State PoliceQ of Lazaros to Stay Soviets Mulling Bombing China? U. S. Concerned From Our News Wires WASHINGTON — Intelligence reports that tile Soviet Union may be considering an air attack on China’s nuclear installations have caused serious concern at highest levels here over possibility of war between the two Communist giants. The reports, coming from Communist sources of varying degrees of credibility, assert Soviet leaders have been sounding out their Warsaw Fact partners, as well as some Communist party leaders in Western Euurope, as to what their attitude would be, if the Soviet Union had to take such an extreme step. Washington has cast doubt on the truth of these reports. * ★ * Versions from some other Western delegates at the meeting tend to discount the reports as exaggerations or as delierate misinformation promoted by non-Soviet Communist factions for their own interest. CONSIDERED SERIOUSLY Some authorities here believe the reports have been planted by Moscow for psychological effect against Peking. In view of the steadily increasing bit-However, other information reaching temess between Russia and China and their recurrent border clashes, however, the intelligence reports are being considered very seriously at the highest levels in the Nixon administration. ★ w ★ The assumption of those authorities who tend to believe the reports is that the Soviet Union wants to determine whether such extreme action would cost it support within the international Communist community, particularly i n Eastern Europe. The reports all appear to be talking about a possible Soviet attack byv bombers armed with conventional weapons against Lop Nor and other Chinese nuclear facilities'. Teachers Settle in Waterford A (Waterford Township teacher strike was averted early today when negotiators for teachers and the school board unexpectedly reached agreement on a new teachers’ contract. Prospects for a strike had been good yesterday, which would have delayed the opening of school. It is now likely, schools will reopen oh schedule a week from today. * * * “We didn’t expect to settle the contract issues at all yesterday,” Warren Williams, executive director of the teachers’ Waierford Education Association, commented. - “It surprised us too,” remarked acting Supt. Dr. John Pagen. “It was a compromise. The teachers gave up soma things and we analyzed the possibility of a strike.” ‘MORE BELT-TIGHTENING’ “But the proposed contract means we will have to do more belt-tightening. We’D have to go with a total austerity program, which I will say more about later.” - Now all that remains to be done to send teachers back to work Tuesday to prepare for school .opening next Thursday is approval of the one-year pact by a vote of the teachers and the board of education.' ■, * * * Williams said teachers are set to meet 7 p.m. tomorrow at Mason Junior High School, 3835 W. Walton, to vote on the proposed contract. The district has about 650 teachers. t v Pagen said he would try to call a meeting of the board of education for tomorrow to vote on the measure. • MONTHS OF TALKS Tentative agreement was reached after six months of negotiations. A state mediator had recently been conducting negotiations. Tuesday he had called for fact-finding by the State Labor Mediation Board. “We’re very happy with the proposed settlement,” Wiliams said. “We got a pretty competitive salary scale. It is a substantial jump on all levels. Salary was the key issue among six unresolved areas.” * * * All issues were solved after school administrators returned from a two-day preschool workshop late yesterday and called a negotiation meeting, which lasted eight hours until 2 a.m: today. The state mediator wasn’t present. CHINESE RETALIATION If Soviet leaders are indeed considering such a strike, China could retaliate with a massive land invasion. The Soviet! would then be faced with a decision of whether to use nuclear weapons to halt the armed hordes China could throw against them. Nixon Criticized on College Strife WASHINGTON (AP) - Some Republican congressmen who toured the nation’s colleges last spring say the administration has done little to ease the basic sources of campus I “The critical urgency of the problem cannot be overstated,” the 22 GOP congressmen reported to President Nixon June 17. f* -it ' * And now, Rep. William A. Steiger says: “I think it’s fair to say most of the people who took that tour would tend to say things would still be difficult this year.” CONTRADICTS FINCH The Wisconsin congressman contradicted the assessment of Robert H. Finch, secretary of health, education and welfare, who was quoted last week as saying chances for a quiet year on campuses are very promising. “I think the tempo of the student demonstrations on Vietnam will pick up this fall,” said Rep. R. Lawrence CoUghlin of Pennsylvania, one of those who made the spring tour. * * * Some moves over the summer have been encouraging, representatives of the informal coalition said in interviews, but progress has been slight in alleviating student discontent over basic issues like the draft, their alienation from national politics and the depersonalization of big modern universities. even if passions aroused by past issues fade, the congressmen say, the discontent is volatile enough to feed protests over yet-unknown issues. US. Must GIs in S. Korea—Park SEOUL (AP) — President Chung Hee Park declared today that U.S. forces will have to remain in South Korea until the threat from all Communists in North Asia is eliminated. He referred to the Soviet Union as well as Communist China and North Korea. * * * Park’s interview with the Associated Press was his first interview since his talks with President Nixon in San Francisco last week. * * * Asked when U.S. forces could be reduced or withdrawn, Park said he and Nixon Had discussed the subject, and both recognized the threat from the North Koreans. ‘U.S THWARTS N. KOREA’ “The reason they are not executing their invasion plans,” the president said, “is because the U.S. forces are in Korea. A withdrawal of U.S. forces is not foreseeable until the threat has been eliminated. And until then, the continued FAIR QUEEN — Gay S. Chipman, 17, a 1968 graduate of Birmingham Groves High School, was crowned Miss Michigan State Fair last night in competition with nine other finalists at the fair in Detroit, who were chosen from a field of 55. The 5-foot-4 blonde is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Francis S. Chipman, 26111 Carol, Franklin Village. Miss Chipman is a dental assistant and enjoys swimming, tennis, skiing and modeling. Someclouds will driftinandout of the Pontiac area today, tonight and tomorrow, but weather will continue mostly fair for the period. The weatherman predicts tern-' peratures will soar to near 90, today and tomorrow with little change Saturday. The low will be a mild 62 to 68 tonight. Red Infiltration Replaced Viet Loss- Pentagon presence of U.S. forces will be required.” v Park said South Korea probably would achieve economic self-sufficiency by the end of the third economic plan in 1976. * * ★ , “Militarily, however," he said, “we are inferior in some aspects to North Korea. We have to improve our weapons and make them strong enough to deter the North Koreans. (When that can be achieved is-difficult to predict.” * w ★ Park added that even if South Korea could withstand an offensive from North Korea, the U.S. presence would have to continue in the face of threats from the Soviet Ujiion and Communist China. “If the United States were not here," he said, “we would give the Communists an opportunity of renewing their invasion of 1950. 1950 RENEWAL FEARED “If Korea were communized, Japan would be the next target.” ★ * * Concerning Japan’s campaign t o regain Okinawa and his own opposition to closing of the U.S. bases there,'* Park said he had taken pains to make clear he does not wish to interfere in the territorial, and administrative functions of Okinawa, that these have to be worked put between Japan and the United States. Sailor Tells How I Turtle Saved Him f LOS ANGELES UP) — It took a whale to save Jonah from the briny deep. Chung Nam Kim says he made it with a turtle, and he’s got witnesses. Kim, a 27-year-old South Korean sailor, said yesterday.a turtle kept him afloat after he fell from the (lock of a merchant ship in tile Pacific Ocean. ★ ★ ★ Hours after his strange adventure began, he was picked up by a Swedish freighter, the Citadel, Crewmen of freighter said Kim was swimming with one arm on a turtle’s back, and one of them took pictures to prove it. TELLS HIS STORY Kim related his story in a radio-telephone interview aboard the Citadel, which is due here tomorrow. He said he was a deckhand aboard the Federal Nagara, a Liberian ship headed for New York. 'it it it , As the ship sailed about 100 miles off Nicaragua last Friday, Kim said, he got a headache: It was about 2 a.m. and he couldn't sleep. So he walked out on the deck for some fresh, ah', he said, and “one foot went off — and then I went off. Nobody saw it.” “I had been swimming — it seemed like 13 hours,” he said, when he saw an animal. “I thought it was a shark, then I could see it was a turtle. “I threw an arm around it and we swam, very slowly, very slowly, for about two hours.” ^ it it it Finally he spotted the Citadel. Sailors of the freighter* threw Kim a lifebelt. He grabbed it and they pulled him out. Kim said he looked back gnd saw the turtle disappear under the water. Nobody on the ship saw it again. Fine Days Due Through Saturday Windiare south to sonthwest at 6 to 18^ miles per hour. < No precipitation is predicted through Saturday. ★ h m it The low temperature before 8 a.m. was 62, and the mercury had zoomed to 88 by 2 p.m. WASHINGTON (AP) - The Pentagon said* today North Vietnam sent about 100,000 troops into South Vietnam during tiie first Mlf of this year, enough to “substantially replace” enemy combat losses. The Pentagon figured enemy killed during that period at 93,653 but said that loss would be expanded when prisoners, wounded and defections are added in. ir ' it ★ It was the first time in months that the Defense Department has released infiltration figures and came at a time when the Pentagon was seeking to play down the idea that it stands in sharp disagreement with the State Department over the significance of a recent infiltration decline. * * ★ Defense spokesman Jerry Friedheim, asserting that there is no disagreement, said both agencies agree that infiltration is lower this year and that there may be a decline of enemy strength in South Vietnam as a result. CAUTION ON SIGNIFICANCE But whereas the State Department said it viewed the development as “significant,” Friedheim said: “We interpret this cautiously.” it * ★ Frlendhelm said the 100,000-man infiltration figure for the first half of 1969 Is half the Infiltration figure for the corresponding period in 1968, but he said any comparison of the two figures “must be made cautiously” because of special factors which existed last year. it it it Among these, Friedheim said, are the fact that in early 1968 North Vietnam was preparing for U|e big Tet offensive. He said also the halt of the U.S. combing of North Vietnam last fall and weather factors over Laos this spring must be considered in any assessment of this year’s lowered infiltration. it • it i Friedheim said that while the enemy mayt have suffered a slight loss in strength in-South Vietnam, his strength “remains sufficient to conduct operations under his present strategy.” •k it it Friedheim used the 100,060 infiltration figure because he said he did not have “specific figures which would be meaningful for public release.” “Militarily, however, the bases are not only for safeguarding Japan but for defending the free nations in this part of the world,” he continued. “Therefore, they have great impact in safeguarding freedom in this area.” it ir * Park said he is opposed to any withdrawal of U.S, forces from Okinawa without adequate, provisions or alternatives. Told the U.S. people were puzzled by North Korea’s seizure of the Pueblo and its downing of a U.S. reconnaissance plane over international waters, Park said he was equally puzzled. His guess, he said, was that the North Koreans were testing the degree of U.S. determination to defend South Korea and attempting to split the United States and South Korea. 'Nixon to Rule in Jetport Rift7 WASHINGTON (AP) - A conservationist says a White decision is imminent on the controversial jetport at tpe edge of Everglades National Park in southern Florida. Thomas L. Kimball, executive director of the National Wildlife Federation, said President Nixon would decide the Issue since the Department of Transportation wants the air terminal built whUe the Department of Interior fears it wtil harm the park. Federal approval is necessary for -financial aid and designation as an airport for international flights. Kimball’s group, the National Parks Association, Sierra Club, National Audubon Society, and the Wilderness Society say the huge aircraft and the thousands nf paimlo Who would around the airport would ruin the park. POLLUTION FORESEEN In the jetport the conservationists see the entire spectrum of pollution: exhaust products; sewage, fertilizer, insecticide runoffs corrupting the water; jet engine noise disturbing the peace of the swamp. The park is a mixture of broad cypress swamps and savannah, pine stands, salt meadows and mangrove thickets alive with alligators, osprey, panther-ra tropical ecology unknown to the rest of the nation. h t it A rise of two feet in the water level can change hundreds of square miles into swamp and shallow lake. The park’s water supply has been manipulated dangerously in the past at the expense of the wildlife. Poachers have illegally taken upwards of 20,000 alligator hides a year until this situation has finally been considered ex-, tremely serious by the Interior Department. ’ , * / •• CONSTRUCTION STARTED As the conservation groups muster for the latest crunch some runway construction already has started at the 39-square mile jetport site. Presently, the site is called a training facility for commercial pilots. it it k Kimball said decisions must also be made as to whether an alternate site is available', which would cause less damage to the nark. If the jetport) hr to be built, Kimball added, a decision must also be made on what stipulations there could be to help protect the park. A—2 TIIK PONTIAC l’HKSS. THURSDAY, AlCiST 28, I9G9 Israel Begs for Safety of Jews in Arab Lands HENRY CABOT LODGE N.VietTroop Pullout a Must,Hanoi Told By The Associated Press Israel’s parliament called on all nations of the world today to help save the Jews of Iraq, Syria and Egypt “before it is too late." It also demanded an urgent United Nations investigation into- the plight of Jews in Arab lands. The Knesset was called out of summer recess for a special session to discuss the execution Monday of 15 alleged Iraqi spies, including two Jews. Nine other Jews were executed in Baghdad earlier this year. Prime Minister Gol(la* Meir accused Year-Round School OK'd the U.N. Human Rights Commission of “making a mockery of elementary rules of fairness" by failing to investigate the situation of Jews in Arab countries while conducting an investigation of alleged Israeli atrocities in occupied lands. She said the commission’s investigation of Arab allegations of Israeli atrocities “in fact encouraged Iraqi rulers to go ahead with their policy of mock trials and hangings.” * world,” he said. “But nothing seems to stop the Iraqis. There are semes of Jews in prison. They have a life of terror and persecution. “If they are not stopped by world opinion, they will no doubt hang more people, more Jews in this bloodthirsty Birmingham ‘BUND HATRED’ PARIS (AP) — The United States warned today that a negotiated settlement of the Vietnam war is impossible as long as Hanoi rejects the principle of a mutual withdrawal of all norf-South Vietnamese troops from South Vietnam. * ★ ★ U S. Ambassador Henry' Cabot Lodge told the 32nd session of the deadlocked peace talks that more thah 130 battalions of regular North Vietnamese forces are “actively engaged against South Vietnam." , * * * - “It is thus impossible for the people of South Vietnam to determine their own future freely unless these troops, from North Vietnam return < to North Vietnam,” he went on. it It it “This is why. It Is, impossible to achieve a negotiated settlement until the Democratic Republic of (North) Vietnam is willing to act on the principle that all non-South Vietnamese forces will leave South Vietnam." DEMAND DENOUNCED North Vietnamese de'egate Xuan Thuy immediately repeated Hanoi’s longstanding rejection of any mutual troop withdrawal. *, . * * He denounced the American demand as a trick to prolong the U.S. “occupation of South Vietnam" and protect, the “puppet regime"—a reference to the South Vietnamese government. “Ever since this conference started, the United States has Insisted on its extremely unreasonable demand of mutual withdrawal, which we have many times criticized and rejected," Thuy said. NAACP Plans Suits on Building Bias PITTSBURGH -UP - The national labor director'of a civil rights organization said today his group will file “several suits" to stop all construction being funded with public money to back up demands that more Negroes be admitted to draft unions. “We are. not going to allow billions of dollars of federal, state and municipal funds to be used to subsidize radal discrimination in the construction industry,” said Herbert Hill, national labor director of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. * * * Hill said the NAACP next week will fUe the first of several suits in U. S. District Courts across the nation to stop the expenditure of funds “on projects where Negro workers are barred from getting a fair share of jobs by the building and trades unions." “Undoubtedly, by putting forward this demand, the United States alms at finding some justification for sending its troops to the other cno of the globe to invade Vietnam, ana at equating the United States—the aggressor — with the Vietnamese people—the lighters against aggression." LANSING (UPll—The State Board -of Education yesterday adopted | ^ rules allowing year-round opera- | $ tion of schools in Michigan, ft Under the new rules, districts f ; may apply for state aid payments | based on pupil counts taken four s | times a year instead of the usual f | one time. , * * * I The counts are set up for the | fourth Fridays in July, October, | | January and April, i The year-round plan has been | ; endorsed by many school officials | < and legislators as the best way to | ■| fully use school facilities and1 f | personnel. | OTHER ACTION | In other action, board members 1 :: asked that a report be made on j ;■ alleged delay of school funds to ] | the Ferndale School District. The I 1 district, now engaged In hearings i I with the federal government over j Jf charges of discrimination in the : ’ system, claimed the Department |. of Education delayed funds follow- ! ' ing the federal charges. The 3,000 Jews in Iraq “are helplessly exposed to the blind hatred of the Arab States toward Israel,” Mrs. Meir charged. As she spoke, about 50 Israelis of Iraqi origin assembled outside the Knesset building for a silent demonstration protesting the Iraqi executions. ★ ★ ♦ David Rivlih, Israeli Foreign Office spokesman, told newsmen Israel vietos ’ the persecution of Jews in Iraq “very, very gravely.” “Even non-Arab Moslem countries have bitterly deplored the, executions there, not to mention every enlightened government and the free press of the In Beirut, Lebanon, King Hussein of Jordan, said in a newspaper interview war with Israel was inevitable “and the possibility exists of an explosion at any time.” HuSsein’s comments, printed by the paper AI Jarida, reflected his hardening line in the Middle East conflict. “We are now prepared to take these blows and deal with them soundly," he said, adding that if the West refused to supply him with arms, he would turn elsewhere—an obvious reference t o Moscow, ★ * * Hussein charged certain big powers had encouraged Israel to reject the Security Council resolution of November 1967, which lays down the guidelines of a settlement.. Story Hour Registration Set Tuesday BIRMINGHAM - Registration for fall preschool story hours is Tuesday at Baldwin Public Library. Registration must be done in person during regular business hours. Children aged 3-5 and not enrolled in kindergarten are invited to the story' hour program. Preference will be given to children' not enrolled in nursery school. * * * Classes will be limited to 25 each of 4 seven-week sessions beginning Sept. 9 and 10.' Story time is 10-10:30 a.m. on Tuesdays and Wednesdays. 70 Car Prices Going Up; Only Question: How Much? ! St. Benedict School Stays Open Another Year in Face of Deficits St. Benedict’s school will open as scheduled Wednesday in spite of mounting financial problems. It may be the last year for the Catholic elementary school, however, officials indicate. Some 540 pupils attend the parish school which ended the last school year with a (58,000 deficit. Projected deficit for the 1969-70 year is (79,000. WWW The parish school board w a s reportedly seriously considering closing The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Fair with some cloudiness at times and continued warm today, tonight and Friday, high 85 to 90. Low tonight 62 to 18. Saturday outlook: Little change. Winds south to southwest 6 to 18 miles. No rain is forecast. TMay is Ponitac Lowwt ttmptratur# preceding I a. At | e.m.: Wind Velocity 4 m.p.h. Direction Southwett Sun tote Thurtdiy el 7.14 p.m. Sun rliei Friday at 5:55 a.m. Moon Mta Friday at l:3S a.m. Moon rlooi Thor •day at 7:55 p.m. Downtown Temperature, Hl«ha,I and Lawatt Temperature, TUI, Data In 97 Year, 07 In 1941 47 In IS Wednetday'l Temperature, the school at Highland and Voorheis — a move that would put mo8t of the pupils into Waterford Township’s financially-troubled public schools. However, a directive came from the archdiocese in Detroit ordering the school kept open. PARISH DEBT (350.000 A spokesman tor the school’s finance committee,' points out the parish is now facing a (350,000 total debt.' From studies the spokesman sissert$ the1 school is efficiently run and on a cost-per-pupil basis operates very economically. At the same time educatiohal standards rate highly and staff mot ale Is reportedly excellent. However, the school’s future looks dark, it was indicated, unless other forms of revenue are found. w w w Other Catholic schools in the area have closed recently. St. Vincent’s in Pontiac closed down completely last June and Pontiac St. Michael’s ended first through third grades this fall. From Our News Wires k ■ DETROIT — The price of the 197$ model cars Is going up. Exactly how much won’t be known until the auto makers stick the price tags on when the new cars go on sale in dealer showrooms next month. But, Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler Corp. already are billing dealers for tentative price hikes ranging as high a( (275 on Ford's Continental Mark III. I w w w A spokesman said Ford is sending advance billings to dealers calling for increases averaging (68, or about 2. per cent over the price of the 1869 models. Chrysler said the prices of its 1970 ' models, will be higher, but wouldn’t give an average iperdase. BROADER WARRANTY- Ford also announced today its 1970 model cars and light trucks will carry a simplified 12-month .warranty with no mileage limitation, providing free service in virtually all cases during the first 90 days of the warranty period. , Ford said the new warranty also contains no limitation on number of owners and eliminates requirements for validation of maintenance. The new warranty will take effect with npw Mavericks — designated as 1970 models — sold today. The alctual prices to the car buyer will be announced next month — Ford shortly before its new cars go on sale Sept. 19 and Chrysler shortly before its new cars go on the market Sept. 23. gm Holds key But, it will be General Motors Cbrp., the giant of the auto industry, which may again determine the actual price hikefe- . | GM refuses to comment so far on its 1970 car prices, ’ but when it does, any increase is sure to influence the rest of the industry since GM annually accounts for more than half of the auto sales. Several Birmingham - Bloomfield area students will be among the college students from all over the world who will attend the Christian Science Biennial College meeting this weekend ip Boston, Mass. Area students Include Skip Brown, 520 Wimbleton, and Ken and Cecil Pratt, 1509 Birmingham, all of Birmingham; and Andy Cummins, 4252 Derry, Bloomfield Hills. From Bloomfield Township are Mark and Marcia Moyer, 3917 Cottontail Lane Bonnie Anderson, 421 S. Cranbrook; Bunny and Susan McBride, 6845 Whysall; and Steve Rea of 5400 Lane Lake. * ' * f Purpose of the three-day meeting is to discuss by panel, workshop and pktnary sessions such topics as campus and community tensions, racial, conflict, the drug problem, marriage and birth control, morality, conscientious objection to military service and social action. BIRMINGHAM - Driver education Is available to any student residing within the boundries Of tile Birmingham Public School District.- The course, Sept. 13 to Jan. 31,1970, will meet each. Saturday. A student must be 15. Assignment to a given term will be based solely on the applicant's age. Older students will have priority. • h ★ ♦ Applications for the fall term are available at the Department of Added Education at the Birmingham Schools Administration Building, 550 W. Merrill, or at any secondary school counseling office. To partiepate, a student must complete an application form and return it by Sept. 6. Lowftif ♦•mpamturu Mt«n ttmp*r«tur« i*Cwv WMniUK til F«wtm I F«rl worth ■—tstuunvim _ . _ Kansas CllyrB7 73 1$ OS Los Altoeloi 13 4$ k. 13 44 Louisville S3 41 17 44 Mloml Bosch IS 77 89 44 Milwaukso S3 43 90 4S Now Or loam 89 70 IS 41 Now York 71 41 M 41 Omaha (4 41 10 IS 4S PltoonTx 105 if . 04 47 FlHiburgh 77 S3 I 91 43 St. LOU It 19 47 II 44 S. Llkl City 95 44 If 57 §, Franc I ICO 41 55 49 40 S. Sto. Mario 85 45 * I 71 MM .43 If . - -t——tv || LAKE CONDITIONS: St. Clair — South to southwest winds, 8 to II knots, today and tonight. Fair. Huron — Southwesterly winds, 12 to 22 knots, today and tonight. Fair. Erie — Southwest to west winds, 10 to 18 knots, today. Southwest to south winds, (to II knots, tonight. Fair. NATIONAL WEATHER—SheWers are forecast for tonight in parts of Montana, Idaho, Wyoming and Utah- Mora showers are expected from the Southwest through . the central Mississippi Valley. Sunny and warm weather will prevail over most of 3-Death Crash Leaves Boy'Fair' A 6-year-oUl Pontiac boy remained in fair condition today in Pontiac General Hospital after a car-truck cirash Wednesday killed his mother, sister and baby sitter. Hospital officials today said George Morris, 8, of 141 W. Beverly suffered internal injuries in the.10 a.m. accident. ,, ★ * ★ Dead are Mrs. James (Mallie) 'Johnson, 27, of 141 W. Beverly; her daughter, Billie Jean Morris, 4, of the same address; and Kenneth LaFond, 16, of 2175 Silver Bell, Oakland Township. LaFond was belieevd to have been a family baby sitier. All were passengers in tiie car driven by Mrs. Johnson. The driver of the truck, James Barnett, 25, of Madison Heights, was not injured seriously. THROUGH STOP SKj£t ■ Oakland County sheriffs deputies said three witnesses reported Mrs. Johnson’s auto was traveling westbound on Silver Bell when It went through a stop sign and collided with the northbound track on M24. The car and the truck both were thrown into a ditch In the median of the divided highway. The late-model auto was torn from its frame from the impact of the collision. ★ * A Barnett said he was traveling at about 45 miles an hour and estimated Mrs. Johnson's speed at 15 m:p.h. at the time of tile collision. 1, , r ... HARVEY’S FIRST ANNUAL SUMMER SALE! is off in 4 days Last chance to grab great furniture buys like these; Colonial iota iml chair. Choice of—— colon. Zipper richlux cushions. O/f OOO Regular 399.00......»............. Traditional sofa, quilted arm covers and self platform. Choice of colors. *1 QQ95 Regular 299.95.................... . 9-pc. dinette aet Includes table and 8 chain. Table extend* to 36”x48” 0095 x60”. Regular 139.00.............. 5-imp. solid maple dinette 42” round ' table with 2 leafs and 4 mate chain. *1 0095 Regular 159.95........1^7 Spanish bedroom set. Complete with triple dresser, twin mirron.5 draw- OQOOO er chest, and bed. Regular 399.00... Solid hard rock maple bedroom set. Complete wRh triple dresser, min O/IOOO ror, chesty and bed. Regular 499.95. ObMTplF So i t a Fold-o-bed. Full siae mattress. C hoice of fabrics and colors. "|0095 Regular 249.95. | Ay ✓ ' Tables. lamps, and accessaries — SAVE UP TO Vi ^ ijss mm Fits* furniture for entry room... to tuit every budget and ovory toate. HARVEY FURNITURE i, 4405 Highland ltd. (MS9) Comer Pontiac Lake Road Open 9:30 till 9; Tuesday and Saturday till 6 1 tHE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1969 A—3 Polaris-Gap Fear Based on Intuition' WASHINGTON (APy — A Navy adviser has told Congress intuition and uneasiness—rather than technical evidence—apparently is the basis for Pentagon warnings the Polaris submarine may become vulnerable to attack-after 1972. ★ ★ ★ Dr. Harvey Brooks, dean> of engineering and applied physics at Harvard University, and a member of the Naval Research Advisory Committee, gave the testimony before a Senate Foreign Relations subcommittee May 16. • ★ • * ★ , A censored version of Brooks' testimony was released Wednes- day. Brooks dealt with the Polaris assessment on March 20 of Defense Secretary Melvin Laird in the secretary’s testimony Concerning the Safeguard an-tiballistic missile system. “If this particular , question of State School Board Faces Lively Session LANSING (AP) - Unsettled teacher contracts, racial unrest in the classroom and a brewing ’ palace revolution in the State Board of Education presage a lively time when the board reconvenes Sept. 8 and 9 in Lansing. Meanwhile, Gov. William Mil-liken’s office and the state’s teacher bargaining units — the Michigan Education Association and the Michigan Federation of Teachers — reported contract agreements Wednesday in three more districts—leaving 186 dis- tricts across the state without them. Settlements have been reached in 347 districts. Milliken defended Dr. Ira Policy, Democratic s t a t e superintendent of schdols, after a plan to seek Poliey’s ouster failed to develop. ★ ★ * Polley “is doing a good job and I support him,” Milliken Said. James F. O’Neil, publican board member from Livonia, charged the superintendency was “too much’ Polley and called a news con- ference to announce his plans to propose the board put someone else in the job. The State Constitution allows the board-six Democrats and two Republicans — to do that by a majority vote of five. ★ ★ * O’Neil said Polley, who had been on vacation, was in Lansing and would attend the meeting, but when Polley did not appear, O’Neil said he would postpone the attempted ouster. Marilyn Jean Kelley, a Democrat on the board, branded O'Neil’s charges “flimsy fabri- cation for self-serving purposes.” She was supported by Edwin Novak, a Flint Democrat. ANGRY -PARENTS Polley's proposal of statewide sex education guidelines led O’Neil to call for his removal at an earlier meeting. As that matter awaited further resolution, angry white parents from Inkster charged Tuesday racial antagonism and poor classroom discipline have handicapped their children in that city’s schools. LAST THREE DAYS MID-SUMMER SALE THURS. - FRI.- SAT. t participate, subject to the same limitation. 2. To enter, you Simply check your prediction of the winner of each of the 16 games below (to indicate a RIGHT OF FOUNDATIONS Private foundations, it will be contended, therefore, have just as much right under, the Constitution as any other group to set forth their views on politics or subjects of public concern. Hence, a diminution of their tax exemption because they have expressed opinions on public questions will certainly be challenged before the Supreme Court. w w w The specific question that arises today, however, is whether there can be discrimination in a tax law against one group while another is permitted to carry on the same kind of activities. (CtpyrMft, Ilihari-Hall I !. R. T. D. REPLY Czech Rebels May Face Soviet Punishment Soon By WILLIAM L. RYAN AP Special Correspondent There is a long list of accounts waiting to be settled in Czechoslovakia. A whole year has passed When and to what extent punishment is to be meted out has not been made clear, but there are broad hints of action to come against people singled out for denunciation. Czechoslovakia’s brief experience with political reform are being exposed daily in the Communist press, now in the firm grip of pro-Soviet elements. - - • w w'. . W. ■'...... A raft of official Czechoslovak Communist party statements appeared in the press in connection with the first anniversary of the invasion. These suggest that a power struggle persisted after the Soviet invasion and now is just about resolved in favor of the orthodox leaders who toe Moscow’s line. The party will not take "subversive activity” lightly, said Stefan Sadovsky, pro-Soviet first secretary of the party in Slovakia. He promised that the party will “resolutely and harshly act against t)iose p e o pi e, wherever this will b e necessary, possibly today, tomorrow or at any other time.” TOP LIST At the top of the list of those being denounced are men like Cestmar Cisar, 49, who was a party secretary under the former chief, Alexander Dubcek. He was fired after the 1968 Soviet invasion. Pravda called him a revisionist, and the Soviet^ Politburo, in A threatening pre&nvaston letter to t h o Prague leaders, accused Cisar of pitting "an inciting rohiV Another under heavy attack is Josef SmrkovSky, 88. while Dubcek ran the Show, Smrkovsky was chairman of the National Assembly, and a popular spokesman for reform. He is accused, among other things, of insisting during the night of the invasion that the Czechoslovak party’s ruling Presidium call the entry of Warsaw Pact troops an aggression and an occupation. * ★ * * There are many others on what appears to be a growing purge list. Dubcek himself is being attacked by implication for failing to inform the Presidium of Moscow warnings to change the course of events. first, we’ll correct an error in the original notice, it should have said that 10th grade students report to the appropriate SENIOR high for a full day 8:30 a.m. Monday, Sept. 8, not “junior” high as printed. All senior high students report for a full day Tuesday, Sept. 9. Junior and senior high students who. haven’t already registered should do so next week at their appropriate schools, rather then waiting until the very, hectic first day of school. Kinder-gartners not already enrolled may be enrolled by their parents Friday, Sept. 5 or Monday, Sept, 8. They report for class Tuesday, Sept, 9. Grades 1-6 report for regular morning classes Monday, Sept. 8, and regular, full day classes .Tpwtldjfy Sept. 9. Seventh graders should report to their appropriate junior high far a full day 8:30 a.m.Monday, Sept. 8. All junior high students report for a full day Tuesday, Sept 9. Question and Answer Is there any way to get a rental deposit returned besides ' II" it Is the only way, what is the ap- to court? If proximate cost? . MRS. J. REPLY We don’t know all the circumstances nor can we give legal advice. However, we urge anyone making a rental deposit to get a written agreement. This is a civil matter, and if you have fulfilled your lease qnd the landlord still refuses to return the deposit, you would have to consult a lawyer. The cost would depend on your lawyer and the specifics of the case. If you can’t afford a lawyer, Oakland County Legal Aid might be able to help you. Nixon Disdain for Northeast Stirs Fear my uiat luugmy relatively minor X By BI8UCE BIOSSAT NEA Washington Correspondent WASHINGTON - Republican sources say that roughly half of the relatively minor "honorary c q, m m l s -slon” pdlron-age jobs/ available to the Nixon a dm 1 n 1 s -tratlon are being handed out to southerners. This is just another of the B108SAT accumulating evidences that Preaident Nixon is bending his attention away from the liberal Northeast Republican zones toward the South and such other conservative sectors as the Midwmtem-plains-mountain heartland and the Pacific Southwest. ★ ★ .★ Visibility of types atlhe White House and the GOP National, Committee it) staff posts is running very high. The word is that Nlxon’f political agent, Hatty Dent of South Carolina Is *»Mng frequent counsel with Kevia Phillips, spWEdhl assistant ta Atty. Gen. John Mitchell and author of a new book, "11)0 Emerging Republican Majority,” which asserts that the OOP’s future lies h the conservative regions. BUILDING TOWARD *7* Some sources sty that Nixon himself has bought Phillips’ thesis and is consciously building toward 1972 on that basis. Though there -is nothing going on which would classify as large-framed “party debate” op the l»auef. much quiet and continuing discussion centers on whether the new Nixon approach may not mean that "Northeast liberal Republicanism is down the tubes.” ★ W h Wrty officials still* committed to holding a big role In the GOP for fye Northeast view with alarm the vacating by death or other reason any present Republican congressional seats in that area. They feel that many^f not all such seats may be difficult or Impossible to keep out of Democratic hands and that the Nixon administration accepts this prospect, believing , its fortunes lie elsewhere. DISILLUSIONMENT It should be noted here that not just Nixon strategists and theorists are looking askance at the Northeast. Somewhat more detached party people voice disillusionment with more then simply the Republican outlook in the Northeast They see it as a regidn Increasingly smothered by its problems, unable or unwilling to eome to gripe with the new technology, caught In varying attitudes of indifference, lassitude and near-hope- of many kinds usually attract large numbers of alert, Interested, probing types in the West and South but tend to be thinly attended when held in the Northeast. .Under Republican Gov. Ri^tfd OgQvle7~the Illinois GOP seems to have ridden past its Dirksen-Percy factional days and is embarked on an ambitious introduction of computerizing, date-processing and the other techniques which signal the Onset of the real "new politics.” For all Its factional troubles at the personality level, the Ohio Republican party under former national chairman Ray Bliss continues to be well-synchronized organizationally. In Texas, where Rep. George Bush has thoughts of knocking off Democratic Sen. Ralph Yarborough next year, thoughtful, modem voter analysis is presently under way in ground-laying efforts. The Northeast is seen by some party experts as standing In painful contrast to these and other promising situations. serve that regional meetings twWwJ fcm h mMU ns8w |» Mis Ml Iw tasslil tf «fl Imd i**mJ j* aa a MfeMtattHf pmIm* Ik • m ai MC, ZIP CODE FEDERAL'S VS h.i.s® is a "big wheel” in campus sportswear circles “Coventry” slacks Perm, press polyester/cotton with soil*release finish. Flare bottom, In manly plaids. 29*36. *11 h.i.s® “Apache” shirts Tapered shirts with long collar. Perm. pr6ss blue, gold polyester/ cotton. S • M * l. 6.50 THE NEW NEW RALLY MAN SHOP OP IN 10 A.M. TO 9 P.M. (Set. 9:10-9) Drayton epee Sunday Neen to 6 p.m. , rDMMM dne Turn, Wtd. m 6 pmJ FEDERAL'S DRAYTON TLAINS STORK ONLY THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 28. 1969 A—9 Tourists Rate British Food, Hotels, Weather LONDON (UP1) — The average tourist to'Britain just tolerates the food and hotels, dreads the weathdT, dislikes the traffic jams. The dishes he views with most distaste are sausages staple menu item of most cheap eating places — and the redoubtable Scottish haggis whose ingredients are better left unsung. * He also is confused by the currency, annoyed at the early closing of '’ shops and discontented by the restrictions that keep bars and pubs closed part pf the day . Still, be finds the advantages outweigh the disadvantages because only one in every 17 trip was worse than expected while more than half find their expectations were exceeded. IMPROVEMENT ASKED But if he is to keep coming in ever-increasing numbers, particularly when the jumbo jets are carrying millions of extra passengers in the 1970s, an organization called the-National Catering Inquiry recommends q considerable improvement in the facilities offered him. The Inquiry's critical look at Britain found from questioning r,002 tourists that they looked forward the most to seeing the sights, London, the shops and pubs. The weathdr and traffic headed the dislikes. visitors goes away feeling his I “Our food and hotels seem to be tolerated rather than enjoyed. More serious still is the assertion by four out of 10 of those who expressed doubts about hotel standards, that the accommodation was worse than expected; the same proportion found hotels dirtier than they expected. ‘Hotels were specifically mentioned by three per cent of all tourists to this country as a feature of our life to which they positively did not look forward." A. O’Boyle, U.S. consu general in Edinburgh, told the Inquiry: “There is very little difference between the best hotels; but a big drop down to another level. There is really no second-class hotel that provides satisfactory accommodation. Go down to the third level and they are pretty rugged." ^. While sausages and haggis rank among the disliked dishes, the most enjoyed are roast beef, English cheeses, steaks and desserts. Curiously, fish and chips appear on both the most liked and most hated lists. Some Americans complained of lack of ice water and restaurants selling “American” food. .Tourists differ drastically from Britons in what they want to do on vacation here. Most Britons who stay in their own country head for the coast and only two in every, hundred come to London, while 84 out of every hundred foreign visitors choose London. Save 50% on textured ribweave no-iron spreads Twin or full siz*. In walnut, gold, bluo, avocado or rod to accont your bodroom A O O decor. 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' 85 ®nemy’s !*1} £| The U S. Command disclosed! ^ Tt $ I * * fensive subsided somewhat, the ,that morc casuaUie8 had j^n The U.S. Command reported U.S. Command announced day. U.S. headquarters said Americans were killed and 1,367 wounded compared with 244 killed and 1,409 wounded the I reported in Uie terrorist attack I Tuesday night on a meeting of pacification workers and peasants near Phu My, 269 miles northeast of Saigon, and a spokesman said that the inweek before, when the enemy Ujdent now ranked as “the campaign opened with a n worst single terrorist act of the upsurge of infantry, rocket and year.” The command said 24 mortar attacks. persons were killed and 81 - * * * . wounded when four hand South Vietnamese head-!grenades were thrown. The quarters reported 398 govern-{terrorist escaped, ment troops killed last week; * * * and 928 wounded. The week! Secretary' of the Army before the report was 477 killed Stanley R. Resor completed a and 1,269 wounded. week’s tour of the war front to- The two commands said 2,757 [day^wlth a news conference at Vietcong and North Vietnamese j which he said the U.S. program were killed last week, compared to strengthen the South Viet-with a revised total for the namese armed forces is ahead week before of 3,898. | of schedule and he is confident jmore American troops can be withdrawn from Vietnam. But he i deferred until next month his decision On further American troop cutbacks. Resor said that during his tour of the battlefronts, he^iad noted a ‘‘major change in operations — “heavy emphasis on joint operations between the Vietnamese and ourselves.” often joint headquarters, and joint operations. 12)680 combined operations are an Important part of our Viet-namization program, along with our emphasis on the modernizing of equipment.”' lt JOINT EFFORT “Everywhere I went,” South Vietnamese regulars and militiamen. Resor also said he was impressed "by the development of the pacification program and the pdrt that the regional forces and the popular forces” are playing in it. that the withdrawal of 25,000 American troops announced by President Nixon last June 8 was completed today. Nixon announced last weekend that because of the Communist command’s fall campai. launched Aug. 12, he had said, “I found joint planning, I equipment for the nearly 800,000 “The Army of the Republic of Vietnam is still short onlskills. But the problem Ur leaders, both officers and non- Recognized and we have pro-commissioned officers, and they for staining it.” take time to train. 1 * • * * SUPPLY PROBLEM Resor said he thought the United States wad “ahead of “I don’t want to leave you with the feeling that we don’t schedule” in providing. this, (have problems,” he continued. “I think another area, a large area, that needs emphasis is logistics support ... their ability to support themselves in combat... And that’s going to take time because some of the skills there are long lead-time Resort said he would do all he could to see that the case of eight Green Berets charged with murder is handled fairly. He said he expected a decision on whether they would be brought to trial in “ a couple of weeks.’’ 38,000 U.S. DEAD A total of 38,128 Americans^ now have been reported killed in action in Vietnam since Jan. { 1, 1961, while the total wounded UP TO NIXON has risen to 247,096. I “The decisions on redeploy- The enemy campaign continued in low gear, with scant major ground fighting reported and 24 mortar and rocket attacks on towns and allied military posts during the night. The Saigon government an-1 able to make fur the nounced that about 80 redeployments if he decides militiamen suffered “heavy,that is the wise course to lossess” in a battle Wednesday!follow.” near Phuoc Long, ,in the! “I think that's as far as I Til K I’ONiiAl' TH l USD AY. Al Gl/ST 28, 1989 1_ Youth Air-Fare Plans Stay in Effect WASHINGTON (AP) - Stu-dents readying to fly back to school can count on youth standby and reservation fares remaining in effect through the football season, and probably through the school year. The Civil Aeronautics Board said in an opinion Wednesday that Its examiner, Arthur S. Present, was wrong when he ruled last Jan. 21 that youth [fares were unjustly ,discrimina-|to fly at odd hours when the'air. tory and should be canceled. limes have unused seat capacity, The board said the fares—Lu , , . a* I which enable the 12-to-22-yearLthe tpefal £area fen®ratet a‘r‘ iage group to travel at half fare| ‘^Hbusi"ess a"d lehvel °ut fe on a standby basis or at two- S tbf fboard. said thirds fare on a reserved-seat About * ptefr centKof aU a,r pas1 senger traffic is by promotional basis—are by their nature discriminatory, but without the of-fensiven blatant character of racial or religious discrimination. By encouraging young people fares, and youth fares account for 13 per cent of that total AGAIN DISAGREES ^ The examiner Said the fares [were reasonable. The CAB, dis-1 ! agreeing again, said there was insufficient evidence in its proceeding. i Accordingly the board returned the case to the examiner for further hearings and a new ruling. This could take months. Meanwhile the youth fares will remain in effect on the two airlines that offer both types— Continental and Northeast; the 11 that offer standby fares only —Alaska, Aloha, American, Hawaiian, New\ York Airways, Northwest, Pan American, San Francisco & Oakland Helicopter Airlines, Trans World’, United; and Western; and the 11 that! provide reservation fares—Air West, Allegheny, Braniff, Delta, Eastern, Frontier, National, North Central, Ozark, Southern and Texas International. Cyclists Must Don Helmets by Monday LANSING (AP) — Motorcyclists iftust 'move their helmets frorti ; handlebars to heads Monday or risk running into a $100 fine and 90-day jail sentence. Col. Fredrick Davids, Michi- ed a reminder Wednesday that a new state law requiring helmets worn “on the head” takes effect Sept. 1. Some law enforcement offi- Space Try Flop Police Identify Victim as Booster Errsl »n Hazel Park Shoot-Out CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) HAZEL PARK (AP) - Twen- been released, will be charged ■ Pioneer 10, a $7 million ex- ty-one year-old David R. Ricas, j with murder, while the three pKir" J^IHS lTm« kUW to o0“rJ*™ >" 0,6 tel to probe earth-sun relations, lay jjazej jn wj,aj p^g say j aerved with warrants of assault j wrecked at the bottom of the may have been the result of w*tb “^ent to commit murder.' Atlantic Ocean today after its] motorcycle gang rivalry. * * * gan ate o ce rector, issu-^ers predict the law will cause!booster rocket shot out of con-; Five adults and a juvenile are Younge said the shooting fol- some contusion—but they con- troi and was destroyed. j being held in connection with lowed a fire bombing of the tend it will be enforced. , * * * the shooting. Hazel Park police house about 4 a.m. Wednesday. JBMBbL HM Prosecutor! Safet - . th downJsaid warrants would be sought I If^ \701 I ^yp.n Haymond L. Scodeller suggested; ... , . . on open charges of murder, as-< UIQVC/I V/QYG III the possible confusion because! ran8e statlons sent rad‘° sl8nalsSault with intent to murder and the law—first passed in 1967— to detonate explosive charges in robbery! Arraignment was ex-was ruled unconstitutional by the three-stage Delta rocket LgCte(j today the Michigan Court of Appeals. I when it swerved off course eight * * * [CARRIED ON CYCLES jJS&jf181, laUnch WedneS’ Hazel Park Police Chief! GRAND RAPIDS (AP)-Two Th« Legislature then passed a! * * * Charles Younge, Sr. said a gun' WASHINGT0N _ A f1 bovs were killed Wpdnpsdnv measure requiring the headgear D.___ tn , . .. battle between four persons in . | Iea‘ when atuLelSlansedburv carried on cycles , Pion®er 1lwas to have joined a car and resjdents /a home in e/al^dge has declined to issue wnen a tunnel collapsed, bury-, J foui other Pioneers in solar or- na„„i pnrv a judgment awarding Rep. ing them in the sand of a gravel i The idea of the second law bit reporting on interplanetary wSneSlJ be«an about 1 P m Adam Clayton Powell pay lost pit, but two brothers of one ofwas to encourage people to Space and how the sun influ- ^ .. . when the Harlem Democrat was the victims were saved after , wear the headgear, aatd Rep. enceg weather, communications Witnesses said insults were denied his ^eat in Congress, the sand trapped them. j'Loren Anderson, R - Waterford and other conditions on earth exchanged between the people * * * Kent County sheriff's deputies 'SSSL hsp~of the hel", Also lost in the explosion was “ ,the «“[ •*5°“ to tbe US District Court Judoe liH th* vietims wpr» -rim met-on-the-head bill. L sma], 45_pound communica-hou?e: ^en’the*i‘?e?ses sa,d> I George L Hart Jr 8 l*iw cotaiistl ____ ... a shotgun was fired from the u Hart Jr- Kills Two Boys Judge Won't Back Powell Pay Claim said the victims were Tim Robidoux, 12, of Ada and his cousin, 6 • year - old Shawn Thomet of Grand Rapids. Two other Thomet brothers, Rick, 12, and Randy, 8, were rescued. car at the house. A person in the house returned fire with a rifle, and Rivas, in the car, was hit and killed. SPED AWAY Wednesday that before Powell can get his $55,000 in back pay he will have to refute in court charges by the House that he misappropriated congressional “We felt that by forcing mo- tions satellite, which was to torcyclists to have the headgear have been placed hr earth orbit on the bike, we would encourage for use as practice by the them to wear the protective cov-lground stations in the Project erings,” he added. | Apollo tracking network. That move failed, Anderson [ * * * maintained, noting that in 1967, The National Aeronautics and- The car then sped away, la- ★ * * Deputies said the cave-in "rst y®***tbe *aw requiring Space Administration traced the ter to be stopped by police in To do this Powell’s lawyers occurred while the boys were helmets to be worn was in ef- rocket problem to loss of by- Ferndale who had been alerted would have to file an amended tunneling .into the side of the ^ar®. motorcycle draulic pressure in the first-by Hazel Park police. complaint—which would open gravel pit. The cave-in was dis-forties in Michigan. stage engine four seconds be- Police said the resident of the the way to a trial on the coUn- covered when Scott Thomet, 11,[FATALITIES UP fore it shut down. house, whose name Has not yet terclaim by the House. Frigidaire Dishmobile has Super-Surge Washing Action for cleaner dishes! Frigidaire Fliptop Dishmobile features Jack-in-the-box racks! 2 colon & whit*. Frigidaire Dishmobile with 150° hot wash helps sanitize dishes! 90 Days Sam* As Cash or Monthly Terms FAST DELIVERY ■|| 9-9Q9I 3465 MIBIfflN BP, returned from lunch. Authorities said some of the boys apparently had camped overnight at the gravel pit and the other youths joined them Wednesday. ★ * . (i * Gail Cobb, a neighbor, said he Was driving a gravel truck when he spotted the collapsed tunnel and saw the heads of the two boys who survived sticking above the sand. Cobb dug the boys out. The next year, when helmets had only to be carried, there were 124 cycles fatalities. The total in 1966, before the helmet legislation, was 122. Anderson said 1967 was “the only motorcycle season in which the numbar of fatalities was significantly different. Since that was the year we required’ motorcyclists to wear the head-gear, it’s safe to say the law I was a significant factor.” ALL-FOR-FALL Printed and woven fashion fabrics for fall sewing^ Choose from our large selection of Avril® rayon/ cotton blends and 100% cotton in fashionable colors. Great for sewing new dresses £ and sportswear for fall. 36" to SK 45" wide. Shop now and savel yd. FINE JEWELRY Beautiful 3-ring matching sets or 3-row diamond wedding ring Lovely choice! 3-ring matching diamond set* or wadding #AA ring. Both 14K solid gold. *QQ Men’s or women’s sparkling blue Unde Star ring styles A gift to treasure! Linde Stor set In gleaming 10K. Oil A A solid gold. Savel , C>iH 10 A.M. TO 0 P.M. (Sat. 9 30-9) toy** *P*n IdUdNh. h> « (Downtown cJwaTmi, VU. m $ < n rayon/cotton upholstery Ck assorted weaves, colors. Mb #0# WP y Cotton flonnelette in juvenile, fior- il I el and other prints. Washable. 36". / ' y 45" woven rayon/acetate suitings In ■ plaids, stripes, pin checks. Charge it. Il # M * 54” acrylic bonded to acetate in ** plaids, solids. Machine washable. y We have a complete selection of all sewing notions and Simplicity pattern* available. SOPEN 10 A.M. to 9 P.M. (Mon.-Fri.) Set. 9:30 A.M.-9 P.M.—Sun. Noon to 6 DRAYTON PLAINS STORE ONLY BUY! SELLI TRADE! . . . USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! Back To School in young fashionables The All Season Coat Fashions to take you to school in oil kinds of weather. Water repellent and' wrinkle resistant with a zip lining. Fall fashion colors of Navy, Beige and Brown. By Betty Best, sixes 7 to 14.... $20.00 ^Plaid Kilt Skirt ' \. . from Panrlora Vie Muyt-have-Fashion in skirts with , p\!ong rib orlon vest. New styled ■blouse with dog ear'collar.,, Needs no ' ironing ever. Foil colors sizes 7 to 14. Skirt... $9.00 Vest... $8.00 Blouse... $6.00 MMX s Telegraph at Square Lake.Rd. Miracle Mile Open Mon. thru Sat. 9:30 to 9:00 A—It THE PONTfAC PRfesS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, I960 Despite Kremlin's Friendly Overtures U.S. Still Getting Bad Press in Russia MOSCOW !•: Pravda charged that t h e ’ fe astronauts' glory was being * "used in the interests of those}* who wage the dirty war in)l Vietnam, help the Israeli ag- £ gressors and support the Bonn £ revenge-seekers" Shortly before the Apollo} ;8 mission. Foreign Minister^ Andrei Gromyko told the Soviet ^ parliament he wanted “friendly |: relations" with the United i: States. QUOTE OVERLOOKED This passage In a long speech was never picked up and featured in the Soviet press. An extended period of ex- race at work, most of them ln^ the act of clubbing demonstrators. Fifty-seven showed pickets and other demonstrators, 41 depicted racial strife, 21 poverty and hunger, 20 space achievements and" 20 were miscellaneous illustrations on cfime, vice, fascism and such cases as the trial of Dr. Benjamin Spock. This total is higher than 118 because some pictures fit more then one Of these, 79 showed policemen Category. HONG KONG custom tailors 12.3 Cu. Ft. 2-Door With Big 120-lb. FREEZER Famous deluxe Frigidaire features: Two big Egg Trays — huge Porcelain Crisper - big gutter Keeper — Plus a galaxy of ‘goodies’ you’ll like. General Electric Automatic Washer wSEERf!ra MINI-WASH MINI-WASH lets you wash delicate “wash basin” loads (2 pounds, or less) right in your G-E Washer. Lift out the Mini - Basket and yoQ can wash 14 -pounds — Save water* heating and detergent costs. New Low HOME FREE 15-Cu. Ft. Chest With Storage Basket and Easy Defrost S26*lb. RLPOOL 10-Cu. Ft. Upright With Door Shelves and 350 lb. cap. 16-Cu. Ft. Upright With 560*lb. Capacity W *9 • ELECTRIC RANGES Frigidaire Deluxe 30 SUNRAY 30-Inci Deluxe Big Automatic Electric Range Oven starts tneal auto* matically. Electric Clock and Timer — Liftoff oven door - Infinite Heat Controls — Big Utensil Storage Drawer. , 90 Days Same Aa Cash 1kGOOD HOUSEKEEPING of PONTIAC 51 W. HURON / FE 4-1555 FREE PARKING OPEN MON., THURS. and'FRI. TILL 8:30 BRIEFS 9 to 12 Reg. Price 89c NOW S'"*!** Sizes 14 to 16 Reg. Price 95c NOW 3 ♦2” 4 to 12 Reg. Price $1.00 iw 3*3” Sint 14 to II Reg. Price $1.15 iw 3 *3** TEL-HURON FE 5-9955 childrens mmm shop monday through Saturday to 9 NYLON WARM-UP JACKETS i v;:Vr:-' - • • - <^ THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1969 A—18 SHOPPING CENTER Bill Petrusha k Sons TELEGRAPH RD. AT HURON ST. Qriawold Sporting; Goods Beckwith-Evans Osmun’s Town t Country Cunningham Drugstore Children's Shop Jayson Jewelers gg S.S. Kresgo Sally Irent Cleaners Camera Mart. Sanders Wrigley’s Shoe Box RB Shop PHOTO ALBUMS 1. LIFT PLASTIC SHEET the slack 2. PLACE PHOTO at Osmun’s You won't wont to miss this chonco to savn on young, kicky knit shifts in your favorite stylos. In solids and stripes, they're perfect for now through fall. Navy, brown and green in the group; Junior sizes. [JESS Take up This Labor Day weekend you can get very special savings on 65% Dacron, 35% Orion sport slacks. Sizes 30-42 in black, light; blue, green and gold. Colorful ribbon belts. Regularly priced at $14.95. u But this Friday and Saturday you H,-^H ■ ■ ha 7 can fill out your wardrobe for only $5.95 MMM a pair, 3 for $17.50. Tel- Ml"EBEBH ■ 1 1i Huron Store *6hly. T6L-HURON STORE ONLY 3. DROP PLASTIC SHEET Todaya Go-A nywhere Do-Anything HUSH PUPPIES COLORS (Leather) e Brown Antique e Honey Antique Widths $1 COO N-M-W ID sale Favorite Cotton Knit Shifts at Savings 7.97 BACK TO SCHOOL »I2W The Best'Buys Are Always at THE CAMERA MART RUMIYA 500DTL CAMERA With Two Meters- Behind The Lens Spot and Averaging Sold Only With Cate SIMS POLAROID SWINGER You Oat Both CAMERA and CASE THK CAMERA MART Tal-Huron Shopping Center 55 S. Telegraph FE 4-956T dBmSmSml The Call of Fall Echoing Fleurs Lace. Nothin! nicer than taffeknit by \ . all your new Fall fashion*. Delie know you’re a woman. While, Fos Blue sky. 32 to 42, Ave. 32 to 38 S Matching half slip. SML. Avgl, She THE PONTIAC MALL - Ttltgraph ot Elizabeth Lak« Rd. Open Monday thru Saturday to 9 LUMBER & BUILDING SUPPLIES SINCE 1890 A—14 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY,/ AUGUST 28, 1869 Watch out,though,for its easy-talking ways. *• Soft Whiskey could soft sell you into forgetting that its 86 proof. For All Your Washing and Cleaning Naodi See U» of . . . Econ-O-Wash BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE SHOPPINC CENTER FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE WE WILL SIZE YOUR RING WHILE YOU WAIT OR SHOP “The Friandly Convenient Jeweler" BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE SHOPNNQ CENTER Gnat buy, sure! Bat non than that—It*! a win tonntmantl You nave money on a versatile Fall wardrobe-In tha fan of today’s lining coete. Everything in FASHION-BIGHT! Everything in SUALITY-PERFECT from nationally-famoue Bond’ll Every-.ing you’ll need for every buaineee, aoeial and leiaure activity this Fall. {Everything cavee yon money-aftd you can “Charge It". YOU GET ALL THIS- you select from our entire stock of fallowing: ★ Any $79.50 Style Manor 2-Trous«r Suit«.............$79.50 ★ Any $47.50 Royal York 8port Coat __________________ 47.50 ★ Any 2 pairs ! 17.50 Pure Wool Slacks ..............35.00 Total Regularly $162.00 ________You pay 138.00 you save *24 No charge/or I Add $8.50 for normal alterations | euitewitkvest i, ,v- ■ % 1 ■' I , \ Higher priced wardrobe combinations available at similar savings (choice of one trouser or two trouser suits/ (EDITOR’S NOTE - Ncwhert, along the Mississippi Gulf Coast1 did Hurricane Camille spend mare of her fury than at Pass Christian, a quiet ufeekendj hideaway for many New Orleans residents. It is now nothing more Hum twisted wreckage.! Associated Press writer Bd Tunstall. a frequent visitor to\ Pass Christian in years past, visited Pass Christian Isles.) i Bv BD TUNSTALL PASS CHRISTIAN, Miss. (AP) — There was no laughter, no sound except helicopters! whirring overhead and trucks grunting over wet roads. And I what was once the pleasant! breeze off the Bay of St. Louis; brought only the smell of disinfectant. Hurricane Camille had left Pass Christian Isles as I had never known it. No shiny boats on their way to the bay. No I neighbor passing by with an invitation for golf or a word about where the crabs were biting! jbest. \ Man had lost a battle against nature. It is impossible to Com* jprehend the impact o^f the winds j and water Camille had pushed j into Pass Christian. A mattress hung from a limb! beyond my reach. A badminton racket lay on the road’s edge.] Pots and pans littered front; yards. PATH EASILY FOUND | | The path of Camille’s venge-j ance was easily found. From a ispot on Sandy Hook Road,' which winds through the isles, ll could see bark peeled from one| side of the tall pines as the; storm, smashed its way to the (bay. . ..., j The homes of friends are; {gone. It is difficult to tell where | the houses once stood. Most of the homes in Pass any food in the freezer? We got Christian Isles belonged to peo- i» get it out if it’s spoiled. We’re pie who had saved years to spraying this whole area.’’ build them. Nothing elaborate * * * but nice. It was a quiet place! There was no reason for him where a bus driver or mechanic]^0 ask, really. Not a door re-could spend a weekend withThiained on the cabinets of the Monday always far away. newly redecorated kitchen My wife’s mother lost herj^ ,we °"ce boiled crabs shp and her husband ^m the bay. Camille pried the refrigerator door open home. She and her husband built it for their retirement years. It was crushed as if the kitchen stove had exploded. The new drapes hung limp through smashed windows. The refrigerator leaned at an uneasy angle In a corner of the kitchen. NEEDLESS QUESTION As I stood in front of what | was left of our house a Jeep with big tanks strapped behind ;it roared up and the driver “This your place, Mac? Got and water seeped from it. Down the road, a man, his wife and their two boys poked silently among the shambles of what was once a pretty little home. The roof, almost intact, lay on the other side of the road. WHAT TO DO? “We just don’t know what | lost their homes then and re-we’re going to do,’’ the man | built. Survey Points to Success of School Desegregation said. “We haven’t derided yet. We might rebuild.’! The man is young. For others, the years are waning. There’s just not enough time to start over. * * • * “How am I going to rebuild?” asked Mrs. William Gatipon. “All our savings for 15 years were put.into that house. I had It air-conditioned, new rugs, new range, new refrigerator. It’s all gone. Why rebuild at all, ^others have asked. Hurricane * Betsy swamped into the island foiir years ago and covered most of I them with a foot of water. Some YOU SAVE *24 CHARGE IT! CONVENIENT PUNS AVAILABLE Calvert Extra,The Soft Whiskey $10ts $4m $2** weaiaa et. pm For Sale Profitable farm and industrial lain and aarvlca buiinau located In Central Michigan. Voluma approx. $900,000. annually with profit* after talarla* and taxai averaging $20,000. annually in pait | yean. Wire, Writ* er Telephone Leonard O. Zick & Associates 21 West 16th Straat Holland, Michigan 49421 Area Coda (616) 396-1401 WASHINGTON (AP) — Mosti Academically, integration southern students, teachers and!most often beneficial to Negro parents think achooljstudents while having desegregation has worked bet- significant effect on whites, the ter than anticipated despite Department of Health, Educa-some increasing disciplinary I tion and Welfare study shows, (problems and continued student! ★ ★ * social separation of the races, a! The survey, which purports to igovernment survey concludes. Ibe an attitude survey "rather 'than of numbers or other provable; facts,” was conducted by the department’s Office’ for Civil Rights in Atlanta. Interviews talked to 1,230 whhite and Negro students, | teachers, school administrators and parents from 13 school districts in Florida, Georgia, Mississippi, South Carolina and Tennessee. Most of the districts in the second year desegregation when the survey was conducted last spring. OF 1$ DISSENT Nine out of 10 Interviewees agreed school desegregation is working better than generally anticipated. Most of the dissenting 10 per cent were parents of school children. Without listing figures, the department said the survey showed “significant minority” or white parents felt that academic standards have dropped since the schools were integrated ahd that their children have adversely affected. However 70 per cent of the 160 Negro students interivewed said they thought they receiving better educations under integrated schools- Both white and Negro teachers sup-ported the students, conclusions, and said whites are learning as much and Negroes more in desegregated! classrooms. ♦ / A A However, '20 of 205 white teachers interviewed said there had been some loss of standards land the. educational learning (progress has slowed since their I schools were integrated. OLD RED'S LOOKING FOR THRSTY PEOPLE IN PONTIAC FOR THAT RIB THIRST LOOK FOR 0U RED AT YOUR FAVORITE STORE THE SEVEN-UP BOTTLING CO. OF DETROIT Ngw Garbage Pick-Up Schedule Village of Lakt Orion Effective September 3rd the garbage will be picked up within the Village Limits of Lake Orion each Wednesday for the entire Village. This is a change from the twice-a-week summer schedule. John F. Reineck, Village Manager ur HTB4I ePiMTft Atom CALVERT DIST. CO.. LOUISVILLE. KY SHINGLE SALE! These End of Summer Mingle Savings are only at Yard MULiHIDE 235 LB. SHINGLES Rw. T.J41*r if MuUhid* 235 Lb. Standard Strip Shingla* offar a beautiful and aeon- NOW ONLY emicai now roof. No Available in Whita, Black, and Soft Pagtal Color*. SOL-SEAL SHINGLES Quality 240rlb. Muiohido thinglti. Solf*toal|ng by tht sun's ray*. Silent Desolation—Camille Was Here where courtesy is contagious Save Big How! "MULTI- WARDROBE" *138 It’s not pushy. THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, i960 Brothers Keep Paper, Politics in Perspective A—15 FREDERICKSBURG, V a. (AP) — Mayor Josiah P. Rowe III went to Washington recently to tell two congressional committees why he feels the Salem Church Dam is needed. k ★ k Meanwhile his brother, Charles S. Rowe, was back in town writing for the Free Lance-Star, an afternoon daily newspaper which th« two men own and run. Mayor. Rowe, who is general manager pf the newspaper, told the congressional committees the city project “is needed and that land acquisition should proceed.’* The development would be a source of water, power, flood and salinity control, with attending recreation benefits, he said. When he came home, he read an editorial that told tym what editor Rowe thought: ' “The pork-barrelers made two more trips to Capitol HiO this week to plead for planning funds as the first step in building an unnecessarily large, unnecessarily Wasteful dam on the Rappahannock River,” wrote brother Charles. Josiah was dismayed, of course, but not surprised. His paper had flown in his face before. ★ ★ ★ v The pork-barrelers have gone back to Washington,” he said to himself. “He didn’t point me out by name but the infers ences are there.” In 1949, when the brothers took over the paper after the Miss America Pageant Near Bus/ Week Ahead for the Contestants ATLANTIC Ciry, N.J. (UP!) — Just short of a‘year ago, a curvaceous blonde trampoline star floated down the 160-foot ramp of convention hall as America 1969. Tomorrow, the beautiful girls will begin arriving in seaside Cinderella city in hopes of succeeding the d a z z 11 n Judith Ann Ford. •k k • ★ * J The next week, climaxed Saturday, Sept. 6, at midnight with the crowning pf the victor, is packed with interviews, photo sessl parade and grueling practice “flje Sound of Now” is the themC Of the 1970 Miss America Pageant, produced by George Cavalier. The contestants, who always parade on the stage pageant night in the latest fall fashibns, tills year will "J“' mod.” C •NOT MINIS’ They will wear, on some production numbers, culottes, owl-size sun glasses and bell-bottom slacks. Others are talking aboutdeals too fantastic to be true. death of their father, both men marked off their territories. Charles would run the newsroom and Josiah would attend to the business side. POLITICAL CIRCUIT In addition to his work at the newspaper, Josiah, 41, began working the political chicken-dinner circuit. He served eight years on the school board, then ran for mayor in 1964. The vote was close, but he won, and won again in 1968. ‘Family tradition had a lot to dp with it,” he said. His father, grandfather and great-grandfather were mayors. ★ ★ ★ Charles, 44, the editor, stays pretty close to the paper. For the most part he cares for neither politics nor chicken dinners. “I abhor those things. I used to go to them but 1 just 'don’t want to and I don’t have the time .. I used to be real nice and sweet, but the older I get the franker I get,” he said. OFTEN NO SUPPORT In his politics, the mayor has often had to do without the support of the newspaper he man- fes. “Basically, Charles Is more liberally inclined than I am, I’m a Virginia Democrat,” says Josiah. “Charles inay show me an editorial and say, ‘Is this the right put it?' I say, ‘Yes, I disagree, but that’s the right way to put it.’ ‘‘If it ever came to a showdown, I would defer to the edi- Pageant officials say skirto tor-~we both have the goal of iM w~ mu m *fc—i putting out a good newspaper.” The editor describes the relationship this way; “He’ll talk with me and perhaps argue but I make the final decisions. There’s no damn way to vote on the thing, and that’s good because with him being in politics it’s best that be doesn’t have the final voice.” will be “twe to three” inches above the knees, but refuse to call them “miniskirts.” * ★ * One major change for television viewers will be the absence of Bess Myerson Grant, Miss American 1945, as the television commentator. Mrs. Grant, who has filled the role since 1951, is now director of consumer affairs in York City. She will be replaced by Miss American 1966, the former Miss Kansas, blonde Debbie Irene Bryant o f Overland Park, Kan. ‘THERE SHE IS . . .’ Master of ceremonies Bert Parks will continue his role, one he has filled since 1950. The standby song “There She Is, Miss America . ..” will be sung by Parks as the pageant winner promenades down the ifing ramp which juts into the Convention Hall audience. ★ ★ ★ It all begins officially on ijrtinr Day, when the contestants are tube registered in their hotels and motels. The interview and picture-taking sessions begin, sessions that last the week out. On Tuesday afternoon, the annual Miss America Parade —-which attracts thousands of tourists and girl watchers takes place on the city’s famed boardwalk, lined with amuse* ment rides, saltwater taffy stands, and souvenir shops. PRELIMINARY judging Then, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday nights, the contestants are divvied up into three groups for preliminary competition in swim suits evening gowns and talent. The 10 semifinalists are picked Saturday night, then the five finalists, and then after the jpdges ask their questions, the crucial moment. r, , k * This year, who will fulfill, (he dream of every American gifl? You already know this is the time of year you’re going to save money. You just want to know how much you’ll save, and on what car. Plenty. On a Chevrolet. Take Impala. Even without year-end savings, you’d save. Many models cost less than last year’s, comparably equipped. You save again on your Chevrolet dealer’s Talk’s cheap. special year-end deal. And you save still a third time. The day you trade Impala in. (Traditionally higher resale value, you know.) Name another Car that promises as much (besides Chevelle, Camaro and Nova). You can’t. When you’re on Chevrolet Savings Time, you’re onto something big. Putting you first, keeps us first. Chtvrolat Impala Sport Coup* YouVe on Chevrolet SavingsTime. I as 108 N. SAGINAW ST. - DOWNTOWN PONTIAC - FE 3-7114 OPEN FRIDAY 9:30 o.m. to 9 p.m. - SAT. HOURS 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. FOR THE BEST FASHIONS' SEE THE PROFESSIONALS AT ' 1 for the money ... 2 for the show ... to Get Ready... 4 Back to School... SONY PORTABLE TV Goes Anywhere You Go The world is as close as your fingertips with a Sony portable TV. Take one back to campus this fall ■ and keep in touchl This compact set weighs only 9 pounds and offers solid state circuitry, 7" (diagonal) picture, front-mounted speaker. Complete with earphone, AC cord, UHF loop antenna. Picture snaps into action instantly; perfectly. 109” (Shown at right) Phone Orders: FE 3-7114 PEERLESS Radio-Phono Operates on batteries or AC and plays LPs or 45 records! Features FM-FM .radio With telescoping antenna, tone control. Walnut frame carrying case, (•hewn abov.) 4995 SONY DIGITAL CLOCK RADIO A dock that wakes you with your favorite FM or AM program and gives you the time in easy*to-read numbers. Under-pillow speaker Included. 59” (Shown at right) LIBERAL CREDIT TERMS AVAILABLE AT WKC - EASY MONTHLY PAYMENTS ARRANGED TO FIT YOUR BUDGET! r PARK FREE IN WKC'S LOT AT REAR OF STORE OR 1 HOUR IN DOWNTOWN PARKING MALL -HAVE TICKET STAMPED AT CASHIER'S OFFICE A—16 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1969 Transplant-Ethics Question Resolved NJ5W YORK (UPI) — For Ronald D. Guttman are) They checked 57 k 1 dney|mental or emotional instabili-transplant surgwns a delicate;psychiatrist and internist, re-jdonors of past years and found ty." ethical question has be«njSDective|v ;“almost complete unanimity of[ belief that they would do Hi jhgain, and tyat each had) derived some sense of i worthwhile accomplishment of helping to save a life.!. ... .. Sometimes, the answers were ftwcr failure8~ At ^ Bat moving.’* All the donors were lected” by their own and fam- H ily emotional pressures, F rath, Gutt|nan and Murray re>|| ported to “Surgery, Gynecology I & Obstetrics," publication of the I resolved. A study draws people who donate a kidney in the hope1 of saving the life of a relative; are not psychologically harmed; AACI) Man Gets by their generosity. Contrarily, fVWU mun many are benefited. A Dab* All dolors have sworn to “do ACCOUnTing TOST no harm." It is a deeply felt ethic. Taking a kidney out of a EAST LANSING (AP) - Dr.I healthy person contaminates the , . .. ■.... donor, tat the physical harm is,James M1 Edwards- tchalrman temporary. The donor soon feels |of the Michigan State University well again and he will be able Department of Accounting and to live a full life with his re-j Financial Administration, has malningkidney. (the American Accounting Asso- , . _ „■ * * * !been named presidentelect of!■American ^College of Surgeons., Ethically it is balanced by the Potion. He will becorhe ' presi-j „ motivation l« good of the continued life of the dent °f the 18,000-member, ^n‘ comDiex for no famiiv is com recipient But.what if this harmW tree of obli8a^» based was nottempoary and damagedjyear- association, made “P L guilt shame debt or fear” the donor on a lasting basis j°f certified public accountants, ^ ^ iudeements and psychologically? This was the!industrial accounts and account- Xtona'mld! it hSe before' ethical question the . t u dy ing educators grants 830,000 ^ appr^ches !he| "solved nual‘y t0 doctoral 8t“denlsaad transplant service are of para-! If was made by three sponsors researchiand works to mount importance” I members of the Harvard JjSSftEj students to careers in| men the transplant service! University team which has been/hat field. inspects the prospective donor, involved in transplanting) ___________________:_______ it must make sure there has kidneys in the Peter Rent ibeen no “undue external coer- Brigham Hospital, Boston, sincej Japan’s mackerel pike-fishing!cion” and he fully understands 1954. Dr. Joseph E. Murray is aiindustry suffered its poorest |the risks for himself and the celebrated transplant surgeon, catch ever last year, harvesting recipient. And he must NOT Drs. Robert M. Elsendrath and I only some 130,000 tons. I have “a history of significant The Lively Set Knit shirts of miracle BeBon® cotton yarn won't shrink or stretch, can be machine washed and dried with no ironing. Vat-dyed Brigham 65 per cent of transplanted kidneys were functioning at the end of a year thatW°each had In the Present stage of kidney when they came from a parent p -.transplant science, blood or a brother or sister. When relatives of recipients are they came from an unrelated preferred as donors. There are cadaver, only 40 per cent were functioning after one year. Are You Really Sui YOU PAID THE LOWEST 1 PRICE FOR YOUR LAST PRESCRIPTS? Cluck and cpmpa»l Bring your praicripKon to Thrifty’*. You'll ba plaarantly nuprind to in that Thrift/* price I* lowar Ikon mow. 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In this article Morgan, who has studied the problems of the Mexican-American in Michigan and in the Southwest, looks at the effect mechanisation is having on the migrant farm worker.) ; By HUGH MORGAN | Associated Press Writer A mechanical vibrator with a first year that significant numbers of migrant workers who travel to Michigan from the Southwest each year to work the fields have begun to experience the effect mechanization. Some 67,000 migrants were in Michigan a year ago. This year, the estimate is 50,000. Dr. Daniel Sturt, head of the Michigan State University Rural Manpower Center and the Agriculture Labor Commission, believes the number of seasonal canvas catcher like an upturned n T * . slcirt Hanppc smmut WOrkerS Will be CUt in half Ikirt dances around a cherry $ee. It shakes 1,200 times a minute, and cherries fall into me catcher. * A V -shaped blade, developed £y a Decatur farmer and costing only $20 to make, shears Off spears of asparagus. ★ * ★ An electronic ruffle picks its tyay through a field, slashing out weeds and surplus sugar beet plants. •This is the era of farm mechanization. SIGNIFICANT NUMBERS | M .]■. Buschlen, operations manager of the Farm Bureau’s Michigan Agricultural Service Association, says this is the within 10 years. Mechanization is becoming an economic necessity, explains Buschlen. When Wages .reach the cost of the machines, the machines take over. SOME FACTS Buschlen says the uncertainty of the labor supply, increased costs of benefits such workmen’s compensation and requirements for housing are making farmers mechanize. The pressure from migrants for a better life, and from the United Farm Workers union, which is trying to organize them, also are making some farmers think about mechaniz- “If we mechenize tomorrow, we throw them (migrants) into a welfare situation,” says Buschlen, who advises “Let’s go slower” on such, items as increased wages and more fringe benefits, until an orderly transition for the migrant can be made. “We have to give the family time, so the adult , can keep working and the children Can earn an education so they can find other jobs,” he added. | WRETCHED CONDITIONS Leo Rivera, who nibs the Saginaw office of United Migrants for Opportunities Inc. a federal antipoverty project— says any “go slow” attitude would prolong an already wretched situation for the migrant. Rivera says he hopes, the < pressure from the United Farm) Workers Union will make the “We have growers here who the migrant a man who wants to work and who despises welfare —into a better life, says Rivera. The impact of mechanization is especially evident in the sugar beet fields of eastern Lower Michigan. Michigan Sugar Co., one of the state’s two sugar processors, says 20 per cent of the acreage was grown and harvested without any migrant labor this year. 2,600 HOEING This year 2,600 workers are hoeing die fields of growers who sell to Michigan Sugar Co. Fif-years ago, they numbered 9,600. Mechanization brings jobs for the more skilled worker who wishes to remain on the farm. But the number of jobs decreases. used ,to just hire sugar beet field workers,” said Max Henderson of Michigan Sugar Co. “Now they have them come up early and be tractor drivers and help plant crops other than s s 1 v e resettlement pro- sugar beets. I don’t think grams, like those for Europe’s there’s any question they are displaced persons after World going to command highe War II, are needed to integrate'wages.” 'farmer get his machines and u then get these people out of the fl farms. Then, the nation may K realize something must be done C to retrain them. But Herrera says even if stoop labor is reduced drastically farm workers still will be needed in considerable numbers. And these people will need the union, he thinks. Not all crops lend themselves to machine picking. No way has been found, for instance, to harvest strawberries except by stooping and picking by hand. Tomatoes, cherries, grapes and many other fruits and vegetables are bruised by the machines in harvesting. They can’t be sold on the market as fresh produce, but instead go to processing plants which turn them into juices, jellies, pies, catsup, etc. * ' * * Louis Smith, a Carleton farmer and member of the! State Agricultural Labor Commission, said the prize squeeze on the farmer raises the prospect that the whole fresh produce market may become a! thing of the past. 1970 MODEL PREVIEW Low, low price for Console Color with fabulous A.F.T.! This big - screen Color Console features RCA's advanced Automatic "Locked-in" Fine Tuning (A.F.T.) to pinpoint the correct signal electronically, Tilt-out control panel provides easy stand-up access to all controls. Glare-proof color picture tube is 20% brighter than any previous RCA tube. demon*! ration. The PORTLAND Model GM-539 95 23” dia., 295 si 499 SWEETS RADIO S APPLIANCE ALWAYS DISCOUNT PRICES 422 West Huron FE 4-5677 30 DAYS SAME AS CASH AMERICA’S LARGEST FAMILY CLOTHING CHAIN ■ per quirt Its ■ longtime between paint job* with MARY CARTER PAINTS. , Mary Carter Paint available only all S3 2030 Dbc Lincoln Perk, Mich. 306-3300 11894 East Warren Detroit, Mich. 822-8200 158 N. Saginaw _ Pontiac, Mich. 338-6944 13830 Eureka > Wyandotte, Mick. 884.2708 41*1 OolananBtvd. ■. Detroit, AAkh. 833-0190 904 Whet Harm Pontiac. Mich. 481-1220 Westland, Mkh. 429-1830 20433 Uvemeis Detroit, Mich. 842-9200 4380 East 8'Mil* Road Detroit, AAich, 893-8844 84484 West Michigan Avenue Dearborn. Mich. 941-0988 Michigan Avenue lilt, Mkh. 834-2884 10300 Woodward Detroit, Mich. 049-7000 288 Wlliptor Street BoRarMk. AAleh. 497-9288 18820 West Warren Detroit, Mkh. 271-3319 81411 W. Grand River Detroit, Mich. 933-9936 707 Pontiac Trail Walled Lake, Mkh. 624-4845 4018 W. Viemor Street. Detroit, Mkh. 8854828 27100 Orand River Detroit, Mich. 533-4148 7790W. Venter Street Detroit, Mkh. 8434322 7256 N. Gennei Gennossee, Mkh. 666-4810 738 8. Telegraph Road Monroe, Mich. 241-0836 G5431 Fenton Road Flint, Mich. 236-6033 26610 Van Dyke Center Line, Mkh- 787-1490 11330 Joe. Ceinpou Hamtramck, Mkh. 344-4920 4935 N. Woodward Royol Oak, Mkh. 849-2847 Clarkston, 6460 Dixia Hwy. Just N. of Waterford Hill Utica . 61035 Vetn-Dyka Just N. of 23 Mile Rd. Troy Just N. of tig, Beaver Road BATHROOM ^ TISSUES Jag# COTTAGE Bwm CHEESE DELMONTE PEACHES HALVES and SLICES CHARCOAL BRIQUETS BEEF STEW 1I”X28’ SPARTAN COFFEE *1 jlVnaW1^ A—IS . j1 cou ||fj^ . THE PONTIAC PEESSI THURSDAY, AUGUSt 28. 1969 / J / ijfHGpP — 1 '1 ,1 1 ■ —" " _ ■ 1 i..i ■ 1 ;—'1 *"■: ‘ • "*■ Bernadette Comirjg to Detroit 'Irish Catholics Seek Human Dignity' Abby Questions Validity of This Big-Tiitie Spender By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: I am a waitress In a v«ry nice restaurant which is located on an interstate highway. It’s one of a well-known chain. I greet everyone With a smile and try to give good service. Sometimes I exchange chit chat with my cuttomera, but I never get overly familiar. I am happily married and have four children. * ★ ★ About three months ago a man came in alone and 1 served him. I don’t know who he is or where he’s from. He was well-dressed and well mannered. He didn’t talk much but he did tell me about his grandchildren. I also told him about my family. I showed no more interest in him than any other customer and he neyer made a pass at me. About three weeks later this man came in again and sat in my section. I remembered him, greeted him cheerfully and served him. When he left he gave me .a hundred-dollar bill for a tip. I was flabbergasted! I really tried to give it bafck but he wouldn’t take it. ★ w ★ About three weeks later he came in again, and the same thing happened. After it happened a third.time 1 took the three one-hundred-dollar bills down to the bank to find out if maybe they were counterfeit. •'They were real and legitimate. I haven’t spent gny of it. I’m afraid if I do, he might turn out to be some kind A Cooperative Picnic Opens Season hr DAR A cooperative picnic at noon next Thursday will open the club season for members of the General Richardson chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution. , • -Pi Mrs. Lisle Echtinaw will open her Hatchery Road horde for the event. ■ Kt Assisting the hostess will be Mesdames: Lewis Arscott, E. G. Clark, H- C. Bates, H. M HUton and Misses: Agnes HlltotoMd Wilma Doebler. •V,:’1* '■:.w '• James Barrett of Rochester will address the group on the study of the U.S. Constitution at this first meeting. of eccentric and his family might demand the money back'. He seems perfectly sane and normal to me, but I wonder now just What I should do? PERPLEXED WAITRESS DEAR PERPLEXED: If you haven’t already told your husband, tell him. Ydu are wise to save the money for the time being in case The Last of the Big-Time-Spenders turns out to be a disturbed or shady character. Maybe he is on the level, but I’m suspicious. It’s a little early for Santa Claus. w * DEAR ABBY: I have a wonderful husband and Children, too, but don’t use my name as this is a small town and I’m known here. I love my husband and he loves me. So what’s my problem? My husband’s brother. I feel strongly attracted to him, and it is so frustrating because we are around each other a lot I know that he feels a strong attraction for me, too. He is also married, and has a family, but you can’t change what you feel, can you? ’ ‘i ■ (w it ★ ★ I wouldn’t want to jeopardize my own marriage, or his either, but I sometimes feel that if I don’t get this guy alone just once, I am going to jump out of my skin. It’s getting worse all the time. How can I control it? Or should I make the first move and get it over with? He wouldn’t be hard to get. ATTRACTED DEAR ATTRACTED: Sublimate! By that I mean keep busy, think of something else, and keep your mind off this man. You’re undoubtedly “flirting” with him, and he’s responding. CUT IT OUT! It’s marital suicide. ★ h \ ★ DEAR ABBY: Please let a secretary answer GEMINI as a secretary’s point of view: No marriage is threatened by a married man buying his secretary dinner jvhen 'She works late to express appreciation for extra work or a Job well done. typing for seyeral hours, and missing dinner because the boss’ insecure wife feels her marrilge would be threatened if her husband took his secretary to din- I can assure all wives that after such a grueling work session, no secretary could possibly entertain, any “ideas” About- her boss. All the secretary would like is a nice warm meal and a kind “thank you”—little to ask in return for her inconvenience. WELL PAID EXECUTIVE SECRETARY ★ * * CONFIDENTIAL TO “ALIVE AND WELL:” You may be “alive,” but in my opinion, you are far from “well.” Your “honest” approach to the necessity for extra-martial relations In order to satisfy man’s (and woman’s) urge for variety will eventually destroy the “deep love" you claim to have for one another. Trida's Upset Over; Cause Still Unknown WASHINGTON (AP) - Doctors still haven’t pinpointed the cause of abdominal pains which hospitalized Trlcia Nixon, but President Nixon’s elder daughter is reported improving and free of pain. ★ ★ ★ The White House reported Wednesday that Tricia was still under observation at Walter Reed Hospital, where she was taken by ambulance Tuesday morning. The Western White House at San Clemente, Calif., reported earlier Wednesday that the President’s 23-year-old daughter was out of bed, eating and “doing well.” By the Associated Press It. Northern Ireland s . -Cr u s a din g Bernadette Devlinthe same “simple, honpst-to-God demand for human dignity’1 is behind turmoil in America’s poverty areas and the “Catholic slums” of her homeland. Miss Devlin, at 22 Britain’s youngest member of Parliament, told a rally of about 2,000 persons Wednesday night in Los Angeles that she’s seen a lot of “the America I really didn’t know” in this, her first trip to the United States. it it ★ On her week-old tout of U.S. cities to raise $1 million for rebuilding homes in riot-torn Northern Ireland, she said she is constantly asked her reaction to America. m “I can say now my impression is it’s' , not so much a nation, but a large pieced of land where everyone who has ever been oppressed has come to look for a better life,” she said. <.f * * * ■<> “I stand solidly behind my fellow citizens of the world, the citizens Of America who happen to be a different color than me . . . Like us, they bre voicing a simple, honest-to-God demand for human dignity.” The strain of her jammed schedule was noticeable as she spoke for only 15 mihutes, her grey minidress blowing in a cool summer breeze under the swaying palm trees of Douglas MacArthur Park. Coalition (IjDC) an outgrowth of the Presidential, campaign of Sen. Eugene McCarthy,- D-Minn. A1 Fishtnan, NDC chairman, said there is' no possibility that any of the funds raised by the appearance would go to NDC. ★ ★ * The Detroit News reported Wednesday that Miss Devlin, is being sponsored by the National Committee for Irish Justice. The newspaper said the telephone of the committee is listed in. the name of the New York Peace and Freedom Party Organizing Committee, the party which ran Black Panther Eldridge Cleaver for president last fall. “It could not be determined if there is any link between the National Committee for Irish Justice and the Peace and Freedom Party,” the newspaper said. Daniel P. O’Kennedy, treasurer of the Irish-American Clubs oi Michigan, said at a news conference today that about 60 representatives of the club voted with only one dissenting vote to back Miss Devlin. “We are satisfied the money will go where it belongs,” he said. O’Kennedy said his group would cooperate with NDC in planning and coordinating Miss Devlin’s appearance. WILL DEBATE Her aides announced that the National Educational Television network will tape on Tuesday a debate between Miss Devlin and two of the three members of Parliament coming to America as a Protestant Unionist party “truth squad.” The location of the debate was not announced. * * * She said her money-raising efforts are “encouraging,” although she had no estimate of the donations. “The money is coming in very fast, so fast that I haven’t been able to keep count,” she told a news conference earlier. ★ ★ * A controversy surrounding the appearance of Miss Devlin in Detroit apparently was resolved Wednesday when the United-Irish American Clubs of Michigan voted to back her fund-raising efforts. Several Irish-American groups had threatened to boycott Miss Devlin’s appearance Friday with the Irish Rovers singing group at Ford Auditorium. The groups expressed suspicion about some of the American groups sponsoring Miss Devlin’s visit. SPONSORS Miss Devlin’s appearance in Detroit is being spohsored by the New Democratic Miniskirted Bernadette Devlin, fiery member of the British Parliament who is in America seeking $1 'million to rebuild homes destroyed in Northern Ireland rioting, speaks at a rally in Los Angeles’ MacArthur Park Wednesday night. tou t i told (he wife if the boss wants to show “appreciation,” he should try money — and for the most part, I agree. But let me assure you that' no amount of money paid by a corporation — not the boss — makes up for the inconvenience of an Interrupted weekend, a 100-mile drive, working in a cold office because over the weekend the heat is turned off, To Be, or Not to Be/ Never a Real Decision for Actress By JANET ODELL . Women’s Editor, The Pontiac Press John Femald has made his mark at Oakland University as head of the Meadow Brook Theatre. His wife, Jenny Llird, has displayed her acting talent in a number of the plays presented there during the past three years., ■ it Sr 4' ' Their daughter, Karin, is doing her first acting this side of the Atlantic at the Stratford Festival in Ontario. She appears in Shakespeare’s “Measure for Measure” and Moiiere’s “Tartuffe.” It was the latter wrsaw last week.------- Alter, the performance, we went out with Karin to Stratford’s only nightclub, a large rather barren, robin above a theatre. Over glasses o( Beaujolais wine, We talked. Karin, who is in ,her mid twenties, resembles her attractive mother in logics, speech and actions. A thoroughly modern young woman with decided opin-ions on a number of subjects, she is a defeated actress. GOVERNMENT AID She thinks that governments must mgke larger grants to, the performing KABW FERNALD arts in order to keep the theater alive ' and growing and to give more persons a chance to act. The United States, she thinks, is a laggard in this respect. In line with the current plays which make such a point of including nude scenes, we asked Karin’s opinion of nudity on stage. “I really -couldn't care less,” was her cool reply. If nudity is essential to the action, it is all right; otherwise, not. She has never wanted to.be anything biit an actress which is not strange with her family background. On her mother’s side, she is a third-generation performer. ★ ' ff ■ ★ • Although most, of her professional career has been to London, she has had repertory experieiica .-to other parts of England. Her part to “Measure for Measure” is her first’prolonged work in Shakespeare and she finds it most rewarding. ★ .. Or ★ ' “Shakespeare has such a wonderful way of saying things. And you have the -opportunity to grow in the part. It’s very satisfying. I like Shakespeare.” She also likes working in the Stratford company which, incidentally, includes Angela Wood, a former member of the John Femald Company here. ★ ★ ★ . But life outside the theater is not particularly exciting in Stratford. Karin has no car and must depend on friends with the same time free and a car, even jj to go swimming. The townspeople, she ' ' says, view with a bit of suipicion the actors and do not, ai a rule, mix with . them, This is surprising after 11 years of the Festival. However, Karin considers her six months in the Ontario city a time well spent, Her first love is for London and she expects to return to the states there sometime, * ■ /♦ ijf MSjPpt’; But after the Stratford-Festival closes, she will come to Oakland University for a few months. Her parents’ dream of having their daughter a part of the Meadow Brook Theatre Company will become reality in October. It’s bye-bye bedder bedroom sale in just 3 days In 4 days it’ll be all oyer. Too bad you didn’t make it. Or is there still a chance? Of course, there is. But stop procrastinating. Drive over. See the 114 (wow, that’s a lot) of bedrooms spread out before you and sale priced besides. Choose the one with the style and price tag that matches your personality. Find out why our sale was so successful • • • within the* next three days. * Thomasville Pont Road collection. Colonial solid maple, double dresser and mirror. Curved CQCOO back headboard and roomy chest. Sale........ Broyhiil finest contemporary bedroom set in* eludes triple dresser, two mirrors, headboard A *1 QOO and chest. Sale............................. TlO Broyhiil Spanish Bedroom includes triple dresser, mirror, queen headboard aud chest. 299°° Off-white Mediterranean bedroom set includes triple dresser, mirror, carved headboard, and 52300 largo doorchest. Sale. All of out* bedrooms carry the bedder guarantee! All furniture may be returned within thirty days for a full eath refund if you 1 are not satisfied for any reaion. 2. All furniture will be setVieed at Mo charge t| aa yon own it. 3W? wfo refund the difference in cash if you should happen to receive a lower * price somewhere el.e on the tame funil* lure within one month. The Better Bedroom People on Telograph Rood house of bedrooms 1711S. talagraph Rd., Bloomfield, Botwaaf Miraelo Milo and Orchard Lako Rd. STORE HOURSt MONDAY - SATURDAY 9 TO 9 o CALL 334*4S93 B—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1969 -A Better Late Than Never Is Thinking PRINCETON, N.J. (AP) -The 41-year-old wife of former Gov. Robert B. Meyner is expecting the couple's first child after 13 years of marriage. Helen Meyner announced ' Wednesday that she and her 61-year-old husband, who is the Democratic candidate for governor again this year, expect a baby in late February. MRS. MEYNkR She said pregnancy was achieved with the aid of the fertility drug Pergonal. Gals Work With Hoses for Contest "We had always hoped to have a child, but one has to be philosophical about it," Mrs. Meyner said. “I had had a fertility problem." She said that she had been under treatment by fertility experts at Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center In New York MADISON CENTER (APIH oii * u in,,. . , City for about four years, “then TTtere s nothing like firemen bat- / isi , j was 'ffectlv« ^ tling a blaze with high-pressure [nj{ hoses to draw a crowd. Now H ®-some firemen's wives in Madi-n Center have donned rubber suits and helmets — over frilly shower hats — to share the attention. Mrs. Meyner, a brunette with blue-grey eyes, said her husband was delighted with the prospect of becoming a father at last. The wives get together almost every day during the summer to dress up In their husbands’ suits and -pull out the firehoses for a game, of waterball. Now the womens’ waterball squad Is training hard for the Sept. 6 and 7 National Water-ball Tournament to be held In Angola, Ind. When the girls practice, they don rubber wet suits and showerhats before running out to the Madison Center Fire Department parking lot for a session of high-pressured spraying a ball hitched to a 100-foot wire. Linda M. Sherman will wed Gary G, Gartee. Mr, and Mrs. Clarence C, Sherman .of Hospital Road announce their daughter’s engagement to the The Charles Pollock home on Orchard Lake was the setting Tuesday jor a fresh and dried flower arrangement workshop. Members of the Orchard Lake Flower and Garden Club are preparing display items for the group's flower show on Sept. 18, 19 in the Detroit Bank and Trust Building at Maple and Orchard Lake Roads. From left are Mrs. William McDonald and Mrs. August Meeschaert, both of Birmingham, and Mrs. Joseph Kardas of Orchard Lake. The show is open to the public from 10 a%m. to 3 p.m. on the 18th and from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. on the 19th. Betrothals Announced Gish-Slaughfer Dec. 20 wedding vows are being planned by Sandra Rae Gish of Kalamazoo and Joe of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Keith Slaughter. Gartee of Irwin Drive. ' | Dr. and Mrs. Duane T. Gish fl The prospective bridegroom of Kalamazoo announce the m attends Oakland Community engagement and wedding plans j| College- I of their daughter. Hill-Schroeder The bride-elect is a graduate of Western Michigan University. Her fiance was graduated from Grand Rapids Baptist College and presently attends Michigan State University as a graduate student, and Grand Rapids ge'Baptist Seminary. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Clemmie Slaughter of Walling Street. Weddlhg vows have been set for the summer of 1970 by Clare Ann Hill and Donald J. Schroeder. Mr. and Mrs/ William R. Hill of Thors Court announce their daughter’s engagement and marri plans. The prospective bridegroom _is the son of Mrs. Donald Schroeder of South Edith Street and the late Mr. Schroeder. Grease Removal For grease stains on clothing, sprinkle talcum powder on the staih immediately, let the powder soak up the grease, wait until it’s entirely dry and then brush away the powder lightly. The stain will be gone. Abrasive Rub Prevents Calluses Case No. L-501 He reacted with characteristic humor," she reported. "He said, , ‘Well, it’s too late for To prevent calluses from grandchildren, so I might as!building up and hardening on well settle for children.’" the soles of the feet, give them Mrs. Meyner said she was not regular treatments with a mild concerned about giving birth to'abrasive such as common table her first child After the age of salt. Sprinkle salt in a foot Wife Shows Depression 40. "I’ve never felt better." She is the former Helen Stevenson, a daughter of former Oberlln College President liam E. Stevenson and a cousin of the late Adlal E. Stevenson. zr!14aed Aug. 26 basin, moisten it slightly and rub the soles of the feet in it. You can keep track of your hats even if you keep them In non-transparent hatboxes. taeh a descriptive tag to each box. By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE L-501: Eileen K„ aged 42, is a problemwife. "Dr. Crane," her husband wearily began, "Eileen is driving me almost crazy. "For she developed fibroids of the womb and had it via a hysterectomy. "But ever since then she has Object of the two-minute game is to hit the ball with the water atreairt and apln It along the wire into opposition territory. Points are awarded for speed and accuracy TIME CONSUMING "Waterball takes up an awful lot of time in the summer," team member Mrs. Mackle Cheschier said. "We practice at lOast two nights a week, and then there are the weekend Invitationals." Mrs. Cheschier and her teammates started playing waterball seven years ago, a year after her husband started in the men’s competition for the same sport. depressed and keeps accusing me of not loving her any more. 'She lies awake till the hours, crying and claiming that I am running around with other women, yet that is not true. "What can I do to snap her out of her moodiness and stop her jealous accusations?” PSYCHOLOGY Ever since Adam and Eve, women have made a tragic mistake. about their uterus (womb). They have universally believed it was a barometer of their physical appeal to their mates. Thus, they erroneously imagined it was a "sweetheart" organ instead of being merely a "maternal” spare tire on their sexual anatomy. "We wives weren't getting any social activity because they were playing waterball all the time, so we decided to get Into the act too," she said. Waterball is the favorite game of the Madison Center firemen's wives. The team. uses fire hoses under 90 pounds of pressure. Lower left: Mrs. Macide B. Cheschier slips into her game uniform and at AP Wlrtphot* right, Mrs. Cheschier is backed up by Mrs. Donald W. Betz as she sprays water on the suspended ball, attempting to get it into the opponents' territory. "But, Dr.' Cfane,” Eileen wept in my office, "my husband' has been less ardent with me ever since my operation!" Well, that is due to her excessive nagging and also her carrying a sexual chip on her shoulder. A wifC aged 18 can have her womb removed surgically because of fibroids or lose it at 38, or merely have it cease its normal monthly function due to her mid-40 age bracket, yet that should not reduce in any significant manner her ability, to.function as a thrilling and thrillable mate. For the female womb is no more essential to a wife’s sexual charm to her husband, than her vermiform1 appendix Is essential to her enjoyment of dinner date with him! Both organs are figuratively excess baggage. MISS HILL “I’m not all there as woman,” such wives routinely think, "so I shall watch him like a hawk to see if he still shows the romantic ardor of our honeymoon." For heaven’s sakes, women, wise up to reality. It isn’t the loss of your womb that cools off his ardor but the fact he is 25 years older than at the wedding day. Moreover, you are probably somewhat fat and stodgy, so you don’t add additional romantic appeal to Svhet his waning verve. Since you are looking for a reduction in his ardor, you soon find imaginary afronts to your sex ego. Actually, the usual husband would not know if his wife had a uterus or not, as regards her functioning in the marital relationship, if she didn’t develop | this nagging complex and feel inferier. But when a wife falsely believes she has lost her sexual charm to her mate, then imagines he must be looking elsewhere, so she tries to "beat him to the draw" by quickly accusing him of outside affairs. 108 N. SAGINAW ST.-Downtown Pontiac-FE 3-7114 FRI. 9:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. and SAT. 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. TTrw*l SAVE $70 on This Dramatic TWO-PIECE LIVING ROOM SUITE Regular *31995 seller. Come and see this set to appreciate the value-traditional sofa is 85 inches long, 21" deep and 32" high, chair is 30" wide, 21" deep and 32" high. Stitched Urethane foam back, soft’ edgeback, self deck. Choice of Avocado, Marine* or gold colors. llSERAL CREDIT TERMS AT WKC Easy Monthly Payment* Anongsd to Fit Tour Budget PARK FREE in WKCS LOT at REAR OF STORE or 1-HOUR In DOWNTOWN PARKING MALL-HAVE TICKET STAMPED at CASHIER'S OFFICE J .v ' ‘ MISS SHERMAN MISS GISH CAMPUS FAVORITES! High School to College !U>*jv£ SHOES PRESCRIPTION SHOES OPEN FRIDAY EVENINGS , WATERFORD 623-963S Final Week of MIDSUMMER SALE SAVINGS ON en FINE FURNITURE AND DECORATIVE ACCESSORIES ChooM from formal and informal furniture stylus In Heir* loom Nutmao Mapla, Old Tavam Antlquad Hna, Claaalo . Manor PruHwood. and BhoffMd Solid Chorry. Sava on lampe, clock*, pictures, wall decor, earpaling, bedding! Michigan’s Largest Ethan Alien Dealer PHONI 422-1770 earthside w# Cara Absat Vaar Hama Alms** A* Much A* Yaa Dal 15700 MIDDLEBELT HOAD •LIVONIA Just North of Five Mile Road tm owe !.. Mon., 'til 9 p.m. Wed. & Sat. 'til 5:30 1680 So. Telegraph Rd. FE 2-8348 Free Parking Front of Store ■-.......... ' - Mm _ Mm Vt . IH ozs. THE PONTIAC |»RE$S THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1060 SEW- SIMPLE By Eunice Farmer Dear Eunice Farmer, 1 have read so much about the no-wale corduroy I am wondering if the thick and thin wale is completely out of style. Also, does the no-wale corduroy have to be cut in one direction as the old kind did? Mrs. R. T. Dear Mrs. R. T.: The no-wale corduroy is new and resembles velveteen and does have a nap which must be cut in one direction. •k it ' it I have done some' research on this and find that designers still prefer the very wide wale as well as the thick and thin for handsome coat dresses, tunics and important maxi coats which can be worn over matching pants or as evening coats. In fact one of these coats made by a leading coat manufacturer was priced over $400. Whoever would have thought that the practical, old stand-by for generations would ever be considered high fashion? That’s the fun of fashion! Study of Puntmg.Techniques Conducted by Woman Prof mmmmmmmmmmmma JER Galley, Calif., is this 1 iner for her following 1 TAILOR TRIX WINNER Mrs. Gordon J. Sarver, Spring Valley, week's Tailor Trix pressing board winner f( sewing suggestion. “Everytime I sit down to my sewing machine to make 1 a new article of clothing, I make a small boutique item and j put it in my ‘Christmas Stocking Box.' "These items could mean glove bags, hosiery bags, j hand puppets, bean bags, small aprons, or eye glass cases, j The items depend on the material I am using at present, since there is always a scrap or two left over. "When Christmas comes, I love to give handmade i gifts, but if I wait until Just before the holidays, there never l seems to be enough time to accomplish them. However, by adding to my 'Christmas Stocking Box’ all year long with these items, it’s easy to fool your friends and family ] who always seem to remark, 'How did you ever find time | to do all that sewing?’ P. S. These make great little gifts j for unexpected occasions throughout the year as well," Dr. Zelma George (right) has been named, to the 10-member panel of judges for this year’s Miss America beauty contest at Atlantic City. She will be the first Negro ever to serve on the panel. Dr. George, executive director of the Job Corps in Cleveland, handed out certificates to 37 graduates earlier this week. Recipients are Mary Faison (right) and Anita Muha. Looking on is Cleveland school superintendent, Dr. Paul W. Briggs. MADISON, Wis. (AP) -> Mrs. Elizabeth Roberts, former athletic champion and now a ":ssor in the physical education department at the University of Wisconsin, has undertaken a scientific study of kicking. Incorrect coaching, she reports, may be hurting the development of young football and soccer kickers. “The techniques given in m o s coaching texts inhibit the young punter and do not let him take advantage of the full natural kicking sequence,” she says. ★ * ‘ * The natural pattern of movement, she has discovered in her research, begins with a turning of the hip, then a forward movement of the upper leg and finally extension of the knee after it has moved past the other knee. Usually punters are taught to restrict the hip turn by approaching the ball straight on, she says, "but our research suggests the full use of this joint action would enable the punter to get greater tancte.” She is conducting her with films of soccer punters and place also with camera studies of !*year-old son, Charles. Single Female Guides Planes FREMONT, Calif. (AP) The only female radar > con-1 trailer at the Federal Aviation' Agency’s Air Route Traffic j Control Center here, Mrs. Charlotte Kositch, shares with men the job of guiding every type of aircraft from private planes to giant jets. Working over banks of radar screens, she helps control air traffic in an area extending from San Luis Obispo, Calif., to the Oregon border j from Tonopah, Nev., to the half-way the son of Mr. and Mrs. mark to Hawaii in the; Pacific Alfred manton 0f QUf. Ocean, and over coastal waters , , c, . ■ from Alaska to Mexico. Jora *ireei- Kathleen Diane and Franklin R. will wed. Nov. 8. Mr. and Mrs. Harold k. Stah^pf North Anderson Street announce their daughter’s engagement and wedding plans. The prospective bridegroom is Announce Productions of U. of M. Players The University of Michigan Players have announced their seven major productions for the 1969-70 season to be presented 'in the Trueblood and Lydia j American guise creating a vital “The Dark of the Moon” by .contemporaries of Shakespeare, i Revival, and many would con-Richardson and Berney The ai*d the Spanish p h y s i c a 1 sider this play to be his finest, play is the powerful folk’ story th,atre- *h « was|The struggle of love and war ", _ . ... ■ , . ./ remarkably similar to the has a special poignant of Barbara Allen in i ts t English Elizabethan stage. ! relevance in our own time- Dear Eunice Farmer, Seems that each year I am shortening slips for myself and ,H$y girls; they never seem to be the right length. I simply $pven’t learned how to finish the hems of these slips. I usually >«nd up with a very ruffled and uneven hem that looks very Wretched out of shape. Could you help me with this? None of Itfce young mothers In our neighborhood can do this alteration Cither. Mrs. Helen C. D. I j Mendelssohn Theaters. k * * Opening the season, Oct. 8-11 in Trueblood Theatre, will be Jean Genet's most successful play, “The Balcony”, which enjoyed lengthy runs in Paris and New York. Although Genet’s Impact en modern literature has work of mood, of tragedy, and laughter. Music and dance contribute to re-creating the world of the Witch Boy and the simple girl he destroys through love. Next will follow in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, Feb. 18-21, a premiere production offered in cooperation with the E wltob S£? v=r " Dear Mrs. H U. D.: I work is in the drama. j c o operative enterprise con- It is never very easy for an inexperienced seamstress to; » tinued for over forty years, work with slippery knits. For this reason, I would suggest you SECOND Entitled, “Esperanza,” th , SECOND mark your slip for the correct length, but don’t cut off the excess The second production of the at this time. Use the stretch type lace for your new hem and pin fall, Nov. 5-8 in Trueblood it in, place, just above the new cutting line. You will have to pin Theatre, is Shakespeare’s early frequently to avoid slipping. and rarely seen Roman * ★ ★ tragedy, “Titus Andronicus. If you have a zigzag sewing machine, use this stitch and sew the top edge of the lace to your slip. Now, carefully cut away the excess fabric from the hem. I think the results will be -amazing, and your hem should come out much smoother and Imore accurate. The University Players’ production of this naive but powerful work will draw upon the costume and traditions of classical Chinese drama illustrate the influence of ritual Keep Hands Scrubbed Maybe you take it for granted that your family’s health Is safest in your hands, in your home. But is it? How rigid are the rules of cleanliness you set up in your own kitchen? And how faithfully do you follow them? We were interested to note recently that cleanliness standards in some commercial food handling plants are actually enforced by law. For Instance, in most states there are laws regulating the storage and distribution of troken Included in these rules that must be obeyed are specifications for hand-washing facilities, and for adequate soap: and clean toweling. WWW' And here’s a regulation to make you think twice: “Hands! shall be washed immediately prior to starting work and each j resumption of work after each -absence from the work station.” | .34.. less formal language, It tttfkans that you must wash your I *fg§nds before starting to work,; •Njd you must wash them again! SKich time you come back to -taur work station — even if •weu’ve stepped away only for a minute. Now — how do you stack up as a food handler? When you go into the kitchen to prepare each meal, are your hands scrubbed with’ soap and warm water? Every time you leave, the; kitchen to answer the phone, orf put the cat out, or get the mail | out of the box — do you scrub your hands again before con-! turning the preparation of the meal? It does sound pretty rigid. But premiere has been written by Susan J. Shaw. This year’ major play which concerns revolution in a mythical South American dictatorship offers why take chances? We all know that germs can be transmitted by hand — and that germs lurk everywhere. When you handle doorknobs or phones or any ject that hasn’t been recently washed, you can bring germs back to the kitchen with you. I It’s worth your while to keep kitchen work surfaces swabbed clean — and to wipe off the tope of food containers with a sudsy sponge before opening them. And do suds-wash that can opener every time you pse it) upon the dramaturgy. * * ★ Completing the first half of the 1969-70 playbill will be Jean-Claude van Itallie’s "America Hurrah!” to be produced at Trueblood Theatre Dec- 3-6. Three satiric plays on aspects of Contemporary American life constitute this advantgarde or experimental production. These plays grew out of experimental work in improvisation among a group of actors. 1970 * The first production of 1970 and the winter term, Jan. 28-31 in Trueblood Theatre, will be Third on the winter bill Trueblood Theatre, March 11-14, Is the rarely seen classic Calderon de la Parca: “Life a Dream.” Calderon and Lope !de Veqa Spain’s greatest Renaissance dramatists were CLASSES NOW FORMING Milford School of Ballet on Main St. above McMartin'i Jowolry Storo, Milford O Beginners 9 Intermediate • Advanced ' 684-7005 — if no answer call Howell 546-2836 Climaxing the season will be one of the crowning achievements of the modern theatre: Sean O’Casey’s “The Plough and the Stark.” This last production of playbill 1969-70 will appear in Lydia Men-Theatre April 8-11. O’Casey is undoubtedly the greatest of the dramatists to participate in the Irish Literary Season subscriptions of the University of Michigan Players 1969-70 season will be avilable by mail only until the Trueblood Theatre Box Office opens at 12:30 p.m. Sept. 29 for sei tickets and individual seats to all performances. Base, prices for season subscriptions are available at $8.00 and $11.00 for the season of seven shows. J%trtk nc i live x _____ ANNUAL DELUXE Permanent Wave SPECIAL p reg. $20 Ph. 673-0712 673-3408 DRAYTON WIG DISTRIBUTORS 4666 Walton Blvd., Drqyton Plaint FOR YOUR H WEDDING ... m DUALITY and QUANTITY! C. R. HASKILL STUDIO FE 4-0553 •Sacro-Lumbar Belts • Maternity Qannsrits. •Surgical Hose • Ankle Wrist and Kttff Braces • Sacroiliac Belts* Cervical Collars and Cervical Traction etc. “FITTED ACCORDING TO YOUR DOCTORS ORDERS”... MALE AND FEMALE FITTERS, HOME FITTING AVAILABLE. CALL FOR APPOINTMENT. - Alto a complete convalescent aids department featuring! Shower Chairs — etc. FOR RENT OR SALE Prescriptiens FREE DELIVERY 4390 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plains 674-0466 or 6T4-4455 Fine Furniture Since 1917 Last Week! FURNITURE lAILE I WIG CO. PRESENTS THE WASH ’n WEAR PERMANENTLY CURLED WASH IT, SHAKE IT, SLIP-IT-ON . . it lasts forever! ADVANCE FALL SALE REG. THEPOXTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 19(i^ open m 9:30 ^ 7/1 9 9:30 t ^ From coast to coast, women look to us for the newest in suits imported from British Hong Kong! Here are two from our exciting full-fashioned collection... a 3-piece with contrast accented jacket, a shell with 2-tone ribbed front., .the other with wide 2-tone stripes, repeated on the flip-tie jacket... both with slim skirts. Love these? See all the others! 8 to 18 in group. It’s service galore at a Detroit service station manned by 17- to 24-year-old girls tending to motoring needs of the customers putting in for service. Owner Ken Wall said he taught the girls how to work un- AP Wir.pholo der the hood and service autos in-one day. Girls from teft: Denise Sarosik and Mrs. Jane Johnson clean off windshield as Kathy Fair gives the oil a check. ; Working Life a Gasser for Girls J DETROIT (AP) — Watching|owner of the East Detroit sta-ihow to'work under the hood, but *his gas station staff of short- tlon. I they picked it up within one day. t ski/ted girls prance about tend- j * * * j * ★ ★ J ing to motor needs, owner Ken “Every boy over the age of J With girls like gathy Fair, 18, ;WaH noted, “Business has pick-112 has worked in a gas station.;of St.Clair Shores, working at *ed up 10 to 15 per cent. These By the time they came to me,’the station, Wall doesn’t worry. Igirls are even getting tips! It’s they just had too many bad She says, “I took auto shop (unheard of!” habits,” Wall said. “I couldn’t twice at Lakeview High School j “The girls, ranging in age from find and keep reliable boys.” because I liked it so much. I >17 to 24 years-old, were hired],, He said he was afraid he’d just like cars.” (out of desperation, said Wall,!have trouble teaching the girls Then smiling, she indicated there might be more to it than love, of autos. “Sometimes I date customers, but they have to stop by six or seven times' before I go out.” How do the customers react? Janet Gartrell, 19, of Dearborn, said "I think the women sometimes would like a man to work i on their car, but they are very ! quick to tell us when they are pleased. i “The boys just sit and stare with their jaws open,” she said. Soldiers Teach Washing in Nam A U.$.~ officer, writing to describe life in far-off Vietnam in terms understandable ’American youngsters, has reported that “Medicine and doctors are almost unheard of, until the soldiers come into a Village.” “Then all the people run out, I and the first thing we give themi is soap. The second is to show Handcrafted look duttinguishes the new Scot to collection of belts by Sol Collins in ,,Corfam,> regard soap as the basic In- poromeric. From left to right, a hip-hugger, de- gredient of daily grooming, the signed for wear by both sexes; links threaded We® of teaching grown people with a gaily printed scarf; sculptured effect in use W seems almost in-a velvety version of the man-made material; eoroprohenslble. brass rings with shining squares;, geometric links; a jewel of a belt in a reptile grain com-bined with golden hardware Britton Assumes Post 1 of Theatre Manager ^Donald R. Britton, Company; York to join the management of; Manager of the Meadow Brook|Trans-Lux Theatres where he' Theatre since its premiere served in several capacities' season, has been named:including District Manager for1 Managing Director by OaklandiWashington, D.C and' University Chancellor D. B.| Baltimore. He also handled j Varner- : advertising and publicity in Britton, who suceeds David! various cities for such films as Bishop, will begin his newi“My'Fair Lady” and “The! duties Sept. 1- Bishop resigned*! Greatest Story Ever Told.” j his post to accept the position of7*- * * * Managing Directoir with the, During the initial season of. Alliance Theatre Company of'the New York World’s Fair,! Atlanta, Georgia. j Britton directed the operations! Under his leadership, the °( two m®j°r exhibits for1 season subscrption drive has Cinerama. grown from 4,500 to 10,000! ;---——"— ! subscribers since 1967. Both, Washrhn* hAnia : Britton and Bishop were WuSnragS MOKe j previously associated with the r* n ± L I Ypsilanti Greek Theatre. | r/fie rdtChWOrk < it if it I Britton began his pro- Want a bedspread that's both feessional career as an actor ini casual and colorful? Here's' an-several Broadway and touring idea from the National Cotton productions including “An- Council, niversary Waltz,” “The Happi-j Make a, soft and comfortable1 est Millionaire” and “One for pacthwork spread from cotton I the Dame.” After signing a con-terry velour wash cloths in ■ tract with Columbia Pictures, assorted rich colors. ! he moved to Hollywood where ★ ★ j he continued acting in motion Just stitch the velour squares pictures and television. .together in a patchwork design] * * * V jto form a colorful and washable! He later returned to New i no-iron spread. Nancy Lee Parent and Wayne Duncan have set Nov. 15 as their wedding date. Mr. and Mrs. Alger Parent of Walled Lake announce the engagement and wedding plans of their daughter. The prospective bridegroom is, the sdn of the Leonard P. Duncans of Lum. I St. Peter's Gate j Closed on Minis,! Even Royal Ones ROME (AP) — Princess Paolo of Liege, sister-in-law of Belgian King Baudquin, ran afoul !of the Vatican’s ban on mini-! skirts, two Italian publications reported today. * * ★ The newspaper II Tempo said the princess, a native of Italy Iwho is the wife of Baudouin’s ! younger brother, Prince Albert, jwas stopped by a guard as she was.about to enter St. Peter’s 1 Basilica with two friends, i Paolo told the guard, “All r right, we will come back some other time,” II Tempo said. | The magazine Novella 2000 published a picture of the prin-jcess smiling as she talked with ja guard at the entrance to St. I Peter’s. She was wearing a miniskirt that was not as short as many but still ended above the knees. I The Vatican last week banned | women in miniskirts and men in shorts from St. Peter’s. Towashfragilelace safely,; Add the s)ivered whites of first baste it to a piece of white;hard-cooked eggs to cream cotton cloth. It then will go sauce and heat. Then pour this! through the wash, even an sauce over freshly made but-1 automatic washer without any, tered toast. Sieve the egg yolks j 1damage. lover all and serve immediately.I Lake Yields Fresh Bread IffTERLOCfHEN — Musicians earn their “bread” by playing or singing, but it probably has never come to them on the waters — as it just has to Interlochen’s National Music Camp. It came via Lake Michigan, sealed in a bottle, to Interlochen treasurer Clare D. Burns. The “bread” S-j the musicians’ term for money — in this case was a $1(7 check that Mrs. Ted Flora of Peoria, 111. had written and sealed in the bottle. She threw the bottle overboard July 24 from a ship on which she was a passenger off Point Betsie — “because that was about the nearest point to Interlochen.”1 * ★ ★ The lake current carried it northeast around the Leelanfiu peninsula, and it went ashore dt Charlevoix. The finder picked it up Aug. 9 and it reached Interlochen by carrier. Mrs. Flora had more than a casual interest in Interlochen. Her daughter, Ellen, was a drama and voice student in camp here this summer. Cotton losses due to insects can run as high as one out of ever eight bales. Yarn-dyed cottons are richer in color and more colorfast than dyed piece goods. LANE BRYANT IT’S A FUR and LEATHER GET-TOGETHER Pictured here Is just a sampling from our collection. Natural racoon on black, green or brown leather. Sh“,"*S,135 REMEMBER: IF ITt OMAT FASHION, ; IT'S HIM IN CUSTOM SIZISI Ijr pnANto MM«i to thm* (Minty fJCIA/f IMPORTED 3-PIECE Br”m WOOL DOUBLE KNITS You'll agree they're worth *45 to *55 wmmm CLARKSTON UTICA PONTIAC Tho Pontiac Mall 200 N. Saginaw Free Parking 6460 Dixie Hwy. Just N. of Waterford. Hill 61035 Van Dyke Just N. of 23 Mile Road Just N. of Big Beaver Road B—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1969 Impressively large and spacious. Meal far a businessman, tael 42 x 20-lneh top. Budget Terms of Course Two ways, one is over the styles and colors we have fc an|l your other1 fit will be free with your purchase. The shoe Mj(JST fit, or you |ust won't wear It. Stapp's Lawl OPEN MONDAY THURS. & FRI. 'til 9 PM. 332-42)1 4 COMPLETE FLOORS •PROVINCIAL* COLONIAL • TRADITIONAL • MODERN nninntllipiliuiMl Swimwear Stabilized ShrinkageTouches B By GAY PAULEY NEW YORK (UPI) - When she wore more coverup than today’s female dn the ski slope. She wore drawers and corset, yet, under a wool dress with sleeves, long skirt and black stockings. How she kept afloat, let alone enjoyed the swim, is some sort of miracle. But granny was modest, as the mores of her day interpreted modesty. She’d turn over in her chemise, for sure, if she were to see today’s crop of swim suits hiding practically nothing and providing water sprites with as much freedom as if they were “skinny dipping.’’ Connie Hobson, 21, of Council Bluffs, Iowa, displays thp swimming fin she uses to help compensate for the lack of a right leg. The leg was amputated above the knee in 1964, but Connie was back in pie water in a month. She has now passed her Red Cross Senior Life Saving test and is ready to go on to Water Safety Instructors* School.- She fa shown here with Red Cross executive, Mrs, Anna May Stephen. For swimwear has through a tremendous revolution, with less noise about it than some other feminine fashion innovations, like the miniskirt or the Dior “new look.’’ About the only real ripples came with the binkini and!bathing with men,’ Ruid Gemreich’s topless. topless? Despite the hoopla Hudl’s topless caused a few years ago and the wave of nude fashions it set off In other clothing, jGernreich is not immortalized in the latest documentation on ming Costume in the United States.” Its author is Claudia B. Kidwell, assistant curator of American Costume at the Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. THE BIKINI But the bikini goes into the record — without mention Brigitte Bardot. Miss Kidwell says the bikini, introduced in the United States in the 1940s, was slow in being accepted. Women were wearing the two-piece bare-midriff suits in those days. ★ ★ ★ Actually, the curator’s work traces bathing customs and costumes from the days of the ancient Greeks and Romans. She tells of the growth of spas in both the United States and Britain, finds one of the earliest references to women’s bathing costumes in a bode .written in 1538 when mixed bathing was practiced in Zurich — “the women wearing only drawers, The first John Quincy Adams and James Audubon . Swimming for women to be acceptable toward the of the 19th century and in Goucher College, a school for girls, indoor pool. - * .* * Annette Kellerman, Gertrude Ederle and Adeline Trapp, of course, helped to break down the barriers to swimming as a feminine sport and to get rid of some of the trappings bathing suits. Miss Trapp in 1909 became the first woman to swim the East River in New York through the treacherous Hall Gate; Miss Kellerman gave swimming and diving exhibitions in sleek tights, and Miss Ederle swam the English Channel in 1926. ★ * * By the 1930s, swim suits were covering less and less of the bather —! and women started the cult of suntanning. Neither trend has ever stopped. MISS WEBER December 1969 wedding vows are being planned by Sharon Marie Weber and Daniel Warren Gehman. • ■ The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Weber of Gage Street vrcuige iicuw ui udK Direct ' y has attended Bethel College, I en«aSement Mr. and Mrs. Mishawka, Ind. and Oakland John T. Ristich, of First Polly's Pointers Puckers Will Vanish the first swimming school in 11"Women’s Bathing and Swim-1 Boston. Among its vitistors — fi I DEAR POLLY - Mary Jana, who has puckers in her Madeira tablecloth after ironing It. should place a heavy terry doth bath towel on the ironing board, place the cloth bn H (embroidered side down) and press With the steam iron. This allows It to stretch where needed. It should come. out beautifully, with the embroidery standing out and not looking pressed down. — MRS. T.C, DEAR GIRLS - If any, dampness remains In die linen after ironing with the steam iron, turn to dry heat and press until the doth is perfectly dry. When any dampness remains wrinkles, and perhaps puckers, are sure to appear. — POLLY Dear Polly — Nall empty thread spools to the garage or workshop wall to hang work clothes on. There will be no rust marks on clothes as there may be when damp or wet garments are hung on plain nails. LINDA 0. POLLY’S PROBLEM DEAR POLLY - I have several pieces of gold braid that must be 40 years old. None of it has been used but Is slightly tarnished. Is there anything I can do to restore dlls braid to Its natural beauty? I would like’ to put it on some pillows and wastebaskets. — JESSIE DEAR POLLY - When I need a small soaker in the garden, 1 take a cheap canvas glove, slip the end of the hose Inside and fasten the end of the glove around the hose, above the brass coupling, with a wire twist from a loaf of bread. Twist on tight and this will keep the glove from slipping off the hose when the water is turned on. The fingers of the glove spread out and cover qultq a wide area and no ground is washed out or holes dug by the water pressure. One pair of gloves makes two soakers. This Is much cheaper than buying regular soakers even If you have to purchase new gloves. Water will flow through the canvas more freely if the gloves are first washed remove any sizing. — H.J.H. \bur Lucky DaVS at Singer SAVEm THE DREAM MACHINE — THE NEW GOLDEN TOUCH & SEW* SEWING MACHINE BY SINGER! The one with the push-button needle threader. The speed basting stitch. The built-in buttonholer. And the famous pushbutton bobbin. It’s yours at big savings now, in your choice of three handsome cabinets. And Singer has a credit plan to fit your budget. SINGER M*tihM»JkMmmMO»tSINGKnudaitr jlH Trademark of THE SINGER COMPANY tfONTIAC MALL, 682-0350 TIL-TWILVI, 353-1330 OAKLAND MALL, 585-5010 I BIRMINGHAM, 523 CAST MAPLE, Ml 4-0050 “ Window of Hope,” a design by Robert J. Lee, is being used for Project Hope Christmas Cards, Project HOPE, founded in 1958 by Dr. William fi. Walsh, extends American medical knowledge to the people of developing nations! The greeting cards, priced at $4.50 per box of 25, may be, ordered from Project HOPE, 2238 Wisconsin Avenue NW, Washington, D.C. 20007, Couples Are Making Risiich-Carter Lillian Katherine Ristich qtill wed Randall Scott Carter. Announcing their daughter Benjamin Franklin seems toUat of Mure? Miss have been the most famous I Kfwe11 "UP* «• thing is cer-proponent of swimming among p®* ~~ women never again will the colonists and it was In 1827|syat"® themselves with yards that Frances Liefer established j °* ^bnc. ★ * -k But with all the new freedoms in mores and morals, will the swim suit disappear? Kidwell doubts it — unlikely that either the swim suit industry or standards of modesty of the near future will permit a total elimination of, swimming costume.” "Charm School" Nurses Patients A “charm achool” which teaches pktients the basics of cleanliness and beauty is paying big dividends, at the South Florida S$te Hospital. .• dt. ■ k A very successful volunteer project* p a weekly session where patients receive shampoos, manicures, beauty treatments, and cleanliness tips. 'Or *,. k According to the hospital staff, the first sign that a disturbed woman patient Is getting better comes when she starts pacing attention to her University. Parents of the prospective bridegroom are the Rev. and Mrs, Ord Gehman of Fillmore, Calif. He is a graduate of Grace College, Winona Lake, Ind. Avenue. The prospective bridegroom is the bon of Mr. and Mrs. George W. Carter of Broadway Avenue. He is presently attending Oakland Community College. Allen-Schoemaker The engagement ot of Gall Beth Allen to Seaman William L. Shoemaker, USN, is announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil G.; Allen of Woodlow Street. Stationed aboard the S. S. LaSalle at Norfolk, Va.,. the prospective bridegroom is the of the Bernard H. Shoemakers of H e n d e r ■ o n Street. ippearance. c mon over, got a lot of -to-school shoes to fill! The Julia«• • The Colon Wild Cherry wHh Modflqulng. The Style, Wingtip Two Eyelet Tie. To qualify, make sure your foot measurei 12 Vi to 3, C-D-E width OR $ - 8, Width* AA • C $12.50 and $13.50. JStrideRite L/ SHOE The Shawnee • • • The Colon Russet with Modtiquing. The Stylet Antique with a Buckle. To qualify for thl* campus cutie, your foot can conform to eithur ilmt 12 Vi to 3, CPE width*, OR 5 - 9, width* AA - D. Priced ot only $12.50 and $13.50. we know you’ll have a fit! Stapp’s whore the experts work 931 W. Huron St. ; Pontiac For Evening Hour* Please Gall 681-2121 Divition of Thomas Jewnlry Co., Inc. 17-19 S. SAGINAW ST., Downtown Pontiac “You Must Be Satisfied-This We Guarantee” Free Delivery-FE 2-4231 \ COLONIAL STYLE DESKS [ WESTINGHOUSE tyCARTA HI-PRESSURE PLASTIC TOPS FOR LIFETIME BEAUTY 4-DRAWER DESK 49" Compact hat officiant with plenty of space for all bocks, papers, ate. 36x 18-inch top. 7-DRAWER DESK Gracefully fashioned knothole Is perfect for home ar office. Large 40x18-ln. tap. All Three stylet Are Afillehle In WeliNt Or Maple PlNleh. TttE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. AUGUST 28. 1969 B—7 The old saying, “The way to •Restrict your use of fatty a man’s heart is through his “luncheon” and “Variety” stomach” is still true, but today meats like sausages and sala-it has a new meaning. Evidence ml. 'is mounting that too much satd- • Instead of butter and other! rated fat and cholesterol in the cooking fats that are solid or diet ^o contribute to coronary completely hydrogenated, use! heart disease, the number one liquid vegetable oils and mar-threat to a man's life. garines that are rich in polyun- ★ ★ ★ saturated fats. The food a woman plans and ★ ★ * the way it is prepared can en- • instead of whole milk and .courage or discourage harden- cheeses made from whole milk ing of the arteries. There are and cream, use skimmed milk .other factors which lead to ar-!and skimmed milk cheeses. teriosclerosis, such as too much! ____________________ smoking, lack of exercise, and jstress, but it is believed that jhabits in eating are of great importance. - i Engaged to Wed I Linda Kay Torley and Robert .Eric Ford will wed on Oct. 18. Parents of the couple are the Donald Torleys of Delaware Drive and Mr. and Mrs. Norman Ford of Troy. The bride-elect is a graduate of Oakland Community College and the Pontiac Practical Nurse Center. Her fiance received his BA degree from Lawrence Institute of Technology. MISS BRENNER MISS POPPECK * MISS DAVIS Dad Has Crew of Girl Scouts Three More Engagements Announced DavisShipman daughter, Barbara H Michael Craig Shipman. Latex Mattresses Have No Lumps Latex foam mattresses offer unique construction advantages. They are made of single pieces of molded foam rubber covered with ticking. Because of this »cushion” A giant flower? No, a dining table with six ■ chairs. By Italian designers, the table has a cylindrical fiberglas base and a wood top with a permanent tablecloth of polyurethane covered in glossy vinyl or wool military cloth. Chairs are chunks of polyurethane also covered with vinyl or wool. Moderate changes in food intake can make your husband Deborah- Gayle Brenner and Dennis R. Burrill have set Nov.! and8 Mrs^ E^A^Brenner^f Mr' 80(1 MrS' Wi,liam J- The son °f Mr and Mrs. construction, they are lump Florence Avenue announce their Davis of Elizabeth Lake Road ^arion SJiipman of Prairie free, since there is no loose GLEN COVE, N.Y, (AP) - daughter’s engagement and ................Lawn S,.reet al!ends Mlllon filling or batting to mat in one Slate Installation! Emit Chemicals of New Beta Sigs safer, and you too. Here are Edward Polk has five scouts to marriage plans, some suggestions from The man his 27-foot sailboat. The prospective bridegroom is American Heart Association. tbe *erna'e members of his the son of Mr. and Mrs. John C. i To control your intake of cho> family are involved in different Burrill of South East Boulevard, lesferol-rich foods: ^vels ot Girl Scouting. Mrs pnnn^L pjB • Eat no more than three egg Po,k ls » cadatte. troop leader, roppecic-K/ce yolks a week, including eggs N^CJ’15> a. Sem°r. Karen, 13,! Mr and Mrs Fred w Popj used in cooking. L2’-* Jumorpeck of Troy announce the • Limit your use of shellfish and Teresa- 9> a^Brownte. ! engagement of their daughter, and of organ meats. ' , SCOutinc ” Mrs. Polk •Jan,ce K- to Gre8°ry M- Rice- To control the amount and CQmmJn£d my The couple is planning Oct. 25 > announce the betrothal of their College, Milton, Wis. type of fat you eat: Anyone working With farm f th * f h „hif>kpn say we are closer or not closer The son of Mr. and Mrs. > chemicals should avoid con- [urk and’ veal- and limit becausei of scouting, b u t William F. Rice of Knollwood : ~~ taiminating family and pete by hf y,’ h nftrk Lnfl hnm t0 possibly more than anything Road, Pontiac Township, has!; Mrs. Esther Ragland o f taking a hot, sudsy shower im- f, moriprate- -Two male teachers grappled ip with the deer and finally were' fp able to hold the animal dowp. The humane society was called, w ★ * -The society sent a taxi to pick; K up the now frightened deer for 11 the purpose of transporting it 1 pack to the forest but the cab-1M Me refused his fare. The deeri 1 had to walk home. > ! *3 separate washing. This advice comes from a USDA Home Equipment Specialist in Iowa. Cotton is flexible. *• trim visible/fat, and discard the fat that cooks out of the meat. Avoid deep fat frying; use cooking methods that help to remove fat; baking, broiling, boiling, roasting, stewing. SHRIMP FRY FAMILY STYLE "ALL YOU WANT" Knit a handsome vest (below) to wear with skirts and shirts or pants and a pullover. Pattern PK 4353 has directions for sizes 10-20 and 42-44. Make long lean sweaters (PK 3098) for him and her (right). Knit of worsted and fingering, Free instructions for both are available by sending a self-addressed, stamped envelope to the Needlework Editor, Dept. E-600, The Pontiac Press, PO Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056. frifirtnfrTSri vt irkin' -§:.' if m B—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1969 gp mmmm «8«W|| Lung Illness Woven Into Cotton-Mill Jobs CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) -Byssinosis, the respiratory disease of the textile industry, has! beat like a recurring nightmare j which few understand and many; have tried to ignore. The disease, which consumer! champion Ralph Nader calls “brown lung,” has been a silent companion of textile workers for generations. Yet until a few years ago, Health agencies in textile-producing areas had largely ignored it. ★ * " fit One study in the South now indicates, that 24 per cent of some 370 workers in a North Carolina cotton mill showed traces of the “We have had the comfortable illusion that byssinosis was not a threat to American workers,” said Charles C. Johnson, administrator of the Consumer Protection and Environmental Health Service of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. SCIENTISTS TELL IT “Now, the scientists in our occupational health program tell me this is far from the truth.” Dr. Arend Bouhuys, director of the section of chest diseases1 at the Yale-New Haven hospital, sayq he has learned that J’inha-lation of airborne cotton dust in certain work areas of textile plants causes acute as Wei) as chronic respiratory symptoms in a relatively large proportion of workers.” Among certain textile jobs,! the incidence of byssinosis and! other respiratory ailments may1 be as high as 25 per cent, Dr ! Bouhuys reported. He also main-i tained that long-term exposure i to cotton dCist may cause “irre-| versible damage to the function i of the lungs.” Byssinosis apparently strikes almost exclusivly against cot-, ton-mill workers, altho u gh health officials in North Caro-| lina point out that studies of the! effects in synthetic fiber plants! have not been made on as large a scale. Although workers throughout the mills may develop the dis-1 ease, it generally strikes persons in the carding and spinning rooms, where the air is thick with tiny cotton fibers. “The dust was so thick that the 300-watt light bulbs in the room looked reddish,” said Lacy Wright, who worked in a North Carolina mill for nearly half a century before byssinosis made him change jobs. ' “I’ve seen new employes come in and stay only two or three hours,” he added. “It got to where I couldn’t breathe down there. The doctor told me to get out.” Few workers seek medical attention until the disease becomes unbearable, partly because most of them have known very little about it. Dr. C. D. Williams Jr., Charlotte, a pulmonary disease specialist, says of the workers, “Their grandfathers worked In the mills and their fathers did, too, and they always had a bad cough. So the workers don’t vbother to go see a doctor.” Byssinosis is relatively easy to cure doctors say, unless it] has had time to weaken the lungs and bring on more serious I ailments. In many cases, I transfer to a new job in a less I dusty part of the mill is all that’s necessary for a cure. But for some, a transfer can mean a drop in pay or other inconvenience. When Wright developed! the disease, he was transferred and it cost him $2.40 a day. . The Textile Workers Union of America, AFL-CfO, is clamor-j ing for compensation pay for i byssinosis victims and for better filter systems in plants. The' industry acknowledges the problem of worker health land says it is encouraging research into more efficient filter ] systems. I In an article entitled “Head! (’Em Off at the Pass,” A. A. Christiansen, editor in chief of Textile World, wrote: “The only! thing that appears, certain about | byssinosis and textiles is that! more and more people at var-: ious governmental levels are. talking about it. And they are raising a cause that the textile * industry sooner or later will RENT, SELL, TRADE---USE have to face.” [PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! Right or Left? German Vote Will Tell Business English Business Mathematics PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT Tuesday tram 6.30 to 9:50 CRtDITS AND COLLECTIONS Monday and Thursday from 6:30 lo 8:10 SHOP NOW! GET SPECIAL “MONTH-END” DISCOUNTS AT CARPET CENTER! BONN, Germany (AP) — In 1965 Kiesinger's party got to West Germany’s policy to-’ Next month’s election will show 47.6 per cent, Brandt’s 39.3, with ward the East Bloc. Schiller has on one side whether the right- 9.5 per cent for the Free Demo-shown he knows how to keep thej wing National Democratic party crats. economy purring and has identh can vault into Parliament and * * * lied his party with economic se-j on the other whether Willy, Dissatisfaction with the coali-curity—an important election is-Brandt’s Social Democrats can tion and rising radicalism on!sue- cash in on 2Vi years of sharing^both the right and the left are! The party favors immediate| government power, factors now. | signature of the nuclear non- The final weeks leading up to; The election should provide ajPro _rat0" i£®?ty and, In gen-the Sept. 28 vote may provide! key test of what has been So-1 the most violent election cam- clalist strategy for the past dec-paign since Adolf Hitler’s rise to ade—an attempt to prove the power in the early ’30s. 8PD is a responsible party that * * * ' ■ deserves to govern. Police leaves have been can- RECESSION FEUD celed because leftist demonstra- ... . . , , , . , tors plan to be out In force at We8t ,G*rman£s fedara iu« i . in a ltiwMmt, ernment has been dominated po ticai Al^ theyi h will try to disrupt meetings of • . the Social Democrats and Kurt- “rals’ ,n 1#7 , ey an ,.e „ ‘ 7. , ’ Free Democrats formed a coali- George Kiesinger Christian tion under Ludwig Erhard. This Democratic Pa^hhe,raP^a ! collapsed in 1966 when the Free thrget is the NPD-the National pulIed out the> ^Demonstrators try to occupy (mld8t J an®con(™lc reces,si°n NPD meeting’ halls! toss rocks'and 8 disPute ovcr taxes and f1’ 7 , .. j . nance measures. ’T Npr? ehW B™*'* . |ndt Nazis out. NPD chief 8traUsgy ouU|ned by plpe.puf(. Adolf von Thadden has about , Herbert Wehner, saw Its 100 speeches planned for uth°] first chance to participate in the campaign’s last month, a sched-j federai government and took It. Ule that should keep the demon- * * * strators busy. Some youths took to the •NOT NEO-NAZI’ I atreeta carrying signs proclaim- The NPD, which deniesjin* a betray, but the leadership claims it is neo-Nazi, was convinced the party could formed in November 1*4 STTSSTg got only 2.1 per cent of the vote en the r u,, n g coaUtio„. ih the 1965 national election A Men Brandt and 8Economic9 fiarty needs 5 per cent Jor|Minister Karl Schiller have representation in the Bunches-,been major forces |n the coali-tag, or lower house of Parlia- t|on mpnl- | Brandt has given a new look I * A * I —... ‘ Since 1965, Von Thadden has! won a power struggle within the party and gained seats In seven of 10 state parliaments. The high point so far came in April 1968 when the NPD won 9.8 per| cAnt of the paden-Wuerttem-j berg vote. * * * Von Thadden predicts his par-) ty will win 8 to 12 per cent of the; national vote and place as many! as 50 deputies in the 518-member Bundestag. Many political observers) doubt this. Public opinion polls so far show the NPD at about] 5 per cent ~ •BROWN-SHIRT BID’ A,battle in Frankfurt between] demonstrators and helmeted) NPD guards raised the cry in) West Germany's liberal pres-. that the party was using “Brown Shirt m e t h o ds,” a deference to Hitler’*- Storm Troopers. News pictures showed j tough-looking NPD guards and a bloodied youth being carried] iway on a stretcher. I An NPD spokesman argues] (hat such Incidents will help the party. It has been calling for firm measures against demonstrators. * * * Others, like the Christian Democrats' parliamentary leader Rainer Barzel, say Germans will reject such violence and keep the NPD under 5 per cent. ] If the NPD does win seats in the Bundestag, the other three I parties say, they will not form a coalition with Von Thadden. Since it looks now as if neither the Socialists nor Christian Democrats can gain a majority of the vote, another coalition government is likely to result. FREE DEMOCRATS They small F^ee Democratic, , patty is expected to return to the Bundestag and could enter a I coalition with one of the two big parties. Or, the grand coalition I of Chancellor Kiesinger's Chris*] tian Democrats and Foreign Minister Brandt's Socialists jcould be continued. eral, pushes for more contacts with the East Bloc. The tone of Moscow speeches lately might i help it. Arty menacing Kremlinl policies would probably hurt, j The party is hammering away at the theme that it has the best men in the coalition and is the party “creating a modern Germany.” Kiesinger's party is telling West Germans they never had it so good and they should stick to the Christian Democrats. ! Public opinion polls indicate' their strongest card is Kiesin-] [ger. The silver-haired chancel-] lor seems more popular than! Brandt, who is funning for chancellor for the third time. OPEN THE DOOR TO PROMOTIONS AND INCREASED WAGES SCHOOL OF BUSINESS -PBI Evening Division FAlIf TERM BEGINS SEPTEMBER 8 REGULAR EVENING CLASSES ON MONDAY AND THURSDAY BETWEEN 5:40 and 9:50 Accounting Dictaphone - Speedwriflng Shorthand IBM Key Punch Shorthand Dictation Special Evening Classes ECONOMICS } Wednesday ■ from 6:30 to 9:50 -IBM KEV PUNCH Tuesday and Wednesday tram 7:00 to 9:00 Free, Lighted Parking CALL 333*7028 FOR INFORMATION OR INTERVIEW APPOINTMENT /l|i|irurf<) for I 'rirront IH W. Lawrence - FE 3-7028 . Office Machines Typing CARPET *4 v‘ N M V H I RANDOM CARVED HI-LO Durable deeply-tufted con eus filament nylon pile. Choate from 7 eeler comb. FIRST QUALITYI CRUSH-PROOF TEXTURE ACRYLIC THIS IS THE KIND OF CARPET SALE you just cannot afford to mitt! Right now our warehouse and store* are bulging with NEW STYLES and TEXTURES - many being shewn for the first i!)| time anywhere. By shopping now, wo guarantee PRE-SEASON SAVINGS on every yard you buy. Plus, you will bo assured that the color you ask for will bo in stock for "instant" installation. So if you need carpeting - shop today, THE SELECTION WILL NEVER BE BIGGERI THE PRICES WILL NEVER BE LOWER! j ORDER TODAY! INSTALLED TOMORROW! OPEN THE ENTIRE LABOR DAY WEEKEND FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE SHOP M PONTIAC ATS121W. HURON OPEN DAILY 9 AeMe to 9 PoMe SUNDAY 11 TO 6 LABOR DAY 11 to 0 CARVED TERMS FOR ANY BUDGET! JUST SAY MCNARQE IT"! KODEL SHAG NEWSPAPERS Mo per IN (its. delivered Royal Oik WiBtt Paper A------------ tobe yew'll have to live ’CALL 682-5605 TeH Cells-0ALL COLLECT! EXTRA DISCOUNTS ON ALL ORDERS DURING THIS HOLIDAY WEEKEND!. JU»T DM MM W—T OP IIUMAFR the Pontiac press, Thursday, august 28, me Imospifal Schools Children di Nurses LITTLE ROCK, Ark. * --purses with preschool children Spring therh along when they go 9' work »t St. Vincent Spfiripary here. The kids go to SI Special center designed to at-2|faet and keep badly needed *jwrslag help at the hospital. 9*'4» a. selling point to attract •.siothers who have urgently £geeded nursing skills, die St. Inheritcenter not only watches **ver the child but tries to oroaden his knowledge and perception. ★ * ★ “We are trying to enhance their environment,” says the ^ ‘ hospital administrator, A. Allen ''Weintraub. “We want our child care center to be based on learning, to do something for; the children, to make a concentrated effort toward teaching.” The need for nurses is great nationwide — partly because many qualifidd women are too busy with motherhood to work — l^it Arkansas ranks last among the states in the ratio of nurses to population. WANT MORE , A number of hospitals — including some in Arkansas — have centers for children of nurses. But Weintraub said in an interview he believes many potential nurses would want more than just baby-sitting and meals. To direct the program, St. Vincent hired Miss Dana Durst of Fayetteville, Ark., a 23-year-old Sarah Lawrence College .graduate. Her staff, in operation slightly more than a month, provides eight or more hours of care and a learning environment, plus three meals and two snacks — to 53 children. The only requirements are that the parents be St. Vincent employes, that their children be pronoimced healthy by the family physician, and a fee of $2 a day. The fee doesn’t come close to covering the cost, so some of it will show up on the bills of patients. But Weintraub. said he doubted that the program would add more than 5 or 10 cents to a patient’s bill. The program already shWs promise. Of the 33 employes Who have children in the center, Weintraub says about 50 per cent “counted the center as a plus when they decided whether to get into' nursing services here.” In the long run, he added, such a center also may encourage nurses to maintain their careers without fear of neglecting their children. Carol Warsell, a registered nurse, returned to work ' specifically because of the child care center. “I have several friends who are waiting to see how it works out for me and who indicate they may start back to work if it proves successful," she said. 'Holiday Traffic to Kill Over 6?5; CHICAGO (AP) - Between 625 and 725 persons will he killed in traffic accidents over the three-day Labor Day weekend, the National Safety Council estimates. The council said Wednesday the period covered by its estimate will run from 6 p.m. local time Friday through midnight Monday. The Carstairs Crowd. They know how.to mix it up. FIFTH $3.98 |R CM)*: #1J* g PINT $2.52 Code, #lil Vl GAL. $9.23 Codti #t0» Carstairs Whiskey Join the Carstairs Crowd. Adds up to Hoo/er—bold and belted. Fashion says it's important. You say "you love it. We say we have it now in Auditions latest collection. $39.95 Value BATTERY 8 AC PUSH-BUTTON CASSETTE TAPE RECORDER The Hoofer in Antiqued Red Brown ond Ton "Wet Look" leather. 18.00 Companion handbag 11.95 $49.95 Value - nou Portable mono cassette recorder with pop-up cassette feature, automatic recording level, 1.5 watt output. Charge It or $ 1 holds . Solid slate portable FM/AM in personal style, roto-tuning bar, illuminated slide rule tuning. 20 W. Huron Downtown Saginaw St. BACK-TO-SCHOOL SPECIALS! LABOR DAY & BACK-TO-SCHOOL SPECIALS AT WKCI Zip Lined All Weather Coats rans* SPECIAL $|988 ” SUifsT SPORTCOATS ~ BODY SHIRTS LATEST IN $V9S < FASHION # FAMOUS 'CLAIROL' INSTANT HAIR SETTER 'GENERAL ELECTRIC STEAM 'n DRY TRAVELING IRON f $1250 Compact travel iron fits In your luggage -- ideal for travels and back to school use. Irons all fabrics. GE model F49. KEYSTONE INSTANT LOAD FLASHCUBE CAMERA SET Back-to School Special $14.95 SELLER - NOW Park free in WKC's lot at Rear of ttore for I-Hr. In Downtown Mall — Hove Ticket Stamped at Cashier's Office roarsicg! 79* TOY SALE Mini-Priced Toys For Hours of Maxi-Fun $24.95 ask about our Enggass Instant Credit Plan CLCLKb 25 North Saginaw • Telephone 332-2501 JEWELRY CO. Opon Mon., Thure., Fri. to 9 P.M. Downtown Pontiac FE 5-4171 SIMMS,m CLOTHES The Pure Sweet Ring of Beauty! \j>UNT9 OFCONVEHiENf J 'ARKING NCAR AUSTOrTsT ^/BROGUE (Tor Your ‘LABOR DAY’ and ‘BACK-TO-SCHOOL’ Fun! PANASONIC* GO-ANYWHERE PORTABLES B—io THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1969 Dr. Wayne G. Brandstadt Says; Sunlight Essential to Body's Functions One of the less publicized effects of sir pollution is the reduction in the amount of natural light to which we are exposed. William and . Helen Hartley, I writing in Popular Science, state that this may impair I man’s health or! I shorten his life,) They quote BRANDSTADT Dr. John Ott as saying that light entering the eyes stimulates the pituitary 1 and pineal glands and possibly! other areas of the midbrain thatj control the production of hormones. A recent study by Russian scientists reveals -that, if the) skin is deprived of sunlight for long periods, disorders of the! nervous system, a vitamin D deficiency and a weakening of: the body's resistance to chronic disease Will develop. It is important to use moderation, however. A daily 10-minute exposure of the hands and face (but not the eyes) is sufficient to maintain health. Q — What causes bursitis? What is the best treatment? A — Bursitis is an tnflsmation of the sac that lubricates some of the larger joints. It may be caused by prolonged strenuous use, injury, infection, gout or diabetes. Bursitis of the elbow may be caused by playing tennis or by the habit of leaning on the elbows when reading or driving |a car. Bursitis of the knees (housemaid’s knee) is often caused by [prolonged kneeling, j In mild cases that are not yet chronic, massage with an ice cube is helpful. It must be applied directly to the skin until the skin feels numb. This relieves the pain and enables the victim to exercise the joint this preventing stiffness. An injection of cortisone directly into the bursa often cures the disease. Q — I have a chronic bursitis in my„ elbows. Cortisone shots are not effective. Will it go away of its own accord? A — Although with rest an acute huraitis may clear up spontaneously, a chronic bur-sitis will not. If a cortisone injection does not relieve it after two tries, further treatment with this drug will not help. Drs. F. W. if-field and S. M. Field of Beverly Hills, Calif., have devised an elbow brace that prevents complete extension of the joint and j Nm,paMr Wig?, limits the rotation of the forearm. It proved very helpful in two-thirds of a group of 36 patients in whom other treatments had failed . LABOR DAY SALE HERE’S WHAT YOU QET: • 7 ft. long, 6 ft. wide quilted King-size Mattress • Dual Box Springs • King-size Fieldcrest percale top sheet • Fieldcrest percale bottom sheet • 2 King-size pillows • 2 pillowcases • King-size Metal Frame with casters • King-size mattress pad INCLUDES 0MH0-PAK QUILTED TWIN or FULL SIZE MATTRESS and BOX SPRING A direct-to-you price special! Beautifully quitted mattress aid hex spring. Exclusive Ortho construction, decorator ticking. BOTH PIECES INCLUDES DOUBLE BONUS I OF MATTRESS PONTIAC 2211 S. TELEGRAPH RD. Phonm 332-2227 Mirada Mila Shopping Cantor DETROIT 15707 LIVIRNOIS North off John C. Lodga Expressway, Livemois bit Phont 861-6656 0P£N DAILY 10 G • SAT 10-6-SUN 12-6 * (ALL STORES NOW OPEN SUNDAY) - MICHIGAN ‘BdNKARD & SECURITY CHARGES 746 N. PERRY AT JOSLYN next to krooirs SUNDAY PIC-WAY YOU DON’T SACRIFICE STYLE FOR PRICE. YOU PICK FROM ACK AFTER RACK OF EVERYTHING NEW AT EVERYDAY SAVINGS! MIX 'EM PICK MY TWO PAIRS MARKED »2.M % av ; -m3 1 vw pi '; 1 \ * GYM III •• •’• HI Hi SHOES 1 11.97 THE PONTIAC PRE k THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1969 B—11 MONDAY — (LABOR DAY) 10 A.M. te 6 P.M. THURS., FRI., SAT., SUN., MON. A Division of the S. S. Kresge Company with Stores throughout tho United States, Canada and Puerto Rico 5 DAYS SAVE OVER *5 on these HI-LITE ALUMINUM COMBINATION DOURS Our R $22M 16.96 During Truckload Sale Only Pre-hung, easy lo install aluminum combination doors with door closer. Two sizes 32”x80” and 36”x80”. Take advantage of the great savings during this truckload sale. Charge It! No Money Down - Months to Pay TRUCKLOAD SALE Self-Storing Aluminum COMBINATION DOOR TRUCKLOAD SALE WHITE ALUMINUM CROSSBUCK STYLE STORM n’ SCREEN Our Reg, 37,79 CoIohlaT style. White finish stays bright. Fiber glass screen panels won’t rust. Pre - hung; with door closer. Essy to inatslL 32x80**; 86x80”. TRUCKLOAD SALE PRESTIGE ALUMINUM SIDING TRUCKLOAD SALE ParlM 4% "WE Charge it M- jg M 9 Seres painting costs, adds insulation, IneremCe SuMMe value. Prestige elding feature# tough weather-resistant, color-fast hnljjf eyt-rtffhing colon, including white and pastels. 133.96 Sunliner patio cover hes interlocking roof panels supported bjr heavy .duty ornamental columns. Built-in rain gutters. Finished in white acrylic baked enamel. May be level or eloped. 8ft. X tilt. ••••««..••• ' ““ GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD B—12 v 'f'/Hty ' b / / THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1969 r-/> OPEN DAILY 10-10: SUN. 11-6 I MONDAY (LABOR DAY) 10 AJM, to 0 P.M. THORS., FRI., SAT. ONLY A Division^ S.S. Krtsge Co., with Stores in tho United States, Canada, Puerto Rico, Australia School-Day Discount Sale G L E N W OO D CORNER NOR' PERRY AT GLENWOOD k&k-A -1*; ! ! ) OPEN DAILY 10-10; SUNDAY 11-6 THE PONTIAC PRESS, / THURSDAY, AUGUST 2R. 1969 x OPEN MONDAY (Labor Day) 10 A.M. to 6 P.M. B—13 i _____ THURS. - FRI. - SAT. f A Division of S.S. Krosgo to., with Stores in tho United Stotts, Canada, Puerto Rico, Australia School-Day Discount Sale SUBURBANS IN NEW LENGTHS Our Reg. 20.94 — 3 Daya “Dr. Zhivago” styles, military, safer! and bush types. Wonderfully warm materials with a choice of quilt or acrylic pile lining. 6-18. GIRLS’ 4-14 SKI JACKETS Reg. 4.66 - 3 Day• 3.66 ■ Quilted nylon. Some ' ' : reversible, some arryl-• ■<* pile-lined. With hood. SCHOOLGIRL DRESSES S3 $4 $5 Regularly 3.78 to 6.78! With high style eye-cue! Sailors, drop waists, zipper backs, bishops . . . sashed and belted, some two-piece. Cottons, rayons, blends ... some bonded. Plaids, prints, solids. 4-12. FOR TEACHER, TOO 00 7 •laeks Reg. 3.78 3 Daya Fashion-print cotton denim. With . tapered and flared leg styles. Some sashed. 8-18. Stand-outs in a class by themselves . . . skimmers, low-torso A-lines, shifts and two-piece dressmaker suits. Acetate doable knits, Orion® acrylics. Col-oray® rayons. Rich fashion colors. Jr. petite 3-11, jr. 7-15, misses* 10-20. Just charge it. ®DuPont trademark ®Courtaulde T.M. 1 i NEW (MUCK-CHANGE HANDBAG Our Reg. 2.78 J Day Only The gmlnwiat gadabout on the school scene. A versatile shoulder strap style in black, brown, tan or cognac WATCHBANO TRADE-IN grained vinyl, mu or brown plastic patent. Change purse has handy fold-ont section containing a large, see-through sippered pocket, LD. card and seventeen POPULAR WATCHES 3.96 Our Reg. 6.87 3 Day* Only WALLETS FOR YOU 07* Our Hrg. Ml — J Day. Only /lien's, women'i walleU. mulUview window,. Sava! In go-go watches with wide bands! lour choice of groovy colors, styles. Save on time and Charge It today! UmltgM'MMHy . Km Sold to Doaion ELECTRIC SHAVER Our In. f l.lt-S Day. Only Bava on Bunhaam fast** bark twin head ahaver. Limited Quantity - Mom Sold to Doaion - Modal IM 707. 10 00 GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD B-14 before FINE FLOOR COVERINGS ti «. Tumi rKJtaM. THE IPOyTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1969 LAST 3 DAYS! THURSDAY - FRIDAY - SATURDAY SMITH FURNITURE 128 WOODWARD BIRMINGHAM GOING OUT OF BUSINESS SALE Chooso from the remaining stock of Nationally Known Living Room, Dining Room, and Bedroom Furniture ... EARLY AMERICAN AND TRADITIONAL All at Sensational Savings ... Everything Must Go . Open Thursday, and Friday Until Nine Saturday Until Five-Thirty Ooklond Community WWW College Announces REGISTRATION FOR FALL 1969 Regular Registration September 2, 3, 4 9;00 A.M, to 8 00 PM. (Exclusive of the lunch and Sinner hours) Orchard Ridge 27055 Orchard Ik. Raad Farmington SEMESTER BEGINS SEPTEMBER 8, 1969 , ' For Further Informotion Contact: Admissions .Office—Oakland Community College 2480 Opdyke Rd., Bloomfield Hills 48013 Lepers New Hope: Thalidomide HONOLULU ( UPI) '-leprosy treatment originated) The suifone drug* continue to the drug to Hawaii hospitals Thalidomide, the drug blamed about two years ago with Dr.|be the most effective weapons and Carville, received special r_ a I_A| k I a* * U Ualrmt Chnrl/in Bn ImibbII A_I . W . . ._* ^ for thousands of birth Jaakov Sheskin, an Israeli doc-! against the disease, he said. 27 Americans Killed in Viet Auburn Hill. Highland Lake. 2500 Faatharatana 7350 Cooley Lake Read Road Auburn Height! Union Lake 647-6200 deformities, may be a new aid tor working in Jerusalem, in the treatment of leprosy. Recent tests may alter) “We tried it out about a year thalidomide’s reputation as a and a half ago,” Hirschy said, crippler of unborn babies to a;“and found that although it is drug offering hope for leprosy I not effective agaiiist the disease victims. Thalidomide presently)itself, it has a high degree of is banned from general use in success in the treatment of this the United States, particular reaction, a familiar * * ★ one in leprosy patients. Ira D. Hirschy, head of —................... Hawaii Department of Health's Communicable Disease) Division, said tests in Hawaii hospitals and at the U.S. Public Health Service hospital in Carville, La., have revealed that Thalidomide is valuable Ih treating a common reaction to the disease. The Hawaii tests have taken; WASHINGTON (AP) — Twen-place in the Hale Mohaluty-^ven servicemen killed in) Hospital In Honolulu and at the i action in the Vietnam war have Kalaupapa Hospital on the*”*" Hated by the Defense De-. island of Molokai, 54 miles eastiPa£frne"t of Honlulu. Kalaupapa ls The list includes eight men Hawaii’s only leprosy tlement. ; ARMY SOME SYMPTOMS IChicwP'ltatt*$*". , iVandaila. Spk a Joups w. Mlichafl, “Fever develops and places Inic kaSu? _aBar, the body affected by the disease) *anw cV, become red, hot and swell up," Hunfon, oalfwi Hisrchy said, "causing pain and’sowtar"o! discomfort.” But daily thalidomide doses, for a period of up to 10 days1 Michigan""" !;™.”"cpi have been “very successful’’ in;Mu^’e7Vr om missing U>: relieving these r e actionis , dead_hostile: Hlrkschy said, “and there has army been no evidence of them JrNyD,AM*- WeH> J*ek,on'i romirrino 3 I minnEs’TOTA - Spac. a Richard R. recurring. Olson. Minneapolis * * * Died not as a result of hostile I “It’g amazing,” he added, notion: Wiy ‘Within 24 hours the swelling MISSOURI _ tulkttr Conuructlonman and fever go down, making the Ia result'of hostile patient feel much more com- actj0n. fortable. He rests better, eats . aiimv m ' better and sleeps better.” ! suJantar*f''spac. HainR*chard A.*rDeria,' Hirschy emphasized t h a t JKfc,W. Mw,h,n L thalidomide . is “not used on li. pwiip t. smiw. women leprosy patients o f -• ,ti‘i—*—— childbearing age.” CONTROLLED TESTS “We've only used the drug on) hospitalized patients,” he said, “testing It under controlled) conditions.” With Immigration to Hawaii rising, Hirschy noted that the number of persons b e l n g1 treated for leprosy has in- Canadian navy is investigating cfeased during the last decade. (’omP'alnt8 tbat t'*ree of its J~ »*— « I authorization to diatr ibu11 thalidomide for the teats. "It gives real hope of relief Since the Federal Drug Administration has -barred thalidqmide from general use in the United States, Hirschy said,)for patients with these) the William S. Merrell Co., of particular reactions,” Hirschy Cincinnati, Ohio, which supplies I said. MAR I NR COUP WANT TO SELL LAWNMOWERS, POWER MOWERS, ROLLER | foreign born. SKATES, WAGONS, BICYCLES? USE A LOW COST PONTIAC| * * * PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 332-8181. Linking thalidomide to) | Canadian Navy Eyes Incident 1 VICTORIA, B.C. (AP) - The' is Invest! three of played par cant of themrb°y* and Jndia"s” during weekend exercises, leaving a trail of r,r.r.J 6 days EWHU only! New, breathtaking 8x10 LIVING COLOR PORTRAIT handling and delivery Your money back if this isn't the most lifelike portrait of your child evei. Not just an old-fashioned tinted or colored picture, but "giving Color"! The complete portrait comes ohve~—captured ih amazing full-color realism with Eastman Professional Ektacolor film. Entire portrait photographed In ' living Color by Jack 8. Nimbi*, Inc. * Choose from actual finished . portraits'—‘not proofs, * Estra prints available at reasonable prices. No obligation to buy. • Groups taken at 99 per child, ■ • Age limit:, 5 weeks to 12 years, /• Limi/i one per child- two per family. MON., AUG. 25-AUG. 30 Photographer on Duty 10-8 damage along 10 miles of shoreline * A 0 A spokesman at the Canadian) forces base said Wednesday the ships were steaming about 12 knots during maneuvers Sunday. “which isn’t fast when you consider that Britsh Columbia -| ferries go . at about 18 or 201 knots." “They were just playing cow-; boys and Indians out there in) the inlet,” said Percy Perkina, a marina operator. "They went _r and down; making sharp! turns, and the wash they created was just l|ke a tidal wave.” | WWW Perkins said one of his floats! was damaged and several boats! were smashed. WWW Rod McDonell,. another marl-) no operator, said he and a friend went out in a small boat end tried to stop the ships. They | were greeted by spray from a fire hose, he said. HALL PREST Robbed Staff Gan't| Teller-From Him I ! DETROIT (AP) - Detroit ’ police are seeking a male—or, ■ was it a female?—bankrobber who wore lipstick and de-'» manded money from a Michigan' 1 Bank branch toller in Detroit I i | Wednesday. w w w The teller aald she handed j* 1800 to what she thought was a j | man dressed as a woman after f he gave her a note and pulled 'f a gun. w w w Other witnesses said the bandit was a woman. The bandit: wore blue jeans and a white i|j( turtleneck shirt. / Fat Overweight Aval Uhl. to you without e doctor', prescription, o u r product called Odrinax. You mutt low ugly fat or your mo nay back. Odrinax tt a tiny table) and aatlly swallowed, 'Got rid of excess fat and llvo longer. Odrinax costs $3.00 «nd a new, large economy site for $5.00. Both art sold with this guaranteeif not satisfied for any reason, ‘just return the package to i your druggist and got your ML money back. No questions asked.',. Odrinax Is sold with this guarantee I SIMM'S CUT RATI DRUG STORI — 91 NORTH SAGINAW —iff 'MAIL f ' NEVER-IRON DRESS SLACKS 449 C49 sizes mN sms e-10 ,g.|g Extra low-priced for extrd value! Permanent press rayon and acetate blend, fortified with : extra-strength nylon. Tapered model with the slim trim At boys go fori Pre-hemmed for instant wear. , NEVER-IRON DRESS SHIRTS IN BOLD NEW COLORS Designer look in shirts... of permanent press polyester-nnd-cotten... with rtew fashion spread collar ,.. now fashion colors of blue, gold green, brown, Long sleeves, 6-18. COLOR-COORDINATED TIES............99$ Pontiac 200 N. Saginaw Fro* Parking Clarkston 6460 Dixie Hwy. Just N. of Waterford'H August Chmm\ Open Thursday Friday and Saturday Til 9 P.M. Save 30 to 50% Fine Broadloom GROUP ONE... ODDMENTS GROUP THREE.. ODDMENTS Indoor-Outdoor CARPET frt« apuellty-fom.ua mel»-ine In ipy room In the hou.t. Idnal far boll,, ind outdoor, for latiaa and antronca,. ’ ^ A Von't ntildow or ra). OB :hoica of 9 colors. f y tpecial purchase. 4HR v*Tx9’ Stara Sample, $39.95 to $(9.U Remnants Priced to Clear Size Description Como. Sale 12xM’G” Orange 1 Brown Leap 109.00 HR 12x1tv4** Bold Texture 100.00 •1.18 I2xll'2” Green Twist 8GG.M 119.99 12x10*1** Gold t Orange Kit. Gpt. 110.00 10948 12x14*4** Blue Indoor Outdoor 120.00 114! 12x14*8** Orange t Gold Kit. Cpt. 140.00 . 09.95 12x1 G’G” Gold Loop 109.00 19.9$ 12x10*10** Avocado Texture 100.N •9.95 12x9*8” Orange Wool Kit. Cpt. 104.00 09.95 12x18*4** Bronxa Texture 100.00 19.98 laxIG’H" Beige Texture 220.00 118.86 12x15*6” Cold Loop 141.10 18.16 12x11*0" Most Random 110.10 . 118.88 12x16*10” Emerald Random 214.10 188.88 12x10*1" Calory Carved 194.00 81.86 12x8*8” Shomrook Plush 112.00 68.88 12x11*2" Gold Tweed 194.00 89.86 12x14*11" Emerald Twd. 200.10 118.18 12x11* Cold Loop 119.00 88.88 12x12*10" Beige Loop 192.90 68.88 12x10*8" Meet Twist 1M.0R .118.88 12x11*8” Bold Nugget Loop 90.00 89.86 12x10*1" Red KR. Cpt. 141.00 81.96 12x10*0" Cold Tweed 141JC 18.88 12x10*1" Avoeade Loop 111.00 18.88 12x14*1** Bronze 1 Olive Kit. Cpt. 2M.0C . 89.88 12x111" Blue Breen Loop 100.00 18.86 12x21*10" Cold Loop 201.10 118.88 12x11' Cape Blue Kit. Cpt. 200.10 181.18 12x10*1" Clover Breen Kit. Cpt. 204.00 129.98 1x11*4" Pink Commercial 281.00 118.18 11x111" Croon i Brown Twd. 210.00 116.16 12x11*1" Cold Twd. M.00 6146 12x22* Oold Loop 203.00 188.88 12x11*1" Red C Week KH. Opt. 200.00 119.98 11x11*1" Beige TWd. 114.00 9846 12x111" glue Breen Carved 1MJ0 19.18 12x221" ' 8eld Leap 243.00 119.16 T2H01" Blue Breen TWd. 20040 118.18 12x11" Blue Breen Kttohon Cpt. 10440 69.98 12x11* Cold Loop 11140 •8.16 12x12*11" Cold Plush 11140 199.18 12x11*10" Avoeade Carved 11141 11146 12x111** Cold Loop 11141 •f.88 12x11*11" Bronze Random 11040 99.98 12x10* , Blue Leap 1140 48.88 12x121" Avoeade Carved 20440 18648 12x18*1" Ague Random 88140 198.81 12x111" Avoeade Oarved 1IB4C 88.88 11x11*8" Breen Random 14441 8948 12x8*2" Beige Lea p •040 18.88 12x11" Bed A Black Loop 11141 •8.98 12x111" Avocado Loop 11040 69.98 12x111" Aveeade Kiteken Cpt. 11141 188.81 12x14*4” . Red KHehen Cpt. 11149 88.81 12x181" Spanish Rod Shag 190.00 118.08 18x181" Bronze Random J4040 84.98 18x181" YelioW Random 19040 •646 18x84* Celadon Random 1N.N 100.08 18x111" Celery Oarved 299.00 116.18 18x88’ Olive Breen Leap 81040 188.88 18x18’ Bronze Hush , 22441 18848 18x14*4" Avoeade Plash 20040 188.98 12x10*1” , Pufrple Plush 2M40 12I4C 12x81*18" •eld Loop 208.00 189.90 18x811" Bald A Arana Leap 29940 11148 18x81*11" •aid Leap 2M40 188.88 18X88*1" ■lea Arana Leap 20040 188.08 18x11*1" •aid KHehen Cpt. 21148 1184S 18x18* •aldgAai 21848 11848 Beduuitli- Eve UM -- ------------- -----------THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1969 ____ Hpve Yourself Culinary Fling fo Mark Last Holiday of Summer By JANET ODELL FM Editor, ¥4 The Pontiac Press Let’s get ready for company during the Labor Day weekend. It’s the last summer holiday. ’Hopefully, It will be pleasant •and we can entertain out of doors. ; Let’s have chicken or turkey •for the main course. Both are •more economical than meat fright now. I Chicken parts cooked on the jgrill are given an Interesting •taste with a spicy plum hasting •sauce. ' ■ ;v ■ PURPLE PLUM B ARBECUED CHICKEN 1 (l lb.) can or jar purple plums | 1 medium onion, sliced | 1 dove garlic, crushed 2 tablespoons wine vinegar 1 teaspoon salt 1 tablespoon pickling spices ’ V« cup salad oil. , 1 frying chicken, cut-up p Drain plums, reserving syrup. Separate onion slices into rings .’and add to plums. Combine “plum syrup with garlic, vinegar jwnd salt in small saucepan. Tie rpickling spices in cheesecloth and add to syrup. Heat just |, Pour over plums. ★ it k Cover and marinate overnight in refrigerator. Remove plums and onion from marinade Discard cheeseddth hag. Add salad oil to marinade. Place chicken pieces oiled grill, skin side up, about 6 to B-inches above hot coals. Audi with plum syrup marinade. Cook chicken until tender, turning aid basting frequently. Season with salt and pepper. SERVE AS WCTJSH Serve marinated plums onion rings in a relish dish dr use them to garnish the Plum Barbecued Chicken. Hie boneless turkey roast is wrapped in foil and cooked right on the grill. Fifteen minutes before serving time, cook fresh com on the grill. SOAK CORN Early in the day, pull back husks only far enough to remove silk. Dip in water. Rewrap corn in husks and soak in water for hour or so. While grilling, keep turning until com is tender. The taste will be superb. BARBECUED TURKEY ROAST 1 (2 lbs. 8 oz.) boneless turkey roast Barbecue sauce. Cut a 30-inch piece of heavy duty foil. Fold in half crosswise. Remove frozen roast from foil pan. Wrap foil tightly around roast. Leave one ad poen. Pair in % cup of- yourr favorite barbecue sauce. Seal end tightly. Place oh, barbecue grill. After 1 hour insert meat! thermometer. ■ 1 * Grill to 175 degrees about two hours total. Remove carefully Iran grill to keep juices from leaking. Remove foil. Place roast bade on grill. Turn and baste with additional sauce untQ nicely brownec about 20 minutes ’mow. Yield: one rOast. Lemon Barbecue Sauce .2 cloves garlic, minced 1 teaspoon seasoned salt 1 cup salad oil 1 cup lemon juice V« cup chopped onion 1 teaspoon black pepper 1 teaspoon thyme, crushed 1 bottle (8 oz.) Italian dressing. Blend all ingredients thoroughly. If possible, allow to overnight to blend Savors. ★ * Salad is a must. Why not make it crisp cole slaw? Here are two unusual recipes. Just remember that the trick to good cole slaw is to slice the cabbage into shreds with a sharp knife. CRUNCHY COLE SLAW 1 large head cabbage, cored and shredded I coarsley shredded 1 green pepper, seeded and 4 scallions, sliced chopped v 6 radishes, sliced 2 carrots, scraped and1 % cup sliced celery Let Escort Help Prepare Picnic Food Purple Plum Barbecued Chicken You can help *your summer romance flourish with a perfect picnic in a pastoral setting. Special picnics call for food with a flair to stimulate young man’s senses. This hamperful of outdoor fare has color to delight his eye, Interesting tastes to tempt his palate and the fragrance of coffee to scent the air. You will have his ear with sweet conversation as you pack your! picnic basket to dine together out-of-doors. ■I! You can ready the tables together, take out the picnic basket and your vacuum jug. Before you fill it with steaming coffee, pour him a cup. (If you’re a cream-in-coffee fancier, don’t forget a smaller, separate vacuum container of cream and, for a sweetner, pack little foil packets oi sugar.) With that welcome cUp of coffee, next prepare the sandwiches- These ar ordinary picnic sandwiches, but slices of cold roast meat and a filling of cream cheese and| delicate oriental seasonings. ★ ★ ★ Dessert is plump juicy strawberries held by their caps and dipped in sour cream and brown sugar. The only thing left to complete the picnic refilled cups of coffee. To make sure your coffee is up to the great outdoors, make sure you brew it correctly. Use fresh coffee — never buy more you’ll uSe in a week. For every six ounces of cold tap water, use One Approved Coffee Measure. Your vacuum bottle should keep it hot for hours. ORIENTAL SANDWICH 1 package (3 oz) c r e a cheese, softened. 1 tablespoon soy sauce teaspoon garlic salt V* cup finely chopped water chestnuts 114-2 teaspoons cider vinegar Cold sliced roast beef, turkey or ham whole grain Hard rolls bread Mix the cream cheese, soy sauce, garlic salt and Water chestnuts until smooth. Add the first measure of vinegar and taste.. If a little more zip is needed for flavor add only a few drops at a time, checking spreading consistency too. Makes about % cup or enough for 3 or 4 sandwiches. To make the sandwiches 1 the filling on both sides to prevent the bread from absorbing liquid from the meat while the picnic is packed. Note: This filling is flavorful alone as an appetizer spread, or a filling for stuffed celery. A good snack idea with mid-afternoon coffee. * % cup mayonnaise V* cup sour cream % cup beer 14 teaspoon celery seed Vt teaspoon sugar Salt Pepper * k ★ Prepare vegetables and combine cabbage with gfeen pepper, carrots, scallions, radishes and celery. Place in large plastic bag; seal; refrigerate. ★ ★ * Blend mayonnaise with sour cream, beer, celery seed, sugar, and salt and pepper to taste. Keep chilled in a separate jar. * k k Just before serving, pour ressing over cole slaw and toss until well blended. Yield: servings. FRESH TOMATO SLAW 3 cups shredded cabbage 4 medium-sized tomatoes, chopped V< cup Blue cheese, crumbled % cup sour CTeam ! teaspoon salt Vs teaspoon minced fresh onion Daslj pepper Combine cabbage and tomatoes in bowl. Chill. Com-bine remaining ingredients. Toss lightly with tomato-cab- bage mixture. Makes about 8 servings. ♦ - a ★ For dessert, make a pie with some of Michigan’s famous peaches. This one requires only brief baking for the cookie crust. PEACHES ’N CREAM PIE 1 (9-inch) cookie pie crust, baked 8 to 7 peach halves, peeled 1 (3-ounce) package vanilla instant pudding mix . Vb cup sifted brown sugar 1 cup milk 1 cup sour cream 8 peach slices Place peach halves, cut side down, in the cooled pie curst. Empty instant pudding mix into deep bowl. Add sifted brown sugar, milk and sour cream. Beat with electric mixer on low speed for two minutes. k . k Pair over peaches hi pie crust; cool in refrigerator for at least 2 hours. At serving time, cut into 8 wedges and garaUh each With a fresh peach slice. COokto Pie Crust 1 package refrigerator sugar cookie dough 2 (9-inches each) pie plates Slice cookie dough thinly. Arrange slices in each pie {date to cover. Allow dough to soften slightly and press with fingers to fill any “holes.” Bake in 375 degree oven for 10 to 12 minutes or until golden brown. Allow to cool completely before filling. Place one pie crust in plastic bag and freeze for later use. “T RICHARDSON , FARM DAIRY & DAIRY SPECIAL Small or Large Curd COTTAGE h. Ctlle 29' FEnWE FLAVOR CHERRIES JUBILEE ,t£l99° FLAVOR 8FE0ML BANANA SPLIT CRENI ^'•79° ICE CREAM BARS 24 Pack Regular ’I” m Chocolate Marshmallow Regular.40° 35' •very day LOW MUCH RICHARDSON BREAD 5 km. 99* CARTON JQc RUSTIC QQc or GLASS i|9 GALLON 39 HOMOGENIZED MILK RICHARDSON FARM DAIRY STORES fa yourIbodList Tender Juicy STEAK 99 Lean, meaty SPARE RIBS Picnic Special fti t lb. QUALITY 3-lbs. 591 Hamilton EGGS CHUCK STEAK 651 MM Cured, Sliosd BACON X 31. I Skinless Brads 1 lbs. CHUCK ROAST 78 Rerih Saginaw DOWNTOWN P0NTU0 OPEN FRIDAY EVENING | TIL T P.M. 4348 Dixie Highway ____y 9-8 Monday, Tuesday, Wcdaasday 9-7 •« Thursday, Friday aud Saturday M Quality Meat Since 1931 1220 North Pony AT MADISON OPEN DAILY 9 A.M. to 8 P.M. SUNDAYS 1G AaMutsGMI* THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1969 Let the Kid$ Come Cool Drink, Cookies for a Party % cup packed brown sugar 1 cup flour Vt teaspoon salt V* cup quick rolled oats Filling: 1 can (It oz.) apple sauce • cup packed brown sugar 3 tablespoons flour ’ Vi Teaspoon dried lemon peel 1 1 tablespoon canned lemon 1 juice 'I Mi teaspoon nutmeg 'itk teaspoon cinnamon ’Ilk cup chopoed nuts BACKYARD PARTY-Make snack time big glasses of Orange Nectar Cooler for party time this summer when the neighbor- drinks and serve plenty of Frosted Pumpkin hood children drop in for treats- Set out Drop Cookies and Apple Sauce Squares. i Frost eacn cooKie witn Brown Combine the juice of the|gu^er Frosting and top with a , j limes with chilled Juices and walnut half, if desired. About! sugar. Stir until sugar Is five dozen cookies, dissolved. J FROSTING: In a saucepan heat> FROSTED PUMPKIN DROPpk cup butter or margarine until j COOKIES light golden brown. Add 4 to 4% ^ 1 cup shortening ,CUPS »‘fted confectioners sugar 1 cup packed brown sugar |and41 ® gg, ^U,n8 wat">, 2 eggs beating until mixture is smooth. • 1 cup canned pumpkin, or j APPLE SAUCE SQUARES I ! squash |vk cup butter, or margarine CUKE *N’ ASPARAGUS - Don’t neglect asparagus just because there are so many other good vegetables at this time of year. Canned asparagus spears are delicious with fresh cucumber dressing. Sour Cream and Cukes Dress Asparagus Spears with tangy sour cream and seasonings. Let the dressing chill in the refrigerator to mellow. Spoon it on top of the asparagus and you have a dish fit for a king. COOL CUKE AND ASPARAGUS SALAD Mi cup grated unpeeled cucumber M cup dairy sour cream 2 tablespoons diced pimiento 1 teaspoon grated onion, drained 1 teaspoon lemon juice tk teaspoon salt y< teaspoon dill weed Vk teaspoon pepper 4 drops hot pepper sauce 2 (tft-oz.) cans extra long green asparagus spears, chilled and drained Drain cucumber thoroughly. Combine with sour cream, pimiento, onion, lemon juice, salt, dill weed, pepper and hot pepper sauce. Chill for 30 minutes. Asparagus, the gourmet’s de-" light, has many virtues, one being that it tastes as good cold as it does hot’ If you haven’t served tender green canned asparagus spears as a salad, now is the time to try it. Simply chill the asparagus in the refrigerator for several Hours. Then carefully drain and arrange the apears on a bed of crisp lettuce. For a delightfully refreshing summertime dressing, combine shredded unpeeled cucumber Cake Topping With Coconut Is Broiled l*oi. j«r Wf Mb. 1-ox. Can 29" Take this cake to the picnic right in its pan. Everyone will enjoy the crunchy coconut topping. COCONUT TOPPED PUDDING CAKE 1 Mayer package regular yellow cake mix 1 package vanilla or lemon instant pudding tk teaspoon salt t 1 cup water Jk cup salad oil 3 eggs Place cake mix, pudding, and salt in large mixer bowl. Add water, oil, and eggs; blend at low speed, then beat at medium speed for 3 minutes, or until smooth and creamy. Pour batter into a greased, floured 0* tnch square pan. Bake at 350 degrees 90 to 55 minutes. Let cool 10 minutes. Fold a 40-inch sheet of IS" j wide foil wrap to make a long band 3 inches wide. Wrap around pan, overlapping at ends and pressing to pan. It should extend up 2 inches. Spread with the following topping: Coconut Topping Vi Cup melted butter or margarine Vi cup light brown sugar V« cup milk Few grains of salt BAKED FISH IN SOUR CREAM-Pre-pare half of an 8-oz. package of herb bread stuffing as directed for dry .stuffing. Fill a 3-4 pound fish with head and tail left on; lace or skewer together. Stand fish on its underside, as though swimming, in buttered baking dish. Combine 1 cup dairy sour cream; V« teaspoon each salt, celery salt and dill seed; 1 tablespoon flour and 2 tablespoons chopped onion. Spread evenly over top of fish. Bake at 350 degrees about one hour, or until fish is tender and topping has lightly browned. Makes 4-6 servings. Arrange asparagus spears on lettuce-lined salad dishes. Top with cucumber dressing. Garnish with pimiento strips. Yield: 5 to 3 servings (1 cup dressing.) California Size 24 U.S.No.1 an Pascal Celery 19 Dry Onions ill 29 CELERY US DA CHOICE MEATS PEACHES SHAPES H0HEY ROCKS CALIF. SWEET 1 cup shredded coconut I % cup chopped walnuts I Blend all Ingredients together. Spread over cake. Brown slowly and carefully under the broiler until topping is golden—about 5 minutes. ***• Select/, Heated Bread Msbury’s funny face f PRE-SWEETENED 1 1* DRINK MIX j J.# packages for _ r i wifh this coupon TY tIDE SUPER MARKET r*0°lar Pr'c* Cream butter with parsley and terragon and use as a spread for French or Italian bread. Slice the bread, but not all the way through; then spread both sides of each slice with some of the herbed butter. Place on foil or wrap in foil and heat in a moderate Or hot oven before serving. GR.1 SKINLESS During Week Ending: Cheese With Rice Next time you prepare rice, cook it the way'you always d6, but toss It with 6 tablespoons of freshly grated Partnesan A Special Touch Want a special touch tor ice dream? With a fork, stir vanilla he cream to soften, add yout favorite flavoring ... nun or almond extract or cinnamon .. . I 1718 Joslyn 373-8377 / TOP $AVING$ 608 W. HURON STREET NEAR WEBSTER SCI 1 SAUSAGE .TUBT u. 59° [HAMBURGER 55: , 69° BACON PETERS ! SLI0ED 0,b** 1100 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 196ft B—17 COME TO OUB LABOR DAY FLOWERPOT HIBACHI — A picnic in the offing and no portable grill? Make one, quick as a wink, from a clay flowerpot. Foil, gravel and charcoal briquets are all you need. For a large party at home, assemble half a dozen of these hibachis and spot them around the patio or backyard. Picnickers Prefer Their Own Work ; The shade of an old apple tree * Is a delightfully bool spot for a • cookout. Sitting on a blanket spread under a treeVings back .memories of an old-fashioned picnic.1 Imformality and casualness are still the mood of the day with a modern twist to the food and its preparation. Glazed kebabs created from variety of jtruits, vegetables and frankfurters were not part of a 1 picnic in the old days. Today’s picnickers enjoy fixing their own creations. Have the ingredients available and each can grill combinations of frankfurters, spiced crab apples, broiled mushroom ‘.crowns, olives and chunks of ’bananas. The flavor of the ‘ kebabs is enhanced with a glaze •made of the. crab apple syrup ‘and bottled browning sauce. Easy to carry to any picnic spot is a hibachi made from a large clay flowerpot, lined with foil and partially filled with charcoal, its just needs to be lighted to be used. The skewers rest on the edge of the pot so a wire rack is not required. FLOWERPOT KEBABS WITH GLAZE 1 jar (1 lb.) spiced crab apples 1 tablespoon sugar . 1 tablespoon vegetable oil, optional 1 teaspoon lemon juice Vt teaspoon kitchen bouquet (bottled browningsauce) Dash garlic powder 1 can (3 oz.) broiled mushroom crowns 4 frankfurters Drain Vi cup syrup from crab Blueberries Dot Biscuits Small muffin-pan cups are used for baking this delightful hot bread. BLUEBERRY BISCUIT _ cup less 2 tablespoons unsifted regular flour (stir to aerate before measuring) 1W teaspoons baking powder H teaspoon salt 1 tablespoon sugar 1 tablespoon butter 1 large egg Vt cup commercial sour cream % cup large fresh cultivated blueberries Butter 12 small muffin-pan cups (each 1% by 1 inch). In a medium mixing bowl, stir together flour, baking powder, salt and sugar. With a pastry blender, cut in butter until particles are fine. ★ 1 ★ ^ Into a small bowl turn the egg and sour cream; beat to blend; turn into dry Ingredients. Add blueberries. With a rubber j spatula, fold carefully until dry 'ingredients are just moistened try not to squash berries. '(Dough will be stiff.) • With a tablespoon and small spatula fill prepared muffin-pan cups with dough; try to cover berries. Sprinkle with 2 tablespoons extra sugar. Bake in preheated 423-degree oven until browned — about 20 minutes. Remove from cups at once and serve hot. Makes 12. Note: In measuring flour, fi a cup and level, then remove tablespoons. apples into small saucepan. Add sugar, oil, lemon juice, kitchen bouquet and garlic powder. Place over medium heat and bring to a boil. Remove from heat. Drain mushrooms reserving broth for use in soup, sauce or gravy. Score frankfurters lightly in spiral from end to end. Cut into quarters. Lace mushrooms, meat and crab apples alternately skewers. Brush with glaze. Grill over medium coals 3 to 5 inches from heat 10 to 15 minutes. Brush frequently with glaze. Makes 4 servings. VARIATIONS OLIVE VARIATION: Substitute 12 large ripe, pitted olives for mushrooms. BANANA VARIATION Substitute 2 large bananas forj mushrooms. Peel bananas and cut each into 1%-inch chunks. Dip in lemon juice to prevent darkening until ready to use. POTPOURRI: Use a com- “ bination of mushrooms, olives and bananas along with the meat and crab apples. * " UP ★ ‘ Line a clay flowerpot withl foil. Fill two-thirds full with! gravel. Top with a square ofl foil. Add a layer of briquets.1 Select skewers at least 2 inches! longer than the diameter of the| Special! DREAM 4-0z. OO WHIP "•"*30 c 1 VLASIC KOSHER i DILL OQ > chips j» 30 c ' OVEN FRESH , Old Style or Italian IIA bread Lv.Lf Ca c ~ Oatmeal Fudgestiek, Fig ASSORTED Bar or Vanilla Wafer KEPLER A/SI 00 COOKIES 3&J ’* MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE 9 «,. $‘108 mm can White or Assorted NORTHERN TISSUE 4r»m 9Qt Pack Dixie White 9-lneh PAPER PLATES 58' 10p°kgct- ROC BEL-AIR PAPER CUPS 7-Oz. too-ct. Pkg. 58° JOY Liquid DETERRENT Giant Size RINSO DETERGENT E 3-lb., 1 oz. Pkg. BREAST O’CHICKEN Chunk Pack TUNA Assorted Flavors Hl-C DRINKS or CITRUS COOLER Bean Recipe Book Available Again The Michigan Bean Shippers with the Michigan Bean Growers have up-dated and reprinted what certainly must be the most popular bean recipe booklet ever printed. In five years, over a million have been distributed to schools, Institutions, church groups and private individuals. : The Bean Recipe booklet is ptill 38 pages and contains recipes from famous chefs throughout the country plus those of the Kennedy*, the LBJ Ranch ... and the Plllsbury Grand Prize winner which Mvfer seems to dim 1 popularity. It is available singly or in quantity again. Send six cents In stamps or coins for each book to cover postage; namf, address and zip code. For Quantity shipments, or lndivi-il copies, write to: GET THE BEST FOR LESS OUR OWN TTulYm/u, APPLES *f**st 50 LBS. MIOHIQAN UJ. No. 1 POTATOES $199 t 1004 E. Jefferson Avs. Detroit, Mkb. 48207 I Drain and Dry If yott want to broil pineapple ■ rings (canned) to serve withe' meet course, be sure to drain1 And dry them thoroughly before, brushing with melted butter dr mgrgarine. If you like, you may •H a little hooey and sby sauce to the butter. 1 ^ Swaet, Ripe U WATERMELONS f 99* SWEET SPANISH ONIONS 1 10*a. • PLUMS • PEACHES • PEARS earning quantities BY THE LARGE NO. 1 HOME-GROWN TOMATO!* . Also Small Tomatoes at 99c Pook; OPEN SUN. TnK.thnuchgsUO-7 12-7 CLOSED/MONDAYS Corner ot Clartotoh tn. IM.HH..I1HI !>■>!» Ml ARMOUR STAR SUOAR CURED FULLY COOKED HAMS lb. 79< whole or half HYGRADE’S SLICED Pflft LUNCH MEATS n? 69 Fresh SLICED 1 SIDE PORK I Fresh BONELESS I ROLLED PORK ROAST 1 Fresh LEAN CUBED PORK CUTLETS Fresh LEAN PORK STEAKS 69c 1 k79*l 1 fc79* *•79® Hygrade’s Sweet’nized SLICED DADOE lb. Pkg. 79' IHPERIAL Yellow SEALTEST Fresh MARGARINE HALF n’ HALF 1U>. ®*. QQp Otn. Op BAY’S ENGLISH MUFFINS SUM JIMS SHOESTRING POTATOES w 38’ RICH’S COFFEE GICH s ig* GORTON’S Frozen FISH STICKS IVz-lb. Pkg. 68 c tjusf QUALITY MARKET Fresh, Crisp CAM Freak? Green ONIOI Fresh, Crisp Pkg. 10 SWEET, JUIOY NECTARINES 29?. Yellow Cooking ONIONS 3&S9® 1116 W. 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LADIES’MINI I HALF I SLIPS IA9 • Nylon, satin, Irtcotl. • Cutoout lace trims, scalloped • Includes battery, earphone, and carry strap! • Popular slide rule tun* Ingl • Outstanding buy at th|s prlcel • Guaranteed! • White, rink, Blue, Maize or Mint. $,M,L 64 vivid coleiil with built-in TEENS’* WOMEN'S TOWN OXFORD* ^33 • Papular new he-she loCkl • Anllqubd vinyl upperil e Gilt studs for fashion accent! • In brown • Sizes 3 to 10 • Imported shop our 9,30 am. nu ioPM...tmsaoAtSvmm CHARGE IT.* Hffimitwn;' Igjimmmfftf ws» nafePtmtHflii? t THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1969 B—19 BOYS' 6 T018 100% NYLON DRESS SHIRTS 10UK EVERY DAY' l nice 1.99 j Nylon tricot drew shirt with sprtod colior 'n 2-button cuff I Chooie from assorted colors I An outstanding value I • No-iron bell bottom pants with 2 pockets and wide vinyl beltl • Polyester and cotton blend. • Choice of assorted colorsl ^ lyppw /pr LIk '!■" ptsmnttn DUNGAREES • boll bottom, with ' beltl 3 pocket.I FLANNEL SHIRTS • Kayon'n cotton flan-nel I Plaids I Checks I DRESS RANTS • 100% Acrllan* ac-rylic knitl 4 pockets I ACRILAN'SHIRTS • Scuff •resistant vinyl upporsl , • Moc stitched vamp, long-wearing molded solel Black. 5 to JO. J • Imported j styles and trimsl Black, Brown, Cognac, Spice I BOYS' 6 TO 16 DOUAR SPECIALS ILABOR DAY WEEKEND SAli GIRLS' 7 T014 BACK-TO-SCHOOL DRESSES OUR \ J A EVERY \ ▼ , OUR EVERY DAY PRICE 5.99 • Assorted group of girl’s charter plaid dressesl • Hogwashes, Heidi’s, and more newest stylesl • Choice of assorted colorsl Buy now and save GIRLS’ 3 to 6X DRESSES Reg. 3.99 BOYS' 6 TO 16 PERMANENT PRESS SPORT SHIRTS GIRLS' 4 TO 14 ■ BOYS' 6 TO 16 SKIRTS! SLACKSlIOUILT LINE JUMPERS! I JACKETS Teat '1 H Ytss ^ 99 aiOKSI w M■ CNMCEI % JR. BOYS' 2-PIECE SLACK SETS • Button - down collarl • Solids, stripos, plaidsl • Polyester ’n cotton. BOYS' 6 TO 16 BILL BOTTOM BELTED PANTS • Bell bottom • ..99 JUMPERS • Inverted flare skirt, flare bottomsl 100% cotton. Fall colon. SCOOTER SKIRTS • Pleated front panels and fold over frontsl Zipper tin groupl W)DE BOTTOM SLACKS • Bonded front and boxor bockl 100% . cotton. Prints 'n colorsl COKDUROY JACKET • Button front and 2 • pockets I |h§lh roffen corduroy, 900% ntfcfclf backing. In I ng i 900% rayon, with • • Vast stylo top with A*llne skirt I • Assorted plaids and colorsl • 100% acrylic bonded to acetate! Marvelous fashion buyl Solid or plaid shirt with button-down collarl Solid or plaid bell bottom pants with belt to match shirt) 100% rayonl Assorted colors. Sites 3 to 7. • Single and double breasted styles in groupl Choice of assorted fabrics and colorsl A terrific value I SUEDE JACKETS • Zip front and 2-pockets I Uttlli IjwwkM vinyl, 100% call-hothing, 900% teflon facing* Llnii beltl • Cotton 'n Ion blend I Ivy model, 100% BAfU rayonl Long sloovosll DIXIE HIGHWAY AT TELEGRAPH RD. - »<”<"« \SH0POMY9:30AM Ml 10 PM...0PBI SIABAYS NOON M 6 PJt\ CHARGE IT! B—26 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1969 USE YOUR CREDITI Daily 9 AM - 10 PM Sunday 10 AM - 7 PM COME 7 DISCOUNT SHOPPING! ANO SAVE 1 DETROIT STERLING HEIGHTS DOWNRIVER PONTIAC 1125 N Perry 'At Arlene V % We’re Out To. Become Michigan’s Favorite Discount Department Store! THIS IS HOW WE’RE DOING IT: 1. You get a 100% MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE on every purchase you make at Yarikee. 2. You buy at our advertised price even when we sell out. Get a YANKEE RAIN CHECK and 'pa'll re-order so that you can buy at our advertised price when new supplies arrive. 3. You get FIRST QUALITY MERCHANDISE only at Yankee. ,No seconds, no irregulars and no sub-standards products. 1,864 PRICES SLASHED TheRevotatig YANKEE DISCOUNT DEPARTMENT STORES THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1969 C—1 BACK-T O-SCHOOL •Slipping Tim at The Beautiful Enclosed Air-Conditioned PONTIAC MALL SHOPPING CENTER t Located at the corner of Elizabeth Lake and Telegraph Roads . .. Parking for 7,000 cars all around the Center is free and convenient. The Center is open from 9:30 a,m. to 9 p.m. Daily with some stores open on Sunday 12 noon to 5 p.m. For Relaxed Dining while Back-To-School Shopping in The Pontiac Mall IF YOU'VE GOT THE KIND OF BOY WHO GOES AIL OUT—PUT HIM IN THE KIND OF SLACKS THAT TAKE IT ALL IN STRIDE. PUT HIM IN A PAIR OF FORTREL*-AND-COTTON KAZOO SLASHBACK DRESS JEANS WITH DOUBLY STRONG FABRILOCK* KNEES. CHOOSE FROM SOLIDS AND CHECKS, SIZES 6-12, RE.GULAR AND SLIM AT $7. "Roijaif £cota &nitl Cafetewt You’ll a we, bil o’ Seollaml ami enjo\ Minr fuvorile fond*. nerved l»> Tu.ly end Templing Fonda . . . Ju»t what you’ll be looking for... in an almoaphere for dining pleanure. We are «ure you will be pleaefd! laiaaiea in Tartan Kill.’ DINNER or LUNCHEON SERVED DAILY, MONDAY thru SATURDAY Open 1 liOO AM. to 8>00 PM. 111HU Ladies Sizes 10-11% Open Sunday 12-5 TAKE A LONG r" "SAFARI” In Wank raw ponMneemble with In tonga, "both" jackal and dart, you've Km total frnW- Iraveling lightor, bright*,. Swing lh* world -or on lh« local «cene th'u bonded Orion* ocrylic bap* o lull ichaduto, Hretouiyi nova, torn Hi great .hope. Own today i took new Knee-High* Stretch Orion Campus Hose Olds' Sizes 6-9% Long wearing, softly warm .and wool like. Orion® acrylic blended with stretch nylon. White, navy, light blue, rad, main, pink, beige, hunter grasn, black, royal and others. Young Misses', Teens', Women's Canvas Casuals IS pair Whita Navy Blua C-# Tim roNTiAc niKss, Thursday, augitst 28,1W9 Hand-tailored, custom-detailed overcoats / and topcoats by an excellent maker. All in/ fashionable new double-breasted styles, in luxurious imported jFabrics. in many patterns and shades. / ' REGULAR ' 20% OFF IN $11111 PRICE 1125 AUGUST, NOW • IUU Some of the finest coats in our stores— beautifully tailored by one of the country's mdst celebrated makers; add all in luxurious' imported fabrics. Choose from many styled From the country's finest maker of cashmere coats: silky-soft impo/tfid,cashmere from Mongolia, tailored in several styles (includ--ing double-breasteds which are regularly •160, now $128). REGULAR 20% OFF IN $191 20% OFF IN AUGUST. NOW This 20% reduction applies to men’s topcoats and overcoats only. AUGUST, NOW TELEGRAPH & ELIZABETH LAKE ROADS LANE BRYANT BUDGET FLOOR Driving Tips Point to a Safer Holiday NEW YORK (UPI) —able care and precaution and [drink a cup of hot coffee or Something like 700 Americans you’ll have a good chance of if posisble. Avoid who could read this today won’t) coming home aliv6 and in one)stronger, be around reading anything!piece. • Shift your come Tuesday. They'll be dead, j First, of course, you will have the wheel from This is the projection of the; made sure your car is in top as not to get too National Safety Council l nshape before setting out. You’ll [and become drowsy. Move Chicago which notes: 597 men,[have checked, or had a|eyes around to avoid the women and children died on thejmechanic check, your , car’s;notic effect of staring at nation's highways during this brakes and the tires, including [road ahead. Keep a year’s Memorial Day holiday, Ibe spare, the w i ndsh i e 1 djopen, play the radio ( no and 809 died during the July 4th washers and wipers, headlights, I sleepy time music) or talk to the weekend. [stoplights and taillights, and the [others inthecar-withou' * * * [battery. turning to look at them. For this Labor Day, the) * * * | • Keep the windshield and Council predicts that as many if | You won t block your view other windows clean. Lower not more Americans will die ln|throu8h the rear window — lyour headlight beams when ap-traffic accidents as lost their 'particularly with golf clubs, I poaching oncoming cars or lives during the 1968 Labor Day fishing rods, skis or similar ob-|when catching up with one in weekend. The figure then was'i^ which can become deadly [front. Mg. projectiles if you have to brake! • Don’t exceed speed limits. All told, 25.890 Americans lost suddenly. See you on Tuesday’ their lives In road accidents in You w»n’1 rlde without the the first six months of this year. seat or ch«®t belts fastened. If j you have a baby riding in one; TOLL NOT NECESSARY 10{ detachable seats, you’ll This frightful toll Is notimake sure It is firmly fixed and! necessary. {won't tear loose on sudden; Most of the accidents are at- stops. 1 trlbuted by the experts to driver errors and carelessness. , * ^ ^ Here are some other lifesav- It ing tips: . • Never stop suddenly t highway unless in an emergen-R cy. If you miss your turnoff, ’’ Space Officials Studying stry Moon Car Bids HUNTSVILLE, Ala. (AP) -Officials of the Marshall Space Flight Center began studies yesterday on industry proposals for the manufacture of a moon rover scheduled to explore the lunar surface in 1971. source evalua board Monday it wb consider technical and of the fourp als sub before makin contract possibly in mid^October. RACCOON’S REPOSE—A raccoon lounges on a porch railing at Camp Pattagansett in East Lynne, Conn., as summer draws to a close. Winter snow soon will replace the. lazy days of summer, and the raccoon will need that fur coat. A spokesmen at the center the firms submitting proposals were Chrysler Space Division, New Orleans, Gruman Corp., Bethpage, N.Y.; Boeing Co. of Huntsville; and Bendix Corp., Ann Arbor, Mich. * ★ ★ The Space Administration said the contract calls for the manufacture of four moon cars with an expected price tag of $20 million. NASA said the cars will have to be strong enough to carry two astronauts, scientific gear and lunar rock samples. Hie vehicle would not travel more thqn 10 miles an hour, ‘ ( NASA Wants file vehicle by the spring of 1971 In time for Appolo 17 mission a few months later, The rover will make several trips of 19 miles ich and then be left behind as le spacemen return to earth.. ★ A * Nearly 30 contractors had been asked to submit offerings for the moon rover before the midnight Friday deadline. The number of factories igistered in Hong Kong last year was 11,793, an increase of one-third, during the last four years. LAST (2) DAYS COAT SALE No one has yet come up with a sure-fire way of Improving the performance of the "nut at the wheel," even, while the safety and performance of the can they drive are being, improved. But if you are not a nul yourself — and look out for the nuts who never learn — you'll have a good chance of coming home from your weekend alive and in one piece. This weekend, don't let one of the nuts be you. Take reason- 'SeacJog' Shows a Soft Heart for Four Kittens CHARLESTON, S,C, (AP) "1 suppose,” said Capt. Lee McElwee, skipper of the 52-foot ketch Shlreen, “the toughest old •eadogs have a soft spot for women and children." ^ ’ But In this case he was refer ring to a curly haired black poodle named Elmer, who treats as his own four kittens bom month ago to another "me her" of the crew, a cat named Bunny. The 6-year-old Elmer has accompanied McElwee, a charter boat operator, on voyages to many parts of the world. The captain is bound for his hometown of Annapolis, Md., after purchasing the ketch in Miami . Hr put in at the Charleston municipal marina Wednesday. is Isafer to continue to tile next exit than to back up or cut across traffic. It you must stop, get off the' highway if possible. If you can’t, open the hood and trunk and set up flares a safe distance away — never, never stand in the road behind your car and try to wave coming drivers. • Don’t tailgate, particularly at high speed. Leave plenty of space between you and the car ahead but without disrupting the stream of traffic. Be doubly cautious during the early morning and late-evening hours when mist or dew can make the roads slick. Yield - don’t fight road hogs and weavers, They are particularly dangerous on crowded roads. And be ready at all times to make allowances for — and anticipate — “honest’’ driving errors by other drivers. • Allow cars pulling onto the highway in front of you ample time and space to move Into the flow of traffic. Don’t you yourself try to steamroller your way onto the highway, even It the sign only says to “yield" to oncoming .traffic. Don't across the white lines on approach or'exit lanes unless they are free of can. • If you are driving long distances, take a break every two hours. Get out of the car and stretch your arms and legs, Chorga Customers Will /Not Be Billed Until October Older by mail or phene *62-7500. Add 40c fer delivery dec 20c for C.O.D't end 4% tax THI PONTIAC MALI________________________________ VIRTUALLY EVERY OUTSTANDING MAKER IS REPRESENTED: GGG • EAGLE * HART SCHAFFNER l MARX • ALPACUNA BARRY WALT • MALCOLM KENNETH • CUSTOM SHOP • BARRON ANDERSON * MONTCLAIR . CHARTER CLUB, IN A WIDE ASSORTMENT OF STYLES, SHADES, PATTERNS, FABRICS, HERE ARE JUST THREE EXAMPLES FROM THE THOUSANDS OF COATS Y0U1L FIND. t EAGLE, CROMBIE DOUBLE- HART SCHAFFNER ft MARX PURI MONGOLIAN CABHMIRB BREASTED OUTIRCOATR IMPORTID-FABRIC TOPCOATS OVERCOATS BY ALPACUNA casual favorites 2-WAY STRETCH PANTS Double-knit or green. Elettlc waists 32 to 46. COTTON OVERBLOUSi polsloy pri.nt.CC Sir*. 38 to 52. OPEN EVERY EVENING MONDAY THRU SATURDAY TO 9 P.M. THE PONTIAC„ PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1969 71 Ex - Musical Sfar Calmly Looking to New TV Series | (EDITOR’S NOTE—Dan Dailey, since the days of the MGM musicals in the 1040s has had the image of a song-and-dance man. But, he’s made some SO “straight” pictures, too. And now he’s going to do a television situation comedy, “The Governor and J. J.”) By CYNTHIA LOWRY AP Television-Radio Writer HOLLYWOOD—Dan Dailey, a rangy 6-footer who walks like a dancer although he swears he’s given it up, is taking his impending television network but with the tension the average citizen builds up for a trip to the supermarket. Dailey, in his 50s with a 30-year movie career behind him, will play half of the title role in mars, who was set to play J.J., CBS* “The Governor and J.J.,” had seen our show in Los An-one of the incoming situation geles and was sure I was right1 comedies which Is being touted as a potential hit. The actor who Certainly has no financial problems and has worked just about as much as he has chosen to over the years, insists he was talked into it. ★ * * “I’d been playing the pompous asg in ‘The Odd Couple’ for two years—six months in Los Angeles—and then a sympathetic pompous ass in ‘Plaza Suite’ in Los Angeles and New York,” Dailey said. “Just about a year ago, my agent called and asked me if I’d like to do a TV series. I said, ‘no’ and hung up. “When we were breaking in 'Plaza Suite’ in San Francisco I was called again about the show. It seems that Julie Som- to play her father, the governor. “I said that I hated television —but after that I met Julie and fell in love with her. So we made the pilot, and sold it.’ Dailey had one encounter with television 11 years ago when he was one of four stars (Vittorio di Sica, Richard Conte and Jack Hawkins were the other three) who made a british-based action series called “Four Just Men" It was a hit abroad but had only play the head man of an unidentified. midwestem state. Julie Sommars will be her widowed father’s official hostess and also .hold down a job as an assistant curator in a zoo. | The format permits the half-hour scripts to move in all sorts of directions, from comedy based on political situations to romance and animal tales. TV NOT FOR DANCERS Dailey qualifies but is no can- a mild success here as a syndi- appear cated show. ances on variety shows, he just * * * | will not dance on television, not | In . the upcoming series— even on his own show. , j which will enter the network j “You can’t even see dancers: lineup on Sept. 23, Dailey—in a on the television screen,” he I gray hairpiece covering his said disdainfully. “They usually thinning light brown hair—will I wind up being little tiny people! moving somewhere behind the stairs. TV is not a dance medium.” ,x ★ * ★ Dailey seems just a little bit disturbed that his public image is that of a song-and-dance man. 'Everybody associates me with Betty Grable,” he said with a shrug, “and that isn’t bad. But the truth is that I made 50 straight pictures and only 12 musicals.” He was still playing dramatic parts when he entered the service during World War II, mus- me for ‘Mother Wore Tights’i stage acting, arid while he has Lucy” by Desi Arnaz, and Dail-with Curable. But Zanuck said hej foresworn dancing as a career ev finds the work easy. He is a knew that it would make me a he has been working with young little impatient that the work star so he wanted me under con- people interested in acting and- week runs five days; four for tract. I was still Under contract or dancing careers. Last De- rehearsing. He thinks the show to MGM, so I went to L.B. May- cember he married Carol War- could be done in much less. But er, who was head of the studio, ner, a dancer. His first mar-he likes TV’s casual attitudes, and told him the problem. He riage ended in divorce. During the interview he was tore up my contract, shook my “Dancing and acting are so sitting around his living room in hand and said all he wanted was closely related,” he said. “If shorts and shirt. When it was my agreement to return to the you want to be an actor, you time to go to work, he changed studio for another picture. I did, have to be able to move. If you quickly to faded blue denims later, for three.” | want to be a dancer, you have and sandais Zanuck was right, Dailey didito be able to act. I think that it! * * * become a star, and the picture is vital for an actor to be able to, „• , . . . k sparked a series of those song- dance-it travels you sSstly taring out In IMS. and-dance shows that firmed up from here to there.” ;he sSld He puned a conSSa- ZANUCK’S BlD ! that image. WORK EASY live, blue suit from a closet. , "I was water-skiing when myi * * * The series is being shot with “This,” he said proudly, “is agent called in that summer to For the past six years, Dailey the three-camera, live-audience the only real suit I own. How’s Isay that Darryl Zanuck wanted'has been mixing directing with!technique developed for "I Love!this for the rough life?” CAMPUS '69 Dan Dailey's Caught The TV Bug Coast Guard Urges Ships to Avoid 1-75 Drawbridge LANSING (AP) - All the!I weekend motorists who’ve ever I been stuck at the Zilwaukee drawbridge on I 75 south of Bay i City can take heart at the latest word from Secretary of State j James M. Hare and the 9th U.S. Coast Guard district. Shipping companies using the waterways at the bridge, which must be raised to let most commercial sized vessels pass, have beep asked to avoid that passage as much as possible on weekends — at least on the long one for the coming Labor Day holiday. ★ ★ ★ Hare’s,office said today the Coast Guard has suggested ships avoid file bridge at the ! following times if it would havei to be raised to let them pass: Friday from 1 p.m. to midnight. Saturday from 7 a.m. to 61 p.m. Sunday from 1 p.m. to 1Q> p.m. Monday from 11 a.m. to 101 p.m. ■ Control of the bridge is under the Coast Guard because of its authority over the Saginaw River below it. Hare and other state officials have appealed to Transportation Secretary John Volpe for restrictions on shipping When it is most likely to cause i a traffic backlog. Volpe has I charge of the Coast Guard and, i thus, of inland navigation rules. PONTIAC MALL ■hop monday, thursday, friday and Saturday to 9 TEL-HURON CENTER shop ovary evening to 9 Get the fall season off to a good start with these updated versions of the casual loafer. They're our 6wn exclusive Pace-setters, so you won't7 find these great shoe values anywhere else. Bottom, soft kidskin with a burnished metal ornament, stacked heel. Black* brown or grey. Top. broad toe higl rise In dark or golden Mini ribs make big fashion news. (Especially so here, in a kicky Orion* acrylic sweater set. U-neck top and skirt with elasficized waist in navy or wine, sizes S-M-L 18.00 antiqued kidskin set on hew higher heels, lots of hardware trim 8.97 regularly 12.00 loafers A long sweep of scarf sets off one of the newest coats around. Rich black ond white wool tweed with patch pockets and gleaming patent belt, misses' sizes. 75.00 M \ .fci... THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1969 4 Top Contenders in Crowded Detroit Mayor Race DETROIT (UPI) — The next down a college scholarship to he background,” Austin has said..he says allows he is leading the> Again, the Kirkwood Group, mayor of the nation’s fifth could help his family, finally Both be and Gribbs have I race by a ‘‘small margin." But‘an organization of black leaders largest city — a city that boasts graduated from the Detroit pubBcly said they do not wish to jtptuch depends on how many [dedicated to finding black can-of cars and unions but vividly Institute of Technology and make race an issue. registered voters in Detroit are!didates, debated long and hard recalls racial strife — probably became the city's first black * * * black. before unanimously endorsing will be: • chartered public accountant. Stocky, square-jawed and; v* * * \ Austin, for mayor, insiders said • “The Negro version of i„ i963. Democratic Pollsh' r,ribbs' in About 40 per cent of the dtysjthat, even after the Horatio Alger, as one *up- legislators applauded his work law c,«®. ran ■ private 1A million residents a r eidorsement, many of the militant porter calls Richard Austin. ag cochairman of a commission practice, worked as proaecutor Negroes So far, 710,800 persons members of the group would • or a stocky, square-jawed tha, reshaped legislative anda traffic; court referee until! have registered to vote. more vigorously support - sheriff with a liberal record districts he was appointed sheriff o^ STUDY FIGURES I “blacker” candidate." which contains one Spot bitter year ago. to Negroes and white liberals. PAVS 0FF DEBT • Or s women who launched Since he was elected Wayne then he has cleaned ud her career as a H^ral but is Ownty, JJ*.the sheriffs’ department which CLEANS UP DEPARTMENT The city dot’s office does not keep records of registered voters by race. But one study,! Lew Is Reiected by the Detroit Free Press,! LevX 15 IWfwCTW* now regarded as the voice of paid off the: county’s had ^ charged ^ "J law and order miflion debt, putting it In the. improved conditions at • Or a public relation ex- nation si e ad I n g accounting ^ and appointed ecutive who says "My childhood tons, offered him a pamership N uniliam Lucasas his and everything else leads me to but Austin decided to run ?<*'!cyef ] expect the worst.” mfi3'or . But when he was a prosecutor Negroes make up 40 per cent of IrejedetTa proposal for a l-tniu! WONT RUN His were the first campaign m 1963( Gritfts ^vigorously | the registered vote. Ilevy to raise 34,000 to support! estimates that between 20 and) r i.I 25 per cent of the registered! *<>f .NllBS Library voters are Negroes. Another study, by Mike Wynne of the) NILES (AP) — Voters in iUrban Alliance, estimatesjsuburban Niles Township have It Is felt the candidacy of councilman Mary Beck, 61, wiH; hurt Gribbs mm than Austin. CARRYING BROOMS The daughter of Ukranian parents, Miss Beck has been dramatising her campaign through women carrying brooms to symbolize her promise to give law and order to the city and sweep it dean. Though this is called the “Broom Brigade," o[ have dubbed it "The Witch Watch.” Miis Beck , has been on the Common Council since 1940. In recent years, she continually has needled Cavanagh, and her campaign to recall him two yews ago came within a few signatures of going to a public referendum. ★ ★ * The fourth major candidate, Walter Shamie, is a public relations executive for a large retail chain making his second ran. In 1964, Cavanagh took 66 per cent of the vote against Shamie. The son of Syrian parents, Shamie said, "A man is what his past makes him. I was the short, ugly, foreign kid with the big nose." , When he decided to ran, Shamie bought a series of television, spots on a local channel. The night the first spot was shown, viewers across the world — and Detroit — watched Neil Armstrong’s foot descending on the moon. *r„ # dr ‘ ' "I don’t suppose too many people watched my show,” said Shamie. Mayor Jerome P Cavanagh, P08*1"* t(! dJecoratln« ^' prosecuted civil rights sit-in ® * wallt anH nAfiMBAdin nrinflfMrc . *___ ________________< i the Niles Public Libriary. The vote was 168 The RINNELL’S MUSIC I T O ft I I Student Favorite*. FM-AM Radio Desk Set rralnHino nut his second four- wal** “V* **®*^*^P wVM*°?r8 demonstrators at the First I Even in that case, however, vear^term has announced he of “handoned buildings ,n the pedemi Bank that IS- were Austin is not assured of total; ^ jail tarn. ntf'btek mpport. Sam. btacki , he wants to spend more time * * * blacks and many white liberals Readers still remember with] against the proposal, with his eight children ! “I fool the voters are becom-; never have forgiven him. ■ bitterness his unsuccessful race jtownship now contributes! Regarded as a "boy wonder" fog more concerned about the * * * against popular Negro John'116,000 out of its general fund tn| when he won his tot term, the qualifications and ability, and! Gribbs recently released the (Conyers, D-Mich., in the 1964 a contract with the city cover-! last few years of Cavanagh’s‘leas about race and ethnic results of a private poll whichicongressional primary. ling library use. administration have been marked by the 1967 Detroit riot.j a running battle with the common Council, and a divorce. * *• * Altogether, 2 9 candidates! have filed for the office. But only Austin, Wayne County Sheriff Roman S. Gribbs, Common Councilman Mary Beck) ami businessman Walter] Shamie are given much chance: to get through the Sept. 9. primary. The top two wiU fight j it out for mayor in the Nov. 4] general election. Most observors believe these two will be Austin and Gribbs. •QUIET MAN’ "Some people have said I’m a quiet man,” Austin said. "We’ll make no more noise than is necessary for us to win." To date, t|ie primary campaign has been unusually low-key with each candidate trying to solidify his own support and position while trying to avoid | offending the others. * * * . Austin, 56, has been generally successful at anything he has undertaken. When he was 12, he moved from Alabama t o Detroit, shined shoes, turned with SHEAFFER PEN1 "The President" combination desk sit features a solid state FM-AM radio, FM antenna, Sheaffer ball point pon, metal latter opener, memo pad, utility or cigarette box. Walnut finish. 29 >95 Grinnall't, 161 N. Telegraph Pontiac, Mich. 48051 PIocm tend Radi* Oath Sot. ® 20.05 Name .................................... Address ......................... City .................... State D Chock or M.O. dnclotad Q C.O.D. □ Mail Ordari and 4% tolo* tax The Pontiac J i 'til 9, 682-0422 BUCKLE ON 14” Lacquered-looking styles . . . topped with a gloss of buckle. Winning players to tons up fashion tweedy skirts, skinny ^sweaters, vests, tunics, pants. Red, two-tone spectator version with buckle trim. Classic in Beech w/Go|den and Black W/Grey. FAN FAKES. IDMJTIAP The Pontiac Mall run 11 Aw Open Every Evening ‘til 9 OUR PONTIAC MALL STORE IS OPEN MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY TO 9:00 P. M. — TELEGRAPH AND ELIZABETH LAKE ROADS i THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1069 C—5 HUDSON’S MONTH END Save Friday on these bargains and morel Only at Hudson's in the Pontiac Mall, Telegraph at Elizabeth Lake Road. Shop early, shop late 9:30-9:00. Sorry, no phone, mail orders. summer slippers 1.99 Hudson's Hosiery Department BLOUSES SHORTS SHIFTS , 1.88 to 4.88 Great values including many go-togethers and wardrobe compliments. St. Claire Blouses. SPECIAL KNIT SUITS *491° *99 A look-ahead value in two and three piece suits. Woodward Shope WINTEB WISE SAVINGS Warm pajamas and gowns, S, M, L. Sleepwear. .2U19 Fall jackets, Sportswear Department..... 2.88-17.88 An assortment of sweaters, Neckwear Dept 1.28 Sweaters, some cashmere, Woodward Shop ... 10.88 BIKES A terrific buy, 20" high banana seat, high rise, all gold. Outdoor Toy Dept. 30.88 BIG SAVINGS IN MISSES' SPORTSWEAR 2.97 6.97 Summer Slacks in Misses sizes, Misses Sportswear Department Budget Store. HALF SIZE DRESSES $4»9.90 \ Hard-to-find values Women's Dress Department Budget Store BOY'S SHIRTS Bey's short sleere shirts, broken sites, Bey's Wear 96° Bey's knit shirts broken sites, Bey's Wear, Budget Store JACQUARD BATH TOWELS 88° Linen Department Budget Store JACQUARD FACE TOWELS 4/n Linen Department Budget Store. STRIPED SCATTER RUGS Big Values 1 QQ 21x36 XeOO / Savings O QO J 26x45 Xl.OO L Small Rugs Department Remnants and Skirt Lengths 67°» 4.77 Assorted wools, cottons and blends, in solids, plaids and * A fancies. Yardgoode Department UPSTAIRS MISCELLANEOUS Various Aisles of Beauty soap, Cosmetics ...1.99-2.99 Cochran Clearance, Cosmetics Department .... 2 $5 From the Book Department Classics by Prennial ... 69c The Everyday Cookbook by Paul Hanlyn,1 Books .. .2.98 FOR MEN Leather Pouch from Men's Accessories ...........98c Swank Cuff Links, a buy from Men's Accessories 2.98 Tie Tacks by Hudson, Men's Accessories Dept. 48c Key Cases also from Men's Accessories.....98c & 1.98 Surprise him" with a Pocket Secretary ............ 98c Fashionable Cuff Links from Dante, Men's Access. .. 2.48 Wallets, from Men's Accessories ................98c Belts, an assortment of styles and sizes from Men's Acces- , sories........98c to 1.98 Neck Wear, Asstd. patterns. Men's Haberdashery ... 2.98 Short sleeve, knee length pajamas, asstd. patterns and sizes, Men's Fum......2.68 Cotton Boxer Shorts, Men's Furnishings.........3/1.98. Assorted Swim Wear, Sports Apparel ..............4.48 Assortment of Knit Shirts Sports Apparel .......4.48 Boy's Polo Shirts, Boy's Department ........1.28-1.98 Slacks for Boys, from Boy's Department ....1.98 10,5.88 Short and Polo Sets, Boy's4 Department ....1.98 to 2.88 FOB WOMEN Summer Sleepwear, from Girl's Accessories Department .......... 98c to 4.98 Knee Hi's, Girl's Accessories Dept. .. P.. *.. .-j;. ; . ... 88c Assorted Girl's Jewelry, Girl's Accessories....58c Summer Purses ip Straw and Patent. Girl's Aoc. 48c to 2.98 Fun Beach Wear, Girl's Accessories ...... 48c to 1.98 Assorted Sweaters, Sports Wear Dept. ... 3.88 to 10.88 Assorted Hose and Panty Hose, Hosiery Dept....47c Dresses and Pantdresses, from Hoihe and Town-Dresses Priced from ....1.97 to 15.97 Pretty Petticoats, Daytime Lingerie ........48c to 98c Summer Skirts and Shifts in Misses sizes from Women's Sportswear ..... 4.88-11.88 Summer Skirts and Shifts, Sportswear Dept. 3.88-19.88 Summer Skirts, Pants, Shifts Teen sizes, .Young Juniors Shops ..........1.88 to 6.88 An assortment of Summer Kn(t Shells, Neckwear.. 1.97 FOR YOUR HOME- Imported Table Linens, Cloths and Napkins from Belgium, Table Linens Department. .... 4.99-13.99 Assorted Holloware, Silverware Dept. .....4.99-26.99 Assorted vinyl shower curtains and sets, Bath Shop. Priced today at 2.49 to 14.99 .. Assorted table lamps in all sizes, Lamp Dept. 14.99-34.99 Wall Accessories, pictures, placques, mirrors and sculpture, wide variety of sizes and styles. Picture Department priced from 1.99r29.99 Bulletin Board with Black Board, Small Housewares Department .............$5 Paint, Gallons and Gallons of White Latex interior paint Black Label brand, from the Paint Dept.......... $2/gal. Assorted Lawn and Plant Feed, Garden Cent. 2.99-9.99 “Astrid" 52 pc. Flatware Set, Small Housewares .... 16.88 BUDGET STORE FOB WOMEN Junior Summer, Dresses, Broken sizes, Junior Dresses. Great buys ..... 1.90-11.90 Summer Shorts, also in broken sizes from Misses Sportswear ...........1.16 A little pick-me-up for the • mother in waiting Maternity dress Department, broken sizes..........6.76 to 9.76 Summer Dresses in broken sizes, from Misses Dress Dept...................5.90 Junior Slacks, broken sizes, Jr. Sportswear. Values priced for Friday at 3.96 to 5.96 Assorted Bras and 'Girdles. Foundations Dept. .66c-2.66 Cheery Print Snap Coats, in broken sizes, Lingerie Dept...................1.56 FOB MEW AND CHILDREN Children's Shoos, broken sizes, Budget Shoes____2.07 Short Sleeve Sweatshirts, broken sizes, Boy’s Wear 96c Boy's Underwear, broken sizes, Boy's Wear ..... 3/$l Boy's Jeans, broken sizes. Boy's Wear Dept.......2.27 Poplin J a c k e t s in broken sizes, Boy's Wear.......2.16 Seconds of T-Shirts, S. M. L. Men's Wear..............2/$l Seconds of Men's Ankle Hose, sizes 10Vz-13^ Men's Wear Dept............. 47c Seconds of Men's long sleeve Dress Shirts, most sizes, * Men's Wear Dspt. . .. 1.16 Seconds of Sweatshirts, S. M. L. Men's Wear Dept. 1,36 FOR YOUR HOME Upholstery Fabrics, 5 to 20 ydl. lengths. Yard Goods Department.......2 yds./! 1 Shower Curtains and Drapes Linens Dept. ......49e-1.96 Sheets and Pillow Cases, Linens Dept. ...... 57c-2.97 Odd Length Drapes, Drapery Department.......$1 to 810 ' KITCHENS BATHROOMS Great team: bush shirts, pantskirls! 097 K97 O and O Walk oH With IWO of foil's most important look* at savlngil Firsts plaid-bright wool pantskirts for sizes 6-16. Salt 5.97. Sec*, ond: lonq sleeve, pocketed bush shirts* navy, green, fcrown. Sizes 8-16. Sole 3.97. Save on the fluid-fitting dresses no up-to-date wardrobe should be without! The scoop-neck acetates with new yoyng styling that takes you anywhere, anytime now. (n multi-prints or solids for sizes 5 to 15. C—9 TIIE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY* AUGUST 88. 1969 Deaths in Pontiac Harry L Corn Service for Barry L. Coin, «, of 71 N. Edith will be 1:30 pm. Surviving m* Ms wHe, Saturday at Spertc^Oriffln^ mother, Mrs. Tom Chapel with burial in Perrysr.; four children, Ahna. Mount Park Cemetery. neth, Karen Elizabeth Mr.Coin,nretiredemptoyeoflGwendolyn Debtee, an of Fisher Body plant, died this and ate brothers, morning He was a member of Central Christian Church. Mrs. Charles T. TROY - Swvtc. to. Doughty of Pontiac; six of 5780 Houghten wui be 1 grandchildren; and a Feat-;Friday^atlPrice Punend grandchild i*W» *"*** ta Mount ! Cemetery. Rochester. __ ._______ I Mrs. Edwards died yesterday Mrs. James Johnson * member of]First Service for Mrs. James;Methodist Church of Troy, the (Millie) Johnson, 27. of 141 W. Jack A. Mason VFW Post Aux-Beverly will be in Jackson, Ky. iliary 3900. Rochester, the Cap-Ho- body wtQ be at Breathitt!tab David Kimball Post 2» Funeral Home Jackson. Local1 Auxiliary of the Spanish arrangements were by {American War Veterans, Pon-Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home, tiac, and the Rochester Mrs. Johnson, a waitress, was j Grandmothers Club, killed in an auto accident) Surviving are two sons, yesterday. , __i Charles F. of Troy and James Apartments Eyed at Loon Lake Site DEDICATED TO TREES - The Lyndon Johnsons and the Richard Nixons flank a plaque In a Redwood forest near Orick, Calif., yesterday with which they named a 300-acre grove of giant trees the “Lady Bird Johnson Grove.” Surviving are her husband; her parents. Mr. and Mrs. George Griffith of Bethany, Ky.; one son, George at home; five sisters; and three brothers. Mrs. Harry Kuack Service for Mrs. Kerry (Elizabeth) Kueck, 84, of 532 Orchard Lake will be 10 am, tomorrow a t Voorhees-Siple Chapel with cremation following at White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mrs. Kueck died Monday. Surviving are six grandchildren. C. of St. Clair; two sisters, including Mrs. Angie Harves of Pontiac; four grandchildren; and 16 grand-grandchildren. Mrs. George Golliher COMMERCE TOWNSHIP -Service for Mrs. George (Hazel) Golliher, 72, of 2068 Alsup will be Saturday at the Crawshaw Funeral Home, Murphysboro, 111., with burial In Pleasant Grove Cemetery, Murphysboro. Local arrangements were by Elton Black Funeral Home, Union Lake. Mrs. Golliher died yesterday. She was a retired registered nurse and a member of the Church of the Nazarene Murphysboro. Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. Lyle Hertz of Chicago, 111., Mra. Clarence Sellers of Commerce Township and Mr«> Edward Culltnsn of Benton Harbor; two Sons, Robert of Dolton, HI., aned a new. one-year contract teachers with master’s degrees I s„uare mjje{! of Australia’s! tion’s other member. “You cut for 1960-70. Teachers with a| will be $7,700 to $16,640. i Great Barrier Reef. s Burts «==kvW Ui.(9vl —- Pontiac /IAONTGO/IAJER WARD Sale ends Sunday 4 BIG DAYS! Thurs.-Fri.pSat.-Sun.—Aug. 28-31 pre-Holiday EAST LANSING UB - The best time to seed a lawn Is now, advises a Michigan State Uni-versity expert. Dr. James Beard, a turf grass researcher, suggests seeding up until Sept. 1. The seeded or sodded lawn Should be mowed when the grass is 214-3 inches high, he adds. The new grass should be cut to a height of 1MH 2 inches. 1.70 off! 20-lb. p box of detergent a 99 REG. 4.49 The compUte detergent for ell your laundry needs! Lawn growers should apply a light application- of .soluble nitrogen, such * as' ammonium nitrate or urea — 1% pounds of actual nitrogen per 1,006 square feet of lawn* he says, when the Eisenhower, 21, said his late granddad advised him to go into file Army if he wanted to make! a career of it. For a shorter stint, despite his own spectacular career which began at! West Point, he recommended the. Navy for his grandson. Young Eisenhower said , that his father, John Eisenhower, a retired Army colonel who is serving as ambassador to Belgium, agreed that for the shorter haul he should go into the Navy. “I’m thinking about it,” saidi David. At present, he has a 2S student deferment and will be returning to Amherst on Sept. 16' to begin his senior year. Later, he hopes to attend law school, perhaps iBCaitfornia. Expert Says Now Best to Seed Lawn Savings Galore - Thru-out the Store Save! Comfort-fit nylon panty hose , 99** vs Stretch nylon, popular colors! Smooth fit. 8/2 to II. 30-pc. socket set 2188 Mm ■ 32.47 23 . sockets, drive ratchet, adapter, more! Special! Girls' dresses forfall J*retty never-iron dresses In plaids and solids. 3 to 6x. 1.12 Off! Men's knit pullovers 488 REG. $6 Mock turtleneck style I Orion® acrylic. S-M-L-XL. items and Save on 2x4-foot peg boards- Wonderful for storing smell hanging tools. Save! Hoavy-duty auto oil filters SPIN-ON CARTRIDGE 1.99 99c Better than most original equipment quality filters. 35.12 off! Fine solid maple chest "TA88 reg. # W $115 4-drawer chest, Early American styling. Terrific buy! Special on handy folding TV table Metal with attractive woodgrein - finished top. Big valued 18-lb. automatic dryer *78 8-cu. ft. drum dries wash quickly, fewer wrinkles. Pontiac Mall OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10:00 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M. , SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 5 P.-M. • 682-49,10 C—'S THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1969_________ ■ J . .. .. P rv ....cr.- ^ Danish Food Reforms May Revolutionize World's Eating Hobits Nut CiliMtt Fortrel* polyester . cottons stay wrinkle-free. Dual-action Scotchgard* resists j stains, washes dirt and spots out faster, easier. Brightest plaids, solids, chocks. 3-ox. BOYS13.99 SUCKS NEVER-NEED-IRONING The In* look for back to school! Fashion solids, plaids and prints in button-down collar stylo with long sleeves. Easy-care polyester* cotton. 3 to 7. ‘ Get 'Spot Check1' soil releas-ant for easy-care in a pair of colorful polyester -cotton COPENHAGEN (UP!) — Two* free choice between sucrose and new companies, just formed in j glucose. It is not possible to buy Oenmark may re^ii^oniM thej(w cream marmalade, jam, eating habits of the world s ad- . vanced industrial nations. chocolate and sweets, and it is. One company plans to convert] not normally possible to buy Danish agriculture to the pro-{lemonade or a cup of coffee or duction of products with a much tea where the sweetener is reduced “hard" fat a n d glucose," he says, cholesterol content. The other, * * * potentially much the more im- He plans t0 change a„ thlg portant of the two win aim to!Among the first expected to go! persuade the worlds food P”>- over from gucrose to giUC08e; cessing industry to use^glucoselare wy(ra] 0f the main! as a sweetener instead of tnei---------.------------—£:____J conventional cane and beet sucrose sugars. Common to both companies is the production of foods which, they believe, will be healthier than those they are replacing. Hard, or saturated, fpts and cholesterol are believed to be major contributory factors in the development of heart disease. Sugar of the kind we normally eat \is thought to be a prime cause! of both heart diesease and dental cavities. Behind the companies is the! Danish Innovator — Industrialist Karl Kroeyer of Aarhus, who already has a number of successful inventions behind him, Including an ingenious method | for raising ships from the seabed by pumping them bill of plastic balls. ‘MOST EXPLOSIVE’ Kroeyer described the glucose versus sucrose issue as the “most explosive in the sugar Industry." This makes Koreyer’s new glucose manufacturing company all, the more interesting, because it has been founded on a 50-50 basis with the De Danske Suk-kerfabrlkker, the Danish sugar company which has a government-granted monopoly. Starting capital is just under Kroeyer has been Interested In glucose for many years. One of his first big successes was a new method of processing liquid glucose. Several years ago he found a new method for making glucose sugar which is very similar to ordinary white caster sugar, which he calls "total sugar." But the company will be using a completely n«w process which outs the cost of making glucose sugar by all existing methods by 25 per cent, making it competitive with ordinary sugar. * * *. The process Is enzyme extraction which uses corn as its raw material. The corn starch is converted to liquid glucose by the enzyme, and because of the nonchemlcal process the glucose is so pure that It is not necessary tp--crystalllze I remove impurities. END PRODUCT The end product, served by Kreoyer for my coffee when Interviewed him, Is a fine, free-flowing white material with crystals which are slightly larger and much more regular than those of ordinary sugar. The conversion of the Danish sugar industry Into admitting the value of glucose Is regarded as something of a minor miracle by Kroeyer. “It is as the steel industry __ suddenly decided that it ought to bs making plastic pipes," he said. .* ‘ * ♦ The medical case against conventional sugar is that it increases the blood cholesterol level and provides an ideal nourishment for the bacteria which bore holes in the teeth. Prof. John Yudkin of London University has reported that men' having their first heart attack have on the average consumed twice as m sucrose as a control group without signs of heart trouble, and experiments by t h American National Aeronautics and Space Administration among others have shown that the cholesterol level can be reduced when glucose replaces aurcroee in the diet. EXPRESSES CONCERN But although the findings the medical researchers are by now becoming well-known, Kroeyer Is concerned tha neither the glucose nor the sugar industry have up to now done anything about it. w’< * * 1 “The public does not have a Copenhagen bakeries. Glucose, as it happens, is a better) preservative and lmpro taste. The new company, to be known as DDS-Kroeyer, will set up its first factory in old refinery premises in Copenhagen. Production is expected to start at the end of the 1970. DDS-Kroeyer will hold the international rights to license the building of new factories using the process. The theory hehind the secondj Kroeyer company, formed on a! 50-50 basis between Kroeyer and ; Denmark’s biggest] I slaughterhouse, the United ’Zelatid Cooperative Slaughterhouses, and to be! known as FSA-Kroeyer, is that if animals are fed the right foods, the fat makeup of the foods can be changed. ’ In experiments with the production of a new Camembert cheese, he managed to bring about a reduction of the Kard,i saturated fat content ip the milk. And because the - soft,] unsaturated fats have ai stronger taste, it was possible to make a finished product] which contains only-30 to AO perl cent fat instead of the normal fto per cent. With eggs he has succeeded, in reducing t*h e cholesterol content of tile yolk to 60 per cent of normal: The process will also -be applied to meats. "It is not possible to produce a leaner pig than we already do, but we can change the fat makeup," he said. By increasing tile com and soya content of the feed the fat becomes softer. •ik -1 ‘The bacon we shall be eating soon will have a soft beige fat instead of the hard white fat we know. There is an added advantage in that more of the soft fat will melt off in the frying pan, while what Is left behind will taste hetter." For Danish agriculture’, the new foods could prove very important. We are known for making good products, but are no longer ahead of the others. But Danish agriculture is small and very well organized and thus well-suited to the creation of a new speciality in healthier foods," said Kroeyer. It is significant that the Arm cooperating with Kroeyer in this cooperative. The cooperative movement was the makjng of modem Danish agriculture and continues completely to dominate trade in agricultural products. . ★ ★ * The United Zealand Slaughterhouses is one of the 10 biggest industrial concerns in Denmark, and capable, if any firm is, of launching Danish agriculture into a new food-reform movement. Bond Issue Vote MIDLAND (AP) - Bullock Creek School District voters go] to the polls today to consider a' proposal for a 61,347,000 bond; issue which will finance construction of a new middle school. School board offldnb have advised voters the be issue will be paid off without /lAONTCiOAAERYR WARD Sale ends Sunday /■. Never-need-ironing dresses for girls GREAT NEW LOOKS FOR BACK-TO-BOOKS Little girls dresses NEVER-NEED Regularly $5 each IRON NG Fell dreises for fashion-minded girls. At such a fantastic sale price, mark this ''must see!" Fuss-free cottons and polyester-cottons in deep tones and bright*. A-lines, dirndls and shirtwaist styles in the collection. Girls' 7-14. $ / * BOYS' SPORT SHIRTS IN PLAIDS, PRINTS, SOLIDS (’<#} Pontiac IV OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10:00 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M. SATl RDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9 P.M. 11\Y 12 NOON TO S P.M. • 682-191 1 /rUK PONTIAC. UlIKSS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1969 T 2 GI German Shepherds Sniff Out Dogfaces' 'Pot' in Viet OPEI#TVfdNDAY THRU FRIDAY 10:00 A.M. TO 0:00 P.M. SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO r P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 5 P.M. • 6824040 .., '\^hkQ!Is : Pontiac Mall marijuana while he’s not sniff-intake mistakes the same as peo-jons, munitions, and governing packages. |ple do," said Sgt. Enos Cooper, ment-iss|ued goods. According to the rules, the!the senior instructor in the prO-P ★ ★ ★ trainer can show affection fori*™1”- ! After several weeks in Viet- his dog only when he finds a! Above all, the dogs need si-nam, the dogs’performance will hidden package-. iletice for their work. During ajbe evaluated and recommenda- During one demonstration at mls.si, . at ihe. Tan ,^on _N»Jutjtions made whether to expand « military police battalion head-IP0?® . ^ ^°°kle f°und the program. If the dogs get die quarters Smidgen failed to d&JfeV dist™cted H cro"ds of go-ahead, several more German tect one packet curious postal workers who see shepherds selected fjir their in her a down-to-earth replace- "military aptitudes" now in NOT PERFECT ment for the electronic fluoro- training at the Military Police “Hie dogs are not 100 per cent scopes now used to detect illegal School at Ft. Gordon, Ga., will effective. They occasionally|shipments of marijuana, weap-'join Cookie and Smidgen. SAIGON (AP) Cookie andj Smidgen are looking for Mary Jane in Vietnam'. Hie two are a male-female j team of German shepherd dogs I brought into the country by the U.S. Army on "temporary duty status” after 16 weeks of intensive training on Okinawa. They were drafted for a military ef- fort to curb the shipment of marijuana back to the States by' 'servicemen. * > * I So far the dogs have been kept busy—demonstrating their skills everywhere from the main postal terminal at Saigon’s busy Tan Son Nhut Air Base to 9th Infantry Division troopers in the Mekong Delta icking up to go home under resident Nixon’s 25,000-troop ithdrawal order. Cookie and Smidgen are the, only two dogs who passed the course out of do candidates. For [ 16 weeks the dogs were trained in basic obedience, safety, re-1 trieving, and scouting, taking on] their complex sniffing missions! starting with a marijuana-filled toy. LONG A PROBLEM The purchase and use of marijuana, also called Mary Jane, by GIs have long been a prob- lem in Vifetnam, although the I ]extent has often been the sub-! ject of controversy. In recent 'months the U.S. military has stepped up a campaign against] lit, including the wide use of ra-|dio and television spots on the j local armed forces network. But with the cannabis plant so readily—and cheaply—available in Vietnam, it is not ^surprising that some GIs think of mailing some to their friends back home. typical demonstrations,! | Cookie and Smidgen sniff their! | way past assorted pieces of baggage or packages and individuals and sniff out planted marijuana shipments^ or personal "stashes” in a' man’s baggy fatigue pockets. For his find the dog is rewarded with an affectionate pat on the head and given his stuffed toy to chew on while he bones up for his next sniffing mission. The toy is to remind the dog of the smell of Beauty Contest Titlist a Surprise ~/f$ Vicar's Boy HORNING, England W-The vicar waa congratulating the tall, slim beauty, clad in yellow miniskirt, who had just been - named Miss Horning of 1969 when the winner removed a wig and said in a deep voice, "Hello, Dad.” It was the Rev. Wynter Blathway’s son Harry, a six- ' foot, 133-pound lad vtt7 chosen by 369 guests at Homing’s annual failing club barbecue over five girls. He said two barmaids made him up for the role. .* * * "His makeup and false shape took me Ip,” said the vicar. “I was terribly peeved' at first-but It was a joke done ex- traordinarily wdl.” Harry said: "You should have seen the look on his face.” ROSY OUTLOOK — Mai Van Bo, chief North Vietnamese delegate to the Paris Peace Talks, seems to show a very self-satisfied expression during a recent .press conference!. Safety Faults told by State LANSING UFI - That mini-skirted lass prancing past the company water fountain may cause a few .observant male co-workers to bump into doors or trip on the stairs, but over-* dressing actually accounts for most on - the - job mishaps, according to the Michigan Labor Department. Loose. clothing, long shift sleeves and trouser: cuffs may become entangled in machinery, causing injury, says, the department’s safety'and regulation bureau. Rings and long ties are potential hazards. ★ * * Women risk injury by wearing full skirts, sashes or jewelry while operating machines. So shop personnel may be advised to keep on their hard hats and safety glasses if they have to pass by the steno pool, the department suggests. Sfate-Capitol News Men's long or short-sleeve dress shirts NEVER NEED ANY IRONING RVERI • Sanforized Plus 2 broadcloths of polyastor cotton • Long or short-slaava stylos with regular collars .... • Just maehino wash and dry««. never ntad Ironing Wowl 5 shirts for only $1 Ql And cot ordinary shirts otthorl These ore finely tailored to fit porfocHy. Pick long sloovo shirts with cohvartibTo cuffs, 1 -pocket; or half-sleave with 2-pockets. White & Colors. 14% to 16Vi. Reg. $11 Mob's stretch crows %Cse!£:74' Sixes 9'A-I4. PAIR $1 off! Mon's sweatshirts nw REG. 3.99 Crew neck sweatshirts of Creslan* acrylic knit Icaap their fhape and bright colors. S-M-L-XL Great! BUY 5... SAVE 4.95! FOR •10 MG. 2.99 EACH Save 2.11 Men's Casual Slacks IN NEW DIAGONAL TWILL E 88 Regular 7.99 * 2-ply, cross-dyed twill in Fortrer polyester-cotton * Stays neat, machine wash 'n dry... they never need ironing Trim Ivy style, great for casual or dress-up wear. Just wash 'n dry and they're ready for action! Chooso blue or whiskey colors. Man's 29-38. Save 5.12 MEN'S NEW ZIP-LINED ALL-WEATHER COATS 24«8 REG. $30 Rain • shedding Dacron* polyester-cotton has zip-liner of warm acrylic pile. Ideal for campus, office. MONTGOMERY WARD Sale ends Sunday orm daily ia a.m. to t f.m. SATURDAY'9:30 A.M. TO 9 P.M. SUNDAY NOON TO I P.M. ; T-Vt7^l fw . . v . ^ r ' ’ '• ; ■ ' ! ' ■. ■ • ^ . • •■ v , C—10 ' V tHE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, I960_. ___________&--- 30.95 off! Easy-to-carry 74-squarc-inch* color TV Solid-stata, no-tube chassis .plays instantly—no warm-up needed. Big balanced speakers and tone controls add up to treat listening. Modem cabinet. Tune in FM/AM radio or play LRs on its au-tomaticchanga&Spaak-ers separate to 16 ft. Khe Sanh, Once a Besieged Bastion, Now Empty and Forlorn siege. It was a state of mind. SIGNS ARE GONE ,KHE SANH. Vietnam (DPI) .whoever? wants it. But no one — It stands abandoned on the {does. bomb-torn plains, another Gentle depressions in the sun-forgotten landmark of a war baked basin are all that remain that has moved on. of the bunkers where 6,000 For 77 days in the winter of:Marines once held out in the plaiik on which was scrib- 1968, Khe Sanh was what theiheight of privation. The hospital it? can * ac*ius* ^*s en‘ war was all about. Then they'has been razed, the command vironment.” Or the neatly found other battlefields, andjpost toppled, the sandbagsjcarved sign: “I think I’m fall-now the old fortress belongs to [emptied. | ing in love with Ralph.” more than an outpost under,scabs of bomb-ripped red clay Gone, too, are the traces of {humor that lightened the fog-filled days of constant fear and frequent death, khe Sanh was glower from the mountain slopes on ridgeline after distant ridgeline. 5ne wonders what became of I Across the cracked and bucketed pavement of Highway 9, an old French road twisting from the coast to Laos, eight miles west of the base, dozens of charred timbers rising from baren plots mark the ruins of Khe Sanh village. More than 2,000 mountain tribesmen once lived in small huts on bamboo stilts. They.lLaotian border to hunt and fish freely crossed the unmarked]and trade' with other Mon- Chest-high elephant grass now covers expended artillery canisters that lie rusting near the 2,300-foot metal airstrip. Huge boniibr MSU Professor to Chair Confab EAST LANSING (AP) - Dr. David R. Dilley, associate professor of horticulture at Michigan State University, has been named chairman for the next Gordon Research Conference fa* postharvest physiology. The conference, set for 1972, Includes presentations of current research on maturity, ripening and.aging of plants and plant products. Members include scientists from universities and industries throughout the United States. tagnards. But the civilians have long since gone. For miles and miles, the placid-looking plains have become a no-man’s land. VIOLENT HISTORY This tranquility belies the brief, violent history of Khe Sanh, the crash and thunder of up to 1,000 Communist rounds which used to hit there daily, the 40,000 North Vietnamese troops who fought there. Even the Leathernecks no longer value Khe Sanh. They have moved their war eastward along the Demilitarized Zone and the coastal lowlands to compensate for the withdrawal of a Marine regiment tc Okinawa. * ★ ★ Khe Sanh now is in what the military calls a reconnaissance zone, an area probed by only small-unit patrols both friendly and enemy. Unclaimed by the living, it belongs to the dead. MEtXION-DOLLAR LOOK — Bernadette Devlih, 22, the youngest member of the British Parliament, is in the United States trying to raise | $1 . million for the poor in Northern Ireland. Home of U.N. Gets Cramped Extra Space Costs $1.4 Million a Year | Save 80.95 AIRLINE® 295-SQ. IN.* COLOR TV "399 REGULAR 479.95 • Our exclusive chassis design has fewer parts • Handsome cabinet enhances your room • Color Magic keeps colors crystal-clear Looking for color TV, but worried about problems? Wards "service-guard" chassis ends worry. And multiple signal boosters improve reception even in fringe areas. We've added every engineering feature lor superb color viewing. Come in, see for yourself. UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.1 (AP) - The United Nations, crowded In its headquarters on the East River, has moved 259 of its people this summer into two buildings elsewhere in New York City. The 5,213 men and women that it employs in the city now work In 12 buildings spread over an area of several miles. It Is paying rent of $1.4 million a year. * * ★ Hie United Nations pays no rent to take care of 4,266 people | In buildings on the 18-acre head-1 quarters plot. Some of those In the new outposts like their quarters. But many complain because they have to come back here to do their banking, attend club meetings, eat cheaper In the cafeteria or shoo cheeper in the cooperative stores, and it’s unhandy. BIGGER WORKLOAD The official explanation for renting space outside headquarters Is that as the member countries in the United Nations have required more work of it, the staff has outgrown die home base. A theory of some U.N. staff members is that more space required not so much because more people have been hired as because more have been promoted. The higher a man moves in the secretariat, the bigger office j he is allowed. On one level, he gets one window, oh another, two, and on still another, he gets three. The mat in the process : ployes have been pushed out Into other buildings. In the 1988 General Assembly, Secretary General U Thant estimated that he would have to pay 8550,000 rent for outside premises in 1969. The fact that he is paving more than twice that is expected to put pressure on this year's assembly, convening Sept. 16. to rush plans for a • new building. , Save $20 on FM/AM eloek radio boasts big 5-in. speaker Wards makes waking up a little 4% 4\99 easier with beautiful music. Mmsw-Slumber switch . •. solid state. $•«. 4t.fi 15.07 off! Turn on TV value with this 74-sgiiaro-ineh* TV Tune in on this compact port- 74“ able. Space-age chassis in part beige/brown case. •18-in. diagonal MW Kq. et.tS 4-1F, transistorized chassis re-$9% 9% ceivas hard-to-get stations. Walnut-color casa with handla. •18-in. diagonal vUv> 2*9.219.11 QUALITY REPAIRS ON ALL MAKE HEARING AIDS ^ Save $31 •. .Solid-state AM/FM Airline* stereo 168 Save $30 on solid stale AM/FM R«9. 119.91 | j OPEN MONDAY THRU FI 111) AY 10 AM TO 9:00 p.M; 1 | | SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M. 11 1 SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 5 P.M . • 682-V 940 %. 4v ■ k IC. L___________._______________j AAOIMTGOA/lERYj WARD 'M t m THE PONTIAC l’KE^ JRSDAV, AUGUST 28, 1969 in Japan Just Isn't What It Used to Be KAITAICHI, Japan (UPI) -Japan has a spiffy little army! which some critics say couldn’t! fight its way out of a paper But a lot of Japanese couldn’t care less. That judgment may be too!, harsh, but it is a fact that soldiering in Japan isn’t what it used to be. ★ ★ ★ Professional soldiers don't pack much prestige these days in Japan, where Samurai warriors once were treated with great deference and the World War II Imperial army had things pretty much its own way. Japan doesn’t even call its army an army, preferring instead the euphemistic term “ground self-defense force," or simply the GSDF. [the GSDF doesn’t have enough! [ammunition to meet even .this! [requirement. DEFENSE OPPOSED j The basis of the defense of jJapan is the U.S.-Japan security treaty. Not only do many Japanese oppose that pact, which is subject to renewal next summer, many oppose Japan’s having any military forces of its own. Japan spends less than ! per cent of its gross national product on defense, a percentage0 topped by just ahout every other nation in the world, \ Until recently few Japanese politicians would dare speak out' for a defense buildup. It just is[ not a popular cause in a nation; whose experiences with war! were particularly grim. ★ ★ ★ Another factor is that many people in this prospering nation ijust do not feel threatened.; Even the defense agency admits the possibility of an attack by the Soviet Union or Communist China is highly unlikely. j So it is not surprising that soldiering in the GSDF is not! like soldiering in any other! army. A PR TASK The GSDF’s 13th Division is based here at Kaitaichi on the! outskirts of Hiroshima. Its 7,8001 men are changed with the! defense of nine prefectures (states), or about 14 per cent of Japan’s land area. The troops here spend a lot of time trying to make the local I citizens like them better. Units1 of the division have been! deployed 117 times in the past seven years to aid the people after earthquakes and during storms, floods and other! (port local festivals and Boy Scout units. * * * Maji Gep. Tsutomu Fuseya, vice commander of the 13th, believes all this public relating has done some good, but he admits his men receive 6ft hours of riot training per week in case! they are needed to put down! violence that may erupt in op-; position to the security treaty.! Discipline in the GSDF is not what it was in the old Imperial army. Soldiers who don’t like soldiering may simply resign by turning in their uniforms. Privates who punch sergeants are dealt with in civilian courts on assault charges rather than by court-martial boards. PAY SCALE The basic pay for a private is slightly less than $50 per month. A full colonel gets $200 per month. HP W • A ’ The GSDF has three infantry divisions and one mechanized division in its northern army, .charged with the defense of Japan’s northernmost island of Hokkaido, which lies within [sight of the Soviet Union. The rest of Japan is defended' by nine infantry divisions. Sale ends Sunday NO RESEMBLANCE The GSDF resembles not at all the Imperial army hordes that swarmed through Southeast Asia, endangered Australia and threatened to seize half the world. And . that suits the present government of Japan just fine. ★ ★ ★ Bulldozer Stolen From Vacant tot The GSDF has 173,000 men in uniform and 30,000 in reserve. It has 770 outdated American-made tanks, 530 armored personnel carriers, 50 surface-to-air missile launchers, 40 surface-to-surface missile launchers, 180 helicopters and 4,510 artillery pieces, including the 155mm howitzer. Yasuhiro Nakasone, a potential future candidate for prime minister, may have shocked some people when he said last spring that even against an enemy attacking with conventional weapons, Japan would not be able to-hold out on its own for more than 10 days. j * * * Nakasoe, a member of the1 ruling Liberal Democratic par-! ty, said his countoy’s defense [ policy, based on outmoded con-[ cepts of 1958, is for Japanese! forces to resist invasion for a month and then look to In- i tervention by the United States or the United Nations. He said Extramarital Affairs Seen on Increase NEW YORK (UPI) - Sexual affairs outside marriage have become almost the rule rather than the exception, according to the Institute for Sex Research founded by the late Dr. Alfred Kinsey. Dr. Paul Gebhard, head of the institute at Indiana University, said about 60 per cent of married women have affairs with partners other than their spouses. ★ • ★ * Gebhard, Kinsey’s successor, recalled that the Kinsey reports of 1948 and 1988 estimated that. about 80 per cent of men and 25 per cent of women engaged in extramartial sex. “This is change, but not revolution,’’. Gebhard said. “T)ie idea that there has been a sexual revolution in the past decade or two comes from the fact that we have become so rapidly permissive about what you can say and print." . . [; More than half the men interviewed* said boredom of one type or another led to dalliance. Almost two-thirds of1 the women blamed “the emo-, ttonal boredom of marriage.” AI major motivatlnon for in-; fidelity, according to Hunt, was “toe need for self-esteem" which came with the realization on the part of the husband or wife that they were still attractive to someone else. - Queen-size sleep sofas BRIGHTEN YOUR WHOLE ROOM WITH A STUNNING NEW SOFA Three beautiful 78-in. sofas to choose—and they all have a queen-size mattress tucked away inside! Modern channel-back, quilted contemporary or traditional quilted pillow back in v the finest decorator fabrics. USE WARDS CONVENIENT CHARG-ALL CREDIT PLAN TO SAVE—NOW! fc/239 REGULARLY 299.99 PORTLAND, Or*. (AP) -Barker Excavating Co. called Rental City in Portland Wednesday and asked it tb deliver a 9,-j 000-pound bulldozer to a vacant, lot. The $9,000 bulldozer was Ieft( in the lot.. Rental City Manager Marvin Helgreto went to the lot later and found only the machine's cleatad tracks. i Police found no Barker Exca-| vating Co., and no address such as the one given. OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M. SATURDAY' 9>30 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 5 P.M. • 682-4940 L THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1909 Londons Theater Shows Few Bjl WILLIAM GLOVER , AP Drama Writer LONDON - Some of Broad- ( way's past, much of its pres- ent and littl« for tts future —such is London's West End theater today. For showgoing tourists the ' major entertainment array points up how much more than an ocean separates England and the U.S.A. Sim. who is shy, retiring and a< stubborn homebody. There is some outside chance for “As Dorothy Parker Once Said” getting to Broadway, but the cabaret-style revue with music by Sandy Wilson admittedly needs elaborate overhaul.1 There is far greater stage diversion numerically than on Broadway, and box office congestion attests to how playhouses rank with Buckingham Palace as prime visitor mag-| nets. But unless some smasher; emerges quickly, the pattern in' recent seasons of propping up; Broadway with proven London successes fates drastic curtailment during the “next setnester.; About two-score dramas, mu- j steals and comedies are on display at any moment. Of these, among the biggest hits, are seven creations from New York. Seven others are shows that Broadway previously borrowed from here, out of which only “Hadrian VII” still survives across the sea. SOME MAY SURVIVE Of all the other fare now being purveyed, only a couple, If carefully nurtured, might survive transatlantic transfer with much expectancy of a happy future. The most promising prospect, “40 Years On," however, ft' unlikely to find a sponsor. A funny I kaleidoscope of recent British history, the show stars Sir John Gielgud, splendidly., He is not available for travel, and author-actor Alan Bennett to well as potential backers are reluctant to go without him. TIRELESS BIRD DOG Its Broadway rights belong to> Alexander H. Cohen, one ofj Broadway’s most tireless bird | dogs. Among the busier providers of what theatrical excitement I (here is around.(own are the National Theater tof Great Britain, j just up with a two-part, scqpi-l cally imaginative addition to its repertory of Shaw's “Back to Methusaleh”; the Royal Shake-l speare Company; and individu-, ally, Peter Bridge, who with an-j nounced involvement in 20 productions for the next year makes i the agenda of David Merrick, Broadway’s self-acknowledged leader, seem modest indeed. I For an insatiable stage addict who has eat In on 32 English productions during a 25-day stay, a most impressive phase of the current scene is the abiding popularity of vintage dramatic material, from William j Shakespeare to Georges Feydeau. Comedy from Restoration to Victorian is getting particular attention. Running side-by-side in ,a single week recently one could see Oliver Goldsmith’s ["She Stoops to Conquer," liam Congreve’s “The Way of I jthe World” and his “The Double! Dealer," Feydehu’s “A Flea in I Her Ear" and a revision of an-j other romp by the solemn Frenchman, renamed “Cat Among the Pigeons." TOP MUSICALS i The musical theater is dominated by American items—Ginger Rogers wowing the multi-Itudes in “Marne,” Richard Kil- ley ditto in a revived “Man of La Mancha,” “Fiddler on the Roof” and “Hair.” For reasons hard to comprehend, a local tuner called “Charlie Girl” is in its fourth year; “Canterbury Tales” rolls on after flopping on Broadway, and “Lock Up Your Daughters,” which closed in Boston en route to New York, continues to pull them in at the Mermaid. Doing well too is “Anne of Green Gables,” a bucolic croon which began at a summer festival on Canada's Prince Edward Island, and which enjoys the! presence on-stage of Broad-j way’s Hiram Sherman. “London theater is changing,” gently observes Sherman who first played here 20 years ago in Brigadoon.” “Theaters are, disappearing and the samehit-1 flop syndrome of Broadway is I taking hold.” Sandout nonfnusical attrac- tions include Arthur Miller’s “The Price”; “Arturo Ui," thanks to Leonard Rossiter’s performance; “The Boys in the |Band”; “Conduct Unbecoming," a ranmpantly colorful recent arrival about chin-up redcoats in Victorian India; and “Rosen-crantz and Guildenstern are Dead.” And yes, Virginia, “The Mousetrap’ss is still catching [crowds, in its 17th year. For similar reason, forget the Chichester Festival rendition of) Arthur Wing Pinero’s “The! Magistrate,” turned Into an unforgettably joyous experience by the performance of Alastair, Gl Pilot Killer of Aussie Girl SYDNEY (UP!) - A U.S. helicopter pilot based in Viet-1 nam was convicted ofj manslaughter yesterday in the killing of a Sydney model and sentenced to 10 years in prison. | Lawrence James Hull, 20, of Enfield, Conn., a warrant officer with the 180th Helicopter Assault Group at Blen Hot, Vietnam, had pleaded innocenti to charges he killed Josephine Dunphy, ID, In a Sydney motel I last Dec. 16 Miss Dunphy was strangled and stabbed three times. Justice Wilfred Collins of the Central Criminal Court said Collins would have to serve a minimum of three years before becoming eligible for parole. MEDAL-LADEN Hull was on rest and recreation leave from Saigon at the time of Miss Dunphy's death. He appeared in court wearing a green uniform laden with c bat medals and decorations. According t o Auatralllan police, Hull gave himself up and made a confession to police on Dae. 16. He withdrew " fession in court. “I don't know why I did it. She didn’t even struggle,” Hull! said in his confession, according j to Detective Sgt. R. McDonald. OPEN DAILY 10 A.M. TO 9 P.M. SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9 P.M. sumay NOON TO S P.M. Sale ends Sunday SAVE 60.95 So many features... frostless side-by-side REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER $ 339 REGULARLY 399.95 • All frostless—ends messy defrosting chores • Large freezer—holds 196 pounds frozen food • Butter, cheese compartments; egg rack • Fresh meat keeper; slide-out freezer basket • Automatic ice maker available—an "extra" SAVE 31.95 Giant Capacity UPRIGHT FREEZER 16-CU. FT. SIZE <188 • REG. 219.95 * Holds to 560 pounds of food * Convenient adjustable shelves * 3 additional Interior shelves * Lock, 2-keys for safety; * Convenient roll-out basket Save 130.95 on Refrigerator-freezer CHEST FREEZER 23-CU. FT. SIZE Frostless—no defrosting « jm 1 Handy adjustable shelves ^3 ^3 1 Moves easily on rollers* Jm jW 1 Automatic door closers REG. 629.95 1 Holds 332 pounds SAVE 50.95 199 REG. 249.95 • Huge 23 cubic foot capacity 9 Holds up to 805 pounds food 9 space-saving foam insulation 9 Cold control for fast-freaze 9 Lock; 2-kays; 2 handy baskats ^ Huge 17.5 eu. ft. refrIgerator*freeser *299 REG. 349.95 Frostiass—ends defrosting Freezer holds 182 pounds food Handy adjustable shelves, more . VH mm 0:.iO A.M. TO 9 P.M. Ml\\ 12 NOON IO t P.M. a 6K2<49ML Mibfc MgSiii THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, *969 C—13 Lessoni of Labor Loom as China Starts New School Setup HONG KONG (AP) — For the Th« _. , . _ , . . HONG KONG (AP) - For the first time in China’s 3,000-year history a system of. rural com* pulsory free education goes into effect this fall. In some respects it may be a system of compulsory labor. The new school system is mostly Mao Tse-tung’s idea, Western analysts of Chinese affairs say. They think it may be one of the biggest gambles China’s 76-year-old leader has taken since coming to power in Moo Painted as Monster by Moscow BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) -Solemnly, Moscow pumps propaganda into Asia picturing Red China’s Mao, Tse-tung as, among other things, a drug peddler, brothel keeper brainwash-er of children and inventor of a thing called “the antirevisionist dance,” Not only that, says Moscow, but Mao is against love. k k ★ Ever since the Chinese-Rus-sian border clashes, Moscow has been sending reams of news releases to its Asian embassies for distribution, “Corrupter of Souls,” one such article is entitled. According to this, Mao’s minions, “fighting revisionism in the kindergartens,” require children to relate their “positive experiences” in the fight. ‘TORMENTED’ “My revolutionary conscience tormented me for a long time,” it quotes a Chinese 4-year-old. “I wasn’t able to perform the antirevisionist dance well enough, but I remembered Chairman Mao’s instructions that for the sake of revolution one must overcome himself. I, i little soldier of Mao Tsfee-tung’s thinking, overcame myself. 1 am dancing now to spite the revisionist.” k k 9*^' Love and marriage are out, ~says one Russian release, quoting Peking radio as saying such things are used only, “by class enemies to distract youth from proletarian politics.” Another release says Chinese people starve while Mao and associates grow fat on drug traffic and gold smuggling. ‘PERSONAL CAPITALIST* The “gambling dens and brothels of Macao,” It says,* are managed by Mao’s personal capitalist, Hd' Yin, a high-ranking Communist who also owns dog tracks, four banks, five hotels, two newspapers, a bus-taxi company, five schools, a hospital and all movie houses in nearby Portuguese Macao. “Facts vividly show,” says the release, “that the Maoist clique, which has long stepped the .limits of hypocrisy, has long made dope trading one of the biggest sources of its foreign currency receipts.” one major goal of Chairman Mao’s cultural revolution purges. This suminer the purges "were finally extended to elementary schoolteachers and staff. Now that Mao’s mat run the classrooms, they can put into effect the kind of education plans opposed by deposed President Liu Shao-chi and his followers. MAJOR OUTLINES grafted on. Its destruction waa These are the major outlines The “old” school system was built largely along European lines with doses of Mao thought 4 Firms Face Labor Charges DETROIT (UPI) - The U.S. Labor Department has filed suit in federal court charging Israel Marx with failing to pay 70 employes the minimum wage for regular and overtime work and withholding $15,000 .from them since April 1,1067. The suR, filed by Secretary of Labor George P. Shultz, also charges Marx with "oppressive child -labor” by employing 27 minors under the age of 18 as motor vehicle operators, outside helpers and power hoist operators at his suburban Southfield service station. . * The suit asks that $1,000 in back wages be returned to the employes, and that the court issue a permanent injunction “to restrain Marx from future violations.” / Shultz also announced he has filed suit against three related Southfield companies,-* Alsar Co., Alqar Manufacturers Inc., and Alsar Applications Inc. — charging they failed to pay “many employes the required premium pay for overtime hours since March 28,1887.’ ■ k ' k * The three companies make, sell and install aluminum siding, doors and windows to homeowners. Explain Surgery A surgical technique fo transplanting the larynx whs 1bed recently. It has been successfully oA dogs who nag their barks and growlp h transplanted voire boxes d , of the new school system as related by the Chinese presk1: ' —All children 6-13 will go to schoql in September. ★ ★ ★ • Courses have been shortened from 12 to 7 years, and almost no children from the countryside will ever go to a technical institute, college or university. * Children will spend the seven years in “productive labor,” the study of Mao’s writings, and in learning better farming methods and the use of farm machinery. * All schools will be administered and financed locally, instead of from Peking’s Ministry of Education. Mao apparently is saying that to develop its economy China needs fewer physicists and more good farmers, fewer well- educated bureaucrats and more literate welders. Including “productive labor” in the curriculum will give toe country’s leaders a ready reserve of flexible labor- Shortening the course to seven years will speed people into the work force. MAO’S ADVOCATES Experts here say Mao may be right Developing nations don’t have many jobs for highly trained professionals. Mao evidently thinks China has been wasting manpower resources and needs to concentrate training and skills in the lower levels of the country’s labor force. China’s press says the new policy will still provide highly trained experts. But candidates for advanced training will be far fewer than they have been, and all will be selected by the Communist party. “Essentially Mao is saying that the old way of developing a country by emphasizing experts and neavy industry hasn’t worked in China despite 20 years of trying,” one analyst ' Only the U.S. Senate has the power to approve or disapprove major presidential appoint- ments. A/\ONTGO/l/lERY WARD Save *3 gallon! Sale ends Sunday r A N- j 7" economy roller set raster, easier paints ing! 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THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1969 Plight of Woman Without a Co Become Typical MANILA 1UM) - Mrs.| Virginia Joseph-Kosloff — "Benjie" to her triends — Is al Filipino. Her father was an Iraqi with a British passport. | Her husband is a Russian with] Chinese nationality, and her daughter is an American' citizen. Benjie herself is stateless. Her story is typical of thousands around the world. There are no specific figures as to just how many wandering] stateless persons there are — who were themselves or whose, families were uprooted and displaced first by World War Ij and the Russian Revolution of 1917, and then by World War II and Nasi racialism, from Which < so many fled when they could escape being murdered. Benjie, who has played a leading role in Manila society for a quarter-century, says, “You will never learn the value of having your citizenship unless you lose it.” | One disadvantage is that though Benjie was born in the Philippines, and her husband lhas lived and worked here 20 years, they chnnot own property in thje Philippines. BOUND FOR CALIFORNIA ' So, now that d a u ght e r Natasha is 17she was born in Los Angeles when Benjie was accompanying hear mother to the states for an operation — the family is heading for California late this month. < Natasha-will go to college in Los Angeles In September, and Benjie will buy a home and stay as long as her visa permits. When Natasha Is 21, her parents will be allowed into the U.S. as nonquota Immigrants, They plan to live partly in the U.S., partly in the Philippines, where Benjie’s husband, Nick, is in the shipping business. Though Benjie, 46, has a busy life as a Manila society matron and charity worker, and is deeply attached to the land of her birth, she wants to settle down for Natasha’s sake and put down roots — something she cannot do here as a noncitizen. “My love and loyalty to the Philippines supersede everything in my life,” the dark-eyed woman, a shade over five feet tall, said.“But I want Natasha to go to her country, live w|th her people and serve her country as I have served die Philippines.” FATHER AN ARAB Benjie’s father was Lazarus Joseph, an Arab citizen Baghdad who obtained a British passport w h e n Mesopotamia under British mandate after World War II. Her mother was Rafaela Maganti Carvajal, a half-Spanish Filipino. Benjie the seventh of their eight children. Benjie’s citizenship mix-ups started when she was .21, and wanted to apply for Philippine citizenship. As the Philippine-born daughter of a noncitizen, she would have to make choice of'citizenship at that a But when she applied to the British Embassy to evidence of her paternity,, she found her birth had not been there. In the end, however, she got a Philippine passport. She then met and married Nick Kosloff, a white Russian who grew up in. mainland China and was a Chinese citizen. When she applied for renewal of her Philippine passport, the Philippine Foreign Office said she was Chinese as fur as it was concerned. The Chinese Embassy said she was Filipino as far as it was concerned — but she was welcome to apply for Chinese citizenship. Benjie thought it over and decided she didn’t wish to become Chinese; Instead, she obtained a passport as a stateless person under the protection of the Philippine government. MOIVUiO/IAERY WARD 10x7*ft. steel ■\ STILL WORKING -Juliana Baker got a rest recently when it rained. In good weather, the 91-year-old woman keeps busy working her 45-acre farm near Blancbardville, Wis. 'U.S. Blocking Club in Saigon' building SPECIAL! 9988 "CHARGE IT" Panels are double ribbed for more strength. Doors open to 51-inch width. 97"x67" Interior storage capacity. Save $20 on big 5-HP tiller 159’ ^99 REG. 179.99 SALE ENDS SUNDAY SAIGON (UPI) - The American Legion has protested that the U.S. military command here had blocked the establishment of a Legion club for off-duty servicemen in Saigon. I The Legion’s post in Saigon issued a statement saying the headquarters of the U.S. Military Assistance Command refused the Legion the use of U.S. military scrip, the money 1 used by the U.S. forces in Vietnam. The statement from the veterans’ organization said the use of scrip was “essential” to the establishment of a Legion post “home” — or club — for off-duty servicemen. Legion officials said they could not operate such a club through the use of Vietnamese piasters because servicemen deal in scrip and because the use of piasters is discouraged to check chronic inflation in Vietnam. A spokesman for the U.S. command said he had no immediate comment on the Legion’s statement but would look into the question. II Save ’100 on Wards Squire 12” garden tractor Features power reverse for easy back-out; iasy-Splri starter; adjustable tilling width and folding handle. Wards Garden-Mark® Squire 12 ctin do more than a team of horses! Rugged engine lets you cut grass, plow snow, til) garden with attachments. Center control panel. $ MOWING ATTACHMENT........144.99 769 REGULARLY $849 TRACTOR ONLY Riders to Rock Fete Thanked by Bus Firm SAVE 22.11 ON ROTARY MOWER 10.11 off! 30-la. Trail Sweeper, 89“ REG. 99.99 Hitches to rear of any riding mower or tractor. Easy to assemble and stora. Easy swing load dumping. Sava! 67 88 REG. 89.99 Husky mower has pull-and-go instant starting.. Double-folding handle makes for compact storage. Makes grass-cutting a snapl 11-ga. galvanised steel fence outfit 66' FOOT Includes 48" chain link fabric, line post, loop cap, top rail and tie wires. Terminal posts, gates and installation available. 100' mini- NEW YORK (AP) - The bus company that carried thousands of city youths to the huge music festival in White Lake, N.Y., two weeks ago has taken an advertisement thanking the young customers for “their generosity, patience and good humor.’’ The Short Line paid about 15,000 for a half-paga advertisement in today’s New York Times, in which six bus drivers give their impressions of their passengers. I don’t understand why they wear long hair but now 1 <" , care,” said Richard Ferber of Calicoon, NY- “They’re the most n o - g r 1 p 1 n g , no-complaining, patient and generous, respectful bunch of kids I ever “They treated me .with respect. Even love. They were neat, polite, full of fun and good humor and not a bit of sarcasm,” said jJ. J. DeRock of Leonla, N.J. The Short Line ad ended: “We got to move thousands of kids to and from the festival.! Rut bettor then that — they, moved—us. Deeply!-.....Their generosity, patience and good; humor turned what might have' been a difficult task into a revealing and enjoyable trip. We learned a lot about the young people around us. “We love what we learned.” THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. AUGUST 28, 1069 Health Plans for Vets Vary By JERRY T. BAULCH AP Newsfeatures WASfflNGTON-H you’re getting out of military service it’s a good idea to take a detailed look before you decide which, If any, of the 90-day bargain health insurance pinna to pick to protect you while you get settled back into civilian life. The temporary plans are different in many respects, with each having advantages over the other in individual situations. The insurance program went into effect in August to meet the problem of people in service and their dependents losing their military medical benefits on the day they are discharged, unless they stay in long enough to retire. The Pentagon picked two companies: Blue Cross-Blue Shield and Mutual of Omaha. Both ®AULCH provide 90 days of protection under rates generally available to other civilians. A serviceman thus has protection with time to decide what kind of regular health insurance he wants, if any. DIFFER ON CARE For instance, Blue Cross-Blue Shield offers maternity care, meeting the problem of wives who are pregnant when their husbands are discharged from service. Mutual doesn’t this. On the other hand, Mutual pays a big hunk of the cost of renting wheel chairs, hospital-type beds and iron lungs and other things that Blue Cross-Blue Shield does not. And Mutual will help pay for a private nurse, but the other plan won’t. ★ ★ ★ ®Iuf Cross-Blue Shield has two rates — $16.50 for the individual and |90 for the serviceman and his family for the 90 days. Mutual has five rates ranging from $30 for the individual to $90 with a wife and two children and $103 with a wife and three or more children. Blue Cross-Blue Shield will automatically convert the service-separation policy to Its regular coverage for those who want it. Mutual will consider each applicant separately. Job Training Step-Up Looking hopefully to an end of the Vietnam fighting and » shrinkage of the armed forces, the Pentagon is taking steps to do a bigger and better job of preparing men leaving the service to find and hold down civilian jobs. For one thing, there will be expansion of Project Transition, under which men in military jobs that do not train them for dviUan roles are taught skills in their final six months of active duty. Also Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird wants career counseling and career guidance programs set up. * ★ Hr. The plan is to give job counseling 12 and 24 months before i man retires. Police-Fireman Training A program to meet the shortage of policemen and firemen across the nation is being focused on men getting out of military service. The Veterans Administration has the biggest program under the GI education bill, with some 150 cities having 3,700 police students and 68 cities with 600 firemen students. VA Administrator Donald E. Johnson is hoping many other cities will provide similar training programs. , ★ ★ ★ ■ Another program is being conducted under Project Transition by the joint efforts of the Defense, Labor, and Health, Education and Welfare departments. Part of this training is in junior colleges and other police science institutions under contract with the International Association of Police Chiefs. Vets in Small Business The Small Business Administration recently launched a program aimed at helping men getting out of military service with money and technical know-how. SBA Administrator Hilary Sanoval Jr. designated veterans affairs officers in each of his agency’s 73 field offices and instructed them to make “the most liberal interpretation possible of our rules and regulation in aid to the veteran — particularly the returning Vietnam veterans wishing to start their own business.” Army Thank-You The Army, Which has been pushing a “thank you” program to men getting out of service, has now started giving them a Certificate of Appreciation. The certificates will be signed by the Army chief of staff, Gen. William C. Westmoreland, and are about the size of the discharge paper. \ I will be a couple of months before the certificates will be available but those who get out after July 18 will get them automatically. Soldiers who got out before then are eligible but must write for theta; however, the Army hasn’t announced yet to which office they should write. New Reenlistment Policy The Army has changed the rules so that soldiers up to E6 staff sergeant — who are discharged may reenlist and not lose a grade if they wait up to 30 months after separation. Previously, there was only a 90-day grace period and this was limited to E6s and below with less than four years service. However, E7 through E9 — the top enlisted grades — will continue to lose a grade if they do not reenlist within 24 hours after discharge. A one-grade reduction also will be Imposed upon any soldier E6 or below with over six years service who: 4 Failed to honor a statement of intent to immediately reenlist. • Did not take action to extend or reenllst when placed on over seas orders prior to discharge. Lawyer Incentive Endorsed The Budget Bureau has endorsed the idea of offering a bonus to pay military lawyers extra to stay in service — similar to the doctor bonus. Under new military law rules there's a crying need for more qualified lawyers. The bill smiled on by the Budget Bureau would give lawyer-officers an extra $50 a month as a lieutenant or captain, $150 as a major or lieutenant colonel and $200 as a colonel or C—15 t Also there would be a bonus of up to two months basic pay for each year of additional duty beyond the required time. Slanted Appeal Hit in Parking Decision CAMDEN, S.C. (AP) -Women will have to park parallel along two blocks of a main street ih Camden whether they like it or not, Judge John Gritaball of Circuit Court has ruled, , 2 Merchants on Broad Street Had sought a court injection to stop city offlcilas from eliminating .angle parking on the two blocks of the street-They argued that most of their customers were women and that women don't like parallel parking. TV**?® * * ■■+ 1 " Grimball denied their request. MONTGOMERY \VLVL\ S 99c FILLER PAPER' 61‘ S-hol* piptr with 1 rid marginal rules. ' IO'/jxS", 500 sheets. Back-to-school values START X.OUR KIDS' SCHOOL YEAR RIGHT-CHOOSE ALL OF THEIR SCHOOL NEEDS FROM WARDS BIG SELECTION! 21-volume encyclopedia set now at less than $2 a volume 3988 Develop a thirst for knowledge with the 1969 illustrated World Encyclopedia. Grade, high school students will enjoy their research projects as 15,000 subjects come alive with II ,000 pictures, maps. Yearbook service until 1979. DOTS, STRIPES in mod beck-to-ichool enstmblei. 3-ring binder. 2-S-holar theme book. Extra them# books, oach 49c FLOWERS, PLAIDS in snap-notebook trio! 3-ring bindor, them* book, not# pad. Extra thorn# books, oach 74c ALL-IN-ONE SET with 3-ring bindor, 4 theme books, 104-shoats, filler paper, dividers. Other ell-in-one sets from 1.19 99 199 101 USES FOR W* LABELMAKER To use in school, office, tool >g shop—anywherel Tape in 4 ' M asserted colors. Extra 12’ tape rails.79c STURDY SCHOOL BAGS - REG. 3.99 Eesy-to-hold handle plus strap, lunch pocket. Solid or plaid, loqg wearing. 2.99 bags ....2.19 A. BIO S 8-PEN PACKAGE World-famous pens writ# first time, every timel Dependable supply, never skipsl B. BIC PEN COMBINATION One low price for pack of accountant's fino-point pen plus 2-crystal medium points. C. SHEAFFER PEN OFFER Famous cartridgo pen with 4^. 7-refill cartridges in an as- SI II' sortment of colors. Savel D. PEN AND PENCIL SET Attractive Scripto ball point gg pen with matching thin-lead mechanical pencil. E. SCRIPTO PENS, PENCIL, LEAD , For every writing ntod—Scripto fiber- ■■ _ tipped pen, ball point pen, mechanical SI ^ pencil plus lead .., all in one package! $1 BOX OF 120 CRAYONS Non • toxic. ■ With sharpener. With crayon ^ #2 PENCILS PACK OF 30 A11 pencils eraser - tip-OOc oed. Save! M FELT-TIP MARKER PEN Your choice: ■■ Black, blue. SW' red or green, ~ 18x24" CORK NOTE BOARD 299 Save now on molded or vinyl attache case A. OUR 5.99 MOLDED ATTACHE Sturdy plastic frame, m a a plated locks, 2 keys, mm 18x121/4x41/4" size. B. WARDS 8.99 VINYL ATTACHE 17x12x4" with heavy ^ an aluminum channel, Q side locks, 2 keys. OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10 A M. TO 9:00 P.M SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 5 P.M. • 682-4940 e—i« Younger Audience, Old-Style Industry THE T()NT1AC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST.28, 1969 Hollywood Caught in Costly Paradox By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD (AP) - The] mood of the city: color gloomy. The movie capital of the world-does that title still hold? —finds itself plunged into !depression during these mid' Famous for Juicy Steaks and Roasts and Round-Up Dinners CHUCK WAGON 5800 Dryden Rd., Dryden summer days. The reason isitions—‘‘Che,’1 “MacKenna’s clear: Never has the production Gold," “The Loves^of-fsadora,” 'outlook appeared so grim. Yes, I know.: The doomsay-j ers, including: perhaps this] one, have been] busy during this Year of Our 'Lord, 1969, de-j {claring how bad {the movie busline ss Is. The] paradox is ines-capable: a vast, •generation audience 12 NORTH SAGINAW IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Open IttM an Wed. thru Sat. ) and 1:00 p.n. Sun., Man., Tuet. J tinuous All Day, SS4-44M YOU MUST BE 18 — PROOF IS REQUIRED Adults ONLY! NS? The Bushwhacker 2nd HR “SEE HOW THEY COME" 'Patton: Blood and Guts," representing an investment of perhaps $40 million. The production schedule has been curtailed to await a payoff. / a Warner Brothers-Seven Arts —The forward thrust of the two-year-old management replacing the aging J. L. Warner has been blunted by another change of ownership. Now , „ whole new team will have to _ Pa;8™™1 “ Mter a su?' start over again. Wfcasful 1968 — “Rosemary’s Baby,” “The Odd Couple,” “Ro- • MGM-After a debilitating imeo and Juliet,"-the company power struggle withjn the com-is undergoing a lull because ofpany, the studio Seemed ready ‘The Bridge at Remagen,” “Star"—are not. And the costiy' failures can be ruinous to a film company’s profit statement. SOME SYMPTOMS The malaise of the film companies appears in different ways. For example: ger to embrace film enter-overcapitalization in huge pro-1 for a comeback. But now the tainment and a lumbering, old-style industry unable to fulfill that need' That paradox has not yet been [resolved. Certain films—“True Grit,” “Midnight Cowboys,” j"Easy Rider,” "Love Bug,” {“Goodbye, Columbus”—are attracting large crowds. But many other expensive attrac- duct ions: "Paint Your Wagon,” "The Adventurers," “Catch 22," "Darling Lill," “On a Clear Day You Can See Forever." Total outlay is estimated at $60 million. • Twentieth Century-Fox—Another |case of putting all its eggs in a few baskets: “Hello, Dolly," “Tora, Tora, Tora” and! imminent take-over by Las Vegas moneyman Kirk Kerkorian threatens another long delay before a production policy can be evolved. f Universal — the studio has thrived on tourist visits blit failed with its production policy. The take-over of the company !by Firestone presages another lengthy period of inactivity' Universal’s future policy remains a mystery, with scarcely any new Sims announced. ★ ★ ★ Of the established companies, only two appear to be on an even keel. United Artists, with burden of studio overhead, continues on its enterprising path, while avoiding immense projects. Buoyed by the good business of “Funny Girl" and 'Oliver,” Columbia keeps busy. Taking up some of the production slack are new companies such as Cinema Center Films, Commonwealth United and ABC Pictures. But their contributions are not enough to offset the basic gloom that infects the film-making community. * ★ ★ The solution? It rests in the hands of a new breed of film maker who can understand the needs of the new, young film audience. 7 don't care what he says, he means.' IVUY FRIDAY — | P.M. to 8 P.M. — PISH DINNER Uncls John's 1 Reg. I 09 $1.65 ■ a WOODWARD AVE. at 14Vk Mila Rd. a 16326 W. I MILE RD. Just E. of Oreenfield • 10001 TELEGRAPH RD. Nssr Plymouth Rd. All people who talk to other people*—whether in business negotiations or in social conversation--have a tremendous advantage if they have an understanding pf the messages being conveyed by the gestures of the participants, Gerard I. Nierenberg, a prominent New York attorney and a founder of the General Semantics Foundation, has written a book, "The Art of Negotiating" (Hawthorne, $7.95) which, among other things, discusses the significance of ordinary, often unconscious, gestures. He points out that Darwin was aware that facial expressions and body gestures can be traced ^tep by step from ancestral animals to the, everyday conversations of man. In this series of photos by Laurence Cox, Nierenberg demonstrates some common gestures and explains what they can mean. *©ii) iHtlliTabem Style Show Every Friday Daring Luncheon 12:S0 to 1:30 featuring the latest wear by / PENTHOUSE FASHIONS . y •' WE WILL BE CLOSED SUNDAY, AUCfSlit and LABOR DJR Entertainment Wednesday thru Saturday RENNE BADER, STEVE ANTOS “JIM GERARDIN DUO” °^n^nA^NnAYSK Year Host Mr. Ken Wright CLOSED SUNDAYS 5838 Dixie Highway, 623-0060 COMMERCE OPEN NIGHTLY FIRST SHOWING AT DUSK FIRST RUN! DRIVE-IN THEATER UNION LAKE AT HAGGERTY HD. EM 3-0661 CMINne Under 12 FREE Man has conquered the moon wuhthe epic APOLLO tl FLIGHT! NOWTAKE ANOTHER MOMENTOUS JOURNEY! 'JOUHKYTDTHE I | ■ HD A UNIVERSAL PICTURES LTD. PICTINIE !Also* “In a friendly conference, if one member suddenly, sits back and folds his arms with some abruptness, you know at once that trouble has arrived. It’s, an indication that he is not accepting what you are saying." “Many times people are turned off because they have .gestured and signaled that they would like to interrupt the conversation tp add their' point of view and the gesture has passed unnoticed. Such 'interrupt' gestures are a tug at the ear or throat,, or modified raising of the hand." 8 IRIS IS BUR HEW LOOK HE'LL FRACTURE YOUR FUNNYBONE WHILE HE STEALS YOUR HEART! "In the course of a conversation or negotiation, if you spot the fingers in a steepled position, rest assured that the subject being discussed 'This is a nervous speoker. is one in which the gesturer He has subconsciously kept has complete confidence, his hands folded to prevent Look out for the poker player them from assuming posi- who rests his cards on the tions that would even further table and assumes this posi-show his tensions." tion." Disability Policy Offers Plan to Refund Premiums NOW!! COOL! AirBONDlTIONIND Sunday Liquor \V 2280 Union Lake Road UNION LAKE “When a person assumes this position, you can readily believe everything* that he is about to say." . HARTFORD, Conn. (UPI) - | Aetna Life & Casualty said I yesterday it is offering an {insurance policy that pays you if you become disabled, but | refunds your premiums at’ age 65 if you don’t. may be turned in for a partial refund of premiums after it been in force for three years. Aetna says current statistics Indicate that one man out seven will be disabled for at iw ii yvu vvu v. .least six months between I Aetna's policy is believed to 35 and 65, and that the average be the first of its kind in the disability period is seven years. | nation with a hill money-back | —*-------------— feature. It provides up to $1,5001 #» , ,, . monthly to persons unable to v7/rQTT6 S WlQiGS work for long periods I of illness or Injury. OPEN 7:00 624-3135 'gDAMDNIVEN WED. • SAT. • SUN, SDHEDULE “RASCAL” at 1:00 - 3:20 - 1:40 - 8:00 -10:18 “HAND YOUR HAT ON THE WIND” at 2:25 - 4:45 - 7:05 • 9:25 MON. • TUES. - THURS, • FRI. “HAT ON WIND” all A 0:18 - “RASCAL” at 1:80 -10:05 ____________ Mourn His Death The company, wTllch’Tg'the] BALTIMORE, Md. (AP) -j nation’s largest health insurer, Bay, the 4-year-old maid giraffe said policyholders who reach at the Baltimore zoo, died] WANT TO SELL LAWNMOWERS, POWER MOWERS, ROLLER SKATES, WAGONS, BICYCLES? USE A LOW COST PONTIAC I IH----- PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. JO PLACE YOUR8, CALL 332-6181. premium total. And the policy I Rhodesia In 1966. 65 without collecting benefits will receive a refund of all premiums paid. Even if benefits are paid, a 1 refund will be made at 65 if ! their total is less than the Wednesday from an Incurable' blood disease. Besides fprieving zoo officilas, the chief mourners are two' female giraffes brought to Baltimore with Ray from a w%mm 1 ■ifll stone M. AT RAIISN sun. cmtwta tail ii 1 “SO R0UDN ARD VIVID 1 IT’* ALMDST UNBIARABLE” -NIW YORK TIMIS “MAN NAS OOURUSMDTMR. , Moeu WITH TM INS FLIGHT OF OMLIO It. NOW TAKIANOTHCR M0MCNT0U* JOURNIV!” tat MIN Geraldine Page-Ruth Gordon "What Ever a Happened rim (QWvjdStS To Aunt Alice?" * mum nciwuut.tenet iillWI imiaa /! II d ahSILJumi r [Mils Hull JR' 11 AUGUST SPECIAL NO COUPON NECESSARY Available 7 Days A Week 50coff 11 on any Bucket or Barrel of | Red Barn’s new fried chicken. | | F,mll, lMk*t 15 ,1km Me .ft wM, ad M Party Darrel 21 pleeas SDc eff with ad Good at the Following Location!: PONTIAC 752 BALDWIN at Montcalm 441 BLIZABITH LAKE RD, at Telegraph RED . BARN’ YOU MUST DC MTISMD OR YOUR MONEY BACK Bring the kids, grandpa, everybody. To the most mouthwatering dinner buy in town* Our featured special of the week, plus many other delicious meats, vegetables, crisp salads, and much, much more. All for this unbeatable low price. And go back for 2nds and 3rds. Even lower prices for children, Beverag* and I dessert extra. »' Eat less expensively than ypu can at horn* at: Opan 7 Days a Walk HOURS: 11AM. - 2 PM. and 4:30 - 8 PJKL Dally We're Opan Sundaye 11 AM. to 7 PM. 755 BALDWIN at MONTCALM - 335-5556 ^snYOrgasbord]r Your hou$a of hotpItMllty from eornttoraut. . J t 1 x ( ' l)p Sjf THEr PONTIAC PRESS, —— -......».-^nr«n>ww^-^%vWVy«^W>WW<:OQC<<<<«VWW,’>r.V.V.’.%V.V»V.1.V.V;VV Bridge Tricks From Jacobys Marriage licenses THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1969 CAMPUS CLATTER V*. Lalng, 113 WM Hob! HUSH**.1, f* *W ilnahamt , S Richard A. van Traaia, uo L... !: Sfi-irly *nd M,ry A- ©«How«y, Laka t Orton ■: CrJrh Klmtola, Farmington and :: FrSHeit f- Mown, Farmington S . MJcHmI P, Taylor, Detroit and ■ [ JsjapWj. 1M South cau Laka i. mSS*®?1 P- Fauat,, Clar- -[ Michaalena Denton, Clarkston WHERE’S HE’S DOWH AT GRUBBY, , THE CORNER, POP? A picketing another . SCHOOL/ Clarkston and d and Dianna NORTH (D) 21 4KJ43 VK3 2 ♦ AKJ76 ♦4 WEST . EAST A 76 4 5 ♦ Q108 5 ¥J974 ♦ 95 ♦108432 4Q887S 4KJ10 SOUTH ♦ AQ10982 ♦ AS ♦ Q 4A532 Both vulnerable West North East Sooth . X* Pass 24 Pass 34 Pass 44 Pms 4N.T. Pass S4 Pass 74 Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—4 7 By OSWALD AND JAMES JACOBY Once a partnership has committed itself- to going to game 111 bids below game are forcing. Tnis nukes it possible to gather extra information about your partner’s hand and to explore slam possibilities before getting past the game level. \ North and South deserve little Or edit for getting to seven spades and even less for making all 13 tricks. They could also have made seven no-trump if they had bid that grand slam. ★ -★ ★ They deserve little credit yet when the hand was played in a sectional tournament, almost half the pairs failed to get to the grand slam and only one or two managed to reach game. South’s jump to two spades made life easy for North. He might have gone right into a Blackwood routine but North was in no hurry. He wanted to find out a trifle more about his partner’s hand pattern so he temporized with a mere raise to three spades. South could do no more than continue to four spades. He had a mainumum for his two s jump response with good lades. At the same time the spade rebid gave North all the information he needed to be able to take full control by means of Blackwood. North held the perfect Blackwood hand with first- or second-round'control of ail suits. When South replied with five spades to show three aces North saw no reason to waste time checking for kings. He simply bid the grand slam. I He did have one slight worry. South might show up with three little diamonds. When dummy hit the table South announced, “Drawing trumps,” and spread his hand. ■ "jNrtF. — fPPPV , l~ Grangood, Drayton Plains Oovjd C Whaalar, 1*1 w................ and paborah L. Caldwell, Bavarly Thomas E. Ward, Rochastar and Gloria G. Garwood, Rochastar WatartOrd ai E- O'Neill, Clarkston . ©ary D. Woods, Highland and Kathletn A. Hicks. Waterford ci£• Jaggart, Farmington and Elizabeth H. Hodges, Farmington • ©•ra d t- Balding, Warren and Bavtrlt J. Dials, Troy Tarry L. Fields. Auburn Holghf- — Linda L. Fllhart, 220 South Lynn By Larry Lewis THE BERRYS THE BETTER HALF Q—Th® bidding has baen: West North East South Pass 2 4 Pass 24 Pass 44 Pass 54 Pass 8 ♦ Pass 7 You, South, hold: 4AK884 WQ65 4AK104 42 What do you do now? A—Bid six spades. Your partner is making a belated effort to got to seven but ho was willing to stop at game so his hand is limited. TODAYS QUESTION Instead of bidding four spades your partner has bid four no-trump over your two diamonds. You show two aces and he rebids to five no-trump. You show your two kings and he bids six spades. What do you do now? BERRY’S WORLD-By Jim Berry THE BORN LOSER l/T.. AMD SO SCO CAM TAKE V YOUR OOP, PUT IT |M A BOX Tie a BikiPiMK ribbon c rr amd drop it into the DEEP, BUIE SEA!.,, WHAT DO YOU HAVE ID By Carl Grubert \ I HAVEN'T BEEN DRIVING"1 ^7 for AN HOUR YET' ■------1 ZOOM/ 7 ZOOM' By Art Sansom S* By SYDNBY OMARR AQUARIUS (Jan. 10-Fato. II): cm fusion may axlsl In connection with r quests by rolotlvos. Stick to your own . vlows — stand toll. Takes court" ’• convictions. But you will win m n unusuoj^ontrse tor tonight would to a—o with noo Iks (M* ros surprL on# thing |W-.Spirit, l result. t tlnoncial'plor ARIkS (Morch 21-April tf): Day •eeturas surprises, sudden actions. You 1 thing and look lor now Holds to m —................■■ TAURUS (April 2»-May 30):----..... 1 'eaturod. What might hivo comas Into door locus. Improve. You got credit re. Kov to to l tango doe, not n Inciples. You are o FRIDAY IS Y< ituithM, sympe------- something of Import By Sopfomfaor, m us offorfo will boar tr M A; m\ By V. T. Hamlin ALL I KNOW as, any rarr, . TH’JOB PONE/ JWs'N IME f CAPTAIN EASY IF FRIDAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you " ------**-**- -kU^i igmg ______ .. fo OC- — _ many or ------- prevlou, offorfo will hoar Irulf. copyright Its*, Oeneral Features Carp. sllact. Moai •fid yog toe y dlflaranct ID 1»« by NIA, Ik. “Have you ever considered leaving the ghetto and changing your life style?” OUT OUR WAY ________I j restless. Rita ranees. cancer (June 31-July 33): Conflict between homo and duty can bo amicably solved, Kay 1s to bo versatile. Show family member that you do caro — —* that you will make concession. LIO (July 33-Aug. 32): Toko care w IIV (July t In transit, Be Hone. .Soma ra show If. M spi VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 32); dltions subject to chango. R the linos. Avoid being too fr specific and aworo of details. 1: Money con-Rood between r. 33-oct. it to chonga. Rood between tne linos. Avoid being too f with assets. Changes are net this and respond accordingly LIBRA (Sept. 33-Oct. 32): Fortnsrihlps, so alllanca are occontod. New Ideas ra. Olsagraemants could occur. Obto'-■1 from LEO message. Recognlie th cioea to you may be suporsanaltlva. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21>t Your ^bH» a Thursday, Aug. 28th, the 240th day of 1009, with 125 to follow. The moon is between its full phase and last quarter. The morning stars are Venua and Saturn. The evening stars are Mercury, Mars and Jupiter. ♦ * i * On this day In history: In 1883 the British Parliament banned slavary throughout the empire. fa, 1823 a New York realty company pa|d $100 to sponsor the first radjlb commercial Over WEAF. In 1883 more than 200, demonstrators staged an orderly civil rights lparch In Washington, D.C. It) 1808 the Democratic Parly nominated Hubert HUmprey to run for President ns Chicago police battled thoueaada of anti-war daman- TOPROCK FOR HIS PI5APPEAR- By Leslie Turner HBMUSJB KILT PA ANP HID THE QOLP1 HIE BROTHER NEVER APMITTBP TOPP'O CRIME, BUT EBEMEP OORB AT TH* SKUNK! AN' PAID MB PLENTY..,NO POUET /FROM TH* 5VMA»,„N0r BLAB MY SUSPICION! r—■ By Howie Schneider BOARDING HOUSE By Ernie Bushmiller THIS BOOK SAVS THAT BIRDS HAVE THE KEENEST EYESIGHT IN THE WORLD TUMBLEWEEDS THE SONS O'GERONIMO FELLERSHIP LODGE WILL SPONSOR A OL' FASHION' ARROW PEE MONPAY, AT WHICH ARROWS WILL PE MAPE FER THE PIG MASSACRE PLANNED FER TUESDAY. A GOOD TURNOUT IS HOPED FOR, AS THE LODGE WOULD HATET'SEEOUR P0V5 IN PATTLE TGET STUCK ‘THOUT NO ARROWS. By Tom Ryan donaLd DUCK ^y Walt Djsney C*-18 ' / ^ ■ THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST. 28, 1969 TINY ROLLS ROYCE - Irvin Woifson, 10, sits In a pint-sized Rolls Royce alongside a rare 1934 Phantom II Continental Rolls Royce sedan, both owned by his father. According to the senior Woifson, the mini-Rolls was produced by mistake for an owner of a full-sized Rolls who 1919 Rolls Result of Mix-Up ® AP Wirtphot* ordered a model of his own car for his children — but who did not tell the dealer his children were 5 and 7 years old and that he wanted a pedal-type car for them. The tiny car is available for sale at Wolfson’a garage in Edison Township, N.J. L|KrINNELL]S SAVE ON PIANOS • ORGANS • TV • STEREO • RECORDS • INSTRUMENTS Discontinued Models, Trade-Ins, Floor Samples, Many One-of-a-Kind ! Minicar-by-Mistake Is for i EDISON, N.J. (AP) - Want to buy a mini Rolls-Royce that’s only 9 feet long, less than 3 feet high and actually runs? Such a car—an exact miniature of the famous 1919 "Silver Marriage Licenses L*u J. Collin Hnklnton, fill Thom** w. WKk 1 Ihfran K. Mouil. Borkliy Bornond M. iH B. Franc* App.1. Oak Park d c. F.rrand, RochMtor and A . Alborl J, Au.rn.ny, Farmington and Joyce A. Unto. Farmington _ Cacti T. Lawrence, 471 South Boulevard But and Blda M, Mclntoih, MSS Ednr Carol A. Glech, Milford Howard 0. Wood Jr., 1*15 Olddlnge and Martha j, st. Clair, Ur * Larry A. Walker, L. Deaton, tof North HR Anthony J, DaCuma, troy and Florence R. Crook, Tray Chrltflan A. Hlrnalaon, Drayton Plalna end Marianna Hutton, *45 Northtiaid Charlet W. Knowlet, Bloomlleld H and Laura M. Bryce, St. Clair Shorot Kyle P, Viera, Royal Oak and Linda WIlMn, Troy John W- Mlalka it, Fund.1* Cynthia L *“—jUdl— Ghost", roadster — is parked among an array of prewar British automobiles in a nondescript garage in this township. ★ * * Walter Woifson obtained the minicar a number of years when he gave up his structural steel sales-engineering career to devote full time to his hobby of collecting classic vintage automobiles. Woifson, an affable man who untiringly explains the history of each of his cars to any inquiring visitor, buys and sells antique autos across the world. He also supplies unique cars for movies and advertisements. ORDERS DUPLICATE Explaining how the small roadster was built, Woifson recalled that in 1919 a Pennsylvania man, Arthur Llewellyn, dered a regular-sized Silver Ghost—a two-seater that was quite fashionable. been, handmade—down headlights, bumpers, wooden spoked wheels, full transmission, radiator emblem and everything else the "mother car" had. The vehicle, the 'only one of its kind in the world, is powered by a four-cylinder gasoline engine and will do about 30 miles per hour, Woifson added. ★ ★ *) at Baltimore (Pel- I Oakland (Dobson 14-10) at Detroit (Lot ten 16-7), nlgtit Kansas City (Bunker 1-10) (Culp 17-0) Only games scheduled. Friday's Games WASHINGTON" MINNESOTA Unser c) 4 0 0 0 yhlaendr ct*5 F Howard Hl|||lftdH^ .......... 3b 0 0 0 o •.DURR Versalles si 3 I 1 0 Renlck ington starter Joe Coleman, 9-’mer and drove in three runs the- Baltimore Orioles the Seattle Pilots 7-2 Wednesday night behind the four-hit pitching of Mike Cuellar, who won his 18th game. s o T o l 0 0 0 Klllebrew 3b 2 1 1 0 0 0 Reese lb 3 11 0 0 0. Manuel If 2 0 0 0 0 0 . 0 0 0 0 McMuIln 3b BAllan 2b Stroud it Versalles ss 3 I 1 0 Renlck ph Casanova c 3 0 0 0 Qullld 2b Colemah p 1 0 0 0 Roseboro c 4 0)2 Epstein ph 10 11 Cardenas ss 4 0 0 0 DSmfihph 1 0 0 0 JP,rrV P 4 0 0 0 Knowles p 0 0 0 0 Total 32 2 4.2 Total .......010 0 11 33 4 7 I 0 0 0 — 2 Washington 4, Uhlaender, A/Vaye, BOSTON (AP) - Sydney O’Brien cracked a bases-loadedp"'"sESr.... DU QUOIN,111. AP) — The Lomangino secretary. Fred, L| ifor 3-year-old trotters by win-.two-out single in the ninth in- coieman (l,o-id Lomangino and Antonaccl fami-and Joseph Lomangino,.ning the Kentucky Futurity in ning driving in Boston’s winning lies climaxed a truly great, brothers, also are in the cor-1 Lexington Oct. 3. Last month, run as the Red Sox shaded Kan- Minnesota 10. rags-to-riches story when their jporation. So are the Antonaccl 215,000 purchase, Lindy’s Pride, brothers, Frank "and Thomas, won the $124,910 Hambletonlan Lindy’s Pride, sired by the Wednesday. great Star’s Pride, and bought They started out as garbage as a yearling at Harrisburg, collectors in Brooklyn and built Pa., earned $62,455 for his vie* a hauling and carting empire, tory in the Hambletonlan, Then in 1964 they decided to harness racings most quit working and go into some prestigious stake, form of recreation. They en- The smallish colt boosted his tered harness racing. record to six triumphs in 12 * * * starts this season and earnings Guy Antonaccl became presi- for two years to $213,601. dent of Lindy Farms of Lin- The next big target is to denhurts, N.Y., and Frank'complete the triple crown sweep for U.S. Open Crown FOREST HILLS, N. Y. (AP) games and pick up some cash in! — Ion Tiriac and He Nastase the Open, which got under way are a couple of tennis gypsies, Wednesday before a record from Communist Romania who, opening day crowd of 11,6 are unworried about getting the West Side Tennis Club, contaminated with some capl- * * * talistic silver and gold. Tiriac, 30, shaggy and lmpos- They have their eyes on the'ing, won his opening match, $16,000 first prize in second U.S. j beating young Terry Ryan of Open and the big silver bowl of South Africa 9-7, 7-5, 5-7, 841. inestimable value which is Nastase, troubled by the fast called the Davis Cup. |bounce, trailed Ian Crookenden finishes. “I think our chances of win-j of New Zealand 4-6, 6-4, 4-6 in a! third with 8-2 for $14,898 ning the Davis Clip are very;match halted by darkness. 1 Dayan, 3-4, collected $9,992 and slim, said Nastase, a young, The Romanians looked eveniAmbro let with Joe O'Bripn dark-haired man with long side- more menacing when a player Jas 4 5 worth $6 245 bUI|nS«J,Thl 8Urf.aC* la t0° faat^hey both had beaten in the In- The other8i ou’t 0f the money and he Americans are too ter-Zone final, Britain’s Mark flnished tBte way. Vtetpoint good. Cox, pulbd the biggest upset of Harold Dancer Jr„ 5-6; Delbert TO MEET U.8. the day, ousUng flfth-seeded HanovePi Bll, Haughton, 641; Tiriac and Nastase form the Tom Okker of Holland, 1968 run-. Bonfire Hanover, John Simpsor two-man team which will try to ner'uP’ '*°;8'3’ J8’8'’’8'7- ; Sr., 9-7 and Gun Runner, Earl WH '* . .. , .. Avery 7-scratch. Another upset saw the British - L......... Davis Cup Coach and Wimbledon pro, Owen Davidson, trounce South Africa’s eighth-seeded Cliff Drysdale 6-2, 6-3, 6-4. Drysdale eliminated favored Pride took the first jewel, the $100,000 Yonkers Futurity, and then came the second with a blazing straight heat victory in the 44th Hambletonlan. Howard Beissinger, Pride’s 46-year-old driver, won in his first appearance in the classic. He never had to touch the colt with the whip, winning the first heat on the perfectly-groomed mile oval by l'A lengths over stretch-charging The Prophet in 1:57 3-5. It matched the second fastest time ever of the Hambletonlan, where the record of 1:56 4-5 was set in 1964 by Ayres. Lindy’s Pride took the second heat by a good two lengths over Dayan .in 1:58 2-5 after a bumping incident' on the first turn that made tempers rise for several drivers. Dayan, reined by Fred Bradbury, a other Hambletonlan newcomer, was set down to fourth place by the judges on an interference charge- Smokey Morn, piloted by Ned Bower, was placed from third to second and The Prophet, Harold Dancer Sr., from fourth to third. It changed the summary and money rewards for thoT volved. In the summary The Prophet took second place money of $31,227 with his 2-3 Smokey Morn was sas City 4-3 Wednesday night. The Red Sox were leading 3-2 going into the ninth when Jerry Adair’s leadoff homer tied it for the Royals. Then, with two out in the bottom of the ninth, George Scott singled and raced to third on a hit by Russ Gibson. Dick Schofield batted for winning pitcher Vicente Romo and walked, loading the bases for O'Brien. ry—his first complete game in |, the majors. KANtAS CITY Kelly rf 'lor# lb ... I MM “Inlelle If 4 0 J 6 Yilrrr.„, , (Irkptrck e» 4 o o p RSmlth ct .... Foy 3b 4 « 2 0 Petroclll if 4* l 2 *■*— 4 121 AConloIro rf 3 0 0 # .... «. 4 a 3 o i * 11 -------- 4 0 2 * 0 0 0 0 Romo p 3 0 1 4 10 0 Schofield ph 0 0 0 ....... .. .... m.inllflirO ERodrgez c 911 I Scott lb li-----oboe Gibson c win the Davis Cup from the United States at Cleveland Sept. 19-21. In the meantime, they'll 'be trying to sharpen their jiljaf) — too ti24,«io taua 2- 3 031.227 0-2 114,000 3- 4 10,002 4- 5 06,245 Lindy's Pride, H. Beiuenaer The Prophtti H. Dancer Sr. Smokey Morn. N. ower Dayan, F. Bradbury Ambroiet, J. O'Brien Delbert Hanover, w. Hauphtoi Yanks Down Chisox to End Losing Streak NEW YORK (AP) - When Knowlos J.perry (W,16-5) . HBP—by i Colei................I Coleman. PB- Casanova. T—2:14. ,16,749. Coleman (Reese). WP- Bases-loaded Hit Paces Angels Win CLEVELAND (AP.) - Rich Reichardt tripled home three runs in the 10th inning after Jim t* J 4 \, 0 # fi Romo got credit for the ^ , «...____£ ‘he ninth with a homer and the p-itimor. ? The victory ended a four-game losing streak for the Orioles, longest of the season for the runaway leaders of the American League’s East Division. Robinson homered in the third following a single by Paul Blair, and rapped a run-scoring single in the fifth off reliever John Gel-nar after Blair's double chased loser George Brunet, 7-11. San Diego ......... 37 M _________ B Wtdn.tday'1 r.,uii, San Francisco I, Philadelphia 7, 10 1 ''tfouston 5, St. Louis 1 Cincinnati 6^ Chicago 3 abrhbt SEATTLE BALTIMORB abrhbl Harper 3b 3 0 10 Buford .. ., . Simpson cf 1 0 0 0 Belanger u 412 Hovley rf 3 0 0 0 Blair cf 4 2 2 Comer rf 3 110 FRoblnm lb 2 2 2 TDevla if 4 12 2 Molten rf 2 0] Goossen lb 4 0 0 0 Rettenmd rf 0 o 0 Paglronl c 1 0 0 0 BRobln “ Renew c 2000 Djohnson 2b 4 b 0 Donaldtn 2b 3 0 0 0 RtchaW _ Clark ii 2 0 0 0 Hendrcka c 3 0 0 0 Cuellar p Gil ph 1 v u » Lockwood p 0 0 0 0 toblnan 3b 4 O 0 3— “ 4 00 200 2 ] 1 401 35 3 » 3 Total 32 4 f winning run scored. .. 000 020 00 1 — ..030 000 001-. Petrocelll. OP—Kansas 1. LOB—Kansas City 6, Boston 7. SB—Scott, Romo. HR— Petrocelll (31), Kelly (7), Adair (3). SB— Foy. S—Andrews. i—OBrlen, R TR BB SO 4 4 4 3 ooker (L,4-tl) .... 0 2-3 9 lomo (W.69) . 9 9 « * 1 / WP—Romo. T—2:25. A—20,717. Cards Hole-ln-One H. A. Pfoff need the 183-yard No. 2 hole at Plum Hollow this ..MRPHRIVPW week. He used a 4-wood for the uew#w*!, . ' ‘’^ 'Mashore and Danny Breeden. Save -K.Tatum. PB—Suarei. Southfield Gal | Rod Lavor in last year's tournament, opening the way for a vie-1 Ends Drought ff!by Ame,lc''!‘Arthor “* I f | • | I SERVE TIPS on Go If Links Ashe, serving with more zip, won easily over 18-year-old 'Dickie Stockton of Garden City, The first victory of the season N.Y., 6-2,6-2, 7-5 and was joined was a long time coming for in the second round by his Dagis Mrs. Max Evans of Southfield Cup teammates, Clark Graeb-in the weekly events of the 1 ner and Stan Smith. Women's Metropolitan Golf Graebner, from New York, Association. 'whipped Tom Mozur of Sweet-! ,. ... A six-time winner last year, I water, Tenn.. 6-0, 7-5, 6-2. Smith Mrs. Evans checked In with her crushed Patricio Rodriguez of!{|n. . f’j P ■ initial triumph of the present Chile, P KaXS S.Ia campaign yesterday as she led * *. „ in the leadoff spot. The rest of a field of 59 in competition at The other member o the var- ^ battln ordensn't that easy. Romeo Country Club sity squad, Bobby Lutz of Us Clarke *sIammed four ringi(fJ After an uneventful front nine Angeles, lost to third-seeded iin j-iv-. wedneidav th» of 46. Mrs. Evans collected four|Tony Roche of Australia 9-11, 6-K York Yankees snapped a pars and a birdie for an in. 4, 6-4, 9-7. 'five-name losinn streak udth a! coming 39 and a total of 85, five! 'The Australians showed theirvictery over the Chicago! shots ahead of runner-up Mrs. musc'e' lj®v®r> seeking hiSj^^Hg ^ yj,e ||)ree g|ngjeg David Mortimer of Birmingham, j second grand slam, toppled Luis j an(; a doub|e |n f jve at-bats The ladies move to Pontiac!E»rcl» cf Mexico 6-2, W, •-*; rained his average to .298, tops! Country Club next Wednesday “°"n NeWcombe, NO. 2 seedjon a team wnb a collective al.i____a___At. KrAovnrl nnct Paul Ciil!•■»*»•» a$i -- for their next outing. I breezed past Paul Sullivan of!mni.i. „> •» Wayland, Mass., 6-2, 6-2, 64. | K 01 23 47^mSo Ken Rosewall No. 6, struggled AJri. Tony AAHcholl, Detroit 41 -42—ft (a a flVHfit victOTV OVW Peter i!ri‘ BUOY Oeerborn SS3I9 , i si IT « ia B « Mr». Fioyo vernier, mrm. Cramer of South Africa M, 5-7, Mfft. Non Donlolty airmingHom 41-47—ffL a jo m a n .. r> XT mih vicki tui, Detroit .4649—4164, 4-6, 6-4. Roy Emerson, No. n Liiw SHrU 9- had little trouble with Zeljko Apirlclo II 5 0 2 1 Mlclwtl, ■ nnr». rr«™ URngroro {MS' PlPil Mr*. Don Sheppard, I Mr*. Vincent sirumli Ml** j*ni* c*- Mr*. Doelay « Mri. Joteph g 4 0 10 Murcer rf 3 110 Con 3b 3 0 11 ZllX B----- n ff 11 4 000 4 110 4 12 1 f 0i 0 I lorry cf Know tb CBrkmen ..... „ McCraw oh 1 0 0 0 Beehmer Pevetlch c 0 0 0 0 Itotlmyr* Total unto » CoTtbrek ~t Kerkenin, Uvonie 49-40-97! A . . r,Peter, p 3 06b “im*r#mek S0-W-9H » » * Ward ph 100 0 Mr£ wiiiiev 'VrtinSn, &wr8l »3rZ*9! Old Pancho Gonz.ales.-41. beat B J J 2 f Jttnwtw. W wene. ^ Potthnd of Caperino, Calif., T„„ ----- Detroit^ 4646-94;- Mr*. Vesclle Cove, 6-3. 6^, 6-4. ' Chlcw The wompn played the firstre'-cfc’ bpi-Ww York t^LOB^chh round tod»y- Nine postponed — * ““ v*’k * “ GtStlk*' Detroit'*iIti^ioJ4' Lew' wpl! matches were to be resumed in Mrr&'Nwtw^b* men’* 20,000-mile guarantee Equals original equipment BRAKE OVERHAUL Seif- •djuiting S4 more linings * • Check greoie teal* Check wheel cylinders • Inspect ell fluid lines Check master cylinder • Install new fluid fern all faur drums • Bleed, ad|ust brakes Test drive automobile 278®. 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Belt SJ£r* lii 73S/14-F78/14 558 2.4.1 775/14-F78/14 558 2.54 825/14G78/14 558 2.66 055/14-H78/14 164 .2.11 778/15-F78/ IS 558 2.45 825/15-078/15 558 2.62 . B55/15-H78/1S 564 2.51 88S/15-J78/15 564 2.85 915/15-178/15 564 2.97 PERFORMANCE PLUS 78 4+2 GLAS BELT 2,*58 Most eny site listed DRAYTON PLAINS CENTERS riMtak M00Uiis Hwy.. -Pheoo 3310338 Ogse II ts I; 1st 8-JO is 0; Ses. esse ts 8 c 1272 Mils Mary., -Pbseo 121-1131 sa. An Fri. I is 1.1st. 8 ts t PONTIAC CENTER ________334-2515 Ogee Moe. thni Set. 8 to I DETROIT CENTER WtrtM at Connsr - Phone 122-1332 Ipm Mon. this Sst. 8 to I; See. mm m I si* Y Tire Discounts U ' I i £‘X_ K : * D—-A ____THE POXTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, I960 O.J., Sayers in Cleveland / Oilers After Texas Grid Title By the Associated Press The Houston Oilers, sporting the best squad In years, hope to snap the Dallas Cowboys’ hold on the Texas Pro Championship tonight in a sell-out game at the GETS A LOOK AT HIS NUMBER - Pete Retzlaff (right) general manager of the Philadelphia Eagles profootball team shows Leroy Keyes the uniform jersey he will be wearing after the number one draft choice had signed a three-year contract yesterday that could make him one of the highest paid players in the Eagles history. Morton has a slight edge over Pete Beathard, the Oilers’ rapidly maturing quarterback. In three games, Beathard 'has completed 35 of 71 passes for 534 yards and four touchdowns while Astrodome which kicks off a 13- Morton has hit on 39 of 77 for game holiday weekend pro-! 561 yards and three touchdowns. . 8ram Another grudge game is on *tnee stra*n- , Coach Wally Lemm warned,tap Friday night when the Kan-1RAM SUSPENDED his Oilers to watch for quick sas City Chiefs, unbeaten in four The Rams will be minus vet-outside and up the middle plays! exhibitions and the hottest team | eran cornerback Clancy Wil-when he learned that the Dallas jin the American Football Hams, who was Indefinitely sus-starting back field will Include League meet the Cardinals at St pended by Coach George Allen Craig Baynham and Les Shy. Louis for the Governors’ Cup. Wednesday “That’s their speed back-|The Chiefs won the Inaugural; Allen threatened to trade Wil-field." Lemm said. 'game last year 13-10 and are fa- Hams because of his “indiffer- The Oilers also will have an vored to repeat. lent attitude.” eye on Cowboy quarterback jn Saturdays games, the New “There’s more to this game Craig Morton, who stepped in York Giants (0-2) meet the Phil- than just ability,” Allen said. “Ij For Playoff Hopefuls Ticket Printing Begins NEW YORK (AP) — Ten, The representatievs decided -teams, including seven in the there would be a day of travel National League, have the {between the second and third green light to start printing tick- i playoff games only if the clubs ets for baseball’s first divisionali had to jump from one coast to! playoffs for the league pennants'the other, but for six of the teams, the * ★ * tickets will only be souvenirs. Joe Cron|n and barren Giles, - The clubs given the go-ahead .presidents of the American and for retired Don Meredith to direct the multiple formation Dallas attack. It was Morton who came off the bench late in the game the last two years to clinch 30-17 and 33-19 thrillers | for the Cowboys. adelphia Eagles (1-1) at Princeton!, N. J.; Los Angeles (1-2) is at San Diego (2-1-1); Chicago (2-2) faces Buffalo (14) and Green Bay (1-2) takes on Cleveland (2-0-1) in a doubleheader at Cleveland; Miami (04) hosts Both teams have identical 2-1 Baltimore (4-0); New Orleans Ipre season records and almost (1-2) entertains Atlanta (2-1), | identical rushing records. Dal- and Cincinnati (1-2) travels to las has averaged 120 yards on Pittsburgh (1-1). i the ground while allowing 86 In Sunday games, San Fran-I yards qn defense. Houston has cisco (0-3) is at Oakland (1-3), | averaged 126 yards to itsyoppo- Minnesota (3-0) faces the Jets nents’ 86 yards. 1(2-2) In New York, and Boston (1-2) entertains Denver (1-2),, i five times for 25 yards and re-Tucker Frederickson will {turned a kickoff for 23 yards, make his first start for the I In other pro camp activities: Giants and Philadelphia expects j PUNTER OUT their ground game to improve | FULLERTON, Calif. UP) Ji with the return of Tom Wood-i Rookie running back Jeff eshick, who missed the early Jordan Umped on ^ injured pre-season games because of a rlght .nkle Wednesday and will be/hSst indefinitely to the Los Angeles Rams. The Rams also disclosed that punter Jon Kilgore has released on waivers, leaving another veteran, Pat Studstill, to handle the job. GIANTS CUT FAIRFIELD, Com. (J) — The New York Giants claim linebacker Bob Sanders on waivers from the Los Angeles Rams Wednesday. At the same time the National Football League team said four regulars, suffering from injuries, would not be able to play against the Philadelphia Eagles in the exhibition at Princeton,' Whitewalls, Tubeless TIRE i ICHQC | 7.75x14 lURvicEj 7.00*13 9D9D 8.25x14 ILiiSJtJU If 1 I 8-55x14 Free Mounting BRAND NEW-FULL 4-PLY WHITEWALLS 6.50x13 - $14.95 i 1.871 7.00x13 -i $15.95 • 1.94 7.75x14 - $16.95 l 2.20 7.75x15 - $16.95 f 2.21 8.25x14 - $18.95 i 2.36 8.15x15 - $18.95 4 2.38 8.55x14 — $20.95 ) 2.571 8.45x15 - $20.95 ( 2.57 llourtt Mon.-Fri. 8-8,Slit. 8-6 TIRE SERVICE CO. Pontiac 190 W. Walton Blvd. Ph. 332-5888 don’t care if he has intercepted 19 passes the last three years. He has had an indifferent attitude toward the game and toward practice this season.” The appearance of Buffalo’s . J. Simpson and Chicago’s Gayle Sayers on the same field'N.J., Saturday. , has helped lure a sell-out crowd1 The four, are offensive tackle for the doubleheader at Cleve- Willie Young, sprained, ankle; land. Simpson played about half right guard Charley Harper,! the game in last weekend’s 20-71pulled hamstring; linebacker! losing encounter with Balti-jTommy Crutcher, sprained! more. The most publicized rook- j ankle, and safety Bruce Maher, ie in pro football history carried! shoulder separation. Come In and See Our Large Selection of One Owner, Late Model Cadillacs Today! JEROME 675 S. Saginaw 333-7025 Cadillac Sales KSflSAVE *8 ON RIVERSIDE® National Leagues, respectively, also said a one-game sudden death playoff would be held in the event of division ties for first place at the end of the regular season. Wednesday were Baltimore, runaway leader in the American League East, and Minnesota and Oakland in the AL West. In the National League, Chicago and New York were named in the East and Cincinnati, San Fraftcisco, Atlanta, LoS Angeles and Houston in the seesaw NL |f West. BEST OF FIVE The playoffs, a best-of-five i series, are scheduled to start on Saturday, Oct. 4, The AL playoffs will start in the home city of the East winner, presumably Baltimore; while the NL series will begin in the home of the West Division champion, After the first two games, the teams wifi shift to the home city of the rival club. Winners of the league playoffs will win berths in the World Series, a bost-of-seven contest, starting on Saturday, Oct. 11 in the American League city. Representatives of 12 clubs were invited to the meeting in the office of Baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn. The St. Louis Cardinals and the Pittsburgh Pirates, currently third and fourth in the NL East, tended the meeting but were ) „ given permission to start print- j| rh*°* 626-,S00 §:! ing tickets. | Sale endi Sunday tim tun bring Intm in now, for • upon ftpairi and tuno-U, YIAE ABOUND SKI SMS EXTRA HEAVY DUTY 50-MONTH GUARANTEE BATTERY 12-VOLT EXCHANGE REGULAR EXCHANGE PRICE $25 Here's a battery with more rugged power than most heavy-duty brands. Powerline construction for fast starts in any weather. Gives continuous, trouble-free service and added power for use of your automobile accessories. Don't wait for your battery to fail... replace it today with Wards extra-heavy-duty battery at great savings! 8.29x14 8.99x14 *45x14 LAREDO RAIN TIRES BUCKS 4 lor PLUS FED. EX. TAX THE WIDR8T OF THK WIDE OVAL TINES Wide Tiger Paw POLYGLAS BELTED BLEM. RED & WHITEWALL 0x14 2.33 FIT F-70xl4 J# XO50 BLEM. TIRES CANNY FULL R0A0 HAZARD GUARANTEE 10-QT. CAN RIVERSIDE® ALL SEASON MOTOR OIL Save 1.30 >99 Reg. 4.20 All Season, the motor oil designed for sever* service! Gives free oil flow at all temperatures and driving conditions. SAE grad* I0W-30. Hurry in. | all seofij! M oro KING 31 W. MONTCALM, PONTIAC 608 N. PERRY ST. 20 STEREO TAPE PLAYER Your own style of music with just * flick of e switch! With volume, balance end tone controls, push button program selector. Save today! OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10 A.M. TO 9:0(1 P, SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 5 P.M. • 682-4940 THE PONTIAC THURSDAY. AUGUST 28. 1969 form Boy Getting * New View of Trgck D—a | FORD JDARUNGTON, S. C. (AP)-Twenty years ago today, flamboyant Curtis Turner took his CBdsmobile race car around the npwly-built Darlington International Raceway at 82.03 miles per hour—to the amazement of etoy°ne AMERICAN LEAGUE for him the pole posi-! Southern 500. fhg* f°r the first 500-mile race I Yarborough for strictly stock cars* Turner, just beginning a driving career that was to make him wealthy, was the toast of this town of 8,000 for weeks.. Cale Yarborough, then year-oj^farm boy, scrambled OAt R H Pel. *7 364 70 190 .352 ; c!24 453 99 147 . 119 499 75 156 .317 C123 433 69 133 .307 fence to s weatherbeaten old Darlington to turn a lap at 151.985 m.p.h. in a Mercury. It won for him the pole spot for the 20th running of the Kentucky Derby of stock car racing scheduled for Labor Day. Yarborough, who now lives in year-end combination A GREAT COMBINATION OPEN HOUSE AND YEAR-END ] SALE IS NOW IN PROGRESS AT OUR NEW LOCATION. EVERY NEW FORD IS RED-LINED TO GO. -A SPECIAL SAVINGS GIFT Z, TO YOU. YOU HELPED US UP, WE'LL NEVER LET YOU DOWN. MVEISIDE* RUNABOUT 48" high fane* includes ell line post, top rail & fencing. Beautifies as it protects! Endipost, gate, and fittings extra. Price based on 100-ft. or mere. OPEN LABOR DAY 9 A.M. - 4 P.M. ANY 1 SIZE LISTED TUBELESS BLACKWALL, + 2.07-2.57 F.E.T. EACH AND TRADE-IN TIRE OFF YOUR CAR WHITEWALLS $3 MORE EACH 7.35-14 7.75- 14 7.75- 15 8.25-14 8.15-15 Big savings. 4-ply nylon cord body. 24-month ' guarantee against tread wearout. 4.50-13 ONLY $11 •(* 1.79 FAT. AND TRADE-IN TIRE OFF YOUR CAR LARGER SIZES ONLY $18 + FAT. IJMBERCOMPANY '•OME BUILDERS DISCOUNT DEPT. STORE 7940 COOLEY LAKE RD., UNION LAKE H i * It If 11 OPEN MONDAY THRU FJRIDaY IO AJVL JG 9:00 I’ M. | Vmt iafV V/| ni • SATtjRDAX-9:.MMrTD fdO P.M. i UllLHXV. lT.lXtll SUNDAY NOON'TO'S P.M; iia D—a .THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AtlGljJST 28/1969 ^JSysricir WWI, „ Jj.,, _ «»■ Ho FLANNERY FORD HAS TWO BIG STORES TO SERVE YOU BETTER. ONE AND ONE IN METROPOLITAN DETROIT. WE NAVE HIKE HARO TO GET POPULAR BODY STYLES. SELECT FROM AN INVENTORY OF OVER 205 UMTS; PLYSCORE 1x6 1 redwood Airport in M-59 Piano Reds Top Sagging Cubs, 6-3 Once-Lowly Mets Feasting on Expansionist Padres By the Awodated Press 'themselves against one of thisi The 4-1 triumph crept the beat the Padres 4-1 on six hitsja row against Cincinnati and.in besting Dock Ellis, 0-14, for It took the New York Metsiseason’s new kids on the block,[charging Mets within twoiduring an earlier U-game Mets’ seventh in nine games, fell be- Atlanta’s fourth triumph in a seven years to recover from the] the San Diego Padres. jgames—and even on the all-im-1 winning streak that brought I fore Alex Johnson’s two-run1 row. National League’s first expan-i With Koosman, who hurled a|portant loss side—of the sinkingithem alive in May and Jyne andldouble and solo homer and Lee] sion, but the second one has] two-hitter, once again taking ad-1 Chicago Cubs, the East Division turned out to be a big hit for vantage of San Diego hitters leaders who were beaten by Cin-them—and Jerry Koosman.land embarrassing pitcher Claylcinnati 6-3 in the afternoon for After taking their lumps fromjKirby, the Mets rolled to their their fourth consecutive defeat, the older teams since they camel 11th straight victory over the! Cincinnati’s victory matched into die league in 1962, the Mete j expansionist Padres Wednesday |San Francisco’s 8-7, 10-inning won 3-2 on five hits during their May’s two-run homer, current six-game run—and IX of * ★ * 13—that has cut Vh games off • Jim Davenport’s pinch-hit sin-Chicago’s lead in two weeks. gle with the bases loaded in the suddenly have become bullies might. l/.S. Sail Team Edged LONDON UR — A British) The British defeated the universities team clinched the Americans, 3-2, in an event for Sir Thomas Upton Trophy for Firefly Dinghies — Dinghies of sailing boats over a United 12 feet — in an event decided States intercollegiate team on by the best out of five races, the Lake of the Welsh Harp ln| The Cubs, losing their third in northwest London Wednesday. Slugger Finds Slow Pitches No Easy Marks The Americans were represented by Dave Coit, Yale, Tim Hogan, Southern California, Tom McLaughlin and Ed Butler of San Diego State, Richard Doyle of Notre Dame and his brother, Robert Doyle of Harv- afternoon verdict over Philadelphia and kept the ,Rcds within al half game and three percentage points of the first-place Giants in the West Division. it it it Atlanta, a half game and five points back, also kept pace with a 1-0 victory over Pittsburgh, and Los Angeles remained one game behind with a 7-3 triumph over Montreal. Houston, three games back, beat St. Louis 5-1 1 1 0 Kntlngtr u 4 I 1 0 Backer" 2b, J 1 3 I BWIIIami If 3 «00 Santo 3b 5 10th gave San Francisco its seventh consecutive victory after Willie McCovey made it 10 RBI in two days with a two-run single and his 41st homer with a -------1. Bobby Bmids also hadi Willie Davis drove in three runs with two of his three hits as he extended his hitting streak to 24 games, longest in the majors this season, and helped Singer of the Dodgers to his 16th victory and Montreal to its seventh successive " Doug Rader triggered a four- 0 Kenton NOIfvtr pr two-run homer, his third in ™ 10t^ i Ri,n,g Gjb®w ’ two days, and singled and 6:9-witht * tie-breaking double ii---. .r ------------• I for Houston, raising Tom Grif- fin’s record to 9-6. scored the winning run. l\ Phil Niekro, 18-11, hurled a ...........^'six-hitter, doubled and scored \ *1 j the only run in the sixth it i, cnica8b~3.i inning on Tony Gonzalez’ single :ago 10. 2B— ° ' ° m S*T° (j7)/| MONTRI ,TOlF*r * 23 S } "} J& WBH«agi».z | t iMKN Save—Carroll. HBP—by Holtllfian I WljPj [olan), ^ Holtimaifi ^(Tolan^, - PITTSBURGH (AP) - The "softball floats across the plate *^iHd slugger Frank Thomas I MICHIGAN MEMBER in 10 innings in the other game. The Mets, who lost only their first game against the Padres this season, bid a sad farewell to San Diego after their sixth straight victory. Koosman, on the other hand, couldn’t be sure whether he was more sorry to The United Stites team tsjleave &n Diego or Wrby. sponsored by the Intercollegiate Against the rest of the Nation- r ift fL pl- ]C I Yacht Racing Association of f1 nL,ea«”e » Pitche,rs- ^man 1011 IU UllCIi, / J| 1 North America. 8 J orf ’ £ut “g he‘ is 3-for-5 nfter two hits,Wednes- SAN ERANCISCO *5 1 Vi Mason 3b S 0 1 0 8 13 4 Hunt 2b 5 1 3 j 3 0 10 Mayo cf 4 10 0 I 4 f O 0 Burda rf 10 01 0 0 0 0 McCovty lb 4 3 3 4 4 0 0 0 Bonaa rf 12 3 2 5 110 Mandarin If 10 01 4 12 2 Marihall If 2 0 0 1 5 12 1 DMz C 4 111 0 Devanpr* ph l 0 0 MCormck p 2 l Sagging Mud Hensf Buy N w t Volkowagen tor repair or water hoae re-placemen* eoota. Mom aavinga. Even if you bend a VW fender, you aave. It can bo removed by loosening only 10 boll*. You A Volkswagen goes a lot farther don't pay for die whole' tide of on a gallon of resular sm ... the car. about 27 miles. So, if yon buy a VW, you’ll save on gaaoline. A VW average* about 40,000 mile* on original tirea. That’s about twice a* far ai moat ear*. You five on Urea. Bny your Volkswagen now, and save oven more. Como in and see ns right away before car prices go even hi^s-art We’ll save one for yon. A VW is air-cooled. So yon ean forget about antifreese, radio- BILL GOLLING Volkswagen, Inc., “Where Service Comat Firtt” Maple Road (15 Mile) Aoroaa from Ben Airport Between Crooks and Coolidge Roads Mon. and Thun.-V P.M.. Tuss, Wad., M. and SaK-APJ*. LOCATED IN TUE TEOY MOTOR MALL Fine Selection of Reconditioned Used Cora Ml 2-6900 day night. swings and misses. He smacks! The others on the team are Koosman’s line single, hlal the next pitch to left—a single. Chris Seaver of Yale, John jfirst hit in 49 at bats, in the , ,Thomas, the same Frank Thomas who belted 286 home rims during a 13-year career with aeven Clubs, has a hefty .440 average in the Greater Pittsburgh Sow Pitch Softball League. Meyer of Michigan and Leslie]third Inning, started a rally t! Oessenger of the University of California, Santa Barbara. The Americans defeated Bri-ban’s Hayllng Island Sailing Club, a combined Brttiah services team and Britain’s Wembley Sailing Club on Its tour, "Once you’re an athlete, you hove pride In keeping yourself in shape,” Utomas said. . j _ . , . . .. "If vou let vourself so vou 11,8 team also def<®ted the lose pride I enjoy playing | Universltiea^ In Gotland, softball for that reason. „ *ost Pfjf8]"8 "At first I thought It was just Bosham Sailing Club . . mm as .. 7L m . - *__Mfltk OnAtflAW Qpllii a big joke,’’ the' 8-foot-S, pound. Thomas said. "Me play softball? But then found it was more difficult tha , I thought. In baseball you’re (used to holding the bat,out, waiting for the quick pitch. Here, I keep the bat on my ’ shoulder and wait for the ball." ★ h * Thomas said he didn’t find it easy to hit well against the slow, arching softballs when he switched from baseball three years ago. with another British team, Castaways. Overall, the Americans scored 14 victories, lost four and tied once. ended In Cleon Jones’ two-run double for a 2-1 lead. He beat out a topper in the seventh. His only other hit this year, pff Kirby, was n bunt single. Kirby, taking his 18th loss against three victories, had other troubles in the sixth when Art Shamsky doubled in a run and scored on Ken Boswell’s single. Koosman, 12-8, and 3-0 against San Diego, yielded only a homer to Ollie Brown and a single to Al Ferrara in the first inning. He By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS j The sinking Toledo Mud Hens] all but saw their hopes of a first-division finish in the International League destroyed Wednesday as they lost to the Syracuse Chiefs 7-5. It was the Mud Hens’ third loss hi as many days. A double by pave McDonald a single by M&rv Staehle, passed ball and a sacrifice gave Syracuse the runs It needed in the 10th Inning. The loss moved the Mud liens to 10 games back of the new league leaders, the Tidewater Tides. PALACE’S AUTO WASH Radar 2b 4 Edwards e 3 Griffin p 3 MTS Shamiky. HR—O.B Gladding Gibson (L« I WP—Griffin. T—2 Wash • Wax • Air-Dried 92 DALDWIN DICK FLANNERY SAYS, WE HAVE THE CARSandTRUCKS @FAIRLANES staroair it CtonifitB & i v i o aangumn c 0 0 0 Martlnti. 21 0 0 0 Patak m. 0 0 0 Cilia p Receiver on Waivers Total 31 0 0 Q ii m v.;zj )P—Atlanta 1, Mania 5. Plttiburah NEW ORLEANS (AP) -Wide receiver David McDaniels, placed on waivers by tha Loa Angelas Rams; has been acquired by the New Orleans Saints. \ unwr 7) MUSTANGS BIG FORDS TfE^pAHpsAtVl1 ToU TN| PRICE INCREASE! 623-0900 °Wa£?£rdHT 5806 DIXIE HWY., WATERFORD 623-0900 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1969 Horse Race Results 4Teams 0pen Sept 20 D—7 ; Hazel Park Results "MULTS >7.20 7.00 43 Ace's B.bv Famous eric 2nd—01700 cam Artor Wav Trail .im—02700 Cond. Pact; 1 Mllai Livonia Boy Johnny G feg- f&TSSSi cfalmina Paco* .*1 "jjlltei Cinney Spring Fever Roman Empire -M-,, Mighty AAcKlyo l SSL3™ P«ul Cathman loth—$1700 Claiming Pace; 1 Mile: 7 40 j Royaf Robert* Big 10, Irish Await Workouts v.ano s uauqnter DAILY DOUBLE: 0-1 Paid 001.20 Srd-OllOO Cond. Trot; 1 Milt: Lutlne . toon 7.40 4 oo WBB?lrna’*r*"*n 3.00 Enoian4#Ad|,*lm,nfl TrM' ’ * John" Express M0 I K Mr, Bissonav a an a on Mils Amy Adlos ,»;Jo ***»—***•? Cd"d. Paco; 1 Mila: Morris Seotiman 19.70 7.80 mKThsIiw*1 PERPBCTA 7-0 Paid 0110.00 711^-01700 Cond. Trot; 1 Mila: Spar5" »•« 54° Dutchess Exoraso Cond. Paco; 1 Mila: May Western 3.10 3.00 w iwn-n/w uaimi 10 Cottonwood Misty K) Kino Herber* j Warhoops DRC Results RESULTS Mile 70 ____ 540 3.40 3.60 0 ....... 0 To7r*¥ridg»' 1 George RH^^^fcUBLI NolW^WL ...... 3rd—02000' ‘ Claiming; 1 Mila 70 yards: 10 Time To Sing 9.00 4.00 m Delta Pass ..so £ York Eagle 4th—02100 Claiming; 0 Furlongs: CHICAGO (AP) - Almost 900 candidates will start flexing their muscles Friday as the Big Ten and Notre Dame launch; [practice for the 1969 football ! season. Michigan, 1968 runnerup to; unbeaten national and conference champion Ohio State, got the practice jump on Big Ten rivals. The Wolverine school, operating on the trimester academic schedule Tuesday began drills for a conference cam-; ipaign in which league coaches ■nmiou mint Dearborn's Hi Float Jolly NRPlCTA: i-CROWD: 5,411 HANDLE $447,073 Ig Paca; I Mila: 0.40 4.80 4.00 10.40 13.40 Hindlya 240 pPT. TWm DOUBLE M Paid (204.80 Hazel Park Entries 1..’ „,JH,W?AY'* ■htrieb eVo"* ■ Anna EnXr Doug's Don u. S. Pannv r£S" Pi!f ■L*- Mister Abbott Chjru.G.rl Bonnie Colby C!*,mln« Pott; 1 Mila: 8!?.i tpvshlp. C. Meadow Hal Dayla Blue The Mender Alfiona M. Mr C G gtjjtnt Pick Dream Craad Felix Fortm Cond* Trot; 1 Mile: Spot II Josadale Traasuri Adonis Dream High Lloyd GuMy Gallon Sudan's Special Nlaflara Scotty Bounty 4tls—01100 cond. Pace; 1 Lucky Night ---- a.® Adios Spoelal Paach Princess Cledella KsMalwood Linda Dancing Dream SMMI700 Cond. Paca; I Mila: Wdj'. Volo Pop's Adlos bfflparJBtut Boy., Long Gone I£pNa». Trudy Direct Cotfl Customer Cottonwood Blits ofh—$1400 Cond. Poco; 1 Mlloi Candy Sue St. Gatlan 0th—04SOO I Peggy's U-Round Pearl 5 40 3.20 CONSOLATION TWIN DOUBLE ^ Paid SSI 1.00 9th—03200 Claiming; 1 1/10 Milos; |h am 13.40 «.40 4.40 Rule Breaker 3.00 PgRFBCfAVNet, 7-1 Paid 095.00 —elusion HoBo's Elsie Met 4.20 ATTENDANCE 9.911 HANDLE: 0070,525 DRC Entries 1st—82500 Claiming; 4 Dovlled Ham Desert King 2nd—$2500 Maidtns; 4 Furlongs: El Politico Yo Ole Son Miss Rags Noble Greek Holme's Dancer Guess Right Magic Curtain G. R. Jonas Handsome Pilot* Lark's Folly Sin Allay 3rd—S2000 Claiming; 0 Furlongs: Commerc'sl Coda Gone Miss ' W. L. Beloved Windy Quest My Cornel Felaha's Love Sure Noisy . Count Phil Beau David Pop Oran End Shows Speed of 1st U-M Practice ANN ARBOR (UPI) - Mike Hankwitz is fast — fast enough to become the first Wolverine to capture a ‘‘champion award” from University of Michigan football coach Bo Schem-bechler. Unanimously agree that talent: loaded Ohio State will be the team to beat. ; Under NCAA rules, the first three days of college practice i will limit athletes to. padless: | drills before they get down to real head-bumping prepara-; tion for the Sept. 20 start of the regular season. SPRING PRACTICE In a poll based on spring practice, Big Ten coaches tab-, bed the conference race a qon-test between overwhelming favorite Ohio State and as many as six possible challengers. The coaches, including new mentor Bo Schembechler of Michigan, bracketed Indiana,! Purdue and Michigan State as! strongest threats to Ohio State. They rated as dark horses Iowa, I Michigan and Minnesota. ★ ★ * Numerically, Ohio State’s turnout of 75 is well down the list of Big Ten practice personnel, but Coach Woody Hayes — starting his 19th Buckeye season — has no fewer than 18 re-1 turning starters-from the 22 who climaxed a perfect 1968 season (10-0) with a 27-16 Rose Bowl trimming of Southern Californ-' J«en t. Adios Arms G. Milo Lena: I Rip «dway*Dollle Brian Mohawk Guy Cashlar 7110-02700, Cond. Trot; 1 Mila: PIBBw Girl Liza Gallon R m#(b, Highland Pick Hard To Catch Whirlwind Wick At independent Notre Dame, B some 75 hopefuls reported to ' Ara Parseghian who lost nine offensive starters from the Irish t who last year placed No. 5 in Veledonn.. Satan's Hons Stella's Task Red Applan 5th—S2S00 Maid: Frsd E. Scott's Cartel. Like Now Arabian Strip Bit O' Chuck Ambatella Batter Bees Music Bonds Plel ll 0 Furlongs: Balancad Trade Sharing Honors NEW YORK (UPI) -Tom! Seaver, the New York Mets’ ace righthander who missed a bid for a perfect game by two outs and golfer Dave Hill shared monthly honors for July in thej S. Rae Hickok Professional Athlete of the Year Award. Carllon Just Bill Denlon Bartolomo Court Rule Little Bit Read Shirt unm Three Wedges 718*—$4000 Allowance; 0 Furlongs: [Shelly Bell Primrose Princess Crimson Lass Fancy Collette Rlckl Road Princess Tamers Really On MB—03100 Allowance; 1 Mile 70 yards: Tim Trip Fritzle Jo Pat's Village Rio Bravo Miss Julie Rev *lh—02000 Cloimli Colonel Luck Some Singer I Stubzy Fine Affair Jug Judge Patricia Merle Knockemstllf Banked Running was the order of the day in the first of two sessions Wednesday as the i Wolverines began bearing down to work themselves into shape for the ! opening game against Van- ! derbilt here Sept. 20. Hankwitz turned in the best time — 4:55—in the mile and Schembechler’s new prize for the man making the outstanding, n | oi • effort in practice*went to the aengaisLiaim, senior offensive end from' ls“ttsv"h; . . Jet Fullback ! Schembechler said he was [generally pleased with the HEMPSTEAD, N.Y. (AP) -! Physical condition of the team The New York Jets announced land noted that all but three;Wednesday that fullback Billy; were able to run the mile inljoe, who had been placed on' less than six minutes and only!waivers the day before, has1 | one player reported back to been claimed by the Cincinnati : training weighing more than 240 Bengals. pounds. . * ★ * Schembechler said the squad! Coach Weeb Ewbank said he! would go through twice-a-day! might withdraw the waiver, but! drills until Sept. 5 when school would leave the decision up to opens and then one-a-day after Billy Joe. He has 24 hours to' that- , . ' j make the decision. the Associated I’ress final poll easily topped by Ohio State. “This is the biggest rebuilding job of any unit in my six Notre Dame seasons,” said Parseghian. who owns a sparkling composite Irish record of 40-7-3. Indiana, hoping to repeat its Rose Bowl trip of two years ago, lists the most candidates,! a turnout of 103, including 16 starters from an injury-plagued 1968 campaign. Ohio State, again playing'only, nine instead of the customary! 10 games with a Sept. 27 start against invading Texas Christian, is ineligible for a Rose Bowl encore. * . * * Eighty or more candidates appear at Purdue (89); Michigan (88); Minnesota (87); Michigan State (81); and Northwestern (80). Illinois expects 79; Wisconsin 65, and Iowa 62. Iowa’s Ray Nagel, whose Hawkeyes were the Big Ten’s No. 1 offensive club last season in a 4-3 tie with Indiana for fifth place, had a good spring drill despite absence of 16 boycotting Black players, including fivfe defensive starters. That problem still has not jjeen resolved and additionally star fullback Tim Sullivan was lost be-[ cause of a motorcycle accident. ' The Sept. 20 opening card in-! eludes: Indiana at Kentucky;! Minnesota at Arizona State;.! Northwestern at Notre Dame;! Purdue at Texas Christian;! Washington State at Illinois;! Oregon State at Iowa; Vanderbilt at Michigan; Washington at Michigan State, and Oklahoma1 at Wisconsin. i WHEEL HORSE | I M$pecial | Trade-up 24 Hour Day OOMMCTI BUILDINB SERVICE KITCHENS A SPECIALTY MODERNIZING Free h'ltimates-Term* QkM t ELLIS FI 2-1211 Announcing A NEW RENT A CAR Program .„.y*490P" pluo 6c Per N 1969 Chevy Nova AENT-A-TRUCK , $£90 Per 24 Only D Hour Day plus 7c per mile 1969 Pickup or Ch«vy Van C.A.R. RENTAL A LEASE, Inc. SUMMER CLEARANCE 1 Special Price STOP IN AND SEE US NOW! Mow, till, dig or haul > effortlessly with a Wheel v Horse. 42 back-saving 4k tools. Electric starter, v ft automatic shift, - # hydraulic lifting, etcetera, q Jr 1jpj|bi •. r;( ^ 0 Wheel IfuJlAE% TUCT08S/M0WEK/SN0WTH80WIBS ^ 4R * WAcrfrJ____ 6$ f KING BROS.^^* 5 PONTIAC RD. at 0P0YKE <§ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN % Phone 373-0734 l* 2 # 1 16437 m m *3,104 •• plus tax and trai 1969 Chovelle Malibu Coupe Inclwdodt factory Air* 6-cylindor angma, rodk. In9.’ !‘Bh"’ P,u* *•* ond trans. ii Equipment included; i-cylindor engine, radio, automatic trantmiiiR radio and Haator. whitewall tiro*, padded doth, backup outti jept view, mirror, loot belli, haiord warning flathero. electric wipe DEMONSTRATORS AND MILEAGE CARS AT HUGE DISCOUNT PRICES S.wn|. Strvics Satisfaction HAGGERTY HAS IT! LABOR DAY QjpuloJk- TELEPHONE MA 4-4591 HAGGERTY LUMBER & SUPPLY CO. tMCHAQOCKTYRoS WALLED LAKE f SALE ENDS SEPT. 4 OPEN 8 A.M. to 6 P.M. - Frl. Nite to 9 P.M. - Sat. 8 A.M. to B P.M. 631 Oakland at Cass FE 5-4161 i nif'i^i''iii n iiiiiiifirlirMi'riiii r i ~ .in HAGGERTY LUMBER & SUPPLY CO. • DO-IT-YOURSELF HEADQUARTERS AUGUST 28, 1969 THE PONTIAC PRESS. Boosted by Scattered Buying m 3 The following are top prices eovering sales of ncally grown produce by growers.! and sold by 0>em in wholesale-package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Friday. Ted's Attorney Market Holding Narrow Gain! Meets Setback! Business Watchdogs Face New Problems By JOliN CUNNIFF lead to reciprocity? Perhaps not marketplace.jshould try to out- AP Business Analyst -in great numbers. But the al- wit each othff. But do they nev-NEW YORK — The federal j ready overworked regulators er succunqJPto temptation? * •regulators of business certainly are going to have to watch the . Produce Apple*. William's Rad, bu. Blueberries, 12-pt. ctn. .. Cantaloupes, bu. •-l. kal Haven, % bu. “1. Vi bu. NEW YORK - The stock market was holding a narrow gain in quiet trading early this | afternoon, with brokers reporting some scattered buying giv-! ing the market a boost. The Dow Jones industrial av- until the Labor Day weekend is New York Stock Exchange, ov®r- . largely on a block of 147,900 ] “This backing and filling,1 shares. Leasco was off 1 at 25%.i dawdling pattern probably will On the American Stock Ex-i continue until the weekend is change, Banff Oil was up % at f Past”. '13V4. Asamera Oil eased , . {not only with Judge Denies Pleas+ he industries for Full Safeguards they watch but because they are b e i n g EDGARTOWN, Mass. (UPI) watched also A District Court judge denied by « , 5s*,slich > .. . ... . 90 Pnlnh Morlor HiJ* 7W Jones industrial av-j Another analyst observed that 28. Austral Oil was up 1% at 35 7* T™ Judge denied ^^Nader Esc * nM" -up “ Peaches, Fair Haven, % bu. .. teaches, Kal Haven, Z4bu, .. Reaches, Rad Haven, 44 bu. Beeches, Rich Haven. ■> I! P 175 i^es- •' I The Associated Press 60 stock 3%. constitutional safeguards atthe . m rei JjjL same]average at noon was up .2 at: Among other active issues,, ept' 3 in 1 ouy j wisn to reacn an s called fr the inquest .from you ’syndrome; and pow-jthe market, these e called in the inquest. * * * market. Boyle then announced at the First leciprocity. hearing that he would not honor ----- managers | agement companies today are er concentration in the stock come up with different funds for content with just one entry in market WaffiES_1 § M ...... J j different purposes. • the mutual fund derby. Oelervy Pascal, di. stalks . Celery, Pascal, J to Mi. ctn. Alary Hearts, Cello Pak, dz. baas Oorn, Sweet, 5-dz. bag wcumberi, Dill site, vs bu. Oucumbers. Sllcars, bu.... IfPkkle Size, W bu, .... ISO -NSW YORK (AP) - „„ 2.50 Exchange selected afternoor 3.50; A 3.351 —A—— if *•'«*............................. York stock! Sales prices: (hds.) High Low Last! Gen Elec 3.50 132 83% 83'/< 83% H ■III. 4l. bch. ■ggptant. tag, ... Bggpton, Long Type, pk. bskt. . Gourds. Pk. Bskt............ Kohlrabi, dz. bch. Okra, pk. bskt........ Onions, Green, dt, bch. . Onions, Dry, 50-lb. bag ... *•*—1* Pickling, It Pars ey. Curly, dz. behi . Parsley. Root, dz. bch. Peat. Blackeye, bu. , Pimento, Pk, Bskt. \ Radishes, Rod, dz. bch...... Radishes, White, dz. bch...... Rhubarb, dz. bch. ............ Squash, Acorn, bu. ............. Squash, Buttercup, bu. ... Squash, Butternut, bu....... Squash, Italian, Vi bu..... Squash, Summer, VS bu. . , Tdmatoes, 1<-Ib. bskt. Turnips, dz. bch. . . Turnips, Tapper, bu........... > lettuce and orebns Csibbege, bu......... Celery, Cabbage, dz....... Collard, bu....... Eddlve, by. Endive, Bleached, bu. .' Escarole, bu. Escarole, Bleached, bu. Kdle, bu. ... . Ldltuce, Bibb, pk. bskt. .'. Lettuce, Boston, dz. . . Ldltuce, Leaf, bu....... Lettuce, Head. bu. Lettuce, Head. dz. ... Lettuce, Romalne, bu............ 3.50 Ad Mlllls .20 . 3.25 Address 1.40 :. 1*75 AetnaLII 1.40 ,, 4.00 AirRedn 95a . 2.00 AlcanAlu 1.10 - 2.00 AllegCp ,10g 175 A OOLud 2 40 3-50 A legPw 1.28 .. .95 AllledCh 1.20 ,, 3.00 AllledStr 1.40 ,. .22! Allis Chaim .. 1.10 Alcoa 1.80 .. {'m AMBAC .50 a 95 Amer :'. 475 Am Alrlii AmBdcst 1.80 Am Can 2.30 ACrvSug 1.40 AmCyan 1.25 ‘ lIPw 1.58 Enka ' GPubUt 1.60 6 Tel El 1.52 Gen Tire lb Genetco 1.60 165 34 33% 33% 05 18 17% 17% - 44 30% 30 30% 4 54 49% 48% 48% -16 34% 34 34% 4 45 55V ■ ■ H| 7 | Glen Alden v J* Global Marin , J* Goodrich 1.72 I ,?I Goodyear .85 r GraCaCo 1.50 Granltec Stl i. , [GrantW 1.40 v ^"Gt A8.P 1.30 ■ I Gt Nor Rv 3 j Gt West Pinl 85 4 PPG.... ProctGa PubSCol PSvcEG Publklnd Pueb Su 11PugSPL *; Pullman 2.80 :*: Questor .50 their motions. He said. “I’m not A large comoanv selling a . T?" T\cons^a^\ satisfied that the United States broad line of products wishes to fUndsC capital ^ains" fundT and P* Supreme Court would read the riivoroitv -sn— it i—‘Unas, capital gains funds and 6J St0ckss Polaroid J2 ‘m*’ijSTiim i2o%' +??,* SuPreme Court would read the diversify even ifiore. It looks the so on. Once a good mutual fund]yoONDs. iff « 93% 93% + :tdue Jr°cess. 4clause of tha Held over and decides to buy^"™' . + % Constitution into our inquest into a smaller company, one of ”a . f you “p in„ s ,.« o«ona ,r.o, S Jft S “ proceedings.” many companies that make a "ery Soed chance he will pro-ho j |f% 29% 29%m *1- “Therefore. I deny the mo- similar p.cduc! and with which duce a fund that suits your pur-| ---------- ......| tions,” he said. the larger company trades. ■ P°ses- 896.82 I 2 04 199.52-0.21 _ 115.45—0.03 280.054-0.76 . «71.79—0.06 58.054-0.02 . 70.85—0.12 78.53—0.03 79.83—fi.l 4 —Q— TO PROBE DROWNING The interest is only a minority lhe quesli(°" kof competition! A Home 1.40 124 601 Am Hosp .22 **° ™ AmMFdy .90 AMetClx 2.10 AMetClx w| Am Motors AmNatGas 2 Am Phot .120 * Smelt 1.90 Std 1 ...TAT 2.40 AMK Cp .90 AMP Inc .48 7 18 44 49M ■ ■■ , ... 169 29% 29% 2t'/> + % SCSSSJ^! 104 34V4 33% 34 + % Gtwnunlt .90 12 48Vi 48 V4 48r 1 i 27 47% 46% 47V 1 24»/4 24V4 24V, , R 114 29% 29% 29% — % 89 30% 30% 30% | 27% 28 Greyhound f 61 19% 19V4 19% 4* 1 GrummnCp 1 16 25% 25% 25% + 1 Gulf Oil 1.50 102 36% 36% 36% - ' Halllburt 1.05 20 38% 37% 37% - 582 52% 52% 52% - 211 27% 27 27% + 115 48% 47V4 48% 4 50 41% 41 41% 4 123 29% 28% 29 4 2 43% 43Vj 43% 4 9 23% 23% 232A + 81 27% 27% 41 40Va 18 35% 35% 99 37% 37% 37V 3 19 18% 19 11 13% 13% . 13« 39 36% 37% 37' The inouest will investigate one’ but 'bought occurs t« UP «n the buying a"d sell- ^uity on —n— .1 , n ,st Wl mvestigate . . h fh Cftmnanip„ mg of stocks by the funds; mm ei 23 22V. 22M, 22V4 + i. all Circumstances surround ng ;ae. ,as DOm COmP?nleS which in the Irarlitinn nf lhr> °'l" & 5« ^ Wth> death of Miss Kopechne. 28 hat. since they are part of one which’. in th^ lradition ol the *«»« u. o* pjy. ccord gi* ' .06 Q 9-10 VT30 HoornWal .82 *V2 Anocond .... ,fiiAnchHock .80 is AncorpNSv 1 i-H ArmcoSt 1.68 i £ ArchDan 1.60 - i-S ArmtICk .80 Sti Aihld Oil 1.20 ' I :It AtldDO 1.20 IV VO WV4 .5". -t- J 'f All RIcMId 2 643 113W 1I1H 11236 +1W A(l*« Chom 1 24 2711 27 2734 + 34 .551 Allot Corp 124 534 SVb 5/V 66 14 V. 14V. 1401 85 69 «IVk 19 . . . 30 430. 41V. 430. +19. 5 21V. 21V. 21V. 93 320. 32. 32V. — V. MeyDStr 1,60 Maytag l McDonnD .40 Maid Corp l MoIvSho 1.30 Merck i.aoa MobllOII 3.20 24 34 330. 34 162 30W 30 30'A U 1*0. ISO. 160. -I- V. 15 36'/) 360. P + '/> Dan Rly 1.20 p»;l ind .30b Bwcgfig i-i4 paytnPL i.oo PuroCO .2.. Dal Mnla 1.10 DellaAIr .40 SI.1I 1.40 I 30p Dlasham 1.40 jjpfji - uPont 3.75b luq Lt US . )yna Am .40 i EltraCp 1.20 Imvflac l [ndjohn .12p Jssexlnt 1.20 wm^SfAn 23 160. 16V. 160. 27 SHI 470. 470. — 13 249. 240* 249. + , 13 26W 36 260. + V. It M }M 9 4 0. I 27V. 269b 2S9k ... 21 am 31 31V. -0* 35 L T 1-' 30 120. 12'/. 120. 12 mi 22'. 22'A + I 6 85 MV. 85 +1 41 53 52 53 -MV. 29 49/fi 69''/ 690. - ■ 41 300. 290* 30V. - 16 32 ■ 31V. 3101 + - •“ *s* 1M + T-H 65 1IW 18V. 7» 85b 4 4W sT 55 WB 18W II 2U. 259. 20 52 510. ;;*! SU* U , - . -45 3SV. 340* , 35V. + .0* lo 27 dt*. an. 8 1Tft 140. 119. 52 Zl Bw + v. ■.+ 0* t M FalrchC .50a 1011 630. S2M Falrch Hiller 'is 130. 13W 13V; 26 2704 227W - V. 27 MW MO* 3SV. + VS 2 320* 220. 320. - 0. 54 41 p « —10* •* 49 a 47+0* (I * I 15 *79. 67 438 h 10 40V. 40V. 40V. — 42 309. 300. 3004 + 2 290. 290. 290. - 100 345 343'/) 345 +2 71 29 2804 289> + 42 140. 139- 1.14 J- 67 34Vk. 34 139 39f “ 202 54 10 33' , _ „ 8 20V. 20V. 20', ReynTob 2.20 RoanSal .3Sh Rohr Cp .80 RoyCCoTa .54 RoyDut 1.03g ’-TSys .50 SfRaglsP 1.60 Sanders .30 SaFelnd 1.60 SbCLInd 2.70 SaarIGD 1.30 Searsp 1.30a Shell Oil 3.40 ShellTrn ,73g "erwnWm 3 inalCo 1.20 ig*rCo 2.40 —nth KF 2 SCarEG 1.19 SouCalE 1.40 South Co 1.14 SouNGat 1.40 Sou Pac 1.80 Sou Ry 2.80a Spartan Ind 67 87% 58% —J— I 1 5 48% 8% 83 38% 34% 18 133 132 8 90 49% 1 23% 23% 2 31% 31% 5 29% 29 —K— 35 32 31% 58% 4 5ijof Washington, who drowned l?1? • n<)VV» the large one ' when a car driven by Kennedy should bl,y °" > fro7n th® fma11: | M M m '‘iplunged off a narrow bridge on er,one’ ,e8ardless of qua,i‘y and 1 67 mh 3^4 W4 - 41 Chappaquiddick Island into apr ce’ 114 4,/. 444 |j| tidalpond 2 POINTS OF VIEW Edward B. Hanify of Boston, It seems reasonable, at least one of four attorneys represen- • from a selfish and narrow point ting the 37-year-old senator,!of view. The regulators, howev-l said Kennedy Will appear to'er, are committed to taking a testify at the inquest “not as a broad view of the marketplace.! United States senator from Reciproc*ty, the government r..,„-.D./w ,, , Massachusetts, but he comes to haq said time and time again, BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) for a reduction this courtroom stripped of the unfairly limit.' competition and , e. V.S , government has strength, trappings of office. When he injures tne competitive oppor- pledqed h^u°r, ex's'in8 .aRrlelf*! He said he did not know how comes in the courtroom, he will tunities of othei companies. ments with Thailand despite the| many troops would be withal stand before you as a private * * * , Impending withdrawal of some' drawn but he understood “they 141 citizen , with the same con- Now here’s the rub.* A suroe . *^eL. aa roops, ^ rme n s- will not withdraw immediately, 31 24'/4 24 13 33'/* 33 5 41% 41' 51 41 40' 24% 24V A! 4* 4 ..—m—___ 24% — % 39 27% 27% 27% 19 47% 48% 47% 4- % ‘ 24% 24% 24% 4* % 42 50% 49*. 8 32% 32 32 10 19% 19% 193 35 29% 29% 29*. 11. 37% 37% 37V 29 39% 39% 39*. 133 88% 88% 88* 75 55 . 54% 54' 1 34 34 34 18 58' 95 30’ 33 67 25 39' 61 28' Thai Leader Confirms •U.S. Support Pledge troop 95 30% 33 67 25 39% 61 28% 95 33 41 25% 14 i 4Q .. I 39 35 34'/3 i 16 46% 4- Now thp mh • A kiira* f*'**Kmn will not withdraw imnu 4 u ^ .u S je rUD‘ t sur8e ter Thanom Kittikachorn said because the situation in Vipt b stitutional rights as t h e sieems to be under way in corpo- uecause me suuauon in viei- 51 humblest man in fell this land.” rate purchases of minority in-1 G«n*irtn« J™ ^ Improvid*” After ‘ ‘ terests in other companies WJ JpaanS Si aSL ita,king with Thanat and U S' of- T. Grimm & Co., management ^ A„.„Tj f5‘ia,.s Wednesday, visiting Sen. iareD .80 , Brand 1.50 StevensJ 2.40 called to the inquest said they outright mergers in the first sixi^8.8 conc n . na fec^afe wll ,'cted only 1,500 American troops adopted Hanify’s arguments andlmonths of thi: year. But it estt, j*®** 1S“'®tar_7 ®!_StaS W '.lWould be withdrawn. adopted Hanify’s arguments and I months of thi: year, also branded the inquest as morej mates two to three times ast like a criminal proceeding than Ynany minority purchases. -a preliminary investigation. I Will these minority purchases , NO THAI CUT I Mutual Stock Quotations TampaEI .72 MtBITT 1.24 7 19% 19% 19% 2 16% 16% 16% 51 8% 8 8% 14 20% 20% 20% 25 46% 46% 46% 22 9 8% 8% 13 34% 34% 34% 28 39 38% 38% 439 48% 47% 48% +1% 38 8% 8% 8% •+ 36 24% 24% 24% 859 31% 30 31% + 22 24% 24, 26% + 117 18% 18% 18% — 6 24% 24% 24% - 3 53% 53% 53% + i 8 25% 24% 25 - % 11 16% 16% 16% —M— 38 15 14% 15 74 35% 35 35% + % 30 26% 26 M% — % 33 47% 47% 47% — % 33 47% 47% 47% — % 93 46% 46% 46% + % 34 UVa 55 55 f % 10 37% 37% 37V 1 £ 54 2p% 20% 2(N 68 31% 31% 310 49 26% 26% 26» 146 26% 26 26% 6* % 40 24% 24% 24% - % 23 65 64 64% 218 28 27% 23 8% 8% 1 33 31% 31% 15 33% 33 160 19% 18% —U— NEW YORK (AP) —The following quotations, supplied by. Energy 14.1014 8 39 9.17 9.52 10.40 which (asked) Wedns bought _.isdy. Bid Ask 2.37 2.59 7.39 8.PB 8.02 6.68 10.49 10.49 11.59 12 67 5.91 6.46 3.25 *V52 t Gth 17.7 IK 15.3b rat tQ 14.37 15.54 lor 23.24 24.72 Id 11.0012.02 Ppi Bu "Mill Fed Grth Fid Cap .. Fid Fund 16.7611 Mu Omln 10.27 11.13* MOt Shrs 18.01 18.01 Mut Trst 2.64 2.69 NEA Mut 10.60 10.82 Nat WSac 10.6011.46 tin Carbide 2 Un Elec 1.20 UnOIICal 1.60 SSSaur 1 Uniroval .70 UnitAirc 1.B0 Wm % unit MM 1.30 USGypsm 3a US Indg.t .45 USPIpe 1.30 US PlyCh .04 US Smalt 1b us Steel 3.0 UnlvO Pd ,10 Uplohr ‘ .... ^ WnUTei 1.40 WestgEI 1.80 WfyiHjir .so Whirl Cp 140 White K%t 2 Whittaker Fuel 1.68 Oonl .20 NtlOyM i.05 Natlnd .469 Newberry 1 NEngEl 1.8 “WHIHt 1.04 igMP 1.10 rfotkWst 6 ...rrlslnd .00 NorAmPhll 1 NoAmRock 2 NoNGai 3,60 Nor PSc |.*0 NoStePw l.*0 31 ltte 17M fm + V* 5 35V* 35V. 350* — V* 74 27 3M* 2M* + V* 35 Bk 2»'A 20V. — V) m ii'a fm 11 + M 32V. 310* 310* — 22 4Mi 4301 43V* + 3 130* 130* tM , . *94 980. 95V. 90'/* 4-2V* 14 4* 504 4* 2* 5*0. 5*0* 5*0* + / 370* 3*9* 3*9* —' 130 23'. 339* 23V. + i 33V* 330. MO.— Wqolwlh 1.30 340 370. 36 37+f. +1»* xerox Cp .60 303 9*0. 94 9*0. +l\ Zale Corp ,*4 12 439* 48 ’* J| Occldnt Pet OhtoEdli I, OklaGE 1. OkllNG. 1, Olln Math , Omerk Ind Qt 34 520* 52V* 52'. + ' 40 289* 210. 2BJ. 95 Mk, 4304 44'. + * 4304 40* 430. + 27 2SV* 249t 1 ' "*T 37V* 35'/t I 27V* 3*9* 1 Hi ¥ „ >> 43V* 43V. f V* 3(6 35 3*0* 340* 51 240* 24 34'. Ml 11 30V. 30V* 20'. — V. 9 T9'. 19>. I9V. + *’• 32 3*'. 2* 26 23 4* 230. 24 + PecTIT 1.20 nWHiU 77g BHwy PannDIx .*0 Penney JC 1 PePwLt l.<0 PennzUn JO film 1J0 Philo El 1*4 Philip Morr r T-P— ,• U 340. 350* 340* 2* 25 27V* 37’. 54 330. 33 33'. 9 30V* 300. 300. + '. 10 200* 20'/4 200. + v« if IB* I?» Wi - J* 127 1*0* (*'* 16Vk — V 49 30 2904 30 22 32’. 320. Hta 97 42V* 410. 4Vw + > 40 190. 19V. 190. *' 90 ,51'. 500. 51V* +1 13 |go{ 20'. 310. - 1- 4* 300* 30*. 30'. — '. 35 45V* 45 45 — 0* /li iiw Ib* iso. +■ o* 35 Si 150* I* + V* 19 410* 41V* 410* — Vi 44 34 350* 250. » 3*0. ttv* ml 520 33** 32 in. +10. 438 309* 43J. 44*. + j 45 52'? *05 40’. 32 459, « 23'. HR .. . 2*0 45'. 44'. 44V* 22 15' 191 440. H 30 19V* 10! • 'TV* 510. »zv. + a. I>. 4* 470. +19* ■ 44’. 45’. + 9* 33'. 23'. (■■PH 44V* * no* no* 12 48'. O'. «'« .. 14 370. 27'. 270* 10 73'. 72 73'. +1 97 35’. 250* 259* 4- 12 37'. 37 37 - 137 320. 319* 320. + 32 40'. 39'/- ’O'* — 134 379* 37' MMIIE 220HRP 420* 43' 59 230* 220. —V— rion Asso * 25 20>. 20 20’. + ' nab Co -*o 10 loo. loot lio* — < EIPw 1.12 73 230. 23 23'. . _w—X—Y—Z— irLom 1.10 33 *3 *10. *3 IS Wot 1.28 23 32’. 22*.' 32’. 0 , 2*9* 2*0. 249* + 113 389* HOI: 3*’. •* r payments hot deslg- flgures are unoflldal. > otherwise noted, rates of dlvl-» **>» foregoing Mbit are annual based on tha last quarterly aarnMnnuaf — ...Ira divldanda foitewlnr* l«... a—Also extra or extras, b—Annual rate plus slock dividend. c—LIquldatlng 41'-* ■*—I 1—Declared or paid In 1969 pi ividend. a—Paid teal yaar. T— Pi, alack during 19*9, asllmated cash »n ex-dividand or ox-dialrTbutlon 1—Declared or paid 50 far this PUR .1—Declared ur p; id after itork dividend or split up. k—Declarer' — *““* this year, an accumu'a ive las.. . .... mi: ii!arr»dn^ftM.r^ -----action taken at nt dwidcnJ meat- PUP t—Declared or paid- In 1940 pll't slock dividend, I—Paid In stock .dining 19*0, aetimafad cash valve an tx-divicrnd or tx-dlatribuitan date, z—Sales In full. . cld—Called, x—Ex ih/lder and and aaiee In full, x-al ..on. xr—Ex rlghti., xw-MP rant*, ww—With warrants, wd—when dia-.31—-. W|_$hen n,,;ad. nd—N« ' —11 bankruptcy or rac*lverf...r .. ■I ..organized under the Bankruptcy Act, of securities ossumtd ta auafe ponies. MvMPmHH lerer-----* Kl *y such cor I sublecl to I Treasury Position WASHINGtpN (AP) - The cMh IMS .199,373.10 7,405,314,934.23 _____I year July 1 2*.922,572,794.74 UJ8l,115J90.1t ->ii fiscal year ,«MJ17J*9J1 32,7*7, *71,373.49 [-^^747,090.531.17 355,449,310.tjl4 15 *te,W,010,237*0 10, X—Includes *35*11,944.4* d It Mtk 34'+ 3»v* + te lect to statutory IHnlt. Am Dvln 10,37 I AEx' spl 9.00 Am Grth 4.75 7. Ant inv 1.94 a Am Mul 9.41 <0. AmN Gth 3.14 ! Am Pac unavi Anchor Group: dibit B.'*0 v, Orwfh 12.9014 ' Inv 8.83 V Fd Inv 10e0411/ Axe Houghton: Fund A 7.01 7.62 Fund B 8.89 9.66* Stock 6.81 7.44 B{road St 14.61 15.79 BUllOCk^ 15.21 16.66 CG Fd 9.36 10.12 Canadn 18.3319.83 Caplt Inc 8.39 9.19 capit shr 7.00 7.68 Cant Shr 10.5211.50 Channlng Funds: Baian nnrir.sr Com St 1.78 1.95 Grwth 6.67 7.29 Incom 7.91 8.64 Sptcl 2.95 3.22 11.12 12.92 96.86101.16 11.80 12.90 11.26 19.96 Shrhd Charnel Colonial: •(duly «./. o.i/ Fund -11.7512.04 Grwth 4.47 7,07 Vant '4.71 7.33 comme 11.0013.90 Incom 9.0210.73 invou 9M 10.47 Stock > 9,4710.37 Cwlth AB 1.4* 1.58 Cwlm CD 1.70 1.84 Comp As unavall Compel unavall Comp Bd 9.3710.00 comp Fd 9.0910,75 Comslk 5.15 5.43 Cdncord , 14,3714.37 Conaol in 12.3712.75 Cpnsu In 4J3 5.17 CehT Glh 10.1910.29 Carp Ld 15.2116.70 Cnty Cap 13.5314.41 Crown W 7.00 7.45 ‘ It* O rerun rerun rer Commonwlth Fds: Cap Fd 9.77 fd.tO Incom 9.1210.73 IhUdM 9,5810.47 Stock 9,4710.57 Cwllh AB 1.4* 1.5*, Cwlth CD 1,70 1J* Comp At uneven Compel unavall Comp Bd 9,27TOi Comp Fd 9.1910,7* Comilk 5.15 5.63 Concord 14.3714.37 COhMl in 12.3712.75 Corlsu In 4.22 5 17 Conf Glh 10.19 10.29 , Corp Ld 15.211(.70 Wlr »!P 13 33 14.41 Crown W 7.00 7.45 Craw In 11.3412.40 deVgh M *7.5*67 56 Pocil Inc 12.37 ii.41 DOtMWSi 13.4914.74 Della fr 6.04 0.79 • Dlvld Shr 3.79 4.15 DEwT In 6.50 7.19 Down! F 4.3* 4.1* Draxel 15.6615.16 Dray? Fd I2.9B 14.32 Drtyl Lv 12.0913.10 Orwlfi < 12.54133A Incam Spec I Stock - 14.5515.93 11.09 n.1)9 . — ______ 13.55 14.83 Fid COP 11.41 12.49 ■' I Fund 14.7*11.12 J Trnd 35.20 27 *3 Financial Prog: Dynm *.47 7.08 Indusl 4.72 5.17 Incom , 6.32 4.92 Vant I 0.34 9.13 FsIP Vi 10.1911.90 Fat inGth 9.74 10.68 Fsl InStk 8.45 9.46 Fst Multi 9.34 9.49 Fsl Nel 7.53 8.23 Fst Slere unavall Flel Cap 7.93 Flet Fnd *.40 Fla Gth 7.21 7.88 Fnd Glh 5.4* 5.9* Foundrs 0.38 9.05 Fourio 11.7512.04 Franklin Group: • Com St 7.02 7.49 ONTC 11.54 12.65 Util 4.45 7.29 Incom 2.31 2.53 Freedm 8.51 9.41 Fund Am 9.51 10.39 Gen Sec 11,1511.15 qibreltr 12.7512.75 Group Sec: Aero Sc 0.85 9.40 Com st 13.3514.43 Ful Ad 9.10 9.95 Grth Ind 21.90 22.5* Gryphn 16.4710,00 Guardn 25.65 25.45 Hamilton: HFI 4.88 5.33 Glh 6,99 9,03 Henovr 1.35 1.47 Harbor 9.02 9.8* Hbrlwll 14.9414J3. HGC Lev 11.9012.0* Hedb Gor 9.02 9.02 Hedge 12.5513.72 Herllge '3.9* 3.23 H Mann 15.571* S2 Hubsmn 7.94 t.*0 til Glh 5.31 5.50 jil Inc 4.53 4.95 Imped F 9.3710.24 Imp Cap 10.19 ,1.00 Imp Glh 7,*4 0.30 Inc Fund 11.9413,05 Inc FdB 7.30 0.00 Indtpnd lo.09H.oj ■ indie la.to’3.49 Pi Stk ' Incom HR ... Stock 8.53 9.37 Net West 6.13 4.72 Nel Grth 9.1* 10.72 lliam P. Rogers’ message wasL sent and did not elaborate fully on its contents. However, he Thanom sai'd Thailand was said it “reaffirmed existing not considering withdrawing its j agreements the United States i '2,000 troops from Vietnam even ! has with Thailand.” he said the' United States was | United States would not “turn I ™tUn* back its own forces away” from Thailand in mat-!”161-6, ters concerning the country’s “The United States most like-security. ly will not pull out its troops * * * from Thailand right away,” he Turning to the negotiations said. “When the'time comes for opening Monday between Thai-j the pullout, some units are exland and the United States on peeled to remain here in order the gradual withdrawal of some to act jointly with Thailand in of the 50,000 American troops,{accordance with the SEATO Thanom said Thailand wantedi (Southeast Asia Treaty Organi-L» 9 32 |on*y t() know about U.S. plans j zation) pact.” nvet 7.99 0.64 Ocngph Omega 100 Fd 9VRPHP 101 Fd 9.8210.73 One Wm$ 15.25 16.67 16)24 16.24 8.41 9.18 8.30 8.42 14.86 16.24 WMHMipi «* * % \* Successful 'Investing .* ♦»' Or # M # »: 8.13 8.13 8.54 8.54 15.00 16.44 9.09 9.93 7.72 8.44 I 10.76 i076 4.82 5.27 10.00 10.81 Funds: 10.7211.72 I By ROGER E. SPEAR las shrinking margins from Q - I foolishly got caught j Pr‘ce weakness in color-TV by conglomerate glamor and|‘“_®s..a!ld.„ov*r.c_®pacity ln ,U I bought Avnet around 35. |||H | || | appreciate your opinion. |R.N. . I»d copper wire plant. _ However, earnings should {move up in fiscal 1969-70, aided by cost reduction meas-i. ... .|Ures, corporation restructuring holding as a turnaround though|and the current uptrend you will need patience whileisaies which is expected to c6n-watching and evaluating |ts tinue. Broadened operations - I believe Avnet is worth L Rep Tech 5 w 5.54 are being skillfully integrated adverse clrcum- through Jong-term planning "by experienced managers. ... ... 11.5*12.50 See Eqult 3.67 4 s* See Inv ttwli Islet iv'y* eth 4.97 5.49 J ncock 8.39 9.01 Johnsln .14 9.14 -39 9.01 21.42 31.42 l'^3o*nJl tells 20.75 GUI (2 30.2* 32.10 GUI B4 9.74 10.63 GUI Rl 7.91 3.43 GUO K2 5.29 5.70 . . Cus I 20.02 22.71 .Wl 2 11.1*12.18 CM 3 0.22 8.98 CU8 4 5.18 5.M : Polar , 4.39 4.01 . Knlckb 1 7.44 |,t| Knlek 01 11.0* 13.11 Lexlngt 10.1611,13 Lex tch 1S.fl 16.73 UHRU 6.25 4.33 Liberty 6.25 4J3 Lite Stk SJt 5.49 Life Inv 4.74 7.37 Ling 6.44 7.04 Utemls Seylet: Caned 33.13 33,13 Gmh 11,6611.66 ..Mul WJ* 14,70 Menhln JM 7.9* Meet Fd ttin iljl Mess Oth l£Tf iut M*U Tr 16.3314.75 Mates 4.09 4.09 Malheri, It.Tlll.h McOon t.5410.45 MMA Mu (M 7,1) VSSSLM Sec Dtv IH '• «6WF to.' 7.78 8. ue„u 10.1310.VO Sal Specs 15.7317.20 Seh Dean 22.52 22.52 ITdi 9.8310.75 Sigma 10.0911.0:1 Slg Inv 11.76 12.85 Smith B 9.53 9.53 Own Inv 8.10 8.76 Swlnv Gt 9.04 9.78 Sover Inv 14.3215.68 StFrm Gt 5.46 5.46 State St 50.00 51.00 Steadman Fund&: Stfln Roe Fds:r . Bel 20.42 20.42 Cap Op 14.6814.68 Stock 14.2514.25 $up tnGt 6.92 /.58 SupInSt 9.3510*25 ayncr Gt 11.6712.75 TMR Ap 20.10 21.96 Teachrt 10.5013.94 Techncl 6.21 6.79 Techvet 1.24 m _ Technol 7.97 8.69 Temp Gt 22.58 24 60 Towr MR 7. 5 7.81 Tran Cap 7 89 8.58 Trav Eq 9.7410.64 Tudor Fd 17.13 18.72 Twnc Gt 4.43 4.84 TwnC Inc 4.76 5.20 Un t Mut 10.1511.09 Untd 9.5310.42 United Fundi: Accm 7.53 8.23 Incom 14.19 8-l|K Scien 7.96 8.70 UFd Can 7.94 8.68 Value Lina Fd: \ Val Un 7.85 8.60 Incom 5.30 «.ii ■ I £1 |i 1.03 8.78 Vendrb|SPl Var*tndP Viking WL Me . ,5.45 Grwth /’«_ 13.4314J9 ii Fung*: th 10.3411.13 , MM I ____ ,.j ll,(j 13.90 Wash Mu 13.5*13.73 Wtilgtn 11.96 i3.no Wm? Ind 7.95 |,*9 Whltehll 14.77 14.09 -Windsor 9.47 10 35 WiMMId 6.93 4.47 WiK Fd 7.36 7.93 Worth 3,tO 3.31 emergence from an extended |{ {series i | stances. / Stocks of many respected | and well-known electronics! Q — Last January I bought firms have been having a gen-j 25 shares of Clary Corp. at erally hard time; conglomer- 23%. My adviser thinks It will ates are seriously depressed, be a winner so I’ve held on. and in addition Amvet has had Should I sell if I don’t need strikes to contend with as well!the cash — w.H. ' A — Clary peaked out in I July, 1068, at 32V* and you've {Stocks of Local /nferestjriddeH il down from ,ts 1,681 Figures after decimal points ere eights performance level in 1969. Un-over-the-counter stocks jw earnings are out of the red stash**8,ipRed early this year , •ffovoHootn»w d«y.—I don’t exepect share price "rices 06 not Include relei I markup, , , , r 'markdown or commiiuon. |to show any real bounce. aidAtkedi .phe company’s product mix 4?'° jfijlof gyroscopes, small computers ii'* 'jl and Peripheral equipment, moot.'* 33.'* | bile homes and housing com-33.'t j*.* ponents suggests areas of po-l4;1 'Jj lcntial profitability that could _J6.4 37.4 help Clary to become a specu-stock averages lative winner. How long this compiled by The AM*ciai*d.pr*M . might take is impossible to predict. The burst of speculative strength in Clarv’s share a year ago reflected a tripling of earnings between 1966 and 1^58, from 16 cents a share to over j**.*' 50 cents. Since then sales have fallen oft 21 per cent, an earnings deficit has appealed and ■■■HI recent acquisitions must nr jn*. uni. fob. i-yt. I effectively integrated. Yourde-ciSionJo held or to sell depends largely on your temperament because even partial recovery, to your ^ cost seems to me ratter far away. AMT Corp. Associated Truck Citizen! Utilities A . Citizens utilities B Kelly Services Mohawk Rubber Co. Week ego Month Ago Year ago I960 High C. L Ii util, stock* I 137.9 792.0 — i 138.0 391.8 I 154.5 iii.9 394,4 ««.4 151.3 laa.a 319,1 474.5 194.3 14J 333.3 513.5 317.7 159.1 340.9 433.3 148.0 134.4 304,8 ..BONO AVBRA6E5 Campllad By The Associated FrMi Weak Ago . 40,1 83.5 77.4 91J 74.4 Monlh ago . *1.2 (f.5 71.2 91.3 76,4 Year ago ,.44,0 04.4 01.t M.4 11.7 M Low ijj) High 1944 Low *7.0 HJ 97,2 79.4 . wu.i 01.5 . Kl 91.0 43 8 05.0 D—10 THE PONTIAC jPRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 10QR He Apes Apes, Keeps Puffing IMPACT STUDY — A nationwide accident study to determine the effectiveness of the General Motors side-guard beam began last fall when this 1989 GM car was struck broadside at a California intersection by a car traveling 40 to 50 miles an hour. Though GM Widens Use in 1970 the force of the collision spun this cor 180 degrees on dry pavement, the side-guard beam inside the doors prevented the striking vehicle from penetrating the passenger compartment, and the driver was unhurt. companions are baboons who smoke four packs a day, it’s enough to make you go ape. Henry Swanson Ji1., 32, been trying to stop smoking for a year. But he has to spend most of his time with three live baboons who are all as crazy; over smoking cigarettes as eating banan- They said they found striking similarities between baboons and humans in areas of sickness. Hence the research into Police Hunt 2 Robbery, Fire Suspects Car Side-Guards Seen Effective Proving themselves effective iGeneral Motors has announced! Engineers concluded wh under actual collision con- It is installing side-guard beams earlier testing had indicated ditions, side-guard beams1 as standard equipment in all of the side-guard beam encourages ^ f°r him and still likes beautiful girls, de-developed by Fisher B o d y: Its 1970 intermediate cars, such'the striking vehicle to richochet,lllvered thls opinion while waiting for his new engineers will be placed inside j as the Chevrolet Chevelle, Pon- thus reducing the severity pf "Holiday on Ice” revue to open at Madison Sq. the doors of most 1970 General .Uac Tempest, Oldsmobile F8s| the collision. Motors cars. and Buick Special. During the | j^fss PENETRATION Fisher Body and GM auto'1®8? model year, all full-sized safety authorities agreed their worth after studying thousands of accident reports and making in-depth observations of damaged cars containing the side-guard beams. As a result of the study, NOT ICS OP PUBLIC SALS Account No. R11-171 Jt-J4 Nolle* ll hereby given by the under-•iQned th*t on Thuredey. Sept. 4, iw*. •t 10 o'clock A,ha. el JOS Mein' Si., Rochester. Michigan, public nl* of * 1M4 Ponline Grend Prlx J-door herdtop, beer-Ino lerlnl number W4PS75MI will be held, ter c*»h to the hleheet bidder. Inspection thereof may be mode ot ?os Mein It., Rochester, the piece ot storeg*. The undersigned reserves the right to vide a "guardrail” effect. SPECI AL PROBLEMS Side collisions are not as common as front and rear-end collisions, but providing protection from side impacts represented special problems to automotive engineers because of the limited space between the occupants and a striking vehicle. * * * Although the side-guard beam was the product of two years of UNI |_______riiv*n,"tKr* Public I development and severe testing, c^ssiM^t^th. To^hi^otPB^m#.!H was not until It was subjected MMn Oeklend Count, Mlchlger M * " j GM cars carried the safety feature as an industry first. They also concluded that when a car equipped with the beam is struck broadside, Developed to protect oc- Penetration of the impact is cupants from side collisions, the e98®"®*1 reducing t h e heavily ribbed structural beams I tendency of the striking car to are built Into the doors to pro- override the struck car’s frame. NEW ORLEANS (AP) ** As I ing since he was 12, says "most-lteries is a major factor in the, everyone who has, tried to give lyilack of will power" keeps him death of most of the world’s up cigarettes knows,-it’s-tough j puffhig. But lighting up four male population, to break the habit when you packs a day for the baboons The baboons were brought hang around with q* bunch of would put a strain on anyone’s into the program after he and h£avy smokers; And if your will power. i team of physicians made a trip ' His heaviest smoker is “087,” to Kenya, who got started when, in the interest of science, -he was rewarded with a banana every time he took a puff on a cigarette held at the edge of his cage. Then the other two baboons started smoking, too, perhaps to keep up with “007,” and now the three are permanent residents of a smoke-filled room at the school. For “007,” it’s three „ , . i # ... packs a day, the other two a Swanson is a caretaker for the^ k * animals who are part of a Loui-1 siana State University School of'MAJOR DEATH FACTOR Medicine research project on] Dr. Jack P. Strong, head ofl Cit poijce todav are the effects of smoking on hard-j the school’s pathology d®Part* searching for two men both ening of the arteries, ment and director of the pro- about 30 old w,;o are Swanson, who has been smok-lgram, Says hardening of the ar- believed to have robbed a clty girl of $70 cash yesterday and set her house on fire. Lovie Ann Lodge, 20, of Crawford told police two men woke her up about 11 a.m. yesterday and told her to give them all her money. One of the men held a revolver to her head while the other rifled her purse, she said. WWW When the pair left the house, the victim ran downstairs and discovered downstairs bedroom. She told police she thought the two robbers also started the fire. Fire officials this morning said they found fuel oil spread on the floor of the room. The fire was brought under control within , a short time, but damages were estimated at $6,000 to the bedroom and furniture. hardening of the arteries. In addition to teaching the baboons to smoke, the researchers have introduced them to a high-cholesterol menu similar to what the American male eats. When the baboons die, autopsies will be performed to determine whether there are significant differences between the condition of their internal organs and those of their nonsmoking brothers. Hughes Called Ideal Boss; His Hirelings Never See Him ByEARL WILSON NEW YORK — The greath myth named Howard Hughes is one of the best of all Show Business bosses “because he’s invisible — you never see him — while all the other bosses are always putting their 2c in.” “Yet in an eerie way ypu know that Howard gManM Hughes is aware of what you're doing. You feelsH^Hjj^M t that he’s got you wired for sound." Don Arden, who has 150 beautiful girls work- ifTlmV' ifT'm~ vTffi Ito actual collisions on the Townihip* h*ii, 4joo T*i*- highway during the past model ln *8? ordinance^ .’w*) year that Its real significance * exriueivei ei The Safety Research * two inmnv re»Toonii«** iv'^Vruc-1 Development Laboratory at the yi'eMeeT^ihouTllSd GM proving grounds in Milford Mere 50* No. 2 COPPER * 45* BRASS . * 25* RADIATORS ""25* ALUMINUM «8i Pontiac Scrap Co. 135 Branch r Entrance on Hass St. * 332-0200 THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . . Leonard Hoffman, 56, former drama critic of the Hollywood Reporter, died at Mt. Sinai just 8 months after the death of his brother Irving Hoffman. He had requested cremation and no funeral service . . . Sen. George Murphy read a tribute to] Martha Raye into the Congressional Record . . . There were' people walking barefoot on 5th Ave. the other day . . . Jack E. Leonard plays the mother on Bob Hope’s version of “Peyton Place” when he’ll have 17 comedians clowning. When George Sanders’ nephew Peter was married recently! his “best man” was his former aunt Zsa Zsa Gabor ... A young film star, brought to N.Y. by the studio for interviews, balked at doing ’em. He was told, “OK — so pay your own hotel bill.” (He immediately began doing interviews.) ★ ★ ★ TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Dick Cavett got a letter from a grateful farmer who put a TV set In his chicken coop; “And now when you lay one, they lay one." (PubUihere—Hell syndic etc) £ « d Id2 U— ______ permined in] passenger compartment. About , y(s**oi*,iht»;75 per cent were from an angle. He's Here Oil DUSineSS i el eny yerd ebulllng a y Reeldenllel District thell Ceut* Ne. JSM7 STATS OF MICHIGAN -lit Court DIvltlL In In* metier el the Suten Yvenne Sutton. Allies Regain Captured lank 1,9 SAIGON (AP) - An Amerl-w,can tank that the Vletcong cap-J lured from allied troops nearly Boone Clings to Image In September he will be on location in New York for his next movie, “The Cross and the Switchblade”. The film is a documentary on I the slums of Brooklyn. MECHANICAL . ENGINEER To design Ijeating, ventilating, air-conditioning and piping. Capable of ossuming full responsibi I ity for evaluation and selection of systems, design of system, supervision of draftsmen and coordination with other design disciplines. STRUCTURAL ENGINEER With extensive experience in the design of structural steel and reinforced concrete for buildings: Capable of applying technical skill and of exercising the thought and judgment which make for complete practicaLdesigns. CIVIL ENGINEER To design site work In' connection with build-; ings. Will be responsible for the design of parking areas, roadways, drainage systems and grading plans. These ore permanent, responsible positions with Austin Engineers, Inc., which is engaged in industrial, commercial and institutional projects. This office is moving to new quarters - (now under con. struction) in Southfield. Access will be easy. Parking will be provided. Working conditions will be very pleasant. Phone or Write: W. J. La tick. District Engineer AUSTIN ENGINEERS, INC. 2978 W. Grand Blvd. Detroit, Michigan 48202 Phono: 875-7737 An Equal Opportunity Employer |entertainment, and they can By YOLANDA BENAVIDES bring every member of their The white shoes are still pert family to see him. of the Image, but now they’re —, MV$MbMtitnt Fences on all loti it record In ell Residential Districts which ssrys ss erchitectural or decorative landecap. hr -------------------------- Vietnamese Air Force fighter-bombers destroyed two of the tanks as their captors fled north along a highway, but the A Short Holdup HALIFAX If) — Employes of ,n a bank .thought the 6-year-old *id* y”iVwh"S"*Kc**d th* m’lrSmum was just playing around the ctli xTv"s*c*on*t!»'l3'till zoliino cash drawer. Then he and four ♦pp,ov*1 *• "“ companions ran out of the bank \ and ‘he cash drawer was $1,360 » JhTh’ *h®r‘- «rw^7^,l9"#',h9'Mp®Mce cau«ht them two Decorative lendtcaplnp fences may be blocks away, freeetendlng and may be used to ebscuro e prhfetp arfrp rffM.^lew ■» " 1 ..— J Sign From Above? t height 'eMieid Tonot ehoir'rwi ffiSriSZJV eLST#*wr,d ,rm JOHANNESBURG, South YrT**M*.i'"**"**** *r* r,w***- Afrlcad) — "Any unauthorised "cartbr chamberlain,;cars will be spirited awty,” sioamfioM ^awSHShSp siys s sign in I PMhhtj^jyjjtMijn church parking lot. Though not In Detroit as sn entertainer, the lean six-footer said he still periodically does the nightclub and stRte fair scenes. KEEPS HIS FANS To his pleasure, most of his fans who are also in their mid-30s, have reniained with him. “The younger, kids still recognize me largely because they see so many of my films on television,” he said. * * ★ . “If they' didn’t know the, begin, with, they eventually get around to hearing them as ‘oldies but gwxiies,” he laughed, a * * Speaking of the wide spectrum of ages he appeals to, Boone said he feels It is because people always have been able to trust him to provide clean Pat Boone: Oldie' Rut Goodie UNUSUAL FURNITURE VALUES Our Quality Sofas and Chairs, ALWAYS PRICED LOWER, ARE We ore clearing our floors for Fino Fall Morchandisa arriving dally Early American Styles or Contemporary aid Traditional Open Monday and Friday 'til 9 - Convenient Terms! 32 YEARS OF SELLING BETTER QUALITY FOR LESSI 144 OAKLAND FURNITURE | Park Five Jutt Around the Comer on Clark Street j Closed Wednesday Afternoon* During Summer For Want Ads^Dial Marriage Licenses JOWph L. Little, 29 East Howard ■ Maureen E. Stafford, Detroit I. Profit, S it S. Follette, Endlcolt, Now York verlw A. fiarnut. u„.“* and Beverly B. Sprout, Bloomfield Hills ClarkM. Ansbaugh, Birmingham and Tarata Swlontek, Birmingham Arthur Leas, 180 East Huron and Ruth D. Kennedy, iso Sett Huron ,h Michael J, Ferrara, Clarkston and Kathleen L. Wilton, Clarkston Alvin E. Smarch, Marvsvllla and WmSb V. Puddy, 42i South 'winding d South Wind ng WHIIam $. Council; 1st North Jessie and Rose M. Kllmartln, Mount Pleasant Daniel W. Greger, 7215 Howell and Linda K- Carpenter, 220 Clayburn Themaa w ------------- city and Death Notices THE PONTIAC TRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, loop be held Saturday, August 30, at |g a.m. at the Voorhees -Siple Funeral Home with Pastor E. Clay Polk of-ficiating. Interment in. Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Kenneth will lie In state at the funeral h o m e ., (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) Andra L. Smith, Troy Kathleen M. Philip B............. „....... Darlene C. Rann, Starling Heights LInvd E. Pan II. n»<»a .J! . ,wJlt'. Birmingham and ........ Sterling Ug|ghsa Lloyd E. Pain II, Oxford ...» Hi -McArthur, Oxford V - Bailey, 2340 Private and Char. OOk r-____ _ .1 MRI?h^d*eE"5i«' Norh Cass Lak, Richard E. Allan, 250, South Paddock end Ettella Robins, 2SI South Chasa, 1M7 Boston M ichoai Mlhokp Mlshlma, 49 East Strathmore m. Howell, . David R. Tucker, Ferndala and Carol A. Koop, 136 Melrose Thomas C. Hedrick Jr., Troy and Paula nuuMvnu mils, iu| .MJUU1 JS; Sammle Vmon, 101 South Jessie William F. Bennett Jr., Bloomfield ai Barbara L. Tennant, Troy John R, Doran, Farmington and Irei M. Spears, Farmington S •"« Vale, s.:r.rT - wir.!,?r.w!sn^lk'Troy *nd und* *• _Oanl*| J.. Uncoln, 5005 Wlndslow and Estha F. Hicks, 52 North Paddock Steven M. Topolt, Drayton Plains anc Sandra M, Young, Waterford Thomas J. Dyszklewlcz, Union Lake and Jane M. Bohex, Union Lake Charles D. Balogh, Bioomtleld Hills and Sally A. Faatharston, 3056 Marten *nc LYND, VERN ASHTON; August 27, 1969 ; 382 South Marshall Street; age 84; beloved husband of Sadie Lynd; dear father of Mrs. Adrian (Thelma) Thompson, Mrs. James charge, ter that portion BER." No adjustments will Clatin'g lima lor adv.rt taining type tin, lor, ular again type it 12o'cl 7.52 I 2.12 5.70 9.12 5 3.76 6.84 10.94 F 4.39 7.98 12.77 > 5.02 9.12 14.59 F 5.64 . 10.26 16.42 0 6.27 11.40 18.24 An additional charge el 60 ennf. TheVontiae Press FROM 8 A M, ta 5:30 P.M. BOX REPLIES At 10 a.m. today there were replies at The Press Office in the following boxes: C-2, C-7, C-12, C-15, C-19, C-23, C-24, C-27, C-29, C-30, C-32, C-35, C-36, C-37, C-40, C-41 and C-48. Cord of Thanks 1 sincerely tar , Rod kind oxproi________ . The Powell and Walker ti '^ FAMiLY of Lonnie Cummin. wlBhn to thank most sincerely the friend, and neighbor, for their ♦ft*1 o«*rlng, *nd contribution,. AI,o Father Jonei for hi, comforting word*. May God bln, each In Mtmoriam 28, 1986. in our htarta i Alway, tender, fond and true; ’ There's not a day, dear mother, Wa do not think of you, Sadly ml,,ad by daughter Ether id family. RASMUSSEN, FREDERICK; AUGUST 26, 1989; 169 Gateway, Waterford Township; age 79; .beloved husband of Lettie L. Rasmussen; dear father of Mrs. Doyle (Ada Y.) Shearer, Clinton F., Clair D., and Murray E. Rasmussen; also survived by 12 grandchildren apd four great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Friday, August 29, at 1 p.m., at the C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor. Interment in Oakland Hills Memorial Gardens, Novi. Mr. Rasmussen will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours are 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) 1 BEGINNING SEPTEMBER 2, Ben Powell Disposal Service will start Winter schedule of 1 pick-up per week. Pick-up days will be some as last Winter. For information Call 625-5470. 31. 10 a-m. to 6 p.n LOSE WEIGHT Mfaly with D*x-A> Diet Tablet,. Only FI cent,. Slmm'a Brot, Drug,. HALL FOR RENT. RECEPTIONS, todies, church. OR 3-5202; FE 2- Funeral Directors COATS FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON FLAINS__________ 67641461 C. J. GODHARDT FUNERAL HOME Keego Hirbor, FH. 692-9700. DONELSON-JOHNS FUNERAL HOME SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOME Thoughtful Service" FE M25I Huntoon FUNERAL HOME ROBARE, MARTHA; AUGUST 26, 1989; 3810 Lakewood, Waterford Township; age 84; dear mother of Mrs. Harold B. Potter, Mrs. James A. Stone, Mrs. A. J- Gurney, Mrs. Charles H. Garven and Max P. Selle; also survived by ten grandchildren, 2 4 great-grandchildren and one g reat-great-grandchild. Funeral service.will be held Friday, August 29, at 3 p.m., at the, St. Stephens Lutheran Church. Interment in Ottawa Park Cemetery; Mrs' Robare will lie in state at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. (Suggested visiting hours are 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) 19 Oakland A vs./ VoorheesSiple Cemetery Late Cemetery Lets I GRAVE LOT, V bronze marker,. ..... Memorial Eitatoa. Rod! 6 Rocheiter. Ph. ML Clam, Personals SMITH JR., TOM; August 24, 1969; 281 Ferry Street; age 49; beloved husband of Nellie Smith; beloved son <£ Jaen Smith; dear father of Alma, Kenneth, Karen Elizabeth and Gwendolyn Delores Spilth; also survived by she sisters and six brothers. Mr. Smith will lie In state at the Frank Carnithers Funeral Home! until 8 tonight at which time he will be taken to Marshall, Texas for service and Interment Saturday J August 30, at 1 p.m. BILL PROBLEMS! -CALL DEBT CONSULTANTS 138-0333 CHOIR DITector lor young grow. Ing church. Any ago. Grow with us. FE 3-7431 or FE t-1155. HELPING FOLKS With Root Estoto problem, for 3 generatlon, — Wo can help you I Mortgage, loan,. ial*<, now construction — trado, and 2nd mortgagei. wo elmply got tho job EM 3-6703 PONTIAC PRESS UDELL, GERALD SINES; August 27, 1969; 44675 West 12 Mile Road, Novi; age 68; beloved husband of Gladys M. Udell; beloved son of Mrs. Elizabeth Udell; dear father of Mrs. Elizabeth Porter and Robert W. Udell; dear brother of Roy Udell; also survived by five grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Saturday, August 30, at 11 a.m. at the First Baptist Church, Walled Lake, with Rev. Wendell Bagloe officiating. Mr. Udell will lie in atate at the Rtehardson-Bird Funeral Home, Walled Lake, after 7 tonight. CLASSIFIED ADS ARE FAMOUS FOR "ACTION" JUST CALL 334-4981 COLLEGE STUDENT noodt dollf rldo to Flint, wmht td (Kara pen,a,. Will dltcuu over phono. 332-5634, mmmmm.___________BupagWr eniw tho portlculor education he need,, we’ve lost oil If you don't help us.. If your child I, lagging and bagln-' ip undesirable el- reason he neei , own role at need, us. Wo ore completely ungraded and On our brono new sight on Scrlpp, Rd. Call 693-6400 or. 500-7422.________________ JIM, HAPPY 2)ST ANNIVERSARY. All my lova, oil my IU9. Bavarly. Mr. and Mrs. Homeowner Do you need financial advice on repairs, rtmodollng, paying Real Estate Taxes, grouping bills, Etc.7 9-5 Dally except. Set. Team, and Are you having trouble making you [found out v irrow yourself out of debt? THEN LET: “DEBT AID/ INC." HELP YOU WITH THESE PROBLEMS 10 WEST HURON WIG PARTIEk. Wig, t FE 2-7992. WITNESS TO ACCIDENT on Orchard Llko et Telegraph, August 3 at 1/1:45 a.m. involving 1961 Gray Plymouth and 1966 Blue Bulck, blacktop, woman and 3 —— Coll 611-0900,_____ chlldroi Lost and Found 2 BILLFOLDS TAKEN OUT OF purse Sot. night at Catalina 1 -unao, please return papers, — ■stlonr --*—11 questions asked. 3231 Judah, 391- BLACK POODLE. Pepl, oft Maybee Road. Reward 673-6222. 2 6 1 9 Williams Dr., Pan.________ FOUND BOY'S BRAND new blkoTin Waterford..OR 3-5602. Pay for ad. FOUND DACHSHUND, near Union Lake Village, call 363-5628.______ LOST: ONE YELLOW Thompson ski with white boot on Otter Lake, Coll 6S2-1495. , Green Lk. Rd., Lk. Rd, 662-8410, Reword, LOST: BALBOA Ik Pontiac , L«ko Point, 682-0742. LOST: WHITl MALE Miniature ■tig -------- to Rleky, ed Lake High School call 624-5346 oftor 5, LOST: VICINITY of Pontiac Lake and Teggtrdlnt Rd., trl-color mate ------------------------ 363-9415. MALI SEAL POINT StemSaoWRP vicltnity of Tlmbarlono Troll. Hortlond. No collar. Reward. 632- 2 FULL TIME MEN 5 2 MEN PART TIME Over 21, man______ __ employed. Call 474-U20 p.m. and 7 p,~ 2 FULL TIME MEN $790 a month, company benefits, 1$ or ovor. Call 674-0930, between t and 12 Frl. only._____ 3 MEN STEADY WORK jnd bonefltt to atart. Taylor, OR 4-0S30 from f:0 *tll noon tomorrow only. Mr. A.M. 8 MEN Full or port time to work with newly opantd office In Union Lake. Coll Friday, 10 a.m. to 12 noon. 363-7791 for Interview._____ ALftfcT MAN TO work In department store. Full or part tlmo. Coll 12 noon to 2 p.m. 336-7061. ACCOUNTANT $9,600 PLUS CHALLENGING'POSITION — with ?rowing multbcorporolo function. his la a full charge supervisory apot, ottering challongo, diversity ........benefits, salary C-—..____ on okporltnco. Call MRS. DAN- IELS. 542-5610.___________________ AUTOMOBILE MECHANIC OX-perloncod. In broke rellne, muffler and shock. Haro Is an axcollont opportunity tor a good-------- tarn tor above r------•••■ >0 average wagti, and benefits. Apply Flrettono Store, If W. Huron. LuYd ____ Dodge dealer, looking —1------1 auto - r... B m. Pie dltiont. C AUTO SALESMEN. Fast gmwlng for tx- rnTaTai Assistant Manager parlancad li r- Salary i IHy, Liber Opportunll Strong oxparlencad It. ___ ____ necessary. Salary commensurate Liberal fringe tunlty for ad- i parson, oik tor ALBERTS MIRACLE MILE alio machlnOi, steady workers ...... good working condition! and fringe benefits. Walvarlne Machine Products Co,. Holly, Michigan. AGGRESSIVE YOUNG MAN for position as waroh"1"™— —a Jruek driver. Very i tf Possibility hev# cheuf- ASSISTANT CITY ENGINEER CITY OE PONTIAC i several years of Personnel OHlS, 450 Wide Tri IrTct ARC WELDERS tr stool tonka. Experienced, II vartlme over at hr*. Prasanti wrklng It hrs. Paid holidays, It tirance, work cMIhot and oqull mont. Clavtoon Tank Co., MS I ASSISTANT MANAGERS AGES 19-26 ding local office of In-onal Corp. now Interviewing young man for nidltg^pi-----* trainee positions. Tronsportetlen , graduate and atto to \ mediately. Mr. Plarca 9:11 a.m, to tlse o,m.___________ IQj SOY, 3:30 to 18:30. Sop Ji •ShoS 1 Jffr " 1046, 4 8UILDING AND ground auporvladr. Smith I Vtln Cnmmui.llu .. . by c rang* Into....... DO,W0 to S11.500. buildinGMnspector' CITY OF TROY SALARY TO 111.200 - I, years experience In building trades, loumovn»n>« .tL.w.’! ir Rd.. Troy. 419-4900. BUS BOY WANTED for-pirMlm! employment, apply In. person — BDY OVER 17, stock and clerking, full or part-time, Russ' Country tmo cn-sbetb Lake Rd. BARTENDER Experienced preferred. Will train f5i tSS*, t, J,:3# aw md from S p.m. to < | BARBER WANTED, EXcYlLENT lob tor aleidy man. 412-0993. Attar BIG BOY RESTAURANT ______20 S. Telegraph_ BROWN & SHARPE automatic benefits. Apply Rochester Precision Ports Corp., 311 Griggs, Rochester. BIRMINGHAM PERSONNEL (OFFICE — Young man with Interests public contact, collage helpful but r 647-8BB0.___ CARPENTERS AND CEMENT MEN ^lg|i|Ujjgigl|gMMructlon wanted. Bill Dew . 338-2191 or 33S-3529. CREDIT INVESTIGATOR To train ter executive position. In national organization. High school grad or patter. Must have car. Good salary plus expenses. Apply Liberty Loan Corp. 1219 W. 14 Mila Rd. JU S-4W0. engineering engineering In. design and. Birmingham Chrysler Plymouth. Full tlmo employment. Ask lor Mr Northrop. 642-7800. month to start'with benefits si d1 bonuses. Call 674- 0520. 9 o.m.-12 noon tomorre COMMON^ LABORERS material handlers, press oi Many lobs available dally DAILY FAY EMPLOYERS Temporary Service, Inc. FERNDALE 2320 Hilton Rd. REDFORD 36617 Grand River CLAWSON 69 S. Main CENTER LINE i!561 E. 10 Mil# An Equal Opportunity Employer Not on Employment Agency CLARK OIL IS looking for ambitious For mora Information c Edds, LI 8-7222 a COMBINATION ROOFING and shoe! motel man. Carpenters and construction helpers. 42S-3I5S or 428-3159. CONSUMER FINANCE Local office, excellent full prowth company, prefer Interview call Mr.. Wright, FE 4-2424. Mutual Finance._ COM Nights, steady work, apply In Parian at Hip's, eel W. Huron. COOK — FULL OR hart lima. Apply In parson, Joe's Spaghetti House, 1031 W. ------ CITY OF TROY PLUMBING INSPECTOR SALARY TO (11,200 I with excellent Inspection axporiopco required, but CHECKERS DETAILERS SPECIAL MACHINE-AUTOMATION advancement. fringe benefits, overtlmi CLYDE CORPORATION designers . CLYDE tORP RATION 1MB W. Maple___________troy DlfSEfTfR Experience proforred.** Small TOUgr pon",e DISHWASHER-SALAD hifp needed, r^M-£g5.d,y,,nd DEPARTMeT/T-Store Manager' Sffhmi Annfrx »iort, *xpwriti only, A“‘“ •“ ----- - resumo to Slmmi e 5fl DESt^TER for progreiiive hr-w,rt "•,y- DteHWASHER, SALAD HELP naed- DEPeftOABLE tOY 10—i lull /time **“” —“- atotf. iexl^.....„ — Ilghtt. 82 par hr., to r l Mon. Coll Ml 7- DAYfWORK, PART f DISHWASHER ntcoisary. Apply 175 S. OIIhWaIhER, II OR OVtr _fcr~a ihlfts, blue cross and othi Mnaflta, Steak and Bo Restaurant, 5395 Dixie Hw| olivER salCsman, married", Salary S3t3744.2l, _________ 1h. fi^ltten. Excellent trlnga [Srw'% . —Pledge of tho prlrv-■iid prOGtlCOi Of drafting or have knowledge of the principle, and, pradlcsa of land surveying. EDUCATIONAL SALES ■■■■p teont too world do^[Khaolo[to"9i9 gnSBr*PS!v hospltsllzollon, Excellent t------ career WH..___________ personal Interview ct • WO 2-4211 or 332-9070. Equal Real Office Box ii) EXPiliE'HCVB 1IP6IIYIII ir ■parte editor to.ooo circulation RaeM growth area. (If. IMI, t rsr rgonoroln._____. nochliw 1 * ?1>c*ll,n90Ul Help Wanted Mai* EXPERIENCED SURFACE grinder, shaper and mlllhand, also drill press operator. Northwest Gaga and Engineering, lnc„ 26200 Novi Rd,, Novi. wages and benefits, a - ________ _.i. equal op- ------Hoff mans e o a k t a n d Packing, 626 N. 'Perry. ENGINEERING ASSISTANT CITY OF TROY 12.29 to S3.I0 Utilize your experience In drafting, surveying or construction Inspection, In rapidly growing engineering department. Steady work with celiont benefit package. Apply Personnel Dap.. 500 W. Big Beaver Rd„ Troy. 6S9-4900. _____ dependent, steady to work In th* best pay-pla new facilities, lots o CALL OR SEE PAULSON FE 5-4101 OR SEE BILL Af~li45~S. ’TELEGRAPH*” EMPLOYMENT COUNSELOR! F you have the ability and dealra ti c contact axparlancs. we will train you. Exceptionally high aamlngs first year. Snelllng and Snelllng. Call Bob Scott, 334-2471, for appointment. EXPERIENCED SPRAY painter-to ...........mSrclal , „„ banaflts, Appply at Mich. Transport Trailers, Inc., 4555 Dixie Top benefits. .gP! Transport Trallars, In Hwy., Drayton Plaint. ELECTRICAL INSPECTOR CITY OF TROY SALARY TO $11,200 gjjgg~~ electrician looking tor ibla position In growing depart int. Generous benefit package, sponsible work with opportunity FULL AND PART time service station mechanics and attendants with experience, good pay, Northwest Suburb, 626-0525. _ ______ FULL TIME GAS station'mechanic ....... j - ,r|tnci, Bill, 338- 7983. erf...Vim, lardwara, 9 0 5 itatlon attendants, weft area, nold not work ovos., Sundays or hall-days. 626-3887 or 624-6080. FACTORY WORK FOR titan over 30) Ithmatlc required. Apply 2)7 Central, Vi block off Saginaw repair man for light cc tools. Reference, wages confidential. Write to I Pontiac Press. all shifts, chance lor advancement, Morio Detective Agency. 240-0240. GAS STATION attendant, experienced, mechanically Inclined, local references, fuh or part tlmo. Gull Telegraph and Maple,____ GENERAL MAINTENANCE anii die setters wonted. Apply In parson at. Howell Ind, 100 Syre St, Lapeer GAS STATION MECHANic, “full time. Glenn's Marathon, M-S9 at Airport Rd. GENERAL LABORERS Immediate openings for man I housekeeping, dietary w — ““ /arehouse. All thlfit available, (per lent _______ Permanent full time work wit excellent benefits. Must be et leej 18 yrs. or older. CONTACT PERSONNEL OFFICE Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital 50 N. Perry St., PogVec, Mich. ________338-7271, ExLTM__ GENERAL FOUNDRY LABORERS WANTED Steady Employmi , Complete company paid frln benefit*. Apply In person Systemation 29464 Novi Rd. NR! __An equal opportunity employer OUNSMiYHp MU$T I experience, write Fontlec ____I Box C-24. _ HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATES Mulll-mlllion Corp. now hiring 6 young men, ages 11*24 for outsldo eppt. Ceil Mr. Lorenz, 339*8315 before 2 p.m. HELP WANTED FOR WINDOW cleaning, experienced or will train. Cell 335*1465._____ HIGH SCHOOL BOY must be over 16 to work Saturdays In Nursing dlstnytahlng. Call bet. 10 end 3 only. Evergreen Cdnv. Home. 334* 3224. I. MILLER SHOES HAS POSITIONS OPEN FOR THE NEW SALON AT TROY SOMMER-SET MALL, EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY, RECEIVING, STOCK CLERKS, PORTERS, exporlancod and tralnooa, Interviewing applicants at Kingsley Inn, Itapmfiald Hills. ting cl_______ __... _____________-4540, 9 ».m. to S p.m, I. MILLER SHOES HAS POSITIONS OPEN FOR THE NEW SALON AT TROY SOMMER-SET MALL, EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY, SHOE; SALES experienced and ■tjttlir ...........ig applicants at lleemfier ggfi JANITOR PORTER APPLY JACOBSON'S 334 W. Maple Birmingham LAROn INDEPENDENT has an opening tor a territory nignagar tralnsa Mr assignment In IM stela n and chance for ad-.011 eempsny ax-nacauary. Apply 1521 ....... “tlch. LANDSCAPE MAN V • I a r p n preferable. Johonnol Landscape s Tree Service. Cal aft. 6 p.m,, MA 6-7111, MOLD MAKER Apprentice. Good wages, bonoflla and overtlmo. S ml. N. of Pontiac, 1 ml. N. ofUL Apply af T, 67 Shea Mfg. — . Rd., Orion Township. iMECHATiic - GOLF CARTgasoTTne ‘•~J* •'— -----nd wo Good pay and ba Saginaw. FE 4-9505.__________ MANAGER FQR~AUTb wpOi. Pi i 7961 from 9-5. . * Help Wontad Mala LIFE INSURANCE SALESMAN $10,000 to $25,000 With , or without Insurance experience. Complete training In our wvardlng and lucrative business with e generous long-term trelnlno allowance up 1o 110,600 per year to *»T> plus opportunity to elrn ad-ditlonal commissions and bonus. Income of 525,000 to 830,000 ob- lable In 7 to *10 , MANAGEMENT OPPORTUNITIES There Is unlimited management end earning possibilities for high calibre men with our progressive expanding Ir year,8|nabuslno**Uwlfh slso'mlllion prestige office facilities In Southfield and e fin! lor advancing our car"" Mr. Gaunt, 353-1901. “Mechanic Heavy duty truck, must have good ref. Top wages. Ytar around. Adrian Sod. 474-721 ?.__ MAN WANTED FOR PORTER-end maintenance of 2 restaurants. Apply Champs Rer‘..........gt — — Maple f. 646-3411. MACHINE OPERATORS and trainets for • LATHES .MILLS • GRINDERS Lynd Gear Inc. Phon* 651-4377 361 South Street Rochester, Michigan ____________ipportunlty employer MATURE MAN WITH knowledge ol tools and Medlem equlpmqnt. No drinkers please. 42 W. Montcalm. MAN WANTED TO worklrrifort, steady work, good pay, apply In parson, Peoples Fish snd Poultry - Markot. 377 5. Saginaw, Pontiac, MAN FOR BOAT shoo, year around work. Newkirks, 2156 Cass Lake Rd. 662-0610._____ MOTEL PORTERS Days or midnight, noed 2 men. Apply 1001 S. Telegraph. __________HOLIDAY INN " management in fTnance Rapidly growing financial organization Is soaking those anger the satisfaction of developing and attaining goals. Must possess initiative, ba aggressive, and havs the desire or [iKtepandonce In managing tho - .... management as rapidly as your ability permits you to progross on a formal training program. eluding semi-annual merit reviews and profit sharing. All replies confidential. Call or write. Sentry Acceptance Corp. 7410 Highland Rd., Fontlec, 674-2247. MANUFACTURER'S REPRESENTATIVE Over 23, young, r willing salt-sterling, willing to relocate in locations of Pa., Maryland, Dal., N.J.. N.Y., Florida, Colli., Ohio, Texas, at company axpansa, local Detroit area store has openings as wall. Position starts at 09100 ptr year, salary to those qualified. Plus commission, all company benefits. For confidential Interview, contact Mr. J. Porker, 729-4610. MAINTENANCE MAN, full lime, daya, public building, mult ba pood hondy-mon. Please sand resume to Pontiac Press. Box c-48. MECHANIC FOR TRACTORS and light Industrial equipment, 334-4479. MODERN IZATfON SALESMAN -Qualifications: must bo at least Journeyman with S years building experience. Dew Construction Co. 33S-219B, 338-3529. MECHANICS, HELFHrS7>WYIM. Apply Keego Sales and Service, 3060 Orchard Laka Rd., Keego Needed Immediately! the oil new Pontlecs, Tempest*" PonVtec-BuIck. Rochester." 651 NEEDED AT ONCE Collision Men i moved Into our I Matthews- Hargreaves I T. O. Orion Two. _________________________ fTBTTC E“I NEED OOOD recon-ditioning men to claan used cart, $3 and up to right man, FB 5*1244, NIGHT KITCHEN utility min (or private club. Good wages and working conditions. Call Jordan 6-7109 gwy (toy r"~—* - ORDERLIES Full tlmt and Part tl graduate, t personnel, Hospital, 90o wooowar coll 332-9111. Exl. pelntmont. PROPERTY MANAGEMENT OMking full /'-UJSwm service large o 0 10 P.O, I submit Pontiac Press. AjjBti MANAGll.'-Past-qrowlni arts manager. Past growing Dodge dtolor needs aggressive ex-pOrlonco young man who Is Interested In a good future. “ irv bonuses," rotlrement. ""c2m Bridge*. 424-1572, Walled Lake. PART-TIME PORTER Part .... employ* bi Robert nornlngi, ft I, apply In p Trey, 46M644. PRODUCTION SUPERVISOR tor *farao tape cartridge manu(ac-turar, IPs a fait growing, small {wnpany. Experience flpiBio. Tapo-Tronlcs Inc. 441S Flmlee. Royal Oak. 576-2777. PUNT ATTENDANT ■ work In Mnerai mjsl have Detroit Bollor Operator llconw. Salary panda on qualifications and experience. Excellent trlnga banaflts. Contact. Personal Dept. Pontiac General Hospital. Seminole at W. Huron, Pontiac, Mich. Phone 331-4711. Ext. SIS. POT WasHIr, 'kitchen cleaner Ex-pariancad prafarrad. Goad wages, trlnga*, paid vacations, meals, unWrm*. Apply in person orchard Lake Country CM*. SOW W. Shore Drive. D—11 PROFESSIONAL TRUCK DRIVERS DO YOU WANT STEADY EARN- INGS OF $12,000 per year as SLEEPER CAB OPERATOR? axpertenca. Contact: T r I n a e o n ■rnatinn of |obs available I , An Equal Opportunity Employer PORTER ‘ NEW OR USED CAR it ba 10 years or older, at rivers license, market and show travel trallars. mechanically Inclined Opportunities and-Lend;'W* Vi need of hlgh-callber a a representatives, preferably lice,,— now In real estate but not ntetssary. Wo have - " throughout th* state. Th* only non-resldentlel multiple listin'1 *■—!— kind In the u.S. I of tho Michigan Busin work. Fingers of t REAL ESTATE Our bonus plan Is * it plus paid -...eluded. Wo spoclallu In business opportunities and Investment properties. Call Mr. Worden at M2-3920 for personal Interview. RETIREE FOR PORTER WORK Evening Shift •10 eoVXrive in 2490 Dlxte Hwy* R EfiRkb PERSON FOR steady work managing car w*ih, 335-3422. *lu- ^ —‘|7 533.004"* 1 ROUTE SALESMEN For tstebllshod dry doming route, aMd opportunity tor npot spring aggressive man. Apply » necessary, prater local C-?l„ Pontiac. SURFACE GRINDER HANDS for progressiva dies.1 Steady SS hour weak. All fringe*. 334-4523. SINGLE MAN FOR general car* of ■ ,i.siu living1 mmmm toC Ray Rd., Oxford. 620- lorses and s' )■ 4 p.m I, 4SM77S, SERVICE ATTENDANT Gas pumpar, full time. S112JC pi weak. Daya. Sundays off. Call A Service Work Part-Time — Days Flexible BURL., and service rest roam deodorant appliances on well established route. No atlas. Dopondablo, conscientious man who Is handy with simple tools. Phono Mr. Doug SHEER OPERATOR WILL (rain for day shift. Apply THOMAS Dio and Stomping. 2170 E. Walton Blvd., Sales Representative Wholesale Building Material* Local company has outatondlng opportunity for aggressive salesman. Call on local retail lumbar yards to soli complete lino of building mttorlols. Salary, commission, company btnofHs, cor furnished. For oppolntmmt coll LU SHEET METAL compufor field, now hlrlM experienced mm for 1st and 2nd shift. Grow will? too loador In Its field. SC hrs. par wk., profit ahar- I, 32451 N. Avll, N SERVICE MANAGER. Fast growing Dodgo dealer needs aggressive experienced man, who Is Inwrnstod In a good future. Present labor salts $6,000 a month. Good working conditions. Good saterly, bonuses, rillromont. Call Mr. Br(dgt*> *24- Sporting Goods Salesman Employment Off lea Hudson’s Pontiac Mall SALES MANAGER $12,000 PLUS NO SELLING - Live win man, supervised and trained tor a large Lake, r rar and rMprt property. ... ____ ever *3.000,000,000 in in- ventory. Our salesman, Mrtllna over $20,000. Llcms* ana ax-parlance needed. Career position ell benefit* and unlimited future. Salary dapandlno on ax par lane*. CALL MRSTDAnIELS. 542-5610. TRUCK DRIVER tandem dump, ax. «<£khvj TELEVISION TECHNICIAN RCA qualified television technician*. Applicants, with electronic schooling military, or vocatfonol may Spply. RCA often on outstanding bmaftt program Including company ppld hoapnfl, - surgical, matof medical Insurance plan •■Ui vnur family, paid vocation, r&T3i Hlghtoito^Rd., Mon.-sat. M p.m. ,v i D—1£ 6 Help Wanted Femol# 7 Help WantedFeonle ‘ YiMfiklk wAnveo F51t rmi Eltet« Min. Comylet. training: BABY __ overtime.! transportation provided l FRANK 0. area. 682-CK9B_________ I Cola, Blrm-I.I^V SITTER needed ft m child, let Mill. tlS a \ Keego ^small’^bW ER WANTED In young couple who occasional weekend out. I 'HIK PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 7 for Wont Ads Dial 334-4981 Help Werted Femirfe NORTHLAND AREA to expending business, mIm engineering Arm needs quel i- Housewives I____SELL PART TIME CXT"ll^M«etW.*p,’p«rln0ar L“rdIi^-1 J“r2JiBf.W1??* •vellebl. aggressive. Apply at 1 Hour high pay, BABY SlTTCR MUST Tl j.. . . : Pnnllor tin nor u.onk ....tMndSd Auta; ~ Pehflat. 330 I » Oakland. 330-4033_____; BABY SITTER NEEDED OFF [CLEANING -""-utos which or* given’out™n WANTED, WAN WITH Highland Rd., Pontiac. WANTED AGGRESSIVE NEAT APPEARING YOUNG MEN PR Walton r______ _________ -. I In*, mar, i Coll***. Cell after 4 p Iftttabtaaffc 73401BABY SITTER, FOR y "ommunlty housekeepers, Birmingham, 373-0045. : allowance. 641-7900._ ig couple. DO YOU' ENJOY CHILDREN? N end paid vacation. Apply MIm Woodard, _. through Thurt. BEELINE STYLIST EARN I Bloomfield “uaranteed svi nuurs • oey, ays a week. Excellent pay an Mnge benefits. Phone 332-0M2, i potential* call *7441 . Bloomfield I DtVON“GABLES' discount Ttl-Hurcti Winkelmans experienced inn OMSlIy UnltM »uu *,* perienced. good wages i benefits, Hoffman's 0 a k 11 Pecking, S16 N. Perry. WANtib: AUfO PARTS C must bo experienced In soiling and rebuilt parts tor ell t_______ Apply Hollerback Auto Parts, 173 Baldwin A vs. Ph. 330-4034. WOOL PRESSER tor tuiTlime~po tlon In quality dry doanars, mi be uperlencid MA Mff, si Telegraph et Mepla. Wanted: man capable learning Marine mechanics tret Over 11 yoars of age. Frln.. benefits, Interested? Cell FE 5- WaNTUD: ^BN 45 to fl years old tor porter work. Day and evening shifts. Apply after 4 p.m. Big Boy Restaurant. 1490 Dixie Hwy, JYOUNG MEN NEED MONEY? BEAUTICIAN. 'Salary' | mission. Good cllenlel ' BAR WAITRESS Frl HAIR STYLIST Americana Wig Company 5905 Dixie Hwy. I nd epend ence^ Common s _ J HOUSEKEEPER beby liftsr, g 10 YOUNG LADIES For outslda order dspartmt $114.50 per week. Qualifications: r, Johnson. _____J26 bet. p.m. dolly. OPENINGS For counter girls, checkers, Mrs, dry cleaning, and department. Apply between and 9:30 a.m. or 5 and 6 p.m. Orpsham Cleaners, 605 Oakland i Blue Cross Y SITTER It ty $1.50 par hr., HOUSEKEEPER, LIVE"... furnished. 075 E. parents, 1 school aged !m. Ml 6-6108 private room, alr-co OUR homoTTld girls. Call Mr. Sherman btlwet TO a.m. and 5 p.m. 542-1853 or 54 1724. '_____________ YOUNG SALESMAN TO WORK fleer covering store, no oxporlom YOUNG MEN I lob, at fraoio Auburn. FE l-O,... WANTED TRUCK MECHANICS Gas or diesel. Liberal pay, Insurance furnished, retirement and full benefits. See Mr. Coe, 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m Monday thru Friday. GMC Truck Center Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485 *h aquel opportunity employer Qualifications: love 674-0717 or 674-17?3.0r 'BAKERY CLERK — DEPENDABLE, RELIABLE, Baby [DEPENDABLE I Bakery 1337 Auburn Rd. Aubur StjEtS_________________‘ I 646-0117^ __ 8Mrt^IS ANiDhtW*hi«**?i ,u" •nd;DI$HWAS'HER, kitchen cleaner. I BARMAID, 5 DAYS, must be we experienced, neat and abla l assume responsibilities, Duffy' Union Cake, 363-9469,___________I BAR MAIO - PULL and part tlmi nights, apply In parson after fturon L*l3H- ATTENTI0N HOUSEWIVES” toll toys, gifts, now tor "SANDRA PARTIES" —Over 70 per cant Amtrlcat Cashier - hostess WAITRESSES kitchen help Now tilling lull time or part time positions, no oxporltnco nects' wo will train. Apply Blazos, W. Maple, Troy, ______ CLERK, ADULT, CIGAR and Candy HE, Every other evening 1 to 10 Every othar Sunday 10 a.m. p.m. Mills Pharmacy. Blrm- am_MI 65060.___________ COOK-EXPERIENCED, references, commute or live In. 156-1031. COUNSELOR, all you naed li_M to work with the public. Call Anglt Rank, 531-9137. _ CURB HOSTESSES ~ Night shill. Full lima i —Suppllt* furnished —Delivery by United Parcel. —Beg* Included With ordere. —Hoeteti, up to 15 per cent pH SHOP AND COMPARE! CALL BETH WEBER wages, hospll benellts. Apply: ■LIAS |R< 0355.___ HOUSEKEEPER DAYS, awn Homemakers isieay, iuii time , Lady Orva hoc Mall. N C E D MANUFAC-I girl wanted. Salary ______ jubmlt resume listing experience and references to Box-B, utlca, Michigan.__ EXPERIENCED waitresses, top "IS, good working: rcSy,r Waterford. EXPERIENCED SHIRT finisher tor Hudson's Pontiac Mall conditions. EMPLOYMENT COUNSELOR: If you havolhe ability and desire to work with people and have had salts or public contact experience, wa will train you. Exceptionally high Mmlngs first year. Sntlllng and Sntlllng. Call Bob Scott, 334-,1471, tor--—* BIO BOY RESTAURANT __Telegraph A Huron_ COMMElCl TWP. AREA, n ^WrTp'm’ -,y* * A RELIABLE mother w small dtlMrah la ci month old boy, 3 day* hrs. dally). Musi have fenced and no goto. Desire location i between Pontiac and Bloomfield Hills, r—- la a—— -— -- 1 C-37. apply In parson at Rip's If CLEANING GIRL WANTED 3 days ASSISf ANT . .. lection, laboratory ...... essential, full lima. Sand rt Pontiac Press, Box C-l. babysitter in home; Auburn and Opdyke ares 334-7339. ___ Faby STFTfK waniid vicinity of Harrington HUM 1951, Carelyn. la Pontiac t "Mb, tomllae, 1 KAlVSTfriX WANTED ln“ homa. Te live In with soma w If applicant from area tout . parttime. 473-5744 afttr 5:30 p. iABYSITTER: ContWent ' led watch 1 child, 5 days wk. Iran*. 636*911. Holly amt. BABY-SITTER, LIVE In, lit week, 631-1079.___________ BABY BITTER transportatlon,. V‘ 7317, aft. 4 P.m. BABYSITTER NIOHT1, I dry cleaners, hrs. 10:30 a.m, to 3:30 p.m — - train. MA6-7107. counter ________ perienced, Flash Cltantrs, 339 CASHiEft 'SALES~gTRL - John _Lumbor Co. 7940 Cooley Lake_R{ CASHIER - WAITRESSES TELETRAY OPERATORS Maturt dependable person restaurant-dining room. Full part , lima. Good will I Hospitalisation and ethtr bind Telegraph 3. Huron 1490 Oixto Hwy. I Pontiac Press Want Ads I For Action EXECUTIVE OFFICE ASSISTANT TO Top Management Typing and shorthand rc- quired. Must also havB knowledge of and ability to handlo balance sheets, cost reports and assist comptroller in other phases of accounting. Generous benefit f gram. Good salary. Best of working conditions. Please send detailed resume for - prompt appointment to PONTIAC PRESS BOX C-l 4 PauI^a ^Hamburf IX PER if NCEDWAIT R ESSE S7~i I. MILLER SHOES HAS POSITIONS OPEN FOR THE NEW SALON AT TROY SOMMER-SET MALL, EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY, SHOE SALES, , CASH pirlenctd and train tervlewlng applicants — ____ Kingsley Inn, Btocmflald Hills. C6ma In and talk It ov id ~ for an appointment. Benton. 641-1400.__ KEYPUNCH OPERATORS Kelly Girl 333-7937 — Bru*I Opportunity Employ! LIVE IN babysitter. Coil otter FE 4-9039, ______________, LEGAL SECRETARY Exptrlanc«ART i call 676 PONTIAC NORTHEND Restaurant. 1375 Baldwin, needs waitresses and grill help. Full or port time. Call Mt. 3:30 and ID a.m, PE >646' Evas. 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. FE 1-0193. PART TIMfe DRIVER wanted li picking up odd delivering di cleaning, mornings preferred o early afternoon, 2719 N. Wood- PE 1-0505.___________ PRESSER WANTED FOR quality dry cleaning plant vacation, paid holidays and Mniflts, . call Mr. . waitresses. 3616612, PRESSER, EXPERIENCED. POSITIONS AVAILABLE State Bank, accounting preferred. Inquire Perse---- . u»in office. Also needed mol i tor combination mall , 1 so, wo have Immediate opening (or two real estate sales people. Interested In making money. Ex-perlence helpful, but not necessary. Will train, plenty of toads and floor time and attrdctlvo commission schedule. For Interview, call Mr. faylor, OR 60306. Evas. Monday-Frlday, 12 Dishwashers Excellent wages, evening shift, . or 6 p.m.-2 - a.m. Pull or part time work ovoliobio. Apply ,_ Wr*MACHUS RED FOX Telograph Rd. at 15 Milo Rd, i Dr. E., Pontloc. SECRETARY: ____ ___________ switch than fight? Mature gal with typing and shorthand wins JMa battle. $590. Call Mary Brldgai, 3362471, Snelllng 6. Selling. SECRETARY: ............... shorthand? Are you wasting skills tor low wages? This si waiting for you. $520. Cali SHORT .ORDER C WANTED- YOUNG PEOPLl —ferably collage students tor the and surrounding area, i licants on Sept. 2 at 1:00 ! ... Michigan Employment Security lommlsslon, 242 Oakland. Call lor in appointment 332-0191. DISHWASHER, $1.75 per hr., apply parson, Farmington Country _ 0, is Milo and Haggerty Rd. DISHWASHiSR, DAYS. Mople House Restaorant, Birmingham. Call Mr. Brandel, 6467039. EMPLOYMENT AVAILABLE - ap- Sales Help Male-Female 8-A Calling All .. Salespeople 111 YQRK Is on fno lookout for con sclontlous self-starters with outgoing parsonalltlas, If you moot this description, YOU ARE WANTEDH1 E XP E R I E N C E D salesperson, good salary, eppiy Irving Kay . Draperies, 237 N. Woodward Avo.< Blrm.. 6465180. RECEPTIONIST i meeting peoplw?,,^ Attr«tlv«u waitress,_______... .wmmm necessary, Rochester area. Apply North HIM Lanes, 150 W. Tlenken, —■ 4pJn. WAITRESS TO WORK lunch l________ 11 to 2. Appl^ciub Rochester. 206 rest In publli 1- 647-0000 > type. Oxtord vicinity. REGISTERED SECRETARYFOR Mltoto OfflCO, ind minimum veek. nlaasanl^.^ Commerce, SECRETARY Telegraph, 3362444 oxl. 165.____ MEDICAL OFFICE assistant, Pon-.... .. . . Inlocllon, routlna MATURE WOMEN for waitress, cashier work, also Short order cook, apply Richardson's Farm Parly, 7350 Highland Rd. MEDICAL SECRETARY Full time position ovoliobio In X-Ray dept, of local hospital must bo high school gro typing skills, medical terminology ..._________ short hand not necessary. Apply polntmont 336811" txt. 233. , V Phong 71 __________ Machine Operator . No experience necessary Good working conditions Fold holidays'— vacations Transportation necessary it Davis Cltantrs_____647-3003 MATURE And dspsndabla v lor pwaient real estate an Little typing, M days. Miller Bros. Realty 53W W. Huron Pan 333-7156 PULL TIME'olllce girl. Beauty! Wig Salon. 4664 W. wallon Blvd. FULL TIME Housekeeper, cook and Nurse Aldas. Call lr — GENERALOFFICE, .............. soma axperlanco preferred. Call Mrs. williams, 3336113. Equal Op. poriunlty employer._ GENERAL KITCHEN WORK days. MATURE LADY TO Ilv6ln, cart 2 children while parents work, 4323 before 4:20._ MOTEL MAID OVER 25, dt| debit. 330-4061,________ MODEL-SALESGIRL Experienced In retailing, to fashion In womens hair wear. < Dabble Amtrlcana Wig Company 5905 Dixie Hwy. Independence Commons MA 3-9300____1 MOTEL DESK CLERK Apply 1101 S. Telegraph. ____ HOLIDAY INN [MATURE LADY AGE 21 to 35 ... carry-out restaurant work. Good ........ SuS- OrchsrJ I Roc^esloi ASSISTANT DEPARTMENT MANAGERS We hove opportunities for aggressive young men with retail experience to train for management positions, enabling them to fill future openings for merchandise department managers in high volume departments. SEND C0MPLET RESUME OR APPLY AT Personnel Department, 2nd Floor PONTIAG'MALL All EquaKOpportunity Employer GENERAL OFFICE - Experienced mature woman lor printing ottlce. Accurate speilinfl and knowledge ol English grammar, ara atsant'-' Job requires a parson with ■round Intolllgonco end o doslrs work. Excollonl wages • benefit*, pontloc Graphics Inc., Woodward.J306467. | GAS STATION A T T E Nfb /Til n parson only at KlXS MANAGER MANAGER TRAINEE Exparlance helpful but ns necessary. Wq will train. A benefits Including profit sharlr plan. Apply. 2 p.m.-5, p.m. Mandai BIG B iS BROS. No phono calls. Niiksfi, lir"anJ“n».W.;“haii tor afternoon and midnight ihlf Increased salary benefits, frln bonoflls. Coll Nursl" —------ 1 60045. __________ NURSES FOB LABOR SECTION, full or pari lima, all shifts. 300 bod hosplto has OB-GYN Resident Tralnlnc Program. Excollont s t a r 11 n« salary. Canorous fringe benefit! Including Rotlromont Program Contact Personnel Dlriclor Saginaw General Hospital, 1447 N -b Sagli—.......- 7536411 Ext. 235. ws _ OO D ............I SHORTHAND, plus real related background Prastlga spot with 1 suburban firm. All ban unlimited future, salary on axaarltnca. Coll DANIELS, 5426010. SHIRT PRESSER Full tlmo good poy, : Clsanors. 605 Ooklond Avo $550 A eslata Waitresses i HUDSON'S Ipontiac room Has kill time openings with ex cellonl employee benefits: Purchase discount, Ills Insurance Blue Cross and many others. Apply In person Hudson's Pontiac Mall Full or Part Time Fry Cooks Decorators Counter Girls Janitors Dawn Donuts REAL ESTATE SALESMEN Experienced to work on far...J Oakland and Macomb Counties. Salary or drawing -------------8 SALESMEN HELP! WE NEED YOU I SALES TRAINEES: Restless young grad Is sought by high caliber employer . . . Train for management. 57,500. Half toe paid. Call Bob Scott, 336-2471, Snclllng and SALES REP. Excellent opportunity tor young man. Earn while you loom. Good salary and baneflta. Call: INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 601-1100* "■ TRAFFIC SUPERVISOR, direct Co. owned trucks, rout* commercial carriers, familiar with Interstate, commerce regulations end load hauling limits. S11.000, v„ adorns t Ktoms iRStrucHoBS-Schoeh ,tt - ASSOCIATED TAX SCHOOL Slat* approved tax course, qualifies you for employment. Associated Income Tex school, Write 220 W. Walton Blvd., Poh- SALES MANAGER $12,000 PLUS NO SELLING — Live wire .man, supervised and trained (or o large land developer, specializing In laka. river and resort property. Wa have over 15,000,000,000. In In-. -—- earning 1 depending 1 5RS. DANIELS SALESMAN Is your opportunity Id got In 0 ground floor. GMC Real 1 have openings fT* "■“* I. Terrific Work Wanted Male salespeople who can't be wron Call today. MILLER BROS. REALTY 333-7156 PULL TIME;' I assistant caretaker, i WAITRESS Full time. 01.70 per hour. Pleasant working conditions. Uniforms and, meals furnished. Many company benefits. Apply In parson bet. 9:3n' a.m. to 11 a.m. 1:30 p.m. to 4:3# p.m. Downtown Kresge's. _ WAITRESSES Apply In person. S. S. KRESGE CO. PONTIAC MALL See Mr. Plslwr 9:365 in tquil opportunity employ est.______ Mali resume Inventory. Our n dim on oxporltnco, commission and bonus; This la a career ipqt, and all benellts. Call MRS. DANIELS. 542-5610.____________ Fox Dry Cloanart. 719 W. Hui WOMAN TO CARE tor 3 motherless chlldrsn, live In. 6516095. 9 AM to 11:30 AM a: Sales Personnel IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR PULL TIME PERMANENT POSITION IN FOLLOWING AREAS; Women's Apparel Children's Home Decorative Men's EXPERIENCED PREFERRED LIBERATL BENEFITS AND GOOD WORKING CONDITIONS. JACOBSON'S 336 W. MAPLE*4**”BIRMINGHAM STOP READ TH TOY CHEST oftori. I poriunlty t^eemj^lllft™SHOW GUARANTEED TOYS. Bern 20 per cent pTue, no delivery er collections. Car and phona needed. 662-0653 er 363-2121: WOMAN WITH CAR. housekeeper tor eld live In. Ph, 363-7623. WOMAN tor kitchen t young Woman poiT” department. Apply B e SECRETARY i. ws SURGICAL NURSE R.N. Outstanding opportunity in modern progressive 392 bed hospital 11 p.m.-7t30 a.m. shift Nlon.-Fri. Permanent, full time. Solary range $757-$891 per month. Beginning; salary commensurate with education, training and# experience. Excellent fringe benefits. Contact Personnel Dept. Pontiac General Hospital, Seminole at W. Huron, Pontiac. 338-4711, ext. 218. r further Information < *s Restaurant. Keego Harbor Help Wented M. or F. I US DRIVERS PRIVA NURSERY school Bloomfield H mutt be available 7 a.m, ti physical raqulrtd, 6465598 be! ^L00r DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED Tm8.. Wad,. Thurt. 10 Highway Construction Aide 03 To fill It monthly. All Michigan civil service benefits Including an oulitandlna stale contributor ■VIPMiaDtKfbRa TODA 3526000, CHSATE 6 CHOATE DENTAL RECEPTIONIST, wT ELECTRONICS TECH axilla learned In service qr _ school? Employers ere looking for you. Good pay and location. Call: INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 6SI-U00_________1000 W. Huron EXACT PERSONNEL vacancies. Salary S434 to SS37 monthly, All AMchloen Civil Jar1- *—*• Including an -qntrlbutorY i excellent lendjtylty of college IfflftkoT IHPV STATISTICS ° CLERK EXAMINATION ON MAY 10, 1969, NOT ELIGIBLE. For application, contact the Detroit Office, Michigan Civil iarym, i40i Cadillac Square Building, mdraWL. Michigan 43226. phono 3S» SWS. Jf MMI6-naaretf Michigan Emptoy-mant Security Commlsilen Olfice. Applications must be received ny the . Mtontoan Department of Civil Service t , jRp. nation sm NURSES _______ ______.mm pantos, $260. Call Anglt Rook, 332- 9157, Assoclatoe Personnel._ OPTOMETRIST TRAINEES, doctor will train, S2M-, Call Jerry fiffi*' .................... GENERAL OFFICE, " 'ms, good banafili. ssia 1 Legga, 3326157. REGISTER NOW— EXEC LEGAL AND MEDICAL TAXATION-COURT REPORTING STENOGRAPH (MACH, SH.) Alto Refresher Courses Accountlng-Buslnett Math Shorthand-Steneograph 11 A-l CARPENTER WORK AT A PAIR PRICEI Additions, family seems, kltcheh ' cabinets, garages, tiding, roofing, cement, sic. Large or email lobs. DEW CONSTRUTION CO. PE 6 2190 or FE 36529 Open tyO. *1111. AND ALUMINUM collIge students desire work In painting or general maln-tonanca. 853-5379 iff, 4. , REMODELING OR net garages, basements, small or to --“,*‘ Carpentry, 3 TLE AND CARPET I Work Wanted Female 11 McCosian, FE 4-_______ BABY SITTER, MY HOME, D weak, mature, responsible' r of 5 school age children-end Baybrook, Drayton Plains, 6736723. HOUSEWORK BY DAY. Need transportation. PE 5-4251. Werk Werted Cwplte 12-A CHILDLESS COUPLC* tducational —‘ T ** amora ana, grounds keeping, bo familiar with maemnary* -------- — _____ad apartmi Business Service IS CUSTOM BATHROOM VANITY MANPOWER DEVELOPMENT TRAINEE S*50 plus car. Excellent potential for young man wfth college degree*. Fee paid. INTIRNATIONAL PERSONNEL Dreee Making * tailoring 17 MANAGER TRAINEE PUBLIC RELATIONS: Like people? Perfect shot tor pretly*» Dlxld Hwy, OR M7I7 ( Male-Female l-ASalts Help Male^emale l-A » Wauled M. or F. 8 Help Wanted M. «r F. I Female 7 Help Wanted Female 6V3 6613. HOWARD JOHNSON'S NEEDS Waitresses Counter Girls Hostess-Cashier M bolh da pMl,lon' "ow avsllab van tailor your Thlf? *to 'ye! availability. Abova average ear: tops ! axd pleasant working Ca transportation and bd willing l train. Apply In parson. Telegraph at Maple Rd. Birmingham fOU SEKEEPER, BABYSITTER,1 en Cess Leke. 6326747, _ 7 Hostess • Cashier- Good wages, meals furnished. Ap-I ply In parson only, between *•“ * ' TED'S BOOKKEEPER Immediate Opening Full time permanent, position for right person in north Oakland County arsa. We will he training. Background in Bookkeeping and cost costing for construction company (freferrsd, but not neensary. {Call Mr. Deaver from 9t00 a.m. to SiC" ” personal interview. ) 5:00 p.m. for a Richard'S. Royer* Ihc. *~^\Htciltor & Builder , OXFORD, MICHIGAN PhoMt 428-2548 or 628-2574 OXFORD OFFICE CLASSES REAL ESTATE Courses Covered Company Introduction Appraising Salesmanship Sales Tools & Aids Financing Listings Preparation for State Examination ROYER REALTY, INC. 823 S. Lapcr Road 626*581 ENROLL NOW CAREER OPPORTUNITY IN REAL ESTATE BATEMAN REALTY CO. ANNOUNCES THE ENROLLMENT OF ITS 1969 FALL "TRAINING COURSE FOR THE BEGINNING REAL ESTATE SALESMAN." * • Fundamental Salesmanship • Preparation for Board Exams • Real Estate Law • Appraising THE COURSE WILL RUN FOR A PERIOD OF 4 WEE CLASSES WILL BE HELD AT BATEMAN REALTY C 377 S. TELEGRAPH, MONDAY . THROUGH FRIDAY EACH WEEK FROM 7 TO 9 P.M. APPLICATIONS AW ABLE AT THE FOLLOWING OFFICES* UNION LAKE PONTIAC 8175 COMMERCE RD. 877 S. TELEGRAPH 338-7161 ^CHESTER CLARKSTON 730 S. ROCHESTER RD. ' ,6573 DIXIE HWJU Wonted Hausehold Goads 29 Wonted to Root For Wortt Ads Dial 334-4981 REFRIGERATORS mid WANT TO RENT «|7« mi.1050 I homt, 3 orVb< * *n,*rwt®d Intmstr I J or 2-story, new or older that may need] ^J32! Wanted Real Estate to buy WANTED CHEST or upright freezer,| 30 Wanted Miscellaneous WY ALL USED Furniture and all! YnuNc Bvenmue— unwanted articles. 373-0382, child n!?d 2 or 3' SS&LMJ COPPER, BRASS. RADIATORS, 'furnished*home wnh^garage, "n wn,r,,ort- c- Olx-I Rochester or surrounding area sew, OR 3-5849._____________ I Prefer occupancy before Oct. Is* WAtiflB:BUYING silver coins, 1 ’* | •ml back, call for latest pr quote, «M3»1. WAIVED: Schwinn Bike, boy's ***** "" «• 12 GIRLS TO SHARE 1 DAY CASH FOR YOUR HOUSE OR LOT NO COST TO SELL FAST FRIENDLY SERVICE . A BETTER CASH DEAL All cash tor homes, Pontiac and Drayton Plains area. a ' hours. Call home p u THE PONTIAC PRES^, THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, ]0fm Wemtad Real Eatota 36j Want«d Rtoj fatat#361 Apartment*, Unfurnished 38]Rent Business Property 47-A Sare Houses BEHIND p—yn legal costs ci PAYMENTS? ^Avoid lOT^- WANTED M* PONTIAC UMlm HOUSER ,^^*.m«»|C(»LEY_AND HOSPITAL Rd„ 24' DeA. tv i - . .' M4 s B( 49 Sale Houses COUPLE WITH $5,000 down desires 3-bedroom home In Waterford arba. Agent OR 4-1649. 338-6993. Shorn living Quorte rs 33 V [ J R fv 3 GIRLS TO SHARE with same.! l"L»- WANTED Chest type deep Freeze In condition. Phone. OR 3-5402. ike, 3134 Mtddiebeftllp, ' CHRISTIAN PR 6 F~E S SION d I same. 303-6634. ________°m* * Wanted to Rout 32 S BEDROOM UNFURN |TheD HOME In or near Pontiac tor a I "***“* m - er0w$s children. APPRAISALS FREE GUARANTEED SALE 30 DAY LISTING Wanted Real Estate SWFfiW.-"’ ~ ’-"P—hj- 1 TO 50 RESIDENT PHYSICIAN DESIRES 2- HOMES, LOTS, AC RE AG AA iMnm h.aa. nun , PARCELS, FARMS, BUSINESS PROPERTIES, AND. LAND CON- LAUINGER 674-0319 ROOM WITH PRIVATE entrance and bath for o retired men. Non-smoker — drinker,- Prefer room in Drayton -Plains or Clarkston area Phone 332-6532. Call 7:00 am —Evenings 7-10 p.m.___________ ROCHESTER AREA — FAMILY OF 4 needs rental while new home Is completed, need occupancy about Sapt. 25th on monthly basis. asrcsgffc,r*Biv,n- pimm SINGLE DESIRES 2 bedroom home or duplex, unfurnished, first dess refs. West tide preferred, 338-1226. WANTED BUILDING for •hop'under >200 per month, 852-1656._____ WANTED: 3 OR 3 bedroom home on — near a lake In Waterford _____ BUILDER NEEDS Vacant I* ARCELS. FARMS, BUSINESS' sewer Anv area PROPERTIES, AND. LAND CON- InHo ?omml™on charged. TRACT. I mb .eruiil - * . WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. 373-111 Urgently neM tor lmmed,.!. | Re#d/ Daily ',i, s | property. Call us for fi MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE W ...........“ CASH ___FOR YOUR HOME PROMPT, COURTEOUS SERVICE MR. ARTHUR •;... *'"398-7902 CASH! FOR YOUR PROPERTY BRIAN REALTY Sold Your Neighbor's Home Multiple Listing Service “““ §1 “ Sunday 1(M [Weekdays ... | 5280 Dixie Hwy.______ [being TRANSFERRED, WM. MILLER, REALTY 3324)262 CASH NOW Move later. No points, no i mission, get our price FIRST. MARK ___REAL ESTATE COMPANY 1782 S. Telegraph_____ 332-0124 DELINQUENT PAYMENT S"-—-• •- Brought up to date and your credit '•a. Can work out rontal If Agonl, 681-0374. 1 i in tak agent, 681-0374. TRANSFERRBtit — I wli house and lease It bate to you. i Agent, 6814I374. ' WANTED: 3 OR 4 BEDROOM home for church parsonage. General! area of M-59 and Elizabeth Lake' Rd. or suitable building lot, if 0066. WANT TO PURCHASE .3 be a roc J**r Mell. Cash. Agent, 338-6V93, (0r church parsonage. General I - 674-1649._____________area of M-59 and Elizabeth Lake' S,rX£r- Located In Hlllvlew Village, HAVING HOMES TO SHOW It necessary qualification of the res estate firm you deal with whe listing your home. As'one ot the . . Pontiac areas mos.t active real near 1-75 estate firms, O'Neil Realty is m24 Poa capable of offering- It's many 444.22(1 buyers many different homes from nnm. „ c which to choose at any given time. E| ® « LK ' 1 An ''O'Neil ftoid Mine-' sign, can Apartments, Furnished *- be shown on your homo too, by —--------------------------------. 3 ROOMS AND BAtH galling OR 4-2222.________________l-BEDROOM AT 669 Homestead, 647- 2!5:...And ra<' app,y 18 STORR FOR’lEASE, 2000-fquart bedroom with magnlficc ^gusfifiL Private e n ibeth Lake Road', I Sale HOUSBS 363-6334, CLARKSTON AREA On M-15, modern building available now, ample parking. 627-2825, 627- 3840, 353-0770. Micheals Rlty._ DIXIE’ XND HOLLY Rds., 30'x70', and 20'x40' commercial bldgs. 625- 104 * AT ROCHESTER i THE BEAUTIFUL HILLS — this xecutlve's home with only 113,500 ' Clarkston School Area WALTER'S LAKE PRIVILEGES, located west of Clarkston Golf Course. Enter from N. Eston and • 835,750 842,500 N 826,900 834,000 B EM 3-2123, Apt. 1 _Court.____. _ , 1 Rent Houses, Furnished >2 BEDROOM. CLEAN, year ai OAKLAND :all AGENT, 38-6993. Buying^ hou*** 2 AND 3 ROOMS. Utilities included. FE 2-6208. feROQMS PRIVATE bath. \ 830 dep. 825 Will pay all cash. Agent,’681-0374.' I Will Buy Your House Anywhere, any condition, points, no commission. CASH NOW MOVE LATER Miller Bros. Realty 53W W. Huron 333-7156 ______i.JlOO Nor AND 3 ROOMS, rated, fn lveti u E W l m 31. Securlt ! 1124, Y i 2093 HAMPTON, b Islam •>rpetint c Lake; 8250 r _ 11 CLEAN ’ AND WELL garage, gs utilities jrnisht 2 . blocks .0 A SALE IS ONLY | j*»nc ■ **“ AS^GOOD ^ AS YOUR FINANCING, and I [Ibla. Near handle your "mortgage. °FHA or gT 673^68 Aaron' Mtg. & Invst. Co. immeareie ponession. 332-1144 Elwood Reeity ‘ 682 2410 2 BEDROOMS it.. r». oirrurp winu„„ ^ $9000. Ihr must be seen to be appreri*t«»fi «. 821,900. RETIREE'S SPECIAL ^ 373-0156! CLARKSTON LARGE 100x790 lot, HIIIKf pfr rFNT. u h"“' - ...... wLthjjHH rooted I BEDROOM, 2 OR 3 poMlble. I Mott High School. Attractive horn Basement. Lot 40x220, $1250 dow AVON TWP. iTOwlndowBgal,Vih?at TOM REAGAN REAL ESTATE I Opdyke ;n|ASSUME 344 PER CENT, N SYLVAN .682-2300 Country Farmhouse (ltchen.lnRew carpeting and'p'rfce ROYER REALTY 636-2211 ESP*:.! INVESTORS rent In and 681-0374. FOR YOUR ’EQUITY, VA, FHA, -----1ER, FOR QUICK ACTION NOW. HAGSTROM ------)R, OR iUgfaaMflligi I NINGS FE 4-7005. SPOT CASH ■HP FLATTLEY ■HPPHPH plUi dep' f¥'5- P«^- .Mr-49l6.'~*'' j 620 COMMERCE RD. 363-6981.| Ray today 1^674-4101._ DUCK LAKE HOME. 2 bedrooms. 2 BEbR6dMS7 5 room,' total, full I Partially turn. Electric refrigerator I basement, 134 Golden oft Elizabeth ALUMINUM RANCH chiidren'r Inquire, ~649 ''Loun6bu7v,'j range. Built-In features. Half, tk. Rd. VapT'" 2 ROOMS AND'BAW^inSujrefett'ioe “0*™':"!' Jun^ s'ecu?!^ de^s“j"--------- o ocn N. Johnson.____________ Adults preferred. $145 mo. (87-8931 " 2 ROOMS, NEWLY-DECORATED,| or LI 7-8048. Nice condition, y ............ ^.EPRONT HbME, "ettrectlve, STATE WI---- [ decorated, RAY •8363 furniture. bath, sound proc facilities# , Sept, to Jum 338-9047 bet. 10 AM-8 PM. 2 AND 3 ROOMS, adults only, 3& \ 0374 aft".' 4'pTm.' WO4- ' A » SMALL BRICK HOUSE, 13 ROOMS FOR MARRIED couple, j adults only. 10685 Dixie. 625-2546. . STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE __________________363-3482 ] 3-Bedroom Economy CATHEDRAL Beai ■ ONE ACRE Rancl OR OTHER, FOR QUICK ACTION 3 CLEAN ROOMS 830. No .....................drinker, or peti. 335-5182. ROOMS AND BATH. ' TEACHER'S SPECIAL', r ir lot Iron*. Sept.-June, — 3 ROOM AND prlv L- #£*7 „ 1 Air ConditiaiiingJ CE DIRECTORY SERVICE -SUPPLIES - EQUIPMENT ■ ' Utilities ce. — bath, | _6454._ r month, 682-2024 c sly 820,981 E. J. Dunlap Custom Builder 2717 Sllverstdne, corner Walton , 338-1198 _ or ' - 338-6497 ‘ 3 BEDROOM " NEW HOME—FULL BASEMENT np irir p Awrw nti. Mng- LOW DOWN PAYMENT ™creatlo^m.U,e'! child 157 NO. ROSELAWN ! l28'rBjot, FHA. $27,1 •7852 CaM Mr. Sills after 7 p.m., LI 2-4677 766. 332-6681._________J _ 3 BEDROOM" BRICK, NEAR Tel- BY OWNER. 3 " bl Rent Houses. Unfurnished 40 M2™524**,er,0!'d Sch00l$' ,,‘,00'i S Vront' GMC ___ by OWNER WA TERFORO MAX nBBM broock _ 682-7852 TEACHERS, 5 room, _______ a.—.—^ nicely furnish 5096 Dur *- — rnished, 5096 332-6681. vileges. 2656! 3 r. Lake Roai 1-4000 Dm <’ 444-4890 DOLL HOUSE OF THE MONTH 1 BEDROOM, IN COUNTRY, nea 75, stove 8. refrigerator furnist $35 per week, $150 dep. req., » Rd., Sec. dep., a natural ----, full flrei 3-BEDROOM BRICK RANCH, large kitchen, c... IPP ed air heat, $16,500. FHA. .Zero down. 681-0370. GMC 625-2440. CO. PB 2-1296, FOWLER ELECTRIC C1?MEMtlMtatNawC«l»ENT w#rk CUSTOM FLOOR COVERING PATTERSON ROOFING CO. I tree estimj.1.. >«•«« formica, tile. Carpellng.1 Free Estimate_ 373-6726 > HUH — SPECIAL ON ROOF coating,! INTERIOR FINISH, kitchens panel-1 Aluminum Bldg, items PATTERSON & SONS ., Alum, and reefing specialists All types el alum., and roofing work Sidings, awnings, guitars and Mobil# Homo Skirtings. 373-6726 588-3724 paTtbrson alum. SIDING CO. Fma istlmatas ________373-6726 SIDING „4tuM. VINYL AND ASBESTOS t AWNING-PATIOS SCREENED-IN OR >L ASS ENCLOSED EAVES TR0UGHING ALL TYPES ol cement work. 625- CALL NOW ’ — DAY O R . NIGHT—681-2500—TERMS DEALER—ASK FOR BOB OR RED ALL TYPES OF CEMENT WORK '_________682-9213 _____ ALL BRICK REPAIRS, dilmnev, porches, violations corrected, Antenna Service BIRCHETT ANTENNA SERVICE ______Also repair, 338-3274. __ WINTERIZE—REPAHTAND INSTALLATION ALL WORK GUARANTEED — WINTERIZE NOW - CALL 852-5221______ 1-A, Auburn Heights Paving Tennli courts, parking lets, driveways. Guaranteed. FE 5-69*3, FE S-3179. A. JAY ASPHALT DRIVEWAY SPECIALISTS, FREE AADC0 ASPHALT Pavlne Co.,'licensed and Insurtd. Proa aetlmatlen _________,332-4631 A G Kosiba Asphalt New driveways, parking lots, re-turtaclng worn out cement, old-asphalt. License, bonded, and fraa estimates. OR 3-6310_______________OR 3-3776 ASPHALT CURBING Drlvawayi, parking lots. » x Residential-Commercial ■ A. G. Koilba Construction COMMERCIAL, INbUSTRIAL residential brick And cement GUINN'S CONST. CO. _____391-2671 ___ Driveways, basements and colored patios. General Cement Con-tractors# 338-9916. MASON# BRICK# STONE# slate I - No lob too small. 674-1720. [ PATIOS, DRIVES# OARAGES’, SLABS, 40 cants sq. ft. FE 4-2876, days._____________________ SEAWALLS, DRIVEWAYS, porches, block, brick patio, fret estimates, 689-1725.____ 1920, liilcfi 625-5091. DOMINO CONST. CO. 674-3955 IeliablI ASpHaTt lontractei Free eitlmatae. Specialized ... patching and'iaaling, drlvawayi, parking l~-~ l. 338-1214 at ^ leach Services BEACHES CLEANED SANDED, DOCKS INSTALLED. STEEL SEA WALLS Collar Conlractlng_____ 68) 0300 Sarvic* BOOKKEEPER eccounl dsslrad. 651-0027. SWAMPED TO THE GUNWALE over the boat? For complete rtflnlshlng wood or fiberglass# call 651-0001. Limited atoragi# pick®*** and dellwry. A-l Building Results Computer? — sure we've get itl It all add, up to .results — lot Hackstt Fit you to a now home. EM 3-6703 fT A h H6Mp imprAvCMINT. Aluminum aiding, porches, tlreplacae, and addltlene. 682-7809. HAVE YOU BEEN thinking about adding a room er remodeling your baaamentt Are you worried about hiring aomaona to --- ariy—it so, try ui L— iX , ...... , y only Man.-Prl. 8-5 that la . -ie Clarkston 625-2674________ HOME MAINTENANCE REPAIR. ‘-WHO. 6SM088. A-l INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR • Family roams, rough or finish, dormer,, porches, rec re at Ion room,, kitchen,, bsttiruomi. State UglWF* Rea«- Call after 5 ~ TA^S~i5BYffr^a' mWlnt *m$!air?pi ___________________ Carpentry BMRKy and ceme. free estimate,. 852-5252. Floor Tiling Reefing 5930 M-15, Clarkston, 625-2)00. furnished, baby welcome, 682-8496. Lorg® lot. 1 car garage. 3 BEDROOM, CARPETING, paneled.1 J^p'75 by ®F»oln,fn®n* ®f '2'BEDROOM ieke"frohrhome. J PHWPq|PP||PPWg||||||v per mo. end dep. 673-1180. jSSTm u¥lyer,lty”brr totween"3i2 BEDROOM, US baths, 835 per'4 . _ I..............R____________ and 8 p.m.__________________I plus utilities. $150 d e p o , 11 ..one, P-83. Call RayTodayl 674-4101. ROOMS AND BATH, child g^ence* rsqulred. Inquire st 73513 BEDROOM, CARPETED 'llvlna welcome, 837.50 per week, 8100 —BaKlWif>*____________________I room, large utility room, 2Va aaa dep., inquire at 273 Baldwin Ave., 3-BEDROOM RANCH, $180 per garage, north side * fi Dmaseim,. s>.n »o J6ica monttf, close to Fisher Body# sec. agent, 682-9026. ,0j fireplace, .. carpeting, Pontiac, Call 338-4054. kitchen full baseme refrigerator, s 10 v and drapes plus IVi < \ of Pontiac. -Ion Construction stlmates for new construct! lodernlzetlon. 334-0501._ Carpeting RPET INSTALLATION. ood buys on carpets. 623-121 ___Carpet Cleaning k. Rtt». 391-1959. 625-5674. JOB TOO SMALL, j * ROOM FOR family, reference and _ dap, ri FREE RE landlords. 3 BEDROOMS IN Clarkston'area) :E lor; 4Va per cent mortgage, 111,000 walling,1 . down, S76 per mo. $18,500 full; BEAUTIFUL ivord to describe this home Plus full dining room an; existing mortgage on this rp, clean 3 bedroom ranch with no carpeting, newly decorated pa large corner lot. No closing cost No qualifying. Move In In Tauinger YORK THE EXECUTIVE, quad-bath, big kitchen, family '"•nd SSK-sSfisT*6?« A * ----j — - —. -------.WILL REPAIR LEAKS, 1 reshingle 6-ROOM LOWER FLAT. 651 insect Lontrol roofs. Inexpenslbly, anytime. 651-1 alter 4 p.m.__ , _,r -1... . - , -----1 0801. ________ 4 ROOMS AND BATH, baby I "T V. ALSO 'BEES, WASPS, HORNETS oxter* I WOMACK ROOFING CO welcome, S37.50 per week, SIOOI Annett IflC. Keoltors —tnated. 625-MU;— -------_jFuej«im!tM____________FE.jMj4i! can’jM-ioM* *1 *” B,ldwln Ave';28 E. Huron St. 338-0466 Landscaping Sand—Gravel—Dirt i e-rmn k'r ■■I ottice open Evenmos a Sunday: -all 625-3315.__ BEDROOM RANCH fenced GMC 674-0319 __ 674-08801 BRICK RANCH ifine sylvan ■ lake village 3 w«i nkZ y. i. Z , bedroom home, quick financing, by West Bloomfield Is the location of lend contract. 338-2679 or 647-0813. >00.' 12300 la 335-3433.________________ BASEMENT AND BRICK WORK, fireplaces,| commercial and In-dustrial repair, 682-1143, 673-32S1. BLOCKS, FOOTERS, and cement. 334-6043.______________________________ BLOCK^AND. CEMENT work. Pon-ili kinds. Al'S LAWN MAINTENANCE, Spring and fall clean ups. Cutting, fertilizing and spraying. 673-3992. CEMENT WORK OF - too large or tma [parlance, free astir Free est. 602- _ -1 COMPLETE LANDSCAPING, •peclillzlng In retaining walls. Free estimates. J. H. waltman Landscaping. 373-0666, 11111111 1111111111 Al DOZING, Top ■ field saaMg^l 602-7)97. CHOICE SHREDDED black dirt Sand—Gravel—Dirt SAND, GRAVEL, I paneled lot, |ua» payment Sept. 1st ........J brick home «P jceptlonplly attractive lot. Has feet ot floor erea, 3 large ‘ large bed living II gravel products. 22 CADILLAC. Modern 3 adults. 338-1760 or 353-3200. BEAUTIFUL 1 BEDROOM, •lectrlcl 0?orC2^£5AyE-' S— kitchen with washer and dryer, !.°L.aWJnI?1J UU..HIIWI ■»...»< pool, plus car- Aiso dozing, HEAVY CLAY LOAM To pool delivered by S yard Made larger. Grading available. J. Waltman, Landscaping. 373-0661 SCREENED BLACK DIRT 6 PEAT DELIVERED, 852-S462.____________ VIBRATED PROCESS, peat loaded ''Birr end delivered at Auburn and! S2.50 Adams, 391-2501 or 391-26)8. 1-----g Septic Tank Service . - Mur|)hy ^ jt| year-round andoi port. Call 851-0796 •OVELY APART:___________ ___________ setting. Adult couple. SI 45. 673-7466. 602-4554. Will b vacant 15 of Sept.________ , PONTIAC. SHARP CLEAN, *Suburban BEDROOM HOME. SEC. 5.u.?u.rP.®n QLIIRED tm PFB uo sol GMC RE- QUIRED. 8115 PER MO. 39*8-5632. T*ir& .^rinfl '^' ^ pc I________________ NICOPARTMENT^p^r ,Wy office, hrs. 642-1180,_ i RETIRED LADY ONLY, I 2'/a rooms, newly dec Kitchen dinette. Living Dep' Rei. COMPLETE LANDSCAPING Sodding, seeding, shrubs. Licensed Nursery Man. 682-7850. EXPERT LANDSCAPE# W O R REAS. ~LAI^A'pE~da'«1^^ —'rB ___________________________1 pets. Phone 330-4060. Ud ?wnE WrANPhS.CA«WE 6So!ooT76C *nd ^N^M^ or coup..; no child, lendtceoer 33S-3304._V____tS5afeJ5«»____________________________________________ 3-BEDROOM# BRICK, Tan Lake privileges, 2Va baths, lot 100x200. '•m«»"«® ♦',J Me* mo. Paved drive. Full tile basement _______ ____ i with fireplace and bar, 628-1100. PONTIAC 3aBEDROOMb FENCED 14-BEDROOM' COLONIAL" Clarkston Hi 625-5l07CrM' bV °Wn#r' ”° dflen,S* I WEST OF GENERAL Hospital, 61 --iom brick, gas heat, garage, isement# $175 and deposit. 673-1 6339. WEST SIDE idition. Carpeted,1 ne floor. Good d. $175 p onth's rei 4 BEDROOM , ZERO DOWN | FHA approved tor $11,900. Better] PonlY»c'sr East sTdo. °CMonthly DAvments Ot $80. NEAR AUBURN WARDEN REALTY j 3434 W. Huron, Pontiac, 682-39201 If ho anwor cell 363-0660 I Our office will be closed Saturday i thru Monday, havo a salt and enjoyable holiday weekend. BACKUS PLEASANT LAKE 3 bedroom all brick ranch with! attached 2 car garage, lovely MLS FOR PROFESSIONAL ' REAL ESTATE SERVICES. CALL IVAN W. SCHRAM 1111 Joslvn FE 5-9471 REALTOR N - Jervlng Ponttac area lor 20 yeai FOR THE EXECUTIVE | tlng,**orUth!s alTbrlc^rancShoma! The entertaining will be enloyable with such, extras as a heated swimming pool Indoor-outdoor fireplace, family room with bar, lel? For*appo|b?Wn7t* pr*c®d i ’ GAYLORD, INC. lake privileges. 832,500. FHA TERMS «j LAWN SERVICE, TREE trimming! TOWNSEND'S SEPTIC Repair ~ A Tatioh. 682-0876._ Spraying Service (celled by Bert" CemmTns7 39l-| and light haulTrig. 334B417. ljiiij||Wejj|pWM|ppBpp^M IAWN. SP^YING^ fartlilzars, and,NSw ° scale"*SPRAY. ._ . _______________„ ..... *'*“ 3005._____ ” .-I new, furnished. No chlldrei MOSQUITO CONTROL, NO lob tool P»t»- 27 Glosplo St„ Oxlord, M big or too small. Call ' ' 2500. natas, 625-4019, 674-4449, ant. C A H Spraying. WHITES CUSTOM lawn cutting, fertilizing# lawn spraying and clean up. Phone 682-5657 or 682- pets. Phone 3334060. ....... | KENNETH G.'TtE/MPSTEAD, I REALTOR IBS Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE 4-0284 1 Rent Lnko Cottages 411 DALBY 6 SONS TREE SERVICE I S8B 0«C. fWp. ____________, j MULLETT LAKE. Large cottages .— ---------- '--ujta FE 3 UPSTAIRS, 2-ROOM and bath, brand "v*1.1'- *10'*. through Labor Day I n.u, «.,mich.w .*1 weekend. Sleeps (-10 healed. 865- Real nice > lull t e ac h e r srrrjupoiiipeDnii^ fireplace, nicely furnished. 50961 " Durnham. 682-7052 or 332-< " TRAILER FOR RENT, adults only, LAUINGER FHA TERMS SHARP 3 BEDROOM RANCH In good section, near Flshar Body. o uuuiuurn mum. nome on 7 com- Carpeted, gas heat. Sa*'.eii NOW 33 car $16,900 Full price, 818,500 V ' LADD'S OF PONTIAC J9I-3300 FIRST IN VALUfS Backus realty 332-J323 _______________ 3331695! BY OWNER, Drayton Plains, bedroom ranch, tuily carpeted, l>» ..........Ifif..........“X\ , finished r “’o and su.------- large fenced < Lawnmower Sorvics lakefront new. Free e»t. 674-4341, 625-1501. Construction Equipmont DOZERS, BifCKHOE, LOADER Sales & Rentals Used Bobcat Loaders Burton Equipment Co. 3776 E. Auburn Rd.____ 052-3553 Dressmaking, Tailoring 1-A ALTERATIONS, SUITS, COATS, _dressee, 335-4207^Mrs. Sebaske._ ALTERATIONS, ALL TYPES, KNIT -------•—-r- coats, 60-903. TALBOTT LUMBER is sarvlco, wood or alum dlno and Hardware supplll ________________FE 34S9S Moving, Storage bON JlbAS TREE removal, Froo estimates# Insured. MV 3-1816. _____hiai raw prices or py nr,. i ^rcj^Ej^S^TRE^SERVICE^f rea SMITH MOVNG CO. YouTmoVIng aAAAfaltala LB 4 4044 ' OAKLAND TRIA DRY WALL SERVICE# new an< remodeling, guaranteed. 335-1039 o 332-1013.__________________ Eavostroughing M & S GUTTER CO. LICENSED-BONDED Complete eavestroughlng sarvlco Fraa est. 473-4846. 473-5662 Mowing Service WEB Vacant loti a_______________ Piano Tuning PIANO TUNI'-'-e—REPAIRING [OSCAR SCHMICA_________FE 2-5217 Pointing and Decorating 1*A CUSTOM PAINTING re# Estimates__________682-4635 A RELIABLE RAINTING# I exterior. Free e$t. 334-6594. 25-YEAR-OLD University slue paint, Top quality work m- m expensive price. 651-8801# anytlma. -1 PAINTING# tfxc. work a reasonabla prices. 332-5400 ate Elfictrlcal Services ADRIAN'S PROMPT algctrlca service, reasonabla rate*. 6732712. MCCORMICK ELECTRIC ~ Residential wlrlng-ServIca '■ 157 Baldwin __________FE 44191 EwawHag l-f BULLDOZING, Finish Grading, Beckhoe, Basements. 474-3639. FI 31381. cLa^KIITON excavating Cdmpanv •paclallzlne In flrBalng, land daarlng, stump rams-driveways and Mptlc tank AMR Fraa ast. Work guarantaad. 425- ^ONDS, LAKES AND bANALS, dug dr claanad„62i-4M0 I. G. Eisenhardt Excavating contractor, lakes, txinds, bulldozing land BWBffitSrwWIWO. Richmond. 1. 1 wk. sorv. Pros at CHAIN LINK ai _ 2 wk. sarvlco CHAIN LINK FENCING Installed repaired. Quality .want, fiat riSOU lea, ask tor Hon, 8ik-d968. Hoar# raflnl8liag< 7-793774L_ =OR SALE. 3 bet------ ----- Sylvan Village. Phone 4S2-6513.__ “TARRELL Miller Bros. Realty r screened porch, 2 n by eppt.# only, 673-5168. BLOOMFIELD MANOR WEST Newly completed luxury apartments, H o t p o I n t electric appliances featured. .Carpeting and drapes Included. Model open dSIly TO IMMEDIATE1 OCCUPANCY Orchard Laka 3 Mlddlebelt Road 2388 Woodrow Wilson—682-3882 COLONIAL VILLAGE Now renting 1 bedroom apts. OPEN: 1 Mil dark DAILY Closed Fridays On Scott Lake Road, 1 mile _Off Dixie Highway . . . 6739669 LARGE CLEAN, refrigerator and stove, sac. dap. $100, closing, 852- ■I........ ...idlfload, $50 a week, 789 S. Woodward. SLEEPING ROOMS for gtntlamon. BRIAN REALTY 33-7156 _ 333-7245] *T$iph u?W?gh1 $109 PER MONTH j smTdixV# Hwy’ WALTON PARK MANOR Buul UNPRECEDENTED OP- coptlonai foatui MftTUWIJX .PAMjLIESl vldlng 4 large bedrooms;'j' belhj Iwy. _ 623-0703' CLARKSTON brick homo with ax-] carpeted, TV, telephone, maid service, $60 per week, -------- and ItVS Mile. ___ Rooms with Board RETIRED elderly . m.... , country flame. 625-5)58.__ LARGE COOL ROOM near Tel-Huron, private entrance, shower bath, with or without meals. For 1 or 2 rnon, FE 8-3338. _ NICE CLEAN ROOMS, homo cooked meals, lunches packed. 335-1679. Rant OffltB SpacB 47 APPROXIMATELY 775 sq WITH LESS THAN *10,000 ... COME. 1, I AND 3 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSES ADJACENT TO I-75, ONLY 35 MIN. TO „JRH DOWNTOWN DETROIT. OPEN marble DAILY AND SUNDAY 12 TO 8 floors. I EXCEPT THURS. MM with ceramic tile, spacious ill room with fine view, kitchen w island sink, large utility room i 3-bedroom ranch on l acre lot. Carpof In ovary room. 2 full baths. Beautiful recreation room in basement. 2-car attached garage with paved drive. Priced below reproduction cost. Call lodayl Pontiac-East Side FHA approved 4 room» and bath. 2 lot». City wattr and tawar. Full prlca 810,250. FARRELL REALTY 2405 N. Opdyke Rd. Pontiac __________ 373-6552 * Golf Manor ni trl-level, beautiful 2774. EMBASSY WEST APARTMENTS Large, sound conditioned, 2 bedroom units, all utilities except electricity, central air conditioning. Carpeting, swimming pool, two bedrooms. Minimum a n a - y o a r lease, no children, 4'/i ml. w. of Tel-Huron Shopping Center, 5367 Highland Rd„ Apt. 137. 674-8569, Mrs. schuitz. Between 1 end I p.m. only. ’5 sq. ft. Ol ----....MRU -r-~- for Teaso. 631 Gait BlVd. 674-2222. SINGLE OFFICES. 4540 01x18. S3! and up. OR 3-1355. 195 SQUARE FEET of choice offici Stale Hospital. KENNETH O. HEMPSTEAD 185 Elizabeth Laka Rd. Pontiac PB 4-8214 Apartments, Unfurnished 38Apartments, Unfurnished 38] I Drilllai WELL DRILLING, well points 4033 LOMLEY DRAYTON PLAINS Now throe bedroom, bath and h lull basement, largo kitchen, i lot with ehada trees, close schools end stores. DON E. MCDONALD Licensed Builder OR 3-2837 6.500 BUY EQUITY ancT2 new homes, ecroas from lakde, 2 and 3 bedrooms. 887-5092._ $13,990 THE BIG RANCHER - 2 bedrm., family size kitchen, fully insulated, large utility room, On your lot. Y0UNG-BILT homes REALLY MEANS BETTER BILT Russell Young# Bldg. 334-3830-33Vfr W. Huron St. $1,000,000.00 For single residence mortgages other quality Poramus 51. or af-end of Goldfinch] pool.^immediate* ^sma1m. bodroorn, lull basamant, mods EM 3-6703 wl,h 2 c,r attachad oarage. ------ --------yjz— ----------------1 blocks No, on Rockeroft off Dlx Hwy./ 4 to 7 PM eves., 8-5 p.r Sat. noon to 6 P.M. Sun., Rlehar Brockle Builder, 335-4055, MITER I HEATED SWIMMING POOL plus a 3 bedroom Trl-level, family room with fireplace, attached 2>/> car garage, fenced.,lot. $28,580, forma. LAND CONTRACT TERMS on this 8 ! rooms and bath, basement. 513,500. J In HpllV. ' WEST SIDE - Large 7 rooms with I Ha battii# gat haat# full baiemant. $16,900, terms. Call B. C. HIITER, REALTOR, 3792 Ellz. Laka Rd. 682-8010# aftar 8 P.m. 682-6427._ | HALLMARK " To Buy, Rant, Sail or Trad* Use Pontiac Press WANT ADS Office Haursi 8 am. to 5 p.m. Cancellation' Deadline 9 a.m. Day Following First Insertion COSWAY Wolverine Lake Privileges 3-bedroom ranch, aluminum siding, full basement, gas heat, baautlfui kitchen with bulilt-ln oven and range, large let, $26,500. 4-BEDROOM j •ere"tot! only U9%M, Land Contract! terms. COSWAY REALTOR ___ 681-0760 COLONIAL. 4 BEDROOMS, Drayton ‘area, lake > privilege*, ivy . bath, custom carpeting, drapes. Family room with fireplace, formal dining area. MUST SEE TO APPRECIATE. S39,000-pt10,088 down land contract farms, 7 par cant Interest, CALL 673-1751. bedroom with olec, heat and 2 car attached garage. The other Is 2 ---------~as heal, carpeting. Both hardwood floors and a______ 1 old. Excellent, Investment. 674-4123 4821 Highland Rd. (M-59 Next fo Airway Lanas) HERE IT IS, THE"buy of the veeri Three bedroom, 2 baths, full brick ranch an beautiful lanHtrnn 1 hat •aneh on beautiful ti_________ ... — privileges on Cam- icree Lake. Inc range, 6' doorwall In the dinette, humidlter,, pantry In utility lanced-In beckv"'' —— garage. MMmN alt drive, partially enclosed, Close to shopping and year-round vacation activities. Total price only 831,500. Don't wail on this one. Call 817-9191 or 363-3741. Salas by Easllck Properties Inc. JAYN0 HEIGHTS 3-bedroom brick ranch, axcallanl condition, 127,900. Will sail on land contract. 6744670 elter I p.m. REALTOR | m ORCHARD lk. no. wml rnt ' KELLER .^HU mmM flkrMMfai « NOW'S THE TIME I___ KING-PHIPPS SPECIAL KINZLER GMC OPFN s" .^6703 AVON WEINBERGER RANCH par T;nl,MLJTyC‘R*0PEN : -■!!7‘ j5&rt?;VVSV.^r #H | iSS?SSiJ®SaS A OPEN ms tbi . run MfiOFi 1 SJOHNSON Wm-rn RAY* SAVE MONEY KS Sgawaa §k OPEN 2 MODELS °£fpt Sot. and Sun 2-6 ! SSiSjCi fiSS4*^ HAVE YOUR OWN LOT? I h0"'* d*,lw” tiding. Priced at $29,000. Land) •* BUYING OR SELLING CALL gmfiKSKS d JOHN K. IRWIN & SONS i jnmi&ma*. am?*** J CLARK gSiSLiuSP iiSffi SEj*arais. p^wSagSha pi?., i5Xi“ VttfiBK " MATUtlN AL I T . J'r-aTAW PiKffi A P R O STRUBLE Sr*: GILES rTHBT'' STOUTS Best Buys Today LAKE O'NEIL MHS&5* LAKE FRONT wzz‘3zz:' Times Realty WARREN STOUT. REALTOR f TED'S Trading 674-2236 HAGSTROM, REALTOR . Nothing Down MODEL S*S3«£« a *«* ««• iQCSfiih^^r^fewRanch fsggd Hfi|Tw> won^oT MOVE IN FAST • ® VJyn, rr,.il|E^^iL ^ immediate mNss^Son | 5S^1®SP^ LTOH YON RfAlTY . , ?«« * W. 6 i~ SWSr 3?®f| i irf--HfE5P3 ! ,0 Widemrn L LhS38Sw j , PROTECT SMALL CHILDREN J!5f« ,SS£fWS!£toWS '• Jgr^iEASTHAM pfii WILL YOU BY WAITING’ PSBKiPKr”'-..••; |r|M KEATING P»»WMM * *Tib&sStFwBTSUBURMN bSBSb^JiHW . ,h“' ^TtStoJiLiy* aaH^»Tftir*ui(c^: 5 wwl BS IP^sssajssI BEEnutwtkH A PRIVATE WORLDI, No. 34 TREAT YOURSELF No. 95 gg(K5w*as»a PONTIAC CLARKSTON ROCHESTER UNION LAKE PONTIAC CLARKSTON ROCHESTER UNION LAKI 425-2441 651-8518 363-4171 338-7161 ond thutlor, iog«ih*r will) MiutRulty THA TERMS • ■ thj pric» it Hill I14.9W on your prison oi »« londtcaeod eorntr lot. til so to Two Mdroom ronch, Corpotod mill niMft CITS 1 lot. YOU CAN'T BEAT >ITI . . . bolonco on 7 max. tlu. ■ homo you'd bo proud living room. Kltehon L Ulllllv. oUllLMNo Slit DON'T DiLAY. CALL TODAYI tr.el. to own. CALL FOR APPOINTMENT.1 Extra (tic.. Locottd on tho nlmotl 1 ocrot of prlmt land, coll inv of our qudllllod talot- U 0. jmwi m» I BroShw g|£f|ngJt ,3^SWW|t C.HtlStV, iiiiL.. —-w*—r wSr ^ghouiS2~ ^ ImmST WSErnr ~ r-. ^ Val-U-Way I . . . mpossible to beat at this price D . .. •finitely homey ond cute E... osy to gel to ond to own A/. . ./II houso ond a yard-wide ! L... ess than 5 mih. to fiftd out about this opt ovsr the phono - will give you a duo/$21,900 I D—16 THE PONTrAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, For Want Ads Dial 3344981 ft*! Tools Mttihwry PORTER-CABLE electric chain wWt cose. I Ml 57-1134 •«* 1 CONN CORNET. E*oai tack $250 Call 682-6116. S iM-5741 i WELCH PONIES. 1 SorraT - ^ , buckskin gelding, both ga „ w.»». m.wm MFw>. 628-1431. | R?■ Sldla;h,S30n Grind! # 1i AKC TOY POODLES, most colors, Milford. 685-3217. puppies and qrowjv 683-6387. If pioYn'g HORSES for salt *V 2 AKC GERMAN SHEPHERD pup, 8638 iH. _______ ■ |m H Mg 2 HOTSE TANDEM axle tri ____'.JMjfravrt Traflart oughbred, 5 1*6*. 20’ SELE-CONTAINBO. l Appaloose i used, travel trailer. ddMOat. rar=i 1 1969 STARCRAFT _ I TRAVEL TRAILERS I western. INSIDE DISPLAY tesure horse, j CRUISE-OUT, INC. ---... —.'u I. Walton DallV *-* F« CLOSED SUNDAYS RE'i-i [ OLD REGISTERED, ^ Stallion. Chestnut w be. shots, good bloodlines. 473-0*44. AKC BOXER PUPS,"? weak*. 1381 j yeAR~OLD ragTitoi {* PIECE iRUM SET. *200. call, 3AM. Gelding, saddle and a 473-0054.____________________AKC REGISTERED English spr- 0571. ft STRING HOLLOW body Moerira Jnger, apan ......... guitar with base. 8225 451 0731 _ horse stud. 474-342?. ISPliCtt WtW) drumsTno: PE 0- AKC REGISTERED MALE * YEAR-OLD WELSH Pinto geldlno IfM Schneuter puppy, e wks shots pony, reasonable. *71-5451 or 33V’ •Si PENDER JAGUAR - SM0 00 slarted^StlS. ceM *f? 3ISI 5440. Sure MtW A Stand - 120 40M024 AKC^BEAGLE PUPS. AT GALLAGHER'S akc chihuahua i Used Console pianos Irons S344 stud service. FE 2-l«*7. • year OLD goldlng, I* hands, for j Used Leeway Owns.fromW*5- AKC COLLIE puppies. Show puality. sale or trade tor hay^ *17.3164 I Sew*’ useo wo oass aicurara. ITS. Terms. Jtud service. 173.1454 ARABIAN GELDING, 5 years old. ' Shoe us before you buy AKC BEAGLE PUPS, I "weeks, 14 3 hendsi S-yeer-old Tennessee DAkltf TEDMC chomplon line. Phone *14-14*4 walking horse, gelding. Double D.' BANK TtKWb AKC"GERMAN“SHE>HERD puP, : Iffi *'A\^_um.nsSs»._ 6 weeks old 3324*11. ARABS Vi TO 4, mar*, oeldlng. GALLAGHER'S Akc poodle "PUPS.- champion. to tm Totegroph r F eosee brad, shots, paper trained, wormed COOLEY AND HOSPITAL RD., 14' it Summer Store Hour* and trimmed, pedloree Included,' 3** barn. 334134. _ . . ■?:3C j y.,P.T, . . - I *,s; 3W J73f DAINTY SORREL Welsh'mare.'* A AKC POODLE PUPPIES. Sliver stud' yre. spirited, tor older child. MS. CONN CLARINET. Used 1 hrs 1100. ,#rvict and groomlng. 3324I57. i Call 4&4740. , ALL PET SHOP,_5S"WHil*ms,"F'E'going AWAY to'eollage. Must sell! Parakeets and Qgrbtls. | 7 geMIngt. ^Pjn* tor 4H. Vary! BR'iTTANV PUPS I'd AIRSTREAM IMF 18 ft. to 31 ft. ON DISPLAY - Also Used Airst reams WARNER TRAILER SALES Cell 4034814___ CREST WOOD. b*s* and an WO. *eM4dt.___________ FENDER. SU>ET~r»v*rb an and Fender duo-sonic gul't c*llen^beglnnor_ssi. U00. *2 GUILD GUITAR. EXC EL condition S2S0 Fonder Customised deluxe rever Have other equipment. Ml HAMMOND ORGAN. It4* L largo Leslie spooker. oi dhlwLMl-im. _____ MOLLY SPINET PIANO, c 5. 402-3547. HAMMOND ORGAN A MORRIS MUSIC 14 S. Telegraph Rd., across ft Tsl Huron, FE 20)*7_ Magnificent oPano ' i APACHE APACHE PICKUP CAMPERS OELREY FLEE TWINS plckup^jn Stock Frm^SITS. STUTZ FLEETWING MOBILE TRAVELER From Sllf JIM HARRINGTON'S SPORT CRAFT Apache Factory Homo T SOOCC TITAN ____ 350CC REBEL .... 2S0CC SAVAGE .... 200CC INVADER ... I2SCC STINGER ... I10CC TRAIL KAT 100CC. WOLFE ... 50CC MAVERICK . nonths or 11,000 ml. warranty Many ueed models In stock MG SUZUKli SALES 4447 Dixie Hwy. ' *73-0450 Drayton Plalni HONDA MOTORCYCLE. 50 CC Red. _________________________t. 612-5310. ’itVlflV BOXER PUPS, champion'iIrad, MARE, I 852-5618. NICE RIDING HORSE, gelding ondition. PE 2-7328. m COCKER MIXED PUPPIES 7 I CHIHUAHUA' puppy fo ,t months old. 335 5640 _ ! CHOCOLATE POINT.' I r Slamesa. 5|5. 693-666? i DOBERMAN PINSCHER~p 1 765 5875 j ENGLISH POINTtR pup p j paper*. S35. 353-7238. •ENGLISH POINTERS, _ i raglitarad, out of Riggins w I! Knight, Paladln't Royal Flush, T THOROUGHBRED mare, 16.21 ids, 11 yrs. 8300. 647-8630. ’ PAL AMINO GELDING, 7 yttrs' old. I lorses hoarded, . Bnd sold. 887-5004. ™ ;, REGISTERED FINffl, White i oeldlng, gentle, ■ SKrofte. G50b cbNb., » | OH-3577 "UPRIGHT PIANO. I40. I 0. 0*3-171. R IDING“CLUi~SPACE'. you home hunting lor APACHE1 The best time for camping In th best unit. ^AVF HUNDREDS READY FOR LABOR DAY New Apache's as low as $895 1 Used Unit L*ft The best time to camp Is lut ahead, anloy the beauty i Michigan Pell Spectacular. Travel Trailers TRUCK, “Wilbur’s SUCH a gentleman—I was losing an argument with him and he offered to switch sides!” AutoAccessorles RADIO end stereo t WINNEBAGO llRRlGH't , Moving USED ORGANS B Alma, I Elliott at 6. ' GRINNELL S DOWNTOWN STORf I » S. Saginaw_____re S-7IU USED'PiANO CLEARANCE 1 ~ BALDWIN ACROSONIC. mahogany, finish, excellent con- l1"-' STEINWAY GRAND S’l" b i • u 111 u I condition, completely retlnllhetl end rebuilt. ] -.GRINNELLS CONSOLE, mehoienv I vr. old, lust llke new. 4- ^ELSON COLSOL1 PIANO, walnut finish ..........**l S - WURLITZER SPINET, excellent playing condition. _ « - GRAND BTSTTIRGRAN T as Is plus cartage ... ■ S12S. _ Smiley Bros.-FE 4-4721 frMifehl u$iB"6elT viiti-weh nodal. *1-1744 FREt, 3 A6bRASLi"KITTSNS—i beige, 1 calico. IS1TI37 FRie'KlfflfJS, S Wdeiit old."' ___________ilMMl. POR sale OR 'trade, mile and SIHmH service._______________ GERMAN SHEPARD PUPPIES i wks. old. SIS. Cell 7S2-3153. • GERMAN SHEPHERD'PUPS; At North America's finest bloodll 100 per cent, guaranteed. See bi kitchen. For Information call Mr. 83-A ——ioa ROMEO MEAT CENTER - Home! ■1711 Clarkston *507 Dixie Hwy. Open Mon.-Frl., from *-» Give us a call d appointment meets. Ckn 373-*ns, Hay-Grain-Faed BOOTH CAMPER Pickup covert and camp cut tern built. 4M7 Lefo r Welertord. *74-1313. YOUR DEALER FOR"-SPORT TRAILER, GEM ' Ellsworth Trailer Sales t BACH IN STOCK REDUCED 111 CLEARANCE, ALL 1969s 12' WIDES, LOW AS S3,Off DELIVERED AND SJTUPI UP NORTH BUYIRS -Ask tor speclil prietit - S Used Homes from S17ftl ADD-A-ROOM UNITS AND DOUBLE WIDES NOW AVAILABLE COUNTRYSIDE LIVING 1004 Oakland ________SM-tSW Tires-Auto-Truck REPAIR, MOUNT, and end chroma wheels. N wheel*. Msgs-Americen ______, AP Anstn. Trad* old mags Ipr n Goodyear Polyglass liras. Chei slicks. Marks* Tlr* Co. 2*35 Orch ----Rd. Kaago. Motor Scootort t LIL INDIAN, S I month* old, SUft M LIL' INDIAN MINI-blks, t isrms svsllsbls, i ,',B Poultry t, *h2m8 * 714 ACCORDION GUITAR. LESSONS, Sates-ssrvlea. Also plana tuning. Pulaneckl, OR W5H. “yiAN'O ANb"dUITAbTESS6NS SW4S74 FqWELL Mulic studio Lastont ih tTTaaaar. Oxtord S ^PESKS. WOOD, goo Spwtiog Goods 1 M MARLIIN WITH ( "”**'» Tm^ aniT*' LABRADOR RltRIKVER, 12 weeks old. 1*1-MM. LONS-HAIRifi ^KlTtiNS. fr** to goad home, *14-14*4. MINIATURE SCHNAUflRl. AKt Chamalen lint. Shot*. *14-704* MALE ALASKAN Malamui*r1f''yri. old. black end grey, 171 AKC. M4-mts. miniature hACHSHUNb, * weeks old, papers. FE 4 54I0. MIXED PUPPlIS, 15, __ *71-5422^_ MIXED LABRADOR ritrelvar, 4 months old, fimelt. StO. 4S2-7IM. mm PEDIGREE HOMING Pigeon, tret 72| •• good home. 1SS-744I^_ PEKINGESE PUPPIES. AKC. alto lets. I black Pake-a-ooo't. 412-4711. POODLE PUP, SILVER" ftmele, AKC~ 10 Wkt. *29-4*73. POODLE ' GROOMING. S3 a puppies snd stud ssrvlcs, : nr 311-5*.lf.______ PORTABLE DOG PEN JMI ’ ACRES, OP SECOND cutting, stsndlng Altslls, 4M-44I4. ' ANY QUANTITY. Excellsnl 'quaUIV *t corn. Frsth at term, tis- IluebIrries k your own, is cents psr lb. n 7 days a waak, from I t.m. Rd., Imlsy city. Phons 714-1*00. BURBANK PLUMS, Hamms, 231 N. Sgulrrsl, dosed Saturday morning. Cldsr- Osnuts—Applst Open dally *-* p.m. Sst. and Sun. t-l P mDIEHLS ORCHARD & CIDER MILL UTS Ranch Rd. u Trealtor's Traitors 001*12 0*45 Mil Pontiac Drlv* I elk, nw Tsl. and Ofcn. Lk. Rd. CLOSED SUNDAY ~ PLEASUREMATE DELUXE HARDTOP CAMPERS I-43& I V OUNS, dating a 3.BLACK JiNt}tONY ..^IWMVNr^^oolt. Bank | PlWOW IABLE a Spring) las. Call tadav ter detail RHODES POOLS RABBITS FOR SALE. Call"attar p.rn. UL 2-4353. ____ SPRINGER "SPANIELS Akc." IT BERNARD pi pllrad. 151-17*2. ■dlid. LAST WEEK FOR fpt* sweat con 4350 Margin Rd. 3*1-100*. PEACHES Praai* ar can. Applaa. Oaklan Orchards, 2205 E. Commerce Rd Lk. 6 CONTAINER Wr YdiTki€R ■aches. £pen anything of valua. Open ♦-» P.M, MIDLAND TRAILER SALES 1ST Dixie Hwy. ________33S-0771 1-A MODERN DECOR Early Ainarlcen, Madltarranaa •tichardson >« Monarch Hickory Rldoa Rd. n loft and follow alont SALES. TIPSICO I SMALL FEMALE PUPPIES, mostly cocker, SJ. 474-1541. SIAMEtB KITTENS. TRAINED, us-•d to children. 132-3231. ST. BERKfAMtrT*lJPsrAkC champ. Farm Equlpnwnt WAGONS dally i:30 to 7. Orchards, 12*5 at Panton. 87 1*7® m Optn iwon.-a*t. 'ill 9 KAMPR VILLAGE 630 I. Wilton noor Joslyn ____ 588-0M1* 373-5330, 388-0811 _ CENTURY YELLOWSTONE TRAVEL TRAILERS QUALITY AT ANYEU DOIT STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. 1771 Hlfltland (M S*)_*02 * Check our deal on — SWISS COLONY LUXURY TRAILERS FROLIC TRAILERS AND TRUCK CAMPERS. SKAMPER FOLD DOWN CAMPERS U to 21 avdliMav st — Jacobson Traitor Sotos 14*0 Williams Laka Rd. OR 3 St EXPLORER MOTOR HOME If, 23', 25' MODELS Sm this California bulll-ln unit which Is No. 2 In motor hon •ala*. Prlcti itort at 88,885, up. STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. Colonial Mobile Homes PE 2-1457 *24-44*4 25 Opdyki Rd. 8733 Dlxlo Auburn Height* Phona 371-4435 CLEARANCE SALE on oil new and used gar-1 Skam^'r'-PI#a*ur#'Mala* den tractors - agricultural 4 used travel* tral*#r**and camper*I j west~h7ghland whit*-ierrifa. ond industrial tractors. Also MUST 60 ~ ** Y**r'*nd Pr,rt*‘ good buys on n«w and used Holly Traval Coach, Inc. ™ ™i Milts trenchers lands ri issio Hoiiv. Holly mb 4-4771 .....i uusers, , irgn«ngrs, iaaaers,| have y6u SEEN THE all NEW ^ | rakas, plows, Etc. ...................sts-4414 Pet Suppflos StrvIce CCpKvIr DOUBLE US0. tonighl— — - —- —■ ................, ”!ZiJ9SL_________________ I 1-A GROOMING Fashion Poodle: POOL TABLE. SLAtE.1150. Closing Pool Tebie Warehouse. 332-7505. i laijp- "all TRAIL BOSS- ............| Bloomfield IS HERE Med* bv the manufacturer nl temous Apache camp trailer, * wheel drive, ell terraln vehicle, j Poodle Salon, 332 W. Huron hoi more to ell*r th«| family | nays 335-*435 “— MS sportsmen, Check these taeturaa. | - •' •„ a Pontiac Form and Industrial Tractor Co. I2S S. WOODWARD HAVE 'Hufmip 335-5259 DO MARS Ponllsei Open Dally Including Sunday CLOSE-OUT" FLOOR MODEL . ...| whaaihorsa^tractors and^mowar yp^BCIALl wardrobe and ovarhaad storage. _PJrt*_l2S0 takaal UL 2-2311. HAYDENCAMPER SALES On M-5*. Vk Ml. W. of Oxbow LI 138.3154 SALE - SALE - SALE fa'r* Making Dgglat Now- Is Th* I Elect i Htabla, any ttltt*. PE 2 1*75. POODLE GROOMING ourth. Pontiac, FE 4-SM2 JIM HARRINGTON'S SPORT CRAFT Auction Sotos Apache Factory Home Town Dealer: 'oPENSuNDAyr**"-*^*1 ! 8 & 8 AUCTION Rfb WINO Hunler», M2.50 M4.434* EVERY FRIDAY .. 7:00 F A«CH.RYft,,4 W. Hurnn. |v|rv SAUIR^AY 7J F SKI-DOO S WE BUY - SELL - TRAON USED SKI DOO'S to HP UP TO ucfrrs uvui n 24 HP ALL uRe MODELS IN A t r AS^ pS^P B JiY^f CONDITION. PRICED PROM 14*5! BBIZB AND UP. TERMS AVAILABLE. KING BROS. 373-0734 _____Pontiac Rd. el Opdyke Sand-Oravel-DIrl 76 Orchard Lk. Ave. FE 5-2424. j SUMMER CLEARANCE USED LAWN AND GARDEN TRACTORS WITH MOWERS ~ CUB CADETS - WHEEL HORSE — BOLENS — SIMPLICITY ~ I SPRINGFIELD. ALL RECON-h OITJONED AND READY TIT GO. ALL PRICED TO SELL. TERMS AVAIL ABLE. KING BROS. 373-0734 ; Pontiac Rd. at Opdyka nIw, usih and MtSmTSSU--. _________________ rakas and hay condlllonars, DAVIS ittiu ismB! MACHINFUV. nPTAMUIl i ■ ual _ r."" To Taka That N*w Trailer Or Pickup Camper Noma Prices Slashed McCtollan Travel' Traitors 4IM Hiahiang Read (M-M) PHONE *74-3143 Close Out on '69 Models g WHEEL CAMPER ;HIN«RY.„pkT6.NVILLjf, NA cov^ eu*!^ bufS tSTuH liryfea" :0?.l*r''“ Jota toir*. C.rt Nm 4100 H«tchary, Drayh)n, 4^4473. dTapi'rl. iStore. f* "* "** •i'17 Travel Traitors FRI. NIGHT, AUG. 29th 7 P. M. SHARP O'* FT. CAMPER—REDUCED 114: Weirs GOODELL'S 151-4550 V f OLD OUT CAMPER 2 years nl k BLACK DIRT, top soil, sand, •oad gravel PE 1-4120. SERIES OF EXCAVAfIONS1 Whitt ...jrtoi — gravel. I o you lor hi* cost at hauling Od I 1-0*35. * - «■ •* - — ' lndep*ndence.U V till dirt, clay, a ,----- - ... „■■).. Sun. bid kULLOhZtkG. TO ADR R W< tlnlah grades our spec , reel 270*. . s __ IXCELLENT TOP SOIL, black _ leveled 420-17W alt. a p.m. '' CA-WriAND'ANOORAvIL All graval products, fill sand ar color portable TV, 1 large early j Vmfricttn cabinet color fv; new; ^ •khn^ tr | - DOOR PRIZE-1 Small Block : Jj Shetland Pony (mare). . Yukon Delta 16-Ft. Traitor Iff* rnfrlfl. 18 raatfv fo MMo Irtj. Milch, KsFS@-ANb-d,r, Latham mw Ml k«r«a;r« IcileiFED BLACK DIRT A PEAT pcPec*d*V7oloT"i|^no°rOOTUwll*! DELIviRED, 05154*2. plus much more, lit National Bank SP¥ciAl - LIME itona, lOkA'afoni ?! L*P»*r Lyl* Allan. Clark, •vprslmd stona, road graval, and ' <■Maiehlno, Prdp, sand, *135 Sashabaw. MA J-1141. Bud Hlckmolt - Ojnaral Auc- WlLL ACCEPT CLEAN till dirt: . Cass Lika Road. *01-113*. MONDAY SEPTEMBER 1,10 A.M. •- —----—-—— ------Elchlngar Ctnlannlaf Estata Pets-Huntmq Drqa - 79 I7S1 Am»llth Rd.. Bay city Parkin* Salt Sorvlca Auctlonaers 1 MALE'. 4 MONTHS Old, Mtxlcsn •*!?' Swert, Creak 1-41M400 Chihuahua, Pi s-Mii, ___Saturday I MALE PlKINGESE, 2‘ AKC, S40. FE 2 3*14. ALSO NOMAD AND HI-LD VILLAGE TRAILER SALES 1*470 DIXIE HWY. CLARKSTON . *25-2217 | SALES-SERVICJERENTALS i PiCk0P"CAMPER, |0W' "sail | talnod, IlltS. OR 1-I275. I PICK-UP COVERS FACTORY SECONDS, WHILE 1*1 new urn, aai-aaii. I THEY LAST, ggiwISd, Insulated, I W'SELF-CONTAINED F R'D L I C ,! ov^'mouier Vdeet m&EILB 1 *J!VU‘'.H'^c44 ‘7t““ _ fV0°pU cVi!r 25** ' CRUMS. h'|J4’t , HOLLY ^Selt eontelned, Moor, WALLED .LAKE, *24-41*1, Jmilng. I**]. jfxifcRAkt bitiix*, I altepar, i*7i. Motorcycles 450 ESA NEEDS PARTS. 54' MARLETTl, AUGUST Special Sale New and Used Tracks 1543 FORD PICKUP, I MOTORCYCLE TRAILER 2 t 035. PE 3-4723 bet. 10 ».m.-3 p. Ovet 100 1969 Boats NOW ON DISPLAY Glastron, Sea Star North American Aluma Craft, Mirro Sail-fish, Sun-fish Mercury^ Merc Cruiser Cruise Out, Inc. 43 E. Walton , Closed Sun. PE 0-4402 Oban * 0, Mon.-Frl.. 2-5 Set SALES BOATS-Motors-Trallera I Pontoons-satlboats In Itockl PINTER'S OMC SUBURBAN cuatem' *51-0) condition. 0450. GMC TRUCK CENTER' 0:00 to 5:00 Mon.-Prl. , 8:00'to 12:00 Saturday 701 Oakland Avenue 335-9731 BIU. Lk. Rd., 402-0021. TRIUMPH BONNIE. 11,000 miles warranty. Cycle ac ceaaorles. Rupp's Mlnl-blkes. TAKE M-59 to w. Highland, right ti Hickory Rldga Rd. to Damoda Rd., left and follow signs to DAWSON'S SALES, TIPSICO LAKE. P“— YAMAHA - KAWASAKI Mid Season savings, all model complete selection of enduro's. Financing Available CLAYT'S CYCLE CENTER Bicycles _ JyvBlty Exit) SPECIAL YEAR tnd prices, o ^ — Giassper, Steury, K SAILBOAT, 10 FT, turnabout cla spinmaker and trailer, 8300. 6 7178. ________ SUMMER CLEARANCE! 1 . BOATS-MOTORS TRAILERS 5$55-SAVE-SSS$ Harrington Boat1 Works «** 5. Tategroph_____ 332-0033 TERRIFIC DICOUNTS On all boats, pontoons and cano. AT TONY'S MARINE Johnson motor* — 33 years re, 34»iPQrchiird Lk. Rd. Sylven Li > TIRES, regular Cyclateacher 545, 474-0015 eft, 4 HARLEY CHOPPER, tin*, tSOOcc, needs work on itr, make otter, oa 0-244*. „ LIGHTNING, 450 C IMS TRIUMPH BONNEVILLE, t 1*57 HONDA SCRAMBLER 305 C 1*50 Vauxltall, almt rnndltl, dratted. *51-4574, Opdyke, Apt, 5. 12' ALUMINUM BOATS ........ill Lb. cep. Beat trailer* .513 rrallari $120, 15 canoes tis*.*5 Big Coho boats, 14' 5200. 15' 030*. Sdve $$ at Buchanan's Hours 1«6 683-8381 14 FT. CHRiS-cSAFT Boot, motor, trailer and equli mant. 8280. tSMOOa* Wanted Cars-Trucks 101 attenYion Car — bring your car and tltla For cosh to EXECUTIVE bIMI p 01150, tl . FEATHERCRAFT a I U 0 sportster, Teen** trailer, .. .... wheels. $350. With 40 h.p. Johnson Olectrlc, 5575, 40M0M. I FIBERGLAS BOAT. -------M h.p^ motor, [oaded with extras, 373- HONDA 540. Si llabars, new liras, new mini-! excellent condition. 0105. Call 1544: 1*44 TRIUMPH BONNEVILLE, fully. SW 1*4* CATHEDRAL Pibergias runabout with vertlble top, 75 hp. McCullough outboard, 1200 lb. tilt trait" 1— traa, sacrifice, call 451-3700. 4‘ STARCRAFT Fiberglass I rgloss Deep Outboard. PI 1*44 SPRINT H 332-2413, *tl«r 5:30 p.m._ 1*44 HARLEY OAVIDSON PLh 7 1M7 HONDA, chromed, I 0205 or PE 8-3114._____ 10^7 HARLEY SPRINT, PE M*oa. 1*47 HONDA 305 SCRAMBLER, *350. SS7-42S0._____________________ toil BSA 441 VICTOR, 1,*00 mites, iflur 10 —■ perfect condition, 5475, 474-4274 or )S'~CHETEKi 585-27*1 dally. Sit. sun. S N (S17) 154-2041 In CMevllle, I 14' CHRISCRAFT, excollont CM.... - • lotor, troller ready to go. I Car*. M4-2131.______J 14* SORG PIBERGLASSED boat. TaeNs* trailer. 25 hors* power Johnson motor. Extras. S475. 343 '• PE S Economy C . 17' CANOE, 1175. . 311-0444 ) HAMPTON. Avon I 144 TOPPER, EXCELLENT condition, 03,400, no phona calls, 3)70 Orchard Laka Rd., Kaago Harbor, lot 35,ask tor Mr. or Mrs. Shouts. t*45 lieYKTy llxis. Sxc. condition. I*ity aha?. 3320417, to*1*^ LIBEEtY, 12 X.S5 Ilk* naw.'gas 'RICHARDSON," IMS KAWASAKI 175 and “Tdoki t00. FE 0-435*. TRIUMPH . 500 CC, _________ loage. soma custom styling, Int condition, mutt tall. 414-5002. SUZOkI, 126 CC, wfirsacrTtic*. 3-4320. i>40 tRlUMPH itkok/ 450 CC.4,000 -~"-s. excaptlonally clean, 0775 or ,h «xtrat. tM-24i TMS RITZ CRAFT, 0 335-1405. CONTEMPORARY TRAILER Baamsd colling 50* long, lorgi kitchen, lot* of cupboerm, stov and refrigerator, dryer bulIMm dean priced *2,*00 call today. EASTHAM REALTORS no Highland Rd. M-S1) MLS 674-3126 335-7900 UNION LAKE BRANCH 363-8303 8181 Comm«rc« Choicel FAMILY SITES .... HOME. OAK HILL ESTATES HOME OP HOLLY MOBILE HOMES DOUR HWY. AT OAK HILL RD. 34-4443 Dsllv 0-0 IMS TRIUMPH 500-1*4* Yaihtha UP alactrlc. FE 5-2442. 1240 tRIUMPH 500 SCRAMBLER. —• otter. Exc. condition. 410- 1*40 RIVERSIDE, 350cc, road'll - naw. S3I5. S2S44M. 1*M YAMAHA 250CC ' 450 CC Trluttlph BI - J mlloa, extras. Ml-3442. 1*4* HONDA 350 Scramblar, tak* TRAVEL TRAILER, DETROITER AMERICAN SUNRISE PARK KR0PF Double Wldat. Expaltdo Custom built to your dfdd* Fra* Dollvary and Setup Within 2t0 MIM| AT BOB HUTCHINSON MOBILE HOME SALES 4301 DIXIE HWY. 673-1202 DRAYTON PLAINS Com Dally 1111 p.m. Saturday and Sunday Mil. wieiB" % ftp. l&DlfV in Motor homo, must too to ap- . preclata, will tak* 1M7 or 1*4# cor I for agulty. 473-0008. _ '' R0YAL-0R-REGAL ACTIVE honoa Scrambler 350. Outboards, l-O's Inboard Cruisers,_____________ Many to Choos* Prom LAKE S SEA MARINE . Blvd. at Stglnayr FE 4-0587 Toil YAMAHA, 350.'Mi0. 473-2243 HONOA 050 ro*d blka, s J,“ 500 mlt*l> 2 safe! neimsia, *450, 343-4441 attar 7. 141 YAMAHA 350 Scramblar, callent cond. 473-7451, If no anai 474-4407. hXr. collmt cc 474-27*1.____ f CREST PONTOON, 30 h, mercury molor, call aftar 4 p.n 6744)887* 1 y 25 fiORSfcPOWER EvINRUDE, excollont condition, 575, cell 42 2252. 20' SLOOP, DAY SAILOR, centi 1*41 If cHRISSCRAPT C-aklft, h.p., • sat* coho boat with tral 401-2727 or 402-3553. _ 1**7 SEA-kiME, -1$' flbergle* l strako, 45 h.P. Sea-King *l*etrlc i* HUSQUARNA, 250 easonabla. *12-127). 1000 HONDA Moto Sport gG plua 2 holmgta. 350 ml. tlS. 334-8455. HONDA, SHICEAmElER, ■ 474-1431. ExctMlant condition, 1*4* KAWASkl, 350 SI, 1)00 ml. Cali 420-3005 before 4. 4204134 attar 4. Aik for Grig, io* liA Lightning, astet. sii?A. 852-5170 attar S p.m, M0 HONDA 450. Fully drotood. S52- 1300._____________________ 1*40 TRIUMPH DAYTOttA SOL CUItompalnt. 424-5474. Ko law* HUSTLhk, ntsfel * 125, h.p. Mtrcury, I llak* ____jrlea, .500. Call 343-72*2. 1*4* HONDA SCRAMBLER, 350, 40411*. *4* YAMAHA. M MILIS, 40 CC. 1250. Famela adult owned. 425-437*. 5 NORTOtt, 7i . ____MMI___________ "lm* ti chrome. Beat ottar. 405574. A-l Motorcycle IntUranct PARMER* ■* “ ““— EXTRA Dollars Paid FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Car AveriU's FE 2*871 2Q0 Dixit .«« 4-4G1 Mansfield AUTO SALES : 300 MANSFIELD &UT0 SALES 1104 Baldwin Ave. “TOP DOLLAR PAID" GLENN'S FOR "CLEAN" USED CARS onWjHwmst. TOP * FOR CLEAN CARS OR —omy Cert. 2S35 Dixie John McAuliffe Ford -DUMPS- 1741 FORD P-400, with 3-5 yrd.. BIG VANS , 1866 FORD F-700 J With 14 ft. body# roll up roar ddpr, A-1 Mechanically. 1865 GMC 14 Ft. With alum, body* hideway lift goto, A-1 mechanically, ready to work. SMALL VANS Hiavy Duty H new paint. Nlcal __ __D Haavy-Outy window van, na*rt paint, would nakt nlc* camper. - STAKES TRACTORS 1*45 FORD C-1000 534 VI tnglno, 2 apood, 5 apoed, straight air, sleeper cab, new liras, must sa* this on*. PICKUPS W* have a good aoloctlon of now and used pickups, raduetd and ready to gd nowl Close-Out Deals On All 1969 Model* John McAuliffi Ford Wo Moved . . V* Milt N. Of Mlraclt Milt 1845 S. Ttltgrtph Rd* FB 5-4101 Foreign (art_______________ 858 TRIUMPH, Brlfllh green, axe. condition, S3 JOS 1*40 MGA, LIKE n *475. FE S-1SS7. 1M1 TR-3 m In good ihap*. p.m.373-14*3. top DOLLARS FOR SHARP, MILEAGE AUTOMOBILES. H. J. VAN WELT OR 3-1355 Junk Cart-Tracks 101-A re* tow anyttmo, 331-2041. m JUNK CARS FREE TOW "HORSEPOWER Mercur Mtrcury r 673-7687. : nUuM*i$r P0R ,0M COPPER - brSss, radiators —1—a. e. Dixsm, ID CONDITION, radio, _____ txtra snow tiros on 8585. 626-3185. 1963 AUSTIN HEALY Sprite, roadstor, with excollont condition throughout! Only $495 1969 VW 2 Door Sodan Whit* with a rod Interior, l,o$o $1795 TOWN 8t COUNTRY •CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH ROCHESTER It N. Main St. SSI-4220 1964 FIAT ir Waal tor"b*ck*to*»cha5, ^42).C*r GRIMALDI CAR CO. *00 Qpklpnd Avt.______PE 4-7411 1M4 RENAULT R4, station wagon, 1 owner, low ml. 343-00*1. dir. 1*44 VW, NEEDS BODY work. Bo'ott Art Arriving I Must Mova Our Stock I Chrysler 23’with h**d WAVs^UYINO^tNkjjARS I I EE TOW ANYTIME, PI Used Auto-Track Porta 107 SET TRI-powor. 1-4 barrel sot up for ‘45 to ‘4* Pontlac. 42S0045. AIR COMPRESSORS, 1*44 Pontiac front and part, and touckata. Ml- ATTEX The Oo-Anvwhara Pun Vi For Outdoor Sports . CORVAIR IMS, good motor, --------• offer. MY 34443. PWflAC 388 vac. trl- ITEMS: 28* WuilanV |__________.in*. OR 3-5551. 28' CENTURY, IW7T~ oxcolnnt . ma. jp44i*. ' 1*44 TlibuTWOOD trav Sait-contoinod. csrsatad, condition, SI250. 332-*50t 1*4* 14' TROTTWbOO, vary' condition. Salt contained. Mlrron.i 1147 GMC '1-lon truck wltFil**p*r. Evening* and Saturday. 47M11S. I»d0 SEARS FOLD-DOWN with 11x14 acraanad pan 37S4SW. ___ TfkdO APACHE MESA! SLB'iPS'*.!. G.ll.y^.Plaatlc window*, full pa*|EI( LOWRY6 CAMPER SALES ' S. Hoipltai Rd. U EM 3-3681 camptr Eh. 1500. 41 Want Ads For Action SPORTSCRAFT MPO. py*y *2X1*50 waiortord TROTWOOOS H i Mlaty Comfort ECONOMY JOHNSON'S Walton of Joslyn fl 4-50*2 TRUCK CAAAPER. many extra*. Iii-quit* 111 Ruth, Pontiac, fMr S Nylon carpatlng over rubber pod TOWN 6 COUNTRY . MOBILE HOMES, INC. ToMErgih at Dlxlo Hwy, 3344694 Boot TrrtyUw* JOB’S SUNNY SUNOCO monthty, TuW'ui ___Im, os-foot 1TORAOE ONLY IPAitp POE'4- trailerTI •hady park, Hlllfltld *40 IM. C»ww>rcl^li8ar> $66 ■EL UTILITY FB 1-4354. Anderson's Best Buys Naw! 90cc Honda —$$39 New! CB 350 Honda . $695 |New! Hondo 50 .$239 New! Honda Mini . . $268 Now! 650cc BSA . $1095 N6w! BSA Enduro . $850 New! 650cc Triumph $1195 Ne w I 750 cc Norton $1195 NewI 250cc Ducotti . .$495 MANY MANY MORE! 300 tYCLES IN STOCK LOW DOWNPAYMENT. CZ TERMS (All pmtS PM Tax) AN0ERS0N SALES & SERVICE 1048 S. TdtlENpiEjB .PB 3.710I BIG SAVINGS M CC Ben*HI min level* 125 Cc Banelll _____ til CC J»rldB*»tene s5* Perry Lawn 6 Sport Equip. IMS Hlghlend RE. (MS*) 473-4234 OUTBOARD MOTORS CUFF DREYER'S MARINE DIVISION 15110 Holly Rd., Holly ME 4-47 BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER SUrcrofL Sllvarllna ^Plb*r|^»*r *i boats. Marc, I2*srs. weedware at Adam* COH0 SPECIAL Badgar with 100* Mare. 1000 I traitor, leadad 02,5*5. — and Mtotoro oos-iooo dRasTK DISCOUNTS On alt remaining naw GLASIPAPI and DUO BOATS and JOHNSON and CHRYSLER^meter*. S' Shall Lika IS h.a. Evlnrud*. SOJS S' laa Ray, d0 h.p. Ivlnruda SMS 4* Creator, 40 h.e. Marcury, traitor ... Jffif S' Grumman aluminum, Lima BG3iiu‘hi Sunday 1 4M* DIxto HtW. — — .vton Ptoma OR FOR THE BIST DEAL ANYWHERE 0N- itar Cradlf Glastron: 0. If- nvadar boat*. Johnson motor*i :ra*t pontoon*. Scrambtor) Terra :*t and Trail Braakar trail blkd*. Come To JIM HARRINGTON'S SPORT CRAFT Want Ads For Action MO Cu. In Trl-Powtr 474G7M id ChIvy dNdlNE, eompiai*. ('SJoTr lew and Usgd Trucks 103 IMS FORDPICKUP, SIGO. INI CHEVY *"Float*Ida 44 $ clean. 12*5. 34XWGI, dir. 1*42 CORVAto vAti, naaSTn good liras, MB 474-lou, r»M fohp Ecmiolltid. 15c 1964 MG BACK TO SCHOOL SPECIAL EXCELLENT CONDITION S42S GRIMALDI CAR CO. *00 Oakland Ava,____PE 5-0421 1966 VW 2-daor sedan and It is In real ax. callent condition, IMS. GRIMALDI CAR CO. M Oakland Ave. PE 5*421 >44 VW, SUNROOF, 'rad, run* good. *7)0. Phmd 373-1245,_______* YWj.f OWNER. 1244. Good condition. 1*44. Fasmack. Exceltant~iMP — jn.AM.PM. Radio, 441-4205. 1047 OPEL Cuiton Kadett 2 doe/. Looking tor economy and spandlng very ijltlto money? Thl* ll Itl Pin# *SHELT0N Pontiac-Buick 55 S, Recheiter Ed. ______451-5500 *41 VW BUG. Radio and sun roof. Vary clean >1400. 401.2440.____ 041 BLUE MG-B-GT, Coupe, AM-PM radio, good condition, OMOO. Call 474-2302 alter 4.___ *40 Vw SUN ROOF, automatic, r*d, n*w ear earnmo. si3So. 330-2755. JOHN McAULIFFE Ford 1041 VW with radio, heater, aytomftlc^ transmission, matalilc school special I 0ISM full price! I P.S. We've Moved I IMTcHEVROLET VAN, Excallant (wavy duty work, STM. GRIMALDI CAR CO. too Oakland Ava. ' PE 5-442) 104S EL CAMINO, tanaau cover, V-0 rtjat.'caiit, pic^^imfioi-otfo!10 1045 S. Tatograpb Rd. GRIMALDI CAR CO. *00 Oakland Ava. pi 5 •to FIAT, PIATA70S6‘'mll()*, condition, 482-2543. 4#C"EXCECCiiilT, 24JU0 k *t*r*o, air-conditioning. C^l'MC^nsSh In Laka Orton a»’ji SHELTON Pontiac-Buick -J 8. Rochester Rd. ■ 451-5SP 1047 CHEVROLET CAMPER wactol " “ -----T.To bi 4 DR. Travatatl. VS, auto ------------------------- 047 FORD VI. Excellent condition. 11400. 4S4-2M4. •—WfSTWWTTfSN: " it# cMKVY t&fMTPRliit/P. Mica blue tlnlah. Raiitfr to do a dr work. Rldo tan In the saddle. SHELTON Pontiac-Buick S&-------------- ' w'm Volkswagen This Week Specialsl toss VW dual ION 10M VW Sguaraback (|latton Wagon) ««?,*urdHr.str.]5t bTIl GOLLING VW A -J! ffi!!? 8*' (Maato Rd.) 4, ■A' I For Wont Ads Dial 3344981 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1969 Foreign Core W'tfi MW 105 L Waterford, New and Used Care 106 MIKlTsAvaiO CHEVY, WO w. Mao to. **»•*•* D—17 Now tend UsedCnn lQb 9 Standard Auto "Home of the Dependable Used rari" 1 ITIAC __________ pi DICK CANAANS MOTOR CITY DODGE 159 OAKLAND AV€. 131-922! YES1 I YEAR END SAVINGS Lloyd Bridges Dodge WALLED LAKE______124-157! 1914 OUICK Skyli...___________ va, power, automatic, beaut blue finish, one owner. SHELTON Pontiac-Buick 155 s. Rochester Rd._______151-5500 1968 Buick LeSabre Hardtop 2-door with automatic, power etei toast: br*kM'r,dl0'hM" $2397 Matthews-Harg reaves 1911 e I R A<*~ PE 4U! New and Used Core 106 1M5 Chevrolet Station Wagon. V-l automatic, power steering end a1-conditioning, full price 11095. Bat delivery, call Mr. Parks credit manager for payments schedule at Ml 1.7500. New location of TURNER FORD 2100 Maple (15 Mila Rd.) Troy Mall f LE SABre Convertible trunk led opener, 174-2222”* *,1M- Phone 313-104 1949 BUICK RIVIERA 101-0225 !9M, CHEVY, JMPALA, air SEDAN DE VILLE, runs r for parts. 332-2540,_ ”*9 CADILLAC LIM0UJ|NE |e a,ran*port- 19M CHEVY IMPALA, 327, good 7 In. slicks, 3 speed, Hurst shifter. Highest bid. OR 34007. 1917 CHEVY ll, v-l, 11297. Good ■ Cadillac. Full power and Ful price $1195. Bank te ayallabte,immediate delivery. Mr. Parksr-credlt manager,- ... payment echedule at Ml 4-7500, naw location of TURNER FORD 2100 Maple (15 Mile Rd.) Troy Mall 1 mile east of Woodward CADILLAC CONVERTIBLE, 19141 door •u,o™"c- h. iy.07 corvette CONVERTIBLE and brakes. One $1088 Suburban Olds 860 S. Woodward Birmingham Ml 7-5111 use. 147-0171. 1917 BUICK LeSabre Hardtop. One owner with 11,000 actual miles. Folks, let's go first class. This one should be on the showroom floor. SHELTON Pontiac-Buick 155 S. Rochaiter Rd, 682-3495. ____________________ 1967 CADILLAC COUPE DeVllle with *“*■ ESI! . Very low mileage. SMJk FE 5-1114. No dealirs ~~ COUPE DeVllle, 1967 Buick Wildcat Convertible brakes, mag white top. Full! Otter 3354170. 151-5500 CADILLAC 1919 -----*— BM. Air, cruls. rating,151-3253. PM. Air, cruise control. Automatic i leveling, 151-325* 1949-' CADILLAC _. i ----------- 173-0301. Power steering, wheels. Blue will price 1966 CHEVY SPORT VAN s. Ideal for vacation. Only, $1295 1968 VW $1695 1966 MUSTANG id, on tlw floor, good condltk $1095 VAN CAMP BCHEVROLET On N. Milford Rd. New and Used Care 106 1966 Chrysler 306' 2-door, hardtop, 303, auto., power, $1395 DICK CANAANS MOTOR CITY DODGE KESSLER'S DODGE CARS AND TRUCKS B ;_. Solos and Service ' Oxford____ oa 1-1400 1917 CHEVY Caprice 2 door hardto with automatic, power, VS, vln roof. Hart Is atyla and classl SHELTON Pontiac-Buick 153 S. Rochester Rd.______151-33 JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 1917 Chavv Biscayne 2 door wit eyl. angina, automatic, rat... haatar, power Hearing, bargain of the day at only S9M Full Prlca. P.S. We've Moved! Vi Mila N. of Miracle MIN 1545 5. Telegraph Rd. PE 5-4 1917 CORVETTE convertible, 300 1 —* i power steering — 052-4379 slier 5. 1967 CHEVY Tranepertetlon Special 097JO GRIMALDI CAR CO. Oakland Ave._______PE 3-0431 1M7CHEVROLET Caprice VL automatic, power ataarlng and brakes, blue with whit# vinyl roof, mllaage, radio, haator, vails. $1095. LARRY SHEEHAN'S HILLSIDE Lincoln-Mercury 1250 Oakland 333-7863 $2088 Suburban Olds 860 S. Woodward Birmingham Ml 7-5111 1907 ELECTRA 225 Cl i vinyl ri _____ -12795 . Buick, 115 1940 ELECTRA 225 Coups. Showroom ntyr. ' One owner Birmingham trade., Tull power and air condition. Just 13,295 full price. Fischer Buick, 515 S. Woodward, Ml 7-5400. The Best Used Cars Come From Flannery Ford WATERFORD 1967 Comet Caliente Hardtop 2-door with V-l, automatic, powor steering, light blue finish, vinyl trim, black vinyl tap. Only— $1795 1969 Ford Goloxie 500 Hqrdtop- 2-door with 390 V-t, automatic, power steering, brakes, vinyl roof, balance of new car warranty. $2795 LATE MODEL CADILLACS ON .HAND AT ALL TIMES JEROME CADILLAC CO. 1930 Wide Track Or. FE 3-7021 1949 CHEVY. 301 cu. In. duel quads. Custom Interior. 335-4211 of tar t 1954 CHEVROLET “ 325-3707 1956 CHEVROLET 4 DOOR, tram California, special motor, transmission and rear end, exc. condition, for solo or trade, 3250. 957 CHEVY with new 301 engine with quads, etc. $425. Call after 5:30 p,m, 125-2955.________ 50 CORVETTE 4 SPEED poslti John McAuliffe Ford 1917 CHEVY 9, passenger, Nation wagon with VI, radio hooter, automate, power steering, beautiful metallic lurqualie' with matching all vinyl interior, summer special only SUM, full prlr~ P.S. We've Moved! W Mile N. of Miracle Mile 1345 S. Telegraph Rd. - '48 CHEVY IMPAL VS, automatic, vinyl FE 5- CARNIVAL 1932 DODGE i. Call Mr. Parks TURNER FORD 00 Maple (15 Mila Rd.) Troy Mall 1 mile seat of Woof-—J 41 DODGE 4 DOOR. By Dick Turner LABOR DAY Specials No Reasonable Offer Refused! 1969 PLYMOUTH FURY III ‘ f-Uoor. sedan, V-3, angina. Torque- «». ------- rM)0 (nd hMl#r, —.. ,----- steering, electric dock, rear ..window defogger. White hMUtlful blue vinyl Interior, warranty, buy of tti* day I New and Used Care Only $2688 1911 CORVAIR, RUNS WOll, Work, 1125. 124-9325. 1911 CHEVROLET Impels, hardtop. VI. SIOO. FE 2-7235. 1911 CHEVY WAGON, ‘ 395. Rune A-l. SAVE AUTO FE S-3278 1912 BISCAYNE Chevy, 4-q stick, 35,000 miles, $t25„ g cond hand car, 3344113. w, . sat.-Tuea., a 1913 CHEVY, double power, FE 0- 1300.___________________________ 1913 CORVETTE, 327, 215 FI hetdt. ♦71-3719. ___________ 19M CHE9Y, good "M3" transmission, $50. OR • ‘ $1895 1967 Country Sedan 1963 Chevy II nr, automatic, radio, hoator, towall tires. Economy special. $495 Suburban Olds 860 S. Woodward Birmingham Ml 7-5111 power ataarlng, radio, white* 1967 Ford % Ton pickup, V-0, automatic, alia tires, heavy duly sprint $1795 1966 Ford 2 Door Hardtop Oelexle 500, with 219 V-l ou-tometlc, power steering, three choose from— Drive the , Extra 5 Miles and Save 1969 Plymouth Fury I t deer with V-0, automatic, pew atoartng, radio, hooter, 4 l, premium first, balance of new car warranty. $2295 1968 Ford XL Convertible With V-l, | 1M4 CHEVY li, station w< sarr' **.............. ing, brakes, power windows end MMter otar. Ir car warranty. $2195 1962 Corvair Monza 0299 DICK CANAANS MOTOR CITY DODGE FE S-4521 APALA, 327 floor I I" engine 3-7490. 04366 R V AI R Horsepower. 4 speed, c dowt. 3350, OR 4-1401. CMVY Impale, 2 door Marvel Motori, 251 Oakland, FE CHEVY ---.' Inch, «... ....__________ condition 3545. Buy Here—Pay Here, fi|W|tojU||||f 251 Oekltnd, PE o- ilMCHEVY SPORT IMPALA, good condition, host effer. MY 3-1551. 1914 CHEVY BISCAYNE 2 deer, r. Aulo., new tlr«. 752-9440. WATERFORD STANDARD AUTO Mering. Pull price 31195. ^ank torms available, here. Immediate delivery. Call Mr. Parke credit manager for payment schedule a' Ml 4-/500. Now locatlonn of TURNER FORD 2100 Maple 115 Milt Rd.) Trey Mall I mile wit of Woodward 1915 CHEVY Impale Super Sport.-)/ 8, automatic, vinyl top. Yes folk was b rb**u,y' z,ppy •* "to dey I SHELTON Pontiac-Buick 855 8. Rochester Rd.______451-550 1945 CHEVELLB, supsr-sport, 37 horsepower, 02200. 473-1314. 1945 CHEVY IMPALA, Sport coupt automatic trantmlsslon, power .................I —condition. 1968 CHRYSLER hardtop, e blue beauty wilt matching vinyl Interior, with a blech vinyl top enly. $2495 1967 CHRYSLERS Moor, hardtop, or Moor ndon, both aharp cars, fully equipped Including air conditioning, toko your pick only. $2195 New and Used Can / 106 New and Used Care 1911 MUSTANG CONVERTIBLE, Vl, SAVE MONEY AT MIKE SAVOlB CHEVY" ItoOW. Moplo, Ml 1-9735. 1946 MUSTANG, 2-DOOR hardtop, oil white with black vinyl top, V-l engine, automatic, power steering, radio, ,h*stor, whitewall tires. 11495. LARRY SHEEHAN'S HILLSIDE Lincoln-Mercury 1250 Oakland 333-7863 FORD, 1944, STATION wagon, VB, -“*> power, 1 owner, 493-1498. “ "Junior Higgins, you know better than to interrupt your father when he’s listening to me!” 3 speed, 3375. 31 1 p.m, OR 3-5355, Exc. condition. A 1937 MUSTANO, HARDTOP, good condition, 11495. 151-1579.__ 1917 T-BIRD, LANDAU, 2-door hardtop. factory air conditioning, full power, block vinyl top, radio, heater, automatic, whltawall liras, 12395. LARRY SHEEHAN’S HILLSIDE Lincoln-Mercury 1250 Oakland 333-7863 32200. C«ll 674-0714. 1917 MUSTANG OT with mag wheels* 390 engine, exc. OR 3*6563 after 3 p.m. 1947 FORD FALCON.'1 cylinder, 200 motor, stick rhl“ - dltlon, 121-3233. good con- ing. Full price 31495. Bank ' available here. I m mod l dolivory. Call Mr. Parks, credit manager, for payments schedule at Ml 4-7500. New location of TURNER FORD 2600 Maple (15 Mil* Rd.) Troy Mall ______l mile oast of Woodward__ 1967 MUSTANO 2 Plus 2 fattbick. GT equipped. V-0 an gins, automatic, consola. Whlta with black bucko* saats. Special wheels ClU 442-3239**^ ,ir“- lmmiCUla’*' Audette Pontiac 1350 W. Maple Rd. Troy mediate delivery, credit manager, for schedule at Ml 4-7500. TURNER FORD New and Used Cart 106 conditioned, 31900. I P.m„ 373-5111. 1968 T-Bird Landau Full power, and factory air conditioning, must be soon to appreciate — clearance spatial at only 33415. Full Price. . P.S. We've Moved! Vl Milo N. of Miracle Wllle 1345 s. Telegraph Rd. FE -54101 I960 FORD Falcon station wagon. Six cylinders, automatic, beautiful sunsef yellow finish. Plenty of room and comfort. Radio, hooter, whhowaHs. An exceptional buy. ' LARRY SHEEHAN'S HILLSIDE Lincoln-Mercury 1250 Oakland 333-7863 John McAuliffe Ford 1919 Felrlan* Cobra Hardtop. . engine, automatic trensmlsth radio, heater, power steering a brakes. Black cordovan t o Clearance special, 03111 full prlo P.S. We've Moved! Maple (is Mila Rd.) Troy Mall I,,,. I? TelealLh1 W 1 mile east of Woodward IS45 s. Tolograph 1917 FAIRLANE hardtop, stick. 11295 1967 BARRACUDA John McAuliffe Ford 1967 FALCON 4 door, With . beautiful silver blue finish, with matching interior, radio, heater, stick shirt, can't ba told from naw, still under naw car warranty, summer special only $1288 full price. P.S. We've Moved! W Mila N. of Mirada Mila 1145 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 5-4l0i 949 MUSTANG SPORT Roof. 2 door hardtop Fallback, v-8 3 spaed floor shift, stereo AM-FM radio. Roe I "whlTewaMS'tlre**1 Td* miles. Naw car trodo ln'!cell 442- vlnyl top, chroi -1--- and man" 3 p.m. - 106 New and Used Care 106 IT?. 1941 FALCON. Automatic, radio and idlt? heater. Full price 3595. Bank terms available her*. Immid lal ' i delivery. Call Mr. Parks cred >82-2011 manager tor payments schedule i ----- Ml 4-7500. NSW location of TURNER FORD \aplt (15 Mila Rd.) Troy A 1 mile east of Woodward_ John McAuliffe Ford 19M Ford country Squire Wagon. 10-paeeongtr 3 to chooso from — «... ..... ranomun, 334-0313. Pom I - Hoc, DICK CANAANS MOTOR CITY I P,S' We've Moved! iviv^ j. i, \^i i x i w Mila N. ol Mlraelo Mila FlAPlP IT ____JfWI5| I A JI JL ir. 1911 FORb “COUNTRY Squire.' 10 155 OAKLAND AVE. 335-9222 lanV'condlllon. 313X471 .**; _ - , i 19«f6RD%-TON- VPQ | $1299 J. I ily-Ji I DICK CANAANS YEAR END SAVINGS MOTOR CITY Lloyd Bridges j DODGE lAU nBlrlanil CB Lilli Dodge 1967 FORD LTD 4 door hardtop. w!th b(ack vinyl roof, oughem Interior. 30,00o i, air condition. Power I sieering and brakes. Excellent I condition. Call 642-3289. Audette Pontiac 1050 W. Maple Rd. Troy WALLED LAKE OR 3-3 ■Ing, vli t-2711. 1911 CHEVEL^E SS, 394 AL HAN0UTE Chevrolet Buick On M24 in Lake Orion 693-8344 1949 CHEVY 'KINGSWOOD wtoto ritrnow^M^wlth little rod beauty only $1895 1967 PLYMOUTH GTX 2-door, hardtop, see and drive performance car at only $1795 1968 VW 3 door, this little green bottle Is a sharpie end today's prlca Is anly. $1595 1965 PLYMOUTH FURY III 2-door, hardtop, V-e, automatic, with powarv a rad sharpla, only $1095 1965 CHRYSLER t-door, hardtop, this gold btauty Is roady and only. $1195 1964 IMPERIAL John McAuliffe Ford 1915 CHEYSLER Imperial 2 door hardtop, with Tti black flnuh, ™ WWM'pr P.S. We've Moved! Vi mil* N. of Mirada Mila U45 S. TelegraphRa, Ft 5-1101 1966 Chrysler Convertible Newport with beautiful canary yellow, black top, black Interior, VI, automatic, radie, haator, power etoiriMk brakes, backup lightt whitewalls, other occasional, local car, real ntMl Special $1195 BILL FOX CHEVY 755 S. Rochester Rd. ” 151-7000 iW^cHami -------------------- EL ... -^ER CHARGER, R.T. 2 hardtop, ayary posslbla Ito option Incl. 440 MM. •harp. Call far detain, 424-1572 ’, 5395, Bui 5, Buy irs, 2511 1914 Falrlano Wagon. V4, automatic, power steering. Full price 31195. Bonk terms available here. Immediate delivery. Call Mr. Parka »tom» New and Used Can *» IWII 6 wet*“oft TURNER FORD riHUiMr 2600 Maple (15 Mile Rd.) Troy Mall T mile east of Woodward _ john McAuliffe ford 1966 T-BIrd convertible, this carl 1,000 4 door, air. USED CARS AT Fastback $1595 TROY 1968 CORVAIR Automatic. MOTOR MALL $1195 1968 OPEL Mtpls Road (15 Mila) Between Coolldge and Cropkt . $1095 1967 CHEVY ONE STOP SHOPPING AT Impala, coupa. $1495 Audette Pontiac I964| MUSTANG $896 Birmingham 1965 BONNEVILLE * Chrysler-Plymouth $695 1967 CHIVY Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury 4 door* air. $1595 VAN CAMP Bill Golling VW CHEVROLET On N. Milford Rd. Mike Savoie Chevrolet Milford MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1919 FORD Filrltne, 2-door, hardtop, 1 automatic, radio, haator, whitewalls, sconomy special, 52095. 177 M-24, Lake Orion, 1934341 ■ John McAuliffe Ford 1919 Mustang Fastback. V-l automatic, radio, hosier, powor slotting. Beautiful canary yellow with black Interior. Clearance Special only 32431 full prlca. P.S. We've Moved I Vi Mila N. at Miracle Mila 1045 5. Telegraph Rd. FE 54101 OVER 1,000 USED CARS AT TROY MOTOR MALL Maple Road (15 Mila) Between Coolldge and Crooks ONE STfOP SHOPPING AT Audette Pontiac Birmingham Chrysler-Plymouth Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Bill Golling VW Mike Savoie Chevrolet 106New and Used Cars 106 New and Used Care 106 alter 5 p. 1734539. ■. stis. I940TALCON, 1 OWNI condition. Reliable. —1300. 147-4711. 1940 T-BIRD, r.._ _____ SAVE AUTO. 1W2 FOSB Falrlane, condition, 3250. ___goodies I ckiarai_IH_____1 —31703 full price.. P.S. We've Moved! Vi Mile N. of Mlracla Milt 1345 3. Telegraph Rd. PE 54 $995 1964 PONTIAC «at station wagon, automatic, with power steering, drive this tor only. $895 1965 MUSTANG * 2+2 lop, vinyl top, with automatic, . tea this one tor only $795 1965 FAIRLANE ll wigon, i ltd only 1913 FORD Station wagon, good c< dltlon, >249, 1174553.______ 1913 FORO GALAXIE 500, g< condition. Call 102-5432. 1913 FORD CONVERTIBLE, , condition, all powar, 352-2743. 3981 aflgr S p.—. 1913 FORD GALAXIE, 500 XL, •: condition, OR 4-1549. 1914 FORD 2 DOOR ________P BRI engine. Rebuilt Cl Irons,, alto 427 engine. Mornings 3344139. 1914 FAIRLANE. SPOTLESS. Now wldt ovils, 5135, 151-1371. John McAuliffe Ford 1914 T-BIRD Landau with full Qowsr, and new tires* runs like a! naw one* summer special at onlyi 81088 full prlca. . P.S. We've Movedl Vi Mila N. of Mlracla Mila 1545 8. Telegraph FE 5 1915 MUSTANO, 2 DOOR Sporti coupe, vinyl hardtop, A-l, 4514710. 1,000 USED CARS AT TROY MOTOR MALL Mapla Road (15 Milt) Between Coolldge and Crooks ONE STOP SHOPPING AT Audtftt Pontiac Birmingham Chrysler-Plymouth Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Bill Golling VW Mike Savoie Chevrolet v-i. d HAHN TODAY'S SPECIAL 1968 CHEVY Wagon, 9 Passenger $2495 With V4, automatic, powar steering, bright rad finish, black Interior, how car condltlonl 1968 PLYMOUTH Fury III .... $1995 2 door hardtop, automatic, full powor, economy V4, vinyl Interior, mist blue, now car warranty. Price raducad for quick sale. ,1 1961 FALCON 2-Door $129 Sedan, automatic, radio, heater. 1969 JAVELIN SST $2895 2 door hardtop, with factory air conditioning, V4. automatic, full power, factory official cars. Two lo select from. 1967 JEEPSTER Wagon $1895 With V-3. front and roar atoll, lt.000 actual miles. Must see to appreciate. 1965 CHEVY SS CONVERTIBLE ..$1195 Burgundy with white top* matching bucket seats. 1963 CORVETTE Fastback .... $1895 4-speed* 327 engine* hurry ~ will not lest at this price 1 1967 CHRYSLER Newport $1995 3 door hardtop, with full powor, factory air conditioning, white with block vinyl root. Naw car warranty, 1967 DODGE Pickup $1495 Sweepline 8 ft. box* V-8. custom ceb* runs like newl Excellent condition throughout! Chrysler-Plymouth-Rambler-Jeep Clarkston 6673 Dixie Hwy. MA 5-2635 $695 Thll rid one ll prlcad rl $595 Oakland spaed. Full prlca SW5. Bank terms avallablt hers. I m m a d I a 11 delivery. Call Mr. Parka, credit manager, tor payments tchsdula al mi 4>notb Naw beaHM of TURNER FORD 2100 Mapla (15 Mila Rd.) Troy Mall 1 mils aartti Woodward 1945 FALCON, 1 cylinder, automatic. New and Used Cars 106New and Used Cara 106 New and Used Cars 1 * 106 New and Used Cara 106 915 Ford automatic, B delivery. Call Mr. raws, cr.an manager for payments schedule at Ml 4-7300. NOW location of TURNER FORD 2100 Mapla (IS Mila Rd.) Trey Mall I mils east of Woodward 1915 MUSTANG 1 CYLINdER ) I MUSTANG FASTBACK, good mdltlon, 8725, 1724593.__| MUSTANG V4, ! —tt oHir. ifrllfs. ____________ 1915 f>ORD GALAXIE, 2-door straight transmission, posltractlor —I. 27400 ml. 3700. 373-3232. New and Used Cars 106New and Used Care New aad Used Care 106 1515 CHiVY IMPALA - wagon! _ auto, douhla powar, AM and FM radio, and luggage rack. Vary lor1/ai^t^eonvarllWa. Plant 1, 1915 CHEVY VI, 44oor- automatic, naw air condlttonlnoTFETml7' 1915 CORVAIR MONZA convarllbla'. ‘ $1495 1966 Ford ySl tap pickup, V4, standard tram muMn, radio, haator. $1295 1966 Bronco WAGON 1 cylinder, 3 speed, wheel drive, with blade. $1395 Flannery On Dixie HWy. at The double stoplight l Waterford 623-0900 1,000 USED CARS AT TROY MOTOR MALL Mapla Road (15 Mila) Btlwaon Coolldge and Crocks ONE STOP SHOPPING AT Audette Pontiac Birmingham Chrysler-Plymouth Bob Borst 1 Lincoln-Mercury Bill Golling VW Mike Savoie Chevrolet I BRAND NEW 1969 JAVELIN $2498 Includes the following oquipmont of no oxtra chargoi Automatic transmission, whiftwpll tires, powor storing and powor brakes, visibility group, light group, push button AM radio and all vinyl interior. 666 S. Woodward, Birmingham Opon Monday and Thursday 'til 9 P.M. MI 6-3900 1962 Corvair 1964 Fprd 1963 Dodge 1964 Pontiac Monza 4 door hardtop. Metallic green with matching vinyl interior. Automatic, power steering, radio, heater, whitewall tires. Full price $195 2 door custom. Metallic blue with matching interior. 6 cylinder, quto-matic, radio, heater, whitewall tires. $395 Dart Convertible. Beige with brown vinyl interior. White top. Bucket seats, 6 cylinder, automatic, radio, heater, whitewall tires. $295 Catalina 4 door Custom. Olive green with matching interior. V-8 automatic, radio, heater, power steering and brakes, whitewall tires. $395 1963 Olds Fiesta 9 passenger. Sahara gold with matching vinyl interior. V-8 automatic, radio, heater, power steering ond brakes, whitewalls. Deluxe chrome luggage rack. $395 1964 Plymouth Belvedere 2 door hardtop. Turquoise with matching interior. Power steering and brakes, radio, heater, whitewall tires. $395 : 1966 Ranchero Midnight blue with matching interior. Power steering and brakes, radio, heater, whitewall tires. $695 1964 Plymouth 9 passenger station wagon. Green with matching interior. V-8 automatic power steering and brakes, radio, heater, whitewall tires. $195 3275 West Huron Corner M59 and Elizabeth Lake Road 681-0800 681-0800 D—18 THE E A)N TIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1969 For Want" Ads Dial 3344981 Now mi U*ed C»t Itolllgraai JeedCm 108 Now and Used Cert fM IMktW t « «*!»*. 4 Speed. ; OLDS DELTA «. 415. I Mina, brakes. Auto, trot n. Mu«» mn Clock •> 106 Naw and Used Cor* power 1784 TEMPEST LeMans, 2 106IMARM ADUKE By Anderson and Leaning ’’urnerTord' rn 05 Mlto WdJTroi TjM Jtt^ 4 CYUNpER, .top, lock out hubs. I8S0 « offtK. ttfrStU._____ 1967 Jeepster Convertible V-4, 4-WHEEL DRIVE, ao Save ' Suburban Olds v 860 S. Woodward 5 Birmingham Ml 7-5111 1967 Plymouth pna> i k«ii*in vvinamwii, 04**> uavt MtlVflfl, . 335- Rochttter, 852 2640.__________ ____w 1844 Pontiac ^9 passenger wagon, Paalar______________ 373-56001 IIW4 PONTIAC CATALINA, power, radio, original------ ; som.' i - ti i-». mi 3-DOOR,' L*M >p I oood condition. 334-3474 after 4 ir eteerlnp,! 1764 PONTIAC, BONNEVILLE 2-.--------xj hardtop, ,lrtCk Tpecial $1995 BILL FOX CHEVY 755 S. Rochester Rd. _ «St top YtoTCJ 5 JEEP. 4 cylinder. 4 wh« drive. Kelly steel cob. Deluxe rea bumper. 843x15 Ittg tires. 2500 at tuol mllos. Will Mcrlfict for 1349! ' * 1961 MGA Roadster, r """"grImaldi CAR CO. 1968 Olds 68 Luxury Sedan Suburban Olds $1595 J Matthews-Hargreaves .1 Oeklend A«.__ PS 4-4i ^1,,, WE FINANCE Plymouth ; No Money V.I.P. j Down LARRY SHEEHAN'S HILLSIDE Lincoln-Mercury 1250 Oakland 333-7863 ’ i 1765 PONTIAC CATALINA verttble, double power, mllee. PE 2*2510. $395 Bob Borst New and Used Cars 106 1761 PONTIAC TEMPEST 2 door. Red with black roof. V-l, automatic, power etoerlng and brakes. New wide oval tlraa. All decor moldings. Excellent condition. Priced to nil. Call 542-1217. Audette Pontiac 150 W. Maple Rd. Troy New god Usad Cars 188 1759 PONTIAC CAtALINA, power, I top. air, and axtrae. 673-7*78. 1768 FIREBIRD. LOW mileage. Take r payments. 673-3028, between service. 36^7777. condition. Lika r lardtop. Automatic, i • $2195 PONTIAC RETAIL New end Used Cars 188 PONTIAC 1787 GRAND PRUC. Blue 1767 GRAND .....Cluster guege. Zlebart. $3750. 673-7877. •_____________ 1767 PONTIAC CATALINA 4 door Hydramatlc, radio, power , brakes, whitewalls. OR 3- brakes, AM-FM radio, wring . i 63.200. 4 67 PONTIAC CATALINA, : vinyl top, power and ell mileage, 83150. 651-6516. GRAND Prlx. Factory 4 DR. TRAVELALL. Vl, iu . , power steering, posltrac. " condition SI275. 2076 1761 RAMBLER AMERICAN station i rambler, OOOD seen to approclpto. 3 I RAMBLER 770, 4-door Station 29,000 actual miles, 6 cylinder, radio, .1 Konomy Plus, pH 7,700, executives c &6s£°6& 1767 PONTIAC , top, factory i PASSENGER FB 3-7754 ppwdr stnrlng,. extra clean. U “Phil, come right over! I’d like to get something off my chest!” (her extras that make! BUY OF THE YEAR[CALL g|JPggg| iooi Joslyn Ave, "" PONTIAC STATION Wagon. Lincoln-Mercury Sales 1750 W. Meple Rd^Trey Ml jl-1762 MERCURY METEOR. $1695 fto* MERCURY FOR I 5-7352 before 5 p.m. 17*5 COMET, excellei Mutt nil. OR 3-7437. 1765 MtRCiiRY Monter Automatic, power t ^«0»5hM,,r LARRY SH__ HILLSIDE Lincoln-Mercury condition. $3795 j Suburban Olds ’ BIRMINGHAM ”i CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 2100 Maple Rd. Troy, Mich. 642-7000 1968 Plymouth Fury III "; ! Doubl« power. 5750. 652-5715. 1763 PONTIAC 2 PLUS 3. 4 I tri-power, power brakae, beet DEALER New 0ncj Ufd Con 106 PONTIAC WAGON, 6 passenger, ided, sire clean private, 82150 3-4246.______ 1965 PONTIAC 4 Door, Starchlaf, al vinyl Interior. 651-8760. ______ 1965 PONTIAC Catalina. Factory a'li 1250 Oakland : 1966 COMET CYCLONE' OT" 2-hardtop, 390 V-l •nfllnj, factor 1969 Olds 98 Hardtop in I_________________I _______________ leering end' brakes; radio! heater, j rhltewallt. A really line car. ] LARRY SHEEHAN'S KJ HILLSIDE 860 S. Woodward j dick canaans j Lincoln-Mercury Sheehans Birmingham Ml 7-511J j MOTOR CITY 1250 Oakland 333-7863 John McAuliffe Ford 1765 PONTIAC Bonneville station HHHIHH ,,, wagon, with boautlful d a• - H# Qaktond 338-4526 metallic burgundy with matchlr 1 ! Sff®1 JrvHra P.S. We've Moved) 333-7863 LARRY SHEEHAN'S HILLSIDE * Lincoln-Mercury *1250 Oakland_______333-78631 1 1766 MflCURY MONTBRAY, dx-l cellent condition, mutt sell, 51.175. i*46 ' mXXCURY FaTTk LA N E I convertible, 41# V-l engine, automatic, power brakae, power etoerlng, rddlo, hoetor, whitewall | tlrM, gr*JY jheehAN'I I HILLSIDE lincoln-Mtrcury 1250 Ooklond 333-7863 feyTSerti^Coui 11795. Rnk ’ tarmi’^avallabie “'“HB dallvary. Call Mg *nag#r fr- gags 4-7500. Final | 33 Cars i Must Go! 1 1969 Olds New—Used & Demos $$-SAVE-$$ BEST OLDS 550 Oakland Ave. FE 2-8101 PLYMOUTH 4-DOOE DODGE "GO! HAUPT PONTIAC Sove—Save—Save CLARKSTON_AAA 3-5701 SAVE MONET AT MIKE, SAVOIE New and Uee4 Curs 106 1761 LeMANS 2 door hardtop. Bungundy with black buckat Mats; V-l. automatic. Powar steering and 1 brakes. . Console. Low m II o * - I Bought her new. Call 642-3287. Audette Pontiac 1850 W. Maple Rd. Ti 7 GRAND PRIX mileage cere. 3 o choose from. Fully equipped In--luding air conditioning. Priced to •II. Call 642-3287. Audette Pontiac 10 W. Maplt Rd. Troy 1969 PONTIAC CATALINA. FE 4-1 1062. 1 y 1969 2 _ !1969 PONTIAC' Factory Official RjRPai and Company cars. Low i mileage. Several models to choose from. Priced right Many with AIR CONDITIONING. Call 642-3289. Audette Pontiac , 150 W. Maple Rd.' Troy 1767 RAMBLER REBEL 4-door, .Stick shift, radio, hooter, 6 Wlmdar •nglna, economy cal* BfllM to sail at 5775. ROSE RAMBLE.R-JEEP, Union Lake, EM 3-4155. 1766 RAMBLER CLASSIC, 4doer, 1768 AMBASSADOR oowar, automatic . .......... radio, heater and whitewall -- Full price 11975. Bank tarmi available here. Immediate dallvary. 1 2-DOOR HARDTOP Bonneville, id condition; 335-2772. 1,000 USED CARS AT TROY MOTOR MALL DICK CANAAN'S top. 311 e ..............Alracle M. . 1845 S. Telegraph Rd. FES-4101 1965 C BILL FOX CHEVY 334-4225 i 1965* PONTIAC CATALINA 4 I hardtop, double power, __ 51 -7000! mileage, >950, 332-7221. 8 PLYMOUTH ROAD runner, 383,11946 CATALINA 4-DOOR I i speed, power. black vinyl top* f‘Tl SHARPI DICK CANAANS MOTOR CITY | DODGE !»55 Oakland 335-4528} I John McAuliffe Ford | i 1767 Plymouth Balvadara Station i Wagon. 8.000 mllat. V-0 autentalc, 1 power stoning and brakes, radio, heater. Clearance special only -‘"8, full prleo. i P.S. We've Moved1 I GTO 4 MOTOR CITY # DODGE loos OAKLAND AVE. 338-7222 3 YES! YEAR END SAVINGS Lloyd Bridges Dodge vinyl top. C Bloom*laid H WALLED LAKE 1767 TEMPEST CUSTOM Con-vertlble. Power, automatic, VI. White with blue top. Keep America " PONTIAC EXECUTIVE. 1767' 4 1767 PONTIAC CATALINA, power mGIT'I top, air and extras. 673-7878. ONE STOP SHOPPING AT Audette Pontiac Birmingham Chrysler-Plymouth Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Bill Galling VW Mike Savoie Chevrolet 12388, E 5-3271 " .. __ j, double D condition, 48,000! 5 Weeks old, 1966 Olds Toronado Inetudino factory *elr conditioning,! 1,000 USED CARS AT TROY $ave j MOTOR MALL Suburban Olds 860 S. Woodward ! Birmingham Ml 7-5111 ONE STOP SHOPPING AT Audette Pontiac 8 OLDSMOBILE 442 Converlll Birmingham Chrysler-Plymouth 1767 OLDS 441 Cuttoss convertible, Ytilow with matching buckat aaati. Powar ttaaring and b r a k a • . * ■*—natic, conaola. Special prlct. 141-3219. Audette Pontiac New and Used Cart Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Bill Coiling VW Troy< Mike Savoie Chevrolet 106 New aa4 Used Core 106 MERRY OLDS 1969 COMPANY Car Sale! 1969 Delta 4 Door Hordtop . 1969 Olds Luxury Sedan . $4195 T969" Olds 98 Hordfop .....7.$4295 Audette Pontiac Birmingham Chrysler-Plymouth Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Bill Coiling VW Mike Sovoie Chevrolet New md Used Can 106 New and Utad Can 106New and Used Can 106 I MERRY OLDS, Inc. 528 N. MAIN ST. Rochester OL 1*9761 a-wq, aik for Rick Blttla. 741 PONTIAC, FAST back 8, than tint raatonabla offer takes. 69 “yourt VW CENTER 70 to Choose From —All Models— —All Colors— —All Reconditioned— Autobahn Motora Inc. Authorized VW Dealer to Mila North of Miracle Milo 165 S. Telegraph FE 6-4531 137' PONTIAC, GOOD ihape. 37,000 ml, , owner. C«ll ..tor 5 p.m. 873, , fat PONTIAC ENGINE and tranimlsalon, 17*4 * Chevy Irani M with shlflsr, 1768 407 htadi. 334- w 8753._ 1762 PONTiAC " CATALINA eon-RodHtolar, dSl'-ja'l* qr'lSnftJ. 1763 "PONTIAC. POWER •laaring, automatic, real good. 1375. 882-7223. Dealer. 1763 CATALINA, 1150. 338-3764 _ 7 6 4 BONNEVILLE Convartlblo, powar ilotrlno and brakfli, clean, 8700. UL0-1550. speed, ~2 door. 1744 Pontiac 1966 Bonneville 2-door hardtop. Burgundy black vlnyt top, $1595 Suburban Olds 860 S. Woodward Birmingham Ml 7-5111 1086 PONTIAC M 767 TEMPEST WAGON, 6 power steering and brak miles. SI750. 628-4140, NORTHWESTERN AUTO SALES 2023 Dixie HWV.______PE 0-2820 BONNEVILLE COUPE. Extra ... BONNEVILLE, AIR, all powar, 18,000 miles, S2150. 682-412). 767 PONTIAC 2-OOOR hardtop, double powar, excellent condition, 11475. 852-4607. ___ 767 PONTIAC CATALINA 4 door sedan with power, automatic, 5 new whitewalls, priced to toll at r, $775/ 887-5678. trade. Vinyl top, automatic, steering and brakes. OneyoL.----- rantv. Just I1M7 full price. Fischer Jlulck, $15_S. Woodward, Ml 7-5600. 766 CATALINA 2-door, 1 ----ng and brakes, ■7-08QI >ned, powar brakes and alear-Ing, 4-door sedan. Excellent con- dlllon 8100, Ml-2174, __________ 1767 PIREBIRCi; 326 automatic, power Hearing. 81.70Q. 620-2677. 1747 PONTIAC “ —' - I HH HRI ___________i available i. Immediate dallvary. Call Mr ks, credit manager I o 1767 CATALINA CONVERTIBLI. d brakes. 5 m door hardtop, ad floor ahift, heals, rad line .. Mff jrlth matching rlor. Excellent conditon. Call 3207. Audette Pontiac V. Maple Rd. ’ Tray I76i 6-DOOR PONTIAC executive, vary daan, many axtraa ind. air, S2300. 062-2372._ FIREBIRD, Dark blue, V4, .-■HI* U|H0 miles, 81675. M7- i. Call 442-3207. Audette Pontiac 1050 W. Mapla Rd, 1767" PONTIAC Vonlura. 2-dOOr, rad hardtop, black —■— -*—‘-1- 4370. I. PE ^ 1764 PONTIAC, good li 1375. 332-7457, alt. 7 p. Over PONTIAC VENTURA 2 door ■donation,! nardtop. Black with rad vlnvl Interior. 400 engine, 3 -----duty floor ahift t- 1,000 USED CARS AT jliso W. Mapla Rd. Troy TROY n ■—:--------“7 motor MALi|Pre-owned Maple Road (15 Mill ONFSTOPSHOPPING'AT I Beauties FroirTtRe Birminghom-Bloomfield Area 1969 Cadillac Sedan DeVille Firemiit paint with vinyl roar. Loadad with equipment Including climate control and PM *'— radio. Sava hundreds on this 1968 Cadillac Eldorado Plrfmlit Madera Plum with _ TOM RAC ® CHEV all CARS AVAILABLE W Easy GMAC ' 1964 RAMBLER Wagon $395 With radio, luggage rack, economy a cylindtr JEMACHER HH Y- OLDS ITft LOW DOWN PAYMENT! UH Terms Available! HI 1963 RAMBLER 2 floor $195 1967 CHEVnr hnpolo -$1795 1966 CHEVELLE Wagon $1295 Willi, automatic, oowar steering, radio, white-^ wall* an exceptionally sharp car. 1964 CORVAIR $695 Mad dura coat rust proofing whgn new, body li extremely thorp, radio, premium whltowalls. 1964 OLDS ”88” ... $895 4 door sedan, regular fuel V-l, automatic, power ttaaring, brakes, whltawall*. 1964 JEEP Wogoneer $695 d^ahoal drive, lrat whaaimo hubs, radio, on-oM 1966 CHEVY Corvair $595 A btek to tchool MMCtol with flick shift.' 1963 CHIVY Wagon $395 I passenger, with V-l, automatic, powar steering, brakas. and radio. 1964 CHEVY $695 With V-l, power stoarlng. brakes, radio, white- I walla, real shdrp. Nty car trade. . 1965 BUICK Hardtop $1195 } door, with power steering, brakes, radio, -heeler, and regular fuel gas, v-l. wnttowaHs, naw car On USI0 at M15, Cla 1965 BUICK Skylork $1195 t door, hardtop, with V-l, automatic, radio, white-waifs, baautlful black finish. rkston MA 5-5071 | 1968 Cadillac Coupe DeVille rt balpa with black vln metallic Aqua with matching. Interior. Clearance special only j P.S. 'Ve've Moved I to Milo N. of Miracle Milo 145 S. Telegraph______PB 5-41B1 sffvr 642-3217. Audette Pontiac maintained. Call lop. Keep America baautlful. Buy inli ana. SHELTON Pontiac-Buick 1968 Buick Electro 225 Limited ilnyl root,, air condition, FM lorao radio. That vary Wat Buick iuilt and vary sharp. 1968 Pontiac Bonneville Vista 1967 Buick LeSabre 400 Coupe Cuitom Interior, vinyl root, factory air conditioning. Sharp! 1967 Mustang Coupe V-l automatic, pnwsr steering, factory air. Lika now throughout. Wilson Crissman Cadillac 1350 N. Woodward Ml 4-1930 168 CATALINA viiKBON, 4 dooi Power steering, still under wai Xanly. 82300. OR S-0377; _ HUNTER DODGE GREAT FINISH 1967 LeMans Convertible Rtd with white top. Power atee ing. radio, stereo topi, wire whaa and whitewall tlraa. Stock 1736/ $1995 1966 Ford Galaxie 500 7 door hardtop, ftod paint. Buckat •flatf* contole, pow*r •faarlng, rfadlo* whltawall tl r • •. Stock 4S90A. $1495 1966 Dodge Sports Wagon Automatic* 4 cylindtr, radio. St 890SA. $1295 ^ 1968 Ambassador Cross Country wagon. Po steering — air conditioning tinted glass, luaoam rack whltawall tlraa. Stock 7571. $2295 1967 Dodge Poloro Wagon 4 passenger, power steering, ra whltawall tlraa. ttoCk 7547. $1695 1968 Dodge Dart 3 deer, v-l power stoarlng, sti radio. Sharp carl Stock 7572. $1895 HUNTER DODGE 499 S.'Hunter, Birmingham Ml 7-0958 KEEGO PONTIAC SALES KEEGO HARBOR 682-3/1 PONTIAC, 4>DOOR hardtop e: 1. *2723. 651-7532. Here We Go! „ ARE YOU READY? * FOR A '69 FACTORY CAR GM FACTORY OFFICIAL CAR Loaded With Equipment New Stock Arriving Doily NO DEALERS PLEASE I CADILLACS ..........$5670! BUICKS ...............*27801 ELECTRA 225s .......$4550 OLDS M's ...........$J»»# OLDS 2 doors* 4 doors.$2640! PONTIACS ...........$2480! CHEVYS ........... S234B1 GTO's ...... CUTLASS .... ICHEVELLES .... camerosG.•. ............. WAGONS .............$2680 I YES* Wt Takt Trjides I Executive! Cars Inc, 1137 S. Main Romeo SAT. Sunday Looktrs Wtlcoma | .) Tray M tdwara sen Bankrupt? Naad a Car? nt to reestablish your credit NO MONEY DOWN I Hundreds to choose from. 1757 VOLKSWAGEN-Call I ..12660 ...S2210 1,000 I USED CARS AT Maple Road (15 Milo) Between Coolldgt and Crooks TROY MOTOR MALL ONE STOP SHOPPING AT Audette Pontiac Birmingham Chrysler-Plymouth Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Bill Golling VW Mike Savoie Chevrolet * and Used Cars 106New and Used Can 106 New and Used Can 106 New and Used Can 106 Whocl buy a new PONTIAC this time of year? at $3829 A Smart That's $2495, . , v We Guarantee in Writing Every Qne of Our Quality Used Cars are Actual Milesl — (As Traded) Deal With People You Can Trust) Where Honesty Is Our Policy! 1964 Buick Skylark............. ....... ........$895 with a baautlful bronia finish, white top, powar stoarlng, brakes, buckets I 1966 BONNEVILLE....................... $1395 ir steering, powar brakas, windows, seats, ad glass, cordova top, hydramatlc, radio, 1964 CATALINA Hardtop .......................... $695 J— —iwir attiring, brakae, Hydramatlc, radio, heater, 1968 PONTIAC Catalina ............................. $2395 jj| m— hardtop* hydramatlc* powar tfaarlnp* lr"‘—“*"* toil. 0iaii# aii windowo, factory 196& PONTIAC Station Wagon ..........................$595 ----nr steering, power brakes, radio, t- 1968 PONTIAC ..................................... $1495 Catalina 4-door stdon, power sloorlnd, heavy duty brakes, Oakland County car, turbo-hydromatlc, brand new whitewalls. Vinyl top. 1962 T-BIRD .................$691 1964 BUICK Hardtop ............................... $645 ----- iMt speaker. Black vlnvl tap, brand naw brakae, axt TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS 1965 STUDEBAKER .............................. . .$495 I 1962 Valiant 4-door.................. ............$195 4 door, automatic, power steering, radio, heater, whitewalls. | runs good, automatic, power stoarlng, radio, heater, and whitewalls. PAINTER SPECIAL <■ II PONTIAC CATALINA 4-deor sedan, with hydramatlc, i wring, brakes, heater. Oakland County — id drTvaa good. Made a little paint, only — $995 MECHANIC SPECIAL 5 CORVAIR 4-ipaad. hardtop. 2 door with N lit, needs some angina wqud Only— $295 ^ PONTIAC-TEMPESX-Open Daily. Till. 9 P.M. Open Sat. Till 6 P.M, On M-24-Lake Orion MY1 3-6266 the PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY* AUGUST 28, 1969 in School M Pupa's writing 1 School writing , . implements 39 One who SCkwfiold inherit* 41 Tier 9 Studied in 49 Noun suffix , biology class 44 Mix 12 Ellipsoidal 46 Felt through 13 Studied ,in ' *#W* , anatomy class 49 Undraped 14 Brazilian macaw S3 Bullfight 15 Expedient r=heerJ. 17 Equip 54Part«fa 18 Slumber «,!*** r*,vlw 19 Tedious 56 Entangle 21 Fork prong 23 Term in 58 Tropical syllable 31 Flat-bottomed 6 Book----far boat English class 33 Spiny-finned 7 Roman road fishes 25^"“ 35 Propelling a 9 Meteorology rowboat 40Physostigmine 10 Old Testament 43 Very swift ems, 59 Abstract being HS«:u^y >4Ecclesiastical 16Mortifies 46UndrtJmtoed 27 Pulls along DOWN -22 47 Sidiuriastic after lUsedin 24Dry ardor cooking cIms 25 Unaspirated 48 Ancient Irish (pL) 26 Wicker capital 50 River Talley 3 Appellation 28Divide 51 Epic poetry 4Froaenrain lengthwise 52 Females SOTrick (colL) 55 Request 32 Harvester 34 Befitting a MBepersistent 37 City in Texas People in the News By the Associated Press British actress Olivia Hussey, the teen-ager who sprang to film stardom in “Romeo and Juliet," has lost a leading ' role in the forthcoming movie “Red Hotshot” because she's ; a bigger girl now. Director Piero Zuffi said she had been replaced by Czech actress Susanna Martinkova. “It seems as if Miss Hussey let herself go a little In recent times and has slightly taken on some weight," 7-nffi explained. Moscow Honors Czech Red Party Head The Soviet Union has given Gustav Hnsak, the Czechoslovak Communist party head, the Order of Lenin—its highest award. The award followed Husak's crackdown last week on Czechs who demonstrated against the U.S.S.R. on the anniversary of the invasion of their country. However, the citation said Hnsak was honored “for outstanding service and heroism displayed in the Joint struggle against the common enemy—the German Fascist invaders—during the Slovak national uprising" in August 1M4. HUSAK Iranian Empress Expecting Empress Far ah of Iran, the mother of two sons and a daughter, is expecting her fourth child in February. A court source said yesterday in Tehran that for this reason she would not accompany the shah on his visit to the United States in October. Orchestra Leader's Wife Files for Divorce the wife or o leader Juan Esquivel has filed for divorce on grounds of separation, court records showed yesterday in Reno, Nev. Florin Joyce Esquivel is asking $1,200 a month alimony and all the couple’s community property in Las Vegas. She also asks the court to order her husband to pay all debts and legal fees. They ware married in Las Vegas Sept. 5, ION. Esquivel’s orchestra currently is playing at the Stardust Hotel in Las Vegas. Aetar Given Until Oct. 30 to Answer Complaint Actor Broderick Crawford, accused of failure to pay a grocery bill totaling $4,580, has until Oct. 30 to Answer the complaint. Crawford, 57, surrendered yesterday in Los Angeles on a bench warrant issued when he failed to appear for pre-, vious hearing on the matter. Superior Court Commissioner Jacqueline L. ’Weiss then rescheduled the hearing for Oct. 30. -Television Programs- Programs fumishod by stations listed in this column, ara subject to change without notice! D—19 1 i T" 5 6 7 8 9 ' 10 12 13 14 15“ 16 17 nr 19 20 21 23 24 25 26 ] r rH 29 30 ii 32 3^ r 36 37 38 140 41 42 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 S3 54 55 66 67 58 60 60 61 28 THURSDAY NIGHT 0:00. (2) (4) (7) C-News, Weather, Sports (9) R C-I Spy-Kelly's disappearance sends Scott on a weeklong search. (58) R C—Flintstones (56) What’sNew —The trigger fish is discussed. , (62) R-Sea Hunt 8:30 (2) C—News—Cronkite ( 4 ) C—News—Huntley, Brinkley (7) Ne,ws — Reynolds, Smith (50) Rr-McHale’s Navy (56) Cancion de 1 a Raza—Spanish soap opera (62) R—Highway Patrol 7:00 (2) R C-Truth or Consequences (4) (7) c—News, Weather, Sports (9) R—Movie: “Silver Whip" (1952) A young stagecoach driver runs into bandits. Dale Robertson, Rory Calhoun (50) R — I Love Lucy—Ricky arouses Lucy’s jealousy with a fictitious old flame. (56) NET Playhouse— English play wright Harley Granville - Baker’s “The Madras House,” a drama of social criticism, stars Gerald Flood and Gene Anderson. (62) C — Swingintime 7:30 (2) C—Animal World — Birds of the Ecuadorian jungle are viewed. (4) R C — Daniel Boone—Daniel and Gideon search for a black “Indian" who has been terrorizing the countryside. (7) R C —Flying Nun — Sister Bertrille, while caring for a sick child, learns a bank rob-her is nearby. (50) R—Hazel 8:00 (2) R C - Prisoner -While investigating a mad scientist, the Prisoner runs into opposition'‘from a dangerous lady. (7) R C—That Girl—Ann plans a singing career for Rose Cassinitti unaware that Roee is a nun. Danny Thomas and other family members guest-star. (50). C-Pay Cards—Steve Rossi guests. (62) R—Ozzie and Harriet 8:30 (4) R C — Ironside — Eve, near death after being wounded during a robbery, is grieved by her coworkers as they reminisce about her. (7) R C - Bewitched -After zapping a chimp into human form, Samantha finds herself with a man who possesses un-usual “animal magnetism." (9) C—Telescope—“Footnotes on the Future—Renta-World" focuses on the possibility of living and working without ever seeing money. (50) C-Password (56) R-Washington Week in Review (62) R C —Movie: “Checkpoint’’ (British, 1057) Anthony Steel, Stanley Baker 0:01(2) R—Movie: “The Nanny" (1065) A sinister relationship develops between a 10-year-old boy and his nanny. Bette Davis, William Dix (7) R C — Tom Jones — Guests include guitarist Manitas de Plata, Mireille Mathieu, Pat Paulsen, the Who and Fran Jeffries. (9) Canada at War—“Cinderella on tho Loft" (50) R—Perry Mason (56) R-Speaking Freely — Bayard Rustin, executive director of the A. Philip Randolph Institute, is interviewed. 0:30 (4) R C - Dragnet -Friday and Gannon investigate the shortage of merchandise in a department store and discover an un- eotiwiOTiwaawwaMaiiipaM , ^ -> TV Features NET PLAYHOUSE, p.m. (56) 7 1 ■—Radio Programs- quantities. One series, ABC’s 'The Brady Bunch,” has six. While the approaching season does not appear to contain much experimentation with radical, daring material, some fresh forms around will be offered. NBC’s “My World—And Welcome to It” is based on cartoons, writing and personality of the late James niurber. It will combine live actors and realistic sets with animation for a first in adult situation comedy- GM Executive Honored Twice Hie technical director in GM’s styling division, Dr. Peter Kyro-poulos of 4857 Dover, Bloomfield Township, has been twice-honored professionally tills summer. Selected earlier to the council for the New g York State Col-1 lege of Humane | Ecology in Cor-1 hell, he was re-1 centiy elected to | the grade of | Fellow by the I American So-1 ciety o f Mo-1 chanicai Engi-neers (ASME). KYROPOULOS The ASME cited him as a 'creative educator and innovator who has earned recognition for his advanced concepts of automobile c ' ABC’s, CBS’s and NBC’s new medical shows will inevitably remind one of yesteryear’s Kildare and Casey. Cute children have often helped a run-of-the- Dr. Kyropoulos, 54, joined GM' in 1957 after 16 years as an associate professor of mechanical engineering at California Institute of Technology. Pharmacists Pick Former City Man Former Pontiac reslden Louis M. Sestl has been appointed executive director of 11 h e Michigan State Pharma-ceuticai Association. His duties will include the over-all m age men t and adminli-tration of the state professional society of pharmacists. A member of various other phrmaceutical associations, Sesti practiced pharmacy in Birmingham for three years^ and hospital pharmacy in Farmington for two years prior to joining the staff of MSPA. Is 'Curious (Yellow)' Too Blue? FRIDAY AFTRRNOON WCAR. Naan, Rod Millar wjbk, Hmk o-Naii llilS-MUR, Focus WWJ, BM iaatlay 1iSS-WJR, Noun, At HOf— lilS-WJR, Arthur Oodtrsy ii4t—wjr, SutmytU* tiMMfVRON. Naan, Dan WWifT Naan, Milts S man WJR, Naan Dlmanalon MJ—WJR, Music Hall Jtl»--WCAR, Naan. Ren Rea* WJBK, K.b. Bayiay CKLW, Sd Mticfie WMF I, Dan AIM HMUWFON, Lum V Abnar Block on Film Ban Is Sought HIGHLAND PARK (AP) -The mayor of Highland Park and other city officials have been ordered to appear in U.S. District Court Friday, as the distributors of the Swedish movie “I Am Curios (Yellow)' seek to bar the Detroit suburb from seizing or banning the film. .dr * ' ★ An attorney for Grove Press, distributors of the film, said he will ask the court to declare Am Curious” not obscene pornographic. The hearing will be held at 10 ■m. Friday before Judge Ralph M. Freeman in Detroit. About 1,200 patrons stood in lint Wednesday afternoon to get Into the first Michigan screening of the controversial Swedish ■ex film. HOST OF OFFICIALS The audience included Blackwell, most of the City Council, the city attorney, three police vice-squad officers, two judges andi an assortment of other municipal dignitaries. They filled the bade two rows for the Michigan premiere. After viewing the two-hour, 15-minute feature, the mayor announced in the lobby the film was “definitely obscene." "We just have to decide whether to confiscate It right now, or later, and under what law,” Blackwell said. ‘SEVERAL’ SCENES Councilman Ethel Terrell was not happy about the movie, either. “We found several scenes highly objectionable. The film should not be shown.” lore cautiously, Council President Michael Glusac said, “The film is in poor taste, parts of it are obscene, but to prove If pornographic will be difficult- I suppose it has some redeeming sodal value." dr dr ★ For the Michigan opening, ticket-seekers were strung out in a block long queue at the Six Mile Theater, ready to pay $2.50 for a seat. The manager of the Six Mile Theater said he was looking forward to a brisk evening business. Five performances were scheduled for Wednesday^ Moviegoers Mr. and Mrs. Ed Burns of Westland Said they came to see the film because they planned a' trip to New York soon. “Admission is $5 in New York," Burns said. “I objected to ffie political overtones more than anything. It is very much anti-U.S., and antiwar.” Bruce Biddle, a Huntington Woods bachelor, said, “they s both barrels politically. SESTI PLUMBING I DISCOUNTS Hi !3-Piece BATH SET ■ 5995| ,92" I {Domestic Wafer {Systems From! FIREPLACE Qas Log* | SUMP PUMPS 1 |J. VANITIES 1 CABINET SINKS l TUB Enclosures 1 a EXTRA SPECIALS! S a Both Tub* li«S..$20.00 up . ■ Show Stall wMTrirn.*3J.»9 ■ {S^J&SUr $49.95 { :c •Save plumbing! 841 Baldwin gave us both barrels politically. | ,,,.1 Otherwise it was a waste of are or FE o-ZlOQ. _______________...... ■ Oaan Mon.. 1st. Silt P.M. 1 lot worse as far as sex goes.” Wad. and Fri. Evas, mi 7 P.M. TENUTA’S RESTAURANT Tender, Golden Fried Fish Dinners GAN EAT Also CARRY-OUT *1.19 Served ALL DAY Friday FE 8-9639 CORNER OF HURON and JOHNSON (Acroee From Pontiac Ganerol Hospital) 10" Motorola *19»s 16” Philco $2495 21” Muntz $29” 21” Crosley $2995 14” Portable $29** IT” Portable $3995 21” RCA $3995 21” Motorola $3995 21” Zenith $4995 19” Portable $4995 10-DAY EXOHANQE PRIVILEGE PI 2-2187 WALTON IV USE. Walton .Blvd. Comor Joelyn Open O to 9 % D—20 THE PONTIAC PRESS, T6URSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1969 pnprrromfyf^ Did Teacher Eat Three Kids? Protect Your Familys Home with \ I, ' '\ . ' ' ’i/ • ' VI. ^ , . J* , f „ Starting Kindergarten a Fearful Step ARE YOU UNDER 30? Guarantee your wife up to 1 *20,000 i to help pay j off the mortgage FOH LESS THAN $7 PER MONTH! . For All The Facto On This 20-Year Allstate ^ • Mortgage Protection Plan, Tha Man To Saa Are At ■ /instate Allstate Life Insurance Company Northbrook, III. 4M1 Highland Road (MB9) ; At Pontiac Lake Road Phono 001-0400 Suuuu UW> UUU WJU AAllJUiJULUAIUUUUutf AMKNICA’S LANOEST FAMILY CLOTHING CHAIN By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK (AP) - Remarks that a young man preparing to start kindergarten gets tired of hearing: MI don't know why you feel you have to lead him by the hand to class the first day, Madge. After all, Andrew is not exactly a baby any longer." ★ a A “I hear you’re going to have Miss Blimpstein aa your teach-~ oy, that old girl 1$ a tiger. I had her myself when I was in kindergarten. At the! end of the year three of us kids were missing, and everybody figured she ate them." ‘For two days Andrew has done nothing but polish the apple he plans to {give his teacher the first day. |Now he’s finally worn the peeling off it.” WHAT’S THE FUSS? "If you don’t pay attention in class, Andrew, Miss Blimpstein Will hang you up by your thumbs and pour ice-cold buttermilk down ypur back." "What’s all the fuss about anyway? Andrew isn't going to the moon—he’s just starting kindergarten." A A A “Don’t worry so much, kid. Even if you weather kindergarten, you still have IS more years to go before you’ll get out of college.” “Don’t let him pull any fake illness on you, Madge. Whether he claims he has a fever or a bellyache, I want him in that kindergarten seat when the bell rings.” BEWARE OF BOLL? ’ "I understand that that 1 bully in the n«t,}>lotfk1&! going to be in the same kindergarten' class with you, Andrew. Don’t let him knock all your front teeth out;" “If you aren’t polite to all the little girls, Andrew, Miss Blimp-stein Will make you stand in the comer and let them throw spit-balls at you." "You’ll get to do all kinds of fascinating things, Andrew such as galloping around the room to music, cutting out dolls, and learning to draw and color little white lambs in green grass." • A1 W if 'What do you mean you think you’ll drive him to school every day, Madge? You’ll not only spoil him—you’ll stunt his growth. Let him walk. It’ll do him good." DRINK INK “Mom, I’m not going to have Andrew tagging alofag after me to school every day. What’ll the other guys in the third grade think if I gotta stop every few steps to let my baby brother catch up with mo?" “If you wfj^jpir nose on the Meeve of yobr^otoater, Andrew, Miss Blimpstein will make you drink ink instead of milk for your lunch." ; A *%-t ■ ‘Now quit blubbering, Andrew. I insist you wear short pants to kindergarten. You look so darling in them. You can have long: pants when you start first grade." No, you can’t take the dog: with you ... or the cat ... or your turtle ... or any other pet. You just take yourself, understand?" A REWARD “If you’re a really good boy, you’ll be rewarded. You may be permitted to beat the blackboard erasers." ★ * ★ 'If you talk out loud in class when you’re not supposed to,, Miss Blimpstein will probably I twist your ears with a pair of I "When I was in kindergarten, there was a mean, little red-haired girl who used to kick me every time we were in the cloakroom. By the end of the first week my shins were all bruised black and blue." * A A "Of course, if you flunk kindergarten they’ll make you stay in it until you pass—even if It takes until you’re 21 years old." A A A “Don’t let them tease you, Andrew—kindergarten is no worse than a bad case of mumps.’ LONGINES Investment Your investment in Longines "Gold Medal" series will reap you all. that helped to make Longines, the World’s Most Honored Watch. from $79*° at PARK JEWELERS and OPTICIANS i n. saqinaw *GK2r * (Corner Pike St.) Dr. Cherhey FE 4-1889 Optomptriit SUNDAYS FAILSWEATERS 100% cardigans and sllpovars, machln* washabU. Colon, ilyUi. *°y* R*0' jf BOYS ^ * 2-PIECE " PAJAMA SETS r Print ill 4.3 ox. spray can YOURCHOICE WESCLOX ALARM CLOCKS Bwttorfingors, Baby Birth, Payday. Milk Shdko, •Ig Tima, Hollywood CacaaiHrt 'bars and othors Ivory Luminous Nothing to Sot - - - or forgot! With wlro twists Ragular 77f SEE OUR WIDE 11 SELECTION OF NEW MU COSTUME ^JEWELRY at ObcMMt Prim % MULTIPLE % VITAMINS With Iron XTRA STRENGTH PAIN RELIEVER MACLEANS TOOTHPASTE Regular or Spearmint Flavo ANTIPERSPIRANT ROLLON DEODORANT tog. 1.09. \ 12 02 Wide Variety ef Permanent Press and Sportswear Fabrics Wldo cholco of colors to mako you fashlon-rlght this fall. Sold in4 to 10 yard lengths Foamed back. Largo 52" x 70' slxo. Colorful prints and solids. DISH TOWELS .’4 CANNON savyweig FIRST QUALITY olid colors. Wide assortment urrv for this fine selection. Fabulous Buy! 2-Plia JACKET and SKIRT SUITS PAliy Sundays DISCOUNT CENTER m=M l^HORTH SAGINAW mLJfmr 1 intdowntoWn roNfiAc f LADIES COTTON BROADCLOTH PAlAMASf Colorful Cotton prints. Washable Sixes 6 to 16 MEN'S CARDKAN ml SLIPOVER SWEATERS YoNow and charcoal colors. Protect yourself against those rainy fall days Maas I to 11. 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Tubular Hammer 6-Pc Saw Set 6 Ft Start Tape 3-Pc Utility File Set 12" Aluminum Level 2-Fc C-Clamp Set 13J*c Drill Set-Metal Index 5- Pc Drill Set to K" 8-Pc Interchangeable Tool Kit 10-Pc Ratchet Socket Sat 6- Pc Open fend Wrench Set 8" Ad). Angle Wrench 18-Pc Hex Key Wrench Set Putty Knife & Scraper Set Combination Square Handy Sander w/10 ’ Sandpaper Sheets IN DOWNTOWN FONtlAd DEATH CAR — Three area persdni died yesterday merit" young when this car collided with a truck (background) on MM at fair co r«'BeUtotita1lwmihi|k Dead m iFMIac Roman, her A-2> Soviets Mulling Bombing China? U.S. Must in S. Ko^ea—Park U. S. Concerned From Our News Wires WASHINGTON — Intelligence reports that the Soviet Union may be considering an air attack on China’s nuclear installations have caused serious concern at highest levels here over possibility of war between the two Communist giants. The reports, coming from Communist sources of varying degrees of credibility, assert Soviet leaders have been sounding out their Warsaw Fact partners, as well ' as some Communist party leaders in Western Euurope, as to what their attitude would be if the Soviet Union had to take such an extreme step. A a A However, other information reaching. Teachers Settle in Waterford A Waterford Township teacher strike was averted early today when negotiators for teachers and the school board unexpectedly reached agreement on a new teachers’ contract. ftospects for a strike had been good yesterday, which would have delayed the opening of school. It is now likely schools will reopen on schedule a week from today. A A A “We didn’t expect to settle the contact issuek at all yesterday,” Warren Williams, executive director of the teachers’ Waterford Education Association, commented. “It surprised us too,” remarked acting Supt. Dr. John Pagen. “It was a compromise. The teachers gave up some things and we analyzed the possibility of a strike.” 'MORE BELT-TIGHTENING’ “But the proposed contract means we will have to do more belt-tightening. We’ll have .to go with a total austerity program, which I will say more about later.” Now all that remains to be done to send teachers back to work Tuesday to prepare for school opening next Thursday is approval of the one-year pact by a vote of the teachers and the board of education. A A. A ■ Williams said teachers are set to meet 7 p.m. tomorrow at Mason Junior High School, 3835 W. Walton, to vote on the proposed contract. The district has about 660 teachers. Pagen said he would try to call a meeting of the board of education for tomorrow to vote on the measure. I MONTHS OF TALKS Tentative agreement was reached after six months of negotiations. A state mediator had recently been conducting negotiations. Tuesday he had called for fact-finding by the State Labor Mediation Board. “We’re very happy with the proposed settlement,” Wiliams said. “We got a pretty competitive salary scale. It is a substantial jump on all levels. Salary was the key issue among six unresolved All issues were solved after school administrators returned from a two-day preschool workshop late yesterday and called a negotiation meeting, which lasted eight hours until 2 a.m. today. The state mediator wasn’t present. Washington has cast doubt on the truth of these reports. Versions from some other Western delegates at the meeting tend to discount the reports as exaggerations or as delierate misinformation promoted by non-Soviet Communist factions for their own interest. CONSIDERED SERIOUSLY Some authorities here believe the reports have been planted by Moscow for psychological effect against Peking. In view of the steadily increasing bitterness between Russia and China and their recurrent border clashes, however, the intelligence reports are being considered very seriously at the highest levels in the Nixon administration. A A • A The assumption of those authorities who tend to believe the reports is that the Soviet Union wants to determine whether such extreme action would cost it support within the international Communist community, particularly in Eastern Europe. The reports all appear to be taking about a possible Soviet attack by bombers armed with conventional weapons against Lop Nor, and other Chinese nuclear facilities. CHINESE RETALIATION If Soviet leaders are indeed considering such a strike, China could retaliate with a massive land invasion. The Soviets would then be faced with a decision of whether to use nuclear weapons to halt the armed hordes China could thrqjr against them. Republicans Hit President Over Campus Crisis SEOUL (AP) — President Chung Hee Park declared today that U.S. forces will have to remain in South Korea until the threat from all Communists in North Asia is eliminated.' He referred to the Soviet Union as well as Communist China and North Korea. * * * Park’s interview with the Associated Press was his first interview since his talks with President Nixon in San Francisco last week. A ★ * Asked when U.S. forces could be reduced or withdrawn, Park said he and Nixon had discussed the subject, and both recognized the threat from the North Koreans. ‘U. S THWARTS N. KOREA’ “The reason they are not executing their invasion plans,” the president said, “is because the U.S. forces are in Korea. A withdrawal of U.S. forces is not foreseeable until the threat has been eliminated. And until then, the continued FAIR QUEEN — Gay S. Chipman, 17, a 1969 graduate of Birmingham Groves High School, was crowned Miss Michigan State Fair last night in competition with nine other finalists at the fair in Detroit, who were chosen from a field of 55. The 5-foot-4 blonde is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Francis S. Chipman, 261lf Carol, Franklin Village. Miss Chipman is a dental assistant and enjoys swimming, tennis, skiing and modeling. Viet Infiltration Talk Splits State Dept., Pentagon WASHINGTON (AP) - Some Republican congressmen who toured (he nation’s colleges last spring say the administration has done little to ease the basic sources of campus ferment. “The critical urgency of the problem cannot be overstated,” the 22 GOP congressmen reported to President Nixon June 17. A A A And now, Rep. William A. Steiger says: “I think it’s fair to say most of the people who took that tour would tend to say things would- still be difficult this year.” CONTRADICTS FINCH The Wisconsin congrossm an con-' tradlcted the assessment of Robert H. Finch, secretary of health, education and welfare, who was quoted last week as saying chances for a quiet year on campuses are very promising. “I think the tempo of the student demonstrations on Vietnam will pick up this fall,” Baid Rep. R. Lawrence Coughlin of Pennsylvania, one of those who made the spring tour. -A A, - A Some moves over the summer have been encouraging, representatives of the informal coalition said in interviews, but progress has been slight in alleviating student discontent over basic Issues like the draft, their alienation from national politics and the depersonalization of Mg modem universities. Even if passions aroused by past Issues fade, the congressmen say, the discontent is volatile enough to feed protests over yet unknown issues. 'NO CONCRETE STEPS’ Hie congressmen’s recommendations last June Included the establishment of a commission to examine the impact of federal involvement in aid and research programs, the appointment of one man to coordinate federal youth programs and expansion of student involvement in federal programs through a national youth foundation and student teacher corps. “I don’t see any really concrete steps by the administration,” said Coughlin. (,'* V, A A’ A ..> * "I personally am not satisfied with the response of the administration,” said Steiger. “The administration has not, as far as I can determine, taken those administrative actions that were suggested.” “We were gratified by the President’s initial response, but the trouble is in implementing specific suggestions,” said a spokesman for Rep. WUUam E. Brock of Tennessee, who was the group’s leader. Brock Is touring the Far East. A A A The spokesman, Aram Bakshian, said the consensus among tbs congressmen appears to be that the best they can hope for is that disruptions wm be. reduced in scopm^ds foil, if net in frequency. $ Sailor Overboard I 1 Saved by Turtle | LOS ANGELES OH — It took a whale to save Jonah from the briny deep. Chung Nam Kiih says he made it with a turtle, and he’s got witnesses. Kim, a 27-year-old South Korean sailor, said yesterday a turtle kept him afloat1 after he fell from the deck of a merchant ship in the Pacific Ocean. AAA Hours after his strange adventure began, he was picked up by a Swedish freighter, the Citadel. Crewmen of freighter said Kim was swimming with one arm on a turtle’s back, and one of them took pictures to prove it. TELLS HIS STORY Kim related his story in a radio-telephone interview aboard the Citadel, which is due here tomorrow. He said he was a deckhand aboard the Federal Nagara, a- Liberian ship headed for New York, A A' A As the ship sailed about 100 miles off Nicaragua last Friday, Kim said, he got a headache. It was about 2 a.m. and he couldn’t sleep. So he walked out on the deck for some fresh air, he said, and “one foot went off — and then I went off. Nobody saw it.” “I had been swimming — it seemed like 13 hours,” he said, when he saw an animal. “I thought it was a shark, then I could see it was a turtle. “I threw an arm around it and we swam, very slowly, very slowly, for about two hours.” AAA Finally he spotted the Citadel. Sailors of the freighter threw Kim a lifebelt. He grabbed it and they pulled him out. Kim said he looked back and saw the turtle disappear under the water. Nobody on the ship saw it again. Fine Days Due Through Saturday Some clouds will drift in and out of the Pontiac area today, tonight and tomorrow, but weather will continue mostly fair for the period. Hie weatherman predicts temperatures will soar to near 90, today and tomorrow with little change Saturday. The low will be a mild 62 to 88 tonight. Winds are south to southwest at 6 to 18 miles per hour. No precipitation is predicted through Saturday. A A A • The low temperature before 8 a.m. was 82, and the mercury had zoomed to 88 by 12:30 p.m. WASHINGTON (AP) — The Pentagon is all but arguing publicly with the State Department over whether a recent reduction to enemy infiltration into South Vietnam can be considered “significant.” The State Department used the term yesterday, saying the Infiltration drop suggests Hanoi may be letting its force level in the South go down through attrition. AAA “We consider these facts to be significant and have said so on several occasions,” Press Officer Robert McCloskey said at a State Department briefing. Called upon to provide some statistical lacking for State’s postition, the Pentagon later would acknowledge only' that infiltration is “down considerably” from last year and that,,enemy strength may have suffered some loss. ‘SIGNIFICANCE’ AVOIDED But the ‘ Pie n t a g o n a v o i d e d deliberately, according to sources — embracing the term “significant,” and in a three-page statement listed no fewer than eight reasons why the recent infiltration decline may be short-lived. The Pentagon contended North Vietnam “is substantially replacing" its losses through the current infiltration rate. A A A Among factors cited by the Pentagon “that could influence the present lower infiltration rates:” ( • Fewer infiltrators showed up this summer because the spring monsoons over Laos, a principal infiltration route, made travel difficult on the Ho Chi Mih trail. • The enemy has needed fewer replacements recently. • The enemy may have made a political decision not to Increase h 1 s forces but “this decision can be altered on short notice.” A A A The Pentagon cited close proximity of North Vietnamese troops to the Demilitarized Zone and their deployment in bonier sanctuaries handy to battlefields, as well as their ability to move rapidly over a travel system improved since the United States stopped bombing the north. presence of U.S. forces will be required.” Park said South Korea probably would achieve economic self-sufficiency by the end of the third economic plan in 1976. A ★ A “Militarily, however,” he said, “we are inferior in some aspects to North Korea. We have to improve our weapons and make them strong enough to deter the North Koreans. When that can be achieved is difficult to predict.” A A A Park added that even if South Korea could withstand an offensive from North Korea, the U,S. presence would have to continue in the face of threats from the Soviet Union , and Communist China. “If the United States were not here,” he said, “we would give the Communists an opportunity of renewing their invasion Of I960. 1950 RENEWAL FEARED “If Korea were communized, Japan would be the next target.” . AAA Concerning Japan’s campaign to regain Okinawa and his own opposition to closing of the U.S. bases there, Park said he had taken pains to make clear he does not wish to interfere in the territorial and administrative functions of Okinawa, that these have to be worked out between Japan and the United States. A A A “Militarily, however, the bases are not only for safeguarding Japan but for defending the free nations to this part of the world,” he continued. “Therefore, they have great impact in safeguarding freedom to this area.” AAA Park said he is opposed to any withdrawal of U.S. forces from,Okinawa without adequate provisions or alternatives. Told the U.S. people were puzzled by North Korea’s seizure of the Puehlo and its downing of a U.S. reconnaissance plane over international waters, Park said he was equally puzzled. His guess, he said, was that the North Koreans were testing the degree of U.S. determination to defend South Korea and attempting to split the United States and South Korea. PwrilK PMt hr WMM R. N*ta and a baby sitter. A third youngster was to today at Pontiac General Hospital. (Story, page (%- .* _ A , : ■' . ' .. & 'Nixon to Rule in Jetport Rift7 WASHINGTON (AP) - A leading conservationist says a White House decision is imminent on the controversial jetport at the edge of Everglades National Park in southern Florida. Thomas L. Kimball, executive director of the National Wildlife Federation, said President Nixon would decide the issue since the Department of Transportation wants the air terminal built while the Department of Interior fears it will harm the park. A A A Federal approval is necessary for financial aid and designation as an airport for international flights. Kimball’s group, the National Parks Association, Sierra Club, National Audubon Society, and the Wilderness Society say the huge aircraft and the thousands of. people who would settle around the airport would ruin the park. POLLUTION FORESEEN In the jetport tlie conservationists see the entire spectrum of pollution: exhaust products; sewage, fertilizer, insecticide runoffs corrupting the water; jet engine noise disturbing the peace of the swamp. The park is a mixture of broad cypress swamps and savannah, pine stands, salt meadows and mangrove thickets alive with alligators, osprey, paint tier —a tropical ecology unknown to the rest of ‘the nation. A A A A rise of two feet in the water level can change hundreds of square miles into swamp and shallow lake. Hie park’s water supply has been manipulated dangerously to the past at the expense of the wildlife. Poachers have illegally taken upwards - of 20,000 alligator hides a year until thlb situation has finally been considered ox* tremely serious by the Interior Department. CONSTRUCTION STARTED As the conservation groups muster for the latest crunch some runway construction already has started at the 39s-quare mile jetport site. Presently, the site is called a training facility for commercial pilots. A- A ' A Kimball said decisions must also be made as to whether an alternate site la available which would cause la la damage to the nark. If tits jetport la to be built, Kimball added, a decision must also be made on what stipulatioaB Bam could be to help protect the pa»^ * « Colonial sofa and chair. Choice of colon. Zipper rlchlux cushions. Regular 399.00................ Traditional sofa, qniltcd arm covers and self platform. Choice of colors. Regular 299.95................... 9-pc. dinette set includes table and 8 chain. Table extends to 36”x48” x66”. Regular 139.00.............. 5-pc. solid maple dinette 42" round table with 2 leafs and 4 mate chairs. Regular 159.95........./.......... Spanish bedroom set. Complete with triple dresser, twin piirron, 5 draw* er chest, and bed. Regular 399.00... Solid hard rock maple bedroom set. Complete with triple dresser, nan ror, chest, and bed. Regular 499.95. Serta Fold«o*hed. Fall else mattress. Choice of fabrics and colors. Regular 249.95.................. Tables, lamps, and accessories — SAVE UP TO Ml 299®° THROUGH STOP SIGN Oakland County sheriffs deputies said three witnesses reported Mrs. Johnson’s auto was tnveltng westbound on Silver Bell when It went through a stop sign and collided with this'northbound truck on M24. The car and the truck both were thrown into a ditch in the median of the divided highway. The late-model auto was torn from its frame from the impact of the collision. HARVEY FURNITURE A—2 TIIK PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1969 Israel Begs for Safety of Jews in Arab Lands HENRY CABOT LODGE N.Viet Troop Pullout a Must, Hanoi Told By The Associated Press - Israel's parliUnent called on all nations of the world today to help save the Jews of Iraq, Syria and Egypt “before it is too late.’’ It also demanded an urgent United Nations investigation into the plight of Jews in Arab lands. The Knesset was called out of Rummer recess -for a special session to discuss the execution Monday of 15 alleged Iraqi spies, including two Jews. Nine other Jews were executed in Baghdad earlier this year. Prime Minister Golda Meir accused Year-Round School OK'd PARIS (AP) - The United States warned today that a negotiated settlement of the Vietnam war is Impossible as long as Hanoi rejects the principle of a mutual withdrawal of ail non-South Vietnamese troops from South Vietnam. Democratic Republic of (North) Vietnam is willing to act on the principle that all non-South Vietnamese forces will leave South Vietnam." DEMAND DENOUNCED U.S. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge told the 32nd session of the deadlocked peace talks that more than 130 battalions of regular North Vietnamese forces are “actively engaged against South Vietnam." North Vietnamese delegate' Xuan Thuy immediately repeated Hanoi's longstanding rejection of any mutual troop withdrawal. LANSING IUPI)-The State Board i of Education yesterday adopted * rules allowing year-round opera- , lion of schools in Michigan. Under the new rules, districts j may apply for state aid payments | based on pupil counts taken four j times a year instead of the usual ! one time. “It is thus impossible for the people of South Vietnam to determine their own future freely unless these troops from North Vietnam return to North Vietnam." he went on. He denounced the American demand as a trick to prolong the U.S. “occupation of South Vietnam" and protect the “puppet regime"—a reference to the South Vietnamese government." "This is why it is Impossible to achieve a negotiated settlement until the “Ever since this conference started, the United States has insisted on its extremely unreasonable demand of mutual withdrawal, which we have many times criticized and rejected," Thuy said. The counts are set up for the | fourth Fridays in July, October, ! January and April. The year-round plan has been jj endorsed by many school officials j and legislators as the best way to ] \ fully use school facilities and j | personnel. Pittsburgh Blacks, Builders Talk Jobs PITTSBURGH (AP) - A bitter struggle to win more jobs for blackB in the construction industry moves from the street to the conference table today. “Undoubtedly, by putting forward this demand, the United States aims at finding some justification foe sending Its troops to the other end of ’the globe to invade Vietnam, and at equating the United States—the aggressor — with the Vietnamese people—the fighters against aggression." OTHER ACTION In other action, board members 1 asked that a report be made on f alleged delay of school funds to the Ferndale School District. The I | district, now engaged in hearings I I with the federal government over | i charges of discrimination in the ! 1 system, claimed the Department 1 | of Education delayed funds follow- j j ing the federal charges. Builders of 10 major projects Involving more than 1200 million, targets of three days of angry protests by hundreds of black and white demonstrators, agreed ia|t night to suspend operations until next Tuesday. „ St. Benedict School Stays Open Another Year in Face of Deficits The move was hailed as a victory by lenders of the Black Construction Coalition, which called the demonstrations to force an Increase in the two per cent Negro membership share among the city's 30,000 trade unionists. Byrd Brown, a coalition leader, said of the protest: “It has been a qualified success . . . but we still have no black people working on these jobs, and until we do it won't be a complete success." St. Benedict’s school will open as scheduled Wednesday in spite of mounting financial problems. It may be the last year for the Catholic elementary school, however, officials Indicate. Some 540 pupils attend the parish school which ended the last school year with a $58,000 deficit. Projected deficit for the 1860-70 year is $79,000. the school at Highland and Voorheis — a move that would put most of the pupils into Waterford Township’s financially-troubled public schools. However, a directive came from the archdiocese in Detroit ordering the school kept open. The parish school board was reportedly seriously considering closing The Weather i Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Fair with some cloudiness at times and continued warm today, tonight and Friday, high 85 u Little change. Winds south to southwest $ to 18 90. Low tonight >2 to 08. Saturday outlook: i. No rain is forecast. EscHitab* Flint 83 II JacHionvIl.. 1 O. Rapid, I* |1 Kanin City it 73 i u i! Ui Ann-'" “ wxintiday m Sanilac ... . „ Lot Angaltl ..... ..jn Lk. 13 M Louisville Jackion 17 «4 Miami Beach II 77 Laming |9 il Milwaukee II 63 Marquette 90 II New Orleans 19 70 Oscoda 1| 6t New York 71 62 Saginaw II 65 Omaha 16 61 S. Ste. Marla I! 6! Phoenix )|| || Traverse c. M 67 Pittsburgh 77 1} LAKE CONDITIONS: St. Clair — South to southwest winds, 8 to II knots, today and tonight. Fair. Huron — Southwesterly winds, 12 to 22 knots, today and tonight Fair. Erie — Southwest to west winds, 10 to 18 knots, today. Southwest to south-winds, 5 to 15 knots, tonight. Fair. Data From U.S. WEATHEX BUREAU - EISA the U.N. Human Rights Commission of “making a mockery of elementary rules of fairness” by failing to investigate the situation of Jews in Arab countries while conducting an investigation of alleged Israeli atrocities, in occupied lands. She said the commission’s investigation of Arab allegations of Israeli atrocities “in fact encouraged Iraqi rulers to go ahead with their policy of mock trials and hangings.": ‘BLIND HATRED’ world," he said. “But nothing seems to stop the Iraqis. There are scores of Jews in prison. They have a life of terror and persecution. "If they are not stopped by world opinion, they will no doubt hang more people, more Jews in thief bloodthirsty Birmingham Story Hour Registration Set Tuesday The 3,000 Jews in Iraq “are helplessly exposed to the blind hatred of the Arab states toward Israel,” Mrs. Meir charged. As she spoke, about 50 Israelis of Iraqi origin assembled outside the Knesset building for a silent demonstration protesting the Iraqi executions. In Beirut, Lebanon, King Hussein of Jordan said in a newspaper interview war with Israel was inevitable “and the possibility exists of an explosion at any time.” David Rivlin, Israeli Foreign Office spokesman, told newsmen Israel views the persecution of Jews bl Iraq “very, very gravely." -- “Even non-Arab Moslem countries have bitterly deplored the executioift there, not to mention every enlightened government and the free press of the Hussein’s comments, printed by the paper A1 Jarida, reflected his hardening line in the Middle East conflict. “We are now prepared to take these blows and deal with them soundly," he said, adding that if the West refused to supply him with arms, he Would turn elsewhere—an obvious reference t o Moscow. BIRMINGHAM — Registration for fall preschool story hours is Tuesday at Baldwin, Public Library. Registration must be done in person during regular business hours. ‘ Children aged 3-5 and not enrolled in kindergarten are invited to the story hour program. Preference will be given to children not enrolled in nursery school. Classes will be limited to 25 each of 4 seven-week sessions beginning sept. 9 and 10. Story time Is 10-10:30 a.m. on Tuesdays and Wednesdays. Hussein charged certain big powers had encouraged Israel to reject the Security Council resolution of November 1967, which lays down the guidelines of a settlement. * I 70 Car Prices Going Up; Only Question: How Much? Several Birmingham - Bloomfield urea students will be amohg the college students from aU over the world who will attend the Christian Science Biennial College meeting this weekend in Boston, Mass. Area students include Skip Brown, 520 Wimbleton, and Ken and Cecil Pratt, 1500 Birmingham, all of Birmingham; and Andy Cummins, 4252 Derry,. Bloomfield Hills. From Bloomfield Township are Mark and Marcia Moyer, 3017 Cottontail Lane Bonnie Anderson, 421 S. Cranbrook; Bunny and Susan McBride, 6845 Why sail; and Steve Rea of 5400 Lane Lake. From Our News Wires DETROIT — The price of the 1970 model cars is going up. Exactly how-much won’t be known until the auto makers stick the price tags on when the new cars go on sale in dealer showrooms next month. But, Ford Motor Cb. and Chrysler Corp. already are billing dealers for tentative priefe hikes ranging as high as $275 on Ford’s Continental Mark III. service in virtually all cases during the first 90 days of the warranty period. Ford said the new warranty also contains bo limitation on number of owners and eliminates requirements for validation of maintenance. Purpose of the three-day meeting is to discuss by panel, workshop and plenary sessions such topics as campus and community tensions,. racial conflict, the drug problem, marriage and birth con; trol, morality, conscientious objection to military service and social action. A spokesman said Ford is sending advance billings to dealers calling for increases averaging $68, or about 2 per leant over the price of the I960 models. ' Chrysler said the price# 6f its 1970 models will be higher, but wouldn’t give an average increase. I The new warranty will take effect with mew Mavericks — designated' as 1970 models — sold today. The actual prices to the car buyer will be announced next month — Ford shortly before its new cars go on sale Sept. 19 and Chrysler shortly before its new cars go on the market Sept? 23. BROADER WARRANTY Ford also announced today its .1970 model cars and light trucks will carry a simplified 12-month, warranty with no mileage limitation, providing free GM HOLDS KEy But, it wilU b^t General Motors Corp., the giant of the auto industry, which may again determine the actual price hikes. . GM refuses to comment so far on Its 1970 car prices, but when it does, any increase is sure to influence the rest of the‘industry since GM annually accounts for more than half of the auto sales. BIRMINGHAM — Driver education is available to any student residing within the boundries of the Birmingham Public School District. The course, Sept. 13 to Jan. 31,1970, will meet each Saturday. A student must be 15. Assignment to a given' term will be based solely on the applicant's age. Older students' will have priority. , Applications for the fall term are available at the Department of Added Education at the Birmingham Schools Administration Building, 550 W. Morrill, or at any secondary school counseling office. To partiepate, a student must complete an application form and return it by Sept. 6. PARISH DEBT $350,000 A spokesman tor the school’s finance committee, points out the parish is now facing a $350,000 total debt. From studies the spokesman asserts the school is efficiently run and on a cost-per-pupil basis operates very economically. At the' same time educational standards rate highly and staff morale is reportedly excellent, However, the school’s future looks dark, it was indicated, unless other forms of revenue are found. Other Catholic schools in the area have closed recently. St. Vincent’s in Pontiac closed down completely last June and Pontiac St. Michael’s ended first through third grades this fall. 3-Death Crash Leaves Boy'Fair' A 6-year-old Pontiac boy remained in fair condition today in Pontiac General Hospital after a car-truck crash Wednesday killed his mother, sister and baby sitter. i Hospital officials today said George Morris, 6, of 141 W. Beverly suffered internal Injuries In the 16 a.m. accident. Dead are Mrs. James (Mallle) Johnson, 27, of 141 W. Beverly; her daughter, Billie Jean Morris, 4, of the same address; and Kenneth LaFond, 16, of 2175 Silver Bell, Oakland Township. LaFond was belieevd to have been a family baby sitter. All were passengers in the car driven by Mrs. Johnson. The driver of the truck, James Barnett, 25, of Mddlson Heights, was not injured seriously. HARVEY’S FIRST ANMJAL SUMMER SALE! is off in 4 days Last chance to grab great furniture buys like these: | ...f' 'V Mf""- V’*3BBB8 THE CLUI ROOM MEN USE A WARDS CHARG-ALL ACCOUNT TttiUY WHAT THEY WANT, WHEN THEY WANT IT ! NEW PLYMOUTH 'CUDA - New to the Plymouth Barracuda Une for 1970 is the ,'Cuda series, offering greater performance potential than ever before available itt a compact-size Plymouth. The standard engine has 383 cubic-inch displacement with four- THE PONTIAC PRfcSS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1969 A--5 Sale ends Sunday TOTAL FASHION IMPRESSIONS FOR MEN WITH YOUNG IDEAS the smartest men in Pontiac WILL BE IN THE CLUB ROOM AT WARDS, FRIDAY, AUG. 29 ... HERE'S WHY THE CLUB ROOM STYLE Helps you. achieve a total fashion image with a strong flavor of today. Smart enough to separate fashion from fad. THE CLUB ROOM VARIETY Plenty of what's new, what's right for you. Enough for in* telligent selection. You never "settle" in The Club Room. THE CLUB ROOM MANNER Young, knowledgeable fash* ion specialists on hand to help, or to let you just browse in the relaxed, alLmale atmosphere. THE CLUB ROOM MEN WEAR: 6-button (2-to-button) double* breasted navy blazers... 65. Contrasting' flare-bottom wool blazer slacks.......20. Solid-tone shirts with long-point collars, French cuffs.... .8.50 4* width imported wool challis ties in neat designs......5. I'/*" grained leather belts with solid brass buckles... .6. CRASH KILLS EIGHT — Six members of a Portage, Mich., family were killed in a two-car head-on crash early yesterday morning near Wadena, Minn. The vacationing Emil Soroko family was riding in this station wagon, which collided with a car carrying two airmen from a radar station at Wadena. WORTH EVER PENNY - Linda Goldstraw of Birmingham, England, shows off her million-dollar legs. She won the Lady Cantrece title at a London hotel yesterday. With it goes $1 million in insurance on her legs for a year. FIVE-HOUR DELAY - The 7-mile bridge in the Florida Keys was closed for five hours yesterday when a tractor-trailer rig loaded with 4 tons of cold asphalt went out of control and overturned across both lanes of U.S. Highway 1, only route in the area. Traffic backed up 10 miles before the wreckage was removed. WEEDS OUT CIGARETTES — Pharmacist Martin Sopocy stands in his Lake Forest, 111., drugstore beside an antlsmoklng poster after disclosing plans to discontinue the sale of cigarettes, starting today. Sopocy, whose cigarette sales have averaged 2,000 packs per week, says that as a druggist, he has no business selling a product “which has proven to be a life-shortening agent.” Plymouth Revs Up With 'Cuda Chrysler-Plymouth Division’s sports specialty performance entry, the Barracuda, will " be available. in three distinctive series this year, announces division General Manager Glenn | White. The basic Barracuda will appear with the ‘Cuda series and the luxury-oriented Gran Coupe In showrooms Sept. 23. All three versions are fourseaters built on a 108-lnch wheelbase with a total length of 186.6 inches. The ‘Cuda series has a front track of 66.2 inches and a rear track of 60.7 inches. In the standard Barracuda and Gran Coupe versions the front track measures S9.7 inches with a rear track of 61.3 Inches. PfiWTTAl P M AT T PHONE u MALL 682-1910 barrel carburetor. All Plymouth high-performance engines are optional. Standard features ihdude heavy-duty suspension and 11-inch brakes. The Barracudas will be in. showrooms Sept. 23. < Area dealers are Oakland Chrysler-Plymouth, 724 Oakland, Pontiac; Birmingham Chrysler-Plymouth 2100 W. Maple, Troy; Hahn Chrysler-Plymouth, 6673 Dixie, Clarkston; Milosch Chrysler* Plymouth, 677 S. Lapeer, Lake Orion; and Colonial Chrysler, 209 S. Main, Milford. * * * Exterior styling on all three linos of Barracuda is bold and1 . sleek with long hoods and short decks, minimum over-all height and steeply raked windshields. * ★ ★ Included in the exhaustive list of optionals are an innovative “shaker” hood on the ‘Cuda series, road wheels and wire wheel-cover options, AM-FM stereo radio, luggage rack, performance-axle ratio packages, special paint and stripe treatments and five higb-outpout engine choices In Hie ‘Cuda series. w ★ ’ ★ • Turn signals and stop lights are much brighter, and side markers have lights in addition t o reflectors. Lane-change signals require only 'slight finger pressure, and a full-circle horn switch is activated) by ’ _ a soft rim on the i of the steering wheel. THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, I960 A—7 SUMS OPEN TONITE til 9 pm-FRI. 8 an to 9^0 pm-SST. 9 am to 9 pm LABOR MY and BACK-TO-5CHOOL II Gillette Blades 1^ Simms will pay for 1 -hour of parking in tho rifCC rAllMnU—Downtown Mall-Just have ticket stamped at time of purchase. Except tobacco and beverage purchases. Anacin Tablets $1,39 value package of 100 fait pain relief 83 $1.95 value, package of 15 Gillette ttainleu steel razor blades . 129 Gillette Foamy Shave $1.49 volue, 14%-oz. size lemon lime, menthol or regular shave cream..... 89* Gillette Sun Up Lotion $1.00 value, 4-oz. Gillette Sun Up after shave lotion. Drugs—Main Floor 59* Ban Deodorant $1.59 value, 2.5-oz. Ban roll on deodorant for 24* hour protection................. 89* fiillette Hair Groom $1.09 value tube or liquid Heads Up men's hair groom, by Gillette. ■....., ■. •,.. OR COLGATE $1.29 value 8%-oz. tube, your choice of Pepsodent or Colgate 67® Tooth Pasta T7C LIKE IT? CHARGE ffWcWm"you- pureha~ -30 i same as cash plan or us* your Master Charge Card. Ask us about the plan for you. 1-Inch Tubular Aluminum Frame 7-Web Lawn Rocker With Two 20-Gal. Garbage Cans Garbage Can Tote Cart Polished aluminum tubular construction frame with gay colored webbing. Rocker style lawn chair Is comfortable and sturdy. Limited selection of other styles also clearance priced. 2nd Floor 944 Model HT-12 all metal tote cart with heavy duty rubber wheels. Includes two 20-gallon garbage cans. No more heavy lifting, fust roll the cart to the street. 2nd Floor Improve Your Grades—Back-to-School Special Contac Cold Capsules k $1.59 value, package of 10 1 Contac capsules for colds Vand hoy fever.................. 93* 'Scope Antiseptic $1.59 value 17*oz. size oral antiseptic, keeps breath fresh. 93* Drugs—Main Floor ‘AIWA’ Portable Style Tape Recorder Model TP31 Aiwa portable recorder complete with . remote mike, sampler tape, batteries and take-up reel. A $21.95 value. Charge it or $1 holds in layaway. Recorders—Moln Floor Holiday Outdoor Fun Tennis Racket 8-ply tennis racket with full ' leather grip and double reinforced with nylon, string. Regular $5.98, now only— Volley Ball Sot Ambassador volleyball complete with net, ball and stakes. Official size and weight. A regular $4.49 seller for . . . . . . . ... r Official Softball Water Fun and Safety Heads S3 Approved life Jackets ' Re|. $2.25, up to 4Wb... . . I7* set 2a® Reg. $2.49, up to 90-lb. Reg. $2.15, adult size.. ‘RHAPSODY’ ^ Cassette Tape Playw Kapok filled and packed in water tile Inner liner. Coast Guard approved .Jiff lockets protect your loved ones, while booting and swimming. WaterfHe Swim Mask $22.95 value, os shown—portable cassette tape player operates on batteries. Carry it anywhere to hear your favorite j cassette tapes. Charge it or $1 holds; Recorders—Main Floor 49* Riviera Full Foal Fins Reg. $3,75 full foot tins, sizes 3-4 a m and 3-6-7, priced at only ”044 Sundries—Main Floor JMW Cured Plastic Strips 79c value, package of 79 assorted size Cured ouchless telfa pads 49* Esquire Shoe Coloring With Two-Quart Vacuum Bottles $1.50 Instant, shoe coloring In 32 different shades, with conditioner 89* Ponds Boodorent Talc 98c value, 10-oz. size Ponds perfumed deodorant after bath talc..... No Boz Tablets 78* $1,29 value. 60's, the safe alert tabs for that dozy drowsy feeling. Drugs—Main Floor Outing Kit Reft. $8.88 Now Only 744 Two Alladln quart size vacuum bottles and plastic eqndwich box In red plaid zippered carrier with riveted handles. It's waterproof, too. 2nd Floor Keep Picnic Foods Fresh with 42-Qt. Poly Ice Chest MADE ICE CREAM for the Holiday Ice Cream Maker 42-qt. styrofoam ice chest with 2 large carrying handles. Holds all the goodies for that picnic and keeps them fresh. 2nd Floor Remember how delicious home made, ice cream to be? You can enjoy It again with this crank style lee cream maker with polyethylene tub, tin plated steel cream cap, double seamed for long, dependable service. Recipe book included. -2nd Floor Toni Homo Permanent |33 $2.29 volue Toni home permanents in gentle, regular or super type............... Toni Scatter Perm $3.75 value, Toni Scatter AOQ perm gives what you wont where ybu wont It; ........... tOKr Scatter Perm Refill $2.75 volue, |uit the lotion for |79 Frcev If the Scotter Permanent Jargons Lotion $1.59 volue, 16-oz. size the 99 world famous hand lotion Ponds Busting Powder 11$ 1.00 value, 5*0z. Ponds / Dream Flower dusting powder Drugs—AAain Floor 59 it Big 25% Discount on All Polaroid Sunglasses Reg. fi.ee....1.49 Rag. $248..... 1J1 Rag. $2.81..... 2.24 Rag. fSJS..... 2.19 Rog. $1.98..... 2.90 Rag. $4.98.....3.14 Rag. $8.11.... 441 Rag. $8.98 . e.» 5.24 Ripg. $1.98 . •«. ■ 5.99 Styles for men, women, boys and girls, regulars and over specs, ond the new mod styles, light and dork colored frames. Polaroid •unglosses filters out the harmful sun rays that hurt your eyes. Let Your Patriotism Show-Fly OLD GLORY on LABOR DAY 3x5-Ft. U. S. Flag Set 3x5-foot fast color cotton flag, with 6-ft. 2-piece aluminum pole with ball top. Rope ond • wall bracket is included. Storm King Flags *8,# list, 3x5-ft... 4“ *10°* list 4xS-ft... 6“ MS"list,5x8-ft ..10“ ‘20" list 6X1041.. 14“ J| Bunting exceeds U.S. Government specifications, sewed * stars-itripes. Nylon Flags $12.65 list, 3x5-ft........ 9.95 $16.40 list 4x6-ft...... 4 .13.95 $23.10 list, 8x841..... •*. 11.96 iSf1 Miohigan Flags 2x3-foot............... 6.95 3x5-foot .mimiim.... 8.96 18-Ft. 3-Section Steel Flagpole Flagpole, ground socket, rope and all hardware. 9 i95 Sundries—Main Floor Super X or Romington .22 Long Rifle Shells Regular 95c box of 50 cartridges in popular long rifle. Limb 10 boxes. , 69* A-A SHOT SHELLS 12-GA. Trap Load, 8 Shot Box of 25 trap load shotgun shells for skeet and trap sboeting.Umlt 4 boxes. Regular $3.25 value. Sports—2nd Floor 2IS Top Brain Laathar Trackers’ Safely Wallet Sturdy truckers' wallet with belt loop and chain for hip pocket. Made of top groin leather. Model #T*3. I ; Sundrios—Main Floor 98 R. Saginaw St Downtown Pontiac SIMMS"* I The Friendly One with Personalized Service i<3j Back-to-School Needs School Binder Set 177 S25V volu*. tncludm blnckr. not. bock .1 th.m* book, n^gcmlzw, o»itQnm.nt book. Deluxe Binder Set hg I2.K Coipu.nrat..plo.d»>u who. a. n. Wm IP ^r' and ^rs' William J.j The son of Mr. and Mrs. j construction, they are lump Florence Avenue announce their i Da vis of Elizabeth Lake Roadi^*rio,1fShipman of Prairie free, since there is no loose . ... . aun Nlroot ottonHe MiUnn’fillinit knit 1M#* i. i.____ and Lawn Street attends announce the betrothal of their .College, Milton, Wis. Milton!filling or batting to mat in one spot. The prospective bridegroom is IRR............RnHi , All the female members of his !the son of Mr. and Mrs. John C. I To control your intake of cho-;farndy are involved in different Burrill of South East Boulevard.':! lesterol-rich foods: levels of Girl Scouting. Mrs.: • Eat no more than three egg p.^> 8 Senior, Karen, 13, used in cooking. Limit your use of shellfish jand Teresa- 8 Brownie. and of organ meats. To control the amount and type of fat you eat: Poppeck-Rice a Cadette, Victoria 12, a Junior: S a.nd Fred W‘ P my children have attended Eastern Michigan ~I week. developed a sense of University and Oakland Com- Choose lean'cuts of meat, responsibility.”'1 • munity College. Mrs. Esther Raglahd Kansas City, Mo., international!mediately after use. His representative Of Beta Sigma I clothing should be stored in a special closed container separate washing. This advice comes from a USDA Home Equipment Specialist in Iowa. Cotton is flexible. trim visible fat, and discard the i fat that cooks out of the meat. Avoid deep fat frying; use cooking methods that help to remove fat; baking, broiling, boiling, roasting, stewing. SHRIMP FRY FAMILY STYLE [Uninvited Guest Disrupts Show Knit a handsome vest (below) to wear with skirts and shirts or pants and a pullover. Pattern PK 4353 has directions for sizes 10-20 and 42-44. Make long lean sweaters (PK 3098) for him and her (right). Knit of worsted and fingering, Free instructions for both are available by sending a self-addressed, stamped envelope to the Needlework Editor, Dept. E-800, the Pontiac Press, PO Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056. "ALL YOU WANT" STEAMED SHRIMP, served with Drawn Butter, DEEP FRIED SHRIMP, with homemade Snappy Sauce. Huge TOSSED SALAD. Choice of POTATOES, Hot HOMEMADE Bread. EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT 5 to 10 P.M. Ml 4-7764 Woodward & Square Lake Rd. BLOOMFIELD HILLS REGINA, Sask. (* — Massey School’s 4th graders were engrossed in a nature film being shown in their darkened classroom when 8 deer jumped through a window near the screen on the teacher’s desk, scattering text books and papers in all directions. * * - * Two male teachers grappled with the deer and finally were able to hold the animal down. The humane society was called. ★ ★ * The society sent a taxi to pick up the now frightened deer for the purpose of transporting it bfck to the forest but the cabbie refused his fare. The deer hdd to walk home. j ☆☆☆☆ ifrSv ☆☆☆ ☆°mk I CARPET CENTER l LlTA 'i 111! ITTT.T1 T-Tl"."M :W B___14 ^ JK T^E PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, i960 LAST 3 DAYS! THURSDAY-FRIDAY - SATURDAY SMITH FURNITURE 128 WOODWARD BIRMINGHAM GOING ODT OF BUSINESS SALE Choosg from tho remaining stock of Nationally Known Living Room, Dining Room, and Bedroom Furniture... EARLY AMERICAN AND TRADITIONAL All at Sensational Sayings... Everything Must Go . . . Open Thursday and Friday Until Nine Saturday Until Fire-Thirty Lepers New Hope: HONOLULU ( U PI) - Thalidomide, the drug blamed for thousands of birth deformities, may be a new aid in tho treatment of leprosy. Recent tests may alter thalidomide’s reputation as a crippler of unborn babies to a drug offering hope for leprosy victims. Thalidomide presently is banned from general use in the United States. ★ * Dr. Ira D. Hirschy, head of tbe Hawaii Department Health’s Communicable Disease Division, said tests in Hawaii hospitals and at the U.S. Public Health Service hospital Carvllle, La., have revealed that Thalidomide is valuable in treating a common reaction to the disease. The Hawaii tests have taken place in the Hale Mohalu Hospital in Honolulu and at the Kalaupapa Hospital on the island of Molokai, 54 miles east of Honlulu. Kalaupapa 1 s Hawaii’s only leprosy settlement. SOME SYMPTOMS “Fever develops and places in the body affected by the disease become red, hot and swell up,1 Hisrchy said, “causing pain and discomfort. But daily thalidomide doses for a period of up to 10 days have been “very successful’’ in relieving these reactions Hirkschy said, “and there has been no evidence of them j recurring." leprosy treatment originated about two years ago with Dr. Jaakov Sheskin, an Israeli doctor working in Jerusalem. * * * “We tried it out about a year and a half ago,’’ Hirschy said, ‘and found that although it is not effective against the disease itself, it has a high degree of success in the treatment of this particular reaction, a familiar one in leprosy patients. 27 Americans Killed in Viet WASHINGTON (AP) - Twenty-seven servicemen killed in action in the Vietnam war have been listed by the Defense Department. The list includes eight men from the Midwest. Killed in action: ARMY _.'RH ‘ Chicago; Staff Sgt. Oakland Community VWV College Announces REGISTRATION FOR FALL T969 Regular Registration September 2, 3, 4 9:00 A.M. to 8:00 P.M. (Exclusive of the lunch and dinner hours) 2900 Futhgritong T350 Cooley Lako Read Road Auburn Halshlt Union Lako SEMESTER BEGINS SEPTEMBER 8, 1969 For Further Information Contact: Admissions Office—Oakland Community College 2480 Opdyke Rd., Bloomfield Hills 48013 ;________________647-6200_____________________ WANT TO SELL LAWNMOWERS, POWER MOWERS, ROLLER SKATES, WAGONS, BICYCLES? USE A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 332-8181. “It’i amazing,” he added. “Within 24 hours the swelling and fever go down, making the patient feel much more com-|fortable. He rests better, eats better and sleeps better.” Hirschy emphasized t b a thalidomide is “no]t used on women leprosy patients o I childbearing age.” CONTROLLED TESTS “We’ve only used the drug on hospitalized patients,” he said, “testing it under controlled conditions.” With immigration to Hawaii rising, Hirschy noted that die number of persons bein§ treated for leprosy has increased during the last decade. He said 350 persons are under treatment, 60 per cent of them foreign bora. , The sulfone drugs continue to be the most effective weapons against the disease, he said. Since the Federal Drug Administration has barred thalidomide from general use in the drug to Hawaii hospitals and Carville, received special authorization to distribute thalidomide for the tests. ★ ★ ★ “It gives real hope of relief the United States, Hirschy said,|for patients with these the William S. Merrell Co., of particular reactions,” Hirschy Cincinnati, Ohio, which supplies I said. ! EST. 1040 iy R. Lapin. —..... .... „__________ 6. Shipley, Vandal!*. Spec. 4 Joseph W. Mitchell, hlcago. Pfc. Daniel E. Carey, Utica. KANSAS — Spec. 4 Tarry L. Bar, ansas City. MICHIGAN — 1st Lt. Horatio W. urston, Detroit. NEBRASKA — Spec 4 Thomas L. Fowler, Geneva. WISCONSIN — Spec. 4 William S. Haider, Lakewood. Died of wounds: MARINI COUP MICHIGAN - Lance CpI. John L. from missing to dead—hostile: ARMY INDIANA — Ptc. Lawrence H. Jackson, •ry. MINNISTOTA - Spec. 4 Richard R. Olson, Minneapolis. Died not as a result of hostile action: NAVY MISSOURI - Builder Constructlonman Ronald D. Tillery, Kaniat City. Missing as a result of hostile action: ARMY CWO Latter A. Hansen, WO Gerald L. Jlvarstaln. Spec. 4 Richard A. Dor la, Pfc. Stewart j, Lavlpna, Pfc. Stephan L. Martino, Pfc. Richard J. Zlsko. NAVY Lt. Philip T. Smith. Linking thalidomide to ■HMiifiicQisjQaJj ^ days Mraa only! New, breathtaking 8x10 LIVING COLOR PORTRAIT Canadian Navy Eyes Incident VICTORIA, B.C. (AP) - The Canadian navy is investigating' complaints that three of its ’ stroyer-escorts played “cowboys and Indians” during weekend exercises, leaving a trail of damage along 10 miles of shoreline. * * * A spokesman at the Canadian forces base said Wednesday the ships were steaming about 12 knots during maneuvers Sunday. “which isn’t fast when you consider that Britsh Columbia ferries go .. at about 18 or 20 knots.” * * ★ “They were just playing cowboys and Indians out there in the inlet," said Percy Perkins, a marina operator, "liiey went up and down, making sharp turns, and the wash they created was just like a tidal wave.” * ★ * Perkins said one of his floats was damaged and several boats were smashed. ♦ ★ ★ Rod McDonell, another marina operator, said he and a friend went out in a small boat and tried to stop the ships. They were greeted by spray from a fire hose, he said. i Your tnenay bock if this isn't the most lifelike portrait of your child ever. Not just an old* fashioned tinted or colored picture, but "living Color’’( The complete portrait comes olive—captured in amazing fytj-color realism with Eastman Professional Ektacolor film. Entire portrait photographed in living Color by Jock I. Nimbi*, Inc. Rat. U.S. _. ™ . Trolsmstq Plus 50( handling and delivery • Choose from octual finished portraits—not proofs. • Extra prints available at reasonable prices’. No obligation to buy. e Croups taken at 99c per child. • Age limit: 5 weeks to 12 years. • Limiti one per child-two per family. MON., UK 25-AUG. 30 Photographer on Duty 10-8 MhL SSL Robbed Staff Can't Teller-From Him DETROIT (AP) - Detroit police are seeking a male—or was it a female?—bankrobber who wore lipstick and demanded money from a Michigan Bank branch teller in Detroit Wednesday. WWW The teller said she handed $600 to what she thought was a dressed as a woman after he gave her a note and pulled a gun. ★ ★ ★ ' Other witnesses said the bandit was a woman. The bandit wore blue jeans and a white turtleneck shirt. Fat Overweight Available to you without a doctor's prescription, our product called Odrinex. You must lose ugly fat or your mo nay back. Odrinax Is a tiny tablat and easily swallowed. Got rid of oxcoaa fat and Ilya longer. Odrinex costs $3.00 and a new, larga aconomy sixa for $5.00, Both are sold with this guarantee: If not satisfied for any reason, just return the package to your druggist and gat your full money back. No questions asked. Odrinex is sold with this guarantee SIMM'S CUT RATI DRUC STORE — 91 NORTH SAGINAW — MAIL ORDIRS FILLED — 1 Pontiac 2.00 N. Saginaw - Free Parking Utica 61035 Van Dyke Just N. of 23 Mila ltd. HALL-PREST* NEVER-IRON DRESS SLACKS 449 C49 SIZfS sizes *-io i2-it Extra low-priced for extra value! Permanent press rayon and acetate blend, fortified with extra-strength nylon. Tapered model with the slim trim fit boys go fori Pre-hemtned for instant wear. NEVER-IRON DRESS SHIRTS IN BOLD NEW COLORS 099 Designer look in shirts... of permanent press polyester-and-cotton •. • with new fashion spread collar... new fashion colors of blue, gold green, brown. Long sleeves, 6-18. COLOR-COORDINATED TIES..............99< Clarkston 6460 Dixie Hwy. Just N. of Watarford Hill Troy Just N. af Big Baavar Road August Cfmam1 Open Thursday Friday and Saturday 'til 9 P.M. Save 30 to 50% Fine Broadloom GROUP ONE ... ODDMENTS Indoor-Outdoor CARPfT ha Hon*. Ideal far holla. 298 *4.M, 25 roll. - 7 colors, fine qualify odd*, long warning, good looking, 15 rolls ora GROUP THREE.. ODDMENTS GROUP TWO .., ODDMENTS 32 rollf, 12 colors* Cleanouts of carpal ranging from $8 to $ 11. Choice qualities beautiful textures. WDKXTS 698 45 nib. Chair* quality odd.. liKludrd aw «na wool., wylica In to* gradat. Ranging In valoa Irani $9 to Six. OVER-STOCK CLEAIAHCE! Remnants 12'x5' and under $2.00 Per Yard. Perfect for Halls, Stairs and Bedrooms. CARPET SAMPLES 20c Each 12’x9’ Store Samples $39.95 to $69.95 Remnants Priced to Clear Sirs Description Como. Solo 12x14’6” Orange A Brown Loop 169.00 M.9B 12x11-4” Gold Toxturo 180.00 80.95 12x17-2” Groon Twist 200.00 175.95 12x10*1” Gold A Orango Kit. Opt. 170.00 105.95 12x14*4” Bluo Indoor Outdoor 120.00 19.95 12x14*8” Orango A Gold Kit. Opt. 140.B0 89.25 12x10*6” Gold Loop 150.00 09.05 12x10*10” Avoeado Toxturo 110.10 89.95 12x9*1” Orango Wool Kit. Opt. 104.00 59.95 12x10*4” Bronze Toxturo 160.00 89.95 12x14*11” Boigo Toxturo 220.00 115.95 12x15*0” Gold Loop 147.00 79.55 12x11*0” Moss Random 180.00 . 109.95 12x10*10” Emerald Random 264.00 139.95 12x10’S” Calory Carved 18440 09.95 12x8-8” Shamrock Plush 132.00 55.95 12x11*2” Gold Tweed 150.00 59.95 12x14*10” Emerald Twd. 200.10 119.95 12x19’ Gold Loop 175.00 99.95 12x12*10” Beige Loop 102.00 69.95 12x10*5” Moss Twist 160.00 .109.95 12x11*5” Gold Nugget Loop 90.00 59.95 12x15*7” Rod Kit. Opt. 147.00 89.95 12x16*0” Gold Tweed 147.00 79.95 12x10*0” Avocado Loop 138.00 19.95 12x14*5” Bronxo A Olivo Kit. Opt. 200.00 99.95 12x16*0” Bluo Oroon Loop 160.00 99.95 12x21*10” Gold Loop 203.00 109.95 12x15’ Cope Blue Kit. Opt. 200.00 139.95 12x19*6” Clover Oroon Kit. Opt. 204.00 129.96 5x17*4” Pink Oommoroiol 230.00 119.95 12x11*2” Oroon A Brown Twd. 230.00 119.95 12x11*7” Gold Twd. 96.00 59.95 12x22* Gold Loop 203.00 109.95 12x17*3” Rod A Block Kit. Opt. 200.00 119.95 12x15*7” Boigo Twd. 100.00 99.95 12x11*0” Bluo Oroon Carved 110.00 79.95 12x22*0” Gold Loop 203.00 109.96 12x18*0” Bluo Oroon Twd. 200.00’ 119.95 12x9*6” Bluo Oroon Kitehon Opt. 104.00 59.95 12x15’ Gold Loop 175.00 99.95 12x12*11” Gold Plush 175.50 109.95 12x11*10” Avoeado Oarvod 175.00 119.95 12x10*0” Gold Loop 175.00 99.95 12x11*11” Bronze Random 101.00 99.95 12x10* Bluo Loop •i.oor 49.96 12x12*0” Avoeado Carved 204.00 139.95 12x10*7” Aqua Random 231.10 159.95 12x11*0” Avoeado Carved 105.00 99.96 12x12*5” Oroon Random 144.N •9.96 12x5*2” Boigo Loop 88.00 39.95 12x5*l” Rod A Blaek Loop 117.10 •9.95 12x11*1” Avoeado Loop 110.00 •9.96 12x11*2” Avooado Kitchen Opt. 11M0 199.95 12x14*4” Rod Kitehon Opt. 111.90 99.95 12x11*5” Spanish Rad Shag 1N.N 119.95 12x11*0” Bronzo Random 140.00 94.95 12x12*0” Yellow Rdndom 160.00 99.95 12x24’ Oolodon Random 151.10 199.95 12x10*0” Calory Carved 255.00 119.95 12x23’ Olivo Oroon Loop 310.00 119.95 12x12* Bronzo flush 224.N 139.95 12x14*4” Avoeado Plush 200.00 119.96 12x10*0” . Purple Plush 2M.M 129.95 12x21*10” Bold Loop 203.00 150,51 12x27*0” Bold A Oroon Loop 25M0 1tl.ll 12x21*10” Gold Loop 203.10 19941 12x20*7” Blue Oroon Loop. 200.10 15*40 12x10*7” Oold Kitchen Opt.' 21040 119.90 12x10* Bold Shog 200.10 11MB Seefaoifii-Evm FINE FLOOR COVERINGS XI S. Telegraph - TeMf——- Celll B—13 THE T*OtfTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1969 OPEN DAILY 10-10; SUNDAY 11 -6 OPEN MONDAY (Labor Day) 10 A.M. to 6 PM. THURS.-FRI.-SAf A Division of S.S. Kroigo Co., with Stems in.the United Statos, Canada, Puerto Rico, Australia School-Day Discount GIRLS’ 4-14 SKI JACKETS Rag. 4.66 — 3 Day* 3.66 Quilted nylon. Some reversible, some acrylic pile-lined. With hood. SCHOOLGIRL DRESSES $3 ^4 ^5 W* U md MW Regularly 3.78 to 6.78! 'With high style eye-cne! Sailors, drop waists, aipper backs, bishops ... sashed and belted, some two-piece. Cottons, rayons, blends ... some bonded. Plaids, prints, solids. 442. SUBURBANS IN NEW LENGTHS Our Keg. 30.94 - 3 Day “l)r. Zhivago” alyles, military, safari and bush types. Wonderfully warm materials with a choice of quilt or acrylic pile lining. M8. FOR TEACHER, TOO 00 7 t cotton denim. With tapered and flared leg styles, borne sashed. 8-1II. Stand-outs in a class by themselves ... skimmers, low-torso A-lines, shifts and two-piece dressmaker suits, Acetate double knits, Orion® acrylics, Col-oray® rayons. Rich fashion colors. Jr. petite 341, Jr. 745, misses* 10-20. Just charge it. WDuPont trademark ®Courtauldm T.M. GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD HEW QUICK-CHANGE HANDBAG Our Reg. 2.7* 3 Day Only The goingesl gadabout on the school scene. A versatile shoulder strap style in black, brown, tan or cognac pained vinyl, tan or brown plastic patent. Change parse has handy fold-out section containing a large, see-through aippared pocket, LD. card and seventeen Charge It WATCHBAW TRADE-IN fPmyOmly Am K-lhx band iuMm. #1 & ■ _ _. off re*ular price. g OFF £■, • ,. • . Mi fat r T3f \ THE POflTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1969 D—7 Horse Race Results Hazel Park Results Smoothie Grattan Won Time 4th—$140$ Claiming H Ensign Adlos John Express Carla Ann Lou Ifh—$27$4 contl. Pace) 1 Mile: Livonia Spy Johnny G. High Card Bay Wheeler Royal Ian Pocket Adam Bueno Tlempo . .Swift Knight sth—$2700 Claiming Pace) l Mile: Lard McKinney Spring Fever Tropical Wind Roman Empire Royal Robert Mighty McKlyo Cardinal Paul Cashman 10th—$1700 Claiming Pace) 1 Mile: Cottonwood Misty Frontier Marshall Kino Herbert Pace On Warhoops Halls Gift Bud's Valentina . Kip A Roo Greentree Edition DRC Results Robert Kemp Captain Breeze S.4d 5.00 Dutchess Express lth-*IUM Cond. Pace) 1 Mile: May Western 3.10 3.00 Wlngockl Wick 0.20 Hellp Pussycat T. Twinkle i. Tran 1 A 12.20 0.20 uerninmenoe 7.60 ’ 4. One sand Only j. loth—$1400 Claiming Pace) I Mile: Iroquois Chief/ 9.60 4.10 4. Dearborn's Hal 10.00 13. Flait Jolly 9. PERFECTA: 1-5 Paid $139.00 CROWD: 5,41$ HANDLE $447,073 Hazel Park Entries THURSDAY'S ENTRIES g Pace) t Mile: tysnip c. ............ ie Regent Pick Dream Creed Felii Forbes 3nM$13S0 Cond. Tret) 1 Mile: Spiteful Josedale Treasure Adonis Dream High Lloyd Gusty Gallon Sudan's Special Niagara Scotty Bounty 4th-s*li00 cond. Pace) l Mile: Ludfir Night Conclusion A. f; Adlos Hobo's Elsie Mae Special Peach Princess Cledelle Kendelwood Linda Dancing Dream Sth—$1700 Cond. Pace) 1 Mile: War volo Pop's Adlos Hoojrnr Blue Bdy Long Gone TyQpf Trudy Direct CooQiustomer Cottonwood Blitz 4th—41400 cond. Pace) 1 Mile: Candy Sue St. Gatlin Jean T. Adlos Lenawee Bay Anna*6. Mite . Speedway Dollie Adlg* Rip Brian Mohawk GuyTCasnler 7ti>—$2700 Cond. Tret) 1 Mile: Petipa Girl Liza Gallon , Whlajwlnd wick r. Malar Diioei wild Highland Pick Hard To Catch Delta Pass 4th—$25M* Clalmil Carolina Game Brian Stewar: Continents Teams Open Sept. 20 £ eOWWOlBBO OVfhOBMOl $ f Big 10, Irish Await Workoutsf WHEEL HORSE £ m $pecial | CHICAGO (AP) - Almost 900 candidates will start flexing their muscles Friday as the Big Ten and Notre Dame launch practice for the 1969 football season. Michigan, 1968 runnerup to unbeaten national and conference champion Ohio State, got the practice jump on Big Ten rivals. The Wolverine school, operating on the trimester academic schedule Tuesday began drills for a conference campaign in which league coaches the Associated Press final poll .five defensive starters. That easily topped by Ohio State. problem still has not been re-“This is the biggest rebuilding solved and additionally star full-job of any unit in my six Notre back Tim Sullivan was lost be-Dame seasons,” said Par- cause of a motorcycle accident. Iseghian, who owns a sparkling! The Sept. 20 opening card in-drills before they get down to composite Irish record of 40-7-3.1 eludes: Indiana at Kentucky; real head-bumping prepara-1 Indiana, hoping to repeat its Minnesota at Arizona State; tion for the Sept. 20 start of the Rose Bowl trip of two years Northwestern at Notre Dame; unanimously agree that talent-loaded Ohio State will be the team to beat. Under NCAA rules, the first three days of college practice will limit athletes to padless First Bxp____ ___ ........ Gaga Lino 4.20 3.001 Brick Away 1.60 > Ifh—$4340 Allowance; 4 Furlangi: Faggy'a Liz 4.20 3.(4 2.60 Round Potrl 5.40 3.20 j Ivaljv 3.00' CONSOLATION TWIN DOUBLE 3-1! Paid $311.10 9th—$3110 Claiming) 1 1/1$ Milan ■Dm 13.40 6.60 6.60 DRC Entries Ea*tern Edition Internationalist Mr. Nordling A,mos M. Mss Decathlon War ... Kish Dtvllad Ham 2nd—$2500 Maldani) 6 Furlongs: Dasart Klnq i) $ Furlongs: Yt Olo Son Noblo Greek Guess Right G. R. Jones Lark's Folly Holme's Dancer Magic Curtain Handsome Pilot Sin Alloy 3rd—32400 Claiming) 4 Furlongs: lommere'al Coda Gone Miss * Noisy _____David Gone Blue •" '1300 with Robin Satan' Trade-up * offer! O End Shows Speed at 1st U-M Practice ago, lists the most candidates, a turnout of 103, including 16 starters from an injury-plagued 1968 campaign. Ohio State, again playing only nine instead of the customary 10 games with a Sept. 27'start I against invading Texas Christ-ineligible for a Rose regular season. SPRING PRACTICE In a poll based practice, bed the conference race a contest between overwhelming favorite Ohio State and as many as six possible challengers. The coaches, including new ^'1’‘ mentor Bo Schembechler of;B0W1 Michigan, bracketed Indiana,! Purdue and Michigan StatSvas! Eighty or more candidates ap-| tin statpsjjear at Purdue (89); Michigan! 8U Minnesota (87); Michigan I State's!81); and Northwestern-(80). Illinois expects 79; Wisconsin 65, and IoWa 62. Iowa’s Ray Nagel, whose! Hawkeyes were the Big Ten’s No. 1 offensive club last sea-' son in a 4-3 tie with Indiana for j fifth place, had a good spring drill despite absence of 16 boy-; cotting Black players, including Purdue at Texas Christian Washington State at Illinois; Oregon State at Iowa; Vanderbilt at Michigan; Washington at Michigan State, and Oklahoma at Wisconsin. Valedonnx Claiming) 4 Furlongs: ' Old Chappy Courting Sam Ml. Batter Baas Music Stella's Task Bonds Plot Red Applan Sth—431$$ Maidens; $ Furlongs: Fred 1 Bit O' Chuck Sharing Honors NEW YORK (UPI) -Tom Seaver, the New York Mets’ ace righthander who missed a bid for it perfect game by two outs and golfer Dave Hill shared monthly honors for July in the S. Rae Hickok Professional Athlete of the Year Award. Crlmsoh Lai Rlcki Road Really On — SUM Trip Colonel Luck Soma Singer Stubiv Fine Affair Golden Timor Balancud Trade Golden Deed Spyron Mac's Clyde Bio Devil 1 1/1$ Mlltt: Court Rule Little Bit Road Shill Three Wedges Furlongs: .....jse Frlncoss Fancy Collette Princess Tamara Knockemstlff strongest threats to Ohio State: They, rated as dark horses Iowa, Michigan and Minnesota. Numerically, Ohio State’s ANN ARBOR (UPI) — Mike turnout of 75 is well down the Hankwitz is fast — fast enough list 0f Big Ten practice person-to become the first Wolverine to W but Coach Woody Hayes — capture a “champion award” starting his 19th Buckeye sea-from University of Michigan son -& has no fewer than 18 refootball coach B o , Schem-j turning starters from the 22 who bechler. i climaxed a perfect 1968 season * A A (10-0) with a 27-16 Rose Bowl Running was the order of the trimming of Southern Californ-day in the first of two sessions ia. Wednesday as the Wolverines i * * ★ began bearing down to worki At independent Notre Dame, themselves into shape for the some 75 hopefuls reported to' opening Same against Van-1 Ara parseghian who lost nine derbilt here Sept. 20. I offensive starters from the Irish Hankwitz turned in the best who last year placed No. 5 in | time — 4:53—in the mile and Schembechler’s new prize' for! t(ie man making the outstanding effort in practice went to the senior offensive end from Scottsville. KITCHENS' A SPECIALTY MODERNIZING Announcing A NEW RENT A CAR Program only ?490 plut 6c Per Mil* 1969 Chevy Nova AENT-A-TRUCK , $C90 Par 24 Only O Hour Day • plut 7c pgr mil* 1969 Pickup or Chovy Van C.A.R. RENTAL A LEASE, Inc. 631 Oakland at Cat CLEARANCE' fc* ««*» • ^ Wkkminnwm effort/ess/y with a Wheel i. 1 Special Price Horse. 42 back-saving » # f ayaib iai a am tools, Electric atartor, I STOP IN AND - automatic shift # L §££ U3 HOW' hydraulic lifting, atcetara. o J TI/AreI 'ffv/lhE. % TUGT0IS/M0WEM/SN0W IHROWUI ^ KING BROS. PONTIAC RD. at 0PDYKE PONTIAC9 MICHIGAN Phone 373-0734 me BROS. INC. KO V * 1 PONMC/fO- | iH o OR»Oo^ft»0Oo%<»l» WANT TO SELL LAWNMOWERS, POWER MOWERS, ROLLER SKATES, WAGONS, BICYCLES? USE A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 332-8181. | Schembechler said he was generally pleased with the physical condition of the team and noted that all but three were able to run the mile in less than six minutes and only one player reported back to BengalsClairri j Jet Fullback HEMPSTEAD, N.Y. (AP) -The New York Jets announced Wednesday that fullback Billy Joe, who had been placed on waivers the day before, has| been claimed by the Cincinnati j training weighing more than MO Bengals. pounds. 1 * * * Schembechler said the squad! Coach Weeb Ewbank said he would go through twice-a-day might withdraw the waiver, but drillB until Sept. 5 when school would leave the decision up to! opens and then one-a-day after Billy Joe. He has 24 hours to that. I make the decision. PRICES GOOD THRU SEPTEMBER 3,1969 LABOR DAY WEEKEND AT DRC OUTDOOR STORAGE BOLDING BICW, 7-SUE 436 cu. ft 73J4*-4 door opening. Includes plywood floor. SUA88 ITT HMUMI Ideal hidesway for ell gardening and buflding equipment. Sturdy construction. Include* plywood floor. 8'x 6’ STORAGE BUILDING UIOS DIMENSION $0088 CO- CEILING PANELS Suspended to . create a quiet room. Owens corning fiberglas® f x-C PANEL BACH $|l* SCULPTURED $141 RM.f1.M FIRE EXTINGUISHERS ROCHESTER STORE 2230 CROOKS R0. North of MM Expressway Open Daily 8-5:30 P.M., Fridays 8-9 - Sot, 8-4 Closed SUNDAYS Bloomfield MIRACLE MILE 2215 Telegraph Rd. Open Daily 9-6 | Friday 9-9 Saturday and Monday Post Parade: 2 P.M. SATURDAY—10 GREAT RACES FEATURING $25,000 Added Frontier Handicap MONDAY—10 BIG RACES FEATURING $25,000 Added Labor Day Handicap A Total of *50,000.00 in Stakes Two fantastic days of exciting action at Detroit's vt; top track. The nation's best stables >? racing each other for soma of the season's biggest purses f Come early and have lunch at one of One's fine restaurants. DAILY DOUBLE TWIN DOUBLE : PERFECTA 'Enter from ell three toads. There'i plenty of perking for 12.000 cere. Or teke special D8R end Greet Lekee bueee from Downtown. 'GENERAL ADMISSION $1.50 • CLUBHOUSE 92.00 For Reservations, Coll GA 1-7170 simmcm SCHOOLCRAFT AT MIDDLEBELT ROAD D—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1969 At Pro Event Strike by Caddies Eased WETHERSFIELD, Conn, (AP) — Frank Beard, Dave Hill,' and controversial Ray Floyd rule as the top candidates for the first vprize today on the j eve of the strike-threatened $100,000 Greater Hartford Open golf tournament . Among them, they have won! eight tournaments this year,! Well over $900,000 in purses and: have been in the forefront of this season’s major development—the emerging dominance of some of the younger tour reg-v ulars. The tournament, threatened UNITED TIRE, INC. by a strike of local caddies ?> which the caddy master said $ would have prevented staging jf the event, has an unusual Fri- > day through Monday foremat . [because of the Labor Day weekend. {THREATEN Some 300 local caddies had threatened to stage a sit-down !' strike on the grounds if profes-: | sional touring caddies were used. Some 37 top professionals |p had shown up with their own | bag-toters, but 17 of them—in- * eluding Jack Nicklaus and Dan Sikes—quickly made other ar-{' rangements, and the locals were ? mollified. * • * * “1 don’t know what we’d have [ done if some of the pros hadn’t,; decided to take the boy assigned! to him,” caddy master Mike { Coyne said Wednesday. Coyne 1 was one of the key figures in; solving the dispute. ”We couldn’t have moved 300 I of them off the course. They {were just going to sit there and <• inot let anyone get off the tee.” i; j This event is the last of four >• qualifying tournaments for the rich Alcan Golfer of the Year toll be played in Portland, Ore.' Sept. 25-28. As such, it has; drawn an extremely strong field. 'World Can Learn From Athletes' FOREST HILLS, N Y. | !$ — Secretary-General U I Thant of the United Na- Jj lions said Wednesday that 1 if nations behaved like | athletes the world would § be more at peace ★ * * He made the statement Jj at the opening of the U S. ; • Open Tennis. Cham- f pionships, designated as International Day. “1 wish that we in the-United Nations c p u I d j abide by the rules of our j charter, in letter and | spirit, as scrupulously as \ the sportsmen of the ! world observe the rules j and regulations governing their particular field of ; activity,” he said. "If this were to be the ; case, we would have a j world more at peace than the world as we know it j today.” ★ * * He offered this as a final thought: "1 un- derstand the youth of the world today favor the motto ‘make love, not war.’ Rochester Speedster in Auto Racing Lineup The Waterford Hills Sports i cars. Saturday’s pro gram .Formula Vee Car Racing Club’s 12th annual {begins at 2 p.m. with the first of .August Road Races will be|eight 15.mlie events. Sunday’s ;Saturday and Sunday on the . . . ? ... . lVfc-mile course on Waterford races be«in at noon and three of i Road. the nine Sabbath events will be ! The entry list has reached 150|over a 22-5-mile distance, drivers from midwestern states! * * * Chuck Bartlebaugh, a 22-year-old speedster from Rochester, will be seeking his sixth consecutive victory in his McLaren Ford. The slight youngster holds the track record for A-Sports Racing class with a mark of 68.25 miles per hour over the twisting, turning, up-and down-hill course which {features 11 comers liberally sprinkled throughout the layout. .and Canada for the racing weekend for 21 classes of sports Benvenuti Must Fight Rodriguez to Retain Title Dwight Knupp, Southfield, will defend H-production honors in a Sprite; Bill Barbei', Birmingham, is in a Lotus XI in C-Sports Racing; and Bill Koch, Columbus, O., drives a G-production Midget. * ★ * An added feature to Sunday’s program will be a sky-diving exhibition at 2 p.m; when Conrad Crowton, Michigan 1969 champion, and Lou SchroddeT, titlist, will leap from aircraft at 5,000 feet and land in front of the grandstand on the west side of the Waterford Hills course. Ken Nielsen, Clawson, the { ROME (AP) - The World i Boxing Association says Nino i Benvenuti must defend his mid-; die Weight championship against | Luis Rodriquez, but Benvenutl’s manager, Bruno Amaduzzi says SfflH . . I the next title defense will be record of 69.26 mph in May. against Fraser Scott. | In addition to Bartlebaugh * * * and Nielsen, other sports car : I Amaduzzi said Wednesday ;! that Benvenuti will defend against Scott, a 21-year-old J Seattle fighter undefeated in 19 bouts as a pro, Oct. 4 in Naples, i The WBA had warned Benvenuti that he had to arrange a 'title fight with No. 1-ranked {challenger Luis Rodriquez of { Miami by Wednesday or face I possible loss of his title. Best-Ball Event Durihg Weekend at Rochester CC ,, I !, . . > i A closed field of 136 teams over-all track speed champion wil] be on hand Sund {or th ln, .h‘\ , B , Merlyn’!start of the seventh annual e^shed^he^an-classes George Sadowski Memorial Best-Ball Tournament at Rochester Country Club. Op tap will be 18 holes Sun- day with an 18-hole wrapup slated for Monday. * * * Returning to defend their title will be the twosome of Norm Craven and Joe Brisson. ECONO-CAR OF PONTIAC mil 332-0102 record holders will compete. Entered are: John Greenwood, Pontiac, in an A-production Corvette; Bill Petree, Warren, B-productioh Corvette; Jeff Lance, Pontiac, C-production titlist, now driving! a Lotus 51; Even Mathews, Ann! -Among the leading challen. Arbor, in a D-production Lotus Lers (lie new champions’ Super Seven; and Chris rejgn are two-time winners Gahman, Royal Oak, driving an|Melvin (Bud) stevens and Don ,F-productionLotus. {Mead, along with Rod Sump- Amaduzzl was to go to the I * * * ter of Grand Blanc and John United States today to talk with| Garret Van Camp, Farm-!Ortiz of Flint. Sumpter was WBA officials and Angelo Dun- ington, E-production champion low amateur in last week’s dee, Rodriquez’manager. {in a Porsche, has moved tojMichigan Open at Battle Creek. PEACOATS^N NAVY fsTYIF ****** NAVY STYLE SATIN QUILT LINING ANCHOR BUTTONS REPROCESSED WOOL Men’s $1998 Boys’ $169l C.P.O. SHIRTS 95% Wool ANCHOR BUTTONS NAVY BLUE $J98 PUD JOE’S r SURPLUS 19 N. Saginaw -In Downtown Pontiac Shop.Mon. nntl Thun. 'HI HHIO. Wed...'HI 6 F.M.. Fri. *M9- n GO TO Matthews-Hargreaves Chevy-Land During Their 11 ANNUAL RED TAG SALE ONE OF AMERICA’S LARGEST AUTOMOBILE SALES EVENTS Chooio from o big (election of new Chevrolet* in stock. Many can and trucks in stock are ready for immediate delivery. Come early far best selections! THIS IS WHAT YOU GET WHEH YOU BUY HOW! 1. Lower Down Payment because of the bigger trade-in values, or increased discounts. 2. Much Larger Trade-In Allowance on your present car so that we may build up our stock. 3. Immediate Delivery within the same day on most cars because of our readiness to handle a fast flow of cars at this time with extra help on our sales staff and extra mechanics in our garoge for service. 1969 Impala 2-Door Hardtop With Factory Air Conditioning Red Tag Priced n ^eluded Factory Alt, 8 cylim >ian, powor ttaaring, haotar, podd.dd •or view mirror, loot bolt., hotard w oth.rft, turn tignalt. , *3,104” plus tax and trans. ' 1969 Chovollo Malibu Coupe Red Tag Priced aluminum EXTENSION LADDBRS featuring CASH & CARRY HOUSE PAINT eiA/B OIL 5Wr base OR A-100 Latex * 1 L Now Only ,'Sks 1 m, ' REG. (749 whwinI/Vhii*** $8.99 O imp u ; house paint { M GALLON . ,0, _ T.«J PREMIUM $1940 KEM-I-COAT .. 1 fcO.il. YOUR CHOICE CAULK GUN OR 3 TUBES COMPOUND 96* WHILE THEY LAST! plus tax and trans. ; 1 PLUS DEMONSTRATORS AND MILEAGE CARS AT HUGE DISCOUNT PRICES s.,.. f VEGETABLES 'Beano Green Round, bu............ .Beano Kentucky Wonder, bu. , Beams. RMMtt, bu................ Beaaa, Wax, bu................... .Beets, Topped, bu................ , Beets, dz. bch. ................ Broccoli, dz. bch................ . Cabbaoe, Curly, bu................ Cabbage, Red, bu. ............... Cabbage, Sprouts, bu............. Cabbage, SfbnMrd Variety, bu. .. .Carroll, dz. ben................. Carrots, Cello Pak, 2-dz......... .Carrots, Topped, bu.............. Cauliflower, dz. ................ Celery, Pascal, dz. stalks ...... Celery, Pascal, 2 to 5-dz. ctn........ 'Celery Hearts, Cello Pak, dz. bags . 2.25 « "We're in the traditional pre-l Labor Day drift," one analyst s commented, “and the fact that s we’re in a tight money period is \ not helping very much.” Shortly after the opening, the i UPI marketwide indicator ° showed a gain of 0.36 per cent Judge Will Set Inquest Rules Ford rose V* to 46V« in its gained a full point to 136, and Sprerry Rand‘044 to 43%. Control Data jumped 1% to 49, «rouP. Wlth Chrysler up % to while General Electric held un- 37%. General Motors gave up % changed at 83%. National Cash toJ n . Register eased % to 55. IBM! ,In tbe chemicals, Du Pont {edged up % to 125%. Union gained 2V* to 345. Carbide fell ;W to 43%. regulators of business certainly have enough problems today, e i/ j n lno' only with oen. Kennedy to Be^he industries! ..... x ■ • they watch but Witness at Inquiry 'because they are being EDGARTOWN, Mass. (AP) _iwatched also Judge James A. Boyle was ex-|by pected to lay the ground rules 'as .Ra£b Nader Business Watchdogs Face New Problems By JOHN CUNNIFF lead to reciprocity? Perhaps notimarketplace, should try to out-AP Business Analyst |in great numbers. But the al- wit each other. But do they nev-NEW YORK — The federal ready overworked regulators er succumb to temptation? i are going to have to watch the . today for the inquest into the death of Mary Jo Kopechne. {and others. N e v e r the- One point already was clear— ress* *’fre arej •Sen, Edward M. Kennedy will!8 c°uP,e more be a witness. |problems that HARD TO PROVE It’S i trend nevertheless, because, they can’t be sure unless they 11 s a very difficult thing to check. {prove that the portfolio manag- roMPFTiTiOM riiT-v er of one fund doesn’t communi- COMPETITION CUT. cate his trading plans with the The issue of power concentra- manager of another fund in the tion in the stock market is s largely one for the Securities and Exchange Commission. Power is /being. concentrated, there is no argument about that. The question, again, is whether competition is reduced. Consider the situation infplace. same stable, especially since they draw their paychecks from the same source. , It is equally difficult to believe that! in the interests of profits and in reducing losses, such activities do not take Still to be ruled on were mo- Washin8ton may have to ban' wbicb some mutual fund man’ | * * * tions filed by lawyers represent-jdle ,in greater numbers: red- agement companies find them-J The importance of the situa- Jersey Standard dipped % to, American Telephone dipped jng persons expected to be|Procity 'n buying'and selling,{selves these days. Because they tion is underscored by the tehd-72 among the oils, whil el% to 52%, __________________ called as witnesses at the in- ^ “you,buy from jm I L""'.................................................. ................... The New York Stock Exchange quest. The motions dealt with such matters as the right to cross-examine and whether statements could be presented in place of oral testimony. —A— 9 26'/. 26% 26% — 14 20% 20% 20% — % 26 27 - 26% 26% 13 33% 33% 33% 9 23% 23% 23% I 71% 71% 71% + % • >- — n i - 42% 4 24 42% 42 ... 17 22% 29% 29% 11 34 33% 33% f % . .... ...4 48'/., 4 12 47% 47% 47 — ' 25 22% 22% 29% — t 41 30% 30% 30% — 1 1 27% 27% 27% + ' 27 60% 52% tO — 1 5 32% 32% 6 19% 12% iy% 4 43% 43% «3% 10 2 2 2 12 32 32 32 — u *hds.) High Low Lott Chg. 8 48% 48', 4 48% 9 27% 27% 27% 4 48% 45% 48% 20 27 immnCp 1 —f Oil 1.50 OulfSYaUt .96 GulfWln .40a Halllburt 1.05 Harris int i HeclaMng .70 Here Inc 1 HewPack .20 HoH Electrn Hotidylnn .20 Uj*“*ywl 1.20 sehF 1.10 5 25>/4 25% 25% .. 12 36% 36% 36% 3 21% 21% 21% + 114 24 23% 23% — —H— Howmet .70 MNIck 1.10a -* Pap. 1.50 TST .25 1 43% 43% 43% . . 13 27% 27% 27% + 12 32% 32% 32% — % 6 32% 32% 32% + % All Rlchfld 2 162 112% 111% 1117% 4- % * 5 27% 27 27% + % 17 4% 5% 5% | 12 27 26% 27 14% — % " DETROIT POULTRY » DITROIT (AP) - (USDA)—Price. •er pound lor No. 1 live poultry: Heavy fep? hone 20-21, heavy typi roailaVrJf »%; broilers and 3-4 lb. fryer, whites, 80-32/ turkeys (young type hens) 23%-2£ DETROIT COGS • DETROIT (AP) — (USDA)—Egg prices paid p«- dcoan by first receivers/(Ihclud-|no U.S.: Grade A lumbo 49%-SO; sxtra JSJJ* ,rB* m*dlum 27'/a-40; ‘‘CHICAGO (API Burl Ind 140 20B unquoted. _Eggs: prices paid delivered to Chicago inenanged to 1 higher; to par cantor bailer grade A whites 47-42; tnadliim extras 32%-40; standards 4040%. Livestock _ Cdttla 200.' Not enough slaughter' steers •r totters on oftor for price to-* - Voolors 50. Not enough tor t« « Shoep 100. Not anougn for to I CHICAW LIVESTOCK » CHI CAPO ZAP) - ZUSDA) - Hogs rs- { t Butchers l ■ as Imm,7 t 120____„ ________________ 2475-25.25; sows steady; 330400 lbs C24.00-24.75; P 23.25-24.00; 24 500400 lbs U lo 50 lower; c •1.225-1,450 It i 6,000; ./nr. lalriy - ecuw.________, ., moderately active at bast, wtal •r. lata sales-25 to » lower; fulls steady; prlr— jU far steers yield I •-■eral toads a .lea and prli... ____________ choice 975.,,350 ltw y,eW 4 29.75-31.25; imxdd good a 29.00-22.75; good VM-WMl all low topd 26.00-27.50. . Half load orltna 1,050 lb slau........... Iff 30.00; high chdlea and prime 200-1,025 yWd ,0r«l» ? bpO 4 28.75-22.25; choice -lOO-LM) Ita yield grade 2 to 4JUS4|>75; K'jeO.SJod and chplca It&JOM, good 25.50-26.30; utility and caMiMfligl BEM iMin'a. JaroPLt 1.42 CarrlarCp .60 Cartarw -0a CastleCko .60 CaterTr 1.20 iUMMCp 2 Cenco Ins .30 Cant SW 1.00 com 1.60b Cert-teed .80 CessnaAir .10 Cites Ohio 4 Chi RT Pac ChrlsCtt .05d Chrysler 2 :iTFIn-1.80 Cities Svc 2 ClevEllll 2.04 jOCOCOf 1.32 Cota Pal 1.20-ColllnRad .80 COtoliltSt 1.60 CBS 1,40b ColuPas 140 ComwEd 2JO, Comsat ' Con Cdls 2.80 Con Poods 1 ConNatG 1.76 ConsPwr 1.20 ContAIrL .50 pwnt 2.20 ContNtof .10p Com 0111.50 Com Tel .72 Control Data CoOMrin 1.4o ’tPCjnti i.7o •I cows utility 1 17.# Pip couple tots choke w American Stocks NEW YORK (AP) . Exchange taleclsc^nooi i-. J% + % 16 31% 20% 71% 4-1 16 15% 15% 15% 12% 17% 17% + % it kf ' 11 ^ T 3 AarMs Eng Ta - Aril Pet J4g Caippbl Chib javelin: r Cinerama . 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TaxETm l.io TexGSul .60 Texaslnst .80 Textron .90 Thlokol .40 TimetMIr .So TimkRB 1.80 ToddShp 1.20 TrnWAlr ,50p Transmr .50b Transitron TriCont 2.90g TRW Inc 1 Twan Cant y 5 2QV# 20 V? 20V 15 09# 89# 89. 6 24% 34'/# 34V# ... 17 39 38V# 38V# — 83 479# 471/4 479# ‘ 21 31V# 309# 31 6 24 24 24 28 18'# 189# 18'# 1 29# 249# 249# 2 539# 539# 539# 7 16V# 16'# 16V# -M— 1 15 15 15 - 9 35 35 fii 10 26 26 8 479# 479* 26 46V# 46'/ 3 35 35 35 — V# 10 26 26 26V# 8 479# 479# 479# 26 46V# 46V# 46% 18 55V# 55'# 55V# 4 9#! 6 gv# 37V# 27 209# 20V# 1 24V# 24V# 24V# 7 64V# 64 64 33 98V# 979# 98 4 38 38 38 2 199# 199# 109# “ 219# H|j Pp 1069# 5 219# 7| }# 819# — J V 4 V# 1 20 ^ 13 99# 58= I 369# 36V. 9P 20 4394 439# 439# 4 1 7 77 27 27 4 11 99# 28'# 28'# — 16 19 129V# 129^ 4 I 2 229# 229# 229# 4 —N— fi 4 am 319# 319# V# 12 50 499# 50 S W% 4fV# 09V l 38 1319# IS* 1 20 10V# 1 1 25V# 2SV# , I8SS% 4 10% 10% 10% + \\ s% i a%i 3 13V# 139# 139# 14 2M# 259# 259# 1 P»z *J*Z 0 28 10 m. Si SS 5 809# 88V# 88V# 249# f % £18 ioAmRock 1 It 9% 21% i "-"■‘is 2.M 70 44 43% 1 (hds.) High Lew Las! Chg. 7 24% 24% 24% 24 27% 27% 27% + % I 46V, 46V, 46V, — % 3 24% 24% 24% 4 % 23 50% 49% 50% 4 % 28 32% 32% 32% 4 % 3 19% 19% 19% % There are conservative funds, A large company selling a speculative funds, income Judge Boyle, who will preside broad line of products wishes to funds, capital gains funds and at the District Court inquiry ?1!':ars,fy even™reJ 1°?kSKthe 80 on' 0nce a good mutual fund scheduled to begin nextWednes- nnS sa,esman sizes yOU UP t1iere’s a day, said he would see to It that ^‘°n a i very good chance he wil1 P™" the senator »M present--;^ SrToTe Tmwim ‘' ^ 8"“! your 22 so^imm 3 67 669# 669# 8 399# 39 39'/# 4 V# 43 329# 62% 329# 4 V# 23 25'/a 25% 259# 4 % 12 399# 39V# 399# ' M 17 35 35 35 8 46V# 46V# 46% 473 23V# 23 23V* 32 44 439# 439# 3 219# 219# 219# 9 44V4 439# 439# — ' 2 149# 149# 149# 4 ‘ 10 599# 59V# 5991 ... 61 579# 579# 579# 4 ' 65 729# 72 729# 4 1 172 115 114 114 4 105 129# 12 129# 4 9* 11 379# 37 379# 4 V# 14 37V# 379# 37V# 1 j# 23 42V# 42 42V# 9 379# 379# 379# 1 58V# 58V# 58V# 23 7 69# 7 9 i 23 24V# 24 24% 4 9# —T- me, I buy wish to reach all segments of jency of funds to be grouped jun-from you” syndrome; and pow- the market, these managers !der one management. Few man-er concentration in the stock come up with different funds for agement companies today are mar^- (different purposes. 'content with just one entry in First leciprocity. | ★ ★ * the mutual fund derby. j it H/zb koo ^ kea „.k» similar product dnd with whichL if he has to be subpoenaed. d “It is essential that Mr. Ken- th* larger co"1,pany tradef' u hedy be present as a witness,” °nLy,^a mln0rl y Judge Boyle said at a prelimi- ane' ubut‘h%th°ught occurs1to nary hearing Wednesday be, heads ®f both ^mpames . that, since they are part of one, ASSURES COURT big family now, Ihe large one! Kennedy’s chief counsel, Rob- should buy only from the small-1 ert Clark Jr. of Brockton, as-er one, regardless,of quality and1 sured the court the senator)price, would be present but did not say g POINTS OF VIEW whether he would testify volun- u seems reasonablei at least The question of competition comes up in the buying and selling of stocks by the funds which, in the tradition of the I lion! Capital Gains Research Bureau recently compiled a list that showed mutual funds had assets of more than $55 billion in the first quarter of the year, and that 61 per cent of these assets were directed by just 13 companies. “These 13,” it reported, “guide the affairs of 55 funds with total assets of about $34 bil- 17 24% ! 34 24% L«-/i i, — i 12124 125 125% 4 l 20 28% 28% 28% 4 1 22 13% 13% 13% 4 1 11 46 46 46 6 33 32% 32% 4 1 2 35% 35% 35% — < 71 38% 28% 38% 4 ' 42 27% 27% 27% 4 ■ 17 8% 8% 8% 4 I 26 31% 31% 31% — ' 8 33% 33 33% 4 ' 35 18% 18% ,18% 4 ' —-u— I I _ . 17 30% 30% 30% UMC Ind .72 15 15% 15 15% 4 ' Un Carbide 2 117 44% 43% 44% 4 1 7 19% 10% 19 ... 31 52% 51% 52% 4 ' A% A% 4 UAL Inc 1 Un Elec 1J0 UnOIICal I UnPac C UnlonPaci Uniroyal UnitAlrc USGypsm 3a US Induit .45 USPIpa 1.20 USPIyCh .84 “S Smelt 1b S Steel 2.40 nlvOPd .80 Plohn 1.60 393 46V# m§ 8 45V# 45V#__________ 3 23'/# 22% 26% — 50 45V# 44% 4SV# ■“ 10 279# 279# 279# 9 72V# |H 10 32V# 319# • 22% — \ 5 40% 399# 40% 47 379# 37V# 379# + ' 21 23 229# 229# -f • 10 429# 429# 429# .... —V— 11 20% 20 20% 4 1 ■PI ■ ... -1 18% 18% 18% — 1 VaEIPw 1.12 20 23% 23% 23% 4 1 WarLam 1.10 Wat Wat 1.28 WnAIr L .50p Wn Banc 1.30 WnUTal 1.A WastgEI 1.80 Wayartiir .eo White Mol 2 WhIHaker WlnnOIx 1.42 Woolwth 1.20 _w—X—Y—Z— . .. 41% 42 14 22% 22% 22% 4 ' 2 24% 24% 24% 4 7 38% 38% 38% 4 10 A% A% A% — 39 59% 59% 59% 4 1. 44 A% 39% 89% — % 2 370k. 37% 37% 4 % 44 33% 22% 23 ^ + VS 14 33% 32% 32% 57 34% 34 34% 4 % 41 94% 94 AAw^AB 4 43% 48% ....... .... 27 38% 38% 38% - Copyrighted by The Associated Press 19 figures are unofficial, otherwise noted, rates of the foregoing *-*-■- — -isnts based on PilPRaipWI - declaration. Special or ______ _________ " «ium»,(s not daslg- noted as regular are to 4k, extra or extras. . ...... 1 43% 43% «% 4 % 4 25 24% 24% 2 35% 35% 35% 4 % 134 27% 24% 27% 4 Va 4 33 >3| 33 23 43% 43% 43% 4 % paid after stork r—-'-Tad or ““ HMVq Issue dMdande In arrears, n—New Issut. . Palo mis year, dividend omitted, deferred or no action lakw ‘ J' Ing. r—Declared stock dividend, t—. 19487 eatttnalod cash value oi or ex-dlsirlbutlon data, z—Salas In gull. cW—Called, x—Ex dividend.-y—Ex zttv dand and sates In full. x-als-Bx ol-rlbt lion. xr—Bx rights, xw—Wj»hq,'l vy>i venia. ww—with warrants, wd—When dn ..................... i. nd—Next day 122 35 * 34% 35 4 9 I 3 23% 23% 23% .. 7 44% 43% 43% - I 2 34% 34 34% 4 27 44% 44% 44% .. ---P— 9 34% 34% 34% 1 22 27% 27% - 24 33% 33 1 20% 20% 1 20% 24% .... . I 17% ink,mt. .tsl dividend meet-in 1948 r -s stock dui being reorganized under the Bankruptcy Act, or securities assumsd by such — ponies. fn-Foralgn issue sublect tsrest equalization tax. 'HnayBw M 'olarold .32 'PGlnd L40 -rocIGa 2.40 . 'ublCol 1.06 Pumlm) '.4H Pullman 3JO Ranco lnc .92 Raytheon .50 laTr - RelchCh JO RapubStl 2.50 gpvlan i.A Reyn Mat .90 Rohr CP .80 wSaummM SSfiSn'^l • 13 1 7 M , to Mi,.— ... 43 42% 41% 41% + % 26 19% 19% 4 % 23,51 50% 50% 4 121 28% 28% M%— 47 30% 10% W% 4 17 A% 45% 45% - 8 t|% 15% 15% 4 - - 13 M. 85% W% + % 8 41% 41% 41% I 17 24 25% 25% I 1 24% 26% 26% . 224 33% 32 31% +1% 21 34% 34% 34% 4 % 111 121. 127% 127% 4 % - , 14% 34% 4 % .94 04 +% DOW-JONT5 AVTRAPES STOCKS 30 iniprMli,....... » Uthittas''. —R— 14 32% 22% 22% .. « 10% 29% 30 - 35% 35% 35% . , 18 7 91% 91% 91% Jt an 30% IMk 3 31% 18% 38% n 4% 4% 4% 4 % 28 (2% 28 + % 4 »% 20% 20% - % .!W am' «%■**% ■•ar‘ i 35% 35% 35% Treasury Position * 4J53J99,273.10 Its fiscal va«r July 28,922J72,794.74 2 a In) s 7^8S92U4984.a3 V 24,388,118,690.11 ” 34,909' JU,4^7?9ir 33,747,670,373 49 r0T*x—w),747J9iJ31-17 365,449,310,954.15 *** 81 U)*367.0l0,337.60 10,344,534,949.47 (-Includes 435,411,944.44 debt not sub* t to statutory Ittntt. /. 824.8943... 280.12 40.54 . 72.01+0.09 I- 58.7140.0 71.0140.2 .. 78.43+04)1 . 79.90+0.01 Stocks of Local Interest ires after decimal points art eighths OVBR-THB-COUNTER STOCKS -jatotlons from the NASD art rat aontatlv* Intardaalar prleaa. Intardai — change thriiighout, th _____ _o nef Include retail i markdown or commission. AMT Corp. Astoclatsd CII|xons Util Cttii— Dali Truck, . «i: jrvlcas fer.6 JO 7 33% 33 33% !!.. tatran Printing ...mjuj......... 14J TLO ■ A% aI* A% ^ % wJwtoDtlo Chaqnlcel 30.4 3/4 from a selfish and narrow point { of view. The regulators, hovvbV-er, are committed to taking a broad view of the marketplace. Reciprocity, the government has said time and time again, unfairly limits competition and Injures tne competitive opportunities of other companies. Thai Leader Confirms U.S. Support Pledge BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) -The U.S. government has pledged to honor existing agreements with Thailand despite the impending withdrawal of some for a reduction in troop strength. He said he did not know how many troops would be withdrawn but he understood “they tarily. Miss Kopechne, 28, died when car the senator was driving plunged off a bridge into a tidal inlet , on Chappaquiddick Island, Martha’s Vineyard, July 18. + A * Massachusetts State Police confirmed Wednesday—after once denying it—a Boston! * * * I American troops, Prime Minis-1 will not withdraw "imm^iateTvM Record American report that a Now here’s the rub. A surge iter Thanom Kittikachom said because the situation in Viet’ trooper had teen assigned to seems to be under way in corpo- today. |STas not ZprZd ’’ ARer protect Dist. Atty. Edmund Din- rate purchases of minority -In- speaking to newsmen after a talkine with Thanat and U S of is, who called the inquest. terests in other companies. W. me£Ung J the NaUonal Assem- 3 Wednesday v“ sitineSen The state police said Tuesday T. Grimm & Co., management|biv. Thanom said the pledge! “haripJ h pJ™ n!!ii nr!!L that the trooper, Cpl. Robert Enos, had been assigned to Din. is* office for investigative pur. pores. B u t on Wednesday a spokesman said this was “misinformation.” conRulttop firm ^an°m SaW P»«»ga Charies H 7^y, R^Vei iSwLS / contained ina message sent icted only 1,500 American troops Rnt .t L i before Secretary of State Wil- wou|d be withdrawn, months of th r year. But it estl- „am p Rogers. me8sage wmLl, mates two to three times as sent and did not elaborate fully iN0 THAI CUT many minority purchases. on |ts contents Howeve he Will these minority purchases Mutual Stock Quotations INVESTING COMPANIES NEW YORK (AP) —Th* following quotations. supplied by the National Association of Securities sold (bid) or bought (asked) Wednsdy. Bid Ask Aberdn 2.37 2.59 Advlirs - 7.39 8.08 Affiliatd 8.02 8.68 Afutre 10.4910.49 Alpha Pd 11.59 12.67 Amcap 5.91 6.46 Am Bus 3.25 .1.52 Am Dvln 10.37 M.34 AEx spl 9.88 Am Orth 6.75 7.34 Am Inv 8.94 8.94 Am Mut 9.41 '0.28 AmN Gth 3.14 3.43 Am Pac unavtdl Anchor Gtoupt Capit 8.»0 9.75 Grwth 12.9014.^4 Inv 8.83 9.68 Pd Inv 10.0411.00 Associa -1.31 1.44 Astron 6.35 6.94 v Fund A 7.6} 7.62 Fund B 8.89 9.66 Stock 6.81 7.44 Sci Cp 5.17 5.62 Babson 8.74 8.74 Barg Knt 9.73 9.73 Blair Pdb 10.29 11.25 Bondstk 6.81 7.44 Boston St 9.8410.75 inaroy 14.1014.10 Entprsa 8.39 9.17 Equity 9.5210.40 Equt Gth 17.74 19.47 EsiOX 15.38 Evarst In 14.37 15.54 Explor 23.24 24.72 Falrfd 11.0012.02 Farm Bu 11.09 11.09 Fad Grth 13.5614.82 Fid Cap 11.6112.69 Fid Fund 16.7618.12 Fid Trnd 25.28 27.63 Financial Frog: “ - 6.47 7.08 4.72 5.17 MIF Gth 5.85 6.32 Mu OmG 5.14 5.59 Mu Omln 10.27 11.16 AAut Shrs 18.01 18.01 Mut Trst 2.64 2.69 NBA Mut 10.6010.82 Nat WSac 10.6011.46 Nat Ind 11.2711.27 Nat Invst 7.99 8.64 Nat Sgcur Sar: Balan 10.5711.55 Bond 5.51 6.02 Dlvtd 4.41 4.82 Grwth 9.14 9.99 Ft Stk 6.91 7.55 Incom 5.57 6.09 Stock 8.53 9.32 a i d it “reaffirmed existing agreements the United States has with Thailand.” he said the United States would not “turn away” from Thailand in matters concerning the country’s security. * from Thailand right away,” he Turning to the negotiations!said. “When the time comes for opening Monday between Thai- the pullout, some units are exland and the United States on pected to remain here in order the gradual withdrawal of some of the 50,000 American troops, Thanom said Thailand wanted only to know about U.S. plans font,. Broad St 14.}) 15.79 Bullock iLfi (Lm > CG Fd 9.35 10.12 Canada 18.3319.83 Capit Inc if 9.19 Capit w 7.00 7.50 -Cent Shr 10.5211.50 Channlng Fundi; Balan 12.1113.23 Cam si f.n 1.95 Grwth 5.5' 7.29 [ncem .fjl |J4 Spec! 2.95 3.22 Chau Group; Fund 11.1212.92 ----- 95.15101.15 Incom 5J2 5.92 .Vent 8.34 9.13 FztF Va 10.1911.90 Fit InGth 9.74)0.68 Fit inStk 8.55 9.48 Flf Multi 9.34 9.49 Fit Nat 7.53 8.23 Fit Slara unavall Riot Cap 7.93 Flat Fnd 6.50 Fla 6th 7.21 7J8 Fnd Gth 5.46 5.95 Foundri 8.28 9.05 Fouria 11.7512.14 Franklin Group: Com St 7.02 7.69 ONTC 11.5412.65 Util 6.65 7.29 Incom 2.31 2.93 Fraedm 1.61 9.4] Fund Am 9.5) 16.39 Gen See 11.15 il.15 Glbrattr 12.7512.75 Group Sec; Aoru Sc S.I5 9,40 Com SO. 13j| 14.43 Ful Ad 9.]0 9.95 Orth Ind 21.90 22.5} New Wld NY Vent ..... Newton 15.25 Noraait Ocnqph Omega 100 Fd 1M Fd One wms 15.9915.99 HFI Gth 25.55 25.65 .4.80 5.33 0.99 9.83 1.35 1.47 9.78 10.57 .7010*29 .25 16.67 .24 14.24 a,41 9.10 8.42 14,0} 16.24 .82 16.73 ...99 15.99 15.19 16.16 upperm 7.05 0.59 P«nn Sq 0.13 0.13 Pa Mut (.54 1.54 Phlla 15.001}.44 Pilgrim 9.09 9.93 P St 7.72 IJ4 Pine St. 10.7410.74 Pioneer . 13.0214,23 Plon inv 11.9513(07 Price Funds; Grwth 24.34 24.34 N Era 9.65 9J5 N Hor 26.40 *<6.40 Pro Fund 10.74 >0.74 Provonl 1 ** Puritan 11.73 * Successfuhlnv&sttng* M% /.m - -- it.;/ '' M M W/ M j# '# % 4 *1 If % # 1 9 02 9. 14.94 16.M 11.90 la.fS HRPW 9.02 9.n Homo 12.5513.72 Herttga 2.96 3.23 H Mann 15.57 16 22 Hubimn 7.94 0.60 IFilh 5.31 1,(0. (SI Inc 4.53 4.95 . Impact p 9.3710.24 Imp cap io.i9 ii.oi Imp BIK 7.44 (JO jlie Fund 11.9413.05 fnc FdB 7.30 0.00 in|«md 10.0911.03 ind Trnd 13.5214.70 Inditry , 4.10 6.67 ineBk stk 6.44 7.04 ■-7 CoA 12.5114.77 ' J9 • 12.1413.29 Inv fiuld j Inv nijjlc j Comp Fd 9.1910.75 Comnk 5,15 5.63 Concord / 16.3716.37 —^iConiol in n&l 12.75 TCgntu to S 5.17 Coni Gth 10.1910.29 Carp Ld 15.21 16.70 6m cap iyauji Crown W 7.00 7.65 tta o rerun rerun ror Commonwlth Fda; Cap Fd 9.77f0,M In/nm 9.0210.73 9.58 10.47 Inveelori Group: IDS ndl 4.90 5.33 Mut lOjI 11.29 Prog 4J0 4,09 Stock 19.9721.70 elect 9.11 9.00 . Var Py 7.04 0.S2 Inv son 4.97 5.43 8.29 9.01 fun InGI 21.42 51.42/T^BprnSI 4.82 1,27 ....... lo.oo )o.ii Putnam Funds: Equll 10.721..-Georg 14.31 15.64 Grth ' 11.40 )2 46 Incom 0.26 9.03 Invest 7.10 7.05 ' vide 10.6611.65 Voyag 8.94 9,79 Rep Tech 5 07 5.54 Revere 11.0714.94 Rosonlh 8.41 9.20 Schustr unavall Scudder Funds: int inv isjt is.73 (pel 36.31 36.31 Bit 14.01 14.01 Com St unavall Sac Dlv 11.5612.50 Sec Bqult 3.67 4.01 Sec Inv 7.70 0.(0 Selae Am 10.1310.9} 'TRSf UU || 9.8310.75 10.09 11.03 imiLU 9.53 f.n Swn Inv $.10 #.74 Swinv 01 9,04 .9.70 Sover Inv 14.3315.68 MlM .jM 5.46 5.46 State St 50.00 51.00 Steadman Funds: .. Am Ind H.0512.08 Flduc 7.20 7.96 Scion 4.63 9.06 -Sleln Roe Fds: Bel 30.42 20.42 Cop Op 14,6(14.61 *—■- 14.25 14.25 By ROGER E. SPEAR Q — I foolishly got caught by conglomerate glamor and bought Avnet around 35. appreciate your opinion. R.N. A — I believe Avnet is w holding as a turnaround though! you will need patience while watching and evaluating its emergence from an extended series of adverse circumstances. * t?dh.B fin It # 92 / Stock Cwlth AL Samp As § tall v I unavall . Bd 9.2710.08 Fd 9J910.75 Concord 16.3714.37 ', Keyolone Funds: Cus Bl 19JO 20.75 . Cus B2 30.36 22.10 Cus B4 9.7410.63 fllf CUS 1 20.82 22.71 i Cus 3 11.1412.18 ! Cm I 8.22 1.91’ Cus 4 5.18 5.66 Polar 4J9 lit KnlCkb 7.44 0.15 Knick Gt tL0612.lt Lexlngr 10.1011.13 Un SCh 15.3116.73 CKtrty crown W 7.00 7.65 - Cmw In 11J412.40 Ifitll S?hrr WSR DOWT In #.$9 7.19 Pownt “ r Dr«x*l Efty O Stk • Inv UM Loomis Si Capit 38J3 38.13 nn MM itU 14.22 12.59 13.80 gKu ii.sa 12.5413.70 l-H f-M 11.3512.40 MM Manhtn 7J$ 7.9* Min Pd .llK }]Jl Mass Gin jilt MOU Tr 15.3316.76 - Motel 4.(9 4.89 Momori 1J.fl 11.71 Me Don 9.5410 J5 . MldA Mu 6J7 7.10 Moody Cp 14J915.73 Moody's 13J114.19 Morton Pwwoi _ Grwth 10.3411.31 MIP Pd a.as Syncr Gt IIJ7 12.75 TMR Ap 20.10 21.96 Teochrs 10.5017.94 Technel 6.21 t.79 ToChVSv 0.24 Tochnol 7.97 0.69 Temp Gl 33.58 24,68 Towr MR 7. 3 7.81 Troll Cap 7J9 .0.80 Tray Eq 9.7410.64 Tudor Fd 17.1310.72 TwnC Gt 4.63 6M TwnC Inc , 4.76.5.20 Unit Mut 10.1511.09 unlld 9.5310.42 United Fundi: Accm' 7.53 .(.23 Incom 14.19 *5.51 Sclen 7.96 3.70 UFd Con 7.94 8.61 Velue Line Fd: . Val un 7J5 8.60 Incom 5J0 5.81 Spl Sit IM (.25 Voces spl 7.72 1.44 vendrbt 3.03 8.78 Vanpd .5 41 ‘.91 Var IndP 5.01 (.45 Viking 4.97 7.58 WL,.MOrg }.]J 9.97 ““*6 14.72 H.09 9.47 10.35 5.92 # 47 7.2# 7.93 Wellgtn Air Windier w Thanom said Thailand was not considering withdrawing its 12,000 troops from Vietnam even though the United States was cutting back its own forces there. “The United States most likely will not pull out its troops to act jointly with Thailand in accordance with the SEATO (Southeast Asia Treaty Organization) pact.” m as shrinking margins from price weakness in color-TV tubes and overcapacity In its copper wire plant. However, earnings should M^move up in fiscal 1969-70, U, #ided by ebst reduction measures, corporation restructuring and the current uptrend in -sales which is expected to continue. Broadened operations ! are being skillfully integrated through long-term planning by Stocks of many respected {experienced managers, and well - known electronics firms have been having a generally hard time; conglomerates are seriously depressed, and in addition Amvet has had strikes to cohtend with as well • DI,l*tWt INCREASED Burdette Oxygen .03 S 7.31 9-15 ““ “ “— .03 Q 9-5 9-1* lonal Inc.... ,07 d M2 0 Co A ..... .07* Q 9-5 , „ .......tama Bk.NY .45 O M9 9-39 Monmoutti Capital .15 Q Morris ... •»* ° ■M as 5. Betts Tlshman Rlty&c ■'--‘■1 Corp ...... n Gas 3/ El .26 8 9-15 9-30 ' 0/ 9-8, STOCK AVBRAOBt Compiled by The Associated press 30 15 If « Ind. Rails Ulll. Sto UXnCwKf!* !'.V7 03.3 155!9 133J 192.0 “— Day . 431.4 10,9 131.0 Ml Ago ...... 437.4 191.9 •"* - - _____1 Ago .... 423.2 j*j Ysar ASr,,.,.. 474.4 195.4 ..... Him ....... 513.5 417.7 159.1 B) LOW ....... 422.3 143.0 136.4 304J High ...... 531.1 217.4 mi 368J LOW ....... 435.6 165.6 1».l 299.) .BOND AVERAGES ComplMd bj Tho# AiMKl.I.d Pretty Rills IHd. Will. Fan. L.Y8. Net Chariot -^*1 .. Til’ JNij; 60.7 12.2 77J 11,9 76.7 time AH 7 89 4 77 1 91.8 76.7 77.9 {1.1 77.0 WNk Ago 60J §2. Month Ago #1.1 £1 ________#3 a? ..n m 64 3 Wl .0 11.4 Wj 63.1 85 0 i 78.3 M.0 Q — test January I bought 25 shares of Clary Corp. at 23%. My adviser thinks it will be a winner so I’ve held on. Should I sell if I don’t need the cash - W.H. A — Clary peaked out in July, 1968, at 32V4 and you’ve ridden it down from its test performance level in 1909. Until earnings are out o( the red -they slipped early this year -I don’t exepect share price to show any real bounce. The company’s product mix of gyroscopes, small computers and peripheral equipment, mobile homes and housing com-ppnents suggests $reRS of potential /profitability that could help Clary to become a speculative winner. How long this, might take is impossible to predict. The burst of speculative strength in Clary’s share a year ago reflected a tripling of earnings betwee/i 1966 and 1968, from 16 cents a share to over 50 cents. Since then sales have fallen off 21 per cent, an earnings deficit has appeared and recent acquisitions must be effectively integrated. Your decision to held or to se}l depends largely on your temperament because even partial recovery! to your oost seems te me rather far away.# P—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1969 Our Quality Sofas and Chairs, ALWAYS PRICED LOWER, ARE W» ora clearing our floors for ***' » Fino Foil Morchandiso arriving doily hrty Inericu Styles nr Meapmiy ul TmUtinil .Open Monday and Friday 'til 9 — Convenient Terms! 32 YEARS OF SILLING RETQR QUALITY FOR LESSl IMPACT STUDY - A nationwide accident study to determine the effectiveness of the General Motors side-guard beam began last fail when this 1MB GM car was struck broadside at a California intersection by a car traveling 40 to SO miles an hour. Though GM Widens Use in 1970 the force of the collision spun this car 180 degrees on dry pavement, the side-guard beam inside the doors prevented the striking vehicle from penetrating the passenger eompartment, and the driver was unhurt. He Apes Apes, Keeps Puffing NEW ORLEANS (AP) - As everyone who has tried to give up cigarettes knows, it’s tough to break the habit when you hang around with a bunch of heavy smokers. And if your companions are baboons who smoke four packs a day, it's enough to make you go ape. Henry Swanson Jr., 32, has been trying to stop smoking for a year. ★ * * But he has to spend most of his time with three live lpboons who are all as crazy over smoking cigarettes as eating ' Swanson is a caretaker for the animals who are part of a Louisiana State University School of Medicine research project on the effects of smoking on hardening of the arteries. Swanson, who has been smok- ing since he was 12, says “most-fylack of will power’’ keeps him puffing. But lighting up four packs a day for the baboons would put a strain on anyone’s will power. His heaviest smoker is who got started when, in the interest of science, he was rewarded with a banana every time he took a puff on a cigarette held at the edge of his cage. Then the other two baboons started smoking, too, perhaps to keep up with “007,” and now the three are permanent residents of a smoke-filled room at the school. For “007,” it’s three packs a day, the other two a half-pack apiece. MAJOR DEATH FACTOR Dr. Jack 1*. Strong, head of the school’s pathology department and director of the program, says hardening of the ar- Car Side-Guards Seen Effective teries is a-major factor in the death of most of the world’s male population. The baboons were brought into the program after he and a team of physicians made a trip to Kenya. ' * * ★ They said they found striking similarities between baboons and humans in areas of sickness. Hence the research into Proving themselves effective i General Motors has announced under actual collision con- it is installing side-guard beams ditiohs, side-guard. beams as standard equipment in all of developed by Fisher B o d y its 1970 intermediate cars, such engineers will be placed Inside las the Chevrolet Chevelle, Pon- the doors of most 1970 General jtiac Tempest, Oldsmoblle F85| the collision. Engineers concluded what earlier testing had indicated the side-guard beam encourages the striking vehicle to richochet, thus reducing the severity of Motors cars. land Buick Special. During the Fisher Body and GM auto »^ model year, all fUiLrissd safety authorities agreed BIN4 their worth after studying thousands of accident reports and making in-depth observations of damaged cars containing die side-guard beams. As a result of the study, j NOTICK OP PUBLIC SALK . | Account NO. R11-J71H24 Nolle* I* hereby given by the undersigned Hint oh Thurtdev, Sept, 4, 1M9, ah to o'clock A.M, at SOS Main St., Roch-•tier, Michigan, public tala ot a 1044 Pontiac (min Prlx a-door hardtop, boar-inf serial number aOaPlTlfSI will bo how. tor caeh to the hlghait bidder, lauiactien thereof may ba made at 90S st., Rochester, the place ot storage. Mam st., Rocnoster, me pit The undersigned reserves purpose ot amending Ordinance No. ttf, Ming the Zoning Ordinance, and that same M amended by addition to footnote (d), Section t45* BRASS . . . "> 25-RADIATORS 25* ALUMINUM a|| He's Here on Business MECHANICAL ENGINEER To design heating, ventilating, air-conditioning and. piping. Capable of assuming full responsibility for evaluation and selection of systems, design of system, supervision of draftsmen and coordination with other design disciplines. STRUCTURAL ENGINEER With extensive experience in the design of structural steel ahd reinforced , concrete for buildings.- Capable of applying technical skill and of exercising the thought and judgment which make for complete practical desighs. • CIVIL ENGINEER ' To design site work in* connection with buildings. Will be responsible for the design of parking areas, rood-ways, drainage systems and grading plans. These are permanent, respdnsible positions with Austin Engineers, Inc., which is engaged in industrial, commercial and institutional projects. This office is moving to new quarters (now under construction) in Southfield. Access will be easy. Parking will be provided. Working conditions will be very pleasant. Phene or Write; W. J. Lauck, District Engineer AUSTIN ENGINEERS, INC. 2978 W. Grand Blvd. Detroit, Michigan 48202 Phene; 875-77S7 An Equal Opportunity Employer Boone Clings to | • SAIGON Carrying a 76mm cannon, the tank was still in operating condition. It apparently .was one of three captured by the Vietcong on March 23, 1966, when a strong enemy force attacked the headquarters of a government armored regiment 35 miles north-Ausuit M,"t«f west of Saigon. ni notice hearing ^n6?^* iltf County. Henorfbj* t* Coi «M County " EUGENE ARTHUR MOORE, true copy Judge of Froboto HELEN LTNAMILTON, Deputy Probet* Register -Juvenile pjvh BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE tt HEREBY 0IVEN. that * Vietnamese Air Force ni^^commii5w»r oT W fW&iT'Si \ fighter-bombers destroyed two t2^“‘sSki^Ce^iN$lehS,ni»Sof lhe tanks as their “P40" fled o'etot* j).nTet in* \ewwiti»' H«n, xifil north along a highway, but the ourpoiJ ot *fLnd"ni ordin*nc*lpNo°r h*. third tank was never located. being .ttw MBIWB Ordlner—* — *—11 if section ifiK'to'roid *t'%llowi^I,r*1 Jw .1 Regulotloni A Short Holdup CTO not WfSiSlSP HALIFAX (Pl - Employes of @mifinw fgirntji* bank thou8ht 018 6-yoar-old *mo vend which exceed ttw minimum, was just playing around the Then he and four companions ran out of the bank and the cash drawer was $1,360 Police caught blocks away. I tbe prlnclpel yee structure end •Mil, (Men pieced In ttw eide ar tr*nt yard, be *f the tame maiarl*l which man** m me malar portion at that -wmmmmsmu. Decorative |gxd«c«l>ing lencet may be Jraeeaendtag and may «* need to . mmm ' pHuet* *r** tmm view ngm twyand th* let iim. M used in > _ BH S/gn From Above? TH* twipht at t*Id fence eheil net1 8ffSri&BrAifijr*"* *"*I JOHANNESBURG,, South ^ *r* frataot*d Africa (J) — “Any unauthorized "carter chamberlain, cars will be spirited away,’ fBieomtieid Twn»h!S says a sign 4n a suburban • church parking lot. PAT BOONE By YOLANDA BENAVIDES The white shoes are still part of the image, but now they're dapper white leather with fashionable silver buckets About 14 summers ago, Pat Boone, now 35, would have been in white bucks. Boone was 1 n the area yesterday for a promotional stint at the State Fair Among numerous business investments, he is a partner in the Wendell-West Real Estate Co. * * * Boone, who hit the teen market big in the mid-’50s, Was impeccably dressed in a bone double breasted suit with stynted pockets and slightly flared trousers. A cherry ahirt and matching tie accented his California tan. . * * * Though not in Detroit as an entertainer, the lean six-footer said he still periodically does the nightclub and state fair scenes. KEEPS HIS FANS To his pleasure/ most of his fans who are also in their mid-30b, have remained with him. “The younger kids still ~ recognize me largely because, they aee so many of my films on television,” he said. ★ W h “If they didn’t know the scords to begin with, they eventually get around to hear-ing them as ‘oldies but goodies,” he laughed. , T * w A Speaking of the wide spectrum of ages he appeals to, Boone said he feels it is because people always have beat wNa to ' trust him to provkflw dean entertainment, and they can bring every member of their family to sea him. TV MYSTERY Boone has already filmed a television murder mystery with Sammy Davis tp ba seen this fall. In September he will be on -i location in New York for his § next movie, “The Cross and the !;: Switchblade”., ' - w The film is a documentary on j: the life of a minister, the Rev. David Wilkerson, who works in -ji the slums of Brooklyn. Pot Boon*: pint But Good!*