The Wedther ' ' . **•*• WHHMr Stir*** SarMM " T .; •.; ;r\:- - -r\ .'V; .MlV"V THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition VOL. 127 — NO. 205 ★ ★ ★ ★ PQNTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, I960 —52 PAGES SSQCIATBD PRESS PRESS INTERNATIONAL Waterford Schools Seek 9-Mill Tax Hike ByDICK ROBINSON Waterford Township voters will be asked to pass a one-year, 9-miU property tax Increase Nov. 25 to provide money to put some 18,500 chlldrentoack oh full-day classes. “ The mlllage amount was decided by the board of education last night. It also agreed to appeal to the Michigan Supreme Court an Oakland County Circuit Court ruling that it must restore full-day classes by Nov. 3. At the same time, school trustees canceled a proposed bond issue that had been slated for. the same ballot. The 0-mlll levy — |9 per 1,000 of assessed property evaluation — for the 1070-71 school year would provide just enough funds so the school district could borrow the money to restore duil days this shool year and pay for full days the next year, acting Supt. Dr. Jphn Pagen said. The school district will have to go into the red next sprlng'toiinance full days, Pagen explaiped, but It is hopeful of getting permission from the Municipal Finance Commission to borrow money on anticipated revenue If the mlllage passes. * * ' •* ■ Two-thirds of the mlllage revenue would be used to finance full days next school year and one-third to'repay the loan for full days this year, according to Pagen.' Trustee Billie S. Farnum proposed the levy foV just one year because it Is pos- sible that the governor1# plans ~io revamp school financing may provide more revenue for Waterford In 1071-72. , A 9-mill tax Increase, which would be levied on December 1070 tax bills, would Cost, the average property owner about 890 per year, Pagen estimated. He figures the average property Is worth about 020,000 and is assessed.at 010,000. Pagen - estimated. the JT-mlT! TaX~ lh; crease would raise about 01.8 million during 1070-71. + * * A decision the board made, two weeks ago to hold a no-tax-lncrease bond Issue election to primarily build a needed -junior high school along with the ngllage proposal was unanimously rescinded. 'unanimously ■ voted Ifr appeaF 'Judge William J. Beer’s order giving the school district five additional weeks to restore full days. School Attorney John Rogers said he would file for a stay and appeal to a higher court today or Monday and that he expects the issue to be heard there early next month. SUIT BROUGHT BY PARENTS Beer Originally gave school officials two weeks when he ruled that shortened class days as a cost-cutting device and a state law prohibiting deficit financing are unconstitutional. The suit was brought by a group of Waterford parents shortly after half-day school sessions went into effect for three elementary grades last month. Secon- dary students are on a shortened day by _ one hour for the second year.-* * * Schools officials had said It is impossible to hire some 130 teachers, redistribute supplies, reschedule classes and rearrange bus schedules by Nov. 3. In fact, the soonest that secondary students could go back to school for six hours a day would be January, Pagen said. Restoration of elementary full days would probably take longer since it is difficult to find enough teachers in the middle of a school year, Pagen said. Waterford Township schoolchildren will go back td full-day classes no matter what happens in their parents' court battle providing residents pass a proposed tax Increase, Pagen said. 3 ISSUES DEFEATED Waterford voters have defeated three millage issues in the past two years, the last a two-year 0-mill proposal ity March. Property owners now pay tax on a total of 32.63 mills, of which 24.83 is for operating schools. Seventeen out of the county's other 27 school districts levy higher operating taxes, Pagen has said. .EXPLAINS REASONING fcr • - . Trustee Eldon C. Rosegart explained the reasoning this way: 7 ."As much as you can tell people the bond issue won’t increase taxes, they can never separate bond issues from millage increases on the'same ballot. "Once the millage is passed, we could call a bond issue for the near future.’’ As expected, school trustees Backers Confident Tough Plan Will Be Law Coal-Safety Bill Clears Senate From Wire apd Local Reports DETROIT — , Americans, though growing Cautious in their purchase of nonessentials, bought new cars at a record rata in September. All four American auto makers announced records of one sort or another. , * * a ___Even American Motors, which often discloses sales figures only when askpd, volunteerecMhat September sales were 21,121, "theS highest for that month in five years.’’________ *■ Sales during the month were spurred by introduction of the 1970 models and bargains on remaining stocks of 1969s. Industry sales for September totaled. 709,388 cars, compared with the previous record of 601,375 in 1968. Sales for the first three quarters were 6,303,636, second only to 1965 when the Industry registered 6,397,199 new cay sales through September. — WASHINGTON (AP) — Sponsors of the modt stringent coal mine safety bill ever to clear a branch of Congress say they are confident the measure will become law this year. Following a 73-0 Senate vote yesterday, the measure was sent to the House where a similarly tough measure already has been approved by the Labor jini Public Welfare Committee. ★ ' ★ ★ Congressional action has been spurred by the tragedy at Farmington, W. Va., last November where 78 miners died in an underground explosion and the wide publicity given recently to black lung disease. House managers said they, would puXh to bring the safety bill to the flow as soon as possible. ' • AC Wlr.ph.lo POWER PLAY—Foreign Minister Willy Brandt (left) of West Germany’s Social Democratic party shakes hands with Free Democratic party leader Walter Scheel. Last night, they drafted a coalition agreement that would bring. Brandt’s, party into power for the first time. Both parties were meeting today to decide whether to ratify the agreement. - New Car Sales Set September Record Last year through nine months the auto makers sold 6,275,829 cars. With a strong finish the industry could top the record 1965 domestic sales figure of 8.7 million cars. Pontiac Motw Division today reported it sold 69,385 cars last month, surpassing the previous September record of 63,655 set two years ago. In the final 10 selling days of the month, the General 'Motors division sold 28,754 cars compared to 28,443 in the final 10 days of September 1968. CHRYSLER CUTBACK . Chrysler Cwp. reported Its September . sates of 117,5Q1 were the best since 1950, but sales for the first nine months have trailed 1068 figures by nearly 90,000 units. . Chrysler also had. a dip in profits this year and revealed yestefday that It . would cutback Its white-collar staff. 2 More Set in Aleutians ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) - The Atomic Energy Commission plans two more nuclear test explosions o n Amchitka Island in the Aleutian chain after yesterday’s blast which did not yield an earthquake or a, tidal wave. The Soviet Union, Japan and Canada as well as numerous U.S. scientists and political figures had objected to the one-meghton underground explosion because they feared it would cause seismic disturbances—in—Hre—temblor-prone Alaskan or Aleutian faults. ; * a •* . . But the blast yielded only a ground roll on the desolate, windswept island, and apparently didn’t even bother 25 sea otters swimming in pens near ground zero. ABC officials at. a control center In Anchorage said two more nuclear tests were planned under the island Tundra during the test'project. NO VISIBLE AFTERSHOCKS Gov. Keith Miller, a Republican who supported the test, said the commission had advised him that it would be at least two years before another test would be set off on Amchitka. Scientists said there were no visible aftershocks but that scientific'' instruments may register unfelt aftershocks for days or weeks. They said no radiation escaped from file 4,000-foot deep hole in »which the blast was detonated, and that a building atop the hole was not damaged. The AEC said the first explosion was a suitability test and indicated the results were satisfactory. It has not announced a reason for the next two. Parent! Although not a single Senate vote was cast against the measure on final , passage there were several fights on amendments during five days of floor debate. The bill had been under study for months in a labor subcommittee headed by Sen. Harrison A. Williams Jr., D-N.J., before it was sent to the Senate floor. * a * Williams said after the Senate vdtrhe was confident the legislation “will mean very significant improvement in the working environment of the nation’s 130,000 coal miners.’’ The bill would establish federal minimum dust levels in the 3,600 U.S. coal mines for the first time. FEDERAL INSPECTIONS • It also would set up stricter controls over methane gas, provide for tighter and more frequeni federal inspections, require that all electrical equipment and wiring be made spark-proof, ban smok- ing and use of flames in mines, and establish a program of interim compensation payments for miners disabled by pneumoconiosis or black lung. In the last major floor fight yesterday, the Senate declined to exempt small, so-called nongassy mines from the equipment requirements of the legislation. Sen. John S. Cooper, R-Ky., arguing for such an amendment, said the requirements would be so costly that many of the small mines would be forced to close. Williams and Sen. Jacob K. Javits, R-N.Y., offered a compromise under which the nongassy mines would have five years to install the new equipment, instead of four as provided In the main bill. * This was adopted 45-31. Under the dust provision, all mines will be required within six years to meet a standard of not more than 2 milligrams per cubic meter of air. Pontiac area residents may look forward to. a warm weekend with temperatures ranging from a high in the' 80s to a low near 48. Partly sunny is the forecast for tomorrow, and partly cloudy and warm fs the prediction for Sunday. Winds light and variable 6 to 12 miles per hour'today will shift to the southeast tomorrow. The probabilities of precipitation are near zero today and tonight, and 10 per cent tomprrow. t * * The low before 8 a.m. in downtown Pontiac was 57. The mercury had climbed to 70-by 2 p.m. Safe Schools Urged by Pontiac Parents , By MARY SUNDSTROM “We've-got to do something . . . something has to be done now A’ The estimated 250 persons who attended last plght’s Pontiac Board of Related Story, Page A-2 Education pieetiqg at City. Hall seemed to have t one common desire — an, education for the children'’ of Pontiac In safe, undisrupted schools. . * * * Their Collective plea to the school board was that a solution be found to the disturbances that have plagued city high schools since last week. Northern High School closed last Friday as a result of seemingly racially-related fist fights between students last Thursday, and Central High School closed Monday because of student-to-student confrontations at PCH last Friday. TENSION BUILDS AGAIN V Racial tension built again at Northern Wednesday whefi white and black groups of students gathered and threatgne® w fight. Parents have patrolled halls in'»he two high schools and several junior highs since the first Incident Sept. 25.. I Both black and while parents attending last night s meeting, which overflowed the City Commission Chambers, urged that all of the youngsters involved in the recent disruptions be punished. *. *',* ,, Others urged meetings with Involved students to attempt to pinpoint causes for the disturbances. They said that once administrators and the board know the (Continued on Page A-3, Col. 1) JAMES R. HOFFA PAUF to Begin Fund Drive With Ball, Torch Lightings A ball tonight and a dual torch-lighting ceremony tomorrow will highlight this year’s Pontiac Area United Fund general kickoff. The ball, sponsored by Annett Inc. Realtor, 28 E. Hurop, is at the Holiday Inn nf Pnntiap Aetiiftl kickoff begins at noon tomorrow at the Pontiac Mall with d helicopter dropping UFOs (United Fund Objects) containing numbers WWdrcmr be turned in for gifts donated by The Pontiac Mall. ★ ♦ * The first torch lighting will follow at The Mall with music provided by a Boy Scout band. Campaign leaders will be lifted to the torch in a Consumers Power snorkel for the lighting. > A ear “care-a-yan” of. campaign leaders, the Boy Scouts band and other agency volunteers will then head for dowhtown Pontiac for, a torch lighting at 1:25 p.m. at City Hall, 450 E. Wide Track. w ★ * The ceremonies mark the start of the area’s 21st United Campaign, which seek money for 55 health, welfare, education and recreation agencies. This year’s goal is 31.24 million, a 15 per cent increase over the amount raised last year. The drive will run through Nov. 7. Worm, Dry Weekend Forecast Parole Request by Hoffa Denied WASHINGTON (AP) - James R. Hoffa, once counted among the nation’s most powerful labor leaders, faces at least another year-and-e-half behind bars of a federal prison following rejection of his plea for parole. Hoffa, who has served two years and eight months of an eight-year sentence for'jury tampering, lost his try tor early release yesterday when the U.S. Parole Board rejected his bid. The board said it would reconsider' his case in March 1071. - - *' * ♦ a Hoffa, the stocky, defiant leader of the two-million-member Teamsters Union-whose legal battles with the government began under the Kennedy ad-ministration, were ’continued’’during the— Johnson administration and still are going on, is In. the Lewlsburg, Pa., federal prison. Nixon Will Intervene to Block Rail Strike WASHINGTON (AP) - The Labor Department announced that President Nixon will Intervene to block a strike against six major railroads tonight. „ A department spokesman said the President has decided to appoint an emergency board, whose members will be announced later, to take up the yearlong dispute. Appointment of the board automatically will postpone atrlke action for 60 days. iiwiiwaef(MWiwaimM»WBaaawiaw| In Today's I Press Harambee I 1 Plans nf black housing cor- I 1 pnrntion detailed - PAGES C-4, 1 I C-5. • ’ [ft Next Moon Shot | Apollo 12's crew plans a 1 shocker on the trip home — j PAGE B-tl. Called Off Bulck Open golf tournament | canceled — PAGE D-l. | Area News .A.............A-4 j. I Astrology ............. B-13 | Bridge B-13 B Crossword Puzzle .. . D-15 8 I Comics . B-13 S Editorials A-8 I Farm and Garden C-6-C-9 5 High School ........B-l, B-2 Markets . .............B-l! >. Obituaries C-l I Smoking Series B-14 ) Sports ..... D-l—D-6 Theaters B-14, B-ll TV and Radio Programs ..D»ll l Vietnam War News . .. A-10 ; Wilson, Earl ............B-14 ■j Women’s Pages *.....B-l, B4 A—a THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1089 House Votes End to Sheridan Tank Beset by Trouble WASHINGTON (B - The House -turning aside efforts, to chop $3 billion mirth .of other weapons projects — has voted to kill the trouble-plagued Sheridan tank. through the House yesterday with little debate and no vote count. The proposal to end the gl-billion Sheridan program as seen as the current contract is completed was shunted Haynsworth: No Withdrawal WASHINGTON (AP) - Judge Clement F. Haynsworth today denied reports by congressional sources that he had sought to have his nomination to the Supreme Court withdrawn. “I did not think about such a thing," Haynsworth told a- reporter who asked whether he had asked President Nixon to call back the appointment. "I don’t know where you all got such a thing. Somebody eta dreamed the thing up." The proposal was backed by Armed Services Chairman L. Mendel Rivers, (D-SC.,) whose committee concluded the tank’s caseless ammunition is dangerous and the tank itself was not worth the time and cost of development. But efforts by military spending critics to cut money from the safeguard antimissile system, C5A supercargo plane, ships, helicopters and missile programs .were easily defeated one by .one. $57.6-MILLION CUT The critics tried to cut the projects from a $21.35-billion authorisation for procurement of military hardware. Rivers’ cplHfhittee already had cut $57.6 million from the Sheridan program, leaving only $15.2 million for completion of the present contract. Birmingham Araa HOUSING ADMINISTRATOR - George W. Romney, secretary of housing urban development, talks with Eugene A. Gulledge of Greensboro, N.C., yesterday In Washington, D C., after Gulledge became the new federal housing administrator. GOP Enthusiastic When then asked whether he anticipated asking that the nomination be withdrawn, Haynsworth replied: "I have not and I don’t" Despite Haynsworth’* denial, and one from the White House, the congressional sources who disclosed the original reports to the Associated Press yesterday remained firm today. HEAD COUNT REPORTED The sources said the White House had concluded after an informal head count that at least 40 of the 100 senators were prepared to vote against confirmation of the 56-year-old U.S. appeals court judge. One midwestem senator was reported to have told his staff hours before the reports were published yesterday that Haynsworth was asking that his name be withdrawn and that a statement from the White House was imminent It had urged the Army to correct the tank's problems — particularly the danger of ammunition explosions inside the lank — Before it asks authority to buy any more. But the amendment shouted through yesterday would terminate the program entirety when the contract runs out. As final as :the House language is, the decision could be reversed in future authorization bills If the Sheridan’s problems were solved. Romney: Senate Try Open WASHINGTON (APT- Republicans generally reacted with enthusiasm Thursday over an indication by former Michigan Gov. George Romney that he may run for the Senate next year against . Sen. Philip Hart, D—Mich. Asked by newsmen if he felt tempted to step down as secretary of housing and urban development and-enter tha Senate-race, Romney replied: “I haven’t completely closed the door.” .Told of Romney’s statement, Rep. Gerald Ford, R-Mich., House minority leader said the former governor would be “an excellent candidate for the Senate. Cuts attempted by spending critics but defeated by the House yesterday would have trimmed: e All $345 million for deployment of the Safeguard antiballistic missile system, leaving intact $400 million for research and development. • $1 billion above the adminiftration’s request for ships, added by IJivers to modernize the U.S. naval force. • $401 million for purchase of 23 additional C5A cargo planes: Second Man Plates Collins in Cycle Shop But afterward and following, a talk with Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell, White House press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler plld the latest information “indicates 1B}t this report is absolutely untrue,” • $175 million for production of six carrier-based F-14 Navy fighters, a plane still In the development stage. • $86 million for 170 Cobra helicopters. • $77 million for the Short Range Attack Missile whkth has suffered development problems. ANN ARBOR (AP) - A second man has placed John Norman Collins, accused of murdering an Eastern Michigan University coed, in an Ypsilanti _motorcycle shop, during much of the time the crime allegedly was being committed. John Lehto, a 26-year-old employe of J and J Motorcycle Shop, backed the shop owner yesterday in saying that they were with Collins on the afternoon of July 23. The coed, Karen Sue Beineman, allegedly was abducted by a motorcycle rider at about 12:30 p.m. July 23. An autopsy report indicated she was dead by 3 p.m. FORD DELIGHTED “I’m delighted to know he has not foreclosed Hie possibility of running," Ford said. Rep. Donald Riegle Jr., R-Mich., said: “If he decided to run, he would be an excellent candidate and, if elected, an outstanding senator.” 13 Are Arrested in Pontiac Drug Raid By KINGSLEY COTTON A major source of heroin to Pontiac may have been uncoveredTy city poHce last night. In their second major narcotics raid in less than a week, officers of the Pontiac police vice squad broke into a South Side home early last night. Police confiscated $8,000 worth of suspected narcotics and $2,000 worth of property believed stolen, and made 13 arrests. Last .Saturday Vice > squad officers-confiscated more than $14,000 worth of narcotics and made two arrests on. a raid at qp apartment on Douglas. Eight officers in three cars swooped in on the home of Shellena Bently, 18, of 302 Going at 8:30 last night. While four officers covered the front and sides of the four-room house, the other four broke down the reardoor-A search warrant had been obtained, earlier yesterday. Arrested and charged with sale of narcotics were Miss Bently, Cynthia Pippen, 21, of 107 Wesson and Michael Whitaker, 23, of 61 Orton. V. Lily Pullard, 26, of 17 Gillespie, was d cna The Weather arrested and charged with possession of narcotics. NINE OTHERS ARRESTED Nine other persons were arrested and Foil U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Today mostly sunny and Tonight fair, low 48 to 53. Saturday partly sunny, a li look for Sunday: partly cloudy and warm. Winds light variable erly 6 to 12 miles per hour Saturday. Probability of precipitation and tonight, It per cent Saturday. i, high in the 76s. high 75 to 86. Out-becoming southeast-zero today Ttantfay in nantlac charged with loitering. Confiscated were what are suspected to be marijuana, cocaine, and heroin as well as two pistols and a rifle. The property believed stolen consisted mainly of furniture, a number of television sets, radios, and record players. Twelve of the thirteen persons were arraigned this morning before Pontiac District Judge Cecil McCallum. ■ckionvlllo 13 7! 69 49 Detroit Flint 66 52 MX* ££ Laming 7D 4» Marguette as 4» Naw Origans Muikagon Oscoda > Pallston Naw York U 57 Lowast tamparatura ..... Mean tamparatura ....... Waathar: Mostly sunny Lawast Tamparaturas This Data In W ' 57 54 75' 55 St. U H; Tar aa *» f! W. ’Marla < Crossing Guards Scarce BIRMINGHAM - The Police Deportment has reported a shortage in school crossing guards for the 196W0 school term. In the 1869-70, city budget, seven school crossing guards were authorized to provide protection at critical ioca-tions, a police department spokesman laid. , . , Police Chief Daryle Bruestie has offered three alternatives to the. City Commission as a method of alleviating tjhe personnel problem: • Reevaluate present crossings and cover only the ones lhqt are most crucial, eliminating the need of soma guards. —• Adjust the financial benefit of the position in order to attract more ap- plicants. The present pay la M-50 per day'and each guard works two hours per day. 4 • Study feasibility of employing high school students to fill the positions. Riegle is known to be considering seeking the Republican senatorial nomination for himself, but he said if Romney Yuna he would not oppose him in the primary. When asked about speculation that he might seek the Senate position, Romney kiaid: ‘‘Well, I’m not doing anything in that connection. I haven’t completely closed the door. I’m not doing anything about it—I’m not seeking it or anything." Whitaker’s bond was set at $66,000' while Miss Pipen’s and Miss Bently’s were set at $35,000. WARRANT SOUGHT Bond for those Charged with loitering was set by McCallum at $500. Miss Pullard was being held until a warrant could .be obtained charging her with possession of narcotics. Conviction on a charge 'of telling narcotics, carries a minimum prison term of 20 years, according to Detective Bruce Jarvis. ' While relative calm prevailed yesterday in Pontiac city schools, police nonetheless arresters number of youths. The arrests were made, according to Pontiac Police Chief William K. Hanger, in an effort to prevent the gatherihg of large crowds around the schools and the subsequent disturbances which have plagued Central and Northpm high fthools for the past week. In the wake of racial disturbances at the1 schools, police aliw reported the firebombing of » house in a Negro residential area and a number of incidents The Commission is studying the recommendations. Joseph D. Swoyer of 934 N. Rending has been appointed senior vice president of Young & Rublcam, Inc. advertising agency. Swoyer is now in charge of automotive accounts. New Pullout Move Seen Before Yule Previously, he was a supervisor for the Plymouth account and a vice president. Swoyer was employed by the N. Y, Ayer and J. Walter Thompson ad agencies before joining Young & Rubicam. He is a graduate of La Salle College, Philadelphia, Penn. WASHINGTON IB - Sen. George D. Aiken, the Senate’s senior Republican, predicted today President Nixon will order a new troop withdrawal of 40,000 men from Vietnam before Christmas and that “most of the ground troops” will be pulled out by the end of 1970. “I expect that the President will probably give us another troop withdrawal for Christmas—enough to make 100,000 men this Year,” the Vermont senator told a reporter. He said he has not discussed the possibility of such a new withdrawal with Nixon but that “The South Vietnamese government seems to be confident it can take things over. Some 60,000 troops have been included in troop withdrawals announced by Nixon so far. In terms of the number arrested, last nights raid was one of the largest In department history, Jarvis said. “It was the culmination of three months of Inteltlgation and surveillance," said Sgt. Guy White, head of the department’s vice squad. “We are thirty confident,” Jarvis added, “that this operation was the direct supply for a major proportion of the heroin addicts in Pontiac.” 7 Arrested as City Police Seek to Keep Schools Quiet where youths reportedly were throwing rocks at passing cars. w No one was injured but minor damage occurred at the home of Marvin Jackson, 62, of 31 Franklin Blvd. last night when a Molotov cocktail was tossed through his kitchen window. NATIONAL WEATHER - Staffers are. forecast today in thk South, along the : ‘ “ and Southwest. I Cooler iem- Mld-Atlantlc Coast and I through much of the Midwest to ths ftmthwait. YWCA PARKING LOT The Incident occurred at 7:40 p,mM according to police.. •> ; 'Sr'V Officers speculate that the bottle, taming fuel oil BLOOMFIELD HILLS - Harry B. Cunningham, 210 LOWELL Court is In London, England with 84 other American businessmen and community leaders to attend an International affairs conference called “Forecast: The 1980’s — Decade of Decision.” Cunningham is board chairman and' president of the Kresge Company. ★ ★ . ★ The meetings are intended to give the business and social leaders a perspective beyond their immediate communities in addition to news briefings on wqrjd events and business and marketing trends. Personnel attending the conference include board chairmen, presidents and vice presidents and executive directors of food, chemical and insurance companies, banks, utilities, department stores, civil rights organizations, educational institutions and major officials of state and federal governments. from the parkmjg lot of the YWCA on Huron. Six Pontiac Central students were arrested by police yesterday, including three juVeniles. David D. Danielson, 17, of 294 N. Johnson, Calvin Mason, 18, of 403 Dit-mar, and David Scott, 17, of 306 Central wars arrested at 11:30 yesterday morning outside* of Central and charged pith creating a disturbance. TOLD TO DISPER8E According to police reports, the three were among a group of about 16 who wart told to sUapsrhM. Officers skid the three arrested wire the ones who failed to comply. . Three Juveniles also wire arrested and charged with setting a fire In a loritsr at Central. Another juvenile, previously suspended, was arrested/ at Northern High School at 10 B.fo. yesterday and charged with loitering. Two assault and battery complaints were lodged by Central students yesterday, aoaUrdtng fo police, but have been made. W1H CHECK OCR LOW, LOW PRICE! WORLD'S FINEST COLOR TV PERFORMANCE 6 RELIABILITYI Tim 80 handcrafted chassis -Mat* performance. CHROMATIC BRAIN eolor demodulator Zenith’s unique demodulator haaitha Aral Integrated olroultry ever uied to produce a eolor TV picture. 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SERVICE SPECIALISTS TV • RADIO SERVICE FE 5-6112 Open Friday Evenlngt ftil 9 770 Orchard Lak«, Pontiac VfcMIle Irmt of Telegraph si V \\ mm m Parents Plead for Safe Schools ' '*v* THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1969 (Continued From Page One) causes^ they'can work toward a lolu* tion., "'u »- * ‘ * V Y—~r Fourteen students — eight white, six black — had been singled out by Northern High School administrators as being involved in Wednesday’s cttsh there and have had classes dosed to RECORDED AS ABSENT (Students with closed classes may not attend classes for up to 10 days, during whjch they are recorded as absent. A student may make up missed work when he returns.) ■ * * * Schools Supt. Dr. Dana P. Whltmer said that those students had been "Identified, by one of the people at die scene of the disturbances as committing an act ouch as hitting another person or as im citing others.” He said that the administrators are working on a plan to suspend Or dose classes to the 3iNT or so students involved In Wednesday’s disturbance in a meaningful way.— He said last night he was not prepared to announce the plan. ■ ■ STUDENT BLAMES OUTSIDERS _ Whltmer said early in the meeting that administrators’ Investigations had shown no particular Incidents that incited the recent disruptions and that no demands from students had been set forth. * * Cecelia Brown, a black Central High atudent said that outsiders had started everything, but if a problem had not existed among students in the first place the outsiders’ influence would not have been so great. ★. ★ it Another unidentified black student added, "If the board of education would stop making racist decisions and Dana P. Whltmer would quit lying to us, there wouldn’t be this trouble;’’ Miss Brown said that a list of Black Student Union demands had been placed before the board last winter, but black students were unsatisfied with the action or lack of action taken on the demands. ’RESULT OF DEMANDS’ Whltmer pointed out that the recent Human Relations Institute for all teachers in the district was ons Tesult of the Black Student Union demand that racist attitudes of teachers be worked He added that steps bad been taken to Improve the transportation problem for black students and that more black teachers and administrators had been '’hired. * * * Some students complained about the parents patrolling halls recently. They said some parents disrupted classes, some grabbed students as they walked down the hall, some were in the way — especially at Central, whore crowded conditions exist. An unidentified white student said she was glad to know that so many parents were interested in students’ Safety and education, but that the adults in the halls made students feel as If they were In a police state. ’REFLECTION OF SOCIETY’ "The situation is a reflection of our own society. Give the students feedback and let them deal with their own problems. The only way to get this solved is through the students,” she said. A A A Appearing before the legislative assembly’s meeting, O’Brien said Atty. Gen. Thomas C. Lynch has asked the authorization of 58 county counsels and hundreds of city attorneys in California to file the suit. The U.S. Justice Department Recently dropped an antitrust suit against Ford, Chrysler General Motors, American Motors and the /Automobile Manufacturers Association, who were charged with conspiring to delay dovelopment and installation of smog control devices on cars. 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PANASONIC Portable TV SET With DIGITAL CLOCK SI251value - Save $26.95 at Simms. Get the 38 sq.: In. viewing screen tV with Illuminated numerals. Sleep timer. Detachable dork tint screen. Sliding control layers.; Set end forget tuning. Model AM^p9T Charge It or Si holds. > * SIMMS CARRIES A COMPLETE SELECTION OF QUALITY *PANASONIC’ ELECTRONICS SIMMS"* Park Free lor I-Nr. In Downtown Parking Mall, - Nava Tlekat stamped at llmma. V-UI VII 1^0 I IV# TT T Til I I I WII Artist Hews By LOIS FRIEDLAND FARMINGTON - "I take a piece of wood. The grain suggests the first few lines. It I don't see a picture in it, 1 throw it away," explained Jean Paul Gaugy, a French-born scnlptor of rough-hewn woodcarvings. The carvings lining the walls of his basement studio parade a wide range of homan emotions — from humor .to pathos — on the gay faces of young girls and the drawn, work-worn faces of withered old men. is chiseled into per-vorn the by too much is communication. You work with your feelings and put your emotions in your carvings," insists Gaugy, who spent the days of the Csech crisis working with wood to portray the loss of freedom of the people. The diminutive Gaugy, dressed in a sweatshirt and pants and looking like someone's younger brother, has big ideas. HIS OWN LANGUAGE "Each artist must write his own language and then teach people how to understand it. This is his responsibility — to find a new form of communication. You can’t Just throw a canvass on an easel and put. paint on it. You musHhink what It means and what it is going to-say,” Gaugy, 25, developed the emotion evident in his works during his early years among the night people o! Paris. ★ it ★ He left school at age 14 to take a construction job. Unhappy, he went to Paris to find work. At l5, he was able tn-leam enough to make a living as a nightclub portrait artist while studying art during the day. He recalls reading anatomy and art books and attending classes sporadically. LEARNED TO LOOK_________ "I lived with night people and learned how to see people. You develop your emotion and then learn how to translate the amotion with your hand. After a while you can Just do it,” he shrugged. Gaugy met his wife, a Farmington girl named Margaret, while in Paris. The twocamrback totheU.S.two^earsago because artists have a better chance here according to Gaugy. AAA He began working with wood after reaching the stites because his favorite medium, stone, was too expensive. Gaugy soaks a piece of wood, usually cypress, "because the grain is tortuous,” in oil. Then he dries it for a month, He sketches h!s theme on the wood and begins "carving, usually only a hammer and chisel. Afterwards, he stains the wood, often adding colors, "Dark or light depending on my mood." IMITATIVE STYLE He confesses that his current style is an attempt to imitate the brush strokes of Claude Monet, a 19th century founder of the Impressionistic school. “I try to translate the way he stroked and used his brush with my chisel." i—;j] * * * The effect offers a distinct sense of mood rather than an intricate photographic representation.../ The esthetics of art have nol Gaugy’s business sense. He that art is a business by chooses to support his wife and month-old child. Farmington Road this weekend, JiourB are 2 to 10 p.m. Saturday and from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Sunday. HdMs so busy thot he turns down commissions he "doesn't feel -like doing,” like a request for a sculpture to be placed in Kennedy Square, Detroit. He indicated fear of doltig a big mission and being stereotyped i Alexander Calder (a 20th-century THE PONTIAC PRESS FRIDAY. OCTOBER 8, 1960 A—i Despite Independence Efforts Homes Still Waterless By NED ADAMSON INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP -Some 40 households in this township are really going to appreciate the convenience of hot and cold running water — If and when they see it again. Nearing a month of going without running water, the 40 families living north of Woodhull Lake in the Clinton, Pinedale, Lakeview and Hi llc r e s t districts have been obtaining water supplies via the tea kettle and gallon jar route from a tank truck brought into the area by the county department of public works. “The citizens h a v e been amazingly cooperative and patient about the water dilemma when you consider how Pontiac Twp. Chiefly One Man By TIM McNULTY PONTIAC TOWNSHIP - The Township Board has decided that its community has come of age — an age to warrant Its own police department. ★ A,, •* To head and to establish the Pontiac T«wn«hlp Police Department, the board chose a' man of no little experience. ’ A A * ■* y Richard Earl Brown, 48, of Royal Oak has been patrolling the township, along with the Oakland County ..Sheriff’s Department, for almost four weeks. Avon Township Gives Library Resolution OK AVON TOWNSHIP - The Township Board has adopted a resolution urging that the “adjustment of ownership and use of the township library be approved in principle.” ■ A A A., The resolution, identical to the one passed by Rochester in August, means that the title to the Avon Township Free Public Library, 210 W. University, Rochester, will be deeded to Avon Township with the library's assets split between Rochester and Avon Township on a ratio based on the number of users in each municipality. Supervisor Cyril Miller said ' he felt the library board, which now holds the title In trusteeship, 'will be "agreeable” to the plan. ■ ■/: a ★ * He said all three administrative units (the city, township and the library board) “realise the path we are following and recognize it to be in the beet interests of .the township.” A A 1 . ■ Miller also said the township "has no Intention of entering a relationship with the Wayne County Library System.” A sharing relationship with Wayne County waa proposed by the library board. Hpmvor, no action was taken on it. A 23-year veteran of the Birmingham Police Department, Brown has hundreds of hours of police training under his leather Mace-and-gun-totirig belt. COURSES VARY He has ‘attended courses ranging from childbirth procedure to riot control. "The more training a policeman can get, the better he can do his job,” said Brown. A A • A A lifetime resident of Oakland County, Brown .enlisted in the Army in 1942. Within a yegr he was promoted to staff sergeant. In 'the Italian campaign of; World War II, Brown was wounded three times and received a Purple Heart each time. * - * A ------- Discharged in 1944 because of his , wounds, Brown worked at GMC Truck and Coach Division and the Birmingham Post Office. "I found out soon that that type of work just wasn’t my cup of tea,” Brown said. AAA He joined the Birmingham department in 1945 and rose to the rank of sergeant before he resigned, in 1968. In . 1957 he received the City of Birmingham’s Medpl of Valor for shooting a holdup man after he himself had been shot in the chest. MIS8ED POLICE WORK Earlier this year Brown decided he wanted to get back in police work. “I really missed police work,” said Brown, "and 1 figured the only way to get back was to find a place where t could build my own department. \ ■ A A A "Diversity js the attraction to police work,” Brown said. You never know what’s going to happen. People are interesting, and 90 per cent of a policeman’s Job is helping people.” * , A A He said a great part of his job In the township is to get . in the residential areas “and just let the people know that we’re available to thorn.” Brown has two immediate goals for his new department: to hire more officers to provide patrol 24-hours-a-day, and to consolidate the police and fire calls under one telephone'number. .... ■ A .,A ■ A All police calls now are routed through the Oakland County Sheriff’s Department. The township fire department has its own number. ... frustrating thesituation has been,” said Township Clerk Howard Altman. Altman, a youthful “take-charge” guy who makes it a point to get concerned about any situation that might warrant the attention of the township government, has been the man In the middle during the local water dilemma. When wells went dry in early September, Altman swung into action. . Public meetings were called, many phone calls were made — some of them angry — and a lot of heat was applied. The county agreed to truck water Into the Woodhull Lake neighborhood. 't A A A * But Altman decided that the water truck was only an Interim solution. He decided to avoid any further bureaucratic haggling and hired a contractor to construct a temporary water line through the affected area. REAL FRUSTRATION Construction crews laid the line in a matter of days and Altman and the residents had visions of the morning shower again. But that Is where the frustration really began. Before water could be pumped through the line and into the homes, the county health department had to approve it for public consumption. AAA The water has been coming up unsuitable for use In test after test for nearly two weeks, with no one quite sure -what the chief contaminant Is. "We have flushed nearly a half million gallons of water through the line, scoured it With all kinds of cleaning agents, but It to still showing a positive reaction (with contaminants) in the laboratory anal-yses,” Altman rioted. ALTMAN THROUGH FORECASTING Altman Is now through forecasting when the Woodhull Lake residents will have water. "I simply cannot say now when we will have water. We are using some new procedures In taking the WatSP samples tank tests and maybe that' will be the afisWer,” he added. A A A Meanwhile, costs of meeting the water crisis are. mounting. The cost to an estimated $6,000 to 90*000 on the water line with the bill to be presented to the pounty DPW. Considerable additional monies have been expended in cleaning the line. And a spokesmen for the DPW says It is costing 93.00 per gallon to hsve the water trucked in. Nearly 000 gallons have been delivered to the waterless homes. ' \ •A ■A " A There Is no Indication when the dry wells might-recover their normal levels. QUALITY NEEDED “You have to product yourself,” he commented, adding that the demand for art works to so great that artists can’t meet the supply. Still, an artist must make his pieces of such a quality and sell them at such a price that people will still want to buy them some 15 years from now, he cautioned. . Many people buy his art for Investment purposes and they don’t really love the piece, Gaugy explained. Admitting that this attitude disturbed him at first, Gaugy insisted that he has come to understand it, explaining that people usually begin enjoying the pieces once they are in the home. —Gaugy displays Ms works In several galleries in Detroit, in Ohio* and areas, and will have showings in and New York this year. He to frequently invited to demonstrate: at state fairs and art shows. He prefers displaying his works where he can actualy talk to people. Gaugy has a one-man show at the Masonic Temple on Grand River and Wood Sculptor Jeon Paul Gaugy At Work Novi AssetS’Division Due Gets Pitch in Cou NOVI — Another verse in the discordant city-township duet called “Who gets which assets from the former village” will be composed in Judge William J. Beer’s court this afternoon. / Events leading up to City Attorney Howard -Bond’s motion ordering a final division of assets — are long and involved. Court dates have been frequent. A A A The Village of Novi and 98 per cent of the township -were Incorporated as a city In May 1988. A: city charter was approved last Februry. The incorporation left the remaining residents living on eight small and separate “islands” around the new city. TOWNSHIP LOST FIGHT The acting township officials unsuccessfully fought the incorporation for several years. Earlier this year their last append to the State.Supreme Court was denied. In May, Judge Beer ordered the township to hold a special election' to select hew township officers and a board. Most ot the acting officers now lived in tiie city** -A- A A The court also ordered the township not to spend any more funds without court approval. The question of accounting between the township and the city was adjourned for 30 days. Since election' of new township officers, representatives from the two governments have been .meeting regularly. COUNCIL DISSATISFIED ‘ Dissatisfied with the progress of negotiations, city coun-cilmen voted early last month to authorize Bond to file a show-cause order. Bond and Township Attorney Emory Jacques met three weeks ago before Judge Beer in an attempt to compromise on division-of-assets delays. ' The two attorneys couldn’t agree, according to Bond, and the matter was held over until last Wednesday. That date was canceled due to Judge Beer’s schedule, with today’s session scheduled instead. 0 While the attorneys are involved in court proceedings, the city and township negotiators are busy behind the scenes. Progress has been made since the beginning of September. LETTERS EXCHANGED Originally, letters flew back and forth: “Thb city to accusing the township of unnecessary delays” and the township is protesting the city’s “needless, unjustified and costly action” in filing suit. Appraisers have been at work. When results are in, negotiatons will begin in earnest. Major facilities owned by the township but now on city property include the township hall, library and park. Bargaining in Amicable Atmosphere' Clarkston Board, Teachers CLARKSTON — Negotiations between the board ot education and the Clarkston Education Association (CEA) resumed yesterday for the first time since CEA members struck the district Monday. A board spokesman said the sessions were conducted in'an "amicable at- Neither'side had scheduled further talks,-but there was a possibility of a meeting later today or tomorrow. The board accepted the -CEA offer to resurrie negotiations after the teachers dropped their demand that talks resume only in the framework of the state factfinder’s recommendations, \ i LEAVE COMPROMISE Little progress was reported on salary differences yesterday. However, a compromise was worked put on the teacher’s demand of.two;4to(B» leave for personal business. Negotiator Floyd Vincent said the school board agreed to CEA’s proposal of two pefMtuu .days while dropping s legal-and-moral-day clause. Vincent said the personal days clause will require administration approval before the leave can be taken. A A A> CEA officials did not reveal the specifics, in their revised salary demands. Vincent said the revised offer to the one CEA had said represented only a 937,000 difference between the school board’s offer of b 97,326 to 912,550 scale and the fact-finder’s recommendation of a 97*376 to 912.92^ range. WHIP POCKET* "They have been holding this latest offer it; their hip pocket,” Vincent said. The board continually has contended that CEA’s .previous salary Remands would mean expenditures of 9300,000 ovor income and require a school-operation tax increase of 25 per cent. - , fi ■ A A A Vincent said Clarkston’* property valuation per * child Is approximately 99,500. "This is about 11,500 below the baas of any district around tis, yet wo are still able to offer a scale that represented raises ranging from 9875 to $1,440. I think We have been more than fair,” he said. AAA The board’s attorney, Charles Keller, was reported to be in attendance at last night’s negotiation session. Yesterday \aftornoon Keller said he could not com-' tnenton the board's thinking on the possibility of securing an Injunction ordering the teachers back to work on Monday. Milford Landfill to Be Saturday-Only Facility . MILFORD—The area sanitary landfill will be open only on Saturdays beginning next week. It had been open Tuesdays and Thursdays as well. The decision was reached this week by tit* Milford Township Board and the Milford Vlllags Council after study of cost and Income figures from thi operation. PROTECT YOUR HOME AGAINST THE INVADERS. DUST, DIRT AND POLLEN1 MO Takfrapk U. .1 Orchard Uki 111-9255 The City of Pontiac Will Pay Sk : * ’ '-’Vk»jp / By the Associated Press GeorgiCrosby, 26, a former Las Vegas showgirl, testified in a divorce action that Bing Crosby’s 33-year-old son Philip drahk to excess and often stayed away from home at night. Superior Court Judge Laurence J. Rittenband granted her a default decree yesterday in Santa Monica, Calif. She and Crosby were .married July 11, 1967, in. Albuquerque, N.M., and separated less than a year later, They had no children. Crosby was ordered to pay 6500 monthly alimony for 27 months. Actress Wins Suit Over Loss of Role The Lea Angeles District Court of Appeal •aye actress SUrley MacLaine is entitled to $7M,00b in damages over loss of a starring role in the film “Bloomer Girl." The court yesterday upheld a 1967 Judgment In Superier Court In favor of Miss MacLaine. ' The defendant, 20th Century-Fox, was charged with breach of contract when It changed its mind about making the film, tinder the 1961 contract, the actress was scheduled to portray Evalina. Singer Sues Firm for /Poor-Quality' Film Ballad singer Johnny Rivets filed a $500,000 suit yesterday against Vldlcam of Hollywood, charging the’ firm turned out a poor-quality film of his charity concert in Santa Monica last Dec. 27. The singer's Superior Court complaint said he had hired a production crew and special technicians in anticipation of obtaining a film of acceptable quality for commercial use On television that would gross more than $250,000. But he said the firm, and codefendant Robert Boathouse, failed to operate camera equipment properly and knew In advance they could not handle the assignment satisfactorily. | * Playwright Hospitalized In, St. Louis Tennessee Williams’ brother says the playwright has been In a St. Louis hospital since Sept. Il H for treatment of the effects of long use of ■ a sleeping pill. The brother, Dakin Williams, an attor-BH ney of Collinsville, ill., said Wlltiams'iell ill IHUJAMI "Csmino Real” In New during a visit with their mother, Dakin Williams, In suburbairClayton. He added th«t the playwright, 15, would stay In Barnes Hospital Indefinitely but planned to attend the opening of his play York Jan. S. MANHOLE COVER — Don’t laugh. Electrician’s helper John Harris is protecting himself from a Florida rain as he works in a manhole on Miami Beach. After the rain John put up his bumbershoot and returned to work below. TAKING IT EASY — A South Vietnamese girl, her hair tied on top of her head with a rubber band, rests on her mother’s ihoulder as they wait for American soldiers to screen the population of Fhu Hoa Dong for Vietcpog. The city and Its 10,060 residents have resisted pacification efforts since the days When the French occupied the are*. -SERIOUS MISUSE OF FIREARMS (INCLUDES ALL ACTS OF SNIPING) -SERIOUS ASSAULT OR ATTACK ON ANY POLICEMAN OR ANY OTHER PERSON -MAJOR THEFT i - ^ -MAJOR BURGLARY -MURDER -OR ANY PLOTTING OR CONSPIRING TO COMMIT ANY OF THl ABOVE CRIMES The Pontiac City Connissioi hit begun this reward systOH in an effort to farther combat the iicreasiagly serious threat of crime to every citizen in Fontiac. Use the following instructions to report a crime and eolleet the sash award: 1. Typs or print your Information about a crimo on a blank shnnt of paptr. 2. DO NOT SIGN YOUR NAME, but sign with any number of six figures ^ . . '■ . 3. Tear off and keep a corner of tho thoot of paptr containing the q \ \ information on which is copied Idea tamo number. 4. Moll tho shoot of information to F. O. lax 602, Pontiac, Michigan 48056. ^ 5.' If your inforirtutlon loads to on arrest, instructions will bo puMishod for competing tho toward without revoolinlg your Identity. Eligibility for reward will be determined and kept confidential by a three-man dtixens committee appointed by the Mayor. v' Pontiac City Commission THE FONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1980 Girl in RO TC N TRENTON, NJ. (AP) — Jean have njny girl uniforms and until jtereslcd In taking a commission Ana Saruowskl dates a National hers arrives she’s soldiering In in the Women's Army Corpsj Guardsman and hasi a brother men*a fatigue* made for some-.when her training is completedr in the service in Vietnam, and. . , " , .. J* . v .h. .h. 155IS, body * lot bigger than five feet - * * * Uniform Needs Attention ■.. awe..-.-:.. ■ , a big step..............-........ So now she’s the only girl lap Also, a girl of that size I the Rider College Reserve Offi- tough making the 30-inch strides She says she Just decided [“Most girts know absolutely nothing about the mHHary and I thought It would be interesting cera Training Corps. required in ROTC drill * * * “I have to wear these men’s Jean Ann, aa attractive 20- fatigue* you wouldn’t belisve,” year-old brunette, is finding out said Jean Ann. “They’re Just what they mean when they say, atrocious! They’re these big, 'Well, that's the Army for balloon-type thihgn, and the 3»n,” and K Isn’t quite what she pants come up to my chest.” they didn't1 Jean Ann said she was not in- “Neither a borrower nor a lender be.... so, stock up on milk for the weekend.” to find i A NICE CHANGE’ Besides, added Jean Ann—a Junior majoring Jn marketing— 'I figured it would be a nice change from a typical subject and a good way to get a general studies elective out of the way.” her boy friend think of all this? “He’s not enthused about my I venture in ROTC.” 1 And-her family? '‘My father thinks it’s s riot.” For IsformtioH Leading to tk« Arrest of Persons Responsible for Any if the Following Types of Crimes Committed in the City of Pontine front Jannary 1,1969 throngh December 31, 1989: -ARSON (INCLUDES ALLACTS OF FIREBOMBING) -INTERFERENCE OR ATTACK ON FIREMEN OR THEIR EQUIPMENT Hearing Oct. 30 for M43 Sector LANSING OB - A public hearing over the proposed reconstruction of nearly 13 miles of M43 in Kalamazoo and Van Buren Counties will be conducted Oct. 30 in Kalamazoo by tho State Highway Depart-tent. ■ The hearing will begin at 0 pan. at Grand Prairie school. EYES RIGHT? — Rider College ROTC class members have their eyes directed right according to the drill, but not in the direction one might expect. Jean Ann Sarnowski ranks as a real attraction in the company of all her male classmates. SWAMP SWEEP—Looking for enemy troops and arms caches, GIs of the 82nd Airborne Division zip through a swamp 10 miles northwest of Saigon in a flat-bottomed' boat. wV-v'Y THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, IQttO Remain in Lasf Man's! Club By SAM HANCOCK EFFINGHAM. III. (UPI) Large tulip bulbs—all varieties including Parrot and Doubles male* your attention early 10 p;95‘ Fall is the time to improve your lawn Buy Grass Seed in bulk from experienced seedmen Kentucky Blue Grass... m...... lb. 89c Delta Blue Grass.............lb.79o Newport Blue Grass lb. T9o Banish Blue Grass... ...••••..... lb. 79c Merlon Blue Grass.... ■ • »* lb. 1.59 Creeping Red Fescue......... lb. 49c Ghewings Feseue.............. lb. 696 Penn Lawn Feseue........uM .lb. 79e Kentucky 31 Feseue.. . i.......... lb. 49c .Perennial Rye Grass . . lb. 29c 10 lbs. or more at lower prices SEED MIXED TO ORDER - NO CHARGE • e We ore authorized distributors of Scotts, Greenfield and other lawn care products Salt for Water Softeners . pricea — loaded in your car at store Roek Salt Crystals - 80-lb. bag....2.20 Morten Salt Pellets - 100-lb. bag .. . 2.65 Diamond Salt Nuggets - 100-lb. bag. 2.65 Granulated Salt — 100-lb. bag......2.32 Mini-eubee - 50-lb. tag....... •... 1.50 White Salt Blocks - 50 lbs......... 1.23 Diamond "Red-Out” — 40-lb. bag... 1.09 Merten’s "Pollens” - 40-lb. bag • • •. 1.89 We Deliver - Phone OR 3-2441 REGAL Feed and Lawn Supply Co* . 4216 Dixie Hithway - Drayton Plains, Mich. 3 Mil.. North of Pontiac Eleven of the last IS members of the Last Man4* Club got together for dinner Wednesday night. It was the chib’s 38th annual meeting. ^ As usual, a bottle of French cognac held the attention of the old men. Gach asked hlmself : Will It be me?” — to their eternal reward.” Then the last man will pop a cork on the bottle of cognac and drink to their memdty. ' 75 YEARS OLD? “Everyone thinks he is going to be the one to drink it," said Leonard Steis, 78, clubnrecre-tary. ‘Til let you know how it The survivor will drink the cognac at the club’s last supper. The Last Man’s Club Is World War I veterans, all American Legion members. In 1934, when there were an original 146 members, the bottle of French’ cognac was presented to 'the dubi with the derstanding it will not be drunk until the club’s membership “has dwindled to one.” The club's membership has dwindled to 13, and 11 of these men got together Wednesday night tn the Effingham Legion Club. .v No one knows exactly how old the bottle is, but-many believe its vintage dates back 79 years. A v typewritten note dreen glass bottle reads: “This bottle of cognac is being presented to the Last Man’s dub in the year of 1934 by Dr. C. C. Holman, the seal of which is not to be broken/ until Its membership has dwindled to one. Five years ago this bottle was found in an upright position in the basement on a sill, which evidently had been placed there a number of years ago by the former owner of the home, Mr. John Feldhake.” The Last Man’s Club roster includes Andy Beasley, Dr. E. E. Webster, Paul Tonn, Adolph Sudkanyi. R. A. Volts, Alfred Gruel, ft.. M. Michaelree, Henry Berslg, nnd Alt Underriner, still active as a druggist and the “baby of the group at 69.” : ¥ * i ; Berslg) recalls how Ip almost dropped! out of the runhThg. “Back hi 1938 I had pneumonia and thes' had about pronounced me deiid. Three or four membeRi of the club were working on a caisson to bury me with, They’re all dead IMPERIAL Of 124 S, Woodward, Birmingham Hong K om NEAR MAM.E CUSTOM.SUIT SALE i NORMALLY*105^*89“ ’W Every suit will be precisely Hand cut to your exact measurements in any style of your choice. A final "fitting here assures your sotisfaction. Mo appoint-merit needed. TUES. THRU SAT. 10 to 5 FRI. 10 to 9-624-4104 W. Piy Parkins—Mod Credit Card.—Tuxede Rental COLEMAN’S FURNITURE MART . . . First in Furniture, Carpeting, Appliances Occupying its usual place of prominence on the speaker’s table was the bottle of cognac, which had been removed from its place of safekeeping in a bank vault. Sompday, the surviving member will dine alone. He will read the names of 145 members for whom Taps have sounded and proclaim, “They have gone Tremendous Factory Purchase... saves you noo Fighting in Viet Kills 28 Yanks WASHINGTON * - The names of 28 men killed in action are on the latest Defense Department casualty list from the. war in Vietnam-Included are four men from the Midwest. NA — Pfc. Mark W. Surbcr, iton. VrSvera X Ohio — Capt. Stephen J. Cheney, Merlon, He. Bobby D. Schouer, Cincinnati, Pic. John.E. Wright, Clrclovlllo. Missing to dead-hostile: ARMY . . MICHIGAN - Pfe. Steve* V. Mltln* Lansing. OHIO • Missing as a result of hostile action: ARMY WO ) Barry K. Alexander. 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UP TO 16 MSS. TO MY fearing construc-. Choice gf 6 NEW ■ or lovely floral a auUtlndl Come COLORS in velvet-type see whet sensational values'th*y Ore at this $100 sawing while our stock lasts. . . . Just toroit Glenwood from Kmart FREE PARKING OPEN EVERY NITE TILL 9 FE 4-9615 ... .’77 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1969 v A-T 'Double Agent' Linked to Ambush of 2 Patrolp ; (UpI) T double agent In the Green . Beret case provided Communist troops with Information that • led to the annihilation of two five-man Special Forces ! PHSli US. military sources said today. J _They *aid Th«l KhBc Chuyen apparently had access to the Green Berets’ secret patrol plhns and tipped the Communist . trooP* on wnwe the reconnajasance missions would be going. .. ----___________it __ Jl_________' ; ■ ^lthln,l81mlfute# 01 thelr Inwtlon by helicopter Into : Communist territory, the patrols were wiped nut, according to tuaie sources. ~ ■ -r—r— About 20 South Vietnamese soldiers died on similar missions during the same two-week period, they said FOR REAL - SATISFACTIONjga -.0 Y^MFFood Sliofiplrtj | "shop THE STORE VullTil -rill- r-r»A p\t-» » . tt. U ■ / Chuyen latar was arrested and interrogated. He disappeared June 20, and the U.S, Army charged eight Green Berets with murder and conspiracy in the case. Those charges were dropped Tuesday. . . '! ■ - b/i'ill, „ * *• *_______* .. Because of the V. 8. losses suffered in the Communist ambushes of the patrols; a senior American officer was relieved of hia poet within the y.8. command, the sources said. Col. Robert B. Cheault, commander of all Green Berets In Vietnam, was one of the eight who faced chargee in the case. He returned to the United States Wednesday denying that any double agent had been killed. 'PENETRATION AGENT' “There was a penetration agent," Rheault told newsmen S. Viets Pressured to Return Home before his departure from Vietnam. Wheii asked if Chuyen was this agent, he said, “I believe so." Sources. Clpse to the Investigation salcf Chuyen'* role as a double agent was confirmed by lie detector and truth serum tests administered at Green Beret headquarters at Nha ffiif lit ♦ , if ">■' ?„ * Chuyen’s body has never been found. It wu the Army’s contention, that-he was drugged, shot at Nha Trang and dumped Into the South China Sea in a weighted bag. WITH THE SPARTAN 'f ,\ ON THE DOOR" «* J \ SAIGON (AP) *- Premier Tran Thien Khlem has distributed a directive calling for etrong measures against military men and civil servants who refuse to return to South Vietnam after receiving training abroad, the government news agency Mid Bday. Vietnam Press reported, the directive said that in “the present war situation, this desertion from service cBimot be tolerated, especially when it is committed by elements who have enjoyed such privilege." The instructions celled for stern punitive measures, Including prosecution before military court*. There was no mention of how many persons might be involved. 2-Child family "NEW YORK tfl - The Association for Voluntary Sterilization announced at a recent meeting it had adopted a resolution urging' that American parents “adopt as. a social and family ideal the principle of the two-child family." ' Oak leaves stand for streng glory and honor. The Romans decorated their war heroes with crowns of oak leaves. I FT. WIPE, COMPlCTt W/MINQEI Trl UNiVtHSAi An,;. BUT WITH CONFIDENCE IF BILL PETRUSHA MB SONS ikjsSM “BEST BUIS” 1970 ipA Big- Fami!y-^.z^,Color Screen! ■wmRi "BEST BUY” FOR ONLY FREE HOME TRIAL RCAThe Pick of the Portables’ LOWEST PRICE RCA TV TMK PERFECT BLACK * WHITE PERSONAL TV FOR YO0RSBLF OR AS A flIPT. fiOMFAOJ 11-LB. OABIHET. “A STAN&OIJT VALUE.” m. 1970 RCA...ComputerCraftecl Color WITH FIDDLE-FREE AUTOMATIC FINE TUNING s M- 1 . FIRST TIME EVER 1 AT THISfRtGE •IIMUi; ■(. PsSnL WALNUT GRAIN Now Portable Color with A.F.T.I BIG 146 So. In. PICTURE Nb DOWtf,PAYMENT With ApprovRCl Orodlt UP TO 36 MONTHS TO PAY 15% to 40% OFF Furniture for Home or Patio 93” Decorator Sofa 199*8 Was 279.0B ooue-pu back. Reversible latex ruahii Ball caster* roll easily. Save : Matching Arm Chair 9988 Was 139.95 The .ideal mate for the decorator, aofa at left Looae-pillow back. - - : N 1 __ BH t 7* Vinyl Umbrella Redwood Tete-a-Tete lSS r.%*. 22“ £& 34“ fl Triple-laminated vinyl to keep out son's ray*. Cnnk to open or eloae. Yellow end orange prink Prime redwood, weather reaiatant Bright yellow and orange mahiona ere foam Ailed. W Ion*. Redwood Clab Chair Wat 26.95 18“ m Rnnied. weatber-miitant redwbod. /MSI plump polyurethane roam mshiom / in yellow end ortn*e print W’'1P5 Home Appliances 20% to 50% OFF! Washers and Dryers ’ / | Refrigerators and Freezers | Stoves and Air Conditioners We Have Moved Hundreds/of Appliances From Our Warehouse Into fhe Store for This Special Sale. Choose Brand New, As-ls, Some One-of-A-Kind Models. Hurry In! Aik About Soon February Deferred Payment Plan on Appllaneei Entertainment 20% to 40% OFF A«-li Radios, Televisions, Stereos, Organs, Tape Recorders, Phenes . . . Floor Samples . . . One-Of-A-Kind. \ Console Stereo Stereo FM/AM ra- „ did, 4 ., .peed i hanpK ti 179”* Portable TV FLINTY 9F FREE FARKIN9 -r,. [Scars; Downtown Pontiac e Phone FE 5-1171 ::w ill THE PONTIAC PRESS ipl 4| West Huron Street, Pontiac, Michigan 48056 “J5 HOWARD H. FITZGERALD Pubi*»h*r 1914-1034 HOWARD H. FITZGERALD II • Publisher , , HAMXD A. mZGMAlO PeMMwr 1936*1966 1IraspF RICHARD M. FITZGERALD ~f Finance Officer JOHN A. RILEY ' , Advbrticing Director ' 1 HARRY J. REED j Idltar _ ... ■, ARID McCLILLY j Circulation Manager / O. MARSHALL JOkOAN ! Local Advertising Manager RICHARD M. SAUNDERS Managing Editor life. School Plan Unveiled Gov. Wiluam Miluken’s comprehensive education-reform package to be considered in a special session of the legislature! which convenes! Monday is as far-reaching as it is unprecedented. It embraces a three-part program j to be implemented ] over a three-year period, with its Constitutional aspects to' be voted on by the mhjjken electorate next August. Essential elements of the program are: ★ ★ ★ • The elimination of school-support property taxes on the district level and establishment of a statewide property tax coupled with a proposed 2.6 per cent income tax increase to fund the State’s educational system. A primary benefit of such a revision would be the equalization of educational support per ztu-dent that now varles greatly from one school district to another, depending upon the respective wealth of communities and value of their tax bases. • The reduction of inftrmedi-ate school districts from the present 59 to 10 or 15 regional districts, a reorganizations! move dictated by diminished need-for: a multiplicity of such agencies; and abolition of the elective eight-member State Board of Education in favor of a State director of education appointed by the governor. • Allocation of 2 per cent of the total school budget ($848.6 million .for the current fiscal year) for parochial and private-school aid. Admittedly, education in Michigan is in a state of crisis, calling for bold and innovative remedies. We think Miluken’s school-taxation plan has much to recommend it and could well be the answer to the financial plight in which most of the State’s school districts find themselves, ★ ★ ★ His plan for restructuring the intermediate school district setup and shift from a state board of education elected on a partisan basis to a single, responsible school head can easily be supported, although it could generate considerable opposition in many quarters. But we strongly oppose his aid-to-private-schools proposal on legal, philosophical and economic grounds —a position we have taken from the. outset of the issue. ★ ★ ★ Moreover, we think that Gov. Milliken may have erred in advocating too much change in too short a time. Politics has been termed the art of the possible, Is it possible that he has ignored this precept? Economie Pros at Odds Demonstrating that economics is one of the most inexact of sciences were the divergent opinions recently expressed by four leaders in the field at a ’University of Michigan-sponsored panel discussion. The mix of conclusions stressed on one hand thT urgency of halting inflation even at the expense of a slight business recession; and on the other, the assurance that ‘‘small inflation”—up to 5 per cent a year— isn’t, necessarily an-evil. In support of the latter position, it was pointed out that the Country hasDad a creeping form of inflation for 35 years and that in comparison with other nations it has been inconsequential, with no detrimental effect. ★ ★ ★ On the subject of interest rates and their undeniable effect on availability of commercial credit,-one expert saw the current 8Va per cent prime interest rate (actually 11 per cent because of stipulation that a por- tion of the loan remain on deposit with the lending institution) declining to a pre-boom level as the economy slows in response to Federal fiscal and monetary policies. Another, while foreseeing interest rates settling back slightly in the near future ^predicted that “we would never see 6Vk per cent again in our lifetime.” In fact, said he, we may look back op the 8‘A (11) per cent rate as a “moderate, reasonable' and attractive ★ ★ ★ And so'it goes. The main booby-trap in the realm of economics is the imponderable factor of mass behavior and response to economic stimuli. Until the. reactions of John Q. Public can be precisely plotted^ and who would be rash enough to predict such an eventuality?—the study of economics will continue to provide a most fascinating guessing game. Ho Chi Minh Chicago Tribune Sentimental gushing about Ho Chi Minh in the ‘‘liberal" press, bn television and even in official remarks was to be expected, - considering the prevailing psychosis of unreality induced by the Vietnam war. He has been described as benign and, gentle, wise and witty, beloved of children, a philosopher king, a man god, and even —believe it or not—another George Washington. “The plain truth,” a s .Columnist Bernard Levin \ wrote In the London Daily Mail, "is that ^Ho Chi Minh,, was a ruthless and bloody tyrant." Lest we forget this in all the sickening posthumous # exaltation of this small-fry Stalin, It is well to review some of his enormities. -After the Geneva accords of 1964, Ho introduced a typical communist terror, In North Wl!wWi‘"bimi which more than 900,900 civilians fled to South Vietnam before Ho gtopped the'exodus by sealing the border. Hiis was done In violation of his agreement. In North Vietnam land owners, including peasants with only one or two hectares of rice land, were d-i s possessed as a class and many thousands (estimates range as high as 150,000V were shot. Gen. “Vo Nguyen Oiap, victor at Dlen Blen Phu in the war against the French, finally protested that the terror had gone too far. The communist magazine Nhan Van, o f Hanoi, was permitted t o report in its Nov. 5, 19S6, issue: ‘‘People were arrested, jailed, And cruelly tortured; people were executed or shot on the spot and their property was confiscated; 1 n n o c e n t children of parents wrongly classified as landlords were starved to death.” in many ’instances their ...children, also — were mutilated and killed as examples of what others could expect. A survey of available American and South Vietnamese records by The Tribune in 1,067 indicated that at least 2S.OOO civilians had been assassinated and more than 60,000 others had* been abducted — most of them never heard from — In 10 years. The assassination total now exceeds 3 0,000. Uncounted thousands of other civilians now have been killed in indiscriminate acts of terrorism, Including the destruction of schools, hospitals, churches, pagodas, market places, and village halls by mines or fire. Virtually a whole generation of natural leaders In South Vietnam — village and hamlet chiefs and elders, school teachers, p r 1 e s t s, monks, doctors, nurses — were eliminated In a systematic campaign of a 8 s as sinations and kid-napings. Fa r m e r s who resisted the Vietcong1— and These atrocities are never mentioned by American peaceniks, but Hanoi has often boasted of its successes ill this kind of warfare. For example, a report, on the Hanoi radio for the pevfod from January of 1961 to January of 1965 Said: “Ifamr lets destroyed, 7,550.” That Would be an . appropriate line for Ho’s epitaph. Game Of The Week! David Lawrence Asks: What Price Vietnam Pullout? WASHINGTON - Which is better — short-range politics or long - range patriotism? This question is p e r t i nent now, and it-concerns no| only the future of the United States but Ihe destiny of other countries well. Congress are -playing with fire. They are, in Effect, telling the enemy that America Is ready to raise the white flag in Vietnam before the end of 1970. t-range politics ;e patriotism? Nations, pointed out In a speech during the last few months of the Johnson administration that the Soviet Union, not Vietnam; lsr”the" greatest threat” to the United States. He said Americans have "too long taken their eyes away from the main ball .game.” Politics today is on the side of surrender — at least that is the way various members of Congress interpret public opinion. ---- It seems incredible that a small group from both parties in Congress is demanding that President Nixon announce that the withdrawal. o f American forces from Vietnam would be completed in 15 months, even though the enemy makes no concessions whatsoever. Gen. Lewis W. Walt, assistant * commandant of t h e Marine Corps, said in a speech last night that - he believes the, Vietnam war would have been ended a year ago if it were not for the v “voice of dissent” In this country. •VOICE OF PEOPLE’ He added that the Communists have judged this to be the “voice of the American people.” He declared: “In the past year, over 10,000 Americans have been killed in Vietnam. Those who dissent may not have fired the rifle or thrown the grenade, but they must bear, a part of the responsibility for the loss of those gallant Americans.” It remains to be seen what the American people would say about a pullout from Vietnam if the consequences should prove to be grave. The Wall Street Journal, In an editorial the other day commenting on the possible results of an American Withdrawal from Vietnam, said: “The Communists would take over South Vietnam by military force, which would be a cheap enough price if the international^ effects stop there. But 'just as the American debacle at the Bay of Pigs helped prompt the Soviet initiatives leading to the Cuban missile crisis, so we expect American defeat in Vietnam would encourage the adventurers throughout the Communist world. "We do not know whether the next crisis would break out in Thailand, Berlin, South America or elsewhere, but we do feel that over the long run a show of American irresolution is likely to result in worse crises, not easier ones.” Bob Considine Says: NEW YORK - Hello, folks. All you good people who are rooting for world disarmament and nation in modern times is whether to disarm the American people. If you do not agree, print your rebuttal along with our fact sheet to show how we are wrong.” Reviewing Other Editorial Pages If merely a problem of domestic politics were involved. certainly It would seem more popular , to-end a war than to keep one going indefinitely. But there's more to the issue. The United States may find itself in the midst of a'major war within the next two or three years, and this cotild conceivably provoke the use of nuclear weapons in Asia with possible attacks against the United States. GOLDBERG SPEECH Despite the outward appearances of friendship between Moscow and Washington, North Vietnam is directly sponsored by the Soviet Union. It will • be recalled thit Arthur Goldberg, former American ambassador to the United the Northwest Gun Owners of Bellingham, Wash. Fasten seat belfs and flak jackets. .Ben Hinkle, the club’4^ president, writes: “The majority of the press has presented a ’distorted picture of the effect of guns In our serious crime increases. We firmly believe this Is only a smoke screen to cover the real reason behind this concerted effort to d i s a rm America. The "fact” sheet asserts: ' “The United States of America was created out of tryanny add oppression by patriots of freedom who armed themselves and won their independence. With this fresh in their minds, they wrote the 2nd Amendment to our Constitution, ‘a well-regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be Infringed.’ ARMED POPULATION "The United States today has the largest armed civilian population the world has ever known. It is the strongest bastion of freedom and the greatest obstacle to Communist domination.” ‘2 SIDES TO QUESTION’ “Any reasonable person knows there are two sides to any question. It js the duty of the press to present both. sides. In too many cases this has not been true with the gun question. People who do not own or use guns for legitimate purposes will 1, - . / fiublh Verbal Orchids Mr. and Mrs. \ Charles W. Curtiss of Wlxom; 55th wedding anniversary, Clifford H. McCormick of 16 Clayburn; 61st birthday. Mrs. VMa t. Berry of 96 Candlelight; ftth birthday. readily believe the one-sided^ propaganda that has flooded publications In recent years. "We wisij to appeal to your sense of fairhess, your loyalty and your duty to the millions of citizens of this great republic who look to American journalism for' equal and equitable news coverage to print the other side of this controversial question. Okay, you crazy gun-bearing cop-fighters, fireman-snipers, college* campus guerrillas, rooftop assassins and other' “well-regulated militia” types, fall in four abreast and march to the barricades protecting us from the two-front invasion by* Communist Albania. One hopes that the pebce-jovlng sportsmen who shoot only birds, deer, moose, mice, etc. Will be oh J i Albania’s ride. i la antltlad IQf rnpubll->• gwintad In of WhiteLike Township; 89th birtHday. , “One of the most serious threats to our. national security to come before this Th* r*mie< w»m a artwws w mntm tar tOa ■ ***fci erfcer* matted Metemb, Lapeer ami ■ WatMenew !• mpO a* wm»| aba-alma In MaUaaa aMji otliw piece* In lb. UnM IWn SM4S mym.: Ml Hiair'wMMMiHte^ gr-od? «a*M. PeMep* be* baa* mU at th* ini clear rat* at MtdMpen. Member *t ASC. • . T'77 Voice of the People: tN * Citizens Must Strive for Safer Community’ A quotation in The Press by Curtis H. Rossow, assistant planner for Waterford Township, read “Fast-growing communities often neglect tq pro-; vide adequate recreational facilities for their residents. They would rather spend, their money on such things as the police department." Mr. Rossow neglected to mention how inadequate our police department is, compared to recreational facilities in Waterford. ★ ■ # ★ He did mention a deficiency, of not having enough community parkland to serve residents within two miles of their homes, but did not mention a deficiency of polijce manpower to assure the citizens of this community, a safe place to live and conduct business. Mr. Rossow stated there were 1,100 acres of public recreation land in Waterford for some 65,000 residents, but nothing was said about the 20 patrol officers trying to serve this fast- tne growingcommunity of 65, ★ . ★ ★ We do not deny the importance of recreation, especially for the youngsters, but as police officers and citizens we must also strive to make this a better and safer community, then provide the non-essential luxuries. CARL W. SOLDEN, PRESIDENT WATERFORD TOWNSHIP POLICE OFFICERS ASSN. ‘Let’s Approve Waterford School Millage’ As a concerned Waterford Township parent I support the board of education. The members have worked for us to try and make a fine school district. Although the taxpayers have turned down the necessary millage, the board Is still trying to do its best. Let’s go all out to support ouf schools. Vote "Yes” for our future. T . . We are overtaxed on our property, but let’s pa*1 this mill-age that is desperately needed and then each, write our legislators In Lansing and insist (hat they' pass an educational reform to ease our burden. - * ” ‘ ■■" , r. .... Two Give Opinions on Recipients of ADC It is time for a change in our welfare and ADC laws. It isn’t fair for hard working people to bear the burden of other people’s children. I don’t mind having welfare for women who have small children and whose husbands have deserted them, but I do mind having to pay high taxes for the women who have several children by different men without the benefit of marriage. m 1 also object to paying for people who sit around doing nothing while someone else supports their families. If the men who let their families go on welfare and ADC were made to pay back the money they receive, we working people might have a tax relief. I refer to the perfectly healthy ones that are too lazy to work. Give us working people a break. Our kids deserve just as much as yours and we have to work to give it to them. DISGUSTED TAXPAYER Gun Group Exec Takes Potshot at Disarmament I have read where ADC mothers are protesting .lor more money for clothing for their children. An ADC person receives as much as an average factory worker and has no taxes to pay except aales tax. I believe these people could make a go of it if they tried, but they couldn’t have all new clothes and fancy food. MRS. GEORGE EDWARDS ‘Siiggest Distributing Food Stamps by Mail’ Why not. djatribute the County food stamps by mail? A book,of specially-encoded tickets, issued to each applicant to Identify the payments, can be signed and ma|led with check or money order and eliminate the need of security police and crowds. There is a great need for the government to figure out ways and means of stopping this walking sickness whieh has hit our society. BETTY R. FRASER ‘Many Homes Torn Down for Businesses1 What can be done about houses that are being torn down? There have been about ten houses torn down in the Union Lake area in the last year and a half. In thefr place you see some kind of business going up, mainly gas stations. Do we really need two or three on one corner? What about the several homeless families because of this? Are any . homes being built, in their place so a working man. or an'ADC or welfare famjly can afford them? Nd, they have to pay a high price for rent because the lower‘priced homes are being sold to businesses. Is this fair? W ‘ v UNIONLAKE Question and Answer The telephone company Is cutting tops off dead elms and leaving tie trash on Conaty right-of-way. Why does the County let them get away with it? W. A. WHITMER BIRMINGHAM i “ REPLY Because the.phone company is doing them a favor. The County can’t get to alfthe dead elms immediately, and dead branches tend to break and fall—on people, houses, cars, etc. Phone crews tap the ones they find and leave the wood in a pile for the County to collect. Michigan Belt Division Forester Hoatlin says crews always talk to property owners first and the arrangement is agreeable to all concerned. Question and Answer i just bought an Incubator. Can yon toll me where to t fertile calekea eggs? ' \ - p ' P. DeHAAN ' . , . ■ AGE 10 REPLY tip eggs are guaranteed fertile, but most fa ere with chickens would have some that proba ere. Why not take a trip ft the Oakland Com Farmer’s Market on Pontiac Lakt Road? It’s o\ every Saturday and a number of formers sail a ..there. You can surely find one who ,can sup j a few eggs for hatching. ' ; ZLxi . ‘ I l! MONTGOMERY WARD STORK HOWS: Pally 10 •.m. to 9 p.m. S«». 9>S0 a m. to 9 p.m. Sun. Noon to 5 p.m. Save $4! WASHABLE FOAM PILLOWS Fluffy Kodal* polyester Is allergenic, odorless, Mm isi. Cotton ticking. reg. $5 IA. Lines Dept. *8 Special! PACKAGE OF 3 FLASHCUBES Great for color or black end white. Gat 12 fine flashes. ! Reg. 1.39, M-3 bulbs. .$1 REG. 1.39 Camera Dapt. «in* N1 ' w i THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBERS3, I960 a—« m fML <> J Wash-and-wear shirt-leek shift 344 REG. 5S/$5. || 9 Ivy League collar and • button-front styling i X ii 1111 9 Vycron* polyester, cotton combination ., 11 if 9 Smart prints, checks, • stripes in collection rill Just the thing for classroom or casual wear. So easy for a busy student to care for. Selection of colors. In Misses' sizes. Sportswear Dapt. ^ SPECIAL! Mlssti1 light hooded jacket |99 Nylon, waterproof and windproof • Unlined—great to put over sweater • Spectrum of smart Snappy new shades Classic-style nylon wind-breaker has drawstring waist and hood. 2 pock* ets. Perfect for casual and sportswear. Accessaries SAVE 1.67 * Classic Ban-Lon" shirts for men *>33 * Up-to-the-minute styles and shades * So comfortable at anytime, any place * Washable nyl on knit dries beautifully Always in style, sport* shirts of easy-care Ban-Lon* textralized knit. Selection of shades. S-M-L-XL. Save now! Men's Dept. Huge clearance of little girls’ shoes WIDE SELECTION OF STYLES COLORS FOR ALL OCCASIONS OFF REG. PRICES Great group of the season's most popu-lar fashion shoes for little girls. Quality materials and craftsmanship. Various styles in sizes 8I/2 to 4. Buy now... save! Shoe Dept. A SAVE 1.33 Man's sweatshirt of 100% croslan* 2« Smooth, comforteblo ideal £or outerwear Never any shrinkage, crease-resistant ♦Wide assortment of sharp, smart colors Contrasting stripas trim the collar and cuffs of. this sweatshirt. Warm and washabla. Sizes S-M-L-XL. Bargain! Mae's Dept. Save 5.1 PORTABLE PLAY YARD Tubular steal frame has drop 1688 sides. Foam cushion in bright vinyl print, Buynowandsavo! REG. 21.99 Furniturm Dept. • v r pc- ’ Sava $31 BIG 12-35 CUP COFFEE URN Hostesses' favoritel Brew hot T99 coffee for 12 to 36 people M with this aluminum urn. rig. 10.99 Housewares Save $21 FULL-LENGTH DOOR MIRROR Select sheet glass withtex- *3 99 tured linen moulding finish* . ad in gold. I5"x55". REG. 5.99 China Dapt. Save $80 180-SQ. INCH COLOR TV Fine color sat has automatic^R 95 controls for color fidelity. Ar 3F modern console for all homes. »■<* a tees • 1 •-MIC* lUatfonal ul.io mmw* mrwfwm TV-Radio Dtpt. 5«vg $1 POLYETHYLENE BIRD FEEDER Attractive Mrd feeder QQc comas with seed! Unbraak- j/f- •bl|t holds 2 lbs. of wad. RIG. 1.99 Garden Shop Sovg 1.55 HANDY PROPANE TORCH KIT Kit includes soldering tip, pencil point, utility burner, flame spreader, morel rig. 5.99 > Hardware Dept. 44# ; Sovg $201 QUI$T FOOD WASTE DISPOSER Sound • proofed _ disposer is 49” REG. 59.V9 y Plumbing & Heating also jam - proof 11 Pulverizes most known food waste. Save 2.55 COLORFUL STADIUM BLANKET Warm up at football games C 44 with this acrylic blanket you gM machine wash. Use as cushion. REG. 7.99 Auto Accessories A—10 »fi", f * ■; 1 ' v " J\ *x'<. *; 7^-'-! THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCT^BE^ 8, 1969 ii Yanks Battle N. Viets at DMZ; 3 U.S. Aircraft Lost major combat units baing rode-[place departing Marlno-*r spokesmen said. w W W i * The spokesmen said a company of 100 to ISO paratroopers was petroling a/ mile south of the DMZ late Thursday when It ran into fewer than SO North SAIGON (Ap) - U.S. paratroopers fought North Viet*. . , . . namese forces along the demili- second.round of troop withdraw-tarized zone and closer to Sal- als. , gon while the United States lost A U.S; Air Force Phantom three more aircraft in the war, fighter - bomber crashed Thurs-/ military spokesmen said today, iday 95 miles northeast of Sal- Two observation helicoptersig°n. hilling orn* crewman. The , . of the 82nd Airborne Dlvislon|U.S. Command said the plane!Vietnamese troops in bunkers. were shot/down early today in a believed shot down by ene-j * * * fire fight 20 mUes north of Sal- my ground fire. A two-hour exchange of gon. Paratroopers on the ground g YANKS KILLED | small-arms and machine-gun lost one man killed and 10| Americans were reported wounded In the engagement, re- kiUed and w wounded m 20 ene-ports from the field said. jmy rocket and jnortar attacks * * * during the past 24 hours, the Hie 82nd Airborne has only its UA Command said. Ird Brigade in Vietnam. That, The DMZ action involved together with one regiment ofj paratroopers of the 101st Alr-lder a 25-round mortar barrage the 3rd Marine Division, are the borne Division, moved up to re-'from North Vietnamese but suf- fire killed two paratroopers and wounded -four. Enemy casualties were not known. MOTOR BARRAGE Another company of paratroopers a mile away came un- Ifered no casualties, U.S, head-. Official sources said that [quarters said, while the defense' of the north- plratroopers of the 101st AhN era-frontier will fall primarily | borne Division have been rede-lfo -the <4 20,000-man $outh Viet-. Iployed along the DMZ to help'namese 1st Infantry, Division, 1 fill the gap left by the 3rd Regi- ftp Airborne wll conduct ment, 3rd Marine Division, reconnaliwanw patrols along ! which began redeployment to DMZ as well as the Laotian Okinawa last Monday under border. - — President Nixon’s secojrid round BATTLE ACTIVITY l/IW of American troop withdrawals.! clash aiong the DMZ was * * * one of several sporadic actions The 3rd Brigade of -the tOlst across the country, but again no j Airborne Is patroling around the craggy outpost known as the Rockpile, operating farther north than ever in the war. It major sustained fighting was reported by the allied commands. A spokesman for the U.S. Command said Thursday battle! moved from the A Shau'action had dropped to its lowestl j Valley, 80 miles south along the [level of the year. Laotian border. I The Navy reported a five-inch gun aboard the cruller Boston blew up today while firing on enemy positions and four men Were wounded. It was the second time in three months that one of the Boston’s guns had New-Dem Parley FLINT (AP)—Michigan’s New! Democratic Coalition has Scheduled a two-day conference for | this weekend in Flint to decide! what actions it will take in antiwar activities and in the 1970 elections. The meeting is scheduled for Flint I.M.A. pavilion.. 1 blown up while firing in support of ground units, the Navy said, FENCE WHOLESALE RETAIL Factory Distributors 363-6639 UNIVERSAL FENCE AAAANA ELECTRONIC RADAR-RANGE OVEN , Now on Display, $40500 NEW 1970 GENERAL ELECTRIC COLOR TV and STEREO HAMPTON ELECTRIC 825 W. Huron FE 4-2625 PLCHTy Of convenient M(iJ£ pnnn/no neon mi stones. DOWNTOWN KRESGE'S IE m Reg. •19" GENERAL ELECTRIC WAKE UP RADIO with LIGHTED DIAL CLOCK RADIO Andre’s FALL SPECIAL - 100% HUMAN HAIR W/T/^ C All Cut and Sly led wLlIjiJ ALL SHADES ONE PRICE, NONE HIGHER Hand Tied Wigs^OO ALL 100% HUMAN HAIR Featuring a lighted clock dial, dirfet tune dialing. Solid .state circuitry. DOWNTOWN KRESQE STORE ONLY $10*8 ■ LIMIT ONE FALLS WIGLETS CASCADES Hm Phone FE S-9257 No n .01 Appointment Beauty halon Necessary 11 N. Saginaw, Between Lawrence and Pilte.Ste SIMMS Hard to Beat Value on Anscomatic Movie Camera Super 8 with Electric Eye $49.50 Value at Simms m It! del S81 Anscomatic super 8 movie camera has electric eye, that provides automatic exposure control, low-light warning signal, removable pistol grip, built-in daylight filter and film footage indicator. Charge it or $ I holds in layaway. Camaras — Main Floor 91 North Saginaw St. SIMMS.?* McCondfeM CwipdA Practical Glamot|»r ^ KIMI CARPETS - RUGS -LINOLEUMS -* DRAPERIES Just Arrive, Beautiful New Kitchen CARPET Select from a Wide . choice of attractive colors. FASHION BEGINS WITH A FOUNDATION Spend 5 Minutes in our fitting room and see the difference ESTABII.SHED I9SI 38 YiARS OF SATISFACTORY SERVICE I ALL OAKLAND COUNTY McCANDLESS Corner of Perry and Pike Streets N. Perry St. FE 4-2531 Bobette Shop 16 N. Saginaw Downtown FE 2-6921 CHARGE ACCOUNTS FREE PARKING : During the summer, a review board was set up, consisting of the School Government officers and the School Judicial Board. A review of the proposed constitution was proposed. RATIFIED BY STUDENTS It was ratified by the student body Monday. PETITIONS AVAILABLE Students interested in becoming members of the activities or curriculum department must gpt a petition of 20 signatures. Petitions are available throughout the school year. Current school government officers are Bruce Annett, president; Doug Dubrish, vice president; Georgia Rose,wall, recording secretary; Kendra Solberg, corresponding secretary; and/Joe Kahn, treasurer. Dawn Saffron was elected yearbook * editor this year with Vicki Keys, assist ant editor . * Plans are now being made for the 1970 "Polaris.” It is expected to be 200 pages with color features. Books will be on sale in the near future. Yearbook sponsor is Jane Hunt, English teacher. “ PROM PLANS Elected co-chairman of the Senior Planning Committee are Mari Lynn Hutson and Connie Crawford. Jjeniors are now making plans for their senior prom. A tentative date of June 5 has been set, Or - Or ★ V Meetings are held every Monday from 7:30-9 p.m. Mott’s newspaper class is sponsoring a «: Bermuda Day next Friday. Tickets will go on sale Wednesday for 25 cents. Adams Shifts Into High Gear By PATRICIA VOLL "One disadvantage of this new schedule is that I can’t skip and go out to lunch illegally this year,” laughed senior Fred Wade at the new Rochester Adams High School. Adams has Just begun Its first year as the second high school established in the Rochester School District. ’ Adams students temporarily are attending’ the Rochester High School building in the afternoon. Rochester High students at' tend in the morning. Many prefer the new eystem although all their friends are not enrolled in the Nancy Jerdme said, "I can finally sleep in on those brisk wintry mornings.” it A. A. Turko, coop adviser, said it was an excellent opportunity for students to find morning Jobs. CHANGE IN FEBRUARY The afternoon shift is to conclude in February upon completion of the new Adams school building. ' * ♦ ’ ★ Adams students not only have a new Identify-but an almost entirely new staff of teachers, counselors and office help. 3 Senior Girls Vie for Brandon By UNDA DIXON One of three Brandon High School senior girls' — Sherry Taylor, Susan Foster or Terrie Grovesteen — will be chosen today as this year’s homecoming queen. The queen’s court includes princesses Mona Wray, Junior; Delores Hebert, sophomore; and Julia S bar man, freshman. ★ - ♦ * The class float and hall competitions were Inspired by this year’s theme "Here Come Da Circus.” Homecoming week featured a special event each day. Monday, sweat shirt day; Tuesday, hat day; Wednesday, blue and white day; Thursday, dumb-hair-do day; and today topped die week as spirit and team day. PARADE TONIGHT The homecoming parade will assemble 'f ... . at approximately 6:30 tonight at Cedar And Ball streets in Ortonvtile. * * * - The town’s fire engine along with Brandon’s cheerleaders will lead the annual parade. Included in this parade will be: Margo Mahoney, 1968-69 homecoming queen; Margie Widman, Miss Ortonville; the Byron Band; Brandon’s Australian exchange student, John Smith; Youth for Understanding student, Bernhard Scholten from Germany; Brandon’s three queen candidates; Brandon’s senior band; senior float, the Junior princess and float; the sophomore princess and float; and "the freshman princess and float.. ” * i*. ★ A bonfire on the Bfandon baseball field will follow the parade. The senior class will sponsor tonight’s dance from 9:30-11:30. Ttie group “Love la*’ will entertain. Ralph Hawes is the first principal of Rochester Adams. Dominic Mautie is the assistant principal. All the counselors excluding Mrs. John Ryan are new to the school district, and they are: Donald Kemp, Dave Parks, and MTs. A. A. Bogard. ‘SWING HOUR’ ' Adams Student Council, made up of representatives of the four. Classes meets daily during the. "swing hour,” the hour between the end of the RHS day and the beginning of the Adams’ school day. Officers of the Student Council are junior Debt Kresge, president; senior Dave Konderik, vice president; junior Amy McKay, secretary; and senior Debt Durkee, treasurer. ★ * * The Adams Varsity Club, is sponsored by Max Hasse, the varsity football coach for Adams. Pep rallies take place in the afternoons before football games and class councils meet regularly, planning, various ac- ' m * Adams’ "Highlanders” hive enthusiasm and involvement In their new school and their colors of gold and brown are quickly becoming a familiar sight to schools throughout the county. ★ —Hr W The annual "College Night” program will be held Oct. 13 beginning at 7:19 p.m. Parehts and students of both Rochester Adams and Rochester High Schools will be able to talk with 49 representatives of educational institutions. The program will be broken into four halfhour sessions. 'Madwoman' Cast at Groves BY MIKE WILSON Michelle Bowman, Anne Hllfinger, Nancy Jardak and Pat Ursin are four madwomen. That is, they are in respect to the casting of Groves’ fall production, "The Madwoman of Challlot,” written by Jean GlraudoUx. The'play will be held Nov. 20-24. * * * Pat, in the lead role, portrays the aged Countess Aurelia, the Madwoman of Chailiot Street. Michelle, Anne and Nancy, are cast as Mme., Gabrielle (Madwoman of St. Sulpice), Mme. Constance (Madwoman of Passy), and Mme. Josephine (Madwoman of La Concorde), respectively. They are the countess’ three women companions. In other roles are Linda Konde as Irma, the Countess Aurelia’s daughter; Thom Zawacki, as the hard pushing corporation president; and Steve Weinstdck as the broker. "U’)l give me a chance to show off my girls,’j said drama teacher Mrs, Susan ^pBaft. .... i M i , Hi'W A two-act play, “The Madwoman of Chailiot” deals wjth attempts of an o\L corporation president and an oil prospector toiry to tan,a large JDoUpf oil ftetieath Paris. Thej|envlsion warfl as a City of oil wells and her residents as standardized workers. The story develops when the Countess Aurelia and her ^ vagabond friends undertake destruction of the two men’s plans. Other members of the cast: Joshua Schrier, Steve Orandelius, Sandy Estroff, Barrie Brown, Rick Orbach, Mike Barrie, Terry Smith, Brian Sherwin and Debbie Diehl. TONIGHT’S THE NIGHT — Kicking off a new season are Waterford Mott Wgh School cheerleaders Deedee Smith (left) and Dawn Saffron. The cheerleaders art sponsoring a dance following tonight’s first home game when the Corsairs play Dearborn Heights High School. Ofi Attendance New PNH Policy Waterford Twp. Old Grads to See Signs of Our 4 By CAROL WILUAMS "Signs of Our Times” has been-chosen as the theme for this year’s homecoming at Waterford Township High School. The pep rally, bonfire and football game Will take place .Oct. 17. The king and queen will be crowned at, the Coronation Ball, Oct. 18.. ★ * ★ Cochairmen of the homecoming are Joe Worley, Kerry Jergovich and Barb Way. Committee chairmen include Barb Kitts, jep rally and bonfire; Bud Klm-mel, cars and driver’s; and Laura Knight, publicity. OUiers are Diane Nurkula, decora- They competed with schools from all over Michigan and won a first-place ribbon, in overall competition. Captain Barb Way received first-place individual honors, with Jill Motley receiving a fifth-place ribbon. Hr * 4r Members of the squad are Donna Douroujalian, Debbie Halpin, Barb Kitts, Melody Mason, Jill Motley, Denise Pety, Joyce Putman, Judy Stack,- Pat Stott, Linda Winowiecki and Barb Way. Mrs. Louis Pefy is sponsor for the varsity. Junior varsity cheerleaders this year are Becky Calcote, Nancy Adams, Carol Crisler, Nancy Heyd, Vicki Shaw, tlons; Ina Johnson, 'invitations; Ed* Vanessa Simmons, Kathy Swartz and JUMBO FLOAT IN WORKS — Theie Brandon High School queen candldates-(trm left) Susan Foster, Tinrto Grovesteen and Sherry Taylor — are building an ahtitiant which will make its debut in the homecoming parade tonight at 6:30. One of foe girls will reign as queen over tonight’s dance sponsored by the senior class. Bertrand, tickets; Jo Ann Reid, coronation ceremonies; Denise Smith, entertainment; and Nancy Wojclk, refreshments. PARTICIPANTS WELCOMED Students wishing to participate on a committee may contact the chairmen. . Sophomore class elections were held a week ago today. Those chosen are Scott Sines, president; Pam Jergovich, vice president; Karen Vaughn, treasurer; and Nancy Wojclk secretary. ★ ★ w Newly elected Varsity Club officer! are Jim Mato, president; Craig Whetstone, vice president; Mike Daly, secretary; Bud Kimmel, treasurer; and StaVa Moffat, sergeant-at-arms. EKk.,......v.j .. ,v The Skippers host Walled Lake Central tonight in a varsity, football game. Halftime ceremonies will feature foe Skippers’ blue and gold band and drum major Don Riley. Assisting him will be majorettes Debbie Rourke and Laurie Vore, PROGRAM EDITORS . Robert Davidson, advjser to the "Victory at Waterford” football program, has named Lynda Ruggles and Mike Freeman as editors. The varsity cheerleaders attended cheerleadtog camp during the summer. Nancy Trapp. Kim Anselmi Is captain. Mrs. Donald Ersklne Is sponsor. By NATAUEXHJMER In an effort fo/achieve better attendance, Pontiac Northern has changed Its attendance procedure. Richard L. Til wick, PNH attendance counselor, offers tide explanation, “Attendance and the granting of credit have been tied together. y "If a student misses more than 15 per cent of the total school days to a semester, he will be required to take a five-hour comprehensive examination in the classor masses.” * * * ★ V Glenn Griffin, father of last year’s valedictorian, Patrick Griffin, has been added to the staff of PNH along with 23 other new teachers this yCar. Sophomores proclaimed their “Sophmore Spirit” on a 16-foot, red-and-white banner in one of the main halls — too bad'they didn’t check the dictionary for the spelling of sophomore. . STEPS TAKEN ON TENSION After the recent outbreak of racial tension at Pontiac- Northern High School, several steps have been token to relieve the situation. Meetings held all day Friday gave some parents, students and faculty members an opportunity to express their opinions and plans were set in motion to alleviate the problems. WWW Most often students commented that they simply wanted an education without interruption, Many students have very definite ideas on the situation. Ruth Goemarere, a PNH senior feels that, "When a minority of students can run a school it’s a bad situation.” ‘INNOCENT PEOPLE HURT’’ In Rose Ann LaVerdure’s opinion, "It’s a disgrace to the community.” As far as the cause of the upset, Earl Williams states, "I don’t think it’s outsiders, it’s two gangs in Pontiac fighting it out. Innocent people are getting hurt between the two gangs.” Del Darling, PNH Junior, put it this way, "If this is freedom, we don’t want any!” _ Lee Calvin expressed the opinion oi many when he said, “You feel like you’re under watch all of the time.” \t Grade Dominguez expressed this belief, "They’re only doing It to try to prevent what happened Thursday.” . Debating Course Is New By JOANNE SANDERSON With the opening 6f school at Walled Lake Central, many new ideas and courses have materialized. One of the nvw programs at WLC is the debate program. ibis program la unlike last year’s extracurricular program. Kathy Walker is teacher and debatp coach. Students in the program have already begun preparing for this year’s debate issue — Resolved: That Congress Should Prohibit Unilateral Untied States I Military Intervention to Foreign Count tries. . ! TWO WORKSHOPS ' Debaters have participated in two workshops this year. They hope to attend the workshops held at Michigan State University, University of Michigan and Battle Creek. *' These workshops are designed to familiarise the new students with the techniques of debate and the issues found within the debate proposition. Plans for homecoming are centering around a Walt Disney theme. Any club or class may build a float. Homecoming candidates will be selected this week. ■ Each class will choose four candidates with the exception of the senior class which will choose five. Ibis year homecoming will be held on Oct. 17 when the WLC Vikings meet the Pontiac Northern Huskies. * w * Seniors will participate in College flight Tuesday, at Farmington High The night will begin with a. dinner at 5:30 sponsored by the board of; education. * * * > The program Will start at- 7 with a panel discussion. This discussion will feature speakers from Oakland Community College, the University of Michigan and the University of Detroit. The topics disuseed will be college selection, student activism and adjustment to the college campus concerning dorm life and the community stodem, Planning Beguln for Avondale's Homecoming By PATTI ANDRUS The Avondale High School 8tudent Council hal started making plans for the Oct. 24 homecoming game. Chairman is Judy Stevens. The theme for the floats is "Song Titles.” The homecoming court is made up of Patti Andrus, Jan Auten, Ranae Hewett, Val Hewett and Judy Stevens. * a it . w Student Council officers for this year are Chuck Lovelace, president; Randy Cornell, vice president; Kathy Cassidy, corresponding secretary; Debbie Lewis, recording secretary; and Mitch Vogdl, treasurer. Avondale has throe foreign exchange students this year. They are Nirtoa Raveloarnoa from Madagascar, Rainer Lempfert from Germany and Hans Cogne from Sweden. Nirtoa lives with Mr. and Mm. Lewis Bradbury, 473 Opdyke, Pontlae Township. Rainer Uves with Mr. and Mrs. Donald Roch, 657 Provincetown, Pontiac Township. Hans lives with Mr. and Mrs. John Floeter, 66 Lovell, Troy. The Avondale Players are going to put on four one-act plays this year. Officers ere Dick Chesser, presient; Ron Bradford, vice president; Mary White, recording secretary; Bill Anderson, corresponding secretary; Darlene Frankowski, treasurer; and Pam Ankeny, historian. * * * Varsity cheerleaders are Patti Andrus, captain; Jan Auten; Kathy Cassidy; Val Hewett; Sharon Somers; and Mary White. Junior varsity cheerleaders are Cocaptains Vanessa Haley and Teslie Milewicz, Joy Crawford, Brenda Gibbs, Debbie Mannl end Sharon Mannl. SPIRIT RISERS. Officers for the Spirit Risers are Mary Holland, president; Sherry Mabry, vice preaident; Sue Gibbs, secretory; Judy Clark, treasurer; end Jeff Bowbn, business manager. Avondale has a new Band Director, David Moore. Majorette^ are Mery LeBresh, Be Jay Davis, Patsy Glffin end Sherry Malory. Drum major Is Mike Clschke. Additional School Niws Found on Pago B-2 i • 1 OCTOBER Novi Ity TERRY VALENTINE During the last three weeks of May, about 80 Novi High School girls tried out fbr cheerleading. Florence Pangborn, physical education teacher, coached the girls. ★' ♦ * Split up Into groups of four or five, the girls learned one new chew and one old one, and also made up their own pompon Pompon routines were to bear no similarity to other routines. VARSITY JUDGES Novi’s exper 1 onced varsity cheerleaders — Kathy Winner, Virginia Clift, Pat Ling and Sue Vivian - and Miss Pangborn Judged the girls on their overall personality, coordination and their school grades, which had to be above a C plus. Picked as cheerleaders for the varsity teams were Diano Krezel, Marilyn Proech, Barb Reska, Eunice Reuter, Debbie Ward and Denise Ward. '★ it | W . ■■ The junior varsity team consists of Debby Dale, Claire DeBrule, Ann Padget, Cheryl McMillan, Sue Boyer and At Cheerleading Camp Novi won first* place ribbons for a Novi cheer and a camp cheer, with second-place ribbons for two pompon routines. ★ . * Marilyn Prosch won a second place trophy for most outstanding Cheerleader. Dominican ByCNYDI WYZGOSKI Two classes were added to the Dominican Academy curriculum tills year — general business and journalism. Journalism previously was offered only as an extracurricular activity. • it it ★ Both the Woodlander (yearbook) and The Crane Back (newspaper) will be put out by the journalism class. The staff already has presented the student body with two issues of The Come Back. The drive for yearbook ads has begun. An award will be made to the class bringing in the most money in ads. The goal this year is $600 per class. The race was on to see who started the year off with the first project and the winner was the senior class. . ■ Sf .h Monday it started its charm sale. The charms are miniature class rings with the year of graduation on them. They come in a choice of silver or gold bands And a varied assortment of setting cot ora. - / « Yesterday installation of class officers and executive members of the Student Council was held. / Oakland Christian By LAURA KIRKPATRICK Candy and competitive spirit soon will fill the halls St Oakland Christian High School. * The ninth-grade homeroom will sell candy With a prize going to each of the two top salesmen. Vickie Powell is president of the ninth grade. / The 10th grade homeroom also Is sponsoring a “candy campaign” as it Is called by President Mary Breslin. ’ Juniors and seniors, although a combined homeroom will be split by competition as the seniors, led by Kevin Lee Ballard, president, sell candy and Ice cream during the lunch hour. The juniors have no definite plans yet, it * ★ Oakland Christian had more than a new curriculum and teachers to get used to tills year. It was also in a new building. It is now located in the Hickory Grows school building, a two-story structure on Square Lake Road. The senior class discussed at a recent breakfast the senior trip and moneymaking ideas. Holly By MARCIA CLARK In, an effort to improve communications between the administration and students of Holly High School, Prin-cipal Norman Jones opened his office fromlto 8:90 a.m. Wednesday mornings to enable students to register complaints abotit school problems. ;/V" ’ * * * '' Also', a student-faculty communications has been formed to present pressing problems to the administration and to propose solutions. This committee meets vrith Jones during the lunch The student-faculty communications committee and the handbook committee were instrumental in forming the present dross code. / ^ LACKED SUPPORT -,!l A protest against this dross code was raised but lacked student support. Teen Club, bold in the student center and gym on Tuesday nights,1 has »• turned tide year. Students may tatetol* opportunity to play volleyball, basketball or Ping-Pong, dance or just sit and talk. ★ ★ it , To afford the students of Holly with still more recreation time on weeknights on weekends, support Recreation Center is Pontiac Catholic By PATRICK FRANCKEN Pontiac Catholic High School started the 1W-70 year with a flurry of activity. Tryouts for the fall play, “Araenlc and Old..Lace,” have begun; work on homecoming floats has (parted; the Phoenix yearbook staff baa embarked on an expansion campaign; and freshmen have hern initiated. * # ★ Howard Hoeflein, director of the play, found the tryouts encouraging. The play will be presented early In November. The theme selected by Student Council for this year’s homecoming Is “fairy tales.” Each class chose Its own sub-theme — seniors, Cinderella; Juniors, Humpty Dumpty; sophomores, Old Woman Who Lived in a Shoe; and freshmen, Winnie the Pooh. SPONSOR CAMPAIGN Yearbook editor John Parle, along with bis staff, put together n sponsor campaign to finance yearbook improvements. “We put together a staff capable of producing an outstanding yearbook," said Parle. “But, the staff can’t finance It. We decided to raise tiie price. But we also put In a way of getting the yearbook tree.” If a student reaches a sponsor quota, he receives his yearbook free. dr A it Last Friday’s freshmen initiation mostly consisted of a presentation. During which the class was subjected to “good natured” abuse from the seniors. Oxford By LUCY SCHICK Growing pains are evident at Oxford High School. The senior Mgh»now contains only three grades. The ninth grade was officially moved to the junior high “ building in late August. This move diminished sports, the marching band and many ..clubs. At the same time, study hulls Ware eliminated. ★ * / it As a result, all personnel have been affected by these major changes. Every classroom la used every hour. The cafeteria is alfio used as a classroom. Chemistry, physics and typing class enrollments are limited by cramped faeffitiia. CLASSES OVERFLOW General biology and math classes have overflowed to the choir room, while the choir classes moved to the band room. Lack of a metals shop teacher has caused many boys to be rescheduled into gym class. Each student attends five consecutive 70-minute classes, with a lunch break during his fourth class. If he rides a school bus, this schedule makes the library inaccessible unless the student goes in with his class or during his lunch break. *• ★ * ’* On the other hand, the new football field and the all-weather track are being hailed as superior facilities. When they were built behind the high school, a new tough cross-country course was set up at Camp Oakland. Students and faculty are being given two months In which to adjust to afi the major changes caused by becoming a three-grade school. Then a survey will be taken to.determine the new system’s strengths and weaknesses. MAJOR ADJUSTMENTS Student Council also has major adjustments to make. It has a new constitution and two new sponsors: Elmer Ball, shop teacher; and J. B. McQueen, math teacher. A new dress code Is in effect which relies on each student’s own judgment of what is in good taste. Stevenson By ROXANNE BURKE Stevenson High opened its doors to three foreign exbhange students again this foil. Currently attending classes at SHS are seniors Gregorio da Guzman, Martin Beck and junior Antonio Yupango. Gregorio, who hails from San Juan in the Philippines, claims he joined the exchange program to “gain experience.” Among the things he’d like to do during his stay in the United States, are traveling, attending a football game and seeing snow. ★ Sr ★ Contrasting the educational processes between his homeland and the U.S/ Greg states tiutt he finds American schools a great deal less formal and claitns this informality mate! learning easier. Antonio X“ p a a go, also from the Philippines, explains his reason for Joining tte exchange program was to ^roaden xny hurinmafi Tow a Crank, Patsy Bailey, LUa WORD TO THE WISE - Managing Editor Richard M- teen-agers attended a three-hour workshop prior to the launch- Saunders addresses a group of Pontiac Press high school ing of the school pages. High school news will appear each correspondents on the dos and donts of good journalism. The Tuesday .And Friday through the school year. OLL Yearbook Ad Drive Begun By MICKEY SEETERLIN The annual yearbook ad drive is under way at Our Lady of the Lakes with a goal of $4,000 to finance the 1870 Lochmara. Each student who contributes $12 wrath of ads will receive a fret yearbook. ’ ‘ • '/■ The homeroom which turns !ty/lbe largest amount of ads will rocatvf a free day from school to attend a movie of Its choice. Deadline for ads is Oct. 17. Anyone who wishes/to be a social patron or to [dace an ad in the yearbook can do so by contacting any OLL student. COEDITORS Yearbook coeditors are Anne Hoffman Reed. Cynthia Kora is What’sthe “Mod God Squad”? that’s the npwnickname the Sodality Club has adopted. This group of about 30 girls does volunteer work to help other people mid the community. . ★ ★ Its first project of the year included participation in the Alfac March to aid handicapped children. The Varsity Club is Involved In a fundraising venture to .raise money for additional bleachers for the gym. UNDER OWN’'POWER Along with the Men’s Club of the parish it is offering a “Tin Lizzie” which is a replica antiqud car that runs under its own i power and carries one Varsity Chib officers are Mike Webster, president; Bryan Sauve, vice president; and Kathy Reed, secretary-treasurer. * * ★ The annual Junior Ring Ceremony with the blessing and presentation of class rings to the Class of 71 will be held on Sunday, at the 8:45 Mass. Following Mass, juniors will be the guests' of tiie sophomore class for breakfast. 1 J,________ ’ it it it Junior class officers are Peggy Hagan, president; Tom Newcombe, rice president; Nancy Wilke, secretary; and Pab Schulze, treasurer. There’s a new dub at Lakes this year—the Photography Club. The purpose of. this dub, sponsored by Robert Snare, is to assist the yearbook staff in taking professional type pictures for the yearbook. W. Bloomfield Adjusting to 2 Shifts Per Day By RUTH SOMERS^ Excitment and turmoil are subsiding as West Bloomfield High School students adjuftt to their new two-shlftwwtay schedule. Overcrowded conditions and a high school still under construction have caused the normal school day to be rearranged. Juniors and seniors attend school from 7:15 a.m. to 19:15 p^whlla freshmen and sophmores arrive at 11:20 a.m. and stay until 5:20 p.m. Two of the new people at West Bloomfield are our foreign exchange students. American Fidd Service student Marla Rosetti is from Argentina. She makes her home with the Thomas Stevenses of Orchard Late. Dominique Guarino is from Paris, France and lives with the Mac M. Ashers of Birmingham. , The AFS Drive Is Oct. 18. This house-to-house canvass takes place from 0 a.m.-l p.m. followed by a workers’ free lunch In the school cafeteria. The goal of |2,000 will be used to send exchange students from WBH abroad for the summer of 1070. Each partidpating person is entitled to free membership In the dab. The Laker football team meets Clarkston Wolves, Oct. 10 homecoming game. Weeks of time and effort have spent preparing class floats for the halftime festivities. The homecoming weekend is climaxed with dection and presentation of the queen at the semlformal dance to be held in the gym Oct 11. te crab, eeta the in the ve been ffreaTdeal at humab education not , fo technical knowledge but to Actual living Mjfnrtonces. ' HOPES TO VISIT FALLS During bis stay in America, Tony hopes Jo visit Niagara Falls and ta .anxious to witness a snowfall. Re is Ruling to tS all varieties of winter tyMrts inducing “War with snowballs. Martin Beck accounts for hls winting to visit the U.S. te his desfrb to better Us knowledge of the English language and to find out what America Is “really In some ways, electric heat Is better than warm summer sunshine. For one thing, it’s even the wear around. And it stays that way during weather changes. Also, with electric heat, drafts and cold floors beqome a thing of the past. With flameless electric heat, you’ll never wake up in the morning feeling dried out. You even get an operating cost guarantee. In writing. If you’d like a free estimate on installation and operating coat, send us the coupon below. We’ll arrange for an Edison Approved Electric Heat Contractor to call on you. Naturally, there’s no obligation. ponvert to electric heat. Winter will never be the same. DREAM HOME YOUR HOUSE WITH ELECTRIC HEAT uuuiirouiii ui ,4 iwy. Against SaturaFats By JANET ODELL ■ •- , Pontiac Press Pood Editor Breakfast Thursday was full of foods that our luncheon speakers disapprove of. Paberware took the opportunity tp display all their small appliances by cooking breakfast for the food editors In the grand ballroom of the hotel. Our first , cups of coffee were chosen from pots containing different blends of coffee. Then there was a choice of ham, Canadian bacon, sausage, chicken livers, eggs, apple fritters and fruit kabobs. An hour later we were seeing a demonstration of sausage cookery and Invited to taste same. Devo Inc., (a division of Johnson and Johnson) told the story of, how they developed Collagen sausage casings. »Kennel, directors of the Framingham Heart Study r In Framingham, Mass., reiterated what doctors have been laying for the past few'yeans: the Increasing ntimber of sudden deaths from heart attack can be prevented. Certain foods seem to be the vllllirtl./ Persons who are overweight, too sedentary, heavy smokers who also hive high blopd-pressure and high blood cholesterol are, prime victims. Evidence seems to indicate that proper diet will lower the cholesterol level and allow the Individual to live longer. start with children Then TV personality, chef Eddie Doucette, prepared an egg and sausage brunch dish, oth?r recipes for the humble pork sausage followed until we were convinced that sausage can indeed be U9e a *,mP,e design, leaves, the flower portion might waxed paper on top of the design you have traced onto white paper. Put this against a window pane and tape securely to hold it in place. The design must be visible through the stencil paper to be copied easily.- Trace the design onto the waxed paper with a hard pencil. Then cut out the design with the stencil knife or razor Made. If more than one color is to The completed place: mat reflects some imagination and adds color to ajable. The simple art of stenciling is an old craft of trans- ferring designs * to furniture and fabrics and is just as easy arid rewarding today. Hiey wnAfl for either a ready-made pattern or pleasantly different flavor. A * J ‘ ““ 1 * ’* When fudge, after cooking cooled to lukewarm before! beating, it should be at 10! degrees oh a candjjlWAXED PAPER I To cut the stencil motif traced from an art book lor magazine. Flowers, fruit, J sunburst, leaves, animal m shapes, birds and Initials are good, choices. KITCHEN CARPET Sq. Ft. This Price Includes Hi-Density Rubber Back and Labor TUSOM CARPET SALES fc SERVICE 4494 Dixie Highway Goo. Tuson 674-1 Drayton Plains -1011 “Neither a borrower nor a lender be.... so, stock up on milk for the weekend.” be red,’with the leaves to be painted green in the final design. Therefore, one stencil wiU be cut for the flower and another for the stem and leaves. Put the fabric to be stenciled on a blotter or thick cardboard to soak up any excess paint. Tack or tape the stencil in place Barefootedness—Good, Bad? Depends Where You Stand To get all of the Ice cream out of a container, try using a rubber bowl scraper Instead of a scoop or spoon.____________ perspire freely, and courages development of fungus infections such as atMete’s foot. Twenty of every thousand Americans suffer from some foot condition according to a study by the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. Much of the suffering and disability due to foot disorders Use the manufacturer’s directions for the preparation and application of textile paints. Stroke color on fabric with the stubby brush, working from the outer edge of the stencil' toward the center. Be sure not to have too much paint on the brush. Wipe off excess paint before each brush stroke is begun. Let the first collar dry before adding additional colors to the fabric. DECORATE TABLECLOTH After simple designs and items have been successfully _ . j , , „ decorated, try a bigger project - F«* tototo ■ mat-such as a bedspread o r : ^ ® keeping your feet clean tablecloth. M dry. The use of pHisoHex, Your personal touch with antibacterial skin cleanser, designs and colors will add!*" place ■ of soap -is often charm and interest to any I recommended, and has been Going barefoot has b e e n stretches of sandy beach Is a frowned on by mothers for| wonderful feeling, pften'gtod generattons Physicians a n d|for the feet _ and for the Jnner podiatrists including members . of the American P o d 1 a t r y1 ■ • Association, are likely to support mother — but not completely. • Without shoes, feet are exposed to injury and Infection, and especially to a painful condition of the soles of the feet known as plantar warts. Encased in shoes, especially iring warm weather, feet Leather furniture can be cleaned with saddle soap, rinsed with a damp cloth and dried thoroughly. Complete the cleaning by using a conditioning dressing. KINNEY SHOES THE PONTIAC MALL Open Sunday 12 nopn to 5 P.M. rnsm 59c{ 59J «• \ n 1 can be prevented by annual foot rofessiona! ment, and personal treat-f o-o t hygiene. home. Watch Fuses 'If you are giving a large brunch party, borrow several friends’ electric toasters and-let guests make their own toast; but be sure your electric wiring is adequate to take the load. found to control foot perspiration odor, when used regularly. Frequent shoe and stocking changes will help, along with liberal use of a good foot powder/ Any injury to feet dr the existence of a chronic foot ailment should be treated by podiatrist or physician. Wearing an apron made of terry doth when you are sewing kind of slippery , material will help anchor it and keep it from sliding off your lap. But MD, foot s p ec la list mother, and the whole family are likely to agree on one point — that walking barefoot on soft, green grass, or on long ■KL .. , • ^ r ' ’: • mm -Art Teachers Make It Big -as Inventors >3 p THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, lflgi NEW YORK (UPI) - "Thou •halt not permit children to drop paint on the floor." That's the rule Nancy Cherry and Judy 8hackelford, two young women wall on the way to millionaire row, credit for 'their success. “We loved the children but hatedJhe ayitem,” Min Cherry aaid. “Can you imagine teach-ing finger-painting and not get-ting paint on the floor?” . * ★ ★ ; That Was five year* ago when the two coated a heat-up foreign car between an apartment they shared and school. They turned to non-pedagogical pursuits and now drive a Cadillac. The .two disgruntled former art teachers, average age at, have established themselves as Inventors of toys and other things, Including Inflatable mannequins used to display B—J as Ap wiraphot* J “When we left teaching, we had no money, only a few art fupplles and an Idea or two, Miss Shackelford said. "We didn't even have enough talent to: make money painting portraits In Greenwich Village/ TISSUE PAPER The first toy Idea they sold to a major manufacturer Involved artistic use of tissue paper and glue. Then they sold a doll with wardrobe to a mail order house. They made a deal with Parker Brothers and marketed ait inflatable pillow version of “Instant insanity.” hfisg Cherry, graduate of Hpfstra University and a native New Yorker, is president of Inflat-A-Industries — the f 1 rn that Invented and has rights to the inflatable mannequins. The ‘tblow-ups” cost a' third of what plastic and plaster versions do. ★ * ★ Mfss Shackelford, of Alton, ill., and a graduate of Southern Illinois University, Is president of Cherry - Shackelford Creations Inc., the art end of the partnershlpl The newest item In that line: \potted flower that opens to revjeiL a baby dott Afternoons of Art Again Planned at Detroit Institute “Afternoons of Art” are again being sponsored by the Docent Committee of the Founders Society at the Detroit institute of Arts. ’ The afternoons will begin at 12:18 p.m. with a salad luncheon in Rivera Court. ... - ★ ★ . . Following lunch, small groups Will tour the newly renovated Robert TannahUl Wing, which opened hi June of this year. Exhibits include examples from the’ early colonists through the lttb century and feature the works of John Singleton Copley, Whistler and Winslow Homer, American furniture, silver and glass are also on display. The luncheon^ tours will begin Oct. 22 and continue’ on Tuesdays and Wedno id a y g through April 29, 1970. Groupe as small as 8 or as large as 80 may he accommodated. /.Reservations o r additional Utfprmation may be obtained by contacting Mrs. Carolyn. Goodrich at the Institute. Mocha Is Result 2 • S' \ pf Flavor Mix CoffiN and chocolate flavors blend harmonoiously. Mocha Frosting IJJ 1 tablesepoon instant coffee 8 tablespoons boiling water V« cup , butter, at ro o n 1. tablespoon unsweetened' |tk cups unsifted confeotloneri1 sugar Dissolve the coffee In the hOQlhg water. Beat the butter and cocoa together. Gradually MR in the sugar alternately the coffee. Makes enough frosting for top and sides of a 2-layer 9-lnch round cake. .finely chop almondl and work into your pastry (or pie cruft mix) for summer fruit dii barfy pies, GATE Vanessa Redgrave, British actress, proudly shows her newborn son, Carlo, to the boy’s father, Italian actor Franco Nero. The parents are ■ not married. Taken at Miss Redgrave’s home in Chiswick, England, Sept. 15, this is the first picture of parents and child since his birth. Stocks, Mutual Funds May Be Answer for Retirement By ANNE TAYLOR APNewsfeature Dear Miss Taylor: Could you advise the best placp tor about $200 monthly that we are now able tq save with the children We have a balance due of $10,800 on our heme, now worth about $38,000. We have about $2,800 In stocks, and some $3,500 in savings. Would if be better to make extra mortgage payments aj five per cent or invest all we can in special accounts at five to five-one-half per cent? We’re not familiar enough with stocks or Interested in them other than for the American Telephone we’ve received through my husband’s payroll deduction. WS are both in our early fifties, and want to use the money we have in the best way possible. Mrs. F. C., Des.. Plaines, 111. Dear Mrs. F. O.: tf it’s an “either-or" situation, and I don’t think it need be, then an Investment at five per cent wins out easily. That mortgage is an asset; you can't get money any cheaper than that, wo why pay off In advance? If you have $200 a month to invest I think you must widen your horizons a bit and familiarize yourself with equity investments such as stocks, mutual funds or real estate. Inflation is quite likely to be a part of our economic picture for not just months-but years ahead, and the return on your Investments, must exceed the rate of inflation: or you will be cheating yourself. You might seriously consider purchasing a n inexpensive vacation home. You will then The/re Good Some epicures like to add raw mushrooms to a green salad. If the mushrooms are very small, add them whole. Medium-size mushrooms can be sliced thin and used. Ever add raisins to Waldorf salad? Small.fry like this. have income from rentals when you are not using it, a small tax deduction and a hedge against inflation. , I suggest you obtain at your bookstore a copy of “Your American Research Council, and browse through It at ydur leisure. T think then you might Wng think differently about limfl your use of money to just two or three outlets, “Tis better to have loved and lost than to have run out of milk on the weekend.” OPEN MON. and FRI. PROM 9 to 9 * TUIS., WED., THURt. and SAT. 9 to 6:30 ORCHARD 164 ORCHARD LAKI AVBNUI, PONTIAC 2 Blooks Wait of South Wide Traok Driva Budget Terms Available • Free Parking Free Parking noxt to store * Good Sorvice DEAL DIRECT - PAY AT THE STORE NO FINANCE CO. INVOLVED 31 IP-e THE PONTIAC PRESS,\ FRIDAY; OCTOBM 8,- Mrs. Edward Metzoian of David K Drive and Milton E. Taylor of Lakeville Road, Addison Ti>wnshifi announce the engagement of their daughter, Beverly JoTaylor, to John Glenn Hayes. The prospective bridegroom, who attends Oakland Community College, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Hayes of, Voorheis Road. Mrs. James Bullard of South Edith Street and Coffee Drinkers Can Expect Teeth Stain By DR. HOWARD E. KESSLER [more then does regular coffee, [yourself. Your stomach add In Coffee is a subject many! A number of persona askedoutput is greatly increased, readers want discussed. 1 !me in letters whether or not your head beats faster, blood Drinking coffee is chiefly re- the new freeze-dried coffees [vessels in your brain constrict tend to stain the teeth. Fromjbut widen in the heart' area, alt indications they do not kldneys increase their output, discolor the .teeth as much as ^breathing increases, metabolic instant coffee, but they havejrate goes up and, tyhat dental not been on the market long [a c i e n t ists have particularly enough for a definite answer to [studied, Salivary flow greatly increases. the teeth of a targe percentage of patients because of its almost universal usage. 1 am told that 96 per cent of fafhiliea drink coffee every day. porcelain fillings These reactions differ widely Shred Cheese lated to dentistry in three ways—staining the teeth, discoloring fillings and increasing salivary flow. Some people blame the cal< felne for staining their teeth, but this - Is not true. The oils of the coffee are the basic stainers. [many things to occur within coffee drinking varies greatly Icheese yields about 2 cups of Caffeine is.. White, odorless [-——----\ y.sjshredded cheese. 'Ertimnn Vslleu nf incidentally, a. poison in certain concentrated forms. Wo 171611 WSar RfHOS be given. Synthetic tend to become stained by cof- from one individual to another fee. [because caffeine tolerance is When you drink coffed with [so variable. In a like manner, caffeine, you usually can expect!tooth staining associated with the mouths of different people. • In spite of these variations, Correction Made! Garnish-Pork Boneless S m,o k e d shoulder The e n g a g e m e n t MjP! m ■ nouncement of Penny Doreen butt looks very festive indeed if Iser published Oct, l was In- correctly reported. Miss Iser will wed Pvt. Thomasf H. Berger, USA, on Nov. 15. Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Iser of Semloh Street, Orion Township and Mr. and Mrs. Clare Berger of Lake Orion. ■ jugJPNlllfeiJjMiEJfe; ranged on a platter ind sur-. rounded with spiced crabapples ! nestling in sprigs of parsley, Before starting to iron, spread ■ a wornout Sheet under the iron-, ing board. This prevents your { freshly Ironed clothes from ; becoming in contact with the * ■Cheese blends more readily with.other ingredients and melts more quickly if you shred' or dice it first. One-half pound tur, Ala., announce the engagement of their daughter, Marjorie Kelley to Alvin Cameron, Oct. 25 is the date chosen by the couple for ’ their marriage. He is the son of Mrs. Denton Childers of Hartline Street, Avon Towiiship and Callus Cameron of Baltimore, Md. Caffeol, a volatile oil, is mainly what gives coffee its characteristic aroma and flavor. So, IdO-caffeinated coffee tastes it the same as regular coffee, andr accorping to many authorities, is better for you, but is just as apt to stain your teeth as coffee with caffeine. Instant coffee tends to stain the/ teeth 'much more than the slow-type coffee. Notice how it discolors your drinking cups Children Ask but Who Can Answer? By BETTY CANARY NEA Writer I keep having this dream. It’s sometime in the future and there’s a crowd of young people fust standing around. “What’s happening?” J ask. “Why are you milling around here?” “Well,” a young m a n answers, “none of us know how to do much of anything else." “You poor tiiiings,” I say, “didn’t any of you go. to •chool?” i “Most of us are very well-educated,” he answers politely, “but none of it seems very, uh, what’s the word?" “Useful," I suggest, , “Releyant,” he says. “What happened?” I ask. “It all started when I was in junior high school,” he begins, but we’re interrupted by a group of pretty girls whirling across the street, “They learned folk-dancing.”rhe tells me. “You were saying ...” I prompted. Honestly, they keep asking'fourth grade did “Chitty efiitty things such as, “If I want to be Bang Bang.” They were almost a mechanic, why take two years of Latin?” and “I made straight As in French, so why can’t I speak or read it?” and “Why ipend a year learning to make hot chocolate when I already know how to cook and •. I’d rather spend that time studyipg poetry?” There MUST Vb"e answers to that kind of question. Anyway, I believe in that did truism. “If you can’t say something nice about someone, don’t jay anything at all.” So, I professional productions. When I was in'fourth grade our chorus sang, “I’m a pretty snowflake,” ajbd only one girl knew all the words. In both fifth and sixth grades I was a cabbage in a nutrition play. Talk about amateurs! Jjjfow, if 2 can only sleep long m M I ough the-next time, I’m going to point out some facts to the boy in the dream the kids really DO know how to do .something. Maybe they know about the more thought and I thought and »t ventianal jobs, but they can all last I realized there was one 8° into the entertainment field. area in which welve made ter- .. rifle achievements. In school' When Icing cakes, you can plays. make them look nicer if you ★ • * ' * first frost them with a thin Sarah Laura Medjna and Pvt. Antonio Macias Jr., USA, will wpd Dec. 27. She is the daughter of Mrs. Mary Medina of South Paddock Street and, Alfredo Medina of Mt. Clemen*. Her fiance, now Stationed at Ft. Knox, Ky., is the son oh Mr. and Mrs. Antonio Macias of Cottage Street, BROWN-MOORE January wedding vows are being planned by Linda Lee Brown and Harry S. Moore. Parents of the engaged couple are Mr. and Mrs. vDavid R. Brown of South Marshall Street, More Nutritious Brown rice Is the whole unpolished grain of rice, with only the outer hull and a small amount of bran reqioved. It has a nut-like flavor and a slightly, chewy texture. To run out of milk is to run out for milk. Stock up for the weekend. You can give that pork roast the delicious flavor of Chinese ;pork by sprinkling it well with! Harry Moore of celery seed before roasting, and Dearborn and the late Mr. [basting with one-half cup of soy Moore. sauce when it is almost done. ! ■ I Gome to those who care, for YOUR HAlR Ruthanne, Cheryl, Holly, Jeanne and Phil 1£cJorj * tnmti St.T Call 332-3 694 W. Huron L... 0|m>ii Monday thru Saturday ^rgTrrmrmTrrrirnTYmriTrrnrrmriTnrrmt^ »> a itwH m»»>»iim adinrr»b'>e¥ififjj “You ftfust Be Satisfied - This We Guarantee” Division of Thomot Jswslry Co. 17-19 S. SAGINAW ST. Downtown Pontiac Free Delivery . _ F£ 2-4231 TRIPLE VALUE Last year, I saw a sixth grade i layer of icing. This will hold class present scenes froirtldown crumbs and give a smooth. “Oliver!” and the year before I,even base coat.- As soon as the saw one do a short version” of , first iclne sets, apply the final “South Pacific.” Last spring the I coat of icing. - “Yes, Oh, I had to spend hours learning to make things In woodshop in junior high school and I didn’t care much for that. But, because I made good grades, I was allowed the special privilege of being in the beginning Spanish class., although I didn’t want to learn Spanish. I liked history but I didn’t pay too much attention because I had already read better history books from the public library. It was the same In high school, only worse.” Chocolate, Oranges, Herring May All Bring Headache I awaken then and realize I’ve been dreaming. I even know why I have the dream. Because I've listened to the questions kids are asking today. Brushy Broil Broiling slices of liver? Brush them with melted butter or margarine and cook close to the heat; turn and brush with butter again before finishing the broiling. CHICAGO (AP) - It may hardly come as a surprise that drinking wine can give you a headache if you stay with it long enough. But 'Whoever thought' you might, get the same painful result from eating chocolates, cheese, oranges or herring? It seems that you can, reported Australian Dr. Michael Anthony at ah international symposium on headaches at Mount Sinai Hospital Medical Center Wednesday. * * t “Migraine la associated with detectable chemical changes In the body, namely a fall In plasma serotonin,, the substance in blood which prevents the endings, and thus you have migraine,” ALIEN SUBSTANCE Anthony, a professor * o f neurology at the University ^)! New South Wales, Sydney, said, “This drop in serotonin is due to an alien substance wtyeh enters the blood during the m-tack.” Research has Indicated, he said, that carriers of this alien substance include chocolates, wine, cheese, herring and oranges. Anthony said research has shown that serotonin constricts large arteries and veins and dilates smaller vessels, Lumpy gravy? Mix a little aajt with flour to prevent the lumpsTrSHi forming. vessels from dilating or con- including capillaries, striding excessively,” Anthony A study of patients admitted said. to hospital for migraine showed “When serotonin drops, that their headaches were vessels enlarge, blood flow in- relieved by the intravenous ad-, creases and' places painful ministration of serotoniij^ he pressure on the vessel’s ndrvejrejported. . , Advertised at $49.05 Limited Time Sale Price SUNDAY BREAKFAST BUFFKT i ' ' 9 A.M. to 12 NOON i Nationally Advartlaad at $59.95 Limited Tima Sale Price QUEEN SIZE *1 Cfl Reg. $159.95 *1011 From tha.makara of Sorts Perfect Sleeper !44fta Extra-firm, smooth-top mattress with expensive llocktU-design covsr . . . hundreds of resilient steel colls, prebuilt borders, fresh air vent*, handles for ‘easy turning, healthful ovef-atl support, limited time, ot'sri BljY ON WARD'S Convenient Credit Plan MONTHS TO PAY 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH TERMS TO SUIT YOUR BUDGET OPEN1 MONDAY, ,..THURS. & t=RI. 'til-9 PJVt, , 4 COMPUTE FLOORS or MOW ruMiiHiMok-uvAioft snviei to iach hook •: provincial • colonial • TRADITIONAL . • MODERN Alt By America's Leading Manufacturer's! ?ssseese«sseeeeeeeesDte Bsuteeie t MUMlitlAiltlltflflltt liltmutmmititttnitif eeesi ts ss sTeies^sss^. ItAiLdtulLU A{IjLhkj EIGHT THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1969 // REACH OUT AND CARE // GIVE! Thru Your Pontiac Area United Fund! Your United Way drive is under way. This is your chance to show you care, your chance to bring hope and joy and purpose into many lives that will live in darkness unless you help bring light. It's yopr big chance. J. A. FREDMAN, INC. - 735 PADDOCK ST., PONTIAC E ' UNITED FUND - Lights AT THE FLAGPOLE AT THE PONTIAC MALL TOMORROW (Sat., Oct. 4th) LOO P.M. REACH OUT AND CARE" 1 Through Your PONTIAC AREA UNITED FUND Watch the Progress on the United Fund Thermometer at The Pontiac Mail THE PONTIAC MALL SHOPPING CENTER Telegraph at Elizabeth Lake Rds. — Open 9:30 AM to 9AO PM. Some Stores Open Sunday 12 to 5 TWO THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1969 UF Has Three Distinct Pi s The United Fund is a national sole purpose of helping others. In its attempt to serve the greatest number of people, the United Fund has three distinct but related purposes. serve the community and make K a better place iar at) to Bee. r, it serves its member them to plan well as providing one central is to serve people; .each individual who benefits from one of its wwrtw agencies is actually being ferried by the United Area United^ Fund began in IMS following the creation of Detroit's United Foundation Torch -Drive. The Pontiac United Fond thus be second united seta be established in Dn United Fund serves as a central clearinghouse for volunteers, providing a central paid staff for planting, administration and budgeting. This central organisation enables and helps each member agency to rim more efficiently. * ♦ ■ * f Agencies of the United Fond spend upon private fund-drives, tor their cpesa-If each of die 55 agencies in the United Fund eoagucfed separate drives, expenseswould range from 15 to 25 per cent of the amount collected. BALANCED PROGRAM In tie Pontiac area United Fund drive, eaeompasmg aS the agencies, campaign costs average about 4 per cent of toe United Fimd agencies proride a balanced program of services. i of services, n stake contribution buteadi of many, eliminating tie j annoyance of separate drives, ' * i * * Modern management techniques are employed to assure that every dollar collected will remit m toe maximum yield of service. Each spring all the Pontiac Area United Fund agencies submit a budget for the operating year beginning in the following January. These budgets are carefully analyzed by budget panels composed of volunteer citizens from every type of profession iBcludmg labor mid industry. RECOMMENDATIONS As a result of these studies, the various committees recommend what tiie United Ftjmd should, appropriate to each agency for the nest year. Ad of these reconunendations are added together ^ and this sum becomes the fund-raising goal sought during the fall United Fund, campaign ' * A ★ United Fimd administration also involves year-round review of agency budgets on a monthly bass. The budget comnpfrtee also meets monthly to handle special financial requests from its i raising As in every other United Fund activity, the fund cam- . paign is a Volunteer effort. Ap- -i proximateiy 8,000 to 10,MO residents m the Pontiac area take pert In’ the ftmd-raising effort. , ZjgE* * # j ; Volunteers solicit the moUey, plan promotional programs that will spotlight the drive, do campaign accounting and speak to their fellow citizens on behalf of the United Fund agencies. Help Through The Kenny Rehabilitation Center At Pontiac General VARIED ACmniES - As these Girl Scout campers show, young girls are served by the North Oakland County Girl Scout Council, another United Fund service to the Pontiac area community. f: LEGAL AID - Legal advice is based on income at the Oakland County Legal Aid Society, which provides a personalized service as varied as the people who seek legal help- lids is still another United Ftind agency. THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1939 SEVEN aged, adolescents, and child-parent relationship difficulties. ■ Big Brothers of Oakland County recruits, screens and trains men to befriend boys from fatherless bones, providing masculine adult companionship for boys otherwise deprived of that important factor in their fives, COUNSELING SERVICES Catholic Social Services of Oakland County provides counseling services to families and individuals regarding problems of adjustment, budgeting, parent-child relationships and marriage counseling. fri addition, services are provided for unmarried parents and for placement of The M local and statewide United Fund agencies are aimed at providing services including assistance in pro-fessional.guidance, counseling, research, recreation mid education. The Oakland County Legal Aid Society offers legal advice mid representation to persons of limited finances while Family Services of Oakland County provides family counseling services including individual personal adjustment problems, marital counseling, counseling for the Volunteeri Aid Red Cross Arthritis Foundation Provides Therapy, Research Opportunities For Boys Provided By The Boy Scouts THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1999 Urban League Workers Are Trained To Help Leader Dags' Training School Is In Rochester Counseling Services Available At Family Service Catholic'Social Services Provides For Preadoption Care THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1999 Children Served 'Indians’ At The Boys' Club Of Pontiac, the. Guidance: Crime And Delinquency Physical Fitness Programs Are Conducted At The YMCA Of Greater Pontiac Salvation Army Offers Emergency Relief Big Brothers Provide Companionship For Fatherless Boys B<®R THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1969 A Message To The Community Ok campaign riogmilte year Is Hiodi Owl ond Can." I how nww been mow sincere when I My that during our UlM Fund campaign this year m must "Reach Out and Cara." TW Pontiac Ana United Fund, olong with thn Detroit United Foundation won the lint such Otgnnizntitins in the unU. The citizens in our ana staitedj something that has been copied in AwtanJi ol ciliei throughout the United States ond Conado. Wow twenty one yeors ioter the Pontioc Area United Fund has reached o crossroad. I am sany to report that in the Pontiac ana, os well as in most cities of the United States, the very Foundation el the private enterprise way of lile expressed through the United Fund movement Is haing threatened by a lack el interest and participation oh the part ol the citizens'who created An United Fend movement. It has become-increasingly hard to recruit the army ol|S,000 to 10,000 yplunteers who an needed he conduct ear local campaign each year and to cjonvince all ol our citizens to give a our firm or company Functions, will not hurt the company — it hurts you, your Friends, ■ be so easy by using the poyroti deduction plan most firms offer, or by paying monthly to the United Fund oHice. I concerned about increasing tones and highet costs. However, 1 think il we honestly ■anal circumstances we have to admit that we On in a period ol prosperity and we r>r had it so goad. cannot survive without concern and cate lor lone another. By surpassing our goal rill prove that we do cate. So let each and eyery one el us “Spoch Out and Care.* Campaign Chairman W. H. EIERAAAN through Research! National FIVE Offices hi Oakland and Macomb Counties M THE PONTIAC 3PRKSS. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, i960 B—« Apollo 12 Grew Plans a Shocker on Way Home > CAPE KENNEDY, Pip. CAP) After they explore the moon next month, the Apollb 12 aitro-nauts plan to tend their manned landing craft, crashing to the surface from a height of 66 miles to create a giant seismic shock. Hie impact, measured by a seismometer, could. reveal much about the internal struc-ture of the lunar mass. HR' - ‘4 * Assigned to the mission, scheduled for launching Nov. 14, Is an all-Navy crew of Cmdrs. Charles Conrad and Richard P. BURNING CONCERN — Astronaut Alan L. Bean looks over a radioisotope generator he is to place on the moon as he tells newsmen it may become too hot to handle. The generator is to supply power for the experiments the crew will conduct. At a press conference in Cape Kennedy last night, Bean said he was not concerned about radioactivity, but the generator could heat up to 1,400 degrees if left out long enough. Register All in U.S., Says Passport Chief WASHINGTON (AP) The director of the U.S. Passport Office indicates she favors a national registration system, with everyone being given a number and possibly fingerprinted. Frances G. Knight sees this not only as a possible first step toward international passport cards, but also as a move to correct faults in current Identification methods which result In "enormous tax evasion, social security frauds and national crime.” “No intelligent law-abiding citizen can seriously object to a national registration which would establish his identity and safeguard his security, bank, tax and insurance benefits,” she said in a paper prepared for an international trade and transportation seminar Thursday^ at the University of Wisconsin at MMlsbn. Rather than an invasion of privacy, Miss Knight said, national registration would be a personal safeguard. 59‘dCl i|ri59° n V|J 9th Graders'Bill NowU.S.Law Congress and Nixon OK Clast Project LUTHERVILLE, Md. (AP) -What beganas a ninth-grade project to show how a bill Is drafted has ended as federal legislation signed by President Nixon. ’ 1 Ralph Jaffe, the young social studies teacher at Rldgeley Junior High School who started the whole tiling, is shaking his head in disbelief. Gordon Jr. and Lt. Cmdr. Alan Bean. Conrad and Belli aura to land in the Ocean of Storms whHe Gordon orbits overhead. Bean, the'Only rookie on.the team, described the project’s planned experiments at a news conference Thursday, night. CRASH TIMING He said the deliberate crashing of the lunar module, or LM, is to occur after the two explorers launch themselves off the moon and rejoin Gqrdon in the command ship, 65 miles above the surface. Gordon will maneuver the LM to the proper attitude'for the bum,” Bean explained Then we’ll move away and fire up the jets to start the LM out of orbit. We hope to track it all the way down. /‘We’d bke to crash it about/ one kilometer from the seismometer. The impact ought to really, excite /it and |we can infer lot about the internal structure of the moon.” M ■' w '■ a a ■» A record of the resulting shock wave, for example, could tell whether the moon is layered, like the earth, or more sol-Id. '/ 1 ' • , . FIVE EXPERIMENTS The seismometer, intended mainly to record moonquakes and meteoroid hits, Is one of five scientific experiments Conrad and Bean are to deploy during seven hours walking around on the lunar surface. That’i more than triple the time the Apollo 11 astronauts spent outside their module In July. Four of the experiments will measure such thihgs as the solar wind, magnetjc fields and the pressure of the atmosphere, a . a -if - : The experiments wfll receive electricity from an atomic generator fueled by a radioactive element, Plutonium 238- The generator Will build up terrific heat. ■ “I don/t think the radioactivj-’ is ever going to be a problem,” Bean reported. “The thing to worry about is the temperature. It’s up to about 1,401 degrees if you leave jt out long enough.” WITHIN 20 MINUTES He said he intended to have the generator in place within 20 minutes and didn't expect the temperature,to,rite above 250 degrees in that period. • a a! " #/■ .'/ v Conrad and Bean hope to land about 600 feet from the unmanned Surveyor 3 spacecraft which touched down on the moon in 1067. They want to climb ISO feet dofn i crater wall fo clip of. parts of the vehicle with a bolt cutter. Bean paid the condition of the pieces could help designers oi space stations and moon bases determine how weU certain materials stand up to long-term exposure in the space environment. FLAGS OUTDOOR '# INDOOR ALL TYPES CHRISTIAN LITERATURE SALES IS Oakland Ava* FE4-9891 ardized, let us say by 10 nations with the largest volume of tourism, we would be well on oui way towards an acceptable international identification document,” she said. She said the airlines who had been applying pressure for “credit-card” type passport which could be scanned electronically to feed data into a computer and accelerate the transfer of passengers through international airports. But before any credit-card type passports can be developed, she said, a footproof document must first be developed —and this inevitably will require national registration. While the idea of a credit-card type passport sounds great, Miss Knight said, it’s dangerous at the present time to try for overly swift and easy clearance of persons entering the United States. SPEED DEPLORED She deplored the emphasis on % the format can be stand- *Peed thaLhas brought about the so-called one-man clearance at airports where one Inspector handles primary Inspection for four agencies—public health, Immigration, agriculture and customs. Only “problem” cases are referred to a specialist for more detailed inspection. style you like or use your plant, TYPICAL FINANCING TeHmS________ ■ Prle* of Tht Cjiirt—$K20 ■ I0JS dewnpaymeet—two a li yaer loan-144 payftiinti ■ 71 piymtntl JM: 12 aeymenti 1*7 a Annual percent , ! 3>31t.4lth Street,Minrtipolli,Minn, nil 1% per Annum. ! f plin lo build: Now □ Soon p In Future □ Snvo Ihoujlnd. of l>tH dollar* by ! 1 owo I lot □ i C»n buy • loT□ hint work yourself. Eipirl deni ......................... corponloi enodollvi •rnociiiiryllnlihlntmolorlill ■llo—fra*. Sit ell the fact*! FRfE CATALOG! Ferfy-ellM colorful piioifullef kernel, floor plant led kuylnf Intor- BlrewrT-H Man Ik ; ■ j own i lot □ i einluy a loin I Want lo inlet with work to tivo monoyt | YelQNoD I Addrstt- 23»»l iTMlsrML. IMHO— niMiewHsesH-* s ■ ■■ nternational Homes Jaffe said the idea originated last March while he was teaching two sections : of the ninth grade at Rklgeley. a course ip how the government operates. “We decided to try to draft i bill and after some discussion we came up with the Idea of: bill that would create an adult-youth communications week, what with everybody talking about the generation gap," he said. WHY NOT CONGRESS? But once the bill was drafted; Jaffe added, the two sections of some 65 students decided to see If they could get It enacted by Congress. So a delegation approached Rep. Clarence Long, D-Md., Whose district the school IS located. it * * “He was very receptive to the bill,” Jaffe said, “and he Introduced ft in the House.” “As far as the kids were concerned, the real enthusiasm started when they found their bill had actually ^beon introduced,” he said. The measure set aside Sept 29 through Oct. 4 as Adult-Youth Communications Week and urged adults and youths as well as communication media to encourage dialogue between adults and youths. LETTER campaign Jaffe said that once th$ bill was introduced, the two classes started a letter-writing campaign to gain support for It. “Wa found that the kids had at least one friend or relative In every stats In the..union, and they wrote to them and asked that they write their friends and get them to write their senators and congressmen," he said. Jaffe said hundreds of letters went to Congress from across the country, but that the one the classes were the proudest of came from Vietnam, “One of the children’s father was stationed there,” he plained, “and he got his er battalion to write a letter to President Nixon urging support oT the bill.” f On July 29 the blU passed the House. It was enacted by the Senate on Sept. 10 and President Nixon signed ft Into law last Thursday. The biggest deal is behind the price lag. Whirlpool takas Mttar care. Tiet-cm urnct. If evar your Whirlpool appliance neiedi service, there's a Whirlpool-franchised, Whirlpool-trained TOch-Cara. Service technician-near you. MiMMarmr m«m. If you move out of the servicing area of your soiling dealer while the original warranty Is In offset) Whirlpool War* ranty Service Central take* care of the warranty any place lnU.S. muni M anywnsra is ll. s. If you can't find a Whirl-pool Tech-Care service representative or authorized servicing dealer, just dikl 800-283-1301 (In Mich., 800-632-2243) free any time of the day or night, from anywhere in the continental U.S. lunar man maillist With every Whirlpool appliance there's a simplified, easy-to-uhder-stand warranty latter that has no “fine print”. It qtiickly tells you exactly what is, and what is not Whirlpool responsibility. 1-Tsir Fm laior. Whirlpool la so confident of the quality of Ha appliances that, during the first year of ownership, all labor chargee are free for the repair or replacement Of any part This le just part of Whirlpool** warranty. *199 95 195 Modal IVA 5540 Modi ETT15J Modal SVB-70 Whirlpool I Whirlpool ■ Whirlpool AUTOMATIC WASHER with Permanent Press cycli • 2 speeds, 3 cycles • Special cooldown ears tor Permanent Press fabrics • 6 water tamp selections • 2 water 1s • Maglc-Mixt itnt filter • Super surgilator* agitator. n«a. AUTOMATIC WASHIR. replaced tor the original No-Frost REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER^ with 15.1 cu. ft capacity • No defrosting over • Super-freeze lo# tray compartment • Jot Coldt moat pan ‘ Twin, porcelain-enameled crisp-era • Super-storage door • Slide-out ihetvee • MILLJON-MAO NET* B. t**- WHIRLPOOL WARRANTIES of mo wothor (oxoopt light bulbo) found by Whirlpool to bo dafao-uvs In motorlalo or workmanship. Sorvtoo must bo portormod by • Whirlpool tuthorliod torvlco organisation. ROFRIORRATOR ,. * For . j refrlgorAiionj—*----------------- — Custom top-load PORTABLE DISHWAS ua* Immrl by Whirlpool lo ba defaoliv. er workmanthlp WASHER • Exclusive Super Wash system with 2 full-size revolving spray arms • Double-wall construction • Porcelain-enameled tub..• Swing-up top reek • Walnpt. finish work top • Dual detergent dispenser. lo* mutt ba performed by a Whirlpool oulhorliad oarvtee orgonl lion. DMHWASHin... For ana year, til ptrlo ot « dlobwotmr i ehotod for homo uta found byWhirlpool lo b* defective In malar or workmontblp will ba repaired er rtplaetd for lb* original c choior Iran *1 oHarga. tarvlo* muat b* parformad by a Wblrlp 8ss ons of ths following participating Whirlpool dealers for tha Mggaat appliance daal svarl And battsr oars la Included I Hie Carat^uirs CtopwcL rwre $3.98 The light touch is their thing. Vi OAL $9.23 Carstairs Whiskey 3B (V Join the Carttafri Crowd. ABC APPilANCK, Mt 8581 E. 10 Milo Warren, Mich. 48089 CIARKSTON APPLIANCE 7183 N. Main Clarkston, MIelv '48016 FEDERAL'S 91 N. Saginaw Pontiac, Mich. 48059 PIDIRAI'S 5000 Dixit Highway Drayton Paint, Mich. 48020 PRITTR APPLIANCE CO. 1650 S. Ttlsaroph Pontiac, MleM48053 GENERAL TIRE A RUBBER CO. 3475 N. Woodward Royal Oak, Mich! 48072 OOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP 51 W. Huron Pontiac, Mich. 48058 ’ HAYDEN SALES 2862 E. Highland Rd. Highland Plata Highland, Mich. HIGHLAND APPLIANCE CO. 317 Pontiac Mall Tsltgraph A Elizabeth Lake Pontiac, Mich. 48053 100 E, Mapla Tray, Mich. 4808* LITTLE JOl'S BARGAIN HOUSE 1461 Baldwin Pontiac, Mich. 48058 &10 S. Washington Royal Oak, Mich: 48065 RX.P. TV 32766 Vo.. I Warnn, Mich A APPIIANCI im Dyke ROYAL OAK APPIIANCI 208 W. Fifth St. Royal Oak, Mich. 48067 SOULE APPLIANCE SERVICE 331 Main St. Rochester, Mich. 48063 SWEET'S RADIO A APPIIANCI WC 422 W. Huron Pontiac, Mich. 48053 iBwiir THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1969 Part «Time Workers Are More Sigriificcirit The following are top prices covering sales of .ocally grown produce by groweru and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Wednesday. Produce W 3.73 Applet, Mclntoab, bu. . . Applts, Northurn Spy, bu Applet, wolf Rlvtr, bu. Grtptt, Concord, pk. bi Poochot, Elborta, 44 bu. Noebpo, KpJ Hpvm, Wbu............3.75 Peachoa, Rou Skin, bu. ..........3.75 Poort, Borfloft. 44.hu.......;.... 3.50 VBORTASL1S K©* feprur Cabbago, curly, bu. CmSB, Red. bu. Cebbtie, Sprouts, t Cabbage, Slanderd Cerrolt, m. ben. Curraft, Cello Pok, Sdi. Quran, tapped, bu. Celery, Neeal, dt. ttelkt ... Celery, Pascal, 3 to Sett. ctn. Celery Hearts. Cello Pak, dz. I Corn, Sweet, 5dx. bag .; ... Cucumbers, Mil Slie. vs bu. Cuauiiiiars, Pickle Sira, vs Cucumbers, Stock Mart Ratfy Continues NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market continued this aft ernoon to ridt the waves, .of i rally spawned late Thursday, as advances outstripped declines by dearly 500 issues. The Dow Jones industrial average appeared to sputter at noon, however, reaching 813.82, up 1,98, after having been ahead more than 3 points in moderate trading earlier. Analysts still see the market climb as somewhat technical in of decline that led to an over, sold condition. “It would be nice now if we could get some positive economic news to keep it going," observed a broker. One analyst predicts the rally will carry farther than many market, watchers think, even though blue-chip Issues, such as American Can, at 46V«,( off 114, and General Foods, 73%, off c, seem to be lagging in the broad advance. nature, after six straight days' The Associated Press 60-stock average at noon was up .4 at 284.8, with industrials ,rup .6, rails off .1, and utilities tip ,7. Amerada Hess was delayed in trading but later opened after reaching a new yearly low of 3614, down 4%, Thursday, despite a company indication that nine month per share earnings wilt show a slight improvement over last year. Eleven of the American Stock Exchange’s 20 most-active issues were ahead in midday trding,while 5 down, and 4 Aides „Rtady Plan for Schools Reform The New York Stock Exchange ffiRuii'. Long Typu, pk. b.kt, Pie. LANSING W> - Vowing he’i “not going to pull any punches” Gov. William G. Milliken has given aides one week to whip into shape the biggest, hut yet unseen, punch in his education reform plan — his tax proposals. Milliken expects to make formal legislative recommendations and reveal fiscal details of his wide-ranging plan in. an address Thursday before a joint session of the Michigan House and Senate. The two chambers reconvene Monday after a two-month recess. “We’re in for a good we ougMt to have one,"/Milliken said Thursday at a news conference, Reacti/on from legislators, educators and the public left him “reasonably optimistic" and /“encouraged, Milliken said Milliken nS>in declined to ific "reve Task: raise the $186 million mends be added to s schools budget: a long-range revision i assessment through in the property tax. intend to stick to the resent system" Milliken said. I will not recommend a graduated Income tax." Milliken said he might pro-ise “some combination" of taxing methods to meet the added costs. Rep. Martin Butji, R-Comstock Park, a s s is t a n t minority le’ader in the House, said recently that Milliken is considering a five-cent increase in the state tax on cigarettes. There also has been speculation that the state sales tax, now four per cent, might be hiked. Questioned,‘about other controversial recommendations — 57 an 33 + *jparochiaid, and abolition of the Ifgy* 70»4 3m !State Board of Educa-“ ora + {{Mon.— Milliken replied “I With the development of suburban shopping centers, for •example, traffic has become especially heavy during after-dinner hours. Rather Jhan employ fulltime help throughout the day, many stores hire mothers for a few hours during the evening while the kids stay home and! wash the dishes. There are other probable reasons as well, such as the notion that two part-timers being more' effective—and perhaps less expensive—than one full-timer, STIMULUS .recognize that various parts ofj “Government regulations con--'the bill will have to Mind onlcerning overtime premiums their own." Imay ... have encouraged the By JOHN CUNN1FF AP Business Analyst NEW YORK - Did you ever figure out how your neighbor can-afford, to have a bigger than yours and own a place) at the shore! or in the mountains while you manage only to rent a place for a week or two each year? Assuming he's earning these luxuries legitimately, the answer might be keeping track of the hours your neighbor and his wife keep. Working hours, that is. According to the Labor Department, about 3.6 million wage and salary workers hold two or more jobs, the second one usually being a part-time occupation averaging about 13 hours a'week. And this'figure doesn’t count the moonlighting families— where mother goes, to work when father comes home. KEY DISCOVERY Just as significant perhaps is the discovery, disclosed in the Department of Commerce “Survey of Current Business," that some retail trade and service industries are adjusting their workweeks to the habits of part-timers. • •In retail trade,” the report states, “the employment of of—taxing I part-time workers appears to be a deliberate policy of department stores” to .adjust to shoppers* habits. replacement, of the” long-week workers by two short-week workers," the Commerce Department report states, continuing: “Another stimulus ... is the saving in the cost of fringe benefits, such as sick leave, vacation and holiday pay, which are generally not paid to part-time personnel..." Whatever the reasons, official statistics show that more'than 37 per cent of employes working .department stores in 1966 re on part-time schedules, compared with only 26 per cent 10 years earlier. And presumably the trend continues. In food stores' about 41 per cent of employes worked less than 35 hours in 1966 compared with 33 per cent a decade ear-lier.inl963 less than 20 percent of laundry workers were part-timers; to 1968 the percentage was 30. service industries have turned to women in their quest for help. In 1964, the study shows, women accounted for 47 ,per cent of all retail trade help. Now the percentage is 60. The booming economy,’ of course, has a lot to do with-the changing job patterns. With un-employmeht rates regularly below 4 per cent, the poorer paying industries have been hard put to find willing full-time workers. Adjusting to the realities, many companies now employ » minimum level of full-time help and “lay on” workers during peak hours-or when production schedules are temporarily raised. The more flexible schedules not only suit employers but open up job opportunities for moonlighting husbands, and mothers who cannot; leave home for more than a few hours at a time Increasingly, retail stores and I or who wish seasonal Work. $9.5 Billion Is Voted in World 'Paper Gold' WASHINGTON (AP) - The Internatioal Monetary Fund today voted to distribute $9.5 billion in “paper gold,” the world’s first, international money ..However, the fund expected in advance a near-unanimous de-‘ cision, with only South Africa’s position seriously in doubt. As the fond’s largest gold-pr&fuc- backed by cooperation instead ing country it has a Special in-of gold. . jterest not only in the continued J. B. Zulu, governor of the use of gold but also in Its expan-Bank of Zambia, announced] sion. that the 74 nations which have! Paper gold, or SDRs, will be agreed to take part in the first distribution of the new money had given at least the 85 per cent vote required to put the fund’s Special Drawing Rights (SDR) into effect..... * * * The vote was announced as the fund drew toward the close of its joint meeting with the World Bank. As is customary, the specific vote was not announced. Mutual Stock Quotations NEW YORK (AP) fattens, supplied the N ggj atten Fid Fund 16.7318.28 Nat Ihd 11,28 Fid Trnd 25.58 27.96 Financial Proo: Nat InVSt- 8.1018.76 .Iff: i 10.4511.42 M .459 fflmi ■ tfw 29% + % 19% 18% If . 'Ill** f p H-ii 34 V, 33'/. 333, - '/» 354, 33’/. 13’/. -it* 17 fra+'Vk 30 4014 30 + H 34 33'/, 3344 ft* 8 114 46% 44 46% + H r88 24'/t 24% 24% + »/4 44 28% 28% 28% - % 237 26% 2848-28%.+ % 50 97 26 36% + % 143 126% 134 134% +1 ' joj ill 165 18% x 18% 18%-- % 100 26% 26% 26% - % n f % f% 1 + % 15 21% V% 21 % 13 27% 27 27% — % • 9 49% 48% 48% — % itock dividend. c~Llqulda»lna l. d—Duclufrud or |»M In l»« jpli •lock dlvldtpd. u-Rild iMt v,.r. l-e. IB • •tuck during fm, Mtlmitid e on ox-dlvidond or ox-dlitr»ul on,. g-Duclurud - - . yoor. n—OMlurad dividond lie R............ dlvld.nd no ocllon tokon .t I. I. r D.cl.rod or Mid Ck dividend, t-Puld In fM, tilln v|—in bankruptcy or rocolvorihlp or Mine raWfMMM unMrJng •■nkruptcy Act, or Mcurnioi noumod bv ,uch com-j»nloi. »n -korolgn nouo ,ub|oct to In. According to Pontiac police, Harold Wjlkerson, 28, of 678 Nevada reported thieves broke into his home yesterday and stole a color television valued at |350. Rummage Sale. First United Methodist Church, S. Saginaw dt Judsort,, Sat. 8-11 a.m.—Adv. Carpeting, bankruptcy liquidation Midi Bring your measurements. Open 9 to 9. 4990 Dixie Hwy. —Adv. American Stocks American Stock 8s.) High LOW Last CM. 2 11% 15% 15% + % 12 11% 11% 11% + % TJTnrr Aerolet .50a Air was! .Wg Am Patr .85g AO Jndust Cinerama Creole 2.4 8 8% 3% 3% 6 19% 19% 19% 28 14% 14% 14%0< 67 16% 16% 16*/a • 26 9 7-16 9% 9% 10 14 10 10% 10% 10% 5 32% 82% 82% 9% 8% 8% • ;I ICp .05# 11 4% 4% Resrcft 27 6% 6% 6% ... tent Oil 1 14% 14% 14% — % 1% + % riant Yfl .40 58. 11% 11 teldflald 15 6% 6 ■«ts •4 ..... 1-+-% r +, % in is’/, uv, in, , in m (Hfi, t 10 VM 1# + W 31 1M4 UV. 16'/. .... 3 6Vt 4, tow ill* ira + V. 3 too Mb + 14 » m m, .ra.+ v< 74 75 73 74V, +1 43 34 3514 34 * + 44 7 150, IS1/, flu — Vb 30 4 V/t 33b.... 17 \m 13V. 13>4 .... . 3 4H 434 4*4 .... 10 014 8 Jl* ,, ; 134 73W 7m 73. +2W 47 1*14 f* i*U + 4b 14 30 30 W + W 437 7*1b 7714 7714 -1 33 311* TOW 30*4 _ H 1* fol4 4* 10*4 + 44 Th» Associ.t.d Pr«M 1*40 international money backed by nothing more than the fact that nations will accept It In payment for world trade, just as they now accept gold. It will exist only on the fund's books and will change hands only on ledger sheets. AS GOOD AS GOLD Nevertheless, paper gold will be as good as the genuine |rti-cle simply because the nations agree that it is, .which is the only reason gold is accepted. Of the $9.5 billion to be distributed in paper gold*a.1lr8t three years, $3.5 btilion will come to life next Jan' 1. Plans are for $3 billion to be distributed on the first dayy of 1971"and 1972. The fund’s managing director, Pierre-Paul Schweitzer, proposed last month that the iSDRs be distributed-In proportion to nations’ quotas—or required contributions—to the fond. Treasury Position crra&’s®— Mr«r to S«pt. 34, iw7ln dollar,): Balanet W..hdr4W!?(ff.feJ 35,053,714,363.40 50,434,151,477.17 Total dibt ■■ > X -343,114,130,33*.40 337,141.111,144.0* Sold ui4.li O 10,347,010,3.41.57 10,347,031,474*0 X Include, 434,434435.71 dobt not tub- lurud of Roy. 0*1. rlod Rocurd ablu RSQUIAR 7 .07$ Q 11*14 11-90 *' Succ|ssfu/ JJ. A. Rest assured that your shares are of the highest quality and the dividends therefore are re, Louisville’* final position Is excellent with longterm debt only 48 per cent of total capitalization. Construction expenses between I960 and 1973 budgeted it $161 million with only 380 million expected to be raised through bond Issue In the first 8 months this year total revenues rose l.S per cent producing a similar gain in earnings to $1.30 a' share. Full year results should surpass 1988’l net of $3,26 by a good margin, pivldends are paid out of earnings and are no't dependent on price fluctuations. The decline in your shares closely parallels the drop In the Dow Jones .Utlllly Average begun In 1966. Until Inflation is effectively cooled, issues such as utilities which ary closely tied to the money rate will continue to lag behind the market. Q. I own Occidental Petrolenm and have jnat learned that the Ubyaq military has taken over the company. The stock has dropped considerably. What should I do? — E.B. A. Your information Is J npt quite accurate, The military junta in Libya which deposed King Idris has pledged to respect existing oil contracts. But continued uncertainty about Libyan production, which' contributes approximately 80,, per cent of OXY's profits, caused sharee to sell off. Hie company’s failure to successfully bid on substantial North Slope acreage exerted further downside pressure on the shpres. while Libya's nationalization jot Amyrtcian/ petroleum Interests does not appear Imminent, I would take advantage of shy price recovery to sell, (Reger Spear’s 46-pag« investment Quid# (recently revised and la Its nth printing) Is available to all readers of this column. Send $1 with name and ess to Roger E. Spear, The Pontiae Press, Bos 1611, Grand Central Station, New York, N.Y. 100170. Y- >* A v 1 * THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, l&flg Bridge Tricks From Jacobys - 6X41 ♦ AJS42 ♦ 1061 , WEST !» CAST AT " 6 92 VXQ100 V78J ♦ Q*f 4XJ74 6QS752 *10646 SOUTH CD) 6 AQ J10865 ♦ I ♦ All jH 1A Mm 2v Pm* 46 Pm* 5* Pm* 56 PM* 6 * F*m Pm* Pm* Opening lead—6 K By OSWALD and JAMES JACOBY There is a certain type of play that occurs regularly In columns and books and we have even seen it in actual games on maybe two occasion*. The play has no name but it might be called “The U n n e ce * sary Finesse.” Solomon and Wilson have included it In their book. '.-North is certainly entitled to go past game after Uls partner Jumps to four spades and he chooses the fiveclub cue bid. South shows his diamond ace and North settles for the small slam. If South held one more club and one less diamond, the slam would be a cinch. With the actual holdings, there is no real play for it but South finds a line of play to give him a chance. 6' 6 6 He wins the heart in dummy and ruffs another heart. Then he cashes his ace of spades, leads a spade to dummy’s king and ruffs another heart. This leaves only one heart out against him and one more lead from dummy will give him a chance to establish dummy’s fifth heart for a discard of one of his diamonds. He needs this discard, because, otherwise, he will have to lose two diamond tricks. He” needs to get to dummy twice to accomplish this. The ace of clubs is one entry. Where can he find another one? • it ♦ Maybe the Jack of clubs will do. He leads the nine of clubs and plays dummy’s jack. If the unusual finesse works, h e ____es his slant. If East produces the queen, he will be >wn two instead of one-It does work but, if West were really alert, he could have foiled declarer’s plan by playing Ids queen on the nine. We wonder if Anyone ever made that sort of a defensive play at the table! *' Q—The bidding hM been: 'West'* Nerth Bast lea > I * 'U? 16 Pm* 14 Pm* 3* PM* »♦ Pm* 46 PM* •* Pm* , vff PM* «♦ PM* ? You, Sou*, hold: CAMPUS CLATTER i—rt By Larry Lewi* Whati* your 1 TODAY’S QUESTION Instead of responding apade, your partner ha* ■ponded om diamond to y dub opening. What do you do? BUT 1 ONLY SHOPPED TO REAP THAT SIGN ~#*JVOULDN’T GET A TICKET/ THE BERRYS THE BETTER HALF Tr-tiiw T&fiNe-i 61m*. While Aqvarli at rslsctlen. Cancer i astrological on*. Oamlnl hat tun, while Capricorn may fin* out truth about date's financial ao»l- ARIEI (March 21-Aprll It): Now you fan o*t down to butlnai*. Sift fact from wmhm, *nf uruowit nsa* SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): B* positive within. Answers or* forthcoming. Shara ---- — IMrn by taachln*. Accent on __________vladg* to practical us*. Dent yat'boggad down In traval ‘ ------- SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-D*C. 21): You lay not got exactly what you r—1 you Os hove Wads of fun. This to rolax. Leave special mallei parts. Replenish your aplrlt. CAPRICORN (Dae. tt-Jan. It): Accent on marriage, a combining of fo ~ Question of cosh arises. Ay your share. But don't sacrifice somethin* TAURUS (April 20-May 20)1 features movement, communlcatlw or*, active, alert. You com# alive, tear now Maas. You can cope with to gracious to relative who may at QEMInP imsv 21-Juna 20): Your horn* 4nd poRMtslons rtb spotllphttd. You can find what you aook. includw romanct* rant which bring warmth to rasld«nc«. Somaonw could ha trying t» causa carolttsnass with your money. attentive, it caraiul about what you wodr. Many otoaarvt and could |ud*a by your clothes. VIROO (Aud. 23-Sapt. 22) I A rill-tlonship it tsstsd. You (asm whsrs vou stand — and why. Dig far Information. » Welcome truth. Rdtutd to hang on t* . outmoded methods. Move with fn* times. fflussniE am :1s _kaan * AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fsb. IS): On offsrs advlcs may Or on ttarwVRP Follow through — gat mom clearance. Those who want to aid naad an-OHiragamant. (Siva tt. Pisces (Pab. l»-March »)| MRB what la of real value to you. Your family meant ^ more than you might Imagine. Know this and act accordingly. A minor SATURDAY . I^YO$R BIN? ... jre creative but also practical ip* actteOfMO with proper channel---- fore**. Recant contusion ft eve to .yinlth. You will b* working along ataady llnat — and an spaclflc court* T (Coayrlght ttst *sesral Paataraa r “Boy, what-a DAY!... The cocktail hour will be extended to an hour and a half this evening.”, BEERY’S WORLD-By Jim Berry 6 INI ty ML is*. "Is that all you can say about my getting married—’very interesting’?” OUT OUR WAY •us%aroM. p- t: IWfTSUPPBR WADY Y»T? WHATYB YOU 5EBN COHN® ALL P. .. HAVE 3E MINUTES TO eat7 rve oot sons. SHOP* HOMEWORK. TO POTONISHT.' Daily Almanac Today is Friday, Oct. 3. the I70th day of 1669 with 89 to 'ollqw. Hie moon is in its list (uarter. The morning stars are dercury, Venus and Saturn. ~The evening atari are Mars md Jupiter. ' ■ / 6 it , it On this day in history: In 1931 Mrs. Rebecca I’elton, a Georgia Demoorat, tecame the first woman to lerve In tho United States Senate. * * * In 1935 Italian dictator lenlto Mussolini launched an ittack on Ethiopia. 6 6 6 In i960 Soviet Premier BETTER V MOOD J By Tom Ryan ‘W DONALD DUCK Mam. rfA By Walt Disney i VHAT .8 1 ojxjjjk xawasswk. /y iydW ! K f\ • B—14 THE PONTIAC PRESS, Y T , ? >S, FRIDAY, OCT Thdy Pay for U.S. Levy ideas Taxing H By DICK WEST WASHINGTON (UP!) r The main strength of America and the thing that has made this 'republic great is our , almost limitless ability to think up new kinds of taxes. Other nations have achieved greatness only to flounder, stagnate or fall. In each case, they reached the point where they- were taxing everything in sight and were unable to devise any new revenue-raisers. Once a nation arrives at the WEST By that token, I am convinced that the United, States will flourish for at least a thousand summers. And maybe winters, too. Within the past month, our country has been blessed with a number of ingenious new tax proposals, anyone of which could keep America assessing for four score and 20 years or In Texas, for example, a member of the state senate hit upon the idea of a dirty movie tax. The more obscene the movie, the higher the tax. THROWAWAY TAX If adopted on a national scale, outer limits of its tax levying I that levy could easily finance k capacity, it has no place to go! landing on Mars. Providing we but down. ' keep importing films from In other words, the danger to: Sweden. _ ■ nation is not overtaxation, as! At a Senate subcommittee some economic theorists would hearing in Washington this have you believe. The danger is! week, Sen. Jennings Randolph,j that it will run out of new taxes|^W. Va., suggested that some to impose. | thought be given to a CONTINUES TO PROORESS . I Each tax has its own ceiling! it would finance waste beyond Which it canhot be{disposal programs be extracing! raised without causing internal j a penny a pound for the sale of rebellion, But as long as \na'j products that end up in the junk tion has a supply of new taxes pne< up Its sleeve, it continues to . The new federal tax bill progress. {recently passed by the House t would make interest from! municipal bonds vulnerable to Uglies New Beautiful People , By GENE HANDSAKER HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Weak chin? Floppy ears? Bulbous nose? Are you, in a word, ugly? ... Then you're" right' down Bill Bordy’a alley. And maybe television's, at least in dais. ‘UGLY DIRECTORY’ — Bill Bordy looks over photographs of some of the aspiring performers who have signed up for his “Ugly Casting Directory," in his office in Hollywood. They’re not ail really ugly, Bordy concedes, but with makeup, costume and expression, they can make themselves look ugly. A Hollywood trade paper carried his ad this week: "UGLY CASTING DIRECTOR “Who gets all the work In commercials? Why, the ugly people, of course." UGLIES UNLIMITED The ad u r g e d readers, ‘‘I< you’re ugly, unusual oi' interesting-looking," to call a certain number. The number led to Bordy’s office in a television studio complex. He calls his service Uglies Unlimited. “Good-looking types are on the way out," said Bordy, 38, a part-time actor himself, big-eared but otherwise more on the good-looking than the homely side. A light flashed for Bordy: a For $60, a customer gets a full page showing three poses of himself—which he supplies— and a resume of hit experience Two insertions of the trade-pa- You can see it yourself just by watching TV commercials. The trend is to plain people. Person next-door types are getting the work because it’s so much easier for the public to associate with them. / READ ARTICLE ‘ “The chunky, hard-hat labor er who gets the promotion because his wife has washed His shirt in that detergent. The manicurist wbo uses dishwashing detergent as a hand lotion. Several months ago Bordy read a magazine article about a London modeling agency which had advertised for ugly types, . - , gbr^a fantastlc response" and Df/CK/ey Gets now does a big business supplying such models for advertising. per ad brought 200 calls, and his, phone was still ringing. “Are you ugly?" is the first question he asks. About half answer, Yes, I am;” the others, “Not really, ugly, but I’m a* good character actor." SOME TURNED AWAY : Promising - sounding a p p 11 • cants are invited to his office. • ' Y Senate Okay Some he has turned away, Bois dy says, because they were too good-looking. About 28 h a v e signed up, and as many have indicated definite interest. His publication deadline Is Halloween* “which I j thought would be a humorous touch," he says. Not all of his space-buyers are really ugly, Bordy concedes, but with makeup, costume and expression can make themselves look so. What kind of ugliness is most in demand these days? The natural typei” said Bordy, “which John Q. Public can associate with." •»„ WASHINGTON (AP) - The! casting directory for aspiring Senate Thursday, confirmed the performers with less than perfect features. He’s calling it the Ugly ’ Casting Direetory. He’s clients that 1,000 copies will be distributed among advertising agencies and movie "Nowadays, ugly is beautiful.'and TV,casting directors. nomination of James H. Brick- ley of Detroit as U.S. attorney for the eastern district of Mich-1 igan. Make Us Your pno - Slop Food and Entertainment Center ' Excellent Cuisine - pus -IIP Ronnie Wolfe ''The Runaway*'' tontuht LAKE INN 7180 Highland Rood 673-9988 the federal income tax for the first now Earl Leads With His Mouth at Lewis' Press Luncheon Cigarette Is Symbol of Comfort to Some Brickley, who currently is chief assistant prosecutor of Wayne County, was nominated for the post by President Nixon. Now Appearing •FomofUA o DINING o DANCING Mr. B’s FIREBIRD LOUNGE 2828 Elizabeth Lake lid. Phone 681-2128 By EARL WILSON ■ NEW YO^K-I opened my mouth the wrong way to Jerry Tj&i. 'W^fempapeT Lewi*' , . , , ’ ... ... Enterprise Association series When Jerry announced he’s launching a theater chain to <,//«,* a double-pronged solution to the problem, it is written by RETALIATION THREAT Now some states are threatening to retaliate by taxing interest on federal securi- SZj&jL'Z* 5 * called the Jerry Lewis Cinema, he said'that totoigutag new ideas yet con- ^cturesf are tosing^avor~«the wheel is a „„ it c 'turning’’—and “I don’t think it makes sense ,„h 2-JLfe*SS, 22 dealing with something on its way out." , nn tho national rfoht whan1 This was at a crowded press luncheon at 21. tox on toe national .debt. When S1^ rVe ft rapped dirty fHms j wanted to you consider the size of toe na-[ . . . vr J tional debt, the revenue poten-|pi mean,” j agked him( ,.that your( theaters are not goirig to show any sex pictures at all?" fEDITOR’S NOTE - Mere is the fifth in a 14-part series on to stop smoking and not tials are staggering. But if these new taxes aren’t “That was our plan, Earl, but if you feel to formulate routines that would I help the smoker “kick" his I habit. Sometimes the methods they ! used would work — sometimes There was.no consistency to Julius Fast, novelist, medical their results, editor and mystery writer.) J What helped one man give up ...cigarettes had no effect on By JULIUS FAST I another. And once toe habit was Dr. Daniel Horn of the'U.S.| _ j| Public Health ...Service has divided smokers Into six types. WILSON enough for the country to thrive |bad about ,t Jugt $ ^ know when want on I have an idea for the to gee one „ ultimate in revenue measures. 14-----------— - call it a taxation tax. rTFW#Uld be srtBX on all of the Jack E. Leonard and Rodney Dangerfield got the crowds usually a graciops queen of the other taxes, and it should bring'the other night—Jack E. opening at the Rainbow Grill, Rodney screen, Deborah Kerr or Five of them have beep described previously. The “relaxation” smoker is {toe sixth. In the cinema stereotype, the “relaxation" smoker NEWOUTSIK CATERING SERVICE! Catering to All Types of Parties! Open Sunday for Banquets Only Now Specialising in Italian Dishes Special * Smorgasbord On Sat. $3,95 T'o'itucol WIDE TRACK AT WEST HURON wasr Stop ^ Smoking Lose Weight , us to the millenium. opening his own swinging club (Dangerfield’s) at Sfst and First recently Julie Andrews, who | Avenue, first new nightclub in N.Y. in many a year. would light her cigarette over - -™r—£•— -----------------. J coffee at some dim restaurant _ _ ; .. _ ,.j. 7 , * r with checked tablecloths, some kicked, there was no guarantee toto the street. at Dangerfield d. H cost me ious terrace* overlooking the cure would be permanent. $2M,0M toopen. How I gotinvolved I donlknow’-pimgerfield ^ or Budapest, who * ★ * said “And now as my club-slowly sinks into the hands of the smoked as she slpoed her cofree Mark Twain put it well when Bankets • • •________ l .t . ....... . and listened to the male lead he said, “Giving up smoking is He was warm, winningand likable and was saluted l,y such ,e|| her about the brldge he wag ea Tve doneeu 0Fften.-faM^s Joe E Lewis Milton tole, Fanny Flagg and Belle buildin the clag8\e wagj Because of the indifferent Barth. He -offered this thought: “My idea of willpower is when t hi B th , h r lt ~ Jt number of a guy is going to the electric chai* decides that on his last meal the novei hc was results, a great number of stick to Metrocal.” (His club should be a hit.) I writing. ••bm _i ™s cigarette is a symbol to * | the smoker, a symbol of comfort, relaxation and ease. It might be an altar-, I br eakfast-on -a-Sunday-m o r n i n g 1 cigarette,,, or after - Thahksgiv- Jack E. did his famous comments Iwonderful face—I wonder what his -neck looks like.” “Milwaukee' —where they still think Lawrence Weik Ip a hippie” . .. “Indian-; iapolis, the only town that’s happy on Memorial Day”—and “Meet imy pianist; he went to school at Berkeley where he majored in i’TSJV pmvded t, ningtr VI VellKa, DangcrntM w|Srt?5jS?tTfi S,..™"™ “* rJWwSAw S^5 * ■* * ♦ * sure of food. BEAUTIFUL WOMAN 'THE MIDNIGHT EARL ... A handsome man, a beautiful Jackie Onassls saw a Broadway preview of "Indians” with 22*—"^the the David Altmans, then went to The Ginger Man with William Vaa den Heuvel for white wine and cheeseburgers . . Diana Ross and the Supremes will formally announce their breakup soon ... James Masota’s steady is Saady Morris, 21. Secret Stuff: Lola Falana, often linked with Sammy Davis and Jim Brown; is now with one of TV’s biggest names . . . Concord Hotel Philharmonic will record “Marry Mel Marry Me!’’ from the film for its,singles weekends theme. EARL’S PEARLS: Flip Wilson’s not against mixed marriages: “I think it’s all right for a man to marry a woman.” Don Porter claims it’s easy to get a parking ticket in N.Y. First you must gel s parking space . . . That’s earl, brother. cigarette’stands for all these and more.. The key to the entire problem of giving up clragettes lies in six categories. or years and years physicians and educators have tried methods for foreswearing tobacco have spriltijjj' up, each claiming (often with truth) a good percentage of success. NOT COMPLETELY EFFECTIVE None, however, was completely effective. The problem from th'e very beginning has been the assumption that every smoker was the 'same and smoked for the same reasons. Dancing and Entertainment "Live Entertainment" Friday and Saturday Nights at the NITE OWL LOUNGE (FormerlyClub Tahoe) ««• dm. hw,. -0R 44222 WINKO'S y m 2322 Orchard Lake Road OPEN 24 HOURS Under New Management BEST FOOD IN TOWN “Come in and try us — It will become a habit” 082-0949 If this was so* it followed that one technique, whether simple or complex, would work for everyone. But we have seen from Dr. Horn’s clarification that every smoker is not the same, and therefore th* same plan cannot work for all smoker*. Next; Find your type.) I for Dm author'! Wotollod booh TPennut CellSF IV* Milts North ot Union IN PERSON FRIDAY! SATURDAY! SUNDAY! Northern Lights Affected Location of First ABMs Stop-tmokinf Book • o/o Tha.Pontiao Press Dept. 480 P.0. Box 4l8f Radio City Station Now York, N.Y. 18818 Pleas* send.......copy (copies) of "Haw to Stop Smoking and Los* Weight" at $1 each tot In the Airway Lounge THE ROAD SHOW for reservations phone 674-0426 4825 W. Huron (M-59) NAME CITY, SING ALONG WITH DEV DIG MAMA HILL WASHINGTON (UPI) - The quency (UHF) transmissions, , northern lights — those shim- used In the ABM radar systems. • mering luminous curtains of The magentlc distrubrances | ADDRESS light in the polar sky .— played of the northern lights also a key role in determining that resemble Effects associated with I the first Safeguard antiballistic nuclear explosions. .• ■ missile (ABM) installations Because of the p rob lam, 1 would be in Montana and North Johnson said, scientists must I Dakota. ■ work in a location where they . ’ r •—'**’'——j Dir. Charles Johnson, scien-jcan learn to deal with thy|- . T* *-"* .^ ** ** 11 ** * - *■ w j tific adviser to the military interference — rather than head of the Safeguard program,]somewhere else where they STATE...................................ZIP. MM» chaefc* p«y»M« ta -nctulmaMiit laab.” Allow 1 waup tardallvari.) told a house subcommittee that would have no exposure to what the1 northern lights, or aurora [ could be a crucial factor ip borealis, affect ultra-high fre- making the system work. MAYWORM on piano t oroan, GINGER and kin ianjo OXBOW LAKE PAVILION DANCING v S FRIDAY AND SATURDAY'NIGHT 9 P.M. 'TIL 2 A.M. COUNTRY WESTERN MUSIC ,BY THE COUNTRY IMAGES STARRING BETTE DEE 361-9253 9451 Illsoboth Lok# Rd. Union Lok* Enjoy The Relaxing m Atmosphere of an ■ ^ 1 Early American Iim' Good Food - GoodSptrtti\ Good Fellowship THE CLUB ROCHESTER 306 Main St., Rochester 651-6351 I Year Host a • a Ben Hsjnelton m IS THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1989 ‘fr-lS GM Truck Turns Talk Into Jobs for Members of Minorities By DIANNA durocher Executives at QMC Truck and Coach Division have established a program aln)ed at turning rhetoric Into/action; providing jobs — Instead of the promise of jobs — (or members of minority groups in Pontiac. The program Centers around a -seven-member liaison com* > mlttee formed a little over a year ago to facilitate communication between minority group Individuals and the management of the sprawling GMC Truck production operation. The committee is composed of black and white GMC personnel. In addition, a nine-member in job referral and also serves as a line of communication between division executives and members of the city's minority communities. Earl A. Maxwell, director of salary personnel for the division and a member of both committees, explained primary function of both committees is to place qualified individuals : from minorities in jobs and offer better jobs to those already employed by the division. "lids is. in addition,to standard employment procedures such as college recruiting and recommendations of the Pontiac Urban League and the Pontiac School District," he added. About IS per cent of the plant production employes are black. Division officials are seeking to place more qualified black men and women in salaried positions, Maxwell continued. Since formation of the two committees, the number of black people in salaried positions has increased from 27 to about 130 and those in supervisory positions have increased from one to 12, Max-wellsaid. . “And uiis is only the beginning,” he added. , “If an Individual is qualified for a position and has the recommendation of the liaison or the ministerial committee, he will be hired with no further check," Maxwell said. “Being a part of this large organization gives me a feeling of accomplishment and prestige," said Mrs. Gloria Green, who operates a copying machine in the division’s drafting department. She was recommended for the position about a year ago by Ramona Bevls, a liaison committee member employed in the purchasing department. A month after Mrs. Green was interviewed she liras hired.' Mrs. Groan, mother of five, said she was unaware Mrs. Reyis wiis a member of a committed but responded positively, when she learned there was a possibility of working at the division. A graduate of Pontiac Central High School, Mrs. Green lives with her husband Harry and her children in Detroit. Prior to working at GMC Truck and Coach Division she worked as a cashier, as a secretary for the Pontiac Board of Education and as a doctor’s secretary. Ho- previous jobs did not offer fringe benefits, Mrs. Green laid. She said there is great security in knowing her job benefits such as insurance, sick pay and vaca* tionpay. Gloria Lewis contacted Rev. Amos Johnson of the New Bethel Baptist 0>urch about getting a job at GMC. Johnson is a member of the ministerial committed. Shortly following her interview with the division's personnel department she was hired as a clerk and key punch operator last March. Miss Lewis of M S. Anderson Is a native of Colon, Panama, and worked there as a secretary before coming to the’ United States in search of a better-paying job. She reads and writes Spanish and English. Prior to working at GMC she was employed at Pontiac General Hospital as a desk clerk. In general, She is “very definitely an elevation.” | positions,” Taylor said, “and I “There are other black people hope that With the help of the who are qualified for salary 1 committees, they may get one." William M. Taylori of 197 Judson has worked at the division for more that! 14 years. Nine months ago he .was promoted from an hourly position m the material department to the salaried position of clerk — material processing. He has takep courses at Oakland - Community College and a General Motors management course through Oakland University’s continuing education program. Prior to coining to Pontiac in 1953 he attended South Carolina State College! Orangeburg,& C. Taylor, father of three adopted children said, “I have a better Job with more responsibility. The position is r Airplane-Cleaner May Be Washed Up at 15 tywtdsf I jgiBTipnl A WILLIAM DOZIER PRODUCTION _ H TECHNICOLOR' TANAVISION' TECHNICOLOR* PANAVISION* J PROM WMINIR MOS.-SEVEN ANTS PROM MWIMSR BROS.-MVCN JUITBW LOUISVILLE, Ky. OB — At 15. ton Jarboe may be washed up in his fust business venture. Since June, the youngster has been grossing up to $400 a month by cleaning and buffing private planes at Bowman Field. The Ldulsville - Jefferson County Air Board wants him to stop for two reasons: He isn't licensed by the agency, and state law won’t permit workers Under 18 in hazardous occupations. “The last reason is the most compelling,” explained Phil Schaad Jr., the air board’s manager for Bowman Field. “The law considers work 12 NORTH SAQINAW IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAO MlliliCDfUC DRIVE-IN THEATER uUMMcHUb i FIRST SHOWING AT DUSK cmmim umitran FRI., SAT. and SUN* N0W12 MORE SHOTS AT CUNT EASTWOOD I CUNT EASTWOOD HANOI'EM I'THE GOOD. THE BAD HIGH I “-■THEUGLY" mniUiHtudArtiifi TtWUUStlFC TECMMUYl One plainly wrapped time-bomb... One set of plane for overthrowing a small-but-nice country... EAGLE UJUff unsa ■Bah 'Submarine x- J90lBllB OMN PNIt 9149 ML -.•AT. 1901 AM. - WIN, Hitt AM. fUNOKAY MATINEES iwstots llwis utemut WJ* 1 Sunday ivijijNBs „ ^ ■ ,11149 A.M. I wwpiata ahawl’atsrttMl st TWIAIM around aircraft . and airport ramps to be hazardous.” Ron learned about the age hang-up when he received a letter from Schaad which warned, -“Sinceyour company has no agreement with the air board, you will stop at once all activity of a commercial nature on Bowman Field.” YOUNG BUSINESSMAN -Ron Jarboe, 15, who has been averaging $400 a month by cleaning airplanes In Kentucky has been told he has to go out of business. The Louls-ville-Jefferson County Air Board says state law prohibits anyone under 18 from engaging in a hazardous occupation. PSaKEECOi Michigan Doctors Urged to Cooperate on News DETROIT (AP) - Michigan doctors . were advised Wednesday that for their own good they should cooperate with newsmen to inform the public of medical advances. A “Doctors should learn that a reporter id going to write something anyway,” Frank Chappell, director of medical for Southwestern Sports Fitness School for Boys, Girls Planned The YMCA of Greater Pontiac, 131 University, announces a new' program concept for youth physical fitness. A 10-week youth sports fitness school win begin tomorrow for boys and girls in grades 1-8. The program is designed to. build endurance and physical fitness while teaching new skills to the participants. Participants will be divided by sex and age groups and classes will include instructions in gymnastics, swimming, sports, games and exercises. Another major emphasis will be on testing. Flee for the program is $10 for non-YM(5A members and $5 for current members. Texas Medical School, told the Michigan State Medical Society (MSMS). It often is preferable to provide full and prompt disclosure to try to help the reporter get H firsthand and get it right, rattier than secondhand, piecemeal and only half right,” he added. Dr. Donald Kahn, the University of Michigan’s heart transplant surgeon, agreed and added that he would like to see the medical profession “show a more maturity in dealing with the news media.” Chappell and Kahn took part In a panel discussion o f Physicians, Public Pronouncements and the Press: Do We Need Hew Ground Rules?” GEORGE SEGAL RSULA ANDRESS ORSON WELLES ■IAN HENDRY. STELLA STEVENS SHELLEY WINTERS COLOR* rBIRMINGHAM^f\ BLOOMFIELD 1 COOL COMFORT COOL COMFORT jamcs Garner in . “SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL SH!RIFF»00 Mon.-Fri. Till and IliM sat. 2 tie, nil, stie sun, liM, 4iM, 111! “IF ir "Tuesday THIS MUST BE ri BELGIUM” IflJ Mon.-FrLlitoOnly . M.id|iPRr Sun. SlOB. Sill, IHO BtoPIdiM of the Year Academy Award Winner “OLIVER”®] Shown Monday thru Sat. evMtagalP.il, Sunday Ivealngs 1P.M. Mstinau WncL, Sat., Sun. Wa*.Sm,Sm.lMNS MaaaiaraaamS (LIMITED ENGAGEMENT! NOW thru TUES. ONLY) “THE SHOES OF THE FISHERMAN' RESTORES FAITH IN FILMS! ' —Look Maoazinu HURON MGMpmsenteaGeoryEneundprorfaction .AnfhonyQum-OakarWemef Dmid Janssen-VittoiioDe Sica I Leo McKern-John Gielgud R#fen Jtffrifd - nomntrlo Derarlpf ' * Laurence Olvier John fttrickM Jamas Kennaway MMMMMhMoriiiLWM • Michael Andsrson:> ."** -■ *■ ' W ' ■ ' ! Murphy’s election to the board of auditors was accomplished by secret ballot ~ 21 votes for Murphy, one for Robert Patnales, Republican caucus leader, one for County Clerk Lynn Allen, one abstention and one blank ballot. An attempt by O’Brien to overrule Board Chairman Charles B. Edwards J r ■ ’ s decision- to bold a secret vote had failed. ■LILLY SUPPORTERS The later roll call election for chairman revealed O’Brien jGt'ba, Mastin, William Richards Both Murphy’s qualifications of Royal Oak and- Niles Olson of and those of Lilly were lauded Orion Township voting for Lilly by both political' parties, but Lee Walker of Madison Democratic support of Murphy .Heights abstained and James — particularly among older I Mathews of Pontiac was boaid members — was viewed * * * as a tribute to his qualifies-1 The remaining Democrats lions. . ■ and all the Republicans cast 20 A * # * votes for Murphy The vote by several younger ! The election of the auditor taken up under special order of trust them.’’ | Democrats for the Republican had not been scheduled on Mastin said O’Brien had at-1 was FORECAST FIGHT An early display of political muscle in an attempt to, align votes presaged the coming fight, however. Democrats attempted to name Gerald St. Souver vice chairman of the county's new drug abuse committee. Led by Chairman Arthur Jalkenan, dean of. students at Oakland University, the committee includes M courtly citizens, including four supervisors. The names 'were approved at a committee on committees meeting preceding the regular board meeting. *....W ' * ~ The committee approved with no vice having been named. , Controversy cropped g { yesterday onare solution eventually tabled, which would have supported state legislation to temporarily remove the interest ceiling on municipal1 bond#' i LOS ANGELES (AP) — John LACK BOND BUYERS D. McGtllls, 05, former Detroit The county has been held up! Civic Center Commission direc-on sewer and drain projects I tor, was appointed Thursday as of a laCk of bond management consultant of - the buyers, said to be due to the I Los Angeles convention and ex-tight money market. Buyers are hibition center. His appointment yet to be found for bonds to by the recreation and park corn-build the comity’s $0-miUion' mission is subject to approval jail, as well. | by the mayor and other city Removal of the interest limit ° ^cer* whs termed “usury” by legislative committee Chairman O’Brien. report calling for a professional jail administrator as well as ai consequential reduction in prisoner population, wag no reflection on Sheriff Frank' Irons. He said, in fact, that! Irons had cooperated 1 n preparation of the report and that any action on it would be up to the sheriff. * h * Murphy reported that he had come to an agreement with Pontiac quarters. The matter is due for consideration by Aaron’s com-! mittee on Tuesday. Gets LA Post 'Further controversy a-ros e over receipt of a report from public protection and GATE $84)5 UNIVERSAL FENCE Mahon (right), past president of the Pontiac Kiwanis Club, presented Ralph Norveil, past president of the Boys Club o( Pontiac Inc,, and water safety. To run out of milk is to run out for milk. Stock up for the weekend. It makes any sedan as big as our Squareback sedan. Without It, hone comes close. Th*. Volkswagen Squareback Sedan has 31.2 cu. ft. of carrying space. (46.9 with its redr seat down!) The n^xt biggest sedan has only 22.1-cu. ft. (And a good part of that is taken up by the spare.) Of course, we admit the difference doesn't matter if you're carrying only a suitcase or two. But let's say you’re out and you find a goad deal on an antique chest that's about 5’ long; Or o stereo console thot'i cash and carry. What do you do? With any other sedan, you get a U-Haul. With the VW Squareback, you haul it. Autobahn Motors, Inc. 1765 S. Telegraph Road OVERSEAS DELIVERY AVAILABLE BUY! SELL! TRADE! ... USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADSI ‘A / CNB AUTO LOAN The quickest easiest way to turn on a 1970 automobile is with a 1970 CNB \ Auto Loan.You don’t even need to leave your dealer’s showroom. HlFjl take cqre of the details while you wait. Or stop in at one of out^l convenient offices. Either way you’ll be on your way in nothing flat. So remember. When the 197(fs turn you on, tell the man you want „ Community financing. That’s the key to the situation. v.\-> ;j National Bank I 21 Offices in Oakland and Macomb Counties fl 1.. m t ( C—8 • Vi'HE PONTIAC' PltKSS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1869 #Set Bad Example for Youth' Parents Hit on Drugs By YOLANDA BENAVIDES [the situation can only worsen, Bl a nation where relief is Dr. Pollard said, billed on TV as just a chemical Dr. Adolpho J. Brane, M.D., •wallow away, it was almost who assists part-time at predictable that today's young Detroit^ Lafayette Clinic and is people should take up the an instructor at Wayne State “habit,” according to a forum university’s School of Medicine, Dr. Harold Davidson, M.D., a child analyst, rested mi problem on I most of the the parents' of psychiatrists. Yesterday’s panel discussion lead by Dr. John C. Pollard M.D.. an associate professor of psychiatry at the University Michigan Medical School, was sponsored by the 104th annual scientific session of ,/the Michigan State Medical Society in Detroit's Sheraton-Cadfflsc Hotel. “Why shouldn't young people turn to drugs when they see their parents take vitamins in the morning, tranquilizer* by noon, ‘pop * Chock at. 4,' and take a before-dinner drink at I?” asked Dr. Pollard. He saw that some 100,00Q pounds of amphetamines and 80 million/pounds of barbiturates distributed by .per .year Of a dependent na- UNDER STRESS /■■“At 16 or 17, a young person Is under great psychological He must master his 1, all i," he stress. sexuality, the problem personal identity — in shoi the problems of maturation. •aid. “The whole process can be very painful, but if a youth takes the easy way out by choosing drugs, as ti relief, he may neven give Mwmrif an even chance to mature,” according to Dr. Pollard. agreed that young people are uiuig drugs to escape their problems. HAPPINESS Accordingly, marijuana gives one a very “special feeling, a happiness with , the way things are," he said. The potential danger, according to Dr. Brane, is that marijuana usage never allows young people to tackle their maturation period. * * -j Today's younger generation is also concerned with the, dismal world situation they will inherit. “The possibllty of total destruction by the bomb, or facing a fatal tour of duty in Vietnam, the struggle for and against the war which makes service even harder — all these killed today in Vietnam than will ever suffer from brain damage brought about by drugs. We must be honest with -------------------------- . .ourselves if we want ' our factors makeTt very easjrfor chiidren’s Fespwt Tnd l^Td young people to 'turn off fftm society ami take the most immediate'route for relief/’ said Dr. Brane. SERIOUS DRUGS While‘marijuana for ijjan ‘ideal substitute’ for facing reality, Dr. Brane was more concerned with the increasing number of young people who are taring to the more serious drugs for relief. On the basis of available evidence, Dr. Brane is of the opinion that of all the drugs on the market, marijuana is the least harmful. Today, with more than 75 hallucinogenic products available, chemically speaking, City thieves Take Furniture at Home Thieves broke into the home of Cheryl Hamilton, 274 Victory and stole furniture valued at |550, city police reported today. According to officers, the incident occurred between 10 p.m. last night and 12:30 a.m. this morning. * ★ ★ Police said entry was gained by pushing in a window and unlocking a door from the News at a Glance of State Leaders By Hit Associated Preae TNB OOVBRNOH Promised an Oct. ♦ tddrtw to t lolnt Mulon oMh# Legislature ot fiscal details ____LSADHlt ROBERT WALDRON Prsdlctsd the governor-* edueatlo arm proprem would liava a rough mimm AHUM BTW msslont MOUSC MINORITY iht*fr ‘ im would hav rWary’of JAMBS HARR hla propotod trotllc safety Iha 1970 legislative union action raform, highway ufaty Jlcanalng Improvement. ATR COURT OP APPRALS a stata Labor Midi *THelliieisuTURe He also noted that most of the clinical cases seen at Lafayette were extreme hard-drug cases. “Today we see more and more young people ' who are moving away from marijuana and taking speed (methadrine), Dr. Brane said. DIET PILLS He noted that diet pills are a popular source of speed for most kids. They cither take them from mother’s medicine cabinet or take her refill prescription down to the druggist. “Kids have also turned to heroin as a means of getting down fast from a ‘speed high’,” he said., The great physical stress on their bodies as well as influencing the addictive tendency of heroin, poses a great danger to these young people says Dr. Brane, including eventual brain damage in some cases. Block Club Sets Cleanup Party A, fall cleanup party will be held tomorrow from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. by the Wall Street Block Club. A city truck will be available to cart away ddbris collected by residents from Sanford t o Jessie, according to Block Club President Mrs. Gladys Hardy. OLD HYPOCRISY According to Dr. Davidson the “hypocrisy of the adult world has been a large factor in turning this generation of youth away from old ideals. “We tell our children to be good, to be honest and to treat all people as equals, and then they see us cheating on income tax reforms, going through red lights, discriminating against Negroes and blowing each other up in Vietnam,” Dr. Davidson said. “Kids today know that we are not honest with ourselves •- _________ they see that we have laws that a total of $27 show us Up for the pious, | . ___________—1 ”*1 /food Funds Set “More people are going to be on City Streets Two groups of three men were robbed7 at gunpoint early this morning, according to Pontiac police. ■ A- . 4r 4r , , Robbed at 2:45 a.m. n e a r Bagley and -Wilson were Luther Scott, 29, of 323 Russell, Claude Barton, 36, of 178 Mechanic and Gary M. Watson, 25, of 323 Russell. Scott lost $86, Baron a $153 check and Watson some keys, Robbed at 5:30 a.m. Rockwell between Bagley and Motor were Donald E. Moore, 22, of 7278 Redriff, West Bloomfield Township, and two others who did not -identify themselves to police. Moore lost $40 and the others help them,” he said. LANSING UR - An additional $193,000 in federal aid sc dary highway money will be available to Michigan counties during the 1960-70 fiscal year, Bfe~stiBTand county secondary roads. Contract to Remodel County Annex OK'd Contracts totaling $157,457 for the remodeling of the Oakland county administrative annex (formerly the county board of education building) were awarded to Steve Krachko Colne. of Waterford Township and Schultz Electrical Inc. of Pontiac. The contracts were awarded by the county board of supervisors. The huilding will house Veterans’ Affairs, 4-H, the county’s computer system, and some Community Mental Health Service offices. It is located on toe Telegraph Road Service Center. -------- *------ * * * Supervisors approved a five-year lease for District Court ajters in Independence Township. The lease for the Independence Township Hall Annex In Clarkston calls for an annual rental of $4,840. The county loan of $176,000 to a drain revolving fund was approved. Tlie money is used to pay for engineering costs before a construction project is funded. SOLID WASTES Harry W. Horton, R-Royal Oak, chairman of the public ;s committee, reported that his committee is still engaged i study of solid waste disposal. He said that while the group has not given up entirely on an incineration process as recommended in a recent tricounty survey, more concentration to being given a compaction process which would extend present landfill facility use. ★ ‘ * gf . Horton raised objections to an expansion ’of responsibility undertaken by the supervisors Desegregation Plan Hit Although the five Pontiac Board of Education members at last night’s meetiitg said they felt a proposed school desegre gation plan was undesirable and unworkable, a motion to reject it failed. ** The board also failed to approve an amendment to the motion which stated that the district would submit | an alternate Irian. © ★ ★ ★ The proposed desegregation plan calls for students to have free choice of thej school they wish to attend: • ★ dr j ★ The plan to part ojf litigation In a suit filed by the Pontiac Chapter of the NAACPj in the U S District Court in Detroit in February, which charges the trict with de-facto segregation and with discrimination in hiring and placement of administrators. 1 COURT DATE 'The suit, which has been in I hearing, is next in court day in Detroit. Board members William Anderson and Russell Broton were absent last night. Although only five board members were present, lour votes are needed to pass a motion. Or: Robert Turpin and Christopher Brown voted agefawt the motion to reject the SAAGP plan. They had earlier voted to amend this motion to Include a statement that the board would at some time submit an alternate integration plan. The proposed desegregation plan also called for the student to select his school during an annual period from Aug. 15 to Sept. 2, With no preference given any student for prior attendance at a school. INTEGRATION MOVE8 “In case of overcrowding at any school, preference shall be given, with a view toward counteracting the effect of racial segregation," the plan read. Also included In the proposal was a provision that a new teacher to the system would be assigned to a school to which the faculty is predominately of opposite race. .1 Mrs. Elsie Mihalek pointed out that the board was directed by Federal district court Judge Damon Keith to respond to the plan Wednesday. ★ ★ ★ Dr. Robert Turpin said he would like to see an alternate plan presented by the board or by a board-based citizens’ committee. "However, one thing we haven’t done as a board is decide If we want integrated schools,” he added. CONSTIPATEDO DUE ID IRAK All (AMI ■ Mid he felt tost night was an inappropriate time to discuss the plan because of the recent school disruptions. \ “We’re talking about more than just physical integration of bodies. We should also be correcting attitudes on the part of teachers and students.” OPTIONAL PLAft If administrators don’t agree with the plan, they should come up witfr some options," Brown •aid. 0 ft M ft BUIS Since 1945 ; III N. IMIIUW CIMSNT WORK • PATH ad hoc roads committee. A resolution to add Telegraph Road Improvement to a list of other projects headed up by M59 widening touched off Horton’s spoken disapproval. Makeup of the committee was referred back to the board’s committee on committeees. N fie sOls„on,D-Orion Township, chairman of the airport board, asked for im-mediate action on an earlier request for a full developmental study on Oakland-Orion Airport. He got an informal promise that the study will be forthcoming. AIRPORT FUNDS------------•---- The supervisors aviation and transportation committee has proposed appropriating $250,900 for improvements at the airport master plan, however. A flurry of resolutions introduced at the end of the meeting by Carl O’Brien, D-Pontiac, ran the gamut — endorsing pending state legislation, legalizing bingo, and county participation in Oakland University’s announced plan to fit each Pontiac child for a job. SENIOR CITIZENS He also proposed the immediate allocation of $97,000 to a senior citizen program to be handled by tile Oakland County commission on Economic Opportunity (OOCEO). The resolutions Were referred to appropriate committees. Still Lacking? Museum Gets New Display BONNER SPRINGS, Kan. (AP) — A moonshine still—defended by its donor as a proper exhibit in an agricultural museum because the essential ingredient In making “moonshine” is corn—was added Thursday to a display here. Joseph A. Boyer, Blue Springs, Ga., visited we Agri cultural Hall of Fame two yean ago and noted the absence of a still. > * * The retired U.S, Public Health sanitary engineer talked with hall officials and was given authority to locate a still. “j went back to my home in Blue Springs, and I told the sheriff about the Hall of Fame and asked him to give me the next. stlU he might confiscate,” Boyer said.* Dedths in Pontiac, Is Recovering Don Johnson, 44, of 540 Auburn, president of Fisher r UAW Local 596, Is recovering from a heart attack at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. Johnson was stricken two weeks ago and for a while was under intensive care. Johnson MCDONALD JOHNSON said yesterday his doctor has informed him he can expect , to be released from the hospital soon and return to his duties early in January. He atoo offered thanks for his many vyell- While Johnson is recovering his leadership post will be assumed by the local’s “idee president, R. L. (Ricky) McDonald. McDonald said he and financial secretary Gil Heilman, will continue to carry outstanding policies. Burton A. Dickwrts LAKE ORION A- Service for Burton A. Dickens, 80, of 145 Hauxwell will be at 1 p.m. M o n d a y at Allen's Funeral Home, with burial In East Lawn Cemetery. Mr. Dickens died this.morning. He had worked for the Oakland County Road Commission for 20 years. Surviving are one sister and three brothers. G. Melbourne Howell HOLLY — q Howell, 85, of 1125 Hubble died yesterday. The body is at Dryer Funeral Home. John L. Murray KEEGO HARBOR - Service for John L. Murray, 68, of 3069 Brock will be li a.m. tomorrow at the C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, with burial in Roseland Park Cemetery, Berkley. Mr. Murray died yesterday. He was a self-employed house painter and a member of Our Lady of The Refuge Catholic Church, Orchard Lake. Surviving is one sister, Mrs. Charles Parker of Keego Harbor. William G. Walker HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP -William G. Walker Sr., 7S, of 2194 North died Wednesday. The body to at Funeral Home, Milford. Dividend Set at Consumers Consumers Power Co.’s board of directors today declared a quarterly dividend of 47)4 cents per share on the company’s: common stock* payable Nov. 20, 1969, to stockholders of record Oct. 17. The board atoo declared a dividend of $1.12)4 per share on the $4.50 preferred stock, $1.13 per share on the $4.52 preferred stock and $1.04 per share on the $4.16. All these are payable on Jon. 2, 1970 to stockholders of record Dec. 5,1969. Hwrbwrt G. Wingei ROCHESTER — Service for Herbert G. Winges, 60, of 1385 North Lane will be 11 a.m. Monday at Pixley Memorial Chapel with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Winges died yesterday. He was a self-employed decorator. ■** . Surviving are his wife, Ruth; two daughters, Mrs. Joseph J. Leavy and* Mrs. Robert, M. Haney, both of Pontiac; one stepdaughter, Mrs. Robert Schlecte of Rochester; two stepsons, Robert L. Gronzo of [Lake Orion and Gary L. Gronzo of Rochester; his mother, Mrs. Alvin C. Winges of Pontiac; one sister, . Miss Vita Winges of Pontiac; one brother, Alvin E. of Pon 11 ac ; and nine grandchildren. The body may be viewed after 2(p.m. tomorrow. ~Wt» have ft barber! wifhnm6totfraiv37 years' com* binad axperianca. Wo specialize in razor styling, straightening, hair treatment, coloring and lust plain old ear lowering. Appointments available, even recommended. Ml 6-9894 Ml 4-9793 75 W. LONG LAKE RD. Bloomfield Hills (teck ef Men'rStore) M INSTALL fasti And .your Midas Muffler Is guaranteed as long as you own your U.8.-make auto. Rapla ” " sssary, at any Midas ssrvlbe charge only. 435 S. Saginaw t-Wocfce 6oerti ef Wide Track Or. NO Ms ttiru nt. •iM to 111* Dally ADVERTISEMENT eon bids Notice I* hereby given that sealed bide will he Mamaf- UF the Township of Pontiac, MO Opdyk* Road, Pontiac, Michigan until I o'ch October I, 1M» Soot repair on Reef repair on the Township Fire Hell ■t ton Joslyn Road, Pontiac. Btoe will be opened at •:», P.M. on Wednesday, OdMKIEjMf. The Town, ship Beard reserves the right to rolact ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS SeelM propeeels, one endorsed "felled Car" andTene endorsed "Penesr," toil he received Sv the Township ef Pontiac, S«M Opdyk* Read, Pontiac, Michigan, until s o'clock p.m. on Wednesday, October Zl, mt. ter e Police Car and ter a passenger-type car to be used by the Plre Department. Specifications end bid forme may be obtained at the Pontiac Township oillce. MO Opdyke Road, PontlSC, Michigan. All proposals shell specify firms end shew delivery dote. The Township Beard reserve* the right to rdlect any or all wggoMHii to waive — w— ihs proposals recall ORBTA V. BLOCK. Clark October a, l, 4, i**» FALL SPECIAL Do It Yourself and. Save! Save! Save! BaiM a Big 214-Car GARAGE Do-tt-Yoursttf and Sava! Wt spacializa In Garaga materials — our largo quantity buying makos thoao valuos possibla. All Kiln Dried Lumber INCLUDES: « Plates • Rafters • All Ext Trim • Nails • No. 1: Kiln Dried Douglas Hr Studs * Roof Beards • Premium Grads No. 106 Siding • Shingles • Crass Ties A BIG 22x24 2,/i- bulbs, follow three easy steps: First, use a spade, trowel or Inches deeper than you Intend to plant’your bulb. Throw the excavated soil into an old dish pan or onto a board. 7 -* v. # ' * ' a^uind; add thm full ditlontng mineral vermiculite to ithe earth you’ve removed. Horticultural grade vermiculite is porous and absorbent, aerating the soil While providing a reservoir for moisture. A proper mix la two parts soli to one part vermiculite. Now re-fill the hole to the desired plating depth with the mixture. Third, plant the bulbe at the depth best suited to each |ntimber of Inches apart each' variety, After planting^ fill the | bulb should be planted^ ■ ' hole with the remainder pf thb : Bulb Covering Space soll-vermicblite blend. : Crocus , 3” 3" Af I*/.,*/ \ Grape Hyacinth 3" 3” The following chart tells the Scilla 4" 8,” ' number of Inches of soil that Tulip 8” •" should cover various Spring!Hyacinth - 0" 0" blooming bulbs, as well as the! Narcissus 0" 6" ave^oUvc Silver Maples Reg. $19.95 •9 When C. Nell Kinder of Elkin Road, ' planted his canna tubers, he wasn’t | prepared for the bountiful I season they would treat him i to. The plants reached over I 7-foot tall. Normally cannas are in the 8-foot range unless they are of the minia-1 turb variety. “We fertilized them with liquid fertilizer four times,*’ said Kinder. “Other than that, we just let them grow,” Shrub Dogwood Hedge . 49c Many Others at Tnese Savings Pontiac 852-2310 Geraniums | Spark Scene I If your summer cottage la surrounded by a green sea of !ivy it’s wonderful from one point pf ,view —■ No grass to now. But, it aura can get .monotonous, especially on rainy days. • ■ Solve the problem easily and inexpensively by buying several clay pots of geraniums — the brightest yob can find — and set they among the ivy leaves. I At the end of* the season, transport your clay-potted geraniums home, with the rest of your luggage. With proper care, geraniums can be year-round bloomers. Plus We' Specialize In Quality Hand Picked Apples -OPEN DAILY 10 to 10; SUNDAY 11 to 6 FRU SAT. & SUN. m mmm mm 3 POTTED EVERGREEN SALE Discount Priced at^y ff JM ^ 3 Days Only ■ 4 mO^Wm Yews, arborvitae, juniper and evergreen shrubs potted in one ■atlon me container., all are ready for quick, ea.y planting. MI ARB0RVITAE.r....... 3 CU. FT. CAPACITY GARDEN CART 5.77 Reg. 6.88 ] Day Enamel..finish oh Steel. Graphite bearinga. Charge It Kmart 10-6-4 FERTILIZER Our Reg* 1.87 ^ 3 Days Only A/ V An effective formula fertilizer for lawn and garden. Feeds and nourishes lawns to a luxurious growth, beautiful greenest and enrichee soil for a more pro* ductive garden. Charge It. — p«ntioe Store Only. MERION BLUE SOD 57 GROWN ONTOtSOIL Kmart Discount Price $ yard STEEL STORAGE SHED Our Regular $119.00 — 3*Days Only ChargeJIt! 8 ft x 8 ft White galvanized steel. Outside gliding double dopr. Not exactly as pictured. 3 HORSE POWER Recoil Mower utir regular *44— Limit 1 Per Customer Kmart’s own mower with Briggs & Stratton recoil starter engine, 22” staggered wheels, U-type handle, mounted single engine controL 3 in 1 i.sjr 20 lbs. r*8jw 287 SHEEP Mg. 1.11 M( 00 Lbs. 91 22 INCH PUSH TYPE GOLDEN VIQ0R0 WEED and SPAG-M0SS VlfiORO WINTER CARD FEED CHUNKS w AM pounds f ‘ 20 *87 pounds V 20 017 pounds Efa J47 TOPSOIL ■ 97° BONANZA TRANS-POWER Lawn Tractor Our Rsg. $444.00 Lawn Traetor Ih eleofrio atartar And haadligl CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD \!,v EVERGREENS are GUARANTEE No. TK6525 with 7V4- buihel removable basket, 1-knob sweeping height adjustment, steel backed fiber brushes snd other deluxefeatures. Charge itl 5919 HIGHLAND R0«&lM59j d^ AiRP0ftf RtJAb 31®90 Grand River, Faraiingten • 6575 Telegraph at Maple Rd. • 14 Mile Rd. at Crooks Rd. PARKER 25-IN. KLEEN SWEEP LAWN SWEEPER C—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1969 First Prize, Hybrid Tea Rose, Is Sole Winner of *70 With the fall planting season approaching, gardeners are beginning to seek, information regarding new roses. Foremost among the Ust of newcomers is the magnificent, deep rose-red hybrid tea, First Prise, sole winner of a 1970 AARS award, j Growing and blooming plants of First Prise have been on display in 128 Public Rose Gardens throughout the nation since early spring and the impact of this new variety on the countless thousands who have seen it has been tremendous. From its extra long three to four inch buds, to its huge, satiny,: open flower, it has received acclaim as one of the finest roses ever to have received an AARS award. Reports from Kansas, Nebraska, South Dakota, and! other plains states credit it with: great resistance to heat,! dryness and disease, and from all over the United States come reports of the great beauty of its bud and early bloom. . VARIANCE The height of First Prize, of course, will vary with locality, from two feet in Idaho, three feet in Colorado, New York, Kentucky, and Rhode Island, to ibur to five feet in California. 4 Many reports mention the broad, bushy plants and lush, deep-green, leathery foilage, Fir it Prize, offspring of Revelry and an unknown seed! lng, includes such famous roses as Fashion, Golden Scepter, Queen Mary, and Golden Masterpiece in its heritage, and displays the good qualities of all of them. The classic, extremely long, bright rod buds slowly open in a graceful spiral to a huge, brilliant, deep pink to light red rose, some five lo six in'ehes in diameter. Reports have been received from Tacoma, Washington of blooms seven to eight inches across, from Aurora, Colorado of six inch blooms, Eureka, Kan., six inch, j Mi Clemens, Mich., six and one-half inch, and Burlington N.C., six to seven inch. Aside .from outstanding beau-ty of bud and 'early flower, the blooms of First Prize have two unusual characteristics: Texture and color. The 20 to 30 broad, thick petals have satiny quality, and ac-appear almost artificial /their glowing pink.. The ex quislte, half-open blooms brilliant and almost irredescent disclose a lighter pink shading the inrier side of each petal,[virtues, First, Prise has eclassic beauty of its bloom, theicoijM, in, stressing the prolific! It is Indeed fortunpte that in giving the flower a distinctly delicate “old, rose” perfuniieiflowers stay fresh tw four to blooming of this rose, Denver, limiting the award winners for bicolor appearance. 7 [that will be ejijoyed by, all. | five days. IColorado reports as manrus * W I"**** ^•■•Wardo ' of AU-America Rose rose’ that wll^be enjoyed by,all ___^ Bloom cycle completed, the! Many reports have freon1 The stems of this award wln-ibi^’M^li^rixiuis^lP*^ . . spent blossoms drop off cleanly,received of the long-lasting ner 8re exceptionally thick and Kentucky “17 flowers and buds f® M * candidate leaving the bush looking neat qualify of First Prize blooms, stqfdy, holding the large roses at this time,"Eureka, Kansas'"^8 ““I0™’ this n?Mt »nd tidy. both on the bush and as a cut wect, flrsrxingly and later frj->a,t one Ume there have been gtl0™""1®"* Fragrance Is a great asset to.flower, In which department fr the season, In clusters. least a dozen buds and blooms!LONE WINNER any rose, and to add to its excels as, in addition to the| Many, many reports havelon this bush.” ' | It is possible that Firat Prize so overshadowed the other con-| In addition to having been fostants for honors that the chosen for the 1970 AARS panel may have decided there.award, this rose already has was no other candidate good been honored......with a Silver enough to share honors/with Certificate from Portland, this roae. This is the first year Oregon, and no doubt will; since 1956 that only one All-receive many more recognitions America award winner has I of Its outstanding qualities in i named. [the next few years. MRS. BUD HOLZNAGLE Area Woman Leads Florists Presiding at the recen meeting of the Detroit Women Florists’ dub was the newly elected president Mrs. Bud (Bette) Holznagle. Mrs. Holznagle is affiliated with H o 1 z n a g le-Paschke Flowers, 8186 Cooley Lake, Union Lake. The dub organized in 1912 meets six times a year and is open to florists or the wife or daughter of a florist or person directly allied with the florist industry. ** , Each year, the group sei\ds 20 crippled children to Camp Bentley, north of Port Huron. It also assists in beautifying the camp with flowers and supplying necessary equipment. SECRETARY Assisting Mrs. Holznagle ps secretary is another area Mrs. Oliver (Ruby) Mrs, Dunstan is with D u n s t a n ’ s Huron, Waterford, APPLY FOR A CREDIT CARD FRANK'S NURSERY SALES - ALWAYS GREATER VALUE AT FRANK S Special Pur those of EVERGREENS Dug ... Finest Quality... AllPriced to Save You Money Now! S5S5 AND GLOBE ARBORVITAE 3 FEET TALL AND OVER! PYRAMID JUNIPERS Nearly lVi-ft. Pyramid Yew* 2-ft. and over Pyramid Arborvitae 15-in. Globe Arborvitae. , Instant beauty in your landscape! What an exceptional low price to pay for such large plants! OVER 2 FT. ACROSS SPREADING YEWS NEARLY 2 FT. ACROSS RHODODENDRONS Trim them any way you want them, they don’t quickly outgrow ideal laodacape size. 5.99 2.99 Large broadleaf evergreen plant* waded with bud* for next springs bloom. OVER 21/2 FT. TALL PYRAMID YEWS .Large, lush plants for Instant landscape beauty, grown to Frank’s exacting standards. Ssvs now! FRI., SAT., SUN 30-INCH PARKERETTE LAWN SWEEPER CLEAN THATCH OUT OF YOUA LAWN THi EASY, POWER. WAY Thatch (dead grass, dipping* etc.) lates in your lawn. Removing It lets grass thicken snd grow normally. (2-HOUR MINIMUM) MON. Thru PER TOURS. . ... Mr I. • jL' * • i*;V? * > THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY", OCTOBER 8, 1069 m we ve ever A Compost Heap Helpful Boon to Home Gardeners Don’t thro* away thoaa tall leaves, coffee grounds, banana peels, tea leaves, lawn mowings, even vacuum cleaner fluff. Put It on the compost heap! You’ll have a richer garden next year. All you’ll need to begin your tomless bln m chicken wire 1 enough to ho waste. A bln 4 be adequate fo heap Is a bot> ado of board* of hat fill be large Id the vegetable feet by 6 feet win r a garden of halt Pile the soft waste material In the heap until it Is about I to 1 Inches deep. If It Is dry, water It down until It Is thoroughly Add a thin layer of soil for activator to stiihulate the rotting process. If natura 1 materials aren’t available your nursery or garden center will have commercially prepared products. CONTINUE Continue, this' process layers of waste material and activator — until the'pile Is 4 to I feet tall. A productive heap should be moist as well as warm, and to help create these conditions rake the top of the heap to a slightly concave shape So It will catch rainwater, The final step Is to cover over layer of soil about • Inches deep. This acts to retain the necessary heat, encouraging the breakdown Cf the proteins and carbohydrates lniflde. * . * . *.........c:::: The American Association of the entire compost pile with a Nurserymen offer this ad-jneighbors. ditlonal reminder. You are not building a rubbish heap with a mere collection of garbage and trash. That sort of collection will only attract bugs and disease carrying Insects, and It Is certain not to attract APPLY FOR A . Y; CREDIT CARD Ui-±TL-i FRANK'S NURSERY SALES ALWAYS GREATER VALUE AT FRANK-S A real compost pile will be dark tnrown or Mack in appearance, and it will be sweet smelling. It will show no trace of the original materials. GUIDEUNE8 ------------ With the guidelines suggested by the nurserymen, you will have a compost pile for your ute in feeding your garden soil next planting season. And you’ll be feeding it a royal banquet. Were making non hr the greatest amy Nairnf All bamboo rakes, fan leaf rakes and bulb plantors on sola thru 10-9-only. Handbook Aid foRosarians The 1970 “Handbook for Selecting Roses” is truly a “golden treasure of rose buying Information^” In its new, bright golden jacket, the Handbook is the latest In the dnnual series published for gardeners by the American Rose Society. More than 1,000 roses are Hated and the latest Information given about the height, color and National Rating of each. The National Rating Is obtained through an annual survey sup plied by the 18,000 members of the Society. WWW The convenient size (3H* x 6Vi”) of the Handbook fits neatly into pocket or purse. Members of the American Rose Society make it a practice to carry this handy reference piece with them at all times. Besides the conveniently arranged listings there is detailed information about services offered by the ARS, description of the current All-America Rose Selections, a section about the highest rated roses by color (especially valuable to the beginner) and any changes in the classification of listed roses sipce the previous handbook. IN TIME The “Handbook for Selecting Roses” is' being published in time for the fall planting season, a time considered most favorable by garden experts. K is also ideal fer those considering catalog orders for spring delivery. To receive your copy send a self-addressed, stamped envelope and 10c in coin to the American Rose Society, Dept. H, 4048 Roseles Place, Columbus, Ohio 43214. Organic Club fo Hear Talk 'The Challenge of an Organic Garden Let’s put an end to the procrastination on when arid where the proposed stadium for the Detroit professional teams is going to be built.’ The Lions and Tigers have mutually agreed there le a need tor the stadium and they have publicly indicated the urgency’ of a* decision. Yet they procrastinate, all be-cause of . a worthless plan proposed by a downtown Detroit stadium site.. If the two major athletic teams want a chaotic Review of a stadium being built In a downtown area of a major city they should take Just one ride around the Three-Points "undomed” 'Stadium being built on the Golden Triangle in Pittsburgh. Located on the Junction of the Allegheny, Susquehanna and Ohio Rivers, the Stadium adds .to the beauty of the new Pittsburgh skyline, but this has to be its major contribution. The people of highly populated Allegheny County are furious over the site. They claim that the downtown Pittsburgh businessmen bought off the county politicians. COBBLESTONE AREA Except for one major access road, which must cross the bridge at thepointoTjthe stadium, the entire area surrounding the 55,000 seat structure is made up two-' lane cobblestone streets and a prolific setting of slums. A parking deck for 4,500 cars is the extent of primary parking area for the stadium. It was lVb hours alter game time and the Lions’ buses leaving Pitt stadium two'weeks ago, were still bumper to bumper for almost the entire distance to thri airport." ★ Sk ★ Can one imagine what this traffic situation''will be like with a stadium in the heart of this congestion, qr when the office crews let out during the afternoon baseball games? ★ ★ ★ The recent Detroit Chamber of Commerce plan for the riverfront stadium has tb be the plan of yesteryear and not the plan of parking facilities of 4,(00 and remainder tp be dispersed in business lots, 10 to 15 minutes away from the stadium. * 1 * * * * * -' They are talking about 27.5 acres for the stadiunt complex, arid the easy access of which they -talk is access to the central business district and not to the imajor points of outstate Michigan. And then there la the financing, a factor which has Mayor Cav-anagh’s palm reaching to Gov. MlllTken and the state of Michigan. If Milllkeo goes along with the downtown site and the "feasibility They are talking about property acquisition and railroad track relocations which in dollars means |18 million to $30 million dollars. They are talking about primary It’s sure to go Into a state referendum and by 1989 they will still be The Stadium Authority of the city of Pontiac in presenting the bid for a site at M89 and I-7B, has made a sincere bona-fide offer. The presentations have been costly but they have been made and pursued conscientiously, and from all requisites' fos-huildlng the modem stadtflmof tomorrow, they have been the most sensible as far as: 1. location availability toithe people of Michigan, 2. the availability and c6st of land acquisition, 3. the access of current and potential roads, 4. the rtmvenience and availability of auto, bus, rail and air facilities, 5. the sure availability of primary parking for 27,000 Cars, 0. the faith and credit financial backing of the city's $500 million valuation, 7. the locale of Oakland University’s and Oakland Community College’s facilities and manpower. WHERE’S COUNTY SUPPORT? Together, the Lions and Tigers ' constitute a total investment of at least $25 million in today’s professional sports market. , It would be a shame to see the market place relegated to 27 aeres in the center of two million people when there lies available 200 acres surrounded centrally by 7% million buyers. What is as upsetting as the procrastination which is evident, is the apathy of the government of Oakland County in failing to make public commitment or offer endorsement and support for the professional- athletic tenants to this great marketplace. Should the teams decide on the 1-75 and M50 site then the county might Jump on the bandwagon. Lions, No. 1 on Defense, vs. Offense-Minded Browns It will be Cleveland’s offense (No. 2 in the NFL) against the Detroit Lions’ defense (No. i this week) before a probable crowd of 82,000 at the Lake Erie Municipal stadium Sunday. Leading the Cleveland offense is a familiar name, Ron Johnson, who is one ofthe many outstanding rookies in pro footbalHhla year.. . it ★ ★ What is even more surprising is the fact that the Browns- rank only behind the Minnesota Vikings on offense and they are doing it without the services of Leroy Kelly, the fop runner in the league last year. ★ ★ ★ Kelly has been injured and Johnson and Reece Morrison have carried the load. Morrison is only a second-year player with the Browns and in two gatpes he has rushed 40 times for 178 yards and an average gain of 4.5. He has also caught six passes for 71 yards. Against Washington he ran for , 131 yards In last Sunday’s 27-23 triumph.' Johnson, the former University of Michigan star, is’even doing better. He has carried 37 time* and picked up 191 yeards for 5.2 average and has scored four touchdowns. Cleveland willValso have the current top punter in Don Cocltroft* who is averaging 45.2 yards per try, while the Lions will have the league’s top punt returner in Lem Barney, whose 74 yard touchdown return is the only one so far this season in the NFL. The Lions’ defense which has victimised the quarterback six times in two games, led the defensive statistics in seven categories, including average offense per game and percentage of passes allowed per game. Bukk Open Golf Tournament Canceled THE PONTIAC PRESS FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, I960 D—1 Absence of Top Name * (* * 1 ** ffpl ' 1 1 V £ Believed Reason f Move 69 YEARS APART - The face of college football really hasn’t changed too much over its 100 years. At left is Michigan’s 1968 football captain Jim Mandich, a prime All-America candidate. At the right is Willie Heston, who played for Michigan from .1901-04 and Was named recently to the all-time AU-College team over the century. The two look*o much alike that Heston’s picture hangs in the Michigan locker room with Mandiih’s name. By FLETCHER SPEARS ..-Big time golf will apparently take a holiday next year in Michigan. Missing from the 1970 schedule will be the $125,000-Buipk Open, held for the past 11 years at Warwick Hills near Grand Blanc. . Word that the rich event'was being removed from the PGA tournament slate came from Buick public relations head Jerry Rideout, who has also served as tournament chairman for the popular Buick event. GETTING OUT Rideout revealed to The Press the contents of a letter sent to Joe Dey Jr., commissioner of the Tournament Players Division (TPD) of the Professional Golfers Association: * * ;*; “This is to confirm that Buick wilt not sponsor a tournament in 1970. Buick was one of the first national firms to put its dame on a golf tournament and over the years it has been a good promotion;- “But from time to time-we review our various promotion programs and reevaluate. It is our decision to dlscon-tinue the tournament.” WOULDN’T ELABORATE Rideout declined to elaborate on the factors that' were involved in reaching the decision. It has been common knowledge, however, that he was unhappy MSU Plays Notre Dame Wolverines Rated ANN ARBOR (lIPl) - Missouri at Michigan. It looks like an intra-squad scrimmage instead of a battle between nationally ranked teams. The Wolverines are favored by a’slim one-point- margin despite being ranked 11th to the Tigers’ No. 9 position. Michigan has whomped two foes — Vanderbilt by a 42-14 . margin and Washington by a 45-7 count, while Missouri has stepped on a pair,-Air Force by a 19-17 score and Illinois by* a convincing37-6. i* * - .,. '. . ' - ; . * ★' * Michigan has a fine option quarterback in Junior Don Moorhead. Missouri has one in senior Terry McMillan. COUNTER MOVE The Wolverines feature sophomore Glenn Doughty springing out of the backfield like he'd just stepped on a-nail. The Tigers counter with junior Joe Moore, who also doesn’t have to spot a Jet any yards In a race down the runway. EAST LANSING (AP) - The eyes of the nation won’t be on Michigan State and Notre Dame this weekend as in 1966 when toe football rivals both were unbeaten and played to • 19-10 standoff the last game of toe season. That was the year MSU partisans Jeered because the Irish had the ball in the closing minutes but played possession, running out toe clock on the ground instead of gambling with a pass ^carrying for a win. Triplett has been a bust as passer so for, completing only eight of 28 tries for 59 yards. Coach Duffy Daugherty still is going along with the Junior who took over as signal-caller in midseason last year. Triplett has been able to drive the team in for touchdowns when they are needed. He has the third best-running record, gainhlg 127 yards in the two games by ‘ the option. a number of the more prominent names on the tour bypassed the Buick event to practice for the British Open. :?★ ★ ★" The Buick Open was slated for July 2-5 next year. The British Open come* the following week, but in the past, It’s been the procedure for some of the bigger names on the circuit to head for Britain a week early to get in some practice licks. Notable among this crowd were Arnold Palmer and Jack Nicklausi ‘NO SURPRISE’ Dey said he was disappointed that Buick was dropping the event but he said toe announcement came as no surprise. "It Was not a total ’surprise,” said Dey. ”! knew there was a question since they had not' exercised their option. There’s a 60-day period in which they can renew it. So we kriew there was some Indication it was possible they wouldn’t renew it.** ★ ★ ★ Dey said the date' given Buick probably was not toe reason for dropping the tournament. "He (Rideout) knew well in advance of the dates and they were completely acceptable.” SHU. TALKING Dey said he nbd talked with several groups about filling'Ruick’s spot on the Schedule, among them the Warwick Hills Country Club. “The Warwick Hllll people are interested. I understand they t were totally unaware of the Buick move,” said Dey. Whether Warwick Hills was interested was not certain as of noon today. Robert ' Breeden, president of the club’s board of directors, said he was not aware of any interest by toe club in promoting the event. “I’ve heard no discussion on that at all,” said Breeden, •'I’ll be darned if I know what to say.” (MORE) Hayes Scott, chairman of toe board of directors, is In Washington, D.C., on a business trip and was unavailable for Saturday’s' game at South Bend , has been called lacklustre. Supporters of both universities will be watching it closely^ however, trying to determine if either the Spartans or toe .Irish have a hope of going anywhere this fall. ... * ★ ★ •• (Michigan State had to come from behind for two early wins, 27-11 over Washington and 23-15 from Southern Methodist Scoring pushes on the rushing game saved State both Sdturdays. Michigan State quarterback. Bill ' Leaders in the established rushing at* tack have been senior Don Highamith, a bulldozer runner, with 217 yards. Scat-back Eric Allen, (in elusive little mite, has netted 186 yards. * ★ *• The: defense has been the solid rock of the Spartan team. Time and time again the defensive corps, led by the rush of the front four, has held the opposition to give State good field position. Six lost fumbles didn't help the MSU cause. Defensive end Wilt Martin and linebackers Don Law and Mike Hogan have been some of the standouts. The Lions and Browns have met only seven times in regular season play with the Lions holding a 6-1 advantage in toe all, time series, but the two teams were arch-rivals during the 50’s when they tangled for -the NFL championship four items with the Lions’ winning three. The lone defeat at the hands of the Browns was^ toe 19(4 contest at Municipal Stadlumwhichended 37-21 for Cleveland. FORMER BUCKEYE , One of the veterans of the Browns who has played in three of toe games with toe Lions is defensive captain Jim Houston, linebacker from Ohio State. "I’m personally ashathed of our record against the Lions and would like to do something about it,” he was quoted as saying. The Lions have decided to fill toe vacancy .at offensive guard, created with toe injury to Bob Kowalkowskl, with Frank Gallagher, a 240 pounder who played at North Carolina-and who is in his third year with the Lions. Kickoff is 12:30 Michigan time Sunday. Moorhead, who was voted Back of the Week by UPI for his. work, last' Saturday, - has more Impressive statistics than McMillan. Michigan Coach Glenn “Bo” Schembechler has a more wide-open offense than Missouri’s Dan Devine, who prefers going through defensive tackles than oyer or around them. i clicked on 18 of 28 Post 6-1 Verdict Early Goals Spark Wings MAY REENTER? Rideout’s statement pertained to the 1970 season so it’s conceivable that Buick could reenter toe picture later. The schedule is now on a year-to-year , basis which leaves the years beyond 1970 wide open. The demise of the Buick Open is toe second bit of bad news for Michigan golf fans. Just last month, the $100,000 Michigan Golf Classic became a fiscal fiasco when the sponsors couldn’t come up with the money to pay the players. A spokesman for Michigan Golf Classic said earlier today that efforts are still being made to tally all receipts from toe ill-fated Classic which was held over toe Labor Day weekend at nearby Shenandoah Country Club. * When the sponsors couldn't pay off, the TPD then came up with $50,000 for the players, a sum-which the TPD hopes to get back from sponsors of the Classic; That matter is now in hands of attorneys for both the sponsors and toe TPD. passes in two games for2fl& yards and.a single touchdown while McMillan is 12 for 2$ for 216 yards. But the Wolverines’ Grand' Haven product has gaintei 239 rushing in 29 carries with five scores compared to 108 yards In 20 attempts without a touchdown for the Tigers’ junior college transfer. Doughty has one thing in common with Moore — neither started his collegiate career as a running back. Doughty began as a split end. white Moore was a linebacker for the Mizzou froeh. Moore, like Doughty, gained 191 yards last week, but trails the Michigan counterpart by 14 yards for both games and at 48 has made four more tries to get through enemy lines. Doughty has a 2-to-l touchdown edge. DETRiSIT XAP) — Two Rrst pat«r goals started toe Detroit Red Wings on their way Thursday night, and' they followed up with one more in the second period and three in toe third for a 6-1 decision over the New York Rangers. The win moved Detroit’s exhibition record to 5-2-1 and droppe<| New York’s mark to 6-3-0 in pre-season play. Detroit’s Wayne Connelly opened the scoring at 10:29 of the opening period on a slap shot from Garry Unger. Four minutes and 17 seconds later Bruce MacGregor followed with a goal, assisted by Nick Llbett and Pete Stemkowski. Gordie Howe kept the pressure on New York goalie Ed Giacomin with an unassisted goal at 1:41 of the second period, bur then New York’s Vic Had- PlStODS Shattered field interupted the Detroit binge with a , _ ,, .. -- - goal from Jean Rateile at 2:02 of the Qy. QofleTS^ 722*176 Detroit wound up the scoring on goili-^-by Stemkowski, Larry Jeffrey and Libett. Flyers Option Center HERSHEY, Pa. (UPI) — Veteran center Garry Peters has been optioned to Quebec of the American Hockey League by. the Philadelphia Flyers. However, a Philadelphia spokesman said Peters may be back with the Flyers when they open their National League season against Minnesota Oct. 11. TOLEDO, Ohio (AP)—Former Toledo University star Steve Mix, now a rookie with the Detroit Pistons, went back to' his home court, Thursday,.. but that wasn’t enough as the Pistons fell to the Baltimore Bullets 122-116 in a National Basketball Association exhibition.' Baltimore, now 3-3 in preseason play, took the lead early in the second quarter and never fell behind. Earl Monroe tead the Bullets in scoring with 29 points md Ray Scott and Jack Marin came up With 22 each. Assistant Cage Mentor for Pontiac Northern \ BUI McKinney today was named assistant basketball coach at Pontiac Northern High School. He replaces Jay Shutt who gave up the position to continue work toward a graduate degree. McKinney was athletic director at Madison Junior High last year. Ho Is currently an" assistant football coach. McKlnnqy will assist head coach Dick HaU and nave charge of tab junior varsity cagers. ’ _ .... . 6 Mechanical Brain Stymied for F-Bird, Lansing Odds DEFENDERS AT WORK - Detroit Red Wings’ Gary Bergman deflects a shot by the New York Rangers in the first period of their game at Detroit Olympia last night. Keeping a dose aye on toe play Is goalie Reger Croiler (1), while left wing Hank Monteith (15) has things under control to Groaler’s left. Firing the shot was N.Y.’s Bill Falrbairn (10). Wings won the exhibition contest, 6-1. The computer can't even come up with a clear-cut favgrite in the battle between toe Pontiac Firebirds and Lansing All-Stars to decide the Central Division leader of the Midwest Football League. Fed the data of their records, the mechanical brain gives the Firebirds less than a half-point advantage in their game Saturday night in Lamina.------------ - v j On the board the betting would, be even. ■< ■ ' ,i 1 In the power ratings of the MFL, the computer says: ' 1. Pontiac Firebirds 96.5 I. Lansing All-Stars 16.1 3. Lackawanna Lancers 98.0 4. Dayton Colts .......95.0 5. S.W. Michigan Hawks $5.5 0, Grand Rapids Chiefs .. 72.6 7. Flint Wildcats ..... 08.4 8. Detroit Cowboys ..... 68.6 Pontiac and Lansing both lost to Lackawanna, but each has defeated toe Lancers in their last meeting. Against each other in the first meet, the Firebirds and All-Stars played to a 13-18 tie. What does Saturday’s battle af Lansing Sexton field mean? It means the probable Central Division titty. The only, roadblock after this game would be Dayton, and both teams still have to meet toe Colts. r ’ -I ’ 1 * * * The addition of another bus hiss extended the deadline for those desiring to make the trip for a $7 package. The buses wiU leave Wiener Stadium at 5:15 p.m. 7 Fans driving to Lansing can pur-chase advance tickets at the VFW Post No. 1370. A capacity crowd of 4,000 is expected for the g«nta D—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1969 ■mi m TMrin Boston * Washington Oakland, Chicago patrwt _ national lbaoub B3if MM' iaattla Cal If or Caraw Raita B.smll Oliva P.Roo ram] W.WIII Giants Keep Rookie Pilot Clyde1 King INDIVIDUAL BATTING Robinson Bal Andrawi Bi i 141 535 92 15t Unsar Wat PlSlil“*KC «oC^h MS T.Horton Cl* m*y* wm Klllabrtw Min Hovlay Saa R .Jackson Oil D.Graon Oak ■ SIN II »-143 VIM 13 *3 .30* Sf niff 24 ioi .3» 339 111 111 31 lft .30* 333 13 132 31 111 .304 4)1 3* 143 3 31 .304 ill i$I 137 54 7* I 37 .191 351 99 111 11 44 .190 331 99 1M If |{ »0 13 S-'X *1 519 73 151 1 30 .117 «1 ft 1M 4 47 .217 581 69 166 | 57 S* fjl si] 609 106 S?1 31 113 1 399 Sl8 3 if 571 47 131 10 71 .100 , 311 31 143 7 S3 .IN | 403 73 HI 3? 170 j 73 1 13 .171 3|3 77 in 27 « • 33 50 93 10 40. 134 1*1 lft 49 140 . 319 41 91 3 10 , 344 122 150 47 Ilf .|W , WON LA McCovay A .Johnson / SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -"'jSecond agate in the National _ I League, the San Francisco sal Giants’ only consolation is that Sp bi» h it 443!four players won individual in 91134 It * J8 titles and that Manager Clyde $4 8 ill 3 S ”0 King has been rehired, iliffl “I ^ded during the middle 5” w 18 1J 93 307 the eeeson that Clyde was I’813 j U '^ doing a 330 *9 133 If 79 3 5* JOS i 79 .301 72 130 I 47 .301 I 43 tl 14 47 .300 M IN 1*1 44 Of ,M0 455 ?7 1M 11 O .295 419 111 115 37 113 .V4 331 B 15* 33 90 .»! 441 103 IN 11 91 .193 543 9 lp 1 34 .191 *1 71 174 MW .291 43* 79 116 31 09 .m 574 97 135 19 113 .1*7 303 M 173 | 33 .333 433 35 131 17 70 SS 374 » 71 9 42 J55 a matter of when to make the announcement we were going to keep him." said dub owner Horace Stoneham following Thursday after San Diego beat tee Giants 3-2. Tartabull 0*k Hooklr Killy Bn 554 93 151 • 33 .173 I 533 03 151 19 14 .171 ' 39* 57 IN 13 54 .171 fie 44 140 10 99 .171 H4 31 111 1 11 171 M S 71 0 11 .137 341 33 M 1 31 .343 I » if II: 54* SlS ? I ElSiS: “Naturally, I’m- happy with my new contract,” beamed the ■1} 5 gS bespectacled King, who re- 414 firn 5 31 :iM ceived a raise above his 140,000 47i jolsT is ’n 1? rookie salary for guiding San us 8 in 4 n .Im Francisco to a second-place ft-590 # iso i 43 inllah despite a battle-scarred line- lo'cllm CALIFORNIA 455 73 123 22 79 .270 Up. 1 I 'I J 9 s * * * rtBBR 9 ilf 8 Ifrwp McChvey 41 1! 0 0 *icift,ib !WSR I" 4* « 9 n tee league leader with 45 home snnc*r ib i o i o Mynoini. Min o cim* ib” 553 nin io wlgJruns and 126 rbi’f. A bunt sto-.grcwn cb a o oo AdJlr»•1 io o i win**1 m 33* »]]{ io 3i !i33 gle Thursday night allowed him §*!**” P i o o o rohvS ib ° ? i f RamSSi * in will .4 JLp S finishwith acareef-hlgh JioR JIHKg.* Ifil-BDa^ Pirates Win in Farewell! Sf*Forces to, mm mU PITTSBURGH (AP) Pittsburgh Pirates and 9, baseball fans said a happy—but perhaps premature—goodbye to the creaky, historic confines of Forbes Field Thursday night. The easily beating the lowly Mon-treal Expos 8-2. It was the dub’s 88th victory in 182 games and clinched third place la the National League’s Bast Division. The Pirates did it with a flair. for 6-2 Victory Next April, if plans run true, the Pirates win open the season in the plush Three Rivers Sports Stadium, a multimillion dollar ■ f. _ s_ . J sports complex now wider con- fflls Mop Angels stn,cflon « &•««?’« North KANSAS CITY (AP) - The Kansas City Royals , broke up rookie right-hander Vem Geish-ert’s bid for a no-hitter in the seventh inning Thursday night, combining together six hits and two errors for four runs and a 8-2 victory over California. 3 0 0 0 Norttey cf 40 10 Keougtl Cf 4111 Scholl 3b 4 0 0 0 Alcarai lb Forbes Field, baseball landmark which probe bly had its finest moment when Bill Mazeroski poked a ninthinning home run over the left field wall to give the Pirates the 1960 World Series, is scheduled to be turned over to Pitt University. 4 0 0 0 Falroy ef OOOOStaub rl PITTSBURGH nil MAlou c*«h n 95 154 40 111 .gS 1 McAttim* Ot W.Horton DC Fraahan Dal Campanarl* 0.k 54* W 141 (RSS SI ill pis R.Olivcr KC QuWml Cl* YutTMimkl Bin 1 Ralcfwntt Cal iwlon Chi* A. Conlellaro Bin olbaoo Bin &bir.kKSak . AlyM was _ ; KN9n Wat B. 4 CmrM i, ,»i 5S3 75 143 11 .4S,.U5|(j A 39 9* 10 M .154 I 493 30 115 11 47 .154 in S'o if 37 ' g 8lS if *7 :lw Grot* .NY iiis 1*7 n 71 3 XS S’z* J J3 75i'i7 » 53 :im average. ja M-W 1 M .M.11 . . 4--- M* «|4| 0 » ^ MVP CONTENDER 341 30 53 0 15 .141 j 335 9 95 14 54 “ 1 53 145 i| *4 3*7 19 74 0 30 if ♦* & 19 N 3 p m 741# 13 M 4*3 31 133 « 34 J55 495 3 134 10 71 J55 v J«rar iv ,io ! 0 S8o(Jjin,b|b 1 |f o°Sv is,i? 1 Sutharlnd ph 1 The slugging first baseman, a strong contender for most valuable player honors, also topped the League with 121 walks and established a modern major league mark with 45 intentional passes. He also scored 191 runs. SAN PRANCISCO Iff mm 41* 39 99 * B . Ill 30 51 19 J 439 4* 111 4 S4: 537 7* 117 I J 81 li 11 !S is 8 i Si !8S;3 1* »| 59* 79 140 33. «5 . IT 1 ill 47 llB 7*4 9*0 31 47 » 31 .Ml 104 14 47 4 a .*4* 339 22 71 1 If 197 S 4l .4 II. I|1 51 140 11 55 .154 311 14 54 4 14 .353 its tt 141 & 104 3fi 531 47 131 II 44 .153; SAN I 541 44 137 13 44 .353 475 51 110 17 M .1» D**n u 493 57 134 14 57 .150.JlOCum lb 4 0 0 1 ElMrlOO* 3 471 44 111 4 30 .350 Splezio li 100 1 H*r« If 8 8. t & •«» Colbr, lb 10 00 McCw*y 1 395 H 9* 0 34 .34* VKelly 3b 4 110 Bond* cf 33 M 11 IS <240 Gntan el 3 0 10 Bwraa rl 3 .1* 14 51 .141 jwillams rl 10 0 1 Mason lb 1 I'g If SiS 8ST,C 3 3,1° O RobertsnC p & Sift s Ifipv" 200 ftf -I4*! Hirbt Ip 221 22 54 ‘ 301 a® n I Run for Cards ST. LOUIS (AP) — Curt Flood walked with the bases loaded in the lBtli inning, forcing to a run that boosted the St. Louie Cardinals paatthe Philadelphia Phillies, 8-2 Thursday night as. Bob Gibson won his 20th game. Gibson, 20-13, yielded eight hits while Jackson gave six as both went the distance. But Jackson walked four hitters to the 12th, one intentionally, The final pass came with two out. Despite the victory, the. Cardinals finished a' disappointing Season to fourth ’ place after Pittsburgh dlnchad thlrd by a game with a victory over Montreal. PHILADELPHIA ST. LOUIS . ISE^w^beVKS5 Tilt fS1,? in Sr,? i# OJohnson 3b 5 0 1 0 MCcrvtr I II MM* pr 0*00 Shannon 3b 4 0 JOMph 3b 0 0 0 0 Hmim rl 4 0 BStcn* If SOSO Davallllo rf 10 walfclni c 4 110 paViMn h noo Harmon u J j 1 0 Olboon p 4 0 0 0 OJock*on P 5 0 1 0 tflFtrl H RERBBI o \ in —On FranclKO Jim Wright Wins Title Cowboy Rookie Receives Award WHITE HaAINS, N.Y. (AP) . Jimmy Wright, Inwood, N.Y., won tee $10,000 Met Open Golf Championship Thursday with a 146 for the final two rounds Snd{ a 72-hole total of 284. DALLAS (AP) — Good things i who also is studying theology at keep happening to Rdokto Cal- Southern Methodist University, vin Hill of the Dallas Cowboys has been awarded a $1,000 of the National Football League, scholarship from the Chester J. * ♦ ★ LaRoche Annual Achievement The running back from Yale, | Award fund. ... 15 50 2 12 .119 544 43 130 3 35 W 331 51 04 12 44 .234 273 33 35 4 27 .230 353 33 03 11 SO .Ml 317 41 75 1 27 .217 IS 3 2 if gg W 34 12 29 m V 30 7 26 S I# lit 4 40 |iM|l 111111 Slpln SD Hmdaraon SP cjnnUam.SD Sarrldo All . Phillip* Mil £i W%r SSITii 5 19 . ssss E—Hart. pranclkb Dtan. SF- 3 0 10 Fuwntws ss 79 3 3 3 Total b§ .. toi otoit•«— 2B—lOrby. 3B~¥uante*. 5 Kirby (W,740) ... 7 5 iiiiii 211 10 49 0 10 ^*,1 495 3 115 4 50 .233 24* 31 42 2 33 .Ml' 144 8 54 11 35 .M0! 317 13 52 3 24 M9 450 40 103 4 42 .239 495 37 113 0 35 if* 350 43 57 0 13.321, 391 M 99 . 2 3* .Ml 391 g 19 4 30 .M* 313 23 49 212 IS 4* If’li 41l.st* 240 30 54 4 1 .110 302 35 35 0 10 SIS 400 3* M 1 39 3l5 “I* 9 .226 23 .215 8Z3 91 12 in wain .in || Bf 291M2 7I1BB11 Si* BB^lifinl mm m¥: ssmfu Sav*-R*barg*r. WP-Robar l:U A- 1,995. . Brando's Triple Wins for As Ex-Reliofer Jim Roltind Hurls Seven-Hitter SEATTLE (AP) — Jim Roland’s seven-hit pitching and a third-inning triple by Sal Bando paced the Oakland Athletics to a 3-1 victory over Seattle’s last-place Pilots Thursday night. ttVoh Hands Chi Parry SF cp:tn« Sid Colaman Wa» Pi si Looker S»a Huntar Oak R.Nalfon KC Bc&ww’ny R.May Cal H.iw^a wa* Phoabu* Bal Oalnakl Chi R.Weodaon Min Paul Cl* _ . P.Dobum D.t Hardin Bal Hannan w*t ?saoc^k SlW* Bl! Harlan Chi C.Dobaon Oak B*hn»an NY Butlar KC J.vlSllfam* Cl* Llndblad Oik srcir Wynn* Chi Brabandar Saa Kaklch NY Jarvla B»n iparrna Dal MS 222 103 2791* IP 2-97 IMsIffP ilgll 1181® li iffs liniEL- 104100 40 4* fig *}} 137 127 44 7 3.61 if 8.2 a ,1,W,"f7tfW,WL.«A i 29913 54 303 21 11 Ifo Mil* 1013 1 273 2111 82 200 25 7 11 gbali ill Moved up frora reUef 0?|corps to a starting role on Sept. 3252ft 9i 2» 1914 2.52121, Roland posted a record of fh luill ?7i9i 2313 2^61, his best as a major leaguer. liiiiii ■ * * * U m 15 0.15 14 9.19 m mi 1301M 71 79 1 9 1351]| 8 » ! ? » 293 239 91 2151710 3.47 Bando, who has been merciless to Seattle pitching in Sicks Stadium, got his 15th hit in 16 eppearances ia4he lhird toning and tripled home Reggie Jack-son, who singled. > Bando later made out twice. isrft* "TsVf afu 230 13*154 9 19 III lot 7i im i4 n m 235 237 79 ] mm lilig 193 174 I lilt 3.70 Ull is If WaTOl ,Sf 170 8 1 4 » t?f OiUftl StL Holtzman Chi Bunnlng LA iNlakro.TD Kirby SD •iiimanom . McGinn MH 11(155 9310011 10 3.54 117129 It 4114 9 1.54 lww 134112 41 94 4 » IWliSl 111 9/ 57 90 4 0 3.57 Roiai 219 105 73171 11 17 3.51 R01*' tM 95 41 41 10 4 3.5* 145144 49 101 13 10. 3.59 107 114 31 53 13 4 3.59 99 M 37 42 I 7 3311 141 140 931751713 3.32 Uiia 44 71 4.10 3-33 190155 11 11012 10 3.30 112 212 59 15313 10 3.39 Ml Ml 50 31 lit 3.70 M 39 M 40 7 5 1.7| 115105 45113 I 2 3.71 105194 §111 115 0.94 325 210 97 MS 1412 1.93 p J §8 H fffl I 8S „ fe/'rl Roland p 4 0 10 0 0 1 Oy ler as .000 Lockar p 3 0 10 Kannady i Mil miM Oil: 146170 44 si • v 4.m j johnaon PI 128]£1 50 6$ 7 7 Mffrlft^ln 205 IW 103 1311314 4.26 !d0$s SD _____jlO| 134 123 67 215 213 !!§ W 1267 61 f 10 4.08 ifl 1 *4.29 It *11 4,J| 4017 .9 4.34 35 I I 3 Total Barter. T—2:27. 00**00*01— (T.Raynoldi). WP- il 11,! fSi Stonam.n Mtl 49 991} 14 4.34 B|au pgh I a» 123 IIS 11 19 4.35 J 144 43 94 ill 4.31 105 .41 49 33 4 3 4.43 w«y.n.r^( 14313lo 4.37 | 9 4JI Mil 4,41 1 100105 43 34 77 41 ■2 01 47 SO 5 5 4.11; siik SD 04 97 40 49 4 7 4.N Clonlnger C n •7 99 35 47 110 5.13 Ctemplon Phi 15*144 71 133 711 540 H.Raad Mtl 144 143 II ft 514 5491 Palmar Phi mm ?ii?a si§’i» a 34 34 M 17 i t 4.45 ia;s fijii Two Division League Starts PTTA Action Trouble for Ex-Leaf Execs (AP) -Harold Smytbe land Harold Ballard fired earlier this year as presi dent and executive vice-president respectively of Maple Leaf Gardens, faced * preliminary bearing yesterday on tee charges of Income tax evasion Information under tee Income Tax Act charges Smythe of the evasion of 1878,899 and Ballard of $186,188 between April, 1986, add April 1988, Norman A. Chalmers, regional director of the federal department of Justice, said during Thursday’s court appearance that he hopes a trial date can be set Nov. 6. Lawyer J. J. Robinette, representing the accused, said there is such a massive account of material to consider that he is not sure a date, can be established at that time. The'charges against Smythe and Ballard were sworn in July, several weeks after the board of directors fired them as executives of tee organization that: owns tee Toronto Maple Leafs mStiS of the National Hockey League.!)^ Two divisions of eight teams each started the 1989-76 Pontiac Table Tennis Association season with Richardson’s taking an early lead in the National Division. The dairymen defeated Dawn ^totihe American bivision, five' teams are deadlocked after the night of action, i MUST. _J3l Rtally . 5trick's laoir. . Rich. Dairy 4 Watt 3. Mobil 4 Stalanikr TV 3 Club 99 ... 2 Mr. Staak 1 Baikln A Rpbblni t RRSULTI OP PLAY Buatlnar Claanra daf, Strick'i la and* Fual Had Palaca Raatau spfN' \ * ' t\* "X * p ■ * %V$J ^v?\ v;-p t Wm s ^ :: • -' ' • • \ '- \_. \ , ■ . ' THE PONTIAC PRKSS. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8,1969 • ^ v ^ ,V'n'v.\n~ P~8 rjg I . „ (-~x , N.Y. Underdog Against Braves ATLANTA (AP) — The pres- Braves’ final 10 game winning lire that goes with long winning streak. streaks was lifted from the New , .- *—* / * York Mets and Atlanta Braves % Meta, once the darlings of but there still will be|futmty) overtook the Cubs, who around when tne held a nine-game late season their bestrof-fivese ^gg to wln ^ Eagt ^ elght> hamnir nre not taking them lightly! “what in previous years it took | pitched a no-hitter against Oak- They have an explosive ball 102 games to do.” jland while running up a 16-4 rec- club ” manager fc tae , A * * , ' inaugural American League! The Twins will counter withj^™, $aJhelr schLled right- workout. playoff series between the Ori- their 20-game winners, oles and the Minnesota Twin*,(handers Jim Perrys and Pavel opening Saturday in Memorial Boswell, but Manag/f Billy M ar- SORE FOOT Stadium. Redlegs'Pete Rose Keeps National Loop Bat Crown Niekro of. the Braves. SECOND GAME Atlanta’s Ron Reed and New York’s Jerry Koosman will work the second game Sunday before the series moves to New York for games on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, if necessary. The third game probable pitchers are Pat Jarvis for Atlanta and Gary Gentry for New York. , 'The Mete late-season streak was led by1 their outstanding pitching corps while the Brave streak was highlighted by good YOU! AUTOBAHN TBLtaMra ROAD Jut asrth if S(sars lake Aud PHONE 388-4521 412 o pitching and the red-hot bat of a.r*y e» i. o oe *•«•«> * if \ Rico Carty, who had a .387 av-l ' s ? 11 erage as Atlanta won 17 of its j ! | J last 20 games in September. To-4 • • 8 ny Gonsalez hit .489 in the I Don lb I Hansen lb ill Christian If lit Hopkins lb 4 11 Knoop'lb 3 0 0 $8.96 UNIVERSAL FENCE Wt Hovb Your NEW PARTS For Briggs, Tecumoeh, Reo, Lawn Boy and Clinton MOTORS AUTHORIZED SERVICE CENTER Hand. Powar, Rida ' ‘Come in and let ut know your need*" McNABB SAW SERVICE 1345 (AP) — Cincin-i He said he learned of j natl’s Pete Rose won the Na-I Clemente's three hits from tional League batting champion- “some fellow in the first row. I ship for the second straight year j was as nervous as I’ve ever Thursday night with a bunt Bin- been. I didn’t know what to do.” gie against Atlanta he called! *____* * ' . ‘the biggest hit I ever got—nbt Total 14 1S 4 Total . yl Chicago .........0 1! t1 i f f •— f Minna solo ......10 1 111 it l — 4 B-Kaot. ' DP—Mlonaaota I. LOB- ChlClOO 6, Mlnnoaota 4. 2B-Ortli, Tovar, Alllaon.. iw .prtwirnfWfien,'' «*-• Raoaa (14), Oliva (14), Alllaon (t). IF— -----:—ip> h wee qe te Low .............. 4 7 5 J ” ) (L.1-1) 1 11001 Oefefcefc the longest, the I The tap down the third base Rose, who has l,018Jhits in the afienda (w^i) last five seasons, said, “That’s the first time ir I bunted with two men out and in scoring position.” • { .. J ... x ■ ■ the first time in my^ life I’ve LJtKffipa line came with two out and nm-|hlinterf „Uh twn m/n ners'at first and second in the 'eighth inning after Rose had gone 0-for-3 while his closest: " " > ' contender, Roberto Clemente of! ^ose saM he had set his goal Pittsburgh, was 3 for 3, for 200 hits and 100 run? before WWW. the season began. He achieved At that point, Clemente had both. Rose scored twice in Cln-clirabed to within .0008 of Rose.jdnnati’s 8-3 victory over Atlan-who finished with an unofficial ta Thursday night, giving-him _______.348. Clemente went out in hia 120 for the year to tie San Fran- will pitch the first two games fourth trip against Montreal and cisco’s Bobby Bonds for against the Twins—who had oniy ended the year with , an unoffi- league scoring title, a 31-25 record after lefties kj 'cial ,345 average. , I Cincinnati Atlanta the regular season. ! “I knew if I went O-for-4 and Cuellar and McNally each had he went perfect he could beat }U! |in?Ii.?cf f?l o HUD Grant OK'd for Calvin College S A1 nq-hit bids spoiled by Minneso-ime,” Rose said. OUT PULLS OTHERS From PLUS F.E.T. 8.24x14 8.8)1x14 It.RKvIA WASHINGTON (UP1) - Sen Robert P. Griffin, R-Mich., announced yesterday that the Department of Housing and Urban Development has ap-j proved a $1.21-mlIlion loan to ” Calvin College for a new i, m dormitory. The three-story structure on <.t6the Grand Rapids campua wilt m I house 242 students and a small E& IHfF-ari^1 ------------------ ^""te.llilCOMSTIPATEDO te i ii *sjff,Y5!jrar ! KHkCkiCfl 88 4 0 1 0 VBV It ^ C ft TRY^ ^ ^ ALL-BRAN* White f ALUMINUM SIDING STYROFOAM AND FOIL BACKED 8” Horizontal..... *32* 12 10 Mlllon 112 2 Brown I I ) 1 Gon»li 1112 Ivont 10 0 0 Lum ' 4 0 0 RJockton H 4 01 . McQueen p 00 0 0 TRY. Aipromte 2b 4 12 1 Told 22 011 0 Total 24 2 11 g Cincinnati .. 00 1 00 0 OTO-I, Atlanta ......... 0 0.2 0 00 0 00— 2; E—Braiala, RJackson. DP—Cincinnati I. LOB—Cincinnati i, Atlanta 10. »-| Lum 2, Aspromonlo. HR—Aspromontoi (2), Porai (17). I IP H R ER BB SO Malonoy (W, 12-15) .4 7 2 2 2 1 Culver ............ 2 4 o 0 l Oi McQutan ........2 111}} PrWoy ...... I loot T Ilona (L,12*10) . .. 2 1-2 5 i .4. 0 0 Nalbautr .........■ 2-2 2 2 0 0 1 Wlihdm .......i ooo i t I Sava—Culver. WP- Maloney, Culver 2. IT—2:27. A—15.451. m Saturday ‘Special » Up. TRACTOR 42" SNOW PLOW neg. NOW $C4R 9104S ONLY OHU TERMS TO SUIT LE| Bros. Equipment 828 UHlVlRUTt PR, PH. Ill-Mil 8/4” Exterior or Interior White Pino WOOD SHUTTERS 14"x35Vi" .......?. 8“ 14"x47Vi"..........*.0*# 14"x63'/2" ?I2’* Fiborglat R0U INSULATION foil Faced 50 ft. ROLL 4” thick F32# 75 ft. ROLL 2Vi” thick 5 A Clean Sweep of Boauty The PANORAMA Parma-white 'i’ Aluminum DOOR FEATHERLITE COMBINATION Tampered talety Glass Doors Fiberglat Sereening Key Look $497B ujJm, STORK HOURS 4495 DIXIE HIUNWAY DRAYTON PLAINS OR 3-1211 Open Weekday! Men. thru Frl. 8 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. Saturdays from 1A.M. to 4 P.M. the PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1969 V THE BEAUTY OF an IN YOUR HOME Tlu* Week "x96" Pro-Finished PANELING $275 each FACTORY CLOSE-OUT — 3 Beautiful Colors STANDARD GRADE CEILING TILE, DOORS, TRIMS, COUNTER TORS, ETC. PONTIAC PLYWOOD till Baldwin FE 2-2543 New Bosox Manager Has 'Good Guy' Tag the pen- BOSTON (APT — The Boston ness; It paid off Bed Sox are doing an about nant.. face. Even an Army drill ser- j rt|i other W-0 games, Brighton invades Kettering and Clarkston plays host to Clarenceville. ALMONT TRAVELS Almont, a surprise 21-18 winner over New Haven last week in a Southern Thumb clash, is on the road this evening against another tough league '/ foe,, a Contest this evening at Harbor Capac. Dry den, owner of a 1-0-1 mark ly the Thumy circuit, entertains Memphis in another key contest, while the remainder of the schedule finds Armada at Richmond and Anchor Bay in a non-leaguer at Marine City.' ' Imlay City’s Spartans are 3-0 34-0 win over Saginaw Arthur Milfordi whlle^estBloomMd entertains Nortlville. In the Beach (2-1) in a Greater Thumb (2-1) entertain the Dales and 1 try to make it 44) in 1 the state’s Class C teams. 'Soul** Dodge Fever Relievers Are Here in Pontiac Com* In and na Saul raliam YOUR I Dodg* f uvur. - Motor City Dodg* hoi ' can, Mr. Watt, FfiHiiirii.y So VroUrm MOTOR CITY DODGE 811 Oakland Ave. BEN FRANKLIN COLONIAL ' FIREPLACE STOVE , Mad# of strong, durabln cast Iron. f 25" daap by 32" wida.‘ Hearth Is I 37%" wide. Cait iron grata, 8" fluo b outlat included. Rag. $152.00. ■IBM \ WE HAVE ONE ON DISPLAY FOR 5 YOUR INSPECTION. ALL ACCESSORIES AVAILABLE. ORDER NOW FOR ONLY $118.85, PICKED UP AT OUR STORE* Now Only • SAVE *32.05 *119” TOM’S HARDWARE 905 ORCHARD LAKE AYE. 335 BUY! SELL! TRADE! ... USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADSlX Walled Lake Central against the Skippers of Waterford. SKIPPERS VENGEFUL The Skippers are. smarting from two Successive losses after opening the season on a winning note,, so the Vikings of Walled Lake could be In for a rough evening. The Skippers have an added score to settle, too. It’s PolarisTO z CHARGER m Hete’s a snowmobile 3 with real snap and dwsg-*’ ger. Handles like a sports *». car, rides like a dream. « Quality constructed in $ every way: 15 Vi-Inch ail- * rubber track, one-piece * extra-thick contour seat, •* twin talllights,. optional Z electric start. Go ahead ... take charger Pr«-S«asoit Sale LOW Prieaa On ALL Models Perry’s Lawn and Sport Argentine Entry Race Favorite DETROIT (AP) - Argentine import Figonero was among nine horses entered Thursday for the 21st running of the 8100,000 Michigan Mile and ’A at Detroit Race Course Saturday. Figonero, with Jockey Alvaro Pineda aboard, will carry top weight of 121 pounds. Figonero Is owned by Clement L. Hirsch, president of a racing group which leases Santa Anita track in California. Figonero won the mile and Mi race at Delmar on Labor Day and was installed an earlyfa vorite for the Saturday race as he get a world record of 1:46 1-5 in that effort. Other entries, with post position and Jockey included: S 1, Night Invader,' rider not named; 2, Rising Market, Bill Shoemaker; 3, Tropic King, 2nd, Feraandoo Toro; A; Calandrito, Carlos H. Marquez; 5, Fcgone-ro; 6, Mr. Clinch, BUI Phelps; 7, Irish Dude, Eric Guerin; 8, Mr. Right, Angel Cordero; 9, J.P. McCarthy, Ronnie Campbell. LAREDO RAM TIRES 2 ** *47°° TO FIT THUS CAMi BUICK, CHEVROLET. CHRY3UR. FURY. MERCURY, OLDSMOSILE, POLARA, PONTIAC, taking thaw ,iw» S.23x14, 8.25x15, S. 55x14, S.5Sx1 S, 8.85x14,8.85x1 St All price* plu. Sod. Ex. Tag of 32.11 to $2.74 U.p.iullna on ii>t and 2 tiad. In tlm on your cor -4 tiad*.ln Mnw aft yavr cnr- WHITEWALLS ONLY 3S.OO MORE EACH $88‘ TIGERPAWS WHITEWALL BUM TIRES The widest of the Wide Oval Tires E-70x14r”r. 1850 F-70x14 SPECIAL WIVTER PATROL SNOW TIRES Blamiehad ’ j__ mxm. *|#“ rx.T.ut *If** 8.25x15 SJ5x1R KING 21 W, MONTCALM, PONTIAC sot No PERRY ST. FE 3-7068 nijiCT T,RLS mmi T,RES OPEN DAILY 10 to 10 SUNDAY 11 to 6 SEAT COVERS 288 WW- EACH 8tain resistant, tightly woven nylon. 41-1050 THERMOSTAT f 54 m **ch Nun-currnpiVe. maintain* proper opera I inn temperature, 44-1021, 2II..1IOO, 44-1017. 44.1020, 20:3101. 44-1018 CAS UNI ANTIFREEZE 4m88 I Ounce* 44-2010 BRAKE FLUID 33C For .safety's nake ... be sure your brakes- are in perfect' working condition. 42-1101 BATTERIES Nationally advertised Fink leak' proof battorivM. 46-IOOO-20-50 WASHER ANTt-FREilE 37 A BACH ta Ounce* ' 44-2011 FISK PREMIER > Full 4-ply 100% pre»ure-coolod pre-•tretched nylon cord > Heavy duty butyl inner Unor »FuQ,,<^ptiiMmaI.w^8round t»“d ...IPP Black * all. tubaleac . die Federal Excite Tex *ndtrade i.i tin. off your WHY WAitrCHAWGE ITt TSST3 “14.88 1.79 lOb-13 6.S5-14 tor ———vi 1.94 •foe' .7.36-14 1 7.88 18.88 2.07 7.35-15 19.88 2.68 7.75- 14 7.75- 15 20.88 2.20 2.21 8.25- 14 8.25- 15(8.15) 22.88 2.36 2.38 8.55-14 24.88 2.57 *9.00-15 28.88 2.83' All prices plus Federal ffxclta Tix'»nd tr»dtalo (|fpbff tour csr.WhltewslHS3.QO more eachTWh Hawaii* Why. t 12-rolt exchange WBI4S _ LISTED . itajws "mr New miniature diMip'u permit* SinupUt inttluHatimt in any vehicle even when nptu-o I* at a premium Fully auidntifttc with electronic channel vhunger. All trimxmtnr wild mule unit hu» 6 watt* of ntuxlr power per channel. MODEL # RR4S ST-0 ",? ft|' fc Rk GLENWOOD PLAZA-NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD Dr-6 ESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1909 Avon Jackets Face Wildcats Nothing has been easy lor the [the Jackets have been by total of eight points. There was the 20-14 loss to Milford in the season opener and a 0-4 setback in. Romeo last Friday. ITie lone win was a 12-6 verdict oyer highly-regarded Troy. Yellow Jackets of Avondale this season. The Yellow Jackets are 1-2, with a 1*1 record in the North Division of the Oakland * A Leape, and they’ll try to improve that mark against upstart Oxford tonight. I Oxford, on the other hand, Is SLIM SETBACKS | enjoying its best season in Those two losses inflicted on years. The Wildcats are 2-0-1,1- — --------------, ■ ■■***".1,11 * >1 in die league, and they are : Javoreri by a scant two points In the collision this evening. That’s one of the big ones on the O-A schedule. CrION TRAVELS Another important contest finds Lake Orion at Rochester Adams. Orion, now 1-1 after an , 8-6 loSs to strong Utica Satur- KANSAS CITY (AP) - Run-j^y. needs a victory to stay in ning backs are hogging the spot-'the .running for honors in the light now that three of the top N°rtt> Division. Adams, like passers in National Association' Avondale, has suffered a couple Runners Take Grid Spotlight From Passers SPURS DEFENSE - This is part of the defensive lineup coach Tom Wheatley of Avondale will be tossing at Oxford tonight when, the two tangle on the Oxford field. On the line (from left) are Dan Barker, Bob Bordeaux, Gary Price and Phil Barger, while manning the linebacker spots are Mitch Vo-gelt (left) and Bill %e. In Michigan Waters Salmon Plentiful, Trout Scarce By United Press International iTraverse Bay; Porter Creek in Salmon fishing continues to Lake Charlevoix at Advance; ______^ provide anglers with excellent and at the south of Bear Creek clos* setbacks, the latest ajsport> but upstream trout and atPetoskey. tory-have graduated. 12-8 failure at Oxford last week, brook trout are hard to find. In Grand Traverse Bay, The Wg gifns so far are Mike . , * * * ■ With the official conclusion of , salmon, mostly coho, averaging Saltier of Doane, Neb., Dan| In other games on the O-A the “trout season” at hand, Ehle of Howard Payne and'schedule this e v e n i n g, designated trout streams will be Chuck Riley of Westminster Rochester travels to Lamphjsr, 0 f f. \ j m ;1 $ to Michigan (Utah). Sallier has romped for [Bloom field Hills Lahser }s at i fishermen. Many streams in the 656 yards on 101 carries in three Clawson and Troy visit a lower part of thb state will regames for an average of 185.3 Madison. main open for steel head and yards a game. Ehle has totaled On Saturday, Romeo invades brown trout 653 on 63 carries and Riley 532 on 103. Sallier has scored eight touchdowns to lead the NAIA, ♦ ■ ♦ #.......... The past couple of years they have performed In the shadows of passing stars Sim Byrd of Troy, Ala. State, Sonny Wade of Emory & Henry and Jeff Petrucci of California, Pa., State. New passing leader is Don the Chieftains of Utica. RANKED FOURTH I The salmon are biting'' at One of the area’s top Class A[»ever?I1, nfw locations, including squads will be in action this:the Wes* Arm °* ®ran^ evening in Birmingham when) Groves entertains the powerful Raiders of North Farmington, j North Farmington is 34) and figures to make, its Northwest Suburban League record 2-0 in Dalton, Western Carolina quaH^J=°ntest a*ains‘ Groves. The terback, who lias completed 22 Beiders are. ranked ..fourth ini of 49 passes for 530 yards In two games. Curtis Broome of Lane (Term.) is the top receiver so far with six catches for 144 yards in one game. HEAD FOR SHOWDOWN Femdale and Royal Total offense leader’ Is Ken| Ray of Central Oklahoma with 250 yards on 30 plays in one game, while Bill Dement of Angelo, Tex., State is the top punt- JUPUPI werage on nlTOlMrchlVanas^atlon kicks; Cl,iff Harris of Ouachita Baptist leads In returns with a | 42-yard average. No Barrier Big Enough BOYNE CITY (AP) ■** The Two other Northwdatipower of the Coho salmon’s Suburban games are oh the spawning urge has been naiaers are ranked lounn in the Associated Press poll. TT Saturday slate. Those find Westland John Glenn a f Femdale and Oak Park at Detroit Thurston. ' demonstrated along Porter Creek near Boyne City. SUite biologists report the big fish smashed through one-inch Iron pipes set an inch apart at the mouth of the creek and from 8 to 16 pounds, are being taken in 80 :feet of water about 2549 40 feet from the surface. Coho In Lake Charlevoix, averaging from 8 to. 12 pounds, are being hooked from about 40 to 50 feet down. HITTING At TAWAS The best coho fishing in Lake Huron continues to be at the mouth of the Tawas River, while coho from 10 to 1$ pounds are being caught off Thompson Creek in Schoolcraft County In the Upper Peninsula. Trolling for Chinook at the south-end of Manistee^ train' has produced catches averaging nearly 20 pounds. Chinook Kimball are heading for a;swarmeduPstre®mtosPawn showdown in the Southeastern 59*17* •Exchange - Whitawalls t.OI ntora Itltllf fll. (Idle Tax .51 le .11 Satdty Studs OvtllaM* Open Daily l-l, tat. 1.1 UNITED TIRE INC. 1007 Baldwin Ave. J bUn. from Downtown Pontiac Hear Fisher Body Dl No Mac Knoxella litS 1-J 3.00 2.20 2.40 a <# 400 4.00 3.20 ».I0 Mis* Gay Knox Janidawn 4th—Pace; milat 2:at 3*9 Gomar Nad Lota Stott AnflOs P erf eclat (94) Paid S249.M 7th—Pace; mil Pocket Adam . , 4.4Q 3.20 2.4 7th—Pace; milat 2:03 2*5 Pocket Adam Boy Dlllor Bitty Boy Ith—Trot; mlltt 2: Elbarod Highland Pick , Chris Darts 9th—Pact; milat 2tl Jimmy's Blaze Adlos Rip Pastima Eloisa , 10th—Pact; mill Al Galea 3.40 3.C 13.00 4.20 3.40 9.40 3.40 3.00 Jack's I Smash* Adlos Gala 1700 Cond.' Pact;8? 1 “ Picks Act Bird Sf. Gatlan I A King total handle $444,214 Hazel -Park Entries FRIDAY'S ENTRIES lit—01100 Claiming Pace; 1 Milat Chief Holloway Ell la May Abba Coment Head Mr. Ripper Pride Yatet Guy Cashier Lady Ko San 3rd—17000 Ml Blue Water Duke Brown Sugar Baby Dominion Led Kimway Pointer Celts Pace; 1 J Medlll's Ch Russet's Victory ' Mr. Rolco Dolly J Kenny Creed Content Hello Puiay Cat Joe's Don Juan Mr. Tima 9111-13900 ClalmliHt Pace; 1 Mile. —y Dares Adlos Polo tw Guest Speaker Adlos ' Aerial poug Trefoil Kathy Llll Dang . 10th—11704 cond. Pact; 1 Milat Tyrona Dusty Creed lyt Khuter Gwen's Time m Fitly speedway Dollie Trudy Direct Daa Daa North War Blaze DRC Results THURSDAY'S RKSULtl lot—4 furlongs: 1:13 2*9 In A Plash 9.00 Llks Opera 1 Laurie e. 2nd—4 furlongs; It 13 4-9 Dancing Toy Old Chappy 1.00 9.40 4.00 Eternal Prince Child's Prince Cinnamon Roll 4th—4 lurlongsj ‘Shacky Chi “*■ | furlongs; Dancer Sue Hava's Policy <4*11) Paid 28.20 9.C Dally DOuMat (441) Paid 142.40 Consalatlan Doublet (I MA------ 3rtf-4 furlongs t 1t12 2-f Eternal PrlnCi Child's Prltica £ '1 It 12 1*9 till 4*9 Hunk le Sue DRC Entries SATURDAY'S BNTRIBS . 1st—53409 Cldlmln«; 4 RurIdeas: Vellntln* Baby Bluf’s Tuscanny Amos M. Sunny Alma Doctor Morris Ski Tromp Quarter 'Til Basic Rock Prnc* Ktm Jm’s Baby Th&T/lek._. 1 1/14 Milas: Mora Coins Go Mila Go Ama|«y Blutflrass Parmar Camaron O, Hilts; 1 1 ■*1 ” wmummami * puneti**: Rusty Rock Clatti Would Don Hullo Lordy No Bit O' Chuck Spider'* Quoan Santlmantal II a-Ha's A Raasor Salute Ric Suggestive Gama Orphan BmS Jim Mr, Sunman fir Icotch a-Waltformaboys Baby Tip Jr. BliMbkd a-Pottar-Portney antry -Mb—S34M Claiming; 1 Mila 74 Yard El Palsans Happy Fantasy Mora Martinis Polar Park Catty Cornua HI Pop Terrorist . Hall of Fain* Ring Sharp 4th—110,000 Handicap; 1 1/14 Milas: Miss Julia Ray Psrtlnsnts Moka It Platinum Glanrlck Gran Campaon Admiral Bong Tar Wadrap Tlmilm Dandy Oigaj.jna 7m—S3I00 Allawanca; 4 Furlongs: Irishi Loom o-Champagno Carol Crafty Ambar a-Oray Flay nai 1 . _ PR Nationwide a-P. L. A C. T. Grissom Gold Bdga Handsome Tip Rodty'rtad Battle Pick 49.00 18.< __________ _____ Medlll's Chip Billy Clay Dan Russet's V Cligper Chip Just Prlti 4fth-nMi °Cand. Trot; 1 Mlltt Miss Rambling R4se Seattle Kathy Sharp Cat Daring Dude Darby Mite D. J.'s Annie Alshlre's Abbe Herd To Cetcl • Dual Holary Vnlvas Win* and records at: Bonneville, Bristol, Daytona. Available In Dual Twin and Hurrlcaha Scrambler i fsraaMsrfii AddRHatf BONUS SPECIAL This week-Buy a Dual Twin or Hurrloana Scrambler and net a customized TACHOMETER-a $33.90 valua—for only $12.60| SAVE 181.00. WHIILS. INC. 1313 N. MAIN ITRIIT AOYAL OAK. MICHIOAN PMONB: MI-4141 Nsuty T Not* Worn 7lh—4 (urtongs: 1:11 I Foxy Hamlot Solsmsnlho I Consolstlon Twin: (1-4-I) Fsld •th—4 furlonos: 1:11 1-4 ’ Quaker City Touch ‘ fia 9 th—1 i/ia wines; it at i*s Tap Mlspluy 4.40 4.20 4.40 Devious Miss 20.10 13.4« Shinrone 11.00 Perfects i 17-9) PUld 414100 0/414; fetal handle 4700/lit sin 4*h—4104/040 Handicap; HI Milest 2‘S Night Invader Mr. Clinch j'ag! Rising Market Irish Dude , Tropic Kingi I Mr. Right 7 dsn j CalandrJto , J. p. McCarthy IF Igontro '■" m 7 a6 9th—110/000 Handicap; 1 1/14 Miles. 9 40 8iJLtr Efto|§ Speed Line yJalOnlDUf . Fell Fury { Rock Burner ^Itarfe 7 SO ®’Mr. Reblld b-Chickle's Jaco B.80 Chuting Champ Cold Column Pick and“ Princess Hdp.; H4 Roseberry and Shovel •ss Jo Jo H4 Miles t oX Ole Hub i ! a Kroner b-M. H. Touch A Go Go r's Pll By The Associated Press YORK—Julio Novoa. 199/ Pi ) ointed fteve Shavlln,R51*/i, RENT A CAR *89 1970 Chevy Nova /^.L MAINTENANCE INCLUDED Igulpped with a V-l engine/ eute. tron** mtifion, radio end heater, power steering/ vinyl top/ whitewall tir#»» LA. R. RENTAL i LEASE; Inc. Division ef Metthewi-Nergreaves v * Chtvy-Lend - ‘ 111 oakicii^ «f 0m . Phone FE 9-4101 J Rico, OUfpOi ford/H.Y./ ^ PORTLAND/ Maine—Irish . Jd McDsrmott, 170 Hotvoks, Mass., km out Johjny JornM, 170, Phllsdslpnls, .. 1 MONTREAL—Josy Dursll., tSJV., qua* b«c, and Oav* Dlftmsr, lit, Naw York City, drew, 10. Northville topped Waterford Mott 18-43 in a meet at Mott. Paul Bedford of Northville set a course record of 10:38. Roger Strader placed third for Mott. Bloomfield Hills Lahser took four of the top five places in a meet with Rochester and’ grabbed an 18-41 victory. Mike Manx and Jay Kershen-baun of Lahser tied for first in 10:59. Jeff Smart of Rochester was third. . ^ game winners. “The last few times out there it seemed like I was trying to climb Ml. Everest,” Singer smiled. “I’m Just happy I got fourth for,it.” He got It by the tiniest of margins and Walker Isn’t so sure he has it yet. It was a see-saw game with Three Ex-Titlists Sharing Golf Lead FORT WORTH, Tex. (AP) -r Three former champions were tied for the lead going into today’s third rotuid of the U.S. Senior Women's Golf Tournament. They are Mrs. Marge Mason, Ridgewood, N.J.; defending champion Mrs. Philip J. Cudone of Myrtle Beach, S.C., and two-time winner Miss Maureen Or-cutt, Haworth, N.J. All have 157 totals. Mrs. Mason, the 1967 champ, shot an 82 Thursday. Mrs Ctfc done fired a four-over-par 77 at Ridge Country Club and Miss Orcutt had a 79. Mrs. Lowell D. Brown of Ty-for, Tex., fo two shots behind the leaders. The final round of the 54-hole tournament is set today. Miss Post Wins Pro-Am Title LAKE SAN MARCOS, Calif. (AP) — Pro Sandra Post and three amateur partners ran around the Lake San Marcos golf coarse in 60-54—114 Thursday to capture the pro-am part of the Mickey Wright Invitational Golf Tournament./ Miss Port’s best-ball score of 54 was good enough lor first money of 8150. Ruth Jessen, whose team was in at 118, earned $125 for her best-bell score of 55. SAVE MONEY ON USED AUTO PARTS Wa'ri Now Buying Scrap COPPER-BRASS-ALUMINUM (We Also Pick up Junk Cara) FE 2-0200 Pontiao Scrap 111 Branch At the rate new leagues are forming, It’s not unwise to advise those thinking of forming leagues for the winter se to contact the lanes of. their preference for choice bowling times. High Gsmss-Msryl Gee. 255: Jack Moryi -Bill Gee, 455: Roy Tsulbs*. 451, NOllTH HILL LANBS MsnRsy Night Ladies League First Rise# Teenrs-Four C'l Engine# Ing, won ML loll 2, LAKEWOOD LANES Sundsy Night Mixed Plnspllltrs , High Games -Mlk* Hayden, 321: LI Grlpsnlrog, 210. High Series, Women Euls Vick, 5S4: Betty Bernard, 554. Converslons-Ruby *’ ‘ ' Lakeweedert Fi High Games- A. SI. Benedict's Mixed L*H«* High Games—G* Bill lidwerds, 303. Stars A Strip* High Garnet—Frank Thick, i, 111: Sill Series Games—Gerry DeFreyne, 321: NORTH HILL LANE! _____ ____ Game—Karl VenOeMogr- tell, 279. Men's High Series-Bob Grenio, 724. Women's High Games—JoAnn* Bell. 231) Belly Bevllu, 332. YBA Junler League High Games and Series-Tony lellz. 347-741; Georg* Reichert, 243445. Fry, m 107; Hgtor Weslsld* III* Oemts-Jag Or«nl 5771 I __ HR Clyde' 221; Ted Grant, MV; Oborgg Perk- EE .nr BOWL Geme^Bonnto11 ftugtnl, »7l Dot- Brwdlng?*tW.*~Hh>h siriet-Don'' OlitK 534; Ray Brown, 111; Frank Rulkow ski. end- Sarlto. 279-453, Gome and Striae—Warren Phipps. ter Mixed/ jt Treacy, 437; Of va tie. • -/ Sylvan Lake Me* / Hign semes—Art Lewis. 357; J. C. Bolton, 333; Lou VanAttor, 331. High Series—Art Lowls, 4S2; Chuck Spack, 413; J. C. Bolton, 410. . HUBON BOWL / Firebird Hl-Los f High Gom* ond-Sorlos—Donno Herron, High Games—Paul Dolko, 1341 W«avtr, 255; Norm Koolav, Huron Bowl Classic Games—Bob Lowry, 379; Noll Wrlonf/ AIRWAY LANES Serifs—Karl Smith. 264-MI; Carl H( ------------------------ 196-957; Wanda Howail/ 309*983. the lead changing hands four ™' s^iTs'^or'c times after Ted Sizemore b»rl*,n- ‘70) Bob L#*rv- *«< 0«r»* slapped his. fourth homer of the year in the first Inning for Los Angeles. But it was tied going Into the ninth and Stinson, making only his third start of the year, opened with a single. Singer sacrificed him to second wal Maury Wills, who was celebrating his 37th birthday, bunted for a single and the Dodgers had runners at third and first with one out. CALLED SAFE 1 Walker then brought Jack BiUingham, a fornjer' Dodger JJTJ'atj; Wheatley, 542; Jo* Qrotn, 111. Conlury Pilch—John Curoon, ,324. -----Airway Youth Loeguo* - - High Gam* Prop*—Kovln Edwards. 159. High Sorlos Prop*—Kim Portray, 407. High Gam* and Series Peanuts— Kay-FtMan, 131-323. High Game, Junior* —Klm Peaenon, 200. High Sertoi, Juniors—Tom Schmidt, 513. High Gom* and Sorlos, Malore^-Corky Lang, 91444. ; Traveling 333-414. Oam* and Series-Corky L*ng, Ponttoc Motor Tempos! Loogu* It, tUl 407; John Voelpel, Flits, 343; smith, 345. High 431; Mlrv Krug- OUt of the bullpen to pitch to Sizemore. But Billingham’s first pitch was in the dirt and got away from catcher Johnny Edwards. Stinson raced for the plate, Edwards raced for, the ball. Hie ball and Stinson got to the plate at the same time and Olsen called Stinson safe. The Dodgers raced to congratulate Singer and Walker charged* Olsen with something less than congratulations on his mind. It was a wild scene on the field and Walker was still throwing everything in sight when he reached the clubhouse. HOUSTON „LO* ANOaLBS Moroan 3b 5 0 11 Wills JAlou rf 5 8 2 8 Slzen . tBSvIb Iff 4 8 18 WDevtl eff _ . NMHtor if 4 110 Crawford rf 3 1> $ Btofary lb aoji Ltfibyro Sb Monk* so 4 3 2 0 Porker 1b Rldor 3b 4 0 13 Joshua If Edwards o 3 113 Oobrlo sn p» JR»y p ' 3 111 Russall If Marflnoz ph f 000 ijlnson * 4 13 Bouton p 0 0 0 0 iingor p 3 0 0 Lampord ph 1 0 0 0 BIMWohSip ml 114 Total—Ja7iT 5 0 2 0 I.} i 0 5!iempr* 3b 4 13 j Sartos, Woman—Jerri Roy, 540; ..........trios, Mon Martinson, 523; Gordon Norm, More* Ostorhout, 137, —Jerry Martinson, 3 535; Jim McVoHy, SIS, savAyumss High Gemos and StrlM, MHNMtrr Kipp, 257-404; Ed Pry, 23-595. High Gemoi and Sartos, Women—Terry Him, 212-440. Chrlt Bernard. -Marilyn SUVA High Series, 243-541. High S*rlg«, Mtn -Don Docker, 335-401. Savoy Hit and Haro High Garnet-Ken Mltolr, 334;- Don Stoughton, 310. High Sorltt-Km Mlltor, 573; Id Sonnanborg, 533. WRSTSIDR LANBS ■ Indepondent LadlM j High Series—Dee Venn*, 304-5731 Kerm Bateman, 333-554. Westsld* Classic , High Games—Ed Austrsng, 257; Bill Reeve's, 244; Bob Moore; 243. High Series—BID Moshlmor, 454; Mlkt Floras, 445; Jerry Pern*. 441. Pontiac Housowivst High Gome-Bvelyn Milder, 241, High Barry's Loss Is Big Chunk SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-Hlck Barry would have gotten $92,509 more lor playing with the San Francisco Warriors this year than he ’ fo getting from the Washington > Capitols, lawyers revealedThursday. .The figures came out In U.S. District Court where lawyers sought to p fight an ihjunction that forbade Barry from playing professional basketball for anyone but the Capa. A STRIKE — Sometimes a bowling instructor will aug-gest that you set your thumb at “11 o’clock,” or perhaps “1$ o’clock.” He is thinking of the celling as being the 12 on such a dial and he wants your thumb to be pointing Just slightly to the left as you release the ball. The tendency for t most bowlers la to turn the thumb much farther and this should be avoided. CAMPER TRAILER SALES AND. RENT Ail PANTHER of PONTIAC 2274 tlLiORAPH RD. PHONE 339-5149 Acroaa From' MIRACLE MILE Mets Drop Pfeil “ CHICAGO (AP) ~ The New; York Mets dropped rookie In-fielder Bobby Pfeil from thett*. player roster Thursday to reach ’ the legal limit of 25 for their NSrV tional League playoff with tha Atlanta Braves atartlng Saturday In Atlanta. ’ Death Notices BROWN, MRS. IDA J.; October 1, 1969; 14 James Street; age 80; dear mother .of Mrs. Mary Nutting, Mrs. Opal Curtis, Mr. Gall Brown, and Thomas Brown; dear sister of Mr*. Ethel Shannon; also survived by 22 grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Saturday, October 4, at 10 a.m., at Huntoon Funeral Home, with Rev. Robert Shelton officiating. Interment in Beach Grove Cemetery, Muncle, Indiana. Mrs. Brown will He in J state at the funeral home. KUERBITZ, CARL J,; October 1, 1969; 26 West Kennett Street; age 72; dear father of' Mrs. Howard Hubble, Mrs. Arthur Icier, Mrs. Bernlch Hicks, Mrs. Betty Stockwell, Mrs. Carl Martin, Albert, Carl Jr., Arnold, Jimmy and Eugene Kuerbitz; dear brother of Arnold Kuerbitz; also survived by 87 grandchildren and 12 great-g r a n d c h 1 Idren. Funeral service will be held Saturday, October. 4, at 1. p.m., Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home,' with Pastor Ralph C. Claus' officiating. Interment in White Chapel Cemetery. Mr. Kuerbitz will lie" In state st the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours are 3 to 5 and 7 to 8). * MURRAY, JOHN L.; October 2, 1969 ; 3069 Brack# Keego Harbor; age 68; dear brother of Mrs. Charles (Inez) Parker. Funeral service Will be held Saturday, October 4, at 11 a.m., at C. J. Godhardt. Funeral Home, Keego Harbor. Interment in. Roseland Park Cemetery, Berkley. Mr. Murray will lie In state at the funeral homo after f o’clock tonight. (Suggested visiting hours are 3 to 5 and 7 tp 9), WATSON, MILDRED D.; October 1, 1969; 660 Wist Brown Street, Birmingham; age 73; beloved wife of George M. Watson; dear mother of Mrs, John Ge«r; dear slater of Mr*. Irving , Lancaster, and Raymond Richardson; also survived by three grandchildren. Funeral service will bo- held Monday*. October 8, at 11 a.m.; 'jpt Sparks-Grlffln Funeral Home.’ Private Committal aervipe'at White Chapel Cemetery. Mri. Watson will lie In state at tea funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours are 3 to B and f to 9), The family suggests memorial > contributions may bo made to oaa’i own charity. ' for Wont Adi Dial 334-4981 ' L .Ty -t-/’1* v v., u jjY THE PONTiAC PRESS. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, 19B9 m p Dial 834-4981 r f* ? (Mart,HimM,|j.t) ■If* (Ssl. • Is 2,10) Si* or 332-8181 , (Men. thru 3,1.) . frsm I A.M. 10 3 F.M. <»■•-1 to I) . Pontiac, Pro*! W6nt Adi ««Ia$t action NOTICITO ! AOVfkTIlfRS ads siciivio sy sp.m, Will M PUSIISHIO IHI ' following oav. All MM iheul* bt Ipulwtjtfir, er no lain tan ih. liny following puUlcqllen, If no noli. WWf •! Mgptr I. mod. by that •lm»i jt gill H alMiwod the ad It I boon randdrod value* I banilanl Want All la 9 a.m. I > la gal you, "Kill NUM- Claim* lima far advanliamanli it agala type li 12 o'clock naan ny provieui ta aubliaallan. CASH WANT AD PAHS •ccomponiat ordor) 1*0«y 3-Doye 6-Doye U l» mailt ftr utt tf Pontiac Press IK numbare. Tho Pontiac Proit Cldilifiod Dapartmont MOM • A.M. ft 3:30 P.M. Lost and Found • ■ | mas. old. Whlta tri chttf and from Wearing^ choJja ___c_h a I ft, word "food", Leaf toon Sspt. fl, in * vicinity of sttS^Charstf, Pontiac. WHITI MALI iby pood la. 1 Orlevlng chlldran would Ilka tho do# back. Ft 54341, 'rawer*._/ Hal# Wanted Mato 4 I IMMBDIATI VACANCIRS FOR I GROUNDS KEEPER I / $2.73-33.30 PER HOUR I Plus: Family Blua Craoi-Blu* Shlald Ufa Iniuranco _ koflramonl plus Social locurlly Legal, tick and vacation Bays Tuition raliMMfjtmeni QUALIFICATIONS: II ta 40. Michigan Llcanoa, tth grad* aducolloo, raildant of MNnM County, ddslrabla that applicants BOX REPLIES At 10 «.m. today thin W«ra replies at Th« Fran Office in t boxes: , C-2, C-3, C-5, C-25, C-27, C-29, C-34, C-36, C-39, C-40, C-SO and C-55. Help Wonted Mile V ■ draftsmen, /: Layout Inspectors, Electricians, Hbne Operators lot-up axparlanca raqulrad. 8k-o col Ion t bonofitt, itoaay tmf m""‘ M. C. DIVISION _ KELSEY HAYES CO. Ill Indlonwood Rd.. Liko Orion. Hll -- An iauei’OPPartimlty employ DETAIL DRAFTSMEN, aoma ox-parlanca daolrad, would eonoldar a night School .ludan., |iprL~‘:> benefits, yaga larva Control 't Trey. WMSW. If WIT Baikat of ff> tf. Huntir, 444455j ________ DRY CLRANfek fflD^Meriar, Oakland County Court Houm I parlancad. good pay, hoHdayi, i too n. .Telegraph Pontiac yacatlani. Call tar anaamti THE PERSONNEL DIV.,ffeSR, tTOynNamflc. PH,! 338-4751. Ext. 4fS *-"rffcl^MCPC------- . A merit ayaftm DtblONfcKb And equal opportunity omployor 25 MEN WANTED EVERY DAY 6 A,M. r KELLY LABOR j (MinT arlrw “bg^raqulrad! IH N. Saalnaw I M4-24Sf er tt507tt._______ DRAFTSMEN ' on tost aqulpment and Help Wilted Mali GAS STATION ATTENDANT, parlance*, mechanically Ind lecal references. Full or part l Quit, Telegraph ana Mpf.. Foundry Laborers Wanted Systemation plications contact: 349-5230 TroundskeepeT time aoaltlon avallab undskeep 4 Help Wilted Milt LATHE OPERATOR i experience ntcaisery, axil wage* and fringe banatm, y ' eJevirfima, .ra»vt .and noon a. Apply at Ban ton Plvhton,. •nduatrlal .... Bat wean Id and CdaTldet Hwy. LATHE', MiLL I NEEDED IMMEDIATELY 10 SHARP MEN ■ M 18 TO 25 at 332-3639 m NEEDED AT ONCE I hr. Vouno man to do clap,n up, peril chaaar and atetlon i „ , work tar now cor dealership, to ska In person — 'Mr. Keh and Johnson, Bull Johnson Fon-functlan.ln email , MW W Lake frlon. manufacturing plant. Must ha able MAN WITH BODY shop experlanct, 41 Help Wilted Mile STATION ATT1NDA all IrIngas. 114 MAlNtlNANCB AND iiugMr. fenis® WANTED TRUCK MECHANICS ' lanced, HI 1. Walton Blvd. rRviCrmtieif' Kfinlfin lull limn day mechanic, min til' tools, ilM Mr weak for tight ma Call Ml "woe._____j___ Turret Loth# Operator , ifiwf^wws'^and1 frYno-1 Gas or diesel. Liberal pay, rtafe insurance furnished, retire. • A-MfcHrM:V.n il ment and full benefits. Sse eiVlRLY MANOR ORFRRS R.N.'i, L.P.N.'s. NURSES AIDES the aft portunlty la care tar eur seen ladlas and gontlaman. MOM t fMl contribution In nursint by tarvlne paapia who need YOU. Please apply and Iff us toll you tha Beverly ' alary and BecOPMjI lMthber of the Bavarly family. You rewardad. Wt will tra ft Bavarly Manor Canyals Center. It? Orchard Like Avenue, 1 Itraat (Pontine a K rX’alr luring | and IS Mila RdS„ off Cooldoa aa, t.. >. A.in rim General Hetpllal). Hwy. / i* Mr. toe. o O.m. to 4i3U p.ns. hauvsittfr LIVE lama and mining, machtnd, do tom* tools and pr# iaWba iigrh. F>r|-flfh< day -thift. only. Plax^dbla Cnrp. lire Stevansdn Hwy.. Troy. MANAGER FOR AUTO WASH, ax- wrtanw hdlptul, 'tut1 tjgl wawiiem Kuhns Aula wash, 14* W. Huron. SISQ. wwy. fejiBH. / fiTALTAND RimAlI HfCeyyaftttjl for construction work In trw/lf. WI5, call evenings altar » p.m. MAN WANTED FARflllM PT.'»U» time prafarrad, alaady position, shipping, rsdilvlng and custodial dutlaa, muat have . automohlla driven license. ThomaatjJdWdlrv Co. El 4-lMy. Meridav-Fridy, I MAN WITH exptrlinc'f or will train tor Inatalilng heating and tlr conditioning. Stddoy work. Call aftar * p.m„ MMill. _ „„ MEN fO bp JANITORIAL Work fij offices and schools. In the City Jf ■m. ss.se ewmjin JH-WmL Orion, OPPORTUNITY With a future In plastics, same parson with mechanical ability, chance to warn malntananca of Inlactlon molding presses arid maid Mtflript. Day wilft, a v a r f l m a premiums. Apply In parson Men.-Frl, I a.m.-4 p.m. to: APPCO »« W. Maple Walled Lika PART TIMi TEMPbRARY position, preparing income tax returns. Prat PLANT ATTENDANT To operate and maintain t TOOL AND DIE Monday thru Friday. troy firm .needs men' experienced /"'T'K K(~* pooling for tub* ftbrlcdlon, s*i , 'OrlVI'sy . feucK ."bWiVeR” "PbR ".j • f t *,. . Truck Center, Chauffeurs license requIredj Ma.rr- board 8H m, Oakland at Cass _^FI 5-9485 to Mil lOfOO ticket luxury Item*.; - Call FE 5-5460. STOCK MAN alart youno man. lull tlma* day «hlff,s fraa Hut Croi*, penilon, holiday and vacation pay. L30. per 5 Mnd«..non«. m- *'“'»«•' vle,nlty' nWd. you, C4. meresied porllss may obtain an BABVSiftER.,MV HOM^vklnHy ™"r v • • -i3.il,iz. r_. .-.I-., inijt.m.iinn 0I Crescent Lake Rd. and Tubhi et 446 /eoe. y -m so» -m. —^ Rd. 6:10 ».m, - 3. 473-0626. : BARMAID AND WAITRESS, will BABYSiffiR, CLARKSTON area, TeMV. *BPlV Pav*on waca. 7» ■ ■ Huron* Pontiac* Mich. Fhona ■........RE ______ _______________ Roehaslar ara*. *5l »ja*. - . iccouNtiwo clerk ^ PHARMACIST SURFACE GRINDER HANDS, for l|„ work wllh llghl Modern suburban store, sxceilsnl grturasslva dies. *la»*y s* Hour experience lor builders office. Ai u.___.____! weak, all fringes. 334-6#,_____ lor Mrs. Sags, 3344W3. £5KolrC5?|YWO OTed xar porters need- I ASSEMBLY COUNT ER and mi 447-4314, ar go, ggod working conditions, girl, no sxperlence necessary. __J-------many fringe benefits, uniform* ply In parson, MAM Cleaners, "“’barmaid, PULL OR p and inturence provlJed. Apply Orchard Lk, Rd„ Keego Harber._ ;B6355 etler 12 noon for ATTENTION OENTAL HYjyfi^ST. gAMAlO AND waliri TRUCK ORIVER WANTED, Romeo Are there eny married hyglMlitlj „r> time, night shift grta. 78^***. ......_.... - In th* Mllfard, Highland or Whit* win train, apply In par fHE CITY OF WIXOM, Is accaptlng Laka-araas who would want to go pm Airway Loung applications for th* position ol back to work t or 2 day* a weak, Highland Rd., (M^5*l. Police Dept. | If so wrH* Box 43, Mlllord,|gj^;|R ^r Dry cnenlng Plant Oakland county upon appointment. back to work It SO Writ* BOX 44, minora, Michigan. - ‘T Young lody Over 40 | TO 17,200 to train for porionnoll ..Clynortr- 4420.___ BAR WAITRESS* NIGHTS, axcollant - -T—T Aogt 2) B, Pika It. throuBh Trial baianca, 9 you 2*000 4 past DOT physical qulromtnft and hava all iaai truck driving 1949 at Trantcon Unat* 4195 Can-tral Avis* Dotrolt, Michigan. An Equal Opportunity Employar. ■ . J mmmu p w«okondl__4iff y tad nartiat may obtain an bab1...... ....... Crescent Laka bv'wrftlng. f ho Chlavof Foilcl [mm _________________I____I_____■_______ 4*045 Pontiac Trail, Wlxom, 4*0*6 nve in ar out, 4354547 after I. ----------SCSMS®.---------------- baby sitter, oBer women; „ „ TAILOR M.nv n&hH, *15. 335^3*0, no call*'a Full tlma and part timt. many ■’sm fringe banoflts. ------------------f-----♦--r-^ SACKS HU 5th AVf rmln^jhai ca. Typing 50 Good itartlnq i Management “4 COUNSELOR* all you i MATERIAL HANDLER preform man •hilts' In plastic molding •bath Lika Rd. Lcjse^ight ORAYTON PLAIMt S744H4I t.J, OODHARPY -MIlilERALMOMt Kaaflo Harber. PH. tSMMO. - Huntoon IV FUNERAL HOME Sarvlno Pontiac tar SO years -I*. Oakland *«■ ■ PE Mil* SPARKS-GRIFFIN ■ PR Mill VoorheesSiple FUNERAL HOMR. 111101 Esiahllshed Over 45 Yssrs , 4 LOTS, WHITE CHAPEL, Teal Evans, CHOICE COMPANIONLOT, Garden ■ Ht* Anyx^Cnristlan Msmerlai Saklai ___EMSI -CALL DEBT CONSULTANTS 131 free. WIG. .wiq_partt*s, 5-3*53, 474-4433. HOME OWNERS; HUD wants I housing • coda In Pontiac. Tuesday your city commission (iotas on this naw Housing Cada^lf passed vou'r* ham* will tf erchsd lor violations. I m a If—era yatif ________________________ IF exparwnc*. Open St fringe MHaftt*. Apply Personnel Department, 405 Cauri House, Flint, Michigan 41501 EXPERIENCED American Piastle Product Co. 2701 W. Maala - W*H*d Lake; EXPERIENCED BOOKKEEPER, I part tlmq college student* lor parts rooms and Inventory control. guar Mil or 111 N. Talagraph Insurance. HYDRAULIC C 0 m“m’eJRC I A L Bl«nl'""Gooq ring* ASSEMBLER. Bxparlancad or Kf™, VVVY------------ Kest Irslnee. Plpnlv ol overtime, good w tf la bi uftcSss1' Day Instaset Corporation 1.*r!e.*W.» 1330 Piedmont St. Eauai oaaortuniiy Troy, Michigan____________ modernization SSlIsman - , 132 *157. 6Help Wilted Mile c*X, AMBAC Ir . Raw, Tn Employar. ACCOUNTING Cost actfuntanti sutfrvlsor cost section, muitG* temlibr with |ob order costing, evarhaad analysls, profit mareln analysis, w# warn a man who will nandla tha eomplata cost ralatsd function (or th* can-troilar. Dagrs* net nacassanr. Apply or tand resume to. Bantqn Division, AMBAC IndUStl Industrial Row, Trqv. between 14 and IS Mila Ceclldc* Hwy._______ AUTO MECHANICS 155 Oakland Ava. AUTOMATIC BARTENDER must ba fast altar 12 noon BURNER SERVICEMAN, WAGES, Tlma and • ban ana ■ ‘ ... Blua Cross plans, FOR AIR COIL refrigeration: ......... ,tar round work etlrbllshsd firm. Fgr Intarvlaw cel 144* E. Hamlin I Mlchleart. EXPERIENCED TANDUM HELP WANTED o day at a timt rafaranett. 187-9500. EXPERIENCED. RELIABLgriober, man, machanlcally inclined to atsuma building anglnaart lob In w£vbunvvpA,q;l Pontiac, .giving rasums of work sxMNftcaiiybackji round ELECTRONICS ENGINEER To work with R. and d. group. Pleas# sand resume to, Pontiac Praia. eox C-47. Pantlac 44056. E X PERIENCED MAINTENANCE Man wanted, private club. Call HI-SMI. EXPERIENCED TREE TRIMMER * a.m. to S p.m. , EMPLOYERS .Temporary Service, Inc. FERNDALE 2320 Hilton Ri REDFORD 26417 Grand RjVl CLAWSON CiNTM L..J— .... An Equal oiftortunlty Employar Opbqrtl Employ HYDRAULIC LAB ASSEMBLER. Expartancad or trainee. Plenty of ovartlma, good wages, and fringe benefits. Including luliy paid blua crest. Day shift. Apply at Banton Division AMBAC Inauitrlwb M» Industrial Row, Troy, equal Op-portunlty Employer. , INSTALLMENT LOAN train**. Apply at Pontiac Slat* Bank, main Journeyman with S years toillding •xasrl -- --- s......-7r- || 335211 rlence. paw Construction Co. MECHANICS, MECHANIC. HatoV*. Apply Kaaga laws and Mrvto. 30*a Orchard j NM “-------- I machine OPERATORS ,C Examinations: DEPUTY DOG WARDEN $7,300 TO $8,200 Plus Excellent Irlngs benefits E. Partridge 1050 apply 1S4 N. Parry, Real Estate Office 333-7156 Miller Bros. Realty RETIREE FOR PORTER WORK Evening Shift Bio eo9"i>R*ve IN ~ i Dixie Hwy. SHIPPING AND RECEIVING htltfr. Town and Country furnhura,. 4107 Telegraph Rd., Bleamflgld Hills. SERVICE STATION G«s pumpers, full tlmg days, Sundays off. Call Ml 741700.__________ Phono 651*4377 361 South Street Rochester, Michigan ' An equal opportunity alnpteyar J AN, 10 YEARS OR Otbttt, tor ganaral work In furniture store. 144! Oakland Av*. MAINTENANCE MAN PLi train For,/uR, O I HONING RET- Jaa Ouarantaad veer 3*3-4154 batwaanr ( INSPECTOR. EXPERIENCE orator-rad, or will train. Mint ba abl* to wiin people and nova nna use stand Impaction equipment and or .public contact axparlanca, reed blua prints. Afternoon shill. wa will train "you. Exceptionally Good wages and trlntf banaflts, ■ ■ ...._________________ high garnlngs first year. Spelling: Including *««/ pijd Blua Cross, Full tima *n indgitrlal Rew,| SACKS k.|i v exVi cfi~rVn—'furnSce Trey. Equal Opportunity Employer. 'if ----------I INSTALLMENT LOAN coiiiictar.! Big Baavar at* Coalldtf. Summer- ........Pontiac Itato Branch, Mall, Troy Apply Parawtaal Off lea. Salesmen WO needed to Mil now cars and trucks. Will train tha right person, prefer some sales backgraund, demo, good, pay plan, (ring# benefits, apply In person at wg Oakland Av*., Pen. Salesmen Appointments. BOILER OPERATOR Pull tlma position In hospital power plant. Licensed or abl* to obtain (leans* In * months. Excellent (ring* banaflt program, Including paid blua cross and Ufa Insurance. Apply St. Joaaph Marcy Hospital, *00 Woodward, Pontiac, hospital Inturanca, paid vacations and other (ring*' benefits. Apply hi parson Kast Heating A Cooling Co. FOREMAN ___ Corp. Ifikf i background In plastic i for shift 1 capabN based fringe cali4E Instaset Corporation 1330 Piedmont St. Troy, Michigan smmar-l BECAUSE parson,! LEADS FOR IALLY El HAVE JANITOR, MACHINE ASSEMBLERS MACHINE AND BENCH HANDS WE OFFER:* Excellent working conditions —. Suburban loeatlan, day shifts, excellent wages plus n Inc. 23400, Haggerty Rd irmlngton, 474-7100, axf. 50. EQUAL OPPORTUNITY Cud financial Md Inc TltoV Yea nr* _ having f n^srVonfe they can no* FE 2-0181 'cn ANb ApfER , this' "oat! I (ring* benetns. jdltig' fully Mid blua Croat. Adpty tf Benton Division AMBAC Industries, 3*70 Industrial Row, 1. Trey. Equal Opperlunltv Emalayar. R CHRISTIAN RECORDING and Salts £tl C5K needs part tlma halo Immediately. Ouarantaad aalary, no exp. needed. 1-7555554 Warren, Michlfliw, _________;_________ EMPLOYER JANltOR FULL tlMR 515-1454, ,___________■ LABORERS - NO EXPERIENCE PULL TIME SERVICE station, ax- necessary. Education no barrier, pfrlancad, S1i» »« *V»« *«•”»- 95? Birmingham art. r*ll,blll'v‘ ,l wanted BRUNSWICK pin lumpar Also lanlfor. Apply 114 Oraehard Lake Ava, Pawfffc. ^ ■ .. WORKING PORBMAN FOR .small teal shop an samlfraductlon tool work. Familiar with turret lalhts, all ban* * 4*17. I WANTED LaIorERv not ba myttlf UsfEndFound_____ 5 GLUE SHETLAND Colli*, tomato, offer raward cash or 1 puppy, fhtreuflhbrad. PE 5I0W. 425431*. lost: Small whit* 5 apricot ppodia, malt, vicinity of Wlsner Stadium, 14 Summit, 3154*SS. L G i T I PIKiMW ~btf htiiund pup, chlto's pat, sis RoWnwawC.-—- Ufifi SufiK'YBY • paodlt, eon- Wm§: aS^6^wnnmirwr~- - r*w,fd-, >iWTt \eLaCR p66dl« Ih Rarry v Park with rad rhfnastona collar. Coil 134-4i24. iismsms ^CARPENTERS 3*1-324t ar WI-337S or 1H4MI1 CARPENTBI^,^INUH ONLY, COOK, 5 ta 4 nlghts. musf ba ax callant an braltor, dependabla — proper parson. Duffys, Union Lak* 335*48*. fiAfToPFiR A PERMANlNTJab to a man who can ba an tha ■ lot •vary night. If p.m. to 7 a.m shin, mutt ba railtbia, sober era able lo supply rdtorancat. Apply at * ' Oil, *5*4 Dlxl* Hwy., plgtflc alanl. 1701 W Walled Lake, Michigan. __ »OR FUTURE Record Recordmq* A PRiTCHETTE NEEDS . MUSICIANS Wb» can /aa* ^^wrjto^muito and want an Inskto lab Winter, see Gary WIIIIl..... H Wlggs Warehouse, 355, Friendly Rd. bahinr’ Mired# Mil* Shgpplng Center, ggneral warehouse worki (or reliable men, no drunks.___ LICENSED BOILER OPIRATGR th# This I* tlrong Interest It fishing. Ptv commtntursl* background *nd axperltnc*. Excellent employe# benefits elude: Purchai* discount Pan vacafwn-Halldayi Inturanca-pantlon programs Silt •valiqble. Liberal salary plus afternoon differential, .axcallanl frlnoa benefit*. Apply Ferionnel Office. CRITTENTON HOSPITAL Unlvtrtlly Dr phone mtcrvl Pontla ■end a ihort outline of your u» axparlanca. apt and number for aqpolnlmanf tor aw to Praia Vex No. C-24. Help Wonted Male PIANO (or) ORGAN . PLAYER (who Ml arrangement nblllty) DRUMMER, BAII GUITAR., clvanHI pslroleur NO • SPOTTER for TwfiSftardfe CONTRACTORS Ganaral CaWrKtaf — Accepting ■Ms Pram SulKanlractors on All Trades. IM Unit Aparirngnt P"'y.\ Mason Cantlructlon i lit iW Pbntiac Press •" Want Ads ; For Action “ IUST CALL 334-4981 CHECKERS DETAILERS Special Machines Automation agrse- ime and urged to I professionals and tnfly formed BAl fecord, royalllles written contract. toil _ avanlne. er prncllcs prepare. II b* arranged: m m ‘ kd M No barriers of tax, race, ner ags. Tai Mr. Sanawritfar , pgr Audition AMoMinMftf ■ kindly Mall Your RaqMM . PRITCHETTE ENTERPRISES cliy'oflonitacT fitciiotn FACTORY HELP Over II yaara, stoadv work, all banaflts. Apply M0 E. ft Mil* Rd., • Ptrndalt.Mich. v Vull qr Vary »Wi* 'hjiB, sWVfc* i station ar yrackardriver, ax-wrlanifgtr flWH*., ■ kAaoW wDRK‘■foreman ey*r~M, simple arllhmstlc r * q U Ir Rd . WtW" ov*r?lm*nCstoS}vI ^S’lt ^Mtoc ^ *** ISW wTVAFLBROrTROY Mr, WHtor, SjK4S4fc arsfilftf. 6mie^F|^7*arfffmi;iun j oiRgSyylwfid I1LIVIRY HILP N 1161 dfRTKAL LAioliRl,^ R.Mltt. Inc., Chlgkan Dsllghl, 11M ’W, Huren */ toSI Haggarty Hwy., Waited Lak*. M N. Parry’ 1 M4442f. 6HgI» Wontsd Mott DO'YOU WANT TO BE YOUR OWN BOSS? SHELL OIL COMPANY -aj PONTIAC AREA ; FRANCHISE AVAILABLE • PAID TRAINING • FINANCING AVAILABLE CALL'MR. ZOLMAN , DAYS: J535-8500 Nights and weekends *37-7206 Hudsons Pontiac Mall Wawtad Malt 6H*lp Wanttd Mala : WANTED, MAN. VRTff ability, Jo strata* all I ir luge b*n(fllt, ■ y«»r n™™ work tor quallfltd P*r*on. Apply In Parson only 151 I. Paddock, Webb 1 FualCc. ' . ] 1 WAftfisb: Mlfi 45 to 55 y**re old 1 for portor work. Day and evanlng snmt. Apply altar 4 p.m. Big Boy Ratfauranl. 14*0 Dlkl* Hwy. WANTib: AUfS Wifi, eiark. mutt b* sxpsrltnced In tailing naw and raGtolt part* tor all cart. Apply Hellarback Auto Parts, 273 Baldwin Av*. Ph. 3354054. WANTED: ^AAN CAPABLi of learning Marin* mKhanlct trad*. Over 3) yaart of ag*. Fringe bensllts, IntortsltdT Call PI V ' ENGINEERS Engine & Foundry Division of Ford Motor Compony has txcellBnt opportuntits. immsdiattly availablt In turbint and industrial area fori • Material handling Engintore - BSIE dograo with automotivi experience. • Plant Engineering Designers r* BSME degree with axperitnci in design layout and construction. Exctlltnt itartlnq aalary plu* llbaral frlnqa banaflt*. tand com* .platl rt*um» to: -—.——' ~ ., ■ Engine & Foundry Division , FORD MOTOR COMPANY 3001 Miller Rood Room 3030 Dearborn, Michigan #48121 An Bqusl Opportunity Empleyar (Help Wanted Mai# * 2 roduction Workers NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY All of.the GM Benefit Programs will accrue as you enjoy Top Earnings with a winning team Make Application vat Employment Office 8 A.M. to 4 P.M. , 1 ■ 1 3 m | MONDAY THRU FRIDAY FISHER BODY DIVISION i BALDWIN AV*. PONTIAC \Phnns Jllll 331-1141 “ AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER TELEVISION TECHNICIANS RCA Immediate openings for felevlsion technicians, experienced and trainees. 1 These are career positions offering excellent salary and fringe benefits that include paid vacations, holidays, sick leave, medical insurance, life insuraner and'a modern retirement plan. Additional (earning possibilities, planned advancement, company-provided vehicle and tools. Extended training program in advanced electronics. ' \ G* CALL MR. BAFfRETT FOR INTERVIEW) 335-6118 ■ • 9 A.M.-6 P.M. ■ f MONDAY THROUGH SATl)RDAY AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER THR PONTIAC PEtfe, FRIDAY, OCTbBgR 8, 1089. Htlp Wowtid 7 Mf }/lmItflhmilB FULL TIME CLEANIN U Mil* Rtf. i I Mr*. Corby% < oVNAir "tt¥N6TI'?~hiK.......sx- parlance not necessary. Pontiac Laundry, 140 I, Telegraph. 1 GENERAL OFFICE, bookkteplng CLERK-TYPIST •ranch ottlc# of noth company. Abovd avari conditions. Excallant banaflta. Knowledge i general office procedural required. Cell Mr. Priybylskl, M4-2254. CREDIT WOMEN i .ppiy Ricky.,... Credit work and collectlone tor grill COOK and gem retail etore. AH phases of retail work, Donnell's, 2775 Keypunch Optrators Wo have bnmedlete opening: day, and aftarnoon shifts In Pontiac dree. KELLY GIRL Arn N. SMimiw $38 -033$ or 442-9650 -.Atf. ltfuil ppponuNliv Emplowr KITCHEN HELP FULL or pari-ir II yuan. Yduo i, 5)71i MONTS, ‘full'-. tlm>gi Evtrgrttn Conv*l*»c*nt Horn# Rtf., Ltfkt Orl j HOUSEKEEPER. ALSO. FlKaMno l adi if ft houMktgptra* Bln 9ll»Wlitt44».7999» Cam r> » $;30 l chttt party. Call HOUSEKEEPER, FOR BEAUTY Salon, part tlmf, 4 day wk.* — ----- Barnard Hair Stylist — mi 7-3033. .‘JFJanar. j5e*w 'HOUSEKEEPER - BAtvI'lftil i ciaanara, jot w. w,„tod. Mon-Frl., 11:30 to 0 p.m. Birmingham araa. Coll Oftar 0 p.m. 647-3421.. _____ Y house kfiFlSTLlva"ln. 6wn room plus salary. Small child walcoma. irga. Haw 613-6116 XJteWMh. I» ____ftil Otflca' . HOUSEWIFE to otrn extra monay MATURE WOMAN "tor raal aatata ED tar' '■ Apply I. 5046 Cash i l>^b'^oRK Js! COUNTER HELP WANTED quollty dry cleaning plonti at sally Brant cleaners Highland Rd. OTJCOjI 673-5347. Counter and laundry h«io wanted, lull or port time, tor quollty dry cleaning plont. Apply at l-Hour Martiniring ot Milo Snapping Center or MooreotSSHIa. ' CTil*~S I RIS VW AI fR E SS Nights, Blue Star Drlve-ln, Opdyke Rd UVI IN BABY SITTER, privet, reom. very nice, room end board, plui reotonablo wages.—tor 3 children. required. Rochaottr, 651-. A^llTf^AMTST »!ora.ln2f»ytflk»,,3 7-1300 Mrs. Zatyra. MATURE GIRL FOR halt day*, ot ofncd work mm partita. Vivian Orovf# 1)59 Byron )*d .VHowll,91M44-34I1 r TYPISTS : Kxparlthcatfe Mu»t bo oblo to typo 40' word* por min. on oloctrlc machlna. Excallant alartlni ‘ Birmingham Manapamanl pany naotfa you. It you m Tinm •ton ot hOgpy tolophono women. Must oo adult in charietor ana hay. good work record; il.M on hr. to S3.5o an hr, to atort. For ^ointment 2 to noon only, ssy ^ffESl"WAfitiD"for full time amploymanl. Apply In parson only, Frank's Rwtourant. Koooo Harbor. Pharmacist Salary Rang* $904-$ 1,085 n .lar / Rtf WO. ' ml "com-j Additional 50c per hour for )*«£! afternoon and evening shift, ----plus $2.50 for tach 8 hour WAITRESSES KITCHEN HELP Jack‘t Drlva-ln It W. Montcoime apply in p offica. 'Mail” Information'' to' WOMAN ’ tO ASilST my choT" * ■ II 4A pQIWlHo ' fi “ “ j ft lBI. 5 Boys por otf 1ct. Pltoaoht — • ■ 1 typing ontf knowledge of book- keeping required. 5 gay# 35 hour reataurant Pontiac. Apply dally. Maura ti week. At oi mont. Apply Borger, N«l*ntr Bros., Saginaw, Pontiac.__ edi'Mr, HOUSEKEEPER, 5 day._________ pftftpfflftft Cross! must havo own transpS'tVj inc. 6575 Telegraph af tlon. Call colltct t - 5 4 5 - • l • l Birmingham. C ‘ betwaan t and 12 a.m.___ ‘ 1242 9-5^__ NURSESAIDES, I .... HP Coll 413-1 j Broker. Joe TarilgwL lovely MORNING FULL tTME CASHIERS htdANIN# LAO?, references r a q u I r a d transportation. * Thursdays Call coliact 1 - 5 4 5 -tlll an 9 and l|ja.m.____ j Homemakers ["sir1***™* NEEDED DRY CLRANINO prasstr.! kltchan, hra. of 11:30 p.m., Tuos. thru lot, havo hod previous experts raslouront work. Cooking of homos doss not count. Ills por wk. to start. You'll noon your own cor ond unlformt. Rostturont located In Southfield. Reply Pontlec Pres* •Ox C-33. __ WAITRESSES shift worked on Excellent f r I n g • benefits program. Contacts' Personnel Dept. Pontiac General Hospital Seminole ot W. Huron Sts. Pontloc. Mich. 33M7II ___Equel Opportunity Employer Fridays. It .so’ oft hr. to start. 33S- CLEANING & KITfcHEN | Excellent working cendltlens, 5 or 0 day. week, dttroctlvo tdlory. EM Milt. CASHlER-fYPISf Permanent, chellenglng position tor high tcheerjaredueto with good, grades, ago 20 or obovo, General oil ice duties Including typing, some figures, and mfttlnp the public. Skills bs o homemaker could ' Incoma tor you, Wo or# Inn applications tor _......... elilna schedules. It you orq available days or evenings Own presently Hudson's Pontiac Mall Pontiac, Watarford WANTED; xparlancad prafarrad afafar A“ Plaia Shopping Canlar, NURSES AIDES Training Program Wo will b training pn Must ba II stilling am Oct. 37, lWt; iari of ago pr over, ah school graduate. DISHWASHER Off Sundays, S day week.11 #,m. -7 p.m., liberal benefits. Fled Piper Restaurant, 4370 Highland Rd. DOMESTIC HEl> mediately. 337-537V after 5 l HOUSE KEEPER, LlVi It room, bel l and TV, referen waiwa. tfi-TaiO.______• INTERVIEWERS TRAINEES tt TO IS 3133 PER WEEK currant ref. Call PAY WORK — FART time — must have own transportation, 3915 Auburn, Auburn Holghts, Michigan. _____MISS NEWELL AT 332-3439 IMMEDIATE OPEN ING, IPS imperial Molded Products, 33 Oakley Park Rd., west of Naogtr Rd. bo tween l a.m. and 4 p.m. DENTAL ASSISTANT ■xporlsnco- not neceatery helpful, 10 e,m.-2 p.m. 3 doyt _ eluding lot. Excallant aelery. 333- IMMEDIATE OPENING tor ottlo 6106. I girl, apply In peraon only betwaei ...I -to p.m. Blue Sky Drlve-ti Thoolra, 2130 Opdyko. ._ IMMEDIATE -OPENINGS REGISTERED NURSES--- Licensed Proticol Nurses. 3 p.m. to 11:30 p.m. shifts 11:30 p.m. to 7 p.m. shifts TOP SALARY For dxcoplablo roloroncoi. “WtlHng-fo work any ahlfl. Storting salary 12.21 par ho Excellent fringe b*n*fHi. Fontloc Osteopathic I N. nr H 321-7271 Registered X Ray Technologist Salary Rang* $571-5685 pir mo. 7 Additional 50c per hour for afternoon and evening shift, jart time, mult! ____ I . 1 a*Fjrinw. benofiis, j shift worked on weekends. Boyv Rastaurqnb TologrelS!'an3 Excellent fringe benefits 6onto.’ ’ aaaiatont,.gH"?’ Cont«*' pratorrad but not Personnel Dept. W8SK- HZ Pontiac General Hospital previous working oxptrlornd._ lomlnolo at W. Huron St. WOMAtT'FOR FULL TtME otflcol » TOaqb* OFP^«iJ Bmployar Pontiac. No pnona cail»._ - WOMAN TO WORK IN Schools! ™* OAKLAND^ COUNTY MERIT Jaffa hit machlna. M<4Q0. call Pava! Lae, 334-l47l, 8nal)lng and Inalllnps EYr PRIVATE IaTThelF _v WANTED CAREER FOIITIQNS OPEN IN: o MANAGEMENT TRAINING f engineering and OHIO Pontiac ' Dolly 111 I MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE _ PARfVr’Win^!!!* VOIN ULil • CHEMICALS • Accounting • ADMINISTRATIVE Adams B Adoms SALES: MMpr manufachirar wonta Dova Lid, 33^2471. (nailing ond STATmiCALTYPIST Largo Trey firm nttdo qualltlod typiif with top iiNtd and accuracy. Shorthand halpful. Idtal opportunity tor the right gel. Foe paid. Accuracy Personnel_____642-3030 SALES TRAINEE I $500-5650 PLUS CAR All fleldo. Ago ft and up, aome collage helpful: Call: INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL sst-tiw 1M> w. Huro SECRETARY lor Birmingham office A reaoonslble, dlvorilfltd poaltlon. lomo A edema 647-iit -RAV CLERK: Oat CASH NOW Move totor. No points, no commission, got-our price FIRST, MARK REAL ESTATE COMFANY 7M I. ToWreoit 331-0124 ‘ CASH FOR YOUR HOME PROMPT, COURTBOUS SERVICB Sunday 104 ______423-0702 4 ro6m»" ".aHo ■ • welcome. 327.30 par "dep , inquire af sh Bpiawin av* ' CoH 330 _____ FINISH. PE 3-3443 A-l CARPENTEh WORK AT A FAIR PRICBI Additions, family looms, kitchen ELDERLY C6uft.ll NEEDS home MOr^MalL Cosh. Agent, 331-6021, I Will Buy Your House . CASH NOW \mov« later Cash investment Co. DEW roNSTRUflON CO. vni MWiW, 33W ;'S1 NEWLY I Sh OLDER COUFLi WANTED, close I furniture, prlvoto beth, entrence, cerpeted hallways. Washing ftcmli«, 2 chlldran -welcome. From S32.50 wk. Me. deposit. FE 4-tKB. ’ Apartments, Unfurnislied 38 1 BEDROOM APARTMENT With fireplace and many I uxuj-y faaluras. Plaasant, quldt country typo living, M4S nor .month. rj?,tp;ig?.^p73.1133 rent. UL 1-2344, Rent lieatH, tarnlilied 19 BRICK MASON Contractor# fraa attlmatas on brick work. Call aftar 4, ask for B«y. 373-4244. YORK, PI 8-7178 OR 44M) 3-ROOM MODERN hOUIP furnished, call *32-4412. Wyh WtMtd finftlt It 4 water* $159 sec/dap. $3o a wk. 70 Se FrafWla* Fontlac, N. af Auburn* W. of Boat Bivd., call aftar 7 p.m., •H-9244 or 411-3779. 3 ROOMS AND HATH, ullllttoS iWli In txchang* far wins part time sarvict, amall Child welcome. Rur lies w. Huren. 2 LADIES WANT DAY baby tilting or janitor work af night* FK 4-7174 or Hi 9-2991. HANDYMAN - Buying hausat In Penrlec and lurroundlng eraas. Will pay all cash. Agent, 441-0374. ! ROOM, ADULTS O N LY, references, dap., prlvtto entrance. S34-2I23. A-1 IRONING* 1 day sarvict. Mrs. McCowan. 334-3847. INVESTOR WILL PAY cashL. Per jtour equity today call agtnl, 47e- ^4109 PER MONTH ' uSakdayt °or * night?/ area"1 off Walton, batwaan Jotlyn and Parry* 1 373-5491. MANAGEMENT^ OF aparfmanf' -rooming houta In axchanga for ARt. 33M421. Math Tutor Available -1 Evenlnge Jn my homa. By quallflad , Math T a a c h a r . Transportation i 1 HAVK a PUfeCHASfcR WltH CASH FOR A STARTER HQMI IN O A K L AND COUNTY. CALL AGENT* 474-1499 or 338-4993. WALTON PARK MANOR U n p recedenled opporlunlly-tor famllln wllh toss than $10,000 In-cema. lAl and •) bedroom townahetoie*,\adl*c*nt to 1-75, only 33 min. to ddtontown Defroll. Open dally and Sundhy 12 to 1 p.m. .except Thurs. Far mers Infarmallan Call S3S417f. V _— LAKE FRONT, Williams Lake. 4 bedroom, largo living room, dining •ret, mg kitchen, gas heat! Available Oct. fst.-Junen3h. sin plus utilities. Mr. Parmentor, 441-4431 after 3:10. \ INVESTORS — Buying hsusei to rent In and areund Pontiac. Agent, 681-0374. LOTS - WANTPD IN PONTIAC UPPER STRAITFLAKE. 2 bedroom horn*, completely furnished, f rear Baraga, 1 to 4 mot. Mas*. 612-7467 belore 6 p.m. . _ available. For a d d 111 on a l In-formattoh and mathod or an plication phono 334-1712._ REGISTERED"NURSE available""for private duty. AAA Oakland County registry 647-3422._________;_ WOMAn WANTS dishwashing |ob! Faying $2 a hr. Irt Union Lk. area call REALTOR Building Servicss-Supplies 13 person Gavos Grill, *73 flguroo i NEED 2 AGGRESSIVE license? I oslolo sales counselors. Must neat ond conscientious. 3244323. city ot | REAL ESTATE a. $1.75 Psrsnnntl Offlos, wk. 4-10 our staff. Licensed ________I preferred, buf will train. Cl storting ovary Islurdoy ot 2 PRE-FAB GARAGE d 0 | erected. 1423. Dew | 322-2191 qf 338-3522.____ (Business Sarvict AVON-TROY carpet Construction Co. 15 WARIHOUbI —-REALTY. AA9.J396 NEED 2 OR 3 BEDROOM ranch, dose to Betdwln Rd. priced up to A CLEAN 1 $11*000 coll effr 3 PsWl 411-1197. i - • * •Pdf CAlM FOR YOUR EOUITY/ VA, FHA. OR OTHER# FOR QUICX ACTION I I ohi....... NINOS Fi 4-7009. TRANSFEREE Itrgs down 4-0131 or 1, Looking inltoc are Coll my ogont, 421-0374. tRANSFBRRtbf — I will buy your house ond Idas* It bock to Agonl, 081-8*74. WE ARE READY TO BUllD. PLASTIC MOLDING 9 JVdntid1 M. or F. 8 $500 TO $400 PER MONTH. COL-LECTOR FOR REAL ESTATE COMFANY. KN 9 I O E AND OUTSIDE WORK, f X P B N PAID. GOOD FUTURE. PHONO MR. BLOCH, 423-1333. Rtt^^ .32-1444;-Z J i MfllotfS, imell guantltTei. 474-1 3735 or 332-1404. __________| Moving and Tracking rls It Son R6»l WEI WILLI BUY I Your equity —. Cosh i Is ordered emmuawr INSTASET CORPORATION 1330 Piedmont Troy# Michigan PANTRY GIRL, Experlerictd onl ------ Bike Club, 114 Orchard PRESSER FOR NOW dry cleaners, ' Opdyke Squire ShOppIne Ctntai perlance helplul. but not ne< ary. Will train. Call 424-7212. RETIRED LADY RECEPTIONIST - PERSONNEL otflca. personable person wir torost In public contact soma Are Your Afternoons Free? Motor Routs opening irt Southeastern part of county- mg. 647-2340 _ SHAMPOO GIRL REQUIRED, must hove license, ond good sppearonce. Thursday, Friday. Saturday-. Birmingham area. Call 347-3443. SHIRT MARKKA AND packager tor dry claandr plant, will train, apply 2M N, Woodward, Douglas Cleaners, Birmingham. SUPPLEMENT YOU# McOMi Noed someone to aislit me In nr tost growing business. Choose ™ own hours. Earning unlimited. Interview appointment, call 0374. Mendty-Fridiy, SHORT OROER COOK. SECRETARY Immtdtqtg opening perienced secretary to the administrative offl be 21 or older, ne personality and the public, i 1342 Wide Track Dr.* W. Mon.* Prl. 9-4 Tues.* Wed.* Thurs. 10-5 S7741 depending benefits. Contact the Personnel Dept. Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital 50 N. P 330-7271 ..I,___________ ■...............■ ‘IlMI frlno. 1 UU OC?ll I I Personnel. 332^137. I bead*: For use In lo< TRAI Read. 2 AND 3 ROOMS Newly new * furniture* private entrance* and bain* washing facilities, sound ... ■ rE*n 8 5 p.m. Excellent fringe Perry Pontlec Prmtinr f ‘ rum me ttel ephone solicifOR Pontlec 25 to 50 Pontiac Press Box C*41 PULL TIME’pIiofTF"oar maid and! waitress. Apply In person* Nlte-Owl 47ef pixie Hwy„ Drayton rxplRTfficio FooD^and cock fan 50 N. Perry P;.r*r™x,i0Hic, UtU « B Excellent cleaner, t « i 338-7271 • Ext. 262 or B»me. li 4-1112.___________________ days, Birmingham, IlSO par hr., 3, Accictnnt nirartnr nf TYPIST" 1TEN08 nrss oar dav. sand rMumB tn Hajisiuni Direcior ot Temporary Work Nursingi Miss Clifton .......... am«rjcan .o.iku _____Ext. 383. . Flqlrit. '""7 v ""' IF “WCUT'VE SECRETARY : fefi M Experienced. Must be able to type' and wish to earn S80 per week ci <40 words per min. on eMetric1 before noon. Ml 2-7343. woVdTSsr *mJn afJrtim KEV PUNCH OPERATORS el P*rl»nced only. Apply 5 7 4 c'm^ny*lr:,'.T,myouMan*?,™u ^ qualify, pleas* call Walter Ponder at P44-7IM. t l.m. te 3 a.m, rOIL TIME gas station attondanT must be II, need (alary, Alrpoi' Mobile. 3223 Hlghla d * I .. 442-3033 . 221" Si Adams, B'ham, the Oakland countT MERIT SYSTEM Announces Ihe followlnd OPEN COMPETITIVE Interested In making money. Experience halpful, but not nacassary. Will train, plenty of leads and floor tlma and attractive commission schedule. For Interview, M Taylor, OR 44204. Eves. filial cou pi Troy. Handle tenant rela- EXAMINATIONS Apply Drey Phone 473 1211. Stoady werk, good wages, paid Blue Cross Rd., Pontiac. Punch Servlet. Sales Help Male-Female 8-ASales Help Male-Female 8-A we haVi ownings for/two qualified sales People. WE OFFERS PROFIT SHARING, PAID VACATIONS AND MANY OTHER FRINGE BENEFITS. CALL T00AY FOR AN APPOINTMENT WITH OUR SALES MANAGER. - . . ' C" KAMPSEN REALTY, INC. 1071 W. Huron St. ' 681-1000 In thtip elptslflcptlbni. FOOD SERVICE WORKBI FULL TIME-14400—15001 Part T Imp-$2.11-13.39 p«r h< Foiitioni at Odkland Co Sanatprlum. Mutt bp rtsldt Oakland County, aga 11-59 goSPhaSlh KITCHEN PORTER fulMimt $5500 $5900 part-timp $2.43 -$2 $3 par hour futurt vacanclat anartmanf. Of 24 MVHP Haw . ____________ tlon»* minor malntananca* cara and hall cleaning, N coilac tlon*. Exparlan nacassary. Apt.* utilities plus >alary, 554-3199. CARETAKER COUPLE - Sobar.MtnOO rasDonsibla, married couple fori “ t79nn I ID g—Fct^bTrirT malntananca of grounds, building ^'200 ® rtt PAID and aqulpmam. No chlldran or mi 1 FRF RBAHIfATFC pat*, salary plus large furnished wLLtUC bKAUUAIti a ....- ' • ‘ food.flW- , NO $UN* llrlds. Call 10 MANAGER TRAINEES* $6*500. Jim Retd. Aaio< Pbrsonnal, 332-9157._ $60, $80. $100 STENO-TYPIST / Type 43 fa 30 ward* par minute. Shorthand or speed writing helpful. INTERNATIONAL BMSONNEL 481-1100 x ibso w. Huren $400-$60^FEEPA|D MANAGEMENT TRAINEE In flnanjea sales, and efflet. Aga 21 rNVAfe»h®Nlr! costuming. Ml 4-4418, ~7* ■ WANTED—GOOD USED tobla taw, FE 2-1141. WANTED TO^OV"-Lleharfralns, know angina No. whan fanctng on tildBfMWlt 3MM9W._______ CO-EDS NEED PLACE to stay togather from O.C.C. Coll Mitchell •si-loco Ext. r j mm Mon.-Prl. ilMb4S« 2 and 3 f 6 O M furniihod, til urilitiat paid, call aftor 1 p.m. Shown by appalntmant only, no children. 333-22*4, 2.RQMA ArabTMINY. clean .im For managamant position 237 gfGINNEb: No exparlenca her*.1 rjc I ROOM EPF I ■ I franc* and b*fh. newly decarated and ntw furniture. All utllHlM, I child wdlcomt, 324.30 wk, Im. dipealt. 3M-2(W, -Sfi 2Vb k6eki ok LAKE 33 4734243 1 kdOMI,' BRIVATK DAY CALLS, CAr¥tWER mfPLerfflLL Ijmg tf' I'OB tor large apartmanf prelMf L. ... __________ ..... N. Parry, vyifa to clean, husband, Typing and - public to do minor maintenance, helpt Beautiful bustling offl with landscaping, shovel walks, or weekends. Start nowl S280. etc. Fraa apartment plus good) Ann Carter* 334-2471* Snelllng ihee* Uvlne Quarters 1 WORKINO. GIRLS leaking tor 1 of * furnlainSf, babyVwa'lcoma*,M2-S424.' nlcaly g af,. COUPLE TO BaaulTful bustling offlea. No nldhtol — ——.. — —. — c*iT Sanatorium. Full-time or mornings' Must ba resident of Oakland County, aba i« iv, in good health. To ba coneldarad, applications for the above examinations meet be postmarks* ,ar received el tlto Personnel Division before 5:00 , ^T on/|.dn.,d.y October WE Applications rrloy be obtained from: > THE PERSONNEL DIV EARN EXTRA MONEY Kament your family' onto* man and i hi'asewlvii, factory workers, office for Intarvlaw. *nd-or tree in-tormalion — include your phone number tot AREA MANAGER, BOX 100, HlahTind, Michigan irving Kay priperlei, 217 Woodward Aval, Blrm„ Mich. WNTTURk"SALl[SMEN m IONNIL W, Hur holDfeys, sick pay, group life •kland county Court House medical insurance, employ* 200 N. Telegraph, Pontlec counts, *xeoll*nl chance lor . Phene 130-475I, Ext. 425 vancemenl, should have some i *n Equal opportunity and marl) experience. Apply W, T. Gri , J eystem employer 7IW Coaiev Lake Rd„ Union ' --------L“--------E—'—^--------- Shopping Ptoza. Pontiad .Press Want Ads For Action Shopping P IMELdvM|WT~AvSi'LSltir ply; at Seminole Hills j Nursing Home, 122 Orchard L4k» Ava. rAlfr?jtOoili'wltFlKa belfoTi newt, Mllfard *r*p, 4S8-1200. TRAINEES Call jDatroit 963*0088 CONSUMER CREDlfTLocal branch of- national company hie opening tor caraar-mlndad ndIVIdua 1. S3,4*o. Call Jim, Cana, 334-2471, _SnpMlngjend_Sntlllng.__ • EX-SERVICEMAN Wandering where to gat wa have career opportunitiesi Tn til fleids, INTBRNATIONAL PERSON 431-1103 , 1820 W GENERAL OFFICE *4300 TO $425 INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 4II-1100 to$o W. Huron J U NIOR, S IM I Sr S E NlbR ACCOUNTANTS Public rend Induiirlal accounting poalllona available. I x c * 11« nl potfnflil. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL ______i.RobfiiiiM — —......... mnsnsi' for coro of 2 ichooi ago chlldran. 425-5994. -________________; I _ _ MALI to IRaRE HOUSE" and 3 ROOMS jkND BAtH* prlvaf# qn- .................. i^JS^regu Ro^rLeV.^RdTun^VS'iS R«"» H#uies. Unlurnlthtd 40 a month. 442-2543 or 42M372*_^ —,,1 AMERICAN HERITAGE 1 w.to5."rS0Yr»,HT.E*ndM*i.l5; $140 a mo. Flrit and toil me. plus sac. Phone 724-1222._____ 2 Be6ro6m, GAS HEAT, utllMy room, garagt, raf., sac. D*p. ML 2~ jn|o1iS6M, LAKl'~M6MI, no drinkers, Infanf welcome, MS * wk.^Rdf. and Pep. 41248)2. only, 673-1148. BACHELOR, New carpeting, pi ................ ' 333-4 qulaf, N. and, vary file*. 832-4374. Canterbury Apartments Oppeslt* Sf. Joaeph Hospital And Thd NMV SharatonTnn 1- and -badroom, ppli,, balconi swimming pool, CPfilMlne, baa hof water Includad In mill. A cond. Sorry no chlldran or pat PI4499$. COLONIAL VILLAGE Now ranllne 1 bedroom epla. OPEN: 1 'ill dark DAILY Closed Fridays On Scoff LaKi Road, 1 mile Off Dixie Highway ■ ■ ■ 473-2442 Now Leasing BRAND NEW LAUREL VALLEY > T0WNH0U5ES / I, S AND I BEDROOM APTS. ON PRIVATB,L^Kfl INDIVIDUALLY CONTROLLED CENTRAL HEAT AND AIR CONDITIONING Luxurious won to wall -carpeting, bath and a half (except 1 Mdroom ........................ laundry IT" Ihroughoyf. fit »ssr„ MODELS OPEN' FOR YOUR INSPECTION RENTALS FROM $155 Rantal Agent an Premises- 1412 LAUREL VALLEY DR, aMV^WtITO., 673-8686 Custom Crafty Appliances HOTPOINT FIRST WITH FKATURI8 WOMEN WANT MOST 11Br5Sms; MODfR Lake area. SIS* a monil deposit, ratorances, Inqu Ora, Okfard er call 421-2 2 BEDROOM. Terrace, wall to wafL carpeting, ho chlldran, marruil couple, first and leal month's rent, after r-p.ni. 42FI»I> 6MI. iKicK' coupto wmi, * BEDROOM,"$il3>E*' month. ~t -----xnd dtPMlt* 111 4-4404. \ -------- bassmant, Ittobeth 1)27 Charryfewn, CLARK8TON M-13 2143 M6, PHA, ...... XT ) BJDROOM EXPANDING M34772 NtW LAKE FRONt BRICK. BUILT-I REE RENTAL SRRVICR landlords, mod tsnants wal Art Daniels Really, 433-1347. FOR RKNT OR SALE, Harrington ■ alw'1 RENT. WHILE BUYING 2-44 badronm homes, wHh beaamenfs. soma with garages, lets tor the children. . 373.00 par month Miller Bros. Realty 333-7156 Want Ads For Action Apartments, Unfurnished 38 Apartments, Untarnished 31 ENJOY LIFE MORE AT Oakland Valley 1UXUR? APARTMENTS IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY and 2 Bedroom Apartments, fully earpated and air-conditioned, from $153 Pool, Saunas, Social Cintar Exercise Room Walton Rd, between Adams & Opdyke east of 1-75. Phone 373-6480, facilities with seme, 2:10, ____________________ MaTuRR WORKlNolMArTdl home with same, after 5:io, I Sundays, 1 DAY CASH YOUR HO NO COST ' I-ROOMS, FRIVATI ...... ........ entrence, nb pats, T child walcoma. 1 ROOMS, FRIVATI anfrenco, near - Pontiac Odnqrdl Hospital, SMJe par wk. SOS deposit. FR 4-3434, ifhwSp.nl, LEGAL SEChETARY ■xacutlva' gal With lagel ax-tor, sanlar partner af fad Birmingham lew fliyn/MUH 1® Accuracy Pprsannal / 442-3030 FOR YOUR HOUSIOR LOT NO COST TO MLL - FAIT PRiITNOLy SRRVICR Aaron Mtg. & Invest.-Co. ) - esMiis. .1 y APPRAISALS FREE \ GUARANTEED SALE , 30 DAY LISTING ina W# guarantee the salt af youi SS® P‘ LAUfNGER WiE Of-Mll X 473-1148-, efiirp4d.' *■ ~eooMi RIDGEMONT TOWNHOUSE APARTMENTS •One, TWo end Three Bedrooms v X Roper, 60s Ranges ‘1'; '""“W‘;" i Hbtpoiiit Refrigerators ■ V • Carpet ond Drapes V\ *-• All Utilities Except Electric * , • Alr-Cdnditlenlng by Hot point • Swimlng- Pool and Pool House prom tin with on«cvbar^ea£«. no pats allowro Between Eaet Boulevard end Madiion-2 blocks from main ggte of Ponflac Metere. * 937 N. Perry St. Phene 3S2-3S22 ... v' Own. Billy WAAL tt \ for Wont Adi Dial 334-4981 Mot UkO Cotton 41 'Bsar OUt HOOWO 42 ffipsMSwggia WCf"ROOM near Kmart lor girl or H19W4.<#)MC roomi for root, hjmjTprlvHOfltl, middle-coed Indy, ___ ; i r RWINO^bjMJoil LADY. ' luBIPtNO BWIA ffSttranrontus line. TO-MW after 1:11 p.m. l6(Jipjfo~¥60M near Pontiac 4EgE«^ t*£58i. 1 'SAGA MORI MOTRL. TV g# euttd, telephone, glr conditioned. *41 o wood, 717 *. Woodward. ItVlLLE MOTRL, air MndlllOnOd. carpeted, TV, toToohono, mold I Mrvtco, MO por w—-I ond im Milo. \THE FONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, I960 Room* with Board 11 OR I ORNTLEMCN, l« 1 pood food, wail. I iOARDiR, MtALI, ll 1 on. OitlM lake, pMOMi 1 country homo. 415-315*. 1741 Pal. t p.m. ar MS-3417 an; EXECUTIVE LAKE FRONT, wait Pontiac, M7I monthly, M7-M14. STORAGE SpAtjl FOR RET.,. 40x00 baiament. Dry. Saparata allay antra,*,. Birmingham — Snle Houses 49 0 DOWN All tltit la naadad to own ttili ipic and span 2 badroom homo In tho Northern High coatt. Larga Bat •Wln^la another extra. Full price * MURPHY PARK Nice | bedroom homo with mont and 2 car garaga. Full prke only I1&9M, with V down i -monthly payment* at Ml plut t "lauingeh 4740317 lit " »ibffOO/ftS1'~RAfiiLiD living room, plus dining room, Il'xlfiF lot In Waterford towninlp, Largo utility room, now bm lurnac* and RymikSTday1 dTcloilng, „ or or 4-tnil.. • ... . , , im _ 2 St6RY ; , 1 1 Badroom Jtomo, larg* ------ room with puoat cloatt, fill BDROOM HOME, CARPETED, 'ININO ROOM, PULL BASE-1 B NT AFD fA R AOB, LUMINUM SIDING ON LARGE HADED LOT. CLOSE To COL-LEGES AND EXPREIWAYS. IN ADiURN HEIGHTS. 132,000 CASH,. TERMJ AVAILABLE. BY OWNER 3-BEDROOM HOME, Garaga and -r i z------n„t, im iackoon In Pontiac atiparty. Minimum 07,MO. i elbAdoM, 1W BATHS, f ,na room, carpatad llvlno room, dining room and dan with flraptica, fun baaamant, t car S*raga. Samlnola Hlllt. iy pwnar, tarma. 330-oaia. file Houses 49 S»M40C‘ 627-3135 ' 35341770 ■orwssPfa D—0 ■HR: NIW 3REDROOM RANCHERS WalvsrTng Lk, PHA mort* Aw' T°a?.T OPEN 9 A.M. TO 8 P M. M4 WILLIAM* LAKB RD. i Drlvg.wgofr 2 BEDROOMS B^iiWS^aSTirai cwifrictTlrmi. , ~r~— 3 BEDROOMS on land contract tarmi. FLATTLEY REALTY 0M COMMBRCe RD, _Jk EOROOM W-703J_ f S ANb 4 RbbROOffi|ri67 ( ART DANIELS RRALTY, Highland OR 4-4110. I 2Vi ACRE BARGAIN LAKE FRONT Bait buy for tho handy man, 1 badroom ranchar with liraplaca, 10’ living room; andoaad braaza-way, atfachad garaga, got haat, nlca traaa, too* watar frontaoa on Joalya N. Of Clarkiton Rd. $28,500 ~ FULL PRICE Ladd't of Po 3BEOROOM RANCH, kltchan and dlnMfO,. 371-3 largo .carpatad oom ana nan, M’xSM'tot. •trial. Only *16.500 PHA GMC 4 BEDROOM CAPE COD -alum. tWltte, garaga, largo lot, now undo, comtructlon, READY IN 40 DAYS. Loaa than O par cant dawn-hind caatraat,—■------- - MILL'S REALTY ■or ALL Yaur Rapt Batata Nndi Officat In Laka Orion and Lapaar 473-0171 M4nfl0» rBEDROOM HoOlC. baigmant. lW d Inlng* room, *an? laka and prlvata clot, to acnadl, by Attar 5:30. Clarkston School Area WALTBB'S LAKB .PRIVILEGES, locatad wail of t lark«ton Golt Count. .Intar from N, Baton and "USmoblATB OCCUPANCY | badroom ranch ....112,750 3 badroom trlPUval ...O'* 4 badroom ranch .....t- 673-34M SYLVAN 4« lit lot, Imm, 17145. DRAYTON AREA—4 badroom cal. Snlgl, Jlfc Mini, toko prlvhagai. Ing room, IW cor Boros*, fruit Iron, shtltor lor prlca roducad to 014.900. P RAY CALL RAY TODAY_ 074-4101 I BEDROOMS — Por tha largo family, big living rogm, formal dining room, 1 Mthi, full Mao-mont. E*7 hoot. Juaf 121,500. VA or PHA- CALL 401-0370. GMC MbNt^LVp 00 OOWNa 14 33S-617I $109 FIR MONTH WALTON PARK MANOR UNFFECEOINTKD PORTUNITY ■— POR WITH LESS THAN OP- PORTUNITY « FOR FAMILIES THAN IIOpOOO IN* AND 9 BEOROOM TOWNHOUSE! ADJACENT TO 75, ONLY 35 MIN. 1 DOWNTOWN DETROIT. OPI DAILY AND SUNDAY 12 TO F.M.# EXCEPT THURS. F< MORI INFORMATION CALL 9 4171. 5469 HEATH OFF MAYSIE ROAD i 9 bedrooms bath end a basement, large lot. DON E. MCDONALD LICENSED BUILDER OR 3-2837 1 ALUM..VINYL AND ASBESTOS/ V AWNING-PATIOS , SCREBNBD-IN OR .1 %SS ENCLOSED/ I EAVES TR0UGHING 1 Centlnuad Saamlaii ..vattruughlng. [ Wt Bring Padory lo Yun. . (PAST SERVICE - QUALITY WORK /— TERMS 1 CALL NOW - DAY O R i MGHT—611.2500—TERMS DEALER—ASK FOR BOB OR RID | / Aafeaaa Service * ANTENNA SERVICE- Initalltd and j rtpalrad. OR S-1070. ; biRCHlTT 5 SON ANTENNA Sarv-1 IM, AIM fsfilf. IBM174. _^ CEMENT AND RLOCK WORK, frta wtlmalt, MTeWB. --C'dsiMiiiCiAL./iNbOSTRlAL and A. JAY ASPHALT A-A-A ASPHALT Paving atifl SMlino DOMINO CONST. CO. 674-3955 j 3311214 or 1344731. Basement & Oarage \i Btumant 5 Garaga Claanlng \ Light Hauling fPE t-MTl PB ljljl I inttWH xww X lob, 47M0714. ______________ Carpentry ' A-l INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR - Family roomi, • rough or flnlihi I dormora. pgrchts.r •«r /^NtRr^Rknr^ *uwr GUINN’S CONST. CO. _371-2471 _ DRIVEWAYS, SIDEWALKS, man! floors, patloa, plain ar or. Oanorol Comonf Contri POURED BAfEMtNt doflona, will olvo Im torvlco, MMTTLor .l-M Ceramic Tilt DAN’S CERAMIC TILE, tloto floort, morblo sills. Intfoll In homsj, old or now. Pro, oat. S74-414I. 4M-1M1. DOZERS, BACKHOE, LOADER Sales & Rentals. Used Bobcat Loaders Burton Equipment Co. 3774 E, Auburn Rd,_____052-35! Cueteai Praperlts 30 YRS. EXPERIENCE Daace htitractlafis COOPER SISTERS D 761 W. Auburn. S52-J lor Isiiofil. Tap, BS ^PiflnoTunlni I-A ALTERATIONS, SUITS, COATS, 0SCiRNSCHMIC,' H....A. IK-i-mi AArn itMhMBkM OOVAn eLnfWII^ OlLp Forced olr Air conditioning. 5atea, aMSOI, 474-4341. londscapinB ________________irtcku 4443 Sharwood. 42S-200Q. ERION BLUE sod, II ■rad. Compiata larv ast. 602-7177 __ i-'l COMPLETE LANDSCAPING, aptclallilno In ratalnlno walls. Frsa satlmatas. J. H. Waltman Lsndicsplnp. 17304M. _______ t-1 MERION BLUE »6p, on Pott, 43 csntii por yd. dollvorsd, 403-1704. . ri ME'RION BLUE Sod, on Pool, 41 ■ • yorid, ASSUME tho mortgogt for S3200 i this j Mdroom, sibsitos ranch, ■OIL fill grotp’i N,w e,rM*'n#< '* '7*1 CALLRAY TODAYI *74-41 l *52-5462. ___________ Septic tank Service COMPLETE SEPTIC WORK, UWSr ond wotor linos. M3-M43, FE 2-MM. TOWNSEND SEPTIC REPAIRS and Tnstoliotlons, 6S2 0S74. Spraying Ssrvice Al’S lawn maintenance, and foil titan ups. ■ wrtlllslnii and tproylng. m COMPLETE LANDSCAPING Sodding, iotdlne, shrubs. Llcsnssd Sundry Mon. 4*2-7130. LANDSCAPING. '"11 ISSffiSS ding, dollvorod ai UNIQUE LANDSCAPE dtslgns, dr complsts landscaping, unusual TALBOTT LUMBER usiSi^ha'ir. I0S5 Oakland BexPoete Box POSTS and flog polos i Sforogs ■rrn-MOS CT. Your moving Alltrttlgns E DrMimsklng ^, Ml. 0 0,m,-7 p.m. 333-4135 Drlvet's Training CHUCK’S DRYWALL AND loping , strvlca. Mny and ramodallng, also painting. S77-14M balora 1:30 and War a P.M. __________ DRY WALL SERVICE, .MW> and gdallng, guarantaad, 135-1017 or Eavostrooghing M & S GUTTER CO. licensed-eonded ComP?IS'MSM ADRIAN'S PROMPT ELECTRICAL B lifiaidwln IcW” SWe Excavating Backhoa. iaaamantl. 074,1117. IERVicB, lAtWAVMfi. sapti< istsllallon, Prat dotin^wllh ISO! grading, 001-1041, FE 1- [ Carpetlnt................... 'carpet clinic wAEBHouiB. «'o Pond's, Lal(es and Canals 1 tavingi on carpal. 433-1074. ■ Wieifti. 'flLli AN6 IlMloySf I axpsrlly insiallad. Proa Ott. I j-*74*. , ' ________ I Caiyet ClaaRlRg ■CARPETS AND UPMOLJTBRY I clMnod, Por low rtloo. MM7SS. I Camant Work Painting and Dgcpratlng" 1-A CUSTOM PAINTIN ^ Frot utimotu t^^psiNWntatior, oTVbaM iSmEnilNta, sailniinu, Friy*E»?! Orvol Oldcumh S734H7S A-l PAlNtiNQ AN_6 1 PEI... . APER HANGING THOMPSON ITl-IMS GEORGE PRERICKS Minting, reasonable. Fres astlmafsa, work guaranlotd, 37 yra. txp. Coll anvflmt. 401-5741. ____________ PAINTING, DiCORATINO, Com-merclsi and ratklanllal. Call 111-0774, QUALITY WORK ASSURED: Point- 1%, | ....................... Paper Ing; Wall 'spraV PAiNYiNdT Plastering Service Plumbing l Hegtlng 24 hr*, Het tar, thirty^' repair*. We will net be undersold R. DUTTON PB 0-1719 RI-ROOP1 iPaciAukT. all typos, roofino-ou»t«r Work. 30 year* ex* parlance. 335-17*3. uroi'IKf A — OWENS CORN I NO leaning I - 4KM195. SUSPENDED (iEILliTGS Tree Trimming Service REE REMOVAL and llghl I, fraa astlmatas. PE 5-4307. CAVANAUGH'S TREE umpa removed free, " nvn the- Iras. Fraa illy Inaurtif. u4d047. astlmatas. Inaurad. MV 3-1114. iARDNER'S TREE SERVICE. Fra* astlmata*. vary raas., 935-4744. OAKLAND TRIMMING SERVICE ___• Tracking A-l LIGHT MOVING, TRAtH haulad raasannbla. FB 4-1151. AI LIGHT HAUtyi^anfW A-i uoHt Trucking at any Odd Job*. FB *j847, A-1 LIGHT HAULINO REASONABLE RATES. 331-1266 APtKR * P.M. light I S74-MW Hauling and rueeish and cgn- structlon claan up. 412-3041. U6Ut HaULiNg idid Odd loSTHJ- pavjg CUTTING LIGHT HAULING. lAIOMaNTl goraaat tiaanad. 474-1141. LieW ANb HEAVY TRUCKING rubbish, fill dirt, grading and jraval and fronMnd loading. FE 1> TRASH HAOlINGT odd lobs. FE 4-17! Trach Reotal _ Trucks to Rent Vk-Tdn Pickups IW-Ton -I TRUCKS - TRACTORS • AND EQUIPMENT Sami Tralltirs Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co US t. WOODWARD PM A0441 FE 4-1441 Qpon dally Intiudlnt Sunday ACT NOW). Pall ul* prlcga on chairs, asfai raupholsiarad. S35-17S0, fraa *at|. maias. Eval. and Ssl 625-4561. irnnrixmsnr'irwreRtr^ Quality Pabrlea and work, pick us and dollvary, 4M-4I7S. Wall Ocaaers •LOOMPIBLD WALL CLEANERS, walls eioaMd. Raas. SaiisiatikM Buaraniaad. Iniurad. FE 2-1*31. Water jglftener Bepilr WATER lOPTeNBR probltm? , For < service only cell werrcn Softener repair, 079*9792 or 343*3145. _RAY_ AVON STERLING HEIGHTS. Balltva It or got a 1 badroom hrt ranch, with carnallng and draw full basamanl, 2 car garaga, for fa contaact with a minimum of *5t HOMES BY WEINBERGER 1530 CROOKS RD. m I jEwIrWr yaw IqiiltyWB_ T-T A rjXfPTT jSBAUTY CRAFT HOMES 1 iAVw/i\J-i I i ------"DRr«nnr6WkiHi 363-6703 full betement# *14/ Wllllemi Lk. ranch, laroa famll “ rWP. 0« V on M-», turn Naw 3 badroom rinch, r‘ ilc both*, •itfinfp )vt cerami baiament, 2 car. Fine Wooded JoBlyn. 343-511 a r|J,,rV'h OPEN ' [mmodlal* tomlly room, tfirii! Si...... enev. Iraplac FARRELL Northern High Area iMdroomi. Pull hauminl. iths. 2 car garaga an to I, Pull prlc. 117,500. Lond i, Kltch*?*_______________... It-ln ovan and rang*. Panalad tg room. 027.M0. ELIZABETH LAKE BSf ATII, „ bfdraem, city Watar, tat and VI 353-7315 Of W1-1WI. •____ "FLAWLESS" MARK! THIt LUXURIOUS CUSTOM RUILT 1 bedroom. kitchen, 14’xlO’ ■> hut. 110,700.00 on lond con-•ct. HAGSTROM, REALTOR KO W. Huron OR 4 0350 S________Aftar * P.m. FE 4-7005 First in values RENTING WE ARE NOW HOMES 3^ ^_______ from Any workers, widows OR. DIVORCEES. PEOPLE WITH CREDIT PROBLEMS AND RETIREES APE OKAY WITH US. OPEN DAILY AND SAT. AND SUN. ' or Come 9UN. : 9*8 P.M Weterfordp Cambrook Lana off Dixie to N. Rainbow Una. AL PAULY 473-3100 eves, tium Y0UNG-BILT HOMES REALLY mean* EETTjfR SILT HARRISON womm Coif Ray Todor *74-1401 liberal tarmi. or Ives. LAPEER 074(0, aero, laatoil 'aka* alia. hor»a farm. •or. hunting vacationing. 1 adlolnlng laka. CALL 44 >KS88i< tal N m /ary III IVIft. LAPEER 49140# hara I* the bargain you Uya boon look-BB BEAUT IFU I no for. BEAU ilTttffi box board fenced. -----MARK-----— Real Eilat* Company 1702 »■ Tatanraph 3314113, ROCHESTER, BY OWNER Brick calanlal on baautlful 4 acra woodad lot, all alaclrlc, lota ol bullt-lna, walking distance at n*w high tchaol, 145,600. 441-1714 attar 4 LAW: PRIVILEGES WOLVERINE LAKE -bedrooms, besem.nl, l.rg. paved strati and drlvaway, *14, MAND0N LAKE PRIVILEGES - 1 badrw *13,450 PHA TIRM0. WE HAVE OTHER LAKE PROPERTIES COSWAY REALTORS 681-0760 M,T1" AREA HOMES RANCH WITH PULL Mtam* yaur lot, SISMS. Merlf. avallabla. Prank Marott* t assoc. 11*1 Union Lk. Rd. 143-7001. ROCHESTER. ¥f OWNER, 1 ^ckb,Vfi«i^r*oiuminUum# "aiding! family room# excellent condition, also extra W lot# call after 2# 451 • SYLVAN LAKE SAM WARWICK - HAI BEDROOMS, Brick, carport, city sarvlcas. taka prlvileqot. I Warwick, JOIJW. Immdlata cupancy. thow any lima, Ct 611-1630 ar 01-1716.__________ SALE tfVGWNRR, braanway amTl cu^ garaa*, 37 . Ing all*. Only Vary Tlbarai tarmi. 4644M0 EVES. 714-070. PONTIAC 47412, loVOlv 1 Mdroom ronch tyro horn*, gas h**l, ca rp*fln(, plaslared, storms and screens, pevad drlvt, ChOlC* ol acltadli. Slang* building, awnar must mu, PHA or mortgage can M eesumed. Price SI7.H0. CALL 4*4-0540 EVES- 7*34744. on proparty, large Mrn end several other nut buildings. Ideal retreat for tha hard working bualnui man. Pina oldar 4 badroom home, new furnact, all (hit can be youre for 777,000, CALL 444 15*0 GOODRICH AREA 47911, ar* aw secluded acres 7-75. This OPETT Two Models fflHQ ™"lc**v*ckS^tNw luxurious home. In an ere* Maturing winding struts, apaefoua rfB i, cantral wtfari tlgrm eawara imos priced from 731,040 Ing. Affi Colony Htfghlt. Wa alto build an y financing gvgllgbto. HAYDEN REALTY I W Mila wait oT OKMw tak* BEDROOM Nanwlch, Dri after 1 TOM REAGAN REAL ESTATB Opdyko TRI-LfeViL, 3M0 ■ 037,700. 411-1144 M STARR, SMALL 2 badroom ranch, garaga, no baumant, new P^A, 111,400 or offer, owner, 140- i*-WlST TENNYSON vacant I bedroom ranch, no basamanl, now PHA, 111,700 ar otter, open Sun. 2-3, owner. 54S-1512. ASSUME MY MORTGAGE Ranch atylad horn* with 3 car attached garaga, andoaad and flnlihtd bruzaway all carpatad, larg* dining arta, assume 4 par cant mortgage. YORK A 24'X 40’HOUSE. M,779 Roush In on your Jot, Construction Co. 3SS-I17S or Its W. Kennel! rralNvalub-realty For Immediate Action Call FE 5-3676 - 642-4220 GET 1 POR 1 - 1 Mdroom Colonial, dining room, full bus-mini, gas hut, email 1 Mdroom houM fii mar can rant gut. Total gj^a istoo. call fer detain. *si- GMC Grand Opening i our Maullful 1 I model, 2 car attached garaga, t basement, 2 block* Mnh i Dixie. Hwy. Open i Rockcroft i day Sat. ai Richard Brockie, Bldr. 335-40*5 Aaron Mtg. & Invit. Co, 03,1144 ____ BY dWillRl f BEDROOM horn* ner etorae-and school. OR 33457 after 4. ■ ■ . BY OWNER. CIEtAz CErMIM ng rum and dining knees. si*,ig*, a,go* land contract. PB *■ BY OWNER, MILFORD, trl-laval, 1 badroom, panalad family room, attachad. bruzaway and 2 car ---------- Call altar 4, 415-1714. JOSEPH SINGLETON REALTOR 4» ORCHARD LK, RD, . 1131114 KEEGO HARBOR, 2 bad rooms, gas, city watar and aawer, tanead, Immediate poesasslon. 112,0m, ill-41*4. LAKE MdNf Year round Ink* living al It* Mat can M yours with thl* attractive 3 badroom ranch and allachad garaga on' buullful Duck Ltk*. Hu fireplace In llvlno roam, family room, rang* 3 dishwasher, Mautiful lawn, dual >26,too with terms. WARDEN REALTY 1434 w. Huron, Pontiac 4*1-3010 It no dniwgr coll 163S44B LAKE OAKLAND HEIGHTS? Mdroom brick ranch, finished basamanl, garaga, lake privileges. 137,300. Lond contract with *7400 down. Or 111,000 down to S Mr m With living , kitchen end land contract, sal) Ray Rati LAKE ORION, Ml rum, dining re bgth, UISO down S15.TOO lull prlc: ■iiata,4744f01. s? badroo extras, rtgaga- or will conaldar ' equity, plus on smaller IY OWNER, M’ Lake Orloii Iron-tag*, ] Mdroom, iw baths, 17,0M down lo existing 4 par cant can- 1 BRIAN REALTY Weekday* 'III t 53*0 Dixie Hwy. RY bWhkR: SlkMlNi .. ’* horn* Sarvica ■ . Sunday II living room ond fireplace, full basement, brick 0*r*fta, lmm*r-‘-possession, tarmi. Call avu. 4, 331-7576. ______ Sy OWNER, Rochester *rM badroome, large living room, ly room, kltchan, bath, Mile. 1-car garaga with pavad d brnk parMcua, lenead in lot l 140,. fric* *17.000, coll alls k«JiSP1i»7,f -------------- LAKE PRIVILEGES Scenic iit« for this S room bungoi with 9 bedrooms and attach parage. Beautiful 920 foot dl lot with fruit trddt. Land ci tract tormt# coll: YORK I. ream* end bath, in qutat rat I deb t I al neighborhood, gat hoi air furnact. Utility room alio h*» a atparale bath ranting for II. Requires subtlantlal down paymtl on ult -prlc* at *l74M. Buy*ft secures mortgagi for balonco. . KENNETH OH R hi FtTIAD, R teller \ 10) BUZAMETH LAKE RD, ! ___ pITmbi* \ '___ •f MUST SEUT l "BEDROOSi homo. {! n**r Ponlioe Moll, completely n^'GoTFXcc Mine, new 2 Mdroom , full Mtahoonl, roody for cupancy. $17450, P HA, *750 S^W»lPPvV.*OWA *■ ISOC.. 3171 Union Lfk* Road, iveM3*TO. ovafflhge 07-4554. ,. ! ' THi |Yo* RENTING $140”MO. ________ _.J* closets. bageh, carpal* and big kwh MAINTENANCE FREE MOVE IN FAST Wldbwa, Dlvorcus, even vlth credit problems.—OK will un Cooley •Ign bn < XI Common Laka Rdl., or call — we SYLVAN VILLAGE see the new cuitem t "AMERICAN COLONIAL H( for t growing thd active family. 4 bedrooms, lit Mthi, all City services. Air condlfkm> lake privileges. 1*15 Itratterd. 542,75b. Financing arranged also 1 othar hgmil nun sun., 35 PAS. 4--- any>im¥. 4*3»ig. TUCKER REALTY REALTOR WEST HIGHLAND VILLAGE. 4249 Lancaahlra Lana, en M-57 watt of Hlkory Ridge Rd. Spa: 1 badroom, 1 bath, walk In CM modern kltchan, utllltv rogm, 1 lot, PHA valua. *25,75*. Low i payment, 12,150- Monthly payi gag. Open laturdays 1* a. p.m. Or by appointment, 41M* BRITON RUILPING CO. percel It lual( IS. Lovglv sit* to country him*, II va LAPEER AREA 479*i. Thla woodad parcel include! 40 rolling gctnlc acres. Ideal location t>r your country delate. Only *471 par acra — mort land, avallabla. CALL 464-154* EVES. 4131514. YALE AREA — 1 plnu, 1 miles Mil, M-iv. spacious S badroom horn* on to acral. Exultant Mm, alio ■VIS 435-4*41. JOHN A. ROWLING, Inc. REALTOR lit W. GENESEE, LAPEER ARRO LAKE FRONT C«pt-Cod horn* with 9 badroc 23' living room# 1W baths, basamanl, lot tha IM«. ^ only 122,500. SPEND YOUR WEEKENDS And vacation In this cozy Mdrwm estfagt, prlvllooos < Cose and SUsabath Lake. Plus M X 170' taka front tat an EllztM 343-46M 10733 Highland Rd. (M4t^> WMIIa Waal ofOxapw Laka OPEN 3 bedroom, family roam. HE both*, 1-car garaga, trl-laval, only tll.ttt on your lor. DIRECTIONS: Highland Road (M47) lo Crescent Lab* Road, right tf mil* to modal. Atu ranchos and colMlala aa law at 115,77* plua to*. GIROUX REAL ESTATE ____333* HIGHLAND ROAD 4737S1T . 47340# LADD'S HAS7 SUBURBAN HOMES and^Ml'lt-ln'utraa. 'piU $33,500.00 ReCREATION ARIA on m-57 at TteetrilM Rd., Quad on a*’ lot. G*r*ed. p»* carMtlng. 1 or 4 Sadr— $26,750.00 FHA Cun | ' X SBPrx. bungalow With A&G $950 DOWN Gl TERMS futurlng lovely firtplac*. fam tfylt kltchan, attachad garag* i private drive, *17,75* (MlT prlc*. ANDERSON & GILFORD Building & Realty 111 Highland Rd. (M-57) 41371 WATERFORD m-^chamintJ Sr*'’ 2-car garage, ly *17,501 land wn. CALL Ml- GMC _____714-Rik«r Bldg._ WATERFORD ARIA, 1 bedrooms, full htaamthf, 1-ear garaga'* loaf paintad on tha outaloa. City watar# naw aaptic fiald. FHA approvad. 116,500, tiro down. CALL 651-0370. GMC_ . .WYMAN LEWIS REALTY ... I'LL BUILD any tlyta hoi ...."-mt <>2191 i BACKUS BLOOMFIELD HILLS Cuttem built 1 Mdroom frMtval i larat tat. Hum ' " a kltchan with bui •Ins and^brt. With fireplace and dapi leading lo autman patio, ivy I 1 car aftecngd garag*. City water ' sewer. Can attaint 4 per r— call i AUBURN HEIGHTS oom ranch, larM separata dining reon easement with racraatlen fha tarmi. Call today. BACKUS REALTY M l 321 - ■' . * Val-U-Way NORTHEAST SIDE Beautiful 4-Mdroom home with full a IW car garag* lad formal dlnlnj kltchan with bird Larg* carpeted living room. Aluminum a I o r m a and Kruhs. Priced at 111,75*. Avail- Larg* carpatad spacious p.m,. *l fvoWi i living Flue tool shed. % NVK7 carpeting, drapes, laka asium# axlitlng mortg 0170. BY OWNER, 3 BBOWOOM tha vicinity BlliaMth Lake no. approx, r yrs. old, larn lot, 717,1** on PHA dr cash I* existing mortgage. *11-1700 If EM 370*. Macaday Laka prlvlli vgnfiwtal terms, 435-97*7, _..I’grmti tlHHT, _______* CLARKifftN. llf l6t surrounds 3 large Mdreomi. Has Mxll country kitchen, ill prlc* 114,10* tnd »*m* cash, lti.itig, EB^iAR'drfflWier 1 Mdroome, dining n baumant, garage, gae : mgr*. Just 111,MB PHA. -jll Rev Todev P-53____ NiW 3BEDRo6s6 rinch, m Nothin tormol dining room.' lull bosemont, ito tor garaga. fenced yord. and only t block from (homing cantor. Priced *1 114,400, *2250 down and ItOt par mo. LOVELAND WATERFORD Neat I bedroom, living root b«h7~u»nwy Good location. Said Houits THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, I960 49 For Wont AtliYDlal 834-4981 4 LAZENBY LAKE PRIVILEGES/ SMITH Lotui Lake. Largo living re with gloiood-ln perch, good ill bedroom*, largo MNMR with « ing ipoco. braOMway 10 a in i WATKINS LAKE FRONT A contempoory ] bedroom rand located at the woter'i edge, v beamed colling In the living ro along with 0 striking bi_______ fireplace. Title homo alto natural IHWIN EASTHAMI “YES, WE TRADE" EAST SIDE MANSION bod room i. largo corpotod living ■t dining roomi, fireplace, Ito kitchen bullt-lnt, lota of room, 3to-car of. PHA terms cltan. tastefullv MOVtNO~OUT? 3-bad room homo with toll basement, living, dining room, kitchen with breakfast bar. Inclosed beck ponph paneled. lto-car^aragt, NORTHERN HIGH AREA Nice t bedroom bungalow with family room; Mas Hit ear garage i on PHA terms. LAKE PRIVILEGES room, Ito baths, paneled fireplace, large wooded let with lake, privileges on Elizabeth lake. Call today for more Information.— PHA torma. 4 BEDROOMS ixtra laroe carpeted vith firaplaca. Si- kitchen 4t|Sild Hdiiw OPEN, SA^.-SUN. 1-5, P.M. vanity saparata din-ga kitchen with built, fast nook, t bedroom 1 largo bodroomi •tar move right In. Ottorod ALMOST NEW 3-BBOPOOM I. BRICK FRONT, gas heal, 'ceramic bath, I m male u la la kitchen, i-car garage, 4624W, Walton—OR A-OSOt OPEN SYLVAN SHORES P/lcad i WILLIAMS LAKE PRIVILEGES ! S bedrooms In nice area, large •4 pit In back yard. Priced 117,000. Part basement. TWO IN ONE j I estate will not Hera Is your opp i now quality brick r's prices. Chock these 3 bedrooms. Lot The Rolf* H. Smith Co. Sheldon B Smith. Realtor 144 $, Telegraph 333-7848 TIMES PHA or VA sided oungaiow in a ’ lovely suburban letting, close to I-7S and Oakland Unjveralty. Features Include: with finished fourth bedroom or fenced yard. Garage street. Offered i SAT.-SUN. 2-5 P.M. isdroom ranch— Beautiful large — taka privileges — sowar — water — carpeting — drapes — 2' * garaga — dishwasher -ga disposal. 2751 Woodbine Almost 1200 and paved 122.750. Call IGiSn! a'Pffi MILL'S REALTY • ALL Your Real Estate Needs leas Tn Lake Orion and Lapakr CALL EM 3-0703. ESTATE ARIA, ploca, attachad EXCLUSIVE ________ Beautiful layout, ft carpets, 2lb bath garage, M3,OOP. CALL EM Sih Hum 4 -' 'itiNomm KINZLER Crayton plains x.Trv values that Wa have rooms including, family ■Mi m j mmm . piush tgrpbm| basomont and attached 2 and •Ktrasn. Anchor tone. 276’ with vorloty of trull gomes snd flowers. Owner transferred. This Is one of e kind, better Sea Today I Lot's Trgdol Incamt Prapsi-ty ISLE IN LAKE ORION Wa are offgrlite t yoor round tSlAM land ttmtraet; torma. call us mnwn itofalit/4744161. ■ —“if PRATT RD., MRTAMQRA, ELIZABETH LAKE AREA Brand.- new ranch In Elliabath Lako area. Hga 3 stairway *to heats future badroomt. room with cut out atone /ANNETT OFFERS d-PAMILYr-WEST SIDE Well constructed brick in got location, iacn apt. hat LR. Pi kitchen, 2 badrooma, bath at.. ...—. I—I, .. .... . «.rr'4n » . storms,UandBrians’ X'JfWk DPOOPlif ! Land contract terms. M DrlVjwOJSto 1 BRICK COLONIAL-2 LOTI _ , J room with split ttoldttera, natural .sue Orchard Lake ,Road south of I ' ryear *r lot. W fence perma*i Lstt-Airtefs H jUTCfaUEPJ3 Ilf, >00. bo subdivided. ACRil. Could > lake Freni.--------- t horns. Barn ini . *49,000. Jari loci# formal DR* IxJo porch; lavatory on main floor. with birch Kbboailds, large .... . *««« utility With attached Ito car IWA O-GUUU-J with knotty pine living racriitlon, Oak (loon. glass window*. Gas heat a ship water. Lpfte Trad*) SUBURBAN 1-ACRE dean cosy all whlto S room igraW- In g park like lotting of or rotlroM.'I car garage and Multiple "PHOTO" Lilting Service »- OTTAWA HiLLS BRICK , Attractive name In thla desirable location, architecturally unique. 3 BaratP oversized 2 I Included. fiiy J» large lot with full I mdicep garaga.’ S34.500, terms. SYLVAN LAKI FRONT divided, price, HI ,755, rad. MOM down 6 par cant Intoreit. owntr Will ihew It, Saj. Oct. IV «J* •ujk.OcLI»| Clnosbt.,, ran BBte”E iW down* balance on tai 9___________brick________ homo nowly carpeted^ tractlvoly decor a tad. and located In Orion Twp, Aluminum trim terms. Land contract a 2-famlly income, toll basement. IVtur garage, call tor further detent Nowi Priced *14,450. 363-8303 674-3126 335-7900 MODEL HOME 3 bedroom, largo kitchen, ceramic tilt bath with vanity, full basement. slurp, aiding, sealed glass windows, marble sills, oak floors and prlcwLJd under S15.0M. Let's gat yours started. GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR GIROUX REAL ESTATE 5338 HIGHLAND RD. 673-0200 VON ASSUME MORTGAGE bedroom brick ranch, electric , carpeting. 2to car garage. LISTING - SELLING - APPRAISING - BUILDING fye fatchfr______________________ tor toe small family who want a home Instead of bedrooms, new kitchen with loads ot cupboard space, bullt-lns, et-tactied 2 car garaga, an a large lot, bettor check tola ana out. *17.900. NEAR GLENW00D PLAZA Walt token car* of newly painted INCOME PROPERTY-SOUTH SIDE mlly Income. *75 par month from aach unit, heat, city sowar and water. — i J— This to a new Hating. Only r. close to down- EXTRA SHARP-SOUTH SIDE 2-ytar-nld extra sharp 3-bad room hot convenient kitchen with range and or FHA torma. Thla la a brand naw MLS FRUSHOUR-REALTY- REALT0RS MLS ___________ 674*2245 5730 Williams Laks Rd. 674-4161 Every Convenienct ottered with the purchase «t the 2i ' eve In Panton. of living area lata of storaga space and I rang#, refrigerator,1 SAGAMORE ESTATE. Artists GILES dining roam, TVS" 2-car alt. oarage. ° v translarrad. S47.000, terms. Altar S | 0711. 31452 CEDAR iiToSI __ cbmfKtVrw nor! DESIRABLE LAKE fronts !';l LOWER STRAITS LAKE — Pina •J area. 3 badrooma. 2 flrafitoeaa, walkout level. SM.5M. Land eon Orchard L|kg Rf At PontTac Trail 100. 4444B90 lo 'ACRES. ttLAkKS'tdfl, ac^xjja, Phone 325-3141, P ACIhK-^iilf I* mltaaV^.X "■ Rochester. Priced to Mil WtfN torma, ; . 45 BBAUTIPUL—rolling acres. Ideal home alias. 74 ACRE*-on U milt pavnd road 71 ACRRI-N. of Rochaitar1* • faW Of flea In Rechaatar AArt. Cva F. Andaraon CALL CM 3-5477. built-in ROWHEAD RD. OPEN SUN. 1-5 Wl WILL TRADE Realtors 28 E. Huron St. 338-0466 tract tarmi, COMMERCE LA badrooma. Ilka *39 900. $15.000. farma. • IVBR FRONTAGE ■MILTON WEAVER. INC.* Raaltora Hi w. Unlvaralty 451-1)41 I0~AC R E 8 N E"A R Ortonvllla, W"mil* Include: garaga Offered hs, attachad nd all city convar__________ it only 522,950. On land contract torma. Shown by ap-only, so call ua aarlyl 116.500. Features Include: I badrooma. ceramic bath, family sliad kitchen with formica cup- sldlng. srorrr iulatad walla BEDROOM BRICK' RANCH, tot, patio, i chad garai 2 BEDROOMS, Garaga, farms. Appraisal Tn Ptflca. 217,200. VON REALTY ktS ......... 3401 W. Huron , parllculara. WHEN YOU SEEK OUR SERVICE YOU ’JOIN THE MARCH TO TIMES" i carpats, patio, I wnt, Walltd _______ 1174 AL-TOR CIRCLE. OPEN SUN. 1-5 P.M. CALL FOR INFORMATION, 343-7700. room dlraclly ovar lha laka, ntot kltchan with 3 FE 5-8183 and baach -prlcad at only S14.750. PLEASANT LIVING CAN BE YOURS 3 badrooma, 1VS baths, toll basement, ga* heat, slat* root, patio with grill, much m«ra, Gl torma. EAST SIDE ' 4 roam, 3 bedroom home, with full Living and dining rooma. Kitchen. Basement. Gat HA Mat. vacant. Closing costs move you In an PHA torma. COLUMBIA AVE. - Near Stanley St. Carpalad living room. Kltchan - with .. bullMnt. Good ,“7oq oaacn. vestment *t land coniracl 427.3041, 4 iST ACRBS.” between .......... FRONTAGE -1 " brick ranch toll baatment, swimming pool. Loads of extras. 547.500. coir tor 100x150' LOT details and appointments. IUUX r JU lu i H4R0LD R. FRANKS, Realty; catkin* laki privi>mg«. ETT CUMMINO! 7913 Union Lika fAK# 1 CiI lint nlca homai. 343-7111 BVERETT CUMMINGS, BROKER as}!j|ii.....„ ............................ “ Pries um 4-H real ESTATE, *23-1400, OR 3-0435, OR 3-227).___. ACREAGE FOR PALL And wlntor turn pish pond,,irout_slrMm,)to*al pivemam. Pontiac or Bay Rivar-Aiptna araa*. aar -m# and Its your*. Call col lad (3131 433-1331. ______ HEARTHSIDE SELL"H I plus costs. OWNER SAYS Price sq. it tobagoanlng. Short . drive Phone Stoddard lie-1334, Esfat imagine' ovar 1.M0 tTPEW NiaLYJ»66DBb tt.„ Sf btaytllyljaka 12,600 M6"* OPEN SUN. 1-5 Times Realty O'NEIL WHY NOT TRADE? HAD IT looking tor lha right prlctt This 3-bad room brick pact I TnlSKjr, BSL extras. . .. mortgaga may b* assumed. Thla 4 yr. old home can b* yojjr. tor only r HEAF l DIXIE HIGHWAY Raaltor Opan 9-9 Dally flea Optn Sunday 1-5__ BEDROOMS* William* Laki ','l*l"'*rg*tUloi. ’iS'.slo. CAl'l Claude McGruder , Realtor 27)0 EllzObath Lk. Rd. 453-7720 Multiple Listing Service Opan 2-7 Moves you In. mrat oeo ranch located on Astor Carpeted living room. IV* ll Utility room. Ga* 3 BEDROOM BUNGALOW IN WATERFORD TWP.* kitting 3V* car garaga* carpeted living cupancy. Available ____________ farms. FULL PRICE 317*500. LAKE FRONT BEAUTIFUL RANCH hilltop view* o v a r l o Elizabath Lk.# excel li xrs* carpeting living room, hallway a i bedroom. Must be seen to < predate. AVAILABLE F G $34*000 ON NEW MORTGAGE. IT'S A HOMEY WARMING HOUSE iRT- sr closes behind you, you heartwarming cozlnass oI I carpeting Throughout, 3 i art on one floor, plenty el room tor the family llto-tnsida. Full baaamant partly finished, gat FA , heat, enclosed rear porch; lahcad yard, drapes, curtains, washar, drvai land air condltlonar Included. Prlct 2-Bedroom Lake Front SITTING ON WOODHULl LAKE with excellent view. He> Ing ( garage* 343-7037. RAISED RANCH* W . area. Central air dltionlng* alec, garaga -------- ------------- j DPEN SUN. 1-5 P.M. 375 PEN- LAKE RD. EM 3-6703. PRICK RANCH ON S ACRES fi| “ Lika prlvllagts. large walk-out 4 BEDROOMS* 3 bath* Wolverine Lake front* very larg ... ---- hing. CALL PC1 '* EM ! CLARK Vacant. IV*. Call MI. ALTON, PE 4-5! Nicholie & Horger Co, 33V> W. Huron St. PONTIAC COUNTRY CLUB la right across lit* alraat, (ram this contemporary redwood ranch. II* a cozy 2 bedroom horn* with a family achoolt and shopping araa. At-id carport - Include* carpeting owner will Consider trad*. PIONEER HIGHLAND! • . brick ranch, full and recreation HALL 3-BCDRDGM ALUM. RANCH - IW-car Water* basement, large garaga. Located fnM fireplaces, 9V» car attachad garaga. Tn|| It a BUY I REALTOR 2147 ORCHARD LAKE RD. 334-3573 334-3574 Bn~uiH LAKE PROPERTY, Possible Income rlJs)*?, proparty on Lake Orion, with a on* bedroom Apt. In baaamant, hout* haa 3 bedrooms up and KSs.S&JM. —1 lAKEFRONT ACREAGE.. tCRBS. Cl I a pascal ling good 1 ACRES I 2lk acres, clarkalon, baaufllul land ■ paacafull atmosphere, gently room with. fireplace. 324,700. PHA torma. WHAT WILL YOU GAIN BY WAITING? With prlcad tncraaalng avary year. Your Ural horn* It a stepping stone that stops the rant raciapts. Our 3-m--------------on Oakland EB$ . a real nlca family room NORTH OF PONTIAC IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY on fhle 2-bedroom bungalow, In ax-cellant neighborhood. Home Is Ih top condition* available on land contract farm*. FULL PRICE Call today wa firaplaca* Oakland. are: living room* saparata dining room* bullt-lns In kltchan* IV? baths* family room w I tJi ‘ ‘ hint with at- APPOINTMENT, EM 3-5477. $2000 DOWN LAND CONTRACT* brick ranch* attachad garage, full basement, lot 50* x 250', outsldo bar-b-que pit. $19,900. CALL EM 3-7039. Summer cottage in white Lake area, shaded lot 40* x US'* $4700* land contract or $3650 two boautlful lots, ‘ ~K Rl HURON ST. CLARK REAL ESTATE HURC OPEN 1 3-BEDROOM ALUM. BUNOALOW-wlth full bassmant, large 100x150 ft. lot. Home Is In need of finishing. Offered on land contract! farms. Don't wait on this ona. >* 36*795. 7 ACRES, luat north ™foro, slightly roiling, and pgrttcl tor horaa loving people. ; 10 ACRIS Lanaar art*. •“"I.c.!jndi wooded, plain, or .rolling. $5,730, I parcels to (------- 15 ACMil, ting. 1950 Hr acra. C. PANGUS INC., REALTOR OPEN 1 DAY* A WjlK Sll®“ CALL COLLECT 427-3117 25,000 down on land contract, rmatlori call JAMES TAYLOR, Raaltor, OR ARIZONA SUN SITES, 1 aer* lot, valua 11,275 will Mil tor 7750. Call owner 472-27M.__________________ II ____ upen ueiiy v-v mi. MILLER t’Fn'Q AARON BAUGHEY REALTOR £ LjLJ KJ J. L* Dally Co. J "BUD LAKE FRONT* LAKE PRIVILEGED 8322, 665-1404, 363-3665. with lake privileges on delightful this 3 story* IV* $Ya&LL° _$17,700. PHA or LL 363-7700. BEDROOM Brick ranch In stland* carpeted* vary nlca lay-out* full basement* fenced yard* built-in bar In basement. 34987 BARTON RD.* OPEN SUN. 2-5 KM. time. Priced to match at call 363-5477, 12 MILE AND GRATIOT* IV* ..tT^a CALL 342-7027. WALLED LAKE SCHOOLS, PHA terms. OXFORD AREA, 3-BEDROOM RANCH with lake privilege* for those out ot eltyjKlwallars. Family room, bullt-lnt, Ylnatto. toll bast-mtnt, gat heat, 2Vj car garaga. Largs lot plus mora. Only 127,550. EAST SIDE 3-bedroom ranch. Large modern kltchan, dining area, .utility room. Prlcad to Mil fait. Immediate PHA terms. grading 674-2236 BEAUTIFUL LAKE FRONT RANCHI) Pasturing 1 barooms, sunken living room, family room, Full walkout basi baach. Scenic lot. Partridge “IS THE BIRD TO SEE" EXECUTIVE RETREAT Black Lake In Cheboygan County, year around ranch, home, 2-car attachad garage. Over 2 acres pavad siraat. Prlcad at $5,750.55. 20 ACRE$ Rom Townahl* .near Davlsbyrgi Rd. Florida FOUR THOUSAND DOLLAR Prlct reduction. Unbelievable be. ranch, I4xl2 living room with flraplact, 3 alien roamT attachad garage and lei COZY COMFORT In this storV, and h«lf bungalow In ll Ilk* g dining room, wa have ll. S . basement, 2 car garaga, 517,505, PHA BROKEN HEARTED 73x300, north suburban. Pontiac Northern araa, Stop Mvlng kltchan, 2 badrooma. ipROSS SSK* 'IlSpKSl 321*700. . No. 3.31 CLARKSTON SCHOOLS j brick couple starting _ ‘ltd garage, city water.ano « 22'x2o*. $2000 down land Cohffact. BEDROOM IN CITY OF No. 14-4371-RiS-LP. ASK FOR FREE CATALOG | PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE $22,250 I >050 Wait Huron SI.r Ponll.c for this sharp 2 baroom aluminum,*•'•*'» ------ --------WOM757 LAND CONTRACT TERMS waaf olI home, basement, garaga, beautifully city. 5 rooms and bath on 1 floor.' landscaped tot. City convaniancas Full baatment, oil haat, lanced yard!with country living, call today, this plus lota more. *14,730 with easy on* won't last long. Call 424-2400. CALL EM 3-6703. LAKE FRONT __3 bedroom ranch horn*. 1 TO 7 large tot, nice baacl rolling terrain about to wooded. Prlcad btlow market at 114,550.00, cash. NICHOLIE-HUDSON Associates, Inc. 1141 W. Huron It._ ••• 4IM770, after a p.m. PI 2-3371 • • ACRIAGI U ORION AREA- 3.4 acrat of unapoltod baauly In rolling countryalda. A visit tor mllai. Saa thla today- rawio—----------1 .. . WARREN STOUT, REALTOR Nf^0.Ar^^^.V^I,'hnl izLWm*"37 ,#r vour MILLER REALTY ! 481-2111 WO 5-8797 Inyaatmant Co.* Inc. w Rd.* Drayton Plaint 674-3105 PONTIAC. Land contract terms. 70750, gas haat, city water and fewer. FOR APPOINTMENT CALL EM 3-7700. to almost give m* awi Clarkalon arag, lira* fl recreation roam, attachad 2 car garaga i | larg* country style I living room, Ito windows and hot hast. Plus i $0 Uhls i 3-47 privacy and farms lot over 100x400. modarnittd kltch-Included In the price of 015,750, WATERFORD HILL COLONIAL had a call from Oregon and tt ooms, with 2to baths, basement. baths, bassr i carpeting, 1 car aitachi with firaplaca, dining I PONTIAC LAKE FRONT Buy your lake front homo this war. ■MU "nc ov.^.*nd“r.hn« LOOKING FOR THE BEST?- j ^ . *uJ?'1)','J? W* are proud to offer ona of the! !boat dock stays, bf 7|®*dy r,,"r. cleanest ad best custom built' r fun. Asking prico only brick ranch homes In the Auburn, Extra high DORRIS 8. SON REALTOR iwl \ ..MLS......... Salt Haastt \ 49 Salt Hint 49 ^ _ proud jea^water tun. Asklnf’lirtoa iyiiy PONTIAC NORTHERN ma'nTwith Only 2 block* away. Thafa rtohl, car garaga. this nlca 2-badroom home haa a .full basement, patio, 2-car garaga. lenc-ad in yard and all for lust 017.0W, Belter call today, lust llstad.No. 2-27 HANDYMAN'S SPECIAL PosMsslon Immediately, 3-bedroom, STOUT'S Best Buys Today ] Pi X; 31000 DOWN* 2 m....... - _________... large living room* fenced yard with 70* water. $15*400. CALL EM 3> CALL EM 3-7037. VACANT PROPERTY 04* ON COMMERCE LAKE 235' deep* excellent building ill CALL AND SEE 363-4703. CAUL 343-7700. HOUGHTON LAKE AREA* IS Wideman i^viums On Lower Strait. Lake, with Ml i"."i»-p»wTmn, CUl* 2 bedroom ranch, large lot.} U . Trum non b_I._ ' icrtahi, utility: K. L. TEMPLETON, Realtor “* gull "'*2337 ORCHARD LAKE RD.. 472-5750 tAKlIS OVER PAYMiNT*. MUST Mil, lake living site on hill over* looking land bottom spring fad lake. Call owner, 423-1333._ TRAILER* SfTEi ■ tractive 3-bedroom, aluminum sldad - MOVE ON NOWI rail .no ip family horn*, on a nicely shadedl Tto hours from Pontiac, 4 minutes call "r- double lot with lake privileges, from■ 1-75. Owrar mutt sail, Bit flrapiaca, bullt-lns, full basement, 2' mwilhly. Cell owplr 623-1333. SLEEPS IN ■■ 'E^aWWRttt rHfeSC. 5!* itowUr.Mrodrw,nk;nbif^ walking’ ! TERRACE *>, ACRE PARN I Mack ta whoat Thil home features 5 1cn'. . . . r°hm modern _________532-5242 ny'bWNER. tot1 X tW, l«ra» M MACEDAY LAKI a . with 2 Iota, across PRIVILEGES QN ELIZABETH LAKE Go. with this sharp while rancher. Vastfbul* tnlranca, carpalad living room and dlnlnajell, spacious kltchan | Call 424-2400. 11Vi*h ear'jjaraga, atomlnum FawntoSs i ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES go to mak* thla proud to «w i POINTMBNT. corner 5lot, I You can't alford to ,5 room tarraca TWO FIREPLACES- Setoffthlayaar-aroundlaka front ham* located In Lapetr-County on private laka, and laahiraa large enclosed porch, 3 family room, tola of WILL GUARANTEE THE SALE OF YOUR HOME CONTEMPORARY brick rancher. Include* J bedroom*, ^Jto^baiht, bright haarv Jk\l afagd. DISASTER! HANDY MAN NEEDEOI room* doublo fireplace, LARGE WMLLeMAINTAINBD oldir •nd tmomdlofo pouh-Sultiblo for tho largo ft or* a 12-unlt Incoma. forma. HURRY* CALLI NOWi WIDE OPEN SPACES AND A RAMBLING RANCH- g, CALL TODAY 11 *27 -OLD-FASHIONED COLONIAL, Early American badroomt, rustic fireplace," full basement, and 2 car garaga. Big fenced a view of fh* lake. Antique Invert wanting up-to-date living should CALL NOW:; GO NORTHII OXFORD AREA SPECIAL I of BONUS faaturai. Marbla Bills, ctramle bath* naw ear* paling, . laka prlvllagaa* and opan fields at your doora. Sole and span homa with 1 $22,950. CALL TO- FIVE NEW MODELS OPEN SAT. AND SUN. 2-5 p.m. or by apdolntnitnt COLONIAL AND MID-LEVEL: West Huron *1 Voorhtls Rd. KRYLON RANCHER AND TRI-LEVEL: Hllltr Rd. at Ktylon Dr. AVON RANCHER: Avon Rd.. lust east of Crook. Rd. PONTIAC CLARKSTON ROCHESTER UNION LAKE 388-7161 625-2441 651-8518 363-4171 Price 21.750. NEW MODELS akavlew Clintonvlll. Road, rear yard. Land contract terms. NEAR OAKLAND U.- Small farm alz* property 140 X 240 with excellent 3 bedroom family homa with full basemant. Giant 2to car garase. Many fruit and ahad* treat. 7 x 14 glassed . parch. 518,500 with axcallsnl land contaact terms. atarford WEST SIDE COLONIAL- Our Lady of Lakas Church) | Laka Angolua Road. Clarktfon Meadows 1-75 and M-15 Clarktfon ridge of Waterford 1-10 Iowa ‘ plus flowing afraam, CALL 343-5477. LARGE LOT ON . trout $9500. SPRINGFIELD TWP. 34 loti* vary nlca building iffat* $2150 aa. CALL FDR MORI INFORMATION* IM 3-4709. CALL FOR TERMS. EM 3-7700. LOT 75*x105*. $1503. Ih Wallad Lake schools, Middle Straites Good looking Eiiz. Laka Road & fwfi'Tarr OR 4-22^3 Sols House1 home. Ideally located Pontiac Goneral Hospital. Full baseiVient with gas haat. Black top drive and garaga. Assume existing FHA mortgaga. WARREN STOUT, REALTOR ! 1455 N. Opdyka Rd. Dally LOT 75'xl55'. 11555. Laka school.^ Middl. Lakes. CALL EM 5-5477. APPROXIMATELY 24 ACRES ef on* of Ih* boat freeway commercial and service areas, call POR TER*"------------------- EM 3-7537. FOR TERMS AND DIRECTIONS ACRE FARM, 27 acre! ctoerad, 4 obm modern slant house, many out buljdlns*, In dMr arok, 4 or 7 excellent lijvaitmant at S7, tings, In dMr are basamat, miles. E. of 33 on M-5L t .............. Beach Rd. Martin Cavarly. I. G 'WIDEMAN, Realtor MOpa XJPEN 2 JO 6 412_WV HURON ST. 354-4526 j REDUCED TO $40,800 KELLER lllngi, osets, firaplaca, Ito baths, attachad 2to-car garaga, txcttitnt beach facilities and araa of dlitlnc-i today, follow M-S7 Prescott, Michigan. CAMPERS SPECIAL 1U| acre, wooded campsite— WOO.Oo owner. Ca 6I4-255-7447. HUNTERS 11 Lama completely furnished cabin, modern facilities, txcallant hunting SOUTH! Must salt this 3 and fishing. .. (Tarth Lake* .lub.) and NEW complatalV it on Staap Hollow tOi around homo* outskirts' of carpatlng, drapat. natural firaplaca.| JtoJel. McCULLOUdH REALTY. rlson »13,3oi in tolll coJitr.c •tfarhm*« garaga* assy contract farms ALSO offars 3-badroom ranch* with -----------------------I ----------------- ££ m,ny C. SCHUETT EM 3-7188 < right ptrty. Call Soanl INDIAN VILLAGE: This large^ ve i other extras from SI 7,750 on your large vestibule leading to beautiful -----n| uinlng room, chan, 3 spacious bedrooms, gat haat, hast and clean. F.H.A. torma, or trad* for imall -573-1 111 I 335-4454 49 tale House* 49! Mastim “IT'S TRADING TIME" ALLEN LAKE LAKE FRONT th« 23 ft. living room Into th» formal piacai into tho kltchan with bu“‘ flag g the thraa specious bedrooms and room with flra-0 araa; through complets baths; than to tna eplaca; another bedroom HV complato bafh, with second kitchen and laundry room ____in bar. Maka an appointment to saa the many other deluxe features of this hom*~our salespeople love to show Itl TERMS CAN BE ARRANGED. EXECUTIVE HOME-BRICK COLONIAL Close to schools and shopping: room, large kitchen with si arge living room, formal dining __ . ____ lichen with stove nack-bar. Thr Irsf floor. T Screened porch, fenced yard and 2*. All this stove, refrigeratoi --------- Three bedrooms first floor. Screened p only $37,900. PERFECT SETTING AND LOCATION with tokp. prlvllagaa and >a beautiful view of Ptoaiant Laka. Thrs* bedroom brick ranch with Ito batha. lull b.lament, VA Large kltchan with built-in*. Salt Include, carpal, ranch with tto batha, full be lament, 2to arage. Large kltchan with bullt-lns. Salt Include, carpal, i- and water aofttror, Some furniture can alio bt bur-chaMd. Priced *1 only 531,505. NEAT AND.CLEAN > T Three bedroom homa In the Northern High School area Includes carpet, drapes, washar and dryer. Nlca fenced yard with metal storage shad. Can ba purchased FHA or assume , low Interest rata. Prised it 117*500. WE HAVE MORTGAGE MONEY AVAILABLE TO HELP OUR BUYERS FINANCE OUR GUARANTEED TRADE-IN PLAN IS DESIONED FOR YOU* MR. HOMEOWNER . . . WITHOUT IT . . . YOU MUST SELL BEFORE YOU BUY ... OR BUY FBEFORE YOU SELL.. CALL RIGHT NOW TO TRADE THE, HOME YOU OWN FOR THE Dick Bryen, Elaine Smith, Leone 1071 W* Huron St. acres. CALL 363-6703. vt down on iu acres, zom commercial, land contract term FOR DETAILS CALL 363-7700. APPROXIMATELY 23 AGRE8 aka, excel la 37,500. Land McCullough Realty, Inc. 5446 Hlahtend Rd. (]«»: 674-2236 624-2400 Pontiac Walled Lake KELLER REAL ESTATE „ REALTOR ______MLS REALTOR JOHN K. 673-07*72 contract torma. CALL 3435477. LIST WITH HACKETT START TO RACK IT 7750 COOLEY LK. RD. UNION LAKE, MICHIGAN JOHNSON IRWIN 4 BEDROOM 7-room, 3-alerv frame homa, toll- e crtkic baaamant, ga* haat, large bam In w uvzi.* rear. Wllf toll an Gf or FHA SYLVAN SHORE, torma. 112,750. | Vary wall kept 2-badroom, 1 After 4, Carroll Braid, FI 4-2254 | “MfraST M ! kltchan NORTHERN ______ Lake LAKE . LOTI, mar Gaylord and Lawlatan, private owner, 371-3137, Fentiac._____ TRAVERSE CITY 250 acres, axceptlanal davalapmant land. 2 mile* from city. Fantastic growth predicted additional acre*! BEAUTIFUL HILLSIDE BUILDING sites, low down gajimant. Walters Clarkston School Aria Walters Lake prlvllagaa, tavaral choice building altoa, Pare tost* 3-3455_____Svtvgilf 452-2505 CLARKSTON 5 choice acrat with 259 Of front-tga, 2.7 north of t-73. Across lha street from 7730 M-15. Full price 57,500. Tarma available. Sislock & Kent, Inc. 1307 Pontiac Itat* Bank Bldg. 555-7274 ___ _________MH17I CLARKSTON AREA NBaTI-75 baautllul to to 1 acre Iota In raatrlctad subdivision. 423-3442. CHOICE BUILDING sit*. 4 1-3 ur*, rolling, wooded. OA 1-2035. 10416 DarfmilBth Rd„ Ctorkaton. CLARKSTON AREA DEER LAKE - 4 woodad lots, ovar to acre aach, toko privileges. 51,505 to 111,550. BOB WHITE REAL ESTATE FARRELL Pontl 3 ACRES Igc Twp. ^an private dilvg. orici ei iit*ixin-Ti™. FARRELL REALTY prlc# of 7155,065. Tarmi 140J N 0pdyk( pd, Pentlaa ____373-4352 GRAND BLANC , 414-744-3010 l-4l4-747-4l6’4 40 -Acres an Baldwin Rd- WIH acra parcala. Excallent Reiert Property 52 JOHNSON Sal* Heuiti PI 4-2533 Many extra nice ----- _ eppolnfmenf. $24,950. 49 CLARKSTON AREAt I---“ ntl.c, 5-bedroom Located on ito Laka Rd.. large tot 135x135. Priced at only 113,550 with M00 down plus closli OXFORD OFFICE PERRY LAKE STARTER HOME contract tarma. Ask ter 347-C. Quick po«***«lon. CLEAR LAKE-BRAND NEW Only Its,TOO lull price, 10 par Cl patad living roam, large kitchen today Sto i.a 351-E. 10 ACRE PARk 1,340 tg. ft. ranch. _ __ basement, fancag-ln backyard 1-163 v ly bullf-ln faafuraa, flnlahad lo* 10 aer# tubdlvltlen* park Od. k Don'* milt Basing this one* raduckd 'for quick sale. Aik for CUSTOM QUAD-LEVEL ON LAGOON Located In on* of fha nicest treat In Oxtor tarred, hit last It your gain, 4 larg* apacleui view, family roam, split-rock firaplaca, plMtergd 544,700, rrany, many gxtrira, make appoln' 823 S. LAPEER ROAD Nffto. panoramic throughout, only tag 325-B today, 628-2548 'buying’or SELLING CALL JOHN K. IRWIN 8. SONS 313 Waaf Huron Pull price 12,775, down. Clot* to many lakta. Near thousand* of acres', of (fata land for hunting. Low pollan count climate. Come to our office acroia from Wllapn Slate Park on Bus. us-27 (I-75K Opan 7 daya a D a v a I It Co, Commerce), NEAR BLACinfiVER LARGE BRICK HOME W FE 5-9446 After f p.m, 625-4045 LEACH VOORHlBS: large 3 Daoroom coiomxi, run oasamant. 2 car garaga. Beautiful carpeting, firaplaca and large formal dining room* FHA op provod at mMO, .... -------nf % CROSS $2*100. Im-i down Mymonf modlato potiaai 592$ HIGHLAND RD. (M59) 08-4017 _ S74-7I42 475-7467 KiijS'r' Realty and Invaalmant Co., Inc. 2 APARTMENTS TO Kent, th* grocery war and win*, tanka for t Land contract tarma avaMal 742.50 ■bl*.. LbI»—Atraegf 1 ACRE QN CAII LAKE ROAD ., -i NORTH OP M-S7 1 / ■FUTfLEYjREALTY,' 425 COMMERCE RD. 3424751 1.4 ACRES, 3 mild' north at Clarjf.ton, any torma. 425-3174, .i-ApnStfifloyrbatormlraBllit, aaa aawar, and: water, private, HIM. TU 1-5109. , I rr6~AClf~TilvSi*“th[5 iTritim ; acreage, woodad tna rolling. : Powlar Realty, 1424123. 451-1404, building IIM5. S ACRES-HADLEY AREA 'Country aattlng. etat# highway. Tarma, 29 ACRES-HADLEY AREA KING-PHIPPS CHOICI Davis 105* x 120* •10*500. Tarma. 120* offara great view. LARGE' WOODkb L0t, wislvarlna Lake, nice .ubdlvtilon, pavad atraat, Lake prlvTlapaa, cash ar land contract, MMiMl. LAKE "PRIVILEGED homasifei. Private baach araa. Lara* lake. From 51773. JACOBITRI B SCHULTZ •1244 WrXNKSR-njqnBii Look at It and calli JH-R JSS*. Pontiac Prill Work Wondiri. mobile Home lots METAMORA, MICH. PH 47*4172 part, toil than I (tr». Irani P*n-llac. WotMted retreat tot country ^nih;iir.c, For Want Adi Dial 3344911 Tlrii PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, IMP Dr-l PRIVATE LAKE n««i or Mb ■•rlalbauah McCullough realty, inc. 3444 Hlbhlend M. 474-3144 fA*!' 6W»n>ipir«IBTirocrooM ’^©bster-Curtis r-sMj—Oxford-Orion nllvt ecrei Clou to ml lac County, Only ■ ' Oxford vory nice cornar lot, hen-to schoola, ' II,MO, termt.----------- Contract tarn4, ROYER REALTY, Inc. Goodrich 434-Mi I Welly 434-1304 80 TO 800 ACRES Itf Lower Michigan. Dairy, grain, hoof or hogtl Name your farm im^rVa^v^Arfe Haadquartora," 3M N. Michigan Avo., Coktwalar, Mich., Plu 417- 274-1744. __ _________ |743 AN AtHl, 344 acre, country gentleman's farm. Itatoly 1 bedroom plua 2 bedroom tenant houaa, good garni and outbid tdlnga. 44V, acroa with well-kept 4-badroom farm houaa. large horse barn and nice outbuilding,, spring-fed fish itraom north of Rocheater, lts,4 cupancy. Priced Of 441440. Rochester Commercial 3Vi Acres Industrial W IrmliM with 101' OR M59 OX* light Induitrlot. -mssFSfi COMMittCIAL •51- Isog .iS^FTTlivi Snyder 1 rally. Rot DEPART Ranks . heater ■ARTMENT t on *,500, vestment. 443-1444 Of 474-4434. _ 1)33 OIXII HIGHWAY fTontege a 44x472* deep, 24,404 aq. ft. Waterford, ronad M-1, cement of flea building 34x44*. now mala atoraga bldg., 34x74' wood frenu bldg.. 33X44'. Owner: W, R Porboa, QRW747, roa„ OR 4-3*44 Fecial 442-3444 or 442- HALLMARK ZONED MULTIPLE Wallad Lak# arta—ttl 190 ft. daap. 112,000 farms. m/k§ taih. 174-4139 at) Next to Airway I HOWARD T. KEATING 42044 W. IS MU* j-- ilrmlnghan Calla Welcome Tennyson* Scixys: How dull It Is to pause, To-make an end, To rust unburnished Not to shine In use. The Dutch Cookbook says it another way: Better it Is already to wear out, than rust out, yar SO If /you ore not In need of ruafoloum — wo pretent those ox- In Davisburg An eider building In aged .repair. Upper could bo rsflnlihed tor llv Ing quartan. Lower — flna tot antique,, gina, variety atoro, cotlaa ahop country atoro or lodiot droaa •hop. By pppolntmont only. Coll tlther of the otxwo telephone numbora — may ravprio chargee. Also In Davisburg Owner laid - this building muat bo told tor. p got station Ming pur Into good mod, dltton. ,44 ft. X j* ft. on Clear ' three One gal. camprgaaar. One hvdraulle alt holat. One lo gal. electric hoi water heater. Oral,Ing equipment Well, electric pump and MPtle Tire changing equipment ana ■tend. Priced at 111.440. 13,400 down. Balance 7 par cant land contract, or con be Icoacd on ooay torttit while getting aitabtlihod. < Edge of Davisburg Little over,4 acre* — on- T fee........... SkVdooIng. Prli down, balance contract. 10 V Paymonta 174.31 crecline Intoraat. C. NELSEY, SALES AGENT Dovlsburg, Mich, INCOME OPPORTUNITY 4 room office building, now eahti faeWaHiHk MlM» *H fmproY«m*nft. pavod road, ijmpla pfl^raat party - Properly 87 IMMBDIATB POIICISiON. M-34 •vo'ISmo, 'w> ®"nwGw ropn Acroa MV <4343 tFGHT INbOStRlAL ~ Over a acraa With 1,100* railroad TWP* close to Ml,400, totm», I ' PONTIAC TOWNSHIP Ml ft, toontea* an M-i. monuiocturl^'uIoK' contract. 0PDYKE ROAD 14 ocroi, 314 ft. of cw BATEMAN INVIITMCNT 4, COMMERCIAL CO. - 377 S. Telegraph Rd. 338-9641 Aftar 3 p.m, and Sunday a — CALI 473.1747 NORTH WOODWA RD-bLOOMFI El D art*. 11,400 aq. ft. of httvy SAwytauw and Talaeriph, owner will laaao tel] on liberal land tenlract tartr 4-Rand and Aatoclotol, 143-4742. professionaT Noxl to ahopplng center, 141-2133. Sal# Land Contract! 69 ~ * 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently, nogdod. lee us botoro you dial, Warren Stout, .Realtor 130 N. Opdyko Rd. . 173-1111 fff 14^5^5^',rJii^iry“tofi'W C. PANGUS INC., Realtor I QPRN7 DAYIAWBBK 4 M-fl i Ortonvlllo CALL COLLBCT 427-3411 ; Wanted ConfratiNlIHg. 60-A RESTAURANT IlL -the-elly--of Kongo Harbor, tool, fncludod * V**r> 0ld’ prop*r,7 ••tele office. Prims fronlpgo on o molrl highway. 1117,140, tormo. NORTH SAGINAW vx..,ii,.6s».,.r.,ic.w GROCERY STORE burn Haight* nr**, gromd $113,000 it if yaar,, alio haa 3 MILLION on made ovalloblo to i,. mortgogoa or buy nornta, lot* or acraag* outright. sajrmwt LOUGH JR. 674-2236 McCullough realty 5440^ t^l|h lend Rd. (M-tf) i Tto“50 LAND CONTRACTS JU*MOI M*d*d’ u* bo Warren Sout, Realtor l N. Opdyko Rd. 173-1111 Open Eves, *tll 1 p.m. Money to Loan prlct with 17440 down. LIQUOR BAR Locatad In main hi wma tal DAIRY SUPREME Soft lev craam operation, could year round, located In Water! Township — tell — Trade exchange, BALDWIN AVE. 144'xi2S* vacant commorclol. Various t uiot, lend contract tormo. 5,000 SQ. FT. BUILDING Situated on an acre of ground ar with SOS' of frontage, ovorhei NORTHERN BAR Only bor In Chippewa Township. Grot,*, 174.404 par year. With entertainment and It aoatt 144. APARTMENT MOTEL Located 19 mllet south of Daytona In beautiful New Smyrna Beach, Florid*. Ultra modarn, fully H ____|_____ carpatad and r conditioned. Built In 19$3. 720 SQUARE FEET •I gfflca, loci ■wnshlp, bum i term,. Omg Putrall Or Bob Bartotbaugh McCullough realty, inc 4440 Highland Rd._ 474-3234 FOR-SALE ORIoom - 1700 aq. ft, 2V, acre fenced yard. Near GMC Truck and'Coach. 133-7141 JOHNSON TELEGRAPH R. 14x40 building. Good park Gun shop business now. Will toll business end reel estate or pr -pgriy^gnly^ Inquire for mo detolti. After 4. Carroll Braid, Pfl 4-1114 JOHNSON 1714 1, Telegraph_PB 4-3431 S9 ATTENTION, INVESTORS •In contact Robert Bartlebeugh, Commercial Exchange Dept., McCullough RHy. 474-2234. _ tLARK OIL AND Refining Corp., has a atotlon In Koogo Harbor, for w required, for further Rddl 3424, FOR 4ALR OR LEASE, Carry featuring chicken, riba, flah or plno. All modern equipment. Terms ovalloblo. Mornlnts. 343-22*4, Eves, altar 7, 412-3400. comar of Pontiac — GULP ITATION For looso at comar 1 Lake Rd. and Watkln* Rtal good location wun nigh potential. 2 aervlco bay*. Needs a Ward, Economy Oil Co. Oayo. 474-3144. Evening* 451-3432. HAVE CLASS (TOR B liquor tic •lao property to build on In tloc, will build to tulf or partner. Also could move to - T»4 tioff if Vuit«bii . mvmr Partridge "IS THE BIRD TO Sir WEXFORD COUNTY BAR Butinas# and rtal as tat* b*lna c rrtmant. Locatad in tha c 1 raiort araa wh*r* you can on|oy a four aaaaon bu«l Coll now on No. 144472-B-Z3. ASK FOR FREE CATALOO PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE ' Huron Sta# Pontiac $91-2111, WO $4799 Opan waak night* *tll t PROF IT ABlgTUSTFl R SI opportunTty t boat and tnloy Igh aarnlngt i try In a hglh yolu 'lea station In financial SUNOCO Pontiac l.. SUNOCO OPPBRS • PAID TRAININO • LOW INVESTMENT • MODERN STATIONS If you art an aggrakilva iooklnr B — — ng tor a tfcvrl futura call r to laarti tha datalla. saQinaw bay grocery A fine ns eompotltlon stem In « collont resort town location. Room expend to potont drug* B Dry goods flnoi. A genuine bargain at luaf 42,440 plua stock down. Call at ottici pc^!wT contract. 4 ' MILLER REALTY CO. AAftON BAUGHEY, REALTOR BRICM-1,4tor44 located on main road, Ample parking lot. New rorttod. Juit 442,404 on Lend Con-, wafIt to siitrL tiling Vour bualnoit la our butlnast Qualltlad buyers waiting. Calf lot Ira* appraisal. , WARDEN REALTY 34 W, Huron>, Pontiac $12-3920 WHY DRIVI TO w6lW7w 4,000 40. ft. EUILDIM atUNto# ale. nW1 Ml.Bto buys tnii Origin. LOrtd l* 4|4 W. Huran if. ■ . FE 2-6662 OPEN 9 TO 9 Sife ■ L V ROYER REALTY, Inc. Goodrich 434-2211 HoHy Sail Land CiHtTB«t« Chrali nUT will LOANS 424 to 41,000 inaurid Bgymnt pitn BAXTER^—^UVINGSTONR 41 Pontiac Stato Bank Bulldlnt FE 4-1538-9 VOUR HOytE _ FORECLOSURE op thp bill coiloctor — »lop >ur credit eraBtomo — wo h illllohi of dolloro tor mortga. wldowj. dlvorcaas, and mopI* im bad credit erg O K. with ua. (Mbslf g# LBBBI FOR THE PAST 42 YEARS Voss Bi Buckner, Inc. 1441 PontlK Stale Bank Bldg. CARNIVAL . \\ to SEW faaturai da | iso Ate iw, ever 1240. full nrlc* »n pnona Mldwoal Appli M4-MI2. ■ ' ~ — in'DiVB’flAilR . GOLDEN TOUCH AND S Medal 444, full grig# llto.ts, Call MidwuatRggfliMitgriMWr i .-r~yCiNfyWvWD m ANTIQUE WALL | Daacona H ASmICWair ^bARtAbLi WlniRy •tylas. Sllp-cov*r*d In fall plaid uptiontaiY. Good far In ISO ranga chair] I * , airlca, COMMERCIAL upholstering. Ts.« ~ Franklin Vlllaga. 2 bio 14 Mila ofrToTagraph. A HOUSEFUL OP odB^ouhrs doming and aomt furniture. 7141 Lake Com, off ai ' . W*t4rf5rd/ 42M7t1 Blue 144" COUCH ^__________tnmn BUNK BEDS Cholco ef IS atylaa, frui • triple trundle bad* gnd complata, lit JO and Furniture. 444 Aubui BIG JOB 65BAN ailTal warehouse at vk th* pram Walton at Joalyn. 173-4140. rn, PE 4-7H1 Of® 447 11, By Dick Tumet Far Bale MleeaBwemw 67. y%7m* °°°"*M|"; uM BTU GAS inACp bgater I bunk Mi, I bunk bod from*. OR 3-1744, , "DtesTesS’ SbSt“** "* 48.044 UNiY PURNACl. lift n4W, 1144, »ftor 3. f»i M477. ^ tei,4N;tTU OAI PUlRlACC' eom-plotoly Instollod to pro ton! duel work. 3441. Pontiac Mooting, 474- 2411, 442-4474. _ _ 124 FORD. WtoaiL Mreg Irictor, mower, mow plow B rototlllor. 423-3414. ______ ifi ALirrckALM*fvtn&» with TMI4 JMfF gnd forktlnoi, Comploto 13,400. A-1 condition. 117- Ipjodquoon JWt itorh ilko now, ol*o • Im'^Iooil •now blodo. 2*3 Chivy engine, oxc. condition. 4440 each. 473-2011. M.OO'gTLT'»OOM gos UtoC4.h(*ltr with wg|l thormoatat and blower. Alao oil hot wolor hooter. Both In *1 condition. Call 473-0472. droning toblot, mlmeograp- |b|d In HMimbgr af M par c Forboa Printing and ONI piiasTgioi Dixit, or U747. "No, I don’t think the government will he able to abolish poverty ... but they may wealth!". ~ For Sale clothing. mlac.ll44Tllmer, Pom ANCHOR FENCES NO MONEY DOWN PB 5-7471 ALUMINUM SIDING with .......iy.SBM.JIB49$$, $99,50. ChamwrTtara $1940. Caib roglitoria $39. Salt*, $19*804 Storaga Cabnnats, $99.50, FIlMy 14* WOOD BOAT, 10 hp Jol_____________ motor, and trallar, tor Apacha typo campor or what hava you. Valua $228. PB 4-9712. trad*. Aftir I p.m. $74- 199« CADILLAC. ly, tii , for T 343-4411. dir 1940 PONTIAC HEARSE, Exc. « dltlon, aall or trade, 142-4441 49MS»1.____________ 1944 RiVERItoa to CC far.'cliiIn CASH FOR CEMENT MIXBR. 4I2-" DUAL MANUAL PORTABLE organ) 4440 or trade for somdmlne of equal voluo. Call Terry, 472-4217, ROOFING --FOR CASH OR ANVTMIMG- of V0IU0. 424-H29. TRADE KING MIOGETTIOS onglno, race car and trelkn^ for pool table TRADE — Nlct, Ctoan 1145 Chavy Vi 4 cyl. stick, tor trallar, 24 h.p. Pr •nca. 442-5749. WILL SWAP NlW .140 .Spiniih WHAT CAN YOU aw4P a house fort After next {MV find put. Sito~ baautlfUl, new: cocktail doytlmo drassaa alias 1-12. Bsy'a raincoat, tip Out lining, alia 12. Men't topcoat. alia 91. 447-4*74. BLACK BROADTAIL. CLOTHING SIZR 7-14, odd* ond a no also. Reasonable. FE 44427. GREEN WINTER CdAT JrMflMGl mink, all* 14. 441. Cdli FE 2-M94. MINK PAWS COAT, fxC#llmt dltlon olio 11. PE 2-1741 ■ MEN* ’ BOfCK LiAtMlfcjKOjM 144, 'motch^ig*in|C*sa» coot, til# U 134, 447-4044. __________. WEDDING DRESS SIZE 9, 420. 473-4147, WINTER CLOTHES, coats, wadding dims, olzoo 7 A W, ill good condition. 124* Amorlllo, Wolvtrlng yiiiiig*. WBpOINO DRCH AND mil, ■ to to, rmtonaHo oftor, 37XM12 Satt'ltafnelioM Oaede 63 W WHAT YOU'D EXPECT TO PAY 3 ROOMS $297 LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN FURNITURE KaMwwjM war 'Jti ^dWcLTy Coll 3*2-7944 oftor 4 p.m. OB 3**' RANGE, A-1 condition, 440~ 3340779. nodi. 344.41 and up n*w box aprlnga ond Hi, 449.9! Up, STonoy's. or 741! Wtat Hlghlor 4219. Caih. Terms. Lav-owoy. Peorson'i Furniture, 440 Auburn — PB 4-7*41.______________________ 3 Piaci" SKTIONAL. 2 chair*. 3 gnd tablaa. 4 lampi. PB 4-4012._ 4-PJBCa BBDkOOM*, brand ,h*w. Si SiSM? HWM> 9x12 ALL WOOL (iammurelti grada) rug land pad, rad, MS. 333- 9xT2 Linoltum Rugi~54i95 rsyl Aabaatoa.tlla 7c •< *loorTihop^MM Elliaboth Laka** 'Across From thi Mali" IMh cimUkV BNOLISh tornlturt, hand flnlahad, axqulslla condition, mitt 17,ton VARw bfr 'Cbreti - — Mu«t Mill. Kitchen, commorclol .# s r*n GOLDEN TOUCH AND SEW C,M nWUSrDSlNGfR TOUCH AND SlW foaturoa blind htltlli bultonholas, Taney daalgna etc. cabin*! Included. Compare new, over 1244. f ul| price mm Admiral. Motorola coigr TV's m low •• mi ot to m* 4 has brand non i *1 to tha profit. BIO JOE DORAN'S worohouM hoi Whirlpool, Hgtpolnt, Phllco and Admiral tWIpnmM, rsnsoi, washers, dryors, TV's and Sfareos tor to Ing groftt. BIO JOE DORAN'S waahouM has trada-ln refrigerators, ranges and washers cheap, to ihp profit. 547 E. Walton ot Joalyn, 379-4440. BUNKBED4: SAVE PLENTYI Llttla SbI* Household Gocdt 65 KELVINATOR DOUBLE OVEN, 40", bast eHar taka* it. Call 391-4411._ KIRBY SWEEPER EXCELLENT CONDITION-444 fULL GUARANTEE, Kirby Servica & Supply Co. Sl>7 PIXIE HWY. 474-2434 LINOLEUM RUGS. MOST SIZES! 43.44 up. Pearson's Furniture. 444 Auburn A»t. Pi 4-7MI. _______ LEONARD REFRIGERATOR, good Ttlon, 440. 331-1109. LIVING ROOMS. BRAND naw, about to orlca. Llllla Jog's, 1441 Baldwin, PE 2-4442. ________ LAMB BND' +ABLI, Ilf. 4*2-9192 meaiuremantt. Spoi OixiaHwy cholc* of color. 14.9! voluo. 4 color* to chooaa Kodal plus, *11.94 ' now only 14.97 i Pro* oatlmotei — Easy tormi HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE 44HM1 _______ BRONZE OR CHROME DiNffTi solo, BRAND NEW. Largo and small alia (round, dnpp-lopf, rectangular) tobto* In 2-, S> ond 7-pc. PEARSON'S FURNITURE 440 Auburn PB < u REFRIGERATOR COPPERTONE ond otovo, Mi, m 4 mo. old, 441-2449. COMPLETE LIVINC WRIPtoRI.,-.. cantor, lamp* drapM and room KCtiMfltii MU m mors# frooitr, Mix 373-0915* 2991 Patrick Mo COPPERTONE GAS RANGE, DELUXE MAGIC CHEP gas rang*, bAV«Np6kT «6NVIbYi Yo bad * badroom chair# diiha*, a Itt jpungai, >E 4-179$. top, $40. 1 drattar Irror, »*ml-an»lqu*r $5i alight Lana. 339-1037# bah bEE* FRliZI, lo cubic ft„ m DRYER, 435) REPRIGERATOR HSi gKrw DARK WALNUT DINING ROOM lUITI- T«bto, 4 M?SC*?0nd|f|0rt' 11 U‘ FB M>‘ ELECTRIC itOVf, Bit-" 'Srah&S'wSffi woshor »nd dryor, Orlerto ruga, China, Books, mlK. Sala I* Sat, and Sun., Oct. 4, 4, 11 o.m.-4 p.m., 4*92 Dubay St.. Wotortord. 1 HqeJ wait of Dlxto rlwy., 1 block, norit of Andareahvllto Rd„ conductod by ILTCTR f C retrlMrotor, 440 for both, 442-943*. rFwErT*?44w,,htr;MB-0-Formica breakfast set oval t Prifldolre otoctric ctoan rang* 30 t 1,040 BTU *lr conditioner I 1) cubic toot choai Irooior Crump Electric gas drVBH, wriWgI* .Wiytoq woihor with dsublo llnod tub, and raaai,f!IJ GAS clothIs DRYER. Ctoan and working.- iaat offor. 442-4494. Gt RLRCtRIC STOVi with p watts, dri oil burner light 1 T electric kitchen ttareo amp., 4T ■ra form, alio 14, 'control" attar 4:30, 331- gas aipifioWAYje"®.' 1044 Craacant Lk. OR 3G477. GOOD DOUbLE bEDSPRINO, pay tormfi gi.&i-nw. HOUSEHOLD SPECIALS “ifooufS. ‘-a. . box apr no and 3 vanity lampi. A. FURNITURE CO. 17 B. HURON P» 4J301 HOuihHOLD fALtt i turnlhire. plTanc**, dlihas, ML T _‘ MISp IE?" Thur«.-Sai kIlVinator. ilIctrTC ring* Sale Housahold Goadi 65 WHITE NORGE ELECTRIC DRYER ______________324-4443 gwe» . ^ 6$-A ANTIQUE CHINA CHEST, axcoltont condition, 4140. Call 474-1124. ANTIQUE IETTEE AND platform reckar. 430D~ 473-1)447 . . CUSTOM ANTIQUE REFInTiHINO, Soaclallzlno In nimltura refInlahlng and rapalrt ot ali type*. 343-9341, Mon.-laf. FOR PRIMITIVE anttouaa. _ visit varra .Antique boeth S Orion-I RkiaLMarkat, avary Sat. JUST' RETURNED Pram thy main shop with larga freer toaB ■ aa tlquaa. Margaret Ti Dixie Hwy. Cornar of banchas. peat card d eatera, 414.99. 441-4404, 211 9 Mila Rd. Batter Pualnaii. BR(3l(eN"C6NtRETiand“Sto' aiu. atorma B acre*na. M44Mi SIlow FACTORY PRICE, cemplata trallar axlaa. closing out, 14* ai* while Ihpy tool* 444-7244. BRIDE* - BU'TYOUR WEODifid ----------ito ait dlacount from, Dlxto. Drayton, OR 3- 1-7, 792 H*mTngway Rd., aft CiarkStoR Rb,i ti ■ hint, m ac. » scoH Lk. *£____________ GARAGi SALl, 6cfto»r i-4,14'a.r — 1 p.m, Mnc. Hama, cloth* furniture, Mhf llama, MwflM bi 4 ahoai. 1410 Handrlcka, off Parkway, near Dodgo Park No. OArAOIi iali _ lot* ef nmtse. IMP Eooon. off PontToc Lake Rd pARAQk, fALBl'"m ioiTTio - Drayton, 4 ill 4 g.m. OR 34" DELUXE RANGE, puoh-butlona, doop-woll, clock, timer, light, ixcillint condition, *74. Hot-cor roc* oat, lali ef track. 434 . Call after 4 a.m. 474-kWl, HdoyVii Q'PRiGHf~,9ieuum.~4l2- 141*. axcoltont condition,___ HltolDlfWR, how toil yoor~from ware, gold IM*. poll 111. 434-439A HOU4EHOLD ITEM* ond ontiquoa Must bo sold, moving to Ptorldo next wook. Prl. ond (at., lb-4, 3544 Darcy Drive, N. af Mapto oft Lahiar, Uiwfl" k>R I NKLINa ■ plait£l*plp*Fl%1 P«r 104, lto ploillc pip*, 44.51 par 110, Ito ploallc pips. 411.11 per 100. O. A Thompaon A Son, 7441 M-49 W. LADY'S UNIFORMS, >W“ 21, Portoblo rodld-atorm. 2941 Vporhala Rd. 1 *121. 343-7719.___________________________ ^Wjri!3.0rft?bmre. gxcaliim condition. NCW ITORHY-CLARK argih, walnut tlnlah with baneh, rag, SMILEY BROS. FE 4-4721 CORNETS, TRUMFETS, oaxoahonaa, flutaa, trorribonaa,clariiwM, ate. uaad bargain prlcaa. Paoplaa 134- - evehEtT_CHORb~OROAN, mad* by Hammond, a-i shop*, dm moo, •all 1324. MA 3-12*7. farfITa, dW-ComAact1 ' grean ’ with Began 1*4 watt amp. file. 451-3744, , FARFISA COMBO ORGAN. 4440. Lesley Ipsakarr 4144, 44G7747. HAMMOND'ORoAN, Modaf C con-iol«# 2 tower#, own*r, $1000 With 110 OoQb. WHW. HAMMOND B-V AND Laalia, call Day* attar 4:34, FB 2-27*4, baft otter ever >1201. IF VSuk £M(ld IILD CAN tay Mr I's tlm* aha laamad VLempwpn'ahd Ion, 7104' LAVATORITS CCiMPTETir 454.40 value 414.94) alia bathtubs, fellafi, shower stalli, Irregulert, terrific values. Michigan Fluorescent, 393 orchard Lake-1. MEN, WOMEN, aMldrenf* ctothlng, ruga. Frl. end, let. 19 B. Sheffield. MOTORIZED PARKER GRASS and loot catcher, Ilk* new, lias value tor 444Jf, 114 Ihlrley, Herb* Mowing Mrvte*# $92*1311. _______ NICE OLD ALL OLA$$_. Chin* Fr** d*llv*ry HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE 441 Elliebath Lak* Rd. (Ntar Telegraph) 441-2M4 ________ 10J dally________ PRIVATE PARTY WANTS good 41-4473. furniture. REFRIGERATORS, Stoves! tobto*, and chairs, mlac. 344 W. Huron. RBCR BATON BAR with 2 leather -itoSgrMMaTy. ______ REFRIGERATOR, Tapparf REFRIGERATORS, DISHWASHlRS, limwMd wjreupc uLtcffiBrnffiff Fully puarantaad. TarrHIe aavlnoa. Term*, CURT'S APPLIANCE LAKE RD, 474-1101 "at *}K MANUFACTURER'* CLOl£-OUt~ STEREO WALNUT OR MAPLE CONSOLE Djamend Naadlaa BSR 4-Spaad changer $89 yiVERlA' “ ""^i'dIxI* Hwy Illy 14)144 TgS.~, let. 10:14-1 ITEREO. WALNjfr cabin*!, S radio, I4>, PE WWI. _______ VM CHANGER, Dews Id tuner am amplifier, French Prevlnela apeakaraablnet. 4144. *34-4474. SINGER DELUXE MODEL-PORTABLE turdj^ carrylnp cat*. $38*^ASH or Paymtnfs of $5 per Mo. S Year Guarantaa UNIVERSAL SEWING CENTER 7*11 Dixie Hwv._____PE AW44 SINGER AUTOMATIC ZIG ZAG Bultonholas. cabinet. Tbka___„___________ $7 per Month for 8 Mos. .or $56 Cash Balance Sim Under auarantt* UNIVERSAL SEWING CENTER MM Dlxto Hwy.___________PB 44)901 ' accaitorlsi. 424-9244. 5EWING MACHINE! IN NBW CABINETS FALL lEAlON SPECIAL 1949 ZIG-ZAG New, In beautiful cabinet, do* tha great clg-ug atltchaa. Ni tochmanta naadad, to make button holta, taw en buttons, evarcasl fancy itltehat, blind ham, hami draaiaa ate. Ouarantaad for I vra, PULL PRICB 442,95 tax Includad, 14.29 par mo., no Intarasi Call Capitol 14.29 par •oaaq. Call ' Machine Credit .-* p.« PHONE 7t9-44l4 If toll Call collect I YR. PARTS AND L A ■ O R _____GUARANTEED. TA.776fi p** |tpyir«B, 55": uiib color ... - • • • *131.46 .J^rbjy. y,h S?.bTrSf: HILF APPLIANCE CO. 141414 Mlto n*fr Cselldge 13 W. 10 Mile n**i fi'GTAG" v . IN CABINET 1969 SINGER SEWING MACHINE. In ^excellent condition. Complete with Vbeeutllul new cibinat. Ait Cantrell built In CASH 443.3* TAX INC. . Or pay 44.14 dawn end 9 Intoraat free, payment! Ot 14.2* ptr month. ■ Call Capitol Sawing Machine Credit Dept. 9:00 g..m. to 4)04 p.m. If toll “ j ’ 729-4414 I YEAR PARTI AND LABOR OUARANTII . vTlVh fXRL’TAAfeiiCAN MfR M" tong, plus * tow plteaa ot baby tqulpnwnt. 434-4447. Westinghouse Color TV Sets II DIHirent modal* at Close-out Prices ' Term* available to INCH COPPER WATER PIPE, 24 cento a ft. end to Inch 1 GAS SPACE heater 440. refrigerator >44. 334-2244. Ito cAr end you move It, ________._____ Park Drive, eft Commerce Rd., Union Lake. ■ 1HJNCH PLASTIC drain plM no n««d to 'pIS . with gluts oil you hotel. It t htek tnt • point bruin, too O. Thtmtion t long im W. 2 4' ILiOiWg OuBS doors, r lharmu wna. Mlaath. tfttdtB 2 MILK CANI 111, kitchen ceuhtar ■tool 42. Chrome drop lest table MBEiareMg polisher 417, ph table m^»35, conn corlnal 4140. dy Hirttona. Channal Master and 4 chairs $25, 1 2 table lamps M record holder tl •hep mala 414" i aat bar halls >7, ■ Hi NT Milford Rd antenna, 140, ul 2-4322 p,m. 4" BROKEN CONCRETE dallvarad. Clay, loam, topioil.«J. H. Waltman _Landtcaplng, 173-0444. 4 HORSKpOwIR, CreWiman-rl n mowar, used 3 flmst. 4 FOOT POOL TABLE, hot •!••• top! Mult aall. 145. T44najjj* bpy'i wmltr coats, sire 14, mlac. FB 3 0433 from 4 p.m. to 4 p.m. only. I GALLON ELECTRICAL humtdltor, with caitorr ‘ ‘ ‘ ton, Il£ *:». 442-1304. __ DIRT CONVRYOR, dining room tobto and~ch*lra, 42i-)14*. moo, iIlk* n*w condition. 474-2143. " >ji. 40 FTT'ShRUCM, 44" bate.- Make offer, 9*4 Voorhel! Rd. '—arwcr^6Trw um — I74'*CI^AIN LiAiTf¥nurtog f*li;*li Tine peito, 4212. 473-0949 ottor 4. 4)4 PUKlP~'4ti6tiSQN, extra shells: i/WTW! Call *11. 4 p.m. OR 3- TIB. _____ ' BY blWBI9~¥iMr*i iRen-Troy Carpal Werthouse. Carpal, rubber pad and delux* inMailatlen 14.44 '%#flm*'eC#r'”whljS mtrehandiss frra ;ndd p.« humldlflart ate. Clothes, ell sizes. Oct. 3-5, ‘ Drayton nf f ffiture Center wreught i ,_____,...... . potchaa, tt.44. Irregulars, aamplea. E,Vn"FrJ.», *A,norcCd Lk.-ft. ESTATR SALE — CONTENT room horn*. Air candltton**, BTU. 4 pc. bedroem aulto. Set. to-4. Sun. IM. IN N. Williams Ltka. 34M041,------r --------m ENCLOSE YOU! SHOWiRjJVSy d*ilgn,,'M?Ml TOM M-Jf W, FURNACES, GAB “ *—me. aau was. JOKES, Si wfeiTiJiHi1 OARAGE SALK, 44N batwaan Sashabaw and Dixie Maybe* Rd. Prl-Sat. 9-7 p.m.. GARAGE SALE, antlquts, 19 storm tail mowers and parts. UL 2-1744-3339 Auburn Rd., Auburn Hgts. OARAGE bOOR OPENKITs, 1 cars, 499.30 ____......jar ‘ Deer Sale*. Giant Garagi Sale landlse galore, Incl.) Me-suppllae, hardwart, tools. bolta, guns, cleaning beard hangers. G mystic Jaj>* and ONLY. 4V? ri.'9-j, nit GUITAR AND AMPUFER Larga wattle Iren end grill 99 Swing set 410. Child's baking atovt II. 731-1444. OARAGE »ALE"V-Schwlnn, antiques, larga suito, dishaa,_ •xcallant-Christmas gilts, all good ctoan thing*. Andaraonviita Rd, b Clamant to 4404 -Hlllcrast Or. GARAGE lALirotf. 2-4-4-I *1 1331 Oikdato. Baby els ‘ mlac. GARAGE SAUL 4AT. 9-5, Baldwin to Alberto, to 4tlb Menllobe, near i-7l. ■■ , . , ... GARAGE 5ALi, STARt. I*pt. 11 Octid from *-7 p.m, 44) Melreee. Saraoe SALE—s*t.> m. r Niagara Cor. S. Geniuee turnlture, ml*e. ________ GARAGE SALE, CLOTHE4, geidej and town teola, endmlse. let. Oct OAT*A"ffinOTr6iB6e?nn _ ...... 415 COBtl .kd. Out peidwln to Seymour L*he^M lARAGB SAL* F( womsn—tools, cloth 433-0447. MORRIS MUSIC 14 I. Telegraph Rd., across Tal Huran, PB 3-4147 LUDWIG INARE DRUM 332TWa.'',ailLUtor,T«n?*W L0WREY ORGANS NEW FOR 1970 Priced at $495 ■ Bank t«rmi~lmm«dltft dtllvtry SHOP US YOU iUY GALLAGHER'S ktiMiUim, lavyj -cwpTHiffg. 241 w. btrethmare/f** Pri. B Sat. RUMMAGE 1ALE, SOME enWquat; 3434 Auburn av»., Whlto Ihaghard Church. 9-4. Thura-Sat. RMAoB 'IalE, ftohlng hjefla. clothing and mlac. Oct 2-i. 9-9 -104 KIPRlaiHATbR,-124. good con dltton. 47M142. RU^GEJALA^j^rlyi laa .... j««i# inghitn# • u.m. lo l g.wie _ SIliMBlUliliiH AND^uwtgM aump pumps, sold, rtpulrpd# renlpd# CT-F^42.ri SNOW BLOWER for Eotone trcetor, like new, iif-NW" loUtMFtlLb baptiit ci^uetH Rummage, Oct. 4 at itonecrggt In Weltod .Lak* •cross from Com-munitv National Bank, IM PM. SPRED-SATIN PAINTS, WARWICK SET OP WEDDING RINGS, MM I SURPLUS OFFICE. CHAIRS AND Omar mlac, o«lc* furniture. Priced to mall. Hundred* ot Jlenewable-type filial, p'reclton of Original coat. BOULEVARD SUPPLY 440 4. Blvd. B. . 134-71*1 THE SALVATION ARMY ' RED SHIELD STORE 111 W. LAWRENCE ST. ■varythlng to i CtoBilnii, Purel TWIN BED *15, 49 | , water heater *15, electric stove *7, 1 coel ttovea *4 each, girl's email 3 wheel bike 44. 44M44I. . USED STEEL crenk-eul houaa win-daws. Good tor cabin, beat oftor. PE 4-3177. -_______ USEDlAI L ROAD t if s -34*0 Galleway ct.. Pentlae usiBTIbt watIrTaUk, eiaciric, 19 montha old, *34. Call MMjiua. yard iAlITOcI. 3-4, f a.m.-i p.m. Mlac., taan'a ctolhas. 5215 Tubbi Rd, off Crwant Lake Rd. - WASHING mTcTTi S E I N GOOD CONDITION. 19*1 Chavrolel.. Mini blka, axe. condition 3W h.p. 442- 12 GAUGE BROWNING, BMP and under, goad condition, UM. Can ettar 4 p.m, 473-3227. i&ep6k1 OT4M4.' Paoplaa 334- 2WIMMING peon, lank 1 Call MMy for drifflK*.', RHODES POOLS 241 W, Walton Men,, wad.. Thurs., eviNRUDi m. PlkiRLAI bilME bUgoV Body, GUNS-GUNS-GUNS On* of th* torgaat aalactions In Oakland Couiilv; Brawnlni, Waamerby, Wlnchattor, Ramlneton. Cell end Smllh-Weaten plitoli, icoprn, tlghto. We do eur own repelr work. SKI-DOO'S Jl", ll^',,en3 ft" treeki 49 mechlnee In eteck now I We hgva a comptoto lint pf qa> cenorlta. Spaade, , toch, iladi, lull!, boeti, halmeto. gtevaa, cudem colored trailer*, alnpla end 5TOP OUT THIS WIBKRNDI Cliff Draytr'i ; Gun and Sports Center IHI4 Holly'Rd. Holly. Ml 44771 Dally and lundayl i It. Ph Brighton. 329-4290 attar 4 p.m. __ 1944 OLIVB CRAwLBR loader. gaahtre. Wald Ponliic Men University Dr1< tyai’cSSeTr*"front ... lack*, staam BACKHOi LORATiIB L-34 V vard bucket. Daiar 194* baare 354. Garwrator*. WM FlMtiiON NTbackho* md combination, OL 14449. PClMIC LIFt TRUCKS, M< Clark., 449* lb. Clark, 70 , Clark, all In good /cond|llo( HUNTING CLOTHIS - MIN'S SIZII 4942, WOMEN'S SIZE to. CALL 473-7124* JOHNSON SKI HORSE M0T0 SKI SNOWMOBILES Complato line ef tnowmablle ctothi* and bitoto. YOUNG'S MARINA Opan dally 4 'til 4 Sunday if to 4 w 4430 Dixie Hwy. en LeenLak* Dreylen Plain* OR 4-0411 NEW 19^0 SKi-OOO'S COMB IN AND PICK OUT THI MODEL YOU DBIIRa WNUjI THE SELECTION I* GOOD. PRICE! ITART AT ONLY lift. ALIO Wf HAVE A GOOD 4T0CK ----[Jj, OF reconoitionid ueep DOO'S, ALL PRICED TO III. KING BROS. LL. frJSfi''cXiT !tC: Jvda* ^30LO,^filh^VdReOn Pomiec’RdfffopdyKa nnjlv.............. ^2.11*5 friw AWntrini RAGE 5AlI.t Urge yiriBv,l — inewmebllii.. It h.g.< 44 w^h,, tolhTng. jturnVl.A.Wito, « ‘ WJfOWER l4".lrqckL leto F * WJ*) Daquli [arseit < 17,440 iq. yds, In dock. 442-2444. doming Hudion. Thun., Prl., I. Set GARAoS i*ALf:~*lft*~1ke*ch—Dr.. Clerkiton, let, and Men. 9 ill 5. AQI »ALB, FrTend I Ir 4491 Lotua, Witorferd. Relrlgereler I 34" electric range. GARAGt'kALB -Tlilurdey' 9-i, too Pre*tonit9W. Huron. . _ JjWAOinfttf^TpblR A 4-L earner ef Lone Pine Rd. and Woodward Ave. Clothei, furniture, gerteri wheel, May equipment end heuiehetd articles, 317-4411 tTSn • mlic. hand toeli.^UL 3-4344. S: Comero* • aarvice twice. COMPLETE BELL AND rnovlq , quHIf. ‘fidi $M#r 4-4940 a$9 _ LRltA HSMaA And 1%$x1% with 90MMt >99 Ltlti vtrlob Ifni. Good rendition# $$J is" track. : wifk. $406, Fniiroir*' yo GENE'S ARCHERY. 714 W, Huron. Want Ads For Action D—19 If i ^ THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, l»fl» for Wont Ads Dial 834-4981 IKI DOO, SCRAMBLER 1 Trtl MM, Per 1M flneit service and Sunday*. 444-lttt. *dkSB62 icon* tuo. sos-ssn efter 5e,m. SNOWMOEILR TRAILfcRI, singles 1119.50, doubles *119.30, 4 MM Saw Mra W ef 4W-41S4 jRSTfT llte-*l_h,p. 1470 me Jm* Brand ss tkNf> OUN CABINET, waiters, Suck kMt.1l - 11 In. mil eume. ilf-OlU. THE AIL NEW 1970 SKI-D00S _ NOW IN STOCK—SHOP IARLV SPECIAL» H.P. SNO-JBT IW USED SfoVAMWILE TOO CRUISE OUT, INC. _________________________ « B. Walton • PE i-4403: LONG HAIRED kittens, free. } b*ii» mi tat. 94i ck~ NH-HwiNwf Pkfl __________children, MS=iL_. ice, mixed. ME GOOFED ON COLOR rnetiflp, AKC poodli pupa. 1 plrtly color brown ¥ white; ana i week. sss-sow, L . GERMAN SHEPHERD pupplta.il POttiWt With ptpirt. S94«f». GERMAN SHtfPHERD,—CAR 0 black 3 yr. old mele._*73-1734. GERMAN SHEPHERD, 3 yr*. ol •xcalltnt guard dog am" Mk * callant bloodllnt, *93-6065 GERMAN sTBPHfRCf FUFI,' Ak£ excellent* blood line, shots, wormed, to**riKto'h>r gun,, hunting equip oi rcerpfr; arofwr MtB.wmr HALF COLUB PUPPIES, frat to I homt. Call ifttr I p.m. SSS gg______________ IRISH wolfhound PUPPIES EHwTwni kiTYEns, looking for homo. Landlord unhappy hevefotake *o shelter. 473 m Auction. 70S i traliarp. cart is per Pick-Up IM dll Ivory, coll Arvl't Inc. todpy. 49M444. kI CAMPER. NICCESSORlfsr Clerks ton safi. ___ SATURDAY OCTOBER 4. IP AM A. F. Jcktrt Steadlnp ton 1134 W. Commerce Rd , MHtord Ditilli Mr# on ThurMPV I Auctioneers r ALASKAN CAMPER ON 1944 complete, pood nS. 403-3072. Porklnt S’ i cib-ovir camper. LUO I mil Channel ct„ t mint N. i Pino turnlttilnpi incl. Color TV Sporting good* tnd outdoor Itomo Porklnt lam Soi Aerou from comp Pontloc. pftor BLUE SPRUCE, ^ROIAIN SALE Uvttfttli I) 1 RIDING HORSE. txc. condition. M Pino Knob Rd.. Clerk- TRAIL BOSS USE IT ALL , 12 MONTHS NEW SHIPMENT JUST block, roglotorod, ISO. i ARRIVED READY AGAIN FOR JNWHBiATf DELIVERY EVAN'S EQUIPMENT 411-1711 f DIxilTl 1-7 YEAR OLD DARK b gelding, gentle. chopp, ssl-0145 7 PONIES. Welsh more. Shotltnd sowing. J yrt. or SlOOJtktt Ojl. 179-1334. 7 YEAR OLD ROAN moro. will IlVtlfR'ind broko, SI4S. Coll anytime. 333-1993. SIS. 473-0707. | A.O.H.A. GELDING. pleasure broke 5, fomelet j end gontlo wllh children, S yr. old, _______________451-2445.___________ olio rep. yotrlingi end ------ «**•»*'» pupPiMs WanteB itTHM : or AKC, wo buy complete ISt-OsTI. • PUREBRED GERMAN ~ ' Sh pup*. *35. 4PK7S14. POODLE PUPPIES, reasonable' MALTESE Mupi tree to good homo. 6r S-I TTaTnITS TRAIL BOSS USE IT ALL 12 MONTHS 3219. 441-3S94, Almont Western Stprg Complete lino, of Itorto corp p ucti, Wottern clothing, booti, k horn taddles# tack and aqulpm 145 1. Main It. Almont, N Optn Mon. throum Thurs. 9-4 Id «6t7Vl6 p.m. If TRAILER, $1695 Wt 11*6-00001LL'S 152*4550 ____ 16' GARWOOD, SLEEPS idfrnarf—mm—* 363-2K3, 16* SELF CONTAINED, brakt control; >1. | 1 10*3 10VY WnluiipTn 1)941 23' CENtURY Travel trollor, ,ir>. win tolt-contelntd, twin beds, It! 332-0495 I Lokitldo, Elizabeth Loko Estates. “OVb MOT "TRAVEL trollor uum. i'-'YELLSWST i3Nl travel r, Mlt contolntd, oxtrot. ML u, nircn ira sh-nts.______ 194) 10' Y Wolverine camper on GMC I pickup. Now • ply i, With or without By Katt Oaann EVAN'S EQUIPMENT 02S-17I1 Clprkoten t!S-Mtt 4J07 Dixie Hwy. Open Mon.-Prl. from 9 n.m.-l p.m. Iptvrdtv till I p.m. PURVailP GERMAN pim, s i ' otter s, RABBITS FOR SALE. OOlho coll otter S. UL 1-4353. 'RAi«ltS>OR~giSC*' Reg, te more. After 4. 425-3393 BEAUTIFUL 4 YEAR Old, tgrrol . IHRff more, 15.1 hondt, oxtro tplrlted. COII 42A4424 •*? rldon only. Coll 157-4575. i BAY GELDING. TENNESSEE ini silver 'Eagle, to 9 ft., lloopt S. I2V-II0V-got. hitch, locks end eccenorloi. 430 I. Wilton. Alter 4:10 p.m. 1949 TRUCK CAMPER, 10W, nlf ccntolnod, olpopo S, colt 479-4107, 1970 PLEASURE MAff deluxe hordloj) cemper, on dlopaly at 430 HAMPER VILLAGE 173-5350 MitEfcy«>i» • NMAhoTAI IteUS MO* XJ /|-J “Take It from a baby fitter—when a four-year-old - starts acting up, you REALLY have a generation gap!” Cbrl-i die, blinkoti, S40. 425-4740. _____ FEEDER VmTWi Joaamin Rd. S. »AL~~wrofniiTOiit~kitteno. woolu Old. ioi-WM. HjU H| ‘ BERNARD PUPPIES. 1970'S WALKER POK pOOS, young old. « on UP. OR 3*151. Pat SEppWgi'Sgrvke 7f-A Land, gravel. ano dirt. Procoat stone 451-7920 or 1-A GROOMING Mr. Edwordt' High Pathloi Colon, oil breedt, 7 day \ Bloomfield _______ 335-5259 A-l POODLE GROOMING S3 ind' puppldd end otud ttrvlcd. 3! Of 332-5439, ..——- HOUSfS# MOSt oliot. ORAY quarter n GELDING YEAR OLD NOW DISPLAYED TWIN CYLINDERS SPRINT BY BOLEN'S THE SNOWMOBILE SALE HUNTERS AND | ■sr. TORSES AND TOP brands of aquip. New-used. UP to SO per cent off. Guaranteed. Double D Ranch# 4940 |......... Rd.# POIttlaC. 473-7457. MEDIUM sized dantla REGISTERED QUARTER wk. years old# sorrel# reasonable. 493- Pontlae {144, _______. REGISTERED HALF Arabian. 451- S#turdoy till 5 p.i Take M-S0 V7 Mil# Wait of Oxbow SAVE APACHE Juft! (STUBBEN) JUMPING SADDLE.! , Llko now. -S725 comeloto. Almont - Woalorn Store, 79MMII.__________j TRAVIS FARMS cere. Fancy olylti. Horiet boarded SAVE HUNDREDS ' peiT-Mittfitt, a reea delivered. 'IcRIHnIP BLACK dirt Jk peat delivered. SSPS442, —- ^ IPKlAL - Llfi4B ttane, IgA atomy • JEM —— ANTIQUE AUCTION. Furniture, art steney Creek. 752-3950. tsSg 'Yule Bless, prosed glao fruit loro, bottles, original pointing. Sunday ) p.m., Oct. 17, 1040. House of Ardyth, Flint. Michigan, corner of Hill end Torrey Rd. 14 ml. W. of U.S. 77 Expressway on Hill Rd. Proprietor A. Schindler. Auctioneer, Charlie i *,r' sioney crees iron# Road# Laonar i. A ..rr-— Leonard, Michigan. 79 1 AKC TOY POODLE Male. 417-5704 I amRaBLE SEALMINT Siamese mole. 3354470. AUCTION SAT., OCT. 4, 12 NOON N&M SALES A-l MEAT CUTTING# FREEZER wrapped We cure and tmoka maaHTcalim4W. HEy-SrEfo-fitf S4 HAY, MIXED, PIRST cutting, alecked In field. 35 cents. 407-9741 Form Produce SA EVAN'S EQUIPMENT 4507 Dixie Hwy. m Mon.-Frl. from 9 a.m.-t p.m. Saturday 'til f p.m. APACHt CAMP trailer - Rev, Teur-e-t I kup campers on i flhost service town dealer. Va POODLE i»'_________________ Va AKC MINIATURE Dashound I SMALL TERRIER pupa, 1 SlemoM cot, each 41 Ol Kitten frit. 4ltYlP9. PUPS, MALE { FES I FEMALE PUPPIIS, 3 mo. old, housebroken. MS-1420. -i YR. OLD BEAGLE, well Started! f YEAR 'OLD Be! SSM •ellnl—male A While. VI. WS Williams Lake Rd. nptr corner of M-59 Pontiac, Mich. Power •kill sews, sober saws, drills, grinders, tools, electric can -a, blsndsrs, hand mixers, ladles' hair dryere, electric curl Irene, bodopreods, pillows, taflen-polo end pens, misc. hardware, gross sold, transistor radios, tape players, clocks, gift were, censelt stereo record players. Keystone movie prelecfore, bristle rug •hampeeer, geo garbage clneratoro, oil fleer furr furnace, (I ________ ... ing goods, Earls keeping machine, check rittr, , electric cash register, many r Items net mentioned. ANTIQUE AUCTION—Sunday, Oct. 5—7 Fancy APPLES - DELICIOUS and Jonathan, you pick, bring con-falnert. Own weekdays 11-4, Saturday 9-4, Sunday 17-4. Closed Mondays. Frsnen Orchards, 1290 Stele Rd., touthsldo of Fenton._ APPLE AND t ' ;_________________________ bushel Crates 75c to soc. ai»i< Valley, 3040 Hummer Lake, ivy ml. east of Ortwivllle, 417-3491. ND CANNING ppaches, Sun. only. 9741 Rettalee CONCORD GRAPES, S4 a bushel, you pick. 441 Shortrldge one block north S. Boulevard, 1 blocks svest DELICIOUS golden. 30 North of w APPLES, red doun tor S1.M, SO lie. VS. < St.. Pentl I DOBERMAN PltiSCHEiTPuS' 451-3419 ■■■■ L-WEBK-OLO "Akc apricot poodles EVERY SATUPDA —4H-4949 Pftar 4 p.m. . AKM74. 1947 F-1M TRUCK, F.IM. yif P9PVV duty, ltd. ihlft. 14,DM ml. he*t alter, 424-3454. ____________, 7 -1944 901*0 (■•IW pick-up*. 1 with ether without tp IP* *52-1200. temper 113% Cel to *00 *52-120 Mon.. Through Frldey only S:W;< 4:30 p.m. ’ . , taf fiflHiiaiET IIamIBI ppooipT, auto., cuBtem cab, ] step-bumper# exc. condition r* CMC TRTOK 'CENTER 1:00 to 3:00 Mon.-Frl. 1:00 ,to 12:00 lotunlay ,. 701 Oakland Avtnu* 335-9731 TAKE dVBR PAYMENTS, llS Jeep»ter. 4WS110. Toyota lAnd cWiWlOveitern hydroturn inowplow. 331-1309 ottor TRUCKS ARE OUR BUSINESS! 1968 GMC Comptr ipeclel wllh •tlf-contelntd tow cei 1968 GMC i cab and chassis# has only i milei. 61661. "Check the rest# Averill's Dixie -E 4-4896 Mansfield AUTO SALES m Sharp Cadillacs# Pontiac# Olds and GMC TRUCK CENTER 701 Oakland Avtnua 335-9731 _ Auto Insurancs-Marlng 104 Foreign Can 1999 MERCEDES, runt Buick* ter dollar paid. MANSFIELD AUTO SALES truck*. Bcanemy Car*. MM Dixie. Cell SSI-1734,_________________ *tete market. Topi iM1 DUNE BUGGY without body. 441-1374. 1961 MGA Cuslomlfed, One ot • kind ...,S99| GRIMALDI CAR CO. too Oakland Aye. FE H47I 194S VW, EXCELLENT running “TOP DOLLAR PAID" GLENN'S FOR "CLEAN" USED CARS 951 W. Huron St. ________rft-im________ Junk Cnrs-Trocks 101-A trailer. M25. 33&137I. |*2# Junk cars* free tow anytime, YOUR DEALER FOR ~ SPORT TRAILER# GEM AND CORSAIR TRAVEL TRAILERS Coriair end Dam pickup cami AIRSTREAM heme needs.0 Wouldn't 1^ be "much!'4! FIBERGLA3 BOAT, motor' Slid 1^3 JUNK CARS_- TRl toiler to make lust ONE STOFI trailer, new- wiring end ic-l tow anytime. FE 2-M44. HOLLY MOBILE HOMES JUNK CARS, PAY FOR SOME, •"d **!«tlon ot trailer, 5750. 451-9114. N*w Moon. Bread Lent, '.Regent!!'•! XyMIHUM, 31 Champion pnd other*, but el*o otters 1 '*• Dude trailer. the lovltesr choice of sites to place your new Mobile Home beautiful, peaceful Di ESTATES located In e ■ | 4S4-3S45,lfil' __________' L L j 25' CABIN stoop .wood plenk! >r»i — -*--1 rigging, cabin In-little work. 45I-4SS4. why not make that one stop AT , OAK HILL ESTATES HOME OF HOLLY MOBILE HOMES DIXIE HWY. AT OAK HILL R 434-4443___________ Bally vyi DaEr Huntfre Specials ! Ill ................. { 495 473-5454 eft. 4 t ADDITION to family, 'to house. 15' 11" Ini IS h.p. and frailer. Any akc Yorkshire t. .Akc by eppoTnlmen, 1 POODLE* stud sarvlca# pupplis. FE 4^G44. AKC AIREDALE puppies, 4 week*. AKC^ POODLE STUD service. 473-'ADORABLI TERRIER FUFS, 493- ALL PET SHOP, 55 Williams, 4-4433 perekeel* end Gerbll*. XRS REDISTERED BOXER Akc german shefhard . I chemplenihlp bloodline*, 473-4017. Akc FEKiNglik puppiei Fl 4-9414. AKC BEAUTIFUL MINI-Tw poodle mm ... _ Jd 175, While or •llvtr. Also whlft or sliver toy stud ssrvlco. Rest. Royal Oak. 565- EVERY SUNDAY WV BUY - SELL - TRAD* *** WELCOME - CASH PRIZE EVERY AUCTION 50B9 pixie Hwy. . OR 3-2717 B & B AUCTION SATURDAY NIGHT 7 P.M. SHARP OCT. 4 At usual — truck loads ot new and used furniture | neons. 5200 Waterford Rd. 473-1254. ! CIIM P Cl(| MARINA P M. POTATOES. 71.25 bu. We~dlo"ind M1, 0n P.M. Pick up. Your contelper, Pontiac* ***' C M!u.*2ii.S£,l,c' 0n P.M.! (red) Chlepewe (white), Michigan Russet*. (Idaho), Ipfurdey, Oct LIBERTY TV's sine, lorm rockers, », chests, dressers, ilques, glassware, mar end trailers, ilher articles too numerous to i 0 soot Dixie Hwv., Drayton pi, CASH DOOR PRIZE 3 & B AUCTION puppies. 343 and AKC NORWBOIAN ELKHOUNDS, me*., must sell. 137-1492. AkC jUjVtl TOY FoodirTuppi Akc TOWLl PUPPIES (or~ie1e.!CAIH DOOR PRIZE. EVERY auc Black, sliver end brown. 331-1412. FRI. 7 PM SHARP OCT. 3 BID SALE mowers; racks; shovels, polishing wheel, steam Iren, nets and pens; portable camping tent complete; color TV, chest m drawers, dinette 'AIREDALE PUPS, AKO. excellent - BIRD DOG, FEMALE. I After 4 p.m., 473-4443 Boston bull pups, k hove been declared abandoned ere therefore schoduh public auction, pui le list most ell Seymour Like Rd. from In Oxford to Coat* Rd ■MrejajMM mile i Granger or Baldwin to Granger -----— - , ^ ranger l k 14434. PICK YOUR OWN Delicious PLr__________ also fresh cider. 9-4 dally except Sunday. 72SO Perry Like Rd., PEACHES REARS,' PLUMS, APPLES Jonathan, CbOMM, beklehd Orchard*,''2205 ' e'”" mtree. Rd, between Burne Farm Eqaipaignt 17 t EVERSMAN LAND LEVELCR, 4244187____________ 3 PLOW OfESEL Tractor, 1 year eld, listed price ever 44,988. Sacrifice for 52,900. Lots of option*. 487.4477. ■ ____ ARIBNS AND TORO snovvblowers on dllptey. Leyewey now I Tern's Hardware, 90S Orchard Lake Ave. FE 5-7434. _______________ CHAIN SAWS NEW MCCULLOCH CHAiN SAWS PRICED AS LOW AS $119.95 MeCULLOCH AS S76, KING BROS. 373*0734 ___ Pontiac Rd. at Ogdykb DAViS MACHINERY; your Homolito Chain Saw. "D#*«lar'/. .Inhn Daara Chain Saw# "Daalar''# John Door# and . New Idea par* ORTONVILLC. NA 7-7 Loveable. beautiful, AKC# 334-0398 or 332-1144. tuTJ^^VlALB KITTENS, S3 each. EtilHUAHUA AND TERRIER-rSix- AhIHUaHuA, Fox Terriers, white, tgrlfel toy peedlM, all rag., stud PE 7-1497. -Pup*, AKC 1949 (c.l.. sec. 257, 131) by thp FORD TRACTORS. Farmell, AIM* Pontiac Felice Dept, at Sam Allen! Chalmers, trailer*. Etoter, Maisey S. Sons Inc., 300 Collier Rd., Pon- Furgesen, on rubber, Model 10001, tiac, Michigan. Sale of -vehicles - all Th very good condition, priced H bgj Saturday Oct. 4, to sell, 70S Clorksten Rd., Lake Cess Lake. 101-47110 Chick our deal on SWISS COLONY LUXURY TRAILER* FROLIC TRAILERS ANO TRUCK CAMPERS. SKAMPER FOLD-DOWN CAMPERS 13 (ill I JOHNSON'S TRAILER SUPPLIES A ACCESSORIES DEALER FOR; TROTWOOD WAG-N-MASTERS WeltoiKot Joslyn__F e 4-5453 EXPLORER MOTOR HOME . .M’WjcW MOpBLI Sites. Price* i oter 993, i STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. 3771 Highland (M-39) 441-9444 ^R HUNTma TRIPS. _ best~effer, FiBkROLAj TkiiCk CAY8M, 4 other* iyMt. swinger Motor yJ— Pioneer Cemper Salat, 109 Huron. Frankilne-Craaa $kemper-Plee*ure Mates Truck Compare Holly Travel Coach, Inc. MIO Hislly, Holly Mg 4-4771 IAVE ‘49 GMC cemper', low mileage, eik ter Glenn Haikini, 1949 i LARGE HOME AUCTTON, Oxford, consisting of quality tlques, household goods, Jund't misc. Selling from one of th) < homes of the t o m m u n I pngldelra 4 burner electric si Mgfdifro rsfrloere! ABC wringer washer, i .Phene PE M73S TO GOOD HOME mixed, i poodle, MI-4373. I ' PMIfe RUpRlljS, SMALL Mix chlfip cabinet Wifh oval glast, 2 place maroon ilvlng room suite, Stoger pnd lorn upright slang, choice, 1 three piece oak bedroom suites, antique sewing machine, ever ,100 yrsJ eld, antique prim Childs cer- mafchlng wIcEer^ch'furnlshtnps, so 'volume* of Harvard Classics, tergp amount of choice antique oarage, Linear County Trust ana Rank county clerk; This will be s very large auction end we art sure you will net be disappointed by attending, there ere to room: of furnishings In ell. Ffed F. Stevens, proprietor, Bud Hlckmot, auctioneer, Oxford, 420-iHf. MONDAY QCTdBlR 4, 10Vm. Highway Conitrucflon f 9 r c • 1 liquidation. Proctor Bros.# Furnlt FORD TRACTOR with snow bl. and Eush Hoa Mower. 1730 p< sprayer, 417-Mil.____ ____ FALL, CLEARANCE SALE NEW BdUIPMENT leader. Landscapers special. IMF1135 tractor. Lend see per* IMF220P ‘ »p|i|r specli 4F113 1MF2744 Crawler loader i 1MF2244 Crewter do;- - ftesel. 1i Tiger line 2 axle demonstrator. 1 Tiger line 1 axle trailer new. USED EQUIPMENT IOC Ford 3 cylinder gas dozer In Ferd tractor with trencher. HAVE YOU SEEN THE ALL NEW' OMEGA Motorhome with the Chevy Chassis 330C engine, power steering, brake*, spesd transmission, dual-roe'r wheels, eematoMly self-contained. Aim hem a wi(h Doge chassis 330 cu. In onglne, Only at Holly Travtl Coach, Inc. inti Hally Rd., Holly—ME 4-4771 Holly—ME 4-4771 aadHrahr, gims.—-""'"01'" i8LandFr~m6t6W HOM>, ' InklFn motor nofM, pickup ceaches, . -kc---- yiTfr SND INOW- REMOVAL 'Into re iuKPs, lamps, mlrrar, ward turfi. _ Perkin. Isles Sarvlcp J PH i Swartz Creek Kg* tractor % h.p. rtcoll tractor and mowart. PONTIAC PANM AND TPACfON Cjf or Dava Lockhard PI 4*6461 TtxAto EX6bLl~‘«'VW7 WP: bk- cellenf condition. 15" seet. Must WiSm? *omA,v "moSSSW^ —jjUpljj- Steei frtmt pickup covers and tops, c*b to camper been /IPORTCRAPT/MPG. CO, 4148 Feley 473-0438 Waterford . McClellan Troval Traitors 4838 HlghMnd Read (M 5*1 PHONE 47W1141 Closs Out on '69 Modils A Few Boats .... _ ....................... t'x. Lift for Closa-Qutl I AND ALL, 6x 35 ...... .........6 695' lAVa Shell Lsks with Sf M P Marr HAVE MODERN DECOR JJ' .................................*■ • fiffi power trim, t.^.m’v.llbr! ftfii Early American - Mediterranean ' 10 X 51 "...‘"..'i: . *2195 c,nvM ,nd mMrln« ***• *)*»■ CAMSklOOE y-fifafrgp H ■ i- . ..............*••• tm 14' lerson wllh 40 H.P. Evlnrude. MONARCH New 12 ag .'fri *«« eenv.s end trailer. S995. HOMES | . I Dixie Hwy. at Sashabaw ATTEX Colonial Mobil* Homes Th* 0<>L*nywh»re Fun Vehicle FE 2.1457 FLEETWOOD 18 k ST SKIRTED. For Outdoor Sports * * 014-4444 perch, shed, eerp-*1-- gtemppi ..... -- irvsr. ceii itoft MUST SELL—1949 17X4$'"Star. Set up on let, 4SSW, S3S-S314.____ I • WILL BUY USED TRAILERS ' free tow. FE 5-4079. •tartars «nd generators, C. Dixson, ALWAYS BUYING JUNK CARS and •crap# wa tow. 37*6440. JUNK 1, 2# 3 Junk cart. Fra# tow Usftd Av»o-Truck Parts 102 ’PLIPP1D" MY Station Wagon. Ha naarly new tires* '63 TEMPEST make an offar. nly body Coopen INB AND , 335-4749 AveUeblt rembran6t 390 positraction, black buckets and console. AM-FM radio, tape player end tapes. FE 1*477.___ 1943 LeMANS Parts', motor *6 transmission, read end A radio. I 1943 RED VW, WHITE Interior aA PM radio, 4343. QR 34WI.... 1943 VW^ASSIjl 'dun> 1943 VW, nice, good running, V^OTi 1945 Ghle Hardtop 1944 VW Sedan 1947 VW But Financing . Your immediately Available BILL GOLLING VW is Mile Rd. (Maple RE.) , Across from Ben Airport Between •nd CeolMge Rd. Crooks ■ Just Troy Motor Melt if*! IPITPlli,..BEST otter. 4% 1771, otter 4 p.m. VW 1744 CONVERflBLl. low mile*. 25 Opdyke Rd-----2733 Dixie Auburn Heights 1 Now From Balcony, left Your I Holly Park end dining rso 3oo Milts. Will trade ter mi anything of value. Optn 9-p P.M. MIDLAND TRAILER SALES 7257 Dixie Hwv.__________338-07 . 3 TIMES 12 equals 24 x '40 (t.' Wugel trvjid* Living, lost Oakland 334 iiSp M66ilI ,nd ... 12.400, 477-3741 ~ CHAMPION MOBILE tO'xSO' HOME, must soil O x 54, 1*15 Ootrolt, 3 bedroom complete, furnished, ter SmT 4 Duane St., Pon. Mobil* (I Park, 226 I. W6W6B# 80 1950 MOBIL! 11,795. Country»ldt Llvlno, 334-1566. jSSL.n^ °von Countryside Llvl EMY, hi BRAND 1,9951 2 b SBL1ID9. 20'x55' MARLETTE, 3 BEDROOMS, lmnlelely furnished, carpeted, tl¥ . Walton, 14C *t---------------“ 1932 NEW-M(56H r X •» condition, furnished, OR 3-9 r lO'xSO', PARTIALLY furmshid. occupancy. 19,300 1947 LI BE RT Y12'XSVi tMnomi lifloii,, carpeted -HvIm 734-1094 Tlret^itG-Treck 9> REPAIR, MOUNT, end balann mag AP Anson. Trade Goodyear Polygla* slicks. Market Tire Lake Rd. Keego \%SSi Co. 2635 Ol USBD TIRES, 6;i 14# low at $4. 662-5568. AlltO SBTViCB MOST POWBRGLIOE over-hauls. St 20 parts and labor. Dept. 431 Oakland. Vh HORSE POWER, Briggs end Straton, Big Beer scrambling mlnl-blke frame* Cheee. sit. FE 2-4I5S. 4~ H.P. MINI BIKE, Ironf end rear shocks, lltoits, 3 speed, kick start, OXC. *150. 343-7904. LIL' INDIAN Mlriiblke'with light*. 451-; RUPP TRAIL BIKE, shocks, front and rear, 5 h.p., iv> mo. old. is RUTTMAN MINI-BIKl. Ixcii IVi h.p., ehrotTHTt seal. OR 1*55 HARLEY CHOPPER, 1200 CC. SU. S OUPBO 4131 ClInttnvIHo Rd, 1949.RITZCRAPT TRA'f WHEeT CAMPER , Just a WW Istt to choose 1 7t YAMAHA WWfWIILI, | - S#ll*rs Matt thru Pran Want Adi. mriMphlt tax right I ar with m FULL LINE OP CUFF DREYER'S MARINE DIVISION 13110 Holly Rd., Holly_ ME ongllw,™ln° Mto* yttle** Dude trailers. Cell after 4. 474-179). BOAT STORAGE BOAT _ HOIST, 14' Hum iTiim Feathtrcritt, 13 h.p. Johnson. 412- CLEARANCE 1969 Boats, Motors, Trailers COHO SPECIALS tens, to h.p. Westtiis ..-.lor ............. 13'Olestren Tri-Hull, 40 h tson, trollor WINTER STORAGE Cruise Out, Inc. DAWSON'S SALES wc 12 months or fl; LAKl"phons°4?t-Tjy9._I A * ' CLOSfOUT 1969 R JL JOHNSON MOTORS i GLASSPAR BOATS oaat I motor 91*716* YOUNG'S MARINA »k*g _ end *pmiker!*Rliid - Marina Storaga ; PINTER'S Mskt your reservations ." AA'-^Tb^MA'lf rR#ff I NO 173-0714 1^ lAiLiwr SUN & SKI MARINA Johnson" boot* ffS, "wX «,.r* 3& 1662 386“CATALINA ENGINE automatic tr«ni. _l961F*lcon 1961 Econ. Van* needs motor* -SMS irons., (Iras, etc. irwll Ft 34427. GASOLINE R1AT1A Velhswpgpn. 4yM374^M Si H AUTO SERVICE 1943 Rambler 4 engine .,... 4123 T-EIrd 390 engine 1943 Felrlen# 1945 Mustang'339' engine 1 ------PHx • 3*0 to 427 duel qued complete . $ 95 And body perl Inttpllatlen OR 1-5100 excellent ell or parts, 414-9134 m?. chevy 327 trains and. trans. *350. Door end other porta. 493-FORD: 219 Englnt, complp tily. 4240. 402-5930. MOTORS: (943 FORD* 249, 1940-1943 45 Chevy '42 Ford iso, goad front or '43 Pontiac. Loo - FE M444. '41 Chevy end 1 1-2444. Now and Iliad Tratto 103 SMC PICKUP, V7 ten, VS. 421- tf*f CHEVY M TON Pickup, condition, list. 7*4-3441. FORD irk, trade.! 'C40i, tut cei ae.Sl-iioti, di CHEVY, 44 TON, pickup, IIS. 1*41 BCONbLlNB VAN, II7S. J71- 1*94 gfter 7. ________ 1941 PORD m ten pickup, Runs. Hi. F t Mia. : 1941 GMC PICKUP, lift ___ 343-44110._____ 1941 CHlVY Tendsfri-dump, beat Otter. 442-7434. .______ !4I CHEVY 4 to 1:30, 414-1444. S3 FORb~>TcRui same work ISO. 41 1943 GMC _________si 100, 441-4M4. 19*1 -GMC SUEURBAn, WlfiPfipt* end windows, good condition,- «S0. FE 2-1779. to44 .^HivV.. 6AI*4V-ALL. good MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 493-13(1. 43"B< p6U6e ig TON p||k-up, 4 id, good condition, lira, fe i- 1944 FORD ECONOLINE von, good condition, OTas. 711-8144. -i94i“6oB6i 'Fl'iku>r*isra«3ri 41400. MA 4-11 ixhiifit,___________ JOHN McAULIFFElORb 1944 FIAT 1500 torlos Spider Convertible, his everything ~mciuding cl«ss, McAwliff spaolt 1 only - $411 lull price, 0400 below book value. P.S. We've Moved! 1947 VW CAMPER, POP tep>'git heater, 11900. 447-4370 week days, after 4 p.m, 1947 VW, wlte's car, «g»rea 1944 VOLKSWAGEN, 414SO. Atttr 4 e,m„ MS-4S40 944 OPEL, 1 DOOR oporto coupe, 08 ■idewall cr-mAr1"" vw, ra'd] RAblO, R a Atl r 4,000 miles, ihprp 31: 4S3S Otter 4. 740 vw, ffiol, U6W~ Sflattirprivotp ewnorMi * Wire ht yollow with black mlcrior! 1 whMls, whltaweli radial ply AUDETTE PONTIAC 1150 W. Maple Rd. TroV 1941 FORD COltTIflAi 14,000 miles, 11300. 343-5731 btttr IllOplfh. COMPLETd AUHi iUOOY' kit. DUNE BUGOlll - 36 PeL W otl ^ HARRINGTON'5 ” SPORTCI E. of Lapoer at M-31. open nil. E. of Lappar of . .-00PV9; :4444MI, New and Uitd Care 166 "HOME OF^THE^D^PENDAtLd Waterford Standard Auto 1964 BUICK Etoctra irdtop, ,w $988 GRIMALDI Buick-Opel HO Orchard Lk. ~ 1 ■ mshttoxIIs 9 posstngor, I top. Tlntid gloss, dlflon, lull powtr, rock. Nsw *p*r*. C- „ . AUDITTI PONTfAC *** 150 W, Maple Rd. . N»f*V ^ftTLAgCl?|S8;(iwp Want S6mathlng Don# Edit? Un Pmi Want Ad* - m For Wont Ad* Dial 3344911 * Now eb4 UsedCys 104 *jJWPWKi3s wTOf'Wfwwisr ’ HiprMiioaiv loulhai SPECIAL $1295 BILL Fbx' CHEVY >0. pSFRSIy Now end Uied Can /JOHN > MeAULIFFE FONIT- is? W P.S: We'ye Moved I jiytpfL ™ PiSS« |x|, Ft wm ano in,UU r*w«.?l Wr cHivf iiiwtEi v" . ■ V\ - . ■ Ai - ' . Jffe ,Y THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1060 ?_________ New e nd Uged Cmi m MARMADUKE ' By Anderson and Uamtoftftow and Used Cm MB jqhn gagg F0RD m m black TJtfirtor; V i r*f|o,^oatar, powar raarfcig, biiktsy factory air SftdHtewmor Mnsfc jgwME. top. Claaranca spatial only INN full Pr *P.S. We've Movodl 'Vk Mil# N. #f Miracle Mila t. Talearaah Ed. - Pa Ml01 jOHNlleAULIFFI FORD IM FORD Torino * oath jc T 4 ,p"d' 3P*W . tiar ouicit‘i^i*iiri»ii "eewir. . ■ flit. wtiaaJ, Ilka naw tlraa, muit Mil. SUM. Btw4l ttlaf 4, __ - 1965 BUICK LeSobre 4-door hardtop, automatic, powar *taarlng, brakaa only— $1095 GRIMALDI Burck-Optl fin ordure Lk. ad. n mil 1965 Bulck LoSobro 400 4dJ^> automatic, powar ataarlna -■ '$988 Suburban Olds 860 S. Woodward Birmingham Ml 7*5111 <♦'44 BUICK WILDCAT, 4 door cuilom hardtop, full powar, atarao, |r^ta nV,IY c"*n' 1947 PUICK Skylark I door eudom. Vinyl tin powar ataarlna and torakas. Sinaw wblftwall lira*. Call AUDETTI PONTIAC 1IM W. Maplo Rd. Troy tav. 1967 BUICK Wildcat GRIMALDI Buick-Opel po Orchard Lb, Rd. FE MI44 — 1967 Buick Wildcat Convertible Powar ataarlna, brakes. map whaall. Blua with whlto top. Pull price. $1988 Suburban Olds 860 S. Woodward Birmingham Ml 7*5111 <941 POOL STATION WAOON, good condition. Bait offer. Phono 343- 1941 MUldlC Skylark cuitom deluxe convartlbla, rod, attek Am, good condition, 411-2492 attar I p.m. and IMI> New pad lhod Can 1949 OLDS 9S, St $2995 jeaftiBL______________ lfU^COAVAlB MONZA, 4499. 4H- ligSB£ 1949 tHIVY MONIA CMtorflM*, Ml* » ® Ing Auk JOHN MeAULIFFE FORD 1*43 CHBVY SS Hardtop, 1 beautiful yaitow with black i dowan top, V4, automatic, co tun powar, ..epady for. the P.S. Ws'Vs Vk Mila N. at Mirada Mila 1|49 5. Tetograjh Rd. PE 5-4101 IMS CHtyy’ iSLAIR, T WS-lIM 1949 CHBVIlle, axoafimt 4 apaad. MHtk, • 1M9 CHBVY IMPALA Coupe. 1490. Pooler ___ 273-9449 '1949 CHl VV SS, burgundy black Interior, radio, hiof" atoorlng, V-S, rial thorp to##* 173. 123-1432. imt^rWy MbininfYr ■, powar litini, powar mmm excellent conditio -piOsr#,_Morvi 1943 CORVAlR CORSA Convortll «P9Qd, l43 ' 1943 CHlVY 3790. 322-1923. _ mh , m atoorlng, low 4240, IMS CHBVY- IMPALA, ■i..............jrX heater, rear speaker, rear window vinyl mU-iiM. lfW^oSVefrB. ’363-f423,' attar MANSFIELD AUTO SALES 1969 Cadillac SEdan DEVillE, full power, air. 1969 Eloctra 225, hardtop coupo, power and air conditioning, 3 to chooso from. 1969 Executive 4 door hard-top, power, vinyl top, oir conditioning. 1969 Executive station wa- brakoa,'' atoorlrig, radio? ^ _p3rajoowno^^^^^^*'|^* 1943 £o6veTT4 COUPE, 250 bp, 4 •pood, poaltracllon, powar brakoa, 1943 CHEVY CAPRICE WA06n, 4 ... OTrM«Mr“"<* V; LI 2-7331. ___________________ 1941 FALCON, axcallanl condition, 3128. 232-4327. __________ 1MI FORD, 2 DOOR. 4 cyllndor.l block'-'lnlorl'or'.“,'tlniad 'wlndahieid: I *♦■«*- IranipOrlotlon, IIM, buy va*outontotlc. radio, hoolor, powor j n*r* ■ Pkt^wOjMorvol Motor., 231 atoorlng and brakoa. Oakland, PE,HW*-. _______________ 11941 PORD . STATION wasoit. SIM. TOWN & COUNTRY CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH ROCHESTER HOI N, Main 31,_____ . 431-4220 1M7 FORD 6ALAXIE 900, 2 door, axcallanl condition, I14M. OR 3- MERCURY MONT EWY Convartlbla, lull aawar, whlto owowaila, 472-4917 gtti11. iia cbuoAR, power stberino, vinyl lop. Coll 441-1092, Vtor 7. 1969 Colony Pork Marquis Station Wagon % .to choote tram. WITH AIR I Buy “*$AVE Bob Borst Br,o«»a’tfSMr*' ■***• 1940 OLDlMbkiLd. axcailanFrun'. nlng condition. $179. 1943 Valiant, alondard ahltl. II,040. UL 2-92M. l i94o 6lds, cXll aei-ioie, before 2 OVER 50 SHARP CARS LAROBST MOPAR IHVIHTORY PONTIAC DICK CANAANS Motor City, Dodge 194 Oakland Ava, Olds Hardtop $3795. Suburban Olds 860 S. Woodward Birmingham Ml 7*5111 1970 Olds "80" 2 DOOR HARDTOP Autematje tranimlaakm, itaarlng, brakoa, radio, V Now and Und Can Aulomotlc, radio and how DooJor **' **” W' Huron' sponts pay; gfy^flMrliy^ond brakoa. S3>* MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH $100 UNDER DEALER C0STI 1969 CHRYSLERS 1969 PLYM0UTHS ALL NEW1 •akaa. 1799,_________ 44 PLVM6utH AtlfAMiy jRwaar tour door, ntw llrao, 412- 1944-ROAbRUNNBR, Ml on thf floor, II Op dt poymonta. 447-4724.______, IM* PLYMOUTH "66Ab runnwy "143", auto., power atoorlng, wood (rain atoorlng wheel, AM-PM altroo lope, tinted glaao, hoodora. OR 2-2991 attar 4 P.m ,r ROAD RUNNER. C, 4424MI. And tha 449 angina. Only Tohi Rademacher Chevy-Olds On US 10 at M-l5 $1395 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH M. Tray, Mich. 642*7000 gon, powtr, air condition- Clarkston MA 5-5071' Bargains NEW-CAR Showing 4 P.m, THUNDERBIRD, LIKE and tranamlulon. 4390. PE 2-1449 9, telegraph TRANSPORTATION Specials ■ ____ 1M» OLDS M Wagon HS9 PHPT..9-. ,__i_— -------- 1942 jkylirk Convertible .... JOHN MeAULIFFE FORD '»« •“'« «««• apodoi .... tJ?ndF®5re, PVI*'l,rodl2, L »™ro Ip choore.from power atoorlng, brekoi, oul ffllc.aooooon agoclol HIM. fuiii GRIMALDI Buick-Opel P.S. We've Movtdl Vb Mila N. off Mlraclo MIU * -14----r TE 5*4101 IMS T-BIRD, NO ID, 300 horsepower V wide ovals, IN0. PI 441-9422._____________________________ 1943 GALAXIE, angina recently ovorhoulod. 1M». M9-93M otter 4. 1942 PORD .OALAXIE, good eon-dltlon, >279. OR 24044. 1M3 FORD, 3124 Rockhovon, UL 2- 4242._________,_________,____ 1944 FORD OALAXIE 300. aport ntarlor nndltle powar, Hd MbtOtV air .Tall aaaaon apaclai at 1964 OLDS Wagon Extra daan thi $788 MILOSCH I- CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1949 Road Ruimar, 2-door, hordtap. :B4S-rarwWa 1MI PbNTIAC WAOON, good tramportotlon. 4223, FE 9-7432. ; '442 TEMPEST WAGON, cl#an, good ! tlroa, *190, tornw, 23MM1, dir. 1942 PONTIAC 1 Dbbfc harijHop."tri Now and Uttd Can lOANow and Uead Cart 106 $3595 MERRY OLDS 921 N. Main 31. Eli Orchard Lk. id. PE 29144 1966 Olds Toronado Loaded will all tha axtraa Including factory $ave GRIMALDI Buick-Opel Orchard Lk. Ed. FE 2- MeAULIFFE FORD I0K Riviera with hoautl matador rod with whIM cordov top, fun power, 9,000 actuelmlTa P.S. we've Movtdl 1941 IKYLARK 2-door hardtop. V-3, automatic, powor o1oork)«. Now whllawoll tiro*. 21,000. achiil mlloa. v.hsm-mst IwTitMCK LOSabre, low mileage, 4 door, powar brakaa and atoorhjj. Mony oxlraa. Origin 12993. Call 179-4219. tMTiDlCK SKYLARK cuatom V-l, •lr, gowar atoorlng radio, ale, mllta. *2,479. 474- <949 BUICK BLnCTRA, 4 ■rijaew oood condHww, BISS, I 1444 fAPI^C COUPE _b«yillo, Sh<29, BY owner? only OPBO lull prlca. P.S. We've Moved I Vk Mila N. of ARIracI* Milo 1343 1. TaowEEh ne.------- - 1943 ELDORADO, air, atarao, air, warinarycrtfSaSSnalic?1 Warranty •r old, air, crulaa control, 4 woy toot, •AM-PM atorM, amothyat, white fntlda, white top. oava over 12,000. IWo 6UWIlLaC bbuPi bivnio. ‘ ’ * wav.M>t' low mHoago, 412-3! LATE MODEL CADILLACS ON HAND AT AI.L TIMES • JEROME CADILLAC C0. | ing, chrome rack. 11969 Grand Prlx, power, vinyl top, air. 1969 Catalina 9 passenger wagon, power, air conditioning, 2 to choose from. 1969 LaMans hardtop, auto., powtr, air, 1969 Custom hardtop, power, vinyl top, air. ^ 1969 Catalina Coupe, pow-. er, vinyl top, oir. 1969 Catalina coupe, auto., power steering, power brakes, 2 to choose from. 1968 Bonneville Vista, pow-. er, cruiso control, AM-FM radio, oir, vinyl top. 196B Bonneville coqpe, power brakes, power steering, power seat, vinyl top, oir, 11,000 miles. 1968 Bonneville wagon, full power, air, vinyl top, rack. 1968 Executive, power steering, pt^ver brakes, chrome —rock. 1968 LeMans hardtop, auto., power, dir. 1968 LeSabre 4 door Sedan, powerw steering, power brakes. . . 1968 Grand Prix, power steering, power brakes, vinyl top. 1968 Catalina Sedan, cnito., power steering, poWer brakes. 1968 Catalina Coupe, power steering, power brakes, vinyl top. 1968 Executive Coupe, power, vinyl top, air. 1967 Catalina wagon, power brakes, oir. 1967 Bonneville Coupe, power, vinyl top, ajr. 1967 Catalina wagon, auto., power, 2 to chooso from. 1967 Bonneville Vista, auto., "iSHSriLSo i minor repair, VS autemollc in good~eohiltTon, lira, Marval Motora, SSI Oakland, , 1968 JMPALA Convertible, Ilk# new— $1995 1967 CORVETT Fallback, turbo hydro, 350— $3495 VAN CAMP CHEVROLET On N. Milford Rd. Mlltord_____________434-1428 sBTgrejgTrairs,. make room fori _ liege. toko trade or Mil lor nils, 7913. 194S CHEVY IMPALA $2588 $2295 I ■_________ I ooorI I automatic, radio i I heater, powar brakaa, axe. c dltlon, 12,000 actual mlloa, 01,1 3344193, 1943 CHEVY, call attar 9, FB > 1944 CHEVY, 2 door, power i 19M £HlvV IMWaIA 4 DOOR “ ■ RR-i 'SB w. 1967 Malibu hardtop, auto. 1967 Mustang, auto., power, vinyl top. 1967 LeMans Convertible, auto., power. 1967- LeSabre 4 door hardtop, auto,, power, vinyl top.' 1966 Bonneville Vista, auto., power, vinyl top, oir, low Jtilloagl. • __ 1966 p,Vmofth FurV' 1 * tHiVidUT, tti. ~~~l poW,r‘ , 'm mi!'r FurY> outo" whiTawalit, Wh. deMii4._.. pojver. kmPBjIPly Chovy Tmpala Coupe, auto., real nice, f ZfiCf,1fA6 Chovrolet, II Camino Pickup, auto, with powtr. MANY MORI TO CHOOSE FROM J '1104 BALDWIN AVE,, FE 8-8825 FE 5-5900 1968 Chevrolet Bel Air Wagon ■ $2195.. BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 2199 Maplo Rd. Trey, Mich. 642-7000 1941 CHBVCLLB Malibu, VI automatic, dlac brakaa, now wldo aval tireo, radio, A-f condition, 11990, call aWor 9, 494-3649, 1949 CAPRICE COURB, IMdfd With accoMorioa. air, attar 3 472-1901. 1949 CHdVY^Sj^paM, *2995. 149 CH6W IMt>AlA CUSTOM, air, ‘ow Sove $$$ ot Mike Savoie Chevy 1900 W. Maple - Ml 4-2735.......... powtr altarlng, lutojn a ?°i c Iranamhalon. roof rich, 474-9711. powar and 0 nict ono, for - $995 1964 T-BIRD tdoer, hardtop, 1 black booufy and $795 1965 FORD » wagon, economy 4 ollck. A w only $695 r CaMARO, loko_ovtr 1 IW^CHEVPOLET Klngtwood^^olr 1944 CORVAIR MOWaT4 MMdTTK hortopow>r. 4»4>4I. f>49 CORVETTE CONVERTIBLE, doublo powtr, powar wlnoowa, jjuMoflffSactual mlloa, 14200. 4TB 1949 CHEVROLit itomatlc, 442-4497 door, 2400 ml., 4IB4422, call oftor \ oxocutlvo.__________________ ftd° toanF ww horaopowor, 1965 Impirlol Crown useiSSea Fuj| gjjht IneludlnB FacMry air, “ '$1295 . BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH , 2190 Maplo Rd, ' troy 642r7000 $2195 1967 CHRYSLER door, tadfn, cuitor larp Inroughouf, only $1995 $1895 $1695 1967 DODGE 1 door, • luxury • ir car prlcoa, anil $1695 $1595 1965 OLDS 1964 FORD 1 automatic,, a nlca $495 1962 IMPERIAL 4 door, hardtop, a real luxi automobile and^Vj^ "GIVE \)t A TRY BEFORE You euYu Oakland Car Irada In. No money down. LUCKY AUTO 1940 W. Ft 4-1004 __or___ 1M4 NORD ' StAtlbH automatic, now tlroa, offar. 427-3949. dova top, V-8, radio, ,,n.. „™ - —---------_ . , ^,oninbgr.,,<,cV..rli^.ofY31w?!;i o'^ Suburban Olds 860 S. Woodward FE's-4iof Birmingham Ml 7-51.11 42244. * P.S. We've Moved! Vk Mila N. or Mlracit Milt Track 1449 2. Telegraph Rd. FE 2-7*54 JOHN MeAULIFFE FORD 1942 FALCON 2 door «kfth boaul metallic iTmt gold flnMl BEEN BANKRUPT? HoaB 6' cBrfl wagon, *351) or FORD 1944 WAGON Oalaxlo power altering, auto., 1 ow oxc. condition.TmI 7-72U. !y,Pl W| to ChOQM 1 .vair. credit? • 1964 FORD CONVERTIBLE, f, automatic, brakoa and itaarhM, $299. GRIMALDI CAR CO. apacfaT at'only *<449 ... P.S. We've Moved! Vk flAllf N. aI Mirada Milo 1149 «. raegrawr lid. Fi i 1968 Ford XL JOHN MeAULIFFE EORD 1944 OLD! "94" 14 4 door hardtop, beautiful matMto burgundy udih “iBSa lean, t» my ouaat and wfe1 We've Moved I ME with matching vinyl I ... .. miles. Naw spare. Sport wheals# 1t*7 CUTLASS STiSSe “ 1 1949 T-BIRD, CLEAN ! *900. 362-9x10. Sat. or aun. mpWit 2 MUSTANG, rail cloan, stick shift, full aat of Mag whaala, call anytlma attar S, FE 2-0994. 9090. 1944 FORD OALAXIE ©Era ______ tira». Plush In. ttMiw7> 1944 MUSTANO. t.eyllndor irSTiiar. AUDETTE PONTIAC Show AUDETTE PONTIAC' JOHN MeAULIFFE FORD 1M4 FORD Cuatom 2 dear, vi, autwmm, rad P.S. We've Moved I Vk Mila N. ot Mirada Mila 1143 t. Tatoaraah r JOHN MeAULIFFE FORD 1943 FORD Falrlana 900 Hardtop, with boautHu) metallic bronn with a Mack Intarlor, V-0, radio, hoator, automatic, power itacrlng, -----------i —n full o^.SaSlfM 1947 MUSTANG, HARDTOP, JOHN MeAULIFFE fORD 1947 FORD Galaxto 300 conyerlll boautlfui Arctic whlto with MMk top, and Intortor. v-», radio, hootar, power otoarlnd, i brakaa, truly ono In a million,, cloaranco apodal only *1701 full prlco. nP.S. We've Moved! Mila N. O? M ■ph Rd, ,i.«d?.torw;,ti JOHN MeAULIFFE FORD ttnareimm all vinyl Intortor, v-l, radio, heatar, automatic, power alaarlng. daaranca apaclai only BldOB full r P.S. We've Moved! lk Mila N. of Mirada Milt.... 1043 3, Tilograph Rd. FI 3-4101 ot only 914 P.l We've Moved! JOHN MeAULIFFE FORD 1949 FORD LTD Hardtop, will beautiful metallic Him,gold wTlI factory air •paMalLalx..._r.. P.S. We've Moved! Vk Mila N. at Mlracla Mill 343 B, Taheraah FB 949 MACH I, 421 ram air, power femBdrcndtr.d^l.».r5f YOUR vw CENTER 7-0 to Choose From -All Models-—All Colors-—All Recondifioned— Autobahn- Motors Inc, AbthorlMd VW Dealer Vk MlaTlafH allwrada MHa ______________________ 743 I. falaeraph , FE a-493 New and Used Csrs 106 New and Used Cars 106 New ami Used Care 106 Suburban Olds 860 S. Woodward Birmingham, MI7-5111 I960 OLDS ft HOLIDAY sadan. naw 're*, toll power, air, original wnar, 444-24BI. 1968 and 1969 OPEL door, rally K ode its, from— $1488 MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1941 Torenodd, red with Mack v top, timod glass, rectory air, pi windowl, powtr Mata,. ehro wheals, 99199, 477 M-Xf. Like Ol A-l SPECIALS 1968 CAMAR0 Rally Sport with V-l, automatic, aewer steerIne, brakaa, vlnvl tap. $2495 . 1968 PONTIAC Catalina Hardtop Moor with power tteerlng, brakaa, v», automatic, burgundy finish, black Intortor, only $2295 1968 FORD Fairlant GT Torino Fallback with v-l, automatic, pewar itaarlng, brakes, buckats, console. $2395 ; 1965 COMET Calanita Hardtop 2-door with VI. 4 spaed, red $1095 1967 MUSTANG 2 Door Hardtop v-a, ayfgmatlcp do ir, metallic graan am ’ $1695 $1495 1965 FORD Galaxio Hardtop t door with i $895 FLANNERY FORD, On US10 (Dixie Hwy.) —WATERFORD— 623-09(Xl1 Care 106Naw and Used Can 106Naw nod Uead Can Want Ads For Action HAHN TODAY'S SPECIAL 1969 BARRACUDA Hardtop.. .$2695 cor warranty, showroom 1968 MERCURY Monterey ............$1995 2 door hardtop, will owner, trade, mull i 1966 PLYMOUTH Wagon ... $1195 Bolvodore II with V-3, automatic..toll power, luggage rack, many extra*, A-t condition. 1957 BUJCK 4-Ddbr'... .... $795 Run* good, axcoltont i 1964 CHRYSLER Imperial . 1 door hordtop. With lull, aowor, wi leather Interior, A lot at ear tor $995 1969 CHRYSLER Wagon . .. $3995 .Town A Country, with full powtr, fadary air can* ‘—ifn|» fadary * “ “ ■ - — - * to choose fr 12 used jeeps to choose from, yours for as low qs .. —. .$ 295 1967 PONTIAC gatalinp ..%... $1595 sedan, with avtomaT ine. matalllc ccmmion.____ Catalina aftc, full So with blua U 1967 PLYMOUTH Fury III . $1595 Hardtop, .with full power, automatic, 3141110 with rad Intarlor, now cor warranty. a Chrysler-Plymouth-Rdmbter-Jeep Gldrkstoh . 6673 I)ixi© Hwy/ MA 5-2635. /sf\ Mike Savoie • Ls* Chevrolet OUR CUSTOMERS ARE SATISFIEDl . . ARE YOU? 1969 Pontioc Bonneville ,.....$3695 1 4-door hardtop. 4-woy powtr, factory air conditioning, vinyl top. 10,600 mitoo. 1969 Camara SS Super Spprt . $2895 Doublo powtr, automatic, vinyl top, 3)000 mlloa. 1969 Pontiac Ventura ...$2995 [ 2-door hardtop. Fowar, factory air . rendition. 1965 Cadillac. .....$1995 4 door hardtop. 4 way powar,' factory air- ' SHARPI NEW TIRBI. | i960 Pontiac Catalina ——$2495 Power, oir condition, vinyl top. 1967 Lincoln Continental... . .$2695 4 way powar, factory air, vinyl top. SHARP, SHARPI i 1968 Javelin Custom $2095 | Power, automatic tranamlaalon, vlnvl tog. .Yellow and blua. Sherpl 1966 Plymouth Sattllito $1195 2-0oor hardtop. Bucktf iaati, doublo powar, auto? mafic ♦ranimlMlon. 1965 Pontiac Catalina $1195 2 door hardtop. Rod point, double powtr, auto- 1966 Plymouth Satellite ......$1195 Convartlbla. Double power, bucket tail*. , 1968 Impala Custom Coups . .*■. .$2100 4 to chooM front. Doublo power, automatic irana-j mlaslon. —--v‘ 1965 Mercury Comet $995 va automatic, power. Mutt are to appreciate. Lika brand naw. 1968 Grand Prix $2695 4-waV Sowar. Factory air conditioning., 1965 Ford Custom $895 2-door. Sharp 1 Automatic tranamiMton and power. , 1969 Impala Custom I ,..$2595 1 Fewer. Vinyl loo- f,MB mile*. 1963 Impala Convartlbla ....... $$95 ‘ Sharped ‘43 in tha City.. Rad and wblta. , , Mike Savoie' Chevrolet 1900 Maple Rd., Troy MI 4-2735 Phone Ml 4-2735 for- directions to Mika Savoie Chevrolet Open 8.30 A.M. to 9*30 P.M. Mon. ond Thur. Open 8 A.M. to 6i30 P.M. Tubs., Wad., Fri. and Sot. m ■Xr\' D—14 VTHB PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1M9 New imI IMCm *** love Auto . ■ - , _pe M»» Ha..PONTIAC SEDAN, rul nice. ■ Gw. M»B3, dealer. , :_. ftoJ PONTIAC, 4 door, dean. aeod condition, 10*0 A, Walton, FE « 104! New amt Ui^ Cirt lOi “H OVER 50 SHARP CARS ittTOR ' 85^Wevin*T'*T "n." Weekends. JIM, Boult, Ai Motor City Dodge 1403 CATALINA, I 1 334-3444. mTaTALINA 4 ooor hi •53 Oakland Avo. :tfismmm^TuK pow*r storing, •> w1|Mjbwimr, W50. 33*7524. PSit *Xli. )1m4~6t6, 4 *potd, 4*50 —......... Drayton Plitfll. 473- client condition, s,io*sr^ 1965 PONTIAC Catalina Ktoor hardtop, wltlt full price Oh $688 Can 106N*w •nd Utod Can lM|Naw and Uiad Can_____106N«w and Uiad Can yil fewsS •nd powtr *f«trlng, r • d I o« T»0' * sul For-Wont Adi Dial 106 Now and Uiod Cf» 10* IMf ..CATALINA 4 Doe Pyll decor, power It conditioning, dlic brikn. Au ------ ’ tronimlulon, Factory dlttoning. 4,MO mm. Coll 44 AUDETTE PONTIAC • 50 W. Maple Ad, Tf BB* 442-328*. &»i iTcic ROM, low mlltags lO SELL. ROSE RAMBLE JIEF, Union Lon, OM 3-4)53. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD NJT’PBHtTac ~catalina,~7 door. GRIMALDI Buick-Opel ] hardtop, root nlct. Ml-7704. M0 >14 Orchard LFl .Rd. __FJUfc!]i* JOHN'McAULIFFTFORD IMS PONTIAC Bonneville Station I >r sport ^•OOn Bo»uHM,motOl|lc Burgundy shocks.! *73-4*3). 1**4 PONTIAC coup*, brond i 1400 Coll 400-OSSt, ottor t Mail. Ins'*grand piwx; v 1969 Jovolin /», automatic, AM-PM rodlo, oeton loai— mm Vory nlco. Call 441-3111. AUDETTE PONTIAC i IISO W. Maple Rd. j 1*4* *CATALINA! sTW A A i N O brakes, 4 door hardtop, SttOS. 073 'H0MKMU! mfiot. Company car. Coll MfSMt. AUDETTE PONTIAC BREN BANKRUPT? Idailer) IpMMt, . Ll«t| lO^I PONTIAC CATALINA, your credit! double power, - 11090 W, Moplo Ad. Troy i Tw TGMPII^ CtStim"*. Interior, chroma I lull | black P.S. We've Moved! iry^ «lr condition, tohltowalli, ' $2695\ I EXTRA . now tlrpt, txtrti, 8UIS. 343-0984. _ 11143 s. Tologroph f*65 TEMPEST LtMANS. powtr11945 BONNEVJLU steering and brokos. new tiros, i door hardtop, 43 excellent condlton, 9975. 425-3294. tool PWffAC^fc’M>eST~1 door*VI hardtop, clean. 333-4547 gOSMiSLPONTIAC- ViNTURA J-door MT«,,ul*u SJf r,.ii.?C*' hardtop, powtr staring and 3773 W. Huron. 4M;7IXI. Pooler _, brakes,_auto., dton. 343-4147. 1965 PONTIAC I >*44 PONTIAC* CATALINA wagon OR AND PR IX, exceptionally nice' JgAwOW pood condition. t>R "grTmALDI CAR CO. 1 1 ^ HO Oakland Avo._________FE H4JI condltlon, S450. PE J-yTt. - r • 1000 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 3 door IMS PONTIAC, 1 plus 2. |uit Ilk* hardtop, powtr altering and 1963 Dodge Convertible V-l, automatic, power steering «i brakes. 949 BONNEVILLE Convertible. V-8, hvdramatlc. power steering and brakai. Power top, glaae back! Window. Light blue with matching bucket scats, Low mlloaga. lx* cedent condition. Call 442-3219. AUDETTE PONTIAC Troy (ISO W. Mapla I lucky .Auto As 11230 or, brokos and In I_ toko over paymanl*. 431-7)40._ 11»44 PONTIAC Bonnavlllt, 2 door p. »*!'**■ 1*3 3-?t54 ~ ggjSHiteCKY AUTO • Track $895 968 Americo ifdan, 4 cyllnd 271. $1195 1969 Amaricon 2-door, 4 cylinder, i Radio, Pull price. $1495 Motor City Dodge ready lor the open road Or _ it kids to school! McAuTltta Special. Only $777 lull price,,. P.S. We've Moved! to Mlfp N. of Mir ad* Mill/ 1145 s. Talagraph PC 5-4)oi 1040 GRAND PRIX, hut than 5,000 ”h6mi of the dependable mlta>, 03150. 47S-I037 attar 4. I USED CARS" 1,43 RAMBLER AMGltiAbOa'. V,i, POiltlOC automatic, powtr itaarlng and ~ , , _ putt Srjct. Kinpiiuto^m'-SmS: Standord Auto ----- Ins Oakland Avp. FIJ^033 1^67 RAMBLER Ambossador \ Tt|» REBELS tlrto. FAX#.TfiKJCL%Lk.C.A!nSd*^ ' $1288 4 * two TO CHOOSK FROM. Big GRIMALDI Buick-Opel I I Lk. Rd. FE 2-9145 JEEP, Union Like, IM 3-4155. Ntw nml Used Cars 106 New and Used Cers 106 LaMANS. 133 Oakland Avt, Powtr steering end brakes. Bench CaLm^3*^________* ! am toVa°r CATALINA 4 DOOR Hardtop. 1575. 473-1231. Next to Our New Cars Turnerized FE 4 FE 3-7034 Special On All Rambler Wagons 9 to Chooso From! 1746 CATALINA. DARK GREEN Open ell day Saturday, , to 4 p.m. with groan Interior. Powtr And air. New car trodt In. Call 443^207.. T ttt t It /-an AUDETTE PONTIAC VILLAGE 1850 W. Mapla Rd. m4~OfO, 3ACRIFICE. 1791 Used Cars I JOHN MCAULIFFE ford w V-A. '✓LAX »✓ ..PONTIAC C«0 rIT b 10 Are Best!! ^RAMBLER Call 4S1-1074, audETTe Pontiac m, tem>e3t, 4 cyiindorrid '1050 W. Maplo Rd. Troy wcond car, 402-S2S3. . __ i _______ , . ...............: imo GRAND PRIX .AIR, toll pow 1M0 LaMANS CONVERTIBLE. 350 While walla. 53500. Call 1-00-4-3214, : « aid ilaarln.,Cl”2000.PO4a'-, 1969 FIREBIRD 350 HO, 0071._____ Blue Black vinyl top, Olr. 4tPi i rr-.^-i-m—k—n—-----------=ih i *- ■» -•■wrlnp, dlic brakai, tilt wiwoC r liras, Rally II whatlS, power antanna, daloggar, glau. custom trim, ramota 473-04*7. ■ ________ N.w lira. Law mll.aoa I 1969 Grand PHx Call 442-3289. * Vinyl tap, air conditioning, , AUDETTE PONTIAC 1 r,dI°' *“y^Ao!'c 1030 W. Mapla Rd. Troy $0050 '^c^&j4 PONTIAC RETAIL i?40 BONNEVILLE o passanflar =r^Sferi*d5Thii3 wagon, air. power brakaa. steering l*4» CATALINA, 2 d«>r hardt and windows. Lumago rack and hOW*r, vinyl top. 334-4247 _crulspjconlml. SUM. 473-4115. j ________________*_____-- IMS PON T i*C TEMPEST 4 door. JTM double power, M.ooo mlf ----- UL 2-2034. with matching In-• condltloi steering mill Catalina, with beautiful matador 666 S. Woodward Ml 6-3900 »., i Convertlbl j 1943 Mercury 2 ion epaclei only $1188 full price. P S. Wo'vo Movodl Vk Milo N. of Mlraclo Milo mileage. Savtral i 1965 Mustang economy onglnt. Radio, htator.l.... .'‘'JSOLJIlFJ!'™ whit, wail tlras. M«d ,0 sail a. double power, outomotlc dttlonmfl, IVw, iftflSM. $585 1966 Country Squiro £ $988 GO! HAUPT PONTIAC 1*67 PONTIAC CATALINA hardtop, gllvgr blue wli cwdltlonlnond niu ^tranSSfy.^ 1 CONDm^lN3."CfT4%A ^'•".IS'rfna'^nd *brakai"and AUDETTE PONTIAC excellent tires. Low mlltagi car trade In. Calf 442-3289. AUDETTE PONTIAC 1130 W. Maplo Rd. Troy !0» PONTIAC FACTORY eltldel 1742 . ■ _ ..... ronttl and company^ cars. . Low. KEEGO PONTIAC SALES n i 1050 W. Maplo Rd. ' 1M0 PONTIAC CATALINA 1 ; hardtop, vinyl lop^Rally w ,TrcvrSiSir— Troy car* lit '__________ 1MI PONTIAC GRAND P rl Cordova top; AM-PM oNroo rodl rally wheel.. S3IS0. Coll 4SI-43M POWER air, grean. , 12,30. 473-7044. PONTIAC GRAND •r. 370 hp. 30,000 330-3100. $885 1966 Ambossodor Wagon Air, »power equipped, transmission. Priced at < $785 HR_____ , I Sovo—Sovo-Sov* TURNER priced CLARKtTON_____________MA J-530n GRIMALDI Buick-Opol conditioning. Hydra-1 TIQ Orchard Lk. FE 2-7143 1947 FIREBIRD* low mtiaageTexcs condition, muet soil, taka * 473M8d97,a*tar > b, power, factory air, 334-4491 ’Sffigs New and Uted Car. 106New and Uted Can 10* blu* tap. Keep America beautiful, buy this ont. SHELTON Pontiac-Buick 435 3. Rochester Rd. _431 -3300 1967 PONTIAC Convertible Sharp, and ready at only— $1488 grade gas. (1.475. COM 1968 Torino Fostbock GT JOHN McAULIFFE F6RD 1*44 PONTIAC Catalina ci vertlbla, with beautiful matai black Interior and t< Full this Special Only 91088. Full Price. *—P.S. We've Moved! ____ ______ Vk Mila N. of Miracle Milt tircBv TURNER 1845 S. Talagraph Rd. PE S-410 I OVER 50 SHARP CARS LARGEST MOPAR INVENTORY • PONTIAC I - [ DICK CANAANS .1968 FoH Foirldne $1995. V8 automatic. Motor City heater. Our low r day TURNER PRICE. $1595 THUNDER BIRDS 1966 T-Bird automatic, radio Pull prlca $1277 1966 Ford Power, autom dhlta wall tlrai. TURNER $765 1967 Tempest LeMans Club Coupe power equipped, re TURNER priced at $1295 1966 Dodge 4 door. Radio, heptar, while wall tlras. TURNER priced lor quick $585 Dodge. Hiai 1*47 473-330,. ____________ 1,47 CATALINA 4 door har radio, haator, whitawalls, burnished finish. Only— 1968 FIAT 850 Series with buckets, 4 speed, fire angina rad finish. Only— haator, whitawalls, nr atatrlng, ridlo, haator, vary nlca. 1967 TEMPEST 4-Door Sedorr with a maroon finish. V-4, automatic, spotless and vary tin* car throughout. 1968 EL CAMINO Pickup Id finish, saddle tan daluxa Intortor, V-l, automatic, power itaarlng, radio, hntor. beautyI ^dM ft itaarlng, radio, haatar, whitawalls, and India Ivory finish, Only- powor, black vinyl roof, charcoal finish, radio, hootor, whitawalls. 1967 CHEVY Bel Air 4 door sodon, with radio, haator, V-l, automatic, one and India .Ivory finish. Only- lock out hubs, western blade, oil motel—oil woothor cob. $1795 $2495 $2395 $2695-$3095 $1395 ^ $2295 * $2095 $2295 $1545 $2267 $1295 -$2895 $1395 $2695 To Serve You Better—We Have a BUDGET LOT ’ 630 Oakland Ave. i Across From Our Main Showroom! 631 Oakland at Cass ER 4-4547 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1969 ;’Tfl D—U R - Rerun C—Color FRIDAY NIGHT 6:90 (2) <4) (7) C- News, Weather, Sports (80) R C — Fllntstones (56) Segovia Master Class — Guitar classes are offered by Andres Segovia with music students from . Spain. , (62) R - Ozzle and Harriet / 6:30(2) C - News L Cronklte (4) C - News - Huntley, Brinkley (9) R - Dick Van Dyke (SO) R — Munster* — .After allowing Eddie to run away, Herman ' * searches the woods and brings home a bear cub instead. (56) Photography: The Incisive Art — Ansel Adams discusses the language of photography on final program of the series. (62) C — Robin Seymour 7:00 (2) C - Truth or (4) C - News, Weather,'-Sports' (7) 0 — News — Reynolds, Smith (9) R C — Movie: "Back-Street” (1961) Love affair between married man and a woman content to Btay in background is never blessed by legal or social -Television Programs- Programs furnished by stations fisted in this column are aub|act to change without hoticel 2-WJSK-TV.4~WWJ.TV. 7-WXYZ-TV, 9-CKLW-TV, 30-WKMD-TV, 36-WTVS-TV, 62-WXON-TV recognition. Susan Hayward, John Gavin (50) R - I Love Lucy (56) What’s New - "Tom Sawyer” continues as Tom, Huck and Joe return to town for their funeral, to the Shocked surprise of the community of Hannibal. 7:20 (2) C — Get Smart -Max and 99 go shopping for baby buggy as part of assignment to get plans for the .anti - anti • antimissile - missile out of the country before they can be stolen. Paul Richards guest-stars. v (4) C — High Chaparral — — Buck leaves the Chaparral when a longstanding family f p u d erupts between him and his brother John. (7) C— Let’s Make a Deal . (50) Beat the Clock (56) Accent — Two outstanding Chicago musicians — guitarist Richard Pick and violinist David Chausow -*■ 23 Hotel itms 2S Angry ICribbageiaUw 26 Roman 2 Redact goddoMdf 3 Greek letter 34 Biblical land 4 Wee tern state 27 Build 196 Female hors* 5 Yellow bugle 28 One who uses 37 h victorious plant an oar 56 Precious stone 39 Blemish 6Ten(comb. 29 Stage whisper 57 Hade bite 41 Secret agent form) 30 Type of 59 Pig’s home \ r“ 4 5 6 n U r- nr rr 12 13 U ib 1b WE lb m L ir m t k 26 j 1 u f bb 1 i L 37 \ ■ 42 1 4b worn d t B1 52 U' 55* sr ■ BT 61 \ m IS 1 S3 b4 J n be bb * Storm. 7 • / ) C — Of Lands and Seas — Mexico is visited. 6:06 (2) C - Good Guys -After a quarrel, Rufus and Bert divide the diner. (7) C — Brady Biinch — Hie kids think they’re breaking up their parents’ new marriage after readings about a family exactly like theirs In an advice column. (50) R-Hazel (56) R — People in Jazz. ' — Jazz guitarist Wes Montgomery Is featured. 1:10(2) C — Hogan’s Heroes — After obtaining a top-secret Luftwaffe code bode, the herbes meet difficulties in passing the code on to London. (4) C — Name of tho Game — A district attorney uses People magazine in his plot to 'get revenge oh the hoodlum who blinded him and disfigured his wife. Jack King man and Broderick Crawford guest-. star. (7) T! — Mr. Deeds Goes to TownDeeds goes to night school to learn more about the world of high finance. (50) C — To Tell the Truth (80) Jazz Alley — Memorable numbers of - the 1920s are played by tenor eflkophonist Bud Freeman and his host, pianist Art Hodges. . (02) R — Nelsons. 9:00 (2) C — Movie: “Double Trouble” (1067) Mistaken Identity has man and a beautiful girl enmeshed in a smuggler’s plot and attempted murder. Elvis Presley, Jphn Williams, Annette Day (7) c — Hare Come the Brides — Jason and Lottie get the townspeople to make it look like Clancey owns Lottie’s saloon. Ber-ard Fox guest-stars. (9) C — Windsor Raceway Preview — Highlights of past races and previews of upcoming season. (50) R — Perry Mason (56) NET Festival — ■Documentary shows pictures from 100 museumd, in pursuit of the truth about Rembrandt’s personality. (62) R C — Movie: "Tartar Invasion’’ (Itslian, 1963) - Yokl t Tani % 9:30 (9) C—Apollo 11 Highlights 10:09 (4) C — Bracken’s World — Testimonial dinner for Sylvia Caldwell’s father, a former movie executive, is marred when a fading actress publicly blames him for the failures in her life. —— Durante-Len-nons — Glen Campbell, Arte Johnson and tee — Radio Programs— WWJ, N«*l CKLW, Stevt 8 WJBK. Tom Sh WCAR, Now,, VXYZ. VPpN, VHP I, I 0:15—WJR, Sport, , WTON., SotwMO lh, LI lilO-JWWJ, Todoy ln Rot wpon, Phono Opinion WJR, BuHnow, Tim, T' •lor oios-wwj, ptmhtil. WJR, Rtpprf, 1,HS WJBK, Tom. own WWJ, Now,. Sport,Lin, WRPI, Loo Alan RMsontr R • 1 Choral Cavaleodi Till—WJR, IW,. ,:30—WJR, IhOWCOM, CIOOO-Up i ||4S—WJR, IhoweoH, Ml- Itilf—WJR, Poeui Bncoro iitOi—WJR, Now, il til—WJR, Sport, Il'iM^VVjT Mu'lc Till Down Vlifc^»k,°?lm^i?,rr»ton CKLW, p Bdw,rd, W|j» my, jar |,“rMn wpon', (tows, CMldC Worron WCAR. Now* Rill Dalian WHPI, Mare Avory 0:JO—WWJ, NOW,, Morrlo tllMOiWI ;m-WJR, CovoKodo tiOO—WJR, New, . •ilS^WJR, Sunny,Id,, Cavil- PiOP-wtNJ. Naw*. Monitor Q(LW,'H«| Mortln 10,00—wpon. Now,, Oiry WCAR*C*New«, Rod Millar wxvz, Now,, Johnny Ron- SATURDAY APTSRNOON 12:00—WWJ, New* WJR, New*, Big Ton Pro. view Hits—WWJ, Bob Boo,lay WJR, Porum 12,20—WJR, MSU Football tiSO—CKLW, Ed Mltcholl 2:00—WPON, NOWS, D«n - Milium WXYZ, Now,, Mika SInrmon WJBK, Honk O'Noll StIO-WCAR, Newt, Ron WMF I# Pen Alcorn Ii#4—CKLW, Scoff Rogon HOMEOWNERS will dont with ladder agalnat It. ALSO Cftitom Mod* Shuttor* 7 Colors to Swlwct from. Pointing thl.v sutler has already baandon* for yon the factory. Giiaienins white enamel i, baked on and IM guaranteed for 10 year,. We ate* eoVar ovarhang and fuel*! JU-ytir ,r|m eliminate oottlypaintlng. Gat 2 estimate, — then lauarinttf. call me. I GUARANTEE I will aava you mongjb For she ^ t tru|tJ n||na ln ..vggtroughlat..I)l(t PHONE TODAY 673-6866 or 673-5662 MILCOR X LICENSE BONDED CONTRACTOR Quality / M & S GUTTER CO, , 4162 West Walton* Drayton Plain* Fsmous\ (9) (50) C — News, Weather, Sports (56) NET Playhouse — “Mid-Channel” — Middle-aged husband and young wife are torn apart by their desire to stay, geteer. 16:26(9) C - What’s Line?. (56) R — Ben Casey — Casey Is drawn between a domineering father and a lovelorn daughter. ' (62) R — Sea Hunt 11:66 (2) (4) (7) C - News, Weather, Sports. (9) R — Movie: Veil” (1951) Jane Wyman, Charles Laughton (62) R — Highway Patrol 11:26 (4) C — Johnny Carson (7) C — Joey Bishop — Muhammad AU guests. (56) C — Merv Griffin -Jack E. Leonard and the Ishange Africa Dancers guest. ■ (62) R — Movie: “Toughest Gun In Tombstone” (1958) George Montgomery 11:25 (2) R C — Movies: 1. “Day of the Trlffids" (British, 1982) Drama about man-eating plants. Howard Keel,. Nicole Maurey; 1 “The Goldwyn Follies” (1688) - Adolph Menjou 12:24 (9) Viewpoint C — Perry’s Probe — “Marriage Breakdown” and “The Female Executive” 1:80 (4) Beat the Champ (7) R - Movie: "High Wall” (1947) Herbert Marshall, Robert Taylor ____(56) C — Wrestling 1:86 (4) C — News, Weather 2:15 (7) C — Wonderful World of Sports 2:26 (7) C — News, Weather 3:26 (2) R-Naked City (7) C — Five Minutes to Live By SATURDAY MORNING 5:56 (2) TV Chapel 5:55 (2) C —News 6:66 (2) C — Across tee Fence 6:80(2X0' — Sunrise Semester 6:45 (7) C — Rural Report — “Stop Rate Forever" 6:56 (9) Warm-Up 6:55 (4) C —News .7:66 (2) C-Jetsons (4) C — Country Living — “Fall Bulbs - Planting and Care” (7) C - Casper (9) Ontario Schools 7:96 (2) C — Woodrow tee Woodsman Lettermen guest. (4) C — Oopsy (7) C—Smokey the Bear 8:66 (7) C—Cattanooga Cats 8:96 (2) C — Bugs BtuMy-Roadrunner 6:66 (4) C—Here Comes the STEREO e FISHER • ELECTRO-VOICE # KENWOOD • MclNTOSH • TANBERG • REVOX . • GARRARD • DUAL • RECTILINEAR CUSTOMADE PRODUCTS 4540 W. HURON 573-9700 Grump (7) C-Hot Wheels (50) R- Wells Fargo 9:36 (2) c — Dastardly and Muttley (4) C- Pink Panther (?) C —Hardy Boys (9) Chansons (50) R — Laramie 16:69 (2) C Perils of Penelope Pitstop (4) C — H. R. Pufnstuff (7) C — Sky Hawks (9) A Place of Your Own 19:29 (2) C - Scodby-Doo (4) C — Banana Splits (7) C-Gulliver (9) Swlngaround . (56) R — Movie: “Knufe^ Rockne — All American” (1940) Ronald Reagan, Pat O’Brien 11:66 (2) C Archie Show (?) C — Fantastic Voyage (9) Ballads and Chansons 11:29 (4) C-Jambo — (7) R C - Movie: “The Golden Blade” 098S} Rock Hudson, Piper Laurie (9) Canadian Football: Hamilton at Ottawa 2:69 (2) C — Roller Derby <50) R -.Movie: “Force of Evil” (1948) - John Garfield, Beatrice Pearspn-2:55 (7) C >— Wonderful World of Sports —:-------- 2:06 (2) R C - Movie: “The Gorgan” (British, 1964) — Peter Cushing, Christopher Lee (4) C - Baseball: New York at Atlanta (7) R — Outer Limits (56) Action People 3:30 (9) C — Magic Shoppe (60) R - Movie: “Flight to Mars” (1952) — Cameron Mitchell, Arthur Franz 4:06 (4) C - Red Jones (7) C - Wide World of Sports (6) C - Bozo (62) R — My Friend FUcka 4:38 (4) C — Gadabout Gaddis — Viewers are taken to Bingham, Maine, and tee Allagash Watershed for fishing. (9) C-Skippy (56) R ,— Joyce Chen COoks — “Egg Foo Yung” is featured. (62) C — Gospel Music 5:88 (2) C — All-American Carnegie Hall Will Rock Again NEW YORK W - Carnegie Hall, which has had a ban on rock concerts since 1983, has removed the ban. * r r *11 * / * /This season, Carnegie will hear tee Byrds, Flying Burrito Brothers, Holy Modal Rounders, Led Zeppelin, Chambers Broths r s Stephenwolf and Over 18,000 registered nurses were employed In across the nation ln 1966, (6) C — Time Tunnel (90) R — Combat (82) C — Wrestling! 1:26 (2) C - Porter Wagoner (7) R C - Wackiest Ship in the Army QUALITY REPAIRS ON ALL MAKE HEARING AIDS V* s4c*kc S&art We buy, sail and trada PISTOLS, RIFLES and SWIRUNS Largest Sslselien te Okeeea From! Oash Paid for 2624 N. WOODWARD AVI* Between lift Dally 0, Sim. mil LI RENT, SELL, TRADE - - - USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS I I N G. SALES and SERVICE DISCOUNT PRICES • Color and MW TV AA4 4E4E eStereos-Radio QO I” 111 111 • Tap* R.cord.r, Opon _.(v TBBBi« • TV Antonnas Fit TU > F.M. IWT TEWIB | ROA and ZENITH Authorized Paater | , “Our year$ of experience U your assurance of satisfaction” Since 1932 11B1W. Huron/3 Blocks Waal of Talagraph/Pontiao DEDICATED TO TOP QUALITY TV SERVICE TESA of OAKLAND COUNTY PONTIAO MALL OPTICAL A HEARING Alb CENTER 813-1111 "Living Sound" esnten Itadfo-TV FE4-9T1I 1M W. Huron, Pantiao CiVTV FE 2-37*1 1« OaldtRS, Poirtiao Dalky Radio t TV FK 44992 Mart Radio-TV FI Mil* fNOnMUfesMdaMHM Jim’s Radio a TV 292.1418 uh ItsNy ua* ■*» Ndsa lam ObalTV 112482 SMI BbakathUe,Rd,NaHa* DEALENS Ryden TV list Rats! Al Roodine TV FI 4-1111 2192 W. MtdalMI Rd, Lab* Rdtte Rtofanskl Radio 5 TV UMI1I 1111W. Mama MaNat •wort's lladia »TVF««4«n 422 W. Hama, Partla* ToohTVSontoo IKM488 Mil Wait tebom, Rsobsatar Troy TV-Radio TR 84888 SHI Uvaraaii, Tray Valin's TV , MI-1118 SI9H.Hii%l _____musette* ISIS K. Watt MaptaBd^WaBadLabji Walton Radio-TV ft 2-2211 ItlWtWtttbl WKO, Ino, lanrioa 874-1118 2919 86da Roy, Bnytsa Plate* NO LESS THAN 15 NEW SONY 1 FEATURES! Add tho Sony Modal 630-D stereo tape deck to your sound system and liatan to tha improvement! An array of professional featura* provide the clean, quality sound of Sony atarao taps. And tha Sony 630-D’s additional high level Inputs and switching facilities proyldai greater versatility for 1 your sbund system.' Coma In today and sm what tha Sony Modal 630-D can do for your, sound systeml You never heard It ao good. 4 OVSTWIK ' PRODUCTS CO. 4840 W. Mures It. (Mil) S 8114118 i NEWI 2-Cbanml POLICE RECEIVER Medal PR-1611 with sgualah • Fart- i •Me and AO eporstion! $4095 SPECIAL! UfllWiMfrics VHF Monitor •.Ten Transistor • Tunes ut-116 MHZ • Telssooplng Antenna • li-Oiy Warranty Rag. S24.S6 $1766 STOCK OF • POLICE RECEIVERS BASE and MOBILE ANTENNAS • CRYSTALS - 2-WAY RADIO EQUIPMENT JSSwn& COMMUNICATIONS (EduntFu Magana* 4884 W. WALTON BLVD.f DRAYTON PUINC, MICHIGAN 48020 HOURS: 9 A.M. to 6 P.M. TUESDAY. W|DNESDAY, THURSDAY AND SATURDAY OPEN 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. MONDAY and FRIDAY convenient credit PONTIAC 361 S. SAGINAW • FE 3-7901 OPEN MONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY TIL 9 DRAYTON 4945 DIXIE HWY • QR 4-0321 OPEN MONDAY, THURSDAY/FMDAY TIL 9 each style available in these sizes: now at Thomas Furniture LUXURIOUS CUSTOM SO I PRICED AT VERY SPECIAL SAVINGS | CHOICE OF 4 STYLES AND 4 SIZES We've gathered together four elegant sofa designs and tagged each of^I every one with very special savings! But that's just half of the story! Choose your favorite in a size to fit your exact needs then let your decorative imagination go with a choice of dozens of lavish custom fabrics; And what quality. . . sumptuous Dup-Tex crown rubber cushions, self-decking, coil springs, even protective arm covers included at no charge. Shop tonight 'til 9! •%\ Th# Weather U.I. WMlhcr Surami F* *r*c*n Warmer (Dtlllll Flf* |) MAKE OVER PAGES THE PONTIAC PRESS VOL, 127 — NO. 205 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1900 52 PAGES; uN,T,ymTfMPTggiKVoM^ __________________10« Waterford Schools Seek 9-Mill Hike By DICK ROBINSON Waterford Township voters will be asked to pass a one-year, 9-mill property tax increase Nov. 25 to provide money to put some 18,500 children back on full-day classes. The millage amount was decided by the board of education last night. It also agreed to appeal to the Michigan Supreme Court an Oakland County Circuit Court ruling that it must restore full-day classes by Nov. 3. At the same time, school trustees canceled a proposed bond issue that had been slated for the same ballot. The 9*mlll levy — $9 per 1,000 of assessed property evaluation — for the 1970-71 school year would provide just enough funds to the school district could borrow the money t(k restore full- days this shool year and pay for full days the next year, Pagen said; •WILL GO INTO RED’ The school district will have to go Into the red next spring to finance full days, Pagen explained, but it is hopeful of getting permission from the Municipal Finance Commission to borrow money on anticipated revenue if the millage passes. - Two-thirds of the millage revenue would be used to finance full days next school year and one-third to repay the loan for full days this year, according to Pagen. Trustee Billie S. Farnum proposed the levy for just one year because it is pos- sible that the governor’s plans to revamp school financing may provide more revenue for Waterford in 1971-72. A 9-mill tax increase, which would be levied on Pecember 1970 tax bills, would cost the average property owner about $90 per year, Pagen estimated. He figures the average property is worth about $20,000 and Is assessed at $10,000. 3 ISSUES DEFEATED Pagen estimated the 9-mill tax increase would raise about $1.8 million during 1970-71. h it ★ A decision the board made two weeks ago to hold a no-tax-increase bond issue election to j primarily build a needed junior high school along with the millage proposal was unanimously rescinded. EXPLAINS REASONING unanimously voted to appeal Judge William J. Beer’s order giving the school district five additional weeks to restore full days. School Attorney John Rogers said he would file for a stay and appeal- to a higher court today or Monday and that he expects the issue to be heard there early next month. SUIT BROUGHT BY PARENTS Beer originally gave school officials two weeks when he ruled that shortened class days as a cost-cutting device and a state law prohibiting deficit financing are unconstitutional. The suit was brought by a group of Waterford parents shortly after half-day school sessions went into effect for three elementary grades last month. Secon- dary students are on a shortened day by one hour for the second year. * * * Schools officials had said it Is impossible to hire some 130 teachers, redistribute supplies, reschedule classes and rearrange bus schedules by Nov. 3. In fact, the soonest that secondary students could go back to school for six hours a day would be January, Pagen said. Restoration of elementary full days would probably take longer since it is difficult to find enough teachers in the middle of a school year, Pagen Bald. Waterford Township schoolchildren will go back to full-day classes no matter what happens in their parents’ court battle providing residents pass a proposed tax increase. Waterford voters have defeated three millage issues in the past two years, the last a two-year 9-mlll proposal in March. Property owners now pay tax on a total of 32.83 mills, of which 24.63 is for operating schools. Seventeen out of the county’s other 27 school districts levy higher operating taxes, Pagen has said. Trustee Eldon C. Rosegart explained -the reasoning this way: f “As? much as you can tell people the bond issue won’t increase taxes, they can never separate bond issues from millage increases on the same ballot. “Once the millage is passed, we could call a bond issue for the near future.” As expected, school trustees Backers Confident Tough Plan Will Be Law Coal-Safety Bill Clears Senate POWER PLAY—Foreign Minister Willy Brandt (left) of West Germany’s Social Democratic party shakes hands with Free Democratic party leader Walter Scheel. Last night, they drafted a coalition agreement that would bring Brandt’s party Into power for the first time. Both parties were meeting today to decide whether to ratify the agreement. New Car Sales Set September Record Although not a‘single Senate vote was cast against the measure on final passage there, were several fights on amendments during five days of floor debate. The bill had been under study for months in a Labor subcommittee headed by Sen. Harrison A. Williams Jr., D-N.J., before it was sent to the Senate floor. ★ * * Williams said after the Senate vote he was confident the legislation “will mean very significant improvement in the working environment of the nation's 130,000 coal miners.’’ The bill would establish federal minimum dust levels in the 3,600 U.S. coal mines for the first time. FEDERAL INSPECTIONS It also would set up stricter controls over methane gas, provide for tigher and more frequent federal inspections, require that all electrical equipment and wiring be made spark-proof, ban smok- ing and use of flames in mines, and establish a program of interim compensation payments for miners disabled by pneumoconiosis or black lung. In the last major floor fight yesterday, the Senate declined to exempt small, so-called nongassy mines from the equipment requirements of the legislation. Sen. John S. Cooper, R-Ky., arguing for such an amendment, said the requirements would be so costly that many of the small mines would be forced to close. Williams and Sen. Jacob K. Javits, R-N.Y., offered a compromise under which the nongassy mines would have five years to install the new equipment, instead of four as provided in the main bill. * * * This was adopted 45-31. Under the dust provision, all mines will be required within six years to meet a standard of not more than 2 milligrams per cubic meter of air. PAUF to Begin Fund Drive With Ball, Torch Lightings A ball tonight and a dual torch-lighting ceremony tofoorrpw will highlight this year’s Pontiac Area United Fund general kickoff. The ball, sponsored by Annett Inc. Realtor, 28 E. Huron, is at the Holiday Inn of Pontiac. Actual kickoff begins at noon tomorrow at the Pontiac Mall with A helicopter dropping UFOs (United Fund Objects) containing numbers which can be turned in for gifts donated by The Pontiac ^Mall. The first torch lighting will follow at The Mall with music provided by a Boy Scout band. Campaign leaders will be lifted to the torch in a Consumers Power snorkel for the lighting. A car “care-a-van” of campaign leaders, the Boy Scouts band and other agency volunteers will then head for downtown Pontiac for a torch lighting at 1:25 p.irt. at City Hall, 450 E. Wide Track. ^ ^ The ceremonies mark the start of the area’s 21st United Campaign, which seek money for 55 health, welfare, education and recreation agencies. This year s goal is $1.24 million, a 15 per cent increase over the amount raised last year. The drive will run through Nov. 7. Warm, Dry Weekend Forecast From Wtre and Local Reports DETROIT UR — Americans, though growing cautious in their purchase of nonessentials, bought new cars at a jecord rate in September. All four American auto makers announced records of one sort or another. ★ ★ it Even American Motors, which often discloses sales figures only when asked, volunteered that September sales were 21,121, “the highest for that month in five years.’’ Sales during the month were spurred by introduction of the 1970 models and bargains on remaining stocks of 1969s. Industry sales for September totaled 709,388 cars, compared with the previous record of 601,375 in 1968. Sales for the first three quarters were 6,303,636, second only to 1965 when the industry registered 8,397,199 new car sales through September. Last year through nine months the auto makers sold 6,275,829 cars; With a strong finish the industry could top the record 1965 domestic sales figure of 8.7 million cars. Pontiac Motor Division today reported it sold 69,385 cars last month, surpassing the previous September record of 63,655 set two years ago. In the final 10 selling days of the month, the General Motors division sold 28,754 cars compared to 28,443 in the final 10 days of September 1968. CHRYSLER CUTBACK Chrysler Corp. reported its September sales of 117,501 were the best since 1950, but sales for the first nine months* have trailed 1968 figures by nearly 90,000 units. Chrysler also had a dip in profits-this year and revealed yesterday that It would cut back Its white-collar staff. WASHINGTON (AP) - Sponsors of the most stringent coal mine safety bill ever to clear a branch of Congress say they are confident the measure will become law this year. Following a 73-0 Senate vote yesterday, the measure was sent to the House where a similarly tough measure already has been approved by the Labor and Public Welfare Committee. * * ★ Congressional action has been spurred by the tragedy at Farmington, W. Va., last November where 78 miners died in an underground explosion and the wide publicity given recently to black lung disease. House managers said they would push to bring the safety bill to the floor as soon as possible. 2 More N-Tests Set in Aleutians ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) - The Atomic Energy Commission plans two more nuclear test explosions o n Amchitka Island in the Aleutian chain after yesterday’s blast which did not yield an earthquake or a tidal wave. The Soviet Union, Japan and Canada as well as numerous U.S. scientists and political figures had objected to the one-rftfegaton underground explosion because they feared it would , cause seismic disturbances in the temblor-prone Alaskan or Aleutian faults. ★ ★ ★ But the blast yielded only a ground roll on the desolate, windswept island, and apparently didn’t even bother 25 sea otters swimming in pens near ground zero. AEC officials at a control center in Anchorage said two more nuclear tests were planned under the island Tundra during the test project. NO VISIBLE AFTERSHOCKS Gov. Keith Miller, a Republican who supported the test, said the commission had advised him that it would be at least two years before another test would be set off on Amchitka. Scientists said there were no visible aftershocks but that scientific instruments may register unfelt aftershocks for days or weeks. They said no radiation escaped from the 4,000-foot deep hole in which the blast was detonated, and that a building atop the. hole was hot damaged. The AEC said the first explosion was a suitability test and indicated the results were satisfactory. It has not announced a reason for the next two. Pontiac area residents may look forward to a warm weekend with temperatures ranging from a high in the 80s to a low near 48. Partly sunny is the forecast for tomorrow, and partly cloudy and warm is the prediction for Sunday. * * * ■ Winds light and variable 6 to 12 miles per hour today will shift to the southeast tomorrow. The probabilities of precipitation are near zero today and tonight, and 10 per cent tomorrow. * * * The low before 8 a m. in downtown Pontiac was 57, The mercury had climbed to 67 by 12:30 p.m. Safe Schools Urged by Pontiac Parents By MARY SUNDSTROM “We’ve got to do something . . v. something has to be done no\^ The estimated 250 persons who attended last night’s Pontiac Board of Related Story, Page A-2 Education medllng at City Hall seemed to have one common desire — an education for the children of Pontiac in safe, undisi'upted schools. it it it Their collective plea to the school board was that a solution be found to the disturbances that have plagued city high schools since last week. Northern High School closed last Frl-j day as a result of seemingly racially-related fist fights between students last Thursday,' and Cehtral High School /M,/ a closed Monday because of student-to-student confrontations at PCH last Friday. TENSION BUILDS AGAIN ' Racial tension built again at Northern Wednesday When white and black groups of students gathered and threatened to fight. Parents have patrolled halls In the two high schools and several junior highs since the first incident Sept. 25. Both black and white parents attending last night’s meeting, which overflowed the City Commission Chambers, urged that all of the youngsters Involved in the recent disruptions be punlshed.-* m , * Others urged meetings with Involved studehts to attempt to pinpoint causes for the disturbances. They said that once administrators and the board know the (Continued on Page A-3,, Col. 1) .A' ■ //V/, JAMES R. HOFFA Parole Request by Hoffa Denied WASHINGTON (AP) - James R. Hoffa, once counted among the nation’s most powerful labor leaders, faces at least another year-and-a-half behind bars of a federal prison following rejection of his plea for parole. Hoffa, who has served two years and eight months of an eight-year sentence for jury tampering, lost his try for early release yesterday when the U.S. Parole Board rejected his bid. The board said U would reconsider his case In March 1971. Hoffa, the stocky, defiant leader of the two-million-member Teamsters Union whose legal battles with the government began under the Kennedy, administration, were continued during the Johnson administration and still are going on, Is in the Lewisburg, Pa., federal prison. Nixon Will Intervene to Block Rail Strike WASHINGTON (AP) - The Labor Department announced that President Nixon will intervene to block a strike against six major railroads toight. A department spokesman said the President has decided to appoint an emergency board, whose members will be announced later, to take up the yearlong dispute. Appointment of the board automatically will postpone strike action for 60 days days. In Today's Press Next Moon Shot Apollo 12’s crew plans a shocker on the trip home — 1 4 PAGE B-ll. Called Off Bulck Open golf tournament 1 | canceled - PAGE D-l. Wood Carvings Area man hews to the grain L of his emotions — PAGE A-4. I Area News ............... A-4 I i Astrology B-13 I Bridge . B-l$ E Crossword Puzzle ........D-15 r Comics ................. B-13 | Editorials ...............A-8 | Farm and Garden ... C-8—C*9 f High 8chool ...........B-I, B-2 *1 Markets ................B-18 1 Obituaries . ........... 0>t Smoking Series ..........B-14 Sports ..............D-l—D4 Theaters , B-14, B-II TV and Radio Programs . D-ll % Vietnam War News........A-I8 Wilson, Earl ............B-14 . Women’s Pages .....B-8, B-8 | ■V ■ ' -\ # ’ p ■' • Y A—2 THE PQNl'IAC 1’llESS. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1969 House Decides to Kill troubled Sheridan Tank WASHINGTON Iff - The House -turning aside efforts to chop $3 billion worth of other weapons projects — has voted to kill the trouble-plagued Sheridan tank. through the House yesterday with little debate and no vote count. The proposal to end the fl-billion Sheridan program as seen as the current contract is completed was shouted Haynsworth: No Withdrawal The proposal was backed by Armed Services Chairman L. Mendel Rivers, (D-SC.,) whose committee concluded the tank’s caseless ammunition is dangerous and the tank itself was not worth the time and cost of development. But efforts by military spending critics to cut money from the safeguard antimissile system, CSA supercargo plane, ships, helicopters and missile programs were easily defeated one by one. WASHINGTON (AP) - Judge Clement F. Haynsworth today denied reports by congressional sources that he had sought to have his nomination to the Supreme Court withdrawn. “I did not think about such a thing,” Haynsworth told a reporter who asked whether he had asked President Nixon to call back the appointment. ‘‘I don’t know where you all got such a thing. Somebody else dreamed the thing up.” SS7.S-MILLION CUT The critics tried to cut the projects from a $21.35-billion authorization for procurement of military hardware. Rivers’ committee already had cut $57.6 million from the Sheridan program, leaving only $15.2 million for completion of the present contract. HOUSING ADMINISTRATOR - George W. Romney, secretary of housing and urban development, talks with Eugene A. Gulledge of Greensboro, N.C., yesterday in Washington, D.C., after Gulledge became the new federal housing administrator. GOP Enthusiastic When then asked whether he anticipated asking that the nomination be withdrawn, Haynsworth replied: "1 have not and I don’t.” Despite Haynsworth’s denial, and one from the White House, the congressional sources who disclosed the original reports to the Associated Press yesterday remained firm today. HEAD COUNT REPORTED The sources said the White House had concluded after an informal head count that at least 40 of the 100 senators were prepared to vote against confirmation of the 50-year-old U.S. appeals court judge. One mldwestem senator was reported to have told his staff hours before the reports were published yesterday that Haynsworth was asking that his name be withdrawn and that a statement from the White House was imminent. It had urged the Army to correct the tank’s problems — particularly the danger of ammunition explosions inside the tank — before it asks authority to buy any more. But the amendment shouted through yesterday would terminate the program entirely when the contract runs out. . As final as the House language is, the decision could be reversed in future authorization bills if the Sheridan's problems were solved. Romney: Senate Try Open WASHINGTON (AP)- Republicans generally reacted with enthusiasm Thursday over an indication by former Michigan Gov. George Romney that he may run for the Senate next year against Sen. Philip Hart, D—Mich. Asked by newsmen if he felt tempted to step down as secretary of housing and urban development and enter the Senate race, Romney replied: ‘‘I haven’t completely closed the door.” Told of Romney’s statement, Rep. Gerald Ford, R-Mich., House minority leader said the former governor would be “an excellent candidate for the Senate. Cuts attempted by spending critics but defeated by the House yesterday would have trimmed: • All $345 million for deployment of the Safeguard antiballistic missile system, leaving intact $400 million for research and development. • $l billion above the administtation’s request for ships, added by Rivers to modernize the U.S. naval force. • $481 million for purchase of 23 additional C5A cargo planes. Second Man Places Collins in Cycle Shop But afterward and following a talk with Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell, White House press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler laid the latest information “indicates Hut this report is absolutely untrue.” • $275 million for production of six carrier-based F-14 Navy fighters, a plane still in the development stage. • $86 million for 170 Cobra helicopters. • $77 million for the Short Range Attack Missile which has suffered development problems. ANN ARBOR (AP) - A second man has placed John Norman Collins, accused of murdering an Eastern Michigan University coed, In an Ypsllanti motorcycle shop during much of the time the crime allegedly was being committed. John Lehto, a 26-year-old employe of J and J Motorcycle Shop, backed the shop owner yesterday in saying that they were with Collins on the afternoon of July 23. The coed, Karen Sue Beineman, allegedly was abducted by a motorcycle rider at about 12:30 p.m. July 23. An autopsy report indicated she was dead by 3. p.m. FORD DELIGHTED “I’m delighted to know he has not foreclosed the possibility of running,” Ford said. Rep. Donald Riegle Jr., R-Mich., said: “If he decided to run, he would be an excellent candidate and, if elected, an outstanding senator.” Riegle is known to be considering seeking the Republican senatorial nomination for himself, but he said if Romney runs he would not oppose him in the primary. When asked about speculation that he might seek the Senate position, Romney said: . “Well, I’m not doing anything in that connection. I haven’t completely closed the door. I’m not doing anything about it—I’m not seeking it or anything.” 13 Are Arrested in Pontiac Drug Raid By KINGSLEY COTTON A major source of heroin in Pontiac may have been uncovered by city police last night. In their second major narcotics raid in less than a week, officers of the Pontiac police vice squad broke into a South Side home early last night. Police confiscated $8,000 worth of suspected narcotics and $2,000 worth of property believed stolen, and made 13 arrests. Last Saturday vice squad officers confiscated more than $14,000 worth of narcotics and made two arrests on a raid at an apartment on Douglas. Eight officers in three cars swooped in on the home of Shellena Bently, 18, of 392 Going at 8:30 last night. While four officers covered the front and sides of the four-room house, the other four broke down the rear door. A search warrant had been obtained earlier yesterday. Whitaker’s bond was set at $65,000 while Miss Pipen’s and Miss Bently’s were set at $35,000. The Weather Arrested and charged with sale of narcotics were Miss Bently, Cynthia Pippen, 21, of 107 Wesson and Michael Whitaker, 23, of 61 Orton. Lily Pullard, 26, of 17 Gillespie, was arrested and charged with possession of narcotics. WARRANT SOUGHT Bond for those charged with loitering was set by McCallum at $500. Miss Pullard was being held until a warrant could be obtained charging her with possession of narcotics. Conviction on a charge of selling narcotics, carries a minumum prison term of 20 years, according to Det. Bruce Jarvis. Fall U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Today mostly sunny and warm, high In the 70s. Tonight fair, low 48 to 53. Saturday partly sunny, a little warmer, high 75 to 80. Outlook for Sunday: partly cloudy and warm. Winds light variable becoming southeasterly 6 to 12 miles per hour Saturday. Probability of precipitation near zero today and tonight, 10 per cent Saturday. At 1 Dir »t temperature preceding I i a.m.: Wind Velocity 0 m.p.l ectlon: Variable •eta Friday et 6:12 p.m. rleet Saturday at t: 33 a.m. i aeti Friday et 1:90 p.m. i riaee Friday at 11:11 p.m. (SB I Highest temperature NINE OTHERS ARRESTED Nine other persons were arrested and charged with loitering. Confiscated were what are suspected to be marijuana, cocaine, and heroin as well as two pistols and a rifle. The property believed stolen consisted mainly of furniture, a number of television sets, radios, and record players. Twelve of the thirteen persons were arraigned this morning before Pontiac District Judge Cecil McCallum. In terms of the -number arrested, last nights raid was one of the largest in department history, Jarvis said. “It was the culmination of three months of investigation and surveillance,” said Sgt. Guy White, head of the department’s vice squad. “We are fairly confident,” Jarvis added, “that this operation was the direct supply for a major proportion of the heroin addicts in Pontiac." Lowfit temperature Moan temperature ............... Wtaihar: Cloudy, rain Thursday'! Tamparalurat Alpana 70 47 Danvar Escanaba M 41 Oatrolt O. Rapid* 79 47 Jacksonville Houghton 5* 49 Kansas City Houghton Lk. tt si Los Angola* Jackson 70 52 LoulevIlT* Lantlng 70 40 Milwaukee Orleans 17 5* Moan temperature Muskegon 79 59 Now. York 01 47 Fhoonlx Saginaw «7 54 Fltf Travers* C. 75 j* St. Atlanta*' 09 If 0. Lake City This Data In 77 Year* Oscoda 43 53 ‘ 71 47 47 54 75 M ■_________ •4 59 Tampa 79 8 *. Lika 71 If S. Francisco 4* M |. «M 7 Arrested as City Police Seek to Keep Schools Quiet While relative calm prevailed yesterday in Pontiac city schools, police nonetheless arrested a number of youths. The arrests were made, according to Pontiac Police Chief William K. HOiger, in an effort to prevent the gathering of large crowds around the schools and the subsequent disturbances which have plagued Central and Northern high schools for the past week. In the wake of racial disturbances at the schools, police also reported the firebombing of a house in a Negro residential area and a number of incidents where youths reportedly were throwing rocks at passing cars. No one was injured bpt minor damage occurred at the home of Marvin Jackson, 62, of 31 Franklin Blvd. last taight when a Molotov cocktail was tossqdjhrough his kitchen window. Birmingham Area Crossing Guards Scarce BIRMINGHAM - The Police Department has reported a shortage in school/ crossing guards for the 1969-70 school term. In the 1969-70, city budget,., seven school crossing guards were authorized to provide protection at critical locations, a police department . spokesman said. Police Chief Daryle Bruestle has offered ‘three alternatives to the City Commission as a method of alleviating the personnel problem: plicants. The present pay is/ $2.50/,per day and each guard works two hours per fw. 3 • Study feasibility of employing high school students to fill the positions. The Commission is studying the recommendations. Reevaluate present crossings and r trie Joseph D. Swoyer of 934 N. Reading has been appointed senior vice president of Young & Rubicam, Inc. advertising agency. cover only trie ones that are most crucial, eliminating the need of some • Adjust the financial benefit of the guards. position in order to attract more ap- Swoyer is now in Qhgfge of automotive accounts. ^ New Pullout Move Seen Before Yule Previously, he was a supervisor for the I Plymouth account and a vice president. Swoyer was employed by the N. Y. Ayer and J. Walter Thompson ad agencies before joining Young % jSubicam. He is a graduate of La Salle College, Philadelphia, Penn. WASHINGTON W> — Sen. George D. Aiken, the Senate’s senior Republican, predicted today President Nixon will order a new troop withdrawal of 40,000 men from Vietnam before Christmas and that “most of the ground troops” will be pulled out by the end of 1970. “I expect that the President will probably give us another troop withdrawal for Christmas—enough to make 100,000 men this year,” the Vermont senator told a reporter. BLOOMFIELD HILLS — Harry B. Cunningham, 210 LOWELL Court is in London, England with 84 other American businessmen and community leaders to attend an international affairs conference called "Forecast: The 1980’s — Decade of Decision.” Cunningham is board chairman and president of the Kresge Company. He said he has not discussed the possibility of such a new withdrawal-with Nixon but that “The South Vietnamese government seems to be confident it can take things over. Some 60,000 troops have been included In troop withdrawals announced by Nixon so far. The meetings are intended to give the business and social leaders a perspective beyond their immediate communities in addition to news briefings on world events and business and marketing trends. Personnel attending the conference include board chairmen, presidents and vice presidents and executive directors of food, chemical and insurance companies, banks, utilities, department stores, civil rights organizations, educational institutions and major officials of state and federal governments. sensational from the parking lot of the YWCA on Huron.. Six pontiac Central students were arrested by police yesterday, Including three juveniles. David D. Danielson, 17, of 294 N. Johnson, Calvin Mason, 18, of 403 Dlt-mar, and David Scott, 17, of 308 Central were arrested at 11:30 yesterday morning outside of Central and charged with creating a disturbance. TOLD TO DISPERSE According to police reports, the three were' among a group of about 15 who were told to disperse. Officers said the three arrested were the ones who failed to comply. / Three juveniles also were arrested and charged with setting a Are in a locker at Central. AF WlreptMto NATIONAL WEATHER — Showers are forecast today in the South, along the Mid-Atlantic Coast and through much of the Midwest and Southwest. Cooler tem-penBure|are expected In thf Southwest. ^ YWCA PARKING LOT The incident occurred at 7:40 p.m-according to police. Officers speculate that the bottle, containing fuOl oil or kerosene, was thrown Another juvenile, previously suspended, was arrested at Northern High School at 1$ a.m. yesterday and charged with loitering. Two assault /and battery complaints were lodged by Central students yesterday, according to police, but no arreiti have been made. ; The TlfUNER • Modal A4S12W Beautiful Contomporary styled compact console in grained Walnut color on talact I solids and venaers. 5" x 3” Twin-Cone Speaker. CHECK OUR LOW, LOW PRICE! WORLD’S FINEST COLOR TV PERFORMANCE S RELIABILITYI Tim 80 handcrafted chassis combines famous Zenith Handcrafted dependability with ■olld-etate performance. CHROMATIC BRAIN color demodulator Zenith's unique demodulator haa the Ural Intagratad circuitry gvor used to product a color TV picture. NEW ZENITH COLOR COMMANDER ... Now ono knob adjusts contrast and color lavtl with brightness in proper balance almultanaoualy—and they slay perfectly In ’ need to turn i reception. • eUNtHINIt COLOR TV PICTUMTUIK for greater Iploture I ■BMUMNNMMMNKSN SERVICE SPECIALISTS TV » RADIO SERVICE FE 5-6112 Open Friday Evening* *tll 9 770 Orchard Lake, Pontiac Vi Mile Ea*t of Telegraph IBS m f ■ , ,' § rMSfe. J c 48 West Huron Street THE PONTIAC PRESS Pontiac, Michigan 48066 FRIDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1969 HOW/ Mrtli AM) H, f ITZOIRALb HOWARD H. FITZGERALD II RICHARD M. SAUNDERS School Plan Unveiled M1LUKEN < Gov. William Milliken’s com* prehensive education-reform package to be considered in a special session of the legislature i which convenes Monday is as far-reaching as it is iiu- j precedented. It embraces a; three-part program to be implemented over a three-year] period, with its constitutional aspects to be voted on by the electorate next August. Essential elements of the program are: ★ ■ ★ ' ★ • The elimination of school-support property taxes on the district level and establishment of a statewide property tax coupled with a proposed 2.6 per cent income tax increase to fund the State’s educational system. A primary benefit of such a revision would be the equalization of educational support per student that now varies greatly from one school district to another, depending upon the respective wealth of communities and value of their tax bases. • The reduction of intermediate school districts from the present 59 to 10 or IS regional districts, a reorganizational move dictated by diminished need for a multiplicity of such agencies; and abolition of the ,elective eight-member State Board of Education in favor of a State director of education appointed by the governor. • Allocation of 2 per cent of the total school budget ($848.6 million for the current fiscal year) for parochial and private-school aid. Admittedly, education in Michigan is in a state of crisis, calling for bold and innovative remedies. We think. Milliken’s school-taxation plan has much to recommend it and could well be the answer to the financial plight in which most of the State’s school districts find themselves. • ■ ★ ★ ★ His plan for restructuring the intermediate school district Setup and shift from a state board of education elected on a partisan basis to a single, responsible school head can easily be supported, although it could generate considerable opposition in many quarters. But we strongly oppose his aid-to-private-schools proposal on legal, philosophical and economic grounds «—a position we h^ve taken from the outset of the issue. ★ ★ ★ Voice of th e People: . ‘Citizens Must Strive for Safer Co A quotation in The Press by Curtis H. Rossow, assistant planner for Waterford Township, read “Fast-growing communities often neglect to provide adequate recreational facilities' for their residents. They would rather spend their money on such things as the police department.” Mr. Rossow neglected to mention how inadequate our police department is, compared to recreational facilities in Waterford. ★ ★ ★ He did mention a deficiency of not having enough community parkland to serve residents within two miles of their homes, but did not mention a deficiency of police manpower to assure the citizens of this community a safe place to live and conduct business. Mr. Rossow stated there were 1,100 acres of public recreation land in Waterford for some 65,000 residents, but nothing was said about the 20 patrol officers trying to serve this fastgrowing community of 65,000. ★ ★ ★ We do not deny the importance of recreation, especially for the youngsters, but as police officers and citizens we must also strive to make this a better and safer community, then provide the non-essential luxuries. Moreover, we think that Gov. Milliken may have erred in advocating too much change .in too short a time. Politics has been termed the art of the possible. Is it possible that he has ignored this precept? Economic Pros at Odds Demonstrating that economics is one of the most inexact of sciences were the divergent opinions recently expressed by four leaders in the field at a University of Michigan-sponsored panel discussion. The mix of conclusions stressed on one hand the urgency of halting inflation even at the expense of a slight business recession; and on the other, the assurance ghat “small inflation”—up To 5 per cent a year— isn’t necessarily an evil. In support of the latter position, it was pointed out that the Country has had a creeping form of inflation for 35 years and that in comparison with other nations it has been inconsequential, with no detrimental effect. ★ ★ ★ On the subject of interest rates and their undeniable effect on availability of commercial credit, one expert saw the current 8 Mi per cent prime interest rate (actually 11 per cent because of stipulation that a por- tion of the loan remain on deposit with the lending institution) declining to a pre-boom level as the economy slows in response to Federal fiscal and monetary policies. Another, while foreseeing interest rates settling back slightly in the near future predicted that “we would never see 6Vk per cent again in our lifetime.” In fact, said he, we may look back on the 8^ (11) per cent rate as a “moderate, reasonable and attractive ★ ★ ★ And so it goes. The main booby trap in the realm of-eeonomics is the imponderable factor of mass behavior and response to economic stimuli. Until the reactions of John Q. Public can be precisely plotted— and who would be rash enough to predjet such an eventuality?—the study of economics will continue to provide a most fascinating guessing game. Ho Chi Minh Chicago Tribune Sentimental gushing about Ho Chi Mlnh in the “liberal” press, on television and even In official remarks was to be expected, considering t h e prevailing psychosis of unreality induced by the Vietnam war. He has been described as benign and gentle, wise and witty, be? loved of children, a philosopher king, a man god, and even —believe it or not—another gton. George Washingti i "The plain truth,” ,ap Columnist Bernard L e, v l n wrote in the London bally Mall, “Is that Ho Chi Mlnh was a ruthless and. bloody tyrant.” Lest we forget this In all the sickening posthumous , exaltation of this small-fry Stalin, It Is well to review some of/fiis enormities. After the Geneva accords of 19S4, Ho Introduced a typical communist terror In North Vifttuun, from which more than 900,000 civilians fled to Soiith Vietnam before Ho stopped the exodus by sealing the border. This was done in violation of his agreement. In North Vietnam land owners, Including peasants with only one or two hectares of rice land, were d I s p o s-sessed as a class and many thousands (estimates range as high as 190,000) were shot. Gen. Vo Nguyen Glap, victor at Dlen Bien-Phu In the war against the French, finally protested that the terror had gone too far. The communist magatine Nhan Van, o f Hanoi, was permitted t o report In its Nov. 5, 1996, issue: “People were arrested, Jailed, and cruelly tortured; people were executed or shot on the spot and their property in many instances their children, also “j were mutilated and killed as examples of what others could expect. A survey of available American and South Vietnamese records by The Tribune in 1967 Indicated that at least 25,000 civilians had been assassinated and more than 60,000 others had been abducted — most of them never heard from — In 10 years. The assassination total now exceeds 3 0,000. Uncounted thousands of other civilians now have been*killed in indiscriminate acts of terrorism, Including the destruction /of , s c h o o I s, was confiscated; I n nwc e n t hospitals, churches, pagodas, children of parents wrongly market places, and. village/ classified as landlords were starved to death.' halls by mines or fire. Virtually a whole generation of natural leaders in South Vietnam — village and hamlet chiefs and elders, school teachers, priests, monks, doctors, nurses — were eliminated In a systematic campaign o f assassinations and Kid-naplngs. . ,Farmers who resisted the Vletcong — and These atrocities are never mentioned by American peaceniks, but Hanoi has often boasted of its successes In this kind of warfare. For example, a report on the Hanoi radio for the period from January of 1961 ti January of 4960 said: "Ham' lets destroyed,' 7,969.” 1, That would be ah appiroprl ,ate line for Ho’s epitaph. Game Of The Week! CARL W. SOLDEN, PRESIDENT WATERFORD TOWNSHIP POLICE OFFICERS ASSN. David Lawrence Asks: ‘Lei's Approve Waterford School Millage’ What Price Vietnam Pullout? As a concerned Waterford Township parent I support the board of education. The members have worked for us to try and make a fine school district. Although the taxpayers have turned down the necessary millage, the board is still trying to do its best. Let’s go all out to support our schools. Vole “Yes” for our futdre. WASHINGTON - Which is better — short-range politics or long - range patriotism? This question is pertinent now, and it concerns not only the future of the United States but the destiny of other countries a s well. Too many members of Congress are playing with fire. They are, in effect, telling the enemy that America is ready to raise the white flag in Vietnam before the end of 1970. Nations, pointed out in a speech during the last few months of the Johnson administration that the Soviet Union, not Vietnam, is “the greatest threat” to the United States. He said Americans have “too long taken their eyes away from the main ball game.” Politics today is on the side of surrender — at least that is the way various members of Congress interpret public opinion. It seems incredible that a small group from both parties in Congress is demanding that President Nixon announce that the withdrawal of American forces from Vietnam Would be completed in IS months, even though the enemy makes no concessions whatsoever. v Gen. Lewis W. Walt, assistant commandant of • t h e Marine Corps, said in a speech last night that he believes the Vietnam war would have been ended a year ago if it, were not for the “voice of dissent” in this country. ‘VOICE OF PEOPLE’ He added that the Communists have judged this to be the "voice of the American people." He declared: “In the past year, over 10,000 Americans have been killed in Vietnam. Those who dissent may not have fired the rifle or thrown the grenade, but they must bear a part of the responsibility for the loss of those gallant Americans.” It remains to be seen what the American^ people would say about a pullout from Vietnam if the consequences should prove to be grave. The Wall Street Journal, in an editorial the other day commenting on the possible, results of an American withdrawal from Vietnam, said: “The Communists would take over South Vietnam by military force, which would be a cheap enough price if the international effects stop there. But just as the American debacle at the Bay of Pigs helped prompt the Soviet initiatives leading to the.Cuban missile crisis, so we expect American defeat in Vietnam would encourage the adventurers throughout the Communist world. “We do not know whether the next crisis would break out in Thailand, Berlin, South America or elsewhere, but we do feel that over the long run a show of American irresolution is likely to . result in worse crises, not easier ones.” We are overtaxed on our property, but let’s pass this mill-age that is desperately needed and then each write our legislators in Lansing and insist that they pass an educational reform to ease our burden. MRS. S. R. Two Give Opinions on Recipients of ADC It is time for a change in our welfare and ADC laws. It isn’t fair for hard working people to bear the burden of other people’s children. I don’t mind having welfare for women who have small children and whose husbands have deserted them, but I do mind having to pay high taxes for the women who have several children by different men without the benefit of marriage. I also object to paying for people who sit around doing nothing while someone else supports their families. If the men who let their families go on welfare and ADC were made to pay back the money they receive, we working people might have a tax relief. I refer 4o the perfectly healthy ones that are too lazy to work. Give ns working people a break. Oar kids deserve just ns much as yours and we have to work to give it to them. DISGUSTED TAXPAYER ,C#PVX!' Bob Considine Says: Gun Group Exec Takes Potshot at Disarmament I have read where ADC mothers are protesting for more money for clothing for their children. An ADC person receives as much as an average factory worker and has no taxes to pay except sales tax. I believe these people could make a go of it if they tried, but they couldn’t have all new clothes and fancy food. MRS. GEORGE EDWARDS ‘Suggest Distributing Food Stamps by Mail' NEW YORK — Hello, folks. All you good people who are rooting for world disarmament and a nation in modern times is whether to disarm the American people. If you do not agree, print your rebuttal along with our fact aheet to show how we are wrong.” Why not distribute the County food stamps by mail? A book of specially-encoded tickets, issued to each applicant to identify the payments, can be signed and mailed with check or money order and eliminate the need of security police and crowds. There is a great need for the government to figure out ways and means of stopping this walking sickness which has hit our society. BETTY R. FRASER CONSIDINE Reviewing Other Editorial Pages If merely a problem of domestic politics were involved, certainly it would seem more popular to end a war than to keep one going Indefinitely. But there’s piore to the issue. The United States may find itself in the midst of a major war within the next two or three years, and this could conceivably provoke the use of nuclear weapons in Asia with possible attacks against the United States. GOLDBERG SPEECH Despite the outward appearances of friendship between Moscow and Washington, North Vietnam Is directly sponsored by the Soviet Union. It jjpll he r e A a') led that. \Arthur Goldberg, former American ambassador to the United the Northwest Gun Owners of Bellingham, Wash. Fasten seat belts and flak jackets. Ben Hinkle, the club’s president, writes: Verbal Orchids Mr. and Mrs. Charles W, Curtiss of Wlxom; 95th wedding anniversary. / Clifford H. McCormack of 16 Clayburn; 81st birthday. Mrs. Viola C. Berry of 68 Candlelight; 94th birthday / Mrs. Hattie Draper of White Lake Township; noth birthday. ■ ' “The majority of the press has presented a distorted picture of the effect of guns in our serious crime increases. Wo firmly believe this is only a smoke screen to cover the real reason behind this concerted effort to disarm America. ‘2 SIDES TO QUESTION’ "Any reasonable person knows there are two sides to any question. It la the duty of the press to present both sides. In too many cases this has not been true with the gun question. People who do not own or use guns for legitimate purposes will readily believe the one-sided propaganda that has flooded publications in recent years. “We wish to appeal to your sense of fairness, your loyalty and your duty to the millions of citizens of this great republic who look to American Journalism f o r equal and equitable news coverage to print the other side of this controversial question. The “fact” sheet asserts: “The United States o f America was created «ut of tryanny and oppression by patriots of freedom who armed themselves and won their independence. With this fresh in their minds, they wrote the 2nd Amendment to our Constitution, ‘a well-re g u I a t eif militia being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.’ ARMED POPULATION "The United States today has the largest armed civilian population the world has ever known. It is the strongest bastion of freedom and the greatest obstacle to Communist domination." ‘Many Homes Torn Down for Biisinesse What can be done about houses that are being torn down? There have been about ten houses torn down in the Union Lake area in the last year and a half. In their place you. see some kind of business going up, mainly gas stations. Do we really need two or three on one corner? What about the several homeless families because of this? Are any homes being built in their place so a working man or an ADC or welfare family can afford them? No, they have to pay a high price for rent because the lower priced homes are being sold to businesses. Is this fair? L. M. B. UNION LAKE . Question and Answer The telephone company is cutting tops off dead elms and leaving the trash on County right-of-way. Why does the County let them get away with it? W. A. WHITMER , BIRMINGHAM 1 Okay, you crazy gun-bearing cop-fighters, fireman-snlpers, . college campus guerrillas, rooftop assassins and other “well-regulated militia" tyfkes, fall in four abreast and march to the barricades protecting us from the two-front Invasion by Communist Albania. \One hopes that the peace-loving aportsmen who shoot only birds, deer, moose, mice, etc. will be on Albania’s side. REPLY Because the phone company is doing them a favor. The County can't get to all the dead elms immediately, and dead branches tend to break and fall—on people, houses, cars, etc. Phone crews top the ones they find and leave the wood in a pile for the County to collect. Michigan Bell Division Forester Hoatlin says crews always talk to property owners first and the arrangement is agreeable to all concerned. x "One of. the most serious threats to1 our national' security to come before this Tho PdMIac Pr**e it 4 Mrs. Vera Hubbard of Clarkstoh day at western- Golf and Coun-and Mrs. Marietta Doucette of ^ r|<|^ Ithaca. will row 7 use a simple design, i leaves, the flower portion might tmfd saiacj They mate fo,! either a ready-made pattern or be red, with the leaves to be pleasantly different flavor. a motif traced from an art book painted green in the final'Association, are likely to sup- __________________ or magazine. Flowers, fruit, I design. Therefore, one stencil Iport mother — but not com- When fudge, after cooking, i,sunburst leaves animal will be cut for the flower andlpletely. «i«t i„w.™ shapes, birds and initials are another for the stem and Without shoes letters from readers. I quoted a few of them concerning the difficulties it created for a wife. There is no doubt that a man's retirement changes his wife’s The bridegroom is the son of j hersisteras matron of honor "* "* ”* Y" pattern as well as his own Mr anH Mr« Elmer Reid of !ler m8HT 01 ”onor- * * * Some of these letters were 01 Gary Herubin performed the. six victims of kidney failure]humorous, some frustrated, and duties of best plan. who owe their lives to the | a few were rather bitter. HUBBARD-DOUCETTE The couple were feted at a center will attend. Included are The Church of Saint Paul the reception in Superior Banquet!Farmington residents Edith The letters from readers kept Apostle in Ithaca was the set-1 Rooms in Alma. [Knapp and Harold Shpiece. coming in long after my col- umns were published. Today, I bring you some letters which present another viewpoint. Dear Mrs. Lowman “Here’s some advice for the women who think life is rough after their husbands retire: Tell them to get down on their knees and thank God for sparing their husbands for a life of leisure and companionship with them! “I, too, miss friends and neighbors dropping in because I have to work, to support mysdlf. However, many so-called goad friends don’t call after you are widowed because you are an extra spoke in the wheel. .. -, * * ★ * “Yes, get these unhappy wives together, and let me come and tell them how tired one is at the end of a hard day’s work, and how lonely it is to come home to an empty house, clean, wash and irQfti cook, pay bills; and worry about keeping the house in repair.” * * * Dear Mrs, Lowman, “A short and snappy answer on the subject of retirement. There is only one alternative to a husband’s retirement and that is widowhood. Think it over, wives, and you will thank God every day for the sweetest of all blessings, companionship and love.” " The completed place mat reflects some imagination and adds color to a table. The simple art of stenciling is an old craft of trans- ferring designs to furniture and fabrics and is just as easy. and rewarding today. Spinach Salad I To get all of the ice cream |out of a container, try using a Barefootedness-Good, Bad? n,“"r bowl ”r,per “0,1 Depends Where You Stand Going barefoot has b e e n stretches of sandy beach is a frowned on by mothers for wonderful feeling, often good generations Physicians a n d'for the feet _ and for the |nner podiatrists including members . of the American Podiatry'8011' . good choices. cooled to lukewarm before beating, it should be at 104 degrees on a candjjWAXED PAPER thermometer. i To cut the stencil KITCHEN CARPET 99 Sq. Ft. This Price Includes Hi-Density Rubber Back and Labor TUSON CARPET SALES & SERVICE 4494 Dixie Highway Drayton Plains 614-1011 leaves. Put the fabric to be stenciled on a blotter or thick cardboard to soak up any excess paint. Tack or tape the stencil in place on the fabric. Use the manufacturer’s directions for the preparation and application of textile paints. Stroke color on fabric with the stubby brush, working from the outer edge of the stencil toward the center. Leather furniture can be I cleaned with saddle soap, rinsed! with a damp cloth and dried j feet are ex- thoroughly. Complete the posed to injury and infection,gleaning by using a leather! and especially to a painful con-conditioning dressing, dition of the soles of the feet known as plantar warts. Encased in shoes, especially during warm weather, feet' perspire freely, and this encourages development of fungus infections such as athlete’s foot. Twenty of every thousand Americans suffer from some foot condition according to a Be sure not to have too much study by the Department of paint on the brush. Wipe off excess paint before each brush stroke is begun. Let the first Health, Education and Welfare. Much of the suffering and disability due to foot disorders color dry before adding ad- can be prevented by annual foot ditional colors to the fabric. jcheckups, professional treatment, and personal foot hygiene. “Neither a borrower nor a lender be.... so, stock up on milk for the weekend.” DECORATE TABLECLOTH After simple designs and items have been successfully, _ " ", decorated, try a bigger project1 Fo°* care *s ha*ically a mat-such as '■ a bedspread or ter of beeping your feet clean tablecloth. {and dry. The use of pHisoHex, Your personal touch with!an antibacterial skin cleanser, designs and colors will add j *n Place of aoap *8 °0®n charm and interest to any recommended, and has been home. I found to control foot perspiration odor when used regularly. Frequent shoe and stocking changes will help, along with ,, I . . . liberal use of a good foot If you are giving a large d brunch party, borrow several ■ friends’ electric toasters and let, Any Injury to feet or the ex- Watch Fuses guests make' their own toast; but be sure your electric wiring is adequate to take the load. Wearing an apron made of terry Cloth when you are sewing any kind of slippery material will help anchor it and keep it from sliding off your lap. istcnce of a chronic foot ailment should be treated by a podiatrist or physician. * ★ * But MD, foot specialist, mother, and the whole family are likely to agree on one point — that walking barefoot on soft, green grass, or on Ion seats Michigan's Fine Jewelers ’ So Beautiful .. So Perfect! Ke epeake* The exquisite gift! Elegant styling and perfect quality assure you of lasting pride and satisfaction. » > SUMS 24 N. SAGINAW ;Art Teachers Make It Big as Inventors NEW YORK (UPI) - “Thou (halt not permit children to drop paint on the floor." That’s the rule Nancy Cherry and Judy Shackelford, two young women well on the way to millionaire row, credit for their success. “We loved the children but hated the system,” Miss Cherry said. “Can you Imagine teaching finger-painting and not get-• ting paint on the floor?” * * * That was five years ago when the two coaxed a beat-up foreign car between an apart-, ment they shared and school. They turned to non-pedagogical pursuits and now drivi Cadillac. 'The two disgruntled former art teachers, average.age 26, have established themselves as inventors of toys and other things, including inflatable mannequins used to display clothing. “When we left teaching, we had no money, only a few art supplies and an idea or two,” Miss Shackelford said, didn’t even have enough talent t<) make money painting pprtraits in Greenwich Village.’1 TISSUE PAPER The first toy idea they sold to a major manufacturer involved aftistic use of tissue paper and glue. Then they sold a doll with wardrobe to a mail order house. ’They made a deal with Parker Brothers and marketed an inflatable pillow version of “instant insanity.” Miss Cherry, graduate Hofstra University and a native New Yorker, is president of Inflat-A-Industries — the f 1 r m that invented and has rights the inflatable mannequins. The “blow-ups” cost a third of what plastic and plaster versions do. ★ ★ ★ Miss Shackelford, of Alton, 111., and a graduate of Southern Illinois University, is president of Cherry - Shackelford Cre tions Inc., the art end of the partnership. The newest item in that line: potted .flower that opens to reveal a baby doti. THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 3,,1969 Stocks, Mutual •\ \vi AS Wlrtphoto Vanessa Redgrave, British actress, proudly shoxbs her newborn son, Carlo, to the boy’s father, ftalian actor Franco Nero. The parents are not married. Taken at Miss Redgrave’s home in Chiswick, England, Sept. 15, this is the first picture of parents and child since his birth. B—0 enrient By ANNE TAYliOR t AP Newsfeature Dear Miss Taylor: Cbuld you advise the best place for about $200 monthly that we are now able to save with the. children grown? . J ■' Z, We have a balance due of $10,500 on dfcr home, now worth about $35,000. We have about $2,500 in stocks, and some $3,500 in. savings. Would it be better to make extra mortgage, payments at five per cent or invest all we can in special accounts at five to flve-oqe-half per cent? We’re not familiar enough with stocks or interested in them other than for the American Telephone we’ve received through my husband’s payroll deduction. Wc are both |n our early fifties, add want to usei the money we have in the best way possible. •> Mrs. F. C., Des Plaines, ill. Dear Mrs. F. C.: If it’s an ‘either-or” situation, and I don’t think It need be, then bn investment at five per cent wins out easily. That mortgage is an asset; you can’t get money any cheaper than that, wo why pay off in advance? If you have $200 a month to I invest I think you must widen] your horizons a bit and familiarize yourself with equity investments such as stocks, mutual funds or real estate. Inflation is quite likely to be a part of our economic picture for noC just months but years ahead, and the return on your i have income from rentals when i American Research Council,', investments must exceed the you are not using it, a stnairtax land browse through it at your rate df inflation or you will be deduction and a hedge against I leisure. I think then you might cheating yourself. 1inflation. , I think differently about limiting z ' * * * j i suggest you obtain at your your use of money to just two You might seriously consider bookstore a copy of "Your | or three outlets, purchasing an inexpensive * vacation home. You will then They're Good Some epicures like to add raw mushrooms to a green salad. If the mushrooms .are Very small, jadd them Whole. Medium-size mushrooms can be sliced thin and used. “Tis better to have loved and lost than to have run out of milk on the weekend.” Ever add raisins to Waldorf! salad? Small fry like this. | FURNISH YOUR DREAM HOME economically...at thrifty ORCHARD furniture AIR CONDITIONED FOR YOUR COMFORT! Afternoons of Art Again Planned at Detroit Institute “Afternoons of Art” are again being sponsored by the Docent Committee of the Founders Society at the Detroit Institute of,Arts. The afternoons will begin at 12:15 p.m. with a salad luncheon m Rivera Court. * * * Following lunch, small groups will tour the newly renovated Robert TannahUl Wing, which opened in June of this year. Exhibits include examples from the early colonists through the 19th century and feature the works of John Singleton Copley, Whistler and Winslow H6mei American furniture, silver an glass are also on display. ★ w w The luncheon tours Will begi Get. 22 and continue o Tuesdays and Wednesday through April 29, 1970. Groups as small as 8 or as large as 80 may be accommodated. Reservations o r additional information niay be obtained by contacting Mrs. Caroly Goodrich at the Institute. Mocha Is Result of Flavor Mix Coffee and chocolate flavors blend harmonoiously. Mocha Frosting 1 tabiesepoon instant coffee gitableepoons boiling water Vi cup butter, at room temperature 1 tablespoon unsweetened cocoa 1 Vh cups unsifted confectioners’ sugar Dissolve, the Coffee in the boiling water. Beat the butter and, cocoa together. Gradually beat in the sugar alternately with the coffee. Makes enough frosting for top and sides of a 2-layer t*lnch round cake. finely chop almonds and work into your pastry (or pie criist mix) for summer fruit agi berry pies. OPEN MON. and FRI. FROM 9 to 9 TUBS., WED., THURS. and SAT. 9 to 5l30 ORCHARD FURNITURE 164 OMHAM LAKE AVINUI, PONTIAC ) 2 Blookt West of South Wide Traok Drive e Budget Terms Available e Free Parking e Free Parking next to store e Good Service DEAL DIRECT - PAY AT THE STORE NO FINANCE 00. INVOLVED p B—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1060 MARKETS ' Tlie following are top prices I covering sales of .ocelly grown ' produce by growers and sold by • them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the * Detroit Bureau of Markets as ol | Wednesday. Produce Thursddy Upswing Qarries Over Milliken Eyes Market Higher,Trade Active Tax Overhaul Aides Ready Plan for Schools Reform ApplM. Dtllcloui. Rtd, bu. Apples. Delicious, Goldtn, bu. AiiMt Mclntoth, bu. APPMs. Wolf Rlvtr, Gripes, Concord, ok. PNChM, Elborto, 44 I NEW YORK (UPI) — Stocks [UPI marketwide i n d i c a t o r i Standard of California were opened higher today in showed a gain of 0.74 per cent unchanged at 69Mi and 56%, moderately active trading. on 325 issues crossing the tape respectively. The market’s abrupt upswing j There were 183 advances and 62 Ford picked up % to 44%, late Thursday marked the first j declines. | while General Motors rose *>ii M M I advance in seven sessions. Most j Bethlehem gained % to 287s It0 72%- Chrysler dipped % to I 4*00 analysts believed the momen- m the steels, with Republic and $7tyi . American Motors held * “I turn would be carried over, u.S. Steel up % each to 37. j unchanged at 10%. barring adverse news!..., MIYt,n . - National Cash Register!*1®® ?‘yenaide®. In the oi,s> Atlatic Richfield JumPed 2V*t0 144V4 ln the elec-yetPuise0en, pJnchto “reduci-that the list has been oversold I e ^ t0 102, with Cities tronics, Westighouse edged up uon reform plan — his tax pro-and a rally would be quite J service Up^» to 50. Pennzoil feSMi to 5514, General Electric ’’t posals. natural at this time. | V» to 30%. Occidental eased to [ to 86, Litton to to 46Ti and RCA j Milliken expects to make Part -Time Workers Are More Significant LANSING (0 - Vowing he’s ‘not going to pull any punch* ;s,” Gov. William G. Milliken m , Stanley, % bu. .. VI0ITAH.II Graan Round, bu. . Kentucky Wonder, bu Shortly after the opening, the126V4, but Jersey Standard and IV4 to 42. ■MM, Ronwn, I BMt>, dt. bch. iMtl, Topped, b 1 Broccoli, Ot. bch. :8E5:B®"b Sprouts 1 Standai The New York Stock Exchange Carrots# Silo Pole# 2-dr. Topped, bu................ Cauimow ! Calory# Pascal# 1 * Celery, Pascal# 2 to 5-dz. ctn. ; Cilery Hearts, Cello Pak# dz. b Corn# Sweat# 5-di. bag ....... Cucumbers# OMI Site, % bu. . Cucumbers# Plckl# SI so# % bu. Cucutnbors# Slicors# bu....... Dill# dz. ‘ 1.50 NEW YORK (AP) • New York J 2.50 Exchange selected afternoon prices: 3.50 NEW YORK (AP) * New York S 3.50 Exchange selected morning prices: l,2f _A_ —1\ 3 28% 21 VS 28% + vs Sanders .30 % SanFetnt .30 1 HeclaMng .70 Here Inc 1 , HewPack .20 HoemWai .82 , Hoff Elecfrn 29% 29% + % SbCLInd 2.20 98% +1% 4 27'm z/% 27% + Vb 7 10% 104b lOVb 4* Vb 155 0 39% 39% + Vb Scott Paper SbCLInd r ‘ Searl GD SearsR 1.20a Shell Oil 2.40 3 43% 43% 43% 4 24% 2% 2% 34 54% 54% 54% 34 30 29% 29% 5 23% 23% ,23' * 0 29% 28% 29% 5 37% 37 37 9 35% 35% 35% 139 48% 47% 48% formal legislative recommendations and reveal fiscal details of his wide-ranging plan in an address Thursday before a joint session of the Michigan I House and Senate. The two chambers reconvene Monday after a two-month recess. “We’re in for a good fight and we ought to have one,’’ Milliken said Thursday at a news conference. Reaction from SouNGas 1.40 Sou Pat 1,80 j. J» 4, 1/41 Sou Ry 2.80a mi 128« I Spartan Ind 325, 325» + 5| SperryR ,17a IS 15% 4- SqusrtD .80 35% 35% 4- % St Brand 1.50 1 411, + % $td Kollsman 29% 29% 4- % StOCal 2.80b " “Olllntf 2.30 StOIINJ 2.70p 2 40% 40% ■ 40% By JOHN CUNN1FF AP Business Analyst NEW YORK - Did you ever figure out how your neighbor can afford to have a car than yours and own a place at the shore or in the mountains while you manage only to rent a place for a week or two each year? Assuming he’s earning these luxuries legitimately, the answer might be revealed by keeping track of the hours your neighbor and his wife keep, Working hours, that is. CUNNIFF According to the Labor Department, about 3.6 million wage and salary workers hold two or more jobs, the second one usually being a part-time occupation averaging about 13 hours a week And this figure doesn’t count . . ... i the moonlighting ' families— legislators, educators and the|wj,ere mou,er goes to work public left him “reasonably op- j vv|ien father comes home, timistic’’ and “encouraged,” Milliken said. |KEY DISC0VERY Milliken again declined to as significant perhaps is discuss specific revenue^ discovery, disclosed in the reforms he will ask: [Department of Commerce “Sur- First, to raise the $186 million vey of c,u™at Business,” that he recommends be added to ?°me, retaiI trad®.aad ! next year’s schools budget: industries are adjusting their Second, a long-range revision in revenue assessment through cuts in the property tax. “I intend to stick to the present system” of taxing, Milliken said. “I will not recommend a graduated income tax.” Millikfen said he might pro- pose “some shopping centers, for ex- taxing methods to meet the add- ample ^ Bhas become espe ed costs. Rep. Martin Buth R-- ciany heavy during after-dinner Comstock Park, assistant hourg Rather than employ full- m „ + *,m"ority ,®?d" *" ^uu f’ltime help throughout the day, j* tsaid recently that Milliken is I stores hire mothers for a m ,H.i % w considering a five-cent increase few hours during the evening t Vi in th<> state tax nn ciBaretteS.1 . .. ..... ,_______i replacement of the long-week workers by two short-week workers,” the Commerce Department report states, continuing: /'Another stimulus ... is the saving in the cost of fringe benefits, such as sick leave, vacation and holiday pay, which are generally not paid to part-time personnel .,." Whatever the reasons, official statistics show that more than 37 per cent of employes working ln department stores in 1966 were on part-time schedules, compared With only 26 per cent 18 years earlier. And presumably the trend continues. In food stores about 41 per cent of employes worked less than 35 hours in 1866 compared with 33 per cent a decade earlier. In 1963 less than 29 per cent of laundry workers were part-timers; in 1968 the percentage was 38. workweeks to the habits of part-timers. “In retail trade,” the report states, “the employment of part-time workers appears to be a deliberate policy of department stores” to adjust to shoppers’ habits. With the development of sub- in the state tax on cigarettes. whl)e the kids stay home and There also has been speculation wash the dishe8 that the st»te sales tax Jiow There are other probable rea-four per cent, might be hiked. ^ such Has the notlon QuestionedI about con- part.Umers being more troversial nanmUMu -Lffective^and perhaps less ex-sJparochiaid, and abolition of ‘he ,v than Qne fuij.t!mer. ■* State Board of Educa-|^ ^ tion — Milliken replied “I [STIMULUS !J j recognize that various parts of “Government regulations con-the bill will have to stand on cerning overtime premiums their own.” I may ... have encouraged the Mutual Stock Quotations TURN TO WOMEN Increasingly, retail stores and service industries have turned to women in their quest for help. In 1964, the study shows, women accounted for 4? per cent of all retail trade help. Now the percentage is 68. The booming economy, • of course, has a lot to do With .'the changing Job patterns. With ;un-employment rates-regularly below 4 per cent, the poorer paying industries have been hard put to find willing full-time workers. Adjusting to the realities, many companies now employ a minimum level of full-time help and "lay on" workers during peak hours or when production schedules are temporarily raised. The more flexible schedules not only suit employers but open up job opportunities for moonlighting husbands, and mothers who cannot leave home -for more than a few hours at a time or who wish seasonal work. The accommodation of employe and employer is especially beneficial during the Slimmer. Sales drop off at many retail stores during the hot months. And with sales in the doldrums the employer hardly wants a lot of help—which , is okay with mother, for she’d prefer to be away at the cottage anyway. Paper Gold' Floated on Faith of Nations WASHINGTON (AP) - The International Monetary Fund today launches its “paper gold,” new good-as-gold money based on faith'lind cooperation between nations. Balloting among the 74 countries that have agreed so far to take part in the sweeping new program of Special Drawing Rights (SDRs) opened Thujs-day morning as the fund NH the World Bank neared the of their five-day annual meetii here. Although votes were not an/ nounced, only South Africa’s position appealed in doubt. As the fund’s largest gold-producing country it has a special interest not only ln the continued use of gold but also in its expansion. Paper gold, or SDRs, will be international money backed by nothing more than the fact that nations will accept it in payment for world trade, just as they now accept gold. It will K of Vjjribt exist only on the fund’s books and will change hands only on I ledger sheets. AS GOOD AS GOLD Nevertheless, paper gold will I be as good as the genuine arti- I cle simply because the nations m agree that it is, which is the ■ only reason gold is accepted. I Of the $8-5 billion to be dis- ■ ributed in paper gold’s first ■ years, $3.5 billion will fl e to life next Jan. 1. Plans B re for $3 billion to be distribut- aH News in Brief According to Pontiac police, Harold Wllkerson, 28, of 578 Nevada reported thieves broke into his home yesterday and stole a color television valued Rummage Sale. First United Methodist Church, S. Saginaw at Judson., Sat. 8-11 a.m.—Adv. bankruptcy liqul-Bring your meas-Open 9 to 0. 4998 -Adv. ed on the first days of 1971 and' 1872. Hie fund’s managing director, Pierre-Paul Schweitzer, proposed last month that the SDRs be distributed in proportion to nations’ quotas—or required, contributions—to the fund. Since the United States ,juid other jndustrial countries fcpve the largest quotas because they have the strongest and most productive economies, they will receive most of the SDRs. Thiy also have the largest voice in deciding whether SDRs will be distributed, and met in Paris last July to work out the details of the plan. Treasury Position I.772.W2,317.12 7,707,341,1 I fiscal year July 1 50,433.481,680.32 47,114,343,1 Will fiscal yaar 35,037,711,949.40 50,424,131,1 -143 J14, ISO,137.40 137,141,111,244.02 10,347,010,341.57 10,347,021,425.7 ncludes 434,434.035.71 debt not aul i statutory Ijmlt. # »i * Successful 'Investing* SR E. SPEAR I 1944 and 1963 1 lares of Louisville trie 5 per cent in average cost of I at once it has is than $19 a share pays the same yon think the 5 tied to the money rate will continue to lag behind the market. it 83 this Is quite a blow, ye followed the market in «al paper for over 59 Rest assured that your i are of the highest quality ends therefore are svllle’s financial tion is excellent with long-i debt only 46\per cent of capitalization. Construction mses between 1969 and 1973 budgeted at $161 million only $50 million expected e raised through bond Issue, 6 months this year a ».l rose 9.5 per cent a similar gain in » $1.30 a share. Full ilts should surpass of $2.26 by a good Ividends are paid out gs And are not on price fluctuations, ne In your shares els the drop In the Utility Averqge Until inflation is cooled, issues1 such i which are closely Q. I own Occidental Petroleum and have just learned that the Libyan military has taken over the company. The What should I do? - E.B. A. Your Information is not quite accurate. The military junta ln Libya which deposed King Idris has pledged to respect existing oil contracts. But continued uncertainty about Libyan production, which contributes approximately 50 per cent of OXY’s profits, caused shares to yell off. \ The company’s failure to successfully bid on substantial North Slope acreage exerted further downside^ pressure on the shares. While Libya’s na-tionalization of American petroleum Interests does npt appear Imminent, I would take advantage of any price recovery to sell., (Roger Spear’s 48-page Investment Guide (recently revised and in its lith printing) Is available to all readers of this column. Send $1 with name and address to Roger E. Spear, The Pontiac Press, Box 111$, Grand Central Station, New Yoft, N Y/. 110179. 11 'AH I’llK IHhVMiU- FRIDAV, CXTUHKK Si, lk9 'Set Bad Example for Youth' 6 Men Robbed Parents Hit on D0,1 S,reets By YOLANDA BENAVIDES ithe situation can only worsen, i In a nation where relief is'Dr. Pollard said. Dr. Harold Davidson, M.D., a billed on TV as just a .chemical swallow away, it was almost predictable that today's young people should take up the “habit,” according to a forum of psychiatrists. Yesterday’s panel discussion, lead by Dr. John C. Pollard, M.D., an associate professor of psychiatry at the University of Michigan Medical School, was sponsored by the 104th annual scientific session of the Michigan State Medical Society in Detroit’s Sheraton-Cadillac Hotel. “Why shouldn’t young people turn to drugs when they see their parents take vitamins in the morning, tranquillizers by noon, ‘pop a Chock at 4,’ and take a before-dinner drink at 5?” asked Dr. Pollard. He said that some 100,000 pounds of amphetamines and 30 million pounds of barbiturates are legally distributed b y prescription per year — clearly a symptom of a dependent nation. UNDER STRESS “ “At 16 or 17, a young person la under great psychological atress. He must master his sexuality, the problem Dr. Adolpho J. Brane, M.D. Who assists part-time a Detroit’s Lafayette Clinic and is an instructor at Wayne State University's School of Medicine, agreed that young people are using drugs to escape their problems. HAPPINESS Accordingly, marijuana gives one a very “special feeling, a happiness with the way things re,” he said. The potential danger, then, according to Dr. Brane, is that marijuana usage never allows young people to tackle their maturation period. Today's younger generation is also concerned with the dismal world situation they will inherit, destruction by the bomb, oi facing a fatal tour of duty in Vietnam, the struggle for and “The possibllty of total against the war which makes service even harder — all these factors make it very easy for young people to ‘turn off’ from society and take the most immediate route for relief,” said I Dr. Brane. SERIOUS DRUGS While marijuana for some is' an ‘ideal substitute’ for facing! child analyst, rested most of the problem on the parents’ shoulders. OLD HYPOCRISY According to Dr. Davidson hypocrisy of the adult World as been a large factor in turning this generation of youth sy from old ideals. We tell our children to be good, to be honest and to treat all people as equals, and then they see us cheating on income tax reforms, going through red lights, discriminating against Negroes and blowing each other up in Vietnam,” Dr. Davidson said. “Kids today know that we are t honest with ourselves — they see that we have laws that show us up for the pious, hypocritical frauds that we Two groups of three men were robbed at gunpoint early Still Lacking? I' Museum Gets New Display Deatns in Pontiac, Nearby Areas this morning, Pontiac police. according to Robbed at 2:45 a.m. near Bagley and Wilson were Luther Scott, 29, of 323 Russell, Claude Barton, 30, of 178 Mechanic and Gary M. Watson, 25, of 323 Russell. Scott lost 886, Baron a $153 check and Watson some keys. BONNER SPftlrtGS, < Kan. (AP) — A moonshine still—defended by its donor as a proper exhibit In an agricultural museum because the essential Ingredient in making "moonshine” is corn—was added Thursday to a display here. Joseph A. Boyer, Blue Springs, Ga., visited the Agricultural Hall of Fame two years and noted the absence of a still. Robbed at 5:30 Rockwell between Bagley and Motor were Donald E. Moore, 7278 Redrlffr West Bloomfield Township, and two others who did not identify themselves to police. LAKE ORION — Service for Burton A.' Dickens, 60, of 145 Hauxwell will be at 1 p.m. Monday at Allen’s Funeral Home, with burial In East Lawn Cemetery. Mr. Dickens died this morning. He had worked for the Oakland County Road Commission for 20 years. Surviving are one sister and three brothers. The retired U.S. Public Health sanitary engineer talked with hall officials and was given authority to locate a still. “I went back to my home in Blue Springs, and I told the sheriff about the Hall of Fame and Moore lost $40 and the others asked him to give me the next a total of $27. still he might confiscate,” Boy- ___________________— i er said. 'More people are going to be killed today in Vietnam than will ever suffer from brain damage brought about b y drugs. We must be honest with ourselves if we want our children’s respect and try to help them,” he said. Road Funds Set LANSING UT) — An additional $193,000 in federal aid secondary highway money will be available to Michigan counties during the 1969-70 fiscal year, the state and county secondary I roads. UAW Official Is Recovering Burton A. Dickens Herbert G. Winges Leavy and Mrs. Robert M. .Haney,, both of Pontiac; one ROCHESTER — Service forigtepdaughter, Mrs. Robert Herbert G. Winges, 60, of 1385 ^ Rochester; two North Lane will be 11 a.m. stepsons, Robert L. Gronio Of Monday at Pixley Memorial Lake Orion and Gary L. Gronzo Chapel with burial in White of Rochester; his mother, Mrs. Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Alvin C. Winges of Pontiac: one Troy. - sister, Miss Vita Winges of Mr. Winges died yesterday. Pontiac; one brother,.Alvin E. He was a se 1 f-emp 1 oyedlof Pontiac; and nine decorator. grandchildren. Surviving are his wife, Ruth; The body may be viewed two daughters, Mrs. Joseph J. I after 2 p.m. tomorrow. G. Melbourne Howell HOLLY — G. Melbourne Howell, 85, of 1125 Hubble died yesterday. The body is at Dryer Funeral Home. John L. Murray Contract to Remodel Fisher personal identity - in short, all , said. {concerned with the increasing! COUfltV Annex OK'd 'The whole process can be number of young people who’ / r ■ Don Johnson, 44, Auburn, president ( Body . UAW Local recovering from a heart attack at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. Johnson was stricken two weeks ago and for a while was I under intensive care. Johnson KEEGO HARBOR - Service for John L. Murray, 68, of Brock will be 11 a.m. tomorrow at the C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, with burial in Roseland Park Cemetery, Berkley. Mr. Murray died yesterday. He was a self-employed house painter and a member of Our Lady of The Refuge Catholic Qiurch, Orchard Lake. Surviving is one sister, Mrs. Charles Parker of K e e g ol Harbor. William G. Walker Very painful, but if a youth takes the easy way out by choosing drugs as immediate relief, he may never give himself an even chance to mature,” according Pollard. turing to the more serious drugs for relief. On the basis of available evidence, Dr. Brane is of the opinion that of all the drugs on the market, marijuana is the least harmful. Today, with more than 751 He also noted that most of the .a * _____I__1- nlinmrtl AfiflAfl coon git. liflfflVfittfi h a lTu c i nog enlc products!clinical cases seen at Lafayette available, chemically speaking,'were extreme hard-drug cases. “Today we see more and City Thieves Take Furniture at Home .more young people who are Contracts totaling $157,457 for the remodeling of the Oakland county administrative annex (formerly the country board of education building) were awarded to Steve Kruchko Co. Inc. of Waterford Township and Schultz Electrical Inc. of Pontiac. The contracts were awarded by the county board of supervisors. The building will house ad hoc roads committee. moving away from marijuana | veterans’ Affairs, 4-H, the and taking speed (methadrine),' county’s computer system, and Dr. Brane said j some Community Mental Health Thieves broke into the home of Cheryl Hamilton, 274 Victory and stole furniture valued at $550, city police reported to-day. , According to officers, the incident occurred between 10 p.m. last night and 12:30 a.m. this morning. Police said entry was gained by pushing in a window and Unlocking a door from the inside. News at a Glance of State Leaders DIET PILLS He noted that diet pills are a popular source of speed for most kids. They either take them from mother’s medicine cabinet or take her refill prescription down to the druggist. “Kids have also turned to heroin as a means of getting down fast from a ‘speed high’,” he said. The great physical stress on their bodies as well as influencing the addictive tendency of heroin, poses a great danger to these young people says Dr. Brane, including eventual brain damage in some cases. Service offices. It is located on the Telegraph Road Service Center. THB GOVERNOR Promlied »n Oct. * address to,» loll union of ths Lsoltl.tur. Of tlscsl d.t.l of Ml propoMd •dilution riform pr *r,m' HOUSE MINORITY LEADER RORKRt WALDRON _ .. . .. ... —|—gr‘| oducallon r Block Club Sets Cleanup Party A fall cleanup party will be *rWh ,lm>eld to^ow from 11 a.m. to *,C*AMBS HARE p m. by the Wall Street Block Outlined Ms proposed trstllc Misty Club. •Beksgs lor llte 1*70 legislative saiilon .. to Include election reform, highway safety A City truck Will be available “TMyvsTArfcoftR?popv^nBALs to cart away debris collected by RoardrnrgHng *that cR^pollesmen' may residents from Sanford t O fr"J-,.b%un'£f.y*prtl*nllni1 #"’*f pr°-1 Jessie, according to Block Club . ™a taoiiLATURB I President Mrs. Gladys Hardy. Supervisors approved a five-year lease for District Court quarters in Independence Township. The lease for the Independence Township Hall Annex in Clarkston calls for an annual rental of $4,840. The county loan of $176,000 to a drain revolving fund was approved. The money is used to pay for engineering costs before a construction project is funded. SOLID WASTES Harry W. Horton, R-Royal Oak, chairman of the public reported that his committee is still in a study of solid waste He said that while the group has not given up entirely on an incineration process as recommended in a recent trlcounty survey, more concentration Is being given a compaction process which would extend present landfill facility use. resolution to add Telegraph Road improvement to a list of other projects headed up by M59 widening touched off Horton’s spoken disapproval. Makeup of the committee was referred back to the board’s committee on committeees. Niles Olson,D-Orion Township, chairman of the airport board, asked for immediate action on an earlier request for a full developmental study on Oakland-Orlon Airport. He got an informal promise that the study will be forthcoming. AIRPORT FUNDS The supervisors aviation and transportation committee has proposed appropriating $250,000 for imrpovements at the airport master plan, however. A flurry of resolutions introduced at the end of meeting by Carl O’Brien, D-Pontiac, ran the gamut — dorslng pending state legislation, legalizing bingo, and county participation in Oakland University’s announced plan to fit each Pontiac child for a job. SENIOR CITIZENS He also proposed the lm-j mediate allocation of $97,000 to a senior citizen program to be handled by the Oakland County commission on Economic Op-j portunity (OGCEO). The resolutions were referred to appropriate committees. I HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP -William G. Walker Sr., 78, of| 2194 North died Wednesday. The body is at Richardson-Bird I Funeral Home, Milford. MCDONALD JOHNSON said yesterday his doctor has informed him he can expect to be released from the hospital soon and return to his duties early in January. He also of- Dividend Set at Consumers Wo havo 6 harbors with more than 57 years' combined experience. We specialise in razor styling straightening, hair treatment, coloring ana iu plain old ear lowering. Appointments availaoti Ml 6-9894 Ml 4-9793 75 W. LONG LAKE RD. Bloomfield Hills (Back of Mm's Store) Consumers Power Co.’s board of directors today declared a quarterly dividend of 47)4 cents per share on the company’s fered thanks for his many well-1 common stock payhble Nov. 20, wishers 1969, to stockholders of record ’ ★ ★ w j Oct. it. While Johnson is recovering! * * * his leadership post will be The board also declared assumed by the local’s vice president, R. L. (Ricky) McDoifeld. McDonald said he and financial secretary Gil Heilman, will continue to carry outstanding policies. W INSTALL Midas Mutflara are Installed (reel And fasti And your Midas Muffler la guaranteed aa long as you own your U.8.-mako auto. Replaoed, If neo- dividend of $1.12)4 per share on the $4.50 preferred stock, $1.13 per share on the $4.52 preferred stock and $1.04 per share on the $4.18. All these are payable on Jan. 2, 1970 to stockholders of record Dec. 5, 1969. Horton raised objections to an expansion ’ 0 f responsibility undertaken by the supervisors ADVIRTISRMENT FOR BIDS DVERTISEMEk • Is heresy givi i received by Pont lee. ms opdyfes Reis. Pswiist. Igtn until • •‘CMP * “ “ October I. INS fe i lire F Reel n •I MM * ■hip Board reserves the right to relectj GRETA V. SLOCK, I. 1'. 4, IN* Desegregation Plan Hit Although the five Pontiac Board of Education members at last night’s meeting said they felt a proposed school desegregation plan was undesirable and unworkable, a motion to reject it failed. The board also failed to approve an amendment to the motion which stated that the district would submit an alternate plan. They had earlier Voted to amend this motion to Include a statement that the board would at some time submit an alternate integration plan. The proposed desegregation plan also called for the student to select his school during an annual period from Aug. 15 to Sept. 2, with no preference given any student for prior attendance I at a school. Mrs. Elsie Mihalek pointed out that the board was directed by Federal district court Judge Damon Keith to respond to the plan Wednesday. AOVBRTISIMRNT FOR BIOS , Sailed propose It, ona andortad "Pol lea, Cer" end one endorsed "Fire cer," will until I o'clock P.M. on WwIneMley, October n, IN*, for • Mice Cer end for a pauanger-type cer to be uiad by tha Fire Dtpirvmtnfe Spacification! end bid forms mev be. „Plained at tha Pontiac Township Office, EMO Opdyke Road, Pontiac, Michigan. date. The Tewnenlp Board right te relect any or ell propotalet te waive any Informality In the proposals received; end to accept The proposed desegregation plan calls for students to have free choice of the school they wish to attend. The plan is part of litigation in a suit filed by the Pontiac Chapter of the NAACP In the U.S. District Court in Detroit in February, which charges the district with de facto segregation and with discrimination in hiring and placement of administrators. INTEGRATION MOVES “In case of overcrowding at any school, preference shall be given with a view toward counteracting the effect of racial segregation,” the plan read. Also included in the proposal was a provision that pew teacher to the system would be assigned to a school In which the faculty vis predominately of the opposite race. COURT DATE The suit, which his been in pretrial hearing, is next In court Wednesday ip Detroit. Board members William Anderson and Russell Brown were absent last night. Although only f|ve board members were present, four votes are needed to past a motion. Dr. Robert Tur- »afid Christopher Brown vot* against the motion to reject the NAACP plan. Dr. Robert Turpin said he would Hhe to see an alternate! plan presented by the board or by a board-based citizens’! committee. "However, one thing we haven’t done as a board is decide if we want integrated schools," he added. CONSTIPATED? DUB TO LACK OF FOOD " MILK IN YOUR OUT .BRAN f&mpj* BUDS* Brown said he felt last night, was an inappropriate time to! discuss the plan because of the1 recent school disruptions. *, ‘‘We’re talking about more than just physical Integration of bodied. Wo should also be correcting attitudes on tha part of teachers and students.” OPTIONAL PLAN If administrators don’t agree yvlth the plan, they should come up with some options,” Brown said. , GAMA ELLIS lines 1945 CIMINT WORK • PATIOS CARAOIS • ADDITIONS eOMPLSTI SUILDINO IRRVICR TIRMS PB 2-1211 I 1 Phene 626-9300 ') '// " 7 FAIL SPECIAL Do It Yourself and ... Save! Save! Save! Build a Big 2%-Car GARAGE Do-It-Yourself and Save! We spacializD in Garag* materials — our larga quantity buying makas these values possible. All Kiln Dried Lumber INCLUDRS: ALL MATERIALS FOR A BIG 22x24 21/2-CAR GARAGE • Plates • Rafters • All Ext. Trim • Nails • No. 1 Kiln Dried Douglas Fir Studs • Roof Boards • Premium Grade No. 106 Siding • Shingles • Cross Tips • Window $49997 Price Does Not Inclvdo ALL STUDS A RAFTERS 1$” ON CENTER < GABLE ROOF Be Sure to Oat Our Price Before You Buy! FREE Estimates On All Site Garages, Call Today Phone 682-1600 2496 ORCHARD LAKE RB. Keego harbor ' Phone 334-1594 181 Oakland Avs., Pontiac poole-dickie Mon. thru Fit, 8 Is Bi88| 1st., 8 te 1 F.M. NOIJUfi w Let’s put an end to the procrastination on when and where the proposed stadium for the Detroit professional teams is going to be built. The Lions and Tigers have mutually agreed there is a need for the stadium and they have publicly indicated the urgency of a decision. Yet they procrastinate, all because of a worthless plan pro-, posed by a downtown Detroit stadium site. If the two major athletic teams want a chaotic preview of a stadium being built in a downtown area of a major city they should take just one ride around the Three-Points ‘'undomed” Stadium being built on the Golden Triangle in Pittsburgh. Located on the junction of the Allegheny, Susquehanna and Ohio Rivers, the stadium adds to the beauty of the new Pittsburgh skyline, but this has to be its major The people of highly populated Allegheny County are furious over the site. They claim that the downtown Pittsburgh businessmen bought off the county politicians. COBBLESTONE AREA Except for one major access road, which must cross the bridge at the point of the stadium, the entire area surrounding the 55,000 seat structure is made up two-lane cobblestone streets and a prolific setting of slums. A parking deck for 4,500 cars is the extent of primary parking area for the stadium. It was. 1)4 hours after game time and the Lions' buses leaving Pitt stadium two weeks ago, were still bumper to bumper for almost the entire distance to the airport. ★ w ★ Can one imagine what this traffic situation will be like with a stadium in the heart of this congestion, or when the office crews let out during the afternoon baseball games? ★ ★ ★ The recent Detroit Chamber of Commerce plan for the riverfront stadium has to be the plan of yesteryear and not the plan of tomorrow. They are talking about property acquisition and railroad track relocations which in dollars means $18 million to $30 million dollars. They are talking about primary parking facilities of /4.600 end remainder to be dispersed in business lots,- 10 to 15 minutes away from ihe stadium, They are talking about 27.5 acres for the stadium complex, and the easy access of which they talk is access to the central business district and not to the major points of outstate Michigan. And then there is the financing, a factor which has Mayor. CgV; anagh’s palm reaching to Gov. MJIUken and the state of Michigan. If Mllliken goes along with the downtown site and the “feasibility fiasco” which has been presented, it’s sure to go into a state referendum and by 1980 they will still be talking about what could have been. The Stadium Authority of the city of Pontiac in presenting the bid for a site at M59 and 1-75, has made a sincere bona-fide offer, i The presentations have been costly but they have been made and pursued conscientiously, and from all requisites for building the modern stadium of tomorrow, they have been the most sensible as far as: 1. location availability to the people of Michigan, 2. the availability and cost of land acquisition, 3. the access of current and potential roads, 4. the convenience and availability of auto, bus, rail and air facilities, 5. the sure availability of primary parking for 27,000 cars, 6. the faith and credit financial backing of the city's $500 million valuation, 7. the locale of Oakland University’s and Oakland Community College’s facilities and manpower. WHERE’S COUNTY SUPPORT? Together, the Lions and Tigers constitute a total investment of at least $25 million in today’s professional sports market. It would be a shame to see the market place relegated to 27 acres in the center of two million people when there lies available 200 acres surrounded centrally by 7V4 million buyers. What is as upsetting as the procrastination which is evident, is the apathy of the government of Oakland County in failing to make public commitment or offer endorsement and support for the professional athletic tenants to this great marketplace. Should the teams decide on the 1-75 and M59 site then the county might jump on the bandwagon. Two Early Goals Enough in Wings' 6-1 Decision DETROIT (AP) — Two first period goals started the Detroit Red Wings on their way Thursday night, and they followed up with one more in the second period and three in the third for a 8-1 decision over the New York Rangers. The win moved Detroit’s exhibition record to 5-2-1 and dropped New York’s mark to 6-3-0 in pre-season play. Detroit’s Wayne Connelly opened the scoring at 10:29 of the opening period on a slap shot from Garry Unger. Four minutes and 17 seconds later Bruce MacGregor followed with a goal, assisted by Nick Libett and Pete Stemkowski. Gordie Howe kept the pressure on New York goalie Ed Giacomin with an unassisted goal at 1:41 of the second period, but then New York's Vic Had-field interupted the Detroit binge with a goal from Jean Ratelle at 2:02 of the period. Detroit wound up the scoring on goals by Stemkowski, Larry Jeffrey and Libett. Ex-Manager to Coach CLEVELAND (AP) - Kerby Farrell;; who managed the Cleveland Indians in 1957, has been named a coach, Manager Alvin Dark said Thursday. Isaac Sets Hof Pace in Practice for Wilkes '400' NORTH WILKESBORO, N.C. (AP) — Bobby Isaac raced around the Wilkesboro Speedway at 105.533 m.p.h. in a Dodge in $ practice run Thursday. He was favored to win the pole position as qualifying start* * er today for Sunday’s Wilkes 400 stock cat race. ★ ★ ★ His practice time)was slightly more than 1 m.p.h, under the record he set this .spring for the high-banked, asphalt, "Jive-eights mile track. He is from :Catawba, N.C. ★ ★ ir The first eight spots in the 30-car field for the 250-mile race were to be filled today. The final positions will be filled Saturday. Richard Petty of Randleman, N.C., won the last two Wilkes 400s and has a total of five victories at the North Wilkesboro Speedway. He drives a Ford. Tigers Name Snyder as Stadium Assistant DETROIT (UPI) - Ralph E. Snyder, who has been in the Tiger organization since 1947, has been appointed assistant stadium manager at Tiger Stadium. He will succeed Jess Wails when the latter retires as stadium manager at the close of the 1970 baseball season. Walls is 64. David C. Miller, 37, currently general manager of the.Detroit farm club of Lakeland in the Florida State League, will assume most of Snyder’s duties as minor league scretary next season. ¥ Rated Slight FavoriteM/kfitftji pile $ THE PONTIAC PRESS FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, 19H9 D—I MSU Notre Dame Contest Fails to Stir Excitement AP Wircphoto 69 YEARS APART — The face of college football really hasn’t changed too much over its 100 years. At left is Michigan’s 1969 football captain Jim Mandich, a prime All-America candidate. At the right is Willie Heston, who played for Michigan from 1901-04 and was named recently to the all-time All-College team over the century. The two look so much alike that Heston’s picture hangs in the Michigan locker room With Mandich's name. ANN ARBOR (UPI) - Missouri at Michigan. It looks like an intra-squad scrimmage instead of a battle between nationally ranked teams. The Wolverines are favored by a slim one-point margin despite being ranked 11th to the Tigers’ No. 9 position. Michigan has whomped two foes — Vanderbilt by a 42-14 margin and Washington - by a 45-7 count, while Missouri has stepped on a pair, Air Force by a 19-17 score and Illinois by a convincing 37-6. . * ★ * Michigan has a fine option quarterback In junior Don Moorhead.. Missouri has one in senior Terry McMillan. COUNTER MOVE The Wolverines feature sophomore Glenn Doughty springing out of the backfield like he’d just stepped on a nail. The Tigers counter with junior Joe Moore, who also doesn’t have to spot a jet any yards in a race down the runway. ★ *. * Moorhead, who was voted Midwest Back of the Week by UPI for his work last' Saturday, has more impressive statistics than McMillan. Michigan Coach Glenn “Bo" Schembechler has a more wide-open offense than Missouri’s Dan Devine, who prefers going through defensive tackles than over or around them. Lions to Meet Browns Top Defense vs. No. 2 Offense It will be Cleveland’s offense (No. 2 in the NFL) against the Detroit Lions’ defense (No. 1 this week) before a probable crowd of 82,000 at the Lake Erie Municipal stadium Sunday. Leading the Cleveland offense is a familiar name, Ron Johnson, who is one of the many outstanding rookies in pro football this year. * ★ * What is even more surprising is the fact that the Browns rank only behind ' the Minnesota Vikings on offense and they are doing it without the services of Leroy Kelly, the top runner in the league last year. Kelly has been injured and Johnson and Reece Morrison have carried the load. Morrison is only a second-year player with the Browns and in two games he has rushed 40 times for 179 yards and an average gain of 4.5. He has also caught six passes for 71 yards. Against Washington he ran for 131 yards in last Sunday's 27-23 triumph. DOING BETTER Johnson, the former University of Michigan star, is even doing better. He has carried 37 times and picked up 191 yeards for 5.2 average and has scored four touchdowns. Cleveland will also have the current top punter in Don Cockroft who is averaging 45.2 yards per try, while the Lions will have the league’s top punt returner in Lem Barney, whose 74 yard touchdown return is the only one so far this season in the NFL. The Lions’ defense which has victimized the quarterback six times in two games, led the defensive statistics in seven categories, including average offense per game and percentage of passes allowed per game. * * * The Lions and Browns have met only seven times in regular season play with the Lions holding a 6-1 advantage In the all time series, but the two teams were arch-rivals during the 50’s when they tangled for the NFL championship four items with the Lions’ winning three. The lone defeat at the hands of the Browns was the 1964 contest a t Municipal Stadium which ended 37-21 for Cleveland. FORMER BUCKEYE One of the veterans of the Browns who has played in three of the games with the Lions is defensive captain Jim Houston, linebacker from Ohio State. “I’m personally ashamed of our record against the Lions and would like to do something about it,'Vhe was quoted as saying. The Lions have decided to fill the vacancy at offensive guard, created with the Injury to Bob Kowalkowski, with Frank Gallagher, a 240 pounder who played at North Carolina and who is in his third year with the Lions. Kickoff is 12:30 Michigan time Sunday. No Big Event in State Cancel Buick Open Tourney The pro golfing crowd will apparently be missing on the Michigan scene next summer. * * * The $125,000 Buick Open, held for the past 11 years at Warwick Hills near Grand Blanc, has withdrawn from the Pistons Shattered by Bullets, 122-116 TOLEDO, Ohio (AP)—Former Toledo University star Steve Mix, now a rookie with the Detroit Pistons, went back to his home court Thursday, but that wasn’t enough as the Pistons fell to the Baltimore Bullets 122-116 in a National Basketball Association exhibition. ★ * * Baltimore, now 3-3 in preseason play, took the lead early in the second quarter and never fell behind. Earl Monroe lead the Bullets in scoring with 29 points and Ray Scott and Jack Marin came up with 22 each. * ★ * Jimmy Walker scored 28 points for Detroit ahd Howard Komives added 25. Mix scored 24 points and snared nine rebounds in the game. A Piston spokesman said he has clinched a spot, on the Detroit starting five. PGA schedule, tournament director Jerry Rideout told The Pontiac Press today. * ★ .* A Despite failure to attract the top names on the tour, the tournament nevertheless was played before record crowds at the long Warwick course. LETTER SENT Rideout revealed the contents of a letter sent to Joe Dey, executive director of the PGA’s tournament players division: “This is to confirm that Buick will not sponsors tournament in 1970. Buick was one of the first national firms to put its name on a golf tournament and over the years it has been a good promotion. “But from time to time we review our various .promotion programs and reevaluate. It is our decision to discontinue the tournament.’’ * * * Rideout declined to elaborate on the factors that were involved in reaching the decision. The 1970 Buick Open was listed for the same dates as this year. It was slated for July 2-5. The demise of the Buick leaves Michigan without a regular stop by the PGA. Back in September, the Inaugural of Hie $100,000 Michigan Golf Classic turned out to be a financial goof when sponsors couldn’t pay the players. Moorhead - has clicked on 18 of 28 passes in two games for 202 yards and a single touchdown while McMillan is 12 for 28 for 216 yards. But the Wolverines' Grand Haven product has gained 239 rushing in 29 caries with five scores compared to lOo^yards in 20 attempts without a touchdown for the Tigers’ junior college transfer. Doughty has one thing in common with Moore — neither started his collegiate career as a running back. Doughty began as a split end while Moore was a linebacker for the Mizzou frosh. Moore, like Doughty, gained 191 yards last week, but trails the Michigan counterpart by 14 yards for both games and at 48 has made four more tries to get through enemy lines. Doughty has a 2-to-i touchdown edge. EAST LANSING (AP) - The eyes of the nation won’t be on Michigan State and Notre Dame this weekend as in 1966 when the football rivals both ware unbeaten and played to a 10-10 standoff the last game of the season. That was the year MSU partisans jeered because the Irish had the ball in the closing minutes but played possession, running out the clock on the ground instead of gambling with a pass for a win. * ★ * Saturday's game at South Bend has been called lacklustre. Supporters of both universities will be watching it closely, however, trying‘to determine if either the Spartans or the Irish have a hope of going anywhere this fall. Michigan State had to come from behind for two early wins, 27-11 over Washington and 23-15 from Southern Methodist. Scoring pushes on the rushing game saved State both Saturdays. PASSER GROUNDED Michigan State quarterback Bill Triplett has been a bust as passer so far, completing only eight of 28 tries for 59 yards. Coach Duffy. Daugherty still is going along with the junior who took over as signal-caller in midseason last year. Triplett has been able to drive the team in for touchdowns when they are needed. He has the third best running record, gaining 127 yards in the two games by carrying on the option. * ★ * Leaders in the established rushing attack have been senior Don Highsmith, a bulldozer runner, with 217 yards. Scat-back Eric Allen, an elusive little mite, has netted 186 yards. 1 * •*• * The defense has been the solid rock of the Spartan team. Time and time again the defensive corps, led by the rush of the front four, has held the opposition to give State good field position. Six lost fumbles didn’t help the MSU cause. Defensive end Wilt Martin and linebackers Dion Law and Mike Hogan have been some of the standouts. Pro Contract Expires for Wimbledon Champ LONDON (UPI) — Ann Jones of England, the Wimbledon champion, when her professional contract with the National Tennis League expires Oct. 13, will be registered as a “player" with the British Lawn Tennis Association. Since the BLTA does not distinguish between amateurs and professionals, it is possible Mrs. Jones will be eligible for the Wightman Cup matches against the United States. Flyers Option Center HERSHEY, Pa. (UPI) - Veteran center Garry Peters has been optioned to Quebec of the American Hockey League by the Philadelphia Flyers. However, a Philadelphia spokesman said Peters may be back with the Flyers when they open their National League season against Minnesota Oct. 11. Mechanical Brain Lost for F-Bird, Lansing Odds DEFENDERS AT WORK — Detroit Red Wings' Gary Bergman deflects a shot by the New York Rangers In the first period, of their game at Detroit Olympia last night. Keeping a close eye on the play is goalie Roger Crazier (1), while AS Wlr«r>hoto left wing Hank Monteith (15) has things under control to Crozier’k left. Firing the shot was N.Y.'s Bill Fairbairn (10). Wings won the exhibition contest, 6-1. The computer can’t even come up with a clear-cut favorite in the battle between the Pontiac Firebirds and Lansing All-Stars, to decide the Central Division leader of the Midwest Football League. Fed the data of their records, the mechanical brain gives the Firebird^ less than.a half-point advantage in their game Saturday night in Lansing. < On the board the betting would be eyen. In the power ratings of the MFL, the computer says: 1. Pontiac Firebirds 96.5 2. Unsing Ail-Stars ....98.1 / 3. Lackawanna Lancers .. 98.0 4. Dayton Colts ........95.0 5. S.W. Michigan Hawks 85.5 6. Grand Rapids Chiefs . 72.6 7. Flint Wildcats ......66.4 8. Detroit Cowboys .....62.6 Pontiac and Lansing both lost to Lackawanna, but each has defeated the Lancers in their last meeting. Against each other in the first meet, the Firebirds and AN-Stars played to a 13-13 tie. What does Saturday’s battle af Lansing Sexton field mean? It means the probable Central Division titlb. The only roadblock' after this game would be Dayton, and both teams still have to meet the Colts. ★ ★ * The addition of 'another bus has extended the deadline for those desiring to make the trip for a $7 package. The buses will leave Wisner Stadium at 8:16 p.m. Fans driving to Lansing can purchase advance tickets at the VFW Post No. 1370. A capacity crowd of 4,000 Is expected for the game.