundits only once. THURS. at 1-3-5-7-9 CHARUON HESTON ARTHUR R JACOBS poducixm dLani iiiibWMcDOWl- MAURICE BUNS KMHMEMiejmaE PRICES This Encafimsnt Only AR||| Thurs. Sat. Matineo.1.25 ADULTS Nitat and Sunday. ••••.1.75 Children Under 12......75c ROW, HAWAIIAN LUAII Mast Fabulous of Feasts Saturday, June 1 The Big Band of FRANK JAMES SPECIAL - July 5 HARRY JAMES and His Orchestra August 9 LEE CASTLE and the JIMMY DORSEY Orchestra Entertainment Every Friday and Saturday Distinctive Dining for Lunch and Dinner Dining Room doted Monday* HAWAIIAN GARDENS Resort and Motel The Exciting Party Restaurant 4501 Grange Hall Road Reservations Holly, Mich. 48442 63441231 COMMERCE IN-CAR ELECTRIC HEATERS DRIVE-IN THEATER Union Lk. at Haggarty Rd. EM 3-0661 CIDQT Dim SHOWTIME— DUSK ■ Ind I nun weo.-thurs.-fri.-mt.-sun. PBERMt om0100**»mM> «N gS TECHNICOLOR' S' I They could share the Apache-Hell ...but never the womanl MGM;__ Jenn Ford 43 * \ Arthur Kennedy - DeanJagger r __ . SR* "Day of the evil gun" PMMVBKM and MITROCOLOR S’ Now the Best Everyday Steak Buy in Town HOSS'S FAVORITE Select STRIP STEAK With Bokod Potato, Buttar, G^roonSajad, Toko* Toast. Monday In Free Beverage Day BONANZA SIRLOIN PIT. Kmart Glen wood Plpza North Parry Straat, Corner Olahwoad Carry-Out Available M-Mtt Open 7 Doyi a Week 11 A M. - 9. Frl. and Sat. *111 JOp OPEN SUNDAY'TIL 9 P.M. $|79 HOT ! B~18 cm Inf THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 40, 1968 / 58.88 EACH SAVE 778 30" RANGE HOOD • COPPERTONE • DUCTLESS Regular $32.95 Now Sava $5.00 No vmtlng req cial charcoal Altar cleans smoke amt odors from tbs ah'. 2 speed operation, En-closed built-in light hi* eluded. SHELVING BOARDS No. 2 Ponderosa Pine rxi2" These clear, smooth-surfaced boards are ideal for shelving or general use. Easy to work with. May be painted or stained. 18.6' LIN. FT. 3.5 HP-21" ROTARY MOWER Built of lightweight, but tough, left aluminum. 4 cycle Briggs & Stratton engine. E-Z spin recoil starter. 4-position toggle type controls. Cutting height adjustment REG. $79.95 SAVE $12.07 *67 88 EACH DRYER VENT KIT 4 IN. x 5 FT. Rid your homo of dryer lint, dust, and hot air. Hare’s a complete wnting system you can easily install yourself. Includes vent hood, 5 ft. of flexible tubing, and 2 clamps. Specially priced for you this week. REGULAR $4.99 SAVE $1.11 *3 88 EACK- WICKES LUMBER and BUILDING SUPPLIES CENTER HOLLY and BALDWIN ROADS BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE ,5 Miles South of Grand Bland 221$ South Telegraph Road Open Daily 8 A.M. to 5:30 PM„ Sat. 8 to 4 Open Daily and Sat. 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. Michigan Bankaro 0 :*