AP WIrtplwto EMBASSY ROOM AFTER BLAST - This is the damaged interior of a room at the Soviet Embassy in Washington after concrete ledge of a first-floor window, while Soviet officials a predawn explosion today outside the structure. According said they believe a bomb was thrown. This picture was made to l»lice, investigators believe the blast was set off on the through the window where the explosion whs detonated. Soviet Embassy Hit by Bomb Explosion WASHINGTON (AP) - A predawn blast, apparently caused by an explosive device placed on a window ledge, damaged the Soviet Embassy here today. Police and Soviet officials said no one was injured by the 5:52 a.m. explosion that shattered windows in the embassy and nearby building and scattered debris apross a wide area. placed on a windowsill or otherwise attached to the building. MESSAGE Investigation was hampered, according to Soviet informants, because no debris from the bomb apparently survived the blast. Informants also said that no message was left. quarters in the United States,” it added in a, dispatch from Washington to Moscow. Police could not ay immediately wat type of explosive was used. It apparently was detonated on the concrete ledge of a first-stpry front window. The ledge was ripped away and an iron grating twisted. By midmorning, there had been no arrests, officials said. One Soviet source said, “We believe the bomb was thrown” — rather than Despite a State Department apology soon after the blast, the official Soviet news agency Tass said, “This act of provocation could have teen committed only with the connivance of the American authorities which, despite warnings, had not taken proper measures to protect the embassy.” “Judging by everything, this crime is a result of the growung anti-Communist hysteria that is being fanned by certain An FBI spokesman said although Washington police are handling the investigation, the bureau has offered the services of its laboratory and identification facilities and will investigate any leads developed outside o f Washington. An FBI laboratory technician was sent to the scene at police request. DEMOLITION EXPERTS? Protest on VietVeh Brings Army Study Mercury Falls to -3 in Pontiac TODAY’S TEMPERATURES Protests by congressmen and relatives of Vietnmn war veterans has caused the Army to restudy its policies on returning men to the' fighting, it was disclosed today. Mike took part in over 100 helicopter air assaults in his tour which ended last May. DIRECTING CAMPAIGN Mrs. Phelps has been directing a letter An Associated Press story from Washington said the Army, faced with strong protest, is developing a plan to permit what is called a “phase return” of men who had recently returned from their first war duty. and telegram campaign in the Holly area to bring back the veterans. 1 a.m. ... . 0 6 a.m. -3 2 a.m. ... ... -1 8 a.m. ...... -2 3 a.m. ... ... -2 10 a.m. 4 4 a.m. ... ... -2 11 a.m. 7 5 a.m. ... -3 2 p.m. . . 13 The Associated Press said the plan for “phase return” of the veterans had not yet been approved hy the Army but it would entail quicker rotatioh. Most of the men involved are contingents of the 82nd Airborne Division and a Marine regiment. Some 10,5(10 were sent back to Vietnam iast week to bolster U.S. forces in the attack on major cities. Many of them had already served tours there. A man who had been home from the war six months, for example, would be V rotated baqk front his second tour ahead of a man who had been back in the U.S. a shorter time. Arctic winds sweeping into the Pdntiac area from the northwest plunged temperatures to 3 below zero early today in the downtown area. Surrounding communities reported as low as 10 below And tonight's forecast is more of the Among those from the Oakland County area protesting to U.S. officials were Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Phelps of 1124 Lambert, Holly, who claimed her son, Mike, 21, had riot fully recovered from his year at war. The Army said it would stick to its policy of limiting tours to 12 months and would retain, where possible, its policy of allowing 24 months between overseas shipments. SUNNY AND COLD In Today's Press Tax SpiraF Survey of area citizens shows concern — PAGE A-4. Estate Income Tax Informational series begins in today’s Press — PAGE A-3. Venice Canal dredging to continue despite fears of consequences— PA'GE B-3. Area News ..................A4 Astrology .................F-2 Bridge ....................F-2 Crossword Puzzle......... F-11 Coniics .. F-2 Editorials ............... A-* Food Section ....;... .C-8—C-11 Markets .............»..,;.F-3 Obituaries ...........1.....E4 Sports ............<• D-1-4M Theaters E-14, E-15 TV and Radio Programs . F-11 ^ Wilson, Earl F-11 Women’s Pages ........C-1—C4 President Sees Pueblo Accord same. The mercury is expected to dive to zero to 8 below in Pontiac. WASHINGTON (AP) - President Johnson is depicted by White House visitors as quietly confident that diplomacy eventually will win release of the captured intelligence ship Pueblo’s crew. There’s a chance of a few brief snow flurries tonight. The weatherman predicts partly sunny tomorrow and not quite so cold for Friday. This morning’s west to northwest winds at 10 to 22 miles per hour will continue tonight. In the face of .a new North Korean threat to try the 82 surviving crew, members, Johnson was said to believe a way will be found tq reach a settlement after the other side Has had its day of blustering- precipitation probabilities in per cent are: today 30, tonight 20 and 10 tomorrow. The Weather U.t. WMthir Burt»u rar*c*sl Fair, Cold (Datatlt i) Home Efdition THE PONTIAC PRESS I’ON'riAt'. MIC'IIICAN, ^VK;l)\KSl)A^ . FKlIHrAHV 21, I!m;k VOL. 126 - - NO. |;l ★ ★ ★ UN,TE5^S7»rTlR^TT,ONAt ^76 l’A(iL,S IOC Sen Fu/brigh) Votors Okay McNamara Still Foes on Tonkin Open-Housing Law WASHINGTON (AP) -• Weary adversaries after a 7M!-hour confrontation. Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara and Sen. J. W. Fulbright still disagreed on the real story of the naval engagement which prompted the first U.S. bombing of North Vietnam. McNamara issued a 21-page account of the affair, over Fulbright’s objection, contending the administration proved conclusively that the U. S. destroyers Maddox and Turner Joy were attacked by North Vietnamese torpedo boats in international waters on Aiig. 4, 1964. From Our News Wires FLINT — A clerical error in tabulations of the vote on an open-housing referendum showed today that the measure was approved yesterday by a 43-vote margin. Previous reports had indicated the proposal was defeated by 54 votes. Unofficial tabulations showed the final vote was 20,172 in favor and 20,129 against. The Flint Journal said the error was discovered when the city clerk was asked to check a discrepancy between his figures and those tabulated by the newspaper’s staff. The clerk then found 100 favorable votes had not been counted in one precinct. Earlier, Negro Mayor Floyd McCree said a defeat by 54 votes would have constituted a “great moral victory” because he had expected the measure to lose by a 3-1 margin. He termed “monstrous” any suggestion the United States induced the attack, seeking an excuse for its subsequent retaliation. Observers believed a recount now will be demanded by open-housing opponents. In late August, McCree threatened to resign after the City Commission rejected an open-housing ordinance. He stayed on, however, and the measure was passed by a 5-4 vote Oct. 30. Fulbright, the Arkansas Democrat who heads the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said the public statement McNamara issued “does not tell the whole story by any means.” PENALTY SPECIFIED The ordinance specifies a penalty of a $.300 fine and/or 90 days iq jail both for violators and for persons who falsely claim to have been discriminated against. Exempt from the ordinance were owners of dwellings which house five or less farnilies if the owners live on the premises, owners who sell privately and religious groups which house only members of their denomination. Fulbright did not relate his version. “I’m too worn out to attempt any kind of discussion,” he said after McNamara’s marathon appearance before the committee. ’i “I’m on overtime now,” McNamara told newsmen,as he emerged from the closed committee room, refusing to answer questions. An Army lieutenant and a master sergerint, both wearing fatigues, entered the four-story stone and brick building seeveral hours after the blast, but would not say whether they were demolition experts. | ** And so the session which ran into last night produced only fresh confroversy over the engagement in the Gulf of TonU& MNm zNamara’s session with the committee clearly was a sometimes angry affair. Fulbright said he had urged McNamara not to release his statement, bqt the secretary had it distributed at the Pentagon. LBJ Rights Bill Dealt Setback WASHINGTON (J) - Some Senate backers of President Johnson’s civil rights bill, already dealt one serious setback, plan jettisoning an open-housing provision in an effort to salvage the original measure. Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield said he will propose tabling the controversial open-housing section — an amendment to the administration bill — when debate resumes today. Ta- * bling would kill the amendment. In it, McNamara said the U.S. destroyers had in no way provoked attacks by the North Vietnamese, and had not participated in South Vietnam’s bombardment of Communist islands in the gulf, assaults which occurred at about the same time. F. JACK DOUGLAS Sen. Wayne Morse, D-Ore., said the South Vietnarpese used boats supplied by the United States, and contended “North Vietnam had every reason to fear” the U.S. destroyers. Suit Challenges City Candidate But other supporters of open housing talked of a bid to modify the amendment in hopes it might be made more acceptable to opponents. Both strategies aim at saving the civil rights bill itSelf, which would make it a federal crime to interfere with Negroes and civil rights workers pursuing equal rights. Offices to Observe Hoi iday T omorrow A lawsuit challenging the eligibility of F. Jack Douglas as a city commissioner was filed yesterday in Oakland County Circuit Court. The suit, initiated by attorneys Robert D. Cunningham and Robert D. Coon on behalf of Patrick M. Galloway of 483 Tallahasee, contends that Douglas’ election as a city commissioner would lead to a conflict of interest. The Senate voted 55 to 37 yesterday for cutting off the debate, seven short of the two-thirds vote needed for cloture. The debate has been going on since Congress reconvened Jan. 15. SECOND VOTE SET A second cloture vote set for Monday also seems headed for failure unless there is a shift of Republican ranks. Community National Bank, FontiaC State Bank and First Federal Savings of Oakland all vHU be closed tomorrow in honor of George Washington’s birthday. The city and county offices also will be closed. It asks that the court restrain the City of Pontiac and the city clerk from placing Douglas’ name on the primary election ballot. The election will Ik held March 4. GOP senators split 18 to 18 on yesterday’s vote after Senate Republican leader Everett M. Dirksen urged the senate not to gag itself by approving The post office will be closed, although the main post office lobby will be open for mail deposits, access to locked boxes and purchase of stamps from machines. The court ordered the city to appear at 9 a.m. Monday to show cause why such an order should not be granted. Douglas said he will be represented by an attorney at the hearing. Michigan’s Gov. Romney, a candidate for the Republican presidential nomination, had urged all Republican senators to approve cloture. ON LEAVE OF ABSENCE Mail will be picked up from deposit points on normal holiday schedules and processed from outgoing dispatch. There will be no regular window or delivery services. Douglas of 1644 Charleston is one of four candidates seeking the City Commission seat now held by District 4 Commissioner Leslie H. Hudson. The Democratic tally was 37 for and 19 against. Except for three senators from small Western states. Southern opponents of the civil rights measure accounted for all the Democratic votes against cutting off debate. Sw/ss-N. Viet Link BERN (UPD—Switzerland today gave de facto diplomatic recognition to Communist North Vietnam. A city fireman for 18% years, Douglas is presently on leave of absence from the fire department. He took the leave in February 1966 riifter being elected.loJhe full-time position of president of the Oakland County AFL-CIO Council, which includes 111 union locals. Mansfield has indicated he will move to lay the legislation aside if the second attempt to cut off debate does not succeed. Swiss foreign minister Willy Spuehler told parliament Switzerland’s ambassador in Peking, Oscar Rossetti, has been named official “representative” to the foreign ministry in Hanoi. Hotel Fire Kills 3 Men However, he interpreted the first vote as showing a clear majority in support of open-housing legislation. Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., floor manager of the bill called it a significant victory. KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP)-Three men perished today in an early morning fire that leveled the three-story May Hotel. Firemen rescued six other persons. Mansfield has emphasized that without Dirksen’s support, he sees no chance of getting the two-thirds majority necessary to choke off debate. In Moscow yesterday, Zang le Zoon, counselor of the North Korean Embassy, told a news conference the Pueblo’s crew will be punished and any American reprisals would bring immediate war. Private School Aid: Future Savings? The United States already had warned that any pimishment would be a “deliberate aggravation” of the crisis. The North Korean’s threats seem to be regarded at the White House as a part of the game when dealing , with the Communists. More important, it was said, was that after early shouting sessions at Pan-munjom some real negotiating now is going on. By DICK ROBINSON A controversial proposed state bill to aid nonpublic schools if approved could theoretically save Oakland County taxpayers an estimated $18.5 million in the future. , The bill is scheduled to be introduced in the State House and Senate today. Oakland County would benefit most from the proposal next to Wayne Ooqnty. the most,schools — 271. Oakland County is second in the state with 30,362 students in 63 schools. ★ A it Under the bill, Oakland’s taxpayers would not have to pay out $18.5 million to educate all the nonpilblic ritudents in public schools if theoretically ’all the ncmpublic schools failed financially. • nonpublic secondary schools and $50 each for those in elementary schools. Core city children would get higher amounts — $150 for thqse in high school and $75 in elementary school. Wayne County has the largest number of nonpublic school pupils 134,124 ^ in FUNDS AUTHORIZATION The bill would authorize the state to grant $100 each for cluldren attending All grants would be given to parents, not the schools. The theory is that schools could then raise tuitions since parents would have more money to pay them. or four “secular” courses — such as English Or reading, arithmetic or mathematics, science and physical education — would be eligible for aid. This Would be certified by the school. Educational grants would not be paid to parents for any formal course in religious doctrine or worship. Backers of the bill say it does not violate the principle of separation of church and. state. Only parents whose children take two (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 3) A—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEPNESPAY. FEBRUARY 21, 1968 Romney Predicts Hell Win Wisconsin. N. H. Primaries demand that Pennsylvania Gov.moderate stand on issues—has Raymond P, Shafer be named indicated he would agree to Sha-co-chairman. fer ks the committee’s vice Dirksen—whom the governors chairman but not as its cofear would not produce achairman. By The Associated Press i expect to win them both," Michigan Gov. George Rom-1 Romney told reporters Tuesday, ney predicts he’s going to beat- ♦ ★ * fellow Republican presidential Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy, rival Richard M, Nikon in the Democratic jiresidential candi-Wisconsln primary—and says date, meanwhile, accused Presi-he's gaining on Nixon m the dent Johnson of ‘ eroding and New Hamp.shire ( ontesi weakening the structures governmeol." And a showdown appeared to' be developing between Sen Ev-[ .crelt M Dirksen, R-Ill , and Re-1 /i C.^1* 'publican governors over control I lO wOlV0 I 0QCn0r ^TISIS iof the platform committee at the Republican National Con-| Ivpniion TALLAHASSEE, Fla. Ufl ~ i , I Gov. Claude Kirk returned from TEMPORARY END | California today amid criticism Florida Governor Returns Private School Backer Replies j Romney’s predictions of pri-i mary victories over former Vice 1 President Nixon came as he brought a temporary end to his Wisconsin campaign to return to New Hampshire. The governor told a Rice Lake, Wls,, hews lis ‘’Still an underdog” in New Hampshire, but he said he is jgaining on ‘‘my primary oppo-Inenl.” ★ ★ ★ Romney is not scheduled to return to Wisconsin before the New Hampshire primary, the j first in the nation, March 12. ; McCarthy—who is challenging j Johnson’s Vietnam war policies I—said in Madison, Wis., that the j President ‘also is blurring the traditional separation between the Supreme Court, Congress and the military. INCREASING TREND “The use of the military to defend political policies,” McCarthy sairf, “has been an Increasing trend, particularly since the United States became because he was out of i The governor took note ofi criticism about his six-day, absence from the state. “I can' handle my job by telephone,” during a teacher walkout that Kirk said, “Is it true that I has kept more than a half have to be there hourly? Do you] million pupils out of class. ”I will go into the county as I always do and break the core. ____That is to say, I will go to c^erence he]Miami.” the governor said. Kirk has said the source of the dispute is in the state’s bigger cities. Police Hunting Cor of County MurderVictim Oakland County sheriff’s detectives said today they are concentrating on locating the victim’s car in their vestigation of the murder of an Oak Park man whose frozen body was found in Pontiac Township Monday. The body of George Cobiht, think the phones don’t work California?” “Does President Johnson have to be in Vietnam' Johnson Taps Friend to Run His Campaign LANSING (AP)- Legislative backers of a proposed $2l-mil-Uon state grant to nonpublic education denied today that pressure groups were responsible for triggering action on the controversial measure. The Committee for Educational Freedom, an organization composed of persons affiliated with various religious groups, and other backers of tbe measure have flooded state offices with more than 60,000 letters in the past 2Vi weeks. "I think the public believes that the Committee for Educa- m the association, tional Freedom and the Nonpublic School Association triggered this thing (the bill),” Sen. George S. Fatzgerald D-Grosse Pointe, and Senate spon-Isor of the bill, told a news con- Birmingham Area News New President Elected by Student Loan Grpup BIRMINGHAM - Thomas C. Morgan Jr. has been elected president of the Birmingham Student Loan and Scholarship Fund Association. ★ ★ Morgan, who lives in Bei^rly Hills, succeeds P e 11 Holl-ingshead, who has been president for two years. scholarships which have been established by individuals and organizations. ★ * ★ The loan fund is available for students who wish to further their education and who reside within the school district. Loans are granted on an interest-free promissory note, payable when ingshead, current ^’fh^studenVs educational plan is the board of education, continue to represent the board loan LIMITS Payments to the fund ihay be deferred at four per cent interest per year. Loans are limited to $400 per year or $1,000 total. at Gainesville. “How many do Rowe’s Citizens for Johnson-you put in jail for violating an Humphrey Is well under way. injunction?” * ★ ★ A high party source, who declined to. be quoted by name, said that the Citizens Many county school boards filed the suits since the teachers walked out Monday. A citizen’s suit was filed in Miami Tuesday by Leonard H. Rubin, a North Miami Beach attorney, in behalf of his daughter, a first-grader. Judge at Trial for Ruby Dies DALLAS. Tex (API — Judge Joe B. Brown, the state district judge who meted out the death sentence for Jack Ruby only to see his verdict overturned, died Tuesday of a heart attack at the age of 60. who insisted on courtesy butp"''°*ved on a large scale in the SO^^was^ State Sen. John Mathews, D- allowed a relaxed atmosphere Vietnam war P • “ I Jacksonville, m^de a plea for in his court, had several heart! The GOP platform committee| ® * * * 'the Republican governor to attacks before, and after the I showdown was indicated in a re- * * w i return as “captain Of the sink- Ruby trial. I port by Washington Post writer The victim, the assistantj mg ship” the day the legislature Funeral arrangements were!David S. Broder that Republi-manager of the U n i t e d, passed its education package. Kirk left that day, last Thursday, for his speaking tour. * * * 4 The board of educationamet Tuesday and voted to give State School Supt. Floyd Christian emergency powers to cope with the crisis that closed schools from Pensacola to Miami and has kept about half of the 1.3 million pupils out of class. Some 26,000 of the state’s 60,844 teachers had quit their jobs in a group to reject what they consider stingy financing state’s 1,800 public Fitzgei'ald pointed to the $200, WASHINGTON (AP) ~!ooo Michigan sch(?ol finance to'hand^eThrsUumion i^^^ /1*" nam?” Kirk said. f" W*™!- W a s h i n g t« n^ough the State Department of| ★ ★ * lawyer James H. Rowe Jr., to Education. ^ jisrholarshio fund PI J AH Ms still unannounced bid| The study, he said, mdicatedj®^^ P Florida Atty. Gem L a r 1 ^ ^ p ^ j ^ nonpublic schoolsi Faircloth said Tuesday j sources saylmust be maintained, or the the suits that school boards and .,j television a n d state’s public schools will en- |f taxpayers have filed to try serious financial prob- force teachers back to work are^ Although Johnson has notlems. | academic. | formally announced his can-1 ★ * * QUESTIONS ididacy for a new four-year Fitzgerald and House spon- “How can you force teachers! term, planning at Democratic sors of the bill—Rep. Thomas to teach?” he asked in a speech!National Headquarters and at Brown, R-pausing, and Rep. Reelected officers 1 n c 1 u d e » James Aliber, 678 Henley, vice d president, representing the PTA t( council; Harry S. Stark Jr., 268 Ij Fairfax, treasurer, representing $ Birmingham schools alumni; and Mrs. Herbert D. Hunter, contributions to the fund may 627 Pilgrim, secretary, ^g^t to Supt. of Si:hools Dr. representing the A m e r i c a n j^^^ g Smith, Hill Bldg., Association of U n i v e r s i t y and Merrill. Women. ___________ He can governors have decided to American Life Insurance Co. qf Detroit, had been beaten on the hehd with a blunt instrument, d^ectives said. beauties shid Cobitz had apparently been killed elsewhere, for Absentees^'- Ballots Set be announced today, leaves his widow and a son Ruby shot to death Lee Harvey Oswald, accused; assassin of President John F. Kennedy, as Oswald was being transferred from the Dallas City Jail to a cell in the county^ jail. ‘ The soft-spoken Brown told. Voters wishing to take part in friendsiof “drinking a Dr Pep-jthe March 4 city primary deeper w^th old Jack” during'tion have until 2 p. m. March 2 recesses of the Ruby trial. “YouJo pick up absentee ballots, City know. ” he said, ”I kinda likedIderk Olga Barkeley said today, talking to him. : Persons who can use absentee , * , ballots are those who will be out He refused a change of venue^f for Ruby one of the items onj incapacitated which the Texas Court of, ______. /_____ Criminal Appeals later reversed“ ,.,^11 ia , Pontiac police said today they the original decision and sent it .have obtained a warrant charg- back to Wichita Falls for a hardship, retrial. , , . Later, after Ruby died of R^Sular application forms for absentee ballots are available at the clerk’s office in City Hall. Mrs. Barkeley said requests and applications taken by mail or at the clerk’s office must be signed by the voter. Saturday or early Sunday. City Shooting Warrant Issued of the schools. Johnson - Humphrey operation, reestablished at the start of the year in an office adjacent to party headquarters, will be in charge of the campaign through the primary stages and probably through the fall. The • source said Rowe heads the entire campaign effort, with major help from Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey, Postmaster General Lawrence F. O’Brien and White House aide Marvin Watson. The party’s national committee, the source said, will function as a support group to do campaign organizational work. J. Robert Traxler, D-Bay City , —maintained the $21 - million ^ grant to parents of nonpublic ' school pupils would save Mich-;an taxpayers money. The current trend, they said, . is for nonpublic school children * to enroll in public schools because (of a financial pinch felt ' by their parents and. by the > nonpUl^lic schools. ; If the 330,000 children how en- i rolled In nonpublic schools were ’ to enter public schools, if would > cost Michigan $200 million, they said. Man Bilked in Box Trick loan and -fhe'city Planning Board will association! problem of ' ® ’’ developing a condominium j ordinance at its regular meeting ^ I tonight at 8. . ^1 According to Planning Director William R^ Brownfield, few ordinances or laws have been ^'developed on the local level to deal with condominiums. Since state law requires that Racial Forum Is Tomorrow A 52-year-old Oakland master deed and by-laws be Township man told Pon- with the state before a tiac police yesterday he 'condominium development is was bilked out of m 0 r e »i undertaken. Brownfield said, than $1,000 by a pair of ijjjg fjj.st step in formulating an confidence' men. 'ordinance would be to require Kenneth Roberts pf 2470 that the same material be made Adams told officers he ^ | available to the city. ' withdrew the money from |! ★ * * a credit union after being ^planning director also convinced by the men 1 suggested a number of restric-that the cash was needed ^e included, such as for a trick which involved j separate fire walls and separate locking the money in a 11 utilities. metal box. 'll______________________________ One of the men, whom | he reportedly m e t while ^ walking at Saginaw and Huron yesterday after ^ (XTCEOCets U.23 Million A second public f 0 r u m!k sponsored by the city’s human money, the victim relations commission to discuss racial problems will be held at 8 p.m. tomorrow in City Hall, j The first, which lasted Stii hours, was hpld last Thursday.!^ More than 200 persons attended. said. The other man then supposedly placed the hand- ; kerchief in the box. which ! Roberts took home. cancer in 1967 in the Dallas County Jail, Brown told friends he “doubted that Jack Ruby could gel a fair trial anywhere ” Ruby died while his new trial was pending. ing a city man with attempted murder in connection with the shooting of a woman early Sunday. Sought is Arnzelle Mayo, 42, of 384 S. Anderson, according to officers. The Weather ' Capt, Charles Gale, chief of m idetectives, said Mayo is ac-! cused of shooting 54-year-old Frances Hardiman of 30 Hibbard four times following an argu-^ I ment between the victim and , Iguspect. Full U. S. Weather Bureau Report ! She is undergoing treatment PONTI.AC AND VICINITY - Mostly fair and conUnued 1 in the intensive care unit of St. >ery cold today and tonight, but with some variable cloudiness [Josfiph Mercy Hospital, where and chance of a few brief snow flurries. High today 10 to 16. ] her condition is fair, according Low tonight zero to 8 below. Thursday partly sunny and not to hospital authorities, quite so cold. Winds west lo northwest 10 to 22 miles per hour | today and tonight. Friday outlook: fair and a little warmer. lities in per cent: today 30, tonight 20, CLAUDE KIRK Approval of $1,233,802 for the Oakland County Commission on Economic Opportunity (OCCEO) was granted today by Congress, according to Jack H. McDonald, R-19th District. The funds mean there will be a summer Head Start program in tbe Pontiac School District this year, according to James McNeeley, OCCEO directw. There was none last summer. However, some other districts in the county will not be funded for this summer, he said. The funds for preschool teaching, 427,151, provide for continuation of school-year programs, he said, and the total is a slight increase over last year. * ★ ★ Of the total, $806,651 is for regular program administration and this is also a slight increase over last year, McNeely The three were to meet ' * * * r- later, but Roberts, becom- | The forums are being held in' ing suspicious, forced | an effort to determine and fe open the box and found , identify factors which a re I only blank paper, he told I; leading to racial tension and 1 police I conflict in the city, a i said. , Fast Sale of 30” Gas Stove “Our Press Want Ad was most resultfuL A quick sale at our asking price.” Mrs. L. C. 30" GAS STOVE, GOOlfcbNDlfiON, _$40._ _______ _ __ PRESS WANT ADS are so useful in so many ways. They sell, buy, swap, hire, find. They go to work for you immediately. What can one do for you? Djal 332-8181 or 334-4981 J DelroH 10 Duluth J Fort Worth » JacksonvIM# S K»nsa» City CO 42 57 Private School Aid a Savings? (Continued From Page One) 1 revenues. Money would not be „ “The U.S. supreme Court has'Mk^" repeatedly upheld the principle]earmarked for public education. “ of secular educational benefits j * ★ ★ iXa*ch « 50 the child in becoming | it would cost an estimated 7 Kew Odaans 36 ® educated citizen,” saysi$200 million in additional state • ■ " - H 5 ^ Citizens for]and local taxes to operate new 4 50 Educational Freedom of|fadlities for the state’s nonpublic school students shoj^d the nonpublic facilities close. AF Wfraphata NATIONAL WEATHER — Showers and rain are fra-e-cast tonight fr<»n the Pacific Northwest to Arizona. Snow is exi^cted in Montana, Oklahoma and the Texas Panhandle, while snow flurries are due in part of the Midwest and Great, Lakes region. It is clear that the purpose 77 50,of this bill is to assist parents in ’ complying with the state coni-jpulsory attendance law witliout I interfering with their con-Istitutionai right to select the school their child will attend.« •$21 MILLION NEEDED’ "Such a purpose is clearly 'secular and its primary effect is I to assist in the secular education of children and. therefore, jit does not advance or inhibit religion.” J Sponsors of the bill estimate lit would take about $21 million to pay tbe grants to parents of an estimate 333,000 students who attend Michigan’s nearly ! 1.000 nonpublic schools. ' Grants would come from the 'state's general fund from I surplus state income tax ‘COSTS LESS’ In addition, some $710 million would be needed to provide them with new public school buildings. “It will cost Michigan taxpayers less V> pay‘educational wants to parents of nonpublic school children than it wonld to pay an estimated $600 per child educate them in schools,” claims CEF. Non public school enrolIment| have declined during the last three years by nearly 10 per.cent and if,the trend continues, public schools in many areas will be forced to undertake crash programs costing millions of dollars to provide new schools for children now attending n o n p u b 1 i c schools.” A big question in the issue is whether it is politically possible to obtain public support tor nonpublic school children. PROBLEMS A number of people think so because Michigan has in the past passed laws which gave some type of aid to students, regardless of whether they went to public or nonpublic schools. Problems in Michigan’s ni public schools have been up in four wwds — declining enrollments, rising costs. • Nonpublic school enrollments, which faU a peak of 361,000 in 1964, have declined by 30,000 childroi during the currant school year. , ★ ★ ★ Two major reasons for rising costs are the desire to pay competitive teacher salaries and the increased number of ly teachers in Catholic schoMs. ★ ★ A About one out of seyen school children in Michigan attend a nonpublic hchool compared to out of 5 in Detroit, 1 out of 24 in Pontiac and 1 out of 17 Waterfod Township. THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAV, FEBRl'AR^' Jl. !!)(?? A—3 Your State Income Tax—? Ifs Wise to Make Out Federal Return First (EDITOR’S NOTE - Most Michigan taxpayers have already received tax forms and instructions for paying the state’s new 2.6 per cent per-i sonal income tax. To assist, those struggling for the firstl time with this new levy,\ Clarence Lock, the stotej revenue commissioner. f)as] prepared for The Associated j Press a four part series.) By CLARENCE LOCK ! State Revenue Commissioner ' Written for i The Associated Press I LANSING — Most taxpayers | will have to fill out two income | tax forms before next April 15 CAlAERAGieL *iuillbe.at SlMV\5 •thisFrj. SeeSlkMSADV. ini 'Fri-WimcPRess 'ForDetails—Have lyour&tiilypicW it^Ken in COLOR FREE/ — the standard federal form! You may simply take the in-] and the one for the new come you earned during the last^ Michigan personal income tax. j throe months of 1967 and com-j You might find it’s a 'goodpute the tax due on that. Or,' idea to make out the federal you may divide your total return first. In most cases, the year’s income by four to begin ^ state return will be easier since determining your taxable in-much of the work done on the come, federal return can be applied to -puy boxh WAYS the state tax form. | ^ But at the same time, don’t large pay increase during the forget you can deduct the year or received a good-sized, amount you paid during 1967itaxable year-end windfall, under the state income tax from you’ll likely be better off using your federally taxable income, [one-fourth of your whole year’s You may not, however, ex- empt the federal tax paid or the! On the other hand, if your in-itemized deductions allowed by come was below average last the U.S. government from your fall and winter — for instance if state tax liability. [you were an auto worker on ★ ★ ★ 'strike — you would probably be For this year’s return only better off using the three-month the state tax deduction is $300 income approach. Strike per dependent, with an extra benefits are taxable, but prob- Icomputed tax is $55 and the]does not plan to make refunds state W-2 form received from|Of under $1. held, you are not required to! *, * file. I Social Security and railroad ★ ★ ★ [retirement income is exempt However, the state inust pay Michigan tax, so if you any refund that is due, even ‘^e only income received, if it is under $5. As a policy, it,« not required. Military pay of the armed forces is not subject to tax. A member of the armed forces with no other income is not required to file a return. Husbands and wives filing a joint federal income tax return must file a joint state return and the return must be signed by both husband and wife. $300 added for those 65 or over !or blind. jNEED NOT FILE ably would be way below your average income. If the amount of state tax So if you’re a married man due, after you subtract from under 65 with two children can your bill the amount withheld leagally claim four exemptions by your employer, is no more on your federal income tax than $5, you need not file a form, you need not file a state return. For example, if your return unless your earnings for during 1967 came from wages, interest and dividends, you may use the shorter MI-1040a. This form will be discussed in the next article in this scries. If in addition, you also received taxable earnings from rents, royalties, business profits, distribute income from partnerships or fiduciaries, or Income from pensions or annuities, you mtfet use the longer form MI-1040. It will be discussed in a later article. A joint return filed by the wife of a serviceman in Vietnam need not be signed by the husband. The wife should write “serving in Vietnam” / in the space provided for her husband’s signature. 2 BASIC FORMS There are two basic Michigan income tax'forms: MI-1040 and MI-1040a. CLARENCE LOCK If your only taxable income There are two other stale income tax forms. One, MI-1040d, is used in connection with MI-1040 where the taxpayer must show gains or'losses due to disposal of property. ESTIMATED RETURNS A person whose tax is not withheld and who expects his tax bill will exceed $100, or a taxpayer who expects that he will owe $100 more than is being withheld, must file periodic estimated tax returns on form MI-1040es. m:tv ZENITH 'ZENETTE” ihii tiny, «U*k Zanith weight jutt 1 /6 ounce . . . and fitt in the ear. Powered by Zenith't miniaturized Mier»-Lithi<@ Circuit in your choice of two performance levels. For most mild and moderate loitet. Thoughtful design and precision performance. No dangling wires or tubing. Please listen to it. ■JOB e The quality goe» in before the n Pontiac Mall Optical & Hearing Aid Center 882-1113 the last quarter of 1967 came to more than $1,200 (four exemptions times $300) and you also earned more than $4,800 during all of the calendar year. ' The last quarter of 1967 (October, November and December) is important; because the new 2.6 per cent personal Micfadgan income tax did not take effect until Oct. 1. Only money received between Oct. 1 and Dec. 31 is legally liable for the tax this year. Because of this quarter-year oddity, the Revenue Department, this year only, will give !you a choice of two methods of ■computing your Michigan income tax. You may use whichever leaves you with a smaller tax bill. winter coat sale! regilvl; *18 Save ... for now and next winterl Choose singly and double breasted slim and flare styles'!h a variety of fabrics! Interesting details! Plaids* solids, novelties and more . . . in brown, blue, grey and black! Sizes 16’/2 to 26V2 and 38 to 46. Come and See PONTIAC MALL Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac wwr IIS SIMMS 'Axes’ You To Join Us in Choppinfif Prices Tomorrow Patnte 9pm WASHINGTONS B\R.THIllAy WHAM! Super Simms hits hi-prites POWIE! With the axe BAM! Chopping, chopping oil day tomorrow ZAP! All you do Is come in Thursday 9 o.m. to 9 p.m. for these Washington Birthday specials. WHOO EEE! They're, so good 'that Super Simms must reserve the right to limit oil quantities. You don't need on axe at Super Simms-all you need is a little cash . . . i very little! Main Floor CLOTHING DEPT. Odds and Ends Famous BUSTER BROWN Children’s Anklets Slight Irregulars. of better quality. Choice of white ribbed or solid 100% cotton anklets. While only in sizes 5 to 11. —Moin Floor it Assorted Rich Colors 2-Pe. Bath Mat Set these 2-pc. both Brighten up your bothi mol sets. Your choice of rich colors ond miscelloneous fibers —Main Floor Assorted Prints-Stripes—Solids 100% Cotton Yardgoods Fully washable 100% cotton yordgoods lor dresses, quilts, etc. Choice of juvenile, prints, kitchen prints, floral prints, checks and solid colors, —Main Floor n yd. Eiderlon or Rayon and Cotton Girl*’ Brief Panties Girls' panties with elastic waist , ill soft eiderlon or rayon ond cotton blend. White or pastel colors. And sizes from 4 to 16. —Main Floor SIMMS DISCOUNT BASEMENT IIVa-Cz. Blue Oenim-Irregulars Men’s Work Dui^arees Slight irregolors of $3.49 values. Work'dungo,.,.. reinforced ot points of strain. Sizes 29-30-31 and 40-42 only. Sonforized. -Basement n m [22 First Quality Sizes 8 to 18 Only Boys’Cord Pants First quality boys' cord pants, sizes 8 ond 16 in olive ond size 16 in wheal. Also rayon and cotton pants in sizes 12 ond T4, block color. —Basement [22 100% Cotton and Fully Sanforized Boys’ ^Flannel Shirts * n flonnel shirts tor boys ^ «hoX 2-F Oacron Filled-Nylon Outershell -Men’s Insulated Vests ..isolated vests to keep you worm in the coldest weather. Nylon outershell with lightweight Dacron filling. Choice of colors. Sizes S-M-L-XL. — * 2** First Quality Lintless Linen 1968 Calendar Towels There ore several different stylos to choose from, oil washable lintless linen and all cotdplote with honging bo,. -Bacement Main Floor Specialties Dept Regutars-King Size-^Fitters '.-'V Cigarettes $14.00 value, yo«r favorite brand *^©f clgoretiei, regulori, Ling$ or fillers.. New lOOmm or lOlmm size not included. Limit 4 cths Tebocco-Main Flo«r E 41101^ StM Sheets of ^Hole MOHAWK Ruled Filler Paper $1 50 value, 2-7Sc pocks ot 5 hole htler poper. Fits either 2 or 3 ring binder, limit 2 packs. With Sundries-AAem floor 2-F SIMMS CAMERA DEPT. KCOAK Model $10 Instamatic Color Camera Set Genuine Kodok Ir and 1 roll of C5126.12. be for only Comeras-Moin Floor All Weather Black 'n’ White ANSCO Snapshot Film 01$ ^ Your choice of 620 or 127 oH weather pon film. Good in sunny or doudy weather or indoor flash pictures. Regular 50c value Film —AAain Floor 22' Choice of 4 Sizes—Flip Pages Photo Albums Regular $3.50 volues. Your choice of sizes for Polor-oid pictures (3'/ix5), for Swinger, (3Vix3V'2). Holds 60 pictures. Albums—Main Floor Famous PANA-VUE 2z2 Size Lighted Slide Viewer $2.95 value. Handy lighted slide viewer for viewing all slides in 2x2 mounts. 2 ponlight batteries included. , Camoras-Moin Floor Oeveleped and Printed by KCCAK Kodacolor Color Processing Save $1.02 on this genuine Kodacolor color processing of your snapshots. 12 exposures lor only 3** Cameras —Main Floor Choice of CCLGATE or PEPSCOENT Nylon Toothbrush Regular 69c value, long wearing nylon bristle toothbrush. Your choice of Colgate or Pepsodent brond. Drugs—Main Floor 22* With Razor Band Cartridge- -New Gillette Techmatic Razer Regular $2.95 value, far smoather, claseh shaves use the Gillette Techmatic razor complete with razor band chrtridge. Drug*-Main Floor [22 Jumbo 32-Oz. Size Famous; LIsterIne Antiseptic Regular-$ir98 value, use fresh tasting Listerine antiseptic to kill germs that cause bad breath; Helps pre-vent colds, sore throats. Drugs-Main Floor [22 Large 22-Oz. Size-All New Jergens Lotien $2.00 volue, 22-OZ. size, Notionally famous Jergens lotion soothes ond smooths dry skin, leoves you toft ond coressoble. New plostic "bottle. Cosmetics —Main Floor [22 Don’t Leave Your Family Defenseless Right Guard Deodorant $2.i9 volufi, i3-oz. Dependable Right Guard deodorant in handy spray form. The one deddorant the whole family can use. Drugs-Main Floor [22 1 Main Floor Specialties Dept. | 4 Pick-Up Solid Body Flat Top Electric Guitar 4 pick-up solid body, flot top. c< ilar with ton* ai;id volume contro Sundriei-Mciin Flc 33** 2nd FLOOR SPECIALS Protect Floors and Carpeting ruivwi riuvi9 aiiu Boot & Shea Gaddy Regular $1.99 value — jumbo size caddy to hold m wet shoes and bools. Prevents trocking in ot dirt ond * mud. — 2nd Floor A Necessity in Any Tool Box 6-Ft. Folding Ruler 3 [22 For Garage-Shop-Basement 75-ln. Steel Shelving Unit For use wherever extra ment workshop or gore $7.99 seller. _ !s ore needed—i e. Easy to assemble. Regulor —2nd Floor 6** For Tea-Coffee-Sugar-Flour 4-Pc. Canister Set 6** 13-Inch Oiameter Oecorated Large Serving Tray 2i3** Steam and Dry Automatic General Electric Iron Model F60 General Electric Steam and dry iron with 7 holes to spread steam evenly. With wash and wear, settings. Factory guarantee. —2nd Floor 8** 10-Inch DuPont Teflon Coated Color Cast Frypan Heavy cast iron frypon with bonded porcelain finish outside and non-stick Teflon finish inside. Wooden handle.*Washes like china.. -2nd Floor 42* For Basement-Garage-Kitchen Dust Pan & Towel Set with printed'terrycloth in the kitchen, garage ond -2nd Floor Main Floor Specialties Dept. Ladies' or Men’s Styles BENTLEY Butane Gas Lighter ■, Cleon operoting butone goi cigorette M of ribbed design, foshion design, bosket-Tobqcco—Main Floor 3;F LEY 3** RONSON 500 Stainless Steel Cutters Men’s Electric Shaver Ronson 500 electric shaver with lloinlou steaV it shoving screen, unbreakable Lexon body, trimmer Sundriot-^Moin Floor 9** SIMMSiE. 98 N. Saginaw St.-t*ontiac Survey Shows Public Is Concerned About Taxes iB th#re • tixpayers revoU undw Do pe^le f«l taxes «re too htfh for ________________ one of concern. But, dnpite millnge defeats in Avondale and Troy earlier this week, most people felt money spent for schools is well spent, providing said funds don’t “buy frilis.” As always, taxes generally were not popular. ★ * ★ “Politicians wa.sle too much money.” said Joseph Phillips. 926 Byron, Milford. “The Schools don’t get enough. As long as they build basic schools instead of all the frills and use the money wisely, it’s okay,” said the operating engineer employed at the General Motors Proving Ground. ORGANIZATION FORMED Mrs. Leo Armstrong, 630 Bow Lane, Waterford Township, telieves, "There's a taxpayers’ rebellion on the way. In Waterford Township we’ve formed ah organization to fight higher taxes and 'Wb Have No Garbogm Pickup, Our Hoads Aro Tcrribh. I've Novor Soon A Gtavol Truck Dump Gravel On Our Hoads Yot/ Corhplains West Bloomfield Resident they’re charging $5 a membership. We’ve got a large participation,” said the woman, who along with other' Waterford Community School District residents faces a possible millage vote this spring. “Our taxes a tittle better than doubled this year,” said John Ferrett of 1651 Lakeview, Higliland Township. “I really think people are getting upset. We and a lot of our neighbors paid them under protest.” “I thought after we retired, taxes wouldn’t double,” he said. “We moved out to Highland to a three-room cottage just so we could live comfortably aftfer I reached 65,” Ferrett reported. ★ ★ ★ “I never kicked on school taxes. Education is something important,” he declared. •NEEDS MONEY' A Pontiac resident, Edward Edington of 690 Stirling, active in the Disabled American Veterans organization, thinks President Johnson’s proposed surtax Is all right. “He’s got to raise money, and he’s got to get it somewhere, ^ut I don’t think anybody but Congress can curb inflation,” he offered. Mrs. William Langdon of 5409 Sun-nycrest. West Bloomfield Township, reported, "OUr taxes went up $100. I think everybody in our whole area is ready for a tax revolt. “We have no garbage pickup. Our roads are terrible.»I’ve never seen a By JEAN SAILE INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP - A taxpayers’ organization with the avowed aim of slowing development here to a “more manageable” pace was formed last night. Robert Kraud, a salesman for Merrill, Lynch, Pierce, Fenner and Smith and a township resident, drew about 70 people to the junior high school gymnasium which he had tented for the evening. Formation of an 11-man committee to attend township governmental meetings was the immediate result. Three goals were set: • A review of membership on the Township Planning Commmission. • Repeal of the “planned unit development” or “cluster-type housing” section of the township’s new zoning ordinance which becomes effective the end of the week. • The calling of a public hearing on the Clinton-Oakland sewer project with the demand that estimated cost figures per home be made available. W ★ ★ Volunteering to serve on Fraud’s committee were Robert Hurst, Vern Fulton. Royce Hyatt. Richard Butler, Peter Stienborg. A. M. Carlsen Jr., Lawrence Morgan, Jack Eiden, George Graves and Stephen Stamas. •DECLARED WAR’ Fraud’s differences with the planning commission reportedly arose some 18 months ago when he and most of his neighbors attended a meeting to protest rezoning of their rural area (Holcomb north of 1-75) from agriculture to residential. Admitting that since that time the commission had reversed Its intention and left the land agriculture, Kraud. nevertheless contended that he and his neighbors — “75 per cent of the residents out there” — were told that in five to 10 years anyone owning more than a normal-size lot would be taxed off the land. •‘When the planners said that, they declared war on me, ” said Kraud who owns 8.5 acres at 6771 Wealthy. Regarding the “planned unit development,” Fraud said he had considered petitions asking for a referendum on the ordinance, but that since the new ordinance would be in effect until the referendum was held, he said he had decided against such action. “The damage could all be done by then.” HIS GRIPE His gripe against such a zoning category was that it would increase ,. ‘You Ain’t Seen Nothing Yet.’ population density by allowing less than normal size lots and that it would load the schools and consequently lower the standards of education in the Clarkston area. •‘The purpose of the zoning ordinance seems to me to be that of enabling developers and builders to come into the and you voters and tax- Holly Village Council Names New President HOLLY — The Village Council has named President Pro Tern Leo Oberheim as village president to fill the unexpired term of the late Clarence Lester, who died repently. Oberheim, who lives at 308 Hadley, has been a councilman since 1960, and is a member of the police, finance, personnel and parks and recreation committees of the council. The new president appointed Fred Dis-brow, 209 First, a former councilman, to fill his vacancy on the council. WOLVERINE LAKE - Another attempt to change the boundaries and status of this small village is faced with an obstacle. Petitions proposing incorporation of the village and six square miles of Commerce Township have been declared invalid by the boundaries committee of the Oakland County Board o f Supervisors. Making the petitions invalid is the absence of words stating speciBcatly that the area considered for incorporation comprises at least 2,000 persons and at least 500 people to the square mile. The area does, in fact, contain the required population, said Clifford Cottrell, village administrator and head of a village citizens committee pushing cityhood. * ★ ★ The opinion of invalidity came from gravel tru<^ dump gravel on our roads yer," alie said. 'ROLL BACK PRICES’ William A. Goodfellow who rents at 5516 Brunswick, Waterford Township, and is a^ Pontiac Mall security guard, thinks it would be a good idea if prices were rolled back to .the July 1967 rate and a ceiling slapped on them. Worried about inflation, he reported that having recently moved from the Upper peninsula he is coming around to the opinion that he was better off up there. ••There whsn’t so much money, but Petitions Seeking Incorporation of Wolverine Lake Ruled Invalid Request Tabled in White Lake Trailer Park Rezoning Hit WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP - Some 25 residents argued against rezoning for the area’s fifth trailer park at last night’s Township Board meeting. * * ★ Before the large audience of 75, the board tabled the rezoning request on a technicality. The owner of the parcel — not a township residerit — hadn’t signed the rezoning appplication, reported Township Supervisor James Reid. It is uncertain whether the request will have to be returned to the township pi—wlug commissioB or the board, once thesii^attire is obtained, said Reid. The opinion of the township attorney is bein« sought. * ★ w Board members did not comment either for or against the trailer park rezoning, said Reid. While Reid refused to give his own opinion, he mentioned that the township master plan designates the parcel in question for future commercial and civic building use. WANTS REPORT He added that before his decision i^ made, he would like to hav^ an engineer’s report on the terrain and soil conditions of the land. Some areas are marshy, he added. Trailer park developers Sam Bravermaau and Leon Cherniak of Southfield and their attorney appeared at last night’s meeting to speak on the advantages of trailer parks and to answer resident’s questions. Plans are for 400 trailers on about 90 acres north of M59 and west of Teg-gerdine. The developers said that they would spend $1 million on the park. there Weren’t so many expenses either,” GbodfelloW said. * ^lr * Mrs. William Snider, 3241 Grange Hall, Groveland Township, the wife of a Seventh-day Adventist minister, reported, '‘My husband thinks we pay high enough taxes, but we don’t want state money either. •NO LONGER FREE’ “Our children go to private schools and it costs us $60 a month. Once you get state aid though, private schools are then no longer free to do what they want,” she said. Unhappy with Oakland County road conditions, she reported, •’Our roads get better as soon m you Come to the Genesee County line.” Mr and Mrs. Robert Evans of 2619 Woodbine, Waterford Township, were viewing the travel display at the Pontiac Mall when approached. “I think President Johnson s proposed tax on travel is too bad,” said Evans. ★ ★ ★ All in favor of the portending Waterford schools vote, the partially retired couple hope it passes. “We have grandchildren being educated and I think they’re getting their money’s worth as compared to when our children were educated. “Taxes were high 20 years ago, but they weren’t as high as they are today,” said Mrs. Evans. ‘ THE PONTIAC PRESS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY" 21, 19«8 A—4 T axpayers Form Group in Independence Twp. payers are required (by this ordinance) to help them,” said Ecaud. He referred to development ,of the Ford property around Deer Lake which has been proposed for planned unit development. Regarding the sewers proposed in the township, Fraud asked why after 10 years and on the eve of “the biggest engineering project the township has faced” did the township board hire new engineers. NO ANSWERS Johnson and Anderson of Waterford Township recently replaced the local Kieft Engineering firm as township engineers. The Waterford firm was aiso employed about a year ago to do the engineering on the sewers. “I don’t know the answers,” Kraud said, “but if you don’t take action now to learn, you ain’t seen nothing yet.” He cited estimated costs in various communities for such services which ranged as high as $3,500 per lot for water and sewer service — a figure reportedly quoted by Johnson and Anderson in Avon Township. “We have a fantastic advantage. This community is now at a crossroads,” said Kraud. “We wiil grow, but what we will become in five or 10 years is the question.” Artist's Conception Of Building Planned For troy Downtown Area Troy Rezones for High-Rise 'Downtown' County Corporation Counsel Robert P. Allen, who recommended denial of the petitions. The decision of the boundaries committee goes to the supervisors board as a recommendation. BOOK CLOSED Also at the recent boundaries committee meeting, the book was officialiy closed on Walled Lake’s annexation efforts. One annexation petition regarding about one square mile in the north part of the village was under study on a question of its contiguity to Walled Lake. The committee has declared this petition invalid and will recommend such to the supervisors board. , ★ ★ * This action followed the opinion of corporation counsel who said the village area wasn’t Contiguous to Walled Lake. TROY ~ This city will soon have its own high-rise ’‘downtown” section. The City Commission recently approved the rezoning of 3.6 acres, near Crooks and Big Beaver from Sinpe-family residential and freeway service to office building. The zoning change provided sufficient acreage for the first building, a six-story office building planned by Berry and Sey-burn, a real estate firm. The architectural firm of Straub, Van Dine and Brown is handling planning for the Crooks-Big Beaver area, long regarded by Troy officials as the city’s logical downtown. ★ ★ ★ Besides being adjacent to the 87-acre civic center, the area is near an entrance and exit to the 1-75 freeway. According to architect Frank Straub, a development with both high- and low-rise buildings, offering a wide variety of rental spaces, is planned. Plans also provide for a number of, pocket parks, or “parklets,” to be situated in spaces created by the folding in or out of building exterior walls. The object would be the construction of a downtown area which would combine business district accommodations and services with a suburban atmosphere, Straub said. * * * In keeping with that aim, he added, automobile parking areas, while adjacent to office buildings, would be relatively small and would be separated by walks, planting or a building structure. •‘Rather than culminating in a series of individual, separate buildings, each inevitably surrounded by its own sea of parking, we have devised an arrangement which allocates the land to building, to parking, and to parklike planted areas, so that, from all viewpoints, the desirable qualities of each are maximized and the u n desirable minimized,” Straub concluded. Lapeer to Air Acceptance of Detroit Water Contract W. BI(Domfiel LAST WORD The Township Board has the last word on the rezoning. The request was recommended for denial by the township planning commisSiwi and the Oakland County Coordinating and Zoning Com-misson. The .board also accepted for the police department the donation of two portable hydraulic jacks valued at more than $100 each. The donor was Robert Perkins of Arrowswift Construction Co. here. The portable jacks are used for such purposes as prying doors apart. WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -Official praise is in the offing for three firemen fiere who helped rescue young Michael Sievers from his burning home Thursday. The 3-year-old, son of Judith Sievers who lived at 2846 Beland, Keego Harbor, died of third-degree bums Friday at the University of Michigan bum center. Fireman Roscoe Hunt, 38, repWtedly brought Michael out of the home seconds after an explosion momentarily killed flames. The other two firemen to be specially cited are Chief Mel Jwitz and Bernard Fante, who were injured in their attempts to enter the house. ♦ ★ * The honor directed to the entire fire departmmt is expe<^ed in the form of a resolution to come before the Township Board at its meeting tonight at 8. UP FOR APPROVAL Up for board approval are the final plats ftw Bloomfield on the Lake West No. 1 and 2 and Pine Hill ViUage No. I. and 2. The board will be receiving a letter frwn residents of Hills of the Powder Horn. The letter asks why Apple Ridge Trail hasn’t been extended according to previous plans; If* * * * The residents explain tiiat the extension will make getting their mail at the corner of Middle Belt and Walnut Lake roads easier. LAPEER — The City Commission will discuss whether to accept a new contract offered by the Detroit Water Department at a special meeting March 7. The meeting was scheduled at the request of City Manager Arnold Whitney, who said he wants to explain unfavorable aspects of the contract to the commission. Whitney has met several times with Detroit Water Department representatives in an effort to have some parts of the contract modified, he said. The department, after considerable discussion, agreed to revise the contract, Whitney said. However, the new pact offered still does not contain many provisions which he requested. ★ ★ ★ For one thing, the department insists on a 35-year unbreakable contract which could be terminated at the end of that time in one year, the city manager said, adding, that by that time it would take Lapeer three years to construct sufficient water facilities itself. ASKS FOR NOTICE Whitney also asked for six months notice of rate increases, but the revised, contract only provides for 90 days, he said. A third point of disagreement is the use of Lapeer’s wells as an emergency standby supply^ The new pact specifies that such an arrangement could only be made with written permission from the The department also refused to grant permission for the city to open service to neighboring Lapeer, Mayfield, Oregon and Elba‘townships whenever the city wished. ★ ★ ★ The department, Whitney said, would only agree on the condition that the city pay a higher rate now, even though ex- , pension might not take place for another 20. years. Sex Education Talk Set for PTA Program “Sex Education pnid Human iSexuality” wfil be the topic for the Avondale Area PTA Council’s Founders’ Day program at B p,m. tomorrow at Avon^le Senior High School cafeteria. # * ★ Dr. Armin Grams, director of the human development program at the Merrill-Palmer Institute for Human Development and Family Life, Detroit, will be the guest speaker. 2nd Zoning Law, Map Hearing Set ORION TOWNSHIP - The second public hearing or “a continuance of the first” on the township’s proposed new zoning ordinance and map will be conducted at 8 p.m. tomorrow at the Lake Orion High School cafeteria. Richard Beer, chairman of the township planning commission, said no formal action on the ordinance is expected by his group until its next formal meeting March 6. If the township planning commission approves the new ordinance and map, it wm then go to the C^ty CootdinaUon Zoning and Planning Crtnmittee for review and back to the Township Board for final action. . Voter Deadline Friday jn W. Bloomfield Twp. WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -Friday is the deadline for registering to vote in the township millage eleclian March 25. "nie" Township HaU at 4460 Orchard Lake will be open from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Friday The ballot March 25 will propose a 1-mill renewal and a 3^niII increase in property taxes for a'five-year period. -irM/V //./■ THE I’ONTIAC I’UKSS. WEDNESDAY. I'Eimi AlJV 21. T.MiS A~!i ^:v An<) Battalion Chqplain Dies ^ Soldier Earns 4th Purple Heart By ALV^ B. WEBB JR. jSgt. Bob Thi)ifmi got his fourthlcorporal got killed, HUE, Vietnam (UPI) — S.lPurple Heart. A ^ COMETlTTC^Yr Time to CHOP DOWN Your bullet little lance [shredding the Purple Heart citation in his pocket and plunging into his chest. The Battalion chaplain was shot in! the head. I INCOME TAX Cefting your income tax figured con be, 0 wonderful, Woshing-ton's Birthdoy presertt. Take it-to BLOCK. They'll make sure you get every legitimote deduction. See the office m your neighborhood today. BOTH FEDERAL AND STATE fflS ‘5. America's largest Tbx Service with Over 2000 Offices [ 20 E. HURON PONTIAC I 4410 DIXIE HWY. DRAYTON PLAINS 1 Weekdays: 9-9 - Sat. and Sun. 9-5 - FE 4-9225 10 APPOINTMENT NECESSARY ■ Related Story, Page E-6 Pictures, Page E-14 | The Marine battalion began the drive up ‘ one block of “Rocket Alley” led by five tanks. We had one left at the end of the block. The sergeant Is alerting Delta Company for action. The battle for this block began with the explosion of a Communist B40 rocket. The rocket hit a truck full of Marines. A Leatherneck jumped out and tried to push the truck. Shrapnel tore his face but still he pushed. “Grenades!” someone yells. The Marines Scramble for cover. ★ ★ ★ The pusher did not make It. He died, knelling. Sgt. Thomm, 23j of Baton Rouge, La., has his men charging over a broken wall. SERGEANT IS TARGET Up ahead, about 25 yards, a North Vietnamese soldier leaps from the rubble and starts firing at Thomm. The sergeant already has three Purple Hearts, bnough for a guaranteed trip home. Thomm picks off the Communist with hts M16. A bit of shrapnel nicks the sergeant good for his fourth Purple “ rt. One too many, says Your Dollars Go Further at Sears SAVE 20% J Decorator Vanities SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO. SALEI From our regular stock! 5.^9-9.99 Gol^lroom 'n Duets are stylish spring steppers 3.94 Step out in style at a price to fit your budgetl Mid-heels, mini-heels, flatties m leather, patent, some suede. Brown, red, ton, green, block. Sizes for all in group but not every size in every style or color. “HeH, we don’t seem to have many staff sergeants left around. Guess I’ll stay abound,” he said. Thomm grinDeda ★ ★ ★ . “Okay, saddle up!” he yells to Delta Company. “We’re moving out.” DIVE FOR COVER A wild dive into a shallow hole puts me behind a Aeet of tin riddled with bullet Holes. I peep up and see Lance Cpl. Selwyn Tate, 20, of New York City and 1 think he looks like John Wayne in a war movie. Tate had taken an AK47 automatic rifle from a North Vietnamese soldier 24 hours ago and now he had a chance to fire it. Tate stood up. He fired all the AK47 rounds he had. Then he began tossing grenades — one, two, three, all of them landing up on the high wall in front. ★ ★ ★ 'Grenades! I need more grenades!” Tate yelled. He began scrambling un the ter|*aceS toward the top of the wall, past the shack “hootches” the social dropouts of prebattle Hue had built. FRONT-MOST UNIT 'We are now in the foremost (furthest advanced) unit in the battalion,” someone yells from behind. And then it is over. The Communists have fallen back to fight for another block. There lay the body of the young corporal. A friend gathered the pieces of the Purple Heart citation the youngster had received the day before. I went, looking for chaplain Eli Thaesian of Methuen, Mass. ★ ★ ★ He had gone hunting for the battalion’s chief chaplain, a great happy Irish Catholic priest and found him dead, shot in the head. OREN 10 A.M. TO * P.M. (S-t. »:30-P) Drfyten OM" Sv"4«y Noon »• 6 p.m. (Downtown closes Tues., Wed. at 6 p.m.) downtown and .DRAYTON PLAINS 'The only state in the U.S. named for its founder is Pennsylvania. /mYrmmiiiiiiMA* ............. • PONTIACS OHV( Complete DRAPERY FINISH Uft/ixi-Tonje/ PROCESSING Ultra-Tone Profettional Care ProtecU Your Drapery Invettment We are proud lo be Pontiac’s, first cleaner qualified to recommend and offer Ultra-Tone — The finest drapery care the textile maintenance industry can provide., ■ , *Vtirm-Teme pr*ci • e»ii. Ii ptrmilp ^line •cenney. »»»« nHTecKHS "•n®'' ' • hfMiMU 4npcri«>. ; m Oakland Avanue t.l 9 9 9 AAimJUUtJLUAAAAAA Fashion Storage to Enhance Your Bath 25’S Reg. M14 91*« Installation Available This vanity will add style to any bath. You get ample storage for towels, cosmetics and toiletries in a beautifully fiirished cabinet. Smooth marbella top, with the look and feel of marble, resists scratches and moisture. Vitreous china wash bowl included. New, reinforced door construction provides rigid, unmatched durability. Antique white in classic style. Choice of faucet extra. Sale! 41" Decorator Vanity, >1 Stl Reg. 5189........ ....................;Now! 20%on other vanities, toilets, washbasins and tubs. Seors Plumbing ond Heating Dept. NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Home Modernization Credit Plan or Use Your Convenient Sears Charge! Tempered Glass Tub Enclosure r;ii *39 Fits Mandard 5' tub. Anodiaed aliiminuni framr, sliding door convenience! Complete with two towel bars. Ref. 6.95 Higli-yloss marldeixed pattern, really easy Jo clean. Rustproof plastic hinpe. bits standard toilets. 6 colors. Sale! 2-Piece Sculptura Toilet «Rs(. Q195 39.95 elJl Finest vitreous china with a glass-bonded finish that won’l stain, pit or scratch. In Color, Rog. 49.95.39.95 Lighted Decorator Medicine Cabinet 43»» Antique while frame has matching lamp bases with gracefully curved frosted glass shades. 1-pc. steel cabinet. Sears Aluminum is a Beautiful Wall of Protection Save 15% on Installed Aluminum Siding Reg. $710 603»» Installed on Average 24x30' One-Story Home Without Gables, Less Trim. In White, 7 Colors. It’s beautiful, durable and ends the need for frequent repainting - it really lets you take it easy on maintenance . . . and it’s installed. Helps reduce your fuel bills in winter; keeps your home cooler in summer. Charcoal, blue, pink, yellow, browns, yellow, green, white. Installed Aluminum Guttering e finish is actually bonded to "■ OQ ,i,c si.^i.s by bakiniu SeamloM except at ■ corners. Brown, Oroon, Charcoal................141 Ha. ft. Saars, Roebuck and Co. ____ 154 N. Saginaw - Pontiac, Michigan 4NS9 □ Patio Covers □ Doors □ Windows .City.. Fiherglas® Instant Attic Insulation.........------3.69 covers 50 sq. 14x47” DuPont® Nylon Shutters. Vhite or black----------- . . . ( Other Shutter Siaes Avadable ” j Zip............................................... I Pontiac FE 4-2579 ULJUUUUULI3.9.U.9.9.9.9.9 9 91 f 9 9 9IXJ Open Monday, Thnraday, Priiiay, Saturday 9 lo 9, Tueaday, Wednoyday 9 to S:S0 Sears! Downtown Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171 WAHS, SOEBUCK AND CO. THE PONTIAC PRESS M West Hutm Street Pontiac, Michigan 48056 SSU; WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY'21. 1968 »>«r4 es.&^ M« Mter O. Mauhau Jqbban tool AdvfrtUIng M«tit|«r Will He Upset Eleetion Apple Cart? Although few give former Alabama Governor George Wallage, running as a third party candidate, a Chinaman's chance to be| elected president ini November, the can-r didate might well I throw a wrench into I the machinery of I the Country’s two-F party presidential! election machinery. P For it is not be-| yond the realm ofi possibility that his WALLACE American Independent Party could win a total of 47 electoral votes from a bloc of seven southern states. Were this to eventuate, Wallace could conceivably preclude either major candidate’s garnering a majority of the 538 Electoral College votes needed for election. ★ ★ ★ Thus the Southerner would be In a position to swing his electoral vote total to either the Republican or Democratic contend- er during the month between the presidential election in early November and the decisive vote canvass of the Electoral College a month later. Or, should Wallace elect to sit tight with his electoral winnings, thereby ruling nut a majority for either of his opponents, his action— or inaction—could throw the issue into the House of Representatives where each state would have one vote in namirtg the next President of the United States. While a presidential election has not been thus decided for 144 years, the possibility of it again points up ‘ the anachronistic status of the Electoral College. Frequently, proposals have been heard in Congress to eliminate the hoary institution or amend it in conformity with modern elective patterns. ★ ★ ★ Perhaps the upcoming election will prove the stimulous productive of such long-needed reform. France Bent on Biting Hand That Feeds It The French government seems intent on sabotaging that country’s tourist industry. Effective Feb. 1. persons paying fof French products with foreign currency or travelers checks will no longer receive an automatic 20 per cent discount. The discount system, initiated after World War II, was designed to encourage purchases by tourists and thereby to swell France’s then-meager foreign currency reserves. In practice, the discounts mainly benefited foreign residents of France and those Frenchmen lucky or resourceful enough to acquire foreign currency. The system thus operated primarily as a tax dodge and it is being discontinued for that reason. ★ ★ ★ President de Gaulle’s anti-American, anti-British, anti-Canadian and anti-Israeli attitude may or not have been sound foreign policy, but it certainly is poor public relations. Some American retailers who ordinarily sell French imports have curtailed or canceled their orders. I^rancois Gluck, assistant manager of a Paris travel service, expects that 20 per cent fewer Americans will visit France in 1968 than did in 1967. His gloomy forecast was made prior to President Johnson’s tax proposals to curtail European travel by Americans. Actually, the French tourist industry has been in trouble for some time. The number of Americans visiting Nice last July, according to French statistics, was more than one-third below the 1966 total. ★ ★ ★ French anti-Americanism is only partially responsible for the decline. Of at least equal importance are poor service and high prices—two tourist attractions that Americans can find easily enough in the United States. Women Cut a Figure in Makeup of Work Force Today one of every three workers is a woman, and one-sixth of these women hold executive-type positions. ★ ★ ★ Of an estimated 26 million employed women (well over a third of the total U.S. work force), the U S. Department of Labor reports that over 4.5 million are “professional and technical workers, managers, officials and proprietors.” Workingwomen’s annual earnings are estimated at $81 billion, making up more than one-fourth of the Nation’s wage, salary and self-employment income. V'erily, the hand that rocks the cradle also, in increasing numbers, reaches for the pay check. Union Favor Backfires for Rocky MOLEY By RAYMOND MOLEY In New York City the garbage has vanished, the rats and the roaches are hungry again and the tempers of the citizen-sufferers are mea-s u r a b ] y cooled. But the fragrance of the Rockefeller-Lindsay struggle 1 i n-gers on. And the political impact upon the governors presidential visions— if indeed any such visSons remain—are left to the political seers and philosophers. When Nelson Rockefeller entered politics 10 years ago the political unions and their bosses were riding high. The Democratic Party practically lived upon the money and skills of the union - organized (Jommitlee on Political Education to gain congressional majorities and legislative control in the slates. Cultivation of the favor ol the unions became a fixed Kockefeiier passion ' \ * * * Those interests, especially In New York City, became firm Rockefeller allies. And in 1966 his smallish majority was no doubt due to their help. LABOR FRIENDS John DeLury of the Sanitation Workers Union was a Rockefeller friend and ally. And so was Van Arsdale of the New York labor council. That was the background for his intervention on the side of the garbage workers’ union which resulted in a general public repudiation of the governor. F'or the public and, as it proved, the people’s representatives in Albany had decided that union blackmail had gone far enough. * ★ * Rockefeller had brushed aside a law sponsored and signed by him. a law which DeLury and his union had \iolaled, and sided with them against an elected mayor. The reaction against Rockefeller is now visible to the whole nation. DECUNING POWER Rockefeller has not realized. perhaps until too late, that in 10 years the power and prestige of the political unions Outdoing Mr. Hyde David Lqwrence Says: Pueblo Crew ‘Ransom’ Possible have vastly declined nationally. They have reached too far and demanded too much. The failure to recognize this change led Rockefeller to support George Romney whose victories were due less to his virtues than to the decline of Walter Reuther’s machine in Michigan’s politics. That was Rockefeller’s £jrst mistake. The second and crowning one was made this month in New York. * ♦ * The weakness of the draft-Rockefeller movement will now become evident. And the odds against the nomination of Rockefeller must o f necessity rise. For those Republican members o f Congress who recently rated him most likely to beat LBJ will no doubt have second thoughts. And if, by some weird chance, Rockefeller should get the nomination despite the roadblocks of Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan and Barry Goldwater, he will find that the big national unions^are in the custody of President Johnson. They have nowhere else to go. WASHINGTON-The United States government , is against a challenging complex problem in trying to obtain the release of the 8 2 surviving crewmen of the U.S. Navy ship Pueblo w h 01 were seized by the North reans. LAWRENCE The question is how to get the men back without resuming the war in Korea and involving this country in a large military operation while engaged in the Vietnam war. T he Soviet government, through Premier Kosygin, emphasized last week that it would try to keep the Pueblo episode from escalating into a war, but in Moscow this week the counsellor of the North Korean embassy told a news conference that the crewmen would be punished. This is taken to mean that the men may be indefinitely imprisoned and not harmed. The United States will continue to exert pressure for their release. ' It begins to look as if there may be some bargaining. Perhaps “ransom” deals may be made, such as have been worked out with the Communists from time tp time during the last 17 years. ASSETS ‘UNFROZEN’ Thus, in April 1951, Robert Vogeler, an American businessman who had been imprisoned i n Communist Hungary, was freed after the United States agreed to “unfreeze” some of the assets of Hungary in West Germany and to permit Hungarian consulates in the United States to reopen. In December of the same year, four American fliers, who had been forced down in Hungary, were released after the United States paid a cash ransom of $123,000 in ‘fines.” Another incident occurred kind of technique. In 1962, for instance, it traded Gary Powers —■ the American U2 pilot who had been shot down over the Soviet Union and given 10 years in prison — for Col. Rudolf Abel, a master Deals of this kind are not unusual in the Orient. Distasteful as the process may be to Americans, the Communists probably will insist upon some sort of payment or concession spy for the Comiiiunlsts who ^leasing the officers was serving a 30-year sen- and crew of the Pueblo, tence In the United States. Bob Considine Says: It’s Taxing Job to Figure Taxes on Foreign Travel NEW YORK-“The mechanics of the expenditures tax would be relatively simple,” Treasury Secretary Henry H. Fowler said, explaining the new proposed taxes on foreign travel to the House Ways and Means C o m-mittee. P r o b a bly would be simple, if you CONSIDINE were Einstein. Or a computer. Here are a few simple mechanics detailed in a 22-page Treasury handout that accompanied Fowler’s 46-page statement to Congress: “Amounts paid for food and services (where no separate charge is made), and seating or sleeping accommodations, during the period transportation is subject to the 5 per cent tax rate shall also be taxed at the lower 5 per cent rate. “Thus, if a United States person takes a 30-day cruise which makes no stops within the Western Hemisphere and which makes its first stop outside the Western Hemisphere of more than 12 hours on the fifth day and makes the last such stop on the 25th day, one-third of the cruise fare plus any separate charge the regular expenditure tax rate.” The British have a much less complicated system of keeping their people home. The British say, “Sure, go anywhere you wish to visit-hut just don’t take any money with you.” The Russians have the best system of all to keep their people captive. No gobbledy-gook, no beating aroujnd the bush, no “howevers.” The man at the desk simply sqys, “nyet.” ★ ★ ★ What happens to the nice old lady in the tennis shoes who is all set to go off on one of those llO-down and $10-a-week - for three - years -tours? Will Uncle Sam take $10 down on his blankety-blank tax? Nyet. Voice of the People: Jr. High Student Submits View on Racial Problem I am a young person who has listen^ to ^he racial problems in our country. Why slio , mind schools being integrated Exchange In my school we are having a jfu Program where we exchange a few stud . another school for the purpose of better relation and the exchanging of ideas. We are go ^ change with an all Negro school and already °ur sponsor has been getting remarks from th saying that he is just asking for trouble, et ., it was the students’ idea. ★ ★ ★ u- k Have the adults been able to solve this proD-lem of civil rights? I ask, for the nations sake, please let us try to do what we can to solve it ana don’t pass your hates onto us. JOHN FOSS PIERCE JUNIOR HIGH, WATERFORD Local Post Chaplain Is Proud Legionnaire Due to the past raid on our Legion Post, there has been a lot of talk about us. I am proud to be a Legionnaire and prou to be a member of Post 377. At times I have been disgusted with people who don’t understand our cause and what we ao for the needy. What disgusts me most is the fact that mere are people in the Legion who purposely cause harm to us. JAMES R. PILLOW , CHAPLIN OF POST 377 Opposes Legalized Betting for Our Slate I hope dog racing is not to become a Tnain attraction for Michigan. If Representative Law is so interested in looking into the matter of revenue for our State, why does he leave the legislature while it is in session and why does he travel at State expense? Let’s use what we have — beautiful lakes and country — as a major tourist attraction. ★ ★ ★ I don’t think legalized betting for Michigan is the only answer. Sanctioned dog racing may well be the wedge in^the door that is to be flung open to gambling houses, numbers rackets and prostitution. * ★ * I ask that we give the Law Plan serious scrutiny, bearing in mind that what problems we have could be worsened by such a plan. Let’s be constructive in our efforts to make Pontiac and Michigan an attractive place for others and for ourselves. J. W. BRINEY JR. 62 E. mOQUOlS Comments on Gov. Romney's Tax Reform In a speech in Nebraska, Roihney said “It's time to give the government back to the people.” Too bad he didn’t think of that when he pushed his tax reform through. One thing he did that I like, he showed us we don’t need two men in the governor’s office. Maybe that would be true all the way in CLARENCE ABRAHAMSON 2308 ALLEN, ORTONVILLE Question and Answer Is it true Pontiac Motor was granted a reduction of many millions of dollars in their property assessment? Was this after Romney was elected and what was the reason given? M. L. REPLY We talked with Mr. Finney at Pontiac Motor Division, and he felt the answer should come from the tax people. Mr. Kephart, City Assessor, says the assessment reduction in 1963 was made after an appeal on the depreciation schedule of Pontiac Motor’s personal property statement. The City and the Division did not agree on the matter, so it was referred to the Board of Review of the State Tax Commission, which ruled in favor of Pontiac Motor. We talked with Mr. Kane, Secretary of the Commission, who was not familiar with details of the case, and tater wrote informing us that all 1963 files have been destroyed in accordance with the records disposal system established by the State of Michigan at the time the Records Center was inaugurated in 1952. Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Great Loss The Grcmd Rapids Press w i i m for sleeping accommodations May 1^, when William ^ ^ Oahs, an American newsman transportation tax (if paid for in the United States) or the who had been jailed for two years in Czechoslovakia, was freed after the United States 0xpenditure tax. government agreed to lift ^ ^ trade bans which had cost the Czechs $20 million in exports to this country. From 1950 to 1954, the Chinese Communists were paid more than $10 million in money and property tor the release of American businessmen who had been jailed or had been refused exit visas. Subsequently, 11 American airmen were imprisoned in Red China. Out of our efforts to obtain their release, a formula was developed whereby more than 5 0 Americans held in China were to be freed while the United States returned a few Chinese “students,” and some Communist assets “frozen” in other lands were to be released. Moscow has used the s “The remaining two-thirds of the cruise fare and separate sleeping accommodations charge and any additional expenditures (such as for sight-seeing or fbod) not covered by the basic fare will bCr subject to.the expenditure tax at the regular rates. , COMPUCATED SYSTEM “As another example, if an iildividual flies from New York to Paris and, after a scheduled two-hour stopover, continues to Rome, the entire cost of the transportation from New York to ’Rome would be taxed at 5 per cent. “However, if his stopover in Paris is scheduled for longer than 12 hours, only the cost of the t^ansportatioii from New York to Paris is taxed at 5 per cent and the remainder would be taxed at It is easy to believe that President Johnson meant it when he said that it wqs “with deep regret” that he accepted the resignation of John W. Gardner as secretary of health, education and welfare. Gardner was one of the cabinet’s most distinguished members, a man who has been above the political battles and whose intelligence and integrity were heralded by men of all political faiths. That he was the best secretary HEW has had is beyond dispute. Since he obviously has not wanted to make things any more difficult than‘necessary for Mr. Johnson, Gardner has denied that his views on Vietnam — they are opposed to the President’s — or the adverse effect the war has had on HEW’s budget influenced his decision to resign. But official Washington believes otherwise. ^ The obvious reason why Gardner has quit is that he no longer felt he could do adequately the job for which he was l^ed. , He may feel also that if he returns to his regular positioa as head flie Carnegie Cor-jwratioB foandafkn he will be aUe to work mim effectively for peace. Tlie loss ctf J(4m Gardner will be felt keenly In an‘ administration that already has seen some of its best men depart — and from which others soon Will be leaving. Embarrassed... The Portland Oregonian Gov. Nelson Rockefeller’s response to the decision of a bipartisan state board in Wisconsin to file his name in GOP presidential preference primary was that it caused him “embarrassment” and he will withdraw by affidavit. The same response may be expeetki if Oregon’s secretary of state files Rockefeller’s name in the Oregon primary as a Verbal Orchids Mr. and Mrs. Seymour Arnold ofHdiy; 62nd wedding anniversary. Bert D. Wood ^ of Franklin; 89th birthday. Julius Merz of Waterford Township; 83rdbirMay. Mrs. Phoebe Riley , of HoHy, formerly of Pontiac; 80th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. George E. Dietrich of 271 Preston; , 51st wedding anniversary. generally advo cated presidential candidate, which he is. The affidavits of withdrawal or disclaimer are similar, stating that he is not a candidate for president and does not intend to become a candidate. * ★ * The question is: If Gov. Romney, who Gov! Rockefeller supports, falters in the battle of the primaries and withdraws, would Gov. Rockefeller feel “embarrassment” on repudiating his affidavits and becoming, at the national convention, a full - fledged campaigner for the nomination? Well, not really. The flexibility of political declarations IS well understood and part of the game. Anyone can be “drafted,” either spontaneously or with connivance of the draftee although it is best to have it look like a draft rathet than a conspiracy. •or a o in OakI ‘tooamlfc Upir ^ CawiHa* jcrytijr wjar-^ Navy Reveals Missile Plans Sea-Based Intercept! System Considered \JIASHlNGtON (UPI) - Thei N^vy has disclosed it is considering deployment of sea- j based defensive missiles to complement the nation’s “thin”, antimissile system. Navy Secretary Paul R.; Ignatius told the Senate Armed' Service Committee yesterday | that such a system not onlyj would provide early warning of i missile attacks, but could shoot down tnultiwarhead weapons before they could let fly at targets. Ignatius testified on the N»vy’s $23-biilion budget, aiong with Adm. Tbomas H. Moorer, chief of naval operations, and| the Marine Corps commandant,; Gen. Leonard F. Chgpman Jr. The witnesses also told the committee that Navy officials are studying 'possible development of an intercontinental ballistic missile with an even longer range than the muitiwarhead Poseidon, which | soon will replace the Polaris on most of the nation’s 41 missilepacking nuclear submarines. * * * ^ The Poiseidon’s range is classified, but is reported to exceed the range of about 2,800 miles. SURFACE SHIPS Moorer also raised the possibility that some surface ships might be armed with either the Poseidon or a longer-range missile. ★ ★ * “On the defensive side,” Moorer said, “we are looking at a very-promising sea-baser tiballistic-missile intercept system which would be capable of contributing to a defense-indepth of the United States.” 'Bugging' Bill Is Introduced in State House LANSING W - A bill to authorize electronic eavesdropping by law enforcement officers, under restricted conditions and with the approval of a judge, was introduce in the House Tuesday. The bill, sponsored by Rep. Hal Ziegler, R-Jacksori, follows recommendations made by Gov.' George Romney’s crimei' commission. ★ It would allow a circuit or appeals court judge to issue an “eavesdropping warrant” oh application of a prosecutor or the state attorney general. ' The application would have to show probable cause to Iwlieve that a crime is involved, and that necessary evidence could be gained by eavesdropping and not by more conventional methods. COURt BAN Evidence gained by wiretaps and other “bugging” operations has been barred from Michigan courts, but the governor’s commission said recent ,U.^. , Supreme’GOurt decisions appear to legalize a well-safeguarded proc^ure Involving court war- /IHE PONTIAC PHESS. WEDNESDAY. FKBRIIARV 21, 1068 A—7 rants. * >AIHf ST0nt< I AU VICTOR PAINT STORES CARRY A I COMPLETE LINE OF MARY CARTER PAINTS PRE-PASTED WALLPAPER PER ROLL 158 N. Saginaw St. Naxl to Saart tologlieno 338-6544 906 Wait Huron al TeNUMth M ,. Toiaphono 838-3738 OPEN 10 A.M. TO,9 P.M. (Sat. 9:30-9) Drayton opan Sunday Noon to IS p.m. (Boumiown ehnt Tim, Wti, at 6 pjiU downtown and DRAYTON PLAINS THK PONTIAC PRKSS. WEDNKSDAV. FP^BRUARY 21, 1968 ^ i ^ . i Oil Under Gulf Quick R«fl«f from I ft* Geologists estimate that 18 rllO IrrifOtlOn Million barrels of oil may lie be- INCOME TAX 4» vwr» .BO» Buii»io droMisi c.r«»(M neath shallow Gulf of Mexico ooln*m«it to rUtave ItcMttB .no «m.rl- 1 4 waters along the mineral-rich. irm v>r^J ^ acrott the m«Mno pAntinAnliil Prfv4iir*linn l«l _ Continental Shelf. Production is more than 400,000 barrels ....................... ''""^aday. | ^ Parti Availabla) WITH USELESS JUHK CARS Ni|hMt PrisM Paid - We Piek Up FE 2-0200 PONTIAC SCRAP________135 Branch 1 SCOTT CX ^ AtHI 1 BONTIAC MAU g mtClIAPH , S;3I A.M. to II P.M. SalurdByt I S.M. !• I P.M. ----------P.M. IB I P.M. TUXEDO DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Offers FREE PARKING M TIE COURTHOUSE LOT (eOHf. SUMJIW Md HUWM) Fumithed by the Following MerchunU: ARTHUR’S 48 N; Soflinaw St. OSMUNt MEN’S WEAR SIN. Saginaw Sk, BOBETTE SHOP 16 N. Saginaw St. 0000 HOUSEKEEPING SHOP 51 Huron St. CONE’S CLOTHES 73 N. Saginaw THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 W. Huron St. Pro-LBJ Democrat Wins in NY RENTALS NEW YORK (AP) - Bertratn: L. Podell, a pro-Johnson Demp-jcrat, defeated Melvin Dubin, an avowed peace candidate, and two o^ers Tuesday night in a special election for Congress that was fought over the Vietnam war issue. Assemblyman Podell, a self-described “100 per cent” supporter of President Johnson, ran [about 4 to 3 overjparty maverick Dubin in the Brooklyn contest' Dubin, 44, backed the presidential campaign of Minnesota .‘•.f w Eugene J. McCarthy, who is challengiing J.ohnson for the party nominatoin. McCarthy made one campaign appearance on Dublin’s behalf. Stanley Steingut, leader of the Brooklyn Democratic organization which backed Podell, viewed the win as “a great vic-| tory for President Johnson.. .1 A reform Dem^rat, Dubin ran as an independent. He said he would not fight In Vietnam if he were ofdraft age unless Con-j gress first declared war. With #11 358 election districts reporting, the final nnoffjcial count i^owed 35,913 for Podell; 27,684 for Dubin; 4,909 for Re-I publican Gerald L. Held and 14,200 for Conservative party I candidate Michael V. Ajello. i I POLITICAL UNEUP ! The result made the political linedp in Congress 247 Demo-Jcrats and 187 Republicans, ijrbcreils one vacancy. 1 Podell, 42, campaigned in the heavili|i^|)^oorutic 13th district %s a aipporterf'^f me President but said he favorea a softer approach On the war. He called his victory "a display of confidence for Lyndon B. Johnson as President.” Stars to Help Polish Apple Valley Image! dramatically drawn by the appearance of Sen- McCarthy,” he said. HOPED FOR UPSET Held. 35, considered a Rockefeller Republican, had hoped for an upset based on public dissatisfaction with the administration’s conduct of the Vietnam war. He campaigned on the theme of “time for a change.” Ajello, a 26-year-old lawyer making his first bid for public office, urged stepped-up military action to win the war. The district fs'predominantly residential, with both big apartment buildings and small homes. Its communities include ConCy Island, Flatbush, Flat-lands, Borough Park, head Bay and Bay Ridge. j^r men and boys for all occasions,! Make your selection from •aJiBiORMHa. ihe famous styles of after w* ^ X six, by Rudofker. jR, |I T 111 O O II 908 W. Huron FE 2-2.300 Cu.lom Tailor. — Uniform. Drr.» Soil Rrnlal. APPLE VALLEY, Calif. (J>) -It’s called Apple Valley but there isn’t an apple tree in sight. ! Cowboy stars Roy Rogers and I Dale Evans, resident of the I community, will help plant the first of 1,000 apple trees in a-ceremony Sunday to begin the project, “Apples for Apple Valley.” j ; “We’re tired of hearing there! are no apple trees in Apple Val-i ley,” a spokesman said Tues-! day. It has been estimated that about 55 million Americans ride bicycles. Dubin had narrowly missed winning the Democratic nomination for the seat in 1966 when he lost to the incumbent Rep. Abraham J. Multer. The special election was held to fill the vacancy created by Multer’s election to a judgeship. Podell, who has been in the New York Assembly for 12 years, is known asjm organization man and a tough, energetic campaigner- PREDOMINAN’rLY JEWISH The short, dapper Podell is Jewish, as were the other candidates except Ajello, an Italian-A’ merican. In the 1960 census the district was 68 per cent Jewish, 22 per cent Italian-American, 5 per cent Irish-American and 2 per cent Negro and Puerto Rj-Ican. . . .Traman Capote’s IN COLD BLOOD Wtitien for the screen ond directed by Richard Brooks Moiic by Quincy Jones ■ A Columbia Pictures Release In Panovision* STUDIO NEW CENTER 3rd Avc. at W, Grand Blvd.-Tr 4-0025 Free Parking Across liom Marquee Weeknights 7;15,9:30 Saturday 6:00,8:15,10:30 Sunday 5:00, 7:15, 9:30 Positively no one tinder 1 $ admitted unless accompanied by a parent or guardian. IsmTI a sale mattress combining features from Sealy's *59, *69 and *79 best-sellers! You get the same costly cover formerly used on Sealy's famous $79.50 mattress, the some' edge supports used on a Sealy $69 mattress and the same Dura-Gard innerspring unit used on o $59 Sealy mattress all combined into one great sale-'value at just $49,951 You can choose twin or full size. This is the kind'of value you'd expect of Thomas Furniture! ^ V ig' \ \ V \ At \ \ V ^ ' \ \ tli \ X V N \ V \ X > ^4 \ X \ ^ J ^ ' ■ LOOKS LIKE A $79 SEALY! iLhm SUPPORT OF A $69 SEALY! INNERSPRING OF A IBS SEALY! SEALY HEALTH GUARD LUXURIOUSLY OUILTED PREMIER POSTUREPEDIC FOR SUPREME LUXIffiY full or twin each piece ♦59.95 ♦89.95 P Cameo satin fiockpd cover ► Dura-Lux deep quilting ► Firm Golden Edge borders, ► Specially lemperedj coils ► Elegdnt damask coyer ► Deep quilted surface ► Dura-Lux„cushioning ► Gently firm or extra firm 1' J- PONTIAC 361 S. SAGINAW*FE3-7901 OPEN MONDAY, tHURSbAY, FRIDAY 'TIL 9 I DRAYTON .4945 DIXIE HWY • OR 4-0321 OPEN MONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY TIL 9 , ' t -r 'M,; Mi THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 21. 1968 TWO CDLOBl B—1 Thursday, Friday and Saturday See WashLagton's Birihda3r ee i\Vie S\de^ 0^ AOl ,1 Safe/ BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER Telograph at Sqaara lake Road iSk. B—2 THE PONTIAC rUKSS. WEDXKSDAV, FKHHUAKY’^ 21, 1908 HOMECOMING CANADIAN — Prime Minister l/Csler B, Pearson and Mrs. Pearson stop to talk briefly with reporters as they arrived back in Ottawa yesterday from Jamaica. Pearson lieaded for Parliament Hill and a meeting of the cabinet to discuss the governmerit crisis created when a major bill was defeated in the- Commons Monday'' night. Canada's Pearson Strives to Keep Regime in Office ' OTTAWA (AP) - Prime Min-Rter Lester B. Pearson sought today to prevent his cahhwt’s forc^ resignation with a vote of confidence to offset the defeat of a key tax bill in the House of Conmnons. The Conservatives opposed the confidence vote, arguing that the only course open to the minority Liberal government after its defeat Monday was call a general election. Debate on the government’s motion for a vote was expected to continue into next week, a delay which could bring other opposition leaders around to Pearson’s view that most Canadians aren' ready for their third general election in less than five years, w * ★ Pearson, who cut short a vacation in Jamaica, contended that the 84-82 defeat of the 5 per cent Income tax surcharge was accidental and "a hazard of minority government.” The prime minister said such defeats would mean ”a lot of elections” if they were regarded as tests of confidence. But he' if he loses the confidence vote, "then of course the government resigns.” OPPOSITION ALERT The tax bill had been approved on its earlier second reading, an - Bills tighten the law a g a 1 n s ti possession of fire-bombs and empower local officials to^ declare states of emergency! were, reported out Tuesday by the House Judiciary Committee. Also sent to the House floor was a bill providing that males accused of soliciting prostitutes could receive the same penalties as the prostitutes themselves. The fire-bomb and emergency powers bills were recommended; by Gov. George Romney's Crime! Commission foliowing last summer’s racial outbreaks. Under the committee version of the second measure, the chief executive officers of cities, villages and townships would be allowed to declare states of emergency where it appeared j likely there would be "civil' disorder” which couid not bei otherwise contained. CURFEWS, BANS Emergency proclamations could ihclude curfews and bans on the sale of alcoholic beverages, inflammable liquids such as gasoline and firearms. Rep. Joyce Symons, D-Allen Park, sponsored the measure. countywide state o emergency could be declared by agreement of two of these three officers: prosecutor, sheriff chairman of the board supervisors. Violation of such a decree would be a misdeameanor. Currently, only the governor is empowered to proclaim states of emergency. The fire-bomb bill—Aimed at the “Molotov cocktails” familiar in urban rioting — is designed to strengthen an existing law making it a felony to a bomb with intent to use it uniawfully. ’The bill, introduced by Rep. James F. Smith, R-Davison, would permit a trial court to the arrested person had unlawful intent, leaving it up to him to prove his innocence. LAUAN MAHOGANY REG. $3.68 NOW S2*T WHITE SAND LAUAN REG. $3.79 NOW »3« ANTIQUE NORTHERN BIRCH REG. 5.68 NOW »5« RIVIERA WALNUT REG. $6.88 NOW S044 PROVINCIAL ELM REG. $6.88 NOW $044 ALL BEAUTIFULLY PRE-FINISHED 4'x8: SHEETS CHOICE OF OAK, TEAK OR CHERRY NOW ONLY WOODGRAIN REPRODUCTIONS 4x8 SHEETS REG. $5.68 OKUME PANELING IN 4 NEW DECORATOR COLORS • HARVEST GOLD 4x8 $JBB • BLUE MIST • HERITAGE GREEN • CRIMSON HAZE Sheet OWENS-CORNING SUSPENDED CEILING PEBBLE WHITE 2x4 PANELS, fl.04 NOW SAVE 10% ON ALL OWENS-CORNING PANELS GRID LIGHT *1U7 LUMBER and BUILDING SUPPUiS CENTER ARMSTRONG VINYL ASBESTOS FLOOR TILE 8x9 TILE 7V%-12 k 12 TILE 17c Phone U2-tni BlooafiaM Miracit Milt 2216 SMrth Ttitiraph Itoad OSM Daih Man. thru Sat. tfalP" 6 MHtt StMlk tf 8ratd elate t|Mn OnHjr I tJLtn Ml PJL Stt.lM4 Sale Starts Thursday Morning 9:30 a.m. All Sales Final! No Layaways! Mishimton’s Birthday SALE! Ladies Fashions 17 Only, Print or Stripe All Weather Coats, Reg. to 20.00.................' 1 Only Ladies Camel Hair Coat, Reg. 36.00.................................16.00 Blouses in a Variety of Styles and Colors, Regularly to 7.00................. Long, Wool Robes, Regularly to 40.00....— • - • • ...............'ort 'iocA Coots, All remaining Stock, Reg. to $125, All One-holf off........ 30.00 to 62.50 4 Only, Ladies Hooded Melton Coats, Reg. to 25.00.9.00 Ladies Sportswear, Jackets, Pants, Skirts, Sweaters, Reg. to 40.00... 2.00 to 5.00 Ladies Car Coats. Regularly to 36.00, Now Vi off..................14.00 to 1 8.00 Ladies Sleepwear and Robes, Now Vi off..............................2.00 to 7.50 Ladies Helenca Knit Shells, Now each........................................2.00 Ladies Dresses, Reg. to 55.00 ............................ 5.00 and 10.00 Ladies Surprise Table Ladies Cocktail Dresses Dhconlinued Slylei, Dressy slylei for f\IUi Odds and Ends Of Better O r - f 00 offer 5. Sires 5 fO ^ Wearing Apparel. jOr to 22'/j. Values to 55.00 * Values to 7.00 Men’s Apparel .Men's Dress Shirts. Regularly to 7.00, Now each 3.59 or.....2 for 7.00 Men's Winter and All Season Top Coats! Regularly to 125.00..39.00 to 79.00 Sport Shirts 1/ Sweaters /2 Knit Shirts values to 36.00 Men’s Fine, Fancy Novelty Vests values to 10.00 goo Merits Suits and Sport Coats^ now . •1/^^ pp Values to 100.00 • OJJ Girls and Toddlers Girls' Winter Coats, Snowsuits, Jackets, Reg. to 40.00, Complete Stock, ... % off Girls' Dresses and Skirts, Regularly to 15.00, now.......2.00 to 5.00 •’ 6 Only, Girls’ Raincoats, now, each ...........................1.00 Girls' Swim Suits, Regularly to 7.00............................1.00 Girls' Sweaters, Regularly to 1 2j00........................... 3.00 ' 1 Only, Girls’ All Weather Coat, Reg. 18.00.................. * 3.00 ; I Only, Girls' All Weather Coat, Regularly 24.00................7.00 ' 1 Only Girl's Dress Coat, Regularly 40.00 ....i............... 5.00 < Boys’Apparel 3 Only, Boys’ Jackets, Sizes 5 and 6, Reg. 25.00 .... 7.00 Boys' Hgts and Caps, Regularly to 3.50, now each 59c or...... 2 for 1.00 Boys' Selected Suits and Sport Coats, Regularly to 35.00, noyv ..Vi off j 3 Only, Boys’ Suits, size 16, Reg. 25.00 ....................... 7.00 Boys' Slacks, Knit Shirts, Pajamas, Robes, Sweaters, Reg. to 12.00. ...'Vi off ■■•+5 Boys' Dress Shirts, Sport Suits, Washable Slacks, Reg. to 9.00...off Bays'Corduroy Slacks Boy^ Snow Suits ■ 1 ■Reg. 4.00 Pg...........2 for5.00 || Reg. 5.00 Pr....... ...^2 for 7.00 1/ Regularly M R.g.$7ard$8fr..........2for9.00 /2 dj 30.00 '^1 j Famous Name Shoes For The Entire Family || Women’s Naturalizer and Life Stride 500 a pair Complete Stock... Women*s Snow Boots, Regularly to 24.95 goo_yoo •4 Dress and casuoi styles included. Good colors and sizes. Regularly to 18.00 Men’s Pedwins and Roldee Regularly to 13.99 400 TtT a patr Men’s Portp-Ped Men’s Nunn Busk j ygQQ Regularly 29.00 to 30.0Q pair Children's Insulated Boots JL ^ir MiS» America and American Girl Dressy Styles, Reg. to 13.00.......................4.00 Miss America and Life Stride • Casuals, Reg. to 13.00.............................3.00 Girls' Only: Buster Brown Shoes, Reg.tol0.00,......I................................2.00 Miracle Mile — Telegraph Rd, Daily 9:30 to 9 P.M. Use A Lien Stera Charge PIcm - Faahiena far The Family. \ THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 21. 1968 B—8 Venice to Continue Canal Dredging Despite Fears of Results VENICE, Italy (AP) -Venice’s city fathers have decided to continue dredging a canal through their famous lagoon despite fears that this may speed the slow settling of the Js-liand city into the sea. Mayor Giovanni Favaretto Fisca told a tumultuous city council meeting that the new canal for oil tankers would* provide 30,000 new jobs for Venetians, who have been leaving the city at the rate of 4,0( jrear. ‘'No one has succeeded in demonstrating that this work will produce damage,” Fisca said. “We have reason to be reassured.” Shouts of “Remember Vaiont!” rang through the hall, a reference to the collapse of the Vaiont Dam which killed 1,-800 persons in northeast Italy in October 1963. Fisca had called the Monday meeting in an attempt to put a brake on a growing press and public campaign against him and the Italian government for delays in approving protective measures to avoid a recurrence of the 1966 floods and check the progressive encroachment of the Adriatic. A petition to President Giuseppe Saragat, asking for further measures to protect the canal-laced city against the sea, has already collected more than 40,000 signatures in Venice, a city once noted for its civic apathy. Funds for a $1.4-million survey to provide information on which permanent corrective measures could be based have been blocked since 1963 by government r^ tape. The 1966 floods, when the sea covered the streets to a depth of six feet, spurred the city administration to arrange for con- Rockwood Vote ROCKWOOD Ml — Mayor Irving Brewer will be opposed for reelection in April 1 tpunlcipal voting by former Village President Howard Ditner. They ran one-two in a primary earlier this week. Brewer getting 349 votes and Ditner 230. Isn't ittime YOU wore a walchband? cAd&uuu LAOIEr-^NTMUA iSS!WSS‘...pj» lOkteoMniM ... 4S M LAOtir—TAKRED MESH AdlMllUt. • Fr«0 Engraving 0 W* Sarvic* What W'e S*’" • You Nead Not Be 21 to Open a Charge . 4-WAY PAY Lay-A-Way, SaeurHy Clwi«a Lou-Mor Oharge, ekih. ■ankard struction of nine miles of sea wall to protect the lagoon. Fisca told the council meeting only 2.4 miles had been completed because of “technical difficulties.” But he said work on the controversial 10.8-mile canal through the lagoon had been hd-vancing satisfactorily. The canal will be 590 feet wide and 46 feet deep. Opponents say it will cause the sea to come rushing in much faster than before and destroy the precarious balance of tides. * ★ ★ Some experts predict that the ?iazza San Marco will be per- manently under an ankle-deep an old lady, without tears or la-layer of water by the year 2000. ments,” said Countess Marina The piazza’s bell tower has sunk Cicogna, one of the leaders in seven inches in the past 50 the fight to save the city.’ years. ★ ★ ★ “Venice is dying slowly, like “It is dying stone by stone. fresco by fresco, bronze by bronze, and it is tragic that in this century of scientific and medical advances, a city will die from lack of clinical assistance.” PEOPLES Open every nite til 9 • also Sunday 12 to 6 Gikson anwo/r 30-incli custom deluxe gas range no money down $1 0 a month SO-inch Custom uniline with heat shield for versatile installation ... to look built-in, free standing or end of counter. Giant family size oven, 3-level top area and best insulated range ever built. Choice of Copper, White or Avocado. SAVE $40 during our sale. 2-door atutomatic defrost 12-cUe ft. refrigerator with separate freezer Automatic cycle defrosting, large family freezer compartment, slide-out porcelain vegetable crisper, convenience storage door. *188 no money down $10 a month looking for a famous on sale? .„they are at Peoples Very Special no money down $10 a month 2-speed Spindrier washer Your Spindrier is completely portable and self-contained. You can stop it conveniently out of the way—then simply "roll it out" when you're ready to wash. You can use your Spindrier any place there is water and electricity. No separate rinse tubs to use. Adaptors available to fit most any faucet. So, if it's speed you want in a washer—you want the EASY Spindrier. Westinghouse heavy duty , automatic agitator washcf* and dryer comhination AUTOMATIC WASHER • Perfect washer for young families. Famous double wash action. Heavy duty transmission. Large rugged agitator for cleaner, better washing. AUTOMATIC DRYER Set the time control, the dryer does the rest—safely and automatically and shuts itself off. Special 'air-fluff setting." Handy lint collector. open Sunday 12 to 6 *188 *138 oth«r BtorM In DETROIT POkT HURON • PONTIAC • ANN ARBOR • FLINT • TOLEDO* OHIO • PEOPLES OUTFITTING CO. TELEGRAPH ROAD and SQUARE LAKE ROAD Miracle Mile Shopping Center B—* THE I’OXTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. t^EBRUARV 21, 1968 It s Good News for Gourmets, on Paper at Least Bv DICK WEST WASHINGTON il Pl! - A newspaper with breakfast is pari of the morning ritual for many people. But how about' 8 ncwstiajjer lor breakfast? A bowl of ghredded Wall Street Journal for instance? Or a scrambled Chicago_________ Tribune? WEST Sound tasty, eh? Well, be patient. Vitamin-enriched newspaper flakes, brimming with rrunchy goodness, may be the next thing in the line of breakfast cereals. At Iea.st that is the projection I make from a recent experiment in cattle feeding. Researchers found that a group of heifers fed a mixture of newspapers and molas.ses gained weight and appeared as healthy as heifers fed a standard high quality feed supplement. FIT TO EAT / If such a diet benefits cattle, it seems logical that human beings would thrive on it, too. In which case the New York Times might change its mptto to: “All the ne\ys that's fit to eat.” The food section of yonr favorite dally could print recipes for newspaper cuisine. Then you eat the recipes. When fish Comes wrapped in old newspapers, you can throw the fish away and bi*oil the wrapper instead. wouldn’t recommend serving moo goo Drew Pearson writbont soaking the column overnight' But think of the convenimee! When your wife insists going out to dinner, simply ta her to a newsstand. Dundee, Carleton Election Foes Set News of Area Service Personnel Spec 4 Jay T Dean, son of Mr and .Mrs. Richard Dean of 171 E Pike, is currently serving with the lOlsl Airborne Division in Vietnam. Before enlisting in March 1M7, he attended Pontiac Cen-; Iral’’ High School and was employed at Arteo. He took basic training at Ft, Knox, Ky., advanced training at 0IJ50N lULAICA And when .someone makes us newspapermen eat our words, we can invite guests. INFINITE VARIETY The main advantage, however, would be the infinite variety that newspaper dishes would bring to the menu: New F7ngland boiled dinners consisting of the Beaton Globe, j Providence Journal and Hart-: ford Courant; Southern-fried Montgomery Advertiser served DUNDEE (JP — Village with hus^ puppies; the St. Louis President H. C, Dean, a Post-Dispatch under glass. Republican, will be opposed by: i Anyone on a bland diet might Howard Williams, a Democrat,! try poaching the Christian in a municipal election March! Science Monitor. 11: 1 Machine Shop, Waterford **★ j Township The son of Mr. and: gynday brunch: Sports section Dean polled 86 votes to 5 for Mrs Harold E. Hadden of 3632 casserole, chopped fresh Harold Moon in a Republican’ Meadowleigh, Waterford society pages with cream sauce primary earlier this week.' Township, he graduated from and a mixed columnist salad, wiliianis received 90 write-in Waterford Kettering High H^pQu-puD CUISINE votes on the Democratic ticket, j i 1^®'' those who like imported * * * : I Rrnn» n Vaiip delicacies, canned London Fi- At nearby Carleton, Village] ' '^11 r tiirnoH In viptnam f^es. caviar Spread OH PresldCHt Harold Buckingham,' recently returned U. Vietnam ^ Democrat who garnered 70 Ft from a rest and recuperation editorials flown in from votes, will be opposed by Ken- leave in Sydney, Australia a Republican , ' A ' Cu onrf nnmnlptpd Pfc. John Sulaica Jr,, son of In September 1967, helmed ★ * * who got 42 primary votes. The (,ordon. Ga,, and completed p j,pthe Air MedalJor^mentori^ Admittedly, some newspaper Carlelon election also is March ■■ He was stationed at Ft. Louis, decorated with the Silver Star lac- Wash « >® action near^ o,, prior ,0 loovln* , Naile of 2818 Davista, DEAN FOWLKES NAILE BAIIJEY Pontiac Northern Higli School land was employed by P®®‘i®c: Highland Town.ship. Motor Division prior to, enlist- * Ing. I........ * * * ' Marine Pfc, Arthur T. (iRockwlI is at Camp IWcune, N.C, for advanced com-niiinicalion and electronics ' training prior to leaving for a toiir of duty in the Caribbean. | Pfc Charles T. Fowlkes Rockwell entered service lasti recently received a Bronze Star August, taking his training in] with “V“ device for heroism in San Diego. Calif. He then went] a military operation in Viet-to Camp Pendlefbn. Calif, and p oailev son of nam. The citation said Fowlkes received his private first ^,5 ‘and Mrs Eugen^C Baileyt crawled more than 200 meters rank prior to a leave. He Meadoilawn is sta-! thr»gt, open rice paddle, l.nder earned hi. Held ,ad,o oper.ldr , Wma.y I enemy fire to reach a besiegtM i™ . „ . . _ ,, A Pontiac Northern High School i platoon to administer first aid Rockwell a tended P®®tiac b. wounded personnel N.irth.Tn High School a n d enlisting in March Fowlkes; with c o in p I e t e ""t ked for Peoples f- o o d ' disregard to his own .safety, Market prior to entering training at aaid the citation, contmued service. He is he son of Mr , giving first aid until the order and Mrs. Merritt W. P®®kwelli gj^ ^Ith him. ; to move was given. '*3 N. Ardmore. Fowlkes, currently stationed^ In Cambodia, is the son of Mr. and Mrs, Jimmie Fowlkes of 520 Fildew. He received basic training at P't. Knox, Ky. A former employe of Kinney Shoe Store, he graduated from Pontiac Central High School. Sgt. Norman E. Olson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Olson of 7110 N. Milfordl' Holly, has returned from Anderson Air ROCKWELL Petty Officer 3 C. LETTER-LINE A. 1C. Ralph D. Candelaris A.F. 16827238 602 ACW Sqdn, Box 397 APO New York, N.Y. 09321 Spec, 4 Bruce R. Naile HHC 1st Bn. 5th Cav. Medics 1st Cav. Div. APO San Francisco, Calif. 96490 Harold E Hadden Jr. CS-3 B 50-29-62 U.S.S. Pitkin County li>T 1082 FPO San Francisco, Calif. 96601 kCDDSE^flyDDnSE^ EVERYTHING PHOTOGRAPHIC - 24 HOUR FILM SERVICE HOME MOVIES ARE EASY! Automatic Eye Super 8 Cameras As^Low $2995 Come on in and let us show you how you con be making movies of your family. We Welcome Michigan Bankard or Security Charge TELEPHONE 334-5992 Remember the Day . . in Pictures Bloomfield Miracle Mile Force Base Communications Hadden Jr. joined the USS Squadron, Guam, after an 18- Pitkin County, a tank landing .. month tour of duty. .ship, in Vietnam la.sl month. He D/gf rOClIity vJf\ Cf His wife and son will join him was previously assigned to the SAGIN.'LW (UPl) - The on his next assignment at USS Okanogan, an a 11 a c k gggjpg^y County Board of Wurlsmith Air P'orce Base.^''a®*'P®''G F®*" a Pacific tour ®f Supervisors, in a split vote Oscoda. and spent four months in yesterday, approved plans to He enlisted in July 1964, after Vietnam. |build a $103-million courthouse,! graduating from Holly High He enlisted in May 1966, after jail and parking ramp with a School. being employed at Terry $7.5-million bond issue. | THIS IS IT AGAIN AT SIBLEY’S SHOES! SPECTACULAR SHOE SALE Bring Mother, Father, Sister, BIG Starting Thursday Brother, Ams ond Unkels . . . days at 10 a.m. FAMOUS BRANDS FOR WOMEN DRESS and CASUAL SHOES Heels, Stacks and Flats 96® •» 8®® Uso Women's Discontinued Florsheim Styles - $1 2.00 • Red Cross • Sandler e Miss Wonder MEN’S HOUSE SUPPERS Famous Evans Brown and Other Makes t. 3** Values to 1 0.95 Sibley*s Men’s Hand Sewn Loafers ^80 Values to 12.95 3 Wacky Bargain-Filled Days of Discontinued Styles of Famous Brand Footwear CHILDREN’S SHOES - Mostly Qirls’ Some Boyf ’ Too Values to $10.95 Goise SS” to 3®® Replace your "Soles wtth tKe Holes" at untjelievoble sovingsl Greatly reduced for this event -all selected from oor regulor stock. ^^I(:HI(;A^\S L4KGEST FLORSHEIM DEALER a Shoes MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER, Telegraph at Square Lk. Rd. Sony Easy-Malic Eassette-Eoriler Model 100 Here is a recording instrument that works with the greatest of ease ... so easy that you can operate it with your eyes closed. Snap in a Sony Tape Cassette, press d button and you're ready for business or pleasure. A simple push of the eject button and the cassette -pops out, ready to reload. Completely equipped with built-in extended range speaker, Cardioid Dynamic Remote Control Microphone, Leather Carrying Cose, Personal Earphone and one 60-Minute Sony Tape Cassette, EASY TERMS! Shopping Center FE 8-9601 Tomorrow -One Big Sale daf COME TO PEGGY’S miracle mile Ulasbington’s F5 IF T ‘ JU8* ■ *m Srlm ■....■Ji Savings of Vi and more on many items COATS dress coats, mink or fox trimmed Vo / H save 50% COATS fine wool untrimmed casual coats Vo / (fa save 50% warm winter car coats Vo / mm save 50% fine wool double KNITS 1/2 now on sale up to OFF formals, cocktails, casuals I/O many up to y OFF Robes - Housecoats YiOf? 1 Group of Blouses Nylon Tricot Slips 'A Off Wool Knit Gloves A OFF Wool Kriit Mittens A OFF Bras and Girdles ’/2 OFF famous make discontinued styles .1 Group wool sweaters ’/2 OFF SHOP TILL 9 P.M. .PARK FREE me your charge sorry, no layaways Hi /■ THE PONTIAC PKESS. WEDNESDAY. FEBRT ARY 21. 1908 B-5 Entertainers Give Voice to Political Dissent Ganadian, U: S. Stujplents to Meet By BIB THOMAS AP Movie-teleylston Writer HOLLYWOOD (fl - Item 1: “Support Our Boys in Cana- of the off-Broadway play, “MacBird.” The remarkable aspect of the , - - V New Dissent is the availability ’ iof mass media. When Harry Be- The reference is to Americans lafohte took over the “Tonight” ■ border to dodge shew in place of Johnny Carson ♦ “ """ this month, he not only sang ea- ilypso songs; he also used the HI NBC program as a forum for his views on Vietnam. PROTEST VOTE Luther King, Belafonte declared: “All of us here feel verjr strongly on the war, and we opn pose it.” The singer added Iris support of the protest vote for Sen. “Eugene McCarthy. No demand for equal time to register : On the Smothers Brothers opposing views has been report-Show, Tom and Dick are dis- ed. ■ cussing the offering of London j Recently Tommy Smothers, ; Bridge for sale. Tom says helwho opposes President Johnson ' wbuld like to buy it, and Dick i both on and off the television asks what he would do with the screen, was asked about the is- ■ bridge. I sue of equal time for Democra- Tom: rd give it to President tic loyalists. Johnson. Vietnam and they wear peace emblem on their jackets as proof. They say they think most of the people in the country are^ for peace. Dissent from the administration’s Vietnam policies is being expressed in film theaters as well. United Artists is releasing! Live for Life,” in which Claude Lelouche (“A Man and a Woman”) inveighs against the American position in Vietnam.! In interviewing Dr. MartinjThe film was financed by U.S.i money and stars Yves Montand and Candice Bergen. Dick: What for? Tom: To bridge his credibility gap. ★ * ★ Item 3: Pat Paulsen, avowed noncandidate for president oh the Smothers Brothers Show, comments: “As a comedian, I think I could be just as effective President Johnson.” Cut by the CBS censors was his following line: “But I don’t think I could run the country as funny.” Item 4: Tommy Smothers, by a curious pattern of cross-pollination, appears on the Rowan and Martin “Laugh-in” and delivers the one-line blackout; “Let’s all get behind President Johnson— and push!” NEW DISSENT These items offer evidence of the New Dissent that has appeared in the entertainment medium during the past year. Dictionary definition: Dissent—to differ in sentiment or opinion from the majority. ★ ★ ★ Political satire has been a part of the American ehtertain-ment scene from Will Rogers to Bob Hope. Comedy makers from the time of Aristophanes have used those in authority as, the butt of their jokes, usually to the glee of those who are governed. * * * But in recent times the tone of the satire has become more strident, the attacks more bitter. They range from the antiestablishment humor of The Smothers Brothers Show and “Laugh-in” to the sledge-hammer blows “We feel the administration’s views on Vietnam get plenty of airing on television,” the comedian replied. “The Bob Hope Show, for example.” His argument is that ^ope, with his Christmas specia based on his entertainment tour of Vietnam, givds wide circulation to the hawkish side of the war. Hope and John Wayne are the most vocal of the show-busi-hawks; Wayne recently directed and starred in the first major fUm about the Vietnam ‘The Green Berets.” PEACE EMBLEMS Comics Dan Rowan and Dick ber unpopular. Martin of “Laugh-in” acknowl- The result was Ji long period ^ge that they are doves on in which entertainment figures Another American distributor, the Walter Reade Organization, is releasing “Tell Me Lies,” a film version of Petli- Brooke’s London stage play attacking the Vietnam war. Hie movie tures members of the Royal Shakespeare Company, as well as comments by Stokely Carmichael, and clips of the self-immolation of a Buddhist monk. On the American entertainment scene, the issue of the Vietnam war has brought the kinds of dissent that celebrities haven’t dared for almost yearsi McCarthy era During the Depression and war years, show business personalities often lent their names and financial support to cai that were^ at variance with majority opinion. The ascent of Sen. Joseph McCarthy changed that. Many actors, writers and directors found they were unemployable because their names had been linked by congressional committees or private organizations to causes that proved to ■refused to engage in any politi-, “I’m just not a political fel-i leal activity. low,” says actor-director Carl ★ ★ * Reiner, “and I’ve never been! In recent years they have Politically active before. I never been slowly returning to the po- hl^red, because ,I saw too many llUcal arena. The success of t’’® George Murphy and Ronald era. Reagan prov^ to many actors! “But now I’m taking a posi-that political activity should not I tion. I’m too disturbed about be precluded because of their^what might happen in Vietnam profession. to stand by and do nothing.” Now the Vietnam war has Last month Reiner acted as| prompted many performers to emcee for a “Broadway for' speak out in a manner they! Peace” benefit at Lincoln Cen-| would not have dared a fewjter’s Philharmonic Hall in New! years ago. lYork City. I The program featured two, dovish senators, Gruening of be a featured .speaker at Alaska and Morse/of Oregon,!Michigan Stale .University this plus an assemblage. of show! weekend as, students from 14 business figures: Paul Newman,!Canadian and American Joanne Woodward, Harry Bela- universities convene for the fonte, Barbra Streisand, Tom- third intercollegiate Canadian-my Smothers, Eli Wallach, Amer,ican Conference. Anne Jsjekson, Leonard Bern-i * * * stein, Diahann Carroll, Robert Under discussion during the Ryan, Tony Randall, etc. three-day meeting are such Noting the turnout. Variety topics as political parties in quoted an observer: “I don’t| Canada, minority groups in the think I’ve ever seen so many United States, social class and popular entertainers .supporting .structure and the North a minority view.” I American Indian. ' SAVE TIME... SAVE MOHEY at Miracle Mile Econ-O-Wash FE 5-0725 ‘ MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER SPECIAL ELECTRIC GUITAR, k AMPLIFIER and $4095 VENICE MUSIC CENTER Casa 2313 S. Telegraph Rd. AAiracle AAile Shopping Center FE 4-6000 Final Clearanca Prices on Men’s Seasonal Merchandise! Men's and Boys' ' mi WHITER JACKETS 72 OFF Special Group MEN’S SUITS 59.50 to 19.50 2988 AAen's and Boys' HIP HUGGER SLACKS Regular to $16.95 488 Special Group Men'x and Boy*' Special Group Long and Shorf Sleev* SCHOOL Boy*' SPORT SWCAT TRINCH SHIRTS SHIRTS COATS 89* Res. $15 to $18 Y0UN6 MEN’S SCRUB JEANS RofluloHy $5.00 $288 0 ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY ^ Spring starts right now with new curtains and drapes! All at low Penney prices I Penn-Prest print curtains tor just about any room in your house. Sturdy long wearing 100% cotton sailcloth . . . machine wash, tumble dry, never-iron. Choose cafe sizes in kitchen print or pinch-pleated shorties in our new floral print —both In decorator colors. 'Garnett Rose' elegantly tailored pinch-pleat shorties 'Epicure' easy care cafes -rings included! 30" or 36" long 3.98 F 4.49 pr. 4.98 pr. 'Elegance' ruffled tier curtains — embroidered . . . Penn-Prest®, too! 24", 30" or 36 long 3.98 pr. toppor 4.98 Enjoy elegance and practicality! Choose this kodel polyester/Avril® rayon blend that machine washes in lukewarm water. Pretty colors. Valance 68"xll".....................2.98 'Grecian' tailored tier curtain in Penn-Prest® Kodel®/Avril® blend 30" or 36" long 3^29 P' Dress up windows with this carefrefe tier in Kodel polyester/Avril rayon. Machine wosh, tumble dry and hang. Embroidered trim, great huesl 24" long.........................2.98 pr. Valance 72"xll .....................2.29 REDUCED THRU SATURDAY! Penneys' famous dress and sportswear fabrics Our famous Full Sail^ prints and plains REG. 79c, NOW 35/36" wide 66= yd. Great fabric for spring sportswear with this crisp-fo-thcrtouch cotton fabric that always behaves. Machine washes, resists creases, little ironing. Colors, subtle and bright. Regulated plus pirints and coordinated solids Dan River's Doristar combed cotton prints and solids REG. 98c, NOW Q/^C 35/36" wide OV/ yj This wash and wear cotton is just right for unlimited spring sportswear. Sews up like d dream thanks to its crisp texture. Zingy prints for the now look in your wordrobel Dacron® and cotton poplin —frosted and plain! 80= yd. REG. 98c, NOW 35/36" wide High fashion broadcloth woven of Regulpn, 65% Polynosic® rayon/ 35% combed cotton blend. Lush, silky texture for blouses and dresses. Machine washes with little ironing. 99= REG. 1.29, NOW 44/45" wide ^ ^ yj Skirts, shorts and slocks all swing for spring with this wrinkle shedding Dacron® . polyester/cotton. For fashion's tailored look. Machine ywshes and needs little irpning. Lots of colors. SHOP MONDAY THRU SATURDAY ... TIL 9 P.M-CHARGE IT! B—6 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, FB^BRUARY 21. 1968 Bid Okayed Purchase Deadline for/ndosfrio/ for Auto Tags Near Park Lines One week from tomorrow is the deadline for Michigan vehicle owners to purchase 1968 license plates. If motorists B detected driving on old plates after Feb. 29, they face a fine. Secretary of State branch offices it} the Pontiac area I where drivers can buy license plates are located at 96 & E. Huron and 4520 Pontiac Lake, Waterford Township. Motorists applying for passengM proof of Insurance and last year’s^ car title. plates must have rgistration card or Both local offices maintain 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. hours during the week. The Pontiac branch, in addition, is open from 9 a m. to l p m, Saturdays. The branch office in s Waterford Township is open from 9 a m. to noon Saturdays. Both branch offices will be open for business tomorrow, Washington’s birthday. RELATIVELY SLOW Patrick K Daly, manager of the Waterford Town.ship branch, said license plate sales have been relatively slow this week, buti that this year's pace is still ahead of last year's. ‘ We'll lake care of anybody In line that last day,” said Daly. i Construction sewer water lines to serve the city’s industrial park was authorized by the City Commission last night. Commissioners voted 6-1 to accept the low bid of $107,843 for construction by Troelson Excavating Co. Commi.ssioners also authorized accepting bids for a water survey in efforts to cut down on water loss in the city’s system, j District 2 Commissioner Robert C. Irwin objected beginning construction of the utilities in the industrial park. He recommended that the city !use money that would go for the construction to purchase liaiui in the industrial park that !is now privately owned. City commissioners last night deferred making a decision on continuing rental payments for the Oakland County Commission on Economic Opportunity Action Center at 7 W. Lawrence. Daly, who also serves as a justice of the peace, said that vehicle owners who fail to purchase license plates before March 1 could be fined at least $15 if caught driving on the expired plates. I Irwin said this - was the recommendation of the in-idustrial park advisory committee, which includes a [number of area realtors, and 'should be followed. NOT UNANIMOUS I Other comrnissioners Indicated that the advisory committee was not unanimous in its li/i f I A A I k. I _________________ -J recommendation and that it was Wotertord Mon Is fyomed ^o^ adverse either to beginning construction of the utilities now. to Deputy Attorney Post City commissioners last night i Felix, graduated from St. approved unanimously the ap-iMichael’s High School and re- p„,„un,n, .t . depd.y!c^- .“.uT7r.ml District 1 Commissioner T. Warren Fowler Sr. said the commission should act before construction costs rise. Other commissioners said the city could develop the utilities /police "administration from owned by the city city attorney. The aPPolUmont, University. hopes of selling part of it. to be effective March 4, will ^^^,^^^,^ This money could then be hrinv fho leoal staff to three ' uuauu utilized for further expansion of altornevs legal staff ‘o ‘'’fee ,„rnmigsioners last night the 32-acre park, they said. Nam^ to the post at a start- a*so appointed Faustin J. The water survey w a s Inc annual salary of $10 868 is I’^hski of 275 Tilden to a one- authorized in attempts to stop Frederick R Felix 40 3878 -''e®'' on the five-member about 3 per cent of the water Dill, Waterford Township.’ hoard of review. loss, which would amou^ to a F„„. . ...ycr ™p,..yd ‘w“'d County Circuit Court Probation *CCEPTED LOSS Department, was admitted to Anderson. ACCEPTED LOSS the Michigan bar in .lanuarv. The board has two exofficio' He said the city can account « iin HroreP members - Director of Law I for 9" to 92 per cent of its » rriipi^nf ?nw Sherwin M. Birnkrant and Di-|water. “It is an accepted fact from Detroit C ollege of Law Finance Edward Gal-/hat any water system will, in last > ear. lagher general, experience a water loss between 4 and 5 per cent, he I said. Ex-Serviceman Decision Deferred on OCCEQ Rental Since December 1965, the city has been paying rent on 10,000 square feet of office space as ‘‘in kind” local contribution to the federal program to private owners of the building. Commissioners met with James M. McNeeley, who is resigning as executive director of the OCCEO effective Friday, and Edward Reevls, his successor, for a half-hour before the commission meeting and decided to meet again Monday before making a final decision on the $800 per month rental payments. Commissioners also; • Received a proposal from General Motors Corp. t o purchase the city’s No. 2 fire station at Saginaw and Wilson for about $46,000. • Aeceived notification that the Pontiac Teachers Credit Union has completed construction of an office on former urban renewal land at Auburn and Hill. • Set a March 12 hearing for consideration of a request of Fleet Carrier Corp. to re- • Authorized the department of public works to contract outside companies for repair of city sidewalks in the 1968 program. City Manager Joseph W Warren said negotiations between the city and GM on the fire station will continue. GM EXPANSION GM has acquired all the frontage on both sides of Wilson from Saginaw to Franklin for expansion and modernization of the GM ’Truck and Coach Freeman Plans forJunket Eyed WASHINGTON ( A P ) Republican Sen. John Williams of Delaware says Secretary of Agriculture Orville Freeman plans a Far East trip for Congress members, governors and farm leaders despite President Johnson’! appeal that citizens cancel foreign travel plans. The President said earlier this year that curtailment of travel abroad by Americans ! He said that. Since the City is TJl"Wesson^ and Ralph E Nor Keeps Pledge to three-year terms on tliejamount lost to that tax on American tourists t' » of other water syst^^^ (traveling outside the Western WW II Rlldd\/ reappointed Oscar Bohn of 559 ^ ★ Hemisphere. T” TT If UU\J\JY U;.Ae,eAn t* fnrm 1 ___*. . would help offset the U.S. gold drain. He recently proposed a MEMPHIS. Tenn, (AP) - In 1944, Kenneth N. Jones of San Diego, Calif., and Aubrey H. to a three-year term ^ ^g^^^ jsj Officials at the Agriculture on the zoning board of appeals. I j Department confirmed Free- ----------------- man and his foreign trade Grave Vandals considering a Far Childress Jr. of Memphis stood ^qIc6 {East trade mission but said no BLUE SPRINGS, Mo. (AP) — decision has been made. They on the deck of a carrier in the V-UI5 /ViUl^tf More than 200 gravestones werejadd^ White House approval Pacific and pledged that if ei-i , , overturned in a cemetery would be needed. !?ould explain‘Iht'deSlth to^I'he Wonfecl Usf |ident If the associaUon ^that But Williams told the Senate tim’s oarents operates the pre-Civil War cem-Tuesday a 12-day trip will begin ChildreL died March 24, 1944, anN ARBOR (AI’i -- l’olice:"i®g'>l'^’'^'*'""'‘‘^ at'April 3 and that a presidential in a bomber crash at Bougain-in Ann Arbor have been issued/ ’ e us . ville. lists of the ”10 most wanted’ * * * autos” — cars having anywhere! Jones, 43, arrived here Tues-from 26 to 59 unpaid parking day at the home of Mr. and tickets issued against them. Mrs. A. H. Childress. He said he * * * had been unable to locate the Officers were ordered to keep Childresses until recently, their eyes out for the worst * ★ ★ violators after eight police ”I am grateful he has done recruits sorted through 20,000 this,” said Mrs. Childress “The unpaid tickets. In the la.st two pact was typical of my son. He weeks, drivers have paid $14,000 would want his family to know in back parking fines after something and just not leave it being contacted about their unto the imagination.” paid tickets. LAD n LASSie MIRACLE MILE Hear Ye Save KRAzK Special Selling! Girls’ FISH NET HOSIERY New Colors — Reg. $1.25 CHOPPED!! Girls’ SELECTED DRESSES Were to $ 1 6 — $ave! HEAR YE! GIRLS’-BOYS’ • Coats • Jackets • Skirts • Snow Suits • Slacks • Vests • Boys' Cord Sport Coats BE HERE EARLY: THURS.-FRI.-SAT. Michigan Bankard - Security Charge Open 10 A.M. to 9 P,M. 334-4766 A suice SMINGS! Selected Group of JEANS America’s Most Famous Brands SALE Regularly J8 $4 Selected Group of SWEATERS Discontinued Numbers of our most famous brands. V2 Regular OFF Advertised Price WE HONOR MICHIGAN BANKARD AND SECURITY CHARGES EVERY EVENING MEN'S WEAR TILS BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE TELEGRAPH at SQUARE LR. RO. zone to manufacturing lots, south of 532 Tex. south Division facilities Wilson, he said. ,! GM desires to acquire the No.^ 2 station and when a new firej station is built have Wilson, from Saginaw to Franklin dos-j ed, he said. The fire station is the most obsolete of all city facilities and its location is poor because of railroad tracks running next to the building, Warren said. He said another station would be built in the southern portion' of the city before the present | No. 2 station is abandoned. | GOOD FAITH DEPOSIT The teachers credit union purchased the office building site in October 1966, with a good faith deposit of $1,522, Urban Renewal Director James L. Bates said. Since the building is com-plpted and the purchase price of $15,220 paid, commissoners voted to return the deposit. FREE Personal CHECKING ACCOUNTS If You Maintain A Minimum Balance of $300 Or An Average Balance of $500 AT ALL 12 OFFICES OF Pontiac -State Bank i;j;:i:Main Office Saginaw at Lawrence-Open 9 A.M. Daily Member Federal Depotit Inturanve Corporation OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF FAMOUS AAAKER WOOL AND HOLIDAY SPORTSWEAR NOW Vl OFF REG. $6 to $26. NOW$2.99to$W.9^ 122 Famous Maker DRESSES JUNIOR PETITE-JUNIOR-AAISSY SIZES Reg. $15 to $35 999 „ 22” DOOR BUSTER SPECIAL CASHMERE SWEATERS Reg. 17.90 and 19.90 099 NOW V LONG SLEEVE CARDIQANS AND SLIP-ONS SIZES 36 to 40 - NINE FASHION COLORS 38 SUBURBAN COATS V2 OFF Reg. 20 to 46 Now 10 to 23 KRESGE'S CUT PRICE THURSDAY OHLY Drip-dry solids, stripes and Jurquolse, orange, sable, green, blue. DAYS ONLY SALE Fishnet Limit 4 While Quantities Last Women’s Spec/a/ Value SHIRTWAIST DRESSES New spring array of drip-dry cotton shirtwaist dresses has ipli-up sleeves and full skirts. In solid colors with embroidered detail pr woven stripes. Orange-Turquoise-Sable-Gceen-Blue. Ladies’ FASHION SNEAKERS While Quantities Last BIKESAIE 20” Dragster 20” Bike with Training Wheels 26” Boys’and Girls’ /While Quantities LaSt 2999 7-Ft. POOL TABLE COMPARE AND SAVE! Wit|le Quantities L^st NOW 44« MIRACLE MILE TELEGRAPH at SQUARE UKE DRIVE A LITTLE SAVE A LOT Charge It! //// V / ' I.UlllJ Nii THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. FEBRTIAEV 21. 19fi8 B—7 Our experts will, fill your prescription with pinpoint precision, whatever your needs; including: aspheric, cataract and plastic lenses. Many high fashion styles in frames and eyeglass accessories in a great variety: also- a large selection of sunglasses. We do not examine eyes. Pontiac, Lower Level; also Downtown Detroit, Northlanpl, Eastland and Westland. HXJIDSON’S Women Hold Sidewalk Sway Over Men By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK JAP) - Men drivers of^n complain that women drivers are fte worst traffic hazard in America. That may or may not be tri|e in the streets. It is certainly untrue, however, of ’ sidewalks, where women drivers are only an intermittent danger. On s i d e-walks the greatest traffic hazards are women pedestrians. At least they are to men pedestrians. They have become such ard that I feel it is time for our statesmen to pose to themselves this question: Can any country call itself truly civilized until it provides separate sidewalks for the separate sexes. SEPARATE LANES Or, if the cost be prohibitive, BOYLE then separate sidewalk lanes for men and women. Men who spend their lives behind the wheels of automobiles are unaware of the problem. They ^don’t have to fight their way daily along a pavement thronged with wave after wave of burdened women shoppers. ★ ★ ★ But I’ve been a lifelong pedestrian since the a g e of 1 and, based on that experience, it is my firm belief that halt the men who wind up in the gutter didn’t get there as a result of personal vices. They were simply pushed there by women pedestrians who wouldn’t give them sidewalk room. /pss % MEim 5H0P Floor Care Money Saver Specials! 3-DAY SPECIAL light down a country lane arm I dents, but rarely gets in one in aim with a woman under 75. herself. Particularly if her car Poet Emily Dickinson wrote be new, she defends its fenders with haunting grace of “thejas she would her virtue. ’ path just wide enough for two' ★ ★ ★ But a wonian, pedestrian is a different creature. She acts as if who love.’j' NOT IN LOVE But the country doesn’t have sidewalks. The city does. And alas, most of those who walk she were back in the Garden of Eden, and Adam was away on a business trip. To her the public sidewalk becomes a personal es- Walking with the fairer sex, of course, isn’t always a wounding experience to a fellow. Nothing is lovelier than strolling at twl- * •.» oivjcvraiiv a uc-ic^uiiai ca upon them are not m love with , . I pleasure alone. I There is something about city ^ i sidewalks that brings out the^^^®*-'!^’ RAMBLE beast in women, and also those She ambles, she wambles, she capricious qualities of their na- rambles — upstream, down-ture that ever makes femininity'stream, sidestream, an unpredictable puzzle to men. * * ★ If you are behind her and try woman driver employs to pass her to the left, she zigs some caution. She obeys the rules of the road, generally, and generally st^s on one side of the road. She may cause acci- left, too, cutting you off. If you try to pass her to the right, she zags right, too, and you impale your kneecap on a fireplug. ' INO THiM raoiiiMs wini A Coolerator^ AUTOMATIC HUMIDIFIER $74.95 Elimin^at* troublo cauiad by horih, dry, bokad-eut wintar oir. Thii -*w Coolarator Humidifiar moiitan. tha air, filtan it of dutf and puriliai. You fool comfortoblo ot lowor tamparafurot. Phone 333-781 2 Enrek Electfic Broom Special Low Price fl9»5 Delivery and Service Included! EASY TERMS-«5 MONTHLY Here’s floor care the easy way with this'sweeper vac broom.-It’s lightweight for easier handling with 3-way action cleaning. Has throwaway bag, adjustable brush for rugs and bare floors. Hangs up neatly and out of the way when not in use. Enreka Eaiister Vacnun Complete with Attachments Delivered and Serviced! EASY TERMS-85 MONTHLY It’ll roU easily from room to room making yonr house cleaning that much easier. Has Super suction to pick -up the most imbedded dust from your floor coverings and bare floors—complete with 5 atUchments for upholstery, draperies and crevices. Uses big, throw-away dust bag. HOOVER 2-in-One Va£UDin Specials A good sturdy HOOVER. Beats as it sweeps. Throwaway Bag. Toe Switch, $4050 EM TERMS STILL, BETTER! The Convertible New Styling, Two-Speed Motor, Lightweight, Wide Angle HeadlighL $0050 EASY TERMS BETTER! Bigger and Heavier Motor, g a Autpntatic Rug ^ * Adjuster. Positive Agitation. $5450 EASY terms BEST! DIAL-A-MATIC $0050 EASY TERMS ITgood housekeeping shop of Pontiac 51 W. Huron-Open Monday, Thursday and Friday ^til 9-FE 4-1555 Do something patriotic on George Wnshington's Birthdoy. Spend Americon money nt Osmun s. (WeTe having one of those soles again!) And you're in luck again. Search through the "values" listed below. (Honestly — you'll find some real ones here, too.) You can't go to the bank anyway, so do the next best thing — come to Osmun's and save. ” Now 14 Off SPORT COATS Perfect for the man with o sense pf humor. You've got to fry them on before you moke any comments. Plaids; checks, solids — and that's only the liningsl Wear topcoat and no one will know the difference. ValUtS tO $85.0 PERMANENT PRESS PANTS Great—unless you wont to sit down. Big selection and all 1^ AVM HO ■sizes for men who stand a lot. $9.95 Values la V vY DRESS PANTS There's nothing wrong with these pontsl See for yourself—the/re really OK. On sale UAiae 00 In honor of George Washington's Birthday. Cuff alterations only at cost. Values tO $14.95 |l|| ff f SUBURBAN COATS and JACKETS Corcoats,woolMe1tons,others.40inoll. Nice, nice, NOVy! ^^00 very nice. Some hove pockets. All of them ore ot the DOWNTOWN STORE. Values lo $19.96 RUlf' U Famous-Brand DRESS SHIRTS VVeor them for Spanish dancingl Hippie Parties! Give one to your boss! Also may be worn under sweatersl May be worn over sweaters. Now *2“ each, or 5 for ^10““ HATS and CAPS a la Bonnie & Clyde No Imitations herel These wide brimmed lids look as » 00 if the/re straight out of the'thirties. Great for costume parties or George Raft look-dike contests. Also may be MAUf ^ JUU worn with sunolosses when you feel like going incognito—or out of cognifo. Values tO $20.00 law wW Ae r2KowM2” Now H Off HATS and CAPS a la Bonnie & Clyde No imitations herel These wide brimmed lids look as (straight out of the 'thirties. Great for costume parties or George Raft look-dike contests. Also may bi th sunglasses when you feel like going incognito—or out of cognifo. Values tO $20.0! Sir Walter Raleigh TOPCOATS Perfect for placing over puddles and open monholesl The/ll never go out of style because the/ve never been in style, Weor one and start a fad. You con buy one at our ■ DOWNTOWN STORE ONLY. ^ Values to $85.00 Old-Fashioned SWEATERS With that "home-made" look that's so hard lo imi- ‘tote. Just because no one wonts to imilote them is no reason to pass up these bulky knits, crew-necks, V-necks and double knits; Values tO $30.95 SPORT SHIRTS Unusual pidds, stripes, checks and solids (not oil on the some shirt though) that'll go with plaids, stripes. Now *1“ each, or 5 for ’6“ WIDE TIES are coming back! people keep returning these. Perfect for teaching your son the art of the Windsor knot. Also may be used for tourniquets and towing cars. MeilSf 0 0 U A V R f AV $100 Valuesto$4.00 ROW JLiL III 9 lUI I DRESS PANTS Manufacturer's closeouti (Actually, he closed them out in 1940, but it took us a while to .figure out that these were ponfs.) We've got 200 pair In sizes 28 to 32,,oH d our DOWNTOWN STORE ONLY. M Allf $0 00 Values to $10.95 RUff L ODDS Underweor, socks, robes, pojamag, Madras fockets, scarves, belts ond a lorge^ ossortment of ofhers, Sony, no evens. Now 22'-’2“ o a part o/ Pentiae stnea I $31 SMUN’S STORES FOR MIN A VOUNB MEN FREE PARKINS at ALL STORES ■ Downtown Pontfac Open M. 'tfl 9 I Tel-Huron Center 1h Pontiac ■ Open Every Nleht 'til 9 I Tech Plaza Center In Wonwi Open Every Night'til P B—8 THE PONTIAC PKKSS. WEDNESDAY. FEBRUaIiY 21. 1968 HEAD LETTUCE Fresh, Crisp 24-Size FRESH Cole Slaw. . ..... 19' FRESH Pole Beans. ...... ^29' FRESH, CRISP Green Peppers. . .3 29' THE BIG PUIS AT A&P JANE PARKER SAVI ZOc^ANi PARKiR BUTTIRSCOTCH OR Chocolate Brownies .. JANI PARKI^ THIN-SLICID, INRICHED Sandwich Bread .... 2 i» 39 JANE PARKER FRANKFURTER OR i| Sandwich Egg Buns.... 45 ALL BEEF Hamburger LESSER AMOUNTS 3-LB. PKG. or MORE lb 53* JANE PARKER Hamburger Rolls 49: PKG. OF 12 37 CCONoPi RICES ■ we care OepetK/ofnhffffyAsP WHY PAY MORE? A&P CHE ECONO AN PRICE COMP Prices IHeciive Through Sun., Feb. 25th in Wayne, Oakland, Macomb and Washtenaw Counties QT. JAR m 29 □ DAY-IH-DAY OUT SAVINGS NET WT. 4%-OZ. STRAINED JAR Angel Soft Napkins..... Reynold’s Wrap........ Northern Tissue .....4 Nescafe Coffee........ Flushabyes Giant Breeze... Silver Dust Blue Advanced All... Swan Liquid ... Dove Liquid.... Wish Detergent. Phase III...... Dreft Detergent. 22‘ 66* 33* r' 99* 79‘ 63* 71* 55* 55* 69* 24* 79* □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ Sauerkraut. . . Beech-Nut Baby Food Santa Ciara Apple Juice.. Kellogg’s Puffa Rice .... Nabisco Shredded Wheot *SIZE** Kellogg’s Sugar Smacks.. Spry Shortening ’i,ss....£^69* □ Dow Oven Cleaner 69* □ Instant Fels’s.*.'.'.........99* □ Glad Sandwich Bags..... 29* □ 1-QT. 14-OZ. CAN 31'□ NETWT. 14-OZ. PKG. 2-LB. lO-OZ. I CAN 7* 23* 32* 39* 39* □ □ □ □ □ Tomato Juke. . Libby’s Corned Beef....59* □ Libby's Spaghetti & Meat Balls 49* □ Libby’s Beef Stew......59* □ GREEN GIANT NIBLETS 21' NET WT. 12-OZ. CAN Cascade < 41‘ □ Maxwell House Coffee 75< Maxwell House Coffee .... can I” Noodles Romanoff "^CASSEROLE^" *^6^ 39> Noodles Almondine“;K,‘.rLi"' tSl: 39‘ LA CHOY CHINESE FOOD Chow Mein “SfJKr . . T9« Beef Chow Mein bi-rack m^^z?cAN 79* Chicken Chow Mein BI-PACK im^o'^'CAN 79* Chow Mein Hoodies ..... 14* Chop Suey Vegetables . . . 'c'a’n 29* SoySauee....................... 17* Van Camp Pork ft Beans. . . Del Monte Tuna CHUNK . . . Chun King Egg Rolls FR02EN tables s/uS I Rrozon in Butter I Soueo—Groon Giant • Peter Pan Peanut ButterS Instant Sanka Coffee . . o . Comet Rice _____ Sunshine Graham Crackers. Chicken Croquettes JOHNSON'S Normel Chili with Beans. . . 33< KRAFT CRACKER BARREL CHEESE To"z':65‘ 14* 25* 49* 35* 35* 55* 43* 37* 69* CnaeheHl boy-ar-dee isih-oz. dpagneill with meat balls .to CAN Chef Boy-Ar-Dee Beefaroni o .' Beef Ravioli chef boy-ar-dee . 0 I Banquet Meat Pies5 Anacin Tablets Listerine Lozeng Sta-Flo Spray Starch . . . . o s-oz; Alberto VO-5 Shampoo 110 0 size s-t». toiioiiai T-OZ. ivory Flakes Liquid Joy .'ssi:....... Giant Oxydol Sponge Mop°'*“' Sprite Detergent .. Bon Ami Miracle White Electrasol ......... 3''Vkg;l^ Adorn Hair Spray IVr Mum Cream Deodorant.... I • • • BTU 59* □ 10c OFF LABEL 3-LB. 1-OZ. PKG. 64' BHd fRIMIUM PKG.—10c Orr labei. , . h — — DUZ Detergent 69 1»e OFF LABEL , „ ^ , Thrill Liquid... % 42* yilE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. FKBRUARV 1>1, 19G8 B-9 GRAND OPENING You Are Invited to Attend the Week-long Grand Opening ’ Celebration A & P's Newest Early American Style Super Market .BALDWIN and MONTCALM Pontiac KING OF MA5FS! “Sopcr-Mgbf” QuaUly BmF Standing Rib Roast FIRST 3 RIBS lb 89 4lh& 5th RIBS .79 ALLGOOD Sliced bacon 2-LB. PKG. ' S17 ! 1-POUND PACKAGE 59* "SUPER-RIGHT" FANCY QUALITY Sliced Bacon... "SUPER,-RIGHT" COUNTRY STYLE Thick’Sliced Bacon .. Beef Rib Steaks • • • -SR* Young f urkeys USDA Grado "A" iV 6 to 8-Lb. Avg. PINK FOR BRAZINO Beef Short Ribs • . . . "SUFER^iaHT” BONELESS Delmonico Steaks . . b49‘ Beef liver. . PEELED AND DEVEINED Shrimp 39* . .49- m-LB. ^79 BAQ ^ Smoked Sausage . . . lb I At tomr fwfMees JUDGE FOR YOURSELF WHY PAY MORE? bonus ^No Price HEINZ Ketchup. e e e I NETWT. 14-QZ. BTL. 23‘D KITCHEN TESTED FLOUR Gold Medal. . . 5-LB. BAG 49'□ Hellmann’s Mayoiinaise.. 39‘ □ Del Monte Peaches......21' □ Corned Beef Hash BOUNTY a • • 44' □ SEMI-SWEET • a SKIPPY Creamy P^ut Butter 1- LB. 2- OZ. JAR 49 Jiffy Baking Miit Nestle’s MorOels Jiffy Pie Crust Mix... Chef Boy-Ar-Dee Pina I Crisco.Oil.. b. Merten’s Sait^. .... Argo Corn Starch Pillshury Pancake Mix Jiffy Fresfing MiR... < Jiffy Cake Mixes Nestle’sEverReady Cocoa ■NETWT. Minute Rice....... Mott’s Apple Sauce. .... Prune Jiilce ... •.. • Franco-Amerienn Spoghetti'^s'^ Navy or Northern Beans.. Superose Sweeteiier ..... %. Ffeischmonn’s ...is..... Red Rose lee Bogs m sfh A&P )00% Colombian Coffeo Aika'SelUbr Tablets.... Handi-Wrap (punm . .j. . . ' Gala Towels . ........ .»ik. Gala Napkins...... .f • • °'- 69* □ 42' □ 39' □ 39'' □ I4‘D 29' □ 59* 42' □ 48' □ -77^.p, 47* □ ■25'.. Q 33' □ 27' □ MITY CROCKER Cake Mixes ALL FLAVORS 29 iC 2'/aVOZ. . ' ^ a " ' M NET.'WT. Durkeo’s Pio Perfect a a a 4 «oa: Hershey Baking Chocolate "isr Aunt Jemima Corn Mnnl oiLMitiNo ^ "»»■■, "■hETWT. Hershey sCocoa........ ^ _ ■ NETWT. Randall’s Dinner s... . Fmnco-American Gravies ' __ '■■■■.' ^ ■ ■ . ' ' NETWT. Hormel’s Spom ..,.vi Upton’s Tea Bags....... Heart’s Delight APRICOT NECTAR 3.VSi. OAc CANS start Breakfast Drink 24' □ Firiit Cocktail ..1.0.11...... 25 i—^ Del Monte Pinenpple.';s 19' □ Maraschino Cherries ROMEO 'jar" •25' □ Mandarin Oranges..... ."S’?' 19' □ Dailey Sweet Slices rs .. » 39* □ Every Meal Apple Butter.. ^ 29* □ Champion Fig Bars....39* □ Nutiey Margarine ...... at 15' □ Jif Peanut Butter...... 39‘ □ Bounty Decorator Towels *FACIC‘ 41' □ Soft Ply Facial Tissue 19* □ Scot Toilet Tissue......12' □ Roman Cleanser Bleach a arusTie 48' □ Bright Sail BLEACH 5.25% Hypochloride 39 C GALLON PLASTIC the PONTIAC PRESS. jvEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 21, 1968 You'll onjoy ihopping at Food Town and Poo-ploi, Oakland County'* largost homo-ownod and oporatod indopondont Supor Markets wher* quality and greater savings go hand in the Food Town Duck Lake Store Only ROBOT CIRCOO TODAY THRU SATURDAY FEB. 24 i f i FOOD TOWN SUPER MARKETS i i Sashabaw Rd. | 2186 Highland ltd. _ HYLAM PU2*; Miybti Rd. I COR. DUCK UKI RD. OPEN SUNDAYS CLOSED SUNDAYS THRff COLORS PEOPLES FOOD MARKETS [ OPEN SUNDAYS | OPEN SUNDAYS | OPEN SUNDAYS [ SUNDAYS | V • Gold Bell Skimps Three big days and evenings to enjoy this fabulous ArmouKs Robot Circus now showing at the big FOOD TOWN SUPER MARKET, 2886 Highland Road at Duck Lake Road . . . Bolloons, ice cold pop, prizes, fun galore . . . Don't miss it! 11A.M. to 7 PJI. DAILY FREE BALLOORS • PDF # CLOWNS • contest; • GAMES HOT POGS Armour star Ini” EachlU^ Meadowdale Crushed or Sliced moz. can YOUR CHOICE Hills Brofc SAUDA TEA BAGS Chase Si Gmdwni ffol 12 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, I EBRtl4.RY 21. Special Purchase HAMILTON WASHER and DRYER •OOSimtS! tOOSERIiSc I S-^ewd capacity - l-pacilla* praatam ■ S«>lry drynatt cantral - 7 t«npcialvr*i ”i *^^’*** — jS aalat laval - Tartu alt •Iraaiti drying - Qalat apa^ •alaclar - fabric caftnar ditpancat. Plm - 50-pe. set STAINLESS TABLEWARE Come in today, or Coll 333-7812 CONSUMERS POWER 28 West Lawrence St. AID Chief Surviving Barrage WASHINGTON (AP) - For- trator-in eign aid chief William Steen shice the storm season began-Gaud is taking his I'lmps but ^ . iT . 1 . i. of « worldwide agricultural bearing up well, at least in blessings of control. „ . . . . A sex scandal involving AID He^s undergone a two-weekJ^jfj^j^,, g^, ^ high-lev- H?!el padded expense account in I* first interview ciousness at all,” Gaud (rhyme)[“But that would have been^true' With cloud) told a reporter. I in any case; it always is. ^ i “And anyone who says the| “Maybe I’m a sucker for feel-whole Afp operation is rotten ing this way, bvt I think most of ‘’.Washington? scandal and inefficiency in his '"* ’ far-flung, high-spending Agen- j cy for International Develop-‘I ment. “Foolishness. Just sheerafool- Yet the lean, salty adminis- ishness in both cases. Not vi- (AdvgrtlMmcnf) lAdvtrHiPingnn Comeback Fights Fatigue Fast: Restores Fresh, Rt, Wide-Awake Feeling In Minutes Medical tablet eases discomforts as it wakes up your system NEED HELP?' USE PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADS. LOW IN COST. FAST IN ACTION. PHONE 332-8181. New York, N. Y. (Special): The Drug Research Center of a major company today announced a remarkable unique formula that helps fight fatigue fast. In minutes, your system can feel refreshed as exhaustion and drowsiness start to disappear. Fven the tired, achy feeling is relieved. You work better, feel brighter, all without harmful, habit forming stimulants. The secret is a combination of medically proved active ingredients that help recharge your vitality. Minor aches and pains that make you feel weary, and washed out are eased. This special formula is now available under the name Comeback.^>* feel fresher, fit, more wide-awake in minutes. And only Comeback contains this unique formula. Doctors know simple fatigue is one of the most ponunon adult ever fatigue makes you feel tired and drained of energy, fight that fatigue fast and for hours with Comeback. Take Comeback to help you feel fresher, fit, more wide-awake in minutes. FREE BEAUTIFUL DANISH-DESIGNED STAINLESS STEEL This “Tulip 5-piece place is exquisitely highest quality Stainless Steel in Appledoorn, Holland. “Tulip Timi"was designed by the international Award winner, Erik Nielson of Denmark. IT’S YOURS AS A GIRT... when you open a new Savings Account at Capitol for $25 or more (or add $25 or more to your present account)'... and each time you make an addition of $25 or more to your account, you may purchase another place setting for only $2.50. After you’ve acquired seven place settings, Capitol will give you an eighth one FREE with an‘ addition of $25 or more to your account. What a wonderful, economical way to acquire thetinest Stainless Steel tableware... and build a worthwhile savings account at the same time. And Remember, Your Funds Earn At The Highest Rale Of 4%% Per Annum, Paid And Compounded Quarterly... An Effective Rate of 4.84%. This offer is made only to one account per family: multiple accounts in the same family cannot qualify. Offer Is good only at Detroit, Pontiaq,and Lathrup Village ' offices. M I ' '' CAP/TOl SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATION DETROIT 234 State St. Wa^ir^ton Blvd. Bldg. PONTIAC UTHRUP VILLAGE 75 West Huron St. 27215 Southfield Rd. Near 11 Mile Rd. because of these things is ing a lot of damned nonsense.’ ★ * ★ Is AID morale sagging? “I’m the worst person to ask that,” said the 60-year-old AID boss. “They don’t all wander in here and^tell me they feel like hell. “And yet it’s been a bad two weeks. I can’t imagine it hasn’t bothered and discouraged them. That’s why I gave them that pep talk Monday.” CHIN-UP LECTURE’ Gaud had called 800 of AID’S top personnel together for : brief “chin-up, let’s-get-going’ lecture. As for his own morale, Gaud —who’s headed Aip for a year and a half and been in it nearly seven—said, , “I’m okay. . I’ve had some bad moments in the last two weeks. •* “But my real frustration is the lack of public support and understanding of foreign aid. That’s the toughest part: Feeling this kind of program iff so vital to the future of the world, yet being unable to make the people at large understand this.” Gaud refused to accept speculation that his foreign aid program will be torn apart by Congress because of AID’S troubles. TOUGH TIME We’re going to ,have a tough time getting the ^.5 billion we them (congressmen) recognize that .vye’re trying to" run this agency we)l, constantly improv-, ing odrselves. Those who like to| make a career of kicking us, ofj bourse, will certainly have a new pretext fordoing so.” ★ ★ ★ Gaud enthusiastically claimed AID accomplishments in the agricultural and economic development of the world’s emerging nations; of the gradbai accepts ance of' birth control in the heavily populated ones. A* neat, tweedy dresser, he sat in a straight-backed chair in his well-appointed State Department suite. His slightly cultured accent made it doubly surpris-. ing when he larded his phraSes with seamanlike expletives. GREAT CHANGE “The problem is that there’s been a great change in foreign aid since it really got going in the 50s,” Gaud said. "At the time of the Marshall Plan, we were aiding Europe — the French, the Dutch, the Belgians, with whom we had blood ties. “’The C O 1 d war was hotter then; people were really worried about communism. They had a real stake in foreign aid. Today it’s going to a lot of people they’ve,never heard of before-Indians, Bolivians. Thais. ★ ★ * ‘People haven’t caught up with the fhet that what happens these countries matters to Clip These Valuable COUPONS! gii]LJnj!im.iinaa BRAKE ADJUSTMENT, We’8 adjust your brakes and" add fluid for only asked for,” he acknowledged, us.” People in the News By the Associated Press Mayor John V. Lindsay and Mayor Marcello Spaccino of Trieste, Italy, exchanged municipal greetings and gifts yesterday during a meeting at New York’s Grade Mansion. Spaccino, here on a four-day visit, presented Lindsay’ with a medal bearing the seal of Trieste, and Lindsay reciprocated with a lithograph of City Hall.- 1st Woman Ambassador to Poland Presented UNDSAY Miss Pamela Ann McDongall, Canada’s new ambassador to Poland, presented - her credentials to President Edward Ochab yesterday In Warsaw. The 42-year-oId Miss McDongall is the first woman ambassador to Poland. College to Honor Pulitzer-Winning Poet ' Poet W. H. Auden will receive thq, $r,(HK> Dickinson College arts award in a ceremony in Carlisle, Pa., March 3, the college announced yesterday. Auden, who has won several awards for his writings, including the Pulitzer Prize, is the sixth recipient of the Dickinson award since its creation in 1958. Composer Walter Pistol was the most recent winner in 1966. Auden, 60, came to the United States from his native England in 1939. In addition to poetry, he has written drama, opera librettos and critical essays. Soviet Premier is 64 Today Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin celebrated his 64th birthday today. It was not mentioned by the press and there was no public ceremony, in keeping with the Soviet practice of talcing public note only of decennial birthdays — 50th, 60th, 70th, etc. Be a Guest of f 0$|Olt V at the ICE ^CAPADES 250 tickets' WILL BE GIVEN AWAY IN PAIRS FORt^AKCHSPERFORMANCB REGISTER NOW at any store or dealer listed No purchase neexasary. lowing MARCH I NORTHWOOD PLAZA NED'S FIRESTONE WOODWAW) 518 S. WASHINGTON ROYAL OAK FIREStONE 146 W. HURON PONTIAC WITH THIS COUPON BUY 3 SmCK ABSORBERS AT OUR LOW EVERYDAY PRICE GET THE 4th FOR ONLY II 88^- Famous Brand Installed J WITH THIS COUPON REPACK FRONT WHEEL BEARINGS Offer Expires Feb. 29, 1968 Take Months to Pay WITH THIS COUPON FROUT RND ALI6NMRNT HERE'S WHAT WE DO: • Inspect, tighten, adjust steering * Correct toa-in or toe-out • •Correct Caster Tiresfone ; 8KR NMIMY ah friuy [4 ^LL 9 PJL 146 W. HURON THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. FEliHl ARY lQfi8 B—13 COMPARE FARMER JACK'S PRICES-THE LOWEST ANYWHERE! RREiT FARMER JACK'S TOP HAND - FUNNY OL' CUZIRN CYRUS IN l>ERSON! ■WWMi ■ ■ W , 1 ^ . wW m M..U ' BEB OB. _ O'1 B'M Trt K P: N. WOODWARD at 13 MILE RD. ROYAL OAK SATURDAY. FEB. 24 - 9 A.M. TO 4 P.NI. SUNDAY, FEB. 25 - 11 AJR. TO 5 P.M. TELEGRAPH at SQ. LAKE RD. MIRACLE MILi SHOPPING CENTER MirucIc Mil^sTTcicgroph at Square tokc Rood • Dixie Highwoy-Dreyton Ploins 1 Glenwood Plazo, Perry St., Pontiac • Pontiac MaH Shopping Center-S. Telegraph Opow Ntowday • Tooidoy - Wodwoidoy Ifli AM. to 9 P.M. • Thonday • Friday - Saturday 9 AM. to 9 PJA • Svnday 11 AM.1di P.M* 1 Open Monday • Tuosday, Wednosday 10 A.M. to 10 P.AA • Tliunday • Friday - Sotorday 9 PJA. to 10 P.M. • Sun. 11 A.M.-5 P.E B—14 PONTIAC PRESS. WliiDNESDAY, FEi^RUARY ai, 1968 ONLY raizi STIERS ARE ROOD ENOUGH TO MAKE FARMER JAOK'S. BEEF - - IHE BEST BUY! AND HE SELLS HIS TENDER U. S. CHOICE CUTS AT THE LOWEST PRICES IN TOWNI rAHMEB JACK'S u. S. CHOICE CENTER CUT u.s.cHOicenHDe* Chuck Steak 68* Chuck Roast "General Gtore" Prices at Former Jack's! . PIECES AND STEAK /Oxford Mushrooms . VLASICZESTY Polish DHIs IDAHOIAN Potato Flakos HORMEL BRAND Chili With Boons SILVER FLOSS Sauerkraut 1 IB. 11 OZ. CAN SAVORED IN TOAAATO SAUCE PARTY TIME CRISP Potato Chips REALEMON TART Lemon Juice ■59*1 SERVE ON ^ ' vlMl STRAWBERRY mil Smuckers 44^ VWI Preserves FRANCO AMERICAN Tasty Spaghettio's CUT GREEN, TENDER Del Monte Beans PEPE STUFFED Manzanilla Olises MARIO STUFFED /m^Manianilla Olives wr7jM Honey Grahams rKG! m Fverytking Costs'Less at Farmer Jack's! THE VARIETY BAKING MIX Bisquick Mix M#|a NABISCO I 49* Honoy Grahams WAGNERS DELICIOUS BREAKFAST Orange ,Drink IP BRACH VILLA Bing Cherries BRACH delicious' _ ^ SPECIAL LABEL 48* Red Rose Tea Bags _ _ INSTANT 38^ Nescafe Coffee A PARTY FAVORITE Brach Bridge Mix 'Mfj BRACH BRAND Chocolate Stars PETER PAN Peanut Butter 1 LB. 2 0Z. JAR FOR WEIGHT WATCHERS Carnation Slender EASY TO PREPARE REGULAR OR QUICK mama IN spray CAN 38^ Lysd Disinfectant iwmaA liquid 38^ Lysoi Antiseptic GRIFFIN WITH APPLICATOR 56^ Shoe Polish COLD water 69^ WooliteSoap m ma lumi ASSORTED FLAVORS'^ iLQC llHI STOKELYS 48 HliTruit 99« eoc «.c« I Quaker Oats 1 LB. 2 or. PKG. SUNSHINE Krispy Crackers REGULAR Sucrot Lozenges JQL. FOR FLOORS Aerowax Polish BEEF STEW,OR CHICKEN PARTS STA FLO Fahric Finish > DELICIOUS SANDWICHES Spam meut i Mirocle MHo-S. Telegraph ot Square Loke Road f Dixie Highwey-5re^on Ploins 1 Glenwood Plozo, Perry SL, Pontioc • Pontioc Mail Shopping Center-S). Telegraph *..iOpee Monday • Tuosdw “ Wodnsiday 10 A.M. to 9 P.m}^* Thursday - Fridoy - Soturdw 9 A.M. to 9 PJL • Sdtadoy 11 kJA. to 5 P.M. lOptn Monday ■ Twosdoy, Wodnesdoy 10 AJH. to 10 P.M. • Thorsdoy • Fridoy • Saturday » P.M. to IQ P.M. • $gn. 11 A.M ^5 P M J!': /1.P i. i'i>- ■ ' THE PONITAC press. WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 21. 1968 B—15 FARNIIR JJ^eK'S Me)pIT - SO FRESH • so TASTY - HEXL GIVE YOU... TWICE YOUR MONEY BACK! IF YOU'RE MOT SATISFIEDI AMD... HIS MEAT PRIOES ARE LOWERI FiSHMEH JACK'S butt PORTION OR WHOIE ®oiokej| Ham FRESH CREAMBir Dairy Ridi Butter FARM AAAID OLD FASHION HYCRADE SKINLESS GRADE 69^ Ball Park Franks fkc: w ALL BEEF SKINLESS GRADE 1 IB Aa 111 _________ 39^ Tiger Town Franks JS 59^ JJ ECONOMICAL ,a ECKRICH SKINLESS GRADE 1 ^- Sunflower IHIargarino solid MICHIGAN CROWN Melntosh Applaa 3 LB. BAG fresh CRISP r Slaiw FRESH ROMAINEOR Endive or lb. U.S.N0.1 GENUINE IdaKo Baking Potatoes FRESH Sno-Whito IWushrooms mild TENDER Onions LB. BAG FARM MAID VARIETY OF FLAVORS Ice Cream 1/2 GAL. CTN. MISS MUFFLET GRADE A SLICED Strawberries FRESH FROZEN ijor. Red L. Onion Rings » STOUFFERS FAMOUS QUALITY II01. Macnron|& Cheese .To SAVE ON PRICES FRESH FROZEN 3 VARIHIES ^ Ocoma Meat Pies wt ^kg ■ FRESH FROZEN 3 VARIETIES Abels Bagels TOM THUMB FRESH FROZEN Meatballs EGrany DOLE FRESH FROZEN JUICE BIRDS EYE GREEN BEANS OR Mixed Vegetables GORTON CRISPY Fish Puffs TERRYS FROZEN Beef Chop Suey FROZEN FOOD!! ‘‘KEPT ON ICE! QUICK TO FIX 4 VARIETIES 2 6 01. Ocoma Frozen Dinners CHEF CHOICE CRINKLE CUT French Fries RICH'S FRESH FROZEN Coffee Rich LB. BAG Meet •ffMtfv* thro Svn.', Fab. 2s tlT Sorry, No Salas To Daalars SPECIAL LABEL Dial Regular Soap 3 BAR PK. 38^ DRY SPRAY Arrid Deodorant Wi-JbLN 98« KEEPS drains clean Liquid Drano 1 FT. ioz. CTN. 69« VO REGULAR Hahr Drecshqi 1 1/2 0Z. WT. TUBE 88« BLUE RIBBON Power Ammonia 1/2 GAU CTN. 29« KEEP HAIR IN PLACE VO Hair Spny 10 1/2 OZ. WT.CAN 98« OCEDAR Sponge Mop EA. $271 IN SPRAY CAN Fresh Deodorant a 1/2 OZ. WT.CAN 99« 0 CEDAR SPONGE Mop Refills EA. 88« FOR RELIEF OF HEADACHES Excadiin Tablats $f18 MiracU Mil* — S. Telegraph at Square Lphe Road Dixia Highwoy—> Drayton PfciiiB OpON Moudlay, Taesduy, Wodnetday 10 AJH. te 9 P.NL Hiarsday, Friday, Sataiilay 9 AJlL t# 9 Pit Sunday 11 A.NL te 5 PJL Gltnwood Ploxo, Parry Stroot, Pontioe Pontioc Moll Shopping Center—South Telegraph OpeB e«Hlay, Ta^, Wednesday to AJD. te 1o PJL^ Thursday, Friday, Saturday 9 AJL te 10 p.it ^ Sunday 11 AJL te 5 PJL THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, FEBUUAHV 21, 19G8 B—17 78 Arhericans Are Killed in Viet Fighting WASHINGTON (J) — Seventy-eight servicemen killed in action in the Vietnam war have been listed by the Defense partment.* Three others died of wounds and seven "previously reported thissing in action were listed Killed in action; ARMY ARIZONA — Pfc. Ned Lee, Flagstaff. CALIFORNIA — M, Sgt. Jesus P. Ramirei, Marina; Pfc. Pefer A. Hill, - 1st Lt. Edward J. Kowskl Jr., La Grange; Spec'. 4 Carl J. WIeneke, Hardin; Pfc. Dan E. Bryan, Kewanee. MICHIGAN — CpI. Vincent P. Landon, Saint Clair Shares; Spec. S Homer A. Ruple Jr., Three Rivers; Pfc, Melvin J. MISSISSIPPI ner, Hattlesbui MONTANA -Jr., Libby, NEW MEXICO — Spec. Douglas J. — Ma|. Eugene J. Con g- - Pfc. Lester W. Johnsoi .pelevan; ^Spec. 4 James Dziencllowskl, - Spec. l.C. James J, New York. TENNESSEE Sherrill, Dover. TEXAS — Spec. 4 James P. Ferguson, Nederland; Spec, 4 Klaus J. Strauss, Fort Worth; Pfc. James E. Malone, -Richardson. _WASHINGJJ0N_ - Sgt. Alfred P. L. Jerry L. Collier, Boaz. CALIFORNIA — Hospitalman Michael B. Barrett, Granada Hills; Hospitalman Robert J. Staten, Ontario. ; FLORIDA — Hospital Corpsman 3.C. d L. Salyer, Loulsvl OHIO — Hospital Corpsman 3.C. Lat W. Stull, Fostoria. OREGON — Hospitalman Charles Johnson, Portland. MARINE CORPS ALABAMA — Lance CpI. Larry G. Clark, Huntsville. ARKANSAS — CpI. Anthony W. Hand-ley, Hot Springs. , CALIFORNIA — Capt. Howard L. Jose-lane, San Clemente; CpI. Manuel P. Torres, Ventura; Lance Col. Pedr* ‘ aid C. Roundtree, Sherman Thomas M. Pinatelli, Hawth_____ CONNECTICUT — Lance CpI. Raymond A. Burgess, Southli^on. I DISTRICT OF 0)LUMBIA - Stall Sgt. Alvin P. Mason, Washington; Lance CpI, James W. Durham Jr., Washington. GEORGIA — 1st Sgt. Robert L. Turner, Savannah; Sgt. George E. Jones Jr., Atlanta; Pfc. Thomas R. Craig Jr., A|-'*?LLINOIS — 1st Lf. John K. Woods, Western Springs; Lance CpI. Cecil L. Russel, Coal City; Pfc. John C. Pondoff, East INDIANA —'CpI. Bruce E. Srate, Vln- Walter M. Scott, BloominuiDM. IOWA — Sgt. Tommy E. Antrim, Manchester. LOUISIANA — Lance CpI. William L. Glasper, Baton Rouge. MARYLAND — Pfc. David Baltimore. d R. Johnson, ; Pie. Patrick M. Murphy, MerrII MINNESOTA - Sgt, Pefer B. Hedlund, Cedar; CpI. Norris L. Brenden, Deer River; CpI. Thomas C. Lewer, Bemldllf Lance CpI. Lawrence H. Swanson, Hast-"XsisSOURI — Staff Sgt. Bernard B. McKinney Jr., Springfield; Pfc. William K. Colegafe, Brentwood; Pfc. Charles H. Cook, New Haven; Pfc. Larry L. Phelps, ^NIEBRASKA — CpI. Myron Kot, Lln-NEVADA — Sgi. Alonzo E. Mayhall, North Las Vegas, NEW jersey — 2nd Lt. Michael A. Deeter, Flemington. Brook Iv NORTH CAROLINA - Staff Sgt. Curtis OHIO — CpI. Russell L. Wilcox, Waynesfleld; Pfc. Gerald R. Clemson, Geneva; Pfc. Roger G. Lyons, Amelia; Pfc. Ronald L. Pelbmeton, Milford. OREGON^ — Pvt. John W. Rowden, Jacksonville. PENNSYLVANIA - Staff Sgt. Frank Ramos Jr., Mondca; L.ance CpI. Jeffrey M. Walsh, Bethel Park. SOUTH CAROLINA — Lance CpI. lerg; CpI, Douglas H. Griffin, Coleman >fc. Clenzell Morris, Lufkin. _ VIRGINIA CpI. Jerry C. Burl Pfc. Clenzell Morris, Lufkin. --------A —^ CpI. Jerry L. -----.... Pfc. Raymond C. Lawson, "VIRGINIA — Pvt. Darrell E. VIrglllna. WEST \......... Dunlap, Madison. Died of wounds: . Frederick M. Stamen, FLORID/ ' oTmo - Hoytville. Changed from missing to dead - hostile: ARMY ILLINOIS — Pfc. Ben Jcwers Jr., Peoria. INDIANA — Spec. 4 Manuel S. Flores, Redkey. MICHIGAN — Spec. 4 Robert R. Lord, SOUTH CAROLINA — WO Wlllia Duncan, Shaw Air Force Base. TENNESSEE - Capf. Carl L. West Smithville; Sgt. Joseph L. Fa------- TEXAS — Spec. 4 Robert E Clarksville. TEXAS Cleburne. Died not as a result of hostile action: ARMY GEORGIA Sgt. l.C. Charles Wood, MARINE CORPS DELAWARE — Pfc, Paul W. Quick "I, '*'^mTn!?Es"6ta — Lance CpI. Michael L. Tostenson, Minneapolis. . _ , -NEW YORK — Lance CpI. Earl F. Macey Jr., West Chazy. Changed from missing to dead - npnhostile: ARMY ALABAIWA Pfc. Donald L. Will L. Smith, Troy. Missing as a result of hostile action: - ARMY 1st Lt. William R. Ross Adrian A. Quick Jr., Spec. 4 wunam G. »?kli^Vv.n^ryV&^« MARINE CORPS WO s Changed from missing captured: ‘ MID-WEEK MEDITATION “For whosoever shall call upon the name of the Lord shall be saved.” ^ Romans 10:13 lion Lake i )tist Church ) Commerce Rd. Union Lake SEND FOR FREE TRACT -Th. Touch of th. Mattel's Hand the rights AUSTIN LEEDS tiand-shapes oiie of spring's of spring: ever, the plural body line dictates the.sliape shape most favorite patterns-Glen plaid-and forms a more-than-favorable impression. For this spring, more than ...and Austin Leeds is a most eloquent spokesman for this season’s fashion dictate: shape. $120. Our Pontiac Moll Stor* Open Thurs. ond Sot. to 9 P.M.-Frl. to 5:30 P.M. 309 N. Telegraph Rd. V'T,' ■ , V'/ .i'u r Birmingham Store Open Thors, and Fii to 9. P.M. - Sntordoy W 5:30 P.M. 300 Pieru St. THE PttNTlAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1968 State Senate OKs Curbs on Lie Detector Examiners LANSING (AP)—A bill to li» in cases of examiners exclusive-j the state board if the licenseel Th^ watchmakers bill would cense lie detector examiners ly employed by and working for was found guilty of a felqny or'forbid a person from engaging was approved by the Senate the U.S, government, a licensed misdemeanor Involving moral in watchmaking or , using the with four votes to spare Tues- interp or a person examining turpitude or if he demonstrated title “certified horologist” fOT day, despite protests it is vague, individuals solely for scientific incompetency or allowed his li-profit or compensation of arty and ambiguous and would not research or medical diagnosis. ! cense to be used by an unli-kind without first obtaining an protect the public. | w * * ! censed person. I annual registration certificate. The bill, approved 24-19, The bill spells out certain ed- NO DISCHARGE ! ® bipartisan backers places responsibility for licens evnoHonr*. miaiifi. reduces the annual reg- ing profession, the supporters tag'and regulating- lie detector or experience qualih-; Another ground for revocation j^om $25 to $15 and Sfair under State Policebe met and would be failing to noUfy the makes the law applicable Jurisdiction and sets up a state ®ols license fees ranging from examinee of his right to refuse more persons than before^ said. Approval unanimously was a bill to lower the penalty for violation of a 1965 act setting up health standards for agriciStur-al labor camps and Ifcensing and regulating such camps. At present, violations of the act" are circuit court misde- !a case comes to trial, he added. The bill recces the violation to a simple misdemeanor, which would allow such cases to be heard more quickly in crowded justice courts. * STATE BACKING The bill was introduced at the court bill, the Judiciary Committee offered amendments which would boost stated)aid portion of district judges’ salaries to $17,500 a year. examining board. $10 a year for a resident public or accept the exam and he can-examiner to $100 for a nonresi-'not be discharged from em-The Senate also approved bills dent annual license. [ployment solely because he re- fexpanding provisions of a 1965 A license could be revoked byjfuses or accepts, law requiring certification ~ meanors, said Sen. Robert Van-Ir«l““‘ ^he State Department der Laan, R-Grand Rapids, theo^ Public Health and also is The measure, approved 26-6,‘biirs sponsor. ibacked by the State Depart- not only would offer greater i Since circuit court dockets ment of Labor, Vander Laan protection to the public, but jammed, migrant worker wit-j said. would upgrade the watchmak-inesses often left the state before! In reporting out the ..lower Counties would be able to supplement .Jthe salaries up t total of $27,500 a year. The Appropriations Committee has offered amendments which would cut the state portion to $15,000 p year and allow counties to supplement only up total of $25,000. YOU MAY HAVi PIN-WORMS AND NOT KNOW IT I-PIOKUK, a wnnmtiBC ottma telltala diiu of Hat mod- Fldgetinc.iK rectal itco Kt-w ,— —-——p— -- Pln-Wortna...iisIy bariaitM that medical aaparta aay fnloot 1 out rf evarr 8 peraona examined. Eotire famiUea may be vlctima and not know it. To set rid of Hn-Worina, they rtuot be tdlled in the Utrea intestine whera they live and multiply .That's exactlr what Jayne’s P-W tablets do... and here's how they do it: >1rat—a aclentiac coating tablets into the boweto they dissolve. Then — Jayne’smod-ern, medically-approved ingreuent goes right to wrork—Idlla Hn-Wbrma quickly, easily. Aak nour^r^Ut. Don't Uke chances with danker-ous, highly contagious Pin-Worms' which infect entire families. Get genuine Jayne's P-W Vermifuge . . . small. ea8.v-to-take tablets. .'i special sizes for children and adults. certain watchmakers and re-i duclng the penalty for violating an act licensing and regulating agricultural labor camps. j In other action, the Senate Judiciary Committee reported out to the Senate floor a revised lower court reorganization bill calling for a $27,500 top aalary for district court judges. LENGTHY DEBATE The lie detector bill, sponsored by three DemocraLs and two Republicans, was the subject of lengthy debate in the Senate last week and opponents made one final try to sink thc« measure Tuesday. Sen. Roger Craig. D-Dear-born, accused the sponsors of “setting up a vague and ambiguous process for licensing and qualification” and allowing “continued indiscriminate use} of lie detectors in employment practices.” He has argued that lie detection has no scientific basis and Involves “pseudo-science and witchcraft." “Instead of protecting the public from charlatans,” Craig said. “It (the hill) guarantees them a way to make a living." FORBIDDEN PRACTICES The bill woul^ forbid a per-Bon from engaging in the determination or verification of an individual’s truthfulness or deception without first obtaining an examiner’s license. The only exceptions would be Yesterday's Stale Capitol News in Brief |ob» for ioms ifhOW youngttsrt sround {ht stats this summsr. TMt ATTOaNBY OiNBBAL sd a provision changing real esttls dealsrs' lees onto one of the governor's TmE'lTATf ADMINISTBATIVB BOABD Heerd en etlornev's plee that If expitin why It has refused to award s *1.07 SB7II. Tospp. RsquIrs llcei regulation ---------------- operators. SB619, L.. cerlitlcatlon lee expand coverage their certlllcatlon. ng| SBIOi, Vander . Reduce penallv .... _________ .. —t licensing regulating agrlcullurel labor camps. Bills Introduced included. SB105S, Cartwright. Appropriate I?" ■ r Wayne County |-‘----------' Disiric SBI057, Mock. Provide tor slate grai to county low libraries. SBIOSi, Meek. Provide armed tore „.i.r,ns with credit tor college a irsity physical education courses. SB10S3. Mack. Provide telarles tor county' prosecutors wm, no paying 50 per cent. SBIW7, Meek. Provide lor molatorlui n enllerless deer hunting. sub|ect to ai proval of voters. the 75 p communll grams. THE HOUSE Mel briefly end recessei Bills introduced Included: Establish stele lob. on to enlorce equal op i pertaining to slate HB3716, Holmes. E milted In connection il code I I felony to firemen end pollemi HB37J4, Goemeeri faring Income tax a dice before Internal HB3727. Goemaere Deline as crirr usury, punishable by up to five years 110,000, charging more than 25 per 4V3729, Ziegler, court of electror evidence gained without a eouirement -I penalties •tfeef. HB37S9, Tierney. License and regulate driver training ecnools. HB37S2-07, Licate. Increase penalties or, •<«ahiises and white carnations,! fjot ' long ago I had a!another. They had lost sight of Paiila K Smith became the fascinating visit with Edithl this for various reasons. SAN FRANCISCO (UPl) new entrance requirement went into effect for California schools in 1968 — a measles vaccination. A new state law requires immunization against measles for any youngster entering a public or private elementary secondary school for the first time. The law does not apply to those whose beliefs prohibit Immunization or to youngsters with a medical reason for not receiving the shot. Youngsters previously were required to be immunized against smallpox and polio before entering school. bride of Pvt. James W. Teatro,| Lances at her New York City USA, Saturday in Unitedgaion. Miss Lances is a charm-Presbyterian Church. jng and interesting woman and Attended by Mrs. Robert has long been distinguished as a Stimson, the bride wore a designer brassieres. In fact, operation, traditionally styled gown of she has been called the “queeiT ^ taffeta with an overlay of of brassieres” even by some of Chantilly lace. • her competitors. Permanent Hair Removal Licented El^etrolntiitt • Permanently • Painlessly Carried by Paula Srriith Independence t^nship. Ushers were Darwyn' Montville. Dale Wood andj Herman Montville. Richard Wood was ringbearer and SHdla Sneath flowergirl. ■k r A reception \At 'the CAT building honored the couple following the aTternoon rite. Then she told me a very touching thing. One of her customers told her what her husband had said after her PoyiMiita Apply ewrcIwM SMILEY iROS. Her silk illusion veil was capped with a pearled head-piece. had never realized diversified problems desimers of brassieres have, such as * * ^ creating bras to go along with Bridesmaids were Joy the recent flat dresses. This Cramer and Debbie Smith with!reminds me of the flapper era. Dale and Craig Smith and Lloyd t just read that there was ac-Busch ushering. jtually a Boyish Form Brassiere Best man duties we re. Company at that time, performed by Douglas| ★ * ★ Reidsema. i Miss Lances said, A reception for the newlyweds happy to say that we are now He said, ‘T would not be unhappy at all about this except for the fear of cancer for you, and the way you feel. It is such small defect on someone who so beautiful inside and outside.” ' RICHARD'S BOYS' and GIRLS' WEAR TOeCf»oppe/(8 ‘ryasfiif THE PONTIAC MALL SALE STARTS THURSDAY AT 10 A.M. CELEBRATING GEORGE WASHINGTON'S 236th BIRTHDAY. SHOP EARLY ... ALL SALES FINAL! Recommemlod by Dermatologist* and Physieiant^ a* a Skilled S|>eriali»t in the Field of A* FJeciroly»i»4; j 6.5 m 539 ^ I Nall. Bank ofltel. BUIp- I Rorhealrr, Mleh. was given at Glngellville Com" munity Club. Their parents are the Paul L. Smiths of Wesson Street and the W. K. Dudleys of Airport Road. Spread the Word Via the Computer DALLAS (UPI) - Rev. E. R. Dayton, aerospace engineer turned evangelist, says mi.ssionaries will be able to reach every person in the world — via computer. The minister heads t h e Missions Advanced Research and Communication Center which envisions the use of social scientists, business executives programmbrs, geographers, anthropologists |anri others. Tlw cushion insolo'i tin comlort lecnt! H ccidla till loot so Ihit aslhioj (mIs like lloitini toam' A Clinic blessini... not in disfuin $1400 PAULI'S SHOES DOWNTOWN PONTIAC, 35 N. Saginaw deserting the immature, baby doll vogue, and are going back to the much more feminine figure with a bust.” INCREASE She also told me that she has noticed an increase in the average bust size since the advent of the birth control pill. Many women who needed a B cup before now require a C or D cup. A report I saw said that the average national bra s'“‘ has chane^ from a 34 to a 36. There is no actual increase in breast tissue, but the pills promote fluid retention. When they are discontinued, the inflation disappears. It amazes Edith Lances that some girls and women will buy a brassiere without trving it on. She said, “They wouldn’t buy a pair of shoes without trying them on and the proper fit of a brassiere is just as individual and important.” SYMPATHY Miss Lances has great sympathy for those women who have lost a breast through surgery. She has had many of them for customers. She understands what a psychological shock this is to a woman and asked me to tell my readers who have had this experience one or two things for her. First, brassieres can b e adapted so that this defect is absolutely unnoticcable. Therefore, women need not be self-conscious about it. I Second, this will make no difference to a man who loves you. Miss Lances has knoym instances when the operation turned out to be a blessing because it made the husband and wife aware of how im- St. Fred's Class to Plan Reunion STAPP'S the home of 12 WINTER DRESSES, each 3°“ Regularly priced to 45.00 NEWEST SPRING FASHION Children's newest shoe available. Black, Red, Blue. Sizes B's to EE's. 8V2 to 12, $9.99 12V2 to 3, $10.99 Growing Girl Sizes AA's - D's, 5 to 8 $11.99. Center buckle for ease and comfort, square toe. Classy and comfortable. STAPP'S SHOE STORES The Home of Stride-Rite Shoes 931 W. Huron at 418 N. Main St Telegraph, Pontiac Rochester For Evening Hours PleSse Phone 332-3208 30 SWIM SUITS, each 2®® (Mostly 2-Pc.) Regularly priced to 25.00 SPORTSWEAR 50®^ to 75®^ OFF Skirts, Sweaters, Pants and Tops Regularly priced, each to 30.00, now 2.00 to 7.50 DRESSES, 50®/o to 75% OFF Regularly priced to $250 Winter and Transitional Styles Included Dressy and casual fashions In this si finest fabrics, colors and styles. Bro sizes, mostly one-of-kind. ALL WINTER COATS 1/2 Oft Regularly to 350.00 Preliminary plans are being made for a reunion of members of the Class of ’53 of St. Frederick's Schobl. Anyone interested may call Mrs. Steve-Alonzo (nee Barbara Younce) of Hanley Street; Mrs. John Hackett of Chippewa Road, or Mrs. Edward McLaughlin of Hamlet Road. FUR TRIMMED UNTRIMMED STYLES CAR COATS KNIT SUITS and COSTUMES V2off Regularly Priced to 300.00 SLEEPWEAR and ROBES 1/2 Off Regularly priced to 50.00 can count on O OMEGA You ean count on Omafa SMtnaster time at autematioally at tunritt tnd tunatt. Jutt your avtiydty wriat movomonta, tnd tht foreo of gravity, powor thit mtfvtiout miniattm of automation. WttroMi Count on Rl Squaro Soamaatof In 14K fM, $11^ Saamaatar Oa Villa with data-tJlinf dirt in stainlaaa ataol. $13 S. Othar Saamastara from $95 Ri»MOND»S Jewelry 81 N. SAGINAW, PONTIAC Fr«e Purktmg in Jt«ar 0/ toeCI»of)p6/is^af^ DeLISO DEBS Regularly ta 2-2.00 Regularly-to 20.00 Caresses Adores Town & Country 4 First Editions ' Capezio CASUALS and FLATS 70% off and Moro! 500 .{ Copezios California Cobblers Trampeze Cover Girl Town & Country Regularly to 18.00 Pontfoc Storm Only 300 ' ..rn Pontiac Rochoator 303 Main Street baity 9 to 5:30 fri, 9to9 P.M. d/U ‘I .-K-Ay ■ ,1: THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRI ARV 21, 1908 C—5 CANARY ISLAND BATHERS—Tourists soak up the sun at Las Canteras Beach on Las Palmas in the Canary Islands. "The temperature averages 70 degrees on the islands. Most of the tourists come from Scandinavia. Arctic Alaska Enjoying Influx of Winter Tourists NOME, Alaka (UPl)—Arctic Alaska is experiencing an influx of winter tourists. This was out of the question a couple of years ago, but tourist facilities operators and airlines aware of the serene beauty of Alaska’s long winter nights and modern travelers’ desires for something different began a campaign to attract offseason tourists and it is paying off. Here in Nome, winter tourists find they can leave their | warm, modem hotel wrapped up in a wolf skin parka and take a dog sled ride on the ice of the Bering Sea. They can jig for tomcod through holes in the ice, ride a snowmobile, look at reindeer and the spectacular display of the Northern Lights. They also can enjoy such inside activities as watching Eskimo dances and swapping tali tales with sourdoughs. Many of Alaska’s wintertime visitors spend part of their time in the Arctic and part in Anchorage where some of the best ski slopes in the world are available. CELEBRA’nONS Also enjoyable are such celebrations as the Anchorage Fur Rendezvous, the Cordova Ice Worm Festival, the Homer Winter Carnival, the Willow Winter Carnival and the Dillingham Beaver Rroundup. In March, the North American Championship dog sled derby is held at Fairbanks. One big advantage in visiting Alaska in the winter is rates are lower not only in hotels but also for tours and for many airline fares. Escobedo Gets 22 Years CHICAGO (AP) — Danny Escobedo, whose name identifies a landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision in a murder case, was sentenced yesterday to 22 years in prison for dealing in heroin. Judge Alexander J. Napoli of U.S. District Court assessed the penalty on Escobedo’s conviction earlier this month on charged of possessing and selling the narcotic. The maximum punishment would have been 160 years in prison and a $160,-000 fine. Federal agents testified dur- ing a seven-day trial that Escobedo, 29, and an accomplice sold them heroin on several occasions last year. The agents said $1,800 was paid for the drugs. In 1964 the Supreme Court handed down what has become known as the Escobedo Decision. The court set aside the murder conviction of Escobedo in the killing of.his brother-in-law because it found Escobedo had not been allowed to consult a lawyer before making a statement to authorities. IIHTMY SALE lirir ☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆ Yardsman 20” Push Type Lawnmower Mod*l2180-1 R*g. Price $109.95 Sole Price *79** Ml SLEDS POPUUIR MAKES FLEXIBLE FLYER • TRUE TEMPER AND AMERICAN - ALL SIZES ALL SKAGWAY INSULATED SUITS AND JACKETS 50% Off List (Except Ovaralls) 25% OFF ON Ml ROCKWELL GREEN LINE DRILLS 1/4” AND 3/8" SIZES t0% OFF ON ALL IMPORTED BOOTS Buckles, Zip^rs, Loces and Insulated KEE80 HPWE. NO. 1 3041 ORCHARD LAKE RD. Free Parking in Rear OPEN DAILY 7:30 A.M. TO 6 P.M. 682-2660 SUNDAYS 8 A.M. to 2 PlM. ■I’d "i/J ,/ G~« THE PONTI AC PRESS. »VVEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 21; 1968 Unions Dim Chances to End Copper Strike MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) Chances appeared bleaker today for any break, in the na-tionwifM copper strike after unten leaders slapped down a goverament prqwsal to get tatts moving again in the aevui-month-old walkout. "It tooks pretty grim," said strike leader Joseph P. Molony after his committee represent-striking' unions jected Tuesday a federal sug- George Meany, said the federal plan "is unacceptable because it is unworkable and would not resolve any of the basic prob- gestion that the unions drop lems which caused the strike.' demands for company wide bargaining. The strike leaders, with the approval of AFL-CIO President They said the 60,000 striking workers in 22 states can’t hope to wipe ouUnequities in wages and working conditions at four ipajor copper firms if the tuiions give up their demands for companywidebargaining. 'I hope they will continue with this stril4 until iqiur objectives are met,” said Molony, vice f»-esident of the United Steelworkers^ Union, “but it’s for the members to tell us what to do.” VotetUx Approve 2 Schhoi Issues BENTON HARBOR (AP)-School district, voters at Benton] Harbor have approved twoi school money issues including I renewal of an 8.8S-milt, three-year operating levy, 2,850 toj 1,660. Voters also approved' establishing a building and site, fund, 2,595 to 1,873 and levying one mill for three yearrs for a building program, 2,620 to 1,847. U.S, Citizenship Classes Schedul'ed The fourth tern? of American tinue foi^ 15 weeks to prepare {Citizenship classes, sponsored participants for citizenship ex-|by the Waterford Department of aminations ih July. Community School Services,! ................................... will start at 7 p.m. 'Tuesday'’at I Each session will last three iMMon Junior High School, 3835 hours, No fee wIU be charged. W. Walton. ‘The classes are fun,” said Mrs. Hqffarth. “We are very informal and we "all learn together. Students are not required to preenroll for the course and iHoffarth, the course will con-!become American citizens. Sihce last fall, Mrs. Hof-may report to the tot class 'farth-a civics teacher a tmeeting, said Donald Youmans, ; assistant superintendent * {community school services. Clubs to Aid Job Drive for 150,000 Young THE PONTIAC l^HKSS. WEDXESDAV, FKIVruaRY 2J, 1968 C—7 LANSING (AP)—Officers of fsxtent in Michigan or any other six Btatemde service clubs, meeting with Acting Gov. William Milliken, agreed Tuesday to jjoin an effort to find jobs for some 150,000 youngsters around the state this sunimer. “Never before has any program been undertaken tp this state to my knowledge,” Milliken told representatives of th? Lions, Rotary, Kiwanis, Civitan and Optimist clubs and the Jaycees. ★ * w Millikeii urged members of the nearly 900 local affiliates of the clubs represented to seek out youths looking for Jobs and to. help them—even to the ejctent of asking employers to create wbrk. ★ ★ ★ Members cmild also “coach” three to five youngsters each, he said, helping them apply for jobs, taking care of their transportation proUems^d so on. Milliken warned that nearly 2.5 million students aged 15 to 19 will be Q^t of school this summer, many of tfiem looking for jobs. -----_____________ Ftre Hits School I GOP HoHs Senate Election Win MUSKEGON HEIGHTS UPl A fire of undetermined origin in storage closet forced the evacuation of approximately 500 students frpm the Philips Elementary and Junior High School Tuesday in Norton Township. There were no in-iuries reported and damage was confined to the closet and an adjacent unoccupied classroom: LANSING (API-Republican State Chairman Elly Peterson hailed the GOP victory in Monday’s special Senate election as additional proof that the people of Michigan still look to the Republican party for leadership in state government.” GOP candidate Gary Byker beat Democrat Chester Harm- sen by an unofficial 15,583 to 6,579 margin in the solidly Republican 23rd Senate District, including Allegan, Van Buren and Ottawa counties and part of Barry County. The death of Sen. Harold J. Volkema, R-Holland, created the vacancy. 'Sen.-elect Byker, of course, ran in a predominantly Republican district,” Mrs,. Peterson said, “but his 2-to-l majority clearly indicates that the Republican party is gaining strength, rather than just Iiold-ing its own.” Blue is the least penetrating of lights. C-~8 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. I 21, 1968 BAKE-OFF WINNER - Mrs. Phyllis Lidert of Oak Lawn, III. holds the Buttercream Pound Cake which won her $25,000 Grand Prize in Pillsbury’s 19th Bake-Off in Dallas on Tuesday. Mrs. Lidert’s cake was selected by judges as best of the entries from the 100 finalists. Bake-Off Winner Is a Pound Cake DALLAS, Tex. tiW Judges awardhtd Om Buttercream pound cake at Mrs. Albert Li«M ItttB Oak Lawn, 111., a Chicago suburb, the $25,000 grand prize Tuesday in the Pillsbury Co. Baken^. Thrft other women shared $5,000 Tunnerup., prizes in the 19th annual event, staged in the big DalJas Apparel, Mart -Mrs. j, DavW Taylor d<.Dallas, Mrs. Lee Holeemb of Farm-ingtOHr N.M., and Mrs. Edward Schumann of Oshkosh, Wis. Betty Taylor, wife of a Ph. D. candidate in.psychology, triumphed in a hew refrigerated fresh 4ough category with “craft crescent lassagne," using the standard Ingredients inside refrigerated creicent d i n n e -rolls.. . BaklAg at a range .between Mrs. Lidert dnd Mrs. Taylor. Mrs. Holcomb wtta with *»,toffee breaks,-^ a cookie using Smglish toffee frosting ndx that .likes minutes to prepare^ ,t*V “Bacon braid,” in the mix category, gained Mrs. Schumann W *i«ptee. a combination of iltot roll mi* and cream cheese'to yeast h(^d, flavored with bacon. Soupls^e for Baked Dish • I Tuna-Noodle Florentine uses spinach to tasty'advantage. If fresh -^^nach is 'not available, the recii^ can be made with one ten-ounce package of frozen spinach or a one-pound catl of spinach, drained. A cup of white Here is the buttercream pound cake winning recipe. BUTTERCREAM POUND cake 1 package Pillsbury but-' tercream lemon frosting mix | 2 cups butter, softened | S eggs I 4 cups Pillsbury’a best ' all purpose flour { 2 teaspoons baking powder 1 can 12 oz. poppy seed cake and pastry fiHlng Confectioners’ sugar or glaze, j In large mixer bowl, creamj dry frosting mix and butter at medium speed,, unhl light and. fluffy, about 6 minutes. Add] eggs 1 at atime, beating well after each, Gracfhlly beat in flour and baking'i^der. In small mixer bOWl, combine 3 cups batter with poppy seed filling; blend well. 'Spread half a plain batter over bottom of | greased IP-inch tube pan. Then! alternately add spoonfuls of peppy seM batter and remain-i plain bitter. ! Bake at 325 degrees for l hourj miiiutes to 1 hour and 45 gtihtoes. Cool cake in pan 15 tninutes before removing. Cool completely. Sprinkle wiUi confectioners’' su^ 6r drizzle With glaze. I Glaze: Combine F cup con-' fectioners’ sugar with 2 table-1 spoons mjlk or lepioh juice. | Self-rising floitf Is not recom-| mended for u.se in this recipe, j Potato Ideas | Are Collected i in New Book There's something new in the spmacn ormneu, “ 3" h,!Ziway of cook books, devoted ex-, sauce to, "S^i^luLelv to potatoes, it's the' has been idded. can substitute for the cheese soup. published by the Maine Potato' Tuna-Noodle Florentine commission. 8 oz. enriched'durum noodles -phe Potato Idea Book lists 26 2 cups cooked, c h o p p e d different kitchen-tested ways to spinach, drained 'prepare and serve the prosaic 1 can (7 oz.) tuna, drained and potato, with suggestions ranging flaked j from soups to desserts. H cup milk It's handsomely illustrated in 1 can (10?4 oz.) condensed full color. Several of the recipesi cheese soup ' included are prize winners from | 1 teaspoon salt recent consumer contests con- Dash pepper ^ducted by the Commission. All 1 cup enriched bread crumb$ | recipes have been tested. ! cup grated ParmesaB'l Potato Idea Book Is cheese I broken down into eight sections; Cook noodles in boiling, salted I Soups, salads, main dish water until tender, yet firm, 5 casseroles, entrees, baked - • ............ dish to 7 minutes. Drain. Combine with spinach, tuna, milk, soup, salt and pepper. Pour into shallow 2-quart baking dish. variations, side potatoes, desserts miscellaneous. Readers may obtain a copy of Sprinkle with bread crumbs and the Potato Idea Book by sen-cheese. Bake in p r e h e a t edidlng 25 cents in coin to The ,350-degree oven, 20-25 minutes.|Maine Potato Commission, Makes 6-8 servings. i Presque Isle, Maine, 04769. TOR ffmivg ocemoNS ^ . ' Wdmi-sweet choetdate bits or Iwtttractdph'ptodW <* ,, douMe boiler. Using a Ltole knife, spr^ fnaftad ^uoaad ends of pirouette cookies, limnediateiy spiOTOe wlUt fiaely chopped nuts, or Jhredded coconut. AUow to set on eake rack. Perfect for engagement parties, showers and wedding receptions. m EACH WEEK A DIFFERENT ITEM. PLATE. CUP. SAUCER«r BREAD and BUTTER PLATE WILL BE FEATURED FOR 29c WITH EACH AND EVERY $3.00 PURCHASE ... TABLERITE MIXED WHITE DOVER IRONSTONE UNNERWAREt CUPONiy29(’ . WITH EACH 53.00 PURCHASE ALSO MATCHING COMPLETER PIECES AT SAVINGS UP TO 4Q% POOUC CHOPS 78! PORE CHOPS IlfiO Cut From Tender Yeung Porkers Pound wij^ TABLERITE CUT A WRAPPED FREE WHOLE FORK LOINS.... "■68° PORK LOIN END ROAST... ">0° TABLERITE CHUCK STEAK... TABLE KINO Thick Sliced Bacon farmer PEETS SMOKED BRAUNSCHWEIGER TABLERITE ^ . FRESH PERCH FILLETS 2p£.*l” BAIL PARK FRANKS OCOMA 11. 39° TURKEY DRUMSTICKS FARMER PEETS BONANZA .b79' ,b 69* s29- HICKOKY SMOKID Pound TABLERITE FRESH OYSTERS .<11241. Tin OfKiAlL 1-Quart I i6-0z. Btl. $|19 59° Soft IGA COOKIES HEALTH and BEAUTY AIDS FAMILY SIZE TOOTH CREST 59' 3-n. k:~ DREEN GIANT NIBLETSCORNa. JIFFY HONEY DATIMUFFII IGA KING SIZE MENTHOL PLAIN or>ILTER GIGAREHES ■ 1 . a . 10 Pack Carton CRISCO OIL. ALL PURPOSE MIX BISQUICK.. JIF CREAMY OR CRUNCHY PEANUT BUHER I ■ ■ I 2-oz. Jar 59° * 39« I ■ 8-oz. Box 12-inches ■€ Ae !5-FootRoll 19 BAKERY VALUES OVEN FRESH SOFT TWIL BREAD 2 49' IGA TABLE TREAT BREAD 5 Mb. $100 4-oz. 1 OVENFRESH LUNCH BOX PIES 10' IGA TABURin KE CREAM [hoice of HAifm FARM FRESH PRODUCE HALF SHI y PINT |i CARTON |Y BLUE BONNET MARGARINE i-ib.29' krAft AMERICAN CHEESE SLICES Not 12-Oz. 59' MISSION YELLOW CLING IGA ALUMINUM FOIL BANQUET fROIlN MEAIPIIS 12^ pmCKEN. BEEF \ or TURKEY Michigan TUU FRESH I 11 FRESH QAUUFLOWER............a. 40* ,CA AYMbSPNERE Melnlosh APPLES.. 3.*,i5S‘ QUANTITY RIGHTS to^RVEP >.i «rt. 8-OZ. Size I TABLEKING POLY BAG CUT CORN or GREEN PEAS coilAR STRTTCHERMmm^/y HILU BROTHERS 9EGIHJUI or DRIP cofNe 2 t WITII THIS ebt^ON and $10 or MORE PURPHASE I .inks BRbTHERS|i$I^FiE ..2 ^:;.$1.19 u7rpifRrN:u ’"LiRATai^CANWiTHTW Valid Only af Wjngert'i and Gingellville IGA Markets ONE COUPON PER FAMILY COUPON EXPIRES FEB. 24,1968 PRICES IN THIS AO 0000 THRU FEB> 24,1868 2spES If'siWNtt iinin . YQpE IPP FED AND MONEY AHEAD 1MIUNH pAAWillMS,MIOOR|INEI6IITS-SLNniC(,OXFOm SIM Ihnn i XU. to ( P.M. Daily - ClolWl SMMTS GINGELLVILLE MARKET 3990 BALDWIN RB. STORE HOURS-SUM.Ipji CLOSER SURRtYS THE PONTIAC PRESS. W^NESDAY, FEBRUARY 21, n com Make Own Starter for Sourdough Bread Sourdough Bread, a favorite of pioneers and miners, is still popular with Westerners, but is not as readiiy available as it was in the early days. There is something about Sourdough Bread that cannot be equalled or imitated. The starter” was guarded with the same zeal the miners used with their gold, hoard. They used it for bread, flapjacks and jbiscuitsi. Vwy seldom did the newcomer start from scratch, [because an old timer usually 'shared his “starter.” From then r allowed to give it out. Capture a bit of> the early West with your very own “starter” and revive the old hospitality of passing on a bit to a friend. * SOURDOUGH STARTER 2 cups flotU> 1 teaspoon salt 3 tablespoons sugar Vz teaspoon granular yeast 2 cups luke warm water Place all large place to sour; stir Kveral times iy.‘ In two or three days your sourdough will be ready. At least once a week keep the starter active by adding one cup unsifted flour and one cup warm water .and let stand at room temperature either all night or all day. The amount of water and flour added can be increased for each time as long as the proportion is the same. Always reserve one-half»cup ‘ more of starter and keep in ingredients into^^e rerigerator after making jar; stir untila "^w batch. j mixture is a smooth thin paste. i Sourdough Bread Put on<*lid and set in a warm i cups ourdough starter 2 cups lukewarm water 2^ cups sifted all-purpose flour 1 cup milk .3 , tablespoons butter margarine 3 tablespoons sugar 2 teaspoons salt 1 package active d^ yeast V4 cup wartn water (105-115 degrees) 6¥i cup sifted all-purpose flour 1 teaspoon baking Salad oil Measure starter into large glass bowl; add water and flour; mix well. Let stand, [covered, in overnight. warm place The next morning, faeat milk then stir in butter, 2 tablespoon sugar and 1 teaspoon salt. Cool to lukewarm. Sprinkle yeast over V* cup warm water. Let stand 5 minutes. Stir yeast into cooled milk mixture; add to starter mixture; beat with wooden spoon until well mixed. Beat in cups flour until batter is smooth. Mix baking soda with remaining sugar and salt. Sift evenly over dough; stir gently to mix well. Let dough rise, covered, in warm place until almost double in bulk, 30 to 40 minutes. Mix down dough; gradually beat in remaining flour until dough is stiff enough to clean sides of bowl. Knead dough about 5 mimites until smooth and elastic. Divide dough in half;le t rest, covered, 10 minutes. Grease bottom of two 9x5x3-inch loaf pans. Shape loaves put in pans. Brush tops lightly with salad oil Let rise about one hour until dough has risen to top of pans. Bake at 375 degrees for about 50 minutes. BAKED TAPIOCA CUSTARD — From the Federalist ! period right up to the Jet Age, Americans have been highly i influenced by flr^t family f^ favorites. Currently, tapioca { pudding is enjoying a renaissance of popularity. Serve your ' family Baked'Tapioca Custard with strawberries. Rote Tapioca Pudding | High in Popubrity Ever since Abigail Adams, first of our first ladies to live in the White House, hung the family wash in the East Room, Americans have looked to the nation’s first families as style-setters. Though Abigail’s washday idl- she did help popularize the white potato, ften generally considered more fit for animal fodder fiiap for human consumption. Abigail ordered 20 BUSHELS of white potatoes to see her family ttmough the winter of 1799. Jefferson, greatest gourmet ever to grace the White House, introduced the country to vanilla, macaroni, Parmesan cheese, and the glories of French cookery. Indeed, so “Frenchified” did Jefferson become during his tour of dnty as Minister to France, that Patrick Henry carped “he abjured Us native victnals.” Dolly Madison ^ the capitol city abuzz with her marvelous strawberry ice cream, “piece de resistance” at to husband’s second inaugurid btdl. Julia Dent Grant brought into v 29 course diitneb, though the General was cmtent to breakfast off cucumbers and coffee. '' w “ W w Today, tapioca pudding is high on the popular list, thanks to a good press from LBJ’s household. Even without such reflected splendor, the fashioned goodness of this homey favorite will delight your first family, particularly when you serve it with strawberries. And with qidck-ceoking tapioca, the bhked tapioca costard pictured is as eaq^ to make as it Is to e|t Baked Tapioea Cnstard With medium beat Until mixture comes to a full boil (6 to 8 minutes). Remove from heat. Add vanilla. Pour over slightly beaten eggs, stirring constantty. Add butter. Ponr into 8 individual custard dishes or a IW-quart baking dish. Sprinkle with nut-ineg. Place in a pan of hot water. Bake at 325 degrees for 45 min-ut«, or until knife inserted in center comes out clean. Tbp with Strawberries^ Makes 8 V* cup ^uick-cooking tapioca H cup kugar V4 teaspoon salt 4 cups milk 1 teaspoon vanilla 3 eggs, slightly beaten 1 tablespoon butter Nutmeg 1 package (10 oz.) frozen strawberry halves, thawed Combine quidt-cooking tapioca, sugar, salt, and milk in saucepan. Cook and sty* over Slit a Roast, Fill With Yam Stuffing In Hawaii pineapple is the s y m b 01 of hospitality. T h i Yam-Stuffed Pork Roast” ha a generous amount of crushed pineapple mixed in a delectable candied yam stuffing. The mainland touch is a final “glaring” with one of the most popular foods in this country — convenient, canned tomato sauce. ★ ★ ★ Cooks have found so many uses for tomato sauce now — as sauce, instant seasoner, colorful garnish — that it has become a staple item in many cupboards.' Yam^inffcd Pork Roast 4 lb. boiled, rolled pork shoulder ibast 2 (1-lb. Jf-dz.) cans yams, drained 1 (15-oz.) can crushed pineapple, drained ^ cup brown sugar V4 cup melted butter 1 (8-oz.) can tomato sauce Place roast on rack in roasting pan. Cut 3 or 4 slits crosswise % the way through roast, floast at 325 degrees, for 40 to 45 minutes per pound. / B hour before roast is done, remove from oven and fill slits with candied yam staffing: With electric mixer whip together yams, pineapple, brown sugar, butter and V*. can tomato sauce. When roast is stuffed, pour remaining % can of tomato sauce ovef top. Cbntinue baking remaining Vt hour or until done. Makes 6 servings. •OR lit DRINKS-Brlghtr mlored 16-ounce steins with ge, convenient handles are tured in new line of in-ated serveware introduced The West Bend Company, ins as well as cups, mugs, iiblers, ice bucket and be^ ige server are available fb (ice four new colors — n (green), pineapple (yel-0, tiger lily (orange) and ique gold. School Lunches Set High Goals Nearly all schools participating in the National School Lunch Program serve lunches fiiat meet the program's major ndtritimiBl goals of dalorles,' protein and calcium, findings of a nationwide study show, MSU Extension specialists say. W A • - .W Standards call for each lunch to contain a minimum of two ounces of protein-rich foods; three-fourths cup vegetables or fruits consisting of two or more different foods; one slice enriched or whole-grain bread or equivalent; two teaspoons but^ ter or fortified margarine^ and one-half pint milk. The recommendations are based joo nutritional needs of 9 to 13 year old children. introduces 4fOewFiosted Pop-lkrts ^ Mvith spd&al sugar Sparkled idng anda very special cRogouie vliite id^ andcoconut filling irirsi: WomS First came regular Pop-Tarts®. Then—Frosted Pop-Tarts. Now our latest —sugar sparkled Frosted Pop-Tarts in three new flavors. Plus an all-new Pop-Tarts pastry—Chocolate with white icing and coconut filling. Sugar sparkled Pop-Tarts have the same tender pastry crust that made regular Pop-Tarts so popular. Same luscious whole-fruit preserve fillings —Blueberry with golden icing and buttercrunch sparkles; Strawberry with white icing and rainbow sparkles; Cherry with pink icing and red sugar sparkles. * ^ , Try ’em hot from the toaster—the sparkled icing won’t melt (our secret). Or« eat ’em fresh from their foil wraps for lunch, snacks, a picnic. Sugar sparkled Frosted Pop-Tarts —in the toaster pastry section at your grocer’s. CUT ALONG DOTTED LINE O ld68 by Kellogg Company w C—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 21, 1$68 Meat and Cheese Appetizers Are Perfect Start for Party By JANET ODELL l(exc«5pt cheew) for filling; beat onions, nuts, egg, parsley, mint Pontiac Press Food Editor well blended. jand salt. Shape small amount of Are you tired of the same old| Wvide cheese among the 18 '^oil*^°Ser™ *,„d p.r.ta»T D, .nr. tSI?..- ,Z SUt wish you could think with bacon-wrapped chicken livers if you don’t want Cook in hot oil. Serve ( Cheese. Bake* 15 to 20 minutes, . until filling puffs and is new for a «>^st jjgj,yy jg course? Relax, we’re about toi Pitted ripe olives are the--"---------------- come to your rescue. Isurprise Ingredient in the center ,^' ” “ '^Ipn .5 Granted that sour cream of cocktail meat balls. Served ®'*'* * cup canned t i onion dip with either crackers hot, they’re accompanied by a or raw vegetables is popular, it lemony or spicy sauce. Bere’s a ^'*f ^ tab espoons lemon ]uice Isn’t the be-all. end-all of ap- really different food. .petizers. Nor t*®, y®" RIPE OLIVE MEAT BALLS 2 cups canned pitted ripe olives 1 pound ground beef V.! cup chopped onion Vz cup pine nuts 1 egg 2 tablespoons chopped parsley 2 tablespoons chopped mint 1 'k teaspoons salt 2 tablespoons cooking oil How about homemade liver paste? It looks Impressive and sounds extravagant. It’s neither and has the added advantage of going together in a hurry. ANGOSTURA LIVER PATE 2 pounds beef liver 2 envelopes un flavored gelatin 3 cups cold water 3 vegetable bouillon cubes 1 small onion, grated 3 tablespoons lemon juice 1 tablespoon salt 1 tablespoon Angostura aromatic bitters Cover beet liver with water and bring to a boil.'Lower heat and simmer for 10 minutes or until liver is tender. Drain and put through food chopper. Crinkle unflavored gelatin Into 1 cup of cold water. Let stand S minutes. Add bouillon cubes and stir, over low heat until gelatin and cubes are dissolved. Stir in remaining water and onion, lemon juice and salt Chill until mixture Is syrupy. Fold in ground liver and Angostura. Beat with rotary egg beater until well blended. Pour mixture into a lightly oiled 9x5x3 inch loaf pan. Chill until firm. Unmold and cut Into slices to serve as first course onlettuce leaves. For hors d’oeuvres, cube uid serve on crackers or on top of bread-squares. Makes lloaL If you do enjoy fixing hot ap-petixers, miniature hot quiches are a good choice. Make your tart shells early In the day, or even the day before. Have the filling ready. You can assemble and bake the tartlets in 30 minutes. CHEESE TARTLETS Pastry mix for double crust 1 egg yolk 1 tablespoon water 3 eggs, well beaten 9 tablespoons powdered creamer V« teaspoon salt Ml teaspoon cayenne pepper % teaspoon black pepper 1 can plus 2 tablespocms boiling chicken broth % cup grated cheddar cheese Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Prepare pastry according to directions on package. Roll pastry and cut into 18 3-inch circles. Fit into 2y«-inch individual tart pans. Beat egg yolk and water together; brush on pastry; refrigerate until filling is ready. Combine remaining ingredients Drain ripe olives. Mix beef, cups, about dozen meatballs. GREEK SAUCE; Melt 2 tablespoons butter and stir in 2 and carefully stir in 1 egg yolk. Makes about 1 'k cups. INTERNATIONAL SAUCE: Cook 1 minced onion, 1 chopped green pepper and 1 mjneed clove garlic in 2 tablespoons butter until pepper is limp. Blend in 1 tablespoon flour, IMi teaspoons chili powder, and Vi teaspoon salt. Gradually add Vi cup tomato juice an|d 'k cup beef broth cooking until thickened. Makes about IVi RH»E OUVE MEAT BALLS Crisp Lettuce Is Base for New Salmon Salad “Cream Cheese S a 1 m o ni Salads’’ calls for beds of chopped, crisp, western iceberg let-| tuce tossed with pimiento and green peppers, and a topping of. salmon and cream cheese! Kture flavored with dill pickle, j onion, lemon juice and savory.; Yum! I Serve this flavwful fish salad for Saturday lunch vrith buttered, heated, Parmesan -sprinkled bread sticks. Ci«am Cheese Salmon Salads I head western iceberg lettuce 1 can (I lb.) salmon, chilled 1 package (3 oz.) cream cheese, at room temperature Vi cup chopped dill pickle 2 tablespoons finely chopped onion | 1 tablespoon lemon juice Vi tea.spoon savory, crumbled 2 tablespoons chopped pimiento 2 tablespoons chopped green pepper Core, rinse and drain lettuce; chill in plastic cris^r oi disposable plastic bag. Chop 2 cups lettuce; chill remainder for use another time. Drain salmon; discard skin and bones if you desire. Work until soft; fold in pickle, onion, lemon juice and savory. Fold in 1 cup chopped lettuce. i To make salad beds, combine 1 cup chopped lettuce with pimiento and green pepper; divide onto 4 sale'’ plates.; Invert V^-cup measure o f salmon mixture onto each lettuce bed. Makes 4 servings. CHEESE TARTLETS Cold, colder, coldest — tbat’sjscoops of chocojate malted ice aU we. hear from friends andiCnam into mugs. AM hot spicy the weather man. When Iheljjjjjj* ^ weather’s brisk and blowy, and you long for warmth, keep the ANGOSTURA LIVER PATE Hot Milk Punch Is a Warm Idea cold away in a delicious new way by treating yourself to a hot malted milk punch, w ★ ■ ★ Hot malted milk punch for adults? Yes! When temperatures dip, you’ll be warm, warmer, warmest when you sip Malted Mocha Punch, S^icy Chocolate Malted Float, or nonalcoholic Chocolate Malted Tom and Jerries, tiiree hot malted milk punches for adults. Spicy Chocolate Malted Float I quart milk V^ cup chocolate syrup V4 teaspoon nutmeg Vi teaspoon cinnamon 1 tablespoon honey Chocolate Malted Ice Cream ★ ★ ■ Combine all ingredients. Heat to scalding. Put generous seizings. Malted MOcha Punchy 1 cup strong coffee V« cup sugar 1 quart milk I cup half and half Chocolate Malted Ice Cream ■*■■■-* 'A Combine, all ingredients in saui^pan. Heat. Put generous scoops of chocolate malted ice cream into mugs. Add mocha milk mixture^ Makes four i cup servings. Chocolate Malted . Tom apd Jerries 1 egg 1 tablespoon sugar Dash baking soda 1 tablespoon rum flavoring IVi teaspoons vanilla 3 cups milk Chocolate Malted Ice Cream Separate egg. Beat white until! frothy. Add sugar gradually | beating constantly until white stands in peaks. Beat yolk separately until thick and lemon-colored. Blend egg yolk and beaten white with a dash of baking soda. Put 2 tablespoons of egg mixture toto each mug. Add flavorings to milk and heat' pour into mugs. (Baking soda will cause the hot egg-milk mixture to froth.) Add a scoop of chocolate malted ice cream. About 4 servings. MIAMI bake shoppe Open Evenings THE PONTIAC MALL SAM A WALTER Delicious Sausage Carry Outi ■— ’ Open Mon.r Thurs., Fri. * - J HOFFMAN’S fiAimrmnm NO OBLIGATION. NO PURCHASE NECESSARY. SIMPLY PICK UP YOUR ENTRY BLANKS AT OUR MEAT COUNTER. YOU MUST BE 18 YEARS OF AGE TO ENtER. EMPLOYEES NOT ELIGIBLE. Center Cut Swiss HONDA MOTORCYCLB tve®. HOaE FREESB SKCULS! FULL SIDES OF BEEF cut, wrapped, and delivered free NO DOWN PAYMENT JuMt Say “Charge It“ 55^ Michigan Grade 1 _ _ SKINLESS HOT DOGS.. 39^'^ SLICID BOLOGNA.....43*'^ CHUNKS..................39* All Beef Cheny Red HAMBURGER 47< 39i Always Delicious BEEF POT BOAST J^zrpryday Low Prices 5 *1 Sliced BREAD 1-lb. 4-oz. loaves Homogenized M ^ MILK Borden’s-gallon Ew All Beef Hamburg M M STEUCEHES 49 Ruby Rad Vina Ripa B in a TOMATOES Tray Pack Lorga Crisp HEAD LETTUCE 2 Heads oiilONr SBunehes Fancy Rad RADISHES 3 Pks. Lorga Ball GREEN PEPPERS 3 for 2F STEAK SPECIALS RIBS CLUBS BUTCHER B9YS OUR OWN SMOKED COTTAGE STYLE PORK CHOPS 591 Come in and Sea the Handa Matoroycia to.bp given away FRU! FMCY _ Leg-O-Lamb m BONELESS ROLLED TENDER RUMP ROAST 791 HoFFHM’S OtKLMID PaCKINS Go. (RETAIL DIVISION) S24 NORTH HIMIY STRUT, PONTIAC Serving the Gredter Pontiac Area for Over 50 Years FRIK OARKINO IN RKAR FI 2-1100 WE RESERVE THE RiCHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES OPEH DAILY 8 AeMe to CPeM. Get Your Entry Blank FREE at the meat counter THE PONTIAC PliESS» WEDNESDAY, FKHRl Ain ‘Jl, 1968 Hot Sandwiches Right for Now C—11 Hot sandwiches during cold weather do. hit the hunger spots just,,right! You can come up with in a hurry if there’s, canned luncheon meat on the shelf.. Simply slice end place between bread, spread butter or margapne on the outside and lace in waffle baker to toast until golden brown. Spicy Mixture Gives Beef Ribs Good Taste It’s not new to suggest a hamburger for a hot sandwich, but (Mie with variations may excite the interest. 4 As one innovaton, mix ground beef with deviled ham (one pound ground beef with one can' of two and one-fourth ounces of; the canned meat). Another usesj equal parts of ground beef and lamb. V CORNBREAD — Corn bread, whether Southern style or Yankee, is a favorite hot bread for breakfast, lunch or dinner. Bake it in a skillet for a change. "No doubt about it,'Americans like their beef, and sh'prt ribs rate high on the list of favorite beef dishes. Short ribs are usually wise meat buys. Trimmed from the end of a standing rib of beef, they have the fine flavor and good eating of this cut of meat. And Oriental Beef Short Ribs are especially tasty. Lazy pace cooking is the rule when preparing beef short ribs. Long, slow, moist cooking guarantees these chunks of beef will be tender, juicy and so-o _ They require little watching while cdqking. If time for fixing dinner is short, the beef ribs may be cooked to the fork-tender stage the evening before, stored overnight in the refrigerator, and finished cooking with the celery and onions at dinner time thp second day. Good in Both Areas North and SoOth Disagree on Cornbread Most people have a pretty made with white corn meal and flour is just moistened. Filll Melt shortening in 9-inch iron fixed idea as to what good corn buttermilk, with no sugar and well-greased muffin tins or|skillet or 9-inch square baking bread should be and anythingjlittle or no flour and the bat-jcornstick pans ®/4 full or pourjpan in oven, brushing sides of other than that just isn’t the ter is poured into a hot pan and I batter into well-greased 8-inch pan with melted shortening, real thing. baked until it is crusty and square pan. * j Sift together dry ingredients. If you hail from south of the browned. I Bake in 425 degree oven 20 to Combine egg and buttermilk Mason-Dixon line, it’s usualiyl Alrout the only ^g Southern 25 minutes fy muffin or and stir into dry ingredients — -----------—and Yankee Com Bread have in cornsticks and 2^ to 30 minutes'along with melted shortming. common is lots of butter'served for square pan or until brown. iPour batter into hot pan. Bake with them. jMakes 9 muffins or 11'in 450 degree oven 20 to "25 YANKEE CORN BREAD Cornsticks. I minutes, or until browned. Cut 1V4 CUDS sifted aU-Duraose' SklUet Corn Bread: Double in squares or wedges, serve hot floSr *“ P"'‘^%ecipe for Yankee Com Bread I with butter. Makes 9 servings. % Cup yellow corn meal u-r? „, ., ^ greased lO-inch iron skillet. 2 tablespoons sugar Bake in 425 degree oven 30 to 35 i¥t teaspoons double acting minutes, or until brown, baking powder Everyone Needs Some Vitamin A At least every other day you should eat vitamin A rich foods, advises the Consumer and Marketing Service. Vitamin A helps protect against night bUndnc md so and keeps skin smooth dnd soft. It also provides a resistance to infection. Sources include: eggs, deep yellow squash, pumi^, sweet potatoes, parrots, ai^cots, cantaloup or dark green leafy vegetables. Oriental Short Ribs have a great flavor and the interesting added spicing of ginger, soy sauce and ginger ale. Served with its own piquant sauce, hot fluffy rice and simple fruit salad, it makes an invigorating nourishing meal—just right for snappy days. Oriental Beef Short Ribs V4 cup flour l‘/i teaspoons salt % teaspoon ginger 3 pounds beef short ribs 2 tablespoons shortening IVi cups sliced onion ' IMj cups sliced celery 1 clove garlic, minced 1 bottle (10-oz.) ginger ale % cup ^catsup 1 tablespoon soy sauce Combine flour, salt and jinger; mix. Coat short ribs with flour mixture. Melt shortening in large fry pan or Dutch oven with close-fitting lid. Brown ribs well in shortening, over moderate heat, turning meat as needed to brown evenly. Add % cup onion, % cup celery and garlic; coirti until onion is soft. Sprinkle remaining floiir mixture over meat. Add ginger ale, catsup and soy sauce. Cover; cook slowly untU meat is fork tender, about 2 hours. Add remaining onion and celery 30 minutes before end of cooking time. Continue cooking until both meat and vegetables are tender. Remove short ribs. Spoon off excess fat and simmer sauce to thicken if desired. Serve with hot fluffy rice. Yield: 4 servings. ORIENTAL BEEF SHORT RIBS-They ’re long on flavor, short on labor. Oriental Beef Short Ribs are a wonderfully hearty dish that will please the whole family. I 1 teaspoon salt 1 egg Two-thirds cup milk One-third cup all-vegetable; a shortening, melted Sift flour, corn meal, sugar, egg, stir in milk and melted shortening. Add to dry ingredients, stirring with fork until SOUTHERN CORN BREAD V\ Cup all-vegetable shortening 2 cups white com meal 2 tablespoons all purpose flour 2 teaspoons double-acting baking powder 1 teaspoon baking soda 1 teaspoon salt 2 cups buttermilk Cracklin Bread: Slice % pound fresh pork fat very thin, then cut into small pieces. Fry small amount at a time in a skillet over medium heat until browned and crisp. Drain off fat as it accummulates. Spread crisp pieces of fat on paper towels and sprinkle lightly with salt. Prepare Southern Corn Bre; directed, adding crisp fat to dry ingredients. Brown Sugar Comes 3 Ways Jelly Layer Is Spread on Bar Cookie When you have a great many I 4 egg white.s but not dry: add remaining cookies to make, it is conveni-j ■!'4 cup chopped nuts sugar gradually, continuing to ent to make bar cookies. ThisI 1 teaspoon lemon extract merinpe is formed, recipe 1» VugeelavUe. , crean, PuUer »l,h ■, cap ,u.|2 a'n”d rmee’eaSlc,'. JELLY MERINGUE BARS Igar; add - " 1 cup butter 1V4 cups sugar 1 egg yolk Vi teaspoon salt 2% cups sifted flour 1 cup blackberry jelly egg yolk and salt! Beat until light and fluffy. Stir spread meringue over jelly. ~ • fnlfll flour. Pat mixture intojand sprinkle with reserved greased 10xl5-inch jelly roll pan.jchopped nuts. Bake in 350- de-Stir jelly with a fork; spreadjg^ee oven for about 40 minutes, evenly over dough in the pan. Cool and cut n squares. Makes-Beat egg whites until stiff, 42-48 cookies. Your attention is called to the fact that light, dark and ganulated brown sugars are not completely interchangeable in recipes. The bulk densities and the flavors of these sugars vary. This means that substitutions of one for another without an adjustment of the measurement will alter the flavor and may in some instances cause a recipe failure. Take a Caeklebirel Roagtep home to dinner (So pluifip they can’t stand up)t. ^and get a ^100 coupon to buyaCaeklebfrd RoekComfsh OameHen! SAVE io« ( on one 1 pound con or two 8 oz. cons ) Vian Camil’s New Orleans Style Kidney Beans are made from a recipe created by an old New Orleans family. Choice red kidney be^ in a piquant sauce bring you the distinctively delicious flavor of authentic ‘Old World” cooking! Serve them alone, or in nourishing salads that men like, or as the main ingredient of many bean dishes. S' Cash-in now on this Cacklebird BI^-LITTLE Special. First, take e big Cacklebird Roaster home to dinher. Enjoy an abundance of plump, tender succulent meat with that exc/us/Ve Cacklebird farm-fresh flavor. Then send us the front label from the wrapper together with the coupon from this ad. We’ll send you a certificate worth $1.00 on a deluxe Cacklebird Rock Corhish Game Hen. (It's like getting the Game Hen free.) And-Cacklebird Game Hens come larger than the ordinary.>'lVi-2 plump pounds. So you . enjoy mqre juicy meat, more sumptuous flavor. Look for Cacklebird ih your supor markclt poultry f roozor. Get your mofiey-saving Cacklebird Certificate Mail to: iacklebird Rock Cornish Game Hen. 1 State __^Zlp 1 Offer MpirM April 30,19M CacMebird ii a raf iatarad trademarK ef Corn Products Company. ///'/; /.:■ I k'' . THIS COUPON WORTH 104 when you buy one 1 lb. can or two 8 oz. cans of Van Camp’s New Orleans Style Kidney Beans ’( New Orleans StyT* Kidney Beans. ____j tax L valua 1/20 of 1 Present This Coupon To Your Moll Qroeor X'specrrTe'd Md"are‘no"n"transferablerconsu^^^ ....er taxed, restricted, or license required. Cash “* THE rONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1968 6-Cent Letter Still Bargain! OLADEWATER, Tex. (UPI)-When postage went up to sixj leents, Postmaster J. H. Parrish of GJadewater dug into postal I jhistory for evidence that even at the new level, postage is a bargain. i i In 1916, he said, a single sheet letter cost six cents for! Idelivery up to 30 miles. The more sheets and the more the' miles, the more the cost. | NIAGARA FALLS ‘AFIRE’-Smoke appears to be rising from the American Palis, in Niagara Falls, N.Y., in this typical winter scene. Actually the condition is caused by a combination of above-freezing air temperatures and* the subfreezing temperature of the ice jam below the cataract. Ice plunging over the cataracts ja^s in the lower river to form an “ice bridge" each year, usually starting late in December and continuing into March. A letter going 400 miles cost 25 cents per sheet, he said,: and this in days when pennies wer| worth more than ttiey are today. j- In earlier days, the receiver and not the sender paid for;, the postage, Parrish said. In 1855, this was changed and thej i sender was required to pay in advance. | Uniform rates regardless of distance and free city delivery. |came in 1863, and the practice of charging per sheet of paperj Iwas dropped. ' i ' I I/)oking at the recent price increase in ferms of today’s ieconomics, Parrish said, postal rates ,in the United States arei 'still favorable to those in many other major countries. I I The average American worker earns the price of a six-centi 'stamp in 1.3 minutes, he said. I It takes a worker in Great Britain 2.5 minute^! to earn letter 'postage. In West Germany the average worker labors for 2.7 minutes and in France, a worker toils for 5.6 minutes for the price of a letter, he said. moppED! Sw9il0rs Up to $]5 Values Wools $jeoo Cardigans ' TO SAVK YOU MORE ♦♦ THAN EVER! SflWe aO% to T5% on Many Spociais Sta-Press Shirk $488 National Brands . Pair of Pants ith Any Sport Coat Over $20 % Shirt Sale 2 for $3.Pe All-Weather Coats REDUCED 1 Group to ♦10®* 1 Group to ns®* mii SHIRT with Any Suit I Jacket Clearance SAVE TO Vz CONN’S ______________ BOYS’WEAR TS^irSaginair-Downtown Pontiac Soviet Union Is Wasting Brainpower, Polls Show MOSCOW (IIPD-Like an army that sends medical graduates to cooking school, the Soviet Union wastes much of its brainpower torough sloppy planning, a series of polls showed today. The polls, summarized by the magazine Novy Mir (New World), showed that: • Half the Soviet Union’s university - trained specialists are put to work In fields outside their specialties. • Only 2 per cent of Industry-connect^ research is performed in laboratories attached to factories, compared with 61 per cent In the United States. • High Schools encourage their students to go on to uni- ' versities and emphasize college preparatory education. But Soviet universities have room for only a fourth of high school graduates, leaving 75 per cent of them disgruntled and ill-prepared to go to work. ’The statistics were In an article by Vladimir Kontorovich, who used them to point up the use that can be made of sociological polls. Such polls are still relatively rare in the Soviet Union. Kontorovich said the infant science of Soviet sociology can make good use of it to improve the nation's life. We have one million more engineers than the United 1 States, but only 65 per cent as much industrial output, he said.. “Add to this the problem of quality, in which we still lag behind.’’ “This is connected with the; inefficient use of highly qualified specialists,” he said. He quoted statistics that he said showed “the results by our great army of scientific workers are low.” “Engineers fn offices are overloaded with work that could easily be done by an average educated worker,” Kontorovich said. “Often engineers take on jobs that have nothing to do with their specialties. “According to the polls,” he iSaid, “almost half of our specialties with a higher education work on the wrong jobs.” AC WirMlwta CLAIMS A GO GO - Joan Carolle, 23^ of Cooksville, Ont., go-go girl-turned prospector, stakes a claim during the frantic uranium staking race in the Elliot Lake area of northern Ontario this week. Miss Carolle re^stered a dozen claims outside Sault Ste. Marie, Ont. New Many Wear FALSE TEETH WiHi Mar* Comfort To ovtrooma dlioomfort when donturM aUp. tUde or loooen, Jxut ------» a litt---------------- Srmer. You oat battrr, (Ml moro ' comfortable. PABTKKTH Is alkaline I —won't sour. He^ check plate odor. Dentures that lit are eaeenttal to ' health. 8m your dentist retularlT. ' Oet FASTBXTH at all druK counters. (AdvsrHiement) Grand what’s-its-name railway. We don’t need snow tires. Grand Trunk makes its own tracks ... in any weather. Eight traihs a day to and from downtown Detroit. Time. 1 hour or less. Board at principal suburbs between Pontiac and Detroit. Free parking at most stations. Commuting costs are low. Track down the Grand Trunk schedule. 332-8831. Commute GTT Grand Trunk Western •*w* don’t caw If you catch ourhi as long as you catch our tr GOOQ^EAR SERVICE World’s Largest G.E. Appliance, Stereo and TV Dealer STORE i' f. Kettering Nips Milford, 57-54 Waterford's Skippers Topple Cfafkston A couple ot streaks came to a Mt last night as Waterford’s Skippers saddled a cold Clarkston quintet with a 60-41 set-' back. The triumph broke a three-game losing streak for the Skippers (6-8)» while the loss ended a six-game winning string for the Wolves (8-6). The contest also enabled the Skippers to accustom themselves with the Clarkston floor, since they’ll be playing there In the distrct phase of the state high school tournament early next month. Waterford had another winner last night ih Kettering’s Captains, who slipped past Milford’s Raskins, 87-54. 'ITie win gives Kettering an 11-2 record, and a 3-0 mark against Wayne-Oaklanid League teams this season. The Captains join the W-0 next season. Waterford shot well, ctmtrolled the backboards throughout the game and that combination was too much for the Wolves, who checked in with theic, lowest point total of the season. The Skippers, hitting on 50 per cent of their shots in the fiiret half, jumped off to an 18-7 first-quarter lead and stretched It to 35-17 at halftime. BRIEF FLURRY Clarkston made its only move In the third period, closing the gap to nine points on one occasion, but the Skippers UGLA, Houston Rematch Seen Cougars Okay Bid to NCAA Cage Tourney By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS College basketball fans better circle fee date of Friday, March 22. Assuming that all goes well the eagerly anticipated rematch between Houston and UCLA will take place that night in the semifinals -of the NCAA championship tournament at Los Angeles along with another duel between the Big E, Elvin Hayes of Houston, and Mr. A., Lew Alcindor of UCLA. ★ w ★ The date was set Tuesday when Houston’s unbeaten Cougars, No. 1 in The Associated Press poll, accepted a bid to fee NCAA tou]mey along with eight others: St. Bonaventure, 19-0; 3t. John’s of New York, 16-6; Florida State, 17-5; Marquette, 19-3; Chicago Loyola, 13-6; New Mexico State, 18-4; Boston College 13-7; and either Columbia, 17-3, or Princeton, 17-4, whichever wins the Ivy League crown. UCLA still has to clinch fee Pacific-8 title to qualify for fee NCAA along wife 13 other automatic conference winners, but the Bruins are heavily favored to do ■0. Three independents. Army (18-4) Oklahoma City (17-6) and Fordham (14-6) were named to the other major postseason tourney, the National Invitation In New York, which opens March 14. Army passed up a bid to the NCAA in favor of fee NIT. SECOND PLACERS The remainder of fee 14-team NIT team likely will come from fee runners-up in fee Missouri Valley Conference, Atlantic Coast Conference, Southern Conference and Western Athletic Conference. Duquesne, a leading independent, also is hopeful of an NIT invite, having passed up the NCAA. - Duke’s Blue. Devils, eighth-ranked nationally and the only team in The AP Top Ten to play Tuesday, trimmed Ctemson 82-70 on fee road for their seventh straight and a 174 record. Mike Lewis’ 32 p^ts paced Duke which will cmnpete in the NCAA if it wins fee ACC crown or in fee NIT if it finishes runnemp id fee ACC. i St. John’s, the one certain toumafment bound team in action, also won ofi the road, but just barely. The Redman ledged Massachusetts 55-53 at Amherst, Mass., on Jim fenyth’s 30-foot shot in the last second. Kansas tightened its hold on first place in the Big Eight by defeating Missouri on the road 7445. In still another road triumph, Tennessee downed* Georgia Tech 7149 in two overtimes. Southern Methodist threw the Southwest Conference race into a triple tie by defeating Baylor on the road 7043. Baylor now, is tied for first at 7-4 with Texas A3cM and Texas. Texas A&M gained fee tie by defeating Arkansas 71-67 at home. Texas, also playing at home, moved up by downing Texas Tech 7949. THE PONTIAC PRESS WEDNESDAY, FEBEUABY 21, 1968 D—1 Wins Come Easy for Orion, Kimball quickly hiked the lead again to a comfortable 20. f- it .if if Skipper coach Bob Taylor, going more and more to his younger players, had an opportunity to cleat' the bench against the Wolves and seven members of the squad dented the scbring column. Leading the way was Bruce Saffron wife 16 points. Roger, Reed contributed 11 and Bruce Carlson added 10. Eric Hood collected 12 markers to lead the chilly Clafkston offense. ★ ★ ★ For the night, Waterford hit on 26 of 59 shots fOr a' good H per cent, while the Wolves took .more shots — 62 — but hit only 14 for 22 per cent. SKIPPERS TRAVELING The Skippers are on the road for the rest of the season. They visit Livonia Stevenson in an Inter-Lakes League contest Friday night, and close the regular season March 1 at Walled Lake. Clarkston, third at present in the Wayne-Oakland League, is also on the road for its last two contests. On Friday, the Wolves take on Brighton and then tangle wife West Bloomfield Feb, 28. Milford (4-10) couldn’t cope with the rebounding strength of Kettering. “They -r • L seemed to shoot until it went in,’’ said OLoAA I riUnfiphS the Skins coach Dave Torrance. the Captains held a 25-21 lead at halftime and added a point to the margin in the third' stanza. Milford, down nine and 10 points much of the third and early fourth periods, finished strong and almost closed the gap. “We just ran out of time,” sighed Torrance. Lake Orion and Royal Oak Kimball breezed to victories last night while Al-mont was forced to snatch victory from defeat in fee last four seconds. Orion’s Dragons knocked off Oxford, 87-54, Kimball dipped Oak Park, 77-48, and Almont slipped past Imlay City, 69-68, on Tim Reaume’s basket with just four seconds remaining. The Dragons of Orion, who hammered Oxford in their first meeting back in COVERED UP — Clarkston’s Mark Erickson keeps a tight defensive lid on Waterford’s Bruce Carlson during their game last night in Clarkston. Carlson didn’t, get out of this predicament, but he was free often enough 4o flip in 10 points. Balking Hurlers 'Strike Zone' in By United Press International The most important pitches in major leagub spring training camps are still being made by general managers who h(g>e the hurlers wife whom .feey are dickering will prove.as effective in fee summer as they are stubborn in fee spring. Personnel director Harry Dalton of fee Baltimore Orioles and general manager Lee MacPhail of fee New York Yankees are Among the front-offiM executives hSvii% their'troubles throwmg strikes. \ Daltim reached an a^eebient wife relief pitcher Moe Drab^sky Tuesday but still is dickering wife Tom Phoebus, who led the Orioles’ staff with 14 victories in 1967, and Stu Miller, a vetergn star reliever. In fee meantime, manager Hank Bauer is fretting over getting on wife fee No. 1 Job in fee Orioles’ spring camp — reorganizing his pitching staff. MacPhail announced the signing of 18^ year-old high school qtar Bob Elliott, who had a 354 reiem'd at Massapequa, Can't Find Pay League N.Y., but failed to reach agreements wife A1 Downing and Dooley Womack. Downing had a 14-10 record and 2.63 earned rqn average last season while Womack was the .star * qf fee Vankees’ bullpen with a 2.41 era and 65 appearances. POLES APART MacPhail indicated feat hk is close to Ah agreement with Womack but that be and Downing are pretty far apart. The New Yoit Meik si^ed A1 Jackson, reat^nired during fee winter feom the World Champion St. Louis Cardinals, fer an estimated 130,000. Jackson, who pitched for the Mets from 1902 throng 19M, had a 94 record and 3.95 era for the Cardinals last season. Dick Hughes, Larry Jaster, Jim Cosman and Mike Torrez all signed wife the, Cterdinals; fee Chicago White Sox announced contract agreements wife Gary Peters, Pete Ward, Tmn McGraw, Wayne Causey, GOrry McNertney and BobPriddy. PontlK Prttt Phste by Edward E. NsM* TAKING AIM - Waterford’s BiU Foley (35) takes aim on the basket during last night’s contest against Clarkston after faking the Wolves’ Chuck Granger out of position. Waterford won, 60-41. Senior Posts Top Effort November, 76-20, started slow but gained fee upper hand at the begiiming of the second period and turned fee game into a rout. After gaining a 17-15 edge in the first frame, the Dragons pushed in nine points in a row to open fee second and feey left the floor at intermission wife a 34-23 lead. A 35-12 edge in fee third quarter ended any Oxford hopes of an upset. ★ 4 ★ ' The loss was fee 14th straight this season for the Wildcats and their 23rd in a row. ** LEAD DRAGONS Bill Foss, 6-5, and Gary Mize, 6-7, led the Dragons (12-3) in scoring and rebounding. Foss contributed 25 markers and Mize came through with 21. * if * Ray Martens flipped in 16 for the Wildcats. Kimball ran its winning streak to seven strai|dit> and in gaining its life win set a school record for victories. The best pfsevious total for fee Knights was 10inl|BS. Lesl Ltttle and Jay Brown, pushed in IS points apiece to spark the Knights, with help frmn teammates Fred Shellnut (ll)ahdEdPeltz(lb). ' ★ ★ ★ Kimball romped to a 42-21 lead at in-termisidon and cruised through the second half. Trent Harbin flipped in 19 points for Oak Park, now even for the season at 7-7. REPEAT PERFORMANCE Alfeont opened fee season with a 6342 win over Imlay City and last night’s contest was almost a carbem copy. , (Ckmtinued fei Page D-2, Col. 1) RochesferMatmen, Walled Lake Tune for League Duels Walled Lake and Rochester’s wrestling teams prepped for their respective league tournaments Saturday by posting easy victories Tuesday night. Rochester, who will conclude its Oakland A dual meet slate tomorrow against Utica, downed St. Clair Shores Lakeview, ^5, as John Major (10-2-1) capped the meet wife his fourth straight pin in the heavyweight event. Ben Rlgdori of fee Falcons registered his 13th victory in 14 starts. The Rochester squad is 124. Walled Lake concluded its dual meet season by thumping Catholic Central, 30-15, for win No. 11 in 13 tries. aOCMESTEa U, UAKEVliW » . , 9t owndi-Chrl* Vlwnb (R) bee Chrl* Boei (R) won by forleltt m—Paul Boe* (R) dec. Chtrnlek, 4-1; US—Ben RIS|dw **!„'*?£ Yii,," ana, 7-0; 130-Fred Herrieon (U dee. NI^, 4-0; 13»-BHI Serrell KiMSAU (jy “I’m in lieu of news,” an-Kopion ^3* ^7 Schmidt ? 7-7 I nounccd Lombardi. Then he 7 3A 7 Brown ‘ M Is'procecded to talk about his new i to 0 smiinot 3 t* iilcareer as a general manager, Horbin I yi 17 ptiti 5 0^ '>|divorced from coaching MS for DtAP (St) Shoder 2 0-0 Jotho 1 0-0 Oahlbcrg 0 2 3 - KInnball 1 0-0 7 ; Didn’t I ■ Know_____________________ I By John Carter I Horo't ono lor you huntoi ■ Do you know whol't Iho boif _ to woor whon you go hunting D Tho National Shooting Sports I dolien hoi dona roiaorch, one Ira pert thol tho color that ihewail up aj boat in thair ioata woa o fluoraacent a| I bloia orongo , . . Thty toy this I Ierongo it batter then Iho traditional |! rod plaid or dull brown bocouto it !| I alonda out beat undar oltnoal oil |) g conditioni of light and background. | I Ever wonder why akiitiR it I I callod akiiny? ... Tho word “tki” || -------to ua from tho old Norwegian o TMalt tt 1A-M 41 • 13 U 11 - « ball IS 17 17 It — 77 arsitv: Royal Oak Kimball 77, Oak Park 54. IMLAY CITY (Ml AkMONT (t7) PS PT TP PO PT TP Brinkar t 7-7 14 J.BchItky 7 3-4 71 Rowley 7 4-4 I F.BchIzky I 4-5 4 Shull 1 0-1 7 A.Currey 11 (W 27 SImont a S I 21 Wallace 3 2-5 I Schonbrg 7 2-4 70 Roauma 4 0-0 17 Roy 1 OO 7 Tolalt 10 7-14 47 Flthhabr 0 17 1 Totall 77 14-71 41 SCORK BY QUARTERS Imlay City ” ” 'Imont Junior ____ Almont 45. )r Varsity: 13 17 16 20 -17 22 17 13 mlay City 42, ToteT* Hauxwi Milt Adking 'OSD OXIKORD (S4) — PIT PO pr yp 7 0-0 4 ----- 0 23 2 Walt in 2 1-T ' “ - 0 O-l w .......... w 1 2 0-2 4 Millar 0 2-4 10 1-5 21 WlllotMf 11-4 3, * • * 2 Davidson 3 2-4 I, 5 Gammtl 2 3-4 responsibilities. “What are you going to be doing next summer when the Packers start working out,” fellow asked Lombardi. “I will be very much disappointed if I do not have enough self discipline to stay away,’ said. FROM ABOVE “Where will you watch the games?” “From the press box. Lombardi said the door to his office always will be open to _ any player who wants to talk flwith him. He will handle all the J contract signing. “Did the general manager of 2 M 4 Darting 0 L2 1^*’® Puckers take a cut when he » )1i 25 Romo * 2 3 4^“‘^ coachlng?” another asked. 14 14-46 S4 lonkort 5 IVO tO ^7oioii 14 lin (7 SCOR.gYOUARTJIRI^ 15 6 11 I7-S4 Lokt Orion 51. II set iLsks Orion ■ Oxford I Junior VarsI m\ Oxford 37. Auburn Hills Drops 2 Swim Verdicts I IHara's o raal oddity , man who holds tho all-tim I in tho Notional BaskotboU > Dolph Schayosg 10 Uoguo oHlco — ____ __ , >u think his job Is? . SchoyoSg who commiHod moro fouis ■ I Hion any othor ptpyor In history, is ■ I new tho Suporviser of Officials for | I Aubiirn Hills campus o f 51 Oakland Community College I-1 came out on the short of the ' I I score against two swimming I bat you didn't kno m third gonaroliena of eld cuilomora. | * Wo toko pride Ini tboll b CARTER TIRE CO. s, /L/(« s„y,./, i:, l.-df . 370 S. Saginaw FE 5-6136 PONTIAC opponents last night in the Oakland University pool. * ★ ★ The Nikes bowed to Calvin, 76-14, and to St. Clair, 50-31. The sharp Calvin squad downed St. Clair, 75-19. ■k * * Lone bright spot for the Nikes as a record-breaking effort by Dennis Orosz in the 200-yard frq^style. He turned in a time of .5 to beat the old mark of 2:09.8, set by teammate Tom Peasley last week. POOL TABLE SALE 10 DAYS ONLY FISCHER • 100% Wool Felt • Wedge-Type Cushions • Formica Toproils • Chrome Corners • 5-Yeor Guarantee Open Mon.-Fri., 11:00 to 1:30 - Sat. to 6:30 TOURNAMENT SALES 1965 S. Telegraph, North of Miracle Mile . Phone 335-1406 “If he did, he probably would still be coaching,” said Lombardi. ■A ★ ★ Lombardi said he only knew two Packers who were thinking of retirement. He said Max McGee already had nounced that he would not be back. The other man was not identified. Lombardi said preferred to let the player make his own announcement. In answer to recurren rumors that he eventually will be back in New York. Lombardi said. “I can understand those rumors. I am a New Yorker and 1 have a lot of friends here in New York.” WOULD USTEN “I dare say if somebody said 11 give you 40 per cent—or 51 per cent—of a club, I’d have to listen,” he added facetiously. “But there is nobody around who is going to do things like that." As for the Packers’ future, Lombardi said he considered lineback Fred Carr of Texas—El Paso the best college player in the recent draft. Naturally, Carr was one of the Packers’ first round choices. ★ * ★ “I have talked to Phil (new Coach Phil Bengtson) about it, and we plan to start Carr out as a tight end,” said Lombardi. I also am sure Phil plans to try Donny Anderson at flanker.’ Lombardi said Bengtsi staff was complete with the ^ning of Wayne Robinson, of Houston, to coach the defensive backs. Jerry Ohio Stott iewi Furdut Nonhwestern Wisconsin Ifinois Mkhlgoii Stats COURT BOUT - Detroit’s Terry Dischinger (top left) and (Chicago’s Jerry Sloan (4) engage in a little fist throi^ng after battling for a loose ball during the third quarter of their game in New York last night. Trying to stop the bout (bottom photo) is Chicago’s Kpith Erickson (15). This bout ended in a draw, but the Bulls won the game in overtime, 124-121. MSU Tops Indiana; ■■ 'k: * Michigan Defeated 7 3 tloronco All Olinti WLftl. WLPCI. 3 .700 14 4 .700 3 .667 12 7 .432 I 3 1447 1 7 .411 I .400 11 8 .576 5 4 .554 11 6 .579 5 4 .554 1# 7 .524 4 5 .444 10 7 .574 3 6 .333 7 10 .474 inneaol* 3 7 .300 4 14 .300 itchl^n 7 6 .200 7 13 .350 By United Press international Michigan State end Indiana, cbchampions in the 1967 Big Ten basketball race, battled for the seventh spot in the conference Tuesday night and the Spartans came out on top 75-70. The win upped Michigan State’s Big Ten mark to 4-5 while the Hoosiers dropped into eighth place with 3-6. ★ ★ Last-place Michigan fell to Illinois 72-64, Purdue knocked Iowa out of the conference lead 66-73 and Ohio State jumped back into first place witti an 87-67 rout of Northwestern. Indiana opened the game with four quick iteiote, but the Spartans hit for nine in a row to take over the lead, 17-11, and surge to a 38-28 halftime edge. The Hoosiers’ leading scorer, Vernon Payne, was held to,only two points in the first half but still ended up as the game’s top point maker with 21. BROKE TIE Indiana bounced back in the icond half to tie the score at 55^5 with 6:12 remaining. But Lee Lafayette scored nine of his 17 points in the final half to put the Spartans back on top. Harrison Stepter led Michigan State with points while Bemie Copeland added 17. Earl Schneider and Bill de Herr put in 16 points apiece for the Hooi^ers. Sophomore Randy Crews sank five free throws in the closing minutes‘to lead Illinois to victory over the Wolverines. Pistons Blow Big Late Lead, Lose 1967 DEMO'S GT SPECIAL Only 1000 of theso sporty GT's wore produced to spll in America. Many custom sport features. PONTIAC SPORTS CAR, INC. 4CT Auburn Ave. (MS9I in Pontiac, ]36-iaif (Pontme'f Only Aalhorisfil lUfi Healer} j Burns, who handled the job year, has left to join the Minnesota Vikings. * ★ “The only thing that I have done differently since I announced my retirement,” said Lombardi. “Is that I have not had any meeting with the coaches. I did make all the decisions in the draft but this possibly may be the last time I’ll do all of that. “As I have said before, it is difficult not to think as a coach. Certainly, I am going to miss it. So far, I have been too busy with other things.” Brighton, Sail Inn Post Cage Wins By The Associated Press The Detroit Pistons let a 109-97 lead slip through their fingers as the Chicago Bulls tied them in regulation play and then pulled off a 124-121 National Basketball victory in overtime Tuesday night. The game was the first of a Russian Ace to Challenge U. S. Jumpers OAKLAND (AP) - The United States’ best long jumpers will meet a Russian challenge in the National AAU indoor track and field meet at the Oakland Arena Friday night. ■k k * The Russian, Tonu Lepik, surprised with a 25-foot-8% inch victory over Bob Beamon and others at the recent Los Angeles Times meet. He also won at Seattle. k k k “But it will be very difficult” to defeat Beamon again, Lepik said on arrival here to top off his training. Lepik’s best around 27 feet. He is accompanied by six other Russians who will compete in the AAU meet Friday and Saturday. k k k Beamon won the recent Athens Invitational here with 26-10 but was disappointed he didn’l clear 27 feet. His best is 27-1, an indoor record. ■R * * Also in the long jump field will be the former Olympics champion, Ralph Boston, rounding toward top form, and Gayle Hopkins, Pasadena AA, who has a best of 26-9%. He’s a former NCAA champion from Arizona State. . : doubleheader in the new Madison Square Garden. In the second game, which also went into overtime, the New York Knleks beat the San Francisco Warriors 115-112. k k k In other games^ Philadelphia outscored Seattle 30-2 in a torrid fourth quarter en route to a 140-108 rout and Earl Monroe shot Baltimore to a 127-115 triumph over St. Louis in doubleheader at Philadelphia’s Spectrum. Boston walloped Cincinnati 126-110 In an afternoon game at Boston. * ★ ★ No one gave Bob Boozer of the Bulls the game ball in the opra-ener, but he responded anyway, with a similar performance. EXTRA PERIOD Boozer, Jeriy Sloan and C3qn Haskins team^ for 11 strai^t points that brought the Bulls from a 109-97 deficit to within 109-108, and Boozer’s drive wjth seven seconds left forced an ex< tra period at 111-111. then hit seven of his points, including Chicago’s last five, for the victory. k k k New York salvaged a 104-all tie at the end of regulation play as Dick Barnett scored the Knicks’ last 10 points. Barnett, who topped 10,000 points during his NBA career during the game, came out with 32 for a game total, well worth it to thfe sellout crowd of 19,500, largest gathering ever to see an NBA game. Philadelphia pulled out of a 17-100 lead with its spree behind Hal Greer, who finished with 32 points, Wilt (Chamber-lain set up another game-stopper with 20 points and 20 rebounds. He needs only five points against Detroit Friday to reach 25,000 career points. k k kr Monroe scored 35 points and Ray Scott hauled to 25 tdxiupds as Baltimwe barely protected an early 23-pdnt lead after St. Louis pulled within 101-96. Eight straight points put the game out of reach. Sam Jones, rookie John Jones and Don Nelson shot Boston into an early lead and BaUey Howell helped pull the Celtics away with 25 points as (Cincinnati played without injured Oscar Robertson. Sail Inn (5-1) and Brighton (4r 2) turned in victories last night in Holly recreation basketball action. Schupbach’s (2-4) fell to Inn, 69-61, while Norton’s bar (3-4) took a 28-23 lead at Hillsdale (College had halftime, but bowed before the Aquinas (College EMU Trackmen Keep NAIA Title for District 23 BIG RAPIDS (AP)-Winning nine of 16 events, defending champion Eastern Michigan University held onto its District 113 NAIA track crown in five-college competition Tuesday. Host Ferris State College, which won the remaining seven events, finished second with 81 points. The Ferris State thin-clads set the only four new district marks, however. 12 Tush of Brighton in the second half, 66-58. Chuck Schroeder tossed in 27 points and teammate Doug Gerkin added 25 to pace the Sain Inn victory. Don Herbst led the Brighton .attack with 25. Sam Licsfvoli jcollected 16 markers lor I Norton’.s. Grand Rapids nine, and Mackinac College one. R- R * Ferris State tracksters who set meet records are Phil Troechelman, high jump, 6 feet, 6 inches; Doug l^ith, Long jump, 22 feet, 5 inches; triple jump, Lavem Miller, 42 feet, 10% inches, and Miller, 69 yard low huhlles, 6.9 seconds. 7* 4^ 18 B6riM6 w DOtrrft 7 7-4 4 7-4 _________ 7 4-7 70 Fox 0 04) - ■ 1 1-7 - It 21 M 36 13-.1M I 2-4 16 Chapll ; 4-7 20 Fox 0 041 0 Walker 3 4-0 10 _________13—lM .................. 34 10 >1 27 6-ia Fouled oul—Dolrolt, Bing, CghopMlI. T%l fouit-aicago 20, Detroit 31. Buckeye '5' New Target for Purdue CHICAGO (AP)-Ohio State’s Buckeyes vaulted back into the Big Ten basketball lead Tuesday night with an 87-67 victory over Northwestern but they needed help from a team which becomes the next obstacle. Ohio State regained the conference lead only because Purdue was'able to knock off Iowa 86-73, and that becomes the crux of the matter. R R R With the lead in hand, Ohio State must now engage Purdue at Lafayette, Saturday and the Buckeyes have to win to stay on top. According to the way things have been going in the Big Ten,' the Buckeyes will lose and Purdue will be in command of the league lead come Saturday night. MINOR INJURY Sophomore Rick Mount poured in 38 points to lead Purdue to its triumph over Iowa. Mount scored 36 of his points from the field and left the game in the ftnal two minutes because of a 1^ cramp which was not considered serious. Sophomore Chad Calabria topped Iowa with 19 points and Hawkeye ace Sam Williams was held to 18. R R R Ohio state, busting a two-game losing streak on the road, found the home floor more favorable and connected on 13 of its first If shots from the field to bury Northwestern. ★ ★ ★ Bill Hosket scored on his first seven attempts and led the Buckeyes with 23 points while Dave Sorenson added 22. Terry Gamber and Mike Weaver topped Northwestern with 12 In a cold-shooting tilt, the mini led 33-31 at the half, but Michigan clawled forward in the second period and the lead see-sawed back and forth. • R R ★ The Wolverines failed to score basket in two four-minute periods, and Illinois took advantage of a frozen Michigan court by breaking through to build up as much as a seven-point lead in the last 10 minutes. Michigan pulled within one point at 61-60 with 3:30 left, but Crews dropped in a pair of crucial charity tosses to clinch the win. He padded that with three more free throws in the final seconds. Michigan’s Dennis Stewart popped in 19 points to lead all scorers while teammate Jim Pitts and the mini’s Dave Scholtz tied for second honors with 18. Crews tailed with 16. R R R The loss rooted the Wolverines firmly in the Big Ten cellar with a 2-8 record while niinois edged ahead of the .500 mark with 54. Joyner DeHeer Andover Skiers Beat 2 Rivals 20 Squads Competing Today in Loop Meet Bloomfield Hills Andover withstood a strong challenge by Waterford Kettering’s girls’ team to sweep a ML Holly Prep Ski League meet Tuesday. The Andover boys outpointed Clarkston and Kettering decisively, but the girls were only 3.5 seconds better than „ WKHS and Cterkston was 21 seconds off the winner’s pace, * Jeff Smith ami Bnrb Goode ted the victors by taking the respective first |dace honors for Andover. The b<^ also took 44L 7 white the girls grabbed 2-7, The meet served as a warmup for today’s annual league meet which began at 10 a.m. AO 20 schools planned to send skiers to today’s competition. MT. HOLLY SKI LBAOUB "S';' Boyk* In__________________ 1 Smnh (BHA) :44.f; 1 Tr :44.7! 3. OoiY “--------- - ■ ■ ir (B1 'ted I' tr.;' ng I 4. Rick Reininger BtoomnoM Hllli Andover 11 iring 111.7; 1. Clorkftan 169.9. (BHA) :mJl 4. Debbk ' • T Rll6y (K) 1:01.6. TEMININE FALOms - Rochester’s girls ski team could be a strong trophy contender today at ML Holly in the annual High School Ski League Meet if Cheryl Luther (left) _______ apd Wendy Wmis dd up to toeir potential and a third coed ’L0*w.‘'R^m^iS!l?r complements their efforts. Boft Misses Luther mid WUlis (C) 1:00.4; jijve been among the leaders consistently this season. ... 4 Copeland 4 5-11 17 I 0-3 16 Lafayelo 4 5-7 17 4 5-7 13 Bailav 7 5-6 9 8 5-8 21 Slepler 9 7-5 20 Tolalt 14 14-14 76 Toltit 8 2-2 18 Sullivan 7 3-4 17 Maxay 5 2-4 12 Pitts 1 1-3 3 Henry 7 0-14 McClellan 1 0-0 7 27 16-16 71 Tololt 14 14-24 44 Total fouls-llllnol Attendance: 4,300 TomWeiskopf Officially Still in PGA Lead PALM BEACH GARDENS, Fla. (AP) - Tom Weiskopf held onto the lead in the Professional Golfers Association official money standings Tuesday but continued to trail Billy Casper in unofficial total winnings. R R R Weiskopf had an official total of $32,987.50 after the Phoenix open, $30,000 of it won in the Andy Williams-San Diego Open. Weiskopf’s unofficial total was $39,290.71, second to Casper’s $41,262.29. R R R Casper has won $23,319.08 in official PGA tournaments. The top 10 with official and unofficial totals: Tom Weiskopf, $32,987.50, $39,290.71; A1 Geiber-ger, $29,175.00, $30,305.43; Ker-mit Z a r 1 e y, $27,537.50, $31,010.00; George Knudson, $23,662.50, $30,310.84; Billy Casper, $23,319.08, $41,262.29; Dave Marr, $21,116.67, $21,354.17. Ray Floyd $1S;106.25, $21,324.58; Arnold Palmer, $14,631.25, $36,102.47; George Archer, $14,224.89, $16,734.89; Gene L i 111 e r, $12,612.50, $14,652.00. Andover Nabs Big Swim Win Bloomfield Hills Andover siet three school swimming records Tuesday night in raising its season record to 10-5 with a 70-35 victory at Dearborn Crestwood. The medley relay team of Steve Kuzma, Lyle Vidigar, Ted May and Chick Adams started the night off right with a record 1:55.3 timing and eight points, ’ * * * Dave Grothethen won the 200-yard freestyle in 2:04.6 and Jeff Klann (who also. w(hi the 109 yard breaststroke in 1:09.7) made its three records with a 2:23.8 victiMy in the individual medley. Kuzma also won the 100-yard backstroke, May Ihe 4 0 0 freestyle and Adams the 100 freestyle. Dave Vanker took tha 50 freestyle and Rich Methei^ the diving. Bennett Paces Lions Scott Bennett poured to 27 putots last night to lead gopth Lyon to a 6M5 vlctotw (mSB Sto(*brito. Bfll Barker todlhd lo^ wlQi a. TIIK POXTIAC PRESS, \VEDNESDAY. I'EHlirAR Y 27. 70fl» Boost Given US. Amateur Hockey Program NEW YORK UP) - Tom Lbckhart, longtime tireless worker in the field of amateur hockey, thinks there’s a h answer to improving America’s showing in' that sport in the Olympics. Lockhart, president of the Amateur Hockey Association of the United States, announced Tuesday the formation of anj eight-team tournament to be| , sponsored by the U. S. Military I Academy at West Point, N. Y,| The tournament will be played March 29-31. i * j Honored for his long and meritorious service to hockey in the United States, Lockhart received the Lester Patrick Memorial Trophy Tuesday night. * * * i He told an audience of some 1,500 of the plans for the tournament. “We were disappointed in the showing of our hockey team in the Olympics at Grenoble,” Lockhart said. “We| are going to do something about it.” Windsor Races Jack Riley, coach of Army’s played in various sections of the America’s amateur program,iBush. “But I believe our pro-| Honored posthumously with hockey team who led America country beginning in March. watched the Grenoble Games I gram needs d total reorganiza-| Lockhart Tuesday were the late to the Olympic gold medal at“ The United States, placed and believes this country should I tion and if that means sittingBrown and the late Squaw Valley, Calif., in 1960, sixth in the recently completed-quu Olympk competition for out the Games in 1972, then-^uhn Reed Kilpatrick. will Ko chairman nf ihn tnnrnAtr OlvITlDicS. itS loWGSt finish PV6r ihaf^is u/hnt u/A cihniiM Hn ” - -----------------— Olympics, its lowest finish ever.|awhile. - Walter Bush, president of the 1 ★ ★ * j ★ ★ * i Minnesota North Stars of the! “1 was very proud of oui- Bush admitted that there was lodVyi dam.* National Hockey League, andjplayers and' the way they!little chance that so drastic a Mosk^on"li'’To^^o'^*’“‘ will be chairman of the toprney, which will be known as the Bantam Olympic Ice Hockey Tournament. Lockhart ““s a i d elimination games will b e like Lockhart, long interested in|handled themselves,’ YOU GAN RELY ON RELIABLE! • Service • Price • Guarantee We Repair Automatic and Standard Transmissions (Any Make - Any Model) RELIABLE TRANSMISSION CO. 922 Oakland Call 3344t01 Tir@ ClosMuil Only5(^3Tires Can Be Sold at these Low Sale Prices Hurry! They’ll Go Fasti! These are Discontinued Tread designs at FANTASTIC PRICE REDUCTIONS! ALL ARE i00% NYLON CORD, TUBELESS, AND TUBE TYPE TIRES GUARANTEES FROM 18 TO 36 MONTHS! CONVENIENT CREDIT NO MONEY DOWN ALL PRICES PLUS TRADE-IN TIRE AND FEDERAL EXCISE TAX Sports Special TUBE TYPE BLACKWALLS 5.0x15 1.34 Sports Special TUBE TYPE BLACKWALU 5.5x15 1.80 Windsor TUBE TYPE BLACKWALLS 6.70x15 1.89 ONE WEEK ONLY I CUSTOM 240 TUBE TYPE BLACKWALLS 6.70x15 2.23 CUSTOM 240 TUBE TYPE BLACKWALLS 7.10x15 2.33 CUSTOM 240 TUBE TYPE BLACKWALLS 7.60x15 2.53 CUSTOM 240 TUBE TYPE BLACKWALLS 6.00x16 1.87 CUSTOM 240 TUBE TYPE WHITEWALLS 6.70x15 2.23 CUSTOM 240 •TUBETYPE WHITEWALLS 7.10x15 2.33 WINDSOR TUBE TYPE WHITEWALLS 6.70x15 1.89 CUSTOM 360 TUBELESS BLACKWALLS 6.00x13 1.59 ONE WEEK ONLY I ONE WEEK ONLY I PREMIER TUBELESS WHITEWALI5 6.00x13 1.59 CUSTOM360 TUBELESS 6.00x13 1.59 WHITEWALLS CUSTOM 360 TUBE TYPE BLACKWALLS 1.15x15 2.33 Fisk Ecpnomy MUFFLBRS Moot Forde, Chavyt, Plymouthe and Campacte. Pric* fncludae installation. FOR YDUR CONVENIENCE ... CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT CUSTOM 240 TUBELESS WHITEWALLS S.15x15 2.33 CUSTOM 240 TUBELESS BLACKWALLS -1.45x15 2.53 s onssis 2.33 .Si. 2.23 ONE WEEK ONLY I *11 4 46 17 24 ?u“se^sV“ BLACKWALLS t.l'5x15 2.33 1 ONE P. CUSTOM 360 TUBELESS WHITEWALLS 7.75x15 2.23 9' PREMIER TUBELESS BUCKWALU 7.75x15 2.23 CUSTOM 240 TUBELESS .BLACKWALU. 1.45x15 2.86 ONE WEEK ONLY I *12 1. Tread Wcar-lt the tread wears put before the guaranteed number of miles, the tires will be replacod, charging only for the amount of mileage received. 2. Free Replacament-lf the tire Is rendered non-sarvicaabla for any reason during the first 90 days after purchase, it will be ' Ing^thin spacifisd months guaranteed. 4. Woii^manship and Matsrial-Every tire Aold by us is guaranteed against all failurss or defacts in workmanship and material for the life of the original tfaad. If the tiro.fails due to defects in material and workmanship, the tire will be replaced, charging only for the amount of mileage received. ALL ADJUSTMENTS ARE BASED ON CURRENT EVERYDAY SELLINO PRICE, AT THE TIME OP ADJUSTMENT-NOT LIST PRICE OR NO-TRADE PRICE Above tires and accessories on sale while quantities last . . . Other size tires not listed here are available at equally low prices, but in limited quantities and you can charge it: GLBNWOOD PLAZA . • . North Perry Street at eienwbedl D—4 THE PRESS. WEDNESDAV, FEBRUARY 21. 1968 CAR Care NIAD-QUARTERS TMEYWIReM WNERE IRE , EXPERTS ARE... FRONT END ALIGNMENT • •raM fhiM aM*4 p» Sfi66 ■HMmFUSC TERMS V »•'«•>• GOODYEAR RUSTPROOFING • CrtUa^M M V*2^**^ EAST $ PAT 9 95 NMplR4 MtlRrMRiE $li COMPLtTE MOTOR TUNE-UP W« «hMk antf ttrvleti pluf*. earburi bowl, , otort- Biike AdJusUnenf ssas, Xoflunro Iroat ft rear wheala, ■djuat brakaa, inapoct front wheel bearinga, inipect fttaae aanla. add fluid, teat. WE HONOR ALL ACTIVE MAJOR CREDIT CARDS mSTANT CREDIT FREE Licence Plate FRAMES and Installation Limited Supply ALL TIRES AND SERVICES ON EASY PAY TERMS SenricR Store 1370 Wide Track Drive Situriaytt2:M Will Contact Boycott Participants South African to Seek Reconsideration JOHANNESBURG. South Africa (AP) — The president of the Soutft, African Olympic Games Committee will personajly ask all the countries boycotting the summer Olym* pics because of his country’s participation to reconsider. Frank Braun said Tuesday night, “1 am going to approach these nations on a personal basis in order to emphasize to them they will be participating in an historic event by supporting South Africa. ‘it will be the first time a team representing all races of South Africa will be competing ’ So far, 14 countries have pulled out of the Mexico City games because of South Africa’s admission to them. Kenya, Sudan and Iraq were the latest to withdraw, taking action Tuesday. In addition, three Scandinavian politicians have urged Norway, Sweden and Denmark to ask for a reconsideration of the decision to let South Africa compete. INTEGRATED TEAM The South Africans, who did not compete in the 1964 games, have said they will send an integrated team to Mexico City in October, but will not have mixed trials In their country preceding :the Games. Braun said he expected South Africa's Invitation to the Games to come from Mexico within the next 10 days. The vote to allow South Africa back into the games was taken last week at the winter games in Grenoble, France. In Mexico City, meanwhile, Pedro Ramirez Vazquez, {H'esi'fWeiding Supply' had to wait un- dent of the Olympic Organizing Committee, said, “It Js up to the South African countries to decide their own attitude. Mexico will fulfiH as it always has done in the past all of fts international pledges.” With BOWL/NC Howe’s Lanes had two of its biggest nights this season last week, the scoring continue up in the 300 Bowl Classic but the 233, Mo Moore’s 234 and Bob - iNqrth Hill Lanes Classic • slump slightly. A true bourbon of Hiram Walker quality ata welcome price. The League at Howe’s featured sizzling 269-214-230 by Larry McLeod that produced a season-high 713 series as well as a Century Club Award on the high game. /•ft Hiram Wkiker^ Ten High Sip it slow and easy. Enjoy 86 proof straight Bourbon whiskey as only Hiram Walker can make it. Enjoy . getting an excellent value, too! Your best bourbon buy $409 I $25* Lowry’s 232. The Deni’s Market team apped its lead to eight points by hittlBg 102ft-lU4. A 1029 was the team high in Tight Contests in Rec League O’Neil Realty and Genesee til the finpl 10 seconds last night Mfore bagging the baskets that produced victories in Waterford Township recreation action. ★ ★ * Burk’s IS-foot jumper just two seconds left O’Neil to post a come-from-behind 45-44 win over r w i n Realty, and Dennis Diehm’s free throw with ift, remaining gave Genesee a 75-74 nod over Glenn’s Auto Sales. SCOKCS michioah hioh (chwi uarabNia Almont M,-Imlay City M B«a«vu* «7, Mapit Valley 44 Boyne City 74,n*etosKey St. Frencls 45 Berrien Springs 74, Ecu Clairs 57 Sloomingdale 73, Mattson 47 essemcr SI, Hurley (Wls.) 51 say City John Glenn 72, Tawas Area Bay City St. Stanislaus 59, St. James 57 i Bay Crty VUest tatholic Central 54, j Saalnaw St. Andrew 51 Brld^port 43, Carrollton 42 Cheboygan 83, Onaway 32 Charlevoix 77, Petoskay 57 Chesaning 68, St. Johns 59 . „ Dearlwrn Fordson 77, Livonia Franklin The victory gave O’Neil j M record in National League play. Dennis Brosseau finished with 24 points to pace O’Neil. Irwin held a 25-15 lead at halftime and a 31-25 edge after three periods. Pacing the Irwin attack was Gary Adams With 20. Diehm wound up with 21 points to lead the Genesee scoring parade. Gary Hayward Bill Kirland’s 227-223-639 was the top series by four pins over Ed Gibbs (216-215). The high games were Larry VanDeVeid’s 233 ( 616) 231s by Jerry Hoffman (624)lfljpped in 19 for Glenn’.. and Ken McIntosh. Dick Gas-1 ----------------- teiner, rolled 227-206-628 and Bill Moshimer 225-201-626. laHser's KnightS HOWE'S LANES HIGH GAM^E?AND*SERIE’'s*'^ Wsnda P/f) S0-~38 DofeOf Norma Conley, ---- - 0 2 - 5 2 0. Philadelphia Mipnasota kt'ViuTs*'** Pittsburgh ............... Odkiand 13 33 Tutsdsy's Etsults No games scheduled Meyo, 207-223—424; 200-539) Vonnie I_______ TEIPLICATE - Gloria Hoyt, 111. HUEON BOWL Wfdmsday NIta "A" Man HIGH GAMES AND SERIES - I on Avondale JV's Ralph Long’s 217-245-656, Bob Sturgis’ 246-213-652, Del Green’s 233-210-636, Jerry Hesse’s 246-204-632, Ray Conlev’s 233 (612) and Ken Craft’s 223 ( 609) all w« 'ivershadowed by McLeod outburst. Sherm Lucas hit 235 ond A1 B''nnctt 233. rSSI,'?.,'®'tssT -■ The Friday night S e n i o 4«in.sd.y hi-l.-. House men reported their top}„«'GH night of the season. Ernie (502). I Bill Wek and Bern I*** J h.g'=h^'Ms 5rra7S,.rr,"5, A. McPheeley led the Knights with ’57—669. Tonv Zografos had a Manganeiio. 409. high games - _ — '10-661, and Frank-Miller a'wy;nr.Mch*.?i^'“'^*" others in the scoring parade Filrguson.^WT'^cantury* ciub Aw^r*"*'^ were Bill Johns (212-234-634).l‘"' Duane Fornwall (632). ArtL h^gh ga^e,,^^^ Latimer (232-632), John ’Sames'^nd*' ’''hitehad (?.M), Ron Kind (233),iRobak, 255-842) Pr. john Rwj^^^^ lack Topham (230) an(i Larry F?»nk”iiiy8iuriM) ■*ldV8vi?'’*«7^Jw Lucas (234). If.""''' ‘ “ !00 BOWL The 330 Classic had two men.......- - ci,« • rnr-r HIGH SERIES — Vtlm# Grubsr, S22) Dorothy Banion, 514. HIGH GAMES - . ......... ..... The Knights of Bloomfield “ Austrani, 225) wii Hills Lahser ran their record to *EiMno?'*Reen., 52i;|l2-3 last night by downing 9jHiGH " GAME—Marilyn Mathers,' 230 Avondale’s junior varsity, 50-38. _______i;|nine points apiece. Dennis Hill wTiTiam^took scoring honors for Avondale with 16. E (H> O FT T __________ 11-3 9 Mill I Ulrich 4 0-0 1 Barger ■y'oangnalh 1 4-4 a Verroi 3 2-3 - a 1-2 13 I 0-1 - with 645 series. Chick Messer did it with 216-217 and Chuck Richards had a high 279 in his sparkling series. ★ ★ * 237- wodMsday FIrii womon HIGH SERIES — Barb Pickatt, . .. Emily Mecum, 512. HIOH GAME — Jaan COOLBH --------- HIGH SS»lN*r»W -Boyer, 224-227-823) BUI Grdan. 231 '453; Joy Marys, Vangeloff, 324-204. Tom Augello rolled 255—626, Mel Boothe a ’24(>--4i33,'g,ji,5i -oi;drieh," too. hIgh sERies"'-Srooks Robertson a 238—621,j^'*a Tiibot^^aOj^^^ ^ while other good games werel^mcH^ gam%^^^ Dick Kings 235, Les 319-a00; Steva Ollieck, 214-a0roOee;0g Rothbarth’s 232, Ed Austreg’s ‘ Gain Mat Win Brighton won the first two bouts, but Kettering’s Captains (6-7-1) took the rest in gaining a 40-10 wrestling verdict last night. JTfeVe Not Braggin’... SALE If S ALL During Our FEBRUARY CLEAN-UP WE WILL AAATCH OR BEHER ANY "PRICE AD" o»1968 PONTIACS-TEMPESTS Firebirds or Used Cars ADVERTISED IN ANY AREA NEWSPAPER, RADIO OR TELEVISION BROADCAST! So put your newspaper in your WF MFEn Yflim pocket and rush in to see one ifC IIUU iUUn courteous salesmen. TRADE-IN Select your model and color NOW^ in the warmth and comfort of ^ ■ our two modern showroomsl Potte Petoifi fitore UNIVERSITY at WIDE TRACK DRIVE i DOWNTOWN PONTIAC 3 3-2 I Ramsay 2 0-1 1 2-2 4 Cornell 13-8 2 0-14 Carp'ttr 6 1-1 Totala 20 lO-ia SO ratals i« 10-19 la SCORE BY QUARTERS I. H. Uohaar 19 16 tJ I Walarferd Katlariir 9S-Rkh^ ^liSlilch*' I pinned Bridge- _____ _____ .„ ______ Allen (B) pinner* Jeff Hoke, 2;59) 112-Chuck Frase (lO pinnad Bill Walsh, 1:44; 130-Dava -- ke Gray (K) dac. Rick Diatr— . -Woody Raase (K) pinned Harold ____,, 4:41) 138—Gary Jamas (K) pln^— Mike Ramalla, 5:06; l4S-Mlke Kelly —I Johnson, 10-6) 154-Mlkey Gobler c. Dennis Greene, 7-8; its—Mark ..... (K) pinned Dele Hendry, 2:40; 160-Oennfs Wooster (K) dec Tom Thelser, 11-0; heavyweight—Dennis .... (K) torfelt. jly Name 70, Menletique aS Evart'a;". MCMIn „ iSI?n“T*rout“’c*r^ 1M-' « FMn?‘‘cent?‘al “ P^'in"} N^'HlSSSte^n Centrel ^Fllnt St. Michael 73, Athertm 71 ..V was. H6ir77, Lansing Waverly 82 Grand Rapid. ^‘Ht,S!l.o":^lS'.'’?.n’nvllle 57^ J.*ckson SL'M%r‘?'46,'^E«t Jackson 50 Kalamazoo Ghrlstian 42, Gull LOka ^ Lansing Boys' Training 77, Ashley 37 Mount Clemens >'> U"“ ?*,. Midland^70, Mount Mount Clemens L'anse Creus 73, War- Shor ■ 27 18 13 47 176 147 . 27 16 11 45 144 144 » IJ if m 24 36 5 53 149 181 JO 24 ,11 5) 126 134 20 27 9 49 144 145 II 61, Douglas Mec- Clair Lakes Shore 63, Wan Saginaw Arthur *' Vaoinaw St. Stephens 71, Holy Rosary 57 Trkonsha 59, Cllmax-Scotts 40 Utica Stevenson 79, Dearborn Heights Annapolis 57 Vanderbilt 101. Alba 22 nnesota at Philadelphia NBA ^SCORES Easitrn Division Now York ..... 34 33 .742 — .488 4 .507 1 5>/^ .470 10 .462 18>/) Chicago Seattle San Diego Boston l26,’crnc1nnat'rilo ' 124, Detroit 121, overtime * 115, San Francisco 112, ov :hlcago 1 4ew Yori Thursday's GamM ABA ' SCORES ttsburgh innesota . Eastarn Divislan 24 .431 2'/s Dallas 146, Oakland 130 Pittsburgh 121, Aanheim 114 Mirmesofa 119, Denver 117 Today's Oamas Dallas at Houston Denver at Indiana Thursday's Gamss Houston at Oakland Anaheim at Minnesota I LIncol Clemens Chippewa Valley 49, Ma'renhfco 57, Ironwood Cath^lc 50 (OT) M»urlce 72, Chesaning OLPH 71 Milan 56, YpsllantI, St. J«^n M Morrice 72, Chesan'— ‘ ” MIO 80, Hale 77 g'our Lady 71 KTandyw®^^^^ PiOOfn 51 Orchard Lake St. Mary 83, Detroit SI. pSrtlig^e Central 80, Battle Creek Lake- Rose City 57, AuGi— --St. Louis 100. Alma 87 Veslobur 72, New Lothroi Willow Run 78, Flint Hn'” Wllllamston 80, Haslett ...-.ana 70 Illinois 72, Michigan 44 Eastern Michigan 77, Akron (Ohio) 43 Spring Arbor 99, Bethel (Ind.) 98 St. John's, N.Y., 55, Massachusetts 53 American Internet. 74, Williams 73 Rhode Island 93, Brown 53 Connecticut 94, New Hampshire 48 Boston St. 100, Gorham, Maine, 48 Brandels 100, Lowell Tech 73 South Duke 82, Clemson 70 South Carolina 44, Furman 44 Bethune Cookman 105, St. Leo 74 Tenn. 71, Georgia Tech 49, Two OTt Miami, Fla., 88, Stetson 71 Washington 8, Lee 110, Emory & Henry Ohio State 87, Northwestern 47 Purdue 84, Iowa 73 Kansas 74, Missouri 45 Evansville 110, Ball Stata 74 Indiana State 83, Butler 55 Rice 73, Texas Christian 49 Abilene Christian 101, Tex.-Arlington 81 Southern Methodist 70, Baylor 43 Texas 79. Texas Tech 40 Texas A8.M 71, Arkansas 47 Sonoma St. 40, Humboldt St. SO Sacramento St. 84, Nevada 81 Farmington JV Edges Lathrup Farmington’s junior varsity spotted Southfield Lathrup a 39-27 halftime lead and then turned on the steam on the second half to post a 6 Mark Maniewski paced the Farmington squad with 16 points. The loss left Ldthrup with a 9-6 mark for the season. John Lang led Lathrup with- a school record 22 points, 17 of jthem in the first half. For golfers only Not all headache remedies come from drugstores A bunch of 'em come from right here. Northwood-Green-acres Golf Club. What's your headache? A slice. Work if out this winter in the comfort of our heated driving ranges. Putts that won't drop? Give a new putter a try. Wt've got hundreds of 'em. Priced so low it eases the pain. If six footers still won't drop, club's wrong for you? Let oor pro fit you to the proper weight, length, grip. There's no aubstiture for good equipment. Like Haig Ultra, MacGregor \ ^ Tourney, Wilson X-31, Arnold Palmer, Ben Hogefp, Spaulding. We've got 'em. Priced well below par at terms to suit. Sinus headache? Try the drugstore. Golf? That's our business. NORtHWOOD-GREEN ACRES Maple east of Crooks Daily ’til 9 p.m., Sunday ’til 5 FIfona BI9-2288 THE FONT!AC VVEDNESDAV. FEBRl AR D—5 AUh^ the "Ttai! Pontiac Pr>ti Young Coho Salmon Die ^ at Hatcheries in North Unsaved losses of young coho absorbing their yollr sacs and salmon have almost ended atistarting to feed on special Proposed Gun Law Silenced Mayor Jerome Cavanagh’s proposed gun law for Detroit, patterned after the one which went into effect ii) New York this week, has been silenced by Common Council. The proposal, calling for all shotguns and rifles, to be registered, never was formally introduced. All seven members of the council gave it a cold shoulder. A final attempt to get Introduction was made yesterday. The effort failed and the general opinion is that this Turkey Permit Deadline Set proposal will not be heard again. A good place to try ice fishing for big bluegills is Little MUscamoot Bay at Harsen’a Island in the St. Clair Flats. The gills have been hitting consistently in the bay for the last month. An added bonus are big pike. Perch are reported to be hitting off Metropolitan Beach, In the Pontiac area, pike are being taken at Orion and Lakeville lakes', perch from Big Lake and crappier from 1 Sixteen. Bluegills have been active on Pontiac, White, Duck and Middle Straits lakes. Emerson Vilet of Clarkston took a 16-pound, 2 - o u n c e northern pike on a. tipup last _ . u . cl X j Friday at Crooked Lake. Tlie Spring Hunt Slated lunker was 39 inches long. in Baldwin Afea fl»e Metropolitan Miami Fishing Tournament on a recent vacation in Florida, The Consenvation Department;Lawrence J, Moloney, ill S. has started accepting ap-jTelegraph won a citation fw plications for permits to hunt!landing a 16-pound, 4-ounce wild turkey gobblers this'jack. spring. Deadline for filing applications for the May 6-12 hunt in the Baldwin area is April 1. Only male turkeys will be legal and only shotguns or bows and arrows can be used by hunters- j Bird Dogs Lag in National Test Animals Lose Handlers in Tennessee Fields GRAND JUNCTION, Tenn. OP) - Spectators during the second Charlevoix hatchery and they day of the National Bird Dog •• Championship saw more birds than the four dogs that competed. Handlers blamed poor TROPHY HUNTERS-These five Waterford Township Clifton brothers have been active on the snowmobile circuit throughout Michigan. These 30 trophies indicate the s they’ve had on the trail. Pictured here (1-r) are Doug, 8, Rod, 10, Tom, 14, Bruce, 16, and Keith, 15. They are sons of Mr. and Mrs. Tom Clifton, 3110 Rpsanne Lane. The annual P e r c h v i 11 e Festival will be this weekend at the Tawases. J. P. McCarthy of station tVJR will be crowned king Friday eveing. A * A A polar bear swim highlights All applicante. must be «Saturday’s activities and least 14 yean old. A total of racei will b e permits will be issued ~ by,featured Sunday. The big at-machine drawing if the nnmber|fraction, however, will be exceeds the fQj. p^rch and pike in Tawas Bay. permits available. Taking a govemnient poet card, the applicant must print his current smalt game license number and sign his name in ink on the blank side. On the postage side, he is to address the card to himself, by printing or typing. Place the card in an envelope and mail to: Wild Turkey, Mlchign Department of Conservation, Lansing, Michigan, 48926. Applications will be accepted only by mail. Want to try something different in the way of ice fishing? * ★ * A Go to LittleHeld Lake Isabella and try for smelt. Anglers hdve been taking smelt consistently this winter. Trout Fete at Kalkaska The 32nd National Trout Festival will be held 1 n Kalkaska April 26-28. Regular trout fishing opens April 27. Selection of the trout queen and naming of the king will be April 6. All single girls, 16 through 21, can enter. Former trout kings will select the 1968 monarch. » “Brook Trout Leads the Nation’’ is the theme of this year’s festival. Cliff Kimball is festival president. hatchery diets. Durling points out that the current coHb die-off only involves fish scheduled for plant ing next year. They are being raised from eggs collected last fall from Lake Michigan salmon. Those coho (about 1.8 million) slated for release this year arc not affected by the problem. performances on their animals’ tendency to run the edge of fields on the Ames Plantation instead of probing thickets. The first dogs out Tuesday were Calibanner, a big pointer from the kennels of Dr. R. E. the Conservation Department’s Wolf Lake hatchery, but the young fish are now starting to die at northern rearing stations. ★ ★ ★ Brad Durling, in charge of hatchery management, says the Wolf Lake toll is expected to total about 350,000. That would represent about 25 per cent of the young fish being reared at that hatchery for planting in 1969. However^ while the worst seems to be over at Wolf Lake, coho fry are also dying at the showing the same] symptoms. About 30,00tf have I gone into spinning convulsions, sunk to the bottom of their „ • j ___ i,„- tanks, and died at t h Charlevoix station. The schedule of S o 1 u n a r Another 45,000 appear sick and are expected to die there, much smaller been taken from John Alden Knight’s SOLUNAR TABLES. Plan your days so that you will be fishing in good territory or hunting in good cover during Whitefish Bay Recreational Project Slated SAULT STE. MARIE (AP) -Plans for an $8.8 million recreational development a t Whitefish Bay in Upper Michigan were announced t^ay by a U.S.- Forest Service oL ficial. A1 Troutt, supervisor of the Hiawatha National Forest, said the government will begin this year developing the 64,000-acre tract into a year-round recreation arep. First step in a 20-year plan for the area, he said, will be construction of a road through miles of the heavily wooded JDubenbostel of Carbondale, 111., , .. and Johnny Crockett, a setter '" . "’‘I owned by H. P. Sheely of first coho losses were reported these times, if you wish to find within the past week at the | the best sport that each day has Harrietta and Oden hatcheries to offer. Dallas, Tex. Calibanner was lost in the breakaway and was not seen again despite efforts of handler Bob Lamb of Concord, Ga., to locate him. Crockett worked for an hour, spotted no birds and disappeared, sending his handler, W. C. Kirk of Lewisville, Tex., on a dog hunt. hred quickly ’Ihe afternoon heat between Safari, 1966 winner of the national Championship, and Warhoop Judy Suzette. | Safari, an 11-year-old pointer bitch, tired quickly because of her age. She was handled by John Rex Gates of Leesburg, Ga., for owner S. H. Vreden-burgh of Montgomery, Ala. WWW Suzette, another pointer bitch. The fish there, as at Wolf Lake and Charlevoix, are being liiu'dav . victimized at the critical “but-KiVv ton-up” stage when they are wVdne*d«v Ediltrn Slandn-d Tim* A. M. I*. M. Day Min. Ma|. Min. Today ...........1:45 5:00 11:10 Thursday " " 7:10 12:45 7 Reg. 29.95 CLEAR covLis24^^ ALL WORK BUAWAWTEED Regular 69.95 VINYL ROOF4g95 BIG CAT - poug Hallett, 6284 W. Maple, Walled Lake, poses with the cougar he shot wtiile hunting recently in the Chiricahua Peak area of Southeastern Arizona. The 100-pqund female was taken with a'387 magnum handgun after being treed by outfitter Marvin Glenn’s dogs. This was Hallett’s fourth trip to the Arizona-New Mexico area and his first cougar. section. He estimated cost of had three finds but was absent die road at $3.8 million. ifrom the front oil several oc-1 He said the section will be casions. Handler G. W. “Stub”| named Blg-Sea-Water Recrea-'Poynor of Hugo, Okla., was tlon Area, after a phrase taken soon out in the boondocks look-, from Henry W a d s w o r t h; >"8 for Suzette, owned by H. L. i Longfellow’s famous poem, The'Phares of Lubbock, Tex. Legend of Hiawatha. The park will include 30 miles of sandy beach along Whitefish Bay, off Lake Superior, running Bounty Bill Bugs Game Experts Beaver Harvest „„ __________^___________^ Michigan trappers took 14,081 southward from Iroquois Point I beaver and 642 otter last year, : almost to the mouth of the considered a good harvest, i Tahquamenon River. ' [reports the State Conservation I The area is north of M28, Department. [west of Sault Ste. Marie east nff~_ M123. G.t t.t for fpring w.oth.r oh.od — giv. your cor now b.auty Of wall at moro valua! BILL KELLEY’S SEAT COVER 756 Oakland Ave. Cornnr Kinnay OPEN DAILY 9 to 6 LANSING (AP) — One of theipartment’s game division em-best Ways to bug the Conserva-jphasized this point in discussing tion Department is to bring up {the recent decline in the a bounty kill. lant population. A measure to restore the $5 ^0 EVIDENCE bounty on red foxes has teen introduced again thi^ year With Rep. George Prescott, R-Tawas City, the sponsor. Sponsors of the bounty stick by their theory that fines destroy game such/as ridibits and birds. ' Conservation department game experts admit the foxes do stHne such killing, but also a lot ^ good, such- as helping keep ro-doits under control. Don Douglass, chief.of the do- U$ID CAMMNO TENTS 5-9x9Umb.Tanfs............ 2-9x9 Until. Tints.... ... 2-9x15 Goffagt Tints...... 1 -9x18 Cittagi Tint......♦SO®* NEW € AMPINS TENTS 4-10x10 Cottagi Tints / e»so Aeg.$92.50............. 1 - 10x14 Cottagi Tint Smso Reg. ..................... ’w 1 -11x10 Coiiman Poiistar $oaso Reg.$124JI................ 9x15 Cottagi Tint ' \ sa^ttso Reg.$l9J9.............i." 1-9x18 Cottagi Tint Svaso Reg. $99.60............ Sali Starts Thursday, 9 A.M. JOE’S SURPLUS Tui$., Wed., Sat. 9:00-6:00 19 N. SAGINAW-Mdn.-Thon.-Frt. 9to9-Ff 2-0022 “There is no evidence that foxes have been responsible for the low pheasant population,’' Douglass said. In its summary of arguments against the measure, the department stated: w w w “There are absolutely no valid reasons for paying a bounty for a dead fox, whether it is killed by a car, by a farmer, by a dog, by hunter, by a trapper or by disease. ,W w, w ‘teunties do not control predator numbers," the departaent said. “Predators do not control game populations.” • Bounties would be paid on many foxes killed accidentally incidentally by hunters. U. P. Biting Flies Will Take Powder • Bounties invite fraud. Every bounty-paying state, including Michigan, has experienced this. • The red fox actually is a valuable game animal which | effort to take some of provides a good deal of sport the sting out of a common variety of Upper Peninsula biting flies, a Northern! for fox hunters. LAW REPEALED Michigan had a bounty on foxes from 1947 until it was repealed in 1965. ir In the first full year of the bounty — 1948 — there were 20,-968 taxes presented for payment- In the last full year—1964 — there were 36,917 presented. * It * “Fox numbers increased during the bounty period,” the department said, “because bounty hunters and trappers annually removed only part of the surplus fox population; they did not reduce the basic breeding stock.” Michigan University biologist will dust the insects with{ fluorescent powder tiiis sum-| mer. 'The biologist. Dr. Gordon Gill,' said more data on the dispersal patterns of the species Stomqx-ys calcitrons is needed. The powder will allow Gill’s research group to trace flight patterns of the species, whiph; has been known to-disperse up | to 11 miles along the shoreline i of Lake Superior in a matter of few hours from at least three miles inland. I The project is being financed by an $1,800 grant from the National Science Foundation. "Nl SEHVim OAKLim COVN'IY OVER 35 YEARS Lflzelle Agoney, Inc. ALL FORMS OF ^ INSURANCE J# 504 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG. Closed Saturdays—Emergency Phone FE 5o0314 Phone FE S-8172 ■mliMsaminAsani u ■ miRAt a^miRAs amioAs amiiuu Bminxsa Twice as safe an icy roads with *Jeep^ 4-wheel drive A‘Jeep’Wagoneer with 4-wheel drive has twice the traction of ■ other station wagons. It holds fast on icy roads, plows through snow and mud with ease. With new 250 hp ‘Vigilante’ V-8 or ^ hot’new 6, it’s got all the power you’ll ever need. And there’s the option of Turbo Hydra-Matic* automatic transmission, power steering, power brakes, the works. .Su .2in Jeep’ ragoneer Yau^vs got to drivo it to boHovo If f Soo um for a tost drivo, 090 OAKLAND (US 10) FE 0-041^1 Wide ceicction of NEW and USED JEEPS Complete Parts And Service MIDAS BRAKE SPECIAL! SAFETY INSPECTION & ADJUSTMENT LIMITED TIME ONLY Brake SpedollsH in eur MM« Irak# Department will check brake linliigf, cyHndert, amt drums, and adjust your brakes —all for only 88L62* MENNEH PUSH BUTTON Deedoraaf......................oz~a»72* HAND LOTION FOR THE FAMILY Cora Hashers......... •••••••( LISTERINE ANTISEPTIC Throat Lozenges............... KRAFT SLICED Mezzorello Cheese...............i STAR-KIST FROZEN Tenn Neodie Casserole 4> i«-cr W0S * FKG 43* .89* WITH THIS COUPON ON TWO 1-LB PKGS COUNTRY CLUB SKINLESS WIENERS SLICED BACON ■ Valid Thru Sun., Fab. 25, 1968 ^ Valid Thru Sun., Fab. 25, 1968 bJ Krojwr Dof. Z Coif. |Q At Krogair SUNSHINE BRAND Hydrex Cookies $^^59 29 LIVik OR FISH CAT FOOD-44 OFF LABEL Little Friskies V-ic* 25* INDEPENDENT CO. ROYAL Assortment V kPo (^ei 12-QZPKGWpW ■■■■/; D—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEPyESDAY, FEBRUATiY 21, 1968 AP WlrtPhet* ICY SPIRES—Flying spray from Lake Michigan waves hitting a breakwater in Chicago coats these pilings for a building project ashore. And, in the wave of temperatures in the teens and twenties, the pilings soon took on a coating /)f ice. JOIN OUR ,,**w«MNGT0N'S Extra Large, Fortisan 2-PIECE INSULATED *12” UNDERWEAR HATCHET DAY SALE $^99 Reg. $22» GRAY, 2-PIECE SKAGWAY DOUBLE INSULATED UNDERWEAR $ggg Reg. $0>s FORTISAN $Agg INSUUTED JACKET Reg. M2” Boys', Girls', Sizes 8-14 $A99 Insulated Underwear ^4-—^ R»*. ’24” Fleece Insulated UNDERWEAR $099 Reg. ^28” RED PLAID VIROIN WOOL HUNTING GOAT ^\4^T TO MATCH AVAILABLE $1^99 Reg. $599 Rubber Insulated BOOTS $299 Reg. 21" Toro or Reo M09” LAWNMOWER $3095 Reg. *12” E K No. 1 ELECTRIC KNIFE $499 Reg. Used Complicity MOO” RIDING MOWER $0095 S45Q00 Value Used, 7 H.P., 36” Mower ELECTRIC START Wheelhorse Tractor *299®® ’400 Value Used, 6 H.P., 32” Mower $000 Wheelhorse Tractor Reg. M” Gal. of Pure Drum TURPENTINE 99' Reg. 98‘ >A”x1te-Ft. Roll - All Furpoto MASKING TAPE 43' Reg. ’23” 6 Foot Torpedo TOBOGGAN $1200 Reg. $2099 8-Foot Torpedo TOBOGGAN M5®® 7” Paint Roller HANDLE Jl DuPont Lucite or Kemtone Flat Wall PAINT $099 Vi»continued Color Sale A fsL Reg. >98g« 1 Only — TO-H.P. 6-Speed Electric Start Brand New WHEEL HORSE TRACTOR ’699” Sorry No Phone Orders, Layaways, Rotunds, Exchanges During This Sale! '44o/idufO/vt 905 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 5-2424 Daily 9-6. S'un. 9-2 3-Day SATURDAY LAST DAY 36 Month GU^piANTEE Reg. 16.95 exch. No-charpe replacement within 90 days of purchase if battery proves defective. After 90 days, we replace the battery if defective and charge you only for the period of ownership based on the regular price less trade-in at the time of return, prorated over number of months of guarantee WIIMi USE YOUR CREDIT Buy now, pay later! Use one of Sears Con' venient Credit Plans. • Extra power for faster starts ... more reliable in cold weather or extreme heat • More power for today’s many elaetrieal Wi accessories. ri FREE Battery Installation FREE Power team check, inclnding geaentor,^ ■hemator, vollaga regoUtor and' battery. Auto Acceuorlot Dept. 25% OFF - Sopertred Tires Nylon Cord ... 36-Month Guarantee 6.50x13 Tubeless Blackwall 1A46 \ Fadtral belli JHB« TMcmdOW e Extra-wide outer rib puts more rubber in the shoulder.where tread wears the fastest. Means better mileage, iu-eater steering stability. e Shoulder is safety contoured with a wraparound tread for surer oornering, added grip. e Over 95 feet of water-eliminating traction slots see plenty of action on we^ slippery pavement N-Memii iMoraiitM Rot. Moo : wmi Trade tale Friee WHh Trade net Fibral SxeiuTH SJtois 21.55 16.46 1.80 T.0DX13 23.56 11.96 1.93 1.95x14 22.55 11.21 1.93 T.35X14 24.55 15.11 2.98 1.15x14 25.95 25.21 2.21 5.21x14 28.56 21.11 2.89 5.55x15 20.95 15.11 1.89 1.15x15 26.95 25.21 2.23 Whitewalls Only $3 Mare Per Tire Allstate Tires Installed FREE SgrTS Downtown Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171 SEABS, BOSSVCK AND CO. i ; ;V'* ■' -' .i «.*4a^i^^ ' ^ I -4^' **'■-*' >*''*^*'»’*‘;;r'-i« THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1968 —-e- ONE COUR 'W'‘'m •;i‘.''’#Jj i' ‘iM a: MpWm^ K- V- E—1 , I Visit the new and beautiful South Mall of The Pontiac Mall Shopping Center. The lavish Portuguese marble decor, statuary fountain and fine fashion shops, are sure to please the most discriminating. ^ The all enclosed weather-conditioned Pontiac Mall, contains 60 stores and services, with convenient free parking for 7,000 cars surrounding the entire Shopping Center. Main entrances on Elizabeth Lake Road and Telegraph Road. Six other entrances for your convenience. ____________ ' 3rd. Annual TravaL Show... Now Thru Saturday -V;/4 ;A; m UZABETH LAKE & TELEGRAPH ROADS* :/./:' :^/ A E—2 THE POxXTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1968 Why Not Study Sick Whites? By WHITOEY M. YOUNG, JR. IshouJd study white folks. After analyze these poor souls. We Executive Director lall, Negroes didn’t wreate the ought to have studies on the National Urban League ighelto, white folks did., The “anatomy of fear” In alLwhIte This Is a presidential election'sickness of racial hatred is a suburbs, the kind of place that vear and that means that problem white people have hadjlets any gangster buy a home ^!ibd"'-, Floxl-Charqe Account, get fashion news, sd..' sa/in.,'. „nd budget payments. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1908 E—3 Shop evenings at Hudson's Pontiac, Northland, Eastland, Westland open till 9 p.m. Monday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday; Downtown Detroit open till 8:30 pjn. Monday and Wednesday HUDSonrs CHEAT HOME SUE 89.88„J19.98 Dinette sets with sturdy, mw-resistont table tops Two sets by Howell, with laminated plastic tops, Widnut with selt-edge top; plus four chairs In walnut color legs and chair frames, fabric-backed Moss Tosca or White Tosca vinyl. Set, 89.88 vinyl upholstery that wipes clean easily, and sturdy B. 42' round table with one 18' leaf, in Canadian v-braced table legs to give them greater stability. Wabut with hardwood tapered edge; six wood-^^2' round table with one 18' leaf, in Canadian back chairs. Black cr Avocado Channel, 119.98 40.98.76.98 SALE Handsomely-finished warm Pecan color funufure Of selected hardwoods, hand-grained, styled by B. Six-drawer chest, 48x17x30' size 76.98 Sparta with tops protected by tough plasticized C. Comer desk measures 32x32x30' size. .40.98 polymer, suspended drawer guides, and recessed D. Three-drawer chest, 29x17x30' size... .43.98 backs. You can pick a smgle piece or a stack group. E. Panel door cabinet, 29x17x30' size... .46.98 A. Four-drawer desk, 431/4x17x30' size.. .86.98 F. Hutch top with doors. 29xl0%x44'size,8i:98 Tow choice, swiydl bar stools by Admhal in 24' or 30' size. With contour back, black metal tubtng. footrest, fabric-badted vmyl upholstery In isladk, olive or flame. Ideal for Idtchen counters, bar or tocieahoa room,-and priced at savbgs. Canister vacuum cleaner by Eureka features vibrabeat rug tool, steel constmction, built-b cord reel, convenient tool pad:, toe switch, flip-top lid, siq)er-efBcient motor. Beats, sweeps, suction-cleans. Also on sale. Eureka upright vacuum. 1----------$72 lightweight Eleotrik Broom by Regba does a man-size job of vacuuming, but its slim stylbg makes it a real space-saver. Has swivel nasde for haid-to-get-at^laces, and a dirt cup for easy cleaning; hangs in doset wheh not b use. Great value. Our own Hudson zig-zag sewing machine in a pebbled wabut color console. Bbid-sUtches hems, over-casts seams, buttonholes, monograms, darns and repairs, sews forward, reverse. You get one year's service and 8 hours sewtag instructions. Hudson's Pontiac- 2nd Floor; also at Downtown Detroit. Northland, Eastland, Westland THE PONTES C rRESS. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 21. 1968 Death Cidims Retired Exec Deaths in Pontiac Area i CpI. James R. Hedger . I Home with burial in Perry Service Is Tomorrow, service for Marine c p I .'j^ount Park (iemetery. Forum to Feature City Candidates The legislative division of the American Association of Uni- koad Mishap Costs Soar Moonshiner I Pedals War^ I accidents resulted In an eco-president of Bible Literature versity Women will sponsor a nomic loss of $12,442,413,000 inTnternatiorial, who returned last; e transnortlna •’ from Saigon where he charged wi t h transponing NEW YORK (AP) - Traffic Visitor to Viet Will ] Speak Here Tonight The Rev. Jack Falkenberg, for Birmmgham MariJ«"»esR Mr. Wilder, owner of thelpublic forum featuring City, 1967, $100 million more than whisky when they Perry will be 2 p m. Friday at Mobil Service Station at 2395 Commission candidates. The 1966, the Insurance Information 7 tonight at the opening sessionLonfiscated three gallons of il- Pursley-Oilbert Funeral ^ome yp,terday. He forum will be at 7:30 p.m., Feb. 1 Institute said. Carter E Shields, retired vice with burial in Perry Mount ^ member of Disabled!29 in City Hall. , was president and controller of the Park Cemetery. . American Veterans. Michigan Consolidated Gas Co., Cpl. Hedger was serving with| sy^viving are his wife, Zela;i „ t ann. r«i» oairf .u. 2nd Bat_-!j^„ and Davidj. W.ra4U n4 4tit/\ pSc*4AV*a ! died Monday. He was 66. of the 33rd Annual Missionary j . j._ ^^om him, didn’t fit jConference in First Baptist|"''“ ^ ........... . Church. I into the picture of the tradi- FRANK E. HIU.S County Barber Is Dead at 82 It estimated the number of^ ^ ^ jtional moonshine runner in his the' First ^Division, 2nd Bat-!j^7;”„y"^“g,;y"M and Da^^^ Persons injured at a record! jygt g week before the Viet-'highpowered car. He was riding „ w K 11 „ Marines g both at home; two sisters,”“"‘!4,356,243, up 3.8 per cent fromicong attacked a Vietnamese g bicycle Ro„„..„, he w- ki'lei 1" ««“L,.Ke„neU, Miracle and Mrs! ■"-« Safely Coun-lvUtage and killed aeveraC ir:r,«r:,;at L'nV -r irz’ KU',‘-t!F ^ ''T^h^'tn'ri- men, „ll, he In Hnly Sepulchre S™« -re^'; »«',Ste;>. cindijg PaulPan^^^ . iXi7,r,hrcondTda’'to T k“"'"'’ *** ■ ’ daughter, Jami R. at home, foundation. Mrs. Belz said all candidates Birmingham. three brothers, Bert, Roger and -- jseeking office have been invited' persons had b fic accidents. The institute said its figures! The Rev. Mr. Falkenberg’s work takes him to mission sta- Dem Election Set I Surviving besides his wife, Richard, all of PonUac; and, jggg ygg^ the;to the meeting. The city’s pifi-i°" °®®®® “®^,tions around the world where he I Josephine, are three daughters, three sisters, Mrs. G e o rg ej^jate’s sales tax was in effect, I mary elections to select two'Wages, medical expenses, prop-|aggistg missionaries in . i ws r Mrs. Joseph Doyle’^ of Midland, Fowler of Rochester and Sue gijout $300 million was collected inominees from each district will erty damage and the service plying and translating Bible UAw oca Mrs. Joseph Cavanaugh of Ellen and Jacqueline, ooin jp Nqw York. ’ be held March 4. ! cost of insurance. literature. Baldwin. The public is Lawrence Pontiac. ; -------------- ---------------------- -------- The Democratic Clpb of Pon- tiac will elect officers at a 2 meeting Sunday at the Hall, 821 invited. Frank E. Hills, oldest active barbers Oakland County, died yesterday * at the age of 82. Detroit, and Mrs. one of the Gaydos of Virginia: his father,: Edward'C. of Detroit; a sister; and 12 grandchildren. | Memorials may be .sent to the Michigan Heart Association or • * * Aquinas College Service will be 1:30 p.m. Fri-, Rapids, day at Voorhees - Siple Chapel, ★ ★ ★ wuh burlal lk otu.. Cemetery, I n d e p e n d e n c e ^as controller of the Michigan yesterday. Township. land Wisconsin Pipe Line Co. Surviving are two sons, F. from 1946 to 1949 when he ll.ia.MP«>«.c.mlM.D.lk.f:)”"'f, Gas Co. Petoskey; two grandchildren; | j,g ^as the director of the Otto R. Johnson Service for Otto R. Johnson, 70, of 392 Highland will be 8 CrandP"^ tomorrow at the Frank Carriithers Funeral Home with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mr. Johnson, an employe of! Barney F. Goetzke FARMINGTON — Service for Barney F. Goetzke, 76, of 23978 three great - grandchildren; Citizens Research Council in Earl Court will be 1 p.m. Fri-and two brothers Detroit and the Employers’day at Kinsey-Garrett Funeral „n. , Lu u .u , 1 I Unemployment council of Home. Royal Oak. Burial will Hills of 4632 Elizabeth Lake, former director and be in Oakview Cemetery, Koyal Waterford 'Township, has jp^g^pp ,,f Catholic Youth'Oak. Mr. Goetzke, a retired, toolmaker for Ford Motor Co.,' died yesterday. He was a member of Royal Oak Lodge No. 464, F& AM. operated a barber shop for 62 organization in Michigan, years. Fw many years his shopj ★ * ★ was located on East Huron. | He was- a member of the Most recently Hills, with his | Detroit Board of Commerce, the son, F. Keith, operated the;Michigan M a n u f a c t u r e r s barber shop at 4632 Elizabeth As.sociation, the Economic Club Surviving are his wife, Laura, Lake. of Detroit, the Detroit Golf Club g daughter, Mrs. Samud Sachs and Holy Name Church, pp^jpg. g son, Bernard A. of He was a graduate of the parmington; two sisters, Mrs. A life member of Oakland County Sportsmen’s Club, Hills attended Calvary Baptist Church. University of Detroit. Police Action Drain Bonds Sale Okayed Clara Deiss of Rochester and Mrs. Erna Schenk of Troy; two grandchildren; and two greatgrandchildren. William Avenall OXFORD — Service f o r William Avenall, 83, of 35 West Pontiac police officers k and Oakland County sher- ‘ bonds for a Waterford Township Cemetery, iff’s deputies investigated sewer project has bt'en ap-| j^r. Avenall, a retired farmer, proved by the State Municipal ,jipd Monday. He was a il Finance Commission. [member of the Gleaners An- I; ★ ★ ★ cient Order, pi The bonds are to be .sold Feb.| Surviving besides his wife, ■! 28. according to R J. Alex-j jjija,, are three daughters, 1 ander, county public works ]^jpg Marion B a i I e v of I department director. They will (-jarkston, Mrs. Ruth Mann of I cover the cost of lateral lines g„d Mrs. Lena I leading into the Pontiac sewer Pontiac; four system froni areas west of ftTelegraFA, three blocks north ^ ,land south of Huron. ^ and Marvin of Lapeer; 2! I i The construction contract has eeandchildren; 25 g r e a t i already been awarded pending S'-andchiWren, a brother; and a H sale of the bonds. Alexander lister, Mrs. Minnie Stevens of I said. , reported incidents and made nine arrests the past 24 hours. A breakdown of causes for police action; Vandalisms—6 Burglaries—7 Larcenies—11 Auto theft»-l Bicycle thefts—1 Assaults—4 Shopliftings—2 Disorderly persons—3 Armed robberies—1 Unarmed robberies—2 Obscene phone calls—3 Indecent exposures—1 Bad checks—2 Traffic offenses—12 Property damage accidents—9 Injury accidents—4 The older larger-than life size Everett Wilder stone sculptures ever unearthed have been found in Yugoslavia! PONTIAC TOWNSHIP -and are estimated to be about Service for Everett Wilder, 36, 3,8,000 years old. of 2121 Dexter will be 1:30 p.m. that brings this new Arnel® triacetate jersey print closer-to-you in a fit-and-flare. Green and orange or blue and yellow on white with a rayon chiffon scarf to match. sizes 12’/j to 26V'a Order by mail or phone 682-7500. Add 35c for delivery plus 10c for C.O.D.'s ond 4% tax PONTIAC MALL - TELEGRAPH AT ELIZABETH LAKE RD. 682-3930 OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 10:00 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M. - SALE BEGINS TODAY! NAME BRAND FABRICS • CUSTOM DRAPERIES • COMPLETE SEWING NOTIONS • PATTERNS 100% COTTON PRINTED OUTING FLANNEL cuddly soft and warm sleepwear fabric with a wide range of designs. Reg. 49c to 59c yd. values 36" Wide Guaranteed Washable 33 FAMOUS DAN RIVER COORDINATES Wrinkle shed, cotton and rayon • WINDOW PANES • CHECKS • PLAIDS • SOLIDS • STRIPES all perfectly color coordinated Reg. $1.19 yd. value. Save 51c yd. Little ironing 45" wide Guaranteed washable 57 New Spring Cottons! • SUN VALLEY PLAIDS • DAISY CHAIN PRINTS • MATCHING DOTS and STRIPES • PRINTED CRISKAYS Lush new spring colors for dresses, blouses, playwear Reg. 79c to 89c yd. values 35"/36" wide Guaranteed Washable 69 SAIL BLEND PRINTS NUTCNING SOLIDS avrii rayon'and cotton neat mini prints on a fine sportswear fabric for pant suits, hip buggers, play-wear. All the new spring colors. Little or no ironing 36" wide ' Guaranteed washable 89 WISPY VOILE PRINTS dacron polyester and cotton the season's most wanted fabric. Great design and color selection. Fun for frothy new midi-dresses. Little or no ironing 45" wide Guaranteed washable *1’3 covinEsr miins 100% cotton All new spring colors and designs great for dresses, blouses, children's playwear. Easy care, little ironing. Reg. 59c to 69c values. 36" wide M A ^ Guaranteed Washable *W ydi “DOT-LYM” Nickel dots of white on solid grounds in new spring colors. A fine quality rayon in a popular butcher weave. Specially purchased for you. Reg. $ 1.19 yd value. Save 51 c yd. 45" wide Guaranteed C Washable ydi COLORFUL NEW SUNKIST PRINTS An acetate crepe fabric. Bright, sunny designs, some big and bold, some minis, some florals, oil beautiful. Ideal for new spring dresses. You would expect to pay $1.39 to $1.49 yd. 45" wide Washable POLYNESIAN TAPA PRINTS Mad, wild colors, mod designs. Unique for shifts, A-lines, tents, dress or sportswear. These will make the scene anywhere, anytime. Imported 100% cotton Guaranteed washable 36" wide ydi SUNELLA PRINTS A rayon butcher weave, crease resistant for dresses, suits, sportswear, in a wide range of colors and designs. 45" wide. Guaranteed v/ashable. MATCHING SOLIDS $1.19 YD. DRAPERY FABRICS DECORATOR SOLIDS heavy quality rayon antique 'satins, bulky boucles, smart nubby weaves. Good colors including white for pinch pleats, curtains. Rfeg. $1.98 to $2.29 yd. 45" wide 8 colors 78 COLORED BURLAP Tro-tone decorator colori smart for pinch pleats, curtains and spreads. Colorful for wall decals In children's rooms, dens. 10 vivid Colors to choose. Reg. 59c to 69c yd. values. 36" wide 100% Jute jriiE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, FEHRI ARV 21. 1908 Tourists Still Seek Timbuktu—Simply Because It Is There TIMBUKTU, Mall UP) — Once mains. Now it is encased in the you get here, you wonder what sand and mud of a fly-ridden the fuss was all about. jtown of flat, dun colored, mud Six centuries ago, Timbuktu’•“rick compounds inhabited by on the southern rim of the ^bout 8,000 persons who are the Sahara was a legend of gold,|b^t tourist attraction in the camel caravans and Koranic I Pl^ce. intellectuals. The legend re-i Timbuktu has been disap- Special Purchase! pointing tourists for years. I *‘A mass of ill-looking houses, built of earth,” sighed Frenchman Rene Caille, 24, who| supposedly, spent 11 years ofj preparation and disguised himself as a Moslem to become! the first white man of modern | times to reach Timbuktu, in 1823. IT IS THERE But still the tourists come. Timbuktu is to tourists what Mt. Everest, is to mountain climbers — they seek it simply because it is there. First sight at the new, Moorish- designed airport recently was an Air Mali DCS plane chartered by American tourists. On one day in Bamako, Mali’s capital nearly 500 miles to the southwest, could be found two Columbia University professors and their wives heading for Timbuktu. Right behind them were the American ambassador to Guinea, Robinson Mcllvaine, and the former to Liberia, Edward Rhetts and their wives. "STARLITE" 4-DRUM SET with 4 cymbals included Big sound for your combo! Set includes SVi" x 14^' snare drum, I4''x22" bass drum, 9"x13" tom tom, 16"xl6'' floor tom, 1 mounted cymbal holder, mounted tom holder; ,hi-hat pedal, cymbal floor stand, stick, brushes and 4 cymbals. Sparkling finishes. 259^^ The Pontiac Moll 682-0422 Open Every Evening 'til 9 Mali government officials say about 2,000 tourists have visited Timbuktu since the start of the "high season,” when the rains stop at the end of November. Tliis is the first year the Malians, who suddenly have reali^ Timbuktu is still one of the biggest names in tourism, have campaigned to attract tourists and their money. The government celebrated International Tourist Year with two weeks of colorful parades of CLEAR-the-RACKS COAT sSojfo 2 OFF “all wmter coats must go 99 untrimmed winter coats reg. $40 . . V2 price ^20 t ^ ■ < novelty winter coats reg. $60 ^ price ^30 f better winter coats . reg. $80 ..,.,. Vz price ^40 ; famous maker coats reg. $90 .,..,, ^ price ^45 ■ ’mink trimmed coats ^eg. $110.Y2 price ^55 ^designer fur trims . ^ price f , * , Don’t miss sale savings . . . use our *80 I convenient layaway or charge it OPEN: Monday-Thursday-Friday-Saturday IQ A.M. to 9 P.M. , . Tuesday and Wedneaday ,10 A.M. to is P.M. New Fashion Midi in the Pontiac Mall Arabs steeds and r i d e r s ,ifine mud-built tower about three of salt which market womeni who had paid $79 a day for a 69-along the Niger River, or at climaxed by the departure of alstories tail. A narrow, winding|slice and grind. Iday African tour were ilvingiGao, about the same distance 500-camei caravap to collect!staircase of mud leads to thej Tourist items on sale range there without complaint. least of T(pibuktu. -Deluxe salt from the north. jtop and the best view in town.‘from high - backed dessertj An outdoor dining room is steamer fare is about $100 and Camels still are a big at- Second stop is the second oldest saddles to an ostrich egg done|co\/ered by raffia mats to keep includes air-conditioning and traction, and their handlers who I mosque, and so it goes. up in a leather holder. For less out the dust, and food is private bath. loll with their ungainly animals! * * ★ jmoney, hens eggs are available,'substantia1 but sandy and most ----------------- joutside the main market will| Timbuktu provides a wideitoo. |Often includes the Malian na-j provide^ a ride for patrons forjrange of physical types, fromjLODGINGS tional dish, misch-wi, roast* PotOtO-RcpOrt about 50 cents. jsouthern Greek and Romanj Tourists put up at an en-l^mb on a spit. Otherwise, guided tours of the!faces to the broad African campment beside a rain-filledi For those unwilling to spend LANSING (AP) — The .state’s town are short and snappy andjfeatures of natives of the West!water hole where scores of 11 years in preparation, flying potato growers, dealers and indicate things haven’t changed;Coast, nearly 1,000 miles south.(camels gather to water in the'is the quickest way to get to processors had 2.9 million hun- > much since 1853 when a The town’s streets are mostly of morning. The seven double Timbuktu. Air Mali, o f t e n dredweight of fall crop potatoes German explorer reached Tim-sand and are wide enough for bedrooms rent for $2 or $3 a!piloted by Russians or Chinese,!in stock as of Feb. 1, says, the buktu disguised as a Turk andlone jeep. Its major market is a night. The Malians are building|schedules four planes a week!Michigan Crop Reporting reported: “The only refnarkable I smelly, bustling shed with a a fancier two-story hotel with 22 from Bamako. The trip may! Service. The figure was 41 per public buildings in the town are three-story roof. Timbuktu isjrooms, 40 beds, and runningitake from three lo five hours cent of total fall crop pro- the three large mosques...” jnot rich, and the goods on water. A wall fell in duringjand costs $72.40 round trip.lduction, and was 2 per cent F’irst on the tour is the oldest [display are scanty. M o s tjconstruction in December. ButiRiver steamers can be taken at more; than the stock on hand a mosque, Sankore, which ha^ a^tascinating items bre the sheetsiby mid-January, Americans Mopti, about 230 miles south year ago. unninaliam’s DRUG STORES fke4cniption^Speaia£c^ Bloomfield Miracle Mile Shopping Center, S. Telegraph Tel-Huron Center, S. Telegraph-Rochester, 1451 N. Mam Pontiac Mall Shopping Center, N. Telegraph JUST UNBEATABLE ISENCE1' SEUenOH ;> SMIMS W' ■JiiM.. /r /./ ■'/ E-—6 THE PON TIA C PRESS. WEDNESDAV, FEBRUARY 21, 1968 HUE, Vietnam (AP) - The slight, 46-year-old priest with owlish eyeglasses really had no business being there. But the Infantrymen he loved were being killed before the battlements of Hue’s imperial Citadel, and the Rev. Aloysius P. McGonigal wanted to go. The chaplain Order by mail or phono 682-7500. Add 35c for delivery plus 1 Oc for C.O.D.'i and 4% fax. Priest Wangles Way to Front, Dies There bullefc.1 died, wound in his head with a unit | that was not his own in a battle he could have missed. He prac- ^ tically fought his way to the battlefield. Most soldiers McGONIGAL die almost anonymously, known only to their close comrades, to the sar-geants and to the company officers. Father McGonigal was known all over the 1st Corps i area and elsewhere in South' Vietnam. ,| ROAMED THE FIELD He roamed with a fierce devotion to “the men in the field.” His 5 feet 6 almost disappeared inside a flak jacket. Father McGonigal was a native of Philadelphia. He was ordained in 1953 and taught at Gonzaga High, Washington, D.C.; Loyola High, Baltimore, Md.; and Georgetown Univer-srtiy before becoming a chap- lain, He was attached to the Maryland Province of the Society of Jesus and is survived by ttiVee brothers and four sisters. An Army major, his last assignment was the U.S. Advisory Compound in Hue. He traveled all over the northern provinces and had extended his year-long tour in Vietnam. He took his extension leave in his ancestral homeland of Ireland, which was practically written on his smiling face. They were expecting him to leave his post at Hue and take desk job at Da Nang. His re-placenient was actually on the way up the day Father McGonigal headed for the north side of the Perfume River, where the battle for the Citadel was raging. “There was no Catholic priest with the 1st Battalion of ^he 5th Marines who were assaulting the walls and the father wanted to go,” said Dr. Stephen Bemie, an Army doctor from Dayton, Ohio, who had traveled frequently with the priest. Father McGonigal had been angrily walking the advisory compound for three days before he joined the battle, oidered by the compound commander to stay put. ^79.50 O Trouser Suits 2 for mi m save ^28 f87.50 Trouser Suits 2 for m3 you save ^32 NOW—substantial savings in the face of this Spring’s rising costs! About 80% of our 2-trouser Spring Suits go into this great sale! Superb pure wool classics, natural shoulder styles,, side-vent Forward Fashion models I NOW’S the time to save! No down payment and you have at least one year to pay! 3 money-saving ways to select O Two Spring: Suits ^ One Spring Suit +\ One Tropical Suit © Two Tropical suits All alterations without charge Use Bond’s more convenient Optional Chaige Account Bwids AMERICA S LARGEST CLOTHIER THE PONTIAC MALL Woodwerd, 1525 Woodward,. D«froil-' “ >ing Contor, 15 Milo ond Gratiot iliepping Center, 12 Mile and John R THE PONflAC PRESS. WKD\KS1)A^■. FEBHl Ain Jl. I!k;s 'Decorate with Ready-ie-finish Louvered Shutters! Room>Size Colonial Nylon Reversihle Oval Braid Rug They'r* sanded smooth I and ready to stain or painH Arneriean pin* shut-♦,tiers have movable louvers prices cut on all sizes! Were 2.99! Child’s Vinyl Rain Boots . Bright orang* for •afoty — ruggodi BM Reg. 79e-Wards Fiber Glass Furnace Filters Koop dust gut of tho air. From lx* 16x20-1x20x25. 39* Rhg. 19c-"ltalian Marble” Vinyl Tile Boautiful pattorq liko mdrblol Gold, 1CC boigo or whito. llRtS. Airline® Portable 8-Transistor Radio ' Peckot sixo with ABB poworful rocop- J®® tioni Largo dial. VB Room-size 102x13|8-in. oval fits 9x12 area! Continuous-f iloitient for double the weorl Choose from 6 color combinations. Reg. 59.99 .AV, THE PON HAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 21, 1968 yWoNTGOMERY WARD Save Half Perma Press Contour-style bra 99< Reg. 1.99 Lightly padded with comfortably toft fiber* fill to add alluring curves. Machine washable cotton polyester. Don't wilt or wrinkle - always looks fresh. A, B, 32 - 38. Long log panty firms thighs 399 Reg. 7.99 Power net nylon and Lycra® spandex with self paneled sides, lace front panel. Has 4 detachable garters. Slims hips and firms thighs. In sixes S,M,L,}^L Save '/> SPRINC-BRISHT COTTON DUSTERS Machine washable cotton for easy care Comfortable and flattering fashion looks • A colorful array of spirited prints k BIG SELfCnOII OF SHINY PA1ENIS AND VillTL PATENTS FOR TOUR LITTLE GIRL Save $1 to S3 PAIR FORMERLY 4.99/i.Sa You'll simply have to see them to believe that you can get so much fashion at such exciting savings. See the fancy bow trims and buckles as well as stitching and cut- outs. You'll find all her favorites in Miss Brent® fashions. Get them in black and colors. All with long-wearing composition soles. 8 to 4. Carol Brent ^ classic pajamas Select yours from this refreshing collection. Find smart fashion looks that are comfortable and flattering. S, AA, L sizes. REG. $2 e Tailored in Sanforized® cotton broadcloth e Feminine floral print in pretty pasteU e Easy-carCf too ... washinyourmachine DRESSY VINYL PATENTS AT WARDS AMAZING LOW PRICE Your choice in shiny black and the new fashion colors. Neat trims. Just 99 right for dress-up. Composition dBI PAIR soles. Sizes BV» to 4. Rec, 3.99 For pretty lounging, comfortable sleeping. All around elastic waist band gives nobind fit. Misses sizes 34-40. Save 41% Colonial Crass StHoh Print QUEEN-SIZE PERCALE SHEETS BRIGHT AND SHINY NEW VINYL PATENT DRESS SHOES REDUCED Great buys in pretty Miss Brent® |||MA Styles Including adjustable straps, 199 gores. Composition soles. Sizes ■ 81^ to 4. PAIR2.H Reg. 6.79 Reg. 7.79 KIN0-SIZ6,109x120-in...............4.99 Reg. 2/2.N PILLOWCASES, 42x40-in.........2/2.19 The Colonial charm of these luxurious sheets will brighten your bedroom like Spring sunshine! Wide 20-inch cross stitch print borders the top in bright color. Super-sihooth, extra-durable 190-count (after washing) percale in 90x120-inch queen size. Misses’ acetate trieetliiiefs I9* Briefs have elastic logs, waist. White. 5, 6, 7. Misses’ nylon poWpants 89« Pretty ^trims. Eosy-core, long wearing. S,M,L. (JJcxaJ^ : w .* nii.\ rmn v\i\\)\\ !»'• \.\i. to s \ n m) \,\i. TO r.\i. s /WoNTCOlWERY WARD Spring 1968’s newest WARDS FINEST BRENT SUITS . FOR MEN ... AT *22 SAVINCS THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, FE«RUARY 21. 1968 DAYS ONLYI »*0 Here's just the spring tonic for your wardrobe, look at these savings! You'll find the latest models in fine inworted and domestic worsteds. Dacron® polyester - worstods. Glen plaids, nailheads, stripes, cavalry twills in latest shades, liegulars, shorts, longs. <l’\ Tlllit. | [:(I)\'| 10 \.V1, T(M»;00 IWl .s VI I i{|» \'i \.A|. TO 0:(I0 Si 1:.^ \ou\ TO .-> I’.'M . 682001(1 ‘ -s i'). a/ . i THE PONTIAC PRESS, w!EDN£SDAY. FEBRUARY 21, 1968 E—11 Seven>HP Garden Tractor Has Electric Starter A great value in a rugged 7*HP tractor! Reserve power for cUmb> ing grades, heavy cutting. 32>in.°^K%l%|w Mower Attachment, 89.98. w w w 42-inch rotaiy mowor attachment, now... M50 Save 100! 10-HP Garden Tractor makes garden work easy, even fun! Save ^20! 5-HP TILLER WITH POWER REVERSE *149 REG. $169 • Powerful Briggi & Stratton engine • Change »peedfa$t without shifting • Finest safety features available Built to handle the toughest chores! Attachments available to plow deep with-■ out straining... grade, remove snow, haul, till, mow lawns! Spend more time enjoying your property . . . less keeping it up! Try a test ridel ^699. Recoil-starting Briggs & Stratton engine drives bolo tines that till a 26-in. swath to 9-in. deep! Cultivate, till or aerate in one operationi Power reverse lets you back out of corners! Belt drive. Save *20! 4-HP, 25-ineh Rctaiy Riding Newer Differential in rear gives easier ' handling . . . makes it a breeze to cut any lawn! Floating mower cuts evenly. 199" REa.219J9 Sportsmen! Save on the car-top boat of your choice ’I 10-F00T ALUMIHUM JOH BOAT $88 Reg.$94 Toygh aluminum hull for rugged outdoor life. Extruded gunwales^ safety foam floatation steady-riding 45-ihch beam. 12-ft, jon boat...... $99.00 WARDS 12-FOOT FISHIHGBOAT «154 REQ.$1$9 Wide, rib-reinforced lapstraked hull for drier^ smoother running! With 3 cool-riding varnished wood seats that cover foam safety f lotatation tanks. Save *100! Deluxe 12-HP Garden Traetcr Job-taming 12-HP engine is synchrobalanced to eliminc vibration! Does a score of chores! 48-in. Mower Attachment, $185, REO. $898 $799 *40QFFf Warcb eew 120411. ft. $119 m OFF! ^ Airy .l••pino loom fort... with and epwfwitongrf 3 .crU^wi^dowt, o lipporod Dutch d«^, •mKfl-f* .•wn-in flood 8-ft. eontor height and 6-ft. hand room. Goo. up fait, on a toloteoplng aluminum framo. IfaiW. io» OI>K>i MOMDAV TIIKIJ FRIDAY 10 A.M. TO <):On l>.\l. SATTRDAV 9:30 A.M. TO 9:0(1 l>.\l. Si 'YD A'i 12 AOO\ TO .'> i’.M. . 0«2-19 lo E—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. FEBRTT.ARV 21. 1968 I G/bra/for Struggles Under Spanish Curl GIBRALTAR (AP) — Soviet as Britain withdraws militaryjbusiness has been cut almost in j southern Spain. More than seamen crowd Gibraltar’s bar- power from other parts of the:half by the blockade, as it is 10,000 Spanish wot-kers, many of gain shops in such numbers that„ h ... irimiRir IN nniiRT The Russian sailors and to work in Gibraltar s homes, shopkeepers are putting up Rus-F^^ indoubt^ si^ips hotels and dockyards. smn signs and learning Russian ’ British we are, British we ^ ^ r^*’ them I would have had to close.jgreeJ ron S eroVthe road to Veiled Moroccan women from white and blue on the side of an hap-|pS haveLn padlocked across the strait give the old apartment budding. In a refer- up against moL traffic Tourists fortress town an Orienta look It endum last September only 44 ^ '"V , Ler had before. out of 12.000 voters asked that fI"*® This two-mile-long limestone the Rock should be handed over TOURIST BUSINESS ^foot and by sea artd a>r- but rock was a pillar of Britain's to Spain, as it demands. The blockade is bad enough, st^tseers rather th^ world power for 250 years. The But the referendum left the In 1964, the last “normal" year, ^P®’?®'"®^ ^^® *‘‘®“ motorizes Union Jack still flies, but future in doubt 140,000 private cars and busesl"*®™®* 8°"®' Spain’s restriction on movement * * * brought nearly halt a million The Spanish dockers stil to Gibraltar by land is begin- “British we are indeed, but tourists into Gibraltar. The'conie in from La Linea and by ning to hurt. how long can it last “ asked a shops sold $45 jmillion worth of ferry from Algeciras. Every Gibraltarians watch anxiously Gibraltar shopkeeper whose goods to tourists or residents ofi^^^n carries his lunch in a plas- ... , - - |tlc bag as he walks into town. At the end of the day, Spanish I customs men carefully search jeach bag. No one may take home even a pack of cigarettes. The 6,000 Spa]jiards are 1 dwindling, aging labor force. The Spanish have refused to is sue new permits since 1964. The 2,000 Spanish women who worked on the Rock have been banned altogether since August TREATY VIOLATION I Their place has been taken by I Moroccans. TTiis influx is technically a violation of the 1713 I Treaty of Utrecht by which I King Philip V of Spain ceded the Rock to Britain “absolutely with all manner of right forever.” It i provided that “No leave shall be ■given under any pretense whatsoever either for Jews or Moors to reside and have, their dwellings in the said town of Gibral-itar.” » I That clause has been ignored for two centuries. Spain claims the whole treaty is out of date and should be scrapped, i There is virtually no limit to the possible Spanish harassment. The dockyards could be paralyzed by a ban on all commuting workers. The non-Spanish tourists still coming across the border at a rate of 4,fi week could be blocked. Sea and air traffic could be obstructed. A Spanish gunboat from Algeciras anchors at the entrance to the harbor in what Britain regards as Gibraltar’s territorial waters. A dozen merchant ships of all nationalities edge past every day to use Gibraltar’s modern facilities and give their passengers and crews a few hours on shore. ANNUAl PIANO FAaORY Complete Hearing Aid Service * HEARING TESTS * HEARING AID SUPPLIES * REPAIRS ON ALL MAKES )i0ittfair mall ojitiral Sc l;parttt$ aili Aulhoriitd Diipantsr of ykMiTM “Living Sound” Hearing Aids NATHAN UPSON, ified Hearing Aid AudialogiMt 682-1113 Billy the Kid No Iron Corduroys *4»o to *3®® *5®® to *3’’ »6®» to *4®® »7®® to *4*' .Nut All Colon in Every Size — But ■ Good Selection. Buy ior Now and Neat Tear •— Moitly All No-Iron! ! All Salt Final No Layawayn STRETCH Your Dollars - NOW! GREATER - LARGER at RICHARDS THURSDAY AT 9:30 A.M. - FRI. - SAT. SJJLE Out They Go Girls Dresses *3 »»4 BOYS LONG SLEEVE • Polos a Sta-I Press Shirts $3®® to $2^00 *3»® to $2|33 *400 to $2^67 *410 to $300 Giant Once A Year Clearance^ 1/2 OFF I • Girls Winter Coats • Girls Sno Suits • Girls Winter Jackets • Boys Sno Suits • Toddler Boys Sno Suits | • Toddler Girls Snow Suits | • Infant Sno Suits Bi| tolection of brekoR tiaot from hi|hor priced iroupi, Sitei are 1-4, 34s, and 7-14. The Talnee nm|e from 16 to $17 Itami. • Naal Sates • No Layaways • No Try>ORS All from our regular high quality atock of brand ij:| name garmenU. Choose from Town and Country, Gastwirth, Gardner, Tidykins, Kutc Kiddies, Won-derails. The early bird catches the worm as telec-tions in some categories are limited. • Sweaters •Skirts The Very finest in knit and iSu-Preea dacron — cotton •hirta. Brand namet auch ai Model, Braxton, and Don- All Soles Final No Loyowoys Special! Rummage Table 50‘ $|00 A'special table of odds and ends of much higher priced goods. Some may be slightly soiled and some imperfect but they are all good values and are priced for immediate sale. Mort ef them sweaters toA skirts are color dyed to match Mch ether. Practically all of the sweeten and most of the ikirta areVaili-able. 'VahHN ranie «p to $9 Grinnell Pianos reduced' TO MAKE WAY FOR 1968 MODELS Grinnell's Piano Factory is well under way produc- . ing fine new '68 styles! All discontinued models Grinnell Jr. must be sold now at great redgetions! This is your rnnsoles now chance to select a Contemporary, Traditional --Modern Grinnell piano. New Spinets Priced From New Consoles Priced From *379 *445 *645 GRINNELL'S, THE PONTIAC AAALL, 682-0422 Open Every Evening Until 9:00 for Your Shopping Convenience CX)WNTOWN PONTIAC STORE, 27 S. i\GINAW, FE 3-7168 Open Mon. and Fri. yntii 9:00, other evenings 'til 5:30; Use yo ur charge, 4-pay plan (90 days same as cash) or budget terms. BUY, SELL, TRADE . . . USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS , I . L, ■ I ■» . THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. FKBlU Ain^ Jl. 1908 E—13 Name-Cqlling Meaningful for U.S. Programs WASHINGTON Sometimes it seems the White House must have a speciai staff in charge of dreaming up names for federaL programs: Head Start, Upward Bound, Operation Mainstream and ali the others. But no such staff exists. The whole name - calling procedure is a very informal one, though it sometimes resembles an organized exercise in “gro' p-think” or “brainstorming.” Take the christening of the National Alliance of Business- men, the group President Johnson created to give private enterprise a role in training and finding jobs for the hard-core unemployed. When White House aides were preparing Johnsdn’s recent message to Congress on jobs, they kicked around all kinds of ideas for naming the business organization. Their final choice was determined by thd fact that National Alliance of Businessmen can be alphabetized as NAB — an apt description, they thought, for a program to actively seek out job-training candidates and propel them-into the labor force. THING TO AVOID ‘We try to find something Uplifting that gives the essence of the program,” explains Lar ry Levinson, a White House assistant who has participated in many a bureaucratic christening. The thing to avoid, he says, is dull, formal verbiage. Occasionally a program name is suggested by the department principally responsible for its evolution. More often, members of the White House staff sit around in a small group and start thinking out loud. Eventually someone produces an idea that wins acceptance. * * * Thus New Careers, Stay in School and Operation Mainstream. Acronyms are ever popular. Last year^when a presidential commission on the draft suggested a Selective Service lottery, h conscious effort was tag that would play down the gambling connotation and help sell the idea. made to come up with a name Area Manpower Planning System, CAMPS. In these cases the abbreviations seem alrnosl essential in view of t h i rnouthful of words required tc recite the formal titles. Acronyms of this kind are no) , encouraged in all cases, of co’.rse. As an example, Johnsot month proposed a new program that he 1 a b e 1 e o Partnership for Education and * * * I Earning, which qualifies as both Some other examples: Job inspirational and catchily Opportunities in the Business descriptive. It does not lenc Sector, JOBS, and Cooperativelitself, however, to abbreviation. NOT ENOUGH Result: The fair system, for Fair and Impartial Random System. But even that wasn’t enough to persuade a reluctant Congress. WHAT’S IN A NAME?—This drawing by AP staff artist Len Poznanski shows a mythical White House staffer juggling ideas for names of new administration programs. ,Larry Levinson, a presidential assistant, explains, “We try tb find something uplifting that gives the essence of the program.” Last Goodbys Said, Airman Dies in Viet SAIGON (UPI) - It was the big day. After exactly one year in Vietnam, “Mac” McMahon was going home. He hurried out of bed early., Back in Fredericktown, Ohio, his mother read and reread the letter that had pome two days earlier. Mac’s last line: “See you all soon.” Air Force Sgt. William L. McMahon, 23, his last goodbys said, rode across Saigon’s Tan Son Nhnt Airbase to the airline terminal Monday. A Vietcong rocket hit just over the ticket counter minutes before Mac’s flight was to leave. The blast wounded 21 men. It killed only wie—Mac. Sgt. L. D. Lee, 25, of Jackson, Miss., and Staff Sgt. Paul Pinkham, 25, of Mount Clemens, Mich., had driven their friend Mac to the terminal. Now they had to drive his body back to the 377th Hospital Dispensary in their ambulance. KIDDED MAC Sgt. Lee said, “It was a quiet drive (to the terminal). We were all tired. We were kidding Mac and Smithy (flight surgeon Robert 0. Smith of Honea Path, S.C.) who was getting out too. You’re just getting out in time, we told them.” Sgt, James Portis, 21, of Claremont, Calif., crowded into the ambnlance taking Mac to the terminal. He wanted chance to say goodby. Portis said they all were Jumpy after a night of tending wounded. It was 6 a.m. and rockets were still crashing into the base. The rocket hit while Mac and Smithy stood in line. Smith took six shrapnel fragments in his chest. One ripped into a lung. Mac took only one but it was in the head. ^ •THOUGHT OF MEDAL Pinkham gently lifted his former roommate. They had served their tour of duty together. He thought about the medal of valor Mac was getting for bravery under fire in his last month’s duty, the time when “short-thners” usually take it easier. Back in the d,i s p e n s a r y •owded with wounded, the radio receiver heard from the ambnlance: “One Kia (killed in action) . . . it’s Mac. 'The'KIA, it’s Mac.” ‘We didn’t realize what they were saying.” said Mac’s commander, Capt. Joseph Begin, 31, of Hamilton, Ont. “They kept repeating it but we went on talking. We’d been up night, snatching sleep between rockets. Suddenly someone realized and said, ‘Hey, Mac...’ “There was just a silence.” In Fredericktown, his mother said, “In his last letter, he said he was hoping he could find a job right away because he had a lot of things to do. He wanted to be an accountant.” She said Mac never wrote of the conibat, his medal. — wouldn’t tell us anything about it in his letters. He was going to tell us what happened when he got home.” Pinkham was flying home at week’s end in time for Mac’s funeral. Waist Sizes • 32 to 42 2-way stretch nylon rib-racy pants Ready to ptay partners to your favorite tops . . . ribbed-rich figure favoring flex fit pants. Impeccably toilored and waist elosticized. In black, navy, brown, lime, oronge, Scandia blue. IA S. S. KRESGE THE PONTIAC MALL CHARGE IT Beautiful , 8x10 PORTRAIT of your child BUST VIGNETTE Plus 50° for AAAILING and HANDLING! Group pictures slightly higher. Choice of several poses. No appointment necessary. Limit one per family. THIS WEEK ONLY NOW Thru SATURDARY, FEB. 24th HOURS: 10-7 DAILY , BURT& 100 |49 I and A ' ] Broken size*! Remainders from our '}' $emi Pork Chops or Fried Chicken V«g., Potato**, Salad, D*i**rt* Child’! Price! Available Thursday Might, 8-8:30 p.m. at the AIRPORT SKYROOM 6500 Highland Road In the Airport Terminal Building 8T3-8932 L(M)K1NG FOR THE ENEMY-A U.S. Marine position atop one of Hue's towers commands a view of a street in the Citadel. Bitter house-to-house fighting amid the rocky fortress walls has continued since a North Vietnamese-Vietcong offensive against Vietnam's urban centers began three weeks ago. NMU Rolls Up j MARQUEITE UP) - Northern jMichigan University reports it has enrolled a record 6,538 students for its spring term, up 3.9 per cent from 6,294 in school last spring. The second semester enrollment includes |5,963 undergraduates and 575 graduate students. TONIGHT 8:15 ^ \ 7 1 j 1 Surprisingly Different!! Breathtaking New Productions, Lavish Costiin^ gic sMen. Unforgettable Music, and the Incredible Magic SOTOen. Stoi; Tommy Ufi; Ann-Morgrot Froi; li _ Chopol; CliH M«*fdio; Diono; Gill# Vonosio; Marilyn Ceopor OPEN TUES., MAR. 5 Thru MAR. 17 WEEK NIGHTS 8 P.M. Two Shews Saturday 2:00 and 8:30 P.M. Two Shows Sunday 2:00 and 6:30 P.M. Prices: $5.00, $4.00, $3.00 NO SHOW MONDAY, MARCH 11 Tickets enxale at Olympia and all J. L. Hudson Major Stores z senior Ciliztn* Holt Pric* Sot. Matin** Mar reh 9 «i(ly Eicolatsr S*rvic* t* Ih* Bolc*ny ________________________________________ MAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY FILLED Encloi* S*lf-Addreswd Er)y*lop*. If Ordering for Sat., Slat* Mats, or Ev*.; lor Son., Stot* 2 or 6:3p p.m. Show. p DR_________SEATS AT S_____ ENCIOSED FIND $_ DATE CHOICE, 1st— PlEASE PRINT NAME _ 2od_ _ 3rd— OLYMPIA STADIUM I /\fo4it Ploufi^ AURJE. DRIVE-INS : lALGIERS Ibeli EASE SIDE Iforb-wyoming (Frt.-S«t.) (Sun. only) VILIAGE nWYANDOIlE annex IKIJIBrtIRIE.. VAN DYKE Moua PloAfin^ at &Ute Sluf. KARL MALDEN M MWISCH ratiy«'EIM«RO LAIKRSOH iOEMNWnsSE -BILLY WILDER^ "BILLION DOLLAR BBAIN”J nil] TECHNICOLOR- PANAVISION' )' COLOR by Deluxe iN-CAR HEATERS • BOX OFFICE OPEN 7:00 P.M B£mSk DRIVE-IN THEATER ----- 332-3200 OPDYKE RD. AT WALTON BLVO CHIIDREN UNDER 12 FREE For Show Times, See Movie Guide in P ELIZABETH u Taylor Burton RICHARD IN THE BURTON-ZEFFIRELLI PRODUCTION OF _ THE Haming OF THE OHREW TECHNICOLORS PANAVISION® , ^ WEOn, SAT. SUN. - '•"'CE* V I ^HtS ENOAOEMENT ONLY » nill TC we<.-»el. Itot.. . t1.II _________ RS.-FRi. I AUULl5llMe*ee4tae...|lJI at T:M A l:tl only Children (under 12).....|IJI Starts Wad., Fab. 28th-Walt Disney's ‘‘JUNGLE BOOK" BUY! SELL! TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS‘WANT AD3! WE'RE OPEN EVENINGS, TOO! Steaks to fulfill your draam* of parfaction Prime Rounds World'* Ta*tiast • Broa*t*d Chicken • Lobster Toils • Char-Broiled Steaks • Fresh Florida Snapper and Pickerel • Famous for Excellence in Sea Foods • Try durFpmous Round-Up Style Dinners We Cater to Cliildren of All Ages from 1 to 100 CHILDREN'S MENUS AND FAVORS CHILDREN.% PRICE .Vo Liquor — Just (iood Food Call T96-224S for Taka Out Orders Call for Rosorvafions 5800 Dryden Road, Orydon, Michigan , ''' J” ” Open Daily 11 A.M. to 9 P.M. Poirtiao 1 Af(uu at PoHiiac f WVJWKEN FATE®; „ eoM» T^aTiia^Jii?l The year’s #1 best selle^ IN-CAR HEATERS • BOX OFFICE OPEN 7:00 P.M. Pontiae THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1968 E—15 Kingfish Seeks Cash to Prevent Riots PHILADELPHIA (JR -Kingfish 0>hen is looking for an angel. Not the hefivenly kind, but one with the real green. He needs cash, he says, without strings attached, to continue “the fight for peace in the Negro ghettos of Philadelphia while building hot summer — “It was me, plus frequent weekend rains aind a tough but good police commissioner.” His legal name, is Benjamin Cohen. He’s Ne^o and he’s Jewish. Kingfish, determined that the nation’s fourth largest city will hope for Its frustrated, militant, I ™ *”*®ting, unemployed, uneducated summer organized the Knights youth •» I of the Mystic Sea, Lodge No. 1. ott«nrti., b, tt.1 tu.' Cohen’s Knights never had cluUiouse trouble. To ensure peace, Kingfish created his own Mystic Police (MP’s), composed of (he toughest from the strongest gangs. ' ★ ★ * Now Cohen wants to get some ^ency, or the city, or the school board to come up with Philqddphla apart. I end it was a peaceful hangout Kingfish claims he helped fw members of 53 of the cUy’s avert violence during (fee 1967! toughest gangs. WASHINGTOIf (AP) ^ Bobby Baker, the ei'stwhile Senate whiz kid, is on the go > and money to provide a bigger doesn’t expect a jail sentence to meeting place and solid pro- - - -grams that would steer school dropouts to jobs and renewed education. But he wants total dependence. Remember Our TOMORROW, Thursday, Feb. 22nd • Buffet • free Gift ■LUNCHEONy 12 Noon to 2 P.M. DINNER,. 5 P.M. to 9 P.M. A replica of on Ancient Coin The JERRY LIBBY Trio For your listening and dancing pleasure 9 P.M. to 2 A.M. See our giant aquarium featuring exotic tropical fish YOUR HOSTS: Jay and Joann Bares I JogsoM 4195 Dixie Highway, Drayton Plains For Reservations Coll 673-7900 COME IN NOW FOR FIRST CHOICE Ladiac' (b HOVSe SUPPERS $1 ^ nn.toS.il ^ 1 j • Fwra • SoHni ■ BllCl • Laolhar • All Colon ■ d» <) • All Sfylot JL f ' Ladias' ^ SPORTS FLITS H • All colon • All Styloi ■ • Loothon • Suodot ■ $3 Lodiot' ^ High - Mid - Dress \ SHOES r;fi to 0 Potontt • Loothon V■ ns • Suodo* 0 All Colon sPO Ladiat' |h fttl STACK \rr LITTLE HEELS 'Pri Reg. 12.99 o All colon 0 All clyloo V ■ o Loothor • Suodo* ^ “P SNOW BOOTS Spocial Group Eskiloot (8 J Rag. to 15.99 • High Ho«U oflatHooli __ 0 High • Low \JR HAINDBAGS Reg. 5.99 to 14.99 a Drott • Sports / *_ • Suodos • Potontt f | o Loothor • All Stylos ■■ $5 Open Every Evening 'til 9 Washington Sale! 26"-36"-45"-#5 - 7404 WASHABLE TIERS Trimmed with Fringe • Blue • Gold • Red • Pink • Green VALANCES TO AAATCH Value$ to 1.99 each Values to 5.99 1 99 pair RUFFLED CURTAINS With tie backs fringed to mptch tiers 36"-45"long Values to 7.98 QUILTED BEDSPREADS Twin and full size - assorted colors. Regular 29.99 at DUAL SIZE BIDSPRtADS While they lasf Regular 39.99 at BUNK AND TWIN SPREADS Machine washable bunk and twin Regular 7.98 at DRAPES TO AAATCH 2?? »49 12” SW X 45 Reg. 6.98 at SW X 63 Reg. 7.99 at 499 3?? SECURITY CHARGE OAK PARK aimri fiwwNM eeso tim arwHUUM, «way switch on pole. Easy to Use-Easy to Store BAKE KING FOIL BAKE PANS • BROILER PANS • LOAF PANS • CAKE PANS 3P PONTIAC 3 Days Only—Reg. 2 Prs. 86c Sheer, Seamless Nylon Mesh Hose Gossamer nylons to flatter legs beautifully. A fin^ run-resistant mesh knit in Suntone, Mist-tone or Cinnamon. Sizes 8^-11. Don’t miss this opportunity to save on hosiery. MEN^S TERRY SHIRTS 100% cotton pullovers in contrasting all over stripes or solids. S-iVJ-L. |94 DOWNTOWN PONTIAC TEL-HURON CENTER Extra Wide TRIM TAILORED PANELS Expensive-looking, extra wide tailored panels in "Pendant” pattern... a textured diamond weave, made of durable rayon chenille. White, beige, gold, olive or pink. DRAYTON PLAINS FINISHED FRAMES Specially Priced! |6S |98 ■ 9x12 ■ 14X111, “MOC" Style SLIP-ONS Women’s and teens’ vinyl casual slip-ons. Sizes 5-10. ROCHESTER PLAZA BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE Shop without cash- "CHA/ice /r AT msers —Pay only once a month! DNE COLOR TOE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 2^, 1968 NO MONEY OOWN • 3 YEARS TO ^AY PONTUd MU SHOPPINfi CENTER TELEGRAPH ROAD, Corner Elizabeth Lake Road OPEN DAILY 9 to 9 • _ PHONE 692-2330 III / #///! I III I ■)/'-> THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY F—1 'True Support" HOSE 76* Our Reg. 97e Pr Thureday Only Pr. 100% stretch nylon with support rubber added. Combines over4he-calf fashion with complete, ho-garter support. Rdieves leg fatigue. Black, navy, brown, grey. S. M. L. JUNMM BOYS’ i SHORT SLEEVE I SPORT SHIRTS ; Compare to 2.49 i Thurtday Only In solid dolors, plaids, and prints. With button-down and spread-collar styles, in a big selection of colors. Available in sizes 3 to 7. Charge It! ^8 ft TRANSISTOR TAPE RECORDER Our Reg. 12.44 1 ^ Thursday Only 1 WqOO ^ Fonr-transistor, two-motor tape recorder is ideal for home, I office or school. Comes in hi-impact plastic case with s carrying sUap for greater portability. Complete with re- j mote control, mike and earphone. * ^ Super, STANDARD REVIEWER 7ur Reg. 10.77 O 04 rhursdayOnly jMt lali reviewer available in super 8rnm or regular Sniin ize. Fast acting movie editor enables you to edit your novies. Features easy slip-in loading, comes comi>lele vith splicer. 20-0z.' Chocolate Covered Cherries 66' Our Reg. 97e~Thanday Only Choice of mHk or dark choco late. 20 os. box. •NrtWf. JUMBO SIZED, CURLER BASKET IT Score Hair Cream :horjr« if gLr'o .Sos.* king iso “Score." VT VF Poly Lunch Kit 2’^ Our Reg. 3.S7 Lunch kit with IVk-pl. hottle. Buy Two and Save! CHOICE OF BRAS ON SALE NOW! Our Reg. 1.37 ea. * Thursday Only Many fabrics and styles including padded and unpadded; some permanent press; some stretch straps. White, black and colors. 32-42, A-D, and some larger. "APOLLO" TENNIS OXFORDS Our Res. 1.97 Thurgde^Only Women’s and children’s tennis oxfords in many colors, and siaes. Fnll foam cushion insoles, canvas uppers, rubber outsoles. Women’s to 10. SAVE ON STURDY ONE-PIECE DRIP m DISH DRAINER OurKe,. J.57 T Thursday Only 20xl4VkK344’* dish drainer. Won’t mar, scratch surface; one-piece construction; boiling water safe. Charge it. Limited Qvontity-None «etd te deoiert. RUBBER FLOOR AAATS Our Reg. 2.97 U OO Thursday Only Deeply ribbed rubber gives door-to-door protection. Easy to install and keep clean. Protect your car’s interior. Many decorator colors. Non-skid, back keeps mats in place. Front only. BOX OF HANDSOME ALL-OGCASHW GREETING CARDS Our Reg. 53c 38* Thursday Only AU-oecasion cards for birthdays, get-well wishes and sympathy. All with appropriate verses. Save! NEW HIGH RISER BICYCLE Our Reg. 36.93 40 MI6 Thursday Only Boys’ and girls’ High Riser bicycle with Malibu handlebars; positive action coaster brakes and polo saddle. Boys’ in red and ash green, girls’ in white with magenta ^m. Save! Umitod Quantity-Nofw fold t* dwUn. Kmart Brand 1-lh. BAG POTATO CHIPS Our Reg. 49c Thursday Only 44c l-lb. bag crisp, fresh Potato Chips. Perfect for Meals, Snacks, or anytime. "COHO" SALAAON RIG Discount Price • Thursday Only Choose a famous “Pflueger” or “Pen” trolling reel. Both come with star drag and large capacity reel. 4,V2-6W rods. Spinning “Coho” Rig Only.............2S.9Y SPECUUiY PRICED 23’Ax71*A” Viscose RAYON RUNNER Our Reg. 1.97 h48 Thursday Oply Dyed tweed Viscose* rayon cut pile runner with border stripe pattern and non-skid Latex® ruU>er back. • U.S.Rubb«rCM|>. Limited Ouontity - Non* told ta daoloit. POLE SHELF CABINET UNIT 6.44 Our Reg. $.88 Thursday Only' Roomy bathnmm pole unit has 2 plastic shelves, sU^ng door medicine cabinet and two plastic towel rings. ■Chrome {dated steel tnlnng poles. ^ METAL STORAGE SHELVES 2.96 Our Reg. 3.44 Thursday Oply 12x3<»IO”, or 12x36x37” storage shelves. Grey finish. Save! 4' Him STORAQE SHELF......................... I.M V Him STORAGE SHELF........................... T.SS 22-GAL TRASH CONTAINER a.22 Our Reg. 3.84 Thursday Only Extfu strong, lightweight trash container is crack resistant in temperatures as extreme as 30” below aero. Easy to clean, hag,tight fitting cover with locking mCtRl handle. ALUAAINUAA HAND TRUCK 3.96 Our Reg. 4.97 Thursday Only Holds up to 156 pounds. Set up, 40”Hxl5”Wul8”D, cart features: non-slip hand grips; durable self-lnbrb eating wheels; big 7” tires; oversised, IQ” deep platform. Limit 2. Save. GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD I F—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 21. 1968 Jacoby on Bridge j NORTH SI ♦ K7 V K Q J 10 4 ♦ A876 «83 W*8T EAST AQ 10 88 *JS42 V 7 5 6 « 8 3 ♦ J 10 5 2 ♦ KQJ74 * 1095 SOUTH (D) ♦ A9S V A832 ♦ KQ4 ♦ A62 Both vulner«ble West North Eait Sou^h IN.T. Pas* 2 ¥ Pass 3 N. T. Pas* 4¥ Pass 4N.T. Pass «V Pass 8N.T. Pass Pass OpeninE lead—* K viraallaed a heart tlam at this have been a cinch because tmt * "of South’s hearts could mvi By OSWALD AND JAMES JACOBY Today’s hand has appeared in our column before. Oswald Jacoby was North and one of the (greatest hand hogs of all time sat south. This hand was played In the early days of contract when any suit response to one JACOBY 51 one round force. South also hated to have his partners jump so Jacoby contented himself with a two heart mponse although he knew that he wanted to be in game at least. Ruth’s jump rebid to three I ao-nmp showed at least 17 points. He played indefinite but strong no-trumps. Jacoby' jump to the heart slat merely lead to a rix ao-trunqi; contract. So he made a second, underbid of four hearts. Sure enough, the hand hog came right back with four no-trump. He had 4-344 distribu-j lion and even though his four, card suit was the one his partnel- had been bidding, South wanted to play the hand. At this point Jacoby finally decided to bid his values and jumped to six hearts. South bid six no-trump! South made a valiant effort to make his no-trump slam. He ducked the first club in order to set up a possible squeeze. He won the second club and ran hearts. I East chucked a club as soon as possible to give West a count of that suit. Then East bung I onto his diamonds while West Just held whichever black cards South did. I Of course, six hearts would Musicians fo Vie MARQUETTE (J) - Some 450 student musicians from 17 Upper Peninsula high schools' will compete in the annual yppa! Peninsula Solo and Ensemble Music Festival Saturday Sponsored by the U.p. School Music Association, the festival will be held at Northern Michigan University. been used to ruff that fourth diamond. Jacoby was mad ttien. iHe is still mad 35 years later, but blames himself for trying toj get the hog to let him play a' ’The okapi is a cousin of the I giraffe. THE BETTER HALF THE BORN LOSER Q—The bidding has been: "They were out of waxed paper, but the girl sold me an NeVfRMETMvV OK, M/,HESA-AF|M6L00K|M6 sou, PIP YOU, AUPPINL/ i.lTTL£ FEUAJ'lesSlR! AH,VK, HE'S (?) TAK^ OFF THAT WPICULOM^ Weil North East South 1 * Pass Pass 1 ♦ 2* Pass 3* Pass 7 You, South, hold; AAQ885 WAS 4A *AK8 5 4 What do you do now? : A—Bid four club*. Ton want to be In game if your partner holda five little clnba and noth-' tag elae. TODAY’S QUESTION Initead of bidding three cluba your partner Jump* to four spadea over your two spade*. What do you do now? PISCES (Feb. ,»• a« syoNtY OMAaa Per Taartiev . .... ’ ........... evoid lech. 'up'with rn-i if THURSDAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY tormetlon. imporlent metuoe )• due. , you tfrive ‘ ■ - — ..............- .TAURUS^ wHIInq - ‘ ARies! Socle!------ TENDlNClfa: Cycle hij IIZ« iner currwm auwmmwi h tolvtd. intormitlon you S2w"^w.’* Imeelneg el( (July 2S-Aue-te. Find out h< CANCea (June JtOuly M); Sm people. | -------— „„„ tooling reellellc, - -* ■*"------- }»: Settle llnenclel .. .« thii. Act VIROO (Aua. M-Sept. M); Your feel-Ingi mey be difficult to doflne. You ep-... —,od. Whet It LIBRA (Sept. ».Oct. M): Alter morning houri, emphetll Ir —-------—........ how you utlllie geil — ---------- edgt. Key It Ireth outlooh. Include onet In unique plen, prelect. SCORPIO (Oct. itJ-Nov. 21): Relief ot; finenclel pressure Indiceted. You get chance to move ebout, to ditpley verte-tmty end telenl. Pounce on opportunity. Key It to be elert, bright. Control omo- SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 2^Dec. 211: You ere presented with opportunity to Invest ■- ....- ---- —'—■- Key It to know; . 1*); Work Cycle moves up. Kioy ceros cioio lo cnest. CJoDn't tell all you know. You are being observed by people who consider your causa. Maintain dianity. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. II): Some In with organlza- .. ......r. iO): Strata on fulllll _dMlret. Key_ U to CAPRICORN. Special Marriage licenses ____I M. Smith, T97 Palmer Michael L. McCullough, i Barbara L. Mendhem, Milforo William R. Hall, 722 Pentecole and Karen L. Heraravet. 739 Portland Richard O. Vlitcent, Clawson end Nancy a Johnson, Troy Louis A. Garevaglla. -BIrmIngharn and Karan A. McAulltfe. Chicago, Illinois EEK & MEEK By Howie Schneider • ItN Iv HUCIm. TiA !•» A DEMTIST'S CR66D A GOOD healthy bite /s siMae. iKJoeeo PS DOtOM TO EAI5TH AS GRAVITV... ^ ^ MAKES EVERYTHIMG RIGHT... y &C«HS ) A KMIMWMS / U'/ ; ' 'y r. ' s -- e - i '' , ' 1 AMD THE HEIGHT OF PePRAV/ITY.. /S A CAVITY / By Ernie Bushmiller Mchael . . 39a Howland Patric Charie M G. Rowe, BIrminghei. ry E. Vamihen. 275 Liberty ai ■ -ch, 64 Ogemaw Shirlay J. I Richard irnetl, 1210 Joslyn ... .. Kacso, Hazel P ______J S. Clippert, Troy Wilbur R. Powell, Farmington and A Devroy, Farmington Edward M. Bryant, Fort Knox, t— tucky and Oorotlij, A. Gray, 422 Highland Gary E. Stortsl'Lake Orion and Cgrolyn i G. Shephard. Lake Orion I Clayton A. Leeym, .... -------- Michigan and Diene L. Kniseley, Walled | ^ Sheiwo^ ^ S. Southfield and j Russell J. Mdv II, Drayton Plaint and Marianne Dorwang, Drayton p'-— Gerald F CevenBugh, , . ... Michigan and Carmen S. Miller, Oxford John M. Petr- ‘ da K. Fuller, 4 Richard S. end Keren G L ---------------- Gary J. Hyde, 1024 West' Huron end! Sandra J. Tucker, Utica Francis L. Sharpe. Walled Lake end Diane M. Fitzgerald. Orchard Lake Douglas G. KImler, Union Lake and Theresa M. Miller, Unk“ ' Road and Elnere C. Guthrie. 3494 8 Cherlee A. Fee, 319 West Columbia JoAnn McMurray, — ----- ' Boulev--" David C. Singham, Birr Judy M. Bishop, 2771 Dt— Geoine H. KnebI, JoAnn Startford, Farmbigron Welter Creloven, Oak Perk end Susan Cole, Ortonville Steven L. Stifle, Brimingham end Nancy C. Bucfcan, Birmingham Larry M. Mafhews, 151 Clive and Sandra M. smith, 243 E -‘ --------- Charles / -------- i rilK PONTIAC PUUSS. WKDNKSDAY, I'KIlItrAKV 21, l!l(i« inance ♦ The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets of Friday. Produce Technical Mart Rally Goes On |Postal Service Apples, C--- ----- ---- .. Apples, McIntosh Apples, Northern Spy, bw. ... Apples, Red Delicious, bu. .. Apoles. Golden Delicious, bu. Apples, Steeie Red, bu. VEGETABLES NEW '^RK Uf) — The stocki The ability of the market to Prices advanced on the market carried a technical rally [advance even though the'Amerlcan Stock Exchange on [into the third straight session,Washington’s Birthday holiday Aamerican Stock Exchange.! learly this pfternoon. Trading.tomorrow will make a tour-day Sheffield Watch and Scurry! [was fairly active. weekend for many W a 11 advanced about 2 i Blue chips were prominent in [Streeters was surprising to Speed-0-Pidnt V/k Magazines, Papers Blast Department 2." I the advance, making their best some analysts who had an-| Im’ showing in weeks. Horseradish, pk. bskt. Parsley, I Parsnips, -™<. Potatoes, 501b. I Black,'V _________ hothouse, _ ___ Rhubarb, hothouse, dz. bch. Rhubarb, hothouse, S-lb. box . ' -b, hothouse, , Acorn, bu. _____, Hubbard, " urnips.^op^ed^E I Gains outnumbered losses on j *2'”jthe New York Stock Exchange bu!'"'''*'''' AT?! by wett over 2 to 1. The Associated Press average [ 60 stocks at noon was up 1.9 ..'ujat 310.2 with industrials up 3.5, L5ol rails up .5 and utilities up .7. 1.50! The market was higher from i:75 the start and widened ts gains. Susquehanna nearly a point. WASHINGTON 1^1 - I Representatives of magazines land newspapers which gear Sduash, Hubbard, I Turnips, topped LETTUCE Mta Gl Celery, Cabbage, b7^ . ticipated a drab session because; of precautionary selling. ? Signal Oil “A” paced the list their deadlines partly to mail RECORD SEEN volume, sinking nearly 3 deliveries say the postal service International Nickel reoorted following the decision to is getting worse and some a “ are c. nc. 1 U.g ddarter earnings and United | because of it. Aircraft reported that fourth! * * * 1 The publishers’ represen-j quarter profits were up 54.6 per LTV Electronics. Allied tabves took their complaints up cent from a year earlier. | Artists and Goldfield weie'V'tb Post Office Department International Nickel gained 2 among active f r a c t i o n a 1 officials at a meeUng'Diesday. and United Aircraft about 3. I gainers. officials promised to try to ----------------------1--------------------—-------------------find answers. j Poultry and Eggs DETROIT EGOS The New York Stock Exchange DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT (AP)-(USDAI- Prices paid Cp 1.60 per pound for No. 1, live poultry:.2 CHICAGO BUTTER, EGGS !AlcanAlum' 1 CHICAGO (API - (USDAl - Chicago Alleg Cp .20g Mercantile Exchange — Butler steady; * 'O'akI ?.;« wholesale buying orices unchanged to 'A * l U higher; 93 score AA 66; »2 A 66; 90 B A lledCh 1.W 6t%; M C 61'A; cars 90 B 65W; 89 C ^ ' <0 ^23/^ Atlls Chal 1 Eggs steady; wholesale buying prices 'l*®, rw"X'"2i;'’*U^d' 25'/,; A;hBdCSt I.M CHICAGO (API - USDA - Live Am C»n poultry: wholesale l)uying prices un-|«^'T"»' changed to 'A higher; roasters 2«6; ,L25 special led White Rock fryers W/z-M/z. , 30 ----—----------^------ A Home 1.20 Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK _ 'Am Motors DETROIT (APl-(USDA)- Cattle 300| AmNatGas 2 hardly enough steers or hellers on offer Am News 1 tor price test; utility cows 1^20.00. 'Am Photoepy Hoas 150; U.S. 1 and 2 200-2^ pound Ann Scat i barrows and gilts 20.50^^^ 1-3 220-240 Ann Smelt 3 lbs 1975-20 M; U.S. 1-3 r....— --------- "•* ' 16.50-17.25. Vealers 50; price lest. pot^n*d*^^o*?id *Ks •?6.5<;’2750; Joupie Amperc^^^^ tos choice 85-100 pound shorn Iambs with Amphenol n L"u"ogte? " *““';Ar"chS"an’?,^ slaughter ewes 6-9. [Armco Sti 3 CHICAGO LIVESTOCK AT[j!!®Ck 1 Soa CHICAGO (AP)-(USDAl- HW 4,5M: AshIdOII 1,20 1-2 200-235 lb butchers 20.50-21.00; 1-3 Assd DG 1.60 220-250 lbs 20.00-20.70; 1- 3350-400 lb sows Atchison 1.60 17.50-18.00; boars 15.00-16.00. All Rich 3.10 Cattle 5,500; calves none; prime 1.25B Atlas Ch .80 1,400 lb slaughter steers yield grade 3 Atlas Corp and 4 29,50-30.00; high choice and prime avco Cp ' 1,100-1,400 lbs 28.50-29.50; choice 950-1,350 Avnet *— (AP) - New York Stock i :ted noon prices: | Bales Net Gam Sko 1.30 (hdf.) High Low Last Chg. GAccept 1.40 35 45V4 44 44H + % GenA/iMF .40 3 30 30 30 -H GenDynam 1 38 42'/4 41% 42'/b -- Gen Elec 2.60 25 4S*/3 4x65V^ + Gen Fds 2.40 44 65V3 64 64f^ -i-1 Gen Mills .80 29 177/i 17'/b 17% -k % GenMot .85e 40 31H 30V» 307/i - GenPrec 1.50 37 24 23^11 24 GenPrecis wl 40 14% 14*^ 14% -i- GPubSv .56e 5 67% 674 67% -f % GPubUt 1.56 36 22% 22% 22%-% GTel El 1.40 175 36% 35% 36% ■¥ % Gen Tire .80 33 37% 36% 37% -f % Ga Pacific lb 102 32% 32V4 32>/4 — % Gerber 1.10 46 72V4 71V2 72% GettyOll 72e 20 79% 78% 78% - % Gillette 1.20 220 28Va 27% 28 -f % Glen Aid .70 18 49% 48% 48% - % Goodrich 2.40 108 48 47% 47V4 - % Goodyr 1.35 14 50V3 50% 50% -k % GraceCo 1.40 4 28'/4 28% 28’'4 + % Granites 1.40 103 2% 24 24% -f % Grant 1.10 34 37% 37% 37V3 % Gt A8.P 1.30a 16 39 38% 39 -f % Gt Wor Ry 3 50 54% 54 54 Gt West FInl 9 78% 78% 78Va GtWestUlt 5 18% 18% 18% + % GreenGnt 6.8 26 20% 20 20 ■ Greyhound 1 38 48% 48 48% ..... iCrumnAirc 1 170 12% 12V4 *12% — % Gulf on 2.60 29 37% 37% 37% -I- % GulfStaUt .88 28 30% 29% 30Va -l-1% GulfWIn .30b 121 19% 18% 18% i 6 23% 23% 23% 16 67% 67% 67% -f 32 33% 33 33Va -k • —- 203 51 50% 50% 2®'^cjnc .25e 37 32% 32 32% - % * 2® 42 83% 82% 82% + % 95 29% 29% 29% Hnlihwinn nn PltPlate 2M 1 30% 30% 30% ........j Poiaro d 21 21 20% 20% Proctr G 62 50% 50% 50% + %:pubSvcCofo 64 87% 87% 87% + % Pubikind 46f 46 67% 66% 67V® — % PugSPL 1 68 4 36% 36% 36% d..ii^J:. 58 76% 76V4 76% i ‘The word we get is the Post loffice. just doesn’t give a damn labout the newspapers anymore," said Otto R. Seidel of the Salt Lake City Tribune. s.i« Ntt! Seidel said deadlines timed to! 64"*-M/.’|mail schedules have been made! M I9M4 i97v5 198W + 'A uscless wlth unannounccd ,_____ ... 10 99'/j 99 »»w-I-'A phanpps And he said lack of [ProctrG J.40 20 86V< 881A SO"/. +1 Cnanges. AIIU lie SdIU IdLA U1| +'A enough postal workers on 6 49^ 49^ 49^- ^iWeckends delays delivery of his ■ paper’s Sunday edition. | NEW FUNERAL HOME - Frank Car-ruthers stands in the main chapel of his new funeral home at 52 tfagley. Garrulhers Funeral Home was formerly at flO W. Wes- sen. I’he new 4,800-square-foot building is about four times the size of the old place, according to Carruthers. There is a main chapel and a small one in the new building. Business, Not Recreation Save at Supermarket 26 6Va 6% 28Va 20Va + V4 RalstonP .60 /I 4uvi 39% 40V® — % IRayonlar 1.4Q 24 24Va 24'/® 24v® . |Raytheon .80 ,r AOT/- 44-8A 44»,. i/s Readlr" —R— 147 49% 49Va 134 21 20% 26 41% 41% 13 28% 28% 28% — V® I RelchcS Sob 13 87Va 87V4 87V4 -1-1% | RepubStI 2.50 •' 'Revkm 1.40 Rexail .3)b Reyn Met .90 31 47 46% 46% — 32 13% 13% 13% IS 62% 62% 62V4 48 49% 49% 49% _ ________ 52 37% 37% 37% - % RheemM 11 24V- ------ • 9 31 •' 283, . 52% 52V4 52V4 — % RyderSys _ --- . % RoanSe 1.67g . .. 30% 31 -k % Rohr Cp .86 26 283% 28V4 28% + % RoyDut 1.90g 4 52% 52V4 52V4 - % RyderSys .80 62 18 17% 18 ' 101V4 101 V4 101V4 , ^ By JOHN CUNNIFF Among the suggestions: plan gram's shoppers. But, at the HI‘DAYS, WEEKS LATE’ I AP Business Analyst ahead, keep records so real bar-lower end of the scale, two Other p".blishers’ represen-j YORK (AP) — With a Sains can be spotted, take ad- pounds of uncooked, short-grain » 20% °9Ai 20W + %'tatives said some mail bit more dare, education and vantage of weekend specials, rice cost just 29 cents. li 41% 'a* - % I subscribers get their papers andjtraining, households could cut 10 quantity for future use, g|. aware OF COST M M 30 -I-%jmagazines days and even weeks to 20 per cent from their food ®f“dy labels, reduce prices to ..lubjch one will vou choose?” i?T Jk « [late - and sometimes several bills, saving $200 to $400 a year amoimts per pound or ounce, booklet asks. ‘‘If you choose 134® 10% 10% 10% + days’ papers arrive in the mail at the supermarket, insists Dr. consider substitutes. variety to save yourself 35 32% 32H -1- 'H bunch. ; | Hanz Beisdorf of Cornell Uni- Nothing sensational, but that minutes each cooking time. 17 22% 22% 223/4 9 Sander. ... 174 47% 47Va 47% -k % Schenley 1.80 ____IJ___ Schering 1.20 5?A 55 55% -l-iy. |cM"*Cp'^.60b HecIa M 1.20 14 57% 57% S7Vi . . ............. 34 38% 37% 37Z/. _ % s^d CstL 2. 105 65% 65 65% - 'A s«arl GD 1. ’ 13% --% Sears Roc ' i SC*'’®':® J.® I 1™ Hollbyinn .30 + % HollySug 1.20 I % Homesfke .80 ^ U/snMAnul 1 in Honeywi 1.10 I Hook Ch 1.40 ibs’Vleld grade 2 to 4 27.25-28.50; high Avon Pd 1.60 choice 975-1,075 lb slaughter heifers yield grade 3 and 4 27.00-27.25; choice 850- 126 36V4 34% 3SVa . 28 43% 43% 43% 3 52Va 52V4 52% - 65 57% 56% 57% +1% Howmet . 55 38% 38 39% — % 13 73Va 73 73 , 33 ^27% ,27 _ . .. . ... Hl'centTso’ Imp Cp Am ’55 49% 48% 48% + % jSK5d*St? 2 « Tl% 'nsNAm^’Lo 69 H8'A 118 118 +1% Interist 1 JO ___n_____ IBM 5.20 6 46'A 2 32% J.V. j.v. .. 17 72% 72% 72% - 'A Shell Oil 2.30 29 99% 98 99% -1-1% SherwnWtn 2 13 37% 37'/j 37% - 'A Sinclair 2.80 6 32 32 32 -f % , SingerCo 2.40 3 «. « ^3 + ^ISrpIthK 1,80a 11 32’/. 31% 32’A -H 56 25% 25'A 25'/i - '/ 9 43'A 43A 46% -F % IS 31% 31% 31% — % Jewel Co 130 JT,® TF* T?’* r jSilMaS 3.20 ’2? 2® . 2? t A JohnJhn .60a 31 77 76% 77 % JonLooen .80 65 49V. 48% 48% -'A joSS®* 2.70 21 30% 30% 30% -I- % jSy Mtg 1.40 25 27'A 27>A 27'A - 'M ' * 2 52% 5P/t 52% - % 55 72% 72 72'A - % Kaiser Al 1 218 14% 14'A 14% -1- % KanG^E . 1.32 44 23% 23'A 23% -F 'A KanPwL 1.12 34 23'A 23'A 23% - % KayserRo .60 8 37% 37'A 37'A ■'------- ' 7 40'A 40'A 40'A -F 'A; sduCalE South Co — . 717/ 713/ 713/ SouNGas 1.40 7 il?A ilvt 4- V ' 60 ? Ik Ik d So®*" 2 *9 1 57% 57% 57% — V» Conrtnn Inrt 2 30'A 30% 30'A llfollcSl 9 20° 26 599 598 598 -F3 |{a||nd 210 22 34% 34 34 iK'Ij'j “ 23% 23% 23% + % |{gSi!ir2.'50b ^ '®2^:^ 'SkA' r t % i;.»7o 13 50% 50% 50% - 'A j'j? 55 73 71 73 -F1% 1 T IStude Worth Sunrav 1 50 18 34'A 34'A 34'A —'A sun-on 1b 6 59% 59% 59ZA -F V. , Swift Co 1.20 12 81'A 80'A 81'A-Fl'Ai 1 53% 53% 53% — 'A : 16 51% 51% 51'A -F %: 3 30'A 30'A 30'A -F 'A Tampa El .68 _K— Washington Post! versity. spokesman said it has “lost! Beisdorf’s pro-many of our subscribers”!gram for using] because of late out-of-state 11 h e supermar-] deliveries. The New York Times ket as a savings said ‘our renewal notices are! institution c(in-decreasing” as a result of con- tains no magic, tinued late arrival of papers. | but still Is at- __________:_____ ! trading g r o w- . _ . I ing attention in Area Res/denf New York state, as testified by i 87 35'A 35% 35% 33 26'A 26'a 36'A 22 45 44 44% 19 29'A 29 29'A -r •/. 6 47% 47% 47% 106 21 20% 21 + % 206 50'A 49% 50'A + % Gets GM isn’t all. The Propain then ^e aware of how much this seeks to motivate the shopper. „ „ Self-study booklets and exten- ^ ^ ^ Sion service instructors then at- example of substituting tempt to take the recreation out of shopping and substitute busi- using dry skim milk for the liq-* * * uid product. Nutritionally there I Shoppers are motivated to at- jg bttie difference, and the dry tack their job with cold efficien-product’s taste is being im-cy, a little savagely perhaps, proved. [judging items critically and per-, ------------------------ jhaps as adversaries trying to deprive them of cash for other thinps. Savings are always kept in mind. Tektronix T«ledyn 3.8U 27 2^ 27% 27% + % ? 21., 20V. 21. -F % TexETrn 1,20 Kennecott 2 I Burl Ind 1.20 11 1131/b 113 i ex G Sul ? TexasInsT ,«u ^ rex PLd .35g . Textron .70 ? Thiokol .40 25 52% 57'A sf% -F % mcchanmal of 95 69% 69'A 69% -F 'A „ . » 13 67 66'A 67 -FI General Mo- 14 ir ”o% 40% + % tors - Holden’s ]] 4l% 4”% 4?% i % in Melbourne, f 2? Sii g^ + %!Australia, it 11 ^ 2“% “7% + % was announced _,j,_ : today. 13 34% 24'A 24'A ! GM-Holdcn’s, 172 109% io1% 108% 1 !tthe largest pas-1^ “% 7^A 78% 1: % senger car pro- 16 22% 22% 22% . in Ails- ROBERTS WixomPicks6 for April! Vote 'M /. CUNNIFF pie using h i s ‘ Batter Shopper” courses. 106 50% «'/. »■/. -r 7. George W. Roberts of Water- * * ★ 1 i% ford Township has been appoint- The program is bound to get For example, Beisdorf and £ 2m 2m K + A ed assistant chief engineer- even more attention as food Mary Burris, a home econo-costs go up. Farm prices rose mist and coauthor of the pro-i last month, meaning retail price gram material, shopped jare-| increases aren’t far behind. In- lesslv and then carefully for a wixom’s creases of as much as 3 per cent family of four. One cart cost over 1967 are feared by Wash-'$26.69, the other $22.70. yesterday to select six of seven ington. I YEARLY TOTAL * candidates who will run in the * * * I “If you’re not impressed by April 1 general election. TTo combat rising food prices, pest cutting of $3.99 a week ★ * ★ Beisdorf and his associates use jbink of it as a yearly total of a total of 273 ballots was cast rnethods that are deceptively ^207.48, or a savings of 15 per out of the 727 registered voters, simple. They may offer little ad- cept on your grocery bill,” they [according to Clerk Mrs. Donna 'cirsi P?r 30 2%2 1W6 m-F^I-16 ^fn^err.*"" M 'S% ^^ i ^jmjjH ' ^® D.r.'*c«t’" 17 19% “e% m. + %‘3;xr?o' /Sz’1 Felmont Oil 10 16 IPA 1^- a caterTr 1.20 ,1 *9% 'J'A *9% + -A CeljneMp 2 *3 19’'" 18% IBzA + 'a'cfI SH .80 36 19'A 19 + '^‘‘ch?i5(iP'’stPP 3 15'A 15'A 15 A ■ ;GmMil^^ 21 24% 24% ^ 1.80 6 7% 7'A 7'A — % Chi m Srk Mn 86 10 ?% -'W cLk Eq 1.M z TimkRB 1 ; 42'A 43% 42'A 22 35'A 3S'A 35'A - 'A LehPCem 53 27 26% 1- .- 36 23% 23'A 33'A 3 39% 39'A 39% 1 24% 24% 24% 130 60'A 60 _ % Leh Val Ind If?? r* I lulno.l,< Gen Plywood Giant Yet .40 Goldfield Gt Bas Pet Gulf Am Cp GufResrc Ch oernerW .82 62 38'A 38 38% - 22 55 54% ....... 11 47% 47 26 43% 42% 42% 111 70% 70'A 70’A 2 LoewsTh .1-" LoneS Cem 1 43Vb 43Va ~ V* r 17’/* 17% LoneSGa 1.12 UngIsLt 1.16 10 44Vh 44’/h -k % 8 16Va 16H U’/i -k t'ckv Sir 90 9 63’/^ 63'/4 6V/7 9 34*/^ 341% 34V® _ Lukens Sti 3 36% 36% 1-1 ? ItY* T S M»cke Co .30 20 19% 19 r ^ lU, ............. %4. 5 34% 33% 34% + NewPark Mn Pancoaslal RIC Group 42 3 2V6 3 362 , 6'A 5% 6 17 14 13% 14 245 M% 32 32 ,ClevEIIM I.E. iCocaCola 2.10 + i/i;ColgPal 1.10 Zl?2 ColIinRad .80 _ % ColoIntG 1.60 rS1‘! HSa I. E.E - ----—r----- ConEdls 1.00 Stocks of Locpl Interest Quotations from the NASD are repre- conf Can 2 tentative Irtfer-dealer prices of approxi- cont Ins 3... matelv 11 a. m. Inter-dealer markets conf Mot .40 change throughout the day. Prices do cont Oil J.80 not Include retail markup, markdown - - ■ ■ -- , c.onrroi uara jCooperln 1.20 Biu n.~f«‘*L FUNDS- . 9.0 9.3 Dan Riv 1.1 Dal Mnte 1. Commonwealth Stock iA DenRGW 1.10 8 34 6 m DetEdls 1.40 Mass. Investors Trust Putnam! Growth ........ Technology ............ Wellington Fund ....... Windsor Fund .......... 9.26 10.09 . 12.45 13.53 . 18.02 19.59 Dyrta Am .40 Treasury Position ‘'“TeS.irwI.’'*" 18, 1987. “V"53a587,288.13 8 5,723,325,253.34 Eversh.rp Deposits Fiscal Year July 1— 93,S88J25J32.79 »0J11,4I4,5*3J8 IFeirCam 50g '"'"iffi'll.Sf'e"; ^••■iir5.27l,5..,784.92 ?X?t ''•W5S729.88 329.73.^27,7*8.54 Gold Assets— 112 50'A 49% SO -F % Mad Fd 3.«e ± ?? MaomaC 3,80 25 48% 43 48'A -F 'A Magnsvx .M 28 25% 25% 25'A - 'A w»?a,hn 1.40 17 37% 37% 37% M$g Mid‘1.50 13 125 124'/z 124'A - % Msrquar .30t 8 42'A 41% 42 - % MarflnMar 1 88 73% 71% 72'A - %!M8yDStr 1.80 5 42% 42% 42% - % Maytag 1.80 90 4*'A 48% 48'A 'McCeir .40b 28 27'A 27% 2Tyt + A McDonD .40b ■ % Meed Co ‘ „ ,... ,. „ .... . % 10 43!A 42'A 43 + 'A _ 81 33% 33'A 33% , . iMIdSoUtll .02 22 3?'A 38% 39'A-FI'A l.innMM 1.45 18 S2'A 52% 52% - % MinnPUt 1.10 175 27'A 27% 27'A MO Ken Tex » 40'A 39% 40 -F V4 MobilOII 2 7 29 28'A 29 -- 'A Mohasco 1 135 21% 21 21'A -F % Monaan 1,80b 11 SO'A 50 50'A -F % MonfDUf 1.80 20 79% 79 79 - Mont Pw l-S*-^ 5 II'A IB'A 18'A — % MontWard 1 11 70% 70 70% + 'A Motorola 1 12*124 122% 122% -F % Mt St TT 1.24 4 40'A 40% 40'A *2 2% 43% 2% + % NalAirlln .M I 30% 30'A 30'A NatBIsc 2JO 8 55% 55% 55% -F 'A Nat can .60 5 S3 58 58 -F % NatCash 12 0 20 43 42% «% N Dairy 1.M II 32% 32'A M% -F 'A NaJ D's* 1.*0 n ?t'A 2% ??%T':jsj ^*v v 3^22% 22%.K"i.®.r3.^s, ——If— Nat steel 2.50 5 23/4 49 49V® , 24 14% 14Va 14% + % 7 72% 72% 72Va +1 ” W/4.T% umc 6®4 OX^ J- lyh Cl..—-—- -ZB 4/ 46'A 47 + 'A unOMCal VJo M iiiA 'unTank 2.50 M 95% '^lUniroyal 1.20 !« Tz I?” J. ■/. * UnltAlrLIn l ?4V zlfiA 1S.A "' '^‘lUnit Cp :60e 6 35Vi 35Va 35% iln Pmlt 140 16 33% 32% 33'A-F% [j£asCP UO ----M— |UnifMM1.20 20 19% 19 19 - %jH|f-SS«m zS 27 34'A 34'A 34% - 'Ail'IGyPsm 3a 26 26% 26% 26'/z -F 'A Uf "'P -'®,h 1 56% 56% 56% -F 'A , US Llhes 2b 123 42 41% 41% -F % UfPlyCh 1.50 29 46'A 45'A 46'A -F %' US S'"*" TwenCent .80 im the race with .was William E. I that if you bought five pounds of r chuck roast a week over a peri- Running April 1 will be, in or-od of 20 weeks, the 20 roasts der of votes received: Charles , -would cost $62.30 if bought early S. McCall, 3884 W. Maple, 124 . .. - I in the week, $39.30 on weekend votes: incumbent Gunnar E. Arp Un at tdison Ispecials. Mettala, 2752 Loon Lake, 121; MIC up 01 LUI^il I * * w |Mrs. Mary Parvu, 3§45 W. Ma- I I Frozen orange juice that cost i pie, 120; incumherit Oscar B. Detroit Edison’s gross $1,34 regularly was purchased]Simmons Jr., 2028 Hazel, 117; revenues were $415,362,594 for,for 99 cents on sale, or a saving Mrs. Kathryn L. Miner, 30290 1? lt:i 5m+ %|pontiac^’chassis 12 months that ended Jan.!of 35 cents on less than a dollar ,B^k 93; and Neal L. Taylor, , «,/. ox,/. fjgy at the time of|31, 1968. Gross revenues for the invest^. ‘‘One dollar at 5 per 2901 Maganser,86. Wo oooicmmpnt to GM-Holden’s. icorresponding period of 1967 cent interest would take six, - ★ ★ '‘'^1 Roberts, 6168 Balmoral, goesj rirnrr PaifOnilOC _U— to Melbourne in his firsji over-1 UlUW iXCVCIlUCJ x2i M’A 20% 30^4-F% seas assignment after more x33 22% 22% 27% + than 20 years with Pontiae Mo- 42 4ff% 40 * 40 "Itor Division. ■ He joined GM in 6 48% 48% 48%-F^% 1947 as a dynamometer tech- 89 5l'A 49% 51'A -F1% 332 70'A 68% 70'A-F2'A jUician ffl Pontiac. ?? MV 76% "'''’ Roberts was named F % his assignment to GM-Holden’s. corresponding period of 1967 us steel 2. % UnivOPd 1. 4 % Uplohn 1.6(1 *25 38% 38% 38Va + %' 4 37% 37% 37% + V® j 1 32V® 32V® 32V® + V®' 113 52% 51% 52 —V®!, , 37 35 3<% 35 + a.c, 11 79% 78 79% +1 99 78% 77V® 78Va +1 34 45% 44V® 45% ' 20 13% 13% 13% - 11 62% 62% 62V® T V4, ----z , - w w 137 40 39% ,39% — % ffradudte of the Universitv of i • ■ - i * • 32 46% 88%-1’'“ I Michigan. He is married and Net earnings of the company j^^Two^pounds^o^precooM of four-year terms 35 cents,’ shopper is reminded. the! The six top vote getters will [now vie for three council va- |has three sons. Venqo Co .60 14 25'A 25'A 25% -F 'A 1 25% 25'A 25'A -F 'A 52 41% 41% 41% —1 j 3 22% 22% 22% ~ % 24 30% 30V® 30% -f V® 7 32Va 32% 32% — % 12 35 34% 34% + V®, 49 64% 64Va 64% + % LBJ-Thant Talks Hold Little Hope WASHINGTON (JO - Adminis- ____________ —W— 51 83% 82% 82% + ;a ' 11 22% 22'A 22'A -F 'A ’ 105 47 46% 46% Was Wat 1.20 45 25% 25% 25% + 'A ,1 55 44% 44 44 Wn Banc 1.20 10 29% 29% 29% + 'A WnUTel MO 36 28 28 28 — 'A WestgEl 1.80 25 23'A 23 23'A -F 'A Weyerhr 1.40 42 112 110% 111% -F2'A W" rlCp_^L60 2 22'A 22'A 'A — 'A White Mot 2b WinnDIx 1.50 ^ Woolworth 1 4 30% 30'A 30'A -F 'A; IS 48'A 48 ' 48'A + 'A ___V____V 1 3 37'A 37'A 37'A i ---^^ 40 115'A 113% 115 -F2% 46 35 34% 35 -F ' XeroxCp 1.40 47 2553A 254 255'A +2'A ; 11 38% 38'A 38'A -'A YngstShI 1.80 13 32% 32% 32% -F % mOVe. 83 28% 28^ M% + 'A Spyrighted*by The Associated Press 1968 As Thant and JohnSOn pre- 28 , 62% M'A 62'A-F%[ Sales figures are unotticiai. -pared to talk, several Senate ’? Of U.S. war i»iicy ex- J «V S.Z, Sz/ X*IA disbursements ba^on the last quarterly pressed doubtS abOUt the South 19 28% 28'A 28% -F % or semi-annual declaration. Special or . .25 20% 20'A 20'A — 'A extra dividends or payments not desig- S 91 90'A 90% + 'A as i^ular am identified In the 20 36% 36'A 36'A — JA following toeJnotes. 23 53% 53'A 53% -F A a-Also extra or extras. b-Annual rate 5 S2'A 52'A 52% -- 'A piyj efock dividend, c—Liquidating divi- 6 31% 31% 31% -F 'A oend. d—Declared or paid In -lOW plus 7 3S'A 35 35 + % etod( dividend, e—Declared or paid so *’ t ?? **’’s V98'’- 1-Payable in stock .dining IB 49% 48% 49% +pltration sources express little 48 »'A 29% 29'A + %'optimism that U.N. Secretary 39 23% 23'A 23% jGeneral U Thant’s talks with Preuident Johnson on Vietnam ,JwiU produce any new U.S. peace Successfuhinvesfhg t #*» J A 4*E By ROGER E. SPEAR ■ 34'A 35 198 93% 92', ... .... .... -F2'A 254 31'A 30% 30% -F 'A 77 26'A 26'A 26'A + % SfJSSi . O tir/. 747A _ lA O'V'oeno. 1967, estimated cash value c -----IWrlbur— - ” k—D'eciared e 8% 8% - The horn oT the rhinoceros is fijpwu it* formed of fibers, practically bristles, agglutinated as **» grow. PruehCp 1.70 11 2?'A 27% 27% - % P»c Up 1.M 6 16.A 18% 18'A Pje^ef ---r— 'PacTET 1J0 29 88'A 88 80% -F Ik PanASul 1JO 29 19% 19'A 19'A -F % Pan Am .40 11 47'A 47 47 -% Patlll EP 1.80 20 48 45% 48 4-1% ParkaOavis I 9 71% 71% 71% - % PaaGoil .25a a 33 32% 33 -F % ParwiDIx .8Clb 2 33'A 33'A 33% -F % Penney 1.60a 10 32% 31% 32% -Fm PannCan 2.40 55 49% 49'A 49% -F % Pi PwLt 1.52 48 28% 21% 28% 4-1 |PannZoH 1.40 ■ 8 22% 22 22'A + % PepsiCo ,90 S3 37'A 37 37'A + % Perfect Film M*3l%‘^%M% ! 17% 17% 17%-F'A Phjia El 1.68 17 M'A Vietnamese government’s stability following a new rupture in its program to rebuild cities shattered in repulsing Vietcong Thant’s visit to the Whlt6 House today is c o n s i d e r e d, sources said, simply an exten-_ sion of his recent trips to Eu- 35% 35'A-F vi pJf^j„®^,J3("durinsM98a,*K^^ and A?ia in which he ^ yalua on ex-dltrldind »r Vax-dlstrlbution Vi^tnampc, In full. ... -_ex dividend, y—Ex i in lull, x-dls—Ex'disti lion, xr—EX rights .........‘ 'ants, ww—With war or split an accumuianve issue wmi uiwiu—im® arrears, n—New Issue, p—Paid this year, %'aH ' iZ dividend omitted, deferred or no action si 5ii iwA + % *»'W" ■* dividend meeting. r-De-11 t lA clPted or paid In 1968 stock dl 60 36 35% 35% 4- vii n.*B< *. .•la.ir ie®a 3 22 i^ei earnings or me cuiiiuanyi r------------- r--—--------------- for the 12 months through Jan.l^^t » check by the pro-each. 19^, were $60,211,280. After j providing for the pieferred stock dividend requirement, i|| earnings available for common stock amounted to $2.01 per ^ share. Preferred stock was ^ issued in October 1967. ' _ bonds to yield as much as 5 per For the previous 12 months, q _ We are both 68, retired, ^ have E bonds but would which ended Jan. 31, 1967. net with our home clear and ade- *'ke now to get something to earnings were $62,416,758 or quate insurance. Annual income y*®*** more., I do not Want to buy ' ■ from pension is $8,400 plus stocks. — G. B. Social Security. Savings total a — The highest rate ob-$16,000. We own $22,000 in bonds tainable from government land 11 stocks on list enclosed, bonds or notes at recent levels We will have about $15,000 jg about 5.7 per cent. You could Betty Emery of 585 First told available for investment this get this yield (figured to Pontiac police yesterday that year and would like to increase maturity) on the Treasury 5%s someone broke into her home our holdings in the above due 1974 which have been sell- and stole some $200 from a stocks. What are your sug- jng around 100(4. You can do a coin bank. gestions? — P.O. little better on good corporate Waterford Townshin no lice A - Your Telephone, Pacific bonds. Jersey Standard 6s due ^ T.xu.„ IZ®, were selling recenlly lo $2.17 per common share. News in Brief 24 27'A 27% 7% -F '/*, , 34 48 47% 47% ' ' - —P. -sounded out North Vietnamese Ex divi-i officials about peace talks. (—without war- r.l SSay'' On™ ben* are satisfaemry. M yonry* Style Setter, 7!18 Cooley Lake,untirS^^ in which change and hair spray p. . , , National Lead — P®’’ ®®"^ be obtained from worth $23 were taken. American Can 6s of 1W7 which Harold B. Reek of 7465 Mace^ than for growth. Since your cannot be redeemed before 1977. day Lake, Waterford Township, over-all income appears more R°th of these issues would give . . 1 .. .. . . I ___1 __vnii a % 4- % Phil Pet 2.40 17 36y. 36'A 36% .....IPilneyB 1.20 21 101'A 101 lOl'A 4- 'A! . I M wvf 37 +,=»*[ Perry Pharmacy-is opening a | 34 61 60% 61 [seventh store today at 771 Bkl- .! -'!! -3% 4- lA dwin in the Baldwin Plaza. The | i «% «% 48% +’% 6,600-square-foot store will be | X24 »% 59% 59% + % I managed by Edward Glick. No Listings Because the stock markets in New York will be closed for Washington’s Birthday, there will be no stock listings in tomorrow’s Press. reported to township police than adequate, I suggest you ^ satisfactory degree of yesterday the larceny of $20 in strengthen the growth section of security and good call pro- Ichange .and two watches, a your list in the expectation that m®bon. revolver and a painting — total stocks of this caliber will pro-j (To order your copy of Roger S: I value of $350 — during a break- tect you over a pefiod of time Spear’s 48-page Guide to Suc-I in of his home. [from continued dollar erosion, cessful Investing (now in its 8th i| „ , - . 1 which se^s inevitable. I would printing), send $1 with your ! ’fo the /raternal membe^^^ Roebuck; name and address to Roger E. ■Order of Ragles ot Aerie American Telephone, which Spear,»in care of The PonUac /’thp consider oversold at current Press, Box 1618, Grand Central 'of the changing of the bylaws, 'kjaaav. a Tiipsdav. 8 D m. ■[March 5, Tuesday, 8 pm. ■-/! Lowell Willhite. Secretary. • —Adv. Station, 10017.) Q — Can I buy government New York, (Copyright, 1968) F-4 TllK PONTIAC 1/KKSS. WEDNESDAY. FEillUARY 21> 1968 Touring Student Tells About Arrest in (EDITOR’S NOTE — Auatra-lian and New Zealand gtadents ran into a series^ of incidents durinff a tour of Red China. This accounf is by a JQ-year-ald student at Melbourne Unhmsity.) By JOHN PATTISON HONG KONG ( AP) - I was surrounded by Red Guard students and arrested in Peking because I made and carrM “Peace In Vietnam” placard In Tien An Mdn Square. I was released after six hours of arguing, finally “confessing” that I had “insulted the Chinese people and provoked the Chinese government.” At the border station, they confiscated my diary and eight or 10 pages from my notebook. Then they held me for a day while they went through my possessions and listened to about 10 hours of tape recordings that I made in China. ’ Eventually they gave It was one of a series of incidents which our group of 57 Australian and New Zealand university students had with the authorities during 25 days in Chi- ENGINEER AT WORK - Joe Yocum, (standing) director of the department of facilities and operations for Oakland County and first vice president of the local chapter of Michigan Society of Professional Engineers, works with switches controlling electrical facilities in the Oakland County Courthouse. John Rehard, senior facilities engineer watches. Area Chapter Picks 'Engineer of Year' About 40 Red Guards led by five or six who wore armbands, shouted iipprecations at^ me, shook their red plastic-covered Mao Tse-tung books at me, and made what I thought weJ-e threatening gestures. WORRIED They did not rough me up in any way, but I wa^ worried and asked them to take me to a police station. For about an hour they kept me alone in a small detention room, Then the Red Guards] your pocket. You start doodling. One of our students, very proud of his own beard, put a mustache and beard on Mqp's photo and then stuck the Mao photo in the seat pouch. After we got off the plane, the cleaners found it and there was both my tape recorder and my tapes —mostly recordings of briefings and explanations given us by officials at the places we visited. At least half a dozen of our group were asked to explain their actions and some were forced to make self-criticisms. On a plane from Shanghai to Peking the plane crew handed out photos of Mao. DOODUNG Well, you know how it is when you are sitting on a plane on a dull flight and have a pen in IRS Will Enter Suit Overfunds Says Seized Money Belongs to Bookie The Internal Revenue Service hell to pay. The Chinese called in our tour leader and said we had been guilty of a seAous political insult. The doodler immediately came forward and admitted that he had done it Then he criticized himself before the Chinese officials. One of ith a suggestion by black nd. ggjj credited with saving ■tionalist leaders that the day ^ jjis son, David. 4, il^ considered a holiday. broke out Tuesday in I, ★ ♦ ★ the basement of the Ball home II Spokesmen for the automotive where the youngster was ]Big ’niree — General Motors, playing. Assistant Muskegcn ford and Chrysler—said absen-Fire Qilef Ben Tripp said Ball ilteeism was reported at a normal rushed to ^he basement after ^Ate in aU major plants. smelling smoke and carried thej 5 ',The Detroit Board of Educa-boy to safety. Damage frmnj tion said a preliminary check fire, heat and smoke was! showed 479 substitute teachers estimated at $5,000. 1 f > Livestock ........... Meats ............... Hay-Grain-Feed ...... Poultry.............. Farm Produce ........ Farm Equipment....... AUTOMOTIVE .. 83 ..83-A ...84 ...85 Travel Trailers .............88 Housetrailers................89 Rent Trailer Space ........ 90 Commercial Trailers ......90-A Auto Accessories............91 Tires-Aufo-Truck ........ .92 Auto Service 93 Motor Scooters ..............94 Motorcycles .................95 Bicycles ....................96 Boats-Accessories ....... ^97 Airplanes.........—99 Wanted Cars-Trucks.........101 Junk Cars-Trucks ........101-A Used Auto-Truck Parts ... 102 New and Used Trucks ..... 103 Auto-Marine Insurance ...104 Foreign Cars . ...........-105 New and Used Cars..........106 Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME 332 8378 Cemetery Lots WHITE CHAPEL Moving fo Fla. Choice graves $»5 ea. ■----- nre privately ov 2-3534 These Gra' Personal! 100 PER CENT HUMAN hair wigs ANY GIRL OR WOMAN N^EOING a friendly adviser, phone FE 3-5122 before 5 p.m. Confidential oIbt Consultants OF PONTIAC, INC. 14 Pontiac Stale Bank Bldg FE 8 0333 r AID, INC., M4 COM. I PLANNED BUDGET PROGRAM YOU CAN AFFORD TAILORED TO YOUR INCOME . PLAN NOW FOR DELIGHTFUL old fashioned sleigh ride. Ideal out- Inn for vniir ClUD Or grOUP. OC- kinds. Lovely club JOHNSON, OTTO RINGLING;! February 20, 1968 ; 3 92 Highland Avenue; age 70; beloved son of Thomas and Delary Thompson. Funeral service will be held Thursday,; February 22 at 8 p.m. at the| Frank Carruthers Funeral Home with Rev. Thomas J.l Holt, Jr. officiating. Inter-1 ment Friday in Oak Hill! Cemetery. Mr. Johnson will lie in state at the funeral home after 7 p.m. tonight. dining aret '21 your^ holldaji^^parly. Call for r '"upland HILLS FARM along scenic Laka Trails, open all year, 3200 acres, private club-room, picnic facilities. Relive yesteryear at Keatington Antique village. 391-0731 after « p.itl 2378 JQSlyn Rd. -wi.ura WEDDIftG PHOTOGRAPHY BY Professional color. Brochure avail-able. Call 336-9079, anytime. WILDER, EVERETT (COTTON); February 20, 1968 ; 2121 Dexter Road; age 36; beloved husband of Zela Jane Wilder; beloved son of Leamon and Lulu Wilder; dear father of Wesley Mitchell and David Everett Wilder; dear brother of Mrs. Kenneth (Geraldine) Miracle, Mrs. Cecil (Geneva) Thompson, Paul and J. C, Wilder. Funeral service will be held Friday, February 23, at 1:30 p.m. at the Huntoon Funeral Home with Rev. Claude Cook officiating. Interment in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Wilder wUl lie in state at the ftmeraT home. The family suggests memorial contributions may be made to the Kinney Research United Fund. $50 REWARD DEAD pR ALIVE- lost Ortonville ai FOUND: GRAY ^ ■■■ »^t FOUND: GLASSES 363-5^22.^ LOST - BLACK MALE p white goatee, |- ‘---- Heights area. LOST: REDBONE HOUND, ON state land near Camp Pontiac in White Lake Twp. Reward. OR 4-1637. COCKER SPANIEL, Rd.,pleasa call, 338-259 LOST — CHILD'S GLASSES, dark reddish brown plastic frames, Vic. -■ -----------—d Williams Lake arrlnghan i74-jk». Pettibone I----- ------ ------ Grey Shaggy Female dog. Terrier. Answers to pHe Reward 885-2522. LOST; BLACK LABRADOR male. MINIATURE WHITE POODLE, III Meuioriom Sadly missed I: ACID INDIGESTION? PAINFUL gas? Get new PH5 tablets. Fast, as liquids. Only 98 cents. Simm s 3325 Orchard Lake Rd., I Bloomfield, featuring a. complete Bldg. FE 2-0181, Refer I Great Savings During, Hu(dsoh's HdmeSale . Hudson's HALL FOR RENT, WEDDINdS, and parties, " after 8 p.m. Pontiac Press Want Aids for Action k Rhinestone toller. I DEPENDABLE 21?call 334-'277i!'4 1 MAN PART TIME need a dependable man s'. Ca*r 674'-05»”4°'^ - LEARN TO OPERATE, repair bulldozer and NIemchak Excavating, 363-0881. i. 673-9660 between 4 AEROSPACE LAB equipment. Drv box, vacuum, cryogenic, welding, clean room sales. Cover Inquiries in Toledo, Detroit, Saginaw, ■— . Wayne regions. $20,0'0 Mrlte Pontiac Press Box ALL AROUND upholsterer, WIelands Interiors, fringe benefits, 847-7354. APPlIlANCE SERVICE TECHNICIAN , RCA Service Company has Open Ings tor appliance service technicians, exc. salary and fringe benefits. For Interview, phone JO ........... ClayTor with . Help Wanted Mole Help Wanted Male 6 experienced heating serv- Apply 105 Tregpnf, PONTIAc! ir. Keller, bet. 2-4 p.m. 272-4820. inkerton Security, Inc. Assistant Controller , Woodwari Grpen House, 545 : gas" STATION ATT AUTO painter SEE ‘ KEN° DUDLeV, B( GUARD .UTO mechanics!^! KEEGO sales 8. SI ttOUSEKEEPmO, ’ O I I MAINTENANCE, or( w A N T 0 LUBRICATION M IMMEDIATE OPENING FOR MEN ' who can be on ihe job ivery day. i Pleasant job, secure future, no tire | repair, washing or greasing work. > FAST BOOKKEEPER 53, Ed. Thomson. Industrial Soles Engineer ^THE GATES RUBBER C(). BURROUGHS CORPORATION Business Forms and Supplies Group CREATIVE SALESMAN THE OAKLAND COUN1V AREA WHICH OFFERS: JANITOR SERVICE JANITORIAL LEADER, good have a lanitorlal leaders |ob o[ ooenings for qualified ianll WE ARE LOOKING FOR A SALESMAN WHO: e business forms Detroit 875-1055. _ ___ J 0 U R N~EYMEli ■cARPENfERS, 1 SterUng ^ ^Township area aparL | EiM^ Holan Tontractfng* A>„*47«! 0»7_or J53-3^ lifter _7_p.m. JOURNEYMAN ELECTRICIAN QR ; experienced helper for electrical ; i intelligent — MACHINISTS, TOOL MAKERS, < makers, part or full time, rellrL„ hired. Apply at 217 Central, |ust | ., Pontiac. _ I MACHINIST, EXPERiENCED ON ! ' ....... shaper, 585-5880, , y Co., Madison HeigJ^, bursing equiprr kland County at IX C-43, Pontiac, Mich. ! Pontiac Press ; FOR APPOINTMENT CALL: Mr. T. B. Schmidt 335-9244 R E S U L T S ? MECHANICS WANTED deMndIng i BURROUGHS CORPORATION Business Forms and Supplies Group exp", wRf'^'conside'r^'ofhers! *S PonllaC,_Mlch.____________ MECHANIC'S" HELPER AND attendant, Crawford Shell - Ser USE 0 Pontiac Press Box CAR WASHERS DRYERS - I CARPENTERS ROUGH, UNION. t Carpentry Contractors METAL PROCESSING PLANT requires Immediate help, apply Systematlon Inc., 25464 Nov) Rd., MOONLIGHTERS PRESS Books of the Western \ CARVER Excellent hours, les, and benefits. Apply Machus CHEF, MUST BE EXPERIENCED WITH PROVEN ABILITY TO COMPLETELY RUN COMPACT KITCHEN FOR COCKTAIL LOUNGE AND RESTAURANT. Chief Engineer the r aggressive plastics jubling in size within . Our present sales located in the Detroit Metropolitan area. The successful candidate for this position will be responsible tor all tool facilities and personnel, tool design and building, prdcess engineering and estimating, ot both tools and production. Applicant extensive tool ex- fringe benefits. Send CLEANER AND SPOTTER f! clea^^er^ 2nd*'hoHdays"''ca NEED REAL ESTATE SALES MANAGER you are interested In ez personality and able I complete charge of oi _____ program. All inquiric. ... fidentiel. Call 674-0301. Ask for Roy Lazenby, Lazenby Realty, 4626 W you $50 per week l52-f3T'" PLANT MANAGER REQUIRED BY MODERN STAMPING PLANT IN PONTIAC Man must be able to estimate stampings and tool costs. Wages based on experience. /»ald v— tion, and hospitalization, al-~ n w A N T Dflglnal Sanford. PROCESS ENGINEER » 3cai electrical control manufac-rer seeks graduate engineer. A. E. preferred) Preferably In production processes, ime and salary to P. O. Box 1, Mich. 48012. , Biffs, Telegraph at Maple DIESEL MECHANIC to fake charge of small sh Mather Trucking Co., 474-0645. PROGRAMMER Storting Salary to $13,000 A D S DRIVER SALESMAN EXPERIENCED ACETYLENE torch man. 335-8141. ------------- steady. PONTIAC PRESS BOX C-1 48058 332 EAVESTROUGH SHEET METAL REPAIR, Ml 4-2511. --------- CUTTER e over complete - Birmingham' Community Production Manager upervlse*^ "35'''' people. Compani lanufactures proprietary electro « Assoc., j<^6-8622. Welshuhn or apply at 2421 Wolcott, Ferndale, Michigan. An Equal Opportunity Employer are you looking i=OR"STEADY Factory Workers a Co. t openings 1.— .. ---- ... sialler repairman. High school ed ucation or equivalent necessary. Apply at General Telephone Business Office -- 317 Union SI., Milford, Mich. An equal employment --------“V employer. APPLIC^IONS^h V BEING t< e Mile Drive'In PLANT, FACILITY DESIGNERS Empiryers Temporary Service UNITED INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING 29330 Stephenson Hwy, 8 1 8 Real Estate Salesman 1 HACKETT REALTY F—6 ■ ______________ THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 21. 1968 m W-tM jWh ~ WmM fanMite 7\Mp 7[tMp WM Fwle 7|S«»h! Rtoi E$rat« Sotosman Ml niil M*1t « lt» ««•. 2!3I woiiiiw cooiMtlBn», M Hi* MH*tl l*c*l1oi» Hi O**'*"* w**k. Apply Orinn«ir», r C*. LM Pi M*«l - Mil P<| M*M. I BAlTlTTW-TSTjvfjSr . iy»pi. Ml ypH.MMg. M'lwk— p,^ w*a*t> "vii' — — COUN I C«II b*t. *-4 P.m„ warn ______________ LIVt .. chlWrtn, no cooklnp, priyll* . •IK) b*»h, oocxt p«y-*nP bonui. : INSPECTION Exp*rl«nc* on sm*M PUlomHHv* hirdwor*, mu>l r**p mict —* prinli, day ihIH. Apply — EMPLOVERS TEMPORARY IN. i Waitrisies, no experi^ce MR. & MRS. AMBITION MnkAtMl far what va Pfin., ■111. Li_____ wXifRIi*. obb'b tips. R**IPMf«ilt. WAITRESSS Mmlno del*ntl*l t, 3M-Mfl. Snell' * BABY si'TTlR. MATUlOl^rarkttoh -- - >l*n area. a*y». n*f„ iwa *-»w. _ 'I'- BABYSITTER^ PRlPiR LIVE li ___ child, pood pay. mxIM hr*. At BALEMEN-iiLL THE ALL NEW SJ Or Jill W. P* j-nTT ....... ...—--------------- ' — - ■ — PllplDi iivi OLDS. 5__ mlnoham. iALESMAN-WAWtlb, MUSf b* It t SrfffR. LIVE“ 4355. or aaSMI. 5:15 p.m _ ,____ Hohm Chryi Plympum. **73 DIkN Hwy, SERVICE STAtiON attendanl*. P#rl»nc*d. day and •*• HI*. *g-»t7A _ SEMI-REfiRED MAN to .aa .a. l.a.Mr,., ware, i’-.V, M5r’in'c*; ~r*ioTrid: Aff«- *J» m . 3M4»1I _ BABY“$iTtER. NElblb ariiic*. . a. i pr«er llVa-ln. unwed mother or .'■.III. woman with child welcome, apply * plu* •' Homeiiead Dr. aiiynm*. ,rw^«ri' barm's^-and-waitresw i p.f«. / ' flW. ftoint #>19.. rtHibI*, 3 ••1°* . . * BAlM!kr071i(i*fURE“AT^^^ dratl experience, r*r>., orelerred. 3» l*55. BEAUtlCIAN, RECENi --------------Tfunltv, Lake a I Better grade. ileady. Maple ir garag*. excellent opportunity, a a I a r y , commiMlon, hoipttalliatnn, other b e n 111 s. High volume lelon. Bernard Hair Styllet* ~ Bloomfield, Mist Bryce ~ Ml 7-3033. Birmingham, Mil* Pat — Ml «- STOCK MEN TOR NEVK CUNNINGHAM'S DRUG STORE IN WATERFORD Wishing to work with r#toil,*'phHip|« rt*^Ponii*c,'KM^^ mErchondise, build disploys beauty" dPERAfOR," 'full' end do general ionitorialj S?r^i’n',T.'m^ifM cleonup work, will find thisj ------r .. , BEAUTY OPERATORS^ job of great interest. This *eo piu* commi»*ion. steady, good is 0 full time job offering! iWeXIaiJi*'®* fill rnmnnnv ond PE^*f251F oil company oeneiiis ono cashiers"and concession excellent solory. ll and over. Apply Miracle Mile In Per»on Drive-ln ^ mI?SC oftici si^Oakland STYMIED? ft-34 Coreer Opportunity No Experience Necessary cleaning woman TUlSDAY a $710 Htndt tt«tut r*H0lr«AM "This Is not an ordinary for an ordinary Rtal Ei LADY. GENERAL HOUsEWORK and good around chlldr watk. Ret., *13-3530. years ri PROFESSIONAL >(uiKlatlon wamen with a minimum of 3 _________ axp. for general office work. For lurthar Information call Miss Roach at M.E.S.C. 333-01»1 MANICURISTS, Excellent op-portunlly, salary, commlatlon, high volumt tahm. Barnard Hair mT7-»37, It Bryn, _ D I C A L RECEPTIONIST, ax-parlancad, mature and dependable, bust ..... Position open meoiaraiy. vyrita Pontlec Pi _Box C IS, P^liec, Mich. _ _ SE'brcTL ASSrSTANT, M. speclallsl—skin and allergy. rut7 7 bpeni ne of tr I a.m. I or * nights e weak. Apply In porion only. Big Boy' Rnteurant, 30 S. Telogreph ot "-------- • — 4 p.m. penseted lor whet whet you know? ovaliable with — growing repl i...... ----------- ... Oakland County. Seles experience preferred, but not necessary. W-traln. Cell Mr. Deever now ti personal Interview. Phone *31-354 ~ 'er Realty Inc., Oxiord, Mich. , TO $8,400 PIUS BONUS AND GAR MARKETING-NO FEE Excellent career opportunitle* with national firms, move during am-Mtloui expansion period. Cell Mrp. 'IntIrnationais personnel lmtwKtkms-S|^Poli Al-WIn, l'< "•nf n Ages 3I-4S drivers. PotenUel e*™'"** \.5't\ to *13.1100 pey «%r utrlte Ai-WIn. 1 2471s SfWiHlftg it Sn»H..„. _ ELECTRONIC TRAINEES conieeVTonry’ manutecturer ' seeks | $5,000 UP ;*?i;?S;™'''pJuion“''ln''i Electronics «■ ' . ..xrim™ the service. International personnel TO $9,233 TRUCK DRIVERS •xMriences wwfc wpBtwn^oti A-t CARPENTER, rough end 335-3445. »_____________ - A-1_HAULING, ODD lobs. Cell CaC* 333-51**. CARPiNtkT - 5 A S E M'E N kitchena ramodeled, pantUng, ^ iiig tilt formica work, ret. p e r t u n 11 y' HoMdVy" inn,’"s*5-l'37l, Oelrolt. d Thurs. Fri. until 3 , 18-26 YEARS to pro IS. Must orvlew and personnel. experienced. elllgenl, ). Only] knowledgeable pertdnn#l. You, must be neat, courteous, honest i and be bblo to meet the public. | Pension plan, profit sharing, Insurance ‘ plan and w e a ■ SI45 WKLY. SALARY TO START OFFERED TO ALL SUCCESSFUL APPLICANTS qualified Inquiries ----------- — Proksch. O'Neil Realty, OR 3333.______ ____________ RBAL ESTAte CLASSES Wowhvard M2 I26I EX-SERVICEMEN Wondaring whart to 0o? Wo caroor ooporiunltloa In all fiok... INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 180 w. Huron* Pontiac___M4»<971 FINANCE TRAINEES $5100 UP-NO FEE 31-30 NO EXP. NEC. Mrs. Hoppe. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL .. ,4*0 S. Woodward (B'hem.) *43-53 .uSr^* m f RONT DESK, GREET people, answer phone, exc. hours, Blrm-Ingham area. S350. Call Pat Cary, 334-3471, Snalilng *■ Snelling. FREE COURSE I.m., 333-S743. I Art you sutticlantly acquainted HOME with I ----------- - In exchange ■ _ Snelling. time. FE 5-7131. _ __________ I NURSES AIDES, ERPEAiENCE'O or "■ train, alt shuts, must heve| Personnel, 705 Norlhland Towe-s, East. 353-1550.__________ GENERAL OFFICE, ambitious .... .... young man tor fast growing co. lake areotl Exc. potential, benefits. 56,000. Call I Dick Wills, 334-3471, Snelling ib7 b*byirttlng,'T '”' ---------------- Cn.ihno **3-15*7 or **3-3*78.__________ %lp WantMl M. or F. 8 A OAREER IN REAL ESTATE Join ut In our New Share The Profit New class now forming Progromi i llnued salestralnlng sessions We ere expending and need real completion of presont course. estet. personnel. . c. SCHUETT NEW CLASSES STARTING NOW ! FOR REAL ESTATE -------- ---------_ "SIneb I*'’’” III your I ■s are yes - GENERAL OFFICE $325-$425 i Receptionists, typists, sccol..... r. clerks, many varied positions. Many . Also con- INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL ■„l) S. Woodward (B'hom.) <43-«3** GENERAL OFFICE, VARIED duties, light ly^ng. Interesting Friday mi llonJlT^ mornings. Own transporto- OFFICE CLAIM CLERK I large multiple line insu cempany. must be high school graduotc, exc. employe benefits. *47-5*00, ask lor R. A. Jones, to guaronteed salary, PonfUc are*. **3-**7*. : 0~M P'i TENT, EXPERIENCED - aged work, 1 I lor general __________X, I girl office. *1o 5, . days. Cell **3-**00 tor appointment. cbSMETiCIAN, FOLL'TIME, eppfy I Interested Ir better than average salesperson, you should check with us. Wo will train to help you obtain your STOP IN AND SEE US. Wo'v I, Call Mr. Lazenby, Lazenby tidonllol.___________________ ARE YOU READY FOR A CARE-Foley-York Root Aetna Lite end Casualty Comper An equal opportunity ond plans fori er? Cell ... progress einployer.________ I Estate, 474-0363._______________ Opening For BLOOD DONORS Attractive Waitress j URGENTLY NEEDED Neel, trim end happy In serving All RH Positive people el_one_ ol fka jH-ya's finest All RM Nag. with poaltlvt Increasing volume of busini in the . _r over experienced lies personnel riuw! DORRIS & SON, REALTORS GENERAL OFFICE, GOOD « background, variety In thL ---- S350. Call Kathy King, 334-3471, Snelling *■ Snelling. mission wltl\ dally guarantee, call FE 4-0955 _ Punch Press . AB-neg. " MICHIGAN CtJMMUNITY I BL------ In Pontlec one of the area'. ----- ----- s. Please phone lor op-i lectors lA-noq. " 0-nog. ""■HIGAN CtJMMUI. BLOOD CENTER ,...{ FE 4-**47 1343 WIda Track Dr.. W. . . J I Mon. thru Frl„ * *.m.-4 p.m. Operators wanted I w«d. i p.m.-? p.m._________________________ Mrian "'savo-On briibs '*5i6 • lemlliorizotlon with CASTVOU SINCERELY GIVE ME feleora^'et Maola ® " iProgrossive punch press operetion.. 40 hrs. e week? Cell Mr. Foley — plant. No txparlence nocossar-Will train. Apply SM S. Woodwar Birmingham. DENTAL ASSISTANT, MUST I chair 1 1. for full timo p Employers Temporary Service COUPLE, FULL TIME FOI apartment c------ ** mechanically plus apartir References not nectstarv. ___ . torvlew appointment. _ D'ENTAL ASSTSTANf. Excellirirpey lor elticlant, pleasant, sharp girl No oxptrlonco necossery. Firm inghom aroo. Apply In owr handwriting to: Pontioc Press Bo> C37, Pontioc, Michigan._ DENTAL ASSISTANT, nocoisery,--------— »N OR LPN. AFTERNOON, i night or port time. Unusual portunlty for right porson. Par and must suit you. EM 3-4121. •xptrlonc R 3j^UM. 48075 or ctH ovtning OlVBRSrFTED OPFICI marura womtn* llgh R.N. Supervisor ond LPN's NEEDED On 11 to 7 Shift l„HER THAN AVERAGE resume and starting salary expected lo_P.O. box_435, Pontlic._ bqetbR'S OFFICE, opTbllte SALARY General , 5 day wtek.i ■aquirad. Send Box C- enter the Reel, Estate I lession. We otter e c-....------- training program. An opportunity to oorn $10,000 or ore the first year end i eueranteep drew. For confidential Interview, call Mr. Cross ot 674-31(0. WONDERFUL OPPORTUNITY for ceotlonally high Income, we have an established Insurance debit In CREATIVE SALESMAN IF YOU ARE A SELF STARTER And bet. 35-60 years of age you may qualify. Tho annual earnings range from t«,500-Stt,000 and up, depending on your ability. Many other fringe benefits including auto ollowonce. For tho opportunity of ... FE 3-r ~ Accuracy Personnel StnricB WE.'if'L'- CUT ANY TREE « 642-3050 GIRL FRIDAY $375-$450 Instnictiem-Schooli INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL vtwerd (B'h DA^Y, A Iva, Loxpcrii S50GI550. t ACCOUNTING TYPING, MATH, LAW, ENGLISH AND SHORTHAND REGISTER NOW FOR CLASSES ______ Sorge Personnel. 705 Northland Towers, East. 353-1550. ’ . .. S FOR »«...= — ______ -___h*'el- plus commission. Call Dick Wills, OF BUSINESS E. Huron 333-50** Licensed by Mich. State 334-3471, Snelling «. Snelling. Insurance Experience? $6,136 PLUS n needed tor exc. position ■ ) *43 S3«* LICENSED REAL ESTATE^^SALESMAN Full time only, progress with egresslve comMny, earn minimum of SIO.IKIO per year, cover West and N o r t h w e . .. Member of the mlltl-board. Walker Realtors, 33000 Northwester- '- Orchard Lake). 851-)710 , ATTENTION Enroll now ~ start training Auto Mechanics Atty-Arc Welding Auto Collision DAY-NIGHT SCHOOL Approved under Gl Bill MICHIGAN'S OLDEST TRADE SCHOOL WOLVERINE SCHOOL ) WEST FORT WO 3-0 Boekkeepping & taxes H w*. ---------------------- ^ Associated Tax Service | JjS jg S7 N. Perry 332-5*** Credit Advisors without a DEBT AID CAN get out ot d , ..an! You can .__r$elf out of debt. Our service and credit couns helped thousands .of peop area since 1**0. There Is no cost examine your pro we can't be of help, but It's worth checking Into. You weren't em .--------, inio debt—se about getting berressed Debt Aid, Inc. — Licensed i ling has'o^'rlil. ^ > in this ^ leci IS (cMinW STLVEB-jgiRT. 504 Coir , »-6 PM, Sat. *-1 iTeo, PPJ Clemens.___________________' Dressmaking & Tollorin8 l7|**^^^ DRESSMAKfNG AND WEDDING AND EVENING appirtl dtstgnad and tailored, 335-1629. Income Tax Service 19|homc ir‘'?.\re*J&or’S S3 FOR SHORT FORM..LONG form! phone FE 3-7801 or FE 4-0773. -- " ..... Employment Agencies CURTAIN AND DRAPERY sales, top salary, downtown Blrmlnnham. Irving Koy'i Dreporles. FREE REAL ESTATE' CLASSES. $400 AND UP BOOKKEEPERS Gen. Ledger, Trial Bel. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL BO W. Huron, Pontlec 334-4*71 MATURE WOMEN $85 UP PER WK. It you are Interested !n ful employment and have any ____, -- --- skills, wa can place you. Call Mrs. tor lucrative car ' '■nsenthal. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL - LEARN BULLDOZERS, GRADERS, Ford Rd. 421-71 y^^lTffRE?| $400-$600 FEE PAID York Root Ettat.,! MANAGEMENT TRAINEES $400-$500 SECRETARIES typo 50 w.p.m., shorthend 10. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL " Huron, Pontiac 1880 5. Woodward (B'ham.) 643-»3«* 334-4*71 *74J)353._________________ LIMOUSINE DRIVERS. MUST 35 years. FE 3-*145. MANAGEMENT TRAINEES $400 PLUS 20 up. Great future ' compahiesi many are fat N. LeRoy, Fenton, Mich. 629-7268. Y A R d' man. we LD I NO exper lem helpful. Apply Security Fence Ct 5451 Dixit Hwy., Water o r < between f and I. YOUNG MAN “to ” try* donut Teystee Bakery, 432 Orchard La» Ave, Apply AM only- YOUNG MEN 18-26 YEARS ress Bo)^C.31 . Pontiac, Mlchjgi DOMEsffc — 3 DAYS per wi Monday, --------- ■ • - • ! working condilli _ In Oelrolt *75-1055. __ EXPER lENCEO' LAO'y'tO work In' CaJI^Mr. Foloy-York Roll Estate, In finence, sales, oftlee.. Age 21-35. Some college. Cell Mr. Francis. _________________________ INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL CLASSES STARTING-LEARNIKBO W. Huron Pontiac 334-4*71 INTERESTED IN _.... - full lima DIAL 338-7151 Ext. *5 1:30 aj^-4 p.m. Tk, SS"%ay®'^ulr.*l(Sli;| ?.*,r35l’7'7‘o'o* , $SO0-$6OO PLUS CAR _ ...... ......r-'e TEVTiomsT--A^VArTiv^ SALES TRAINEES and THeoraph, qood| outoolno person for personnel of- *.P®ll:- 1 All fields, age 21-30, some college. ••— call Mr. Given nee eV^hrs $M2 Ca^^^ USHERS, con-i iNTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL I - ■ W247i. snelling A Snell-| “ ^tMSe-r‘ .... For full Information call Tuxedo 6 3350 or Write Alpha, 20171 Mack Ave., Grosse s*,.^- **!-*. «3%T.tfl SSu'&w.X 53*rt*erst! iS^tWfcw X 'awveJRiii' ii,e. CPU Woods, Mich. ALL BOOKKEEPING | i AND TAX SERVICE i J>_ . Sourlall, 13 yrs. e«g.| VOUWiinPCHI ■ 'n Federal .LfC Pontiac 334-4*71 nust bei I least 31. Call I INTERNATIONAL Corp, ref 357-5^5*. _ _ EXPERrENCEb" CLEANING lady, - traniportatlon. Cf- ------------ .......... need apply. $145 WKLY SALARY TO START Birminghi 642-7900. Posl'tions. "'no e x P ER IBNCED r Only those, ' " -• *- ( Immediately! area. 11.50-82 gar h ______ Translgn Inc. 34 W. Sheffield. Pontjac. _ „ EXPErTeNCED WAITRESS Mapla . •—raph area. No nights or relegraph M2:5836._ OFFERED TO ALL SUCCESSFUL APPLICANTS Eiiiabeth Lake Ro^. , o.r, ™..„.nr”!iTiabl*" Ai”! Ribhar’dson'. ..... ply Grinnall's, Pontiac Mall. ! joi ePPgjn^nL_______________ R-ECJIWRBD--NURSES----------AND Licensed precticel nurses neeC- “"'e" ' lor tvenlng end night shifts. It.... «, part time. Openings ... Surgical end Intensive $5,000-$ 12,000 TECHNICIANS ... Mech.-Elec.-Lab, age 2O-30 INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL ~~ W. Huron, Pontioc MEDICAL ASSISTANT, will train In lab procedures, 2 girl spot, no| Saturday, $<07 month. Call Kay Kelly, 334-2471, SnelMng *. Snelling. PERSONABLE GAL t6 type and,; answer phone In small busy oHice, ! $330. Call Donna Allen, 334-2471, ; Snelling t. Snelling.___________ 1 i PUBLIC RELATIONS li 2 yrs. college and degree, many' Interesting positions, most fee paid. *'^7NTERt4ATIONAL PERSONNEL Unitl I. Apply to P 1, Saginaw Gene N. Harrison, S Department, --------- -------- pllal, 1447 N. Harrison, Saginaw, Michigan.____________________ RELIABLE INTELLIGENt cleaning woman, general housework, light Ironing, 3 days, own transportelTon a must. 334-42*4. to 2 Driva-ln. 1 Gave'* Orlll, 175 B 3 WAY RADIO ' . - dispetcher, must y, FE 2-ij^“*rej-»ke____ HOUSEKEBPER. Li'ir'E fit MID- ----■— ■ -•-■vly men, good I lulls, private and desire to v sales or public contact exp., we train you. we are the nation's St with offices coast to coast, earning petentlsl. Call Helen ns, 334-2471, Snelling t SALESLADIES Experienced, lull or perl womens sports wear end Suzette Ir- "■ —“ -' a tor 1 I SALESWOMEN Must have selling experience. A|F ply Arden Draperies, Pontlec Mall. EX- **71. FE I , car necessary, 334-4)3*. ». more flexible hours weekly? Cen you use l)30-$)50 monthly? Pick up end del'— Fuller Brush .orders near ho— North ot M-5* phone Linde Kretz. 334 *401. South of M-S* ty Owen, MA 4-*1*3, Wily WwM Mall AUSTIN ENGINEERS, INC. MECHANICAL ENGINEERS (iqn and dftvflopm^nt of AIR A. Foydenko AUSTIN tNGINEERS, INC. 2978 W. Grand Blvd., Detrait, Michigan 482D2 Phone (313) TR 5-7737 secretaries Advertising Agency North, Woodward, Attractive openings tor experienced secretaries, diversified duties. Good Steno graphic skills * requirement. Ml *-1000. Personnel Dept, An Equal -----‘ ' hospital _________________________ . - experience necessary, mjsl oe avelleble In early afternoon nours, PRESSER, PART TIME, V cleaning plant. FE 4-*M). PfeOMOTION ON YOUR EFFORT Instead ot senlorltyl Call M " ■$6,D0D-$12,0DD ACCOUNTANTS Jr. and Sr., age 21-45 gen. or COST 2-4 YEARS. College exp. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1000 W. Huron, Pontlec .... ley-York Real Estate. «744B«3. REAL ESTATE' Salespeople, train, classes startliw, tor tervlew call Cosway Reel Fa 337* Orchard Lake Rd. (at $720D AND UP COLLEGE GRADUATES n all fields INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEI- I S. Woodward (B't RECEPTIONIST, m.) *43-0! RECEPTIONIST TO GREET people.|*LUMINUM SIDING, ROOFING Personality and poise, answer .......... ■— --------" ' phone, typing, $350. Call Kay Kelly, 334-347), Snelling 8, Snelling. RECEPTIONIST, CHEERFUL oal, lots of public contaci Tocatlon, $300. Call Kathy 334-2471 Snelling «. Snelling. "gid '^wte Buffing, Polishing B & G SERVICE ...jmlnum gutters and stdir.. Winter Special until March 15 ,J cents per ft. installed, tor larg-heavy duty, enameled gutters ei Cornmerce Rd.) t*t»07*0. SALES TRAINEES $6500 PLUS CAR 22-30, some college required. Fee -paid. Mrs. Plland. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1*00 S. Woodward (B'ham.) 642-0'*^* TR 3-8540. ______ SHOULD YOU Make an employment '•.hi NOW IS THE TIMEI Michigan Bell Phone: 3*3-2*15 frR'ED OF THE MONOtONY~gF | A-.. -'^9°^*.*..^:^■I*'!'*'?’:I your Job? cell Mr. Foley-York ADMINISTRATIVE Real Estate. 674-0343._________________________ TDAIKICCC TIRED OF THE TIME CLOCK? IKAIINttb Call Mr. Foley-York Reel Estate,! $450-$550 SALES REPS. $7500 UP PLUS CAR AND EXPENSES Degree required, fee paid. Mr. TntERNATIONAL PE^tSONNEL 1 *80 S. wnodward (Bham.) <42-»2<* s'¥cRETARY. SECURE FUTURE, good typist and phone mapnw. To greet public, $450. Call Kay Kelly, ^2471, 5 ----- ------ ..... -......... .........- -B-Y?! Call Mr. Foley-York Real Estate, y Employer. , _*74-03*3^___________________ WILLING TO INVEST JUST YbJA lime? Call Mr*. Foley-York Reel' TO EXECUTIVE, losition, redulring good shorthand, pieeseni ......... pieisa ........... National Concei. . Good pay. Immediate opening. Cell **8-5007, Mrs. Goss. ing conditions, cookii light housework, Son. end off, previous' experience. *47-4143. 'stenographers and typists , ___... ,.jr are*. Wor leys a week, a week er two, in or all year. • -T SERVICES, *42-3*“ 725 s^Adams Plaza Rm. 12* B'hi SITUATION FOR RECEPTKJNIST- - "Girl Friday' ... leading realtor firm. Interesting opportunity In please-* —- _Eitetr *74-03*3. ) Maie-Femaie 8-A V branch oHIce. We are CAREER SALES Stable man. age 2S to 45, Interested In long term employment with a prominent local firm staffing a new bref looking tor a pe Immediately avi ulna opportnity 510,000 per yeei fringe benefits ..... ........ .... gram available. For Interview call Mr. L' Esperance at Jordan 6-7*7) from * to 4:30. Interesting fee TNf¥RNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1 to S. Woodward (B'hem) «42-*2<* ARE YOU IN A RUT? Hye Is your change, train for manager, exc. opportunity, SS5M. Call Kathy King, 336-2471, Snelling *, Snelling. BOOKKEEPER - NEW PLUSH ot- 1. Am 25-SO. Accuracy Perten- EXPERIENCED. 25-50. Fee paid. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL .-10 S. Woodward (B'hem.) «42-«2a CLERK TYPIST. PART time. I oth^ quality i Phone 965*9540 ei andcrafted merchandise. TECHNICIAN ORGANIC MATERIALS , vironment. Accurata typing; soma knowladgt of shorthand desirable.] Avail.^^Mar. 18. Call 636-4000 for your fellow man and yet get Into a position 01 unlimlt«d Income, where the only prtrMUIsItea^ ere; (1) SURGICAL Technician or lpn experienced In surgery Mrs. Gates, Avon Center Hospital. *SI-»3*1. or stop in for dn Interview. Mr. Larry SlecInski at Wm. Eastham Agency, 5020 Highland Road, *74-^'*%UR NEXT REAL ESTATE TRAINING CLASS STARTS FEBRUARY 27, 1**». TEMPORARY JOBS IN YOOH area. Shorthend, typing, tiling telephone. Dictaphone, statistical, bookkeeping. adding machine, key punch, comptometer, and general olllce. Age 1* to SERVICE KEllY SERVICE WAITRESSES, NO I ■ waitress, ooioin -----YSnt. MUSIS._________ WAITRESSES Exp«rl«notd prWsrrM. I p.in. 1 a.m. S or S nighti a «k ^ply (n paraon only. Big Rattaurant. 20 S, Talagrapli HuronjMt. I and 4 p.w. WANfiO: ALL AROUND rotfauranl ' MR. & MRS. AMBITION Want to gal out Of iha » to S ru|? Want to work whara you ara — MntatM for what yw can dc what you know? Oponlngt avalialria with ont ot tho K____ growing rant aatata contpanlas In Oakland County. Salat axpar'--“ partonal li Royar Rat . Phoiia <».2SM. COST CLERKS $450 UP «.3S, Ngura aptlt^, good lo^uro. internationaT’personnel IMP S. Woodward (B'ham.) M2.S268 ELECTRIC PANEL Wir parlancad or tralnaa Wlf„ ... iMaratt, ssm. Call Dick Wiiit, 334, 3431, Shalling S, Snalling. ^ ELECtRONIC TRAINER ,. Blr- Drayton Ptol^ «74.IW0, ?L^i‘s.^v‘k«i;ari“/r“Br fA^S^WAStilsriiusT^ SEMI-RETIRED MAN lo drivo partt trudu and do lanltarlal work around garoga, call 43S-M3I atk MANPOWER Largati Tamporary yen. Outland Ratlauranf, IN. ov»r 2Sa f ^ W©rW» Urotsi T#mpor«ry Ha Nts: KEY PUNCH OPERATORS WANTED WOMAN OVER 40 ax- . —— ---- Ganaral . —t;" ..jpartmanL Staady Incoma. Apply In parson. Evan-i _ Equipmanir 4S03 DIxIa Mwy^Clarktton. ' adaMlihad tarrildry. F elBdas salary, merit _________ automoblla axponsas and llharal, bandtits. Equal oapartunity amploytr. Call P. J. Harvey, Holiday Inn, 045-1371. Detroit. *■' $5,000 UP --------Jt school or training w In the aarvica. AAost |obt fee p I real eStaYIs salesmi WrS! R# l*^st ta INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL ISO S. Woodward (B'ham,) 442 S248 EX-SERVICEMEN Wearing where to go? Wo ha . .."SItIonal peS'sonISIi Huron, Pontiac 334-4t7l SERVICE STATION attendants, ax-(torton^^MV^i^MjW^shltts, BABY SITTER, NEEDED a Boy Restaurant, Tatograph ' Homastead Dr. LADY, GENERAL HOUSEWORK control to procure management pm!tlons.__ Must te InWIII^nt, * BARMAID AND WAITRESS, lull ( chflwam » I . jjyotTiCT^ and 43fS._____________ barmaid, mature 4 —arlenca, ret LOCAL professional Association ----women with a minimum of 3 recant exp. for general office FINANCE TRAINEES rnS^'iadSSfcie *p8r?i,Ja"'YSu $5100 UP-NQ FEE must Da neat, cour^us, honest 1 31.38 NO EXP. NEC. Mrs. Hoppe, and be able to moat the publlc.i international PERSONNEL Pension plan, prgfit sharing,Iiiio s. Woodward (B'"—.......... guamntead d^^ ncsir. rso SI4S WKLY. SALARY ORE^ET P^^' Call Pat Cary, work. For further Information call d BEAUTICIAN, RECENT gradi axcellent opportunity, tala ,, oommlssten, hospitailiatlon, c STOCK MEN FOR NEW CUNNINGHAM'S^ DRlfe STORE IN WATERFORD Wishing to work with retail i mnrrhnnriica build disDlovS'i ben fits. High vpluma talon. f%d"*M«* Ml "sisr B^mlngham, 3SI Pyt*! M?^’ Roach at M.E.S.C. 332-01?! MANICURISTS. EXCELLENT 0 portunlty, salary, commission, high volume talon. Barnard Hair Stylists - ^---------------- TO START OFFERED TO ALL SUCCESSFUL APPLICANTS REAL ESTATE CLASSES FREE COURSE ' available for mature mir I, Miss B medical RECEPTIONIST, ax-parlancad. mature and dapandabla. Must know medical dictation Refarancat. Position open Immediately. Write Pontiac Press —1 C-lt. Pontiac, Mich. woman and 4 childrtn. In exchange Oakland Co.? for babysitting. 1 child welcome.'go you Iwva a car? _ 493-1587 or 493-2878. Do you have the desire to lean ——--------------------------------- ! gf g,, biggest businesses Ir •r F. I world? ---------- I Do you have the ambition to wo hours minimum per week? t^al balance. 8500. Harriet Sorga Personnel. 705 "—■■■"■■ ''--- rd East. 353-15507 general OFFICE. Si iT’Airj:...................... Dick Wills, 334-2471, Snalling 8, ' Snalling. IwplByiwBitt AgtaclRS 9 TO $8,400 PLUS BONUS AND CAR MARKETlNG-NO FEE Sfti!?u7 WmVisW parlodT'Cai VInclar. INTERI C*"if m" IL PERSONNEL TO $9,233 TRUCK DRIVERS axparlahce, .diasat ____ ___.aas contldarad after TfStERNATIONJkLPERSONNEL 5733 W. Maple Rd. Orchard Lake TO $7,500 YOUNG LADY OVER 30 General office, typli experlenca helpful, v....... ortca, pleasant surroundings, —...-------— fKe. 5723 W. Maple Rd. Orchard Lake InttrucHoNli-Schooli TRUCK DRIVERS coma Tax Sarvica. 19 Ages 21-45 naadad to train as^pemLl, drivers. Potential earnings SlOjOW.F to 812,000 par year. Phone I-SI3-W3-93I3 *'■* St:, HamI ,uL per«)nal or business L SILVIS ^ 4n,1939 ^icaj^^aitqn and Opdyka Atw, CAttpab-rkV - B a S eWn t s" kitchens remodeled, paneling, cell ■— -—'-T work, ref. dOSTODIAL - mornings; « hours. OR 3-2573. !, --- ----------rrrrTTu.—rm 1 '^''Imjrai®c'iean‘'up R^kFlii^sSsi aoj DtcoroHag 23 g«i.ra c aan up. Maxine McCowan. FE 4-'38( kBY_INTERIOR DECORATOR ................... You'rt next, prvi T Papering. FE 8-4214 , PAIlffliO 4dD PAPER iirg. - * - -------hb, 4« EXCELLENT IRONING.” I SPRING SALES in'tr.rs!.i«'*pjria.‘T.'',; and do general jonitorial cleanup work, will find this job of great interest. This IS a full time job offering all company benefits ond axcellent salary. 242 Oakitnd MEDM BEAUTY OPERATORS 1L ASSISTANT, -skin and allei... routine laboratory, full lo sat wigs. Salon FE H257 _ n Lake Area. EM 3- CASHIERS AND CONCESSION help. II and over. Apply Mirada mIU Driva-ln Theater. 2-4 and 4-ig CLEANING WOMAN TUESDAY A CAREER IN REAL ESTATE i 1 In our New Share The Profit New class now farming. Al rami . tinuad salastralnlng saisler i(a expanding and need real' completion of present court iparsonnal. i q SCHUETT NEW CLASSES STARTING NOW I FOR REAl ESTATE ---- - *----- - ■ ecomlng a _________ "SInct 1942" ’sX STYMIED? Friday mornings. C ' Career Opportunity No Experience Necessary CLEANING WOA4AN FOR nursing OFFICE __________ cempanyy must grMuatey exc. i «47-S900s ask for CLERK TYPISTS $710 Minumum monthly guarantat you meet our requirements. C.. nacetsary. To arrange personal nontti or all year. ' WITT SERVICES, 442 3055. IS. Adams F>lasa, Rir.. 124 B'hi COLLECTORS WITH OWN car TOOL MAKERS Inspection and Bench K ------- lovrnayman status raquired. Day ihiff, top wages, frli^ benefit- Jered Industries, Inc. 1299 AxtalL Troy guaranteed salary, Pontiac area. 4424479. ______ M P E TENT, EXPERIENCED --------------------»«.; ■ oHica* 'wiTi iiH days. Call 482M00 for person, Ssvaan Drugs, Telegraph at Maple. ____________ COUNTER GIRL FOR 6ry Cleaning ‘TRUCK DRIVERS AND ssarehouse W?l"Veln? A»?r 04^. Blrmbigham. ________________ dental ASSISTANT, MUST have CLERK FOR r;»n”'“fo“' interested In b "^wilh 1 GENERAL OFFICE I “ $325-$425 I Racaptlonlats, typists, . I Clarks, many varied posit f fM paid Mrs. Tanner. , INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL ■ 1880 S. Woodward (B'ham.) 442-8268 GENERAL OFFICE, V"k R I E D duties, light typing. Interesting spot, $325. Call Donna Allan, 334- 2471, Snelllsg 8. Snalling._ GENERAL OFFICE, GOOD working amts'» -•!!!? ig the Pontiac area 1 backgrounA variety in this one. 8350. Call Kathy King, 334-3471, Snalling 8. Snalling. Aetna Life and Casualty Company, i progress employe______ Opening For Attroctive Waitress and happy In serving a .............'s finest A i, 4744)343._______ BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED GIRL FRIDAY $375-$450 Varied duties, typing 50 to 40, li taresting |ob, soma office exp. Ft paid. Mrs. Tanner. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL people at one ot the area's I restaurants. Please phone tor pointmant. FE 4-0955 Punch Press I RH Nag. with poaltiva ir GIRL FRIDAY, Manufacturing Personnel. 70S Northland towers, East. 353-1550. Operators wonted Prater a familiarization with CAN”' progressiva punch press operation. " -Day and night shift. Apply batv— ' MICHIGAN COMMUNITY BLOOD CENTER •ontlac FE 4^47 1343 Wide Track Dr„ W. WILL TRAIN Jtlous parson desiring to r the Real. Estate Pro- EC T ' 0 N S FOR ,_____ _____ _xc. potential. plus commission. Call Dick trahdng prograh tunity ta aarr 334-3471, Snalling A Snellint ----- the first v... Cross at 474-31ID. *to",«g?'"i; Insurance Experience? $6,136 PLUS II Estate. 474.0343. with growing firm. Northland area. Call A.... - INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL Employers Temporary Service COUPLE, FULL TIME FOR large WONDERFUL OPPORTUNITY -partmenf complex. Must be —------------------ -- ----- lachanlcally Inclined. Salary 1800 S. Woodward (B'ham.) 4434344 ambitious man LICENSED REAL ESTATE SALESMAN TYPIST I sarvlee It nacasiary. 335-4780.. EXPERIENCED SEC RET A dtalroa work, 3 to 3 days per in Pontiac, Drayton or Waterford. OR 3-0457. 'OByaftatiai lA c4iforn -..^IFORNIA CAR, TOP C^"l«=9 other rating. BR 2-5777. 14157 Grand Rlv»r, plush office with i Detroit, li AAA AaIeRICAN DRIVE-AWA^ ralitornla, *->------ - Accuracy Personnel ACCOUNTING TYPING, Math, law, ENGLISH AND SHORTHAND REGISTER NOW FOR CLASSES beginning March 18lti. MICHIGAN SCHOOL OF BUSINESS 16 E. Huron 332-5898 Board ot Education ATT^TI TION Enroll now — start training Auto Mechanics Acty-Arc Welding Auto Collision DAY-NIGHT SCHOOL MICHIGAN'S OLDEST TRADE SCHOOL WOLVERINE SCHOOL > WESY FORT WO 3-C lot nacetsary. lervlew appbin Call 3434418 tor ^ »N OR LPN. AFTEI T.V. TECHNICIAN Experitncad on color T.V., top salary and eemmisalon, othar benefits, —-------------- " Ingham area. Apply handwrittng to.- Pontiac P C37, Pontiac, M'---- ^ sharp gir iiary. Pirn wrtMrship available. DENTAL ASSISTANT, rantal companM I immMlIate opa DENTAL ASSISTANT RECEPTION-Ist, talar- ............. - 5 days weakly. 9-5 p.m WANTED SERVICE TECHNICIAN, alactrical ability. D a n n Manufacturing Co., 883-55110. Northland Medical Bldg., Southfield 48075 or call avanliigt UN 344M. DIVERSIFIED' OFFICE DUTlOs f0< ■ R.N. Supervisor ond LPN s NEEDED On 11 to 7 Shift CREATIVE SALESMAN F YOU ARE A SELF STARTER 742-47l6 ind bet. 35-40 years of age you ---------- lay qualify. The annual earnings will train i . __________ ... successful. Previous Sale: halpful but not necessary, i Interview li tnlmum of *’sJoS8o''par^ yea Member ot the miltl-board. Walker Realtors, 33000 Northwestern, '------- Orchard Lake). 851-1710 or Flint Realtors, Baptist Nusary ..v.iuu, program creative activities, stories, and recreatktn. For inform phone FE 3-7881 or FE 4-0773. allowance. For t CURTAIN AND DRAPERY sales, top salary, downtown B'—-— Irving Kay's Draperies, DRUG CLERK, PULL TIME, apply in person, Save-On Drugs, 4510 Tal^raph a* MATURE WOMEN $85 UP PER WK. It you are Interested In full ‘ employment and ha' " — " .................. skills, we can place _____ INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL Rosenthal. ^ ______ M lu u..™ Pontiac 334-4971 INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL ---------------- 1880 S. Woodward (B'ham.) 643-8348 ; $400 AND UP BOOKKEEPERS office p’i¥LD'"'rCAINrNGT'GREFRr' . now. 844-7427. Gl approved. OBTAIN LIFETIME SECURITY, oung men and woman praparp noi >r lucrative careers In the Airline WILL TRAIN RETIRED OR i •pprtatlon and be abia to evening par wiak. Sand itna and starting salary ax-' - 0. box 435, Ponthc; j WELDERS AND SHEL. man. ^ly Ferro Fab, “ LaRoy, P-- in. Full time. Hospital. 50 N. Alchtean. 4EET METAL DOCTOR'S OFFICE, HI.IHER THAN AVERAGE SALARY Every ottigr weekend oft. Part tinto or full tima DIAL 338-7151 Ext. 95 FREE REAL ESTaYE CLASSES. . ^_________________________ Earn while you learn, tpll or part INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL --- Daniels R«al^ 31000,1080 W. Huron, Pontiac 334-497 $400-$500 SECRETARIES type 40 w.p.m., shorthand 80 MANAGEMENT TRAINEES $400 PLUS Grosse Pt 'school Equiv years nursing axparlancs, convalescent or — taking charge .. ---- Preferable no other lady In Please call MA 4-1450._____ WANTfeO IRONINGS TO D _________ California, Saattia, Arizona, WITH 301 rlda, DeMer, Dallas, MIlw., I, care tor 13550 GfRid River. 834-9400. “El-!,'' DRIVE NEW CADILLAC TO ■* -------1 bafc 343-959T NaasahoM BubIwmb ServIcB WILL CUT ANY TREE < r 8100 or less, FE 3-7343 or FE BoekkaepplHg & Taxes 16 Associated Tax Service 47 N. Parry 332-5198 Across from Osteopathic Hosp. _________Free Parking ,_____ self out of debt. Our budget Ice and credit counseling I 9d thousands .of people in I ____since 1940. There Is no cost or obligation to examine your problem. Sometimes 'f be of hr- -•* ■•'- — checking ashamed about getting WANTED, FANCY GLASS or China, Dressmaking & TaileriHg 17 DRESSMAKING AND wedding AND EVENING apparel designed and tailored, 335-1439. income Tax Service 19 ------- .lightly higher. 6. Dunn Co. 2094 Cass Lake Rd. 482-7581. no answOr phone 1-883-5534 reverse ALL BOOKKEEPING AND TAX SERVICE william J. Sourlall, 12 yrs. Formal training in Federal ______ State Tax codes. Certificate from M.S.B. 4524 Williams Lake Road. 473-0074. 6 8. B AUCTION Hxla Hwy. OR 3-2717 IV OR SELL your furniture. r Macomb County. Erna A SMALL PIANO OR babfl COPPER, BRASS; RADIATORS; starters and generatora, C. DIx- son. OR 3-5849._____________^ NEWSPAPER. 7dc PER 100 POUND deliver^. Royal 0 and Metal Co. ‘ Royal Oak. LI 1- SILVER CERTIFICATES, 81.25; gi s, double face. FE S4492. WANTED - HOSPITAL BED. Wanted to Rent HOME BEING TORN DOWN, need-Immediately — 3-bedroom, , Oakland Co., FE 4-7829. SHOP AREA, SIZE of 2% car Share Living Quttrters Share 8140. Call FE 5-4111, YOUNG BACHELOR SHARE t YARD A4AN, WELDING experlanrt helpful. Apr'- ------- -------- 5451 Dixie I. Apply Sccuril Mxle Hwy., W sn 9 end 1. Security Fence Co., ages 3»45, sand resume to Pontlac'ifgir—sharp ' Giri ' eryaHv NEW CLASSES STARTING-LEARMj ^ess BOX C-21, PontljC^MIchlgen. ' Information P TIONIST, ATTRACTIVE DOMESTIC - 3 DAYS p YOUNG MAN TO .., _____ Taystec Bakery, 432 Orchard Lake - Apply AM — - EXPERIENCED LADY TO work In' I Southfield 4 » ^'MUST DRIVE 40 HOURS weekly, E 3400 Rochester Rd. Royal Oak. OPENINGS FOR USHERS, ----■“ ‘■elp, apply In person after, Pontiac Drive-ln Theatre',' MEDICAL ASSISTANT, will train lab procedures, 2 glr' *■"” —nth. PERSONABLE GAL TO type and RECORD AND SHEET music sales Ri-iUr*- - - not necessary, full and positions availablt. Ap-ply Grinnall's ------ ----- INTERNAYIONAL Cerp. will train In personnel control to pro-—~9hf positions. No ssary. Only those work Immedlatoty XiGI^ERED -NUBsES {,'“SS-„,n»ntor*J EXP ERIENCED BOOKKEEPER, full charge of books, payroll, tax returns, etc., Transign Inc. 34 W. Shefflald. Pontiac. For personal Interview EXPERIENCED WAITRESS, t "4*4*fd . Apply to P , Saginaw Gene N. Harrison, ! iHip WooM Femoie EXPERIENCED SHIRT pri Apply AAan Cleaners, Elizabeth Lake Reed. GRILL GIRL, DAY SHIYT Driva-ln. 22 W. ktoWcalm. GRILL C^K_ WAmYeO. RELIABLE INTELLIGENT cleaning ------ general housework, light 3 days, own transportation 334-4294. A TELEPHONE GIRL II.SO to 83J6 per hour. If you have —--------- ■ pt----— I Ca ... WOOL Rein!'?lve"ln 'araaT'AMy'Eastdii Cleanars. 8185 Cooley Ul Rd. ART LINKL^TTER JOINED Beeline Grill Cook TED'S Woodward ■» SquarB Li HOUSEKEEf’ERy LIVE IN MID- AUSTIN ENGINEERS, ING. MECHANICAL ENGINEERS Minimum five years axperlance In design and development et AIR CONDITIONING, HEATING. VENTILATING and PLUMBING tor Jnduttrial, Chemical and commercial facilities. (Ragiitrition cieslrcd). A. Faydenko AUSTIN ENGINEERS, INC. 2978 W. Grand Slvd.. Detroit, Michigon 48202 Phone (313) TR 5-7737 TECHNICIAN ORGANIC MATERIALS Major auto and appliance manufacturer hos on ex-cellent opportunity for experienced person with at least 2 yeors in the evaluation ond/or specification of adhesives, sealers, deadeners, and tape moterials. Degree desirable but not essential. Include education, experience ond salary requirements in reply. EMPLOYMENT OFFICE; 14250 PLYMOUTH R0„ DETROIT, MICHIGAN 48232 AN CaUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER ____ desira to u.............. ........ skies or public contact axp., we will -train you. Wa are the natlon'-largest with offices coast to coast Exc. earning petontial. Call Heiei Adams, 334-2471, Snalling S Snail SALESLADIES Experlencod, full or part womans sports wear and Suzette Inc. 444-1930, f« SALESWOMEN havt selling experience. Ap-rden Draperies, Pontiac Mall. SECRETARIES Advertising Agency North Woodward. Attractive Ings for experienced secretaries, diversified " — —........... graphic sk-.,. _ . -4-1000. Personnel Dept. An Equal -------— ' SECRETARY T 0 EXECUTIVE, Interesting position, raoulring good typing end shorthand, pleasant phone manner. National Concern. Good pay: immediate opening. Call 048-SI»7, Mrs. Goss._______________ rmingham house, exc. salary _..d living condltiona, cooking and light housework. Sun. and Mon. Oft, previous -------'---- ''' " ______________________447-4143. STENOGRAPHERS AND TYPISTS Temporary lobs In your area. Worli nth or all year. WITT SERVICES, 442-3055 725 5. Adams Plaza Rm. 124 B'ham. SITUATION FOR RECEPTIONIST-secratary as "Girl Friday" tor leading realtor firm. Intoraiting opportunity in pleasant environment. Accurate tyiring;----- knowledge ot shorthand desi____ Avail. Mar. 18. Call 424-4000 tor surgical TECHNICIAN OR L axperlancad In surgory Mrs. Ga Avon Center Hospital, 451-93*1. keeping, adding machlito. hostess and cashiering, neat typist TO ""handle PURCHASE orders, permam^ I prdfflotlon, must be k TYPIStS __________ ........ 8429, 9 torvisw. Minimum typing speed, 50 w.p.n 2. Previous ' genetal o f 11 e a e; perlenca. Fringe WAITRESS nc evening work. Rocco's “-yy.. Dr-*— — WAITRESS, NO EXPERIENCE ' necessary, afternoons, good pay, axe. tipi, pleasant coimisr work. ...................... WAITAeSS AFTERNOON OR EVE-nlng shift, Jwrt-time, hourly rata. ning shift, jwrt-time, hourly rata, 4 days nAak. For turthar M- tarmatlon. Call UL 2-3410._____ WAITRESS WANTED, FULL^ time. Agpiy In porson only. Pronk's Reataurani, 3415 Orchard Lk. Rd.. Kagge Harbor. PART TIME MANAGER, must be dependable and st least 2). Call Richardson's Farm Dairy. FE 4- ____________Pontiac 334-4971 $5,000-$ 12;000 TECHNICIANS :h.-Elec.-Lab, age I -------L PERSOf PUBLIC RELATIONS . college and degr Interesting positions, most Mrs. Moreen. internaYional P RECEPTIONIST, GOOD --- to press silks tor quality cleaning plant. FE 4.9111._____ PROMOTION ON YOUR EFFORT tervlew call Cosway %al Estat 3379 Orchard Lake Rd. (at end i Commerce Rd.) 481-0740. SALES PEOPLE _______ Home". Experienced It Draperies. Call Collect, ; SHOULD YOU kc an employment -hang NOV/ IS THE TIME I Michigan B«ll Phone: 393-2815 TIRED OF THE MONOTONY OF your Job? Call Mr. Fotoy—York Real Est-«* XVX-MX9 OF THE TIME CLOCK? •. Folay—York Real Estate, $6,000-$12,000 ACCOUNTANTS 334-4971 benefits, $330. Call Donna 334-2471, Snalling 8. 5nelllng.__ RECEPTIONIST TO GREET people". INTERNATIONAL PER^NNEL phis-.;-i;ping-;'‘'53S."“ "call 'key Kelly, 334-2471, Snelling 8, Spelling. $7200 AND UP COLLEGE GRADUATES Wsnagement positions In all fields. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 10 W. Huron Pontiac 334-4971 $8,000-$15,000 ENGINEERS POSITIONS IN ALL FIELDS RECEPTIONIST, CHEERFUL poi gal, lots of public contact g(— location, $300. Call Kathy King, 334-2471 Snelling 8. Snalling. SALES TRAINEES $6500 PLUS CAR 22-30, some college required. Fi laid. Mrs. Plland. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL - - — • --------I 442-8268 ACCOUNTANTS $7200 UP I. college and degree p SALES REPS. $7500 UP PLUS CAR AND EXPENSES ADMINISTRATIVE TRAINEES $450-$550 0, college helpful, me.. .. many Interesting fee TIRED OF JUST GETTING BY? ...... Folmt-York Rf JI Estate, p„|,to„,; Mr! MireW. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1880 S. Woodward (B'ham) 442-8248 CAREER SALES I man, age 25 --Bd In long term ......... omlnint local firm ARE YOU IN A RUT? Hera Change, train for —'-------- opportunity, 855M. King, 334-2471, SnOllli BOOKKE^f ER_-;^ NEW PLUSH ot- »du':i LB » per year upwarc.. ________, I benefits end training pro- ..... •^'1. For Intervltw "0 at Jordan 4 BOOKKEEPERS $450 UP EXPERIENCED. 25-50. Fao paid. Irs. Rosenthal. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL .J80 S. Woodward (B'ham.) 442-8248 CLERK TYPIST. PART nil nrins line or imponaa laoies handbags and othsr quality im- Phone 9^9«o''pI^8-«i55'''’*"**'”' DOES YOUR, PRESENT EMPLOYMENT LACK OPPORTUNITY? THEN CONSIDER THE REAL estate PROFESSION! ’ ou desira to be of r fallow man and Itlen of uhlImItiM only prarequlsHoi oro: n; «sty (2) Ambition, than call me .. stop In tor Bn Interview. Mr. Larry SlaCInskI at Wm. Eaatham A«^y -- It got Into a CREDIT AND COL FEBRUARY 27, 1948. INVESTIGATE This High-Pay Inciependent Career DO YOU LIKE TO MEET THE PUBLIC? Can you typo SO w.p.m.? Mar Interesting lobs are available Ii you. Call Mrs. Rosenthal. You will enioy Iha p working for one of the el your owi) Initiative wl single most important Ingredient tor your success ... and aura. Our aptitude analysis system will determine your Chances tor Success In Our business. If your pros-look gM, we'll pay you an —. ------------------learn attractive selary the bu^ness and mder jupervlilm. pects will be well Into iigurefJ In feet, yearly ea with pur Company of 820X 8MOOB ere net uneommm. Briefjaarticulari to: Pentlae Bof (|% Pontiac, MMh. Real Estat« Salasmen CEePEi ___ latsry ......... Wjd.^A^e^25-50. Accuracy Ptnon- CLERK TYPISTS Birmingham Area $375-$425 18-21. No shorthand raquired, but Snelling 8, Snelling. international PERSONNEL SECRETARY. SECURE FUTURE, ---' typist end phone manner. To $456: Call ------- greet public, $456. Call Kay 334-2471, Snelling 8. Snalling. loTihC STENO-SECRETARIES BIRMINGHAM AREA $425r$500 : UP, typing 50, shorthand 80. to $5,100 Excac. Mgr. trainee, be cessful financial e giant '" '- perlence necessary. VIncler. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 5722 W. Maple Rd. Orchard Lake 851-1050 TO $7,200 ELECTRONIC TECH Trainees and experienced. Large national company, transportation and test equipment furnishae, ca" Mrs. Smith. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 5722 W. Maple Rd. Orchard Lai 851-1050 TO $7,000 PLUS BONUS MANAGEMENT TRAINEE Soma college and food experlenbe, lifetime opportunity with national firm, expanding In the foreign countries, call Mr. Frye. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 122 W. Maple Rd. Orchard Lake Yrainee FOR Management, - ig high scl^-' paid 8S5B0 W"‘- ^ Snelling. young high schbol grad. Fee paid 8S5B0 plus expense. ---- Wills, 334-271, Snelling , I Wanted M. or F. BHelp Wanttd M. or F. 8 authorized Kaiser J|77;________________________ Auto Bufflng, PoHihiiig genuine SIMONIZE PASTE vi ... ------------ appointment only only 85.95, .....- . free pick-up. Wash and Wax, FE 2 3411. Open 7 days. 57 N. Perry. Boots and Accessories BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER Your (emlly boating headquarters Starcraft aluminum —' '“■— lum and fiberglas I.M.P. fiberglas. d at Adams Road Carpentry CARL L. BILLS SR., NEW Old floor sanding. FE 2-5789. SNYDER. FLOOR LAYING lON'T NEGLECT YOUR' CARPET Have a pi'otesslonel beautify you-carpet at our low winter prices Free estimate, r*ii *si.8S4 McDonald Carpet Carpet Installation ,-1 QUALITY CARPET CLEANING pet. 343-5781. Cement Wei* WENT WORK. CQWIMERCIAL AND INDUSTRIAL remodeling speclatlsis GUINN'S CONST. CO. 334-7477 --------- Dressmaking, Tniiering ALTERATIONS, / SUBSTITUTE TEACHERS FOR PONTIAC'S PUBLIC SCHOOLS $25.00 DAILY RATE Apply In Person 2-5 p.m. Monday through Fridoy PERSONNEL OFFICE ADMINISTRATION BUILDING : Ext 251 350 Wide Track Drive 338-9151 BACHELOR'S DEGREE OR EQUIVALENT REQUIRED NO EDUCATION COURSES NEEDED Drivers Trainh^ PROVED AUTO DRIVING Pi]iwidi DRYWALL SERVICE _______Old and new. 427-3229.' $P.EaALIZEb GUARANTEED, DR'Y I, new end remodel. FE S-2441 Electrical Services Excavating END LOADING AND back hoe, -•-.Ing, sand gravel and )lae septic work, buildo: ----' digging. 473-1972 or Fleer Tiling 741 N. Perry, FE 2-4090. TALBOTT LUMBER Oi Oakland storage Painting and Decorating A-1 PAINTING AND PAPER HANGING THOMPSON _____________FE 4-8344 -1 QUALITY PAINTING. INTE-rlor—exterior. REAS. 428-4423. AA PAINTING AND DECORATING, 25 yrs. exp. Free est,. UL 2-1398 CHARLES PAINTING-DECORATING ---- quality materiel and work- flip ynjazi manship 332-8971. EXPERT PAINTING AND PAPER hanging. Call Harbla, 473-4790. GRIFFIS BROTHERS, PAINTING, frae estimatte. OR 3-1430. PAINTING, PAPERING, WALL QUALITY WORK ASSURED. PAINT-toj; paporlng, wall washing, 473- Pinno Tunings OSCAR SCHMIDT Plastering Service „ . PLASTE^G, NEW OR RE- R«lr- FE 8-2782.________ PL^TERTNG. ^REE ESTWOfffS. O. Mayors,---------------- PLASTERlWJj-NEW AN,D"REPAIR. JACKS DRIVE INN Cor. Baldwin & AAgntcalm FE ; ''^rank and Jeanette Slaybeug Roofing pair roots. FE 8-1725. QUALITY ROOFING. NEW AND ----, Bonded material. Fret as- Reasonable. 4e^7514. Work guaranteed. Call 75^3107. SNOW PLOWING AND TOW Sarvica. SNOWPLOWING. Reasonable rales. 674-3504. ______________, SNOW PLOWING, CONTRACT only, — seasonal charge, pay as yr " " Storage Space STORAGE SPACE FT. " JTree.Trimming Service A-I TREE SERVICE BY BI.L Free estimate. PE 5-4449, 674-3510. TRp TRIMMING AND REMOV- Truckitig HAULING AND RUBBISH. NAME --------- ~ time. FE 8-0095. LK5HT hAuLING, Moving. Reasonable, 332-7514, LIGHT HAULING _______________ 2-4751._____________________ Light hauling and moving op .......... •^tpendable. FE 5-7443. Truck R'»B*a| Trucks to Rent ------ - tractors AND EQUIPMENT Semi-Trailers Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. 82S S. WOODWARD : 4-0441 FB 4-1M n Dally Ir- "— - -- Water Softeners THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, FJ^BRUARY 21. 1968 F—7 Wontad RmI Estatt 1 Million Oolliri h»* bj»n mad* avalli to ot to purchao* land contri and asium* mortgagu oo hw and vacant propei^. We will | you caih »r ' ybur *qi^. prompt lervlce ttil* -phonp num_ Is avallabla to you 24 tours per day. 7 day* per week. ' TED 1-50 HOMES. LOTS, acreage, PARCELS, FARA4S, BUSINESS PROPERTIES, AND LAND CONTRACTS WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyk* Rd. , FE S-I1i Urgently need for Immediate Salel Pontlao Dally 'til I multiple LISTtNG service I BEDROOM HOME or larger wi commercial frontage, within .. miles ot Pontiac, Pvt. Individual. ALL CASH ^any^|^la^(|* In Oakland YORK WE TRAJ D yto** p.^e L CASH QUICK, ^INGLES^ flats, II and FHA equities, call anytime, t. D. Boraks. UN 2-2252. BEST CASH PRICES For lots In C I a r k s t o n, Waterford area. Call Mr. Baker, at Cross Realty. 674- CASH 48 HOURS LAND CONTRACTS—HOMES WRIGHT I? Oakland Ave._FE 2-9141 CASH ulty ...... 1 quick act! of homes Ir — ...... ... will pay cas ■fS!* *2!..R!i. IVAN w. SCHRAM SERVING PONTIAC,18 YRS. REALTOR “ ^ 1111 Joslyn ___________33S-W1 I HAVE A PURCHASER WITH CASH FOR A STARTER HOME IN OAKLAND COUNTY. CALL AGENT *T t74-14ys LISTINGS NEEDED FARMS-HOMES-ACREAGE RIDGEWAY, REALTOR NEWLY MARRIED CO Real Estate, FE 3-7088. SMALL FARM OR WOODS V I River, Farmington, A WANTED—HOUSES TO SELL Call BREWER REAL ESTATE, m RIker Bldg. FE 4-5101. We Need Listings Buyers Galore J. A. Taylor Agency, Inc. Real Estate — Insurance — Building 7732 Highland Rd. (M-S9) OR 4-0306 Evenings call E7‘ Apartments, Furnished 37 I LARGE CLEAN ROOM. Bachelor 1 ROOM, STOVE, REGRIGERATOR, bedroom set, dinette, private bath, etc., for adults only, FE 2-5171 or 1 APARTMENT, SUITABLE FOR utilRies furnished. No chlldi’en dr pets. 59 Monroe. FE 4-9678. t ROOMS AND BATH. Attractively 2-BEDROOM UPPER, utilities Incl. 2-ROOM, $20 WEEK. 3-room. I 2-ROOM APARTMENT FOR rent, 30 2 ROOMS, SIS A WEEK, working bscheinr. 335-6371. 2-ROOM PRIVATE Entrance i bath. Ill N. Telegraph Rd. 2 w dep. Apply apartment No. l. ROOMS welcome, i tl-i AND GATH, Q.50 per wk., witi. — e At 273 Bakfwia Call 2- ROOM, BIRCH Apartnjients, Furnished 37 2 ROOMS ANDB/^^ r^s and bath, $30 weekly. 335- * Rob^s AND Gath, children or pets, nice 'nnot deposit required. 330-2754. 3 ro«3ms, on lake. BABY 30 per Ro6Ms’‘ANb BAfri, upper, irpeted, $30 a week, dep. 0T3- Apurtniei^ Unfurnished liflioems.>with Board IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY OAKLAND VALLEY APARTMENTS 7986. 3 ROOMS AND BATH. Fireplace. Enclosed porch. Newly decorated. Utilities included. Adults only. $40 week. Deposit required. 625-2920. 3 ROOMS AND BATM, INQU'RE at 200 North Johnson. ROOM APARTMENl ROOMS AND BATH, child welcome, $35 per wk., with $75 iJP^quIre at 273 Baldwin. Call ^OMS AND BATH, utitf Lake Vista Aportfnents 3 rooms and bath, carpeted Stove, refrigerator, utilities. Adults only. 5366 Cooley Lake Rd. ____________ luxurV 2-B Ebitooii apart-' on beautiful private lake grounds. Swimming, beating, g. Stove and refrigerator. 64^ KITCHENETTE APARTMENT •’ontlac Lk., no pets or chile..... loyal Apartmants. S1S0 Highland LIVING ROOM, BEDROO/lOrtt^H-enetta and »w,,n. ... »>. Deposit. 429 SMALL APARTMENT FOR mlddle-agad unencumbered lady low rent In exchahge for tight services, FE 8-2343, If no answer FE 4-1941. ___________Highland Rd. (M 59). Apartments, Unfurnished 38 363-7000, 9-5 p.m. BEDROOM, til Lacey. 633-7191 E BEDROOM. Mixed neighborhood. Ground floor. —— *—■- -- .....- ..elol Clean. Couple ( ■■ • S, FE 4-5243. 75, air b e p r o~o m apartments incHMthg carpets, and drapes. Extra storage space, parking area, c...... cepted. From S143 per ....... _ Walton Rd. between Adams end Opdykc, east ot 1-75. Model----- -......... 35-mt or 357- Bent Oftee Spnye 47 NEW DOLLY MADISON APARTMENTS Near J. L. Hudsons-Sears --- shopping center. Includee heat, gas for cooking, hot water, elr conditioning, auto, fire alarm lystem, carpeting, large etorage lockers, laundry facllitle~ -- ------ GE products, t I with ample i From $135 Models open ll e.m. to 8 p.m. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION FURNISHED AND UNTARNISHED APARTMENTS AVAILABLE GORDON-BEGIN CO. 14 MILE AT f-75 505-1125 NICE CLEAN S with sur -- ?iy- ' ROOMS AND bath MIDDLE-AOED * RETIRED. Clean gulet noirfe. 625-5150. PRivAti WSOM, HOME ci LARGE 62' X 70' SUPER market type store, goexi close In subui' vliiaoe locaTtony for all typoi buslnessn. Large perking lot. tommerYi■a^*^paK:M.’PlenfV^^^^^ free perking. Phone 651-4576 or 731-8400. LARRY TREPECK ____________C WStOi ON WEST HURON Near Waterford Twp. Hall 9x14 to 24jd4 673-6555. Eves. 673-7752 BEDROOM, NEAR P o n General Hospltel. Adults onl required. FE 5^1727 after 6. .BEDROOM, J E A N N . apartment, large living rooi kitchen, carpeted, on weti I- 2-BEDROOM. NEW. NEAR — Carpeted. Adpiiences. Al....... sound conditioned, heated. Rec. room. Adults, no pets. From 2 BEDROOM APARTMENT, f ~rpeted. Refrigerator and s elcome pets. 1165. 417 Park Rochester. 651-7595. 3 ROOMS AND BATH, close to to ROOMS SUITABLE FOR vorking after 5 ROOMS, FULL BATH, adults, FE 8-0547.________________________ 5 ROOMS AND BATH, ADULTS AMERICAN HERltAGE APARTMENTS Furnishes luxurious apt. living. Carports end all utilities ----* No children or pels please. 3365 Watkins L-- BLOOMFIELD ORCHARDS . APARTMENTS Ideally- situated In Bloomfield-BIr-mingham ----- ------ ’ " bedroom apartments avellable for Immediate possession from $135 per month including car—"" HotpolnL air conditioning a pliances,* large family kl swimming pool and large su.. ..... — All utilities except electric. No detail ot luxury has been overlooked In Bloomfield Orchard Apia, located on South Blvd. (20 Rd.), between Opdyke and 1-1 pressway. Open daily 9 to 6 Sunday, 12 to 6 p.m. Closed 1-- day. For Information; UN 40303. Mgr. 335,5670, FE 8-0770. BLOOMFIELD MANOR bedroom s, Hotpoint refrlgerOtor, Hot point air con-private dining wall to carpetirig, •extra features. MODEL APARTMENT OPEN DAILY PHONE: 682-3614 UN 4-7405 AVON apartments. 3 rooms - “-1. 35 yrs. or o' BIRMINGHAM bedroom $155 mo. Phone 644-5002 or 9fej GRAND PRIX APARTMlN 1-2 bedrooms, from $120 per mi 1-2 bedrooms, with carpeting From $130 per month 315 S. Telegraph - Pontioc see N 334-7171 IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY CORAL RIDGE apartments Rochester's Outstandino Value Featuring 1 end 2;^fo LOW LOW RENT FROM $132;50 Limited numlw ot furnlsheo Hotpoint refrlmretor, ^Hotpoint oven-range,, heat Included, plenty of parking,* large closets, ga disposal, reundry-storage spaci Directions; Turn west from M$ln St. of Second St. drive 2 blor'-- •-Wilcox Rd. in Rochester. 'nishad mi I. PhSto: t INDIAN YILLAOIE APAR+MENT Ing ^ bwi,7e1i living room, d ea, bedroom a ■etove _____________ ____ furn.V'vt. entrtne'e. Ceil eft. p.m. 33»0360. lake FRONT, Clerkston, large new 2 BEDROOM apt. Rtohester. kftchen, l. |oundpraof. irpm, I Appltor Apurtmente, Uwfurniiheii 38ff»irfaiaiiit8, UafurHithed DARLING COURT (All Electric) APARTMENTS l-BEbSOIlM $165 PEf MO. Including aM utilities plus • Comfortable Electric Heat • Complete GE Kitchen Pkis Washer/Oryier, Dlshtoesher, Formito-Top Cupboards. Laiy F Central Air Conditioning F All Rooms Fully Carpeted - s. Hallways end FonwI^J • Soundproof Wolls • Centrol Antenna • Private Poved Parking furnished or Unfurnished Open 7/boys a Week~ 1 P.M. to 6 P.M. 3440 MSHABAW ROAD • Stdlrage Area in Each Area • Close to X-woys and Pontioc Mall Ft^l in Dixie Hwy. end Wolton Blvd. 674-3136 Imm^iate Occupancy $125 transportation, Ctotra ditloning, disposal, w carpeting, drab^ 40 Mecllinlc S FE #031 ORCHARD COURT APARTMENTS 2 bedrooQjjMrtments Menager-Afil- 0. 19 Selmer ROYAL ........ . swimming pool. Plenty o t02oTt^ SYLVAN CM THE LAKES ■nimedlate octopancy. 1 and 2 be rooms. Frem- StS2. Children wi ----3. Ph,S0O. Weltradetoo Nix Realtor___651-0221, 152-5 attractive 3-BEDROOM COlOf ranch, I'A baths, 2 car gars. I5'XI3S' wooded tot, 017,500. OR 3-8361._______[________________ BIRMINGHAM-BLOOMFIELD WEIR/ MANUEL, SNYDER & RANKE 398 $. WOODWARD AVE., B'HAM. Mi 4-6300 BIRMINGHAM-BLOOMFIELD WHITE BRKK farm cotonlal raneh_.In eupei. condllton right In Blrndngheiti. Beautiful landeeartng wite many trees eni potto. Three btor^s (masterIhae dressing room) 2'/k ■^•^s. Peneled family--- Thern&ne wl Ingham tohaols. WING L4KE prlvllegbs. Excellent constrOTtion and floor plen. Three-todropm ranch. Two full baths. Peneled femlly room with fireplace. Roomy kitchen has bullt-lns end eating space. Nice bte lot with attractive patio. Gas heal. First floor laundry. Carpet end drapes. 835)900. FIVE BEDROOM older home In h Ingham. Close to --- Good condition. Eating S| kitchen. Storms *nd heat. I Ready and wet to move In. 015,900. TWO IMPRESSIVE stratts. Cl., ---- — --------- Cniyanimt tocatlon^^ Farm col-' nlty’rwSL -------J coteblsl baths and three levs. Femlly room with ‘ $58,500. Both are specie to^™w'^ln*c*ll 'ui’^r SLEEPING ROOM FOR (Mltlomm, kitchen prhrilogn, FE 4#4Sg, SLEEPING ROOMi, tol* gilE, ladies, only. FE 4-4002, WOMEN. SHARE OWN LIVING SNYDER KINNEY & BENNETT Sola. Hratas Beauty- Rite Homes HUNTOON SHORES Drive IVk miles North ol I on AlrpixT Rd. turn right _ Pleasant Drive tq medal. OPEN DAILY (EXCEPT WED.) 3-6 p.r Sat. A Sun. 1-6 p.m. Call 674-3)36. BIRMINGHAM walking distance to MIdval Seaholm, Covington Schools, bedroom Capa Cod. I n c I u d i draperies and carpeting throui out. Kitchen lust completely i decorated.. 2 full baths. 2 fii places. 2 car attached garage. F basement with lav. ahd outsi entry. 847,500. Call oiamer. Ml BY OWNER, Metomora IRWIN DRAYTON AREA; »m home located tr^.^RMd. Locatto ^n Jarga PADDOCK STREET: Take advantage of Interest rate no longer avalleble. 7 rooms am bath. New furnace. Close ti schools. $2600 down. BUYING OR SELLING CALL JOHN K. IRWIN & SONS 313 West Huron — Since 1925 FE 5-9446 After 5 p.m. FE 5-4846 lake priv., 678-2262. Cass Lake Privileges 4-room and utility, r Investment. Onl, , 12,000 down, 867 per m CITY OF PONTIAC Alum, siding ranch, gas he; 7S'x296' landscaped lot. Home real neat and clean. Zero down qualified purchaser. Call YORK fruit trees. Gas heat, carpetlnj Steve and refrigerator. Ready to move In. Waterford aree. Only $) 1,900. WALTERS LAKE Do your-own Interior decorating a save on this brand new bedroom Cape Cod. Possible ANDERSON AND GILFORD, INC. OR 4-3141____or______OR 3-423 Crestbrook MODEL OPEN DAILY 12-8 3-bedroom, family room and 2-car garage, priced at only 0)6,400 pi lot. Located In new eub with pav streets, curb, gutter, eldawatks ai city water. Drive out MS9 to Cri cent Lake Road, turn right Crestbrook Street and medal. GIROUX ROSS 2 WEEKS POSSESSION ON SOME COLONIALS, RANCHES, S P L ' -LEVELS. from $31,500 Including lot S3,100 down plus closing costi Lakeland Estates Golf, tennis, 10 miles of w_ sports, private beach on Dixie Hwy. 4-10 miles past Walton Blvd. Turn ^^ht at Parade ot Homes sign. “■ 1941 S. telegraph RD. FIRST IN VALUE RENTING $78 Mo., Excluding taxes and Insurance ONLY $10 Deposit WITH APPLICATION 3-BEOROOM HOME - ■ S HEAT IINING AREA ALL APP,__ ___ ___ ANY WORKERS, WIDOWS OR DIVORCEES. PEOPLE WITH CREDIT PROBLEM S, AND RETIREES ARE OKAY WITH US. OPEN DAILY AND SAT. AND SUN. REAL VALUE REALTY For Immediote Action Call FE 5-3676 6424220 HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty FAMILY HOME 4-bedroom, large farm kitchen, ful basement, fenced yard, almost ar acre. Neat' Four Towns School in Waterford Twp. Price $14,800 large down payment required. Everett Cummings, Realtor 2503 UNION LAKE ROAD EM 3-3200_______________36M1I1 HAYDEN baths, 2-cer garage. Full price, 114,500. lALF ACRE, $2400 assumes the 5 per cent mortgage on this sharp bedroom ranch, fireplace, h water heel. Call quick on tli 4-BEDROOM raised ranch nei -felled Lake. Just the house for -irge family. Nicely landscaped >mer lot, 2Yi-car garage, blacktop reefs, 026,900. J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor EM 3d6M 10735 Hlghiend Rd. (M-S9) .. — — M Oxbow Lake HERRINGTON HILLS, 3 beoroom brIciL car^tlr- -- —' need yard, r qualified buyer, S1S,700. 330-0571. HIITER AUBURN HEIGHTS - neat S re and bath, basement, sunporcl car garage, large lot. $11 $12400 WE BUILD - S bedroom rsnehert, oak fleors, vanity . In bath, full basements, gas heat. On HOUSE f6R UlE in OSCODA, Michigan, Cadar Lake Road. 3-badroom, ranch type, carding, gas heat. Ideal for ratirad eoupir Lawn and landscapad. Write 1 Bex No. $7, Osceda, Mich. 48750. V Upper Stroll; I. W« trade. wM^biAfi odcuPAiicY eOv bedrom tri-tevet, torgo* KteTlc lot! 2Vi cOr garasa> newly carpeted. 1201 Panorth, Commerc*. 03,900. Sole Houses IMMEDIATE POSSESSION Nt'i'ly ramodelad 3 bedroom bunoelow locsted In West Suburban tree, lake privileges on White Lake. Includes stove, refrigerator, j. A. Taylor Agency, Inc. 273 Highland Rd. (M59) OR 4-0306 SCHRAM COMFORT AND INCOME STOP PAYING RENT IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY $8150 FULL PRICE 1-75 — Baldwin area, 2-bedroom, basement, 2 car garage on large wooded lot. Assume lend contract payments, $60 a month. $72 A MONTH Clean a bedroom, 15 min. from Pontiac In Exc. school end r-uix c-Mori, r.HLi_ FREE appraisal. BRIAN 623-0702 5904 Dixie Hwy., Wetertord basement. All equipment plu established clientele goes wit house. Only 53,000 down on ten List With SCHRAM And Call the Van OPEN EVES. AND SUNDAY Lauinger VILLAGE OF MILFORD 6 room alum, end brick ranch. Gas heat, 70' landscaped lot. Seller leaving country, wants quick deal. Call YORK WE BUY WE TRADE OR 4-0363 OR 4-0363 4713 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plains Wonderful locations. LOVELAND DOLLHOUSE Immsdlate possession. 2-bedrnot... Full basement. Gas heat. Glassed In porch. 2-car garage, r- New Mo(del OPEN 14 SAT.. SUN. ^BEDROOM BRICK TRI-LEVEL < ..lams Lake Rd. 1 block nor Jnlon Lake Village. Choice > Kitchen cabinets galore Fortnica counter fops Ceramlc*tli Vanity ALSO WE BUILD; and 2-car garage, $29,200 pi at us dispose of your present hi an^ place you In a new home J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor 363-6604 10735 Highland Rd. (M mile west of Oxbow Lake NORTH OF OXFORD, 3-bedroom trl- ...... OTz “ ‘ NORTH SIDE loms and utility, large living 1, gas heat, 2 car gOrega, td drive. Only $11,500. TOM REAGAN REAL ESTATE I. Opdyke____________333-0156 NOW SELLING, UNION Lake a OLD FARMHOUSE Partially remodeled 2 - s 10 r y farmhouse on 4'A acres with TOO ft. Irontege In Rochester Schools. $18,500 with $5,000 down. Phr-651-8588 lor details. SHEPARD REAL ESTATE RETIRING SPECIAL Neat and clean ranch with tul basement, new gas furnace, ndv carpeting, 2-car garage 15x22 llvini room 0 down, about $70 per nhonth Owner's agent. 674-1698. RHODES 10 ACRES With s 3*b«droom bi il’'oM *heef!''"2edroom bungalow 3 gas hast, recrea- FAMILY INCOME — On large 100x233 It. commercial lot. Lower apt. features 4 bedrooms, extra arg* living room and kitchen, also lull high basement. 2-bedroom apt. wn’l mova''y* ***» LET'S TRADE B. HALL REALTY, REALTOR STRUBLE ---------- starter h Wetertord Twp., c and shopping, yard ;rsde, lake privileges on Lofu id Van Norman Lakes, priced i $10,250 with payments of about $( per month Including taxes end ii NDRTH SIDE 6-room family home close I schools ar** *•*—----------- partition, f hOat can b. with $1500 di REAL SHARP HOLLY AREA ^ ^ MILO, STRUBLE REALTOR 674-3175 Fmshour LOOK HERE 111 JUST LISpO _ a very clean alum, rancher, large living room, dining room, compact kitchen witn bullt-Tn stove, 2 bedrooms and tath. Lovely finished walkout ba^ent with second kitchen, half bath and shower, end large recreation room Carpeting end drapes Included In price of $18,900. Call now for an appointmenl. ■ SEMINOLE HILLS THIS^ 3-BEDROOM home Is Ideal for family with children, only 2 blocks from school and eonvenlenf Le»« l« tilths. Only tiB,900 and we will DELIGHTFUL PLACE TO LIVE IF YOU WANT - lake privileges on on* of Oakland County"* besL 3 ffirkitern, ■’iji’d' TO cTO Ki?"to**«'-”'„'?ji„'yva Ca8t!' *'''**• - 'T'S Va' JACK FRUSHOUR, Realtor .......... MLS Eastham HOUSE OF PLENTY with this home you can anlov IS-S'VJL.*'? Itosomont roeraatlon !!• BOnorouo utility ..../uS!?p*KLuW,4 ctura, betlda* all this, lore, the golf course at Item* in Golf view igrana'i"! P0NTI4C KNOUS larot with Inum $U,aw; BILL EASTHAM R^LTOR - MLS ”“T7r3f2lf‘“”’ STOUTS Best Buys Today MOVE RIGHT INI ottering on this 3 home well locate. ... Township, (kiod aluminum Pontiac •tie liS laater. CHy vrater'm prot»- SS-ieJS*®' BRICK TERRACE Fin* 3 bedroom un|t located oft Univatsity drive convenient tb all area's. Basement with gas heat and hot water. Hardwood floon* and plastered wells. Includes some extra's. Only $7950 with terms. A fine Investment.- - WHITTEMORE STREET ........... -. 1 plessur* to show. SEE ITIlt / - Warren Stout, Realtor 650 N. Opdyke Rd. FE $4105 Multlpio Listing Service ' ■ F—« GILES sVlvan lake «nW‘- —* plin SSk ST. MfKIS AREA *V4 iton nlortobl* home you have ^n| 1^"® with'"' 2 *Mth5!"'*MH KI meni, • pas heat, pantry otf, kitchen, enclosed front porch,! fenced back yard, 2-car Borage, j Cloude McGruder Realtor KAMPSENl 1fS TRADING TIME' SLEEPING BEAUTY- tor fomlly living, e d r o o m brick rancM THE PONTIAC PRE3S. VVEDyKSDAV. FEBRUARY^21, 1968 49 BATEMAN Values Income fre|wirty ’ FAMILY INCOME, 4 lerg end bath up, S rdoms a d»wn. Very good conditloh with t4,S06 down. FE 4-23 APARTMENTS ALSO T caretaker. Bringing In * 'Eves."FE*l? y»ars ago o lot with I WiiHams t~' atTachad g I taka. I _______ garage, tui lots of bum-UiSe V/» i baths. Owner says a Full^price « 'live BETTER FOR ILESS MONEY CHI £ rs 3 bedroom spllt-rock with full tiled basement, iv» attached plastered garage, kitchen with b u 111 -1 n s, at ° far \elow dupllution By Kate Osann n. ACRE LOTS -----*75 Expressway, Orion Twp. a ea..—k.-- WRIGHT REALTY Oakland Ave._____FE J OWNER, LAKE bokland Val-U-Wayl NO CREDIT REPORT QUICK POSSESSION Extra sharp 2 bedroom homo Baldwin. Featuring wall to i carpeting In ^the Ing area, ’ ample cupboard ^THINKING OF SELLING OR TRADING HOMES I OUR ESTIMATE BEFOI DEAL — Call Thur 5-BEDROOM RANCH IN OXFORD AREA, * privileges on Cedar Lake -theast Hosier Lake. $17,200. Terms. PAMGUS, INC., Realtor OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 630 M-15 Ortonvil CALL COLLECT ---------- Northern Property S1-Aj Gl, No Money Down i "x >r i i • i I oi«Md windows, mai Mattingly arpeting in the Jiving _and _dinlng i X ^ “ime ma®ke' your “I’ve found that wH^n you're talking things out with your parents, it’s best to keep your mouth shut!’’ subdivided for! small! TODAVI TIRED OF BEING CRAMPED IN ........ ROOMS. THEN SEE THIS LARGE RANCH HOME ON MIDDLE BELT No 95 " ■■■"T^A^^^LAR^SETorEf^ lN ROCHESTER LANDSCAPED YARD AND PRICED IDEAL FAMILY HOME: AT ONLY J22.000, CAN ASSUME! side with 3 bedrooms, f PRESENT 6 PER CENT LAND: ment, formal dining room .^'COTTAGE ON MAtNSTEE LAKE. ■ rND«_ . ONLY lESENT 0 rtK LtNi land; m»?m, r----------- ----^ r CONTRACT. ' and^ ® STm' 3”"rooms™“and *ba?h T. MIXED AREA Separate entrances 81^ 3-BEDROOM HOME ON LINDA TpAniWn Has oM heat, full h«ernent, 2 car y PRICED AT ONLY $15,950. IKAUIMb garage. Located on the City s easT^.j,,. rx.-r..e^.^ TLJt oa-tc tide. S2800 down, SlOO per month. R. J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 *^:THIS VERY DESIRABLE LOCA-1 TION CLOSE TO SCHOOLS. SHOP-. PING AND WORK CAN BE YOURS^ '■“A TERMS. I Open ‘ DORRIS “ESTABLISHED SINCE 1930" LIVE A NEW. of ground, spacious 1tV4x2t, kitchen with -----. ---- hardwood floors, full basement with gas heat, a 26'/sx32 ---------- that Is unbelievable with n furnace and stairway fo at.......... BATEMAN WAY givei positive sale and allows yo in your present home until move into your new ifcme. LOON LAKE SHORES 'cdldnia^1°‘^tri-'J?5^eII THIS COMFORTABLE RANCH IS RANCHERS " -■ LOCATED ON A CORNER LOT,i your lot wit HAS 3 BEDROOMS, LIVING ROOM. Shown by a GOOD SIZE UTILITY, FAMILY SUNDAY 1-j k.>-. x.— «k- 2-CAR GARAGE. poinfment NOW! ■' ! YOU CAN TRADE BATEMAN MLS ORIDN-OXFORD LAKE OAKLAND IN THIS LOVELY ,7? ^ iiM WEINBERGER HOME LOCATED dL-hpVt^R UNION \^AKE ON » lARRF rnoMFo I riTc , ROCHESTER UNION LAKE SACRIFICE - iO ACRES N. it Manistee Lake near Kalkaska., e- $1250, terms. Discount lor cash. I' Write P.O. Box 78 R No. 2, Cedar,! 'll .■Wicblgan j^,-----------. j Resort Property iCOMMERCE^WOLVERINF L B| areas. Lots $995, mo. whik e last. Open Sun. Bloch Bro; ^ Lots-Acreoge DREAM COMMUNITY it describes Hi-HMI Village. Loi from $3,375.00 - 10 per cent down. LADD'S OF PONTIAC ' Lapeer Rd._____ 391 3 HIGHLANOMILFORD AREA. - —- $2495, $25 mo. Ni min. Pontiac. Open S 54 Sale Business Propertj^^S7 iUO FT. ON TELEGRAPH Ro« '1 I' ESCANABA MOTEL -“^rn units. Year Fully equipped. Ii artert. Gross Ihci ,ord over $57,f““ ilth $45,000 daw bonti ^HAVE STSTIONS' WILL LEASE 'e hav< some excellent 1 Sale HoHsehoM Poods 45 y WHAT YOU'D EXPECT TO PAY 3,ROOMS brand new FURNITURE $297 UTtPe JOE'S ^ BARGAIN HOU^E High Gallonage and prolitabla mtthaidcal business. Small In-vestmaflt only. • CALL LARRY TREPECK OR G^ CAMPBELL 674-3184 Sole Household Poods 65 refI^erator, dishwasher, stove, washer and dryer, call 623-1242. _________________ REPOSSESSED STEREO GE 1 MONTH OLD $1,75 PER WEEK Goodyeor Service Store 1370 Wide Track Dr., Wast Pontiac Open F “ APARTMENT SIZE Ma gas stove, like new, 185. m.nt r particulars. i. l^lome also ha formal dining -------- garage with attached drive, yard 1 md landscaped. 1 a bought on I "JOIN ThE MARCH TO TIMES" Times Realty CKCCK nunne UUCAIbU di-w-uectcd un X LARGE CORNER LOTS I ij4iV BLOCK FROM SCHOOLS AND TJo jwea. Near expressways. 51 Bloch Bros. 623-1333, FE| No Stress No Strain SIMPLY RELAXyi LIVING COUNTRY rtYLE 1/2 ACRES, wooded land with 2 nic hills, $5,000. Terms. Ortonvil large lot In back for parking, 2 Apts, up, l< in back, exc. location, useful purposes. This proper very good condition. Price new building. Only $55,000 with $20,000 down. Near Ionia. STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE 2661 S. Lapeer Rd., Lake Orion i'Sa'Tage'i fhink Chlcken! —ty"?s*'ij:| IT'S “LITTLE RED HEN'' $17,50" ' Floor Shop-2255 Elizabeth Lake “Across From the Mall" ^~GAS"“RAN«7cbPPER'T0NE, 3 rrs. old, $125. FE 4-9683. _ ■' ELECTRIC STOVE. EXCEL- singer ZIG ZAG Sewing machine like new. Dial-a-matic model. Does ^buttonhojes, attachment needed. Yours for bal. owed $67.77 or pay $8.50 per mo. Phone 332-5761, Northern Sewing _ Machine Co._______________ SOFAS REUPHOLSTERED, SAVE n fabrics during Spring sale. 335- tOO. Coml. Upholst^v Co.____ USED TV'S, $19.95 COLOR TVs, $299.95 Repo. ........... *“ Washer „..EETS RADIO AND APPLIANCE, INC. 334-5677 I, $35. 682-273 1960 FRIGldAIRE HAMMOND REALTY Axton Hammond, Broker SO ACRES, WOODED RIVErI frontage, Oakland-Genesee-Livings-!S ACRES, wooded, h ton. Mr. Fowler, EM 3-9531, EMI Hadley area, $6,995, I ACRES, NEAR PONTIAC A 130 ACRES, north r 730 S. Rochester TED'S Trading seeing is believing tached garage, aluminum stoi and screens, carpeting, buil dishwasher. ^ All on a large i moving to flint? We have the home you will w to see first. You can trade y present lot or home in on this v attractive 3 bedroom bri>-v ■ aluminum colonial home. I O'NEIL WHY NOT TRADE? CLARKSTON - JUST 2 MILES FROM 1-75 s with buildings Lapeer Co. I 5 Milford Rd. Zon ALL COLLECT NA 7^ SHINN i REALTOR ! Howard COMMERCIAL; Corner Adioining -*•" I Only $11,000. •xcellent h BEAUTY SHOPPE AND HOME WINNING ALL THE WAY 'GOLLY ITS GOOD!" Now frar chising the most popular carrv out Item in the food Industry operating across the U.S. Get now for a choice of iocatior This may soon become the me valuable franchise you cou hold. Get the details no "GOLLY ITS GOOD!" — K FOR FREE CATALOG ‘“TRlDC------------- __ W. I* Open W APARTMENT SIZED STOVE and refrigerator $15 each, 335-8431. apartment ELECTRIC STOVES ??JwTo*M------------------ County's busiest salon features all i and furnishings. The plastered walls, firei S. Eves. EM 3-7541 landscaping arid finishing your basement i—- -r- srvva';;v"h:s*.'rsrn;oX*“w*,^IB A TFM A N' dows, plastered, heated garage.!^1. X J—iXVXXxlN Gorgeous big lot with 24 towering i ^ . Oak frees and the back yard completely enclosed. $34,900 with 338-9641 trade invited. MOVE UP! No. 1-7__COMMERCIAL DEPT.______ BIG FRONTAGE; 383' beginning at Paddock and Perry. Plenty of "AC-, TION" In Pontiac. "ELL" SHAPED 60' x 120' (alleyl' Then 40' X 120'. Baldwin and Ken- r nett. Plenty of ACTION In Pontiac. T 'BUD" ^'lokTo*'! ROCHESTER AREA our savings 120' x 120' parcel < lovely Lake Oakland Heij There Is a full basement, 2 __ sarage, patio, fenced yard, paved street and drive. Full pri-I23,50b-$2,400 dow? or lets fra equities. LAKE AN6ELUS ESTATES LAKE FRONT HOME rhis new 3 bedroom brick ram_ large family room has sliding Thermopane doors *-■ ilt-in bookcases, replace, living $20,950. About $4000 dc... mortgage or better still present home for this on HERRINGTON HILLS CONTEMPORARY Lovely 3 bedroom brick fenced yard and yes also a m at $16,500 on FHA or Gl te Nc LAKE ORION Bdach at one door — boat at otherl First time offered. A c nicely remodeled lake home. I ir garage. Immediate Possessioi NOTHING DOWN 1 FHA terms for this 3 bedroi I basement, 2 c ffi*5gJ; TED'S CORNER Question — Do 'we have rent AND make payments a have sold our home? The ______ Is YES. You must continue to make payments until th • CLOSED, after which make rent payment: . payment. When y purchaser's payment Is due 30 days from the date of closing, may'®still*be occupying the fio™*-matter we will be happy to be of MeCULLOUGH REALTY REALTOR I Highland Rd. (M59) MLS ■n 9-9 674-2239 Business Opportunities 59 Business Opportunities 59 bedroom family home. Decorated in the best of taste with ettracti carpeting, drapes Included in t purchase price. One bedroom ai *;.Imaybe you wish to SELL? vye " have qualified buyers, also SHINN ^ REALTY will pay C-A-S-H today forj NICHOLIE-HUDSON Associates, Inc. FE 5-12o7 Oni 2-3370 ^le Land Contracts 1-50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgenthr needed. See us betorg Warren Stout, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5-816I Open Eves, 'til 8 p.m GOOD SECURITY Dandy contract secured by targe vacant lakefront lot on Cedar Island Lake. Sold December 65 for $7,500 with $1,000 down, present balande $4487 at 6 per cent can be purchased for $3700. Warren Stout, Realtor <50 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5 8165 I Woi^dJ^ntracts-Mfg. 60-A 1-50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently needed. Sec us btlort. Warren Stout, Realtor j 450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE M165 Ooen Eves. 'Ill 8 D.m. ' cherr 1968 WHITE guarantee. Makes but 5, overcasts, monograms WANTED TO BUY ss*shade*”FE*4Sw6. WAREHOUSE SALE, OPEN TO public Entire Inventory of new fop brand refrigerators, freezers and ranges, etc. Must be sold. Every Item discounted, scratched Items priced accordingly. ^No rws. off^ tomorrow, H^|t Applance Co., Woodward and Crooks._________ . Household Appliance, BEAUTIFUL AN ,-9.* g^r^i bargains. Little Joe's I $50.02. 335-9283, APARTMENT SIZE“E L E C"TR^ stove, $30, dining room table, chairs and buffet, $30. Chest of drawers, end tables, antique metal bed, commode. Cone's, FE 8-6642. ATTENTION APPLIANCE BUYERS Terrific saving: up to $100 on' a°n'''refrlgeratorV, ranges, dishwashers, freezers, washers and dryers. Coleman's CUSTOM ANTIQUE REFINISHING finishing, furniture repair of all types, hand caneing, hand carving, custom matching colors. All work guaranteed. Harold Richardson, 363-9361. Mon.-Sat. 1285 Union Lake Road, union Lake.___________________ LARGE IRON KETTLE; SMALL kettle; Iron teakettle; ISO yrs. old, loveseat and chair. Stone lug, some china. 332-4134.________________ USED TV ... _.. close-out Walton "' model appliances. Save BEDROOM SET $50, LIVING room set, 145, desk $10, dining room set $45, chest $12, dresser $15, dinette $22, refrIg. $29, stove $29. M. C. Lippard, 559 N. Perry._____^ BRONZE OR CHROME DINETTE sale. BRAND NEW. Large and small size (round, drop-leaf, rectangular) tables In 3-, 5- and 7-pc. $24.95 up. PEARSON'S FURNITURE COLOR vTV BARGAINS, LITJLE ‘"'5 Bargain House, FE 2-6842. ACRES, NEAR HADLEY, lisl-! prlnch c 30. Terms. i land, f 10 ACRES, near Ortonville, $8500. (neW) LAKE LOT on Little Cedar, $35() HOMESITES, Indlanwood Shares Ni 3. Select your homesite today. A. J. RHODES, REALTOR _______FE 8-2306___________ has good NORTHERN' Our Mackinac Bridge; I really help ^ou. We havi Oakhlll, West on lien, Nprth of 3460 4 igs or Sat, afternoon. 3 bedrooms all o ZT% AL PAULY 4516 DIXIE, REAR OR 3-3800__________EVES. 673-9 180' FEET M-59 FRrjNTAGfc - $1200 SHOULD MOVE YOU INTO his lust listed story and bungalow; upstairs part 200 ACRES' NEAR ORTONVILLE sets of buildings in fair condition, slightly rolling land. Springs for potentral lakes, will split into 80 and 120 acres parcels, reasonable down payment. Balance on land IN REAL ESTATE WITH 40 ASSOCIATED OFFICES DROP IN TO SEE THIS 160 ft. of CHOICE COMMERCIAL M-59 trqntage directly across from the airport terminal facilities. Excellent 30'x60' block building with qtass front and full walk-ln and drive-ln basement. One-ton elevator r good s ;AATH pi I. This building a RENT-FREE BAR This hot spot business grosses $95,000 a year and shov t>r«fif. Husband- and wife have other • — i" part with If. They will take $15,000 dn. -- ----- - , as part trade. Believe it or not, the apf. attached almost rent tor everything. Call today. «14-5D32-BR. BUY A BLOCK OF BOUNTIFUL INCOME BONANZA 2t units of rental property in excellent location. Shpws over $2500.00 per mo, gross rentsi with possibility of mote. Frontage on 3 main streets. All furniture In marvelous condition. Everything can be had With only $30,000 dn. and the balance on reasonable terms. DON'T MISS THIS ONCE IN A LIFETIME DEAL. PARTRIDGE ' "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" AIK FOR YOUR FREE BUSINESS GUIDE PARTRIDGE REALTORS IBM W. Huron $t. , 334-3581 (Open Week Nights 'til 9:00) location. North of Pike St. price only $13,500. If you eligible for a Veterans loan will move you in with stove refrigerator included in sale. No. 1-6 BRING YOUR FAMILY ALONG o see this nice 3 bedroom rancher In Pontiac. Gas built-in range and oven in the spacious kitchen, extra EAST SIDE SPECIAL separate dining room plus 2 bedrooms. Gas heat, all this ; low price of $7950. Zero dov. qualified Veteran. No. 6-2 NEW MODELS OPEN SAT. & SUN., 2-5 P.M. RANCHES - COLONIALS -TRI-LEVELS PRICED FROM $24,890 INCLUDING CHOICE LOT WESTRIDGE OF WATERFORD FOX BAY SILVER LAKE ESTATES CLARKSTON MEADOWS WIN WITH SHINN 83 N. Telegraph Rd. 34^___________after hrs. 62! TODAY'S BUYS: X 225' wooded lot with J blacktop streets, I vlleges, on Deer Lake. $6,9i er lot on knoll with view, id frontage. 265' deep. Gas on eet. Contains 3,2 acres. $6,95p. age lot 308' road frontage. 336' UNDERWOOD wooded. $9500 BUILDING SITES i a GOOD ti 'alsing material an u can beat this Ir rays by buying you . FIRST: your ini the home*you°b ''’'*n'6w crease in value as prices go up. LIST WITH O'NEIL REALTY For 3 Good Reasons We ....... j'uGlad'^ou Called RAY O'NEIL REALTY 3520 Pontiac Lake Road OR 4-.2222_____My_________J35-46 ^'schools and h°"''’ gas availablCr good *^perk, ha location ^with few neighbors *m1nzIes"rEAL ESTATE 625-5485 9230 Dixie Hwy. 625-5015 BLOOMFIELD HILLS is a Difficult Place to Find an Ideal Loke Lot Rood Frontage In Depth ALL THIS LOCATED ON MEADOW LAKE coIl'mWs'b NEW COMMERCIAL BUILDING CALL COLLECT NA 7-2815 Store—Apartment—Office Good Close-In suburban village location. Large 4300 squar-■ - Biq parking lot. Will 1 Million Choice of 15 styles, li complete, $49.50 and ui CARPET YOUR WALLS Or floors, kitchens, bathrooms, living rooms, etc. See our large selechon^ of commercial ^qualfty r home. Regent Co. 335-1700. nade available,CHEST TYPE DEEP freeze. 674- Juildlng 31 Business Opportunities 59 150-FT. TO HOUGHTON LAKE -Ideal family business, has owner's quarter plus 15 units completely furnished, plus separate 6 unit motel furnished. Call for more details. Price 135,000 — 'a down or trade? 4-H REAL ESTATE. 623-1400 OR 673-8372. $2880 Puts you In this profitable par K..I — business. Investment - should have back -Phone 576-2813, A J SPRING FED LAKES within 40 HOWELL Town & Country, Inc. TOP LOCATION BAR you ’'fas*h * fo'r°'’vof'***'equlty' ®For TED MCCULLOUGH JR. 674-2356 CHROME DINETTE SETS, assemble 3t69.95* valt^y*$29.95; %teo 6 Chair sets. New 1968 designs, tormica fops. Michigan Fluorescent, 393 . Orchard Lk. FE 4-8462. — 33. COLONIAL SOFA AND chair. Good condition. $100. 363-4256. CUSHIONS-CUSHIONS Custom made for Danish, Colonial and Contemporary chairs and sofas. Spring sale on close-out fabrics. Call M5-1700. Coml. Upholstery Co. f CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS. H. J. Van Welt. 4540 Dixit Hwy. OR 3-1355. NEED LAND CON.TRACTS. SMALL discounts. Earl Garrels. MA 4-540a EMpire 3-4086. DRYER $3S. DOORS $3 EACH. Apt. size refrigerator $35. Bunk beds. Misc., G. Herrts. FE 5-2766. Money to Loan 61 ! (Licensed Money Lender) ! loans' ! $25 TO $1,000 COMMUNITY LOAN CO. 30 E LAWRENCE FE 8-0421 ELECTRIC STOVE, $25; GAS stove, $35; Refrigerator with top G**H*arris, F=E ^2766. **‘ END TABLE SET, DESK, dinette, blond dining room set with china cabinet, living room set, bedroom sets. LIppard. FE 5-7932. LOANS TO $1,000 Usually on first visit. Quick, friendly, helpful. FE 2-9206 Is the number fo call OAKLAND LOAN CO. 202 Pontiac State Bans B 9-5 Mon.-Thurs —9-7 Fri. GAS RANGE, WkiRLPOOL, 35",-coppertone, $100.' 335-3902. HOUSEHOLD SPECIAL $28 A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OF FURNITURE - Consists of: S-plece living room outfit with 2-pc. cockfail table, 2 tab4 Vamps and (1) 9'x12' rug included.' 7-plece bedroom suite with double dresser, chest, full-size bed with Innerspring mattress and matching box spring and 2 vanity lamps. 5-piece dinette set with 4 chrome chairs and table. All for $399. Your credit is good at Wyman's.. WYMAN FURNITURE CO. LOANS $25 to $1,000 Insured Payment Plan BAXTER & LIVINGSTONE Finance Co. 401 Pontiac State Bank Building 1 FE 4-1538-9 STEREO CONSOLE, 1968 model only 3 mos. old, 30" long walnut contemporary styling. First $91.08 cash or $6.50 Wfonth takes. 335-9283 Household Appliance.________ WAREHOUSE Sale, open to public. Enitre Inventory of new Zenith, RCA end Motorola TVs, color TV and stereos must be sold. Every item discounted. Scratched sets priced accordingly. No reas. offer refused, terms. Sale: today and tomorrow, 10 to 9. Hilf Appliance Co., 2416 14 Mile Rd., Water Softeners USED CULLIGAN WATER softner. Fer Sole Miscelloneeus 67 I BEDROOM tri-lev A. Sanders, rep. GREEN ACRES Lapeer Rd. Lake Orlor MY 3-6262 Coldwa?er. Michigan. Dale A. Dean Farm Broker and Auctioneer. Write or call 517 278-2377 - days Headquarters — Dean Realty Co., or 517 288-6127 - nights._________ HOMESITES I e locations. The Sprin COMMERCIAL DRY CLEANERS, doing excellent business, complete package — business and property — $40,000, $10,000 down, b'- jusy Spring. McCullough realty REALTOR >0 Highland Rd. (M-59) M HOWARD T. KEATING 22060 W. 13 Mile, Birmingham Country Home On 5 Rolling Acres Large imposing home with 3 large bedrooms, each with 2 closets, home has 2 natural fireplaces and Is carpeted throughout. Kitchen paneled < KENSINGTON AREA ....... ..... _j|lt-lns, - _ and dishwasher. In addition dinino room and living rod(»i tt_ uli basement completelv ahd 2-car garage. Wal“-jstered including garas walls. $40,000. Terms. C PANGUS, INC., Realtor OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 30 AA-15 Ortonville CALL COLLECT NA 7-2815 income Property . STARTING SOON ____ ... a 30x36 ft. — fully healed, 40x210 ft. clear span indoor riding arena. 8 stall brood ----* barn Ideal for horses ar" >r can be zoned for con . Large lake frontage wli MOTEL—Excellent “- era! Motors B area, Roon. ._. us now for Ip- OTHER ACREAGES AND _AKE PROPERTIE SAVAILABLE C. Nalsey, Sales Agent, Davtsburi H3-625-3298 or J13-537 5730 Evening Calls Wticqma Home-* 8i , Acres Hera you can enloy the freed: only country living can provide, bedroom home .located approximately 12 miles nbrtheasf of Ortonville. Full basement and ? car garage. Home In akcellen rondItTon. $30,280, 10 per cent C. PANGUS, INC., Realtors OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK i30 M-15 Ortonville; CALL COLLECT NA 7-2815 1 WARDEN REALTY 34 W. Huron, Pontiac 33: Mortgage Leant Home Owners ilVATE MOI Stop F' ConsoTlda Pay Oft r-resem Land Contract Balanca WILLIAM WINT KE 1-6600 Swopi :PA DESIRES TO SELL practice. Oakland County $10,000 plus gorss. Exc. location, large down payment. Reply to Pontiac Press C-39, Pon- DRY CLEANING AND LAUNDRY business. Equipment and truck. In Pontiac. After 7 p.m. 674-2605. ENJOY DEALING WITH THE mechanics and auto repair shops in your home area, secure your future with a Cornwall Tools Franchise, Investment required. 682-4689._______________________ GROCERY STORE WITH SOD and SDM license and meats. In Pon-fl|c. Reply Pontiac Press Box C- MONEY TO loan - FAST 24 HOUR SERVICE =irst and Second --- 515 E. Walton, corner of Joslyn contemporary style. Sold new $379. Only 2 mos. old. Must col 231.54 cash or only $12 a me claims. 335-9283, Household between Wo^ward a 66A Plumbing & Heating FE 8-b643. a licensed h( 33 Early a.i PIECE DINETTE, studjo chair; coffee, er tables; antique mantle V LINOLEUM RUGS, $3.95 EA. He wall tile Ic ea. ng tile — wall paneling, cheap. Tile, FE 4-9957. 1075 W. Huron 50 GALLON ELECTRIC hot v Phyfe tablf condition, $,. Storage. 10 S. 1965 Opel, $695. ^11967 KENMORE BUILT-lf KIRBY SWEEPER \ . EXCELLENT CONDITION - $50 FULL GUARANTEE Kirby Service & Supply Co. !617 DIXIE HWY.______674 223 used, $125. LIKE NEW KENMORE washer and dryer, gas stove. 673-5195. l-•NC•-EUM Rug:.. MfJSI SlZfcS, S' Call ALL 1967 DiarA-Matic Brand new sewing machine left li Christmas Lay-a-way. Originalh sold for $129. Total balance due .only $32.30 or can be paid at $1.2: per wk. FE 4-3886. Monarch Sew Ing. _____ ;GIC CHEF GAS range, 30", good' condition. $60. 363-9676. TON ALUMINUM CHAIN Fall plus! cash for chain saw, cement mixer, gun or ? 887-5207. ______________j VW, NICE CONDITION....... Je for ckmper trailer, will settle ler way. 681-0422. 1967 JEEP COMMANDO Pick-up, $2,OOO^COm ^C^LECTkON a Press Box- ,No. 3 5. FE 2-6603. NECCHI DELUXE AUTOMATIC Zig zag sewing machine — cabinet model a— embroiders, blind hems, buttonholes, etc. 1966 model. Take over payments of: $5.90 PER 'MO. for 9 Mos. OR $53 CASH BAL. Guaranteed Universal Sewing Center . FE 4-0905 LIQUOR BEER GROCERIES Sole aolfiing I Oakland County bulk liquor license This community '- anq,Y bounds ' - party r business Mwn i^us needs an aggressive party store. Owning ,y—- — — — c! PANGUS, INC., Realtors OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK i30 M't5 Ortonvtllf CALL COLLECT NA 7-2015 Pontiac Resale Shop Buy-Sell ELECTRIC STARTER HOUGHTENS POWER CENTER 651-7010 Rochester ________Sales, 625-1501. 625-2537.___ ALL QUALITY ITEMS -- Lady's 4 piece white Samsonite luqgage, men's overseas 2 piece luggage, tux-size 40-42 short, small size mink stole, electric drill, new gold velvet chair, bamboo shades, mlsc. curtains and drapes, portrait Picture frames. Redwood picnic table, glider, outdoor chairs, oarden tools. Moving to apt. 623- n land contract. Antiques, furniture, g I a s s w . . .. I misc. 80 Lafayette, first street past CWkland on Wide Track, 335-W32. . TABLE, SW1V% SPRING 8K""Sirt»am®’- i^a' ^ni^ clean. Waarabta spring and sum-; mar clothing for the whole family.! You receive 70 percent of selling price. Consignments ,t#kan Tuas, and ThurS., 9:30 to 4. WEDDING DRESS AND VEIL, size 12, snow white, perfect condition, 682-4216 between i and 9. Norge — GE Washers ond Dryers I Rota Tenna, 626- BMEMENT SALE, FEBRUARY 22, 23, 24, 2546 N. Williams Lake Rd. BEIGE WOOL CARPETING and pad, 49 sq. yards, 5 years old, ew r.ll.n. r«»llt|on.^$#*« —----*- ■7762. BRACE YOURSELF aan rugs. I r,»$1. Hud: FOR a thru rt£trtc sham BRIDES - BUY y6uR wedding ■ anitouneem«;to.at dlsceunt from, 39767*' ®Drayton. OR F*rSito BLUE LUSTRE SHAMPOOERS BOUSi; Mi^rd haust. 12S baieboBi Thompsi AS PIRiD ilTd 0 BTU tjlSEi, 100' of A- (rorvrite Irontr and hoaRh chair 145. Gyr^alft, hut and massage large pillow ISO. Gem heavy duTy floor waxar and polisher, all at-fachmonts. $100. All new condition. ' —le Coctateal and new cage S25 ... - - .J UNDER, couch an* chair, $10, 140 W. Mansfield. COAL AND OIL HEATERS. Coal furnace. Taylor, 402 University Dr. ^ 1ENT RING n, 150. PE ■ DRAPES, FANCY LINENS, antique dishes, kitchen utensils, steam Iron, lamps, etc. 333 Glendale, Rochester. EURKA CANISTER FLOOR model, sells for $79.50, must clear for $55.30 One year guarantee. FLOOR AAodel Hoover shami $30. hoover Handy-vac floor r $14.79. HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE 335-9283 For The Finest In Top-Quplity Merchandise Shop At Montgomery Word Pontiac Mail H. I. TRACTOR, $400, Boat, motor. Call MOjdK 5UNN AMPLI^iER 100 S Revarb and vibratpr. 3. m Call Mr, Woody. 332-7054. STEINWAY PIANO "•SiSutibViriisJ?"- GALLAGHER'S 1710 S, Telegraph FE 4-054 IANO." „ USED PIANOS George Stock console plana, new, $550 Voss Baby Grand piano, $400. MORRIS MUSIC 34 S. Telegraph Rd. ---“-------- FE 2-0547 solos. Uprights from $49. GRINNELL'S Downtown Store _____:_____27 S. Saginaw___ WANTA CUT A record? Just McCoy Recording, I ' ust $19.95. ucTes 45 WURLITZER AND THOMAS ORGANS AND PIANOS INSTRUCTIONS AND INSTRUMENTS. JACK HAGAN MUSIC 332-050L 8192 Cooley Lake Rd._____34---- 10 gal., gas ------------ ------------ .89.50 value, $39.95 and $49.95 — Marred. Also electric and bottle heaters, these — terrific values In quality ESTEI HEIM KENNELS, 391-1889 LIKE NEW — 1 Craftsman I grinder, , h.p., $45. 1 reel .. _ fluorescent- light fixture, $14; ' rotary power mower, $10; I re Inter-com set, $25. FE 2-5847. OFFICE FURNITURE reflnlshed half the'*pI%e*of*nev?.'^Cal**Mi*l^ 2 NORWEGIAN PUPPIES; 4 months Coml. Upholstery Co.___________________| offer, 335-4451, 4 a.n“- OLD DISHES AND rummage sale. 185 Ann Marla, Rochester. Thurs., I., Sat. 451-9272. Office Equipment Sfwrtim Oeede 74 Snowmobiles \ THE PONTIAC PTJKSS. WEDNESl^AY. Ft^BRUARY 21. 1968 Nice, greeW, con__________ and broma hay, 50 cents a b»1e- YUKOK KING FINAL CLEARANCE 247 CC-10 h-p. $499 was smv warden cycles sales OR 3-2440 4775 Dixie Hwy„ Drayton Plains SNOWMOBILES: 20 H.P. Scurpfon, ' 24 h.p. ScM-plon (denia) and 20' h.p. Pblarls (ito—' - ' 4:laseout prices, .... Service, .1040 S. Lapeer Rd. (M-24) rAKE A demonstration ride the Scatmobtto, the new land a snow vehicle. A limited supply Evinrude Skeetem at close < ■'-“pde Rd. Left and folio AWSON'S SALE------ E. Phone M9-2li ■6ravel>Plrt iLL STONE, SAND ‘PRODUCTS. Road gravel — del. all areas. SAW Trucking, 394-0042, 428-2543. PONTIAC lake BUILDERS --------- Sand gravel tllF dirt. lOOD SAND GROWN potatoes. Rovce Long, 2050 Ford Rd. Milford. 807-4937. _________ B.v Dick Turner Wood-Cooi-Coke-FiMl FOR SALE FIREPLACE VWX dump truck load, $20. 493-4409 $2 for delivery, 391-1704. Pets-Hunting Dogs AKC RED FEAAALE Dachshund Boodles, Parri grooming. Uncle Charlies F Shop, 494 W. Huron, Va mile E. Telegraph, Pontiac. 332-8513. Open 5—'— ’ *- ' l-A DACHSHUND PUPS, AKC, 5433 Dixie, Waterford PRINTING EQUIPMENT II multllith offset press with plate making equipment $1495. Duvison offset printing press $995. Also various desks. Forbes 5433 Dixie Waterford 423-0200. PLUMBING BARGAINS. F_____________ standing toilet, $14.95; 30-gallon heater, $49.95; 3-plece bath sets, $59.95; laundry tray, trim, $19.95; shower stalls witn trim, $39.95; 2-bowl sink, $2.95; lavs., $2.95; tubs, $20 and up. Pipe cut and threaded. SAVE PLUMBING CO. 841 Baldwin. FE 4-1514.________ POOL TAbLE, USED, 4' x 8', slate PORTABLE SAUNA STEAM bath, will defno, FE 4-4588 or 338-9328. Rugs, tremendous savings. new Lee ' Gold Sculptured AcrII rugs; Used only 3 months. E cellent condition. 12* x 17', SI and 8' round, $75. Padding eluded. 442-9549.____________ BPRED-SATIN PAINTS. WARWICK Supply. 2478 Orchard Lake. STALL SHOWERS COMPLETE with faucets and curtains, $49.50 value, $34.50 lavatories complete with faucets, $14.95, toilets $18.9o' Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orchard e, FE 4-8442 — 37. TALBOTT LUMBER 14" Black and Decker drill, $9.99 Appliance rollers, $7.95 a pr. 4'x8'xV particle board, $3.75 ea 4'x8x4k" particle board, $4.95 ea. 1025 Oakland___________FE 4-4595 TUB ENCLOSURES, GLASS ONLY $25. G. A. 15 M59 I THE SALVATION ARMY USED DRYER, REFRIGERATOR, . ______ _____, typewriters, I machines, offset printing presses, mimeograph, drafting toards and tables. Forbe-Dixie, Drayton, OR 3-9747 7-2444. WALNUT LUMBER, LARGE amoun .............24-2723. WANTED 5 TO 7 room space heate 867-5044.___________________ WASkED WIPING RAGS, as low i 19c per lb. 25 lb. boxes to 300 I bales. Used Office Furniture - desk New and used steel, angles, channel beams, plate, pipe. Used metal garage doors. Ideal for signs, temp, sheds, etc. BOULEVARD SUPPLY 500 So. Blvd., E.______FE 3-7081 Hand Toots—Machinery 68 BULLDOZERS Loaders - baCkhoes - trailers - new and used. Body - Harrison Equip. Co. 151 S. Cass Lake Rd. across 'rom 3Q0 Bowl, Pontiac. 482-9400. , Exc, met 0. 391-0734. STEAM CLEANER, SNAP-ON fror. end alignment kit, undercoatlng machine with all attachments. 424- Cameros—Service LEICA M-3 MM, Sumalcron lens, 90 MM, Sumalcron Ians, ““ 3>5810. Store^uipment 2 AUTOMATIC SUPER STEAK patty molding machine, very good condition $300 ea. Assortment of patty plates to choose from, to suit a.m. and 3 p.m. Pauli Jewelry, 28 W. Huron. EQUIPMENT. ALSO 4 National Cash Registers, r Nick's Fine Foods, — Highland Rd., Highland. ADORABLE BLACK MINI-TOY Poodles AKC. $50 ■ ‘ ' Call 834-7425. AKC PEKINGESE, MALE AKC SPRINGER SPANIEL, 1'^ 5, Champion ms. 434-3923. RiEGISTERED luta pups, ihov —■ blood lines, al AKC TOY POODLE pups, Cham- ed to sell. 474-2511. Sportihg Goods 1 USED SKIDOO, 1947 Model, 14Vj ".p. Clean. Only $595. KING BROS. FE 4-1442 FE 4-0735 Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke Rd. AKC DOBERAAAN PUPS. _____________482-1204 I AKC ENGLISH BULL do ' ' reasonable. FE 5-9052. 3 1968 POLARIS' 14 horse $495. 18 horse $795. 20 $895. Perry's Lawn and Garden, 473-4234. 7415 - -- open dally 11 a.m. to 8 p.m reloading equipment, buy, trade. 720 W. HURON, Pfe 22 AUTO^TIC, 7 snot, C-4 scope. 500 GUNS. NEW, used, modern a antique. Including about 50 old model winchesters. Buy, se trade. Ken's Gun Shop in the t white barn.ri'A mi. N. of Otisvil , good enmgs. BIG CLEARANCE SALE RUPP SNO-SPORT Snowmobile 14 h.p., Ilsf $829, now $495 LABRADORS, AKC MALE and $0 DOWN, Easy pay terms MG SALES 4447 Dixie Hwy. Drayfon Plains . 473-4458 ’. Montcalm P< FE 3-7975 BRAMBLEWOOD COUNTRY CLUB miles north .....= HALL ROAD ‘ LAKE ROAD AT MICHIGAN. 2154 MINER RD. HOLLY 434 9209 HEAD SKIS, BOOTS a LAKELAND BAIT HOUSE— a I fishing tackle 50 per cent off - 4870 Highland Rd.___________ LADIES SKI BOOTS, size 4, $25. FE MODEL 11 TEXAN 12 Gauge -fer, all extras $130. AAoc. 12 le case reslier $20. 474-7145. MUST SELL FIVE MACHINES ONLY 15, 20 AND 24 H.P. Scorpion- SNOWMOBILES Demos, trailers, sleds, etc. f... priced tp move. We have another ----nf -—■— " —..- shipmenf coming. If you wai snowmobile, yoif'll buy. NO MONEY DOWN BANK TERMS STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. 3771 Highland (M59 ) 482-9440 SELL-A-BRATION Our open house was a big---- However we still have some of the Apache Falcon Camping "— AKC COLLIE PUPS, 4 V for Intelligence, beauty. children. 332-0410. AKC beautiful TINY BABY " ! puppies, also tiny white toy stud service, and p—■- AKC, GERMAN Shepherd pups, 4e^ ALL PET SHOP, 55 William! 4433. White mice, Gerblls. BEAUTIFUL MALE Chit > Terrier, also monkey. 425- We also have- t tractors and Impiemems: , Fords- 8 and 9 N Ferguson 20-30-35 Loader and Backhoes ; Trenchers T-D 9 with loader and 1 yd. bucket. Crawler with 10' blade All or sea Bob Hillman before oi bOy. 825 S. WOODWARD ‘'Pontiac Farm and Industrial' Tractor Co. FE 441441 FE 4-1442 Open Dally Including Sunday HOMELITE CHAIN SAWS, J O H NEW MASSEY-FERGUSON TRAC-TOR enaine. cornDtAto head GB-176, I fsIS's. $ r AND wheelhorse . - ...»LICITY tractors.- Extra fi______ ___________ now to March 1st. Wa service what we - sell. Harp's Sales * CALL after 5 p.m. 424-1284. Special Sale (ONE WEEK ONLY) USED CADET TRACTOR, 7 H.P. WITH MOWER AND SNOW BLADE, TIRE CHAINS, ELECTRIC START. ONLY 1 USED WHEELHORSE TRAC TOR, y/t H.P., with ELECTRIC START. ONLY $199 1945 HOLLY PARK, 12 out, carpeted, furnished. 852-1378. 1947 RICHARDSON 12 X s5'. King Bros. simplicity BroadrtKwr Tractor, ^ with some attachments. Harp'! Sales 8, Service, 1040 S. Lapeei Rrf fM.OX! .4X1,91 12Vj' YUKON DELTA. Plus e 391-3819,________________ AIRSTREAM LIGHTWEIGH travel TRAILER.^ Since 1932 r-------- ' - Camping Private Lake Safe beach, flush toilets and showers. 1140 MIS, Ortonville. McFeely Resort. 427-3820 weekends or 945-9958 weekdays 9 to 3. Empire Bldg., Datrolt, 48224._ CAMPERS FOR PICKUPS PHOENIX AND WINNEBAGO REESE AND DRAW-TITE HITCHES Sold and Installed. HOWLAND TRAILER SALES AND RENTALS Pontiac OR 3-1454 Dixie Hi__________________ APACHE CAMP TRAIL-1S All new 1948 models on display In CENTURY YELLOWSTONE Travel trailers Quality at any budget STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. cellent condition. »158/ aft. 2. if no FOR RENT: DRIVE end t PICKUP CAMPERS $375 UP GOODELL TRAILERS Wonted Cars-Truckf^_^101 STOP ' HERE LAST M&M •‘You charge $25 a visit? And you’re going to help ME stop feeling guilty?” B^i^Accessories 9i CLEARANCE 1967 MODELS BOATS AND MOTORS SAVE-SAVE-SAVE CRUISE OUT INC. 43 E. Walton Oalcy 9-4 FE 8-4402 Detroiter Mobile Home Now on display at BOB HUTCHINSON'S 43UI Dixie Hwy. (US-101 Drayton Plains OR 3-12 Open dally till 8 p.m. Sat, end Sun, tir'----- Best Mobile Home Sales Open Daily—9a.m.r8 p.m. larlette Champion oyal Embassy Regent tuirt Landola elta Victor MARLETTE EXPANDOS ON DISPLAY FREE DELIVERY AND SET UP. WITHIN 200 MILES. SPECIAL 12x50' Marietta ......... $4995 12x40' Victor ........... $5995 ON DISPLAY AT; * Iberry Lake Mobile Home Vlllar-9420 Highland Rd. _______ :i5-59) 2 miles West of Williams Lk. Rd. 343-5294_____________________3^5^ COUNTRYSIDE LIVING INC. ....... ■“ Academy—$425 1948 U n - $3,795. 1948 40' X 12' B, X 12' Elcer-$500 dn.-$3995 FE 4-1508 COLD WEATHER SPECIALS FOR EXAMPLE— 1968 12'x60^ Holly P«rk at $6800 1968 12'x50' at $3,795 Just In, 1968 12'x65' Mod Also the King, luxury for lass, featuring exterior storage. Large savings on everything in stock. Free delivery and set up within 300 miles. We will no knowingly MOTOR SALES t our new location . , zr SSiS: 1150 Oakland at Viaduct 3^-9261 s pay more for cars. Corvettes ne We would like to' buy lute model GM Cars or will oc-cept trade-downs. Stop by today. FISCHER BUICK' 544 S. WOODWARD _____647-5600_ Junk Curs-Trucks TOI-A 111 JUNK CARS, H." fret to-». 482-7080. son, OR 3-5849. JUNK CARS-WRECKS WANTED-hlghest price paid. FE 5-M20. TOP DOLLAR FOR funk PINTER'S STARCRAF T-THOMPSON-MFG JOHNSON boats 8< MOTORS 1370 Opdyke 9-4 FE 4-(»24 (1-75 at Oakland University Exit) PRE-SEASON SALE NOW ON KAR'S BOATS 8, MOTORS LAKE ORION 493-141 Open Dally 9-4, closed Sunday SEE THE EXCTtiNG NEW Glasspar G-3 ski boat. Also the 18' GlassPar Sunllnar. Perfect for Great Lakes waters. Many other Glasspars on display. Spe our new Ray Green Sailboat Hne, Steury, GW — Invader, Grumman, MIrrocraft, Kayot, Evinrude motors, Pamco trailers. Take M59 to W. Highland, right on Hickory Ridge Rd. to Demode Rd. Left and follow signs to DAWSON'S SALES AT TIPSICO LAKE. Phone 429-2179. 2-TON 1952 CHEVY WRECKER. 20- 1945 VW, RADIO ton holsl. $450. 428-9497.------------------- " 947 JEEP PICKUP; YELLOW finish, 4-cyllnder and 4-wheel drlve^ this one Is real sharp and SKI & DRAG BOATS 1947 18 ft. KIndsvater, 427 Ford, fully upholstered, a d | u s t a b I e CBvItatlon plate, trailer. 428-2488. sacrifice. $450. Only used for hunt-Ing. 934-5149 Detroit. 1959 CHEVY %-TON PICKUP, 17" fires, like new, engine |usl reworked, $125. Can se* «* Tienken Rd., Rochester. 1940 CHEVY PANEL, 4 cylinder still a few GOOD (Marine Division) 1940 GMC V-4, 4 SPEED half ton, 343-0081, Dealer. Holly ME 4-4771 THE SEASON IS COMING, SO MAKE THE MOVE NOW . . . HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS "Your Evinrudo Dealer" 1699 S. Telegraph______332»ro33 TONY'S MARINE SERVICE 1948 Johnson Mtra. on Display Discount on all 1947 Boats-Motors 2495 Orchard Lk. Rd. Sylvan Lake. MIDLAND TRAILER SALES Open 9 to 8 Sun. 1 . 2257 Dixie Hwy._________338-0772 FOR SALE OR ___________ Richardson, 3-bedroom. See GREAT LAKES II 3200 S. Rochester Rd. OAKLAND CAMPER YEAR END SALE JO ft. Karlbou 8 ft. Beeline __________________________________ 8 ft. Tour.a-Home ........... POODLE CUPPING AND SHAM- Still a good selection of cove ------- .----------------- , .™, --------. -ir savings. Oxford Trailer Sales MAftLETTES - 50 to 63 ionu wide, 20 wide. Early American. Conventional and modern deco, Expando or tlp-oufs. Priced right. Built right. Phone MY 2-0721,' mi. S. of Lake Orion on M24. PEERLESS MOBILE HOMES, 13318 Dixie Hwy. Va mi. N. Mt. Holly $1,265 $770 PROTECT YOUR HOME and family. Own a quality Doberman pup. $100 and up 1-474-2592. REGISTERED SILVER sleepers at similar__... 335-0434 Baldwin at Colgate PIONEER CAMPER SALES BARTH trailers 8, CAMPERS TRAVEL QUEEN CAMPERS MERIT FIBERGLASS COVERS (8"-27"-35" covers) ALSO OVERLAND 8. COLEMAN 3091 W. Huron FE 2-398 REGISTERED BOXER, ALL shots, excellent wlth^ children. Must sacrifice. 493-3493. SALE Inventory Reduction SCHNAUZER MINIATURE puw- 14' Frolic ............................. ll^WS AKC, ears cropped, all shots, stud fy Frolic ................. $2,395 service available. FE 2-1590. |}|- Travelmasfer ............. 83J95 SCOTTISH TERRIER PUPS, 4 24' Boles-Aero IS475 weeks, AKC Reg. Champion All ore salf-contalned bloodline. Almost housebroken. Exc.' femperament. S100 or will TRUCK CAMPERS trade tor anyth ng Of equal value. ,8' Skamper (fold-down) ...$1,195 Call Holly 434-4489. lOVii' Frolic, S.C..........$1,795 ----------------------------:---r '•< TttilP.A.MAmA ft ftASHICA 24 TWIN LENS reflex, $45, 2'A X 2'A Openus in larger, $50, like new, ^ 3-1287. A BARGAIN PIANO SALE 18 Used Grands — $195 to $494 14 Used Spinets — $295 to $450 27 New Consoles — $475 to $450 45 Uprights — $85 to 8195 12 Rebuilt Players 110 to Browse SCANLAN PIANO 2280 Finkel Detroit, Sun. 1-5, days 9-8 120 BASS Nobility ai 5. 682-8023 before 4:30. COMBO ORGAN PORTO organ, rn'Ymp?« I. $800. 482-0043 tihtr 4. like new, martin e flat alto saxophone with access. ‘ Washingtony V Mich. ST 1-3536. LOWRCY ORGANS PRICED from'$450 HAMMOf?g^“*^*^llL*lkANSON THOAAAS BALDWIN ESTEY FROM $299 EVAN'S EQUIPMENT 4507 Dixie Hwy. 625-1711 Mon.-Thurs. 9-4 FrI. 9-9 Sat. 9-5 Closed Sun. SCUBA DIVERS 0 2 CFM compressor, 2 h.p. -■c drive, full warrant/ Will e a Cascade system for dive club or at home. $450. 334- SKI-DOO'S CLEARANCE SALE ON A L SKI-DOO CLOTHING AND A CESSORIES. 20 PERCENT OFF. KING BROS. SKI-DOOS-SKI-DOOS One. of Michigan's Largest Dealers all models In stock, see and buy the mighty Super Alpine llVk HP. Electric, with twin IS" , track! full line of snowmochina accesaoi '**’ toAKLANO COUNTY'S , ' MERf-CRUSIER DEALER Cliff Oreyer's Gun and Sports Center 1S21C Holly Rd- Helfy ME *4771 SKI-DOO SKI-DADDLER Snowmobile Saturday, February 24, - 10 a.r 2153 Braden, Southeast of Perry Details here on Thursday Perkins Sale Service-Auctioneers Swarfi Creek TYLER'S AUCTION - Trade, consignments y Friday 7:30 .......j 4 P.m., 7“' ,____ ____d (M-59). 4m534. Across from M-99 Plaxa 5-YEAR-OLD WELSH GELDING. Good rider for children. $100. 5444 Ormond Rd., DavIsburg._______ Quarter horse. $250. 6 _____ ARABIAN STALLION, now being profess! " Ing 5, 731-0202. FRESH COW FOR SALE. 4^48555 HORSES ------------------ „ ------ $50, clean stalls — exc. feed, 2, pastures, $ exercise paddocks, Vk — track, call any tuna, 343-5847. SEE THESE VALUES TODAYI e to 4, Closed Sundays 4140 Foley, Waterford, 423-0450 TRAVEL TRAILERS You dealer for -CORSAIR, GEM MACKINAW AND TALLY-HO ALSO and Gam pickup campors Auto Accesioriof OPEN 9 TO 9 NEW ROCKET MAG ! TROTWOOD AT JOHNSON'S 517 E. Walton Blvd. no________________FE 4-5053 Special Sale r AND 36" PICKUP COVERS while they last/ only 6 in stock. Ellsworth trailer Sales 4577 Dixie Hwy. WOLVERINE TRUljK CAMPERS and slaapers. New and usad, $39$ up. Also rantals. Jacks, intercoms, temcopmg, bumpa,-s, ladder.r . Hpapitai I ^36$IV5para WE CARRY THE FAMOUS FRANKLINS-CREES FANS-MONITOR THUNOERBIRD RITZ CRAFT TRAVELTRAILERS ___________________ Holly Travel Cooch Inc. •**"* - ’ Open Dally and Sundays- HORSES BIMRDING at______________ Large Indoor and outdoor riding I arena. Observation room. and rest rooms: Clean stalls and\exceMent feeding. 44444 Mound Road. Romeo. PL 2-340S. REGISTERED PINTO STUD, Standing tiil March 20. 1 E GIST E R E D BLUE ROAN Stallion, 425-3157. ' WESTERN SADDLE. ETtt. 66N6. Comfortable. »5.00 $73;2I42 *fier « T-A Beautibs to Choose From RICHARDSON OElYa MONARCH i DUKE HOMETTE LIBERTY COLONIAL MOBILE HOMES WE CURE AND SMOKE MEATS. Call FE 2-4155.________________ DIXIE rx3$' trailer, carpelad, air i___ Parkhurst Trailer . Orion or call 426-3443. exccotlonaiiy n SSf * Park, **L air-conditioned exc, < bedrooms. 332-7W carpeted, idition, 2 PLAYER PIANO IF YOU a Ing to spend $950, call and leTl you about ihis orie, 338-fl ^NO-JET SNOWMOBILES 15-I7lk-20-30 h.p. TOM'S HARDWARE - EXTRA GOOD HORSE AND COW, 12x40 NEW ' MOON, AWNING I •carpeted, insulated drapes 334-7202 MO(W 3-BEOROOM, lUM'd rfAKUfVMncc >nr.iAtru ali-ali- 15 Orctivd Lk. PE 5-8424 Op«n Sun.! o«ts. 625-1544. Auto Service - Repair 93 Factory Rebuilt Motors For Cars, trucks. 189 up. High performance engines. C o r v e I r specialists. MODERN ENGINES EZ TERMS 537-1117 Motorcycies 95 WINTER SPECIALS 10' alum. Prams, $59 12' alum, fishing boats, $139 14' alum, fishing boats, $149 -— —noes, $169 noes, $179 w 1947 Johnsoi with c rrylng '.A.A. APPROVED SCHOOL - LET our instruefo'-s teach you to fly. ADI Inc., Pontiac Alrnorf. OR A Want^ Cars-Trucks iOl "extra EXTRA Dollars Paid FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Car ... — . I 0 R S E P 0 W E R VW engine, $100; 1965, 40 Horsepower VW engine, $200: 1944, 53 Horsepower VW engine, $250. VW gas heater, less then 1 year old, $70. MY 3-1452. CYLINDER DIESEL hrs. operation, like new. flywheel. $485. 771-7739. USED ENGINES, TRANSMISSION, New and Used Trucks 103 1947 FORD 1 TON FLAT _ duty extras, low ml., $2,000. 2147, Novi. ' JACK LONG FORD heavy ). 349- New and Used Curs 106T -.. FJNANCE plan. IF PROBLEMS, BANKRUPT, OR garnisheed WAGES, WE CAN GET YOUR CREDIT RE- „ ___ ____________ ESTABLISHED AGAIN. WE WRECKER AND JEEP FOR $ale. HAVE OVER 80 CARS THAT K^d ^orchard LftkeRd-c^^. gg PURCHASED WITH NO DOWN PAYMENT. COME IN AND SEE C R E D 1T MGR. MR. IRV. LUCKY AUTO WINTER SPECIALS BIG STOCK OF 1968 , FORD TRUCKS Pickups Standards Customs Rangers Camper Specials V8 and 4 cyls. $1995 And up BIG ALLOWANCES ON TRADE INS Be sure to ger our Special Before any further price Increase John McAuliffe Ford 277 West Montcalm BUICK, 1943. like new, $995. Absolutely no money down. HAROLD Auto Insurance-Marine 104 AUTO INSURANCE Terms Available CALL TODAY! _ ANDERSON & ASSOC. ■■ 1044 JOSLYN AVE. 1944 BUICK ELECTRA convertible, full power, almost like new car, 35,000 actual miles, full- price $1595. VAN CAMP CHEVROLET, INC., Milford 484-1025. ^reign Cars 105 1952 MG TO, RESTORED condition, $1,500. Delrolt, 531-4459, 1964 BUICK RIVERIA, ALL power, excellent condition and Interior with wood trim, $1,700, 474-2454. 1954 VW GOOD for parts or dune Ing. body Sales. OR parts, etc. H 8. u VW BUS, GOOD engine, body H Auto fair, bad transmission, $150. 474- 1945 BUICK LeSABRE, double ------ exc. condition, $1,395. 731- 731-7812. New and Used Trucks 103: i»*4 vw-cherry condition. $700. o'1964 VW 1500, BLUE, re ■ walls- $M0, 852-1954. 1962 CHEVROLET Wrecker, complete, heavy duty, speed, dual wheals, extra nice. Mike Savoie condition, under 15,000 ml., must "II, best offer, 334-3234. 1965 BUICK Wildcat convertible, power steer* ing, power brakes, factory air-corv ditionlng. $1695 WILSON-CRISSMAN Cadillac 1945 VW, 13,900 MILES, 81125, Day 444-8157, after 5 482-3141. 1965 VW Bus I seats, 4-speed transmisslo radio, heater, only - $1395 1967 MG MIDGET Sportster Convertible, 4 speed trensmls;'"-rsdio, little green beauty, $1449. KEEGO PONTIAC KEEGO HARBOR _____________M2-3400 DUNE BUGGY BODIES frames shortened , All accessories end parts. MG SALES & SERVICE 4447 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plaint 1491 1963 UNIVERSAL JEEP, FULL cab and plow. 474-0751.__________ TOM RADEMACHER' CHEVY-OLDS 1944 CHEVY % Ion pickup, 8 ... fleetside, box with V8, stick, heavy duty shocks, springs and fires, 81195. On US 10 at MIS, Clarkston, MA 5-5071. 1964 CHEVY Step-Van with 9 ft. body, 6 cyi. engine, i real good, Only — Dniy - $595 cellent, I tn TOM RADEMACHE'R CHEVY-OLDS 1945 CHEVY '/i ton with 8 ft. fleetside box, 4 cyl. stick, radio, fresh air heater, one owner, new truck trade, $1295. On US 10 at MIS, Clarkston, MA 5-5071._ "Michigan's Fastest Growing VW Dealer Offers A FINE SELECTION OF 100 PER CENT WARRANTED USED CARS . . BillGolling VWInc. 1821 Maplelown Blvd. Off Maple Rd. (15 Mile Rd.) ACROSS FROM BERZ AIRPORT ^ Just South of Pontiac Troy_________Ml 2-6900 LUCKYAUTO FE 4 1940 W. Wide Track in get the best" at "Check the rest. Averill BIG SALE All MINI BIKES and MOTORCYCLES. New and use AT DISCOUNT PRICES. MG SALES & SERVICE 147 Dixie Hwy, Drayton Plains 473-4450________________ BMW-R69S Sheraton-Cadlllac Hotel, Feb. 21-23. 841-2918.________________________ HONDA 140 scrambler, mutt sell. * offer over $300. Call 474-1329 $40 HONDA, EXCELLENT con-"'"-n, 1944, ' $215, new safety HELP! d 300 sharp Cadillacs, F )lds and Buickt fr~ ' ‘ arket. Top dollar p MANSFIELD AUTO SALES 1104 Baldwin Ave. "TOP DOLLAR PAID'' GLENN'S USED JEEP BARGAINS New Jeep Trades 1945 JEEP Wagoneer, I. Economy Cart. 233$ Dixie. 1942 SUZUKI CYCLES, 50CC-250CC. RUPP MmiMlm as tow as $139.95. Take M59 to W. Highland. Right on Hickory Ridge Rd. to Denxide Rd. ■ ^ foitow signs to DAW-■ --------LAKE. — and follow sigiu to I SON'S SALES AT TIPSICO L; Phon« MAIny-ZI TV-TRIUMPH ^HOW BIKE - FE 2-9077 after 3 p.m. WINTER PRICES A taw '47$ left at C7-48S1. UvcnIa. DRAG BOATS 18 ft, Honda, 424 hemi, adlustable cavitation plate, custom trailer, 18 ft. Hondo hulls, new. 482-2411. TOP $ PAID (Downtown Store Only) for oil sharp Pontiocs AND CADILLACS. We are prepared to make you a better offer! Ask for Bob Burns. WILSON CRISSMAN CADILLAC Wanted Sharp Cars! We Pay Top Dollar! Ir..mediate Cash! All (Makes and Models WE WILL -TRADE DOWN SPARTAN DODGE 1965 CHEVY Van fully equipted, A-1 condition Only— $995 BILL FOX CHEVROLET Rochester__________ OL 1-7001 1965 CHEVROLET Van, sharp. $1095 Mike Savoie Chevrolet 00 W. Maple mi 2 mites East of 1965 JEEP Wagoneer Automatic, radio, healer, like ni Only — $1095 BILL FOX CHEVROLET Rochester OL 1-7 1944 JEEP PICKUP, J-200. 4-wheel ' ’ «• blade. 428-20'’' ;VY 44 TON, 8, $1450. 451-51 TOM RAOEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1947 CHEVY W ton 8 ft. fleetside, box, with radio, fresh air ' cyl., stick. In new trucks __ $189$. On US 10 at M15, Clarkston, transmission, td only $1 I drive. s a new top, the JEEP throughout, first $988 tL._ JEEP UNIVERSAL. Ha$ ________ _____ blade, new paint job, and a rebuilt engine, only $888. 1944 JEEP Unlver$al, this one Is sharp, 4 wheel drive, full price only $488. GRIMALDI JEEP FE 5 9421 TRUCKS ARE OUR Business 1967 GMC V5-ton 8' wldeslde pickup, V-4 engine. 1964 Chevrolet <^-lon V Fen Pickup, V-4 engine. 1945 CMC >/(>-ton 8' Wldeslde Pickup, vi-ton 8' Wldeslde Pickup, . - engine. 1944 GMC 'Mon 8' Wldeslde Pickup, 2-tone blue end white, V* engine, custom trim. GMC Factory Brunch Ookland gt Coss> FE 5-9485 NOW ON DISPLAY TOYOTA ALL MODELS ON DISPLAY MANY COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM HASKINS 1940 W. Wide Track WOULD YOU BELIEVE? NO GIMMICKS—NO GIVEAWAYS JUST RIGHT CARS AT RIGHT PRICES MANY MANY TO CHOOSE 1964 Ford Cpe ............ $499 1960 Cadillac 4 dr., air . $499 1962 Pontiac Safari wgn $499 1959 Chevy Cpe ..... $ 79 OPDYKE MOTORS 2230 Pontiac Rd. at Opdyka 1963 BUICK Convertible, automatic, p o w e steering, clean car. $795 Mike Savoie Chevrolet DO W. Maple Ml i.97i 2 miles East of 1965 BUICK Electra 1965 BUICK Skylark 2-door hardtop, V-8, automatic, double power, $harp. $1495 Mike Savoie Chevrolet too W. Maple Ml 4-2735 2 milei East of Woodward 1966 BUICR LeSabre 4-Door Hardtop, power steering, power brakes. $ave Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Sales 1950 W. Maple____ Ml 4-2200 1964 Buick Electra 225 4-door hardtop, with matching Interior, t u equipped. An unusually clean i $1495 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth 40 S. Woodward ’ $695 Bob Borst JEROME 1967 CADILLAC Convertible, choice of 3 all with ‘ " power and air-conditioning, $4795 WILSON-CRISSMAN Ingham. STAR AUTO We Arrange Financing 1961 VW $597 Your payments ere $9.20 par week . NO MONEY DOWN FE 8-9661 , 942 Oakland__________942 0 TRIUMPH, 1945 Convertible. $695. Absolutely no money down. HAROLD TURNER FORD, 444.7500. 444 S. Woodward, Birmingham, YOUR VW CENTER 70 To Choose From -All Models-—All Colors--All Reconditioned- Autobahn Motors Inc. Auttiorbmi VW Dealer W mile North of Miracle Mile 1745 s. Telegraph pe e-i-TI New OBd Used Cars T06 Neeid a Car? New in the areo? Repossessed?—Garnisheed? Been Bonkrupt?-Divorced? Got a'Problem? Call Mr. White Attention! BUICK BUYERS $39 or old car down ...... of condition. Wa will tow It 200 A-1 used cars to choose ft— HAROLD TURNER FOgD, 444-7500. 444 S. Woodward. Blrmlitatiam. OVER 25 DOUBLE CHECKED USED CARS NOW IN STOCK VANDEPUTTE BUICK-OPEL 194-210 Orchard Lake Rd. pe DeVllle, alr-c mr, loaded,'’ whi :k end while liil..... . $2995 WILSON-CRISSMAN 1966 CADILLAC ---- DeVllle, gold, black vinyl root, full power, air-condItionIng. $3795 WILSON-CRISSMAN 1350 N. Weedwaff‘***° Ml 4-1930 AL HANOUTE Chevrolet Buick On M24 in Lake Orion MY 2-2411 NOW Is the TIME to Save On A New Model MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES 631 Oakland Av«. FE 4-4547 ATTENTION CHEVROLET BUYERS. $39 or old car down regardlass of condition. We will tow “ In. 200 A-I used cars to choose -om. HAROLD TURNER FORD, 444-7500. 444 S. Woodward, Blrm- 1940 CHEVY, RUNS good, $100. Seva '' “6 5-327I. TEXAS CAR I960 Chevy Belaire 4-door. I auto, radio, heater, new snow tim. No rust. Shwp Inside and out. Priced to sett. 451-9243 after S, 1962 MONZA COUPE. •Uttanatle, 1943 CHEVY IMPALA 4 door sports " n, full power, factory elr, 32Z —he, bid tor deal. 391-3475. <943 CHEVY IMPALA. 2 - 6 0 6 $L hardtop. ^ Siwer Sport. Can m purchased with no monov down. LUCKY AUTO CHEVROLET, 1943, SS, sharp. $995. Abrolutoly no money down. HAROLD TURNER FORD, 444-7500, 444 $. Woodward, Bli^i Ingham. F—10 TUB PONTJAC l^llESS, WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 21, 1968 NMVMrflMCWf Ntw md Ut*d Cart 1963 CHEVY II CHEVROLET )M4. WAGON, $a9S.| I5S1?SJS^nt5%heT7orS,"*m"J — ---------------------- $895 , Mike Savoie Chtvroiet 1963 CHEVROLET Carry-All $745 Mike Savoie ' Chevrolet e ^ mACHER 106;New bimI Used Cart 106 |MARM ADl KlE KESSLER^S By Anderson and Leemini; TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS M CHEVY B*l-Alr W^n, wl DODGE CARS AND TRUCKS ”* ‘*'"'’”oA S-1400' ovnwr. Low mtloW, trade, tll9S. On US TO ClaTlaWn, MA 5-S071. COOLER'S / 1^ Extra Clean Used Cars brakes, factori rKiiTKmnOe v-pessenger. $ave Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Sales PODGE CORONET .... rust, excellent condition, $12K). 4657 aft^r 5 weekdays, all day 1964 Corvoir }-door. standard transmission, cellent mechanically. $475 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth too 5. Woodward **' 51- CHEVROLET. \ $895. Absolutely r_ . .. HAROLD TURNER FORD. . AUTOMATIC. $500. 1966 Dodge Monaco Jtoj*. V-8, automatic $S95 i, CHEVROLET, , fully equipped. - BEATTIE FORD "Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" ON DIXIE HWY., IN WATERFORD 623-0900 1964 MONZA Moor, red with black 1965 MONZA Mike Savoie $995 Mike Savoie Chevrolet %-l959 PLYMOUTH convertibles, US '60 Chevy station wagon, UT ECONOMY CARS 2335 Dlalo Hwy. FE 6-213 1961 PLYjWOUTH VALIANT. $125. “How did he ever GET in there??’ NtwjindJIt^ c2ds, 1966 Convortlbla, l Prico $1795. Mr. Parks. HAROLD TURNER FORD, 644-7500, PLYMOUTH ’ BOYEIIS Plenty others ai FE $-9956, bat. 3 p. 965 PLYMOUTH SATTELITE i troque flight transmission, po^ steering, reverb, mag wheels, vi PLYMOUTH, 1965, FURY t Ntw and Used Cart ter lor staorl ?uT' 2067-B $1395 AUDETTE New and Uttd Can 106 j TEmVeST. $1,500, A-1: CON- dition: 62M253. New and Uttd Cart 106 . rambler m ----*»««>apor»tation. 682 5770. PONTIAC CATAUNA, 9 - p, double power, slan nisalon, 19,000 Ml., yr''«» "rm, U4-27M balote ■■ "' 1966 GTO V-«, automatic, power steering. $2095 Suburban Olds l-5ltl ’ BONNEVILLE Brougham, jwer, vinyl top, r" ditlonina, 11,000 mllos, __ .•EMPEST, LOMANS hardtop, I9« BONNEVILLE^J_-dooj_ha;dt^^^^^ 4 S. Woodward,, Blrmlng-I 67 PONTIAC CATALINA hardiop. tone, power steering and brake 12,000 ml. Pvt. $2,350. 642-9809. dinning, $1495. moo PONTIAC sEEGO HARBOR__ RUSS TURNER FORD, 664-7500. 1965 Plymouth Belvedere II, 2-door hardtop,' 393 engine, standard transmission. $1295 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth -iJOHNSON choose'^’from. HAROLD 860 S. Woodward iTURNEff FOROT”644-'75b0. 464 ‘s. New and Used Cars 106|New and Used Cars 106 Woodward, Birmingham.____________| .....- - ^ - . ■ FORD. 1966 SQUIRE Wagor a,'1965 CHEVY 3 > FORD 1 OWNER. $1145 Mike Savoie Chevrolet 1900 W. Maple East of Woodward 1965 CHEVROLET impale Convert.We.^sharp car. Mike Savoie Chevrolet Auto. Rower s accidents. $325. 6 :1960 FORD I960 FORD Pretty Ponies 1965 and 1966 MUSTANGS Mansfield Auto Sales 1104 BALDWIN AVE. FE 5-5900 FE 8-8825 THUROERBIRD, 1960 hardtop, $495 I Absolutely no money down i HAROLD TURNER FORD, 664 -2735 , 7500. 464 S. Woodward, Birming SEVERAL USED MUSTANGS • I CHOOSE FROM ■r — FE 2-9077 after ________________OR 3-B323, alter 3 TOM RADEMACHER FORD, 1960 C automatic t por'd, 644*75C Birmingham. V E R T I B L E HAROLD TURNER FALCON, Harcitops 1967 CADILLAC Sedan DaVlIle, full power, air, vinyl top. 1967 BUICK Custom LeSabre, double powe vinyl top. 1967 BONNEVILLE ... automatic, fur- TURNER FORD, 644-7500. e witn matching interior. Woodward, Birmingham. $995 11962 T-BIRD. HARDTOP. All BIRMINGHAM j Motor tune'up. No!" rust. 1 Chrysler-Plymouth ' 860 S. Woodward ’ CONVERTIBLES HARDTOPS FULL EQUIPMENT Priced From $1295 As Low As $39 Down And 39 Per Month HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE BIRMINGHAM -■ 626-0523. 1967 FORD i Calaxle 500, full^wer, air, vinyl 1967 FIRCBIRD Automatic, double power. 1967 CATALINA Coupe, auto., vinyl top, double 1967 B®EVILLE | T966 CHEVROLET i **i9gins, dw caprice ' sTatio; wagon . 327 V-8, powergllde. ^wer steering, power pQ„^ ''444.7500, brakes, air-coitehtoning. woodward, Birmingham. WILSON-CRISSMAN Cadillac 1966 FORD 500 2-door hardtop, V-8 e, autorrtetlc transmission, -, A 1 owher new car trade, GRIMALDI CAR CO. 0 N. Woodward 1966 IMPALA 2-door hardtop, sharp. $1795 ADKINS AUTO SALES 738 OAKLAND AVE. FE 2-6£ 1962 Ford, 6 stick ...... $4; 1930 1961 Chevy 6 auto.... ...... $3! 1961 Chevy 6 slick.........$3( 1962 Rambler 6 auto ..... $3( 1959 Catalina Wagon . $i: 1967 BONNEVILLE^^^ 19^'LeMANS Mike Savoie Chevrolet uu u.,|e Ml 4-273I t East ot Woodwaro_ 1966 CHEVROLET $1100. OR 3-17U9. 2 DOOR like l’i 1967 CATALINA Coupe, auto., double power. 1966 BONNEVILLE irougham, autow 196riMPkA Auto., double power, 8XK» ml.. 1966 IMPALA. HAS everything I eluding air and 427 engine $1825. Exc. ewdition. 673-323^ 1963 Ford Galaxie 500 4-door sedan, 352 V-8, autor power steering, $895 1966T-Bird 2-Door Hardtop with power windows, power steer ing, brakes, automatic, whitewalls “'■$2695' BEATTIE FORD 965 MERCURY 2 DOOR I with ve, automatic, powei Ing, brakes, one owner, onl miles. $175 down. Finance Of Only $1375. RAY KESSLER'S OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 4 Oakland Ave. FE 5-9. $ave Bob Borst console^ automatlce i ^edr $195 Down, Fin >f Only $2500. RAY KESSLER'S OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH PONTIAC-RAMBLER >n M-24 In Lake Orion MY 3-6266 "1965 TEMPEST 2-door, gold with matching Interior, ' - -utomajlc,^ ^ p $1395 AUDETTE $2695 AUDETTE ranty, $2495. On US 10 a Clarkston, MAS-5701. ,„, TEMPEST CUSTOM h, 8, automatic,^ radio, Jieat beautiful Candy' Apple Red \ 724 Oakland Ave ATTENTION PONTIAC BUYERS. $39 or old car down regardless of condition. We will tow It In. 200 A-1 used cars to choose from. HAROLD TURNER FORD, 644-7500. ■ - woodward, Birmingham. TEMPEST, 1 $39 or any FE 5-9436 Price $1795. 1966 GRAND PRIX w PONTIAC. CALL AFTER FE 2-4138.________________ 1962 PONTIAC STAfiCHIEF, double Lincoln-Mercury Sales 1965 MERCURY 2 DOOR hardtop. brakes and windows, condition. Must sf- *-. 363-6832. eves. Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" i N DIXIE HWY., IN WATERFORD . 623-0900 wer brakes, bucket seats, runs good. Village Rambler 666 S. Woodward Birmingham 646-3900 / tires, brakes, battery 1962 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE. SHARP. Make otter. 338-3177. 163 TEMPEST 2 DOOR, 4 cylinder automatic, power steering, ------ good condition. $695. RO AUTO, 1963 PONTIAC CATALINA. Wagon, power, nice, car down. Full I,, Parks. HAROLD,*® TURNER FORD, 644-7500. ___________ , OR 3-2815. ___ PONTIAC 2-DOOR Brougham,! vinyl top, FM radio, double power, I GOLD BONNEVILLE vertible. low mileage, Exc. -‘•'--i, FE S-4443. 1967 PONTIAC I vinyl Interior, fact'ory a $2995 WILSON-CRISSMAN CADILLAC N. Woodward ____Ml * ER RED -/-UUUK, TUII — MARVEL MOTORS. >964 RAMBLER CLASSIC 778 4 se d a n, 232 6-cyllnder eni aOtomatlc transinisslon, p 1965, WAGOte, $995. RAMBLER, TURNEF^FORD,- 644. 7500t 464 S. Woodward, Blrm- __ingha»t>. 1966 RAMBLER iic sedan, automatic, •r, whitewalls, power ste $1145 Village Rambler 666 S. Woodward Birmingham 646-3900 Station Wagons SAVE NOW-FINE SELECTION i7 Ambassador, power sleerlng, power brakes, automatic, radio, rantT • • ... .... * *^295 1965 CLASSIC, 8-cyllnder, automatic, steering, power brakes, „ tires, assenger, auto., double po chroma rack. Secians 1967 CATALINA Auto., double power, factory air, red. 1967 PLYMOUTH Valiant, 6 stick, 1 owner. 1966 OLDS Automatic, double power. 1965 CHEVY 1965 CADILLAC Full power, tilt wheel. 1965 TEMPEST aMant, auto., double pow 1964 CHRYSLER Convertibles 1965 BONNEVILLE Automatic, double power. 1965 CATALINA ■ Automatic, double power. 1964 CATALINA Automatic, double power. Trucks 1966 CHEVY HaH-ion, 8 cylinder, stand* transmission. . 1966 CHEVY EtCpmlno, one ownar. TAYLOR-IZEP CARS 1967 Chevy Impale 4-do< V - « y powerglid steeringy r • d 1 < Absolutely no money 1 Bir- 1964 OLDSMOBILE 4-door hardtop, this one Is a new car trade, full power and really reasonable. GRIMALDI CAR CO. 0 Oakland Ave.______FE 5-9421 1964 OLDS F-85 COUPE. 1964 BONNEVILLE y7 top*,'^''biack *vlnyl seats, ikTs!*'tinted glass, 30,acjual AUDETTE $2295 WILSON-CRISSMAN CADILLAC SPECIAL 1959 Rambler—Needs motor 1958 Ford, stick 1961 RAMBLER tatlon wagon, V-8, autor ower steering and brakes, i fhitewall tires, air conditic 1966 PONTIAC 2 door. Clean, $1495 . Mike Savoie Chevrolet ?00 W. Maple Ml 4-2731) 2 miles East of Woodwaid COOPER'S Extra Clean Used Cars 1967 RAMBLER (hitewall tires. $2395 Village • Rambler 666 S. Woodward Birmingham 646-3900 1966 LEMANS silver blue with matching seats, v-8, automatic, steering, radio, heater, ......all tires, 20,000 miles, 25 month warranty. 2U1-B. $1995 AUDETTE PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 65 UNIVERSITY FE 3-7951 2-1966 Tempests throughoui. axxrj. TAYLOR FORD, 1964 Country . Price $1795. Mr. Parks. HAROLD TURNER FORD, 644-7500 1965 MUSTANG HARDTOP. 3 COUNTRY SQUIRE, r station wagon, V c transmission, r a d i < chrome luggage rack wi Motor Company. Only $2688 price, $188 down, $79.86 John McAuliffe Ford 1630 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4'°' 1967 CHEVROLET Caprice 9-passenger station wagoi power steering, power brake automatic, 327 engine- factory e ecutive car, showroom new. Mike Savoie Chevrolet onfy*^'^dwn, $44.23*per m available. John McAuliffe Ford mall. • 930 uaxiano mvb. Best I mustang, 1967. SHARY. \ anv old car down. Full Price $2195. m":! Mr Parks, HAROLD TURNER 635 S. Woodward_________ 1965 OLDSMOBILE Holiday sedan. This is the - of the line and has everything for your comfort. Only $1645 full price. 1967 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN S tion Wagon, V^h - - • ~ - • HAROLD TURNER FORD, 644-7500. 464 S. Woodward, Birmingham. MUSTANG, jet black, bucket !s East of W .1 4-2735 1967 CHEVY IMPALA 2-DOOR -- Jlop, with V8, automatic, power ring, brakes, full price $2255 I $255 down. Paymenf of $67.h’ month. RAY KESSLER'S OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 724 Oakland Ave. FE 5-9436 fE ______ V8, radio _______ - speed transmission. Whitewalls. 323 Griggs, r ' .... color matched i terior. Only $2388 f " -------- $188 down, $73.7C — per month. Sjlf®*'' John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Ave,___________FE 5-4101 ; real.nice. $39'FORD, 1967 SQUIRE. .. -own. Full Price s HAROLD TURNER LUCKY AUTO TAYLOR-IZED DEMO Camaro 2-dc FORD, 1965 Station — any old c $1095! >*wlfh TAYLOR ijon, sharp. .. . - I. HAROLD TURNER FORD 644-7500. TURNER FORD, 664-7500. ... ... .......I. Full f $2,695, Mr. Parks, HARi TURNER PORD. 664-7500. r-BIRD LANDAU, 2-DOOR jp, with beautiful met with matching Interior, .... ................ ’ear or 50,000 miles, new John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland 1967 FALCON FUTURA wagon, ! 12,000 idia alter 6 p.m. v-8 automatic J 'condition. Itlll anty. $2388 full I tra nice, $1,450. 673-9465. 1967 CORVETTE,' 427 CUBIC I 1967 mustang 2-DOOR h 4, 625-3829. MUSTANG, EXCELLENT ditlon. 363-9974,_______________ Suburban Olds BIRMINGHAi^ DOWNEY GO! HAUPT PONTIAC 1964 PONTIAC CATALINA, ' power steerlnq, radio, new tires. condition. 334-5562. 3-SPEe6 ON THE COLUMN $1695 Your Choice HOMER HIGHT Motors, Inc. Pontiac-Buick-Chevrolet On M-24 In Oxford, Michigan The Heart of Our Business IS THE SATISFACTIDN of Our Customers 1965 MERCURY CDMET "202" Looking for economy, looking Radio, heater. One owner. 1964 THUNDERBIRD Two door hardtop. A platinum beauty with brakes, premium while walls. One of the nicest w $995 1967 CHRYSLER NEWPDRT 2-door hardiop. A golden beauty v black vinyl top. Automatic, radio, and windows. We've never had a r ■ steering and I had. $1595 1966 BUICK SPECIAL 1 matching*'all ^ vinyl 'hterlor, $2695 automatic, power $2095 Itching bu ), heater. $1495 $1395 $1195 1966 VW CAMPER SPECIAL Sleeps 6. Equipped with ell the goodies for comfortable travel and $1795 HILLSIDE LINCDLN-MERCURY 1250 Oaklad 333-7863 DIdsmobile, Inc. 550 Oakland Ave. FE 2-8101 1965 OLDS 4-door Hardtop, V-B. Automatic, power steering, power brakes: $1495 Suburban Olds MERRY OLDS MO DEAL MERRY OLDSMOBILE 528 N. Main ROCHESTER, MICHIGAN 1966 OLDS CUTLASS Convertible, ' power steerin le the Bi .. _.. . $1688, fi 18 down and $56.47 p ditlon, full price !. CAMP CHEVROLET, INC., 684-1025. MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH Small Ad—Big Lot 50 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM > buy or will adlust your pa CHRYSLER, 1965 convertible. Sharp HAHN CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH RAMBLER ANO JEEP - 6673 Dixie Hwy. (US Id) 1965 CHRYSLER 4-DOOR hardtop, full power, air conditioning, power windows, cruise-control, an axacutive driven car full price $1,895. VAN CAMP CHEVROLET, INC., Milford. 684- ^ a 1066 CHRYSLER 3 MANSFIELD AUTO SALES 1104 BALDWIN AVE. R 5-5900 ^ FE 8-8825 f seats, 8195 down. Finance ce ot Only $187" RAY KESSLER'S OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 724 Oakland Ave. fE 5-9436 1981 DdDGE, PRlVAt# n trantpertatlan, 363-7B28. 1982 DOIMfi O^RT — C $1795 WILSON-CRISSMAN CADILLAC TURNER FORD, 664.7500. , automatic, ! Srks!’°HAROLD 1350 N, vyoodwaT $2195 WILSON-CRISSMAN Cadillac VURNER FORD,' 644-7500. IWS JEEP, :J5, metar*cab, selectromatic hubs. 1965 JEEP WAGONEER, drive, spanking new tire tor anything or anywhei :er month. John McAuliffe Ford Oakland Ave_______ FE 5-4101 beautiful little pony v class of a cham automatic, radio, hei ______,, _______ ______ egg blue, with white nylon top. Color matched Interior. $1788 full price, only $188 down, $56.47 per month. 50,000 mile or 5-year warranty available. John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Ave. FE ^4101 MUSTANG, 1966 OLDS Cutlass C 0 n V e r 11 b I automatic, power steerin brakes, console, .red wl top. Priced to sell at; $1995 Suburban Olds 1966 OLDS 442 HARDTOP, 4-speedi transmission, radio, heater, bucket; seats, beautiful ivy green with black vinyl Interior. Sate priced fori only $1588 full price, $88 down,] John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Ave. ■_____FE 5-4 BUYERS — AT-or old car down irdless of condition. Wa will tow TURNER FORU, 644-75 mercury TENTION’ J <39 reoar"*'— It In. 2UU A'l useo cars lu O I n from. HAROLD TURNER^ IM4-7500. 464 S. Woodward, FAIRLANE, 1966 4-doof, I or any old car down. I $1195. $1288 full price, $88 down and $42.M per month. 50,000 mile or 5-year warranty available. John McAuliffe Ford Oakland 1966 MUSTANG, 4-Pl,US-2, ' mdio. tMAter. 4l>soMd transmiss $1388 Today's bcit b_, — price, $88 down, $46.97 per .. John McAuliffe Ford 10 Oakland Ava. FE 5-4101 MERCURY, 1962 STATIC $445. Absolutely no me..., —.. HAROLD TURNER FORD, 664-7500. 464 S. Woodward, Birming- wagon. S4<». »osBiureir dOvm^HAROLp T^NE^ FORD, 1963 MERCURY, FULL POWER, and extras. $500. 647-662S. mercury, 1963, Ai»ototeiy'teo'inoh*y'db«^ TURNER FORD, 644-7500. 464 S. mercury, ■ - Absolutely - sharp. $995 1. HAROLt Woodard, Blrmlpoham. 1966 OLDS 98 2-door Hardtop, loaded with the extras. Including factory a conditioning and vinyl top: $2555 Suburban Olds BIRMINGHAM 635 S. woodward_______Ml 7-5111 1967 OLDSMOBILE idd, in mint condition, has irythlng, including comfortron conditioning, orrginal list at DOWNEY Oldsmobile, Inc. 550 Oakland Ave. FE 2-8101 'iMilllNIV l>Jlf/t Just Make Small Weekly, Bi-Weekly Payments With As Little As; Because at STANDARD AUTO SALES, You Can Mm mem 1959 FORD Wagon V-8 engine. Auto. Excellent mechanical condition. a $95 0-.1! $2 1959 CHEVROLET Wagon standard shift, 6 cylinder. Looks and runs well above average. $195 $2 weekly 1961 BUICK Wagon Auto. Power steering. $295 $3 weekly 1963 OLDS Holiday 2-door hardtop. Auto. Power steering, brakes. $695 $7 weekly 1959 FORD 2-door standard shift. Excellent transportation. $95 $2 weekly 1963 PLYMOUTH 4-door station Wagon. Auto. Power steering, brakes. -- $295 -L$3w-iy 1956 CADILLAC Coupe DeVille 2-door hardtop. Full power including factory air conditioning. P’''“ $195 $2 weekly 1962 CHEVROLET Biscayne 2-door. *®* *"'* **'^'''* $295 » $3 1963 PONTIAC Convertible Catalina. Robin's egg blue. One owner. $695 $7 1961 PONTIAC 2-door hardiop. Catalina. Auto. Power stearlfig and brakes. « $295 , ® $3 «"”> 1960 LINCOLN Continental 2*door hardtop. All white* Sharp inside $295 $3 1959 THUNDERBIRD 2-door hardtop. Metallic grean. Sharp. $295 oZ $3 1 weekly EVEN IF YOU'VE: HAD A REPOSSESSION, BEEN BANKRUPT, BE OR BEEN TURNED DOWN BY OTHERS. TRADE-INS ACCEPTED, PAID FOR ORqNOT. N GARNISHEED, CREDIT MEN ON DUTY AT ALL TIMES TO IMMEDIATELY O.K. YOUR APPLICATIUN. ' A ■/. THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1968 ' V . F~ll —Television Progi’ams— Pregramt fumiih*d by ttationt litt«d in thi< coigmn cir« tubinct to chongo without notico Choniwli; 2-WJBK-TV, 4-WWJ-TV, 7-WXY2-TV, 9-CKLW-TV, 50-WKBD-TV,, 56-WTVS Id R C yR Conse- WEDNESOAY NIGHT 6:00 (2) (4) (7) News C ($) D«nhis the Menace R (50) FlintstoneS R C (56) Friendly Giant 6:15 (56) Merlin the Magician 6:30 (2) News—Reasoner C (4) News — Huntley and-Brinkley C (9) Gilligan’s Isla (50) McHale’sN^ (56) What’s New 7:00 (2) Truth or quences C (4) Juvenile Court C ( 9 ), M ovie; “Tarzan’s Greatest Adventure” (1959) Gordon Scott, Anthony Quayle, Sara Shane R (50) Munsters (56) City Room 7:30 (2) Lost in Space -* The Jupiter 2 crew battles a rapidly growing plant and a haiLof missiles. C (4) Virginian — A teenager foments bitterness among atiloh hands. C (7) Avengers — Three top British scientists are kidnaped. C (50) I Love Lucy R 8:00 (50) Hazel RC (56) News in Perspective 8:30 (2) Beverly Hillbillies — Granny midges Jethro into proposing to a plain Jane. C (7) Secmid Hundred Years — Luke gets a job at a dude ranch. C (50) Honeymooners R 8:55 (9) NewsC 9:00 (2) Green Acres — Spring fever envelops Hooterville. C (4) Kraft Music Hall — Tom Jones, Michele Lee, Buffy Sainte - Marie, Flip Wilson and Irwin Corey are guests. C (7) Movie — “Hot Rods to Hell” ( 1 9 6 7 ) Dana Andrews and Jeanne Crain C (9) Detectives R (50) Perry Mason R (56) Time for Renewal 9:30 (2) He and She — Bickering by the HoUisters’ friends Burt and Myra ends in separation. C (9) Festival — Documentary: “Soldiers of the (56) WrittMi Word 10:00 (2) Jonathan Winters - Guests are Richard Benjamin and Paula Prentiss, singers V i c TV Features KRAFT MUSIC HALL, 9 p.m. (4) JONATHAlf WINTERS, 10 p.m. (2) GREAT DECISIONS, 10 p.m. (56) INDIA, 10:30 p.m. (9) Dan^ and Dusty Spring-field^ick Curtis, and the Robert Banas dancers. C (4) Run for Your Life — Archeological dig in Israel threatened by Bedouins. C (^) Les Crane C (56) Great Decisions — An analysis of Communist China’s cultural revolution 10:30 (9) (Debut) India -The first df a four - part series on modern India (56) Musicale 11:00 (2) (4) (7) News C (9) News (50) Movie: “Twelve O’clock High” ( 1 9 49 ) Gregory Peck, Dean dagger R 11:30 (2) Movie: “Rio Bravo” (1959) John Wayne and Dean Martin RC (4) Johnny Carson — GueiJs are George Carlin, the Baja Marimba Band and balloonist Don Piccard. C (7) Joey Bishop — Milton ' Berle at “Half a Sixpence” premiere via split screen. Guests are Margaret Whiting, Richard Pryor and Robert Merrill. C (9) Wrestling C 12:30 (9) Window on the World 1:00 (4) Bowling (7) News C 1:30 (2) Dobie GilUs R (4) PDQ C 2:00 (2) News, weather C THURSDAY MORNING 6:00 (4) Classroom 6:20 (2) News C 6:30 (2) Sunrise Semester (4) Ed Allen (7) TV College C 7:00 (2) Woodrow the Woodsman C (4) Today C A Look at TV Suspense Tale a Hit By CYNTHIA LOWRY AP Television-Radio Writer NEW YORK - “Prescriptiwi: Murder,” one of NBC’s two-hour films made for television, brightened its Tuesday night corner with a Hitchcock-«tyle story of an apparently foolproof scheme fM homicide that fell apart. It was the story of a ful psychiatrist who, tired of his wife, laid an elaborate plot to get rid of her. ★ ★ ★ The doctor and a woman patient who was in love with him made the arrangements. She dressed and made up to look like his wife. He told the wife that they were off on a shwi-no-tice holiday in Mexico. Then, about to leave, he strangled her, left her for 'dead, simulated a burglary and met his disguised accomplice. The pair staged a quarrel on the plane before takeoff and she stormed \w\'' i" ' .1 ' ' " N F-18 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESpAY. FEBRUARY 21, 1968 These Specials Are For Ttitii*s., Fri., Sat. Only Floor Sample SALE Another Good Reason to Buy at Sears . . . Now! INSTALLED* ELECTRIC KENMORE FAMILY-SIZE KENMORE SOFT-HEAT 2 Temperature Dryer Automatic Washer Dryer Can’t Overdry “Heat** for regnlar fabrics ... “Air Only” for flnfling. Top mounted lint screen. Load-a-door folds down to make a con< venient shelf. Tumble action stops when door is opened. Acrylic finish cabinet. Installed* Gas Dryer..............$117 Sears Low Price #97 Permanent Press-Wash ’n Wear cycle has water cool-down process to reduce spin-set wrinkles. 3 wash-rinse water temperatures, built-in maze-type lint filter. 6-vane agitator. Spin stops when lid is raised. Sears Low Price 15 Cubic Foot Chest Freezer.... $166 30” Double Oven Gas $227 Bake cakes atid cleaning with separate ainokeiess broiler, \re-Hood movable racks, gttidem. Eolra Kanmora Sange Dept. Bedroom Air Conditioner 10% to 40% OFF Upriglit vtennm cleaners and sewjng_ cliiiirs. Floor ssiiiples, sol Hurry in for lies!seleclion. »239 4.6 cu. ft. freeeer holds 1.5') lbs. Refrigerator features crisper, 2-door shelves, egg racks, cold control. liefrigerertor Dept. 5,000 BTU Air Conditioner Veiglis only 69 lbs. Hehitmidifiei while it cools. Permanent washable filter traps dust, and other air . pollutants.' $97 V Canister Vacuum Compact aite is easy to , Store on shelf. Convenient disposable paper dust bags. 4-piece set of cleaning at- •22 Save $301 Console TV Saon Vacuum Dept. Proyddfw sharp viewing even in fur. fringe afeas. Set - forgrl volume, up-froni controls. Dual S-in. speakers. liny now, save. Reg. 199.99 J69«* Open Monday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday 9 to 9, Ttetday, Wednesday 9 to 5:30 Sears ^l^'dkBUCKAND^; Sears Applianca Oet>t. Sean Radio, TV md Phonograph Dept. - Downtown Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171 ^ s ■ i s. .w /f A ' '' Th0 Weather U.t. WMHitr aurMB ^srtuit r«ir. Com (DMHt r>*|t i) THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, FEBHUAllY 21, 1968 VOL. 126 - NO. 16 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ uN,Tog*«^fN"rlSMTT,;NAu -76 PAGES President Sees Pueblo Accord WASHINGTON (AP) - President Johnscm is depicted by White House visitors as quietly confident that diplomacy eventually will win release of the captured intelligence ship Pueblo's crew. ★' In the face of a new North Korean threat to try the 82 surviving crew members, Johnson was said to believe a way will be found to reach a settlement after the other side has had its day of blustering. In Moscow yesterday, Zang le Zoon, counselor of the North Korean Embassy, told a news conference the Pueblo's crew will be punished and any. American The United States already had warned that any punishment would be a “deliberate aggravation" of the crisis. The North Korean’s threats seem to be regarded at the White House as a part of the game when dealing with the Communists. More important, it was said, was that after early shouting sessions at Pan-munjom some real negotiating now is going on. Quicker Viet Rotation Eyed Protests by congressmen and relatives of Vietnam war veterans has caused the Army to restudy its policies on returning men to the fighting, it was disclosed today. Jor cities. Many of (hem had already served tours there. An Associated Press story from Washington said the Army, faced with strong protest, is developing a plan to permit what is called a “phase return" of men who had recently returned from their first war duty. Among those from the Oakland County area protesting to U.S. officials were Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Phelps of 1124 Lambert, Holly, who claimed her son, Mike, 21, had not fully recovered from his year at war. Most of the men involved are contingents of the 82nd Airborne Division and a Marine regiment. Some 10,500 were sent back to Vietnam last week to bolster U.S. forces in the attack on ma- Mike took part in over 100 helicopter air assaults in his tour which ended last May. DIRECTING CAMPAIGN Mrs. Phelps has been directing a letter and telegram campaign in the Holly area to bring back the veterans. Offices to Observe Holiday Tomorrow The Associated Press said the plan for “phase return" of the veterans had not yet been approved by the Army but it would entail quicker rotation. Community National Bank, Pontiac State Bank and First Federal Savings of Oakland all will be closed tomorrow in honor of George Washington's birthday. The city and county offices also will be closed. The post office will be closed, although the main post office lobby will be open for mail deposits, access to locked boxes and purchase of stamps from machines. A man who had been home from the war six months, for example, would be rotated back from his second tour ahead of a man who had been back in the U.S. a shorter time. The Army said it would stick to its Mail will be picked up from deposit points on normal holiday schedules and processed from outgoing dispatch. There will be no regular window or delivery services. Mercury Falls to -3 in Pontiac TODAY’S TEMPERATURES Sw/SS-N. Viot Link In Today's Press 1 a.m. 0 6 a.m . 4 2 a.m. -1 8 a.m. ... . -2 3 a.m. -2 10 a.m. . . 4 4 a.m. -2 11 a.m. . . 7 5 a.m. -3 12:30 p.m. 11 Arctic winds sweeping into the Pontiac Tax Spiral Survey of area citizens shows concern — PAGE A-4. area from the northwest plunged temperatures to 3 below zero in the downtown area. Surrounding communities reported as low as 10 below zero. Hotel Fire Kills 3 Men State Income Tax Informational series begins in And tonight’s forecast is more of the today’s Press — PAGE A-3. Venice Canal dredging to continue despite fears of consequences— PAGE B-3. 1- Sov/er tmoass ion WASHINGTON «» - A predawn explosion damaged the Soviet Embassy O'^here today and shattered windows in many nearby buildings. Police and an embassy spokesman reached by telephone, who identified himself as a press attache, said there were no injuries. EXPLOSION DEBRIS — A Washington policeman picks up debris from the driveway of the Soviet Embassy after an early morning explosion outside the building today. The only visible damage to the building was the shattered window and twisted grating over the policeman’s shoulder. Furor on Vets Stirs Army Study policy of limiting tours to 12 months and would retain, where possible, its policy of allowing 24 months between overseas shipments. give his name, told a newsman at the scene there was heavy damage to an office and lighter damage to an adjacent reception room. ARMY PERSONNEL Earlier, a newsman reached the embassy by telephone shortly after the 5:52 a.m. blast, and an unidentified man said there were injuries. He Immediately hung up. An Army lieutenant and a master sergeant, both wearing fatigue^, entered the building several hours after the blast but would not say whether they were demolition experts. Police were unable to determine the type of explosive used. It apparently was placed on the concrete ledge of a first-story front window. The ledge was rip-, ped away and an iron grating twisted. Deputy Police Chief Jerry V. Wilson saaid the explosion was outside the building and° confirmed there was extensive damage inside but would give no other details. An embassy employe, who refused to A State Department spokespan said: “It appears that a bomb was either thrown or planted. There appears to be one witness and possibly two suspects who were not yet apprehended. ASSISTANCE OFFERED “The State Department has been in touch with Russian Ambassador Anatoly F. Dobrynin expressing regret and offering assistance. Present iiidications are there were no injuries to personnel of the embassy. The damage does not appear to be extensive.” Police later reported to diplomatic officials one man had been taken into custody, questioned and then released after it appeared he was not connected with the explosion. The U.S. apology for the incident was carried to the embassy by David Segal of the State Department’s Office of Soviet Affairs shortly after department officials learned of the explosion. Sen. Fulbright, McNamara Still Foes on Tonkin Open-Housing Law Flint Voters Okay WASHINGTON (AP) - Weary adversaries after a 7V4-hour confrontation. Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara and Sen. J. W. Fulbright still disagreed on the real story of the naval engagement which prompted the first U.S. bombing of North Vietnam. McNamara issued a 21-page account of the affair, over Fulbright’s objection, contending the administration proved conclusively that the U.S. destoyers Maddox and Turner Joy were attacked by North Vietnamese torpedo boats in international waters on Aug. 4,1964. FLINT A clerical error in tabulations of the vote on an open housing referendum showed today that the measure was approved yesterday by a 46-vote margin. Previous reports had indicated the proposal was defeated by 54 votes. Unofficial tabulations showed the final vote was 20,175 in favor and 20,129 against. The Flint Journal said the error was discovered when the city clerk was asked to check a discrepancy between his figures and those tabulated by the newspaper’s staff. The clerk then found 100 favorable votes had not been counted in one precinct. Earlier, Negro Mayor Floyd McCree said a defeat by 54 votes would have constituted a “great moral victory” bcause he had expected the measure to lose by a 3-1 margin. He "termed “monstrous” any suggestion the United States induced the attack, seeking an'excuse for its subsequent retaliation. Observers believed a recount now will be demanded by open housing opponents. In late August, McCree threatened to resign after the city commission rejected an open housing ordinance. He stayed on, however, and the measure was passed by a 54 vote Oct. 30. Fulbright, the Arkansas Democrat who heads the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said the public statement McNamara issued “does not tell the whole story by any means.” LBJ Rights Bill Dealt Setback Fulbright did not relate his version. T’m to worn out to attempt any kind of discussion,” he said after McNamara’s WASHINGTON W - Some Senate backers of President Johnson’s civil Wixom Picks 6 for April 1 Vote marathon appearance before the com- rights bill, already dealt one serious Less than half of Wixom’s registered voters turned out yesterday to select six of seven candidates who will run in the April 1 general election. mittee. “I’m on overtime now,” McNamara told newsmen as he emerged from the closed committee room, refusing to answer questions. And so the session which ran into last night produced only fresh controversy over the engagement in the Gulf of Tonkin. setback, plan jettisoning an open-housing provision in an effort to salvage the origipal measure. Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield said he will prpose tabling the controversial open-housing section—an amendment to the administration bill — when debate resumes today. Tabling would kill the amendment. A total of 273 ballots was cast out of the 727 registered voters, according to Clerk Mrs. Donna Thorsberg. Eliminated from the race with a low of 71 votes was William E. Allred, 1481 Wren. McNamara’s session with the committee clearly was a sometimes angry affair. Fulbright said he had urged McNamara not to release his statement,-but the secretary had it distributed at the Pentagon. ' But other supporters of open housing talked of a bid to modify the amendment in hopes it might be made more acceptable to opponents. F. JACK DOUGLAS Runnijig April 1 will be, in order of votes received: Charles S. McCall, 3884 W. Maple, 124 votes; incumbent Gunnar E. .Mettala, 2752 Loon Lake, 121; Mrs. Mary Parvu, 3645 W. Maple, 120; incumbent Oscar B. Simmons Jr., 2028 Hazel, 117; Mrs. Kathryn L. Miner, 30290 Beck, 93; and Neal L. Taylor, 2901 Maganser, 86. In it, McNamara said the U.S. destroyers had in no way provoked attacks by the North Vietnamese, and had not participated in South Vietnam’s bombardment of Communist islands in the gulf, assaults which occurred at about the same time. Sen. Wayne JJlorse, D-Ore., said the South Vietnamese used boats supplied by the United States, and contended “North Vietnam had every reason to fear’.’ the U.S. destroyers. Both strategies aim at saving the civil rights bill itself, which would make it a federal crime to interfere with Negroes and civil rights workers pursuing equal rights. Te Senate voted 55 to 37 yesterday for cutting off the debate, seven short of the two-thirds vote needed for cloture. The debate has been going on since Congress reconvened Jan. 15. Suit Challenges City Candidate SECOND VOTE SET A second cloture vote set for Monday also seems headed for failure unless there is a shift of Republican ranks. The six top vote getters will now vie for three council vacancies of four-year terms each. LBJ-Thant Talks Hold Little Hope GOP senators split 18 to 18 on yesterday’s vote after Senate Rpublican leader Everett M. Dirksen urged the senate not to gag itself by approving cloture. A lawsuit challenging the eligibility of F. Jack Douglas as a city commissioner was filed yesterday in Oakland County Circuit Court. The suit, initiated by attorneys Robert D. Cunningham and Robert D. Coon on behalf of Patrick M. Galloway of 483 Tallahasee, contends that Douglas’ election as a city connmissioner would lead to a conflict of interest. BERN (UPD—Switzerland today gave de facto diplomatic recognition to Communist North Vietnam. Swiss foreign minister Willy Spuehler told parliament Switzerland’s ambassador in Peking, Oscar Rossetti, has been named official “representative” to the foreign ministry in Hanoi. KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP)-Three men perished today in an early morning fire that leveled Uie three-story May Hotel. Fiftmen rescued six other persons. WASHINGTON (AP) - Administration sources express little optimism that U.N. Secretary General U Thant’s talks with President Johnson on Vietnam will produce any new U.S. peace move. As Thant and Johnson prepared to talk, several Senate critics of U.S. war policy expressed doubts about the South Vietnamese government’s stability following a new rupture in its program to rebuild cities shattered in repulsing Vietcong attacks. Thant’s visit to the White House today is considered, sources said, simply an extension of his recent trips to Europe Michigan’s Gov. Romney, a candidate for the Republican presidential nomination, had urged all Republican senators to approve cloture. The Democratic tally was 37 for and 19 against. Except for three senators from small Western states. Southern opponents of the civil rights measure accounted for all the Democratic votes against cutting off debate. Mansfield has indicated he will move to lay the legislation aside if the second attempt to cut off debate does not succeed. However, he interpreted the first vote as. showing a clear majori^ in support of open-housing legislatim. Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., floor It asks that the court restrain the City of Pontiac and the city clerk from placing Douglas’ name on the primary election ballot. The election will be held March 4. The coimt ordered the city to appear at 9 a.m'. Monday to show cause why such an order should not be granted. Douglas said he will be represented by an attorney at the hearing. ON LEAVE OF ABSENCE and Asia in which he sounded out North manager of the bill called it a significant Vietnamese officials about peace talks. victory. Douglas of 1644 Charleston is one of’ four candidates seeking the City Commission seat now held by District 4 Commissioner Leslie II. Hudson. A city fireman for 18^4 years, Douglas is presently on leave of absence from the fire department. He took the leave in February 1966 after being elected to the full-time position of president of the Oakland County AFL-CIO Council, which includes 111 union locals. SUNNY AND COLD same. The mercury is expected to dive Area iNews .................A4 Astrology .................F-2 Bridge ................... F-2 Crossword Puzzle .........F-11 Comics F-2 Editorials ................A-6 Food Section C-8-C-11 Marketo F-3 Obituaries ................ E4 Sports D-l-D-5 Theaters E-14. E-15 TV and Radio Programs . ,F-11 Wilson, Earl F-11 Women’s Pages /. . C-1—C4 to zero to 8 below in Pontipc. There’s a chance of a few brief snow flurries tonight. Private School Aid: Future Savings? By DICK ROBINSON tomorrow and not quite so cold for Fri- y,goreUcally save Oakland County tax- the most schools — 271. Oakland County is second in the state with 30,362 students in 63 schools. nonpublic secondary schools and $50 each for those in elementary schools. This morning’s west to northwest winds at 10 to 22 miles per hour will continue tonight. Precipitation probabilities in per cent are: today 30, tonight 20 and 10 tomorrow. payers an estimated $18.5 million j future. The bill is scheduled to be introduced in the State House and Senate ^ay. Oakland County would benefit most from the proposal next to Wayne County. Under the bill, Oakland’s taxpayers would not have to pay out $18.5 million to educate all the nonpublic students in public schools if theoretically all the noppublic schools failed financially. FUNDS AUmORIZA’nQN Core city chUdren would get higher amdnnts — $158 for those in high school and $75 in elementary school. or four “secular” courses — such as English or reading, arithmetic w mathematics, science and physical education — would be eligible for aid. This would be certified by the school. WaynC County has the largest number of nonpublic school pupils — 134,124 — in The bill would authorize the state te grant $100 each for children attending All grants would be given to parents, not the schools. The theory is that schools could then raise tuitions since parents would have more money to pay them.. Educational grants woiild not be pa|^r’“ urse m to parents for any formal course religious doctrine or worship. Backers of the bill say it does not violate the principle of separation of Only parents whose children tok^ two (Ckmtinued on Page A-2, Col. 3) i And Battalion Chaplc^n Dies ^ /; -J-...-.' --^■- Soldier Earns 4th Purple Heart By ALVIN B. WEBB JR. I Sgt. Bob Thomm got his fourth [corporal got killed, a bullet HUE, Vietnam (UPI) - S.lPurple Heart. A little lance Shredding , the Purple Heart citation in his pocket and plunging into his chest. The THE yoNyiAC I’RESS. WEDNB^SDAV. FKHIU A Time to CHOP DOWN Your INCOME TAX Getting your income tax figured can be, a wonderful Washington's Birthdoy present. Take it to BLOCK. They'll moke sure you get every legitimate deduction. See the office in your neighborhodd todoy. BOTH federal AND STATE $ = GUARANTIED 5. America's Largest Tax Service with Over 2000 Offices 20 E. HURON 4410 DIXIE HWY. DRAYTON PUINS 1 Weekdays: 9-9 - Sat. and Sun. 9-5 - FE 4-9225 HBBBMBNO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY ■ battalion, chaplain was shot in the head. Related Story, Page E-6 Pictures, Page E-14 The Marine battalion began the drive up one block of “Rocket Alley” led by five tanks. We had one left at the end of the block. The sergeant is alerting Delta Company for action. The battle for this block began with the explosion of a Communist B40 rocket. The rocket hit a truck full of Marines. A Leatherneck jumped out and tried to push the truck, Shrapnel tore his face but still he pushed. “Grenades!” someone yells. The Marines Scramble for cover. ★ ★ ★ The pusher did not make it. He died, knelling. Sgt. Thomm, 23, of Baton Rouge, La., has his men charging over a broken wall. SERGEANT IS TARGET Up ahead, about 25 yards, a North Vietnamese soldier leaps from the rubble and starts firing at Thomm. The sergeant already has three P u r p 1 ‘ Hearts, enough for guaranteed trip home. Thomm picks off the Com-mimist with his M16. A bit of •apnel nicks the sergeant — good for his fourth Purple Heart. One too many, says SALE! From our regular stock! 5.99-9.99 Goldroom 'n Duets are stylist^ spring steppers 3.94 Step out in style at a price to fit your budget! Mid-heels, mini-heels, flatties in leather, patent, some suede. Brown, red, tap, green, block. Sizes for all in group but not every size in every style or color. ‘*^Hell, we don’t seem to have many staff sergeants lef around. GiksS I’ll stajt around,’ he said. Thomm grinned. ★ A * “Okay, saddle up!*’ he yells to Delta Company. “We’re moving out.” DIVE FOR COVER A wUd dive into a shallow hole puts me behind d sheet of tin riddled with bullet holes. 1 peep up and see Lance Cpl. Selwyn Tate, 20, of New York City and I think he looks like John Wayne in a war movie. Tate had taken an AK47 automatic rifle from a North Vietnamese soldier 24 hours ago and now he had a chance to fire it. Tate stood up. He fired all the AK47 rounds m had. Then he bpgan tossing ades — one, two, three, all of them landing up on the high wall in front. ★ A- ★ ‘Grenades! I need more grenades!” Tate yelled. He began scrambling up the terraces toward the top of the wall, past the shack “hootches” the social'dropouts of prebattle Hue had built. FRONT-MOST UNIT “We are now in the foremost (furthest advanced) unit in the battalion,” someone yells from behind. And then it is over. The Communists have fallen back to fight for another block. There lay the body of the young corporal. A f r i e n ' gathered the pieces of Uxe Purple Heart citation the youngster had received the day before. ’ went looking for chaplain Eli Thaesian of Methuen, Mass. ★ ★ ★ He had gone hunting for the battalion’s chief chaplain, great happy Irish Catholic priest and found him dead, shot in the head. OPEN to A.M. TO 0 P.M. ($•». 9:30-0) Draytui cpan Sunday Noon to 6 p.m. (Downtown closes Tuts., Wed. at 6 pjn.) DOWNTOWN AND Tbe only state in the U.S. DRAYTON PLAINS named for its founder is Pennsylvania. j^yrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrTrmTrrrrmTrrrmTTirnT^^ PONTIACS ONLY Compfeie DftAPERY FINISH PROCESSING Ultra-Tone Profe$$ional Care Protecta Your Drapery Investment We are proud to be Pontiac’s fiYst cleaner qualified to recommend and offer Ultra-Tone— The finest drapery care the textile maintenance industry can provide. . ' • , *Vlirm-T»mo pivci.ion-form* drnprry fold# »t y 806 Oakland Avtnua Pontiac FE 4-2ST9^ Yaoeaptie9^tsi0iatNtiiitottnttilliJttHiiltlJimtO9IHil>’^ A^5 Your Dollars Go Further at Sears Sears SAVE 20% Decorator Vanities SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO. Fashion Storage to Enhance Your Bath 25”, Reg. M14 9120 Installation Available This vanity will add style to any bath. You get ample storage for towels, cosmetics and toiletries in a beautifully finished cabinet. Smooth marbella top, with the look and feel of marble, resists scratches and moisture. Vitreous china wash bowl included. New, reinforced door construction provides rigid, unmatched durability. Antique white in classic style. Choice of faucet extra. Sale! 41” Decorator Vanity, RU BTU Reg. $189..............................How! ^51 20% OFF on other vanities, toilets, washbasins and tubs. Scars Plumbing and Heating Dept. NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Home Modernization Credit Plan or Use Your Convenient Sears Charge! Tempered Glass Tub Enclosure Reg. 49.95 Fits standard S’ tub. Anodized aluminum frame, sliding door convenience! Complete with two towel bars. Sale! 2-Piece Sculptura Toilet 39.96 31*® Finest vitreous china with a 'glass-bonded finish that won’t stain, pit or scratch. In Color, Rsg. 4I.9S....... 39.95 Lighted Decorator Medicine Cabinet £6 43»* Antique white.frame has matching lamp bases with gracefullr curved frosted glass shades. 1-pc. steel cabinet. Sears Aluminum is a Beautiful Wall of Protection Save 15% on Installed Aluminum Siding Reg. $710 114“ CoiUngOnly 4” thick, open ceiling ' for a 24x34* house. FihergIssD. Stva on ' fuel bill.. Combination V# ly*” Door Rag. 19.99 33^^ Standard size alum!, num door with full-J length piano-type j hinge, hydranlio clos-er. With lock. H M49 V<,i ..52.17 , Fiberglas® Instant Attic Insulation........................3.69 covers 50 sq. ft.* * 14x47” DuPont® Nylon Shutters. White or black.........................pair 15.50 • Other Shutter Sizes Available 603®® Installed on Average 24x30’ One-Story Home Without Oablesy Less Trim. In White, t Colors. It’s beautiful, durable and ends the need for frequent repainting — it really lets you take it easy on maintenance ... and it’s installed. Helps reduce your fuel bills in winter; keeps your home cooler in summer. Charcoal, blue, pink, yellow, browns, yellow, green, white. Installed Aluminum Guttering Tough white-'finish is actually bonded to im the metal by baking. Seamiest except at m „ ^ corners. -U- a. Brown, Oraen, Charcoal..................1.35 lin. ft. ^ Sears, Roabuck and Co. I 154 N. Saginaw - Pontiac, Michigan 41959 { I □ Siding □ Roofing D Awnings . ' □ PatioCovors □Doors □ Windows ■ ; ...........................:::..............I I I Addrtss Zip ,.Ci1y.. *Take~With Prices I Zip............................ | — — — — — —..ax.-T Open Monday, Thnr.day, Friday,. Saturday 9 to 9, Tuesday, WedneMlay 9 to SiSO SearsI Downtown Pontiac • Phope FE 5-41^1 THE PONTIAC PR* IBBEEesEQUIB&y .1, c— Sourdou^ &^d, a favoHtft of pioneers and miners, lilfll popular with Westerners, but is not as readily available as It was in the early days. There is something about Sourdough Bread that cannot be equalled or imitated. The ‘ starter” was guarded with the same zeal the miners used with their gold hoard. They used it (or bread, flapjacks and biscuits. Very seldom did the newcomer start from scratch, h because an old timer usually shared bis “starter.” From then I was aevar allowed to give dct. CSffture a bit of the early Wast with your very own "starter” and revive ihe old hospitality of passing on a bit to a friend. SOURDOUGH STARTER 2 cups flour 1 teaspoon salt 3 tablespoons sugar ^ teaspoon granular yeast 2 cups luke warm water Place all Ingredients into| large glass jar; stir untill mixture is a smooth thin paste.' Put On lid and set in a warm! plaoe to sour; stir aevo'al times a day. In two <»: .three days your sourdough wOI At least once a week keep ^ starter active by adding ooO cup unsifted flour and one cup warm water and let stand at room temperature either all night or 9II day. The amount M Water and flour ndded can be increased for each time as long as the pix^rtion is the same. Always reserve one-half cup or more of starter and keep in the rerigerator after making up a new batch. Sourdough Bread 1 cups ourdough starter 2 cups hikewanpi water 2^ cups sifted albpuipose flour 1 cup milk , 3 tablespoons liRtter or margarine , . ^ 3 tablespoons sug^ 2 teaspoons salt ' ; 1 package active idim^st V* cup warm waw .^f^l degrees) 6% cup sifted all-puiisose flour 1 teaspoon baking, soda Salad oil. Measure starter into large glass bowl; add water and flour; mix well. Let stand, covered, in warm place overnight. (105-115 The next morning, heat milk tiien stir in butter, 2 tableqtoqi sugar and 1 teaspoon salt. Cool to lukewarm. S^udiiMe yeast over % cup "warn water. Let stand 5 minutes. Stir yeast into cooled milk mixture; add to star4er mixture; beat with wooden spoon until; well mixed. Beat in cups flour untlL bMter Is smooth. Mix baking soda with remaining sugar and salt, evenly over dough; stir gently to mix we}L Let dduifh rise^ covered,' in warm^pMee until almost double in bulk, 30 to 40 minutes. Mix down dough; gradually beat in remaining flour until dou^ is stiff enough to clean sides of bowl. Knead dough about. 5 minutes until smooth Snd elastic. Divide dough in half;le t rest, covered, 10 minutes. Grease bottom of two 9x5x3-inch loaf pans. Shape loaves put In pans. Brush tc^s lightly with salad oil . Let rise about one'hour until dough has risen to top of pans. Bhke at 375 degrees for about 50 minutes. BAKED TAPIOCA CUSTARD - From the Federalist period right up to the Jet Age, Americans have been highly influenced by first family food favorites. Currently, tapioca pudding is enjoying a renaissance of popularity. Serve your family Baked Tapioca Custard with strawberries. Rate Tapioca Pudding High in Popularity Ever since Abigail Adams, first of our first ladies to live in the White House, hung the family wash in the East Room, Americans have looked to the nation’s first families as style-setters. Though Abigail’s washday idiosyncrasies never caught on, she did help popularize the white potato, teen generally considered more tit for animal fodder than for human con-sumptiem. Abigail ordered 20 BUSHELS of white potatoes to see her family through the winter of 1799. Jefferson, greatest gourmet ever to grace the White House, introduced the country to vanilla, macaroni, Parmesan cheese, and the glories of French cook-eiy. Indeed, so “Frenchified” did Jefferson become during his tour of duty as Minister to France, that Patrick H carped “be abjured his native victuals.” medium heat until mixture comes to a full boil (6 to 8 minutes). Remove from heat. Add vanilla. *ur over slightly beaten eggs, stirring constantly. Add batter. Pour into 8 Individual nrd dishes or a It^-quart baking dish. Sprinkle with nut-leg. Place in a pan of hot water. Bake at 325 de^ees for 45 mln-, or until knife inserted in center comes out clean. Top with strawberries. Makes 8 servings. Dolly Madison set the capitol city abuzz with her marvelous strawberry ice cream, “piece de resistance” at her husband’s second inaugural ball. Julia Dent Grant brought into vogue 29 course dinners, though the General was content to breakfast off cucumbers and coffee. * ♦ ★ Today, tapioca pudding is high oh the popular list, thanks to a good press from LBJ’s household. Even without such reflected splendor, the old-fashioned goodness of this homey favorite will delight your first family, particularly when you serve it with strawberries. And with qnick-cooking tapioca, the baked tapioca custard pictured is as easy to make as it Is to eat. Baked Tapioca Custard With Strawberries V« cup quick-cooking tapioca H cup sugar V* teaspoon salt 4 cups milk 1 teaspoon vanilla 3 eggs, slightly beaten 1 tablespoon butter Nutmeg 1 package (10 oz.) frozen strawberry halves, thawed Combine quick-cooking tapioca, sugar, salt, and milk in saucepan. Cook and stir over S//Y o Roast, Fill With Yam Stuffing In Hawaii pineapple is the y m b 01 of hospitality. This Yam-Stuffed Pork Roast” has 1 generous amount of crushed pineapple mixed in a delectable candied yam stuffing. The mainland touch is a final ‘glazing” with one of the most popular foods in this country convenient, canned tomato sauce. * ★ * Cooks have found so many uses for tomato sauce now — as sauce, instant seasoner, colorful garnish — that it has become a staple item in many cupboards. Yam-Stuffed Pork Roast 4 Ib. boned, rolled pork shoulder roast 2 (Mb. 9-oz.) cans yams, drained 1 (15-oz.) can crushed pineapple, drained 4 cup brown sugar ’ 4 cup melted butter l (8-oz.) can tomato sauce Place roast on rack in roasting pan. Cut 3 or 4 slits crosswise % the way through roast. Roast at 325 degrees for 40 to 45 minutes per pound. Half an hour before roast is done, remove from oven and fill slits with candied yam stuffing: With electric mixer whip together yams, pineapple, brown sugar, butter and V4 can ti to sauce. When roast is stuffed, remaining can of tomato sauce over top. Continue ba remaining hour or until d Makes 6 servings. FOR ICY DMNKS-Bright-ly colored l&ounce steins with large, convenient handles are featured in new line of insulated serveware introduced by Tbe West Bend Company. Steins as well as cups, mugs, tumblers, ice bucket and beverage server are available in choice of four new colors — fern (green), pineapple (.yellow), tiger lily (orange) and antique gold. School Lunches Set High Goals Nearly ail schools participating in the National School Lunch Program serve lunches that meet the program’s major nutritional goals of calories, protein and calcium, findings of a nationwide study show, MSU Extension specialists say. * * ♦ Standards call for each lunch to contain a minimum of two ounces of protein-rich foods; three-fourths cup vegetables or fruits consisting of two or more different foods; one slice enriched or whole-grain bread or equivalent: two teaspoons butter or fortified margarine; and one-half pint milk. The recommendations are based on nutritional needs of 9 to 12 year old children. introduces 4 newFrosted Pop^Ihrts 3 mth special sugar sparkled idng and a very special CHOCOLAIE with white icing and coconut filling # * First came;ke|(tilar Pop-Tarts®. Then—Frosted Pop-,Tarts. Now our latest — sugar fparkled Frpsted Pop-Tarts in three new Havors. Plus an all-new Pbp-Taitts pastry—Chocolate with white icing and coconut filling. Sugar sparkled Pop-Tarts have the same tender pastr'y crust that made regular Pop-Tarts so poipular^ Same luscious whole-fruit preserve fillinj||s -^Blueberry with golden icing and buttercrunch sparkles; Strawberry with white icing and rainbow sparkles; Cherry With pink icing and red sugar sparkles. ' V. , Try ’em hot from the toaster—the sparkled ibing won’t melt (our secret). Or, eat ’etia fresh'frqm theit'foil wraps for lunch, snadks, a picnic. Sugar sjpaKkled Frosted^op-Tarts—in the toaster pastry section at your grocer’s. ^ „ ' V- ' rb CUT. ALONG DOTTED LINE O IffRby Knllqm ComMny won’t melt at toaster temperatures THE rONTIAC PRKSS. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUAUV 21. lixi; HotSan^iches Right for Now Hot sandwiches during cold weather do hit the hunger spots just right! You can come up with one in a hurry if there’s canned luncheon meat on the' shelf.' I Simply slice and , place between bread, spread butter or margarine on the outside and lace in waffle baker to toast until golden brown. It’s not new to suggest a hSmburger for a hot sandwich, but One with variations may excite the interest. As one innovaton, mix ground beef with deviled ham (one pound ground beef with one can of two and one-fourth ounces of the canned meat). Another uses equal parts of ground beef and lamb. Spicy Mixture Gives Beef Ribs Good Taste A fy . ^ CORNBREAD — Ck)rn bread, whether Southern style or Yankee, is a favorite hot bread for breakfast, lunch or dinner. Bake it in a skillet for a change. . No doubt about it, Americans 'like their beef, arid short ribs rate high on the list of favorite beef dishes. Short ribs are usually wise meat buys. Trimmed from the end of a standing rib of beef, they have the fine flavor and good eating of this cut of meat. And Oriental Beef Short Ribs are especially tasty. Lazy pace cooking is the rule when preparing beef short ribs. Long, slow, moist cooking guarantees these chunks of beef will, be tender, juicy and so-o good! They require little watching while cooking. If time for fixing dinner is short, the beef ribs may be cooked to the fork-tender stage the evening before, stored overnight in the refrigerator, and finished cooking wim the celery and onions at dinner time the second day. Good in Both Areas North and South Disagree on Cornbread Most people have a pretty fixed idea as to what good corn bread should be and anything other than that just isn’t the real thing. If you hail from south of the Mason-Dixon line, it’s usually Everyone Needs Some Vitamin A At least every other day you should eat vitamin A rich foods, advises the Consumer and Marketing Service. Vitamin A helps protect against night blindness and keeps skin smooth and soft. It also provides a resistance to infection. Sources include; eggs, deep yellow squash, pumpkin, sweet potatoes, carrots, apricots, cantaloup or dark green leafy vegetables. made with white corn meal andlflour is just moistened. Filll Melt shortening in 9-inch iron buttermilk, with no sugar and well-greased muffin tins or|skillet or 9-inch square baking little or no flour and the bat- cornstick pans % full or ^urjpan in oven, brushing sides of ter is poured into a hot pan and | batter into well-greased 8-inch pan with melted shortening, baked until it is crusty and square pan. j Sift together dry ingredients, browned. I Bake in 425 degree oven 20 to Combine egg and buttermilk About the only thing Southern 25 minutes for muffin or and Yankee Com Bread have in'cwnsticks and 25 to 30 minutes common is lots of butter served for square pan or until brown. Makes 9 muffins cornsticks. Skillet Corn Bread: Double recipe for Yankee Com Bread and pour batter into well greased 10-inch iron skillet. iBake in 425 degree oven 30 to 35 with them. YANKEE CORN BREAD IV* cups sifted all-purpose flour % Cup yellow com meal 2 tablespoons sugar and stir into dry ingredients along with melted shortening. Pour hatter into hot pan. Bake 11 in 450 degree oven 20 to 25 minutes, or until browned. Cut in squares or wedges, serve hot with butter. Makes 9 servings. Oriental Short Ribs have a great flavor and the interesting added spicing of ginger, soy sauce and ginger ale. Served with its own piquant sauce, hot fluffy rice and simple fruit salad, it makes an invigorating nourishing meal—just right for snappy days. Oriental Beef Short Ribs V\ cup flour IMi teaspoons salt Vi teaspoon ginger 3 pounds beef short ribs 2 tablespoons shortening \Vz cups sliced onion IVi cups sliced celery 1 clove garlic, minced 1 bottle (10-oz.) ginger ale Vi cup catsup 1 tablespoon soy sauce Combine flour, salt and ginger; mix. Coat short ribs with flour mixture. Melt shortening in large fry pan or Dutch oven with close-fitting lid. Brown ribs well in shortening, over moderate heat, turning meat as needed to brown evenly. Add Vi cup onion, Vi cup celery and garlic; cook until onion is soft. Sprinkle remaining flour mixture over meat. Add ginger ale, catsup and soy sauce. Cover; cook slowly until meat is fork tender, about 2 hours. Add remaining onion and celery 30 minutes before end of cooking time. Continue cooking until both meat and vegetables are tender. Remove short ribs. Spoon off excess fat and simmer sauce to thicken if desired. Serve with hot fluffy rice. Yield: 4 servings. 4t4 baking pftwder 1 teaspoon salt legg Two-thirds cup milk One-third cup all-vegetable shortening, melted Sift flour, corn meal, sugar, !gg, stir in mOk and melted shortening. Add to dry ingredients, stirring with fork unhl double acting minutes, or until brown. SOUTHERN CORN BREAD V\ Cup all-vegetable shortening 2 cups white corn meal 2 tablespoons all purpose flour 2 teaspoons double-acting baking powder 1 teaspoon baking soda 1 teaspoon salt 2 cups buttermilk legg Cracklin Bread: Slice % pound fresh pork fat very thin, then cut into small pieces. Fry small amount at a time in a ORIENTAL BEEF SHORT RIBS-They’re long on flavor, short on labor. Oriental Beef Short Ribs are a wonderfully hearty dish . that will please the whole family. When you have a great many cookies to make, it is convenient to make bar cookies. This recipe is Yugoslavian. JELLY MERINGUE BARS 1 cup butter 1V4 cups sugar 1 egg yolk Vi teaspoon salt IVi cups sifted flour 1 cup blackberry jelly Brown Sugar Comes 3 Ways Your attention is called to the fact that light, dark and ganulated brown sugars are > not completely interchangeable skillet over medium heat until jin recipes. The bulk densities browned and crisp. Drain off fat land the flavors of these sugars vary. as it accummulates. Spread crisp pieces of fat on . aper towels and sprinkle lightly with salt. Prepare Southern Corn Bread This means that substitutions of one for another without an adjustment of the measurement will alter the flavor and may in directed, adding crisp fat to dry some instances cause a recipe ingredients. , failure. a Caektebirt Roaster home to dinner (So plump they can’t stand up)^. ^andgeta ^100 coupon to buy a Caeklobird Rock Cornish Came Hen! Cash-in fjbw on this Cackiebird BIG-LITTLE Special. First, take a big Cackiebird Roaster home to dinner. Enjoy an abundance of plump, tender succulent meat with that exclusive Cackiebird farm-fresh flavor. Then send us the front label from the wrapper together with the coupon from this ad. We’ll send you a certificate worth $1.00 on a deluxe Cackiebird Rock Cornish Game Hen. (It’s like getting the Game Hen free.) And Cackiebird Game Hens come larger than the ordinary. lVfe-2 plump pounds. So you enjoy more Juicy meat, more sumptuous flavor. Lo^k for Cackiebird In your supermarket pouHryfreeier. Get your money-saving Cackiebird Certificate Jelly Layer Is Spread on Bar Cookie 4 egg whites % cup chopped nuts 1 teaspoon lemon extract Cream butter with '/i cup sugar; add egg yolk and salt Beat until light and fluffy. Stir in flour. Pat mixture into ;grea.sed lOx 15-inch jelly roll pan Stir jelly with a fork; spread evenly over dough in the pan. i Beat egg whites until stiff. but not dry; add remaining sugar gradually, continuing to beat until meringue is formed. Fold in most of the choppeid nuts and lemon extract. Spread meringue over jelly and sprinkle with reserved chopped nuts. Bake in 350- degree oven for about 40 minutes. Cool and cut n squares. Makes 42-48 cookies. SAVE10« ( on one 1 pound can or two 8 oz. cans ) Van Camp’s NeW Orleans Style Kidney Beans are made from a recipe created by an old New Orleans family. Choice red kidney beans in a piquant sauce bring you the distinctively delicious flavor of authentic “Old World” cooking! Serve them alone, or in nourishing salads that men like, or as the main ingredient of many bean dishes. Mail to: Cackiebird, Box 843, Brooklyn, N.Y.11202 m Here’s the front label from a Cackiebird Roaster or Capon. Please send me a certificate worth $1.00 on the purchase of a Cackiebird Rock Cornish Game Hen. City_ Offw mpire* April 3a 1968 _Z'P_ Cacktahird li a ragittered tradamark of Corn Products Company. THE PONTIAC PIIKSS. WEDNESDAY, EKHUUARY 21, V MARKETS ^“imess ind I Advances Actively Earnings Reports Aid Mar/cef | Postal Service The following are top prices covwing sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold byi them in wholesale package lots.! Quotations are furnished by the! YORK (AP)—The stockj Each stock was up more markets will close, a normal Detroit Bureau of Markets asaided by some im-;than a point. j reason for caution. A decline in Produce pressive earnings statements asj Gains of a point or more durable goods orders and a de-l jit advanced early today in fair- posted also by RCA, ControPdine in the short interest werej |ly active trading. Data, Eastman Kodak, Xerox other reasons for restraint. I * ★ Magazines, ’ Papers Blast Department WASHINGTON l/P) o Mclntotn , Northern . Red Dfltciooe. b Mpoies. Golf*- - Apples. Stee VEGETAiLtS Beers,, topped, bu. CAbbage, Red. bu Cabbage,^Standard Variety, bu. Horseradish, pk. bskt. Onions, dry. 50-ib. bag Parsley, Root, dt. bch. Parsnips, ‘ ? bo. Potatoes, 50-lb. bag Potatoes, 20lb. bag Radishes, Black, '-j bu. „ Rhubarb, hothouse, 5 lb. box Rhubarb, hothouse, dz. bch. Squash, Acorn, bu. Turnips, topped LETTUCE AND GREENS Celery, Cabbage, bu. j M reported fourth quarter profits, technical rally into the third |_______ '*5 up 54.6 per cent from a year!straight session even though on! Prices advanced on [55 earlier. iWashington’s Birthday Thursday, I American Stock Exchange. the „ The New York Stock Exchange land Liggett & Myers. Texas! Opening blocks included ‘555' Gains outnumbered losses by Gulf Sulphur advjanced about 2.! American Motors, up V* at Representatives of magazines jwmore than 2 to 1 on the New! Benguet ea.sed fractionally. |12’k on 12,000 shares; Gulf &Jand newspapers which < »York Stock Exchange. | Moderate gains were made by I Western, unchanged at 47% on , their deadlines partly to mail < oo! The Dow Jones Indu.strial Av-1 "Automatic” Sprinkler, Amer-'10,100; Litton Industries, 70-%'deliveries say the postal service «7s crage rose 5.72 to 848.82. ican Photocopy, American Mo-at 70% on 6,300, and American is getting worse and some jooi * * * I tors. Eastern Air Lines and Cyanamid, unchanged at 24'/a subscribers are cancelling International Nickel reported Roan Selection Tru.st. !on 5,500, | because of it. 355 record indicated fourMuarte^^ w * Tue.sday the Associated Press j ^ h e publishers’ represen- 2.»,earnings and United Aircraft i Tlie market was extending a Average of 60 Stocks rose .3 to jatives took their complaints up jwith Post Office Department ' officials at a meeting Tuesday. The officials promised to try to find answers. "The word we get is the Post Office just doesn’t give a damn about the newspapers anymore,” said Otto R. Seidel of the Salt Lake City Tribune. Seidel said deadlines timed to mail schedules have been made useless with unannouncedj changes. And he said lack of: enough postal workers on; weekends delays delivery of his paper’s Sunday edition. DAYS, WEEKS LATE’ Other publishers’ represen-m a i 1 papers and even weeks nes several in the mail NEW FUNERAL HOME - Frank Car-ruthers stands in the main chapel of his new funeral home at 52 Bagley. Carruthers Funeral Home wds formerly at 110 W. Wes- sen. ’The new 4,800-square-foot building is about four times the size of the old place, according to Carruthers. There is a main chapel and a small one in the new building. Olds.) High Low Lost Ctig. .....*.M 6 6**4 UH <4^ + 1. Pitts Steel 4 m. 114-, tl44 PnlArald AJ 66 198^4 I97V3 -4- TO 99'2 99 papers, told the* y already I* altema-magazlne ® Business, Not Retreation Save at Supermarket By JOHN CUNNIFF | Among the suggestions: plan gram’s shoppers. But, at the AP Business Analyst ahead, keep records so real bar-'lower end of the scale, two NEW YORK (AP) — With a gains can be spotted, take ad-'pounds of uncooked, short-grain bit more care, education and j vantage of weekend specials, training, households could cut 10,buy in quantity for future use, to 20 per cent from their food study labels, reduce prices to bills, saving $200 to $400 a year at the supermarket, insists Dr. Hanz Beisdorf of Cornell Uni-„ ashing ton Post varsity, lan said it has "lost| Beisdorf’s proof our subscribers” Sram for using of late out-of-state ‘ ^ e supermar-York Times as a savings notices are institution con-ilt of con- *"agic, but still is attracting g r 0 w-ing attention in New York State, as testified by| hundreds of peo-Jones, P’a h i s department’s"'^^^®*' Shopped courses. , economicsi' . . . , , tiling' of some! program is bound to get' amounts per pound or ounce, consider substitutes. Nothing sensational; but that rice cost just 29 cents. BE AWARE OF COST "Which one will you choose?” the booklet asks. “If you choose the $1 variety, to save yourself ____ all. The program then each cooking time, seeks to motivate the shopper.j^^en be aware of how much this Self-study booklets and exten- convenience is costing you.” I Sion service instructors then at-' an example of substituting tempt to take the recreation out one food for another, the proof shopping and substitute busl- 8'’ani asks shoppers to consider nggg using dry skim milk for the liq- uid product. Nutritionally there Shoppers are motivated to attack their job with cold efficiency, a little savagely perhaps, judging items critically and perhaps as adversaries trying to deprive them of cash for other things. Savings are always kept lowed, 21 quarts will be in mind. • !>n a week. At 29 cents a quart For example, Beisdorf and | *otal bill is $6.09 a week. is little difference, and. the dry product’s taste is being improved. ★ ★ ★ For a family of four, if nutritional recommendations are fol- . . jeven more attention as food Mary B u r r i s, a home econo- y air-o a P pgp^ prices rose mist and coauthor of the pro- For the dry skim milk at 8 cents a quart the cost is only $1.68. The family cuts costs by an ex ra pj.|pg gj.gj.jj material, shopped care- . . u , , . f • u. . • . I increases aren’t far behind. In- lesslv and then carefully for a I one week by c^s- Use of fast freight wains to gpggggg gg jj^^gj, gg 3 pgp ggj,j fgjj,jjy gj jg^p Qne cart cost '^K the dry skim form. That .rr„ oicQ jg bcing g^gp jgQy gpg fgarcd by Wash-$26.69, the other $22.70. nmnim a n ai n I ■ I YEARLY TOTAL too high. -k * -k \ _____ I . "If you’re not impressed by I To combat rising food prices, gggj ggttj„g gf ^3 99 3 ^eek A I*pf4 Ppc/npnf associates use gf jt gg g yearly total of methods that are decep ively ,297.48. or a savings of 15 per , A n . cent on your grocery bill,” they|b“‘ "“t f®, ‘ Gets GM ®'‘"sether new to pgjjjjndgj gjudents. “And that’s'^” l?wer prmes are , v^fvi I woi j^,gg ghgggers. But. collected fg^j fpgg„ fj, g^j - -------------------- amounts to $231.40 saved per year on milk alone,” Beisdorf says. CAN ADD UP Many shoppers already are using such methods, of course, wise shoppers. But, collected j. into a program, these bits of a ' vice add up to big savings. Gross Revenues Are Up at Edison .sought systematically, Beisdorl A study of meat prices in dif-'f^^l®- ®ayi"e® “P j“®f ferent supermarkets showed *^ft® “P careless that if you bought five pounds of I ®"°PP®c- I chuck roast a week over a peri- ^® example. Slide 22 of the ;od of 20 weeks, the 20 roasts would cost $62.30 if bought early! , f" average shopping bill in the week. $39.30 on weekend ^27, the Better Shopper eqpily I j I I saves 15 per cent—that is $4 in I ^ * * * jso minutes. You could say the Frozen orange juice .ha. » “ riv^cii uiaiigc JU1L.C mat l-uoi, , IVT * k ' Detroit Edison’s gross, $1.34 regularly was purchased revenues were $415,362,594 for for 99 cents on sale, or a saving the 12 months that ended Jan. of 35 cents on less than a dollar 31, 1968. Gross revenues for the invested. “One dollar at 5 per corresponding period of 1967 cent interest would take six 17,016,366. ★ -★ Net earnings of the company for the 12 months through Jan. 31. 1968, were $60,211,280. After providing for the preferred Seventh Store Perry Pharmacy is opening a years to earn 35 cents,” the seventh store today at 771 Bal-shopper is reminded. |dwin in the Baldwin Plaza. The Two pounds of precooked rice 6,600-square-foot store will be cost $1 in a check by the pro-lmanaged by Edward Click. be observed in No-s 10 c k dividend requirement,'Ijf earnings available for common!' iral goes a>po“nted to $2.04 per| share. Preferred stock issued in October 1967. was By ROGER E. SPEAR bonds to yield as much as 5 pei Q _ We are both 68, retired, * ‘*«ve E bonds but would Pontiac Mo- * * * lined GM In' ^or the previous 12 months, meter tech-which ended Jan. 31, 1967, net our home 7toar””anrad^ now to get something tc learnings were $62,416,758 or qoate insurance. Annual income yield more. I do not want to buy $2.17 per common share. from pension is $8,400 plus stocks- — G- B- Social Security- Savings total| a - The highest rate ob-$16,000. We own $22,000 in bonds tainable from governmenl and 11 stocks on list enclosed.'po^ds or notes at recent levels We will have about $15,000 jg about 5.7 per cent. You could available for investment this get this yield (figured ’ News in BrieT Betty Emery of 585 First told ofHthe University yesterday that year and would like to increase maturity) on the Treasury 5%s He* is married and broke iqto her home our holdings in the above due 1974 which have been sell- and stole some $200 from a stocks. What are your sug- mg around 100%. You can do a coin bank. gestlons? — P.O. jitue better on good corporate Waterford Township police' A - Your Telephone, Pacific bonds. Jersey Standard 6s due are investieatinir a break-in Gas & Electric and Textron 1M7 were selling recenUy tc reported yesterday at Jan’s bonds are satisfactory. All your 6 per cent to maturity. Style Setter. 7218 Cooley Lake.istocks are of good quality, but They are nonred^maWe as a nd hair surav some - such as A111 e d whole until 1977. A yield of 6.0E in which change and hair spray Treasury Position worth $23 were taken. Harqld B. Reqs of 7465 Mace-day Lake, Waterford, Township, reported to township police yesterday the larceny of $20 in change and two watches, Chemical and National Lead -,Per cent could be obtained from seem better situated for yield American Can 6s of 1997 which than for growth. Since your|cannot be redeemed before 1977 over-all' income appears more Both of these issues would givi than adequate, I suggest you you a satisfactory degree ol strengthen the growth section of security your list in the expectation that tection. revolver and a painting - total stocks of this caliber will pro-| (To order your copy of Rogei value of $350 — during a break- tect you over a period of time Spear’s 48-page Guide to Weiring the ^*® from continued dollar erosion, cessfni Investing (now ia itii'86 isses were! To the Fraternal members ®«®*"®‘"®vitable. I would printing), send |1 with yhW games in-Order of Eagles of Aerie 1230. *<1** ^BM; Sears, Roebuck f name and address to Roger E il teams Hereby notice of first reading A®*™*" Telephone, which Spear, In care of The Pontiac were of the changing of the bylaws, Loversold at current Press, Box 1618, Grand Centra March 5, Tuesday, ^8 p.m.i*®''®*®- [Station, New York, , N. Y Lowell Willhite, Secretary. [ * 18017.) Can I buy govetnmentl (Copyright, 1968) BEWITCHING TWINS-Erin and Diane Murphy act on televifeion, but they are never seen together. They share the role of 3-year-old Tabatha on the television series “Bewitched.” , Child labor laws restrict the number of hours a tot may work, so when one’s time is up, the other steps in. Here, they’re seen as mother’s little helpers. A New Suez 'Invasion' By Science Service WASHINGTON - While Arab and Israeli machine-gun bullets jiip overhead, the Red Sea is invading the Mediterranean through the Suez Canal. Though closed to ship traffic by the sunken hulks of some 15 Mediterranean in recent years, since the removal of a natural barrier in the canal. About 140 species have successfully colonized the inland sea. The increasing influx and' colonization of the aliens has^ some scientists worried that THE PONT!AQ iniK Death Nbtices FONTIACPRISS CLASSIFIED ADVERTISIMG INDEX RiylMJimt M, INS NOTICES Card of Thanks ........... 1 In Memoriam ...............9 Announcements..............3 Florists................ 3-A Funeral Directors ....... 4 Cemetery Lots ...........4-A Personals ...............4-B Lost and Found.............5 ARAKELIAN, PILA February 16, 1968 ; 239 Ferry Street, Pontiac; age 8 0; Funeral service will be held Thursday, February 22 at 11 a.m. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Interment in Oak Hill Cemetery. M r Arakelian will lie in state after 7 p.m. today in the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9| p.m.) vessels, the waterway is open to native Mediterranean life forms traffic of another kind. {are threatened by the com- Swarms of Red Sea animals have been moving into the EndinH-Flights Price for Pact? OTTAWA (AP) - The Canadian government may ask the United States to discontinue flights of H-bomb planes over Canada as part of its price for remaining in the North American Air Defense Command, qualified inforAiants said today. The current 10-year NORAD agreement between Canada and the United States expires In May and negotiations on a renewal have begun. Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson told the House of Com- • mons Feb. 13 that his government has already indicated that it intends to continue cooperation with - the United States in continental air defense. He did not refer specificaliy to NORAD, howeyer. Canadian defense officials say t|iere is no need for patrols of nuclear bombers in the missile age. This happens to be the 'avowed Russian view as well, and the Soviet Union protested such flights after the crash Jan. 21 of an American B52 off ' Thule, Greenland, in which four hydrogen bombs were lost. ★ > Canadian officials say the ’ United States has more than en-. ough nuclear missiles in under-; ground silos and aboard subma-; rines to destroy Russia. • They contend that the n'^clear I bomber patrols, designed ; vent the nuclear strike force ; being caught on the ground by a ' surprise attack, serve now only to complicate East-West rela- • tipns. Other ecologists are not worried at all. The Mediterranean' is the least-fertile of any saltwater body. In additicm it is among the poorest in flora and fauna. ECOLOGICAL NICHES Many biologists believe that there are in the sea many ecological niches — ways to make a biological living — that are not now being used by native iife forms. They think the invaders may be able to make the Mediterranean more productive, due to their ability to adapt and make use of the little that is available in the way of food. Daily Almanac By United Press International Today is Wednesday, Feb. 21, the 52nd day of 1968 with 314 to follow. The moon is between its last quarter and new phase. The morning star is Venus. The evening stars are Mars, Saturn and Jupiter. ★ ★ * On this day in history: In 1878, the New Haven, Conn., Telephone Co. published the first telephone directory, listing 50 subscribers. . In 1885, after 37 years of construction, the Washington Monument was dedicated. ★ ★ ★ In 1950, Hungary sentenced American businessman Robert Vogeler to 15 years on charges of espionage. Vogeler served 17 months, and was released in April of 1951. In 1965, Black Muslim leader Malcolm X was fatally shot in New York City. TRIBESMAN EXAMINED—Df> James Turpin ch«*8 « Montagnard at a Project Concern canip in Vietnam. EMPLOYMENT Help Wonted Male...........6 Help Wanted Female ....... 7 Help Wanted M. or F. .... 8 Sales Help, Male-Female...8-A Employgient Agencies........9 Employment Information ...9-A Instructions—Schools.......10 Work Wanted Mole ..........11 Work Wanted Female.........12 Work Wanted Couples ..; .12-A SERVICES OFFERED Building Services-Supplies... 13 Veterinary.................14 Business Service ..........15 Bookkeeping and Taxes......16 Credit itdvisors .......... 16-A Dressmaking and Tailoring. .17 Gardening ............... 18 Landscaping..............18-A Garden Plowing.......'.... 18-B Income Tax Service.........19 Laundry Service . . .......20 Convalescent—Nursing ......21 Moving and Trucking........22 Painting and Decorating... .23 Television-Radio Service...24 Upholstering.............24-A Transportation ............25 Insurance..................26 Deer Processing......,...,2T WANTED Wanted Children to Board..28 Wanted Household Goods...29 Wanted Miscellaneous.......30 Wanted Money...............31 Wanted to Rent.............32 Share Living Quarters......33 Wanted Real Estate.........36 RENTALS OFFERED Apartments—Furnished.......37 Apartments—Unfurnished ...38 Rent Houses, Furnished ... .39 Rent Houses, Unfurnished.. .40 Property Management... .40-A Rent Lake Cottages.........41 Hunting Accommodations 41-A Rent Rooms.................42 Rooms With Board...........43 Rent Farm Property........4,4 Hotel-Motel Rooms..........45 Rent Stores................46 Rent Office Space..........47 Rent Business Property.. .47-A Rent Miscellaneous.........48 REAL ESTATE Sale Houses ...............49 Income Property............50 Lake Property..............51 Northern Property .......51-A Resort Property ...........52 Suburban Property .........53 Lots-Acreage ..............54 Sale Farms ................56 Sale Business Property ....57 Sale or Exchange...........SB FINANCIAL Business Opportunities.....59 Sale Land Contracts........60 Wanted Contracts-Mtges...60-A Money to Lend..............61 Mortgage Loans ............62 MERCHANDISE Swaps .................... 63 Sale Clothing .............64 Sole Household Goods.......65 Antiques............... 65-A Hi-Fi, TV & Radios.........66 Water Softeners..........66-A For Sale Miscellaneous .... 67 Christmas Trees ......... 67-A Christmas Gifts..........67-B Hand Tools-Machinery.......68 Do It Yourself.............69 Cameros-Service ...........70 Musical Goods..............71 Music Lessons ...........71-A Office Equipment...........72 Store Equipment............73 Sporting Goods.............74 Fishing Supplies—Baits.....75 Sand-Gravel-Dirt ..........76 Wood-Coal-Coke-Fuel .... 77 Pets-Huntipg Dogs .........79 Pet Supplies-Service.....79-A Auction Sales..............80 Nurseries..................81 Plonts-Trees-Shrubs .... 8J-A Hobbies ond Supplies.......82 FARM MERCHANDISE livestock ................ 83 Meats....................83-A Hay-Groin-Feed ............84 Poultry.................. 85 Farm Produce ..............86 Farm Equipment.............87 , AUTOMOTIVE Travel Trailers ...........88 Housstrailers..............89 Rent Trailer Space.........90 Commercial Trailers......90-A Auto.Accessories ..........91 Tires-Auto-Truck ..........92 Auto Service...............93 Motor Scooters.............94 Motorcycles................95 Bicycles ..................96 Boats-Accessories 97 Airplanes..................99 Wonted Cors-Trucks........101 Junk Cors-Trucks........101-A Used Auto-Truck Ports ...102 New ond Used Trucks.......1Q3 Auto-Morine Insurance ...104 Foreign Cars .............105 New ond Used Cora.........106 GOETZKE, BARNEY F. ; February 20, 1968 ; 23978 Earl Court, Farmington (Formerly of Orchard Lake); age 76; beloved husband of Laura Goetzke; dear father of Mrs. Samuel (Pearl) Sachs and Bernard A. Goetzke; dear brother of Mrs. Clara Deiss and Mrs. Erna Schenk; also survived by two grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Friday, February 23, at 1 p.m. at the Kinsey-Gar-rett Funeral Home, 420 S. Lafayette, Royal Oak with Rev. Thomas W. Kirkman officiating. Interment in Oakview Cemetery. WEDNESDAY, EKHRUAKV 21. llKiS Announcemenft 3 Help^onted Male LERS sysletVi r's ''.i ^ HUDSON'S OPTICAL SERVICE HILLS, FRANK E.; February 20, 1968 ; 4632 Elizabeth Lake Road, Waterford Township; age 82; dear father of F. Keith and M. Dale Hills; dear brother of Eugene and Jesse Hills; also survived by two grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Friday, February 23, at 1:30 p.m. at the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home with Rev. Henry Wrobbel officiating. Interment in Ottawa Park Cemetery. Mr. Hills will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9). eyeglasses fille Irames and eyeglass . Optical service. Pontiac, lower level; a Detroit, Northland, HEDGER, CPL. JAMES R.; February 4, 1968 ; 467 N. Perry; age 24; beloved husband of Stella (Ruth) Hedger; beloved son of Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Hedger; dear father of Jami Renee Hedger; dear brother of Mrs. George (Peggy) Fowler, Jacqueline, Sue Ellen, Richard, Roger, and Bert Hedger. Funeral service will be held Friday, February 23 at 2 p.m. at the Pursley-Gilbert Funeral Home with Major Norman E. Wilhelm, USAF, officiating. Interment in Veterans section. Perry Mount Park Cemetery, Cpl. Hedger will lie in state at the funeral home after 7 p.m. tonight. (Suggested visiting hours 9:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m.) JOHNSON, OTTO RINGLING; February 20, 1968 ; 3 92 Highland Avenue; dge 70; beloved son of Thomas and Delary Thompson. Funeral service will bife held Thursday, February 22 at 8 pjn. at the Frank Carruthers Funeral Home with Rev. Thomas J. Holt, Jr. officiating. Interment Friday in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mr. Johnson will lie in state at the funeral home after 7 p.m. tonight. WILDER, EVERETT (COTTON); February 20, 1968 ; 2121 Dexter Road; age 36; beloved husband of Zela Jane Wilder; beloved son of Leamon and Lulu Wilder; dear father of Wesley Mitchell and David Everett Wilder; dear brother of Mrs. Kenneth (Geraldine) Miracle, Mrs. Cecil (Geneva) Thompson, Paul and J, Wilder. Funeral service will be held Friday, February 23, at 1:30 p.m. at the Huntoon Funeral Home with Rev. Claude Cook officiating. Interment in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Wilder will lie in state at the funeral home. The family sugf. memorial contributions may be made to the Kinney Research United Fund. In Memoriam E., Ransom, who passed away, Pab. 21, 1907. You leH us lust I year ago today. And our lives are not the same. Although'you are away. In our hearts you still remain. Sadly missed by Mother and Dad, wile, Willene, sister, Mardel, brothers, Billy, and Wilbert. ACID INDIGESTION? PAINFUL gas? Gel new PH5 tablets. Fast as liquids. Only 9S cents. SImm's Bros. Drugs.___________________ ANNOUNCING THE NEWLY designed Bloomfield Centre Hall, 332$ Orchard Lake Rd., In West Bloomfield, featuring a complete lino of custom services, 47«-726I or DEBT AID, INC., Bk. Bldg. FE Credit Advisors. Great Savings During Huidson's Home Sale Hudson's PONTIAC MALL HALL s=OR RENT, WEDDINGS, meetings, and parties, 2-0072. FE 5-0310 after t p.m, Pontiac Press Want Ads for Action BOX REPLIES ( At 10 a.m. today there ! were replies at The Press ! Office in the following ; \ boxes; j C-2, C-6, C-7, C-13, C-14, ! C-15, C-17, C-20, C-29, < C-32, C-33, C-34, C-36, i C-37, C-3^, C-41, C-42, ; C-44, C-45. ' Funeral Directors 4 COATS FUNERAL HOME’ DRAYTON PLAI^________ Huntoon SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOME ^^Thouphtful Service** FE 1-9288 Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME. 332-0370 Established Over 40 Years Cemetery Lots These Graves are privately owned 10O PER CENT HUMAN hair wigs and hair pieces. Wholesa'a distributor. Home demonstrations. kutikuhn Wigs. 343-4995. ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDING a Irlendty adviser, phone FE 2-5122 belore 5 p.m. Conlldantlal AVOID GARNISHMENTS! GET OUT OF DEBTI We can help you with a plan you can allord. DEBT CONSULTANTS OF PONTIAC, INC. 114 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. FE 0-0333 •■raTE LICENSED-BONDED Open Saturday 9-12 a.m. DEBT AID, INC., 504 COM. NATL. Bk. Bldg. FE 2-0101, Refer to Credit Advisors. 16-A GET OUT OF DEBT ON A PLANNED budget PROGRAM YOU CAN AFFORD TAILORED TO YOUR INCOME MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS ..._ ,______ for groum of .. .. mora. Just the spot for your holiday party. Call for reservations. 42M611. UPLAND HILLS FARM VILLAGE LIVfkY Horse drawn Hay and Sleigh rides along scenic Lakt Trails, ------ rails, open rlvate club- ■. 391-0731 after 4 p.m. H/B joilyn Rd.__________________391.15 WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY B Professional color. Brochure ava able. Call 338-9079, anytime. P beagle -OrfonvTile s FOUND; GRAY MALE POODLE.. Vic. Haggerty —■ -— Rds. 343-0375, a^ OUND: GL vicinity Oxt___________ LOST - BLACK MALE p Reward. 051-2241. LOST: REDBONE HOUND ON stale Idnd near Camp Pontiac In White Lake Twp. Reward. OR 4-1037.________________________ m call 334-3274. male, Atibnta I Opdyke LOST: COCKER SPANIEL, blond —'- —d leather collar, with Seorgla imprinted, vie. and Square Lake —________call, 33S-2592, ________ LOST - CHILD'S GLASSES, dark reddish brown plastic frMnts, Vic. of warrlngham and Wllllanra Lake Rd. 474-J420. LOiT: FEBRUARY 14; iHlghland- Pattlbona Lake Area, Smair Silver Grey Shaggy Female doO, Calfn Terrier. Answers to "Henry'. Reward 4S5-2522._________________ LOST: BLACK LABRADOR male, reward, 334-7194._______________ LOST - APRICOT POODLE, Port Huron Tdgs, 344 Auburn. FE 3- 2922._______________________ . LOST: COLLIE. MEDIUM SIZED male. Sable and white. Reward. Call 442-4444.___________________ MINIATURE WHITE POODLE, 4 months old, pink Rhinestone collar, pink toe nails, answers to MItsey, Vic. Midget Bar, $50 raWard, 473- 21, call 334-2771. 4 1 MAN PART TIME IS. Call 474-0520 4 p.m.-l p.m. KN - LEARN -ft) OPERATE, intain and repair bulldozer and ikhoe, no exp. necessary mchak Excavating, 343-0001. hours. 473-9480 between 4-4 p.m A PART TIME (JOB, OVLR 25, married, call 1^0841, bet. 5-7 AEROSPACE LAB equipment. Dr'y box, vacuum, cryogenic, welding, clean room sales. Cover Inquiries In Toledo, Detroit, Saginaw, Ann Arbor, Ft. Wayne regions. $20,0C0 ______________le benefits, 447-7354. APPLIANCE SERVICE TECHNICIAN RCA Service Company has oper) Ings lor appliance service techni-..I.™ .„H fringe e JO An Equal OoportuViity Employer are you LOOKING FOR STEADY employment In a lob with a future? General Teleohont Co. has Apply a( General Talephonv' Bi ness 0«lce - I""®" ' lord, Mich. An e ' ‘ ALARM INSTALLERS FOR i Ironies security systems, top w for top men. Exp*-'---- required, r ' * Mr. Keller: per. i-s p.m. y/y-xazu. Pinkerton Security, Inc. Assistant Controller We are a multi-state growth company lr> the . N. Woodward area, lookino^ tor an ^ ag^ssiye college accounting and office management. Starting salary Sl0,000 to $11,000 range. If you desire challenge and potential, tell u Taylor, Taylor Chevy-Oid; SEE KEN DUDLEY, Body Help Wanted Male 6 EXPERIENCED HEATING SERV- ’ Apply 105 Tregent, PdNTIAc! Lechner Heating Co^ FE 2-1621. FOREMAN ~ For new modern Injection molding plant, experience necessary, fop wages, fringe benefits. American Plastics Products Co. Maple, Walled Lake 2701 n person, Jacobson's House, 545 S “ ___ _ iriON" A T T E Experienced, MechanI ed. Local, references. »-time. Gulf, J'elegraph ai GUARD For Utica, Mt. Cle anager. Orion. BOOKKEEPER TO DO payroll union reports, receivables, payables, etc. Good opportunity for ambitious man. Auburn Heights area. 756-8350. _ BRICK LAYERS, VENEER, men must be 1st class, highest wages, - call MA 5-2153, Ed. Thom son. BURROUGHS CORPORATION Business Forms and Supplies Group CREATIVE SALESMAN IN the OAKLAND COUNTY AREA WHICH OFFERS: Operat Excel COOK, GRILL / , must have frai collect. Bonded ' i. Guaranteed Security of employment Planned training program Home Office Seminars ■^ent and Insurance programs WE ARE LOOKING FOR A SALESMAN WHO: I interested In e career with one ( Persevering. IS a college education, or pa college and equivalent work e They will take over active eccounts, calling on top executives, selling business forms, systems and check ^sbursing equipment in the FOR APPOINTMENT CALL: Mr. T. B. Schmidt 335-9244 BURROUGHS CORPORATION Business Forms and Supplies Group 2255 S. Telegraph Pontiac, 48053 (an equaf opportunity employer) CAND^^ and TObXccO deib^s Salary and commission. Send Resume to Pontiac Press Box No. C-10, Pontiac, Mich._ CAR WASHERS - DRYERS - 149 W. Huron - apply 0:30 to 9 a.m. CARPENTERS ROUGH, UNION. Contractors 474-9444. After 5 p.m. call 007-5208. CARVER COUNTER MAN HOUSEKEEPING, D’ I E Y IMMEDIATE OPENING FOR MEN who can be on the job tvery day. Pleasant secure future, no tire repair, washing or greasing work. ! AAtict K* iiKU {A d.fpJTl.K i,.f.i Di^e Hwy^, Clarkston. j Industrial Soles Engineer THE GATES RUBBER CO. Has sales engineering position [ I Michigan area, i ortunity and benef expenses. Equal nployer. For interv call 421-5300, Livot Janitor service ' dvancement. 642-5530. Chan JANITORIAL LEAD^RT^good* portunity for the rlghT man. We have a lanitorial leaders job open in our company as well as several openings for qualified janitors. We offer steady employment, good conditions and a secure future. For more information call Mr. Given in Detroit B75-1055.____________ J 0 U R N EYMEN CA^PEN-TERS, Sterling Township area apart-a- « “inths steady work. E&M Holan Contravi 0297 or 453-3482 after '7p^Sc JOURNEYMAN ELECTRICIAN OR experienced helper tor electrical contractor, reildentlal or commercial. Year around job. FE 4- MACHINISTS, TOOL MAKERS, d)^ makers, .part or lull limp, retirees •’L''*? »* 2’’' Central, lust off S. ftglnaw St., Pontiac.__ MACHINIST, EXPERIENCED ON mill, lathe, shaper, 585-5860, -.JS('"''ay Co., Madison Heights. MAN, 20 TO 25, TO learn glass business. Good opportunity. Steady employment. Write Pontiac Press Box C-43, Pontiac, Mich.__ I MAN FOR JANITORIAL work, Birmingham area, local references and must have car. Reply to Pon-tlac Press Box Number C-5. ________ MECHANICS WANTED $2.90 to $3.50 per hr. depending upon experience, prefer lift truck exp., will consider others. Send resume to Pontiac Press Box C-14, Pontiac, Mich.________ MECHANIC'S HELPER ANO gas attendant, Crawford Shell Service, _Keego Harbor. MEN TO WORK ON HARNESS race horses, $80 It experienced, $75 If Inexperienced but willing to learn. Brood mare and stallion man needed also, at good pay. Free furnished living quarters on term lor single man or couple without children. Contact In person. United Stock Farm, 3471 Hanerman Rd., Laonard or talaphone 420.1''' quires immediate Systamatlon Inc., . Novi, bet. 7 a.m.-3:30 p.m OsISlf'Novr ?(1 Encyclopedia Britennica and Great serving. Excellent hours, ss, and banallts. Apply Machus ■ m s Square, 443 S. Adams, WITH PROVEN ABILITY TO COMPI^TELY RUN COMPACT KITCHEN FOR COCKTAIL LOUNGE AND RESTAURANT. Excellent pay and Incentive, call Ml 7-2274 after 5 p m.___ Chief Engineer Is needed by aggressive plastics firm that is doubling in size within the next year. Our present sales exceed $1 million, and we are located in the Detroit Metropolitan area. The successful candidate tor this position will be responsible tor all tool facilities and personnel, too] design end building, process engineering end estimsting, ofiboth tools and production. Appilean --- --- —.... ,00, ox , excellent and fringe benefits. Sand In confidence to Pontiac Box C-34, Pont Fee, COLD HEADER perlenced only. portunity. Maximu........., Blue Cross, paid vacations, plus many extras. Days and afternoons. 1-933-4700. __________ COMBINATION BUMPER AND painter, plenty of work, FE 3,7034. cook-grill man, top pay "for good man, 5 days, benefits, vaca-tlofi. Biffs, Telegraph at Maple (15 Mite). DIESEL MECHANIC to take charge of small shop. Mather Trucking Co., 474-0445. DRIVER SALESMAN Suburban and city delivery, salary plus commission. Call 7 a.m. to 9 - - ' - * - 1. B98-1203, ask for ERECTING CREWS wanted. Must be able to travel. State experiences ■ rences. Contact Boyne REPAIR, Ml 4-2511. EXPERIENCED MEAT CUTTER to take over complete charge in a very fine neighborhood market. Factory Workers By day or week: Warehousame assemblers; machine operator material handlers; comm laborers; etc. Dally pay. Report a time after 4 a.m. Emplcyers Temporary Service NEED REAL ESTATE SALES MANAGER If you are Interested In earning more money, we have an opening lor you, due to our expansion program, Must have full knowledge of all real estate phases, pleasant personality and able to handle responsibility. If you are accepted, you will have your own office and be In complete charge of our new sales program. All Inquiries confidential. Call 474-M01. Ask lor Roy Lazenby, Lazenby Realty, 4424 W. Walton, Drayton Plains._____ It I could show you $58 par week for port lime evening work, would you be interested? Must be 10 or over. Car required. Call Mr. Wilson at 052-1325.________ PLANT MANAGER REQUIRED BY MODERN STAMPING PLANT IN PONTIAC Man must be able to estimate based on experience. Paid va»-tlon, and hospitalization, also bonus plan. Call Mr. Duchine. 334-2^, Original Products, lnc„ 350 I. Sanford. PROCESS ENGINEER Local electrical control manufacturer seeks graduate engineer. (M. E. preferred) Preferbbly >n his 30's with knowledge o f machining, assembly, and plastic moulding techniques. Must be able to design tools end fixtures as well as set-up production processes. Send resume and Salary requirements to P, 0. Box 404, Birmingham, Mich. 40012. F-5 PROGRAMMER Starting Salary to $13,000 Unusual opportunity In Detroit with National Consulting Firm — for a Programmer with COBOL end 340-30 experience. Potential Supervisory or Systems ability desired. Challenging assignment and a broad range of industries. Very limited travel. Send resume to: PONTIAC PRESS BOX C-1 48058 Production Manager Experienced In job shop and short production runs. Engineering degree or equivalent, salary open, supervise 35 people. Company manufactures proprietary electro - PLANT FACILITY DESIGNERS UNITED INDUSTRIAL i ENGINEERING 29330 Stephenson Hwy. ! Madison Heights______LI B-6205 j Real Estate Salesman For busy ollice, experienced I preferred but will train right party. Ask for Mr. or Mrs. Hackott. HACKETT REALTY EM 3-4703 I w A N T FAST R E S U L T S USE PRESS W A N T A D S 3^2 8 1 1