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PNH Wins Handily; PCH Rally Falls Short—Page
The Weather
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Partly Sunny (0«miii Paid)
THE
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Edition
PONTIAC PRESS
THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1909
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VOL. 127 - NO. 218	★ ★ ★ gH.T.SW.T^T.oHAt ^TPAGES *	10c
Bogus $1.5 Million Seized in County
Police raided a Rose Township home last night and seized $1.5 million in bogus bills. A home in Detroit and another in Redford Township were also raided!
The money was all in uncut $20 bills, and according to U.S. Secret Service agents who conducted the raid, "some of it was hot off the press.”
James J. Burke, in charge of the U. S. Secret Service for the area, said it was the "largest seizure” ever in Southeastern Michigan and one of the largest in the Midwest.
He said that the homes had been under surveiUence for three or four weeks, and that none of the bogus money was ever distributed.
Police said the printing press was operated in the home of William Kereluk Sr., located at 801 Little School Lot Lake, a dead-end street of lake front residences.
Kereluk, 56, his wife, Emma, 50, two sons, William, 28, of St. Clair Shores and John P., 25, of Detroit, were among the seven persons arrested at the home during the midnight raid.
8 OTHERS IDENTIFIED
The three others were identified by authorities as Glenn Brogan, 23, of Warren, a jockey at Detroit Race Course; Jerry Zimmerman, 30, of Detroit; and Fred McCord, 52, of Dearborn Heights. •- e ★	★
In addition to the counterfeit money and printing press, police said they had confiscated a rifle, shotgun and three revolvers at Kereluk’s home.
Kereluk, employed at Sutter Products in Holly, has lived at the Rose Township address for about two years, according to neighbors.
Four radio monitoring units—which
can be used to listen in on police calls -r-were confiscated in Detroit and another unit was seized in the Redford Township home.
3 ARRESTED
Three persons were arrested in those raids.
They were identified as Judy Poter-acki, 29, of 9653 Kinloch, Redford Township, and Christopher Glump, 32, and Doreen T. Carlisle, both of 9530 Carlin, Detroit.
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All those arrested were charged with conspiracy to manufacture counterfeit money. State and Detroit police assisted, in the raids.
They were arraigned this morning in Federal District Court and released on bonds ranging up to $15,000 pending further court hearings.
Diet Sweetener Ban Ordered
WASHINGTON (AP) - Secretary of Welfare Robert H. Finch ordered today that all foods and drinks containing the artificial sweetener cyclamate b e removed from grocery shelves by Feb. 1 because of new evidence the substance causes cancer in animals.
Finch emphasized, however, “We have no evidence at this point that cyclamates have indeed caused cancer in humans.”
it it ★
He said he would not recommend that families" who now have cyclamate-con-taining foods and drinks in their homes
BOLIVIAN TAKE-OVER — Bolivian armed forces chief Gen. Juan Jose Torres prevents an employe of the Bolivia Gulf Co. from leaving the company’s office in La Paz yesterday. The employe was trying to leave the office with company documents when the Bolivian army moved in to take over. The army seized the Gulf Oil Corp. holdings because the government felt Bolivia wasn’t getting enough of the profits.
throw them away or stop using them at the present time.
Cyclamates, which Finch estimated are a $l-billion annual industry, are found mainly in diet drinks and foods. They also are contained in a wide range of nondiet foods from bacon to canned fruits and children’s vitamins.
CANCER IN RATS
Finch said he acted after two different laboratories presented evidence this week that cyclamates in very high doses produced bladder cancer in rats and mice.
The evidence was reviewed by government scientists and a panel of the National Academy of Science, which recommended the strong restrictions on cyclamates.
*	*	★
Finch said beginning immediately, no more cyclamates will be allowed in the production of general purpose foods and beverages.
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He said beverages which contain the highest level of cyclamates must be removed from grocery shelves by Jan. 1. Other artificially sweetened foods, which he said contain lower levels of cyclamate and pose a "very minimal risk,” must be removed by Feb. 1.
WILL BE AVAILABLE
Finch said cyclamate-containing foods and beverages will still be available to persons who require them for medical reasons on a prescription-type basis. These persons would include those with diabetes or obesity.
“My decision to remove cyclamates from the list of approved substances in no sense should be interpreted as a life-saving or 'emergency measure,”
Finch said at a news conference, "I have acted under the provisions of law because it is imperative to follow a prudent course in all matters concerning public health.”
A CASE OF SINK OR SWIM — Caesar’s Forum, a floating Miami Beach restaurant that sank in Indian Creek during a 1965 hurricane and was rehabilitated sometime later, is
shown as it is being towed seven miles to a new location in the Miami River. The four-story building is passing through a Venetian Causeway drawbridge.
OU Aims for Independence
Oakland University appears to be on its way to independence from its mother institution, Michigan State University.
A . study committee of the MSU Board of Trustees will be considering within the next 60 days a proposal that OU be granted independence.
★ ★ ★
Trustees yesterday unanimously accepted a resolution presented by OU Chancellor Durward B. Varner that the 10-year-old institution be granted its autonomy.
The resolution pointed out the growth and gains of the college in only a decade and added, "Michigan Stato-*Jniversity is now in the process of naming a new president, who will of necessity have demands on his time of greater priority than the problems and concerns of a rapidly expanding affiliate campus.”
The resolution also expressed gratitude to the board of trustees and the MSU staff and faculty for their contributions to OU during its infancy.
The proposal of the five-member study committee is expected to be a major item of business at the trustees’ December meeting, according to Troy Crowder, assistant to the chancellor.
Members of the study committee will be board Chairman Don Stevens, board
member Frank Merriman, the board’s legal counsel, Lee Carr, board Secretary Jack Rreslin and Varner.
The resolution recommending that OU disassociate itself from MSU was prepared by a steering committee of the Oakland University Senate and was approved by the senate Thursday.
When the board of trustees accepts the independence of OU, as is expected by college officials, the proposal will be channeled through the Michigan Legislature and the State Board of Education.
An OU spokesman said the state board
has been behind Oakland’s autonomy for some time.
★ ★ *
The MSU affiliate was founded In 1957 on the Meadow Brook Farm estate of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred G. Wilson who donated the 1,400 acres in Avon and and Pontiac townships to the MSU board, along with $2 million to assist in the foundation of a new university.
Oakland University opened in 1959 with 500 students and two buildings. It since has expanded to more than 5,009 students and 20 buildings.
Gas-Warfare Tests in the Air to Resufrie
North Koreans Four Yanks
SEOUL UP) — Four American soldiers were ambushed and killed by "an unprovoked attack” of North Korean Communists today near the southern boundary of the demilitarized zone, a U.S. spokesman said.
The spokesman said the men were returning in a Jeep to their units after performing equipment maintenance at a guard post when they were attacked by hand grenade and small arms fire.
★ it :i *' .
Patrols began an immediate sweep of the area. The bodies ware recovered from the truck.
Names of the dead were withheld until their relatives are notified.
60 INCIDENTS IN 69
Since January, one American has been killed and six wounded in a total of 60 incidents along the 18-mile-long American sector of the DMZ.
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Army, armed with a report to blunt congressional criticism, has decided to resume testing chemical warfare agents at two posts after a three-month suspension.
Secretary Stanley i R. Resor authorized j resumption of open-j air testing of chemical agents at Edge-1 wood Arsenal, Md., and use of such gases in defensive training at Ft. McClellan, Ala., after a civilian report endorsed safety procedures at both bases.
Resor had ordered the suspension in mid-July when it was first disclosed that the Army was conducting open-air tests of chemical warfare agents.
That disclosure touched off a flurry of criticism in Congress, where some members already were highly concerned about chemical and biological warfare research.
Resor countered by naming a committee of civilian scientific experts to review safety procedure in the testing at Edgewood and training at McClellan.
The committee, headed by Dr. Ivan Loveridge Bennett, vice president of New York University, found that safety procedures at both posts are “adequate and effective.”
Boy-Girl Stanford Dorm Succeeds
The weather man must be a football fan as the forecast for this afternoon c^lls for partly sunny Skies and brisk temperatures, ideal for players and spec-tators^allke.
Tomorrow’s outlook is mostly cloudy with a chance of showers and a little warmer with highs in the mid-59s. Monday will be partly cloudy and a little cooler.
There’s a 00 per cent chance of rain tonight, dropping to ^0 per cent tomorrow. it
An over night low of 38 was recorded in downtown Pontiac at 7 this morning. At 2 p.m., the temperature was 58.
•'» no (OK UM Wholotoio" Sundoy only, 10-1, it M0. WMIOWtllt-WflMoyoil-Ktaultr-Olati Any tin *nt prict. Pontl« Aim Supply,
MNCI Mo A poor, or oalvanizso,
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STANFORD, Calif. (AP) — Young men and women at a Stanford University dormitory are living in adjacent single rooms in what officials call an experiment in advanced coeducational living. \
“It’s going quite well,” says William Leland, associate dean of students.
Many of the students’ parents approve. No parent has complained.
Joseph Katz, executive director of the school’s Institute for the Study of Human Problems, said the 40 students’ coeducational living may have led to a "partial moratorium on sex.”	'	;	\*m	■ I
INITIATE CHANGE
Students initiated the change last spring by drafting a .floor plan assigning names of men and women in next-door rooms at Roble Hall, previously an all-women’s dorm and one of the oldest structures on campus.
A	★	it
Peter Bulkeley, a new dean visfing Roble, saw the suggested plan on a wall and thought the assignments already had been approved.
*	*	*	. '
"Sounds like a great idea,” he said.
Assistant Prof, John Palmer and his wife, directors of the dormitory, understood Bulkeley’s remark to mean official approval and men were moved into rooms assigned by the plan.
The Palmers say they have encountered no special problems so far in the experiment, which progresses beyond (he now fairly common college coeducational housing with men and women on separate floors or corridors.	\
The bath-and-toil<jt problem was resolved by assigning one to men and one to women.	* ■	‘
\ \	.	*	* vf- \
The program has brought approving comments from' some parents,
| i '“1 approve 100 per cent,” said Mrs. Anne Huston Gilliand hf Corvallis, Ore., ( whose daughter Sue fives in the dorm. “When I went to Stanford 25 years ago, the boys were at one end of the campus and the girls at the other. Dates became too important. They created tension between boys and girls.”
RELAXED ATTITUDE
i Coed Monica Ploeser of Santa Clam, Calif., said she senses a more relaxed attitude toward women among men students.
Robert Blees of Los Angeles, a Dartmouth graduate whose son is in the group, said, “It’s a fine idea. I’m not shocked at all.”
Katz said the coeducational units avoid “over idealization” of the opposite sex and a good deal of the mutual teasing and destructive behavior characteristic of campus dating.	F	/...
On a longer-range basis, Katk said, participants may develop attitudes that will lead them to stronger marriagejs. ■ -1	: \ j; •'
■Sen. Charles McC. Mathias, R-Md., who in July had called for suspension of testing of chemical warfare agents, said Friday night he had requestea— but had not received — a copy of the scientists’ report.
Mathias and otheris in Congress had called for full reports on poisonous chemical munitions when the Army disclosed the open air testing in July.
‘WILL FOLLOW RECOMMENDATIONS’
Resor said the Army will follow tie recommended restrict ion s in the report—such as intensive use of monitors, limitation of "munition dissemination” to heights below 75 feet, installation of additional fencing around the test site, and periodic ecological surveys for the area.
Meanwhile, Resor’s boss, Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird has urged In a secret memorandum to the National Security Council that the United States stop producing biological warfare agents, the New York times reported today.
In Today's Press
Row Over SDS Church members split over housing of militants — PAGE B-6.
Tax Reform Senate panel acts to curb medical-aid abuse—PAGE D-l.
Australia Manhunt Police searching |for only at-large participant In Britain’s Great Train Robbery — PAGE A-5.
, S1
Astrology ...............: D-2
Bridge	...... ... D-2
Church News .........fc-*-C-7
Crossword Puzzle .........D-l I
Comics ...................  D-t
Editorials ... 'r.	.I ... A-4
Home Section ........ B-l—B-5
Markets ........ B-iO, B-ll
Obituaries ...............A4
Sports; ............. C-l—€4
Theaters ..............
TV, Radio Programs .
Vietnam War News ... Women’s Page ........
A—a
THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18. IMP
Last 2 Cosmonauts Return to Earth Safely
From Our Newt Wire* MOSCOW - The Soviets today safely brought back to earth their Soyus 8 spacecraft and its two-man crew, completing their biggest week in space, a period that saw seven cosmonauts orbiting simultaneously in three ships,
' ,	WWW
The Tass News Agency said Soyus 8 ended Its five-day flight In the Karangda recovery area in Central Asia, as had Its sister ships, Soyus 6 and 7 on Thursday and yesterday. Hie cosmonauts were reported in excellent condition.
The big Soyus 8 spacecraft landed In the snow-blanketed fields of Soviet Kazakhstan, not far from the Baikonur launchpad.
Hie two unshaven spacemen — Col. Vladimir Shatlov and Alexei Yeliseyev -were met on touchdown by search and rescue helicopters and flown Immediately to a receiving post In Karaganda.
A televised report from the nearby Cosmodrome said all seven cosmonauts Involved In the eight-day mission "carried out their assignments excellently."
Peace Corpsmen Irk White House
WASHINGTON (AP) - The White House is reported to be upset over public protests against the war in Vietnam by Peace Corps volunteers in at least six foreign countries.
In Turkey, Peace Corps members led a silent vigil outside the U S. embassy. In the Dominican Republic, volunteers ran a newspaper advertisement branding the war as unjust.
Other protests took place in four South American countries, coinciding with mid-
Thieu: We Firod on Soviet Ship
SAIGON (UPI) - President Nguyen Van Thieu, contradicting his military spokesmen, said today a South Vietnamese gunboat did indeed fire on a Soviet trawler offshore yesterday.
Hie president told newsmen on a field trip to the Mekong Delta that there was “some shooting" and that the gunboat’s salvo left “maybe one or two holes” in file Soviet vessel.
* * *
“I don’t believe it will, create any diplomatic incident,” Thieu said.
Earlier, one of his military spokesmen in Saigon had said that a government naval vessel chased the Soviet ship from territorial waters but "there was no shooting.”
Said Thieu: “I don’t believe that before we chased it away that our navy knew whether it was Russian or not." Hie positive identification, he said, was made "afterwards.”
Allied military sources had said a shell from a South Vietnamese naval vessel hit the Soviet trawler off the northern coast and sent it fleeing back into the international waters, smoke pouring from its bow.
As yet, no Soviet protest note has been filed with Washington or at the United Nations. Soviet trawlers constantly shadow U.S. warships off Vietnam and chart American air operations from the 7th Fleet carriers on “Yankee Station.”
week Vietnam Moratorium protests throughout the United States.
Officially, the Peace Corps denied the White House flap. But inside sources reported Henry Kissinger, the President’s foreign policy adviser, telephoned Peace Corps Director Joseph Blatchford to convey the displeasure.
SENSITIVE ISSUE
The Vietnam war is a sensitive issue for the Peace Corps in many emergin nations where the U.S. involvement is under attack.
In the Dominican Republic, one of the volunteers who signed the advertisement said, "For the first time, I think many people here have stopped looking on us as CIA agents."
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The advertisement, signed by 38 members, called the war "unjust and irrational.”
One volunteer in the Dominican Republic said the advertisement was published in Santo Domingo, the|apital, rather in the United States became “we thought it would be more embafrassing 'to the Nixon administration to hfve our views known here...”
It apparently was. A Peace Corps source said, “You can imagine what the
iltn IlfVllfA IIaIIOA *’
I U.S. WmMmt Burtau Raporf
Today lit Pontiac temperature preceding I :i Wind Velocity 11 m.p.h
Sun rises tomorrow at 0:50 a.m.
One Year Ago l Highest temperature .. Lowest temperature ..
i today at 11:54 p.n
(as i
Lowest temperature ................59
Mean temperature ..................44
Weather—Partly sunny, chilly
4 a.m. ........I RH
t a.m........... .38 11 a.n
8 a.m.  .......41 12:30
9	a.m........ 42	2 p.r
Weather—Some rain
Friday's Readings
Alpena . 47 30 Detroit 52 34 G'd Rapids	47	30	Duluth	47	29
Houghton	41	32	Jacksonville	83	55
Houghton Lk.	46	39	Kansas City	58	48
Kinross	44	28	Los Angeles	71	61
Lansing	51	36	Miami Beach	84	74
Marquette	44	33	Milwaukee	51	30
Mt. Clemens	50	35	New Orleans	74	58
52	46	New York	64	44.
49	34	Omaha	54	45
48	29	Phoenix	87	62
52	36	Pittsburgh	53	32
51	40	St. Louis	55	39

, C. 55 39
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This Date in 97 Years
52 28 Tampa 67 57 Washington
Prior to their return, Toes said, the Soyus 8 crewmen tested “new, extremely convenient ways of navigation.”
The cosmonauts established communication with the flight control center through a communications vessel somewhere in the Atlantic Ocean, and the communication satellite Molniya 1, the agency said.
•SUCCESSFUL’ *
“The experiment was successful. Communications were stable,” Tass said.
The agency also said Shatlov and Yeliseyev held a "space press conference," answering questions of Soviet journalists. The questions and answers were not reported.
Soyus 7, with three cosmonauts on board, parachuted to a soft landing yesterday, a day after Soyus 6 came down with Its two cosmonauts. All are reported in good condition. Soyus 6 went up last Saturday, Soyus 7 on Sunday and Soyus 8 on Monday.
According to official reports, the mission of the space troika had been accomplished "according to plan.”
WELDING EXPERIMENTS Among other things, the men carried out cold welding experiments, weather research and geological observations.
Western space experts say this week’s flights left many questions unanswered — although it may be possible, they said, that the seven cosmonauts accomplished things that the Russians were not willing to disclose.
AS Wir.ph.to
. HE TAKES A SHINE TO IT — A U. S. 101st Airborne labeled “Cold Death,” at a fire base south of the demilitarized Division paratrooper polishes up his 105mm howitzer, grimly zone in South Vietnam.
i was at the White House.’ ‘SENSELESS, IMMORAL’ *
In Turkey, the war was condemned as "senseless and Immoral" in &* letter given to the U.S. ambassador by 30 demonstrators, most of them Peace Corps Volunteers.
Peace Corps sources, said volunteers gave other petitions to U.S. ambassadors in Bolivia, Colomhia and Guyana and made a public statement against the war in Ecuador.
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In Washington, about 200 members of the Peace Corps staff—a fourth of the total—took the day off Wednesday to stage a walk to the Capitol as part of the Moratorium protests after an antiwar rally at the Peace Corps headquarters.
Peace Corps officials said no punitive action would be taken against any of the volunteers who participated in the protests.
The Weather
Fall U.S. Weather Bureau Report
PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Mostly sunny this morning becoming partly sunny this afternoon and continued cool, highs in the lower 50s. Increasing cloudiness and not as cold tonight with light rain ’likely, lows 36 to 41. Mostly cloudy and a little warmer tomorrow with a chance of showers and highs in the mid-50s. Monday’s outlook: partly cloudy and a little colder. Winds southwest to west eight to 18 miles per hour today and westerly five to 12 mph tonight, becoming southeasterly 10 to 15 mph. Probabilities of precipitation: 20 per cent today, 60 per cent tonight and 40 per cent tomorrow.
School Buses Guarded After 'Zodiac' Threat
SAlfc FRANCISCO (Ufl) - Armed lawmen pre riding shotgkjn <m some San Francisco Bay area school biises after a killer boasted he might shoot the bus tires “and then pick off the kiddiesas they come bouncing off.”
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The suspected killer of five persons is called Zodiac because of the astrological terms used in letters boasting of his slayings.
*	★	k
.. The latest was a letter to San Francisco police boasting of the murder of Paul Stine, 29, a cab-driver whose body was found Saturday night in the Presidio Heights section of San Francisco.
He sent along a swatch of blood-soaked cloth which police said appeared to come from Stine’s shirt.
WHO’S NEXT?
The letter warned the killer might make schoolchildren his next victims.
♦	. k k
In rural Napa County, officers rode on buses yesterday while in Sausalito, police cars followed buses. Drivers all over the Bay Area were drilled on procedures to follow should Zodiac attempt to make good his threat.
★	k ' k
The drivers were under orders not to stop under any circumstances — to keep driving as fast as possible and as far as possible with headlights on and horns blowing to attract attention and
4 More Spy Ships Are Being Retired
WASHINGTON (AP) - The retirement of four more spy vessels by next June 30 will leave the Navy with fust two hon-c o mbatant-type intelligence-gathering ' ships out of an original fleet of 10.
Only the Valdez and the Muller Will remain once the Oxford, the Georgetown, the Jamestown and the Belmont are laid up.
The Navy, in announcing the new economy move yesterday, said the latest savings will be $43 million.
They are of the class of the Liberty ship which was shot up by the Israelis in the Mediterranean in 1967 and then retired.
That incident and the North Korean seizure of the Pueblo, in January
Meanwhile, the state attorney general’s office is heading a coordinated effort by the San Francisco and Vallejo Police Departments and the Napa and Solano County Sheriff’s Offices to locate the killer fascinated with astrology.
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The killings began last December near Vallejo, about 30 miles northeast of here. They have been woven together by the killer’s morbid notes filled with, astrological terms written to local newspapers and police departments boasting of his cleverness and threatening further bloodshed.
Woman Killed in Area Crash
One woman was killed and another critically injured in a two-car collision in Elba Township, Lapeer County, early” this morning.
Susan L. Wheeler, 21, of Flint was killed in a car which reportedly crossed the center line of Oregon Road near Mapleleaf and struck a car head-on at the top of a hill at about 3:50 a.m., Lapeer County sheriff’s deputies said. k k fc k
Hie driver of the car in which the - dead woman was a passenger was Larry Faught, 24, of 8325 Ridgefield, Davison, deputies said. He was treated for minor injuries at Lapeer County General Hospital and released. „
Deputies said they would seek a charge of negligent homicide against Faught.
The driver of the other car, Mary Schroeder, 32, of 1862 Gray, Lapeer, is in critical condition at .Hurley Hospital in Flint, according to a deputy.
Some speculated that unexpected difficulties may have developed during the flight of the three Soyus ships, precluding spectacular results.
The government newspaper Izvestla said last night the purpose of the three-craft flight had been to “bring closer the period of permanent orbital spaceships."
As Soyuz 7 was lowered' gently onto Soviet ground yesterday, the Russians announced their fifth launching in a week. An unmanned research vehicle, Cosmos 302, was tired Into orbit from the Baikonur Space Center.
Birmingham Area
Church Unit Will Hear Author Talk
FRANKLIN - Jill Renich will speak at the Oct. 28 luncheon meeting of the Women’s Society of Christian Service of the Franklin Community Church.
The luncheon will begin at noon in the Fellowship Hall of the church.
An author, lecturer and teacher, Mrs. Renich is president of Winning. Women Inc., a fellowship of women drawn together by a common desire to share with other women the fellowship of Jesus Christ.”
Mrs. Renich and her husband; the Rev. Frederick G. Renich, director o f missionary Internship in Detroit, have done missionary work in China, Australia, England and Ireland. kkk
Mrs. Renich is the author of four books and broadcasts weekly through her program, “Between Us Women.”
1968, called into question the value of unarmed or lightly armed intelligence ships.
The Navy announced last month that * the two remaining ships of the Pueblo class—the Palm Beach and the Banner— would be placed in mothballs.
The intelligence jobs performed by these ships were mainly to intercept radio communications and monitor radar stations. The Pentagon decided these, jobs could better be handled by reconnaissance aircraft and warships.
In all, i03 naval vessels are being laid up under the Pentagon’s money-saving drive.
The new decision also includes disbanding seven Seabee battalions, releasing about 5,000 men from active duty, by mid-November. Their home bases are in Fort Hueneme, Calif.; Davisville, R.I., and Gulfport, Miss.
A third phase of the latest economy move is a 30,000-man cut in the Navy’s civilian work force which now totals more than 419,000 persons. This will be accomplished by attrition and some dismissals. Bases involved will be identified in the near future.
k k, k
The campaign to cut an additional $3 billion from the defense budget includes previously announced plans to cut military manpower by 196,000 men. The total will reach about 220,000 by the end of this next fiscal year.
BLOOMFIELD HILLS — Some 250 area businessmen and professionals are attending a special meeting at the Institute for Advanced Pastoral Studies Division of Cranbrook center for Human Resources, 380 Lone Pine, today.
■They are exploring ways in‘which the new Human Resources Center can best serve metropolitan Detroit.
The new division, scheduled to open fully' in February, will provide workshops in individual and group communications. Sessions in mental health and social issues also are planned.
BIRMINGHAM - The Seaholm Parent-Teacher Association is sponsoring three meetings for parents this Fall.
Next Tuesday at 8 p.m. in the school’s Maple Room, parents of juniors and seniors will be given information about requirements, college admission, military obligations and other matters pertaining to their children.
The parents of Seaholm sophomore students will be given a tour of the school on Oct. 28.
Open house begins at 8 p.m. Nov. 11 in the Seaholm gymnasium.
7 Bombs Exploded in Athens; No Injuries
ATHENS (UPI)) — Seven bombs exploded in central Athens today, three of them along the route Premier George Papadopoulos was to take in leaving the city for the conutryside.
The right-wing National Resistance Movement (NRM) claimed credit for the bombings but said there was no attempt on the premier’s life intended. Nobody was injured in the blasts.
“This is a rehearsal for what will happen Oct. 28," said - the NRM spokesman, referring to the anniversary of the Italian invasion in 1940.
NY Aid 'Excesses' Told
WASHINGTON UR — Ineligible families in New York City have received millions of dollars in welfare payments, says the General Accounting Office in a report to
The GAO supported most of the findings of a federal-state investigation last month into the program of aid to families with dependent children. The federal-state study determined about $66 million a year was being distributed in excess payments.
Ghetto Joblessness Up
' WASHINGTON UR - The Labor Department reports growing unemployment among big city Slum-dwelling Negroes. But improvements are noted in the job situation among poor whites.
The rate of unemployment for black workers averaged 7f5 per cent in the third quarter, up from 8.9 per cent during the matching period a year ago, the Bureau of Labor Statistics said yesterday.
NATIONAL WEATHER - It will rain tonight in parts of South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas, Colorado, Arizona, Utah and Florida. There will be snow flurries in the higher elevations of Idaljp, Wyoming and Colorado. Cool weather will continue from the Great Lakes into most of' the East and across the Great Basin and the Southwest.
Birmingham Bank Robbed of $1,125
\ A lobe bandit held u{j a Birmingham , bank and escaped with $1,125 yesterday afternoon, police said.	x
■ The holdup man took the money from a tefley at the Wabeek Branch of . the Detroit Bank and Trust Co., 284 W. Maple, shortly after 2 p.in., according to police.
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He reportedly told the teller he had S gun and demanded the money and fled on foot, police said.
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Birmingham police and FBI agents said die suspect wjuT whlte, 20 to 25 years old, 5 feet 10,160 pounds, had light curly hair with sideburns and was cleanshaven and wearing a three-quarter-lenth jacket.
'Most Combat Units to Leave in 1970'
Viet-Pullout Speedup Seen
GARDEN CITY, N.Y. (AP) — President Nikon has ordered the Pentagon to dork out plans for withdrawing up to ,300,000 U.S. troops from Vietnam ■'.'in a copyright story by cotumofrt
Vietnam In 1970, Newsday said today ■ Fiord Lewis, in'-1	\	1
The story from Washington bald that, according to reliable informants, the President plans to announce the accelerated withdrawal program in his Nov. 3 television address.1 * * . *
While many details remain to be worked out, the initial outline of the plan calls for the removal <4 all American combat unlta except two, according to the story in Newsday, a Long Island, afternoon newspaper.
The columnist said the units to be left behind are the most mobile — the 1st Air Cqvafry Division and the 173rd Airborne Brigade. They total between 17,000 and 18,000 men.
“The rest of an American force of between IfO,000 and
200,000 men scheduled to be in Vietnam at the end of next year will be air and support froopi,” the story said.	v
Miss Lewis S& the speedup of troop withdrawals was the key decision made in Nixon’S meeting with the Joint Chiefs of
Staff at Get. 8.	;!
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• “Ifgoes beyond the with<|rbwal schedule that the President planned last August and then dropped in the face of strong opposition from the military, jsubstltutlng an even more modes program which he announcedjin September.
■ }	.. kj i w.. * k .	(u,j..	. '
‘The (dan reflects a shift, of infiuence in the administration to thise civilian loaders who have^been arguing that domestic troubles are tob near the disaster point to permit the much mow gradual ‘Vietnamization’ that the generate wanted,” Mils Lewis wrote..' »	3 ., n T ■,> T-7,. Tr
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TIIK- PONTIAC PUKSM, bATHHOAV, OCTOBER 1H. HHW
A—8
Sacha Distel Didn't Want to Become 'Mr- Bardot1
By KARL WILSON
MEW YORK — “I deedn't want to be Mr. Bardot, Sacha Distal said.
"And I never deed become Mr. Bardot. That might be one of the reasons we didn't make It."
dr	if
It's been 11 years since his famous romance with Brigitte of the towels but |§y| most Americans remember him for that, and It's probable that he'll be answerjrig questions about B.B. when he's 80.
His wife of seven years, Franclne fj Breaud, a former French Olympic skier, ? doesn’t mind — "she’s above all that — after I all, she's my wife and Bardot nevor was my It wife," Distel said. “And anyway, Brigitte Is now In love with another member of my g family."	WILSON
“Who? You have a brother?" we asked him hastily.
* * *
"My son Laurent. He’s 5. He’s very nice. She met him in an airport with me and fell in love with him. She sent him a box of candy.”
People hearing Distel In his first New York singing engagement at the Plaza Persian Room often get confused and think he was married to Bardot.
"We were only engaged," he smiled, when we met at Gallagher’s. "But," he repeated, "we didn't make tt.”
"I have a feeling that females in show business get to be masculine or at least almost like men. She really wanted to get married, and she always wants everything to happen . in five minutes. I was always very slow about getting married. I deedn't want to get married to get divorced two years later.”
And so they broke off back in. the late '50s or '60s when he was considerably under 25 . . . and now at 34, he realizes that "some of the clubs that hired me probably wanted me because I was engaged to Bardot — but I was too young then to be conscious of that."
The Weekend Windup...
Jack Gilford, who portrays a man who picks winniAg horses in "Three Men on a Horse,” will give the audience a tip on a horse each night during his curtain call.. . Call Henny Youngman’s number and the service answers: “Hen-ny Youngman, King of the One-Uners!" ... The Chicago branch of the Factory discotheque has a problem—can’t find a male manicurist for its health club ... Peter Fonda, whoee "Easy Rider" is a box office hit, will sign a major Columbia deal.
II Syndicate)
Gerald A. Jones Jr.
Service (or Gerald A. Jones Jr., infant son of Mr. and Mrs, Gerald Jones of 2838
United Methodist Church of Goodrich.
Surviving are one daughter, Leona'of Goodrich; one son, Donald of Goodrich; and two
Mrs. Raymond St. John L
, Surviving are* his parents; grandparents Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Slaught of Holly and Mrs. Margaret Jones o f Rochester; one brother, Darrell,
Grandview, Waterford at home; and two sisters,'sisters,
Township, wbb to be 2 p.m. this Cheryl and Melissa, both at Sweeney of Goodrich, afternoon at Plxley Memorial home.
Chapel in Rochester with burial |
UVS'S** H.™an K. Ewald
after blrtlh____j WOLVERINE LAKE -
.Service for Herman K. Ewaid,
161, of 1821 Shankln will be 1
Clarkston Girl HMlBWfiPSG
| Lake, with burial in Glen Eden
in Auto Accident
was employed with the Com-A Clarkston girl was admitted«****•*
Chance for Smokers to Kick the Habit
Smokers who want to kick the,St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, and I cigarette habit have a chance, Dr. Arthur Weaver of Veterans I beginning tomorrow, to Memorial Hospital, Dearborn. • participate In S special five-day | Movies showing physical ef-
i I hi	Mr. | , \ program at the Oakland County ifects of smoking will be shown
including mm. amei CourthoUM Auditorium, 1200 N. each night of the clinic and Telegraph.	pamphlets and personal guides
Cosponsored by the Michigan I with suggestions to . overcome the smoking habit will be distributed, followed by discussion periods.
Dr. Williams is scheduled to discuss Some of the psychological aspects of the smoking habit, while Dr. Myaor will discus* the medical aspects.
ancer Foundation and the AVON TOWNSHIP — Service! Pontiac 8eventh-day Adventist for Mrs. Raymond (Hazel) St. Church, the free program runs
John, 80, of 3774 S. Rochester will be II a.m. Monday at William R. Potere Funeral Home with burial in Troy Union Corners Cemetery,
Sunday through Thursday, from 7:30 to 0 a m.
The clinic will be conducted by Dr. Raymond L. Mayor, M.D., and Dr. Robert A.
. St. Jcj|w died yesterday. Williams, director of guidance „ .j j .	.. Surviving are two daughters, and measurements for Oakland
Mr. Ewaid died yesterday. He Mrg 0ra Lockwood and Mrs. I County Schools.
MMHHT	Helen Bishop, both of Aiding in the nightly presen
Rochester.	tations will be Dr. Everette
to St. Joseph Mercy Hospital following an early morning accident in Independence Township today.
He is survived by his wife,,
Gladys; three sons, Rpnald of, ju>
Livonia, Gerald of Redford ■
Township and Roger of Wlxom; ROCHESTER three sisters; and six m. -Shlnnlck, 85,
Gustafson of Pontiac, D r Fred M. Shinnick William Swatek, pathologist at
DR. ROBERT A. WILLIAMS
w w	> grandchildren.
Deborah Rappuhn, 17, of 7689,
Easton was listed in satlsfac-L. T. tory condition at St. Joseph!"'™* Thomas J. nooper Mercy Hospital with face and KEEGO HARBOR — Mrs. neck lacerations.	Thomas J. (May E.) Hooper,
★	*.	*	93, of 2427 Kleist Court died to-
She was in a car that smash- Say. Her body will be at the C. ed into the rear of another that J- Godhardt Funeral Home ran out of gas on Clarkston aft®r 3 P-m- tomorrow.
Road near Dubuque about 2 a.m. I fhe is survived by a son,
according to sheriff deputies.	T- »nd 8 daughter Mrs.
Bernice E. Cover, both of Keego Harbor; seven grandchildren; 18 great-grandchildren; and four great-great-grandchildren.
Neither her companion, John W. Starr, 17, qf 391 Teggerdine, Milford, nor Hie driver of the other car, Kathleen M. Putsey, 19, of 5125 Orion Clarkston, were admitted to the hospital.
News in Brief
Temple Beth Jacob, 79 Elizabeth Lake Rd., Sun., Opt. 19, 14 p.m.	—Adv.
Mrs. Homer Larkin
GOODRICH - Service for Mrs. Homer * (Blanche N.) Larkin, 74, of 8160 Kearfley will be 1 p.m, Monday at C.F. Sherman Funeral Home, Ortonville, with burial at Mount Rose Cemetery, Mount Rose.
Mrs. Larkin died yesterday. She was a member of the
Rochester, died today. Her body is at the William R. Potere Funeral Home.
Mrs. B. C. H. Spencer
ROCHESTER - Service for Mrs. B. C. H. (Frances L.) Spencer, 86, of 137 Perrydale jwdll be 2 p.m. Tuesday at the | jPixley Memorial Chapel, with burial in Mount Avon Cemetery. Her body will be at the funeral home after 2 p.m. tomorrow.
An Order of the Eastern Star memorial service will be held 8 p.m. Monday at the funeral home.
Mrs. Spencer died yesterday. She was a life member and past matron of the Rochester Order of the Eastern Star, No. 165.
She is survived by daughters, Mrs. Hollis Hinkel of Rochester and Mrs. Don Adams of Chesaning; three grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren.
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Health Project Coordinator Is Area Man
A former Oakland County social services director, George H: Williams of 2556 Red Arrow, Commerce Township, was this week named to the 318,000-a-year post of project coordinator on a seven-county health committee.
Williams, chairman of the Oakland County Homeowners and Taxpayers Association until lus resignation last spring, said he will be responsible for developing a comprehensive health planning agency,
* * *
He was selected for his new job by the 27-member Areawide Health Operating Committee (AHOC). Composed of residents from Oakland, Wayne, Macomb, Washtenaw, Livingston, St Clair and Monroe counties, it is funded by the United Foundation and federal grants.
5 *	*	★
Williams said his job would be to develop a health agency in accordance with the comprehensive health planning survey undertaken by t h e Southeast Michigan Council of Governments, the G r e a t e r Detroit Hospital Council and the Metropolitan Fund. Much of the financing for both the survey and the agency is expected in the form of federal grants.
* *
Williams said two planning associates and two secretaries would be added to his Detroit office staff. They will be dealing with health provisions, government responsibility and health usage, Williams said.
National Board Designates 516
John Cotton, San DI e g o, president of the 87,000-member National Association of Real Estate Boards, announced the appointment of 518 persons who will serve as members of its committees this^year.
He noted that they are from 49 states, Pqerto Rico, and the District of Columbia, and emphasized that the work of these men and women is vital to tiie progress of organized real estate, since most of the continuing activity of the- National Association is conducted through its committees.
ANOTHER BARGAIN BLAST FROM THE HOUSE OF BARGAINS
and Monday
folio 9pm
Be a Smart SIMMS BARGAIN GRABBER with These Specials
SATURDAY--M0NDAY
SMMSi
1~HR FREE PARKING in DOWNTOWN PARKING MALL
Shop Simms and have your ticket stamped for 1 hour free parkin; at time of purchase. (Except on tobacco and beverages.)
Rayon or Eiderlon
Girl’s Panties
3 ir
Rayon or eiderlon panties with double crotch, ond elastic waist. Pretty pastel colors and white. Machine washable. Sizes 4 to 14.
Main Floor
w $2.49 value, pkg. of 60 Fall' vitamgis plus Iron in animal shapes the children will love.
Pkg. 60
~ PALS’VITAMINS
m
MENTHOLATUM Deep Heating Rub
$1.89 value, 3.33-oz. tube Mentholatum deep heating rub for .ale temporary relief front arthritis, rheumatic
1"
Drug* — Main Floor
\ Popular Pullover Styles
Ladies’ Sweaters
Valpm
$10.00
the ported pullover, for .lock, and tldm. Mohair and wool blfndi, 100% acrylic and 100% Orient. Turtleneck,, .quote neck,, etc. In then olid long tleeve ttylei. Broken lire! from
New Excedrin PM Tablets
$2.09 value, pkg. of ■HlS I ®0, new analgesic | H| 1 sleeping aid tablets. The safe way to relieve

3t
Jumbo Garment Bags
$1.50 value, jumbo size plastic garment bags with sturdy metal frame. Put summer clothes away safely and keep them dust free.
Drugs — Main Floor
7%x714x4-lnch 75 Watt Recessed
Frosted Ceiling Fixture
Per Kitchen, Rec Room, Basement
AtSimme
Recessed 75" watt ceiling fixture with frosted glass and chrome frame. Ideal for basement, kitchen, or recreation room. Easy to install, too. Not as shown. Electrical--2nd Floor
OSTER Air Cooled Electric
Barber Clipper
Former
*14,95
Value •
Otter Charmaire barber clipper is molar1 driven and air cooled. Now Clearance priced at Simms. All sales final.
Sundries — Main Floor
Box of 25 Remington
20-Ga. Shotgun Shells
4 or 6 Pheasant Load
Genuine Remington 20-gauge shotgun shells In the popular 4 or 6 pheasant load. Don't run out of shells just when the birds ate flying. Get an extra box this weekend.
Sports — 2nd Floor
First Quality - American Made
Men’s Thermal U’wear
Tops or Bottoms Each
first duality and American made thermal underwear that traps body heat to give warmth without weight, tong sleeved shirts or ankle length drawers. Sizes S to XL.	Basement
Mounts Easily On the Walt
Bathroom Fixture
Simmt Price
98 North SaginaW St. fonRaOt Mich.
SIMMS"!
Wall mounted bathroom fixture with white gtojj that directs the beam of light downward, just Where you want it. Chrome base.	Fixtures —2nd Floor
The Friendly Ona With Personalized
Sarvice
For Close Fast Comfortable Shaves
filorelco*Flip Top 20 Speed Shaver Razor
20 flip top Norelco .hover ha. 2 microgroove floating head., on/off .witch and coil card. Flip top cleaning. Won't Ctlt or irritate.
Durable - Easy to Clean PlasUc
Loma Bread Box
Keeps three standard size or two large loaves with 'first day' freshness. Practical, removable divider shelf. Gleaming porcelain, finish is easy to care for.
Housewares — 2nd Fleer
iibt
■Pfi

^ "as*
’ V
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i THE 4t lust Huron Street	PONTIAC PRESS •Pontiac, Michigan 48056 SATURDAY,, OCTOBER IS, 1969	
HOWARD M. FITTOIAALD NMiahar 1*14-1*3*	■ HOWARD H. FITZGERALD II Rublnhar	HAROLD A. FmOIRALO FuWiiKw i*l*-l»a*
RICHARD M. FITZGERALD	JOHN A. RILEY	HARRY J. REED
Fliwnc* Ottlcar	Advortiaing Director	Editor
ARIO McCUllY	0. MARSHALL JORDAN	RICHARD M. SAUNDERS 11
Circulation Mono#*,	Local Advtrtltlng Manager	Managing Editor
Ohio Eyes Judiciary
The long, drawn-out controversy over the appointment of Judge Clem-ent F. Haynsworth of South Carolina as associate justice of the Supreme Court has been not only an ordeal for the man himself and an embarrassment to the President but, like the Fortas case, has done nothing to reassure the public about the ethical condition of the Nation’s judiciary.
There is much to be said in favor of an appointee system of selecting judges, on all government levels, as well as in favor of a popular vote system. There is, also, much that can be said against both methods.
★ ★ ★
Many feel that it is undignified as well as time and energy-wasting for a judge to have to run for office, to have to<.ask for financial contributions and to curry political favor. It is democracy carried to an extreme. Popularity is no guarantee of competence.
On the other hand, the people must have some way of exercising recall power over these very essential functionaries of society.
A new merit system proposed as a constitutional junendment for the state of Ohio seems to combine the best of both methods while obviating some of their drawbacks.
Under the Ohio plan, the governor would establish a statewide nominating commission, which would fill court vacancies from this list of candidates. But a judge appointed in this way would serve only one term and would then run, unopposed, for re-election on his record.
If- the voters rejected him, the governor again would fill the vacancy with another appointment. Otherwise a judge would serve as long as he won periodic approval of the electorate or until he resigned or retired.
★ ★ ★
Speaking in support of the Ohio plan recently, former U.S. Attorney General Herbert Brownell said he was in favor of a merit system for both Federal and state courts. It was while Brownell headed the Justice Department during the Eisenhower administration that Judge Haynsworth was appointed to his first Federal judgeship.
At that time, screening of prospective judges did not include an investigation of their finances. “It was so rare for a judge to have money,” says Brownell.
How times have changed.
California Updates Divorce
California Gov. Ronald Reagan, an alleged “reactionary,” has signed ones of the most liberal pieces of legislation in its area — divorce law ~ ever to be placed on a governor’s desk.
Gone, but for one exception, is the archaic c o n c e p t of “grounds” (extreme cruelty, adultery, “indignities” and so on). Except for incurable insanity, the only ground in California will be irreconcilable differences — in other words, the recognition that some marriages simply have not worked and cannot be made to work and that there is not necessarily one wholly guilty party and one wholly innocent party to every marriage breakdown.
The very word divorce will be replaced on the records by “dissolution of marriage.”
★ ★
Alimony, one of the worat rackets fostered by divorce laws, will be determined by considering a woman’s age, Earning ability and the duration of the marriage.
Also gone will be a lucrative source of income for private investigators. Their reports will no longer be permitted as evidence.
America’s divorce laws, as an outgrowth of the common law, are for
the most part a reproach to a civilized nation. The adversary system, whereby plaintiff and defendant and their lawyers do verbal battle in court, with the truth the hoped-for winner, may be the best system for most types of litigation.
★ ★ ★
In divorce cases, however, it more often than not compounds the anguish and bitterness that already exist between the contending parties.
Most divorces, of course, do not go as far as a court trial. The battle takes place behind the closed doors of attorneys’ offices, where they and their clients dicker over the terms of the settlement and over who shall be the “guilty” party and who the “innocent.”
The court in most cases routinely ratifies the agreement reached and grants the divorce, while the law maintains the fiction that no agreement was made in consideration of a divorce.
★ ★ ★
California has the worst divorce rate of the 50 states. It now has one of the best divorce laws, which hopefully will affect its unenviable record of marriage failures.
Ray Cromlev
President Lacks Firm Grip on Reins
WASHINGTON (NEA) -After two months of private talks with the administration’s “new" Republicans and “old” hold overs, one conclusion is, inescapable:
Thus far,
P r e s i d e nt Nixon has been unable to get a firm grip on the reins of government.
His congressional forces are fragmented.
CRCMLEY
Orders passed down from the White House are re-jiggered in his own departments and agencies by men in basic disagreement with his policies.
Despite the great powers of the presidency, he has not been able to get able men loyal to him located up and down the line in enough of the key posts to bring the bureaucracy under control and insure that his policies will be carrfed out in the spirit, in which .they’re issued.
MUST BELIEVE V It is essential that a man executing presidential orders bie top flight in ability.	1
But he must, in addition, believ* t in the President’s position.* Otherwise, he. may unconsciously sabotage the program in little Ways.
* '' Kl? * ■
This is why president Kennedy made a headlong effort to infiltrate his own men. This is why it is so difficult to understand why Nixon has ..not..-	"3
&%ir*	'• a b
Voice of the People:
\,' s
.op-
Stairway To The Stars
Charles Bartlett
Nixon Faces Big Inflation Test
WASHINGTON - The stock market seems willihg to make a risky bet that the Nixon a d m i nis-
ton. In fact recently the wife of one high Nixon appointee complained, “We’ve been dining out here for over eight months and I haven’t heard anyone mention the stock market. We’ve lost so much that we can barely afford to stay here and yet nobody talks about it."
★ ★ ★
But-the White House can no longer ignore the investors’ doubts that the President real-
ly means to suffer the political pains and economic risks which a serious skirmish with inflation will entail.
He has seemed so cautious iq his dealings on the economy that investors find it easy to believe that he will not be willing to brave the consequences of a strong stand. TAKING STEPS . So Mr. Nixon is taking steps to make his intentions more credible. He has put aside the advice of Arthur Burns that he stand aloof from wage-price decisions in the marketplace.
He is injecting his influence, belatedly but emphatically, to restrain the upward spiral and signal that he really does mean business.
★ ★ *
The President has not yet been tested rigorously enough in domestic or foreign policy to indicate whether he really has the courage to hew to his
Bob Considine
Kennedy and Johnson political appointees aside, a skilled and dedicated' career bureaucracy has built up in Washington the past two decades.
* * *
These men are used' to doing things in certain ways. They are somewhat suspicious of newcomers and White House “theorists."
Yet it is these men who know the labyrinths of government. They know each other. They control the channels of communication up and down. They know where to go to get things done. They know how to slow things down by I strict adherence to regulations or directives. They know their rights. ,
1 ' \ * * *
But above all, they know how to gently enfold new ideas and new programs and softly smother them — so that by the time the new orders reach the field, they’re indistinguishable from orders issued in 1965, 1966, 1967 or 1968.
Baseball Owner Envies Church Attendance Rule
NEW YORK — Horace Stoneham left New York for San Francisco and took his Giants with him for a simple reason. Fans had quit going to the Polo Grounds to see them play. Even Willie Mays couldn’t stem the tide of yawns.
Horace has been back in town, though in another borough of the far-flung city, during the World Series involving the Mets and Baltimore. It has given him a chance to be with his old friends, including Toots Shor, and it has given us a’chance to remember a strange complaint he made about baseball, television and the Catholic church.
★ ★ ★
Some months after the close of what turned out to be the season-that-broke-the- CONSIDINE Giants-back in New York, Horace was watching Midnight Mass on television. He was feeling very sorry for himself as he watched the tube. TV had more or less emptied his ball park.
At the conclusion of the program, the voice of a proper monsignor came on. It said, in effect, “Let us remind all Catholics who watched this telecast from St. Patrick’s Cathedral tonight that this does not represent official and obligatory attendance at Mass on this Holy Day of Obligation. All Catholics are obliged to attend Mass in person later on this Christmas day."
★	,*	*
It was too much for Horace.
“I wish the Giants had a gimmick like that," he groaned.
Dizzy Dean was in Shor’s the other day, telling a long and entrancing story about a golf match he had played some time ago against someone he identified as Frank Lehigh.
It didn’t seem to make much sense to Toots.
★	A	★
“I never heard of any bum named Lehigh,” Toots said.
“That’s strange,” Dizzy said, surprised. “They tell me he was a great coach at Notre Dame."
objectives against the popular pressures.
His economic aides talk as if they know what they need to do and intend to do it. REASSURING
The lip music one hears privately from high sources is reassuring. But the test still lie* ahead because the pains are only comfnencing.
No one in the administration has agreed to say how much unemployment is tolerable in the pursuit of price stability. This is a rational precaution against being tied to an inflexible figure.
* ★ ★
But plainly there is no disposition to suffer the recurring recessions of the Eisenhower years. When the unemployment rate begins to climb over 4.5 per cent, the rescue operation is likely to begin.
Much will depend on Congress, which is the most dismal practitioner, of the dismal qpience.
CHAOTIC SYSTEM
The present system is a chaos shaped only by political opportunities.
Chicago banker Gaylord Freedman made this point In' describing the present stand against inflation as a significant test of Whether a democracy can assume the discipline necessary to preserve the value of its currency.
WWW
The struggle is, as Freedman said, a test of moral strength. Accordingly the President will need to make the strength of his commitment unequivocally clear, so the nation can rally behind it.
Tells Reaction to Photo of SDS Gang Marching
After noting an AP photo of the SDS gang marching in Chicago, it might be appropriate to let our front line troops come home from Vietnam. The aight of homegrown Communists marching down Madison Avenue in Chicago, carrying their flags bearing the sickle and hammer, may cause our troops to annihilate them.
★ ★ ★
Apparently the citizens and attorney general are content to let the police “kid glove” these Reds whose intent and purpose are very clear.
MARY ANN CUENY 4788 Ranch Lane Bloomfield Hills
‘Cleaning Up City Good Use o£ Tax Money'
In answer to a recent letter, I can’t Imagine anyone complaining because the City hired two men to keep our City clean. I think it’s the best way our tax money could be used. They need to put up more signs about 8109 fines for littering. It’s a shame the way people litter our streets.
MRS. WM. HARMON 1529 Stirling
‘Shoppers Abuse Privilege of Use of Carls’
If the people who holler about the shopping carts would put them back where they belong or In the space designated for them, there would be no trouble at any shopping center. Those who use carts just leave them wherever they get Into their cars. At one store recently I came out to find four shopping carts against my car and three nice dents in the car. I’m all for charging a fee for them and then maybe users will show some respect for the privilege of having this convenience.
DISGUSTED WITH CART SHOPPERS
‘Should Try to Find Owner* of Lost Pet*’
To parents of children who bring home stray animals and are allowed to keep them, what kind of an example are you setting? Unless they have done everything possible to find the owner, how do you justify your action?
MRS. WILLIAM GREER 54 Summit
‘Commend Quick Assistance at Hospital’
I commend the Pontiac General Hospital for its quick thinking staff when my one-year-old son was burned by hot coffee. While I was giving the information needed, a nurse took my son into a treatment room and gave him immediate attention. Hurray for our hospital, and you can bet I watch my coffee.
MRS. JENNIFER BLAY 154 W. BEVERLY
Teacher Answer* Letter on Recent Institute
In answer to a letter signed “Former Pipsqueak,” I gathered that the writer felt that he had been violated and "dehumanized” by the three-day human relations institute, not to mention the irreparable harm done to education in general. Obviously “Pipsqueak” missed the point of the program. While calling up various emotions on requests in order to examine their Character and their effect on others is new and unusual for most teachers, I can hardly see how It is an irrational task.
The saddest commentary of all is the inability of “Pipsqueak" to associate human sensitivity and concern with education. They should be so closely related as to be indistinguishable from one another. “Former Pipsqueak" has demonstrated the continued need for this kind of program in our school system.
JAMES S. BRIGHAM A PONTIAC TEACHER
(Editor's Note: All letters to the Voice of the People must be signed and an address given. In some instances a pen name may be used in the paper.)
BERRY’S WORLD-By Jim Berry
Verb?! Orchids
Mrs. Charlotte Snetsinger of 532 Orchard Lake Ave.; 89th birthday.
Mrs. Lola Moss
of Walled Lake; 82nd birthday. Mr. and Mrs.
Lester F. Houghten of Brighton;
51st wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Graf of 4327 W. Walton;
60th wedding anniversary.

“But, dear.didn’t the Mets win the Super Bowl last winter?"
Daily Almanac
to be known as the Mason-■ Dixon line. .	m
lit 1969 Russia claimed to have1 taken pictures of the far side of the moon tor the first time.'	|
In 1966 an earthquake and a tidal/ wave killed 120 persons in Peru:
By United Press International Today is Saturday, Oct. 18, thcf 291st day of 1969, Wifii 74 to follow.
The moon is in' its first quarter.
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Jupiter and Saturn.
The evening star is Mars.
* Sr * ,
On this day in history:
In 1767 tee boundary between Maryland and Pennsylvania was settled. It was later
Questions and Answers
(A) His name is Jerry HaU, 27 W. 270 Mardon, West Chicago, III, 60185. Another man who makes glass animals is Henry C. Johnson, Route 2, Hesperia, Michigan, 49421. He might make a Unicorn on special order if Mr. Hall cannot supply one.
In 1968 American athletes Tommie Smith and John Carlos were suspended by the D.S. Olympic committee tor black power demonstrations at the Mexico City gam**.
(Q) Where can I get a Universal electric coffee maker repaired? 1 understand Universal has gone out of business.
MRS. VERONICA WRIGHT • 82 W. Fairmount
(A) Asa Detroit Edison customer you can take it in to their repair department. They will see if they can repair it, and. if not, they may be able to ''‘refldt %dttj to' Somegjte ■ who can.	■ '	- :
(Q) My hobby is collecting little glass animals. For many years I’ve looked for a unicorn, and I understand a man sold them at the State Fair. I couldn’t get there to buy one, and I was wondering if yea could possibly get his address for me,'or anyone else whom I might purchase one from.
MRS. JAMES QUICK . Ortonvtllo
My mother said shit read that In ’Michigan a girl must he 19 before she It legally on her own. Is this true, aad if so, are there exceptions, such as making her own living?	t
.	; -	.. P. HT
Clarkston
(A) Unless her parents , approve, a• gift living away from home can be brought back as a wayward minor until ehe*» 19, whether or not she’s making her own living. I
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IS, SA'J
THB f»6frTJAC PRESS, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1909
A—a
Aussies Hunt British Escapee
Melbourne (ap) - in one
of (heir biggest manhunts ever, Australian police today are looking for Ronald Arthur Biggs, the only participant in
New Evidence
Britain's ^-million Great Train Robbery who is still at large.
Biggs, 30, narrowly avoided capture Friday night in a police raid on his fashionable home in Blackburn, a Melbourne suburb, where the police found his wife, Charmaine, 30, and sons Nicholas, o, Christopher, 3, and Fair-
ley. 2.
WWW
Police said they learned that Biggs, who Escaped from Lon don’s Wandsworth jail in July LOS ANGELES (AP) - Po- 1965 after eating a 30-year sen lice say they have new evidence tence for hl» Part in the 1963 in the two-month-old search for robbery. fled the house only the killers of haron Tate and n‘ne hourg More the raid-four other persons.	I Police and the Royal Austra-
“If this particular piece of ev-!Uan air force were checking Idence can be traced, it wlllimov«ments of dozens of light point us in the direction of the aircraft. Charter companies killers," Homicide Lt. Robert j. were asked to provide informa Helder told newsmen Friday. U°n 0,1 aU flights made in the * it *	last two days.
He called If physical evidence POINTER OUT
but would not elaborate.
Police said
apparently
The 26-year-old actress and|became anxious after hfs fellow four acquaintances were mur-j workers at a jetport construc-dered Aug. 0 at the rented Los Uion site near Melbourne pointed Angeles home where she lived out how much he resembled a with her husband, director Ro- photograph of Biggs that Aus-““ Polanski. The other vie- tralian newspapers printed this
tims were coffee heiress Abigail Folger, hair stylist Jay Sebring, Polish writer Voityck Frokowski and 18-year-old Steven Parent, a friend of the caretaker. BACKTRACKING “We are in the process of backtracking everything we’ve done, everyone we’ve interviewed," said Assistant Chief Robert Houghton,, “trying pick up something we might have missed."
week after reports he was in the country.
Mrs. Biggs made a brief appearance in a Melbourne court today on charges of violating the Immigration Act. She was returned to Fairlea Women’s Prism and is expected to appear again before the court on Monday.
The three boys are being cared for by welfare authorities.
Biggs and his family had been living in the Blackburn suburb He said the investigation has for several months under the Included more than 400 inter- name of Terry Cooke. Author!-views and the review of some ties said he also was known as 500 pieces of mail concerning Terry Lamb at his construction the murders, which police de-|job.
scribed as apparent .“ritualis-| For the past three days, there
tic" slayings.
News-Bias Case Against CBS Dropped
WASHINGTON (AP)
News-slanting charges against the Columbia Broadcasting System in connection with fi television documentary on “Hunger In America" have been dismissed by the Federal Communications Commission.
The FCC stressed Friday it would not play “national arbiter of the truth" In such cases. It said questions raised “serve thel Phillips said Biggs and Flow-public interest" . and urged grs arrived in Adelaide in 1966 and moved in mid-1967. He said they had their families with
have been rumors that police were closing in on Biggs, who also has been hunted in Europe and Canada. He made his daring 1965 break from the London jail with another prisoner, Eric Flowers. They scaled a wall with rope laddersrthrown by accomplices and jumped into an awaiting furniture van.
Flowers had been serving a 12-year sentence for a crime not connected with the train robbery. He also is still at large.
A few hours before the police announcement of the raid, a former radio announcer, Max Phillips, told a news conference that he was the man who informed police about Biggs’ presence in Australia.
broadcast' license-holders to consider and benefit from such criticism.
It emphasized: “In this democracy, no government agency can authenticate the news, or should try to do so. We will therefore esdhew the censor’s role, including efforts to establish news distortion in situations where government intervention would constitute a worse danger than the possible rigging itself.1’
The CBS program, first broadcast on May 21, 1968, was investigated by the FCC after complaints including a letter from Rep. Henry B. Gonzales, D-Tex.
In spelling out its policy, the FCC said It would not. defer action on license renewals under similar circumstances unless there was “extrinsic evidence of possible deliberate distortion or staging of the news."
them for some time.
LOW COST CAR LOANS
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Girls’ jumper, sweater sets
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Girls’ 2.75 to • $3 pantyhose
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Juvenile boys’ 2.00 slacks
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Our awn Rob Watt brand cotton corduroy un-lined slacks. Navy, brown or lodan. 4-7..
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I
A—8
THE PONTIAC TRESS, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1989
What's in a Name? Asks HeadlineWriter
By DICK WEST I most of the surnames derived WASHINGTON (UPI) - The I from federal job titles would be other day I was looking over highly destinctlve
government manual titled "Occupations of Federal White - Collar Workers," and as I was looking over this manual, I was struck by an imuiioi thought.
Or at least I
Let us assume, for example, that Herbert L. Papershuffler married Penelope Bureaucrat. Judging from the frequency with which the job appears in-the* manuel, their first child-would be named Betty Clerk-typist.
BECOMES ENGAGED Miss Clerktypist would perhaps become engaged to
found it amus- WEST [ William Programanalyst and, ing. You might consider it after a suitable interval, would bizarre, tedious, or even sub- join him in wedlock. Their first verslve.	{child would	be named	Jimmy
*	*	*	! Cardpunchoperator.
I got to thinking that many of j j shall not attempt lo trace the family names in use today i this particular bloodline any ~ the C a r t w r i g h t s, j further. However, you can see Wheelwrights and Wainwrights ^at genealogists would have a among them, not to mention the ; field day Especially Raymond Smiths — were originally oc-^ Genealogist and his descen-cupational	designations.	'dants.
And then I got to thinking! ip^gy would have no trouble what it might be like if the j determining that Willard Hear-custom of deriving surnames . aminer was old Sam from job titles were still being !Ju8dge>g boy But who would followed,	'ever believe	that a nice guy like
Well, for one thing about half Jim Accountingtechnician could of the people who live In sibly have raised a son as Washington would be named £ t b,	perclval
Papershuffler. The other half, ™Lve“agent? or a goodly protion thereof,; Eventually, the most common wouki be named Bureaucrat !name ,n w^ngton would be Pretty soon the Papershuf-, ^ Robert Digitalcomputer-fiers and the Bureaucrats would,
begin intermarrying. And there i________;
would be a lot of confusion in the family tree. In order to retain some semblance of individual identity, each new generation would have to adopt a different surname. Which is where manual SM 56-7 would come in handy,
occupations, many of 'Which .would make dandy surnames.	on",
Some would be fairly simple, gJJ$ such as John Marshal, Fred pontioe in »»w county.
SUNDAY
ONLY

SPECIAL PRICES FOR SUNDAY, OCT. 1911 AM. TO 6 P.M. WHILE QUANTITIES LAST
for tlx County < nlle Division.
In Bin
Don Roy Wallace, fathsr ot
Guard and Edward Giiide. But :
Pickle Packers Meet in Miami
MIAMI (AP) - A pack of pickle packers has invaded Miami.
About 200 members of Pickle Packers International are meeting here in convention for discussions of pickle planting, picking, packing, processing promoting and other palaver particularly pertinent to the pickle-packing profession. i
Notice of Public Hearing
A public hearing will be held at 7:30 P.M. (EST) on Monday, Otcober 27, 1969 in the Cafeteria of the Township High School, 1415 Crescent Lake Road, Pontiac, Waterford Township, Oakland County, Michigan on the Proposed Budget for, the Charter Township of Waterford forthe fiscal year of January 1, 1970 through December 31, 1970. A copy of the Proposed Budget will be on file for inspection, at the Office of the Clerk during regular office hours.	I
By order of the Board of the Charter Township of Waterford.
Arthur J. Salley, Clerk Charter Township of Waterford October It, 1969
SEALED BEAM BULB
Reg. 1.17—Sun. Only Fish series 4000-dual lights.
Rett. 2.27-3.27-
Spiu-on type. Kuny installation.
SLEEPING BAG IN NEW DACRON* 88
Sunday Only
63
Reg. 14.62
A rugged sleeping bag with a heavy poplin covering and Dacron* 88 polyester insulation, warm lining. Olive.
• DuPont T.M.	I .
JmhI,, ChO Am	. ■%
Reg. 96c
Seamless stretch nylon with nude tteel. Fashion-lovely shades. Mist-tone, cinnamon and brown mist S(!20 lbs.), M(12(W40), T(140-16Oj.
NYQUIL NIGHTTIME COLD MEDICINE
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t
Our Reg. 1.07 Vick’s product Take at bedtime* Relieves cold symptoms, sniffles and sneezing. It-quiets coughing. $ oz.*
•fluidW.I»M	■
DRILL SANDER, SOCKET SET
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Sets 18-pc. 14", 44” sockets. Oscillating lander: 2-amp, 60 eyelet, aluminum housing. % drill: S amp motor: geared key chuck.
11.26
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14-POSITION ADJ. IROHING TABLE
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The Chain Shop
SAVE 3.12 M!»»•*' sweaters in pretty; pastels
188
•	Practice! cardigan style in pastels
•	Easy-to-care-for machine washable
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Cozy little cardigan to wear everywhere. Rib* knit at neck and wrists. Pearlized buttons; In Misses' sizes. Save!
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SAVE 3.12 Nylon snowsuits for little boys
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Designed for long, hard wear by your active boy! Interlined with nylon-polyester. In blue, loden green with trims. Boys' 3*7.
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For that rustic touch—-Hand-	J&99
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BIG-CAPACITY HUMIDIFIER
Fits most forced-air furnaces:	99
makes air. comfortable!
1 ^1.98, humidifier pjatOs, 99c, *£0.14.50 Plumbing & Hooting
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SUSPENDED CEILING SYSTEM
Steel grid system and white 2x2' or 2x4' acoustical panels JLW 7 0FF or plain 2x4': white panels. "tHARGI IT" Homo Improvements
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STURDY 3-TON JACK STAND
Get extra support for lifting "8 98 cars and trucks to 3-ton ca-pacity. 12" pinlock style.	reg. 3.49
Auto Accessories "	’■
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SATVR	DAY 9:30 A.M, TO 9:00	P.M.
SI NOW	12 YOON TO 5 1\M. •	12-4910
'mSm
'W
A—-8
WWW\\	\'
the PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY. OCTOBER 18. 19«»

Choice	tor Fed Is a Schdlarly Economist
Storm
WASHINGTON (AP) — Schol-i—Burn! rapidly became known arty, pipe-smoking Arthur as one who had the ear of the prank Burn?, chosen by Presl- President whenever he wanted dent'Nixon yesterday to bejlt.
chairman of the board that pulls ..Art^ur Burns,” said one the strings on the nation's cred-Ua|jjnej agency .official, ”ls the it, has a reputation for liking M|gg man at the White House take his time and think about :who can command complete sittings.	lence and attention in a room
That could be because he has just clearing his throat to spent half his life as a professor lSpeaii d •nd noted thinker about things^ ^ EVERYTHING econom c. ^	^	^	65-year-old native Aua-
As counselor to the President trian has been in on nearly ev-- the Job Nixon created for him ery major White House discus-on taking office nine months agolslon of economic policy. He has
been described At occupying the most conservative end of a spectrum of domestic advisers extending, leftward, all the way to Urban Affairs specialist Daniel Patrick Moynihan.
Burns first came to Nixon’s
chose Burns, who would, hei said, be “coordinator of all my domestic programs and poll* des.”
Burns is universally regarded as a foremost authority on the business cycle. Witt his reputa-
attention 16 years ago, when the tlon for thrift> he has functioned young Nixon was vice president jn the WhUe House prlmarily
and Burns was chairman of President Dwight D. Elsenhow-er’s Council of Economic Advis
As one of his earliest appointments to the White House staff after his election In 1968, Nixon
'Gill' May Enable Man to Breathe Under Water
LONDON (UPI) — An artificial membrane which eventually may be used as a gill to allow man to breathe underwater has been developed by a British medical team.
A spokesman for the Royal Postgraduate Medical School said Thursday the primary purpose of the silicone membrane, developed by Prof. Denis Melrose and his assistants, will be for open-heart surgery.
Experiments have been conducted with guinea pigs underwater to show it can work as a gill, the spokesman said.
Using a normal face mask, a man underwater would carry the gill packed on his back and extract oxygen from water and exhale carbon dioxide. No estimate was given when the gill would be a practical possibility.
In open heart surgery, the membrane would take the place of the lung section in artificial heart-lung machines now used in such operations, the spokesman said. ,
The advantage over present procedures was said to be reduction of the possibility of oxygen bubbles ottering the bloodstream by eliminating direct contact between blood and oxygen.
Ancient Estate Is Found
OLYMPIA, Greece (AP) -Greek archeologists have uncovered what they believe to be a country estate where the ancient Greek historian and writer, Xenophon—c. 430-355 B.C.— is said to have spent 20 years of exile.
The discovery was made recently in an area south of an clent Olympia in the Peloponnesus peninsula.
believed to have been the home of Xenophon.
Historians say Xenophon, whose most noted works included “Anabasis,” was banished by the Athenians for 20 years to a village near here at the beginning of the 4tt century B.C., after their alliance with the Persians against Sparta.
According to toe curator oi antiquities of Olympia, Q. Papa* thanasopoulos, digging In tte area has brought to light part of a “luxurious country estate,"
FENCE
363-6639
UNIVERSAL FENCE
eimetff
iifAve cidct ni iai ITV "
ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY
Monday, Oct. 20th
Mel Farr
in person at Penneys
MIRACLE MILE SHOPPINQ CENTER
Hay Lions football fans... come moot Mol Farr Dotroit Lions star running back. Appearing in Penneys Miracle Milo Shopping Contpr Store, Monday from 6:00 to 8:00 p.m. Take homo din autographed toy tootball. Don't miss this chance to moot Mol Farr now. I
,	UsUtadSespiy #f Footballs
a budget-watcher, a cost-cutter, a reconciler of clashing economic alternatives.
PONDEROUS
Deliberate in speech, beetle-browed, gray-thatched, seen by some as ponderous, Bums did
not develop a reputation as one of his colleagues’ best-loved men. But he was Invariably listened to by those colleagues, because they knew his views were respected by the man at the top.
Burns was born in 1604 in Stanlslau, Austria, came with his family to the United States as a boy and grew up in Bayonne, N.J. He worked his way through Columbia and evenual-ly taught at Columbia and Rut-gters.
ional Bureau of Economic Re-i search, where he worked on the history of business cycles in the! United States. „
Burns was married in 1630 to the former Helen Bernstein and is the fatter of two grown sons, Joseph and David.
He became prominent in his field while working at the Na-

complete
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LAMP SALE!
SAVE 15% ON EVERY FASHION MANOR LAMP, REGULARLY PRICED 19.98 AND UP
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SHORTIE CURTAIN SALE 15% OFF thru Wednesday only!
FIBER CLASS‘CAVALIER’ WITH A RORDER OF FRINGE
Airy boucle texture is so petty and so practical, tea. These drip dry and are ready to hang up
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Mstching fringsd vslsnoe, rsg. MM.
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We Have For IMMEDIATE Delivery 10 - 1970 CHALLENGERS
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44053 Van Dyke Utioa, Michigan OPEN MONDAY end THURSDAY TIL 9:00 OPEN SATURDAY	731-2630
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KEEGO HDWE.
3041 Orchard Lake Rd.
082-2660
PUBLIC NOTICE
FURNITURE and APHJJtNCE
Clow out at A»wt* belonging to Atld Furniture and Di.count Fuml-tuwCHjtbot war* auctioned on by
Sheriff Diet, by aNa.CCM3M13.
SALE!
MONDAY 0NLYI
Colonial or Modem
SOFA and JCHAIR	full price
Jest one of the hundreds of $0000
para at $249.95.
PUBLIC SALE
20 NORTH SAQIMAW STREET NEXTT0P0HTIAD STATE BANK IN Q0WNT0WN PONTIAC OPEN DAILY ID AM. fa 6 P.M.
/
A Doll House for Adults
By JODY HEADLEE Home Editor, The Pontiac Press
“You might Bay," said Mrs. Richard McElwee, “that our house 1b the doll house I always wanted when I was a lit* tie girl."
And the McElwee home Is Just that from the Dutch door entrance on through —each room reflecting the Interest, care and creativity of its owners.
• t it it it
“It’s been our hobby for 21 years," continued Mrs. McElwee. “We’d been married about one month when we bought the house. It was originally one of the tenant houses on the old Mercer estate and very tiny."
After much remodeling and a major addition in 1943, the three-bedroom home Incorporates many novel ideas and decorating tips.
DISPLAY ANTIQUES
“In the spacious pine-paneled living room, situated across the back of the house, the McElwees house many of their antiques.
An old flour bin does double duty, providing newspaper and magazine storage while acting as a table to the high-backed chair in avocado green. Lighting the arrangement is an iron and brass scale made into a lamp by McElwee.
★ 1 ■ ★ w
Colorful dried flowers fill the antique butter churn at the chair's base.
“That trunk near the fireplace is deceiving," said Mrs. McElwee.
“We have an air-conditioner in the window. And, since my husband and 1 didn’t think it really went with our Early American furnishings, he cut out the
back of his father’s old trunk and placed it in front of the air-conditioner,”
Because Mrs. McElwee is allergic to burning wood, the reclaimed brick fireplace holds gas logs.
* ★ *
“My husband electrified the Revere lantern above the fireplace so its candle wouldn’t smoke the ceiling,” said Mrs. McElwee.
Two steps lead to the pink geranium-trimmed kitchen, compact and convenient.
ADDITIONAL LIGHT
A skylight supplements the light available through the room’s one window. And to make sure the McElwee children, Ann, 8, and Rick, IS, aren’t late for meals, a rope directly above the oval oak table rings the dinner bell on the roof.
“The table belonged to my greatgrandmother,” she said.
h ★	*
During one of the remodeling sessions, McElwee took out a kitchen pantry and rerouted the basement stairway. Rather than waste the space, he built in a nap niche with storage beneath and above it.
“Our youngsters really liked it,” said Mrs. McElwee, “when they were little and wanted to be close to me.”
Ann’s room is tiny but brimming with originality. The single bed is framed in rough-sawn pine with a cypress beam for accent. White priscillas cover privacy valances which repeat the pattern of the brown, White and aqua wallpaper.
Adding a sweet touch of color are the bright cardboard lollipops on the round window table. Made by Mrs. McElwee, they are in a bright yellow flower pot.
PtnllK Pro, Photo, by Ed VbiMtenwr*
Bright Red Geraniums Fill White Window Boxes At The Richard McElwees In Avon Township
Ox Yoke Hangs From Beam Above Green Corduroy Topped Table
Antique Trunk Under Shuttered Window Conceals Air-Conditioner
Ann's Room Is Lollipops And Lovely
Old Stairway Is Transformed Into Nap Niche
Kitchen's Eating Area Overlooks Living Room
B—a
^THB PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1969
“YOU CAN TRADE”
The BATEMAN WAY
jK' i '	' ' with our ■	.
Guaranteed Home Trade-In Plan 1
BUY NOW SELL LATER
ras 1 P.M. 'til Dark Dally and Sunday
4-3136 or 673-9669
Officu.	Modal
Salts by Dan Mattingly
LOW ROOF LINES at rear are typical of authentic New England Saltbox, product of the 17th and 18th centuries in America. Wooden shingles, shutters on all windows and pan-
eled entrance door are other Early American features on this two-story, four-bedroom house.
Good Homes Ceramic Tile for Cleaning Up Mud Best Suited for Siding
Muddy walkways outside andlproblem Is to surface the walks entry ways inside are a sure and entry aroas with an easy-to* sign of rainy days.	clean material such as ceramlo
The best way to minimize this tile.
New England Type Has Rear-Roof Line
of the Early American Colonial [week is completely authentic in house has enabled it to maintain its exterior styling, but die arch-its popularity throughout the itect, William G. Chirgotis, has centuries.	given it a modern exterior lay-
It is getting even more atten- wt> with a center hall entrance, tion these days as the rising a practical room arrangement cost of land forces the buying on the first floor and four bed-public to seek as much Uving|rooms ancl two bathrooms up-space as possible within the di-, stairs, mensions of modest-sized lots. Although it has four windows, *	^	*	the living room, to the left of
. .	.. Ithe foyer, has plenty of wall
varinttaL	8P*” fW ln«8in»tiv« ^KOrat-
“i* i-1” * tri'tta,*d
rear without altering the Colonial image.
Design S-15 delivers 2,328 square feet Of living space — 250 square feet on the first floor, 1,078 on the second — yet the basic house is only 36’ 6” by 34’.
It is distinguished from sister-houses mainly because of its rear-roof lines, which extend downward much lower than the roof lines at the front of the house.
MODERN EXTERIOR LAYOUT
. The Saltbox featured
|ing fireplace.
w w ★
On the other side of the foyer is a wood paneled den.
And to the rear of the living room is a separate dining room, adjacent to die kitchen and with twin French glass doors that {take full advantage of the
his* and provide access to the rear - patio and lounge areas. KITCHEN-FAMILY ROOM A combined kitchen-family oom affords enough space for informal meals and relaxation.
The appliance section is U-shaped to assist efficient oper-
Eosily Cleaned* a"lavatory and a laundry
'	jroom are close by.
And there are^entrances from now being used as the finished	_ . ..
surface for a wide variety ofboth jjjg outside and the two“ insulation board ceiling pro-
Plastics Used for Insulating
ducts, according to the Insulation Board Institute. The new finishes are fully scrubbable with most household cleaning products.
*	*	★
The new plastic finishes span the entire range of insulation board ceilings products. This includes plain, decorator and acoustical tile ceilings. Also 2x2 and 2x4 foot lay-in insulation board panels for suspended ceilings in plain, decorator and acoustical.
*	★	*
With the introduction o f plastic-finished ceiling products, IBI suggests that insulation board ceilings are now suitable for rooms where frequent cleaning is usually necessary. A kitchen, for example, can have a noise reducing acoustical ceiling with a plastic finish now easily kept clean of grease and other grime.
CENTER HALL An attractive "center hall staircase leads from the entrance foyer to the bedrooms.
Three of the four bedrooms are close to the family bathroom, which has a clear plastic,
Plant Thunbergia for Winter Bloom
If you would like colorful annual vines in your winter window garden, plant seeds of morning glories and black-eyed Susan vine (Thunbergia). Sow three seeds to a 4” pot.
* * ★
If all three plants grow sturdily, you can thin them to leave only one in the pot.
Before frost threatens, bring them indoors and grow them in a sunny, south window close to the glass.
full-length mirrored double vanity-
★ ★ ★
The master bedroom has two sliding door closets with a total of 13 lineal feet of space, four windows and a full bath with glass-enclosed tiled shower and full-length mirrored dressing vanity.
The garage wing is in harmony with the house itself, even to the long rear-roof lines. WEATHERVANE Its tall cupola is topped by a metal weatiiervane.
. Although the plans show the garage doors at the side, they may be placed at the front or
S-15 STATISTICS Design S-15 has a living room, dining room, family room, kitchen, den foyer, lavatory and laundry on the first floor, totaling 1,250 square feet. Upstairs, there are four bedrooms and two baths, totaling 1,078 square feet. The plans call for a two-car garage and a basement. Over-all dimensions, including the ga-‘ rage, are 80’ 8” across the front and 34’ deep.
In the case of a Saltbox, such as this one, the first floor gets added space because of the rear-roof modification of the regular Early American Colonial.
Floor Plan on Page B-4
How to Build, Buy or Sell Your Home
Full study plan information on this architect-designed House of the Week is included in a 50-cent baby blueprint. With it in hand you can obtain a contractor’s estimate.
You can order also, for |1, a booklet called YOUR HOME-How to Build, Buy or Sell it. Included in it are small reproductions of 16 of the most popular House of the Week issues. Send orders to House Plans, the Pontiac Press, P. O. Box 9, Pontiac, Michigan 48056
Enclosed is 50 cents for baby blueprint on S-15	□
Enclosed is 81 for YOUR HOME booklet	□
Street
City
The prime market for, aluminum' siding is not in homes that have been allowedi to deteriorate, but homes in good condition where the! homeowner leeks to reduce! maintenance expenses and headaches.
it	it	it
That is the chief finding of the Flexalum division of Bridgeport Brass Company, in a survey of homeowners who have purchased aluminum siding.
*	*	*
According to Aldo Martin, a Flexalum siding specialist, es that have bought aluminum siding are generally kept in good repair by their owners. The need for new siding was not always immediately evident.
Installation	of	the	riding,
Martin	says,	was	due	to	the
ease of maintenance of the aluminum product and the elimination of the need for repainting over the years.	j
ORINIGAL SIDING
Where original siding had! been allowed to deteriorate,! Jacobsen reports the owner usually was not willing or able! to invest in new riding.
*	★ *i
One exception to the above,' according to the Flexalum | specialist, is in older homes' that have been repainted a number of times and are not able to “take” another coat of paint. Here aluminum riding mAwi more sense than scraping and repainting.
MTV IlOO to TlOO
"A"	*28,954
i Copt Cod r Spacious Bedrooms » Two Ml bath* with
Ceramic
>	Anderson Wood Windows with insulated elaes
and screens
>	Over 1500 sq. ft.
>	22x22 Attached Garage
>	Extensive living teem
i Custom Built Cabinet*
>	Formal Dining Room
i Full 11 Black Basement
>	Extras In Other Hemes Are Features In Our*
wlmiim
OXFORD OFFICE 028-2548 6000RIGH OFFICE 636-2211
FENCE
WHOLESALE-RETAIL Factory Distributors
363-6639 UNIVERSAL FENCE
clinton Villa
CHOOSE FROM!
HERRLI, TRAVELO, GL0BEMASTER, TOPPER, 12x50, 12x60f 12x63 EXPANDOS, DOUBLES
■All models located for sale in Clinton Villa Mobile Heme Fade. Minimum sise lot 40x80, all underground utilities and paved streets. Nice quiet surrctundfngs.
HURRY - GOING FAST!
ir
CLARKSTON MOBILE HOME SALES
4851 Clintonvilla Rd.	674-0080
enjoy the Hawaiian Weekend mode of livin
CONDOMINIUMS
RENT or BUY a 1- or 2-Bedroom ti CONDOMINIUM APARTMENT
with all these PLUS FEATURES
YEAR AROUND ENCLOSED SiWIMMING POOL WITH SAUNA BATH • Activities Budding with Billiards • Complete Westing house Kitchen with Freezer/Refrigerator, Washer/Dryer, Dishwasher, Range Exhaud Hood, Disposal * Electric Heat with Humidity Control e Individual Central Air Conditioning • Carpeting, * Barbecue PHs, Woter • I Carport, ,! open parking space e All exterior Maintenance including painting, landscaping, snow removal, lawn care, maintenance.
ONE- and TWO-Badroom units now	The first complex of Its. typei In the
available for Immediate occupancy.	area — Ideated on Scott lake Read In
There is no belter time than NOW to , Waterford, convenient to the Moll, Oak-RENT or BUY... and COLONIAL VILLAGE	lend University and the f-75
Mte place to do It.	way to Detroit._______
674-3136
BATEMAN
OLD ENGLISH RETREAT
Lake Orion Lake front featuring an enclosed porch, with a striking view of the lake. 3 large bedroom*, aluminum siding, natural fireplace and has gas heat. Sandy beach just steps from your walk-ont basement. 823,950. CALL TODAY!
100 YEARS OLD
CENTENNIAL HOME completely renovated. Has over-sised rooms with plenty of charm Kitchen has built-ins. Paneled den and carpeting throughout. Large wooded lot. Fast sale price $20,500. CALL TODAY!
TRY HARD
TO OWN THIS TRI - It’s absolutely spotlesn and in “Better Than New” condition. 3 large bedrooms, lVi baths, carpeted family room, and an ideal location. Your early inspection is \invited. Value priced 1
THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1969
969 MODEL CLOSEOUT
BEtOHUi
IMDUW*®*
*32,990
“Westridge of Waterford”
*29,990
Camlono, to tight on Tipparary to
floorcs Schroader Cindy Jamnick 332-3866	394-0041
Jim Williams	John Moss
, 134-0104	103-0040
B—4
THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18, 19(19
Add-A-Room
Nttd nor* rooiRf Trait tho Job to an aipirt. Fraa planning including akateboi, drawings,
FLOOR PLANS: Rectangular shape of lower floor, almost a square, has been effectively divided, with formal living and dining rooms at (he left; informal family room and
den at the right; and the kitchen directly ahead of, but not visible from, the entrance foyer.
FACE BRICK
All Sine* • Colors • Textures For FIREPLACES — PATIOS—HOMES—BUSINESS
I BRICK e BLOCK • CONCRETE |
baife building supply BOICE COMPANY MS (.Telegraph, Pontiac 335-8185
In Home Improving
SAFE BUT READY is the motto of the huntsman who has either of these gun racks. The three-gun rack even has a locked drawer at the bottom. Both racks are easy to make with simple tdols. So don’t delay. Pattern 405, which gives actual-size cutting guides and complete iltystrated directions, is 50c. This Pattern also is one of four in the Huntsmen's Packet No. 24 for 51.50.
The Pontiac Press Pattern Dept.
P.O. Box 50
New Windsor, N.Y. 12550
Don't Overlook Roofing
DAC0N
CARPET CLEANING CO.
CARPET
CLEANING
$1895
If your home improvement!house. Neglecting the roof’s role plans for the year include an in total house beauty is like exterior face-lift, don’t overlook topping an expensive new suit the roof.	with a shabby old hat.
A house can have a spanking Today’s quality roofing new paint job, a revamped en-| materials are designed for long-try and attractive new trim, but term, maintenance-free service
represents a small percentage of the total cost of an average home.
FENCE
WHOLESALE-RETAIL Factory Distributors
363-6639
UNIVERSAL FENCE
BRODY-BILT wMfWMCTlOM
if the roof is shabby it detracts from the entire house.
and beauty -- notably in the areas of color and texture. For instance, heavyweight asphalt shingles are available in a wide spectrum of decorator colors.
These include traditional blacks and whites, soft pastels,
hues
Phone
548-2620
“ATTBmOR”
I Apartment Managers
SPECIAL RATES
ANY SIZE LIVING ROOM AND HALL
WALL TO WALL CARPETING i
Honesty Is Our Policy
Serving All of Oakland County
Too often, homeowners wait until the roof springs a leak before they consider installing a new one. To do so can be poor 'judgment, both economically and esthetically.	I mieresung menus, wra
In the first place, once a roof “euar‘h	fore®t.
starts leaking expensive water'<“3 of brown and green damage to the house interior whi^ w	,.
can result. And, if you have to coordination ot the ta with
pm on.» «.
seledTone that wM give you tS thicker edgcs of »Weight select one tnat win give you me sfiingles give y,, ^ surface a
dramatic “textured” look
lN0 MIDDLCMAN • NO SAUS
commissiont nu nans
AN0 tSTIMATlSl
Did you bum that REALTORS® are real estate brokers, but not all real estate brokers are REALTORS®?
The term "REALTOR*'" mean* a professional in real estate who maintains o' high degree of business competence and observes a strict CODE OF ETHICS in hit service to the public.
So . . . when you do business with a "REALTOR®" you do so with confidence. This trademark of every member is your guarantee.
Poitiac Area Board of Realtors
most for your money.
VISUAL IMPACT | Also important is the undeniable visual impact of the roof. In most cases, it’s the largest exterior surface of a
SOIL
RESISTANT TREATMENT
$|00
Carpets
Stay
Designers and Builders of
Distinctive Homes
Stylad after an old world Spanish villa, this epacieue multi-level home feature* open foyer, beamed ceilings, balconies, winding stairways ... Quality construction throughout backed by our 30 years service in the Pontiac area.
FOR MORE DETAILS call or stop in at our office across from the Elizabeth Lake Road entrance to the Pontiac Mall Shopping Center. 681-1144.
A d ditionally, heavyweights offer maximum protection and minimal maintenance. They carry the U, L. label for fire-resistance. The self-sealing variety (with factory-applied] adhesive that bonds each shingle tb the one below) also1 carries a U. L. label for wind-resistance.
HEAVYWEIGHTS
The extra thickness of heavyweights (they weigh 290 or more pounds per 100 square feet of roof coverage) makes them extremely durable. They are designed by the manufacturers to last at least 20 to 25 years without service.
Considering the Important jobs a good roof does in terms] of beauty and protection, reroofing is a comparatively low-cost item. Quality roofing like heavyweight asphalt .shingles
Ventless Range May Be Solution
If you are remodeling’ your kitchen, the ventless range hood may be the ideal solution to ventilation where duct installation to the outside is a problem. Ventless hoods have a combination of filters which trap smoke and grease-laden air drawn in by the built-in fan.
The ventless range hood-fan usually is lower in cost than the ducted type. It returns the purified air to the room while the ducted type delivers the smoke and grease-filled air to the outside.
Prestige
Area
Over 100 Hones
SALESMAN IN SUBDIVISION 1 to 5 P.M. SUNDAY
KAMPSEN Realty & Building Company
OPEN HOUSE-SUNDAY 2-5 P.M.
IRE CALIFORNIAN ... 2634 Costa Mesa Court
A Distinguished Rancher That Reflects the Ultimate in Contemporary Living.
driving Directions: West Walton Blvd. to OlintonvUlo ltd. to 2834 Coste Mom pourt
ton W. Name St.	681-IMi
' r- ~rt '■v
Sales Exclusively by
Waterford Realty
4540 Dixie Efwy., Drayton Plains
673-1273
9558 CAROL COURT
OPEN SUNDAY 2 to 6
TWIN LAKES . . REDUCED TO $40,000 IMMEDIATE POSSESSION. Ultra sharp contemporary ranchor that has foaturos such as walk-out basement, family roam with beamed calling, firapkica, 1 Vi baths, dining loom, sating bar in kitchen, all larga roams, walk-in closets, attached 2Vj-car garega, pavad drive, iconic lot.
DIRECTIONS: Go W«t on M-59 (Highland Rd.) to loft an Twin Lake Subdivision, follow tha OPEN Signs.
649 SUNNYBEACH
OPEN SUNDAY 2 to 5
TWIN LAKE SUBDIVISION: Lakofront ranch homo with 3 bedrooms, lift baths, family roam with fireplace.
DIRECTIONS: West on M-59 (Highland 1 on Sunnybooch Bhrd., to loft
YOUR HOSTESS Doa Clarkson
3646 ZINNIA COURT
OPEN SUNDAY S^to 5
LOVELY BRICK RANCHER with 3 bodrooms, family room, fireplace, 1% bathe, basement, 2V4 car garage.
DIRECTIONS: West on Walton to right on v
McCullough realty
674-2236
5460
HIGHLAND ROAD
%
674-2236
A-1 CARPENTER WORK AT FAIR PRICES!
• ADDITIONS • OARAGES • HOOFING • SIDING • CEMENT SMALL OR LARGE
IF* will build any ifyle houte 1 on your lot with t fruit!
MW CONSTRUCTION ” COMPANY
621 AUBURN AVE.
OPEN 1 DAYS TIL • P.M.	Phone FE 8-3529
YORK
* ircrM ■ t ^ v m : \
T IfE jPt) N' I’ IA C’sJ * R E 8 S. JS A TI HI)A V; 0(*T0H^Il\m Will
mm
w
B—
Irregular Heat Develops Ills
Many wintertime ailments, I most of the fall epidemics .of, winter colds such as colds, sinus conditions, coughs and colds.”	'estimated.”
some respiratory problems, an I "A lack of sufficient hir that all too common dry, Itchy, I moisture or relative humidity in
The spaced cedar 1x4s, 2x4s or 2xRs laid edge-up as roofing for a patio sunshade can be loenailed to beams, i But it’s even.'better to notch annot be over-l Naturally1, if you could pro-the planks to fit {flown over the I vide moisture In the air so that beams, then toenail.
scaly skin, are all aggravated
■SOLDI
POR SALE
YORK
OR. 4-0363 FE 8-7176
THE SIGN-OF-ACTION!!!
WE GIMRANIEE A SALE
	Guaranteed
	Sale
	We list yaur home •t the Market Price. Wa commit ourtelvet In writ-
	ing to buy the property eny time DURING THE LIST-
	ING.
IMMEDIATE •CASH SALE
W« buy yqur house, all money, in 2 days, stay 60 days after sale.
TRADE
Beoaute of our extensive advertising program wo are able to take your present NOME IN TRADE. Call for
by dry air — low relative humidity.
During this season most of us make a sincere attempt to obtain comfort in our homes and, invariably, when we have a chilly feeling, we turn up the thermostat believing that additional heat is required Unfortunately, this only com-! plicates the problem.
* * * .
In recent years, heating and1 ventilating engineers have realized that true winter health and comfort in the home requires a balancing of heat and! the amount of moisture in the!
r.
The Walton Institute — and many doctors—recommend that a relative humidity of between 35 and 40 per cent be maintained for optimum health. Since heated air found in homes during winter months is usually down to 15 per cent or less, this
our well heated homes and other Indoor places during the colder months, is an important factor in the causation of prolonged asthmatic attacks.”
★ ★ *
‘‘The importance of artificial humidification of heated apartments in the prevention of
Outside Color Fashionable
“Fashion” is the new byword in home building products. Long important Inside the house, new fashion colors and textures are becoming a big factor in exterior remodeling and in new homes.
The main reason for this revolution is the new techniques
means that approximately one and products that have been gallon of water must be added developed to weather the to the air for each room of your eiements while retaining their home, each day, to reach the1 smart appearance, level of health requirements
iD'the aluminum siding industry the excitement centers around new chemical coatings which last longer and enable manufacturers to create exciting new patterns and surface textures.
* * *
They can also produce new, darker colors, which are resistant to fading and “weathering out” according to the Aluminum Siding Association.
NEWER COATINGS Since many of the
NATURE CLEANER
Doctors know that nature has provided a constant house running apparatus in our nasal passages to prevent the growth of bacteria which would lead to disease. A layer of mucus is located in our nose and travels toward the throat every ten or twenty minutes to carry bacteria, dust, dirt and other inhaled matter with it. This mucus carries the germs to the throat where they eventually are eliminated harmlessly.
However, nature never figured on the dryness of our coatings have a high polymer modern over-heated homes. As; base, aluminum siding is now a result, during the winterjbeing offered in designs ranging! heating season, this mucus from marble-like surfaces to1
homes by McCullough realty & building compamy
Will Duplicate on Your Lot!

HI J
becomes dried out by heated air and ceases to function properly. It permits the bacteria which you inhale to remain in your nasal passages and incubate into the many persistent respiratory infections that occur in winter.
7 Office* serving nil of Oakland,
nnHJLaynm Counties
York Real Estate
WANT TO SELL LAWNMOWERS, POWER MOWERS, ROLLER SKATES, WAGONS, BICYCLES? USE A LOW COST PONTIAC CLASSIFIED AD. TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 332-8181.
those with highly grained wood textures. In fact, the average person, can’t tell the difference between wood and aluminum without feeling the surface.
Although white is still the most popular siding color, earth tones — gold, deep greens and blues — are gaining in favor Leading physicians have, wjth the buying public, recently commented in medical textbooks on the dangers or effects of dry air on our health.
Here are quotes from four of them:
“One of the commonest causes of fiasal symptoms leading to acute sinus Infections t and neuralgias is failure to one of.the most excitijig ways to provide humidity in the heat of!make an older home look newer the home and office during the without complete renovatiop. winter months.”	. Besides adding more light,
v NOSF	large windows give a feeling of
.	. s. . . spaciousness and importance.
A dry nose is at the root of|Ceramic ule on the window giUs
will protect them from- inclement weather.
And, if carried through on patios or entryways outside the window, the ceramic tile gives an even more gracious appearance to the new setting.
Window Wonder Gives New Look
Installing bigger windows is
€P
M8BMBWM0BDBBHB
k#£i |
5900 WELLINGTON
OPEN SUNDAY, 1 to 6 P.M.
This Deluxe Rancher Features
YOUR HOST Chuck Shotwall
•	Formica Kit.
•	Ceramic Bath
•	Alum. Trim
•	Full Basement
DUPLICATED ON YOUR LOT OR OURS
*20,500
DIRECTIONS:	Why hot stop out Sunday and let vour host,
From Pontiac qo north on Dixie Highway to one-half Chuck Shotwoll, show you this fine home?
mile north of the Andenonville Rood, and turn right ...	'	,	. _	_______
'on ROCKCROFT (Immediately north of Harvey's W» will appraise your home, give you a guar-Colonlal House and directly across the highway anteed trade-in, and arrange the best financing
•	3 Bedrooms
•	Alum. Siding
•	Drapes
•	WalLto-Wall Carpet
•	Aft. 2-Car Garage
froin Independence Square Apartments),,take Rock* available, craft to WILUNOTON to models.	^ ls,s '	/
FRUSHOUR REALTY
5730 Williams Lake Road 674*4161	674-2245
(Listing — Selling — Appraising — Building)
iMMEHIMHMBBBMDmam®
COLONIAL
4 bedrooms, 2’/i baths, first floor laundry room. From $34,900.
RANCH
1,124 sq. ft., 3 bedrooms, 1 </, baths, carpotlno, full basamont, selling at $18,750.
OPEN SUNDAY 2 TO 5
Deloros Bowman Is your hostess. DIRECTIONS: Scott Lake Road to right on' McCormick to loft on 2389 Marwood.
COLONIAL
1,400 sq. ft., 3 bedrooms, family room with firoplaca, complete for $22,490.
674-2236
McCullough Realty, Inc.
5460 Highland Road
674-2236
J#
IS YOUR REAL ESTATE SIGN COLLECTING r*
□	Cobwebs?	a
□	Pesky Salesmen?
□	Customers?
□	Anything at all?
IF YOU COULDN’T CHECK #3 CHECK WITH
RAY REAL ESTATE
674-4101
Oakland Valley is a great playground for grown-ups,
\A playground with swimWng pooly and a luxurious private club with card and game rooms, exercise room and sauna. A playground for adults , who en|oy lively, Interesting people and a social life that really moves. Yqu'li find all of this at Oakland Valley Apartments . . . where brand new 1
and 2 bedroom apartments with private balcony, sunken living room, terrace dining rent for as little as $153 a monthl You're probably paying as much already ... and getting less for It. So see Oakland Valley today. Pay less .. . play moral
' Immediate Occupancy
Oakland Valley
LUXURY APARTMENTS BUILT BY THE SMOKLER COMPANY
Located on Walton Rood between Adams and Qpdyke. From 1-75, take University Drive to Wojton and turn left. From Opdyke, go east on Walton and follow the signs. Open dally and Sunday from t to 8 p.m., Saturday from 1 to 6 p.m. Closed Wednesday. Phone 373-4460.
B—6

THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18. lfoB?
Housing of SDS Youths Splits Chicago Area Church Members
CHICAGO (AP) - The mill-! lant Weatherman faction of the Students for a Derrjocratic So-j dety, which staged last week’s violent demonstrations in an attempt to heal the split in SDS; ranks,' has divided the member-ship of the United Methodist Church in the Chicago area. ! * * *
Four churches and a seminary inf 'suburban Evanston! housed 400 young radicals dur-j tng the demonstrations which j began Oct. 8 with a window-smashing spree on the'North Side and ended Oct. 11 in a I
downtown confrontation with police.
At Emmanuel Methodist Church, SDS members discovered an undercover policeman and dragged him to a basement where he was beaten until the minister, the Rev. Harry Conner, intervened.
At Covenant United Methodist Church, 41 youths-were arrested in a raid by 100 policemen who said they confiscated iron pipes, chains and cans of chemical spray.
Clergy and lay officials of the First United Methodist Church
Giant Condors 'J ust Holding Their Own'
Temple*, near the scene of thewhurches and some Individuals downtown rampage Oct. it, celt-1 said so at Sunday services, i icized th? housing of young radi- The Rev. Dale Nelson, pastor cals and asked Bishop Thomas Lf Covenant Methodist, said in a
M. Pryor to discipline the minis-sermon that his decision to
ters.	j house 250 youths was based on
The bishop said he disap- Christian charity, proved of the violent and revolu-l	vmril,n
tionary tactics of SDS, but he	vuiuvu
said, "I have seen no evidence ^ member of the church of any Intent on the part of min- shouted, “Would you have Isters or churches of Evanston °Pened the doors to the Ameri-to encourage violence or to link can Nasi party? ’ those churches with the violence An usher interrupted, “Take that did occur.”	that sermon and read it to Rich-
Lay organizations also Voiced ard Elrod!" disapproval of the Evanston Elrod, 35, a lawyer for Chica-Igo, was paralyzed Oct. 11 from a blow on the neck during the downtown demonstrations. Doctors said It might take two
i years for his rehabilitation. . j i The Rev. Mr. Conner asked members of the Emmanuel Methodist congregation to stand , if they agreed with him. TTie majority did.
WORTH THE RISK?	!
| In his Sunday Sermon, the! I Rev. Mr. Conner said, “The} SDS came to eat, sleep and plan: their campaign ... The opportunity was there to convey the1 word of God. Was it worth the risk? God only knows.”
j	★	★	★
I Laymen representing the j United Methodists for Methodism charged Garrett Theologi-; cal Sehninary with “incompetence, negligence and complete!
lack of responsibility to thei “Now that this thing has hap*,volved in society rather than church.”	|pened,” he said, “we have to staying on the fringes.”	....
*	*	*	ask ourselves: What does a, |("	'
Their statement said, “We are Christian do when he’s caught Call Pair to Jury informed that individual Meth-Un a CrUnch?” odists throughout northern 1111-	1	*
nois are canceling their church | The Rev. Dow Kirkpatrick, pledges
event.”	______________________________ ...	...
mon Pleas Court the
SPARTANBURG, S.C. (AP) The odds were decidedly
result of this S representing a commTttee ol thei^ainst it> but ^{{jra^r- w*"g Evanston Methodist churches, , ’ . j	. , , r
said the churches responded to £ ft	££
Thirty persons stayed at thelthe SDS	‘SnUai!week' There are abollt 80-000
• -	----------------cause thou«ht 11 essential names in the jury box.
■ I P „ .	, H they thought..
semiriary and school’s trustees to get the klds away from ^ supported the housing of the cojn park and therefore lessen radicals-	tensions."
APPEAL TO CRITICS ' j Re added that the Involve-Dr. Ernest Sanders, dean of I ment was “the greatest moment the Garrett faculty, urged that!for Evanston Methodist church-critics not place the school on es in recent history—the fact the defensive.	ithat they were becoming ln-
BAKERSF1ELD, Calif. (AP) — "They’re just holding their own,” says one of the biologists assessing the annual count of the California condors to gauge the giant birds’ fight against extinction,
Scores of observers trekked to remote condor country this, week and reported more thanj 200 sightings of the black vul*j tures.
Biologists from the California Department of Fish and Game evaluated the sightings to eliminate duplications" and announced the result Friday. .
and ranging majestically from: southern Canada to northern! Mexico, now lives only in rugged mountains, rimming the San Joaquin Valley.
Officials will use the sighting findings to study population and nesting patterns and update ways of protecting the birds from extinction as civilization The condor, once abundant further shrinks their domain.
The final figure was 53, one more than in the 1968 count, 15 more than in the first count four years ago.
Ibushel WCASEl
DISCOUNT PRICES
SIZE	DESCRIPTION		SIZE	DESCRIPTION	
12x21	Beige Witten	SJW	141xS*4	Beige Loop	21.00
Sx2’l1	Beige TWd.	2.00	1x10*4	Bold Random	7.00
4xS	Blue Plueh	10.00	S*x9*	Blue Random	6.00
12x4	field Wilton	12.00	S’xS*	Green Random	4.00
12x21	Green Plush	9.00	2*10x6	Rlue Plush	8.00
12x4	Beige Rendom	12.00	11*10x2	Rsige Twist	10.00
1Sx21	Brown Carved	10.00	4*x3*	Purple Plush	3.00
11’6x5	White Carved	10.00	16x31	Avseado Plush	12.00
12x11	Brawn TWeed	12.00	12x1*0	Bold Twist	4.00
4*4x141	Beige Twist	10.0S	4'x51	Blue Plush	2.00
12x1*	Breen Loop	15.00	11x2*10	Bsige Carved	14.00
12x21	Brawn Tweed	S.00	01x81	Bold Carved	S.00
1Sx21	Beige Rendon	IMS	12x11	Bold TWeed	10.00
22x2*1	Sand Carved	12.00	11x21	Breen,Loop	8.00
Rug Qafa
Open Sunday 12:00 to 5:00 Monday 9til 9:00
(tub & Guay Oddmtd fiofe
Remnant	C
SAVE 30% to 50%
Yarn Reference to Face of Carpet
FINE
FLOOR
COVERING
‘BeekuiiffL-Evaiu
OPEN 9i30 to 9:00 daily except Tues. 'til 6:00: Sun. 12:00 to 5:00
TEL-HUR0N SHOPPING CENTER W. Huron at Telegraph 331-9544
12x12*0**	Yellow Random	in	S9.U	12x11*9"	Blue Grn. Comm.	in	oo.n
12x11*0**	Avoeado Kit. Carpet	104	109.95	12x21*19"	Gold Loop	201	109.95
12x10*6**	Bronze Random	140	99.n	12x1S*S”	Beige Carved	111	119.U
12x11*1"	Bold Loop	160	19.95	12x19*0"	Green Twist	in	109.95
12x01"	Orange A Bold Twd.	in	89.95	12x11*8"	Gold Nuggett Loop	90	59.95
12x111"	Bold Carved	180	109.98	12x10*2"	Moss ft Aqua Loop	169	89.95
12x181"	Avocado Kit. Gpt.	176	108.96	12x10*2"	Beige Floral	2n	159.95
12x101'*	Gold Carved	120	•9.95	12x10*10"	Emerald Random	264	121.95
12x111"	Avocado Loop	110	69.98	12X11*0"	Moss Rendom	120	69.9ft
12x01"	Red C Black Loop	101	69.96	12x11*0"	Avoeado Random	in	109.9S
12x01"	Beige Loop	u	49.86	12x10*0"	Bold Loop	141	19.98
12x01"	Red G Black K».Cpt.	n	09.65	12x19*4"	Olive Carved	in	99.98
ISxSI"	Green Plush	in	79.n	14x9*4"	Avoeado Twist	in	•MS
12x11*0"	Avoeado Carved	in	99.95	12x19*19"	Capri Om. Carved	in	IMS
12x11*1"	Aqua Random	211	169.66	12x11*9"	Blue Breen Shag	in	IMS
12x121"	Bapri Om. Random	2M	139.96	12x29*9"	Indian Bold Random	210	119.98
12x11*11"	Bronze Old. Rendom	in	ff.95	12x11*9"	Blaek ft White Shag	160	89.88
12x211"	Orange ft Grn. Com.	440	289.95	12x12*0"	Olive Plush	224	139.98
12x11*10"	Blue Breen Random.	100	119.95	12x19*9*’	Lavsndsr Plush	an	129.15
12x101"	Clover Grn. Kit. Cpt.	204	99.65	12x21*19"	Gold Loop	203	109.95
12x14*4"	Blue ln’dr.-0*tdr.	120	19.95	12x14*4"	Avocado Plush	200	109.95
•xlT'4"	Pink Commercial	2S0	119.U	12x17*2"	Ran. Blus Kit. Cpt.	210	1IMS 119^5
12x111"	Green Twist	Ml'	169.95	12x22*10"	Sprues Random	210	
12x181"	Harvest Random	120	79.n	12x21*9^	Off White Random	440	129.05
12x22*0"	Bold Loop	2n	109.95	12x19*4"	Beige Random -	no	ISMS
12x121"	Red ft Blaok Kt. Opt.	200	119.H	12xiri0"	Aveoado Oheg	228	m.n
12x181"		in	79.95	12x10*11"	Bronze Oheg	in	•Ml

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU TUES.. OCT. 21. 1969
Farm Maid Homo. Milk
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Cream Cheese
KELLOGGS TASTY
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DELICIOUS BARBECUED - LEAN, MEATY
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Carolyn Embree Honored
Led the Field as Career Woman
By JUNE ELERT
A pioneer among Women in the field of real estate and insurance, Mrs. Carolyn Embree ot Union Lake has been named “Woman of the Year" by Union Lake chapter, Business and Professional Women’s Club. '
As an observance of National Women in Business week, starting Sunday, members of the nine clubs of District 10, BPW, will attend 11:3(1 a.m. service at Kirk in the Hills.
At a joint luncheon in Devon Gables following the service, Mrs. Embree, along with each of the other' clubs’ representatives, will be presented to the gathering.
Mrs. Embree narrowly missed a career as a journalist. Back in 1900-10, she was Milford correspondent for what was then the Press Gazette, predecessor of this newspaper. She was offered a job in the editorial department but her mother wouldn’t allow her to board away from home.
At 16, Carolyn worked at a grain elevator, sorting navy beans. For this, she recalls, she was paid $3.50 a week; $2-50 was turned over to her mother.
"But then," she says, "a dollar went a good deal farther than it would today."
•to W ★
Carolyn married in 1911 and moved into Pontiac with her husband, where they stayed until 1927. During those years, Mrs. Embree worked for the old Oakland Motor Company and for Pontiac Commercial and Savings Bank, now Community National Bank.
In 1927, the couple made the exodus to j Union Lake, building a year-round home on a peninsula containing only summer cottages, so that their neighbors disappeared with the coming of the first frost. .
In order to keep her job in Pontiac, Carolyn purchased one of Ford’s new Model A's and learned to drive. “That was a circus," she says.
FAMOUS CAR
“Mine was the Only Model A in town except for the police chief’s car, and every time I stopped anywhere, men and
Identity Search Explains Choice
Some articulate black women are together in Detroit this week for the' National Association of Media Women convention. A Women’s Wear Dally reporter surveyed these word-oriented women on the question, “Would you ' rather be called black, hegro, or colored?" ... “Black" was almost unanimous
Some reasons: Sara Slack, Education editor, N.Y. Amsterdam News: “ ‘Negro’ is a corruption non-blacks have given blacks. ‘Black’ represents our new surge toward finding our own identity. We want to throw off anything that suggests, the white master-black slave relationship.’’
Theresa Hooks, women’s editor, Chicago Daily Defender: “If you can be white and be pink, I can be black and be brown. ‘Black’ is a name we have chosen ourselves.”
Phy Stephens, publicity director, Carmen Cosmetics: “To differentiate is with today, with the modem pressure. Younger generations have forced us to identify, to be ‘black.’ "
Janet David, accountant, Amsterdam News: “‘Black’ is like wearing an Afro — it’s being yourself and doing your black, thing.”
Makeup All Her Own
kids "would swarm out of nowhere to gape at it.*’	■
Carolyn eventually got tired of rising at 5 a.m. to do her housework before the long drive into Pontiac.
*	*	*
She resigned her position and with the recommendation of “two substantial citizens and a personal bondsman," (all* that was required In the days before the Michigan Securities Commission controls) the venturesome Carolyn became a real estate saleswoman.
★	*	★
“I think," she says, “that real estate is a very good career for a woman. You can get such good instruction, it WQUld be very foolish not to start in from that angle. When I began, I just had to sort of feel my way through each new situation. Now, the ‘‘red book" (the Securities Commission regulations) is the broker’s bible.
U *	*	* -
"There are a lot more women in real estate and insurance than there were when I started. I don’t think there were any others around here. It was a long time before I met another woman real estate broker."
Carolyn maintained the business alone for five years after her husband’s death in 1940 and then went into partnership with Lynn Gregg, eventually selling out her interest to him in 1958.
She maintains her license to sdll and enjoys this 'semi-retirement, since, she says, “If I feel like working, I can work, and if I don’t feel like it, I don’t have to."
* * *
Carolyn will celebrate her 79th birthday Nov. 18.
“You must have marvelous health," 1 said, naively.
“Oh, no. I wouldn't say that. I've had arthritis of the spine since the early 30s. I get stiff when 1 sit down for very long — I guess that’s what inspires me to be up and doing."
★	it	it
Mrs.	Embree has	seen	a	lot	of	changes
In the	Union	Lake	area	over	the	years.
“Tlie old Morrison home just came down. That must have been over a hundred years old. There are new apartments and shopping centers all the time. But we seem to run a lot to gas stations around here," she commented.
*	*	*
Carolyn’s leisure time is devoted to church work, BPW meetings, Eastern Star activities and a new project of getting a Union Lake Historical Society established.
The building was provided in the will of Charles R. Locklin and has a built-in history, having been used as a way-station to conceal escaping slaves on the underground railroad.
THE PONTIAC PRESS, 'SATURDAY. OCTOBER 18, I960
II—7



Didn't	Write Abby Letter,
but She Gets Blamed for It
CAROLYN EMBREE
Today's Working Wives Are Highly Motivated
By PATRICIA McCORMACK
NEW YORK (UPI) - Let’s hear a cheer for working wives "Sps the 15.3 million of them who juggle home and job duties in amazing ways.
The census Bureau figures that more than one out of three wives nationwide is doing this double duty-compared with one in five in 1952.
A cheer is due since a yen to help others, rather than p u r e g r e e d, motivates most of them.
Black Can Be More Beautiful
By LINDA CABRAL The beautiful black women is what put Libra cosmetic line into busloess. A new makeup group is on the market, designed to let the black woman do what she wants to for her face.
“She can look any way she wants to with opr makeup,” said Mr. Otis, black beauty expert for Libra.
# .1' * ■ " National Toiletrys, Libra’s parent company, was founded in Chattanooga,
Model Sandra Sanders wears the new makeup for black women; she is a cosmetic consultant.
Tenn. after the Civil War when a Yankee prisoner decided he liked the city, even from behind bars.
The name Libra means freedom, say company spokesmen. Their products, ranging from liquid make up, lipsticks, mascara and skin care preparations are designed to give black women representation in a white-oriented field.
ALL CAN USE
Chemically formulated to complement black skin, the makeup line can also be used as a summer cosmetic for lighter skin tones. .
Eventually, Libra will gear their products to all olive skin shades, but primarily. It is geared to the black woman.	■
Plans art now being made to establish beauty clinics featuring Mr. Otis and .black models, who will tour the country, offering advice on makeup application and use.
In Detroit recently on a publicity drive, Mr. Otis said, “after! sill, makeup has two goals: to cover skin imperfections and to enhance natural beauty. Every woman wants to do this, whether black, white or green,";
Believing that there are manufacturers who have negelected to fill this need for black women, Libra is attempting to supply cosmetics to camouflage and enhancp the black Woman.
And heaven knows, we girls always like that,' be we black, white, green or anything else.
. An informal survey of a cross-section of married, employed females in the New York area showed also a need for extra money—the women’s husbands can’t meet the double financial duties created by needy parents or alimony and child support payments.
HUSBAND DISABLED
Others among the women, like the middle-aged one who peddles papers by an automat near the United Nations, work because their husbands are disabled.
Almost envied by those working for funds to fill gaps were the occasional wives whose husbands can handle double or even triple financial duties.-★ * ★
One mother of three in this class always has had a housekeeper. She wants to be somebody rather than just earn money. “Like many in society, I am succpss-oriented,’’ she said.
By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN
DEAR ABBY: Something in your column sure stirred up a hornet's nest in our family, and I’ll bet it did the same in hundreds of others across the country. It was the letter from the married woman who said she had a strong “physical at-( traction” for her husband’s brother, and if she didn’t gef him alone just once she would lose her mind.
* > *
Well, last evening my husband's brother and his wife came over for a friendly visit. The first thing the wife said was, “Did you read Dear Abby today?” I said, “Yes, wasn’t it a gas?” She said, “Yeah, it sure was.” Naturally the men had to see it, too, so they dragged out the paper, and here was this “confession” from a married woman who was physically attracted -to her brother-in-law, also married. By the time they left, my sister-in-law was barely speaking to me, and if looks could kill, her husband would be dead now.
That night when we went to bed my husband acted mad, but he didn’t say anything.
* * *
Will you be kind enough to write and say which town, or at least which state she’s from so the rest of the world can sleep in peace. Heaven help me if you say “Illinois.”
NOT GUILTY
WWW
DEAR NOT GUILTY: You’ll not need Heaven’s help on this one. Illinois it wasn’t.
* * *
DEAR ABBY: We are about to marry off our fourth daughter and we ar,e certainly in a bind. We have skimped and saved for the last 15 years to be able to
"Rip Van Winkle" Is Puppet Show Now
Washington Irving’s immortal classic, “Rip Van Winkle," is the first puppet show of the current Detroit Youtn Theatre season in the Art Institute Theatre next Saturday.
*	*	*
Performed by the Melikin Puppets of Chicago, the. early American legend transports boys and girls back to 1766, when Rip and his dog set out on a thrilling 21-year1 adventure.
it	it	it
The Melikin Puppeteers ‘are well known for their adaptions of classic legends and fairytales. In the current production, young people are treated to a host of special effects, including a youthful “Rip” who ages 20 years before the eyes of his astonished audience.
★.	*	★
Two performances of this “Something Every Saturday" event are scheduled at 11 a.m. and 2 p.m.
Individual tickets arrf available at the Art Institute Ticket Office and' all J. L. Hudson Ticket Centers.
pay the bills for the weddings of our three older daughters. We have deprived ourselves of vacations and other luxuries, and now we find that the only way we can give our fourth daughter the same kind of wedding her older sisters had is to mortgage our home.
Prices for weddings today are fantastic! Not one of the grooms’ parents ever offered to pay a dime toward the
expense of the wedding. We think this is unfair. It should be a 50-50 deal.
Please put this in your column. Maybe it will soak in where it's needed.
MOTHER OF DAUGHTERS ★ * *
DEAR MOTHER: Don't count on it. But you have only yourselves to blame if you go broke putting on a wedding that is beyond your means.
Calendar of Events
MONDAY
Birmingham Alumnae chapter, Alpha XI Delta, 9:30 a.m., Birmingham home of Mrs. Thomas Jensen. “Come and Bring One” is the name of the talk.
Woman’s National Farm and Garden Association, Pontiac branch, 12:30 p.m., home of Mrs. Vere Hodges of Risdon Court, Bloomfield Township. Mrs. P. N- Askounes on “Table Settings Are Fun.”
Birmingham-Bloomfield League of Women Voters, 12:45 p.m., Birmingham Community House. General meeting on the Electoral College. Open to public.
Waterford Township Book Review Club, 1 p.m., home of Mrs. William Pelton on Waterford Road. "The Day of the Dolphin" by Robert Merle, will be reviewed by Mrs. Henry Mehlberg. Any Interested person may attend.
Drayton Woods Women’s Club, 8 p.m., Thomas Cooley School. Mrs. Judy Carver will speak on "Sex Education in the Schools.”
Epsilon Sigma Alpha, 8 p.m., Shawnee Lane home of Mrs. Louie Schaar. Pontiac City Council meeting.
PEO Sisterhood, AW chapter. 8 p.m., Sylvan Lake home of Mrs. Charles Coppersmith with Mrs. Charles Tabar assisting. Mrs. Charles Buck will give reports of the supreme convention.
Sylvan Shores Women’s Club, 8 p.m. Sylvan Lake home of Mrs. Louis Schlmmel Jr. Social meeting.
To Pediatrician Shortage
Supernurse May Be Answer
DENVER, Colo. (AP) - A pediatrics professor at the University of Colorado Medical Center says training “supernurses" could provide great assistance in coping with a crisis in children’s health care.
The “supernurses” or “pediatric nurse practitioners” are the central element of a plan on child health care that the professor, Dr. Henry K. Silver, presents today to the annual meeting of the American Academy of Pediatrics in Chicago.
* * *
Dr. Silver said the “supernurses” could be trained in four months at a cost of $4,000 each, far less than the cost of training physicians.
After the specialized course, then nurses would handle about 75 per cent of the children coming to a health station, he said.
"They can give almost total care to well children,” Dr. Silver said, “and can evaluate and manage a majority of the sick and injured children seen in an ambulatory office setting.’’
He said the ‘ supernurses” could be
trained in groups of 20 a year at 100 training centers.
♦	* w
Forty-eight of the special nurses have been trained in a Colorado programs.
Silver said studies after those nurses began their practice showed:
•	Nurses working alone in a low-income neighborhood were able to provide care without a doctor’s help for 70 per cent of the children they saw. Another 11 per cent of the cases were handled after telephone consultation with a doctor.
•	Nurse practitioners working in the office of pediatricians drew favorable response from 94 per cent of these parents who said they felt the care of their children improved after the nurse practitioner came.
•	When nurse practloners and pediatricians saw a series of 180 patients independently, their findings differed significantly in only 1 per . cent of the cases.
And, he said, pediatricians who employ nurse practitioners have found they are able to see at least one-third more patients than before.
Most familiar in the fabric of American life were explanations from those working for the money. Some comments:	T** I .	11||
		
	iy	
• ‘‘Money — first for my needy	k'' k	vll
parents and then when they died, money to help my husband meet alimony and		^111
child support payments from a previous	\	
marriage."	i	
HUSBAND’S ALIMONY	■	lli
• “Half my salary goes to pay my	iill	
husband’s alimony to a t woman who earns more than I do and almost as much as he does," said a disenchanted mother of a toddler. “The other half pays the housekeeper who takes care of of the baby In my absence.	\
• “Money," says a mother of three now looking for a Job to help pay for needed dental work foil qne child. She hps no training. At best she hopes to get a job as a chbckoiit clerk in a supermarket.
* * *
Homes that aren't always in spic and spam condition bother some working wives—who	cut coriiers in t h e
housekeeping.
But another attitude about this was best expressed by a wife who said:
“A little dust on-the table Is less of a worry to me,than a lot of dust on the brain.”' ; « v
Mrs. Lloyd Jewelt, 41, holds her son, Timothy	;	\	lrw *
(left) and her grandson, Larry (right), both born Billy, 22, father of Larry, smokes a cigar for the i Tuesday in Columbus, Ohio. This made her a occasion; Larry is his second child; TomothV, nis mother and grandmother on the same day. Her son, mother’s ninth/
. r-
TIIK PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY,
OCTOBER 18, I960
Groppi Still in Jail as Lawyers Plans
MILWAUKEE (AP) - The, Rev. James E. Groppi remained in jail today while his lawyers prepared appeals contending that constitutional Issues were not settled in the two latest court decisions against the civil rights activist.
Hie Wisconsin Supreme Court ruled Friday that the Roman Catholic priest’s right to due process was not abridged when legislators jailed him for contempt without a hearing. Simultaneously, a Milwaukee County Court judge ordered him jailed six months for violations of probation.
* * *
The state assembly used an 1848 contempt statute that had never before been invoked to jail the 38-year-old Groppi Oct. 1 for actions stemming from his role as leader of welfare demonstrations at the state capltol in Madison.
The statute has no provision for trial, bail or a hearing and allows for up to six months in jail.
UNANIMOUS
The state supreme court ruled unanimously there was no
Fraud Charged to Firm, Owner
DETROIT (AP) - Eugene M. Greene, president of Debt Aid-Inc., and his company were indicted on 12 counts of mail fraud by a U.S. grand jury Thursday.
Debt Aid was charged with collecting fees from 15 debtors to straighten out their credit problems when the company was unable to perform the service.
★ ★ ★
The grand jury said Debt Aid has branches at 10 W. Huron, Pontiac, and in Mount Clemens.
Maximum punishment for mail fraud is five years imprisonment and a $1,000 fine, with each count punishable as a separate offense.
OPEN SUNDAY 1 to 5 P.M.
question that Groppl’s "ticts er, by authorities who took him I Among numerous litigations were contemptuous” when he to Milwaukee, where he was I pending ort Groppl’s behalf is an entered the Assembly chamber,held until his appearance Frl- appeal to the U.S. Supreme Sept. 29 with 2,000 followers, I day in County Court on the Court of the 1968 conviption un-most of them University of Wis- charge of violating his 1968 pro- der which he was placed on pro-consin students.	bation. • s	Ibation.
As to “whether he is entitled to a hearing," the court said:
“What is there to hear? ...
What need is there for witnesses to tell the assembly as a body what it witnessed?"	|
*	*	*	i
In Milwaukee County Court,!
Judge F. Ryan Duffy Jr. ruled! that Groppl’s activities in Madison violated terms of probation! set last year when the priest was given a suspended six-month term for resisting arrest | during a 1967 open-housing dem-1 onstration.
Groppi was ordered freed in |
$500 bond 11 on the con'l tempt charge by U.S. Dist.
Court Judge James E. Doyle, who did not rule on the constitutional questions but said the assembly had not given the priest j “a hearing of any kind."-' H
*	* *i
Groppi was immediately | placed in custody then, howev-:
Per-Student Outlay Low in Waterford
Waterford Townships school system, third largest in the county, has less money to spend on each studentlnan six other largest schooljmstricts in Oakland County, school officials reveal.
Waterford School District will be able to spend only' about $602 for each student in the regular school program this school year, according to Waterford school figures.
* ★ *
But Waterford will be getting the largest state aid per pupil among the seven largest districts. Waterford’s per pupil enrollment is up just 13 cents over last year.
The comparative per pupil figures for 1969-70:
The only hobby regulated by international treaty is amateur radio.
3 FT, WIDE, COMPLETE W/HINGES
GATE
$8.96 UNIVERSAL FENCE
BIBLE
REBINDING
CHRISTIAN LITERATURE SALES 55 Oakland Ave. FE 4-9591
| District	State	Amt.
(Enrollment)	Aid	Spent!
Pontiac (24,470)	$217	$740
Royal Oak (19,596)	$271	$696!
Waterford (18,501)	$321	$602!
Birmingham (17,526)	$200	$902 1
Southfield (16,351)	$196	$776 j
Farmington (16,370)	$273	$722 j
Walled Lake (10,288) * ■	$271 * *	$700
Waterford’s enrollment is up 263 pupils over last year.
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JEWELRY CO.
26 N. Saginaw St., Downtown Pontiac

Wl INVITE YOU TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF ENGGASS INSTANT CREDIT (dj CONVENIENT TERMS	|f
SYLVAN LAKE FRONT
4 bedroom English Manor brick on north shore,, newly carpeted and attractively decorated. Living room 14x21, formal dining room, modern kitchen with breakfast nook, 2 fireplaces, 1’/j baths, recreation room, 2 car attached garage. $47,000, terms. Directions! West on Voorheis off Telegraph tp grocery store, turn left to 2605 Sylvan Shores Drive.
Your Host, Earl Moon, Home Phone 673-1878
WE WILL TRADE
ANNETT INC. REALTORS
28 E. HURON — PONTIAC—338-0466.
Office Open Evenings and Sunday 1 -4
EYES
BOTHERING
YOU?
Call Today For An Appointment! THE NUMBER IN PONTIAC IS 333-7871 We Provide:
EXAMINATIONS • REGULAR GLASSES SAFETY GLASSES • CONTACT LENSES SUNGLASSES • REPAIRS
This is a consumer organization sponsored by your local credit unions.'Open Saturday and every weekday except Wednesday.
Hearing Aids, Too!
SIDNEY GILBERT, Optometrist RAY HEFFRON, Certified Hearing Aid Audiologist
PONTIAC CONSUMERS CO-OP OPTICAL
Moke An Appointment At Our Convenient Location:
1717 South Telegraph - Pontiac__
H<wt Jia Tjmrnd 'fyArtfpi CIwMmm
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Perhaps it seems early for Christmas, but it does take time to avoid the holiday rush We do wonders with old diamonds by resetting and renewing the beauty and sparkling brilliance of each stone Take the time to choose the design and. express the thought you have in mind.. Come in and plan now Choose from the fancy cluster styles or let us help you design an original for ,ylpu\or yoi^r loved Ofiel
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CONNER Of HURON AND SAGINAW \ STREETS-DOWNTOWN PONTIAC ' . ft 2-0294
Maker’s
Closeout
Boy’s Nylon Jacket
PLUSH PILE LINING... RACER-STRIPE STYLING
Rugged 100% nylon oxford shell with water-repellent finish. Smart snap front with Cadet tab collar. Assorted fall colors. Boys’ sizes 6 to 12; Student sizes 32 to 36. Limit 2 each.
Boys* Dept.
IJ97
Monday Only
4-Ply Knitting Worsted
S0U0 COLORS... MADE OF 100% VIR0IITW00L
Lofted for softness and combed	Ragtilar 99c
to help prevent pilling. Moth-proofed. 4-ply yam in 4-ounce	MrQ ©
pull skeins. Average woman’s	M A
sweater takes 5 or 6 skeins.	™
Great for coats and dresses, too.	- Skein
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No phone orders, COD's or deliveries (except where noted)
Table Tennis Table
STURDY ROLL AND FOLD-UP STYLE
Rfcg. 49.99
Attractive and well constructed. Regulation size. One person can easily set it np or fold it and take it down in seconds. 44” top.
7.99 Table Tennis Sot.... 4.97
Seers Sports Center
3497
Nylon Bath Carpeting
STEP INTO EXTRAVAGANT SOFTNESS!
Cold, hard tile floors are ont. . plush bath carpeting is in! Cut to fit easily with scissors. Non-skid Secnri-Tee foam backing.
6xB-ft., Rag. 13.98...............10.91
Bx8-ft., Reg. 19.98...............15.97
SxIO-ft., Reg. 24.98 ........... 20.97*
8x9-ft., Reg. 27.98..............23.97*
*Sperial Order Only
Reg. 11.99
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Sliding Doors
7x5-Ft. Lawn Building
CONVENIENT ST0RA0E ALL YEAR AROUND	,
The “Greenbrook” provides \ Regular 134.99 216 cq. ft. of storage space for
lawn equipment, bicycles, eta. « CVCVoO Exclusive 5rstep finish protects , the all steel construction. Un-assembled. Floor is extra.	Monday Only
Suburban Equipment Dept.
3/8” Electric Drill
LOCKING TRIGGER SWITCH, SAFETY RELEASE
Regular 11.99
Motor develops Vi-HP. Excellent for light-dnty use as well as occasional building or repair projects. Sleeve bearings, double redaction gears.
Hardware Dept.
397
5-Pc. Power Router Kit
0IUFTSMAN ...OUTS UP TO IGNORES DEEP Rout, mertise or groove. Develops ' Roe. Separate 66-HP ... 25,000 RPM. 100% ball	- - ? —
bearing. Includes cese, edge guide, wrench. Vi” double fldte bit tnd\
$4” raining bit	1 ’	'
Router Bit Assortmsnt.. 1.44 as.
Hardware Dept.
39"
Monday Only
Use Sears Revolving Charge

v. \\
IS
X
THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1969
m
B—9
f v m
i Electric Kitchen Clocks
at 5
39
A clock for any kitchen. Ideal accent pieces to perk up a dull kitchen, whether you like col. onlal, traditional or con* temporary, you'll find a clock to pleaae you.
Cordless Kitchen Clocks
9
99
Battery*operated electric clock atylea for every decor! No ugly cord on the wall. Choose from charming colonial clocka to dramatic contemporary atylea.
Limit 4 Jewelry Dept.
MONDAY ONLY - from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Sears
Ust Your Soars Revolving Charge
order*, C.O.D.’a or deliverle* (except where noted)
Men’s Orion Button Sweater
Rag. $11
All Orion® sweaters are machine washable. So soft to touch. V.neck butoon-up style. Rib knit botton. 2-button trim. Black, blue, red; olive green. S, M, L, XL.
Seen Men't Store
Polyester Double Knit Pants
Rtg. $11
66
6
Classic styling in fall’s basic colors. Perma-Prest® for machine wash, tumble dry care ... no ironing needed. .In Misses* sizes;
Zig-Zag Sewing Machine
PORTABLE MODEL WITH CARRYINO CASE
Sportswear Department
You can seyr zig-zag and straight stitches, forward and reverse. Mend, darn, make button-holes and sew on buttons. A great buy on a versatile machine that does so much.
*59
Channel Back Seal, Back
SET FITS MOST ONAIRS; COMES WITH HARDWARE
Channel quilted “Thunderbird” bucket seat styling. Foam and cot-ton in eeat — cotton in the ful ton in seat — cotton in the full mi-in. high back. In classic black, green, gold.
Single Walkie-Talkie
MANUFACTURER’S CLOSEOUT... SAVE $15
Reg. 6.99
4»f>
100-milliwatt Walkie-Talkie. Great power for one so compact. Channel 5 crystals. Black metal. Comes with battery and strap.	‘
34.99 Walkie Talkie .... 14.98 ea.
Was 24.99
088
mV each
I SmM 9
3-Position Recliner
MODERN STYLE IN EASY- CARE VINYL
♦Men’s Nylon Jacket
WATER RESISTANT... QUILT-LINED FOR WARMTH
Built-in comfort plus luxurious
Ragular 129.95
good looks is the invitation pro-vided by this man-size 3-way re-
Warm, comfortable and good look-ing too. Oxford weave, water re-
Reg. 16.91
cliner. Supported vinyl cover with Serfoam cushioning. Avocado, gold
aistant nylon shell with cadet collar. 12»7
or ebony.
Fly-front and zipper. In navy, bronze and medium green. Sizes S, M, L, XL.	Limit 2
Sear, Mtn't Star*
Save! Women’s Boots
Men’s Dress Shoes
NEW HIBH STYLED 15 INCH VINYL BOOTS
Whether your coat is maxi or mini your boots should be high enough to keep you warm! Step into the leather look of 100% orlon lined boots in either black or brown. Shn 5-10.
Rag. 10.99
597
FINE LEATHER IN WANTED STYLES
Two smart styles to choose from — strap and buckle or slip-on. Avail-
Regular 16.99
Charge It
able in black or brown. Leather soles and rubber heels. Smooth leather uppers. Sizes 714-12.
Men', and Boy.' Shoe Department
997
Monday Only
Continuous Feed 1/3 HP Kenmore Garbage Disposer
$42
Indoor food-waste disposal convenience plus durable quality. Extra-large 514-inch shredder ring, disc. Two-tone avocado ‘green; modern styling Save 12.95 Monday!

9xl2-ft. “Brittany” Rug
id BEAUTIFUL SCULPTURED PATTERNS
Rag. 69.99

Kitchen Planning I
Low loopt and high cut pile of 100% pylon create a subtle interesting pattern. Eaay to maintain. Cushion back resists skid-
Hun.	-------- _
ding and provides softness. 5 beautiful colors.
49“
7-Speed Blender
WITH 5-OUP-OAPAOITY CUSS CONTAINER
' '	Rag. 34.99
2366
8 push buUon. Surgical steel cutting blades. Container is heat, cold and stain resistant Can be cleaned in dishwasher. Cord stores In base.
Sears Motor Oil
10-QT. CAN OF 10W-30 ALL-WEATHER OIL
Monday, ttiuVadny,
day, Saturday 9 to 9, ■day, Wednesday 9 to 5i30
Moor Covering Deportment
1
annwHancri	*
Hurry \lnjfpr the loweiii price^of xhe
nurry in iui	w* i
season. White, evocado or bery
«°W^	Electrical
Monday Only
This great all-weather oil protects as Rag. 4.29 it lubricates. Special additive* stop AUQ sludge build-up, neutralise damaging acids and inhibit varnish deposits. Mr You'll enjoy good performance year	\
round. \	V ■ >	Llmlf2
Auto Acceuorlet
Sears'l' Downtown Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171
SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO.
J
B—10
THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1909
Record of Transactions for Week oh Stddk Market
■1 21	1»H 20V*
17 42V* 39	42
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AmSoAfr ,70 AmSAfr fn.70
Am Sid 1 Amstd pf4.73 Am Staril .40 A Avoir 1.90
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Hrffl	SS	T	T	JtS
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94	26%	26	26	—%%
909	44%	42'/%	42%-1
30	97%	66%	67%
BMflF pf5.50 BanflF pf4.50 BenflF pf4.30
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Banowot fn	437 17* 132* 14.
BoncPho .77f 1327 II*
Weekly Investment Companies
NEW YORK (AP) - WOiWy Inverting Invertor* Group:
Companies	giving ttw	hlah,	low and last	ids New Dim	5.19	5.05	5.29 •
price*	tor	ilia	Gate	Wfflj	M	Mutual In©	10.09	9.03	10.09
Jw Ji* ““
20.95 20.26
8.96	1.94	8.99 + .02
8.37 8.05 8.37	32
£06	5.04	5.06	.
$7.61 22.96 23.91 +1.1 15.90 15.58 15.P + .54 9.16	8.90	9.16
8.85	8.57	8.80
22.38 21.95 22.38
m____■ , .	19,12	19.03	19.12 +	.19
Mid GBd B-2	19.86	19.69	19.86 +	.24
Pile Bd B-4	9.37 9.32 9.37 4- .05
lSkImHII Liberty I Life Gill
Loomis Saylas

.73	7.44	7.73 + .26
tfS ijiHrS
8.19 8.41 + M
15.70	15.31	11*70	+	.
9.59	f	9.57	+	,
19.19	18.77	19.19	+	.
1121 11.96 12.19 4*.
6.74	6.60	6.72 4* .
12.11 11*49 4* .57 100.01 101.79 +3.16 11.93 11.69 11.90 +. .33
4.91	4.79	4.91	+
12.03 11.79 12.01 + 6.77 6.60 6.77 + 7.36 7.16 7.36 + 14.02 13.84 14.02 .28 10.12 10.28
+ .48 + .26 4- .19
Composite Fd
Concord Fund
Cot trail C Corp Leaders
10.05	9.70 10.04 •
8.75	8.60 8.71 4- .
9.48	949	9.6	+	.
10.23	9.69	9.69 - .
5,40 5.25 5.0 • 15.22 14.39 15.22 • 12.37 12.00 12.25 -4.99	4.87	4.96	*
10.59 10.28 10.55 -15.29 14.70 15.29 -
Mil	¥
B&ipkVM
Blair John .40	367 26
BII8S
BIUSl
U0*
1 ■** x2247	72?*	(8*	72?*	+3,
lira 1	21	2*V*	23V* . 2* .	+'
h 1.28	10	22V*	1*4*	22V*	+24*
l.JO	583	274*	25V.	2*V*	+ 4*
ir L2S	420	284*	25V*	27*	+144
IS .80	1*4	M	1*44	17	+ .*
s 2. Of	01	3489	33'/a	3489	+ 99
Inc	243	22%	10%	21%	4-3%
Ir .50	750	14%	13%	1389	4* %
BriaaSt 2.40a	96	.52	48%	52	4*3%
Bri|fMy 1.20	1182	70%	67	70.	+3%
BrlstMy pf.............
Bdwy Hale BklynUG
8.00 6.10
5.52	5.66
>Gr Cm S-1 10.63 10.11 10.63 • Inco Stk S-t .........................
Grth
LoPr
Polar!
50	10.22	10.49
98	7.79	7A0	+
53	5.41	5.53	4-	.22
________	..64	4.56	4.64	+	.17
Knlckrbdc	Fund	7,50	7.42	7.57	+	.22
Grth	12.05	11.02	11.99	4-	.36
r» Tr	10.07	9.93	10.03	+	.18
‘	15.91	15.40	15.91	4-	.66
6.45	6.30	4.45	+	.23
5.05	5.70	5.85
8.20	7.95	8.14 . ■
6.54 4.34	4.54 4-.S5
39.76 38.67 39.76 +1.09 12.01 11.73 12.00 in 15*01
Cm SA
Fund
■IP pf A2 Brown C6 Brown Co pf
' hW :
>wk ..07a BucyEr- 1.20 Budd Co .00 Budd Co pfS BudB F Pf.M Budgat In .84 BuffForg 1.10 BukwaW M Bunk Ramo BunkR pfl.50 Burl IM 1.0 ly .70 ira .*0 l.*2f
SfST'a
attan Fd 7.97	7.82
Fund , 11.14 11.05 11.14-
Inv Grth 12.87 12.58 12.87,-Inv Trust 15.73 15.11 15.73 •
9.54	9.34	9.53
7.01	6.76	7.01	•
14.98 14.60 14.98 •
14.09 13.80 14.09 ■
10.53 10.39 10.53 4.05 4.00 4.05 •
8.63	8.34	8.63	-
9.34	9.20	9.34
6.08	5.90	6.06	-
5.33 5.20	5.32	+	.17
10.29 10.01 10.26 + .33 19.11 11,60 lf.H +
Nat Westrn Fd Nil Grth Fund Neuwlrth New World Fd NY Venture
.13 Oppanhslm Fd .16 Penn Square Mutual Phils Fund Pilgrim Fund
__ ___ T _	11.97* 11.59 .11.97 -
deVegh Mut Fd 49.00 67.95 69.00 -Decatur Income 12.48 1121 12.48 • Fund 14.06 13.77 14.04 -
6.34	6M AM'
17.23 UM 17.23 -13.54 13.35 12J4 •
2.66	2.62	2.6i
11.30 1170 11.26 -
0.49 1.33 0.40
5.57 5.51	5,57 ■
1.57 5.40 8.57 • 6.67	6.55 4.60 -
9.89 10.il-
8.46	8.35	8.45 -
15.32 14.93 14.93 • 9.91	9.78	9.91 -
8.26	8.11 *8.26 -
8.31	8.12 1.29+' .30
9.42 9.11	9.42 +.77
15.47 15.21 15.47 + *47
8.05	7.93	0.05	+	.19
11.03	10.70	11.02	+	.36
13.34	13.00	13.34	+
Downtown'' Draxd" Eqv
Dr.xel^ Equity
Dreyfus Ley" Fd 12.00 12.70 12.00
J< Planned invest 12.30 12.21 12.30 + .32
11.0*	10.04	11.0*	+	.24
4.02	4.71	. 4.12	+	.1*
10.00	0.13	10.00	+	M
Growth Fund
ifock* Fund	15.00 14.66 14.91 + .45
Eberstadt Fund 13.96 13.67 13.96 + .47
Emerging Sec Energy Fund Enterprise Fd Equity Fund Equity Growth Essex Fund Everest Ind Bxplorar Fund Fairfield Fund Farm Bur Mut Federal Gr F< Fidelity capital Fidelity Fund Fid Trend Fd Financial Prog: Dynamics Fd Indust Fund income Fund
13.49 13.28 13.45 • 8.74	8.50	8.74
9.71	9.46	9.71	•
1.82	14.67	14.82	+	.34
24.75	23.74	24.69	+1.26
11.59	11.29	11.54	+	.39
11.96	11.69	11.73	+	.34
1.40 14.14 1.40 + *61 12.15	11*77	12.11	+	.50
7.42	16.90	17.42	+	.62
26.67	26.01	26.67	+	.98
First Sierra Fd 46.87
7.96 7.85 7.96 •
Capit Fletcher Fund Florida Growth Found Growth
Foursquare Fd Franklin Group: Common Stk
P^SlO
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BuM of Amor ten Securities gUyalfiTFund
Hg
Growth Indus Gryphon Fund \ Guardian Mut , \ Hamilton:	'
< c. us
Hartwell JM ? Orfdn BWM
t.20	0.00	0.20	+1.
6.01	*.72	*.00	-
7.7*	7.B	7.50	■
5.04	S.S0	5.03	•
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10.22	io.io	io.2i	+	Tib
10.02	0.07	10.01	+	.31
11.40	11.17	llji	+	j*
14.77	14.47	14.70	+
0.30	0.24	0.80	+	.3*
10.63	13.51	13.2}	+	.r
0.31	0.24	0.20	+	.1
11.30 11.67 11.00 + .41 0.7	0.04	0.17	+	.11
7.60	7.J2	7.**	+	.22
10.00 10.30 10.00 ' “ 0.32	tS	0.32
3.30	*:25	5.20
14.62	14.30	14.90 +.S2
7.02	7.71	7J2	+	.21
1J.0!	15.3*	15.01	I	„
35.20 24.41, 25.30 +1.27 15.75	15.30	15.7*
11.(4	11.53	11.04
11.72	11.M	11.72	,
3.07	3.01	3.01	+	.00
7.04	7.02	7,0 + .20
10.40	10.2*	10.30
17.01	14.73	14,06	. ■■
23.30 22,40 23.27 +1.00 If	1»5	10.34	T	■*
10.11	10.40	10.70
12.13	11.03	12.10	.	...
0(0	0.73	0.14	+	.20
10.13	0.07	10.00	+	.34
oil	0.04	0.3}	+	.37
||	1.11	0.31	+	.35
14.54	14.25	14.54	+	.44
5.44	5.52	5.44	+	.10
52.00 50.50 51.75 +147
Syncrd TMR i
Technivest FM
'.24 14.04 142 26.02
Teachers Assoc 10M 10.60 tAM Technical FuM 4.74 *M ‘fn
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0.01	7JO 101
10.30 10.10 10.30
17-4* m 'lit
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9.13	8,94	9.13	+
Mil	16.08	16.24	+	*
WS	12.79 +
9,34	9.25	9.33	+	,27
.2916	12.17	.12.91	+	.43
2.94	2.87	194	f	.08
)SJ7	llJ6	1$J7	+	.83
7.5i
3.67	148	5.67	+	.24
7.90 7.72 7.99 14.65 14.30 1448
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IM 742	7.74 •
7.24	647	7.24	+	.32
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13.fi	1149	lift	+	.72
12.17	12.14	1117	+	M
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8.09 , 7 J6	8v09
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1.16	5.01	5J5 + .21
7.31	7.21	7.27+ #1|
17 11.91 111I.+j4CSf»E_ _ 20 14.09 18J| + .41 ConFd
mil 10.38 i”
Value Line	8,14 748
Income	8.42 5,31
Spec! Sit Vance San Spcl Vanderbilt Vanguard Fund
Vndng Growth	...
WL Morgan	10.14 9i .81 10,14+4)
W all St Invest 11,94 11.70 11.94+44
Wellington Fnd 12.17 -------
Wjltpl. Indust
Whitehall Fund H .......... „
SFund 1042 10.38 1042 + .37 9.98 9.W 9.90 + JB Grthln "	‘	‘
Wisconsin Fund Worth Fund
9.90 947 flf« 4.20
7.49 7.37 tMWmt -116 3.08 MM + *12
20 Most Active Stocks
NEW YORK (AP)-1
ll
CJ2JS chg.
+2% I Frank Str “ Frfcplul 140 972 FruehCp 1.70 1388 Fuaua Ind 1607
l..
34% +|
29% +2% | Fuqua Ind i +5VS
27% 20% 299 47	44% 47
317 11% 16% 10% 88 16
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GAC Cp	1.50	11*4	43V*	53V*	*14*	+0V*
GAC Cp	pH	1?	41V*	3*	*1V*+4V*
GAF Corp .*0	)7	11V*+1
kSi	l*u	23V*	34'A+1V*
137	20V*	23?*	14V*	+1
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:ont Stl 1	32	11*	31	31V*	— V*
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Conwod 1.00a	35	35	33V*	34*	+ *
Cook Unit .50	402	45*	43*	M	+V
Cooporln L4j	104	M*	25*	27V*	+3’*
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45*	42V*	45	+2V*
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227 24 391 40* 34 30*
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Caro CAOh 5	1290	70	M*	70	+,*
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300 27* 26* 27* + ' 297 ft* 10* ft* +5 111 33* 47 . 31* +# 640 Sii 32*
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IntTAT pfH'4 XU 114 109 114 +7 ITT Bfl 4.50 x57 10S 102 101 +3% IntTAT pf J 4	x3» 101	99	101
IntTAT |HK4 x 265 100 InTT pfLS.50 y640 72
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48	11	10%	10%
43	20%	27%	28
193	47%	43%	46%	+1%
S16	37%	35%	36%	+1%
13	50	49	80
66	14%	13%	14
624 21% 19% 80%+1% 41	20%	19%	20	— “
571	m	33%	35%	f!
GenDynam 1	401	25%	23%	84%	+
Gen Elec 2.60 190	07% 84% 66%+1%
InttriPw 1.24
lOWaPLt 1.60 lowsPSv 1,32 ‘pcoHosg .30 TK Imp .58
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GCsble 1.10® Gen Cig;1.20 GnDevel ,74f
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1099 10% 74% 79
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Gan Mills .(0	947 34* 34* 34
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Gan Sip pt 4 GenStllnd .00 GTalEI 1.52 GTalEI PI2.50
34 Mb 54* 57 f V 137 M* 19	30	+1
10M 25* 23* 35* +2 271 13* 11* 1|» + 1-25 44* 43* 45* +2* 47 13* M H* + * 114 14* 15* 14* + * 1034 34* 33* 34 , +3
14 43* 43
1.4*(	30,	42*	30	41*	+3*
l.40n	13)	37*	34*	37	.....
020 37	35* 35* + *
gensA .50	125	20*	10*	If* + M
■CPL pf 4	1370	57	54	57
..JtlCo 1.50	334 53* 49* 52*+3
Jim Walt .40 2417 30* 33	33 — I*
JimWolt pf 2	11 114	05* 95*-7*
JlmW pfl .40	102	43*	30*	40*	- *
.. pfl.20	T IN* 100* IN* +3*
lit pf 1	2530	14*	13*	14	+ *
an 1.20	703	33*	31*	33* +1*
in ,20a 1ft 150* 142* 140* +1* Svc .M	252	22*	21	M* + *
JohnSvc pt 2	7	55*	54*	55* + *
■	• Man .SO	210	55*	52*	55	+2
-au 1.35	13 32* M* 2m+1*
AL ptS	1520	MM	M*	M* — *
nan 1.30	IS	24	22*	23* — *
ns .40	74	35*	33*	35*	+1*
Vlfg 1.40	145	30*	37*	M*	+1*
—K—
Gsnstar Ltd
[3540 It* 17* 10* +1 300 30* 34* 27* + * 403 19* 10	19	+ *
34)0 74* 73* 74* +3*
370 29* 20	20*......
400 12	11* 11*’+ *
20 36* 35* 34* + * 1294 49* 44* 49* +3* 23 49* 44	49* +3*
1 40* 47	4|*.
240 35* 34* 34* — * 424 59* 54* 59* +3* 43 IS It It 140 12* 12	12*
415 34	32* 35	+3*
102 17	14	14* .
GsPac pfl 44 GaPlC pfl.40 Gorbor 1.10 GettyOII .3lg Gsttv pfl.20 Giant PC .00 Glbralt Fin Gldd Low JO Glllolta 1.40
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378
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1 pf C2 pf D1.20
58 18% 17% 17% f.% 1.72 1074 33* 31* 33* +1* " 431* 39* 34* 2Mb +2* 192 32 M* 31* +2* _	400 44* 40	43*+3*
s? is* h Ilfs
73 It* 17* It* + *
241	51* 40* 51* +2*
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242	27* 24* 27	—
GtABPUO fM* ?mt 8 88 ?SI AbtS
439 44* 42* 44* +1* 2404 20* 24	27* +}*
Sranby 1.20 irandUn .00
Granltev 1.40 GrantW 1.40 Grant pf GrayDrg
GrtNoir 1.35e GtNoPap 1.60 GtNorP pf,40 Gt Nor Ry 3 Gt West '
54	23*	32*	23 H
120	14*	13*	14* +2*
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130	21*	20*	20*
435	10*	17*	17*	■
100	35*	33*	33*-*
■RRHRP	.	m	Mb	m	wi-ii
GHLfHold .40	2140	M*	(5*	37*+1
GWUn pfl .00 GtWashln .50 GrsanGnt .94 Graonsh 1.20 irsyhound 1 V roller .90 .
41 75
75	+2*
Dll	1 JO	51441	34*	33*	33* ■
Resrces	575	15*	14	14*-
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GulfSteUt *.94	5,0 23	21* g*+1*
GulfSU pf4.4t 1470 .41
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S’* S3 ®u,,w P13 *7
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40a 3342 26
191 25* 24* 25* ■ 3 47* 47
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3 03* 79* 03W+V2 13 IM* 122*’l(J»+«» 40	53*	51*	S3	+1*
30	4+	43	44	+ *
M0	23	20*	22*	+2*
151 51	40* M + ■
210 49 4#* 40* — * 70	12*	12*-	12*	+ *
ISO	34*	35*	35*	+ *
92	32	M	31*	+2*
E	12*	1Mb	M
Drosslnd 1.40	473 31*
134 35*
Drossr pt B2 DroyfusCp 1b
Hersco Cp 1	201	20>
HartSMrx J 0 175 34 Harv Al 1.20	354	24?
Hat Corp .40
32* -
120	34*	32*	34	+3*
03	31*	M*	31	+1*
423	50*	40*	50*	- *
4M	24	10*	23	+3*
025 I® 113* 111* +4
M 40 M* 47	....
14	55*	53*	55	+1
3M	25*	23*	25*	+1*
114	20	24*	27*	+1*
Dq 3.75pfl.07 1550 25* 25	25	....
Dq 2.10pf2.10 1130 30* 30* 30* .....
Dymolntf	,47f	333	If*	14*	18*	+2*
Dyne Am	JO	514	14*	12	13*	+1*
—E—
110	31	30*	30*	+ *
273	23*	20*	21*	+1*
1244	im	14*	It	+1
147	24*	23*	23*	+ *
33 22* 21* 21* ......
1717 77* 74* 75* — * 1227 43* 41* 43	+ lb
m pH.19	9 42* 41* 42*+3*
EcfiUnMf	.72	210	21*	10*	21*	+2*
EckrdFla	.30	473	34*	32*	3m	+1*
EdlsonBros 1	101	M*	27*	20	+1
EG&G .10	410	37*	31*	37*	+5*
ElMuelc .090	2033	4*	4*	4*	+ *
I	105	4*	5*	4*	.....
741	30*	19*	19*	+ *
El Mem Maf	403	74*	72*	72*	—1*
Duplan Cp duPont 3.750 duPont pf4.50
wRqt*
DuqLt 4p1 2
East Air .37p EastGF .I.ISt iltll 1.40 East Kodak 1 EatonYa
Heller pf4.07
HelmrhP .10 Herhlsph Cep 200 Hemline .53g
121 27% 26% 26% — %
Electrn
HollySug 1.20 Homastka .40 Honey wl 1.20
inti .30
Houd pfl .12 Houd pf 2.2! Houg Miff .41
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58%
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Essaxlnt
Emhart 1,20b	65	39%	37%	39% +1%
|	1,60	150	26%	86	26
,90b	5	27%	27%	27%
.12p	30	24%	24%	24%
EndJohn	pf4	>290	49%	47%	40
588 24% 22	24% +2%
2 150 141	150 +10
553	39%	35	37% +1%
40	34%	33%	34% ! i
121	86%	23%	25% +1%
483	21%	18%	21	+2%
150	37%	34%	37% +2%;
Essex pfZ.I4	13	44%	41%	44	+2%!
Ethyl Cp	.72	471	26%	28%	86, +2%
-Ebjm	82	48%	88%	40%+1%:
124	it	17%	tm M
2248	44%	40	43% +2%
1215	25%	22%	25	+2%
475	24%	22%	24%.+1%
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418 35% 32% 34% +M6 ■■■ ■ ■ 228 44% 44%. 46%+2% PairdlC .50a 1820 05% 81% 84% , Patrch Hiller	1108	17%	15%	16% +1%
Fairmont 1	140	17%	16%	17% + %
Falstaff JO 185 12	11% 1% — %
Fam Fin .30	159	22%	19%	21% +2%
Fansteel Inc	144	15%	14%	14% — “
Far West Fin	215	19%	16%	10% +2%
FarahMf
219	50	46%	50
FAS Inf	1.40T	161	26%	25	23	—
FaddOrs	.40	1125	22%	29%	32%	+3%
FedMog	i.oo	111	20%	Wk	27%	; m
FadPac	Elec	4614	26%	22%	23%	+ %
F pac pfl.26	184 23% 20% 21% + %
FadPapBd 1	05 23% fflk 23% +1%
346	31%	24%	30%	+1%
974	27%	36%	37%
30	9% f% — %
102	23%	88	23	+1%
144	25%	23%	25%+1%
FadDeptStr 1 Fed Mtg Inv Farro Cp .70 Flbrabrd .70 PlaldMM 1p40 Plltrai 2 Fin Fadaratn Plrastna 1^0 FatChrt 2.29f
62 27	26%	27	+ *
33% 32% 38	+1
26% 38% 38% +8 51% 49% M% +1
,	X1102	50% 45
FstNCIty 2.40 478 60% 64 pit NStr .Tig m ™ Flschbch .80 FlsherSci .16
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+4* +3*
54	34*	34	34* +1
40	31*	Mfb	It* +1*
903 14* 14* Im ......
144	ft*	14	ft	+ *
141	(7*	|t*	0*	+1 I
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10	34*	if*	34*
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FIShr Fd	05d	141	31*	II*	20*	+ *
Fla	E	Coast	244	43	34*	39*	+1*
PH	Gas	.50	141	19*	It*	19* +1
Fla	Pow	1.52	333	49*	43*	49	+1*
FlaPwLt 1.11	172 49* 45* 49* +4*
PIP Stftl .90 : , 73 9VM 24* ; 24* +2* FlUdrCp 2.02f 232 M* MW 34*+1* Fluor	pf S	3	4	54	MM	S3* —
PlyTIMr	.10	1,94	29*	27*	27* -
if	24*	«*+.-
14	41*	MU	41* +2*
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fn ft* i2* im
49 li* u* is* + * 114 25* 13* 21* +1
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132 It* 17* 18* — 945 40* 35 M* +'
25 30* 20* MM —
71 It* It* 10* +
52 37^mEMMHwMI
474 71*
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22*	23*	+1*
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142	31*	30*	31*	—
95	19	ft	10*	+
14M	17*	15*	,4*	+
405 29* 27* 20*	_
217 37* 34	34* + *
235 13* 12* ft* +
544 24* 23* 22* —
IB® MU im ft* + *
119 07* 02	07* +9*
09 21* 19* 20* +1 214 17* ,4* 14* - I 4*	7* +1*
_. . «* 0* + * 270 34	30* 33* +2*
141 23* 22	23	+ "
424 30* 37 . 37* +
494 109* 100* 109	+7*
741 24* 20* 23	+2*
944 43* 50* 43* +5* 312 24 . 25* 25*
3 23	22* 22*
59 47* 44	44* + *
07 ,34	24* 25 -r
707 12	10* 11* +
5314 41	.34	40	+5*
452 40* '51* 59* +5* M 23* 22* 33* L 433 23* 21* 22 004 149* 142* 144* +7* 154 29* 27* 29	+1
__	304 41 M* 40*+1*
Hm.cp.Am	ilftbli
1	35* 35* 35* +1
2	30* 29* 30* + *
141 24* 22* 24* +2* 1030 40	44* 47* +2*
144 1® 133 HI +7* M 71	47* 70* +3*
375 41* 37	40* +3*
127 44* 43* 44	+
Hii6s.ph.50 ,H 4J* 44* 45,A +
975 30* 2m 30* +M 11 74* 74* 74* +2* 59 17	14* 14* — *
HoustLP
pf2.37
pf4.75	14
1.14	—
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III Can pf3.50	44	57*	55*	47*	.
Ml Power 2	405	34	M*	»*+l*
III Pw pt2.35	1200	33	32*	33	+ *
-II Pw pflH	1200	M*	20	29*	+]*
II Pw pf2.10	1100	20	20	20
ill PW pt2.M	1170	28	27*	M
mp Cp Am	4041	14*	14*	14'
INA Cp 1.40	1371	39*	37	37'
ineoma Capit	133	—
79 9*	9*
Indian Hd .40 Md Hd pf4.50 IndpIsPL 1.50 ' PL pf4.25 InEIMax .520
M* +2* 97* 102	+2*
23* Bfb'.+ W 95* 95*
•11	|	7* t +
S3 31* 31
342 43* 40* 42	+1*
IngRd pft.35 121 34* 33* 34* —.* Inland Stl a 1902 20* M* »§+1 InmontCp .74	114 19* p* 19* +1*
----‘	--	ii» 40	50	40	+1*
243 25* 21* 25	+3*
50 27* 25	27* +2*
342 14* 50* im +i*
IcsCp . 1C pfAl

IBM 4 IntFloFr
29* 24* »* +2*
l.M
Int indust	nil	44*	42*	45*	+2*
Int Ind pfl .7#	234	40*	55*	M	+4
IntMlnar ,25p	1142	13*	ft	13*.+1*
IntMlnsr pf4	l	it..	10
Int Mng 30g	732	ft*	15*	14*	+ *
IntNIck 1.20a	1010	38	35*	37*	+1*
Int Pap 1J0............1 MBMM|
iS{.M4
38% 88% +1% S4% 68% 64% +1 14% 18% 14	+1%
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97'4 yy% +3
.....	61% 70% +1%
89 30% 80% 30% +8 89 81% 8f% 31% +1% 11 30% 81% 80% +1% 95 U\l 28% 24% +2% 30 78% 73% 70% +8% 94 17% 16% 17% + % 440 30% 87% 29% +2% 48 If 11% 18% ~% 131 39% 35% 39% +8% 127 19% 18% If + % 91 22% 21% 28% + % 69 27	24% 87	+2%
50 21% 20% 21% +9% fli 32% 31% 32% + % 306 28% 87% 27% — % 995 73% 69	71	- %
4 187 185 127 +2%
328 16% 14% 15% — I 31 11	'10%	10%	...
12% 11% 12% + :
Kaiser Al 1 Kais 57pf4.75 Kail 59pf4.75 ‘ 66pf4.75 il pf4.!2 Kai4.75pf2.37 Kail Cam .80 KSISC Pf2.50 KalsC pH.37
872 38% 36 8 79% 75 10 00	76%
j#7if ■
37% + % 79% +3%
45% 47% —1%
CPL 1 K 88 175L	32% j	31%	88%	+ %
KC PL pf4.50	8880	63%	63	+ %
KC PL pf3.IO	1490	53%	52%	53 v	+._%
KC Soulnd 2	171	45%	42%	45%+2%
KC Soil pf 1
14210	16	15%	16 + %
Kftn GE	1.36	433	22%	21%	B%,+1
KanPwL	1.10	264	»%	19%	19%-%
270	14%	12	iMq +1
360	47%	43%	47% +4%
226	23%	20%	83% +3%
KayserRo	.60	149	31%	PI	p +4%
91	43%	4000	48% +3%
84	21%	19%	21	+ %
224	42	40%	41% +2
123	35%	34	3T +1
179	45%	48%	48% —* %
■.........■	so	al	ai	am +i
Ksnncott	2.40	736	44%	42%	42% —1%
_	f|%	46%	81% +8%
M _	71	30	28%	30	+1%
Kerr Me 1.50	19?	95%	05	95%+10%
KtrrM pf4.50 KeystConln 2 KiddeCo 1.65t
Kendall 40
a	71	76%	78	+1
10	89%	88%	29%	+ %
1480	53%	47%	51%	+3
9	71%	6|	71%	+2%
12 110	107	107	+7
I	2.20	289	76	68%	74%	+4%
KingsDSt	.40	324	22	20%	20%	+ %
Kinney NS	.25	3355	31%	28%	30%	+2%
Kinney pf4.25	11110% 100	110% +9
Kinney pfl.25 744 62% 56% 61% +5% Kinney	pf.90	30	60%	56	60%	+5%
HUB	i	70	49	46%	49	+2%
510 61	56% 61	+1%
I 53% 53% 53%........
113	43	39%	42%	+2%
50	31%	29%	31%	+2%
Kidd pf A2.20
Kirsch Co KLM A 1.30g KLM fnl.38g KnightN .25n
Koehr pf2.75
39%
+2
143 43% 40	42% +2%
2140 59	58% 58% —1%
Koracerp Ind 116 15% 13% 14%+1%
Kraftco KresgeSS .4C Kroenler .80a Kroger 1.30
1744 44%
1370 56% 53 91 26% 23
Electron 197 26% 24% 25% ■
19% 20% + % 71	26%	24%
55	40%	37
379 42% 38% 41% +3% 2 52% 50% 82% +3% 54	17%	16%	17%
3295	22%	17%	28%	+5'
60	55	49%	52%	+3'
2617	31%	28	29%	+2%
420	50%	45%	47%
93	23%	21%	23
LeedsNor .50	96 .25% 22	25% +3%
875 ,jU
LehPCem .60 Loh Val ind Ind pfl.50
Lac Gas LamsnSess 1 LaneBry 1.20 LanvRItz .60 Lanvlq jU.80 LafrobaSt .60 Lear Slag .50 LearSg pf2.25
Miipfzw
26% 31	+3%
P?A2.
mtMjgra
__1.20	M	29%	mk	29	+2
Iht 1.30	Xl»	69%	65%	69%	+4%
Sh pf 4	130	64	64	64,	+ %
_ wax Cp 1814 124	113% 181 tA' +7%
MercanS 1.40	10	61	68%	65	+1%
Merck 1.80a	970 104% 99 102% +3%
8	pf3.S0	81(0	65	65	68	. ..
th	1.30	in	46%	44%	46% +8%
T .480	835	9%	8%	9%	+ %
Mch 2	17	32%	31%	31%	+ %
.60p	171	37%	31	37%	+6%
1 50b	1890	88%	18%	80%+8
MstEd pf3.90
81130 88	51	52 +1%
MG 1C Inv ,20	144 57% 53% 57% +4%
14%,+ % 42 18% 16% 11% +1% 554 86% 81% SfM +3%
311	14	12% 13% +1
139	21%	18%	tllfT**
585	88%	19|6	2866 +3
173	24%	83%	14	+ %
2 106	105	106	+1
54	94%	91	93% fm
MliOLOb	1.20	8104	78%	67	71% +4%
M ltBrad .40	- 89	38%	88%	31% +3
Minn	Rnfsrp	414	17%	13%	17% +3%
MlnnMM 1.60	1671	115%	113%	114%	- %
MinnPLt 1.20	923	20%	19%	20	+ %
MlltnCp 2.35
MISlRIV 1.20 ”*396 19% II	I
-----	32 67% 65	65% -2%
IM	26%	84%	ar +1%
17	38%	2166	22% +1
1808	5466	51%	11% —1%
312	34%	32%	3316 + %
30	30%	30	30 — %
2097	32	86	30% +4%
20	26%	25	25% +1%
444	40	36%	39%+2%
1850	40%	87%	39% +1%
61	54%	49%	54% +4%
65	31%	88%	31	+2%
405	27%	8666	27% + %
Moor	McCor	163	18%	17%	18 — %
2.40 725 61	51	59% +1%
99	34%	33%	33% + 66
440	3466	38%	34% +1%
•55 161% 145% 156%+H 47 29% 88% 21% — % St TT 1.24	147	22%	81%	+1%
...........12	80%	27	»%	— %
82 20% 19	19% + %
55	27% 26% 26% — %
28p	150 10%	9% 10% + %
c 843 86% 85	25% + %
15 03	71% 81	+2%
—N—
m\
m ...	40% 36% 39%+2%
NaihuaCp .44 143 47% 43% 47% +5 Nat Airlin .40 1321 34% 31% 34% +3% rial 2 55g	134 29%
NatBIsc 2.20	640 52
Nat Can .80	160	74%	73%	74% + %
N Can pf 1.50	16	66%	65%	6466 + %
NatCash 1,20 1071 150% 141% 142% --4% Nat Cham .50	135	60%	56%	60% +1%
NatCItyL .90	64	22%	19%	20%	%
Nat Distil .90	551	19%	1066	10% + %
NDItf pf4.25	(ISO	50	57%	57% — %
ism	3	33%	33%	»% +i ■
111	25	23%	24%+1%|
3096	26	21%	34% +3%
604	27%	26	26%
Z50	63%	63%	63%
430 11% 9% 1066 +1%! 9 16	15	15% • ill
16%+1% ....... I 32% +2Va
117	22%	21	22% +1
92	32	28%	31% +3%
37	33%	32%	33% + '
1220	45%	42%	45	+3%
104	13%	12%	13% + %
182	22%	19%	21% +1%
8580	96%	05	87% —5%
MortsSho .60
MSL Ind 1.61
Murphy Murphln MurphOII MurpO pf5.20
NDItf pf2.25 Naf Fuel 1.68 Naf Genl .20 NafGyps 1.05 NGYPS pf4.50 Natlnd .441
NatSvcIn Nat Stand .75 NatStarch .60
NatUnEI .90 Natomas .25 Neptune .74
Newb of 3.75
133	23%	22%	23%	+1%
193	36%	35%	35%	—	r
370	27%	25%	26%	+1
8	94%	93%	96%	+2%
54	39%	36%	3866	“
__	__ x325 31% 30% 31
. SE pf3.75 2430 52% 51	51
NlagMP 1.10	704	11%	17%	10’
NiagM	Pf5.25	2210	70	69%	49%
NiagM	pf4.85	2270	66%	65
Newmt pf4.50 NY Hon .75d NYStEG 2.0
+1%
65	-
_______ 2350	56	54	66	+2%
pf3.90	2710	54%	52%	53% +1
pf3.60	2670	50	48%	49%-
Niag SI Norfolk
MSPffc, „
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il a 25 11=12
NoSIm pfl.40 NVF Co
NortSIm 1.22f	132
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1 S357 20* 23* 23* -2.,
', Mil 74* 74*—1* OccidP” pf3J0 107 03	40* 7jw -4!j
OecIdP Pf2.fi .27 H M* Mirri* - dan Cp .40 I4M 25* 23* 21, +3*
BLrvS s* 88 $u*
tS|s 5d	%5i	±i
Okie GE 1.08 ,	pf4.24
Ok GE pf.80
260 22% 20 2p +1%
12%
ZlOOO 12% 12 % 1.12	134 20	19
rp II 1736 24% 22% 23% +1% Ind If	81 24% 21% 23% +2
Lt .70	133 10*	1** +1*
i 1	73	20	ft*	26	+1*
R 1 20	330	25	33	24* +1*
lev 2	134	45*	43?b
Mar i	hoi	?7*	im
Co .43
Over Trans. 1 OwensCa 1.46 Ovyenslir 1,33
140 85
83%
PacGEI 1.50 PacInEx .80a PacLtg 160
A
x195 27	26	86% + %
% si*. ?o* sa+,x Ibf*1*..
1250 HVb 00 flVb + *
Am .2Qp	1557	15*	14*	15	+	*
P.nh EP 1J6	B	33*	31	M* +3
* Wt .44b	85	M*	» .	»* - *
KrrKS.^4?
ParkHan 1.40 Park Pen .00
__ _ I 51%+2% 21	17% 20% +2%
38% 36	37% + %
991 54% 50% 54% +4V!
10 69	67%	68	+ V
688 27% 25% 27% +2
33%	31%	32%	•
Pennzllri .80	2059	38	34	38,,	+3%
PenzU pfl .33	286	53%	49	53%	+2%
PeopDrg 1.10	79	21%	20%	21%	+ %
PeopGas 1.96	500	pb	31%	n%	+ %
PepsiCo 1	646 54% 50% 50%-2%
(Continued on Page B-ll)
What Wall Street Did

67	+7
255	23	22%	22%	+ %
14. 14%	14%	14%	+ %
275	12	10%	11%.+ %
12	11%	11%	11%	— %
■ I _____I	962	15%	13%	15%	+1%
LlbOFrd 2.80	311	47	45%	46%	+ %
LibOF pf4.75	36 78% 75	77% +2’/4
*	354 9%	8%	9% + %
314	24%	12%	23%	+ %
161	19%	16%	19%+3%
■Jif 11% JTMfiiBHi
LibfyLn 1.30a
aBSp*
2.50 162 35% 34% 3KS
■ +1% 77 42% -ary 37% +1%
___■■H	16 66 ■1 p% 64% + %
Lionel Corp 2470 13% 10	12% +2%
Litton 1.09t Litton ptc pf 226 61
Wm S5«b m........."
Litton pf B2
54% +6% 52% 59% +6% . __ DO 105	+5%
230 45% 43% 44% + • LockhdA 1.20	799 fig.......
21% 23	+1%
LoawsTha .13
X1779 38% 34Va 38% +4% Londntwn .30	90	15%	14%	15%	+ %
LoneSCtm 1	292	25	23%	24%	+ %
LoncSt pf4.50	7	103%	97%	103%	+6%
biBfifiiy M2	1266	19	17%	19	+1
+2%
35 Z100 58 LIL pf l 5.78 oral Corp Land 1.%
LouisGE 1.41 Lou Nash 4a
—2% 58	- Va
I	97	95	»	— %
411	11%	10%	H90+1 ,
633	56%	52V«	56	+3%
138	32	29%	32	+2%
ifi if IBIhM
LVO Corp LykYng .150 LykYg pf2.50
Massey
By WHAYNE EISENMAN AP Business Writer NEW YORK (AP) - In spite of a general improvement in the -	municipal bond market this past
ms It* im	Week, New York Cith on a $160
million new issue encountered its highest interest cost in history — 6.43 per cent.
A syndicate managed by First National City Bank von the issue in competitive bidding and reoffered the bonds to an eager public at yields paying investors 5.75 per cent on 1971 maturities and 6.5 per cent for those due in 2005.
The mood in the municipal market, where bonds are sold to finance state and local projects, improved in the week along with the declininy costs to is-
On Oct. 9 the Senate Finance Committee in Washington voted to maintain the tax exempt status of revenues from municipals. The house had previously passed a tax reform bill to limit the tax exempt status, a move widely blamed for recent lack of buyer Interest in such issues.
In general however, the week’s slate of municipals was so well received as the previous week, according to the investment-firm of Salomon Bros, & Hhutzler.
Corporate bonds, though, enjoyed their larget rally since mid-April, with all sectors ris ing over a. point in price.
As prices rise, yields decline and new issue corporate yields are now almost 25 basis points below their recent all-time highs. Next week’s calendar is the largest since mid-September at $318 million.
Long term government bonds of over 20 year maturities added *ths of a point to the advance since late September which now totals 2% points. Intermediate governments of 5 to 7 year maturities added about the same and are how almost 2 points above their recent laws.
00M-+ * 227 23* 22* 23* + * Mt St* 57* M* + * M0 32* 2f* 32	+3*
120 30* M* 37*+4* 371 33* 21* -31* +4W
«47t 24* It* 23 ...
423 8*	7*	0* + *
4044 17* 13* 14* +2* 752 37* 34* 37*+3
+—M—
125 34* 22	22* +1*
368 12* 10* 12	+1*
512 2f* 17* 20* +3* 05 37	34* 37	+1*
54*
— *
Mad Fd 3.54q 345 37*. 27* 27* + * Mad Sq Gar Ml 7* * 7	7* - *
•“ 1732 M* 30* 42 — * 57 40* 45* 47* +2* (7 (0	10* lt?ks+ *
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Manor Inc 1	1020	51*	45*	50* +4*
Marcor pf A]	113	S3	11*	52*+1*
Marwnnf ,77f	70	if*	ft*	12* + *
Mar Mid 1 JO	201	33*	35*	37*+2*
MsrhMLb J4	411	55*	50*	52*—2*
Marlannan 1	317 4t* 44* 40* +i*
Marq Cm .40	145	14	15*	15* + *
Marriott .Mf	420	35	31*	35 +3*
MarahFd 1.10	M	24*	MM	25* .....
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May, jyv .50	141	22	11*	22	+3*
Maytag Y	430	34*	24*	25* + *
MCA Inc .40	371	22*	21*	22 + *
McCord 1,20b	203	42*	tob'.ffib +2*
McCrary 1J0	M	20	24*	27* +1
McCro pf4.5t	1140	44*	. 44
1270 74* 74'
MCMmMtl 1	(43 74* »lOllOP
McDonald Cp	Iftf	43*	M	M +:
•	'Mt	OH	|4	34* +
McGrEtf L40 \n 37
A%£hK7
76% ..... Mt.1
McGrgDA .40
14 10/
McLouth 1.40
MaSiTSfot
Ix±t
a 7- .7% ..... HR 119% 186% +4% X7I 31% 29% 30	+ (6
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mm 3i am +1% 010 24%
Week's 10 American Leaders
By JAC KLEFLER AP Business Writer NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market was pipped- by peace lever the past week and spurted to a strong ga)ft in heavy irading.
Tj *	.★	:*
Investors also were ehCour-aged by the market’s ability to hold above the 1969 lows In a vital test late in the previous
Expectations of important developments in Vietnam peace talks encouraged investors to buy, and the market advanced sharply on Monday, Tuesday and Thursday.	-
★	+	★
“The 800-level on the Dow Jones industrial average is no longer a market factor, and the question now is not how low down but how high up,” said Newton D. Zinder, analyst for the brokerage firm of E. F. Hutton & Co.
■ ★	★	★
“An advance of the magnitude, breadth and volume that we have seen this week is not likely to be halted or reversed after just a few sessions. While the pace of the advance is obviously unsustainable, the market’s main direction at the present time would seem to be quite clear-cut.’,’
' %
The market’s surge was at its peak Tuesday, when the Dow Jones industrial average’s gain of 13.13 was its biggest since April 30, and the advance -by The Associated Press OOrRtOck average of 3.8 was its largest since Aug. 1,
+
On Tuesday, trading on "the New York Stock Exchange soared to 19.95 million shares, the heaviest of the year and the sixth highest in Big Board history. Volume of 19.*8 million on Thursday was the eighth highest.
Week in Stocks and Bonds
Following gives the range of tiow-Jonifc dosing averages for1 the week.	v
STOCK AVERAGES
NEW YORK (AF) — 1
,hVMr&w
Amtej-cm
Industrials Rails ... Utilities 65 Stocks
First	High	Lew	Last
819.30	838.77	819.30	830.06
197.23	199.56	197.28	190.66
112.03	116.72	112.03	116.72
276.41	282.26	278.41	282.20
w Ji
25*	17
%
Dort.y Co .....
LOOM Th pf ■4M Oft Wt ... Four toilni ... N*f On m o ... JtfWO lj« IB ,
1
"€
14%
86%
46% h'HHI'
It n
li
40 Bonds 1st RRs . 2nd RRs Utilities . Industrials Inc Rails
BOND AVERAGE®
NetCh. +29.10 + 8.47 + 5.94 + 8.97
70.47	70.64	70.35	70,84	■	0.28
56.32	58.41	55.93	66.41	+■	0.08
69.47	68.70	68.86	89.47		i:os
77.78	78.06	77.78	78.08	■' +	0.32
76.32	78.65	87.16	78.66	+	0.74
17,17	87.17	68.97	88.97		2.18

THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, OCTOBERM8, 1969
B—11
fej Week's NY List
'1	fhdt'l Ht*h Lew Lilt Ch»!
(Continued from Page B-10)
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raj
Used to Think of Cops as 'Pigs'
Teen Thanks Officer Who Saved His Life
SunCntm .*
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■
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DENVER ,(UPI) - Frank Vigil 10, used to think of oops as “pigs.” Ho nearly lost his life before he changed his mind.
The teen-ager’s heart stopped beating Sept. 26 when a car In h he was riding was Involved In an accident.
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A rookie patrolman came to his aid ami saved his life, touching off a rock-throwing demonstration In the process.
“I know people consider the
litter
pigs,”' Vigil said in a to Patrolman Robert “I now realize that the police are there to help us and are on our aide, not against us.” Officer Mosier was the first on the scene last month when Virgil's car slammed into a parked auto.
A gathering crowd of youths i some way the people of the thought Mosier was attacking West Side and any other com-the boy and tried to drag him|mun“y .could communicate with off. Rocks began flying and police had to use tear gas to
The young patrolman strad-fallei
en youth and began external heart to get the heart beating again.
died the applying
break up the crowd. Sixteen persons, Including 13 police officers, were injured.
you and any other officer in a better way.
Thank you.'
"I know it’s kind of late to be saying thanks,” Vigil wrote. “I found out the hard way. I almost lost my life ... I wish in
KEYPUNCH,
6 months axparianca
FIGURE CLERK
no typing# will train
EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY
with fringe benefits / Apply in Person
K MART ENTERPRISES
3000 W. 14 Milo at Coolidgo Royal Oak
Interviews: Week Days 8 a.m.-4 p.m.
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KROGER Helps Fiaht INFLATION With
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WERE SERVET HE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES PRICES AND ITEMS EFFECTIVE AT KROGER IN PONTIAC SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19 THRU TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1969. NONE SOLD TO DEALERS. COPYRIGHT 1969. THE KROGER CO, ,
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY^ OCTOBER 18, 1989_V
SUNDAY DINNER
•	Families Welcome
•	Dinner from 2 P.M.
•	Sunday Liquor
8635 Cooley Lake Rd.
Union Lako
363*9469
Film Replica Sinks
Nessie Gets
SAN FRANCISCO (API - A replica of the fabled Loch Ness monster has vanished in the same misty waters where Scotsmen for centuries have reported seeing the sea beast A San Francisco Insurance company received a $25,000 claim Friday for a monstrous
RENT, SELL, TRADE - - - USE stand-in that disappeared off the
PONTIAC PRESS WANT W&jgg&g SSHS
STAN MIDGLEY
Presents
ARIZONA CNUCKELOGUE
Filmed in Brilliant Color by Stan Midgley
Tuesday, Oct. 21, 8 P.M.
Showing at Rochostor High School Auditorium Admission $1.50 - Reservations Call S51-3390
Sponsored by Roc host »i Joyc»».
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DOORS OPEN	SUNDAY MATINEES
FBI. 6:45 P.M. See complete shows starting at 12:05-1:10-1:28
SAT. 10:45 A.M.	SUNDAY EVENINGS
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Where it’s fun to eat
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Telegraph
I Something slipped as a Sher-jlock Holmes thriller was being filmed on location, and the downy, gray mechanical beast sank into the dark depths.
United Artists said the fiberglass monster could not be recovered from the bottom of the 754-foot-deep loch, and placed a claim with Fireman’s Fund Insurance Co:
A Firemen’s spokesman said the claim will be paid because the policy was not on the replica itself, but on the cost of any production delays.
United Artists said filming had to be removed to a studio, where a miniature lake and monster were built, a considerable distance away from legend-shrouded Loch Ness.
MONSTER DISAPPEARS - A $25,000 mechanical Loch Ness monster sends actors tumbling into the water In this scene from a United Artists’ thriller which was being filmed in Scotland. The mechanical monster has disappeared into the 754-
foot-deep loch, and a San Francisco insurance company says it is prepared,to pay off. A spokesman for the firm says the monster itself isn’t covered by Insurance, but production costs because of the disappearance are insured.
LA Raid Death Ruled Criminal
First they're going after the enemy... then after the brats that, sent them
| LOS ANGELES (AP) - The ! death of a young father by stray {police rifle fire during a chaotic narcotics raid was “occasioned by criminal means," a coro-I tier’s jury has ruled.
The ruling Friday followed two hours of deliberation after six days of testimony by about 30 witnesses.
Heyward H. Dyer, 22, stand-1 floor. The infant suffered minor lng in the middle of a room era- euts. dling his infant son, was killed MAY pRospr-u-nr instantly Oct. 3 by a shot fired MAY PR0SECUTE from the apartment above. The The district attorney’s office bullet went through the ceiling!now will determine whether po-and struck Dyer in the head,	j lice Sgt. Frank E. Sweeney, 39,
★	★	*	iwho fired -the fatal shot, will be
He dropped 22-month-old prosecuted, said Deputy Dist. Francis as he crumpled to thelAtty. Ralph Mayer, who pre-
sented the case to the grand jury. He did not say what the charge might be.
The jury’s vote was 4-3 and came after Sweeney, final wlt-jness at the hearing, acknowledged that he had spent 2ft hours in a bar prior to the raid. The officer said he drank three beers and part of a fourth.
Opan Hill a.m. Wad. thru Sat. and till p.m. Sun., Mon, Tuaa. Continuous dll Day SM-4411
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ROBERT A. EMERY
MARVIN BLUM
FREEMAN STALIONS
Sweeney was with six other officers who had mistakenly j | crashed into Dyer’s mother-in-law’s apartment. Armed withj search warrants, they were! making a predawn raid for marijuana and had burst into the wrong apartment.	'fcj
Dyer, who lived upstairs in the same building, heard her screams from below and ran downstairs to her apartment. WENT UPSTAIRS Agents then went upstairs to the apartment listed on tbeir warrant, while Dyer remained with his mother-in-law, Frances Meehan.
The apartment the agents raided was directly above Mrs. Meehan’s.
COMMERCE
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[r]«e»
3 Pontiac Policemen Promoted
Promo t to ns for three members of the Pontiac Police Department were announced today by Chief William K. Hanger.
Detective Robert A. -Emery, 41, of 5347 Highland, Waterford Township, was promoted to sergeant and will become the department’s new community relations officer.
Patrolmen Marvin Blum, 41, of 3919 Dill, Waterford Township, and Freeman Stations, 6669 Man son, Waterford Township, bo t h received promotions to the rank of detective.
Blum was assigned to the Detective Bureau, and Stalions will be the detective in charge of the department’s Identification Bureau.
TOP OF LIST
In making the announcement, Hanger pointed out that all three men were at the top of the department’s promotion list, based on test scores and other personal data.
Emery came to the department in 1959 and became a detective in 1955. He established the Bogus Check Section of the Detective Bureau in 1959. He also organized the Michigan Association of Check Investigators in 1959 and is a past president of that group.
A past president of the Pontiac Police Officers Association, Emery has studied police science at the University of Louisville and the University of Oklahoma.
Blum is an 15-year veteran of the department who worked with its Special Investigation Bureau from 1958-62.
He has received two! departmental citations and was with the Patrol Division before his promotion.
Blum has attended the U.S. Treasury Department School on Narcotics in Washington, D.C., and has studied police science at Oakland University.
Stalions has been with the department since 1959 in both the Patrol Division and the Identification Bureau.
He is a graduate of the University of Louisville’s {institute of Applied Science and the Eastman Kodak School of j Photography. He is scheduled to graduate in April from Oakland Cbmmunity College with an associate degree in law enforcement.
I Sweeney, a 15-year veteran, said the shot was fired accidentally as he was trying to engage the safety mechanism on his AR15 rifle.
{ Later, officers arrested a man who had no connection with Dyer for investigation of having i dangerous drugs.
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Frustration Over for Northern
Skippers End Slump
Whetstone Sharpens WTHS
By DON VOGEL
Waterford’s Craig Whetstone spent a considerable amount of time in Farmington’s backfield last night ... on offense and defense.
The 190-pound senior scored three touchdowns and then made several key second half tackles as the Skippers held off Farmington, 19-8, in an Inter-Lakes League football game.
★ ★ ★
Hie victory snapped a four-game losing streak and enabled the Skippers to pull even with Farmington and Walled Lake Central In the I-L. All have 1-3 loop records. WTHS is 2-4 overall and Farmington 1-5.
Whetstone ran up the middle from the 15 for a first quarter touchdown and then scored twice in the last three minutes of the second quarter from the seven and four-yard lines. A pass interception and fumble recovery set up two of the touchdowns and a combination short punt and personal foul penalty against the Falcons put the Skippers in position for the other.
SHORT-LIVED JOY
Waterford’s defenslSbominated Farm-
Stevenson Nears Grid Title in l-L
The Spartans of Livonia Stevenson assured themselves of no worse than a tie for the championship in the Inter-Lakes League last night by blanking Southfield Lathrup.
Hie win gave the Spartans a 4-0 mark In I-L play with just one game to go — Farmington (1-5) — so they are almost certain to retain their title.
Quarterback Rusty Gregg scored on runs of seven and one yards in the first half as Stevenson built a 12-0 lead, and halfback Gene Walker put the lid on the scoring in the fourth stanza with a four-yard run. Walker also ran th/two-point 1 conveslon. ,
Aussie Breaks Mar If
MEXICO CITY (AP) — Veteran Jack Brabham of Australia took advantage of cooling temperature in the last 15 mlnutea of practice Friday to break a track record and post the fastest time of the day in trials for the eighth Grand Prlz of Meirico.
ington in the first half and the 2,000 Waterford homecoming fans sat back to enjoy the final two quarters in the comfort of a 194) lead.
it	★	★
But third-strihg quarterback D a ni Steimke and the Falcons had other ideas. They drove inside the waterford 15 three times but were thwarted twice > when Whetstone threw the ball cantor for losses and stopped a third time by a pass interception.
★	★	★
Hie Falcons’ only touchdown was a six-yard run by John Welling on the first play after Randy Renee blocked a Waterford punt with >4:30 left in the game.
Whetstone led the balanced Skipper running attack with 54 yards in nine tries. Don LaBlance posted 52 in 13 carries and Mike Shaw added 44 in 10 attempts. Welling was the workhorse for Farmington, lugging the ball 18 times for 51 yards.
POSITION SWITCH
Whetstone moved from fullback to defensive end and continually applied pressure to Farmington’s passers. Hie falcons drove to the WTHS 10 in the third period, but Whetstone made a tackle-for a two-yard loss. Farmington finally reached fourth and four only'to have Whetstone drop Welling for a four-yard loss.
Farmington moved to the 13 early in the fourth period, but lost yardage on two straight plays with Whetstone making the tackles.
dr	*	★
Guard	Jim	Main picked	off	a	Farmington	pass	in	the	first	quarter	and
returned 27 yards to the Falcon 33 to start tile Skippers to their first TD. A 22-yard punt followed by the Farmington penalty and a 12-yard carry by LaBlanc paved the way for touchdown No. 2.
#	*	'
A minute later Shaw pounced on a Farmington fumble on the Falcon 46 and quarterback Carl Whetstone, a junior and Craig’s brother, hit end Pat Jones with a 34-yard pass and/the Skippers Were on tiieir way to another score.
WTHS FARM
First gowns Rushing ..... g J
I	'• J
Northern Halts W. Lake Central
An embarrassing losing streak has come to an end for the Huskies of Pontiac Northern.
Backed by a bone-jarring defense, the Huskies wiped away 10 years of frustration last night by slamming the door on Walled Lake Central, 394).
It marked Northern’s'first victory over the Vikings in 11 seasons, and it was a particularly sweet win for coach Dave Schmidt who was the loser the previous five times the two tangled.
★ * *
“Yes, it felt good beating them,” said Schmidt, “even though they aren’t as strong as usual.”
TALENT THIN
In the formation of a new high school in Walled Lake this .fall — Western — the talent was divided between the two schools, and for Central, long a dominant figure in the football wars, it resulted in less talent than usual.
Schmidt lauded the defense of the Huskies. “I can’t single out any one individual. It was a real team effort. They were just fantastic . . . there’s no ifs, ands or buts about it”
Over-all, the Huskies held the Vikings to a total offense of 119 yards, while running up 246 of tiieir own.
ENDS QUICKLY
And the score could have been worse. The Huskies, now 4-2 and 3-1 in Inter-Lakes competition, scored all of their points in the first half and Schmidt turned to the reserves in the second half.
The loss left Central with a 1-3 mark in I-L play and a 1-5 record over-all.
SPARKS OUTBURST
A1 Nance sparked a 20-point first 'quarter for the Huskies by diving in from the four-yard line and running across from the seven.
Jack Dunn tallied on a five-yard run, Doug Talbott sneaked across from the one, Ro^er Holland picked up a fumble and raced 30 yards for a score, and Talbott ended the scoring late in the second with a 50-yard pass to Bruce Bennett.
statistics If
Fir»t Downs Rushing First Downs Passing Yards Ruihlno-Passlno
l-U 4-14 Fuml
Passos Intarcaptad by Punts and AvardM ...
Fumblss— No, Lon ...
Panamas Olid Yards ..
' ICORINd PLAYS Wat—Cralq whatstona 1J rim/ Wat—Cralq Whati
I. wlMraIi.WHil._____■.... ■ _
Farm-wall me i run (Malinin rim) ICORS »Y OUARTBRI
btM~.No. I
iTtltt and
(Run failed
u
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kick)
SCORINO PLAYS
pN—Al Nanca 4 plunge (Kick tdllad)
PN—Nance 7 run (pass (aiiad)
PN—jack Dunn 5 run (Slavs Humphray kick) PN—Douo Talbott snaak (Humphray kick). .. PN-Roosr Holland M tumbls (Humphray kick) PN-Bruce Bennett » pass from Talbott (Kid
THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1969
1C—1
Flint at Wisner Tonight
Firebirds Favored by 14
Remembering the 33-19 slugfest in their first encounter this season, the Pontiac Firebirds are 14 point favorites to defeat the Flint Wildcats at Wisner Stadium.
Still clinging to hopes of a chance to meet the Lansing All-Stars in a playoff for the Central Division title, the Firebirds’ biggest problem tonight might be over-confidence.
NEW QB
A new quarterback, however,
Pat Brown will be calling signals and this may be enough to perk up the Firebirds who are still smarting from the loss to Lansing two Weeks ago and the poor first half against the Detroit Cowboys last week.
★	# R
Lansing is playing at Grand Rapids tonight, while the key game in the MFL is at Dayton where the Colts face Lackawanna in the showdown of the Lakes Division.
A win for Dayton would throw
that division into a tie and then the Colts have the tough task of facing Lansing next week and the Firebirds in the finale in two weeks, weeks.
*	★ w
Flint gave Dayton a tough time last week on the Atwood Stadium Astroturf before losing 20-12.
The Wildcats have always been a strong late season team having made the Firebirds their victims last year.
Kickoff tonight is 7:30. Gates will open at 6:15 p.m.
Central's Rally Falls Short
Saginaw Pins 29-20 Setback on PCH Chiefs
	
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CORNERED — Pontiac Central’s Perry Humphrey tries to stay on his feet but finds the footing bad and his path blocked by a trio of Saginaw players who secured the tackle. Saginaw won a 29-20 SVC victory last night at Wisner Stadium.
Corsairs Flying High in Easy 31-0 Pasting of L. Churchill
Hie visiting Trojans of Saginaw ran up a 294) lead and then held on last night to defeat the Chiefs of Pontiac Central at Wisner Stadium, 29-20.
Calvin Hirsch scored twice and quarterback Perry Humphrey added the other PCH score in that sizzling fourth quarter but it came too late.
REACH SCOREBOARD
Humphrey put thei Chiefs on the scoreboard with an 18-yard pitch to Hirsch, and Humphrey {ticked up the second tally moments later on an 11-yard un.
* * *
Don Russell picked up a Trojan fumble and ran it back to the Saginaw IS to set up the final PCH score.
A penalty moved the ball to the Saginaw seven and three plays later Hirsch bulled his way for the final yard.
That score came with just 2:00 left in the game and the Trojans took the ensuing kickoff and ran out the time. SPURS TROJANS
Halfback Tom Slade was the big gun for the Trojans with two touchdowns and a 45-yard field goal.
★	* 4r
Slade scored on runs of 9 and 4 yards and booted his long field goal in the second quarter.
Jim Nelson rambled one yard and Dan Evans scored on a six-yard dash as Saginaw opened up a 2341 lead at intermission.
The Corsairs of Waterford Mott checked in with their finest offensive performance of the season last night as they pinned a 314) setback on Livonia Churchill.
★ ★ ★
It was the highest output of the season for the Corsairs and the triumph evened their record at 3-3.
«i
MOM BV OUARTBRI
TOP SKIPPER - Fullback Craig Whetstone scored all three of Waterford’s touchdowns in a 1941 victory over Farmington last night. Playing end on defense, he spent considerable time in Farmington’s backfield and made several key tackles.
After building a 244) lead at intermission, the Corsairs coasted the rest of the way.
★ * * '
Halfback Charles Dohner started the ball rolling in the first with a two-yard run and Randy Cooper took a pass from Jerry McNair for the two-point conversion.
TALLIES TWICE
Terry Ruffatto collected the next two Corsair scores. He zipped in one a one-yard run and went over from the five for his second tally. McNair ran for one two-point conversion and flipped a pass to Dohner for another.
★ ★ ★
Quarterback Bill Ziem teamed with flanker Bob Poe on a 39-yard pass-and-run play for the final Corsair six-pointer in the fourth frame. McNair booted the final point.
ON TARGET
Ziem was on target with his passes, hitting on 9 of 10 for 139 yzrds.
And the Corsairs found another runner in 'fullback Don Bradford. The junior speedster carried the ball 14 times for 100 yards. ,
STATISTICS	^	j1
First Dawns Rushing .................. IS	*
First Downs Passing .................   3	0
First Downs Psnsltles ................. 0	1
Yowls Rustling-Passing ...........ISS-TIf	1 SI-11
Pastes .............................     WO	M
Paisst Intsrcsptad by >.................1	o
Punts and Avarsga ..................   117	S-lt
Fumblas—No.	Lon ................... S-S	1-1
Panamas and Yards ................. 5 55 l l!
SCORING PLAYS f
WM -Chariot Dohnar I run (Randy Coopar pats) WM—Tarry Ruttatto 1 run (Dohnar past)
n (Jarry McNair run)	i
pcs » past from Bill Zlam (McNair
scom iy ouartrAs ........A.............i i e/'e-'*
i	si
The loss was the fifth of the season for the Chiefs, while Saginaw is now 3-2-1. dr ★	★
In the showdown at Bay City Central, the host Wolves, ranked first in the state Class A poll, turned back No. 3 ranked Midland, 14-6, to assure themselves of at least another week in the top spot.
In other games last night in the Saginaw Valley Conference, Flint Central downed Flint Southwestern, 24-14, Bay City Handy whipped Flint Northern, 20-8, and Flint Northwestern went on a sewing rampage with a 66-20 verdict over Saginaw Arthur Hill.
statistics ' f *
First Downs Rushing ................  1}	"If
Flrit Downs PCMlng ................... J	•
First Downs Psnsltles ............ „ J ... .1
Yards RusMng-PassIng............. 141-41	SM-ll
Passes ...........................   n-4	IS-f
Punts and Average ................... MM	4-iy.l
Penalties and Yards ..............  S-5S	S-41
SCORINO PLAYS
(S) Jim Nelson 1 run (Tom Slid# kick)
<S) Dan Bvans 4 run (Slade kick!
(!)
(P) Calvin4 Hlrseh*lS pass Irpm Perry Humphray
(PHI fa|i|i|R)
(P) Perry Humphray 11 Run (Hanry Gamble pasa bom Humphrey)	_ „	'
(PI Hirsch 1 run (Pass rolled)
ICORl BY OUARTBRI ... . . ..
Saginaw ..........................J If. f J*«
Pontiac ..........................••• Sb-*»
Bay City Central 11 Wins Valley Contest
MIDLAND (AP) - Bay City Control, top-ranked In Oaaa A in the Associated Press, poll, rolled on Friday by defeating Midland 144
■*, * .
All scoring in the game came in the second period. Bay City opened the loof-ing with a 54-yard pass from Charles Rogers to Ray Smith in the end lone. Midland evened the score with a six-yard pass, but Bay City went ahead to stay on a 38-yarder from Bogan to Jerry Sisson.
C—2
THK PONTIAC PHKSS. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1969
W. Bloomfield, Andover Win,- Utica Posts 6th Victory
Field Goal Spurs Clarkston Falters, 31-1Q
By FLETCHER SPEARS Senior Scott Wasmuth has
-	proven he can earn his keep with the West Bloomfield foot'
: ball team.
A transfer from New Jersey, Washmuth moved onto the field for his first play of the season
-	last night with Just 1:03 left in : the game and booted a 25-yard
field goal to give the West Bloomfield Lakers a come-from-behind 17-14 victory over flred-up Waterford Kettering squad.
•FIRST TIME’
“First time he ever played football,” beamed Laker coach Art Paddy. “He played some soccer out east but this was his first play in football.”
* ★ ★
The triumph boosted the Lakers to 5-0 (5-1 over-all) in the Wayne-Oakland League and " enabled them to remain atop the loop along with Bloomfield Hills Andover, a 54-0 winner over Brighton.
CLARKSTON FALLS In other league games, Clarenceville and Milford played to a 14-14 standoff, while Northville pinned a 31-10 setback on Clarkston.
★ * *
“That’s the first field goal any team of mine has ever kicked,” said Paddy who is in his 24th year of coaching. “I’m proud of them for the way they came bade.”
CAPTAINS LEAD - The outlook for the Lakers was less than rosy after the Captains, buoyed by the Homecoming crowd, pushed across a pair of touchdowns in me second quarter to take a 14-8-lead at intermission, a a a
And the Captains did It convincingly. Fullback Bob Gratz, -the Captains’ power runner, took a pitchout from . .quarterback Paul Curry and , scooted 15 yards around the left side for the Initial Kettering score. Gratz also ran the two-point conversion.
PUNT BLOCKED Moments later, after a blocked LaKer punt, Curry, on a first-down play from the West Bloomfield 21-yard marker, tucked the ball under his arm and outraced the Laker defenders on the right side for the lead score.
KNOTS SCORE Bullock knotted the score at 14 late in the third when he dashed through a hole on the right side of the Kettering defense and sped 65 yards for
season — with the blanking of Brighton. The Barons were up 24-0 at intermission and broke it open with 22 markers in the third.
Halfback Bob Reid, who collected 149 yards on nine trips with file ball, scored on runs of 68, 25 and 7 yards, while Chuck Palaian, back in action after recovering from a leg injury, picked up two six-pointers on nms of 6 and 1 .yards. Defensively, the Barons held Brighton to a minus 30 yards rushing.
CATCHES TD TOSSES
Terry Mills hauled 1 n touchdowns passes of 24 and 28 yaids from Bob Adams and added a third score on a one-yard run to spark Northville past Clarkston.
it h it
Dan Hallman caught an eight-yard pass from Kurt Richardson for Oarkston’s lone touchdown and the Wolves picked up two more points on a safety.
Milford spotted Clarenceville two quick scores and then came back with a pair in the second quarter to force a deadlock.
Rob Weller’s 24-yard run and Bib Ridling’s 18-yard scamper, along with Weller’s two-point conversion, sent Clarenceville into a 14-0 lead, but Milford came bade with Matt Partridge collected all 14 points in the second quarter.
He rompled over on a six-yard run for the first tally and hauled in a 10-yard pass from Mike Monnier for the second and then ran the two-point con-
The Lakers launched that winning drive from their own 22 with just 4:59 left in the game. John Sopko had runs of 13 and 11 yards in the drive and end Jim Hull pulled in passes of 7 and 16 yards.
But that ll-yard run on third down by Sopko set up the field goal. From the 20, Bullock gave Sopko the ball and he zipped Up the middle. The Lakers called time out with the situation . fourth-and-seven at the Kettering nine. Enter center Kim Dehne, also a parttime player, and Washmuth. Dehune snapped the ban, bullock placed it at the 15 and Wasmuth’s soccer-style boot was low but high enough to clear the crossbar. TIE RECORD
Andover’s Barons tied the school shutout mark — five in a
,0AY ,TAT,.T&iCH
Fir it Down* Rushing ....
Fin* Downs PMSIM.........
First Downs PensIHu .....
Yards Rushing-Passing....
5-32	4-34
V&r.:::::: *3 7$
Rob wSlu'Sfrun^Run MM) .
First Downs Psnaltli
.304-73
%
344 5-M
Ptnaitiss and’ Yards ^	345 447
SCORING PLAYS
A - Bob RaW 40 run (paw foltod)
A — Chuck Palaian 4 run (ran failed) A - Bob Hausanar 17 paw from Scott

SCORE BY QUARTERS ^
STATISTICS wb
First Downs Rushing ..... 10
First------------
First
HAPPY TRIO — Center Kim Dehne (from left), quarterback Bill Bullock and kicker Scott Wasmuth were the principals in West Bloomfield’s 17-14 victory over Waterford Kettering last night. With just 1:03 left in the game, Wasmuth, with Bullock holding the ball, booted a 25-yard field goal to give the Lakers the win. It was Wasmuth’s first time in a game.
Orion Blanks Avondale; Romeo Surprises Oxford
Utica upped its winning streak to six and remained atop the North Division of Oakland A league by romping past Rochester Adams 54-6.
Lake Orion, a game behind Utica, shut out Avondale, 228, while Romeo handed Oxford its third league loss last night, 30-6. SETS RECORD Utica’s Rich Redd contributed four touchdowns to his team’s winning effort while establishing a school scoring record in the process.
★ it ★
Redd now has a total of 90 points in six games, four more than the 86 scored by Tom Orlowsky during the Chief’s 1965 grid season.
A bad snap from center set up Utica’s first scoring effort early In the first period. The Chieftains recovered the loose
ball on the Adams nine and Redd carried two plays later for the score.
FUMBLE HELPS Redd’s second tally came after Adams had fumbled the bell on Its own 44. Utica
maining yardage in eight plays. * * *
Redd added one more idly before the half ended on a two-yard dash and made his final contribution in the third period on a nine-yard scamper.
ENTER PICTURE Bruce Harms, Gary Baginskl, Rich Hall and Dave Scott scored Utica’s other touchdowns on runs of 22, 22, 44 and 7 yards, respectively.
it h h .
Mike Pellerito scored Adams lone tally midway through the final stanza after Bin Sum-merfelt had intercepted a Utica pass on the Highlanders’ 46s yard line.
BLASTS OVER Six plays later Pellerito blasted his way through the line from the three, preventing the Highlanders from absorbing their first shutout in six starts.
ONE MORE YARD TO GO — Lahser’s Bernle McPheely (43) has two Troy defenders hanging on his back but still managed to bull his way one more yard across the goal line for the Knights first touchdown. Troy eventuaUy -fell to the Knights, 30-18.
Lake Orion fought a hard battle against Avondale scoring just once in the first half, and then once in each of the final two periods.
WAMRI.ES WITH FUMBLE Jerry Holtons scored Lake Orions first touchdown when he scooped up Bob Mutter's
Lahser Rolls to 30-18 Win
Bloomfield Hills Lahser, once 1 again behind the explosive run-: ning of halfback Mike Atkina, maintained its share of the lead in the South Division of the Oakland A league by storming past Troy, 30-18. •
Co-leader Clawson kept pace with the Knights 4-1 league record by whipping Lamphere fumble, following a successful 120-3 while Madison dropped one yards, each, pass from Randy Cornell, and Rochester to last place by; Pdte Trail set up Clawson's scampered 31 yards untouched defeating the Falcons, 12-6.	| first touchdown when he shot
tacular run the first play from scrimmage following the second half kickoff for the tally.
Lahser’s final tally came on a IS yarder by Atkins late in the final period to put the game away for the Knights.
Terry Killing and Rick Stewart scored the losers’ touchdowns on runs of two and
CORRALLED — Halfback Dan Pillow of Kettering gets a lot of attention from this West Bloomfield defensive threesome on a running play last night. Making the stop on
Pillow are Ron Thorin (95) and Bill Bullock (15) with help from an unidentified teammate (background).
Ferndale Wins
Kimball Nearing Title in SEMA
I linto the end zone.
Shortly after the beginning of the second half Ron Schailer picked up the Dragons second touchdown on a one yard plunge,
CLOSES SCORING 7 Hollens put the capper on the Dragons scoring for the evening i he bolted through left tackle with 8:57 left in the game, and dashed 24 yards to the end zone.
★	* it
Quarterback Ed Kubilis connected on two conversion passes Gary Roberts and Tom Perry for the winners.
SECOND WIN
Quarterback Pete Sweeney had a hand in all but one of Romeo’s touchdowns as the Bulldogs recorded their second league victory in five stars.
First Downs Passing First Downs Penaltli Yards Rushing-Passing
- No. Lost ...... 0-0	«-1
SCORING PLAYS WB - Kim Woodruff 34 run (Kan Wat-
'wK°—*Bob Great! 15 run (Graatz run) WK — Paul Currsy 2 Iron (run felled) ■ Bullock 45 iMggMI
Scott wasmuth 25 field goal
The Knight* of Royal Oak I Halfbacks Rick Campbell and I a hard-fought decision over Kimball are just a step away Rick Knox set the offensive I fired-up Southfield, the championship in thefpace for Kimball 255-22 209-45 Southeastern Michigan	*	*
runs*rf 14*and ll'yards and he across a pair of fourth-quarter led the ball-toters with 91 yards toudidowns to sew up the in 13 trips with the ball. .decision.
Chuck Petrilla’s 8 5-yard kickoff return at the onset of
SCORE BY QUARTERS
The Knights waltzed past Berkley last night, 40-6, to clinch at least a tie for the crown, and a win over South-field next week will sew it up.
JzJJ SEAHOLM LOSES
LATE SCORES
Campbell scored "twice on The Eagles, now My shoved
TALLIES TRIO Knox checked in with three six-pointers on runs of 1,11 and
While Kimball, second ranked 16 yards, while the other Kim-
First l First Downs P« First Downs P4 Yards Rushing Passss
SCORING PLAYS
kick)
4N 7 among the state’s class A l J teams, was having a ball, »M4 "l;“j Ferndale, last year’s SEMA ' > i champion, was disposing of ;,S? £* Southfield, 28-14, and Hazel Park was doing in Birmingham Seaholm, 26-16.
N — Dan Corcoran 1 run (kick fallad) N - Mills 1 run (kick fallad)
N — Barnard Fox roc fumbla 49 run
...........I 2 • 4-19
The nod over Berkley raised Kimball’s record in league play to 4-0 and 6-0 over-all.
SLICK BLADE - Saginaw’s Tran Slade, a 6-foot and 190 pound quarterback, was the big offensive weapon for the Trojans in whipping Pontiac Central, 29-20 last night. Slade HUM, passes, plays defense and does the centering on punts. Hi also had a 46 yard field goal. Here Slade is stopped by Hany Gambit and Jerry Collier (21),
ball touchdown came on a 45^ yard pass from quarterback Jim Cole to All-State candidate Tom Brown.
★	* it
For the evening, the Knights piled up 231 yards on the ground and Cole hit on two of five tosses for 51 yards.
Ferndale, a 6-0 loser to Kimball last week, rebounded with
Makes Coaching Debut
Cousy Glows in Victory
Bob Cousy got the big one helgeles Stars taking the New York wanted.	Nets 109-95.
Cousy, former star of the Bos-| Boston led Cincinnati 89-77 be-
the game put Southfield ahead 8-0 after Doug Digue added the conversion. Ferndale came back to close the gap at 80 on a two-yard run by Craig Fahoome.
TAKE LEAD
Hie Eagles led for the first time in the third when Peter Pelloski raced over from eight yards out and Bill Screws ran the conversion. Southfield knotted it at 14 when Petrtila hauled in a five-yard pass from Dave Hoffman.
That set the stage for Ferndale in the fourth. Pelloski tallied the go-ahead six-pointer on a six-yard run and John Ownes capped the scoring with a two-yard jaunt.
statistics
top Celtics, returned to the scene of his Celtic glory days in Boston Garden as coacluof the Cincinnati Royals Friday night and glowed as his players whipped the Celtics 110-108.
“I really wanted this one, It was a Mg one,” Causy said after the Royals had wiped out 112-point deficit in the last quarter to beat the defending champions of the National Basketball Asso-
Philadelphia downed the Los Angeles Lakers 131-126 and the New York Knlcks made it three in a row by whipping Chicago 11607 In the other NBA games.
The rival American Basketball Association opened its season with Indiana beating Miami 126-116, Dallas tripping New Orleans 117-109 and the Los An-
fore the Royals caught fire to hand the Celtics their first opening-game loss In 11 years.
Big Bill Russell was not In the Celtic lineup for the first time in 13 years. He rtired as player-coach after last season after leading the Celtics to 11 NBA titles in that tspan.
Veteran Oscar Robertson, with 25 points, paced the Royals. Larry Siegfried was high for the Celtics with 22.
Hal Greer threw in 40 points to lead the 76ers over Los Angeles. Jerry West got 39 and Wilt Chamberlain 35 for the Lakers, the defending champs in tiie NBA West. 1 Walt Frazier, with 20 points, was high for the Knlcks as they routed Chicago. Chet Walker had 27 for the Bulls.
Yard* Ruahlng-Paialng Pann	•
Paisas Intercepted By Fumblas-Nu. Lost ...
W^-%1
249-34 94-53
Pl'rat Downs Rushing First Downs Passing First Downs Panamas Yard* Rushing-Passing
Paaaaa Intareaptad By ..	2 i
Pdhts and Avaraga ....... 2-30	1-25
ROK—Rick Knox, 1 run (Bill Turklng-
ROK—Rick Camaball, 14 run (Mika Ryan run)	iWffW- ifiYii1’-
rok—Campbell, 11 run (run fallad) (COM BY QUARTMS Berkley	4014-4
Royal Oak Kimball .... 14 59 » 5-44
Atkins, who scored three of his team’s four touchdowns, accounted for 209 of the Knights 344 total offensive yardage against the Colts.
Bernie McPheely kicked off the scoring midway through the first period when he shot through right guard frbm six yards out for the touchdown.
Tom Kretschmer’s run for the conversion, his first of three for the afternoon, was good giving Lahser a 8-0 lead.
Atkins picked up his first touchdown early in the second period when he scampered around right raid, with a key block by Tom Kretschmer, 53 yards to paydirt.
Atkins second touchdown outshone his first when he dashed 72 yards in a spec-
through the Lamphere line and galloped to the Rams one yard line before he was dropped.
Joe Heppner {dunged over on the next play to give the Trojans a 60 lead which was cut to three when Lamphere managed a field goal before the . half ended.
After a scoreless third period, Clawson came alive and scored twice in the final period with
Sweeney connected on a three yard pass ploy to Marvin Craft for one touchdown and scored two others on runs of four and 46 yards while teammate Fred I-eMing scored the other and three two point conversion runs.
The Bulldogs spotted Oxford an early 6-0 lead in the first period when Wildcats quarterback Bill Biebuycek climaxed a 70 yard drive with a one yard,plunge up the middle.
★ * [ *
The Bulldogs bounced bade however, and scored once In each period although Sweeney did get dumped by a blitzing Wildcat defensive line late In the final period for a safety.
The Bulldogs dominated the rushing starts with a combined rushing-passing yardage of 254 yards, wMle limiting hapless Oxford to only 135 total. statistics
‘ScorIng plays,
U - Rich Redd nine run Oyn.Wllta) U 2 Broca HmrnbM^twuPUi In-
ra - Mike Pellertto three run (run % 2 Rich Hell 44 run (run iQtlod)
u-^«/WAaWT,,l,d’
.4 25 II .4 4 I
felled)
Marvin Croft thru# I veeney (Prod Lebdlng Pitt* Sweeney four
I < K i 0m
r-. & ^ * *A
AWAY HE GOES — Mike Atkins of Bloomfield Hills (23) Lahser romps to a 73 yard scoring run shortly after the beginning of the second half. Atkins tallied three times in leading the Knights to a 30-18 win over Troy.
Sand Creek Drubs Novi
Novi’s Wildcats took it on the chin (1-4) for the fourth time last night as they dropped a 46-20 decision to Sand Creek-Tom Boyer scored twice for the Wildcats and John Davey added the other tally.
Paul Bailey scored three times for Sand Creek and pass-ed for two other six-pointers.
SCORING PLAYS
SC — Paul Bel ley 27 run (CtitrIM Reiner kick)
SC — Reiner one run (run tolled) SC — fill Giro four pan from Pew Bailey (kick Miedl ■■	.	. ,.	,
N — John Davey 70 run' (run filled) sc — iee sill » run (Rehinar run)
N — Tom Beyer One run (Rite Hill
N — Beyer 14 pin from Davey (run failed) ” '	';*"V--
SC — Bailey throe run (Giro pan)
SC — Ml 35 paw from Ballay (ran
Ballay 45 pan Interception (kick
-	Sweeney 44,run (Lebdlng ran)
-	Prad Lebdlng one run (Lebdlng
SCORR BY QUARTER! „ -V	SCORR BY QUARTERS
mSzlSSRi Wfcfl ltt
ich time.
Peterson capped two Trojan drives, 66 and 58 yards, with dives of two and three yards each while Randy Stone caught one conversion pass for Clawson.
A stiff Madison defensive unit combined with untimely Rochester penalties gave the Eagles their second league victory.
Twice in the final period Rochester drove to within the Madison 10 yard line only to have its scoring drives thwarted due to penalties.
Defensive backs Kenny King and Johnny Angelo also contributed to stopping Rochester’s last ditch drives by intercepting key passes in the fourth quarter.
Jeff Miller scored each of Madison’s touchdowns, once in the first period on a one yard run and late in the second on a 19 yard dash up the middle.
Steve Blair scored Rochester’s only touchdown In the second period on a 38 yard pass play. ‘
STATISTICS	* T
Flr*t Downs Rushing ........ II 4
Flrot Downs Pawing ..... 0	7
Fire) Downs Psnoltlw ... 3	3
SCORING PLAYS
six ran (Tom
Rick Slowort one
BHL - Mike Atkina 53 i w fun) .	_
T — Tarry Killing oni
— Atkins 13 run (run filled)
■	. S—30
................4 4 g-ii
First Downs Pas
sing .. isltlos
Fumbles
Psnsltlss atftYafts lor Wr
3-35
INO FLAYS ‘ run (ran
■ mil fell Stave Blair 31 pew
_ rim
SCORING FLAYS yard field goal
4 4 14-31
Ex-Star Recuperates
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Farmer Alabama football star Millard F. “Dixie” Howell said Friday he is “getting along at well as might be expected” Mowing removal of a malignant atom-ad) tumor Oct. 1
if: ' m ^ fT? “eg	s v*
THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1969
C—8

Schmidt Tops Vote as Greatest Lion
OFFENSE
JACK CHMWMIffN DB llll-HI*
By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sporti Editor, Pontiac Preii A parallel to the adage "never Judge a book by its. cover,” would be the pro too* ball story of Joe Schmidt.
aaiaiiiawiiawwaiwawnwai^^
Voter Earns 2 Lions' Tickets
C. W. Williams of Pine Street, Birmingham, received a couple tickets to tomorrow’s Lions • Bears game as a guest of the sports department.
Williams’ ballot was picked at random from the many voters who participated in picking the All-Time Lions’ team.
Hie voting was held in conjunction with the 50th anniversary of the NFL, and the Bears are the oldest rival on the Lions’ schedule.
When Schmidt entered Detroit Lions’ camp as a rookie in J953 it was picture day at Ypiilanti not a single photo was taken of the relatively small blonde Just graduated from the University of Pittsburgh.
i one knew or cared who No. 50 was. At 220 pounds he was too small to even look like a pro football player. Yet he was the 7th draft choice of the Lions.
Today, jersey No. 50 has "unofficially” been retired and in the recent voting of the fans for picking the ALL Time Lions’ team, Schmidt was chosen as the “Greatest Lion Ever.”
From that great decade of the lgso’s come the majority of the players picked by the fans to the All-Time Lions’ team.
Bobby Layne, who helped the lions to four divisional and three NFL championships ran away with the voting a t quarterback and was runnerup to Schmidt in the "Greatest Ever” balloting.
Among the other players on the teams from 1950 to 1960 who
N. Farmington Rolls; Groves Springs Upset
FOLS, 5-0, vs. St. James, 5-0
Parochiats Collide in Showdown Tilt
Powerful North Farmington, rebounding after a 20-18 loss to Detroit Thurston last week, flexed its muscles yesterday at Oak Park in extracting a 30-0 triumph.
The. victory gave the Raiders a 3-1 record in the Northwest Suburban League, leaving them a half game behind pacesetting Thurston and Franklin (both 3-0) who collide today.
STREAK ENDS Elsewhere, Groves ended a 13-game losing streak with a 25-22 upset decision over Westland John Glenn.. The Falcons had dropped eight straight heading into this season and they were saddled with five more until last night.
*	* A
Quarterback Steve White hit
First Loss for Western
on 16 of 20 passes for 297 yards and he scored once in leading the North Farmington attack. SCORES TWICE Halfback Bob Hughes, picking up 105 yards on just 10 carries, tallied twice on two-yard runs, while Dave McCoy hauled in seven-yard pass from White for the other score.
A • A A
Quarterback Tom Rex scored twice on short runs and passed for two more touchdowns Groves broke into the winning column.
TWO STRIKES Along with his scoring jaunts Rex hit Mike McLean with a 28 yard scoring pitch and tossed a 35-yarder to Scott Chenet.
AAA Groves was ahead halftime, 134, and raised the count to 19-6, before Glenn (3-3) stormed back to dose the gap with a touchdown and a safety.
Over-all, the Falcons wound up with an offense — rushing and passing — of 466 yards,
ITATISTCI
The decision on who wears the 1969 Northwest Catholic League football crown comes Sunday with a collision between the two pacesetters.
Farmington Our Lady of Sorrows (5-0) and Ferndale St. James (5-0) collide on the FOLS field at 2:30 with the winner virtually assured of the Northwest championship. Both have what would be regarded as a breather in the league finale a week hence.
LAKERS HOME While that clash is In progress, the Lakers of Waterford Our Lady <w Lakes (3-2) will be
Almont, Dryden Show TD Punch in Easy Verdicts
Dryden and Almont checked In with impressive Southern Thumb victories last night.
, David Wilcox scored t times in leading Dryden to a 38-12 decision over Capac, while Curt Cuirey and Ron Lawrence scored twice each to spark Almont’s 47-8 rout of Memphis The results left Dryden at 44’ 1 over-all and hi league play. Almont Is *■* in league play and 34 over-all.
Livonia Franklin was a t afternoon game today, while Royal pak Shrine was playing host to Divine Child this even-
The WOLL contest is slated | for 2:30 on the Waterford Detroit Thurston for Township field.
OTHER GAMES Two other Northwest games are on tap tonight with St.
Florian at St. Rita and Orchard Lake St. Mary at Royal Oak St.
Mary.
A A A
Other important Saturday games find De La Salle at Brother Rice, while Cranbrook was at University School in Cleveland for a morning game.
WOLL’s Lakers have lost to both Farmington OLS (16-6) and St. James (28-6) on successive weekends, but they broke out of that rut last week with a 14-8 decision over improved Orchard Lake St. Mary.
. Coach Joe Sharpe will be
hoping to get the Lakers back in high gear against the visiting Mustangs.
SETTING PACE Setting the pace for the Lakers in the scoring column this season have been Mike Webster, with 48 points, and Jim Tracey, with 42.
' A A ■ A
•'St. Lawrence won its opener trying to provide a happy homecoming for WOLL graduates in a game against Utica St. Lawrence.
Titans Win, 7-6
Defense Saves Day for Pontiac Catholic
over St. Florian, but has since dropped four straight.
The Eaglets of Orchard Lake St. Mary (2-3) have lost their last two games to FOLS (8-0) and WOLL (14-8) and they’ll be facing a high-scoring team in RO St. Mary.
ROSM has a 3-2 record, the losses coming at the hands of FOLS (16-8) and St. James (40-0).
Cranbrook, one of the state’s better Class B clubs, is 3-1, losing to Mount Pleasant 8-6.
The Warriors of Brother Wee I are 4-1 — the loss a 14-0 demise at the hands of Catholic Central—and the team owns one of the area’s most explosive runners in Steve Jones, a fleet 160-po under	who has nine
touchdowns.
The defensive unit saved the day for the Pontiac Catholic Titans who returned home last night with a 7-6 triumph over Gabriel Richard.
The victory was only the second of the season for the Titans who have lost three and tied one,
NHL Standings
.so
»ton ....4 > »
Be
mst
New York .......... i v *	»
fe L_v»* h
Oakland ... .7...,. ITT f J 1*
Philadelphia .... f I J* T 1 ,7
°*W*
Sirk etMomreeT
itViflSmA <y *>,..-
>ta at ir. UUH	*
Oakland at UaMNlHj^^,,
Montreal a* WiKiWffil
Toronto at New York ....	.,
Pittsburgh at Wp
wirvisr
Muakaoon ♦. Dayton J Flint «- D**T{TO*/irr-Fimt at Dot Momw
SuOyia-
w
TALLIES IN
After Richard went ahead 6-0 in the first quarter, Pontiac Catholic wqn it with a touchdown and a PAT kick in the second frame.
,	A A ..
The Titans, who had trouble moving the ball, got a break in the second when Richard bob-bled the ball and Pd recovered on the losers’ five-yard stripe. UG PLAY
On the first {day, halfback Mike Albreck billed his way over for the six points and Joe Gullleah picked up the seventh point with his boot
for the Titans. He lugged the ball 21 times for 72 of the club’s 93 yards.
I n A' * Defensively, Kellie Dean, Gerard Holland and David Boyer spearheaded the attack and that trio came up with nine Solo tackles each.
Highland Sets Harrier Standard
John Nadonl of Lakes set a home course record in cross country' yesterday In leading Highland Lakes Community College to 15-44 victory over Schooteraft Community College. J
I With a clocking of 21:22 Albreck Was the workhorse Nadonl led four teammates in grabbing the top five spots. •T J.ulin Gloomis was second
fTATISTICt First Dowftl Rushing
mh
MUM •. enemti • Poeili
j followed by Ron Beegle, Scott itM uni VanNorwick and Randy Lyons.
labrld® MM
mmE
Imwr |
Sfcl
Wayne State University began cross-country in 1929 and has posted a 156-108 record in dual meets in 37 years of competition.
Dondero Evens Record at 3-3 With 22*0 Win
Joe Krakker scored a pair of touchdowns on short runs in the second half last night to lead Royal Oak Dondero (3-3) to a 22-0 victory over Wyandotte.
'A A' A
John Fratt had given* the Oaks a 6-0 lead with a 42-yard dash in the second period, Krakker came back with runs of 2 and 1 yards in the third and fourth periods.^ John Adamski ran both two-point conversions.
\ The win left Dondero with a 3-1 record ip the Border-Cities League and/ a share pf first along with. Grosse Poihte and Monroe.
STATISTICS
First Dawns1 Rushing .
First Downs Fauns ....
First Dawns Fanaltlss ....
Yanis Rushlng-Ptsslng .,.
Fsssts intercepted by .
Punte end Averege ...
A well-oiled Lincoln Park offense piled up 377, yards rushing last night in handing Walled Lake Western a 48-20 setback.
It was the first loss in six outings for coach Leo Folsom and the new Western Warriors. LEAD FADES
Dennis Morenz’ two touchdowns and Paul Christian’s two-point conversion run boosted the Warriors into an early 14-13 lead, but the host Parkers pushed across a pair of six-pointers in the second frame to open up a 27-14 lead at intermission.
AAA
Quarterback Roy C o o m e r , who hit on 16 of 28 passes for 171 yards, picked up Walled Lake’s other tally on a two-yard run in the third stanza.
STATISTIC.	WL	L„
First Down* Rushing .... 4	30
First Downs Passing .. i.'	'
Firs! Downs Panamas .... I	\
Yards Rushing-Passing	...3*rl?!	*77;34
Passu ....liv.-v-
Passes Intercepted by ■
Penalties	pLAY,
NF—Bob Hughes, t " NF—Steve While, 1 Ualessla pass)
4-40 IS

sneak (Doug (Kevin McConeghy pass (McCopsghy
P*“’ SCORE AY OUARTiRS North Farmington .... 4
Oak Perk ........... •
SCORING PLAYS B6—Tom Ren, kick)
s it e-so
(Scott
rim (kick
M pass
JG—Darrell ailed)
JG—Safety — Glenn
ie-jwuMMMli
JG—Jeff
(kick felled) (Domerjj
7 i 4	4—25
14-11
Yards
1-M
(Kick
IP—Jim Kinney
WL—Wayne Morans i piunge iree > LP—Dennis Miller .4 run (Kick failed) WL-Mereftt 1 piunge (Paul Christian run)
LP-Dennls Bartlett S plunge (Run ®°LP—Kinney 1 run. (Kick failed)
I run <Klck oood) SCORS BY QUARTRRS
a Western ...a f t
Park  .......I* « .14
Pair Is Tied for Golf Lead
0—John Pratt 41 run (John Adamski rU{jLjoe Krakker 1 run (John Adamski
scori BthKARTaaf .
5R5B.	t * *-*
WACO, Tex. (AP) - Kathy Whitworth and Marlene Hagge led a full scale charge on par Friday in the Quality Checked Classic at Lake Waco Country Club, both firing sizzling 67s.
■; Kathy Whitworth 1........... 3J-34-4J
*	Mariana Magee .....................RM
,5 carol Mann ........
.'J Mary Miller l,.....
Mjudy Rankin .................. „
4, (stay Cullen .......... A-#—ft
*	Renee Powell ...............
Shirley fnaWiani ............  Sj-jHj
mm
Sheron Miller . Gertie Whelen Mergle Masters
Jose Napoles Gets Decision
Mexican Hold* Welter Boxing Crown
LOS ANGELES I* - Jose "Mantequilla” Napoles of Mexico City li still the welterweight champion of the world today, but Emile Griffth of New York, turned hack in his bid to win the crown for the fourth time, is far from through as a ring attraction.
f A..; A ' A
The 29-year-old Nappies succeeded in his second defense of the 147-pound division title by a unanimous. 15-round decisioi over the remarkable challenger.
Promoter George Pamessus show attracted 15,461 to the fashionable Forum in suburban Inglewood, with gate receipts of $194,316.
Napoles decked the. seldom-jjHFft'floored Griffith in the third round with a right that is a combination uppercut and bdo punch. Griffth was up quickly s-H-fi but Napoles, holding off follow-up rally, retained command of the battle until the end-Napoles weighed 14444, Griffith 144)4.
won berth on the All-Time teams were receivers Cloyca Box (1949-54) and Terry Barr (1957-65); offensive guards John Gordy (1967-67) and Harley Sewell (1953-62); offensive tackles Lou Creekmur (1950-59) and Charley Ane (196366) and running backs Doak Walker (1960-55) and Bob Hoemsch-meyer, (1960-55).
On the defensive unit, the stars of the '50’s include defensive ends Darris McCord (195367) and Sam Williams (1960-65); defensive tackles Alex Karras (195369) and Les Bingaman ( 1948-54 ); linebackers Schmidt (195366), Wayne Walker (195369) and LaVern Torgeson (1991-54); secondary backs Jack Christiansen (1951-58) and Yale Laxy (196264).
Three current players Karras, Walker and Lem Barney made the breakthrough on the team and ironically Barney pushed out his current defensive backfield coach Jimmy David, who he led the early balloting.
Dick "Night Tratn” Lane, who came to the Lions in 1960 after a great career with the St. Louis Cardinals, was recently named to the all-NFL secondary of the 50th Anniversary team, and was also among tile four defensive backs picked by Lions’ fans.
Oldest All-Time Lion picked was Earl “Dutch” Clark who ns a halfback called the signals and guided the Lions to the 1935 championship.
Clark, along with Alex WoJ-ciechowicz (193346) who was the top Vote getter at center, are among the Lions in the MFL Hall of Fame.
A close for the running back spot behind Doak Walker and Clark developed between Bob Hoernschmeyer and Bullet Bill Dudley and apparently the fans emembered Hoernschmeyer from the championship years and gave him the edge over Dudley, who is a Lions’ Hall of Famer.
For Schmidt, the honor as the Greatest Lion Ever” cam# as somewhat of a surprise.
I’m certainly honored by the voting of the fans,” said Schmidt, “there and others who deserve the honor.’? :, Schmidt’s pro career started fast and when they talk about middle linebackers in pro football, Schmidt would Almost have to be called the Inventor of the position.	..
After just two games of the exhibition season in 1963, when linebacker Dick Flanagan was injured, Schmidt received the starting assignment and never relinquished it until his retirement In 1965.
He was recently picked as one of the three all-Time NFL linebackers, finishing just a shade behind Ray Nitscke as No. 1, a vote which iLons’ fans could say was a distortion of justice.	„
Schmidt was picked to the all-pro team nine times, more than any Lion player in history, and four times he was selected » the team’s most valuable player.
Tbe Lions became the most vaunted defensive unit in pro football under captain Jon s^hmidt winning the divisional titles in 195364 and 1957 and the NFL crown In 195367. Tile Lions also won in 1952.
In the 17-16 victory over me Browns in 1953 when Schmidt knocked the ball out of Otto Graham’s hand leading to the first lions’ touchdown.
Two serious shoulder injuries helped bring his playing career to a close in 1965 after which ha became an assistant coach, and now the head coach of the Lions.
Tbit t« Hie belleting W Hie All-Time Lie™* tee-m	a*
quertertaeh—Bobby Layne -IlMO-M). 1.34*1 Earl Morrell (1*3*44). 42/ Tobin Rote 1)*3M*). »> Other*. W, Becke-Doek Welker ()*»•«), MUf Duck Clerk (WJ4J*). «M/Bob Hoorn»ehe.
mayor (l*J^)^/^H"gMtey n*47. M mi W Farr (IW-at). 54*1 Ae* Gulawtky Tl»»4-3* . 34*1 *•*""'** (1*31-33). 143/ Whlmr Whit* 0*4341),
"Ita/Sivara-Ck/ye* Box (l*4M4), *0*t .any leirTowto. 431) ORlLlCaa# (1*60-43), 314) Jim Ooren (1M1-3*). 347/ Leon Hart (1*3037), 104/ Mjfinw (1*4147) 1411. Jim Gibbon?
Terry
OWO^.. IMH Leon Hart (1*3M7).
(1*4147) 141) JBB Charley tender* (1*474*),
14C*nt*re-Alex Welclechewlee J1HB44).
SLA
044/ Harley g«Mn .df‘
Stentel (1*3343), 0*1/
Defensive Ende—Derrle McCord. 0*33-
biis
Bill Glee* (1*5341), INI Others t*.,_
sssefs
*»). 431/ Other*. ,044.	"	-™.
Mrr»a'*Wi Berney, iij Othar*?w0'
r \ \ ■
\1
C—4
THE PONTIAC PljESS. SATURDAY1, OCTOBER 18,
»y Th* Anaclattd Prti*
Armada 30 Harper Woods «
Alpena Catholic central • Roger* City 0 Allan Park 1i Plymouth 14 Allegan 4( Paw Paw 0 Albion 23 Hillsdale a Aahley 14 Lamina Hoyt Training 0 Algonae 34 Marina City 30 Almont 47 Mamphli 4 Bloomfield Hills LOluar 30 Troy 10 Say city Central I Midland 0 Boyne City 3a Gaylord 33 BaNalra to Inland Lake, o Berrien springe a Idwardtourg I Bloomfield Hills Andevar Sa Brighton 0 Birmingham Grovat 33 Wayne Glenn 33 Bloomlngdala 13 Lawrence 7 Battle Creek Sprlngtleld 30 Perchmen 13 Baldwin 30 Mai city a ,, „ J Buchanan la Three Oake River Va ley
Haial Park 3a Birmingham Seaholm la Holland 37 Muskegon Heights It Hudsonvllle 23 Wyoming Regan la Hopkln* 14 Goblet a Haelett 7 Laming O'raWarty 0 Howell 3t Onekeme 37 Hastings 33 Lake Odessa Lakewood Harrison 35 Alcona 14, ,
Harbor Beach 30 North Branch la Homer 33 Union City 0 Hudson 43 Manchester 0 Henover-Horton II Plttstord Ionia 30 Lansing Wgvarly
■ •! m
Hodges Picked Top Manager
Horse Race Results

Rlpptuno Toir House
DRC Results
PRIDAV't RRSUL'
OULTI Purlongsi 1.00	30 20
NEW YORK ild — Gil Hodges,! games the year before and had the soft-spoken miracle workerj finished last five times and I cr«^’^«ro<»i who molded the New York Mets j ninth the other time In their six |c p*!kY_ double m
Btarnal Irlnca I Numbar Ona Cat Dusty Jo*
! Paachas Marla -Nationwide . tlh->3,aiwi Clalml | 1-1/11 Mila,
1 Indian Gama Fraaparklno Storage King 1 0*4 long
(I Vr, Olds;
Pleadlllav Spirit * Macs Cls '
McClain County Nlflopui Moccasin Sand Ona Night Stand
ROM __ H ilng Wavi ronwood 24 Ashland, W mlay City 24 Millington Ida 14 Brla Mason “
Jackson Northeast 4 Jackson Parkslde 42 . ..	■
Jackson Vondorcook Lake 42 Parma Wastorn 0

Britton 26 Potorsburg SummorfloW 14 Jonoavlllo Athona
into baseball’s greatest success years of existence, story, has been selected the!	*	*	*
National League Manager of the He took them to ninth place Year in the annual Associated and 73 victories, their best Press poll.	| record, In 1968 and then
Hie 45-year-old former surpassed even his own goal of
boy
city'Johnoionn ,# Bridgeport K.i.m.wo cantr.i 3« L.mmg mxtonia Dodger great captured the ?5 victories in 1969, winning 100 ci? Hondv s* pifm Norihom • i Koiomowo Norm i» fcriam Cwiroi i honor Friday by one of the games and the Eastern Division
n City 1$ Birch Run 0	Livonia Sitvonson 20 aouvnntta Lttnrup	* ,	*	, _ L lr,A1 ^	_ ______i___
36 Houghton Loko 24 j •
3rd—S2700 Claiming; 4 Purlongsi Skoodu	.4.40	3.20
$uns Cholct	2.40
4tl&tji&C<Clalming; 4 Purlon
Windsor Rosults
Snaeillli Scotl Dtslre
Load the Pock Demagogue Ruler* Admiral
angti
5.00
3.00 Purlongn 1.30	3.40
3.00	FRIDAY
4.40 laf-BldUN; Claiming Nag; I 1 U^lEllteng	17.30
4 Paid 034.3# Claiming; 4 Purleng*: 0.30	4.00
Bod Ax* 30 '_______
Bo Hie crook Central 33 JOckun 0 Byron 36 Geneiee 3 Cantor Lina 0 warren Lincoln 0 Claw ton 30 Mtdlion Height! Lomphere Control Loko 44 Blleworth 0 Cheboygan 33 St. Ignact 30 Clinton 33 On,tad 13	3
Calumat 17 Cryital Fall* 0 Camden Frontier 30 Sprlngport l Coloma 10 Niles Brandywine 0 Caledonia it Hamilton 14 3a Marthall 33 I 30
Caro 31 Cato Clara 13 Far*. I Corruna 11 St. Loul*
Claiming; 1 1/14 Milan
eew.iM Lek. western M greatest margins ever when he .title by overcoming a 9Vi-game "aba.
; v-.ilw vmvi 22 Avondai# o	polled 267 votes to only 10 for Chicago lead in the final two I Tth-suoo I
Lansing ^aiiarn't'i Ann Arbor pionoor 4 second-place Luman Harris of months to win by eight games. J ft™ ytMu» tSStS SE& W&.Afr Hur#n ‘ the Atlanta Braves.	Then came a three-game swmp"^, ? ,urlon„
lJSSiiMyoSior,sprMgv?ri4 -	Although the amazing Mets of the Braves in the-playoffs for Imre, sjampad* 31.00 is.,
mrlee	» completed their fairy tale rise the pennant, and finally they fim m*
uaL| *........iiie-Brendon o from bungling bumpkins to j wiped out the favored Baltimore...................
baseball’s best Thursday by Orioles In five games in the winning the World Series,'Series.
3.401	Porter Torn 3,40 3nd—IMM; C
2.401	Judge Adios
Darina Wick H»rb;
3,30 Dally Doubl 2 40 3rd—43jaa> ll
5.oo w5piwW Wl
DH-Deen'i Tide
4J
"uvr
17.10
Chariofra IS Alma 4
10 Ovld-Bltla
I7j0i My Scotch Song
Ortonvllla-Brandon 0 Marquotto 13 Manlitlqua «
Manilla* Catholic Central 31 Hi Midland Dow 30 Boy City AH Solnl* 13 Midland Bullock Cn
lid 31,717,1 70 yard*: 31.40	10.1
Pocket
1 sib—r 9 Scotty
11.50 4.30 4.20
Perfect* 1-5 paid 4244.1 ATTENDANCE 7,302 PAID 4417*512	,
DRC Entries
MONDAY'S ENTRIES
Lilly Knox
Queen's Ransom Qulntllt: 2*4 paid 442.40 Ills—41*200/ Claiming Pact/ 1 i o ho Tima	t.40
Mada Van	5.20 3.90
Plda Yatas	- 4,00
7th—04*100/ 4*Yr. Old Invitational Paca/ l Mile:
10.20 0.00 4.40
• Dixit Baau Patch
SST wS Ip®* * strength of their stunning Mets’ rise from defeat to vie-$il2k!l^cMrairV 33 Kaiama-stretch run to the National tory, Hodges* own recovery o HaSitt 33	1h j League pennant. The balloting from a heart attack suffered
Chaianino ii ovid-Eitia o	Miiftnf°i4 Livonia^iaranceviu* M among sportswriters and toward the end of last season!
IsSSKSS. 4 fc&KT, #	ISaSmlLSlfflSBfAriiRo*h..Nr> broadcasters throughout t h e was just as amazing.	"fc""' Cl,im,n* ™ Vr- °'d*' * FFgEW
»rrm^tnu,oAroi. canirai iSKpfiSS: was taken before the, Hodges was stricken Sept. 24 *[;•** S)fm	'g&’f&S*
rr- RI— WuRP6 ’	SJTB SSBSBT S®- -
ksassjsawaaiJ’-B. ’jggurirt^, shsn. — cw.	««
rS.lno^o	with three each and Harry
Ottawa
1.40 4.50
4.00
15.40 4.10 4.40
4partan Admiral
Dttrolt Murray-Wrlght 20 Datrolt Chad-K altering 14 Dttrolt Finnay, •
“	- * Highi
44 tec.,- w Dttrolt St. Pranci*
c DwlWn Height. Cre.twood 31 Door-Bom Chgrry Hi M ■catur l HorMOrd o Dansvilla I Plncknay 3 Daxtar 21 Sollna I Drydan B Capac 11 ISLMAWJSm0 Araa *
Eaat Jackson 31 Broklyn Columbia
jjyjg | M*n,,,lS?mU 30 ook
Plaasant Sacred
'pranWort 30 Klrptlay,13 Fla* Rock 33 Bllaillald 30 Win* Cmlral 34 Flint So^mlarn 14
Farndal

Frankanmuth 41 Marlatla • Fruilport 30 Big Rapid* 13 Flint>andla U.
Flint Atharlon M Flint St
Hamaday 0 NAatthew 40 Flint Banfity 1 Flint Holy Radla»na?40 Flint St. Apna
1 Gordon CIN B»*» *4 Grayling. 41 Harbor Grand Rapid* Union
^Grand ^Havon 17 East Grand R»l^d* * Orandvllla 0 Muakagon Orchard Viww O Grand Rapid* Norfbvlaw 43 Byron Con-
*Gro*» lit 33 carlolon Alrport]4 Grand Rapid* Kanlwoed 40 Kalloeg*-
Grand31
Owan-Gag* 4 sabawalng •
o'w*ii'oirMx-'scou* o	’^Walker of Houston with one.
oak*v st, Franei* t Maneaion* * i When Hodges took over the cm'Sd.'tio^wTi 1tv"mr- 3 Mets, before the 1968 season, Portland ’tSf’IStrldc li WabLrvlIla o'y,ey were nothing but a buhch RST.gr sSdSS& 3	Of ragamuffins who lost 101
Portland 43 Moniaealla 4 Port Clinton, Qblo 1» Tomporanco Bod-
tord 7
Pock IS North Huron 13t P Wft Pontiac catholic 7 Dearborn Gabriel Richard 3 Rockford
Roerrlllo ' Brabtoc SO Mount Cloman* L’AnM Creuw 3 . ..	,.
Royal Oak Kimball 40 Barkley 3 River Rouge 34 Romului 3 Redford Uhlan 13 Livonia Bontloy 0 Royal Oak Dondoro » Wyandolta Rudyard 34 PlCklerd 0 Reel* 30 Kingston 3 Richmond 33 Now Haven 3 Reading 14 Quincy RonSo 30 C
Ted Lindsay in line Says ToronfoPaper
Sanders Holds Sahara Lead
Palmer Falls Behind With 144 Total
Loyal* Express Sunset Terraco Com'On Along 4tb—*2,100; Mod Olds; « Purloi Miss Jan Pac Chapel Ally
siru^r
Daddy* Darling
lla $971*221 __
Windsor Entries
SATURDAY'S ENTRIES
Olympian Brat n» iS3 % Olds;
Prlmrosa Princess
Prow# " Man	f^lL. Coun.sl
v. I Easy Jim
Tr‘ Batty Lou Btrrttl _________.
2nd—33300 Claiming Poco; 1 Milo: C. E.'s Sammy	Round Slava
Yankee Luck	Aril# Frost
Mlghfy McKlyo J. J. Lassto
Harbor Land# Trefoil Kathy
Evla* Choice
Faalgooi arly Su I Lina
31^-43,7*0; Claiming 3 Yr. OMtl i
Squire Shield*	Cenedln Bird
Ralntx>w Hu*	Brothor Brud
Preston M.	Boo's Duos!
Klttys Cub _	Prld* and Thot
4lb-33.N0; Claiming 3 Yr. OMs; i
Festive Banquet Spaed Water Doubl* Val
Greanvillo 23 Bolding 14 _
Gull Lake II Harbor Creak 3 Grand Blanc 43 Mount Morrlt 14 Goodrich 33 Lako Fenton 13 Harper Woods Luthoron East 14 Dear-
Warren Couslno 27 Warren Molt 0 Wllllamston 13 FowlervlH* *
Wyoming Loo 13 Grand Rapids Kenowa
Waterford 1» Farmington •
Wayne 30 Willow Run 14 Yolo 35 Dockdrvill* 3
At Winner Sunday
Midget Gridders Play
The younger set gets its: The midget program	|g|||
chance on the football field sponsored by the Pontiac Pa*8 th7 Re7WTngI‘¥e‘again^retired Sunday afternoon when the an{j Recreation Department jfrom the Detroit club two years local midget grid program Puts ajong With the Pontiac Junior!ago.
the wraps on the’69 season.	6	_____ |
_.	Chamber of Commerce.!
There are 15 games on tfP-l Admission of M cents for adults starting at 1 p.m. and running# cen(s for children will be through 6 p.m.	[charged with proceeds going to
Two games will be in prog-jthe Jaycees for youth work in ress at the same time on the;th „uv Wisner field. All games will consist of two, 12-minute M'D?,ewi.ra?Ts?.A^mDAY
narinHa	band SHELL
periOOB.	Schedule-Pelrinqs
1:00—Begley (Blue) vs. Mark Twain (YoMow^ awthorna (Rad-Whlto) vs.
S^a^W-S'r.lu.®
Armada Romps to First Victory
LAS VEGAS, Nev, (AP) -Flashy Doug Sanders slipped to'chink™1"	aimsim
a par 71 Friday but retained the|‘ra*w, c""n"H' U ” Oxford' i	i	early second round lead in theifll^ca",Iov*
Iniffifirs "I TORONTO (API - The ToJ *100,000 Sahara Invitational golf ^Foiiy
sagMaw Miehigan Lutharansaminary 2».rojito iiiooe ana Ma“ ieQ: Sanders, 36 and suffering his *%andiah *t"* i^tTsaginaw carroiiHm	Lindsay mayaucceed BUI Gads-	t bating	season on the
laginaw 37 PoiKiac central 30	by as coach of the National	.	“
» WiKOT® v . 4	Hockey League’s Detroit Red	g;,
li.^^k«r,nfl,on ‘ Wings. akiibSi»>i v	^ newspaper quotes
utira^Rschester Adam. 3	source close to the Detroit hock-
........... ey club as saying Lindsay, a
former Bit-winger with, the Wings, is favored for the job by club President Bruce Norris.
Lindsay was a member of Detroit’s famous Production Line with Gordie Howe and Sid Abel who now is manager of the Red-Wings and acting coach after Gadsby was fired Thursday I night.
Lindsay was dismissed from the Red Wings for his involvement in the NHL Players’ Association. He went to Chicago 1 s Black Hawks, later retired, then came out of retirement to rejoin
Doc Coin

Senator Hudson 3rd—31400 Cond.
Paragon Pick Joel T7 Saint ooMan ciitl*	....
Bye Bye Maxine	Right Season
4tb—SUN Cond. Pan;'1 Mile:
Sandy Knox	On* Mora Tima
Short Tima	Horace Johnston
Bourbon Way	Howl# Johnston
Marry'* Thorp*	Count Ton*
sm-3270* Cond. Pact; 1 MUdt Hideaway Pat	Sara Pattarson
Kutcher	Bret Johnston
Hotol Man	High Card
Forty Nlnor
3th—$2700 Cond. Pactt t Mila:
Adios Caclllty	Skippy wick
Raoruitmant Taam will ba conducting interviews at tha Pantiae Holiday Inn 1801 S. Talegraph Rd., Pontiac
Phone: 334-2444
From MONDAY, Oct. 20, Noon until FRIDAY, Oet. 24, Noon - 24 Hours a Day!
COFFEE ft DONUTS -BRING THE WIFE
Wa will b* available — ANY TIME — from MONDAY thru FRIDAY to axplain tha advantages (as well as disadvantages) of being an independent Businessman with a SUNOCO Franchise.
OALLi
Mr.JimPascoe Pontiae Holiday Inn
or
Sun Oil Da.
Ml 6-6674
a 36-hole total of 136, six under par for two trips over the 6,751 yard, par 71 Saha-ra-Nevada Country Club
course.	.	.	.	.	4	.
Jack Nicklaus and defending Armada stepped out of champion Chi Chi Rodriguez]Southern Thumb competition barged into contention, each! las* u^t to record its first with a 68 for 137, just one stroke victory of the season, a 30-6 nod behind the first round leader.! over Harper Woods.
They were tied with Terry Dill, j	*	★	*
66, and Steve Spray, 70, also at1 fojf Chilcotte scored three
137-	.! six-pointers on passes of 15, 12
Arnold Palmer made the cut md 13 yards> while Joe Blake
with a 69-75-144.	..... picked up the other on a seven-
Local pro Bill Panasiuk did Jard ^ Blake coUected m not make the cut by one stroke	d ^ ds pMfa
«« L* «*4»4l 19JlA-\Aa	if , a ,	°	,	.	...
65 71-136 hauled in passes good for 188
S3=8? y»rds'
69-6S-137	‘
67-70-137
Fact/ 1 Mila: Royal Adios Shiaway Lad
Lady Aries 7tlv—$2500 I Walvis Bay Castla Knight Gunner Creed
•th—$5000 invitatlMtl Face/ 1 Mil Dixie Tomboy	Chief Crazy l
“ " |	Philip Brian
Zip far
J. H. Dandy 9th—$2900 Cm Glow Frost Tod J. Dir act O.C.'a Might
Dennis Grattan
G&Mi, ELLIS Sine* 1945
111 N. Saginaw
CEMENT WORK • PATIOS CARAGES • ADDITIONS
COMFLaTI BUILDING SERVICE
TERMS	FK 2-1211
Austin America More Leg Room For A Lot Less
Pontiac Sports Car
467 Auburn Ave.
BUY! SELL! TRADE!
USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS!
Steva Spray .. Terry Dill ... Steve Reid ...
Kermit Zarley Herb Hooper . Tony Jacklin . Ed Merrins . Dale Douglass Fred Marti ..
Starting the day of activity will be 1 p.m. games between Bagley-Mark Twain and Wis-ner-Forst.
NBA Standings
San Francisco Los Angelas .. San Diego ....
Cincinnati 110* Boston 1 New York 116, Chicego 17
San Diego at San Francisco Sunday's Gama Saattla at Miiwaukat
K*ar
at Cleveland, 1:3# p.r
Barney May Miss Contest With Bears
ranklln (Blue) v*. Emerson (Rural*) V*. Bathune Slue) va. Whlltlar-Frank-
(Yellow)
3:30—V (Green-White)
3:53—Bagiev (Yellow)
30—Reg* lennell ■ (
5:03—Owen (Blue-Gold)
rrbtl (Green) 1:35—McConnell (Green) v*. Whittier (Black-White)
3:10—Wabatar (Blue-Gold) vi. Crofoot (Red-White)
2:43—Baldwin-Central (Black) v* Mal-klm (Green)
3:20—Herrington (Orange-Black) vl Owen (Red-White)
3:53—Mark Twain (Black) v*. Wilson rale) H.w.
30—Baldwin-Central (Black-Whlta) v*.
(Rural*)
4:30—B Wabatar (Green)
A11 - P r o comerback Lem Barney has a Charlie horse that will likely prevent him from playing for Detroit Sunday when the Lions host the winless Chicago Bears the club said Friday.
The injury in Barney’s upper left thigh will likely put Bobby Williams, obtained from the St. Louis Cardinals last season, into his first game for Detroit at that position.
End Bill Malinchak will han die the punting if the injury prevents Barney from that.
Bob Smith Tom Bailey . Peter Townsend Orville Moody Miller Barber . Jim Wiechers . John Levinson Paul Moran . Bert Greene Rod Funseth Don January Bill Maxwell Grier Jones Dow Finsterwi Chuck Courtne Frank Beard Dick Lotz Homero Blanc Jerry Heard . Bob Goalby . Halt Irwin .. Tommy Jacob Hugh Royer
Tom Weiskopf Dick Rhyan ... Lou Graham . Allen Henning
Jack Cuplt ... Julius Boros .. Jim Colbert Bobby Mitchell Dave Stockton
Deane Beman . Dick Mayar .... Arnold Palmer .
Jack Ewin
Minnesota at St. Louis* 2 p.m.
•ttteLgt J York at Washif Atlanta at Ian Francisco, 4 p.m, “—iaf Dotrof
ilngton* 1:15 p.r ,. jnclsco, 4 — iicago at Detroit* 2:15 p.r illedelphU
Buffalo at Oakland* 4 p.m. Donver'at Cincinnati* 1:30 p.ni Miami at Kansas City, 4 p.m. San DJ|0O at Bogon, 1:40 p.m
Houslg^ f York/l R.m.
Enjoy Life With A Hawk Motor Home
LUXUAIdUS LIVING - ULTIMATE ii Quality and Convenience
iirrcRiORwitti ROOM to sport
carpeting; uphalttary
tttpa far exceed th* •tondord* at tha Indue* try. Tha Hawk Motor
GALL STEEL FRAME • Tha framing afJjthG Hawk Motor I 16 gaugo equaro (tool tubing.
no ii conitructod of ruggod
G For •xtariar Wall ■
.030 in thlcknoia. rant and back, will
When you buy a motor home, ute tho lame care and caution you mould ute in buying a haute.
• EXCLUSIVE DEALERSHIP a MICHIGAN (MANUFACTURER
CRUISE-OUT, INC.
M I. Walton, PaoHas
Open Daily 9 to 6\-Sahirdaya 9 to 5. Clotad Sundays
FE 8-4402	>
THE l'ONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY. OCTOBER 18, 19fi9,
C—5
Plans Made At Waterford Community Church
for UNICEF Trick or Treat
Centennial Celebration Near
Th« pnn,i ah u r Beards are sprouting and be held/ at the church. 5995 showing maby former members. Waterford Community Church mittee on UNICEF wUI again hemllneg ar® bru»h‘n8 the Hoor O'ympIc Parkway, Waterford participating in past church af-i from _ 1940-1942, will be the conduct their annual Tricks al Waterford C o m m u n i ty " rreat for UNICEF collectionChurch a" the congregallon evening, Oct. 31.
Township.
Area Church He
‘SLAVING’ FOR RETREAT - Members of the Waterford Trinity United Methodist Youth Fellowship held a “slave day” recently to raise money for the group’s retreat at Franklin Settlement Camp, Lake Orion, this weekend. Hie junior high youths were hired out to baby-sit, clean garages, wash cars,
PtnllK Pratt Photo
etc. Window-washing slaves are Linda Hosier, 12, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel L. Hosier, of 3520 Waringham, Waterford Township, and Bill Banks, 13, son of Mr. and Mrs. William E. Banks, 3629 Percy King, Waterford Township.
All churches and groups interested in participating may obtain materials by contacting the Bev. Larry Bobbitt at First Christian Church, 858 W. Huron, or the Rev. Ron Tollman at Central.
fairs will highlight the Friday principal speaker. It was during *	*	*	night program.	1 Rev. Shock's ministry that the
.	„	..	... A slide presentation reviewing Saturday night at 7, Rev, l church joined the Independent
makes final preparations for the a higtory of the chufch and c^ar|eg Shock( who gervedjFundamental Churches of church’s centennial celebration, i	America,
area! Members of the church will	music skits
don 1869 styles to welcome?- . m	j	. *	’	,
1	4	■“*	■	. .. .. .	•	■« Saturdays program also will
include special music and skits by members of the gregatiop. More historical slides will be shown.
Regular worship services Sunday will call attention to the Centennial starting with the 9:45 a.m. Sunday School.
Rev. Robert D. Winne, the most recent pastor of Waterford Community, will be the featured speaker at the 11 a.m. service conducted by Rev. Ken Orr, interim pastor.
Rev. Winne served the Church from 1957 until his retirement this summer. The Winnes are now residing in Phoenix, Ariz.
Climaxing the centennial observation will be a 7 p.m. service with Rev. Wright Van Plew as guest speaker. Rev. Van Plew. was pastor at Waterford Community from August'1944 through April 1956. During that time a new Sunday School annex was built behind the church auditorium.
Money collected by
people will be sent to the; “u" ‘"U1’	lv .	L
*	...... .former members to the three-1
Nations International^ homecoming and birthday | Emergency Fund to{ festivities that begin next Frl-£ used for food, clothing and (day night at 7. All activities will ■ medical care for children throughout (he world who suffer from war and nalural disasters.
, * - *	*
The Ad Hoc, Committee is viting all area churches synagogues to parti cooperative and wide basis. The houi for collection are 4 - 7 p.m.
*	*	*
A dance will be held participants from 7 ti at Central United Church, 3882 Hi Waterford Township, be provided by the Syrup.
Teacher to I of Kibbutz
A prominent Pontiac educator will describe her an Israeli kibbutz at an B’nai B’rith meeting
Salad lovers are in for a	* if
special^ treat Wednesday u>hen.8:30 p.m. at the B’nai Israel] St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church|Synagogue, Oneida andl Women hold their annual salad Menominee, Pontiac.
Taster’s Luncheon. The menu	*	*	*
will feature chicken salad with'■ Mrs. Scribner, who also has 1	....	.	, ., ; traveled extensively in Europe
an array of fruH and vegetable ^ the Far Eagl gpent the
salads. The luncheon wtll be at entire summer of 1965 at Kibbutz1 the church, 5301 Hatchery, Wo- Dahlia, where she worked on terford Township, with guests the farm, in the laundry, the being seated at 11:30 a.m. and kitchen and nursery.
12:30 p.m. Card games will be|% A no„jew *he *eturned to featured after the luncheon. At fte Holy Und m past summer| left, Mrs. Grady Robertson of to witness the progress of the
NINETEENTH-CENTURY MAXIS-Mrs. David Mehlberg of 3269 Sashabaw, Waterford Township, marks the hem of daughter Linda's nineteenth-century-style gown she will wear at the centennial festivities at
Waterford Community Church next weekend, Linda's grandmother, Mrs. Helen Mehlberg of 5938 Andersonvilie, Waterford Township, lends a helping hand.
land and people since the June, 1967 war. While there, Mrs.] Scribner spent another week at Kibbutz Dahlia.
489 Berrypatch, White Lake Township, puts some dressing on a salad Mrs. Richard Daub-ner has made. Mrs. Daubner of,
6335 Grace K, Waterford Town- There will be ship, is testing a new recipe for jquestion-and-answer use at the luncheon.
Three Area Congregations to Observe Anniversaries
informal, ess ion
Three Pontiac area churches followed by
1st Methodist Harvest Fete Friday Night
Home banquet Friday night.
Bazaar Is Nov. 1 at Faith Lutheran
CHURCH HISTORY According to tjie best records available on Waterford Community, it got its start in the middle 1860s when a Mr, Grow and a Mr. Fifield went around community of Waterford getting pledges in order to erect a church.
The church auditorium was built in 1869 on Andersonvilie Road and the membership adopted the name of First Baptist Church and Society of Waterford. Rev, Charles was the first pastor.
In 1897 Society was dropped from the name and in 1933 the name was changed once again, this time to the present name.
In 1959, the congregation voted to build a new church and there was too little property available at the Andersonvilie Road site, new property was purchased on the corner of Airport Road and Olympic Parkway.
NEW WING
The main building was occupied in 1961, and the new i educational wing was built in 11966.
Rev. Orr came to Waterford Community Church in 1964 as I youth director. He was later named associate pastor and, when Rev. Winne retired, he. became interim pastor.
I The church has grown from a anniversary! Rev. Goddard and his wife'membership of 33 in 1897 to following Mrs. Scribner’s talk, j wni be observing anniversaries'dinner given by the Mary-come to Pine Hill from the; approximately 400. The Sunday which is being sponsored by the tomorrow.	Martha Guild of the church. , pastorate at the Federated school attendance 50 years ago
Pontiac Lodge No. 850 of B’nai' Cedar Crest Lutheran of 485 social BRETHREN	Church at Skowhegan, Maine, was around 35; today it
Farnsworth, White Lake ..	. Brethren Rev He replaces the Rev. Harry W. averages575.
Township, will note its 35th year	VSter of the Union	NoShore
ff Mth anniversary nl	Wis	j
Social Brethren Church, 316.	in thp 1 Pine Hill Church was organ-!
iBakiwin, Pontiac, will b e gBa bask®‘tbl«*d in 1960 under the ministry
I celebrated at	the	regular	11,nent- °V!thc1 c“urfh' “Pf1®1; of Dr. Grey who served until ill	The Ladies Guild of Faith
am service	congregational singing will	be health forced him to retire in	Lutheran Church, 3501 E.
AndPine Hill Congregational Matured in the afternoon. ;1962.	Highland	Highland
Church of 4160 Middlebelt, West PINE HILL	!	'>	*	*	Township, will hold a bazaar
!Bloomfield	Township, will. The Rev. Albert L. Goddard Worship services were first Nov. 1 from 10a.m. to2p.m.
A noted story teller will be observe its ninth year by in- will be installed as minister of held at the Pine Lake School,1 Booths will include cards, the	guest	speaker	at	First stalling a new	minister	at	10:30	Pine Hill with Dr. Alfred	D. but in November 1964, the	books, white elephants, baked
United	Methodist’s	H	a	r v e s t a m-	Grey, minister emeritus,	of-building on Middlebelt Road	goods and Christmas gifts, In-
CEDAR CREST	floating.___	_	was comPleted
Featured speaker at Cedar The program, to be held at Crest’s special worship service the church, 14 Judson, Pontiac, will be the Rev. Richard] at 6:30 p.m., will also feature a Schlecht* President of the'
m
and music by the Davis Trio,1 gynod
composed of Mrs. Eleanor j Re wyj ^ assisted by the]
Keller, Mrs. Virginia Neimisto Rev. Richard Feucht, parish! and Mrs. Miriam Powell. jeducation counselor of the!
*	*	*	English district, and the Rev.]
The featured speaker is Mrs.1 David Ludwig, associate pastor j
Howard W. Burden who has of the Peace Lutheran Church
been in the ministry with her ofPetr0**' . c, ,, .	'
..	. .	..	... mu. The choir of St. Matthews
husband for 43 years. ^ ^theran Clnfrch, Walled Lake,' couple’s first ministry was St. wlu furnlsh special music for James Methodist Church of ^ servjce, Which will be Pontiac.	--------------------*•
*	* *
Mrs. Burden and her husband, '	t ^	,	;
were recently on the staff of the City Choir Union Tripity United \M e t h o d i s t' '
Church in Flint, but they retired in June.
Often caUed “onetf the best City Wide Choir Union ofj story tellers in the world,” Mrs.	will hold ts annual
Burden has been a member of acholarsMp banquet at the, the National Story League since Sveden House a^, ® tonight. I 1942. She has served as secre- G“est _speaker.wi ^ ®r' tary of the National Story Alien Parker, former pastor of League and president of the the Newman AME Church.
Central District of the National	*	*	.	. .
Story League.	Toastmaster for the evening
* ' *	*	is Booker Yancey, principal of
An honorary member of the the Whittier Elementary School.
Detroit Story League, she has Miss Sylvia Blake is guest organised two leagues in soloist.
Saginaw, one of which has] The banquet is open to the]
Ignored her by calling itself the public for a donation of |5 per;
Silvia Burden Story League, Iperson.	I
eluding many handmade items.
Banquet Tonight
McGarry, pastor /of St. Patrick Catholic Church, 9086 Hutchins, White Lake Township, gives two youngsters a preview of the fun that awaits them at the parish fair to-
the John F. Ivory Polo Grounds on Cooley Lake Road, White Lake Township, froth noon to 6 p.m. Riding "Ole Dobbin” are Joseph and Ann Marie Milfor-	I
C—6
UK rONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1969
FIRST
ASSEMBLY
of
GOO
, Perry St, at Wide Track
SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:45 A.M. *
Evaryona Welcome
11 AM.
"This U Your Lift"
7 P.M.
"Show and Toll"
Watar Baptismal Sarvlca Service* for the Daaf
The Church on The March
| Reason often makes mistakes, but conscience never does.— Josh Billings, American humorist.
“AN AMIRICAN BAPTIST CHURCH'
BETHANY BAPTIST CHURCH
WEST HURON AT MARK SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19 SERMON “A RELIGION WITH RESERVES"
Dr. Konti
CHURCH SCHOOL 9:00 A M.
WORSHIP 10:00 A.M.
Ample Porking Space Dr. fmil Konti, Pastor
BLOOMFIELD HILLS BAPTIST CHURCH 3600 Telegraph Rd.
8:30 A.M. First Service 9.45 A.M. Sunday School 11:00 A.M. Second Service 4:30 P.M. Jr. Hi Youth 6:00 P.M. Evening Service' 7:30 P.M. Sr. Hi Youth
Elizabeth Lake Church of Christ
Christian: 183 S. Winding, Pontiac
Sunday School..............9:45	A.M.
Morning Wonhip............11:00 A.M.
Evaning Sorvico ...........6:00	P.M.
Wad. tibia Study...........7:00	P.M.
Minister Konnofh William*	682-2785
FRIENDLY GENERAL BAPTIST CHURCH
Robert Garner, Pastor Sunday School . . . * . 9:45 A;M. Morning Worship...... 11:00 A.M.
Evening Service ...... 7:00 P.M.
Wednesday Prayer at.. 7:00 P.M.
Church of Christ
87 Lafayette St.
Sunday lO:30 a.m.—7:00 p.m. Wednesday 7:00 p.m. . ''Coma unto me oil ye that labour and are heavy laden and | will give you REST."
Malt. II.28
THE SALVATION ARMY CITADEL
29 W. LAWRENCE
SUNDAY SCHOOL 10 A.M.
Taan Ago Fellowship Hour A* Announced
MORNING WORSHIP 11:15 AM. EVANGELICAL MEETING 7 P.M. TUESDAY PRAYER AND PRAISE MEETING 7 PJ Brigadier and Mrs. Clarence E. Critzer Good Mutic — Singing — Preaching You Are Invited
First Congregational Church
€. Huron and Mill St.
Rev. Malcolm K. Burton, Minister Sunday Morning Service 10:30 A.M.
CHURCH SCHOOL 10:30 A.M.
Church of the Mayflower Pilgrims
FIRST CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN
-46 Roselawn Dr., North of East Pika SUNDAY SCHOOL 10 A.M.-HAROLD LEIDY, Supt 11 A.M. WORSHIP SERVICE-7 P.M. WORSHIP Rov. Robert D. Hoover	332-2412
APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF CHRIST
1410 University Dr.
Saturday Young People 7:30 P.M.
Sunday School and Worship 10 A.M. Sunday Evaning Service 7:30 P.M.
Tues.and Thura. Service* 7:30 P.M.
Church Phono FE 5-8361
Pastor's Phono 852-2382
FIRSJ
a|tot
•	SUNDAY SCHOOL
•	MORNING SERVICE
•	WQTE BROADCAST (560)
•	CHYR BROADCAST (71)
•	YOUTH FELLOWSHIP
•	EVENING SERVICE
•	MIDWEEK PRAYER SERVICE — Wednesday
•	WBFG-FM Wed. (98.3)
Pastor Sheitonx speaking
•	WKZO BROADCAST (590)
Cfu/tcb
9:30 a.m. 10:45 a.m, 11:00 a.m. 4:15 p.m. 5:45 p.m. 7:00 p.m.
7:30 p.m. 9:00 a.m.
7:30 a.m.
FINAL SERVICES OF OMR BIBLE CONFERENCE”^ ' ©
with DR. PAUL R. BAUMAN 10:45 A.M'. "Why Doesn't God Do Something about World Conditions?
7:00 P.M, "Jorusalom in History and Prophecy"
OAKLAND and SAGINAW Jtev. Robert Shelton, Pastor
jhlBiinyiw were *t u» sms# ten-hhmi«h’« nssr sradd osens
Brazil VisH6r to Speak at New Temple
! Dr. Stanley K1 r s c h n e r, recently returned from a five-month stay in Sao Paulo,
Brazil, will discuss his experiences in that country at the next regular Friday night service of the New Temple, at the Birmingham Unitarian Church, Lone Pine at Woodward.
Dr. Kirschner is a professor | of chemistry at Wayne State I University. His mission In Brazil was sponsored by the i Ford Foundation and Sao Paulo University. Among his objectives were the construction1 ot an instrument for measuring optical rotation and Initiating a| reserach program In that field at the university.
•* * *
| Friday night Dr. Kirschner will discuss the - socioeconomic I turmoil in Brazil and show his collection of slides. Among them are pictures of two synagogues Ikn’d the j “Hebralca,” “a beautiful, well-developed facility similar to our Jewish center," according to Dr. Kirschner.
I While in Sao Paulo, the; iKirschner family heard David,
{Ben (iurian, former premier of Israel, address a large audience ’there in Yiddish. Ben Gurian 'chose this . language for his	4 ■	.	. „
public address because he felt tfle Waterford ant* fa“|}ac that, of all the languages he "eas nfd	LUeUne
knew, more of his audience Idirectors-would understand Yiddish. | Rev. William B. Ballard, who ★	★ " *	is now directing the Lifeline
Dr. Kirschner, who lives in program throughout the coun-Huntington Woods, was ac- try, believes these two areas companied to Brazil by his wife [definitely need separate direc-Esther and children, Susan and tors. He cited the rapid growth Daniel.	of the Youth for Christ program!
Rabbi Ernst J, Conrad will which helps troubled teens. j conduct worship services at 8:30	, *	*	*
before Dr. Kirschner speaks. • Area residents will have an

LIFELINE BACKERS - Rev. William B. Ballard (right), Lifeline director, outlines his program’s need for two additional staff people to Lt. Dave W. Putnam (left) of tile
Waterford Police Dept, and Gerald A. Fred-eriksen, a strong supporter of Lifeline’s work with troubled teens.
' The secret of happiness is not I In doing what one likes, but In lilting what one has ta do.— James M. Barrie, English' dramatist.	I
FIRST SOCIAL BRETHREN CHURCH
316 Baldwin—FI 4-7631
Sunday School— 10:00 A.M.
Sunday Worship-11 tOO A.M.
Evaning Worship—7:30 F.M.
Wednesday Prayer—7i00 P.M.
Bible Study—7:30 P.M.
Cam Pastor 1*1017

2 More Part-Time Directors
Lifeline Seeking Bigger Staff
opportunity to voice their support of such a plan at two meetings this week.
Monday night a meeting will be held at 7 at the CAI building, on Williams Lake Road in Waterford Township.
GUESTS SCHEDULED
Pontiac area residents will meet at 7:30 next Friday evening at the First Baptist Church, 34 Oakland, Pontiac. Judge
Why I Go to Church
(EDITOR’S NOTE — This is the 15th in a series of articles mitten by.Pontiac area citizens.)
By C. BRYAN KINNEY Pontiac Attorney
I am convinced that the Creator of the Universe intended all men, His' children, to be happy and healthy, free from tension and anxiety. The reverse of that situation exists'today. You see few happy faces on the people you meet every day.
I believe the reason for our plight is, the failure-to follow His judgments and His laws. I firmly believe that Christianity, if seriously tried, would cure today’s ills, that wars would cease, that crime would be abated, that there would be no more corruption in government and that racism would cease to exist.
I believe that Christian churches — Protestant and Catholic — are God’s agencies on this earth, that they are the link between God and man.
Why do I go to church? For the same reason that I vote, pay my taxes and try to obey the laws of the land. I go to church because I must support the principles in which I believe.
Norman Bernard, .Oakland County director of juvenile courts, is tentatively scheduled to discuss the program at this meeting.
Guests at the Waterford session will be Isaac Privette, county juvenile referee; G. A. Fredricson, an executive of! General Motors Corp. who as a! concerned citizen is interested! in promoting the Lifeline program; and Lt. Dave W. Putnam, juvenile director for the Waterford Police.
★	★ if
Rev. Ballard urges all residents interested in helping j troubled teens through the| Lifeline program to attend1 either of the meetings.
FIRST
SPIRITUALIST
CHURCH
576 Orchard Lake SERVICE 7:30 P.M.
Margret Slurett speaker For Information Call 334-3715 r’
Independent, Fundamental, Evangelistic
NORTHSIDE BAPTIST CHURCH
2024 Pontiac Road (Across from 4-H Fairgrounds)
Sunday School	10 A.M.
Church Services	11 A.M.
Sun, Eve. Evangelistic - Service 7 P.M.
Midweek Service Wed. 7 P.M.
A Going — Glowing — JSa Browins Church £&
1st GENERAL BAPTIST CHURCH
249 Baldwin Ave.
Sunday School...........9:43 A.M.
Morning Wonhip..........11 >00 A.M.
Evaning Sorvico.........6:00 P.M.
Wad. Biblo Study.........7:00 P.M.
Rov. T. W. Bland, Pa*tor - FE 4-7172 - 673-0209
C. BRYAN KINNEY
Senate Chaplain Is Presbyterian
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Rev. Edward L. R. Elson, p§stor of the National Presbyterian Church in Washington, is the 59 th Chaplain of the United States Senate.
He is the 10th Presbyterian and the fifth pastor of the National Presbyterian Church (dating from 1794) to be elected to the Senate chaplaincy.
5 Missionaries at Area Parley
Five Baptist missionaries will Nigeria under the Sudan participate in the 28th annual Interior Mission, missionary conference of (he • Miss Carolyn Renner who First Baptist Church of Romeo has worked in the Los Angeles which starts tomorrow.	Hebrew Mission and is now
|	it *	★	| working in file Hebrew and
Hie conference will nin!Christian Society to Cleveland
Ground Broken for New Church
Ground has been broken for the new Saint Anastasia Worship . Center to serve Catholic families living east of Rochester Road in Troy.
Site for the new 8,000-square-foot parish center is between Wattles and Long Lake Roads off John R in Troy.
★	*	*
The center will be used for worship,' educational programs and social affairs. The pastor is the Rev. William B. Davidson.
*	A	*
Architect	for	the $300,000
, facility is Richard Happley of Dearborn; J. S. Vig Construction Co. of Lincoln Park is the general contractor.
★	*	*
Ground-breaking ceremonies were held Oct. 4.
t
FIRST MISSIONARY CHURCH
149 North East Blvd. - FE 4-1811
_	. „	'	. FAMILY
Earle Bowen, Pastor	NIGHT'
ivory
Sunday School 10 A.M. — Wort hip 11 A Sunday Youth Fallowthip 6:00 P.M. Sunday Ivaning Worship 7:00 P.M.
Sermon Topic:
'LIFE CAN BE MEANINGFUL"
LAKECREST SOUTHERN BAPTIST CHURCH
35 Airport Rd,, Pontiac Sunday School 9:45 A.M. - Wonhip 11 A.M. Training Union 6:30 P.M. - Worship 7:30 P.M. Wed. Choir Practice 6:30 — Prayer 7:30	-
Phil Tindle, Jr., Pastor - 335*4897
| through Wednesday with most meetings to be held at the church, 7800' W. 32 Mile Road R|d., Romeo.
AUBURN HEIGHTS FREE METHODIST
255 S. SQUIRREL RD HIMRT SCHMIDT. PASTOR
a
SUNDAY SCHOOL
WEDNESDAY PRAYER
under Baptist Mid-Missions.
Campus Minister Gets New Post
Conference speakers will be:
e Rev. and Mrs. Roger Fox, CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (UPI) missionaries to Japan under the _ The Rev. Donald H. Lee. Far Eastern Gospel Crusade Lutheran campus minister at Mission for the last 18 years. [Massachusetts Institute of
•	Rev. King A. Butler, a I Technology has been appointed Negro pastor of the Bible Bap-1 to the faculty of Harvard tist Church of Kalamazoo. Rev. 'Divinity School to assist in the Butler has worked in the Inner supervision of student field I City Program of the American [work programs.
[Sunday School Union'and will, Lee, 41, will continue to ; speak on the church’s represent the National Lutheran ’ responsibility to the inner city. jCampus Ministry at MIT and to! *	*	*	j serve as associate pastor at the
•	Miss Dora Hunt, a'University Lutheran Church in’
{missionary for 39 years in [Cambridge.	j
Priests Needed
MANILA (UPI) - The Philippines, the only Roman Catholic country in Asia, needs more priests. Official figures show there are only about 5,557 priests — half Of t.hem foreigners — in the Philippines, or about one priest for every 5,000 Catholics in the country .
COLUMBIA AVENUE BAPTIST CHURCH 64 W. Columbia Ave.
(A Soul hum Baptist Church)
"Wh.ra th# difiaranca it worth tho distance* 9:45 A.M. Sunday School — 6:30 P.M. Training Union 11 A.M. Wenhlp — 7i30 P.M. Wonhip S.rvlca Wadnasday Night Sarvlcu 7:30 PAS.
Spiritualist Church of Good Samaritarf
4780 Hilicrost Drive, Waterford 623-1074
"A (rntrr of Spirituality nnti Soriahility"
WORSHIP 7 P.M. :
GUEST SPEAKER FROM MILFORD Thura., Oct. 23 — Silver Tea
FALL REVIVAL
From Muncig, Ind. Hoor this evangelist once — you will coni# again. Spatial Singing Each-Night.
7:30 P.M.
MT, OLIVE FREEWILL BAPTIST CHURCH • 3050 GRANT
OAKLAND CHRISTIAN SCHOOL
165 E. Square Lake Road
(Old Hickory Grave School)
3 Milos South of Pgntiac
GRADES 7 THRU 12
if State-Approved
pT Certified Teacher. if Interdenominational
' it Car Pool.
Call 334-2322 for Mere Information
Welcome To Our Fall
REVIVAL
Oct. 6 to 19 .
EACH EVENING 7:00 P.M
Our fvangelfot comes from Bloomfield, Mo., where
.will be glad to hear him
Sunday School	9:45 A.M
Rev Trotter Morning Warship 11:00 A.M
SPECIAL MUSIC EACH EVENING
Dr. Donald Hanley will have charge of choirs
FRIENDLY GENERAL BAPTIST CHURCH
Ul 2-1135	3414 Auburn Rd. .531335
Auburn Height. (West to tho giro station)
This it your invitation tos
NEW LIFE CRUSADE
Ot
First Baptist Church 4ft Walnut Rochester, Michigan
Oct. If*21... 7:18 Nightly T P.M. Sunday
Muaio By
Rev. FRANK WORKMAN
M. DONALD CURREY,
Bring Your FamHyl Nursciy Provided
THE LUTHERAN CHURCH
INVITES YOU
THE LUTHERAN CHURCH MISSOURI SYNOD
CROSS OT CHRIST
Suede, School *100 and Jti06A.il
THE LUTHERAN CHURCH IN AMERICA
' CHRIST ■
Airport at Wim. tali. Rd.. Wot.rt.rd
2600 n
Than. J
MACS
5S25 Highland Rd. (M-50). Pm Phan.: 673*643*
. Sunday Church Scho.10 A.M. Sunday Wonhip 10,30 A.M.
Sunday WanMp *00 and 1
RntyfC
mb
41S0 Pontiac Uha Rd. PanttM
. Phene 08 4.1312 Werrtilp (iSO and H AM.
Church Schoal tr4S A.M.
THE AMERICAN LUTHERAN CHURCH
•lAl/riFVi SAVIOR
'raftsar*—-h
Sundoy Worahlal.13 ond 11:00 Sunday Church School 9t30
Phan# 335*9111 . Sunday	10,30 A.M.
Sunday Schoal 9:IS A.M.
Ronald I. Roift, Paatar
SYLVAN LAKI PhmiM&no
Sunday WoraMp 140 and 10*45 A.M.
a^^j^ALjeJaA-ta^a
f t m t" iVtSfflpfW.^Bittr
-th. lUTHOAH Hour led, le
V'
THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18, Iftflfl
C—7
MANDON LAKE COMMUNITY CHURCH
Bt lincerc. Be almple In words, manners, and gestures. Amuse aa well as Instruct. It you can make a man laugh, you can make him think and make him like and belleva you.—Alfred E. Smith, former governor of New York.
Revival Campaigns in Area
Ootober 22-31, 7:30 Nightly
FIRST
CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Disciples of Christ 858 W. Huron Street
9:45 A.M. CHURCH SCHOOL 11:OOA.M. MORNING SERVICE
Rev. Lawrence C. Bobbin PHONE: Office 332-1474
Bloomfield Hills Baptist
Special “services of living faith" are being held at the Bloomfield Hills Baptist Church, 3600 Telegraph.
Tonight's service will begin at 7:30 with services at 8 a.m., 11 a.m. and 6 p.m. tomorrow.
DALLAS, Tex. (UPI) Military chaplains stationed In; the central United States plan a
nlng’s service will be at 7. The 1520 W, Walton.	pastorates In tys native state jconvoc#t}on here Oct. 20-22. The I
meetings are open to the public,! The Rev. Charles H, Llpkeriof ,Ohio for 18 years before three-day affair Is sponsored by
1' CiMrllnar Aklia •■■111 mAdmIiimI MaImw ImIa Hia IIaM aI Altnn/TA	T\I«i1aIah nf OahiiIaa 4a
Chap/ain Parley
BIRMINGHAM
UNITARIAN
Woodward at Lena Pino Bloomfield Hill* - 647-3300 Robert Marshall and Stanley Stofaneic, Minister* "Experiment Number Two:
'HANDS OF MAN' "
9:30 and rl tl 5 A.M. Worship Services and Church School (Nursery thru 12th Grade)
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
A Downtown Church Huron at Wayne, Pontiac
WORSHIP A CHURCH SCHOOL 10 A.M.
Infant Nursery Ample Parking Near Church L Pastor—Rev. Galen E. Nershey Asst. Pastor-Rev. G. F. Pope
ffeftb Baptist Gburcb
3411 Airport Road
"DOPE - FRIEND OR FOE?"
Youth Rally Thomo
Oct. IB	7:00P.M.
A Stirring Questions and Film	Answers
A Relevant Meesoge YOU ARE INVITED
SUNDAY SCHOOL.................10:00 A.M.
11:00 A.M.
,7:00 P.M.
People of All Races and Culture Are Welcome Hare I "This Is Nona Other Than the Housa oF God" Sunday Worship 8 A.M. and 10 A,M.
ST. STEPHEN’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH
5500 N. Adams at Wastviaw, Troy
First Church of Christ, Scientist
Christian Science: Do you know what it is?
lundey Wed. E:
Service ..It iOO A.M. School.	11:00 A.M.
m. Meeting «:00 P.M
Doctrine of Atonement
NORTH PERRY BAPTIST CHURCH 1180 N. Parry St. —^Pontiac EVANGELIST FRAN^GONZALES Every Night 7:00 P.M. thru Oct. 21 Sunday School 10 A.M. Worship 11 A.M.
- Yeung Peoples 6 P.M. Evening Worship 7 P.M.
MANMONT BAPTIST CHURCH
68 W. Walton Blvd.
Holding Forth the Word of Life
Sunday School .........9:45	A.M.
Morning Worship ......11:00 A.M.
Evening Service........7:00	P.M.
Wednesday Evening....7:00 P.M.,
REV- ROBERT F. RICHARDSON, Pastor
Emmanuel
CkfiTtdt
'Baptkt
645 S. Telegraph (Near Orchard Lake Rd.)
DR. TOM MALONE, Pastor
A Fundamental. Independent. Blble-Believlng Baptist Church
BIBLE SCHOOL 10 AM.
Departmentalized Sunday School for All Ages with NO Literature But the Bible
Dr. TOM MALONE
at All Services
teach the Word of God, verse by verse, in the latgo Auditorium Bible Class, broadcast on WPON 10:15 to 10:45 A.M.
MORNING WORSHIP 11 A.M. EVANGELISTIC SERVICE 7 P.M. PRAYER MEETING Wad. 7:30 P.M. BUS SERVICE CALL FE 2-8328 Nursery — All Services
MUSIC TO BLESS THE HEART
Gospel Favoritaf and Requested Songs
CHOIR UNDER THE DIRECTION OF JOYCE MALONE
Last Week's Attendance 1606
Guest speaker for the three-day revival which began, yesterday is the Rev. Fred I Renich, general director of Missionary Internship Inc., of Detroit, anlntor-mlsslon organization engaged In counseling, evaluating and screening candidates who are provisionally accepted by various mission boards.
Nationally known song evangelist Howard Correll also will participate in the services. Correll, a recording artist, live In Moorhead, Minn., and is a member of the Methodist Church. He is executive director of Arrowhead Music Camp, Barnum, Minn.
acGordina to the Rev Orald of Findlay, Ohio, will conduct going into the field of evange- the Division of Service to Mitchellpastor of Ortonvlllefr	w“cJLW«bewheld llim-	Mintary Personnel In the
teSWrtT	Social Brethren
Pontiac Hlllcroit ^ ujtar *, no£d evange-L . R'Yi,	•*<»«•
Revival services start Tues- list in the Church of the Naza-j dal®> !**•> wuj day night at the Pontiac HilL rene, has been In the active [conduct revival crest Church of the Nazarene,'ministry since 1930, He served *fr.v , ,
Salvation Army
A series of revival meetings will be held at the Salvation Army, 20 W. Lawrence, Oct. 21* 26 at 7 p.m., according to Brigadier Clarence E. Crltzer, commanding officer.
Conducting the nightly meetings will be Brigadier and Mrs. H. Bernard Lodge, ter-
First Social Brethren Church, 316 Baldwin, starting tomorrow.
van gelistlc services will be held nightly at 7:30 through Oct. 26, according Harry Carr.
MISSION BOUND - Rev. and Mrs. Terry R. leave Tuesday for their first term of missionary the island of Grenada, West Indies. They are serving under the Berean Mission Board of St. Louis, Mo. Rev. Martin is the son of Rev. and Mrs. V. L. Martin of Sunnyvale Chapel, Waterford Township. Terry and Dana are both graduates of Bob Jones University, Greenville, S.C. Thdy spent the summer of 1968 as missionaries in Trinidaa and Terry spent the previous summer helping to build a church in St. George’s Grenada. The Martins have one son, Ymonth-old Daniel John. The couple will be showing slides of Grenada at Sunnyvale’s evening service tomorrow at 7.
GOOD SHEPHERD ASSEMBLY OF GOD
Now on Sathabow Batwaan May baa and 1-75
Sunday School.....10 A.M.
Morning Worship---11 A.M.
CA Youth Service Sun. 6 P.M. Evening Service....7 P.M.
Mid-Weak Serv.
Wad............7:30 P.M.
JOHN DEARING Phono: 335-5313
North Perry Baptist
Evangelist Frank Gonzales will conclude his revival cam-: paign at North Perry Baptist Church, 1180 N. Perry, .tomorrow night.
Revival services have beerij held nightly since Monday. Tonight and tomorrow night, services will begin at 7. Special services also will be held tomorrow morning at 10 and 11.1
Youth Rally Tonight in Waterford Twp.
Church News Briefs
“Dope, Friend or Foe?” is the theme of a youth rally tonight! at Faith Baptist Church, 3411: Airport, Waterford Township. |
The program will consist of a film supplied by the.Pontiac Police Department, a question-j and-answer period with I
. i*i . „ i „	, members of the police depart-
Spann of Mount Calvary Baptist ment answerlng q^tions r£atJ
LODGE
MRS. LODGE
Bible Way Baptist
„	„ „	'	J41_ wiurcnasguesispesKer.	ing to the narcotics problem.
Rev.-E. R. Williams and the	There will be a narcotics dis-
■ ell" r St.	Methodist P'"J «>
midwestern states. Former TObemacie Bapust c n u ten ,	-----------------
professional musicians, t h e J**™**. wU	a 0flbif J; b“ and turkey dtln"«r
wni a|80 provide1 WaY Baptist Church, 188 E. will be held at St. James United musical selections using a Blvd., tomorrow.	Methodist Church, 427 W. Ken-
ritorial evangelists for the 11 •
CALVARY Assembly of God
5860 Andartonvill# Rd.
9:45 A.M. SUNDAY SCHOOL
Special Guests DAN & NANCY RECTOR All Youth Round-Up Oct. 19th-24th' Join Our Round-Up
11:00 A.M. Morning Worship Pastor Ministering Chair Melodias
6:30 P.M. EVANGELISTIC SERVICE
Sunday Evening Service Begins at 6:30 during winter months EVERYONE WELCOME
PASTORS
ARNOLD Q. HASHMAN WILLIAM BARNARD
United
Presbyterian
Churches
AUBURN HEIGHTS
3456 Primary Street
Sunday School .... 9:30 Morning Worship.. 11 A.M.
DRAYTON
Cor. Sashabaw at Monroo St.
W. J. Tetuwisson, Pastor Biblo School . . . 9:45 A.M. Morning Worship 11:00 A.M. Youth Groups .,. 6:30 P.M, Wodnotday Prayorand Study Hour.. . 7:00 P.M.
OAKLAND AVENUE
404 Oakland at Cadillac Theodore R. Allebach, Pastor Audrey Llnkeman, D.C.I. Rlrhord Pickering, Youth Director Werihlp 1:30 and 11 AM. Sunday School . . . 9:45 A.M. Youth Fellowship. • . 5:45 P.M.
Werihlp.......7:00 PM.
Wed. Prayer...7:00 P.M.
LAKELAND
7325 Macodqy Lake Rd., srford
Watoi Roy F. Lambert, Pastor Sunday School.... 9:30 A.M. Morning Worship.. 10:45 A.M.
CHURCH OF ATONEMENT
3535 Clintonvillo Rd. Waterford Twp. Church School 9:30 and 10:45 Werihlp Service 10:45 A.M.
Crea M. Clark Patter
JOSLYN AVENUE UNITED
1106Joslyn Sunday School 9:30 AM. Morning Worship 10:45 AM. Thursday Bible Study 7l30 PM.
SASHABAW
CLARKSTON
Maybee, 1-ML E. of Sashabaw WORSHIP ...........11:00
CHURCH SCHOOL*..9:30
YOUTH...........7:00
MarkH.
Music and messages that can change your Hfe" is the theme of a seven-day revival campaign starting Monday at OrtonviUe Baptist Church, 173 Church St., OrtonviUe.
Conducting the revival services will be Evangelist Robert L. Sumner of Indianapotis, director of Bib-iical Evangelism, an independent Baptist
sociation, and editor of the Biblical Evan-
SUMNER
Guest speaker for the day wUl be Rev. Stewart Cuthbertson of the Sudan Interior Mission. The CUthbertsona have been missionaries in Nigeria for 13 years.
gelist, an evangelistic monthly.; Having worked primarily in1,^ effe^nKmfaaicVl The revival services which education, the couple’s most' transitions
start at 7:30 each evening will!recent ministry has been in the :._I_
run through Oct. 26. Sunday eve-!Kagoro Bible College in the! j =	; '	North Central State of northern
Nigeria.
Leads in Schools Rev. Cuthbertson wUT speak ion “The* Great Commission
variety of instruments.
The Lodges also wiU conduct special services at area nursing homes during their week fiere.
The Youth Department at nett, Oct. 25.
Bible Way is in charge of the | xhe bazaar opens at 11 a.m. exchange program which begins pinner wUl be served from 5 to at 3:30 p.m. Rev. Charles War-|gpm ren is host pastor.	J ’____________________
Child Evangelism Week Is Oct. 19-26
OrtonviUe Baptist
Calvary Baptist
Radio Personality Due in Davisburg
‘Mr. CharUe"
Christmas comes early at Calvary Baptist Church.
Tomorrow wUl be Missionary Christmas Day at the church at 3750 Pontiac Lake Road,I
Waterford Township. Individual | assistant director of the radio Sunday School classes wUl give' ministry of the ChUdren’s Bible gifts to each missionary fantily. Hour of Grand Rapids, will be A Christmas tree and gifts will featured tomorrow morning at be on display throughout the First Baptist Church, 12881 day.	. j AndersonvUle, Davisburg.
At the 9:45 a.m. service “Mr. Charlie’’ will give a fully dramatized story, in which he portrays various characters through the use of rapid voice changes. Augmenting the live characterizations will be taped
The Oakland County branch of Child Evangelism Fellowship (CEF) is observing national child evangelism week, Oct. 19-26. The County Fellowship Supper was held last night with Wallace Grant, CEF central region director, as keynote
Vander Meer, speaker
Tomorrow, members of the local committee with the cooperation of local pastors, will be' presenting CEF programs in several churches of this area. CEF of Oakland County will provide informative bulletins in these churches.
HILLCREST BAPTIST CHURCH
1240 Dorit Road. Pontiac
SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:45 AM. WORSHIP 11 AM. TRAINING UNION 6 PM. WORSHIP 7 P.M.
Carroll Hubbs, Mlnlitar of Mu lie
During the past year, CEF of Oakland County has enrolled 6,035 children in home Bible classes, called good news clubs, 5-day clubs, open-air classes, camps and chapel-on-wheels ministry.
SPRINGFIELD, Mo. (UPI) -The Assemblies of God leads all other denominations with 85 foreign ministerial training schools.
UNIVERSITY DRIVE
CHURCH OF CHRIST
1500 University I PONTIAC
WORSHIP
10:30 and 6:00 P.M.
BIBLE CLASSES 9:30 AM. SUNDAY Mid-Waok Biblo Clan Wad., 7:30 P.M.
BOYD GLOVER
EVANGELIST
335-9231
Staffed Nurtorloi
Illustrated’’ at the . 11 a-m. service and at the 7 p.m. he will speak and show slides on “Bask Missionary Ministries," drawing on his own experiences jin Nigeria. He also will address the teens at their 5:30 p.m. meeting.
W.st. if an dtttrck
All Saints Episcopal Church
Williams St. at W. Pike St.
The Rev. C. George Widdifield, Rector The Rev. Edwin K. Silk, Jr. — Assistant SUNDAY. OCTOBER 19, 1969 8:00 AM. The Liturgy of the Lord'* Supper 9:45 A.M. Meming Prayer,
by the Rector Church School 11:0U A.M. Meming Pn Sermon by the Rector Nursery and Kindergarten only THURSDAY, OCTOBER 23 10:00 A.M. The Liturgy of the Lord's Supper
W0% r THE \ WESLEYAN * , CHURCH £
I I
•IT
BALDWIN at FAIRMONT Pontiac, Michigan
Sunday School...........9:45	AM.
Worship................11:00	A.M.
Wesleyan Youth...........6:00	P.M.
Evening Family Goipel Hour.. .7:00 PM. Wednesday Prayer and Praha. 7.-00 PM. REV. WILLIAM LYONS, Porter
CENTRAL UNITED METHODIST
3882 Highland Rd.	REV. CARL PRICE
SUNDAY MORNING WORSHIP 9 and 10:45
"THE INADEQUACIES OF ATHEISM"
Rav. Carl Prica
J
Memorial Baptist
Rev. Bob Hart, missionary to Ecuador, will speak at 11 a.m. land 7 p.m. services tomorrow jat Memorial Baptist Church, 599 [Michigan, Pontiac. A social, honoring Rev. and Mrs. Hart, Will be held following the evening service.
Friendship Baptist
FIRST UNITED METHODIST
Silvercrest Baptist Church
2562 Dixia Highway, Pontiac
SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:00 A.M.
SERVICES
11 A.M. and 7 P.M.
Rev. Leland Lloyd, speaking
Paitor John Hunter
I Matrons of the Friendship! Baptist Church will present a special program tomorrow at! 3:30 p.m., with the Rev. Fred!

HILLCREST CHURCH OF THE MZMEWE
520 W. Walton Blvd.
NIGHTLY 7:30 P.M.
OCT- 21 thru 26th
iVAIMILIST CHARLES LIPKER •f Findlay, Chit Rav. Willis Seott, pastor
Wo extend to you a cardial invitation
FIRST NAZARENE
60 STATE ST.
‘Where Alt the Family W'orthipt Together”
“KEY TO LIFE” 9:45 A.M. SUNDAY S0H00L
Claim for all ago*
11:00 A.M.
Morning worship
Rev. U. B. Qedman, speaking
7:00 P.M. EVENING HOUR
Great Musical Feast by Church Choir, Menage •i* and-Touch the Heart
9:45 A.M.	11:00 A.M.
Church School	Morning Werihlp
HARVEST HOME WORSHIP SERVICE
ST. PAUL UNITED METHODIST
t«51. Square Lake Rd., aleemfield Hill,-FI S-275a
CHURCH SCHOOL 9i30 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP 9:30 end 10:45 A.M.
Ample Periling—Samuel C. Seltert, Min.—Supervised Nursery
' ELMWOOD UNITED'''f' ALDERSGm ft UNITED METHODIST	METHODIST
26S0 Creek. Road	1336 Baldwin FE 3-7797
WeJwTlV?m*'m* I Donald Seres, paster Evening Wonhip 7 p.i Prayer Wed. 7 p.m.
Donald Bans, path
CLARKSTON METHODIST
6600 Waldon Road, Clarkston CHURCH SCHOOL 9:45 A M. WORSHIP 10 A.M.
Frank A. Coiodd, Minister Adelle Thamai, Director of Music
:* Worship 9:30 A.M. isChurch School 10:45 A.M.I
: TRINITY UNITED METHODIST
Waforford \'	\	6440 Macaday Dr.
WORSHIP 8:15 and 16:30 A M. CHURCH SCHOOL 9:15 A-M-
Donald O. Crum'm, Minister v
METHODIST
COMING: REVIVAL, OCT. 29 - Dr. H. C. Powars
Nurtery AJwayt Open
KEEGO HARBOR TRINITY
United Methodist Church 2091 Cass Lake Read Robert C. Lophew, Min. Church School	Warship ‘ Youth Fellow
9:30	10:45	6 p.m.
Wed.

' ■
C—8
ONE COLOR
THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1969
OCTOBER SPECIAL
NORTHLAND SKIS POLES AND STEP-IN BINDINGS >97
WE RESTORE LIFE MD COLOR
HARVEY FURNITURE
Call FE 2-7132
New Way Professional cleaning method* — will restore the original luster and color to your rugs. The deep' cleaning will also remove the grit and dirt that cuts nap — adds life to your rugs, have them cleaned by New Way.

OPEN SUNDAY 12 - 5 P.M.
Complete
BUNK BEDS $f|Q9S	MATTRESS or $4Q9S
I 99	MX SPRING fcw
3 COMPLETE ROOMS W
$2997
DONN’S SKI HAUS
4260 W. Walton Dravton Plains
OR 4-3035
Now at The Pontiac Mall
'Pm{mmol "Pkotogwipke/tA sSIwhji>-
thru October 25th
Featuring
•	Exhibits by Pontiac Professional Photographers, Dick Frye, Clyde Hasitlll, Dimitri LoZaroff, and Jerry Wooliever
•	1969 Scholastic Photograp|y Awards, photographs from Eastman Kodak Co.
•	A display of color portraiture by J. D. Hicks, Master of Photography from Hint, Michigan Photographer of tha year In 1969
•	Invitational exhibits by Area Camera Clubs
•	Special OneMan Exhibits by Mr. Larry Timms and Dr. Burton Thorn of Waterford Township School System
The Pontiac Mall
shopping Center
Telegraph Road at Elizabeth Lake Open dally 9,30 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. • Some stores open Sun.,
HEW WAY
RUG and CARPET CLEANING CO.
41st Year in Pontiac	Call 2-7132
42 Wiener Street, Pontiac
Has solid maple Boston rockers for just $2495.
^ Isn’t that nice?
i£>
OPEN SUNDAYS 1-5 4405 Highland Rd. (M59) Corner Porittac Lake Rd.
GLOBE
FURNITURE
PH 134-4834
Uressar, Framed Mirror, Chast, lei, Matfrass, and lax Sprint, Sofa and Chair, 2 Slap Tablet, Collet Table, 2 Lamp*, 5-pc. Dinette St Month* tn l‘ny
2135 Dixie Hwy. at Telegraph Rd.
MONDAY SPECIAL!
DOWNTOWN P0NTIA0 STORE OHlYt
SUNDAY ONLY
-T-ptf'
MIXED Efl(
PORK 59*
CHOPS -
LEAN TENDER JUICY
CUBE STEAK
Lb.
OPEN MONDAY EVENINGS HU 5:30 P.M.
BAZLEY MARKET
78 North Saginaw DP0NTIACN
SUNDAY ONLY - At 2 Siorea Listed Btlow Only!
BAZLEY- FAIRWAY
FOOD MARKETS
4348 Dixie Highway-Drayton Plains
OPEN SUNDAY $ A.M. to 6 P.M.
1220 North Perry at Madison
OPEN SUNDAY 10 A.M. to 6 P.M.
Aulhoiii.d S.D.D. Distributor • WINE • LIQUOR • HER
The SENTRY Cadet
MODEL $1
This fin* lew cost sofa is built from the rams campmnt parts as Santrv's largsr models. It carriss U.L Class *C" ana hour 1700 F Fira label, Indicating It has also passad a 9000 P sxploiien haiord last and 30 drop tests. Ham far a price so law you'd expoct t» pay os much far a document box alana. You got th* storage capacity, tha qualityconstruction, the madrnn design, tha flra and theft resistant features which can ba vours only with a real safe. Color silver and gray, builtin three number combination, lock. Vermleullte Insulation, two position removable shelf insldp. □ Dimensions outside 95* high 17W wide 14Vi“ deep. Inside 15" high 19* wide 9%* deep 1710 cu. In. approx, shipping weight 175
1 General Printing & Office Supply 17 WESpMaWcREMCE Phone 335-9261
Reach Out and Care! Through your Pontiac Area United Fund
THRIFTY SHOPPERS WILL SHARE IN THE SAVINGS OFFERED ON THIS PAGE... A REAL
TMligt to Do and Sea This Week e. < Youth Rally - Faith Baptist Church 3411 Airport Road Rally Theme:
"DOPE-FRIEND or FOE?”
7:00 P.M. Saturday
Smshwim-Wiuiams
SUPER
KEM-TBNE
t PHAN’S VARIETY STORE
14TS Baldwin Ave. at Walton FE 4-3348
- Open Dolly 9 A.M. to 9 P.M., Sunday 10 A.M. to 6 P.M.
SLICED	BEEF	
4-lb. limit \ plaasa	LIVER	29° i
HOFFMAN'S
OAKLAND PACKING HOUSE MARKET
Retail Bivition
B28 North Pony Street	FE 2-il90
* 'AVA f
i
\\ ,	. • "\ IX' j v, .4:'
THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY
OCTOBER 18,
I
D—1
Senate Unit Acts to Curb Medical-Aid Abuse
DAVID COUTURE
Teen of Week Is A-Average PNH Senior
David Couture, a Pontiac Northern High School senior, has been selected as this week’s Teen of the Week.
The son of Mr. and Mrs. John Couture of, 1116 Cloverlawn Bloomfield Township, David maintains an A average.
He is treasurer of the French Club, and has been selected to go to Chicago for the National Youth Conference on the Atom at the end of this month. His selection was based on out-standing achievements in mathematics and science After graduation from Northern, David plans to attend college to become a teacher.
David said of today’s world problems: “I believe the only solution to today’s troubled world is to completely yield to God and His will.”
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate Finance Committee has decided the tax-reform bill may provide a cure for a bllllon-dol-iar-a-year abuse of tne government health Insurance programs.
A surprise provision Inserted in the bill by the committee would require carriers of Medicaid and Medicare to report to the federal government all payments to an individual doctor, nursing home, hospital and drugstore exceeding 6800 a year.
* * #
Reports would be under the Social Security or tax number of the doctor or owner.
Senate hearings earlier this year showed abuses in Medicare, health insurance for the aged, and in Medicaid, the companion program for the needy. Finance Chairman Russell B. Long, D-La., said Friday the
A Late Meeting
LOS ANGELES (AP) - When two gunmen robbed a teller of $900 at the Santa Barbara Savings and Loan Association Friday, the manager, John Gians, wasn’t there. He had gone to i meeting on how to prevent holdups.
abuses could run to a billion dollars annually.
Long'sald there is no way to flgtife the additional revenue which would be produced by the new provision but it would be a 'great deal of money.”
He said it would produce a savings to taxpayers through lower charges by doctors and hursing facilities. Currently,
3 Police Pranksters Given Extra Duty
WARREN, R.I. (AP) - Three Warren policemen are under orders to perform extra duty for three days, Without pay, as i punishment for a prank their superiors didn’t think was funny.
★	*	*
A straw dummy was placed In the police chief’s chair Wednesday night, and someone put a wine bottle on the table and a glass in the dummy’s hand.
★	*	*
Police Chief Henry E. Pratte brought charges of conduct unbecoming a police officer and breach of discipline. The town council imposed the penalties after a hearing.
most of these fees are not open to routine federal scrutiny.
Another key revision! by the Senbte panel simplified and changed the emphasis of provisions in the House version of the tax-reform plan dealing with farm owhfera who use losses on the farm to offset or lower taxes on other income.
Opponents of the House plan
maintained it would put a bookkeeping burden on bona f|de farmers. Aides said the Senate version would not ask a taxpayer to keep records that go against him ahd would presume that a farmer making a profit in two out of five years was not in farming as a tax dodge.
* * *
Long said the Senate panel is
FENCE
WHOLESALE-RETAIL Factory Distributors
363-6639
UNIVERSAL FENCE
trying to meet an Oct. 3L dead-, technical language may delay line for reporting the .measure the finished version for some to the floor,, but staff work on'weeks.
SURVEY
?
or
SALES
PITCH
Public opinion surveys are important. Thoy load to bottor products, bottor distribution and a bottor understanding of tho public viewpoint.
However, for every legitimate survey interviewer, you may be approached by as many as 5 to 10 sales people^with an innocent sounding pitch that begins with "I'm making a survey Would you mind answering a few simple questions?"
How can you tell the difference between a real survey and a trick sales pitch? There is one sure way. Real interviewers do not ask you to buy anything... do not ask you for money and do not ask you to sign anything.
BUSINESS ETHICS BOARD PONTIAC AREA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
me
108 N. Saginaw—FE 3-7114 Open Monday 9:30 a.m. to 9 p.m.

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SPECIAL WHILE QUANTITIES LAST

TUN PONTIAC PHKSS.
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1060
CAMPUS CUTTER
By Larry Lewli
Bridge Tricks From Jacobys
By OSWALD & JAMESIspeed up your own play. Today’s hand Is a good ex-1 but South would have been off JACOBY	materially if you will learn to	ample. South	played the jack of and	running. He	would have
The slow player Is a menace I stop and think when ft is jin-	spades from	dummy without a gone	right after	the diamond
to everyone at the table.	Not'portant to do so and the most	moment’s hesitation. It held the [suit,
that he wins from them,	but Important time for declare? to	trick and, all	of a sudden, South He	had done that anyway but
rather that he spoils the game, think is before playing to the, realised he had problems. ; there was a great difference
Strangely enough, you can first trick.
| what happened. With the ace of Ten minutes later, he had ^es played at trick one and
Flying, KlMtlfl pursuits art favored. The unuiui Become* commonplace. Investigate are* of doubt. Clash of Idea* prove* far mor exciting than claih of physical weapons.
ARIES (March 11-Aprfl It): In an. Tender-1 fertalnlng, highlight truth and auair Don't overspend. Avoid any display ■Mdag|||adMecfl*tlve to Ideas,
solved all his problems unsuccessfully and East and West had entered a plus score of 200, representing the penalty for down-two vulnerable.
If South had just bothered to think for a few seconds before putting his hand on the jack of spades, he would have played seven-spot. East’s nine
| IP SUNDAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you are finishing one phase of activity—end will begin a new, exciting and challenging
period. Stress your originality end natural,	_	,,
1	the seven-spot. East’s VMJMI
ley* tin would have forced South’s ace himself if he had thought before •ntermp.Fisce*.	completing the first play. In
the queen and jack left in dummy, there was no way for East and West to keep South from getting into dummy to win three more diamond tricks and he would have wound up with game, rubber and, probably, an overtrick.
South also could have saved
MENU TIP: Sauteed Veal Kldne la bill with ft
ender-lovlng ei , I ..........S_____
gradient tonight. Key Is to be gentle with friends, guests and loved ones.
SSSa
Subtle approach today proves a l humor, person wno needs one. Cooperation with groups, I today.probably deserves It. organliatlons-especlally those ds ting a grouch wont help matters. char tv.
GEMINI (May 11-June 20): Light touch i taURI accomplishes tna or goal. --	—
istlons. Study ARIES

iSKT tn" fraternal organisation.’ Look behind the scenee.
CANCER (June 21-July 12): Mixing money and friendship .could .prove costly. Stick to tod*. Be fair, but firm. Show gratitude tor past favor*. But avoid being maudlin. The truth Is your, strongest
"TfcT'lJuly 23-Aug. 11): Best to within rules, toguletlonr — for quick change. Wise
m
US (April 20*May 20): Unusual H you socialize* probably make
questions

rceptlve and display
gjrp
GEMINI (May 11-June 20): Accent on t assignment done the concentration combined You must check and check. Superiors will be properly led.	|
™l CANCER (June 21-July 22): Good lunar ~ aspect today coincides with chance to1 j! expend views, to bring your talents to " attention of Important persons. Your own'
HEJSTjHBjft S Ph^B?JulJ^A'S«,*%,?'«.y be -	» SB “eiis to°hav*° t«fskeat'hS
obtain genuine bargain In luxury Item. Strive for comfort minus needless ex-avaganco.
lov to, yi.ROOJAug. 23^Sept. aa).: Day to Play Act accordlr
to relatives.
And don't be busy, others eNo have M#ln Ideas about vitamins and health.	” -
LIBRA (S«p». 23-Oct. 22):: Money expended for pleasure of youngster nt. You will not regret brngil
welting game.
...■	____I__ learn. Your,
opinion* are sublect to revision. Make Intelligent concessions. aid of expert legal advl LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct for digging In v '
Mvgg..............■
associates and neighbors. Be fecti ‘’scolffto (Oct. 23-Nov. >21):
spent.
live pf
Yoy. are ms ■	..
B<SCORRllOB(Od. 23-Nov. 21): Pan Is a* to b* stow, Accent Is on attending to neglected duties. The tun and games should watt tor another, day. You may hava to mix business with Sunday retax-
"'sAGITARIUS (Nov. tl-Dec. lit: Avoid
fa ssn
.WXn.^wniS
"'cA^RICOwS*' (Dec. B-Jan. »jt You can coma up with Idea which ultimately ■•suits In gain. Key Is to have confidence. Stress originality end Independence. Shake on tendency toward self-doubt.	„
AQUARIUS (Jan. 10-Feb. IS): You can successfully put together puzzle pieces.
What was missing reappears. Key Is to b* perceptive and receptive. Cycle 1s high. You look like e winner.
PISCES (Feb ll-Morch 10):	News Br0ach IsbosIMve'aid.
'th.r’i.h?,1'miohr AQUARIUS (Jen. 20-Feb. 18): Financial I- ilifii™	gain indicated. You can add to
'your	i£is^a,kzi,&
NORTH	IS
AQJ7
Wo 5 2
♦	KQ1074 *97
WEST	EAST
* K10 8 3 2	*94
V K107	VQ43
#63	♦ A8S2
*1064	* J853
SOUTH (D)
♦	A65 WAJ98
♦	J9
A AKQ2 Both vulnerable West North East South
that case, he could have overtaken dummy’s jack of spades with his ace and brought home the contract in spite of the first mistake.
VACRRD Sensed
Q—The bidding has been: West North Eaat South 1*
Pass 1# IV 7 You, South, hold:
*K878 VA2 #KQ4 *J85S What do you do now?
A—Pass. We wouldn’t quarrel with a spade bid but do have a slight preference for the pass. TODAY’S QUESTION You do pass as doea West Your partner bids two diamonds. What do you do nowT Answer Monday
THE BORN LOSER
By Art Sanaom
Parents Are told Birth No Reason for a Lawsuit
MILWAUKEE (AP) - A $250,000 damage suit filed by a woman who said a drug store erroneously gave her cold tablets instead of birth control pills was dismissed Friday by judge who declared the result to be “a joyous event.”
★	*	*
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Szczerbiak, parents of a baby girl, charged in their Circuit Court suit that the druggist gave them the wrong pills under a birth control prescription, and that they had not wanted more children.
★	to	*
Judge Ronald A. Drechsler dismissed the suit, saying: ‘‘The natural birth of a healthy child, with no injury to the mother, is universally considered as a joyous event.’’:	...
Drechsler said he cquld find no precedent for his ruling, and added that preliminary testimony indicated “The child certainly is not unloved.”
Police Nearly Meet Match
KALISPELL, Mont. (AP) James Petersen told police his pickup truck was stolen from a city parking lot.
to	to	to
Police stopped a truck of the same make, the same year and model and the same color. The truck even carried an unpainted wooden stock rack Petersen ■aid he had just installed, to	to	to
The coincidence fell four numbers short of a match. Petersen’s license number is 7-T-8535. The other truck’s license is 7-T-8531.
loser of Bet Isn't as Sore as Winner
KANSAS CITY, Kan, (AP) — He collected a $12 World Series bet, Gerald Franklin Long, 40, told police Friday, and then his troubles began.
to,.to., to.
Long said the loser, whom he did not know by name, beat him up and took back the f 12.
to * to,
Long said this incident took
B* tin a private club, and the pf the bet drove away., Loag waa treated at Bethany; HMfttal for minor injuries. I
By V. T. Hamlin
YBAHf t DUNNO WHETHER I CAN BEAR TWATCH THtSORNOI/
CAPTAIN EASY
By Leslie Tamer
, WELL, THAT POES IT’. SHE* NOT LBWIMG gg 10 TRY EXPLAINING TH* MASQUERADE
AioNEi nawBONiy one-------
BEK & MEEK
By Howie Schneider
By Ernie
M
f
For Want Adi Dial 334-4981
T1IK PONTIAC PHKSS. SA
*M\r. OCTOBER 18, 1069
4 SALLY BRENT
W« apologia* for t ha ineoiu vanlancm during tha re-modeling of our Ellaaheth I Store. Pirate coma.
•	Tal-Huron 1.0.
•	Auburn Haights
II 8. Squirrel
•	111 W. Walton Blvd.
Vk IMIe W. e» laldwln
S ONE HOUR MARTINIZINQ o Miraolo Milt 1.0.
Man Sentenced for Killing Son of Ex-Girlfriend
SOQfr

Glenn H. Griffin
FUNERAL HOME “Thoughtful Service** 48 Williams St Phone FE 8-9288
J, L. Voorhee*
WHEN SHOULD A FUNERAL DIRECTOR BE SELECTED?
Many people put this deciiion off until forced to. The wisest and best time to select a funeral dirisclor it far in advance of need.
To do this is not morbid—merely good foresight and common tense.
So often, we tm people who are forced to make these decisions under emotions and
strain. How often do we hear, “I hope I
;	__ did right as we never discussed this before."
To choose, and plan ahead, does not hurry death nor does it delay it. If you sit down in the quiet of your own home, and discuss this with your loved ones you will know a peace of mind you have never known before.
In your planning and discussions, if there are any questions unanswered, re-M. E. SIPLE member, our doors are always open-and we are as close at your telephone.
VOORHEES-SIPLE FUNERAL HOME
268 NortH.Perry Straet	Phone FE 2-837ft
L0VE1
Funeral Home
5391 Highland Road,'Pontiac	673-1213
Just a Few Minifies West of Telegraph on M-S9
MIAMI (AP) - A 33-year-old handyman was sentenced to “ Friday lor murdering the 8-year-old aon of hla former girl friend by pouring acid down the child’s* throat.
*■ * *
The death penalty was man datory because the jury, after deliberating four hours, did not recommend mercy In convicting Joseph Nathan Clowers.
★ ft
Clowers was "bent on revenge and death,” Assistant State Attorney A1 Sepe told the jury, “revenge against Tracy’s mother through her children.”
A passerby found TTazy Zell-ner dying in a vacant lot March 4.____________
STATsPblWlCHIOAN—In the Probate Court (or the County of Oakland, Juva-nfia Division,
In ths matter of Ida petition concerning Donald Yanslln. Minor.
To Molvln Cecil Yanglln Sr., tether of sold minor child.
having r —	-
a? soft_________ ...
el Chapter 712A of iho Com-
News In Brief at State Capitol
Sold Iho Mlchtofn Stale, University Board of Trutloss ,7*nd#«i Ion* search with an gxMttoht selection" whan It n«mse Ry, chiton a. Wharton Jr. el New York, a* Jlsjtmy president,
THU ATTOKNIY OBNBRAL Ruled that laachar strike ratlramant funds eccumutotod sine* adoption of (h* prsstnf const Hut ion may not ho used to
?*v teacher, who retired before Its Jsn, , ISM effective dais.
THS tJatlLATURI Was edlourned Untl) Tuesday,
Ip Msmorlam____. _____Jl
IN FOND MEMORY OR Basil# P.
Holts who psssod away Oct. II, ^■Uilliumsiim by psrsnts,
___, „,smsr (Batty
Ball) (ltd granddsughlsr (Christina
daughta sughfar i
N 'Uvi'Nil MBMAAy el asorga jhgman, who pssssg sway Oct, ft,
!-otKor»
"Iftnt
Whllt OVRBfft if# OIIOOp.
SAdiy mltaod by wlfo end family.
In CoVINO MIMORY Of my door huibtnd, Nathaniel Moore who •way 2 yaan ago Oct. II#
plMiont (ace,
UH
1967
■He Ami 11
tra a w
Tobacco farming is a $1 billion-a-year industry, employing about 600,000 farm families.
Death Notices
Isssur* to rscsll
Never to part again..
EWALD, HERMAN KARL; October 17, I960; 1821 Shankln Drive, Village of Wolverine Lake; age 61; beloved husband of Gladys *Ewald'; dear mother of Ronald, Gerald and Roger Ewald; dear brother of Mrs. Emma Messner, Mrs, William Baas and Mrs Lawrence Schumaker; also survived by six grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Monday, October 20,1 p.m. at the Richardson-Bird Funeral ftome, Walled Lake. Interment in Glen Eden Cemetery, Livonia. M r Ewald will lie in state at the funeral home after 7 o’clock tonight.
iN LOyiNO MIMORY ot Jems* 5-Morris wno passed awsy October
Two yssre ago In Hit lovely fell,
Tha Master called your namo.
Oh, bratlwr Jib, though lift goat on It will nevar ba the same.
Tha hours, tha dava, the months end yeprt hsvs sotmad so quick to
Help Wanted Mite___________J
UM PSR HOUR, axparlsncod duct msMIMr and fsbfftafir, Tima and Must have own tools, O'Brien
. --'•r""M«6UfilC, ow HtrvBv
2 Immediote Vacancies JAIL GUARDS $8,500 TO $10,000
OUT lilt Super visa conduct ol prisoners, maintain and onterca ■•11 security procedural and ragulailoMi transport prisoners to authorised places) ate.
BENEFITS: Family Blue Cross-Blue shield) It days vacation In I yoari 13 tick days par ytpri to wan holidays) retirement end social security) paid-up group Ills Insurance) tuition reimbursement.
QUALIFICATIONS:	High school
grodusta or 6. E. O, 21 to 46 years oldi at least S' »" tail, Oakland County resident (3 Months). Good general background. For furthsr Information and sp-pllcatlona contact:.
Ths Psrsonnfl Div.
Oakland Coynty Court Hsus*
(land CmMY Cou
portunlty
God's rtaaon why I can't tee vou now, or 1 hair or kits your fading I rou can't hear me and 1
'Sf\
the atone marking th* place you
Lovad and missed by Mine «h,
Char «, Col.	_________
HTLOVINO MtMORY CP Michael Sweat, who left us. Oct. it, ISM. Love Is • memory time cannot
But tlrst and last. Mm* prtMnt,
tlms fulur*. tlm* pstt.
Beginning and ending tor over new
Impractical to make personal not. this summons and notice by publication ot a copy )n
__________________________, printed
and circulated In said County.
Witness, tha Honornblt. Norman R. Barnord, Judge eI said Court, In tha
day of October A.D.
fUSl *“
NORMAN R.' BARNARD, Judge ol Probata kRJORIB SMITH, Pfobittt Register, Juvenile Division Oct. It, 1M
"Thg '
through
Is atitarl
M.!
(or public
knowr
rant hoy: ■ Lakesid
HOOPER, MAY E.; October 18,
1969 ; 2427 Kleist Court, Keegc Harbor; age 93; dear mother of Mrs. Bernice E. Cover and1 Announcsmtnts Edwin T. Hooper; also' s u r v1ve d by seven grandcMldren, 18 great-grandchildren and four great-great-grandchildren. Funeral arrangements are pending at the C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor where Mrs. Hooper will lie in state after 3 p.m. Sunday. (Suggested visiting hours are 3 to Sand 7 to 9).
Homes, MICH 5-1. In Pontiac, Michigan. Spgelllc Information on buildings and grounds may b# obtained tram tha flee Housing Commission. *
»
re should bo no .....
Is currtntly
submitted to the Pontiac nett Stf(
27, 1969.
s°;«

ng Commission. Owntrs. land-1 tenants liability Insurance for I . .try <
There should elution and Inserted In Bids shot
Housing Commission, 535 Branch Street,
.....gen by October 27. 1*5*.
w ROY B. MacAFEE, Executive Director 14, 15, 15. 17, II, 20, 1*51
NOTICE TO INSURANCE AGENTS
Clark'* Offlc*. 49*5 ■■■■■ HM If ‘	_
VEHICLE POLICY.
I to b* ot_____	■ IBS _____
3, 1*5* It tha Watartbrd Town-School, 1415 maa - Y Road- Pontiac,'wsttrfori ‘ ‘ ‘ bMWiSan.
nd County, Michigan.
Bid tbrma may bt obtained at atarford Township Clark’s Office.
right
ol tha Township.
October IS,
JUSTIN, EDWARD F.; October 16, 1969; 1467 Beach Drive) Lake Orion; age SS; beloved husband of Della Justin; dear father of Mrs. Marjorie Bohlman and Edward Justin Jr,; dear brother of Mrs. Agnes Yarnold, Mrs. Florence Ryan, Mrs. Margaret Shafto and Mrs. Dorothy Clouzzi; also survived by four grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Monday October 20, at 3 p.m. at the Memorial Baptist Church with Rev. G. Rapelje officiating Interment in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Justin will lk| in state at the Huntoon Funeral Home.
_ff?OF MICHIGAN - Tlta Probats Court for ths County ot Oakland.
Eststt of Richard Alfred Austin, minor. It Is ordered that on December 3, 1*5*. 9:00 AM. In tha probata courtroom, Pontiac. Michigan a hearing be held on | petition of Ronald Richard Austin for 'ntmant of a guardian for tha pur of consenting to ths adoption of said r.
and sefvlce shall h* made
NORMAN R. BARNARD, Judoa of Probata October 10, IS, I
ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS CENTRAL HEATING PLANT AND DISTRIBUTION SYSTEMS OAKLAND ^UNIVERSITY ROCHESTER --------
SR, MICHIGAN proposals tor Gantral • and Electrical Con-
,cP.«
at tha office of tho Chant
Wmm i 8
S,Tha*work shall Consist ot:
1. New high temperature watt
d,}!r»uJtt«c.n,r.l haot.
P Srconnaetlonsto and appurtenance* I two 1W|0<I0M HTW generators,
32JoSS WW
5. Approximately forced concrete tun 4. Approximately
^^Approximately 1,000 tost ot electrical
j"*y M.so-
talnad at ths off let of tha arcl-““*
Brightly Lighted and Paved Parking Lot
IT SHAll BE OlSl POUtV TO KEEP TtjE COST OF A FUNERAL SERVICE WITHIN SENSIBLE BOUNDS.
COMPARISON OF FUNERAL COSTS AND FACILITIES IS CERTAINLY IN GOOD TASTE. .	' y*\'j	■	■ \ — t
We Suggest This Intelligent Evaluation
LARKIN, BLANCHE N.; October 17, 1969; 8160 Kearsley Street, Goodrich; age 74; dear mother of Leona and Donald Larkin; dear sister of Mrs. Mable McCandlish and Mrs. Ethel Sweeney. Funeral service will be held Monday, October 20,1 p.m. at the C. F Sherman Funerdl Home, 135 S. Street, Ortonville with Rev. Gary Sanderson officiating. Interment in Mount Rose Cemetery, Mount Rose.
of 5% ot..tho
_. ___ ...	_____ot a certified
or a cashier's check. Fifty (150.00) s must ba submitted aa a deposit ... ch set of plans and apaclflcatlons
lad ot sixty (40) days attar bid DR. D. VARNER, Oct. 11, IL^liS
PROPOSALS TO SELL URBAN RENEWAL PROPERTY City ot Pontloc, Dopgrtmant el Plan-nlng and Urban Rsnswal, City Hsll, 4S0 wide Track Drlvs, East, Pontlse,
M|5o^lcE_IS hereby GIVEN, that Ih* city ot Pontiac, as tbs Local Public Agency, proposes to Mil cwtaln property HB 51 cBD Frlng* No. 2, Urj iHaSi WMBfl Rhfi. and CBD Fry Urban Ranawal Prolact m “ t Michigan St(
R?20, to ths Commission of MR) 1 School District
anr ■
WANT TO SELL LAWNMOWERS, POWER MOWERS, ROLLER SKATES WAGONS, BICYCLES? USE A LOW COST PONTIAC PREK CLASSIFIED AD- TO PLACE YOURS. CALL 332-8181.
S?its ot Michigan and ct of tha City Ot Pott-Slid Urban Rantwal, Prolacts ar* ad Th tha area locatad generally Seuth of Plkt Street, Watt of PaddoeK Street. North of Osmun Stiw and .East
tessera
agendas te^purchsM property ,jn, **B prolacts, and propotaa to eonsld*r an-
K*“,“ M	£
hurl^g/^^unl Wi ml
*ot thK*11 City Cdnmlsslon dP^th* but spadtlc descriptions of the properly
fiSjroposafi* d^fcs**09MCt*s SnS *projj
wiluiMttmw
Dial 334-4981
(Mon. thru Fri. 8-5) (Sat 8 to 2:30)
or 332*8181
(Man. thru fri.)
Prom 8 A.M. TO 5 P.M. (Sot. • to 5)
Pontiac Press Want Ads
FOR FAST ACTION NOTICCTO ADVERTISERS'
AOS RECEIVED BY 5 P.M.
day following publication. If no notification of Mich error is made by that time* it will ba attorned tha od U correct. Tho' Pratt assumes no ro»
r agate type is 12 o'clock noo day previous to publication. CASH WANT AO RATES (whan caih
l*Day 3-Days 4-Deyi
$100 $ 737 $ R.PS 2.00	3 76	5.81
2.32	5.70	9.12
5 02	9.12
5 64	10.26	16.42
627
1.40	13.24
An oddIHanol charge of 60 tontt II bo mod* for u»o of Pontlot Pro in numbers.
Tha Pontiac Pross
Clai.iti.d D.padm.nt fkOM I A M. t» 5 30 PM.
AVON CALLING" FOR SERVICE IN YOUR HOME. FE 4-043*.
farm visits fqr
THE WHOLE FAMILY SUNDAY ONLY 11 A.M. TO 6 P.M.
your fill color tour, tr*v*l to lomlly through ______ wilfadd *x-.
wSLp%
bolna spun Into yarn. Delicious
•fedHrr ..■ss
Chlldr*n*35>cw% aKSt* T? cants. Hsyrldss and tow sxtrs.
UPLAND HILLS FARM
481 LAKE GEORGE RD. OXFORD
N*kto
^^T^«^uCb5M
remembered alt year. George LsForg* to Pise* ■r. S3»W3I.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY PATTAIL
Gran. Pinny i
gift t that '
Hy witn i ■"o 7• T Ta biota. Only »* Slmm'a Bros. Drugs.
Funtral Directors _ _ COATS
FUNERAL HOME r RAYTON PLAINS
C. J. GODHARpT PUNERALHOM Keego Harbor- PH. MXBOO.
D0NELS0N-J0HNS
FUNERAL HOME
Huntoon
funeral home
Serving Pontiac lor »	„
It Oakland Ava.	FE 7-011
** SPARKS-GR1FFIN FUNERAL home --------Sarvlca" FE *-*2i
VoorheesSiple
Cemetery Lots
th* Mount". W. Knapp, M7 133st. N. Miami, Fla. 3314L WHITE CHAPEL memoriae 4 pri

BOX REPLIES I At |10 d.m. today were rapllas ad Ths Pm* Office in f
C-3, C-4, C-5. C4. C-7, C-27, C-39, C44.
to Msmsrism .''ff.
HritSg1asTi* ^memory lasts,
EARN TO is par cam m ^Hs, Hava a Sandra Parly-
FOR PEACE OP mind-tor nei meeting problems—tor suro, s sdylce—dial your Family I 334-20*4.______________■	...
Mr. & Mrs. Homeowner
financial jadvlc^"
j.n,rs'
foV PARTIES, Toy's by Play HOUS*. 320-2027.
ON AND AFTER this data October 1*. 1*4* I will not bo rotponslbla for any debts contracted by any othar than myaalf. David J. Walkar, 253 Church St.. Pontiac. Mlchlaan.
WIG PARTIRiT
FOUND:	BLACK,
German Shephard
4|$),	~
GOLbEN RETREIVER and labrador ratrlavar, 3*t-053* Shonnle A J*m-mle. Reward . . . *25-5014.
LOST:	5 MONTHS OLdJ black
labrador with Whit* marklng on eho*t. wgarlno rod collar, Rochas-far area. *Sl-lH0. . . ..■....
CBsti GERMAN ShIPHERO, black and tan. *25-327*.
LOST!
— wt anau________ I
to ihH and Fra
choke Cham, MmM cottar anq black harMN with allvar atuda. Rewind, mm.	....._
Lhstt YoVJoDtok Aodhi.i.1* iSS
old, Vtelnlly of\T
10 MEN WANTED
DAILY FOR:
' •	LANDSCAPING
EMM	Vactory
MISCELLANEOUS JOBS Report ready lor work — 7 a.m.
MANPOWER
1338 Wlda Track W.-Ra«r Kntranc* An Equal Opportunity
WAREHOUSE
A-l
Oi

ASSEMBLERS
E LICTRONIC-MECHAN 1C AL Our rapid t
2*70 Industrial
A WORKING managar (or t mechanically Inclmad. SO)-
IAPlETE CHARGE DP MULTIPLE CORPORATIONS LAND' DE-
oparatlng equipment.
Bench work-inside. Poaslbl . advancement to (laid service, frlngat, banatlta.
JED PRODUCTS, CO., 1404 E. Avia Dr., Madkon Hgts. (14 Mild A Daqulndre)
An Eaual Opportunity Employer HELP'WANTED MALE — t ....
MOTEL BELL BOY
A^pty 1001 I. Telegraph, Pontiac,
** HOLIDAY INN Auto Dtolerxy Needs Cashier or Car Biller
with daalarihlp experience ' preferred!
Call Mr. Derkacz
651-5500
~ ATTENTION ALL SALESMEN
if you have th* ability and dasir* " ng or Trading real oiler you th* op-
...... KbtT Badore T”
George, 574-4)01.
•state, portunl
earnings, call Mr, Badore or
Auto Damage Estimater
Clean, quiet work aroa. Good •tartlng salary, with regular In-
protlt
vino adlustmant, _ ratlramant and i Insurance. Must have 1 to 3 years auto body gstlmatlng experience. For Interview call Mr. Gtorgg Jayne. State F a i
Insurance,
levee. 1 353-1140.
ACTIVE REAL ESTATE INVESTOR NEEDS YOUNG MAN URGE WEEKLY DRAW
train. Mr.
but not necessary. Will
ATTENTION YOUNG MEN
Wa are looking tor IQ young mi who at* sincerely interested battering thamsalvas. Our ft d management training i ' being offered In <
____Above aver,
rapid
quality. If you are 11-23. high school gradutto gnd willing to davbto 100 .percent effort -to your future. Call 332-3835. tor Interview appointment.__________________
A LEADING SUBURBAN riding club has soma openings tor grooms, must bo cloan and lobar. Year-round employment. Room and board furnished. Excellent working * get Mr. Hutton, Ml
AMBULANCE
DRIVERS
bonaflts, contact ftr.
AUTO MECANICS
CITY OP PONTIAC Salary S3.54-S4.40. Experienced
A GOOD OPENING FOR A
UTILITY MAN
For vorloui lobs In the tenanca department ot known and respactad local t Must ba able t •bi* to do aom This la a
(ring* benefits.
ligTOairfeit-aas
"dog, White1 an chest. 14" at shoulder*, named OMty. 33S-SS74.
“ButUSiAJffBW.
Sat in vicinity ei neOemr BM*. Ut)ST: BEAGLE. ll mg^tM, white, toet, answers stay, Clarkiton ar*S. I
' reward, ass-ini, ^bs^^s&n^'-lqhflda-
_____ ____„ W6M* I
of jmrkf Call fob Hannh Chryiltr—RI) bltr—Rood, 426-2631. CHRISTIAN_RecbRDING.nd7*.r*. Co. naadiupart tlm* halp. Immediately. ouarantaad salary, no axp. naadad, 1-755-5554 Warran, Michigan.
CRANE OPERATOR V9H scrap yardT 333-71)0.	_
BORING MitV OFTkAfOES. lath* operators, apply luH*ry Products Company, 407 Hadley St„ Holly.
CARPENTER-ROUGH MUST BE UNION
Ytsr around work, Pontiac-Rochastar twa, 432-4122.
CLARK OIL
H6l •*vtr«l ttatloni ...........rfilWY
AUTO MECHANIC* 5 day weak, $150 suatantea, fringa benefits, paid


CARPENTERS
opportunity for fur
vS£fe.“T5
Min H222 attar I,
341-3241 or 2*1-3271 or 341-0413 tAB DRIVERS, 25 or over, tulf port tlm* daya or night*, F 3-7015,_■■
CHECKERS
DETAILERS
Special
Machines
Automation
itomotlv* and power driven uipment. Apply City of Pontiac traonntl Otfica, 450 Wlda Track
IS
Please apply In paraon to th*
MAINTENANCE DEPT. »
The
Pontiac Press 48 W. Huron St,
BETWEEN 8 to 11 A.M.
BAKER, ’ DANISH '' PASTRY ihOP, 2523 W. Maple. Birmingham. Ml ¥
•UILDINO MATERIAL distributor nagds warehouse man. goad opportunity for gdvancgtMfn. 053 N. Saginaw, Pontiac.
•OOKKEE
overtime, steady
year around worx. An squat opportunity Employor.
CLYDE CORPORATION 1000 W. MAPLE HO., TROY
DETAILERS
70 HOUR WEEK
___252-1*47_________
DISHWASHERS NEEDED daya and midnight!. Apply 204 t. Telegraph, Palace Restaurant,
DRAFTSMEN
For faat growing comptny, experience necessary. All frlngat, salary optn. Apply In person.
PYLES INDUSTRIES
tlm*. 14* w. Huron.
benefits,
OF KeLSEY-HAYES
Equal
BUS BOYS
Full tlm*, part tlm*. All *om-pany banatlts. paid vacations.-
ig boy Vest aur ani 20 8. Taiierapn _______
, BRIDGEPORT OPERATOR
rhtnlly to loin * foal sny m tha (told at automation. Rxcattont pay and to-Inga penam. An Equal Opportunity imploytr.
CLYDE CORPORATION 1000 W. Mapla Rd., Trey
D—a
NEED 1 part tlm* or full tlm* htoft, attawlinaad aratarrad but not required, will tram In atttoa presantatton that can earn you •3004)00 commission pgr wow tilling down, no cor (MPtniati apply Tn parson *1 1711 ElUsbsih Laka Rd„ Pontiac.
DESIGNERS CHECKERS UY0UT MEN DETAILERS TRAINEE
KTB
t
Gat with th* big on*. Year around program ready to start In our new building.
56 hours par weak, minimum schedule - (ring* banatlts. Phone Mr. Brown at 565-22)1 or Apply -
KOLTANBAR ENGINEERING CO. *50 Mapl* ltd.. Troy
1 open HI * p.m. Dally for hiring DRAFTSMAN
Minimum 1 year axparltnca MAINTENANCE ELECTRICIAN Joumayman or equivalent SUNNEN HONE OPERATOR Set-up experience required MECHANICAL TECHNICIAN
trainee
-«l<ih «rhnni nroduate with tome Excellent
___	^ toymant.
M. C. DjVn
Rd„ Laka Orion
hirer line* 1*21. of ^special automation machinery. Salaried position. Pension. LH* Inaurance. Blua Cross. Not a |ob shop.MIcro-polse engineering, 51300 Pontiac Trail, wlxom. Mr. Erickson. *24-
"designer
Special
Machines
Automation
FACTORY HELP OVER,?) y*are.
IMMEDIATE, OPENINGS $11,200 fi
Minimum If qualified
RETAIL STORE MANAGERS MANAGER TRAINEES MANUFACTURING REP. SALESMEN
MtOrttht Individual, ' ary and bonutat. Along ny othar company (ring* i . Strong solas backgrount isary. For confidential inter
JANITORS PULL TlMC days,
---Nta, Bloomfield Hill*
, 3214341.	______
Lwstm'
00 W. Mapto Rd., Troy_
EXPERIENCED MISCELLANEOUS m«rhina ooerator. Crescent Machine CoTlne. 3501 Wllllama Dr., Pontiac. Mich. ______ ,
H"tlng-551 B,,t furniture, prefer one famniar wlth
Pontiac ahd aurreundlno dtatrleta.
373-0588.	_________
l£fai#rCONTRACTOR iaids licensed lournaymah, 543-3330.
Excellent Opportunity for Retiree
Full tlm* position, courtesy guard, apply at Pgrsonnal Dapt.. Main oftlca, Pontiac State Bank.
PULL OR PART TIME, Styjto help. II or over, Porry Pharmacy 51* E. Blvd. Equal opportunity
FULL OR PART TIME sarvlca tend ants, ovar 21. .Apply Wright's Service, 12)1 N, Parry. FURNACE SERVICE MAN OsJto truck turnlahad, uniform ■ hg —arler
5*3-1757
b* experienced
Meckwarth Ree* 1824 E. 14 Mil* Madison Height*
KITCHEN STEWARD
section, kltd banquet satups. Evening shills, 5 p.m. to cMsIng. Exctllant wagss.
SlsbC. E°xrck
)dy employment
itarglng salary with illy tor advancement.
- management pollclei Paid vacatton, holidays i Insursncs.
UTHE
OPERATORS
FL00RMAN
Blrnflnghsm are*, .cell 544-5171 between I a.m. glia'5 p.m. held representative -
Insurance Investigation, Northern Oakland County. Call employment managar at 1-3534*30.
GAS STAtlON ATTENPaHt; toll or part tlm*. axparlencad, 2*030 N. W«storn Hwy.. SouthftoW.
GAS PUMPlWS. GOOD., PAY, overtime, full and part tlm* halp naadad I Cranbreok and Mapto Rds. Birmingham, Ml 74700.
GAS STATION ATTENDANT,"*?-perianced. mtehantetlty Wtcllnad. local retorencat. Full or part tlm*. Suit. WdwSisnt ana Mapto. - ■, •
~guaBBs^uard supilaviK*! lull or **rt tlm*, axpartoncad or will train, openings *11 shuts. Mgrto Pttoctlv* Agtncy. 35*4340.
HIGH SCHOOL GRADS COLLEGE MEN-
WHY WAIT—you .can noW- start a career with Dial Flnane* that will
that will axesad moat grads. Call Mr. Kuceppa »t *73-1321, w**k daya only. ,
Equal Opportunity Employer / INSPECTOR
Experlanced *r»t*rred, machined parts. Good wages, overtime, fringa banatlts. Precision Auto-ssHc Parts) 35* 3. Blvd. E., Pon-
Apply Mtracto Mil* Drhra-i Thai tor atttr 7 p.m. INiWTOR. PLOOA
Modern factory ant Must bt Interests Steady poalttona wl bandits. Dsys i
Ml'V INDUSTRIAL ROW. TROY, BETWEEN 14-18 Mil* Rds. aft
OT
UTHE OPERATOR
a experience nacastary, ex-:nt wag** and (ring* banatlts, ty oT ovartlm*, day* .and
voan 14 M 1$ Mil* Rd»., off iffiji Hwv.p
Loan Adjuster
Havs opening for man ex* perienced in handling delinquent accounts.1 May consider inexperienced man who desires to learn Installment loan business. Excellent fringe benefits and working conditions.
PERtOtfif^L DEPT.
COMMUNITY f
MAINTENANCE MEN
Joumayman millwright or machine repair V prove S years axgartoncs, Industrial
Sfr
MAINTENANCE ELECTRICIAN bo a
y: American Can
i, good t fringa I an Co.,
MACHINE
DESIGNERS
Stock-Well Co.
1280 Doris Rd. Pont., Mich. 373-5151
1-75 ot Unlv. Dr. exit
Modernization salesman -Qualifications: must bt at (Mat Joumayman with S years building experience. Daw Construction Co. 33B2IH, 33S-J52*.	.
MECHANICS. MECHANIC. BMWWI. Apply Keego Salas and Ssrelcs. 30*0 Orchard Lak* Rd.. Ksago Harbor,. ■	.' ■	•
MACHINE HANDS FOR lothga. mm and qartaral machln-
ino. Sonia axparianca. m p* Wilton. Pontiac.
MANAGEMENT TRAINEE FOR on* ot nation's largatt (Inane* c#m; oantoa. mutt b* high tchoo
MILFORD AREA —steady, In-farattkio* Itfi with cnancas
repairmen. Credit for praviout electrical or oloctronlc oxporionco. High School aducotlon or oqulvatont noootsory. Apply Gonorol Tolophono Co.* $17 Union St** Milford.
‘	Employment Opportunity
MACHINERY MAINTENANCE
Small woodworking plant full tlmo “ Amjum
MILL HANDS
AND
BRIDGEPORT HANDS
Good nay, working condltloni and fringa btntttto — day*.
Interstate Tool Company
2335 t. Lincoln
ftlrmingkorn* Michigan _
AAANASlir^RlCniH«S -rt Natfinil finance company has immadlota opening for a high school oraduafo, ovor 11 with own cor. Phono Ml*
Maintenance Men
Parmannt positions In do: otflcs building. Must b* hendy . , tools and hsvs soma mschsnlcsl ability. Fringe banatlt* Include paid vacation!, Ilfs and hosgjtol Insursncs and ratlramant gton,
WujSTrTHATtOHAL SANK ION. Mgln An wml
^ortun
opera fbr ai
irator. Good op-
dvancamant.
Call 3214*31.
AT ONCE
2
Collision Men
toclttttos. with all
Matthews-
Hargreaves
53i Oakland Av*.
D—4
rHE PONTIAC PRESS,
SAr
m
URDAV. OCTOBER 18,'
For Wont Adi Dlol 334-4981
Holy Wanted Molt
MECHANIC WORKING mult lit Trencher: bkckhoes.
A Htlp Wanted Mele . ORDERLY
Immediate oeanlngs tor toll time ttlornoon tnt day orderlies
Macomb Underground Engineers. 4075 Elmrldga. Star ling Haights.
Naar Mount and tl I
NEW ANP USED CAR
SALESMEN, EXPERIENCED
Apply: Keego Soles Service
SOM ORCHARD LAKE RO.
_____ KEEGO HARBOR ________
• NEEDED Af ONCE i
Young man to do c I a a n up, parti chaitr and ttatlon work tor now cor dulersltlp.
Plumbing & Heating Salesman
Bxctllant opportunity for man with knowtodg* of plumbing and haatlnq ■"'*	■ ■ ou htvt navar sola
train you. Potantial inos Is excellent, banafits Includinc

xparlanca, tlbaral salary i lilts. Apply Parsonnal. Crlti Hospital, Rocha star, 6MAI OAKCXND UN I vfe R8ITY
A Nelp Wanted Male
1	RETIREE
FOR PORTER WORK
Evening Shltt
1 Htlp Wantfd Mala
REAL ESTATE SALESMEN
1 A COLOSSAL. OPPORTUNITY! Commercial, Invaitmant, Buslnass
Tlirrtt lathe Operator
Sot up and oporoto aircraft quail, fy, excellent wapoi tnd trlnpo benefits. plenty of ovartlmr ■i-IE
Industrial and 15 Hwy.
. _ l ■ . lima, dt | |OV.«Troy# batwaan 14
HelpWwited Female
CLEANING OIRL ona day _______
own Irihuortatlpn, references.
Rochester. 4SMM4.______	_
COUNSELOR. a|l you naod.U. ability
Rook, 33*915:
ElVAniW
the public. Coll Anglo |
uffffrr,' aim
MATURE, RESPONSIBLE, woman to live In, more tor homo than COUPLE BULL TIME for working uL.wagti. 303-IMS.	manager ol aporlmont complex in
ffifURl responsible	Pontiac. No children, or poll. E
sitter, I era-schoolers. >27-3797
Oflico Walton
apply at Tha Parsonnal I ..jlton A Squirral Road Rochester, Michigan 48063.
An equal opportunity employer. PARTS CL■ RK AND also PORtIR
USED CAR PORTER
drlvtn llcansa and Ok-
indln'm. MS oi liSP""" ""OAKLAND
Michigan Butlnati and .Invest- CHRYSLBR-PLYMOUTH
714 Oakland Avo.____PE S-9431
No children
parlance In apartment mainienam-e work — pool coro and rental — axcallsni aolory plus apartment , and villlllai, 9S3 2IJI * a.m'-f p.m. Monday through Prldoy. __________
Ojlpwpnct. HKW	i I Ml bJCAL1 ASS ISTANT «*par lanced PjiWAfrfR
64V COOK AND tfATTfaltrOil, II lor.’ physicians pltlca, land	Tior^rWi taJlIdlno
to« p.m. OR 3-2413.	handwritten resume «f qualifies-1 MtEBESiJK •EmttiJK2W3
66CTOhs“6F P ic E “ muiihave' JslMaM	HU, WT*plut lSra5h lurnUhid
Insuranct axparlanca for 4V% days, NEEDED BABY SITfElfc for young apartment, ^utilltiai
salary. Sand rasuma
tat prase to Pontl
2nd FLOOR
Montgomery
Ward
Punch Finisher
DAY SHIFT
Boring Mill Vertical Mill Hydrotel
NIGHT SHIFT LIBERTY TOOL AND ENGINEERING
8250 W. Maple Rd. Walled Li
PORTER
To work from 11 p.m. to 4:50 a. Apply at:
ELIAS BROS.
LAND AND|
........ HAVE
MILLION DOLL A........
VENTQRY - HELP US MOVE
THIS_PROOUCT. DRAW AND
BSRII«fi| TO SUIT YOU. PHONE MR. MARSHALL 483-1333. L
mant Guide.' should make 830.000 to 140.000 par year. Sat your own jlmlt on this ladder to dynamic succaia. All In-pulrlas strictly confidential. Ask for Gary or Ward E. Partridge, 1050 W. Huron St„Phone ItVfm._
Shop Help
Clwy.t Drayton Plains.
WANTED POTATO PICK TO1,
Phone 3f 1-1383.
WANTED
TRUCK MECHANICS
AT END OP SHIFT FREE TRANSPORTATION IN OUR
WORK WAGON L ",	. ...	,
to and from pontiac Gas or diesel. Liberal pay, insurance furnished, retire-
Or-r.portr.ody Mr work !m#nt Qn(| fu|| ^fU,. Se»
Mr. Coe, 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Temporary Service, Inc. jM°nday thru Friday.
FERNDALE	2380 Hilton Rd.	(4Ml .
BEDFORD *	23145 Grand River	VXLVJ.V*/
CLAWSON	45 S. Main	T .	• _
centerline 0541 ¥. io Mila | Truck Center Oakland at Cass
Call 5IS-1990 for i Wagon schadulo and i j ready for < [ to 4 p m.
EMPLOYERS
AN EMPLOYMENT AGENCY I ALL JOBS ARE FREE
FE 5-9485
Help Wanted Male
SALESMAN
Exparienctd, aggressive* nai to sail large ticket luxury
, ablo WANTED: MEN 4S to 5S Items. ,Qr p0r(er Work. Ooy am •hilts. Apply
Restaurant. 2490 Dixie i
Big I
Livonia Transmission Plant
Has Immediate Openings For
Production Machine Operators
i	. AND
Minor Assemblers
My thru Frldpy, S:0O A.M. to 4:IS P.l
36200 PLYMOUTH ROAD LIVONIA. MICHIGAN
.An equal Opportunity I
benefit,. Call PEJ-Mtt.___
SECURITY OFFICER , WE TRAIN—WE SPONSOR-
Full time night position available we supply leads, opportunity for MTSSK X -tr® «r»r rnlndod .parion. Enroll now benefits program, apply 9 a.m.-l2 noon, parsonnal dept. St. Joseph Mercy Hospital,
Pontiac oi
Estate Classes.
Sporting
Goods
Salesman
Union Shop
I Milford. Call 484-1413	—	/
I Badalamente.
WANTED EXPERIENCED COOkTl I pay* plus Blue Cross, paid
RRH ii
Pontiac
I WANTED:	MAN CAPABLE ol
learning Marina mechanics trade. ’ Over 2r	------■
Interested? Call PE 3-
Dining
Room
Waitresses
DAY OR NIGHT SHIFT
out, Perry Perk area. $342898._
Baklan b uWvI rsit y
Tha university Is now accepting applications for ixparlancad secretarial with typing god shorthand abilities. Other clerical )ng positions both full fire available. These
for young apartme who likes! 35i|. io |H j| /W| CALLS. t
DRY CLlANtfR girls, full and p4
a.m.-4 p.m. NO SUNDAY
poaltfona
tha Parionnal, Office
Apply ati
holiday1 pay and pension banafits,
Walton m squirrel Road Rochastar, Michigan 480A3 Ah equal opportunity employer fro Blu. ONE OIRL OFFfCi. plMunl
Iniurancu, vacation.
Apply In panon only,
TED'S
____BLOOMFIELD HILLt____
DENTAL RECEPTIONl¥f
old. 5 days Including Sat. 11 7:30 p.m. 335-4144.
DIETARY HELP, earn
.-11 a.m. to 7:30 P.i ployta b a n af 111. Bloomfla Nursing Canter, 338-0341.__
DENTAL ASSISTANT
Exptrl.nctd.only, l^da^t includmg
» a.n
OFFICE-drtfC-tor doctorir*tflca,l apply only If axparlancad insuranca forma '
monay lor Chrlatmat, 10 i
cant commlaalon. flea. 303-1741 attar 4:10. PART-TIME cleaning, 3
6 Help Wanted Male
WELDERS § HELPERS
Flat welders $3.58 per hour, helpers $3.28 per hour. 9 paid holidays, paid Blue Cross, Blue Shield, paid sickness and accident insurance. We will teach you welding after 30 days employment.
APPLY PORTEC INC. PARAGON DIVISION
44000 Grand River Novi
Hudson's
Pontiac Mall STUDENTS
High School Seniors and College
pply In parson 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Employment Office
Hudson's
Pontiac Mall
Help Wanted Mnle
6 Help Wunted Male
Assemblers
and
Production Machine Operators
No Experience Necessary
Pontiac Motor Division General Motors Corporation
Pontiac, Michigan
Employment Office Open 8-11 A.M. I , *1-4 P.M.
Monday thru Friday
An equal opportunity employer
SUNOCO?
SERVICE STATION, gat pumper, full time* and part time, mechanic full time, wrecker drivers full time, good pay h o u i terviewlng 9 a.m. til 12 p, and Cr- ^
7-0700.
Cranbrook In Birmingham, i
SUPERVISOR
Housekeeping department, full or part time, afternoon shift, supervisory experience preferred, see Mr. Spurlock after 5 p.m. at Crittenton Hospi
STOCK MAN
stock >f full Blue Cross,;
^__jn, holiday and vi
•pply
Immediate opening in i room for an alert young time, day shift, free Bl pension, holiday and vacatii person only.
TED'S
BLOOMFIELD HILLS SHOP Help needed for growin Fab. machinp i

Paid
Apply 4329 N. Woodward In AM or call 1-134-0030.
iO> RWl Y~ol N t l EM an ,wli l Share home with couple In exchange for household services. Ref. required.
Phone 473-3734jkfternoon._
EXPERIENCED PART TIME cook, excellent wages. Apply H«rvey‘s
Colonial House, 3094 Dixie Hwy._
EMPLOYMENT AVAILABLE - apply at Samlnoto Hills Nursing Home, 332 Orchard Lakt Avo,
FREE CLASSES
i Man or woman wanted, Earn while I you learn. We have I oitlces. 200
.... laleipaople who can't be wrong.
liuTCroat Call today.
10-11 p.m., ai-liiS. I MILLER BROS. REALTY FHON'i iOLicifoRS I________________333-7156 ______
from 'of- FREE REAL ESTATi~_ciaue», earn
reaLVy
•• 7-3»lrimi' ""'	1
ISaL ESTATE COURSe, FALL] classes lust starting, enroll now.
LIST WITH HACKETT
START TO PACK IT ____EM 3-4703__________I
RECEPTIONIST Personnel Consultant $5,000 UP
Prestige Birmingham office, base rata plus Incentive plan.
INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1880 S. Woodward Bham. 442-4248
1 RECEPTIONIST
Lika meeting people, attractive, well groomed, to. answer busy talaphona and some general office work, will train, part time or'full lima, apply In parson 3711 _	_	Elisabeth Lakt Rd., Pontiac^
aircraft par to* dept. 474U SHIRT PRESSER, Cabinet unit, ,9 1. mr, Barry.	I cents per shirt, must l,*u*
—FOUNTAIN-SALES-----------
PERMANENT FULL TIME SHIRT PACKAGER FOR dn AND PAjTJTIMB	| inq plant, laundry. Apply
Douglas C I a a
EmploymentAgencies
S~LIOHT FACTOEY poiltlOM. will twin, MW. King. Aiioelstu
9 ralMlnp ini IMorthf H
A-l CUSTOM covering, sr1 Reasonable 1
apprenticeships
Tag dollar, wlll lraln lor bright
M avLt JTm
IM0 W, Huron.	_____
ACCOUNTANT TRAINEE $6,700—TO START
jugretihed.
<^ifSS-rtiSTINir Wfflir iiiid txlurlor, 1 young man, axparlly qualltlad, antiquing, IgIIgrIBji, p.InlltHi^ .and italnlng, PI HIM,
CXBiirollTlII INTlilfil HbV ino naar Watarlord area. Free taTlmatet. OR 1-piM or OR HMS.
with inlarnatlonal tlrm. Call Mrt, Rounding, Inlernallonal Parionnel, ‘till1 Wj9W_W: Ruron.
CLAIMS ADJUSTER $7,800 PLUS FEE PAID
No tap. nectaiary, Car plut bgnut. College. Call Mri. Mam International Parionnel, 411-1 IN. 10W W.
DRAFTING-DESIGNER $9,000-UP
Drafting and lay out experience required, for Inttfvlawi with major equipment manufacture,
Hounding. International
King,
i!n?14-Mn,
i galsi Ntau . aharp |obl , Call Connie tg and Snell*
Transportation
ss
NEED RIDB TO Union Lake > IM mornings, also ride back. Call 343-4114. after 4:30 call FJ 1-1134. RELIAOLB ' PERSON-!# 'dTTVk
27
R PROCESSING
Princeton. S34-3IM
COMPLETE D I 11 E. _ ‘
3-75IJ.	__________________
Wonted Heuseheld Oexls 19
HIGHEST PRICiS PAID POR good
have you?
B & B AUCTION
_______ _ I MW Dixie Hwy.	OR H71I
GENERAL 'OFFICE: Sharp oal Tor wanted NICE CLEAN turnltura of Intaraitlng opanlngl Nowl S140. all klnda. 4M-1S71.
•S3 ml™'1 *n#,,lnB I W^NTiprillNK" iijfir irunffl* GO g6 girl
bad, good condition, 3344773,
No
Saturday, 10 a.r
executive
transportation, raf. required. MA
3317. . •	_________________
IXPERiENCeD WAITRESS 11
$80-UP
'typing.' Call Mri'
LAUNDRY MANAGER
Outstanding opportunity In modern I doing, call ma nowl $320. Cdll progressiva 392 bad general! Mary Bridges, 304-2471, Snelllng
hospital, must have thorough! and Snelllng.________
Ddern steam operation of
EARN $30 FOR 3 I and phone necessary. Call 473-2309. (~ FULL TIME Barmah necessary, prefer over 40, *
Eagers Bar. 1033 W. Huron.
FEMAll HELP. ALL shifi
r.qulred, salary negotiable, collont fringe benefits, Contact personnel director, Pontiac Gonoral
Sarv.|n0| at west K----------
331-4711, ext. 211.
Pontiac, 338-47'
OR 4-
Shift, from 27-40 hrs. poi _
days. SI .05 par hr. to start. 12.04 plus within 1 year. Uniforms furnished and -laundered free. Apply to manager 9-11 a.m., or 2-4 p.m., Mon.-Sat.
SANDERS
Need
Part-Time
Work?

needed In I
l Pleasant HIM fits, salary ( wim .blllty. Call El .. 444-1707 for appointment, caiiscontldantial._____________
GENERAL CLEANING
nlng, • Middle
FULL OR PART TIME i ifrPLY
ALVIN'S
I Telegraph
SERVICE CASHIER
preferred. 333-1300.
day help from 10 a.t or 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. from 5 p.m. to 9 p.
If you have i
SALES LADIES |
Curtain and drapery ahop, must have sailing axperlenca, full and: part time. Also have openings fori evtnlngs, 1:30-9. Excellent working, -------- Apply Arden Draperiet,,
vacation, Blue Croat banellta. Ap- GIRL TO LIVE In, general ply in parson, 300 Bowl, 100 S. housework, own room and TV, 1
Cass Lake Rd.__________________achool-aga child, >40 to atart. Ill-,
rCOCKTAIL, AtfD 1 allay waitress'. 3223. full time nights, paid vacation.1 GIRL TO MANAGE SMALL OFFICE Blua _ Cross_ ban*tltst ^appjy, in_ Pontiac. Bookksaplng,_ Payroll,
HI
and reliable, over 21, must ba able Md have pleasant phone no Saturdays, apply
AFTERNOON SHIFT 2:10 TIL 11
HELP SERVE THE DOCTORS AND NURSES AND EMPLOYEES AT THE PONTIAC STATE HOSPITAL SNACK BAR. IF INTERESTED CALL FE 2<414.
APPLICATIONS NOW BEING taken for counter girls. Apply Donut Centtr in parson 29 North Soglnow
ARE YOU LOOKING for a lob that offtrs o challenge with responsibility? Wo nood an individual lo handle correspondenca and the coordinating of .prelects for management.
con train you now tor our nusy fall sonson. Immediate discount privileges.
Apply
PERSONNEL DEPT.
2nd FLOOR
Montgomery
Ward
PONTIAC MALL
An equal opportunity employer RET I RED MAN OP- houiewivet, part time work during the day, Hartland-I ■ -|||||
vacation. Send FULL Resume In,	Fox"Dry' Cltineri Tl*1 H»^>and‘Hlqhland area, 683-1900.
-writing to Pontiac Press Box C-5, wflHuronV F° ° V C#a #rl" ; SILK AND WOOL Plnishar,
Pontiac.	________4 children I vyotorford, newest and n
tor person n. 673-6588
GENERAL OFFICE | J^aomeon
Mature parson to do Interesting! SALESLADY, work including typing, figuring, necessary, phona and talking to customers. 51 day ipbak. Good salary plus benefits. Apply 4:30 to 4:00 p.m. 335-9261. Westdee Glass Co., 715 Auburn, tYPIST
RETAIL experience I hrs. per wk., no!
d working
Pontiac, PE 2-0252.
Equal Opportunity Employer
GIRLS 18-25
Hickman'.	™	""'I ^al^dorder'lMpartmam?,^mMt0S
A WOMAN FOR ganaral offlca work, average earnings. Apply at suite, pleasant surroundings^	412, Pontiac Stale Bank Building!
Temporary \ AMERICAN GIRL 442-3011	. 725 S. Adams, B1
WAITRESS Wanted for night II er over. Apply In pa Country Kitchen, Auburn
STENOS
TRAINEES '
IN PONTIAC AREA IS TO M YEARS OP AGE M4.50-SI31 PER WK.
Call Detroit 963-0088
WANTED:
Snelllng,
LIKE PEOPLE?
Personnel director needs secretary who enjoys public contact, l girl ofllca. Faa paid. Adama A Adama. 647-8810,
Wanted Mlscellanioui 30
MANAGEMENT $475 TO $800
end Cess Lake
SUPERVISOR: Clean - up on this terrific spoil Build for tha futural Run a tight shlpl Gol 14,200. Call Dave Lee, 334-2471* Snelllng and SnilTlng.	•
Wanted to Rent	32
1 ' BEDROOM HOUSE, vicinity et Whitfield School aria, family,
I SIMMS.	~
I by COUPLE, WITH 2 mo. old baby,
1 i 'or 2 bedroom apt. Furnlahad,
1 131-0749.
i NEGRO WOMAN Ojl$E|RAtE for 2 1 or 3 bedrooms, FE 4-3921 ottsr 1.
I SHOP FOR CO ti St R U C f.T? ft Scenery noedod. Minimum It foot colling, 2400 sq. foot floor apgco, 220 electric wiring, .hot tnd cola, running water. Hoot, lovelory, loading door and ampla parking tor i cars, 1 year loose. PlHiS coil Loan Luka at 177-2MO. Ext, 2144,
WEBSTER School district, I ar~)"
SALES TRAINEE $7,800—FEE PAID
National corp. will train bright young man to represent their firm. Company car glut bonus. Call Mrs. Larson, Inlarnatlonal Perionntl,
SYSTEMS: ANALYZE this problem I Find tha right ablution and you find yourself on topi 110,000. Call Norm Caio, 334-2471, Snelllng end
Share Ihflof Gttnrtera 33
ADC OR DIVORCne to Ihiro my S-bedroom homta PB 4-2130.
GIRL WITH APARTMENT WlShOS to
625-2780, 423-4317..
SECRETARY $6,000-FEE PAID
No shorthand 'necessary, t words par minute, with 2 yeai exp. Call Mrs. Marz: Internal ion Personnel, 6IM10&J0I0 W
SECRETARY JR.
Sales doportmont of Southfield firm needs tw_ secrelorlts, shorthand and typing
MATURE WORKING MAN fo at lake front homo with apim, per mo., plua utilities. 47W1I9.
MATURE WORKING
share n. 994
r? Wanted Real Estate
1 TO 50
Sr
PARCELS,
many fringe benefits. Starting salary to $500, company pay
IcEuHXcy PERSONNEL 442-3010
SECRETARY
losition In this new Birm-lovely surroundings, dgo of booKkoapmg
AMBITIOUS PERSON-rtal estate work. Como
whero the money Is. We train. EM .SALES: Got that di 3-6703.
LIST WITH HACKETT
■	START TO PACK IT
Opdykg._______
waitresses
Night >hltt fuli or part Tim,, must]MAN *1 YEARS.OP AGE and up.
gonial people. Typing required.
A CLERK TYPIST,
Orchard Lake.
ATTENDANT
AN ACCOUNTANT
reference and salary expected to
Boyne Falls Log Homes.
'A TELEPHONE CANVASSER" SUPERVISOR
Top Salary for right person. Call
BABYSITTER, LIVE IN.
d general \ 18-9431
BABY SITTER FOR 2-year-old girl, weekdays, light housework near
Rochester office, 451-5577.
BEVERLY MANOR Offers RN'S, LPN'S end NURSES AIDES the opportunity to care for aged patients. Make an outstanding contribution to nursing by serving
YOU.
vService training.
SCREW MACHINES
Multi-splndlo operators needs.
pay, fringes. 333-7913.___
TREE DIGGERS, START mediately, >2.10 per hr. Fi
port time. Sordines, 1915 s.l TKmu', tiZZrM Rochester Rd., Rochester. 451-, (Pont'oc GonojreljySpjW). 9000.	BABYSITTER, RELIABLE 1
TV SERVICE MAN, must hove color! h> Hv» <"■ 421-4111. ---------
experience. Top wages and BAR REASTAURANT benefits. Hod's TV. FE 1-4112.___| 11.75 an hour. 373-4700.
security, and benefit program. Part time and full time available. Apply at Beverly Manor Convalescent Center, 332 Orchard Lake Avenue,
Hslp Wanted Mala
6Help Wanted Mala
ACCOUNTANTS
Consumers Power Company's rapid expansion in Michigan has created many opportunities for the graduate accountant (individuals with a bachelor's degree and a minimum of 20 hours of accounting subjects).
We have much to offer, both the recent graduate and experienced accountant, with up to 5 years of experience, interested in stable employment, diversified work assignment, and an unlimited ppportunify with an expanding compony.
Plant interview add relocation expenses will be reimbursed. Send resume oj’ call far appointment.
E. A. WELIVER
| Division Personnel /
Director
CONSUMERS, POWER
1030 Featherstone Rood,
Pontiac, Mich, \	> v ;
48058
Phone 333-7812
An Equal Opportunity Employer
TRUCK
DRIVER
Days only, no Sunday or holidays, good pay and benefits. Apply Machus Pastry Shop, 433 S. Adams, Birmingham. 444-1031.
TRAFFIC JR.
RATE ANALYST
National building1 material manufacturer with office in Birmingham has opening for young men, experienced in rail and truck rates. Satanr negociabie. Mail a resumes Pontiac Press Box C-34.
BARMAID, PULL /AND part time, nights, apply in persor	|
Lounge. 3121 W. Huron.
HOUSEKEEPER. ALSO
Square Shopping Plaza, South Boulevard and Squirrel Rd. Call Mr. Herbert, LI 7-8757 or LI 5-0300. Reverse Charges. HOUSEKEEPER. LIGHT d u 11 • •, Llva In. Own room. New baby
HOUSEKEEPER
Homemakers
Your ekllls as a homemaker could be added Income for you. We are presently, accepting applications for our part time selling schedules. If you are available days or evenings come in. and discuss a sailing position with us.
Apply in parson 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Employment Office
Hudson's
Pontiac Mall
HOUUSEKERpER] FULL TIME,
Nursing Cantar, 33*0341.
HOUSEKEEPER, cooking, live in, answer ceil Ml 4
Ml 4-3342. If no
HOUSEWIVEf EARN 82.50 up, pick up and deliver Brush Orders. Call Mai Ma 5, 353-2144, 7-9 398-3172.
HOUSEKEEPING 2 DAYS a wk. Bloomfield Hills, Adams Rd., Long Lako area. Must have own transportation. Must be dependable and hava ref. Cali 442-5920. HOUSEKEEPER, LIVE IN preferred
BABY SITTER NEEDED immediately, live in or out, middle-aged preferred, 2 boys 5 and 8, call OR 3-9711.
3:30 p.m. Celt 334-9401 anytime
after 3:30, <	.............
BABYSITTER,
RN works : salary, possibility
844-9438 all day.
works 3-U: 30 * shift, exc
____ry, possibility of sta>
overnight If desired, 334-8273.
BEAUTICIAN WANTED
wage, 30, S3, 40 per nission.

considered.
. .. I school children, workim parents, Birmingham area. 441
3491.________ .
HOUSEKEEPER FOR MOT* L, furnished apartment plus salary.
HOUSEWORKER FOR Clarktfon area. 11 to 3, 3 days, $30. Call 11
to 3. 623-0828.___________
HOUSEKEEPER TO llva In or lady
cal! after 4, 447-7125.
|F
4 to 9 p.m,, 1 «ven-110-1120
years of age or older, >1.501 earn up ,o >110 an nour plua all fringe banafits. training, plckli Apply In parson, Ellas Bros. Big Puller Brush
642-3050 irugged feeling? Get out on the move! Build your future! Fasti >7,100. Call Norm Casa, 3)4-2471, Snelllng and Snail-
, futural Great! >380. Call Ann UP- Carter, 334-2471, Snelllng and . In SMlIInn'
Call
arlng
Mai
WOMEN POR COLLECTION from 9 'til S:3b-dally, 1 days, must have good phone voice, experienced or will train, call Mrs. Tlbbltt 544-
WAITRESS, S DAYS,
Bob's Ristaurant,
WOMAN FOR INTERESTING office work, Pontiac Credit Bureau. 333
N, Parry St._______________
WANTED, Part-time girls, lor coffee shop. Apply Firebird Lanes. 2521 Elizabeth Lake Rd., Pontiac. WAITRESS WANTED TO work lunch hours, hourly rate plus tips, for hirthor intormptlon, UL 2-3410. WAITRESS FOR EVENING work, to work servo drinks and food, hourly rote plua tips. For further In-
formation UL 2-3410.__________
WAITRESS, full lima, nights. Harbor Bar. 013-0320.______
PART-TIME SALES PERSONNEL WANTED
For our Mena Department Morning, afternoon or evening hours available. Sea Mr. Schwarts, Lion Store, Inc. Miracle Milo Shopping Cgntpr- 2111 c. Telegraph, Pontiac
REAL ESTATE
DO YOU HAVE A LICENSE?
DO YOU GET ADVERTISING?
IS YOUR OFFICE OVER CROWDED?
I WILL HIRE 2 SALESMEN IT WILL PAY YOU TQ CALL: MR. KINCANNON
GMC Real Estate 681-0370
WAITRESS OVER IS. No oxperltnci
references, 682 7899.
More for homo then wages. Call
Interview 20th-24«h,
Laundry Dry
WANTED EXPERIENCED cook, top pay, plus Blue Cross, paid vacation, nick time and holiday pay. Apply 114 Orchard Lake Ave.,
WANTED: LIVE IN room, l£
REAL ESTATE SALES PERSONNEL
FULL AND PART TIME
pre-fab garage _o
Work Wanted Male _
A-l CARPENTER WORK
cement, etc. Large
siding, roofing.
EXCELLENT CARPENTRY. ALL
LIGHT HAULING, garaga etc. PE 3-0981._______
I G H T HAULING, refrigerators.
HOMES,
S,
Iff__IBM —
TRACTS, URGENTLY POR IMMEDIATE SALE I
WARREN STOUT, REALTOR
1450 N. Opdyko Rd. I 373-1111
i DAY CASH
FOR YOUR HOUSE OR LOT NO COST TO SELL
Fast friendly service
Aaron Mta. & Invest. Co.
33*1144________
2 OR 3 BEDROOM houst, with garage and or with basamihl. Between Baldwin and Parry St. by GM plant S3.M0 la MJHO dawn. No agents plus#. 332-4989.
A BUYER WITH CASH
APPRAISALS FREE GUARANTEED SALE 30 DAY LISTING
Wa guarantee the tala el yi home In 3# days.
LAUINGER
474-0319
ijf, for can
Work Wanted Female 12 i BEHIND IN PAYMENTS? Avoid . legal costs call agent today 674-RONING, 1 day service. Mrs. 1443.____________________
McCowan. 334-3847.	_____
HOUSEWORK BY DAY* need!
transportation. 335-4251.
LADY D ¥ SIRE S APARTMENT
confidence. Call tarry Phipps. Lauinger Rtal Estate.
REGULAR PALL classes tor men end women with e desire for tamings, In access of S20,000. Call EMpira 3-4703 for Interview with
FULL
SALESMAN
■HP* part time, good wc conditions, good profit, coll Mobile Homes.
634-4443
light 9-10 a.
12 end 10, c •-11 p.m.;
WANTED WAITRESSES, Day night and pert time. Apply Sonr Lounge 710 N. Milford I
YOUNG WOMEN
lf-25
Local national firm now hiring young women for p 1 e a • a n t,
Tire
Mounters
Our busy AUTO 1E R1 GARAGE hos openings f' time or port timo work, p:
In the morning from t o.: p.m. of later. ,
Good wages plus imony company benefits Including: 1 immediate discount —
ive pleasing personality and ba able Jo start Immediate employemenf. Excellent earning tor those who qualify. No typhia required. For Interview call Mr, Paters before 2 p.m, 335-Bll,
NL or F. 8
.	____ .. urn sso-1170 weak, call
private scheoC. Cfall 442-1IM.	’ before 12 noon. MI 2-7343.	___
BARMAID AND winreises fuiTend.KITCHEN HELP FULL or port part time, nl#ht thin, II or ovor, time. Day or evening. Rocco's, BLOOD DONORS MIL train, apply In parson alt. 6! Restaurant 1171 Dixie. Drayton	nnr-tsiTi u
P.M., Airway Lounge, 4121 Plains. Apply 5 p.m. to I p.m. ■	URGENTLY
Highland Rd„ (M-191.	__ LIVE IN BABY SITTER, >20 wuk All RH Positive
CASHIERS OrTjruG Clarke, full or i plus room and burd. Waterford. All RH Not, with pmltlvt port lime, must be II yurs	- . ..
Calling All SalespBOplBlII
YOU ARE
WANTED!!!
YORK Is on tna lookout for con sclantlous solf-slarters with outgoing porsonelltln. II you moot this description. Experience It not necessary, wa will train you to urn a rewarding career. Join the action turn at
YORK REAL ESTATE
Call Mr. Folty at 6744363
REAL ESTATE
Need 4 aggressive ulat people on our ataft. Licensed aalesppopl* preferred, but will train. CMlHU starting every Saturday at y a.m
FE 5-9471
BuildingServices-Suppties 13
aract«L 1491. Dew ConstrecNon Co! PROMPT, COURTEOUS SERVICE
CASH NOW
Move later. No points, no c< mission, gat our prlco FIRST.
MARK
EAL ESTATE COMPANY Telegraph _______3324
CASH
11702 S.
FOR YOUR HOME
338-2191 or 338-3529.
Busintss Sanric#^^_________15|
Dressmaking & Tailoring 17
YOUR MASON’ SHOE dultr. Kenilworth, Pontiac. FE 2-1S03.
BRIAN REALTY
Wa Sold Your I____
— Listing l
15210 Dixie Hwy,
lay 1*4 4334703
LANDSCAPING
Start Immediately 4 man, 42.50 an hour, dally i bring lunch end report at 7:00. 2497, >10 Opdyko. 1	,
CASH!
in a! FOR YOUR PROPERTY
Ready to movo ratlra, or- loso your propirty* Call us for fast cash.
SNYDER BROTHERS. Local and forld wide. Plano exports* 452-2440
LIGHT HAULING.
LIGHT,HAULING, CALL anytime,
WM. MILLER, REALTY
DELINQUENT P A Y M ■ NTS-Brought up to dote and your credit saved. Can work out rental H needed. Agent, 4914374.___
Divorce—Foreclosure?
Don't loir your homo —Coll Ui for free opprolul.
973-319*
am. Agent OR 4-1949.
down oujris
J?33$P-
Wanted Female 7 Htlp Wanted Female
person Arnolds Drugs.
2nd FLOOR
Montgbmery
Ward
PONTIAC MALL ~
ganaral offlca Call bat. 1-5. PE 3-3161.
rots i mm
ba able
• IN ESS
CLERK WITH bockground, mu high school HwhlondRd.
CLEANING LADIES, tvonlngt. nights per wk., mutt bo ban roTleble, Industrious, apply R< 909, Pontiac State Bank Build 333-2430.
CASHIER-RECEPTIONIST
Our frlondly needs e person
UNITED SAFETY AND ttCUklTY SYSTEMS INCOR.	/
NEEDS BRANCH MANAGER TRAINEE | 25 TO 45
Earn While You Learn ' j
NetionWIdt firm with'local honk, ofllca daalrn to traln 'tho
llnoara desire 9a
tvee. Outstanding fits, Contact Mr, Hnsnsr, or: we 7111. Gonoral PuBlIt -Loan,
CASHIER
TELE-TRAY OPERATOR CURB GIRLS KITCHEN HELP
For evening shift. AH banafits. Good wages. Apply at:
, lUAf Edoi.
Bio BOV RESTAURANT . . 01x19 Hwy. A Silver Lk, Rd.
' CASHllR'' RECePTldtiiST rrw eating people and c*n twit fo on aptnlhf far
OR 3-1111	___
L.P.N.
Part fima, afternoon aalw, 1m

MICHIGAN COMMUNITY
.	BLOOD CENTER
LIVE IN, CARE OF ONE child and ,n Pontt»S	^ FE 44947
light hdutakeeplng. Mult
. 6734717,
shift. Apply
LIGHT ASSEMBLY tfarao tape plant, day •t 4413 Farnlea, Royal Oik,
C E D FGr )ld Township Long Like Rd. ns. 2 or 3 days II 714-3030. i
LADIES FOR PART and lull lima telephone work from our ottleo. >1.60 per hr. Coll 4914413, 10-5 on-
TELEGRAPH It HURON LADY PoTgENERAL hOUff work Saturday, 132-4879,
1342 wide Track Dr« W. • Mbiit “
Tvta., wa BOOKKEEPER.
CAPABLE Of M/bla entry books, ratlramant plan, pa no iimir. Apply batwaan 9-12. ormally Jawalari, 45 N. Saginaw, lb phona calls
CLERK WITH BUfiNllS * i able to typa* school graduate. 612#
high
Hlghli
UNUSUAL OPPORTUNITY NATIONALLY KNOWN OIL COMPANY
Has openings In mis area for an Industrial, lubrication saluman. Man saluted will ba given special I specialized jets. Must hava lit* I be available now; Drawing account whan qualified- II you are looking for o position offering unusually high Income, pleaunt working conditions and an opporunlty Ip train tor ~ Manager's post til
qualifications, address .. . _____
number to Jock Rosier, Dept, 10-MmLp. O. Box 393, Dellas, Taxes 71331. .	.	■ -
Division
write
WANTED
Rut Estate Salas parsonnal, or port time who art looking
LAUINGER REALTY
>20 a wuk, 3414447, mornings ly-	■; I,,, - ..
MAlff POR RITX l
DIRECTOR 0E
VOLUNTEER SERVICES B mXt0(ib laoy bBBkkmlnB
Mureui'w	"«^9™ lifmodlcol clinic, S390 cjthy^lng!
CSrffi,IVAhim3	r.M Apsoclotos Pgroomwir WI4I17. i
direct programs for recruiting SJSEfKfFJwxihta training and using value leer gw- ■*h>t>. Eqdkj. Alaoclataa workers r^uirad, prlar hospital	■.
veluntur services aXparlanCt 2 GENERAL OFFICE POSITIONS, preferred, preference Is tor college ( tor jdoctor's ofllca >310 Pat Cary. gladuate, salary naUtlabla, ax-i 'AM«cl»tg> PpreounglTlliailF callent fringe txMWHlt, contact
i.AtOa<;
Idn, 1941 t. Talagraph. ' MAGNET IC CAR and truck ~door ; sign, part time ar tuH time wark
convanlanca ickar calls it. attar 3
IWItMl PH. end
parsonnal director,
Hospllal lemlne'
Pontiac, 3M-47I1
CahTtaRer coQVLfrPliCL ...................
-ft
General
Huron,
WriDGKff ife
j.TWcSsar
Hi Jandacaplni, ahevoi
c, Prop opartmont plut
Fil'Ml' DRlVrtl 'oxertlut dTiving
lift;
record >12,000,' Pat _ C a 11. A*<mT>liiiT.SWiiw*t mwi<?. o' tyUiil Ataw naaOad^
train 9241, Anal# Rook.
Ptrionnti, 332-9117.
________far I . „ _
11,190- PM pold. Anglo Boa Associates Parsonnal, 3124117,
Licensed Practical Nurses
and
Nurse Aides
FULL Ol* PART-TIME WORK
LOOK NO FURTHER UNLESS YOU WISH TO COMPARE OUR TOP SALARIES!
wL.P.N/1
$5800 ($2.78 fi.h.) Lo $6700 ($3.21 p.h.)
NURSE AIDES
$5000 ($2.39 p.h.) to $5700 ($2.73 p.h.)
ALIO NtGttY SHIFT DIFFERENTIAL OF He PER HOUR
TOP FRINGE BENEFITS, INCLUDING:
Full Paid Blue Cross-Blue Shield, Full Paid 2 to 4 Weak Vacations, Paid Sick Leove, 13 Days Pir Year (Unlimited Accumulation),* Paid Legal Holidays, Paid Group Life Insurance, Employe's Blood x Bank, Educational Reimbursement, In-Service Training, Acres of Close-Lighted Free Parking Guarded by Security Patrol.
EXCELLENT WORKINQ CONDITIONS AND AN OPPORTUNITY TO BE PART OF A DYNAMIC TEAM THAT THE CITIZENS OF ALL jOAKLAND COUNTY ARE PROUD OP.
After you compare us to the other opportunities
AFFORDED YOU, CONTACT EITHER:	;
THE PERSONNEL, DIVISION
OAKLAND COUNTY C6URT HOUSE , 1200 N. TELEGRAPH ROAD, PONTIAC PHONE: 3384751, EXT. 495, MISS WHITE \
oaklanoTounty HOSPITAL COUNTY SERVICE CENTER PONTIAC, MICHIGAN 48053	, ,
PHONE: 334-9982, MRS. THOMAS, Director of Nuraing

For Want Adi Dial 334-4981
Wanted Real Cltat*
THIS PONTIAC PRKSS. SATrRPAV, OCTOBER IB, 10fl9
36 Apartminti, Furnlihid 37 Apartments, Unfurnished 38
.M>th, MM 4-ROOM APARTMENT working
tx^sjSwuur
$109 PER MONTff WALTON PARK MANOR
U n p recsdenled opportunity—for tomliioi with lots than lio.ooo Incoma, 1,	2 and 3 bedroom
townihousot', adlacant lo in, only
Caili, Again, 33B-AVP3,1	P»r wA., N,
,________	| Jfaglnaw jl, Ml a-Mit.
} "ROOMS FURNISHED nanr fal-
•Hr!*#-____
^fiyMAPi ;- Buying houses I __________, .
vi!r!£u iVP. surrounding artas.l Huron mopping canlor. 333-7334
-MJMBUtiLStff!,- *«!«. iijw a-ioooM FURNisTieb apt;, w IMMEDIATE CASH i,,°,Vo--------------------------- I
c*“ w Oakland county,
' commission, slay "1‘	34 hours.
7 people, Giles Really Co., 3 S2£MX' PtnVATOr both," gntrance,
YORK
INVESTOR wTLL PAY cash I For your aqully looey call agent, 6>V
Investors — Buying houses to rent In and around Ponllac. Agant,
Your
House
I pay cash# no i ilont. We alto buy any condition/ anywhere. Call Kallar at
____333-7824
I HAVE A PURCHASER WITH CASH FOR A STARTER HQMI IN OAKLAND COUNTY. CALL AGENT# 674-1691 or 331*6993.
Cots — wanted in pontiac
Immediate closing. REAL VALUE
REALTY# 442-4230.	_
SPOT CASH
FOR YOUR EQUITY. VA, FMA.
or other# r mm —
CALL NOW REALTOR. On NINOS FB 4-7005.___
WEI WILLI BUY I
Your equity — Cash dlract to yoi a* soon as tltla work Is ordtrec and deal Is closed. No gimmicks Call now and anyona of oui courtaous appralsara will your door within 15 i Remember, a quicker sale today
4054.
273 Baldwin Ave. Cell 338-
LQSTROf
anyone i wl
IS minutes, ir sale today may maka you a better purchase tomorrow!
WHEN YOU SEEK OUR SERVICE YOU
"JOIN THE MARCH TO TIMES'
Times Realty
trance, wall .dulls only. 373-5591.
ROOMS AND BATH. Utilities , Included, nice building. FB 2-6208.
3 ROOMS FURNiIRfb, PRIVATE —	FBS-344.
3 ROOMS FUlNiSHED apartm.nl private bath and entrance, utllltlei paid, sac. dap. req. Can ba seen ai 13 A Union Court from 10 a.m. . I
P.m. FEJM636. _________
3 ROOMS aWbath. arlvala trance, narking, newly decora new furniture, washing facilities, sound-proofed, 3 children welcome, 832.50 Wk.. dep. 335-2136.
3 AND 4'ROOM, PRIVATE,' belh and anlranct, utlllllas, Purn. 340 N. Saginaw St.
3	ROOMS; GENTLEMAN'S apart-mtnl, al) PVT.e. near Tel-Huron, 1st tlosr, mature adult only. 4SI-1455, 1-3:30 p.m.
4	ROOMS, SSSnjTILITIES Included,
security. 343-5004.__
4 ROOMS Atlo BATH, no drinker, or pels. 35 Williams 51. 334-4433. ADULTS ONLYT3 ROOMS.
_____ FE 8-2944,
AV AILABLB10-17 1 twdrOdm apartment, dap, rag, 335-3173 or 334-37H. CLOSE TO DOWNTOWN, 3 and 3 rooms, nawly decorated, exc. condition, Children w a I c o m a, soundproof, washing facilities, pvt. •ntranca# bath. From 132.50 wk. __Sec. deposit. FE 4-1802.
COZY
Clean# comfortable, beautifully fur* nished, centrally I ocated, a 11 utilities paid, laundry and parking facilities, dep. and ref. required, _no children, no pets^ FE 2-7007. CLOSE TO DOWNTOWN, 3 rooms, new furniture# private entrance# carpeted hallways# pvt. parking# bath. Children welcome. Must sea appreciate. From $32.50 wk. 335-
c# II 335-4171.
N i*CB SLEEP!NG B00M~l separate kitchen, working near Mall. >13 wk. 481-1734. ____
3 ROOMS AND BATH. Adult only 135 deposit, FI 3-«077.____________
AMERICAN HERITAGE" APARTMENTS ,
' 1 and 2 bedroom# all conveniences! air-conditioned# all utilities In-eluded In rent. No/pefv. Adulti
Round Lake Rd. Union Lake# $125 mo. utilities. 642*2543, 426-8272.
COLONIALVILLAGE
entlng 1 bedroom »pi N; I Mil dark I Closed Frldayi
5090 DIXIE HIGHWAY 423-0600 Realtor Open 9*9 Daily OffIco Open Sunday 1-5 HEADQUARTERS FOR INDEPENDENT INVESTORS INC. tRANSPERfee - Looking tor a housa In tha Pontiac araa, have larga down paymant, will taka evar your mortgage. Call my
agant, 491-0374,	_________
Transferred? - i win buy your
larging building program. Call Dor rle S. Son Realtors. 474-0334._
Apartments, furnished 37
ix
OPEN; I 'III dark DAILY Closed Fridays On Scott Laka Road# 1 milt _ P!LD,xit Hfiqhw^y . . , 673*9669 CLARKSTON AREA, Prefer »ji girl or young coupla#
After 5. 673*2490._
EMBASSY WEST APARTMENTS
Large# sound conditioned, two-bedroom units# all utilities except electricity, central air condltlonihg. Carpeting, swimming pool# minimum ont*yaar lease, n o children, no pots, 4ft miles W. of Tel-Huron Shopping Center, 5367 Highland Rd.# Apt. 137, 674-0569, Mrs. Schultz, between 1 and 0 p.m. only.___
NEW APARTMENT COMPLEX iti Clarkston has 2 vacancies
1st. Large rooms# < rpeted. Refrlger range, dishwasher, lonlng and laundry facm furnished. 2 blocks to town.
0600 for particulars. Ask for
near airport, Cali evenings OR 3-2294, _
”0 ¥ V LTOHT.....MOU 5 E K B E P I N O
suburbs# answer to Pontiac Press Box CO 7,	•
F6r ¥mPL6y«D PIrsON# kitchen
available# good transportation# mar only# 331-6072. _
LADIES# IAROE ROOM with TV kitchen privileges, Wastslde. 330
North and plants. PE 2-P27. SLEEPING"ROOM, Walking distance Pontiac Motor# Plsher Body, cooking privileges. FE 5-3051._
SLEEPING ROOM# ALL modern, ground floor, for mature lady, _ kitchen privileges. FE 2-9839. SAGAMORE MOTftl. IV C# Muted,
carpeted# TV# telephone# meld
BEDROOM HOMS, OVER 1 acre#
I mile from i-75# cash to 6 per I cent contract# 625-3045.
, 4 BEDROOMS
AVONDALE SCHOOLS 633 PROVINCETOWN# Bloomfield! Orchards# 1ft baths# attached i garage# extensive carpeting, built-! mi, A custom home In an excellent
attached garage!V24I9 3 BEDROOM — 1ft STORY
Lovely ASSUME low
ELIZABETH LAKE
nt. Birmingham S c
FHA TERMS
Beamed

BEDROOM# brick recreation
$39,900,00.
14.7 ACRES
and stone ranch# wl... room and bullt-lns# property
spring-fed pond. $51,000.00. ORCHARD LAKE PRIVILEGES odern bt-level# fa fireplace# living 1
............... - .... baths#
/attached garage. $62,400.00.
SLEEPING ROOM# NO ona fl _ drinks, day-shift worker, 334-7609. SLEIpiNO ROOMS with kitchen grlvll^jjts# near Pontiac General
ROOM AND BORD or
MILFORD AREA
NEARLY NEW 4 BEDROOM quad attached garage. Fenced 14' lot.
Just off M-59 at Teggerdlne Rd.
$26,950.00 FHA
LADD'S OP PONTIAC 391-3300
3	'BEDROOM HbMtf~~w)th ~ large recreation room# Just outside city.
Immad. post. Cash to mortgage or land contract Firms to qualified buyer. $29,950. Will taka smaller home# land contract or Income property In trade. Toms. FE 5-2424 or 628-2644.__
4	BEDROOM, (POjsiBLE fifth),
ranch. Ideal for larga family, living I 4139 Orchard Lake Road room, dining room# full basement# >	At Pontiac Trail
— 500 P-24, ceil Roy Todiyi fl/IA 6-4000	444-4890
Office Open^ Sundays
5960>AtiAMU$, CLARKSTON EXCEPTIONALLY WELL
Located and appointed
HOME WITH APPROX. 1H ACRES OF LAND WITH ACCESS FROM BOTH PARAMUS ST. AND
bedroom model
room with fire...............
has fireplace# recreation partially finished.
ire
BROOCK
4128; Garden City# GA 1-781 AY CITY (Van Dyke I 69635# attractive 3 room home# 1ft bath,
valtablo. Du#
GOODRICH AREA. 19 mill from Pontiac. Acreage building site# beautiful worn ed area. 13750. low 'dow payment, easy terms, CAL 664-8560 OR EVES. 62(1-4963.
LAPEER AREA. 3 bedrooi recreational setting, 4 lots < 2 large lakes. Excellent fls Ing, sandy beach, a good bt nt $32,500. Land contra available. CALL 66 4 - 0 5 4
KINDA CHOOSY?
FEATURES YOU
fireplace, sparkling
. i, spark kitchen, 1ft ceramic basement, attached 2 ige, In p/ e s 11 g e >od near Watkins Lake.
49 i Salt Houita
|H4MS3MOR >AU>	•'*»>
fivj no," nfiSTNis, ■11KITBHI1E% bedroom and bath lit floor) t bedrooms *nd Mth 2nd flMr, bsasmtnt, oil hul, Qtrsot, Sauilwait Ild,. FHA ttrmi.
Anderson & Associates
044 Jotlyn	FB 4-3534
Evenings FE 2-4353 or 612*1039 Jf A V I NO STATE”-- 3-b^room co'«
, Ionian, 2 yrs. old on peaceful Lake B reamer. New electric stove; combination side- by side refrigerator freezer; washer-dryer; carpeting, drapes Family room flrapl
200 feet 1

a«
Phone Holly 6 pointment.
| NEW 3 BEDROOM RANGH,'
674-4101.
occupancy. 2
- 3 ready for Lapeer. 2 in i build to suit.
MILL'S REALTY
For all your real estate needs
CALL; _________________ 693-8371
BEDROOM, 1ft BATHS, family room, carpeted living room, dining room and den with fireplace, full 2 car garage.
waterfront. $15,500. $2500 down. 3129 Grove, Katgo. Harbor. 602
2136.______
FURNISHED 2 B EDR O 6 M , northeast blvd. araa, $145 per month with $150 sec. deposit. Immediate Occupancy, call FE
S-2794.	__________
NEW# 1 AND 2 bedroom. 61575 11 Mila Rd. off Pontiac Trail. Near South Lyons. Adults only, sorry no
KEEGO HARBOR LOCATION,
ref., 682-3100.
“BEDROOM CARPETED, 1
LOWER 3 ROOM and bath, $30 per wk.# $75 dep. FE 2-0790.
MODERN APARTMENT deluxe# new furniture# quiet# deposit. 775 Scott Laka Rd.___________
TWO AND THREE ROOMS# new furniture# private
children welcome.
carpeted. Refrigerator, built ditlonlng
----L#<L _
chi Idi
[ iersignl)
VALLEY PLACE APTS.
In the Center of Rochester 2 bedroom, 2 baths $188
OPEN EVERY DAY
_____CALL, 651-4200 ________
WALTON SQUARE Apartments 1675 Perry Rd. North 373-1400 or 338-1606
Come see one of the nicest apartments being built In tha area. Comfort, and beauty ere combined
2383 ORCHARD LAKE RD.# 3000 sq.|heet.
office, furi carpeted# good for professional "■*** ‘Exc: parking ai active local sho
oom# dining room, and upstairs# ga 1 only 812,000 FHA# call Ra today I 674-4101,
ra
ideal summit
69632# lovely 3
RENTING i
WE
ARE NOW
Rochester Ada
garage# ns High !
APPLICATIONS
$109 MONTHLY
GOLDFINCH LANE. TRI-LEVEL
KITCHEN wfTH SLAND SNK. LARGE CARPETED VINYL FLOORS. HOT WATER HEAT WITH ft ZONES. 2 ft • C A R GARAGE AND OTHER QUALITY FEATURES. 847,500 CASH OR CASH TO MORTGAGE B Y PURCHASER.
KENNETH G. HEMPSTEAD REALTOR
185 ELIZABETH LAKE RD.
WORKERS# WIDOWS CALL RAY TODAY
screens# paved drive# choice of schools, storage building# owner must sell. FHA or mortgage can be assumed. Price $17,500. CALL 664-8560. EVES. 793-6946.
merchantlle. Exc:
U00 D0WN ------ ,| LICENSED FE Encash
BATH UNIT MODEL 1337 CHER-
a nd
carpeted hallways, facilities# 2 child!
welcome, 338-6504. ____________________, r™m $32.50 wk. Sec. deposit. TP
FM r,"r*d iTNroN 'n^ir-^
'rmSisaw1—utilities included, youno marrieds ' ^FFtCIENCY apartment, alj| or worklno ttirls, FE 2-3404.
__________________UPPER J ROOMS_ andjbath. located
appointment,
elegance. Large private thick carpeting, brick ala trie heating are apeclal We're still Building but oc< available Immediately, or at any time or location of your choosing.
From $165
SORRY, NO CHILDREN OR PETS
APPLIANCES BY FRIGIDAIRE
Rent Office Space
47
sphee ohj grot lighting# ample parking lanltor «ervlce. fiai _orner of Er* ' i Murphy Sts.
kenJeth g!sBempsteap
Corner of Elizabeth Lake . Sts. across from Pontiac State Hospital.
KENNETH G. HEMI I I 185 Elizabeth Lake Rd.# Pontloo
340 SQ. FT. PRIVATE entrance, ample parking# all utllltlei# will remodel to suit next to new bank. 3634160.
OPDYKE RD.
1-2-3 BEDROOM# BASEMENT#
BATH UNIT MODEf -----
RYLAWN# PONTIAC____
$2100 DOWN
OFF JOSLYN ON LENOX. Bi
_____334-3830~53ft W. Hurqp St,
WATERFORD Area, off Walton Blvd. Custom built ill: brick ranch with 11x18' living room, natural stone fireplace# large kitchen and dining room; 3 bedrooms# Inter-corrv inside and outside# 2 patios# bar-b-que pit. 2 car garage# well landscaped yard# with numerous trees and shrubs, paved circle
lixceMen* location to schools center. CALL
HOMES
WILL ACCEPT ALL APPLICATI
FROM ,....
OR DIVukv.be3.
PEOPLE WITH CREDIT PROBLEMS AND R E.T I R E E S APE OKAY WITH US.
OPEN DAILY AND SAT. AND! SUN.
or Coma to 296 W. Kennett Near Baldwin REAL VALUE REALTY
I For Immediate Action Call | FE 5-3676 - 642-4220 I JOSEPH SINGLETON" REALTOR
I 429 ORCHARD LK. RD. 335-8116!
LOTUS LAKE 1
JOHN A. ROWLING,
REALTOR
129 W. GENESEE, LAPI
utilities furnished, $35 1
UNIT
ding. Utilities fun dep. Adults only. 338-6380. EFFICIENCY APARTMENT” 1 682-4333.
fAND 2 BEDROOM apartment lor rent. Lake Orion# 693-1076, f-BEDROOM# AVON Township, Me. dep. $35 a week, call after 3 p.m.,
OR 3-3929 or 673-9463._________
1 BEDROOM DELUXE motel apartment, adults only. 373-0025. i ROOMS, NEAR Pontiac Motors, clean end quiet. Adults only. Utilities Included. FE 4-4625.
*2 ROOMS PRIVATE bath, couple, ref. $30 dep. $25 wk. 100 Norton.
2" BIG ROOMS and bath, child Welcome, $30 par wk. Seneca St.
t AND 3 ROOMS Apartments, private entrance, baths, parking and laundry facilities, sound-proofing, carpeted, 1 Infant welcomed#' must see to appreciate, from $32.50 and dep. FE 5-6642.
t ROOMS AND BATH, married couple, no children. FE S-1705.
625-4045 after S.
I floor, private bath no children or pets.
FAND 3 ROOMS, excellent condition# good furniture, redecorated# pvt. entrance, bath, parking, children
I AND 3 ROOMS Newly decorated#
...... _ _________* Newly
new furniture, private entrance, ■■■■mng . eted
appreciate#
I all utilltl $32.50 and up. Dep. required. FE
and bath, wasAlng facilities, sound hallway. Must
welcome 132.50 . 1-1802.
utilities furnished,
private entrance, bath, washing facilities, newly decorated# new furniture# 1 child welcome. From
$32.50# dep. FE 5-6642.___________
2 ROOMS, NEWLY DECORATED'# furniture, pvt. bath and
t ^ROOMS, PRIVATE ENTRANCE# bath, newly decorated, new furniture excellent condition, soundproofed, washing facilities, child Welcome. $32.50, dep., utilities turn., FE 4-1802.
2 ROOMS AND BATH, S25 !
Inquire at 273 Baldwin Ave.,
338-4054.____________________
I ROOMS, PRIVATE bath, nicely furnished, baby welcome 682-8496.
at
_ _ _ Dixie Hwy All utilities except electric. S25 per wk. S7S sac, dep. Couple preferred. 673-8547 or 693-1055.
WESTSIDE, NEWLY DECORATED, carpeted, 1 bedroom. 332-3470 or
Apartments, Unfurnished 38
Rent Houses, Furnished 39 *®»* &»«"•** Property 47-A|
2-BEDROOM HOME IN Waterford M*^°/kl®U)iDi^' 'irp 0,,ice’ area, 5225 a mo„ ref FE 4-6167 parking W. Huron. FE 3-7968.
2400 to. FT, STORE building on I
siding, carpeted. Largo down payment. 80x135 lot. $18,900 — 852-1486.
$109 PER MONTH WALTON PARK MANOR
UNPRECEDENTE PORTUNITY — FOR FAMILIES
DOWNTOWN DETROIT. OPEN AND SUNDAY 12 ~~ P.M., EXCEPT THURS.
EXECUTIVE HOME I
Sharp 3-bedroom 70 x 28 brick i home In Novi Twp. with new1
carpeting and drapes throughout.)--------------------------------
Larga living room with fireplace, IMMEDIATE POSSESSIO utility room and 2ft car garage,	bedroom# 1ft baths, family
Beautiful 180 ft, a lot with apple	basement# garage# 80x180	lot#
trees. Low# low price on this home $22,000. Cash to $15,000 mortgaga because owner Is moving out of at 6% per cent# 646-8790.
$36,000 with terms, or	to sfiv np aeri'i
iptnaim a* 4ft nmr	TO BUY OR SELL
CALL
RAY
roes and shrubs. Just terms. See it today.
WARDEN REALTY
Huron# Pontiac 602-3920
cla'mstSn
ON MILL POND
3-bedroom, 1ft baths# completely ‘*1, living room fireplace,
— screens, new roof’, 829,900. Cell after 5. 625-4217.
LOVELAND
WATERFORD
2 bedroom# living room,.
•nd bath. Utility room, location. Leko privileges.
$11,500.
Leona Loveland, Realtor
100 Cess Lake Rd.
2 BEDROOM LAKE FRONT,
ref., no pets, will consider
small child. 673-636$._______
BEDROOM HOME in Holly furnished except refrigerator, $15
required. 634-3317.
ROOMS, NICELY furnished 682-
FREE RENTAL service to landlords# gc *	~	_
In rent# air con-| DANIELS REALTY# Pontiac# OR
dltioning. Sorry, no children or 4-4128; Garden City, GA 1-7800._________
pets. FE 4-8900.___________________ HOUSETRAILER, NEAR Ortonville,
2 BEDROOM, WITH BALCONY, cellent vi«w, living room with fireplace, completely carpeted, m baths, utility, room with washer and dryer, air conditioned, stove, refrigerator, garbage disposal ere Included. 8195 per mo. 363-2685 or
363-8910.	______________
2 BEDROOM INCOME,_ Upstairs,
l after 7 p.m. MA 5-2576-
3 BEDROOM APARTMENT, oft Sashabaw, In Draytbn Plaint. FE
IMMEDIATE
OCCUPANCY
Michigan'* Winter Wonderland lies right at your doorstep when you live beside beautiful Sylvan Lake. Freshly decorated 1 or 2 bedroom apartment—with large
from $152 per month Including heat. Skating and iceboating# beach privileges id alr-t
resident manager < Lake Road or pr
■y.
SYLVAN-ON-THE-LAKES LUXURY APARTMENTS
On Cast Lake Rd. between Sylvan and Cass Lakes lust north ot Keego Harbor. (From
right on Cats I
Apartments, Unfurnished 38 Apartments, Unfurnished 38
©
ENJOY LIFE MORE AT
Oakland Valley
LUXURY APARTMENTS IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY
1 and 2 Bedroom Apartments, fully carpeted and air-conditioned, from $172 monthly.
Pool, Saunas Social Center Exercise Room
Walton Rd. between Adams 8> Opdyke east of 1-75. Phone 373-6460.
Apartments, Unfurnished 38 Apartments, Unfurniihed 38
RIDGEMONT
\	TOWNHOUSE APARTMENTS
•	One, Two and Three Bedrooms
•	Roper Gas Ranges, \ l ■	k
•	Hotpoint" Refrigerators
‘	• Carpet cfnd Drapes	• I
•	All Utilities Except Electric
•	Air-Conditioning by Hotpoint	„
’	* Swim ing Pool and Pool Houle
I	NO PETS ALLOWED
K	CHILDREN O.K.
; Between East Boulevard and Madison—2 blocks from * main gate of Pontiac Motors.
957 N. Parry St. •	Phone 032-3322
Open Daily 10 A.M. except
dep. Partly furnished, ref. qulred. 887-9750.
th flreplai k. Includl
Rent Houses, Unfurnished 40
2 BEDROOM HOME In Pontiac, In-quire after 11 e.m., 26 Gamer, off
3-BEDROOM PARTIALLY furnished.
, plus sec. dep. Evenings;
3 ROOMS, BATH. Close to shopping,
$189 MONTHLY
UNIT. MODEL 1337 Cherry lawn.
Pontiac 335-6171.
CLARKSTON—M-15. $165 MONTHLY FHA, NEW LAKE FRONT, 3 BEDROOM, BRICK BUILT-INS# EXPANDING ATTIC. 627-3840, 627-
FA RM IN GTON, RANCH homa nawly decorated, 2 bedrooms, paneled den or third bedroom, paneled living room and dining area.< Cathedral ceilings, ledgerocli fireplace and trim. Huge patio, bullt-lns, TU 4-8868, all day Saturday and Sunday til noon.
BEAUTIFUL 4 BEDROOM
occupancy. Call LI 8-2830.
EFFICIENCY COTTAGE, Lake
IN ROCHESTER, 3 I
MODERN 4 ROOM AND
NEWLY DECORATED double house, 2 bedroom, 1ft bath, own heat/ garage
M59, parking.
HAYDEN REALTY
363-6604
DIXIE AND HOLLY Rds.. 30'x70\ and 20‘x40‘ commercial bldgs. 625-2546.	______________
erence
BUSINESS-SERVICE
mm...... ■
h«|M*uod
Partridge
MS THE BIRD TO SEE"
00 SQ. FT. IN RED-HOT AREA t the first tenant In this block
ALL ELECTRIC, NEW, 4 bedroom brick home, family room with fireplace, 2 car garage, Waterford Township. Call owner 681-1428.
be developed. Owner will i A SALE IS ONLY
almost any
SIDING
ALUM. VINYL AND ASBESTOS
AWNING-PATIOS
SCREENED-IN OR »L\SS ENCLOSED
EAVES TROUGHING
Continued Seamless eavestroughing, Bring Factory
work. 682-7648 after 6.__
I,Id out ter future isold^or0selling	FA5A#E^Tc’EPiTuVA[,iTrwORK
85 few	FH* °r G'-|CALL NOW- TiRMSDAY O IMSSSBA
Starts 1 grading and eiand; Aaron Mtg. & IflVSt. Co. [ OEALER-a1k8FO^OBRORS RED 1
332-1
GUINN'S CONST. CO. 391-2671
per yd. delivered. 682-1904. Al'S LAWN MAINTENANCE, Spring end fall dean ups. Cutting# | fertilizing and spraying. 673-3992.1
. COMPLETE LANDSCAPING j
Sodding# seeding, shrubs. Licensed Nursery Man. 682-7850.	!
DON P O R TER LANDSCAPING,,
NORTH SIDE 6500 Sq. Ft. located between
Oakland Ave.
ASK FOR FREE CATALOG
Open weeknltes 1
SMITH
NORTH PONTIAC
2100 Square Foot building with paneling and carpeting# i rT customer's service arear 5 year lease# terms can ba negotiated. Immediate occupancy.
The Rolfe H. Smith Co.
Sheldon B. Smith, Realtor 244 S. Telegraph
333-7848
0 DOWN, FULL pried only $I6,50« for this 3 bedroom ranch. In Waterford, featuring wall to wall carpeting, In living room and hall,
lake privileges, P-25.
CALL RAY T6DAYI	6
RAY
2	BEDROOMS
Ranch style home, 2ft car garage# large living room, fenced In. Land Contract Terms,
3	BEDROOMS
2 story, full basement, large lot, patio, excel lent condition. $19,900 on land contract farms.
FLATTLEY REALTY
620 COMMERCE RD.	363-6981
FACTORY BUILT HOUSES for sale, easily transported and erected on your property. Each housa hat 950 sq. fast, bath and
BEDROOM, 4 ROOMS, oarage, large lot. 795 after 5:30, 681-2441.
BEDROOM ALL BRICK ranch, 6
and screens, built-!
PONTIAC. 3 BEDROOM, BASE
MENT, FAMILY HOME. 2 YEARS j gVge'cV'be 'assumed. Cali collect
OLD, NEAR GRADE SCHOOLS, after 6“ ------------
SECURITY REQUIRED. $185 PER1
MO. 398-5633.................
Sylvan
BY OWNER — Laka
bedroom colonial. Full
basement, 2
Owner transferred. $34,000. 673-
BY OWNER, IMMEDIATE OCCU-ncy. Upper Straits Lake, laka vileges# FHA financing, 3 bed-
new ly carpeted, 100x100 ft.
$29,500. Cell 674-1392.
BY OWNER. North Royal Oak. 3 bedrooms, 1ft baths, corner lot. $22,500. FHA approved, $2500 down plus closing. LI 9-2450.
down, balance on land contract. Sea at 571 Crescent Laka Rd. 682-
ready to occupy,
is heat, beau______ .
tramic bath, lake Waterford Township, will Full price 819,900. s&msmjm
hip, OR 3-:
privileges dll FHA
BRIAN
REALTY
sold your neighbor's horns Multlplo Listing Service — .... y	sundoy 10-4
;___________423-0702
breezeway, $21,500, Gl or con-
CARROLL LAKE
Shiny new 3 bedroom beauty, lake privileges, spacious kitchen, deluxe carpeting, paneling. $1,400 BROKER 363-8670 for further CALL BETWEEN 1-8 P.M. —
BY OWNER, 2 bedroom, garage, carpeting througt . .	_
utility room, close to lake with beach facilities. 363-0220,
BY OWNER, Immediate possession, 3 bedroom, family room with fireplace, carpeted, full casement and garage. Wolverine Lake, 624-
BERKLEY—2820 Ferris. Pont la 0-171
down payment, no mortgage costs. Many others. Art Daniels, 6653 Highland, (M-59). 674-4128. CLARKSTON—M-15 S165 MONTHLY FHA, NEW LAKE FRONT, 3 BEDROOM, BRICK BUILT-INS, EXPANDING ATTIC. 627-3846, 627-2825; 353-6770.________ ; ..
Clarkston School Area
WALTER'S LAKE PRIVILEGES, located west of Clarkston Golf
Antenna Service
ANTENNA SERVICE—Installed
repaired. OR 3-1096,
Asphalt Paving
A. JAY ASPHALT
Driveway Sptclallsts, Fre Estimates, FE 5-W80
. ASPHALT Paving and Sealing -5320	Free Estimates
ASPHALT DISCOUNT, |»vln£, re-
cap, free estimates, FE i
DOMINO CONST. CO. 674-3955
RELIABLE ASPHALT Contractors.
or. General Cement Contractors,
DAN'S CERAMIC TILE, slate floors, marble sills, install in homes, old or new. Free est. 674-4341, 625-1501.
682-3042, FE 3*
TOWNSEND'S SEPTIC IMPAIRS and Installations, 682-0876.
Spraying Service
DALBY Si SONS TRBE SERVICE NOW ELM SPRAY. 373-6670.
Rj Suspended CeiHagc
Tracking
parking lots. 330-1214 or 334-8733.	3774
Caratractlon Equipment
DOZERS, BACKHOE, LOADER
Sales & Rentals	Moving, Starege
Used Bobcat Loaders rsKfaft mov-no co, your moving!"ablegate™
Burton Equipment Co. specialists, fe 4-4864.------------------- a-i light Movino, tAaSh i
-	Rd.	852-35531	------ ------------------------------
ISHT HAULING. REASON-1
Piano Tuning
bump end paint work, go to Dibbles Collision 3123 S. Lapeer Rd. (M-24) about 2 blocks N. of 1-75 Viaduct 373-0011.______________________
Basement & Garage
Basement & Garage Cleaning
Light Hauling
fe s-3392	------
Brick Block & Stoke
BRICK VENEERING,
Building Modernization
\-V ADDITIONS AND gar age v ca
estimates. Springfield Bldg. Co.
625-2128._________________
DEW CONSTRUCTION CO.,
Dressmaking, Tailoring
•A ALTERATIONS, SUITS. COATS,
I a.m.-7 p.m. 332-6636
ALTERATIONS, ALL TYPES, KNIT
OSCAR SCHMID*
FE 5-4226
Painting and Decorating
1-A CUSTOM PAINTING
RELIABLE PAINTING, Interior,
Free Est. Orvel Gldcumb 673-0496
V-l PAINTI NG WORK GUARANTEED. Free estimates 682-0620.__
A-1 PAINTING AND PAPER HANGING
t-1 LIGHT TRUCKING of i
Odd Jobe. FE 4-2347.___
AFTER 4 P.M. light h ___________674-3233
RUBBISH. Name
BASEMENT!
garegee cleaned. 674*1142. jHHHOTiffi AND HEAVY TRUCKING
THOMPSON____________ 373-1821 rubblih, fill dirt, grading an!
GEORGE FRERICKS	*nd front-end loading. FB »
Interior end exterior painting, IWML________________- . . ______
reasonable. Free estimates, work’	Tpnek Dental
*XP‘ mi m	—
tlons. 674-4475.
Driver's Training
i pickup.
Drywali
PAINTING# DECORATING,
fc.ii'“S:l Trucks to Rent
complete remodeling kitchens, baths, porches,
ad- PONTIAC DRY '
Itlons, garages, driveways, patios, end remodeling, guaranh
ASSURED; Paint-.
aluminum siding, carpenter work, additions, (big
small jobs), 682-7809.________
MODERNIZATION
Carpentry
Eavostroughing M & S GUTTER CO.
LICENSED-BONDED Complete eavestroughing service Free est. 673-6866# 673-5662_
Electrical Services
SPRAY PAINTING _____Ken, 852-2940__
Plastering Service
ADRIAN'S PROMPT ELECTRICAL | —
1-A PLASTERING, NEW WORK 0 patching, tree estimates. 363-5607. PATCH PLAStERING'# all kinds. K Meyers, OR 3-1345.________
A-1 CARPENTRY AND roofing,
Plumbing & Heating
673-2712.
estimates, 394-1 McCORMICK ELECTRIC
Residential Wiring-Service 1
1157 Baldwin______________FE 4-91911CONORA PLUMBING 8l_HFATING
‘ Famliy’ foomsr rough or finished |	ExCOVntlng
INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR
3 bedroom homes1 from~$160 to 8175. Call 682-2820._
Rent Lake Cottages 41
WILLIAMS LAKE FRONT yaar round, cattage, until Junq 1st, furnished, 1 bddroom, III .life., 1125 mo., aic., dtp., rsq., call 673-6527 attar S p.m.________________
(Bedroom tki-lEVEL, family! room. Inground pool, FHA ap-. proved, $23,900, open Sat.	-
1-59 left on Taggardlna, l.fiMMS.
Wl-A
3EER
oven
HUNTERS, mlta,units. Fife Laka, Mich. 496ft Ph. W3770.
HAVE 2 COTTAGES FOR RENT, 1 “	‘ iledp * ‘
1	SINGLE BEDROOM, 1076 Scott Lake Rd, 6t2-9332.
t^6m¥^f^C00Km, min, Ppntlec, >$2-49$9,___i_____
ATTRACTIVE. QUIET# ROOMS "for men. Close in,.perking. $12. OR 3-6839 dr EM 3-2566.	■ _, •.
2	"slhiOlli ftOQMS# with kitchen prIvlleMi, 775 ScottJLeko Rd.
t SLEEPlNO ROOMS IN nice clean, quiatv homa. Oantlaman, Near >aitbe Meter. SMlI.lturiBall. j
BLOONiFIELS HUXIT Ava. near Square Lil large fronV. 1st floor.
i 44S F.rra, 363-4200.
3 BEDROOMS
IMA6ACULATE RANCH on -larga lot, l’/k-cdr garago, full basement, with Wolverine Laka privileges and Walled Lake schools. 126,500. Land contract terms. \
WE HAVE OTHER LAKE PROPERTIES
V COSWAY
REALTORS
>81-0760
SYLVAN____
DRAYTON 4 BEDROOM baths, carpeted
Rees. Call after 5
HrcrcnMiRY AND CE/ free es ((mates . 852-5252.
CARPENtRY”AT ITS best, kitchens, baths# and rec-rooms a specialty# call 363-8121 or_6?4-3856.
CARPENTRY WORK.’All types.
*"b 8-3529
George Do If. 673-0377.
.TRACTORS UIPMENT Semi Trailers
Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co.
125 S. WOODWARD Fh 4-0461	,	FE 4*1445
Open dally Including Sunday
_	1 Upholstering .
ACT N0WI -
Fall tala prices on chairs, sofas reupholstered. 335-tTM, free estimates. Eves, and Sat. 625-4565. UPHOLSTERING BY—RT£HAR6 -Quality Fabrics and work, pick up and dtllvory. 482-4178._____
Wall Claanan
8->201
BULLDOZING. BACKHOE basement, grading. 682-3842.
67.2639, FE bio BOY DRIVE-1
3 BEDROOM BRICK
Ranch $676 Golfslde Dr., Union Lake, 2 car garage, family room, with fireplace, Florida room, extra
family room, 2^
FE 8-2198___
I .....I M......CARPENTRY
car garage.
Roofing
7-1631.
iWALL WASHING. $5 per room and carpet cleaning, Interior
peintinq.
681-2848.
CLARKSTON EX£AVAT Specializing in grading, driveways, clearing. 625-2750.
FARRELL
Northern High Area
3 bedrooms. Full ‘ baths. 2 car lot. Full \prlc tract terms.
garage on cc $19,500, Lend
repair. FE 5-1331.
Carpeting
expertly Installed. Free
24 hrs. Hot tar, shingles# repairs, i	Welding
! We will not be undersold r '
R. DUTTON _ ^	FE8J725|......ATCHISON'S WELDING
,	I SHINGLING; BEAUTIFUL WORK.
AND WOOb FENCE lowest price In town. Jamas Scott
153 W.
1 wtsk service 338-3786
FLOOR SANDINO AND LAYING. Fne estimates Old floors rtflnlshtd, 427-3775 — 1
674-3530.
8. H ROOFING. Free ostlmtlts.
Hot ter end shingles.
NO JOB TOO SMALL. 625-5674 WOMACK ROOFING CO.
exp. New-old
owner mbylhg to Florida for a quick sale only $33,800. Possession
at dosing.
2 BEDROOM ALUMINUM SIDING
172 Parkdals, Pdhflae, 2 car garage, corner 1st, full basement with aktr. bedroom, neat at a pin, owner moving Up north only 119,500. Lond contract. Poosotilon
STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE
payments of (199 per month.
FARRELL REALTY -
105 N. Opdyke Rd.	Por
and 440 amp. si yard has big garden plot flood, tights, road is paved, 3 bedroom nOme with Michigan basement# Is carpeted end easy to heat. Neat, clean, could be home and shop to right person. Also only $24,908 or make offer. Will consider trade.
LIST WITH HACKETT
START TO PACK IT
EM 3-4700
Carpet Cleaning bts . ^nd u^holstery'iI	Floor Tiling \
sod. For low rates, 3ft4704. )	-- --~  -— -
A WAY at F’omifc, brightness CUSTOM FLOOR C 0 V E R I N I >red. no scrubbing, fret llnoltum. formica, fllo. Csrqatlr nstst, 482-6633.	1 5930 M-IS. Clarkston, 625-1100.
FOR FAST ACTION
SAND# GRAVEL#
reasonable, 338-1201 or 674-2639.
| CHOICE SHREDDEI} black dirt# tog
day top solL 6 yarc Tvered. Also dozyng# FJS Sand^Gravel—Black Dir
WaH Drilling
2M WELL DRILLING,
end pump service. UL S*
FIREPLACE WOOD DELIVERED. Call after 5:30 3344423.
Wood, Coal and Foal
CANNEL COAL, the Ideal tlraplaca fuel., We also have complete lino of
Lake. FE 5-6159.

---V-—V
OPEN
9 A.M. TO 8 P.M.
KSSSa
ddcuukd’
-iJSBL
Emmmt, pay
HOWMy *74 «JJ	. * TDIICUCI
THR PONTIAC PRESS. SAtURD^t, OCJ^BKR 18, 1
Brown
OPEN , i 55
SUNDAY 53	1. I tSdrwm Col^Tfl form.T <*1,^0
CLARKST0N-0RI0N | ^.^.OTc^S*'-
MMb
RENTING
$140“MO.
MOVE IN FAST
■BUttg YORK ggm IRWIN
GAYLORD BSSHfi -
GMC
GILES
OFFERS
HANDYMAN SPECIAL
i.?; &
2W*. iff
! PSSi........
«“i RAY lassr^^rHau*
T Bed™!0lir
fiisS5""“ ,8B**
*q«w»
lltiiii iSi
CROSS
OPFN 0^sm
HB 1 TRULY
openI^^oWappt.
maSSSl® I
------- colonials .. ft.
m
BUYING OR SELLING CALL JOHN K.- IRWIN & SONS
METAMORA
GMC
KINZLER
LIT ROCK BEAUJY
S-Iw SNYDER,
KINNEY & BENNETT
ANNETT
•	' 49|Solv H•u,,
OPEN '1
VON REALTY Ma-saoo_Liw®
HEARTHSIDE
ii“ss!>!-*srnr
realtor
TIMES
5 OPEN
mwjri&t -«^SHUlMSSS! swf&Br&rss* &nsa<an&&j3 I
|—i	OPEN
SDm,0Nfe! SUNDAY
OPEN
Two Models
ijp^K
T7DWEklK0DPAEYVkVcATpR‘.DSA°YN-
“£s».:r gmc
YORK
* <-««_P**L
DAILY
IN ROCHESTER
Hi
LISTING - SELLING - APPRAISING - BUILDING NORTHERN PROPERTY
$109 MONTHLY*
WALTON PARK MANOR
CHERRYLAWN & HOPKINS Call . . . 335-6171
fBSSS OPEN ,®5=
Realtors 28 E. Huron St. j _	_ _ ^	, mBH
0,"C# °B*n 338-0466 5Und<,V | SUN. 2-5 P.M.
IRWIN
"YES, WE TRADE" TAKE NOTICE CONTEMPORARY LOVERS
"SH# GMC .Sliglsl
__.ra* ^	- , -	-1 LITTLE DOWN
■ ■
MILLER
AARON BAUGHEY REALTOR
NOW HEAR THIS! BEAUTIFUL
OPENl»«iS»lk
SUNDAY 12-6 T.AZENRY
1®#
■I 363*6303	REALTORS TIlTIGS R©Cl'ty
L^WS-TWO ...	»■>
« TED'S
TRADING ml3~
674-2236
9558 CAROL COURT
LY 2 TO 6

OFFICE OPEN SUNDAY 12 TO 6 FOR INFORMATION CALL OR 4-0324
PONTIAC-WATKINS ESTATES	i
AS PAINLESS AS POSSIBLE •	1	Li
CRESCENT LAKE ESTATES
DORRIS & SON REALTOR lit Hwv.	MLS * OR 4-0324
For Wont Ads Dial 334-4981
THE PONTIAC PRKSS. SATURn
)iv. 1)C TOBEr\i8, loip\y
ARRO 0wn2“ou"! AVON
lsa»*s,tss;MILLER BROS, tti |g REALTY
SKY J KELLER “feats
SBSS#*«ms' LEACHjHLros6Si"SU5L.
JSSS §SHW
'"^Johnson
MMMM WMMMi SHasa*"
3 ms MM,
OPEN 3184 ANGELUS DR.
ii^=asi®s!s3=?3a-5
fe 5-81831 open haaerf**
wm.™®^**®*
LdT	OPEN	------ I . A.j,„„w„IIP
{?«:&“'I L*WBAlRMICKC^pMiERwMh iFE
Webster-Curtis
CROSS
arghrMt^i&^g
OPEN 7260 SAGAMORE (CLARKSTON AREA)
OPEN 8762 SHANNON (UTICA AREA)

OPEN 1410. WHITTIER
OPEN 6451 WELLESLEY TERRACE

OPEN 4216 WOODSTOCK	SORRY-SOLDI
OPEN 155 MICHAELSON (ROCHESTER AREA)
SSw“£HSl“ ss
ISfWS&SW Sft“S“w s£H

OPEN 639 PINE TREE (ORION AREA)
fsaafiyssss	■*
OPEN 1911 BIG TRAIL
SSSSwSSSST«^£b3S{3
OPEN 6747 SCOTCH LAKE RD.
OPEN 229 SERRA (OXBOW LAKE AREA)
210 CAYUGA (ORION AREA)

cayuga (Orion area)
bksksssisw*™*^
OPEN 6669 SHELLEY DR. (CLARKSTON AREA)' SORRY-SOLDI
FIVE N
SAT. 8, SUN. 2-5 P.M. OR BY
COMPUTER SERVICE
OLD ENGLISH RETREAT	NO. 52
jg^suftar sxta afBS.'e.'&iau bs
»T““
■iLrraasa'st


CLARKSTON • 6573 DIXIE HWY.
a?A.S
§ Realtor fiT,
nT	8175 COA
3634171
*X< on
”i hfatSSx!^
OPEN
SUN. 2-5 P.M.
tBVtiM&i!
674-3175
|_H no intwtr call FE »-M40_
qfOPEN
SUN. 1-5 P.M.
OROOM RANCH,
R^*®
IMS*
5feo,a»"i
aKffiBt3U¥| .jaqggpM.
«3&£5J gfe' ||||jl OPEN
Sunday
S^CiL"=,«Sw5i- - .zvm&i-
"BUD"
>27. w “£,ud“
pr'HSffiS
RIFLE RIVER rSjSS 3gt;mume'locatioh
41T sr'tsr'c; !	.“
ftftftWGR
MARK
,. FARM HOME!
r^iWibSSr^u A DULY F0« THE $$»	| ig ACRES
1 3‘ EL^!T^ «V.,DE.Tu,0MP Tr.v.r_
wim -J ssa^i?d
OPEN
SUN. 2-5 P.M.
FOR SPACIOUSNESS & HAPPINESS
MODEL CLOSE OUT LAKE LANGELUS LAKEVIEW ESTATES CUSTOM BUILT BY KAMPSEN-
IS
OUR PICTURE AD IN THE HOME SECTION DIRECTIONS. _
UNION LAKE AREA
OUR OFFICE WILL BE OPEN SUNDAY FROM 2-5 P.M. 1071 W. HURON ST.	MLS	681-1000
i BAYVIEW REALTY	C.
STOUT, REALTOR 114 E. FRONT ST.	mo
r
Miii
24 ACRES
S-SK?*8**
SaRgBs Ml
P sa KEATING1 »*
ftk'ffS	or Blm,®SS Zn^TT'RmToTT
E[ Advice to
tenKBBewdB ISBior1- ”	-1
jSCHRAM
And a Closed Refrigerator

IVAN W. SCHRAM
SKSSfeJ C. NELSEY, SALES AGENT
I -zS's^SSj —
eau]
Singleton
429 Orchard Lake Ave.
gpl i mmSs? p°",ik	rj
! Partridge ! Partridge
LAKEFRONT
saajp-
. the -
•,&“usyr a warn
ESTATE	«•«»•
Bob White
REAL ESTATE
Yfe^nssnS® ,* sar*» **»*• ~LS2S... ‘te
wont Ads
For Action
sa&owm -‘	""	<■ Br»»»wiy. *J*.

D—8
’HE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY. OCTOBER
For Want Ad* Dial 3ii4981
toe
BUILDERS
DEVELOPERS
INVESTORS
itterlng • variety of sites; ro«l^tlol;<;cmm»rcij^«nd
Swap*
1943 JEEP PICKUP, 4 whwl drlvt Sale or trido for 1944 Van or latar.
p e 22112.
1945 TRIUMPH ibo'Scrambltr, good
Salt Houithold Good* ASiSalt Houtthold Good* 6S CARN1VAI
P0W"'' JOSEPH Realty
Singleton
429 Orchard Lake Ave.
Boe-Skl Snowmobiles.’ "Canada1 bast 13 to 10 h.p. Some open. Call 517-704*2153
B refrigerators, and trade-in ra bargains, • Lltfl* Joa's n House, Baldwin at Wal-ton Blvd. riMWi _ «kii
\" AUTOMATIC V ZIO ZA6
Machine.
PRIOIDAIRE S10VS, 1 largo auto.
roll shades, excellent condition each approximately 94" wide, by Weekdays. 5:30 p.m
>ng. Call
condition. '42 Plymouth swap lor Harlay-DavId^^MMllJ.__
Ml DODGb PICKUP, good eon-,	.	- ... _
^^^i»i9s4pagNp8^ni
-Isarirarirr&c’ip^^r ■
I ’or $44 Cash Balance gray twit* seas, dresser, night
ROOFING
value. 424J339
.... leal RIVERSIDE 350 CC, swap
_______i_____REACTOR p|Ckup, MOO-S3 00 yalu*.'43*4M5:
DEALERS WANTED^^ USED*PIANOS and furniture.
Iw
I., 3SM Peg# Ave., Jackson, Mlch_ 49203.
GAS STATION AND edlacent stort
Sevas Tuscola end Sendee counties which nets a good Income each month. Includes
POR CASH OR ANYTHING
UNIVERSAL SEWING CENTER
Sets Dixie Hwy.______FEa-oaos
8 AA USED teet SINGER Mov I no I	GOLDEN TOUCH AND SEW
- t	....-	Moving j Mod#| |)4J B ct|h 0f M (0 ,
m b. jesse.	— month. Owarantaed. Mldwaat Ap-
pllance. 33A-53H.	____
'Sole Clothing	o4 a late"used singer with touch
I DESIGNER DRESSES, suite.
' cocktail clothes, evening gow ■ «. 10 4 U.Rsas. 426-4)44.
FOR’ SALE: FLOOR* ianpih
and lessons.
stand, box sprlnos and mattresses,
SUO. ell excellent condition, 363-
TniL_	________________
3E . Electric range, 0 E refrigerator. Kenmon washer, 9'xl2* oval br place bedroom outfit, chest of dreweri, riding lawn mowtr 4 h.p,. lawn ewatper, English satter hunting dog, 752-
„WVB and 4300 gal. bulk tank' size u. 338-0949. 7Mil,AlrT»nl '"suwh l0"mleyU^Oly' ^iSk F*I>E Takes $3200 lo $350o'e LANDSCAPINO’eysiNESS tor sale,
ides'-i Or is.so a month, Midwest Ap- HAMILTON DRYER. AUTOMATIC epe.1 _ pllanca, 334-3312._
A HOUSEHOLD BARGAIN
Whirlpool washer. Both
682-1893 after 5:30.
H0USFH0LU SPECIALS
Top location. Ideal tor Substantial down. Call or
^ "warden REALTY
434 W. Huron# Pontiac
' W^^ING ^ 6«» - .nd Kg	U%o2SU& WW.
.	* Veil 7-0. Suede coat 9. wool coai	springs, lamps); 4 piact slsts ot:	...
good ouy at 04000 cash, »2*2215._..	9 6S2.jmo.	_____ bunk bad - 5 pltct dlnatta. *-------- -wh
------	Any Item Sold Saparatalv
on, ot Oakland, county s^/inest Sale Household Goods AS AMKAY^URNITU°RE'ly
WHAT YOU'D EXPECT TO PAY Next to K Mert In Olenwood Center
ACT NOW	, - r- -
Reupholster your sofa and chair. 5-placjr dlnatta sat Big discount ““
BRAND NEW FURNITURE
82.50 per week
profit. 582 E.
882-3828 I 363 8660
Mi3OR OlL_C0MPA_NY has e.c.h
training end financing ?ve"«cb'«’
i-East^ Bh
.....or motion ceil 341-5000 E
342. Nights 455-3095___
MAKE LOTS OF MONEY - $$$$
Gu?Mr»nch?se dealership avffii
Slid«* E-*V 'vSikl:PM, n.
and no Bay type statlon-are within easy reach tor only a small investment.	,	...
Call Bill Ward. 473-3184 _______Eves. r51-3432	____
Partridge
"IS THE BIRD TO SEE"
past franchise restaurant
Over SITS,000 gross sales and more this year. Sensational locaNon
3 ROOMS
) NEW FURN
82.50 per week
$297
LITTLE JOE'S
BARGAIN FURNITURE I 1461 Baldwin at Walton FE 2-8842 l Acres of Fret Parking I Ev*L. 'HI 9: .Sat, 'til 8. E-Z terms 1 REXAIR SWEEPER, large
humidifier, mlsc. FE 3-74J8.__
-i MAHOGANY ACROSONIC piano j By Baldwin* Cost $1,000. Selling price $500. t antique china cablnet-
secretary. $200. 363-6051.	_I
2~APARTMENT SIZE STOVES, good
8 piece living room outllt with 2-pc. living room suite, 2 step tables, I cocktail labia, 2 table lamps and (1) 8'xl2‘ rug Included, place bedroom sulfa with double dresser, chest, full-ell* bed with Innersprlng mattress
spring and I vanity lamps.
Bolt and fabrl

table. All tor 8388? Your
COMMERCIAL UPHOLSTERING,I credit’ It $>opd ®» 1Nyman't. 335-1700. EVES.. OR SAT. 6254585.	WYMAN
Blw.rJ.?oeu.?0.?^ ftr." PtSWT FURNITURE CO.
Walton at Joelyn, 37'rJMO.	I 17 E. HURON ___________F_EijMMI
condition. Antiques galore. Come end see. 100*1 M-15. The Trading Center. 4 ml. N. of Clarkston.
3-	ROOM - (Brand new turn
at*. Cash. Terms. Lav-Pearson'e Furniture, 840 Aubl FE 4-7081.	______________
4-	PIECE BEDROOMS.-brand new,
187. Little Joe; ------ --------
big JOE DORAN'S warehouse I
Iral, Motorola
Sylva
I ITALIAN PROVINCIAL GOLO chair.
porary studio couch and 424-2479.	_	_...
PROVINCIAL TRIPLE
By Dick Turn*i Bar Sal* Mlsc»llana»i» 47 HMd Tools-Mochlnory *• garage SALE -	FORK LIFT TRUCKS
££S2 clerTnet end mJw._ltom$.Oci.|	j.ooo ib. ll.oio. Clark s.ooo
lb. 81.000., Clark, 5,000 lb. $1,500,
Crescent Lake Rd. to Uhlversel io Crane. GARAOEIalI, m t» Telegraph,
8.000 Ib. 81.100. 515-3680 542-1802.
GOOD USED TIRE MACHINE. 110-10 Coali demo. 1275. 2-785 Coats
manual $35. t May* ■ ;
Come	buy the lunk your
grandmothr. threw out. Everything cheep, owner tranelerred. 211 E.
I roquols. Antiques., etc._____
GARAGE MUli Moving out of greese-gf stale. 4012 Blackthorn CI. teen after 8:30 Thorncrtn Sub. r,A ml. E. of dock or call SSO-SUIflaaiHJ
Tel!areph. o« Maple.___________11NTESNATIONAL TO, *4 dozer.
GARAGE SALE:	maple bedroom ready to go. muit tell, $2,850. 681-
• *-i h«ri. antloua hall |49#«____
ofiJiRAtOR SETS? 115-220 volt. Mop watu. 8 ftp ga» engine. *» . cast Iron eonalructlon. Priced $248.
Refrigeration Engineering. 432-7782. LOGAN eATHE^4* Mceilenl for hobbyist. 82*3. Pit, Ml 6-3285 METAL LATHEV 56"
508 W. Lincoln,
Sporting Good* ___________ 74
BEGINNERS SKI | itT ■kit, boot!* ^polat* 682*0505.	>—
GUNS-GUNS-GUNS7
One of the largeet eeleclloni In
WealherbYfwineheeleN UAUfl Coll and smlth-WaBion pl»tol», icoptB. »ljhti. Wt do our own
"sKI-DOd'S
*	12 to 45 H.P. _
• 15", II", and SO" track*
38 machlnte In stock nawl We have a complete line of ec-casBorlat. Spaado, faeh, •'•**•* aulta, boota, halmata* Q\ o v a_a, cuatom colorad tfallara* alngia and
’"’stop OUT THIS WBEKEfiDI
11381 Ember Rd. 0lg[Mullca| Goods

Sashabaw, Drayton.
Midland 8t.,|; piece LUDWIG Drums, U‘U” 1375. 402-0193.
MR LESLEY SPEAKER, condition. 473-7192.
in Cliff DrEyer'*
| Gun and Sports Center
.115210 Holly Rd. Htfllf. M! 4-6771 Open Delly.end Sundays t |S;ARTIC ( AT * MOTtS-SKI now In
,w'| 0UTD00RSMEN
...	SPORT CENTER
6487 Highland Rd. (M-58)_673-3600
NRUDE SKEETER'S now
.	”L5J._?----— . am UPRIGHT PIANO wanted, ap-; Hickory Ridge Rd. to Demode Rd-.
clothing, end Sat. end Sun. Oct. 10 end 18, 832 Croybon Rd..
GARAGESALE
IAN UPRIGHT PIANO wanted, pearanca not Important, elseiw player piano for parli, 338-0108.
Af GALLAGHER'S KAWAI PIANO'S
CONSOLES AND GRANDS SEE US BEFORE YOU BUY
Mon. Through PH.
dresser, with mirror.
..	excellent
brand new, condition, 651-4858._______
1 Pro,|t. , LINOLEUM RUGS. MOST SIZES.
“Doctors are too busy these days to keep up with the latest medical advances ... he admitted he hadn’t seen a TV commercial in weeks!”
car parts, china cabinet. 41 Chevy
coupe, 44 North Tasmania, Oct. II, _________Sat. 8.317
1, -10 STn.-6_p.rn.________ ______I BALDWIN E X T E R
;aRAG1—SALE — Miscellaneous amplifier, good merchandise, nothing over 82.1 power, «
Weds.-Frl. 3:30-1
5:301
SALES, TIPSICD LAKE, 828-2178.________
Snorting Ooodl_______________I
COLT PYTHON, 357 MAGNUM*
_____423-0004.
EVINRUDE SKEETERS BOBCATS
70s HERE NOW Fabulous snowmobile camp trailers LAKE 0. SEA MARINE
BIG JOE DORAN'S warehouse has I
$3.49
Pearson's Furniture,
-IT
Antique'
goes—furniture, clothing, mlsc. 234
Over $17S,000 gross sales and
ir. Seneetionel »S?tL . Hgts. Net over *37,000 jest veer, cell end we'll tell you why the owner It selllng thls fabulous business that Is thjdjeam otthosa ♦hat era awake. $25,000 down tor ♦ha valuable real estate and all. Getting this will be your bonus tor quick action.
INVESTORS! IT'S PRIMEI If you're looking for more Income
Bargain House, ______Baldwin. FE 2-6842.________
9x12 Linoleum Rugs $4.95
Solid vinyl Tile „........ Jc
Vinyl Asbasto* file ...... 7e aa.
Inlaid tim. 8x8 ........... 7ca*.
Floor Shoo-2255 Elliabath Lake
"Across From the Mall
80 INCH SOFA,
373-0085,
BUNK BEDS
Choice of 15 stylet, trundle bode, triple trundle beds and bunk bads complete, 848.50 and up. Pearson'* Furniture, 640 Auburn. FE 4-7881. BUNKBEbS: SAVE PLENTY! Little
.......... OilMt FE 2-6842.
BRONZE OR CHROME. DINETTE sale, BRAND NEW. Large and email size (round, drop-leaf, rectangular) tablet in 3-, 5- and 7-pc. hUKBia WFE-4-7881
SXr* cash. Kodels, nylons, and
tht unique, ad- carpet
irgest
available to you i
vantages a'
14-4374-GB.
ANN ARBOR | _ . f Vary Clean Restaurant and Bar In WXfiy . «V Veer*' uld
&W>nIr0»Sl8 VW*“3
double the. present . grott M 8104)00.00. call fjrNrthw Information on No. 14-6338-RB-Z2. ASK FOR FREE CATALOG PARTRIDGE REAUfSTATB m jjWe West Huron St.,>onttae.i(.
Rd. (M-58). Rochester I Deaulndre. OM-2444.
CARPET INSTALLATION, also good buys on carpet. 332*834.	.. ■	.
COMPLETE TWIN CANOPY eel,
1260. Call UL 2-1876._________
CHROME KITCHEN apt. aatinwood
ANTIQUES, FURNITURE,
Tiger strip* maple tel . table, end tables, lamps, unusual
Store BUILDING WITH 2 rental unite on 68x175 ft. commercial lot, on Oakley Park Rd. at Commerce Lake. Price, S1MOO. Bood terme.
100x247 FT. COMMERCIAL LOT — 10wi«t7a 2» x *5 ft. buHdlng at lMO S. Milford Rd., near Highland. Price, 124,500, terms.
14 ACRE CORNER PARCEL -*Wlth long road frontage Tin grow Ing ’area. Good potential. Priced to sell on good farms.
HAROLD R. FRANKS. Realty
E Vfi RETT_ XUMMINGS'^B R O K E R 383-7101
$250 new, sell tor $75, 384-0008.
lamps, u I cabinet, dishes, nlc-nacs, room size rug am pad, pictures, toy*, clothing frosted ash wiglet, electric broom many other Items. Thure. 1:00 Sun. 7800 Ratals* Lake Rd.
Admiral refrigerators, rang washers, dryers, TV's end St* tor V* th* profit.
BIG JOE DORAN'S waehousa n«*. ”dishwasher',' 'automatic, "MO, 873-1 Ford,
35ehw- SS5 SiSiaSlsm—I S
Touring. 82,500 or offer, 1848,
rede-in refrigerators, ranges and; rashers chaap. Vi the profit.
E. Walton at Joslyn. 3«J580._ BABY FURNITURE—bassinette with pad and skirt, travel bad and high chair. 332-2778.	______________
PEARSON'S FURNITURE
EXCELLENT CONOITION-S65 FULL GUARANTEE
Kirby Service & Supply Co.
2817 DIXIE HWY.	674-2234
LIVING ROOMS, BRAND I
wringer washer, 320.
WIDDICOMB DINING room outfit, by Robb-Jon-GIbbougs, table, buffet, walnut with sorrel finish, 4 chairs, upholstered teats, 2 table lamps, pole H I ‘ |M|
St. Andrew* Church and Legion Hall, 231-234 Walnut St., OcT. 21-23, 10 a.m.-»_p.m., earvln' oven lovin' cookin'. Country etore,
bedroom set, Ilyina room furniture, ' *070-
chairs, electric stove.
|_____ _	machine,
miec. articles. 673-1762. CARPETING, 57 YARDS, like i
NAUGAHYDE, LAZY boy chair and
I foot stool. Call FE 2-7706._
I mViOGANY DROPLEAF table with Walton* TV. FE
Hi-Fi, TV and Radios
6 REPOSSESSED COLOR TV'S
Goodyear Service Store
1370 Wide Track 'Pontiac, Mich.
PHONE 335-6168
■ USED TV ......... ...	128
515 E. Walton, corner of Joslyn
" BROKEN Clay, loam, I Landscaping,
ATORI speakers. 200 wall.
mmm	642-7583.___
day Sat-' ©' BA'LQiWl¥>CR6»PKlC 5j*n3%jpln*''' ppdyk™*
........ fMlII plug in SUNS.
ends',''furniture, clothas, elc^ “mpiltlar. Ilka"new.' $60. Attar 5 Kn‘,anoJn''shop,
p.m. 424*3343._____ _ _ .	- Ofisville on M*15a
^OR ~SALE* 2 PICKUP elKtirJc! _j)pen 7 days.________________________
625-5026	'GARDlfT-EOUIPMENT and too., ' «	»ltlon'.C' SS! Tali' HEAD ^IS. wlth^ubco^ slanderds.
lacrlllce. Ml 7-0272. __ _------ 628-1764.___________________-—-i--1 tki bools. 7Vi Medium, 10, and
CONCRETE delivered. GARAGE DOOR OPENERS, dlscon- FENDER TELECASTER W TH io'/,. 626-647)._________________________________________
Waltman tlnued mdelt. .......... | deluxe case. very good conomon.kjEAD SK|Ji w|)h Cupc0i it<ndards,
'GARAGE SALE: Sat. Oct
65-A;For Sals Miscsllaneous 67	2479 Emmtrson, Bloomfield
| •* -- -	| j||—'• I	~	blocks W. of Woodward corner of
___i 4x0 UTILITY TRAILER, »75.	Square Lake.	______
___________-	_____ garden EQUIPMENT and
rrv drop. iear tooio* condition* S125. After ___	473*9403.______________
ROUND OAK DINING teblf, 4 cene	A	j
J	FORCED air furnace.!
Installation. Pontiac
opsoii J. 373-0444.
1-car* $84.50 2 cars, $99.50 Also number 2 garage c*-
power unit*
, factory, $400. 425-
Heating. 474*2411
PASSENGER BUS* converted to motor home* water, heat* carpeted, walnut panel etc. 152*1313,
top carrier* beds* clothing*
Adams South of S. Blvd. Use Adams from 0-75, 1302 Ashover Dr. Bloomfield Hills.
100 PER CENT WOOL* carved grey-
Mi 4*1035 and FE 2*0203 GAS RANGE* BIRD <
_______U • 0-8939.______________
HOT WATER HEATER* 30 gal. gas Consumers approved $895ff value, $39 95 and $49.95 marred. Also electric and butane heaters. Ter-rifle values* Michigan Fluorescent,
clotting I HAMMOND BC. end Leille, SI 300.
IF YOUR CHILD CAN My net
HANNAH'S HUSBAND H E C T O R .............SO ha
MORRIS MUSIC
Tal Huron, FE 2-0567 LUDWIG PINK Champagna drum aet, complete with cymbals, »3jj Pontiac Music 8. Sound. 602-3350.
Hardware* 41 B. Walton,._____
HAND MADETtEMS, baby clothes*	iglii ODrAM
flower arrangements, Christmas	LOWREY ORGAN
and assorted gWts.^This and That J5 peda|S/ ideal for church or “nn " serious musician
Gift Shop.
lined. $250. 30 yards of candle light gold with padding. $125. 20 yards of medium gold with padding $175. Traverse rods, 4 pair. $30. 334*5303.
SUNOCO?
To“ buy, sell, A business ....1 Business — FE 3-7041
1«aNT tS SELL YOUR BUSIN ESS? Definitely, Realtor Partridge Is,the bird to tee. 1050 Huron, Pontiac,
Sale Land Contracts
1 TO 50
LAND CONTRACTS
Urgently needed- Ss* us before you deal.
Warren Stout, Realtor
1458 N. Opdyke Rd.	373-1111
Wanted Contratte-Mtg. 60-A
LARGE OR SMALL land eont ouick closing. Reasonable dl*
Earl Garrals, MA 4-5400 or
MILLION
are hat been mad* available to purchase and assume land ts* mortgages or buy lots or acreage outright. Wa will gly* you eafli for your equity. Confect TED McCUL LOUGH JR.
674-2236
McCullough realty
^ Highland Rd. (M-58) ^MLS
Absolutely Nowhere Such Drastic
Price Reductions!
£Off
LARGEST DECORATOR FURNITURE SHOWROOM CLOSES
THE DOORS OF ITS CONTRACT DEPT. FOREVER FINAL WEEK
11 00.000.00 WORTH OF DECORATOR FURNITURE MUST BE SOLD AT COST, BELOW COST OR SLIGHTLY ABOVE COST.
All Furniture Is BRAND NEW AND FULLY GUARANTEED! Entire Inventory of Contract Dept, mutt be told out I Free Immediate delivery. Free storage-layaway plan. Terms to suit you. Dealers bring CROWN
CARPET SALE
All carpeting told at 11.00 over cost. First grade quality only. Large color aelectlon.
DuPont 501 Nylon, FHA approved, $1.85 value now 84.88 a tq. yd.
Kitchen carpeting, $7.85 value, now
100.par cent continuous filament
Many other Similar aevings.
681-2383____________
DINETTE SET CLOSE-OUT All 1868 Model*. E-Z term*.
Little Joe's. 1461 Baldwin, FE 2-6842 DINETTE SET, STOVE, refrigerator and Iota of other artlclei to
°21" TV, $35* bunkbedt; apertmeM stove, $35; mlsc., G. Harris, FE 5-2766.________________________
DESK, KIDNEY-shaped bleachec mahogany $35, Colon irontr, $30,
ELECTRIC STOVE, $25j Gai, Stova, $35i Refrigerator with top freezer. 848! Wringer washer, 140. G. Her-
Brody, Lane, Broyhill, Coleman,
8 PIECE LIVING ROOM GROUPS $188 - $388 - $588 HIDEABEDS, QUEEN SIZE $188 - $258 - $388 10 PIECE BEDROOM GROUPS $170 - $208 - 0480 -SEALY SETS OF BEDDING ALL SIZES • $49 0 PIECE DINING GROUPS
1 to 50
LAND CONTRACTS >
Urgently needed. Sea us before you deal.
Warren Sout, Realtor
1450 N. Opdyke Rd.	373-1111
Open Evas. *tl * —
Money to Loan	61
(Licensed Money Lender)
LOANS
$25 to $1*000 Intured Payment Plan
______________________Chest, Desks,
Lamps, Pictures, Accessories
: beds, VS off 11
Italian Provincial,
REFRIGERATOR $25;
. Walton near Baldwin
21-INCH RCA COLOR TV, 5 years, walnut cabinet.
Overstocked
dresaar, mirror, 4 drawer chest
10'' modern sofa with floral Mr. 8, Mrs. chairs, zippared reversible cushions, $278 value, unclaimed
Hollywood bed set, complete with mattress, box springs, frame ad vinyl head board. $88 value, unclaimed balance $68.
Many similar savings.
FREE DELIVERY
HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE
461 Elizabeth Lake Rd. (Near Telegraph)	681-23
REFRIGERATOR, STOVE, beds,
etc. 673-0045.______________
REFRIGERATOR, 80 Ib. top freezer,
sofa, chair, mlsc. FE 4-4632._
STRICTLY CONTEMPORARY dining
1870 COLOR TVS now in slock. RCA, Zenith, Sylvanla, priced from $259.85. Wa sarvic* what wa sell. Obel TV, 3507 Elliabath Lake Rd.
BLACK AND WHITE portable with aland, RCA, 045, 634-0125.
CLEARANCE ON ALL 'M model TVs, save up to 0175. Obal TV, 3507 Elizabeth Lake Rd. 682-8820. COLOR TV'S FOR LESS
_____ . . BARGAINS, LITTLE
Joe's Bargain House.
LIKE NEW rabulit upload.' black ai—
Obal TV, 3507 Elizabeth
$. Blvd. at Crooks.
_____|	Reduced to $1695
. ___ water i	GALLAGHER'S
______WI*$J^M>_y117)0 TELEGRAPH
STEEL CABLES, jlka ntw, call j ^TERN ATIONAL J t Plano. $20. 683-6620
JEWELRY, ODD LOTS for prlies, MUST SELL NOW. V- .
— "•> Gretch guitar,, Suparblrd
$56. Wood i_
4 pairs boots- Cheap. 335-8772.
JOHNSON SKI HORSE M0T0 SKI SNOWMOBILES
Complete line of anbwmoblli clothas end boots.
YOUNG'S MARINA
Open dally 9 'til A Sunday 10 to 4
4030 Dixie Hwy. on Loon Lake Drayton Plains _____OR 4-041
Join the Winner's Circle With A Red Hot "Rupp" SNOWMOBILE Special Oct. Prices
Also snowmobile suits* helmets Boots, Gloves* Trailers and Ac
after 4 p.m. OR 3*9271,
581 GIVEAWAY TIME at AvotvTfoy Carpet Warehouse. Carpet, rubber pad and deluxe installation S6.66 sq. yd. Hurry — this Is a once-ln-a-lifetlme offer While merchandise Is available! 1658 E. Auburn Rd. (M58) Rochester bet. John R 8,
aas—oil—forced air —
? Wa Bala. AOK-1 KA1 nr
-05661
Rochester':
largest carpet 17,888 aq. yds. In stock. 852-2444,
resale, etc., 81.28 par dozen up,
■■4-4428'______________________
LAWN sprinkling systems, « Inch plastic pipe; 53.65 par 188, V plastic Pipe, 5.61 par 160. JJA plastic pipe, 88.51 par 100, 1V4 plastic pipe, *10.01 'per 100. G. A. Thompson & Son, 7005 M-58 W.
LAWN SPRINKLING PUMPS, I np fo 2 hp., priced from $82.50. G. A. Thompson and Son. 7805 M-58 W.
ALUMINUM SIDING — window* -doors — awnings — gutters. A 8, H Sales. 625-1581 or 874-4341.
COLOR
jrt a-uuna,.
color TV, qua ran teed, black and white. $20
EASY WASHER Dryer combination,
OR 4-1009. __________________________
END TABLES* CHEST, dinette, an
chairs* reasonable. FE 2-2182. FRIGIDAIRE DELUXE refrigerator-freezer. 673*1762.
FRIGIDAIRE Refrigerator, Tappan gas range* good condition. 682-9280* 296 Fernbarry* Pontiac. ______________
334-3573
Mtnignge loans
FOR THE PAST 42 YEARS
Voss & Buckner, Inc.
1403 Pontiac Slat* Bank Bldg. j have bean loaning $1808 to $5088 to
334-3267
CROWN
FURNITURE
1175 14 Mile Rd.
V4 BLOCK EAST OP CROOKS RD., CLAWSON 2 MILES WEST OF 1-75 EXPRESSWAY. LOCATED OPPOSITE CLAWSON SHOPPING CENTER
JU 8-0707
OPEN DAILY 8-8, SUNDAY 12-6 ______1-AC23	__
Pontiac Press Want Ads For Action
Business Opportunities 59Business Opportunities 59
FriglUBIIi	.I.IIII.. .1 _
Igldalrs electric clean rang* 30
l 8,080 BTU air conditioner 1 15 cubic foot chest freezer
Crump Electric
3465 Auburn Rd.___
FOAM SLEEP SED. with modern bookci- .
Friday after 4 or Saturday and Sunday. 163 Ogemaw.___
GOLDEN VALUE THIS WEEK ONLY
(Phon* 728-4510) Following this
week|Only^Ew CAB|^ETS
1969-1970
SINGERS-
CAPITOLS
ALWAYS i YR. GUARANTEE 1970 ZIG-ZAGS
In beautiful new cablnats. Does all the great zig-zag ■atltchee.xPA l without attgehmanfi. Eaiy TOUCH, feature* to SEW, all »ncy ttltchee Will make button hqlee, eew or buttone overceet, blind hem
dr*‘PAYC$4.12 DOWN
And 8 interest free payments ol $4.12 a month.
FULL PRICE
SINGER
DIAL-A-MATIC
Zlg Zag sewing machine embroiders, appliques, buttonholes, etc. Late model school trade-in. Terms of:	___
$6 PER MONTH OR $59 CASH
Naw Machine Guarantee
UNIVERSAL SEWING CENTER
2515 Dixie Hwy,___ FE 4-8805
REFRIGERATORS, DISHWASHERS, dryers, washara, ranges, crat* damaged and scratched modal*. Fully guaranteed. Terrific eavlnge. Terme.
-----C-B RADIO SPECIALS!
Demo Closeout Sal*
Johnson 223 $188.87 -23 8178.87 — Amphenol 777 *118.88 — Johnson 123 *148.85 — Sonar J23 $178.97 — Mark Invader $149.8* — Sonar FS-23 1259.97 - Johnson Mess I $75.97 — Tram Titan II $439.00 — Tram Titan I $349.(p — Courier 23 $169.00 — Courier 23 Plus $189.00 - Cobra Com SI $189.00 — Johnson 320 3170.97 — Regency GT523 8159.97 - Brown g Eagle $449.00 — Stacked 5 EL. Hy Gain Beams $01.00. Many other specials on CB and Police Monitor Radios — Antennae — Linear Amplifier* — I track atareo tape
pl,y,r TOWN & COUNTRY ’ COMMUNICATIONS 1664 W. WALTON, DRAYTON PLAINS TEL 674-3161
CONSOLE STEREO
Edison brand chllds Wardrobe, drassar. 681-0718.	“ijL- Jh .
ANTIQUE BOOKCASE with desk, buffet, Craftman table saw, if rigid pip* dies, and pipe r. Ball saw, circle saw MVtner. Many miscellaneous fools, priced to sell. Murals Tool Rental, 7110 Highland Rd.. White Lake Twp.
393 Orchard
NEW HUMIDIFIER, 5 room $80. I apartment
SPRING AIR, FIRM, Quean slza •tree* and box springs, 3354449.
BABIES
A ’
USED COLOR TV SETS *125.00 Used GE 2-dr. reh^erators ,849.95
RADIO AND APPLIANCE INC. 422 W. Huron___________334-5677
ROUND FORMICA DINETTE let.
829.95. Countryside living 334-1509,
ARTS 5 GEMS GALLERY EUROPEAN IMPORTER Art glass, unusual old lewelry, old mins diamonds, opals, emeralds, etc. Old Jewelry restored to it; original look. Diamonds and other stones recut. Open Saturday 12-6, Sunday 1-5, Weekday* call 602-6631
N. Telegraph —
... $349, balance due $23?. Cash i payments available.
Household Appliance
MANUFACTURER'S CLOSE-OUT
STEREO
WALNUT OR MAPLE CONSOLE
Diamond Needles BSR 4-Speed changer
$89
UNIVERSAL ^”^2615 Dixie Hwy, Dally 10:15-0	_Tuts.. Sat. 10:15-6
MEDICINE CABINETS LARGE 20'
_.K	I I	GRINNELL'S
without lights* sliding doqrs* Tar-	DOWNTOWN STORE
rlf_ic_ buys^ Michigan Fluorescent, i7 s sagi
-----U P RI
Moving Co., 10 S. Jassli cond. S1S.00, 1 water WONDERLAND. 3 piece
BASEMENT SALE - at 2700 Old smoblle, guitar, amplifier, baby essentials, sawing machine, mlsc. Items, 17-20.____________________________
BARBER CHAIR AND polt, prac ■ Hy new. Can bt assn from t tc ary evening. 12 Warren St.
BARNWOOD, HEWN
BARN SALE
Everyday, rain or shin* 10 a.m. to sundown maple school desks.
10 a.m. to sundown naple school del trunks, cedar chests, twin with can* meet, alec. 50 g heater and range, lavatories and
with cant Inset.
‘ rai _ .
drapes. Cherry « leg dropleaf tables, glass-
crystal, tfavlland china. Silver, wrought-irbn
BARBIE AND
Open Mon. through Frl. 'til 8 , 4667 DIXIE Sat , e:3B°tir$:30 p.m. prlies, must SELL NOW. Very reasonable, amplifier. 335-4917.
MG SALES
MOVING SALE — Oct. 10 and 19 Sat. and Sun. af 9:00 a.m. 661 First St. Furniture, storms and screens, clothas, mlsc.
DRAYTON PLAINS __
MODEL 1897 WINCHESTER, gauge pump. Good condition.
PLAY BY CHRISTMAS
Rant a beautiful Baldwin Plano or Organ. Starting at 110 par mo.
plus delivery.	______
SMILEY BROS.____________F*, 44?!'
ROTH VIOLIN, and case In excellent condition. 682.4093.
SALE: GUITAR, *10. Call alter 4, 335-8577.________“	___...
USED ORGANS
Choose from Hammonds and other well-known brands. Prices at low
■H418 bolt action shotgun. V Imperial winter skis, and binding, $25. 887-9397.
NEW 1970 SKI-DOO'S
COME IN AND PICK OUT TH8 MODEL YOU DESIRE WHILE
ALSO WE HAVE A GOOD STOCK OF RECONDITIONED USED SKI-DOO'S* ALL PRICED TO SELLe
KING BROS. »
373-0734
_____Pontiac Rd. at Opdykt
POOL TABLE S FOOT
magnum, excellent condition* 195*
GENE'S ARCHERY,
softener* $10.00.
OUTDOOR FLEA Market* Sunday, Oct. 19, 1 to 5, 10 dealers. Troy Corners. Square Lake at Llvernols.
PLUMBING BARGAINS, FREE standing toilet, *29.95; 39-gallpn
shower stalls with trim.
POOL TABLE pong top* V $40. Also 2-775x14 tires* $20. 673-1839.
RUMMAGE SALE*
__________115 Stout
tUMMAGE SALE. Furniture* appliances* clothing*
RUMMAGE SALE. Dishes* clothes, Oct. 17-21.	5 7 5?
with 18" cymbols. Good condition.!S 8$ W HIGHWAY Patrolman .357
$75. 363-8534.
Music Lessons	71-A
ACCORDION, GUITAR, LESSONS. Sales-servlce. Also piano tuning.
Office Equipment ^	72
$159' MODEL 1811 SIGNATURE add-
machine. Best i
PRINTING NUARC lineup model RR 51* $425. 332-5042
Sporting Goods
673-0998 after STAR MODlL caliber $35. Remington* modal 30,’ 30 06. Both good condition* $51 682-
SKI DOO* SCRAMBLER
the best deal* come to JIM HARRINGTON'S SPORT CRAFT* v» ml. E. of Lapeer on M-21. Open Sundays. 664-9412.	________
2 PLACE TRAILERS, $169.50, Sports!
TRAIL BOSS USE IT ALL 12 MONTHS
.PrMuow'Slons ak' i BROWNING 12 g.„ over end
miscellaneous items. Owner
EVAN'S EQUIPMENT
... 8275!625-1711 Clarkston 625-2511 6587 Dixie Hwy.
81751 Open Mon.-Frl. from 9 a.m.-8 p.m.
BRIDES — BUY YOUR WEDDING
RUMMAGE SALE, BASEMENT, you a it, we got it, 1589 N. Opdyk*
BIG CUT BASEMENT aal*, new and used clothing, man'* suits, some furniture and miec. 334 W. Huron, until 9 PE 8-8889.______________________
COLOR TV, davenport, easy chair, coffee table, 24" real power mow-er, akls. Ice skates. Ml 7-8837.
SALE, SOFA and chair, floor lamp, coffe* table, Zenith atareo, call
CO-OP GARAGE SALE, 390 Coats,
MAGNAVOX CONSOLE, 23"
NEW COLOR TV's, priced from Warehouse. «57*E* Wal?on.JI73-&60? SONY 530 TAPE RECORDER, used
COMMERCIAL HOTPOINT Electric deep fryer, heavy duty. Call after I 30? 363-2649.
CHRISTMAS CARD SPECIALS OF
i Dixie, OR 3-9767.
STEREO
Danish modern walnut console sjerao. Sqjld
state, AM-FM
OCTOBER 19)	1969.
___ A.M. -6:00 P.M. RAIN OR
SHINE, UNDERCOVER FARMERS MARKET, DETROIT STREET. FREE FREE P A
I N G, 662-9453,
$1,600,000,000.00
\	*	nriApKci
v	"MORE THAN 3.6 MILLION BIRTHS WILL
BE REGISTERED THIS YEA*"
RESTOCK BABY TOY & ACCESSORY DEPARTMENTS
\ NO SELLING
Company Fumishet Ratal! Accounts
. . INCOME STARTS IMMEDIATELY
GUARANTEED INVENTORY BUY-BACK ?
An Investment pf $1,595 to $2,995 can glv* you a yearly potential exceeding 85,888 In your apart lima . . . building to full time with wnfMlINif earnings.
WRITE TODAY FOR COMPLETE DETAILS ...
Enclose Name, Address and Phone Number.
INTERNATIONAL SALES. COMPANY
MR. BOYER
*600 Dalmar * ft. Louis, Mo, 63124	•	(214) 993-1475
$41.20
FEW SPACES AVAILABLE, CALL
HANKS SWAP SHOP 7850 N. Slat* Road
_____Davison Mich. PH 653-6477
GREY MARBLE" top dr**i*r ■ commode. Y-Knot • n 11 q UI DavisDurg. 634-8991. Closed 3 days._______________________
(2 per cent off far cash)
1969 SINGER,	,•
Used, axcallant condition. In »tyllsh new cabinet. All controls, built Ip for wy TOUCH, Will SEW. an buttons, mak# button hales, overcast, blind ham drassts.
FULL PRICE . $56.80
(2 par ,c*ni off tor cash)
Will taka $5.68 down and 9 interest tree payments of $5.6$ per month.
USED SINGER
Excellent condition — cash 834,88.
CALL NOW 729-4610
CtRlfol Sewing Rttlll Store Credit Dept.
9:00 A.M, TO 9:00, P.M.
Mdnd.y through
ATTEND THE 51 PRESENTATION OP
THE DETRpm ANTIQUE'SHOW,
SECOND, OCTOBER - -- TO 18. P.M. SUNDAY TO VFI NEST DEALERS FROM
ANTIQUE SHOW, and flea market, Michigan Slat* F a Jr g t a u n J *. Detroit, Michigan. Community Artt Building, October 17, 10, and 19th
65 Daalara, 81 admission._____
ANTIQUE OROAfTToFwla, bast at far. Cal) 338-1218.
CUSTOM. ANTIQUE REPI Specializing In furnltur* r and repairs *9,0 type*.
____ ... alia records. Sold for
8219. Balance due 8156. Cash or payments available.
Household Appliance
__________681-2383________
WAREHOUSE SALE
a,,Trz,iM!
Phllco, ate. allot floor cltaranc* soma marred and scratched with factory warranty t e available.
ABC APPLIANCE 41825 VarvDyk*
1 blk. S. 22 Mils 8561 E. 18 Mil* ;|
entire Inventory of Zenith, RCA,
Applience 24123 W. id Mil* Near Telegraph. ZENITH AM-FM STEREO, 8208. See
COLEMAN HEATER, humidifier and blow<
CLOSET SALE: 12 TO 14. *IZ*I. 96 Oneida, off W. Huron, Thuri., Frl. and Sat.__________________________
CYPRESS PRIVACY FENCE, *' •actions, S and V height, $7.50 par
I Electric built In rang* stainltM steal, 165 each.
TALBOTT LUMBER
1025 Oakland____________FE
UHF, 850. Call FE
MUST SELL, Bruno dlal-a-matlc,
rentals. 673-3792 i
For Sala Miscellaneous 67
V> INCH COPPER WATER PlPt!, 28 cents a ft. and M Inch copper water p ad, 29 cant* a ft. Q. A. Thompson A Son. 7885 M-59 W.
1 BREAKFAST SET, tormlca top, i
chairs, with ottomans, 1 Irrigation
laafi, 4 chairs 2 ' h ottomans, 1 mater, 825.5536.
1 CARTON IMPORTED PortugufSf cork fpr pit. daa Each til* 13"x26‘
CHIPPED BATHROOM fixture* for
720 W. Huron______________ 334-1754
3 NEW 1969, MOTO SKIS, 19 and 24	Saturday|ttl
horse power. Full warranty.
RAILROAD TIES, NEW
12 GAUGE, PUMP
fired. S45. Llama' 45 auto. $70. 887.
SUBMERSIBLE AND upright tump pumpSf sold* repaired* rented, Cone's FE 8-6642,
SPRED-SATIN PAINTS* WARWICK Supply* 2670 Orchard Lake. 602-
20HP-—297CC — electric start Sachs* Ine new with carb. $200. Call
SET OF STARLIGHT drum 8, takeover payments. Also 1963 Corvelr* $250. C reftimen Snowblower $100. 36 StockwelW FE
35 REMINGTON PUMP*
SOME ANTIQUES* LIVING* dining and bedroom furniture* many household Items* and potted plants* washer* dryer* refrigerator* RCA color TV* and office desk. 644-4252.
STOVE HOOD WITH FAN* and sliding step for truck. Mlsc. “ 674-2413. ____________
THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE 110 W. LAWRENCE ST.
_saMS.jsare^
UTILITY TRAILER, 2 wh.el, spring mounted, 4x7 box, larga enou '
2 snowmobiles. 334-7492.
USED RAILROAD TIES. 373-1743
inlngt, L I 183 Watt
Hand Tools—Machinery 68
DANISH LIVING ROOM eet* sew table and motor* TV* steamer trunk* handmade medicine cabinet* desk* boys and ladies clothing*1 shoes, good, toys* bar stools* many dther trams. After 7 P.m. Sun. and
Mon, anytime* 3734)838. _______________
ENCLOSE YOUR SHOWER over fhe bathtub with a beautiful glass tub enclosure* aluminum frame* with Ign* $28.95. M«39» W.
2 LOCKE MOWERS* $500
Thompson* 7005
LARGE
SIZE
Frl.*
i end Sun. from 1
FURNACES* GAS Installation Good Deal.
_„r	or OH* fast
ton. Aluminum aiding.
DOG houses*
FURNITURE, WRINOKR wpthpr, refrigerator, formal wadding gown and vail am 12, all In gopd Condition. Ra*$. terms accepted.
GIFTS-GAGS Lay-p-i “r 3265 OIxlP
IS, novelties, ways. Liberal Bill's OutposIL ORJ-9474.
E DOOR 16x7, used, and Future, floor ihitt. *24-5474,
Antiques, Iraasures
12 GAUGE AUTOMATIC shotgun, axcallant condition. $75. 673-7687.
shells* special stock in sling, $120.
357 Magnum* $58. 38 special* $40 and 22 Buttine* $37. 22 Western,
06 Metsenrbolt action* $55. bolt action*- $22. Double barrel 12 gauge* $50. 308 Nato 20 shot seml-auto. $200. FE 8-8165.
1969 MOTO SKI* «34 CC* $1*000. 1968! Rupp Snow Sport* $500. Modified 292 cc. 673-3312 after 5 p.m. o “ 9994* days. ___________________
Jordan at 624-1146*
Off 1-75. 373-0007.
1970 YAMAHA SNO-MOBILES# Free sleigh and cover with each machine.
K & W CYCLE 2436 AUBURN
UTICA	1 731-8290
MICHIGAN'S OLDEST EXCLUSIVE YAMAHA DEALER
THE ALL NEW 1970 SKI-D00S
NOW IN STOCK—SHOP EARLY
SPECIAL 23 H.P. SNO-JET -8499
USED SNOWMOBILE TOO
CRUISE OUT, INC.
. Walton	FE S-44M
Pally 9-6) Sat. 9 S; Closed Sun.
magnum with;________ _______ ____
choke with all tubas and dova tall sights for slug shotlng. 8150 llhlca 375 skaet 12 guage 8135. 682-9215.
Sond-Orovef-DVrl___________
ALL SAND* GRAVEL products* fill* tppsoil delivered. Phone 623-1338.-C? SERIES OP EXCAVATION; throughout Whit* Lake, Independence, Waterford Twp., o* fill dirt, clay, gravel. If you ara to need of tuen, wa shall deliver this to you for tha cost of haullnp,.OR-34935, 6 a.m.-llp.m^ Sun. InclT..
EXCELLENT TOPSOIL,
SAND, GRAVEL, AND dirt. Latham
7 h!p. CHAIN SAW. Good condition.
S75. FE 2-2112,-	|
io'' POWER SAW, BISHMAN lira changer, wheel balancer, 18 ton
Kess, Vi ton chain saw, steal work nch, mlsc. air toola, oil furnace, 25
1961 TD6 INTERNATIONAL. Ex
1968 CASE 310
i 134 hra. Don't sleep i
i aha. OR 34935.
1970'S
NOW DISPLAYED
TWIN CYLINDERS
SPRINT BY BOLEN'S THE SNOWMOBILE
EVAN'S EQUIPMENT
425-7111 Clarkston 625-3514 Opan Mon.-Frl. from 9 4.m,-8 p.m. Saturday till 5 p.m.
1967 CASE 318 FRONT-END Loadar.
CASE1........■_____________ .
bucket, pallet tinea, a “'■machanlcar condition. 644-4311, CATERPILLAR, MODElrUI Ol with cab, sacrljiar, ate. t master dutch* $1*000 682-0798 or 612-9600.
I* 14' OELfA JIG SAW with 3-sp««d
ARCTIC CAT & YAMAHA
CLAYTS CYCLE CENTER
( E. of L«P
SELECTION
„ S.A.W. SAND AND GRAVEL All gravel products, nil tend and dirt, crushed limestone, A-1. top toll black dirt. Phone 3944042. AS
- areas delivered.______
SCREENED BLACK dirt t peat delivered. 852-5462.
SPECIAL - LIME ttond, 10-A slorw, oversized alone, road gravel, end sand. 6335 Sashabaw, MA 5-2141.
WoedCoal-Cokt-Fusl__________77
ALL SEASONED OAK, fireplace wood, 6934827 er 338-3056.
ALL KINDS of wood far .8818, fireplace or furruca, OR .‘
fiReplacejw66d
Pets-HuntingDegs_______79
, AKC CHOICE
poodle stud service, alee leasing, puppies, 682-
.MALE BLACK ANDto aV6
AUTOMATIC, 12 gauge jun, ribbed barrel, used very pup*
, 4834076.	'____ .	6853
BROWNING 12"Sa06M?""8 p t o . 2-YR.-OLD'german s liepher
to Phone, shotgun, >125. 1962. 651
Buckhorn Sporting Goods
Guns, and ammunition, western '2“gjj^^s77;K<r”3’y;r
2 REGISTERED RABBIT
GARAGE SALE: 4535 Dixie Hwy.
Oreyfen Plaint. , Oct, 1942. m GARAGE..SALE: B|
2 STEREO MAGNAVO) original Value '
PE 5-7164.	1
r coma 3-1420.
Want Ads For Action
tack, archary i
Custom arrows by Banka, g licenses. 4177 Elizabeth Rd. 682-4112. Optn 7 days a
BUCK AND DOE dear
th* S. 363-1811. __ ___ 'famai* mala. Excalltnt
huntars. 1734445 attar 5 pJtl
it.SRfc MMA'Clt, Wtoff'
poodles. 10 Wk«. 6734M9
for Want Adi Dial 3344961
THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1900
D—0
gffiitJaJMriLri...
ifa, Jim *5o(Sr*«ln!na
bkIIMIlTdilB W*il**, lio. *412-71*3._■ ,, , „ __,
tassHfflc
IRiTtbV. Black oriprTcol poodle
,,rvl7 C*H
iKc~oeRMAbi 'ifiiwwfr~pup,;
hl#wi#4 llna.
;'PBKiNOiife Fu?i>ilt..
WHIM, __
gMfr*
{KC REGISTERED Bessel pupplei.
OMi IWHf	___
aKC GERMAN IMiTOiRD, S mo., aood with kid*. |7S,
HMlkV'i
*»«ks oidrlSS lich. 342-1317.
IKC CHAMPION GERMAN Shorlhelr Pointer pups, will Mil or trads. Two rad lamalas. 77*-02*5. nt ^OOOLBS, WHITE, 10 WMkl, I mala, 1 fsmoto. Moko oflor. 423-1JJ0.
IKC CHOCOLATE (brown, female) uoodla. 4 wks., champion show dog
Back. FU Will. ________________
AIREDALE PUPh. AKC, excellent
A,;‘llv dOd. 330-334).__________
IIXCKPUPS. Frea, I wks, old, and fclttans trained. 373-1142.
IiRD-N CAGE PET SHOP. Canarlas, parakaots, mica, hsmitsri, garblls, dogs, llamaso and
Ptt Su|ipll»|.Strvlt,_794
1-A GROOMING
WR-iKig;
aw	"
w?»r w **,vv	w
Auction Sain	gg
B & B AUCTION SAT. NIGHT, OCT. 18 '	7 P.M. SHARP
truck loads op good, used and NSW furniture
AN0 APPLIANCES *.uch •» Sdlorod and whlta TVs, ?l-*r»0l< hunkbads, chasts, drossars, iff!: T*!,r!LW *» ftllls, lamp
Fortii" Product	**
«*»» »* OrtonvTilo. 427-Iftl. c^^D^Rsi-MWrr«TSap.
"OOWTS^fOER^AFPtES'-
lalasroom opan I to I dally.
DIEHLS ORCHARD & CIDER MILL '
1(70 Ranchy Rd. — 4 ml, south ol Holly lust off Milford Rd.
Pin* mANuru. pick ugTiBlt*.-
JONAfHAN AFPlES and prapbs. you pick, bring containers, Mahan Orchard, III E. Walton, 1 blk. E. of Joslyn.
JOHNATHAN, Macintosh, Delicious,'
and dryar. many other articles.
DOOR PRIZE EVERY AUCTION 1 SHETLAND JONY
til* Plklo Hwy._L__OR 3-8717
B It i AUCTION
EVERY FRIDAY ..	7 00 PM.
EVERY SATURDAY . ... 7 00 P SA
*7&|uUH.LL-TSfDRPX
WELCOME
B & ETaUCTION ~
SUN., OCT. 19 2 P.M. SHARP
!	CLEARANCE
Davenport bads, rockers, recllners, end tables, bedroom suites, auto, washer and dryer, dishes, tools, antiques, late model refrigerators, apartment site stoves, vaccum cleaners, chroma sets, hundreds of arllr'"
Xrs..'e'o'!n'“fiD00R PRIZE EACH AUCTI0N
I, Sat. and lun. 10 to
Open Mon-Th
1 SHETLAND PONY
................... . Dixie Hwy. _______________________OR 3-1717
Boston bull PUPS. Lovable, i
"beautiful. AKC, FE 4-03*1 er FE J- Auction Solei	-*
iEAGLE' PUPS, 4 weeks old. ISO.
“ « 1-ltH.	['_________
COLLIE mixed - Shephard mixed ouoDles, healthy, shots Included, wormed, 110-103.
Orchards. 420* It afternoons. 4753817. fo. 1 POTATOES, ONIONS, dry bains and turnips. 3200 Waterford Rd, 433-US4.__________________
PUMPKINS
For Halloween, Alse apples, pears, sweet cider, Oakland Orchards, 2205 E. Commerce Rd., bat. Burns and Duck Lake Rds. Milford. 1:30-
CENTURY YELLOWSTONE
TRAVEL TRAILER*
JALITY AT ANYOO MET
STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC.
__Ughiand (M-») _____4ii*44i
CAWn fitI Ll'17'unffnlftrt
Inside, 373-0131._________
Chock our dual on — 5 SWISS COLONY
LUXURY TRAILERS
FROLIC /
TRAILERS AND TRUCK
CAMPERS.	,
SKAMPER
FOLD-DOWN CAMPER!
Jacobson" Tr'aMor *Sales
■to Wllllimi Lak» Rd. OH 3-5*81 CAMPlir^
MAN V«n« fully pandablt top. *ia 863-8489.
DON
JOHNSON'S
TRAILER SUPPLIES A ACCESSORIES DEALER FOR:
TR0TW00D WAG-N-MASTERS
Wilton et Joslyn	PE ASMS
PICK YOUR OWN delicious, elso
RED AND YELLOW Delicious, Jon-ethen. Wlnesap, you pick. Newman's Orchard, *752 Rattalee Lake Rd. v, mile E. of Dixie Hwy.
peck, honey rocks 3 for 9 lor e quarter, No. t preening apples S2.99 a bushel. Boros Coun-try Market, 2350 Dixie Hwy.
EXPLORER
MOTOR HOME
See	u,
which It No. 2 In motor h ••las. Price* start at 89,995, up.
STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC
3771 Highland tM-Wt____412 *440
Form Equipment	87
I EVERSMAN LAND LEVELER.
very nice. 421-31 GERMAN SHEPHERD puppl black and tan, big boned, going pupplei, tether English
GREAT PANE PUPS ARC registered, excellent bloodlines.
i old, AKC registered, exc background, t)0B. 343-3351 ■ GERMAN SHORT HAIR Pointer pups, purebred from hunting (lock, no popprs. 330. 473-11144.
(ERMAN WIREHAIRED, Pointers, -malt, female, 1 year old AKC, 424-
AKC,
Irish wolfhound
must sell. 752-3444.'
KITTENS NEED A GOOD home.
Ca)l alter 5:30-473*486.___
LABRADOR PUPPIES, purebred, , 135, 373-4455.
Mlklo PUPPIES WANTED. We buy complete litters. til-0072.
6NB TRAINED Bird Dog, Brittany apanlel, registered AKC, 3
. old. i
train. 625-4274.
Pets-rtunting Oogi
Pure german shepherd pups.
Part GERMAN Shepherd-Collie puppies. SIP tech, 432-4331.
Fart GERMAN Shepherd pupt, reedy ter delivery SIS- 424-0*10. POODLE PUPS. S weeks old, no ,125, 423-114* after 4.~
Registered Male $p
spaniel, 14 months, • xce11 an t
hunter, <35, cell 343-4*44..__
REGISTERED DACHSHUND. 473-
(EGISTERED 8 MO. old etarted Bluetlck Coon pupa, call 421-2050
PH,: Swartz Creek
Plonts-Troos-Shrubt
81-A
CHAIN SAWS
NEW McCULLOCH CHAIN SAWS PRICED AS LOW AS
$119.95
RECONDITIONEO McCULLOCH
dig. 12
NT of 1-75 Intersection. Cedar I Evoi Hwy. 625-1
Livestock	83 ARlteNS A^D TORO
---------— on display. Layaway
2 REGISTERED MORGAN mares,
2 HOLSTEIN HEIFERS, grain cal) afters, 391-3143.
5-YEAR-OLD BUCKSKIN wall broke, $3oa or bott
oftW
S YR. OLD Shetland for seta, c
with klda, 3*1-1123.____________
4 YEAR MARE. Thoroughbfad quarter. 332-403*.	_________
FALL CLEARANCE SALE
MF213S Gat *3200 MF135 Gee 3 cylinder saeuu MP354 Diesel Loader 14.535
• YEAR OLD SADOLEBRED-
jSSSr&r New^lumplng1 i^lS* gj™, gR •i.iKkMPi	Kbit |200. 724-7035,1	u,eaci TorK 1
Almont Western Store	WSS*. Viws
Complete line of horse cere prod-
--------boots, long-1	USED EQUIPMENT
USED TRUCKS
145 S. Main St.
BUCKSKIN HORSE AND saddle,
4250- 025-154*._______________
DAPLE GRAY MARE, I yrs. old.
REGISTERED Quarter
Many to choose from. $200
ot equip, cent oft
maiRRIL D Ranch, 40S(
Cllnlonville Rd., Pontiac. 473-7457.
after 4 p m. UL 2-
MANX KITTENS
PIGS POR SALE, have
PONY SULKY cert end tine harness, *70. Child's Enplii and assorted other oqutpir ford. 424-2737.__________________
REOtSTBRED APPALOOSA mar. celt, cell otter < p-m. 421-2271.
SMALL GENTLE PINTO mere. Ol^
TRAVIS FARMS
Hortes boarded t 450.00 Per month ^Srers^Lergi indoe^nd outdow
a^i•dC•^J?o£e.^
Stoney Creek, 752 3>Sr ,0450 .Yule Reed. Leonard. Michigan._
Seats	83-A
Spring spaniel pupt, 4 mo. aid. house broken, champion stock,i	—■■
AKC raglstarad, 363-8226._l*,j /v\baT CUTTING, FREEZER
IaleT MALE.canary, cage and food; wrapped- .Wt cure and »mok« Included, call aftar 4 p.m., 335- meat*. Call 373-6155.--
Smwwii BifeSSSa |
_____________3 left. 363-3317._________
IT. BERNARD PUPPIES, AKC, pet end thow quality ter the discriminating buyer. Willow Point Saints hoe rough end emooth cooled pupplei, sired .by our own American end CdfiPdlan champion true.V. Melster. If you are looking
SHELTIES, FLASHY tables with
iHtNjfk PUPPIES, (toy Collies) ‘"C registered, guerenteac lUny, happy end alert, 17*^34*.
1ST ANO^NDCUTTIN^HAY'
■riss Produce	86
...m e.
Joslyn, no
iV^BCRNAItO PUPS, Inslred Amer. Cenadlen champs, Treu Meister. Beautifully marked -# show quality, 1175. 524-5337.
AT MIDOLETONS ORCHARD isleV Hallowsen Pumpkins, squesh and boss peers. Apples you Pfk or we pick. Alter 4 p.m. end ell day Sat end Sun. 1510 Prli«™r» Rd-
Lake Orion. Phone 493-8*5*.__
APPLES £ DELICIOUS and Jonathan, you P'<£' talners. Open weekdays 1^, Saturday 9-6, Sunday 12-4. Closed Mondays. French Orchard!, 12*1 State Rd.. eeuthtlde et Fenton.
OrtenvIHe. Ph. 427-34*1.
Auction Solos
*0 Auction Solos
Warrener Hubs, 12100 1 used GMC enow plow truck 1450 Sn Ford tractor and trencher 41250 Vermer trencher 4" *550
Tractor end Mott
Vermer trecher I"
ICH Super C iRffi . trailer type mower M95.
LAWN AND GARDEN EQUIPMENT STRAIGHT DEAL NO TRADE INS
MF12 Tractor with mower 31200 MF10 Tractor wlhh mower 1057.44 MP Recoil trectore with mowers
USED RAILROAD TIES, VERY GOOD CONDITION 6* to 10* 15 117 to 15' 110
PONTIAC FARM ANb TRACTOR CY OR DAVE LOCHART S25 SOUTH WOODWARD PE 4-0441____ FE 4-1442
DAVIS MACHINERY, your Hoi Chain Sew, "Dealer'7, John Deere and New Idee parts Belore. ORTONVILLE. NA 7-32*2.
GARDEN ROTATILLER, --------------
mowtr. S175. 6 steel doors, *20 tech. FE 0-4037. 34 Stockwoll.
WANTED: Side delivery roke, power post hole digger, 3 point hitch, will buy ar trade. Tom'e. PE S-2434 or 628-2X44,_________________________
| trailers, cars. Pick-up
nFT. PICKUP COVER, S225) 1*61 Pontiac S225. 50*7 Elizabeth Lk.
TIZZY
FIBfcRGLAS TRUCk COVERS, •
--------- l—	‘ irHorne,
3091 W,
HAVE YOU SEEN THE ALL NEW
OMEGA
Motorhome
•peed transmission, d u a I - r t a r wheals, complatety self-contained. Alto have 22' with Doge chassis 350 eu. In engine.
Only at
■y ■
15210 HellyRd., Holly—ME 4-6771 Open Dally end Sundty LITTLE DEN" pickup camper!
McClellan Travel Trailers
4120 Highland Road (M-59) PRONE 674-3103
Close Out on '69 Models.
e Wait Wind
I Lake
•	Bonanza
•	WHEEL CAMPER
By Kata Onann
“Father, do you realize it’s almost a week since you gave me an advance on my allowance!”
*9 i Tire*-Auto-Truck
TWO, 1.25x14 WHITEWALL SNOW TIRkSi
CAMBRIDGE LIBERTY	MONARCH
REMBRANDT
Available Immediately—perk (pace
Colonial Mobilo Homes
FE 2-1657	674-4444
25 Opdyke Rd. 2733 Dixie Hwy. Auburn Heightt	“ "
10X50 RICHARDSON, SET-UP, 12100. Cell before #30 p.m. 674-2193.
651-7559.
LIKE new,
7.60x15, cell UL 2-3056._________
USED AUTO. SNOW fires, most sizes, priced 81 to 87 must go Need the room. Cell Bob Norton, Hehn Chry»ler-Plymouth, 625-2635.
»OBto-Atcsooorl*o
(BRAND NAMB BOATS AT)
PINTER'S
BOSTON WHALER—STARCRAFT THOMP0ON-MPO BOAT I ^Ht/SON AND BEARCAT MOTORS WO.TrOde — We Plnenc.
70 OMfyke	373-0224
nenfcs____	iet.Jil
\t FT, PiifAOUkS ' Leneetir, 25 h.p.'LflvInrude, needs miner r.pethb <300. 473-223*.
10 HOOKi P5wSl fR-BRCOTRY electric, excellent condition, 3250, 473-74*7. ,	,
m -if Pdoi pibVrglas Boot, excellent cendltlen, only 53 hour, on lnbo.rd-outbo.rd motor, ell MercrvlM central. Price 11550 with trailer. 544-2*45,	_____
CLEARANCE T969 Boats, Motors, Trailars C0H0 SPECIALS
Got lome lust right for Cohe
14' new alum, bo.t... ... $340
16'Owen., 40 n.p. Weetbond,
trailer .............. 17*5
13' Glestrw Tri-Hull, 40 h. p. Johnson, tralMr .......113*5
WINTER STORAGE
Cruise Out, Inc.
43 B, Walton ..	.... . ..FE 3-4402
Nbw andUsad Trucks . . ... . WAkCK
Oodge Wrecker 0-500, 424-4547,
101
farutyi Cars
■	imriB
Melreie, 033-6740.
i*40 pooak, <-YAk6 8ump truck) good box, 3350, 4,3-370*.
Smith Moving Co. 10 S. ■
Detole Pipe*,
------iMidHlW PT€kuP'
473,11*
1*41 FSRlTTUMPTTi good condlllon. 1*43 7oe. 5 to 4 yard, goad condll Cell 451-4222 or may be i
•250.
■eed condition.
11-4322 or may be eeen et 245 ieuth St. Aechetwr.
r*4t CRIyY PiCKUP
________473,14*__________
1143 chIvy PTckup; (FTTn >
perfect. 432-SM4.	_____
1*63 WILLY* JHkP, CJ5, with new blade. *52-1544, after 5:30. t*4>“Pdi'D *KlcuK »hift, bad engine, a
jB¥P WITH ILAbk itvy flap "	'	■
1-3542. 682-:
houae car 1250.
MILOSCH
Deity »-4l Set. 9-5) Cleaed tun.
"SORO. PIBBROLASSkb beat, 23 „„ ru,( 4P Johnson motor, Tee Nta trailer, surrey top, extras. 1375.
RESERVE YOUR BOAT and I ■ winter eterege apace NOWI Free engine storage with ell tune-up
Wl* ^BIRMINGHAM BOAT • Service Center Ml 7-0133
CLOSE-OUT 1969
CHRVSLER 3 JOHNSON MOTORS
YOUNG'S MARINA
Open dally 9 'til 6 Sundty 10 to 4 4030 Dixie Hwy. on Loon La Drayton Plain*	OR
SPECIAL YEAR end prices, on all
Motor SCBBttrS________	941 ^^trbLt?, an^^elSh'ln
ci2 MINIBIKES, 145 tach, end 1945 6 "ml'es"south of Fenton A Holly.
»' I Honda, 125. 612-7(40.	_ i DAWSON'S SALES, T I P S I C O
BENELLI MlNl'ilkC Oyai mo LAKE, phone 42»-2l7*.__________
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH
1*43 GMC pickup, 6 cylinder, (tick, 4495, 477 M-24, Lake Orion,
IN
1»pVWv*rv.t,-n^ WiiriUI,' rpdle. MeWrf 'aaaBia'' trenemiieien, too per «dM birtWW,
AUTOBAHN
,vw
1761 S. Telegraph	pe 34131 -
i*«rwMiferTTiB^
tires, 335-334*, etter 4 P.M. *
HUNTER SPECIAL
1*47 CHEVY leerts Van. Air een-dltlon, radio, heeler. Jutt whet the modem hunter needs. Piieed to •ell *t only 311*1. kankjlermi available here. .Immediate delivery. Cell Mr. Parke, credit manager, ter payn et Mt 4-7500. New location ot
TURNER FORD
2400 Meplt (IS Milt Rd.)
beautiful maroon finish won piack Interior, year end clearance special, only 11244 full
Prep.$. Wt'vt Moved!
W Mil# N. ol Miracle Mild 1143 S. Telegraph Rd, PB 3-4)01 1*44 VW SQUARE BACK, 3400 mil#!, •till under warranty, stick ihllt, * " roof, aluminum luggage reck.
1966 JEEP 4 WHEEL DRIVE SAVE GRIMALDI CAR CO.
900 Ooklond Avo. FE 5-9421
1*44 FORD 'h TON itendtrd pickup with aportf crcft sleapar, many extras, 337-3434.
1*46 FORD ECONO VAN. Double doors on both ildea- Automatic transmission, radio, heater, whitewall tires. Save. 327} Wait
Huron, 402-204). Dealer______
1969 POR'D CUSTOM, like new.
442-0312
6555TaT*o Sports Van. v» Ick. Heavy duly. Radio. 32.000 i. 343-9611 until 5. MI-0314.
AUTOBAHN
VW
1741 3. Telegraph	PB S-43i
1949 MGC, BRITISH racing green, •peed manual, overdrive, only . mi,, tsooo----■
after 7 p.r
alpine 1*47 tunbeoi whitewalls, radio, ot
black vinyl InMrMr,   ....... _...
dltlon, 41350. By Ownor. Coll alter 4 p.m. 4I145IA _______
10 X 50 1*50 MOBILE home, 31,7*5.
uvlilfl, 334-110*
12'x65', 3 BEDROOM mobile hornet. Old English decor. Had fbundry or mvd*room with ouftido ' ing area. HOMES I.* Flint.
•ntrance.
12x50# 2 BEDROOM Autumn gold kitcii
Med I ter rani an dec*
tractivaly i
ilia homes, appliances. Vary at-
12 X 63 ACADEMY# BRAND
1960 CHAMPIONp 10X50#
be moved off
■ camper. 8800. 625-4119.
1966 ACTIVE 12x50# 83#500
1969 GMC sonabla Trailer Sale*.
Reasonable 338-0772. Midland
near Pontiac.
PICKUP COVER# CASH.
SALE
'69 Model Clearancu
Save Hundreds
17' and 10'. 4 end 6 sleeper travel , trailers priced to mevel I
Take M-59 Vi Mile Watt of Oxbow Lake to
HAYDEN CAMPER SALES
___________■ 343-713*__________
SAVE
$50 to $300
f TRAILER ON
Marked Dowr
SALE
$50 to $300
EVERY TRAILER ON THE LOT
Marked Down
VILLAGE TRAILER SALES
4470 DIXIE .HWY. CLARKSTON 635-2317
SALES-SERVICE-RENTALS
SLEEPER
Steal frame pickup covers and tops. Cab to camper boot. SPORTCRAPT MFG. CO.
1160 Foley 623-0650 Waterford
STORAGE
OF ALL
TRAVEL TRAILERS
$5 Monthly
k Coo.
lOVi FT. CAMPER on 1*66 Ford 44 special pickup. Wil _ _ or together, tee to, appreciate- 674-177*.____________________
separate
aclete- 67 ______
13' TRAVEL TRAILER, with stove,
TRUCK CAPS, PANELED end Insulated, 31*0.03, dole to M-5* and Rochester Rd., 2*90	3.
Rochester Rd.
TRUCK COVER HEADQUARTERS.
6' CAMPER, IDEAL lor summer vacation or hunting, Sleeps 4. Gas and electric lights, gas furnace, Ice
Merit I' fiberglass liter models to cnoosc mm featuring the Swinger Motor Homt end Oloeestar trailer.
PIONEER CAMPER SALES
MI-B73B___________
trailer, eelt conn
21 FOOT 1*44 PAN, SLEEPS 4. mint cendltlen, comptetely 1—
TRAVEL TRAILER, NEW February, 1*40, one owner IS* Scottla. Self-contained with ell the factory extras plui electric broket, full carpeting. A beauty with only I, 500 miles. Reeie hitched Olds FI5 tor above else for tele. Cell Ml 4-0175 owner.
1*66 FORD (4 TON custom cab. Like
Cefni

tbago Camper, will Mil wparai both. 180 Norton Avt.« Pontiac.
AUCTION Office Equipment
From North Amtrican Leasing Co.
To Be Sold on Primise* of
HOLIDAY INN’
i ; BANQUET ROOM 1801 South Telegraph Rd.
Pontiac, Mich.
Tut!., Oct. 21, 10*30
sSEsiwffi^ ®
Marcnent calculator, Yhi—«— i Peymiiter Chedt. Unite, flM, Letter end leg ' end Executive type.
A
|e* chelra.
Size. (IS)
ITEMS TOQ NUMEROUS TO MENTION INSPECTION MORNING OP SALE.
SOLO INDIVIDUAL PIECES ONLY
X£ui I* NOT DISTRESS MERCHANDISE ALL IN GOOD CONDITION
HOLIDAY INN
MtfOUET ZOOM 1101 South Ttligroph Rd.
. Pontiac, Mich.
Too., Oct. 21, 10.30 rf' 1	* Cash or Certified Chuck
1*67 FORD CAMPER SPECIAL, lOVk foot, deluxe travel clean camper, 474-3413.
1*47 LAYTON, 23 FT., *4ll-conteinto, tandem, carpeted, like new. I249S.
OR 3-1*31.	________
iwTPRAIRIE SCOOTER, 14', »el«-
•XC,llen’
io ft. Wolytr-
■m © ........
626-5716.
APACHE
A very few brand new 1969 Model* left.
HUGE SAVINGS
1 used 1967 Messa with canapt* dinette set# water# •tove# link# excellent condition.
EVAN'S EQUIPMENT
TRAILER FOR HUNTING, TRIPS. ^ '	" ir, 452-4*5*.
Truck Caps $199 and Up
WEIR'S-GOODElL
WINNEBAGO
F. E. HOWLAND SERVICE
IS Dixie Hwy.	DR 3-1454
YOUR DEALER POR -
SPORT TRAILER. GEM AND CORSAIR
TRAVEL TRAILERS
Coreeir end Gem pickup compere.
Ellsworth Trailer Soles
4577 Dixie Hwy- •	425-441*
WOLVERINE 10' camper, ilatpi i •elf contained. )*4S GMC. V6 pickup truck, 4 speed Irene., pood
scrambler, 1969. 4-speei knttbbys, 3 me. eld, 4250. 404-3772. LITTLE INDIAN mlnlUk*,' like new. 431-03*1-
IVtotorcyclGS	95
1966 BSA# 650 cc# excellent condition#
SPORTSTER# BEST
beet offer. Alio 1968 50cc
1967 SUZUKI X6# 250 CC# transmitslon runs perfect# 83Q0. Ml 6-1026.
TONY'S MARINE
For Jehnaen*4 Motori. 412-3440. WINTER
Outildt Beet Sterip#
Iniide Motor Storage SAVE Mt ON NEW BOATS-MOTORS-TRAILERS
Harrington Boot Works
>0 S. Telegraph______33240:
YEAR-END CLEARANCE r On All 1*4* Stock I Mew 1*70 boats end tnowm
BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER
1265 S.
claw*. 855. 335-0019. SHIP IN 625-4753.
Wwittd Cdrt"Inicks_____
TOP DOLLARS FOR SHARP MILEAGE AUTOMOBILES.
t extras# 81250# PE 5-3516.
1967 FORD PICKUP# 8 cylinder# deluxe ceb# 81275# 673-8659.
5ALE CARS 106
1967 *8#D RANGE R plckup# V£,
1967 FORD 88 CUSTOM ' mileage. 363-0001# dir, 1967 CHEVY, V TON I
1968 Chevy
Pickup, V4, putomttlc, excellent condlflon.
$1795
Pickup# 6 cylinder# transmission# 12#000 act*
$1695
■MS . 1*67 175 KAWASAKI ROAD bikt, .KING, 2] good condition, *250. Cell 625-2630.
^oT7.r «&r“lSS?S!.fiSn. cHil
104* SUZUKI TC 120 Trill K»t, *3*5,
1968 MONARCH TRI-LEVEL,
Xbn IKI-LCVCL# I
skirted# call 363-8641.
1969 CHAMPION DELUXE# 12 2 bedroom, beautifully furnl located In Pontiac area# must sacrifice. 84#99S. JU 8-3429.
home. Countryside Living. 334-1509,
1 WILL SUIT YOUI
ANNUAL CLEARANCE
Bank say* "Move 'em!" so Reductions up to SI #0001 Countryside Living, liic.
1084 Oakland __________334-150!
FLEETWOOD 10*57# SKI RT E O
MOON completely furnished#
NEW MOBILE HOMES# on the lots, lake front lots with beach and fishing privileges# Square Lake Mobile Home Perk 338-0569.
DETROITER AMERICAN SUNRISE PARK KR0PF
louble Wktet. Expend,
AT
BOB
HUTCHINSON
MOBILE HOME SALES 4301 DIXIE HWY. 673-1202 DRAYTON PLAINS
Coen Oellv 'til I p.m. Saturday end Sunday 'ttl 8
OAK HILL ESTATES
NORTH OP PONTIAC ON DIXIE HIGHWAY AT OAK HILL RD.
HOME COMMUNITY
BY BUYING PROM A. DEALER OP YOUR CHOICE OR OWNING FAIRLY NflM fil	|
CALL MRS.
OR 647-7600.
ROYAL—0R-REGAL
ACTIVE
* or 3 1
TOWN & COUNTRY MOBILE HOMES, INC.
Telegraph at Dixie Hwy.
334-6694
Daily 'til «
TAKE OVER PAYMENTS, 1*4* Star. HI ". 333-3314,
TRAILER STORAGE. PICK up and delivery, Aryl'e Inc., Lake Orion,
695-4444,
...	TRAILERS INEWI 305cc V#mihi
Pontiac Mobile Park
623-1342 after 3:30 p.n
1969 K AW AS At 250CC# 1200 mi. Scrambler# ilka >79-6976._________
offer. 338-8191.
1969 HARLEY DAVIDSON# 350 SS#
Sprint# 155---- —
2109.
1970 YAMAHA SNOWMOBILE* new models on d I s p I a Snowmobile clothing. .................ighland# rlgirt to
9PRUC9 TlOCirrt IAXE. Phori^ 629-2179.
Take M-59 to W. Highl Hickory Ridge Rd. to . I left and follow sions to DAWSON'S SALES. TIPSICO LAKE, Phona
Anderson's
24th
Anniversary
SALE
300 Motorcycles on Display BSA's — Triumph Norton — Honda Ducati — Matchless — Guzzi Mini Bikes
PARTS—ACCESSORIES SPEED KITS
EXTRA Dollars Paid
FOR THAT
EXTRA Sharp Car
1965 Chevy
kup.
$795
On N .Milford Rd.
Especially Cheveliaa, Corvettes, GTO't, Fir 442'a.
Averill's
FE 2-9870	2020 Dixie lE 4-6898
Mansfield
AUTO SALES 300
Sharp Cadlllact. Pontiac, Olds one Bulcks for out-of-state market. Tog dollar paid.
MANSFIELD AUTO SALES

"TOP DOLLAR PAID"
GLENN'S
POR "CLEAN" USED CARS ’Mw*H%r”-
business with • gigantic sale, i -one of the world's largest
motorcycle sale! for the
TOP $ PAID
All Cadillacs, Buick Electro 225s, Olds 90s, Pontiacs and anything sharp with air con-. ditioning.
WILSON CRISSMAN
CADILLAC
A-l Motorcycle Insurance
FARMERS INSURANCE Agency of Pontiac acroti from Anderaon't
1350 N. Woodward
property damage
M25CC
124-200CC
201-340CC
361-500CC
501-750CC
WANTED Used VW's Bill Golllng VW
GIGANTIC
SALE
250Cg Enduro Savage# reg. 8895 sale 120CC Trail Cat# rag. 8495. sale 8435.
MG SUZUKI SALES
4667 Dixie Hwy.	673-6451
_______DRAYTON PLAINS_________
SUZUKI MOTbRCVcLES# Mtt to SOOcc# ell In lection, 12 months or 12,000 miles warranty. Cycle accessories# Rupp's Mini-Dikes.
6 miles Muth of Fenton & Holly# DAWSON'S SALES# TIPSICO LAKE, phono 629*2179.
NEWI 50CC YAMAHA	81»
JttnkCarsJrucRs	101 »A
18-1-2# JUNK CARS# ft— tow time, FE 5-7795.___
1-2-3 JUNK CARS — TRUCKS, tow anytlmo. FE 2-2666,
111 JUNK CARS. PAY FOR SOME.
free tow. Ffc 5^079.	___________
COPPER - BRASS. RADIATORS — •tarteri .nd pen.rators, C. Olxson,
Used Auto-Truck Ports 1
1*52 HENRY J BODY, 3275 673-3311# aft. 5 or 335-9994, day! OTS P 01 D A U Y 6 to A T transmission# 1963 Cadillac right
309 TRI-POWER ENGINE 335-1937
AUTO SERVICE
GMC TRUCK CENTER
1:00 to 5:00 M0n.-Prl.
8:00 to 12:00 Saturday
701 Oakland Aybdug 335-9731
NEW I FOOT CAMPER, cab ovi en 1*4* GMC V-4, If-ton Reasonable, 331-0772, Mid Ian Trailer Salas._____________________
INTERNATIONAL GAS TRACTORS, 1700 series, 1*421 and t*43a, 1*3 h.p.. No raaipfwbje otter refused. HARRY R. PETHICK USED TRUCK SALES, MO M-15,
Fereign Can
■ RUNS PERFECT, nice Interior# $150#
N chassis ready far
' body# $265. FE 5-2632.
;w«r-
1964 TRIUMPH SPITFIRE 3 stops# fair condition 8550. Firm call 624-1146.
64 vw oobb transportation
tedi |	■" "
Dealer >65 B
AUTOBAHN
1 offer. 442-547*
excellent con-
DUNE BUGGIES - so Pet. off en ell bodies end ■cMMonat, JIM HARRINGTON'S SPORTCRAPT, Vf ml. E. ot Lapeer et M-21, Open Sundays, 444-0412,
VW, 1*4* SEDAN,
radio, HI Cell etter ,
sunroof, radio, heater,
DUNE BUGGY - LoededTprec-
Ow
BUICK traciAU 2 door rdtop. bucket easts, V-d, 1200.
1*44 BUICK Wildcat 2 Black vinyl teg, Mg Pull power. One soma Dealer'*. 32,5 Wl Hl 1944 RIVlkRA, FULL
r cendlt!enfng!n AM-PM radio, C. condition. *1,575. 447-22*0.
1967 BUICK Eltctro
225 4-deer hardtop, with full power, •Ir conditioning, two tg choose from. Priced te Belli
1*47 BUICK RIVIERA, ALL •nd	BB|
dition.
l OPEL. Excellent cendltlen, lew <i leapt, $14*5. McKerada Ford. 211 tain St., Rochester. Call 4SI-2504.
MILOSCH
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH
rad with btack vinyl i, factory w, JMN# power seats, c h r o ma *5, 477 M44, Lake Orion,
1968 BUICK ELECTRA 225
4 doer hardtop, factory air cat dltlon. _
©795
Bob Borst
1965 VW# SUN ROOF.
1965 VW# radio# haattr, 4 speed.
AUTOBAHN
1966 VW# LIKE NEW# S795. 363-6111
heater. One owner.
$995
FISCHER BUICK
SIS $. Woodward
1*47' VW FASTBACK, 41250.
1*47 VW. RED, NBW tlrav
1*45 Palrlane or Pelco lt65<,Must.n^ 2B* engln.
AIRSTREAM
Sefvrdaye 'til 5 p.m.
iWiET
amerio6 . siLvimmMRcb-
. All at close-out prices
TREANOR'5 TRAILERS
I04S Dally *-7 Sun. 12-4
outlet, 1 used rant • letcopl
Tou?55fT«*ne and Pleatwing
r'iNGTON1? SPORTCRAPT, W ml] BEAUTIFUL 24 X SS HBRRLI E. of Lrgaar pn M-21. AMthelPutly furnished, cantrel sir, Mt up
'hoSk
’lowry camper sales
1335 S. Hospital Rd. Union Lake
EM 3-3681
lap*
WHY?
, . . Run all over to fill your mobile home needs. Wouldn't It br much easier te moke lull ONE STOP1 HOLLY MOBILE HOMES net only
Mobile hemee, such et: Richardson, New Moon, Breed Lane, Ri Champion end othtn, but also < the lovllest choice at sites to. your new Mobile. Home.,., k beautiful, peaceful OAK H ESTATES MMted in a --------
Sundays, 444-1412.
COMANCHE 1*4*. I#W 1*57 •*» contained, sleeps 4, * 3 * • f* * *,
for your privacy
WHY NOT MAKIj THAT ONI STOP
OAK HILL ESTATES
HOME OP
HOLLY -MOBILE HOMES
DlXUt HWY. AT OAK HILL RD. 434-4443	.____ W
1*4* TRIUMPH 4S0cc
K & W CYCLE 2436 AUBURN
UTICA
MICHIGAN'S OLDEST EXCLUSIVE YAMAHA DEALER
96
RECONDITIONED BIKES, Ilk* I MA *7430.
SCHWINN T*$PIil> Continental, very peed condition. MO- 3W-S433. Boatt-Accessorlgs	97
A Fsw Boats Laft for Close-Out I
14V* Shell Lake with »$ H.P. Merc, r> trailer, full
CLOSE-OUT
STARCRAFT
1969 TRAVEL TRAILERS 1969 CAMPERS SEE THE ALL NEW 1970 AUO'S AND STARCRAFTS CRUISE OUT, INC,
SS B, Walton . . .. .. Pf .4-44(1 Deny Mt lit. Ml Closed sun.
Tlrei-Aute-Truck
lull cenvei end trailer. t**S.
I	ATTEX
tativ'i-9 Th® Oo-Anywhart Pun Vahlcta —1 Pgr Outdoor Sport*,..
Uio it for Wintar too *.. vortiHio omphlbiout
92
Park, ipar xhwb. end end chrome wheels. New_»nd used Danish King. Free Delivery Within Wheels. Magi Amarlcan IT, Creger, 300 mllfilTwW nm for/ melt-At* Ansen. Trade eld mage tar new.
mKnVM’Sies ^
Drive Your Attex
amphlt nlm «
PULL LINE OP MERCURYS—CHRYSLER OUTBOARD MOTORS
CLIFF OREYER'S MARINE DIVISION
1131* Holly Rd., Nelly ME 4*771 if” pibeSolas, ' M*'^fiCWy meter, 133*. 4744300.
1966 VW $995
•in1 GRIMALDI CAR CO.
427 due. quod ciho^ I'S; 900 Ooklond Av». FE 5-9421
Other anginos# transmission* if66 VW. radio, hoator# 4 spaed.
A^d body pqrfa avail*bit , AUTQBAHN
VW
1763 3. Teiagraph	PC 1-4331
JOHN McAULIFFElORD
1966 FIAT 1580 serle* Spider Convertible# has everything including cless# McAuliHe Special only - 8688 full price# 8600 beTow book value.
P.S. We've Moved!
v* Mile N. bf Miracle suit 1145 S. Ttiwaph Rd. Pi 5-4101
body, needs transmission er for parts, 325, 334-3710-1*44 PONTIAC, SECrTOR PARTS.
3*1-1323.	_________
,9oTTWo ENoiNi, excellent condition, 3313. will make deal ter is* end train. 3*1-3331.	'
BLACK BUCK|T1 XHb beck seat, excellent cendltlen, 430. Pi 34477-FORD AND MERCUkY, INI - 1*31,
of chrome running bearde, end parte- 474-0143.
6(4B MlR 1.00x15 M AND H Ripple well elldM, as new Sit. 16W" webber pressure plate end disc ter Chevy 33*. 473-3354-REV-POL A4ARK ll Mellory Ignition tor OTO 40*. Never bfirn used. 332-
1969 Electro 225 Coupi
Dark brown finish with beige Intsrlor, vinyl tap. Full power, factory elr, AM-PM radio. Company dtmoa. New ear warranty,
$3995
FISCHER BUICK
Vinyl Interior 1
$3795
Fischer Buick
513 5. 1
447-3400
CADILLAC COUPE DeVHIg,
1*43 CADILLAC air con trai, I padded
imuw 'Mfriss:
I roof. Phono after I p.m.
John McAuliffu Ford
1*44 CADILLAC CeUPP DeVILLE. Pull power, end factory air. Yaar-end cieerance sale price of only 4*84 full prlei.	■
P-S. Wb'vb Moved!
V* Mile n. of Miracle Mile 1*43 S. Telegreplt Rd. PE 54101 1*45 CATALINA CONVERTIBLE, power tleering end brakes, eutemetlc, undercoat wife's car, excellent condBWfiTiiTf. 3*Mlin 1*44 CADILLAC, 4 door, hardtop, air, other extras, well maintained, privets owner. S4P7432 deya, 051-3*47 evee.
1*4* CAOILLAC ILDONaDO, maroons, stereo, lew mileage, beet offer. 474-174*.	^
1*4* CADILLAC. LIGHT grain, black laather Interior and top, atarao and
CADILLAC ELDORADO, GM
Farndala# 545-7160 or aftor 7 p.n 647-3105.
LATC MODEL CADILLACS ON HAND AT ALL TIMCI
JEROME
1 good shape, PB 5-21
Wi‘ 'TRAbE
pertermence pei Pontiac end Chevy Beat at tune up>-
Texaco Ser Orchard Lk. end Ml
rts. Bring us your
Nbw Bitd Ussd Truck! 103
1-1044 ECONOLINB VAN, make • fine cemger, first (Mt. 10(4 Crai-
r>di((> ~KON6DNfe(, ”i,'"H*nit ms, 1 1*4* at HIM. 1 Bu. van selling eut,
truck. A-l condition. Can *
AUTOBAHN
; vw 7
IMt 5. Telipraph Jf •	FE *-4531
1967 FIAT '
850 SPORT COUPE V Rid and Ready Sava GRIMALDI CAR CO.
900 Oakland Ava. FE 5-9421 in
1*53 CHEVY WITH (ir,
4, 4*3-430*.
1*54 CHtvV. Strip car, 337, Hi HP.
3450, with headers, MOO, 442-4454. 1*37" CHEVY CONVJERTliLB, <naw top ttid carpet- PE 4-5015, bat. 7. 1*37 CHIVY 2 ODOR hardtop. ItFck shift, runt , seed, beat otter, 442-
TtfiiSvi, 21 Door MAfchYdp,
Texe» car, no rust. .040 BV. dual APB quad. 4M h.p.. SSODuntJY
1940, CHEVY73 N new anqw Urea, 475, 3115 AlCO Dr.
Nbnmnt
PE Mill.
l or Cell OR 3-54741 Birmingham
$15 S. Woodward
4 peed t H«VY ll uns beau :jj|VY'
44,-54001
T (loi.
haatir. Sharp one owner. Juit
FISCHtRWBUICK
D—10
NwwUNOn
New and Used Car* 1041 Now ted Used tore H8|Nowond Ihod Ctff John McAuliffe Ford
THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18, MARMADUKE
1060
By Andtraon and Looming
T*43 CHEVY 1 DOOR hardtop, Mick, 0150 or best otter. UL T?6J CHlVY II. * DOOR. 4 cyllndt good CWMMI H*S> 0II
INS CHRYSL1R STATION waaon. MW. UMH.
INS CHRYlLiP, I door' hardtop.
power, elr. 334-3441 evenings, m? cFR’YiLSOfwrORT custom, mutt »tii at naw car it arriving.
HAHN
chrysler-plymouth
RAMBLER-JEEP
6673 Dixie Hwy.
CLARKSTON	MA 3-2433
1968 Chrysler Town 8i Country Wagon
Double power and elr condition.
Bob Borst j
Lincoln-Mercury Solos |
ttio W. Maple Rd.. Trey Ml 4-2300 IN* N OLDS Convertible, showroom i condition, fir condIHontd, ftaroo, ioadad, 4814434. ___|
1969 Chrysler
I door hardtop, automatic, will ir. vinyl too with taddli 'lor, a real steal at only
$2885
Oakland
IN* PORO Custom, midnight blue with matching Interior, all sat tor the cold weather
price ot only IN) fuH price.
P.S. Wd'vd Movtdl
\t MHO N. Of Miracle Milo lias s. Tetograph Rd. Pi 5-4101 V*>4~MUSTANa, hardtop. aytomific, * cylinder, radio, 41000 nth, good eeraitjw.__l»3)k l*S4S34jr_ _
19*0 FORD 10 PASSENOER Country
'utomatlc -------
____..jiS Ml
Bank terms avail immediate delivery. Call Mr. Parks credit manager for payment schedule at Ml 4-7308. Now location of
TURNER FORD
MOO Maple (IS Mila Rd.)
$1395
wTiiWW Ms-
Mitt*).
' 1969 OL0$“~ VISTA CRUISER
shocks, no rust, I47S prtvttta M1-700t,___
T%SrSf^NB *00d ~ CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH
t*S4 CHEVY IMPALA, some rust, IW Oakland Avo._________EJL?:!®*
runs perfect, *974, *7S-tJ*5._: NEW finance PLAN working?
. Tam. t -a,is—.......—■—— **—■ -	»*<- --ringe for
Tom
Rademacher
Chevy-Olds
On US 10 at MO 5 Clorkston__MA 54071
‘	1MS CORVAIR* ttSa
BBB-1M4___
A REAL GEM. INS CorvoFCo"?: radio, hooter, whfiolwo^,-Wolnuf Lake Rd. 0*44019
TO cheveli^Tre^ with
INS CNEVELLE Chib I
day price *795. Bank available here. Immoc del Ivory. Call Mr. Parks, manager tor payment sclw Ml inoa. Now location of
TURNER FORD
*W0 Mania (IS Mila Rd,
1 mltdaBt o* Woodward

INS CHEVELLE CONVERTIBLE
Call credit <
I _ ■ mgr. Mr. Irv - Dealer
FE 4-ieO* or PE S-7154._____________
1944 DODGE, 3 door, VS, automatic,
I Oakland. FE a-4079.
19*4 DODGE POLARA, Moor hardtop. I cylinder auto., reel sharp. 0*3-1717 or MMIH.
19*4 DODGE POLARA, 41,500 mf.
excellent condition, ISMSS).
19*4 DODGE 1 door, rotoonoblo. 3S4-
1900 DODGE CORONET, SI? engine. 4-berrel. excellent condition. S950. PE M4Q3.	_______.
1967 DODGE Monaco
SCO I-daor hardtop, with full power, factory air conditioning. I o w '■ owroom condition. Sale
’$1895
TOWN & COUNTRY CHRYSUER-PLYMOUTH ROCHESTER
1001 N. Main St.______ 451-0M0
a,
DODGE CHARGER. LOW l age. excellent condition* t
mms.
KESSLER'S
good shape, call 427-2153 aftar 4 19W DODGE CORNET,
INS. CONVERTIBLE, | hr green, black top andj ratio, hurst
SI 150. *74-4372.
HOME OF THE DEPENDABLE USED CARS"
Waterford
GRIMALDI Buick-Opel
*10 Orchard Lk. Rd. Pi Ml*5 IN* FAIRLANI 300, MB anglno, double power, meg wheels.
AUTOBAHN
vw
1765 S. Totsgroph _F« S-4531
1N7 PORD L?D HARDTOP. (Wear of the year) Power equipped In Ilka now Condition. Priced to ateti ot only *11*3. , Bonk forms •v.iiabi. hero. I m m od l * t * dollvory. Call Mr. Parks, crsdlt manager for payment schedule at Ml 4-7500. New location of:
TURNER FORD
moo Maple OS Milt Rd.)
new, *1275, 117.
1N7 T-BIRD LANDS white finish with a roof. Power eeulppi ranty. Solo price terms avallnbl* her delivery. Coll Mr.
■m ■
1M7 MUSTANG* I CYLINDER AM-FM radio* wlro whools* sharp*
_______________JilMfL..,.wm
new condition* oxecuflve cor* 2 to Chooto from* save hundreds, S3.iff full iMico* Sura wo will taka your trado.
GET A "STAN" THE MAN D(AL
STAN ELLIS OLDS
550 Oakland Aye. _____FE MiOl
1966 Olds Toronado
Lotted with all the extras Inctudlna factory elr.
SAVE
Suburban Olds
$1695
LDI Buick-Opel
■k, Rd. PE F
OLDS HARDTOP, tmlsh. Equipped will automatic transmlstlon.
...... ..... *12*5. Bank tar
avaliabta hare, I m madia daHvary." Call Mr, Parks, crsdlt menagsr lor payment tchtmu- »•i mi 4-7500. now location ot
TURNER FORD
2400 Maple (IS Milo Rd.
1966
OLDS
>1550* I58-474S aftar 4.
1967 FORD LTD

John McAuliffa Ford
1NB FORD Foirlono 500
lie, hoofer, power a, beautiful candy matciting interior, it lo reedy for the ahead. Veer-end price at only sum
P.S. We've Moved!
W Mile N. of Miracle Milo i S. Telegraph Rd. FE 5-4101
IMS TORINO FASTBACK. angina, 4 spaed transm Bucket teat*. power eMerlng — m ................ pn
brakes. Like new
$1595
Merry
Olds
ROCHESTER
1968 OLDS
brand new'38 427 engine, headers	,	,	_
22+0? SSSr«.“*.irSrrn5dd,'j Standard Auto-
—- fM| fr0RD R E TRACT A BLE HARDTOP. Excallant condition.
Parks* credit manager for payment schedule at Ml 4-7500. Naw
$2495
MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES Main Lot
*31 Oeklind Ave.____FE 4-4547
19*9 CUTLASS 442, 4 speed, 400-350, engine, white with black Inferior,
New and Used Cars
1*41 FAC K A R D, mechenlceTly perfect SS2-13B*.
a ROAD RU--------
$1*95, 107-4720.
New aad Used Cara 106i
New ind Used Cars 186
1*31 FONTIAC TEMPEST V-S, wlft‘l| car* double power* Ic HfWrwiif ie mim
1968 PONTIAC Hardtop
With automatic* radlg* heeti whitewalls* tilt wheel* powai factory air conditioning* gltamln gray ruin mlloaga* now car war cail cradit n to suit youl I
GET A "STAN" THE MAN DEAL
1941 TEMPEST V-l 3-spe#d, snow tiros* aNCillant corn <1400. 335-B73B.	___■
1968 GTO-
SPORT coupe
with four speed franemleslon, buckets, radio, heater, whitewalls, vinyl top. vsrando graan finish, Only —
$2395
MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES MAIN LOT
*31 Oakland Av*.__FE 4-4547
RUSS
JOHNSON
1968 Malibu
hardtop. Yallow with black V-g automatic, power
steering. Lika naw.
$2195
S17M. Bank ttrms available Immediate deliver!
Parks, credit managai ment schedule at Mr 4-7500. Naw location at
TURNER FORD
2400 Maplt (IS Mila Rd
tlras. Full price
power
neater....
1395. 3275
Dealer. _________
45 BONrilviLLE CONVERTIBLE Full power* air* $1095* OR 3-2721.
BEEN BANKRUPT? Need a car?
bllsh your cradit? from. Call Mr. Al
PONTIAC CATALINA* con-ile.
$1095
1968 Plymouth Satellite
2-door hardtop. Black vinyl lop, medium metallic gray finish, 318 angina, automatic transmission power steefthg, radio, heater, ! Whitewall liras, Ilka naw. A local car In mint condition.
SPECIAL $2195 BILL FOX CHEVY
7S5 S. Rochester Rd.______451-7000
MILOSCH
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH
1*4* Road Runner, 2-door, her Vi, automatic. Power steering,
PONTIAC TEMPEST
On M-24 Lake Orion
MY 3-6266 John McAuliffe Ford
lNt PONTIAC Bonneville Wagon, 10 passegger, automatic, radio, heater, power steering, brakes, - factory elr, chrome luggage reck, Veer-end clearance special, only *2*11 full price.
P.S. We've Moved!
■ vs Mile N. of Miracle Milt 1*45 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 54101 19*8 PONTIAC Vtnlure 2 door TAUATA _r daaiti a c	hardtop, elr, double power, radio,
TOYOTA of PONTIAC	like new. Best otter, 33*5303.
*477 HIGHLAND RD. (M-S9) *73-3*11 19*9 CATALINA 4 door hardtop. Mite IMS BONNEVILLE HARDTOP.’ J*!*' *,r< ,ul1 Power, *2135. FE 2-
bucket seats, double power, «d2-	__________
42*2.	_________________	, 1*4* PONTIAC 9 PASSENGER
IMS PONTIAC VENTURA 2 dr,1	,ir' e*»r»». S3250. Ml 2-
hardtop, best oiler. Cell after 3. —****•.,■., .	_	.
FE 5-4507.	119*9 CATALINA, DARK green, black
19M PONTIAC, 2 deer hatdtop. nice,	,a,>' ,,ou,>l• power> »J'*S3-
343-1271.	| 373-13*3,	_________________
TEMPEST CUStOM S,
brakes, axe.
SPECIAL PURCHASE , From B.uick Motor Division
35 NEW and
FACTORY DEMOS
at Below Dealer Cost
To be sold on first come-firet served
That# Can muit ba told to maka room tor 1970 Modal Dallvtry**
-ALSO-
A Few 1969 0PELS AVAILABLE AT Tremendous Savings Too . . .
EXAMPLE^ Brand New Unit .. .
1969 BUICK SPECIAL DELUXE
with vinyl tap, whitewalls, beautiful turquoise blue, i group full factory equipment. Only —
$2198
Financing Arranged — Easy Terms I -What Have You To Trade?-
BUICK-OPEL
210 Orchord Lk. Rd.	FE 8-6421
$1550 or best otter. Ml 7-0732.
John McAuliffe Ford
193* PONTIAC Gftnd P r IX. Beautiful midnight blua with silver
the going sat. Yaar-and clearance tala prica of only $1311 full prico.
P.S. We've Moved!
Vi Milt N. at
’ PONTIAC, 9 PASSENGR wagon.
dllloning, 7200 ml. 32650. 334-8301.
9*9 GRAND black top.
, 402-5416.
only, Sot. and Sun. cell 04HS47, bit. 1 ond S pjn.
19*3 CHEVROLET, PULL power, cloon. FE 4-2424, days; eves. 628-
offer. 425-3454.
DO YOU NEED A CAR?
WE HAVE EM'
ANY SIZB-STYLl-MAKE
CROWN MOTORS
131 Baldwin Ave.	FE 4-51
1968 FORD XL
hardtop. Fallback. Beautiful dy finish, 390. engine, power t end brakes, radio, rear leakers, heater. 3 excellent ;, Local ear. Extra
NEED a SHARP used car* impact and drive an A-l fully equipped 1**3 Brora* Chevy hardtop at 20 Lera Fine, Apt. A corner of
Special $2195 BILL FOX CHEVY
755 S. Rochester Rd.	4
ence special, only S12S0 full price.
P.S. We've Moved!
Vb Mile N. ot Miracle Mile | IMS S. Telegraph	FE s-4tei
CAPfcl 2243 V
1(44 CHEVY BEL AIR, automatic,
1965 International
SCOUT
AUTOBAHN
full metal cab.
$1195
MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES Budget Lot
1*48 FAIRLANE FASTBACK, stick, rad, 21,000 miles, $1,050 or 1941 Cortina 15,000 miles, SI.300. 343 3731 attar 5:30 p.m._______
17*5 S. Telegraph___________FE 1-4531 _J>!gL |
04 CO R V ET T E , 427-430, Conver-11**3. FORD 3..DOOR Gajexie, tlble, burgundy wlnt block top, 681-
automatic, $173, UL 2-3105.
chevrolBt '
war brakes, 2 doer, wnns «>r , no rust, heavy duty, 2750. Call or 4:30. 492-0695.
1943 FALCON RUNS I
1948 FORD LTD Country Squire, lifOO1 'miles!* °Mt'
1969 OLDS Koyale 2-Door Hardtop
Automatic, radio, heeler, whitewalls, rocket engine, full power, factory air cond. gold finish, matching Interior, vinyl lop, new car trade In. Balance ot new car warranty. See this one before you buy any car, you may be paying hundreds too much. Coll cradit manager for payments to suit you. S2999 full price.
GET A "STAN" THE MAN DEAL
STAN ELLIS OLDS
550 Oakland Avt.	FE M101
BEEN BANKRUPT? nSS9 a ar? Want to raaatablish yoor cradit? 100's to chooM from. Call Mr.
1969 ROAD RUNNER* 383, $2500. $74-3902._________
1969 Road Runner
‘77 M-M ‘-.k.l	con'dmenlng.^sa
335-87*5.
1*47 GTO CONVERTIBLE.
terior. MAG wheels*
Y-—TZZ 11909 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE S165?or| jaflH»,.mil°f accessories,
mtHBRAND FRIX, vinyl topTeiTtoJ,
__, .	, power steering agd	«•••*.
automatic transmission, I will errenoe flr
_ »> °«er. 434-4301_
with block 1967 PONTTac”TEMPEST station wagon, automatic trensmleslon, radio, heater, new rubber, priced
$2795
BIRMINGHAM
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH
2100 Maple Rd.	Tray. Mich.
642-7000
•ell
31295.
IOSI
1967 Pontiac Catalina
4-door hardtop. Green with wt top. Low mileage. New tires,
CALL 642-3289 AUDETTE PONTIAC
1330 W. Maple Rd.	T
Mustangs | "Pretty Ponies"|
Factory Official Cars
30 to choose tram. All medals. T-BIRDS—LTD'S GALAX I (SBr-TOR INOS WAGONS—SEDANS
Call Mr. Parks
Credit manager, ter paymei schedule at Ml 4-7500. Bank tern available. Immediate delivery. New location of
Turner Ford
2400 Maple Rd. (15 Mile)
models, ell years.
Several models. Example:
19*4 Mustang f heater
Turner priced at only:
whitewall tires.
1*47 CHEVY CAPRICE
9*7 CHEVY CAFNICK. double bower, tilt whei
iitsa"caii«3i-«*a».
p^Wl
ivananie here. Immiaim leilvery. Call Mr. Parks* ^cradit nanager for payments schedule at Ml 47500. N«w location of
TURNER FORD
2*00 Maple (IS Milt
kCHOOL ADMINISTRATORS V-S automatic, 1967 Chevrolet, SS con-vartlbla* Bolero rod* black top* Intarior* power steoring* rear speaker* good rubber* excallant condition* juat $1425* 444-2711. Ml 100 CARS TO choose from.
1943 FORD GALAXIE XL vortible 4-1444.
condition* $400* OR
$895
1944 FORD GALAXIE 500* V-8,|
0560* FE 2-1688.
1945 FORD STATION WAGON.
LUCKY AUTO
1940 W. Wido Track
FE 3-7054 SUPER sport
UP FOR
PE 44000
9940 CHEVELLE 394—4 speed* low mlleai high but this car la raail 473-1784.
W) CHEVELLi, SET I strip, or can be driven on me street. *25^4*8.
T.68 chevy IMPALA SS Custom, General Meters designers personal car. lMM miles, ash gold, block vinyl root, custom Interior, with block console and instr panel, tinted glass, hydn transmission, posl-tractlon, ever sind tlrn, FM-AM radio, elr conditioning, strata bucket i engine, 5 yr. warranty
transfarrad to — ---------
451-5432.
AL HANOUTE
On M24 in Lake Orion 693-8344
f*69 NOVA, 2 DOOR,
i drive, 4, 13.000
1m* CAMER6. 307, 3 speed, console. AM-PM, 7,000 ml., txcellent con-
For sale i*«* nova, *,
ams.*** ^»
Save $$$ at Mike Sqvoie Cbevy 1900 W. Maple Ml 4-2735
MUSTANG 19*3 CONV*RTIBLE_ 23* — stick. Absolutsly PERFECT mechanically, dean and dependable. Like new brakes, clutch, polyglass tires. 25JKW milts on 19«*
John McAuliffe Ford
1*43 THUNDERBIRO. Full pewtr, end factory elr. Veer-end clearance ealep rice of only 8*33 full
P.S. We've Moved I
1/a Milt N. of Mirada Mil*
1845 S. T*l*gr*ph
FE 5-4101
1965 FORD GALAXIE * good condil $798* 482-209
1965 FORD Galaxld* rebuilt angina*
AUTOBAHN
vw
1765 S. Talagraph
1966 FORD
Galaxie Hardtop
coupe with automatic, radl ■ On(y- *' i'B “ ”
$995
weeu. )n, m m,
3 weed, good condition, 324*5. 333-
WSikYy I hOVA, stick.«. radloJxm Oakland hjymn'^tlrrtW gleu, good condition, ^
Ifif ^HEViLLE SPORT COUPE
MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES Budget Lot
Call Mr. Parks
Cradit manager, for payment schedule at Ml 4-7900. Bank farms available, Immediate delivery.
New location of
Turner Ford
2400 Maple Rd. (15 Mild) Troy Mall I mile out of Woodward
*8* FAIRLANE, 6,000 actual 2 door hardtop, takeover menta. 12,153. FE 4-3*33.
LTD FORD executive's car, i, power, air coni otter over 13,100. 623-02*4, aft. 7 p.m.______________
194) MERCURY Fewar steering >
1*42 COMET, AUTOMATIC, rune
*313.
work. S17S. 335-
1944 MERCURY MARAUDER StO-tlon Wagon. Metallic graan with matching vinyl Intarior, Deluxe chrome luggage rack. V-l automatic, power steering end brakes, radio, heater, whitewall tires. Full price S195. 3275 W. Huron, 6*2-2061. Peeler. ____________
1965 MERCURY Hardtop
1970
OLDS
"98" 2 Door Hardtop
with full power, elr conditioning, tinted glats. whitewalls, radio, vinyl root, rear speaker, only —
$4433
MERRY
OLDS
ROCHESTER
1*42 VALIANT,
eea 1 ■ ■■ ■■ ■■
whlt^airMttir#e."‘,FulT’wTce'"i»^ 3275 w. Huron, 432-2**). Dealef. 1*62 PLYMOUTH CONVERTIBLE, 311 angina, auto, trani., no rust. 3300. 807-4733.___________________
SPORT SATELLITE. Red,
price $5 Dealer.
r steering far. Full r 682-2861
Just Two Left!1 GO!
1 HAUPT PONTIAC
Will arrange financing. 334-1309,
194* GRAND PRIX .............. lave
194* Grand Prlx ..............33295
1944 Bonneville 4 dr..........11295
1*6* GM Hendlbus ..............*895
1944 Chevy Bel Air, 4dr........*895
19*3 Mercury 4-dr..............*4*3
1*42 Mercury convertible ..... $1*5
1**2 Ford convertible ........ *1*5
l**2 Valient .................. g*s
Keego Sales & Service
Keege Harbor __________ 432-3400
1969 VALIANT
Automatic transmission* radio* htafer. Big 6 angina.
$1939
BIRMINGHAM, I .
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH I clarkston" S Sm?
2180 Maple Rd.	Troy* Mich. 1967 BONNEVILLE* vary clean, 4-
door hardtop* with air* a real
1957 PONTIAC* 2 DR.
1961 PONTIAC WAGON* transportation* 8235* FE 5-!
■2632?
1*61 PONTIAC station wagon, runt good, 3*5. 333-4704.
19*2 PONTIAC CATALINA, $165, 159
1943 PONTIAC TEMPEST, i original metallic rad, radio he automatic, no rust excellent
bargain. 625-2795 I
1967 PONTIAC CATALINA sedan With power, auton new whitewalls, priced to only SIMS.
SHELTON Pontiac-Buick
855 S. Rochester Rd.	*51-5500
FIREBIRD CONVERTIBLE double power, auto.. 24,000 ml. >1400. Call 07441)75. after 5 p.m.
1967 FIREBIRD, ,
», 3 speed , Is, 31450 ce
1963 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE, I shape, new top, power bra power steering, power ante back seat speaker, priced to only 3435. Can be teen at Baldwin Av«. From * a.m.
John McAuliffe Ford
1967 PONTIAC Bonneville Hardtop. Beautiful midnight blue with black
1964 PONTIAC CATALINA, hardtop, double power, i owner. 332-7524, attar 0.
TEMPEST V-f
1944 PONTIAC 2 DOOR, black . vinyl top, hydrematlc transmission. 682-4007._______________________'
1*43 FONTIAC CATALINA, auto.,

brakes, ehocks.
1*65 GTO. EXCELLENT COhdif FE 5-6428-_____________
1*4$ oV6, Excellent candii
3*95. 373-3863.
1*45 PONtlAC VENTURA, 2 I hardtop, double power, radio heater, good condlton. $4*5.
•INI full price.
P.S. We've Moved!
/ vs Mite N. of Mlreclo Mile
lists.'- him
"HOME OF THE,DEPENDABLE
Standard Auto
*42 Oakland Ave.	FE 3-4033
1*4* PONTIAC
posl-tractlon, private, 879-6403.
ILER AMBASSADOR,
CLASSIC 4-door, lo, heater, 232 4 cylinder eneine, real cloon, prlcod to sell at *895. ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP, Union Lake,
- EM 34155.	____________
1*67 REBEL. Gold, 2-dr., 4-cyllnder, auto., sharp, cell eft, 5:30. 473-9436.
948 AMX BLUE 290, power steering, stereo, polyglass, perfect condition.
BEEN BANKRUPT? Need a car? Want to reestablish your credit? 100's to choose from. Call Mr. Al (dealer), 412-2041.
New and Used Cart 106	
A-l SPECIALS	
1967 6MC Camper Special with completely self contained, Cerrebo camper, v-4, 4-speed, power steering, extra sharp, 11,008 actual miles. $3195	1965 FORD F-100' Vb ten pickup, VI, 4 speed, radio, heater, $1095
	1968 FORD '/» Yon pickup, VI, etendard transmission, custom cob, radio, heater. ' $1895
1968 PONTIAC Catalina Hardtop 2-deor with power eteerlno. brakes, VI, automatic, burgundy finish, block Interior, only $2295	
	1969 CHEVY Va TON 4 ply tlree, 350. Vi, standard transmission* radio* haafor. $2295
1968 FORD Galaxie 500 4 Door with v-8, automatic, power steering, radio, black vinyl root. Only— $2295	
	1968 FORD Vx TON VI, custom cab, radio, heater, $1995
1965 FORD 4 Door with V-l, automatic, powor steering, blue with blue Interior, °n,v“ $2395	
	1*969 FORD Fairlano 500 Ranchoro with V-l, automatic, power steering, brake*, burgundy with matching Interior, balance of new car warranty-Only - , $2695
1968 FORD XL Conveilible with V-l, automatic, power windows, power steering, brakes, green with e black top. $895	
FLANNERY FORD On US 10 (Dixie Hwy.) —WATERFORD--623-0900	
New and Used Cars 106
New and Used Cars 106
(LINA, low mlteegir i and power brakes* 2 $1300. 87341956.
____________Wl
1968 FIREBIRD* DARK blue* ■Vmyl top* shift* FE r
1968 CATALINA
768 FIREBIRD* LOADED* 651-4992, BftiT S.
1968 CATALINA,
sfeering, tinted glass, an steering, tinted gilts, and lories. Fine condition. FE
Larry Sheehan's ’ HILLSIDE Lincoln-Mercury 1250 Oakland 333-7863,
1*43 COMET, CAUENTE, 2-door hardtop, eutm, V-3, godd condition, *450. FE 2-177*.
vertlblo, VI, automatic, radio,!
►ring, and more, 0,400'
MUSTANG convertible,!
Pontiac Press Want Ads For Action
whitewall'
3273 W. H
1*45 OLDS, DELTA hardtop, full power^ air
TOYOTA Of PONTIAC
4477 HBIHLANP RB. (M-M) 673-MU
JOHN McAUUFFI FORD
' ‘ ‘ W'M .0 door bonttjljj
1969
Javelin
Factory
Fresh!
3 to Choose Front VI, automatic. Power steering, radio, factory air condition, whitewall tlrte and whaal covers. From only
$2695
Open all day Saturday, * I* 5 p.m.
VILLAGE
RAMBLER
666 S. Woodward . Ml 6-3900

■gosgi
has Mi* meet beautiful Interior del only *t,IM, Pull gate*.
P.S. Wo'v# Movodl

I
MILOSCH
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH $100 UNDER DEALER C0STI 1969 CHRYSLER5 1969 PLYM0UTHS
ALL NEW!
Dick Canaan's MOTOR CITY
Dodge
1968 CHARGER 283 Torque flit*, power, air. $2499	1969 CHARGER Ml, automatic, powor. $2699
1966 DODGE Falara, 3-doer, hardtop, V-G automatic, power steoring. ' $1399	1966 PLYMOUTH Safaiilfa 2-door* hardtop* boc-kat»* powir ufatrlng. $1499
1969 DART Swinger, 2-deor, hordtep, V-l, automatic. „ V \ $2299 v	1964 DODGE Comoor, lift top, stove, refrlg. $1399 \
1968 PLYMOUTH Cuttonv wagoh, f-paesangar, automatic, power (tearing, air. $2599 •	1967 D0DUE 448 convertible, V4, automatic, $1799
TRUCK SPECIAL
1966 Dodge Custom Sportsmen V-8, automatic, $399
Largest Mapar Inventory in Pontiac Area
155 Oakland Av*.
FE 84528
Mike Savoie | ® Chevrolet . OUR CUSTOMERS ARE SATISFIED ... ARE YOU9	
1969 Corvette Convertible .... .$4695 4 speed. 7,088 actual miles. Like new.	1968 Chevelle Malibu SS	$2495 Super Sport. Red with black top. White Itathor trim. Console. 3*4 engine. %
’! 1968 Javelin Custom ... —.. .$1995 i 2 door hardtop. Fewer steering, brakes, automatic, . console, vinyl top.	
	1968 Ford Custom . 	. . .,^995 4 door, v-i, autemetic, double power.
1968 Comoro	V ...... .$2100 Dad With block vinyl top. Power eteering, brakes, automatic. Sharp.	1967 Ford Galaxie 500 	.,.$1695
1968 Bulck Grand# Sport ...... $2100 Full power, automatic transmistlan.	1968 Comoro Hardtop 	 $1995 Sport Coupe. Double power, automatic tranemle-elon, console.
1969 Impala Custom	$2895 Factory executive car. Full power end air.	1966 Pontiac Convortiblo	. . $1195 Double power, automatic. Sharp.
1966 Impala Hardtop	$1595 4 door. Fewer steering and brakae, factory air. 28,000 actual mine. One owner.	1966 Ford Pick-Up 		.,,..$1595 CAMPER IPBCIALI ^
1966 Comet Caliinte	$1095. 2 dear hardtop- Automatic transmission.	1968 Sports Von 		....$1595 V*«* automatic. Windows all around.
	1969 Caprice Hardtop		 $2895 4 door. Power steering and brakte. Mydramatic, factory air condition.
1968 Impala Custom Coup*—$1895 1 Power, automatic. Sharp,	
1969 Coprico Coup# 			 .$2795 1 Automatic, power, vinyl tap. Sharp) \	1969 Bonneville Hardtop 			- Save 4^ door. 4 way power, factory air. vinyl fop, Sava
1968 Pohtioc Catalina .. 	$2895 Sport Coupe, Full power, feetery alr, vinyl lap.	1966 Buick Skylark Convortiblo $1095 Clean. Automatlo trensmlsslon, bucket eaile.,
1 1967 Impala Sport Coup#	.$1595 1 3 to cheeee from, Sharp. Sharp. 1 v	1967 Malibu Station Wagon , .$1595 : Automatic, power, Sharp.
; (ft Wo think wo hovo tho cloonost used cars in tho ana. (ft i ft Comdvin ond look around and sot if you don't agrao. . n Thon buy and savt.	
Mike Savoie Chevrolet j 1900 Maple Rd., Troy MI 4-2735^ Phono Ml 4-2Y35 for diroctions to Mika Savoie Chevrolet Open 8i30 A.M. to 9*30 P.M. Mon. ond Thun. Open 8*00 A.M. to 6>30 P.M. Tuts., Wed., Fri. and Sot.	
\V .	5 S	X
THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1969
m
i>—ia
B52s Hit N.VieCamps
SAIGON (AP) -- U.S. B52|sions are reorganizing there <
** “.tuSac
day on North Vietnamese bate Uon, up to 20 of the bombers at-c«mp»n«rCambodanbor-Upked staging areas racing der north of Saigon. Intelligence from.3 to 25 miles from theber-analysts say four enemy dlvl-lder. They also hit other enemy
Around the World
36 Overconfident
MUnM8”
39 Barring 41 Suffix lor adjectives 42-—Moines.
. Iowa 44 Simple
Mr ‘i*®- «h=
30 Was observed 7 Underdone, 31 Formerly ,{•* steak	33 More gigantic
•JJfWjrtjrltem 35 Parish in ■■MW' H Louisiana 40 Mulct 43 Polynesian
ACROSS
1 Honshu seaport 5 Brasilian state
S----Gatos,
California
12	Dark in color'
13	Epochs 14“——on a
Grecian Urn* 15 Those who do
IT Animal doctor (coll.)
18	Singing voice
19	Seesaws 31 Colorado
mountain
23	British brew
24	Sheep’s bleat 27 Soviet news
agency 22 Fart of
duck
56	Social insect
57	At one time
58	Japanese outcasts
59	Masculine nickname
60	Arabian gulf
61	Forefather
DOWN 1 County in England
9 Tomato (2 words)
10	European river ■
11	Coteries 16 Speaker 20 Harass
32 Drop—at	2 Wood-wind	24 Strait
Curacao 34 One who lisps
instrument
45	Sea eagles
46	Ellipsoidal
47	Weathercock
-------	■	48 Minister to
tutelary gods 50 Italian city
iiuuuiiivm separating S2aa*ll»
3 Capital of West A^Srom m (ab.)
*	2	3	4		5-	r-	7	8		r-	iT	11
12"					W					«]		
w				16	|		J			17		
nr						18			20			
			2T		22		■	23|					1
24	26	26		W			1		mnam			
sr			33			1	34	35	■	■	■	■
36"							ST		n			□
5T				B	W	40				w		H
1		isT		1	1	44"			F	r—1		
46	47				1		B	49	r	50	61	[52|
53"				54"			55					
66"				57~					58"			
59~				60"					6T			Zb !
base camps 29 miles east of Sat-
American Infantry and helicopter reconnaissance patrols using searchlights in some cases killed 26 enemy soldiers during the past 24 hours in clashes ranging from 18 miles south of Saigon to 40 miles northwest of the capital, U.S. headquarters said.
No American casualties were reported.
26 REDS KILLED South Vietnamese headquarters reported that its militia forces killed 20 enemy soldiers in an ambush Friday nigh about 90 miies south of Da Nang. Four government soldiers were reported wounded.
The U.S. Command said there were eight enemy rocket and mortar attacks overnight, but that only three of them caused casualties or damage.
The U.S. Command also said that the 3rd Marine Division has abandoned its sprawling Vande-grift combat base near the demilitarized zone.
The base, 14 miles south of the DMZ and 30 miles west of the coast, was the headquarters for the division’s 4th Regiment *	Sr	*
About 15,000 Marines of the 3rd Division already, have been withdrawn from South Vietnam. The remaining 12,000 are to be pulled out by Dec. IS u President Nixon’s orders to reduce troop strength by 60,000.
Sr	Sr	Ai
The Marines had established Vandegrift as their principal western supply point after the Khe Sanh base was vacated. Khe Sanh is six miles west of Vandegrift and was under siege for 2VSs months in early 1968.
Of every 100 people who die in i Latin America, 45 are children | below 5 years of age.
—Weekend Radio Programs—
WJR(760) WXYZQ 270) CKIWC800) WWJ(950) WCARQ130) WPONfl460) WJBK(1 SOO) WHFI-FM(94:7)
WXYZ, Newt* Close-Up WJBK, Steve Newman WHFI* Don Alcorn WFON* Newt WCAR, Newt* .Ron Rose
WJR* News 4:15—WWJ, Football Final WJR* Sports
Ii39—WXYZ, Sports* Dave Lockhart
WPON, Larry Dixon WJR* Weekend Report*.
7:35*»WWJ# Newt* Monitor
* News* Adventures
CKLW* Todd Wallace ft 15—WJR, Space Story 9:30—WJR* Listener's Ch 10:00—WJR, Saturday N
10:30—wwj, Best From In lochen
11:00—WJR* Newt WVWJ* Newt WJBK, Bob Day lit IS—WJR* Sports Final WWJ* Gver.ihiht
WCAR. Nows* W CKLW, Pat St. . whfi, Ira J. Cook
ieWlU
WJBK,
CKLW* Prosnet
WXYZ* Public At-----
WWJ* Overnight 4:10—wjr. Weekend Report*
Organ -----
fHFI, Mi
1 WHFI* Marc Avery • WJBK* Business Re
4:45-WJR* The Christophers WJBK. What's the Issue
CKLW* Church of Christ WPON, Scripture Is Ben tidal
7*1*—WJR, Hymns WJBK, Listen to This
Sunday Choral#'
WWJ, Mariner's Church CKLW. Windsor, Council of Churches
WPON, Wings of Hope WJBK, Abundant Life WCAR. The Cnurch Today 7:45—WWJ, Good Music 1:05—WJR, Nows CKLW, Windsor Labor WJBK, Revival Time WCAR. News* Lift for Living WPON, St. John Lutheran WWJ, News, Good Music •til—CKLW* Report From
CKLW, Canada Now. WJBK, Law In the News WJR* Renfro Valley Gather-
WCAR, Music for Sunday WPON, Shining Light Trio WWJ* News, Church at the Crossroads
WJBK, Wings of Haallng
WXYZ, News* Mike Sher-9:15—WJR, Golden Age of Radio
9:35—WJR, Weekend Report* Patterns In Music. CKLW* Frank Brodle WJBK, Lutheran Hour WPON* Church of Got* WWJ, News* . Newsv Detroit Close-up 9:45—WJBK, Bible Speaks . 10:05-WWJ. News. Route Pul-
WPON, News* Special WJBK, World jot Books WJR, Nows* Sports* Traffic
WJBK*
WPON* The Christophers WJR* News* Sports* Week* end Report
11:15—WPON* Central Metho-
dist
WJR* Patterns In Music 11:15—WJR* Salt Lake Clt> Tabernacle Choir TOMORROW APTBRNOON 12:00—WWJ* News WCAR* Music for Sunday WPON* News WJBK, Tom Doan WJR* Nows* Sports 1S:15—WJR# Showcase WPON* Sunday Session WWJ* AudlO/49 11:15—WJR* Mockfldge, Sun
1:05—WJR* Nows, Dimension, Weekend Report 1:15—WJR. Arthur Godfrey WXYZ, Lion Pregame 1:15—WXYZ, Lion Football 1:45—WJR. Showcase 2:05—CKLW, Steve Hunter 9:15—WWJ* Detroit Symphony
4:05—WJBK, Tom Shannon WJR* Newt* Sports* Show* case
WXYZ, Scores* Jim Davis 5:05—WJR* Nows* Sports* Weekend Report WWJ* News. Speak out WPON. Nows 1:15—WJR* Showcase. WPON. Sunday session 1:95—WJR. dimension* Hawaii Calls
WWJ* Naws, Good Music
TOMORROW BVRNINO 4:50—WCAR* News* Music WWJ* Nows CKLW, Todd Wallact WJR. News, Sports WPON, News
4:15—WPON, Sunday Vespers WWJ, World and Washington
WJR, Showcase 4:35—WWi, News, AudlO/49 4:45—WJR, Showcase, Sports 7:05—WCAR* News, Rick Stewart
WJR, News, Sports WWJ. Red Wing Hockey
. Protestant Hour WJR, Color of Achievement 7:45—WjR, Showcase* Weekend Report
S:ee-WPON, Guard Session WJBK, Jim Hampton WXYZ, News* Show World WJR, Nows* Analysis* Junior Town Meeting S:95—WXYZ, Public Affairs WPON* Serenade In Blue •:35—WJR,
15:95—WJR,
WWJ* ih 11:55—WJR* Newt
CKLW. Pat St. John 11:15—wWJ«. Analogue WJR. Sports Final 11*95—WCAR, Jewish Com-
Show
lltSS-WWj. Wrltton W<
-Television Programs-
Program! furnished by station* listed in this column ard subject tq change without notice!
Channels! 2-WJSK-TV, 4-WWJ-TV. 7-WXYZ-TV. 9-CKLW-TV, 50-WKQP-TV, 56—WTVS-TV, 62-WXON-TV
SATURDAY NIGHT 6:66 (2) (4) C - Newt, Weather, Sports (7) C — College Football: California at UCLA (in progress)
(9) C — Lively Spot — Joey Tex, David Ruffin and Bob Posh guest.
(80) R - McHale’s Navy (58) Critique — "Art and the Machine Age" exhibit at the New York Museum of Art is discussed (62) C — Robin Seymour 6:36 (2) C - Truth o r Consequences (4) C — News — Huntley, Brinkley
(7) C — Michigan Sportsman — A roundup of early fall sports including salmon fishing, waterfowl hunting and archery deer hunting.
(50) R - My Favorite Martian
7:09 (2) C - Death Valley Days
(4) C — Michigan Outdoors
(7) C — Anniversary Game
(9) C — Hockey: Chicago at Toronto
(50) R C - Star Trek -Spock, McCoy and Kirk are punished for violating a “no trespassing” warning in space.
(56) The President’s Men
—	Defense S e c r e t a r y Melvin Laird is interviewed in first of series of eight interviews with the men who advise President Nixon.
(62) R — Movie: “Dangerous Exile" (British, 1958) Rogue, aided by an English girl, saves the King during the French Revolution. Louis Jour-dan, Belinda Lee.
7:30 (2) C — Jackie Gleason
—	George Chakiris joins the Honeymooners.
(4) C — Andy Williams
—	Guests are Don Knotts, Ray Charles, Cass Elliott, the Osmond Brothers and the Creedence Clearwater Revival.
(7) C — Dating Game —• Barry Nelson guests.
(56) Folk Guitar Plus 8:60 (7) C-Newly wed Game
(50) R — Movie: “The Servant" (British, 1964) Clever valet takes over both his master and the mansion. Dirk Bogarde, Sarah Miles
(56) R — On Being Black —A1 Freeman Jr. stars in “Basis of Need,” a drama about a middle-class black social worker who falls in love with a woman on welfare.
8:36 (2) C — My Three Sms — The family gives Steve courting tips.
(4) C - Adam-12 - A routine h i t - r u n fatality turns into murder.
(7) C — Lawrence Welk— Cynthia Ciawsen, recent semifinalist in the All-American College Show contest, guests.
(62) R C — Hey Landlord 9:88 (2) —'Green Acres — The executor of the $20-iniilion Bimbocker pork estate orders Arnold to prove his claim.
(4) C — Movie: “Jigsaw”
MOMMY ONLY 9:30 AM. to 9 P.M. SPECIAL
CLAIROL INSTANT HAIRDRESSER
Monday
Only
Price
$14<x>
Instant hairdresser dees your hair from roil-up to brush-out in minutes. 14 rollers include d jumbo, 8 largo and 4 small rollers. All In lightweight compact case—for homo and traveling.
108 N. SAGINAW - FI 3-7114
Pork fraa In WKC's lot at roar of store or 1 hour In downtown parking mall— have ticket stamped at, cashier's office.
WKC
(1988) Young scientist, believing ha has killed a girl during an accidental LSD trip, returns to the scene with a private detective to find the girl gone and everything in order. Harry Guardino, Bradford Dillman, Hope Lange
(56) R - Book Beat -Sumner Locke Elliott discusses his “Edens Lost."
(62) RC — Movie: “Secret Mark of D ’ A r tagnan" (Italian, -French 1962) D’Artagnan and Porthos are involved in rivalries between Cardinal Richelieu and Louis XIII. George Nader.
9:36 (2) C - Petticoat Junction — Two motorcyclists are suspected of poaching in the Hooterville area.
(7) C — Hollywood Palace — Guest hostesses Diana Ross and t h e Supremes welcome Alan Seuss, the Jackson Five, Sammy Davis Jr. and Willie Tyler Lester.
(9) C — Weekend (56) R - NET Playhouse — “Past Intruding," 1 prize-winnning Japanese film, deals with a psychiatrist who, in the course of treating a patient, finds his own memory of a horrible war experience re. stored.
10:06 (2) C - Mannix - An egomaniacai movie star refuses to believe Man-nix’s contention that someone is out to harm him.
(9) C — NeWs, Weather, Sports
(59) C — Lou Gordon — .1. Felix Layton national vice president of the Theo-sophical Society and his wife discuss the sophy; 2. Robert Hallowell, president of a company which manufactures recreational home, educational products, discusseshis “Bridge — Everyone,”
designed to make anyone a bridge export.
10:19 (9) Provincial Affairs 10:16 (9) C — Stinday Movie Preview
10:21 (9) C - C a n a d i a n Football: Edmonton at British Columbia (joined in progress)
10:30 (7) C - Passage to Adventure — A visit to Munich for the “Oktober-fest” holiday. .
(62) C — Scene 70 11:99 (2) (4) (7) R C-News Weather, Sports
11:30 (4) R C - Johnny Car-son
(7) R - Movie: “36 Hours" (1964) World War II spy is captured by the Germans. Rod Taylor, James Gamer, Eva Marie Saint
(50) R C — Movie: “Master of the World” (1961) Man in a strange - flying vessel. seeks to destroy all weaponry so the world will finally see peace. Vincent Price, Charles Bronson (62) R — Movie: “Port of Hell” (1954) Harbor crew defers sabatoge attempts by enemy agents. Wayne Morris, Carole Mathews
11:35 (2) R - Movies: 1. “Only the Valiant" (11961) Cavalry officer wins his men’s respect after losing face in an Indian skirmish. Gregory Peck, Ward Bond, Gig Young; 2. C - “Honeychile" (1951) Judy gets involved in the music-publishing business. Judy Canova, Eddie Foy Jr.
12:30 (9) C - Perry’s Probe - “The Mentally III”
1:00 (4) C-News, Weather
1:35 (7) R - Movie : “Timbuktu’’ (1»59) Adventurer is involved in a plot to overthrow an African government Victor Mature, Yvonne De Carlo
1:96 (7) C-News, Weather 4:10 (2) C-News, Weather 4:66 (2) TV Chapel
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Detroit NAACP Asks Schools to Be Firm *
WANT TO SELL LAWNMOWERS, POWER MOWERS, ROLLER SKATES, WAGONS, BICYCLES? USE A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 332-8181.
DETROIT (AP)-The Detroit branch of the NAACP has called for firmer enforcement of rules by Detroit school officials.
In a position paper issued just three weeks after outbreaks of racial violence disrupted Detroit schools and caused the temporary closing of three others, the NAACP said steps must be taken, to eliminate alienation between teachers and administrators and between students and community residents.
*	★ Wi
The civil - right organization also called for "real decisionmaking powers” to be given to the students in the establishment and enforcement of school rules.
The report contained eight specific major recommendations For administrative reform and improved student discipline, but an NAACP spokesman said the report was intended neither to precipitate acrackdown on stu-
dents nor as a condemnation of the Detroit school board. ,
The spokesman said the NAACP has "no plans at this time" to bring any action against the school board to force enactment of the report’s .recommendations.
'G' Films Tops
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - A tally based on reports salt to the Motion Picture Herald by film bookers shows that during the summer months of June, July and August, the top income producers were films rated "G" for general or family audiences.

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Special to Chronicle Century of Football
Jim Thorpe, Knute Rockne, Amos Alonzo Stagg, and Walter Camp had their heyday before television came along.
However TV tribute will be paid to these giants of football and others when “100 Years Old and Still Kicking” tells the story of football Tuesday at 10 p.m. on Channel 2.
★ ★ ★
Charles Kuralt will narrate as films chronicle the sport’s first 100 years. Rod Grange, Sammy Baugh,
Don Hutson, Doc Blanchard and Glenn Davis are others who will flash before viewers eyes.
The historical special seems to signal completion of football’s seasonal take-THORPE over from baseball on the ROCKNE televised sports scene. Baseball’s finale was to be Sunday if a seventh game of the World Series were necessary, Saturday if only a sixth game were needed.
This Week's Cover
GRID TELECASTS
Live telecasts of football will begin for the week with UCLA meeting California at Los Angeles today at 3:15 p.m. on Channel 7. Sunday in the National Football League the Green Bay Packers take on the Rams at Los Angeles at 3 p.m. on Channel 2.
American Football League action sends the Denver Broncos against the Bengals at Cincinnati at 12:30 on Channel 4 (unless the World Series is on) and the Buffalo Bills against the Raiders at Oakland at 3 p.m.
★ ★ ★
Among other specials this week will be “Goodby, City Hall,” a look at the office of mayor in Pittsburgh, Detroit, Minneapolis, Boston and Jack-son, Miss., Wednesday at 9 p:m. and Thursday at 2 p.m. on Channel 56. Two outgoing mayors, including Detroit’s Jerome Cavanagh, and three former mayors will appear on, the show.
Frank Sinatra Jr. stars in his first television special Sunday at 9 p.m. on Cannel 2, and his guests will include Sammy Davis Jr., Jack Benny, Frank Sr. and Nancy, with Las Vegas FRANK SINATRA JR. as the stage.
Diana Ross (center) will star as hostess and will offer her own special brand of singing on ‘‘Hollywood Palace” tonight at 9:30 on Channel 7.
The “Big Sister" on the cover of The Pontiac Press TV Schedule this week is Nancy Sinatra who will appear with brother Frank Jr. as he hosts his first TV special Sunday at 9 p.m. on Channel 2.
Private investigator l.ee Gordon (Harry Guardino, left) quizzes the estranged wife (Dina Merrill) of a tycoon and her boyfriend (Troy Donahue) about a murder in the TV premiere of ‘‘The Lonely Profession” on Tuesday Night at the Movies at 9 on Channel 4.
SATURDAY
SATURDAY AFTERNOON
2:00 (2) R — Roller Derby (4) C — Heckle and Jeckle
(50) R—Movie: “Odette” (British, 1950)
2:30 (9) R- Rawhide 3:00 (2) R — Movie: ‘‘Incredibly Strange Creatures Who Stopped Living and Became Mixed Up Zombies” (1962) Cash Flagg, Carolyn Brandt
(4) C — Wild Kingdom (7) C — College Football Pregame
(56) Action People — An examination of the importance of recreation 3:15 (7) C — College Football: California at UCLA 3:30 (4) C — International Zone — “When a Man Hungers”
(9) C — Magic Shoppe (50) R C — Movie: “Voyage to a Prehistoric Planet” (1965) Basil Rathbone. Faith Domergue 4:00 (4) At the Zoo (9) C — Bozo (56) R—Bridge With Jean Cox
(62) R - My Friend Flicka
4:30 (4) C — Gadabout Gaddis — Viewers are taken to the Gulf of Mexico near Panama City for saltwater fishing.
(9) C — Skippy
(56) R — Joyce Chen
Cooks — “Small Eatings”
(62) C — Gospel Music
Time
5:00 (2) C — All-American College Show (4) C — George Pierrot — ‘‘Mexican Adventure”
(9) C — Time Tunnel (50) R —Combat (56) R — French Chef — “Chicken in Red Wine”
(62) C — Wrestling 5:?0 (2) C — Porter Wagoner ^ Nat Stuckey guests.
J4) C — College Bowl (56) R — Making Things Grow - “The Pot Problem”
SATURDAY NIGHT 6:00 (2) (4) C ** News, Weather, Sports (9) C — Lively Spot —
ontiac Prtn« Saturday, October 18, 1969
!>S lex, David Ruffin and Bob Posh guest.
(50) R — McHale’s Navy (56) Critique — “Art and the Machine Age” exhibit at the New York Museum of Art is discussed (62) C — Robin Seymour 6:30 (2) C — Truth o r Consequences (4) C — News — Huntley. Brinkley
(7) C — Michigan Sportsman — A roundup of early fall sports including salmon fishing, waterfowl hunting and archery deer hunting.
(50) R — My Favorite Martian
7:00 (2) C — Death Valley Days
(4) C — Michigan Outdoors
(7) C — Anniversary Game
(9) C — Hockey: Chicago . at Toronto (50) R C - Star Trek Spock, McCoy and Kirk are punished for violating a “no trespassing” warning in space.
(56) The President’s Men
—	Defense Secretary Melvin Laird is interviewed in first of series of eight interviews with the men who advise President Nixon.
(62) R jjj Movie: “Dangerous Exile” (British. 1958) Rogue, aided by an English girl, saves the King during the French Revolution. Louis Jour-dan, Belinda Lee.
7:30 (2) C — Jackie Gleason
—	George Chakiris joins the Honeymooners.
(4) C — Andy Williams
—	Guests are Don Knotts, Ray Charles, Cass Elliott, the Osmond Brothers and the Creedence Clearwater Revival.
(7) C — Dating Game — Barry Nelson guests.
(56) Folk Guitar Plus 8:00 (7) C — N e w 1 y w e d Game
(50) R — Movie: “The Servant” (British, 1964) Clever valet takes over both his master and the mansion., Dirk Bogarde, Sarah Miles
(56) R — On Being Black —Al Freeman Jr. stars in “Basis of Need,” a drama about a middle-class black social worker
who falls in love with a woman on welfare.
8:30 (2) C - My Three Sons — The family gives Steve courting tips.
(4) C — Adam-12 — A routine h i t - r u n fatality turns into murder.
(7) C — Lawrence Welk— Cynthia Clawsen, recent semifinalist in the All-American College Show contest, guests.
(62) R C — Hey Landlord 9:00 (2) — Green Acres — The executor of the $20-million Birnbocker pork estate orders Arnold to prove his claim.
(4) C — Movie: “Jigsaw” (1968) Young scientist, believing he has killed a girl during an accidental LSD trip, returns to the scene with a private detective to find the girl gone and everything in order. Harry Guardino, Bradford Dill man, Hope Lange
(56) R — Book Beat — Sumner Locke Ellictt discusses his “Edens Lost.”
(62) R C —■ Movie: ‘Secret Mark of D ’ A r tagnan” (Italian, -French 1962) D’Artagnan and Porthos are involved in rivalries between Cardinal Richelieu and Louis XIII. George Nader.
9:30 (2) C — Petticoat Junction — Two motorcyclists are suspected of poaching in the Hooterville area.
(7) C — Hollywood Palace — Guest hostesses Diana Ross and the Supremes welcome Alan Seuss, the Jackson Five, Sammy Davis Jr. and Willie Tyler Lester.
(56) R — NET Playhouse — ‘‘Past Intruding,” prize-winnning Japanese film, deals with a psychiatrist who, in the course of treating a patient, finds his own memory of a horrible war experience restored.
10:00 (2) C — Mannix — An egomaniacal movie star refuses to believe Man-nix’s contention that someone is out to harm him.
(9) C — News, Weather, Sports
(50) C — Lou Gordon —
1. Felix Layton national vice president of the Theo-sophical Society and his wife discuss thesophy; 2. Robert Hallo well, president of a company which manufactures recreational home, educational products, discusses his “Bridge — Everyone,” designed 10 make anyone a bridge expert.
10:10 (9) Provincial Affairs 10:16 (9) C — Sunday Movie Preview
10:21 (9) C — Canadian Football:	Edmonton at
British Columbia (joined in progress)
10:30 (7) C — Passage to Adventure — A visit to Munich for the “Oktdber-fcst” holiday.
(62) C — Scene 70 11:00 (2) (4) (7) R C-News Weather, Sports 11:30 (4) R C — Johnny (’arson
(7) R — Movie:	‘36
Hours” (1964) World War II spy is captured by the Germans. Rod Taylor, James Garner, Eva Marie Saint
(50) R C — Movie: “Master of the World” (1961) Man in a strange flying vessel seeks to destroy all weaponry so the world will finally see peace. Vincent Price. Charles Bronson (62) R — Movie: “Port of Hell” (1954) Harbor crew defers sabatoge attempts by enemy agents. Wayne Morris, Carole Mathews 11:35 (2) R — Movies: 1. “Only the Valiant” (1951) Cavalry officer wins his men’s respect after losing face in an Indian skirmish. Gregory Peck, Ward Bond, Gig Young; 2. C — “Honeychile” (1951) Judy gets involved in the music-publishing business. Judy Canova, Eddie Foy Jr.
12:30 (9) C — Perry’s Probed — “The Mentally 111”
1:00 (4) C—News, Weather 1:35 (7) R — M o vie: “Timbukto” (195$) Adventurer is involved in a plot to overthrow an African government. Vic-tor Mature, Yvonne De Carlo
3:00 (7) C—News, Weather 4:00 (2) C—News, Weather 4:05 (2) TV Chapel
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THE PONTIAC PRESS
THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18, 19«0
VOL. 127
ASSOCIATED PRESS	,, pAfTTCS
n PRESS INTERNATIONAL ----*4
Finch Orders Ban on Diet Sweetener
WASHINGTON (AP) — Secretary of Welfare Robert H. Finch ordered today that all foods and drinks containing the artificial sweetener cyclamate b e removed from grocery shelves by Feb. 1 because of new evidence the substance causes cancer in animals.
Finch emphasized, however, ‘‘We have no evidence at this point thaf cyclamates have indeed caused cancer in humans.”
★ ★ ★
He said he would not recommend that families who now have cyclamate-con-taining foods and drinks in their homes throw them away or stop using them at the present time.
Cyclamates, which Finch estimated are a $l-billion annual industry, are found mainly in diet drinks and foods. They also are contained in a wide range of nondiet foods from bacon to canned fruits and children’s vitamins.
CANCER IN RATS
Finch said he acted after two different laboratories presented evidence this week that cyclamates in very high doses produced bladder cancer fat rats and mice.
The evidence was reviewed b y government scientists and a panel of the National Academy of Science, which recommended the strong restrictions on cyclamates.
WWW
Finch said beginning immediately, no more cyclamates will be allowed in the production of general purpose foods and beverages.
He said beverages which contain the highest level of cyclamates must be removed, from grocery shelves by Jan. 1. Other artificially sweetened foods, which he said contain lower levels of cyclamate and pose a ‘‘very'minimal risk,” must be removed by Feb. 1.
WILL BE AVAILABLE 1 Finch said cyclamate-containing foods and .beverages will still be available to persons who require them for medical reasons on a prescription-type basis. These persons would include those with diabetes or obesity.	\
‘My decision to remove cyclamates from the list of approved substances in no sense should be interpreted as a life-saving or emergency measure,”
Finch said at a news conference. “I have acted under the provisions of law because it is imperative to follow a prudent course in all matters concerning public health.”
WWW
He said the law requires that ‘‘any food additive must be removed from the market if it has been shown to cause Cancer when fed to humans or animals.”
Finch said he will hold consultations today with representatives of the affected industries and oonsumer groups to determine the best way of offering cyclamate compounds on a restricted basis and on development of ‘‘new and safe formulations without cyclamates.” WWW
Several government scientists reinforced Finch’s statement that at the present time there is no reason to ' believe cyclamates cause cancer in man.
Dr. Jesse L. Steinfeld, a deputy assistant secretary of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, noted that the level of cyclamates that cause tumors in rats ‘‘is 50 times the maximum amount previously proposed for adult human consumption or ingestion.”
A CASE OF SINK OR SWIM - Caesar’s Forum, a.floating Miami Beach restaurant that sank in Indian Creek during a 1965 hurricane and was rehabilitated sometime later, is
Bolivia Nationalizes Gulf Oil
LA PAZ, Bolivia (AP)— Gen. Alfredo holdings in Bolivia because his country Ovando ffrudih says his military wasn’t getting enough of the profits, government seized the Gulf Oil Corp. In a speech last night, Ovando said
shown as it is being towed seven miles to a new location in the Miami River. The four-story buildiiig is passing through a Venetian Causeway drawbridge.
OU Aims for Independence
he was not satisfied with ‘the large profits it (Gulf) made CQmpared to the modest fiscal share received by the government.”
Ovando presided over the secret cabinet meeting that issued an official decree announcing the seizure and nationalization yesterday. The decree said a commission will be set up to determine compensation.
Police and army troops occupied the La Paz offices of the Bolivian Gulf Co., and the oil fields in Santa Cruz. The office of an Oklahoma drilling company also was reported seized. Employees were allowed to leave the properties and no incidents were reported.
‘NO WARNING’
“We received no warning of the take-over,” a Gulf spokesman said in La Paz. “The police walked directly into the office and there was nothing we could do but leave.”
Pipeline operations between Santa Cruz and the Chilean port of Arica, which move 33,000 barrels of crude oil daily for shipment to U.S. ports, were not affected.
WWW
The takeover came a year and eight days after the military government in neighboring Peru nationalized International Petroleum Go., a subsidiary of Standard Oil of New Jersey.
Oakland University appears to be on its way to independence from its mother institution, Michigan State University.
A study committee of the' MSU Board of Trustees will be considering within the next 60 days a proposal that OU be granted independence.
WWW
Trustees yesterday unanimously accepted a resolution presented by OU Chancellor Durward B. Varner that the 10-year-old institution be granted its autonomy.
The resolution pointed out the growth and gains of the college in only a decade and added, “Michigan State University is now in the process of naming a new president, who will of necessity have demands on his time of greater priority than the problems and concerns of a rapidly expanding affiliate campus.”
The resolution also expressed gratitude to the board of trustees and the MSU staff and faculty for their contributions to OU during its infancy.
The proposal of the five-member study committee is expected to be a major item of business at the trustees’ December meeting, according to Troy Crowder, assistant to the chancellor.
Members of the study committee will be board Chairman Don Stevens, board
member Frank Merriman, the board’s legal counsel, Lee Carr, board Secretary Jack Breslin and Varner.
The resolution recommending that OU disassociate itself from MSU was prepared by a steering committee of the Oakland university Senate and was approved by the senate Thursday.
When the board of trustees accepts the independence of OU, as is expected by college officials, the proposal will be channeled through the Michigan Legislature and the State Board of Education.
An OU spokesman said the state board
has been behind Oakland’s autonomy for some time.
WWW
The MSU affiliate was founded in 1957 on the Meadow Brook Farm estate of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred G. Wilson who donated the 1,400 acres in, Avon and and Pontiac townships to the MSU board, along with |2 million to assist in the foundation of a new university.
WWW
Oakland University opened in 1959 with 500 students and two buildings. It since has expanded to more than 5,000 students and 20 buildings.
Gas-Warfare Tests in the Air to Resume
GULF EMPLOYE STOPPED — Bolivian armed forces chief Gen. Juan Jose Torres prevents an employe of the Bolivia Gulf Co. from leaving the company’8 office in La Paz yesterday. The employe was trying to leave the office with company documents when the Bolivian army moved in to take over.
Flash
A counterfeit ring operating out of Oakland County was smashed last night with a raid on a Rose Township home and the seizure of 91-5 million in bogus bills.
North Koreans Kill Four Yanks
SEOUL UP) — Four American soldiers were, ambushed and killed by “an unprovoked attack" of North Korean Communists today near the southern boundary of the demilitarized zone, a U.S. spokesman said.
The spokesman said the men were returning in a Jeep to their units after performing equipment maintenance at a guard post when they were attacked by hand grenade and small arms fire, w w w
Patrols began an immediate sweep of the area. The bodies were recovered from the truck.
Names of the dead were withheld until their relatives are notified.
60 INCIDENTS IN 69
Since January, one American has been, killed and six wounded in a total of 60 Incidents along the 18-mile-long American sector of the DMZ.
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Army, armed with a report to blunt congressional criticism, has decided to resume testing chemical warfare agents at	jhBBRBil
R. Resor authorized .djBl resumption of open* air testing of chemi-cal agents at Edge-wood Arsenal, Md., and use of such RESOR gases in defensive training at Ft. McClellan, Ala., after a civilian report endorsed safety procedures at both bases.
Resor had ordered the suspension in mid-July when it was first disclosed that the Army was conducting open-air tests of chemical warfare agents.
That'disclosure touched off a flurry of criticism in Congress, where some members already were highly concerned about chemical and biological warfare research.
Resor countered by naming a committee of civilian scientific experts to review safety procedure in the testing at Edgewood and training at McClellan.
The committee, headed by Dr. Ivan Loveridge Bennett, vice president of New York University, found that safety procedures at both posts are “adequate and effective.”
Sen. Charles McC. Mathias), R-Md., who in July had called for suspension of testing of chemical warfare agents, said Friday night he had requested — but had not received — a copy of the scientists’ report.	•
Mathias and others in Congress had called for full reports on poisonous chemical munitions when the Army disclosed the open air testing in July.
‘WILL FOLLOW RECOMMENDATIONS’
Resor said the Army will follow the recommended r e s t r i c t i o n s in the report—such as Intensive use o f monitors, limitation of. “munition dissemination” to heights below 75 feet, installation of additional fencing around the test site, and periodic ecological surveys for the area.
Meanwhile, ResoFs boss, Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird has urged in a secret memorandum to the National Security Council that the United States stop producing biological warfare agents, the New York Times reported today.
Grid Fans Cheer Today's Weather
Boy-Girl Stanford Dorm Succeeds
In Today's Press
Row Over SDS
Church members split over housing of militants — PAGE B-6.
Tax Reform Senate panel acts to curb medical-aid abuse—PAGE D-l.
The weather man must be, a football fan as* the forecast fdr this^ afternoon calls for partly sunny skies and brisk temperatures, ideal for players and spectators alike.\	.
Tomorrow’s outlook Is mostly cloudy with a chance of showers and a little \ warmer with highs in-the mid-50s.,Mon* • day will be partly cloudy and a little cooler.	\v
There’s a 60 per cent chance of rain tonight, dropping to 40 per cent tomor-1 -row7 ,	■
An over night low Of 38 was recorded In downtown Pontiac at 7 this rabrnihg. At 12:30, the temperature was 53.
■iNca -	Jfr
STANFORD, Calif. (AP) — Voung men and women at a Stanford University dormitory are living in adjacent single rooms in what officials call an experiment fai advanced coeducational living.	\	v
"It’s going quite wall,” says William Leland, associate dean of students.
Many oKth& students’ parents approve. No parent has complained.	V
Joseph Katz, executive director of the school’s Institute for the Study of Human Problems, said the 40 students’ coeducational living may have led to a "partial mmajwium on sex.” ■ '	\	\	l
INITIATE CHANGE , |v ' .. . v;	*
Students initiated the change last spring by drafting a floor plan assigning names of men and women in next-door rooms at Roble Hall, previously an allwomen’s dorm and one of the oldest structures on campus.
■'*' ■' 'A £ I *' V .	. ’ . tgf ' ♦ V * ★	\ I	1
Peter Bulkeley, a new dean visting Roble, saw the suggested plan on a wall and thought the assignments already had been approved.
"Sounds like a great idea," he said. /	/
Assistant Prof. John Palmer and his wife, directors Of^the dormitory, understood Bulkeley's remark to mean official approval and men were moved into rooms assigned by the plan.
. The Palmers say they have encountered no special problems so far in the experiment, which progresses beyond the now fairly common college coeducational housing with men and women on separate floors or corridors.
The bath-and-toilet problem was resolved by assigning one to men and one to women.
★ * * ^ \
The program has brought approving comments from some parents.
“I approve 100 per cent,” said Mrs. Anne Huston Gilliand of Corvallis, Ore., whose daughter Sue lives in the dorm. “When I went to 1 Stanford 25 years ago, the . boys were at one| end of the campus apd the girls at the o|her. Dates became too imphrtant. Tbey^ated ten?loh betwemi?oysand/girlst’’ ' a ]
RELAXED ATTITUDE (
Coed Monica Ploeser of Santa Clara, Calif., said she senses a more relaxed attitude toward women amohg men students.
Robert fileea of Los Angeles, a Dartmouth graduate whose son Is in the group, said, ‘it’s a fine idea. I’m not shocked at all.”
Katz said the coeducational units avoid “over idealization" of the opposite, sex and a good deal of the mutual teasing and destructive behavior characteristic of campus dating,-	,.// ,	/,,,//	/
\ On a kmger-ratige basis, Katz said, participants may develop attitudes that will lead them to stronger marriages.
Australia Manhunt Police searching for only at-large participant in Britain’s Great Train Robbery — PAGE A-5.
Astrology ............... D-2
Bridge .................. D-2
Church News ...........C4-C-7
Crossword Puzzle . . .---D-U
Comics .................  D-2	*
Editorials .............  A-4
Home Section .......B-l—B-5
Markets ............B-19, B-ll
Obituaries ...............A-2
Sports . ............ C-l—C-4
Theaters ..............  B-12
TV, Radio programs .......D-Il
Vietnam War News ......... A4
Women's Page .............1-7
Ant
V-	| « .•	- v- a -
THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1960
Cosmonauts
Prior to their return, Tass said the
Last 2
1 From Oar News Wires MOSCOW — The Soviets today safely brought back to earth their Soyus 8 spacecraft and its two-man crew, completing their biggest week in space, a. period that saw seven cosmonauts orbiting simultaneously in three ships. .* ft ' k
The Tass News Agency said Soyuz 8 ended its five-day flight in the Karangda recovery area in Central Asia, as had its sister ships, Soyus 8 and 7 on Thursday and yesterday. The cosmonauts were reported in excellent condition.
The big Soyus 8 spacecraft landed in the snow-blanketed fields of Soviet Kazakhstan, not far from the Baikonur launchpad.
The two unshaven spacemen — Col. Vladimir Shatlov and Alexei Yeliseyev — were met on touchdown by search and rescue helicopters and flown immediately to a receiving post in Karaganda.
A televised report from the nearby Cosmodrome said all seven cosmonauts involved in the eightday mission "carried out their assignments excellently."
Soyus 8 crewmen tested "new, extremely convenient ways of navigation.”
The cosmonauts established communication with the flight control center through a communications vessel somewhere in the Atlantic Ocean, and the communication satellite Molnlya 1, the agency said.
‘SUCCESSFUL’
'“The experiment was successful. Communications were stable," Tass said.
The agency also said Shatlov and Yeliseyev held a "space press conference," answering questions of Soviet journalists. The questions and answers were not reported.
*	k	★
♦	*	*
Soyuz 7, with three cosmonauts on board, parachuted to a soft landing yesterday, a day after Soyuz 8 came down with'its two cosmonauts. All are reported in good condition. Soyuz 8 went up last Saturday, Soyuz 7 on Sunday and Soyuz 8 on Monday.
According to official reports, the mission of the space troika had been accomplished "according to plan.”
WELDING EXPERIMENTS Among other things, the men carried out cold welding experiments, weather research and geological observations.
Western space experts say this week’s flights left many questions unanswered — although it may be possible, they said, that the seven cosmonauts accomplished things that the Russians were not willing to disclose.
Some speculated that unexpected difficulties may have developed during the flight of the three Soyuz ships, precluding spectacular results.
The government newspaper Izvestia said last night the purpose of the three-craft flight had been to “bring closer the period of permanent orbital spaceships."
As Soyuz 7 was lowered gently onto Soviet ground yesterday, the Russians announced their fifth launching in a week. An unmanned research, vehicle, Cosmos 302, was fired into orbit from the Baikonur Space Center.
Peace Corpsmen
Irk White House
WASHINGTON (AP) - The White Douse is reported to be upset over public protests against the war in Vietnam by Peace Corps volunteers in at least six foreign countries.
In Turkey, Peace Corps members led a silent vigil outside the U.S. embassy. In the Dominican Republic, volunteers ran a newspaper advertisement branding the war as unjust.
Other protests took place in four South American countries, coinciding with mid-
Thieu: We Fired on Soviet Ship
SAIGON (UPI) — President Nguyen Van Thieu, contradicting his military spokesmen, said today a South Vietnamese gunboat did indeed fire on a Soviet trawler offshore yesterday.
The president told newsmen on a field trip to the Mekong Delta that there was "some shooting" and that the gunboat’s salvo left “maybe one or two holes" in the Soviet vessel,
■ k k k
"I don’t believe it will create any diplomatic incident," Thieu said.
Earlier, one of his military spokesmen in Saigon had said that a government naval vessel chased the Soviet ship from territorial waters but "there was no shooting.”
Said Thieu: "I don’t believe that before we chased it away that our navy knew whether' it was Russian or not" The positive identification, he said, was made “afterwards.”
Allied military sources had said a shell from a South Vietnamese naval vessel hit the Soviet trawler off the northern coast and sent it tiering back into the international waters, smoke pouring from its bow.
; As yet, no Soviet protest note has been filed with Washington or at the United Nations. Soviet trawlers constantly shadow U.S. warships off Vietnam and chart American air operations from the 7th Fleet carriers on “Yankee Station."
week Vietnam Moratorium protests throughout the United States.
Officially, the Peace Corps denied the White House flap. But inside sources reported Henry Kissinger, the President’s foreign policy adviser, telephoned Peace Corps Director Joseph Blatchford to convey the displeasure.
SENSITIVE ISSUE
The Vietnam war Is a sensitive issue for the Peace Corps in many emergin nations where the U.S. involvement is under attack.
In the Dominican Republic, one of the volunteers who signed the advertisement said, “For the first time, I think many people here have stopped looking on us as CIA agents.”
it ft ft
The advertisement, signed by 38 members, called the war "unjust and irrational.”
One volunteer in the Dominican Republic said the advertisemetit was published in Santo Domingo, the Capital, rather in the United States because "we thought it would be more embaftessing to the Nixon administration to h&ve our views known here.	•
It apparently was. A Peace Corps source said, “You can imagine what the reaction was at the White House.’}
‘SENSELESS, IMMORAL’
In Turkey, the war was condeiitned as "senseless and immoral” in a letter given to the U.S. ambassador by 30 demonstrators, most of them i Peace Corps volunteers.
Peace Corps sources said volunteers gave other petitions to U.S. ambassadors in Bolivia, Colombia and Guyana and made a public statement against the war in Ecuador.
★ it k
In Washington, about 200 members of the Peace Corps staff—a fourth of the total-took the day off Wednesday to stage a walk to the Capitol as part of the Moratorium protests after an antiwar rally at the Peace Corps headquarters.
Peace Corps officials said no punitive action would be taken against any of the volunteers who participated in the protests.
The Weather
Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report
PONTIAC AND VICINITY-Mostly sunny this morning becoming partly sunny this afternoon and continued cool, highs in the lower 50s. Increasing cloudiness and not as cold tonight with light rain likely, lows 36 to 41. Mostly cloudy and a little wanner tomorrow with a chance of showers and highs in the mtd-50s. Monday’s outlook: partly cloudy and a little colder. Winds southwest io west eight to 18 miles per hour today and westerly five to 12 mph tonight, becoming southeasterly 10 to 15 mph. Probabilities of precipitation: 20 per cent today, 60 per Cent tonight and 40 per cent tomorrow.
Pull U.S. Wuttw Bureau Report (Pontiac and Vicinity)
Today lii Pontiac
Lowast tamparatura preceding • a.m. 31 At I a.m.: Wind Valoclty IT m.p.h. Direction—West
Sun tats today at 5:47 p.m.
Sun rises tomorrow at 6:50 a.m.
Moon rites today at 2:30 p.m.
Moon sots today at 11:54 p.m.
Friday In Pontiac
One Year Ago In Pantfac
Highest tamparatura...............71
Lowast tamparatura ...............St
Mean tamparatura .................61.5
Weathers-Some rain
50 Detroit
41 12 Jacksonville S3 55
« 29 Phoenix 17 62 Saginaw	52	36	PHtsburglt	53	32
Travarsa C.	it	40	St, Imu	55	39
Albuquerque	77	41	salt Lk. C.	55	39
— ^	66	39	S. Francisco	60	53
| , * j ’	,	'	AF Wlrepheto
1 NATIONAL WEATHER — It will rain tonight in parts of South Dakota; Nebraska, Kansas; Colorado, Arizona, Utah and Florida. There will be snow flurries in the higher elevations of Idaho, Wyoming and Colorado. Cool weather frill continue from the Great Lakes into most of the East and across the Great Basin and the Southwest.
AF Wlrepheto
HE TAKES A SHINE TO IT - A U. S. 101st Airborne labeled "Cold Death,” at a fire base south of the demilitarized Division paratrooper polishes up his 105mm howitzer, grimly zone in South Vietnam.
4 More Spy Ships Are Being Retired
School Buses Guarded After 'Zodiac' Threat
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - Armed lawmen are riding shotgun on some San Francisco Bay area school buses after a killer boasted he might shoot the bus tires “and then pick off the kiddies as they come bouncing off."
•k	it	it
: The suspected killer of five persons is called Zodiac because of the astrological terms used in letters boasting of his slayings.
★	★	*
The latest was a letter to San Francisco police boasting of the murder of Paul Stine, 29, a cab-driver whose body was found Saturday night in the Presidio Heights section of San Francisco.
He sent along a swatch of blood-soaked cloth which police said appeared to come from Stine’s shirt.
WHO’S NEXT?
The letter warned the killer might make schoolchildren his next victims.
★	★	.★
In rural Napa County, officers rode on buses yesterday while in Sausalito, police cars followed buses. Drivers all over the Bay Area were drilled on procedures to follow should Zodiac attempt to make good his threat.
*	*	★
The drivers were under orders not to stop under any circumstances — to keep driving as fast as possible and as far as possible with headlights on and horns blowing to attract attention and assistance.
k k k
Meanwhile, the state attorney general’s office is heading a coordinated effort by the San Francisco and Vallejo Police Departments and the Napa and Solano County Sheriff’s Offices to locate the killer fascinated with astrology.
k k k
The killings began last December near Vallejo, about 30 miles northeast of here. They have been woven together by the killer’s morbid notes filled with astrological terms written to local newspapers and police departments boasting of his cleverness and threatening further bloodshed.
Birmingham Bank Robbed of $1,125
A lone bandit held up a Birmingham bank and escaped with $1,125 yesterday afternoon, police arid.
The holdup man took the money from a teller at the Wabeek Branch of the Detroit Bank and Trust Co., 284 W. Maple, shortly after 2 p.m., according to police. 1	> \
★ k 4 . v .
He reportedly told the teller he had a gun and demanded the money and fled on foot, police said.
' a- , il(* i . 4iigr,', a
Birmingham police and; FBI agents said the suspect was white, 20 to 25 years old, 5 feet 10,160 pounds, had light curly hair with sideburns and was cleanshaven and wearing a three-quarter-lenth jacket.
WASHINGTON (AP) - The retirement of four more spy vessris by next June 30 will leave the Navy with just two non-combatant-type intelligence-gathering ships out of an Original fleet of 10.
Only the Valdez and the Muller will remain once the Oxford, the Georgetown, the Jamestown and the Belmont are laid up.
The Navy, in announcing the new economy move yesterday, said the latest savings will be $43 million.
They are of the class of the Liberty ship which was shot up by the Israelis in the Mediterranean in 1967 and then retired.
That incident and the North Korean seizure of the Pueblo, in January
Woman Killed in Area
One woman was killed and another critically injured in a two-car collision in Elba Township, Lapeer County, early this moriiing.
Susan L. Wheeler, 21, of Flint was killed in a car which reportedly crossed the center line of Oregon Road near Mapleleaf and struck a car head-on at the top of a hill at about 3:50 a.m., Lapeer County sheriffs deputies said.
★	★	•;*
The driver of the car in which the dead woman was a passenger was Larry Faught, 24, of 8325 Ridgefield, Davison, deputies said. He was treated for minor injuries at Lapeer County General Hospital and released.
Deputies said they would seek a charge of negligent homicide against Faught.
ik	k	k
Hie driver of the otijer car, Mary Schroeder, 32, of 1862 Gray, Lapeer, is in critical condition at Hurley Hospital in Flint, according to a deputy.
1968, called into question the value of ; unarmed or lightly 'armed intelligence ships.
Hie Navy announced last month that the two remaining ships of the Pueblo class—the Palm Beach and the Banner— would be placed in mothballs.
Hie intelligence jobs performed by these ships were mainly to intercept radio communications and monitor radar stations. The Pentagon decided these jobs could better be handled by reconnaissance aircraft and warships.
In all, 103 naval vessris are being laid up under the Pentagon’s money-saving drive.
The new decision also includes disbanding seven Seabee battalions, releasing about 5,000 men from active duty, by mid-Ndvember. Their home -bases are in- Fort Hueneme, Calif.; Davisville, R.I., and Gulfport, Miss.
A third phase of toe latest economy move is a 30,000-man cut in toe Navy’s civilian work force which now totals more than 419,000 persons. This will be accomplished by attrition and some dismissals. Bases involved will be identified in the near future.
k k k
The campaign to cut an additional $3 billion -from toe defense budget includes previously announced plans to cut military manpower by 196,000 men. The total will reach about 220,000 by toe end of this next fiscal year.
NY Aid 'Excesses' Told
WASHINGTON Ufi — Ineligible families in New Y6rk City have received millions of dollars in welfare payments, says the General Accounting Office in a report to Congress.
the GAO supported most of the findings of a federal-state investigation last month into the program of aid to families with dependent children. The federal-state study determined about $66 million a year was being distributed in excess payments.
Birmingham Area
Church Unit Will Hear Author Talk
FRANKLIN - Jill Renich will speak at the Oct. 28 luncheon meeting of the Women’s Society of Christian Service of the Franklin Community Church.
The luncheon will begin at noon in the Fellowship Hall of the church.
An author, lecturer and teacher, Mrs. Renich is president of Winning Women Inc., a fellowship of women drawn together by a common desire to share with other women the fellowship of Jesus Christ."
Mrs. Renich and her husband, the Rev. Frederick G. Renich, director of missionary internship in Detroit, have done missionary work in China, Aus{ralia, England and Ireland. k k k
Mrs! Renich is toe author of four books and broadcasts weekly through her program, “Between Us Women.”
BLOOMFIELD HILLS - Some 250 Area businessmen and professionals are attending a special meeting at toe Institute for Advanced Pastoral Studies Division of Cranbrook center for HUman Resources, 380 Lone Pine, today.
They are exploring ways in which toe new Human Resources Center can best serve metropolitan Detroit.
The new division, scheduled to open fully in February, will provide workshops in individual and group com-munications. Sessions in mental health .and social issues also are planned.
BIRMINGHAM - The Seaholm Parent-Teacher Association Is sponsoring three meetings for parents this Fall.
Next Tuesday at 8 p.m. in toe school’s Maple Room, parents of juniors and seniors will be given information about requirements, college admission, military obligations and other matters pertaining to their children.
The parents of .Seaholm sophomore students will be given a tour of toe school on Oct. 28.
Open house begins at 8 p.m. Nov. 11 in the Seaholm gymnasium.
7 Bombs Exploded in Athens; No Injuries
ATHENS (UPI)) — Seyen bombs exploded in central Athens today, three of them along toe route Premier George Papadopoufos was to take in leaving toe city for toe conutryside.
The 'right-wing National Resistance Movement (NRM) claimed credit for the bombings but said there was no attempt on the premier’s life intended. Nobody was injured in the blasts.
“This is a rehearsal for what will happen Oct. 28,” said toe NRM spokesman, referring to toe anniversary of the Italian invasion in 1940.
Ghetto Joblessness Up
WASHINGTON UR — The Labor Department reports growing unemployment among big city slum-dwelling Negroes. But improvements are noted in toe job situation among poor whites.
The rate of unemployment for black workers averaged 7.5 per cent in the third quarter, up from 6.9 per cent during toe matching period a year ago, toe Bureau of Labor Statistics said yesterday.
'Most Combat Units to Leave in 1970*
Viet-Pullout	S
GARDEN CITY, N.Y. (AP) — President Nixon has 200,000 men scheduled to be in Vietnam at the end of next year ordered the Pentagon to work out plans for withdrawing up to will be air and support troops,” toe story said.
300,000 U& froops from Vietnam in 1976, Nowaday said today, Miss/Lewis arid toe speedup of troop withdrawalsiwas toe in a copyright story by columnist Flora Lewis.	key decision made in Nixon’s meeting with the Joint Chiefs of
Hie sfrry from Washington said that, according to reliable Staff on Oct. 8. informants, the President plans to announce the accelerated 1	0	* t * .	, v ’ ‘	*
withdrawal program in his Nov. 3 television address.	"It goes beyond the withdrawal schedule that the President
k k k	planned last August and then dropped in the face of strong
While many details remain to be worked out, toe initial opposition from ton military, substituting an even more modes outline of the plqn calls for the removal of all American com- program which he announced in September, bat units except two, according to the story in Newsday, a	»	*	* k
Long Island afternoon newspaper.	“HtO plan reflects a shift of influence la the administration
Hie columnist said the unlfo to be left behind are the most to those civilian leaders who have bean arguing that domestic mobile — the 1st Air Cavalry Division and the 173rd Airborne troubles are too near toe disaster print to permit the modi Brigade. They total between 17,000 and 16,000 men.	more gradual ‘Vietnamisation’ that the generals wanted," Mias
“The rest of an American force of between 180,060 and Lewis arote.
1
3
TUB PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, OCTOHKR 18
Sacha Distel Didn't Want to Become	'M
By EARL WILSON
NEW YORK - "I deedn’t want to be Mr. Bardot/’ Sacha Distal said.
“And I never deed become Mr. Bardot. That might be one of the reasons we didn't make it."
It’s been U years since his famous romance with Brigitte of the towels but most Americans remember h|m for that, and it’s probable that he'll be answering questions about B.B. When he’s 80.
His wife of seven years, Franclne Breaud, a former French Olympic skier, doesn’t mind — “she’s above all that — after all, she’s my wife and Bardot never was my wife,’’ Distel said. “And anyway, Brigitte IsWw In love with another member of my
t«4ny."
Deaths in Pontiac, Nearby Areas
Gerald A. Jones Jr. ,
Service for Gerald A. Jones Jr., infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Jones of 2838 Grandview, Wat erford Township, was to be 2 p.m. this afternoon at Pixley Memorial Chapel in Rochester with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery.
He died yesterday shortly after birth.
WILSON
'Who? You have a brother?" we asked him hastily.
*	Sr	It
“My son Laurent. He’s 5. He’s very nice. She met him in an airport with me and fell in love with him. She sent him a box of candy."
People hearing Distel in his first NeW York singing engagement at the Plaza Persian Room often get confused and think he was married to Bardot.
“We were only engaged," he smiled, when we met at Gallagher’s. “But," he repeated, “we didn’t make it."
★	★	★
“I have a feeling that females in show business get to be masculine or at least almost like men. She really wanted to get married, and she always wants everything to happen in five minutes. I was always very slow about getting married. I deedn’t want to get married to get divorced two years later.”
And so they broke off back in the late ’50s or '60s when he was considerably under 25 ... and now at 34, he realizes that “some of the clubs that hired me probably wanted me because I was engaged to Bardot — but I was too young then to be conscious of that.”
Th3 Weekend Windup...
Jack Gilford, who portrays a man who picks winning horses in “Three Men on a Horse,” will give the audience a tip on a horse each night during his curtain call. . . Call Henny Youngman’s number and the service answers: “Hen-ny Youngman, King of the One-Liners!” . . . The Chicago branch of the Factory discotheque has a problem—can’t find a male manicurist for its health club... Peter Fonda, whose “Easy Rider” is a box office hit, will sign a major Columbia deal.
(Publltlwrt—Hall Syndic.!.)
mmmmmmmmmmmmmmm
Surviving are ' his parents; grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Slaught of Holly and Mrs, Margaret Jones of Rochester; one brother, Darrell, at home; and two sisters, Cheryl and Melissa, both at home.
Herman K. Ewald
WOLVERINE .LAKE -I Service for Herman K. Ewald,
; 61, tof 1821 Shaiikin will be 1
Clarkston Girl Hurts'IS-WS in Auto Accident
A Clarkston girl was admitted to St. Joseph Mercy Hospital following an early morning accident in Independence Township today'.
Lake, with burial in Glen Eden Cemetery, Livonia.
Mr. Ewald died yesterday. He was employed with the Commercial Steel Corp. of Detroit.
He is survived by bis wife, Gladys; three sons, Ronald oi Livonia, Gerald of Redfori Township and Roger of Wlxom three sisters; and grandchildren.
United Methodist, Church Goodrich.
Surviving are one daughter, Leona of Goodrich; one son, Donald of Goodrich; and two sisters, including Mrs. Ethel Sweeney of Goodrich.
Mr*. Raymond St. Jdhn
AVON TOWNSHIP - Service for Mrs. Raymond (Hazel) St. John, 80, of 3774 S. Rochester will be 11 a.m. Monday at William R. Potere Funeral Home with burial in Troy Union Corners Cemetery.
Mrs. St. John died yesterday.
Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Ora Lockwood and Mrs. Helen Bishop, both of Rochester.
Smokers who Want to kick the
el farette habit have a chance, ginning tomorrow, to
participate in a special five-day program at the Oakland County Courthouse Auditorium, 1200 N. Telegraph.
Cosponsored by the Michigan Cancer Foundation and the Pontiac Seventh-day Adventist Church, the free program runs Sunday through Thursday, from 7:30 to 9 a m.
The clinic will be conducted by Dr. Raymond L, Mayor M.D., and Dr. Robert A Williams, director of guidance and measurements (or Oakland County Schools.
Aiding in the nightly presen tations will be Dr. Everette ] Gustafson of Pontiac, D r Mr*. Fred M. Shinnick william Swatek, pathologist at
St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, and Dr. Arthur Weaver of Veterans Memorial Hospital, Dearborn.
Movies showing physical effects of smoking will be shown each night of the clinic and pamphlets and personal guides with suggestions to overcome the smoking habit will be distributed, followed by discussion periods.
Dr. Williams is scheduled to discuss some of the psychological aspects of the smoking habit, while Dr. Myaor will discuss the medical aspects.
Deborah Rappuhn, 17, of 7669 Easton was listed in satisfac-L.	, u
tory condition at St. Joseph;Mrs- Thoma* J. Hooper
ROCHESTER - Mrs. Fred 8i*:M. Shinnick, 85, formerly of Rochester, died today. Her body is at the William R. Potere Funeral’ Home.
Mercy Hospital with face and neck lacerations.
She was in a car that smashed into the rear of another that ran out of gas on Clarkston Road near Dubuque about 2 a.m. according to sheriff deputies.
*r *	*
Neither her companion, John W. Starr,'17, of 391 Teggerdine, Milford, nor the driver <of the other car, Kathleen M. Putsey, 19, of 5125 Orion Clarkston, were admitted to the hospital.
News in Brief
Temple Beth Jacob, 79 Elizabeth Lake Rd., Sun., Oct. 19, 1-4 p.m.	—Adv.
KEEGO HARBOR — Mrs. Thomas J. (May E.) Hooper, , of 2427 Kleist Court died today. Her body will be at the C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home after 3 p.m. tomorrow.
She is survived by a son, Edwin T., and a daughter, Mrs. Bernice E. Cover, both of Keego Harbor; seven grandchildren; 18. great-grandchildren; and four great-great-grandchildren.
Mrs. Homer Larkin
GOODRICH - Service for Mrs. Homer (Blanche N.) Larkin, 74, of 8160 Kearfley will be 1 p.m. Monday at C.F. Sherman Funeral Home, Ortonville, with burial at Mount Rose Cemetery, Mount Rose.
Mrs. Larkin died yesterday. She was a member of the
Mrs. B. C. H. Spencer
ROCHESTER — Service for Mrs. B. C. H. (Frances L.) Spencer, 86, of 137 Perrydale will be 2 p.m. Tuesday at the Pixley Memorial Chapel, with burial in Mount Avon Cemetery. Her body will be at the funeral home after 2 p.m. tomorrow.
An Order of the Eastern Star memorial service will be held 8 p.m. Monday at the funeral home.	,
Mrs. Spencer died yesterday She was a life member and past matron of the Rochester Order of the Eastern Star, No. 165.
She is survived by two daughters, Mrs. Hollis Hinkel of Rochester and Mrs. Don Adams of Chesaning; three grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren.
DR. ROBERT A. WILLIAMS
DR. RAYMOND L. MAYOR
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Health Project Coordinator Is Area Man
A former Oakland County social services director, George H. Williams of 2556 Red Arrow, Commerce Township, was this week named to the $18,000-a-year post of project coordinator on a seven-county health committee.
"Williams, chairman of the Oakland County Homeowners and Taxpayers Association until his resignation last spring, said he will be responsible for developing a comprehensive health planning agency.
*	★	*
He was selected for his new job by the 27-member Areawide Health Operating Committee (AHOC). Composed of residents from Oakland, Wayne, Macomb, Washtenaw, Livingston, S t, Clair and Monroe counties, it is funded by the United Foundation and federal grants.
★	Ar	★
Williams said his job would be to develop a health agency in accordance with t h e comprehensive health planning survey Undertaken by the Southeast Michigan Council of Governments, the Greater Detroit Hospital Council and the Metropolitan Fund. Much of the financing for both the survey and the agency is expected in the form of federal grants.
*	* * ■
Williams said two planning associates and two secretaries would be added to his Detroit office staff. They will be dealing with health provisions, government responsibility and health usage, Williams said.
National Board Designates 516 '
John Cotton, San D-i ego, president of the 87,000-member National Association of Real Estate Boards, announced the appointment of 516 persons who will serve as members of Its committees this year.
■v yt *	_ * i
y He noted that they are from 49 states, Puerto Rico, and the District of Columbia,' and emphasized that the work of these men and women is vital to the progresa of organized real estate, since most of the continuing activity of the National Association is conducted through its committees.
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umbo Garment Bags
$1.50 value, jumbo size plastic garment bags with sturdy metal frame. Put summer clothes away safely and keep them dust free.
Drugs — Main Floor
7'/4x7'/-x4-tnch 75 Watt Recessed
Frosted Ceiling Fixture
For Kitchen, Rec Room, Basement
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Barber Clipper
Former $14,95 Value
Oster Charmaire barber clipper is motor driven and air cooled. Now Clearance priced at Simms. All tales final.
Sundries — Main Floor
Box of 25 Remington
20-Ga. Shotgun Shells
4 or 6 Pheasant Load
Genuine Remington 20-gauge shotgun shells in the popular 4. or 6 pheasant load. Don't run oyt of shells just when the birds are flying. Get an extra box this weekend.
Sports — 2nd Floor
First Quality - American Made
Men’s Thermal U’wear
Tops or Bottoms Each
First quality and American made thermal underwear that traps body heat to give warmth without weight. -Long sleeved shirts or ankle length- drawers. Sizes S to XL	Basement
Mounts Easily On the Wail
Bathroom Fixture
Wall mounted bathroom fixture with while glass that directs the beam of light downward, just where you want it. Chrome bote,	Fixture* — 2nd Floor
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SIMMSJL
The Friendly One With Personalized Service
For Close Fast Comfortable Shaves
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Durable - Easy to Clean Plastic
Loma Bread Box
Keeps three standard size or two large loaves with 'first day' freshness. Practical, removable divider shelf. Gleaming porcelain finish Is easy to care for.
Housewares — 2nd Floor
Little Boys’ Sizes 3 to 7
Cord Jackets
Quality corduroy outer shell with famous worm Acrllan pit* lining and ottachod epllt head with lippar. Zipper front tee. with 3 flap pockets. Comfortable rag* |an tloevot. Sint 3 to 7.
THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, OCTOBER
1069 A	s~ ' ^
mi nvn*
‘SLAVING* FOE RETREAT — Members of the Waterford Trinity United Methodist Youth Fellowship held a “slave day” recently to raise money for the group’s retreat at Franklin Settlement Camp, Lake Orion, this weekend. The junior high youths were hired out to baby-sit, clean garages, wash cars,
etc. Window-washing slaves are Linda Hosier, 12, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel L. Hosier, of 3520 Waringham, Waterford Township, and Bill Banks, 13, son of Mr. and Mrs. William E. Banks, 3629 Percy King, Waterford Township.
plans Made I At Waterford Com mu nil
, C—rfl
'ZZL Centennial Celebration Near
The Pontiac Ad Hoc Committee on UNICEF'will again conduct their annual Trick-or Treat for UNICEF collection Halloween evening, Oct. 31..
*	*	*
Money collected by area young people will be sent to the United Nations International Children’s Emergency Fund to be used for food, clothing and medical care for children throughout the world who suffer from war and natural disasters. ★	*	★
The Ad Hoc Committee Is Inviting all area churches and synagogues to participate on a cooperative	and	community-
wide basis. The hours sugg for collection are 4-7 p.m.
★	★	★
A dance will be held for participants from 7 to 10 p.m at Central United Methodist Church, 3882 Highland Waterford Township. Music will he provided by the Syrup.
*	*	*
All churches and groups interested in participating may obtain materials by contacting the Rev. Larry Bobbitt at First Christian Church, 858 W. Huron or the Rev. Ron Tallman at Central.
makes final preparations for the church’s centennial celebration. 1 Members of the church will, don 1869 styles to welcome former members to the three-day homecoming and birthday festivities that begin next Friday night at 7. All activities will
sprouting and be held at the church, 59951 showing many former members
~ ‘------ Waterford I participating in past church af-
| fairs Will highlight the Friday night program.
A slide presentation reviewing! Saturday night at 7, Rev
Beards are . ... hemlines are brushing the floor i2lymp*<: Parkway at Waterford CommunityiTpwnshiP*	*
Church as the congregation!
history of the church and'Charles Shock, who served

Teacher to Tell of Kibutz Life
A prominent Pontiac educator will describe her experiences in an Israeli kibutz at an open B’nai B’rith meeting Wed-
[ Mrs. Ruth Mairy Scribner, for many years an instructor in Pontiac - High schools, will Salad lovers are m for a djSCUSS ber trips to Israel at Special treat Wednesday when 8:30 p.m. at the B’nai IscteL St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church|Synagogue, Oneida and Women hold their annual sotodj Menominee, Pontiac.
Taster’s Luncheon. The menu	*.,**,	,
, a «.• 1.—	Mrs. Scribner, who also has
will feature chicken salad «w»»ttraveled extensively in Europe an array of fruit and vegetable,^ y,e gasti Spent the salads. The luncheon will be at | entire summer of 1965 at Kibutz the church, 5301 Hatchery, Wa-i Dahlia, where she worked oh terford Township, with guests the farm, in the laundry, the being seated at11:30 a.m. and kitchen and nursery. +
12:30 p.m. Card games will te| A non.Jew> she returned to featured after the luncheon. At I the Holy Land this past summer
NINETEENTir-CENTURY MAXIS-Mrs. David Mehlberg of 3269 Sashabaw, Waterford Township, marks the hem of daughter Linda’s nineteenth-century-style gown she will wear at the centennial festivities at
Waterford Community Church from 1940-1942, Will bo the principal speaker. It was during Rev. Shock’s ministry that the church joined the Independent Fundamental Churches 0 f America. ^
MUSIC, SKITS
Saturday’s program also will include special music and skits by members of the congregation. More historical slides will be shown.
Regular worship services Sunday will call attention , to the Centennial starting with the 9:45 a.m. Sunday School.
Rev. Robert D. Winne, the most recent pastor of Waterford Community, will be the featured speaker at the 11 a.m. service conducted by Rev. Ken Qrr, interim pastor.
Rev. Winne served the church from 1957 until his retirement tills summer. The Wlnhes are now residing in Phoenix, Ariz.
Climaxing t h e centennial observation will be a 7 p.m. service with Rev. Wright Van Plew as guest speaker. Rev. Van Plew was pastor a t Waterford Community from August 1944 through April 1956. During that time a new Sunday School annex was built behind the church auditorium.
CHURCH HISTORY
According to the best records available on Waterford Community, it got its start in the middle 1860s when a Mr. Grow and a Mr. Fifield went around the community of Waterfordgetting pledges in order to erect a church.
The church auditorium was built in 1869 on Andersonville Road and the membership adopted the name of First Baptist Church and Society of Waterford. Rev. Charles Sherwood was the first pastor.
In 1897 Society was dropped from the name and in. 1933 the name was changed once again, this time to the present name.
In 1959, the congregation voted to build a new church and since there was too tittle property available at the Andersonville Road site, new property was purchased on the corner of Airport Road and
Waterford Community Church next weekend Linda’s grandmother, Mrs. Helen Mehlberg Olympic Parkway of 5938 Andersonville, Waterford Township, NEW wing lends a helping hand.
left, Mrs. Grady Robertson of 489 Berrypatch, White Lake Township, puts some dressing on a salad Mrs. Richard Daub-tier has made. Mrs. Daubner of 6335 Grace K, Waterford Toton-j There will be an informal ship, is testing a new recipe /OT|question-and-answer session use at the luncheon.
to witness the progress of the land and people since the June, 1967 war. While there, Mrs. Scribner spent another week at! Kibutz Dahlia.
Three Area Congregations to Observe Anniversaries
Three Pontiac area churches,followed by an anniversary
The main building was occupied in 1961, and the new educational wing was built in 1966.
Rev. Orr came to Waterford Community Church in 1964 as youth director. He was later named associate pastor and, when Rev. Winne retired, he became interim pastor! j The church has grown from a Rev. Goddard and his wife membership of 33 in 1897 to
following Mrs. Scribner’s talk,|wju be observing anniversaries!dinner given by the Mary-come to Pine Hill jfrwnthe school*'!^
which is being sponsored by the! tomorrow.	| Martha Guild of the church
Pohtiac Lodge No. 850 of B’nal| Cedar Crest Lutheran of 485 social BRETHREN
Farnsworth, White Lake. At First Brethren, Rev. Township, will note its 35th year |	potter o{ the Union
frith.
pastorate at the Federated Church at Skowhegan, Maine. sHe replaces the Rev. Harry W. Clark who resigned in August to
1st Methodist Harvest Fete Friday Night
in a ^ciarwor^m^ice atCllfford . Potter°l	accept a call to the North Shore
in a special worship-semce AssoGiation in I1Unois wlU give Chui£h (Congregational) in Mil-
....	'the homecoming message. I waukee, Wis. ‘
The service will be followed, pjne ’Hill ^iin:!) was organ-
was around averages 575.
35; today i t
The 19th anniversary of First 1 Social Brethren Church, 316
Bazaar Is Nov. I at Faith Lutheran
! celebrated at the	regular	11 ment of'the church. Special of ^ Greywho served until ill	The Ladies	Guild of Faith
!Ce	congregational singing will be health forced him to retire in	Lutheran Church, 3501 E.
AndrHtil Congregational ^dintheafternoon.	|1962.	-	£*** ^59), Highland
Church of 4160 Middlebelt, West PINE HILL	*	*	j Township. will hold a bazaar
Bloomfield	Township,	will The Rev. Albert L. Goddard! Worship services were first	[Nov.[from 10a.m.to'2p.m.
A noted story teller will be observe its ninth	year	by	in- will be installed as minister of.held at the Pine Lake School,	B~ths wtil	include cards
He	s*d«r ,t FM»Mta8.,^.MlLratWpto, HUI ** Dr. Allnd DM in N^emte
„	Jam	Grev minister emeritus, of-building on Middlebelt Road goods and Christmas guts, in
United Methodist s H a r v e s t a m-	MutiL	i was completed.	! eluding many handmade items.
Home banquet Friday night. CEDAR CREST	flciatUlg’________________——---------------------—--------------------- ■■"^■7-
*	*	*	| Featured speaker at Cedar,
The program, to be held at crest’s special worship service! the church, 14 Judson, Pontiac, will be the Rev. Richard; at 6:30 p.m., will also feature a,Schlecht, president of the
"• f|L * the	'gLSJSS
and music by the Davis Tn°>jgyn0<i
composed of Mrs. Eleanor He ’will be assisted by the Keller, Mrs. Virginia Neimisto Rev. Richard Feucht, parish

and Mrs. Miriam Powell.
education counselor of the English district, and the Rev. David Ludwig, associate pastor of the Peace Lutheran Church
The featured speaker is Mrs.
Howard „W. Burden who has
been in the ministry with her|of.	. c. „	.
. .	. .	_ I The choir of St. Matthews
husband for 43 years. The Lutheran	Walled Lakc,
couple’s first ministry was St.!wUl furnish special music for James Methodist Church of the 8ervice, which will be Pontiac.	1-----------------------—
Mrs. Burden and her husband were recently on the staff of the Trinity United Methodist Church in Flint, but they retired In June.
City Choir Union Banquet Tonight
Often called “one of the best1 “ie City Wide Choir Union of Story tellers in the world,” Mrs. Pontiac will hold its annual
Burden has been a member of the National Story League since 1942. She has served sis secretary of tiie ^National , Story League and president of the Central District of the National Story Lehgue.	,
scholarship banquet at the Sveden House at .8:30 tonight Gulst speaker will, he Dr. J Allen Parkier, fofmerpastor of tiie Newman AME Church.
SHUCKING THE CORN - Three young members of First 'United Methodist Church l«6w decorations for the church’s annual Harvest Home banquet Friday night. They
PWWI Pr.n SMI*
are Dan Arnold of 340, Rivera, Nancy Hevel of 741 Otter and Wally Boone of 3091 Edge-field, all of Waterford Township.
Toastmaster for the evening! is Booker Yancey, principal of An honorary member of the the Whittier Elementary School. Detroit Story League, she has Miss Sylvia Blake is guest organized two leagues in soloist.
Saginaw, one of which has) The banquet is open to the honored her by calling itself tiie .public for a donation of $5 per Silvia Burden Story League. | person.
GOME TO THE FAIR — Rev. Richard McGarry, pastor of St. Patrick Catholie Church, 9086 Hutchihs, White Lake Township, gives two youngsters a preview of the fun that awaits them at the parish fair: tor
morrow .The fall festival will be held at tile John F. Ivory Polo Grounds on Cooley -Lake Road,/White Lake Township, from noon to 6 p.m. Riding “Ole Dobbin” ere Joseph and Ann Marie Miller. ■
2 8® £ IPM
OPEN 3184 ANGELUS DR.
OPEH 426 S. MAIN (MILFORD)
OPEN 7260 SAGAMORE (CLARKSTON AREA)
OPEN 8762 SHANNON (UTICA AREA)

OPEN 1410 WHITTIER
OPEN 6451 WELLESLEY TERRACE


OPEN 4216 WOODSTOCK	S0RRY-S01DI

OPEN 90 HI-HILL (ORION AREA)

OPEN 639 PINE TREE (ORION AREA)
1g|ateS	»«
OPEN 1911 BIG TRAIL (COMMERCE AREA)
OPEN 6747 SCOTCH LAKE RD. (UNION LAKE AREA)
OPEN 229 SERRA (OXBOW LAKE AREA)
OPEN 210 CAYUGA (ORION AREA)

OPEN 220 CAYUGA (ORION AREA)
SSJvSE
OPEN 6669 SHELLEY DR. (CLARKSTON AREA) SORRY-SOLDI
OPEN SAT. & SUN. 2-5 P.M. OR BY APPOINTMENT
OLD ENGLISH RETREAT	NO. 52
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THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY. OCTOBER 18, 1969
N.Vief Hit by B52s
SAIGON (AP) - U.S. B52 bombers renewed their raids to* •day on'North Vietnamese base damps near the Cambodian border north of Saigon. Intelligence analysts say four enemy , divi-
sions are reorganizing there.
Despite ,little battlefield action, up to 80 of the bombers at tacked staging areas ranging from 3 to 25 miles from the border. They also hit other enemy
Around the World
36	Overconfident
37	Whit* poplar*
38	Long draft (coil.)
39	Barring 41 Suffix for
adjective* Moines.
•----Gatos,
California
12 Dark in color ’	Iowa
13	Epochs	44 Simple
14	“—on a	46 Dined too
Grecian Urn” A*lly
15	Those who do fgAMiy	—
.. notcast	S®*0/"**™*	8 Favorite
ballots	84 Fish-eating	BMountah
IT Animal	duck __________ meat*
doctor (coll.)	56 Social insect
18	Singing voice	57 At one time
19	Seesaws '	58 Japanese
21 Colorado	■ outcasts
mountain	59 Masculine
23	British brew	„
24	Sheep’s bleat «? Arnbjlsm, gulf 27 Soviet news
Germany
4 Diplomatic
7 Underdone,
90 Was observed 31 Formerly 33 More gigantic 8 Property Item SSPsrishin 8 Tomato (2 Louisiana
61 Forefather
29 Fart of	D0WN
1	County in England
2	Wood-wind instrument .
34 One who lisps 3 Capital of Weal
40 Mulct 43 Polynesian islands
45	Sea eagles
46	Ellipsoidal
47	Weathercock
48	Minister to tutelary gods 50 Italian city
24 Strait	51 Rip
separating	52 Gaelic
Australia from 55 General (ab.)
10	European river ■
11	Coteries 16 Speaker 20 Harass
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Of every 100 people who die in {Latin America, 45 are children! below 5 years of age.
—Weekend Radio Programs—
WJRC760) WXYZQ 270) CKIWC800) WWJ(950) WCARQ130) WPONQ460} WJBKQ 500) WHFI-FM(94.7)
WJR* News 6:15—-WWJ, Ft -WJR* Sports
4i)4—WXYZr Sports* Davs Lockhart
* WPONs Larry Dixon WJR; Weekend Report* Points and Trends WWJ, News, Audio/69 4:41—WJR, City Hall Reports ItW-WCAR, News, Rick aj-j Stewart WHFI* Lee Atan . WJR* Naws* Sports 7:15—WJR* Mickay Lolich 7:34—wwj, News* Monitor WJRs Daniel Schorr, Weekend Report, Showcase 7:55—WJR, Dimension 1:04—WJR, U
10:30—WWJ, Best From Inter-lochen
11:04—WJR, News WWJ, Nows WJBK* Bob Day llilS—WJR* Sports Final mil, Overnight 11:34—WJR, Music Till Dawn 12:04—WXYZ, Ron Knight WCAR* News* Wayne Phil CKLW* Pat St. ' *
WHFI, ‘	‘ ‘
4:34—WJR, Weekend Report* Organ Encores WHFls Marc Avery WJBK* Business Review
WWJ* MOflhers Church CKLW* Windsor Council . Churches
WPON, Wings of Hope
7:41—WWJ, Good ,
4:04—WJR* News CKLW* Windsor Labor WJBK, Revival Time WCAR* News, Lift for Living WPON, _ St. John Lutheran WWJ* News, Good Music •:15—CKLW, Report From . Parliament WJR* Three-Quarter Time S:J4-^gARs Back to God
CKLwTcanada Now WJBK* Law In the News WJR, Renfro Valley Gather-8:45—WJBK* Town Hall f:04-CKLW* Radio Bible Class
WCAR, Music for Sunday WPON* Shining Light Trio WWJ* Naws, Church at the Crossroads
rM?*0,H“l'n8
WXYZ, News# Mike Sherman
»:15—WJR, Golden Age of RMio
f:30—WJR, Weekend Report,
WJBK, Northwestern Re-
•:M—WWJ. News, Scouts, Michigan Human# WJBK, Young America Looks at Books WJR, Sports, Patterns In
WJBK,
WPON,
WJR, News, Sports,
WJR, Patterns In Music litis—WJR, Salt Lake City Tabernacle Choir TOMORROW AFTBRNOON MiOO—WWJ, News WCAR, Music tor Sunday WPON, News WJBK. Tom Dean WJR, News, Sports 11:15—WJR, Showcase WPON, Sunday Session WWJ, Audlo/69 U:30—WJR, Mockrldge, Sun-
1:00—WJR, NOWS,
Weekend Report 1:15—WJR, Arthur Godfrey WXYZ, Lion Pregame 1:**—WXYZ, Lion Football 1:45—WJR, Showcase
WJR, News, Spdrts, Showcase WXYZ, 5 5:00—WJR,
Weakens Report WWJ, Nows, Spook out WPON, News •si*—'WJR, Showcase
t; Hawaii Calls WWJ* News, Good Music
WJR* News*- Showcase 9:15—WJR* Action: Dotrolt Urban Leagua
9:34—WJR*. Face the Nation WWJ,News, Meet tho Press
10:04—WWJ*
WJR* Showcase 10:15—WJR, Rallgion In Action
10:34—WJR* In Contact WWJ* Eternal Light IliOO—WJR* News WWJ* News CKLW. Pat St. John 11:15—WWJ* Analogue WJR. Sports Final 11:30—WCAR* Jewish Community
WJR* All-Night Show 11:45-WWJ* Written Word 12:0t^W<jAR, News* Wayne WWJ* News WXYZ, News WHFI* Ira J. Cook
-Television
base camps 29 miles east of Saigon.
American infantry and helicopter reconnaissance patrols using searchlights In some cases killed 26 enemy soldiers during the past 24 hours in clashes ranging from 18 miles of Saigon to 40 miles northwest of the capital, U.S. headquarters said.
4	4#
No American casualties werei reported.
20 REDS KILLED South Vietnamese headquarters reported that its militia forces killed 20 enemy soldiers ambush Friday nigh about 90 miles south of Da Nang. Four government soldiers were reported wounded.
The U.S. Command said there were eight enemy rocket and mortar attacks overnight, but that only three of them caused casualties or damage.
4,	4	*
The U.S. Command also said that the 3rd Marine Division has abandoned its sprawling Vande-grift combat base near the demilitarized zone.
The base, 14 miles south of the DMZ and 30 miles west of the coast, was the headquarters for the division’s 4th Regiment.
4	■ 4	41 t
About 15,000 Marines of the 3rd Division already have been withdrawn from South Vietnam, The remaining 12,000 are to be pulled out by Dec. 15 under President Nixon’s orders to reduce troop strength by 60,000.
4	4 4i ,
The Marines had established Vandegrift as their principal western supply point after the Khe Sanh base was vacated. Khe Sanh is six miles west of Vandegrift and was under siege for 2% months in early 1968.
Programs fumishod by station* luted in this column aro sub
change without notlcol
CkonneUi 2-WJBK-TV. 4-WWJ-TV. 7-WXYZ-TV. 9-CKLW-TV, 50-WKBD-TV, 56-WTVS-tV, 6^-WXON-TV
SATURDAY NIGHT •:M (2) (4) C -» News, Weather, Sports ((7) C — College Football: California at UCLA (in progress)	/
(9) C — Lively Spot — Joey Tex, David Ruffin and Bob Posh guest.
(50) R — McHale’s Navy (56) Critique — “Art and the Machine Age” exhibit at the New York Museum of Art is discussed (62) C — Robin Seymour 6:30(2>,q - Truth or
(4) C — News — Huntley, Brinkley
(7)C — Michigan Sportsman — A roundup of early, fall sports including salmon fishing, waterfowl hunting and archery deer hunting.
(50) R — My Favorite Martian
7:00 (2) C — Death *Valley Days
(4) C ' — Michigan Outdoors
(7) C — Anniversary Game
(9) C — Hockey: Chicago at Toronto
(50) R C - Star Trek -Spock, McCoy and Kirk are punished for violating a “no trespassing” warning in space.
(56) The President’s Men
—	Defense Secretary Melvin Laird (g interviewed in first of series of eight interviews with the men who advise President Nixon.
(82) R - Movie: “Dangerous Exile” (British, 1958) Rogue, aided by an English girl, saves the King during the French Revolution. Louis Jour-dan, Belinda Lee.
7:30 (2) C — Jackie Gleason
—	George Chakiris joins the Honeymooners.
(4) C — Andy Williams
—	Guests are Don Knotts, Ray Charles, Cass Elliott, the Osmond Brothers and the Creedenoe Clearwater Revival.
(7) C — Dating Game -§ Barry Nelson guests.
(56) Folk Guitar Plus 8:09 (7) C — Newlywpd Game
(50) R — Movie: “The Servant” (British, 1964) Clever valet takes over both his master and the mansion. Dirk Bogarde, Sarah Miles
(56) R — On Being Black —A1 Freeman Jr. stars in “Basis of Need,” a drama about a middle-class black social worker who falls in love with a woman on welfare.
8:30 (2) C - My Three Sons — The family gives Steve courting tips.
(4) C - Adam-12 — A routine h i t - r u n fatality turns into murder.
(7) C — Lawrence Welk— Cynthia Clawsen, recent semifinalist in the All-American College Show contest, guests.
(62) R C - Hey Landlord 9:60 (2) — Green Acres — The executor of Hie 820-million Bimbocker pork estate orders Arnold to prove his claim.
(4) C — Movie: “Jigsaw”
(1968) Young scientist, believing he has killed a girl during an accidental LSD trip, returns to the scene with a private
/ detective So find the girl gone and1 everything in order. Harry Guardino, Bradford Dlliman, Hope Lange
(58) R — Book Beat — Sumner Locke Elliott discusses his "Edens Lost."
(62) RC - Movie: “Secret Mark of D ’ A r tagnan" (Italian, •French 1962) D’Artagnan and Porthos are involved in rivalries between Cardinal Richelieu and Louis XIII. George Nader.
9:39 (2) C — Petticoat Junction — Two motorcyclists are suspected of poaching in i the HootervUle area.
(7) C — Hollywood Palace — Guest hostesses Diana Ross and t h e Supremes welcome Alan Seuss, the Jackson Five, Sammy Davis Jr. and Willie Tyler Lester. >
(9) C — Weekend (56) R — NET Playhouse “Past Intruding,” prize-winnning Japanese film, deals with a psychiatrist who, in the course of treating a patient, finds his own memory of a horrible war experience restored.
10:09 (2) C - Mannix - An egomaniacal movie star refuses to believe Man-nix’s contention that someone is out to harm him.
(9) C — News, Weather, Sports
(50) C — Lou Gordon — 1. Felix Layton national vice president of the Theo-sophical Society and his wife discuss the sophy; 2. Robert Hallowell, president of a company which manufactures recreational home, educational products, dlscusseshis “Bridge —■ Everyone,”
designed to make anyone' , a bridge expert.
10:10 (9) Provincial Affairs
10:16 (9) C — Sunday Movie Preview
10:21 (9) C — Canadian Football: Edmonton at British Columbia (joined in progress)
10:30 (7) C — Passage to Adventure — A visit to Munich for the “Oktober-fest” holiday.	~*~
(62) C - Scene 70
11:90 (2) (4) (7) R C-News Weather, Sports
11:30 (4) R C — Johnny Car-son
(7) R — Movie: “36 Hours” (1964) World War II spy is captured by the Germans. Rod Taylor, James Garner, Eva Marie Saint
(50) R C — Movie: “Master of the World” (1961) Man in a strange flying vessel seeks to destroy all weaponry so the world will finally see peace. Vincent Price, Charles Bronson (62) R — Movie: “Port of Hell” (1954) Harbor crew defers sabatoge attempts by enemy agents. Wayne Morris, Carole Mathews
11:35 (2) R — Movies: 1.
’ “Only the Valiant” (1961) Cavalry officer wins his men’s respect after losing face in an Indian skirmish. Gregory Peck, Ward Bond, Gig Young; 2. C - “Honeychile” (1951)
i Judy gets involved in the music-publishing business. Judy Canova, Eddie Foy Jr.
12:39 (9) C — Perry’s Probe' - “The Mentally HI”
1:60 (4) C—News, Weather
1:35 (7) R — Movie: “Timbukto” (1959) Adventurer is involved in a plot to overthrow an African government. Victor Mature, Yvonne De Carlo
3:96 (7) C—News, Weather 4:66 (2) C-News, Weather 4:66 (2) TV Chapel
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