Farmer Group Warns of National Boycott DES MOINES, Iowa (ff) ■? The militant National Farmers Organization has given the nation’s food processors an ultimatum: Increase prices for farm products or face an all-out market boycott hy farmers that could “shut down the agricultural plant of America.” ed the slogan, “No prices, no production,” at a meeting yesterday. No deadline for the desired price boosts was set, but NFO President Oren Lee Staley of Rea, Mo., indicated that the board of directors will not hesitate to consider the all-commodity boycott if market conditions fail to improve. store and hold their grain, get the government loans and let NFO bargain for higher pripes.” LIVESTOCK TARGET The target on livestock is $22.45 a hundredweight on hogs, $32.45 on choice cattle and $29.45 for lambs, well above PMtiac Pm* Ph*te ONE PAMPERED BABY — Renay Rollman, infant daugh- Mamie Kittridge, 1451 Courtland, Rochester. Her debut cointer of Mr. and Mrs. Ronald E. Rollman. W/i E. Hamlin, cided with the opening Tuesday of Rochester Branch, Critten- Avon Township, shares the attention of nursery attendants, ton General Hospital, 1201 E. University, and as of yesterday Mrs. Sarah Pauling (left) of 408 Joslyn, Pontiac, and Mrs. afternoon, she was still the sole occupant of the nursery. More than 35,000 NFO members shouted their approval «of the plan and adopt- 'Network Helps Deserting GIs' LONDON (AP)—The Times of London estimated today that the desertion rate among U.S. soldiers in Germany is running at about 1,000 this year, and three-fourths were primarily concerned with avoiding duty in Vietnam. * * * ★ The newspaper said the soldiers were being aided by an underground network of European pacifists. “As the Vietnam war grows, so does the number of deserters and the activity of groups aiding them—which often use the techniques of wartime resistance movements,” the paper said. The Times' said its figures were based on an investigation in Europe. The U.S. Army did not provide figures on what it told the Times was a slight but insignificant rise in the absentee rate. ★ * ★ The Times investigation began with leaflets encouraging desertion printed in London and circulated on the continent. It led to Paris, where Times reporters met one man describing himself as a deserter , and now working as a building laborer. He gave his name only as “Buster.” DOCUMENTED CASE One case of desertion was documented by a picture of Pvt. Roy R. Jones III, 20, a Negro from Detroit. The Times printed a copy of his leave pass, which it said had been forged for him by a friend. It said Jones, formerly assigned to Headquarters Troop, 2nd Squadron, 2nd Armored Cavalry Regiment, in Germany, is living in a Stockholm suburb on an alien’s pass issued by the Swedish government. Jones told the Times he was getting money from the underground network, was studying to enter a Swedish uni- j versity and hoped to be a playwright and teach jazz ballet. ★ ★ * “The Vietnamese people are being treated by Americans there, the same as Negroes in America,” the Times quoted Jones as saying. The Times said the biggest “service industry” for U S. deserters was in the Netherlands, where present and former adherents of Amsterdam’s Proves offer to help runaway GIs. In Today's . Press West Bloomfield New supervisor is appointed - PAGE A-4. ’ Tito Fails Yugoslav President Tito’s bid for Mideast peace apparently fails — PAGE B-12. RFK Helps Johnson Kennedy moves to lessen cut in Alliance funds — PAGE C-6. Area News Astrology Bridge .. . ■ • Crossword puzzle ... Comics Editorials Food Section Markets A4 ......C-13 C-13 ;.. D-15 C-13 ....... A-6 . C4-C-5 0-7 , Obituaries C-14 Sports D-l—D-6 Theaters . . . C-19 • TV-Radio Programs . D-15 Wilson, Earl D-15 Women’s Pages . R-1-B4 Car Talks Cut Short; UAW Rallies Ranks “The NFO is Serving notice that farmers can no longer accept the low farm prices we are receiving,” he said. “Every processor has some time to decide whether he wants to pay the prices and sign the purchase contracts or push the American farmer into waging the economic battle we are willing 'to fight.” HOLDING ACTIONS NFO members also authorized the directors to order holding actions of three to four days on milk phis regional market boycotts on livestock and to establish an NFO “grain bank” in hopes of putting a “floor” under grain prices. Staley announced the NFO target on prices is $1.50 a bushel on corn; $3 a bushel on soybeans and $2 for wheat. On milk it is $6 a hundredweight, about 75 cents over the prevailing price in the Des Moines federally regulated market* •“It is time we tackle the grain situation,” Staley said. “Fanners face $1 corn, $2.25 soybeans and $1.30 wheat this fall. “Our grain bank will enable farmers to prevailing markets. Staley said the interim measures would “let the processors of this nation know that we are building for an all-out holding action that would affect every commodity and would shut down the agricultural plant of America.” “It is not our desire to fight an economic battle that would deprive this nation of its food,” he added, “but nobody else is going to fairly price our products.” ★ ★ ★ Unless farm prices improve soon, rural America will go bankrupt, he said. SCATTERED VIOLENCE Alluding to reports of scattered violence in three major withholding actions on livestock, grain and milk, the group has. conducted since 1962, the NFO president promised that boycotts would be conducted with “a businesslike and calm approach.” * The organization, which claims membership in 28 states, has never attempted an all-commodity holding action. Cooling Showers May Be on Way Partly sunny skies are expected to bring a high today of 83 to 89. Gathering clouds promise a chance of scattered thundershowers late tonight, dropping the temperature to a low of 62 to 68. * ★ ★ Clouds will continue over the Pontiac area tomorrow with thundershowers likely. Cooler temperatures are expected in late afternoon or evening. The outlook for Saturday is partly sunny and much cooler. Winds today are southwesterly 10 to 20 miles. . * * * Precipitation probabilities are today 10 per cent; tonight 30 per cent; tomorrow 50 per cent. The low in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. was 67. The mercury rose to 85 by 2 p.m. DETROIT OR — The United Auto Workers union and the Big Three auto makers cut short their six weeks of negotiations today with unionists going home to build fires they hope will smoke out new contract offers. * * ★ Current three-year UAW pacts with General Motors, Ford and Chrysler end Sept. 6 — less than three weeks away. Thus the union bargainers insist they have been unable tq coax agreement .on a single contract clause— Barry Advocates Trial for' Stokely NEWPORT BEACH, Calif. (Jl — Barry Goldwater says Black Power advocate Stokely Carmichael should be tried for treason and, if found guilty, executed. ★ ★ * The former Arizona senator, at his summer home, told newsmen yesterday Carmichael should be arrested when he returns to the United States from Cuba. While saying he doesn’t know that Communists are inciting riots in U. S. cities, Goldwater said, “If I were a Communist, I certainly would be working right in there with the Carmichaels and the H. Rap Browns.” He said “They should be treated as traitors and the penalty should be given to them." ★ ★ ★ Goldwater, who says he will challenge Sen. Carl Hayden, D-Ariz., for the Senate next year, said he views former Vice President Richard M. Nixon as the front-running GOP candidate, for the 1968 Presidential nomination. But, he added, by next summer, California Gov, Ronald Reagan might be a stronger contender. economic or otherwise—from any of the companies. They express apprehension and say time is growing short if nonstrike agreements are to be reached covering the Big Three's nearly 700,000 UAW members. * * * The companies have yet to make a counteroffer to what UAW President Walter P. Reuther concedes is “the longest and most ambitious set of demands” in his union’s history. Among other things they include a guaranteed annual income. HISTORICAL PRACTICE The companies insist that historically their proposals are made only seven to 14 days before expiration of old contracts. As of today there are 20 days left. The companies appear unhurried. Ford and the UAW were to break off negotiations for the weekend today, permitting union bargainers to return to their home locals to confer with negotiators working on at-the-plant agreements which supplement die national contract. While home, the Ford UAW negotiators are expected to plump for overwhelming appraisal in voting next week on a proposal authorizing them to call a strike. * * * No meeting is planned at GM tomorrow, and union bargainers are expected to get back home to urge a big voting turnout to strengthen their hand at the bargaining table. Douglas Fraser, UAW Chrysler director, brought his local union leaders to Detroit last week for the dual purpose of whipping up a big strike authorization vote and to decide which, if any, issues before local-level bar-' gainers should be moved to the national negotiations table. Teamster Steward Pontiac Pr«»» Ptiot* NEW HOUSING The beginning of a 250-unit apartment a community house, tennis courts and recreational facilities. project is taking shape at a site on Auburn west of Opdyke. The $2.5-million project will be ready for occupancy next „ To be developed by Charles L. Langs, the complex will include spring. Viet Issue Vexes Potential GOP Hopefuls By JACK BELL AP Political Writer WASHINGTON — Republican Gov. George Romney of Michigan is demonstrating the difficulty potential 1968 GOP candidates are encountering in standing still on a Vietnam war position in this summer of political discontent. Romney, an all-but-announced candidate for the Republican presidential nomination, was first classed as a dove, moved over among the hawks, and now is joining the critics of the North Vietnam bombing he oned supported. While House Republican leader Gerald R. Ford of Michigan shrugged off his differences with his governor. Romney’s contention that bombing would never end the war contrasted with Ford’s call last week for a step-up in air attacks. Romney was not the only Republican having second thoughts. Rhode Island Gov. John H. Chafee, who Would like to be the GOP vice presidential nominee, backed away from his previous endorsement of„the air strikes., GETTING DISCOURAGED Chafee, who will head the GOP Gov- ernors’ Association next year, told a Providence, R.I., news conference yesterday he is getting discouraged with the progress of the war and is altering his position on the bombing issue because “we’re not winning to the extent we originally felt we were going to.!’ Sen. Charles H. Percy, R-Ill., who has been moving steadily toward eversharp-er criticism of President Johnson’s war policies, told a Cincinnati, Ohio, audience that if its allies don’t put up mpre fight the United States “must ask itself how much more it is willing to expend Surveys Boost Nixon's Hopes MINNEAPOLIS (AP) T- While Richard M. Nixon endorsed the latest expansion of U.S. bombing in North Vietnam, a poll gave fresh support to his potential candidacy for the Republican presidential nomination. * ★ ★ The former vice president told a news conference yesterday he wpn’t decide until early next year whether to , run for the GOP nomination. If he does; said Nixon, he’ll enter “a number of primaries” and withdraw if he doesn’t win these tests. The American Broadcasting Co. said in New York, meanwhile, that its poll of delegates to the 1964 Republican convention shows a near majority of respondents prefers Nixon in 1968„ Gov. Ronald Reagan of California, who hasn’t yet completed his first year of elective office, was a second choice— and showed surprising strength among the former delegates as an expected vote-getter. * ★ ★ The ABC poll, to be aired tonight on “Who in ’68?”, drew responses from' 938 delegates, or 71.1 per cent of those who attended the 1964 convention. Of the total responding, 614 said they expected to be delegates next year. - Nixon received 48.5 per cent support as a potential candidate compared with Reagan’s 17.1 per cent. But as the projected best vote-getter, Nixon dropped to 39:9 per cent while Reagan climbed to 25.9 per cent. In a Minneapolis speech and at the news-conference, Nixon, despite backing the bombing within 10 miles of Red ffrina, scored the Johnson administration onvthree issues likely to loom large . in. 1968—Vietnam, taxes and crime.1 ' . on a w.ar to protect primarily Asian interests.” At Springfield, III., Sen. Everett M. Dirksen, R-Ill., said although the Republicans are not making the war a campaign issue, “it’s more of an issue with the people than ever before.” ★ ★ * Dirksen, the Senate Republican leader, has endorsed the bombing of military targets near Red China which Percy criticized. Their differences over Vietnam policy may have something to do With Percy’s reputed willingness to become Illinois’ favorite-son candidate at next year’s GOP presidential nominating convention. BROKE SILENCE In Minneapolis, former Vice President Richard M. Nixon broke a lengthy silence on the Vietnam issue to say he approves extension of the bombing of the North. . ^ But Nixon, considered another contender for the GOP presidential nomination, warned a news conference the United States faces £ “massive risk” if it doesn’t end the war soon. In an earlier speech yesterday, Nixon said he agrees with former President Dwight D. Eisenhower > that the war shouldn’t be made a partisan, issue in ’the 1968 campaign. Killed in Philadelphia PHILADELPHIA (AP) §g A Teamsters Union steward was shot 'to death today in front of Teamsters Local 107 headquarters, the scene of a double slaying last year. Police identified the victim as Robert DeGeorge, 33, of Philadelphia. * * ★ The man was shot across the street from the union hall, located a block from the Delaware River waterfront, police said. A snub-nosed 38-caliber pistol was found later by police on the information counter in the Teamster’s office. *. Four men are being sought in connection with the shooting. First Caller said, “I’ll Take It...” “The first caller who responded to our Press Want Ad bought the garage.” Mr. H. W- CAR AND V, GARAGE. GOOD CONDITION. Best offer. , PRESS WANT ADS are sought out daily by people who. need or want something. A constant exchange of items for cash is the result. They’ll work for you, too. Dial —r- 332-8181 * or 334-4931 A—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1967 Rights Bill Approved by House Protects Riot-Area Workers WASHINGTON (AP) - The House has overwhelmingly passed a bill making it a federal crime to harm or interfere with persons trying to exercise their civil rights, and extended the protection to include police and firemen working in riot areas. But the bill, largely the same as a portion of the 1966 civil rights bill which died in the Senate, may be killed there again. Chairman Sam J. Ervin Jr. D-NsC., whose Senate Judiciary U S. Viet Toll Is 7-Month Low Weekly Total Reflects Lull in Ground War SAIGON (AP) - American combat deaths in Vietnam numbered 82 last week, the lowest weekly casualty toll in seven months, the y. S. Command announced today. The number of wounded was 748, also the lowest figure since the first of this year. Hie decline in casualties was a reflection of the lull in ground fighting which has now lasted about five weeks, with few significant engagements Reported. The previous week’s casualties were 146 American dead and 1,064 wounded, which is slightly below this year’s average. The U. S. Command said 1,043 Communist troops were killed las week, which is also the lowest figure this, year. The South Vietnamese armed forces suffered 283 dead and 683 wounded during the week, which is above average. Their high casualties stemmed largely from isolated actions. The weekly casualty report listed 18 dead among other allied forces in South Vietnam, mainly the South Koreans and Australians who do not announce precise weekly casualties. American ‘forces in Vietnam totaled 454,000, unchanged' from the previous week. Communist strength was estimated as 297,000, also un. changed from the previous week. Americans listed as missing, captured or detained now total 709 for the war, an increase of nine during the week. The week’s death toll brought America’s losses in the war to 12,497 killed and 76,630 wounded by unofficial count. subcommittee began hearings on the same measure Aug. said then it “cannot stand the constitutional light of day’’ ui der the 14th Amendment. Senate sources rated the bill' chances of clearing the full judiciary committee as zero. They said an attempt might be made to bypass the committee and put the House-passed version on the floor for debate, but forecast a Southern filibuster ‘ that tactic is used. ANGERED BY RIOTS The amendment providing federal protection for police and firemen was supported by members angered by this summer’ city riots, in which several police officers arid fire fighters were injured. Some were killed. majority of both parties supported the bill, which sailed through Wednesday 326 to 93 after a series of relatively minor amendments were adopted and two major ones were turned back. The bill would make it federal crime for a person to interfere With, injure or intimidate, or threaten to injure or intimidate-anyone because of his race, ‘color, religion, national origin or political affiliation and because he is or has been engaging in certain protected activities. ★ * ★ The House approved amendment proposed by Rep. William C. Cramer, R-Fla. which state$ that free speech and assembly do not permit speech to incite a riot. Cramer is the sponsor of another bill which would make it federal crime to cross a state line with intent to1 incite a riot. He has said the bill is aimed at such Black Power advocates as Stokely Carmichael and H. Rap Brown, chairnjan of the Student Nonviolerit Coordinating Committee.: Court Grants Hoffa List of IS Visitors CHICAGO nt' medicine cabinet with inless trim, turn switch and out-ored doors slide on steel tracks. —2nd Floor Fits Over Top of Toilet Tank Shelf Unit Steel shelves, sliding door cabinet space saver unit can be used in bathroom over top of toilet tank, in laundry over dryer or in the kitchen over a base cabinet, -2nd Floor 75%fah-36" Wide-12" Deep Handy Steel Shelf Unit m Steel shelving unit can be used in garage, pffice, store or plant, whenever extra shelves are needed. Easy to assemble, —2nd Floor [Strong Yet Lightweight ALUMINUM Extension Ladders HP Clearance Sale 16-foot without pulley 20-ft. with pulley. 24-Ft.with pulley. 28-Ft. with pulley. Sturdy yet lightweight aluminum ladders that wjll' give , years of use. Clearance priced while supplies . last. Limited stock on all sizes. *T . . * -2nd Floor 1033 183S 2333 A-4 THE PONTIAC PRESS THURSDAY, AUGUST f . To Serve Walled Lake, Parts' of Wixom New Phone Center to Open Soon A new $1.5 - million telephone central office that will serve approximately 3,900 customers in Walled Lake and a portion of Wixom will be put in operation Sept. 10. Charles B. Woodhead, public relations manager of the Pontiac district of Michigan Bell Telephone Co., said several Changes in dialing methods will be introduced at the time of the changeover to the new switching system. The new switching center is located on South Commerce Bond, a half block north of Pontiac TralL It will replace the facilities at 320 N. Pontiac Trail. Customers whose phone numbers presently begin with MA 4 will be served by the new office. At the time of the change all phone numbers now beginning with the MA 4 prefix will be changed to 624. Beginning Sept. 10, "“telephone users with 624 numbers no longer will need to dial “1” on message unit calls to telephones in Auburn Heights, Clarkston, Drayton Plains, Lake Orion, Oxford, Leonard and Rochester. SAME WAY Calls to these communities will be dialed the same way as local calls—by merely dialing the seven-digit number. Woodhead said there will be no change in the dialing of local or long-distance calls. One- and two-party customers no longer will need to give their phone number when making a message unit or long distance call. New equipment automatically will note details of these calls for billing purposes. * * * * Rural customers, however, Will con- tinue to furriish the number of the telephone they are using when making a message unit or long distance call. Nett numbers will be introduced for information and repair service, Wood-head said. Starting Sept. 10, callers will dial 411 for information instead of 33-411. For repairs, the number will be 611 instead of 33-611. With the changeover to the new phone office, four-party service will be discontinued, Woodhead said.. Four-party customers may change to one- or two-party lines or to rural service. \ PREPAY BASIS Eighty coin telephones in the 624 office will be changed, to a prepay basis like that found in most Michigan communities. Callers will deposit 10 cents be-fore dialing a local number or Operator. A new dial tone somewhat lower in pitch than the present signal win be put .in use. The new signal will enable switching equipment to accommodate both dial and Touch-Tone pushbutton telephones. * ,* ★ Bookmarks for use with the current directory will be furnished customers. These bookmarks show dialing instructions and include a map of local and message unit calling areas, ★ * ★ The dialing information also wUl be included in the introductory pages of the 1966 area directory. ; ' Pontiac Pratt Photo Principal Lowell Ruggles Views Avondale High School Texts Huron Valley Sets ln West New Supervisor Named School Agenda MILFORD - The Huron Valley School District expects 6,300 students — an increase of about 870 over last year—with the opening of school Thursday, Sept. 7. Agenda for the first day includes official enrollment, payment of book fees, and meeting teachers. High schoolers will in adtHftap be assigned to homerooms and ractsive class schedules. Principals will be available in their buildings from now until Slept. 7 for anyone with questions. Teachers report tor pre-school coh-ferences on SepL5. Motorcycle Smash up Kills Lapeer Youth LAPEER—A Lapeer motorcyclist was killed on North Elba near M21 yesterday afternoon. Billie Joe Davis, 19, of 63 Beatty died after his motorcycle went out of contrdl and hit a tree stump about 12:30 p.m.; according to sheriff’s deputies. SHELBY TOWNSHIP - The problem with being supervisor and the lone Republican on the Township Board is that you’re the lone Republican, according to' Shelby Township’s Kirby Holmes. His position, he feels, was once again brought home Tuesday night when the Township Board rejected two of three -candidates to the Township Planning Commission, Holmes charged, “They accepted the Democrat, but they turned down the Republicans—and they didn’t even know, one of the men.’’ Township law provides that the board must ratify such appointments made by the supervisor. * ★ ★ “What am I supposed to do?’’ Holmes, a former government teacher in Utica Schools, asked. LOST TO HOLMES The board accepted the appointment of George Kullman, the Democrat whom WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -The Township Board last night appointed John N. Doherty the new township supervisor, effective Sept. 1. Doherty, to fill a full-time position, replaces John F. Warren who has served as supervisor part-time for seven months The board reappointed Warren as trustee. The new supervisor, of 5431 W. Doherty, has been a real estate developer with the Howard Keating Co., Birmingham, on and off since 1951. Doherty owned a heavy construction company until last year. Before residing in tjhis area, Doherty was a district manager for Pontiac Motor Co. in Buffalo, N. Y. He received a bachelor’s degree in business administration from the University of Detroit. Doherty’s family includes his wife, Julia; Theresa, 11; Michael, 9; and Patricia, 5. In other action, the Township Board Holmes defeated last fall in the election for supervisor. “He’s a good man,” Holmes said, “but so are Joseph Radanovich and John Dyer-Hurdon. Their only problem is that they are Republicans.” However, a spokesman for the Democrats on the board denied Holmes contention that the rejection of the pair was based on politics. * * ★ Holmes also quizzed the board’s action, in vetoing his proposed plan to purchase 30 acres of state land lying along M52 expressway at 25 Mile Road. RECREATION BENEFITS ‘ The County Planning Commission approved its purchase for the benefits it would provide fromVthe parks and recreation angle,” Holmes said. Clerk Mae Stocker, speaking for the rest of the board, said they felt that land purchase authority should come from the people either at the annual meeting or by referendum. approved the final plat of Rutledge Park subdivision and authorized the police department to hire another officer. Imlay Takes Cityhood Step IMLAY CITY—Formal action has been initiated by the Village Council to seek incorporation as a home-rule city. The council acted Tuesday night on a recommendation of the Village Planning Commission which suggested that boundaries of the proposed city be determined at a later date. At the same meeting Mayor John Folk proposed the formation of a historical committee to investigate celebration of the village’s centennial. They will be asked to determine whether the celebration should take place in 1971 or 1973. White Lake Twp. Budget Approved WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP - A balanced budget with $14 to spare received the Township Board’s approval at the recent board meeting. Anticipated expenditures total $171,126, with anticipated revenues at $171,140. Last year’s expenditures were $152,019 and revenues were $152,175. The increase in expenditures for this fiscal year — April l, 1967, to March 31, 1968 — results from expanded public services, more police and fire protection, and additional office expenses. The additional revenues are expected to come from more sales and intangibles taxes, said Township Supervisor James Reid. The Township Board also decided to contract with the Highland Township Library for free library use by the White Lake residents. They have been paying $3 per family each year to use the Highland Township facility. Supervisor Reid expects that White Lake Township will be able to provide this service by paying Highland about $1,400 per year from a state penal fund. GOP Supervisor Plight t of Heading an All-Dem Board | Avondale High Preparing 4-Grade Long-Day Setup Sewer Contracts Awarded, in troy TROY — The city has awarded contracts for two sewer projects with a total estimated cost of $120,000. Winning bidder was Two Way Construction Co. Jobs are a $163,000 project for Wisconsin, Iowa, Maple and De-quindre roads and a $57,000 project north of 14 Mile and west of Dequindre. A hearing was set for 8 p.m., Sept. 11 for a $68,000 sewer project for the Donaldson-Square Lake area. A water and a sewer project were approved and bids called for. A $63,400 water installation is for the Long Lake-Beach area in Valley Vista subdivision. A $54,000 sewer is for Austin north of Maple. Aided by computer programming, the Avondale Senior High School expects to launch its four-grade extended-day program this fall with a minimum of confusion. The Avondale Board of Education this spring voted the extended-day plan in the face of a serious classroom shortage. The ninth grade was added to the senior high school enrollment, freeing the junior high to accept sixth graders, thereby relieving overcrowding at the elementary level. A new elementary school, the R. Grant Graham, is now in construction but not due for usage until next spring. Funds for a second senior high school voted by the people were tied up for nearly a year by Michigan Municipal Finance Commission regulations. ★ * * Lowell Ruggles, Avondale Senior High School principal, said students will be asked to register Aug. 28 through 31. He expects an enrollment of 1,050 students this year as compared to 640 last Ninth graders are to report Aug. 28, for orientation; 10th graders, Aug. 29; Uth graders, Aug. 30; and 12th graders, Aug: 31. Ruggles said class schedules will be presented at that time and books wilt be issued. He paid activity fees would also be collected. Students in all grades whose last names begin with the letters A through M are asked to report at 9 a.m. Tlidse in the latter half of the alphabet are asked toreport at 2 p.m. Ruggles said the school will teach ,11th and 12th graders in the morning hours and the younger group in the afternoon. CLASS DAYS He said classes will begin as early as 7 a.m. and last until noon or 1 p.m. for the juniors and seniors. The younger students will report at 11 a.m. or noon, depending on thelf schedules, and stay until a full program of classes are complete. Though study halls have been done away with, Ruggles stresses that the program will offer all those classes formerly offered by the schoeL He said any free periods on the part of students can be utilized at a snack bar the school hopes to provide. Ruggles said the regular Type A classroom lunch will be eliminated because of the different scheduling. Utica Treasury UTICA — City government ended the 1966-67 fiscal year in the black, an auditors report shows. •year. in the Black Utica property owners pay a total of 19 mills yearly, 1 mill voted for upkeep of the city library. “It’s the first time in years we haven’t had a shortage,” said Clerk Eunice Kopietz. The council wa* told a $19,000 surplus had been accumulated, but auditors warned that no such surplus would be likely next year. The council recently added full-paid hospitalization, a life insurance policy and a $150 annual across-the-board raise to its employe benefits. .★ m ★ A 3-mill raise in taxation last year was credited with the change in the 'financial picture. ★ ★ ★ . “In 1963 we had a $42,000 deficit,” Mrs. Kopietz said, “And we’ve been working to reduce it each year. Of the 3 mills added last year, 1.5 mills was set aside for the operating fund .and 1.5 mills for the reduction of Hie Utica drain fund.” Paving Approved at Wolverine Lake • WOLVERINE LAKE - Special assessments for the blacktopping of Wolverine Drive, Paulette, Ventura, Solano and Brisbane streets were approved at the recent Village Board meeting. The project will cost $17,303, amounting to $1.45 per front foot. Cadillac Asphalt Co. of Southfield is planning tp complete the work within two weeks, Village Manager Clifford Cottrell said. Also at the meeting, the board approved a vacation plan for all village employes. The plan includes six paid holidays, formerly offered only to office employes time off, sick days and probations. City employes had requested the vacation plan several months ago, said Cottrell., LACK MATH TEACHER The school has nearly a full complement of teachers, lacking only a mathematics teacher, Ruggles reported. He noted that teachers would report at varying hours working a solid six-period shift and teaching at least five classes. Other factors taken into consideration, he said, included the school’s athletic program and the need for arranging classes sb that participants and coaches would be free for practice, Final Dance stated LAKE ORION — Area Jaycees will host their last teen-age dance of the season 8:30 pvm. tomorrow at the Bogi-Hut, 102 S. Broadway. The Thyrd Street group will provide music. Jaycees have sponsored a total of five dances this summer, the average attendance close to 100, a spokesman said. Pontiac Pr*»l Photo NEIGHBORS COMPLAIN — This abandoned schoolhouse on Maybee and Pine Knob, Independence Township, has become a source of annoyance to neighbors. Others find it a bource of inspiration and have decorated it with names, pic- tures, and enigmatic slogans in various colors. The'township owns the property and is holding it for,a possible future site of a fire station. Neighbors have asked file township to tear it down or paint over toe inscriptions to end, the “eyesore." Hearing Slated for Land-Fill COMMERCE TOWNSHIP - The Township Board has scheduled a public hearing on a proposed county sanitary land-fill on 10 acres near the intersection of Benstein and Sleeth roads. Hie Township Beard of Appeals will conduct the hearing Aug. 30, at 7:30 p.m. in the cafeteria of the Walled Lake High School, 2978 S, Commerce Road. The County Road Commission plans to operate the land Jill. It received approval from toe County Board of Supervisors about one month ago. A loan ot $21,000 will follow if and when toe township approves the project and toe commission gets a state license.r A tentative schedule sets the opening of the land-fill within 60 days, said Commerce Township Supervisor Robert H. Long. ★ ' ★ ★ ^ The dump is planned to operate for seven years for capacity fill, Long said. COMMISSIONER NAMED The Township Board also appointed George Merring, 4351 Bluebird, to , the planning commission. A West Bloomfield schoolteacher, he replaces Mpx Slater whose term expired. Reappointed to toe commission was Edward Oldencamp, a builder. Farmington Centennial Founders Fete Opens Today FARMINGTON - The Elks ox roast, the Miss Founders contest, and a motorcade will open the Farmington Centennial and Third Annual Founders Festival set for today through Saturday. The Elks were to start serving today at noon at the downtown center parking lot and are to continue through the festival’s end. Miss Founders will be chosen at 5 p.m. at Independence Hall at the independence Green Apartments, Grand River and Halstead. r Walled Lake Teacher Returns From Office Occupations Institute WALLED LAKE - Miss Jody New-< comer of Walled Lake High School recently returned from a four-week National Institute for Teacher-Coordinators of Office Occupations Programs at the University of- Northern Iowa, Cedar Fails, Iowa, . 7 The institute instructed teacher-coordinators of offioe occupations programs in new techniques, methods and materials. Contestants, selected at a preliminary judging Tuesday, are: Nancy C. Brown, Dee Dickson, Wanda S. Gorham, Cathy Karwoski, Linda Newbury, Sizanne Nich-olls, pawn Shipley, Julie E. Slmith, Linda Steltar and Linda Thompson. ★ ★ ★ The winner and runner-ups will be announced at 7:30 p.m. following a motorcade to the Village Green.' CONTEST EMCEE Terry Frisco, a television producer, is the chairman and master of [ceremonies for toe contest. j Completing the festival’s first day wilt be a Franklin Band concert at 8 p.m. ' at the Village Green, a dance at the East Junior High School from 9 p.m. to midnight, and a dinner at toe Masonic Temple sponsored by toe White Shrine No. 44. Slated for tomorrow are a country-style dinner, a community dance, a beard-growing contest ind a Job’s Daughters dinner. , ..NPy ★ 1 Saturday’s events,tncbtoe the all-Wasto era horse show by .the Masonic TCm-. pie, the festival parade, art exhibit, Jaycee chickeit barbeque, softball games and a square dance.* TIIE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1967 A—5 Corner Saginaw and Huron FE 4-2511 "to (xAutes--- TW, ””E>ajde/-:t&--Sciuw>^, Check the last page of section A for. more Waite's Backrto-School ads garland TURTLES WIN______and Garlond turtles are always number one especially when they're pullovers In lush wool with saddle shoulder detailing. Other turtle winners on ■ our third floor, short sleeves, long sleeves, stripes qnd solids, smooth knits and the bulkies you love. First prize, too, for rich plaids in kilts, slim and A-Line skirts. Sizes 5 to 15 and 36 to 40. Sweaters . . . $9 to *18 Skirts ..... ^10 to $14 V Sportswear... Third Floor Double Wool Knit 3-Pc. Dresses $2990 Value 40.00 Save 10.10 Luggage ... Fifth Floor off-to-school! special I save *5 American Tourister Tote-Bag Reg. $24.95 NOW $1995 Offer ends Sept, 2nd. For the first lime evtr, sov# on the casual charm, beautifully stylasl American Touriilcr Tala. Richly grained vinyl with heavy-duty zipper and leek. Flus luxurious brocade lining with twe eulsiza zipper packets ... in scarlclt, blue, twned, white, silver dusk, alive and fawn. Oiler ends September 2nd. Double wool knit jacket, shell and slim skirt, dresses. Two-tone and contrasting embroidered trim. You'll want several of these in the New Fall Shades. Dresses ... Third Floor Girls' 100% Orion Cardigan FAR AH: ML This is the Slak-Back for boys, best-looking, bestfitting fashjon item of the season. You'll like the spicy new colors, permanently pressed fabrics, and sharp' "Slak-Back" rear pockets. with FaraPress® *5 and *6. Boys' Wear... Second Floor navy, gold or persimmon. Girls' Wear ... Second Floor MX *4 to *12 Town 'n' Travel SHIFT DRESS Colton shell knit shift, fully lined, Wear belted or not as you choose. Short sleeves. Zippered back. Espresso Brown, Dresden Blue and Ruby Red. Sizes IQ to 20 and 12Vi to 20Vi. Charge It at Waite's. Sweater L H $5 ti $6 1 Qj 1 Co-ordinate the baby shaker stretch cardigan with your U .new fall skirts and slacks. Jr j* Completely washable. White, ^***/^*H 'of Cinderella has a ball going Back-to-School in delightful new fall dresses. Choose your Cinderella dress from a wide selection in many styles. Sizes 3 to 6x and 7 to 14. Sizes $450 f0 $14 Girls' Wear,.. Second Floor aflMXI m 'OffiOi w@be& KORATROK Model 38™Slak-Back tm Be a headliner in the Slak-Back by Farah. Tomorrow's casual for today's action, available in pace-setting fashion cold's, vigorously powered by rich solids, heather tones and patterns. Best news of the year for young men. Sizes 29 to 38 *7-’8 Men's Ween*... Street Floor . Regular 1.35 NOW 3pr.$325 | YOU SAVE 80c Reg.$1.65 NOW $1.29 Reg.$1.50 NOW $1.19 PANTY-HOSE Reg $3.00 NOW $2.39 Only once a year do you have the opportunity to take advantage Of big savings on beautiful Phoenix stockings. All styles, all colors are now on sale at special low prices. Stock-up now for yourself and for gift giving later on. ail Seamless styles including cantrece® and agilok® are on sall f -Sale Ends Aug. 19th Hosiery ... Street Floor . » • THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 West Huron Street Pontiac, Michigan 48056 Thursday, august'1^, i%7 ' Xxecutlva TIM President and Editor Hint j. Rid Louis H. Schimmel A widespread area loses an invaluable ally and friend in the untimely death of Louis H. Schimmel. One of the established authorities on municipal and State finances, this j outstanding citizen J was blessed with 1 unusual perspicac- | lty and a keen insight that pene« | trated to the 1 depths of every-1 thing in which he I was a participant. I And Mr. Schimmel was spread over a Wide area in a variety of activities. ★ ★ ★ The City of Pontiac had no more staunch friend and ally than this public spirited citizen and he has contributed an untold number of hours to the betterment of Pontiac in a variety of ways. A considerable part of this might SCHIMMEL rightly have fallen within the realms of professional duties. But he disclaimed financial recognition. Mr, Schimmel was quiet, Jovial and invariably with a smile, many of which he sired himself. He was a valuable contribution to any gathering and was welcomed wherever he went. Often a shrewd, practical and penetrating mind is associated with a somewhat arbitrary attitude, but there was none of this in the man under discussion. Unhappily, he has been the victim of rather intense suffering and pain over the past few weeks. His wide circle of friends, acquaintances and neighbors Have lost a valuable'* ally who will be sorely missed in many ways in the days ahead. May God rest his soul. See Need for Gas Stations on Throughways Many people have expressed curiosity and dissatisfaction over the fact you can’t buy gasoline on throughways. Often you face a stretch of considerably more than a hundred miles without a gas station en route. The law prohibits them. Somehow, this seems wrong. Surely the matter could be divided equitably between various companies without showing favoritism. Stations could be assigned fairly and impartially by a board made up, of the companies themselves. None would be along the actual traveled roadways but all would be located at the various comfort stations which are always off the throughways. Hence, the gasoline services wouldn’t interfere with travel whatsoever. ★ ★ ★ Unless there’s some cogent reason -why thig isn’t possible Congressmen should look into the matter. Communists Withhold Payments, UN Totters That greedy, uncooperative Soviet Union owes the UN just over $62 million for peace keeping activities. The U.S. has paid in full. We always do. Communist satellite nations have followed their leader and withheld payments. Probably this was a flat order from the Kremlin. id The tp is badly in debt. It owes over $100 million. ★ ■ ★ ★ U.S. taxpayers forked over nearly half of the total of all peace keeping maneuvers. Some Of this money was on voluntary measures. On these same costs, Russia volunteered — nothing. The UN actually totters. But Uncle Sap keeps it going. Remember—it’s your money. There are over three billion people in this world. How long can slightly less than 200 million pay all the bills, lose its citizens in war and pay the costs around the globe? We are only six per cent of the total. How long can this continue? Remember — they’re your boys. Remember — it’s your moneys -And The Deep Red (Ink) Sea! David Lawrence Says: German-U.S. Ties Dramatized WASHINGTON - The implications of the meeting here between Chancellor Kiesinger of ' Germany and President Johnson are far - reaching. The conference dramatizes before the world the close rela-[ tionship tween West1 Germany and LAWRENCE the United States. For despite the withdrawal of French troops from the NATO military force by Gen. De Gaulle, the fact remains that the United States is pledged by treaty to an instantaneous defense of W e s t Germany as well as France if they should be attacked. Since this commitment has in no way been diminished by the French attitude, it is natural for the U.S. to rely more on West Germany for troops, and to urge that German defense against a possible invasion by hostile forces be not reduced. There is in the background something even more important, which is reflected in a London dispatch that came over United Press International wires coincident with the conference at the White House here. It reads as follows: “The Soviet Union’s deter- ready to take ewe of crisies which might suddenly develop if tensions are again heightened. The current policy, of course, is to try to improve relations not only with the Soviet Union but with % countries in Eastern Europe. The Johnson-Kiesinger conference reaffirms American friendship with the German people, and it also makes clear that the U.S. itself has not changed its mind about the importance of bringing East and West Germany together. While the issue of reunification is at present not being pressed, it has not been forgotten. France already possesses nuclear weapijns and Red China has produced the same kind of bombs. It would be natural for the Germans to try a peaceful way of achieving a reunion with their fellow countrymen. But if this fails, they could someday insist upon the right to make nuclear weapons, not for offense but for defense. Bob Considine Says: . Ruth Crowded Full Life Into Limited 53 Years Voice of the People: ‘WhyAllow Communists lb Overrun Our Why fight Communists in Vietnam when U.S. is overrun with them, publicly preaching h a t e, Vicdenee, arson and murder? LBJ talks “that law and order must prevail,” yet Rap Brown and Carmichael roam free to talk of more riots, killing, etc. Why not deport these two to Cuba permanently? After hearing Castro’s warm-up speech, these three deserve each other. ★ ★ ★ The American people are being dragged under with high prices, far too many taxes, crime and nasty politics. The President proved the last point when he had to play a game while Detroit was burning. ★ ★ ★ Election is coming, so let’s all vote to get the “Bird Family” out of the White House and pray for a man in there to run our country, not ruin it as the present administration is doing. Bring bur boys home and protect America first. E. R. POWELL 3160 S. GERALD, ROCHESTER ---- * Driver Sees Potential Killers on Highway Trucks and other cars that have long ladders or poles sticking out behind should have them clearly marked. I think that’s the law. Recently I’ve seen several of these potential killers sailing along with no marking. The jug’s the place for drivers like this. OLD MAN B Use Newspaper Space for Important Topics A recent article in The Pontiac Press was entitled "Go-Go Dancer to Wed in Working Clothes.” Why will a newspaper bother to use space and time to print such a thing? Why make such an issue and go into such detail when we live in a world declining in morality and values and populated by hipsters and molesters? The space in the newspaper ,should be used for more important and unreported topics. HUGUETTE BLUMENSCHEIN 5768 BERKLEY 'Complain, to Congressmen About Taxes* A recent article stated that “a middle-income married American earning $10,000 a year with a five per cent raise (which means $500 more per year) will only have a buying power of $185 out of the $500 if the consumer price index rises about three per cent over the year." After file 10 per cent surtax and if Social Security taxes rise, you will only have $2.20 left of the pay raise to pay state and local taxes. The article states that even if you are single you are much in the same dilemma. * ★ ★ Wasn’t over-taxation one of the reasons the pllyHm« left England? Where do we go? Write your Congressman and complain. Maybe we won’t have to leave this country after S. PEARSALL 822 WADSWORTH Rights Leaders Striking Far Afield NEW YORK - Hard to believe that Babe Ruth was oply 53 when he died 19 years ago yesterday. He crowded • so much into that comparatively limited life. He lived the kind of life that would kill a horse, but it wasn’t the life he led that ki!i1!rra'Mr. CONSIDINE Cancer earmarked him, with its customarily pitiless impartiality, and mination to prevent the nu- 0ut of the game he clear arming of Germany even, m0re than base- appears to be the primary ball — the game of life, reason behind the Kremlin’s With the help of the con-sudden readiness to hasten a summate baseball historian ban on the spread of nuclear a lot of money by a ring of Cuban bookmakers who had flattered him by promising to fix a race for him. * * * “No good for the kids,” Babe said. He was genuinely interested in kids, probably because he was one so long. Question and Answer Is the Milton Henry mentioned In connection witii the Detroit Black Nationalists the same one who was a Pontiac City Commissioner? DISTRICT 7 REPLY In Washington: Teen Problems Begin at Home By JAMES MARLOW AP News Analyst WASHINGTON Jg§ There’s plenty at home to use up their energy since the civil rights movement is bogged down, but some of its leaders are reaching way beyond civil rights for something to attack or denounce. Latest example: The Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee is now M . accusing the MARLOW Jews of atrocities against the Arabs. Before that Dr. Martin Luther King, head of file Southern Christian Leadership Conference, was denouncing American involvement in the Vietnamese war and calling .fids country “the greatest purveyor of violence In the world.” -■ He called for a coalition of the antiwar and civil rights forces. ★ * * In a recent letter SNCC charged Zionists seized Palestine through terror, force and massacres. Hie publication carried two photographs purporting to show massacres in the Gaza Strip in 1956. SNCC denies it’s; pnti-Semitic. ARAB PROPAGANDA ' That’s not file way Irwin Shulman, southeastern director of the Anti-Defamation League, sees it. He says the whole business smacks of anti-Semitism. He said the published photographs previously appeared in Arab propaganda publications. And, he said, the SNCC charges represent the total propaganda line taken by file Arabs with some changes which, he said, reflect Soviet views. Ralph Featherston, SNCC’s program director, said his organization had received no financial help from the Arabs. But it does need financial It would be interesting to know what kind of financial shape King’s organization is in. FREEDOM HOUSE After King’s attack on the war, Freedom House—an organization whose director# include former Illinois Sen. Paul Douglas, a famous liberal; Roy Wilkins of NAACP, and Sen. Edward W. Brooke, R-Mass., the only Negro in the Senate—issued a paper attacking King in turn. It criticized him for. lend- ing his “mantle of respectability” to a peace movement, which, it said, contained “well - known Communist allies and luminaries of the hate-American left.” King denied Communists , influenced his war stand. But now King, overshadowed for months by the more bizarre antics of Brown and Carmichael, has another idea whiah, if it got out of control, might cause more trouble than anything seen in this country in 1967. ★ ★ *’1 He has called for nonviolent programs of organized, mass civil disobedience as a weapon for fighting racial discrimination and poverty. For example: coupling Negro school boycotts with mass sit-ins at factories to demand jobs. 1 MASSIVE CAMP-OUT And he has another idea: a massive camp-out in Washington. He said this would mean taking people from Mississippi and camping in the capital while refusing to eat or move until action was taken by Congress to ease slum conditions and economic hardslrips for Negroes. But that kind of camp-out weapons, diplomatic sources said today.” The German chancellor declared in Washington that if his government were to sign the treaty for the nonproliferation of nuclear weapons, it would require assurances that nonnuclear nations “cannot be the object of political blackmail by a power which possesses the weapons.” The most practical way to defend West Germany, therefore, is to have a nuclear force established under the auspices of a united Europe, so that the trigger would be pulled by an international command the moment there was a nuclear attack from the Soviet Union. This is the German chancellor’s real desire. The reduction, however, of the number of ground troops maintained in West German would, in file opinion of file American government, be construed in Eastern Europe as a sign of weakness. Hence, file U.S. has urged that a substantial force be Verbal Orchids Mr. and Mrs. Albert C. Benter of Southfield; , 51st wedding anniversary. Mr.and Mrs. Orsel Dudley of Orion Township; 53rd wedding anniversary. ' Fred Lieb, I wrote what became Babe’s last literary will and testament It remains a memorable experience. He was in great pain most of the moaths while the. book was being put together. It made his cronicaliy bad memory for names harrowingly worse. , And there was as much talk about his condition as his memoirs. He didn’t know what was wrong with him and nobody was going to tell him not even the doctor — the great Hip-polyte Wertheijn — who operated on him. * ★ ★ ★ I was made a part of the conspiracy by Babe’s two good friends and advisers, his i attorney, Melvyn Gordon Low-enstein, and his buddy from many years back, J. Paul Carey, the transportation wiz-° ard. I was solemnly assured that if Babe learned that he was a terminal case he’d “go out the window.” OWN DIAGNOSIS v Babe diagnosed his trouble himself. “Dkmned teeth!” he’d groan in" the husky whisper which had replaced his organ-toned voice ol old. “... ‘ couple of infected teeth.” To humor him, his doctors (at one time he bad eight) ordered the teeth extracted. By RAY CROMLEY i WASHINGTQN (NEA) — A survey made by this reporter of data from 12 states coast-to-coast indicates a pattern in the clandestine narcotics and liquor selling, dope a d d i c - | tion, glue sniffing and p r o s t i - I_____ tution in a CROMLEY sizable n u m b e r ‘ of high schools and even junior high and intermediate schools. From South Boston there are reports of traveling liquor stores that do 'a boom business selling cheap liquor and wine to youngsters at black market prices. - * * * From Washington state and the Northwest comes the report that teen-agers in some numbers engage in prostitution ‘ where teenagers can bring .their girl friends for illicit relations. Ip Massachusetts, reports tell of teen-ajgers taking spiked oranges to school in their lunch boxes. Hypodermic needles are used to shoot gin, scotch or vodka into the „fruit. These phenomena are no respecters of neighborhood, state or race. The data comes from middle-class suburbs, from the poor sections of towp and from high-income neighborhoods. The youth involved are both white and Negro. At one leading East Coast university, where surveys indicated 15 per cent of the students had taken marijuana, hashish or LSD, reports Indicated t w o -thirds of the group were on the dean’s list of superior students. * * * In New York state, one d The officer described a group he had in custody: The parents gave them liberal allowances. Some had cars. There was no supervision. In most cases, officials reported absent or overly permissive parents. Some officials said of the youngsters they arrested on narcotics charges that there, was no stable, significant male adult whose strength the addict could absorb. The father was dead, or weak, or he had abandoned the family, either physically or morally. R. the father lived at home, he was a big drinker or spent his time in making money. The mother was the big shot. She had subdued the father. Often the young dope addicts have been protected by their parents from the consequences of their actions. They’ve never known the cost of wrongdoing. Their parents jcia engage m jnusuiu- .. „_______. '-------- lueir parents to raise money for pep PoRce arrested 23 young- have continually made excus-mariiuana op LSD. That ®ere 0,1 Charges of peddling es. When their vnnn<»t«.. . WHK. ... „ „ He made only one change in in Washington could wind up Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Findley the hook, He derided ndt to in a riot at a time when' riots-- . of 18 Porter; include in the texj the story are in the.airv- 54th wedding Anniversary. of having been gypped out of information is echoed from coast-to-qoast. ^ In upper New York state, a principal of a middle-class neighborhood elementary school reports picking up one, two and sometimes three or four empty tabes of airplane glne daily on school grounds. On some high school *nnd college; campuses in a number of states, it is reported marijuana is as easy to Acquire as candy bars. * * jfc* * From Alabama, there are reports of open sex facilities narcotics. The youth were a haVe been caught, thwhave cross section of the middle- often pulled strings and the class community. Only one charges dropped was a Negro. * * * The pattern in these 12 states was in die homes. Th» Pontiac Press to doffwrk „ JEHff » cento • week; where to Oakland, Genesee, Llv-**—•““** umot --■* • It to Ilk Member of ABC Officials working on thq problem complain that pap-1 ents don’t seem concerned enough to give their children the supervision they should. One Virginia judge has been quoted as saying that if parents gave their children a strong sense of direction and moral values, juvenile offenses would drop drastically. This is' a problem we can’t throw at the government; Onnly an aroused citizenry ' can change things. THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1967 A—7 ' \ c k/btii •> tall, alim or rounded, yonng or more mature, most every girl or woman today is concerned about Her figure. And right now, while you're thinking about new atttumn clothes, is an ideal time to take.a look at yourself and see what shape you're in. Even if you feel you have a figure problenj, we feel we can help you. How do we know? We talked with women like yourself, with our expert fitters and figure consultants, with buyers and designers, too. Just take a few minutes now to read about shapemakers that can help you look better and feel better in your new-season clothes. What's new In doth** lor FaU? Generally speaking, the look is young and feminine, yet newly curved—a closerfitting top moving in in the middle. Your bra and girdle are important clothes should glide on over a natural-looking figure, skimming close to bosom and hips. The control should be light but firm, giving you a younger feeling, allowing more freedom and action. The silhouette is easy—shaped! to the body—the top small, curved and close, with gently molded waist, smooth hips and thighs. About the bra and girdle you wear now: ■statistics show that over half4he women of America wear the wrong bra, and much the same probably goes for girdles, too. For instance. Do your bra straps dent your shoulders? Does the back of the bra fide up? Does your girdle pinch, poke or bind? Does it (or do you) roll over at the waist? Does your girdle Squeeze arid make unsightly bulges? All of these, unfortunately^ are common complaints, and easy to correct. Read on." You can have a bra that fita right. They come in a few basic styles, but in many variations. 1. The soft-cup bra, unlmed —can be regular or underwire. 2. The contour bra—any bra with d thin, soft lining in the cup to give just a hint of shaping or extra support. S. The padded bra—to add dimension to the slight figure. t. The strapless bra—any bra without straps. Most all come; in many lengths: short, fP, or longline with or without a bottom band. And, of course, there are variations beyond these basics: All in all Hudson’s Pontiac hasorcr J5<) styles in brassieres—each with u sjteciid reason for being in stock. 1 How should you choose a brassiere? The fitting room is the only real way to be sure of getting the proper size and style! The bra that’s perfect for your friend is not necessarily a good choice for you. And the choice is so varied. Not only is a bra measured for your body size, but your bone structure and cup size are also important factors, with cup sizes ranging from AA (slight development) to A, B, C, D, DD and even E in order of increasing fullness. Your fitter has been carefully instructed so she can advise you correctly, fit you perfectly in 10 to 15 minutes. Hi There axa ao many types of girdles. Here again there are important considerations. A-girdle with a rigid front can flatten your tummy. Side or back panels of heavier elastics or rigid fabrics can minimize full hips. Heavy thighs get smooth control with panties that have long-to-longer legs—one1 pantie girdle even comes in thigh sizes A,B,C like a bra cup. High-waist girdles or panties accent your waistline; panties with a natural-looking back are ideal under pants, the mini briefs and mini girdles control with soft pressure; some shape-makers even have stockings attached. Or you might prefer an all-in-one garment for one smooth controlling curre. In any case, the choice depends on your figure type, your wardrobe needs, your personal taste. How should you choose a girdle? Tile fitting room is a must. Because Hudson’s Pontiac has over 125 girdle styles and sizes, your fitter will analyze your figure, help choose the shapemaker just right for you. Only when you try it on and fasten the garters can you really tell. Then you should stand, sit, bend, to check the fit and comfort. What does a fitter actually do? 1- She deter mines your, basic figure type. You’re a straight-hip figure (full midriff and bosom, narrow hips)' or average (well proportioned) or a full-hipped (weight concentrated below waist). 2. She takes proper measures. S. She judges your specific needs, keeping in mind thi fashions you’re doing the figuring for. 4. She fits you, and double-checks the fit, noting especially the position of the garment, the fit at waist and thigh. Sounds a bit complicated, but not foY our trained ' experts—15 to 20 minutes is all it takes. Know your fabrics. No doubt you know about elastic and satin and cotton, but it helps to understand the newer ones, too. Spandex, for instance, a manmade stretch fiber introduced a few years ago. You see it often (Lycra®, Vyrene® and Blue C® are popular spandex fibers) because it comes in various weights like stockings do, and gives flexible control that can vary from light smoothers to firm controllers. Shapemaker construction may combine stretch fibers with no^-stretch panels for rigid firmness. There you’ll see cotton, rayon, polyester, lots of light quick-drying nylon. What about lace* and pretty trima? They’re very much a part of the feminine pidtue. Because shapemaker designers know what a woman likes, you'll find touches of dainty embroidery or panels or trims of lace, pretty enough to show. Delicate? In looks only. For today’s laces are mostly man-made fibers that wear long; some stretch laces even give good support in spite of their fragile appearance. la color important in ahapemakora? Indeed it is, For real ladylike fashion wear skin tones that blend with your skin—they don’t show through white or pale colors or light fabrics. You'll find other qolors, too, of course. Pastels or bright tones, basic white or black, even colorful prints just for fun! Jt And thora'a more, more, more. Shape-makers are a big story, especially at Hudson’s. Among other things, we’ll alter your garments to suit your individual requirements, keep your measurements on file if you wish. At Hudson’s Pontiac we have expert fitters and figure consultants to help you, in the privacy of beautiful, comfortable fitting rooms. Our unique services at Hudson's even include the careful fitting of many special needs such as surgical garments. Seeing la believing. All "ft takes is a few minutes in the Bra and Girdle departments at Hudson’s Pontiac, 1st Floor. Stop in soon—see what we can really do to put you in great shape. HUDSON’S Hudson’s Pontiac Open Monday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, t ill 9:0 1 “We have not yet found anything to substantiate the charges. All kinds of rumors can be expected,” the diplomat told newsmen at a “background” briefing. He had cited charges by civilian candidates that Chief of State Gen. Nguyen Van Thieu and Premier Nguyen Cao Ky have been using illegal pressure and threats to ensure their election Sept. 3. “It is possible that there will be overzealous officials who (nay exceed their authority,” he said. The diplomat said that even former Premier Tan Van Huong, a leading civilian candidate, had acknowledged this while making the charges against government officials and police. In Washington, where some members of Congress have criticized the Vietnamese elections, president Johnson yesterday said. “This is not to say that the campaign or the election in the south will be without blemish. It is only to say that an effort is being made, without strong endorse-ment, to conduct an open election in a nation under fire.” Khte GIFTS FREE.. 6-Pack 16-0z. COCA-COLA or 2 ... 12-0Z. SIZE LIBBEfAtfegno'j GLASSES or Triple Holden RED STAMPS With the purchase of 10 or more gallons of GULF GASOLINE £> GRAND OPENING mj 6H1F STATION 4186 SASHABAW at ISLAND PARK O Mile North of Dixio Hwy.) When tjOtife tank/ ia tm... get tke, “economy” go'f If you look for Economy... Make it “ECONOMY" Gulf! THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1967 A—11 BUDDY L. TRUCK LAYAWAY SALE LAYAWAY NOW Other Style* Now Shown SAVE Corner Saginaw and Huron FE 4-2511 FOURTH FLOOR I Check Page A-5 for more Waite's Ads Sale *2.49 72 x 108, or Spring-On™ Twin Fitted, Reg. 3.00 FITTED SHEETS WITH FAMOUS SPRING-ON™ ELASTIC CORNERS: . Reg. Sale Reg. Sale Cot,30x72_________£.....3.30 $2.49 Extralg.HoUyw'd,78x80..-.8.00 $1.49 Youth, 33x66_______*___..3.30 $2.49 Day, 33 x 75______J_____3.30 $2.49 FLAT SHEETS: Single, 36x 75-_...„..„..3.30 $2.49 Double, 81x108______ -..,3.40 $2.79 Twin, 39 x‘76...........3.00 $2.49 Extra long Jwin/72x 120 ....3.80 $3.19 Foam twin, 39x76........3.00 $2.49 Extra Ig. double, 81x120 ..4.20 $3.69 Extra long twin, 39 x 80 .....3.40 $2.79 Extra wide dbl., 90 X108.4.00 $3.59 Three quarter, 48 x 76 ....m.3.40 $2.79 Oueen, 90x108.—-------5.00 $4.19 Double,54x76__________—JJ.40 $2.79 King, 108x120 ___________8.00 $6.99 Foam double, 54 x 76 —340 $2.79 Extralongdouble,54x80.4.00 $3.49 PILLOWCASES: Long queen, 60 x 80......5.00 $4.29 42 x 38..............— King,72x84____________..5.30 $5.49 45x38------------ Hollywood, 78 x 76_____-6.99 $6.29 42 x 48.. ,.1.58 $1.38 ,.1.78 $1.58 ,.2.18 $1.89 SPRINGMAID MUSLINS 72 * 1Q8 or Fitted, Reg. 2.50............................................... 81 x 108 or Fitted, Reg. 3.00 .............................................. Your Choice... Belleair Mattress Pads "PRINCESS ROSE" 100% DACRON* PILLOW Reg, 5.00 ^ Large 21x27-incl^size 2**6” 100% DuPont Dacron 88 Polyester. Ideal for many years of sleeping comfort. Print pink or blue. Charge it at Waite's. A full 544 p6und capacity 16.2 cubic foot freezer at a. savings of $25. Features drop front basket, .adjustable shelves, magnetic door ceafs, and big shelf storage. Automatic cold control for maximum freezing with a.20 degree range to choose from. Freezers... Lower Level. A merry* go-round of new cooking flavors for cool kitchen or patio cooking 100% DOWN PILLOWS Reg. 15.00 to 17.00 Jumbo 21x27" Size *10” Your choice of 100% down or 50% down, 50% feathers in medium soft, or soft down pillows. DACRON® "CALCUTTA" TOWELS by J. P. Stevens' Reg. 3.50 $049 Bath Size £ Reg. 1.80 $150 Hand Size ] Reg. 70c CQc W. Cloth J7 Reversible shirred jacquard towels of 100% cotton terry. Choose from blue, gold, red, avocado, orange, and white. Co-ordinates with Nocturne. "NOCTURNE" TOWELS by J. P. Stevens Reg. 2.00 Bath Size Reg. 140 Hand Size Reg. 60c W. Cloth *1 $]19 49c 100% cotton sheared terry With the look of velvet. Comes in red, pink, blue, gold, avocado, orange, and white. Coordinates with Calcutta. Charge Yours at Waite's. Ambassador • 16.2 Cubic Foot FREEZER SAVE $25 & $184 "SNOWH1TE" FOAM RUBBER PILLOWS Reg. 6.00 Extra Plump ^ for $^99 Lovely white prints on colored background. Wonderful for many years of sleeping comfort. Charge Yours at Waite's. Reg. 5.00 Twin Flat Reg. 5.00 $099 Twin Fitted O Reg. 5.00 Full Flat V-7 Reg. 6.00 Full Fitted Pads are filled with 100% Celadoud (or easy washing and drying. Smooth, easy bed making. 3.98 Value 2 ^ 588 Toys... Fifth Floor Save 10.07 St $1488 IT'S VERTICAL Takes Up no more counter apace dinner plate See how you can add fun and new flavor to your meals! Hundreds of exciting new recipes possible through a combination, of rotisserie broiling, baking and roasting. Continuous turning: cooks faster, browns meats . evenly. Cook roasts up to 8 / pounds, large hams, 2 chickens at once, seafoods! 4-iousewares... Lower Level, Reg. 4.00 Twin flat Reg. 6.00 Twin Fitted Reg. 6.00 Full Flat Reg. 7.00 $£“99 Full Fitted vJ Pads are filled with 100% Dacron Polyester. Machine washable and dryable. Flat have elastic bands and fitted elastic skirt. ® Filled COMFORTERS Beautiful floral print oe smooth, long wearing french crepe. Filled with fluffy DuPont "Red Label" Dacron Polyester. Choose from several colors for year* of bedroom beauty.’ Charge Yours. A. Buddy L Pony-Xpress, Kentucky Derby special of rugged steel delivers price-winning horse and colt. B. Buddy L. REA Express, features- 2 sliding doors, swing-out back doors, arid realistic billboards. C. Buddy L Sunshine® Delivery Truck, Ifere comes those jolly Sunshine bakers delivering those yummy cookies. D. Buddy L Traveling Zoo, comes with six different jungle animals, each riding in his own cage. E. Buddy. L Kennel Truck, includes an assortment of 12 pedi-green champions. carousel rotisserie broiler Hurry! This Is 1 t! The Fabulous Money- Sa Sears fi mnm SAVE *10 to *30 Luxury-Quilt Mattresses SAVE $10-Firm«Buoyant Foam Regular $49.95 Each Full or Twin Mattress 3988 Matching Posture-Male Foundations, . Regular 49.95 . ”.......,.........•...... • • • ®*«h No Money Down on Sear* Easy Payment Plan 39“! SAVE *10-Firm Innerspring Regular $59.95 Each Full or Twin Mattress 4988 Wake up feeling rested! Try the luxury of a mattress that’s scientifically built for firm-posture support. Non-sag borders, green and-white flocked cover. 504 coils in twin mattress. Matching Posture-Mate Foundations have firmer center A Qgg coils for better support. Regular 59.95 ..........each No Money Down on Sears Easy Payment Plan SAVE *30-Deluxe Innerspring Regular $99.95 Each Full or Twin Mattress 6988 Serofoam polyurethane. Separate inner-roll border resists sagging. Rayon damask cover. 900 coils in twin mattress. /^Q88 'ii Deluxe Posture-Mate Foundations, Reg. $99.95 each 0:7 . No Money Down on Sears Easy Payment Plan Deluxe Hollywood Beds with Headboards Sturdy natural finish crib Innerspring Crib Mattresses Regular 9.98 ^99 Embossed vinyl 4-Pc. Innerspring or Serofoam Outfits Choice of Decorator Headboards Sear$ Furniture Department Sears Low Price Includes All Thiss e Quilt-top firm mattress— 216-coil innerspring or buoyant 5-in. Serofoam polyurethane • Matching foundation uttlt for deep - down support. e Adjustable metal bed frame on casters e Choice of a beautiful decorator headboard "Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back" SEARS Downtown Pontiac Phone FE 5-41 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1967 A—18 in Our Historu Today * At 9 A.M. jj I 1 Drop everything! Plan to be here early W and treat yourself to the most spectac-^ r ular saving yet! All brand new, 1st quality^ ^ items for every room in your home, yt Check the huge saving, then rush to PRICKS SUSHED! Rugged Colonial Pieces Topped with SOLID MAPLE 3288 Here’s the beauty of authentic Colonial styling at a fabulous low price. Big rugged pieces are superbly crafted of finest solid hardwood with thick maple tops. Beds are all solid hardwoods. Heavy carved bases. Salem maple finish. Save now! PhoilC Sears For All Your Furniture Needs Impressive for its smooth simplicity of line and superb cabinetry . . . this suite is a rare value indeed. Master-crafted of choice walnut-veneers with unusual parquet wood inserts. Dramatic black parting. r^ils; are highlighted by satin brass strips. Dovetailed, dustproofed drawers. Big plate glass mirror. Hurry in and save on tins deluxe suite. Regular 47.95 Night Stand .......... -rrevr... . 39.88 ■ ’ SeWs Furniture Dept '■ ; ' NO MONEY DOWN on se SAVE *70 3-Pc. Contemporary Bedroom, Unheard of at this Low Price! Regular wh 269.95 ^ Sears Exclusive Design! Includes All Thist • 9-Drawer 66-in. Triple Dresser with Mirror • Matching 5-Drdwer Chest • Queen, Full of Twin Size Pdnel Bed * isy Payment Plan , A—14 - '1 n NFI Cl ILlilX THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1967 u “Advertising doesn't make things cost more; it makes them cost less. The more units of your product you can sell, the more of your investment is returned to you, the more people you can employ, the more machinery you can buy, and the more products you can make. Provided you keep tell- ing people, more people about your product. Telling people is advertising. And advertising is one of the big reasons this country has gotten where it is: by raising people's sights, by telling them what's available, and by making products available at lower and lower cost.'' Excerpt from an address by Mr. Robert K. Kintner, $ " Meldrum & Fewsmith, Inc., Cleveland, Ohio. has advertising you probably are MOST interested in, because it is the advertising of the local community, local stores, local individuals. It is the NEWS of local businesses and mqr-kets where you will buy. It is your catalog of items and prices ... a listing you cannot find anywhere else, at any other time! 'HBsyou are in business your advertising ““"should be in this newspaper to reach the« most number of buyers at a fan* tastically low cost per customer. Call us for the details. 1 || lyou are an individual with things or ■““■services to sell, swap, or buy our Class* ified Ads are your low cast agents. Easy to use, just call 332-8181 . . . our Advisers will be pleased to help you. S 11 your business or your hpme is located ““"anywhere in this area you wilt save time, money and "travel by reading and 'shopping' the news columns and advertising in every issue of The Pontiac Press. THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1967 A—11 STARTS FUMY ... 2 RAYS ORLY, FRIDAY ARD SATURDAY ... AT OUR PORTIAC HALL STORE HUGHES-HATCHER-SUFFRIN AFTER-INVENTORY ODDMENT CLEARANCE at exactly off original prices! These are oddments — the broken sizes, one- and twos-of-a-kind, the slow sellers of 1967 that showed up in our inventory. But they're all dependable HHS quality, in fact, they're mostly famous makes, in both summer and year-round weights. Still, out they must go, and we've cut prices in half to insure they do. (As a matter of fact, our Early Bird specials are reduced much more than half.) Better hurry though . . . quantities are limited and the sale lasts just two days. 623 SUMMER AND YEAR-ROUND 1- AND 2-PANT SUITS AT § PRICE ... MOSTLY FAMOUS BRANDS Rarely will you find an opportunity like this to buy good quality clothing . • at such savings! These are odds and ends in many styles and fabrics. The sizes are broken, 6f course, but check the suit list, and if your size is there, sufts f|f| 11A AA *uits EC A A IOC AA suits ATP JPA !Bw*d°n%iw“181 -01 'i45 79.50 »<>» 39.75 «s 11U.UU now 55.UU 20139.UU n.w b/.OU Size . 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 46 48 50 52 m 85.00 £? 42.50 53119.50 r 59.75 34 150.00 r 75.00 100 95.00 r 47.50 so 125.00 T 62.50 28 185.00 r 92.50 41100.00 now 50.00 46 129.50 r 64.75 12 200.00 S£ 100.00 Reg. 6 8 10 20 47 13 44 12 16 9 3 4 4 Short 3 5 9 10 17 9 15 1 5 3 Long 2 5 12 30 15 36 17 22 8 5 5 2 Extra Short 2 3 5 6 7 2 3 Extra Long 8 15 4 15 5 8 4 5 8 4 Portly 5 8 2 8 4 9 3 5 4 2 Portly Short 2 5 2 5 2 4 3 2 Portly Long 2 1 3 4 2 SPORTSWEAR . . . Vi PRICE 224 SPORT SHIRTS, long and short sleeve, ivy and reg. collar, some famous makes, were 3.95-S5 ........... .............NOW 1.97 293 SPORT SHIRTS, long and short sleeve, some famous makes, ivy and reg. collar; some knits, were $5 ................NOW 2.S0 152 SPORT SHIRTS, long and short sleeve, ivy and reg. collar, and Indian Madras, were $5-$9........................NOW 2.504.S0 85 VELOUR SHORT SLEEVE SPORT SHIRTS, were 7.95-14.95 .......NOW 3.97 90 SHORT SLEEVE KNIT SHIRTS, were 3.50-56 ........... .. NOW 1.75-S3 31 LINED and UNLINED JACKETS, some famous makes, , were 8.95-29.95 ......... ........................ NOW 3.9>-14.97 40 FAMOUS MAKE RAINCOATS, were 19.95460.................NOW 9.97-530 362 MEN'S CASUAL SUCKS, were $5-$9 NOW 1.974.50 156 SUMMER SUCKS, Dacron blends, were 9.95................NOW 4.97 25 MEN'S SKI SUCKS, were $15-$30 .. ...........NOW 5.97 91 YEAR ROUND and SUMMER SUCKS, were 12.95-17.95 .........WOW 5.97 282 YEAR ROUND and SUMMER SUCKS, were 15.95-17.95 .........NOW 7.97 156 MEN'S FME QUALITY YUR ROUND and SUMMER SUCKS, were 19.95-29.50 .,.................................NOW 9.97-14.75 BOYS’ and STUDENTS’ . . . Vi PRICE 95 LIGHTWEIGHT JACKETS, cottons, sizes 1442, were 7.98-12.98 .NOW 3.97 67 HEAVYWEIGHT STUDENT JACKETS, sizes 3642, were 14.98-$55 ........................................NOW 7.47-24.97 95 STUDENT UNLINED JACKETS, were 7.98-12.98 ...............NOW 3.97-5.49 64 JUNIOR and PREP UNLINED JACKETS, were 7.98-9.98 ........NOW 2.974.97 38 STUDENT SPORT COATS, reg. and summerweight, regs., and longs, were 17.95-$35 ...... ......................NOW 8.47-14.97 221 LONG and SHORT SLEEVE SPORT SHIRTS, sizes 6-20, were $3-55 ................. .. .NOW 1.49-1.99 181\ LONG arid SHORT SLEEVE KNIT SHIRTS, were 2.50-54 NOW 1.251.49 131 STUDENT SPORT SHIRTS, were $4-55......... NOW 1.99-2.49 140 SWIM SUITS, were $4-55 .NOW 1.99 Notice: Because of the extremely low prices, oil sales are final. No returns, no exchanges,,no refunds, no .layaways, no C.O.D.'s, rao 'deliveries, bdsic alterations will be made and charged for at cost. I AT OUR PONTIAC EARLY BIRD SPECIALS GASH ’N’ GARRY, NO ALTERATIONS FOR MEN 125 SUMMER & YEAR ROUND SUITS were 69.50 - $85 ... NOW $34 Tropical and regular weight suits in many famous brands. 152 MEN'S SUMMER SUCKS, were 9.95-14.95 ................... NOW 3.97 72 MEN'S YEAR ROUND and SUMMER SPORT COATS, were 29.95-550 ...........................................NOW $13 300 DRESS SHIRTS, long and short sleeves, were 3.95-$5 ........NOW 99c 110 DRE$S SHIRTS, assorted whites, solids, fancies, all collar styles, were 3.95-5.95 .................................NOW 1.97 210 TIES, assorted fabrics, patterns, were 1.50-2.50 ........NOW 75c 83 FANCY PAJAMAS, tops and bottoms, were $5-$6 ..............NOW $2 188 SWEATSHIRTS and ASSORTED LONG and SHORT SLEEVE SPORT SHIRTS, were $2-55 NOW 99c 39 LONG and SHORT SLEEVE SPORT SHIRTS and KNIT SHIRTS, SWEATSHIRTS, were*$2-$5.................................. NOW 99c 87 FAMOUS MAKE CASUAL SHOES, were 9.95-12.95 NOW $3 FOR.BOYS AND STUDENTS 69 BOYS' SHORT SLEEVE VELOURS, were $6-59..................NOW 2.49 264 BOYS' SPORT SHIRTS, were 2.50............... ........... NOW 99c 80 STUDENTS' SUITS, 3642, regs. and longs, were $45-555 ..NOW 19.97 62 STUDENT SHORT SLEEVE SPORT SHIRTS, were 3.98-$5..........NOW 99e MEN S FURNISHINGS ... y2 PBICE 400 DRESS SHIRTS, short sleeves, whites, fancies, some famous makes, were $5...................................NOW 2.50 135 DRESS SHIRTS, short sleeves, all collar styles, fancies, were 5.95 ................ ......................... . . NOW 2.97 390 HOSE, Ban Lons, nylons, stretch, were $1 ..................NOW 50c 340 HOSE, solid wools, Orlons, cotton lisles, were 1.50........NOW 75c 74 HOSE, fancy wools, executive and regular length, were $2___NOW 99c 165 CASUAL SLIPPERS, were $4-5.95..........................NOW $2-2.97 185 NECKWEAR,.**Iks, Dacrons, chaliis, were 2.50 .............NOW 1.25 212 NECKWEAR, some imported fabrics, were 3.50..............NOW 1.75 98 NECKWEAR, famous maker, were $5...........................NOW 2.50 210 BOXER SHORTS, cottons, assorted fancies, were 1.50.........NOW 75c 93 TEE SHIRTS, all cotton, were 2 for 2.50.............NOW 2 for 1.25 107 UNDERSHIRTS, were 2 for 2 50 ........................NOW 2 for 1.25 68 SUMMER PAJAMAS, all cotton, were $5 ................NOW 2.50 69 SPORT BELTS, were 2.50....................................NOW 1.25 140 COLOGNES, were 2.50-7.50 ............................NOW 1.25-3.75 93 FAMOUS MAKER FELT HATS, were 14.95-$20...............NOW 7.47-$10 136 FAMOUS MAKER STRAW HATS, were $7-$14...................NOW 3.50-57 179 FAMOUS MAKER SHOES, were $35-$40.....................NOW 17.50-520 123 FAMOUS MAKE YUR ROUND SHOES, were 10.95-16.95 ..............NOW $5 . 67 FAMOUS MAKE SUMMER SHOES, were 15.95 .....................NOW 7.97 WOMEN’S FASHIONS . . . V2 PRICE 140 SUMMER DRESSES, were $16-526 ........................NOW 7.99-12.99 88 FAMOUS MAKE SUMMER SUITS, were $30-540.............NOW 14.99-19.99 94 WOOL SUITS, were $40-$70.......... ................NOW 19.99-34.99 28 THREE-PIECE SUEDE TRIM WOOL SUITS, were $46..............NOW 14.99 149 SKIRTS, 8-16, were $8-513 ......................NOW 3.99-6.49 1^9 SUCKS, 10-16, were $9-$12 ............................NOW 4.49-5.99 182 BERMUDA SHORT^, 8-16, were $6-58.............. NOW 2.99-3.99 648 SUMMER T-SHIRTS, S-M-L, were 3.50-57 .................NOW 1.69-3.49 249 BLOUSES, 30-36, were $3-$7.............. NOW 1.49-3.49 82 STRAW HANDBAGS, were $6-512 ........NOW 2.99-5.99 76 SUMMER ROBES and SHIFTS, were 56-512 . NOW 2.99-5.99 182 GOWNS a<(d PAJAMAS, were $4-59 .. .. ... v NOW 1.994.49 111 ODDS and ENDS: JACKETS, SHIFTS^BATHING SUITS, BRAS, GIRDUS, SLIPS, HALF SLIPS and ACCESSORIES ........... ....M OFf MALL STORE, OPEN FRIDAY aitd SATURDAY 9:00 A M. TO 9:00 P. M. A—16 ONE COLOR THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1967 (WICKES) Old nsUnud IMs Dm I COME OUT FOR GOOD OLD-FASHIONED VALUES AT PRICES LIKE YOUR GRANDDAD PAID! LUMBER! PATIO DOOR PLYWOOD 14" AD %" AD $2.32 4'Xt'ahMt $5.42 4'XS'shMt SHEATHING y2" cd %"CD 2" x 4" STUDS l-R. Kl. Dried 60?. WICKES) InDbartbaUigsiaply center ‘ • —BALDWIN and NRLY ROADS W,C OPEN FRIDAY EVENING TIL 9 O'CLOCK PIiom 694-8286 5 Miles South of GRAND BLANC. MICH. WICKES HOME IMPROVEMENT CENTER . Bloomfield Miracle Mile Shopping Center 2215 SOUTH TELEGRAPH RD. „ PP Owa Mon-Sot Phong 332-9337 ^rjj . THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. THURSDAY. AUGUST 17, 1967 B—1 Save During Our... GOING OUT of BUSINESS SALE (PtlKltt NO. 11, Basio Bedroom In Solid Oak R«g.$249 ^188 CompUt* Open Stock Grouping* Teen Favorites (All Solid Oak) Bachelor Chest..$38.00 Stack Bookcase..$38.00 Utility Cabinet..$38.00 Corner Table . . .$38.00 Desk...........$59.00 Chair..........$15.00 FREE DELIVERY £ Solid maple chests, Reg. $29.88................... Bunk beds, Oak, Maple, Walnut Reg. $39.95............... Serta Mattress or Box Spring —. mismatches, Reg. $49.95 ....... Odd Night Stands, all finishes ............. Solid Maple 4-Piece bedroom suite, formica tops, Reg. $ 199.95 ....... Hollywood headboards, brass, wood and plastic ...............................i... Girl's French Provincial 4-Piece bedroom with canopy bed, formica tops, Reg. $238.00.......... Trundle Bed — Tom Sawyer Style Reg. $109.95 ...............................f. Canopy Beds, white or maple, Reg. $79.95..................................... Girl's Canopy grouping, white or maple — Dresser mirror, Canopy bed and 2 night stands........... 088 *16“ $24» $2000 *118“ $488 *168“ $5300 $4300 *158“ I UMPS-nCTURES . .. all 60% OFF No Money Down — 36 Months To Pay — Easy Terms BUNKLAND 1812 S. Telegraph, Vs Mile North of Bloomfield Miracle Mile OPEN MON,, THURS.', FRL, NIGHTS *TIL 9 FREE DELIVERY • ___ What to Do When Person Forgets Name By ELIZABETH L. POST Dear Mrs. Post: I would like to know what to do in the following embarrassing situation. You meet a person you know whom you haven’t seen in ages, and he addresses you by name, and you can’t for the life of you remember his name. It is especially embarrassing if you are accompanied by someone whom you should introduce.—Lynn Dear Lynn: This is an embarrassing situation, which everyone of us must have faced at some time. If your ob-' vious look of dismay doesn’t cause the other person to help you out by telling you his name, the only thing you can do is say, “I’m so sorry, I' know we’ve met but I just canTremember your name.” It’s not idedl, but unless you wish to struggle along dying to place him, it is the only solution. Dear Mrs. Postfc Our youngest son is stationed in Holy Loch, Scotland, and married a little girl from Greenoch, Scotland, in March of 1966. We attended the wedding over there, met the family, and just adore the girl. They now have a month old daughter and I wondered if I should write her and offer to send announcements to our family and friends in the States. I am going to await your opinion before writing her and making the offer.—Mrs. R. H. Dear Mrs. H.: Although I have never heard of it being done, I see go reason that you should not send out birth announcements if the young mother agrees. Who's Old—Not Chanel, Fashion's High Priestess AP Wlr«photo The original “Gibson Girl’s” granddaughter out-tungs “Twiggy.” Diana Gibson, a senior at Hollis College, models an experimental aluminum-foil-on-paper slip < dressA Looking more like “Twiggy” than her famous grandmother, Diana forecasts fashion for disposable party costumes. Diana is named for Charles Dana Gibsgn, whose-drawings of his wife set styles at the turn of the century. 50 “Mademoiselle” arrives at 31 Rue Cambon every day around 12:30 p.m. and has her lunch in her apartment on the third floor of the building. The apartment is fileld with art treasures collected down the years. * . ★ ★ * She likes entertaining a few friends at lunch. She eats better than when she is alone and she also likes good conversation. SOVIET TRIP She is planning a trip to the Soviet Union with an 80-piece collection and seven mannequins in accepting a Soviet invitation to attend the Moscow festival of fashion. The musical which she has authorized Alan Jay Lemer to make on her life should appear in the fall. Simultaneously, a new perfume called “Coco” will be launched. Whether it will have the same triumphant success as No. 5 remains to be seen. “Just a fluke,” says Mademoiselle, “and not my lucky number at all.” Lenore Romney, wife of Michigan’s governor, poses with two of her grandchildren. Wearing a wool knit dress by Anne Klein for Mallory, Mrs. Romney is being featured in the August Ladies Home Journal. Recruiting By GAY PAULEY UPI Women’s Editor NEW YORK—The newspaper clipping is yellowed and frayed. But its headline shows how the government half a century ago recruited for the military services. ★ ★ ★ Beautiful cover girls rather than a man in a stove pipe hat and red, white and blue attire proclaimed, “Uncle Sam Wants Yon” or words to that effect. “Here are three reasons why Navy Changed in recruiting has been so brisk!” says the headline from the old “New York World” Aug. 16, 1918. "When beauty calls ‘TO ARMS’ WHO CAN RESIST THE APPEAL . . . ” The story told of three beauties of the times whom the noted illustrator, Howard Chandler Christy, had painted for the recruiting posters. POSTER GIRLS We located one of the poster girls the other day when.news got around that either the Christy original or the auto- Her Aging Husband, Surely Deserves More in Loyalty and Consideration 'Sweet Adelines' Plan Circus Costume Party The Utica-Rochester chapter of Sweet Adelines is presenting its annual Interchapter party on Wednesday at 6:30 p.m,, in the Avon Park Pavilion, Rochester. ★ ★ ★ The theme is a circus complete with calliope. Guests are encouraged to attend in costume. ★ * ★ Working on plans are Mrs. Raymond Kraft, Mrs. Donald Hood, Mrs. Thomas Macan and Marge Merhar. PARIS W) — Coco Chanel, the grande mademoiselle of Paris fashions, is having, a birthday Saturday. Whether she is about to become 84, 85 or 86 is shrouded in feminine mystery — she likes to think of herself “up in the 70s.’.’ Whatever her age, her energy and dynamism still mark the fabulous world of high fashion. ’ She has twice conquered the fashion world and still holds her own. A Chanel suit is a status symbol. Women have been known to keep them for 30 years and update them by maybe shortening the skirt, though Chanel has never been a champion of the miniskirt — she finds it grotesque. AP Wirephoto COCO CHANEL Jan Peerce Opens at Meadow Brook Jan Peerce will be the Meadow Brook Festival soloist in the final concerts of the season tonight and Friday at 8:30 p.m. and Sunday at 7:30 in the Baldwin Pavilion of the Oakland University campus. Sixten Ehrling will conduct the Detroit Symphony Orchestra in this the 32nd concert of the eight week series. ★ ★ ★ Peerce will sing arias from Mozart's “Don Giovanni” mid Verdi’s “La Travi-ata,” “Masked Ball,” and “Luisa Miller.” The program will include the overture to Mozart’s “Cosi fan tutte,” the second suite from Debussy’s “Iberia,” and Respighi’s symphonic poem “Roman Festivals.” Grounds open two hours before the performance for picnics and buffet service. Tickets are available at Hudson's, Grinnell’s, and the festival box-office on the grounds, after noon Saturday and Sunday. Navy Mothers Meet There will be a meeting this evening at 7:38 in the Naval Reserve Center for members of the Navy Mothers Club, No. 355. CONSTANT Of her suits her enemies like to say: “It’s still the same old thing.” But she never has departed from the style she herself created — the luxury of ease and comfort, which spelled her initial approach to fashion. She changes her colors and fabrics, introduces new detailing, sponsors wonderful tweeds, and launches new jewelry and hairdos. Basically her, technique is Her own. Her influence was so great on the fashion world that when in 1954 she returned to the scene, other designers had undergone subconscious influence and designed clothes “a la Chanel.” When,her first collection appeared it was a nostalgic remembrance of things past, for she had picked up where she had left off 16 years before. It took her a couple of seasons to get back into stride, but almost from the first, clients began to order wardrobes. ★ * * Today there’s nothing nostalgic about her designing. Creating fashion in her own way is her life. She cannot remain idle. Like an actor, she cannot leave the stage and has never given a farewell performance. “C'est plus fort qu elle — she can't help it” say her workers who adore “Mademoiselle” regardless of the way she is inclined to scotch an entire 'group of dresses if she finds an'imperfection. She has been known to throw out as many as 25 models at the last moment because they did not live up to her expectations. At times, she says: “This is the last collection I’ll design." It only means she’s tired, and on she goes. By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: I am 58. My husband is 71 and retired. We have been married for 26 years. He has always been a kind . and generous man, but Abby, I know that what 7 feel in my heart for I him is pity, gratitude and habit — not true ] love. We have very little in I common. I am a college graduate and f o r m er I school teacher while he never went beyond fifth grade in grammar school. His only interests are home-cooked meals, sports, and shootem-up westerns on television. He is so childish and dull. * ★ ik- Living with him underfoot all day is getting to be more than I can tolerate. We have no children who survived be- i .m' Years graphed copy from the artist to her had shown up on the wail of a New York restaurant. Her son, in New York from the Midwest, accidentally discovered it. Dark-haired Lylia Bumard, she was then. Still in her teens, she .was a Ziegfeld girl, David Belasco was her theatrical manager; her face graced the front of magazines, artists’ drawings of her illustrated numerous stories. Today, she’s Mrs. Jack Leeder, wife of a construction engineer, silver haired and elegant looking, and the grandmother of two teenagers. * ★ ★ From a closet m her Bronx apartment, Mrs. Leeder pulled out the' faded clipping, studio photographs of her in those great-looking wide-brimmed hats of another day, a .photograph of the poster showing her in a Marine uniform saying, “If you want to fight, join the Marines,” and a letter dated May 8, 1918, from Maj. Gen. George Barnett, Marine commandant, thanking her for “this work of art from which we expect such excellent results . . * ★ ★ “I don’t know why anyone’d be interested in this now,” said Mrs. Leeder. Out came some of the cover pictures. “At that time,” she said, “Your face on a magazine cover was tremendous prestige. We were paid 50 cents an hour to pose. A photographer’s model, earned $5 a day. But then, the subway was a nickel, cigarettes 10 cents a pack-. age ...” * * ★ . She, the other girls, Louise Ford and Nancy Palmer, and the artist did the posters as a patriotic contribution. * * 1 * Mrs. Leeder's.son, Willianj, 41, a purchasing agent who lives in Barrington, 111., discovered the Christy poster when, he and friends dropped into “Your' Father’s Moustache,”' a Greenwich Village nightclub. Whether it is the original or the autographed duplicate can’t be determined. It is affixed to a structural wall. But owner Joel Schiavone has offered • Mrs. * Leeder visiting privileges. yond infancy. I am lonely, bored and frustrated. Would you advise divorce this late in life? He has money, and I know I could get a good settlement. No name or city, please. I’m sure he doesn’t know what’s in my mind. “MRS. X” DEAR MRS. X: After 26 years of marriage to this “kind and generous man” I think he is deserving, of more loyalty and consideration than you exhibit. And what makes you, at 58, think ail you have to do is divorce him and your life would be transformed into an exciting, gay and fulfilling one? You supply the answers. But be honest with yourself, then act accordingly. * * ★ DEAR ABBY: I would like your views on girls and women (over 40) who come to work in an office in mini and micromini skirts. Isn’t there some booklet that describes appropriate dress for the office? Sign me ... HORRIFIED DEAR HORRIFIED: In the absence of house rules, common sense should prevail. Unfortunately common sense seems to be less and less common these days, in which casejhe office manager, boss or whoever is responsible for the morale, efficiency, and output of the establishment should post some clear-cut “thou shalts” and “thou shalt nots” with regard to attire. * * . * DEAR ABBY: My husband and I were invited to the home of a friend for a small dinner party. When I received the invitation my hostess asked me expressly NOT to tell her sister-in-law that she was having a party because she hadn’t invited her. Well, the morning after the party, this uninvited sister-in-law phoned me and asked, “What did you do last night?” What could I say? TRAPPED DEAR TRAPPED: You could have said, “It’s a military secret-----” and blown your friendship to* smitherines. Or you coqld have told her where you had been. When asked not to “tell” something, don’t accept the burden of bearing the secret. Reply, instead, “I’ll not volunteer the information. Neither will I lie if asked." * * * DEAR ABBY: I am in a social snake pit. I am 21 and my husband is 26 and we have been married for five Whole months!, Our social 'activities center around my husband’s friends which include hippies, alcoholics, people with shaky reputations, and you name it, he knows one. husband claims he loves me, but when it comes to his friends, I am supposed to just accept them. I’ve asked» him why he didn’t marry someone more “ih” with the crowd. He replied, “If I had wanted to marry someone like that, I could have, but I didn’t want someone like that, for my wife.” Well, he didn’t get someone like that for a wife, but as his Wife I get people tike that for my social environment' What am I to do? NOT “IN” DEAjt NOT, IN: You can either accept them, or try to upgrade your husband's choice of company. If these are the kind of characters your husband found attractive during your courtship^; one wonders what you had in common as a basis for marriage. . ^ '* *„ _* * - CONFIDENTIAL TO R O Z ZIE: If' you’re looking for a man with money, marry a chiropodist, ^understand they make money hand over foot. Problems? Write to Abby, in care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056. For a personal reply, inclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope. ■k k * For Abby’s new booklet “What Teenagers Want to Know” send $1.00 to Abby in care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056. B—2 TIIE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1967 THERE IS A LEAGUE OF WOMEN VOTERS Oven Spray a hazard to Consumer Consumers were warned that three self-pressurized, spray - type oven cleaning products containing propane gas may cause explosions when used on hot surfaces or near a pilot light. Seven instances of fire and explosion attributed to use of the products in ovens have been reported to the Food and Drug Administration. One of them resulted in burn injuries the FDA said. The products are being recalled from the market, but some of the aerosol cans are still on retail shelves, or in homes, the FDA said. One of the hazardous cleaners is labeled as Aeroseal Super Foam Oven Cleaner with Ammonia. It is manufactured by the Aeroseal Corporation, of Camp Hill, Pa. The other two cleaners were formerly sold by the Sunbeam Apnliance Service Company, of Chicago. ★ ★ One of them, labeled Heavy Duty Cookware Cleaner, formerly contained highly flammable propane gas as a propellant. A new version of the product contains freon gas as the propellant, but many of the cans with propane are still on the market. Cans containing freon have an “F" stamped on the bottom. Sunbeam also is recalling another aerosol product labeled as Heavy Duty Oven Cleaner, which was distributed in Nebraska and northeast Indiana- Recall of the Aeroseal Corporation product was initiated voluntarily on June 3. Later that month a Los Angeles housewife suffered first and second degree burns in an explosion that occurred when she sprayed the cleaner in an oven. She had extinguished the pilot light before usihg the cleaner. IT MAKF.S A DIFFERENCE The League of Women Voters was the first national nonpartisan organization to launch a “get out and vote*' campaign. At the present time more than 125,000 women in over 1200 local leagues in all 50 states, the District of po-lumbia and Puerto Rico are getting an education in politics and at the s^ime time demonstrating that a nonpartisan organization can be politically effective. The League is open to all women-citizens of voting age who believe, in representative government. The League of ‘Women Voters was established in 1920 primarily to help the more than 20 million women voters carry out their responsibilities. The League is concerned solely with government, it is non partisan, pioneering in the presentation of candidate meetings, giving impartial information on who is running for office in Ideal, state or congressional elections, where and when to vote, or what the qualifications are or what ballot issues are np for decision-. . . Yes, it makes a difference. Buy a Share in Better Government — Support the 1 League of Women Voters. I wish to make a contribu- • | tion of $................... Name....................................................... Address............................................. TVmpnurilchrrk ©r moni-7order to i Mn. Virgil Rrh.il, Fin.m-r Chairman 2299 R.thrHord Bloomfirld Hill. 4*01 S I would likr mm lafonmation .boat (hr L*.« ur of Womra Votm. All womra rlliarm of rolin* .(ran wrlromrd into Lra,urnu-mbrnhip. 1 In interested in joining the League of Women Voter* .. * ..v Happiness is a contribillion to the League of Women Voter*. This advertisement published in the interest of Good Government for the League of Women Voters by Austin Nopyrll Agency West Lawrence, Steer! at Wida Track, Drive, Watt First Federal Savings of Oakland 761 West Hama St. * Stapp's Shoes os o cashmara romantic . . . purely luxurious and soft os a sign now. r Hadley does it with button-down collar, full-fashioned barrel cuff sleeves.White, pink, pow&er blue. 36 to 40 sizes. 35.00 We Humans Are Already 'Switched Off' By MURIEL LAWRENCE Up at Yale's'Medical School a scientist has suceeded in destroying a female monkey’s maternal feeling for her baby. Re achieved this advance in scientific progress by directing radio commands to electrodes im planted in her head. Reading this news item, a New York Times writer was moved to write an editorial on that probable "day in the future when push-buttons will turn us into robots, too, turning our feelings off according to the whims of the button-pusher. Future day? My goodness, it’s already here. For example, already have b from material war’s burned a babies. Just Hke Exactly like her. ting more and : nected from our ings every day of many of ns >en detached feeling for id mutilated that monkey. ■. We’re get-discoii-natural feel-lives. Our newspaper reports 1 you are invited to an informal showing of the fait dress collection from ^MamselU by Ofretly Garol a a a frOM OUT cJJoung Signature collection. FRIDAY, AUGUST 18 10:0q A.M. TO 8:00 P.M. Jacobsons some drifter with a rifle has leaned out of his rooming house window to shoot dead some innocent stranger in the street below and we tune out on feeling about that, too. We’ve got to. For we are sane rats. And when we find ourselves spinning helplessly in a whirlgig of an uncontrollable world, we adopt the sane rat’s solution to his laboratory’s • whirlgig. We go to sleep. We go robot. It has to be like that. For the button-pushers are directing so many horrors at us these days that we may have to choose to go dead to feeling about them. It’s called “apathy’ in us. I don’t know what it’s called in monkeys. No, we don’t need scientists to turn us into robots. The world’s news has already accomplished it most effectively. So, in a way, I’m grateful for the people I’ve infuriated by my recent columns on abortion. I TRULY AM. I appreciate how desperate is our human need for what small island of moral certainty we can cling to in the chaos of life-hate which surounds us. So, though I can’t agree with you, God bless my critics for their passionately human con- Long-time Pontiac residents, Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Surre of Kemp Street, celebrated their golden wedding anniversary Tuesday. They were married August 15, 1917 in Battle Creek, and moved to this city two years later. Sons Robert and Richard and daughters Virginia and Maxine will host an open house for their parents at First Federal Savings and Loan of Oakland Sunday from 2 to 6 p.m. There are 11 grandchildren and one great-grandchild. ‘ Never Underestimate the Power of Women WCTU Chooses Officers The August meeting of the Frances Willard WCTU iv a s held Wednesday at the James K Boulevard home of Rev. Lola Marion. Mrs. Frank Deaver, President of 19th District WCTU, was in charge of election and installation of officers for 1967-68. Those elected were: Mes-dames LeRoy Shafer, president; Lola Marion, vice-president. Others were Ethel Mc-Cluskey, Ralph U. Graham, Anna Bone and Mrs. Nellie Monroe. Mrs. Shafer was appointed delegate to the state convention in Jackson, Sept. 27-29. The Oakland County picnic will be held Sept. 12 at the Pontiac Lake home of Mrs, Joseph Green. Barry Grant will be guest speaker that afternoon. Protect Ironing Cover The next time you are applying iron-on tape, put a piece of aluminum foil under the hole in the garment so the tape does not stick to the ironing board cover. Jacobsons BIRMINGHAM STORE HOURS*. MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY 9:30 TO 5:3( SHOP THURSDAY AND FRIDAY UNTIL 9 Patsy Ann Matlock and William K. Knight have become engaged. Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. William Matlock of Maynard Court and the James M. Knights of Lake Orion. Mr. and Mrs. Russell Hunt of Clara Street announce the engagement of their daughter, Bonnie L., to Pfc. Gary D. Roerink, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Roerink of Joswick Street, Pontiac Township. She is a Central Michigan University sophomore. GO GLAMOROUS in the rajah skimmer with feminine, flare sleeves in two lengths. Darts supply the easy, but beautiful shaping. Choose a poppy-bold print. Send now! Printed Pattern 4711: Misses’ Sizes 10, 2, 14, 16, 18, 20. Size 14 takes 2% yds. 45-in. FIFTY CENTS in coins for each pattern — add 15 cents for 6ach pattern for first-class mailing and special handling. Send to Anne Adams, care of The Pontiac Press, 137 Pattern Dept., 243 West 17th St., New York, N.Y. 10011. Print name, address with zip, size and style number. Summer’s Fashions are a JOY FOR ALL SIZES! See 115 styles, 2 free hat patterns, fabrics, accessories in new Spring-Summer Pattern Catalog. Gift Coupon for free patterh in Catalog. Send 50 cents. - Quality training by Lopez Pablo’s School of Beauty 4823 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plaint __OR 3-0222 THE PQNT1AC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1967_■_______, B—8 Psychedelic Art Appears in Silver I ^2^' piece of china or glass, hold the pieces together with cellophane tape while applying the cement. When the cement dries, carefully pull the tape away. This makes for precision work. The work is so neat you can hardly tell where it has been mended. serted that it pourqi “literally i able mention awards during without spilling a drop.” | 1967-68 as part of a traveling The prize - winning pieces i-exhibit' sponsored by" the will be shown along with sev- Guild in major cities through eral others which won .honor- | out the country. on either side with tentaclelike projections. Amethyst crystals seem almost to “grow” out of the top and bottom of the piece. The effects of "psychedelic art” are beginning to be seen in sterling silve^ design, an area which leans more to the traditional than' to the avant-garde. Although elegance is still the keynote among the prizewinners of the 1967 Sterling, Silver Design Competition, one piece — a multibulbous vase resembling a rather ferocious sea anemone — was described by judges as a shocker.” A new beauty breakthrough is a soft cream that stabilizes hair color and acts as a hair conditioner, the manufacturer reports. The cream, it is reported prevents fading, streaking and dulling of bleached, toned and tinted hair. But the most startling aspect of the vase is the color and texture of the metal itself. “Electro-formed silver has been tortured, antiqued and worked into a piece which defies every known convention in silversmithing,” commented a judge, adding, “It is a delightful experience.” 'The competition, sponsored by the Sterling Silversmiths Guild of America, encourages design students at the college, technical or post-graduate level to apply their talents to sterling silver. En- trants are required to submit sterling silver pieces which they have both designed and crafted. SKILLFUL USE Despite the sophistication of Originality and skillful use ; its design, the more practical of metal scored high points ; aspects of the functional piece for the vase, which is outlined , are not neglected: judges as- In sharp contrast is the magnificent sterling silver teapot with gold-plated interior which took top honors in the competition. This was submitted by Cranbrook Academy of Art student, Richard Johnston. Oakland County's Favorite Family Fun Spot ^ CLOSED SUNDAYS ^ ► * i PHI First-prize winner in the 1967 Sterling Silver Design Competition was won by Richard Johnston, a student at Cranbrook Academy of Art. The slim sterling teapot and beverage server displayed workmanship described by judges as being “as close to perfection as can be imagined." THE HEARING AID WITH MORE THAN Deep etching o ' sterling inlays is well suited to rugged size and design of jewelry borfcoma billing sterling Silver and walnut. It was designed and handcrafted by Donald L. Bacorn of Syracuse (N.Y.l University. ••••••••••••••••• •••••••#*•••••••••••••• G. R. HASKILL STUDIO Has Photographed Over 2,000 Weddings May We Make Your Pictures? Precision circuitry reproduces sound clarity ana natural likeness unattainable in previous small hearing instruments. Thomas R. Jackmans Repeat Vow in Holly Rite This Instrument Contes In Eyeglass - |j vj§ Or Itehind-Tlie-Ear Models No more batteries to change. Built-In power cell of the unitron Petite' can be recharged in excess of 600 times for 1 8 to 24 months of pea k performance on the same cell. $i i c Full Color I I | with Album J-XW Price Includess St. Rita’s Church, Holly was the setting Saturday afternoon for vows spoken by the Thomas R. Jackmans (nee Theresa Ann Wooley). Janice Jackman was maid of honor and James Wooley was best man. They are sister and brother of the bridal couple. matching lace and organza. A shoulder length veil fell from a petal head-piece of organza and seed pearls. White poses with a white orchid made the wedding bouquet. * Picture for l’ri‘«« ■ • Just Married Sign • Welding Curst Hook ■• Miniature Marriage HBuhh P SmF Certificate Wmmi- ¥ ^■•Riee to Throw WH' *' “Everything hut 1 Mi. Clemens St. FE 4-0553 ••••••••on•••••••••••••••••••••••••••#• PONTIAC CONSUMERS CO-OP OPTICAL 1717 S. Telegraph Road EC 9.7071 Vi Mile Sodth of Orchard Lake Road P sm W I V I I ■■■■■■'■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■a Parents of the newlyweds who greeted guests in the church hall after the rite are Mr. and Mrs. Herbert K. Wooley of Rattalee Lake Road, and the Richard Jack-mans of Romeo. The couple will honeymoon in Canada and at Expo '67. Cynthia Omans and Corinne Wesolowski were attendants. Ushers were John and Kenneth Jackman, also brothers of the bridegroom. The bride chose floor length Chantilly lace and organza with a natural waistline and gathered skirt for her vows. Her full chapel train featured Avant-garde vase won third place for Carole Small, a student at Tyler School of Art, Elkins Park, Pa. It features electroformed sterling combined with amethyst crystals, r Heat canned yams and apri-j cot halves in a sugar syrup in la skillet. Serve with pork chops. | 48 N. Saginaw Downtown PARK FREE Come and see our collection of the New Season coat excitements! Exquisite Furs, Dynamic Designs, Sumptuous Fabrics in smashing new colors-.- 4 PC. COFFEE SERVICE 1 The elegance of silverplate in footed server, creamer and covered sugar, bowl with scrolled serving tray. Regular *37! 5 PC. TEA & COFFEE SERVICE In popular antique silverplate, queen size tray, footed tea and coffee servers, creamer and covered sugar. Regular ’SO00 ' 7 PC. TEA & COFFEE SERVICE Exquisitely crafted silverplate includes footed tea and coffee servers, swinging kettle, covered sugar, tohg holder bowl and creamer with footed tray. Regular *150°* NOW $4 AAOO A small deposit reserves any coat, Arthur's Easy Credit Terms: • 90 Days — same as cash • 1-Year Contract • 30 Days option term Pontiac Telegraph and Elisabeth Lako Road T THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1967 Life Span Increasing , BOSTON, Mass. (WMNS)-A child born today is not only likely to live longer than his forebears did, he is also likely to be heavier and taller than they' were; This is the finding of Dr. M H. Witten-borg, president-elect of the Sciety of Pediatric Radiolol-ogy. The Boston physician, in an article in the “American Journal of Roentgenology," pointed out that a one-year-old infant today is seven percent taller and 12-15 percent heavier than a child in the previous century. His b r o t h e r aged nine to 14 is likely to be six to eight percent taller and 12 to 15 percent heavier. Try Sal Sofia for Cleani Light - colored woodwork comes clean at the first try if you sponge it down with a solution of three tablespoons of sal soda concentrated per bucket of warm water. Last two weeks of• Slimmer Sale! INTERIOR DECORATING CONSULTATIONS Quality Faraishinffs . . . You’ll find a complete selection to complement the decor in your home. Contemporary, Early American, Provincial, Mediterranean, Colonial. In appropriate styles — patterns and colors. Save now! Convenient Credit Terms! Open evening* Monday and Friday ’til 9 2133 ORCHARD LAKE ROAD - 333-1052 AMi'S FREflY 10A.M. to 9 EM. TRUNK SHOWING . of DESIGNER COATS by Pyince Michel Pierre d’Orleans We are privileged to bring to our city Mr. Michel Pierre d'Orleans, internationally known fashion advisor and style coordinator who will help you to select the styles and colors that will best fit your personality. Michel Pierre D'Orleans belongs to one of the oldest aristocratic families in Europe. He is well known as an international advisor In fashion all over the world and will be in our store to present the fashion coats and suits styled by GARE and DIAMOND DEBS. Summer vows in 1968 are being planned by Sandra Janna Rose and Bruce L. Lucarelli. Parents of the couple are Mrs. Wayne Rose of Slocum Road, Pontiac Township, the late Mr. Rose and Mrs, Gladys Lucarelli and Quinino Lucarelli, both of South Portland, Maine. Dear Miss Feeley: Is it true you should tip 15 per cent of a restaurant bill now instead of, 10 per cent? Does this ap-j ply to drive-insj as well as res-] taurants? What is the minimum] bill on wMdh a] tip should paid — for ln-1 stance, what about a couple of root beers at a drive-in, or a 01.25 bill at a restaurant? * Although I am primarily concerned about tipping for The Phillip Whitings of Genes Drive, Pontiac Township announce the engagement and planned June 1968 vows of their daughter, Claire Jacqueline. Her fiance is. Fredrick A. Parsons, son of the Norman Parsons of Kingsmere Circle, Avon Township. She is a sophomore at Spring Arbor College and he is a senior at Michigan State University. Andrew Arrives Mr. and Mrs. Roger L. Clough (Becky Odell) of Los Angeles, Calif, announce the birth of a son, Andrew Lau-rance, on Aug. 7. Grandparents are the Carmi J. Odells of Ogemaw Road and the Lau-rance Cloughs of Delmar, N.Y. Questions Percentage of Today's Tip By MARY FEELEY > V Consultant in Aging, Genes Often Cause of Hair Loss ELKHART, Ind. (WMNS)-The relentless march of time plus genetic inheritance play a role in whether a woman’s crowning glory will' remain thick and lustrous, or whether she will lose a good bit of hair as she ages. This is the view of dermatologist T. D. Arlook, M.D., who also notes that most female “is not an irreversible process in women, as a rule." ★ ★ - ★ While there is little that can be done about aging or one's genes, baldness or hair thinning caused by too tight or frequent hair curling; or by braiding that interferes with scalp circulation; or by excessive use of dyes, wave set solution, or hair sprays can be halted if these practices are stopped. , • ★ ★ * Certain medicines may cause hair loss, as can excessive vitamin A intake. Her physician should be alerted at once when a woman notices that a drug is inducing hair loss. FIND CAUSE Therapy, notes Dr. Arlook, must be based on the cause of .the hair loss. (Hint to users ^>f curlers, dyes, etc.) Incidentally, the physician maintains that there is some truth to the notion that emotional shock or disturbance can be A cause of hair loss. Wigi wiglet, or fall, anyone? Steam Food Off Lids Steam off food which has stuck to the inside of the top part of a double boiler. Turn the pot upside down in hot water for a short time. meals, I would also Ilka Information on tipping porters for carrying luggage mid tipping cab drivers. And what about hairdressers? L.K., Madison, Wis. Dear L.K.: It’s generally true that 15 per cent of the bill is the accepted tipping practice in restaurants — with 20 per cent not uncommon in some of the plushier places in big cities. In fact, we’ve become accustomed to the 100 per cent tip . -*- a dime left beside the saucer for a 10-cent cup of coffee at a counter. * ♦ ★ ★ Drive-ins and food counters are no exception to the ‘res-tanrant" tipping practice: 10 a minimum gratuity for a snack up to 50 cents, gradually rising to a 25 cent tip for a 31 tab. While tipping customs vary, depending on the size of the city or town and the part of the country, be prepared to give the porter 25 cents per bag he carries for you. And don’t wound the cabbie’s feelings with less than 25 cents for a $1 ride, or 20 per cent of the meter, fee if it goes above that. Even if you just ride around the block, less than a 15 cent tip is unthinkable: As for keeping all hands happy in the beauty shop, the tipping situation gets more complicated as the luxury factor increases. In a small shop to{ a small community, where one hairdresser does the whole woiks, 10 to 15 per cent of the bill is adequate. If, however, you patronize a snazzier shop and involve the services Of a colorist and stylist, you’ll thank the former with at least 75 cents and the latter with nothing less than $1. These will be in addition to more modest tips to other attendants who may have shampooed you or unpinned you. If, however, your do-it-aU hairdresser happen also to be the shop owner, you can assume, that any tipping is out of order. Since moderation becomes the tipper more than a display of lavishness does, foUow the customs wherever you find yourself. You’U soon catch onto what’s expected of you. Of course, you don’t have to tip for lousy service. Dear Miss Feeley: I lost my paycheck (or it was stolen) and went to the bank to stop payment on it but the check had already been cashed. I did not endorse this check, and the endorsement which was honored was way out! Who has to compensate me my employer of the bank? G.B., New York City * * * Dear G.B.: The bank is responsible, since it’s their obligation to check an endorsement in your name with your own signature, which the bank has on file if you have an account there. Otherwise, proper identification should be required before payment is made. The usual procedure would be W your employer to give you another check, then arrange with the bank to see that his own acount is properly credited. Dear Miss Feeley: We have two life insurance policies, payable monthly to a collector. He has never mentioned dividends and every time L HURON at TELEGRAPH FINDER-FIT ends ring twist, knuckle problems Mow any ring can slip over knuckles, snap closed, fit snug with the setting perfectly positioned. JEWELERS DONWTOWN PONTIAC Cornar of Huron a aaa j •nd Saginaw Stroots FE 2-0294 BIRMINGHAM 162 North Woodward Ml 6-4293 Open Friday Evening* I’ question him about it, he is evasive. What shall we do? Mrs. J.K.M., Downers Grove, 111. Dear Mrs. M.; Write to the home office of the company who issued your policies, giving them the policy numbers and explaining the situation. Some policies are what’s called “debit’ type; where'dividends are' used to purchase paid-up additional insurance. This may he the type you [have, but you should certainly find out from management. Northville First Presbyterian Church was the setting for recent1 vows repeated by Georgina Susan Hess and Charles William Couple Wed m Northville Georgina Susan Hess became the bride of Charles William Bethea in the First Presbyterian Church of Northville Friday evening. Parents of the couple are Mrs. Oliver H. Kirk of Orchard Lake, George W. Hess of Milford and Dr. and Mrs. John H. Bethea of North-ville*> Following a wedding trip through the Smoky Mountains, the newlyweds will live in Alma. Both young people are graduates of Michigan State University. Shop Monday, Thursday, Friday |and Saturday 'til 9 P.M. Thursday thru Saturday .Wool Knit $pttlal *1897 Brand now for 19671 Tho wool knit drastos you've boon waiting for. Fine, firm knits of 100% wool, nicely detailed. Groat stylos at our $18.97 special price. Misses' and junior sizes in nsw fall colors; Now Fashion Mall in Tho Pontiac Mall THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAV. AUGUST 17, 1967 B—5 McFarlands Take Vows A church parjors reception followed the recent wedding of the John Steven McFarlands (nee Virginia Martinez). The pair exchanged evening ' v o w s in the Sylvan Lake Church of Christ. Mrs. Aaron Martinez was matron of honor for the bride who chose a traditionally styled gown with lace trim on the .bodice. Her bouffant skirt was of silk organza over taf-• feta. A bridal cap held her viel of Alencon lace and pearls of daisies, yellow roses and Stephanotis. Nancy Strbenac and Janice,, Allen were bridesmaids. Herbert Gore was best man. Delbert Wilkinson and Gregory Ross were ushers. Parents of the b r i d a 1 couple are'Mr. and Mrs. Antonio G. Martinez of Scottwood Drive and the John McFarlands of Brownfield, Tex. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Beaty will be celebrating their 50th wedding anniversary Sunday. An open house, hosted by their children, will be given from 2 to 5 p.m. in their Lakeville Road home in Oxford. in MRS. J. S. McFARLANdI Dr. Lands, Wife! Visiting Japan Dr. and Mrs. William E. M. Lands left recently for Tokyo where Dr. Lands is participating in the Seventh International Congress of Biochemistry. Dr. Lands is a professor of Biochemistry at the University of Michigan with Mrs. Lands and their children, he has been visiting in the home of Mrs. Lands’ parents, Mr. and Mrs. Cameron Rose of Walled Lake. Vows Taken in Dearborn by Couple Eleanor Jane Gallagher of East Boulevard South and Charles Frederick Schedlbow-er repeated recent vows in Dearborn’s Sacred Heart Church. * /* ★ The bride wore floor-length white Chantilly lace for the morning rite. She carried a bouquet of white roses. Patricia Gallagher was maid of honor for her sister. They are the daughers of Mr. and Mrs. Edward P. Gallagher of Dearborn. Geraldine McGowan was a bridesmaid. ★ * * Michael Petrusba was best man for the son of Mrs. Frederick Schedlbower of West Sanford Street. Cyril Beaudreau and Louis Petrusba were ushers. After a Bermuda honeymoon the couple will reside in Pontiac. Newsman, Guest to Be Speaker Edgar A. Guest Jr. will speak on “On the Sunny Side j of the Street” at Pontiac Central High School’s Gass of 1947 reunion to be held at the Holiday Inn Saturday. The well-known radio news- j caster and commentator is the son of poet-philosopher Edgar ' A. Guest. Mrs. Kenneth Hoard of Lakewind Drive is chairman of the event with Mrs. Frank Lawrence of Robinann Drive as cochairman. Unusual Names for Young Men SHERMAN, Tex. (UPI) «* “Ike” Tennison’s family has long had a fascination for names. His grandfathers were Newton Columbus Tennison and Harmon Isaac Cagle, and his full name is Newton Isaac Tennison — but everyone called him “Isaac Newton” aintil he was a grown man. rnrr cedar rlULLt chest For The Fall Bride With Every Diamond Purchase of $100 or More Cedar Chart i« Moth-resistant, n Guaranteed to protect and come 36"xl7"xl8"siie happiness is getting the man and the diamond of your dreams We can’t do much about the first part, but when it comes to diamonds .. . we really shine. Let us show you some of our exciting new designs, as romantic and beautiful as. skilled craftsmen can make them. person-to-person credit V-r • No Down Poymont ULH • 90 Days Sam* as Cash 1 • Up to 36 Months to Pay to Finance Our Own AcCO OPEN FR1. A MOtL *TIL 9 P.M. $100 $150 $189.50 home of .famous name brands 1M N. SA6INAW-FE 3-11U $249.50 PONTIAC MALL ONLY 1 DAY WONDER SALE TONIGHT 'til 9 and FRIDAY 9:30 to 9 IF YOUB SIZE IS HEBE ITS LESS TUMI MLF PRICE! SKIRTS sizes 5 to 11, Values to 1 T.si. •. ■ 3to 5 CULOTTES sizes 8 to 12, Values to 12.9S e... *4»*6 SHORTS sites 8 to 12, Values to 9.99.... ^3 to ^4 SUMMER SHIFTS v,.u., 1.12.95.......*6 SLACKS sizes 8 to 14, Values to’11.95 ■. .$4,o$6 WHIMSEYS Values to 8.95 .•■•.. .?2 SWIM SUITS Value, 1.3K..J4" Juniors, sizes 5 to 13 BEACH COATS Values to 6.95.. .^3 SUMMER ORESSES value, t« 39.95 *10„$15 Back-to-School FASHION SHOW FRIDAY and SATURDAY 2 to 5 and 7 to 9 Meet Your Friends Here! FREE COKES! INFORMAL MODEUNGI PONTIAC MALL STORE PONTIAC MALL e BIRMINGHAM B—« THE PONTIAC PRESS, THtJRSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1967 v WHITCROFT JEWELERS . \7 N. SAQINAW, Downtown Pontiac, FE l-Wy Women Medics Confront^ Similar World Problems WICHITA, Kan. (AP) -Problems faced by women doctors in North America and South America are similar, but the diseases they treat are different, two local women physicians learned at the 10th semi-annual meeting of the Pan American Medical Women’s Alliance in Lima, Peru. Dr. Puth Montgomery-Short of Wichita, who was elected secretary of the alliance, and Dr. Irene Koeneke, Halstead, Kan., found there is about the same percentage of women doctors in South America as in this country. But the doctors noted that they saw diseases there; they had not seen since medical school. Malnutrition and parasites were among the big problems. CHILDREN OUTGROWN THE WAGON, BICYCLE? - - - SEJ£ IT WITH A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED | EASY TO USE. JUST PHONE 332-8181. /Won't Spoil on Shelf Many condiments keep as well I Ion a pantry shelf as in the refrigerator. Check the label if I you’re not sure whether a prod-I uct needs refrigeration. Wmgsm Mr. and Mrs. Rodney H. Trimble of Heights Road, Orion Tovmship, announce the betrothal of their daughter, Lorraine Sue, , to Pfc.'Stephen D. Penney, USA. He is the son of., the Frederick. Penheys of Royal Oak and is currently serving in Vietnam. Polly's Pointers Chaise Longue Bed DEAR POLLY - A folding chaise longue makes a comfortable resting place for anyone who must spend the night at an invalid’s bedside. It is easy to carry and fold out of the way when morning comes. Mqd holes that are inevitable under outdoor faucets can be prevented. Remove some soil under the spout and fill in with gravel. This is a real help when small children play in the yard and turn on the faucet to get drinks. . Petunias planted in a tube cake pan make a lovely center-piece for an outdoor umbrella table. The umbrella can be inserted through the openings in the pan and the table at the same time. — LA VERNA DEAR POLLY - Do tell the readers to remember to Jot down dates, names and so on on the backs of pictures they keep. We lost a second son about a year ago and are finding photos that we wish we knew something about. Time passes so quickly, we all forget and, in our case, to put together the ones we want is a real chore. — MRS. T. R. B. DEAR POLLY - When I have to take my two sons to the coin laundry the doctor’s office or someplace where they have to sit and wait we play a game. Tell them I am thinking of something in the room and try „iess what it is. Some sort of hint as “It is round” or ‘It is pretty color” might be given and the one who guesses right selects the next object. They never seem to tire of this and it has been going on for two years. — DOROTHY DOROTHY RICHARD'S BOYS' end GIRLS' WEAR Shop for Buck to School. The Pontiac Mall What's Special Friday Night? SHRIMP FRY Served Family Style “ALL YOU WANT9 BROILED SHRIMP, ifiW with Drown Butter. DEEP FRIED -SHRIMP, with home-made Snappy sauce. Huge TQSSED SALAD. Choice of POTATOES. Hot HOMEMADE Bread. EVERY FRIDAY NIQHT 5 to 10 P.M. in Bloomfield Hills Woodward at Square Lake Rd. Division off Thomas Jewelry Co. 17-19 S. SAGINA : NEW i»i» mm nimnnnn nnutii m i HITlYrnfYinnflTnflnf^ '<9fKe GuffitoWf& Downtown Pontiac OPEN MON., THURS:, FRI. 'til 9:00 P.M. 4 COMPLETE FLOORS OF HOME FURNISHINGS ELEVATOR SERVICE TO ALL FLOORS O Provincial 0 Colonial 9 Traditional • Modem All by America's Leading Manufacturers ivmg COORDINATED ROOMS by KRQEHLER 95 299 INCLUDES SOFA AND BOTH COMPANION CHAIRS For you. who want a fashionable, decorator look in your home without spending a fortune . . . 3-piece Lively Living rooms in bright prints and smart solid fabrics make even hard-to decorate rooms fresh and new looking. Just pick the sofa and two companion chairs you like best in Early American styling, take your pick from our big selection of exciting new fabrics, then ask about convenient credit terms that let you pay for your-new room in small, monthly payments. Come in today. See the beauty, test the comfort found in deluxe foam cushioning, then buy now at this low price and get your fair share of quality, luxury and fashion. This charming Cape Cod room can be yours for dollars less than you expect You'll search long and hold to find a better buy. , quality built by KROEHLER, with Kilndried hardwood frame. $19995 No Money Down Months to Pay Highback "Early American" Swivel Rocker with soft luxurious back. Box-pleated flounce. $7095 FE 2-4231 tlsYou Must Be Satisfied, This We Guarantee” ' I ' } ‘ I ■ . . ■ . . .■ , '' -1 ■ ■ / ■ ■ , . ■ * ■■■,-■■ - - THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1967 B—7 New Guinea Has[ More Incidents of Multiple Birth I PORT MORESBY, New Norman Guinea — In some parts of remit hi in New Guinea there are man times the number of multiple I .a ’ births that can be, expected ini Their parents Western communities., | are Mr. and Two sets of triplets were born | Mrs. Ray L. scently in the Mt. Hagen and] Norman of A cat best knows where to be comfortable. She chooses Firth’s “Country Home," carpet that makes 'everyone feel at home. The checked stripe pattern is ageless, belongs in decorating themes from Early American to contemporary. Eye-catching, but easy to live with because of ittfMense Acrilan pile of interwoven loops. Wide color selection for high fashion look at a budget price. recently in the Wewak districts.' The director of public health, Dr. R. F. R. Scragg, said that in the Bole, area of West New Britain one set of triplets was born in every 400 births, and one set of twins in every* 20 births. The normal expectation in The newlyweds Western countries, he said, was wm rPSide one in 80 births for twins, and1 one in 6,000 births for triplets. Dr. S-ragg said no special I studies had been made that might indicate the reason for the high number of multiple births. He said similar high rates had | been reported from some parts of Africa. in Pontiac '. South Dakota Wedding Trip for Pair MRS. LEE R. NORMAN A honeymoon in the Black Hills of South Dakota followed the recent marriage of Carole Mae Freeberg and Lee Ray Norman in Crystal Evangelical |Free Church, Crystal, Minn. The daughter of the Vernon E. Freebergs of Minneapolis chose a tiered gown of silk Georgette over taffeta in a bouffant style with scalloped edging of Chantilly lace. A petal cluster held h e r fingertip veil of illusion. White roses centered about a white orchid corsage formed her bridal bouquef. A reception |® the church parlors followed the rite in which Joyce Freeberg was maid of ho:v r f r her sister. Bridesmaids were Mrs. James Mitchell and Mrs. Ed-v ard Stricklin, Carolyn Mitchell served as flower girl. Male members of the wadding party were. Jack Henderson as best man with groomsmen Andrew Norman (the bridegroom's brother) and Daniel Bowker. Usners were j Keith Setterstrom and Darrel | Freeberg. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray L. Norman of Brandt Road, Grove-land Township * * * The newlyweds have returned to take up residence in Pontiac. OPEN - 10-6 Mon. Thru Fri. 10-4 Sat. ALBERT’S SUBURBAN HAIR FASHIONS & WIGS 3980 W. Walton, Drayton Plains 673-0177 Push Button Can for Floor Waxing What’s the pushbutton can after now that it has been put to use fixing unruly hair, painting chairs, killing bugs, polishing furniture, lathering beards—ad infinitum. It’s after the kitchen floor, that’s what. The foam that comes from the can is described as “the world’s fastest way to do a floor.” Freeze Leftover Soup Pour leftover soup into ice cube trays and freeze it. Then store the cubes in freezer. You then will have on hand just the right amount of soup needed for each meal. This does away with having to reheat the entire amount. Weight of Affluence WASHINGTON, D. C. (WMNS) — Give the affluent American lots of labor-saving devices, a car and TV and what do you have? The overweight American. This is one conclusion .of eight specialists on nutrition who compiled a book for physicians, “Obesity and Health.” Sponsored by the U.S. Public Health Service, the book points out that obesity is now a major American health problem, becoming more common as the good life comes within the grasp of more people. The truth is, physicians agree, that most overweight people are overweight because they eat too much. It’s as simple as that: Most of us eat too much, too richly, and we do little or no exercise to burn! up the excess calories we ingest. One physician estimates that as many as one out of four patients he sees is overweight. Their problem, he notes, is neither metabolic nor glandular. It is gluttony. * * * How to get the fat off? Eat less and exercise. Fad diets are out but balanced diets are in. Even bettter and easier than shedding excess weight is not putting it on in the first place. Care for Games When children receive a new game, before giving it to them to play with, use cellophane tape to reinforce the corner seams of the box. This prevents the box from coming apart at the seams from handling. Also slip a stout rubber band around the box to help prevent loose cards or parts from being scattered or tost, The Modern Way to HIGHER PAY Speedwriting ABC SHORTHAND Want a job that's never dull—yet will odd an extra $1000 and MORE a year to your income? Let Speedwriting abc Shorthand quickly qualify you for the glamorous secretarial position of your choice, Taught exclusively by us in this area, Speedwriting is the modern shorthand that uses the familiar obc's, not strange symbols or complicated machines. It's EASY, NATURAL —preferred by top firms,, I 50% FASTER than Civil Service requirements! \ Write, phone or visit us TODAY for details. Only Speedwriting Schools can offer these LIFETIME Alumni Privileges FREE transfer anytime— FREE Nationwide Employment Service—FREE Brush-up Training Fall Term Begins Sept. 11 1 8 W. Lawrence St. Styling depends upon the individual. “Colony Craft” pattern from the famed “Designer Gallery” collection of Alexander Smith offers a fine starting point. Its medallion motif can be played up country style with Pennsylvania Dutch furnishings, or the top deck kept stark with Near East accessories as accents. Pattern on the floor is easy to walk on, care for, sit around TV with. Pontiac Airman Announce Birth Wed Recently Airman 3C Robert Clyde ; Hadden, currently of Alexan- | dria, La., wed Linda Cheryl Jones of Arvada, Colo, in a ! recent ceremony. Hie Arvada Baptist Church was the setting for the afternoon nuptials in which the bride wore a cage styled gown of Chantilly lace over taffeta. Parents of the newlyweds are Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth R. -Jones of Arvada, Colo,, and the Louis C. Haddens of Wis- j ner Street. Mr. and Mrs. Keith Phares (Carol Windell) announce the arrival of Kelli Ann this morning. The baby’s grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Phares of Woodlow Street and Rev. and Mrs. Orville Win-deli of Genella Street. Freeze Block of Stock When freezing soup stock", I pour it into loaf pans to freeze. When frozen solid, remove from the pans and wrap in freezer paper. These blocks store neatly and take up less ] freezer space. Colorful Touch in Wastebaskets New wastebaskets are colorful and decorative. * ★ * One group features gay cot- ton print fabrics permanently bonded to metal baskets, then protected by a soil-resistant process. * *- * Like all waste containers, they need to be # washed out often with hot soap or detergent suds to keep the inside sanitary. SUMMER SALE SAVE 20% and MORE! Permanent FLOWER ARRANGEMENTS Summer CANDLES Decorative BASKETS Ceramic POTTERY HOTTEST SPORTSWEAR FOR BACK TO SCHOOL AT COOL SALE PRICES! j 100% Virgin Wool Imported Hand Knit! ( Full l/T-hiim.-.l SHETLAND at IQ WOOL FISHERMAN t AQi a ,Km BLEND V-NECK SWEATERS >3 SWEATERS 1/3 " Angora/Iambsw* Navy, Brown, Olive, White. v Natural Color. S-M-L. Kam Pastel or Basie Color-Cued to Match! 0|] Checks or Plaids! . i)Q| f| MuJti-co.Ior, llo PLAID WOOL KILTS \« W WOOL KNICKERS ,P 9 KNIT SHIFT! Authentic Tartans] 5-15. V/ Mini checks; tartan y . Neon Bright Kii ii» B—9 Tfl THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1967 1 Back to Sohcol SPECIALS Rag. $7.50 FOOTBALLS "Rawlings," laathar, official siza and weight..... 5" Other* from $1.99 to $19.99 Reg. $8.50 # BASKETBALLS "Spalding" official ilze oi weight.......... 4’ Other* from $2.99 to $22.99 Reg. $27 BASKETBALL SETS - wrMHicc "SPALDING e MASONITE BACKBOARD * Reg. $12 FOOTBALL SHOES | "MacGfsgor" high tops ( BASKETBALL SHOES I "Convorso All Star* high tops or oxfords, j 1 block and whito............. < Reg. $36 DELUXE 110 lb. BARBELL SETS ■ .................... 25” p i Mg0 Billyt»Kid BASEBALL WARM-UP JACKETS 799 Nylon, unlinod.................... / Q99 Nylon, casha lining............... * BIKE FORM-FIT MOUTH GUARD All purpose, tough, easy fit 00c for ell players.• • Others $5o to $2.80 INSTANT WEAR® Fresno Corduroy SLACKS w thick '» thin rtb Pblyfer. Z. VMM W001 77 nMWMMD..I * • Our Reg. 2 PLASTICWARE trout and tong wsarisfli your boy can tojoy thsts docks every tingle dayl Measure Model for unusually fin# fW In Mott Blud, Mr u $700 TEL-HURON 8 muss final, summer Clearance A fine collection of spring and summer fashion with savings in every department! But, hurry, sizes are broken and quantities are limited! save on dresses 5.99 SHOPPING I ( OMITIR I * OPEN! ELMS BROTHERS BIB BOV Dressy and casual styles for misses ond juniors. Choose from an assortment of sizes ond colors. Formerly 11.00 to 20.00. sportswear 1/3 *» 1/2 off lingerie 1.99 »a 2.99 foundations 1.99 3.99 accessories 1/3*® 1/2 off A wide selection of bros ond girdles, oil by Your favorite summer styles! See howyousc^son famous makers. Many styles, sizes. Formerly 2.50-11.00. , handbags, gloves and jewelry. A fine selection. shop monday through Saturday to 9 Tel-Huron Shopping Center (Telegraph at Huron Roads) (Clearance merchandise not available at Ponltiac Mall) ,?s=t a AsyBi Understatement of the Year Oar new fall Gene Stanley skimmer is the good taste classic with qniet standards all its own. Choose from new Brick, Black, Teal Brown. Sizes 8 to 16. *16 P. zis .- SHOPPERS GOLF OUTING Sun., Aug. 19 thru Sun., August 27 8 DAYS REGISTER NOW WITH ANY TEL HURON MERCHANT GOLF OUTING AT BEAUTIFUL HOLLY GREENS ................l iaistomers, 16 and over, are eligihle to enter and fill out an Entry Coupon at any of >the Tel-Huron stores. Registration enables you to: play 18 boles of golf at your own handicap and a chance at the drawing for many fine prizesi ALL FREE! No green fees, no entry fees... Check with any Tel Huron Merchant for details. p WfThere go guy ||§ going places in his || pedwin shoes! ALL WOOL FLANNEL $J99 Toa. Toa *Tob«teA on Telegraph at W. Huron Street wm\ Bernhard Altmann . V-Neck Sweaters lw 0 CjoM FABRICS 1 FITTO (SEW Hj pp 1 GOLDEN m NEEDLE iff TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER Phon# 335-5471 WINDSOR.. with full storm wslting. Quality leathers team up with Pedwin craftsmanship to glvs you solid comfort and stylo that puts you outahsad of tho field. Try on the shoo that’s right in gear with young men’s fashions today. —^ , Michigan Bankard ■ TEL HURON Northwood Center Security Charge 29 S. Telegraph “-*■■ ■ - - • ' Cardigan Sweaters $20°° Go back to school in a Bernhard Altmann 100 per cent, 2-ply Lambswool Sweater. Choose classic pullover V-Neck and cardigan sweaters. Both with full fashioned saddle shoulders. Great on campus.’Great colors: Bogota, Moor Gold, Nepal Moss, Navy, Coffee Bean, Donkey Eye Blue, Black/Green Mix. Most sizes, of course. AVAILABLE AT BOTH STORES b pari ot Pontiac since 1931 ISMUKPS I. $ FREE PARKING at ALL STORES ■ Do^town, Porniac ■ ™-Huron CantnHn Pontioc ■ Tech Plaza Center rJfe-io PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1967 Bias on Capitol Hill Is Charged WASHINGTON (AP) - The House, fresh from passing a new civil rights bill, has heard accusations of racial segregation and discrimination in the Congress-run Capitol Hill power plant. Twelve Negro employes of the plant said Wednesday they’re forced to use Negro-only washrooms and are discriminated against ha jobs and pay. House Speaker John W. McCormack pledged a personal probe of charges made in letters to Rep. John Conyeft Jr. D-Mich., and the Washington Evening Star. Conyers, a Negro, said he was pleased to know McCormack would investigate. House Republican Leader (Jerald R. i Ford said if the charges are true, “this would be Jim Crowism at its worst. It should be stopped immediately.’’ The controversy erupted as the House was passing overwhelmingly a bill to provide LAST DAYSI PRE-OPENING! Join Now and Be A Charter Member! 5CTFD REDUCINGI 0 I LI PROGRAM ! Here’s how it works....... OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK Monday thru Friday 10 a.m. til 10 p.m. Saturday -10 a.m. til 6 p.m. Sunday 1 p.m. til 6 p.m. LAST DAYS!! PRE-OPENING! 3432 W. HURON ST. just west of Elizabeth Lake Rd. Ph. 334-1591 Last Days To Be A Charter Member! Put Yourself in this Picture i PONTIAC'S ULTRAMODERN HEALTH SPA i Patented Electric Reducing Machine. • Mechanical Body Contouring Machine. • Piece, of Specialised Exercising Apparatus • Figure Building and Firming Machine. • Personal Supervision • Completely Air Conditioned * Private Dressing Booths and Locker. 9 Private Thermostat icaliy Controlled Showers o Plenty of FREE Parking 9 Authentic Finnish Sauna • Medicated Inhalation Room 9 Scientific Body Massage 9 Pressure Showers COMMENDED AND APPROVED BY U.G.A. - stiffer penalties for those who violate civil rights — including rights to equal job opportunity and conditions. LOOKER ASSIGNMENTS William C. Justice, chief plant engineer, denied, there was pay or job discrimination but acknowledged race is a factor in the assignment of lockers. ★ ★ 9 He said it is customary in making locker assignments for white employes to get lockers vacated by white men, and for Negroes to get ones vacated by other Negroes. Justice said that’s been the policy for 35 years and he has received no complaints until now. ★ 99 This tends to segregate the two washrooms, he acknowledged,. since the lockers are situated there. Justice denied favoritism for whites in job classification and pay. He told the Evening Star white employes possessed ‘higher level experience and intelligence than we’ve been able to find in the colored men." NOT DEPENDABLE Justice added the Negro-white job classification at the plant ‘seems to run counter to what’s desired to get integration here, but they just don’t have the intellectual ability and they’re not as dependable.” One Negro employe, who said he didn’t want to be identified for fear he’d lose his job, called working conditions “like the Deep South 20 years agi One in three, or about 15 million, wives earn a paycheck. Half of all working wives earn about a quarter of their family's total income. Grand Rapids Gl Killed in Action WASHINGTON (AP)—A Michigan soldier was among nine servicemen listed by the Defense Department Wednesday as killed in action in Vietnam. He is Army Sgt. George A. Zomberg, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward L. Zomberg of Grand Rapids. U.S. Imports Wasps to Fight Elm Disease EAST LANSING (UPI) - Atiny black wasp imported from France is being used to combat Dutch elm disease in the United States. Though no cure-all to the tree-ravaging Dutch elm beetle, scientists at Michigan State University hope .the wasp Will prove an effective fighter against the tree killing bark beetle larvae. / \ ( Dr. James W. Butcher, an insect specialist at MSU, spearheaded the drive to bring the wasp to the United gtofrf two years ago from France where it was discovered to be a big help in reducing the Dutch elm disease diere. He said the wasp produces larvae which kills bark beetles existing in Dutch elm trees by sucking out juices from the beetle larvae. , /' *. kP* Several plantings of the wasps have been made throughout Michigan to discover how effective the imported insect will be in comhatlng the Dutch elm bark beetle larvae. wi win com ncmr this JUHSL2V x 21'POOl <»' 666 NO MONEY 7 YEARS TO PAY OUR SPECIAL LOW LOW PRICE INCLUDES • INSTALLATION • FILTER A PUMP • STEEL BRACKETS • WALK AROUND DECKS • SAFETY FENCE A STA I • POOL LADDER BIG TRADE ALLOWANCE? For Your Old Pool, Tool Cabpna Optional 'BIG SAVINGS ^PRE-SEASON SALE! r OTHER SIZES PROPORTIONATELY LOW PRICES. STERLING‘"POOLS ^ 742 W. 7 MILE ROAD • DETROIT, MICHIGAN loPEMTOES ON DUTY 24 HOURS INCLUDING SUNDAYS MW TU5-5HU1 Beckwith-Evans Annual August OPPORTUNITY SALE August is our month of clearance for the fall season. Entire lines must be deleted. Off items must be sold. Over 2,500 remnants must be sold. This can be your golden opportunity to got the carpet buy of a lifetime. All our regular services are yours during this sale- Our installation is still guaranteed for the lifetime of your carpet, irrespective of price. Come in and see for yourself why thrifty carpet buyers await this sale event every year. YARN REFERENCE IS TO PILE OF CARPET BETTER CARPET FOR UNDER *8!! Save on these First quality REMNANTS Rag. Sale 12x9'8" Blue Carved Cameo....(130 $14.51 12x12 Blue Green Poly.....$200 119.95 12x9 Blue Green Holly........$ 65 39.95 ’ 12x12*5" Gold Tockwind...$136 99.59 ! 12x9M0" Gold Gladys.......$ 70 49.99 12x12'2" Green Satisfy .......... $140 79.95 12x13'9" Blue Green Trails v.S152 94.50 12x9 Beige Villa......’...$132 59.95 15x11'2" Gold Rockwind.......... $185 114.95 12x17'10" Russett Tweed Ramble .. $189 94.50 12x14 Red Carved Honey......... $119 64.50 12x 17'9" Nugges Gladys.....$120 74.50 11'9"xH'Beige Royale......$105 54.50 12x23'10" Beige Tweed Briar.$256 149.95 12x13'5" Turquoise Flush Nylon . . $150 94.50 12x12 Gold Tweed Squire...$112 64.50 .12x11'9" Blue Twist Pat.. j.$ 96 59.95 12xl4'10" Red/Black Tweed Cyper. $]80 59.50 12x124" Gold Twist Devon__$126 74.55 12x1 (73" Green Tweed Ivy.$125 69.95 12x10*9" Beige Carved Skyland ... $ 89 4441 )2xl 87" Green Pat Twist..$154 99.50 12x12 Gold Plush Nylon.......... S 96 49.95 1 l^xlOT" Blue Green Trails.$120 69.95 12xl0'4" Gold Tweed Scape....$ 90 49.85 12x11 '4" Orange Vogue..... $ 90 54.50 15x9'9" Beige Carved M Hoy..$140 69.96 12x11 BlacklWhite Glendale ..$120: 51.95 12x12 Gold Tweed Swirl ..SI 12 54.50 12x12'10" Gold Gladys 70 49.95 T^ecfewttk-Hvans SERVING NORTH OAKLAND COUNTY FINE FLOOR COVERINGS TEL HURON SHOPPING CENTER Telegraph at Huron Roads CALL 334-9544 FOR IN THE NOME SERVICE Open Monday thru Saturday 9:30 to 9 — Sunday 12-5 Rubber Craft Padding With Each Remnant THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1967 B-yjl NOTICE . PUBLIC HEARING ON SANITARY LANDFILL Tlrt Public Hearing originally scheduled by the Waterford Township Planning Commission on July 22nd, 1967 to consider the request for o permit to operate a sanitary landfill was cancelled due to the curfew. That hearing has been rescheduled for: Thursday, Aug. 17,1967 7:30 P. M. d.s.1 Waterford Township High School 1415 Crescent take Road Thank You ★ ★★★★★★★★★ The Waterford Twp. Planning Comm. Uncle Sam Pays College Tabs ' . • ' By JERRY BAULCH Associated Press News Features WASHINGTON — If you’re thinking about bucking for a college scholarship maybe you’d like to try for one of the thousands offered each year by the Armed Services through ROTC. Thev’re prize plums, hut the competition Is stiff. Men already in college taking ROTC can compete for them as well as high school students looking forward to college. It’s too late to try for this fall but there’s time ior next year. The Navy has a Nov. 17 deadline for applying, the Army Jan. 1. The Air Force hasn’t set one yet, but it probably will be about mid-April. ★ ★ The program is picking up steam as each service builds towards its legal limit of scholarships by 1970-71. The Navy, Army and Air Force each has a 5,900 limit under their'separately run programs. The Marine Corps is included in the Navy program. THREE AT ONCE If you’re a high school senior there’s nothing to stop you from bidding for scholarships in all three programs at the same time, as well as other scholarships and the military academies. When an ROTC scholarship is passed up it usually goes to an alternate. Each service program has its own variations for selecting the winners, but the benefits are the same: All tuition and incidental fees paid, a textbook allowance and $50 a month living allowance during the school year. The pay is higher during summer camps pr cruises. This won’t, however, take cai*e of all your running its program much longer thibi the Army ,and Air Force, figures you’ll need $300 to $800 a year extra. CHOOSE COLLEGE You can choose your college so long as you find one that will accept you and that has an ROTC of the service that awards you the scholarship. The Army has.262 colleges you can choose from, the Air Force 175, and the Navy 52. But there is an obligation. When you graduate with the gold bar of an ensign or 2nd lieutenant you are pledged to a six-year military obligation. The Navy, Marines and Army each requires a scholarship student to do f o u r years of active duty after commissioning, plSs two more in the Reserves. The Air Force scholars agree to take flight training for a year after college and stay on active duty five more years. SUMMER TRAINING You take one summer of training in the Army and Air Force ROTC before you get your commission. But the Navy requires NROTC students to train during all three college summers. In the three programs, you have to be a male U.S. citizen, a high school graduate and not a conscientious objector. The Navy says you must never have been married and must stay single until commissioned. The main criteria are your scholarship record, aptitude tests, extracurricular activities, and personal interviews. Of course, you have to be in tip-top physical shape. ★ ★ You mustn’t reach your 24th birthday before June 30 of the year you’ll get your military commission. And you must be at II college expenses. The Navy, which has been least 17 when your freshman year starts. | Your Dollars Go Further at Sears Pri< led For A Sellout! Sears 1968 Automatic Water Softeners Are Coming—Now Buy this 1967 Model at Our LOWEST PRICE FREE! flSjWg EVER! Wat?i: Regular *229.95 Now Only No Obligation! Bring in a Sample to Your Nearest Sears Store Seam arranges installation. You can count op quality installation by expert installers. It’s the convenient, professional way. : cither tank should leak during t : following 9 years, we will furnish sl__ : install a /new softener tank or salt : tank free of charge. 149 Check These Features on Sears “Custom” Automatic Water Softeners e Just the right remedy for hard water problems. You get brighter clothes, sparkling dishes, smoother skin • Capacity—handles up to 80,500 grains ' of hardness per week • Regenerates—up to 7 fully automatic regenerations per week while you sleep. Eliminates regenerations during water usage periods • Automatic By-Pass assures continued . water supply during regeneration • Guest Cycle Button allows extra regeneration any time you need additional soft water • Iron Removal—up to 3 ppm iron NO MONEY DOWN on Soars Easy Payment Plan Sears Plumbing and Heating Department , Open Monday, Thuradar, ‘ Friday, Saturday 9 to 9, Tue.day, Wednesday 9 to 5:30 Sears mah, aoaavcK anb co. • Pontiac, 154 N. Saginaw, TE 5-4171 • Gratiot al Van Dyke, WA 541100 7 f , , ■ * Woodward, Highland Pk, TO 8-1900 • Maaend. MAIL Gratiot ft Mile 1U., *9S-B000 a Crowe 7 Hile-Maek, TO 44000 • Oakland Mall. 14 Mile Rd. at Joha % 585-1000 • Grand River al Oakiaa* WE 55500 •Unteln Park, Southfield at Dl«, DO 57000 • Livonia Mall. 7 Mile at Middlebelt, 4756000 • Wyandotte, Biddle-Maple, AV 4-9000 OAKLAND COMMUNITY COLLEGE MHOUNCEMENT OF EVENING CUSSES 1967-FALL SESSION-1968 15 WEEKS SEPTEMBER 5-DECEMBER 21 THE FOLLOWING COURSES WILL BE AVAILABLE IN THE EVENINGS ACCOUNTING Principles of Accounting Proprietorship Accounting Corporation Accounting Survey of Taxation ART Basic Drawing Lettering ana Layout Oil Painting Art Appreciation Advertising Illustration AUDIOVISUAL Introduction to Audiovisual Material* BIOLOGY LANGUAGE Beginning French I Beginning Gorman I Beginning SpanUh I LIBRARY Introduction to Library LIFE SCIENCE Gonoral Biology Anatomy and Physiology I BUSINESS Introduction to Business Principles of Supervision Business Law CHEMISTRY -Introduction to Chemlstryi General Chemistry I DATA PROCESSING Introduction to Data Processing Unit Record Equipment Computer Programming Data Processing Systems DRAFTING Introduction to Technical Drawing Engineering Graphics Technical Sketching ECONOMICS Economics I ELECTRONICS Electronic Circuits Communication Electronics ENGLISH Elements of Written Communications Reading Improvement Fundamentals of Communications Business Communications Technical Communications English I English II American Literature Public Speaking Technical Writing GUIDED ORIENTATION HISTORY Survey of American History LANDSCAPE TECHNOLOGY Introduction to Landscape Gardening Introduction to Landscape Planning MATHEMATICS Business Mathematics Elementary Algebra Elmentary Algebra w/ Geometry Intermediate Algebra College Algebra and Trigometry Analytic Geometry and Calculus I Analytic Geometry and Calculus II Technical Mathpmatics I Technical Mathematics III Comparative Mathematics MECHANICS Introduction to Manufacturing Processes Manufacturing & Fabrication Processes MEDICAL Medical Laboratory Fundamentals Introduction to Medical Assisting MUSIC APPRECIATION PHYSICS Mechanics end Heat General Physics II PHYSICAL SCIENCE POLICE SCIENCE Introduction to Law Enforcement Police Patrol Administration & Pro. Criminal Investigation & Case Prep. Interrogation and Interview Tech. POLITICAL SCIENCE American Government Introduction to Political Selene* PSYCHOLOGY Introduction to Psychology Human Relations and Personnel Problems RETAIL BUYING - SALESMANSHIP SECRETARIAL Typing Fundamentals Intermediate Typing Advanced Typing Shorthand Fundamentals intermediate Shorthand Dictation and Transcription Principles of Secretarial Science Office Skills Stenographic Practice SOCIOLOGY ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS TRANSFER COURSES Students Entering College for the First Time Graduates of accredited secondary schools are elegible for admission. Applicants who complete a high school equivalency diploma by performance an the General Education Development test are eligible. An applicant 19 years of age or older who has not completed high school will be admitted as a special or provisional student and will remain in this.category until such time as he provides a high school diploma, an equivalency diploma, or achieves a 2.0 GPA for ths first 12 credit hours of degree level courses attempted. All studendt will be classified on the basis of their preparation. Those lacking adequate preparation will be required to enroll In developmental courses. CAREER COURSES Students will be classified on the basis of their previous education. There is the opportunity for those who wish assistanee to be counseled in the selection of courses so that success will be assured. TUITION/FEES Tuition - 3 credit hour course NON-RESIDENTS $ 9.00 per cr. hr. , $20.00 per cr. hr. $27.00 $60.00 Matriculated Students Only* Student activities fee Matriculation Fee $10.00 $10.00 $15.00 $15.00 *A matriculated student is one who has earned 18 or more credit hours or is currently carrying 7 or mare credit hours. ENROLLMENT INFORMATION REGISTRATION DATES: September 5,6,7,11 HOURS: 5:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. REGISTRATION CENTERS AUBURN HILLS CAMPUS HIGHLAND LAKES CAMPUS ORCHARD RIDGE CAMPUS Student Services Center High Oaks Hall 103 0-Building, Room 119 For Further Information-Contact Admissions Office OAKLAND COMMUNITY COLLEDE 2480 Opdyk, Hoad Bloomfield Hills, Michigan 48013 Phono 847-628! THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1967 Tito Peace Talks With Arabs Apparently Fruitless * CAIRO (AP) — Yugoslav President Tito wound up his swing through Arab lands today amjd signs that his talks with Arab leaders failed to produce any peaceformula for the Middle East. The semiofficial Egyptian newspaper A1 Ahram quoted Yugoslav sources as saying Tito will soon launch “far-reaching political activity” through personal contacts and through the United Nations. The activity reportedly will be aimed at break-. ing what Tito has termed the “period of diplomatic stagnation”—the time since the emer- , gency U.N. General Assembly on the Middle East adjourned in July. , ★ * ★ AI Ahram said Tito insisted that he had proposed no specific peace plans to Arab leaders, saying, “I came here merely to exchange views.” Informed sources said Tito had pleaded for a “realistic” approach to Middle East problems growing out of the June SrlO war, ami that this stand ' met especially stiff opposition in Syria. PLEA REJECTED' Syrian Chief of State Noured-din Atassi rejected Tito’s plea, the sources said, and refused to budge from Syria’s hard anti-Israeli line. On the religious front, the proposal of the chief rabbi of the Israeli army to hold prayers on Moslem territory ignited fears among politicians that it would touch off widespread Moslem protests, both in Israetoccupied territory and outside it. ★ * ★ The rabbi, Brig. Shlomo Gor-en, announced he would pray atop the hill where the second Jewish temple once stood in Old Jerusalem. The spot now holds the mosques of the Dome pf the Rock and El Aksa, both sacred to Islam. The second Jewish temple was destroyed in 70 a.d. by Titus. All that remains of it is Jerusalem’s Wailing Wall, which stands just outside the mosque area. The International Red Cross said that the first Arab refugees turning to their homes Friday. , In Geneva, the Red Cross said it expects the repatriation rate to begin at about 1,000 a day. More than 200,000 Arabs fled the west bank of the Jordan River ,, during or after the June war. ★ ★ # Czechoslovakia revoked the passport of Czech wfiter and Communist party member Lad-islav Mnacko, who has been in Israel demonstrating his pro-Israeli sentiments, .despite his. own government’s allegiance to the Arabs. Mnacko has a Jweish wife. He created an international storm earlier this year with a book highly critical of the Communist ruling class, “The Taste of Power.” U.S. CRITICIZED In Tel Aviv the Israeli tabloid Yediot Aharonot said U.S. State Department officials were working against President Johnson’s goal for peace, in the Middle East. The newspaper charged that the State Department has been trying to get Israel to relinquish captured land. Ahmet Shukalry, chairman, of jthe Palestinian Liberation Organization which has headquarters in Beirut, Lebanon, blamed the Israeli victory on U.S. support and aid. “Israel, left alone* would crumble in any confrontation with the Arabs,’’ he said. Shukairy, whose goal is a Palestinian state to replace present-day Israel, called the United States the No. 1 enemy of the Palestine people. But he said that if the United States offers the Arabs free military training or other aid, many Arabs might take it. Mower Crashes MUNCIE, Ind. (AP) — Something new in traffic accidents was reported here. Elden Finley was driving around his lawn atop a power lawnmower when the ’ brakes failed. The mower charged out into the street and hit a police car. COUPON SAVINGS |UHIMR CO.| KLIP KATZ KIDS KASH KOUPONS CAULKING 5 TUBES 100 QUAKER STATE OIL PLASTER i BATHROOM i LAUNDRY BOARD I VANITY j TUB 39 c quart I29 i 38" i It 88 white SHOWER STALL CEILING TILE 29 95 SI. Imp. V SQ. FT. CHARCOAL FIRE STARTER 4 400 QUARTS | 32x21 KITCHEN SINK 1095 VINYL LATEX PAINT MAHAG0NY PLYWOOD I Prefinish Mandaran 4x7 $249 4x7 $333 235 h. SHINGLE BEAUTIFUL COLORS 100 SQ. FEET $089 INSULATION ROLL $225 CHAIN LINK FENCE ROLL 1375 0L0SE0UT | ALL ! SUMMER [ FURNITURE! Dust I 2x4 j ALUMINUM! jjgj. Mop j PEG BOARD j SIDING ! MOWERS I 49° I 24*. 4 cycle fnH-2995 PORCH LIGHTS I00 : HARD BOARD: nnnR [Oscillating I 4x8 j MMOn iSPRINKLEH 1 45 495 $■ up SPRINKLER • NO* 41 2«9 : if We Ain’t ! • Got H B’Gosh • • We’ll Get It! • stock* on hand. ALL ITEMS OASH i C, MADISON MIGHTS BERKLEY UNION LAKE, MICH. I 2 27036 John* et tlUge JUid 171G Cooliilge •f Il -Mff.ft.a7 7940 Cooley LLRL I e 1 l/ict. 1. *r Union Ik. M.. 1 0 j LOOK AT THESE LOW EVERYDAY DISCOUNT ICES SPECIAL VALUES IN VITAMINS 9e Absolutely SURE of getting the LOWEST prioo on your next PRESCRIPTION Don’t lust cross your fingers and hope that you'rogottlng the lowest price on your proscriptions. Bo Sure! Tako your proscription to Thrifty! Wo make a point of pricing prescriptions at tho vary lowest possible figure! And you can bo sure of getting tho best service from Thrifty's 'Man in Whlta*., VITAMINS with B-T2s 250'* Reg. 4.95 MYAOEC VITAMINS by Parka Davis Betti* of 100 Captulei 319 DISCOUNT COSMETIC SALE Revlon*, famous meis-turo lotion; Aquamarine scant. 12 ft. a*. Medicated ' formula door, up pimplos, acne, skin blemishes. New. Bikini Brush ADORN HAIR SPRAY Regular 1.50 Value Regular or Hard - to - Hold | Adom plus a clever bikini ] brush to coax now hair stylos I inty place. ALLEREST TABLETS 78* Reg. 1.25 Relieves symptoms of hay favor and other allergies. Bottle of 24. _________ BR0M0 SELTZER 63* Reg.’98c Large Site Relievos ftomoeh upset, nervous tension, hooddehos. LISTERINE Mouth Wash 59* Reg. 98c 14-os. Size Oral antiseptic kills germs by millions. WILKINSON BLADES 45* d-CON READY-MIX 1" Regular 1.69 World-famous Ready-Mix, roady-to-usa powder kills * rots and mica. ENFAMIL Ready - to - use Infant Formula Coneantrated LIQUID 13-oz. can make's 26-ox. of formula Regular 35c can 5 CANS FOR 09* SUNBEAM Electric Alarm CLOCK For Back to Seheol Regular 4.95 Value Thrifty’* DUcount Price 199 INSULIN H OOc U 4 99 40’sww 80’s I RUPTURE-EASER JpUMMttSwki >•$485 ?&£ DRUG STORE IQ A I lv^®4895 DIXIE HWY. Id Hi .. SBJI _____hs ntuss ssgerti form-fitting wathsbls support hr ,. j 38 •i *"•« Is.frsnt Adjustabls 1st •di m, Iras. pad. For men. and ehlldrsn. Mail ordirn (iv« LOSE WEIGHT1 FASTIMieft TCw/fi Most UNITR0L Time Released Captulei One capsule provides prolonged therapeutic effect for about 0 to 10 hours. 21-DAY SUPPLY City-Wide Free Prescription Delivery. Have Your Doctor Call Your Nearest THRIFTY for Prompt Free Delivery Service. PRESCRIPTION 140 North Saginaw Huron Street FILLED BY US QUALITY DRUGS LOWEST PRICE THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1967 B—E* Alaskd Flood Ebbs; Death Toll Now at 7 FAIRBANKS, Alaska (AP) -\ 'The brown flciodwatera of the Chena River receded today, but at a pace so slow that the city’s 15,000 evacuees were hot expect-ed to begin returning to their damaged homes and businesses before Saturday. Only a tiny fraction of them carried flood insurance, officials sajd. Hie bodies of four more victims were found Wednesday, disaster headquarters and state police reported, bringing Alaska’s flood death total to seven. Two bodies were discovered in the city and two more in Tok, river community on the Alaska Highway. ★ ■ ★ ★ Police conducting a house-to-house search earlier reported three deaths including that of a young child. The victims were not identified and the cause of death was not given. as per. About 95 per cent of Fairbanks’ buildings were affected by the flood, but an insurance executive estimated just two per cent of the community' property owners had flood insurance. The situation prompted calls for immediate federal re- House Unites to Back Hike in Benefits WASHINGTON (AP) - House Democratic and Republican leaders have forged a rare union to assure passage of legislation to boost Social Security benefits and taxes. If the bill finally is enacted, the average benefit paid a retired couple would go up from (145 to (164 a month. Each of the current 24.2 million beneficiaries would receive at least a 12V4 „per cent increase. The range of benefits for a single retired person, now (44 to (142 a month, would rise to (50 j| (159.80. * * ★ Taxes would go up as well—a maximum of (44 next year for a worker earning as much as (7,600 and for his employer. The scale would rise more in future habilitation funds and low cost loans to businessmen and home-owners. 'It's much more than I expected it to be,” said Creath Tooley, western regional director of the President’s Office of Emergency Planning, toured the city of 30,000 by boat and helicopter Wednesday. ‘You just don’t expect to see a town inundated such as this.” Damage was placed at about (200 million. ★ Gov. Walter Hickel, calling for Fairbanks to be designated a federal disaster area, said he thought Saturday would be the earliest time residents could return to 4Jieir homes—if rain holds off. Cloudy skies settled above the city today, and the Weather Bureau forecast a few light showers. “If those clouds drop more rain we could be right back in trouble,” said Mayor H. Boucher. FIRE DANGER The danger of uncontrolled fire, which hhd officials on edge Wednesday after five buildings burned in the downtown area, tapered off with no additional fires reported today. The Chena, sent on a rampage by more than 514 inches of rain during four days, was down about six inches from Tuesday’s high point when up to nine feet of muddy water rushed into the business district. ★ * At peak flow, Geological Survey engineers said, the river was pouring through Fairbanks at a rate of 15 billion gallons day—enough to supply the city of New York with water for about two weeks. Hickel,' with Tooley at his side, told newsmen that state HOUSE CONSIDERATION The House is considering the bill under procedures that allow only a yes or no vote without amendments. ROCHESTER’S LARGEST TIRE CENTER YOUR SAFETY IS OUR BUSINESS AVON flreotone 223 HUN ST., ROCHESTER 651-5005 Congo Crosses Twice The Congo River li the only major. African waterway that twice crosses the equator, the National Geographic Society says. Redskin' Hunted in Arizona \ PHPENIX, Ariz. (AP)-Police here are on the. lookout for an Indian with a cracked shoulder and a broken nose. But no posse has been sent after the missiflg 'Redskin,” because the Indian is a 400-pound statue belonging to Ray Evans. It was stolen from in front of the Evans tor-niture store. Nice Is Flower City Gardens of flowers surround Nice on the French Rivieraj the National Geographic says. Cut blooms go to markets throughout Europe. AP Wirephot# 30-DAY FORECAST—These maps, based 'on ones issued yesterday by the U.S. Weather Bureau, indicate that the Pontiac area will have above-normal precipitation and be-low-normal temperatures for the next 30 days. BUY, SELL, TRADE . . . USE PONTIAC .PRESS WANT ADSI PIANO RENTAL SPECIAL! - Use Our Rental Purchase Plan! Here's the way to help your youngsters acquire the musical skills that Will enrich their leisure' for a lifetime! Using our plan, try a piano in your home at very little cost! • WIDE CHOICE OF STYLES A new piano of your choice! Every . style and finish you want. • TRY BEFORE YOU BUY No obligation to buy, but if you do, all rental payments apply. only ‘8. month "Clayton" Spinet Piano in ebony finish, $495 GRINNELL'S, Pontiac Mall, 682-0422 Downtown Pontiac, 27 S. Saginaw St., FE 3-7168 Use Your Charge, 4-Pay Plan (90 days same as cosh) or Budget Terms______________ THIS IS THE MOST INCREDIBLE CARPET SALE WE HAVE EVER HELD! FiM KEB1 AT "CAIPIT CENTER 3127 W.IHM PONTIAC and local governments were nearing the limits of their financial ability to cope with the disaster. “I would think,” Hickel said, ‘that under the circumstances it would be only natural for federal aid to be forthcoming.” BEFORE WINTER • Hickel and Boucher both stressed the need for a quick And massive effort to complete reconstruction and repair before the arrival of winter weather, in which temperatures of 60 below zero have been recorded here. Hickel said he had given some yeai"s- ..... . , ,! consideration to a special Whi e official endorsement of|sion of tl) legisiature to meet the bill by the; House Republican problems of th| disaster, but he leadership Wednesday assured |sajd no decision had been made passage, there is opposition to jas et some portions of It and the Sen-| ate is expected to work over the „T, ..... . „ measure extensively, leaving its’ 1 we,f,"d 11 necessary to call final shape to be determined by «?e legislature into special ses- a conference of the two cham-!«on to th« her*| . we wouldn’t hesitate to call Ders- |one,” Hickel said. ViUIOllSE Sul One of the hardest-hit areas embraced the site of the Alas-ka-67 exposition, showplace of Alaska’s purchase centennial jthis year. CARPET CENTER N PONTIAC . I IN SOUTHFIELD I IN LIVONIA 3127 W. HURON 21170 W. 8 MILE 30830 PLYMOUTH Ur.lUuMUuialM. 1 M. tnrffMii * UUMr | W..i d M,d «<•> US’ (P) (el • (e) Ly NONE NONE NONE PROPOSED AMENDATORY ORDINANCE . ORDINANCE NO. 29-v . - ■ An Ordinance to amend the Zoning Ordinance No 29 of the Township of Farmington as amended. IT IS HEREBY ORDAINED by the Township Board of the Township of Farmington, Oakland County, Michigan: SECTION ONE: J m J "That the Zoning Map of said Ordinance No. 29, as amended, be and the same is hereby amended to show O. Office Building District classification, where RA-2 Single Residency District classification fs, now shown ip the area described as follows: Property located in the Township of Farmington, Oakland County, Michigan, described as follows: Town 1 North; Range 9 East, Section 13 part of the southeast bne-quarter beginning at a point distant north 89* 40* 50" west, 669.57 from the east one-quarter corner, thence south 17 08’ 30" east 420.24 ft., thence south 55 00 west 86.46 ft., thence south 59° 20’ 00" east 327.48 ft., thence north 89* 23*-00" west along the north right-of-way line of Highway 1-696, 1630.23 ft., thenca north 00* 23’ 10 west 605.69 ft., thence south 89’ 52’ 50’ east 560.20 ft., thence south 89* 44* .00" east 368 ft., thence south 89* 40’ 50" east 371.37 ft. to the point of beginning, containing 19.59 acres more or less. . Also: ,, , Town I North. Range 9 East. Section 13 part of the southeast one-quarter corner, beginning at . the east one-quarter corner, thence south on the east section line 577.51 ft., thence north 71 30 west 286.44 southeast one-quarter corner, thence south on the east section line 577.51 ft., thence r north 71 * 30’ west 286.44 ft,, thence south 22 50’ west 149 ft., thence north 59* 20’ west 341 ft., thence north 55* 0’ east 86 ft., thence north 23* 0* west 412 ft., to the east and west one-quarter line, thence east along the said one-quarter line 673 ft., to the point of beginning, i except the north 132 ft. of the east 495.4 ft. thereof, also except that part taken for highway 1-696, containing 5.56 acres more or less. SECTION TWO: All Ordinances or parts of Ordinances in conflict herewjth are hereby repealed only to the extent necessary to give this Ordinance full force and effect. SECTION THREE: The provisions of this Ordinance are hereby ordered to take effect upon publication of the Ordinance as required by law. SECTION FOUR: 1 This Ordinance is hereby declared to have been adopted Ijy the Township Board of the Township of Farmington, County of Oakland, and State of Michigan, at a meeting thereof duly called and held on the ------- day of ■■ '■ ......------, 1967, end Ordered to be given publication in the manner prescribed by law. BLUE PRINTS AND MAPS AND ZONING TEXT MAY BE OBSERVED AT THE FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP HALL ON ANY BUSINESS DAY BETWEEN 8:30 AM. AND 4:30 P.M- , Charles G. Lorion, Chairman Planning Commission Farmington Township Publication dates: August 3, August 17, 1967. FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP PLANNING COMMISSION PUBLIC HEARING THURSDAY, AUG. 24, 1967 8:00 P. M. at O. E. DUNCKEL* JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL 32800 TWELVE MILE ROAD The Farmington Township Planning Commission will give formal consideration- to a proposed amendment to the Farmington Township Zoning Ordinance' which yrould rezone the property shown in the map below and described in the proposed Ordinance from its present B-3 General Business District dassifioatlon to P-1 Parking District Classification. Any person -who may be interested is invited to participate in discussion of the proposed change. This property is located behind and to the north of the Ace Budget Store at 28829 Orchard Lake Road. Purpose of the request is to afford additional parking for the U.S. Tool Company located to the' immediate north of Ace Budget Store; (p) The front set backs shall be measured from the existing or proposed right-of-way line on major of secondary thorofares. Marginal access roads required, whether dedicated or private* may ba Included , wfthin the front yard. The- required front yard may be Utilized for parking and may bezoned„as t P-1 11 District. - . ' • PROPOSED AMENDATORY ORDINANCE ORDINANCE NO. 29— An Ordinance to amend the Zoning Ordinance l^o. 29 of the Township of Farmington as amended. IT IS HEREBY ORDAINED by the Township Board of the Township of Farmington, Oakland County, Michigan: SECTION ONE: That the Zoning Map of said Ordinance No. 29, as amended, be and the seme Is hereby amended to show P-1 Parking District classifieftion, where B-3 " General Business District classification is now shown if) the area described as follows: The west 65 feet of the north 360 feet and the north 40 feet of the property described as: The E. 5 Acres of the N. % of the S.E. ty4 of the N.E. Vi of Sec. 10, T. I N., R. 9 E., Farmington Twp., Oakland County, Michigan, subject to any restrictions upon the use of the premises; excepting end exempting there, from the following described property: Lahd in the Twp. of Farmington, Oakland Co., Michigan, described as follows: Beg. at the S.E. corner of the following described property the N- Vz of the S.E. Vi of the N.E. Vi of Sect. 10, T. 1 N., R. 9 E., Farmington Twp., Oakland Co., Michigan; thence N. along the cert-' ter of Orchard Lake Road , 300 feet to a point; thence W. 300 feet to a point; thence S. 300 feet to a point; thence E. 300 feet to the point of beg.; including that tenement used as manufacturing plant at 28829 Orchard Lake Road and , all buildings, appurtenances end til improvements, conveniences and attachments used in connection therewith. 9 ** SECTION TWO: All Ordinances or parts of Ordinances In conflict herewith are hereby repealed only to the extent necessary to give this Ordinance full force end effect SECTION THREE: The provisions of this Ordinance are hereby ordered to take effect upon publication of the Ordinance as required by law. SECTION FOUR: , This Ordinance is hereby declared to have been adopted Ly the Township Board of the Township of Farmington, County of Oaklaind, and State of Michigan, at a meeting thereof duly called and held on the .... day of -------- 19&I arid Ordered to be given publication in the manner’; prescribed by. law. BLUE PRINTS AND MAPS AND ZONING TEXT MAY BE OBSERVED AT THE ' FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP HALL ON ANY BUSINESS DAY bf TWEEN 8:30 A.M. AND,4:30 P.M, •' . • Chprlea G. Lorion, Chairman Planning Commission Farmington Township Publication date?: .. ‘ « ' ' V* August 3, August 17, 1967, THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1967 B—15 There's Gbld in That Silver -Certificates, Cartwheels NEW YORK (AP) ft- There’s gold in them thar silver certificates! In silver dollars, too. /And even certain nickels are worth more than 5 cents. Dealers are advertising their willingness to pay from 25/ to 30 per cent over the face value of $1, $5 and $10 silver certificates. When trading in silver dollars begins on the New York Mercantile Exchange Monday, the asking price for a 60-pound sack bulging with 1,000 uncirculated cartwheels is expected to be about $2,000. < : And one dealer says he’s collecting nickels minted from 1942 through 1945 because they contain enough silver and copper to make them worth more than cents. The. law of supply and demand is responsible for the current ferment In silver. Negro Youth Charged With Riot Murder DETROIT (AP) - A Negro youth, who arrived in Detroit from Birmingham, Ala., about six weeks ago, was charged with first degree murder Wednesday in the slaying of a shoe repair shop owner during last month’s racial rioting. The youth, Darryl McCurtis, 20, of Detroit, demanded examination at his arraignment before Recorder’s Judge George W. Crockett. He was ordered held without bond pending a pretrial hearing Aug. 28. Judge Crockett said an attorney would be appointed to represent McCurtis. The Detroit News said a tip ‘funneled through its Somebody Knows secret witness plan led to the arrest. The News offered a $5,000 reward for information leading to a* conviction in (he case. McCurtis was charged in the death of George Messerlian, 68, who was severely beaten by a mob of looters during the first day of the riot, July 23. He died in a hospital July 27. Messerlian was clubbed while trying to protect his shop from looters, police said. He emerged from the shop waving a saber with which he hacked one of the looters on the shoulder. Certain coins always have been worth more than their face value because they.were scarce and because a - collector willing to pay a premium for them to fill holes in his collection. Silver coins—dimes, quarters, halves, dollars—command a premium for their value to collectors rather than their metallic! value. This was because the U.S. Treasury for years had held the price of American silver at $1." an ounce, an artificial ceiling (hat ignored the law of supply and demand. The formula Worked, however, even though silver consumption in recent years began outstripping production. In 1966, silver consumption in the United States for Industrial purposes amounted to a record of about 150 million ounces, an increase of 9t4 per cent over 1965. Despite this growing demand for silver by such industries as the photographic, sterling ware, electronics. and electrical, the government held the price. Automatic TRANSMISSION • SERVICE • ‘ 4/u lly /guaranteed* ’ RELIABLE TRANSMISSION 922 Oakland - FE 4-0101 SALE Annually for Over 30 Years "Best Value" Piano and Organ Sale Used Only This Summer at Michigan Music Camps INTERLOCHEN arid BAYVIEW Spinets, consoles, and studio uprights. New guarantee, bench included, choice of models and finishes. Savings up to . . $200 Included with , Baldwin Grands are Studio Used Yamaha, Kimball and Weber Grand pianos. SAVINGS UP T015% Baldwin organs Including compacts used only for choral classes. Limited number. New guarantee. Walnut and cherry finishes. Savings up to ... *125 Complimentary lesson plan for1 all the family. Special summer terms at bank rates. Start payments in October *2«U19 North Saginaw-FE 4-4721 OPEN FRIDAY AND MONDAY EVENINGS TIL • P.M. Closed Wednesday and Saturday Afternoons 1 PAA During August Smiley Bros. . LEADER SLAIN-Puerto Rico union leader Frank Chavez, 39, was shot and killed yesterday in San Juan. A strong suporter of Teamster’s President James Hoffa, he was shot by a former bodyguard, Ivan Coll Figueroa. Harlem Told: Politick for Law WASHINGTON (AP). - A Negro congressman told an angry Harlem delegation — visiting Capitol Hill to demand a rat eradication law—to transform its frustrations into political ac-Hon. T’m as sick and tired of this crap as anyone,” Rep. John Conyers Jr., D-Mich., told the group from New York City’s Ne-gro slum section Wednesday. ★ * *\ “I know you’re mad at everyone including me and that’s your privilege—but it’s about time that black, mad, angry, frustrated America begins to turn ‘this into some political channels,” Conyers added. The Harlem group joined another from the Brownsville section of Brooklyn to meet informally Wednesday with some New York City congressmen and Conyers to demand reversal of House action that sidetracked the $40 million, administration-backed rat control pro- 89 MEMBERS Chief spokesman for the 80-member delegation was Jesse Gray, a trim, articulate Negro. Gray, asserting that rats in slum homes, are one of the root causes of racial unrest, said: “If Congress can’t address itself to killing rats, we’re in a sad sack in this nation.” and by 79 per cent of the Republican membership. Gray was chief catalyst of an Aug. 7 demonstration by a Harlem group in the House chamber in protest, of that body’s refusal to, consider the rat control bill, TTie demonstrators ended by tangling with Capitol Hill police. Once you start killing rats,” he told the congressmen, “you’ll get into the rotten buildings and see for yourself what causes riots.” Rep. Frank J. Brasco, the Brooklyn Democrat who arranged the meeting and who intervened on at least two occasions to soothe tense situations, said the House action was supported by Southern Democrats Romney to Talk CHARLEVOIX (AP) - Gov. George Romney will give a speech on water and air pollution at the dedication of-a $25 million {riant of the Madusa Portland Cement Co. Tuesday in Charlevoix. BUY, SELL, TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! olbiMuilcC*. bliihtd in Pontloc 30Y«m ODDS & ENDS SALE SAVE ... SAVE ... SAVE! WE'RE CLEANING OUT THE WAREHOUSE TO AAAKE ROOM FOR NEW MODELS. HURRY WHILE SELECTION IS GOOD! FRIDAY AND SATURDAY! Frigidaire Jet Action Washers Give You A 5-Year Nationwide Warranty! Lowest price ever for a Jet Action Washer by Frigidaire! Frigidaire 2-speed Jet Action Washer—priced low, low, low! Name the ]obl This Frigidaire Washer does it automatically SAVE UP TO SgQOO ON FRIGIDAIRE WASHERS! ODDS ARP ENDS 1-Frigidaire 6,000 B.T.U. $OR Air Conditioner - SAVE........ fcV 1- Frigidaire 30” $4(1 Flair - SAVE.................. «*** 6-Frigidaire 15 cu. ft. ref., 126 lb. $Bf) Freezer. Grn. and copper. SAVE.. "tU 1 -16 cu« ft. Frigidaire Refrigerator $AH Frost Proof — SAVE “tU 1 - Frigidaire Diyer $911 Floor Model — SAVE....... •.. Bell 1 -Frigidaire Dishwasher $Ef| Under-Counter — SAVE....... llll MANY OTHER ONE OF A KIND ITEMS ... AIR CONDITIONERS ... FREEZERS ... SPECIALLY PRICED FOR OUR ODDS & ENDS SALE! FREE INSTALLATION OF ELECTRIC RANGES AND DRYERS ON DETROIT EDISON LINES! TenderMatic Roasting from. Frigidaire! Is Your Refrigerator big Enough? This One Is! Automatic Ice Maker 100% Frost Free 200 lb. Freezer Special Price FRIDAY & SATURDAY Pull and Clean Oven Heatminder Surface Unit Available in white or copper SAVE $40°° FREE INSTALLATION OF ELECTRIC RANGES ON DETROIT EDISON LINES CRUMP ELECTRIC, INC. 3465 Auburn Rd. Open Til 9 Monday & Friday Auburn Heights A Wig or Hairpiece? ’Mitt Ann will be with ys on Aug. 23 at 1 p.m. Reserve time to stop in and see our New line of fashion Hairpieces and Wigs. Giant Savings Drtlgs 3341 Auburn Rd. UL 2-1661 Uj 1 att The Atmosphere Is MB Something Different ' s The Entertainment Is pEKT»l Something Else f y|gkxY The Food Is Something Special MOl ti>cShalea Inn he light in Auburn Heights UL 2-3410 Go Back To School With A New Hairstyle JR Begin school with a pretty, swing* ffil Ing hairstyle that’s right for classes WUmBH and parties. Let ns cut and set your jL hair in one of the new do’s that are T7 Jr so popular. JT Auburn Heights Beauty Shop 3360 Auburn Road UL 2-2010 SLlAUBIM IN HEI6HTS I ORE COLOR iB—-16 _______ _____________THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1967 12-OZ. UBBEY GOLD-TONED ALLEGRO GLASS With purchase of 8 or more gallons of Gulf Gasoline * of; Beautiful, gold-toned Libbey glass. Perfect for those cool summer drinks on the patio. Why not start buildingyour set right now? One of these fine-quality glasses is yours—FREE—every time you purchase 8 or more gallons of Gulf gasoline. Stop in at your nearby Gulf dealer's and get yours while the supply lasts. And while you're there, fill up your tank with Gulf No-Noxf the Extra-Kick gasoline. Perfect for vacation driving. It lets your car deliver all the power that’s built into it. Extra power for steady effortless cruising on the turnpikes. Extra power to make the steepest mountain trails seem like gentle slopes. Stop in today. Get your free Libbey glass...and a full tank of Gulf No-Noxf You’ll get a kick out of both! / ATYOUR PONTIAC AREA GULF STATIONS WHEREYOU SEE THIS SIGH ■:. few, Mi' ■ - ’ ::v£‘Z i C—1 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 19ely IWU LuLORS Spartan Sliced \ LUNCHEON Ctirter All Flavors Thompson California SEEDLESS GRAPES 29i. SHURFINE WHOLE KERNEL or CREAM STYLE CORN Early Harvest PEAS 1>lb>» 1-OZ.'' SWEET CORN CUCIWIBERS-6REEN PEPPERS GREEN ONIONS-RED RADISHES Your Choice R( Blueberries 3m*100 Alcoa-Heavy Duty ALUMINUM FOIL Henri’s Tastee DRESSING SARAN WRAP Spartan Miniature MARSHMALLOWS Dream Whip DESSERT TOPPING Wagner Low Cal. ORANGE DRINK P.D.Q. CHOCOLATE FLAVOR BEADS oz. Hershey p. . CHOCOLATE SYRUP can Siihlae ,, BABY FORMULA oi. SPARTAN CHUNK STYLE 4’/«-oz. Pkg. 6V2-0Z. Can Libby Low Cal. Sliced _ Peaches?.22 Osage Freestone 4% ■■ ** PeachesS20 AMMONIA Magio Finish SPRAY SIZING FANTASTIC c-a THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1967 Sandwiches Hold Popular Appeal POTATO SALAD POOS BOY August is always' sandwich month. Once again, cooks have a wide Variety of new combinations to try. Who knows? You* might even convert a peanut butter and jet. ly diehard. All of the ingredients used for the Potato Salad Poor Boy are foods you probably have on hand right now, or keep on tap for quick as a wink assembly. Bright red tomato wedges alternate with salami wraped cheese sticks to form a colorful top layer, resting on a brand new sandwich ingredient — potato salad. The crusty, loaf of chewy French bread offers the perfect texture contrast. POTATO SALAD POOR BOY 1 long loaf enriched French bread Butter - Lettuce leaves 2 cans (1 lb. each) potato 12 slices salami 6 ox. 'American cheese, cut in 12 sticks 2 tomatoes, each oat in 12 wedges Cut bread in half horizontally; spread with butter. Arrange lettuce leaves on' both halves. Top with potato salad. Wrap salami slices around cheese sticks to folrm cornucopia shapes. Fasten with, wooden picks. ’ ' • ■■* /' '■ Alternate salami rolls and two tomftto wedges along top of both halves. Cut dach half into three slices for serving. Makes 8 servings. Toasted Raisin Bread Base of Good Sandwich STRAW HAT SANDWICH Make it a farewell to summeri party with raisin bread sandwiches served poolside or on the patio. This hearty three decker sandwich is going to be a winner with the back to school crowd for lunches and studytime snacks. It’s also a satisfying suggestion for big breakfast Baked Bean Sandwiches Hearly Eaters Like'Em Often a delicious sandwich is the perfect answer for lunch, after school shack or late supper. Easy to mqke. it needs whatever you happened to have At one time a bean sandwich was a.happy habit of a few people in-the-know. Today nearly everyone has tried and enjoyed this versatile “in hand” treat: There are dozens of variations and you’ll find it fun to experiment, discover your favorites. TOASTED BEAN SANDWICH 121-oz. can’pork and beans in tomato sauce 1 cup grated sharp cheese % cup sliced pimiento olives 1 teaspoon prepared mustanrd Drain beans and mash slightly. Mix in all other ingredients. Butter bread and spread with the bean mixture. Cover with another slice of bread. Place sandwiches in heated skillet with 1 tablespoon melted butter. Brown slowly on both sides to heat thoroughly. Makes 6. BEEFY BEANBURGERS 2 cups quick pre-cooked beans 314 cups boiling water 1 cup chopped onion 1 pound ground beef , 1 tablespoon butter or bacon drippings 1 cup catsup or chili sauce Dash of tabasco sauce Salt to taste 8 round sandwich buns Add boiling water to beans, bring to rolling boil and simmer onion, stirring to tweak up and brown evenly till meat is done. Add beans and remaining ingredients and toss to blend. Spoon on toasted buns. Garnish with onion rings and pickles. Makes 8. BACKYARD BARBECUE 11-lb. can pork and beans 3 frankfurters 2 tablespoons chopped onion 1 teaspoon prepared mustard Catsup or chUi sauce, enough to moisten * * n Heat beans and grill, frankfurters.over open fire. Dice or slice Cranks very thin. Mash beans slightly and mix in all other ingredients. Serve on your favorite bread. Makes 6. So Low in Fat, High in Protein A three-ounce portion of boned and skinned broiled chicken contains only nine grams of fat, says the National Broiler Council. The fat that' chicken does contain is higher in unsaturated fatty acids than in any other meat fats ... 64 per cent of the fatty acids in chicken are unsaturated. Another nutritional plus for chicken is that it is high in protein, and protein of the best Raisin bread, nutritiously loaded with plump California raisins is stacked with bacon, tomato slices and hard cooked eggs. To add a bit of flavor surprise, spread the toasted raisin bread with curried butter before assembling. Lettuce cups filled with chili spiked mayonnaise, ripe olives and dill pickle are good go alongs. For super sandwiches unlimited, use versatile raisin bread and a little imagination: It’s a popular bread with children and goes over big for to bag for school or eat at home. Stack it, roll it, toast it, frost it or cut it into fancy shapes. For fillings and toppings try all sorts of meat, poultry, fish, jams, jellies, peanut batter, relishes, yon name it't- almost any combination is compatible with raisin For each 3 decker sandwich arrange 2 tomato slices and 2 bacon strips on raisin toast slice; cover with second raisin toast slice and a sliced egg. Sprinkle with seasoned salt. Top with raisin toast. f hfix mayonnaise with chili Sauce. Spoon into lettuce cups and serve with sandwiches. Makes 4 sandwiches. Grate Coarsely If you are trying an old-fashioned cake recipe that calls for “grated unsweetened chocolate’’ to a cake batter, be sure to grate the chocolate coarsely so it will remain in small flecks. If you grate the chocolate fine, it is likely to melt and amalgamate completely with the batter. As party fare, Tiny Tot are unbeatable. Or pack the sandwiches off to summer camp or back-to-school in thq fall. They were Cook on outdoor grill or I Serve with additional catsup, broil on toil-lifted broiler pan, if desired, on buns with choices 3 to 4 inches from source of of avocado, tomato, onion, lem-heat, 4 to S minutes on each on, cheese, cucumber or green Serve them on buns with *1 ,We ***** W*®* bhnn*d’ |PW«- Makes 8servings. they’re so simple to do that your teenagers can make-them when the gang comes choice of makings for a meal-size sandwich. TUNABURGERS packable-perfect school lunch choice. TINY TOT SUB 6 enriched Club rolls Mustard 6 slices bologna, halved 8 slices American cheese, quartered 2 tablespoons pickle relish Cut rolls in half and spread roll bottoms with mustard. Lay 2 pieces bologna on each. Arrange 4 quarters cheese on sandwich, overlapping edges; spread ' aspoon pickle relish over cheese. Cover with roll- top. Makes 6 servings. Tunaburgers are delicious when enhanced with that yummy charcoal flavor. And Ever try adding chopped nuts to hamburger? They give a delightful flavor. Add some finely minced or grated onions along With the nuts and salt and pepper. Flavor Bread for Sandwiches In Spain, a popular sandwich is made .by slicing crusty rolls or small loaves of Italian-type bread lengthwise, then rubbing one piece of the bread with the cut side of a ripe tomato, brushing the other piece of bread generously with olive oiL For the filling, sliced salami or other similar sausage' may be used, or sweet pepper,? (pimientos), or s t o n e d black olives, or a combination of several such ingredients. Vi cup catsup 1 cup soft bread crumbs £ 1 tablespoon lemon juice ■1 tablespoon capers 2 teaspoons instant minced f1 onion 3 ciins (6% or 7 ounces each) £ .flaked tuna, drained 0 hamburger buns, toasted and buttered Avaeado, tomato, onion, cheese and lemon slices Cucumber spears Green pepper rings In mixing bowl, beat together eggs, catsup, bread crumbs, lemon juice, Capers and ipstant onjpn; stir in tuna. Shape into 6 patties. Nutty Hamburgers TINY TOT SUB > r TUNABURGERS STRAW HAISANDWICH Vi cup butter Vt teaspoon curry powder 12 slices raisin bread 8 thin tomato slices 8 crisp cooked bacon strips A hard cooked eggs Seasoned salt % cup mayonaise 1 tablespoon chili sauce 4 small crisp lettuce cups Melt butter with curry powder. Toast raisin bread and spread lightly on one side with curried butter. • To Extend Height quality for it contains all the lessential amino acids. All this 15 minutes. Drain. Melt butter adds up to one point: chicken is or fat in skillet; add meat endjgood for you. To make a collar for a souffle dish, place a wide strip of foil (double thickness), around the outside of the dish, overlapping the ends. Secure the foil with a piece of string. TOASTED BEAN SANDWICH GIANT APPETITES? Check These “Bunyon Bargains” at Chopped Bown Prices from CITY SIDE YOUR CHOICE Petal's SLICED BOLOfiRA Peter’s HOT DOOS Peter’s O.K. SLICED BACON Your Choice 49! FRESHLIKE CANNED VEGETABLE SALE COFFEE MATE Non-Daiiy Creamer... i ib.2<*. 79c CAMBELL’S Tomato Soap ........ iowc. 10c CHARMIN Bathroom Tissue....... iooo 4 rolls 29c SURF Cold Water Detergent... ■ Giant 3 lb. 2 oz. 59c SWANSDOWN Cake Mixes ......., »b. 2 <*. 24c f SALADA TEA BAGS..... ■ ■. i a 100 count box 79c MICH. NEW POTATOES .... ■ a 20 Pound Bag TIDELaundry Detergent.. . . GiantsMoz, 59c Cut Beans, Sliced Carrots, Whole Kernel Com, Creamed Style Corn or Green Peas. TOMATOES 19< L. Spartan 11kbcx Rills Bros. SaUine CRACKERS , dDrip or Rag. Grind coma lit Vi SUPER MARKET 338-0377 1716 Joslyn S Blocks North of • Walton Blvd. OPEN 7 DAYS THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1967 ONE COLOR C— Protein Mixes for Pear Rouhds For snacks or appetizers, ewe fresh pears and cut crosswise ip thick rounds. Dip cut sides in fruit juice to keep white; then spread with softened sharp cheese, cream cheese mixed with chopped nuts, peanut butter or deviled ham. Stack 2 slices together so topping is in center and on top. COOL VEGETABLE SALAD — Change of pace ... A handsome molded vegetable salad provides a cool change of pace from the usual summer salads. Serve on a platter bordered with cold cuts and cheese. Mold Raw Vegetables in Gelatine Salad A cool sparkling gelatine nold, served outdoors on a hot lay, is one of the pleasantest possible culinary sights. If the mold is accompanied by cheese and cold cuts, your guests will have a meal they will long remember — with a minimum of kitchen work on your part. This molded vegetable salad Is a new version of the classic Perfection Salad. Into the mold go shredded cabbage, chopped celery, and chopped radishes; the seasoning Includes a little lemon juice to provide the vegetables with an agreeable tang. Thanks to the presence of reliable unflavored gelatine, there is little cookery involved Only the two or three minutes required to dissolve the unflavored gelatine in liquid. And one of the chief virtues of this wonderful dish is that it may be made beforehand — ai serving time, all you do is un. mold onto a platter, surround with the meat slices, and lunch or dinner is ready in a twinkling. Unmolding the mold is a simple procedure; do it this way. Dip the mold in warm (not hot) water to the depth of the gelatine. Loosen around the edge with the top of a small paring knife. Place the platter on top of the mold and turn upside down. Shake, holding the platter lightly to the mold. Italian Style Hash Made With Macaroni Most hash is made with potatoes, unless it’s a Texas variety which has rice, of course. But if it’s inspired by Italy, the hash will have macaroni. Since macaroni and cheese are 8uch; favorites, they will certainly continue to be when beef joins the team, adding a complete protein to the dish. Leftover beef to be gound for this dish can come from the last of a roast cooked on the rotisBerie or Sunday’s roast cooked in the oven, Italian Beef Hash 2 cups ground cooked beef 2 tablespoons butter or margarine 2 tablespoons flour ■x ■ 1 cup meat stock or water 1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce Salt and pepper % cup macaroni, cooked % cup grated American cheese Melt butter or margarine in a saucepan and Mend in flour. Gradually add meat stock or water and cook, stirring constantly until thickened. Add Worcestershire sadee and season with salt and pepper. Combine ground beef, cooked | macaroni and white sauce and pour into a greased 1-quart casserole. Sprinkle with grated and bake in a moderate oven (350 degrees) 30 miryues. Use Whole Loaf for a Sandwich The whole loaf of raisin bread makes a super snack. Take a loaf of raisin bread. Spread each slice with butter, then reassemble with slices of Cheddar and Jack cheese. Tie together with string and bake in hot oven (400 degrees) until loaf is crusty and cheese melts. Terrific with spaghetti dinners. 6MILIN TIME IS NEARLY^: OVER "Nl HUNTS \ Tomato ) CATSUP VI 14-0z. Bottles If the gelatine does not unmold readily, repeat file procsss. Cool Vegetable Salad 3 envelopes unflavored gela-tin 2 cups cold water, divided Vi cup sugar 1 teaspoon salt % cup vinegar 2 tablespoons lemon juice 1 cup salad dressing 1% cups finely shredded cabbage 1% cups chopped celery 1 cup chopped radishes §wiss cheese slices Sliced ham and liverwurst Sprinkle gelatin over cups of the water in' saucepan. Place over low heat; stir constantly until gelatine dissolves, 3 to 5 minutes. Remove from heat; stir in sugar and salt. Add remaining Yt cup water. Blend vinegar and lemon Juice into salad dressing in mixing bowl; blend into gelatine mixture. Chili until mixture mounds slightly when dropped frotn a spoon. Fold in vegetables. Turn into a 6-cup mold; chill until firm. When, ready to serve, unmold onto large serving platter. Arrange cheese slices, sliced ham and liverwurst around mold. Yield; 8 servings. You can fold tiny marshmallows into a fluffy white frosting that is to cover a chocolate layer cake. Got the Best for Less at OvtcWufl^Pr Michigan \ \ Honeyrock 1 j: MELONS 3 for $1®® Michigan No. 1, New POTATOES 50 Lb,.f.r$l 59 % Garden Fresh TOMATOES h 2 Lbs...... 29* W 1 Peck... sl6* Home Grown SWEET CORN 1 On. 38* For Freezing * 1 bu. *17S fresh From Our Own Orchard APPLES are here now! Cornor of Clarkston and Sashabiw Beads V« Mile Nerth of Sathabaw E*it Open Daily, Except Monday, 10:00 to 8:30 ^ ROUND STEAKS ** SWISS STEAK ^ RIB STEAK YOUR CHOICE ONLY DOZEN CARTON ONLY PUNCH g 1 qt., 14-oz. Can q 29*! ■omobomob ■ CHEERIOS ■ package ■ CAMPBELL'S c ■ TOMATO i soup Hawaiian ■ lovi-oz. Weight CAN PILLSBURY'S Plain or Buttermilk BISCUITS 8-oz. Weight Tube Only. • •< 7« VALLEY BRAND ICE HEIM sj 2 £*IBI FRENCH'S * MUSTARD ■ 2 as 25° MICHIfiM POTATOES 10 nonoi CABBAGE POUND MEAT PRICES EXPJRE SAT., AUGUST 19th Kraft MIRACLE WHIP SALAD DRESSING 32-0z. Jar 49* Grocery ltems Available At Fairway Foods Store Only — 1220NorthJPerry Prices Expire Wednesday, August 23rd | Quality Meats Since 1931 3 LOCATIONS TO SEVtVE YOU: MARKETS 78 North Saginaw Street - Pontiac OPEN FRIDAY EVENINBS 'TIL T P.M. 4348 Dixie Highway - Drayton Plaint WEDNESDAYS 9:00 A.M. TO S:3S P.M. - THURS. THRU SAT. • A.M. to S P.M. SUNDAYSJ A.M. TO * P.M. - CLOSED MONDAYS AND TUESOAYS, 1220 North Perry at Madison OPEN DAILY I AALTO I P.M. * SUNDAYS 10 A.M. TO BP.M. Munraf Authorized S.0.0. Distributor WINE* LIQUOR* BEER TWUPO s 1220 North Perry at Madison, Pontiac ACROSS FROM PONTIAC NORTHERN HIGH SCHOOL We Reserve The Right To Limit Quantities OPEN DAILY l:S0 A.M. TO S P.M. SUNDAYS 11A.M. TO 1P.M. FE 4-2260 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1967 qou qet more for your food dollars! 6V2-0Z. Canoed mushroom gravy embellishes canned luncheon meat and potatoes for an easy dinner. Del Monte FRUIT PUNCH W * Salada Tea Bags . Snicker's Strawberry Preserves Scott Napkins rST '& Betty Crocker Scalloped Potaotes ts Planter’s Peanut Butter Salad Bowl DRESSINQ Jar Oven Fresh Mavis Pop Dinner lakes Little Time It happens to everyone! A casual “why not drop over to the house this afternoon" turns into a spur-of-the-moment “why not stay for dinner." y While everyone pitches in to help, offer them a refreshing cocktail of ice cold vegetable juice, another outaf-the-can juice, tod lively-tasting mushroom gravy. Simply heat and garnish with parsley. * * * Serve chilled cantaloupe with a gay sprig of mint for a light dessert. Your guests are sure to dub you the “hostess with the Be prepared tor this last minute type of entertaining with a complete dinner on your pantry shelf. For example, use canned mushroom gravy to embellish canned luncheon meat and pb- Luncheon Meat and Potato* Company Treat J 1 can (1C ounces) luncheon meat, cut in thin strips % cup sliced green onions teaspoon dill leaves, crushed 2 tablespoons butter or ^margarine 1 can (10% ounces) mushroom i gravy 3 cups cubed cooked potatoes 1 teaspoon lemon juice Chopped parsley In skillet, brown meat and cook onion with dill in butter until tender. Add gravy, potatoes, and lemon juice. Heat; tatoes (for convenience, try, toe canned variety), tangy lemon 12-oz. CANS HYGIUDE’S Semi-Boneless stir "now and then. Garnish with parsley. Makes 4 to 6 servings. Sherbet Tops Melon Boat A cool and colorful sherbet-melon boat is1 a “sure bet" for a summer party’s refreshment. The boat and melon balls are prepared well in advance of the party, covered and chilled in the refrigerator until serving time. Scoops Of delicate apricot tangy lemon sherbet, or bo are set in place just befc the majestic melon is broui to the table. Sherbet Melon Boat Cut off the top third of a lo watermelon leaving a generc portion to form a boat-shap container. Zig zag or seal! the edge if desired. Remo the tipper portion. PINK DRINKS—Vibrant maraschino cherries lend color, contrast and extra special flavor to long cool drinks for lazy summer days. Rich’s Frozen Coffee Hick spoon to make balls from both parts of the melon.' Remove all seeds. Keep balls chilled until service time. Then, fill melon boat with chilled balls and top with scoops of sherbet. pineapple juice, eggs and cloves in electric blender; blend until smooth. Pour into ice filled glasses. Garnish with mint, if desired. Makes 4-6 servings. ‘ Here are a couple of ideas for cooling drinks with a light refreshing taste to go along with afternoons at the pool-side or patio which will bp. enjoyed by children mid grown-ups alike. Lean Meaty Pork Hocks fresh Boneless Pork Roast Young Tender Pork Liver Hygrade’s Sliced Bacon Sweet Hygrade’s Ball Park Franks Fresh & Lean' Cherry Frappe ... a taste tempting combination of ruby-red maraschino cherries, vanilla ice cream and orange sherbet, whirled together in the blender and served over Crushed ice in tall frosty glasses topped with scoops of orange sherbet. Cherry Pineapple Flip . . a delicious concoction of plump maraschino cherries, ' p i ri e-apple juice, eggs and a dash of spicy cloves, aim whipped together in the blender, is just the thing to tempt jaded palates. Cherry Frappe 2 jars (4 ounces each) red maraschino cherries 1 pint vanilla ice cream, tof-tened 2 pints orange sherbet Crushed ice SEALTEST Plllsbury Biscuits -3tSS^251 ice cream and half the sherbet in electric Mender*; blend until smooth. Pour into glasses half filled with crushed ice. Top with scoop of remaining sherbet, Garnish with mint Serve with stratvs. Makes 6 servings. j •For ease of handling, blend half the ingredients at one time. 1 Cherry Pineapple Flip 1 jar (4 ounces) red maraschino cherries 1 can (1 pint, 2 ounces! un- sweetened pineapple juice rAtLER y*-! m . Select From Over ’ LjHkhtoJk- 60 VARIETIES ajCUr ' Imported .and Domestic Bulk and Individual Prices ^ also available r Scandinavian & European Food* 4 Open Daily M, Fit 9-8, Closed Sum, 6824640 - Nationally Advertised Brands at Money-Saving Prices MONTS RESERVED TO UNIT QUANTITIES Combine undrained cherries, ,UNSHINE RINSO 1 FRESH LEAN HOMEMADE FRESH DID LEU J si rant SAUSAGE PORK STEAK 1 s ■ pH 1 a. 39* ib. 69$ | THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1967 C—JO PAIR Of WINNERS — Two County Fair Spice Cake and a deep, dark chocolate cake first prize winners . . . three layer t Prune frosted with brown sugar whipped cream. Prune or Chocolate Cake Is Always a Good Dessert July and August are the traditional months for County and State Fairs where youngsters display fat sleek animals and the ladies vie for first prize ribbons . for their jams; jellies, mincemeat and cakes. Here are two recipes for cakes that are first prize winners no matter whether the judges are professional or members of your own family. ★ ★ ★ Prune Spice Cake is a wonderfully moist (and it stays moist) tender cake with a delicious blend of spice and prune flavors. It calls for a dash of one at a time, stir in vanilla and prunes. Sift together flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt, cinnamon, nutmeg, mace and pepper. Stir into creamed mixture alternately with buttermilk. Pour batter into prepared cake pans**. Bake in 350-degree .(moderate) oven 30 to 35 minutes, until cakes test done. Cool 10 minutes. Remove from pans and peel off paper. Cool on cake racks. Spread Coffee Prune Frost- black pepper to perk up the *»$ between layers and spices sides and top of cake.. You can use either canned or cooked dried prunes. If you’re' using cooked dried prunes, let them stand overnight in their juice and save some of the juice for the frosting. Aunt Kitty's Chocolate Cake is k Pennsylvania recipe that’s a quick-to-make, one-bowl cake. PRUNE SPICE CAKE %. cup all-vegetable shortening 2 cups sugar 3 eggs 1 teaspoon vanilla 1(4 cups chopped cooked prunes 3 cups sifted cake flour '2*4 teaspoons baking powder 1 teaspoon baking soda 1 teaspoon EACH: salt, cinnamon, nutmeg Vi teaspoon mace ]4 teaspoon black pepper 1 Vt cups buttermilk Coffee Prune Frosting Grease three 9-inch round cake pans and line bottoms with waxed paper*. Measure shortening into a large mixing bowl; gradually add sugar, beating well after each addition. Beat in eggs To prepare Coffee Prune Frosting (makes about 3(4 cups): Beat V* cup all-vegetable shortening with 1 teaspoon salt and 2 cups sifted confectioners sugar. Beat in Vi teaspoon vanilla and 114 tablespoons instant coffee powder. Add 4 cups sifted confectioners sugar alternately with enough prune juice (6 to 8 tablespoons) to make a good spreading consistency. *If only 2 pans are available one-third of batter may be stored in refrigerator while other layers bake. * * * pour batter into greased and floured 13x9-inch pan and bake in 359-degree (moderate) oven 1 hour, or until cake tests done. Cool in pan. Cut into squares and serve with whipped cream or sprinkle with confectioners sugar. AUNT KITTY’S CHOCOLATE CAKE (4 cup all-vegetable shortening Vi cup unsweetened cocoa 1% cups sugar 2 teaspoons vanilla 2 egg yolks 2 cups milk 2% cups sifted cake flour 1 teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon baking powder 1% teaspoons baking soda Brown Sugar Whipped Cream Grease two 9-inch round cake pans then line bottoms with waxed paper. In large bowl of electric mix-’, blend together shortening, cocoa, sugar,-vanilla, egg yolks and 2 tablespoons of the milk. Beat at medium speed of electric mixer about 4 minutes, scraping bowl occasionally With rubber scraper. Sift together flour, salt, baking powder and baking soda. Stir into cocoa mixture alternately with remaining milk. Pour batter into prepared pans. Bake in 350-degree (^moderate) oven 30 to 35 minutes, or until cakes test done. Let cakes cool in pans 10 minutes, turn out and remove paper. Cool on wire racks. Spread Brown Sugar Whipped Cream between layers and on top of cake. Store in refrigera- Crackle the Shells To make a quick job of peeling eggs, roll the*ittrd-cooked eggs between the palms of your hands quickly. This will loosen the shell. Begin peeling at the large end of the- egg. CEREAL ’N’ ICE CREAM COMPOTE—Take two cups prfisweetened ready-to-eat cereal and spread one-third pf it over the bottom of well chilled compote or serving dish. Spread one pint of your favorite Jice cream and one cup sweetened sliced peaches and strawberries over cereal. Top With half of remaining cereal. Spoon a second pint of ice cream and another cup of fruit over cereal. Sprinkle remaining.cereal over top. Makes 4-6 Servings.' This Bread Uses Variety of Flours In about three hours you can halve four delicious loaves of bread made. Act One Bread ,% cup milk, scalded % cup sugar •. ' 4 teaspoons salt % cup butter or margarine 1(4 cups warm water 2 packages active dry yeast 5 cups (about) unsifted regular white flour Vi cup yellow cornmeal Vi cup unsifted stoneground wholewheat flour V cup unsifted stoneground rye flour 1 cup wheat germ 1 egg white slightly beaten with 1 tablespoon water Into the scalded milk stir the tugar, salt and butter; cod to lukewarm. In a large warm bowl, dissolve the yeast in the warm water; add lukewarm milk mixture, 2 cups white flour, corn-meal, wholewheat flour and rye flour; beat until smooth. Add wheat germ and enough additional white flour tp form a soft dough. Turn out onto lightly floured surface and knead until smooth and elastic — 8 to 10 minutes. Place in greased bowl; turn to grease top. Cover; let rise in warm draft-free place until doubled— about 1 hour. Punch down dough; turn out onto lightly floured surface. Divide into 4 equal pieces; shape each into a round loaf and place, well apart, on greased cookie sheets that have been sprinkled with extra cornmeal. Cover; .let rise as previously until doubled—about 45 minutes. Bake in a hot (400 degrees) oven 10 minutes. Remove from oven and brush tops of loaves egg-white mixture. ~ j 5 minutes more. Cool on wire racks. Makes 4 small loaves. tor. *To Prepare Brown Sugar Whipped Cream (Makes about 2 cups): Whip 1 cup heavy cream with 3 tablespoons firmly-packed brown sugar until soft peaks form. Spread between layers and on top of cake. 6 MONTHS MEAT SUPPLY TOTAL $105 • Beef (Some Pork if you with) NO MONEY OOWN - UP TO 6 MONTHS TO PAY—SAME AS CASH All USDA Choice Meat Guaranteed These Specials are Carefully Out - Beef Sides, Beef Fronts and Beef Hinds 50-lb. PORK • Pork Chops • Pork Roast 100 lb. MEAT ORDER $2000 > Pork Sausago • Spareribs $|095 USDA CHOICE OR ANQUS BEEF SIDES 591 NONE HIGHER USDA CHOICE Beef Loins NONE HIGHER 791 Pork Loins hone SpareribsHIQHER 49 USDA CHOICE BEEF HINDS Cut and Wrapped < fc. - None Higher * ■very Hind Aged Te Assure tenderness WATERFORD MEAT 4980 Highland Rd. 674-1440 Across from Waterford High STORE HOURS: 9 a.m. -7:00 P.M. Daily ♦Qro»s Weight_ __________ Dry Vermouth Is Sauce for Skillet Chicken Here’s a pleasant menu for two young couples! Wine-kissed Chicken Mixed Rice with Green Peas and Mushroom Sauce Fresh Fruit Cheese and Crackers . Wine-Kissed Chicken . 1 large broiler-fryer, cut up .(4 cup flour IVi teaspoons salt Vt teaspoon pepper 1 tablespoon each butter and oil V cup dry vermouth Reserve bony back pieces of chicken for another use. Wash and dry chicken; coat with flour mixed with salt and pepper. Brown chicken skin side down in the i hot butter and qjl in a ' a r g e skillet, over moderate heat, for. about 10 , minutes. Turn, and brown the other side abqut 10 minutes. Turn skin side down again; add half the vermouth to the skillet; cook, uncovered, about 10 minutes; if drippings scorch, turn down heat: Turn skin side up, add remaining vermouth; cook’ another 18 minutes or until tender. • Remove chicken from drippings and serve at once. CARLOAD SALE WATEIMHIHS SUGAR SWEET 25# AVG. CARLOAD SALE POTATOES ¥ 5IJI« mum a at Pius Calif. Sweet lb. IS* California LETTUCE 2 for 29‘ CABBAGE HOME GROWN lb. 5C PEPPER or CUKES ea. 5e POTATOES U.S. # 1 RED 10 lb. 39c (in HOME GROWN SWEET doz. 39K9FE8 CALIF. SWEET ><>- IF i HAMDURGER lb. 49* Ihot DOGS , 1 b. 98'j 1SLAB BACON ££ II b. 59' / 1 BOLOGNA chunk lb. 35'/ l SAUSAGE .Mu lb. 49* / \OLEO Spartan 5-lb. $1 ^ / LIVER FRESH POBK lb. 29‘ SUPER MARKET Open Weekly 9 to 9 * Friday, Saturday 9 to 9 PRICES SUBJECT TO MARKET CHANGE 608 W. HURON ST., Near Webster School ,fel. THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST IT, : RFK Basks Johnson in Moving to Lessen WASHINGTON (AP) Robert F. Kennedy, backing the Johnson administration, moved today to head off partially a cut in funds for the Alliance for He said he was doing so to honor the pledge his late brother, President John F, Kennedy, made when the plan of aid to Latin America was established six years ago. The New York Democrat sponsored an amendment to restore $72 million of the $172 million the foreign relations committee cut from the Alliance authorization for fiscal 1967-68. Kennedy worked closely with top administration nffiHala in drafting the amendihent, his office said, and they told him a $72-million increase would cover spending plans for this year. The Kennedy proposal would bring the authorization to $650 million. Six years ago, the senator said, President Kennedy pledged to Latin America that this country would join in hew Alliance for Progress to assist free men and free governments in casting off the chains Of poverty.”' ' /. , ‘It is to honor that pledge that I offer this amendment,” the senator continued. He commented in a speech prepared for delivery ip the Senate. The Senate is In its fourth day of debate on a $2.7 billion foreign aid bill, which was cut $737 million below Johnson’s quests by the foreign relations committee. Rising costs of the Vietnam war and domestic problems, including violence lit cities, were cited by committee members as reasons for the cutbacks. Gains have been made in Latin America, he continued, but the battie has not been wen nor is victory in sight.” * On the! eve of Kennedy's speech, the State Department issued its annual review of the Uh|nce, reporting that the Latin American countries are pumping mors money into the program than original^ expected. Amendments to the bill are pending, including proposals to restore $33 nUUkst th* relations committee cu#from technical assistance toti^tod*-veloped nations througtxnit foe world. The Senate voted*' 68 tp 20 Wednesday to overrate the for- eign relation! conunitfoe and continue at n;:peft-JEmft}f'h anujpnt of a private investment in a . developing country, that woukTbe protected agam llils. The committee wanted It to 50 per cent. * ou Can Count on Us ... Quality Costs No More at Sear 'wW Wmm Sears SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO. Elegant Carpeting Priced for a SELLOUT! A. Wlrephsto WRITER EXPELLED -Rebel Czech writer LadislaV Mnacko learned that the Czech government had revoked his citizenship' and expelled him from the Communist party after he voiced opposition to his country’s support of Arabs in the Israeli conflict in a news conference yesterday In Tel Aviv. Romney to Eye Tuition Plan LANSING ®—Go v. George Romney is to meet today with members of the Michigan State University Board of Trustees to discuss the controversial new sliding scale tuition .plan for MSU and Oakland Uidvsesity. ”1 personally want to ask him what help be can give us in withdrawing Iran this stupid plan,” said Republican Trustee Frank Merriman of Decker-ville. “Certainly he (the governor) would be in a better situation to bring pressure to bear about this situation than would any member of die board.” The new tuition plan, based on a sliding, graduated scale according to parents’ income, was approved by the MSU board last month despite objections of Republican trustees. Conner Smith of Pinconning, one of the five Democratic truth tees who voted for the tuition plan, today said he is willing to reconsider the plan. “I don’t like the situation at all,” he said. “I think the plan is discriminatory but to get the university moving, we had to break the stalemate.” Court Studies Civil Ser Parking Fee LANSING (UPI) - The Ingham County Circuit Court yesterday agreed the state, shouldn’t charge some of its employes for parking and ordered daily fees halted at three Lan-| sing lots unfH the case can be thoroughly reviewed. JOdge Sam Street Hughes Issued a temporary restraining order against the State Department of Administration to suspend the 25-cent daily parking fee that state employes in the Capitol area began paying Monday. Hughes assigned Circuit Judge Louis {foash, to get t date for a hearing on a permanent Injunction. Bringing the suit was the Michigan State Employes Association (MSEA), which charged the fee was “discriminatory” in tHa^ti constituted a condition of employment for workers in downtown state, office buildings. Cavil sjfowice employes elsewhere parit free. i fjk] HAVE YOUR NEW CARPETING THE EASY WAY-USE SEARS MODERNIZATION CREDIT PLAN ' $10 per Month up to $300, $1$ per Month up to $450,13.50 per Month up to $600 "Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back" SEARS Downtown Pontiac Phone FE 5-4171 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1967 O-T?- YANKEE IKK TO KONUOB OR MOEI IT COSTS YOU LESS AT VARKIEO! Ml OPEN NIGHTS UNTIL 9 SUNDAY TIL 7 ■H ’JLsL. & GIRLS’ DOUBLE KNIT CHAVACETTE DRESSES BOYS’ THICKSET COTTON BOYS1 CORDUROY PARKA JACKETS KNIT SIZES 7 to 14 The now look Sn girls' school drosses. Two stylos . . . (loft). Baby Doll short sleeves, stripes, round nock . . . (right) vertical stripes, long sloovos, turtleneck, zipper back. Assorted colors. SIZES 0-16 The chemstroird acrilan 1 |67 THURSDAY AND FRIDAY ONLY! MENS 0RL0N PILE LINED OOIRIMY JACKETS Wide wale cotton corduroy. Blouse style, zip front, or-lon acrylic pile lining. Olive and ante-36-46. MOO PERMA-FOESS OXFORD SPORT SHIRTS Authentic ,100% cotton oxford weave. Pastel and deeptone shades. Sizes S-M-L 299 CORNER of PERRY and dONTCAlM ; , . OPEN NIGHTS UNTIL 9,:. SUNDAYS Until 7 & - USE YOUR MICHIGAN BANKARD THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1967 Aegean Water Desalted to Quench Patmos Thirst which it flows by gravity into two underground reservoirs, fhe remaining brine is flushed out of the plaint with sea water and the process starts again. j By OWEN EDWARDS Newspaper Enterprise Assn. PATMOS, Greece - The Ancient Mariner’s paradoxical problem pf “water, water everywhere and not a drop to drink . . is not particularly well-known as literature here in Greece, but on islands such as this one, surrounded by the blue Aegean but depending almost solely for water on winter rainfall, it is a vital fact of life. The Patmos unit is the first of seven such projects scheduled to be constructed on islands in the Aegean. Instant glamour! Soft, glassy, flattering —so practical, fool Nl^ sional fitting, tool Visit our Wig Salon, today-see how lovely you’ll lofik In this wig! " 100% NUMM HAIR WM NOW AT A >13 SAVING! In a style and a shade $VVOO lust right for yogi. Try it on-soeforyourssM REO. 0S4S 3 JN. Saginaw, Comer Pike Open 8 to 5:30 Daily, Frl. 'til 9 Seven months were required to build the Patmos unit, but officials of the Hellenic Industrial Development Bank and the Greek minister of industry say that the lessons learned here should speed up subsequent constructions. OPEN DAILY 10 TO 10; SUNDAY 12 TO 7 The tiny island of Patmos recently drew scientists and engineers from all over the world to w i t n e s s the opening of Greece’s first major step toward quenching its age-old thirst —. a solar distillation plant claimed to be one of tiie biggest in the world. Designed by Professor Anthony Delijiannis of the Poly-technical School of Athens Un- . iversity and constructed by local labor at a cost of 3.5 mil- | lion drachmas ($117,03), the ' desalination “stilB” was officially opened as the final event of the Second European { Symposium on Solar Distillation. After the project was duly blessed by six spectacularly Greek Orthodox priests from the island’s imposing 11th century monastery, a handle was turned by the designer and a stream of fresh water that had been drawn from the ocean the day before shot into the air. At the close of the ceremonies the islanders, initially skeptical of the project, indicated the full acceptance of the new device that will steal water from Poseidon’s domain as they pointed with pride to a blue and white sign in the port town’s tiny square. The sign, 'of the type that guides' tourists to points of historic interest, reads: “To the Patmos Solar Distillation Plant.’’ Open Doily 1(1-10..... Sunday 12-7 Delijiannis told the gathering of government officials, desalination experts and jubilant islanders that he anticipated a yearly yield of almost three million gallons of water. SAFETY MARGIN Although this is less than what the island’s bisterns collect during a normally wet winter, the SAVE m $30°° ON FAMOUS EASTERN LAWN BUILDINGS unit, would, he said, provide file islanders with a much-needed margin of safety in case of drought. Puririg previous dry years it has been necessary for the government In Athens to Cat. No. VC590SP send water by ship from the mainland to many of the Greek islands. The still, which looks like a vast greenhouse rising only about two feet high but covering an area of 33,009 square feet, uses a minimum of mech-ical equipment, employing the virtually cloud-free summer sun as its major source of full Power Suction. 2 year hose guarantee*. Light blue style. Four attachment tools plus steel wands. Rug and floor nozzle, upholstery nozzle, dusting brush, crevice tool. * GLENWOOD PLAZA NORTH PERRY STREET AT OLENWOOD sea to a depth just under One inch. As this water evaporates, leaving its salt behind, it is collected on the angled (dess covers of the plant’s 71 units and trickles down into troughs, from CHILDREN OUTGROWN THE WAGON, BICYCLE? - - - SELL IT WITH A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD, EASY TO USE. JUST PHONE 332-81B1. SUPER SIZE PATIO HOUSE 157V W COLONIAL COMBINATION I STORM and SCREEN DOOR 1 Our Rug, 47.50 4 Day* only Here’s an unusual opportunity to buy these'deluxe lawn buildings with quality features unmatched anywhere, at down-to-earth prices! complete Charge It! White aluminum. Spring loaded hinge design. Reinforced corners, scalloped glass inserts, wool-pile weather strip-nine. Decorative black hinge strap | and handle. Early American bottom panel. 32” x 80” or as** * an” (Model No. 7931).' Rotary Mowf* includes the options others chart [ extra for! EASY-TO-USE PLASTIC Pi 1"xl’ CLEAR REDWOOD The eeeential “extras’" you have to add to the price of nearly any other compact tractor are standard: equipment on a Bolens Husky One mice includes all-gear transmission, and differential, six forward speeds, power-take-off drive, feeders, seat cushion and many others. When you buy a Bolens Husky, you buy a fully-equipped unit One price includes everything. A Bolens Husky is built from the ground up to give you a complete and convenient system for year ’round yard care. A Husky powers over twenty-five different lawn and gerden attachments, offers greater all-hround performance, more time-saving convenience features than any other compact tractor you can buy. Let us prove It! Before you buy. try a Bolens Husky first. Then compare! 3 DAYS ONLY Q QJ Charge It ' Durable plastic panels have many uses indoors and, outdoors. Choose from three 'popular decorator colors: 'White, Green, or Yellow. 26’’xl0-ft«.... .3.13 28”x12 ft. . <. . 4.M Combination Storm and Screen Door Our Reg. 21.88 4 Day only CEILING TILES Spring loaded three hinge design. Heavy tubular hoUowalum-. inum, bottom vinyl •weep, reinforced corner. Screen and. glass inserts, interchangeable. 30” x 80”, 32* x 80” or 30” x 80” {Adds to the value, appearance and comfort of your home. Ceiling tiles are found-absorbing, smooth-surfaced, easy to install . . . easy to paint For added .shopping convenience just say: Chargmlt Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke . Pontiac, Michigan Pfroae: Fff 4-1652 and FE 4-0734 /WoNTGOMERY WARD LUMBER AND BUILDING SUPPLIES AT SAVINGS GLENWOOD PLAZA . MIi T ms am. //re. «Ea' PON rue M. I * ■ 1 4W 4W 1 Goldtone 2.98 S.66 1 Natural Birch 8.68 6.38 I Vinyl Pecan 4.98 S.67 | Vinyl Walnut 4.98 6,67 | San Simeon 4.77 J American Oak 6.27 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1967 CM) “TIFFANY ROSE” BATH TOWEL 24x72" FOLD-AWAY BED Our Reg. 81 e 3 Days Only Bath Towel 73* Fringed-end towel in multieolor floral print. 22x44” 15x26” “Tiffany Rose” Face Towel, reg. 51c..........43c 12x12 “Tiffany Rose” Washcloth, fog. 26c......23c Our Reg. 10.96 4 Days Only Has aluminum frame, link tpring bate, double-locking center lega and 2” thick mattress. 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Chrome-plated. Holds np to 24 garments. Hat and Coat Rack .3.6T ■ Chroma Coat Rack, Reg. 5.9T.... 4.T7 Our Reg. 7.94 3 Day Only 6.66 54” metal table with perforated top for cool and fast ironing. 15” wide, adjusts from 24” to 36” high. Two-tone turquoise enamel. Rolling wheels. Charge It. TEFLON® IRONING 23-Oz.* Can Kmart BOARD PAD, COVER Easy Spray Starch %** 37* Our Reg. 1.74,3 Dayt Our Reg. 42c, 3 Day Fits 54” boards. Both alumin- Guaranteed quality at savings, ized... irons faster at lower heat. Set Of 2. Lint Pie-Ups ..... TlOi %'Du Pont reg. tm. -NetW«l*kt “Brand Name" products at Kmart GI.ENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD OPEN DAILY 10-10, SUN, 12-7 Back-To-School Discount M Thermal Blanket In Nylon/Rayon 3s6 Our Reg. 4.34,3 Days 72x90”. In napped 55% nylon, 45% rayon. Red, blue, brown plaids. RAYON AND NYLON THERAAAL BLANKET 333 Our Reg. 4.24 3 Day Only 2Vi-lb. 55% rayon, 45% nylon, 72x90 blanket. White, colors. Scenes To Fit Every Taste, Decor ASSORTED FRAMED PICTURES 555 Lovely 24x48” pictures with 2” gilt-line frames in maple or walnut Choice of landscape, seascape, still life, city life scenes. Each frame has name plate showing title, artist. Also selection of 24x36” pictures in choice of “Young at Heart” subjects. Discount Price Your Choice QUILTED SPREAD 5.96 Our Reg. 7.66 3 Dayt Only JACQUARD SPREAD 3.66 Double-,twin-bed quilted-to-the floor acetate spread in avocado, gold, bine. Charge It. Rag. 34o Print Cotton Tarry Kitohan Towel 26c SSM Our Reg. 5.66 3 Day Only Woven tartan plaid... a bedspread or a blanket. Ail washable cotton ... no ironing, evert Full and twin siaes. Just say, “Charge It” 11 Our Reg. 8.88 3 Day Only 6.66 BED PILLOWS 2 *5 Xlulti-color patch print cover. Acrylic filling Full zipper. 72x84” Closed it’s a sleeping bag, open a comforter. 'l haWaifaaantr.aaaeiaMtad—1««. Our Reg. 2.96 ea. . 3 Days Only j£, t0r 20x26” finished siae. Dacron® polyester bed pillow. R9g. 1.47 Decorator Pillow, 18x16, Fringod Cotton Corduroy......................1 •DuPont ref.l.m. 76c 97c SAYELLE® YARN ss 97^ Reg. 1.27,3 Days Da Pont acrylic fiber 4-ply knitting yarn. KNITTING WORSTED* 76< 4-ply 100% virgin wool. White and many 4-oz. colors. gkein ty-»io THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1997 ONCE AGAIN IN PONTIAC! The Howard Johnson's Famous WEDNESDAY FISH FRY All You Can Eat - All Day *|19 We're Open Again Under New Ownership To Bring You Excellent Dining In The Fine Tradition of Howard Johnson's iiiMin 3650 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains Open Sun.-Thur*. 7 to 11, Fri. and Sat. 7 to 12 TASTY SUNSHADE—Two-year-old William Borschell of Philadelphia has a tug-of-war over a straw hat with his pony, Bessie. The AP WlrepMta hat was intended for the small, frisky horse all along, but as a sunshade not as fodder. Spain Lures Filming of Villa Capers Road Perils Find Way Into Network WASHINGTON (AP) - The federal government has! realized that some roadside hazards that have been Incorporated into many new Interstate highways. Hoad’ 'builders now concede that when work began a decade ago on the ISO billion Interstate network planners underestimat-the perils that might be ' by fixed objects along the It’s proving to be a costly-and deadly—oversight, although statistics show Interstate highways are far safer than other roads. Now, with 25,000 miles of interstate highways completed at a cost of $30 billion, the Bureau By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-Television Writer ! MADRID - Why would | Hollywood producer come to Spain to film a movie about Pancho Villa, Mexico’s bandit revolutionary? I The reasonsj are mostly eco-| nomic, partly: political, accord-ing to Ted Richmond, veteran of filmingi i n Hollywood (“Mississippi), Bells’’) and THOMAS I Spain (“Return of the Seven”).| He will soon begin shooting: {“Villa Rides,’’ starring Yul Brynner and Robert Mitchum. The new film bears no relationship to the ‘ memorable 1934 movie “Viva Villa!” starring Wallace Beery. ★ * * The Paramount film could have been made in Mexico or California, either of which offers landscape approximating that maraudetLby Villa just before American entrance into the first World War. Yet Richmond chose to make “Villa Rides” In Spain.' to spend what one would be hundreds of millions more in federal dollars to correct such hazards as: TO CORRECT HAZARDS • Heavy steel sign and light | He hjnted that the problems poles mounted in concrete with Mexico were largely politi-1 bases. Although lightweight cal, the government there-has poles that snap off harmlessly been .increasingly concerned! when hit by a vehicle have been with the Mexican image ini on the market-for years, some films, as evidence by the recent-states still erect tile massive ,«uor cuiiors Quiz on- Appropriate - Pleasant FOR Y OUR Pleasant Dining r- the family will enjoy it! itofisnda Country inn 3230 PINE LAKE ROAD Phone 682-0600 Famous Smorgasbord Sunday Brunch Wedding - Banquet Facilities F. Ward Ouradnik, Host MORGAN HORSE ly lifted ban of Frank Sinatra because of alleged slurs against Mexican divorce laws in his film “Divorce on the Rocks, movie about the highly controversial Villa might produce a hornet’s nest of censorial problems. ECONOMIC ADVANTAGES But such problems appear to be minor compared to those of economic nature. The fact remains that filming in Spain is much less expensive than ' Hollywood, or Mexico. “We can-make this picture in Spain for $3.5 million,” said the producer. “The same production values in an American-made film would be double the cost.” ★ * Richmond is by no neans a ‘runaway” producer. This only his third Spanish-made film. But his first one was enough to sway him to here. sign and light supports. • Guard rails that don’t guard, but guide skidding cars directly into bridge abutments and the like. • Exposed guard rail ends that can spear vehicles which run off the road. Some states bury guard rail ends in the ground, but most don’t. • Exit areas cluttered with steel and concrete obstacles. House of Seafoods • Live Lobstar Tanlc ■WmHUMMIIUMk- FROG teas Roadhouse Stylo French Friod Gulf SHRIMP Goldon Friod Maryland SCALLOPS Broiled LOBSTER TAILS Broiled WHITIFISH LOBSTER Nawbure OYSTERS on the Half Shell SALAD TABLE All yew with to Sot. help yourself or oik your waitress to toreo you lalod with your choice of our homemade sauces. loiV susan dish and a relish Try Oir Special Steak Dianar Also .Selections From Our Regular Menu « GOLF « COUNTRY aUB MOREY’S SPECIAL Fri.(Aug. 18 Only- - 4 PJVL. to 6 PAG CHICKEN DINNER Unde\ _ QQc ^ John's^ 1 PssmO 1 f a WOODWARD AYE | at 14% Mila ltd. 1 • 15325 W.S Mil# ltd. \ ffaw f JuatLaiOreOaRaM • 1I0S1 TELEGRAPH ML Wat Hamath M. DRIVE-IN THEATRE UNION LAKE at HAB0ERTY R0. KM 1-eaet - Show Start* at Dusk Mutts $1.26-Children Under » Free NOW SHOWINGI FIRST RUN! CHARLES K. FELDMAN'S CASINO ROYALE THE NEW JAMES BOND MOVIE IS HERE! "BIG SERVINGS “BIG SAVINGS/" BUCKET 0’ CHICKEN QUESTION: How did the Morgan breed of horse originate? ANSWER: The Morgan is a special, remarkable breed of horse. It is descended from one particular horse, a stallion that not only had unusual qualities but the ability to pass these to his descendants, so they have become the qualities of an entire breed. ' This horse, shown in the picture by a statue presented by the Morgan Horse Club to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, was named Justin Morgan after his owner Justin Morgan, who obtained him as a colt. The colt, born in 1793, was first used by Morgan as a saddle horse. He is thought to have had Thoroughbred and Arabian ancestors as well as other blood strains.1 Small, fast, with an exceptionally gentle disposition, this horse was-extremely strong, and able to pull heavier loads than any other horse of his size. He lived to be 29 and had a number of owners. Recognized as a remarkable animal, he was bred many times. His colts proved to have the same wonderful combination of strength and gentleness. Soon the Morgan horse became popular all over America. Special Good Till Sapt. 16 12 Pieces, Fries A Slaw Serves 4 TWO LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU fim w. Heron St.. 500 N. Perry St. L,, FE S-0833 . 334-4958 The Exciting HAWAIIAN GARDENS Restaurant and Resort Motel American— Polynesian Dining Sat. August 19 ROYAL HAWAIIAN LIIAU with BRAHMS WARD And His Orchestra THURS.-FRI.-SAT. LINDA HOWE ' And Her HAWAIIAN-TAHITIAN DANCE Thurs. and Fri. Auguot 17 and 18 Dining and Dancing To DON PABLO And His Hawaiian# , .Entertainment Charge S1.00 in Hawaiian Room No Entertainment Charge in Waitoma Groto Lounge, Banyan Court and Poljrne$ian Longhoute. ■ ,- t>.. Par 3 Golf Course—Mini-Vacation Plans Restaurant Open Daily Except Monday 3501 GRANGEHALL RD., Holly, Mich. FOR RESERVATIONS, Phone 634-8231 / THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1067 Gl'sinViet Grave Water Lack in Combat Areas Leaves Troops Thirsty GIA VUC, South Vietnam UPI — Sgt. Lorin Griggs, 22, of Cleveland, Tenn., was so thirsty he drank a half bottle of blue-colored mouthwash. SP4 Jim Pettit, 22, of Houston, Tex., said he would give a month’s salary, 1246.60 less Social Security, for a single canteen of water. ★ ★ * First Lt. Roger Kehrier, an-other 22-year-old, from City, Mich., was willing to leave the security of the base camp in the darkness to reach the Song Re River, at least an hour hike away through an area thick with Viet Cong. '* ' ★ * To the foot-slogging soldier with a pack on his back and an M16 rifle on his shoulder, few things are more important than his next sip of water. MEMORY OF HOME And for a battalion of the 1st Cavalry Division last Monday, water became something to dream about, to savor like memory of home. It was no emergency, but it served to point out one of the most pressing concerns for the man in Vietnam. ★ ■ * ★ Bravo Company of the 2nd Battalion of the 12th Cavalry dropped into the river valley like clockwork from a score of helicopters. Sniper fire ripped through a few of the choppers . but no one was hit. * * * The zone where the 126 men had landed was ablaze. Support aircraft earlier blanketed the perimeter with white phosphorus, which set fire to the wind-whipped elephant grass. CASUALTIES A combination of the fire and the over-enthusiasm of helicopter door gunners eager to get out of the area resulted in eight sprained or broken ankles and One back injury to the qnen. “Good thing it was a cold LZ, (a safe landing zone;),” said Charles Vokal, 20 of Grand Rapids, Mich. “I thought for sure we were going to run into V. C. fire.” WWW While Med-Evac helicopters were summoned to remove some of the injured, Bravo Coihpany fought the spreading fire. One man collapseid. Water was used liberally. The fire was contained, but not before a substantial amount of Bravo's water was consumed. REQUEST WATER By radio, the request for water was made by Bravo’s commander, Capt. Philip E. Pons Jr., 30, a 1962 West Point graduate. WWW The water was promised and, for a time, was actually on its way to the battalion. But through a snafu it never arrived. Unless it involves a “tactical emergency,” such as a shortage of ammunition, the choppers will not venture out after 7 p.m. for fear of being downed after dark. j w w w Bravo was out of water. A 6w joked, but soon the subject of water became all-consuming. The temperature remained in Uie'90’s even after dark. Reognizing the potentially serious situation, Bravo’s First Sergeant, Theolopolis (Ted) gas, 35, a native of Astoria, Queens,' called his sergeants together. NONE DIED “No one has ever died of thirst put here,” he told them. “We’ll have plenty of water tomorrow.' Let them joke about it. But don’t let it get out of hand.” w w w The company poet recalled line from Coleridge’s “The Ancient Mariner” and mouthed in ja stage whisper: “Water, Water, everywhere, but not a drop -to drink.” I Somepne on perimeter duty "crooned, “Cool, Clear Water.” - w w w - Then, there wap' silence, -“They’re all asleep early to-“night,” said the “top,” Sgt. ~Rigas. “It must be the water.” ; Finally, shortly after 8 o’clock a helicopter landed with 11 five-gallon cane of water, enough for ope canteen per man. . ", >- W ", w w f "You know,” said Lt. Kehrier, "you ^only appreciate water whbn you haven’t got it.” WESTINQHOUSE AIR DOND. $99.88 S.000 ®TU‘S. Plug in. EMERSON 18, tOO WESTINOHOUSE AIR COND. $280 18,500 BTU’s $280 IS*. Walnut front; Sugar hoavy duty. 3 apoods. 1 iluxp. mounting kit. DoIuko. ZENITH BIO SCREEN PORT-8118.88 fir, dial. imaw. 173 In. ZENITH UHF/VHF PORTABLE $88.88 ARVIN BATTERY PORT. TV $88 GE UHF/VHF PORTABLE $68.88 PHILOO 26T SQ. IN. ZENITH 221 SQ. IN. COLOR TV $288.88 COLOR TV $888.88 Giant icon. UHF/VHF. Fna dal Ivory, 90-day .arvica. >" diag. n ..90-day.. CURTIS-MATHES GE STEREO COLOR COMB. $44T. COMBO. $199.88 265 oa. in. TV# utaraa# AM-FM, Staraa hi-fi# AM-FM# FM-otarao £y |j--*•“* 90-day service. radio, lady American. Rag $299.95. WHIRLPOOL AUTO. H0TP0IHT AUTO. WASHER $148 H0TPOIHT AUTO. DRYER $99 PHILOO 30” ELECTRIC $118 ,1W ^ ___ Fro# installation and tarvlea par ipa«My7TapJ*odo Fraa dalivory. Detroit Edison Ca. plan. H0TP0IHT AUTO. DISHWASHER $88 MA0IC CHEF S8’* OAS RANGE $81 PHILOO 13 CU. FT. FREEZER 8188 Upright. Star.. 433 lb». Oi PHILOO ALL-FROST-FREE $248 PHILOO ALL-FROST-FREE $388.88 Iraaaa. Roomy door .taro go. tor and bottom froaz.r ADMIRAL SIDE-BY-SIDE $331 20 cu. ft. dupl. FREE! 10-DAY HOME TRIAL ON COLOR TV RCA VICTOR COLOR TV RECTANGULAR TUBE • WOOD CONSOLE WHIRLPOOL 2-SPEED 14 LB. AUTOMATIC WASHER m and Chock Highland's rock-bottom price on this Whirlpool. 2 tpoode. 2 eyelet * ihn Waoh from miaH Mh to Mp 144h» laodhpSiMpditarwpaiptMiai. Water tovJ ADHIRAL13 CU. FT. DELUXE CHEST FREEZER H0TP0INT14 Cu. Ft. 2-Door COMPLETELY FROST-FREE Sggroda.(u lit oa whoa!.. CTM14. *297 Froo doKvory, RRrviee *159 90 *148 *218 88 INSTJ NT All major credit cards, bank cards or store 1 charge plat., honored at Highland for immediate cieditl Buy with no money down. FREE DELIVERY FREE SERVICE NO MONEY DOWN • 3 YEARS TO PAY PONTIAC MALL SHOPPING CENTER TELEGRAPH ROAD, Corner Elizabeth Lake Road OPEN.DAILY 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. a PHONE 682-2330 J J THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1967 -second adjustment and the entry is ready to compete^ The morning air at San Francisco’s Lake Merced fills with the thunderous throb of high-powered engines and, in the North Lake area, the eye catches the trim lines of surging ships sweeping under full throttle through the water’s calm. But waiit! They aren’t full-size, these beautifully-produced craft, but individual hand-made creations (seldom more than 75 inches in length), participating in the sectional competition of the San Francisco Model Yacht Club. From throughout the state entrants come, bringing with them their own interpretation of the two classes, hydro (pontoonplus hull) and monoplane (single hull), to tune and polish and prepare before launching onto the 700-yard course. They race only for silver and gold cups, but with each entry is a pride of perfection which,, in terms of dollars, can go beyond several thousands in investment. The competition, begun in 1901 with sailing craft only, has swung slowly to the power-crafts favored mostly by the younger enthusiasts while the oldster’s preference stiU is for the sedate speed of a sailing ship. It is, however, the power which makes this event the finest and fastest in California, with over 100 entries of gasoline-operated, remote-controlled yachts in each speed competition. Their lines' and times will improve as years pass, yet in the thrill'of speed and labor of creation, these enthusiasts fulfill apart of themselves and give to onlookers that same excitement as they race in miniature the ships of their dreams. A part of tho crowd which gathered to watch the event Two participants make final adjustments before launch.. An entry comes In under remote-control as a crew member stands ready to retrieve It dim Woodlstch, of Los Angeles’ Modeleers Club, holds his boat, Sidewinder, while swatting turn to launch. Tony Chiboucas controls his $2000 entry while son Chuck hnd friend hold the craft before time trials. A young spectator look* over a row of entries. THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 19i "Jdcoby on Bridge NORTH A A J 6 5 3 ¥ 7 6 52 ♦ 83 + 33 light wen have tand led the nine ef clubs. It wife RA8T (D) A 10 4 2 ¥ A 10 8 3 ♦ AQ96 AK87 ¥J ♦ KJ104 + KJ1064 SOUTH AQ8 ¥ KQ 9 4 ♦ 752 + AQ75 • Neither vulnerable West North East South " Pass 1 + Pass 1 A Dble 1 N.T. Dble Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—A J By OSWALD & JAMES JACOBY In a duplicate game a one no-trump doubled contract is apt to produce a lot of fire-works. If de-jc 1 a r e r can I bring it home I he usually gets [a top or near I top. If he gets set I more than one I trick he gets [very bad score while one down doubled but not vulnerable is likely to be just about average. East's takeout double of one spade is not recommended for steady consumption. He had passed originally but the fact that he had passed had not changed one card in his hand. He still had 10 high cant points and poor distribution. South passed one spade and let his allowed to hold and he continued with the eight. South won tills trick and led the queen of spades. .West the king and South let it hold. decided to try one no-tramp with his 13 points and it was up to West to do something. West made an unpopular double. It was 100 per.cent unpopular. West didn’t like it touch. North hated it but didn’t think he had any place to go. East didn’t like it but was sure he had no place to go and. South surely didn’t like it but knew he had no place to go. West opened his jack of monds and it was up to the fense to set declarer two tr if they could work it out South wanted to get opt down one if possible. The defense was too f and it wasn’t possible. Wi jack of diamonds held the trick and he continued with four. East won with the qi Pony Gets 'Whoa' CHICAGO (AH Ptiteoiman Raymond Egan stopped a mo-torman here and charged him with driving without a city sticker or driver’s license, illegal use of license plates, and obstruction of the driver’s view. The last charge was made because there was a pohy standing in the back seat 6f the convertible. The defense had four tricks in and proceeded to take the king of clubs, the ace of hearts and two more diamonds for that 300-point pjus. The nation’s farm population fell to an estimated total of 1.6 million in 1966 making farmers only 5.9 per cent of toe population of the U.S. ROBIN MALONE By Rob Lubbers Bv Carl Grubert THE BETTER HALF . Jj CAN HAVE THE LASTr-WORD-SO L HUB Q—The bidding has West North East 1 + Db\p 1 A 2 + Pass Pass 3 + Pass Pass 3 + Pass You, South, hold: +K 9 ¥A J54 ♦ 4 3 2 J JACOBY 1076 What do you do now? A—Bid fhur clubs, partner haa shown the ace of spades but warned yon that the diamond suit is wide open. You must not bid three no-trump but .might well have Jumped to five clubs. TODAY’S QUESTION Instead of bidding two clubs your partner has doubled one spade. What dp you do now? Answer Tomorrow [Fcjreciisi^ 3 Mi ’ & BERRY’S WORLD—By Jinn Berry iiS-isssi Bv Art Sansom r V. T. Hamlin mJ CAPTAIN EASY • Leslie Turner ©mr hr NEA,«. “ 'Fraid I can’t make the meetin’ this evenin’ . OUT OUR WAY ! SAY’S HE CAM STAY FOR. AT LEAST A WEEK, AL~^ V, BERT. AMD I TOLD HIM YOU’D BE Ranch Mixes Work, Instruction for Boys BILLINGS, Mont. (AP)-Yel-lowstone Boys’ Ranch recently completed its first decade of providing a second chance for boys aged 9 to 14, ■k ★ * The program combines hard work antf responsibility with classroom instruction, trained counseling and family living. The 87 hoys work on toe ranch and raise a three-acre garden, freezing or canning toe vegetables. The vocational program includes specialized farm and maintenance work, carpentry, and elementary electrical training. ★ * * Nonsectarian, the ranch is supported mainly by contributions. Time and resources are donated daily by civic groups amt {professional people. Bird interference ; STAFFORD, Kan. (AP)r-Cly-heffi Shusky of Stafford was at ai loss to understand why his combine, overheated whenever he took it out to cut his wheat crop. He decided to dismantle the radiator on the vehicle to s6ek toe cause of toe trouble. He found a bird’s nest full of hard-boiled eggs w h i c h had stopped the water from circulat-ing through the radiator. EEK & MEEK I’M HAVING A TERRIBLE CHILDHOOD, FREAKY! By Howie Schneider MISERY AND UNHAPPINESS FOLLOW ME • WHERE EVER I GO! OH, VEAH 1 WELL, RELAX! MISERY AMD UNHAPPINESS-ARE GOING ^ ’lP_ ' V~ ^ 8-17 NANCY | ■f YOU PROMISED WHAT 'S TO MAKE ME A ARE YOU m FANCY GRUMBLING ) LUNCH*"" r ABOUT ?y—A------N,—* Bv Ernie Bushmilier --- AND ALL I GET IS TWO CRUMMY PANCAKES MOMENTS WE WOLE-PUT LIKE ID LIVE OVER BOARDING HOUSE j I WANT SOMETHING THAT WILL STICK TO MY RIBS f f WHICH ARe'YWHICH Y huh, N the bap k ti«$er a the BAF By Bud Blake OOVAI I) 1)1 ;ck LOUIE r A BAD CASE J/' NORMAL. | OF PUPPY,' < FOR A KID LOVEP/fT/J 1} A6E| By Walt Disney NORMAL^—.(OH, I CAN BUT IT'S eOlNOJ) AFFORD TO BE ' A FEW EXPENS!VE!iMOV|ES AND ~~ --- ~-- SODAS. I .i ■ Cr-H THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1967 Man Arrested After Shooting City Youth Wounded j in Alleged Argument! A Pontiac man was arrested late yesterday for investigation of attempted murder following the gunshot wounding of a 19-year-old youth in an alleged ar-| gument. Taken into custodyat his home was Louis Simmons, 49, of 226 Prospect, according to city police. Treated for a wound in the left ankle and later released from St. Joseph Mercy Hospital was Louis Green of 200 I Raeburn. Green told officers he was involved in an argument with fcj man he identified as Simmons i about 10:30 p.m. at the Prospect address. I * * * He said the man pulled what I appeared to lie a small automatic pistol and shot twice,! missing, then fired the shoti which wounded him 'as Green ran across the street. Simmons was held overnight i in Oakland County Jail. Apartment Blaze in. Detroit Snuffs Two Tots' Lives DETROIT (API — Two children perished today wKkn fire swept an apartment building on Detroit’s near West Side. Victims were Anthony Palo- io, 2, and Harry Burke, 3, whose charred bodies were found in a first floor bedroom. * ★ ★ The fire was discovered by vo police patrolmen, who helped evacuate IS residents from the apartments. They were forced back by the flames, however, when they tried to reenter the building to rescue the children. Cause of the fire was undetermined. LITTLE PIG WENT HOME-Because this 3-day-old pig was so small its litter mates kept shoving it out of the pen, it was sent home from the Five State Fair at Liberal, Kan. Deanna Wells, fc, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Larry Wells of Liberal, squints at the little porker< Reunion Sept. 1-3 for Tank Battalion Member of the area chapter of the 761$t Tank Battalion and Allied Veterans Association of World War II, can attend the 19th annual reunion Sept. 1-3 at the Sheraton Dayton Hotel, Day-ton, Ohio. Interested members may contact the national president, Rufus Taylor of 390 Nevada, or the local chapter president, Spurgeon Grazes of 586 Nevada, for additional information or reservations. The Pontiac chapter is dedicated to serving under-privi-ledged children and elderly citizens of the communities. Pill-Passing Pauline Perils London Tots LONDON (AP) - Police warned parents today of the peril of their children playing with a girl named Pauline. Intent on driving home their caution, they toured the streets of suburban Harrow Wednesday night and this morning, broadcasting their warning by loudspeakers. ★ * * The trouble is the gifts that Pauline has been giving. Five children ages 2 to 11 were treated at a Harrow hospital after accepting what they, and perhaps Pauline, too, thought was candy. STILL HELD One 2-year-old is still being held for observation, The police said doctors described the candy as orange-colored junior aspirin tablets. They said druggists told them that four of the tablets were the maximum safe dose. ★ , * ★ The cops acted after several children told of a girl called Pauline generously passing out the tablets on a street corner near a school. Said one constable: course, the children may have exaggerated the number of aspirins handed out by Pauline, but we must be absolutely sure.” [People in the News! By The Associated Press Alabama Gov. Lurleen Wallace is deeply tanned and feeling fine now after her battle with cancer. But she plans more X-ray therapy in September to guard against a recurrence. Most of the time these days, Mrs. Wallace relaxes on the sands of the Gulf Coast. She hasn't been at her office since shortly before she spent three weeks in July in a Houston, Tex., cancer clinic for the removal of a malignant growth in her lower abdomen. LURLEEN But she carries on the state’s business from an office in the mansion when she is in Montgomery and by telephone when she is away, and she plans to make a speech or two before returning to Houston. Mrs. Wallace says she hasn’t decided yet when she will return full time to running the state. 1 Crash Hurts Pontiac Man A Pontiac man was treated for cuts and bruises at Pontiac General Hospital after an accident last night in which his truck ran into a parked car, then careened into a house at 76 S. Sanford. ★ * * Frank Orsini, 49, of 2220 Coe was driving north about 10:10 p.m. when his truck hit the parked car, police said. He told officers the truck’s steering was defective. Orsini was ticketed for improper lane usage. Aug. 28 Trial for Area Man A Pontiac man accused of the gunshot wounding of a man hi a city bar last month was bound over to Oakland County Circuit Coart Tuesday on a charge of attempted murder. Free after posting $500 bond set by Muhicipal Judge Cecil B. McCallum is James Buchanan, 48, of 15 Parkdale. His trial is scheduled for Aug. 28 before Circuit Judge William J. Beer. Buchanan was arrested July 19 about an hour after Candy Elliott, 36, of 90 N. Francis Was ;hot four times in a city bar. Elliott and a companion on the night of the shooting testified at Buchanan’s preliminary examination in Municipal Court yesterday. Romney, Teachers Mull Detroit Crisis disposal Plant to Have Fountains, Pools New York City has hired Philip Johnson, a distinguished architect more at home with cultural complexes and exposition hails, to design a $70 million sewage disposal plant. He says he’s thinking about dressing it up with fountains and ornamental pools. Johnson, who designed the New York State Theater at Lincoln Center and the New York State Pavilion at the New York World’s Fair, said he planned to cover the plant’s 22-acre roof with pools and a system that will spray jets of water 200 feet into the air. Mayor Lindsay 'Balm for an Aching City' New York Mayor John V. Lindsay met former presidential assistant Jack Valenti at the movies last night—in a school-yard in Jamaica, Queens. The showing was part of the Movies in the Street program, funded by the Motion Picture Association of which Valenti is president. “John,” he said, “it’s a marvelous job that you’re doing, getting' down among the Valenti undsay , Ten per cent of the population of Africa is Catholic and almost 50 per cent of all school children in Africa attend Catholic schools. people.” Then he told newsmen: “A leader must move among the people to understand their problems. What Mayor Lindsay is doing works as a balm for a city that aches from time to time.” Hie free show has been running five nights a week since July 13 in 22 areas considered potential trouble spots. 4 Pontiac Teens Will Attend JA's Indiana U. Meet Four high school students will represent the Pontiac Junior Achievement Business Center at the 24th Natiohal Junior Achievers Conference at Indiana University, Aug. 20-25. Delegates will be Charles Graham of 58 Charles; Tonayo Gray of 171 N. Johnson; Sandra KeTler of 232 Grey, Pontiac Township; and Gerald Walton of 2299 Snell Brook. Serving as a counselor at tiie conference will be Theodore Villella of 42 College, Pontiac Township. Villela is the Pontiac center’s business manager and a graduate of the JA program. DETROIT (AP) - An air of pessimism shrouded today’s top-level meeting between Detroit school officials, teachers and Gov. George Romney, called by the governor in an attempt to insure the opening of schools Sept. 5. A.' L. Zwerdling, a Detroit attorney and school board her, said Wednesday he felt the meeting probably would accomplish much. Either the teachers will strike over salary demands, or the school board will have to give them shortened school year as “a ip.” The Detroit Federation of Teachers, (DFT), AFL-CIO, collective bargaining agent for the city’s 11,000 teachers, seeks $1,500 wage increase and reduction of the school year from 40 to 38 weeks. The board offer was $500 and no reduction in the school year. 2 Tp^nship GOP Leaders Appointed The appointment of two worn-in b> head Republican activities in Waterford and West Bloomfield townships was announced today by John Cartwright, GOP chairman of the 19th Congressional District. Mrs. Eugene M. Griffin was named director of the party organization in 1 Waterford, the most populous township in the county. The same post in West Bloomfield Township went to Mrs. Watson Stringer of 2861 Warner Drive. Mrs. Griffin, 5204 Cooliy Lake, is a past president of the Waterford Township Republican Women’s Club which she helped organize. * ★ * A precinct captain and an elected' Republican precinct delegate, Mrs. Griffin succeeds Mrs. L. Catherine Wolters, Waterford Township treasurer, in the party position. Mrs. Stringer has been captain of precinct four in West Bloomfield for 10 years and is a past president of the Walled Lake High School PTA and the PTA council. She has also been active in the West Bloomfield Township Civil Defense" organization. Detroit Man Charged With Hamburg Murder A Detroit man held in 0ak-| Jr., II, who was critically land County Jail on an armed robbery warrant was' charged with murder and attempted murder yesterday in the January slaying of a Hamburg druggist and wounding of the druggist’s son. James E. Hayton, 25, w a identified in a lineup of seven prisoners as one of two men who killed George Reck Jan. 1 in a holdup at Reek’s pharmacy, according to O a k 1 a n d County sheriff’s deputies. He was reportedly identified by Reek’s son, George WSU Alumni Head to Speak at PBI 'Singer1 Is Fined BBOISE, Idaho UH — The leader of the rock ’n’ roll singing group, Paul Revere and th Raiders, should have stuck with horse as the first Paul Revere did. Instead, Mark Lind-leader of the group, was $95 for speeding by Justice Frank Chalfant Jr. of this city. Deaths in Pontiac Area Edward Gallaher of 8044 Farrant will be 2 p.m. Saturday at Elton Black Funeral Service for Edward Gallaher, I Home, Union Lake. Burial will 56, of 10} Mechanic will be l:30|be in Commerce Cemetery. Police Action Pontiac police officers 1 and Oakland County sheriff’s deputies investigated 73 reported incidents tiie past 24 hours. A breakdown of causes for police action: Arrests—9 Vandalisms—11 Burglaries—13 Larcenies—14 Auto Thefts—1 # Bicycle Thefts—2 . Attempted Murders—1 Disorderly Persons—1 Assaults—6 Obscene Phone Calls—3 Property Damage Accidents—# / k Injury Accidents—2 'Good as An/thing From th' U.S. Minf When Georgia Neese Gray was treasurer of the United States, her signature appeared on the greenbacks the government issued. They were considered pretty good anywhere in the world. But before Mrs. Gray was treasurer folks in Richland, Kan., where she was born thought brass tokens bearing her father’s name were as good as anything from the U.S. Mint. Today, Mrs. Gray begins what she calls the final closeout at the general store that her father, Albert Neese, and his brother, Frank, opened in 1879. The store has to make way for the Clinton dam and reservoir on tiie Wakarusa River which will inundate Richland. As town banker during (he early 1908’s and again in tjie ,1930’s Albert Neese istued his own Script, good anywhere In the valley. He urged his clerks and customers to use the tokens instead of money and to invest the regular tender with him. \ Mrs. Gray was behind the meat counter the day President Harry S. Truman’s secretary called to say the President wanted her to become the nation’s .first woman treasurer. She served from 1949 to 1953. Mrs. Gray is now a Topeka banker. p.m. Saturday in Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr.- Gallaher died yesterday. Surviving are bis wife, Betty; a 'sister, Mrs. William Georgia of Pontiac; and a brother. Mrs. Bertha G. Pollard Service for Mrs. Bertha G. Pollard, 67, of 38 Frank will be p.m. Friday at D. E. Pursley Funeral Home with burial ih Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mrs. Pollard died Tuesday. Survivors " include two sons, Charles and Elmer Terwilliger, both of Battle Creek; a sister, Mrs. Lucille VanManning Evansville, 111.; and four brothers including Rev. Waldemar R. Eberle of Pontiac. Max Vought Service for Max Vought, 52, of 574 W. Huron will be 11 a.m. tomorrow at Sparks - Griffin Chapel with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Vought, a member Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian Church, died yesterday. He was a meat cutter. Surviving are his mother, Mrs. Winifred Vought of. Pontiac; five children; Mrs. Edward Sizemoore of Utica, Mrs. Donald Robertson of Waterford Township; and Jack, Carrie and Jerry, all of Pontiac; and three grandchildren. Also surviving are a sister, Mrs. Robert Mosser and a brother, Randall, both of Pontiac. Alvin Armstrong AVON TOWNSHIP - Service for Alvin Armstrong, 80, of N. Avalon will be 1:30 p.m. Saturday at Harold R. Davis Funeral Home with burial In White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. '. Mr. Armstrong died yeeter-day,. Edward J. Hart COMMERCE TOWNSHIP -J Service for Edward J. Haft, 88, Mr. -Hart, truck division superintendent of the Detroit Edison Co., died today. He was a member of Schoval Memorial Presbyterian Church, Detroit, and the American Legion Post No. 187, Detroit. Surviving are his wife, Loretta; a daughter, Mrs. Richard Mager of Garden City; a son, Patrick B. Hart of White Lake Township; two sis'ters; and four grandchildren. Stephen A. Rafferty LAPEER TOWNSHIP — Service for Stephen A. Rafferty, 69, of 1434 Peppermill will be 11 Saturday at Grace Episcopal Church, Lapeer. Burial will be in Mount Hope Cemetery, Lapeer, by Muir Brothers Funeral Home there. Rafferty, retired treasurer of Welch, Inc., died yesterday. He was a former treasurer of Alemite Co. of Troy. Surviving are his wife, Bernice; a brother; and three sisters. More Classes for Practical Nurses Asked The Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital Board of Control last night took action aimed at enlarging the scope of practical nurse training. Hospital administrator Harry H. Whitlow , was instructed by the board to write , a letter to Oakland Community College requesting that the college provide such an educational service. ★ * ★ • Presently the only federally financed practical nurse training program in the Pontaic area is administered by the Pontiac School District and funded by h e Manpower Development Training Act of 1962. Hospital board members are seeking the practical training agency change because they feel the demand for more trained personnel could better be met by the college. Crane Robbed in Orion Twp. Some $400 worth of parts were stolen from a crane parked on unoccupied property in Orion Township, Oakland County sheriff’s deputies were told yesterday. Paul Mason of 1780 Bearinger, Attica, told investoagtors t h battery, instrument panel, generator and radiator were taken, from the vehicle at 3770 Stanton. The crane is used in construction work, deputies said. Homer Strong, director alumni relations at Wayne State University, will address 81 graduates of fyntiac Business Insti-j tute (PBI) to-j morrow on Look Ahead —J Vjfhat Next?” The 8 p.m. ceremonies will be at the institute, 18 W. Lawrence. PBlI has offered STTRONG specialized business - oriented courses since 1896. Strong resides at 8950 Gale, White Lake Township. wounded during the robbery, but managed to escape the assailants by fleeing1 to a nearby restaurant. Hayton was captured Aug. 2 in a holdup at a Southfield supermarket. HiS brother, Darryl,. 22, was shot to death when Southfield police surprised the holdup men and opened fire. Hip Hospital for Teen Ills NEW YORK (AP)—A special adolescent uhit, first of its kind in this city, has been set up at Montefiore Hospital and Medical Center to meet the emotional as well as medical needs of teenagers. * * * The 20-bed section is complete with juke box, ping pong table, brightly colored walls, artwork and its own schoolroom, where iyoungsters will attend daily classes conducted by the Board | of Education. * * “Not only will the - arrangement greatly aid nursing care,” points out Dr. Laurence Fin-berg, chief of the hospital’s pediatrics division, “but if will also help us to gather a good deal of social information about adolescents.” Ticket Is Free DECATUR. Hi. (AP)—A burglar broke into a building here and got away with an assortment of loot—including two tickets to the policeman’s ball. NOTICe OF PUBLIC HEARING Notice Is hereby given of a scheduled public hearing to be held by the Pontiac Townehlp Zoning Board at the Township gHH Opdyke Road, on Tuesday, Petition M-22 to change from C-2 to C-3: East 70 ft ot tha West 420 ft. of Lot 20, Galloway Lake Farm * “J it this maetlng. A copy of the “P and the proposed change n the office of the Township ^ GENUINE DIAMOND AACM'C 14k GOLDS MEN S wooing $225 Is Stolen From City Hotel Police are investigating the reported theft of $225 from the main desk ot the Waldron Hotel, 36 E. Pike. Milton Yerkes, 23, assistant manager, said the money was taken from an unlocked drawer behind the counter sometime between 3 and 6, a.m. yesterday, times when he had checked the drawer. 3 Break-Ins Reported on Orchard Lake Road Police are investigating the theft of an estimated $1,750 worth of business machines, rugs and appliances from three business places on Orchard Lake Road. ■ * a * Also taken in the burglaries committed sometime Tuesday night or yesterday morning were a 32-calibre revolver and an unknown amount of pheno-barbitol. Officers were notified of a break-in at Advance Laboratories, 875 Orchard Lake, by an employe. Missing were an electric typewriter, an adding machine, a portable radio and the revolver- officers said thieves apparently broke a window on the south side of the building to make entry. While investigating, police learned of the theft of an adding machine and the drugs from a doctor’s office upstairs. Police said keys taken from the laboratories opened the office; of Dr. Robert Netzel. ★ a * Also broken into was the Dalton Carpet Cleaners, 871 Orchard Lake. Reported missing were $500 worth of white fugs, combination cash register-adding machine, a check protector, a clock and a radio.' Officers said a screen was removed from an unlocked front winddw. With Purchasa of Sot Above PARK JEWELERS and OPTICIANS I N. SAGINAW $1000? GprTHAT] BIG Beneficial No one likes “th* waiting game" ■— and at Beneficial we don’t play it! It delays us'—* and it delays you. So why watt? Phone for vacation Cash now and get that Big 0,K. fast. Plus yourlown Beneficial Credit Card with exclusive new 30-day Free Loan Privilege. Call Beneficial.. . now! BENEFICIAL FINANCE SYSTEM • 1700 OFFICES COAST-TO-COAST Loans up to $1000 on your signature, furniture or auto PONTIAC—(2 Offices) Beneficial Finance Co. of Detroit • 10 N. Saginaw ........334.9505 Beneficial Finance Co. of Waterford • 477 Elizabeth Lake Rd. ..... 3344513 OPEN EVENINGS BY*APPOINTMENT—PHONE FOR HOURS THE PONTIAC? PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1967 C—irf Pontiac Schools Erhphdsizing Sex Education Classes By DICK ROBINSON An emphasis on sex education in Pontiac schools is as new as a newborn baby. School administrators have decided for the first time to develop a uniform sex education program this fall. Not until three or four years ago did sex education programs really catch on in schools across the country. Now programs are popping up at a startling pace. Authorities agree that sex education in schools is needed in this free-swinging era of sex revolution. They point to these facts: • One out of every six teenage girls becomes pregnant out of wedlock. An estimated 300,000 teenagers report infections of venereal diseases yearly, and more than one million cases go unreported. Pontiac alone accounted for more than half of the venereal diseases, syphilis and gonorrhea reported last year in Oakland County. One-third of the county’s illegitimate births are reported in Pontiac. BESIEGE SCHOOLS Parents throughout ttft nation, including those in Pontiac, have virtually been besieging the schools to take on the job of teaching about sex. It is a job they generally are unable to do. They are apt to feel strained, embarrassed and inadequate. Sex education received In the home is often frequently a mixture of superstition and old wives' tales infused with some factual ihformtrtiqn. "Studies show that 80 per cent of youth gain sex information from sources (the rough-and-ready expertise ‘picked up in the gutter’) other’ than the home,” Asst. Supt. William J. Lacy explained. ONLY INSTITUTION “The school is the only institution in our society that reaches almost all young people.” Thus, schools are called on to help solve the conflict between "mother says” and “the gang says” — whom to believe? Teachers, though, are not free of sexual problems and often cannot use even a meager vocabulary concerning sex without bhishing. But over-all, teachers are the best equipped to teach sex. And they will learn how through in-service programs. BIG QUESTION The big question is when should children be taught about sex. Most experts agree that it should start early. In Glen Cove, N.Y., 5-year-old Idndergartners are taken on bisexual expeditions into the school's men’s room to show the principal anatomical differences between boys and girls. The philosophy in this New York City suburb is that “sex is something you are, not something you do.” * ★ * Other experts would start sex education even before kindergarten. SYPHILIS GERMS “We don’t have any organized program at the lower elementary level,” Lacy said. “We may tell younger children that germs cause disease and when they get older that germs cause syphilis.” Pontiac’s sex education emphasis this year will be put on grades five through eight. Other elementary and secondary grades will continue to receive a sprinkling of sex information, depending on the teacher’s whims. Concerning what should be taught, Lacy had this to say “Our program will teach the kids the things they should learn at home and church." ★ ★ ★ > At the start, time devoted to sex education with two teacher consultants will be as follows: • Three one-hour programs on reproduction education for all fifth- or sixth-grade boys and girls. • Four programs on human sexuality and sex roles for all .seventh- or eighth^ade boys ' and girls.' \ Most pex education courses to the chagrin of the critics— avoid talking about contraception and sex techniques. Michi- gan law prohibits Instruction on birth control. The seamy side of sex—VD, homosexuality, fcbortion—generally is postponed untO late in high school or is not even discussed at all. Venereal disease is explained in Pontiac. Some schools, such as in Washington, D:C., require the parents’ written consent before children may attend classes on human reproduction. ★ "* ★ Today there is a new insist- ence on (jpaling with every facet MANUS POWER MOWERS 3116 N. Woodward Ave. Royal Oak It 9-2440 TRACTORS MOWERS SWEEPERS of sex: biological, emotional and sociological. Lacy agrees that schools should “deal with all aspects of sex.” FACTS OF LIFE’ But for many school districts the “facts of life’’ include only information about human reproduction, menstruation and the dangers of premarital intercourse. Others calim to have sex education programs -‘the popular euphemism “family living” or the “rainy-day phy$-ed-movie bit” — offer- ing little more than a film on human reproduction or Walt Disney’s well-worn "story of Menstruation.” Pontiac, secondary schools have treated the subject via films, printed material and lectures in physical education, home economics and science courses..But still the program is only in its infancy. “I feel a developmental program with units spotted in several grade levels is better that) having separate courses onySex education,” Lacy said. He agrees with experts that straight, frank answers "in language acceptable in education” should be.given and that information should be given gradually. "Pontiac does not have any sensational program as in Anaheim, Calif., where teachers permit classroom use of four-letter words in order to ship them of the forbidden-thrill Value,” Lacy said. Anaheim’s program is recognized as one of the best in the country. Other techniques in schools across the country commoner include assigning children to model the male and female genitals in clay. IN DETROIT In Detroit, a teacher demonstrates the stretching, of the uterus with a rubber ball ipside a sock and the growth humqn embryo by soaking beans in water until they swell and sprout. One of the toughest questions about sex information is whether it should be straight information or have moral direction. The "do not because you’ll get in trouble” attitude no longer carries any weight, some say. Schools may prepare both sexes for the “traps of dating” or rely heavily on “cautionary tales” or “situation ethics.” * * ★ "The main approach of our program,” says Lacy, “is Information. Moral direction is part of the responsibility of the schools, too. We use statistics as a threat, not threats of pregnancy, etc.’* * ★ * • But he emphasized that parents, too, have, to reassert their own morality at home and in society and that sex education in schools should only be a supplement to parental and religious direction. The suicide rate for physicians between May 1965 and 1967 was estimated, at 34 per 100,000 deaths, twice the rate for the male population in general. jUSTAftW j. OFTHEMMtf j M »Y!MlSn. WJ 1 r n Li 3 M n am BIG SCHOOL SPECIALS! r BOYS' SIZES 6 to 16 PERMANENT PRESS SPORT SHIRTS . 100% ORION9 ACRYLIC SWEATER A JUMPM • JUMPER BONDED TO ACETATEI . SWINGER STYLESI • HI-RISE STYLESI • KILTIE STYLES GIRLS' 2 PC. BOYS' SIZES 6 to 16 PERMANENT PRESS SPORT SLACKS JUMPER SETS Orion* acrylic waavas and knits ,. . . fully bonded for perfect shape retention! Great solid colors, stripes, plaidsl Soft Orion* acrylic coordinated sweater! In sizes 3-14. minim DRESSES Neat back-to-schoolersl The prettiest dresses in cotton oxfords and acetate rayon . . . newest prints, stripes and polka dots! Matched up with chain-linked shoulder pursesl Sizes 3 to 11. UDIiS' DRESSES BOYS' ACRILAN® KNIT SHIRTS BOYS' FLANNEL PAJAMAS Notch coat style with long sleeves, pearllzed buttons! long legs, elaeticized waist. Cotton flannel. Sizes 3-16... GIRLS' CORDUROY SLACKS GIRLS' POLO SHIRTS GIRLS' FANCY SLIPS *1 *1 *1 2-*1 59‘ FAMILY DEPARTMENT STORES „ TWO COLORS THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1967 FREBIRIS! Cheer On Pontiac’s New Entry In The Midwest Football League *... TIE milM RIEIIIIS! Another exciting season's in store for Pontiac area football fans, as Head Coach, Tom "The Bomb" Tracy guides Pontiac's new Firebirds against the strong challengers of the Midwest Football League. You'll want to attend all the home games ... and make it a family affair. Home Games Start At 7:30 P.M. WISNER STADIUM PONTIAC, MICHIGAN • Aug. 19-Flint* • Aug. 26—Midi. Arrows D Sept 9-Ypsilanti • Sept 2-Flint D Sept 23—Mich. Arrows D Sept 30—Dayton D Oct 7—Dayton D Oct 14-River Rouge D Oct 21—Lansing D Nov. 18—Lansing D Oct 28-Flint D Nov. 25—Ypsilanti • Nov. 4-River Rouge * Exhibition FIREBIRD TICKETS AVAILABLE AT: P0NTIA6 FOOTBALL CO. 12 N. Saginaw St. FE 2-9254 OSMUN’S BOB-KEN'S LOUNGE GRIFF’S GRILL ADULT SEASON TICKETS................ $1250 STUDENT SEASON TICKETS............... $3°° GENERAL ADMISSION......... *2°° RESERVED SEATS............ $2*° STUDENT TICKETS............ $1°° i This Page Was Donated By The Following Area Merchantsy AUSTIN N0RVEL1 AGENCY 16 W. LAWRENCE at Wide Track West JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 630 OAKLAND AVE. Pontiac, Mibb. 335-4101 GRESHAM CLEANERS & SHIRT LAUNDRY 665 OAKLAND AVE. Pontiao, Michigan 334-2579 HOMER HIGHT MOTORS, INC. 168 S. WASHINGTON ST.. Oxford, Miohigan 0A 8-252S COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK New 21 Offices in Oakland and Maeomb Counties POOLE LUMBER & HARDWARE 151 OAKLAND AVE. Pontiac, Miohigan 334-1594 FOODLAND MKTS. of OAKLAND COUNTY • ATLAS—Walton at Baldwin o D t W - Ortonvillo • LAS—(aka prion • TENIITA-Walton at Sashabaw AL HANOUTE’S BUICK-CHEVROLET, INC. THE CAR BUYER’S FRIEND, 682-2411 269 N. Park Blvd., Lake Orion H. W. HUTTENLOCHER INS. 3N BIKER BUILDING Pontiac, Michigan CITY SIDE SUPER MARKET 1116 Joslyn Pontiao, Michigan 338-0311 FITZPATRICK PHARMACY The Medioal Building- Next to St. Joseph Morey Hosp. 866 .S. Woodward-Pontiac, FE 4-9915, FE 2-8383 CLARKSTON FARM EQUIPMENT CO. M-16 at Oak Hill Rd., Clarkston, Miohigan 628-2238 SAM ALLEN A SONS, INC. 22 CONGRESS ST. Pontiac, Michigan 335-8142 STAPP’S SHOE STORE 931 WEST HURON STREET Pontiao, Michigan 332-3306 SPENCER’S FLOOR COVERING 3611 Elizabeth Lake Road Pontiao, Michigan 334-7715 CHUCK WAGON 8866 DRYDEN RD., Dryden, Miohigan YELLOW CAB COMPANY 211 S. SAGINAW ST. Pontiac, Michigan 3384161 FELICE QUALITY MARKET 1116 WEST HURON STREET Pontiao, Miohigan 335-6165 ROGER’S SPORTING GOODS 24 EAST LAWRENCE STREET Pontiao, Michigan 332-2368 DR. HAROLD BDSSEY, OPTOMETRIST PONTIAC OPTICAL CENTER 163 N. Saginaw - 334-5211 OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 124 OAKLAND AVENUE Pontiac, Michigan 335-9436 KMART GLENWOOD PLAZA Pontiao, Michigan CONNOLLY’S JEWELERS DOWNTOWN PONTIAC BIRMINGHAM Huron and Saginaw, FE 2-6264 - 162 N. Woodward, Ml 8-4283 Open Triday Evenings MEMBERS OF PONTIAC LOCAL 653 3S6, East Kennett Road Pontiao — 334-6611 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE MT. CLEMENS at WIDE TRACK Downtown Pontiao 333-7951 MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES 631 OAKLAND AT CASS Pontiao, Michigan ■ THE PONTIAC MALL TELEGRAPH and ELIZABETH, LAKE RD. MEMBERS OF FISHER-BODY LOCAL 596 621 BALDWIN AVENUE Pontiao - FE 2-6816 BLUE RIBBON TIRE CENTER ISIS WIDE TRACK DRIVE W. Pontiac, Michigan 334-0519 GEE COAL A OIL 659 PERSHING STREET, Pontiao, Michigan 335-Sill CLARK OIL COMPANY 689 PERSHING STREET \ Pontiac, Michigan 332-9161 MEMBERS OF LOCAL 594 865 S. EAST BOULEVARD Ptmtiae - 334-2887 WALDRON HOTEL 3S EAST PIKE STREET Downtown PontiacMS-618T PERRY PHARMACY 5 Groat Storas to Servo Yob in Oakland County OSMUN’S 51 North Saginaw - Pontiao Tat-Huron Shopping Cahtar MEMBERS OF LOCAL 794 ’ Hotel - Restaurant - Bartenders 1 Pontiao-3354168 WATERFORD HILL COUNTRY CLUB / SSIS DIXIE HIGHWAY „ Clarkston, Michigan 525-3050 THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 WEST HURON STREET Pontiao, Michigan 332-6161 RUSS JOHNSON MOTOR SALES, INC. / PONTIAO, FIREBIRD, RAMBLER / 89 M24, Lake Orion 8934266 - TEAMSTERS LOCAL 614 Joaoph M. Banc, President Pontiao - 334-4513 THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN^ THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1967 D—1 Loss to B 'i Pushes B to Fourth Place BOSTON UPi. — George Scott’s crash diet to regain his starting job paid oft the second time in two nights against the Detroit Tigers as the* big first base-man cracked a pair of homers in power- * ing Boston to an 8-3 victory Wednesday night. The defeat dropped the Tigers into ■ fourth place, one-half game behind the Red Sox in the American League p^ nant race. Boston Manager Dick Williams h benched Scott in a series last weekepitf^ because the young slugger’s weight hadST i ballooned to 221 pounds, six over the«^ < limit set by the manager. Scott celebrated his return Tuesday night by smacking a first inning homer in a 4-0 victory over Detroit. Scott’s Wednesday night homers accounted for four Boston runs and a solo shot by Reggie Smith added another. ★ ★ ★ The only Tiger muscle wa'S provided by Norm Cash who hit his 16th homer after a single by Willie Horton. Detroit tied it in the third when Bill Freehan sent a grounder off Joy Foy at third for an error! DENNY LIFTED Tiger starter Denny McLain was lifted in the third after allowing five runs. He was tagged for the loss, his 13th, against 15 victories. McLain was followed by Dave Wicker-sham and then Mike Marshall who let in three more Boston runs as the Tigers lost their sixth straight in Fenway Park. Today Earl Wilson and Jim Lonborg, two of the wlnningest pitchers In the league with 16 victories each, will battle In the Tigers’ final encounter at Boston this year. “No potatoes, no gravy, no beans, no nothing with any starch,” Scott said after his long-ball outburst. “The boss wants me to stay at 215 pounds or under. So it's just scrambled eggs and steak the rest of the way. I want a lot more long tatters.” Scott said he picked up his excess poundage during an off day before the start of the California series. Scott’s two homers, hiking his season total to 16, also raised his batting average to .293. He has driven in 57 runs. Dieting SBH’eastsonTi Chisox in Hit Mood; Twins Whip Angels By The Associated Press The Chicago White Sox, who sometimes seem to win with mirrors, did it Wednesday night with a hitter who can’t ruii, a runner who suddenly can hit and — would you believe — three home runs. The notoriously light hitting White Sox sprayed 17 safeties around Comiskey Park including two home runs by Pete Ward and one by Gerry McNertney and walloped Kansas City 14-1,, Ken Boyer, sidelined by a pulled muscle in his left leg, came off the bench in the fourth inning and delivered a bases-loaded single that drove in three runs.. The ball soared over left fielder Danny eater’s head and the three runners scored easily. But Boyer, limping badly, barely made it to first base. Sandy Alomar, acquired just hours before game time from the New York Mets as part of the Boyer deal, started at shortstop for Chicago, lashed two singles and scored two runs. Throughout his cqryeiv Alomar has been noted as two runs. An infield out following two walks drove in another run and Ted Uhlsender’s two-out double produced two more. * ★ ★ Steve Hargan outduelled Camilo Pas-cuel and Tony Horton’s ninth inning double — only the second hit for the Indians — gave Cleveland its victory. ★ * * Hargan, who struck out 10, finished with a three-hitter. Horton’s two-out double scored pinch runner Chuck Hinton from first base, Pascual did not allow a hit until the seventh when Max Alvis singled with two out. State'iQd^, of iifr*^** ^1 kept the Sox I Vi games '• hack of^toe streaking first place Min-9 heMW-^TWins who won their seventh YEA TEAM! — Ready to cheer for Pontiac’s pro football Firebirds is this five-some of (l-r> Cathy1 Norberg, Sue Hartung, Diana Norberg, Linda Jackson and Lois Hunt. The Firebirds meet the Flint Blue Devils in an exhibition game at Pontiac s __________ Wisner Stadium Saturday at 7:30 p.m. The girls are coeds at Oakland University. F-Bird Back 6,000 Miles From Home ‘“"I Bill Apisa Hopes j to Follow Friend j on Lions' Squad Both at End Michighn’s./Que^ winding qp. the pre pauper. f. T " Joyce Kazmiet&kl, the Michigan State University coed' wht> won nearly every major state women's croWnfast year and lost them aU' 0% season!, suffered her worst defeat, in competition yesterday by dropping a 10 and 6 match in the first round of the Women’s National Amateur Golf Championships in Pasadena, Calif. str&ight; 5-1 from California. Pinning the setback on Misl Kazmier-ski was 16-year-old Bonnie Edge wood Country Club in Union Lakg , ,,* . who later dropped a second-round verdict to Lou Dill of Deer Park, Tex. The biggest surprise of the day was the play of 16-year-old Marianne Cox of Santa Ana, Calif., who ousted four-time champion Jo Anne Gunderson earner of Seekong, Mass., 2 and 1, and then bounced former Trans-Mississippi champ Roberta Albers of Tampa, Fla., 3 and 2. Of the quarter-finalists, five are under 20 years of age. The USGA tourney is being played over the 6,062-yard Anna-dale Golf Course. EX-CHAMP SURVIVES Bjpjbn moved into third place by beating Detroit 8-3. Cleveland nipped Washington >0 and Baltimore edged New York54. - • Minnesota bushed four hits and two walks for/five first inning runs against California and that was enough for Dean Chance, who won his 16th game. The first three Minnesota batters .-r Zoilo Versalles, Cesar Tovar and Ton* Olivf -^t$pled, doubleji and singled fp^ F-Bird Coach Has 'Willies' Pontiac Firebird football coach Tom Tracy has the “Willies” today as 1 [ he prepares for Saturday night’s exhibition game against the Flint Blue Devils j !; at Wisner Stadium. | It’s not that Tracy is afraid of Flint, but he may have some confusion * ! when he calls for Willie Washington to enter the game. Yesterday when Tracy called for Willie, two players stepped out. At tight end, the Firebirds have Willie Washington, a 6-foot and 180 pounder , L from Allen University. Another Willie Washington came into camp yesterday and he stands | 6-feet-7 and goes 240 pounds from Alcorn A&M in Mississippi. Tracy assigned him to the defensive end position. Lions jTfiihk Five From Squad PrMhan c 4 010 Adair 2b 3 > J J Oyler u 2 0 0 EHoward C 10 0 0 Green ph 1 0 0 0 Ryan c * ' > J Treawiki u 1 0 0 0 Manga p ' 0 0 0 McLain p 10 10 Brandon p 3 0 2 1 Wlckiiwn p 1 O 0 0 Landis pit 10 0 0 Dobson p 0 0 0 0 Stanlay ph 10 0 0 Marshall p 0 0 0 Totaf Datratt *?^Foy, Patrocel Detroit 1, Boston Boston 7. 2B—Kf"‘ (10), R.—jtt LOB—Detroit 9. ■MMR ,:oy. HR—Scott 2 (I), Cash (10). SB—Fw, McLain (L.15-13) . 2 2-3 S 5 5 Wtckarsham ...... 21-3 3 11 . T—2:43. A—32.051. The only former champion remaining after two rounds is Jean Ashley of Chanute, Kans., who downed Margaret Harmon of Shelbyville, Tenn., 2 and 1, and Connie Day of Cleveland, Tenn., 2 and 1. Mrs. Scott Probosco of Chattanooga, Tenn., scored a 1-up win. over two-time champion Barbara Mclntire of Colorado Springs. „ Other quarter-finalists are medalist Phyllis Tish Preuss of Pompano Beach, Fla.; Peggy Conley, 20, of Spokane, Wash.; Martha Wilkinson, 18, of Fullerton, Calif.; and Jane Bastanchury, 19, of Whittier, Calif. Giant QB's in Tuneup Kathy, Carol Rated 1-2 FAIRFIELD, Conn. Iff! - Fran Tark-entori and -Earl Morrall, veteran quarterbacks, went through a lengthy workout Friday throwing long and short passes as the New York football Giants went through a final hard tuneup for Saturday night’s game against Washington at Raleigh, N. C. PEKIN, 111. (UPI) - Kathy Whitworth and Carol Mann, running one-two in the scrap for leading money winner of women’s pro golf, were the favorties for the $10,000 Women’s Western Open, beginning at the 6,605 yard Pekin Country Club. r® Cooley Lake 'Open' Fishermans Paradise Cooley Lake will be a fisherman’s paradise until Sept. 11. Fish of any size and in any quantity can be taken until that date when the Conservation Department will chemically treat the lake to remove the existing fish population. The liberalized regulations went into effect Aug, 15, PERMIT REQUIRED However, a# anglers wishing to take advantage of the special ruling will need a permit. These free permits are available at the Pontiac Lake District office Highland and ’Dill. A fishing license is still required. Just about , any method of fishing will be allowed under toe permit. In addition to toe regular hook and line method, anglers can take fish with hand, rubber or spring controlled spears with an attached line of not more than 20 feet in length; bow and arrow; dip nets; landing nets; or by grabbing them by hand. Lights may be used in spearing at night. s Fishermen who do not have x the special permits will nave to abide by the regular fishing laws covering size and possession Urn- . its. The lake is being treated to re-’ move an overpopulation of stunt- • ed panfish and rough fish. It will be restocked later in the fall j>r early spring with rainbow and iargemouth bass. ' 1 f ■ , ' 14 Others Slated for Ax Prior to Season's Opener The Detroit Lions cut five players from their squad Wednesday in their drive to get down to the 40-player limit. Fourteen more are scheduled to go be-foe the weeding out is completed. ★ ★ ★ Cut Wednesday were Jim Edgerly, Jack O’Billovich, Art Johnson, Gus Kas-apis and Clarence Miles. O’Billovich and Edgerly had tried to make the team last year. LEG INJURY O’Billovich, a former Oregon State linebacker, was cut last season after he suffered ajenee injury. Edgerly, a defensive tackle from New Mexico State, suffered a similar injury last year playing with Pontiac in toe MFL. Johnson played college ball at Michigan State as a defensive back and then in Canada for two years before being ' picked up as a free agent by the Detroit club. Miles, a defensive end at Trinity College, had been dropped by the Green , Bay Packers two weeks ago. * * * Kasapis, a native Detroiter who played college ball at Iowa, is a defensive lineman and played Canadian ball. The Lions left for ,the West Coast today to begin getting ready for their next exhibition gaihe Sunday against the San Diego Chargers of the American Football League. . • Pros Wreck Par in Tuning Games for Hartford Open WETHERSFIELD, Conn. (AP) - The annual destruction of par figures at Wethersfield Country Club begins today as 146 professionals and amateurs begin the four-day $100,000 Greater Hartford Open Golf Tournament. Twenty-four of the 49 pfos competing in Wednesday’s pro-amateur preliminary broke the course standard of 71, led by Bob Goalby’s seven-under-par efforf of 30-34-64. The 37-yar-old former University of Illinois football player added toe $300 pro-am prize to toe $72,437 he’d won in 23 tournments this year. Paul Harney of Worcester, Mass., who makes only rare appearances on the pro tour these days, fashioned a 65. Tommy Aaron, Charles Coody and Bill Matin-dale shared third place with 67s. YANK TRIUMPHS—Vincent Matthews of New York City breaks the tape in the time of 45.3 seconds yesterday in winning the 400-meter event during the track and field competition between the United States and West Germany in Dus-seldorf. Score Tourney Upsets MANCHESTER, Mass. (AP) - Two tall girls scored upsets in the second day of play of the Essex Country Club Women’s Tennis Tournament Wednesday. Karen Krantzcke, a 6-foot-2 Australian, defeated fifth-seeded Mary Ann Eisel of St. Louis in a gruelling two-hour match 6-3, 7-9, 6-4. still! another upset was recorded by Maryna Godwin of South Africa, who stopped Mrs. Donna Fales of New York, 6-8, 6-2, 6-3. _____ Bill Apisa, like his brother Bob, the Michigan State All-America fullback, came about 6,000 miles from Hawaii to Michigan because he wants to play football. Bill didn’t come all that way just to play for the Pontiac Firebirds, but he is hoping for a chance with the Detroit Lions and while he is biding his time until next year’s camp.^he will be running at fullback for toe Firebirds. A four-year varsity player at the University of Hawaii, Apisa came to the area a few weeks ago with a friend, Lew Kamanu, a onetime prep teammate in Hawaii who was the Liens’ No. 4 draft choice this year. Kamanu, a 6-4 and 250 pounder who played at Weber State College last season, is being tried at. defensive end. ★ ★ ★ At 23, Bill is one year older than brother Bob who will be a senior at MSU this fall. REASONS HERE “f Want to watch Bob play this fall; and I hope I can get a chance with the Lions next summer,” he said. “I guess those are my main reasons for being here.” Living in Royal Oak with relatives, Apisa will be at fullback for toe Firebirds Saturday night when toe Flint Blue Devils visit Wisner Stadium for an exhibition game. He scored one touchdown on an eight-yard dash in the 28-13 loss to Ypsilanti last week, but he played only half the gaipe because coach Tom Tracy felt he wasn’t out long enough to learn' all the plays. “He’s as strong as a bull,” said Tracy, “he’ll give us real power at fullback.” Game time Saturday night is 7:30 and tickets for the exhibition contest are available at Osmun’s, Griff’s Grill, Bote Ken’s and the Firebirds’ downtown office. There are no reserved seats for the exhibition game, all tickets are $2 for adults and $1 for students. Grid Coach Mending LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — University of Nebraska athletic' director and football Coach Bob Devaney was reported doing, “very well” following an appendectomy Wednesday morning. Devaney was admitted to a hospital Tuesday night. Yanks Cling to Slim Lead Michigan's Peaches in Tennis Quarter-Finals PHILADELPHIA (fll — Defending DUESSELDORF, Germany (AP) — champion Peaches Bartkowicz assaulted > The U.S. track and field squad, shaken .Laura duPont with rock-speed backhand • • • - ■ - -u—j-------—s-“* shots and whipped the North Carolinian, 6-2, 6-0, to advance to the quarter-finals of the 50th U.S. girls lawn tennis championship Wednesday. ★ 4 * .Miss Bartkowicz, of Hamtramck, Mich., reeled off U straight victories with a slashing, two-handed backhand that overwhelmed Miss duPont of Charlotte. The Hamtramck ace also had her opponent on toe ropes witfi several fine drop shots. Germans Surprising U.S. Track Squad by,their ow^ first night showing against the fiery West Germans, face a fight to regain lost prestige tonight. ' * ★ . * The U.S. aCes hold a. slender seven-point lead going into toe final day of the two-day dual meet. Only a mighty final heave by chunky hammer thrower Ed Burke of Newport Beach, Calif., and a soaring lead by pole vaulter Dick Rdilsback of Pasadena, Calif., in Wednesday night’s two final events kept the Americans’ lead alive by a score of 5649. A defeat by .Wept Germany would turn this European lour into a nightmare trip for the U.S. team. The American team, fresh from its overwhelming victory in London where it won 19 of toe 21 events with a 51-point victory margin, was. expected to easily defeat West Germany. NOT FRIGHTENED But the fighting German squad re- fused to be overawed by the U.S. reputation. * * * The biggest upset was eclipse of U.S. star pole vauHer^Bob Seagren of Los Angeles who regularly clears 17 feet and was expected to heard a Yankee maximum points victory. ' * * * ■ Seagren managed only 16-1 and placed third. It was left to Railsback with a leap of 18444 to win for the Ipted States. l>-3 THE PONTIAC PRtiSS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 196? Jack, Sanders Held in Check by Lady Pros BALTIMORE (AP) - Pro golfers Jack Nicklaus and Doug 'Sanders have learned that the weaker sex Is not unnecessarily the inept sex too. ★ ★ * Hie Nlcklaus-Sanders team played to a tie Wednesday against Kathy Whitworth and Carol Miinn, two top women pros who are 1-2 in money winnings on the Ladies Professional Golfers Association tour. * ★ ★ In fact, it may have been even more of an embarrassment but Nicklaus sank a 15-inch birdie putt to win the final hole and ■hot a 60 for the match play round. It was played to benefit the Maryland Association of Brain Injured Children. dr * * ' * Sanders and Miss Whitworth fired 70s, and Miss Mann carded a 71. * Pontiac Praia Photo TOP GOLFERS—Carrying off some of the hpnors in the Waterford Township Junior Golfing Program this summer were (1-r) Darrell Crane, 12, Steve Perkins, 12, and Brian Kirchner, 11. In the par-3 boys tournament, Perkins led the first flight; Kirchner won the second flight title; and Crane set the pace in the third flight. Winners Crowned l Junior Golfers Complete Play A field of 119 put the finishing touches on the 1967 season last week in the Waterford Township Junior Golf Program. ★ ★ ★ ; The young golfers battled for trophies in tournament action at two courses with both girls and boys in the lineup. • • * • * ★ Sid Graves carded an actual 07 to pace the field in the boys’ nine-hole play at Twin Lakes, while Steve Perkins carded a 68 to lead the way in the boys’ par-“ at Waterford Hills. WATMPOMD TOWNSHIP jtnma bolf Tournament Nowtta (Final) V FIRST FUGHtT Davo Ann M-24-44; -1. Sid Graves 17-20-47; 3. Ron Rlanka . VMS—dll 4. Rick Schachern 93-24-49; ■*. Art Lllmatta 99-30—it; 4. “ Arrington 91-22—70/ 7. Doug I 92-22-70/ I. MIK# Hampton I MI-711 Robin 10546—19/ 3. .. _____ Parkins 101-30—71; IQ. Phil Chandler 91-24-74; 11. Davo Wad# 105-30—75. SECOND FLIGHT: 90—68/ 2. Craig Li______,________________ Bruce Smith 10031-70/ 4. Jeff Hoka 10032—71/ 5. Carl Grantors, 11031-72; 6. Gordon Wlgnar 112-40-72/ t Rick Rykowsk! 116-40—70; 8. Craig Marcar 113-36—77/ 9. Jeff Bucholtz 114-36-71; 10. Gary Marked 117-31—79/ 11. Bruco Zollnt- jf|------ THIRD FLIGHT: Ray 1—63/ 2. .Dave Dear *** -eSantls 115-46-69; 5 70/ 6. Stave Schmc. Dave Fredrickson Tarpanlng 12044-84. 2. Grave 93-36-57; 3. Bass 108-50-58; f Daubner 87-jfr-S?; 5. T — ““ . Foran 13060—78/ 8. McGinnis 4. Chandlar 7016-62/ 5. J. Taylor 75-112-63. SECOND FLIGHT: Kirchner 74-20-54/ 2. Roam 75-20—55/ 3. Wellemeyer 73-16— 57/ 4. Driscoll 76-10-51; 5. G. I 80-20-60. 4. Kraus# 7020—58; 5. VanRoakol 80-22—58. FOURTH FLIGHT: Gregory 75-26-49; 2. Campbell 78-24-54; 3. Stormer 90-26— 54; 4. Warner 81-26—55; 5. M. Hatton 85-28-57. FIFTH FLIGHT: Gillette 83-28—55; 2. $. Mandel 85-30-55; 3. Condon 87-30-57; 4. Buechter 87-30-57; 5. Ricks-gars 90-20-62. SIXTH FLIGHT: DeSantis 89-36-53; 2. Patton 91-34—57; 3. Kingsbury 89-32— Rathbun 92-34-58;' 5. M. Kurka 97-34-63. SEVENTH FLIGHT: D. Bair 89-38-51; Copeland 94-38—56; D. Kurko 93-36—57; , Cox 95-36-59; 5. Houghton 97-36-61. EIGHTH FLIGHT: Moichiorro, 77-42-.5; 2. McGinnis 103-52—51; * “ 104-52—52; 4. Kruchko 101-46-55; 5. Nary 10044—56. Ailing Red leg Hurler Misses in No Hit Bid By the Associated Press The tale of the tape—that’: the story of a, serious, but un successful bid for the first no-hitter in the 59-year history of Pittsburgh’s Forbes Field. Tape around the right ankle of Cincinnati’s Jim Maloney enabled the veteran right-hander to. make the bid Wednesday night. WWW But it didn't prevent him from aggravating an injury, which forced him to leave in ihe seventh inning of the game won by Cincinnati 4-0. Billy McCool took over and as touched for both Pittsburgh hits in the eighth inning. St. Louis nipped the Chicago Cubs 4-3, Atlanta topped San Francisco 6-3, the New York Mets beat Philadelphia 5-3 and Los Angeles trounce^ Houston 7-other National League games. 'I was scared,’’ said McCool, who relieved Maloney after he stepped into a hole with his right foot in delivering a fourth ball to Matty Alou, making Alou the first Pirate base runner. “I wanted it real badly,” continued’McCool, “but I wished he could have stayed in., I think he might have gotten it.’’ Babe Ruth Series Discusses Moving SEATTLE, Wash. UP) — The Babe Ruth World Series will have to be moved from flood-stricken Fairbanks, Alaska, but no decision on where to relocate the baseball series was expected before late Wednesday. Milt Granett, president of the Babe Ruth League, Inc., said here’league officials were meeting in Anchorage to discuss the situation. Hie series was to have been played in Fairbanks Aug. 19-27. Granett said all visiting teams had been alerted In time and were being held in their home towns pending a relocation decision. IAJ0R LEAGUE standings Every Saturday is... kiper Saturday at DRC Ev.ry day b exciting, but Saturday b Super at MCI The blggeit raced The biggest purses I Plus, this Saturday, a gigantic Grand Stand Slijisw in honor of the Canadian Centennial Celebration! Come early, have lunch at ana of the Two Dining Torraces or in "Ya Olde Tired Horse Pub " In the Clubhouse, or the "Top of tha Turf’ in tha Grand Stand. Don’t miss a minute of tha Action. FABULOUS TWIN DOUBLE e PARKING FOR 12,000 CARS 2 DINING TERRACES e LUXURIOUS $3 MILLION CLUBltOUSK GENERAL ADMISSION: $1.25 • CLUBHOUSE: $2.00 FOST PARADE: SATURDAY—2 p.m. 10 Big Races Featuring *15,000.°° added Chicago at Philadalphia, night Naw York at Pittsburgh, night Atlanta at Los Angelos, night Cincinnati at San Franc toco, nlgt St. Louis at Houston, night Pontiac Press Hole-in-Ono Club Admits Maloney declined to talk about what might have been but he did comment about his ankle injury, which - he said he suf-last Friday night against Los Angeles. ★ ★ “I haven’t been able to run on it at all, and the only way could pitch tonight was because of the tape,” he said. 6r| ★ ’ 1 Jose Pagan kept the Forbes Field jinx against no-hitter intact with a one-out single in the eighth. Jerry May followed with double but McCool then settled down to preserve the shutr out TAKE LEAD Tony Perez’ 23rd homer gave the Reds a 2-0 lead in the fourth, and they added another pair in the sixth on Lee May’s RBI double and an errpr. * ★ ★ First-place St. Louis came up with two runs in the ninth on a two-out bases loaded walk and Alex Johnson’s infield hit to beat Chicago. The Cute had taken a 3-2 lead on Glenn Beckert’s two-run homer in the seventh. > * ★ ★ Ron Swoboda was the big gun i New York’s victory over Philadelphia. He slammed three hits and drove in four runs. Hank Aaron’s 30th homer, with two on in the third, powered Atlanta past San Francisco as Kefi Johnson, boosted his record to 13-5. ★ ★ Los Angeles broke out of run scoring famine as Jim Lefebvre and pitch Bill Singer each drove in two runs against Houston. Singer also limited the Astros to in the seventh when Bud Hay-four hits in bringing his record ward tallied on a fielder’s to 7-4. . 'choice. Bud’ Hayward and Bill jT* m" ' \ v% > Glen Ketcham 1 * < « i * *•* j 11 < « * .»„• * * | for acing the 115-uard •J No. 8 hole at Twin % % V*•• > ! Lakes. He used an 8- V V iron and carded a 41. City-Township Nines ?i: Meet in 'B' Tourney Pontiac’s American League champion Ron’s Roost is getting another shot at Waterford power Spencer Floors in Class B state district softball tournament action. ★ ★ ★ Earlier in the week, Spencer dumped Ron’s into the losers bracket by posting a 10-0 victory, but the Roost team earned ■■■ shot by eliminating Warren last night, 64. Spencer and Ron’s meet this evening nt S at Bean-dette Park. A win for Spencer would end the action and boost that team into the regional. If Ron’s wins, a second game would be necessary to determine the district champion. Ron’s scored twice in the first and third innings, once in the fifth and addled the winning run Turbine Craft Winner PRE-FINI5HED, PANELING REPEAT OF A SELLOUT 4x7 V-GROOVE A Sheet! LONG REACH, Calif. The gas turbine powered Mona Lou H, driven by Odell Lewis of Fond de Lac, Wis., won the twoday Hennessy Cup offshore race Wednesday. The winner’s overall time for the race in the Pacific Ocean from Long Beach to San Diego and back, a distance of 300 miles, was 5 hours 15 minutes 3 seconds. Mona Lou II, with the same type power plant as the controversial car driven by Pamelli Jones in the Indianapolis 500 ■ suspended i acoustic; CEILING TILE ACOUSTICAL PLASTIC COVERED 16e« Hundreds of Uses! ► Playhouses • Porches • Doorways 1% White Pins Screen Doors $C8° gj AIIS ■Flush Doors 30” . . . 4.95 !Masonite 4xSx11° a 5 ■ paint rasjg" *2”T~5 PLYWOOD SHEATHINO 4x1.. .,$>.21 &"-4xS Ext.,$3.66 FREE DELIVERY Flakeboard ■ V«-4x1.... 2.20 ■ %-*4x0 ... .2.60 ■ Vi—4x8.... 3.20 5 £-4X0....3.355 %—4x8. 8:30-5:30, SAT. TIL 5 J SCHOOLCRAFT RT MIDDLEBELT ROAD uuuitro. ■ 7174 HIGHLAND RD. AT WILLIAMS LAKE RD. & 5. One Mile West of Pontiac Airport ■ OR 4-0316 lnM-69Pldra - OPEN SUN; 10-3 5 ■MMHMMMBMBMMMgMiHMMHMMMMMMBMMMS race on Memorial Day, placed second both Tuesday Wednesday to win the title in the third Hennessy event. Big Broad Jumper, the leader after the first day of racing, suffered an engine failure on the return trip. Bill Wishnick of New York City tried to bring his twin engine craft in on one engine but that conked out near Newport Beach. Second place went to Don Ar-onow of Miami Beach, Fla., in his Maltese Magnum IV in 5:-38:36. led the attack with three hits apiece. ★ ★ ★ Midget Bar eliminated Berkley’s Merchants in Class D district action, 9-6, last night and will now take on Local No. 594 this evening in the finals of district play. If the bar team wins this evening, a second game would be needed to settle the title., SPARK ATTACK Frank Morrow and Bill Goulet picked up two hits each to spark the Midget attack. The winners broke a 4-4 tie with two runs in the fourth and closed it with three more in the fifth. ★ * ★ In Gass C action in Water-ford Township, Day’s Sanitary/ Service of Waterford scoped four runs in the hottom or the oust Porttiac Town & Country. A single, a double and an error brought home two of the runs in the sixth for Day’s and pitcher John Herrington tripled home the tying marker and scored the winning run on Ben Trailer's single. A1 Smith picked up two hits and knocked in three runs for Town & Country Who bolted to early 4-1 lead. Paul Atkins and Tom Studt picked up two safeties each for the winners. The win puts Day’s into the finals tomorrow at 7:30 against Holly Jamison Insurance. ★ ★ ★ In Class A action, Royal Oak Merchants rolled past Femdale behind the three-hit, 15-strikeout pitching of Bill Middleton, 10-0. The two play again at 6 tomorrow. NOW is the time tq bum ■ ■ While there Is still a Good Selection! Turquoise, deluxe steering wheel, deluxe wheel trim, decor trim, pushbutton radio, whitewall tires, 3-speed trans., 6-cylinder OHC engine, Tempest 2-Door Sedan YEAR-END CLEARANCE PRICE $< 2200 PLUS TAX Buick Special 4-Door Sedan Another Shelton Year-End Special V-8 engine, automatic transmission, power steering, push button radio, whitewall tires. $ 2512 PLUS TAX Extra Big Savings on Shelton Demos SHELTON PONTIAC-BUICK 855 S. Rochester Rd., Rochester 651-5500 One-Half Mile From Downtown THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST ;7, D_ 3 f Major League'Boxes . KANSAS CITY CHICAGO ywj AAU Meet Starts Women Tankers Vie PHILADELPHIA UPi — Mrs; only event on the first of a four-j Olympic platform diving chans' Joel Lenzi O’Connell of tfie San- day program featuring 350jP»on who won the indoor title swimmers and 76 divers com-H is ^ fr°m * P^orm t . . .. . title in the Pan American petmg not only for national Qames crowns, but fall trips to Japan, . ‘ „ England and Mexico. I Claudia Kolb, a Pan Am riple _r 4 winner, and the star of tne team The talented field lists 1* of faborite Santa Gara Swim Gub, the 18 winners at the recent b expected to win individuai Pan American Games in Win- nipeg, Canada, and a host of-- _______t world, national and meet rec- TURN ABOUT - World lightweight impion Carlos Ortiz (right) turns his back challenger Ismael Laguna in the eighth round of their title bout in New York’s Shea Stadium last night. Ortiz retained his title with a 15-round decision. Gara Swim Club defends -meter springboard diving crown Thursday as the annual National; AAU Women’s Outdoor Swimming and Diving Championships get underway in K?lly Pool. The one meter diving is the Soccer Standings New York Philadelphia itlanta Pittsburgh Oakland T Pts. OP ©A a 8 157 -It* Sm 11 7 V34 54 9 8 134 48 12 8125 Eastern Divisii 1 'r V- ■•> 157 51 . f34 | 9 134 ... 8 125 ay ao 9 14 7 123 58 71 ilvlsion 18 6 6 175 59 29 13 1 0 8 142 48 51 0 9 10 134 45 48 7 14 10 112 40 58 8 17 4 104 48 82 ___I j Results Baltimore 0 INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Flashy Ortiz Keeps ; Oakland WinsJ! Wants Welter Crown J Division Title YORK (AP>—Carlos i native Panama in 1965 on a 15-; his fifth straight success-lightweight championship ise behind him, had a ;ly puffy eye cocked toward round decision, then winning it back seven months later Puerto Rico. . bigger and better things. “Give iWMmm ive me two months, to Rican-born New Yorker in his dressing room after ly trouncing Ismael Laguna in .15 rounds Wednesday night, I’ll be ready to fight This time there was little doubt about it. The broad-shouldered, power- Clippers Score Soccer Victory 3-1 , Rochester at Syracuse Columbus at Toledo Richmond at Jacksonville TEXAS LEAGUE ords are expected to fall before the meet winds up Sunday. On both Friday and Saturday, there will be six events, trials] and finals, with the final seven] trials and championships Sunday. AH competition is slated to end by no later than 6 p m. each day. Mrs. O’Connell, a pert blonde from Fort Lauderdale, Fla.,I seeks her third straight ,AAU one meter springboard title* and will have to out dive some formidable opponents to accom-| plish the feat. The field includes last year’s:! runnerup, Jerri Adair of the, Rita Curtis Swimming Associa-j tion; Patty Simms of Arcadia, j i Calif.; Micki King of Pontiac; j Cynthia Potter of Houston; Sue] |Gossick, Tarzana, Calif., run-nerup indoors and sixth outdoors, and Lesley Bush, the! Mercury Outboards and Stem Drives • STARCRAFT • SHELL LAKE • IMP BOATS Fiberglos Aluminum V BOAT CENTER* "Boating's Ona Port of Call" IIN t. Woodward at Mam Naad JO Mill Ml 1-0113 Mon., Thurs., Fri. I -1 Soccer Talks Continue By The Associated Press The Oakland Clippers are the champions of the National Pro-tui Ortiz started and finished fessional soccer League’s West- strongly, rocking the 24-year-old . D- . . thankR mainlv to a NEW YORK UP) — Dick Walsh, Laguna repeatedly with a soUd I commissioner of the United Soc- right hand. ispectacular individual perform- cerAssociation, said Wednesday , *• * ★ ance by Elija Mitic. committees representing his cir- “Two months. Then bring om In the roun(iS( he let j * * * cuit and the National Profes- Cokes” I up a bit—“I told him to take it] Mjuc accounted for all three sional Soccer League had held MAKES REFERENCE easy, to let Laguna have a cpu-lai ls Wednesday night mer^r talks. The reference was to Curtislple. manager. Bill Daly ex- T. d.feated thc Chica.i g Cokes the world welterweight I plained later-and the swift, |as Oakland defeated the Uuca champion. j flashy Panamanian swarmed to] go Spurs 3-1. “I don’t need the money,” the the attack to the delight of a » * * jhappy Ortiz said. “I’m loaded.[group of about 2,506 Panamani-j ^ clippers played two' But I would like to be the first ans in the shouting chanting, thirds o{ the game with only 10 U. Rican .to hold tjmj ™» £& V® Ba„»; . . . > in the 29th minute of the first WINNEBAGO MOTOR HOMES 1T and 22* ' Howland Traitor Saloo 82(8 Dili* Hwy. OR 8-14M Puerto fell 51 RfflSB Ortiz, 30, held the world junior Referee Art Mercante and|ha *‘ welterweight title before taking] judge A1 Berl each had Ortiz * * * i Total 3ian2the lightweight championship!ahead in rounds 104-1. Judge] In other games Wednesday ** • ooo **'-a from Joe Brown in 1961 In Jack Gordon had Ortiz the nig h t, New York downed Los :b Blr?oa>. lightweight title fights he is 11-1. winner 11-3-1. The Associated!Angeles 64 and Philadelphia !»*(». s - losing the title to Laguna in his Press scored for Ortiz 104-1. [blanked Baltimore 1-0. | IF YOU NEED A PART FOR YOUR CAR, COME AND SEE US AT ROYAL AUTO PARTS 1130 MT. CLEMENS, FE 4-9509 COMPLEX! M HARRYNICHOLIE Calling .j* Let Our LIFE INSURANCE DEPARTMENT Serve You And Your Family! H. R. NICHOLIE 51 Mt. Clemens Street IKtimvmmm AGENCY INC. FI 3-7151 Before you drive a nail—drive to Churche BUILDING BARGAINS STURDY Wooden Judders all first quality heavy constructed at unbelievably low prices! Step-ladders ASPHALT SHINGLKS Mule-Hide. "235 Pound" Shingle roof# outwear others by years. It is common to find them still sturdy, trim, weather-tight and beautiful after 20 years and more. Only $2 25 PER BUNDLE Extension Ladders 16-ft. Extension .... .$10.90 20-ft. Extension .... .$13.60 24>ft. Extension .... .$19.95 28-ft. Extension.$25.25 see Church’s now STANDARD AND BETTER FIR EXCELLENT CONSTRUCTION LUMBER-CHECK OUR LOW CASH AND CARRY PRICES LENGTHS SIZE 7 8 10 12 14 16 18 2x4 .48 .59 > -75 .95 1.11 1.27 1.49 2x6 .86 1.08 1.37 1.67 1.90 2.23 2x8 1.23 1.65 1.98 2.31 2.65 3.10 ' 2x10 1.76 2.20 2.64 3.08 3.52 4.1 r 2x12 2.18 2.72 3.26. 3.81. 4.35 5.08 Chu/uhi INCORPORATED 107 SQUIRREL ROAD, AUBURN HEIGHTS UL 2-4000 HOURS: 7;30 to 5:30 Mon. thru Fri.-7:30 to 4:00 P.M. Sat. LUMBER & building Supplies UTICA 44865 UTICA RD. 731-2000 WASHINGTON 58415 YAN DYKE ST 1-2811 Final 3 Weeks off our CLEAN-UP-SALE HDmV-NIHY-IIMY All 1967 Model Pontiacs - Tempests - Firebirds Yes, It's Clean-Up^Time and the Savings Are Big! Choose Your New 137 Pontiac, Tempest or Firebird Now. Selection Is Great - Air Conditioned Models. Pontiac Rctali fitow Mt. Clemens at Wide Track, Downtown Pontiac 1X-4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1967 PUBLIC AUCTION TUEADAY, AUGUST 22, 1967 Beginning at 11:00 A.M. (DST) BY ORDER BE TNI OWNER BOATS AND SUPPLIES MICHIGAN TURBO CRAFT SALES 2521 DIXIE HIGHWAY, PONTIAC, MICHIGAN Him**** U Mil* North of IX H •»* T.t.,r.,h *•«*) RAYSON-CRAFT 1966, 17' SPEED MAT, Horn* and Mam, 606 Cu. In. .ngln. BUHLER JIT STREAM BOATS' 4 Ixhl.r 1967, 1966 and I960 16' and 1»', Ford, Boidi ead OnydarMedne Enslno*. INBOARD AND OUTBOARD MATS: Chfe-Craft 1963 171 Inboard *U boot; Chri* CroEt if Inbaard; S A»Ciaf> and M«or Lina 1 S' and 16’ ovtboard boots; Konnor on'boot W/Evinrvdo 33 H P. SNOW VEHICLES: 3-Boatol and limn 1966 Site-BOAT ACCESSOR1B AND SUPPLIES PROP REPAIR DEPARTMENT - ENGINE TEST EQUIPMENT AND SUPPLIES - SHOP EQUIPMENT - HOISTS - TRUCK AND JEEP: Ford 1964 % EMpItb^pa/hwabiiilMioo; Willy* Joop, lour whool drive. WMGA Golfer Gets 3rd Win Mrs. Panasiuk Fires 82 at Bald Mountain Canadian Mrs. Nick Panasiuk continues to hold a hot hand in the weekly Women’s Metropolitan Golf Association outings. Shalea continues to play just well enough to win in its efforts to hang onto the dty’s SlOw-Pitch softball championship. Deposit el 25% (cosh or certified chock) required at time1*! tale HAL Inc. 3362 Penobscot Bldg. Detroit, Michigan 48226 Phone: 961-2070 UNITED TIRE SERVICE Mrs. Panasiuk, from Elm-stead, Ckit., saved the best for last, yesterday as she birdled the final two holes at ~ Mountain Golf Club to capture her third victory of the season ig the weekly competition. The birdies gave her a 43-39— 82 and a one-stroke victory over Mrs. Midge Cova of Novi and Mrs. David Mortimer of Birmingham. Mrs. Panasiuk, who used up 31 putts in her round, rolled in a 40-footer on No. 17 and banged home a 10-footer at No. 18. The victory was her third of the season, and along with her wins, she has grabbed the runner-up spot five times. USELESS WHITEWALLS] '37Z FOR Tax > 6:50-13 ...........8:00-14 1:00-14........... 8:50-14 1s50>14.............6:50-15 FULL ROAD HAZARD GUARANTEE FREE MOUNTING Fad. Tax .11 to .48 RETREADS MURE DISCOUNTS ON FOREIGN and COMPACT CAR TIRES COUPON SPECIAL - NO TRADE NEEDED brand new NYLON 8:25-14 1A« TUBELESS WHITEWALLS Fed. Tax $2.09 *14 You Pay Only Advertised Prices at United Tiro All raw post.ng.r cor lire off your car. Advortitod pi plut Fedtrol Tax anif, old tiro I art the maximum you pay for'(IOW UfO* a! United.• INSTANT CREDIT—NO MONEY DOWN VISIT UNITED TIRE TODAY ... AND SAVE! OPEN MON. THRU FRI. • to I - SAT. I to I - CLOSED SUNDAY Mr*. Nick PiMsIuk. City Slow Pitch Leader Gains Finals in Playoffs Defending champion MGM- seventh, 7-6, and last night the squad picked up the winning taarker in the last of the sixth on Fred Hanzek’s single. The hard-hitting MGM crew gained the finals of the upper division Slow-Pitch playoffs last night with an 8-7 victory over Wagon Wheel, the second one-run triumph for the MGM team in as many nights. . The win moved MGM into tonight’s game against unbeaten Chalet Inn at 6:45 at Bean-dette Park. If MGM wins, a second game will be necessary to determine the winner. If Chalet wins tonight, it will represent the city in district tournament play which opens next week. Ralph Pound, Bob Cheza and jerry Patera led the winners with two hits apiece, while Earl Liesman and Jim Addis collected two each for the losers. EARLY LEAD MGM downed Pontiac Press Sports Picture Remains Hazy Solution Not Near, Says Spokesman MGM jumped off to an early lead with two runs on. two hits in the first and Pound’s three-run homer in the second. Larry Olsen tightened the game with a two-run blow in the fifth. WASHINGTON (AP)-Sen. James B. Pearson said today the controversy over control of amateur sports in the United States appears no closer to a solution despite the efforts of an arbitration panel. Totals 5,058 Points Swede Wins Pentathlon Tuesday night by scoring the Rama. In lower-bracket Slow-Pitch' playoffs, Moose 812 advanced to the second round by downing Hagen Shell, 8-7, and Dave Grubbs’ Kennels was eliminated after forfeiting to Sport-Qr fear that it may become mandatory for the Congress to legislate a settlement in the in-; terest of the athletes themselves , and of the United States as a whole,”'the Kansas Republican! said. winning run in the last of the Mr*. Midge Cova, i. David Mortlmtr, Bir'ha Mrt. G. P. Langford, D'b'n Hit. 4 Phyllis Chandler, Hamtramck,, 4 Mrt. Paler McAlpine, Southfield 43 Vs. George Schade. Detroit 4445—89 Mrt. Henry Premlck, Dearborn 4746-93 Mrt. Sydney Aylet, Union Lake J045—95 Lew Net: Mrt. Harttell 15-14-71. FIRST FLIGHT: Mrt. Vincent Slrvaltli. Detroit 4543-171 Isabel I Burrell, Detroit 4643—99; Low Net: Mrt. Loren Wolf*, Detroit 9MB—74. SECOND FLIGHT: Mrt. Willard Hen. nlnger, Detroit 4946-95) Grace Scheffer, I 4349-97) Low h : Mrt. I ________ ______9*73—75. THIRD FLIGHT: Mrt. Leo Garleey, Detroit 5147-91: Mrt. Jamet Suddeth, Birmingham 5353-193) Lew Not: Mrt. " Sfrobel, Dearborn Hts. lot-34—74. Tulsa Golfer Hurls No-Hitter in Junior Play Moose used six hits and an to produce six runs in the NEWTOWN SQUARE, Pa. — Bjorn Ferro, a 23-year-old Swedish graduate student, won the U.S. Modern Pentathlon championship Wednesday, finishing with a total 5,058 points in the five events. Fenn finished first in fencing, fifth in target shooting, sixth in the 300-meter swim and fourth in the cross-country run earlier in the week and clinched the ! title despite finishing out of the top five in the steeplechase ride Wednesday. flawlessly over 17 obstacles and finished u n d e r , the required three minutes for a perfect score of 1,100 points. Behind Ferm in the over-all championship were four Americans: Capt. Bill Matheson, U.S. Army; Capt. Don Walheim, U.-S. Army; Lous Cotton of Chico State and Dr. Robert Beck of Boston. Bill Sickels, a former quarter-miler at The Citadel, captured the riding Wednesday. He rode Matheson had 4,826 points; Walheim, 4,817; Cotton, 4,758; and Beck, 4,569. The four will represent the U.S. in the world championships, in Sweden, late next month. Pearson made his statement as the Seriate Commerce Committee undertook to review in two days of hearings the status of efforts to resolve the dispute between the National Collegiate1 Athletic Association -r- NCAA — and the amateur Athletic Union — AAU. I first and held on to down Hagen. iHal Hooker, Dick Davis and! Larry McCarlin picked up two Theodore Kheel of New York, hits apiece for the winners. , chairman of the NCAA-AAU Sport-O-Rama takes on Moose arbitration board appointed by this evening at 6:45 at North- Vice President Hubert H. Hum-side. The loser meets Hagen phrey in December, 1965, was to !Shell on Monday at 8;30 at {report on the situation as it now {Northside with the winner of exists end what hope, if any, he Ron Gleason hurled a no-hit- ! that game moving into the fi- foresees for a solution to the ter here yesterday in pitching Roseville to victory in state regional junior baseball tournament action. Hie fastballing Gleason fanned six and walked five in blanking Dearborn Heights, 9-4). Along with his pitching, Gleason rapped out three singles, to spark the Roseville effete. • nals on Tuesday. controversy. Champ Upset in Canadian Golf Tourney VICTORIA,: B. C. (AP)-Nick Muskegon Wins Tourney Opener WICHITA, Kan. (AP)- Third baseman John Chappie swung UNITED TIRE SERVICE "WHfRI PRICES ARE DISCOUNTED—NOT QUALITY” 1007 Baldwin Ava. 3 MINUTES FROM DOWNTOWN PONTIAC defending cham- bi« bat to'the nightcap of I Leads Amputees ! J" * f ■«feSW** 5ZU2. Leaas AmpUTeeS I Saginaw came up with one run C Wednesday in foe CanadianI Mu*., to an 8 - 5 victory8 over I in foe second and two more in Amateur Golf Championship. He Lawton, 0Wa-LAS CRUCES, N. M. (AP) - third to down East Detroit, jwas beaten by Winnipeg’s Nick I « was the first - round game John Hess, a leg amputee from 3-2. Jerry McCoy scattered four Mickowski, a former National tor both teams in the double Tulsa, Qkla., scored a four-over-j hits to pick up the win. Hockey League player with the I elimination, National Semipro par 76 Wednesday to take the first round lead in foe National Amputee Golf Tournament. He went around in 36-40. Defending, champion Wally Baskovich of Clearwater, Fla,, ran into trouble apd came in 40-42-82. U.S. Skiefs Tops Field FARELLONES, Chile (AP)-Jerry Elliott of foe U n it e d States won the 26th Kandahar of the Andes ski competition held last weekend in this Andean town. New York Rangers, 3 and 2. Jim Weeks of San Calif., beat Johnny Johnston of Vancouver, 1-up, and Dick Run-kle of Lbs Angeles routed Dick DaUagiacomo, Redding, Calif., 7 and 6: Mike Reasor, Longview, Wash., lost to Ben Kern, Cooksville, Ont. 3 and 1. Baseball tournament. In earlier games Ocala, Fla,,, eliminated Middlesex, N. C., 4-3; Kokomo, Ind., ousted Jackson,' Miss., 4-1; Sloan, N..Y:, defeat-! ed Plymouth, N. H., 15-5, and Boulder, Colo., the defending national champion, defeated Tucson, Ariz., 6-4. SPECIAL THIS WEEK! 8.54x14 RAIN TIRES Safety Black 6IIIQE 7.75x14 Black AlilAE ■ ■■ Plus Excise ■’W Tsx 2.15 Mfifl ■ Up Fsd. Tsx SMS Extra for Whitewall Whils They last! MU-TREADS TIBER PAWS 4 For Seconds Lines $44** Mas tax 7.11x14 a ■ ■■ Hi AM 7.75x14 1.25x14 1.55x14 and smooth lira Off your ssr! $1750 If UNIROYAL Jhe new worldwide nafnc for US Royal KING TIRE CENTER 31 WEST MONTCALM. PONTIAC, MICH. FE 3-7068 HEAOQUARTERS FOR U. S. ROYAL TIRES H&re9# Your Opportunity to Realty Save on Excellent Quality Golf Equipment During Our Gigantic . * . Because wo are going to Completely Remodel and E-x-p-a-n-d Our Pre-Shop, all currant stock goes gn Sale Right Now! Original Tickets will remain on every tiem so you can SEE what you SAVE! ATTENTION LEAGUE CHAIRMEN! «**'**ii»^ Excellent Selection PRIZES at Reduced Price*! RADIOS* LUGGAGE CARRY-ALLS, RUTTING GAMES BALL WASHERS, UMBRELLAS GOLF SHOES 35 Pairs of Ladies* Shoes Ladies' and Men '* * GOLF BAGS Formerly Now Up to $20...... .... 20% OFF $20 to 30 25% OFF $30 and up...... 30% OFF GOLF GLOVES Both Ladle*' and AAen’s. An assorted selection. $| 99 One Lew FHeei GOLF SHOES e Men’s e Brown • Black e Black with White • Green with Black e Saddles * Wing Tips 20* OFF! Limited Supply of Name Brand PRO LINE CLUBS Weed* and Irens. We dare net publish our lew pita on these Pre-Line Items, but the impressive name* ai on them a* well as the original price tickets. Buy Now and GOLFING SHIRTS-SWEATERS RAIN-JACKETS (men’s and women’s) Including such famous names as Arnold Palmer, AAuntingwear nnrli w a 20% OFF CARL’S GOLFLAND 1976 S. Telegraph Road-Across from Miracle Mile-FE 5-8095 Pro Gridders Slate Full! FOULED UP—Foredeck crewmen struggle to clear jib fouled over the spinnaker pole of the Columbia as her America’s Clip rival Intrepid sails clear in the background with her pole in place. Intrepid held onto the lead to win the second straight race in the Cup AP Wirephol© trials finals. Columbia’s miscue came at the start of the final downwind run as the jib was dropped and crewmen started to hoist the spinnaker which cannot fill until the pole is cleared. Winner Meets Aussie Yacht Lack oi Wind Slows Cup Trials From Our Wire Services I The jolly green giants from , Green Bay, minus the Jim Taylor-made power which carried them to the world championship of pro football last season, clash with Chicago’s Monsters of the Midway Friday night and the thud you hear could be one of the worst falls taken by the Bears under the George Halas’ regime. Taylor now is doing his inarching for the New Orleans Saints. His absence wasn’t even noticed last Saturday when the| Packers put down the Pittsburgh1 Steelers 31-20. Donny Anderson, a half-mil- j lion dollar bonus beauty, sig- , nailed he was ready for fulltime action as he scored on a 50-yard run and' threw a 63-yard touchdown pass. The Bears are on the front-end of an ironman stint, two| games in five days. Chicago:, takes on the Kansas City Chiefs of the American Football League next Wednesday. I The Denver Broncos go after. I their second victory over an’ I NHL team when they host .the Minnesota Vikings in the only other exhibition game scheduled Friday night. TWO PERFECT CLUBS Two other perfect record NFL clubs seek to protect their rec-, ords when Los Angeles 2-0 entertains Cleveland 0-2 and Wash- Other games on tap that evening pit New/Orleans against Pittsburgh at Baton Rouge, La., and inter-league games between Atlanta and Miami in the Orange Bowl and Phildelphia vs. New York at league meeting of the weekend. Dallas is at San Francisco in a' Sunday NFL game and Haiti-1 more ysits St. Louis Monday' night. In the AFL, Kansas City, the I defending league champion, 'goes after its third straight pre-San Diego is home to Detroit season victory against Oakland,' Sunday in the fourth inter- 2-0 at Portland, Ore., Saturday Pontiac Consumers Co-Op OPTICAL, Eye Exams • Contact Lenses Industrial Safety Glasses Sun Glasses HIT SOUTH TELEGRAPH ROAD PHONE 333-7871 Vj Milo South of Orchard loko Road same 24.3-mile course, which! starts at the America’s Cup buoy off Brenton Reef light tower, that will be used in next month’s ocean-going “w o r 1 d series.” It marks the first time such a practice has been observed since the prelims were held I on different courses from the : NEWPORT, R.I. (UPI) - The final series of trials to determine a U.S. yacht to defend the Old Mug in the America's Cup Races next month against Australian challenger Dame Pattie once again is having trouble with the weather—or lack of it. The third series of preliminary races started Tuesday and actual cup course, the four 12-meter sloops vying for the U S. berth in the best-of-, jh« se>ect'°" committee of seven competition opening Sept. New York Yacht Club, home 12 were slowed by light winds,|°Af the 01d,sincejtf* S although they finished the races. A™™*, f'rst4W0" 4U in J851' has until Sept. 5 to make a The same thing happened decision on who will oppose Pat-i Wednesday and the day’s | tie. This country never has lost I races finally were washed out the mug since winning the first' when none of the boats fin- race-ished by the 6 p.m. deadline. * * ★ The Wednesday pairings - Intrepid, unbeaten in last' favored Intrepid versus Colum- month’s trials and beaten by bia and Constellation against Eagle only when trouble oc-j American Eagle—were1 not car-'curred >n the first series on] ried over to today. Long Island Sound, is regarded; Instead, the schedule contin-jas the eventual opponent for the ued in rotation with Intrepid Aussie sloop, paired against Eagle while 1958 Sikppered by Bus Mosbach-Winner Columbia opposed Con- er, the boat has gotten better atellation, the 1964 winner. wfth each race. SAME COURSE the first mark in Wednesday’s race and maintained her lead, Connie held the half-way lead over Eagle but the lack of wind — very light winds, actually — crippled the effort and no one finished. * ★ ★ Some 75 spectator boats — as well as the crew of Dame Pattie — watched the competition under hazy skies that limited visibility to about three miles. Pattie, skippered by Jock Sturrock, has been holding her own drills near the course to get familiar with the winds and waters. POPULAR PERFECTA POST: 8:30 P.M. ___mil Wffl HAZEL PARK OPENING SPECIALS SET OF 4 WHITEWALLS Nu-Treads *39*5 6.50x13 7.00x14 7.50x14 8.00x14 ALL NEW & RECAPS GUARANTEED FOR THE LIFE OF THE TIRE! 6.00x14 NARROW A 95 GOODYEAR WMITEWALL 1 «* LINE x 16 S MSI FULL 4-PLY * TIRE WMITEWALL 1C95 I 4JpLUSTA WHEEL BALANCE - 4 TIRES - *5 INTER TOWN TIRE CO. WHOLESALE OR RETAIL OPEN MON., TUES., THURS., FBI., SAT., 8-9, WED. 9-1 FREE COFFEE AND DONUTS_______ RED TAG SALE! Intrepid led Columbia by The boats compete over the!about a minute and a half after1 Canada Grid Coach Fired VANCOUVER, B. C. (AP) -j Head Coach Dave Skrien was fired Wednesday by the Vancouver Lions of the Canadian Football League. Jim Champion, an assistant coach the past two seasons with the National Football League St. | Louis Cardinals, was named to replace him. Save Up To $500 ON A BRAND NEW '67 CHEVROLET! THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1067 Of All New 1967 Chevrolets • Pontiacs • Buieks At Huge $aving$ DISCOUNTS AS HIGH AS $80000 Frank Lamoreaux .Salesman Drive Out Tonight “Mac” McDowell Everet Ernst Sales Mananer First Come Gets First Choice $AVEl SAVE! save: Clyde Elliott Salesman And $ave With Homer Hight HOMER HIGHT MOTORS, INC., 160 S. Washington St., Oxford, Mich. 628-2528 LOOK FOR THE RED TAG SPECIALS! Immediate Delivery Immediate Financing CHOOSE FROM ONE OF THE SIX GREATEST . . . Chevrolet - Chevelle - Chevy II - Corvair - Corvette and Gamaro ... No. 1 Cars, No. 1 Values, No. 1 Time to Buy!! REMEMBER... MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES HATES TO BE UNDERSOLD!! Service Satisfaction Sales 631 Oakland at Cass Michlt_______ OPEN: MON. and THURS. 8 - *0 6 p.to. (SaU.r , Volum* Chpvn _ I--- n.to9p.m.,TUIS.,WED.,FRt.1»a.m. Op.n Sot.» 8 a.m. to 6 p.m.) * Phone FE 5-4161 Dr—6 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1967 Boat Deaths Down, Injuries Were Up WASHINGTON (AP) - The Coast Guard reported Monday a one per cent drop in the number of deaths last year from boating accifleftts, but said the number of accidents, injuries and property damage increased substantially. ★ * * In its annual summary of boating, the Coast Guard said accidents apparently increased 1C per cent during 1966 but some of this probably resulted' from better reporting techniques. Last year, there were 4,350 reported boating accidents, the Coast Guard said, compared with 3,740 the. year before. But Adm. Willard ,J. Smith, Coast Guard commandant, cautioned that the entire increase cannot be attributed to better statistics. of them, a $2.5 million Increase over 1965. At the end of 1966, the nation's boating-fleet was estimated at 8.2 million craft, 200,000 more than the total a year earlier. * * ★ Capsizing remained the main cause of fatal boating accidents last year. Almost half the victims—621—died as a result of a capsized boat. The Coast Guard said that except in the most unusual cases, persons should re-j main with an overturned boat.! Race Results, Entries DRC Entries . „..Ji Claiming, 11/16 I Count p* Char-* Sole Provider Sid* Issue 19.60 10.00 5.60 xllS Vie En Bee Hazel Park Entries Srewmester rictus Moslem Kino Bio 116 Dauncan Ja '"I Roc A Go TONIGHT Imlng Hdcp Trot, I Mila laky Pete Evening Glow nout Dolmont Pox Fire L"1 113 kim Paul a I Steel Hauler 111 Tabby's Pride 116 ist-l«- — it Fund 111 Crimson Flight 115 Sneaky Pete - ------- - - -— L- - EffB_______________ .... ... _jtty B. Dean ■miPM- 113 Galt Wav Gena Grand Ronnie Volo xlM Deviled Ham 113 Colonel Irnaet Whareisthellne 113 Miss Countess nil2nd-M06: ClaimlM Pace, l Malay 113 R. Nile 1,1 •-»-*—»- ■>— • loyal Chassis 113 Tigers 3rd—62500: claiming, 6 Fork I .... ..... He's A Reason 1)7 Sara K. ‘ 114: Pet Norrlt '. Dominic Pate Prior King Ellas Valley Direct Coach Shares Polo Grounds Slugging Mark 5th—tssao: Allowances, 6 Furlongs Wise Step 116 Tandarlzer Larksprey . . .., Flops 1 Whizzaway Sam 11-7 Bagpipe •• ye', Lure )|7 Doug's Dami rs Concerto 117 Fest-FUght i ' lie Show Talk it Hirrrilt 114 Johnny' u. ‘mma, 4 Furlongs ■Hx!07 Gorton DIs Moines 115 Hard-Rock Jet-O-Mine Klee She's Wise 117 Bud's Valentine 117 Srd—SMSt Con-114 Cool Princess 117 Liza Gallon 114 Diana D 117 Josedala Hustler Adlos Yates Counsel Fleet Trol, 1 112 x107 Janice J. 107 Hanna Gratten 115 Miss Lyndy Bird 112 Phil King 115 Itb-SIOM: lWlPeter R. 115. Valhalla Bal Lyn Josedala Treasure _ Trot, I Mile High Lloyd valley Maid I Hong Kon( i Neshlmar 1116th—41000: Claiming Hdcp. Pace, 1 Mila Lou 116; Queen's Mason , Grand Miss Mighty 114 WllkeStOWn ' Bunny Chlet C. 6th—S2400: Claiming, NEW YORK - (NEA)-Joe r Adcock, now manager of t h e Cleveland Indians, is one of only, three players to homer „D .. . . „„ Jin to the distant centerfield J safe bleachers of the Polo Grounds. , as ever, he warned. i * ★ ★ BIG RISE Joe jolted a Jim He a r niJw .Joiiy^ The Coast Guard.called aston-j(Giants) fastball the 470-plus lshing a 67 per cent rise in per- feet from home plate on April countess , sonal injuries and a 55 per cent|29, 1953, while playing with the increase in property ■ damage Milwaukee Braves, sustained by boats during 1966. * * * www Hank Aaron of the B r a v e s did it June 18, 1962, and Lou Brock, then with the Cubs, reached the seats the night before — both against the Mets. Babe Ruth hit a couple into the general vicinity but that was when the seats were closer in than the present location. Bit O' Reward If* Ramette Miss Rlbot x106 Wanda's Joy O. P.'s Monty 116 Saucy Wac 116 Holly Pershing Johhny Kevin 116! No Troubles Hal's Gl* 116 7th—$900: Conditioned Paca, 1 112 Slava Soldier 112 Port Hills 107 Real Gam 112, Timely Goose 115 Sth—$1400: — 112 Megaton Dody Doyle Tropical Wtod Jimmy Tarway Old Blua Ugh Abbey Pact# l Milo GOOD SEASON—Pontiac owned Cottonwood Cindy, six-year-old bay mare of M. A. Benson Jr., is having a good season on the harness tracks, having been in the money 20 of 28 times thus far. Shown with the mare at Hazel Park Harness Raceway is driver Ray Ross. Injuries rose from 927 in 1965 to 1,555 zast year, the report showed. Of the 5,567 boats involved in accidents during 1966, total , damages of more than $7 million were sustained by 3,226 1967 Cadillacs Complete Selection ALL MODELS now INSTOCK Cadillacs WANTED Top Dollar FOR I 63's, 64's, 65's OR HIGHEST ALLOWANCE erome Motor Sales SE1980 Wide Track Dr. FE 3-1021 112 Record Tlmt Joke's Creed ............_ ___________ : Greenleaf Douglas Chief Andrew Mission 112 Beacon's Beauty 112 9t h-$1400: conditioned Pacer 1 Milt 112 Optimistical ' 112 Babe H Beppl ----- ----- 107 Queen Farne„ go's Miss 112 Pocket Adam Lady Knox 112 War Volo Bud's Dream 109 Beanie Bird ,0,'h—$;40ii: Claiming Hdcp. Paca, 1 Mila 116 Georgia Joyce Armbro Gladiator 112 Margaret Herbert Duke Gemeun i x107 Relgh Prir______ 112 Mr. Colltonl 112 Bronze Cup 107 Red Eff Jr. Dixie Special 121 Khalad Twist Sonny Fleet xl07 Zabey Tombrt 112 Naw Crack Ivalinda 110 9tn—«4tM0: Claim, .g, 1 Mila 70 Yds. Parfact Prince .118 Royal Regent q102 Salute . Ric 116 Road Break 114 High On'a 112 Magic Realm 114 Duress xlll Ram's Horn 114 Wheaty xlll Barneslan 114 x—5 lbs. apprentiue allowance claimed DRC Results 112 Volcanic Rose S. T. Dean MacDuf! Air Queen Hazel Park Results | WEDNESDAY let—IfOO: Claiming Pact, 1 Mila ! Mope't Pride 89.20 26.20 1.60 Chub Volo 10.60 4.80 Marlin Grattan . ZOO 2nd—61400; Conditianad Paca, 1 MUa Miss Wood 4.00 2.00 2.N Starlit! Sue 4.60 5.40 1: Conditioned Trot, 1 Mila 6.40 2.00 2.60 ONi—6900: Conditianad P#ca, 1 M gt 1 Southern Bachelor ) 4.60 3.20 Charlie, Horse 3.40 2.60 Mery K. Peck 2.10 4t g Pice, l AAMCO has a complete Inspection service for only $23.00. Includes removal, dismantling, minor adjustments, end reassembling complete transmission. All makes. All models. gerfy13Q0 AAMCO,Centers Assure Y AAMCO TRANSMISSION 150 W. Montcalm, Between Oakland and Baldwin, 3344951 GARAGE BUILDING SUBURBAN GARAGE BUILDERS 1598 E. AUBURN RD., ROCHESTER The “Sticky” WISE TREAD TIRE High Performance 6w-6,/2,,-7w I Sib—*2180; Claiming, 11/14 Mill Raehi joshi 13.20 Swlthaway .20 4.20 3.40 Chief Ottawa 3.20 4.40 3JI0 pilot Up 4.40 Perlectat (14) Paid 531.60 Miles 7th—61000: Conditioned Pace, 1 Mile 1.20 3.60 Joyce's Joy " 12.60 5.00 ... - — captain Breeze 3.00 Turbo i 2.00 Rad B Claiming, 11/14 Milas HI 10.000.00 7.00 ■ 10.60 10.00 Glenn Primrose Kezar Czar 5.40 Gold Slap Opt. Twin Daubfa: (12-1) Paid >25440 I vtts—S1«00: Canditl 7th—SHOO; Claiming, 6 Furlongs M step Right Pappy's Dream 21.40 13.00 7.00] Janie Brook " lyake Cotton 10.00 7.20 Lord Doyle BUY, SELL, TRADE . . . USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! REGULAR TREAD As Low As *$J95 I CUSTOM RETREAD I CALL 338-2000 I 680 Mt. Clemens St., Cor. East Blvd., Pontiac OPEN 6 DAYS - 9 A.M. to 6 P.M. Duke Dll Ido Charmirig Alibi Be Cagey Mill Misque 16.60 9.20 4.00 m ! 4* l©i CASH IN ON BIG SAVINGS! DON’T WAIT FOR 68 ^67 SAVINGS ARE GREAT!! ret a 67 Ford with 68 Features and Sayef | Your self a Bundle Now. A Wide Choic [of Models, Styles and Optional Equipment^ i to! BIG TRADE-INS, TOO! Your Old Car Is Worth More Now! So Why Whit for 68? JOHN MeAHIIFFE FORD 630 Oakland Aye. ' . FE 5-4101 mm "EASY" BOB REYNOLDS General Manager "Big Round" ORIN STATTON CgOweiu OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH INVENTORY CLEARANCE SALE! 1C 1e 1° 1c 1C on All Accessories Such as Automatic Transmission; Power Steering, Powter Brakes, Radio, White Sidewall Tires, Wheel Covers, Etc. ALL AIR-CONDITIONING AT DEALER COST! CLARENCE ( Quiet, Timid) CAVALIER SLVA (I'd buy that ear myoelf) JONES 200 Theatre Tickets (Good at all 4 area Drive-In Theatres) K GIVE "C Y” A TRY m Im 'm'"'-- t- -v MAC MclNNES HOWARD PETERSEN Parts Manager Gy Owti OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 724 Oakland Avenue.- Pontiac 335-9436 THIS PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1967 D—T The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by tMm in wholesale package lots Quotat' ns are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Monday. * Produce Gains Outnumber Losses, 3-2 ApplM, Delicious, Red, bu. Apples, Delicious, Red, C.A., bu. -Apples, Northern Spy, bu. Apples, Northern Spy, C.A., bu. -'Apples, Steele Red, bu. Apples. Steele Red, C.A„ bu. ... Strawberries, 14-qt. Cnt........ . VEGETABLES Parsley, Root, dx. bch. .... Peas, Green, bu.............. Radishes, Red. dr. bch. Radishes, white, dz. bch. . Rhubarb, Outdoor, dz. bch. . Squash, Italian, bu. NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market remained higher early this' afternoon. Trading was fairly active. Gains outnumbered losses by a ratio of about 3 to 2. ★ ★ * The Dow Jones industrial av-jjerage at noon was up 3.88 at JJ 919.56. Brokers said the average was _ once again bouncing off the sup-so port level represented by 910-915 So in the Dow industrials. « good news At the same time, they said * the market had the benefit of »some encouraging economic if news: the rise in industrial production, the jump in housing! Gains of about a point were starts and the narrowing of the made by Sperry Rand, Glen United States’ unfavorable balance of international payments. Selective strength among blue chips and some of the merger-oriented issues highlighted the ;ssion. The Associated Press industrial average at noon was up .3 at 337.9 with industrials up 1.6, rails off .2 and utilities off .4. Allis-Chalmers was very active and up more than 2 points as it warmed up again to the raised offer by, Ling-Temco-Vought for the proposed merg- Alden, Curtiss Wright and Consolidated Cigar, the latter spurred by a reported merger agreement with Gulf & Western. ★ ★ ★ Prices were generally higher on the American Stock Exchange. Associated Oil & Gas was active and up a fraction. Sperry Rand warrants advanced more than a point. Other active fractional gainers included Asamera Oil, United Asbestos, Technicolor, Gale Industries, Great American Industries, Dynalectron and Ryan Consolidated Petroleum. B52 Targets: Hidden Camps Engineers Rip Cong Tunnel, Bunker Setup SAIGON (AP) - U.S. B52 bombers kept trying today to destroy hidden enemy camps in the A Shau Valley after Army engineers spent 45 days ripping out a huge Vietcong tunnel and bunker System in the An Lao Valley. The A Shau area, on the Laotian border almost directly west of Da Nang in northern South Vietnam, had been the target of more than 50 previous raids by the eight-engine bombers and of hundreds of fightef-bomber strikes. The New York Stock Exchange Low Last Chg. Listings, Growth Help It Work Dart Theory Analyzed By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business Analyst NEW YORK — Those who seek to get under the skin of the mutual fund industry are now throwings darts at lists of corporate stocks and claiming a better investment record! than the funds’, highly p a i 4j managers. The latest to make his-point was' Sen. Thomas J McIntyre, D-N.H., who claimed his dart picked a list of stocks that have risen in a 10-year period from $10,000 to $25,300. No fund can match this record. Earlier this year some highly respected economists said about the same thing, and at least one university study came to the same conclusion after a long investigation that involved billions of electronic calculations. The dart theory, therefore, is backed by the reputations of scholars and universities, but it is not their discovery. The dart But these have failed to destroy the camps east and west of the valley or to close permanently a 25-mile road which carries heavy truck traffic from the Comipunists’ road network in Laos. The B52s struck the northern part of the valley Wednesday night, aiming at suspected base camps, rest areas and storage facilities. A second raid today pounded suspected infiltration routes, storage areas, weapons positions and fortified areas about 12 miles farther south. Supporting American ground forces, the B52s also attacked suspected enemy troop concentrations near coastal Bong. Son, about 325 miles north of Saigon. U.S. Army engineers said that for the time being, the rugged An Lao Valley, running inland from the coast of central Binhj Dinh Province 260 miles northeast of Saigon, is useless as a Red hideout and supply area. The valley had been the scene of repeated ambushes and bat-But the engineers said Wednesday they had finished plowing up the Communist fortifications that included 820 log and dirt bunkers and almost four miles of trenches. Weather limited air raids against North Vietnam to the southern panhandle region for the second straight day Wednesday. Air Force pilots reported destroying three pieces of railroad rolling stock and three trucks and tearing up rail lines in several places. DAMAGE REPORTED Navy pilots said they destroyed or damaged two bridges, 44 supply barges, three trucks and; a ferry. i The U.S. Command did not report any U.S. planes shot down, but an-Army helicopter on an assault mission in South Vietnam was destroyed Wednesday by eneny ground fire near Due ^i-Coin the central highlands 275 miles north of Saigon. There were no casualties. Only scattered skirmishes were reported in the ground war. U.S. Marines George Romney was rebuffed to-reported killing 15 Communists day in efforts to get Detroit in two clashes in Operation Co- school officials and teachers to chise near coastal Tam Ky, resume bargaining on a labor about 340 miles northeast of Sai- contract and to avoid a delay gOn. Four Marines were killed in scheduled school opening next and 11 wounded. month. Romney urged that negotiators get together again immedi-jately rather than to wait until „ , .... .'Aug. 28, when contract talks are Damage to a bulldozer and ,lated ,0 resume. loading machine parked at 5471 ★ ★ * Crescent, Waterford Township, If the method has developed a mum outstanding, and at least following at racetracks, where the running stock sometimes includes some real losers,, why shouldn’t it develop a following on the stock market, where the entries generally are of high quality? CHANCES BETTER If betters claim—and their claim is subject to doubt-success with the dart method at racetracks, where there is only one winner per race, isn’t it likely to work also on the stock market, where there are sometimes hundreds of winners a I my means expansion also for day? the corporations doing the work. Whatever their faults, the Back in 1956 the nation’s stocks listed on major ex- Gross National Product, the to-changes generally represent the tal of all its goods and services soundest corporations in Ameri- produced, was just a bit more 2,000 shareholders. If these requirements are not maintained, the company could become a candidate for delisting. For instance, if the company’s assets decline sharply and its earnings drop below $400,000 for three years in a row, delisting action might begin. OTHER REASONS There are other reasons also for the success of the dart theory, the primary one being the expansion of the American economy. An expanding econo- The fact is that stocks must be winners to begin with in order to be listed on reputable exchanges. Strict requirements concerning profitability must be met. If they are not,, the stock may be delisted. than $400 billion. Sometime next year it will achieve a rate of about $800 billion a year. This) growth in output means that many of the companies that existed back in 1956, when McIntyre's theoretical list was compiled, have grown tremendously. Proof can be shown in a On the New York Stock Ex- change, the nation’s largest, dozcn ways- Consider‘his one: theory has long been used by | listing requirements include a Tn l956 some 1,087 companies bettors at racetracks all over [degree of national interest in with a share value of about $220 the country. The only variation I the stock, wide distribution of *■ is that a needle instead of a dart shares, earning power of more ^ is plunged into the racing pro- than $2 million a year before 0 gram. 'taxes, one million shares mini- * billion were listed on the 1 Board. Ten years later this list of companies had grown less than 25 per cent—but the share value was close to $600 billion. NO MYSTERY Evidence such as this takes the mystery out~of the dart theory. Almost anybody can score a bull’s eye if the board is full of bull’s-eyes, as is the stock market board during a period of economic expansion. But beware of the dart theory; it belongs at the racetrack or in a game of chance. For a person seriously to use the random or dart approach to picking stocks would be to deny his own intelligence. The theory might work, but most investors need tnore assurance than thqt, and that assurance can come only from studying the available information about any corporation before investing. FOLLOW CROOKED PATH-U.S Marines string out along a crooked path bordering rice fields as they set out on Wafer Main Exhibit to Be Shown Here Ever see a water main so big an operation. The Marines were combining with a South |you could walk through it with your arms outstretched and not touch the sides? Such a pipe, outfitted with displays describing area water supply and pollution control programs, will .be at the Pontiac Mall during business hours tomorrow and Saturday. The 28-ton pipe display is by the Detroit Department of Water Supply which serves Pontiac. The walk-in exhibit is a local tie-in with the national promotion of Water Week by the American Water Works Association. Water mains like the size of Vietnamese ranger company in the sweep through suspected Vietcong territory south of Da Nang, in the northern coastal plains. ' « Teachers Rebuff Romney on Detroit School Talks I DETROIT (AP) Gov. would not be available for any such vote. “We believe the issues cari be News in Brief resolved 'between Aug. 28 and the one being used for display the opening of school,” she said. |are currently being laid to form Mrs. Riordan said that resolv-ia giant, pipe line that will even- jwas reported to police yesterday But Mary E1,en Riorflan- Presv £iby Ernest Spurgeon, who said ident of the Detroit Federation! ^ said the monetary extent of the teachers, told Romney in a'% ’- vandalism was undetermined heated exchange that ‘he teach-r J ers are standing fast on their I wj ]• Ralph Dikeman Jr. of 6858 original position and will not ^ ‘jLongworth, Waterford T o w n- come back to the bargaining!* u ship, told police yesterday that table before then, ijlthe top of his convertible was- The remarks were made at a ^(damaged by an object thrown'special meeting called by Rom-„|from a passing car at Cass and] ney in an attempt to get ne-i ing the teacher contract issues before school opening day Sept. 5 would be far easier for both parties “had the governor fulfilled his responsibilities to the schools last spring before the legislature adjourned.” tually reach from the Detroit system to Flint and Lake Huron. The pipe, carrying a “Water Service Is Our Business” sign, is 35 feet long, 10 feet wide, and 13 feet high. if I H f H * £ §|§|j| Successful *lnvestinMM * <» * •» «»*■ •» # Elizabeth Lake raods. WASHINGTON Won of the Thef responding date Balance By ROGER E. SPEAR iyou came in. Financial reports, Q> “I purchased A. J. In- (published quarterly, should be dustries at 77». The stock has I available to you through your done nothing. I have received-1 broker. The company is under no dividends from the com- ino obligation to send you more pany and not much informa- | than you are now receiving. lUIP tion except a year-end" state- i Your shares are speculative but Mrs. Riordan said that there! ment- 1 dont know what ls !aar"ings are reported to be in pwMwas no- possibility of contacting due me as a stockholder, so * strong uptrend and I would & ®J,ear »¥> a * °r.’all of Detroit’s teachers for a!* ara ask*n8 y°ur advice.” 0 or e presen . i'i Treasury Position jgotiations reactivated. They| -were recessed last June 23 at| {the request of -the teachers’| l union. $ 5,903,561,296.3-4 Yu*. 12, * 7,040,415,220.1 ly 1- ' ■ , , 15,347,703,264.40 t all of Detroit’s teachers for a| - meeting at which they might H.K. reconsider their original de-! A» You apparently made the Q* “Th« airlines have not HH||IPiPi^^l^^mcision. not uncommon mistake of buy-. *>een ■JJSfjfi? wed hi a strong *—Total &M-34'353'04 2,'51’443'2M#7i She said they are scattered ing a stock about which you market- Don’‘ y°“ they gow Assets—"23,,,<07 319'7S4'150'731-16t “all over the world” bettering knew very little at the time of j are the best group for tong- nim'5not8?uii<|theh' own backgrounds and ed- purchase. People frequently do: term growth.’ L.C. loot to statutory limit. iucational abilities and therefore'this because they consider that! A) I wouldn’t put it quite as -liquidatingI bond averages i~T.... ----‘------|a low-priced stock is cheap sim- : strongly as that, although the .Sflast" yiar?l Compil*d $v Th. Associate^ Pres.^ j stock averages jplybecauseit is low priced, growth outlook certainly seems m - —11 me Associated Press j This is not necessarily so. 'very promising. Some of the ind. trails utii. stocks; Your company was formerly j airlines have been showing .. 4W.7 202.7 148.8 33/^engaged in gold mining under j margins' from rising expenses Rtf oo.'s fog 92° B5'ojWeeVii Ago* 482.3 20L6 iso? 34ii*ithe name of Alaska Juneau* It and a restricted rate structure. K|| i ,^378 joojjis now mainly in the military j I think that several of the more gjjtf 209^6 169.1 342 6]equipment business and earn-(performance-conscious funds 137,9 2i3.9 i7o's 369!7|ings appear largely dependent I have been selling airlines, “#'4]on the Vietnam war. No divi-jwhich may have contributed to their lacklustre actiorl. 1 like Ago 70. .... Ago . 73.. HR 1967 High : 73.0 95.6 t Change Windsor Fund | Thursday's 1st Dividends Declared idends have been paid for many ! Roto riod R«^%.!yea'-s and none seem inv .225 Q ,5 9-5 , ^{mediately in prospect, the. • shares have doubled in price in o.? 1967 and now sell near their i-iiiten-year high, which js where them for longterm / holding, particularly Pacific §ou0iwest which operates entirely within the state of California. (Copyright, 1967) > D—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1967 PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING INDEX RuMMAtM NOTICES Card of Thanks .. V In Memoriam .. 21 Announcements .. 3 Florists ............... ..3-A Funeral Directors .. 4 Cemetery Lots ,.4-A Personals . ,4-B Lost and Found .. 5* EMPLOYMENT Help Wanted Male ..6 Help Wanted Female .. 7! Help Wanted M. or F. B 8 Sales Help, Mdle-Female. .. 8-A Employment Agencies .. 9 Employment Information . . .9-A Instructions—Schools ..... ..10 Work Wanted Male ..Hi Work Wanted Female.... ..12 Work Wanted Couples ... .12-A SERVICES OFFERED Building Services-Supplies. ...13 Veterinary ...14 Business Service ..15 Death Notices ARMSTRONG, ALVIN) August 14. 1*67; 2863 North , Avalon, Avon Township; ago 80; dear father of Mrs. Dorothy Newby, Mrs. 'Donna Martin- and Robert Armstrong; dear brother of Mrs. Haftle George Armstrong; also survived by It grandchildren end eight great-grandchildren. Funeral ser-uln will h* h.lrt Saturday, AURUSt the Harold R. ome. Auburn In White Chap| it 1:30 p.m. Helot el Ci....-.-... —.............. Its. In state at the funeral (Suggested ________________ _______d of Betty Gallaher; dear brother of Mrs. William (Beatrice) Georgia and Byron A. Downs. Funeral service will be held Saturday, August If, at 1:30 p.m. at the Spsrks-Grlffln Funeral Home. Interment In Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Gal-laher will lie In state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting '--'irs 3 to S and 7 to 9 p.m.) HART, EDWARD J.; August 17,1M7; 8044 Farrant, Commerce Township; ag* 68; beloved husband of Loretta i Patrick B. Hart; d u Violet White and by four grandchildren. ' will be IfSto Bookkeeping and Taxes. ... .16 Credit Advisors ......... 16-A Dressmaking and Tailoring.. 17 Gardening .................18 Landseaping........... .18-A Garden Plowing...........18-B Income Tax Service ....... 19 Laundry Service ...........20 Convalescent—Nursing ......21 Moving and Trucking.......22 Painting and Decorating....23 Television-Radio Service...24 Upholstering ............24-A Transportation ............25 Insurance..................26 Deer Processing............27 WANTED Wanted Children to Board. .26 Wanted Household Goods...29 Wanted Miscellaneous.......30 Wanted Money...............31 Wanted to Rent.............32 Share Living Quarters......33 Wanted Real Estate.........36 RENTALS OFFERED Apartments—Furnished.......37 Apartments—Unfurnished .. .38 Rent Houses, Furnished ....39 Rent Houses,' Unfurnished.. .40 Property Management....40-A Rent Lake Cottages........ 41 Hunting Accommodations 41-A Rent Rooms ................42 Rooms With Board..........43 Rent Farm Property........44 Hotel-Motel Rooms .........45 Rent Stores................46 Rent Office Space.........47 Rent .Business Property...47-A Rent Miscellaneous........48 REAL ESTATE Salo Houses ...............49 Income Property ...........50 Lake Property..............51 Northern Property .......51-A Resort Property............52 Suburban Property.........53 Lots-Acreage ..............54 Sale Farms ................56 Sale Business Property ....57. Sale or Exchange...........58 FINANCIAL Business Opportunities....59 Sale Land Contracts.......60! Wanted* Coritracts-Mtges.. .6Q-A Money to Lend.............61 Mortgage Loans ............62 n Commerce Cemetery. i father of Mrt. Ido Knlckerl In state at the funeral homo. OWENS, FERGUS J.) August IS, 1867; 1935 Watkins Lake Road. Waterford Township; d husband of Anna V. Owens; dear father of Mrs. Walter Delbei, Mrs. Jerry Proctor, Charles ft. end Bernard F. Owens; doer brother of William O.wens; also survived by - 13 grandchildren. Recitation of the Rosary ' ' " it I P.m " »rt Moss MERCHANDISE Swops date Lioming Sale Household Goods . ....65 Antiques ,.,65-A Hi-Fi, TV & Radios .... ...66 Water Softeners ..66-A For Sale Miscellaneous . ... 67 Christmas Trees Christmas Gifts Hand Tools—Machinery. ....68 Do It Yourself ........ ....69 Cameras—Service ..... ....70 Musical Goods ....711 Music lessons ..71-A; Office Equipment Store Equipment ....73i Sporting Goods .,..74 Fishing Supplies—Baits . ....7Sj Sand-Gravel-Dirt .... 76 Wood-Coal-Coke-Fuel ....77 Pets-Huntipg Dogs ... Pet Supplies—Service ... ,.79-A Auction Sales Nurseries Plants—Trees—Shrubs .. ..81-A1 Hobbies and Supplies .. — 82 FARM MERCHANDISE Livestock ............ Meats .. 83-A Hay—Grain—Feed Poultry Form Produce Farm Equipment AUTOMOTIVE Travel Trailers ....83 Housetrailers ....89 Rent Trailer Space..... ... 90 Commercial Trailers.... ,.90-A Auto.Accessories ....... ....91 Tires-Auto-Truck ....92 Auto Service Motor Scooters ....... Motorcycles ....95 Bicycles ,...96 Boats-Accessories ..,.97 Airplanes 99 Wanted Cars-Trucks .... .,101 Junk Cars-Trucks ...... .101-A Used Auto-Truck Parts . ...102 New and Used Trucks ... ..103 Auto-Marine Insurance . ..104 Foreign Cars | New and Used Can .... Dial 334-4981 or 332-8181 Pontiac Pross Want Ads FOR FAST ACTION NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS ADS RECEIVED IT 5 PM, WILL IE PUBLISHED THI FOLLOWING DAT. Tit* deadline for cancellation ransiant Want Ado is 9 o.m. tha of publication after the first made bo •u^VgeMrou* "KILL NUfT BER.'* No adjustments will bo given. Closing time for advertisements CASH WANT AD RATES occomponios order) I .Day 3-Days 6-Days 2 $2.00 $2.46 $3.84 1 2 00 3.60 5.58 3 66 6.48 10JD8 4.27 7.56 11.76, 4.88 8.64 1344. 5.49 *.73 15.13- THE NORMAN GERBER FAMILY would like to exprese their thankfulness to those who were to thoughful end kind during tha recant less et their sen Steven. WE WISH TO THANK OUR friends, neighbors and relatives for their floral offerings and expressions of kindness extended to us during our recent bereavement In the lass of our mother, Leah Gould. Special thanks to Tha National Twist Drill Co. and to Rev. of Kenneth Gould. Just Dial * 332-8181 BOX REPLIES At II a.m. lods) there | were replies it The Press Office in the fol- j lowing buses: S, 10,17, U, 31, 34, 55 Funeral Directors 4 COATS 1 FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS_____474-0441 C. J. GODHaAOT FUNERAL HOMS Keego Harbor, Ph, 482-0200. OONEL83N-JOHNS Funeral Home * Designed tor Funerala** Huntoon 79 Oakland Ava. SPARKS-GR'FFIti FUNERAL HOME "Thoughtui Sarvica" FB 8-9388 Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME. 332-6371 E»f ftilshtd Over 40 Vtan Cemetery Lets (Suggested and 7 to 9 POLLARD, BERTHA G.) August 15. 1967; SI Frank Street; age 67; mar R. and Rev. E. H. Eberle and Edwin and Otto Ukelt. Funeral servlet will ha held Friday, August IS, at 3 p.m. at tha D. E. Puraley Funeral Home with Rav. William 'Doe officiating. Interment In Perry Mount Park Cemetery. 3-5726. PERRY MOUNT PARK CtME-tery. Grove 2-3. Let 44, Sec. 10A. 683-0929. _________ SIX GRAVES, OAKLAND HILLS Memorial Gardens. $50 each. Root. Ill S. -------bk| — ‘ 3691. FULL COLOR WEDDING AL-bum at tha cost of black and white. Free brochure. 338-9079 any time. GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDING ' GIRL 0 friendly , phone FE I. Confidential, Ml can ettora. of Mrs. Winifred • of Mra. r and Randall Voughf; 1 by three grandehil- |___ ... jt 11 .J the Sparks - Griffin Funeral Home. Interment In Perry Mount Park Camttery. Mr. Vought will lie in state at tha funeral home. (Suggested visiting . hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m.) ________ "AVON' CALLING" -FOR SERVICE IN YOUR HOME. FE 4-0439, ■ of relief In every SINA- HALL FOR RENT, RECEPTIONS, lodges, Church. OR 3-5202, FE 3- LOSE WEIGHT SAFELY WITH DdX-A-Diet Tablets. Only 91 cents at Simms Bros. Drugs. _________ SOMEBODY .WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T NEED Sol.. SELL IT Pontiac Press-Want Ad, Ad-Visor She Will Do The Rest. I (MAN IN PARTS DEPARTMENT, new building, good pay, axe. opportunity. Shumen Ford Sales. 1111 S. Commerce Rd., at Pontiac Troll, Walled Lake. 624-4541, ________ 1 MEN NEEDED FOR livery work. Full e Must have car Phone 338-4244. I MEN, PART TM and employed, 335-5333, 5 to 7 p. ____________ 3 YOUNG MEN—1.9 TO 29 nd wine only, 6 nights a iterances requested. Experi- CABINET MAKER, IxFiTi-anted In layout and assembly, goad opportunity, OR 3-9*40 or CARETAKER Pontiac Press Bbx C-18, Pontiac, Michigan. CARPENTERS, GOOD ROUOHfcltS, long rang* residential program. CARPENTERS EXPERIENCED ROUGHERS FOR ’ APARTMENT PROJECT Just starting on Auburn Rd„ between E. Blvd. and Opdykc. Work all winter. Saa Willis Teepie on tha |ob — ready to work. COOK, ftjLt TIME, MUST HAVE hm'inr exp., living qvnrtara »v»M-to right party, H||eSraA|i| area. 363-9469, or 363-9530. vlae. Mar U ____________... shift. Top wages. Bast a. ............., conditions. Apply anytime. Coun-try kitchen. Auburn at Opdyka. 5138 ter appointment. ESTATE SALE, FRI., SAT. FROM 11-6 p.m. 7 complete rooms of furniture plus mlsc. Items. 132 N. Jessie, Pontiac. DEBT AID, INC. 71S RIKER BLDG. PE 2-01S1, Rater te Credit Ad- 549-6200 or 549-2387 Detailers debt consultants : OP PONTIAC, INC. M4 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. FE S4ISB . ! STATE LICENSbO-BONDED i Open Saturday 8)7 a.m 1 START PLANNING NOW FOR your ecout group, church, club FALL HAY RIDES. Enloy a horse drawn ride through fields, woods. Followed by a home cooked spa- 6ET OUT OF DEBT DN A •LANNED BUDGET PROGRAM YOU CAN AFFORD TAILORED TO YOUR INCOME SEE MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS FOUND: BLACK, BROWN AND LOST NEAR AAP STORE, CLARKS- LOST — LARGE BROWN MALE dog. vie. 4-H Fair. Children'* pat. Reward. 3382426. LOST: VICINITY OF ORCHARD Lake and Cass miniature brown and whit* Pekingese. Reward. 662- LOST: GRAY PERSIAN CAT, \ clnlty of N. Edith and E. PI) Reward. 335-2114. __________ DIRECTOR OF COLLECTIONS Full time position available In business office of progressive metropolitan area hospital. Wa ara searching tor a man. preferably with a college degree, who his a strong background In colltc-. tkm activities. W* offer an axe. sarvica Industry. Reply Pontiac Press Box C-47. DRAFTSMAN FOR ESTIMATING department, high school graduate, strong on Math. Rapiy P. O. Box 185, Rochester, Mich. 48863. DRIVER FOR BAKERY, INSIDE and outside work. Apply A.M. only 432 Orchard U school graduate. 626-4618"' EXPERIENCED FUEL OIL DRIV-ars for dallvartng fuel oil In Pontiac area. Apply at Standard Oil Co., 95 W. Pika between 84:30 p.m. An Equal Opportunity Em-ployer. EXPERIENCED North west 6 backhoe operator. Euclid Earth mover. Tamtam dump EXPERIENCED BRICK LAYERS, overtime. General Motors Proving Grounds* Safety Test Building No. 25 or call 776-5210 before 5 p.m. EXPERIENCED SINGLE MAN TO $6500 AND CAR SALES TRAINEE 24-30, Collage helpful, tee pal*. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1SS0 S. Woodward B'ham. 642-8266 ■ $7,200 FEE PAID College Grads-Engineer; Management positions In all fields INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1060 W. Huron 334-4971 A PART-TIME JOB A married man, 21-34, te work 4 hours per evening. Call 6744)520, 4 p.m. to S p.m. tonight. $200 PER MONTH ASSISTANT MANAGER, HIGH school grad. 1 year training program full benefln 85,000 Call Gone Roberts, 334-2471. Snelllng 8 Snail- ATTENTION 4 wall dressed man, part or full Nma. to work In Advertising and soles dept., newest subsidiary of AUTO MECHANIC TOP PAY AND benefits for skilled man. Call Mr. Bridgas* 624-1572. At Lloyd BrWg-e». Podge Waited Lake. AUTO-MECHANIC WITH GM Experience. Plenty of Ijjn and VP- EXPERIENCED TRUCK DRIVERS for local deliveries. Must have chauffeur's licensd. Neat appear, ance. Top wages. 5 day week. H. Hoffman, FE 28114. EXPERIENCED TREE TRIMMER. MU 9-2700, Troy. ____________ Experienced Mechanic Needed for Pontiac, Bulck and Chevy Dealership. Apply Ih person to Mr. Ernst, Homer Hlght, Oxford, Michigan. FITTERS AND PRESS BRAKE OPERATOR EXPERIENCED Excellent fringe benefits. Artco* ■692-26317 Lake Orion* GAS with t( 2-0114. DIESEL MECHANICS Is* union shop* call FE n Equal Opportunity Em- - EXPERIENCED ibricatlon man* $2 — .jut. Time and a 44 hours. Shall Service* GAS STATION driveway and to 62.50 par half O’*— • MaAlt .....,r ....... GAS APPLIANCE INSTALLERS, helpers needed. Good pay. Plenty of work. Incentive program. Apply Delta Co. 421 watt Lincoln. Madl-son His. 541-239*. GAS STATION ATTENDANT, EX-perlanc* necessary. Inquire at Jerry's Shall, 64*5 Orchard Lake and Maple Rd.__________________ GUARDS ., Detroit— LV 14ISZ, DM p.m. LABORERS WANTED. APPLY AT Intorpaca, 7001 Pdwall Rd., Romeo. LAND SURVEYORS HELPER, MIN-Imum 2 years *xp„ lob. Ml 7-8211. openings for tol time driveway h ollne attendant i 12 neon and S Sum. to 10 p.m. Excallant starting pay, frlngt ban*-Nl*. Cab Ml MfSK LOOKING FOR SECURITY? conditions. You must bo and want to work. So* Jim Smith or Bud Panrall. Jack Long Ford Salat. 215 Main St. Rochaalar. 651-*711, , ■ MAINTENANCE, HOUSEKEEPING, dietary, *1.80 hourly. All ahlfn. Must m IS or over. Abl* to piss physical exam. Only those Interested In Tull-tlm* permanent positions need apply. PantwC Osteopathic Hospital. 50 N. Parry St., Pontiac, Michigan, MALES, FULL' TIME, GOLF ■ super-r night working tentative t He should or life Ilcai—. .... and looking for Work only quanta* nlshad each weak. Qualified leads received through national and local advertising. It will pay you to com* In and talk to us. S158 guaranteed par wuak while training. Apply to; Ed Steffen, Holiday Inn, Pontiac, Michigan, on Thursday, Aug. 17th, from 11 a.m. to 2 CREW MANAGERS NEEDED FOR MAN TO SELL MITO FARTS IN Pontiac area, will help establish own business, large commission basis, c#r necessary. Phono Mt. Clemens. 463-01*0.___________________ MAN TO WORK WITH HORSES, house plus salary. Drydan 796-3322. MANAGER TRAINEE. bO YOU have tha ability to manage? Exc, MANAGER TRAINEE. EAGER MAN needed for this spot. Exc. location. 85800. Call Kathy. King. 334-8471. Snelllng 8 Snelllng.__________„■ MEN IB-26 With Intaattnal fortitude 1* work afternoon and evening schedule. 4-10 except Sat. 9-3. Muat b* able to maintain a neat business-like appearane* and able »n converse 3-day tralnln 8142.50 Wk. Can m.. e.m.-2:80 p.m. 338-0359. MEN TO WORK IN SERVICE STA- wrecker driven. M years of age, with I Full time only. E;— ..._.. cation with pay. Shell station, Woodward and Long Lake Rd., DESIGNERS CHECKERS DETAILERS Special metal cutting machine ax- OAKLAND UNIVERSITY Night Switchboard Operator • 12 midnight to 7:30 a.m. Permanent | position, will train qualified appli- "'"OAKLAND UNIVERSITY PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT ROCHESTER, MICHIGAN 338-7211 Between S and 12-1 and 5 An Equal Opportunity Employer NEED PART TIME WORK? Fart time schedules are available In the following departments. MAINTENANCE 5 a.m. to 10 a.m. 5 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. 1:30 p.m. to 10:00 p.m. SHIPPING AND RECEIVING 6 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. >12 p.m. to * p.m. AUTO SERVICE TIRE MOUNTING 9 a.m » 5:30 p. SALESMEN Part tlm* schedules, 4 hours or more par-day. From 10 a-m. to * p.m. , Apply Personnel Dept. 2nd. floor Montgomery Ward PONTIAC MALL driver! In Detroit ai Mon.-Thurs. only. OPPORTUNITY PLUS The Clark Oil and Refining Corp. has available In Pontiac and Walltd Lake a service station Wa specialize In gaso only. W* otter 88,000 pe start. Age 21-60. Excellent opportunity to; mint. Hospitalization, III. tirement program available. For additional Information and Interview call LI 1-7222, attar 6 p.m. Call FE 2-2017. PACKING SMALL PARTS ANB steal cutting knives. Hours 12 to 5, new plant, sxc. working conditions. Bernal Inc., 1450 Soutor Blvd., Trey._________ PONTIAC MOTOR DIVISION Has Immediate openings tor: CLERKS MAIL BOYS Apply or send resume to: SALARIED PERSONNEL DEPT. Pontiac, Michigan 480! (an equal opportunity employor) Help Wanted Malt work. Paid Holidays a cation. Plus many other Denims. No Saturdays. Apply In person to Dal Wankal, service manager. SHELTON* PONTIAC-BUICK, Roches-•ter, Michigan. AUTO SALES MANAGER Needed, must be qualified, please write complete resume on first letter, to Pontiac Press Box C-44 Pontiac, Michigan. AUTO SALESMEN i New and Used Experienced preferred. Good pay I pltn, good'traffic, fringe benefits. Saa Mr. Charll* Barron., Spartan Dodge , 855 Oakland Aye, , AUTOMOBILE PORTER. GOOD BROACH MACHINE AND FIXTURE DESIGNERS Good opportunity v 950 S. R Rochasiei, mien. •I Opportunity Employer. BECOME AN AUTO MECHANIC! Ward's ever-expanding auto service facilities need ambitious men now employed in service stations or having an automotive interest to train for the highly-paid duto mechanic or automotive merchandise fiuld. EARN TOP PAY Our newest store will open soon and will provide permanent career openings for pie^anlcs^ and mechanic trainees. ' Apply in person: Mon., Tues.—10 A.M. to 8 P.M. Wed., Thurs., Fri.-lO A.M. to 5 P.M.; Sat. 9 A.M. to 1P.M. MONTGOMERY WARD TELEGRAPH . An Equal Opportunity Employer PAINTERS, GOOD WORKING CON-dJtlons and pay. Can between 10-11 . nbon or altoc 4 p.m. Ml 4-3MM, PART TIME JOB. *50 GUARANTEE — '—“ — “1, married, am- PONTIAC PRESS DISTRICT MANAGER StOCk ItiV,. IS YEARS. M U 8 T Paints Inc., 3 N. Saginaw, Pew-tlac, Mlctwwm. SURFACE GRINDER TOR H.|,4 Permanent (fled individual. Must able transportation. 3------ndlttons Long.^rculaiton1 t have dtpend-Pleaaant work- , tual fob bene-ni re James FORti it. FULL TIMta. MUtT have ref. and transportation. Union Lokg area. 36S8489. RARE OPPORTUNITY rttonal corporation la applications tram young men 1838 i In appearance, intelligently and Jva. Opportunity Millar * a.m.4 pjtu S_____ Real Estate Salesman^ Du* to th* expansion at tha Mall I naad 3 mar* energetic salesmen. Will train. VON REALTY GEORGE VONDERHARR, Realtor In tha Mall MLS Room 110 ___________682-5800_________ RESORT SEASONAL APRIL 1 thru October 31st. Labor for golf course maintenance, immediate openings. Please reply work experience and salary requirements to the Pontiac, Press, Box. No. 16. cuttini toot ti 11626 -^ ._______ experienced6trEEN triers are wanted far the Panes BRecrMtlon Department of- tha E^.,^Pre»V« tREt tRiMmer. Expekikridlib only. 338*571 or S34-7155. TV REPAIRMAN Exparlancad man and white, and i WANTED CONTRACT DRIVER . With to-Ton Pick-Up ALTERATION WOMAN, tXFERI-“—^ ttert time to Mart. Rapidly " specialty atore. Hadley's “ 682-6180, Mr*. Dlks- y tor advanc -6363 Detroit. Rary si+ter - hGuSKkEep- RABY SITTER, LIVE IN, EXCEL-lont toad and Wad**. 731-7015. . BABY SITTkR, LlGHt NOUSJ-kaaplng, 5 days, 2 children. }7ao sT HIckery Rktot, Lot llfc Milford. BABY* SITTER. MATURE PERSON, . my horn#, 4 days wk., 2 pra-. schoolers. FE 4-7637.____________ BAfcV LiHIr, LlVfc IK OR OUT, in transports Hen. 673-2718 Mr.; Lang. Pontiac Fr ’WANTED: YOUNG MAN WITH DE-slrs tor career In atodrlcaL whola-sallng. Apply standard Electric Co. '"S 5* Sr-r— WANTED IMMEDIATELY Sklllad and unsklltod workers tor day and night shifts, Fachnr hands. Apply bat. * a.m.-a p.m. to CLAWSON RETIRED MAN, CLEAN-UP WORK, 4 nights week, Coin-Operated laundry- Own transportation, references —■ *“-"Jh9 pJuMBSMI. SALES EMPLOYMENT COUNSEL-or. Do you like a challenge? WE will train If you have the gift of gab and Ilk* working with paopl*. Exceptionally high earnings In this specialized field. Call Angle Rook, 334-3471, snelllng 8 Snelllng. SECURITY 'MAN Interesting position tor wall groomed, aleti, mature Individual axpartancad In dealing with paopl* preferred. ’ Paid training period, purchase discount, and many other benefits. Apply In Person Employment Office Basement HUDSON'S PONTIAC MALI. SERVICE STATION MANAGER TO *1 S. Main FERNDALS 3318 Hilton REDFORD 27320 Grand River Employers Tampbrary Service WANTED: GUARDS FOR BVE-nlngs. Top rates tor axparlancsd man, LI 7-4053 attar 7 p-m. WANTED: LEAP GUITAR FLAY-*r, 14 or 13, Call tor audition. 82.70 to 83.84 WIPmPP paw - Employment opportunity. Apply bt-twtsn 9 o.m. and noon poreonnal office Municipal Pullding, 1S1 Martin St., Birmingham._ YOUNG MEN 18 TO 25 QUALIFICATIONS: ar and married, able and Ilk* * Salary and n. 693-6166. _______________ SERVICE TRAINEE MECHANICS ineiindfed Nice location and ban* . Call Gene Roberts, 334-2471. Snalllnfl «. Si n.-5 p.m. 313-232- SPLINE GRINDERS SURFACE GRINDERS A MACHINE CO. Dlv. of Babcock 8" Wilcox Co. 950 S. Rochester Rd. Rochester, Mich. An Equal Opportunity E— YOUNG MAN TO HANDLE STOCK and make deliveries, full tons. Apply, * a.m. to II p.m. singer Co., Pontiac Mall. NIGHTS. 2 WOMEN NEEDED FOR LIGHT $500 UP BOOKKEEPER Soma full charge experienc not* no aga limit. Fee pal STENOGRAPHER Interesting position tor male its no- I grapher at Oakland Pontiac Air- I port. Located on MSS. Typing spesld of 40 corrected WPM and shorthand at so WPM. All applicants mutt have apptttuds and offka worker tost In addition to typing and shorthand. Excellent fringe benefits. Apply Oakland County Courthouse, personal division. 1200 N. Telegraph, Pontiac, Michigan. 3384751 Ext. 495. $5,000 UP PERSONNEL CONSULTANT Prestige Birmingham office. Base rets glut Incentive plan. Soma receptionist duties to start. Mr. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1880 5. Woodward B'ham. 647-8248 A REAL GEM. SECRETARY. A nice place to work S400. Call Sue Knox. 334-1471. Snelllng 8 Snelllng. Assistant to Manager BAKERY SALESWOMAN, FULL time, no evenings or Sundays. Anderson Bakery, 124 W. 14 MU* Rd., Birmingham. Ml 4-7114. BARMAID, FART TIME. 7 OR 4-1444,_______ BARMAID, NIGHTS ONLY, St)N-days and holiday* off. Good rat* of advancement. Apply In 'parson. Town and Country Inn, 1727 s. Tal-agraph, Pontiac. ilEAuticUk wanted for dray-ton Plains area call attar 7. e23-MM. . ■ \‘ - - - BEAUTICIANS, RECENT ORADU-atea, axe. opportunity, aafary, commission, hdopltallzatlon, paid .vacation. Call tor Intarvlaw, Barnard Hair Styllats. Miss Pal - Ml 4-8313 Miss Batty — Ml 7-3033 —. OPERATOR, BEELINB FASHIONS—NEEDS YOU FOR HOSTESS OR STYLIST— 852-4131 __________ BIRMINGHAM PUBLIC SCHOOLS aors to work h schools, 1 to 2 day at S2.00 per 311.__________________ BOOKKEEPER FOR NEW FIRM, axe. opportunity to advanc*. 3500. Call Helen Adams. 334-2471. Snall- posltlon h typail il in Pontiac, if you Ilk* to meet the public, can hand la figures accurately, and art a good typist, call Mrs. Sobell at General FInane* Loan Co, 2787300 tor Intorylaw. Dearborn. CHILD CARE AND GENERAL cleaning tram noon to I p.m. Monday through Friday. Start first weak of Sapt. Call 848404, attar CLERK TYPIST. REWARDiNG PO-altlen with sxc bandttts, ream tor advanc* 8303. Call Pam Pax. 334-2471, Snelllng 8 Snallliw. COOK • WAITkESt - CUR> GIRL —super Chief. PE 2-8151. COOK WAliTEb t6 WORK WEEK-ends Frl. end Sat. eves, hourly rat*. Per further information call Mr, Elwall. UL 2-3410. COOK. PULL TIME. MUSt HAVE I. 348*469 OR 363-9530. COUNTER SALESLADY WANTED, Birmingham Cleaners, 1253 S. —3--——- — 4-6638. DEMONSTRATE TOYS Earn extra money, August to December, (tiling Nam* Brand gags aad GIFTS. 20 par cant plus EXTRA BONUS TOYS i Experience Necessary. Writ* ''SANDRA PARTIES," 7307 E. Mc-Nichols, Detroit, Mich. 41212, %r call Pontiac, FE 80760, or Trey, *89-2*97, or Oxford 6181401. - D|ET|C(AN ADA — Thertpuedlc — *1500 annual talary with automatic In-creates. Outstanding ocBortunlty In medarn 4M bad) axpaaing hospital with latest awfgmint. Outotandlng fringe baneffls. Apply Pontiac Prate Box C-24. Pontiac, Mich. Dining Room Waitress ■W Day shift, ... Cross and IH* Insurance, JIM and paid holidays. Tap wages ai tips. Apply In parian only. Nalp Wonted Mala M ONTGOMKRY WARD PERMANENT MECHANIC ■•Opportunities Soon we will open our new AUTO SERVICE CENTER which will be one of Oakland County's Largest and Finest. We will train you in career opportunities in the following jobsi ★ WHEEL ALIGNMENT * MECHANICS ★BRAKE MEN ★BATTERY MEN • SEAT COVER INSTALLERS ★ TIRE CHANGERS ★ LUBE MEN ★ PARTS MAN ★ STOCK MEN Enjoy TOP PAY and Wards Famous Fringe Benefits • 40-Hour Week . • Paid Vacations and Holidays • Group Insurance # Profit Sharing • Discount on Purchases • Life Insurance Both full- and part-time openings now available APPLY IN PERSON Wards Employment Office — 12 Mile and Telegraph I Southfield, Michigan Mon. & Tues. -10 A.M. to 8 P.M. — Wed.* Thurs., Fri. - K) A.M. to 5 P.M. Sat.-9 A.M. to 1 P.M, An Equal Opportunity Employer I THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY,, AUGUST 17, 1967 ■ D—*0 Holy Wanted Female DENTAL ASSISTANT. MATURE (harp, *350. Call KMtiy Klnfl.\ 334-2471. Smiling A Sntlllng. tiNtALRicfePTINIST-*m, Pontiac area. Sand MM „ Pontiac PraM Box C-i, Pontiac, Mlehioan. * ~ Hely Wanted FbemJb IP YOU GET ALONG WELL WITH *8WMtlftg aM flk Doctor —1 ♦coin In assisting MM. Call l Fox 334-2471. Sn«llng 8, Snelllm l Ik, area. 2 Iranaportatlon. 6! IMMEDIATE " OPENINGS FWl . woman tor telaphen* work tor local beauty salon, Ideal hours tor housawln or —— J I avenlng shift, M 338-4244. day or salary, Ftmale 7 H»ly Wanted M. or F. pay. A\ . Indlsh. t RECEPTIONIST TM PERSONNEL dept, great paoola prestige "— nlca location, benefits. 8325. Hsian Adams. 3S4-I471. Mailing t A REAL OPPORTUNITY POR PULL or part tlma work tor paoplg Ms are willing to work. For-fur..~ information phono PE J-3261 attar 1 p.m. ADVERTISING SALES OPENING. ^Gr* fed experienced, good oppor-*“ right parson. SpInal^Col- wtiUfl..; wliitf ii. part time i KELLY SERVICES or full tlma. New plant. Pressing tm u taninaw _ , . - W - .?»*»thru October 3lst. General RESORT SEASONAL, APRIL 1 E 8-9971. TrlHI'Si and Car IXPfthflNClD GIRL FOR FILING Insurance forms. Blue Cross and various others. Only experienced need apply. Sand resume and desired salary to MmHimMhmMb C-33 Pontiac, " EXPERIENCED WAITRESS, a.m.-l p.m.^ Sunbr— --- 8160. Call Sue Knox, 334-2471. Snell- An Equal Opportunity Employer KEY PUNCH OPERATOR Immediate ! positions In Governmental data, processing canter, all applicants Will be tasted. Must M able to punch SI cards wnt ~~ farm, npov ui art House, parse 0 N. Telegraph, ES NEEDED id Count I dlvlsloi LADIES ___________ strata coatmatlcs I, sioo guarantee on fi LAUNDRY HeLPBR. A0W.Y IN person. 5590 Waltfon Rd. Pine Knob u Wufslng LIKE DOCTOR'S HOURS? LIGHT typing and easlat doctor. counter and cashiar work. Immediate openings in Waterford and vyhita Lake Township area. Please reply, stating work experience and salary requirements to the Pontiac Press, Box. No. 15. BARttNdCRS, PULL OR PART time, no experience necessary. Apply In parson to 300 Bowl, too S. Cass Lako Rd. sAlAs clerk and clerical help. Apply Wi T. Grant C0.MM Cooley'Lake H ? wa , .iff of h people. 33 In this FULL-TIME WAITRESSES WANT-td. experience preferred but not necessary. Apply at Continental Market. 210 S. Woodward, Birmingham. LeChef Petit Restao- Knox. 334-2471. Smiling 1 MANAGER WOMEN'S SPECIALTY SHOP Rapidly expanding company has an exceptional opportunity for a folly experienced manager of droven ability. This axocutlvo position calls MARRIED WOMAN FOR COlU OP-erated laundry and dry cleaning, I must be neat and pleasant, own tramp., refs, required. 338-3448, call 5 to ♦ p.m.___________________ 21, no oxperlenco, 2354)322 bolwott noon and 5._____________, Grandmothers Are you a "Young looking," "Young thinking" Grandma, who would like to be delng something exciting I her ipere time? Wa like matu women because they do so well SEP.—.. 9BEEW8I —— sales work. If you would like to graph ‘ Rd., Bloomfield Plaza, work afternoon* or evenings inquire' Birmingham. iMtbdLfiAOED BABY SITtER* 6 •rta, EL 6-0328. Montgomery Ward PONTIAC MALL HOSTESS Ted't at Bloomfield Hills hat MIDDLE AGED WOMAN WANTED tor party store. OR 34427. MOTHER INJURED - HELPER mMMdto] children and ^ener j housework, own tram MOTHER'S HELPER, 5 DAYS, . — *■ ' -.m„ Clarkston area. hosttii. Top wages, food allowance vacation and paid holidays. Free Blue Crass and llto Insurance. Apply In parson only. TED'S WOODWARD AT SQUARE LK. RD. ROUSfflClfPER FCfR MOTHER, lass horns, llv* In, more for homo than wages. <734594._________ hou«KEEFfeR, m0R e For B:m, to 4 p.m. Iransp. 428-350$. NEED REAL SHARP GIRL fO land bar and waitress. Good pay. Steady work. For Interview see 11 — . — .— 79 N. S, NURSE AIDES All shifts. Good working conditions. Experienced and inexparl- NURSES AIDES Experienced m own transportation SALESLADIES Experienced In bettor ready t wear. Full tlma or part tlm4. BLOOMFIELD FASHION SHOP BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED ■Mr jmMtft' All RH Nto. with poaltlvo factors (7.50 A-neg.. B-neg., AB-neg. SI0 ^MICHIGAN COVAHJNHY 1342 Wide Track Or. I Mon. thru Frl. 9 a.m.4 1 SJ8U7 B.~ FE 4-SS47 Saleswomen doslrable, but ih salary and commission, SI discounts, paid Insui SHIRT LAUNDRY GIRL SHIRT LAUNDRY GIRL No experience necessary Full tlma ..zing conditions Paid holidays Paid vacations JANET DAVIS DRY CLEANRES ____________647-3009 CAREER IN Real Estate Instruction class now forming for a class in Real Estate. Openings for several salespeople, both male and female, who are interested in making money. Bonus; plan and many . advantages in one of the fastest growing companies — main -office plus 3 branch offices. Both existing and new homes. BATEMAN REALTY, Call FE 8-7161, ask for Jack Ralph. CONCESSION HELP AND CAStt-lore. Apply Wotortord Drlvo-ln. BUILDING COMPANY — FE 44931 Sdes Holy, MoU-femoie B-A Wanted Real Estate 36 l TO 50 CAN YOU SELL? If act.-V* have an opanlng 1 2 people bitoreatod In makl monay. Raal Estata axparlan helpful but not nacaiaaryrwa ha a good biUMing program and For to OR 44 HOMES, LOTS. ACREAGE PAR. CELS,. FARMS, BUSINESS PROP. ERTIES, AND LAND CONTRACTS WARrfiiN STOUT, Realto: 1450 N. Opdyko Rd. PE HIM Urgently n**r M|----— — REAL ESTATE •'l at mam. REAL ESTATE SALES i are axpandlng our office and va openings tor aeveral salaapao-i, both mala and1 female, to tall tt and used homes. Top commit-na paid. Including Incentive and Hit sharing. Ewartanc* not n*er‘ •y — wa will teach you the bu j ..V.----, realty YOU AM A SPECIRLISV IN LIFE underwriting or tor company field work with 2 plus euccassful years under your belt. You hove proven ability to train others. You *r* looking tor an open and oppo ity. Wa are a large established multlpla line agency sarvlng Oak-land and Genetse County. Wo have a top management position open with salary and Incentive plan tor the right man. Lore got together. Write Pontiac Prase Bax C-30. Pontiac, Michigan._____________________ Work Wanted Male _________________and wall wash- Ing, painting, Inter’— tier, garages <— — cleaned. You call, Wa'II FE 3-»27. BASEMENTS CLEANED, CHIMNEY SCREEN. REPAIRED AparhneEts, UnfErnhhed It M# ADULTS ONLY -Irlgeretor. 425-2001 oi MULTI PLELllTI NO SERVICE Rent Homes, Furnished County, money In .24 hours. YORK SAPARTMENT5 2 unfurnished 3 room apar and 1 furnished 3 room f ragt. Call PE 54174. 3 ROOMS PRIVATE - „ — 4-213), OR 34425. 3 MjMTTnd ba+h, mo j* 8)00 deposit. Lk. Orion. 003-W S ROOM UPPER F E 44022 S-ROOM TERRACE WE TRADE OR 4-0343 Drayton Plains ALL CASH 10 MINUTES ran If bthlnd In paymsnts or ROOM MODERN HOUSfOfi rata lake, $145 monthly. OR MODERN 1-BEDROOM, ON PON- NEW 1 BEDROOM DUPLEX, 5 ROOMS AND BATH, HEAT AND ff BLOOMFIELD ORCHARD APARTMENTS Ideally situated In Bloomtiald-Bir mlngham araa, luxury 1- and 2 bedroom apartments avallabls tor Immediate possession from *155 per month Including carpeting, Hotpoint, air conditioning .and “ pllancas, large family kltch— swimming pool and largo tun itock — All utilities except etoctrl detail ol luxury has bttn pressway. Open dally a > Cpaff I NEW LUXURIOUS APT. 2 bedroom apt. SIM. No chlldri petlng, drapes, stove and fumlshod, plus all uttlltlei ------, electricity. In Drayton Plains area on Wott Walton Blvd. Call OR 4-3403 altar 5:00 p.m. weekdays and anytime Sat., Sun. RENT INCLUDES ALL UTILITIES And carports. Lsrgs 1 and 2 bad-rooms available, beautiful court yard and swimming pool. No children or pots. American Herltogg Apts. Manager 473-5148 ‘ ™ or waokonde. ROCHESTER. LARGE NEW S-BED- 482-4384. urn, Wotortord School'diet., adults 8125 mo. Sept, to June. EM 3-4322. 3-BEDROOM HOUSE' SYLVAtf Lake. No children, no pots, SIM a mo. 402-1024.___________________ ROOMS, LAKE PRIVIEBSIS, utilities furnished. 840 per week. 0100 deposit. 433-1274.________ AVAILABLE SEPTEMBER 8 Y6 Hired, 8130 monthly. ■ 582-7377 after 4. !—FROM SEP+. . 875 mo. 4730 S HOUSE IN , LAKE ORION. SEP- . 473-4144 0 344 LAKE FRONTAGE. LAKE ORION, 4 rooms and bath, teachers or working couple only, no pets, from Sept. 1 to June 1, Must nave good rets. Lease and deposit. 4934421. SMALL HOUSE. WORKING OR F& tired couple. 8100 Mo. FE 4-4923. Rant Housas, Unfurnished 40 ■BEDROOM SLEEPING PORCH, showing Thurs. 17, 1-8 p.m *741 Oarksten Rd. corner of *~* 2 BEDROOM. MODERN HOME, well Insulated, enclosed porch, professional or business people. Sec- deposit, rots. 3844 Moplo Loot, SECTARY -ing, work exi mature octors receDtli COOK Experienced tor grill __ _......, cooking, top salary plus fringe benefits. Send exp., age, otc. to Pontiac Press Box C-34._________; COOK AND GRILL MAN WANT-ed. Morey's Golf and Country Club 2380 Union ANDKSACREAGEE OWNERS.' Being !&&&£$ have :°aCna; 2Sf,' « -a ' OUtCK I General dtrlcal, with bookeeping knowledge . Typiit ..... - 1 8303. Call Sue Knox, 334-2471. S SHIRT FOLDER FOR PROSPERITY WoodwOrd, Brlmingham. iaef*us before you ~llsti Clarkston Real Estate 15854 S. Mein____________MA 5-5821 SMALL FARM OR WOODS WITH| CRITTENTON HOSPITAL ROCHESTER Registered technicians with blood bank experience. Evening and night coverage, hours to bo arranged. Competitive salaries. Needed at one#. Call Personnel office tor M polntment, 451-4000, I a.m. ti FULL-TIME HELP DAYTIME. AP- JANITOR — NONDRINKER WH6 can work between 4 a.m. and 7 a.m. to dean building. Apply In parson. Wotortord Hill Country Club. Dlxlo Hwy. at Maybee ~ * — to I p.~ LIMOUSINE DRIVERS, MUST I kinds - Walls WorkJWantad Female _ 12 BABY SITTING IN MY HOME FOR 1 or 2 children. 33843S3. IRONINGS WANTED. WEBSTER-Crotoot eras. FE 5-3494, IRONINGS IN MY OWN HOME. Apartments, Furnished BEDROOM APARTMENT. ONE DAY IRONING SERVICE. WILL CARE FOR ELDERLY PER- WOULD LIKE EVENING BABY sitting lob — willing to do housework or Ironing tor extra pay. between 9 and 4:30 p.m Soerdl" OAKLAND UNIVERSITY SECRETARY HOUSEWIVES iChalltnaing position in sdmlnlstra- Earn 83 to 83 oar hour In vour ,,v® of’,ce'. ,or «xparlancada secre-abara tlma Pick uo and delivari^arV' Excaltent opportunity for Id* Fullar Brush oJSri *-lw*nc,,,n*nt Tvolno and shorthand phona OR 3-5876. , Mrs. Indlsh 6S1- ________ I________| «d- ‘intarviaw!vancamaht."'Typing'aiid 'ahorthand *m*rv , likiilB required. I RECEPTIONIST o Record dork, heavy public and tala-M 'phone contact. Responsible for detailed record system. Excellent typist 'required. 11 No cash Investment, no collecting,, I ARDRATflRY no delivery. PLAYHOUSE pays: LADUKAIUKT for all hostess gift* and all TECHNICIAN c#n? *clear*VcomirSsslon -pure Full year or academic year position. ' PLUS tor work In animal research protect bonus gffN. PIaato cak. ; In biological laboratory. PE 3-7377 BBTH or 402 17741 •" Intorvlowa OAKLAND UNIVERSITY PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT ROCHESTER, MICHIGAN 338-7211 Between 0 and 12-1 and 5 ■ - «■-— Opportunity g—*------ Fredricks School. r. 272-5050, Detroit. MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIST Inga for ASCP reg-i ecnnologlst, salary! Credit Advisors 16-A not Dept. Pontiac General Hospital — Seminole at West Huron Pon-tloc. Michigan. HOUSEWIVES HUDSONS Pontiac Mall has a few openings left working part tlma In sales. If you ore Interested In working part-time days, or part-time evenings visit our Employment Office now. Apply In Person Employment Office Basement HUDSON'S PAINT I Salesperson PMBam ....... oxperlenco. En|oy purchase discount, retirement pier r.-...- .-"E^WW^^WliTlte Insurance, and many othe Not a sailing lob. Give phone benefits. Apply In person. ^b,r..*nd "fX* in- EMPLOYMENT OFFICE INTERVIEWERS WANTED FOR port llr* -—----------- ---- Not a party lln.. .... eluding education, work experience and names of references to: Over-I 'it Surveys Department, M. C. MFG. CO. 1 Indianwood Rd. Lk. Orion, 492-2711 An Equal Opportunity Emplo WAITRESS TO WQRK LOUNGE and restaurant, evenings 4 days weekly, hourly rata plus tips, * » tits. For further Informatlor Mr. Elwell, UL 2-3418, mandate Road, Beltsvllle, l HUDSON'S Pontiac Mall Hslp Wanted FemaU 7 Help Wanted Female WAITRESS WANTEO. FULL TIME employment. Apply In person c— Franks Restaurant, Keeqo Her HOUSEWIVES! WAITRESS FULL TIME EVENING work, Rocco's, - 5171 Dixie ■ Drayton Plains. PART TIME FULL TIME WE NEED Experienced Switchboard Opera! Profitable temporary work :oll MANPOWER FE 2-8384 AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER WOMEN WANTED—HAVE SALES experience? Excellent wages for qualified persons, full or port time. Call 335-4822._______ WOMEN, OVER 18, EARN EXTRA ssz*r'riMMil WOMEN WANTED TO WORK part time, demonstrating new product, by party plan or routes. Sales! Clerical! ,12 Mile & Telegraph Our Newest store will open soon. We will fit your avpilabls hours right intd our schedules, many 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. openings. Won't you stop over and visit us? This is your chance to earn extra money for. the Holidays — and get a discount on all purchases, too| APPLY IN PERSON EMPLOYMENT OFFICE-12 MILE and TELEGRAPH Mon. & Tues. -10 A.M. to 8 P.M. Wed,, Thurs., Fri. —10 A.M. to 5 P.M. Saturday — 9 A.M. to 1 P.M. i MONTGOMERY WARD * An Equal Opportunity Employer TOY CHEST has opanings tor woman wl would llko to bat their own wor Ing hours, day or evening and wl would like to have above-average earnings for the time worked. train you, Cell 482-1833 for I motion. __________________ GET OUT OF DEBT AVOID GARNISHMENTS. REPOSSESSIONS, BAD CREDIT, HAR-RASSMENT, BANKRUPTCY AND LOSS OF JOB. We have helped thousands of people with creditor problems by providing a planned managed, organized program. LET US CONSOLIDATE YOUR DEBTS WITH ONE LOW PAYMENT YOU CAN AFFORD. NO limit as to amount owed and number ol creditors. For those who realize, "YOU CAN'T BORROW YOURSELF OUT OF DEBT- . . _uu .. I. LICENSED AND BONDED Kino Motel. 1300 Home Appointment Gladly Arranged “ No Costor Obligation for Interviews HOURS 9-7 P.M.—SAT. 9-5 p.m. DEBT AID 718 Rlker Bldg.______FE 2-0181 SALES ORGANIZER. AGE NO BAR-rier, real opportunity for person willing to work. Saa Mr. Stockwell between 1 and 0 p.m. King Motol, 1300 Opdyko Rd. Frl. Aug. 18 SALES ORGANIZER, AGE NO BAR-, rler, real opportunity for parson willing to work. For details visit | Mr. Stockwell Aug. IS 2 ROOMS AND BATH, ATTRAC-lively decorated, carpeted, no chll-J--------Pets. 335-7942. SHOULD YOU Make an employment change? NOW IS THE TIMEI Michigan Bell 1365 Cass Ave., Detroit Phone; 393-2815 ply in person, 300 Bowl, 100 S. Cass Lake Rd. Wanted IMan or Woman FOR MOTOR ROUTE IN * Birmingham Area at Once Apply to Mr. Stier PONTIAC PRESS CIRCULATION DEPT. Help Wanted M. or F. 8 WATERFORD SCHOOLS TAKING applications tor bus drlvsrs |8 HM Sylvartls 1 WE NEED HELP . X-RAY TECHNICIAN, PART TIME, Mr. Cssarlo, 451-9381._______ Sales H*lp, Male-Female 8-A 2 EXPERIENCED REAL ESTATE Salespeople to replaco 2 wl leaving the State's - taki current prospect flit — hott flea in tho area. Many |____ tlonal opportunities. Call EM 34703 —Hackett,Realty for Intorvlow. Help Wanted M. or F. 8 Help Wanted M. or F. PERSONNEL TECHNICIAN The County of Oakland has an Immediate opening lor a Personnel Technician to make position classification studies, prepare and administer merit system examinations, and carry out recruiting and budget analysis activity. one of tho Nation's most p THE OAKLAND COUNTY MERIT SYSTEM PERSONNEL DIVISION OAKLAND COUNTY BOARD OF AUDITORS T208 North Tolagroph Road Pontiac, Michigan — 48053 j . , Phond 338-4751 ' Dressmaking & Tailoring 17 WEED CUTTING, TOPSOIL, excavating, FE 4-0358. Art I scaping. Convalescent-Nursing ____21 NCIES SUNSET NURSING Painting and Decorating 23 k-1 HOUSE PAINTING. out. FE 8-4041. 4748857. PAINT. PAPERING Tupper. OR 3-7061 PAINTING AND DECORATING. Rates raatonabla. FE 2-6006._ painting-interi6r-e 2872. ” pond, for small I—« club. Write BILL JENNINGS, 37411 Grand River, Farmington, Michigan or call 476-5900.____ OR OTHER. FOR QUICK ACTION CALL NOW. HAGSTROM REALTOR, OR 4-0358 OR EVENINGS OR 3-6229. ____________ WANT TO SELL FAST? It's only logical If your house Is exposed to tho public, where f-‘" sands of people pass dally It sell faster. Why not display : ■------- “ill? COMPLETE ADVERTISING SERV. Ice tor your Business — Largo or small. Brochures, direct mall pieces, product nows, complete photographic service. 335-2434 or <25*' Aluminum Bldg. Items welcome. 325 per wk., with 875 dep.. Inquire at 273 Baldwin Ave. Pontiac, Call 338-4054._______ ROOMS, NEWLY DECORATED. 850 dep. Couple Only. 474-1581, be- ll OOMS, PRIVATE BATH. CAR-peted. 1 person only. 825 wk. 825 dep. FE 54097.___________ Downtown. 473-7101, 573-7904. 2 ROOM APARTMENT PRIVATE ntrance, bath, 820 weekly, (' osit required, vicinity of Aubr leights, Phone UL 2-3994 after 2 ROOMS, LOWER, PRIVATE, NO drinkers, rat. FE 2-9434. BIG BOY DRIVB-IN, DIXIE AT ar Lak»—Telegraph at Huron. JACKS DRIVE INN Cor. Baldwin B Montcalm FE 4-7882 Frank and Jeanette Slaybaugh A ALCOA — VINYL SIDING rest price* — Immediate lerv Marcell Construction MSS GUTTER CO. COMPLETE Excuvuting Basement Excavation—FE 8*2555 Rental Equipment BROWNIES HAROWARE FLOOR SANDERS—POLISHERS WALLPAPER STEAMERS RUG CLEANER-POWER SAWS 8S2 Joslyn ______PE 4-4105 RENT ROTdTILLERS. ROTOR rakes, power sod cutter, trench— backhoas, Jackson's, 332-9271, Asphalt Paving BACKHOE, LOADER WORK, bRY-"1, septic fltldi. Footing*. 402- ASPHALT DISCOUNT PM..._ lj5-Residential or commercial, no lob small or large. Summer dlt-- prices. FE 5-7459. SEPTIC FIELDS. DRY WELLS, TRENCHING, DIGGINGS. S. Lucas Wotortord Sowar Const. *” “ DRIVEWAY SPECIALISTS! FREE -stimates. FE 5-4980. _ _ "QUALITY SEAL COATING for estimates call 343-7034 Boots and Accessories BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER Your family boating headquarters Tour family Starcraft alufmnv Shell Lake and 1245 S. Woodward Ml 741133.__________ lA.P. flberglas. 2 ROOM, PRIVATE BATH, ■) if trance, FE 5-8444. 118 Ml. ■ Clemens. _ ___I 3 ROOMS AND BATH. NO CHIL- ' 734 W. Huron.______!BR|CK, BLOCK, STONE. CEMENT Brick & Block Service C, BLOCK, STONE, CEMEI-. [. fireplaces specialty. 335-4478 Building Modernization 3 ROOMS AND BATH. ROOMS AND BATH IN OXFORD, call after 4, UL 2-4342._ Pedy-Bullt Garage Co. OR 3-5419. COMPLETE REMODELING Service Quality work since 1945 Now Is the best time to plan or remodel — prices are lowest! Additions—recreation ropms •ttlc rooms - aluminum storm |4. NW's2gte.w Gdi*.fl M FE 2-lIH ROOMS AND BATH. if 208 N. Johnson. FOR GARSaGES* HOMt IMPKUve-ments yadditions, residential build-ing, call Drummond Construction Corp. 473-8573 3- AND 4-ROOM APARTMENT -‘"'ties turn., adults. 75 Clark. 3 ROOMS AND BATH, FIRST ^Gbr, adults. FE 4-0122. _________________________________ 3 ROOMS AND BATH. 830 PER QUALITY PAINTING, Q U A L I T Y| wk. 8100 dep. 'FE S-7932. price, years of oxp., free estimates. I .I- o.tu FE 2-4587. Buck's Pointing Serv-' Upholstering 24- AGED FURNITURE Reupholstered, better than new half the price. Big savings al on carpet and draperies. Call 31 1700 for FREE estimate In yo Wanted Children 1o Board 28 PRESCHOOLERS 5 LOVELY ROOMS, GARAGE, COU-ple or 1 child, S40 wk., utilities incl., 8100- dep. FE 2-3592 days. Wanted Household Goods 29 CASH FOR FURNITURE AND Appliances, 1 piece or houseful. Pear- son's. FE 4-7881.__________tfej1 WANTED QUEEN ANNE FURNI-ture, desk, chairs, carnal BK sofa, dining room, wicker furniture old-fashlon glass lamp shad*. Ml BACHELOR ONLY, PRIVATE EN-tranee bath and kitchen, 825 week-ly 8100 security deposit. 425-2415. Wanted Miscellaneous I. Bellow, Holly, <37-5)93 OFFICE FILES, DESKS, —. Chinese drafting tquipment, ate. OR 3-8767. " WHEEL TAPE RECORDER, reasonable. 682-3139. COPPER, BRASS; RADIATORS; starters and generators* C. Dlx- ton, OR 3-5849. Wanted to Rent CLARKSTON-WATERFORD AREA, S or 4-bedroom House, up to $175. by* Sept. 1* 335-6716. FAMILY OF I, < CHILDREN AGES, _. R 12, 14, 17, 19, desires 4-bedroom homo with fomlly roon possible garage In Wotortord schoi district or Rochester. Never ran Retired couple, small. ford-Clerkston erei or north qf, OR 4-3 WANTED GARAGE OR _STOR- WE HAVE QUALIFIED TENANTS with 'verified emptor™* •**<" checks and security rent) verified erri^loymem.^^^redll _____________________*Wa teT ._ and.Drayton Plaint araa. Sislock & Kent^lnc. 1309 Pontiac State Bank Bldo. --- - 338-9295 Share Living Quarters 33 SHARE HOME WITH MIDDLE-aged or retlrod lady with car. FE 2-3H3. ROOMS AND BATH, SMALL A-l Interior end exlerlc • welcome — no pets, 835 per rooms, rough or flrflshe mm., 8100 dep. inquire of 273 porches, recreation i Baldwin, call 330-4054.___________ bathrooms. State I------------- ROOMS AND BATH, PRIVATE Coll slier 5 p.m. <82-0440. small baby welcome, FElA r A T I O N S, NEW Bumping and Painting EARL'S. 4 EAST BLVD. S. COM-plete body repair, motor tunoup. brake work. All work guaranteed, Phone 338-7023, 330-3701. On corner f East Blvd. and Pike.. Carpentry ADULTS ONLY. 4 ROOMS AND bath, 830 a week. 391-3362. CARPENTRY AND PAINTING Cement Work Free Est. <34^094 or <82-1671 , per week. <3 Poplar, c EFFICIENCY APARTMENTS, 290 _ jnthly 850 si curity deposit. EM 34X1 <■____§ KITCHENETTE, SUITABLE FOR or ' 2 adults. 9470 Pontiac Lak Rd. <73-1040.____________________ Basements. UL 2-4213. 338- ACE ROOFING CO. FREE ESTI- mats* - 334-5492.___________ CLARKSTON ROOFING CO. Fencing Ice. CUTLER CONTRACTING Licensed-Bonded FE 54844 FENCES—FENCES—FENCES Immediate Installation Spltzer Fane* Co., FE 8-4544 PONTIAC FENCE CO. 5932 Dixie Hwy.________<28-1040 QUALITY ROWING. NEW AND RE-root. Bondsd material. Fret astl-mates. Reasonable. <82-7514. Floor Sanding CAR I Landscaping -1 COMPLETE LANDSCAPING specializing In ftrokwcongm /altmar~ EXPERT SODDING, BEDS FILL, SAND AND GRAVEL tiAUI-ing. Also finish grading. FE MERION BLUE SOD. PICK UP OR Lawn Sprinkling k-l NEW, REROOF — REPAIRS -Coj1 Jack. Sava the lack. 3384115. BLACK DIRT, FILL, TOP Butldeilng — Backhoa Reas, 63*6894, <8»l<71 CHOICE BLACK blfct FARM TOP. soil. Delivered. FE 44588. PROCESSED GRAVEL, ANALYZED Week dirt and_top soil. Fill. Sand, Bulldozing, FE 54926,_____________ Swimming Pools Clarkston, MA 5-2476 Tran Trimming Service A-1 TREE TRIMMING BY BBL Free estimate. FE 54449, <744510. ABLE TREE SERVICE, TRIM--Ing and removal, free estimates, 6-1872. mates. <74-1281 or 726-2695. DALBY & SONS" STUMP, TREE, REMOVAL FE 5-3005 Firewood FE 5-3025 MICHIGAN SPRAYING SERVICE. and Insect control. Land-id tree removal. 391-1365, 4686 Dixie Hwy. OR ■ TREE TRIMMING AND REMOV-al. Reatonabl*. 391-1666. NEW RAILROAD TIES. ROUGH sawn hardwood. Boat, dOck lumber. 626-7653. _________________ Glass service, » Moving and Storage SMITH MOVING AND STORAGE. 10 S. Jessie. FE 44864. SNYDER BROTHER! LIGHT HAULING, TRUCKING A moving. Limited. FE 54»9. LIGHT HAULING, BASEMENTS, garagi cleaned. 674»1242« LIGHT MOVING>HAULING Trucking MOVING* Al LIGHT MOVING* TRAKH hau»€d reasonable. FE 4-1353. HAULING AND RUBBISH. NAMI vour price. Any time. FE 0-0095. rates. FE 6-1266 or1 FE 24648. Light hauling, basements, garages clean. OR >4417. 6234847. LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING, rubbish, fill dirt, grading and grav-al and front-end loading. FE 2-0603 Painting and Decorating A-1 PAINTING AND PAPER HANGING LIVING ROOM NOT FURNISHED, MOBILE HOME, ADULTS ONLY, 837.50 wk. FE 5-9902.___________ WAITING FOR THAT, NEW HOME? Kitchenette cottage*, sleep 4. Sandy beach. Pontiac Like Motel 8230 Highland Rd. Cement and Block Work Guinn's Construction Co. FE 4-7477________- Eves. FE 5-9122 LICENSED SIDEWALK BUILDER, estimates. UL 2-1398 CHARLES DECORATING. HtT-mates. 3324971, 9-3 p.m. PATIOS, DRIVES, GARAGE SLABS, 40 cents sq. ft. FE 4-2874, days. | IpiTismagg, TnnoHng| EshTar^ ALTERATIONS ALL TYPES, KNIT Poiitlacr With pari * 1 " Utt UNFURNISHED _________________— .....-rated. NojDRESSMAKIN G AND AUTERA- 1 tlons. FE 4-8139. Track Rental Trucks to Rent WTon Pickups lVS-Ton Stake TRUCKS - TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT Dump Trucks — Seml-Trsllers Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. <25 S. WOODWARD FE 4-0461 FE 4-1441 Open Dally Including Sunday -A PAINTING RESIDENTIAL, COMMERCIAL CUSTOM WORK, GUARANTEED. FE 24954 or 6514192. PAINTING,' papering, « cleaning, paper removal. Sanduwy. FE 44548. Piano Tuning PIANO tuning and repairing Oecar Schmidt Walls guaranteed. Insured. FE 2-1631. JANITORIAL SERViCES-WINDOW Plastering Service j Wall Drilling, children or pete, please. FE 2-1688.1 tlons. FE 44139. _____,---------------------- 2-BEDROOM. NEW. NEAR MALL DRESSMAKING 8, ALTERATIONS PLASTERING. FREE ESTIMATES. 2" WELL °^LItW, WELL RE-Carpeted. Appliances. AH- _ano| *73-1463. Eves. FE 2-7944. I D. Meyers, 3634595. I pair and pump service. UL *1831. sound conditioned, heated. Rec. room. Adulte No pets. From 8135. FE 5-8565.’_______________________ : ™ BEDROOM HEAt FURNISHED,] || 2 BEDROOM APARTMENT. HEATI furnished. 8100 mo. Near Water- tfflsUKSgg ford Drive In. Mr. Elwood. Call! -mam-M after 6. Mr. Elwood, 682-3373. If ....... 682-2410.________WmiWm 2-BEDROOM, PONTIAC NORTH- 2'ROOMS, BATHi KITCHENETTE, adult couple, no pets, dap., 429 N. Paddock at K-Msrt. JP^IO THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1967 fcg^ Hovmi, Unfurnished 40 3 BEDROOI^WBAfw*, tAfc-peted living Mid dining roams, completed basement, bur Northern end Pontiac Motors. Sec. do-poslt roqulrod. FE 4-3988. ClBaH 1 BEDRM. HOME. C6uBLt FE j'Sl’O. °n|y. **' B*n*dlct Union lake privileges - 3- >»«t Lola Ciwmn COTTAGE ON LAKE LEELANAU. , Everything bet, sn-oyfr furnish,?, In- UKE-Fll&Nt CoVTAG IS" Northern Michigan — FE 5-1325 attar 5 aid. I'VA^-g-TKT 2-BEDROOMS. 101 RAYBURN ST. KENNETH G. HEMPSTEAD. drtSterVw Nor-1 FE 4-8284-m^ZASETH LK. RD. $100 DOWN A sharp 2-bedroom bungalow with full basement and lanced In yard. North Pontiac araa. ready tar t1--newlyweds, priced right tor qul aale. Don't welt, call YORK $11,190 BRAND NEW. 3-badrm., ranch, OR your lot, full basament fully INSULATED, family kitchen.' N-money down. MODEL. YOUNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTBR-BILT Russell Young, 334-300 53Va W. Hufon St. 2432 MlDDLEBELT ROAD — I bedroom brick with large living room, ceramic tile counter, ample bullt-ins, full bath with ceramic tile, full basement, 1 car garage, special feature Is gla— In sun room with 330 square of area. Lot 1s 150x80. This h_ is in estate. Selling pries Is 323,-500. Under FHA mortgage O- *“ 000 cash. trance, man. LIGHT HOUSEKEEPING I PROFESSION/ ■ lady. Semlno ROOM FOR REFINED MATURE ‘SLEEPING ROOM, NO DRINKERS Room With Bowd CLEAN, QUIET. TV? .SHOWER. bath. Southern cooking. FE 3-3333. feLDlRlY MAN IN CLEAN COUN- try home. 6354350.___________ ROOM, BOARD A^D LAUNDRY, day worker. 332-7430. Ront Offlco Srqco ATTENTION POCTORS A DENTIST Establish your office In this modern msdlcal building near Pontiac General Hospital. Large or small suits how available. Call Rav O'Nall for .complete details. OR *•““ LARGE OR SMALL AIR CONDI-11toned — Svlvan Center. : 673*348$. OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT AtNT'pPPICES—*35 AND UP. 4540 • Dixie Hwy. OR S-1155. kOCHistER? QUALITY OFFICE t suttee with parking, downtown. RtEt Htimu PfRErty 47-A 3-CAR OARAGE, SUITABLE STOR-ago, or TV rMBk^rfr Fl Awn attar Ti 55,000 BO. FT. INDUSTRIAL BLDG. 1 u i l d i*n o Excellent for bumping and painting garagt. Or , warehousing. 31 N. Paddock. Call FE 2-0334.________________________ FOR LEASE CORNER BLDG. 3.000 - “ Larne perklna lot. FE 2-3213 so- ft. Large parking lot. FE Nor LEASE—2100 square^ .jp to appreciate. _____________>■ 051-3323. I . OR 4 beDroom Home's, newly decorated. *450 move, you In. Art Daniels. S1000 Ford, KE 7-7533; KE 7-7230._________ 2-BEDROOM, 3 MILES N.W. t Clarkston, -------'—“ j *' NEW HOUSES, WATERFORD AMONG THE TREES Nestles this spacious 3-bedrooi.. homO, with 10(7x200' lot, flroplocs, full basement, large living and dining room, lake privileges. Zoned C-l. Shown by appointment. The Rolfe H. Smith Co. Realtors 244 S. TELEGRAPH FE 3-7848________EVES. 331-3242 AT ROCHESTER QUICK POSSESSION BEFORE SCHOOL STARTS 3-BEDROOM BRICK - large kitchen, basement, city eonvf-1-- fenced yard, 313,500, terms. shopping, 2-car garage. 323,300, 113 W. University________051-8141 AUBURN HEIGHTS—3-BEDRI brick, IV* ceramic bath, h— heat, approx. 1 acre S29,5w. 1 by app't. UL 2-2326 before 0. Beauty Rite Homes Trade your used home on a new Beauty-Rite Home from 315,550 Buy direct from Beauty-Rite and Save" 3533 Pontiac Lake Rd. 073-1717 ____073-3701 BEAUTIFUL NEW CAPE COD Brown five 1 _________ exterior. Very well cared for with large living room, 20' kitchen, •family room with fireplace, cerpetlng, full basement, gas heat, patio. Full price: 322,500. Les Brown, Realtor 503 Elizabeth Lake Rd. (Across from the /Mall) FE 2-4310 or FE 44504 BY OWNER: 2 BEDROOM RANCH. 7 lots off N. Roilyn, 3330 Otto. BY OWNER: REAL SHARPI 2-BED-room home. New garage IBi mlnum siding on West ! 7491, a—- *---- spilt _____________J. 10 per cent down. OR 3-0100. By builder. i-BEDROOM HOUSfe IN WATS*-ford araa. Near M53 shopping can-r ter. Atteched garage. Large fenced - lot. Smell down payment and take over payments or land contract. • 073-3030. ■PR K near General ; Hospital, 31300 and take over FHA mortgage. Cell Charles Mills, 332-7253 or MY 2-3321. Gaylord Real 3 Bedrooms LOW DOWN PAYMENT NO MORTGAGE COSTS MODEL OPEN 573 COLORADO 1:30 to S pM. — 0 d»y weak WESTOWN REALTY FR 3-2703 days After 7:Sl o-m. — LI 2-4077 BY OWNER - 7 ROOM BRICK ranch, 2 baths, V* acre. Bloomfield Hills schools, fully carpeted. 341,500. Aft, 5:30 or Set. 020-3074. BY OWNER* 2 BEDROOM HOUSE. Qullet Rochester street, 015,000. 335-4513. 3 MODELS OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAY Drive ou Lake Rd. „ — . behind the Dan A FE 5-3437 OAN MATTINGLY ROOMS AND BATH. SJ,F». ti«v-Ina state. Bv owner. FE 4-77M. 4-ROOM BUNGALOW OH heat, Mg Uvlngrreonr porch. Some furniture.; Perry $1500 ~ 441 REAL ESTATE * ACRES — Cutest 3 separate for horssa7"<5>rtier Elizabeth Lake vacant 0 acres. S NEW LISTING. 1844 Dixie Hwy. ,500 with *10,-t. Adjoining THIS IS A BY OWNER 3-BEDR06M BRICK, Formal dining area, 2 baths, walnut paneled fbmlly -room with matching walnut bar — lane I 2V* car attached garage. A garage opener. 524,700, $5,000 Before 9 a.m. or after 9 p.m. 474-1581. c. Akers. Consider garage. Unflnls.„mMH^.,~..., walk-out basement. Excellent. Elizabeth Lk. Rd. location. Zoned ROI. $13,900. Can assume land contract. BY OWNER — PONTIAC NORTH side — 3 bedrooms, IV* baths, full basement, 1 Wear garage. Good Investment. Owner, leaving city. Call eves. 1:00 till 7 n.m. FF 4-9204, BY OWNER, GOLF MANOR CO- ‘“l*‘ ---------n, IV* baths, fin- large *—------- peted. Water, te occupancy. 338-4180. CASUAL ELEGANCE Is the keynote of this long, low and lovely ranch featuring 2V* baths, paneled family room with fireplace, large country kitchen and dining space, built-in stove, oven hood end laundry off kitchen on 1st floor. Cer---*-•* living room and hall, all ___, _i included. Insulated glen, marble sills, wet plaster, special Insulation, full basement, healed swear garage. 115' Idt on high hill with —i dollar view, 3Gday occupan-. -Iced under duplication cost, at 333450. Only 8 months old. Call for appointment. CRESCENT LAKE - HEAT CLEAN 3 bedroom ranch. 2W car garage. Fenced lot. Lake privileges. $14,503. Nix, Realtor. 651-0221, 352-537' SqIb Hows COUNTRY home with LAKE PRIVILEGES jrlous | bedroom ranch with ___l out basement. Spacious family room, stone fireplace: 2 car attached serags—newly developed area — large comer lot. It Itai everything. HOWELL Town & Country, Inc. Highland Branch Office PHONE; 313-685-1585 ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES. 3-1 bedroom, garage, fenced In yard. By owner. 53M33I attar 4 p.m. FIRST in valuJk 1 RENTING $78 Mo. $10 Deposit WITH APPLICATION 3-BEDROOM HOME Das heat WE DINING AREA WIDOWS OR DIVORCEES. PEOPLE WITH CREDIT PROB; OPEN DAILY AND SAT. AND SUN. OR COME TO 230 KENNETT NEAR BALDWIN REAL VALUE REALTY For Immediate Action Call FE 5-3676 626-9575 icrete patio. Living room, room, hall, 2 bedrooms and rpetad. Curtains and drapes I. Cupboard end storage Land Contract terms aval GAYLORD OAKLAND UNIVERSITY AREA. 5 ----- pull down sle1- I...jhed etHe for 4 ,______ 2 car heated garage. *0x250, blacktop street. Call todi way to i pension. 2 (0x250, bUMH ------------ MY 2-2821, FE S-9433. NEAT 2 BEDROOM HOME on 60x-340 lot, fruit trees and berries. Gas heat, 1W car garage. GAYLORD INC. 2 W. Flint St., Lake Orion MY 2-2821 FE 1-3433 HANDYMAN SPECIAL ■cant, 2 bedroom ranch, full basement, doubts lot, make an offer ----------------1,474-1433. HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty PLEASANT LK. PRIVILEGES Outstanding brick ranch, 3 bedrooms with 1W baths, separate Sale Haras IRWIN WEST SUBURBAN Ceraetsd living ri Full basement, ' r to patio In the ■ LAKE FRONT Situated on williams Leke. Large 3 bedroom bur—'— ’ places. Carpet) h > fIre- ling, Full ir garage. Might t ilce 2 bedroom name. GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE Lauinger Handyman's Special 3 bedroom home on 3 acres of ground. Home needs some finishing. Look this overt Only 314,530 Maceday Lake Privileges 2 blocks from beach. A nict horn on larga tot. $12,500. Terms. LAZENBY - r -. -_. ...... ..... very attractive 3 bedroom rancher. Extra large carpeted living room, separate dining eret, modern kitchen with bullt-ln hood, full 2V* car attached patio, sitt scaped eo. tus Lake. Only $21,900. R0YCE LAZENBY, Realtor Open Dally from 9 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Sunda«*- Id - m 4424 W, Walton Beautiful enclosed 16x22 •leely land-looking Lo- OR 4-0301 Lot Owners Rustic Model Unusual & California style homes UNIQUE-EXCITIVE-COMPLETE Lake & Other Lots Available $14,500 to $45,000 TIMBERLINE HOMES 5230 While Lake Road Clerksten 861-7459 MACEDAY LAKE LAND CONTRACT Attractive 2 bedroom home, directly across from a beautiful beach. 2W lots. Prlco 011,300. Call OR 3-3364. If no answer OA 8-1440. MILFORD. IMMEDIATE OCCUPAN-cy. 3;bedroom brick. Garage, *17,- COMMERCE LK. PRIVILEGES Lovely 3 bedroom bi-lovcl, mai extras, gas heat, 3 cor garage. 103x150’ fenced yard. Reduced •- porch. Reduced to 311.008, lam contract. Everett Cummings, Realtor 2503 UNION LAKE ROAD EM 3-3203______________ 343-7181 HAYDEN DRAYTON AREA, 3 bedroom ______ home with aluminum siding, recently decorated and carpeted, $1, NEAR OXBOW LAKE, 4 split-level home with siding, 2 b $20,900. basement, garage, WATER FRONT, nearly J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor \ 3-4604 10735 Highland Rd. Va Mile west of Oxbow HIITER NEAR WATERFORD HIGH — fireplace, attached garage, 3 lots. $13,900, terms. UNION LAKE - excellent 3 bed-■j|gr~rt and bath, part basament, heat, alum, siding. $13,250, On your lot. To sea the model call B. C. HIITER, REALTOR, 3792 Eliz. Lake Rd. FE 241179, See IN ROCHESTER MSP -hit lovely 3 bedroom and den trileyel with 2Vi-hour garage. City water and sewer. Near North Hill Shopping. Has new carpeting and fenced yard. Priced for quick aale at $24,900. SHEPARD REAL ESTATE ________ 451-7175 ROOM MODERN BUNGALW now rented tor S125 month. 40'x26 cement block bldg. Ideal tor car repair—100 ft. commercial on Orchard Lake Ave. Terms. WRIGHT REALTY 382 Oakland FE 2-3141 10% DOWN NEW HOMES S-BEDROOM TRILEVEL, finish family room, IVi-car garage. *1 480 plus lot. BrBEDROOM RANCH with full base-maid, Bear garage, r1— tag, 115,738 plus tat. 3-BEDROOM BRICK TRILEVEL, 2-cnr garage dining area. Crestbrook MODEL ..0?EN| DAILY 12-8 3 bedroom, family room and 2 car garage priced at only *15,-“ -lr“ lot. Located In new sub wit straits, curb, gutter, ■ s.——— and aclty water. Drive out M59 to Crescent Lake Road turn right to Crestbrook street end model. GIROUX REAL ESTATE 4511 Highland Road (M53I 673-7537 <* J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor . Vfc mile west of Oxbow Lake 143-44114 10735 Highland Rd. (M59) «BllrfiPTBL NEAR (SAYLORO. I Trade for hows, wno ra car, truck or caah down. 334-2154, 7 to t jjm. 'fStaiillL' 'ITRCTT, 4 ROOM house, on 58 x 1«r Wt, new rented W&m monthly, RV owner, *4, 330. 3»-5254. j bedroom home. Bam and SW I contract, DRAYTON AREA Idaal location for the Individual who wonts ta. move out of the city and acquire some “‘ap land. Includes a modern home with fireplace, full ment, 2-tar attached garage, ultra storage building, lake pr'' leges on Williams Lakt. I sal) as one parcel or divide. Information call OR 4-0334, MILFORD AREA Immediate possession eon .. yours with' this modem 3-bed-room brick ranch. Includes ear peted living room, full bosemel. recreation room, gas heat, city sewer and water. FuH’price only *16,500. term* to suit. Coll OR 4-0304. J. A. TAYLOR, AGENCY, Inc. im Highland Rd. (M53) OR 44306 till JOSLYN AVE. Evas. EM 3-7*44, EM 34337 *■ IRWIN SOUTH BOULEVARD Good Income possibilities I.. rooming and boarding home. I large 'moms with lVi baths, forced air gas hast, located to the plants. Owner will on land contract. LOON LAKE FRONT eat for the person that 1_ enloy the fruits of lake living i have an income In addition. MIXED AREA $55.00 month on land contract. HARVEY STREET 3 BEDROOMS, decorated. Carpeted Hying gas heat, garage. Only five years old. Just (12,500 with S400 J — on FHA. EVA HOWARD FE 2-6412 Miller Realty, 670 W. Huron SqUHbmm ' 49 RHODES 15 ACRES, Indlanwood, wood.T_ scanlc, extra nice 4-room homo, largo living room with — plsca, 2-car garage, « Ideal for th* outdoor ralox with Ms family. Call too for detail*. A. J. RHODES, REALTOR FE 13-2304 253 W. Walton FE 54712 MULTifLE LISTING BERvICE ' rochestIer — 7 ROOM.'6am-■ mank 117438. — --- 352-5375. ROCHESTER AREA - 5 ACkil, 3 bedrooms, large family room, * baths, modem bom. Immedli occupancy. Priced for quick sa 838,000. Owner. UL 2-3375. ROSS lav* at Today's Lower Prlco* WATKINS HILLS Unique Trl-level, studio callings, lta baths, walkout tamlly room, split-rock ftraplace, 3 upstairs * J oms, Mr.-Mrs. closets. Total ____$26,300. 33,780 down plus closing costs. Loren* at Tamest. Call 6234578 dally 14 p.m. LAKELAND ESTATES LAKE RANCH Ready by Sept. 1st. Buy now and compltte to taste. 740 ft. walkout family room, formal dining room, fully carpeted. Potential S bedrooms, 2Vk baths. 333,330. 33,400 down plus closing costs. CARPETED 4-BEDROOM COLONIAL ■dy by Sept 15th. 2W bath, tour bedrooms, full basement, war- __family room, fireplace. Over 2,000 ft. living area. 2M ci — $34,900. 33,500 down and closing costs. LAKELAND ESTATES ___ course, Iannis court, 1-10 mil* fishing, boating, city conveniences. Hwy. from 4.10 mu' N> ^ Open Dally I. Sunday 14 p. ROYER Richard S. Royer, Realtor TIRED OF LOOKING? WELL STOP Here's th* on* you've been wall- MODEL 315.300. Location 5 blocks north .. Walton Blvd. east off Sashabaw on Pomeroy Street. OPEN Mon. Thurs. Frl. 4-1 Sat. and Sun. 1-5 PRESTON Blit Homes and Realty OR 3-8811_______ NEAR NORTHERN HIGH Immaculate 3-bedroom home on completely fenced lot. Has new carpetings paneled walls, all aluminum family room, gas heat, paved drive. $16,700 with terms. Will Gl. man Lake acros paved drive, beautifully warden Realty 3434 W. Huron, Pontiac 333-7157 ! If no answer call 335-1190 NEW 3-BEDROOM, ltt BATH, lake privileges, by Mtia — Denwood, Crescent Lake. NEW HOMES FOR EVERYONE NEWLYWEDS: Start your financial security early ... - hom* of your own where every vment y— V In mr Mot ... ____________ most apartment rentals. /Models (tart BETTER HURRY R00MY-Y0U BET I If a bl-level fits your need, check out this 3 bedroom, newly carpeted, dining ell, living room and hallway, with finished family room. The exterior features all—' num siding, sodded lawn < mature shrubs, and Cyclone ft_ back yard. Wt car garage makes this a real bargain. DON'T WAIT (tree, sacrifice. UL Val-U-Way LAND CONTRACT Central Ave. off S. Blid. i a eamplSwy j IrtiWMnSWlfii R. J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 345 Oakland Ave, Open ‘ VON Pioneer Highlands Juet for you —'4 r—■— aided bungalow. 2 b both, Maactop sires.. ---- ,___ full b a s • m t n t, carpeting and drapis. Just $12,900. Lorraine Manor Immediate poaseaalon. Beautiful brick rancher with 3 bedrooms. Utility room plus mud room. Kitchen and broaklait nook. Formica VON REALTY GEORGE VONDERHARR, n the Mall MLS Room 110 452-5502 If buey — g|g^ V00RHEES RD. Thl* la a sharp col. hom* ___ . I isemant. Living room ta knotty HI with a hearth fireplace. Yr--1 Is all fenced In for the klddlaa YORK 47)3 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains B BUY WE TRADE R 44343__OR 4-0343 bullt-ins, family HHRPMI room, attached 2V5 car garagt h water heat, 317.900. 3944247. Waterford NEAR DRAYTON SHOPPING CENTER Retiring? Easy care with alum, siding, 2 bedrooms, carpeted living and dining room, lull basement, extension attic, double garage, extras included. Immaculate. On 3 lots. 311200. SERVICE IS OUR BUSINESS WATERFORD REALTY M0 Dixie Hwy. <73-1273 .*•—~lp Listing “- 49 5«lt Nonas KENT, SEMINOLE HILLS —Jot 130 X 153 CHOICE LPT 30 x dry with shade ti 3503 down. NICB LOT with * Floyd Kant, Inc., Rtaltor 2300 Dixie Hwy. ot Telegraph E 24133 or FE 2-7342 KINZLER COUNTRY LIVING 2 year-old ledgestane and Irel deluxe home. Large JlvtaO rot and family room each.with cut stone fireplace, dream kttcher evergreens ai — moving to NEW RANCH HOMES attached**22*x22' "garage- *6 da ful rooms with gleaming oak I - kitchen with built-in oven, i and hood. lVi baths, walk-out ment for recreation. Gos heat, taxes. Also t few choice 317x200’ scenic lots ot only $1,650 on wh“ we could build your ranch or tontal. HOUSE MOVERS!! 7 room ita story aluminum ho In excellent condition. All new c peting. Only $3500 cash for f **J0HN KINZLER, Realtor 5219 Dixie Hwy. _________ 4234335 ARRO TED McCULLOUGH, Realtor WE BUILD - WE TRADE GILES REDUCED PRICE ttoragw Are*, * and sink In b»s« linear garage, k take privileges, one, 313,950. $3,500 DOWN 2-unlt Income wltt ges heat, first wwf-^. with fireplace. Garage — Coll to too. FEATHERST0NE GARDENS 5-room ranch, 4 years old, targe kitchen with bullt-ins, full bMJ-ment, gas h**t. All for $13,200. Claude McGruder Realtor —Itiple Listing Service - Ope/i 9-9 221 Baldwin Ave. FE 5-6176 MILLER AARON BAUGHEY REALTOR WEST SUBURBAN BRICK Ranch. Carpeted living room with l"“*lu brick fireplace, ceramic bi - — -*j master bedroom- 12xi ■ kitchen and eotlrw. illt-ln oven, range and retrig-Full finished bamt. wit ‘if ly bar. Largi A (Ina proper *28,900. Terms WEST SUBURBAN. Aluminum ttd ed home In excellent condition. Re finished floors, new kitchen with tur ■■ • • ailing. 2 bedrooms with 3rd m ™,.emanT.. gas hoot, largo glmsoc porch. 1W cor garage. Just ,314,950 with easy (arms. FT. LOT NORTH aid* Solo Houses Frushour 4-BEDROOM This unusual eotantat has * new appealing floor ptan^taaturliwo full dining room, PM* a dlnotta off th* kltchah. Lovfly tamlly room with flroptare. ft* botha. Lauitary facilities on the main floor. Full basament and a 2 car garage. There Is take privileges and a W*U restricted area. 134,330. Your proe-ent homo could serve at down payment. LARGE FAMILY Older 4-bedroom home, ipaclous living and dining roofiL full base-ment, gas heat, new alum. »Wtog, situated on a large lot. 314,700 — 3500 down on FHA tarme. MODEL HOME SCB IT TODAY! Featuring 3- SS2--- „„ built-in 3 gills, 6' to, plenty HMPHl your rec-aft ached 2 cor garage, *io,/ay plus tot. US* our guaranteed tales program on your present home. JACK FRUSHOUR, Realtor 5730 Williams Lake Rd. MLS 674-2245 ANNETT a privileges. gtassyd porch. Full b s of closet s DOWN buys this 7 rooms HP family hom*. Largs re___________I full bsmt., screened porch, gas hast, this Mat. 2 car garage. $12,300 full price. Ca|| Now| paved street. 315,000, FHA terms. NEW CUSTOM BUILT QUAD-LEVEL, 3 largo bedrooms, csrsmlc bath with double sink and vanity, half bath oft mud room, family room with flraptact and }lld-ing glass doors. Space tor 4th bedroom or hobby room, basement, gas boat, attached 21* car garage. Loads ot extras. $pr-'~ -lot In excellent location. STOUTS Best Buys Today WE WILL TRADE REALTORS 28 E. Huron St. Office Open Evenings A Sunday 14 338-0466 WATKINS LAKE PRIVILEGES, 3.1 MLS ------- ranch, IV* baths, full, garage, kitchen! OPEN DAILY 9-' h bullt-ins. OR 34051, SPECIAL $100 DOWN On this all alum, home, full bas ment, targe kitchen. Dining roor New fumece, paneling In llvii ropm. IV* car garage. Call today. YORK STRUBLE Wideman MILFORD TRI-LEVEL FHA TERMS Featuring tv* baths, targe panele. recreation room, specious kitchen with plenty ol cupboards, gar-' - dining closets, patio. Barbecue, I fully landscaped lot. C fenced, paved street and Only 817,910. E-Z terms MEDIATE POSSESSION. PONTIAC KNOLLS RANCH HOME featuring 3-be_ — tile bath, vestibule entran and closet, kitchen' with dining araa. FuH basement, well landscaped lot. 814,750, FHA TERMS. ^ 0. WIDEMAN, REALTOR 412 W. HURON ST. 3344824 Evos. Call 332-4430 n brick rancher, carpeted j 5354 S. Main WILLIAMS LAKE FRONT The first time offered. 2-story Inr maculate homey living room fireplace, kitchen, paneled den, enclosed porch, and bath down; 2 Clarkston Real Estate HALL CLARKSTON SCHOOL AREA — year old 3-bedroom ranch wil attached 2Vt car garage, full walkout basement with 6 ft. glass sliding door, larga living — with bay window, bullt-ln and rang* In kitchen, 110x300 ft. lot. Total pri Lot c ‘ J — -------- e, (21,950. ____ ______sided 2-bedroom ranch with 2Vi car attached garage, — peting and drapes to living stay. Comi id drapes In living nplttaly bullt-ln kl gleaming tiled bath, lares si------ tot with anchor tanclng. This homo 50 DOWN TO EX-GI _____|_____ _ xcept kitchen and dir ing room, full basement with plenty of space for recreation room, 2-car garage, paved drive, rear yard scaped—Owner r ring and going to North to llvo. Priced for quick i*le at (17,700, terms. Call for ippolntment. low as $14,350. MIDDLE AGE: Children grown up? Married? Off to “Allege? Attractive 2* — «■—*------- inch, l< EXECUTIVE: n built—Your plans or ours— MM home expertly planned, designed.and built to your specifica- O'NEIL REALTY, INC. Office Open dally 9 to 9 p.m. Sunday 1 to 4 p.m. DR 4-2222 200 ft. of frontage. Call f: today. BUYING OR SELLING CALL JOHN K. IRWIN & SONS REALTORS 313 W. Huron SL Sine* 1925 FE 5-9444 Attar 3 pm. call FE S4044 IVAN W. SCHRAM QUICK POSSESSION WALK TO NORTHERN HIGH OR PONTIAC MOTOR FROM THIS CUSTQM-BUILT 3-BEDROOM HOME. LARGE .LIVING AND DINING RMS., MASTER BEDROOM. FULL BATH AND BIG KITCHEN v WITH BREAKFAST SPACE DOWN, 2 SPACIOUS BEDROOMS AND FULL BATH UP. FULL BMEMENT, GAS FURNACE, OARACe. FENCED YARD FOR ADDED LUXURY LIVING- FHA APPROVED. CALL FOR APPOINTMENT. J OPEN EVES. AND SUNS. List With SCHRAM And Call Tha Van roam, gas heat, large jot, on black- NO MONEY DOWN VETS — ACT NOWI Be aHM owner. W* have several homes available to qualified veterans that requires no €--------‘ .. 2 Bedroom 2. S Bedroom 3.4 E Call. I .. $10,500 . *10,500 . $9,950 a tor detail* at'O'Neil Realty y. OR 4-2222. NORTH SIDE _______t, large carpeted living room with paneled wall*, full dining room, basement, gas heat, paved street Good location. Only 83450 with 81450 down on lend contract. TOM r v REAGAN ' REAL ESTATE 251 N. Opdyke ' j PRALL ST. x>ms and bath, full b beat, 812,800, 82,500 d< in 24' living room wt... ____________ barbecue, on reverse side of fireplace, 1 car garage adta '---------- MILO STRUBLE MLS FE 14325 Attar 8 p.m.____________FE 5-7441 is lust th* right size. Quiet friendly neighborhood ntar Lotus Lake. Close to grade school, I Vi cr garage, targe utility. $18,250. RELAX AND STAY AWHILE Is the feeling you will hava whi you gaze around this inviting bedroom ranch — soft springy ca peting In living room, easy del til* floors, vinyl siding, vanity bath, 2 car garage, larga lot I of Drayton. $17,500. SYLVAN LAKE VILLAGE 3-b*drot..., trl level, 2V* Sam Warwick I baths. Insulated Alumavue windows, real plaster, all city services, taka privileges. Beautiful wooded lot. Ready about Spot. IS. 1320 Stratford. Price: 131,400. Open Sunday, 2 ta 5. Show anytime. 4(2-2320. WHI build to suit. living. Neat 2-bedroom ________ _____ slbto) at tha outskirts at Ortonvllle Complete with ba--------1 -------- and targe ramlly i place.’ Home In tx and available tor cupancy. $18,:—' C. PAN*"' 43 S. Ml 5, 627-2815________________Call Collect *whTfS£ Z. PANGUS, INC. REALTORS TRADE TRADE WILL BUILD ', 'alum, elding, ------ .......s and screens, i tills, adding glass door, ,000 sq. ft. of living area, xiey down on your tot, S1,-«n on our let, or yoiir equl- C. SCHUETT ITcaH|FE 3-7088 MAS FAIRGROVE AVE. Outstanding 6-room home, formal dining room, 2 complete baths, large living room with natural Mace, gas heqt, 2-car geragl /Larne fenced tat. Widow Will jlvt TUCKER REALTY CO. B03 Pontiac State Bank 334-H45 TYRONE HILLS Golf Clup adlacent to M acres, wooded, soma pines, | bedroom OMOML 857,500. CAR RIG AN QUALITY^ HOMES, INC., 2324322 V/WANT 3-BfcDhoOM OFP BALD-““ ------------. FHA., 235-3575. WILLIAMS LAKE troom, aluminum siding, per ment, oil heat, carpeted llv WITH PLEASURE The pleasant atmosphere ot tv burban living. Home complet with 2 bedrooms (third posslblel extra tares family room with fin C. PANGUS INC., Realtors OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 630 M15 Ortonvlll CALL COLLECT NA 7-2815 WYMAN LEWIS REALTY --------- 330025 KAMPSEN "IT'S TRADING TIME" INDIAN VILLAGE Lovely' two story hems In ■ cellertt area close to tha Pont).. Mall. Three bedrooms. Carpeted living room with' fireplace. Car peted formal dining room. Base ment — gas heat. Garage. This Is a very clean home. Offer—* et $15,950. 250'LAKE FRONTAGE on Lotus Laka. Six room bl-level home featuring walkout basament to large patio overlooking the leke. Two natural fireplace*. Prated living room. Price to L. dude draperies, carpeting, washer and dryer. Immediate por session. Asking *32,000. Terms. G.I. ZERO DOWN Four bedroom home located o the wait tide. IV* baths, car peted living room. Enclosed parch. Two' tots. Lpcnatadr Mtata star School district, 3 Kerr, Lao Kampttn, Hilda Slaw- MLS FE 44321 FE 5-8183 EAST SUBURBAN Two bedrooms ad on ana floor, oil heat, tile bath, large ktt, lust decorated. Only 810,500 with terme. It's vacant. I, gas haat, completely dec-id Inside and out. Priced te at *3,503 with term*. Va- wall carpeting. Lake 1 By Appointment Eves. Call Mr. Catted, PE 2-7273 Nicholie & Hargdr Co. W. Huron FE S4I33 DAILY BRICK RANCH Milford — custom home — car peted — 2V* baths — lower levs finished Including 2 car garage-balcony — built-ins including dist washer — *25,900 — 10 per ear down. Ideal home for large tarn "V- VETERANS Look — *11.200 — 8500 move* ye In. Were you In service? Charmln 5 rooms — hoi water |Mto heat —IV* car garage — z parks on Brendel Lake — your boat —1 tor swimming. 4 BEDROOMS Veterans — Just small cflHP costs move you In this large house — targe parcel el lead price Includes: 2 baths — -... room —Yes, a real family homel ROCHESTER •O' ranch on IV* acres — Lots of trees — 16x10 ft. dining room —offset living room—3 '-- rooms — builtins — heat — oversized 2 car garage-near Bloomer Park off John R. and near Oakland University. $29, 500. 12 per cant down. CLARK > down payment la Gl: Just mortgage costs, lak* privileges on Upper Strait* Lake 2-bedrooms and dan or ^bedrooms, bungalow In Waded Lake High School district. Large kitchen. Tv* baths, part. Basement plus utility ri oak floors, enclosed ceri beautiful tot, on paved road, cant $13,950 or less tor cash. Will OWNER LEAVING STATE: 9 year old 2-bedroom city ranch with full partitioned basement end -oom tor 3rd bedroom. Newly r tan tor each. SELL OR TRADE:'CLOSE IN: -room bungalow with full baee-ment, carpeted living roc” • targe bedrooms. - Kitchen plenty at cupboards and < space. Hot water baseboard Hardwood floors and ptoi---- walls. Community water. *12,900. Contract terms, less for cash. CLARK REAL ESTATE 1342 W. HURON ST. FE 3-7IH -------'-•» Listing service 'BUD" BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP Brick ranch home, tdeel (or tha working couple; lovely 2-bed- petlng end drapes, largi k.________ and breakfast room, lets of cupboards and closets, tile *~ famlly room, 2-cir attache. . rage, stave and refrigerator — washer and dryer, well landscaped grounds. Pricad it *23,- W. SEVEN MILE RD 4-BEDROOM BRICK near Wyoming In Detroit's northwest arse, close to schools, but at door to Northland —1 "— town. Excellent con Pricwf”*t 119400.' >Sa*mortgage available, . NICHOLIE-HUDSON FES-1201 after 6 p.m. FE 4-8773' the low outside maintenance, full aluminum storms and scraf-good bargain, see 111 rancher with oak floors, HI windows, ceramic bath, marbia basement, PGAS heat, city attached breezeway end 2-a rage. Priced at *19,300, Inc lot, quick potseulan. ORION AREA - Good looking 1964-bullt rat that contains 2 bedroom: neat and clean throughou ad on outskirts of Lake Of.... - to taka. Includes stove and refrigerator at 812,250. INCOME BONANZA Ideal setup Includes i plus owners' deluxe 5-roonvend-belh unit. Alto includes 6S'x60' store now leased. Giant 20(7x325' “ta erty zoned eommerr'-' M ceted near Adams i very fine property action. Chock this or d Auburn. A DORRIS EXECUTIVE NEIGHBORHOOD dev cribet the was! suburban location ot this 3 bedroom brick end frame ranch home with overwhelming charm Inside end put, top construction with oak floors, plastered walls, sunken ceramic entrance, ceramic bath, carpeted living room end r"-‘— -" *• en with eating s family room plu ment end 2 cer $19,900. TOP HEAVY WITH VALUE. 3 b EARLY POSSESSION Ottered with this 3-bedroom ranch heme with full basement on a 9(7x204' lot, s pec lout living room and kitchen area, pertly fenced. A real buy for only 113.-950 cash to an existing contract ol 810,000 at S80 per month, 4 painted bath, partially basement with a fourth b story and half t fore It's oonr ' well landscai the larg lot and one of mediate occupancy, 816,300, FHA cash Investment .. — ..... monthly payments of only *41. DORRIS 3, SON, REALTORS 534 Dixie Hwy. 674432 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE TED'S Always Trading TRADE Your present let or home foi home at Jeyno Heights. ■ ILY. MOVE RIGHT IN IMMEDIATE POSSESSION Oh this clean end attractive taro* 3 t ' room hom* In Indian Village, basement, targe 13x21 living ri with fireplace, enclosed porch, rage, fenced yard, an excel___ family heme With toads of storage. Full price, (19,900. Trade your smaller Ir— j M mm*—’ Gdtaw CLARKSTON LAKE FRONT Private road/ brick ranch, wit tern, „ targe living room with, f..., attached 2 'car gang*,!)full *24,900. Term* or trade. NOTHING DOWN In the Beldwln-Waltan. area, 2 bedroom bungalow with all aluminum alarms and screen., ... tractive Green Cedar Shake siding, lot* ot shade tor those hot summer days. Full price, 37500. LAND CONTRACT Waterford area, .excellent, rental, full pries *10404 With $2400 down. Brick Ranch 3-bcdroom ditton in West Side Brick 3-bad room home, living room with fireplace, dining room, bedroom, modern kitchen A bath en 1st floor, 2 bedrooms up. Full baeament, gas haat. Larga corner lot, 2-car garagt. (17,900. Terms. Brick & Alum. Tri-Level New 6-room-and-bath home In Drayton Plains araa — Larga family room, 3 bedrooms, utilities In bssament. Oversized 3-car i 15-Room Brick Near Pontiac Central High. Building In excellent condition and suitable tar many uses such at doctors' clinic, union hall, church, ale First TIMES CUSTOM DELUXE In book cabinet. Kitchen taken from a queen's dream with long Formica counters, bullt-ln stove and oven, panoramic view from the sink tree and 300 square feet of eating space, embossed kitchen cabinet doers mods to perfection with colonial brass hardware and cupboard room for any and all of your tint wares. Larga slate tayer entrance In this charming heme givee you the ||Bto||ddta ly ot gradoi this formal c< >etad H' _________________________..A Impressive Andersen wood window cases to greet your attention you say as we did — truly a ' “------1 qua li- polntm ly — This It WHEN YOU SEEK OUR SERVICE YOU "JOIN THE MARCH OF TIMES" Times Realty 5090 DIXIE HIGHWAY 034600 REALTOR Open 94 Dally O'NEIL WHY NOT TRADE? CHARM, ATMOSPHERE AND SWEET CONTENTMENT Thla all brick rambler ranch In y^Btamr ik* Woods with lak* prlv- .....__mpasses all this at wall as good location, craftntanthlp and ---a tar a larger than averaga ly. Every homemaker trill love Ingenious step • down kltchsn bullt-ln oven, range, dishwasher — disposal. There Is e specious richly carpeted step-down living —m with a bey window. 3 bed-ms, tots of closet arte and two irkllng baths. The pleasant family , m features an eye level wood rnlng fireplace end It *d|ecent to H kitchen. Full-tiled basement for parties. A big 2V* cer attached ga- ---with electric doer opener. Beeu- stately trees. Just three years with ell the extras in place nVwriced to tell Immediately at *36,500. 3-32. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION distance to the "Mall" and schools. ~ir attached garage and law In yard, priced et only gt!;. THIS HOME IS NICE AND SO'S THE PRICE This home Is an attractive three 1—"-am ranch heated In the Silver —Rd. and Dixie area. Carpeted living room, modern kitchen with ----,w tni rlng# Fu|| * recreational room. Nice corner tot wall landacapad. Roar yard anchor fencad. IV* car garagt a screened In fear porch. All . tar 316403 with 10 per cant down. MO. YEAR AROUND LAKE FUN Can b* yours In this 2 bedroom aluminum .sided bungalow. Best part It hat a lake front lot. Just arpi r favorite golf »y et only *13,900. 4-23 FEATHERST0NE AREA Real sharp 3 bedroom rand basament. Built-In range In k Cydona lanced yard. House i $50 T0TAJ. COST FOR VETERAN ' 3-bedroom bungalow ranch, Gas haat, aluminum storms and screens. Nortlwm school district. Approxl--tstoly *85.00 per month Including Met and Insurance. It you. are a Horary why 'hot. us* your Gl Bill i purchase this nice homo. 3-25. LIST WITH O'NEIL REALTY for 3 good reasons— We think (Mr sens* of value* Our Hat of BoM eroapacta — And our tlrelasa Ettorta— Will make you glad you called RAY O'NEIL REALTY THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1967 __________________________D—ifr P~n THE, PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY; AUGUST 17, 1967 PART COLLIE PUPPIES, 4 MALES ; -1 MSifcl* ft*, sa-ras. MRt'PKpM iMftY HAIR >Up-plea, ST 117 Norton eft. S Ml. POODLE BEAUTY SALON Cttp^tags-AKC Pupe^stoa^trvte* POODLES, TOY, 6 WEEKS, WHITE, nw. Quick sale. 67*3349. Wormed.***. 4*3-7765. RABBIT DOS. VS. INQUIRE 196 Baldwin RcU UB Of Ion REGISTERED APRICOT TOY POO-- 13gd|B awiwtee. toy ter-rvleet. FB 2-1497. 1 OLD. GER- hUehlMS. K*n-Lo, 627-3792. * SEALPOINT SIAMESE KITTENS -Litter trained, *2*7 644-1739. KITTENS. ALSO STUD SIAMESE 1 ftrvleo, U in gar OUTSTANDING HOME FURNISHINGS AUCTIONS W«L. Aug, 23, 10 a.m. Mr. * Mrs. Douglas Horner, owners WALLED LAKE ' At 74(6 Lake Point off Richardson Rtf. on Middle Straits, Wallotf Lake, 4 miles southeast of Union Lake near Bay Point* Golf Club. AUSICAL ITEMS: Thomas organ. Coronet daluxa, model BL-1. earphones, dual Leslie speaker. Color Tone percussion keyboard, pedal sustain, new com model 5722-W, iny newt portable TV, record cabinet, walnut; amplifier, remote 11 H.P., 10" PLOW, DISK, CULTI-—— hydraulic leveling blade ikl, (NO. 11210 Lahsar, 1995 FERGUSON TRAcVOR, DOU- dlshwasbar, Frlgldalre; Imperial dlsbmobila washer. Hot Point sll-houette 14, custom crall --------1 Tiny toy, apricot mal poodle, 0 weeks, 425-3995.____ WE j Kittens aRe free please I UL 2-1907.___________ dryer, Norge _.w fens; ___ ._________ 1 want ___________ 2 vacuums. Hoover ana Kirby, rlgldalre, new; 1 . —uums, Hoover t-tloor _ polisher. jttectrte r; GE blend- FORD TRACTOR AND EQUIP-ment. 332-1611. FORD TRACTOR Wl+tf BLADE, 4312 LaForest, Waterford. OR 3- Auction Salts 80 A-l FURNITURE, ANTIQUES, ETC. Saturday - 7:30 p.m. at Bluebird Auction 16193 Dixie Hwy. 637-5193. ANNUAL AUCIONEER JUBILEE Sunday at Auction land. ,n Friday's paper. AUCTION SALE Antiques, household and hand tools. Sat. August l*th, 11 a.m. Located 2 miles South of Wellington, Mich, then Ito miles West to 4914 25 Mile Rd. or sto miles East of Roehest-Consistlng of a Birds Eye ma bedroom suite; 1 round Oak din room tables; -Vidor talking tv., chine; Burroughs adding machine; antique home furnishings and dish es; hand toots; 15 larva »■— house lacks; approx. 450 r bricks; phis much more, a coll— tion of over 60 yrs. 1st National Bank of Lapeer, Dryden Branch. Clark, Edward H. Kutew-Prop. Washington - 651-8019. Bud Hlck-mott-Ganeral Auctioneer, Oxford. 628-2191. Duane Upton, AuctIoN sale, 2 miles East and I miles north of Imlay City at 3415 Brown City Rd. on Sat. August 19, at 10. a.m. Fennel 350 tractor with fist hitch, Farmall _____I____Jd wagon and racks, 1950 ladders, 2 bear Irage, 9MW ...... mowers, pumps, 20 roll barb wire, ■ —re posts, 100 Cedar rolls, ---* many more Items, tome of very good ; antiques. Walnut nut tea wagon, spindle bed, lari- I ture frames, Samufc.-,«v— rug, TV/weaflbowl set, .blanket chest, mirrors, dinner bell, t IHC auctioneer. Don't miss this sale. PUBLIC SALE roen tractor ““a D-50 Inch R E44R mower# D-50 incn k snow blade, electric starter, lights, and hyrallc lift. At PrMao KWtt. Co. Memphis, Mich. August 21, 19*7 at 11 a.m. To seftsfv the account Of David M. Fogler. J. I, Credit Corp. Terms: east PH: 313-43M4OT _____ 11314 MILLER RD. SWARTZ CREEK PRIOR'S AUCTION FRIDAY, AUG. 18, 7 P.M. Cut glass, art glass, carnival, china, lamps, books, paintings — frames, Plano stools, wash stand, tea cart, metal cabinets, tables, chairs, lugs, lanterns, etc. 3637 j ■Lakeville Rd.. Oxford, 2 ■*• * ■*' traffic light. .* _ furnishings, ^hrimT- ANTIQUE AUCTION At Tbi L. K, BALDWIN ESTATE Saf., Aim, 19 — ip e.m. 2400 Snetlbrook. In Northeast s urban Ponttoe. Between Wet Blvd. and Mt. Clemens Road. Real estate Is for sale.160 fi matching chair, birds ayelH^W Victorian dresser, cherry; 4 ice cream chelrt; Maple rape bed; pine cheat; Country (tore counter Seek, Pine and walnut; Pigeon hSodSkT burly walnut; Wf— desk; Walnut desk with lock bo School desk wtth hanging tit type lamp and child'* Mskt 61 at chests, pine; Quean Ann ti MB . _Jt chair with fid- dle back; Wicker arm chair; Widows slat beck chair; hi-1-chair; Wicker rocker* and sorvl trays, child's Iron bed. baby c; dies; Organ (tool; Pine chair. LAMPSCHINA-GLASSMfARE: Hanging gas lamp, tiffany type amber slag, hall hanging lamp, Cranberry swirl table lamp. Tiffany type, Alabaster slag lamp, brackets, coal oil lamps, candle • *ln, floor lamp, Organ , matched sets and odd i, Bride's basket, Cran- ip bast, ms P shades, B land I service for 8, Mels-II dishes, crystal stemware, lit plates, turned, 4 pistes ent, 40 piece Norteke, pattern glass, colored glass, compote and bowl, thumb weight,^breekfeat5 p bSSet st., small easier set, 5 , orig , satin glau, small 6 records, phonograph, Edison w morning glory horn, musical b Swiss, disc type with l do: metal records In n______ wallan Tlple, 16 string. PRIMITIVES: Saxon urn stove, country cook stove, heating stove, cast. Blacksmith tongs, mantel clocks, coffee mill buggy step, cow, sheep and goat bells, eld tin, horseshoes, copper and Iren tea kettles, trivets, cast Iron pots, metal bowl, both* capper, door stop, cast, (frafi bowl, prints, ladles and r_________ butter tub, ICO lb., ice chest, copper planter, tin match holders. Iron chair, anvil, tttlyards, yoke, lugs, tin tray, dasher a ■ trunks, muffin mold, cast, .... \ spinning wheel 23 ir churns, yarn winder} brass candle holder. DUN COLLECTION:. Flintlock Blunderbuu, coach gt of the 1700 era. Harpers Ferry musket 1036, rare Civil war gun, originally Flintlock but converted for use In 1063. 74 cal. percu”1*-Kentucky .to stock rifle with muzzle, 40 cal., brass patch U.S. rifle musket. 45-70 trap 1871. Remington Rolling Block ___ kef, 45 cal.. Civil War gun, Colt Navy revolver 1051, Iron back- strap, Williamson Derringer ----f and engraved, 4! cal. Thl has a percussion Insert, vary --- Pepperbox, Robbins and Lawrence, firing pin revolve* Instead of barret, English navy bait pistol, single wm jareuaalaa k —1 and teldlnb trigger. Allen, and Thl-'— ■ MISCELLANEOUS: Fruit picture with mant. Oriental thre dreamers stand, all mahogany boxes, Ing watches and b 11314 Millar Rd.. Swartz Creak PUBLIC AUCTION 11 A.M. August 19, to W. Chicago. Pontiac Antiques, round trunk, Seth Thoma ■ lamps, secretary desks, sid picture .frames, flat Ireni , 3 piece sterling carvlm _., .ases, antiques foe numoreu t* mention. Also dining room sal Qwlt tops, maytag wringer washer Kdtvtnaior refrigerator, electrl stove, living ram suite, seta bed sNMM'AeniK'' jtewtaw tools. btoni mere Items. Jedc Hell Auctioneer. |hM I2f Kenmort drop-head, walnut con- high, ig im*v; w»i w»i sofa, wood trim; Naugahyde chair; dinette sat# 5-ptece, Formica and chroma; books, china cabinet# wll- JOHN DEERE AND saw* dealer? DA VISMACHiNERY CO., Ortonvlllo, NA 7-—**1 wrings on win beds; Tiquv nunc! server, 38"; dresser and chest, wslnut waterfall; TV stands) pictures; step tables, wel-nut and white, Formica; floor, table and pole lamps; 2 kitchen cabinet sections wtth Formica; divider table; utility cabinet and cart; card tables; step stools; 4 large rugs; pots; pans and miscellaneous dishes; plants; planters; knick-knacks; spreads; t doz. horse flo-urines; curtains, dye pee, 12 pairs; Flberqtas drapes, aqua *3"t enn, per fireplace screen; saf* and file combination, 4-drawer Cole; foot locker; tvoewrtter; Smith-Corona portable, Ilk* new. MISCELLANEOUS: h.p. motor, ooei cu—<-,ers; outdoor grill; mump, nr lint 24" 3- spoed# reverse; n%w r propelled; rotery mower; wheel-harrow; ladders; gas cans; hose. Antique wagon wheel; lee spu croquet set; bicycle, buy's * Royal; bicycle parts; pin hand tools; clothing tor mtn, won 10. 1 MICHIGAN POTATOES 20 tbs., 77 Cents. Sweet corn 39 cents a dpi. N*. T Reedies 29 cents * lb. No. 1 Igrw tcynafoos, 3 lbs. for *l. Btfros Form Produce 23» Dixie FICKUF CAMPER, HOMEMADE, heated, weather tight, table, cur boards and bed, 1757 4234R80. PIONEER CAMPER SALES m Produce 2250 N. of Telegrapl bs-aFples- 1 peaches-APFli 0 e.m. to 0 p.m. dr pyfATOT^MSp^MOROAN ROAD. 17 5 p.m. 474-1300. I tractors, load- TRAVEL TRAILERS Your dialer for -LAYTON, CORSAIR ROBINHOOD, TALLY HO 30 new and used tellers tn stock NEW SERVICE DEPT. Ellsworth Trailer Sales 0577 Dixie Hwy._________025-4400 (MOWING GRASS? FARMALL CUB TRACTOR WITH 5* DANCO ROTARY MOWER. ONLY KING BROS. FE 4-1552 FE 4-0734 Rd. et Opdyko Rd, WAG N MASTER THE NEW EASY-UP AND EASY DOWN HARDTOP CAMPER. AT JOHNSON'S Walton at Joslyn PE 4-4010 1_______ FE 4-5053 SPECIAL SALE ON* WHEELH0RSE TRACTORS cnl Whselhorse' tractor sale. ... tags up to 0195. Limited time only. Com* In now and save. All KING BROS. FE 4-1663 _ FE 6-0734 Rd. et Opdyko Rd. USED TRACTORS 1962 Bolsn's, wtth mower, $395 1965 Boltn's wtth 42" mower, 161 1960 Whtel Horse, wtth mower, I 1961 Wheel Horu, with mower, 021 1962 Whttl horu ranger, wtth I lgine, elec, starter, 1295. EVAN'S EQUIPMENT bar SjS salesTtoTw. Clarksto? rd.. LAKE ORION. INFORMATION - CALL 693-1071._____________ SATURDAY, AUGUST 19, 10 A.M. SURPLUS STOCK AUCTION OPEN 7 DAYS WEEKLY 8 A.M.-7 P.M. refrigerators, gas end tlec. ranges dryers, spot welders, taels of all kinds. Including skill sews, platform rockers, redlners, trailers, ppwer lawn mowers, sowing n— chinos, vacuum cleaners. Me tag washers, bed mattresses and springs, bunk beds, living room end bedroom sulfes, bicycles, clothing, hundreds of other articles too SUN. AUCTION AUG. 20 2:00 P.M. SHARP Balance of Surplus Stock New and Used must go. To make space for remodeling purposes. WEDNESDAY AUGUST 23, 10 e.n Contnents of D. Horner Homo 7486 Lake Point, Walled Lake Details her* Monday Perkins Sal* Service, Auctioneers i. 635*9400 Swartz Crei Hobbles A SappBes 82 cblN AND STAMP SUPPLIES AT Prices you cm afford Parts Phar mocy, 974 Jaelyfi. FE 6-9679. S3 KCUI91CKBV WUMKICK nUBV es, 4-year-old gelding, contast horse. 6-year-old jeldtag, pleasure horse, 6-year-oW Palomino mare In 9-YEAR-OLD MARE, S3". ALSO year-old gelding, 53" high. 678-2572. A' RED GELDING, WllX trained, with ~ -- APPALOOSAS, QUARTER NORSKS. Reg. Also etud wrvlce. 828-3815. BRED AftOUS COW ANp CALF. MS. 625-3575. DOUBLE D RIDING ST)—_ -------------- — stack. Gentle and spirited, „.„lng. Also horses foi' r*1* Open 7 days, jTfo I.'673-7617. GENTLE 8 YEAR OLD MARE, i good kids horu. *158. 625-3963. swimming aval PIGS, 7 15 cent. 391-2112. QUARTER HORSE REGISTERED TENNESSEE WALK-Ing horses; I yr. bid palomino stallion; 6 yr. old Chestnut stallion; yterHne stallion, 8H “*' Grubb Rd., Highland. FAistf cut RED CLOVkk HAY-. Baled Mon. 30c a bale from field; This week- cwnplnes my heylng. 2422 HoensC Rd. E. of Oxford. J. A. Arnold 638-1137. Clem up price FrL only, from all fields. *“"■■■ —“* 9 p.m. Travel Trailers $$$$$ Aug. Clearance Sale Phoenix convertible campers, Winnebago and Phoonlx pick-up camp-i ers, 16', 17', 19' vacation trailers.: Pick-up covers. REESE AND DRAW-TITE HITCHES Sold md Installed HOWLAND SALES AND RENTALS 3355 Dixit Hwy. OR 3-1456 $$$$ TIZZY PICKUP COVBRS, S34S UP. fiMeng up TS R CAMPER MFG. CO.___ “ *"*■—■ 88BG334 BARTH TRAILERS A CAMPERS TRAVEL OUBfN CAMPERS MERIT FIBf Rtj&ASS COVERS Rent Wag-N-Master WB CARRY THE FAMOUS Franklins—Crees Fans—Monitor Travel Trailers Holly Travel Coach 152)0 Holly Rd. Holly, MB 44771 Opm Dally—1 — WOLVERINE TRUCK CAMPERS sleepers. New and used, S395 tars, ladders, Travel With Quality Line Travel Trailers BOLES-AERO-tRAVELMASTER FROLIC-SKAMPER . _ SALES—SERVICE-RENTALS Complete I.T4. parts center. 1-A LIKE NEW 530(12', 2 BEDRMS. Carpeted, on lot, toko over peym'ts. R Ichardson-WIndsor-Monereh-Duko-Hometts-Llborty COLONIAL MOBILE HOMES FE 2-1457 523-1310 25 Opdyko By Kate Os&nn iCftAM.0'*T “I don’t think .Father should make me wait a whole week for my allowance. After all, in summertime the days are LONGER!” M0NICATTI Boots ond Motors UTICA 731-0020 5250 AUBURN RD. (M59) MONEY SAVING PLANS ON DISPLAY 1987 Sport Craft isw, full fop. Be railT loaded, frailer. (5 h.p. Met Complete ............... SH 1956 MFG 16' full top, cover, 65 fop. Merc. Trailer sharp ........$1995 Dorset!, top, cover, 60 fop. Evlnrude, trailer complete 81295 Many more bargains LAKE & SEA MARINA AUTHORIZED DEALER CHRIST CRAFT GWEN'S Saginaw el S. Blvd. PE 4-9557 good, only szre. r 7381Oakland AVI. FE 2-6238. 1959 FORD Vh-TQN PICK-UP, paint and tlrei Bulck 363-0811, Rfoglns. dealer. PINTER'S THUNDERBIRO, STARCRAFT, MFG SEA RAY BOATS Factory to you prices LAKE ORION MARINA M34 NORTH of Pontiac SHARP. RfcD AND WHITE, 15' Pl-berglas, 60 h.p. (Metric, perfect running order, extras. Reis. FE SNIPfe NO. 16405 TRAILERS All new 1967 models at dose-eut prices. Brand new 1966 models at used trailer prices. Used camping trailers, $195 up. Open dally 'til 7 p.m., Saturdays 111 nc-- ealar. BILL C0LLER CAMPING TRAILERS TO RENT 391-2722_________________ CAMPING Private lake, safe sandy I flush toilets, hat and cold —I Ashing. Half mile south of Orton-vttle McFeely Resort 1140 MIS BEST MOBILE HOME SALES OPEN DAILY 12 A.M. TO 9 P.M. SEE THE ALL NEW MARLETTE AND CHAMPIONS. " “lerous f------ idlng '2 . —tool. 9520 Highland Rd. (M59, 2 r West of Wlllloms Lk., Rd.) On Display at; . Cranberry Lake M a b 11 a Homs ’COUNTRY CLUB LIVING AT ITS BEST" 363-5296______________ 363-5600 DETROITER—KR0PF Vacation Homes I ft. wide with large expanding — rooms md Isrgs expanding living room only 82995.00. Free delivery In Michigan. Also 8 ft., 10 ft. and 12 ft. wldes at bargain prices. lew 10, 12, 20 and 24 ft. wldes. - Yes w* deliver and set up. ,. BOB HUTCHINSON, INC. 4301 Dixie Hwy. (U.S. 10) Drayton Plains OR 3-1302 22350 Telegraph Rd. n 8 B 9 Mila EL 8-1844 Open dally till SD-m. Sat"and Sun, till Sp.m 627-3828 Wl CAR HOME On 1959 International 10* 4" ever. Call MY 3-i»01. CLEARANCE SALE If you are thinking about L___ a camping trailer, now Is the time for you to get It. Evans Is clearing -id all 1967 models. Featuring pache Mesa with dinette, atove, nk, Ice box, bottle gas and carrier, eg. price, 81,240, ula price, $995. Only 1 left. Don't min this ont. EVAN'S, EQUIPMENT 4507 Dixie Hwy* 425-1711 Mon-Frf., 9-8 Sat., 9-5 TRAVEL TRAILERS Inspect 34 years of quality Anodized Aluminum# rounded comers# sealed frame and under belly# battery system# lined drapes# vinyl floors# front awninas# 30 Id. bottlesi self-contained# iprlfn many other OPEN 'TILL I# Mon to Frl. SAT 8 tQ 5. CLOSED SUN. STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. 3771 Highland (M59) _ FE 2-4928 DODGE MOTOR HOME,1 1964, Haa cab end W aluminum boa self-contained. Monomatlc toilet Onan power plant. Air condition* $3,908 caah. 652-7382._________ OAKLAND CAMPER Open for your Inspection KARIB0U KAMPER Tour-A-ilome —Sleeps 6 OUT TltfY GO! WHEEL CAMPER Tent Campers — 4 l> i sleepers. The ultra tn tent campers, a|| 3‘ YELLOWSTONE (Travel Traitors) Capri mod*!*, )9, 3) and 25 models.-Enter all the convenient with automatic water system, battery, rounded comers, etc All the above untie are priced to sell. OPEN TIL I, MON. TO FRt. SAT. I TO 5. CLOSED SUN. STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. ., 240 Ibt. Full price, $795, easy forme ANDERSON SALES S, SERVIL-1645 S. Telagraph FE J-7102 1964 BSA 350CC. EXCELLENT CON-dltlon, before 7, 682-4734. 1964 HONDA 305. READY tO GO FOR AS LITTLE AS $397. No money d0W" STAR AUTO SALES 962 Oakland Ave. FE S-9661 ip, 45 hors ____EM 3-3724. 14' GLASSPAR, G3. SKIBOAT, 75 h.p. Johnson, OR 34055. 1964 TRIUMPH BONNEVILLE, EX- Lake R V CURLY CRAFT INBOARD. U h.p., trailer, easy to launch, good condition. $525. 852-4263. 17' TROJAN, 40 H.P. EVINRUDE, 1965 CB HONDA 160. $3 62341965 1965 HONDA 50CC. 525-2823.__ 1965 HONDA 150 CC DREAM. GOOb jit ion, must ull, OR 3-9552. 1966 HONDA 305, REBUILT EN-glna and new transmission. 674-1631 after 6 p.m. 1961 SUZUKI 80 CC. VERY GOOD EM 341881, Riggins, d"1~ 17' SLICK CRAFT PIBERGALS, 75 fop. Johnson, black wtth red Interior, convertible top, tarp, trail- 17' FIBERGLAS RUNABOUT. FUL- 1-1 MOBILE SERVICE, WINTElt- Afflerlcan, pace available In 4 Star Park, i extra erhage. Also see tho tamoi light wolcm Winnebago Trailer. OXFORD TRAILER SALES XOSED SUNDAYS a Lake Orion on M34 MCDONALD MOBILE HOMES So* our complete line of 12* wldes, 2 or 3 bedrooms os low as *4495. Featuring Travelo, Schuit end Vlndale- and Topper. New quality unit* arriving dally. Models on display at the new Cranberry Lake Mobil* Homes Village. "Country Club living'*1 Its best. 9620 Highland Rd. (M39,1 miles west of Williams Lake I 363-7511. Houri: Weekday* 12 to . — .—I-., ma j pm RETIREE SPECIAL 1967 srSftr custom deluxe ... brandt. Eye-level ovm. Gun furnace. and many other special foe-tores. Waa 56,400, hew only *4,895. WATERFORD MOBILE HOMES 6333 Highland Rd. Across From Pontiac Airport Town & Country Mobile Homes PROUDLY PRESENTS "The Westchester" a It' x 60' Mobil* Hem* unlqi in fieer plan, beautiful dicer. Ida., for rettrement. Moderately priced. See It today. ALSO FEATURING THE 12'x50 HOMECRAFT. AT $3,995 DELIVERED AND SET UP . TELEGRAPH AT DIXIE HIGHWAY Something new wide In (decora. Wo have only 1 60x12*, brand note, for $4895. Demos at a giant savings. We will not bt knowingly undtraBto; Fra* delivery up to 388 mites. Free A*SMS^“b,#,Ba!»FAkK Opm 9-9 ’ 7 Giya a week MIDLAND TRAILER SALES ___„„NIHRI|P Sacrifice $250. Helmet Included. 338-1538. _ 46 BSA HORNET, 650CC, EXCEL- extras. 81.180. 753-3368, Romeo.___________L__ 1966 DUCATI 250CC SCRAMBLER. Must Ull. 334-5005._________ 17W CENTURY 140 tTfo COM-pletely equipped, good condition, in water, Cass Lake. 363-0224. IS' CHRIS CRAFT CABIN CRUISER, 75 hors* outboard, trailer, $800. 334-4015. ____________ 1966 HONDA SUPER 90. LOW MILE age. Exc. condition. FE 5-3917 1966 HONDA CL 160, EXCELLENT mdltion. 1,799 ml., many extras idudlng 3 Iwlmat;. 334-7955. I HONDA 55 TRAIL. EXCEL-391-3388. HONDA 305 SCRAMBLER, 1475 ______ Size 43 verythlng In top 14-1973.______________________ I HONDA, 305 SCRAMBLER 0. 625-5177. 1966 NORTON ATLAS, 750CC, 10: 1966 TRIUMPH BDNNiVlLLE, 2,380 ----- 887-6635. TRIUMPH TR-6, BEST 332-7331, after 4:38 " We, EXCELLENT 1966 TRIUMPH (OOCCTli condition, 5858. 187-438*.____ 766 YAHAMA 305 CC, BLUE MET-[el flake paint, " -------- heads. 6349101 1967 BENELLI 250CC. MUST SELL. 336-5805. < • 1957 BLUE HONDA 50CC. WITH elec, atarter. Less then 1,000 549-3004, 682-5431.______________ mileage. 8575 or beat offer. 1957 NORTON 750 CC 8850. 693-5973.__________________________ 1967 YAMAHA 385 CC BIG GEAR. 1,500 actual miles. Exc., S595. OR 3-9651. HONDA IN LAPEER FULL SELECT ION OF BIKES, parts, accatsortes, small town dmj-or with friendly paraonneL 6649672. MINI CYCLES) GO-CARTS H0DAKA ACE 90 HELMETS AND ACCESSORIES. MG SALES & SERVICE • Hwy., ontcefm. \Di $200. 335-1258. SALE SALE! HPWVRNPl,___t marfcpd dow.. Buy now end save. . Easy forma. ANDERSON SALES I. SERVICE SEE THE NEW SUZUKI X-5 SCRAMBLER 'A FULL LINE OF ALL NEW Suzuki Cycns & Accessories MG SALES and SERVICE 4567 Olxle Hwy.. DraySetl Plains SUZUKI to. EXCGLU|NT CONDI- Brings and seals, $200. 152- Gale McAnnally's AUTO SALES I have Immediate need . for sharp cars! Now shipping to Oklahoma, California, Texas and parts west. Top dollar paldl Shop mo test and get the but deal harelll FIBER GCAS 48 HP TILT Evlnrude, OR 39837. 1384 BALDWIN Acrou from Pontiac Stole B FE 8-4525 HELP! Wonted 300 sharp Cadillacs. Pon-tlacs. Olds and Bulcka for out-of-atata market. Top dollar paid. MANSFIELP AUTO SALES 1104 Baldwin Ava. FE 5-5900________FE 89825 STOP HERE LAST M-&M MOTOR SALES Now at our now location Wo pay more for sharp, fata mo tl cars. Corvettes needed. 1150 Oakland et Viaduct Mow —ddwd Trocb IQf 1158 FORD PICKUP TRUCK, GOOD 2 FORb RANCHERO, VI1y TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1955 JEEP pick-up, overhead cam 6-cyl. engine, autometlc, « hubs. 4-whiol driva, llka nav.. - . 795. On U.S. 18 at MI5, Clarkston, MA 5-5871._________ 1965 Chevy VAN With yellow finish. Only— $1095 HOMER HiGHT 1955 BUICK GOOD TRANSPORTA-tlon. 559. 682-7304 or 303-7228. • 1959 BUICK, VERY CLRaN, tiST 646-0403, alter 4 p.m. 1940 BUICK 2 DOOR, LITTLE RUST, **10. save Auto. FE 5-3278. TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1965 GMC '/5-ton pick-up, with 8' fleetside box, 6-cyl. stick shift, solid red, only $1,395. On U.S. 10, at M15. Clarkston, MA 5-5071. 1966 FORD ECONOLINE SUPER van. Low mlteago. Auto, tranamla-slon. Radio. Custom cab 852-3700 1967 GMC MODEL CLEARANCE i-Ton Pickup Heater, defrosters, backup lights, seat belts, 2-speed wipers, washers, padded dash and visor, traffic hazard lights, directional signals, inside rear-view mirror. $1828 including ail taxes PONTIAC'S ONLY EXCLUSIVE TRUCK DEALER SAVE NOW BEFORE Price Increases GMC Factory Branch . Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485 BEEN BANKRUPT? BAG CRED-IT? NEED A CAR? Cell FE 1-4888 end oak for Mr. White. King. 1965 BUICK WILD CAT 4-DOOR 1957 CADILLAC ELDORADO, GOLD with black vinyl tap, air. FB 8*8875. MO CADILLAC'CoHVIIltlGLK 8395 ““ - FE 5-3378 1963 CADILLAC CONVERTIBLE, ■Igll power. Ilka new 81495. COOPER'S Extra Clean Used Cars 4278 Dixie Drayton Plelna 9 to 9 dally 874-2257 CHEVY POWERED HINAy J BILL FOX CHEVROLET On S. Rochester Rd. OL 1-71 ROCHESTER__________________ "TOP DOLLAR PAID" GLENN'S ; FOR CLEAN CARS OR s. Economy Cars. 2335 Dlxi- 966 60 HORSe EVINRUDE. ALL electric controls. A-l condition, 5495 OR 3-3137.________________________j ......HR ______ITS NEW. 3630 Dixie, Drayton Pis. 7-11. BUY NOW AND SAVE— REPOSSESSED USED Glaspar boot, 65 fop Mercury angina, custom traitor, fki, belli, for only $1,495. 14 FT. CHRYSLER 113 Charger demonstrator, trailer. Mercury 118 hp. Must tall. MFG FiBERGLAfo (Used). Hat been refinished, now only $395. 14 ft. flbergln boat and trailer, dean, only $695. WE ARE clearing the decks of 1967 Chrysler boats, sailboats, MFG, Flbergtaa, Galstron md ' -1—*' WE BUY ANY GOOD LATE MODEL USED CAR! "TOP DOLLAR" too! HASKINS AUTO SALES 6695 Dixie HWy. MA 5-3112 BOAT CLEARANCE lew 1967. boats drastically reduced by hundreds of dollars. Including outboards an Johnson and Chrysler Motors PAUL A. YOUNG, INC. 4838 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plaint, OR 4-0411 -At Loon Lai Open daily 9 a.m.-6 p.m. Men ‘til 9 p.m. *un., 18 a.m.-4 p.m. dawsGn's GPbciaU. used u* Aqua Swan alum, boat, 1955 25 h.p. Evlnrude elec, and trailer, all for *295. Uawl rarf11*— ----------- boat, 195* 51 $695. Cloae-c-. _____■ and Staury Flbergln b Right en lflciwry Rim Rd. to .Demode Rd., laft md fdtew signs to DAWSON'S SALE*' AT TIPSICO UUOi. Fhone: 53952179. \ HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS 1899 S. Ttlegrpph FE 2-8033 "We havb ail of your HOUSEBOAT—3*W, FULL KITCH-La bead .(win outboard motor, must sacrifice, private raph FE all of y hooting needs." =BO AT—28 V head, twir s 5/ must r., isit-ew; JUST RECEIVED New Grumman 14 ft. SallU.^ carrying emeta, fob, sptaaktr end ulls. ? ' T. ■ ,■ : j . GRAND RIVER BOAT SALES 21928 Grand River OR 4-7320 1 ‘-'neks ent of Middle bett f" MEMBER OF MMDA WANT GOOD USED 1962 OR 1963 PONTIAC- OR CHEVROLET CAR. DESIRE AUTOMATIC WITH POWER STEERING AT A REASON- ILY SOUND- CALL 625-4844 AFT. 6 P.M. NO DEALERS PLEASE. SPECIAL $1875 FULL PRICE New 1967 Jeep Universal ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP EM 3-4155 or EM 2-4154 We would like to buy late model GM Cars or will accept trade-downs. Stop by today. FISCHER BUICK 544 Sv WOODWARD 647-5600 Junk Cart-Tracks 101-A 1, 2 JUNK CARS—TRUCKS, FREE tow anytime. FE 2-2666, 673-5224. ALWAYS BUYING JUNK CARS end scrap, we tow, FE 5-9948 COPPER, BRASS; RADIATORS; Clwyy pickup, low miles. 391- Truck Doeter '/5-ton, 44-ton, pick-ups, id camper specials. Get II L-O-N-G Deal. Call Jim Smith Special 1962 GMC 9 FT. STAKE , $850 GMC Factory Branch Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485 TRUCK SALE 1964 CHEVY flMtfldfr Vz-ton, r«d Autobahn Authprlzad VW Dtaler Vz milt North of Miracle.... 1743 8? Ttltgrtph FE i-4$31 » httWflBCi WUirlw 104 Mini-Cost Auto risk Insurance Mini-payment plan (Budget) BRUMMETT AGENCY Miracle Mila ________FE 4-8589 foraipi Con 195 1954 JAGUAR COUPE. EXCEL-tent body. Interior end good me-chanlcelly^Must seal 3637103. Ask Fnraign Cm h.p.. Mss than 2,000 mite* line. MY 3-1652. 1967 VW. low price. 335-W8, MONO POSTO FORMULA c ’lXCl car. R| engine and transmission, otters around 81,308. *33-8889. VW CENTER 85 To Choost From -All Models— -All Colors— —All Reconditiomd— Autobahn to mil* North ol Miracle Mile i>85 5. Teleoreph_______, FE MU tw and Uied Cm 106 BANKRUPT? CREDIT PROBLEMS’ We Can Fmarca You— < Just Cell . Mr. Maion or NEWEST DEALER I VANDEPUTTE BUICK-OPEL 196-210 Orchard Lake 1964 BUICK SKYLARK CONVERT I-ble. V-8 auto. Power, axe. condi-tlon. 363-7491 or 67S4E17. GLENN'S 1966 RIVIERA BUICK L. C. Williams, Salesman # 952 w. Huron St. ■ 4-7371 PB 4-1797 iy More to Chouse Frem 1967 BUICK L______________________ ■ hardtop, while with belck top, power steering, brakes. JEROME On M24 in Lak* Orion MY 2-2411 1(57 CORYITTE. 381, ASPEED, $700. 334-1342, 1957 CHEVY StAflON WA66N; 1959 Chovy Bel Air. $125. After 5:30# 332-7679, 59 C()RVETTE, REASONABLE 1959 CHEVY. STICK# RUNS GOOD. power, sptcial fastback I I960 CORVAIR, 8157 FULL PRICE. No monoy down. LUCKY AUTO many many extras. PLUS 1966 305 Honda S< paint, many acdnsorloa. Will accept any reas. offer or trade for both. 673-8425. _______________ CHEVROLET IMPALA CONVERT-Ibte I960. Radio. Heater. Power brakes, steering. Bast after. 444-4357. No Money Down! 19*2 FALCON 2-door .. ... (29 19*0 CHEVY Auto ..... . |S . WE FINANCE NO MONEY DOWN CREDIT PROBLEMS BANKRUPT Cell Mr. Den at FE 84071 _ Credit Application Refused Capitol Auto 312 V......... . “ONi* *DOOR AUTOM 9^5 M KE SAVOIE CHI LET, Birmingham. Ml 4-2735. in«Kr 4-DOOR, 1962 BEf ’“ '-"c.¥r 11 COUPE, AUTOM; 1C, RADIO. HEATER, WHI1 walls; fJll price *4« SOLUTELY NO MONEY DOW AasurWe wmkry payments of *4 CALL CREDIT mgr. Mr. P# "HAROLD TURNER FORD, i9«,|.CHEVY'^l. 4-DOQR, L i*tt a«VV IMPALA 4-OOOR standard shift, 1 owner. Ask *580. FE 5-7941. 1963 CHEVY WAGOfl. V-8, 66 condition. 3*1-1935, sfter 4. l*M CHEyV . IMPALA 9 FAtSt gar station wagon, .with V-l, at p«,Ic' radio, tJeittw, newer sti . brakes, silver blue mete finish, metchlng Interior, only per rnolX^*’ ** ***" -nd ** only tokos > minute" to Oft A BETTEi DEAL" et: John McAulifft Ford 630 Oakland A ------ 1943 CH|VY StibCI iPdflV, 19« c6mjAIR A80NZ4, 4 SPEED, 19*3 CHEVROLET IMPXU WAG- . ^ steering end brakes, a nice car.JWS. BOB BORST LlN-COLtMSERCURY *. ‘ “**, HIRMING- MIKE SAVOIE CNEVI 'ROLE*! * I Hew ind Used Con 106 1W COTVAI> I DyK, WITH RA- 4 full pi I.M ptr m "It only <30 Oakland Ave._______fe 5-4101 »M IS IMPALA CONVERTIBLE. Consol*. Whitewalls. Radio. Dou- r. hp. I i +3001_______________ 1944 CORVAlt), 3-bOOl stick, turquoise, gooo condition FE 3-3734. 1944 CHEVdU.6 MALIBU SS, Automatic. good shape. S51-8774. 1965 CHEVY Impala Sport Codpe, factory equipped Burgundy with whitewalls. Only $1495 BILL FOX CHEVROLET On S. Rochester Rd. OL 1-71 ROCHESTER STAR AUTO SALES 943 Oakland Ave. FE 0-0441 1944 MALIBU SUPER SPOR1. I speed, dark green. 1*44 Catalina « ”0. 4-spMd, still In warranty, f* MflS days, FE 2-4515, eves. Ask tor Alan Kasten. Must sell ___________ 41,450. FE 4-3144. 1943 CHEVY BEL AIR STATION wagon, with v-4, automatic, radio, heater, power steering, brakes, chrome, luggage rack, bronze me-*•1'He finish, with' beige Interior. See the country in thi« w .n family station Get "A BETTER DEAL" at; John McAuliffe Ford 430 Oakland Ave,_____FE 3-4141 whitewalls,'cherry red nylon top. Mint condition all the way. Only 41144 full price. W8 down, and 439.74 per month. "It only takes a minute" to Get "A BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffe Ford <30 Oakland Ava. ______FE 5-4101 1943 CHEVY CONVERTIBLEImPA-la. sue. condition, 1211 Orchid St. , LET, Birmingham. Ml 4-2733. 106 Mew and Used Cart 106 MIKE SAVOIE $288 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plvmouth 440 s. Woodward______Ml 7-3314 BLUE LOW 1963 IMPERIAL 4-door hardtop, radio, Iwater, I malic, with power, black with mi -- 'nterlor. $1195 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Ply mouth 1965 CHEVROLET Super Sport hardtop, vinyl roof, power equipped, automatic, radio, heater, whitewalls, full price 41495 with 449 down and weakly - payments of 433172. HAROLD TURNER FORI 444 S. WOO BIRMINGHAM i. 2 tops. 427. Call 473-7247 I 944 CAPRICE 4-DOOR HARDTSp, •utomatic. with power. 42,295 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham, Ml 4-3735. 1947 IMPALA, »-PAS$ENGER~WA5. d°Ublt P°W>r-1947 CAMARO. TAKE OVER PAY-™M»^1 Convertible, good condition. 1947 BEL AIR 9-PASSENGER WAG- 3? -Top Quality Used Cars- 1964 PLYMOUTH Fury 4-door, v-4, automatic, power steering, whitewalls, radio. Nice carl Only — $895 1965 VALIANT V-200 4 Boor, 4, automatic, Radio, Whitewall tires. Beautiful Crimson Red with matching Interior. $1195 1964 CHEVY Corvalr Monza with automatic, radio, new whitewall tires and burgundy finish. Only — $845 1965 DODGE 2-door hardtop, It. 24,0& Was $1545 Naw; $1395 1963 PLYMOUTH, III Sport Fury Convertible with V-4. automatic, radio, power steer- Was $795 - Now $745 1962 PONTIAC Catalina 4 Door. V-8, Automatic. Power Steering and Brakes* Factory Air and Whitewall Tires; Extra Clean. $745 V-4. eutemetlc. p 1963 FORD Galaxie 400 4 Door, v-8, Automatic, Power Steering and Brakes, whitawail tires and Radio. Original Paint. $695 1965 RAMBLER Classic 4-door sedan. 4 cyl., automatic, powar steering, redid, whitewalls, showroom clean l $1195 1963 CHEVY Impala Wagon with V-4. automatic, power steering, chrome reck, whitewalls, radio. Only— Was $1095 - Now $995 1965 PLYMOUTH Sport Fury 2-door hardtop, V-S, automatic, jower steering, brakes, power windows, and— Was $1695 Now $1545 Transportation Specials $50 and up. Falcons, Plymouths, 1964 FORD Falcon 2-door sedan, with 6 cyl. stick $hift, extra sharp! Gas mileage special. Only- OAKLAND Chrysler - Plymouth 724 OAKLAND AVE. FE 5-9436 Birmingham's New CHEVROLET DEALER 1104 S. Woodward Ml 4-2735 1960 IMPERIAL -ULL POWER. DORUBLE AIR, RADIO, HEATER, WHITEWALLS. FULL PRICE S495, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Assume weekly payments of 44.11. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD. Ml 4-7340. 1964 CHRYSLER 300K 2-door hardtop, frost green all while vinyl bucket seats, ole, power steering end brakes, sr windows. One owner nav e, priced at only $1395 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth I. Woodward_______Ml 7-3114 KESSLER'S DODGE CARS AND TRUCKS Salta and Servlet BN OA 4-1444 1961 LANCER 4-door, radio, heater, total delivered price Including plates and taxer $279 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth S. Weedwerd______ Ml 7-3214 1962 DODGE - passenger wagon, t cylinder dio, heater, automatic with powi $595 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth 440 3, Woodward____ Ml 7-3214 around condition. Look a 1724 FORD. BEST OFFER OVER 1954 FORD NEEDS LITTLE WORK. >50. 442-5924. 1757 FORD STATION WAGON, 70 N. Francis._____________________ 1740 FORD, 470. 5173 Sashabaw Rd. JTIIE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. AUGtIST 17, 1967 By Dick Turner CARNIVAL New aad Uted Cm 106 1747 T-BlKO HARDTOP ? LAND, with 4,404 actual miles, full pewt 50,000 miles er I year puarant 43,544 full price, wlfh 4244 dow 427.74 per week. Save over 41,400. —- - mlnyta" to DEAL" at: Pretty Ponies 1965 & 1966 MUSTANGS SEVERAL USED MUSTANGS TO / CHOOSE FROM , CONVERTIBLES HARDTOPS 2 PLUS 2's FULL EQUIPMENT Priced From $1295 As Low As $39 Down And $89 Per Month HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 $. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM._Ml 4-7500 »fwy te teac fc*.TJ4, tea “Lost his class ring, did he? Have you looked in the refrigerator?” New end Used Cart 1942 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL, FAC-lory air Installed, loaded with extras, clean inside and out, take over payments. 482-2334. 1737 mercury" convertible - Chevy engine, sell or trade for motorcycle. 474-3427 between 7 — »n<* 1 P-~ 1740 COMET 2-DOOR AUTOMATIC, radio, heater. 4345 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmlng. New ond Used Cars 106 1941 FALCON, GOOO CONDITION 473-4243, after 5 p.m. i74i falcon] good trXnspBr- New and Used Cart 106 1742 FORD 4-DOOR AUTOMATIC, radio, heater, power steering, $595 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET. Birmingham. Ml 4-2735. ^_____ _________ilce carl Only $795. On U.S. 10 at M15, Clarkston, MA 5-5071. 1943Vfe FALCON . VENTURA HARD-top, new 44 Mustang motor, make offer after 4 p.m. 474-2405. 1744 FALCON &PRINT AUTOMAT-ic, power steering, V0, good tires. | UL 2-2073. _____________ GLENN'S i 500 Ford. T COUNTRY SQUIRE 1744, 6 PAS- 1742 FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE wagon. This car can be purchased wlfh no money down. LUCKY AUTO 1940 W. Wide Track FE 4-1004 or FE 3-7854 1962 4-DOOR FORD GALAXIE — New engine, brakes, ignition, radio, heater. 887-4431. 1962 FORD GALAXIE 500. GOOD $425. 3-3711 exc. condition, $400. LUCKY AUTO 1964 FORD GALAXIE 500, STICK 1964 T-BIRD, EXCELLENT CONDI- • WAGONS HO! IMS FALCON ! 2-door wagon, with 4 cyl., stick. —. ( 1963 FORD Country Sedan, with V-8, auto- $1295, matic, powar steering, brakes, radio, heater, luggage rack. White. 1945 FORD Ranch Wagon, with 4 cyl., stick, radio, haatar, blua finish. $995 $1495 1965 FORD Country Sedan, with V-8, ^auto- 1963 FALCON 4-door Wagon, with 6 cyl., automatic, power steerjng, radio, ! $1695 $795 1965 FORD Falaco Deluxe club wagon, with | 1962 FORD , Falcon 4-door Wagon, with 6 cyl., automatic, radio, heater. $1595 blue. $795 1965 FORD Ratich Wagon, with V-8, auto- IMS FORD 1 Falcon Station Bus, 6 cyl., stick, 1 81395 $1495 ALL ABOVE WAGONS 1964 FORD Country Sruira with V-8, auto- ready to go9 to work for you and your Family today! and heater, wh,,e fl39J you all — SAVEI BEATTIE FORD — On Dixie Hwy . in Waterford — Your Ford Dealer Since 1930 623-0900 1964 THUNDERBIRD lardtop, air conditioned, powc equipped, automatic transmissio .radioA heater, whitewalls,' fu price $1595, only $49 down an weekly payments of $12.92. HAROLD TURNER 1965 MUSTANG V8, AUTOMATIC,1 GLENN'S 1965 MUSTANG ' L. C. Williams, Salesman 952 W. BEEN BANKRUPT? BAD .CREDIT' NEED A CAR? Call FE 8-4088 anc ask for Mr. White. King AT BEAT 855 OAKLAND AVL THE We ore not waiting for the new models to cut our pieces. PRICE HIKE End of model year sale prices in effect nowf- Select while stocks are complete! No reasonable offer refused! Easiest possible financing. PRICED TO SELL Stock #2074 1967 CHARGER 13 engine, 2-berrel c*rb„ Inyl roof, power steering, orqueflite transmission, ra-lo, power brakes, power rindows, console, tinted wind-hield, remote mirror, white- PRICED TO SELL CONVERTIBLE $ Save Hundreds $ r, whitewall tires. PRICED TO SELL Stock #3012 1967 MONACO 4-Door Hardtop. 343 engine, 2- bl. carb., bucket seels, radio, power storing and brakes, 3- speed wipers, torquefllts transmission, tinted windshield and whitewall tires. I PRICED TO SELL Stock #3011 1967 MONACO 2-Door Hardtop. All v trim, 383 engine, 2-ba HjBfij Torqueflita transr sion, ewall 1 DISCOUNT $800 Stock #3047 1967 MONACO 2-Door Hardtop. 313 at bbl., vinyl roof, radh steerlng, automatic, air conditioning, tinted g I a 4 s and undercoating. ’ PRICED TO SELL radio, remote r PRICED TO SELL 1965 VALIANT 2-Door Sedan. Automatic, 4-cylinder. $1095 1959 CORVETTE Red. 3-speed. Best buy In Pontiac today. $995 1964 OLDS Dynamic 4-Door Sedan. V-l, power steering end brakei. All whit*. $895 1965 BARRACUDA Stenderd shift, 4-cylindsr. A black beauty. $1295 1964 TEMPEST Custom 4-Door Sedan. Automatic, V-t. $1095 1963 MERCURY 2-Door Sedan. Automatic/ V4, and a tan beauty. $795 1965 CHEVY Blscayne 2-Door Sedan. Automatic, 6. Economy Special. $1195 1965 CHRYSLER Newport 2-Door Hardtop. Automatic, V-S, power steering end brakes. Vinyl roof. Sharp!! $.1895 1963 PONTIAC Catalina 2. Door Hardtop^ V-8 alU (toll powar. $10?$. 1962 PONTIAC Wagon. Automatic, V-8, - Slurp. $895 1965 DODGE Coronet 2-Doqr Sedan. Automatic, 6, power steering. $1195 1961 CHRYSLER Imperial 4-Door Hardtop. V-8, full power. $795 1963 CADILLAC Convertible with full power, white with a black topi $1895 1964 CHEVY Blscayne a-Door. 4-cyllndtr angina, extra dean! $895 1966 CHEVY Convertible. V-l, double power, sherpl $2195 1964 FALCON Convertible with automatic, e-cylinder. Like new throughout. $1095 mmwff mu&. mt 855 OAKLAND AVE. jj \ . FE 8-1122 __Bull price •775, ABSOLUTELY MO MONEY DOWN, Assume weakly payments of 17.72. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500- p— 1965 MERCURY *arklane , convertible, p o w • equipped, automatic, radio, baa tr, whitewalls, full prtca $141 with $49 tfown and weakly p%\ merits of $13.72. i HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Mi 4-75C MERCURY Salat, 479 S GLENN'S 1964 Olds 4 door hardtop. L. C. Williams, Salesman 952 W. Huron St. "It only takes a minute" to Get "A BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffe Ford ) Oakland Ave._______FE 5-4101, brakes and wl dows. Auto, transmission. AM ar FM radio. Air conditioning. 428 a gine. OR 3-2236. Ramblerville USA 1965 Ambassador Convertible, 2 fi choose from. $1195 I 1965 Ambassador i 4-door sedan, V-8, power steering and brakes, radio. $1295 ;1963 Rambler American, stick overdrive, 2-door hardtop. $495 1965 Rambler Classic, stick shift. $835 1964 Rambler Classic, automatic. $775 1963 Rambler: 6 automatic, power: steering. $695 VILLAGE RAMBLER 666 S, Woodward Ave. BIRMINGHAM 646-3900 EVERYDAY LOW PRICES $123.52 - I960 DODGE r, whitewalls. Balance due $115.74 1959 FORD Galaxie 500. Radio, haatar, V-l. automatic. Balance due only— $105.47 1963 FORD XL 2-Dqot Hardtop. Bucket seats, console, V-8, automatic, radio, heater, whitewalls. Balance due only— $263.12 anc* due only— $242.27 1961 PLYMOUTH Belvedere 2-Door Hardtop with automatic, radio, hooter, whit*-' walls. Belanct due only— $228,03 1961 CADILLAC Coup* DeVIII* 4-Door Hardtop. Full power, radio, haetor. white-walls, excellent condition. Bail- #nc*" $481.10 1962 GMC M-Ton Pickup. V-4, stick. Balance due. only— $388.14 IF YOU HAVE BEEN BANKRUPT, GARNISHED OR HAD A REPOSSESSION, SEE US, WE FINANCE I AS LOW AS $5 DOWN WITH PAYMENTS OF $1.57 PER WEEK Elizabeth Lake Road and M59 FE 8-4088 JUST LOOKING? Great! We're firm believers in shopping around and getting the best buy available. Just remember — the best buy, regardless of price, is olwoys quality. Quality costs no more at WILSON-CRISSMAN. 1966 Cadillac Sedan DaVllie. Loaded with equipment including full power. 1963 Cadillr Coup* DeVIII*. Saddle bronze finish, contrasting Interior, lull e-way seat, power door locks, tilt and telescope wheel, AM* FM radio, vinyl rgqf and factory air-conditioned. Sharp. $AVE power, e-way seat, easy-aya .glass, excel lent condition Tave 1965 Cadillac 1964 Cedilla Devin* Convertible. Charcoal Sedan Deville. Tha popular hardtop modal. Black with black vinyl root, full power, <-way seat, factory eir-conditloning. finish with black Interior, full .power, with e-way seat. Vary clean Inside and out. Exceptional car all tha way. ”$AVE $AVE -1966 Cadillac Coupe DeVllle. White flnlih, black and white Interior, black vinvl roof, full power, tinted 1963 Cadillac' Coup* Devil la, equipped with all tha standard luxury features including full powar. finished In a soft metallic color with glass, almost new tires. A real clean car. $AVE matching Interior. Reedy to go In ovary respect. $AVE CADILLAC of Birmingham Ask For Rich Kroll 1350 NORTH WOODWARD PHONE Ml 4*1930 STARTING TOMORROW!! at RUSS JOHNSON'S PONTIAC RAMBLER FREE 1. Gifts For All—- , 2. Refreshments For All — 3. 50 Gal. of Gas With Purchase of Any Car! 19.S2 Tempest 2-Door ....... 1964 Tempest 2-Door ...... 1961 Rambler 4-Door ....... 1960 Pontiac Station Wagon . 1964 Buick Special 2-Door . 1963 Rambler Wagon .......... 1957 Ford Pickup ... 1963 Starchief 4-Door ......... 1962 Buick Convertible 1963 VW Karman Convertible . $195 $395 $350 $295 $895 ..$595 $75 $995 $995 ..$695 -EXECUTIVE CARS- 1967 GRAND PRIX Sove 2-door Hardtop .. ...$1800 1967 BONNEVILLE Save 4-door Hardtop .. ...$1400 1967 BONNEVILLE Save 2-door Hardtop .. ...$1200 \ -DEMO SPECIALS- 1967 EXECUTIVE Save Wagdti ...$1000 1967 BONNEVILLE Save 4-door Hardtop .. .. $1300 1967 TEMPfST Sove Station Wagon ... ...$1300 -BRAND NEW '67s- 1967 T^IPEST . ..$2057* 1967 CATALINA .. . $2895* Statibn Wagon 1967 BONNEVILLE ..$2899* 2-door"1 Hardtop ♦Plus Extra Cost Option is. Sales Tax and License 1964 Olds 2-Door Hdrdtop . 1964 Chevy Convertible . 1964 Wildcat Convertible .. 1962 Falcon Station Wagon . 1965 Chevy 4-Door ...... 1966 Bonneville Convertible ..... 1966 Catalina 4-Door Sedan . 1966 GTO Beautiful 2-Door . 1964 Catalina 4-Door Sedan . 1965 Rambler Station Wagon $995 .$1095 $1195 . $495 $1095 $2495 : $1595 $1895, ,$1095 ; $1195 OPEN FRIDAY 12 NOON to 12 MIDNIGHT SATURDAY 8 A.M. to 9 P.M, RUSS JOHNSON PONTIAC - RAMBLER Chuch Moriarty, Joe Flumerfelt, Ker^ Johnson On M-24 in Lake Orion MY 3-62610- JB i -s THE PONTIAC PfiESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1967 Chrysler - Plymouth - Jeep Rambler 1966 Valiant SKmur® “”y ,-0M $1495 '65 Chevrolet STsr« $1195 '65 Rambler $1295 '64 Chevrolet psg^' '62 Chevrolet $795 1965 Dodge $1095 ON DIXIE HWY. — NEAR Ml 5 W mm ONE-STOP TRANSPdRTATION CENTER ____________VALU-RATED USED CARS____________ 1967 CmLAC^UPE PeVjLLE^fulljgower^. SAVE 1965 ss?as?jiftsu •■•■••••••............$159S 1964 OLDS F-85 ^Passenger Wagon .......$1195 1965 OLDS F-85 Deluxe Sport Coupe .....$1595 V-l, automatic, power stoorlng and brake*. Lika nawl 1966 OLDS 98 Holiday sedan ............$2995 Maroon, with full power and factory air, 1967 OLDS Cutlass Convertible .........$2995 Lon than 1300 Miles. .1965 OLDS Starfire Coupe...............$2395 Full power. Factory air. 1965 OLDS Dynamic 88 4-door HT.........$1795 __J»nM«w^jt»erli>j and Brakea jDmhrn s 1 MERCURY SPORT COUPES 3U1PPED WITH- GLENN'S $2095 Dallwnf BISS HILLSIDE $AVE $ $ $ SAVE L96SLF^K?^ - $1195 BEEN BANKRUPT? BAD CREDIT? NEED A CAR? Call FE 8-4088 White. King 635 S. Woodward Ave. Birmingham 647-5111 OUR USED CARS ARE PEOPLE-PLEASERS i. 2,732 actual miles. 1963 MERCURY Marauder 2-Door Hardtop: Burgundy finish with matchlr intar lor. V-0 angina, automatic, power brakes and ■“ whitewalls. 1962 T-BIRD 2-Door Hardtop. Full power, automatic, sharpest i :, power steer- $2995 . Real saving $495 Hurry on $995 Ing all vinyl 1964 OLDS Jetstar 88 2-Door Hardtop. Looking for that real sharp _ It Is. Automatic, V-8, power brakes and power steering. $995 $1195 1964 PONTIAC Vantura 2-Door Hardtop. Automatic, power brakes and Ing. all vinyl Interior, gorgeous. one? Here $1295 power stoar- $1395 1964 CHEVY „ impaia 2-Door Hardtop. A silver beauty with black vinyl top, automatic, double power, radio and heater, V-8 engine. $1395 1965 CHEVY Bel Air Station Wagon. Radio, heater, automatic transmission. Need tot. of room? Hare It Is. 1966 VALIANT 2-Door. A golden beauty, cylinder with stick shift for real economy. * $1495 1965 PONTIAC Bonneville 2-Door Hardtop. Automatic, power brakes and steering. A blue beauty with all white vinyl Interior. Immaculate at $1995 1966 FORD Galaxie 500 2tDoor Hardtop. A burgundy baauty with black vinyl tope 390 V-8 engine, automatic, power staring. 6,700 actual mots. $2295 LINCOLN-MERCURY 1250 Oakland 333-7863 . *64 Corvalr Monza coupe •63 Ford Galaxie . -63 Rambler coupe '85 Valiant conv. '81 Cadillac, loaded SLF-DOZEN CARS AT S*» E OPDYKE MOTORS 2230 Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke FE 8-2237 ____________FE S-9238 HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 884 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMI,NOHAM_Ml 4-73 M L. C. Williams, Salesman 232 W. Huron St. _ FE 4-7371 FE 4-1797 Many More to Choose From 1963 PONTIAC 4-DOOR. NO MONEY LUCKY AUTO 1940 W. Wida Track ______ ___________ Call after S, FE 5-7461.___________ 1964 GRAND PRIX, 431 TRIPOWER i LUCKY AUTO 1940 W. Wide Track , 1984 .PONTIAC. ORIGINAL OWNER, power, auto., S945. OA 8-2035. 10410 Dartmouth, Clarketon.______ ..^4 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE. 1985 MUSTANG----------“*■ UB 1984 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE, automatic, power brakes and Steering, tilt wheel. 847-3370. 1964 PONTIAC GRAND PfclX. EXC. condition. Best offer. Phone 6*3- New Faces—New Policies KEEGO PONTIAC-GMC TRUCKS ptifsj ■Mi toby hMp. jjy J'go" !. Williams, Salesman 952 W. Huron St. FE 4-7371 \ FE 4-1797 More to Choose From 3140. 591 Fourth St. 1967 PONTIAC CUSTOM automatic VO, radio, whitewalls,i ... Only — $2395 1965 Catalina Coupe, _______ L. C. Williams, Salesman ^ 952 W. Huron St. FE 4-7371 FE 4-179 Many Mora to Choose From TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1985 PONTIAC GTO hardtop coupe With 4-on-the-floor. Mack vinyl roof, extra nice, $1,795. On U.S. 10 at M15. Clarkslon. MA 5-5071. 1965 TEMPEST LeMani 2-door radio, hoater, 4-speed, $1395 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth 080 S, Woodward Ml 7-3218 1965 PONTIAC VENTURA SPORT Coupe, radio, new ble power. 391-3853. 1985 PONTIAC 4 HAUPT PONTIAC Om MIS at 1-73 Internetting* Clarkslon I FINANCE REASONABLE II Rambler & Chevy Wagon *92 ea. I Cadillacs '57 to '58. 1 8295, 2 5395 ‘85 cars. VW Ford Dodge. Rea.— Olds '57 to '5*. SSS to $198. I ' Also Chevy and Ford Trucks 3\'61 Pontlacs and Fords — Po ' ECONOMY USED CARS 2335 Dlxia Hwy. 1961 NASH RAMBLER, GOOD CON-dltlon. BIBO. 882-3032. 1982 RAMBLER AMERICAN. RUtiS • ™L— —“— "res and sftor 6 1983 RAMBLER, CLASSIC STATION wagon with 6-cyllndtr engine, automatic transmlislr- sadta heater. Whitewall tire . -- top. individual reclining seats, nice vacation speclol. Priced tr v car factory warrai 1984 CHEVY Impale 2-door hardtop. Yes, folks—this has all the goodies, nice maroon finish,* and tr dream, economy w 1947 VOLKSWAGEN, ..........I brand new. Has deluxe push-button radio, whitewall tires. Fill the tank end run forever, almost. ......................! $1795 1*85 TEMPEST Custom 4-Door Sedan, with power steering, brakes, V8, one-owner end Is ex- 1983 CHEVROLET Wagon, 9-Paa-senger. Beautiful dark aqua finish, ona owner and locally owned. dsn. automatic. 1985 MUSTANG Convertible. 4-speed, on the floor, and 219 V-l engine. Blue with a white top. ........................$1593 1984 . COMET Calient Hardtop with power sto automatic,- maroon fti Mack buckets. Only . 1*83 PONTIAC Wagon with power steering, brakes, automatic. Guaranteed actual miles ...11*95 1*88 PONTIAC Catiline Convertible with beautiful maroon finish. whit# top. Nsw car factory warranty. Only ..:............... $2493 1*63 BUICK Special 2-Door with automatic, moat economy with Mg car ride. Only .......... *9*5 Pat Jarvis, Rusty Shelton, Tommy Thompson, Salas Mgr, PONTIAC-BUICK 651-5500 OPEN: MONDAY and THURSDAY TILL 9 P.M. 855 S. Rochester Rd., Vt Mile South of Downtown Rochester two to select from, excellent • io rust throughout) FE Cover King.' 1961 PotfflAC, EMERY GREEN. must hi MARVEL.— .-Avs. PE 8-4079. 1961 BONNEVILLE lion wagon, with 4 way pow Hydramatic transmission* c standing condition. * $695 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE ML Clemens_________FE 3-7954| 1982 CATALINA, LINE NEW.' 628- GLENN'S 1982 Catalina 4 door Sedan 1 owi ar. 43,000 actual Ml. L. C. Williams, Salesman 932 W. Huron St. __, FE 4-7371 FE 4,J797| Many More to Choose From 1982 4-DOOR PONTIAC, FULL POW- r payments. FE 1962 PONTIAC WAGON Catalina two to choose from,'*— mafic power steering, brakes. Your choice— HAUPT PONTIAC On M15 at 1-75 Interchange :i»rkston___. _____MA 5-5500 j 983 ttMPEST CONVERTIBLE, beautiful white top, leather Interior. Price only *495, no money down, *5.17 weekly. I Standard Autol 109 East Blvd. (Sv) FE 8-4033 GOOD 1983 PONTIAC CATALINA 4 I top. 421 HO, OR "BIRMINGHAM TRADES" 1966 OPEL r sport coupe, 4-sp< heeler. Beautiful red $1288 1963 LeSABRE $988 1967 OPEL $1688 1963 PLYMOUTH $2988 $2388 - DOUBLE CHECK -- USED CARS - 545 S. Woodward 647-5600 COME TO OUR ANNUAL —Prices Are Clearly Marked On The Red. Tag- H/1hihiaf/v i h my iEr/nf>)/fif>)iy/n 1964 Chevelle - 2-Door Sedan 6*cyUnder engine* standard transmission* whitewall tires. Arctic white. i $1095 1963 BEL AIR 2-Door Sedan 6-cyllnder engine, standard heater, whiter-11 $995. 1965 IMPALA Sport Sedoh V-8 engine, automatic tranamla-aioii. power stoorina and brakes, factory . $1895 1963 BEL AIR 2-Door Sedan 1966 Corvair Sport Coupe Automatic transmission, radio and heater, whitewall tires. Sierra gold finish. Factory warranty. $1495 1966 Biscayne 4-DoorSedan V-S engine, Powerglide, radio and heater, whitewall tlras. Arctic white finish. $1795 1963 IMPALA Sport Sedan . Tuxedo black finish. $1195 1965 IMPALA Super Sport Convertible Bolero rad finish.» ALL LATE MODEL USED CARS SOLD Will Have 5 Brand New Tires 1963 CHEVY Impaia Sport Sedan Powerglide, power steering, radio, heater, wire wheel covers. Jet Mack finish. Only—' $1197 1966 CHEVY Bel Air 4-door Sedan with 6-cyllnder engine, Powerglide. radio, heater and whitewalls. Daytona blue finish. $1797 1964 CHEVY Bel Air 4-door Sidan. V-8* Powerglide, radio* heater* whitewalls. Tropical turquoise finish. $1197' 1966 IMPALA! Sport Coupe steering, radio and heater, whitewall tlras, fectory warranty. Tux-ado black finish. 1965 CHEVY Biscayne Sedan 2-Door. Radio, heatoi 1961 CHEVY Biscayne 9-Passenger Station Wagon. V-8, Poworglld*. 1962 CHEVY Bel Air 6-passenger *» $997 1966 CHEVY Caprice Sports Sedan with V-8* automatic* power steering* vinyl top* brown finish. $2397 1966 CHEVY’ Impaia Convertible oon finish with white $2147 1964 GMC Handy Van With radio, heater, automatic. Outstanding work horst, and lust right for lob—whatever you need —you can do In this onsl Only— $1095 $1795 $2095 $1397 $797 $797 Over 300 New and-Used Cars to select from—All Makes and Colors Oakland County's Largest Volume ..Chevrolet Dealer 631 Oakland at Cass FE 4-4547 jL.......---UUr THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1967 D—14 f>‘), —Television Programs— Programs furnished by stations listed in this column are subject to change without notice ChenneUi 2-WJBK-TV, 4-WWJ-TV, 7-WXYZ-TV, 9-CKLW-TV, 50-WKBD-TV, 56-WTVS TONIGHT l:M (2) (4) News (C) (7) Movie: “Whistling in Brooklyn” (1943) Red Skelton, Ann Rutherford. (R) (50) Superman (R) (56) Misterogers 4:30 (2) News—Cronkite (C) (4) News—Huntley, Brinkley (C) (9) Twilight Zone (R) (50) Flintstones (R) (C) (56) What’s New 7:00 (2) Truth or Consequences (C) (4) Michigan Outdoors (C) (9) Movie: “Missile B; at Taniak” (1953) I PLUMBING DISCOUNTS 3-Piece BATH SET White or omy $CQ95 Colored "B” 99 TOILETS n» *1695 FIREPLACE Gas Logs 24” VANITY WITH TRIM 49** EXTRA SPECIALS! lotmdry Tray oimI Trim • • . • • $19.93 Stainless Steel Sinb.$22.95 Bath Tubs, Irreg...$20.00 up Shmrar Stott with Trim.$33.95 $49.95 •m Not Water Nsttor FITTINGS. WE CUT AND THREAD fittVe PLUMBING 841 Baldwin FE 4-1516 or FE 5-210$ Open Mon., Sat. S:30 P.M. Wnd. and Fri. Ev.t. Til 1 P.M. 21 14" Teleking $19*5 17" Admiral $2495 21" Zenith $2995 " Westinghouse $3995 21" Emerson $3995 21" Muntz $3995 21" Silvertone $39.5 21 "RCA $4995 21 "GE $499* 24" Motorola $4995 30-DAY EXCHANGE PRIVILEGE FE 2-2251 WALTON TV SIS E. Walton Blvd. Comer Joslyn Open 9 to 6 ■ TV Features ‘AN EVENING AT TAN-GLEWOOD,’ 7:30 p.m. (4) VIC DAMONE, 10 p.m. 1 (4) ‘WHO IN ’68,’ 10 p.m. 8 (7) Henry, Susan Morrow (R) (50) Ministers (R) ' (56) Struggle for Peace 7:30 (2) Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour —The Ricardos accept an invitation to vaca-; tion in a friend’s mountain cabin — only to find the Duffs (Howard Duff, Ida Lupino) decided to accept an invitation also. (R) (C) (4) (Special) An Evening at Tanglewood — Erich Leinsdorf conducts the Boston Symphony Orchestra. Violinist Itzhak Perlman is featured soloist (C) (7) Batman — Catwoman demands a ransom for Chad and Jeremy’s voices. (R) (C) (50) Make Room for Daddy (R) (56) News fa Perspective 8:00 (7) F Troop — The troopers dream of a marriage merry-go-round and try to rescue Parmenter from a match-maker. (R) (C) (50) New Breed — A war bride opens the door to a “friend of her husband’s,” but when her husband returns, the woman is dead. (R) 8:30 (2) My Three Sons — A woman claims to be Steve’s old flame—and he can’t remember her. (R) (C) (7) Bewitched—Samantha can’t resist using her powers when she and Darrin spend a weekend with a wealthy and attractive couple. (R) (C) (56) What’s fa a Word? 9:00 (2) Movie: “Barabba: (Italian, 1961) The anguish of the criminal freed in the place of Jesus at the crucifixion is based on a novel by Nobel prize winner Par Lagerkvist. An-thony Quinn, Vittorio Gassman, Silvana Man-gano. (R) (C) (7) That Girl — Ann and Don are stranded with newlyweds at a hotel. (R) (9) Profiles in Courage-In 1850 Darnel Webster seeks Henry Clay’s support to avert civil war (R) J (50) Movie: “The Unfaithful” (1947) A man returns from a business trip to find his home surrounded and a dead man in his library. (R) (56) Lehmann Master class 9:30 (4) Dragnet — Friday and Gannon track down a youth peddling LSD. (R) (C) (7) Love on a Rooftop Julie tries to find out why Dave didn’t marry his flame. (R) (C) (56) African Writers 10:00 (4) Vic Damone — Don Cherry and Flip Wilson are guests. (C) (7) Summer Focus—“Who in ’68?” explores the parties and personalities as they move toward the nominating conventions of 1968. (C) (9) Telescope-Canadian recipes and eating habits are discussed by Pierre Berton. (R) (C) . ■ (56) Creative Person 10:30. (9) Country Music H?ll (56) Eric Hoffer 11:00 (4) (7) News (C) (9) News (50) David Susskind (C) 11:30 (4) Johnny Carson (C) (7) Joey Bishop (C) (9) Gideon’s Way 11:45 (2) News (C) 12:15 (2) Movie: 1. “Callaway Went Thataway” (1951) Fred MaqMurray, Dorothy McGuire. (R) “Women Are Like That” (1950) Kay Francis, Pat O’Brien. (R) 12:30 (9) Song of the Ages 12:40 (9) Window on the World 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) Untouchables (R) 3:15 (2) Highway Patrol (R) TOMORROW MORNING 6:15 (2) On the Farm Scene 6:20 (2) News (C) 6:30 (2) Spectrum (4) Classroom (7) Vagabond (C) 7:00 (2) Woodrow the Woodsman (C) ’ (4) Today (C) (7) Morning Show 7:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry Go-Round 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (9) People in Conflict 8:30 (7) Movie: “The Three Musketeers” Part 2. (R) (9) Take 30 9:00 (2) Merv Griffin (4) Living (C) (9) Romper Room 9:55 (4) News (C) 10:00 (4) Snap Judgment (C) (7) Girl Talk (9) Hawkeye 10:25 (4) News (C) 10:30 (2) Beverly Hillbillies (R) (4) Concentration (C) (7) Dateline (9) Hercules (50) Yoga for Health 10:55 (7) Children’s Doctor 11:00 (2) Andy of Mayberry (R) (4) Personality (C) (7) Honeymoon Race (C) (9) Luncheon Date (50) Dickory Doc (C) 11:30 (2) Dick Van Dyke (R) (4) Hollywood Squares (C) (7) Family Game TOMORROW AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) News (C) (4) Jeopardy (C) (7) Everybody’s Talking (9) Communicate (50) Dialing for Dollars 12:25 (2) News (C) 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) Eye Guess (C) (7) Donna Reed (R) (9) Movie: “The Major of 44th Street” (1942) George Murphy, Ann Shirley. (R) (50) Movie: “Manpower” (1941) Edward G. Robinson, Marlene Dietrich, George Raft. (R) 12:45 (2) Guiding Light (C) 12:55 (4) News (C) 1:00 (2) Love of Life (C) (4) Match Game (C) (7) Fugitive (R) 1:25 (2) Jackie Crampton (C) (4) Carol Duvall (C), 1:30 (2) As the World Turns (C) (4) Let’s Make a Deal (C) 1:55 (4) News (C) 2:00 (2) Password (C) (4) Days of Our Lives (C) (7) Newlywed Game (C) 2:30 (2) House Party (C) (4) Doctors (C) (7) Dream Girl (C) (50) Love That Bob (R) 2:55 (7) News .(C) (9) News 3:00 (2) To Tell the Truth (C) (4) Another World (C) (7) General Hospital (9) Matches and Mates (C) , (50) Topper (R) 3:25 (4) News (C) 3:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) You Don’t Say (C) (7) Dark Shadows (9) Swingin’ Time (50) Capt. Detroit (C) 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (4) Bozo the Clown .(C) (7) Dating Game (C) 4:30 (2) Mike Douglas (C) (R) (7) One Step Beyond (9) Fun House (C) 4:55 (4) Eliot’s Almanac (C) 5:00 (4) George Pierrot — “Holiday in North Europe” (C) (7) News (C) (9) William Tell (R) (50) Alvin (C) 5:30 (7) News (C) (9) Stagecoach West (R) (50) Little Rascals (R) 5:45 (56) Friendly Giant 5:55 (4) Feature Story (C) State of the Union SUte’ 44 Mix 0 Ntw — Aft Pnvara 8 Southern .tit* iS®7comb. \2 New EP*ll"d 5S River (Sp.) — chowder MMOltaiy Prevloue Punle 13 Metculine jm 14 Mouth pert 15 lake in Oregon IS Tentacle! 21 Branches (comb, form) 23 Gibbon < 24 Conducted 27 Breed of pit 28 Proportion ceremonial . . 33 Losing ,- - in'tiered brilliancy 37 Chen rook 33 Arctic sandpiper 31 European river 88S^-(.W * g|flM •1 CaterpiUar heir ______ DOWN bull 40 Assault 1 Frozen desserts 18 Causes sharp, 43 One of the 2 Palmyra stinging pain Carolina^ palm leaf 20 Dens 45 Rakes 3 Town in 22 Meditates 46 Table scraps South Dakota 24 Singing bird 47 Tumult 4 Afghan prince 25 Level 48 Roman emperor (var.) 26 Eager 50 Cavern 5 Sweet potato inclinations' 51 Horse’s gelt 6 Open-chain 28 Wordlen 52 Notion 30 Ceramic piece 55 Scepter 1 5“ 3" r- 6 n 8 9“ 10 11 TT" 13” TT iS” hT ■ TT IT" T5” 20" ~~ : i a zT 24 25 26 W 28 29~ F 31 35“ 3T 35 38” 37“ 38“ 39 40 4r 45“ 44~ 45 l 46 47 48 49“ 50 51 52 53“ Isr 55 56“ 57“ 58~ 59” 60“ — W □ Mexico Now Invites Sinatra to Return-and Make a Film By EARL WILSON NEW YORK—Mexico, which barred Frank Sinatra because he made a movie in which the Mexican flag was inadvertently flown upside down, has invited him to reenter the country whenever he chooses . . . and make another movie . about Mexico. I .inHMPl “We need a hundred Sinatra’s to help us build Mexico,” said Ollalo Rubio Jr., a Mexican producer who has been here spreading the word about Sinatra being invited back, particularly to Acapulco, where he has a home. Former President Miguel Aleman Sr., now president of Mexican Tourism, plus the depart- p ment of interior and the labor unions tele-p graphed Sinatra that his visa had been stated. WILSON Then Rubio outlined the specific movie project to Henri Gfae of Sinatra’s staff. They want to film “The Road to Mexico” with Sinatra, Dean Martin, Sammy Davis and Cantfaflas—a story about American tourists who discover the charms of the country, not only architectural but feminine. I am now a proud father-in-law. Earl Jr. and bride Susan Bauer are honeymooning somewhere in beautiful New Jersey after the ceremony at St. Peter’s Lutheran Church . . . Truman Capote’s, fixing up a motion-picture redo of “Laura” for Lee Radziwill. That’s what they say he said at Dick Ridgely’ Southampton. Juanita Hall is being moved -to Medical Arts Hospital to be treated for pernicious anemia among other ailments. You who contributed to “the Juanita Hall Fund” deserve her thanks. THE MIDNIGHT EARL , . . Secret Stuff: A NY nightclub operator, bored flying back from Europe, going into a blackjack game with a fellow passenger and lost $18,000 ... A film producer enraged the wife of a famous composer by “borrowing” her ideas for house decoration while there for dinner, incorporating it in his own pad, and then getting publicity about it as “his” . . . Paris believes beautiful Genevieve Bujold, who appears opposite Jean-Paul Belmondo in “The Thief of Paris,” could be the new sex rocket. Ann-Margret was out of her Las Vegas Riviera act with laryngitis. Her substitute: husband Roger Smith (aided by Vic Damone) . . ., Secret Stuff: Several N.Y. hotels won’t accept a famed Broadway and Hollywood star . . . Joan Crawford gave a party at Voisin for Jane Jayroe (Miss America), who’ll entertain in Vietnam . . . Celeste Holm and husband Wesley Addy’ll costar in “Mame” in Baltimore. Kirk Douglas again shelved plans to film “Montezuma’ because of its $20,000,000 budget . . . Jack Cassidy went shopping and bought a house that Mrs. C. (Shirley Jones) hadn’t even seen . . . Mickey Spiilane is writing a Broadway musical version of his Mike Hammer stories . . . Singer-composer Gilbert Becaud’s writing three songs for Sophia Loren to do on her TV special. (Publishtrs—Hall Syndicate) Syndicate Buys Control of Four Star Television NORTH HOLLYWOOD, Calif. (AP) — Controlling interest fa Four Star Television, founded in 1955 by the late Dick Powell and other motion picture stars, has been sold to a syndicate. The firm produces television film series, music sheets and recordings. WWW Attorney A. Morgan Maree IH, former corporate secretary, said today the sale was closed Tuesday. The transaction reportedly involved about $1 million, or $2.50 a share, for stock held by David Niven, Charles Boyer and June Allyson, Powell’s widow. NO COMMENT Maree, son of board member A. Morgan Maree Jr., declined to make details of the"-sale public. David Charnay and Louis Blacker, investors reported to be heading the syndicate of 15 members, would not comment until a statement by their attorney is prepared. The firm’s stock traded over Only Balky Firms Fined by Air Rules LANSING (AP) - Industries not measuring up to new air pollution rules won’t be pi cuted as long as they can prove they are attempting to remedy their problems, says an official of the State Department pf Public Health. Only “totally uncooperative” firms may find themselves paying the $100 a day fine provided for in the new regulations, said. Bernard D. Bloomfield, assistant chief of the division of occupational health. The rules, which took effect earlier this week, set specific limits on emission for various types of industry. Trailer Bandit Robs Branch DETROIT (AP) - This city’ trailer bank bandit,” so dubbed by police, Wednesday held up an East Side branch office of a savings and loan office at gunpoint and made off with $4-, ★ ★ ★ The bandit over the past two years ha^ stolen about $50,000, police say, all from branch banks, usually in the suburbs and often temporarily housed fa trailers. The Detroit News has offered I $2,000 reward for conviction of the bandit, described by witnesses as a Negro of medium height and build. Filipino Actor Province Politico MANILA (UPI)-A Philippine movie actor who has played in several Hollywood producti is running for governor of nearby Rizal Province. Actor P a n c h o Magal whose screen credits include Marauders,” the last film in which the late Jeff Chandler starred, was named the Liberal party candidate Wednesday. He will run against incumbent Gov. Isidro Rodriguez of the governing Nacionalista party in the November election. * Mariner 5 Makes Half-Way Point WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Mariner 5 spacecraft is now halfway into its 128-day flight to the planet Venus. The 540-pound space vehicle, launched June 14, is due to fly within 2,500 miles of Venus’ surface and relay data on the planet’s atmosphere and space surroundings back to earth. — Radio Programs— WJW760) WXYZQ270) CKLWfftOO) WWJ[95Q) WCARQ130) WPONfl 460)WJBK[1500) WHFgwTri J WBBfig.-.' IsSK. Sfc pi Authorized RCA-ZENITH See Our Selection of New RCA and ZENITH COLOR TVs RCA COLOR TV as low as $329oo Quality Color TV Service! 13 YEARS EXPERIENCE WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL! CONDON’S RADIO & TV 730 West Huron - FE 4-9736 WATER SOFTENER i ADJUSTING Preconditioning Jnotice: L 24 95 NO UPS ALL MAKES If you have moved into a home with a water conditioner — have it set for your family ... DIRECT FROM FACTORY 105,000 GRAIN WEEKLY WATER CONDITIONER $2590° \ 10-YEAR GUARANTEE FHA APPROVED Authorized of Oakland Co. REPAIRS—363-7400—RENTALS ROCHESTER e MAIN OFFICE • UNION LAKE Aft A ln«lly master.. Bntln.it with the Co.nty ft OsHsikI E THIS COUPON ^SAyEjrqiS COUPON S' the counter Wednesday at $6.38 a share. The firm’s sales hit a peak of $24 million in 1961 but foil to $20 million last year. * ★ A Powell’s estate owned 213,000 of the 665,950 outstanding shares. Boyer owned 107,000. Aide Promoted at Interlochen INTERLOCHEN (AP)-Veme Hawes has been promoted from guidance consultant to assistant director of the Interlochen Arts Academy, Karl Haas, academy president, announced Wednesday. His appointment is the second changefathe academy’s administration since June when Charles Eilber was moved Up from principal to director. C I A This Week Only We will roof an average size home completely for *I6894 Gome in and see us today . or Phone: 673-6775 AUBURN BUILDERS 4494 DIXIE HIGHWAY DRAYTON PLAINS We Pamper Our» To Perfection PIZZA Individual Cheese and Pedperoni PIZZA m os* RICKY’S Call F.r 16 Min. ttfrio* 335-7184 or 338-7782 Urns rraa tt Joi.ph HnpHsI TAKE OUT “Let’s Talk !» $-A-V-l-N-G-$ Take the Pledge... END PAINTING FOREVER! myowi • Wills.__________ bank financing. No •noooy down, 5 yoara to pay • Finn estimate. and personal dorian .arvice • Local- IS yoan oxpori.nco > you can fruit • All work guaranteed In writing. FE 5-4715 PERMANENT ROOFING & SIDING CO. 262 South Telegraph Road-PONTIAC THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1967 Citizen Vote Set on Dearborn Frisk Law Draft Error Gets Nondrivers Get State Identification Cards DEARBORN (AP)-Voters in this Detroit suburb will be asked their opinion in the Sept. 12 primary about the controversial stop-and-frisk law. The City Council, acting on the recommendation of Mayor Or viiie L. Hubbard, voted to place the advisory question on the ballot following a stormy session Tuesday night. ★ * ★ Councilman John Baja, who dissented, termed the advisory vote a “waste of time,’’ adding the law should be enacted and left to the courts to determine its legality. The law, considered in Detroit briefly, has not been drawn into legal form in Dearborn, but in essence would allow police officers to stop and search any person suspected of criminal action or intent. ‘OVERWHELMING SUPPORT’ Hubbard, mayor of Dearborn’s 112,000 residents for 27 years, and, considered a proponent of the separate but equal theory of civil rights, said he felt “99 and 44-lOoth per cent of the people in Dearborn” would support the plan- Hubbard said policemen would “never abuse the law” by detaining or unnecessarily embarrassing innocent citizens. ★ * * “The police know who the lawbreakers are," the mayor said. [clgJ.wtt’fy 6s Imekto school to an MUSIC! 2-SPEED, PORTABLE TAPE RECORDER Enjoy new recording flexibility on the solid-state Craig 212{ Your voice at its normal level is picked up and recorded perfectly every time no matter how far you are from Ate mike! ' New "Slngle-T" controls oil taping operations! Plays on batteries or AC power. 39 95 Remote micro-phone, reel, tape end accessory pouch. are included. AC Adapter 5.95 (Use Your Charge, 4-Pay Plan (90 days same as cash) or Budget Terms GRINNELL'S, Pontiac Mall, 682-0422 Downtown Pontiac, 27 S. Saginaw, FE 3-7168 His Discharge FT. BRAGG, N. C. (UPI) -Pfc. Leslie E. Brown didn’t hate to get up this morning — it’s the day he becomes plain Mr. Brown. * * * Brown, victor over the Pentagon, is a civilian again after five months of Army duty he shouldn’t have served. He was drafted by mistake. “All I Want is time to get back on my feet,’’ said Brown, adding he would be on his way home to Oreland, Pa., by noon. The 23-year-old Brown said he was not bitter. The Army gave him a soft job as clerk in the company office during most of the five months of mistaken service. * * * “I think those five months active time should be compensated for in reserve time,” said Brown. < * * * Brown served six months active duty in late 1965 and early 1966, and then entered the Pennsylvania National Guard. But the Guard goofed and put him on a “delinquent” list. The Army drafted him March 21 de-1 spite his protests. / DETROIT (UPI) — A state representative and his wife today were to get the first state identification cards for nondrivers. Both are totally blind. Rep. Robert D. Mahoney, D-Detroit, and his wife, Jennie, were to be presented the fords under a new program to give legally blind persons official. identification that sighted persons take for granted. Mahoney, of coursp, sponsored the legislation to set up the program. Secretary of State James M. Hare, who was to make the presentation, said he hoped it would soon be expanded to include other non-drivers who for reasons of age’ or physical handicaps can’t get a driver’s license that so many merchants require for identification. BARGAIN DAYS SALE Sale Begins Thursday, August 17 Woven Cotton Checkerboard Bedspreads Full, Reg. 12.1 -1097 Contrasting double cord welting outlines checkerboard. Machine washable. Tnrqnoise/olive or gold/ brown. 11.98 twin size .... 9.97 7.98 bunk size . .6.97 Throw-Style Iridescent Acetate Spreads ss 097 12.98 / Quilted acetate cover backed with cotton. Polyester fiber-fill. Bine, petal pink, green or federal gold. 11.98 twin size.... 8.87 19.98 dual king... 19.97 Saon Dropary DspL Sears Fashion Watches Here’s a collection of unusual and handsome styles with fine Swiss movements. Reg. E.98 4" Dressy styles, snappy sport styles, calendars for men, women. Swiss , movements. - Reg. 12.91 8" Calendars, metal band watches for men. Chic bracelet watch with expansion links, safety chains. 17-Jewel Orvin Watches, Reg. 16.98........13.99 Reg. 15.98 12" SoamJawsIryDapL Sears Featherlite Luggage Hard-grained vinyl covered ease* bave tongne-and-groove closures. Chrome-plated lock*. Women’s cases in blue, red or green; men’s in brown or cbarcoaL 12.98 cosmetic ease.. .9.99 14.98 companion.....11.66 13.98 21” weekender 10.66 13.98 attache.........10.66 17.98 24” pnllman... 13.99 8.98 tote bag..........7.66 21.98 27” pnllman.. 16.99 12.98 model’s ease....10.66 19.98 2-raiter....... 15.66 25.98women’s garment bag 20.66 21.98 3-enlter.......16.99 28.98 men’s garment bag.\ 19.66’ Sean luggage Dept Fringed Nylon Bath Rugs 4.98 Nylon pile rag has attractive 3” knotted fringe. Back coated with Sear-A-Grip for skid resistance. 8 colors. 7.98 27x48”_____6,97 ia.9836x54” ....10.97 2.49 lid cover...1.98 Acetate Taffeta Shower Curtain Reg. 10.99 888 SEARS Slab weave acetate taffeta 1 curtain in 8 rich colors set off by ball fringe. With liner. 69e74-inch sine. 9.9968x54” window curtain . . .8.88 Downtown Pontii Phone FE } Farmer Group Warns of National Boycott m® NEW HOUSING—The beginning of a 250 unit apartment a community house, tennis courts and recreational facilities, project is taking shape at a site on Auburn west of Opdyke. The $2.5-million project will be ready for occupancy next To be developed by Charles L. Langs, the complex will include spring. DES MOINES, Iowa MP> — The militant National Farmers Organization has given the nation’s food processors an ultimatum: Increase prices for farm products or face an all-out market boycott by farmers that could “shut down the agricultural plant of America.” More than 35,000 NFO members shouted their approval of the plan and adopted the slogan, “No prices, no production,” at a meeting yesterday. , No deadline for the desired price boosts was set, but NFO President Oren Lee Staley of Rea, Mo., indicated that the board of directors will not hesitate to consider the all-commodity boycott if market conditions hill to improve. “Ike NFO is serving notice that farmers can no longer accept the low farm prices we are receiving,” he said. “Every processor has some time to decide whether he wants to pay the prices and sign the purchase contracts or push the American fanner into waging the economic battle we are willing to fight.” HOLDING ACTIONS NFO members also authorized the directors to order holding actions of three to four days on milk plus regional market boycotts on livestock and to establish an NFO “grain bank” in hopes of putting a “floor” under grain prices. Staley announced the NFO target on prices is $1.50 a bushel on corn; $3 a bushel on soybeans and $2 for wheat. On milk it is $6 a hundredweight, about 75 cents over the prevailing price in the Des Moines federally regulated market. “It is time we tackle the grain situation,” Staley said. “Farmers face $1 corn, $2.25 soybeans and $1.30 wheat this fall. “Our grain bank will enable farmers to Store and hold their grain, get the government loans and let NFO bargain for higher prices.” LIVESTOCK TARGET The target on livestock is $22.45 a hundredweight on hogs, $32.45 on choice cattle and $29.45 for lambs, well above prevailing markets. Staley said the interim measures would “let the processors of this nation know that we are building for an all-out holding action that would affect every commodity and would shut down the agricultural plant of America.” “It is not our desire to fight an economic battle that would deprive this nation of its food,” he added, “but nobody else is going to fairly price our products.” Vietnam War Issues Seen Plaguing Potential 1968 Republican Candidates By JACK BELL AP Political Writer WASHINGTON ■«- Republican Gov. George Romney of Michigan is demonstrating the difficulty potential 1968 GOP candidates are encountering In standing still bn a Vietnam war position in this summer of political discontent. Romney, an all-but-announced candidate for the Republican presidential nomination, was first classed as a dove, moved over among the hawks, and now is joining the critics of the North Vietnam bombing he once supported. While House Republican Leader Gerald R. Ford of Michigan shrugged off his differences with.his governor. Rom-neys’s contention that bombing would never end the war contrasted with Ford’s call last week for a stepup in air attacks. Romney was not the only Republican having second thoughts. * ★ Rhode Island Gov. John H. Chafee, who would like to be the GOP vice presidential nominee, backed away from his previous endorsement of the a i r strikes. In Today's Press West Bloomfield New supervisor is appointed PAGEA-4. Tito Fails Yugoslav President Tito’s bid for Mideast peace apparently fails - PAGE B-12. RFK Helps Johnson Kennedy moves to lessen cut in Alliance funds — PAGE C-6. Area News A-4 Astrology , C-13 Bridge ......C-13 Crossword Puzzle -D-W Comics C-13 Editorials A-6 Food Section C-2—C-5 Markets D*7 Obituaries C-U Sports D-l-D-6 Theaters C-l# TV-Radio Programs .. .... D-15 Wilson, Earl ..... ... ini Women’s Pages B-l-B-7 been moving steadily toward ever sharper criticism of President Johnson’s war policies, told a Cincinnati, Ohio, audience that if its allies don’t put up more fight the United States “must ask itself how much more it is willing to expend on a war to protect primarily' Asian Interests.” At Springfield, 111., Sen. Everett M. Dirksen, R-H1., said although the Republicans are not making the war a campaign issue, “it’s more of an issue with the people than ever before.” Surveys Boost Nixon's Hopes GETTING DISCOURAGED Chafee, who will head the GOP Governors’ Association next year, told a Providence, R.I., news conference yesterday. he is getting discouraged with the progress-of the war and. is altering his position cm the bombing issue because “we’re not winning to the extent we originally felt we were going to.’ Sen. Charles H. Percy, R-H1., who has MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — While Richard M. Nixon endorsed the latest expansion of U.S. bombing in North Vietnam, a poll gave fresh support to Ids potential candidacy for the Republican presidential nomination. The forma: vice president told a news conference yesterday he won’t decide until early next year whether to run for the GOP nimination. If he does, said Nixon, .he’ll enter “a number of primaries” and withdraw if he doesn’t win these tests. The American Broadcasting Co. said in New York, meanwhile, that its poll of delegates to the 1964 Republican convention shows a near majority of respondents prefers Nixon in 1968. Gov Ronald Reagan of California, who hasn’t yet completed his first year of elective office, was a second choice— and showed surprising strength among the former delegates as an expected vote-getter. ★ * * The ABC poll, to be aired tonight cm “Who in ‘68?”, drew responses from 938 delegates, or 71,1 per cent of those who attended the 1964 convention. Of the total responding, 614 said they expected to be delegates next year. .» Nixon received 48.5 per cent Support as a potential candidate compared with Reagan’s 17.1 per cent. But as the projected best vote-getter, Nixon dropped to 39.9 per cent while Reagan climbed to 25.9 per cent. „ < In a Minneapolis speech and at the news conference, Nixon, despite backing the bombing within 10 miles of Red-China, scored the Johnson administration on three issues likely to loom large in 1968-Vietnam, taxes and crime. Sicily Volcano Erupts MESSINA, Sicily (AP) w- Mt. Etna burst into a new eruption today 24 hours after 37 earth shocks were registered in this nearby city which was destroyed in 1908 by an earthquake. Molton rock was fired hundreds of feet into the air in the new eruption. Lava began pouring from a vent on the volcano’s northeast slope where there have been frequent eruptions during the past two years. Dirksen, the Senate Republican leader, has endorsed the bombing of military targets near Red China which Percy criticized. Their differences over Vietnam policy may have something to do with Percy’s reputed willingness to become Illinois’ favorite-son candidate at next year’s GOP presidential nominating convention. BROKE SILENCE In Minneapolis, former Vice President Richard M. Nixon broke a lengthy silence on the Vietnam issue to say he approves extension of the bombing of the North. ★ * ★ But Nixon, considered another contender for the GOP presidential nomination, warned a news conference the United States faces a “massive risk” if it doesn’t end the war soon. ★ ★ * In an earlier speech yesterday, Nixon said he agrees with termer President Dwight D. Eisenhower that toe wax shouldn’t be made a partisan issue in the 1968 campaign. Fire Hits London Hotel LONDON (AP) — Fire swept through upper floors of London’s Prince of Wales Hotel today, forcing hundreds of guests into the street in their night clothes. No injuries were repented. Fifty firemen brought the blaze under control in an hour. Combat Deaths 82 for Week, Lowest of Year SAIGON (A — American combat deaths in Vietnam numbered 82 last week, toe lowest weekly casualty toll in seven months, the U. S. Command announced today. The number of wounded was 748, also the lowest figure since toe first of this year. The decline in casualties was a reflection of toe lull in ground fighting which has now lasted about five weeks, with few significant engagements reported. The previous week’s casualties were 146 American dead and 1,064 wounded, which is slightly below this year’s average. The U. S. Command said 1,043 Communist troops were killed last week, which is also toe lowest figure this year. S. VIET TOLL The South Vietnamese armed forces suffered 283 dead and 683 wounded during the week, which is above average. Their high casualties stemmed largely from isoalted actions. The weekly casualty report listed 18 dead among other allied forces in South Vietnam, mainly the South Koreans and Australians who do not announce precise weekly casualties. American forces in Vietnam totaled . 454.000, unchanged from toe previous week. ★ * ★ Communist strength was estimated as 297.000, also unchanged from the previous week. Americans listed as missing, captured or detained now total 709 for the war, an increase of nifte during the week. The week’s death toll brought America’s losses in the war to 12,497 killed and 76,630 wounded by unofficial count Car Talks Cut Short; UAW Rallies Ranks DETROIT If) — The United Auto Workers union and the Big Three auto makers cut short their six weeks of negotiations today with unionists going hone to build fires they hope will smoke out new contract offers. ★ * * Current three-year UAW pacts with end Sept. 6 — less than three weeks away. Thus toe union bargainers Insist they have been unable to coax agreement on a single contract clause-economic or otherwise—from any of the companies. They express apprehension and say time is growing short if nonstrike agreements are to be reached covering toe Big Three’s nearly 700,000 UAW members. ★ ★ * The companies have yet to make a counteroffer to what UAW President Walter P. Reuther concedes is “toe longest and most ambitious set of demands” in his union’s history. Among other tilings they include a guaranteed annual income. HISTORICAL PRACTICE The companies insist that historically their proposals are. made only seven to 14 days before expiration of old contracts. As of today there are 20 days left. The companies appear unhurried. Ford and the UAW were to break off negotiations for the weekend today, permitting union bargainers to return to their home locals to confer with negotiators working on at-tbe-plant agreements which supplement the national contract. While home, toe Ford UAW negotiators are expected to plump for overwhelming appraisal in voting next week Cooling Showers on the Way Partly sunny skies are expected to bring a high today of 83 to 89. Gathering clouds promise a chance of scattered thundershowers late tonight, dropping the temperature to a low of 62 to 68. ★ ★ ★ Clouds Drill continue over toe Pontiac area tomorrow with thundefshowers likely. Cooler temperatures are expected in late afteriioon or evening. The outlook for Saturday is partly sunny and ngich cooler.' Winds today are southwesterly 10 to 20 miles. Precipitation probabilities are today 10 per cent; tonight 30 per cent; tomorrow 50 per cent. The low is downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. was 67. The mercury rose to 84 by 1 p.m. ■fll - - m \ § |||§ip fpl | '§ 111 on a proposal authorizing them to call a strike. No meeting is planned at GM tomorrow, and union bargainers are expected to get back home to urge a big voting turnout to strengthen their hand at the bargaining table. Douglas Fraser, UAW Chrysler director, brought his local union leaders to Detroit last week for toe dual purpose of whipping up a big strike authorization vote and to decide which, if any, issues before local-level bargainers should be moved to the nk-tional negotiations table. 'Network Helps Deserting GIs' LONDON W — The Times of London reported today that as many a$ 1,000 U. S. soldiers have deserted from their units in Germany this year to avoid duty in Vietnam. The Times said the GIs were being helped by an underground network of European pacifists. The Times said about three-quarters of the 1,000 soldiers were primarily concerned with avoiding combat. “Ag the Vietnam war grows, so does toe number of deserters and the activity of groups aiding them—which often use toe techniques of wartime resistance movements,” toe paper said. The Times said its figures were based on an investigation in Europe. The U.S. Army did not provide figures on what it told the Times was a slight but insignificant rise in toe absentee rate. The Times investigation began with leaflets encouraging desertion printed in London and circulated on the continent. It led to Paris, where Times reporters met one man describing himself as a deserter and now working as a building laborer. He gave his name only as “Buster.” DOCUMENTED CASE One case of desertion was documented by a picture of Pvt. Roy R. Jones III, 20, a Negro from Detroit. The Times printed a copy of his leave pass, which it said had beeh forged for him by a friend. It said Jones, formerly assigned to Headquarters Troop, 2nd Squadron, 2nd Armored Cavalry Regiment, in Germany, is living in a Stockholm suburb on an alien’s pass issued by toe Swedish government. Jones told the Times he was getting money from toe underground network, was studying to enter a Swedish university and hoped to be a playwright and teach jazz ballot. ★ -★ * “The Vietnamese people are being treated by Americans there the same as Negroes in America,” toe Times quoted Jones as saying. The Times said the biggest “service industry” for U.S, deserters was in the Netherlands, where present and former adherents of Amsterdam’s Proves offer to help runaway GIs. ONE PAMPERED BABY - Renay Rollman, infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ronald E. Rollman, 600% E. Hamlin, Avon Township, shares the attention of nursery,, attendants, Mrs. Sarah Pauling (left) of 408 Joslyn,-Pontiac, fend Mrs. Mamie Kittridge, 1451/Courtiand, Rochester. Her debut coincided with the opening Tuesday of Rochester Branch, Critten-ton General Hospital, 1201 E. University, and as of yesterday afternoon, she was still the sole occupant of toe nursery. First Caller said, wI’ll Take It...” “The first caller who responded to our Press Want Ad bought the car and toe garage.” Mr. H. W. CAR XnO Vi GARAQE, GOOD CONDITION. , . ■___Bwt amr. PRESS WANT ADS are sought out daily by people who need or want something. A constant exchange of items for cash is toe result. They’ll work for you, tea Dial — 332-8181 or 334-4981 A—* THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1907 s$%rMw°,wix°m New Phorie Center to Open Soon A new $1.5. million telephone central office that will serve approximately 3,900 customers in 'Wailed Lake and a portion of Wixom Will be put in operation Sept. 10. Charles B. Woodhead, public relations' manager of the Pontiac district of Michigan Bell Telephone Co., said several changes in dialing methods will be introduced at the time of the changeover to the new switching system. The new switching center is located on South Commerce Road, a half block north of Pontiac Trail. It will replace the faculties at 320 N. Pontiac TraU. Customers whose phone numbers presently begin with MA 4 will be served by the new office. At the time of the change all phone numbers now beginning with the MA 4 prefix will be changed to 624. , Beginning Sept. 10, telephone users * with 624 numbers no longer wiU need to dial ‘T* on message unit calls to telephones in Auburn Heights, Clarkston, D ra y to n Plains, Lake Orion, Oxford, Leonard and Rochester. SAME WAY Calls to these communities will be dialed the same way as local calls—by merely dialing the seven-digit number. Woodhead said there wUl be no change In the dialing of local or long-distance calls. One- and two-party customers no longer will need to give their phone number when making a message unit or long distance call. New equipment automatically will note details of these calls for billing purposes. Hr ★ ★ Rural customers, however, will con- tinue to furnish the number of the telephone they are using when making a message unit or long distance call. New numbers will be introduced for information and repair service, Wood-head said. Starting Sept. 10, callers will dial 411 for information instead of 33-411. For repairs, the number wiU be 611 instead of 33-611. With the changeover to the new phone office, four-party service will be discontinued, Woodhead said. Four-paTty customers may change to one- or two-party lines or to rural service. PREPAY BASIS Eighty coin telephones in the 624 office will be changed to a prepay basis like that found In most Michigan communities. Callers will deposit 10 cents before dialing a local number or Operator. A new dial tone somewhat lower in pitch than the present signal will be put in use. The new signal will enable switching equipment to accommodate both dial and Touch-Tone pushbutton telephones. * * * Bookmarks for use with the current directory will be furnished customers. These bookmarks show dialing instructions and include a map of local and message unit calling areas. The dialing information also will be included in the introductory pages of the 1968 area directory. Pontiac Press Photo Principal Lowell Ruggles Views Avondale High School Texts In West Blomfield Twp. New Supervisor Named Huron Valley Sets School Agenda MILFORD — The Huron Valley School; District expects 6,300 students — an increase of about 870 over last year—with the opening of school Thursday, Sept. 7. Agenda for the first day includes official enrollment, payment of book fees, and meeting teachers. High schoolers will in addition be assigned. to homerooms and receive class schedules. Principals will be available in their buildings from now until Sept. 7 for anyone with questions. Teachers report for pre-tschool conferences on Sept 5. Motorcycle Smash up Kills Lapeer Youth LAPEER—A Lapeer motorcyclist was killed on North Elba near M21 yesterday afternoon. Billie Joe Davis, 19, of 63 Beatty died after iiis motorcycle went out of control and hit a tree stump about 12:30 p.m., according to sheriff’s deputies. SHELBY TOWNSHIP — The problem with being supervisor and the lone Republican on the Township Board is that you’re the lone Republican, according to Shelby Township’s Kirby Holmes. His position, he feels, was once again brought home Tuesday night when the Township Board rejected two of three candidates to the Township Planning Commission. Holmes charged, “They accepted the Democrat, but they turned down the Republicans—and they didn’t even know one of the men.’’ Township law provides that the board must ratify such appointments made by the supervisor. ★ ★ * “What am I supposed to do?” Holmes, a former government teacher in Utica Schools, asked. LOST TO HOLMES The board accepted the appointment of George Kullman, the Democrat whom WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -The Township Board last night appointed John N. Doherty the new township supervisor, effective Sept. 1. Doherty, to fill a full-time position, replaces John F. Warren who has served as supervisor part-time for seven months The board reappointed Warren as trustee. The new supervisor, of 5431 W. Doherty, has been a real estate developer with the Howard Keating Co., Birmingham, on and off since 1951. Doherty owned a heavy construction company until last year. Before residing in this area, Doherty was a district manager for Pontiac Motor Co. in Buffalo, N. Y. He received a bachelor’s degree in business administration from the University of Detroit. Doherty's family includes his wife, Julia; Theresa, 11; Michael, 9; and Patricia, 5. In other action, the Township Board Holmes defeated last fall in the election for supervisor. “He’s a good man,” Holmes said, “but so are Joseph Radanovich and John Dyer-Hurdon. Their only problem is that they are Republicans.” However, a spokesman for the Democrats on the board denied Holmes contention that the rejection of the pair was based on politics. * + ★ so neat you can .hardly tell where it has been mended. Psychedelic Art Appears Cb/pr Stabilizer Is Conditioner able mention awards during 1967-68 as part of a traveling 'exhibit sponsored by die Guild In major cities throughout the country: f sorted that ih pours “literally without spilling a drop.” (The prize-winhiftg pieces wilt be shoym along with several oUiers which won honor- on either side With tentaclelike projections. Amethyst crystals ae e m almost to “grow" out *of the top and bottom of the piece. v ^ The affects of “psychedelic art” are beginning to be seen in sterling silver design, an area which leans more to the’ traditional than to the avant-garde. Although elegance is still the keynote among the prizewinners of the1 1967 Sterling Silver Design Competition, one piece — a multibulbous vase resembling a rather ferocious sea anemone — was described by judges as a shocker.” A pew beauty breakthrough is a soft cream that stabilizes hair color and acts as a hair conditioner, the manufacturer reports. The cream, it is reported prevents fading, streaking and dulling of bleached, toned and tinted hair. But the mopt startling aspect of the vase is the color and texture of the metal itself. “Electro-formed silver has been, tortured, antiqued and worked into a piece which defies every known convention in silversmithing," commented a judge, adding, “It is a delightful experience.” The competition, sponsored by the Sterling Silversmiths Guild of America, encourages design students at the college, technical or post-graduate level to apply their talents to sterling silver. Entrants are required to submit sterling silver pieces which they have both designed and crafted. SKILLFUL USE ■ ' Despite the sophistication of Originality and skillful use its design, the more practical of metal scored high points aspects of the functional piece for the vase, which is outlined ! are.not neglected: judges as- In sharp contrast is the magnificent sterling silver teapot with gold-plated interior which took top honors in the competition. This was submitted by Cranbrook Academy of Art student, Richard Johnston. First-prize winner'in the 1967 Sterling Silver Design Competition was won by Richard Johnston, a student at Cranbrook Academy of Art. The slim sterling teapot and beverage server displayed workmanship described by judges as being “as close to perfection as can be imagined.” Deep etching of sterling inlays is well suited to rugged size and design of jewelry box com-. bining sterling silver and walnut. It was designed and handcrafted, by Donald L. Bacorn of Syracuse" (N. Y.) University. • ••••••••••••••••••••••••-•••••••••••••a C. R. HASKILL STUDIO Has Photographed Over 2,000 Weddings May We Make Your Pictures? Precision circuitry reproduces ^ sound clarity ana natural Ijkeness unattainable in previous small hearing instruments. Thomas R. Jackmans Repeat Vow in Holly Rite m This Instrument Comes In Eyeglass I 'p J Or Belt ind-The-Ear Model* ■ No more batteries tp change. Built-in power cell pf the unitron ■ petite' can be recharged in excess of 600 times for i 8 to ■ 24 months of peak performance on the some cell. Eighteen S P* 8x10-Inch 'Pi 1 k Full Color I I LI with Album Price Includes: e Picture for Press e Just Married Sign e Wedding Guest Book • Miniature Marriage Certificate e Rice to Throw “Everything but a WILLING MATE! St. Rita’s Church, Holly was the setting Saturday afternoon for vows spoken by the Thomas R. Jackmans (nee Theresa Ann Wooley). Janice Jackman was maid of honor and James Wooley was best man. They are sister and brother of the bridal couple. matching lace and organza. A shoulder length veil -fell from a petal head-piece of organza and seed pearls. White poses with a white orchid made the wedding bouquet. PONTIAC CONSUMERS CO-OP OPTICAL 1717 S. Telegraph Road EC O TC Vi Mile South ot Orchard Lake Road T la W 111 Parents of the newlyweds who greeted guests in the church hall after the rite are Mr. and Mrs. Herbert K. Wooley of R&ttalee Lake Road, and the Richard Jack-mans of Romeo, The couple will honeymoon in Canada and at Expo ’67. Mr,. John C. Cornell 1 Ml. Clemens Sic Cynthia Omans and Corinne Wesolowski were attendants. Ushers were John and Kenneth Jackman, also brothers of tiie bridegroom. The bride chose floor length Chantilly lace and organza with a natural waistline and gathered skirt for her vows. Her full chapel train featured FE 4-0553 Avant-garde vase won third place for Cprole f Small, a student at Tyler School of Art, Elkins j Park, Pa. It features electroformed sterling com-| bined with amethyst crystals. PARK FREE Come and see our collection of the New .Season coat excitements! Exquisite Furs, Dynamic Designs, Sumptuous Fabrics in smashing new colors. 4 PC. COFFEE SERVICE ^ The elegance of silverplate in footed j server, creamer and covered sugar bowl with scrolled serving tray. Regular *37" 5 PC. TEA & COFFEE SERVICE In popular antique silverplate, queen size tray, footed tea and coffee servers, creamer and covered sugar. Regular *80M now $g095 7 PC. TEA & COFFEE SERVICE Exquisitely crafted silverplate includes footed tea and coffee servers, swinging kettle, covered sugar, tong holder bowl and creanjer with’ footed tray. Regular *150®* * , NOW *100°° ■—MW A small deposit reserves any coat. Arthur's fasy Credit Terms: • 130 Days option term • VO Days *?/ same as cash • l>Year Contract Pontiac Mall, Telegraph and Elisabeth Lake Road THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 19t>7 iH iSW wlh wm ijis A cat best knows where to be comfortable: She chooses Firth's “Country Home,” carpet that makes everyone feel at home. The checked stripe pattern is ageless, belongs in decorating themes from Early American to contemporary, Eye-catching, but easy to live with because of its dense Acrilan pile of interwoven loops. Wide color selection for high fashion look at a budget price. New Guinea Has j More Incidents of Multiple Birth PORT MORESBY, New! Guinea — In some parts of i New Guinea there are many times the number of multiple births that can be expected in Western communities. Two sets of triplets were born recently in the Mt. Hagen and Wewak districts. * * * The director of public health. Dr. R. F. R. Scragg, said that! in the Bole area of West New! Britain one set of triplets was! born in every 400 births, andj one set of twins in every 20: births. The normal expectation in Western countries, he said, wasj one in 80 births for twins, and 'one in 6,000 births for triplets. * ★ * Dr, Scragg said no special j studies had been made that might indicate the reason for the high number of "multiple births. He said similar high rates had j been reported from some parts of Africa. South Dakota Wedding Trip for Pair MRS. LEE R. NORMAN A honeymoon in the Black Hills pf South Dakota followed the recent marriage of Carole Mae Freeberg and Lee Ray Norman in Crystal Evangelical Free Church, Crystal, Minn. The daughter of the Vernon E. Freebergs of Minneapolis chose a tiered gown of silk Georgette over taffeta in a bouffant style with scalloped edging of Chantilly lace. ; A petal cluster held her fingertip veil of illusion. White roses centered about a white orchid corsage formed her bridal bouquet. A reception in the church parlors followed the rite in which Joyce Freeberg • was i maid of honor f :r her sister, i Bridesmaids werp Mrs. r James Mitchell and Mrs. Edward Stricklin. Carolyn Mitch- j ell served as flower girl. I Male members of the wed- | ding party were Jack Hender- | son as best man with grooms- I men Andrew Norman (the bridegroom’s brother) and Daniel Bowker. Usners were Keith Setterstrom and Darrel Freeberg. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray L. Norman of Brandt Road, Grove-land Township. * * * The newlyweds h a v e returned to take up residence in Pontiac. OPEN - 10-6 Mon. Thru Fri. 10-4 Sat. ALBERT’S SUBURBAN HAIR FASHIONS & WIGS 3980 W. Walton, Drayton Plains 673-0177 Weight of Affluence Push Button Can I for Floor Waxing l What’s the pushbutton can after now that it has been put to use fixing unruly hair, painting 'chairs, killing bugs, polishing furniture, lathering beards—ad infinitum. It’s after the kitchen floor, that’s what. The foam that comes from the can is described as “the world’s fastest way to do a floor.’' Freeze Leftover Soup Pour leftover soup into ice cube trays and freeze it. Then store the cubes in freezer. You then will have on hand just the right amount of soup needed for each meal. This does away with having to reheat the entire amount. WASHINGTON, D. C. (WMNS) — Give the affluent American lots of labor-saving devices, a car and TV and what do you have? The overweight American. This is one conclusion of eight specialists on nutrition who compiled a book'for physicians, “Obesity and Health.” Sponsored by the U S, Public Health Service, the book points out that obesity is now a major American health problem, becoming more common as the good life comes within the grasp of morC people. The truth is, physicians agree, that most overweight people are overweight because they eat too much. It’s as simple as that: Most of us eat too much, too richly, and we do' little or no exercise to burn -up the excess calories we ingest. One physician estimates that as many as One out of four patients he sees is overweight. Their problem, he notes, is neither metabolic nor glandular. It is gluttony. ★ * * How to get the fat off? Eat less and exercise. Fad diets are out but balanced diets are in. Even better and easier than shedding excess weight is not putting it on in the first place. Care for Games When children receive a new game, before giving it to them to play with, use cellophane tape to reinforce the corner seams of the box. This prevents the box from coming apart at the seams from handling. Also slip a stout rubber band around the box to help prevent loose cards or parts from being scattered or lost. The Modern Way to HIGHER PAY Speedwriting ABC SHORTHAND Want a job that's never dull—yet will add on extra $1000 and MORE a year to your income? Let Speedwriting abc Shorthand quickly qualify you for the glamorous secretarial position of your choice. Taught exclusively by us in this area, Speedwriting is the modern shorthand that uses the familiar abcls, not strange Symbols^orTcomplicated mochmes. It's EASY, NATURAL —preferred by top firms, 50% FASTER than CftfJService requirements! Write, phone or visit us TODAY for details. Only Speedwriting Schools.can offer these LIFETIME Alumni Privileges FREE transfer anytime-FREE Nationwide Employment Service—FREE Brush-up Training Fall Term Begins Sept. 11 18 W. Lawrence St. ■ Styling depends upon the individual. “Colony Craft” pattern from the famed “Designer Gallery” collection of Alexander Smith offers a fine starting point. Its medallion motif can be played up country style with Pennsylvania Dutch furnishings, or the top deck kept stark with Near East accessories as accents. Pattern on the floor is easy to walk on. care for, sit around TV with. Pontiac Airman Announce Birth Wed Recently Airman 3C Robert jjjjjy d e Hadden, currently of Alexandria, La , wed Linda Cheryl Jones of Arvada;’’Colo!: in a recent ceremony. The Arvada Baptist Church was the setting for the afternoon nuptials in which the bride wore a cage styled gown of Chantilly lace over taffeta. Parents of the newlyweds are Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth R. Jones of Arvada, Colo., and the Louis C. Haddens of Winner Street. Freeze Block of Stock When freezing soup stock, j pour it into loaf pans to freeze. When frozen solid, remove from the pans and wrap in freezer paper. These blocks store, neatly and take up less ! freezer space. Mr. and Mrs. "Keith Phares-iCarpi Winded) announce the [i arrival of Kelli Ann this morn-11 ing. The baby’s grandparents I: are Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth shares. of Woodlow Street and Rev. and Mrs* OtViUe -\Vm-.l dell of Genelia Street. Colorful Touch in Wastebaskets jj New wastebaskets are color- • ful and decorative. ★ ’ ★ * One group features gay1 cot- j ton print fabtics permanently • bonded to metal baskets, then • protected by a soil-resistant * process. Like all waste containers, j they need to be washed out • often with hot soap or deter, j gent suds to keep the inside ■ sanitary. SUMMER SALE SAVE 20% and MORE! Permanent FLOWER ARRANGEMENTS Sumrtier CANDLES Decorative BASKETS ! HOTTEST SPORTSWEAR FOR BACK TO SCHOOL AT COOL SALE PRICES! | 100% Virgin Wool Imported Hand Knit! Full Fashioned, Imported 1 SHETLAND mi WOOL FISHERMAN mm 1) FIB BLEND SWEATERS rqq 0. & i V-NECK SWEATERS ■ h W SWEATERS 17* ” Angora/Jambswool/nylon. ■ [LkotAti § Navy, Brown, Olive, While. V Natural Color. S-M-L. Pastel or Basic Dark Colors, FLOWERS 101 N. Saginaw St, / / / . ETC* dM Color-Cued to Match! PLOD WOOL KILTS Authentic Tartans! 5-15. P; Checks or Plaids! WOOL KNICKERS Mini cheeks; tartan P Multi-color, Bonded Orion KNIT SHIFTS Neon Bright Fashion Stripes H9i B—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1967 MM Tito Peace Talks With Arabs Apparently Fruitless CAIRO (AP) — Yugoslav President Tito wound up bis swing through Arab lands today amid signs that his talks with Arab leaders failed to produce any peaceformula for the Mid: die East. The semiofficial Egyptian newspaper A1 Ahram quoted Yugoslav sources as saying Tito will soon launch “far-reaching political activity” through personal contacts and through the ' United Nations. The activity reportedly will be aimed at breaking what Tito has termed the “period of diplomatic stagnation”—the time since the emergency U.N. General Assembly on the Middle East adjourned in July. ★ ★ ★ A] Ahram said Tito insisted that he had proposed no specific peace plans to Arab leaders, saying, “I came here merely to exchange views.” Informed sources said Tito had pleaded for a “realistic” approach to Middle East problems growing out of the June 5-10 war, and that this stand met especially stiff opposition in Syria. PLEA REJECTED Syrian Chief of State Noured-din Atassi rejected Tito’s plea, the sources said, and refused to budge from Syria’s hard anti-Israeli line. On the religious front, the proposal of the chief rabbi of the Is-raeli army to hold prayers on Moslem territory ignited fears among politicians that it would touch off widespread Moslem protests, both in Israel-occupied territory and outside it. ★ * ■ * The rabbi, Brig. Shlomo Gor-en, announced he would pray atop the hill .where the second Jewish temple once stood in Old Jerusalem. The spot now holds the mosques of the Dome of the Rock and El Aksa, both sacred to Islam. The second Jewish temple was destroyed in 70 a.d. by Titus. All that remains of it is Jerusalem’s Wailing Wall, which stands just outside the mosque area. The International Red .Cross said that the first Arab refugees 'turning to their homes Friday. In Geneva, the Red Cross said it expects the repatriation rate to begin at about 1,000 a day. More than 200,000 Arabs fled the west bank of the Jordan River during or after die June war. A ★ ★ , Czechoslovakia revoked the passport of Czech writer and Communist party member Lad-islav Mnacko, who has been in Israel demonstrating his pro-Israeli sentiments, despite his own government’s allegiance to the Arabs. Mnacko has a Jweish wife. He created an international storm earlier this year with a book highly critical of the Communist ruling class, “The Taste of Power.” U.S. CRITICIZED In Tel Aviv the Israeli tabloid Yediot Aharonot said U.S. State Department officials were working against President Johnson’s goal for peace in the Middle East. The newspaper charged that the State Department has been trying to get Israel to relinquish captured land. Ahmet Shukairy, chairman of the Palestinian Liberation Organization which has headquarters in Beirut, Lebanon, blamed, the Israeli victory on U.S. support and aid. “Israel, left alone, would crumble in any confrontation with the Arabs,” he said. Shukairy, whose goal is a Palestinian state to replace present-day Israel, called the United States the No. 1 enemy of the Palestine people. But he said that if the United States offers the Arabs free military training or other aid, many Arabs might take it Mower Crashes MUNCIE, Ind. (AP) - Something new in, traffic accidents was reported here. Elden Finley was driving around his lawn atop a power lawnmower when the brakes failed. The mower charged out into the street and hit a police car. COUPON SAVINGS KLIP KATZ KIDS KASH K0UP0NS CAULKING COMPOUND STORES 100 QUAKER STATE OIL 39 PLASTER BOARD BATHROOM: VANITY I c quart 1 29 3895 SHOWER STALL 2995 CEILIHG TILE SI. Imp. 7* SQ. FT. CHARCOAL FIRE STARTER 4 o«eee#ooooeooqeoooe>o