IHm Pontiac Prow Monday, March 10 MONDAY R — Rerun C — Color >IONDAY MORNING 5:50 (2) TV Chapel (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round (56) Americans From Africa 8:05 (9) Mr. Dressup 8:30 (7) R C - Movie: “Never Steal Anything Small*’ (1959) James Cagney. Shirley Jones (9) C — Friendly Giant 5:55 (2) On the Farm Scene Helene 6:00 (2) C — Sunrise Semester Regular programs may be preempted for progress reports (n the Apollo 9 mission in space. 6:30 (2) C — Woodrow the Woodsman (4) C — Classroom 6:45 (7) t ~ Bat Fink 7:00 (4) C — Today (7) C—Morning Show 7 : 3 0 ( 2 ) C — News, 7:50 (9) Warm-Up 8:00 (2) C — Captain Kangaroo 9:00 (2) R C - Beverly Hillbillies (4) C — Steve Allen (9) C — Bozo 9:15 (56) Book Parade 9:30 (2) R—Dick Van Dyke (56) Let’s Go Sciencing 9:50 ( 56) All Aboard for Reading 10:00 (2) R C—Lucille Ball (4) C — Snap Judgment (9) Ontario Schools 10:10 (56) Of Cabbages and Kings 10:25 (4) C — News 10:30 (2) C — Mike Douglas Cornell Wilde cohosts (4) C — Concentration (7) C—Anniversary Game 10:35 ( 56) Reason and Read AREMCO TIRE CO. 4520 HIGHLAND RD. 614-3151 or 614-3158 682-5000 ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD OPPOSITE THE PONTIAC MALL 10:55 (56) Spanish Lesson 11:00 (4) C — Personality — Nipsey Russell, Jerry Stiller and Anne Meara guest. (7)C — Galloping Gourmet (9) Ontario Schools (50) C — Jack LaLanne 11:20 (56) Misterogers* 11:25 (9) C — Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 11:30 (4) C — Hollywood Squares (7) R — Bachelor Father (9) Take Thirty (50) C — Kimba 11:50 (56) Friendly Giant MONDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) C—News, Weather, Sports (4) C — Jeopardy (7) R —Bewitched (9) C — Bonnie Pruaden (50) C — Alvin 12:05 (56) Americans From Africa 12:25 (2) C — Fashions 12:30 (2) C — Search for -.Tomorrow (4) Q _ News, Weather, Sports (7) C — Funny You Should Ask (9) R — Movie: “Showdown” (1963) Audie Murphy, Charles Drake, Kathleen Crowley (50) R — Movie: VGluny Brown” '{1946) Jennifer Jones, Charles Boyer 12:45 (56) R — Spanish Lesson 12:55 (4) C — News 1:00 (2) Ct—Love of Life (4) c — Match Game — (7) C — Dream House 1:05 (56) Listen and Say 1:25 (2) C — News (4) C — Carol Duvall (56) R — Bode Parade 1:30 (2) C — As the World Turns (4) Hidden Faces (7) C — Let’s Make a Deal 1:40 (56) R — Let’s Go Sciencing 2:00 (2) C — Divorce Court (4) C — Days of Our Lives (7) C — Newlywed Game (50) C — American West (56) Reason and Read 2:15 (56) American History 2:30 (2) C — Guiding Light (4) C — Doctors (7) C — Dating Game (9) C — (l^)ecial) — Ontario Legislature (50) R — Make Room for Daddy 2:40 ( 56) Spanish Lesson 3:00 (2) C — Secret Storm (4) C — Another World (7) C — General Hospital (50) R —Topper (56) French Chef 3:30 (2) C - Edge of Night (4) C — You Don’t Say — Betty White and Michael Connors guest. (7) C — One Life to Live (9) Bozo’s Big Top (50) C — Captain Detroit (56) German Lesson 3:45 (56) C — Social Security 4:00 (2) C—Linkletter Show (4) C — Donald O’Connor (7) C — Dark Shadows (9) Tom Shannon (56) Great Books 4:30 (2) C — Merv Griffin ( 7 ) R — Movie : “Frankenstein” ( 19 3 2 ) Boris Karloff, Colin Olive (50) R — Little Rascals (56) What’s New (62) C — Bugs Bunny and Friends 5:00 (9) RC —Batman (50) R —Munsters (56) TV Kindergarten (62) R — Robin Hood 5:30 (4) C—George Pierrot — “Northern California to Nevada” (9) R C—Gilligan’s Island (50) R C — Superman (56) Misterogers (62) R — Leave It to Beaver MONDAY NIGHT 6:00 (2) (4) (7) C — News, Weather, Sports (9) R C — Movie: “The Naked Brigade” (1965) British girl joins up with Greek guerrillas when country is overrun by Nazis in 1941. Shirley Eaton, Ken Scott (50) R C — Flintstones (56) Friendly Giant (62) R — Sea Hunt 6:15 (56) R—Time for John 6:30 (2) C — News — Cronkite (4) C — News - Huntley, Brinkley (7) c — News — Reynolds (50) R - McHale’s Navy (56) R — Brother Buzz (62) R C - My Friend Flicka 7:00 (2) C — Truth or Consequences (4) (7) C - News, Weather, Sports (50) R — I Love Lucy (56) Title Hunt (62) R C — Movie: “Big Money” (British, 1954) Man is family failure because he can’t commit successful crime. Ian Carmichael,^ Belinda Lee 7:30 (2) C — Gunsmoke — Marshall Dillon, en route to Dodge City with deathbed statement needed as evidence in trial, finds refuge in camp of ex-slave family after he is wounded. (4) C — I Dream of Jeannie — Small-town officials who take dim view of “city folks” decide to throw the book at Tony and Roger for minor traffic violation. (7) C — Avengers — Tara King is kidnaped and mysteriously transported back to the year, 1917, where she assumes the identity of girl named Pandora, slated to be murdered. (50) R C - Hazel (56) Bridge With Jean Cox 8:00 (4) C — Rowan and Martin — Flip Wilson appears a s Michelangelo and a hip weather forecaster. “Mod, Mod World” looks at senior citizens. (9)RC-ISpy (50) C — Pay Cards (56) NET Journal — “Some of Our Best Friends” 8:25 (62) Greatest Headlines 8:30 (2) C — Here’s Lucy — Lucy convinces farmer to convert his farm into a “fun farm” similar to dude ranch, where city slickers pay to do the chores. (7) C — Peyton Place — Th« Pontiac Pr»t» Mondoy/March 10 Norman tells Steven to leave Rodney and Betty alone; Betty informs Steven she isn’t going to protest the will. (50) C — Password (02) R — Movie: “Time Limit” (1957) Army colonel investigates whether an officer should face court-martial for collaborating with the enemy. Richard Widmark, Richard Basehart, June Lockhart 9:00 (2) C — Mayberry R.F.D. — Emmet closes his fix-it shop and retires, but is soon bored and becomes burden to everyone in Mayberry. (4) C — Movie: “The Plainsman” (1966) Wild Bill Hickok and Calamity Jane suspect a merchant of selling stolen repeater rifles to Indians. Don Murray, Guy Stockwell, Abbv Dalton, Edward Binns (7) C — Outcasts — Corey comes under pressure when it is believed that he knows where $50,000 in bank loot is hidden. (9) C — What’s My Line? — Guest panelists for the week are Soupy Sales, Joanna Barnes and Gairy Moore. (50) R — Perry Mason 9:30 (2) C — Family Affair ~ Jcxly is jealous of attention given to his pen pal, a little boy from Bolivia who comes to visit. (9) C — Tommy Hunter 10:00 (2) C — Carol Burnett — Ross Martin and John Davidson guest star. ttreak tivav From That Old Scatterbolt In A New ’69 FIREBIRD HARDTOP Check The Great Deal You Get jiif mm MMsm 693-6266 89 M-24^ Lake Orion (7) C — Big Valley —By renting a farm to Mormon and his two wives, Jarrod arouses anger of bully •and his gang. (9) C — Front Page Challenge'- (50) C — News, Weather, Sports (56) R — City Makers 10:30 (9) R — Danger Man — Deep in Arabian desert, Drake finds that slave rings and stranded show girls spell double trouble. (50) R - Alfred Hitchcock (56) R — Folk Guitar (62) R—Star Performance 11:00 (2) (4) (7) (9) C -News, Weather, Sports (50) R — Movie: “No Time for Comedy” (1940) Sm a 11 - town playwright, who comes to Broadway to see his play produced,, falls in love with play’s star, James Stewart, Rosalind Russell, Charles Ruggles (62) R — Movie: ‘ISin-cerely Yours” ( 19 5 5 ) Concert pianist brings joy MONDAY to empty lives around him. Liberace, Joanne Dru, Alex Nicol 11:30 (4) C — Johnny Carson (7) C — Joey Bishop (9) R C - Movie: “The Black Torment” (English, 1964) Nobleman returns with second wife to his estate to find ghostly goings-on. John Turner, Heather Sears 11:35 (2) R - Movie: “The Doll That Took the Town” (French, 1960) Girl who wants to lAake it big in show business fakes an ^ttack to get some pub- licity. Verna Lisi 00 (4) (7)R-(9)C- Beat the Champ - Texan - Perry’s Probe 1:30 (2) R - Naked City (2) C — News 2:30(2) C —News WE WANT WORK I No Money Down — 5 Years To Pay QUALITY LOWEST PRICES 2-CAR SPECIAL ExclMdifig Floor $955 CALL NOW! We Build In All Suburbs IV2 CAR SPECIAL Excluding Floor <645 PRICE INCL % SIDING, 2 WINDOWS, 6** SOX, EXP. STRIPS, WIND BRAKES, builders felt liner, double HEADERS, CROSS TIES, STEEL DOOR. COMPLETE MODERNIZATION o additions OREC. ROOMS • PORCHES • DORMERS • Antes • KITCHENS COLE BUILDING CO. 13242 E. SMILE CALL NOW! CC Q ^1V7 FREE ESTiMATES I C 0"0 I I / OPEN DAILY & SUN. 9-9 The Pontiac Press Saturday, March 1 5 SATURDAY MORNING ^ 5:50 (2) TV Chapel 5:55 (2) News 6:00 (2) C — Across the Fertce 6:30 (2) C - Sunrise Semester 6:55 (4) C — News 7:00 (2) C — Woodrow the Woodsman (4) C — Country Living 7:15 (7) C — Rural Report 7:30 (4) C — Oopsy the Clown (7) C-TV College 8:00 (2) C - Go Go Gophers 8:25 (9) Warm-Up 8:30 (2) C — Bugs Bunny-Roadrunner (7) C — Courageous Cat (9) Tobv 9:00 (4) C-Super 6 a) Casper (9) Ontario Schools ^" (50) R - Wells Fargo 9:30 (2) C — Wacky Races (4) C - Top Cat (7) C-Gulliver f50) Rocky Jones 10:00 (2) C — Archie Show (A) R C — Flintstones (7) C — Spiderman (50) R — Jungle Jim 10:30 (2) C — Batman — Superman (4) c - NBC Children’s Theater — “Stuart Little” (7) C — Fantastic Voyage (9) French Schools (50) R - Movie: “The Trap” (1946) Sidney Toler 11:00 (7) C — Journey to the Center of the Earth (9) D’Iberville 11:30 (2) C — Herculoids (4) C — Underdog (7) C — Fantastic Four (9) A Place of Your Own SATURDAY AFTERNOON Shazzan Storybook 12:00 (2) C (4) C -Squares (7) C — George of the Jungle (9) African Odyssey (50) R — Movie: “Two Flags West^’ 0950) Jeff Chandler^ Joseph Gotten, Linda Darnell 12:30 (2) R C—Jonny Quest (4) C — Untamed World (7) C — American Bandstand » (9) Country Calendar 1:00 (2) C-Moby Dick (4) C - At the Zoo (9) CBC Sports 1:30 (2) C — Lone Ranger (4) R C — International Zone (7) C — Happening 2:00 (2) C — Fisherman’s World (4) C - (Special) NCAA ^ Basketball Tournament (7) R - Movie: “V/atch the Birdie” (1951) Red Skelton, Arlene Dahl (9) R - Movie: “Lost Island of Kioga” (1966) Herman Brix (50) R — Movie: “Jitterbugs” (1943) Laurel and Hardy, Vivian Blaine 3:00 (2) R - Movie: “Attack of the Mayan Mummy^’ (1963) Nina Knight 3:25 (7) C - Wonderful World of Sports 3:30 (7) C - Pro Bowlers’ Tour (50) R — Movie: “Flight to Mars” (1953) Cameron Mitchell, Arthur Franz, Marguerite Chapman 4:00 (9) C — Marvel Super Heroes (56) R — Mr. Lister’s Storytime 4:15 (56) R •— Time for John 4:30 (9) C-Skippy (56) R - Muffinland (62) C — Beany and Cecil 4:45 (56) Storyteller 5:00 (2) R — Mr. Ed (7) C — Wide World of Sports — World Surfing Championships from Rincon, Puerto Rico, and the Internationa! Ski - Flying Championships from Vick-ersund, Norway (9) R C — Monroes — “Race for Rainbow” (50) C - Hy Lit (56) Brother Buzz (62) C — Big-Time Wrestling 5:30 (2) C—Gentle Ben (56) R — Let’s Take Pictures First Federal Savings has a SAYINGS PLAN for you! 4y,» 4V 5* SK* PASSBOOK SAVINGS Compounded and paid quarterly on Insured Savings $2,500 SAVINGS CERTIFICATES Earn the rate of 4%% when held for a period of 6 months. $5,000 SAVINGS CERTIFICATES Earn the rate of 5% when held for a period of 9 months. $10,000 SAVINGS CERTIFICATES Earn the rate of SVa% when held for a period of 12 months. 761 W. Huron St„ Pontiac - Downtown Pontiac - Droyton Ploin. - Rocho.t.r - Clark.ton - Milford - WolUd Lak. - Lake Orion - Wot.rford - Union Lake r*. W»of(»r . . u. (. WMHiit'aurMit ri aondy, CoW Home Edition T^TTTT mJmm ■.-mMLmmJKLm mjmmrnm0i' fPONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY. MARCH 10. 1069 io« 30 S. Viefs Die, 105 Wounded in Red Ambush Pontiac Prill Photo by Edward R. Noblo SIT-IN DISPERSED - More than 250 bladspstudents at Pontiac Central High School ended a three-hour sit-in just before noon today when School Supt. Dr. Dana P7 miiier aff Mth Ove board at 7:30 tonight at Central Hi^ auditorium. The students Insist that the board discuss nine demands prc9iRted«tlastI1iuivdaynWiboid^iaN^ « ^ How to Keep Teens Away From Drugs (EDITOR’S NOTE - This is the first in a series of articles written by a prize-winning reporter to inform anxious parents about the drug md narcotics situation and suggest what they can do to guard their oum children against its hazards.) BY ALTON BLAKESLEB Associated Press Scirace Writer The use—and abuse—of drugs that affect human minds is spreading across the country like smog. Young Americans by the hundreds of thousands, perhaps by the^milMons, are tasting, experimenting or ^ing still further with marijuana, with LSD, with the uppies and downies of pep pills and sedatives, with Speed, and even in some cases with heroin. ★ • ★ ★ By the millions, parents are increas-/ingly puzzled, worried or even downright panic^. Most disturbing to them, is the fact that marijuana or “pot’’especially is becoming popular among junior high aikl high school students. Egypt General Killed by Shell At high schools and colleges arrests for possession of marijuana and other drugs are increasing. Simple possession of marijuana is a felony punishable by jail terms of two to 10 years or more. WAY OF UFE Drug use is unquestionably becoming a way of life for some youi^ people — and for an untold number of adults also. This series of stories, based on inters views with dozens of authorities across the country, deals with questions such as these that confront parents and young people as well: What can or should parents do to steer (Continued on Page A-3, Col. 3) Ray Pleads SLSt??, Hints at Conspiracy SAIGON (AP) — Hundreds of enemy troops ambushed about 300 South Vietnamese paratroopers, killing, 30 of the government soldiers and wounding 105 in a two-day battle that was still going on late today, the Saigon government said. The savage battle was one of five major fights reported in the past 24 hours — at three points near the Cambodian border and to the north and south of Saigon. The dead included 31 Americans and at least 27 Vietcong and North Vietnamese, allied spokesmen said. ★ ★ * The Vietcong also shelled more than 35 towns and allied bases during the night as the enemy’s spring offensive continued in its third week. ★ * ★ - ■ U.S. Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird told newsmen as he left Saigon after a four-day visit that the offensive is a “calculated escalation of the war.’’ But he said it “has not been successful.’’ NOT REVEALED Laird' would not reveal the recommendations he is carrying back to President Nixon, except to say that he would request additional funds to strengthen the South Vietnamese armed sei^Wbes. ★ ★ * The secretary said some American troops would be replaced in due course by South Vietnamese as the latters’ armed forces grew stronger. But he would not give any timetable. ★ ★ ★ Laird said that on the basis of bis tr ip he could not foresee any circumstances which would require more American forces in Vietnam. •k -k * The South Vietnamese paratrooper battalion that was ambushed reported 14 of its men killed and 80 wtJftnded in a savage fight 54 miles northwest of Saigon and three miles from the Cambodian border. American bombers finally drove off the enemy force, but enemy casualties were not known. PLATOON DECIMATED About 20 miles to the south, every U.S. air cavalryman in a 40-man platoon was killed or woupded when an estimated 400 troops from, the Vietcong 9Ui Division ran into the platoon as it was checking the Cambodian bofder for infiltrators. •k k k American reinforcements poured into the battle, but 14 U.S. troops were killed and 31 were wounded. At least 37 of the enemy were killed, the U.S. Command said. k k k Other air cavalrymen operating 27 miles northeast of Saigon on the fringes of the Vietcong’s War Zone D rain into elements of ^the iVetcong 5th Division, which two weeks ago tried to overrun the big U.S. military complex at Bien Hoa. k k k U.S. spokesmen said 24 enemy troops were counted dead, while U.S. losses were two killed and 11 wounded. / From Our News Wires MEMPHIS, Tenn. —James Earl Ray, hinting a conspiracy existed, pleaded guilty today to the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King | Jr. ,Ray was the only ' person in court to suggest others may . have taken part in c the April 4, 1968 | sniper slaying of the | Nobel peace prize I winner. His guilty plea I was part of a deal with the prosecution that he will be sen-tenced to 99 years in the Tennessee State Prison at Nashville, instead of taking the chance that a jury might sentence him to death irt the electric chair. Ray said, however, that he did not agree with a theory—apparently held by his own lawyer--that there was no conspiracy to assassinate King. But, he said. “I agree with the stipulation” to plead guilty. •NOT A CONSPIRACY’ “I've never had hopes of anything except ... to save this man’s life,” said Ray’s lawyer, Percy Foreman of Houston, Tox. “It took me months to prove to myself . . . that it was not a conspiracy.” * k k Five witnesses then testified to the actual fact of King’s slaying, at the Lorraine Motel here April 4, 1968. This is necessary under Tennessee law in a case where the death penalty could be involved. k k k Then, the jury must retire to go through the formality of setting the 99-'year sentence. The jury was chosen from a venire picted two weeks ago, but the jurors themselves had no idea, a court spokesman said, that they would be assigned to the Ray case until court began this morning. Criminal Court Judge ITestwi Battle a.sked Ray, who was called to the stand, whether he understood that his guilty plea meant he waived all rights to appeal. He also was asked if the decision to plead guilty was his own and of his own free will. “L, agree with the stipulation,’’ Ray said, and then told the judge he wanted to add something. ★ ★ Asked what it was, Ray said he wanted to go on record as saying he did not agree with “the theory that there was no conspiracy.” If the jury agrees to the 99-ycar sentence, and there are indications it will, Ray could be eligible for parole in 33 years. k k k The state previously said it would demand the death penalty, but the state’s electric chair has not been used since 1961. Nixon May Trim Plan Area Girl Killed in Avon Crash ABM Verdict Near KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (AP) - President Nixon summoned security adviser Hehry A. Kissinger to his Florida retreat today to discuss the antiballistic missile controversy. Gerald L. Warren, deputy press secretary, said Nixon wanted to consult with Kissinger “on the ABM and other matters.” Asked if the Middle East might figure in the conversation, Warren said he could npt rule that out. ★ ★ ★ Nixon, described as near a decision on deploying a “thin” antiballistic missile shield, will fly back to Washington with Kissinger late in the day. k k k He is expected to make known his ABM decision tomorrow or Wednesday, perhaps in a national television-radio appearance. AWAY FROM CITIES It’s expected that proposed missile sites for the nuclear-tipp^ Spartan interceptors will be moved as much as 30 miles from major population centers. Location of the sites near cities had drawn criticism from citizens who feared JEL AVIV on - After two days of heavy shelling, the Suez Canal was reported quiet again today. Egypt prepared a hero’s funeral for its army chief of staff, Gen. Abdel Moneim Riad, Related Picture, Page A-5 who was-'fatally wounded by an Israeli shell yesterday. U. N. observers blamed Egypt for the start of the artillery duel Saturday. k k k Israeli shells hit Egypt’s oil refinery at Suez for the fourth time since the 1967 war, and the Israelis said a petrochemical plant and oil storage tanks were still burning today. Egypt said three tanks were set afire. Israel said one of its Hper Chibs was shot down, three Israelis including the pilot were killed and 14 were wounded. 3 EGYPTIANS KILLED Egypt said three of its men were killed and 13 wounded and it lost a MIG jet. The semiofficial Cairo newspaper A1 Ahram said Riad had flown by helicopter to Ismailia yesterday and was observing the artillery duel with a group of officers when the shell landed close to him. Riad, 50, was Egypt’s second-ranking soldier after the defense minister, Gen. Mohammed Fawzi. President Gamal Abdel Nasser posthumously awarded him Egypt’s highest military decoration, the Star of Honor. '(f/H accidental explosions or that the areas would become a target for Soviet weapons. The 30-miJe factor would mean the site now proposed for the Pontiac area would be shifted northward, perhaps to the Holly or Ortonville area. k k k The expected move to scale down plans for the Sentinel program may lessen opposition to the antimissile defense system, especially in Congress. Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield said in an interview that a cutback in the proposed number of missile sites “will satisfy some people” in Congress who are worried about the cost of the proposed ABM program. Critics fear the system once started will grow both in cost and intent from one originally estimated at $5 billion to protect against Chinese Communist rockets to a MO billion system geared against the Soviet Union. •* k ★ Mansfield is one of a powerful group of senators, which includes Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., and J. W. Fulbright, D-Ark., who have been fighting immediate deployment of the Sentinel missile system. Oakland Highway Toll in ’69 32 A 20-year-old Birmingham girl was killed Saturday night when the car in which she was riding went out of control and crashed in Avon Township. Dead is Kathryn Ann Edwards, 1555 Chapin, who, according to the driver, fell out of the car when it struck a guardrail on Adams near Avon road. The driver, Ransome Boyd, 23, of Hazel Park, told Oakland County sheriff’s deputies that he was traveling about 40 miles an hour prior to the accident. k k k Boyd said the accident occurred when he slammed on his brakes to avoid hitting a guard post and the car slid sideways and sthick the guardrail. Skid marks measured 111 feet, according to a deputy. New Kitchen May End KP 729 Ponfiac-Area Youths Leave for Army Induction Families, sweethearts and friends said goodbye this morning to 129 Pontiac area young men headed for Petroit’s Fort Wayne Army Induction Center m the M^rch draft call. The group gathered at the Ponti^ Elks Lodge, il4 Orchard Lake, prior to' their 7 a.m. departure. The Elks have been providing use of their facilities since last r ■ Prior to that, the draftees used to assemble and wait for the bus at a downtown intersection. Several area organizations have combined efforts to give the youths a warmer sendoff. At the Elks Lodge,' a light breakfast is provided as well as a place to say farewells. The facility wa^ jammed this morning with more than 600 persons. k ' k k Contributing to the sendoff were Elks Lodge 810; Lake Orion, Chief Pontiac and Cook-Nelson American Legion posts; Post 811 of the Forty and Eight; the Amvets; UAW Local 596, Disabled American Veterans Post 16 and the Gideon Society. The draftees are from three city draft boards, 65, 331 and 67. Today’s call was termed one of the larger ones in recent months. The number reflects a step-up to replace large numbers of men being discharged, according to draft officials. FT. PENNING, Ga. (AP) - A general’s lunch today offers hope > for the legions of GIs who have i dreamed of the end of KP. | Maj. Gen. John M. Wright Jr Ft, Penning commander, is going | . to eat the first meal cooked during the 10-day test of a new. Army-developed field kitchen. k k k The Aripy says the kitchen, called “subsistence preparation by electronic defusion” or Speed, will make kitchen police obsolete. Its utensils are disposable. They «' include paper plates and plastic " spoons, cups and pans. Cooking is \ done by two microwave ovens, a i V grill and a forced-air oven. s k k k i ^ The kitchen is a pod-like affair I 12 feet long, seven feet wide and i , eight feet high. It can be carried ; “C by helicopter or truck and comes , stocked with enough food to main- : tain 200 men for a day. i It also contains an incinerator i for getting rid of the utensils. Spring Unsprung: Snow DueJonight Spring hasn’t sprung yet. T h e weatherman predicts snow flurries, cloudy skies and lower temperatures for today and tonight. Today’s high is due to be in the mid-30s with twiight’s low in the mid-20s. Tomorrow the flurries will end but the partly cloudy skies and cooler temperatures will continue. k k k Light snow is on the agenda for Wednesday With temperatures in the 30s. This morning’s northwest winds at 10 to 22 m.p.h. will slow this afternoon to 8 to 12 m.p.h. and pick up speed again tonight at 10 to 20 m.p.h. Probabilities of precipitation in per cent are 30 today, tonight and tomorrow. OFF THEY GO-Draftees from the Pontiac area leave Ft. Wayne induction center. In t the Elks_ Lodge early this morning to board buses for Detroit’s young men. March call-up were 129 Rome Campus Reopens ROME (AP) —.The University of Rome reopened today after a 16-day shutdown and two months of student oc-cupatiMi and disorders. Police stood guard at the gates to the main campus and at entrances to other schools of the university scattered around the city. Tliey let anyone go in without checki^ on credentials. A—2 THE POXTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MARCH 10, 1969 Parochiaid Foes Pick Up Support From 2 Corners I-ANSING (UPD - Oppning the tax dollars' Jtocketbook to finance nonpublic education got negative responses from two political corners over the weekend. Both want that pocketbook snapped shut and padlocked! The 60,000 member Michigan Education Association (MEA» beefed up the anti-Parochiad forces by contributing $.500 to an organiration bent on keeping tax dollars in the public schools. Stale Sen. Sander l.evln, D-Berkley, stepped into the fray yesterday by announcing his “active opposition to Parochiaid results from vigorous support for a strong system of public schools, rather than opposition to the existence of private or parodiial schools.” The e.ssence of the stniggle, Levin told the Detroit chapter of the Citizens to Advance Public Education (CAPE), is that tax dollars simply won't .stretch far enough to support two different school systems. Levin Is the Senate minority leader and a former Democratic State chairman. He cited the huge deficit of more than $25 million now facing the Detroit school system and the latest information from the State Department of F!ducallon that 74 school districts were operating on a deficit. “Today we are struggling to obtain the financial aid and public .support necessary to sustain quality education programs and to improve programs for children in needy school districts and the disadvantaged children of low income families. "Diversion of monies to private schools would inevitably result in failure to rc.solve the.se ma.ssive education problems," Levin said. ‘VIOLATES PRINCIPLE’ Noting that his opposition to the stormy issue was as an Individual senator and not as Senate Democratic leader, Levin argued that Parochiaid destroys the separation of church and state principle. “Religious institutions have been free to operate without governmental interference and control, and governmental Institutions have been free to operate without favoritism to any religious denomination, he said. 'Wiretap Files Must Be Bared' WASHINGTON (AP) Criminal defendants whose conversations or "preml.ses” were bugged by federal agents have a right to examine government transcripts and logs, the Supreme Court ruled 5 to 3 today. This includes government records relating to national security matters. The Justice Department has argued strenuously against such action. The point of the examination by defense attorneys is to determine if prosecution was built on illegal eavesdropping. 'The government already hdd conced^ its obligation to' disclose illegal bugging If the bugging helped the prosecution. But it maintained this examination should be done by a federal judge-not by the defendant's lawyers. •MORE TftAN FORMAUTY* The court, in an opinion by Justice Byron R. White, a former Justice Department official, disagreed. He said if the bugging hearings “are to be more than a formality and petitioners (defendants) not left entirely to reliance on government testimony there should be turned over to them the records of those overheard conversations which the govern-ment was not entitled to use in building its case against them.” The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Mostly cloudy today and tonight with periods of nght snow flniries. Not much temperature change today. High mid 30s. Colder tonight, low 21 to 2S. Tuesday becoming partly cloudy, with flurries ending. A little collier, high near 30. Wednesday outlook: bec-oming cloudy and continuing cold with chance of light snow. Winds northwest 10 to 28 m.p.h. today 8 to 12 m.p.h) tonight and 10 to 20 m.p.h tomorrow. Probabilities of precipitation 30 per cent today, tonight and tomorrow. Oni Y**r A«o In eonlitc Hlqlwst ftmB«r»lur» *----ttmpnrnturt ................ Me*n Umpcrnlurn Wnmtr. Pnrtly >uni Moan ri>M lomorrew at 2:31 a.tn 3* » Miami 0 2* 10 Mllwaukaa HI York 40 20 Maan •omearalura Partly Sunny. , Sat., Sunny, Baautiful. Sun., N.Y. 3S 23 Phoanix TMt Data la fl Yaari Atlanta „ „ ... ______ Boston 35 25 S. Lk. City S BuHalo 31 23 S. Franclito 5 Charlotta 50 31 Saattia Chicaoo 33 24 Tucson AP Wirapkala NATIONAL WEATHER—Scattered snow flurries are predicted tonight throughout the iatermountain region of the West and for a belt extending from the Great Lakes through New England. Rain is forecast for the lowlands' of the Southwest. It «rUI be colder Jn the South Atlantic states and the southern Rockies aad warmer from Texas to Nebraska. > Birmingham Area ■J Proposed Ban on Cigarette Ads Rapped BLOOMFIELD HILLS-Hie proposed banning by the Federal CommunicgUons Commission (FCC) of cigarette advertising from broadcast media could be “a crippling blow to the basic businessadvertising relationship.” This is the contention of Ernest A. Jones, chairman of the locally, based advertising agency of MacManus, John & Adams Inc. ★ ★ ★ Jones identifies himself as a nonsmoker who “owns no stock In the broadcast or tobacco industries. He added that his agency does not have a cigarette ac- In an address prepared for delivery before members of the Phoenix, Ariz., Advertising Club today, Jones cdntends that he is greatly concerned about the bright of business to sell a legal product in a legal manner. The support of the MEA, which made the donation to CAPE, was viewed as a big boost for the drive against Parochiaid. The Michigan Federation of Teachers, mainly predominant In the metropolitan Detroit area, has remained neutral. Pending in the Michigan House currently is a bill which would grant $40 . million annually to parochial schools for teaching secular subjects. SHOW CONTRAtT — Eugene L. Greek (right), representative for the Michigan Bell Telephone Co., signs a contract for his company assuring it of a booth at the 15th annual Oakland County Home and Sports Show March 27-30. Overseeing the contract signing are Waterford Jaycees Wayne ing, 5640 Williams Lake. PantiK Pr*H Ph«to Barnhart (left), booth chairman, and Tom Ritter, general program chairman. The Jaycee-sponsored show will be staged at the Waterford Township Community .^^vities Inc. Build- Peking: Soviets Provoked Clash The chief sponsor, Rep. J. Robert Traxler, D-Bay City, conceded additional taxation is needed to pay for the massive program. Ship With Hole in Side Is Steaming hr Port TOKYO (Jl — Communist China charged today that the Soviet Union provoked the Manchurian border clash March 2 to divert the attention of Russians who are massing for a “revolution” against “Soviet fascist rule.” NEW YORK (B - The British cargo vessel Montcalm, a hole smashed in her side just above the waterline by a truck which broke loose in the hold during stormy North Atlantic weather, pro-,«Mded today under its own .power toward Halifax, N.S., 350 miles to the Northeast, the Coast Guard reported. The 440-foot vessel, with a crew of 32, began shipping water through a 12-foot hole yesterday while rolling in 20-to ,30-foot seas. Using Us own pumps and two dropped by a Coast Guard plane, the ship was able to keep abreast of the flooding as the seas abated. The Norwegian freighter Pontos is standing by. Some Western analysts have suggested that Peking provoked the bloody fight for a similar reason — to make the Chinese forget internal dissensions and rally behind Mao Tse-tung by raising the specter of a “Soviet threat.” Bolstering this view was an announcement from Peking Sunday that Red Chinese militiamen and jpeasanto are patrolling wjth ^frontier guards. Press reports In Hong Kong and London said Peking has put 5 million men on an armed alert. The official Chinese announcement gave no exact figures. Each side has accused the other of starting the March 2 battle on a disputed island in the Ussuri River, whiefi separates the Soviet Far East and Manchuria. Moscow said 31 of its soldiers were killed and 14 were wounded; China has not released casualty figures. Observers in Tokyo believe the rallying of Chinese in anti-Soviet protests is directly related to Peking’s plan to hold its 9th party congress this year. Peking has not announced a date for the congress, but Japanese correspondents in I’eking reported in February preparations were under way,. Anti-U.S. Strife Rocks Pakistan KARACHI (AP) — Anti-American violence flared up in Pakistan today as opposition leaders met President Mohammed Ayufo Khan and proposed that Pakistan return to a parliamentary form of government. As the “peace” meeting took place in Rawalpindi,- hundreds of chanting student demoHstrators set fire to the main door of the U.S. Information Service library in Lahore, 180 miles away. DETAILED PROPOSALS Rawalpindi, opposition leaders presented Ayub with detailed propi»aIs for changing the whole way of government in Pakistan after his promise to step down as president. The opposition wants a federal government with national elections based on votes for all adults. A statement issued after the session in Ayub’s presidential guest house said that Sheikh Mujibur Rehnum, leader of the powerful Awami League party from East Pakistan, wants represoitatim on a population basis. This would give bigger say to East Pakistan which was roughly 60 per cent of Pakistan's 120 million population. East Pakistan, which produces jute for valuable export, is separated from West Pakistan by Indian territory. StormsAAayChange Apollo Splashdown SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) — With stormy weather buffeting their planned Atlantic landing area, the Apollo 9 astronauts received word today they might have to shift their splash-down to calmer seas. Air Force Cols. James A. McDivitt and David R. Scott and civilian Russell L. Schweickart then turned space age weathermen to report on conditions in the landing zone and over a wide area of the United States. crucial lunar module LEM-checkout, JSchweickart’s space walk and the ,j;endezvous of the LEM and command module occurred in the first five days. They are remaining aloft to prove the reliability of the Apollo command-ship for 10 days, the longest period presently planned for man-to-the-moon missions. The weather watch helped break the monotony of Apollo 9’s seventh day in space—in which the astronauts drifted to conserve fuel and dreamed of home. They had another light schedule of picture taking, navigation checks, an engine firing, and resting. The astronauts had completed 97 per cent of their flight objectives. The As Apollo 9 circled overhead, there was a slight delay in preparations for the next step. Movenient of the Saturn 5 rocket and spaceship for Apollo 10 to a Cape Kennedy laundi pad, scheduled today, was postponed 24 hours becatese of a minor problem. ■ Apollo 10, commanded by Air Forre Col. Thomas P. Stafford, is scheduled to orbit the moon with ,a lunar module in May — paving the way for a landing by two members of the Apollo 11 crew in July. FEARS REPITITION “I am concerned with the Kafka-like execution by commission on an unproven charge. If the voice of legitimate business 'can be stifled in this manner, i wonder what product or service will be next obliterated by a statistical shadow,” Jones explained. Jones believes that any successful unopposed move Inevitably will be repeated and extended. “I wonder when rights of other manufacturers, other media may be assumed by probability rather than certainty, when the administrative act of licensing will be converted into outright suppression. “The use of cigarettes is a medical question; the arbitrary banning of their advertising—however insipidly stupid it may be—is a constitutional question. And one, I hope, that is soon answered by the Congress,” the adman said. Jones maintains there is no product made, no product advertised, from automobiles to aspirin, which does not have a negative potential due to situation or circumstance. He added that other media and industries should not look at the FCC opinion as a tobacco-television problem. “Constitutional rights are neither selective nor negotiable,” he added. Dr. A. P. Ulbrich will give a color slide lecture on NllicHigan plants and shrubs that cause allergies to thousands of local residents at a meeting of the Bloomfield Hills Camera Club in the Oanbrook Hall of science tonight at 8. Dr. Ulbrich, a Troy resident is known nationally for his work in allergies and skin irritants. He has made several hundred slides of local plants and flowers that are. the common enemy of man. Negroes End Sit-in at PCH By MARY SUNDSTROM More than 250 Central High School black students dispersed just before noon today following a three-hour sit-in during which they insisted that the school board meet with them today to discuss their demands. Pontiac Schools Supt. Dr. Dana P. Whitmer addressed the students at 11:25 a.m. and told them (hat he and as many of the board menibers as could attend would meet with them at 7:30 tonight at the Central High auditorium. , rington they were not satisfied with the way their demands and pfoposals were handled at last Thursday night’s board of education. They vowed to continue the demonstration until the board agreed to meet With them in a public meeting. Whitmer earlier had proposed a meeting with a delegation of students, but the demonstrators insisted th^ wanted a meeting that black students irt flic could attend. Other students in the 2,100 student school were detained in homerooms until the 11:30 bell, to avoid any trouble in the passing of classes, Errington said. Two staff members of the Oakland County Prqsecutor’s office conferred with school officials and police at the school at midmorning. They did not take any action. * i ★ Whitmer asked that the demonstrators disperse at the 11:30 a.m. bell and go to their classes. He also asked that all nonstudents leave the bqilding. Several black adults and black students from other schools participated in and observed the demonstration. The sit-in began at 8:30 a.m., the opening of the school day. Demonstrators told Central Principal Garth Elr^ Dr. Robert Turpin, acting chairman of the school board in the absence of president Monroe Osmun, who is out of town, attended a meeting of school administrators just before the announcement of tonight’s meeting. Several police officers stood by during the demonstration in the school hallways and in cars' outside in the event of any call for arrests. Errington said there had been a possibility of arrests under city ordinance for disrupting classes. Because the fire brigade refused to go to the scene without police protection, the library staff put out the fire. Damage was restricted to the main doer of the library and an American vehicle parked outside which was also burned. On Parkinson's Disease Black students, members of the recently-organized Black Student Union, had appeared before the board of education last Thursday, presenting a list of nine demands that they insisted be acted upon immediately. Among the demands were: a reversal ? of the decision to build a prophsed new high school on Pontiac State Hospital grounds (they prefer a center city site at Bagley and Orchard Lake), mwe black teachers and administrators, free bus transportation for all students and an investigation of all Pontiac teachers regarding racist attitudes and discriminatory actions. Drug B^kthrough Seen PHILADELPHIA Stap-lnto-Sty|as Gulotte Dress a Cotton Twill a Kodal® and Cotton Regulars to $9.99 at Simms This group includes a woven toblecloth check coulette of Kodel polyester and cotton with stand-o-woy collar, and a big ii dustrial zipper up the front. Aqua and white check. A cotton twill culotte dress thot zips up the bock in espresso brown with vy trim. Also cotton twill culotte skirt in espre brown with white trim. Sizes 8 to 16. Not all sizes in an styles. First quality. -Main Floor 100% DuPont Orion Knit 2-Pc. Co-Ordinates Regulars to $12.88 2-pc. style, 100% DuPont., Orion knit co-ordinates with cardigan style short sleeve tops ad straight skirts. Spring and summer colors in-elude mint green, ' yellow, gold, blue pnd pink. Sizes 8 16. -Main Floor Watar Rapallant 100% Nylon Men’s Zip Front Nylon Jacket a Firat Quality a Ameridan Mada ■ Men's Oxford nylon jacket with^full front nylon zipper, is cleverly styled with pockets hidden under- the smart horizontal stripe. Adjustable cuffs, and water repellent, 100% nylon. Sizes S-M-L-XL j in green or dark blue. —Basement Men’s Canvas '^Oxfords & Loafers . Thick Crepe Seles .American Made ' Regulars to $3.9S Ut Simms f Comfortable convas uppers ox-Pfords and slip-on styles with thick ^crepe soles. Choice of gore style rloafers or 3 or 4 eyelet ties with cushioned innersole. Choice -of navy, f brown or block in sizes 6’/^ to 12. — Basement SIMMS..?*. How to Keep Teens Off Drugs (Continued FroQi Page One) their children away from using mind-affecting drugs? ★ ★ ,★ How much of, flie complete story about Variouh drugs do young people and. children know? How can you tell if someone smoking marijuana, or taking LSD or other drugs? WHY NOW? Why did the great tum-on with drugs come along now? What benefits do drug users say they find? What harms may various drugs cause? Just what are all these dru^, new and old? * * What should parents do if teen-agers or college student? become dependent on drugs? ^ What is the argument 811 about oyer legalization of marijuana, or reducing the penalties for it? There are of course no simple, pat answers to these and ofter questions. WHAT CAN PARENTS DO For a majority of young people, observers remark, the encounter with mind-affecting drugs appears as a flirtation, a one-time or one-in-a-while event, with users sure they can take it or leave it. But some authorities say such experimentation can amount to drug roulette—that some young people particularly susceptible to various drugs, can become dependent, and get hurt, badly hurt, from what they intended as a rather innocent adventure. The “drug scene” is part of a larger one. For the truth is that American society is heavily a pill society. Its people for years have been swallowing billioiis of and capsules, including tranquilizers. ® American society tolerates alcohol and nicotine, both of which technically are drugs, and millions of people abuse both of diem. It has long had a corps of addicts hooked on heroin or opium, but fewer now than 30 hr 40 years ago. PILLS FOR EVERYBODY Many among a huge variety of drugs are taken legitimately, prescribed for medical benefits. But there Is also a greet black market among some potent drugs, and illegal manufacture or importation.' Each year, says the Food and Drug A^inistration, billions of sedative and pep pills are diverted to illegal use and ultimate misuse. That means enough pills or tablets per person per year to “keep everyone in the United States awake and jumping for a week, and enough barbiturates to keep them in a stupor for a week.” The newer element in the nation’s drug'problem is the rather sudden spread of drugs that induce fantasies or hallucina-I, or that “expand the mind.” ’This drug problem is here. It is now. It is big. It is apparently growing bigger. ANSWERS NEEDED And it has set loose a storm of emotion that confuses the issues, and that, blocks effective answers. Part of the problem is “a tyranny of opinion, attitude and belief in the absence of knowl-lid Dr. Helen H. Now-lis. University of Rochester psychologist and director of' the drug education project of the Nation?! Association of Student Personnel Administpttprs. ★ ★ 1 ★' Many parents are baffled or alarmed because the drug scene is something totally outside any of their own personal experience. Many cannot help wondering whether their children will remain immune to the appeal of present drugs, or to a raft of new drugs which experts predict will inevitably come along. Many parents are far more alarm^, some experts say, than they really need be. REAL FACTS But practically all agree that parents are not likely to get very far unless they know the real facts about different drugs. Onl^ .with knowledge can they givd sound counsel. Youngsters and students gen-wally know a good deal more parents about mind-influencing drugs. But they may also tend to believe what they choose on a controversial subject. And they usually learn about drugs from their own companions—not all of them well or fully informed. Parents are wrong, for exam-ple,4f they argue that marijuana is a “narcotic’’ or that it is Readers can obtain a booklet on drugs and narcotics by sending $1 to: ’The Pontiac Press Teaneck, N.J. 07666 physically addictive. The reasons why it Is not, iand why parents co^d honestly have been misled into thinking it is, are explained later. The point that authorities make here is that parents get into trouble if they do insist marijuana is a narcotic, or if they lump all drugs together as being equally bad. “Once the youngster can prove the parent is wrong about a big points, he very likely takes the position-‘Now I can’t believe anything you say at all,’ ” says one psychiatrist. “Any drug education which is not scrupulously honest will fail with the kids,” a psychologist adds. “()nce you exaggerate, you lose them.” (Tomorrow: Why the drug ex-plosion is occuring now—and how extensive it is) Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. SIMMS OPEN TMITE 111 9pji TUES. & WED. 9 am to 5:30 pm FREEMRKING... rod, downtown parking mall — just stops from Simms' front doors for 1 -hour. Hovo tickot stompod at timo of purchoso (oxcopt on Tobacco and Bovorago itoms). ‘CHARGE IT' at SIMMS Uso our 30-day, samo as cash plan on buys of $10 to $150 or uso your MIDWEST BANK CARD. 'Blacks Eager to Integrate' Animal's Birfhdayj Is Remembered PHILADELPHIA (^) - Four years ago, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ruff, now of Washington, D.C., gave to the Philadelphia Zoo a beady-eyed kusimanse — a small brown burrowing animal related to the mongoose — they named “Goosey.” 'They had found herj on a garbage dump in Liberia, 'Vest Africa. I The Ruffs remembered: Goosey’s fifth birthday recently! by sending her a present — a wood rattle with a bell inside. : •KEVli DETROIT (UPI) ^ Racial attitudes in postriot Detroit find the majority of white people are hesitant over f u 11 - s c a 1 e te-tegration while most blacks are eager to integrate, an indepth social and psychological study has reported. Only 26 per cent of the whites interviewed demonstrated tegrationist attitudes compared to 89 per cent of the blacks who favored full integration, the study said. ★ ★ ★ Directed by Dr. Elliott Luby, associate director of the Lafayette Clinic in Detroit, study found the greatest danger for racial explosion comes from small minority of extremists on both sides. “These are intensely angry and profoundly frightened men, both black and wldte, who will attempt to move us toward more violence and a paranoid restructuring of all race relations in the city,” the study said. TINY MINORITY Sqme 16 per cent of the whites favored segregation as opposed to 2 per cent of the blacks, the study said. A ★ ★ -Of the white segregationists, 67 per cent didn’t finish high school i^ile,ohly 3 per cent of them had* any college training. At the average of 55, they were 14 years older than the average liberal white’s age 41. The study pointed out that 11 times as many white in-tegrationists hud gone to college as segregationists. Seventy per cent of the liberals had finished high school. New Selection of Spring and Summer filin' fdries 98 North Saginaw St. SIMMS.?* NO DOWN l>AYMENT, 36 MONTHS TO PAY Oood Old Fashioned Quality From Kitehenaid, At Today’s Prices. & Sm4- TEL HURON SHOPPING CENTER - FE 3-7879 1560 Union Lake Road. Union Lake 363>6286 Approximately 45" widths 65% Kodel and 35% Cotton 30% Polyester 70% Cotton 50% Kodel and 50% Cotton 1Q0% Cotton in Brown and White >irst Quality-Seconds and Run of the Mill You'll find hundreds of uses for these easy care cotton, and cotton blend wash and wear fobrics. Approximately 45 inch widths, in first quality, seconds ' and run of the mill quality. And you'll shades of pink, blue, green, yellow, brown for sheets Ond pillowc.ises, etc. KitcheiiAid DISHWASHIRS TAKEAKITCHENAID HOLIDAY FROM DISHWASHING CHOOSE mOSA! • BUILT-INS — with Cuttom CelorMi cabinets to perfactly match ANY Kitchen Color Docor • FRONT UQOING CGNVERTIBLE PORTABLES - tho portoblo dishwoshor thot con bo permonontly instollod. • TOP LOADING PORTABLES - for comfroo diihwosh- • OPEN EVERY NIGHT •TIL 9 * PLENH OF FREE PARKING County's Rec Facilities Offer Varied Activities Recreation areas and programs as sponsored by the Oakland County Parks and Recreation Commission will this year give county residents a variety ol dioices. The Springfield-Oaks area, some 225 acres located near Davisburg. provides a nine-hole golf course, hiking and nature trails and a picnic area, ♦ * * Beach facilities to be constructed on the Mill Pbnd should be ready for use in July, according to Kenneth VanNatta, county director. An activities center, an additional nine-hole golf course, a playground, Little League ball field, softbajl field, horseshoe pitching courts, badminton ■. a!id tennis courts are currently in the development process. CAMPING POPULAR At Groveland-Oaks. 181 acres on the headwaters of the TTiread River, camping, is popular,. Beach facHitlcs on Stewart Uke have been Improved and enlarg^ and a small marina is to be constructed. VanNatU said the children's play area, the activities building and campsite facilities are to be enlarged and repaired where necessary. New roads are to be built and new sanitary facilities constructed. * A * At Waterford-Oaks, 110 acres on the westo'ly limits of Pontiac, VanNatta plans development of existing facilities to house programs for the handicapped, recreation craft shows, a performing-arts caiter, a music fesUval site, programs for the elderly, and the area has been designated as home for the 1969 Soap Box Wby. Independenceklaks, 337 acres on the hoKlwaters of the Clinton River, and Addison-Oaks, 700 acres in Addison township, are sUll in the preliminary pl^ of development and acquisition. IVe areas currently offer informal en-jewment in a natural setting. : AAA Total develoi»nent costs of the five anws are estimated at $2.6 million, Van Na^ said. He estimates all costs can be from currently voted millage for recreation. THE PONTIAC PRESS Four Youths Arrested in Thefts From Trucks UTICA — Four youths from Utica and Shelby Township were arrested here Saturday night in connection with the theft of more than $300 worth of equipment from Michigan Bell Telephone Co. trucks last week, police said. Police reported most of the equipment has been recovered. Two of the youths are in the custody of their parents while the other two are being held in Macomb County Juvenile Detention Home. All of the youths will be arraigned in Jlivenile Court. MONDAY, MAHCn 10, 1900 A^4 haHlews #. T.W. « —Vi 21 Persons Killed on State's Roads During Weekend Pontlic Pris> Fhoto NEW SHOPPING CENTER — Under construction by the , Milford Construction Co. on East Commerce Road in Milford, wiH include an A&P supermarket, a King Discount store, a this center is scheduled for opening in early June. Tenants barbershop and dry-cleaning and laundry establishments. Bloomfield Twp. Laments Neglect of Telegraph Rood Disturbed Children to Be PTA Topic , ROCHESTER — “Programs and Tachniques for Helping Emotionally Disturbed Children'’ will be tha topic &>r tonight's meeting of the WoMward School PTA. Charles Kotting, consulting supervisor of the adjusted studies program of the Oakland Intermediate School District, will be the guest speaker. Movies will also be shown and a discussion period w# follow. AAA The meeting will be held in the multipurpose room of the school, at 312 Woodward, and will fiegln at 8 p.m. with Election of PTA officers for the 1969-70 sdhooi year. The ^blic may attend. BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -■ Concern for the pUght of highway M59 in western Oakland County is fast giving an in-feriorlty complex to the police and government personnel of this township. Township officials have been talking long and loud about their road problem — Telegraph — but,’'as Police Chief Robert L. Snell put it, “No one seems to be listening.” AAA Tdairaph li serving a conununill Ihgt only 18 ye*ra ago had a popvtiatlon of approximately 3,800. Today, the township's population is near 45,000. Chief Snell laments the fact that construction of 1-75 and 1-896 has failed to ease the traffic load on Telegraph as highway department officials had figured. A heavy increase in truck traffic on the highway has added further complications. CLOSEST ROUTE . Snell explained that truckers aW many commuter still travel the highway that is the closest between two points, and Telegraph, in many cases, serves this purpose more than the expressways do. “This fact, the highway department apparently didn’t count on. Since the traffic patterns have proved that usage of Telegraph has not and will not decrease, the only alternative is to completely reengineer the highway,” Snell said. ,A . A ^ A He polnted.out, to 8 reqent interview, that a continuing multiplicity of “stopgap” measures have failed to make significant contributions to improving safety conditions on the highway. AAA Total automobile accidents jumped more than 25 per cent from 324 in 1967 to 435 in 1968. More than 300 persons were injured in Telegraph accidents in 1968. Accidents at the increasingly critical Long Lake-Telegraph Intersection more than doubled from 26 to 55. 6-MILE STRETCH Traffic Leutenant Richard Reuther Child Guidance Clinics' Annual Meeting Near The annual meeting bf the Oakland Child Gudiance Clinics Inc. will be 6:30 pgm. Wednesday at the Holiday Inn, 1801 S. Telegraphy Bloomfield Township. Dr. Andrew S. Watson, professor of law and psychiatry at the University of Midiigan, will discuss “Child Guidance Oinics and tiie Crisis of the Juvenile Courts,” Troy Comrnission to Mull Regulations on Motorcycles TROY — A proposed ordinance to regulate' the use of motorcycles will be considered by the city commlssimi when it meets tonight at 7:30. Suggested wording for the ordinance was submitted at last week’s comnUssion meeting by City Attorney Stanley Burke. A * * However, commissioners at that time postponed action on the proposal, saying they needed time to study the ordinance and consider whether any improvements .might be necessary. 'The draft submitted by the city attorney calls for all cycles to be equipped with mufflers, and to be started and accelerated without causing excessive noise. WOULD UMIT USE It would also limit use of motorcycles on residential streets to between the hours of 7 a.m. and 10 p.m., except for persons going to their residences, and would require adequate brakes and lights. The proposal also bans operation of a motorcycle engine when the vehicle Is standing or parked, and alt use of motorcycles on streets, alleys, driveways or parking lots for testing purposes. AAA Violation could result in a $500 fine or 90qks. ‘a a a , Commissioners last week took no action after a public hearing on the ^78,120 project, asking fOr information Mrs. Beadh said she had expected to receive thousands of dollars. She said she wiii so sbodwd at die amount offered that she refused to accept it. » : ■ ★ ■ . .A .A ■ The probate court ordered the county treasurer to hold the money until Mrs. BMdisacreeBtotakeU. It has been in tbe county treasurer’s office ever suux. O'Hara to Speak at Rites for School UTICA — UticaV Democratic CMgressman James G. O’Hara will be the featured speaker at the dedication of the Utica Community School District’s new Stevenson Community I^ Schwl at 2 p.m. Sunday. The $4.8-million building houses 2,100 students. It is located at 39701 Dodge Park Road in Sterling Heights. Stevenson High Sdxral contains 92 classrooms. It <4>ened in February 1968. The {Hdncipal is Dr. Rrriiert Ulridi. The school also contains a 2,500-8eat gymnasium, a 700-spectator swimming pool, an amphitheater seating 120 persons and a cafetorium whidi serves as a lunch room or theater tor up to 708 AU residents of the Utica School District are invited to the dedication. ACCEPT MEDAL - Mf. and Mrs. George E. Whe^y award of tiie Bronze Star for their son. Army Spec. 4 Raymond L. _ _ was kUted in tbe Vietnam fighting last faH. Ihe'award Is presented by GoL Ge^ M. Bush, d^iHity commandar of the U.S. Army TtafliiAuUKnotive C Warren. ■ ..... , Dead Area GTs Parents Receive Son's 2 Medals ORION TOWNSHIP - Mr. and N George E. Whelidey^ 3895 Mill La have accepted po^umous awards of Bronze Star and Pmple Heart iped for their son, Army Spec. 4 Ra^ood Whelpley, lulled in Vietnam combat 1 Sept. 5. The awards were presented by ( George M. Bush, Deputy Commander the U.S. Army Tank-Automotive C( mand (TACOM), at a ceremony TAGOM headquarters in Warren. A A . .A . Assigned to Co. A, 3rd Bn., 18 Infantry, lOlst Airborne Divisio Whelpley died from wounds receii when his unit engaged a hostile force a fire fight. - pheli^y, 21, graduated from Li OriOT Ifigh School in June, 1965, and tended Northern Michigan Universi He entered the service in September 1 and arrived in Vietnam in March il968. THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MARCH 10, 1909 A—5 "YOUR HEALTH" SEVEN DANGER SIGNALS 1. Raeurring KaadacKat 5. Narvou* tantian and/ 2. N«ck pain or "crick" dixiinott. n 3. Grating and popping 6. Ganaral body mutcia noita whan turninc* haod. 4. Bockocha or lag'p 7. Pain balwaan D. H. WARNING If any of thoso symptoms ptrtist CALL YOUR CHIROPRACTOR H. Alexander 8-Day Ordeal Ends for Grizzled Utah Miner LARK, Utah (AP) - Tough, grizzled WllUam (Buck) Jones relaxed in a hosfdtal bed today, freed from the tiny cdl of rock that held him captive d^ in a Utah mountain for eight days. Jcmes, 61-yearH)ld father of 11, was brought to safety Sunday night by rescuers who had tunneled tediously through 25 fe of rock to his cubicle. I After an emotional reunlmi 108 N. SAGINAW ST, - FE 3-7114 OPEN TONITE to 9 - TUES. 9:30 to 5;30 SAVE »5,07 Tonit^ or Tues. on This SOLID STATE TABLE RADIO ismmu • As shown —compact and hand- I some 8-transistor table radio ► Instant-on, too. • No money J down — 50c weekly. with his big family at the mine entrance, Jones was ndiisked 20 miles to a Salt Lake City hospital for examination and rest. He looked weary, but obviously was In fiigh spirits. 1 want a shower!” he shouted.' “I think I need it.” The echo rang down the hospital corridor. SHAVED HIMSELF He got a bath instead. Then he siiaved himself, had a dinner of ham and eggs and watched a television replay of his rescue. A hospital spokesman said there would be no immediate interviews. i It was a tearful, joyful scene when the tunnel train carrying Jones to safety reached the surface after a 4%-mile ride from the shaft in which he was trapped by a cave-in March 1. A cheer went up from more than 300 persons crowding the tunnel opening, including Jones’ 76 Fellows Gets $L4 Million Aid NEW YORK m — The Alfred P. Sloan Foundation has awarded fellowships totaling I ^ $1.4 million to 76 young physical | scientists on the faculties of 4411 colleges and universities. ' The two-year fellowships, announced Si^nday, carry an average annual stipend of $8,-750 for basic research. entire family. Her eyes glistai-ing, Mrs. Jones cried, “Buck, I love you:” His children shout^, ‘Hi, dad." "Hello, rpother,” the weary, bearded Jcxies said to his wife. Then the two spent a private moment in the covered mine car before fellow miners carried him to an ambulance. “His kisses were very dusty,” said daughter Velma Jones-Mrs. Jones said he was “very tired” but had laughed and talked with her. ★ ★ ★ A nurse said Jones did not appear to have any cuts or bad bruises, but had “awfully red knees, probably from having to kneel a lot.” for him to crouch in. DANGER FOR RESCUERS The rescue climaxed days of danger and frustration for Jones’s quarters were about 5jnel with diamond bits also raniGerald Charles, 25, jumped feet wide, and only high enough into problems. The rescue was free. finally made through a tunnel | For 3% days, there was only which workers began chopping!silence as rescue workeris pick-through solid rock Thursday. ied .slowiy through the rubl^le-Rescuers had to puli JonesfThen Jones startled them through a passageway less than Wednesday morning by calling workers who risked their ownjtwo feet, wide, but he was far out: lives in the narrow shaft of the I from helpless. "When are you going to get lead. Zinc and silver mine. j‘GOD SAVED HIM’ T"® here?” Officials had feared a new “He came right down a lad-FOOD AND WATER cave-in which could have(j(>p himself,” said rescuer A day iater a pipeline less ^®jwalt Graham. Another rescuer,i‘^'3" ‘WO inches in diameter . T" . Lack Olancy, said, "H, believe. S A direct route through the | God saved him. Nobody is going 12-to-15 feet of mud and rock to change his mind on that.” which sealed Jones in the tunnel Jones was trapped when the was abandoned after four days!side of a tunnel in which he and ............ because of cave-in danger. Ao another miner were working ^remarked, “is that G^ had his 'attempt to driil an escape tun-caved in. The other miner,larms around me.” Jones with food and water while crews inched their way toward him. , * * * “Ail I have to say,” Jones 7- loOic FE 4.1555 ANY FURTHER to SAVE MONEY! FRIGID AIRE’ S Newest ‘Jet Action’ 2-Speed» 3-Cycle Find *189 PERMANENT PRESS AUTOMATIC WITH THE LONGER.LASTING ROLLER-DRIVE TRANSMISSION! No gears to jam, no belts to break, no pulleys to come loose — the nmplified .Roller Drive Transmission has fewer moving parts to make possible a 1-o-n-g-e-r Frigidaire Warranty! Also has a Look-In Window on lid to watch washing progress —Jet Action Lint Removal — Automatic Detergent Dispenser, etc. Only.$189 GEN£RA£#EUSCTR1C ‘Auto’ Dishwasher AVhirlpool ‘Auto’ Gas Dryer GENERAL^fiieCTRlC Automatic Washer «118 <^118 4^148 SUNDAY BARGAIN in full quality GE Portable diihwather! Hai built-in drain pump, soft vinyl cushioned interior — plus many more popular GE features. ' Easy Terms, ar 90 Days SameasGath INSTALLATION INCLUDED per Miehigan Consolidated. Gas Co. pro-grsm. The *P0qpeMent Prase* model with Air atuPWlnff Oiy settings. Safely dries ALL fUbrii)s. Easy Terms, or 90 Days Fully automatic—with big size, full-family capacity! Has new, improved p .. . fine porcelain tub, top and lid. Mm HOUSEKEEPING OF PONTIAC 51W. HURON FE 4-1555 FREE PARKING OPEN MON.s THURS. and FRl. TILL 8:30____ ‘BUCK, I LOVE YOU’-Miner WflUam (Buck) Jones is comforted by his wife after his rescue yesterday from a Utah mine in which he was entombed eight days. Rescuers had tunneled tediously through 25 feet of rock to reach his cubical. When the tunnel train carrying Jones to safety reached the surface, Mrs. Jones cried out, “Buck, I love you.” DOGFIGHT OVER SINAI-Photo sequence (starting at top) was taken by Israeli plane as it shot down an Egyptian MIG21 jet during a dogfight yesterday over Israeli-occupied Sinai, acebrd-ing to the Israeli army which released the pictures. SINGER PAYS TAB — Julius LaRosa (right) picked up the tab Saturday for the Wbdding of Pueblo crewman PO l.C. Don McClarren, 34, of Johnstown, Pa., and Eileen Salas of San Diego. The couple had planned AP Wirtphota a Las Vegas wedding on a shoestring budget; but LaRosa, a former Navy man, heard about it and spent about $350 on a reception at the Riviera Hotel. DIFFEaiENT DEMONSTRATION—While students across the nation stage demonstrations against things, high school students in Niles staged a Thank You March after voters ‘-K, APWlraphtta passed a 19.5-mill school operating levy. The student* marched from the^ high school to the city hall. . I , / . ^ , V 48 West Huioa Street THE PONTIAC PRESS Pontiac, Mtehigan 48056 MONDAY, MARCH 10. 1969 ' HOWAH* H. Fitmuai*. II Pretldtnt ‘Md PuMliiwr It Seems to Me Mother Nature’s Wrath Was Felt Across Nation Mother Nature is nuts. Never in the two centuries of existence allotted thus far to your humble scrivener, has the western hemisphere teetered, tottered and staggered as it has this winter. California has had so much rain they’ve broken all records for volume of water in a given number of days, hours or weeks. Many lathletic contests have been irtterrupted and some actually cancelled. Florida has had a miserable winter for Florida. Beginning back at Christmastime returning visitors unfolded dreary tales of days with winds, falling mercury and rain. What’s wrong? Wliat gives? - ★ ★ ★ Texas and the middle U.S. southern strip have been hit hard and even Hawaii has been tormented. One all-star football game played there e gnuits, boto because to the lOtoote Institute of Tejchto^ kng ran tt limits the aches fraetd the coosideraUe cumtilation of new contributiflBs made by bask knowledge, and because to the researdi to devdqiment of short run it limits the number Science can survive slim pickings over the short term. But too lengthy a Starvation diet would kill the goose ^ rniliM Pnw h SMbMS hr -Harold A. Fitzgbrald of OrtonvUIe; 12nd birthday. / The 32-yaar-old virtuoso - new products. It found ttmt 70 per ceRt of the std» that rasiittad In andi d sdentiSts who can tratent Dr. GeoTie A, Olah, |l I THE PONTIAC PREfe>S, MONDAY, MAliCII 10, 1969 Vacationing Press Reporter Skis at Sestriere/Italy (EDITOR’S NOTE ~ This i r second in a series'on skiing ci Europe, written by vacation-1 ing staffer Lois Friedkmd.) conglomeration of hotels, In-I eluding the 17-story-high Grand Hotel Duchi D’Aosta and the _____ ^eand Hotel Principidi PIW- • r I* V .. ^ hotel. The Sestriere is a tiny Italian ski rooms in the better hotels are village cut into the mountain-similar to those in the good side - where the'European jet hotels in the United Sates set and J The Principidi Piedmont,' of- Italian working-^ ,fers a man wait side ' theater, by side for the villages In Italy, Sestriere is full,empties the dirty snow into a of well-dressed skiers and chic I tf ash can which he trun^es mothers caring for little children while the rest of the family is on the slopes. ski lift. It was begun as an investment by owners of the Fiat Motor Co., some 35 years ago. Today the ski runs, reached by cable car and mile-long T-bars and Poma lifts, cover miles of mountainous terrain. The village itself is solarium, . a movie s heated outdoor swimming pool and sauna' baths. Hay Drops Aid Wild Horses A number of restaurants offer Italian food at all prices. There are several discoteques and a few piano bar-type nightclubs. WEEKEND SKIERS Surrounding the hotels are many more spai^an apartment houses usually occupied by the working Italians who ski oi weekends and during vacations. We are staying in an apartment rented by Italians whom we met in the United States last year. They come to Sestriere every weekend. It Is a 1%-hour drive from Turin, their home. from (he top of his turtleneck one ski^alone; if hurt, he might pressive people who appear to Sestriere is located in the upper regions of the Piedmont Mountains. The ski area, an extended range beginning about r the village, is The town is very clean. A little old man walks through the central district all day pushing the snow dirtied by cars onto a little shovel with a brush n of tree branches. He then 1V4 miles below mostly above the timber line. LONG, LONG RUNS A skier can start the day by going up a mile-long T-bar and work his way into Sestriere via long, long runs of perfect snow. There is no ice In the spring because the strong sun softens the snow. Everyone sports a tan sweater up. We took the T-bar up and spent the day on an area which was not difficult to ski, for those who have skiied areas in either the eastern or the western U.S. Walter Griyw*ci, Vllf NortTiBn J. Mllltr, Rochtslar. Walter F. Cooley, Ilford, schesior. 2U0V, ( _____ . tartlflan, 71 ________ Leo C. Hllke, 4803 Cresibrook. Paul A. Lynch, Hlland. Dale G. Nu«i, Milford. Raymond M. Bloodworm, 37 E, f not be discovered until the next believe in taking action when day. A mountainside is too irritated. We had stopped In Biiiy l. chaprm,.................. ... ’’ 1 Robert C. Flansburfl, Holly. large to police in the same front of a friend’s apartment in j gJgSrt c 'Gambia HiVaVd^^^ manner as Michigan’s Boyne [Turin late one evening on the; S;?L°n i?Xr"'inmon skiing areas are checked daily, way to Sestriere. j ...... “ ------^ - We discovered — much to ourj Apparently the six of us were william B.' Kloval ___ delight — that we could keep too noisv because an irate third-1 AKVKil The runs are, howe -*^^Mpace with our Italian hosts, floor apartment owner dumped wwWlltH UrTEN senSlton™oT skitog »AVE BLADDER IRRITATION sensation _ of ski g “Nconsiderably better. Most us — without a word of warn-- common Kidney or madfirr irrim- real sKier ureams OI. [when they are very young and * * * ItriunK‘1fr“ NEVER ALONE jhave no fear of the mountain We ran inside the building; i may lo«e sleep and have Headacheal The Europeans always ski in I itself. but, when we came out 30| ,,reMed.'?n ""eh large groups, waiting for each! * ★ ★ minutes later, he was waiting! other at regular intervals. No! The Italians are a very ex-and we were doused again. ’ ipamotc MINDEN, Nev. (ff).— Seventy wild horses marooned in deep snow after fleeing poachers “are definitely picking strength” after twice-weekly hay drops since Feb. 26, says a sponsor of the effort. The mustangs are stranded on a ride of the 9,000-foot Pine Nut Mountains east of Lake Tahoe. The snow is as deep as 15 feet, and the hn'ses were starving until the Pine Nut Mustang Association was fexmed. The apartment looks much like the Inside of summer cabins in northern Michigan, except that you must turn on all hot water when you come in. The water is heated in special units by the bath (no shower) and near the kitchen sink. CHIC MOTHERS All perishable food is kept on the balcony — there are no refrigerators — and portable tabletop burners are used — no stoves. One of the more expensive ski “We’re going to continue to drop hay until the animals can return to their own habitat under their own strength,” said Ed Court, owner of a helicopter service who is paying for the air operation, worth $170 an hour. “If we take them down now, they would become prey to poachers who take them in and sell them for the meat that is used for dog food.” Two pilots brave 7(k^mile-an-hour winds and “it’s extremely dangerous,” Court said Sunday. 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XNH PAGE LAYER Coke Mixes ■■■■ TOIltTTISSOI White Cloud 3 SOFT-PLY rove 2’ROLL PACKAGES Facial Tissue 3«59 ,V7' A—8 THK PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. HARCH 10, 1969 Trial Focuses Next on Sirhan s Mind LOS ANGELES (AP) - On Ihe fourth of June last year, Sirhan Bishara Sirhan mulled over ways to spend a leisurely, warm day. He says he considered the races, a gunnei-y range, a Rosicnician meeting or work on his car that night Robert F. Kennedy, he says, was not in his thoughts. Tliis day, when Californians voted in their prirnary. would make or break the quest. Sirhan, jobless but with $400 left from a $2,000 settlement for a fall from a horse., arose at V a m. and made his first decision of the day. TTio entries at Hollywood Park race track displeased him He decided not to Psychiatrists and psychologists will attempt, beginning to-“day, to interpret nine months later what was in Sirhan’s mind when he shot the senator that night. Sirhan professes not t o remember. A series of chance, spot decisions put him into position to place his stubby little $25 revolver near the senator’s head, he said last week in 3‘4 days of testimony during his trial for first degree murder. Thtt. 24 • year - old Jordanian Arab, who said he has a built-in bug ’ about Jews. Zionists and Israel, said his love for Kennedy turned to hate when he found nut about Utc New' York senator’s long-standing support of Israel. ' Kennedy, too, had a day of relaxation. Behind hinr were 8f! days of his campaign for the Democratic nomination tor president of the United States. go "1 had the idea of going target shording,” he testified. 'Tlirec days earlier, he bought a box of minialag amntunition more powerful than any he had used before. The minlmags, he said, were suggested by a .salesman who was out of Sirhan’s favorite brand. SHOOTING PRACTICE I He botight more than a half-dozen boxes of ammunition and practiced at the San Gabriel Valley Gun Club until j closing time, 5 o’clock, when alH he had left were Ihe eight cartridges In his gun. He put the gun in the back seat of his car and. en route home, stopped al a restaurant in Pasadena. games of pool and was turned down. But ^ Mistri had bought a newspaper and Sirhan looked through it. “An advertisement caught my attention,” Sirhan said. The ad was for a “Miracle March for Israel,” along Wilshire Boulevard commemorating Israel’s victory in the six-day war with the Arabs a year earlier. “Well just before Mistri had handed me the newsnaper, I wasi having in my rpind to go to the Rosicrucian meeting. I had that In mind, but that was at 8 o’clock ... I had nothing to do! ...” So, Sirhan said, he set off to; find out what the paraders “were up to.” find them, so I as almost ready; Another decision: “To go to givo up ... I spotted a store back to the party and with a very highly illuminated , coffee." . : j T u. .U . U Q Ihd you pick up your gun? interior and thought that it sir might have Something to doj Q. As a result of what has with this parade.” , happened, you know you must * * * have picked it up? The store was headquarters | A. I must have, sir. for another candidate in the ^ ^ day’s primary. Sirhan said hei . Rol»rt F. Kem|^y parked his car, leaving the gun Jo accept the in the back seat, and went into P“ of his foUowers. the store. Kennedy passed by. Sirhan was waiting. His chronology continued: At the restaurant he met a friend named Mistri, an East Indian exchange student. He' cfiallMigedAIlsm 16 a coupe Another decision. But Sirhan | said he failed to notice the' parade was for the next’day. | Sirhan. “driving like a maniac.” got lost on unfamiliar; routes but finally found Wilshire' Boulevard. NO SHOOT-UP PLAN Q Did you have in mind shooting up the Zionist parade? 1 A. Sir, at that time the gun was completely out of my mind.' I did not have anything to do with the gun ... Q. Did you have in mind Then came a crucial turning,' point, as Sirhan told it. A BIGGER PARTY “These two boys was speaking to themselves that there was a bigger party down at the Ajnbassador. Curiosity, sir, made me go down there.” Q. You didn’t know there was to be a Kennedy party there? A, No, I did not. Harlem's Powell Stands Up Crowd DAYS OPEN HOUSE CELEBRATION YOUR WAY KANSAS CITY ilfi ~ A sellout crowd of nearly 1,000 gathered at the University of Mi.ssouri-Kansas City Sunday to. hear Rep. Adam Clayton Sirhan walked into t h e powell, D-N.Y., give the final Ambassador, the length of the lecture in an Afro-American lobby and into another political series, party. Powell didn’t show up. The He had at least three gin,crowd waited an hour, then left, mixed drinks, talked to some;Officials said the ticket money people and felt “quite high.” He would be refunded, walked back to his car and got in it “but I couldn’t picture myself driving my dar at the time in the condition that I was Efforts to reach Powell in New York, Washington and Miami failed. His fee would (gimmj] SAVE NOW AT HIGHLAND lifflj PACKARD BELL STEREO HI FI SPECIAL®^ The "goodies" ore a musical package that includes 25 LP stereo record albums, a set of professional eorphones and six 8-track tape cartridges. The Cartridges zip into the handsome auto, tape player. This offer is good only with the purchase— of one of these two Packard Bell Stereos. NO MONiY DOWN Packard Bell STEREO HI-FI COMBINATION »450 Magnificent Mediterranean Styling. Solid (tot* (t*r*o hi-fi with AM-fM (t*r*o radio. Dual A.F.C. Garrard rocord changar. 8-(p*ak*r sy(t*m. ISO W. amplifier. Duel A.F.C. with Z*n*r contral. 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OPEN DAILY 10 to 9 ■> PHONE 682-2330 OAKUND MALL IN TROY l-TS at 14 Mile R4. OPEN DAILY 1C to e PNONE SIS-6Y43 to HAPPINESS THE EASY HOLIDAY WAY OPEN 7 DAYS HOURS: MON. THRU PRI. 10 to 10 A WEEK SAT. 10 A.M. to 6 P.M. SUN. 1 P.M. to 6 P.M. COURSES FOR: • HOMEMAKERS • BUSINESSMEN • SENIOR CITIZENS • CAREER GIRLS • BODY BUILDERS k Roman Steams k Finnish Saunas k Rock Steam Rooms k Private Showers k Private Dressing Rooms k Suntan Rooms k Eloctricai Mechanical Massager k Personal Supervision OVER 250 Affiliated Studios Coast-to-C^st and WORLD-WIDE 3432 West Huron Street Just West of Elisabeth Lake Road at Highland 682-5040 I' . !> „!/,//X. 01128670 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. MARCH IQ, l0r>9 Ah—9 Clock Repair Antique Clock , SpeclaliMta Sales & Service Stiff SItntf ^tfO|r 131 S. Bates, Birminichaiu 646-7377 New SEC Boss Is Tough-but in a Quiet Sort of Way Miiucll noted, Including its attempt to assess the impact institutional investors have on the market and the economy in’general. STUDYING CONtiLOMERATES The agency is also studying conglomerates to see if these corporations that gobble up companies in widely dissimilar lines of business need to be curbed and if the SEC has the power to take them on. * * * In testimony last week before SEC has entered recently, he a congressional committee WASHINGTON (AP) — He is him witih the idea he’ll lay low does a good job of getting righti While Budge likes to keep his called the “Judge” and the title or go light, on the industry.” to the heart of sotnething with a opinion to himself, he expresses says a lot about the style of At the same time, observers single question.” concern about giantism in Hamer H. Budge, new boss of figure Budge to be less an in-i ★ ★ * American business, the Securities and Exchange novater than Cohen, who kept* Another Budge-watcher saidi “Too great a concentration of Commission. gfreet constantly on edge. i there need be no concern about power—this is my own personal The quiet, closed-mouth,', .c-nwr marit the new chairman, so long as he philosophy how, doesn’t have judicial way of doing business ‘””***' maka jg courses of action anything to do with the SEC—is used by the 58-year-old former 1 While Budge spent only three where the law indicates what always something which should Idaho congressman puts him in in his pre-SEC days as a must be done. be watched,” he said, sharp contrast to his old friend t®heral judge, compared with a “He tends to be rather a ★ ★ * and predecessor, Manuel F. decade as Republican con-purist on the law, it seemed to “1 don’t care if it’s in the Cohen, who resigned last month gressman from Idaho, the time me,” hq said. “If the law says government, in private in-under pressure from President °h the bench seems to have left a plus B equals C then it dustry, the banking industry or Nixon. the more lasting mark. doesn’t matter how activist or the securities industry.” ★ ★ A I “When he sits there,” an SEC nonactivist the judge is. He’ll do Questions of scale underlie, i But the new chairman who “he looks like a what the law says and nothing several areas of inquiry thej was elevated to the job'after Thinks like one too. He will'keep him from it.” ropnnti« h« ! serving as an SEC member since 1964, says there won’t be major changes’in the policy 6f tlft commission, which was criticized by Nixon during the presidential campaign as I “heavy handed.” While refusing to comment on the Nixon charges. Budge said “I think the SEC will continue to do its job just as it has in the* past,” he said in an interview. * STORMY WEATHER And so do his subordinates, many of whom admit they will miss the stormy weather that seemed to mark the Cohen years. “Nixon has ;^cked a man who’s 110 per cent behind ouri conducting its own hearings on conglomerates. Budge said he felt investers may be the big losers when the questionable financing holding some con-i glomerates together comes unstuck. * * * It’s the commission’s job, he told a reporter, to see that investers know the risks and go in with their eyes open. “'The basic role of the SEC is to see to it to the best of its ability that the securities market places are honest and efficient,” Budge said, “and that the products — the securities—marketed in those places are honest products.” Thief Makes Off With Orange Pig RICHMOND, Va. W - Somebody stole John Glave’s orange piq. The five-foot high, painted metal pig vanished from the vard of Glave’s Richmond home. It once adorned the entrance to a novelty shop he owns. Glave valued it at $500. emunit ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY ^ THE WORD FOR MEN'S AND BOYS' TOWNCRAFT KNITS OF FORTREL^ IS einorcemehF programs,’’ one attorney said. : “Judge Budge is very en-, Torceinent-minded,” he added.* “I don’t think it would be right to say the President has picked 'HubofWorld' Is Going for j Only $7,000 \ PODUNK CENTER, Iowa (J) —^ The whole town of Podunk' Center is for sale for a grand total of $7,000. The butt of thpusands of jokes, the town consists of one acre in south-central Iowa, and has a gas station, grocery store and cafe—all under one roof— and a four-unit motel. _____ The town isn’t on any road maps, is too small for the postal guide and doesn’t have a zip code number, but its mayor, city manager and owner, Homer Weeks, advertises it as “the hub of the world.” Weeks, 41, says he must sell .the town because burns received last August had forced him to close it down. I ★ ★ ★ ’The town’s population reached lits peak of 21 in the 1930s when* I four families lived there. comfoTtobtet SAtE Center-Wide Madnen - 6 P.M. to 9 P.M. MARCH 14 rjwL i-3 Guys don't know what they're missing 'til they discover the easy care and good looks of FortreP polyester knits. Both dad pnd son will enjoy the trim-fit no-bind comfort of these fashions. Mom will enjoy their easy care. They wash and wear like nothing else! Don't even need tumble drying ... drip dry without puckers or wrinkles! A. Boys’ Mock Turtleneck Stripe knits in a handsome crepe stitch. Assorted wide and narrow stripes. Lots of colors to choose from. Sizes 6-18... -3.50 B. Boys’ FasMdn Xotlar Mesh Stitch knits are cooll White or assorted solids. Hemmed short sleeves. Sizes 6 to 18... ............3.50 C. Boys’ Tipped or Embroidered Mock Turtles. Handsome solids to choose from as well as white. In a lightweight mesh stitch. Sizes 6-18.... .2,99 D. Men’s Double Knit Mock Turtleneck in your choice of white, blue, green, maize or beige solids. Sizes S-M-L-XL ......... ...........5.98 Men's Scramble Stitch MockTurtle with tipped neck,, ribbed cuffs and bottom. Maize, blue, green, tan. Sizes S-M-L-XL....... ............ Boys’ Double Knit Penn-Prest Slacks of For-tr»l* polyester. Solid cord effectf-or checks. Regulars and slims, sizes 8-20..........8.98 ■ELANESE iP-ORTREL A CONTEMPORARY FASHION FIBER SHOP MONDAY THRU SATURDAY . . . TILL 9 P.M. CHARGE IT! MIU A WOODWARD Noithwood Shopping Canter e TELEGRAPH A SO. LAKE Bloomfield Tpwnthip e 12-MILE A VAN DYKE Tech Plaza Shopping Canter e FORT A EMMONS A—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. MARCH 10, 1969 Mothers Who Care Help Johnny Read OMAHA, Neb (AP) - Johnny can read better, thanks to a group of mothers who care enough to work without pay. A bucket of paint, a basement " storeroom and $88 also went Into the “skill enrichment program" at Dundee School, one of eight schools in the Omaha School District where volunteer mothers are hoping to provide programs that the schools cannot afford. "Things have happened that .never would have happened without this pri^ram," said Dundee Principal M a r a r e t Corcoran Tve never seen anything more encouraging." Tlie bucket of paint drewsed up the, converted basement classroom. The mothers trained for 10 months before their work began. And the $88, primarily fromi the Dundee Parent-Teachers! Association, provided children’s! paperback books and poster! materials. j 38 WERE HELPED , | In five months, eight mothers | have helped 38 children! overcome reading problems. Most pupils have gained a| year in reading since October,! said I^rie Conrey, Bj .second grade teacher who helped set up and direct the program. training program for volunteers based largely on the experience of the Dundee group. FEDERAL AID SOUGHT ^ And the district is seeking; $300,000 in federal funds over a three-year period to train volunteers to teach in public! and nonpublic schools. Officials limit each class to; four children, saying they learn i best when taught in small | groups. Parents must give their | permission before volunteers | may work with their child. Some second graders who once had trouble reading have jumped a book ahead because names "s of the mothers’ help, .she said regard us Every school in the district rather th plarts 'to develop a volunteer Mrs. Jack program eventually! 'The home vol district has developed a special; tended cla: Volunteers and children know each other only by first Bag-Boys Get Army Bootj --GroceriesJ^t Tbeii^Bogi officials said. ^’Th&.jvliole program probably WASHING'TON (J) - The' Spokesmen for the an-i Army has sacked a squad of lipoverty group said the pro-grocery bag-boys at a nearbyiblems with the women shoppers! post and will replace them with weren’t all the boy’s fault. | civil servants who will cost thei “All the boys hadn’t beenj government about $123,000 a saints and all the customers! year. hadn’t been saints,” Clifton!; The bag-boys, part of an an- Floor said, “but I think the wife ' tipoverty group from Washington, were fired after a series of complaints from military housewives who shop at the base supermarket at Ft. But, she It works.’’ Myer, Va. The shoppers said the boys, mostly high school dropouts with police records from Washington’s slum areas, were rude and didn’t do their work properly. One woman com- of somebody important didn’t: like it and got to the right person." TIP BOX CONTRIBUTIONS Enough shoppers liked the service to contribute to a tip box that averaged 80 cents per hour for the boys, Flood said. ’The agency made up the difference to $1.60 hourly partially from money supplied by the Ford Foundation, he said. idained-that she found her Jfen if every groceries soaked In vinegar-;, ™ The bag-bo.vs, were paid $1.60 ^ ^ an hour. 'The pay cani ei # r a« nnw p.rtl.lly from Up., with J;iSn. to work for ul^i Ptannlng'otwnteiuon, mMrira » up the dlfferSice. S according to CIVILIAN REPLACEMENTS ] sjms said Sunday bag-boys at The Arniy will replace the j the commissaries of nearby Ft. fired bag-boys with 28 civilians McNair and Ft. Bcivoir, were to be hired through civil service!recruited from high school age and paid $2.11 an hour, ac-|boys on and around the base cording to Leonard Sims of the willing to work for tips. At the Military District of Washington.! district’s other Army com-He said the money would imissary. Cameron Station — a come from congressional ap-| supply base with no residents— propriations and not t h e commissary bag-boys are hired, revenue from the store. Sims said. SHOPPERS! CLIP THE COUPONS—THEY'RE GOOD AS C^SH NEVER BEFORE. MAYBE NEVER AGAIN! One* •achvMirwainvMitory our floor medd stock and moko drastic mark downs in eortain aw spood up tho salos df thoso itomSf for a limitod timo wo art roducing tho prico ovon torthor witn coupons. Clip thorn out and bring thorn to your noarost Frsttor Storo. Tho/ro Good as Cosh. aroas. To VALUABLE COUra^ OUlEFRiTTER GuoronfMS Your Comploto Satiofaction 1*10® 1*15 r«rl.CdwrT "■jsar VALUABLE epupoaq Valuable coupoh SS&’S Spedfll Floor Model Coopoi Solel EARLY WEEK COUPON SPECIALS, RCA Color 23" CoMole ss'sS'iWJr- 399®* Hotpoint Hoc. Ronge •mwI doimnH. mm. | Wkirlpool 14 Lb. Woiher SEJifaK-jr*** ]59*® Port. Storoo Doom Solo OQOO KA. MnM. M Wmiilr- W# ftOM ' ZonMi23"WoodCoinolo YourdtomotoWyawdiMitMhifwO M iiJ%AA ransdo solor o« « ghto-ouray pikw. Mm Mm I'lVW Kelvinotor Refrigemtor SIDE-BY-SIDE Whiripool 17 Cu. Ft. Refrig. Westinghouse Combo Wlltl 4-ij.wO piMM, * t—l«* !■ U y ' ZMiith Stereo Console I o AOO W-yJ ‘■w oMiW- IqII Hotpoint Electric Range WMt SM-Chontymt ^—-249” Toppnn 30" Gos Range 129®® WestiRghouse Stereo RCA Console Stereo 2sH5''»=«330** Westinghouse Deluxe Range X tsi m q aoo Zonilh 18" Port. TV vhm»R’ ^ AOGO jwyiO mti ttnrinO. hn yMn y y Hardwick 30" Gas Range Ml wt.. l^liHiio Wffln. Ml U|JUV MM wMi IlftMl MM*. 7 7 sanm U6HINESS CMUDUNQIllllirY America's LpestWh^ GREAl WHISKEY ASnmoth American Blend 86 PROOF iASZ $085 sinss ■T4/5QT. fcPtNT XW 1/26 All, Taxes Included . suMDEO misKctr, m noof am THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MARCH 10. 1969 A—11, f |^"‘"'"3^ ^ \' Mi^. 'ff(\\ 'ifivl 'imA' ‘«ni^i ti(\' miiS IHV^* muA' ffilvk 'mu\' /im' ‘IIJ'’j jSmWj jbUnxwPj |SlT8^ |i.iK'»KMfj .;^1ivlK| ^.ii-r^p; jiirt^kfPj iuTvSu!^ ■i!lrr"4i3«pj |u!j4*!p iuR'iS OPEN MON. THRU SAT. 9 to 9 SUNDAYS. iO To 5 FOOD TOWN SUPER MARKETS Ifs a Pleasure to Shop OPEN MON. THRU SAT. 9 to SUNDAYS 10 to •;/ We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities! None Sold to 'Dealers or Minors 1S80 Highland Rd. M-SS Plait M-St at Williami Lk. Rd. OPEN SUNDAYS 1 1200 Baldwin Avt. I 0205 Caolay Lakt Rd. I SS29 Sashabaw Rd. I Garnar Columbia I Union Laka Villaca IV I OPEN SUNDAYS | pptN SUNDAYS | OPEN SUNDAYS | 2186 Highland R HYLAND PLAZA OOR. DUCR^UKE RD OPEN SUNDAYS 263 Auburn Ave. OPEN SUNDAYS PEOPLES FOOD MARKETS 1 465 E. Pike St. I 700 Auburn Ave. I OPEN SUNDAYS I OPEN SUNDAYS I 1888 Orchard Lk. Rd. OPEN SUNDAYS Everyday Low Prices •Friendly Service •Gold Bell Stamps Elizabeth Lake Rd. I East Blvd. at Huron St. I Corner of Parry OPEN SUNDAYS | OPEN SUNDAYS RIB STEAK U.S. Choic* CHUCK STEAK U.S. Choiea CHUCK SWISS STEAK Mm Fresh ROASTING CHICKENS Mm Hygrads BALL PARK FRANKS SLICEO BOLOGNA Hygrade 79V BOILED HAM "■ 89*’ PORK STEAK Mm Boneless Rolled ® RUM^ROAST *VAc Boneless 79 HEEL OF ROUHD .49* 69* 59* 8-oz.Pke. 69* 69* 99* A-12 11^ . THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MARCH 10, 1969 Oldest Finn In Pontiac Gd^rates 75. ANNIVERSARY Inch M«ivMnals, th» oktMf firm und*r continuout fomfly operation in Pontiac. pawtM in fOMonition of its 75th Annivortory. Chariot S. Inch, fowndor of Inch Momorialt, Inc., corn# to tho Unitod Stotot from Conodo at a ttono cvttor. Ho otfablithod tho firtt inch'^omoriolt in o building at tho comor of Pony and Eott lawronco Stroot in 1894. Thlt building wot roplacod with a now offico and thop on tho tamo titofn 1W7. In 1927 tbo butinott wot movod to Ht protont location at tho comor of Porry Stroot ond Eatt Soulovard. Thit wot adjacbnt to tho thon nowly ottablithod Porry Mt. Park Comotory. Chariot di*d in 1939 at which timo hit doughtor, Marion Inch fwmot bocomo protfdont, an offico tho hold until hot doath in 1957. Lloyd W. Bumot, hutband of Marion, who had boon octivo In th# butinott tinco 1919 thon bocamo protidont. Although ho lotirod in 1961,'U«yd ttill roMint an activ# intorott in tho compony and torvot in an a^ltery capacity. A third gon t took fl _____ _ . r tho family roignt, ftoboit Bumot, giaiiflMm of thp founder,''it protontly eporoting tho butinott. Tho tamo tiandord of quality ofrOMtOf rialt and cr^monthip upon which Mr. Inch fbundod thit finvi hat continuodjBMttugh throo gonorationt and 75 ytfovt of torvico to tho fino fomiliot of tho PohIhK cnoa, Charigt S. Inch Marlon Inch Bumot Lloyd W. Bumot , I'm" : . k . Is.- Robort C. BunkOt 864 N. Pony Sifoot 1927101969i , Anrdvemay ‘Sp^al' SAVE '.■i When You Buy a Monumeirt ftoni Inch Momorials Porry and E. Lowronco Stroot 1907 to 1927 You got our doptridoUo guidoneo, wndofttoridiOt, aiwl heiMNt odvlco In n< Built to a Standard of Quality mCH MEMORIALS, 864 NORTH PERRY FE 5-6931 ! W, 4 « n j r I ' * lAi ' ‘ liA ' ^ J k I ly iAj -I . f V:' Foreign Visitors See Much to Interest Them in Pontiac / JANET QDELL Pontiac Press Women’s Editor Oakland University’s Continuum Center which devotes, all its efforts to helping women find themsejves is known in faraway places. A visitor last week was Sheila McMillan, senior lecturer in the Extension Division of the University of Auckland, New Zealand. It’s not only American women who are wondering what to do with their lives. When the University of Auckland ran a course of lectures on the changing fole of women, the response was so great that they had to be repeated to take care of all who were disappointed the first time. When was the last time you really .looked at a supermarket? Sure, you shop every week, but you scoot through the store with your list; you don’t see everything. ^ The other day I took an Egyptian man through the supermarket where I regularly shop. In the Detroit area for a two-day visit, Ahmed Zayed was our dinner gu^st through the People to Peo- ple program. For an hour and J^half before we ate, we toured Wrigley*s. The Society for Research on Women is a voluntary organization throughout New Zealand. Dues are minimal and the research is fitianced through subscriptions. Men may belong. Currently, the society is engaged in interviewing 1600 women in the four largest cities. The aim of the questionnaire is to discover how New Zealand women feel about themselves as wives and mothers and how their education has fitted thetn for their lives. They are being asked what kind of facilities they’d like to have in their communities to help with the care of children. 1 have learned, after having a number of foreign visitors, to be careful how 1 speak. One must not be patronizing; one must not brag, one must be as interested to the visitor’s country and its customs as in the ones being displayed. After a while, you get so that you merely show things without too much comment. The choices each shopper has, impressed Mr. Zayed; in Egyptian stores, I gather, you take what is there or nothing. He constantly compared Egyptian prices with ours — theirs seem very low — until you find out that the average worker gets about 50 cents a day. Egypt produces a wide variety of food. Lamb is the principal meat and the most usual way of preparation is the kebab. Mr. Zayed was pleased when I knew what he was talking abbut and told him we often fix kebabs in America. Sheila mcMillan “We did it on the cheap,’’ said Miss STAPLE FOODS McMillan. “On the cheap’’ meqns that volunteers are doing the interviewing. Some 100 were trained. WINDOW ON UFE “Women are interested in how people feel; it is interesting to have a window on someone’s life.” A further survey is planned on unmarried mothers who have kept their babies. Miss McMillan is on a world tour. What she learns will help her plan more meaningful extension programs for women in her native land. Rice is^ten every day^ HQUsewives_^ have a choice of fish and seafood such as shrimp, sardines, crab, etc. Many vegetabldl are grown. He spoke in particular about their giant cucumbers. All those shelves full of salad dressings amused him. But what really amazed him was the number of nonfood items available. In fact, he was so impressed that he bought two pairs of stretch nylons for his wife. I hope they fit. Ahmed Zayed is the general manager of the Egyptian Genersil Organization for Food Industries. He is spending two weeks sightseeing in the United States. AHMED ZAYED Calendar Discuss Cultures of Two Guests Conversation at dinner was lively. On my right sat our Egyptian guest, Ahmed Zayed who manages air the food industries in Egypt. On my left was a soft-spoken woman university lecturer from New Zealand. I had planned as American a meal as possible—no, not hot dogs or hamburgers—meat loaf, lima beans, asparagus, fruit salad and gingerbread. The asparagus was new to the Egyptian; the limas were fo.reign to the New Zealander. He drank tea; she ha^ eoffee. Education was thr main subject of conversation. In Egypt today, many women are attending school. There are community colleges in the cities where a woman may study any subject, says Mr. Zayed. Often mothers and daughters or servants and employers will study side by side. ' , Do girls have the opportunity to take any subject? Yes, but there is still resistance to hiring women engineers, even well-trained ones. What’s new about that? Education is completely free in Egypt. Everyone who graduates from college goes directly irito government work. There are not enough workers to fill all the necessary jobs. American women who sew’know Egypthm cotton well; it is a beautiful fabric. But if Mr. Zayed has his way, ahother Egyptian product will become equally well known. One of the by-products of the immense sugar industry is alcohol. With this alcohol, they are making perfumes which they hope to export to this country. You may one day be wearing ‘.‘Nefertiti” or “1000 Nights” as frequently as you do Chanel Number 5. We got out the encyclopedia and looked up th^ountries of both our guests.. They are, of course, very different in geography, in history and in living today. Where we have a black and white race problem, the New Zea- TODAY Dirt Gardeners Club, II a.m., Adah Shelly Library. Mrs. George Quine will Jgive a demonstration talk on dried arrangements. South Oakland County chapter. Sigma Kappa Sorority Alumnae, 12:15 p.m., Birmingham home of Mrs. Donald Barlow. “The Perfect Hostess” by a Detroit Edison representative. Kappa Delta South Oakland Alumnae Association, Altemoon Group, 12:30 p.m., Gilbert Lake home of Mrs. Russell E. Smith. Election of officers. PBX Clpb of Pontiac, 7:30 p.m., Oakdale Street home of Mrs. Dale Rolfe. Kappa Qtlta South Oakland Alumnae Association, Evening Group, 8 p.m., ‘Birmtoghai^ home of Mrs. Johh E. Gates Jr. Jtoies Shea of Eh-ayton Plains Nature Center will speak. Tr^o. Not Genuine Article Wedding Is a No-No (Continued on Page B-2, Col. 4) Do Their Insults Mean TheyVe Really In Love? By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: My son is a C.P.A. and he is going with a college girl. She makes all kinds of ipean remarks about the way he looks (he is losing his hair) and the way he walks (he has flat feet). He, on the other hand, is always telling her she is built like a stick and has a big nose, which is also true. Why, then, do they keep going with each other? If they should marry, what kind of marriage would this be? They have been going steady for six months. Do you call this love? MOTHER OF A C. P. A. another man since my marriage, and don't intend to. What is your advice? TRAPPED DEAR TRAPPED: Your husand is sick. And any woman who subjects heV-self to the kind of ..abuse your husband dishes out is asking lor a nervous breakdown. Talk to your clergyman, and perhaps together you can persuade your husband to accept some counseling. Tell him if he doesn’t try to help himself, you’ll be forced to take the children and leave him because you’ve had about as much punishment as you can stand. I’ll bet he listens! on your dav off and stay out of MY way? HOUSEFRAU FROM INDIANA AND PROUD OF IT Only Divorce Can Make One Single Again ' DEAR MOTHER: Yes, it could be “love.” Maybe not YOUR kind (or min^) but if they’re satisfied with ^ach other, dont’ let it bother you. As for the “kind of marriage’ ’It would be: Realistic. And possibly a better marriage than one in which each is blind to the blemishes of the other. DEAR ABBY: I have been married for five years and have two wonderful children. My problem is a jealous husband. Before we were married, I had an affair with another man (we were engaged), and I was fool enough to confess it to my future husband. Now I realize it was a big mistake, although at the time, he said he wouldn’t hold it against me. Now that we are married every time we have a quarrel he throws jt in my face. He is so mean, he’s even told his parents! In addition to accusing me of having an affair with every man I meet, now he calls me filthy names and he’s even accused me of having relations with my brothers and uncles! DEAR ABBY: This is for “FURIOUS IN PRESCOTT,” who suggested that instead^ of cofXeeklatching with Jhe neighbors all day, we housewives should do our grocery shopping in the earlf afternoon so as not to crowd the “working wives.” I haven’t had a cup of coffee with my neighbors in years. They are all out chasing their “GOD”—the Almighty dollar. Sure, I market in the evening. Tliat’s when the paper comes and I can see what’s on sale, and my husband can sta'y home with the younger children. By ELIZABETH L. POST The following letter has beei^ chosen as the^rize^winning ^e for thi^weet.^ copy of Emily Post’s Etiquette has been sent to the writer. I’ve suggested psychiatric hela for him, but he says HE is all right, I’M the one who needs help. Divorce is out of the question as it’s against our religion and he is a good father to our children. I can’t say I really “love” him, Abby, but I am trapped. I’ve always been a decent wife and haven’t even looked at While I’m there, I look into your carts and see all the “Ready-Mix” and “Jiffy-Fix” pre-frozen slop you feed your family. How long has it been since your husband, had an honest-to-goodness home-cooked meal? Yes, I’m that lazy, lowly housewife who taught your daughter how to knit in 4-H. I helped her earn her merit badges in Girl Scouts, tqo. And I had six of your boys in my Cub Scout den, and if I remember correctly you were too busy to even come to the Christmas play the kids put on for their parents. I’ve driven your kids to baseball practice because “Mom’s gone.” And your kids always come to MY house because you didn’t want your nice new home messed up. So, why don’t YOU do your shopping Dear Mrs. Post: In a recent discussion, I maintained that a legally separated woman (and man, too) is still legally married and copld not date other men without risk to her good reputation. I believe only a divorce makes one single again and, therefore, eligible to go out with the opposite sex. Would you please comment on the accepted social behavior of a legally separated person of any age? — Mrs. A. S.. Dear Mrs. S.: Of coursq4Ms true that only a divorce can make one “stogie” again. However, if one’s religion, or other considerations, prevent him from getting more than a legal separation, he (or she) need not be doomed to a monastic life once he is living apart from his spouse. As long as their behavior is respectable — adhering to the basic rules of propriety and decency — there is no reason in the world that husbands and wives who are legally separated should not enjoy the company ol the opposite Cranbbook Music Guild, Inc., 8:30 p.ih., Cranbrook House. The Albert Tipton SHEFFIELD. England (AP) — The city of Sheffield, famous for its stainless steel products, has warned thpt some foreign companies are using its name too freely. Officials said that in many boxes of Sheffield cutlery, the only thing made in Sheffield is the box. CARPET ."T^bOUC Tfie Boor Chop HUNTINGDON, England (AP)-Farm-er Harry Raby, (29), was expelled as chairman of Huntingdon Bachelors Club. Without telling his colleagues in the club, he got married. This Is The Year For Slu^! Lancaster Line By Armstrong $Q95 Carriage Trade 100% Polyester Shag Th* coipat orHk Iota el muKle. The pile ----ipriogy end »» end beuncet . ^ _ _______iS,(Sine«.A»itobleinaO $10,95 decender celeni $395 a KITCHEN KING 100% NYLON FACE COMMERCIAL GRACE CARPET _ to you in 12 ft. or 15 ft. - . width to that you can aliminata un- „ ® * tightly taamt. Pnce SUPER KARNIBOND 100% NYLON FACE 8 Twaad colon. Polypropylana backing. e.i. Moittura will not Oriea panatrata foam pad. rnea *6? NO MONEY DOWN UP TO I YEARS TO PAY Mrs. Bonnie Bickman stands before birthday, APwirephow billboard greeting last week in Philadelphia. Mrs. fice across the stfeet from the billboard signed bj Bickman is a medical secretary workinf^in an of- jter husband, Barry. ; . _______ ACROSS FROM HUDSON’S 2265 ELIZABETH LAKE RD. INDOOR-OUTDOOR CARPET $389 Sq.Yd. PHONE S02-4421 Open Monday and Friday 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.; Tuee., Wed.y Thm-e. and Sat. 9 A.M. to 6 P.M. t'n iM ir ■, / A , THE PONTIAC PRP^^S. MONDAY. MARCH 10. 1969 Dinner Guests Coih^ From Abroad ^ (Continued From Page B-1) landers have the Maori (native aborigines) problem; but Miss McMillan says it isn’t tpo much of a problem really. Classes similar to Head Start have been set up to train preschool Maori children and their parents Sp that school will be mpre meaningful and so that pa'rents aren’t completely alienated when the children go to regular school. MRS^ B n POOLE MRS. M. L. YOUNG MRS. JON E. HICKS Bri(des Take Vows Saturday Poole - Aderholdt Young - Blaylock Hicks - Knoll Shelley Ann Aderholdt andi Newlyweds, the Michael Lynn Bernard Dean Poole spoke vows Youngs (nee .Joan Elaine Blay-Saliirday in Drayton PI a ins lock) are honeymooning in the ('ommunity United Presbyterian Church. ' For the early aflernwn rite, the bride chose a gown of Rochelle lace over satin with tiered skirt and wrist-pointed sleeves. A petal cluster secured her fingertip illusion veil. south following their marriage Saturday evening in First United Methodist Church. Susan Lynn May was maid of honorwithr Mrs. Barry Fouss of Marietta, (Mdo, Marcia Clpman and Sharron Burnett as bridesmaids. Stephanie Morse was flower girl. Tom Cline of Marietta was best man. Barry Fouss, Carl Roetzel and Edwin Morse ushered. Colina Poole was ring bearer. RECEPTION The newlyweds and their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Eidon E. Aderholdt of Meigs Street and Mr. and Mrs. Colina L. Poole of Marietta, Ohio, greeted guests in the church parlors. Upon their return from a honeymoon trip to the Smokey Mountains and Florida, the couple will reside in Lake Orion. Terric^VanDyke was maid of honor for the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gerald L. Blaylock of Stout Street. Deborah Stasluk, Esperanza Flores and Kay Young were bridesmaids. Health Dept. Slates Classes for Parents Classes for expectant parents, offered by the Oakland County Health Department, will begin March 17 at the Oakland County Health Center on North Telegraph Road. The free classes, taught by Public Health nurses and cosponsored by the Oakland County Medical Society and various adult education departments, will be held weekly from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. A honeymoon in Texas follow-j J vows spoken Saturday byi Judith A. Knoll and Jon E. Hicks. ASSIMILATION . But Maoris are being assimiliated into t^ie mainstream of New Zealand life; some hold university positions like one in Miss MacMillan’s department. We did not discuss the subject of the Arab-IsraeU dispute at all. Miss McMillan remarked on several American customs. She noted that most of us seem to let the dishes dry themselves. And the stationary bicycle for exercise that stands in the bedroom amuses her. She complained a bit about how our winter weather is chapping and drying her skin. After dinner, we took our foreign guests to the Pontiac Creative Arts Center for the invitational preview of the current exhibit, “Mother and Child.’’ Art is international. Dr. Harold A. Furlong made an immediate hit with Mr. Zayed when he mentioned that Cairo was a favorite stop during a world lour. Free RIm 10 Throw ol ibo Brido ud UrooM C. R. HASKILL STUDIO FE 4-0553 Uoo Unl«enll7 Di Quality Cleaning Since 1929 Mount Olive Lutheran Church in P'lint was the setting for the evening rite uniting the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred K. Knoll of Mount Morris and the son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hicks of, CUntonville Road. The bride was attired in a traditional gown of Rochelle lace over taffeta with scalloped neckline and bouffant tiered skirt. She carried white carnations with yellow rosebuds. ATIDNDANTS Douglas Welch was best man. Ushers Lawrence Schultz, Robert Haroutunian, Thomas Stnickman and Randall Young competed tiie wedding party. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Young of McConnell Street. The bride’s traditional satin gown was complemented by a detachable court train and waist-length bouffant veil capped with a jewel-embroidered The couple was honored at a reception in Fortino’s Steak T'opics include the mental health of the family unit, growth and development of the baby before and immediately after birth, labor and delivery and care and feeding of the infant. Films and other audio-visual aids are used to illustrate some of the topics and each class is taken dn a tour of a hosptial. Enrollment is limited to J8 persons. Those wishing to register may do so by telephone to the Health Department. Weight Watchers Honor attendants were Mrs. Jerry Underwood of Clio and Robert Benardi. Darrell Hicks and Michael Knoll ushered. The newlyweds were feted with a reception in the Ukrainian Hall, Flint. Meet Tonight The Soroptimist Club of Pontiac will meet at Sveden House today at 6:30 p.m for-a dinner meeting. Case No. H-564 Tots Need Companionship By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE H-564: Toni Z., aged five, is lonely. Crane,” his daddy ‘Toni is excessively around other children. is a wallflower 1 li kindergarten and is left out of other play groups, just because he refuses to pick up his cues. ‘‘And I think my wife is partly to blame, for she argues thdt one child is enough. ‘ Yet if Toni had had brother or sister several years ago, wouldn’t he be much more extroverted?” fights while growing up together in the same home, that children leam ia avoid divorce later on! It is wise to have your babies t pairs, spaced about 18 months to two years apart. For then they will stimulate each other to talk, to think and to fight. ‘‘Oh, but Dr. Crane,” some mothers may protest, “surely it isn’t desirable to encourage Children to fight!” But it is by their quarrels and TUESDAY Fashionette Club of Pontiac, 7 p.m.. Adah Shelly Library. WEDNESDAY Waterford Fashion Your Fi g ure Club, 7 p.m., Schoolcraft School. ^ % '■ I THURSDAYS Cal Cutters of Keego Harbor, 7 p.m.. Trinity Methodist Church. No Hips Horray TOPS Club, 7 p.m., Schoolcraft School. Jolly HoUy TOPS Club, 7:30 p.m.. Holly Plaza, Community Room of Citizens Commercial and Savings Bank. Weight Watching JUls of TOPS, Inc., 7:30 p.m., Pontiac Unity Center. Fashion Your Figure Club of Pontiac, 7:30 p.m.. Adah Shelly Library. Pontiac TOPS aub, 8 p.m., Bethany Baptist Church. '^PRE-EASK SPECIAL!' / »Vlimi6 49% on REliPHOLSmiNli ■ “f/, uith guaranteed delivery for Earterl EASY BUDGET TEIRMS OR 90 DAYS CASH WILLIAM WRIGHT Fmrmiten Mmkam end ^TOOtdM FE 4-0558 ALL PERMANENTS 395„g95 a When quarrels invariably will occur, as is true even in the best regulated niarriages, he For a child like Toni who has been a “loner,” will suffer the following disadvantages when he later marries; His 100 per cent monopoly of the adult spotlight will suddenly drop to 50 per cent, which Is like cutting a dope addict’s dosage in half; a He will not be as deft at carrying «i ordinary conversation with Ms wife, yet a happy married couple should be able to chat together hours; will not be expCTiehced in com^ promising and “making up.” In the usual home where there are several children, though they quarrel, they know they must still sit down together at the same dinner table and also sleep under the same roof that very night. Lacking this continual experience all throughout cMldhood, a “loner” may threaten to go home to mamma, or sulk for a week and otherwise perform like a grandstander. is all aglow with gay spring fashions readying for the festive holi- p day ahead. Check your closets now and let Fox put Spring in your bright, colorful lighter weight garments with only the newest Professional Drycleaning processes; AH garments are returned fresh as new to assure you of good grooming on every occasion. COMPLETE SHIRT SERVICE cleaners 719 WEST HURON FE 4-J536 and up Includes All ThU: 1— New Lustre Shampoo 2— Flattering Hair Cut S-»Lanolin Neutralising 4—Smart Style Setting NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY HOiiYWOOD mm Open Mominga at 8 A.M. . 78 N, Saginaw Over Bagley Mkt. 338.‘7660 Mi ' 108 N. SAGINAW ST. FE 3-7114 OP6N TONITE to 9 p.in.-DAILY 9;30 to 5:30 Come, SAVE on Fine SECTIONALS 1 WKCs Lower- Level Furniture Dept. O^eunwrle l^rtejil^liTLONS GANTRECEH stretehynyton. For perfect «™Joet»«skinl PlaiR or Micro. Roin-forced heel and foe or S2 N. Saginaw St. 3-Pc. DELI-AVOCADO SECTIONALS Regular $449.95 - SAVE $40 now at WKC. Grade 1 as shown in ^ A AQ95 Deli-Avocado color. Sovereign style, 520 on sole. ^\Jy .... ^ 3-PC. ANDREA GOLD & WHITE SECTIONALS Regular $599.95-SAVE $40 now at WKC. Style 680 in grdde os % C JZC^95 shown on our display floor. Style as pictured. 00'a 3-Pc. WAYNE RQYAL SECTIONALS Style 620 as pictured in Grade K. Wayne Royal color in this style only. Come, see this on our display floor. $54995 NO MONEY DOWN-90 DAYS SAME AS CASH-3 YEARS TO PAY PARK FREE IN WKC'S LOT AT REAR OF STORE or 1-HR, IN DOWNTOWN PARKING MALL-HAVE TICKET STAMPED AT CASHIERS OFFICE I '. Ai'' I 1. h/rf f THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MARCH 10, 1909 B—3 'Resist Early Marriage/ Career Gal's Advice lilf of the American womeni who marry before their 20th birthdays are subsequently divorced, and as the age of marriage goes up, the divorce rate goes down. So asserts Rebecca Greer, author of “Why Isn’t A'Nice Girl Like You Married? recently published by The . Macmillan Company. Why let yourself be pressured into marrying young? “Whatever your age,' Miss Greer, “your single status is nothing to be ashamed of. Let the girls who marry at 18 or 20 defend their position — they’re the ones whq|re missing out. You’re not missing anything you can’t collect with interest — after you’ve had all the fun of being single.” “I don’t believe in mar- riages, I prefer affairs.” * “I am married but 1 have keep it a secret because of the CIA.” ‘Some of us are beautiful, some of us are successful, some of us are married. “Why Isn’t A Nice Gril Like You Married?” offers many practical tips for the single woman, including decorating hints, career information, and a discussion of “the mating game.” Rebecca Greer, who admits to being on “the smiling side of thirty,” is articles editor of Woman’s Day magazine. She is single. Duplicate Bridge Skiing Honeyrnoon for Couple TUESDAYS YMCA Bridge Club 7:30 p.m., in YMCA. All bridge players may attend.. FRIDAYS Bonneville Junior Duplicate Bridge Club. 7:45 p.m., The Pontiac Mall. All beginners and intermediate players may attend. SATURDAYS Bonn evllle Duplicate Bridge Club, 8 p.m., The Pontiac Mall. All bridge players may attend. [ Attended by her sister, MaryiCountry Club preceded the cou-iwmoon at Jay Peak in north-‘Xnn, and three nieceg, Kristin, pie’s departure fpr a skiing hon-|ern Vermont. I Dana and Marin Outwater, * I Katherine Louise Heym was 'married Saturday in Christ [Church Cranbrook |o Richard / Katherine I Dean Tompkins. Louise Heym %\ Parents of the couple are Mr. Richard .and Mrs. Harold C. Heym of DeanTbmpkins% spoke vows Saturday. Their | parents are Mr. and Mrs. Harold C. Heym of Birmingham and the Robert D. Tomkinses of River Edge, N.J. Biimingham and the Robert D. ‘ Tompkinses of River Edge, ^NJ “The single woman,” she argues, “has more time and money to spend on herself than any other member- of our society.” She can live in a loft in Greenwich Village — or in an elegant -townhouse. She can spend her Christmas bonus on a fake fur or on a trip to Paris She is completely free to indulge herself. woman who resists the lure of Lohengrin long enough to explore the poeople, places, and philosophies of the world is laying the foundation fqr a happy marriage. • But don’t all men worth marrying tie the knot before they’re thirty? Not so, claims our author, citing the late John F. Kennedy who wed at 36! And is it better to have children while you’re young? Why? Asks Miss Greer. So yw can feel resentment at spending changing diapers? 1 Noting that the single girl’s 1 pet peeve is being asked why i she has not yet landed a hus- 1 band, the author compiled a 1 ftist of time tested answers. • “Why settle for one dish m ^ smorgasbord?” Wooden Baskets Have Many Uses A tisket, a tasket, an old Ured basket. If you’re spring cleaning and have unearthed some old and odd baskets, • don’t throw them away. Restore them by first washing with a good cleaner solution. Then rinse and air dry the baskets and they will be ready for flowers, fruit, bread or as collector’s items. Paint the baskets if you like, but the scrubbed, unfinished look popular, too. t. . When rubberized oveirshoes become dingy and gray, give them new life and make them look new again by applying a coat of liquid shoe polish, to their Surface. For the aftenoon ceremony, the bride selected a gown of ivory satin with embroidered pearl appliques on neckline, shoulder, and the Dior bow which held her illusion veil. She carried a bouquet of Eucharist lilies, Stephanotis and ivy. Harold C. Heym Jr. and Robert Outwater ushered. A reception at Pine Lake Is Their 'Trip' Really Necessary? tain the acme of tolerance. That is, to be intolerant only of intolerance. Now I know I most certainly shall never achieve the heights. Because I have just heen talking with a beautiful, young girl who only two short years ago had everything going for her. That w§s before she started smoking reefers (marijana) or got hooked on hashish, during a trip to India. Now her only interest in life is drugs. Capucci For show-stealing strides, try lese flair-out side-zipping pants. Then don the dressy little short over-dress wiA zip away front and the stage is Make it in an easy-care dacron and linen for travel to warmer climes. NS-1022-2 is cut in sizes 6-16. . Size 12 requires approximately 1% yards of 54” fabric for dress and 1% yards of 54” fabric for contrast pants. Other fabric suggestions: raw silk, sharkskin, i n e n, gabardine, cotton. To order NS-l(l22-2; state size, include name, address and zip code. Send ^.00 postpaid. Send orders for books and pqj:tems to SPADEA, Box 323, Dept. PX-f Milford, New Jersey 08848. Tel: duce a better fit and are easier to make. Order normal ready-to-wear size and allow one week for delivery. Something New: Pattern books by classification: Ensembles; Duchess of Windsor; Spring & Silffiner Dresses; Coats & Suits. Each book $1.00 plus 25 cents postage and handling. Hard Cover Catalogue $10.00. This pre-cut, preperforated Spadea Designer Pattern comes in ready-to-wear sizes that pro- It brought out my intolerance for drug pushers-and also for the so-called “open-mind” attitude toward drugs. For those now prepared to tell me, “being high on marijuana is no worse than being drunk on alcohol,” all I can say is, fractured skull may be no worse than a broken back and which of these do you recommend? GLOOMY VIEW As for the conflict of opinion on the effects of marijuana, there has not been enough research done to prove one way or another whether it Is habituating substance (such as whisky and cigarettes) or an addicting one. Neither is there enough mecUcal evidence In to prove whether or not marijuana damages brain cells or leads to the use of harder drugs. Until there Is, I take the gloomy view. In the event that you have New Idea: First time designers have published sewing secrets. Booklets 1, 2, 3, 4, & 5 —60 cents plus 15 cents postage and handling for each. Hard Cover Edition $5.00. Also New: Hair Pattern Booklet — do-it-yourself—60 cents plus 15 cents ostage and handling. SIZES BUST WAIST HIPS 'LENGTH COMPLETE OPTICU. SERHCE EYE EUNIIUTIONS help you enjoy good vision year after • Eye Examinations • Precision Lens QHnding • Fashion-Fitted^rames • Selections of Over 400 »Fast Repair service ITIS EYE CHECK-UPTIME BUDQET TERMS AVAILABLE ... . 108N.SAaiNAWST. E. STEIMMAN, O.D. FE 2-2895 Daily I'JfUl.tcSiSa PJi.-Fridaya:lCMI.taCiMPJI. By BETTY CANARY Most of us would hope to at- been slightly baffled about the various drugs, the following might help you sort them out. 'There are others, peyote, for one, but the following are those most often in the news. BEDSPREADS $988 kins $^488 Opan Doily lOo m M.iabathuMt Im\eg,ap\ BOUT WORRY ABOUT INCOME TAX.. See Souriall & Associates ]'i Year.s in This Area 3881 Highland Rd. in Mattingly Butiniss Center 4835 DIXIE HWY*. 623 AUBURN RD. Pontioc-682-8838 f medical symposium t i 11 e djhemp plants—particularly in the “Speed Kills” held at thejMkIwest where hemp now University' of Californiar for}grows example, did not refer to, was once grown as a crop for automobile accidents. Speed is!the manufacture of rope). Pot a stimulant that, according to|turns one pa.s.sive and in-the medical doctor with whom I trospective. talked, i^ easy to get and is, * * * •available in not onlyj . thC : Sniffing this, powder trademarked versions but active drug in black market (usually im-|jp hemp is the way to really pure) form. bomb, according to those who Speed — Dexedrine and Methedrine — causes one to become irrational and violent and in large doses can produce psychosis. It is widely used. • LSD: The number of those ‘dropping acid” has dropped as more has been discovered about the hazards involved. In some cases severe mental illness has resulted form using LSD Perhaps the biggest danger is a Russell to Speak at Meeting of ABWA Chapter Eugene E. Russell, president of the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce and commercial manager for Michigan Bell Telephone Company, will be the guest speaker at Wednesday’s meeting of Waterford _charter chapter, American Women’s Association. His topic will be ‘“rhe Community and Business.” Mrs. Frank Syron, newly-elected president, will introduce the officers and chairman for the coming year. Mrs. James M. Rowland, of D and D Manufacturing Company, will be the vocational speaker. A “Hand of Friendship Tea,” chaired by Mrs. John R. Johnson, will be held at Howe’s Lanes at 2 p.m. March 16. genetic -one_causcd hy damage' to chromosomes. ■ • Pot: Another name for marijuana. Also called tea and grass. It’s not hard to find (some are harvesting their own Cinch Waist by Exercise It’s a “cinch” to be stylishly small-waisted; all it takes is a little time and slightly more effort. Try doing the f^lowing exercise: Stand with fee [htly apart, knees bent a say they have used it. In actuality, there are probably few who have used it because obtaining it is supposed to be difficult. Hashish: Called hash by e in the know. Very expensive and not easily obtained in the United States. It is the pure resin from the hemp plant. Heroin: The real hard stuff and literally the end of the line. If you have any doubts about this, a visit to the U. S. diction Research Center Lexington, Ky., should clear them up for you. My source says that, relatively speaking, few kids are on heroin and the problem still remains essentially a problem of city slum areas. little, arms out like an airplane. Tighten stomach and buttocks muscles and, without moving arms, push hips as far to the left as you can, then as far to the right. Try putting on dance record for e x e r c i s e background music. The Maynard M. Moyers of Rochester Road, Oakland Township, announce the betrothal of their daughter, Susan Diane, to Paul Edward Taylor, son of the Montie D. Taylors of Twain Harte, Calif. Kitchen Beetles Are Identified NEW BRUNSWICK, N.J. W - Those little ihsects you occasionally find iii the pantry are called saw-toothed grain beetles, according to the Rutgers University College of Agriculture and Environmental Science. The flat, brovmish, slender/pests are only about -tepth of an inch long. 1 Announce Plans The bride-elect, who Has attended Spring Arbor College, and her fiance, a student at Azusa Pacific College, Azusa, Calif., will wed August 16. TURN HEADS THIS SPRING WITH THIS SPECIAL PERAAANENT SC 95 COMPLETE WITH SHAMPOO SET & CUT Beauty" Shopf 42 Saginaw St. FE 8:^1343 NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY [VWTrTil P /ind Floor Beauty 5aIon ' Phone 682-4940 ..SEm..i PnESCniPTlQI^UiflUE BVSUECDBV O "COMPUTER AGE" FORMULAE FROM SUE CORY FOR YOUR SPECIAL KIND OF HAIR SPECIAL INTRODUCTORY OFFER FORMULA 1 for ovarage-slrength; FORMULA 2 for strong hair FORMULA 3 for fragile hair Areas inhabited by the beetled, should be washed and cleaned/ the college says. The household' spray containing DDT/ /is spray containing sometimes effective. k? y 0 * ® (joivUac (/i»av IN)/ltES YOU TO JOIW JACK BROKENSHA EUROPEAN HAPPENING' "All That Jpz/and Something lereBt" 12-28 □ ■ a A Highlight of thO/Tour Will.Be,: 5-DAY MONTREAUX JAZZ FESTIVAL Featuring Ella Fitzgerald SOMETHING DIFFKENT WILL INCLUDE: •,^24 Hour lAMant Auto Race *• Dinner at Maxim's, Paris Casino Mont'a Carlo'• Palma and Lisbon POKIUC TRAVEL SERVIClE 108 Pontiac Mall Office Building PHONE 682-4600 □ □ I . WfTiPiilD S»£]n0 ID Andre’S SEMTIOM SPECIAL 0n 100% Hmnan Hair Anjcoior^ All Cut and Styled Jteg. $69.00 FALLS $: Reg. $89.00 Minnie Falls... *10®* The New Stretch Hand-Tied Wigs Compare at *185®® 2950 SUPREME PERMANENT SHAMPOO and HAIR STYLE Except Saturday 100% Human Hair Wi^els Natural looking textured 100% human hair inglets $299 to add just the dash of glamour you want. In shades of black, frosted blonde, and brown. Phone FE Si-9257 Beauty Salon ^ 1 I XT VAniNAV^n..l«.>MnT.<.wn 11 N.SAGINAW-Between Lawrence and Pike St. ’v‘. I ViY, - ‘ ; 'f. i'l'I'n /1 / \ I) I '/•'/ ''W, I' i B -4 THE POHTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MARCH 10, 1969 New House Unifs Role Grows By JAMES PHILLIPS ' effectively deal with urban,“the impact and import of thisigovernment can be, more ef-1 I API infndi P*'®Wems, says Chairman Suski;} committee is just im-lfective,” he added. , Ho“n^rrCommittee HIGHEST PRIORITY / !measurable.” Lc ^ could turn out to be the sleeper addition. Gov. William „ ^ . Inlet of h o u^ of this legislative session. Milliken has assigned t h e f however, says he f J " “*1!" L Created onlv 40 days ago, the highest priority to matters c 0 m m 111 e e fmancing to construchon. committee has had 1 i 111 e dealing with the crisis of the^»’^‘™f"*hip as a m^ns to, scrutiny.. It has been dUes. I'® ovenshadowed by publicity at- .1, .stands to rcatson that ® tending the controversial MjHigen s bills i- if any - will “ parochiaid and liberalized have to come through the urban5*''**“®: abortion law bills. affairs committee,” said Suski. ‘^a^ breed the physical and * * A * mental degeneration But Rep Edward Suski, D- Whether the eovernor’s nro- .. l-'lint Other bills relating to urban problems will soon be prepared, the he said. „ All told, from 25 to 30 bills have been requested, he stated. TO INVITE MILUKEN the mayors, Suski ha>; been oiiipilv ex- governor’s pro- significant to note that;l)lans to invite Milliken to ap- nanrime iis snhere of influence bottled up m pioneered establishment^pear before the committee. Ca it Se?to hdd ds "r"’ U 'T . ‘be House Civil Rights Com-| ‘Td like to haire the governor “kT. .'"r? ‘985. Partly as a ^ personally borne over and ad- mavors of Michican citfes Milliken s ability to deal ef- |.gg^j|t committee dress the committee,” Suski mayors 0 Michigan cues. fect.vely with the U-memberlegislation said. Hopefully, those hearings will committee. won approval * * * give birth to legislation that will As a result, Suski explained, ^ • * “* ' * A * i “I think we can work in ac- “Long before the riote ofjeord. 1 think the governor’s 1967,’’ House Speaker William motives are genuine and not Ryan recalled, “Rep. Suskbpolitically inspired.” he added, urgently warned of the growing One significant aspect of the unrest and appealed for con- committee, Suski said, is that striictive action. I “it will enable the Legislature SENSITIVITY TO NEEDS to . deal with the urgent pro-“But most important i s Suski’s sensitivity tp the blems which face our urban areas in a more efficient and and concerns of urban people,” comprehensive way. said Ryan. “Such sensitivity is ‘SCATTERED* essential to the resolution of the “Previously, bills pertaining i problems that face us.” to urban affairs were inap-| BesTd^hviTThirtre ma5ton^ ffopriately^ scattered among as- 15 Michigan cities to speak to I the committee, Suski said he li plans to travel to Washington talk with former Gov. George Romney, secretary of Housing and Urban Development, and Robert Finch secretary of Healjh, Education and Welfare. many as 10 different committees,” he said. I think there are urban pro-, blems throughout the cities of! Michigan and not necessarily i confined to Detroit, Grand Rapids and Flint,” he said. “I think the cities have * * * degenerated too far already. In addition, he has proposed | itour hope to reverse the AP Wlrtpheto NOW THAT I HAVE YOUR ATTENTION-Apollo, a 160-pound black and white Great Dane, dominates the home and his mistress, Baroness Marianna von Watzdorf. The baroness runs a boarding kennel in Wylie, Tex., a suburb of Dallas. She brought the dog from Germany. that Daniel Moynihan, special assistant on urban affairs to President Richard Nixon, be invited to speak before a joint session of the Legislature. “I hope Michigan will spearhead the drive rehabilitate our urban environment,” he said. MORE EFFECtiVE The committee should tempt to determine “how state trend and make cities viable,! exciting places to live. | T think we should move' forward with all possible speed,” he added. Soybean production in the^ U.S. for 1968 was estimated at 1.1 billion bushels, about ^ 400 per cent increase from the average annual output in the 1940s. , YOUR NEWS QUIZ The Pontiac Press Monday, March 10,1969 PART I - NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL Give yourself 10 points for each correct answer. 1 The Apollo 9 flight rocketed into Earth orbit with three astronauts aboard. Name at least two of 2 A main purpose of the Apollo 9 flight was to test the lunar module, the craft designed for landing men on the moon. The LM was nicknamed a-**blrd’* b-“jungle gym” c-‘‘splder” 3 After Soviet and East German protests. West Germany canceled its plan to hold its presidential election in West Berlin. True or False? 4 A number of professors and students in the field of.... took part in a nationwide one-day work halt to protest what they called misuse of their work by society. a-law b-sclence c-polltical science 6 President Nixon, in his rej^t\) the nation on his European trip, said that the visit helped lay the groundwork for Mure summit talks with ■ the Soviet Union. True or False? PART II - WORDS IN THE NEWS Take 4 points lor each ’word that you can match with its correct meanhig. 1 interim a-praise highly 2 candid b-temporary 3 component c-begin again 4 resume d-important part of a ' whple 5 laud . / e-frank, sincere PART III .14AMES IN THE NEWS Take 6 points for names that you can correctly match with the clues. 1...Pentagon a-home of Pope Paul VI b-Army hospital, Washington ..Concorde c-U.S. Defense Department headquarters 4.....Walter Reed d-French- British J personic airliner S... 3-l(WP e-lsreel’s lawmaking body * VEC, ln&, Msdlion, Wlic^tn Match word clues 'with their corresponding pictures or symbols. 10 points for each correct answer. dymbol of Apollo 9 crew 2... this nation and Russia clashed In border dispute former President^ Dwight Elsenhower government here overthrown in bloodless coup ', ^9 OislMkamagl •iilimgMtMifirpaMikw ASK US ABOUT KITCHEN CARPET WE CARRY A LARGE SELECTION OF CARPETS FOR ALL YOUR NEEDS OPEN MON. OBd PM.'Til. 9 PJML FMEISTIMATUAIW IMMEDIATB INSYALLATIPN 11 Animals have their innocence and their dignity, and we can certainly learn from them. But man is a spiritual being and has higher and more complex destiny: to learn compassion and understanding, to separate truth from falsehood, to g the meaning of self-sacrifice, to work out his relationship with god, his fellowman and himself. Next — Peter Lind Hayes, famed singer and comedian, tells how a stranger taught him a lesson In brotherly concern! during a nightclub holdup. HARD HAT WITH A HALO — Safety helmet is wired for sound, going and coming, providing two-way communication between James Riley and his control room at DuPont’s Beaumont, Tex., plant. Range of radio signals is less than a mile. (Copyright, lOM, by GuldoposK HEW 7-FT. VACUUM CLEANER HOSE Braided Cloth, All Rubber Exchongaabl* with Your Old R«-U>«-abl* Hoso Ends. $095 Regular T.50 Come in or Free Delivery PARTS and SERVICE ON ALL CLEANERS Dis|>o8al Baits. Hoses. Brushes. Bells. Attachments, Etc. “Rebuilt by Ciirl’a Appliances I'siniiOur Own Paris” Complete with CURT'S APPLIANCE Factory Authorized White Deuhr tm WILLIAMS LAKE ROAD OR 4-1101 BUY! SELL! TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! KITCHEN and BATHROOM REMODELING BATHROOMS Plumbing, alee-trie, tile, custom vanities, medicine cabinets. in decorator colors, birch cabinets in all styles, as low as ^ _ _Per NO MONEY ns: FREE ESTIMATES FR|E PLANNING Gall 682-6800 FULL SUE MODELS ON DISPLAY AT LIFE KITCHEN and BATHROOM lH,lsisn•llH•■M^s•. Open Daily 10-6:30 110 Pontiae Mall Offiee Bldg- Facing Elizabeth Lake Rd. ARE YOU SATISFIED with Your PRESENT TV RECEPTION? If Not LET US IMPROVE IT WITH A NEW COLOR TV AN1SNIU ’"‘^Designed for This Area' COMPLETE ALL-CHANNEL COLOR ANO BLACK AND WHITE SUPER ANTENNA For Sharper^ Stronger Color TV! COAAPLETELY INSTALLED $7995 CUSTOM INSTALLATION COMPLETE WITH WALLPLATE AND PLUGS UHF ANTENNA for Color, Black and White COMPLETELY INSTALLED 95 FOR ONLY VHF ANTENNA for Color^ Black and White NOW YOU CAN GET SUPERB COLOR TV RECEPTION WITH THIS POWERFUL ANTENNA COMPLETELY INSTALLED ir PLENTY OF FREE PARKING OPEN EVERY NIGHT TILS TEL HURON SHOPPING CENTER-FE 3-7879 1550 Union Lake Road^ Union Lake-363-6286 I HE PON'I’IAC’ PRESS, MONDAY. MARCH 10, 1969 Moneymaker for Syndicate U.S. to Hit Drug Trafficking WASfflNGTON (UPn — The federal government is about (o launch a full-scale assault on: Illegal narcotic sales, second | only to gambling as a source of j income for organized crime. John E. Ingersoll, director of j the U S. Bureau of Narcotics [drafting legislation that “would and Dangerous Drugs, toM UPI Friday the government has “identified the major traffickers across the country” and can now begin a sustained attack on their multimiilion dollar racket. He also disclosed that he is put big traffickers away for a lot longer than they are now." Current sentences for narcotics conviction range from & to 40 years but Ingersoll hinted the government may have spent too 1 much time in recent years trying to catch streetcorner pliers instead of concentrating on the powerful gangsters supply them with drugs. GIs INVOLVED ie same time, the Pentagon revealed a large in the number of Investigations dealing with soldiers and their use of marijua- na. J|a ^ On Tuwsdayt W« S«rv» Th* “Little Joe Special” RibEy* Staak Dinner for ZA SIRLOIN PIT* Kmart Clenwood Plaza North Perry Street -> Comer of Qlenwood 338-9433 "AMONG THE GREAT MOVIES OF ALL TIME! MagoMin0 'dKQOSP^L docoRdInQ toshMattheir fZZSKEECO 12 NORTH SAGINAW IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAO OPEN 9:4S A.M. SNOW et lllH AM. YOU MUST SI IS-IHDS TUISDAY-OMH MS-CONTIM^^ P*Y *‘Soma Thought It Was , For Mon Only But... Girls Were Invited Also.. > ” 2nd Hm *«T*KI HER BY tURHtnr* Dine-in or Fast Take-out , Although military officials said marijuana was used far by servicemen than by young civilians, the statistics showed there were 11,507 investigations throughout the United States last year compared with 5,536 the year before. And in Vietnam, the total jumped from 1,267 in 1967 to 3,225i’last year. In addition to more vigorous attempts to naiil domestic narcotic suppliers, Ingersoll said he is instructing federal agents to Intensify their efforts to halt the influx of drugs from abroad. U.S. Responsibility to Africa Is Outlined By WHITNEY M. YOUNG JR. Executive Director National Urban League Foreign affairs Is very much with President Nixon’s trip to Europe, Middle East tensions, Paris peac talks, and yet another Berlin crisis. About the only part of th world that has hot had its share of headlines Is YOUNG Africa, but it would be a serious mistake for the administration not to reconsider America’s role there. As the ancestral homeland of more than a tenth of the population, Africa claims great Interest and affection among large numbers of Americans. Many of us are as concerned about racist police-state actions in South Africa as we are about totalitarian actions in Europe. America depends on Africa for much of its raw materials and resources. More and more, it becomes apparent that it is in our national interest for self-determination and prosperity to thrive on the African continent. STANDING FALLS Our moral standing in the eyes of the world goes down every time we vote with South Africa in the U. N. or back repressive t;olonial regime. The real trouble spot today is the southern part of the continent — ruled by breakaway British colonists (Rhodesial, South Africans whose leadership was in sympathy with Hitler, and the Portuguese (Angola, Mozambique), whose overlordship of the remnants of once-great empire compensate them for p r e s e n second-class status. Unless cliange comes to this troubled area, change that brings power to the black majorities, I don’t see how bloodshed can be a v e r t e d . Unless the United States supports democratic black leadership in these areas takeover Hty Chinese and Russian-supported extremists is possible. A case i| point is the-recent ssassination of Eh*. Eduardo C. Mondlane, leader of the Liberation Front of Mozambique rebels. He was an an-thrqxrlogist who once taught in the United States. I knew him well; he was a humane man who loved his country and who was dedicated to winning independence, for his people. He returned to Africa to lead 9i Oean Martin Kwicaor Matt Helm a . iILe#LSJ5f fwwaa • VYICUIIIIS \mWW‘ PLUS-------------- ^AFUNNTTHING HAPPENEDOH THEMflFlO BOX OFFICE OPENS 6:30 P.M the fight for independence. Since democratic opposition was not allowed, he had to resort 4b guerrilla h|(:tlcs. He and his cause were never backed " this government, for fear of harming relations with Portugal. Yet he was just the kind of man we should be.supporting — an incorruptible i n d i v i d u a' capable of leading his country out of the shadows of a dying colonialism. Now, with Dr. Mondlane removed from the scene, it is possible that the liberation movement will deteriorate into a struggle for power between Russian- and Chinese-influenced factions. This story is often repeated: a moderate national 1 e a d e doesn’t get the support he needs from the west and la either pushed leftward or is removed from power and replaced with mwe irresponsible elements. 'Then the U. S. complains about not having friends in the country in question. NO SENSE [’d like to see ua take a more agressive position of support for African freedom movements. It makes no sense for American that was born in revolution to ignore the plight of the black majority in South Africa. Nor should we support the one-tenth of Rhodesians who happen to be white in their dictatorship over the nine-tenths of their countrymen who happen to be black. Stepped-up aid to the poor nations of Black Africa is needed. Relief for starving Biafra should be a priority item here. ‘ Other countries, including small ones like Israel, give technical and economi assistance to Africa far out of proportion to their size of their wealth. We should stop dragging our feet and pitch to too. TUESDAY SPECIAL! PONTIAC UKE I 18S0 Highland Road PHOHEOn-MIt 3nd FSCTS "H* toyt h*'d rath*r tpoiul hit ' nranayferadtlicioui^uoiilay Only,* all-y«u-carHM>t Spa-ohttfl Sptciol at tha Gman Pamt only $1.25 with cola slow, relit and buttar, 'Pa T ryf!, N^FOOD i/ N LIQUOR ' / You Can’t Help Him Unless You Know What'lfs All About Beginning today ... and every day.. read the new series on "Safeguarding Your Teen-Agers Against Drugs" If you know or suspect that your son or daughter has o problem with the "mind drugs" like marijuana or LSD, or even with some of the pills sold in every drug store, what should you do? What CAN you do? As a starter, read Science Writer Alton Blokeslee's illuminoting articles on "Safeguarding Your Teen-ogsirs Against Drugs," beginning today in The Pontiac Press. ALTON jBUKESLEE For Home Delivery of The Pontiac Press -I* Phone 332-8181 -i , Y?-',/-; ' .V;i ■''t.'CY-'t'' '"'if’: ■ ' v ''Yiy■ '■ C.,yyYC,,'*: THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. MARCH 10. 1909 -rtimt Hcrambled worH game forkldaS* B-7 lliese ftmny-looking nonsense words are actually REAL words, but their letters have been mix^ up by someone. You must put their letters back into the rightorder so thatthey make or- dinal words that you can find in the dictionary. WRITE THE LETTERS OF EACH WORP UNDER EACH NONSENSE WORD-BUT ONLY ONE LETTER TO EACH SQUARE. ASE r \ POM NIPE 7 S BUTE 4 HOW TO SPELL'‘HOUSE" WITH TWO LETTEF5S. Now you are ready to find the tewthat appear inthecirclesandpl FUNNY ANSWER to this puzzle. The around with them. You will find that picture above will give you a hint, you can put them in order so that they Study it carefully. Then take the let- form the answer you are looking for. Print tktFDNNVMISWERberei U I Y Y JLJ^ Answers Elsewhere on this Pg. rA Junior Editors Quiz About- 1 V DONKEYS Historians often credit a Stone Age Egyptian with the accidental discovery of copper ore as he built his campfire in the southern part of the Sinai Pen-la. The peninsula’s copper and turquoise mines were worked by pharaohs of the first dynasty. Jumbles: SEA MOP PINE TUBE Answer: How to spell “house’ with two letters — “TE-PEE’ QUESTION: What is the difference between a jackass, a donkey, a burro and a mule? ANSWER: The spirited animals galloping at the top of our picture are wild asses of Asia. Roaming in rough, often mountainous country, the wild ass became very strong and sure footed, so that he could travel over mountain passes with ease. It is believed tl^at these animals were first domesticated in countries along the Mediterranean Sea. We know them now as donkeys. They have inherited the strength and •surefootedness of their ancestors. These qualities enable them to be extremely useful in packing, heavy loads over rough terrain. It is true that donkeys are slow and have a stubborn quality which makCs people call them stupid or contrary. But perhaps this is because their wild ancestors knew how to take care of themselves. A jackass is simply a male donkey. Donkeys bred for a smaller size, very useful as pack animals, are called burros. When you breed a jackass with a female horse, you get that remarkable creature, a mule. Maybe he is" stubborn as a mu|e, but old Mr. Long Ears is so strong that he has often been hitched up in teams to haul heavy loads. (You may win $10 cash pltis AP’s handsome World Yearbook if yoftr question.^mailed on a postcard to Jiinior Editors in care of this newspaper, is selected for a prize.) REKrUS and SALES Banquot, Brids*, Round and Pokorjablo* Chafing Dl*ho», Condolobra Gloi$waro Champagno Glatsot Punch Bowit Baby Bodt Crutchot Silvor Trayt Walkm SpMi&l-6-and 8-foot U»od Bonquot Tablo* and Choir* NOW FOR SALE FE 4-3989 t TABLE C0«i 14P^AKLANdJ Just North of Wido Track Drivo NEWSPAPERS Nep8r1Nlbs.0glivergd Royal Oak Wasti Piper A Metal Co. ,4l4CHud.^j^O,k Mathematics Explosion Is Reported WASHINGTON—Mathematics has joined the trend toward ‘explosions” in everything from population to rubbish. A recent report by a National Academy of Sciences committee speaks of an “explosive penetration of mathematical methods into other disciplines.” What it amounts to, says the committee, is a virtual “mathematicization of culture.” Scholars assert that discoveries in mathematics over the past 100 years are greater in quantity and quality than those in all previous history, the National Geographic Society says. Problems that would have stumped a 19th-century genius now are easily solved by college students. ‘ In recent years, computers have revolutionized m a t h e -matics. They have made it possible to solve countless problems that previously would have been impractical to handle because of the stupendous number of calculations. Before electronic computers appeared, a British meteorologist envisioned a “weather factory” with 64,000 human com-thft f»alciilntinns necessary to forecast weather by mathematical formula. Today, thanks in large part to the computer, mathematics has moved into a host of. new disciplines, ranging from ecology to psychiatry. (Advertisement) Pile Treatment Works Wonders For California Couple Treatment Shrinks Files, Relieves Pain In Most Gases Sacramento, Cal. Mrs. C. Arnold of this city reports: "I can’t contain myself any longer to write you about wonderful Preparation H for hemorrhoids. My husband has tdso been using same and it’i doing wonders for him” (Note; Doctors have proved in most cases—Preparation H* actually shrinks inflamed hemorrhoids. In case qfter case, the sufferer first notices prompt relief ^ ■ ’ ■ ’ itching. TOOWSBimiBRi Y0U6ETF0R WHEN YOU SHOP AT SINGER FOR SINGER SEWING MACHINE IN LEXINGTON CABINET lUsBws orr alt types of fabrics from sheers to bulky woolens, stays quiet and vibration-free. ONLY di O O Then swelling is gently reduced. There’s no other formula for the treatment of hemorrhoids like doctor-tested Preparation H. It also lubricates to make bowel movements mora comfortable, soothes irritated tissues and helps prevent further infection. In ointment or suppository form.) SINGERy ZIG-ZAG SEWING MACHINE WITH CASE This zig-zag marvel sews buttonholes, buttons; darns, mends and monograms without attachments. NOW ONLY «88 -TOO' Whath new Jbr tomorrow fs a( SIN C E R today!' SINGER ATrtdcmirk of THE SINGER COMPANY Instant Spring! SEW FABRICS FROM SINGER only 990 per yd. Luvlin by Singer. Crisp linen look. 100% rayon. 42" wide. Reg. $1.39 yd. Mystic by Singer. Sheer flocked voile. 65% polyester, 35% cotton. 45" wide. Reg. $1.49 yd. SAVE NOWI Discontinued sewing machines, cabinets, carrying cases. Many one of a kindl 1Q8 N. Saginaw St., Downtown Pbntiac-FE 3-7114 Open Tonite 'til 9 pm-Dailv 9:30 to 5:30 pm IVIcignavox. ONCE-A-YEAR... FACTORY-AUTHORIZED SEE THE WIDEST MAGNAVOX SELECTION BY FAR AT WKC SAVE $55 NOW - MAGNIFICENT COLOR STEREO THEATRE • A true family entertainment center-r Big 295 sq. in. color screen • Stereo FM/AM radio • True stereo phonograph • And solid state sound system • Quick-on permits instant viewing of the most brilliant color pictures you've seen • 15-wotts undistorted music power, two 10" boss woofers and two 5" treble speakers project thrilling sound • See it at WKC today 1 BIG SCREEN PORTABLE TV WITH CART • Enjoy thrilling 282 sq. in. pictures—almost four times bigger than today's overage portable TV • All the Mognovox qgolity features walnut wood cabinet plus the Automatic Fine Tuning that always remembers to keep each channel perfectly tuned R Telescoping dipole antenna. Now only— $17090 1/ / tr Dramatically Long and Low MAGNAVOX ASTRO-SONIC STEREO SAVE *50 NOW Danish modern measures 66" long • As beautiful to see os to hear • Astro-Sonic stereo FM/AM rodio-Phonogroph has 30 watt undistorted music power, two 12" boss woofers, two 1,000 cycle Exponential Treble Horns. Large record library area and many other Mognovox quality features • With BUILT-IN STEREO TAPE DECK-NOW $548.50. Pork Free in WKC's Lot at.Rear of Store or 1 -Hr. in Downtown Moll Hove Ticket Stamped at Cashier's Office reiargarai No Money Down 90 Days Same as Cash Up to 3 Years to Pay li—8 rilE I’ONTIAC PHHSS. MONDAY. MARCH 10, 1969 Bridge Tricks From Jacobys Draining Planter Salts Stain Patio korth «>8642 V A43 ♦ KQ J 4^432 west ♦ Q107 V10987 4S42 4Q96 SOUTH (D) * AK5 ¥KQJ ¥ A1098 *AKJ Both vulnerable We«( North Ewt South EAST ¥652 e 763 *108 75 Pass 6 N T. Pa-w P Pass Opening lead—¥ 10 Jim; "Lei's start with a sim-1 Oswald: pie hand lhat_Dorothy has entitled Two Bites at the Cherry.’ Our readers should look at the bidding and the North-South hands only before planning the play,” > Salts draining through planter tubs may stain a patio surface. Best remedy is to build a tray to set underneath, using cedar “In other words he 2^45 for the sides, tongue-and- leads a low spade. He cashes groove boards for the bottoip. the ace and king later and. Line the tray with fiberglass since spades break, he has bis to make it waterproof, then 12 tricks. If spades failed to 1 cover the bottom with small break he would still be able to| pebbles so water draining from go after his 12th trick in clubs.’’I the tubs can evaporate. ! Jim: “With 25 high card ; points. South had a book three no-trump opening and North’s 10 high card points warrant a I jump to the slam.’’ I Osvvald: “There are 11 tricks ' on lop and the 12th will be pro-Iduced if spades break 3-3 or if; jthe ciub finesse will work.| I Which one shoultk declarer] Itry’.’’’ I By OSWALD AND JAMES JACOBY Jim; “'The answer is that declarer can try both. He starts Oswald: ■ Dorothy Hayden,jby winning tpe heart lead and or)c of our best women bridge I making a submarine play in players, has just completed a spades." book entitled Winning Declarer Play.’ As the namc implies, the book attempts to cover declarer’s play only and does a very good job of it.’’ Jim: “The numerous example hands range from simple to extremely difficult. Most seem —to be variations ^ ol" *" __________ __________fi. midaftarnoon lunar position ' Carp.) ,«p;!;ilaam;n"rchacK v^lua. LEO (JuW you lack mnnl iUrprif* OY w'”ni ^Rer ¥goHi. #•- confident. Stt pwt. JSSlrn. Adhero^ prlnclplti. •P,?rSriS*?i.«|. 3J-Sapt. 33); Finish what -'tyiROb (Aug. 3J-Sapt. 33); Finish wn. vou stert. Ledvo no loos« ends. You get Chinee* to gain W 5;«”rgnrrv."5ian"''r.&‘ "lIbra '(sSsrSs'oit. mannar—aflacts residence. n might ba Imagined. Know iseiosajo^cbasl. ' I you r™v. ,i. ........ , pallerns are broken. Don' iv.JrPIO (Oct. Sl-Nov s myslarloua^ makes A. aiM 8m aqm Humor , YWr« witty. *• Bublect to change. Rid# with th# tnioy yourstert—•••ss-pi. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jen, « occur In occupation ^n J Daily Almanac EES & MEEK Rv Howie Schneider HI. \ / OH, WOTHIWG MUCH'. \ ( KAOWIQUE! V • 1M» W'NIA, he. Til l*|^ MX PW. Off. ^ 3-/0 By United Press International Today is Monday, March 10, the 09th day of 1969 with 296 to follow. The moon is approaching its last quarter. I The morning stars are Mercury, Mars and Jupiter. The evening stars are Venus and Saturn. On this day in history: In 1962 the first paper money was issqgd by the United States government in . denominations ranging from $5 to 01,000. In 1945 B-29 bombers began Incendiary raids on Japan. In 1949 Mildred Gillars, known as Axis Sally, was sentenced to 30 years In prison on charges ot treason for broadcasting for Nazi Ger- many. In 1964 Queen Elizabeth gave birth to a son, third in line for the British throne. Dress-Up Den, Paint the Ceiling A tiny ’TV den can be pepped up with a three-dimensional «v>|fiiig treatment. First paint the ceiling a mid-tone of avocado, gold or Uue. Next run 2x2s across the { them into j(' color. . THE PONTIAC PRES^, MONDAY, MARCH 10, B—9 Pontiac Area Deaths^ Mrs. Burt Dailey a brother; grandchildren. ? Service for Mrs. Burt (Annie rp.) Dailey, 94, of 767 St. Qair ^11 be 11 a.m. tomorrow at • pursIey-Gilbert Funeral Home ^ith burial in Roseland Park Cemetery. ■ Mrs. Dailey died Saturday, i Surviving are three sons, Albert S. Dailey of Athens, Ohio, Francis H. Jones of Diyton, Ohio, and Harry Dailey of Pontiac: five grandchildren; 14 great-grandchildren; and 10 great-great-grandchildren. Mrs. Elna M. Riddle Service for former Pontiac resident Mrs. Elna M.. Riddle, of Sagin*(w will be 11 a.m. tomorrow a't Sparks-Griffin jTuneral Home with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mrs. Riddle, a former employe of GMC Truck and Coach Division, died Saturday. She was a member of First Congregational Church and the Pontiac Gold Star Mothers. Surviving are a daughter Mrs. Frederick Lynch Jr. o 1 Saginaw; and nine grandchildren. Memorials, may be made to the Michigan Heart Assbcia- IMLAY CITY - Service for| P. Dietrich, 72, of 215 Weston will be 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at Muir Brothers Funeral Home, with burial in Imlay Township Cemetery. Mr. Dietrich died yesterday. He was a retired farmer, a member of the Imlay City Farm Bureau and United Methodist Church. Surviving are his wife, Esther; five daughters, Mrs. Ethel Woodley of Metamora, Mrs. Helen Hodge of Flint, Mrs. Velma Morningstar of Imlay City, Mrs. Pauline Krepp of Flint and Mrs. Lois Herdman of Salem, Va.; a son, Glenn of Oxford; 20 grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren; a sister. Delta of Lapeer; and two brothers, including George of Pontiac. Mrs. Hugo Truscello Service for Mrs. Hugo (Mary) Truscello, 43, of 3243 School-house, Waterford Township, will be 11 a m. Wednesday at Spence and Boyer Funeral Home, Lorain, (^io. The body will be at Coats Funeral Home, Wate^^ ford Township, until 10 tcmight. Mrs. Truscello died yesterday. Surviving are her husband; two daughters, Mrs. Dan Cook of Lorain, (Hiio, and Patti at home; three sons, Hugo Jr- of Clarkston, James of Fort Meade, Md:, and Tom at home; 2 in Hospital-Hurt in Crosh Jesse P. Dietrich Mrs. John Drazick BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP Requiem mass for Mrs. John (Mary) Drazick, 67, of 4840 Stoneleigh will be 9:30 a.m. Wednesday at St. Jerome Catholic Church, Detroit, with burial in Holjr S e p u 1 e h re Cemetery, Southfield. The Rosary will be said at 8 p.m. today at Vasu-Lynch Funeral Home, Royal Oak. Mrs. Drazick died yesterday. Her husband is president of Northeastern Tool and Die Co.,I Warren. Surviving besides her husband | are a son, Herman J. of Birmingham; a daughter, Mrs. John I. Prepolec of Blooinfield Hills; brother; and four grandchildren. He Makes His Own Skis and Uses Them-at 82 WENATCHEE, Wash. (AP) ■ “The big trouble with these skis is they start out before Pm ready and stop the same way. “I don’t mind falling, but the hard part is getting up” his family moved to the Methow| making myself a pair of skis for are over—he uses the skis once The speaker: Leonard Cushin, t, of Malott, Wash. Valley in north-central Wash- several years. !in a while to keep track of his ington when he was 11. “This winter Ljust go busy cattle. He first tried them out SKIS A‘MUST’ and built myself a pair,’’ he on a steep hill near his home. He recalled recently that skis|®®‘°- ' I were a “must” in those days SAME METHOD | “I was pretty awkward the for hunting and reaching thel cu^hin used essentially the'^st time or two that I got on country store in winter. method he employed 60 them. I’m no fancy skier like * * * ' ★ * * years ago: Pick two fir boards you ^ee on TV” The topic: His homemade It was natural, then, that with good grain and spring, ---------------------------------------- skis, the first he’s made in eo Cushin’s thoughts turned to fashion them with hand tools. An urban specialist believes years, and their effect on hisjmaking skis once again when steam and bend the tips. that by the year 2000 the U.S. skiing, which he hasn’t done forithis winter’s heavy sno wi Added to the shaped btoards- may be, as a result of popula-30 years. [prevented him from reaching I are wooden blocks and leatherjtion growth shifts, divided into ★ * * * his cow and calves. , [straps to keep his boots from 10 super megalopolis areas with Cushin learned to make skisj * * ★ slipping. a total population of more than as a matter of necessity when^ “I’ve been thinking abouti Cushin says his hunting days'300 million. ON SKIS AT 82 — 'The snow got so deep on Leonard Cushin’s farm near Malott, Wash., that he made a pair of, skis in order to reach his cattle. “I don’t mind falling,” .the 82-year-old craftsman said, “but the hard part is getting up.” , * Charfes F. Kingston Two Pontiac women were injured fai a two-car accident in' the city at 11 p.m. Saturday. TROY — Service for Charles F. Kingston, 67, of 1980 John R. will'be 1 p.m Wednesday at Price Funeral Home, with burial in Evergreen Cemetery, Detroit. Mr. Kingston died yesterday. He was a retired master plumber for. Ford Motor Co. Utica Trim Plant, Utica. Surviving we a son, Chwles C, Harrison Township; a sister; and six^grandchildren. ( Fire Pact Eyed for Waterford The Waterford Township Board is expected to finalize plans for a fire agreement with West Bloomfield Township at its meeting tonight. Under the plan, the Waterford Township department would cross common borders in areas more easily covered by it than the West Bloomfield department. DR. M. G. PROSSER In other sdieduled business, I the board will be asked to ap- In Pontiac General Hospital in fair condition is JiU Miller, 18, of 126 N. Marshall, a passenger in ond car. In fair condition in St. Joseph Mercy Hospital is Mwgwet M. Wagner, 24, of 170 Willard, driver of the other. Miss Miller was a passenger in a car driven by Jerry D. Ward, 17, of 3087 Judah, Orion Township, according to Pontiac police. RAYToWNSHIP - Service! for Mrs. Stefan (Serena) Popescu, 68, 69370 Romeo Plank will be 1 p.m. Wednesday at Roth’s Home for Funerals, Romeo, with The two vehicles collided at the intersection of Perry and Madison, police said. Mrs, Stefan Popescu A •« rV'L. I M! prove a late April educational- Area Physician^s'o^Ti'.Hca; Cancer Society and will hear [reports from the water, police [and building departments and [the Friends of the Library. lsDeadat53 An area physician. Dr. M. G.[ In addition, two license burial in Proctor Prosser, died yesterday. He was transfers will be introduced for 53. Cemetery, Romeo. Mrs. Popescu died Saturday | * * ★ after an auto accident in| Service for Dr. Prosser of Florida. . 5901 Dixie, Waterford Township, Surviving are her husband; a will be 11 a.m. Wednesday a.t son, Lincoln of Detroit; a Donelson-Johns Funeral Horhe daughter, Mrs. Vega Militariu with burial in Perry Mount of Warren; a . brother, Erbe Park Cemetery. Schutt of Romeo; and five the first time. The amount of smuggled marijuana seized at United States borders last year jumped to 70,000 pounds, 10 times the figure of only four years ago. grandchildren. People in the News He was a member of the American Medical Association and had been practicing medicine in Waterford since 1951. Jerry Leo Burch, 22, says the Army told him two years ago to go home and await orders. He did, and that’s the last he heard from the Army until he was arrested over the weekend in Des Moines, Iowa, on a charge of being absent without leave, he said. When told to go home, Burch said, he was in the process of seeking a hardship discharge because of the illness of both his parents. Surviving are his wife, Jeanette; three sons, John G. of Pontiac Twp., Robert G- of Orchard Lake and Patrick M. of Lexington, Ky.; his mother, Mrs. Marie Eldon-Brqwne of Massena, N.Y.; and six grandchildren. Mrs. Nixon Honorary Scout Chief Mrs. Richard M. Nixon has been named honorary president of the Girl Scouts of America, the GSA announced yesterday. Both daughters of President and Mrs. Nixon — Patricia and Julie — have been girl scouts. Since 1917 the wife of an incumbent president has been named to the post. Floatation Collars Lost by Apollo Recovery Unit Camck Filley, head of the recove|y team which is aboard the USS Guadalcanal for the Apollo 9 splashdown, says it looks as though he will need to have some flotation collars flown from Bermuda, j Three of the collars got away in high seas and heavy winds while the recovery crews were practicing yesterday in the Atlantic for the splashdown on Thursday. "Ibe collars are fastened to spacecraft to keep them afloat until they are hoisted on shipboard. Waste Fuel Plan to Be Explained The use of waste products to fuel a steam-generating plant in the Detroit area will be described at tomorrow meeting of the Greater Waterford Community Council. Richard Ankersen, president of the Thermal Conversion Corp., will discuss how his company’s plant makes use of domestic!, refuse, junked household appliances and old furniture without producing noise, dust or odor problems. Ankersen lives at 2420 Private Drive, Waterford Township. Secretary of State's Wife Gets Husband's Post Tbe wife of Secretary of State William P. Rogers was elected a tmftee of Ifce Frank E. Gannett FoniHiation^ succeeding lier hnsband to post, it was annonnced during die weekend in Rochester, N.Y. Paul hfiller, president the foundation and Gannett Co. Inc., said Adele Rogers was elected a trustee of flie foundation that prqvides support for charities apd philanthror pies in ureas served by Gannett newspapers and broadcasting stattens. WiUiam Rogers was a trustee and a Gannett Go. director. Ho resigned when named to President Nixon’s Cabinet. The meeting, which scheduled to include a business ion and the electim of officers, is slated for 8 p.m. at Pierce Junior High School, 5145 Hatdiery, Waterford Township. Austria’s nationalized c o n-cems, which carry out their activities like privately owned corporations, were able to increase their exports by 4 per cent in 1967. TAKE A NEW . LOOK AT YOURSELF IN A HAMMONTON PARK DOUBLE-BREASTED That flair for the (dramatic you've been waiting to inciulge: this is the year, and Hammonton Park makes a hanidsome entree. In this instance, a flatter- ingly carveci double-breasted in imported black mohair-and-wool worsted, six-buttoned and impecpably detailed. The shade: deep, dark black. $150 OUR PONTIAC MALL STORE IS -OPEN TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY TO 5:30; MONDAY. THURSDAY, FRIDAY & SATURDAY TO 9 P.M. TELEGRAPH & ELIZABETH LAKE ROADS Buy With Confidence at Bill Petrusha & Sons The Store That Good Service Built! TODAY’S BIGGEST COLOR PICTURE! -AT THE LOWEST PRICE EVER! BUY NOW! ^454^^ FREE HOME TRIAL! No Down Payment 36 Months to Pay PLENTY OF FREE PARKING TEL HURON SHOPPING CENTER-FE 3-7879 1550 Union Lake Road, Union Lake 363-6286 OPEN EVERY NIGHT TIL 9 B—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. MARCH iW ^969 ^Therefore, I, William G. Milliken, Governor of the State of Michigan, do hereby proclaim the month of March 1969 as SAVINGS and LOAN month in Michigan.” THE PROCLAMATION READS "Savings and loan associations throughout Michigan represent more than four billion dollars of thrift and home financing resources serving this state. v "These associations are lending nearly six hundred million dollars annually in residential mortgage credit for Michigan's home-owning citizens and are paying earnings to savers in excess of one hundred thirty-five million dollars per year. "The encouragement of thrift and home ownership is a major factor in promoting the general welfare of all citizens of this state. "The leaders and employees of this industry have demonstrated their genuine interest In the progress of their corhmunities and the state by octive participation in civic affairs. "Therefore, I, William G. Milliken, Governor of the State of Michigan, do hereby proclaim the month of March, 1969, as SAVINGS AND LOAN MONTH in Michigan, and urge citizens to recognize the important role savings and loan associations* play in the total progress of our stdte." W W. Huron St., Pontioe Mono FE S-TIT1 •MUieM OFFiOESt IS E. Lawrtneo St., Pontiac Miana FE 2-SI4I 4S1MainSt.,lloch Phono OL 2-bll WflDiKioHwy.,OraylonP Phono OR 4-SS21 BITS Ortonvilla Rd., Olarkston Phono S28-tSS1 IIMW.MaploRd., Waned L Phono MA 4-4SS4 4Tf S. Broadway, Lake Orion Phono II1-422S SI1 R. Main St., MiHord Phono MU B-1SBS SMS Highland Rd., Pontiao Phone S12t12T8 Vi Claims Schmidt Plans to Quit Brettschneider Ouster Heats Caldron in Lions' Deh By BRUNO KEAI^ Sports Editor, Pontitg^c Press The caldron is boiling at 1401 Michigan Avenue, home of the Detroit LionsL In another bombshell story, one of several which have come out of Lions’ office in the past decade, Carl Brettschneider was fired today as director of player personnel and the list of charges he made for pint in a Detroit newspaper, were being refuted by owner Bill Ford and general manager Russ Thomas. The Lions were having a closed door meeting this afterpoon—including coach Joe Schmidt and his staff—following the stdiy this mwning in which Brettschneider said, he was told “to keep his mouth shut,’’ and that Schmidt was planning to resign as head coach in June. “The only thing we have to say in regard to the dtuation is that Carl Brettschneider’s contract has been terminated,” said one Liras’ official. “We will have a formal statement on his charges this afternoon.” In his statements to a Detroit newspaper, Brettschneider is quoted as saying, “Russ Thomas and Bill Ford have as much as told Schmidt that he is going to be fired after next season. So Joe is going to beat them to the punch and quit.” ★ ★ * “The assistant coaches’ contracts are coming up Saturday and Joe is planning to get another year and then quit . . . so that they will have a job or have to be paid off by the Lions.” Brettschheider said, ‘“Iliey (the Lions) planned to say that I resigned to enter private business, but that’s a bunch of bunk. “Don’t let them kid anyone. I was fired,” he told the Detroit newspaper. W -k -k 'The former linebacker of the Lions had one year remaining on his contract at an estimated $30,000 and he said he was told by Thomas and Ford last Friday that “we had such a bad college player draft” and that “I was too close to Joe Schmidt,” as the reasons “I was being fired.” Among other statenients attributed to Brettschneider, he said he “was warned, that if I started to do business in Detroit again I would do well to keep my mouth shut, leave quietly ' without slamming any doors. MAKES CHARGE “They moved me out and tried to pressure me to keep my mouth shut,” he continued, “. . . but I don’t want people THE PONTIAC PRESS MONDAY, MARCH 10, 1969 C—1 spms Lakers, Orion District Champs Area Gagers in Regional Play Lake Orion’s prep hoopsters have very little time to savor their 65-58 Class A district tournament victory over Troy Saturday night at Utica Stevenson High School. The Dragons will be right back in the thick of the state tournament tomorrow night when they will tangle with talented North Farmington in the opening round of the Southfield regional eliminations. Birmingham Brother Rice, (15-5) who ousted Bloomfield Hills Andover, 61-53, Saturday at Seaholm’s “A” tourney, will wait until Wednesday to tackle strong Pontiac Central at Southfield. ★ ★ ★ Also due for Wednesday’s regional activity is Royal Oak Kimball. The Knights qualified to meet Detroit Northern at Femdale by trimming city rival Dondero, 81-54, in their own district finale. Almont riddled Marine City Holy Cross’s defenses for a 76-61 s Angeles Sunday by smashing a first inning home run. Kegler Gets Doctor's OK, Then Hits 289 cover and keeps up on changes. TEAM OUSTED The specter of Mrs. Bareham officiating in games Involving her sons — assuming she could get permission lnunedlatdy-<-was eliminated Thursday^i^ when Grand Rapids Kenowa Hills ousted Spring Lake from the state tournament, 67-65. (Pootfac Northorn). I 127 — Mike Karner (W. Lake Central)) 12. Jeff Buehrle (Muikegon Mona Shore),' ........... . (Pontiac Central); .. .Jft Callard (Lanting Sexton)) 3. Larr\ Wee (YpsllantD) ' "— ' ---- (Fltigerekt). — ...ly Osborn (Grand Ledge)) 2. Dave Mkieeu (Thuralon); 3. Doug Smith -................. Borders (Pontlee ___I “Anyone can obtain a permit a ! MADISON, Wis. (AP) - With-to referee from the state to for Houk 8 New York Ya^ees I doctor’s approval, Sam handle high school basketball scored a tying. thrM-™n ho^r probably never would games If they pass an open . " *'P^® ihave made a splash in the 66th hook test. I feel this penalizes 4. rick annual American Bowling Con-«coaches who have obtained wavariyT! , Davo Llborito (Trenton). ....... Hobi Choulnard (Laming Weada (NilaaD 4. . (Temparanca Badford). 154 - (Ctlo)t 3. AAar -txton)) 3. P Paul C a r a V o Royal Oak Don-f (Flln- ---------- ______ 2. Richard Ruddy (Flint Central)) 3. John HIttlar (Tamparanca Badford); ■ “Tb King (Trenton), — Sam Davis (Lansing Eastern); 2. ___Mott (WaUsd Lake Central); 3. Pat O'Connor (Detroit Catholic Central); 4. Mika Cronin (Niles). 175 — Dave Clolak (Lansing Saxton).- ~ STATE CHAMPION - Mike Karner of Walled Lake reigns as the state’s new 127-pound Class A wrestling champion. Karner won in the state finals Saturday at Michigan State University. Coach Threatens Fines Pistons Get Warning By the Associated Press Crew-cut Paul Seymour sighed disgu.stedly and said he will levy a $1,(W0 fine against the next Detroit Pistons that costs his team points by “hanging back and griping at an official." The Piston coach said it “contributed quite a bit” to Detroit’s humUiatlng 126-121 National Basketball Association loss Milwaukee at Coho Arena Sunday. hfter the teams concluded their series against each other this year, with Milwaukee winning four and losing two. editing Walt Bellamy, Hap Hairston and Dave Bing as examples, Seymour said staying in the backcourt to complain to an official “created an odd-man situation. “You give them (Milwaukee) an open shot or you commit fouls to cover up for fellows lagging behind,’' said Seymour OTHER GAMES in other NBA action, GaU Goodrich poured in 47 points an handed out 15 assists, propelling the Phoenix Suns to a 146-133 victory over the San Diego Rocketsi. Wilt Chamberlain hauled down 37 rebounds, helping the Los Angeles Lakers subdue the Baltimore Bullets 120-109, and Walt Hazzard set an Atlanta record of 19 assists in the Hawks’ 134-107 romp over the Cincinnati Royals. the first time In six starts by downing the San Francisco Warriors 138-89. The Philadelphia 76ers trimmed the New York Knickerbockers 110-101 and moved within 1% games of Eastern Division’ leader Baltimore. About his Pistons, wh6 ended a two-game winning streak, Seymour said “Let’m do the complaining when they get back to the other end—or leave it to me—I can do enough for all of The Boston Celtics ended a three-game losing streak and reached the 100-polnt mark for Marty Liquori Leads Wildcats --------- (PontlBC C«ntr»D) 3.1 Norbert Olind (Detroit Catholic Central)); — ■ -------(Walled Lake). Don Parsons (Lansir "a'lll Laland 4. Rick Baltimore 76. WEEKEND PASS gress tournament. degrees and spent time with!y'jJ,';™“7Ba}“ciiy^°cI^^ Aaron, hbwever, was hit on Coleman, 52, of Fairfield, sstydents above and beyond theirjBomouit (Ann Arbor pionaar). the right knee by a Pete Mlkkel-Ohio, threw his back out of duties. To have‘flunkies’go in sen pitch In the seventh Inning place about 10 days ago, and did and serve as referees and do an, pk L A • and will miss today’s Braves-not get his doctor’s permission incapable job irks me,” she LyUlCc An/Ut? Yankees exhibition' at West until three days ago to join the said. Palm Beach. Fla. And White,Hst of more than 32,000 keglers w * ★ D who joined the Yanks on a|in the current tourney. j In the meantime, the office of weekend pass from the Army.j * ★ * director of the will be back on duty at Fortj He rolled a 289 line Sunday. Michigan High School Athletic NEWTOH. Mass. (AP) Dlx, N.J. ;lhe best game to date in the 79-!Association at Lansing^ has a Charles J. “Chuck” Daly, an as- ■ ‘ I day competition. jproblem. jsistant basketball coach at Duke Villanova IC4A Winner 10th Time While Aaron and White were! He had 10 consecutive ' jt is a new situation. Women delivering the l(mg ball in the | strike—matching the best sin-J have been given state permits pinch for the Braves and Yanks, gle—game string so far, then to referee girls’ basketball ronventional homers helped six:left the No. 10 pin standing iri]games and men have been bfher clubs nail exhibition victo- the 11th frame? given permits to referee girls’ rles. * •. * * games but no woman hiterto W ♦ * I His 663 series put him in 10th has been a referee in state high Joe Us hit a three-run blast In place In the regular singles school male basketball games. University, has been named head coach at Boston College. Daly will replace Bob Cousy, who has announced hIto>tor League’s “B’ bracket. Eric Rose had a hat to a 6-3 vmlict over Oakland, also were named to the team. the bail toward the bucket against Romeo in their j trick and Ray Emsley added ict final game on the Rochester floor Saturday ....... ‘ ' Johnston tallied five points as West Bloomftokl won, 81-59. ning flurry that carried Seattle Reaves of Central Connecticut district final game on the Rochester floor Saturday night, [the other goal In support of " ■■ ■ ■■ .. . - .... IgoaUe Brad Muehl’s work. The 13-event finals for the schools entered saw Ma^lanC capture two firsts, with Elliotl Garrett gaining the high jump crown at 24 feet 2 inches and Jim Williamson taking the pole vault at 15 feet 8 inches. Third-place Harvard, with 21 points won both weight events as Dick Benka repeated in the shot put with a 59 feet 1 inch toss and Ed Nosal taking the 35-pound weight throw at 60 feet 9% inches. easy TRIUlvd»H Another meet mark fell when Art Dulong of Holy Cross swept to an easy victory in the two-mile run in 8:44.9. The (frusad-won the two-mile relay in 7:40.2. NAIA Tournament Slate Has Eight Games Today KANSAS CITY (AP) - Cental State of Ohio opois defense of its National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics basketball diampionship ti^iight, taking on M(«mouth, N.J-, in a flrst-raund game of the 3^ NAIA tournament in Munlciapl Auditorium. The tourney got under way today, with four games on the day program and four more toni^t. Other games today included: [illikin, 01., vs. Eastern New Mexico at 11:15 a.m., Ariieville-Biltmcre, N.C., vs. Monmouth, N-J., at 1 p.m., and Elizabeth City, N. C. State vs. Valdosta, Ga., State at 2:45 p.m. The other eight first round games will be played Tuesday with No- I seeded Faihnont State of West Virginia making Tuesday’s day slate has Whittier, Calif., vs. Corpus Christ!, Eastern Michigan vs. Georgetown, Ky., Henders(», Ark., vs. SL John’s, Minn., and Central Washington vs. New Haven, Conn. t Indi- ana Ontral. Last year, Central State stopped Fairmont 51-48 in the Besides the C^tral Obio-Mim-mouth game, at 5:15 pm., to-ni^t’s schedule luts Howard Payne against Wayne, Nib., State at 7, Washbton of Kansas against Western Montana at 8:45, and Soufiiwestem Oklahoma against Yankton, SJ>., at 10:30. Linfield, Ore., opened today’s first-round action at 9:30 a’.m. against Stout, Wis., State. St. Clair Toppled in Playoff Contest BAY CITY (UPI) Vln-cennes, fod., SL Clair, 9369, Si^irday i^t to take fiie Regfarn Juniw College baskefittll tournament and advance to Hutchinson Kans., for tbe national finals. BIG LEAD Detroit held a 13-point lead In the second quarter and was ahead by as many as six early in the last period. But, came the fold. Why? “It’s a mystery team,” said Seymour, ‘"rhey start doggin’ it, then they start trading a few; and before you know it they’re losing some baskets.” Flynn Robinson and Jon McGlocklin led Milwaukee’s final period comeback. Robinson hit for 10 points and McGlocklin rine in the stretch drive. The two guards each finished with 21 points as seven Milwaukee players scofed in double fig- Detrolt had five players with ‘ 17 <»• more points, led by Bellamy with 28 and Bing with 26. Seymour also said he will impose a curfew when the Pistons* open up a five-game stand on the West Coast this week. CAREER HIGH Goodrich’s point spree—a pro career high for the Phoenix backcourt star—offset 39 points by San Diego ace Elvin Hayes. ; Jim Fox and Dick Snyder j scored 21 apiece for the Suns, as I did the Rockets’ Don Koji& Chamberlain’s board work -end-Jerry West’s 34-point effort ► led the Lakers past Baltimore ' and kept them four games ■: ahead of second place Atlanta in ■ the Western IMvision pennant } race. Kevin Loughery and Earl ' Monroe each hit 29 points for the Bullets, who have dropped four in a row. Hazzard broke Lennie Wil-kins’ Hawk mark of 18 assists, freding off for 12 baskets in the ^ first half. Lou Hudson scored 30 points and grabbed 17 rebounds ( for the Hawks. The Celtics celebrated Sam ) Jones Day by running ofl to a 52-24 lead in the first hslf as igfrieddivld- Jones and Larry Siet ed 32 points. Segfried finished with 28 points to lead file Boston blitz. Jones, a standout on nine of ' the Celtics’ 10 NBA championship clubs, was honored at half- ; time. He will retire at the end of ' the season. Philadelphia, spdrked by Wally Jones and Billy Cunningham, -eraseiLa-12-point-fir,st half defi.^-^ c’t on the way to their national ' television victory. Jones topped * the 76ers with 25 points, one ' more than Cunningham and one : less than New't York’s Willis " Reed. : (;!s^ « 1-2 13 DlMimw • 4-7 L 1 ^2 »Hairtlon 7 4-1120 McGIkm 7 3-3 21 Bing 10 M 24 Robin 10 1-2 21 Komivti 5 7-7 17 ....................... 2 04) 4 loss for the Port Huron-based community college, beaten for fiie third' straight year the same school. WHIInni 0 2-2"2Watkir , „ . «l tS 11 20-121 ' f THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. MARCH 10, 1969 C—8 Swimming Champions Crowned Birmingham swimming teams, Groves and Seaholm, dominated their respective league meets Saturday ftight, Andover wai the Tri-County League meet while Pontiac Central failed to win one event and finished last in the Saginaw Valley swim championships. Groves, a. strong contender for the state championships this weekend at Michi^ S 'ents and s< all 11 events and set seven league recwds to win its third, straight Northwestern Suburban Championship in Groves pool. Seaholm, loser only to Groves and Kimball in season meets, I gained its fifth straightl Southeastern Michigan! Association championship in the pool. I Groves finished with 149 points, Thurston with 57, Livonia Franklin with 44, John Glenn fiad 13 and North Farmington had 10. Larry Driver’s two records were posted in the 200 individual medley in a time ofj 2:07.4 and 100 backstroke in' 58.6. He holds both county | records this season in these events in 2:06.3 and 5 7.9' respectively. SCHOOL MARK Doug Tull’s 55.8 in the butterfly is also a school record and the best time in the county this year. Andover rolled up 37214 points in winning the Tri-County meet as Steve Kuzma took the 100 backstroke and Rich Matheny the diving title as the lone individual winners. , Bloomfield Lahser had two individual winners in Mark Beveridge in the individual medley and Rick Amann in the 100 butterfly. The meet was held at Lincoln Park. |dividual firsts, but the depth s the factor for the [perennial champs. Flint Central [had two double winners in John I Stevens and Bob Long, winning ithe individual medley and butterfly and the 50 and 100 freestyles respectively. TRI-COUNTY LGAOUi CHAMPIONSHIPS .....J Hills Andovtr 372VS; 1. Grand Blanc 3UV!i; 4. B. Hills Lahsar 143; 5. Flint Carmdn II*; t. Lincoln -ark 115; 7. Clarancevllla *4. Medlay Ralay\ — Andovar 153.4 (Llovd. 200 Fraastvia - Cody Helderar (Grand Blanc); Snydar (Grand Blanc); Groth (Andovar). 1:54.0. (Now racord.) Fraestyla — Tom McCombs (Grand „.»..€); 2. Adams (Andover); Ballar tyne (Grand Blanc). ;23.». (New racord. 200 Individual AAadlav — Mark Bev erldg* (Lahsar); . record In preliminaries 2:15.5.) _lvlno — Rich Matheny (Ando'. Jim Gregory (Grand Blanc); Andy In the Saginaw Valley meet won by Arfliur Hill with 253 points, Pontiac Central finished last with 28 points. Other team totals included, Bay City Central with 230, Flint Central 167, Midland 105, Handy [94, Southwestern VlVi, Saginaw 53, Flint Northern 41. Arthur Hill had only two in- daker (Grand Blanc). 352. (Meet record. 100 Butterfly — Rick Amann (Lahsar) Chuck Bowmah. (Grand Blanc); Tr-* “ (Andovar). :52.4. (New ad May Fraestyfa — Tern McCombs (Wrand too Backstroke tr)! Mark Beveridge (Lahser); Jeff tianson (Carman). 1:07.5. 400 Freestyle Relay — Grand Blanc, Andovar, Carman. 3:42.0. (New racord.) Bruin Closing Door on NHL Scoring Title 13; North Farmington 10. IM Relay — Groves (Jim Phillips, Steve Driver, Doug Tull, Doug Fraser). 1:46.5. (New league record); Franklin, Glenn. 200 Freestyle — Mark Crorey (Groves); 50 Freestyle — Tim Jones (Groves); Chudlk (Groves); Lee (Thurston). :33.3. By the Associated Press |Esposito snapping the lock on' That click yod just heard the Naticmal Hockey League Could very well have been Phil scoring championship. (Franklin). 2:07.4. (New league record., 1 Diving — Dick Quint (Groves); Me- Igonlgal (Groves); Martin (Groves). 351.95. (New league record.) Butterfly .Y- Doug Tull (Groves); Steve Tull (Groves'); Burke (Franklin). :5*.1. ...... .----. record 55.8 In prallmln- Tull.) r.c..,,. — Tim Jones ((Sroves); Mitchell (Groves); Bruckman (Thurston). :50.6. (New league record.' New league ries by Doug too Freestyfe OU Swimmers 2nd in Meet I Esposito whofbustbd past the lOO-point plateau'’ last week. (Gn -.... Driver res); Jim Phillips (Groves); Dolan Farmington). ' --- -- •----- Mike Campbell Sets Record in 200 scored his 41st goal of the son and added three assists , . day night, leading Boston to a 7-2 rout over Los Angeles. Combined with Montreal’s 2-2 tie against New York, thfe victory moved the Bruins within one point of the Canadiens in the sizzling East Division race. 400 Ffeestyle — ' Gary f (Groves); Gllssmen (Thurston); (Thurston). 4:17.5. •“ Breaststroke — Steve Fraser, Jim Colville, Mark Crori Chudik), FrAnklln, Thurston. •d.) Crorey, S I. 3:35.0. (I Birmingham 5 I ’The four points gave Oakland University swimmers 107 for the season—12 more than: followed up the example of Chicago’s Bobby Hull. Esposito|'”a» iM'^’oliVyGottschiino (Kimbaiu; teammate Tom Davies with two has 11 games left to play and|' " ......................... ........a-—- ........... Royal Oak Kimball 284; Southfield 1*3; Farndale 158; Hazel Park 103. — -------- .jj, _ ,------------------- _________ Phillips, Ray Schwarb, Bob Guilford); Kimball; Southfield. 1:46.7 200 Freestyle - Curt Finney (Se; holm); Rick Watsoa (Kimball); Mar Vanderkaay (Kimball). 1:51.5. 50 Freestyle — Greg Ortega (SoutI field); Jim Morgan (Seaholm), Bill Oi dyke (Kimball). :22.7. j John KlemanskI (Ferndale); Jin Steffi more meet records and three firsts Saturday but Notre Dame finished strong to win the second annual Motor City championships ait Wayne State. Oaklmd’s Pioneers led for the first events aftw Davies started them off with Hull has 10. In other Sunday action, St. Louis and Minnesota played to a 2-2 tie and Philadelphia thumped Oakland 5-3. In Saturday’s games, Mont-,real tied Los Angeles 3-3, New outstanding performance in York whacked Pittsburgh 5-3, Friday ni^t’s 1,6 5 0 - y a r d Philadelnhia and Toronto tied freestyle. (Hazel Park). 351.70. Butterfly — Jim Steffi (Southfield); Bruce Thorburn (Kimball); Ray Schwat^ a Philadelphia and Toronto tied 12-2, Detroit belted Boston 74 Teammate Steve Yedlin, who and St. Louis took Oakland 5-2. had a fifth in the Friday race. Backstroke — Gary Gottschling (Kimball); Lance Wallace (Seaholm); Bob Guilford (Seaholm); Brad Combt (Seaholm). :59.3. 400 Freeatyle — Curt Finney (Sea- holm)) Rick ) ; (Kimball); Mark Vanderkaay (Kimball). 4;05.«. 100 Breaststroke — John KlemanskI ^erndale); Bob Phillips (Seaholm); Irv Weeks); KIml came back Saturday to set a meet record 11:25.2 in capturing! the 1,000-yard freestyle, [ Oakland’s Mike Campbell helped hold the lead by winning the 100 and 200-yard freestyles. I His 1:51.5 in the 200-Js^a new meet reeprd, too. ’ThS^ were! six meet records set in all. ! Notre Dame won^two of the final three events to overtake! the Pioneers for a 163-point winning total. 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Cumout additive 77e „ Cleans carburetor safely. BRAKE OVERHAUL HERE IS WHAT WE DO: • Install ngw linings .•Chuck whggi cylindgrs • Chuck muslgr cylindgr • Turn all four drums • Chuck grgas# seals « Inspect all fluid lines • Install new fluid, bleed and adjust brakes • Test drive automobile 27 88 Self-adjusting brakes 4.00 additional LIFETIME GUARANTEED MUFFLER FOR MOST AMERICAN MADE AUTOMOBILES INSTALLED FREE Heavy Dufy 1 V Bfand-name spark plugs f 491 AC, Autolite and Champion. S.T.P. oil treatment Transmission fluid savinas 32c Oil can tapper 77< leak - proof pouring spout. CBIBBeB AI M C 5272 Dixie Hwy.. prayton Plains -.Open Mon. thru Fri 9 to 9, Sat 9 to 6 9 AVIV wiBVIIBICB igio Widetrack Drive, Pontiac - Open Mon. thru Sat. 9 to 6t*hO(ne 33< - \- ^ C—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MARCH 10, 1969 lech Skaters In S^ifinals : D«f«nding Champion ■ Denver Favored 1X)L0RAD0 SPRINGS, Colo (JJP) ” The defending cham-Uk»n University of Denver Pioneers will meet Harvard Thursday night in the first round V V., ' ' ' i il , AM ft/,." THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MARCH 10, 1969 C—5 BASKETBALL SCOKES I 74 Fruit-■ at Ludington DIatrIct 20 — at YpaMantI Ypallantl 71 Wayna Memorial r' Dlitrlet 24 — at Wyandotte 74 Lincoln Park SS DIalrl'* •' -* •*- 73 Clare 43 uiairict 93 — at ■ Oscoda 80 Ogemaw t Robichaud 55 Taylor Kennedy 44 Olafriet 24 - at Dearborn srdaon 70 Dearborn Haights rict 38 — at Grasse Poln Woods Bishop Gallaghe sods Notre Dame 40 District 41 — at .. Mount Clematis 44 Port ____________ „ District 44 — at Utica Lake Orion 44 Troy 58 District 47 - at Royal Oak Royal oak Kimball 81 Royal Oak Don- Class C ------- . at Wa*— Bangor 104 Hartford 78 District 4 ■ ....... Eau Claire 85 Berrien Springs 75 ■ District 12 — St Quincy . .... 84 Hanover-Horton 54 District 15 — at Jackson Brooklyn Columbia Central 74 Ea Jackson 54 District 14 — at Adrian 54 Madison 52 District 21 — at Dundee B 43 I Brother Rice 4 ern 54 ansing 74 L— District 73 — St Grand Rapids Grand Rapids Union 82 Traverse City Bfl _ District 72 CLASS B District 45 — at Yale New Haven 77 Armada 42 District 58 — at Flint Flint St. Michael 42 Flint St. / 58 (ot) District 75 — at Byron Center ................75, Jen'sor. „ district 78 — at Hamilton Hamilton 77 Hopkins 41 Saginaw 14 ( ;t a — a _______ Parchment 53 District 11 — at Marshall Marshall 41 ALblon 55 District 14 — at Parma Jackson Lumen ChrlstI 70 Michigan Center Muskegon Crhistlan 47 Montague District 83 — at Fremont Newaygo 77 Kent City 51 district 87 — at Mount Pleasant Shepherd 84 Harrison 47 . District 71 - at Bay Cl., Saginaw St. Stephen 43 Saginaw Carrollton 52 Frankanmulh 41 .. ....... Branch 44 District 74 — at Cass City Ubiy 71 Marietta I 22 — at Bedford Catholic Central District lOO-at Grayling Grayling 49 Gaylord 41 District 104 - at Boyne City — - - • ■ St. Francis 48 „ - at Flint Flint Ainsworth 43 Flint Bentley 57 District r ■ ---------------- ----- — .. ______t.Morris Saginaw Buena Vista 70 Lakeville 84 (3 pvts) 45 _ g, Dui’S"?,. . Fenton 44 Swart iCreek M. 20vts) District 42 — at Elsie Ovid-Elsle 70 Ithaca 73 District 44 - at AAason Holt 44 Mason 58 District 47 — at Laka Odei Lakwood at Hastings Wyoming Wyoming CoSiwIn Haights 40 Wyoming Rogers _ ,t Otsego '’*Dlstr"ct 77*-”a?*Hudsonvllle Holland Lake le City 44 Petoskey St. Francis District 118 — at Stephenson Crystal Falls » Norway 57 District l20-at Houghton Houghton 71 L'Anse 55 Class D District 7 — at Kalamazoo tovert 52,^l|chogcr,ft_44at Camden Frontier 81 Waldron 40 District 20 — at Ypsllantl YpsllantI St. John 52 Ypsllantl Roosa- velt 51 District 24 — at Trenton Detroit All Salhts 44 Ecorse St. Francis 40 District 43-at Port Hui It 74 Marine City Holy Cr( District 58-et Flint Flint St. John Vianney 77 Flint St. Marys 47 District 87 - at Mount Pleasant ... Pleasant Sacred Heart " ‘ City 52 District 105-at Bellaira Windsor Raceway Boyne Falls 57 VanderbI District 10 ----... .„ Jt Cheboygan son 81 Pension 74 (ot) District 107-et PIckford DaTour 77 Brlmley 83 District 113-at Gladstone Perkins 73 Rapids River 47 (ot) District 115-at Powers Powers 44 Carney 58 (ovt) District 114—at Marquette Windsor Results ^Marquette Bishop Baraga 54 Republic District Baraga 57 Lake Linden 33 Duchess Lady 5.10 3.20 Dh-KI An 4.00 Oh-Maud‘s Boy _ 4.20 2nd-*2200 Claiming Pace; 1 Mllei Mr. Whiskers 15.40 5.90 3.30 Senator Hudson 4.00 3.10 *'daily**OC»IBL1i Duchess Udy «7) and Mr. Whiskers (7) paid 845.10.. 3rd-81200 Claiming Pace; 1 Mllei Henry's Allen 12.40 5.30 4.30 Irene Song 3.80 3.50 First Nibble 3.50 4th-81400 Claiming Pace; 2 Mila, Bud's Brother 4.70 3.M 3.00 Chris Cobb 8.50 5.70 Adios Doris ...... 5.70 5th-$2400 Clahnlng Paee.^l Mllet Lad^y^BIrd Johnst«t 12.80 4.|0 3.B. "oiyiNEillA“'»ir PaM 811.^^^ By The Associated Press ertimes Florida 73, /___________ Vanderbilt 120, Mississippi State 83 Auburn 80. Mississippi 70 D^or Pate 10.30 s ‘^QuiNBUAi 24 paid miO. MR 4 Mixed Up Kid 5.40 3 7nvl4m*V^rrsd Paeet 1 Mllei Forty NIner 20.30 7.00 3 Raw Vani'** 4.00 4 Royal A lofh-12780 Claiming Pami; 1 Redigo Adios Bill 15.80 Abbe Cliff Caught Napping EMCTORi 8-7 paid 848.40. Windsor Entries lsf-81100 Claiming Trti 1 Mllai Castle Wave Nottlnaham Quo Jamie Who Anne Ensign Byhalla Dean Emily Scotland •'— —eket le Dllllon Mighty Monarch Imperial Lee Bridget Quinn , Abbe Chief a'rg'htW Bjtodi-n- Rick Attorney Pace; 1 Mllei Energizer Fairway Dimples Gallon 'ammy Creed R. Frisco Wyn (Jackm . Nath«i— 700 Claiming Pao Sliver Ronnie Adios Dan Tollgate Coppersmith Cottonwood Sota Parading Panca Dots Girl Rochester Tech 82, Brockport State Ippi 70 Georgia 81 . _»ast Purdue 120, Indiana 74 Nebraska 70, Oklahoma 44 Kansas State 4, Michigan State 45 84, Iowa 74 ....-.asra.. NCAA Ragianal Playoffs Univarslty Division First Round Eastern Ragianal at Ralainh. N. St. John's, N.Y., in 75, Villanova 41 MIdaasf Ragianal at Carbondala, II Marquette 02, Murray State 42 Miami, Ohio 43, Notre Dame 40 MMwast Raglenal at Ft. Worth, Tax. Texas A&M 81, Trinity, Tex., 44 --------------y jj 5gy,on 50 Colorado Stats U Regional at Las Cruces, N State 75, Seattle 73 . Atlantlc^oaat^^farar North Carolina 85, Duke 74 r~z: the unique UNITED TIRE SERVICE , WHIYIWA1I.8 i 4 FULL riT! Mr SIZE SJlill - MS>I4 - t.M>l4 t.Ilitt - SJSxIS - S4I>I4 NEW RIVERSIDE^ GLASBELT TIRE *20 6.50«13 tubalasa blackwall plus I.SI F.E.T. each The Glasbelt combines the best of radio! ply and conventional tires. 2 fiber glass belts hold the tread on the road, reduce squirm. With Riverside* lifetime quality and road hazard guarantee. •With froda-/B tiro off your car. FREE TUBE WITH POWER GRIP HEAVY SERVICE Top traction tread designed to take you through mud and snow. All weather tire for smoll trucks. I 6 70-15 -h 2.80 F.E.T. 6.50-16 H-2.98 F.E.T. 7.00-15+ > 3.28F.E.T. NEW 1969 RUIBLER AMERICM 2-DOOR <1889 ^20-QFF! Riverside® Supreme air conditioner- REGULARLY $249 $229 Drive in luxury with Wards best! Breeze through the heat in cool, pollen-free cPmfort with Supreme air conditioning. Special control gives uniform cooling for city and highway driving. Dual 3-speed blowers and 4-woy louvers for car-wide circulation. Modern slim design gives you plenty of leg room; recessed control panel for greater safety. UOIITN OF MMCH SPECIAL! All Factory Eqiripnieiit heater, BACK-UP LIGHTS, OIL FILTER, GCMPLETELY WIHIERIZEB RMH MOTORS Riverside® Heavy Duty oil filters OO'* Jr JW cartridge Exceed original equipment quality to give you improved filtering and engine efficiency. Spin-on low at . . 1,99 YOU’LL FIHD EVERYTHING FOR YOUR CAR AT WARDS • PARTS • SERVICE • INSTALLATION V FAMOUS RIVERSIDE AUTOMOTIVE PARTS V INSTALLATION ON MOST PARTS WE SELL V TRAINED MECHANICS FOR QUALITY SERVICE Just say '^Charge It!" j Wards Chorg-dll cord is your ticket to notjon- * wide auto service.. • with no money down. Come , a_ _I. teemA »aa.g« It” In to Words t^oy and just soy "charge It.” SfiTSiliRie Highway I CLARKSTON 625-2635 .......'■ Chilly Wolverines Falter in Season finale, 95-86 Kmwm City s««mt 0«ki4n« .... Chictff* WMt uwitm WM L»>l Pel. OB Pl«*Burih MMtrMi S». l«ult S*n Francitco BncI), Fli Clnclma... ....... tota, Fla., canceled, HouMon, M Haven. Fla.. cmclnnall, N, v ■ ele_. v». Boslon. A. I r, 2, New Vorit, COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) - A b(;low-average shooting performance has wound up Michigan’s mediocre basketball season with a 9!>-«6 loss to Ohio State. It gave the Wolverines clear title to fourth place in the Big Ten with a t-7 record. In losing to Ohio Stale at Columbus Saturday, Michigan hit only 36 per cent of its field goal attempts compared with 48 per cent for the winners. For the season, Michigan had a 13-11 mark. Michigan’s Dennis Stewart garnered 26 points and teammate Rudy Tomjanovich, the League’s Number Two scorer, canned 20. However, their per-fonnances were outshadowed by Ohio State's Jim Cleamons, a 6- foot-3 sophomore, who netted 37 points. Just last ’Tuesday, Cleamons collected 37 points against Indi- 5>i, i, ns eioiburgh, N, 3, CdlWnr*. A. 4, C $tn Diego, N, 11, __________ .4. 4, Chlcego, N, 2 $kn 6lego, N, II, Mourctn All Stari « S*n Francisco, N. ♦, Claveland. A, 4 taWmora ■ - * “ ■■ Lwdardala. Patrall, 4 AwKansa I Naw York. A. a ^-Kansas City. A, 2, Washlnoton: I ... ™ ., .... ilnolor I, A. 3, SaaOla. A. 2, 14 I ------ty. A, vs. WOT— :h, Fla., rain BLEW LEAD Ohio State blew a 10-point sec-onr* half advantage as Michigan stayed within reach until the last five minutea. The Buckeyes held a narrow 76-74 margin with 5:30 left, but Jody Finney and Cleamons hit on a pair of three-point plays. The Buckeyes then held as much as a 16-point margin in the last minutes. Michigan State took a 1^S lead, but the Bucks fought back, ar the game was tied before a jump shot by Cleamons put (Milo on top for good 34-33 with three minutes left in the half. Ohio State held a 43-36 halftime __________ All Ogififi W LPef. WL F«l. Fl». OF 3 I .tW M 4 .133 222S 1t3Sl stNrt t S .441 It f .722 2002 l7Mi to^lch t 1 .443 17 T .704 mt 1775 F,,, • ' ............. 2152 31451 waSey Austria's Ski Strength Seen in Vail A/ieet tuton, A, It, St. Loult. N, 4 AtIcnW. N, It, Lot Angoitt, N, 3 A-Ktnut City, A, 5. Wtihinglon, A. DMrott. A, 4, MInnotott, A, 3 FlllMMpMo. N, I, PmiborBh, N, 4, ■nnlngt Clnclniwtl, N, 4, ChlcOBO. A, 0 _ , Soil Froncltco, N, t, CTovtItnd. A, 3 SMttlo. A, 4, Ookitnd, A. 3 .Ctilfgmio. A, 1h Chicago, N. 5 BMCanaat City, A, i,^ntreal, N, s San DIaeo, N, 4. San DIago Marlnai 2 Taday't Oamaa Atlanta, N, vt. Naw York, A, al Wi Palm Baach, Fla. _ O^lnnatl,. N, vt. Phlltdalohla, N, I, N, at Varo WiKonili Indiana Tympa, Fla. I, vt. Lot *N«» York, N, vt. Botlon, A, al Win ^I^MaBMigh, N, vt. St. Louli. N, at ^ ewSfO?'N .'*vt. San Franclteo, N, ^>*$i!n*Ol4oI'N. vt. Clavaland. A, it Toe-‘“chlcaio. A, vt. Datrolt, A, at Saraiota, Kantat city. A, vt. Wathinglon A, Atlanta. N\"!^'HooTton, N. al Watt ^ Chtc^ll!’ N,'vt. Kantat City, A, CinemnatL n« vt. Kanin ^iry« mi i-f. **t^Aw'laa, M, vt Montraal, N, at Vara *3^adaipkia, N, vt. St. Loult, N. at ^'Rli5!u^h,''N,' vt. Datrolt, A, at '*!$lcm, N, vt. Calltornla, A, at ScoWt-**Sali%aio, N, VI. Clavaland, A, at Tue-“Tan^FrancItco, N, vt. Oakland, A, at **Balllmo«V’'A. vt. Wathinglon, A, at **Hw1a«L ***vi.’ Mlnnatola, A,’at Winlar ”8!i!cago,'*A, vt. Now York, A, at FI, L^i^dalt.. f If ^ NHL Standings Niantraal 2 U 2 Ut SSl^York V. ?S 24 '8 R Datrolt ......... 33 25 10 74 211 117 « s s '* ” S, Loult '"•Wu .1 lU 13. 0.kla?!d « « 'i; VL ^ IS S3 It 4* 17 37 It 45 lao w 15 40 to 40 155 220 PttfiBurth tS 40 to 4t MiZ-sr^ido •UdhitiPAAi 9. Mmm Vark ! Boston 7. Lot An«oiOB 2 Philodot^io 5* Oakland 3 d%utw .B.xrtas achadvtod. Toiav*» Oamtt TMtra oar .’‘•"•"'"vssa;!?'-®. Wonirtol Ot St. Loult NBA Standings chigtn ytiltm 4 I 42t 12 12 .500 1423 1755 „ 4 I .42* 11 13 .471 1470 1472-Honrv 5 0 .357 12 12 .500 2035 till Fra'an 5 ♦ .357 11 13 .450 14W 14»2 Nicktic 4 10 .214 t 15 .375 1HI 2023 Ford Spartans Fall to Minnesota in Final Tilt MINNEAPOLIS (AP)- An instant zone defenseis responsible for the crowd at fifth place in the I Big Ten basketball final standings, where Michigan State finished deadlocked with Northwestern and~Minnesota. TTie Minnesota Gophers, leading only 5^51, installed a zone d^ense with 11:15 to play Sahir-day night and then rolled up a 62-51 lead in less than three niin-utes en route to a 78-65 win over Michigan State. All three teams finished the season with 6-8 conference marks. Michigan State had an 11-12 over-all mark. MIKAN STARS Larry Mikan led Minnesota with 21 poinU and 19 rebounds. Lee Lafayette, held to three points in the first half, led the Spartans with 17 points. Minnesota took what proved to be the lead for good with four minutes left in the first half. MSU pulled within two points after that and once to one point before Minnesota coach Bill Fitch installed the zone. CoMItnd LtltytUt 3*,.:vm 7 3-S 17 L. Mik«t) 7 7-7 21 7 0‘S 14 Nunes* . • - Boorekot 7 0-0 4 Hill * n Masrton 3 Hurtoen 4 Reg'luM 5 4 5 14 2 2-2 ' Gtit Flli'ns 0 I T. Mikan 0 C- , Ttlill 34 IS 13 43 Tgitll H 23-35 21 MIcMgin ttttt 52 12>-45 MhintMlg 37 41-71 Foultg out - None. Toltl loult — Michigan Still MInntioti 17. 5,t47. BaI..... . Btefen gisfi'!."* WwMni DiviiiM Let Angtltt 4* 25 .4 Atl4nta • ?! -i San Franclaoo 37 3J .4 ChIcaM . . . 31 43 .4 Ban^^o SO 42 .4 Actual's Event in State Has New Leader omy eanwtu™^.^^ Lat Angetat 12a Oaltlmora )» Phoanix 144, San OlaBO 133 Botton I3S, San Franclteo It Atlania 134, Cincinnati 107 Only gamaa achaduM. TadaytOamat San Franclteo at Milwaukta Only B—..W ToMday'a O...... Philadalphia at Naw York Atlanta at Chicago Ottroll at Lot Angties ----DIago . choduTtd. Only B ABA Standings ■aatam MvWoa MIDLAND. (AP)-Ust year’s chanson in‘the Women’s State Bowling Tournament actual team event is in first place again this year after five weekends of tournament action. Stan Long Pontiac of Detroit replaced Fred Wolf’s Singles of Detroit as the actual leader Sunday with a pin total of 2,672. Helen Weston of Detroit is the new singles actual leader with a score of 611, replacing Lila heatcraft of Rosebush. The leader also took over first place in all event actual action with a score of 1,727, re- 3 2-3 I 11 4-5 24 Cl'o * 2-5 20 Sor' 3 1-1 7 Bar 5 3 4 13 FInnty 1 ao 2 Howall 2 3-3 6 Me'ors 0 (KO 0 Sch'bcl 0 56 32>/ii 313/4 32Vt + i 122 37% 36Va 367/» 29 27Vd 26% 267/« s AmAirlin .80 AmBdcst 1.60 Am Can 2.20 ACySug 1.40 AmCyan 1.25 105 107Va 104V4 106^ +27/t MFdy .90 (t Cl 1.90 84 297i im 29% 59 36 35% 35%- 2 47% 47 47 52 54% 54% S4>/^- 55 33% 33*/4 33% ........ ^inl GtWnumt .90 GraenGnt .95 43 1.1% 11% 11% .. i 43% 4B% 4^ '*’ % X37 14% im 14 4 % 75 59% 59% 59% % mT8.T 2.40 255 52 51% 51% m Tobac 2 ■" ■■■( Cp .30 % — V. 1,025 lbs at 30.50; choica 900-1,200 I 28.50-30.00; mixed goM and cholcf *" 28.50; good 25.50-27.50; standard a AMP inc ... Ampex Corp Anacond 2.50 Armco Sti 3 apod 25 50-27.50; standard and low...... ..... .. ________ ____ ^ 23S«5J0. Slau^tar heiftrs 750-950 Arm Ck 1.40, 1.3 »% )^25.^37.00i..pra tood.27_.M; ,'’2® 30 37% 37% 37% 130 32% 31% 31% 31 35% 34% 35% . . 57 33% 33% 33% 4 % 29 52% 52 52'/« 4 % « 50% 58% 58% 4 % 55% 53% 54 -1% 41% HoustLP 1.12 _____ ______ utility ______ 21.00; cutter 10.00-19JO. u™ AM Compared to .— ------------------- Id glih 60 cents higher. U. % - % .lAtl Richfd Atlas Ch IS isawjsas'-.s-’i.B.a «“'■« Vealars 150. Stoady hi^^choiea and prime 43.00-45.00; choice 39.0043.00; good U.0G39.0O; stenderd 29.0023.00. Sheep 1,000; Slaughter lamba steady. Choice . end pi slaughler.larobs ---- 7.06.10.00. SVt 5% 5JA IdehoPw-nCsO Ideal Baste'I III cent 1.50 Imp Cp Am, INA Cp 1.40 jn^erRand 2 Beckman JO loach Air .75 Bell How .40 0, hogs 200, sheep 500. American Stocks Aeroiet .50a Air West Am Petr ,70e ArkLGas 1.70 Asamera Oil AssdOII <> G 11 27 24% 24% 12 27% 27% 27% 13 33% 33'/j 33% 171 24% 25% 24 83 8% OVa ”'‘- 3% - % 7 28% 2/n •,■% ' ■' 54 15% 15% Cal 8 22% 22% 22% 41 9% 9% 9% - 20 15% 14% 15 — 70 12% 11% 12 12 30% 38% 30% .. 5 13% 13 13 . 17 20% 20% 20% - 43 ^4% '4% 4 % 44 9% 9% 9!'- 4 18% 18% 18< CampRL .45a CampSp 1.10 §ero?Lt ’??42 Cerrior wl 70 16% 1 r,j:W.5o Kaiser Ind McCroi Mich ! 3 25% 25Va 2 44 20% 20% 2. . . 3 12% 12>/i 12% a 14% 14% 4 % 10 17% 17% 11% 4 % ^ ??% r s%i% g^t’% S 65% M% 65% fon®a.t rry Rein . them lr ‘ SyntexCp m 2^ 21% 21% ciyfW by The >^^Pr«s1969 e Gas Sve .21 Q Treasury Position pared to March 5, 1960 (In dollars). .40 139 24% 23% 23% — > IBM 3 IrlstMy 1.2i irunswk 45 34% 34% 34% — ', x29 35% 35 35% 4 1 Xl6 36 21 65% 65% 65% — 1 X166 42% 42 42 —1 17 42% 42% 42% ..... 83 16% 16% 16% - % 87 33% 32% 32% — <' 66 50% 49% 49% - 27 63% 63% 63% - 26 30% 30% 30% 19 31 31 31 39 64% 63% 63%-1% 106 19% 10% IB'/s — Z' 17 26% 26% 26% Harv 1.00 . Miner so IntNick 1 !"♦ ESP. 17 i Kan GE 1.36 KanPwU 1.'* Katy Ind ) 39% 39% 39% 4 0 21% 21% 21% 4 % .— 9 22% 22% 22% KayserRo .60 x33 37% 36% 36% ------- .a. 58 40% 48 48% 21 100% 99% 100 -7 73% 72% 72% 1 42% 42% 42% - " 40'/a 40% 40% — % KhnbClk 2.20 Koppers 1.60 KresgeSS .34 Kroger 1.30 1.60b X216 35% 3 CaslleCke .60 8e'SS£.c’i”2 Cencolns .30 Cent *...... CFI StI .80 ChIPneu 1.00 CM Rl Poc Chris Craft 1 Chrysler 2 CITFln 1.80 cmet Syc 2 ClarkEq 1.40 “ lull 2.04 1 35% 35% 35%- 12 17% 17% 17% — 11 17% 17% 17% 10 34% 337/t 33% 4 % 5 26% 26% 26% 4- % x7 24% 24% 24% 4 % 5 67% 67% 67% 52% 51% 52% 4 % 39% 39 39 — % 431U t7'/t ^2% S91A S9V, ___ CoillnRed ’.80 10 M 2 32% 32% 32’% —'^% 21 38% 30% 38»A ' X28 69 68 , 68 Si swI . - 47% 48% 4 % ColuGas 1.60 ComISolv .40 ComwEd 2.20 Cp 1.60 AAOt .40 Oil 3 on wl „... Tel .60 Control Data 40 33% 33% 33% X17 43% 4m 43% 54 30% 30 30% 43 41% 40% 41 29 10% 10% 18% 32 65% 65% 65% 24 51 50% S0>% 4 22% 22% 22% 54 70% 70% 70% 24 35% 35% 35% 163 23% 23 23% .. 220 132% 130 131% —IV4 17 43% 43% 43% 52 38% 37% 30Vs 15 253 252% 253 3 14%' 14'/4. 14% 4 % 2 40 47% 47% 9 31% 31% 31% 12 34% 34% 34% , . 10 75V4 74% 74% 4 % 222 59% ^59% 59% 4 % A463,753,330.77 7,805,933,956.44; §5yc5:p owois fiscal yoor To*«» [547,029.82 151,715,102,057J3 .11 11J0M10,501.22 X-lneludes 437,«27,;m iect to etotutory UmlL^ Heart Recipient, 6, Dies in Cincinnati ...... Si... ii ^ Si! pSlK 34 87% 86V4 06% —IV4 104 74% 73% ------- 33 37% 37 ______ 37% 4 % 38% 38% .38% '»% '§% -... 22% 21% 22% - % CINCINNATI, Ohio (UPI) -} Six-year-old Christine Corhn,i the nation’s youngest heart transplant patient, died early today at children’s hospital: [ ♦ * \Wr-fs The child, from South Point, | had received the heart William Michael Becker, ?, Feb.iEia^u i^ • ■ --------------------------.(“ 33 24% 24% . 24% 4 80 70% TIFA 70% 9 37% 34% 17% 4 30 59 58% 58%— 26 41% 41% 41% - % 1 20<4 20% 20% - % « S’* 10 aO^Hi 30 75V4 - 4U yjvi M 53 327 UVs 14% 67 49% 48 48 19 28% 28% 28V4 32 57% 57% 57% 33 39% 39V4 39% I 41% - 10 12'* 12'* ir* ~ employment figure 5 44 43v» 43%- % of 76.2 million is an all-time puFimon 2.80 10 m%\M% 52% ^ % high after adiustment for sea- ■Q___\ .sonal factors, he said. 25% - % Pj^rt-TIME JOBS 4j -Vi "Tke total of unemployed in 2*^ V February was 2.9 million. About 4^- 'll one-fourth of them were seeking 45% 45% 45% - % only part time jobs. 2% «% SwTw! jobless rate of 3.3 per gumes. 12 26% 25> —R— 197 42% 42 chCh .50 18 16% 16 marketing men who have come to associate it with complaints about products or services or packaging or other aspects of produce presentation and sale. Reaching behind his desk, As in-pack items, such ak glassware in the soap box. Some premium people claim as much as 15 per cent of all glassware manufactured in a year is dis--tributed as premiums. ! • As on-pack items, such as', another can of coffee taped tp the one being bought. As factory packs, such as-the reusable pail that packages the detergent, or the plastic toy that contains a bubble bath for babies. • Mail-in offers. Typically these involve money and a box-top, or a facsimile of a company’s trademark. Battle claims that premiums distributed in this manner cost housewives only 46.5 per cent of the retail price. Redemption of cou()ons, commonly distributed through the mail or printed in advertisements. Trading stamp redem^ 23% 23'. x» 53 52% 33 .... 4 32 31% 31% - % 52 21% 21 Vj 21V, — • 24 40% 39% 39% - Reyn Mel .90 RoanSel .47g “ ^ ■ .80 I 25% S I 42% 4 lohr Cp . loyCCola ._. RoyDut 1.B9r Ryder Sys 1 Iff Electro illdyinn J5 illySug 1.20 imeatk^e .40 159 37% 37 37%- —H— 64 51 50% 50% — X12 70 69% 70 4 27 33% 33% 33% -70 45'A 45 45 . 20 79% 78% 78% — % 25 17% 17 17 111 67% 66% 67% 95 126% 123% 125 SoarlGD 1.30 SaarsR 1.20a Shelton 2.40 16 31% 30% 31% - % 30 16% 16% 16% ... 2 57% 57% 57% - 43 12% 12% 12% 4 .. 122 38% 37% 30 — Vj > Pap 1.50 TiT .95 I r I 17% 17% - % 57 80 78% 80 41 12 25% 24% 25% 4 Teledyn 3.57f 51 66% 84% 06% 41Vj TexETrn 1.40 Tex G Sul .40 Texasinst .80 TexPLd .45g TImk RB 1.80 LIbOFrd 2 5 McN I Litton 1.891 Livingstn 01 LockhdA 2.a LoewsTho .1 LonoS Certi B 1.12 18I/B - _____ 13V4 — . 54 21 20% 20% - % - 539% 53r 129% 13 i -V/2 ...k 109% 11 11 22V4 22V% «... 72 24% 24 24 -f */% 10 28% 28 28V4 — Va 9 42% 47W 421/i — 98 68% 66% 673/4 -1 _ 133 533A 521/% 52% —1% 39 111/4 109% ll‘/% .. 43% 42% 427/1 7 31 30% 30% 20 24 23% 23% - S 353A 35% 35% .. ) 29% 29% 29% MartInM 1.10 MayDStr 1.60 Maytag 1 McOomD .40 12 80% 79% I 40 S0'/4 49% 20 52% 52 40 51% 50% . 13 37% 37 257/8 26'/b . 39 34% 34 3 497/b 49 27 3m 38% a_. 40 43% 42% 42% - 34% 34% 140 111 109% 109% -1% 41 40% 39% 39% — % 75 28% 277/% 2S% + % " ............ '“ + % What appears to be considered by PAAA as the ultimate proof of prernium acceptance is the strong growth of the industry from less than $1 billion 20 years ago to as much as $4 billion now. These multibillion-dollar estimates are for the total of goods won or earned or given away Battle pulled out “Mrs. Custom-}premiums. They include prizes little essay he composed won by salesmen in sales con-LjQj,g on the subject. “There is a fi- tests and those given to shop-Lj g yggr in premiums nality associated with the word keepers for stocking certainL^g distributed in this manner, ‘consume’ and ‘consumer,’” it products. ★ * * began. Fire, for instance, con- SURPRISING NUMBER j The business grows, Battle rc-But a large part of the total minds a listener. It thrives for 3.......................... ................................. ■ “But ‘custom’ denotes some- by shoppers for buying certain thing done for a purpose; it is products for expressing interest The bureau also reported that I something prepared —‘built to in them. And they were award-average hourly earnings for order’for someone; it demands led in a surprising number of some 45 million rank-and-file| an awareness of wants and a'ways: workers rose one cent in Febru-| desire — and the ability — tO' ary to $2.96. jsatisfy them . . . | •In sweepstakes and con- ‘We should hit the three-dol-| “Out prime concern,” Battle, tests. A sweepstakes involves lar mark pretty soon,” Gold-----------•----- —-----------— --------- 115 ‘DONE FOR PURPOSE’ represents the items collected ’I! IL, rerhained unchanged straight months. 12 42 41% 41% — ’ 121 65% 64% 65% 4 39 36% 35% 36 - [ SouRy 2.80a Spartan Ind Sparry R .22g SquareD .80 '•“-injj UO StbCaf J-oS)" StOilInd 2.30 StdOINJ ,90g StdOilOh 2.70 rta»'.18 SterlDrug .70 Stevensj 2.40 25% 26^ 53 40% 397/J 397/8 - ' 7 58 58 21 207/8 20Vj 185 473/ — 105 21'/ 58 —; i 217/8 2 211 69 67% i t 79V4 1 * 57 ....57% + i "6? . 67Va 67% 67Vt - 20 17 16% 17 • 43 45% 45 45% 26 36 35% 35% + 19 55% 55V4 55V4. — 26 52% 51 Va 52 + ’ " 64% 643/4 -r 7% 7% — 1 51 28% 28% 28% — < —T— 263/4 263.6 26% Texaco 2.80a I 43% 42% 43% +-, — —, 27% — • 82% -. ,.,j 31V 2 30% 31 31% 31% 31% — 1 1B4 31 Va 30% 31 — 131 100% 99% 997/8 —1 37% - ! 43% 42% 36Va 42Va 42Va • stein said. WEEKLY EARNINGS Average weekly were up 37 cents to $111..00, an all-time high. Goldst^ noted that the average manufacturing work week has declined slightlv for the fifth straight month to 40.5' hours, the lowest in nearly a year. Okinawa Return, Cut , I ^ All continental breakfast. in Japan Bases Askeidj ^Brigi^FuTure despite criticism. It doesn’t matter that some housewives participate in the premium Offers out of a sense of necessity or even that they may dislike them. Evidence of the industry’s ability to command the best iS the fact that the annual PAAA Marketing Conference next month will be the grand and stylish Philharmonic Hall. A FREE BREAKFAST "Phe premium for those attending, said Battle, is a free continental breakfast. He said this could mean a possible slow-down in the economy, or just a tapering off in the rate of recent rapid growth. ‘It may not be a precursor of a decline in employment,” he 7 174k 174k 174k + 1 11 43'A 424k 43V, +n 22 37V4 36'/a IM 43 42Va _ _ . 3434 33% 33% -13 116 1 ,ww... 36 31'/4 307/8 a IW Inc 1 51 41% 41% 4 ven Cent 1 353 ^5% 33% 3 \AC Ind :T2 17 21% 21% 2 1 carbide 2 148 427/8 42% 4 Elec 1.20 " I 11% + UnOiiCal UnionPacIf Uniroval .1 UnitAirLIn . „ . UnitAirc 1.80 164 78V4 Corp “ 53% 53 64 52 51V4 51% — 19 26% 26% 26% — 32 40% 40% ^ — 14% 14% — % UnitMAA 1.20 USPipe 1.20 USPIyCh 1.50 US Smelt 1b US Steel 2.40 f 31% <307/1 311/4 t’4 16 74V. 744k 74V. 43 484k 47 47% , „ 94 444k 43% 44V. — 'A X11 3S 34W 34Vj 16 51V. 51V. 51V. _v— 11 26% 264k 264k X14 264k 25W 25’A „ 31 29W 28% 29'A _w^x—Y—Z— im 1.10 78 55V. 54% 55 ./Of 1.20 9 244k 24Vk 244k WeitnAIrL 1 3 374k 37V. 374k LABOR FORCE Goldstein said that along with the big rise in nonagricultural employment totaling 1.6 million in five months, the labor force had grown almost the same amount in that period. “That’s a very substantial increase. It can’t keep it up,” he said. The civilian labor force rose to 79.1 million in February. The unemployment rate for men was 1.9 per cent in February, nearly a record low, and for marri^ men 1.4 per cent, lowest on record. The jobless rate for women was 3.5 per cent for the past 4 months, lowest in 15 years. Varlan Vanda __ __ VaEIPw 1.08 Weyerhi ' " Whirl Cl 7 30% 38% : 40 -FI'A 59 65V, 64% 65V, ....... 57 02% 81V. —' :p 1.60 18 52V, 52 Mat 2 19 47 46% ’ 1.56 x25 344k 34 XeroxCp 1.60 80 255 253V. 254V. - YngstSht 1,00 164 46% 45 45% —1 ZeiflthR 1.40 38 53% 52 53V. -Fl% CopyrlBMed by Th# Associated Press 1969 In the foregoing rsements based on NTil-annual deOlari ------ dividends or natad as regular i following footnotok. the last quarterly Identified In the __________jr extras. . ........ > stock dividend, c—Liquidating 1 iF^eclerM or paid in 1969 Pli k dlvldond. a—Raid last year, f—Pai stock during 1969, astimatad cash on ’ ax-dIvIdend or, Ox-dlstrlbutlon data, g—Declared or pan) so far this yaar. h—Declared or paid after stock dividend or split up. k—Declared------------ . -Id this yaar, dividend omitted, deferred or no action taken at last dividend meet-tng;--f=,Deelared or' paid-'- '*'* — stock dividend. T—Paid In 1968, estimated cr-" -■— or ex-,distrlbutlon I—Sales in full. de^ and sales'In M. x-dis-^x distribution. xr—Ex rights. ,xw—Without — rants, ww—With warrants, wd—Whe.. ... wF-Whon Issued. nd-Next day Cold Wave Knifes Dixie; Warnings Up Is Sborf-Lived CODY, Wyo. (AP) - Thi^e years ago, former U. S. Sen. Milward Simpson flew from MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) —iZealand and Japan—which has! The United States should reduce been advocated by some Japa-i its military bases in Japan and’nese. ! return control of the Ryukyu Is- Concerning the U.S. economic lands to the Japanese, Sen.lboycott of China, Mansfield Mike Mansfield said today. [said; Mansfield, Senate Democratic} “We would be well advised to leader, prepared his statement abandon this antiquated pursuit Washington, D. C., to Cody and for delivery at Kansas State of China’s downfall by economic then drove another 54 miles to University in one of a series of warfare and treat with the an eighth grade graduation lectures honoring Alfred M. Chinese in matters of trade as address—to just one student. Landon, former Kansas gover-we treat with European Com-; ★ ★ ★ nor and 1936 Republican nomi- munist countries—no better and Janice Lynn Fuqua — then 13 nee for President. no worse.” —was the only graduate of the Noting the U.S.-Japan securi- g|Qj^g OF TROUBLE Valley School eighth grade. tLminatpd'T/e^ther^D^ "^he senator also said there Simpson lauded her for com- cinnine next vear he said many 'a'’e signs of trouble between the Pletmg her educatiori in the re-iranesr^Je irrite^ States and the Philip-mote country ahwlhouse and Japanese are irruatea over me trade and Predicted a bright future for presence of American troops m Pmes, mainiy over traae ana v their homeland as well as U.S.jU-S; military bases. Per. oonW of th. 7 ciallv Okinawa [dence, the,frien(jship and the re-| Janice and her 19-year-old Mansfield said- |spect of a pe6Ble with whom we brother,' Gary, were driving “Dbinonto ie lananpqp- wp have been intimately associated!home from Cody Friday night. harnS:,^«Sis.’’L;or^l^^^ . centhr,/;^he jaih. Their car etru^ a bridge T, just or rational alterna- '''Pal ean be expected with re-miles southwest of Cody. The tive other than to try to arrive'gard to other nations in Asiajbrother wa^ hospitalized nfjth at a fixed time schedule for thelvuth which we have had Jittle or cuts and bruises and Janice progressive and prompt return no historic connection?” I was killed. - of administrative control over ,• V u»- A,:#, the Ryukyu Islands to Japan.” NOT INDISPENSABLE’ The senator called U.S on Okinawa “a great military convenience but . • • by no means indispensable.” Mansfield suggested any tu-ture trouble in Southeast Asia is^ Q—My husband and I have more likely to result from eco-; heard newscasters mention the nomic underdevelopment and Phillips’ Curve. Can you make political instability than from a this clear to us and how it may SuccessfuHnve^hg* # *k 47 % By ROGER E. SPEAR By United Press International Arctic air knifed deep into r.' ^7 communis. CWJ.«ee. usi scattered areas from Northern "n- ^ ^ * j A-You’re already affected by Kentucky to the South Carolina} supported formation of re-‘I IPrnngP 'P® of inflation, nnn®'- ... sional economic aid groups to A chart of the Consumer Price and the northern 00^1 plain as a combine of Pe United of North Carolina in the wake of Canada, Australia, New the area’s latest snow. , I inflationary pressures as soon as possible. The Phillips’ Curve warns him that this may adversely affect labor by increasing unemployment. Here is a dilemiha for delicate handling by the President and his economic advisers. I being reorganized u 48% 4 BOND AVERAGES Id by Tht Associated Rri 10 10 10^ 10 —......... Ulll. Fgn. 70.6 90.2 136 36% 35% 35% — 5 60% 60 61% 1^ S T r -.............. § g-i YA ’-2-? .1 HU SU '-OY' ‘*•5 36 16Vk 25% 26% - Vk ,947 High 73.0 95.6 The Virginia Highway Patrol i ^ 7_iires-OTL-£hain& were needed for travel in most mountain areas of the-‘"state. The snow fell yesterday from central Kentucky and northern Alabama to the North Carolina mountain a-reas. Monterey. jTenn., east of Nashville, saw inearly eight inches of snow pile |up. Crtossville, Tenn., had three .inches. I The Midwest was also chilled ;by the invasion of cold air. . Light snow and flurries skipped 79^f around the gorthem plains qnd Minor fire damage was reported when a homemade bomb was thrown through a window at Wallace Headquarters, 544 E. Beverly, it was reported to Pontiac police Saturday. News in Brief through 1968 shows a steeply rising curve. This is the Phil-Curve presenting half of a disturbing lesson in economics. The other half of the lesson concerns the rate of unemployment Q — If a convertible bend is neither converted nor sent in for redemption by the advertised date, does the bond then become worthless?—S. d. -Yes, it does, and for this reason wide publicity is given 4q the redemption or call date. lA 29 45% i 62 40% 40 '2 ¥ i’* 70% -m 10 Higher grade rails . ,«-» 71% -F % 10 Second grade rails . 105% 107% —1 10 Public utilities ...... 35% (6 + % 10 Industrials ............ loj ^li^P® Ureat Lakes region. "i wi’I STORM BREWING ! ” A new storm began building I up strength in the southern 35+217 Rockies and southwestern. 49+0 04 region. ‘Travelers’ wam-1 ■.58-^o;3i ings were up for the New Mek-1.91-0.12 ico and northern Arizona i‘2|lo:” mountains as the storm coupled ollIoS snow with strong, gusty winds. Pontiac Travel Service announces 2 carefree tours for April: New Orleans Easter Holiday, April 5-9; Washing-ton-Williamsburg, April 19-26. For complete (ietails contact Pontiac Travel Service 682-4600. STOCK AVERAGES ^nod-^-jieats* gonfey-notice is sent to-aBrf|^— killmc /\f I.An_ . ......... Prof. A. W. Phillips of the London Schbol of Economics has made a parallel study of these two sets of statistics from which he points to a significant correlation between inflation and minimum unemployment (or high employment). This seemingly favorable condition, however, brings rising ages and more expendable cash, tending not only to push up prices but to increase demand for goods and services. Total labor costs run higher, competition among employers in security workers may boost YS. : Ago .....9 High . 1968-69 LOW , 1967 High .. Rails uw. siMkt^wage rates and union contracts 187.6 i«.o sMj may do the same. With more .....‘ I Hl l money to spend the public pays for prosperity with i j|n f 1 a t e ^ prices. 486.0 194.0 150.1 336.8 509.4 2)6.4 158.2 360.1 . 445.0 167.0 141.4 305.( 413.4 159.4 136.5 : istered holders to which they should respond promptly. Of course, there are sometimes justifiable personal reasons for delay. I’m certain, though, that companies issuing a r^emption notice are troubled by the possibility of eventual loss to some bondholders because occasion-I have been asked by a company to include a ren>inder that time is running out on an advertised redemption. President Nixon wants to easje' (To order Roger Spear’s 48-page Guide to Successful Investing (recently revised and la. ll« 10th printiiig), send $1 with name and Oddress to Roger ^ Spear, (care of The Pontiac Press, Box 1618, Grand Centawil Istation, New York, N. Y. 10617.) (Copyright, 1900) :;T- iY THE PONTIAC PllKbS. MONDAY. MARCH 10. VC Grip on Mekong Delia Is No Longer Uncont^sted > I *m - __A —f ^lAlfrk_0/kin» >hey do In lhe» «™., P-»Sr.s» Vietcong tax collector had slowdr but the Saigon gove™;j a ricketv bamboo fence just off to fight stand-up actions or evenjformance they discovered a th. red .I.Klldg e»t loo-ct. hit and rnn attacks, c^tSd^S a,!;;! =rkSi.>riha. poimc^i dows and did just about any I chore that needed to be done. J uruwu aiiu apciu lucm. —— —- • p|j|club Ince. with derisive humor, signs They are trying to maintain:the evening collecting delin- w^ertamjj^w^^ be in uenc home oh 14th . Marce, chairman of the explinaed that the 12- Tre, capital of Kien Hoa Province. With derisive humor, signs mey are trying lo niaiiuaiiii— ....... ......n, it Hn«q i-----’ « i * u on the fence proclaimed this the Viet Cong presence among quent accounts. American supplies. Street near was a Vietcong military reser- the population, to hold on to bid FOR CONTROL g^e flowing ® low-income family, vatlon. Unauthorized people what they have and to prepare, xhe name of the game is to = , the long-forgotten delta ^ were warned to keep out. for the future. Thus their task is,people. In the four before. While U.S. political injpfgyinggs ^here the 9th oper- headquarters in Saigon is con- .SNOWEI) IN — Students, parents and teachers at Wichita (Kan.i North High School were snowed in at the Hutchinson Sports Arena Saturday after an eight-inch snowfall clo.sed all highways to Wichita. Government militia manning n.u T^ ■ s „'ates—Long An, Kien Hoa, GP temolating the withdrawal the sun-baked mud forts along Officers of the 9th Division Tuong—all the American troops e the road obeyed the signs. ifeel this process is inev'faWyi statistical indicators are slowly j^^g (^is year, experts con-For all practical purposes a eroding Vietcong strength. 'improving. i^gmed with the delta are dig- truce and a stalemate existed in FACING DILEMNA? | -------------------- Kien Hoa—the most populous -pj^gy ggg jj,g enemy com-and rice-rich province- in Ihe gg facing a dilemma, doltc V otcong political bosses, ^j^gy regmup the main-force; guerrillas and tax units, their losses will be un- ! ging in their heels. The structure in the delta, these officials contend, is rtill The family will have an opUon to buy the house. The Young Republicans assisted the House of the Carpenter, a Detroit settlement house affliated with the Church of Christ of Conant Gardens, in the project. Marce said the activity was held sway in the countryside, bearable. If they don’t, their in-I A • 'The government’s faded yellow fjggneg viiiii decline and their ir T/M lfr%c A mpr/rcfnc and red flags flew over the ntiud jjjggpg^gr Jggses still will be in- r OIIC6 I^QD lOUl TOUinS torts and the towns. Harned ggppg^fgbje in the long run. J ^ ;peasants paid taxes to both ,jj IdenflTied os sides, occasional battles upset thlncs only momentarily^__mander, soft-spoken Maj. Gen. James D. Coulter, vice presl- in City School Break-Ins Hudson Exec month. Dead at 42 From Area Is ““ than anywhere else in Vietnam, jit would certainly ■■ 1 quickly if military slackened. Death Notices Killed in Viet ...... ' ___. ■fliauuci, auu-ouviv^ii ma, Bv the official statistics on^ Julian Ewell, veteran of ------ JUIIHU EiWCIl, VI ™ ,52 ?. ^ 01 delta batlte. a year jgnt and general i . , . .L . .1 anii non nponle lived in “relative- uaiuca. manager of the J. L. Hudson Two 17-year-old boys and two raignment while the juveniles 60n,ooo people * ★ vp^i^rHav hp wnfe 49 i Juveniles were apprehended by were released to their parents. WASHINC/rON (JFl — Sixty- ^areas. Where whole battalions once ’ . ^ . / i .ao Ih iti police in connection with two of gfijygBED !two servicemen killed In action S’*'^R'’TNG TO IMPROVE fanned across the paddies, pla- ervice w e .irf%'*pan. five break-ins at Pontiac schools! ontorod wore i" ih® Vietnam war have been I That depressing statistic has: toons now “jitterbug” by heli-, tomorrow at St. Stephen s r the weekend. jp ® started to improve, and the j copter. A platoon sometimes Episcopal Church, Troy, with ^ 451 B' - -. ’! moni paoiiaUt; llel o/>arAd,pnw& havP dl School, 511 S. .Sanford, ^tday night, police said. Area Barbers Join Effort to Cut Tax Load Area barbers have joined a ■ Donald P, Hardle, 17, of 588 j™“‘’ scarecrows have disapoeared.;makes 10 landings daily, prob-burial in White Chapel ■E. South Blvd., was caught y.’ "p‘! The list includes 15 men from The change has come about be- ing grass patches for an hour or Memorial Cemetery, Troy by Ih, M,dw„,. »,r in Vieinam h„ „ »d moving ii nothing is B™. -i™-- nt ».■ action: In relative terms, the violence This work is hot, wet, back-: * * ★ ' ting the federal income ax A/lfanfn/Hpn/fn u-'-'NOis - co«*«n.u«. has declined in Vietnam since ^breaking and dangerous. As the Surviving are his wife, Wnda; load. /Yiei IIUI I ICTLIll 11 wayBriy, sptc. 1 wiTiiim 0. Rv»"> po,!, nAnce talks becan. In enemv has oulled back, boobv-1two daughters, Julic and JWiet,' Suu „ i which seeks to raise the present $600 deduction to $1,200, is Calvin Bell, 17, of 223 S. Edith, was found in Eastern Junior High School, 25 S. Sanford, early this morning, police said. Nothing was reported missing In the break-ins. | Board Adds Psychiatrist ARMY ____JQIS — Sot, iug«n# COMturiauX/ WaverTy; $ptc. 5 WlTn«m 0. Ryan, ''''Tn^IANA - S«t. Donald L. Rhodci, Evaniytllt. OHIO - Pvt. Slava MIrIck Jr„ Cln-tlnnall. . jatnas T. Uab-Kannalh L. Slrll- WISCONSIN - James and ILLINOIS < I Corpsman PIC. Cllllord D. ComI *”*NAVY _____ _. .,„up«, Park Porfesl'. ; ■ COMING OUT DOOR unois Tno™, h.' The U.S. 9th Division, operat- Four officers surrounded Wil- Dr. Richard Knox, the psy- McGrMh,^^^Homtwood; mainlv In four nrovlnces son School in response to an chlatrist recently hired by the Hevworih ’ ' up,, alarm and said they caught Wa.vne County Jail, has been Tracy. Hardie coming out of a door, appointed by Charles B. Ed- Warquand. The juveniles with Hardie wards Jr., chairman of the Oak- L„%'Oo„,n. closed the door so police could.land County Board of Supervis- wisconsin^^^^ not enter the school. A custodian ors, to the Oakland bounty ^ancii_ opened the school and policeICommunity Mental Health found the juveniles hiding under iBoard. a stage after a one-hour search.; Knox replaces resigning D«n-1VDSaid'’j' KVj'aJIKll W * * . del T. Murphy i&VWa.k.rSK'W'' ' In a similar incident, police | ♦ ★ * ; went to Eastern Junior High at| Knox is married and lives In chw «ai. oonaw j. ■ 2:42 a.m. today, climbed through Royal Oak. He has served as i bu,),,'cngin*m«n i. c. s»ri e. Bunon! a second floor window, searched'Chief of adolescent services at |SSr'i5?m»»i«r i.'' c.^*Miuon’ stliSiro, the Mekong Delta, however, the|traps have blossomed every-;and two sons, change has been deceptive. The-where. Perhaps one-third of | Robert, big battles are generally gone j American casualties are caused Coulter of 1183 Puritan, but the war is actually deadlier by Vietcong snares. Birmingham, was also a ,c. than ever. CIVIC ACTION PROGRAMS i member of the Hudson’s board ^ of directors. He was fffst Local 50, Northern Oakland DAILEY, ANNIE B.; March 8, 1969 ; 767 St. Oair; age 94; dear mother of Francis H. Jones, Albert S. and Harry Dailey; also survived by five great-grandchildren and 10 great - great - grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, March 11, at 11 a.m. at the Pursley - Gilbert Funeral Home with Rev. Charles A. Reed officiating. Interment in Roseland Park Cemetery Chapel. Mrs. Dailey will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 9:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m.) County area, of the State Barbers’ Association. Paralleling the infantry war,; employed by the firm as a The petitions, when signed. , . , .. (ciiiulwycu UY . _ mg mamiv m u>ui »■«*...- -- of civic P™8*‘*™s;gg|ggn,gg ^ben as a buyer and will be sent to U.S. ringing the southern aoproaches “"If ® divisional merchandise men from all state districts, the taSaigon. is the onlv American 1 withdrawal of Vietcong units barbers have announced. ‘tatmonttdaS^^^^ ATTENDED I a result of hostile the building for about IV4 hoursjLafayette Clinic, Detroit, and found Bell hiding in a pipe] The mental health board vot-tunnel, they said. jCd Friday to attempt to provide ■tt n ■k |$13,600 as support for the Chil- Hardie and Bell are being held dre"’ RMloinan 2. C. ------ --------------- BiMtrIcKn'i Milt ]. C. Lyl* 0. Zaclitr. Qu«rl*rm»ilar 3. C. El--------- ja new offensive, d«,d «l IB »wn. In Dncember a «»* “ 8™" •«> year ago, when the war was ap- ®"""®® proaching the climax of the Tet offensive, the division killed 578 enemy and lost 50 killed. MUCH BETTER Gang Clash Lures Crowd graduate of Birmingham School, he attended the University of Wisconsin and the I University of Michigan, where These programs range from | he received a bachelor’s degree haphazard medical treatment; in business administration in ____ i by visiting Infantry medics to 1950. i HOLLYWOOD'^APF--Chata- psychological leaflet' drops. * * * |swinving gangs clashed white In statistical terms, that There are programs to encour-i He was a dire^or o f the picnickers and hippies watqhM means the division is doing age defectors, pay informers, Birmingham Historical Society iyesterday at the site of^ the much better now. It also shows grow rice, improve schools, and a member of _the Detroit:hippies’ weekly “love-in” ini~ LEHR, ERNST; March 8, 1969; 11870 Hibner Road, Hartland Township; age 85; beloved husband of Wihelmina Lehr; dear father of Mrs. Kurt (Frieda) Fleber and Mrs. William (Wilma) Ballen;,^lso survived by _^ve grandchildren and idfle great-g r a n d c h ilypeif Funeral service will be held Tuesday, March 11,- at 2 p.m. at the South Fenton Rd. Our Saviour Lutheran Church. Interment in Hartland Cemetery. Mr. Lehr will lie in state at the MacDonald’s Funeral Home, Howell Michigan. that the delta war has become pave roads, teach English, fat-Athletic Club, the Birmingham Griffith Park.^ One person was PROSSER, M. G., M.D.; March in Oakland County Jail for ar- ... .. -. '"Y. niore deadly, and overshadows ten hogs, import chickens, train Athletic Club and the Detroit hospitalized with face and cheek u»Doi***’Bo»tiwain'j^MSie f 'c.*'Soniiid j the fightihg elsewhere. Only One j mechanics, improve sanitation, I Economic Club. icuts. . ■ c u . T^ r o“oh*“siam?n'farms, make bricks! Memorials may be made to! Two others were cut about the Orthogenic School. De-Firaman_^^ BuHnda in the far north—had a and train midwives. ;the Michigan Heart Associa-1 head but did not require hospi- Sallert, Seam " - -- ....... ... — ..|troit. Some 24 Oaxland County liY.J'i^rMiivin "tiving InsuraRce" for tADIES .. .SPECIAL LOW-COST LIFE INSURANCE M. E. DANIELS Dittnct RtpreaBnialiv* 563 Wtil Huron FI 3-7111 MODERN WOODMEN OF AMERICA 'emotionally disturbed children £ currently attended classes at the school. DAY-CARE FUNDS A commitment made by the old mental health board will be honored if possible, according " rougher time in December 1968.1 As always, the Vietcong fighfition. talization, officers said- One juvenile was arrested. John Medole, director. He LANSING (UPI) - I More than 50 officers dispersed a crowd which gathered I to watch the afternoon fight be-itween what police said were a group of Negro youths, a group I wish I had my skis.” theinounced his play, Friday which [companions' on the t(^. Theyj^^ membCT^™*ou^^^^ motw- Milliken Boosts U.P. Tourism said the funds could be taken hi^"desk Today" after a flying 46 - year - old Milliken repeated I favors the urban areas in a 60-'discussed future needs of th'e!”“ from the $25,000 budgeted by through the Upper en t h u s i astically. It was 40 split. [department and ways of ^ ‘ Mo4=>oO=>c^ the board for day-care peninsula. Gov. William G. beautiful weather for the sport,| Milliken defended his reason-meeting Michigan’s present ties ' Milliken. enthusiastically dubbed with a clear blue sky and a ing by saying, “I’m giving the conservation demands. Members were upset by pro-his first official inspection tour crisp temperature. Legislature the latest in- * * * posed legislation which report-^..greattreat.” ‘WIFE BEriTER’ formaUon and facts. Some peo- Even though Milliken couldnt edly could cut the county’s men-1 *‘i have a whole new feeling, h» .h Pl® are literally trapped in strap on his skis, he did tal health budget by as much gbo^ jhe upper Peninsula . f Detroit and other areas and can manage to lead a as $400,000. now,” he commuted after his ,paradeinMunisinga the North The me1ital*health services Mrs. Miiliken couldn’t ac-|‘WON’T HURT’ _ 'oTamSshlp^r^^ some $123,000 a year, make uplservatlon. But it was also University^ i^^mken and natural excludelrSh?hV,t«g^^^^^^^^ for refo^rces director MacMuUan ifee?from tae silit, avoiding to andTjame pros^ctiSe voters dividing up the $10O-million be ^ing ey^^^^ Medole The matter was re-» nhanri ni see him recreaUon bond money caught the recreation bond issue, but committee for study and action, began Friday night at In-dianhead Ski Lodge in Ironwood, and ended Saturday evening with a dinner at the nosh Pine Mountain ski resort in Iron Mountain. Traveling with the governor were Director I of Natural Resources Raloh jMacMullan. deer specialist iDave Arnold, and William T. [McGraw, director of the state No Arrests Made in Ice Fox Hunt on Snowmobiles terward, “My only regret is they didn’t go faster.” Before the parade, he crowned ah excited 13-year-old snow princess, Linda Cornish of Munising. CHAIR UFT EDEN VALLEY, Minn. UFI With the Minnesota branch of the National Humane Society baying at its heels, the Eden Valley Chamber of Commerce staged a fox hunt with snowmobiles Sunday. Ten foxes were released, at a time, in the middle of a Powderhom Lodge near frozen lak^ The contestants n iilli I tourism divisloif; Know Our Service Character, like experience, is not acquired in a day. For over twenty years the folks of Pontiac have known the Dc^elson-Johns service, our thrift and integrity. (Pltonf federal 4-4511 ^a^liinq On Our (PrtmitiV^ GREAT INVESTMENT “It’s a real treat for me to visit here and see the great investment, made in the ^tourist area.” Milliken noted while relaxing on his airplane between stops. “I understand 'about 32.5 million has been in-| vested in the Iron Mountain ski area alone. A sufflcientlv large | amount must be invested in facilities to do the trick of increasing the tourist trade. A dtl enthusiast himself. Milhkfsi kept his hosts questions {DoneLon- JA i m SS5 WEST HURON ST. PONTIAC Ironwood he rode the chair lift to view the slopes from the top and later stopped in at a ski class to greet students. Traveling by plane from city to city in this nigged northern country, Milliken at one point had the pilot side-trip out over the frozen shoreline of Lake Superiw and then over the Mountains. “It’s were to either met the fox or catch him by .hand Sriowmobilers were to be dis-qualifled if they hit with their machines. Conservation Commissioner ,)arle Leirfallom said Saturday that chasing the - fox with snowmobiles violated state law and arrests would be made at the hunt. None of the f<»es abwt equipment, profits numbers of tourists. It was hard to distinguish the boyish looking chief executive from the tourists His sheepskin coat, snow boots and general ski attire tet him mingle easily with the crowd. I < '-I / ■ AR WIraplwt* GOVERNOR TOU1& U.P.—Gov. William Milliken (front left) tours Big Powderhom Mountain near the Upper Peninsula community of ^ssoner as part of his weekend tour of the tourist indusby m the area. At right is Ralph MacMuUan, director Qie Department of Natural Resources. Bdiind Miinici>n is Louis A. GheUer, manager of the Big Powdertwra Mountain ski area. He went into toe interior of the wilderness, too, to look for iteer at a feeding ground near Escanaba. He led a brisk parade of officials, conservation agents and newsmoi over a quarter-mUe of ground t o observe the animate’ food supply. Aides consider Milliken’s first venture into the sparcely populated northem country a success. Future trips -/In ki^dilgan wiU also have a central theme such as tourism, nfmtal health problems. were made. But the head of the state humane society, Dave Davis, said, “It is unduly cruel to put a defenseless animal (»nl a lake and chase him with 15 large machines.” Small Rooms Alive With Bright Ceiling A small room comes alive with :a sparkling ceding treat-'ment. 9, 1969 ; 5901 Dixie Highway, Waterford; age 53; beloved husband of Jeanette Prosser; beloved son of Mrs. Marie Eldon-Browne; dear father of John G., Robert G., and Patrick M.; also survived by six grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, March 12, at 11 a.m. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Interment in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Dr. Prosser will lie in state at the funeral home after 7 tonight. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 ind 7 to 9.) RIDDLE, ELNA M.; March 8. 1969 ; 2565 Lochmoor Place, Saginaw; (formerly of Pontiac); age 62; dear mother of Mrs. Frederick Lynch Jr.; also survived by nine grandchildrm. Mrs. Riddle was preceded in death by a daughter, Mrs. Richard Stewart and a son, James A. Riddle, Funeral service will be held Tuesday, March 11, at 11 ajn. at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. Interment in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mrs. Riddle will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours ,3 to 5 and 7 to STEWART, JAMES H.; March 7, 1969 ; 2515 South Commerce Road, Wolverine Lake; age 79; beloved husband of Myrtle Stewart; dear brother of Eily Stewart; also survived by four grandchildren. Funersd service will be held Tuesday, March 11 at 11 a.m. at r Black Funersnrome,~TJBlbn Lake. Cremation at White Chapel Memorial Gardens. Mr. SteWart will lie in state at the funeral home. I i hi' '/k “This Is only the beginning ol TTy this three-dimensional a lot of travding that I plan to; effect: install fir 2x2s across the do,’( MilUken said “I don’t plan ceiling surface, spacing flieBi to be gone out of the state for oneinch apart, long periods d time, though. Paint or stain the 2x2s before beteiitae I have much to doiinstalling and cover screw holes I with small brass studs.' raUSCELLO, MARY FRANCES; March 9, 1969; 3243 Schoolhouse Drive, Drayton Plains; age 43; beloved wife of Hugo Truscello; dear mothtf of Mrs. Dan (Mary Jo) (^k, James, Patti, Tom and Hugo ITuscello Jr.; dear sisto* of Raymmid Sddlling; also survived by three grandchildren. Mrs. Triiscello will lie in state at the Coats Funmil Home, Drayton Plains tmtil 10 tonight after which she will be taken to the Spepce and Boyer Funeral Home, Lorain Ohio for services and burial Wednesday at 11 a.m. ;4V!J/' V. For Wont Ads Dial 334-4981 THE PONTIAC PRESS MONDAY, MARCH 10, 1969 C—9 To Buy, Rant, Sill or Troda Use Pontioc ProM WANT ADS Office Hoursi 8 cum. to 5 p.m. Cancellation Deadline 9 a.m. Day Following First Insertion p Wanted Male Htlp Wanted Male 1 PART TIME MAN $50 WEEK wiunjirpMSSi onjv.___________________ AUTOMOBILB DfALER ,h«l oMn-ingi for mtchinTcl, itrvleo porlor, p»rl$ drivor ond now Mr portpr. Sm Oaorgt PorMr, $or»K» AJgr.v Grimaldi importod Cars, 9 00 Oakland Ava.______- ~ . AUTO SALESMAN. Exporlanead sail Oodoa cars and »rucki. Call lad°l!.aKa.*«M-15?r * Experienced Carpenters FOREMEN, UkYOUT MEN, SAW MEN AND lOUOHERS. UNION ONLY, AFTER S, CALL « Help Wonted Male MACHINIST Lolhas, Mllli, wHaca grlndar, prassas ate. Mutt prints, up and oparata. Parmanant i tion tor all aroiwd man. Call Drias for aptft. m0tO. I ASSISTANT maintenance ^N. Apply Pontiac I—........ oa^S40S.J[ala._ ___ AMF MECHANIC. ApPiV.a* derland Lanas, 124S Rletu Rd., wallad Lk. ENGINEER mANAOERS, manager tralnai. Graduata Marina or Stationary. If and attandants tor Kayo Sorvlca you ara Intarastad In balng trained I station In Pontiac and surrounding an I area, rapid advaneamont for right In^astlno and important flaw oti man, good nay, trlnga banatits. hollar, machinery, accldant-l Contact Ron Gardnar. 3U-7709 lOr pravantlon, hara It your chance to 363-9235. E«>eJsfva'“fraWlna *proo*ram'“M MACHINIST AND APPRENTICES' Sny* axpeSr.? K'^loc*.!: J®“' P®®" travallng Involved at_-------- ditinns. Automobile furnishad i -------arsonal use. Sal with taeurlly c Proy, Mich. PRESS OPERATORS AND TRAINEES MACHINE OPERATORS AND TRAINEES Exc. opportunity tor man that i dependable, approx. S3 hours t week. exc. fringe benefits, IncludI a profit sharing prograth and I security. WALLMET CORP. 6 BARBER ST. Pleaant Ridge toft 10 Mila Rd.) 41 Help Wanted Male TURRET LATHE Day shift work >> for •xotrlonGod optrators. sttatfy omploymant d.,.t --atjj^ gnj, ovtrtimt. p Wanted Female 7 Help Wanted Female BAR WAITRESS Full and part lima. Nights. Apply 363-2249, alter 7 p.~ MATURE WOMAN FOR llght «tt|ca work, 4 evenings par week, taE.Mrt Jones, at SIMMS BROS.,^ N I part time or fuirtlma,_ V“nil.la ......pi;jbM^Vcelvabw“ TTT\TCVTT T TTT\ ”«»' Hickory Haven Nursing UiNlbKiLLiLU 1 Commerce Rd., iSEMI-SKILLEDi , 2 Advertising Layout Artist ....... stable business, good op-1 portunity lor advancement, paid vacation, excellent life, ------- and Insurance plan, —' to, 195<, You left this world of sor,w„, A.j — .— ,_A-----------A (5 ,1,1, paying, I permananl, newly-Creatad position.' With Dotrg Ts targost home ap-l t pllanca, Tt/ and Starao dealer now 50 years In busInaM. Minimum 21 years ol exparlanea regulrM. r/c !&"» s:-a memorlas ot those happy days, whan wa ware all together. Sadly p I jnlssad by hi. mother,__________ sg_ ^ronw^U; A^ Ava?,* Petrol?, MANAGER-TRAINEES i,’'"ho.priw ’«-«• Du# to 0 .-v..,.ncr?.*ptrog5"wji'h^ Pontioc Pressa Box C-25, An Equal " 391-3^._______________ PROCESS ENGINEER Irm hM Mm«l"new, . (PROOUCITION PLANNER) ic. WO will dovolop Setnl-heovv equipment, one of e tor 0 manogoment kind, long-term program, salary. MEN NEEDED >rk on days evsileble. ENOiNE MOWERS, i Mschlne ■ hendlei Laborers. RESTAURANT WORK women,' nights, tnltorms end 1 turnlshed, experience not no. White Tower, 142 N. Saglnew. 3 ALL POSITIONED yi Jered Industries, __ — — ' Coolldge, Blrmlnghem. Troy-BIrm-I Ingham area. 647-1200. _ AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY;" EMPLOYERS Temporary Service, Inc. IFERNDALE “"‘— Industrial' Nurse FORD : MOTOR CO. eterle I COUNTER GIRL WANTED'Bloom. field area, axparlanced only. Call cw^S^^ke.-EM UTICA PLANT needs a Registered Nurse tor full time position of Industrial f. 3-9112. in Rd. COUNTER HELP wanted for quality dry claaning shop. Paid holidays, yacatjons, ^and other fringe ENGINEERS DESIGNERS RETAILERS CHECKERS ________ 26117 Grand River _____ ________________________B~MPLdYER ......CLAWSON ,54, ^ Start immediate Employ- jhjjy metol 1 An oquol opportunity oirojoyor^ ^ 1 nTrS««ie^n*2fobricotor lothe ond --------operator gonerol assembly. LT' ' GEMCO ELECTRIC CO. ^ I WANTiEDi' mW^ JC'y.*®®* tor porter work. Day and avei -eneflls. Apply .. , ------ Martinizing Miracle Mile Shopping Center or coll Mr. Moor# or Mrs. Evens. 332-1822.____________________ CLERK TYPIST ________ -........ndusIrlBl experience not necossary. Appileanis mutt be rnlstcred In the s(Me of Michigan. For appointment, call 731-3700, Ext. 271. or apply in person at davelopmant, axcallant opixirtunity for advancement, all fringe benefits, STOCK-WELL CORP., | 1200 Doris Road, Pontiac, Wch. * ESTIMATOR / i ,n«, ..........-i-.....- Exceptional Opportunity. ,^conomy Cars 2335 Dixie night to 7j,m. Apply of: manager trainee for blue , Mechanic or Body Mon 1-are you QUALIFfED? 2-HAVE OWN TOOL? 3-WILLING TO WORK7 Then ask tor Richard I ReMaur evening tar 4 p.m. eig Boy ) Dixie Hwy. NOW A DIRECT LINE FOR PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADS HALL FOR RENT, RECEPTIONS, I church. OR 3-5202. FE 2- knowledge 1 near appearing .y. I print rtadlng.l yl exparlanea In ^ laraflona involving' ■ II. Chanco tor advancement. . mld.w6^ A^IMLABLE plastic manutacturer. Experienced with finished wood working equipment necastary. Flberglattlng experience alto datirabla. Apply at Mobile Products,---------- walled Lake. •ELIAS STrIoS, BIO BOY RESTAURANT Talagraph B “---- ond labor on ----------------- stalling now kitchen cupboat_______ sinks, and related work, Installlr file surfaced. Wainscot boar' bathroom. In 400 apartnwnts 2599 Crumb Rd. WELDERS minVie'ctuTlng ipofeTlond involving' o2djke*'’?ontlic,"efr.r op2nii precision peris tor aircraft ond* '"«» tor axparlanead machinists. In ........... 14, ixoT, ai X p.m. ai me runiiat TBPt racoroeri ano oitiar loioicu mlsille IndustrlOS. For con- r®* following classifications: RELIABLE AUTO MESSENGER, il Housing Commletlon Office, 535 equipment, light typing and "yoy 'have your MULING 1 or over, car end full Inturenct, 40 “ranch St., Pontiac. For materials tdmfllarlty with office procedures mllltwy obllgellon « miLLiritj hours, I2.M hr. fringe benefits, ^4 , _ , _ Id labor on raiment fiBorino. In- required. Salary commensurate □oS"ffyrtanlee^^^^ SURFACE GRNDNG P-m. An equal opportunity TAf ± J t J-SSw ..Wanted •f: _ , VALtmil'IC mClALs cars, apply )54 N. Perry.____employee, who hat had tomt MiS*Sd 1 . .r 1®' . I REPAIR MAN TO WORK on Locke experience with station “Urkl'ey, Mlcli.”^' An Equal OppoiTunlty Employer ^pweriawn mower. 398-3636. -oh , . A®“«!LOpp»ri«M»vi!np!».y^ mamari: 1 R«ol Estate Classes ELECTRONIC ASSEMBLER ... I Applications are now being taken Tn”cridirwo7k- -5 dCwVer'S23' Soloried Personnel Office ... B, banofi Mr. Voss, 7 N. Perry St-, or Phone CLERK-TYPIST Typing and filing r e q u I red,; shorthand doslrabla, 40 hour week, I Group hoipltel Insurance. Apply In person or 23 Mile 8. Mound Roods between 8 o.m. 8i 4:30 p.m. AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY . Apply II COOK, SHORT ORDER, ext--------- ----------------------- -------------------shill, 12-81 But N^Nocetseryl Coll Mr. Derkaez For appointment 651-5500 etits.; OElnATXs'SIS'TXNT'>onllVc area.■ - ------------------------- ■4510. Reply Pontiac Press Box C 28. NEED MONEY for Easter ex(«naes? 0991°?!? ..OfliCE, oxperlenoed Co"s^^^^^ vacancies for capable women. Call FE 4-0439 or write P.O. Box 91a It. W-8000. „ . ‘?Ti^';cro“r.”*lidd'ii?o AUTO PAINTER roit, Mich., by tel ot Document --------------------------- Chryslor-Plytnouth HALL FOR RENT. RECEPTIONS, rMj9*!t o °Vtu ”c7n ®m?Jk.* yo?r hZ“'2M"W"all 2ha.eT“?t W AiN i JIjU P®riuniiy w ex .uruaulna Fxrcllant salarv and » » -4. X j- ’"MMndlna 392 PHOTOGRAPHY - Are 25 or over g^®rm°*mf*'rnhir*"*- SS^"Sary° Mr."Bornabi? 335-0322.^ . ministration' desirable, but” will PART TIME ACCOUNTING CLERK consider qualllied applicants with; to work tor CPA firm in B. S. degree. Outstanding fringe Rochester, experienced preferred. benefits. Starting salary based on] 651-8596._____________________ education, background anr* —--Vrlto Pontiac Pre DEBT-AID, Inc. 10 W. Huron FE 2-0181 Llconsed 4 Bonded __serving Oakland County __ LOSE WgiCHT SAFELY with Dax-A-Qlet Tablets. Only 98 cnats. PARENTS WITHOUT Partners, St. -Patrick's Dinner Dance, Sat. night March 15, non n—‘---------------- Bridgeport Operators EXPERIENCED lift, standard benefits 1 working, co CLYDE 10 Corp., BIrmingh Equal Opwrtunlt ELECTRONIC TEi A. J. MILLER INC. ROYAL OAK, MICH. lAaple , ual oppdrtur a'uedTdd II day Sat. , BEAVERlPRECISION TOOL MAKER Troy ESTIMATOR TO PREPARE Cost ---- —... —Ynufoctu''-' ble to i of fabi ina machar.— ara preferred. drawing ... .------- Contact Mr. Fisher at McDaniel Tank Manufacturing Co. 716 N. Saginaw, Holly. _ __________ TOOL DESIGNER EXPERIENCED ARC WELDERS 1970 Big Beaver, Troy ; ..eoed Good pay with fringe I equal opportunity amploygr_^ benefits. Apply McDenlol Tank BOILER OPERATOR | ffo*,Mffl'n. ----------------------- 'I'll!.. 'ffrJSod'or 2Se"fo factory WORK for man over 30. to ass,«5”s5s.nL"Ai;;M''.-. l?lS*Bm! CroL^anTLItel Ap^ly ?17 C9."»r®L “ock " TECHNICIAN __________________________ MOLDING ROOM FOREMAN' 1117 'fE sSm N. Wilcox, Rochester.__ ------=---- MACHINE LAYOUT MEN AND DETAILERS. FULL FRINGE BENEFITS, OVERTIME, APPLY PERSONNEL OFFICE SliTTER PRODUCTS, 407 HADLEY ST., HOLLY. obtain license I M"cT“Hospit®a7,*‘'90o”wo^^^ CLEANER and Handyman. Saginaw St., Pontiac. Ave., Pontiac. FE 8-9111, Ext; 23B | 3915 Auburn, THE PHARMACY tor your prescription! HUDSON'S PONTIAC MALL BOX REPLIES ;__________equaK^.^._^._,_________ At 10 a.m. today there BORING MILL OPERATORS,, were replies at The Press j FULL FRINGE BENEFITS. AP-Offiee In the following PLY PERSONNEL 0 F F I C E. huxes: I SUTTER PRODUCTS CO., gr^^hid yduiig men, iiloi ex- C-3. C-7, C-8, C-13, C-18, | 407 HADLEY ST„ HOLLY. ! g'rt C-21, C-22, C-28, C-31, “CHEMICAL TECHNICIAN I ----------- ......-------- ”* C-36, C-72. Male or tamale lab assistant vrttti * ' I «nm« chamlcal training. Ex-1 or watte treat-1 FULL TIME FLOOR SALESMEN or SALES TRAINEES MANAGER TRAINEE This Is a tramandous opportunity lor the right Individual to grow with a company that Is expanding at a fantastic rate. Retail ex-parlenca or possibly a background In Electronics holptul. Will train a person who is willing to work hard; to prove hlmsoll. if v _____________ ______ to L. Rooert Kimball Inc., 2157 Orchard _L^ke Rd., J>ontjac. ____ SHlPPING-RECEiViNG Immediate opening at our Pontiac location for eager, grattivt young men to hand phastt ot retell store „„„ ?2?'b“"'’dete,!I^l*,'“wlll'''*^^^^^^ Mr. Coe, 8 o.m. to 4:30 p.m. Exc^Uent .ter^ng sel. qualified Individual, excelimt op- Mgi^dov thru Friday, portunity to secure future with one""" *>•* worlds largest Electronics ^ \ .......at alued LiiMO ____ TRUCK MECHANICS „,^ Gos or Diesel. Liberal pay, •Or insurance furnished, retire-Ifoclfment and full benefits. See AJIi, rnm ft n m tn C-l._______________________ EXPERIENCED H A I R 0 R E Suzette's coltfour. FE 2-68S5._ EVENING Supervisor Registered nurse tor Et _ Hospital Supervisor, 3:00 p.m. to 11 :M p.m. Full tlmo, ---------* position In fully sccrodl K_________fully sccrodllod 300 bed progrostlvo teaching hospital with Intern and Resident Ft PARTS AND COUNTER DEPARTMENT Young woman tor lawn and garden div. call 647-1212, Mr. Feist._ PIN MONEY PLUS I 10 hours oar week earns $50 to $75. Hours flexible. Neet, oersooable women over 35. Cell 330-0373 ^ tween 12 noon and 3 p.m. lor Olstritaters. »m.i m ,41.^.,..^ RADIO OF MICHIGAN, 2333 S. TELEGRAPH OR PHONE 344-2"' INTERVIEWS MON. 0. WED. Conlkt "personnel *O0Mrtm«^^ RES f aJu'S ANT 'HELP, fo^ SAGINAW GENEHALJTOSPITAL | P™P»c;*'0";,,®« 1447 N. --------- ... .......... one of the lergest Electronic Olstrlbutort In the world APPLY AT ALLIED; STORE manager perlenced talesman ..... quality elofhing and furnishings store in ths Birmingham atea.| „.. ----------- Excellent opportunity tor mw who -ll CLEANING TRAINEE also telephon# sales girl, . shows InltletTvo. Ratumo to Box C-1 ’"stMpy work, sattsMctory wages, have pleasant aalllng voice ™ 30, Pontiac Presi. ---------------1 jj-aar potential for right parson, some knowledge of llwaars si ™ SURVEYORS, PARTY chlafs. In-' rntervlmlng MORNINGS ■“ ■rdi strument men, rod men, tor, AAr. KKk, Dolton Sorvie# .— In-I suburban Detroit or Alpena, 47) Orchard Lk. Rd., Pontiac, ovartima and 5.4111. k It over. 'uuATRa : RADIO OF MICHIGAN, 2333 S.l Hwy„ _______ TELEGRAPH RD., MIRACLE ---------------CATcCMAM^n MILE SHOPPING, OR 29321 JOHN .siALtSlinAI'l AU “ — ........ — ■“ Bdlate opening for men or -----nf lob •— — _____ ___ rellablt, local MECHANICS I ' Funeral Directors COATS FUNERAL H07 DRAYTON PLAINS Call J. Alt.'- qualified Individuals.' If Interested In joining, largest Electronics Dti...—~.. j. the world APPLY AT ALLIED RADIO OF MICHIGAN, S-l TELEGRAPH OR PHONE 344-2585, ----ling, ..., ......___ hospIteTizatlon and ’ KEEGO SALES S. SERVICE 1 pension plan and ,« —4._ . .1. o., ------1 T^ppiy g, pgy Loss, Dixie HWY., Cisrksti cuWer ORINDER, with job shop experience, must be able to set-up, _ alter, ond iharpon all lYPK • of [ culling tools. Tool-Creft Co., Royal Oak 549-8208-9. ______________. I CLAIM representative GUARDS I lAAMEOIATE., OPENINGS. ^NaC and Royal Oak r— 1-313-6^7190. ter MEN 18 TO 26 National corporation v young mon to procure management positions. Mutt bo athlotically or politically minded. Only those *— ' Intelligent and neat lid Who can start s, Acutus Inc., 421 F tssrr,."® m"fssx Waterterd._____________' Dixie Hwy., Watwtord. 'RE I GRADE SOLOERERS, PRINTED experienced WAI'TREM for INC., 34 W. SHEFFIELD to replac You'll K YOUNG MAN AFTER tch 00 »TNS‘^oj^6Ns,r:#c“. Huntoon DIAL 3344981 We Repeat DIAL 3344981 FOR FASTER SERVICE *79 Oakland Ave. CIVIL ENGINEERS CITY OF TROY ___________________SALARY TO $10,870 TVoorheesSiplei an tx-*GAS STATION ATTENDANT, ex- SL'5Ititer*c'ran?'*«T:nmSr*oS?; Gos station Attendant 5?rl'te""te:'® Parsoiteal'’®Ma Farm Bureau Ins. orwp# 4i Grand RIvtra Lansinpe Mich. SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOME '•'Thoughttul Service'' FE 8-9288 ___ .. jerry's Shell. Orchard Lk. Rd. at Maple._________ iring a___..... — ... diatelv need apply. -Ciii ciiiect; $ISS PER WEEK ------- Call Mr. Nixon 332-3826 before x w.,... _____ _____________________ Needed at Once! , *"°"operaVor'^“ Young, Aggressive a„‘'c';';j‘.,'M%'''indusfH;r ; Experienced i Tr°v-______________ ! Auto Salesmen! 1 SERVICE MANAGER ■TV'rr,:'diMteUpahirb annd workina OUNO~W^AN for 2jd opyjtioni SSSd’"?!!f'e '“whlte'*teamlir a*’tpp' ..^ ll500, ask terTcTub House.___________________ female JANITOR. OUR L^V.Jt Refugo School. 37W Comrryce Rd. FULL ^ TIME _^NI<^HT ' ihW. department, some e x p e r 1 • n c^ Help Wanted Fcmole ^^ 2 TELEPHONE GIRLS jo;n“m*i.ss;i"cKr/S?twrrX, nsrj; ICE. Typing e ad. Apphf Bin let, 167 E. Map ! Established Over 45 Y< Pertondit 4-B 2 MEMBERSHIPS FOR Health Spa, I taka over payments. 549-6225, attar degree I quIrM. mant, " Troy. 6' GRILL MEN BUS BOYS For full or part time employment. Good wages, hotpifallzetlon, vaca- 2?__...tate .MeA n4KAr NIGHT AUDITOR Apply 1801 S. Talagraph uuua ..aui., MV.,,...______ ____ _________Holiday Inn of Pontiac tion with pay and other banafits. ,ggyy ^ar SALESMEN, who intef^S to warn rap wagvsaiL’l'l" hospitalization, profit ^rlnga banetiti Inclodlng Demo and lots of ' ; TRIMMER trainee ' IS years or older. Ml Orchard Lake. Rd., ' ELIAS BROS. _ BIG BOY RESTAURANT Telegraph 4 Huron____ hvdRaulic assembler, d. y ______ . .nexperlenced. Keverley Mercury, 651-9161. Get COLLEGE MEN CLARKSfON 9RAbUAT«, }«• i ESF'ScVfctT'Billi^ ““•''OlO du^ng tji. summer ^ Earn In excess of Rochester Scrip, 2560 Frankton, r. Pay to start will | S52-f911, ODD JOB /WAN, shipping, receiving and write-up, soma lanTtorlal duty, Tool-Cratt 0>., Royal Oak 549-8206- •hrtptiiL ' gitid Tringai OPPORTUNITY rA{?lar*R^"'TW.^°" * .COMl'NATiPN AUTO SALEJ5/WEN Debt Consultants iwork 3 days a wai shifty 2*10 p.m. I $3500 thl» sr— ____estate Ue.®n‘2Sond«L FR^E^WIG, Wfg P.rt.,8, ■ re __________ , v ON AND AFTER THIS DATE, gf part-time attar ----- time in summer. General 0“l»J®« maintananea, painting, cutting }nsw,x®i'?ae.!? .iKif.‘"or. Tn Theatre. 2103 S. Talagrapt tfeLPER FOik BUILDER. March 10, 1969, I will not be' —aaIvbrs LATHE i..... __________ resoonslble tor any debts con- aiE ^^KERS, L ms j traefad by any other than mywlf.j, i5®gSr,.|v** stead^^ pSftlar Mich. "' *rl4*t. Ca*rb« corp. 334- RE^ARO, _MISSjNG^O^^ 26, LOST: GRAY FEMALE KITTEN, - ■ ----- Subdivision. 682-2607. vicinity ot irta. OR 4- LOST: FBIWALE BLACK LabTador-'""■r-Reward, Commerce Twp. . 624-S22il. LOST BLACK AND White puppy, 7 months old. 6S2'9247._______________ - Reward. Call after 4;30, 673-7735. L^Tr^RBOPOMB^^^^ ”lMa!rwrcaH sifi?'Ball«i, 0* DISTRICT MANAGER OPENING For an alert, censcien-man with late model automobile. Good working conditions, supervising news-paperboys. Good starting salary ond car allowance with numerous job benefits. APPLY IN PERSON TO Jim Long Circulation Department LABORER WANTED, /i/tedilna ihop; WELL CORP., 13S0 Oorli Rd., Pontiac, Mich. Pontiac Press Want Acis ARE FAMOUS FOR "ACTION" JUST CALL 334-4981 J 'll h , cars. Fret demo, high com-mlssloni. Blue Cross irisurance, paid vacations, good floor traffic. Call Frank Norton at Sptkar F,ord- Mercury, Milford. 684-1715.______ PRODUCTION SUPERVISOR 52^4^3 Poml..; Royal hardinge_____ HOUSEIWAN. p R I E N D L Y PART TIME HELP for attemoonsi prefer person Interested In c-*"-391 Pontiac Mall. 852-5031. A LADY 25 er over, ------- 1st and —' TURRETT LATHE OPE^tATUK Set and operate aircraft par TAKE CHARGE E B A L a* 5! ra clients -builder* for custom homes, uur company now otters complsts tlnanclsl Ptenninp - Including, PIro 4 Casuslty ins., Lite Tns. Mutual Funds and Real Estete. Wo ^r a chance tor you to develop the opportunity to share In the grow**-tldentlal I LATHE AND MILL Operators and Trainee Excellent opportunity for employment In new machine shop I" Troy, scheduled ter Deration May 1969. Phone WE 3-0926 tor Im termsflon or apply In peteon 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 P.m. at PWfnt plant located at 6666 Tlraman, Detroit. vilify ot Baldwin •"0 *•' can bat. 6 p.m. and 9 p.m. A Tuaa, only, FE 44269. __ GENE'RAL office work, must aS wmt to work-^^a iirmJnant SL4ia'’»”J.SS5,ft Kf jj'riwarfe •RiLp.*-ot Mn, Ts IA-1 ______R NATIONAL CHAIN ORGANIZATION, THE RICHARDS CO. INC. You muit bo abe to convarae Intslllgtntiy, GIRL TO WORK AT Bakery ---• v-,-must do aotno cashier ng tesldes sell ond box bakery and some tp^ Items, work 11 a.m. to S-P-to/*’•” hr. to start, trsnsportitlon, cill Ml 4-7727. rifSrs techniques/ office management Sites*"®.™' STA*^T'lNO®™SAt!j?RT per mo., Jo those eccented. $625 After 3 day riod. ----- all CO BAILl general opp'CE ^ _______________________ tTrkfng ceitomOTS, aM^ j wAWfi$?^^NTi'o^m tlmas, 10 and 3 P.m. Good riflutakooplns| nlohts. Harbor Bar 68«im sW. SI w-HurgiL,------------ I waitress, iXPERIENCED, 12 housework j days,, must have, „oon til 1:30. Ajpply In pe^rson. recent ref., own transportation. Ml girch Room Rosteurant. Saiinaw 4-1703. ______- ______ I at Pike. ________ : \ HOuTfKEEPEfii' TOncARt tor 2 waNTID CASHIER, WITH ex; small children > and 11 g h t parlenca In Billing, ate. Grimaldi -lod. Automatic pay raises and ■■ company boneflti. CALL MR. IL^ for psrsonol Interview Bright Future - top Benefts THE poirriAi: PRESS LICENSED REAL ESTATE SALESMEN WITH PURCHASING experience 8.V , Like T^-Fish^J Join Expanding Operations to New Plant at Sixteen Mile and John R Troy, Michigan Will troin 10 male and ' 10 female machinists on MILLING MACHINES, LATHES, GRINDERS SCREW MACHINES AND DRILLING MACHINES Contact Woody Berryhill Pegasus Div. Koehring Co. 3500 Eleven Mile Road Berkley, Michigon Or Call LI 7-8700 ACCURATE, FAST Typist-Receptionist 3 days a weak, no evenings. Ught bookkseping, must enloy mseting ths public. Excaltent pay. -- Optical Co., 138 N. Sspinaw. AMERICAN GIRL WE NEED EXPERIENCED: SALESLADIES ...Jrcirii ^■m. or all and Sun. SALAD GIRL and genera work, 9-5 p.m. 5 days a_ waeksnds. Apply Club I 306 Main, Rdchastpr. SALESLADIES FOR FULL OR port-time, experience preferred. Apply Alvon's of Pontiac, 892 W. Huron or Alvin's of Troy, 14 Mile and 1-75 Oakland MalL Stenos-Secretaries TYPISTS-Key Punch., General Office WorK' CALL MANPOWER TYPIST, EXPERIENCE In •jJIght bookkseping for small plaasw 1 girl oHIca. Woodward-Long -Jake area. Call 34 P.m. dally. UHm. TYPIST WITH LIGHT ^Bookkeeging -v'li. tor saasonal lob at country Orchard Lake. AAA 6-2576. I'ltsT'in jnly.‘'oihar1teto| Suidlldoei,' i Hlghasr wejias;:,_aig| aig orellirg quarter in Birmingham.' 442-4360 or 964-3139. HELP WANfiO.^WWjPlencod^ g^^^^ and counter, IIJO per hour, day or night shift. Apply st 332 S. Telegraph, Pontiac. HOUSEKEEPER '*'*5 WE NEED A /MATURE womatt to iiv* iri. mort for homt than wages. Bookkaeptrs An-''o«.c'i'^iill. ^**T25's. Adams Plaza, Rm. 124 Phone 442-305$ BlrmWigham Incidentally, we pay housework, days, ffflrf®”"’' reliable, rafarancas. Ml 6-1993. .. keypunch OPERATORS Temp. Asslgnmante all CALL JEAN JOHNSTON 969-7265 American Girl 19376 Woodward at 7 Mila WE WANT axperlaiiead women to sell real estate. Por more In-tormation contact Mr. Gaorga at 674-1131. Women I Needed for temporary FACTORY WORK Press oparatort, OAYrO%l'.»fe REPORT READY FOR WORK. 6 a.m. to * P-m. . EMPLOYERS Temporary Service, Inc. FERDALE 020 Hilton Rd. REDFORD 24117 Grand Rivw CLAWSON 9S s. Main CENTER^ SANPERS! No exeorlanea^ tor permanot, part time, aajtar and contigent, fountain sales. Sor- ®S£^EiSrrliga driw customers from. Wa to tot M.T'wriR-BlljSVi^^ l?“wira*t,ur'pfi?^fj Mrsm at Dougiaa ciasnara, fo* woodward, Birmingham. DESIGNERS checkers; DETAILERS EXPERIENCED 0«NTAL . _TW. SSWE- Over 200 lakaa a » llvISslL" In our gonoral mroct v«’"jatOT °'^A^Ichto»nSawl^rVub# Co. 600 wm. N. McMur- •• ____CIN6 F Arbirs Roast tor smbitlous young ,.,r..ld Th^l^«-iS.-iJs.-a75. tooMs m'“laborotory“w5rk. "phem'e vj* 3W4I143 torTntotvlaw. ’‘-J tiXPERIEkCiO SERVICE „t«JIOij ftsWOrt LUrMAOrND mechanic !u5rn*'*ir sa^^ss: ""“nAZUNO Mclintenance-Electrician Maintenance—Pipe Fitter MUST be LICENSED OR JOURNEYMAN These job openings are ot our Rochester Michigan Laboratoriis. CALL 567-5300 EXT. 5641 For An Interview Appointment PARKE-DAVIS P.O. BOX 110 DETROIT, MICH. 48232 AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER BEELINE FASHIONS" Housawivss, 391-3419 nanv SITTER. f6r 2 SMALL ^boys, 0:30 to 5:30, 5 days, Ksego Harbor, 612-3070. _ ___^— bagger AND assembler tor dn cleaning plant. No nacotsary, afariing rato Slto wm ovarnma and other trlnga hona^to Birmingham Claanars, jlto S Waodvteto, Blrmlnoham. Ml 6-6620. •grJUri,ga"JSii: - -lid at home, ret. rixiul™d-r older woman. Phone 401-_ Si20. jjTTBf IN »ilY Homar S LEGAL SECRETARY Ppn1la?%te,‘'j^^ uijDY FOR GENERAL houseworK, AUNDRY HELP, WAITRESS WANTED, JfWlE, •?: Hnssj!rt,.'isi; ’“^WANTED Girl for GENERAL OFFICE WORK Math accuracy Is Impor-toni experionc* desirable but not necessary. Libetol job benefits. -APPLY IN PERSON TO Arlo McCuiiy Circulotion Department tor 3 school age children. 3j8 P-m., ,vJ!?to{ie fex^ifiiWcar^S the TONTIAC MATOite .wdyiytl mr Banora(;eWici| PRESS ■ t. Htip Ftnwlt 7 Waniwl M. or F. trt w* terlcARETAKKR COUPLE, full yOU'PE LOOKINOI 3 young immon wll Intemtod. c*ll *1 (0 Arc w* lilg to work. g.iW4 tor 1 C—10 Ntip WAITRESSES Foi part’ timt dtnlna roow wairrcftses nredwl on both day one plfbt *hlft, Apply In only. Ted's ' BLOOMFIELD HILLS WOMAN .... _ „ '^u*' opportunIMoi. women" FOR all »Mm in toctoryj/^ppuCATIONS ’ NOW " B ,nu N. Wilco*. Roclw»lei. ; TAKEN for d»v nton, Ufhi ^Trr ,'’*j%.TuS sSy'^r. Iroln. 130 S. I" .Toirgraph FE 4 0911. ARE VOU IN A Rut? Call Mr. ™ - Potoy. YORK REAL ESTATE. OR 4TI3A3. ■’Riv I , w. (rffict at tf THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAV, MARCH 10, t Ads Diol 334-4981 utllltiw. Roehwtor Ar»». 4S1-D043. ____ _ _ _ _ XASHlERI AMO CONCESSION h«lp YOUN^WOMAN TO be dottor'.] n»id#d, Apply Mlracto MIto Drlv# •Mltfanl, will from II no ox-, 'n.T!L»*tFJ!L?lMJ portonot, opply to Ponlloc Proa empi BOX C-31. __ ______ Somli Mtl|i WolitEi M. or f. I'"’v ^c^i/mH "I?- ESTATE,' OR Mlracw Mil# Drivt « S. Totogroph. I available - it Nurilng Homo. 33S-, WAITRESSES CURB GIRLS Soglniw St;,_ __________ e'^ like life" ft pasilng you by? coll Mr, Folty, VoRK^EAL ESTATEi^OjI 4-03*3. fIll or part time eommlalon Miw btlp tor Rawtotati Product! In Ponlloc prop. CoN jl&1l3*.__ Food Service Manager w«»*ap&*'^pnTb9wm5**’Blp*o^^ ARE YOU REALLY" llVINCj"Or cm^trv Fair 1331 W Mapla. Cor lust awlstlfRi? Call Mr. rolay, crwl« CSTATK i74-0»3. _ BLOOD DONORS WOMEN URGENTLY NEEDED N.lion.1 corpoVpJfon will Ir.ln 4 J|| JH P«l.lv. «•« vwmon 10 procoro monpoomont ^ Po»i"vo KrnnL'^rnli ri «-•' *«■««•• *1? X. dX," !f".HTS,t^|: ^ M'CHIOAN community (In Pontiac BLOOD CENTER 1349 Wida Track D’ Mon., FM. f-4 Tuai.r Wad.4 Thors. 10“5 FE 4-tf47 Help Wonted M. or F. SHbIp Wonted M. or F. 8 OAKLAND COUNTY IS NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR: clinical PSYCHOLOGISTS (M.A., Phd.) $11,500-$14,000 SOCIAL WORKERS (M.S.W.) $11,000-$13,500 CHILD WELFARE WORKERS (B.A., B.S.) $8,500-$10,300 For onnouncements, further requirements, information, ond applications contocti „ THE PERSONNEL OFFICE OAKLAND COUNTY COURTHOUSE i200 N. Telegroph Rd. Pontiac, Mich. 48053 3384751 Ext. 495 lip WontMl M. or F. . PART TIME OPPORTUNITY FOR COLLEGE STUDENT WITH GOOD TRANSPORTATION Afternoon Hours Approximately 3-7 P.M. APPLY IN PERSON TO Jim Long Circulation Deportment THE PONTIAC PRESS I Employmenf Ageiiciet ________9 FRBE TRAININO for thP OPI Wtto cpn fypp, but two no etfkttx-parlpiKp. No Saturday! and SSaO. ^ylll! Pagp, 334-1471, Snplling and ■oUdlin Sewkee4opfllee 13 FICLPSTONt WORK FIGURE FANCY Opportunity plu!. Ornt apot I baginnar! wllh tigura aplltuda. Ci IPS. 334-4971. Wonted Reol btoto Low Overhead . _______________— - Personalized Service i^tiWX For Over 47 Yeors g:ii.,»7,,'2!2iHng^'nd".K!8: Alwoys More For Less eiRCH Blush doors I to 50 GIRL FRIDAY $450 UP I POWER SAW SPECIAL idvancamanl potintlal. Paa paid. now ............. 119.93 internatioSUl.pjersoi%l ' "•“Sri i- WAWiEN STOUT, R.al.or | Dally 'fil * *73-51**._^--------- MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 'j-ROOMS. WEST SIDE, 5135 per BEING TRANSFERRED? Need to —■ ........... " ^^^^‘IFIELD ORCHARDS | it«g''s'.'w^*rd, rhani.~ *4ni*s GENERAL OPE f*; _ AH C'MON] (ANY Sizl r) aach Sura you can UM an axtra 1400 a month. Thi! poiltloo ottori fulllANTIOUE KIT SPECIAL BUYERS wo hovo HOMES I to month, dep " ~t[0OMI APARTMENTS sr-334-3551 iitonth and up ‘Inr'aS:---------- HolpoInt oir condlllonlng f™,, , , , .un'dock S»le • Partridge “IS THE BIRD TO SEE" 13,000 SQ. FT. LT. MFG. or WAREHOU^ ' IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY 50c A SQ. FT. , , 140-xlSO' extra LOT ask foS>Ve|£ZVal^ w. Huron St., Pontla^ Onan nlto! til * __ ises W .... Salary aducatlon, parlanca. Ei naootlablaba! backgrouml an icallani trlnga b FREE CLASSES Man or woman wantod. Earn whlla you laam. Wa hava I oNloat, MO laitipaopla who can't ba wn— Call today. MILLER BROS. REALTY 333-7156 RETIREE FOR FULL OR. PART ---Mcratarlal oNIca work call _____Tp-m. W9*M.____________ SHORT ORDIr cooks, top wagaa, —llant working conditions, itallutlon, apply H arvay'a Hal Houaa, SIM Olxls Hwy., IS YOUR INCOMI Mr. Folay, YORK -R 4H)3*3. IRK REAL ESTATE. IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR ASCP raglatarad inadicsl technologists, all shill!, range %m to 555* per n TEACHER, EXPBRieNCeO csrtiflad plui dagroa, full tinw tot privato eetiool. ^ molh,^ lelonco, ehomlelry, Francti-Sponlih, olomon tory *th grodo, Inguiro Ml 4-10*0. >ply: --------- .. ---------------- wifac Gonorat Hoepltal, Somlnolo . W. Huron.________________ JOB Vi/rfH A luturo. Coil Mr. FoiayT YORK REAL ESTATE, OR *4)3*3. LIMOUSINE ORiVERS W 0 n 10 d^ mala or tomolo, year round vrork, good wogos, oqual opportunity. 332-9145. MALE OR FEMALE HELP Wantod, oil ehlHl. Top itortlng pay, mutt bo ovar IS, apply In parson, 49M DIxlo Mwy„ Covollor SorvIco Sta. NEEDED FULL TIME Roal ottoto Solasman, with or withou* perlonco, will train. No lln Incomo If you'ra witling to Inlorvlows dolly. Coll *74-311 tor Mr. Coopor.______ _ OAKLAND COUNTY IS CURRINTLY ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR AN opening FOR PROGRAMMER I or II $9.600-$12,800 Appllconi! must 'bo High Scho 10 paid PI n Autococ kutocodor Cobot or 3*0 --------- .anguog*. For furthar Information or to moka application onlact the; PERSONNEL DIVISION Oakland County Courthousa 1100 N. Tolograph Rd. Pontiac, Michigan 40053 330-4751, Ext. 495 PROGRAMMER-ANALYST, IBM 3*0 . Assambl*r langutga axptrli^ ^ requirad. Call coliaet 1-741-L., Inlormallon Control Svsioms, Ann ' Arbor, Michigan. ice Qui^l [eiiiffiss ^ SERVICE - SUPPUES - EQUIPMENT GROOVY TYPIST ' If you Ilka to typo, this comi will pay wall, good location, top bonofits. Coll I PS, 334:4971. HEARING AID ASSISTANT: Gl bo right arm In plush offica. moro Information coll . K o . , Davit. S325. S34-247I, SnoUIng and rncBu unui, INO CONDITIOI IB BENePITS. 14 W. SHBFFIELC rpUR JOB MONOTONOUS ond itInoT How about tomtttilng dlf-snt? This firm will train you .. ... asslttant In this oxcltlng modical flold. S303. Lynn Andori, 334-1471. SnoillnB ond Snolllng. LET YOUR FINGERS do tho « "CALL" Kolhy Davit tor _ that you wont. FREE Seles Htip Malt-Femele_^l-A 53.00 AN HOUR 3 hours a diyl 3 days a wook Ago — 11 or ovar WrTto P.O. Box 3401 ___Fontloc. Mlchkion 4I0W. 'A REAL ESTATE EXPLOSION" ,.J hovt a luturo for you.In tho Rtal Estoto ♦I9W, JlhJ* YloId - sornlngt unllmitod. Wo will lor lull or port lima „man Pro- ____ you moot our quolllleattos. Wo will looch you this oxcltlng Hold ■'w»?rffur®T6« MULTIPLE LISTING SESVICE 1450 N. opdyko Rd._____FE 5-01*5 rsi«7,:i MEDICAL S E C R E T.AJ» Y j no Saluri Phyllis P— ' Can You Sell? ialary. Downtown BlrmlnQhom. 64^3210. TXPANDING TEXAS MFR, NEEDS SALES REP. Earn up to 010,000 plus rogu cosh bonus. No oxporlonco no< ary. You supply dMlro. Wo s Sv training. Llmlf^ „»rftYOl POTtloc oroo. Air moll F. Y._pi sjT a s""!ar tV. and Si S WAITING! 334-1471, i LUCK GAL Droom lob tor some. .. ------- enough to grab It. Light typing vorloty. Coll IPS. 33A49n. MANAGEMENT TRAINEES Don't wait until spring to tell do II now whlla tho morkot It Its highest. Guaranteed Sale Free Appraisal 30 Day Listings SsSkston, i B6DTOOMsru«nty,i If wo can't sail your homo In 30 hnlit-ln stove, ovsn. Eves. *15-18*5. — wo will buy 111 Stay In ---------— irijt N 'Stllines exctpi 'etactrlc. No " »blE. VACANT. ■ 33^-5*70,' ......... ........... ‘ Gl. Full br-”-““‘ tof. oai :hurch youth win garagas, batamanit, h)Wt:331-755t. your housa 90 days aftar the ule. LAUINGER ___ SINCE 1935 win- *74-0319 5150 -'CONTRACTOR DESIRES Shop and Income Tex Service 19 VN«Ari*0T4VMt-DNl^^^^ ISO S. Wcodward. B'ham. ALL TAX RETURNS carafully praparad, guarantaad In wrltlr-wlth or without app'ta. Avaraga tor City, Stota and Fadoral SI. — Dunn i Co. 1094 Can Lake Rd. coll *91-7501.__- BENJAMIN R. BACKUS 23 year* oxporlonco MID-TERM COLLEGE GRADS morkollng, englnaorlng procMilng. Oponinga n to axparl--------------- 334-497L NEED A RAISE? Opportunity knocka tor a--------- »I with otflea skllli. Call IPS, 33*- 71. _________________ OFFICE:....iP YOU ENJOY TALK- — phone and mealing FRIENDLY-LOW COST KEYSJAX «RVHCE FE uSt”^ PERRY Hallmark Income Tax FAST ACCURATE SERVICE S5 and up. No am't. nacaaary *74-4123 4121 Highland (M-59) next to Airway Lana*. INCOME TAX PREPARATION by Minimum, office tho- ------------------- _ O'Loughlln Construction Co. P.O. 115, Southflold. Mich. 41075._____ Mortgage — oil cosh LAUINGER ELDERLY COUPLE . NEEDS homo mar Mall. Cash. Agent, 330-4952. *74-1*49.____________________________ It outright, or GUARANTEE hIo of it in writing. If thit it your pleotura. Dorris And Son Realtors "Established 1930" GOING TO TRADE? Thinking about 0 guarantaad solo? Don't gl— -noma away, call Ray todi 4ig*. protesslomi — home. Drayton - - *74-1593._______________________________I E!.*''™.'!®' ,««! personal ATTENTION, by op*; for vnu. 5580. |„ yjur homo, Clirkiton, ---- ... ..... Wotirterd orto. 415-5330. ; I Moving end Trucking 22 ^ IN SYLVAN VILLAGE, 2 or 3 bedroom house. Coih. PRIVATE PARTY. *12-91*5. No realtors.^ FHAVE a purchaser WITH CASH FOR A STARTER HOME IN O A K L AND COUNTY. CALL AGENT, *74-1*98 or IFFICE: Do you Ilka working It. plush ofileo with lust light ty(rt™»|" Carol'kU! M*-J«l,’‘snoinng and LIGHT HAULING and heavy n Ing. FE 1-5130.'^________________________________________________ LOTS — WANTED IN PONTIAC imrn^iate closing. REAL VALUE REALY, *41-4110, m naoda sharp gal ...... ■"‘I Sr“» — OFFICE: New for light typli nrj Krg? 3*2471; Painting and Decorating 23 EXPERT PAINTING, wollpiiwlng r,oi ■ kmowledge oP •"« docoroflng, Intorlor and ox-.®nd"d..lr??o"to!?n® to ^m| fro* ost.. roos. rot,,. 915- SnilOT*** '*'6ro*b‘'lt"’ Ko5'"Rl>y! LADIES DESIRE INTERIOR polnl ptrtoncs. Exctllent hours, Tocotlon. Sound good? I Roy, 334-2471. Snolllng i xciwni • ..........■> PAPERING vou'r. mxt. Orvol GIdcumb, *734149*. >'Snell-1 PAINTING, REASONABLE RATES. LOTS WANTED so ft. or longer, any tocotlon. Cosh YORK* 674-0363^°-°-^’*!^- c.'scHUEff " ~' u_T*5*o personnel consultant --- . . “Hieal estate sales ' ll^?"wru“ Ito."i- SMr^?“.OTkr.*om furniture 24-A Aluminum Bldg. Items i Drywull 1 Plumbing 8 Heating ALUMINUM SIDING, WINDOWS DRY WALL WORK Comploto. *25-CON OR A PLUMBING I. HEATING roofing Intlollod by "Superior." | 10*1. Oi trade labor for camper. Sewor, water linos - FE 1-0*43. •ST’'"*:. ---INEW AND REMOOeLINOO MOBILE HOME SKIRTING, own- Guorontood 13S-1419 or SSS-IOr .'"Jl*._»nc«o.ur.to .ny_.l^ 1--imeiSiir'’----- Antenna Service M & S GUTTER CO. LICENSED.BONOED or con not tultlll we hovo boon tjl Ing r 50 years—succottiullyl you mutt make money ily know how to loo thol BIRCHETT ANTENNA SERVICE truly know how CLARK Mr. Real Estote Muyment Agenclee ) 9 SECRETARY: I'll ^ *— gal Ihoy'ro looking fori Why find out? S500. Key Roy. 334-! RECEPtlOmSf $425 UP Enjoy an exciting coraar working with the public, soma typing ro- „ori», >xc. quired. North suburban area. Fee and Dollvory. carpMIng am 44*2 for a t REUPHOLSTER WITH US, furnitoro, boot Intorlor*, quail-— rtferencts. Plck-6S2417k» Goode. 29 PIECE OR HOUSEFUL. thoy'ra tooklng fori —SSOO. Key P«" ....._ ond Snolllng. SMiS TRAINEES $625 UP Wondtrful opportunities eompor'- ------- — - HIGHEST PRICES PAID FORi*» BIrm. Open March 15, 12 to 4 p.m. 852-3091. __ .. _ ______ -----$380 MOVES YOU IN 1.2-3 bedrooms. Now br' townhouses, up to V/2 oatns, basement. From S103 mwthly. tax lavlngs, children '337 Cherrylr— '•"rnar CLARKSTON CORNERS ’“WkW”- OR PHONE *l*-122t_ FROM $103 MONTHLY Ranches, Colonials, up to 2 baths. 1-2-3 bedrooms. Brick, bSsements, children welcome. 1337 Cherrylawn, corner of W. Hopkins, 335-4171, Garden Court Apartments 17 1-bedroofn apis...from S145 ” ’bedroom epts. from INCLUDING CARPETING .0 DRAPES ■'gW'di' IVb Blocks from Pontiac Motors 191-195 W. KENNETT MkO/ FE l-2»4 'S.kU°°^or^'J NEW APARTMENTS Gas hot *rr furnace. 113,900 with cl^ng wto for taxes. Insurance and escrow esilmaled at $350._ KENNETH G. HEMPSTEAD, Realtor/ / 105 Elizabeth Lk. Rd. Ppntlac Phone: 334-8284 N ELDERLY COUPLE. IM remodeled 2 hOdroom h“ street, neat Gt. Mika'i. sulated, loW ■—---- terests. FE 4- at ROCHESTER IMMEDIaYe POSSESSION-ln this. tine brick ranch home. 3 bedrooitia, fireplace In living room, former dining room, 2 full bathe, full/walk-out basement, carport. Country location. 129,900, terms TRANSFERRED COUPLE WITH WANTED LISTINGS; clients for income am. —------- Ing homes. We will ba glad to praise your property. Ft you / ----------■ -ailing, call usl^ 1 and 2 bedroonF apartments, $145 up. No chlwreh or pets allowed. i Fireplace; caTPeflhfl, draperies, air conditioning/ stove, relrtgerator' furnished. Plus «» utilities exceoti electricity; CaM. !es" .... a» kriNewiy compwug duhuh JOHNSON SS'SS D#frolt. 362»7y81. MW car I Apartments, Furnished_37 A-1 GIRL FRIDAY Polsa^ and ADAMsl^^Mr"!^^^^ *, gal to start Immediately with no experience. You con make 5300. Interested? Call Koy Roy, 334-1471. Snolllng ond Snolllng. aTgAL for cineWL OFFICe, lumber knowledge holptul, Coll Pot Cory, 13M157. Aaioctotos 's.~wbb^ard. B'ham. 441-BKl, SECRETARY FOR PRESTIGE SPOT At plush suburban flrm,_,wprk witl top brass. Cali IPS, 334-4171.__ TELLER: Do VOU like work^ with Itioney? Pleasant aurroondtoga aito great paopla are yours at this lob. &20. Ca^ King, 334-2471, Inaliing Wonted to Rent XTOagement trainee? Tired ol routine? Want, a «Araari :iin.kVr”\W“n’LT iyilng.- 5320. Phyllis .... down tha I „n, q, yog; No ax-' 2471. Shelling and Snolllng. _ Calf WAITRESS: WORK IN PRESTIGE w«.a< xarwte An all th* VIP'ft ~ Ca^Etry A-1 COMPLETE LANDSCAPING,, speclatlzlng In retaining wblls. Free estimates.^ J. H. Waltmanl Landscaping. 330-8314, / 1A CARPENTRY and rooHng, free cstImirtMr MA 5'4263. A-1 INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR --dortlltra'wchesTr?c r"a a Lumher / ro^s, klfchant, bafhroomt. State licensed. Reas. Call attar 5 P.m., «S2-0*a. Glass Ii^lc?7wo<)d/br^alumlnum. Building and Hardware supplies. 1025 Oakland / FE /;«« £aRPENTRY and cement vrork tree esttmetes. S51-5252. MoviiiE/SteragB HOME REPAIRr PANELING? painting? roofing? gutfer. FE 4-5170. SMI^TM^.MOVjjrt^Ca Your moving CARf>ENTRV INTERIOR FINISH, kitchens paneling, 40 year experience. FE 2-1235. Carpttini SNYOkk BR6s. moving CO. Local arid long distance moving, modern^storagt. Plano moving 851-2418. 7 estimates. 334-704? A J. Fr..-^^^^ TCHANCi !j;>r*arm:?.rp's,'«.____________ -1 LIGHT MOVING, TRASH heuHdi*?E,n^O-^, 'rouSS _ r«*S0!'*J>i«ije±'3i3- ......I up this job at S350. Phyllis Hage, HAULING AND RUBBISH. Nama j>4.2aTi. Snalllno and Snelling. your orlca. Anjrtlme. FE A0095. la font traitor. 4 lULD LIKE TO BUY GoCart. *82-; I2.i» oft Cooji^ _______ _________ . _-^iT, private entrance, 1 man only. FE ROOMS, bachelor etudig I apartment, no I 234 Mechanic. 5-35^'. d Ilka 1 qV 2 bt vatwtord/ Whit dren. Rdf. OR 3 "in” priv'ata’ honia. "write ^ontl Press Box C-l, Pontiac. PROFESSIONAL PILOT Wlstas t rant tome near Oakland,Count AirpotfT Roasoitibto rent, re< furnished. Phone 722-1139 or *7, 305S. Ask ter Bob._______________ SOUTHFIELD FAMILY, iOOkt > bedroom homo._ W g t o r f o r d , /Clorttslon oroo. Evenings Ml 2.9737 or 272-7749. rROOMS, PRIVATE ba,th,COUPto. $25 dep. 525 wk. IM Nortog. MO 3 ROOMS, UTILITIES IN lod tocotlon, adults. F^ 2-M0i n-3593. / 2 COMPACT BEDROOMS lar-round cabin /oiy^ Watkins • I, utimie* ■ —— s, $)40. ,Sec. VALLEY PLACE APT'S In tha Center of Rdchester 2 bedrooms, 2 totlto .. . SI88 OPEN EVERYDAY CALL: 6^1-4200 ALL BRICK DUPLEX Large living rooizL .dining r- and kitchen on MMt floor. 3 large bedrooms and,/bath on wegnd floor. Third jSoor untlnlehod but has good Bdsslblllfles. ,Naw ro<^ •p?.^.nTMto*?S^rmi,th“'’J Ooklend**iid "wid?' TrackTJ'rlcad at $27,500, terms available. SISLOCk's. KENT, INC. 1309 Pontiac Slate Bank Bldg. 138-9294 ________________338-9295 $1200 DOWN privjtogas, plus clpslng costs. Only * 4 BEDROOMS ^ 3 levels, large patio, garage,/aka privileges. Dnly 527,500. , < FLATTLEY REALT^/ / 3*3-4981 *20 COMMERCE RD. bOMS, MODERN. Ulllltles Kl.'^vallable until Juna 15. phdon, oft Round Lakt Rd. — , .-,4-______________________ bedrooms, FIREPLACE, aauna tatlT $250 mo., Rd., *05-3531. C FURNISHED ^ * /^th. 5150 ALUMINUM RANCH 01^a hill that has 3 bedrooms aiicj .lO'xIl' closets In each room pigs' dining ruom, full basement, garage and electric heat. Full price 123,500. VA terms. ^EAR ROUND LAKEFRONT. HOME, 1 bedroom, pine paneled, I gas heat, lease, sec. dep., rat, Call! after 10 a.m. MY 3-101*._ Rent Housat. Unfvrnnhed 40 l-BEDROOM HOME, Waterfron?' RAY office ____________________________, background. Doctor will train. LIGHT HAULING AND moving.' Start today at $300. Kay Rev, 234- Reasonable. 48F751*. I 2471,_Sj«llIno and Snolllng.__ LIGHT TRUCKING, REASONABLE ' ArrOUNTANt RATES. 330 124*. «LLUMI9IHiei CARPET INSTALLATION. Also good, ...s P-toPWiMt* 4L91.19R4 »» careat*. *23-1285. Cement Work PIANO TUNING -REPAIRING I OSCAR SCHMIDT _ FE 2-5217 |’~>ainting and Decarating Ia-1 paintind wor • guaranteed. Free asllmtles «OT._ tlac. 191-1173.___ I A-1 PAINTING AND 6eMCNT, block and REPAIR,! PA.............. *73-7270 or UL 2-4751. / _ THOMPSON COMMERCIAL, INDUSTRIAL nrvl'm GUINN'S CONST. CO. 334-7677 or 391-2671 crilisTRUCTION/and cement ^t. Rumlla Constr. 887-9448. _ | Ceramic Tiie CERAMIC TILE, SLATE end marble, '----------‘ir or Mesne Installrn""' QUALITY WORK ASSURED; Palnl-Ing: Papering; Well Washing; 1 *73-2872 or *74-1909. ________ IRETIREO PAINTER wants small I jobs. 25 years txperlenced. Reas. I rates. Free estimates. *25-3514 aft; i _ * p.m. _ SPRAY PAINTING Photography Dressmaking, ToHoring /I A ALTERATIONS, sijITS, COATS, til fssei, 335-4207. Mrs Sebaske. ALTERATIONS, ALL TYPES, KNIT drnsiias, leather coats. *02-9533. BETTY JO'S dressmaking, altera-^ tions and weddings. *74-3704. ' ALTERATIONS LIGHT hauling ai ____ FE 54» IGHT HAULING. --garages cleaned. *74-1242. LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING -‘-‘-'-‘I, fill dirt, grading/ and and Ironl-end loading FE ^ Truck Rental 'Trucks to Rent '^^“’T^rK’s-TRAi^^R”?*'*''* AND EQUIPMENT Semi Trailers Pontidc Farm and lndu$friol Troctor Co. FE 4-1442 O^n dally Including Sunday_ tv Soles and ServicB^ COLOR TV SPECIALISTS SERVING OAKLAND-MACOMS NORTH EAST AREA REPAIRED IN YOUR HOME 4 MOBILE RADIO CONTROLLED COMMERCIAL AND RESIDENTIAL ANTENNAS INSTALLED. EAST PONTIAC-ROCHESTE And Tha Greator'ffl-Counlv A 752-9796 porhmltV and fringe banafit*. INTERNATIONAL^JEgSOtti^t^^ Shoru Uvlng Onorters BIRMINGHAM BACHELOR/^ woRKmo girls, ^p_rtvg*jfdro® AMbitIoUS YOUNG man wants CARPENTRY. 36 YEARS Ramodellno, paMIng, kltohii specialty, reasonabla. *73-5720. CARPENTER WORK, ALL kIndA FE 45337._____________/ ,// IX UP, PAINT UP, Inilda or,«uV wwB. OH PART TIMf _worlt, •nytlmt from noon mWnlohf. 363-y37», Trof^eyp morrrtngi. i«rv1oir Mixfnt ADJUSTER TWINEE at staN /Cwnpany cr* business And /ptoasora plu iLUrMONDAY? ErfSt tF^ln •|/R sttnOk^^ll iH&r 334-071. CASHIER RECEPTIONIS - „ _ XMh^Davto, 334-2471, Snalling and NUXSE JB^E2MJJE OEStaL ASSTsTANTI Tliji Sto ttOG RM *205*51/ S300. Kathy Davis, 334-2471. SnalF Ing and Snelling. dental* AMISTANT: .... ..n, ^ SSto’Kon?y "peekM^^ and exc. banetlls. Lynn Anders, 334-1471, Snelling and Snalling. ^ding SinkM4uppli«^ ^SPECIAL SAVINGS FOR THRIFTY BUYERS tratlspdrtatton. 3354*54. ^R0^^S,^^ASEMENT7^ avafto^^ >%52o/*Dravtoii p'ialns!* fFS. Marshall.______________ ./large rooms AND/bath, /private entrance, clean, west side ^ close In, couple enly. FE S-160*. WS, BASEMENT, 2 10 per month, *100 *ec. credit end refertnees. FROM 5103 monthly Ranches, Colonlels; up to 2 beths, 1-25 bedrooms.. Brick, basements. Children welcome. 1337 Char-rylawn, corner of W. Hopkins. 335-*171. Agent. , ______________ 42 , ' ROOMS, WORKING COUPLE, ^.»^r weak, near Tel-Huron. 3 ROOMS, COUPLt or man. *73- 805^_______________________. M Ifis ROOMS, CARPETED, 1 2 PROFESSIONAL W >ree. Call *■ ifler *, 3*3-538*. AUBURN HEIGHTS AREA 3 bedrooms, completely carpeted, gas heat, garage, alum, siding, storms end screens. Only $13,000.oh Gl terms. TOM REAGAN REAL ESTATE _____3pdyke____332-815* AUBURN HEIGHTS - 2 bedroom plus opt. basement, large lot, $1*,500. Nix Realtor, *S1-liai, IS2-5375._________________• A REAL BUY, tore down on this 3. bedroom asbestos ranch, toll price is lurt *15,000, FHA terim. It has wall to wall carpeting, new kitchen ■ k paneling In llvlno room Call Ray tor apporntmant Cali *Ray'''Today *7*4101 RAY share ..... ..t r *34-993* J. / / /_____ G MAN VyOUJLD like to Wnnte^^ Wole_______3 /T" MILLION ir$ hat been made avallai •u u4 W purchase and attuma !*.». contracts, mertgagaa or buy hamiN, tots or acraaga outright. Wa ^11 give you cash tor your —G •Igniting 3-room upper. U-------- ----------- and furnished. Na/chlldran or pets. 890 Rttolnwiood, 338-2754._______ ROOMS AND BATH, adults only ----... «n-9569. ib BATH, 55 CEILINd TILE 12x11 par tq. I DOUBLE YOUR PAYCHECK AND double your tun, you don't ■ ■■ typing to get this /6ne. Phyllis Page, 334M7y Salllni iXECUtlVE SEt^ETARVlo director of - Fllm/Tropic Organization. Warm, mature person with -.. ai»i». So588IL ‘ "•’"‘'iMME'sAVIt’..::. "....li-i.-Blljsl iLECTROpC fICH TRAINEE jemcM flush oooei {Jw:Clc5f«Sun*d'“it«j«A«>NITE 4xto.to par sq. tt. 8 .12 _Mi?:'VoS'^lS[-,pl'’33^i M. A. BENSON COMPANY EX-SERVICEMAN | tumbar^ ay^supplto* PHONEr33S5521 IP$; M4497T.^’ ■' I OPEN • fa $ - Satunlay* to 12 Our appraltar to awa| yew call at 674-2236 McCullough realty W Hjyiand Rd. (M59) A SYNDICATE Having unllmitod funds to tha Real Estate field has i us as thair agent to resMentlal tomes. Coi property, land canTracto, acreaga, ate. May wa suggast tha'-you list your ptoparty you Vto Realty Iw a cash * pS^MTst^ardano. RWi.'CSnW.r VON REALTY iVDN TOWNSHIP - WILL buy VP- A BEHER aSH DEAL N, Johnson.___________ BACHELOR APARTMENT lOT • room etnclency. *82-4775. EFFICIENCY APARTMENT, 1S * OMn minutes from Pontiac on toko, *15-, paJalu., — __ ^ MnliSr.iSia. SPACES, HEAT --- OR 3-1355. V Drayton Plain* area. Cart In _ S3.» hours. Can home purchatlna dapartmant. i YORK REAL ESTATE ;^”lM"5r-U5toW I^RTE^ to^ BY OWNER NEWLY DECORATED a I Of p ing 1, FE 85455. Attar 5 p. Tal Huron. 332-1404.____________ SAGAMORE MOTEL, TV carpeted, telephone, air conditioned, *35 a week............. 3 bedroom *245lll. Arto,^a - brick, 4 bedrdom fireplace, bath a.„ fion. 832,750. Down payment i'/i per cent to existing n Office Space 47 SEPARATE OFFICES to rent. ‘— “ito towr. Brand new. cerpetwi. Heat, air con-and rtaaning f —— m’oo *" marble Tlreeiaeail'e^^ 1 vanity to jmaln bath, wall In family room, attached . .-----.,„y extras Call Ray To . hava to__ ,a^ntmant to aia. P-45 *744101 t, sac, dep., 3384300. EFFICIENCY ^ROOM, all utltltles MOb'MUARE FEET bulWlhg tor Comptolelv equipped to ac-toppslt, rw $23.50 a week. 10 a.m. commodete medium to Targe com- to 0 p.m. Call 334-3005.______pumr system. Adequato 220 power URNISHEO APARTMENT tor rent! and overhead wiring^ Installed, near WIsner School, privato an- Computer roam, has J2 tan alr-tranca. Inquire at 900 Oakland cq^tenlr- FURNISHED OR UNRJRNISHEO apartment, 1 and 1 rooms, adults. FE F4991. ___________ KITCHENETTE SUITABLE tor 1 or 2 adults. 9470 Pontiac Lake Rd. 873-1046. ________ LARGE 4-ROOM XT hEDROOM, WROE; LIGHT Airy 'apartment. Exceptional kHchen. Large ctoiM*, ^ unu except atorfricity. r"--------------- BEDROOM. 1 0 ROOMS, PRIVATE bath, partly furnished, 1 paraan. FE 2742S/ Tjm.a8X. ■ 5 ROOM AND B^ W OFFICE AND WORK Or storago area, approx. 1,000 sq. ft. 900 sq. ft. ohIm space. High trafllc voluma area. Ideal lor insurance, derttarr, 482-5001. • 4415 DIXIE, 3.200 sq. ft., 10 offica ' apace, newly decorated, carpeted, Sr condlttoMd, also 2500 sq. ft. an j Dixie Hwy.i tor any business. MAX161. RAY BROWN REALTY FE 4-3564 “ araa°“a'l[^hr'irk Plbtoa ?„bedroom ranch, ceramic baths wiejeo^ family room, full bast-sSroen Wteton cabmatoi ff«7 * PJn.. OR 3- 1^ toiayw *7’* STRIAL SPACE for tease, 80', Meal tocatlan, 2800' tor af-*, ampla Madlng facHItlas, open n bulMtog, excallent trucking rices. Contoct Mr. Hickman, brick and 2-badroom biiMmtntp 1^^ ------ i CARNIVAL By Dick Turner PLANNING A SPRING MOVE? Four bedroom a 1 acre tot IV I13,SOO V BRIAN I MulHpla UH (daya 'fli t WnClOtMl MVfii iigiwii. ^ price and farms. P.83. Call Ray Today nday 10-4 623-0702 COVED CeiUNOV In thia brick___ ------ j btdroomt, • ** wa I ‘ JarpSlns' ('and extra atwaga loaca. V.SII nay lor priea and tarma. p. CaiiRay Today RAY Cosh for Your Equity HACKETT 363-6703 JOHN KINZLER, Realtor 521f DIXIE HWY. 6ZM» Multipla Listing Service roonb^'AfA' •ppreved, oniy’isoo down. Agent tor owner, 33S-«ty3. 474-149S. RENTING $78 Mo. REAL VALUE REALTY For Immediate Action Call FE 5-3676 - 642-4220 FAMILY WANTED For Waal country^ llyliy, cloat baiement, 3 car garage. MODERN •^s;rab!irs!i5d''«r;'‘ INCOME PROPERtV *^*ceS^ard*Wca'aiaI^ ***'” .COSWAY 6^-0760______________ JFliL CROWDED? You t^t with this ana, on/S acres, d rooms LOOKINO for a , - iW Is It. Thera Is a ui car garage and i poreh. Call Ray KINZLER Suburban Ranch-1 Acre All wbita aluminum axtarWr » badi^ ranch, built In 1»47. Haa *Grtln»*«'’”“'''^«^ 3-BEDROOM RANCH KING-P^It>PS PAN LAKE AREA BRICK 3 BED'RCWM RANCH, Georolan Marhia tlra*'— •- " •--room, tanrtliy/room, basemenb ’ — -*• Wondor^l t3s,oop: rooms, and a kitchen to delight heart of any woman. Add two garaga, large fenced yard and patio, and you have aomothlng very ipeclal. Priced at lust 333,500. na. Large living ro lace an0rway Lanas HOWELL Town & Cpontry Inc. Highland Branch Office PHONEi 313-685-1585 HAMPTON HILLS RAY MILLS Mason's "SPRING IS HERE" LET'S START YOUR-NEW HOME Wa will build on your let . j.KMteioN 673-1291 MILLS LAKE ORION, 2 bedroom, $0900, Jm^’lipost Rd._,,_. Lake Orion 693-8371_________ MODELS OPEN 2 P.M. - 'TILL DARK 3 bedreom, family room, 2 car garage. Tri-level, only 113,490 your lot. 3 bedroom ranch, full .baw™-^ end family room at only $14,490 plus lot. GIROUX REAL ESTATE 473-7837 MILLS basement and 2 car oarao*. 8 IMMACULATE AND INVITING RAY WILLIS M. BREWER REAL ESTATE WYMAN LEWIS REALTY Whltlamora 338-8325 YOUNG-BILT HOMES quet flooring and raised hearth fireplace. Eating area In kitchen and formal dining room. $48,908. SNYDER, KINNEY & BENNETT REALLY MEANS BETTER BILT Russell Young, Bldg. 334-3830 - 53Vt W. Huron St. You Dreamed It ^'We Got It" Township, Lotus Lake Neat S room bungal—-and panaled. On Only YORK WE TRADE "" $-717/ BUY 4-8343 S713 DIxIa Hwy. HIITER UNION LAKE AREA — 3 bedrooms ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES Spotless 4 bedroom brick home, fireplace, full basement, IVi car garage, lakt *" CLARKSTON AREA - 7 room, 2- .—. ..---2 ceramic tile b-"- ir oarage, like will trade. 'Ireplece, 4 c »7,500. Owner ired’rs: eluin.,ildln^^To *yg'^j^-^a~R,'' 3792 ___________________ - TRIS *PRICES* RA5oE°FRO«f'$45,000 GREATER BLOOMFIELD state garage, large lot. $14,900. TMMtblATE OCCUPANCY - 3 alum, aiding, plaata... ■ in blacktop road. Clarkston school 821,908. Call 42i-a574 from 9-S P.m. UWtcUuoi STARTER HOME mat It lust $12,000 toil prica with FHA tarma available. There ace 3 Mreema ahd a naw gas turn------------- NEAR ST. MICHAELS rp*s*A! K. L. TEMPLETON, Realty 2339 ORCHARD LK. RP. . 482-091: NEW MODEL HOME e‘T7.Wup Cus^Bu^^^ IRWIN ORION, UKf FRONT Thia 2 bllfftam alumMum bungaltw ht$ a full baaamant ahd gaa h^, neat at a pin, on a large lot, $17,900. FHA tarma. ”‘'%8497 NEW RANCH (Will Duplicate) ‘»^Wtj;OSSKS.ON -SSn home tecaSy In tha ROYER or FE 8^493. )D YOU REALLY WANT PRIVACY? Lika trees? This rqlllnq IS acres has a small lake, lots of trees and good buHdlng iltes galore. Build the home of your dream. Also a house to live In while you build. Call MY 2-2821, FE B9493. i, rock garden. Only $25,500 with $5,000 down on land contract. Call MY 2-2821 or FE 1-9493. GAYLORD INC. 2 W MYJ:2821_ ., Lake FE B-9493 NORTHEAST OF LEONARD Is — laxi term. Gently droom ranch Stream — possibility. 97 acri rolling land, 2 t Is located In desirable Straford ■,.,.11. on a large wall J lot. Lovely big family In Rochester 134 W. Unlvarslly (2nd tioc 451-4100 OR 3343100 FE 5-8183 NORTH END Bungalow wll kitchen with SOUTH SIDE Two bedroom he..... ------- gas hast, $750 down blanca on land contrKt. Eves. Call Mr. Castall, FE ^7273 Nicholie-Harger Co. FE 5-8183 49 Salt Housai OPEN walls' >uM garaga, make EVERYTHING ON 1 FLOOR OURS ON YOUR LOT OR OURS. Financing Available 11 HAYDEN REALTY —1 u W Mila VON Just Listed-Avon Twp. .lean welt taken cere of o— homa In the Rq^estar area. Large AVON Sale Houses lEASTHAM UNBEATABLE Live wall and economically In thls'TUIC inuciv >i Dcnonnss beautiful suburban duplex. You can I "IS LOVELY 4 BEDROOM "BUD' c on a trta lined . living room, fortntL I, family kitchen. IVb rent the hell you don' enough to make the pa\..... you have lakt privileges on WILLIAMS, MACEDAY, AND LOTUS LAKES. CALL TODAY. WEST BLOOMFIELD Is the locstlon ol this 3 bedroom-home with lake privileges on aluminum ranch Square Lake. Remodeled kitchen. Tie. Large living room, family Intercom, yard lights, 2-and screens, possible PRICE REDUCED 3 bedrooms, Northsida of Pontiac, I Highland Rd. (M-99) rt to Franks Nursery 674-3175 EXTRA! EXTRAI Read all about this find brick end aluminum ranch with * •’“f'JS.'r*; full walkout ■‘Btemant, dining room, bullt-Ins, M,, fireplacas, balcony off IMng r^, patio, boat dock andJs.on^a Moa] oatios boat dodc and Is on a canai fo LOON uScBI Call fbr your personal showing. L-69. DO YOU LIKE DOGS? ^nloy your hobby and mak profitable with this 47 run kennel on 10 acres rolling land with attractive 2. home. Grossed $7,000 Jast on a part time bails. Could Vs., ^xsaskl^ rAI I PHB F "IT'S TRADING TIM^'" SCOTT LAKE FRONT Sltusted on almost an acre of Jand. JTha. seen. Park the cars in tha large 2Vi-car oarage. In the housa the main level has two bedrooms, living room, dining room and kitchen. The lower level has one bedroom, living room and kitchen. Don't be lets and sorry, call for an apporntmant todsy-Only $24,950. FHA SPECIAL Located In Judah Lake Eststas-thls tio,me * Featuring thr— ■»<- ..m— « ___________ CALL FOR further INFORMATION. L-75. OPPORTUNITY Knocki, lo answer this ad w 2 bedroom home with a for dining room, living (WW'./”' end full basement for only $4,001 LAKE LIVING PRIVACY At Its finest. This home Is Iocl.— on the end of a o' proximately 4 .acres «»E. LAKE PRIVILEGES ON LONG LAKE NEAR ORION Thia Is lust a "|lm-dandy" atorttr for fha little firaolaro adorns the comfortable living rqonv loads ot k t^ cabinets In this space-saving Kltchan« Land contrda terms availabw. $3,500 ^down, $1ZW0 full pries. Ask for 476-E. 823 S. Lapeer Road Oxford PHONE; 628-2548 UNION LAKE FRONT Ons of fha finest lakes In Oakland County. Taka tha time to Insptct this fine tome. Some of the many faahiros you will find -three bedrooms, I'A baths, family r<»m. walkout lower to)^ naw carpeting, garage and nicely l»ndsca(tod. The ra^ your Inspection. WE WILL TAKE YOUR PRESENT HOME IN TRADE 1 Priced at $44,500. tradI“tNe''homb “y6iT'own''for-the "hSme^yW’wanti Ask for Bob Harrel. Pete Grpenandal, .OJeto Lao Kampsen, Eileen Moyer, Elaine Sr ley, Emery Butler or Donna Gooden. I, Leo Bogart, Dave Brad- 1071 W. Huron St. After 8 p.m. Call MLS FE 4-0921 673-8565 u O "ESTABLISHED 1930" TOP NOTCH 'o.r 'ttoors.'piasteriBij’ v , carpeted I tiractive alui 1 dining around. Gl OPPORTUNITY Long, WW and rambling describes -with 3 nice bedrooms, separate dining ro heat. Situated on a beautiful west sytorj tha Street from the lake. $15,950 with $( n, spacious ) lot, B3X14J EXTRAS GALORE In tola outetendlng frame ranch home In..(h*, a’g'^ncT S, bullt-ln range and loaOtJoTbirch e“P9o»rds and WmM i^ntera. La«'l^ewr™-Wh*S"S2r.W.->^^^^^ lirxip. $23,500. DRAYTON PLAINS LAND CONTRACT Spacious 2-bedroom. Spanish lot. I2'x24' carpeted living room, separata di basement, garaga --- «t a baautitol. V4 acre d carport. DORRIS & SON REALTOR 2536 Dixie Hwy, OR 4-B324 CLARKSTON VILLAGE QUAINT, TRADITIONAL 2-Story home. Four bodroomt, toll toia-mant, on a village lot elosi to stores, schools, and churches. Fi^ price only $22jno'' on Land Contract terms. Make your appointminl tODAYl WK MC3UT OUR GUARANTEE PROGRAMII #103 ■ 32 SHADE TREES GO WITH THIS Waterford 4-bedroom brick rancher. You may qsw thia horns for lust $23,a0 Inetoding Ito'-tornyY. dishwasher, and fenced lot. SEE IT TODAYIl ASK ABOUT OUR GUARANTEE PROGRAMII #3 ROCHESTER AREA JUST INSIDE ITS, « treat, lust watting for_yqul NO iK SboITt our^8arantIe'pi nant, community wafir, and .r 10 MORTGAGE COSTS If VOO ;a reduced to $20,500 for quick PROGRAMII FIVE MINUTE WALK TO school.a^^e flve^mlnut^drl^a raXinSKt'apato to 'thi totomint rto. ro^-P'«toY ffi;^*ohi;it.’?ALr?SBAYWk a*sSuV^tjr ''G*siR5srTEW.{3 GRAMII UNION LAKE AREA ,, ■ , LIVE WHERE YOU PLAY. Golf, swtm, or ikl at your lalaurw all within a tromtoyt^rly.^^^^^ ______________» bat H^Y, CALL TODAYIl ASK NEW MODELS .Cuslom-Built to Meet Your Personal Needs COLONIALS MID-LEVELS RANCHERS TRI-LEVELS CLARKSTON 625-2441 ROCHESTER 651-8518 PONTIAC 338-7161 ORION/OXFORD 62G4211 UNION LAKE 36M171 C—12 Sal* N*u»i INDEPENDENCE TWP. S BEDROOM UVKE FRONT fln 1 »cr» 0* n I c 11 y landiopMI )«nd. ThU homt hai pl«»f»r«/x L Kw-/Kw-/ S UNIT RENTAL INI Really & Investment Co. 674-3105"‘’"’mis WEST SIDE Modernlied 4 bedroom home — I Designed tor complete family comfort — Walk to 3 schools -Shown by appointment only. BUYING OR SELLING CALL I JOHN K. IRWIN & SONS 313 West Huron — SJnco 193$ FE 5-944A i p.m. EE S-4844 so INCOME showing .....____90 year Income. Asking <18.000 with <5,000 down to a i per cent contract. Your Investment returned In approx. 30 month* plus making payments i WARDEN - 3434 yy Huron, Pontiac 482 W30 .. Subdlvlthin allghtly rolling, larga lra« ... ------3d at tt,SM to aattla atfal tVk car Call on this ona tor] aural ASK FOR FR6e catalog PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE lOSO yy. Huron St., Pontiac 334-35(1 Open NItea 1 LOVELAND ORCHARD LAKE RD> so X IIS ft. <10,000. Terma. Wah and Siwara avallabit. ROYER GOODRICH OFFICE Woterford-Buick area <500 down will buy thia lot with PhTn"riSi,::rr:v\:;:,:.L: Com»r lot on pav*d road. Walking dHtanca to acttools. Full prlca only ROYER REALtY, INC. GOODRICH 636-2211 CLARK guipt _____________ feaiurei a dallghtfui i.,...* tapai'ata dining araa, m ( kltrkan. attractiva bedrooms, garage, a lovely homa m N High School District, F H A. clr^ti also avallabla. ^'DELIGHTFUL' Lake Property 51 , " a STEAL-BY OWNER I Must sail lake from homa with ( Income aparfmant — tornlihad 1 or unfurnished. 625-3809 or after , 8 p.m. 625 4050. BACKUS IS Lk.i <1)00 per acre, ' ZONED MULTIPLE ^e“'<3l,o!^!''UL’^3-l3447"uLYlM7. . Dakland Col- Batin*** On^uaMM EARN MONEY 59 Sal* H*us*li*l4 Oo^t AS 1969 DIAL-A-MATIC Bra^ new sewing m a c h I n originally sold for much rw balanc# due. O0.M or will acc 11.10 P( - M4-30a« oollact Rrgh*quailty INO. Wa at___________ _____ ... train. Dapendabla peraon can net VERY HIGH EARNINGS. Regulro-manta are—car, ratarencea, and <700 to 0»00 caih to Invaat. We also invest at leaat SO par cant with , you. To arrange local Interview, WRITE (Include phone no.) TO; INDEPENDENT , _ VENDORS AMERICA AUTOMATIC ZIGZAG Sawing machina. Rtpoiaaaaed -1MI "Faihlon Dial" modal In pa manta SHa PE^MO. FOR 8 MOS. OR $44 CASH BALANCE still under Guarantee UNIVERSAL SEWING CENTER 2015 Dixie Hwy. Businoss Opportunitlos 59 25c CAR WASH city at Pontiac, Water A Sawar,] ahow* good net, 110,000 - $10,000 j “"'west BLOOMFIELD 334-3501- 'Orocary-Party Store, M.OOO down plus stock Includes good 12 year I______________________________ old masonry building. SDM llcansa. |WANT TO SELL YOUR BUSINESST TAX SHELTER IbWiiVoli’*---------------------------------- Four Commercial atorai and aiaJj, " imrnm hnlisa fwl one lot. OOOd DSCk- -- ASK FOR FREE CATALOG PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE 1040 w. Huron St., Ponfiac ^ MS47W a kitchen built tor c hath, hardwood ilenca, ceramic Ilia floors, M car at-i privileges on Lake Oakland,'mortgagt farms avellabla. CLARK REAL ESTATE MILLER WE HAVE 3 tracts of land that oftar unlQua faaluras such at, privacy, river frontage and towtring traaa, all In comparatively clota distance hxoressway. 1 |- '*--* --- .sr ecre, 1 Is .. ... <1,000 per ecre, another 30 at <800 oar acre. Wa win oe pleased to show these and et-Iracllve buys In 10 acre frecta beginning at SV.OSO. UNDERWOOD _________625-2615 Webster-Curtis Oxford-Orion .'s scenic acres, <5,250. LAKE PRIVILEGES Metanwa, <15,000. h . V 21 wooded acres, <14,000. 3-bMlroom DKlck rsnch homSi ia acrg DArcpi. ilsoo Mr pcpa. overlooking Uke with attached ]* acre 11000 par acrt tar garaga, lull basement, 2 feJ'^S AVAILABLE baths, formica cupboard* with TERMS available ■ 492-2201 _ DA 8-2515 WILL TRADI^40 acre* 14 Ml. Westj THESE FILM SHOWING. EVER HEAR A COMPUTER TALK? WE CAN NOW ANALYZE YOUR INCOME PROPERTY BY COMPUTER IN SECONDS. NO OBLIGATION! BATEMAN INVESTMENT A COMMERCIAL CO. 377 S. Telagrei^ Rd. 338-9641 weekdays alter 5, Sat. A Sun. CALL 428-2941___ GROCERY STORE Kawkawlln, Michigan, good alts for grocery store and meat market with living quartan In rear. Great demand tor thli type of ■■ “ WOW!! THERE IS 5 To Be Macie celleni NO-BAY GULF franchlaa dealerships avallabla for ag-greaslva hardworking Individuals, Pontiac area. C"'" ------------ vestment. CALL Sal* Hous*hold Gooils 45 - ■■■......", y Repossessed GE coppertone Refrig*rotor TERMS AVAILABLE For Sola Mise«llan*ous HOT WATER BASEBOARD, r lif'ssJisrs'U'W Rochester, 451-0374._ lavaT5ri^-^wa^^ Musical Oooil*________„ „ . tiIomas transistor console organ, $375. e«-92Py. ___X- ~~-~UPRT^^, USED ORGANS Choose from Hammonda^and^^or I, $14.95, al wiarV. Tarrltjc Dlnotia a FE 4^1905 0142^_____ fraazer, mitc. 2744;________________________ STOVE, REFRIGERATOR and I. S3S Oasota. 33S- A HOUSEHOLD BARGAIN t pc. living rm. group (aofa, chain, ‘Mautnul tablas, 2 lamps); I pc. Iroom (double draiiar, cheat, bad, ttrasi, springs, lamps); 4 place Ik bad - 5 place dlnatla. Any Hem Sold Separately All/tor S39I - S10 monthly KAY FURNITURE ixt to K Mart In Glenwood Canter APARTMENT SIZE GAS STOVE, as la S25. New 9x12' linoleum rug, new occaalonsL chair, 514.95, ihany. more, ntw at It, factory tecoiida Stonw'a, 103 No. Casa.______________ SINGER DIAL-A-MATIC ZIg Zag tewing mac Embroiders, appliques, ' etc. Late model, tchum iraae-m ^*""‘$“6 PER MONTH OR $59 CASH New Machine Guarantee UNIVERSAL SEWING CENTER 24)5 Dixie Hwy. FE 4-090S stalls, lrreo,ul4t»- Tf Michigan FluwMWit. -----..j Lake. FB 4;W2-JL—_ lawn mower. Reel lyP^ AMC, ■^uted 3 times. Living avocado, and misc., reesonaoie. 424-4707. _ _____ —^ - control. Ilka new. <20. WWBI.---- MEKlflNl-MBINE^^^^^ mirror, allghfly i™rr^' large selecMon of cabinets wl’*i without lights, sliding Ter' rifle buys. Michigan FluoreKent, 393 Orchard Lk. FE 4-8442 — NEW 125,000 BTU lo-boV brands, prlcea ti low GRINNELL'S Downtown Store 27 S. Saginaw____ usiF^icl^RiNO o^t S;,5i„r>5r 5:30 P.m. ------ WINTERS PIANO, Ilka n FE 8.8201. -------- ^WHITEHALL DUO COMBO ORG^ list price $M5 Sale Price $600 PONTIAC MUSIC 0. SOUND 101 W. HURON M2-33 Sbli - will install - J. H Sales $25 MUSiC UlSOni PEARSON'S NOW OVED to 440 AUBURN, puianecki, OR 3-5594._____________________ _____, I CLASSIC^ GUITAR lr-------- I ra_.a«lBW. BAiialr atiH Sou PONTIAC, FE 4-7801. - PLENTY OF USED washers, TVs’ ..ovas, retr'-----— —■ *—' furniture L.... Trade-In store. L. B|vd. FE 2-4042. APARTMENT SIZE GAS ringe and retrlgar-—- —----------- 4-9024. Attention Housewives Highest prices for used furniture and appllanr" * . .jncas. Aik for Mr Grant , Wyrnan's Furniture. FE 5-1501. ly a tmall Irw BUNKBEbs, ABOUT Vt prlca. Llttla _____iLl WARD, 474- Joe'S, 1441 Baldwin, FE 2-4842. 3)84 OR EVENINGS 051-3432. I BRONZE OR CHROME DINETTE sale, BRAND NEW. Large and small size (round, drop-leaf, rectangular) tables In 3-. 5- and 7-pc, sets, $24.95 — PEARSoR'^S FURNITURE itreet. Priced al <32,000, larmt. •BACKUS REALTY 332-1323 3J0-1495 COMMERCE AREA - 3 BEDROOM---------------------- Brick ranch with 2 baths, nawi{a|g Farm* cArpeling. builMns, tentened patio* | affeched V/a car garage. Laka, privileges. Don't delay* this Is' FHA. See If today at $21*500. i CALLAN REAL ESTATE 110 Detroit St. Milford 684-1285 .AARDN BAUGHEY REALTDR suburban living at It* hadrpom brick ran^ In Imn ronOllidn.. Lovaly ___________ ________ . lot ores down payment on acreage, Clarkston-PIna Knob area. 052-2502. LAKE DRIDN CDTTAGE Large ^ living foofi turnece, leech, only i---------- VIM iivinni -........ Balance on land contract. bi. tir.%”, laroS! STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE k llchan '"A •’"“'-i" Mih*".!.?' 391 ■2000 343-5948 rang#* ceramic tiled bath .4,:,^ i nr cad ’cai r m trie heat blower to take the chill »'• '-^J^f„rt^4a^ai7e" alter the ahowtr. 294 car garage, | _ Island. 411-0379. lovaly covered paflo plus 2 large{ lake FRONT HOMES, lota. Just S24.900. Easy terms. . I New and Used. MILFORD AREA BRICK 4 badroom|j. L. Dally Co. EM 3-7)14 ranch featuring 11x12 living room.|L;^^g FRONT, 18x30 kitchen, i nvar tronlaoa ,ui> enu ••,..„ai,>. Farms and imall farms. 343,9531. 343-W3. Fowler Really Rlvardata! HDWARD T. 80 TO 800 ACRES KEATING In Lower Michigan. Dairy, gralrv beet or hogsl Name your farm rx •_ naeda, wa have It at Dean's SsTtrinri' "Michigan's Farm Real Estate, ' Heedfluerters," 220 N. Michigan' ^ Summer; Farm-70 Acres I Fall; Winter [ Approximately 25 miles from Lake Sale Land Contract* 1 TD 50 LAND CONTRACTS ,7 ™bUNK BEDS Urgently, needed. See us betora yog ’‘choice of 15 tlylaa. trundle bad., Warren Stout, Realtor I ro'Cl«;.5r.’nd•^^ 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5-814$ Furnltura, — ' Open Eves, 'til $ p.m. -------- - CA$H FOR LAND CDNTRACT$ H. J. van Walt 4540 Dixie Hwy. - OR 3-1355 oso'yy;' laundry shower stalls with trim, W.95, z ........... .................... howl sink, $2.95; lavs., $2.95; tubs, U5ED COLOR TV SET$, $199.95 1 ^ and M. Pipe cut and thread^. $WEET'$ SWE IPLUMBING CO. RADIO AND AFFIANCE, INC. ' Baldwin. FE 4-1514. RisfAURA^^ ICE UNCLAIMED LAY-A-WAY I jqu^^pmant, can after 4 p.m 1., FE 5- 'lANU MWW yixw4-siw — popular ^n^cla58lcal^74-X630;_ private piano cESM^gwen your home or mine. 482-0290. Sp^ng^ood^ maxe ounonnoies, overcasi and repaired. Cone's, blind hem stitches. Total price SUPER STUFF, SURE NUFI Than $36.00 or terms of $5.00 a month. Call Capitol Sewing Credit Manager till 9 p.m. 5d3-8200. MICHIGAN BANKARD ACCEPTED YOUNG• MARRIEDS eec Household Appliance, 3^WB3.~ Hudson's Hardware, 4) I Opdyke Hardware Need furniture? Under 21? We cen,*'2nd‘‘7lckMss ’planer, slmUcT/tracTo'J withT' S^werl i-----] new motor excellent conditon end 65-A ' Honda 50. 731-4038. Wontarf Contracts-Mtg. 60-A 1 TD 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently needed. Sat us before yog 1944”CUSTOM GO-CART, alsclrlc starter, 10 h,p„ 451-4947,___ 1949 24 HP AAjlF SKI DALLER, also CUSTOM _________ fabrics or ours, .... reas, prices. FE 4-2704. COUCH AND CHAIR, . . exc. condition. OR 4-0479.____ CHILDREN'r FURNitURE, Chairs, -tables, MISC. 332-58« V ROLL-FRO . . |(:HR0ME DINETTEES, low as $34. ?f"uhu7o ^ Warren Stout, Realtor unia joa's, U4i Baldwin, fe i ^7’“ J 1450 N. Opdyka Rd. FE 5-814S —---------------------Hl-Fl, TV anil RoiiioS 66 Open Evas.'til 0 p.m. | DINETTE SET with 4 chairs, and so ijA '-TomiBi c rAcuiMrs mis! gallon electric hot water heater, 2 TV'S, FINE working condition. 335- gallon electric hot water h ortgaga situation? — 5718. bath, 2 Cl ________ ____ja plusi Oh yes, the garbage disposal, washar ,27. Slay with the housal Just 027,9001 rR^O^VATTo'BATH north al«» »*' city. This sharp aluminum sided homa taaturas 3 bedrooms, newly carpeted living room, formal dining ra^, larga kltchan, full -— — 2 ear garaga. First time 1 FE 2-0262 (t^W. HURON_____ OPEN 9 TO 9 LAKE privileges, jjj m-Ts "■ "" Qrtonvlll.: u. .M .rr..n. ^ CALL COLLECT 427-2015' [ ! Sale Business Property 571 I and office; Iwo' cashed out others I maybe we ^,?c*s;r.ivissi , , , , ___________ '~j£r*bi?a"^c.sr’i;si‘ona'b%"%r:i Earl Garrels, Realtor . ______ _______ —— 21" USED TV Frlgldalra, Studio couch, yyalton TV, FE 2-2 New,and . P??." Angle pip--------- _ j Hl-Lows, as low 51-A BRICK CABIN — 24' X $4', com-' " light hidus'tr JJOlSJWysJ O'NEIL WHY NOT TRADE? THE HOUSE MANY OF YOU HAVE DREAMED OF an^ asked for. A home that has tvorYttilng that would make gracious, eomlartabla living. Oi hlltslda with a fabulous view, acres, and a baautltul clreta ~ Suburban Property HOME IN THE HILLS Our specialty. Rochester, Clerkston, Orton, Oxford area. Open dally for your calls. 391-3300 ___LADD'S OF PONTIAC Lots-Acreoge 54 5, 10 ACRE PARCELS, wooded oiling. EM 3-4413, 4 1 5-1 4 0 4 ring, r, fam 3 sq. 11. ol t ceramic tilt, ate. Newly listed. Situated In the Davisburg-Hotly tree. $42,500 It the full price. eppointment please. No. 1840 SQ. FT. OF LUXURY LIVING From the dramatic trance to the maw,-,, spacious closet. This -------- -- distinetiva In avary detail, axtartor appearance Is luxurious, with while split rock brick, foyer Is large and serves as a traffic hub. Step down taihlly room with full wall firtplaca. slUOio cal "' " • bullHns I catling, afficlant kltchan with .......s aruT matching ratrlgarator. Of course, attached 2Vi---------------- targround lawn aprinkling system, custom built and designed ■-— m start to finish. Prlcad at i .5 homa ................. . It 534,900 h excellent financing. No. ' LIKE BOATING? FISHING? Here's an excellent river front homa a stone's throw from Cass Lake. I spacious bodrooms dan I f-iii/t and not too far to Saginow (about 25 miles) . ' Pheasant hunting, rabbit hunting, fishing In area or at the Bay. i Restaurant not now operating but would be a good stand. On hardtap —'- —-1. Near Vassar and ____ ' $44,000. 53 HAGSTROM, REALTOR MLS _ $35; Refrigerator with top freezer, $49; Wringer •— ris, FE 5-2744. 9. G. Har- '21" RCA COLOR TV, good condition,’ BOULEVARD SUPPLY will deliver, set-up and guarantee, 500 S. Blvd. E. 333 $150. Call 423^1154, ____ —----------- COLOR TV SERVICE Johnson's TV. FE S-4S49 LARGE OR SN quick closing. Earl Garrels, BM 3-4M4. ALL land contracts,: Reasonable discount. MA 4-S40O or oves. FURNITURE-STEREOS UNCLAIMED, NEW DIRECT PUBLIC SALE Hand Tool$-Macblnery_M r. 428-4472, t BEAUTIFUL 100 ft. adlolning lake front lots on Waterford Hill. Avail, from owner at S\V,T» oa. 473-0930 acre PARCfUl vTOodaS.'rofl, Ing, N. Clarkiton. 343-4413, 343-4411. 4-H REAL ESTATE 00 ACRES — corner parcel. <4 mile road frontege, house end barn Included, oood condition. Survaym 423-1400 Attar 4 p.m. FE 4^7M5 ,000 S. ~FT.~ BUILDiNO, locate, across from Miracle Mile Shopping Center. Zoned B-3, G a n a r a I business. For full Information call O'Nall Realty, 474-2222 or 335-'"" and ask lor Nick ANNETT Offers . acres. $85,000 slightly IlexIbU, on larms. Owner asks 130,: down and will llscharga mortgage out of the down ment. LOANS mirror, 4 drawer chest, paneled bed, sold for $189, balance du* cash or $10 monthly. COMMUNITY LOAN CO. ""'A^rWAREHOUSE STORAGE 48825 Van Dyke 854) E. to Mile 2 WATER WELL D R 1 L MACHINES with tools Re make an otter. 727-8320, Richmond. COMPRESSORS, lubrication -----, hydraulic leeks, ster- ________ welding equipment, « Pontiac Motor Parts, 10 University Drive. FE 2-0104. CHAIN SAW, ditlon. " *' Call Mr. Linebaugh 444-1234 Ar4a 313. Reverse charges. 1 C. Nelsey Davisburg 425-3298 _ Michigan MAN INTERESTEt) In working pert I e nights for part ownership lr III busint" LOANS $25 to 51,000 Insured Payment Plan BAXTER - LIVINGSTONE and a crest Industry. <29,500. Catl necessary. 4(2-4442, att. 4, MONEY Avallabla to homa owners. Cash In 24 hours even If behind In payments or In foreclosure. CA$H IN AT BRIAN INC. ----- M»0 PIxl* Hw» Colonial Sofa and matching chalt sold tor $349, balance dut $24 cash Or $12 monthly. Console Stereo, AM-FM radio, sneakers, with remote speak! provisions, plays all size records. EXCLUSIVE FRANCHISE Inwq,*, loin < 82 PRIME AREA AVAILABIE I NEED UP TO $5oSS For opening in May. For one men you may be surprised how che ... only to secure his future in well you can add new rooms, repair or davaloped (14 years) business remodel your present home by where men from all walks of llle doing your own work and using LIGHT MANUFACTURING ara earning 115,000 to $30,000 and our money lor materials. Whatever Vacant lend 100k125, oft Oakland more per year. No previous your home needs see; Ave.. City of Pontiac, water (.I business experlgnce required. High saioo, $3250 down. Tp^V t? «iL Voss & Buckner, 1llC. ' to urry. We train 1408 PonNac State Bank Provincial sofa MANUFACTURERS CLOSE-OUf STEREO WALNUT CONSOLE 4-Speakers Diamond n^les BSR 4 speed changer $89 , .OR $5 PER MONTH due $157 UNIVERSAL 2415 DIXIE HWY. Tues.-Sat. 10:3(34 i COMPLETE SET of mecti..-_. ... . tools, with boxes, and ImpiKt, 755-9090 valued at over MO®- Wl'l "V"'' ----- S250. 41 Poplar, Pontiac, 33^9709■ J.D. SIM LOADER BACK HOE. 391- 74 Flnal’®c\iBrance”|'lcas?i™st s^ rnrmobltas*'TOM'rHARDWAW, 90S Orchard Lk. Ava. Dally 9,4, sun 9-2. FE S-2424. ______ NEW, used, mex and antique. Buy, sell or tr Ken's Gun Shop, I'A rnltas N of Otlsvtlle on M15. 431-2991. H 8 : TO to 8:30. 7 days.__ CLEARANCE AT COST, HAVE TO BE SOLD THIS WEEK SCORPION Snowmobles W"Traek_^ , Electric start STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. 3771 Highland (M-S9) 4(^9440 . Dally 10:30 cash or $12 monmiy. California modern sofa and chair. Sold for $299, balance due $235 cash or $12 monthly. Repossessed SHOP OWNERS s, assorted sizes ... Small li Cutters, --------,----- 3 (, 4 law chucks, assorted sizes Drills, reamers, etc. . Demo-Used SNOWMOBILES 20 h.p. Polaris, M95 14V!> h.p. Ski Doo, M95 14 h.p. Diablo, wide track, $395 14 h.p. Evlnrude, wide track $595 22 h.p. Ski Daddler, wide track S79S 30 h.p. Ski Daddlar, demo. $795 CRUISE OUT, INC. 43 W. Walton FE 84402 Dally 94, Closed Sundays MARCH SPECIAL on Sno-Sport snowmobiles. GT 300, rag. (995, . sale $725 GT 370, rag. $1115, .sale (645 GTX 400, rag. 0295, .sale (995 GTX 295, rag. 0295 .sale (995 Several used and demo machines at big savings. Full size hide-a-bed, Scotchguarded fabric, full 4 poly mattresses, sold for S2I9, balance due (188 cash or ditlon qutred. Wa financa I - -.... you must ba nvastlgatlon ai 870 ft. of SI 2,000, ti Call J, A WANT 7 ACRES? t ot^ PonNac, 'has ory 9400 sq. ft. t C-3, property can AL PAULY ________‘^°Te?* ma°"L- ... ..... ............ building, which"Is us^ now by"a| h'avl"'th^'fu* whi*. i^a Twp^_ IneiudM wholesale-retail business, can' Personal Inti also ba used tor offices a* part tion will ba n" "T'.----1 •» alr-condltlpnn'l Fanead con-- >»., Realtor,: parking. DO YOU KNOW ,, !i . curlousl^!^ Svcnai, pivaw Values are Increasing daily by reply unless you teal yoi ma|or shopping canters? Now is ppote ouallflcetlons and the time to purchase this more, capital. Write than 1 acre Tdealiv located mo-" party. $1175 front of 1237,500. Call to 334-3267 , To oad frontage. Full price, DOO down, SlOO per mo. Taylor, ................' 63 refrigerator FREEZER ___combination, $100. Bedroom suite, isty and <75. China cabinet, <15 or can ol wife.' swap for a chain saw. 482-0405. 4 YEAR CRIB for twin size bed arid stroll-o-chair for racllner or 050. Eves. 473-7913. within Located In, White Lake Twp. incudes, take privileges. Will sell es one parcel or divide. Full price <23,500, terms to suit. Call J. A. Taylor ---------- OR 4-0304. ' ■gS 1943 CADILLAC, TRADE for van or s? »r cSM. _______>n Lk., attar 4 p.m. MOTORCYCLE TRAILER, bikes, $75 or ? Inquire Dover. you have the ACRES, 3 POFdS, tccludad,! modern home IS miles “ “' Pontiac. Will divida. 425-554. 121 FT. WATER FRONT'by car attacKod garaga. NIC# sized lot, priced <28,900. BETTER HURRY ON THIS ONE. No. 20-14 HOW ABOUT A FOUR BEDROOM BEAUTY In Ellabeth Lake Estates? Hi . _ _ beautifully kept piece of property LI'* APP.RdXIMAfELY 11^^^ Ctly'"?Xom"',S? X kSchen"3l ?e"r'emlc*lS'm and^^heirXhTz' CLARKSON ,»CHML AR^ A. ^W-^cer^-d^er *r:| finiihftd All DurDosA OAmA. Financing and plans i room* a|l IncludecU In tha *^*raclivei aalas dtica cd lS.900 No LAK6 AREA* lOtalSO' Sitai aaies pric* or w.rvv. ng. avallabla on CHOICE LOCATION iSTs-wV* sylvan 4l^2308 Quick possession. It you are looking CLARKSTON ArIa - S acres, near -------------------------|.75, H500 down, 200 X tlOO'rolling. W iWHAT HAVE YOU ■=— this F—— -on St. ... ________ _______ly Island Waterford Twp. SI9.6oO. 544- )45~FfrUMti'lronT'lor^i^^ rolling terrain. FORMER FUNERAL HOME <59,500. Ideal use for any group, doctors attorneys, Insuranct, lodge or church. Ample parking. AFTER 4 P.M. CALL MRS. EVA F. ANDERSON, 332-3759 Realtors 28 E. Huron St. 338-0466 iiirs'’'™ FLThI"i2n*tad draM In r°R S**-E 20 ACRES, cl!^, water and sewer paid tor Kalkaska J^l$3.__--------------- black^ straffs,_ closa *‘*9PP'"9-'IR^^N)yOOt^^S^ORES^^^ Large 17 moothly payment. Why r 1 equity In your ‘"~-It. Full price <21.51 SYLVAN VILLAGE We had this ona built with your I Also tamtly m mind. Why don't you give; from your kiddles a chance to grow up In! an atmosphara ot clean, retreshlng suburban lake living. Hare In the VilMte, they'll find winter sports e* akcrflng end Invigoreling as. the, pleasures ot aummar time swinnmingl and boating. Here's a brand new 3< bedroom homo, vacant and toady forj you al only $20,000. including lot. Saoj flloday. No. IM' tor details. A J RHODES, REALTOR FE < 2304 250 W. Walton, FE 547)1 MUIJIPLEJ.ISTINO SERVICE } - “ LOTS FROM 1450 For this p Huron St. across school. 100x120. horn* on 1 lot, $20,900. CENTRAL STATE AREA :hotca 4 acre parcel ft. building with apartments up, 3 ci party store, trailer , madlalt possasston. quick sale at 125.000 tract. CALL TODAY. O. BUX 44, ZZI9 N. CBN I Kn ROCKFORD. ILL. 41105 3WNER RETIRING. Selling home and service station. This business netted 514,000 In the pest It months. Here Is an excellent opportunity to save well over $40,000 In 12 years. I did. Substantial payment required, dost ' fs. Phone 434-9MI.____ Partri(dge "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" RETIREE WOODWORKING Or Cabinet Makar. This could ba Iht " ■ tor you. This business ast. »w turning out custom made Sale Clothing FORMALS, WEDDING DRESS, tlze 9. 391-ISM._______ FULL LENGTH LACE Ixtura -..IS. Ideal I.. park, etc. Im, , 150x147 feet, paved. A MIDDLE STRAITS LAKE, Twin; Beech Sub., loci' wooded; Fox Lake, 10O' x 147', Bl-Ltvcl site. Fowler, 3434531, 485-1404. I. 0. WIDEMAN, REALTOR 412 W. HURON ST. 334-452 EVE. CALL 335444 it 3 acres with building ________— sq. ft. Can be purchased for $11500 down. Balance on easy terms. This - 1 real money itiakar. No. 144479. WHOLESALE BEER * WINE Distributorship. Just 3 hours fr.... Detroit. A very profitable operation, much — — ASK FOR FREE CATALOG ------IDGE REAL------- It. Huron St., 3- PEACE AND glTRANOUILITY larpotod living r--- ----- tfatar and sower. Price 114,900. G.L if fHA first oHeiing. Hurry. No. II PARCELS AVAILABLE VISIT OUR OFFICE. A4ANY EX-CELLENT -------- JUST A EX-SERVICEMEN Here's a 4 bedroom homo loctlod Union Lake. All you need It closir costs. Imnnidlata possession. Prict St only 111,000, no money dowp ouallHod Veteran. Lake prlvltagts i MOndon Lake. NEW HOMES AVAILABLE NOW 4 ACRES - Hilly and «^ad across from stata land tor prl___ living, Ortonviila area. S490S, ’,1 ACRES — Panoramic vl secluded, absolute ult I natural beauty. S13,9S0, te I to ACRES — For count living, . North .. ............................., — (hould know ^obeut Jho Jrom^us: down. av^tatOa^ta youT for Imi^lMe oc-llO ACRES — Your toarch could and horses and happy c owanoy. Your next hotmi can itava the smart eye appeal of o modori; riiyb or the traiortionat aleganco of a Holvly oolontal or why not com aidar the popular tri-tevol oil pricod wHMn UMir txidoal. Visit our open dolly 1, to f p hero, ploasont country plenty of stretch ---- land. Just north IS475, 20 par cant 00 ACRES — This I-..- .- ........... --------of beautiful woods, 30" L“s4Sf fO Fox Bay Drive, won aoiuroey and Sunday t to 5 ^'ro’hSit oiS*wy tr”oln«Tn. Business OppertunHie* 59 Basinets Opportunities 59 C. PANGUS, Realtors OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK I M-1S Orta CALL COLLECT 427.2115 RAY O'NEIL REALTY olty -'-CHESTER AREA „ of. $2208. Ntx Realtor, 4514221. S52-S375. ' .ROCHESTER HILLS. 4 ocros wfth" born, can koap horses. Land con-tract. SifxlO down, ptxma 451-1022.1 DISTRIBUTOR FOR THIS AREA Portnimo work—tor extra Income. Now! Chance to become o distributor ol Amsrlcs's tOlfsst growing PREPARED FOOD ITEM. (Multimllllon Dollar Prsptrsd Food Businoss.) No txpsr^tnetd rt-qulradl Msrsly rsstock locstlons with NstlonsI Brsnd Products. Company auurts sxceptlonsi and profitsbis ^ncoms tor our dsalsrs. Will not Intartars with prsstnf businoss or ^patlon, as accounts can ba larvtcod evenings or on weekends. EARNING POTENTIAL I $7B0 A Month or More Depending On Size of Route It of <2,390 to $4,348 It ragutrod. Also s good ear and 4 o 8 spare hours s weak. It you ar« IntarosMd and hovo a gtnulna lasiro to bo aalt-sutnciont and tuccoatful In on tvor-oxpmding bust- OUR COMPANY CAN WITHSTAND INVESTIGATION NATIONAL PIZZA COMPANY 10407 Liberty, Box 714 St. Louis, Missouri 63123 314-423-1100, ask for Mr. Jay MONEY FOR HOUSES CASH IN 24 HOURS Brian )nc. 423-0702 V," B.D. air 1 1" to 2" MIcr--------- New air hose %" 25 ft - - --irr. t Drawe ‘ ' o n e bj e sjui-e sa Goodyear Service Store 1370 Wide Track Pontiac* Mich. ....... ............................^_____Phone 335*6169 Coloniei console stereo* AM-FM woodward b—u j radio* 6 speakers* remote speaker^ Sagamore Motel* 789 s. wc^war^^ Bench grin outlets, plays all size records. Sold WAREHOUSE SALE open to ixibllc. MI-LO for $249, balance due $181 cash or Entire Inventory of new Zenith, $18 monthly. IRCA, and Motorola TVs, color TVs. 'and stereos must be sold. Every. Mediterranean bedroom slite, triple,Item discounted, many below cost,' dresser, mirror, S drawer chest, scratched sets priced accordingly, no mattress and box springs. Sold tor reasonable offer refused, banki ............ $349 balance due KU? cash or $14 terms. Sale today and tomorrow 10-9,' 9 a.m. ABRASIVES & TOOLS I Hilt Medltorranean console stereo, SItenith 24" speaker solid stata, diamond nee- Titian S250 die, plays all size records, remote SiV?"' speaker provisions. Sold ' ' — balance due $231 cash monthly. 5454310 Closed Saturday. Open Sunday 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Mon.-Tues.-Wed. 9 — — - p.m. Thursday & Friday, __________5 pm.._________________ between toolmaker AND INSPECTOR'S tools, gaug— ----------------— PARACHUTE A ND EMERGENCY CHUTE. Good Shape. S125. Call attar S. 4811442.___________ SCORPION Snow Mobiles PRICES SLASHED ON LAST 3 MACHINES IN STOCK 15 Inch Tracks 1 24 h.p. IManual start-H.D. Carb. " 20 h.p electric start. '“ "WANKLE 300" The Call aft. 4 p.m a YOUNG MARRIEDS, WE MAY BE ABLE TO GET YOU CREDIT WITHOUT CO-SIGNERS. HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE 441 Ellz. Lk. Rd. 335-928:. (Near Telegraph Rd. 10-B p.m. dally) FRIGIDAIRE ELECTRIC range *'J For Sale MUcellaiieou* 67 ^ Do If Yoursellf Vi INCH COPPER water pipe, 24 FLUSH DOORS. Mfgs. seconds 9 —— s ft. and % Inch copper Decker. Walled Lwe, 424-2484. 30",^ I _______ . year pld ratrlgarator, t yr. old. CRUMP ELECTRIC ______ 344S Auburn Rd.____________FE_ condition, ui. 3354>7Sf. GOOD ^ . USED CARPETJNG, colors, yards ft 353-7840 2 WHITE LEATHER. - ------------ Headboards, 1, youfh bad with springs, 1 DanTsh modern chair, stereo, exercise machine, all in exc. condition. 887-9187. _____ _ , best offer. <23- Saia HoaiahaW Oaod* 65 W WHAT YOU'D EXPECT TO PAY 3 ROOMS BRAND NEW FURNITURE $297 $2.58 per week LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE 1461 Baldwin at Walton. FE 2-6S42 Acres of Free Parking Evas, 'til 9; Sat. Yli 4, EZ HAVE YOUR OLD sofa -holsWred now. Sale ----- stock fabrics. Don Prayer ----... —Household 33S-1700 for HOOVER SPIN DRYING Washer, B5M099 eft. 4:30._________ HUDSON STEREO TV. 3 separata units In Cherry wqpd Cabinet. Like new, reasonable. Thurs,, Frl„ Sat., 54. ___________.. .^___ ______ SlOO. Norge Uprl^ FratMr, $100. Ma^og Wringer Washer, iss. Ml- 4-PIEC6 BEDROOMS, brand new. Little Joa'a Bargain Baldwin. FE *4842.______________ 9x12 Linokum Rugs $4.95 Solid Vinyl Tile .........fc ea. Vinyl Asbostos tlla .......7c oa Inlaid Tilt; 8x8 .....aa. "Across From the Mali' I YEAR OLD c H E R R Y W O O D ~ ' ' I pItCBs. good cen- aarvlca guaranlaa. Complate price S44J8 or UM a month. „Fgr tree a? tWICHISA t pjn. ifttSAN BANKARD ACCEPTED 1968 USED SINGER TOUCH. Abtolulcly no et- IwrOaSm *medel"mmu PEARSON'S FURNITURE HAS wllh cablnef or porfabte Npw_““"—' sisgr^ •—vnen^i pM wi V tret I--— . ... ----- IS Cell Midwest AppUance, 8-8 *;:3S423t* padding S2 square yard. Neutral ----------------------- C^li * $75*7" tafiesaw,^t20. FE 5-3425. BROKEN CONCRETE, J. estlmafa. Aft. 5 at 448-851$. yxIS* LINC3LEUM RUGS, S3.8S EA. Plastic wall tlla ........• ----- Celling tlla — wall paneling, cl BS.G Tile, FE 4-8857, 1075 W. )" GAS SUN RAY range. Ilk 2 antique clacks — tv HOUSEHOLD SPECIAL $20 A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OF FURNITURE — Consists of: S-piece living room outfit wll living room suite, 2 step ti cocktail table, 2 table lam (1) 8'xl2' rug Included. 7-plece bedroom suite with dresser, chest, full-size be- ■ Innersprlng mattress and matching box spring and 2 vanity lamps. Siileca dinette eat with 4 chr WYMAN FURNITURE CO. !. HURON___________FE 5-1501 KENMORE PORTABLE DISHWASH-— eoppirtene, 2 years old. 451- KENMORE AUTOMATIC WASHEt dryer and Ironer, baby bufltr cri and youth bed. (81-8338.____ KIRBY SWEEPER EXCELLENT CONDITION—(SO FULL GUARANTEE Kirby Service & Supply Co. 2417 DIXIE HWY. LINOLEUM KUGS. — . Pearson's . - ________Ave. FE 4-7881. LIVING ROOMS, BRAND new, abi^ VS price Llttla Joe's, 1441 laMWlta FE 24842. MAPEL DINETTE sat CSnsIsHtlB k Harvdstar table, 2 deacon boncties, 2 captain chairs, and hutch cabinet for small dining room, compteta. $t2S. isn Ladd Rd. «---------- -* LucHla Rd., Walled Lake._________ MODERN PLATE glass ooftat table with plantar, matching and tobtas. -D. OR 34213. __________ MURPHY BED, bait Offi^ 332*851. 1969 TOUCH-AiMATIC Saw tbr SI24.S0, balance only S28J0 .......................................... REFRIGERATORSI. DISHWASHERS, dryers, washers, ranges, crate damaged end scratched modeli. Fully gOaranletd. Terrlffie savings. Terms.) CURT'S APPLIANCE 4484 WILLIAMS LAKE RD. (74-110) :, 34 cents a ft. G. A tvs INCH PLASTIC drain p fittings, no no ' *■ — anymore. It i glue, all you r.— .. - --------- and a paint brush. Sea G. Thompson (. Son. 7005 M-S8 W. TV and stand. 1 EBONY, BLACK PIANO tor, sale, years : " " 8008. sprayer. Sacrifice Mie. (26-884(. SALE SKI-DOOS SEVERAL MODELS OF USED SK|Z DOOS, ALL IN A-1 CONDITION. KING BROS. :B 4-1442 g! PE 44734 PONTIAC RD, It OPDYKE FARFISA DELUXE ; organ, Fi must sail. F FENDER BASSAAAN, 1 ditlon, tK------------ tinantal oi 8524254. FLASH: Rant a brand new Story and Clai piano, S12 ear month. Rent a; cartage applies towerd purchase. Morris Music ADDITIONS, ALUMINUM s....... roofing, dn^all, plumbing and electrical. Guaranteed wholesale price plus supervision, terms. "* BUY YOUR WEDDING -Tts at dlseovht from, Dixie. Draytiff, OR 3- BOLENS 10 DAYS-SAVE $119 Hydrostatic, alec.. HOUGHTEN'S POWER CENTER 112 E. University f ------ DOWNTOWt N ROCHESTER norse moior, aiuu. rooi Teoie, sia" top r, $200. 38" gas stove, S3S. A CASH REGISTER $30, electric adding machine $38, elec, typewriter SSS. Royal typewriter $25. FrWen square root calculator $450. Check iERAAAN STYU STEREO HI Lustre finish, liquor cabinet Telfunken changer, $100, 3354375, weekend all day. Ski Doo's Sno Jet's Mercury's From $695 12 to 45 h.p. CRUISE OUT, INC. <3 E. Walton PE *4402 Dally 84, Cf - HAMMOND CONSOLE ORGAN .. ------ condition, also NEW CONSOLE PIANOS 48" TALU WALHUT finish NO terms ” FREE DELIVERY OPEN EVENINGS TIL 8 P.M. SAT, S;38 P.M. GRINNELL UPRIGHT player plar ___ Grand Plar .. Upright piano $58. avlng, 18 S. Jesse. SAVE DOG AND MARTIN HOUSES. AH till 5: sizes. 74S Orchard Lk. Rd. good, $295; real good, V>. H. R. Smith HAMMOND ORGAN' HUNDREDS. GallL..... . ----- Co. 1718 Telegraph, Pontiac, FE 4-Open evenings till 9 p.m. Sat. iStTp.ir MOVING, BABY GRAND, appraised ENCLOSE YOUR SHOWER ovar the bathtub with a beautiful glass tub — ------ -.—.—„ frame,...*" sWwf FLUORESCENT FIXTURES. telTlfle tor growlna planti Indoera, mar-rad, S13JS valua, SS.8X Michigan Pluerascont, S8S Orchard Lk. FE 4- 4&ai^"^..-ir*rcha«i Rd. Startlag Sat. *8, GARBAGE mSPOSAL, Vt hu __SMI SInka, 32x31, $28J8 PF Sable Launa Plywood. 4xSx'A, S4.85 per sheet. TALBOTT LUMBER ns Oakland FE 4-4S85 PIANOS he plane v y with a gi teSj^^LLAOHI lER'S MUSIC USED ORGANS Professional Models BALDWIN ORGAN Mahogany finish, 2$ pedals, <1 n keyboard, real value. HAMMOND M-100 spinet modaL 1 yaar o I Ptrcusslon ravtrb. PHONE McCELLAN TRAVEL TRAILERS 4828 HWjind R SNOWMOBILES AT DEALERS COST OAKUND -SNOWMOBILE 334-B500 TERRIFIC SAVINGS for the "Early Bird" Shopper On nyw Johnson motors JIM HARRINGTON'S SPORT CRAFT Vb^.E.et^L.j5rarateIlm,ta Worehouse Clearance Sale hi. 8. MOTORS (iaiSBB SI pro-. Road Dogs For Wont Ads Diol 3344981 THK PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. MARCH 10. 1969 C—13 79 AKC tIBORIAN HUSKY PUPS, JIM jr^WIII coniWtr tradt. Call FET Travel Trdbrt , X a', 4 btdroom ti AKC__________________ ; colati, ran, tu-ssss.________ AKC Oartnan Shaphard pupplu. COLLIE PUPS, AKC. aaMat, full collara, SS7-S4»,. CANaEiES, cOlorful lenwlM ■ pain and trioa. Ready. FE M905. toOEERMAN “ PINCHiR~PUPP|ES, AKC /Mistered, I weeks old. 1969 STARCRAFT TRAVEL TRAILERS INSIDE DISPLAY CRUISE-OUT, INC. S3 E. Walton Dally FE S.4M2 CLOSED SUNDAYS AIR^RE/^ LIGHTWEIGHr. TRAVEL TRAILERS Since 1S32. Guaranteed for Ufa. them and gM a demonstration Warner, Trailer Sales, 3WI ... Huron (plan to loin ana of Wally GERMIAN SHEPHERD pupplosT . male, 1 ^malo ^AKC_ raglstered HAIMMOND ORGAN L-100 am Polllna aecordlan, S stops, bes efter. SS3-S34y.__________ _____ MALE LONG HAIRED CAT MIXED PUPPIES WANTED. Wl buy complete litters. asi.M7a. POODLE PUPPIES, red apricot, English Import. 363->m Pekingese puppies, akc, whits and cream, also stud service, <82- REGISTERED MINI-TOY POODLE 2 brown, t balga. Pedlgr - ■ ‘ male tor stud. FE S-1W3. THINK SPRING! .......jinhood, 21 tt. .. •• 1947 Jubilee, 19 It. .......... - 1964 Corsair, 20 ft.... .....S21M 1944 Corsair, 17 ft. ........J125 1945 Magnolia, 15 ft. .......» 095 1940 Gam, 12 ft..............0 “* 1940 Apache Eagla ...........* -■- 1944 Apache Eagle . ....... 0 495 Ellsworth Trailer Sales 4577 Dixie Highway Apache Camp Trailers Pickup Truck Campers Buy brand new 1940 Apache carr trailers at used trailer prices. Sav. 0900 on new 1948 Apache 19' travel trailers. All Apache trailers on ^splfw,ln heated showrooms. Over 30 different models to choose *- quarters '/i mile East of Lapeer ItEGISTERED TOY --------- . also stud service. FE 2-1497. REGISTERED 6ERIAAN Shepherd AKC, and dog house, 075. 434-9847. 412 Elm St., Holly. R EG I S T E R E D LAB RADOR RETRIEVERS, 1 mala, 1 female, $75.423-1194. ____________.. SIBERIAN HUSKY, 1 year old AKC: registered, lovable dog. Call 335; 9424 offer 5. $100. SPRINGER SPANIEL puppies, AKC Salllyn and Frelax ■-— Ortonville, 427-""- SIBERIAN HUSKIES, purebred, shots and wormed, 8 wks. $75. 493- BEAUTIFUL DECOR 8i' Truck Camper MASCOT elgant rear d I ------Ic heater, 3 cu. electric refrigerate with holding tank, pressure water system, 3 burner range with oven. Also metal underside. Yes, lacks are Included. Only 01,795. NEW LOTS. 2285 Brown, sorry no school children. 335-0155. Tirw-AHto-TrucIt REPAIR, MOUNT, and b e mag 5 used ______— Polyol________________ slicks. Market Tire Co. 2435 Orchard Lake Rd. Keego. jetory autlel •'iSi.M parts. I Intercoi pare I line ta------- LOWRY CAMPER 1335 S. Hospital Rd. EM 3-368 YOUR INVITATION TO OAKWND COUNTY'S NEWEST TRAVEL . AND CAMPIN' CENTER VILLAGE TRAILER SALES 4470 Dixie Hwy. 425-221 ADMIRE AND COMPARE QUALITY - STYLE - PRICE NOMADS 8. COMANCHES Motor Scootors 94 SPECIAL Horsepower Mini Bikes, 8219.95. Free SnowskI with each purchase while they last. MG SALES & SERVICE 147 Dixie Hwy. Drayton 473-4458 Motoreycloo 9S 1959 250CC ALLSTATE, excellent condition, I Mke custom trailer Included. FE 2-4845. ______ iW' T R I U M P H MOTORCYCLE, completely rebuilt, new tires, wheals, chrome frames. Call 391-2928 for more details, also 4 mag wheals, plus Dayton 9 thoroughbred tires, like new. 1947 HARLEY DAVIDSON SPRINf; CRS 250 cc, comoetltlen Scrambler, reas. Call after 5. 482-5943. 1-A MODERN DECOR Early American, Mediterranean, • lardson Liberty S' *R*chardjob .af bedrm. $3,795. SIAMESE AND HALF black PerNan^^dfrej^ to good hon- TOY, MINIATURE POODLE stud servlca; grooming, raas. FE 4-4438. EVAN'S EQUIPMENT 4507 Dixie Hwy. Clarkston - 425-1711 or 425-2514 9 WED. AND FRI.QPEN TILL 9 P.M. CAMPING TRAILER, hardtop rollup, sleeps 4, built-in stove, sink. Ice box. Call aft. 5:30 p.m. 493- Pet Sttjwlbs-^^ 1-A GROOMING i Mr. Edward's High Fashion Poodlal Salon. For we pamper your pets. | Open 8:30 a.m. to 10 p.m., 7 day 335-5259 DO MAR'S Poodle Salon, 332 W. H Days 335-9435 _____Eve CENTURY YELLOWSTONE TRAVEL TRAILERS Quality at anybu dget STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. 3771 Highland (M-59) ■ 482-9440' 1 OF OURS IS JUST FOR YOU NEW AND USED 2 and 3 bedrooms In stock (I and 4 bedrooms available)-Front Ivng rms.. kitchens, bedrms. .. .from 85995! tao-s, new................Jrom 84595 (44 from factory .... from 83,799 All prices Include furniture Stud Service. Call after 4 < 482-7075.__________ SPECIALIZING IN | COLEMAN CAMPERS un '8, Ski Marina on Cass Lake, iniu Oakland Ave 981 Cass Elizabeth Rd., Pontiac.'. - ^ 2 BEDROOM, 12x50, NEW $3,999 INCLUDING TAX AND TITLEII F.O.B. Union City, Michigan FURNISHED! GAS OR 01 COUNTRYSIDE LIVING '’ol«S B & B AUCTION EVERY FRIDAY .......7:00 P.M. EVERY SATURDAY ..... 7:00 P.M. EVERY SUNDAY .....'/4:00 P.M. WE BUY — SELL — TRADE »tall 7 Days Weekly CONSIGNMENTS WELCOME _.... a^ucTIOI- OR 3-2717 ; Check our deal on — ' SWISS COLONY LUXURY TRAILERS | FROLIC I T R A I L E R S AND TRUCK CAMPERS. I SKAMPER I FOLD-DOWN CAMPERS I 13 to 28 on display at — Jacobson Trailer Sales I 5490 Williams Laka Rd. OR 3-5981 uffE...MODEL FARM and feeder cattle auction, wed., March 12 at 12 Noon, located I'/li miles N. of Lapeer, 174 N. Saginaw, Watch Tues., paper far. further details, David W. Smith,! Prop. Bud HIckmott, — General Auctioneer, Oxford, 48^2139._ ■“STAN PERKINS AUCTIONEER Ph., Swartz Creek________1-435-9400 SAT., MARCH 15-10 A.M. Goodrich Beef and Vegetable Farm Matching h Automatic 8-w—...w w,-.-...-- FREE - FREE COLOR TV WITH FIRST 12 ORDERS on the New SPORT TRAILER DELUXE HARDTOP CAMPER Sleeps 8, fl495 Ellsworth Trailer Sales 4577 Dixie Highway.____^62^ GMC SCHOOL BUS, new Pontiac i 8, axe, tires. 8450. 343-0081, dir. GMC 1959 BUS CAMPER, full ^tripped. Call after 5 p.m. 335- 3 BEDROOMS, 12x40, 1948 Baror Custom with front living rm., se up In park, 8948.00 dn. $84.40 pei mo., partly turn. 334-1509, Dir._ 1x35 DETROITER carpet, iiklrt, ; awnings._8i^j^3xS. 852-9430 eves^ 12x60 SUN CRAFT by Active $4,845 TOWN & COUNTRY MOBILE HOMES, INC. Telegraph at Dixie Hwy. 334-6694 Open Dally 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Open Saturday 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Open Sunday 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. ______Other times by Appt.__ $300 TO $500 DOWN — buys'a 2 oi \ MOTORCYCLE, $200. Call Ih helmet. 8400. MY 3-1408. By Kate Osann $450. Call OR BRIDGESTONE MOTORCYCLE Sales and service Wheals Inc. 1213 N. Main St. Royal Oak, Mich. 541-3141. _ Motorcycle Sale special PRICES ON ALL MODELS Anderson Sales & Service 1445 S. TELEGRAPH FE 3-7102 Boats-Acceuoriei PRE-SEASON SPECIAL SUZUKI X-4 SCRAMBLERS Reg. $744, sale $575 while the last. Other-cycles at big sayings. MG SUZUKI SALES 17 Dixie Hwy., Drayton 473-4458 New and Used Trucks 103 WELL drilling' TRUCK,'852-2598 Auto If^raMB-jl^ine ^4 Auto Insurance Anderson 1044 Joslyn FE 4-3535 Foreign Cars 105 VW's, 1944 S 1958 $450. Call 473-8635 alter 4:30. 1959 VW. REBUILT MOTOR e IW b, NU, li«. TJS. “I guess it’s lime to resign as president of his fan club —I can’t remember his name!” Used Auto-Truck Ports 102 WANTED: Good 1940-1963 Mercury 30 BOATS ON DISPLAY LAKE & SEA MARINE FE 4-9587 WE ARE PROUD TO ANNOUNCE WE NOW CARRY THE "THOMPSON BOAT LINE'' 1944 Pontiac at.._______ 1964 Pontiac transmission. $50. 1942 Pontiac engine, 80S. 1942 Pontiac transmission, 850. 1944 Pontiac body parts, other boi parts, engines and transmissions. H & H AUTO SALES ______ OR 3-5200 ______________ SUZUKI 10 cc $429 WHY PAY MORE? 4921 Highland Rd. (M-59). Acroas j from Pontiac Airport.____ !SUZUKI CYCLES, SOTCC to SOO'CC, Rupp and Wildcat mlni-bikes, cycit eccesspries Take 7/ “ * - - ru DMO,. , follow DAWSON'W SALES . . LAKE. Phone 429-2179. New ond Used Cars 106 1947 BUICK Elactra hardtop, factory *'r conditioning, vinyl top, new - -■rranty, smell down peyrr w monthly payments. Shelton Pontiac-Buick OM_S^Rocheiter_Rd._______ 451-5500 OPEL WAGON, S300: 4B2-494y. ____ 1944 VW SEDAN, RADIO, heater ixcellent mechanical condition New ond Used Can 1d6 1968 Chevy FLANNERY FORD (Formerly Baattlo Ford) On Dixie Hwy., Waterford 42»090a LUCKY AUTO 1940 W. Wide Track i FE 4-1004 _or FE 3-78541 1965 CADILLAC'CONVERTIBLE, ful|l tower, excellent condit. 81850. 332-| 1947 CADILLAC DE VILLE Convertible, climate control, stereo, many other extras, exc. condition, $3500. 473-5948.__________________ 1947 CADILLAC, 4 OOOB Hardtop DeVllle, full power, vinyl top, extras. 330-4550 or 482-8055. LATE MODEL CADILLACS ON HAND AT ALL TIMES JEROME _____335-4055 ' ' C”EVY h 1947 OPEL, excellent condition,' lac-1^— tArw uunr-rantw «tlM trs MffMrt iM., A rdtop PE S-3278 torv warranty si 1967 VW 2 DOORa with beautiful blua finish, looking for economy, this Is Itl Others to choose from. Shelton Pontiac-Buick 055 5. Rochesteijd._______451-5500 vx Is, Spring (-11688, t 1940 V.W. SUNROOF, SEDAN, black, '*X) Maple Rd. $1600. 335*1068. ■ i______________ 196Fvw'i=ULLY“e^lppedrbeautiM "' :andv apple red with black ell buckets, with solty head ----- Tonic epeclal at price. Just 8100 ‘JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 430 Oakand Aye^_____FE 5-4101 >49 OPEC Kadett Rally, lets go sporty with this company demo, save on this onal Shelton Pontiac-Buick 055 S. Rochester Rd.______^451JW 949 OPEL STATION wagon Damaged. Driveable. 473-4412.__ 1962 CHEVY BEL AIR 2 door. White with blua Interior. 4 cylinder automatic. No radio, no power. 24,000 actual miles. Immeculale body, $795. Call 442-3289. Audette ! Pontiac BRAND NEW 1969 CHEVY Nova 2 Door Sedan with super, thrift angina, and full factory aqulpmant, ALL TAXES AND 1969 LICENSE PLATES Includedi COMPLETE $2011.50 BANK RATES Your old car or 1159 dawni VAN CAMP Chevrolet Dn N. Milford Rd. MILFORD_____484-Tj)25 New and Used Trucks 103 AUTOBAHN YOUR VW CENTER 1947 JEEP, 4 t Silverline Boats CLIFF DREYER'S MARINE DIVISION 15210 Holly Rd. Holly, ME 4-4771 Wonted Con-Trucks 1011 _ EXTRA Dollars Paid FOR THAT EXTRA Shorp Car el drive, radio, _____ $795. 473-3504. 48 FORD DUMP with grain bed, vers good condition. 8500. 335-6572. 50 CHEVY, STAKE RACK, bes'l offer. mYJF1471._ 1950 FORD >14 ton, 4 ipaadr ..... rubber, rebuilt engine. 8575. 482- 8444. _____________ _ ■'59 CHEVY V4 Ton, $195. COME CHECK OUR FINE SELECTION OF NEW 8. USED VW't Bill Golling VW, Inc. From Pontiac to Birmingham 1 “5. approx. 2 ~ n. 44M900. KING Auto Sales 1968 CORVETTE, Intemattonal B with while convertible top. Tlmni windows, power ttearmg amt brakes. AM-FM radio, posltrectjan. $3400. Phone 3350493, after 5:30 finish, 9 passenger. 4 speed, at Radio, heater, whitewall fl Balance due $414.04, payments weekly $3.02. $5.00 down. Call 481- 1968 MALIBU 4 1944 IMPALA 2 DOOR hardtop. V-8 automallc, power steering. Radio, heater, whitewall liras, maculate. Call 442-3209. ^ Audette Pontiac 1850 Maple Rd. ...............April gold wHb latchlno interior. Vf, automatic, .ower steering and brakts, factory ilr __»ndltlon. Immaculate. Call Audette Pontiac 1850 Maota Rd. Troy OPEL 19"47 WAGON, 'ilka new, $99| AKE trucK, ion, .... led, with heavy duty 755 5. HAVE YOU SEEN THE ALL NEW OMEGA Motorhome ARABIANS, FOR SALE DoubTa O-C Arabian Farm. 425-3550._______ HORSES BOARDED. Standing italls, $30 per month, box stalls, $35 and $40 per mr— ------------ ■ colt$ for 10 per month. Aleo horjei, pmie ilts tor $ale. Mount Clemer HArF REGISTERED Arabian mere, 4 years, in foal to reg., Arabian . $450. 4 year Bald mare,^/ speed transmission, < wheels, completely tel----- On display after 3-0-49 Only At Holly Travel Coach Inc. :oin Holly Rd., Holly ME 4.4) open Dally and Sundays LUXURIOUS AND ECONOMICAL TRAVELING IN THE SILVER EAGLE 8. VACATlbNAIRE TRAVEL TRAILERS 4 year Bald face mare, 4 tREANOR'S TRAILER ..... stockings, very classy $250. 8. OUTDOOR CENTER Both gentle and green broke. 9 2012 Pontiac Drive ' year Gelding, gentle ^$125. A-------------i--------- yearling stud colt quarter horse, no papers SIOO. A reg.. Quarter-horse mare, 5 yrs., good broke^ i Boots-Accessories 8' HYDROPLANE, $50. 451-22 1963 CLYDE 14' runa-bout. Alloy 1 trailer, 30 h.p. Evinrude electric 5792. "Check the rest, men get the best Averill's 1941 INTERNATIONAL pickup, excellent body 1 running condition. Has overload springs, like ne tires, big sleeper camper $495. 6?3-3330.___________ 1941 Gli/iC HEAVY DUTY Pickup, good condition. $350. 493-2709. 106 AUTDBAHN MDTDRS YDUR VW CENTER 1765 Telegraph FE 84531 SAVE MONEY AT MIKE SAVOIE CHEVY, 1900 W. Maple. Ml 4-2735. 1942 PICKUP, with camper cover. . CHAMPION in' xStr, ( furnished, air conditioning, carpeting, 2 bedrooms, bath, klfheen, oil forced air heat, exc. eoPd. $2500. Broker, OR 441350 4 CHAMPION, 10 X 50, axcdllent ondition. Partly turn. Carpeted. rasher, shed, steps. 82795. 420-1577. COME SEE OUR FINE display at the PONTIAC BOAT SHOW PONTIAC MALL March 4 thru 15th Harrington Boat Works 1099 S. Telegraph 332-80: CASS LAKE DOCKS Sail, ski. Picnics, family fun Trailer, boat winter storage troa. Best docks go early. Boats readyto go are used twice as much. ’Jidroo’msrtront“k‘itX“wTh co,3i AT TONY'S MARINE pertone appliances and carpeted: i969 Johnson motors, Areocraft GW Mansfield A'UTO SALES 300 Executive Cars Inc. . 1-8^ A-.FFX. GM FACTORY OFFICIAL CARS 1962 FORD T-750 dump truck; ^59 __from —■ GMC tandem dump. FE 5-0136. i siQ^k arriving dally I I KING Auto Soles _ levy Impale 2 door hardtop. Blue with matching vinyl Interior. V-8, stick, radio, whitewall tires. Balance due $478.33, weekly payments $4.01. $5.00 down. Call 401-0002. 442-3209. Milosch Chrysler-Plymouth 1945 Chrysler 300, 2 door, hardtop, fireen with black fop and black ' nterlor, power steering, and brakes, radio, whitewalls, S1295. 477 M-24, Lake Orion. MY 2-2041.________ 1944 CHRYSLER LoBARON, 4 dlior luxury sedan, full power, air conditioning, new tires, exc. condition, $1200. 4444502. 1964 CHEVY STATION wag Power and automatic transmlis] No S down, payments $4.44. Fvn price $795. Call Mr. Parks c^it manager at Ml 4-7500. Nevi/loca tlon of , Harold Turner Ford Maple Troy Ma 14 mile east ot Woodward CORVETTE, 1944, CHROME w —-er windows, new top •“ Rochester 451-9714. i964'CHEVY'4 door, automatic, radio rmants .. _.JI Mr.: at Ml 4-7500. Milosch Chrysler-Plymouth 1947 CHRYSLER 2-door, hardtop, ....—------ atterlng, brakes, ____ ______ rod, white vinyl top, red Interior, sharp car. 8199S. 477 M-24. Lake OrKHA MY 2-2041. 1965 Chrysler 300 4 door hardtop. Midnight blua with powder blue Interior. V-O, radio, heater, power steering and brakes.- $1195 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 2100 MAPLE RD. J TROY. MICH. Parks credit .... New location of Harold Turner Ford 2600 Maple I .'_________ Phone 642-7000 Milosch Sharp Cadillacs, Pontiac, Olds and! Buicks f()r out-of-state market. Top^9^4 CHEVY Vj ton, 4 cyl. stick, radio, fresh air t dollar paid. MANSFIELD AUTO SALES 1104 Baldwin Ave. FE 5-5900 ______________FE 8-8825 1947 ACTIVE BAHAAAA, 2 bedroom,! I960 MONARCH III Illy: 2495 Orchard Lk.__Sylvan Laka _ CENTURY, S1EURY, W Tn N E R , 2 Johnson Boats and AAotors. Spring -nrnatiid'furnlihad and discounts. Sun 8, Ski Marina, 3981; fdit?™. $1500 aild takS Cass-Elizabeth Rd., Pontiac. 482-We pay^ STOP HERE LAST M' “ ponllae Rd. at Opdyka TRAVEL TRAILERS Boatt-Accefsories STOP paying renti START the new year right SEE THE ALLJ4EW DETROITER AMERICAN KROPF BUY WHERE SERVICE IS BEST BUY WHERE SAVINGS ARE GREATEST E-Z TERMS bank FINANCING, SHOP IN COMFORT HEATED MODELS 41 Bob Hutchinson's Mobile Home Sales Open Dally 'tit 8 p.m. Saturday and Sunday *111 5 DRAYTON PLAINS 1 Dixie Hwy. (U.S. 10) OR 3-1202 97Bouts-Accefsories - WINTER aEARANCE New M. F. Farguaon garden tractors j * "*TsED EQUIPMENT I M. F. Crawiari wim Ipadari M. F. Crawlera with dozer blades Ford II Ferguson tra^a t, Tranchon, misc. Implemants. | V Pontiac Form and Industrial Tractor Co. 825 S. WOODWARD If 'BE 4-8441 ♦■’*** ___gpah dally tacludlng Sunday^ Trw^Ti^lurs_______________M 24"^ & 36" Pickup Covers Ellsworth Trailer Sales 4577 Dixie Hwy._______^825^ 1945 TRUCK CAMPER* lalf con-. CRUISE OUT, INC. :. Walton FE I Dally 9-4. Closed S( "TOP DOLLAR PAID" GLENN'S 2"CLEAN" USED C 952 W. Huron St. 431 Oakland Ave. 1943 FORD HEAVY Duty Van. 482-4790, We would like to buy late model GM Cars oi* will accept trade-downs. Stop by today. FISCHER BUICK 544 S. WOODWARD 647-5600 PINTER'S USED BOAT BUYS! Junk Cors-Trucks 17' Johnson 1-0, 150 ______ top, side, aft., mooring cover, electric winch. Like new. 10' Poperaft by Thunderblrd 1-0, ISO hp, demo, full warranty. 15' FIberglat, 50 hp Merc, trailer. 17' Alum cruiser, 75 HP Johnson, frailer. WE TRADE 370 Opdyke “* (1-75 At WE FINANCE Open t-4 • Univ. Exit) PRE-SEASON Boat Special 4 Aero-craft 40 h.p. Johnson and: 101-A ir cars to select from — On US CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH RAMBLER-JEEP 6473 Dixie Hwy. MA 5- Clarkston 1966 GMC '/2-Ton jck, with V-4 engin us iiriish, and Is only— $995 Matthews- Hargreaves 1965 Chevy Camper vs ton pickup. Custom cab VO engine, automatic. Power steering, radio and heater. Lika new. $1295 Pontiac Retail 65 University Dr._______FE 3-7954 IWS DOD^ % TON, V-B, Ir self heater, $1395. Over 75 other cars to 1947 JEEP, UNIVERSAL wim 4 —Under, 4,000 actual miles, blue Hahn SPARTAN DODGE 'THE GOOD GUYS' 855 Oakland FE 8-9^ Unbelievable Prices! we have 1945, 1964 Chevrolets, Pontlacs, Plymouths, Fords, lust received from th- -------- missloners. These c cost prices and cai with no moeny down. LUCKY AUTO 1965 CHEVY Super Sport Chavsila with rad finish, automatic —war steerln^.^Only — GRIMALDI Buick-Opel 210 Orchard Lk. Rd.____FE 2-9145 WATERFORD STANDARD AUTO 3400 Elizabeth Lk. 681-0004 FOR SALE BY owner, 1941 Buick LeSabre, 4 door, excellent cond. S300. 335-2777. ________________ 1962 BUICK CONVERTIBLE, REAS. 1964 BUICK Special Convertible, with white finish. Interior, black top,_ au— power atearln|,^iAdlo, Only- TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1945 BUICK ■ LaSabre 2 hardtop, with automatic, p( brakes, radio, he: _____ one owner, new — $1395. Over 75 other cars to •-Ti — On US 10 at M15, ________MAS-5071. 1944 CADILLAC Sedan DeVllle..Full ea^t ot'w AUDETTE PONTIAC 1850 Maple Rd. 1945 CORVETTE, 327, V-8, 4-spead, tops, tape deck, 492-3951.____ 1945 CHEVY SUPER SPORT convertible. Extra clean. 482-8341. 1965 CHEVY Impala 2 door hardtop, with white finish, blue Interior, buckets, console, r, automatic, power stMring, brakes,h» She tOn PontiaC-BuiCK >lr mnOltionlng. - - — , air Ctindl $;i^5 1965 Imperial >Hh burgund' latle, FM I Id brakes, p power steering e.._ window. 4 way seat, tilt whi factory air, tinted glass and r dafogger. One owner Blrmlngh.... trade. Only 34,000 originsi miles. $1995 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 2100 MAPLE RD. TROY, MICH. _____Phone 442-7000____ 1964 CHRYSLER 2 door hardtop, power steering, brake.s. ___latic, folks Just Ilka new. Priced at only 81595. ;B55 S. Rochester Rd. 451-5508 Grimaldi Buick-Opel i 210 Orchard Lk._Rd. 2-9145| 1964 CHEVY CAPRICE,,^ power] -Tid steering, turbo auro-, In good condition. 423-1 1966 Imperial CROWN 4-DOOR dtop, full power, air co(i-)ned, 30,000 actual miles. S2495, WILSON CRISSAAAN CADILLAC 1350 N. Woodward ..... ... 'power steering, I y $i5ii*fut?'price,'" lusi Chrysler-Plymouth 1967 Chryf —'— ' JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 430 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS ^ 1944 CHEVELLE 2 door, with VO automatic, radio, t>ea;>er top< $1295, Over 75 other cars lOl Milosch ChrysU Chrysler, ), silver jiack vinyl to windows at power vents, power sfaarTng ar brakes, radio, whltawalls, $1995. 4; M-24, Laka Orion. MY ^2041. 4 CHEVELLE wagon, power, lo* nileage, sharp. $1.200. 4744I230. 1/2, 1 2-3 JUNK CARS, Trucks, free two anytime. FE 8-3832. 1-2-8 JUNK CARS - TRUCKSi tow anytime. FE 2-2444._______________; 111 JUNK CARS, PAY FOR SOME, free tow. 482^7080. ' laymen..______ -. . :all Mr. Parks credit manager Ml 4-7500. New location of Harold Turner Ford » Maple Troy Mall; V4 mile east ot Woodward___j R 35TO? ........... Onhr’siwK BILL FOX CHEVROLET 755 S. Rochester Rd. $1995 BIRMINGHAM KING ALWAYS BUYING JUNK CARS and 1850 Mapit Rd. scrap, we tow. PE 5-0201.___ COPPER - BRASS, RADIATORS - Audette Pontiac 1947 FORD V2 TOI See the new 1969 Duo and Glasspaf Boats Johnson & Chrysler motors In our showroom or at the ' Pontiac Mall Boat Show MARCH 6TH THRU 15TH. YOUNG'S MARINA 4030 Dixie on Loon Lake Drayton Plains OR 44)411 Used AMte-Truefc Ports 102 13 GTO INTERIORS, DOORS for 44-I 45 GTO any body atyla, complafa SO and: rear end, radiator; hood. Tempest I 4 cylinder and auto. 335-4900. W3-1400 ,<5 mercury WRECK Transmission, Wheels, body parts. 1968 FORD BRONCO STATION Wagon, V-8, with snow plow, 7905 after 4 p.m.______________ 1969 GMC VS TON PICKUPS, new. Immediate delivery. Save. KEEGO 348 EM 3-4943. CHEVY ENGINE a ___smisslon, new .heavy di clutch and pressure plate, $75. 3 1957 CHEVY FOR PARTS, 3?7-horsepower engine, posltrad rear end, plus more, all In car for $300. 335-7110 offer 4 p.m. barrel carborator Wanted Can-Trucks 101 Wonted Cors-Trucks 101 Pontiac Mall BOAT SHOW PONTIAC MARINE DEALER'S ASSOCIATION CRUISE-OUT, INC., 43 E. Walton Blvd., Pontiac HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS, 1899 S. Telegraph, Poiiflac JORDANtS MARINE SERVICE, 2175 Ca$s Lake Rd., Keego Harbor McKIBBEN HARDWARR, 15 N. Union Lake Rd., Union Lake PAUL A. YOUNG, INC, 4030 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plalna PINTER'S MARINE SALES, Opdyk# at Univaralty Dr., Pontiac SAILAND (LEON F. IRISH CO.) 4300 Haggerty Rd., Walled Lake TONY'S MARINE SERVICE, 2495 Orchard Lake Rd., Keego Harbor WARDEN CYCLE SALIES A SERVICE, 4755 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plaint WATERFORD SPORT A “*“1NE CENTER mtlac Laka Rd., (jilEST DEALER DISPl^YS OAKLAND COUNTY SHERIFF'S DEPT. HUDSON'S Pontiac Mall, Pontiac U.S. COAST GUARD AUXILIARY SPbRrS HOVER CRAFT Pontiac Man, Pontiac ATTENTION: 1963, 1964, 1965, 1966 Used Gar Owners- We are desperate for these modelsl Stop in today and get the Highest Trade-in Allowances MERRY OLDS, INC. W‘“n?ll)f, standard 4100 miles, 82uv sown si tr payments. OR 3-9500. S28 N. Main St., Rochester 651-9761 651-9764 15 New leeps to Trade From On hand and ready for Im-medlats delivery. For the deal you've been waiting for .. . Now Is the time. NO FAIR OFFER OR TRADE P«L“’sWl'l^*A“'d- CESSORIES. GRIMALDI JEEP 8 Oakland________FE 5-9421 CHEVY PICKUPS 1942 Thru 1948 Interior, white top, automatic, f power, custom. Only— $169S GRIMALDI Buick-Opel 210 Orchard Lk. Rd. FE 2-91 196S ELECTRA 4 door hardtop. Full powar and condition. Bronzs with black vl $1495 Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Sales 1958 W. MOPla_________Ml 4-2280 f965 BUICK, ipaclal, axcallani ^ition, $695. Buy hart — Pay Marvel Motors. 251 Oakland, FE A 1965 BUICK CUSTOM 4 44A^L , All ri GMC TRUCK CENTER 8:00 to 5:00, Mon.-FrI. 8:00 to 12:00 Saturday 701 Oakland Avenue 335-9731 lEEP Sales-Service Over 23 Used Jeeps Stock — Ready to gq. HAHN JEEP 4473 Dixie Hwy. Near M15 , 1966 Buick ELECTRA 225 SEDAN Power steering, brakes and factory air, very clean. $1995. WILSON CRISSMAN CADILLAC 1350 N. Woodward______Ml 4-1930 down, payments $18.44. Full price $2,395. Call Mr. Parks credit manager at Ml 4-7500. New —-tljon of Harold Turner Ford 400 Maple Troy M mile east of Woodward 1967 BUICK Wildcat Convertible, blua with terlor, radio, custom, powar steering, brakts, whltawalls. Only $2295 ilue top. ufomatle, BUICK ELECTRA .................... exc. condition, 14,m miles, 474- 3510 after 4 p.m. 482;^^^______ 149 BUick Skylark 2 door hordtops. I, brakes, autwiatlc, fa s company, demos, s: ly lest 8100 (f - " blue with matching Interior. V-8, Milosch Chrysler-Plymouth 1948 Chrysler 300, 4 door, hardtop, factory air, AM-FM, automatic, power steering and brakes, green with green Inferior. 477 AA-24, Lake Orion. MY 2-2041. _______ wire wheal disc. car. Call 442-3289. Audette $1895 Bob Borst On M24 in Lake Orion MY 2-2411 1948 CUSTOM TOP 2 door Chevy, 1948 CAMARO RALLY Sport. Power ._______*vlnW payments. 473-4574 1968 CHEVELLE Molibu Convertible with 275 h.p. V8, 4-1 Read transmbslon, buckets, e o n a p -poWer steering, brakasi r-haatar, whItaWalls, silver blua white vinyl top. Only— $2595 KESSLER'S DODGE CARS AND TRUCKS Salas and Service _ , _. OA t-taill) KING Auto Sales 1944 Dodga Polara 2 door aitver blue with matching Interior: V-8, automatic, radio, heater, whltew^ tires. Balance due $587.34 weekfy peynjOTta $4.93, $5.00 down. Coil 965 CONVERTIBLE, DODGk DODGE DART 2 dqcr har^OP. *33B-10I>3.' engine. r>u,—- -andition. $1880 cash or take over payments. 1967 DODGE SPORTS, van, parf^ , FE 44337 11942 FORD GALAXY, good COndlH«V I $188.^Ejy779._ Matthews-"i Hargreaves $ Rochester Rd. 451-55081431 Oakland Ave. FE A4 1943 FORD STATION I V8, automatic, radl>-solld transportation. wagon, writ) miy niii PflC*a fflOn*V 'jOHN McAULIFFE FORD 855 S. Rochester Rd. 4S1-5S00l63l Oakland Ava. FE A4S47'430 Oakland Ave. PE 5-41*1 C“~-14 THE PONtlAC PRESS. MONDAY, MARCH 10, 1960 For Want Ads Dial 334-4981 Htmmilini Cars 1M Ntw and Ustd Cort 106lNtw and Uud Can 104 iiy«S MUSTAN# t *K>r AUDETTE PONTIAC 1000 USED CARS AT TROY MOTOR MALL ONE STOP SHOPPING AT .... Audattt Pontiac Birmingham Chryslar-Plymouth Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Bill Coiling VW Mikt Savoie Chevrolet _____ C»ll MMNt Audette Pontioc j use MAPI* R«. Tray IWS~A6lib OALAXie see ■ convertible, VI. eutemellc, redlc-i heeter, power ileerlne- beeutllul lime eeW with bleck top. end matcMng tnterlor. Only tltl full ues MUSTANO > door I , MMnlpht blue with metcl ’ terlor, e cylinder eulometk. - whilewello, wheel covert, 3S.000 j, —-------let. Cell MMSf* " Audette 1000 USED CARS AT TROY MOTOR MALL Maple Roed (IS Mila) Belweep Coolldge end Crookt. ONE STOP SHOPPING AT Audette Pontiac Birmingham Chrysler-Plymoufh Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Bill Coiling VW Mike Savoie Chevrolet Naw and Used Can 1041MARMADUKE ISM MtRCURY I , J Celj^FI 5-M»e. «7 I^RCURY MONTEREY 4 door,’ and Used Can re — Peyi I Oeklend,: MERRY OLDSMOBILE ROCHK^d!' MICHIGAN I 1964 OLDS Dynamic 1 ''ll'' convertible, hydremetl-power tleerlng, brekei, ihpwroom ! new condition, only ■ $895 $1095 TAYLOR CHEVV-OLDS Pontioc .......... ..„.„"";nd')l50 Akeole Rd. whitewall tirci. Drive It home lo- r.*rn*?eii"xrr."?;?s: tom rademacher credit meneger at Ml A7SD0, New a tack, be ready far tun. Spring ipaclal on price, [uet IIH down. JOHN McAULIFFE heater, eherp i UM FORD I herdtap, „ I ^ SM » door|UM ford FAIRLANE OT hardly Harold Turner Ford ............ Maple Troy Maili teeutitui bronVe nnltli. titSS. 6i.. kk mile eeil of Woodward j 7S other cert to lelect Irom - On --------------hardtop.I “S.IO at MIS, Clerk.lon, MA 5- cylinder. IN4 FAIRLANE >-door 1N4 FORD ♦ peetenger v automatic. Dark b....... Ing Interior. Ve Cell «42-S2n. Audette Pontiac fitrOAUAX" STf^vertlbie, UW FORD COUNTRY SifOAN, 10 - er wagon, 3*0, 35,C“ ~ ^•t otter. s»M) "over 1000 USED CARS AT TROY ►sTPORD 4 DOOR CUSTOM V-S, ■. a/-vrp/^T-i \ JT A T T & WV5?;. ffi. c'smMOTOR MALL Wtwtwttoi p.m,J#5^M2-l373. I Mipit Ro«d 05 MM#) b#tw##n RU POIID. tXCKLLBNT condition. CooHdQ# ind Crookl. ONE STOP SHOPPING AT Audette Pontiac Birmingham Chrysler-Plymouth Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Bill Colling VW Mike Savoie Chevrolet Bucket eeati, , __________ er, whitewall llrei. S3f down, pey-menle SIO.SS. Full price Sl,3»5. Cell Mr. Park* credit manager al Ml 4-7S00. New location of Horold Turner Ford 3400 Maple < Troy Mall ) brakat, auto. Irantmlttlon, goodi ^ondltlim. FEJh^. ___________[ THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL 1 1966 TORONADO 474 4302. _ _ „ 1944“mustang hardtop, 4 atick. one owner, S995. 473^101.___ 1H4 T-BIRD landau with beautiful white Interior, full powor, and nice at they come. Spring To ipeclel only—S1SSS. Full prlco ano lutt SISI down. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 430 Oakland Ava. FE V4101 | 1944 MUSTANO MARDf OP, with beeutllul iprlng time yellow, with block vinyl top, VS, aulomotic, radio, haator, power ttaarlng, tape recorder, Spring tpeclal oiily Si,-511 full price, lull list down. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 430 Oeklend Avo.________fl S-dlOl MUSTANO 1944, 3 ittor, CruftfrO- ---------- full elr con-[ $2295 GRIMALDI BUICK-OPEL Now an6 lliei Can 106 Naw aad Utod Cart 106 CHECK THESE WHITE HAT TRADES %7 Firebird............................................. $1895 Convertible, I, eutometle, power, redlo, whitewelle. '67 Camoro.............................................. $1695 t-dodr, hardtop, etlck, redlo. vinyl top, whllowelli. *66 Chrysler........................................... $1595 Ndwport, 1 door, hardtop. I, eutomallc, powor, fully eguipped. '66 Buick............................................... $1095 Aglemellc, radio, power. '64 Chevy .,,.. .. $ 995 S. eulomttlc. po '65 Valiant ........ .......................$ 895 ............ $1495 $1195 valli. .. $895 '65 Pontiac . Cptellne, 4 door, I '64 Olds ......... Ik 4 door, hordlep, lOidod 167 Comet.................................$1595 CFclona, ■t door, hardtop, 390, 4 ipaod, o real runnor. '67 Ford .......................... ...... $ 795 vs ten pickup, reedy ter work. THE GOOD GUYS SAY, “WE WON'T DODGE ANY DEAL" SPARTAN DODGE SELLS FOR LESS (Till us if we're wrong) 855 Oakland 338-9222 1944 FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE V-0, 10 poit., outo., doubit powor *" 3570. _ _ _ 1944 FORD COUNTRY Sodan, ita-l Hon wagon, buulllul illver blue! with matching all vinyl Interior, I V-l automatic, radio, heater, i power tteering, broket. Spring •peclel only S1.4SS full price, lutt tut d- - Ml 4-7500. New locelion of Harold Turner Ford 3400 Maple Troy Me ___Vk mile eett of Woodward 1947 OLDS TORONADO, ell powe air conditioning, AM-FM, 27,0( mlloi, S3,995. 334-9402. 1000 USED CARS AT TROY MOTOR MALL Maple Road (IS Mile) between Coolldge and Crookt ONE STOP SHOPPING AT Audette Pontiac Birmingham Chrysler-Plymouth Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Bill Coiling VW Mike Savoie Chevrolet 1945 BONNEVILLE 1 door hardtop, good condition, $850. FE M779. 5 BONNEVILLE 2 door h !P.I mlla5.'’t’i 1945 BbNNEVILLB 3 door ha Burgundy with matching ...... trim. Powor tloering and brakat, 35,000 actual mllat. Immaculate. Call 443-3309. Audette Pontioc USO Maple Rd. Troy with matching vinyl vg automatic, power ind brakat. 39,999 ac*—‘ -y clean. Call 443-32S9. Audette Pontiac 1944 PONTIAC CATALINA, 2 door hardtop# axe. Mnditlon# I o w milaaoa. S1400. S310 Highland Rd. 1944 PONTIAC TEMPEST, 4 cylinder, overhead cam, axe. condition. S975 or bott offer. FE 3- 1947 FORD CUSTOM MO 3 door. boautlful tlivtr bluo with matching Interior, Sprlngtlmo apoclal at I only-SISIS full price lutt SISI I ‘jOHN McAULIFFE FORD 430 ipaklandAyr______FE 5.4101 1947 T-BIRD CaNDAU with baautituT matallc aqua with black vinyl top. Full povMr, S34IS full price, lutt SUS. Naw Car warranty. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD ________________ PE H'®’ 1967 Ford SH Oakland Ava.______FB 14101 SAVE MONEY" AT MIKE MVOIB CHEVY, 1900 W. NEW FINANCE PLAN worklngT Need a car? Wa arrange for olmotf anybody with good, tad " no credit. 75 cart to choott fro Coll credit mgr. Mr. Irv — Otali FE 4-1004 or FE 3-7154.______ 1940 PLYMOUTH 3 door, II™ now ........... S14S Save Auto__________ FE 5-337f; HUNTER DODGE 1964 PLYMOUTH BELEVEDERE, ] door hardtop, I, auto, with power, air conditioning, I owner, 19,000 actual milts. 1943 DODGE POLARA, 4-door, Now aod liNi Con 106New and Used Cart 106 CADILLACS Pre Owned Beauties From The Birmingham-Bloomfield Hills Area 1968 Cadillac Sedan DeVille Baroqua sold with matching trim, and Wadt vinyl roof. AM-FM radio, 4 way teal, tilt and talateapt wheal, power door tetafc ellmeta control, o root 1968 Cadillac DeVille Convertible 1967 Codilloc DeVille Convertible FM ttoroo, full aowar, 4 way 1967 Cadillac Coupe DeVille Full power, 4 way teat, mate control, enoi Bln attmar, hat had axctpRontl cart. 1966 Codilloc Sedan DeVille 1966 Cadillac DeVille Convertible Mutt tea to appreciate. So thorp itt elmotl unbelievable, elr conditioned, 4 way teat. Don't mite thit one. CADILLAC of Birmingham Ask for Rich Kroll 1SS0 NORTH WOODWARD PHONE Ml 4-1930 1947 FORD COUNTRY iqulro 4 paetongar wagon, with V-l I automatic, radio, taatar, ptwi ataarlng, brakat, chrome luggai ra^, beautiful midnight blc. fInUh, with matching al"vinyl Interior. Spring tlmo apocti' I only-S31Sf full price, futt sil ! “jOHN McAULIFFE FORD 1S30 Oiklandjkva.___FE 5-411 11947 ~f6rD Galoxlo I hardtop, power VS, ' vinyl top. roil ty* ■ppaai I down payment. I Shelton Pontiac-Buick S5S s. Rochattar Rd.__ __^451^500 19M FORD GALAXIE SM Fattback, with VS, automatic, - power ttaarlng, bri--- -------- tprlng time yellow with a black vinyl top. Praadantlal tpeclal at only S34II full price, lutt SISI "jOHN McAULIFFE FORD I _______ 11941 tORINd hardtw VI, with i -automatic, radio, hooter, power ttaarlng. brakat, beautiful candy I apple rad with black vinyl t— j Can't be told from brand ni Naw Year tpeclal only S34II. F price, lutt StM down, M,000 mil naw car warranty. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 430 Oakland Ava._________FE S^ll THIS WEEKS REW CAR SPECIAL 1969 OLDS ''98'' TOWN SEDAN $3636 Best Olds 1947 PLYMOUTH CONVERTIBLE VI, power ttaarlng, brakes, and .1 1944 GRAND PRIX 3 door hardtop.‘ • .Ir'nii. I Air condition, silver blue with , oir iiiit,| bucket seats and console. Low low mlliage. Like new. Call 194S ROAD RUNNER, I 194S PLYMOUTH Satglllta, extras, —" dn. ptyiiwnt, taka over inw ly paymanta. 33BF3I4. M 4-3735. >45 OLDSMOBILE M, 4-dear hardtop, radio, hoator, ov*- ■ power, rad with matching A Birmintaam trade. »4S CHBVROLBT MALIBU, 3-door hardtop, radio, hoitor, auto., white with blue Intorlor, low mlltoga. Priced for quick taw. 1947 FORD GalaXIa 500 Convertible, I auto, with power and air, yellow with white top and matching Interior. 1947 COUGAR, radio, hoater, flo shift, graan with black vinyl ro and black Interior. A one own Birmingham trade. 1944 MUSTANO. 3-doof hardtop, V auto., color, white, and tan Intid real sharpi 1943 CHEVY II NOVA, auto, cylindar, a real nice car. HUNTER DODGE WHERE THE HUNT ENDSI 499 South Hunter 442-3319. I AUDETTE ________ ________________ ______I PONTIAC covws."'Excellenl''''condmon."'cail!l*J® Wta'b •*<*■ 442-3219, Audette Pontiac ISM Maple Rd. 1968 PONTIAC LeMans Hardtop vlth a gllitanlng olive graan Unit green vinyl Interior, radio, haati whiltwallt, VI, automatic, only— $2595 Matthews- Hargreaves rsi Otalond Ava. FE 4-45 1000 : USED CARS AT TROY ■: MOTOR MALL ONE STOP SHOPPING AT Audette Pontiac Birmingham ; Chrysler-Plymouth ; Bab Borst Lincoln-Mercury Bill Golling VW ; Mike Savoie Chevrolet ' New and Used Cars 106 New and Used Cnrs 106 94S PLYMOUTH ROAD RUNNER 313, Call 343-4941 ' INEVILLE, < inning, S135. WINTER TIME PRICES Yet, prices are always lower winter, 1949 will be no oxcaptlon. BARGAINS GALORE 1943 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 2 door 4-3434 on. 4:30. _ 144 TEMPEST custom 2 door, automatic 4 eyl. angina, lookin something nice and This is It. Low monthly ,--- SHELTON Pontioc-Buick 155 5. Rochester Rd. 45l-550g 1947 PONTIAC FIREBIRD, with V-l, ------ power St— luo with m. ir. Spring ---- . . S19H full price, lust SIM down. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 430 Oakland Avo._______FE S-4IOI 1747 CATALINA 2 DOOR hardtop.. Audette Pontiac 1150 Maple Rd. 1943 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE, mint condition, S495. OR 3-47CB. 1943 PONTIAC CATALINA, sadan, SW. 343-3M2. 19M CATALINA 3 dMr tiard power, 3 speed, Hurst, potl. Bait eWar, FE A4893. 1964 PONTIAC Catalina a-dnsr. md «nl«h. vvllh PPWai tematl c, ataarlng, brakes, a u whitawalla. plus factory air, absolutely Ilka new,i only $2695 1945 Imperial, 4 door, hardtop, full power, factory air, all leather ki-. tarlor, absolutely sharp inside and out, today's special. I ^’”5 1944 Chrysler 3 door, hardtop, this It a raal beauty and only. $1795 1947 Pontiac, 4 doer, sadan, b maroon, extra thorp, IntMo oi $1795 1967 Pontiac CATALINA WAGON I Dark Turquoise, matching Interior, power tteering and brakat, sharp “' wiLSON CRISSMAN | CADILLAC Ml 4-1930 GRIMALDI Buick-Opel Orchard Lk. Rd.______FE 3-9145 1944 GRAND PRIX, axcallant con-dltlon, 34,000 ml., M95. 451-4441. 1965 Plymouth Sport Fury Hardtop 3 door, with automatic, power steering, power brakes, buckets, and contolt. light blue finish. FLANNERY FORD U4I TORINO FASTBACK,....... V-l angina, cobra let traction lock ---—lutomatic. rtir axle, __________ ______ _____ Ing, power disc brakot, AM-FM radio, tlarao radio, 4,000 mllat, itlll undar naw car warranty. Artic ------------- rally efripa*. Sprat only SI4M, |uat l^tln JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 10 Oakland Ava. FE SUI01 19M T-BIRO, 3 DOOR Landau, goW I4S BARRACUDA FASTBACK Bright rad with black Interior Bucket soott and contole. Im maculate. Call 442-33S9. AUDETTE PONTIAC USO Maple Rd. Troi braksi, the flnaat Ford molor builds. Spring tpoclbl only S25U full price, luif SIM down, new cor *J0h18'’McAULIFFE FORD SM Oakland Avo._______ FE 5UI01 f94l MERCURY MONffcREY, U43 MERCURY 4 door hardtop. 1944 MERCURY 10 passangar ati wagon, wtth bMutlful motalllc gold finish with all vinyl tnta vs, automatic, radio, hoater, .... power, luggaot rack. Spring sjiMial at only S14N, full prlco, *john"mcauliffe ford Mk‘; -SSS^Shifirifi, & mllei, S1,S2S. 343-3775. UN PLYMOUTH ROAD RUNNER, vinyl tta, auto., double powor. Mutt toil, drottod. 343-0877. 1947 COUGAR HARDTOP. AF eon-ditlon, power and automatl& S39 down, paymantt 115.93. Full price S1995. all' Mr. Parks credit manaOa Ml 4-7500. Naw location of Hqrold Turner Ford wo Maple Troy 54 mil# ai ■ ------ 1000 USED CARS AT TROY MOTOR MALL Maple Read (15 Mils) batwaan CooUdga and Crooks ONE STOP SHOPPING AT Audette Pontiac Birmingham Chrysler-Plymouth Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Bill Golling VW Mike Savoie Chevrolet New and Ustd Cart 106New tod Used Cart 106 If ordered with the following equipment (Auto Trans, light ond visi group, vinyl top, deluxe T wheel, disc and whitewalls) you will receive a - FREE RADIO ^Village Rambler 666 S. Woodwartd MI 6-3900 RUSS JOHNSON PONTIAC-TEMPEST MY 3-6266 _ On M-24 Lake Orion I seats, 3 spaed Ihsrpl Call 44^32H. Audette Pontioc .... , DOOR EXECUTIVE Sedan, hydramatic, power ataatlnB ..and brakat, tinted glass, gota rubber, HIM, OR 1-1522 attar 4!Wp.m. 1947 Plymouth Fury, 4 door a one owner trade In, extra nice only $1695 1945 Chrysitr 3 door, hardtop, silver beauty It sharp Inside an with a black vinyl top. $1495 1944 Mercury, 4 door, ti automatic transmission, with i and a braazaway rear window. 2400 Maple 54 mile ei ""?1095 4 Dodge Relara 4 door sedan, a -------labia family car for only $1295 .......... Automatic, power steering. Savaral to choost from. Low mTlet. Factory warranty. Sgina with air condition and virfirTopt.^ Call 442-3289. I Audette I Pontiac 1150 Maple Rd. Troy 941 FIREBIRD, chooso from. A staorlno. Some wllhyvl Low mTlos. New car Wart 442-3219. jf AUDETin PONTIAC 1150 Maple Rd. 1944 PONTIAC 2 door hardtop, pow steering and braktt. Raasonat 4I^4049. ______________________ good tires. Call affor 5:30, X 1944 PONTIAC 4 DOOR Catalina. Cl good. 1400. 473US74._ 1944 BONNEVILLE convertlbta I7N DEAlIIr”'______33I-92M Transportation Specials 1960 CHEVY $1095 5 Ford 2 door, tadan, automatic va, sharp In and ou* — $895 1945 Chavrolaf Impale Super Sport Convertlblo. Seo and drive th'---- at this extra low prlco of only $895 1944 Chevy Sti^tlon V d#rd trr---- priced fc 1962 PONTIAC Grand Frix Full Price Only— $144 1963 FORD Full Fr*M Only— $277 1964 FORD Full p’rlSTnly- $495 up VI angina, runt goad $185 irvelr# i with ti $185 Transportotloit Ipaclal. I to chooso from. Your choice only $99 Oakland 1963 PONTIAC Bonnavllla Hardtop Full Priea Only $377 1964 BUICK 1965GORVAIR * Full FrtMHSity— $477 John McAuliffe FORD/- FE 5-4101 1947 PONTIAC CATALINA hardtop. Vinyl Inferior. Power and automatic. 139 down, oaymgnta 114.92. Full price »'»*• Coll Mr. Troy W adward rl tops. I ity. call Troy ’^raan?T5.p(Jr.y*®*®'- **®«-lng and bi^akos! Black m/BW/RB. m mm 860 S. Woo(dwar(d B'ham MI 7-5111 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MARCH 10, 1969 C—15j Candy 29B«ter(»foMe . lAfl«r-dinn«r i.-- 33 Time-faMtii« f----britU* „ w«nd ■ 31 North 36 Bureau ' ' Vietnam city 37 Culture 12 Impost tax . medium IS Blind impulse 3* Gaze slyly (Greek) 39 Sailor 14—1-dropa 40 Greek letter 37 Unit of . 41 Alleviate ItCopyirt (Bib.) __________ 46E:5o8eto David (Bib.) moisture SlFatdory 47 Nimrod * 22 Skin ailment ^ Additional 23 Proclaim 50 Aver 2B Variety of 51 Expires 32 Printers' 2 Inaccurate 8 Nothing 9 Custom 10 Muscular ____________ spasms (med.) 33 Baseball chibs 11 Iodide for one 34 Girl’s name 15 Having fuzzy 35 Constellation crown 36 Sahara, for 16 Fencing sword instance 21 Moniing 38 Stored beer prayer (eccL) 41 Grafted (her.) 22Wheel dtlbosein •indies power .’ork 45Spreadfor 25 Greaser drying ■ ' 4911 (Roman) 'Mama Cass' Says Hunger Not Only Reason for Eating By EARL WILSON NEW Y0RK-“Mama Cass,” 125 pounds thinner than she used to be, down to 165 from 290, went off her iUu^ous diet at the Stage Delicatessen when TV director CSiu^ Barrett coiddn’t fly in from California to meet her—shei was so depressed that she started eating potato pancakes. • “That’s my excuse for eating,” explained C!ass Elliott—that’s her real name. “You can ^ always find a reason, ^e war in Vietnam, | Biafra, my coat being too long, anything!” Helping herself to more potato pancakes, she said Barrett, director of her TV special ' ABC, was not her boy friend (“I wish he was”). She’s hoping to blast off 55 more pounds bringing her to a sexy 110. “A lot of 110-pounders don’t have your sex appeal,” we said. WILSON “Absolntely!” she agreed. “They have an antiseptic quality, they look like ^ey»ve never been dirty. They look like they don’t have scars on their knees from falling off bicycles when they were kids.” “Mama”—who reduced her statistics from 44-52-55 to 32-42-44 —and wears a size 18 dress—has been divorced from singer-composer James Hendricks but looks forward to a happy life. “God hasn’t slighted me in any way. I also have talent,” she said, and the worshipers of “The Mamas and Papas,” with whom she started, agreed. “The thin, beautiful girls I know are not deep. They never see beyond their own reflections.” * Pushing in the last of the potato pancakes, she said, “I’d like to be the kind of girl, if I walked down the football field, Joe Namath would tackle me.” THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . . Is the LoriUard cigaret company showing an interest in buying the Jets? (Bob Tisch was looking over the Philadelphia Eagles not long ago) ... Bill Harrah (of Reno and Lake Tahoe casinos) and his wife Scherry got the divorce . . . Barbra Streisand, asked to do a “Funny Girl” sequel, said by the time she’s competed her other work “I’ll be playing Fanny Brice as a grandmother.” Burlesque impresario Harold Minsky checked over the former Latin Quarter site. (For a big new cafe?) . . . Mickey Robney’ll be “George M!” in summer stock . . . Marty Mills is sporting a beard, and his wife Edie Adams explains jokingly, “I think he’s going ta play ‘Zorba’ next week.” TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Floridian Sheila MacRae bought an ermine coat, telling her husband, “Well, I might be on a plane that’s hijacked to Green Bay some day!” WISH I’D SAID IHAT: The trouble with a bikini is that it shows a girl pff, or shows a girl up. -Evan Esar. REMEMBERED QUOTE: “There’s only one thing .better than a cold shower before breakfast—and that’s no cold shower before breakfast.” EARL’S PEARLS: Bobby Goldsboro reports that our fighting men took 20 prisoners yesterday-18 teachers, one dean and a principal. Comic Scoey Mitchlll is asked often about the spelling of his name. “I know there are three I’s,” he explains, “-but you only pronounce two of them.” . . . 'That’s eari, Iwother. -Television Programs- Programs furnishod by stations listed in this column aro subject to change without noticAt Chonnels: 2-WJBK-TV. 4-WWJ-TV. 7-WXYZ-TV. 9-CKlW-TV, 50-WKBD-TV, 56-WTVS-TV. 62-WXON-TV - Rerun C — Color MONDAY NIGHT 1:00 (2) (4) (7) C - News, Weather, Sports (9) R C - Movie: “The Naked Brigade” (1965) British girl joins up with Greek guerrillas when country is overrun by Nazis in 1941. Shirley Eaton, Ken Scott (50) R C — Flintstones (56) Friendly Giant (62) R-Sea Hunt 1:15 (56) R-'Hme for John 6:30 (2) C - News -Cronkite (4) C — News — Huntley, Brinkley (7) C — News — Reynolds (50) R — McHale’s Navy (56) R — Brother Buzz (62) R C — My Friend Flicka 7:00 (2) C — Triith or Consequences (4) (7) C - News, Weather, Sports (50)R-ILoveLucy (56) Title Hunt ^ (62) R C — Movie: “Bte Money” (British, 1954)\ Man is family failure be-, cause he can’t conunit successful crime. Ian Carmichael, Belinda Lee 7:30 (2) C — Gunsmoke — Marshall Dillon, en route to Dodge City with deathbed statement needed as evidence in trial, finds refuge in camp of exslave family after he is wounded. Brock Peters heads guest list. (4) C — I Dream of Jeannie — Small-town officials who take dim riew of “city folks” decide to throw the book at Tony and Roger for minot traffic violation. (7) C — Avengers — Tara King is kidnaped and mysteriously transported back to the year 1917, where she assumes the identity of girl named Pandora, slated to be murdered. (50) R C — Hazel (56) Bridge With Jean Cox 8:60 (4) C — Rowan and Martin — Flip Wilson appears a s bflchelangelo and a hip weather forecaster. “Mod, Mod World” looks at senior (9)RC-ISpy (50) C —Pay Cards (56) NET Journal —, “Some of Our Best Friends” 8:25 (62) Greatest Headlines 8:36 (2) C — Here’s Lucy — LUcy convinces farmer lo convert his farm into a “fun farm” similar to dude ranch, where city slickers pay to do the chores. (7) C — Peyton Place — Norman tells Steven to leave Rodney and Betty' alone; Betty Informs Steven shis isn’t going to protest the will. (50) C — Password (62) R — Movie: “Time Limit” (1957) Army colonel investigates whether an officer should face court-martial for collaborating with the enemy. Richard Widmark, Richard Basehart, June Lockhart 1:06 (2) C - Mayberry R.F.D. — Emmet closes his fix-lt shop and retires, but is soon bored and becomes burden to everyone in Mayberry. (4) C — Movie: “The Plainsman” (1966) Wild Bill Hickok and Calamity Jane suspect a merchant of selling stolen repeater rifles to Indians. Don Murray, Guy Stockwell, Abby Dalton, Edward (7) C r- Outcasts — Corey comes under pressure -'—Radio Programs— wmf7*0) WXYZO 2701 CKlW(600) WWJfWO) WCAR(1130) WW)N(1460) WJ6I((1500) WHFI-FM(94ji nport* AW WJS. tiM-WWjr, Tomy, jf' Rtvliw ® WJII, Lowell Thofiw*. Aolo-tm NOW*, Tom WCaS! now*, Rick Siowort V*JR, world Tonight , . WWJ, Now*, suburlon Solute 7:11-WJR, builnoss, So^s 7:S»-WXYZ, Oovo Lodchort WWJ. SoaFhUli* T^Rnr-oWo W . 7?iS-WJR, Muolcol I h 0 w ■ TV Features GUNSMOKE, 7:30 p.m. (2) T DREAM OF JEANNIE, 7:30 p.m. (4) AVENGERS, 7:30 p.m. (7) ROWAN AND MARTIN, 8 p.m. (4) NET JOURNAL, (56) 8 p.m. .... mis-wjR. soert* iit»-wwJ, OverniMit > WJR, Muolc Tiu Down 11:tg-CKCW, Motk Richard* WCAR, Wayno Phillips WJBK, Nlghttlmo -----T, Now*. Jlr ^VcISrlloV I. Now*. BUI Dolzell nSBrOWHPl, Gory Puroco WJR, Now*, Music Hall ------ * Warran V:M-WJR, News' WHPl. uncle JdV CKLW, Frank Biadia NOWS, Ask Your WWJ. NOWI t:15-WJR?pp*n “—a, WXYZ, Nows, Johnny Randall WJBK, Nows, Conrad Pat- when it is believed that he knows where $50,000 in bank loot is hidden. (9) C - What’s My Line? — Guest panelists for the week are Soupy Sales, Joanna Barnes and Garry Moore. (50) R — Perry Mason 9:36 (2) C - FamUy Affair — Jody is jealous of attention given to his pen pal, a little boy frohfi Brief progresB reports on die Apollo 9 million will be interspersed among regular network programming. I1:SS-WJR, NSW*, KalaldO, VWL Jim Zln»*f TUCSDAV UiiS-WJR, Naws, Farm CKLW, Jim Edward* IlilS-WJR, Focus WWJ, Naws,jimph*ti* »;tl-WWJ, Marty McNaaity iiW-WJR, NaWs, At Hama 1:IS-WJR, Arthur SIngar WHaT/ BIII Lynch WJR, Naws, Dimension WXYZ, Mika Sherman .... Hall WJBIO Naps, H*nk O'Nell CKLW. Ed MltchSII S:M-WWJ, Nawstlme News Bolivia who^ comes to visit. (9) C — Tommy Hunter 10:66 (2) C — Caro) Burnett — Ross Martin and John Davidson guest'^tar. (7) C — Big Valley —By renting a farm to Mormon and Ws two wives, Jarrod arouses anger of bully and his gang. (9) C — Front Page Challenge (50) C — News, Weather, Sports (56) R — City Makers 10:36 (9) R — Danger Man — Deep in Arabian desert, Drake finds that slave rings and stranded show girls spell double trouble. (50) R - Alfred Hitchcock (56) R - Folk Guitar (62) Rr-Star Performance (2) (4) (7) (9) C - 11:(M News, Weather, Sports (50) R — Movie: “No Time for Comedy” (1940) Small-town playwright, who comes to Broadway to see his play produced, falls iji love with play’s (62) R — Movie: “Sincerely Yours” ( 19 5 5 ) Concert pianist brings joy to empty lives around him. Liberace, Joanne Dru, Alex Nicol 11:30 (4) C — Johnny CJarson (7) C — Joey Bishop — Guests include Mahalia Jackson, Jahe Wyman and Ken Berry. (9) R C — Movie: “The Black Torment” (English, 1964) Nobleman returns . with second wife to his estate to find ghostly goings-on. John Turner, Hea-. ther Sears 11:35 (2) R — Movie: “The Doll That Took the Town” (French, 1960) Girl who wants to make it big in show business fakes an attack to get some publicity. Verna Lisi 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) R — Texan (9) C —Perry’s Probe 1:30 (2) R — Naked City TUESDAY MORNING 5:50 (2) TV Chapel 5:55 (2) C — On the Farm Scene 6:66 (^C - Sunrise 16:00 (2) R C - The Lucy Show (4) C—Snap Judgment (9) Canadian Schools 10:16 (56) American History 16:25 (4) C - News 10:30 (2) C — Mike Douglas — Cornell Wilde is cohost. (4) C — Concentration (7) C—Anniversary Game . (9) Ontario Schools 16:35 (56) Science Is Fun 10:56 (56) listen and Say 11:66 (4) C-Personality (7)C — Galloping Gourmet (50) C — Jack LaLanne 11:26 (56) Americans From Africa 11:36 (4) C - Hollywood Squares (7) R — Bachelor Father (9) Take Thirty (50) C-Klmba 11:50 (50) Friendly Giant TUESDAY AFTERNOON By CYNTHIA LOWRY AP Television-Radio Writer NEW YORK (AP) -“Bonanza,” in an episode considerably off its usual track, combined on Sunday night many of the standard ingredients of a Western with a n based on man’s inhumanity to man. The episode was written and directed by Michael Landon, \riio plays one of the Cartwright brothers most weeks, but turned the lead in the episode over to Dan Blocker. 6:30 (2) C - Woodrow the Woodsman (4) C — Classroom 6:45 (7) C-r Bat Fink 7:06 (4) C-Today (7) C —Morning Show 7:36 (2) G-News, Weather, Sports 7:56 (9) Warm-Up 8:66 (2) C - Captain Kiangaroo (9) C - Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round (56) I nterviewing for Results 8':65 (9) Mr. Dressup 8:30 (7) R — Movie: “The Glass Menagerie” (1950) (9) R —Friendly Giant 8:45 (9) Chez Helene 8:50 (56) Americans From Africa 9:00 (2) R C Beverly HilMlies (4) C — Steve Allen (9) C — Bozo 9:20 (56) Singing, Listening, Doing 9:30 (2) R-DIck Van Dyke 9:40 (56) Book Parade 9:55 (56) TeUMeaStory 12:00 (2) C-News, Weather, Sports (4) C — Jeopardy (7) R-Bewitched (9) C — Bonide Prudden (50) C-Alvin 12:05 (56) Misterogers 12:25 (2) C-Fashions 12:36 (2) C — Search for Tomorrow (4) C — News, Weather, Sports (7) C — Funny You Should Ask (9) R — Movie: “The Rabbit Trap” ( 1959 ) (50) R — Movie: “The Lost Moment” ( 194 7 ) 12:45 (56) Singing, Listening, Doing 12:55 (4) C-News (7) C-ChUdren’s Doctor 1:06 (2) C — Love of life (4) C —Match Game (7) C — Dream House 1:05 (56) Tell Me a Story 1:25 (2) C-News (4) C — Carol Duvall 1:30 (2) C - As the World Turns . (4) C — Hidden Faces (7) C - Let’s Make a Deal 1:45 (^) Listen and Say 2:00 (2) C — Divorce Court (4) C — Days of Our Lives (7) C — Newlywed Game (50) C — American West (56)* Science Is Fun 2:15 (56) Of Cabbages and Kings 2:30 (2) C - Guiding Light (4) C — Doctors (7) C —Dating Game (9) C - (Special) - Ontario Legislature (50) R — Make Room for Daddy 2:40 (56) R-All Aboard for Reading 3:06 (2) C - Secret Storm (4) C - Another World (7) C — General Hospital (50) R —Topper (56) R — Bridge with Jean Cox 8:30 (2) C-Edge of Night (4) C - You Don’t Say (7) C — One Life to Live (9) C — Bozo’s Big Top (50) C — Captain Detroit (56) Efficient Reading 4:00 (2) C-LinkletterShow (4) C — Donald O’Connor (7) C — Dark Shadows (9) C —Tom Shannon (56) C—Human Relations 4:30 (2) C — Merv Griffin (7) R—Movie: “The Counterfeit Traitor” (1962) William Holden, Lilli Palmer (Part 1). (50) R - Little Rascals (56) What’s New (62) C — Bugs Bunny and Friends 5:00 (9) R C — Batman (50) R — Munsters (56) TV Kindergarten (62) R —Robin Hood 5:30 (4) C—George Pierrot — “California’s High Country” (9) R C—Gilligan’s Island (56) Misterogers (50) RC —Superman (62) R ■— Leave It to Beaver WASHINGTON (UPI) - Odds and ends from the nation’s capital — mostly odd: Charles W. Yost, U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, opened his speech to a gathering of state governors with ‘just a few words to tide you over for the weekend.” Washington's Words Are Sometimes Wacky lensmen, "but one of you is in trouble.” ^. Then he told of the young couple who went to a Justice of the Peace and asked' to be married. “I’m sorry,” said his honor, “but we’ve got a waiting period in this state. The earliest could conduct the ceremony would be Monday.” "Well,” said the prospective bridegroom after a moment’s reflection, “could you just saij) a few words to tide us over the weekend?” Rep. James G. Fulton, R-Pa,, of the House Science and Astronautics Committee, thinks the spaceflight people should stop pinning those fancy astronomical names on their programs. MISUSING NAMES You neoclassicists are misusing ttie names anyway,” Fulton told Thomas 0. Pabw,-who has just been piromoted tq ' administrator of the National. Aeronautics and Spaqd Administration. 'Apollo is identified with thq sun god. Why can’t you just caH it moon shot 1, 2, 3 or 4, or. Mars 1,2, or so on.” WAYWARD WORDS Sen. Gaylord Nelson, D-Wis. discussing the potent drug Chloromycetin, said: “This is a matter of life or death to anyone who takes it and dies.” Walter Reed Army Medical Center, reporting that former President Dwight D Eisenhower had been treated to jello, said: "He ate it with relish.” * Paine just gave a pain^ smile. Doctor Denies Liz Has Cancer Columnist's Report 'Entirely Unfounded'', Sen. James 0. Eastland, D-Miss., has been known to op-civil rights measures things like that. Walter Washington, mayor of the District of Columbia, is Ne^o. FRIENDLY CHAT The two ran into each other at a party and had a friendly chat. A photographer happened by and took their picture. Before he moved Washington jokingly asked the photographer to whopi he had been talking. 'I wouldn’t say,” replied the HOLLYWOOD UB — Elizabeth Taylor’s physician labeled 8s “entirely unfounded” Saturday a columnist’s report that the beautiful actress may havq cancer of the spine. >' Dr. Rex Kennamer issued a statement denying that Miss Taylor, 37, had entered Cedars -of Lebanon Hospital for cancer .' tests. Rather, he said, she is undergoing a general checkup ; and is expected to be releas^ in about three days. Detroit Free Press columnist Marilyn Beck, writing fropi Hollywood, said in a story. Saturday that Miss Taylor’s physician had confirmed her trouble as mote A Look at Television 'Bonanza' Plot Is Predictable recurrmg fc serious than first supposed. She also quoted a spokesmad from 20th Century-Fox as saying, “We are very much concerned for her life.” the jaws of the bullies. The bad guys retaliated later by beating up the little boy. This led to another round of fisticuffs, this time by the boys’ father. It was a story about a Negro farmer, a former slave who had bought his freedom and moved west with his family. Hoss— Blocker’s role—encountered the -year-old farmer’s son saying: ‘I wish my papa was white.” the story then moved in the pected direction. Hoss took the boy back to his farm and found the rest of the family in dire straits. He The story had an interesting twist in the bitter attitude of the Negro farmer—well played by ssie Davis — toward his benefactor as well as his despair and resignation about the bigotted townfolk. There were some awkward and saccharine bits, particularly in scenes between Blocker and a fine young actor named George | l^ell, who played the smallest boy. Generally it appeared that Michael Landon is a better actor than a script writer, but he proved that his heart is in the right place. CBS, in a last minute switch, substituted a rerun of a two - month - old “Smothers Brother Comedy Hour” for the to turn good Samaritan and since there had to be conflict, it came when he returned to town with the two boys and some eggs they had for sale. CALLED NAMES A pair of bulUes picked on the boys and called them names— names rarely heard o n television until recently—and smashed the eggs. of - course, intervened with two well-placed rights to Ag Aide Sees Link of City Ills, Farms EAST LANSING (AP) - Secretary of Agriculture Clifford Hm-din said yesterday “The problems and opportunities of the congested cities are closely interrelated with those of the farms and the open country of these United States.” He said one problem facing the United States at the end of the century is whether “we will be developing rural, open areas to spread out the people over the land and level off our concentrated problems of the metropolis and megalopolis.” Hardin delivered the address gt Michigan State University’) winter cxunmencement exercises. He is a former MSU dean. new prograin originally Network spokesmen said the change was made because CBS did not receive a tape of the-new show in time to permit executives of its affiliated stations to preview it on a closed circuit. “'The content of the broadcast is not at issue,” said a network statement. “As broadcast licensees, the stations affiliated with the ... network have the right to preview on request any program before it is presented on the air.” ' Adult Foment Linked to NY School Unrest The program announced originally for the time period had folk singer Joan Baez and comedian Jackie Mason as guest stars. Miss Baez has taken a well-publicized stand against the Vietnam war and been the center of considerable controversy. RUNNING WARFARE The Smothers Brothers have conducted running warfare against CBS censorship policies and occasionally have had material blue-pencill^, particularly material of a political nature. NEW YQRK (AP) - Retiring Schools Supt. Bernard E. Donovan has accused “a number of adults with revolutionary tendencies” of helping to foment disorder in city schools. Donovan, 58, whose resignation becomes effective Sept. 1, said Sunday he did not care to identify the adults, but added that he had seen “the same faces" at various demonstrations. The network spokesman said, however, that an announcement would be made early this week setting the date on which the program would be broadcast. John Doar, president of the board of education, said “we have some evidence of outside people” but declined to elaborate. Disorders have erujjted in a half;dozen schools in recent trigg^ed by student rampages and demonstrations by parents seeking changes in the educational system or tiie oifster of individual administrators. Donovan spoke on the WABG TV program “Superintendent of Schools Reports,” and Doar on the WNBC-TV pj^gram Searchlight.” Rookie Distracted for a Momenf; 14 Suspects Flee LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) -Fourteen persons arrested in a vice raid yesterday walked away free from police headquarters while a rookie patrolman- momentarily looked the other way. The prisoners were herded _ito an elevator in the base-meiR and left in charge of Patrolman Gary Wilson, 23. Wilson was distracted for a moment, the elevator door slanuned shut and the elev|tor rose to the ground floor, police said. The prisoners walkid out the main door. Police said they had no record of the escapees because they had not been booked. ‘NOT TRUE’ “The report is not true,” Dr; Kennamer said. “Reports of 1 : malignancy are entirely up-founded.” Miss Taylor’s husband, actop Richard Burton, said of the report, “There is nothing to : at all.” Miss Taylor entered the hospital Wednesday for what was described as extensive tests and X rays of a “degenerating disc” in her spine, the result of an operatimi several years ago to fuse two discs, as well as .a ; general checkup. Two 20th Century-Fox pub^:' relations executives said they; had lunch Thursday with Miss Beck, but denied they had expressed fear for Miss Taylor’s life. ‘NONE KNOW HER’ Miss Taylor’s publicity director, John Springer, said in Ndw York of the anonymous studio ‘spokesman” quoted in Miss Beck’s story: “There’s nobody at Fox who knows her wcU enough to say hdlo.” Both Dr. Kennamer and friends of the actress said she was tired from nine months of work, completed,last week, on a movie, “'The Only Game in The Burtons’ secretary, Jili Benton, said the couple would leave for a vacation at their home in Puerto Vallarta, Mex- ; ico, as soon as Miss Taylor leaves the hospital. Color TV RCA-ZENITH LOWEST PRICES BEST SERVICES CONDON'S 730W.HymifE4-»7S* TV Salas oml Servica SERVICE SPECIALISTS HOD’S no ORCHARD LAKE AVE. ■’U C—10 WUMi THE FONT!AC PRESS. MONDAY, MARCH 10, 1^69 1=/ IT’S NEW! irS DIFFERENT! ITS THOMAS FURNITURE’S - UNIQUE PONTIAC STORE ONLY , . . Back-Room' Clearance here’s the inside story of our '^back-room’ sc^! ■_______________________________ Shipments of furniture purchased at the recent Chicago Home Furnish- Ings Show are arriving at our stores. Frankly, we need valuable floor S ■ space to new room up I window . or-two-of-a>kind items them to our at the Pontiac store. We've slashed the pricesi You'll save 20% to * ' S0%l For the furniture you've dreamed of owning at bargain prices you can't afford to pass up... be at our Pontiac store Tuesday or Wednesday evening behmen 7P.M. and 10 P.M.1 i^ifffirrT tjl "'nwflffsttf., ‘’••nuuM WIBUrnrnm^ ‘^mniuu 96 Occasional Tables - Most Styles....... Reg. <29’° t.9’°»*149’° nw *58 i. *78 163 Assorted Lamps and Pictures...........................Reg. *i9» » m *12 n *59 89 Dressers, Mirrors, Beds, Chests, Etc.____________________Reg. *39« k,'269’° mw *19^*199 138 Miscellaneous Dining Room Pieces.........................Reg. «i9’° to<279’° mw *14to*199 27 Five and Seven Piece Dinettes ..........................Reg. »79««. »i79« nn *59»*129 46 Modem, Traditional and Colonial Sofas.... Reg *229’°»«479’° mw *133 e*278 102 Luxury Lounge Chairs-;Tlcc. Chairs, Rockers Reg. «39’° «><260°° mw *19«*128 53 Mattresses & Box Springs Mi,FniiT ’ S >.r',\, ? i- H 'rt' ii.'V>fe'4 Wf '■ t f^liSf^iirSM r I tif r U «fil|llll iff i* f^rnim umi$ I f I » »l|5f Kft kU I HMf hlUfl ill: I s fi M ;v|;i| I y I ItflJNsil4 IN f ^ i i l| " £■ * 'C I I ^*11 i ; if f f f t ■ ^ t I •? t.sr ^|E?3- 'I i' I r l*v ? f I I 4 I ‘! F ^ if i" I '§ '■ H tv”| |i I'-i^ 4-»' ||:| I'III : hi 11: l:^'-f I •■ • ? f- i !|f t ; I b I li ir rylrNtf4f ■f N.'i i-'"'HN'r k j : ' |r ^pfc I ‘ 11 1iiil;' t ;4ii II - *«,f.>, t ■ InK 4l'. I.' I I:. I: I "fe iiili i f t ' . I ’ ^ '; Mh' I I f ti I |i f ^ ‘MU i I : ^ >:A te : . READf-MADES WORK MA3IC N THB MOimj RCX3M-AND THEY DO fT IN AN INSTANT! AND SO CAN TOU TOO! 5B. Softique Danish cushion set by Bonnie in glove-soft, machine-wash vinyl. Tangerine, gold, moss, white, red, black, lime, shocking, sapphire, saddle. Set, $15. As close as 223-5100 or Downtown, 8th; Northland, Eastland, Westland, Pontiac, Oakland . . . you ID uncover all these ways to put life and color in your home. Covers, chair pads, pillows, draperies, shelves, and more! 5C. Matching 16" toss pillows, each, $4. 5D. Solid color Razzle or striped Dazzle sleepons by Sure Fit turn beds into sofas. Of homespun weave cotton with a Scotchgard"^ treatment. Red, berry, lime, cafe. Four-sided Hollywood cover, $25. Wedge bolster cover, set, $16. 5G. Heavy duty adjustable one-way draw traverse rod for patio doors or proBfem windows. 28-48", $5; 48-84", $7,84-156"„ 9.50. Specify right or left hand draw. 5A. Sunburst draperies by Robertson Factories are a closely woven rayon on a polyester net; has a sheer look, but still affords privacy. White, natural, avocado. Per pair: 48x36" long, $5; 48x45", $6; 48x63", $7; 48x84", $8; 72x45", $10; 72x63", $12; 72x84", $13; 96x45", $14; 96x63", $16; 96x84", $18; 120x84", $26; 144x84", $28.Patio 1,82x84", for 6' door, $20. Patio II, 106x84", for 8' door, $25. See back4»age for how-to-measure and order. 5H. Cheswick replacement pads by Crawford for redwood furniture. Multi-floral fabric tops, cotton duck bottoms. 72x24" chaise cushion, $21 ; 44x23'chair, $15. tiXJD SON’S 'READ/-MADES AJ^IE\/E A POPULAR MEDITRRANEAN MOOD IN THB BOOM 7E. Wellesley slipcovers by Sure Fit in 99% acrylic for clear color, 1% Lycra® spandex for good fit. Brown, olive, turquoise, melon, gold. Chair if40, #43, #45, #42, $20. Sofas #48, #58, #59, #52, #53. $40. See back page for style chart and how-to-measure and how to order. Dark wood shelves and wooden rods, a mix of provincial prints, plus well-, 7f. Berwick stretch nyion/rayon slipcovers ' ' I ' ■ Ijy washable, no iron. Brown, fitting slipcovers do this instant-decorating trick effectively. Find these #45*^5°soSs#51,^^^^^^^ 1 iiir-l l%A/ll'r>- I I J Sectionals #74, #77, #78, $20. See back ideas at Downtown, 8th; Northland, Eastland, Westland, rontiac, Uakland. page for how-to-measure, how to order. 7A. Hudson’s own solid Moroccan oak wood shelving. 8x24 8x30*, $15; 8x36*, $18; 8x48’, $24; 10x24", $17; 10x30', $21 ; 10x36*. $25; 10x48*, $32; 12x30*, $27; 12x36*-, $32; 12x48* $40. Thick 1%* brackets; 8*. 5.50; 10*, 6.50; 12*, 7.50. Thin 1 * brackets; 8*, 2.80: 10*, 3.80; 12*. 4.80. Wall standards; 36*, $11 ; 48*, $14; 60*, $17. 8x12* pedestal with brackets, $12. 12x30* magazine rack with brackets, $35. $12; 7G. Grand Prie I unlined draperies by Homestead in rayon/acetate antique satin. White in stock: 10 day warehouse delivery' on gold, olive. Per pair: 48x36’ long, $7; 48x45*, $8; 48x54*, 8.50; 48x63*, $9; 48x72*, 9.50; 48x84", $10; 72x36*, $11: 72x45*, $13; 72x54*, 13.50; 72x63*, $14; 72x72*, $15: 72x84*, $16; 96x36*, $15; 96x45*, $16; 96x54*, $17; 96x63*, $18; 96x72*, $19; 96x84*, $20; 120x45*, $21 ; 120x63*,\$23; 120x84*, $26; 144x63*, $27; 144)^2*, $29; 144x84*, $30; plain valance, $6; trimmed valance, $7; tiebacks,' 3.50; swags, $8: jabots, $7. Special order colprs available including flax, peacock, oyster, champagne, seafoam, ombre, avocado, banana, Spanish gold, daffodil, celadon, ocean blue. Special order sizes, per pair: 48x90*, $12; 48x95*, $13; 72x90*, $18; 72x95*, $20; 96x90*, $24; 96x95*, $26; 120x90*, $30; 144x90*, $36; 144x95*, $39y 192x95*, $50. See back page for how-to-measure and how to order. 7C. Windsor printed linen toss pillows by Crawford. Emerald, gold, walnut, royal, flame; 17* knife with kapok filling, $6. 7D. Linen toss pillows by Crawford, kapok filled. Driftwood, peacock, olive, walnut, blue, cognac, gold; 14* knife edge, $4. HXJD SON’S 71. Fruitwood solid wood cafe rod, 80^ ft. Rings. 35^ each. Ends, 1.40 pr. Brackets, 2.50 pr. Cut to your measurements. 7J. Metal cornice rod; 28-48*, 1.10;, 48-84*, 1.90; 84-156*, 3.90; sockets, 70^ pair. l\>\ ii;« il Ut' ' 1 I i; t f'V’: -A ., k, . \- i U II » t ••* ,* Ifc J!. W * »♦ iN ' \- w i r •n ,>?:• -’ (S ‘) V i.''i J ^i- •'/ i'” ^ ^ '-i-■ ■■ -V J.V 1V-.'_ J' ,'3\ •, '■f "S. $13; 48-84", $17; 84-150", $25. 9K. Hudson's own Colonial Pine' shelving in solid pine with maple stain. With 1 bracket, 8x12", $12. With 2 brackets: 8x18", $17; 8x24", $20; 8x30", $23; 8x36", $26; 8x48". $31 ; 10x24", $27; 10x30", $31.10x36"; $35; and 10x48", $41. 9 A JIFW..REACY D 9ZE OF \A^NCX:W Name your style, color, fa brie... chances are you’ll find it included here! Call,223-5100 or come to Hudson’s Downtown, 8th; Northland, Eastland, West-land, Pontiac, Oakland. See the bock page for how-‘to-measure, how to order. 11 [AST FACE-LIF15 FORY3URW1NDOA/5 IN 3CAC6 OF 3ZES, LQACSaSIYLES Sheers that go-it-alone or under draperies, prints, ruffles, colors galore! Call 223-5100 or come to Hudson’s Downtown, 8th; Northland, Eastland, West-land, Pontiac, Oakland. See the back page for how-to-measgre, how to order. 13 3 14A. Charmino Early American print Whitney slipcover by Sure Fit in machine-washable* no-iron 89% cotton, 11% stretch nylon. Has reversible cushion covers, separate adiustable skirt that hides unsightly legs. Red, brown or olive. Chair )(I42, #45, $18. Sofas #48, #52, #53, $38. 14C. Nassau modern multircolor floral pattern slipcover gives a summery look to enjoy all year. Has all of Sure Fit's practical features-—wash-ability, no-iron, stain-repellent finish, 89% cotton and 11% stretch-to-fit nylon, over-locked seams that won’t fray. Chairs #40, #43, #45. #42, $20. Sofas #48, #52, #53, #58, #59. $40. 14B. Contemporary floral print Chelsea slipcover by Sure Fit, in up-to-date colors of brown or green. It's 89% cotton, 11% stretch nylon with a stain-repellent finish, machine washable, and it never needs ironirtg. Chairs #43, #45. #40, $18. Sofas #48, #58, #59, $38. 14D. Softique by Bonnie in glove-soft, machine-washable vinyl. Avocado, gold, red, black, white, sapphire blue, saddle. Studio cover, $16. Hollywood cover, $18. Wedge bolster cover, $8. 22' floor cushion (in above, plus lime, shocking, tangerine), $7. Also in 10 colors: chair pads, #4: rocker pad sets, $10. i4 downtown DETROIT, Woodward Ave. and Grand River; NORTHLAND CENTER, 8 Mile and Northwestern; EASTLAND CENTER, 8 Mile and Kelly WEVE A [ASHDN RGhfT, FASHDN-BRGHT VARIETY OF WAtSlO PROTEQ NBA/ FURNflURE OR REJUVENATE QD-AND (X) IT INSTANTIY No waiting weeks to hove them in your home—see the bock page for style chart, how-to-measure and order. All are great for adding excitement and change to any room—thrifty too! What's more, if your purchase totals $25 or more you can use a Hudson's Extended Payment Plan or your Hudson's Charge Account with Option Terms, and avoid doing your decorating piece-meal. You'll find all these ideas—end more—at Hudson's Downtown, 8th Floor; also available at Northland, Eastland, and Westland Centers,'^Pontiac, and Oakland Malls. XJ 3D S O 3Sr ’ s 15A. Gemini group by Edson has the look of fur—^though it's really acrylic pile with a sturdy cotton back. Avocado, old gold, royalty blue, fire red, black or white. Washable Hollywood cover disguises a bed and gives a den atmosphere, $26, Washable bolster cover, $6. Comfortable bed rest, $12. 27x27* floor cushion, $12. 156. Hi-low cotton corduroy provides a casual country look. Covers are machine washable and extremely sturdy. Vibrant colors of scarlet, spring green, starfire blue, nu-gold, beaver brown, avocado, and burnt orange keep their good looks. The weight puts it in a luxury category. Styled by Edson. Hollywood cover, $30. Wedge bolster cover, $6. Taboret base, $20; stack cushions, $10 each. Roads; WESTLAND CENTER, Warren and Wayne Roads; PONTIAC MALL, Telegraph and Elizabeth Lake Rds.; OAKLAND MALL, 1-75 and 14 Mile Road 16A. Fabric frame shutters in pre-saiKled Northern Pine by Joanna Western^ 6x16M .10; 7x16', 1.40; 8x16', 1.80; 9x16', 2.10; 10x16', 2.20; 12x16', 2.50; 6x20', 1.60; 7x20', 1.80; 8x20', $2; 9x20', 2.30; 10x20', 2.40; 12x20', 2.80; 6x24', 1.90; 7x24'. 2.10:8x24', 2.30; 9x24', 2.50; 10x24', 2.60; 12x24', 2.90; 6x28', 2.40; 7x28', 2.50:8x28', 2.60; 9x28'. 2.70:10x28', 2.90; 12x28'. 310; 6x32, 2.50; 7x32', 2.70:8x32'. 2.90; 9x32', $3: 10x32', 3.10, 12x32', 3.60; 6x36', 2.60; 7x36', 2.90; 8x36', 3.10; 9x36'. 3.20; 10x36', 3.30 12x36', 3.60; 8x40'. 3.40 9x40', 3.50, 10x40'. 3.80 12x40', 4.40. 16C. 1' brass cafe style traverse rod. 28-48' 6.90; 48-84', 10.60; 84-156', $15; 130-244', $22. With hardware. 16B. Cotton velveteen toss pillows by Bonnie, kapok filled. Avocado, shocking, blue, turquoise, lemon, lipstick, papaya, sun gold. 11' round or square box, 14' round or square button. Each, $3. 16D. Pemberton translucent shade by Breneman. White: 37%'x6', 4.70; 46%'x6’, 6.80; 55%'x6', 8.90; 64%'x 6', 12.30; 73%'x6’, 14.90; cream, 37%'x6‘, 4.70. 16E. Room-darkening Sunstop by Breneman. White: 37%'x6', 5.30; 46%'x6', 7.40:55%'x6‘, 10.50; 64%'x 6', 15.50; 73%'x6', 18.30; cream, 37%'x6‘, 5.30. 16F 1%' cafe traverse rod with rings, hardware. Antique brass, antique white, walnut, avocado', red*. 28-48', $13; 48-84', $18:84-156', $24:130-244', $30. 'Special order. H XJ 3D S O W ’ S 16G. Heavy duty adjustable traverse rod in white enamel^ metal with nylon slides and nylon pulleys. Will operate with the heaviest of lined draperies. 28-48', $5; 48-84', $7 ; 84-156', 9.50; 120-228', $12. le 16H. Windsor rocker set by Crawford. Jacobean print linen, urethane filled. Royal, walnut, gold, emerald, flame. 17%x16%x2' seat, 17%x20x1' back, $12. 161, Crawford's versatile roll-about is covered in wipe-clean vinyl. Gold, olive, black; 20x20' size. Base with casters, $18; cushions, 8.50 ea. 17A. Mobile hassock on wheels by Crawford. Gold, olive, ivory or black vinyl. 21'x13* high, $18. 17B. Saddle-stitched vinyl bench by Crawford. Tan, ivory, olive, gold, black. Measures 24x16x1high, $15. 17C. Crawford's hourglass vanity seat covered in rayon moire. Olive, gold, blue, pink, lipstick. 1514x1714’ high, $23. REE C0LG.1S 170. Northern Pine door panels by Joanna Western, priced per panel. Full fixed louvers: 12x80', 9.90; 14x80', $11; 15x80', $12; 16x80', $13; 18x 80', $14. Half-fixed louvers: 12x80’, 10.30; 14x80', 10.90; 15x80', 12.70; 16x80', 13.70; 18x80', $15. Movable louvers. 12x80', $11; 14x80', $12; 15x80’, $13; 16x80’, $14; 18x80', $15.. 17E. Mariner toss pillows by Crawford, covered in cotton duck, filled with kapok. Lime, forsythia, turquoise, pink, avocado, gold, poppy. 12' round orsquare box, 14’ square knife, $3. READ/- / MADE o PERK UP ROOMS VWH RIOA^ SHLfITERS 10 STAIN OR RW, DEOORAflVE CXUORS'AND ROCS Call 223-5100 or come to Downtown, 8th Floor; also Northland, Eastland, Westland, Pontiac, Oakland. 17 You can get any exact size, any degree of fullness, any color of the rainbow, any type of fabric in made-to-measure draperies, lined or unlined — plus matching bedspreads and have delivery in ten days. Bring your measurements to Hudson's Downtown, 8th; Northland, Eastland, Westland, Pontiac, Oakland. For width, measure the width of your rod or the width of the area on the wall where the rod is to be placed. For length, measure from the top of the drapery rod to the exact length desired. We'll do all the rest. Your draperies will be hand-cut to exactly the size specified (and if you've ordered a bedspread it will be cut from the same bolt for an absolute color match). As for quality, side and bottom hems are doubled and blindstitched, patterns meticulously matched, and concealed corner weights are added to assure you of the correct alignment. Harlequin Throw bedspreads, quilted in hand guided style, in 3 patterns, 3 groups of fabrics. Prices range from $60 for a twin to $100 for a king. Special drops available at no extra charge. Group I, $60 twin; Group II, $70 twin; Group III, $80 twin. All these fabrics—386 colors in all I Frothy sheers, nubby textures, woven patterns, fresh prints, sturdy fiberglass—in everything from pastels to deep tones. And priced surprisingly low, for the most popular size 48' pleated pair width, 84' length ranges from $18 up to 44.60. SON’S 19 How To Select The Right Slipcover Match your furniture style and measurements to this chart and order by number. 40 Fits Aims 2" to 5" Backs 24" to 32" 43 Fits Arms 4" to 6" Wings Backs 24" to 32" 11" to 17' Square Cushion Only Fits Arms 5" to 11" Backs 26" to 3S" 45 "T" Cushion Only Squaie Cushion Only Fits Aims 3" to 8" Backs 25" tb 35" 51 Squo* Cushion Only Fits Aims 5" to 11" Backs 64" to 90" Aims 4" to 9"' Backs 64" to 84". Fits Aims 4" to 6" Wings Backs 68" to 88" 11" to 17 Cushion Only Fits arms 4* to 6* Wings Backs 68*to 88* ll*tol7 58 Fits Aims 2" to 5" Backs 70" to 90> 59 Fits arms 2* to 5* Backs 70* to 90* Reclinei Chaiis. Fits all’reeiiners up to 40" 74 Curved Centei Sectional Bachs 59" to 78" Ri^ Aims 4" to 8"; Backs 39" to 52", teh Aims 4" to 8", Backs 39" to 5?'. Squaie Cushion Hide' A-Beds with aims 4" to 8" wide; Backs 68" to 74" wide. How To Measure For Slipcovers Measure the arms at their widest point, and the backs at the widest point of the outside back above the arms. On wing chairs, measure the wing on the widest point of the outside back also. Note the cushion shapes too—whether they're square or "T". You Can Use Your Credit If your purchase totals $25 or more, you can use a Hudson's Extended Payment Plan—or your Hudson's Charge Account with Option Terms, and avoid doing your decorating piece-meal. Save This Guide To Order Keep these 20 pages handy, and when you want to order, just call 223-5100 or your toll-free suburban number, or use this coupon. Itom No. 1 Quantity 1 i . Name of Item [ Size Color / 1 2nd Color Choice | Price 1 h ^ --I — ! i ’ . -V - - j. 1 — 1 ! ■ 1 1 1 1 j i ■ ; i Li : I 1 ; i ^ L_ ' ^,1.- ,, '* ! r 1 1 : ^ H XJ 3D S O 1ST ’ S DOWNTOWN NORTHLAND EASTUND WESTLAND PONTIAC MALL OAKLAND MALL List each item by key number with first and second color choice and mail coupon to: The J. L. 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Choose full front mats, full’ bock mots, or twin front mats to pro> tact your car ftoorsi Durable, heavy duty vinyl in assorted colo oMi Fits most cars perfectly. vmik ‘SMOOTIT’ CAR WAX PRESTONE NEW WAX PAK IHlU>IR CAR JACK STAND UM M9 ».,M9 »,2.99 11 Super gloss wax protects one c«sse. 22 fl. oss. -30 Applicator, polish, car Adiuste to 4 positfonsi 14" wwh/chrome decmeri steel top ^plotel ifl. PAIMAN ATlAimC FAMILY DEPARTMENT STORES I IKS I l^ nisan v//a(, riRST IN FASHION! FIRST IN VAIUE! TERRIFIC PRICE CUTS IN OUR NATIONAL BRAND CENTER th» W^qthBr r •wtw’Vtracail Cloody, Cold THE ONE CpR^ mt Ray in Court PONTIAC PBESS ^May Plead Guilty PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, MARCH 10, I960 VOD. 1,27 '— NQ/27 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ unitbofww^ntkrm^^ —PAGES 10* i: • ...ViHBxi.......................................................................... 30 S. Viefs Die, 105 Wounded in Red Ambush SAIGON (AP) — Hundreds of enemy troops ambushed about 300 South Vietnamese paratroopers, killing 30 of the government soldiers and wouding 105 in a two-day battle that was still going on late today, the Saigon government said. The savage battle was one of five major fights reported in the past 24 hours — at three points near the Cambodian border and to the north and south of Saigon. The dead included 31 Americans and at least 27 Vietcong and North Vietnamese, allied spokesmen said. MEMPHIS, Tenn.. (AP) - James Earl Ray has a date in court today amid speculation — unconfirmed by any official source — that he would plead guil- s ' ty to murdering Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., and take a 99-y e a r prison sentence. There w% no guarantee tliat the hearing called by Judge W. Preston Battle would involve RAY a plea of guilt or innocence by the 40-year-old defendant. Sonrre observers thought it ffiight bring nothing more dramatic than a motion for a change of venue or some other legal maneuver by Ray’s lawyer, Percy Foreman of Houston, Tex. The Memphis Commercial Appeal reported that Foreman had conferred with two of Ray’s brothers and a sister last week, apparently to clear the way for a guilty plea. shdt as he stood on the balcony of the Lorraine Motel. EXTRAORDINARY SECURITY LONG-WAIT FOR PAROLE Doubters pointed out that with a 99-yegr sentence, Ray would not be eligible for parole for at least 33 years. The state had said previously it would demand death in the electric chair but no one has been executed in Tennessee since 1961. Should a jury sentence Ray to life imprisonment, parole could be possible in IS'/i years. Neither Foreman nor the prosecuting staff would comment on the reports that the deal for a 99-year term had'^been made. Ray, an escapee from the Missouri State Penitentiary, was arrested in London last June 8, two months and four days after King was killed by a single Ray was returned to Memphis in July after lengthy extradition proceedings and since then has been held under extraordinary security precautions in an air-conditioned and TV-monitored cell block of the Shelby County jail. He has made fewer than a half-dozen court appearances since his return, the first for his arraignment and the remainder as a series* of procedural defense motions were argued. Nixon AAoy Trim Plan The Vietcong also shelled more than 35 towns and allied bases during the night the enemy’s spring offensive con- tinued in its third week. ABM Verdict Near Tennessee law in first-degree-murder cases requires a jury to set a sentence regardless of the plea entered, but a provision of the statue allows jurors who say they can not agree with a recommended sentence to be disqualified. The law further requires that the prosecution must then prove that King was killed. Under the 'rules governing a guilty plea, the attorneys then stiuplate that if the case had gone to trial evidence would have been presented to show that Ray was the man who shot King. King was slain on the night of April 4 while in Memphis to help about 1,300 sanitation workers, most of them Negroes, in a strike against the city government. U.S. Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird told newsmen as he left Saigon after a four-day visit that the offensive is a “calculated esclatiop of the war." But he said it “has. not been successful.’’. NOT REVEALED Laird would not reveal the recommendations he is carrying back to President Nixon, excejit to say that he would request additional funds to strengthen the South Vietnamese armed services. Pontiac Prou Photo by Edward R. Noblo SIT-IN DEMONSTRATION — More than 250 black students participated in a sit-in this morning at Central High School, demanding a public hearing with the Pontiac Board of Education to discuss nine demands presented at last Thursday night’s board meeting. They said they felt their problems had not been fully f«aa da assas- New sec Boss ' ' ' QPlfy hia riyle will differ from fi^dee^asor - PACE A^. . Israeli shells hit Egypt’s oil refinery at Suez for the fpurth time since the 1967 war, and the Israelis said a petrochemical plant and oil,, storage tanks were still burring today. E^pt said three tanks were set afire. Israel said one of its Piper Cubs., was shot down, three Israelis including the pilot were killed and 14 were wounded. 3 EGYPTIANS KILLED Egypt said triree of its men were killed and 13 wounded and it lost a MIG jet. The semiofficial Cairo newspaper A1 Ahram said Riad had flown by helicopter to Ismailia yesterday and was observing the artillery duel with a group of officers when the shell landed closf to him. Riad, 50, was Egypt’s seapd-ranking soldier after the (tefense minister, Gen. Mohammed Fawzi. President Gamal Abdel Nasser posthumously awarded him Egypt’s highest military decoration, the Star of Hohor. The Army says the kitchen, i called “subsistence preparation by : electronic defuslori’or Speed, will ; make kitchen police obsolete. Its utensils are disposable. They ■: include paper plates and plasUc s spoons, cups and pans. Cooking is done by two microwave ovens, a grill and a forced-air oven. The kitchen is a pod-like affair ’i 12 feet long, seven feet wide and eight feet high. It can be carried I by helicopter or truck and comes stocked with enough food to maintain 200 men for a day. ^ It also contains an incinerator —^ for getting rid of the utensils. Spring Unsprung: Snow Due Tonight Spring hasn’t spruiig yet. T h e weatherman predicts snow flurries, cloudy skies and lower temperatures for today and tonight. Today’s high is due to be in the mid-30s with tooi^t’s low in the mid-20s. Tomorrow the flurries will end but the partly cloudy skies and cooler temperatures will continue. Light snow is on the agehd^ for Wednesday with temperatures te the 30s. This morning’s northwest winds at 10 to 22 m.p.h. will slow this aftomoon to 8 to 12 m.p.h. and pick up speed again tonight at 10 to 20 m.p.h. OFT' the Elks they GO-Draftees from the Pontiac area leave Ft. Wayne induction center. In the March callup were 129 Lodge early this morning to board buses for Detroit’s young men. ProbhbUities of predititatiwi In per cent are 30 today, tonight and ttanorrow. 'A A - ii . t ! * 'A I i'i Parochiaid FoeS Pick Up Support From 2 Corners LANSING (Uri' - Opening the tax dollars' pocketbonk to finance nonpublic education got negative responses from two political corners over the weekend. Both want that pbcketlwok snapped shut and padlocked. The 60.000 member Michigan Education Association iMEA) beefed up the anti-Parochiad forces by contributing $500 to an organization bent on keeping lax dollar.s in the public schools. , system and the late.st information from the State Department of Education that 74 school districti^ were operating on a deficit. /.. State Sen. Sander Lpvin, D-Bcrkley. stepped into the fray ^teslerday by announcing his “active opposition to Parochiaid results from vigorous support for a strong system of public schools, rather than opposition to the existence of private or parochial schools.” The essence of the struggle, Levin told the Detroit chapter of the Citizens to Advance Public Education tCAPE), is that tax dollars simply won't .stretch far enough to support two different school systems. l^vin is the Senate minority leader and a former Democratic State chairman. He cited the huge deficit of more than $25 million now facing the Detroit school "Today we are .struggling to obtain the financial aid and public support necessary to sustain quality education programs and to improve programs for children in needy school districts and the disadvantaged children of low income families. "Diversion of monies to private schools would inevitably result, in failure to resolve these, massive education problems," Levin .said. ■V IOLATES PRINCIPI.E* Noting that his opposition to the stormy issue was as an individual senator and not as Senate Democratic leader, Levin argued that Parochiaid destroys the separation of church and stale, principle. ■'Keligioiis institutions have been free to operate without governmental interference and control, and governmental institutions have been free to operate without favoritism to any religious denomination, he said. Franc Not Yet Contributing to Currency Crisis BASEL (API—Western Europe’s central decided yesterday the French franc's troubles don’t constitute an emergency requiring international action but the price of gold continued to rise today on Europe’s free markets. Bullion was selling at $43.75 an ounce In London, 25 cents over Friday’s price. Dealers said the demand was normal and the turnover small, indicating the upward movement waS caused by the absence of sellers at the lower levels. On London's foreign exchange market the pound opened a little better — at $2.3908 compared to Friday’s $2.3895. But the franc, which pulled sterling down last week, was still shaky. The support of the MEA. which made the donation to CAPE, was viewed as a big boost for the drive against Parochiaid. The Michigan Federation of Teachers, mainly predominant in the metropolitan Detroit area, has remained neutral. Pending in the Michigan House currently is a bill which would grant $40 millipn annually to parochial schools for teaching secular subjects. Tile chief sponsor, Rep. J. Robert Traxler, D-Bay City, conceded additional taxation is needed to pay for the massive program. Ship With Hole in Side Is Steaming hr Port In Zurich, the price of gold jumped from $43.40-$43.60 to $43.75-$44. hitting a record high for the second time in four days. One bullion dealer said there was “demand from almost everywhere.” but a banker said the buying “did not appear to be really hectic.” After their regular monthly meeting, several of the ba”hkers said the French government has enough gold to cope with the current flow of money beyond its borders. i NEW YORK (iP - The British cargo vessel Montcalm, a hole smashed in her side just above the waterline by a truck which broke loose in the hold during stormy North Atlantic weather, proceeded today under its own power toward Halifax. N.S.. 350 miles to the Northeast, the Coast Guard reported. The 440-foot vessel, with a crew of 32. began shipping >vater through a 12-foot hole yesterday while rolling iri 20-to 30-foot seas. Using its own pumps and two dropped by a Coast Guard plane, the ship was able to keep abreast of the flooding as Hie Seas abated. The hforwegian freighter Pontos is standing by. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Mostly cloudy today and tonight with periods of light snow flurries. Not much temperature change today. High mid 30s. Colder tonight, low 20 to 25. Tuesday becoming partly cloudy, with flurries ending. A little colder, high near 30. Wednesday outlook: becoming cloudy and continuing cold with chance of light snow. Winds northwest 10 to 22 m.p.h. today 8 to 12 m.p.h. tofiight and 10 to 20 m.p.h tomorrow. Probabilities of precipitation 30 per cent today, tohtght and tomorrow. : Wind VHocItv lOM n - St. It t:34 p.m, Wtather, Partly sunhy. n tomorrow at 0:53 a Moon ristt tomorrow at 2:32 am Sumlav's Tamptraturti Datrol ) Danvpi 39 27 De$ f Escanaba 23 II. ( Marquatta 35 27 Ff. Worth 4J Gr. Rapids 35 24 Houston 5* - Houghton 25 10 Indianapolis 3^ Houghton Lk. 30 20 Jacksonvilla Si Jackson 37 27 Kansas City » I antina 37 76 Las Vaoas 5^ 21 15 Littia Rock 4* 31 21 Los Angatai 61 M 20 Miami Beach K 39 10 Milwaukee 3i baomaw 34 27 New York 4( S. S. Maria 31 11 Omaha i: TravarM City 39 33 Philadelphia 31 Albany, N.Y. 35 33 Photnix A! Aibuouargua 46 33 Reno 31 Atlanta 50 36 St. Louis ^ Boston 35 35 S. Ik,. City : Buffalo 31 33 S. Francisco 51 ^ TMs Data in 97 Yaars Chariottf $6 31 Saaftie 33 34 Tucson Cincinnati 40 32 Washington 43 30 oUfa Frem U.$. WFATHM lUKAU • CSSA iMlutod ffcieiwtoii W»> litoiieUd-Cpwswh ipcd Fpisfrt THK ^ONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MAUC’IT 10, 19(>9 Birmingham Area Proposed Ban on Cigarette Ads Rapped BLOOMFIELD HILLS-The proposed banning by The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) of cigarette advertising from broadcast media could be “a crippling blow to the basic businessadvertising relationship.” This is the contention of Ernest A. Jones, chairman of the locally based . advertising agency of MacManus, John ^ Adams Inc. Jones Identifies himself as a nonsmoker who “owns no stock in the broadcast or tobacco inddstries. He added that his agency does not have a cigarette account. In an address prepared for delivery before members o^ the Phoenix, Ariz., Advertising Club today, Jones contends that he is greatly concerned about the right of business to sell a legal product in a legal manner. FEARS REPirmON SHOW CONIRAII - Eugene L. Greek (right), repre.sen-tulive for the Midugun Bell Telephone Co., signs a contract for his company assuring it of a booth at the 15th annual Oakland County Home and Sports Show March 27-30, Overseeing the contract signing are Waterford Jaycees Wayne Barnhart (left), booth chairman, and Tom Ritter, general pi ogram chairman. The Jaycee-sponsored show will be staged at the Waterford Township Community Activities bic. Building, 5640 Williams Lake. “I am concerned with the Kafka-like execution by commission on an unproven charge. If the voice of legitimate business can be stifled In this manner, I wonder what product or service will be next obliterated by a statistical shadow,” Jones explained. Jones believes that any successful unopposed move inevitably will be repeated and extended, ‘a, wonder when Peking Soviets Provoked Clash TOKYO — Communist China charged today that the Soviet Union provoked the Manchurian border clash March 2 to divert the attention of Russians who are massing for a “revolution” against “Soyiet fascist rule.” Some Western’ analysts have suggested that Peking provoked the bloody fight for a similar reason — to make the Chinese forget internal dissensions and rally behind Mao Tse-tung by raising the specter of a “Soviet threat.” Bolstering this view was an announcement from Peking Sunday that Red Chinese militiamen and peasants are patrolling with frontier guards. Press reports in Hong Kong and London said Peking has put 5 trillion men on an armed alert. The official Chinese announcement gave no exact figures. Light Work Slated for Apollo 9 Crew rights of other manufacturers, other ihe-. dia may be assumed by probability rather than certainty, when the adminis-> trative act of licensing will be converted into outright suppression. SPACE CENTER, Houston iJFi - Drifting to conserve fuel, and dreaming of home, the Apollo 9 astronauts sped today into the final stages of their space mission. Air Force Cols. James A. McDivitt and David R. Scott and civilian Russell L. Schweickart ha4 another light schedule of picture taking, navigation checks and resting. reliability of the Apollo command ship for 10 days, the longest period presently planned for man-to-the-moon missions. Each side has aegused the other of starting the March 2 Battle on a disputed island in the Ussuri River, whiefi separates the Soviet Far East and Manchuria. Moscow said 31 of its soldiers were killed and 14 were The major flight plan event was a firing of the main spaceship engine to jockey the craft into a more favorable path for scheduled splashdown Thursday. The astronauts had completed 97 per cent of their flight objectives. The crucial lunar module — LEM-checkout, Schweickart’s space walk and the rendezvous of the LEM and command module occurred in the first five days. They are remaining aloft to prove the As Apollo 9 circled overhead, there was a slight delay in preparations for the next step. Movement of the Saturn 5 rocket and spaceship for Apollo 10 to a Cape Kennedy launch pad, scheduled today, was postponed 24 hours because of a minor problem. “The use of cigarettes is a medical question; the arbitrary banning of their advertising—however insipidly stupid it may be—is a constitutional question. And one, I hope, that is soon answered by the Congress,” the Adman said. Jones maintains there is no product made, no product advertised, from automobiles to aspirin, which does not have a negative potential due to situation or circumstance. He added that other media and industries should not look at the FCC opi- ' nion as a tobacco-television problem. “Constitutional rights are neither selective nor negotiable,” he added. Apollo 10, commanded by Air Force Col. Thomas P. Stafford, is scheduled to orbit the moon with a lunar module in May — paving the way for a landing by? two members of the Apollo 11 crew in July. ' McDivitt, Scott and Schweickart were told not to do any unnecessary maneuvering because they were slightly low on fuel. Dr. A. P. Ulbrich will give a color slide lecture on Michigan plants and shrubs that cause allergies to thousands of local residents at a meeting of the Bloomfield Hills Camera Club in the Cranbrook Hall of science tonight at 8. Dr. Ulbrich, a Troy resident, is known ziationally for his workj in allergies and skin irritants. He has made several hundred slides of local plants and flowers that are the common enemy of man. wounded. China has not released casualty figures. Observers in Tokyo believe the rallying of Chinese in anti-Soviet protests is directly related to Peking’s plan to hold Black Students Sit In at PCH its 9th party congress this year. Peking has not announced a date for the congress, hut Japanese correspondents in Peking reported in February preparations were under way. Khan, Foes Talk Pakistan Reform By MARY SUNDSTROM More than 250 Central High School black students lined the school’s main hallway this morning in a sit-in, asking a hearing with the Pontiac School Board to discuss their demands. Demonstrators told Central Principal Garth Errington they were not satisfed with the way their demands and proposals were handled at last Thursday night’s board of education meeting. auditorium which all black students in the city could attend, not just a meeting with a delegation. KARACHI (AP)..— President Moham-4tned Ayiltf Khan iflet opposition leaders today at. Rawalpindi amid reports that the opposition has agreed on a more representative form of government for divided Pakistan. Sources close to opposition leaders said they have decided Pakistan should return to a parliamentary government directly elected by the adult population, and also agreed to give 56 per cent majority representation to East Pakistan. The latter has the largest slice of the nation’s 120 million population and valuables jute exports, and is separated from West Pakistan by Indian territory. Both states would get more local control, with the federal government limited to defense, foreign affairs and currency, the sources said. But some disagreement was still reported among leaders of the six opposition parties banded in a coalition called the Democratic getion Committee. They said they would sit in until the board meets with them. Several black adults joined the students in the sit-in. Dr. Robert Turpin, acting chairman of the school board in the absense of board president Monroe Osmun, who is out of town, said he would be glad to meet with the demonstrators. He added that he also would rather meet with small groups. Dr. Whitmer said he had not talked with any other board members. mediately known what action the prosecutor’s office might take. Assistant Prosecutor James Williams said, however, if necessary, arrests would be made. He said those under 17 years old would be processed through juvenile court and those over 17 would face hearings as an adult. Other students in the schbhl were held in their homerooms to avoid any trouble in the passing of classes, Errington said. POLICE STAND BY Several police officers stood by in the MEETING ARRANGED Schools Supt. Dr. Dana P. Whitmer told the demonstratorrs he would arrange a meeting with a delegation of students at 7:30 tonight at the board offices. The demonstrators insisted that they wanted a public meeting in an hallway and in cars outside of the school in the event of any disturbance. Errington said that the students possibly could be arrested under city orfinance for disrupting classes. Two staff members of the Oakland County Prosecutor s Office conferred with school officials and police at the school at midmorning. It was not im- Black students, members of the recently-organized Black Student Union, had appeared before the board of education last Thursday, presenting a list of nine demands that they insisted be acted upon immediately. Among the demands were: a reversal of the decision to build a proposed new high school on Pontige State Hospital grounds (they prefer a center city site at Bagley and Orchard Lake), more black teachers and administratolrs, free bus transportation for all students and an investigation of all Pontiac teachers regarding racist attitudes and discriminatory actions. On Parkinson's Disease DOORS MANNED Several black youths had manned the Drug Breakthrough Seen NOT INCLUDED Not included in the talks with Ayub were former Foreign Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, leader of the leftist People's {larty, and 8S^yar-old Maulana Abdul Bhashafii, leader of the pro-Peking wing of the I^ational Awami party of East Pakistan. These two parties signed an agreement yesterday forming a leftist alliance independent ofjhe DAC. In Rayzalpindi, 4,000 supporters of Ayub demonstrated yesterday, demanding that he continue in office. Ayub has announced he will not try for a fourth term in office next yedf because of the recent-bloedshed and rioting resulting from oppositimi to his regime. - PHII4DELPHIA (AP) - Several Philadelphia hospitals report dramatic results in ^e treatment of Parkinson’s disease with an experimental drug. marked improvement in another doors at that meeting, saying they would not let anyone leave or enter the meeting room until their problems had been fully discussed and acted upon. They were dispersed quickly by several black a^dults, who told them they couldn’t close a public meeting. 10. The hospitals report that the drug L-dopa produces virtually complete recovery in about 25 per ceht of their Parkinswi patients and improvement in most others suffering the debilitating disorder of the nervous system whigh causes trembling of thp hands. Four demonstrators were hurt when a bomb was thrown into the crowd. In another clash between students and administrators in the Jamalpur district. NATIONAL WEATHER—Scattered snow flurries are predicted tonight through- .......... .............. .................. out the intermountain region of the West'and for a belt extending from the Great two students were repbrted shot dead i.aki»g through New England. Ram is forecast for the lowlands of the Souttiwest. yesterday. The students have been call- It will be colder in the South AtlanUc states and the southern Rockies and warmer ing on elected officials to give up their from Texas to Nebraska. jobs and work*for new, free elections. Since L-dopa must be adminis-"tered indefinitely, ^however, it is not claimed as a cure. At Episcopal Hospital, Dr. Jack Greenberg said 10 of 35 patients lost nearly all signs of the disease after they were given the drug over a six month period, and SIGNS GONE The University of Pennsylvania Hospital, which began L^lopa trials last summer, reporter that about 25 per cent of 70 to 80 patients given the drug lost nearly all signs of the disease, and about half the remaining patients showed noted improvement. Parkinson’s disease is one of the most prevalent and disabling neurological disorders. There are an estimated one million victims in the United States, with 50,000 new cases diagnosed yearly. When cells in the body fail to manufacture a chemical called dopamine, corresponding nerve signals to the brain fail. L^iopa breaks down in the body to become the missing 1 2 in Truck Arrested at Pontiac Division Two men were arrested yesterday after security officers at PontiacDMotor Division said the two tried to drive a truck loaded, with $25,000 worth of equipment from the plant. Held in Oakland County Jail for ar-rai^ment today are Clyde E. Bennett, 21, of 462 Oakland and Harry C. Papke, 23, of Clifford. .Security irfficers stopped the pair driv-ing out the Highwood and Columbia gate in a pickup truck at 2:45 a.Ri., police said. Police said the two drove the truck to the rear of the plant and used a forldift to load it with 548 alternators and three 4-speed transmiastons. / THE YONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. MARClB 10. 1969 These Values Will Be Found Only at SIMMS Spring and Summer Styles Ladies’ Slacks • Cotton Twill • Cotton Gabardine • Permanent Press Regulart $8.00 at SIMMS 299 Thesa great styles fo choose from; Expresso brown cotton twill pants with white circlets, yellow cotton gabardine slacks with side zi topeVed permanent press 'Queen Casual' slacks with fly front, woven glen plaid With side zip, and also includes permanent press surfefs in Vycron® polyester and cotton. Sizes 8 to 16. Not all sizes in all styles. | —Main Floor Easy-Step-Into-Styles Culotte Dress • Cotton Twill • Kodel® and Cotton Regulart $9.99 at Simmt This group includes a woven tablecloth check coulette of Kodel polyester and cotton with stand-a-way collar, and a big industrial zipper up the front. Aqua and white check. A cotton twill culotte dress thot zips up the back in espresso brown with white trim. Also cotton twill culotte skirt in espresso brown with white trim. Sizes 8 to 16. Not all sizes in all styles. First quality. _ Main Floor // 100% DuPont Orion Knit 2-Pc. Co-OnHnates Washable First Quality Regulart $12.88 2-pc. style, 100% DuPont Orion knit co-ordinates ' with cardigan style short sleeve tops and straight skirts. Spring I summer colors include mint green, yellow, gold, blue Vand pink. Size Ir Main Floor Men’s Zip Front Nylon Jacket • First Quality • American Made Men's Oxford nylon jacket with full front nylon zipper, is cleverly styled with pockets hidden under the smart horizontal Stripe. Adjustable cuffs, and water repellent, 100% .nylon. Sizes S-M-L-XL in green or dark blue. —Basement Men’s Canvas ^Oxfords A Loafers TMck Crepe Soles \ American Made How to Keep Teens Off Drugs (Continued From Page One) their children away from usin( mind-affecting drugs? ★ ★ ★ „ How much of the/ complete story about various drugs do young people and children know? How can you tell if someone is smoking marijuana, or taking LSD or other drugs? WHY NOW? Why did the great tum-on with drugs come along now? What benefits do drug users say they find? What harms may various drugs cause? Just what are all these drugs, new and old? have been swallowing billions of What should parents do if teen-agers or college students become dependent on drugs? What is the argument all about over legalization of marijuana, or reducing the penalties it? There are of course no simple, pat answers to these and other WHAT CAN PARENTS DO For a majority of young people, observers remark, the encounter with mind-affecting drugs appears as a flirtation, one-time or one-in-a-whiL event, with users sure they can take it or leave it. But some authorities say such experimentation can amount to drug roulette—that some young people particiilarly su to various drugs, can become dependent, and get hurt, badly hurt, from what they intended as a rather innocent adventure. The “drug scene” is part of a larger one. For the truth is that American society is heavily a pill society. Its people for years pills and capsules, including tr£fnquilizers. American society tolerates alcohol and nicotine, both of which technically are and millions of people abuse both of them. It has long had a corps of addicts hooked on heroin or opium, but fewer now than 30 or 40 years ago. PUXS- FOR EVERYBODY Many among a huge variety of drugs are taken legitimately, prescribed for medical benefits. But there is also a great black market among some potent drugs, and illegal manufacture or importation. Each year, says the Food and Drug Administration, billions of sedative and pep pills are diverted to illegal use and ultimate misuse. That means enough pills or tablets per person per year to “keep everyone in the United States atvake and jumping for a week, and enough barbiturates to keep them in a stupor for a week.” The newer element in the nation’s drug problem is the rather sudden spread of drugs that induce fantasies or hallucinations, or that “expand the mind.” ’This drug problem is here. It is now. IHs big. It is apparently growing bigger. ANSWERS NEEDED And it has set loose a storm of emotion that confuses the issues, and that blocks effective answers. Part of the problem is “a tyranny of opinion, attitude and belief in the absence of knowl-Dr. Helen H. Now-lis. University of Rochester psychologist and director of the drug education project of the National Association of Student Personnel Administi'htors. alarmeii because the drug scene is som«.................... physically addictive. The rea- Many parents are battled < lething totally outside any of their own personal experience. Many cannot help, wondering whether their children will remain immune to the appeal of present drugs, or to a raft of new drugs which experts predict will inevitably come along. Many parents are far more alarmed, some experts say, than they really need be. REAL FACTS But practically all agree that parents are not likely to get very far unless they know the real facts about different drugs. Only with knowledge can they give sound counsel. Youngsters and students erally know a good deal more than parents about mind-itj-fluencing drugs. But they may also tend to believe what they choose on a controversial subject. And they usually learn about drugs from their own companions—not all of them well or fully informed. Parents are wrong, for exam-;ple, if they argue that marijuana is a “narcotic” or that it is sons why it is not, and why parents could honestly have been misled into thinking it is, are explained later. The point that authorities make here is that parents get into trouble if they do insist marijuana is a narcotic, or if they lump all (irugs together as being equally bad. Once the youngster prove the parent is wrong about big points, he very likely takes the position—‘Now I can’t believe anything you say all,’ ” says one psychiatrist. “Any drug education which is not scrupulously honest will fail with the kids,” a psychologist adds., “Once you exaggerate, you lose them.” (Tomorrow: Why the drug explosion is occuring now—and how extensive it is) (Advertisement) D. FALSE TEETH Rock, Slide or Slip? Don’t Uto In lew ol lalM teetb » oragort, pwt eitrli^e a little FA8TEKTH on your plates. FASTSirni holds false teeth Ormer. Makes eating eaeler. No pasty, gooey taste. Helue cheek "denture breath’’. taste. Helps check "denture breath’ Dentures that lit are essential to health. Bee your dentist regularly. Get PA8TEETH at aU drug counters. Animal's Birfhdayj Is Remembered PHILADELPHIA UP) - Four years ago, Mr. and Mrs. Readers can obtain a booklet on drugs a by sending $1 to: ’The Pontiac Press Box 5 Teaneck, N.J. 07666 Charles Ruff, now ofl Washington, D.C., gave to the Philadelphia Zoo a beady-eyed kusimanse — a small brown burrowing animal related to the mongoose — they named ‘Goosey.” They had found her in a garbage dump in Liberia, West Africa. ’The Ruffs remembered Goosey’s fifth birthday recently by sending her a present -wood rattle with a bell inside, 'Blacks Eager to Integrate' DETROIT (UPI) - Racial attitudes in postriot Detroit find the majority of white people are hesitant over full-scale integration while most blacks are eager to integrate, an indepth social and psychological study has rqwrted. Only 26 per cent of the whites interviewed demonstrated in-tegrationist attitudes compared to 89 per cent of the blacks who favored full integration, the study said. Water Repellent 100% Nylon ^ Directed by Dr. Elliott Luby, ssociate director of the Lafayette Clinic in Detroit, the ■ dy found the peatest danger racial explosion comes from imall minority of extremists on both sides. ‘These are intensely angry 1 profoundly fri^tened'men, both black and white, who will attempt to move us toward more violence and a paranoid restructuring of all race relations in the city,” the study said. ’1TOY RHNORITY i^me 16 per cent of the whites favoredts segregation as opposed to 2 per cent of the blacks, the study said. Of the M(hite _ _ 67 per cent didn’t finish Wgh schml while only 3 pa* cent of Ibem had any college training. At die average of 55, they were 14 years older than the average liberal white’s age 41. • KEYS The study pointed out that 11 times as many white in-tegrationists had gone to college as segregationists. Seventy per cent of the liberals had finisiied high school. I m LUMBER CO. POWER TOOLS DeWolt Home Shop Block & Decker Porter Coble Prefinished PANELING, TRIM Povco • Weldwood Georgia Pacific Royolcote • Morlite MISCELLANEOUS Arrtistrong Ceiling Tile Corkboord Bulletin Board Basketball Backboard Table Tennis Tops & Legs Homosote Bed Boards Fireplace Accessories 151 Oakland Ave. FE 4-1594 New Selection of Spring and Summer ^ Solid Color Fabrics Approximately 45” widths 65% Kodel and 35% Cotton 30% Polyester 70% Cotton 50% Kodel and 50% Cotton 100% Cotton in Brown and White First Quality-Seconds and Run of the Mill •You'll fihd hundreds of uses for these cotton and cotton blend wash fabrics. Approximately 45 inch widths, in first quality, seconds ond run of the mill quality. An;f you'll find lovely shades of pink, blue, green, yellow, brown and while for sheets and pillowciises, etc. 37 4 Yd. SIMMSlf,. r Regulari J Comfortable canvas uppers ox-Ffords and slip-on styles with thick ^T'^repe spies. Choice of gore style Flopfers or 3 or 4 eyelet ties with cushioned innersole. Choice of nav I brown or block in sizes 614t to 12. — Basement SIMMS..®?,. 1.1,, 'ill-Jt. ■]' ■'i./ ^ as CAMERA DEPT. DISCOUNTS SIMMS OPEN TONin til 9rsi TUBS. & WED. 9 am to 5:30 pm FREE PARKING ... downtown parking mall — just steps from Simms' front doors for 1 -hour. Hove ticket stamped at time of purchase (except on Tobacco and Be Beverage items). ‘CHARGE ir at SIMMS Use our 30-day, same as cash plan on buys of $10 to $1 S>0 or ' use your MIDWEST BANK CARD. 8mm or Super 8 Size FkMREa&CAN 36° 46° Metal reel and can * movies from light an Police and AM Radio $29.95 Value Alaron model BI0AP as shown. Portable battery operated radio for Police Colls and AM broadcasts. Solid state circuitry for outstanding ception. Complete with batteries, earpho carry strap. As pictured. Model 4F55W. $1 Holds In FREE LAYAWAY SONY TUBE RADIO SONY 7-TRS. RADIO 17“ 9“ SONY AM-FM Radio I 093 living room sound in^this portable AFC. 3%" ^ | SONY 9-TRS. AM/FM living room sound in^this portable AFC. 3%" A speaker. With batteries,'eorphone. M^t 16F21W. ^ SONY PORTABLE IV |9AQS 11" diagonal screen. Glore-lree sunglass ■ * wMWff ■ - 1(1 Hutiti „ r -tWlVlIOUl M y]AO im ma r.nim ^TIAC PRESS. MONDAY. MARCH 10, 1969 Oldest Firm In Pontiac Celebrates 75 th Inch MnmoriaU, th« oidatt firm undar Continuous family oparation in Pontiac, pautat in racognition of its 75th Annivartory. Charias S. Inch, foundar of Inch MamorlaU, Inc., coma to tha United Stotat from Canada at a ttona cuttar. Ha ottabliihad tha first Inch Mamonals in a building at tha comar of Parry and fast Lawranca Straat in 1894. This building waa raptocad with a naw offica and shop on tha soma sita io 1907. In 1927 tha businatt was movad to Its prasant location at tha corner of Parry Straat and East Boulavard. This was adjacant to tha than nawly astablishad Parry Mt. Park Camatary. Charlaa died in 1939 at which tima hii daughtar, Marion Inch Bumas bacama prasidant, an offica aha hold until har daath in 1957. Lloyd W. Bumatr hvidkand of Marion, who had boon activa in tha businass tinea 1919 than bacomo piatidant. Although ha ratiiad in 1961, Lloyd still ratoins an actiaa intpraat In tha company and tarvas in an advisory capacity. A third ganardtion took ovar tha family laigna, Robart C. Bumas, grandson of tha foundar, is prasantly oparoting tha businass. Tha soma standard of quollty of mota- rials and craftsmanship upon ^Ich Mr. Inch founded this firm has continuad through and 75 y .................• - - yaars of tMwvica to tha fina fomilias of tha Pohtige area. IIU' J^uilt to a Standard of Quality INCH MEMORIALS, ING 864 NORTH PERRY FE 5-6931 \ , ' 'J: I r Idr I */»',/ LI. " • .’.L'Ai)...-I'’It'.. •hi.). A ') I",. ' '..................................................................1*1 j.a/ Foreign Visitors See Much to Interest Them in Pontiac Oakland University’s fcontinuum Center which devotes all its efforts to helping women pnd themselves is known in faraway places. A visitor last week was Sheila MtMillan, senior lecturer in the Extension division of the University of Auckland, New Zealand. It’s not only American women who are wondaring what to do with their lives. When the University of Auckland ran a course of lectures on the changing role of women, the response was so great» that they had to be repeated to take care of all who were disappointed the first time. * ★ ★ The Society for Research on Women is a voluntary organization throughout New Zealand. Dues are minimal and the research is financed through subscript tions. Men may belong. Currently, the society is engaged in interviewing 1600 women in the four largest cities. The aim of the questionnaire is to discover how New Zealand women feel about themselves as wives and mothers and how their education has fitted them for their lives. They are being a^ed what kind of facilities they’d like to have in their communities to help with the care of children. “We did it on the cheap,” said Miss McMillan. “On the cheap” means that volunteers are doing the interviewing. Some 100 were trained. WINDOW ON UFE “Women are interested in how people feel; it is interesting to have a window on someone’s life.” A further survey is planned on unmarried mothers who have kept their babies. ★ * Miss McMillan is on a world tour. What she learns will help her plan more meaningful extension programs for women in her native land. When was the last time you really looked at a supermarket? Sure, yop shop every week, but you scoot t^u-ough the store, with your list; you don’t see everything. The other day I took an Egyptian man through the superniarket where I regularly shop. In the Detoht area for a two-day visit, Ahmed Zayed was oiir dinner guest through the People to People program. For an hour and a half before we ate, we toured Wrigley’s. I have learned, after having a number of foreign visitors, to be careful how I speak. One must not be patronizing; one must not brag, one must be as interested in the visitor’s country and its customs as iit the ones being displayed. After a while, you get so that you merely show things without too much comment. The choices each shopper has, impressed Mr. Zayed; in Egyptian stores, I gather, you take what is there or nothing. He constantly compared Egyptian prices with ours ^ theirs seem very low — until you find out that the average worker gets about 50 cents a day. Egypt produces a wide variety of food. Lamb is the principal meat and the most usual way of preparation is the kebab. Mr. Zayed was pleased when I knew what he was talking about and told him we often fix kebabs in America. STAPLE FOODS Rice is eaten every day. Housewives have a choice of fish and seafood such as shrimp, sardines, crab, etc. Many vegetables are grown. He spoke in particular about their giant cucumbers. All those shelves full of salad dressings amused him. But what really amazed him was the number of nonfood items available. In fact, he was so impressed' that he bought two pairs of stretch nylons for his wife. I hope they fit. Ahmed Zayed. is the general manager of the Egyptian General Organization for Food Industries. He is spending two weq|is sightseeing in the United States. SHEILA McMillan Do Their Insults Mean The/Ve Really In Love? AHMED ZAYED Conversation at dinner was lively. On my right- sat our Egyptian guest, Ahmed Zayed who manages all the food industries in Egypt. On my left was a soft-spoken woman university lecturer from New Zealand. I had planned as American a meal as possible—no, not hot dogs or hamburgers—meat loaf, lima beans, asparagus, fruit salad and gingerbread. The asparagus was new to the Egyptian; the limas were foreign to the New Zealander. He drank tea; she had coffee. Educatioi^ was the main subject of conversation. In Egypt today, many wonien are attending school. There are community coHeges in the cities where a woman may study any subject, says Mrl Zayed. Often mothers and daughters or servants and employers will study side by side. Do girls have the opportunity to take any subject? Yes, but there is still resistance to hiring women engineers, even well-trained ones. Whalt’s pew about that? government JOBS Education is completely free in Egypt. Everyone who graduates from college goes directly into government work. There are not enough workers to fill all the necessary jobs. American women who sew know Egyptian cotton well; it is a beautiful fabric. But if Mr. Zayed has his way, another Egyptian product will become equally well known. One orthe by-products of the immense sugar industry is alcohol. With this alcohol, they are making perfumes which they hope to export to this country. You may one day be w e a r i n g “Nefertiti” or “1000 Nights” as frequently as you.do Chanel Number 5. ★ ★ ★ ' We got out the encyclopedia and looked up the countries of both our guests. They are, of course, very different in geography, in history and in living tod^y. Where we have a black and whitq race problem, the New Zea- "' (Continued on Page B-2, Gol. 4) ^ Calendar TODAY ^ Dirt Gardeners Club, 11 a m., Adah Shelly Library. Mrs. George Quine will give a demonstration talk on dried arrangements. South Oakland County chapter. Sigma Kappa Sorority Alumnae, 12:15 p.nT, Birmingham home of Mrs. Donald Barlow. “The Perfect Hostess” by a Detroit Edison representative. * * * kappa Delta South Oakland Alumnae Association, Afternoon Group, 12;30 p.m., Gilbert Lake home of Mrs. Russell E. Smith. Election of officers. PBX Club of Pontiac, 7:30 p.rn., Oakdale Street home of Mrs. Dale Rolfe. Kappa Delta South Oakland Alumnae Association, Evening Group, 8 p.m., Birmingham home of Mrs! John E. Gates Jr. James Shea of Drayton Plains Nature Center will speak. * ★ Cranbrook Music Guild, Inc., 8:30 p.m., Cranbrook House. The Albert Tipton Trio. Not Genuine Article SHEFFIELD, England (AP) - The city of Sheffield, famous for its stainless steel products, has warned that some foreign companies are using its name too freely. Officials said that in many boxes of Sheffield cutlery, the only thing made in Shef^ld is the box. Wedding Is a No-No HUNTINGDON, England (AP)-Farm-er Harry Raby, (29), wps expelled as chairman of Huntingdon Bachelors Club. Without telling his colleagues in the club,' he got married. . , By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN dIiAR ABBY: My son is a C.P.A. and he is going with a college girl. She makes all kinds of mean remarks about the way he looks (he is losing his hair) and the way he walks (he has flat feet). He, on the other hand, is always telling her she is built like a stick and has a big nose, which is also true. Why, then, do they keep going with each other? If they should marry, what kind of marriage would this be? They have been going steady for six months. Do you call this love? MOTHER OF A C. P. A. DEAR MOTHER: Yes, it could be “love.” Maybe not YOUR kind^ (or mine) but if they’re satisfied with each other, dont’ let it bother you. As for the “kind of marriage’ ’it would be: Realistic. And possibly a better marriage than 'one in which each is blind to the blemishes of the other. it it DEAp ABBY: I have been married for five years and have two wonderful children. My problem is a jealous husband. Before we were married, I had an affair with another man (we were engaged), and I was fool enough to confess it to my future husband. Now I realize it was a big mistake, although at the time, he said he wouldn’t hold it against me. Now that we are married every time we have a quarrel he throws it in my-face. He is so mean, he’s even told his parents! In addition to accusing me of having an affair with every man I meet, now he calls me filthy names and he’s even accused me of having relations with my brothers and uncles! I've suggested psychiatric help for him, but he says HE is all right, I’M the one who needs hplp. Divorce is out of the question as it’s against our religion and he is a good father to our children. I can’t say I really “love” him, Abby, but I am trapped. I’ve always been a decent wife and haven’t even looked at another man since my marriage, and don’t intend to. What is your advice? TRAPPED DEAR TRAPPED: Your husand is sick. And any woman who subjects herself to the kind of abuse your husband dishes out is asking for a nervous breakdown. Talk to your clergyman, ahd perhaps together you can persuade your husband to accept some counseling. Tell him " if he doesn’t try to help himself, you’ll be forced to take the children and leave him because you’ve had about as much punishment as you can stand. I’ll bet he listpns! , it * * DEAR ABBY: This is for “FURIOUS IN PRESCOTT,” who suggested that instead of coffeeklatching with the neighbors all day, we housewives should do our grocery shopping in the earl^ afternoon so as not to crowd the “working wives.” I haven’t had a cup of coffee with my neighbors in years. They-afe all out chasing their “GOD”—the Almighty dollar. Sure, I market in the evening. That’s when the paper c^mes and I can see what’s on sale, and my husband can stay home with the younger children. * * -k While I’m there, I look into your carts and see all the “Ready-Mix” and “Jiffy-Fix” pre-frozen slop you feed your family. How long has it been since your husband had an honest-to-goodness home-cooked meal? Yes, I’m that lazy, lowly housewife who taught your daughter how to knit in 4-H. I helped her earn her merit badges in Girl Scouts, too. And I had six of your boys in my Cub Scout den, and it I remember correctly you were too busy to even come to the Christmas play the kids put on for their parents. I’ve driven your kids to baseball practice because “Mom’s gone.” And your kids always come to MY house because you didn’t want ybur nice new home messed up. So, why don’t YOU do your shopping on your day off and stay out of MY way? HOUSEFRAU FROM INDIANA AND PROUD OF IT Only Divorce Can Make One Single Again By ELIZABETH L. POST The following letter has been chosen as prize-winning one for this week. A copy, of Emily Post’s Etiquette has been sent to the writer. ★ ★ ★ Dear Mrs. Post: In a recent discussion, I maintained that a legally separated woman (and man, too) is still legally married and could not date other men without risk to her good reputation. I believe only a divorce makes one single again and, therefore, eligible to go out with the opposite sex. Would you please comment on the accepted social behavior of a legally separated person of any age? — Mrs. A. S.. ★ ★ * Dear Mrs. S.: Of course it is true that only a divorce can make one “single”\ again. However, if one’s religion, or other considerations, prevent him from getting more than a legal separation, he (or she) need not be doomed to a monastic life once he is living apart from his spouse. As long as their behavior is respectable — adhering to the basic rules of propriety and decency — there is no reason in the world that husbands and wives who are legally separated should not enjoy the compapy of the opposite sex. Mrs. Bonnie Bickman stands before birthday Apwiwhoto billboard greeting last week in Philadelphia. Mrs. fice across the street from the billboard signed by Bickman is a medical secretary working in an of- her husband, Barry. ■ . ' J '' ' ' CARPET Uk Boor (hop This Is The Year For Shags! 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IMONDAV, IMAKCH i6, 1909 "Resist Early Marriage/ Career Gal's Advice / Duplicate Bridge Skiing Honeynjoon for Couple Hall o( till’ Anieritan womciii ,• I don't believe in mar- : who marry before tlieir 2(llha iaRes, 1 prefer affairs birthdays are subsequently • ' I am married but' I have divorced, and as the a^e of to keep it a secret because of marriage goes up. the divorce the CIA " rate goes dovni • "Some of us are beaiitilul. So asserts Rebecca C.reer. f^'ome of us are suceesslul. some author ol "Win Isnlt A Nice of us are i^arried ” Girl hike You M a r r i e d - ' "Why Isn't A Nice Gril lake \ -p h c You Mamed"’" offers many Win let praclical lips for the single I 1III 0 woman, iiu hiding decorating , hints, career miormalion, and a ‘inocK '’f dialing' ‘ Whatever vour age. insists ,, Miss Greer, ""your singk' status is nothing lobe a.shamed of Le smiling" side ol r the girls «ho marry at 18 oi 2(1 „f defend their position -- <'H'y re „ ,magazine. She is ^ mg out , . anything J TUESDAYS YMCA Bridge Club, 7:30 p.m , In YMCA. All bridge players may attend. FRIDAYS recently published Macmillan Compan yourself he pressi marrying young ’ Bonneville Junior Duplicate Bridge Club, 7:45 p ni , The Pontiac Mall. All beginners and intcr-mediale players may at- lend. SATURDAYS Bonn cvllle Duplicate Bridge Club, 8 p.m., The Pontiac Mall. All bridge players may attend. Attended by her sister, MaryiCountry Club preceded the cou-ijiymoon at Jay Peak in north-Anh. and three nieces. Kristin, pie's departure for a skiing hon-!crn Vermont. ^ Dana and Marin Outwtiter, Katherine Louise, Heym was married Saturday in Christ ". Church Cranbrook to Richard Katherine 1 Dean Tompkins. Louise Heym 'I Parents of the couple arc Mr. and Richard ^ and Mrs. Harold C. Heym of £)gan Tompkins ^ Birmingham and the Robert D. . , Tompkinses of River Edge, . . : N.j ' Saturday. Their , ir * * parents are Mr. and Mrs. Harold C. Heym of -g Birmingham and the p Robert D. Tomkins^ of Rwer Edge. N.J. : For the aftenoon ceremony, . the bride .selected a gown of ivory satin With embroidered Ipearl appliques on neckline, 'shoulder, and the Dior bow iiwhich held her illusion veil. She carried a bouquet of Eucharist lilies, Stephanotis and ivy. Harold C. Heym Jr. and Robert Outwater ushered. You're not missing you can't collect with interest after you ve had all thh tiiii c being single " she ' “ The. single woman. " argues, " has more lime and mone.y to spend on herself than any other member of our society" She can live in a loll in Greenwich Village — or in an elegant, lowiihouse. She lan spend her Christmas bonus on a fake fur or on a trip to Paris .She IS completely free to ill dulgc herself Miss Greer contends that the woman who resists the lure of Lohengrin long enough to explore the poeople. places, and . philosophies of the world is laying the foundation for a happy marriage But don't all men worth marrying lie the knot before they're. Ibirty"’ Not so, claims our author, citing the late John F, Kennedy who wed at 36! And is it better to have children while you're young"! | Why? Asks Miss Greer. So youj can feel resentment at spending! your prettiest, most active years! changing diapers? j Noting that the single girl’s| pel peeve is being asked whyi she has not yet landed a huS-j band, the a u t h o r compiled a | list of time tested answers. [ • “Why .settle for one dish smorgasbord’’" (^fxidKL A reception at [hne Lake Wooden Baskets \ Is Their 'Trip' Really Necessary? BWitYVOiatY ABOUT IfiCOMETAX... See Souriall & Associates J3 Years in This Area 388t Hichland Rd. 4835 DIXIE HWY. in Drayton Ploini . jhon* 674-2312 623 AUBURN RD. Pontiac—682-883 8 been slightly baffled about the various drugs, the following might help you sort them out. There are others, peyote, for one, but the following are those most often in the news. A medical symposium titled “Speed Kills” held at the University of California, example, did not refer automobile accidents. Speed is a stimulant that, according to the medical doctor with whom I talked, is easy to get and is available in not only trademarked versions but also in black market (usually im- It brought out my intolerance for drug pushers and also for By BETTY CANARY Most of us would hope to attain the. acme of tolerance. That is, to be intolerant only of intolerance. Now I know 1 most certainly shall never achieve the heights. Because 1 have just been talking with a beautiful young girl who only two short years ago had everything going for her. That was before she started smoking reefers (marijana) or got hooked on hashish, during a trip to India. Now her only interest in life is drugs. NS-1022-2 Capucci , I For show-stealing strides, tryiduce a better fit and are easier Have many Uses these flalr-out side-zipping to make. Order normal ready-* 'pants. Then don the dressy little to-wear size and allow one week A tisket, a tasket, an old tu-ed f‘’''t over-dress with zip away basK..,.H iSS ing and have unccTilhed some IMake it in'an easy-care dacron old and odd baskets, don’t] land litien for travel to warmer throw them away. Restore them! climes. NS-1022-2 is cut in by first washing with a good cleaner solution. n»isses’ sizes 6-16. Then rinse and air dry the baskets and they will be ready for flowers, fruit, bread or as collector’s items. Paint the baskets if you like, but the scrubbed, unfinished look is popular, too. When rubberized overshoes become dingy and gray, give them new life and make them look new again by applying a coat of liquid shoe polish, to their surface. Size 12 requires approximately 'h yards of 54” fabric for dress and IVt yards of 54” fabric for contrast pants. Other fabric suggestions: raw silk, sharkskin, linen, gabardine, cotton. To order |^S-1022-2; state size, include “name, address and zip code. Send $2.00 postjiaid. Send orders for books and patterns to SPADEA, Box 323, Dept. PX-6 Milford. New Jersey 08848. Tel: 201-995-2201. This pre - cut, preperforated Spadca Designer Pattern comes in ready-to-wear sizes that pro- for delivery. Something New: Pattern books by classification: Ensembles; Duchess of Windsor; Spring & Summer Dresses; Coats & Suits. Each book $1.00‘ plus 25 cents postage and handling. Hard Cover Catalogue $10.00. genetic one caused by damage to chromosomes. Pot: Another name marijuana. Also called tea and grass.' It’s not hard to find (some are harvesting their own hemp plants—particularly in the Midwest where hemp now grows wild in fields where it was once grown as a crop for the manufacture of rope). Pot turns one passive and trospective. the so-called “open-mind” attitude toward drugs. For those now prepared to tell le, “being high on marijuana is no worse than being drunk on alcohol,” all I can say is, a fractured skull may be no worse than a broken back and which of these do you recommend? GLOOMY VIEW As for the conflict of opinion 1 the effects of marijuana, there has not been enough research done to prove one way or another whether it is a habituating substance (such as whisky and cigarettes) or an addicting one. Neither is there enough medical evidence in to prove whether or not marijuana damages brain cells or leads to the use of harder drugs. Until there is. 1 take the gloomy view. ^e event that you have Speed — Dexedrine and Methedrine — causes one to become irrational and violent and in large doses can produce psychosis. It is widely used. • LSD: The number of those ‘dropping acid” has dropped as more has been discovered about the hazards involved. In some cases severe mental illness has resulted form using LSD Perhaps the biggest danger is a It’s a “cinch” to be stylishly small-waisted; all it lakes is a little time and slightly mare] effort. Try doing the following exercise: Stand with feet ilightly apart, knees bent a New Idea: First time designers have published sewing secrets.'Booklets 1, 2, 3, 4, & 5 —60 cents plus 15 cents postage and handling for each. Hard Cover Edition $5.00. Also New: Hair Pattern Booklet — do-it-yourself^ cents plus 15 cents postage and handling. SIZES BUST WAIST HIPS ‘LENGTH •From Nape ol Nock to Walsl. Eugene E. Russell, president of the Pontiac Area Chamber _of Commerce and commercial manager for Michigan Bell Telephone Company, will be the guest speaker at Wednesday’s meeting of Waterford charter chapter, American Business Women’s Association. COMPLETE OPTICU. SEIHICE EYE EXMIIIIATIOIIS help you eiqoy good vision year after year • Eye Examinations • Precision Lens Grinding • Fashion-Fitted Frames e Selections of Over 400 • Fast Repair Service IT IS EYE CHECK-UPTIME BUDGET TERMS AVAIUBLE 109 N. SAGINAW ST. E. STEINMAN, O.D. FE 2-2895 Daily fclC AJi. to 5:38 P.M.-FrMay tilB AJN. to B:M P.M. His topic vyill be “The Community and Business.” Mrs. Frank Syron, newly-elected president, will introduce the officers and chairman for the coming year. Mrs. James M. Rowland, of D and D Manufacturing Com-, will be the vocational speaker. A “Hand of Friendship Tea,” chaired by Mrs. John R. Johnson, will be held at Howe’f Lanes at 2 p.m. March 16. little, arms out like an airplane. Russell to Speak at Meeting of ABWA Chapter Cinch Waist by Exercise • THC: Sniffing this powder which contains the active drug in hemp is the way to really bomb, according to" those who say they have used it. In actuality, theVe are,probably few who have used it because obtaining it is supposed to be difficult. Hashish: Called hash by those in the know. Very expensive and not easily obtained in the United States. It is the pure resin from the hemp plant. • Heroin: The real hard stuff and literally the end of the line. If you have any doubts about this, a visit to the U. S. Addiction Research Center in Lexington, Ky., should clear them up for you. My source says that, relatively speaking, few kids are on heroin and the problem still remains essentially a problem of city slum areas. Announce Plans Tighten stomach and buttocks muscles and, without moving arms, push hips as far to the Idft as you can, then as far to the right. Try putting on dance record for exercise background music. The Maynard M. Moyers of Rochester Road, Oakland Township, announce the betrothal of their daughter, Susan Diane, to Paul Edward Taylor, son of the Montie D. Taylors of Twain Harte, Calif. Kitchen Beetles Are Identified The bride-elect, who has attended Spiring Arbor College, and her fiance, a student at Azusa Pacific College, Azusa, Calif., will wed Augus^^l6. NEW BRUNSWICK, N.J. W - Those little ihsects you occasionally find in the'pantry are called saw-toothed grain beetles, according to the Rutgers University College of Agriculture and Environmental Science. The flat, brownish, slender pests are only about one-tenth of an inch long. Areas inhabited by the beetles should be washed and cleaned, the college says. The household spray containing DDT ’ “ sometimes effective. /P1. 7 P " ® (joivitac INVITES YOU TO JOIN JACK BROKENSHA EUROPEAN HAPPENING "All That Jaxz and Something Differeat" . JUNE 12-28 □ ■ □ A Highlight of the Tour WilUBe: 5-DAY MONTREAUX JAZZ FESTIVAL Featuring Ella Fitzgerald SOMETHING DIFFERENT WILL INCLUDE: □ •1^24 Hour LeMons Auto Race *• Dinner at Maxim's, Paris Casino Monte Carlo • Polma and Lisbon POHTIAC TRAVEL SERVICE 0 108 Pontiac Moll Office Building PHONE 662-4600 19 teAiPiaa9eS)naa TURN HEADS THIS SPRING WITH THIS SPECIAL PERMANENT $C95 SHAMPOO SET & CUT ^ 42 Saginaw St. Beauty Shop FE 8-1343 NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY ..SELECTni PRESCRlPmUifllE BVSUE'CDRV 3 "COMPUTER AGE" FORMULAE FROM SUE CORY FOR YOUR SPECIAL KIND OF HAIR SPECIAL IHTRODUCTORY OFFER including shampoo ond set formula 1 (or average-strength: FORMULA 2 for strong hair FORMULA 3 for fragile hoir Andre’S SEmTlONAL SPECIAL On 100% Human Hair Any Color All Cut and Styled Reg. $69.00 FALLS $|Q00 R.g. $89.00 Minnie Falls... *10®® The New Stretch Hand-Tied Wigs Compare at *185®® 2950 SUPREME PERMANENT SHAMPOO and HAltl STYLE Except Saturday 10Q% Hiimaii Hair Wiglets Natural looking textored 100% hnman hair wiglets to add jnst the dash of glamour you want. In shades of black, frosted and brown. $2^ Phone FE 5-9257 Beauty Salon IIN.SAGINAW- JVe Appabitment Meeettary . idPikeSt. / 'S..1K.......................i' '''U/’'. .}U>- .tiu.’,'................................................... THE PONTIAC PRESS, MQNDAY, MARCH 10. 1909 ’ ^that neramhled word game for kidsS® These funny-looking nonsense words are actually REAL words, but their letters have been mixed up by someone. You must puttheir letters back into the right order so that they make or- ASE\ 1 dinary words that you can find in the dictiopary. WRITE THE LETTERS OF EACH WORD UNDER EACH NONSENSE WORD-BUT ONLY ONE LETTER TO EACH SQUARE, K POM 1 NIPE / s BUTE HOW TO SPELL "HOUSE" WITH TWO LETTERS. K'll'iiijn Now you are ready to find the ters that appear in the circles and play FUNNY ANSWER to this puzzle. The around with them. You will find that picture above will give you a hint, you can put them in order So that they Study it carefully. Then take the let- form the answer you are looking for. Print the FUNNY ANSWER here ■ J*"k A Answers Elsewhere on this Pg. L Junior Editors Quiz About- DONKEYS QUESTION: What is the difference between a jackass, i donkey, a burro and a mule? ANSWER: The spirited animals galloping at the top of our picture are wild asses of Asia. Roaming in rough, often mountainous country, the wild ass became very strong and sure footed, so that he could travel over mountain passes with ease. It is believed that these animals were first domesticated ' in countries along the Mediterranean Sea. We know them now as donkeys. They have inherited the strength and surefootedness of their ancestors. These qualities enable them to be extremely useful in packing heavy loads over rough terrain. It is true that donkeys are slow and have a stubborn quality which makes people call them stupid or contrary. But perhaps this is because their wild ancestors knew how to take care of themselves. A jackass is simply a male donkey. Donkeys bred for a smaller size, very useful as pack animals, are called burros. When you breed a jackass with a female horse, you get that remarkable creature, a mule.' Maybe he is stubborn as a mule, but old Mr. Long Ears is so strong that he has often been hitched up in teams to haul heavy loads. (You may win $10 cash plus AP’s handsome World Yearbook if your question, mailed on a postcard to Junior Editors in care of this newspaper, is selected for a prize.) Historians often credit a Stone Age Egyptian with the accidental discovery of copper ore as he built his campfire in the southern part of the Sinai Peninsula. The peninsula’s copper and turquoise mines were worked by pharaohs of the first dynasty. Jumbles; SEA MOP PINE TUBE Answer: How to spell “house’ with two letters — “TE-PEE’ NEWSPAPERS Me per IN lbs. Delivered Royal Oak WastD Paper A Metal Co. 4l4S.Hy^yO,lc Mafhemafics Explosion Is Reported WASHINGTON-Mathematics has joined the trend toward j 'explosions" in everything from| population to rubbish. | A recent report by a National j Academy of Sciences committee l speaks of an “explosive pene-j tration of mathematical methods | into other disciplines.” What it' amounts to, says the committee^ is a virtual “mathematicization | of eulture.” ^ j Scholars assert that discover-' ies in mathematics over the past 100 years are greater in quantity and quality than those in all previous history, the National Geographic Society says. Problems that would have stumped a 19th-century genius now are easily solved by college students. In recent years, computers have revolutionized m a t h e -matics. They have made it possible to solve countless problems that previously would have been impractical to handle because of the stupendous number of calculations. Before electronic computers appeared, a British meteorologist envisioned a “weather factory” with 64,000 human computers making the calculations necessary to forecast weather by mathematical formula. Today, thanks in large part to the computer, inathematics | has moved into a host of new! disciplines, ranging from ecology to psychiatry. .-y SINGER* SEWING MACHINE IN LEXINGTON CABINET It sews on all types of fabrics from sheers to bulky woolens, stays quiet and vibration-free. Pile Treatment Works Wojilers For California Couple Treatment ShrinksTiles, Relieves Fain In Most ~ Sacramento, Cal. Mrs. C. Ar of this city reports: “I can’t« tain myself any longer to you about wonderful Prepai H.for hemorrhoids. My husbaiu has also been using same and it’s doing wonders for' ;nc - • ■ ing sami or him" (Note: Doctors have proved in most cases—Preparation H® aC' tually shrinks inflamed hemorrhoids. In case after case, the sufferer first notices prompt relief from pain, burning and itching. Then swelling is gently reduced. There’s no other formula for the treatmerit’of hemorrhoids like doctor-tested Preparation H. It also lubricates to make bowel movements more comfortable, soothes irritated tissues and helps prevent further infection. In ointment or suppository form.) SINGER* ZIG-ZAG SEWING MACHINE WITH CASE This zig-zag marvel sews buttonholes, buttons; Ihrns, mends and monograms rimout attachments. NOW ONLY ^88 ATrid.mirk of THkSlNOER COMPANY TODAYSEEHOMflNUCH YOU GET FOR WHEN YOU SHOP ATSIN6ERF0R AND SAVE ON -100- Whati new for tomorrow is a( SIN C E R today!' SINGER Instant Spring! SEW FABRICS FROM SINGER only 990 per yd. Luviin by Singer. Crisp linen look. 100% rayon. 42" wide. Reg. $1.39 yd. Mystic by Singer. Sheer flocked voile. 65% polyester, 35% cotton. 45" wide. Reg. $1.49 yd. SAVE NOW! Discontinued sewing machines, cabinets, carrying cases. Many one of a kind! 08 N. Saginaw Sr., Downtowh 3-7114 Ppen Tonite 'til 9 pm-Daily 9:30 to 5:30 pm ^ ONCE-A-YEAR... FACTORY-AUTHORED SEE THE WIDEST MAGNAVOX SELECTION BY FAR AT WKC SAVE $55\NOW - MAGNIFICENT COLOR STEREO THEATRE • A true family entertainment center— Big 295 sq. in. color screen • Stereo FM/AM radio • True stereo phonograph • And solid state sound system • Quick-on permits instant viewing of the most brilliant color pictures you've ^ Dow" seen • 15-wotfs undistorted music power, two 10" boss woofers and two 5" treble speakers project thrilling sound • See it at WKC today! BIG SCREEN PORTABLE TV WITH CART • Enjoy thrilling 282 sq. in. pictures ■•olmost four times bigger than today's overage portable TV • All the Mognovox quality features walnut wood cabinet plus the Automatic Fine Tuning that always remembers to keep eacjj^ ,^honnel perfectly tuned • Telescoping dipole antenna. ‘ j Now only— $17090 1/ / tr Dramatically Long and Low MAGNAVOX ASTRO-SONIC STEREO SAVE »50 NOW Danish modern,measures 66" long * As beautiful to see as to hear • Astro-Sonic stereo FM/AM radio-Phonograph has 30 watt undistorted music power, two 12" bass woofers, two 1,000 cycle Exponential Treble Horns. Large record library area and many other MagnavOx quality features •,With BUILT-IN STEREO TAPE DECK-NOW $548.50. Park Free |h WKC's Lot at Rear of Store or T-Hr. in Downtown Mall Have Ticket Stamped at Cashier's Office No Money Down 90 Days Same as Cash Up to 3 Years to Pby J:WlW /'f L Mi Vff THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, ISIARCH 10, lOCO The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots.. Quotations arc furnished by the paris (UPI) — Tlie United Detroit Bureau of Markets as of today pushed for secret Friday. jlaHs with North Vietnam to 'break a deadlock in the Vietnam Peace Cortferencc. y.S. Pushing for Secret Talks Finch to Testify on School Aid Produce FRUITS Aoplf Cidvr, 4.gal. cate Appi«(, Delicious, Golden, bu. Apples, Delicious, Red, bu. Apples. Jonetben, bu. ^ ■ Apples, Jonafhen, C.A., bu..... Apples, McIntosh, bu. Apples, McIntosh, C.A., bu. Apples. Northeen Spy. bu. . Apples, Steele Red, C.A., bu. . VEGRTARLRS heels. Topped, bu. Cabbage, Curly, bu. Cabbage, Red, bu. Cabbage, Standard Variety, bu. Parsnips, Cello-Pek. di............... Potatoes, Jblb. bag Potatoes, SO-lb. bag Radishes. Black, vs bu............... Radishes, Red. Hothouse, dt. bch. . Rhubarb, Hothouse, S-lb. box ........ Rhubarb, Hothouse, di. bch............ Turnips, lopped, bu. LETTUCE SALAD GREENS ,3^1 A U.S. delegation spokesman! in IS told newsmen, “We are interested in any 1 e g i t i m a t e negotiaUng procedure ... and that includes secret talks. " ★ A * There was no immediate response from the Hanoi delegates. ’ * A * ^ The Paris talks among the United States, North and South I Vietnam and the Victcong have I made little progress since their j start two months ago. The cur-jrent Vietcong offensive against South Vietnam’s cities have worsened the diplomatic atmosphere. ^ RESPECT FOR VC The deadlock in the peace conference also was formed in part by Communist insistence that American delegates treat the Vietcong with more respect. Diplomatic sources said the Communists were blocking [progress until the American delegates pay the same attention to the Vietcong delegates as they do to the North Vietnamese. * * * The United States and South Vietnam officially regard the Vietcong as only a puppet of the North Vietnamese. ★ ★ ★ These were issues that could be handled in secret U.S-North Vietnamese talks.' Such secret talks led the opening of the peace conference. Block Grant Approach Is at. Issue in House The New York Stock Exchange Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POULTRY (Abbott DETROIT (AP)-(USDA) - Pricti P»id, ACF ' , Ptr pound lor No. ' ---- HMvy type hen* 'ru* roeitert 15-37; broiler* and fryer* whites 20'»-2l; heavy type young hen* 23iy-3«; ducklings 37. DETROIT EGOS DETROIT pante*. In—Foreign Inue lublect terest •— Heart Recipient, 6, Dies in Cincinnati CINCINNATI, C»iio (UPI) -Six-year-old Christine Cofhn, 14 45*i 45ik 4sv4-**ithe nation’s youngest heart S3 Sw iiS+ (J transplant paUent, died early 24 4SW 45«i W| today at children’s hospital. ^ i S ^“th Point, II 29'A + Hjhad receive the heart 73*4 71W 7?14 - vJlWilliam Michael Becker, 7, Fi 37iomjSwiMiSi2w(8. in a nine-and-a-half hour II* MW 35J* MjY-I-14 operatiffli, it was thfe first ie 2414 24^-^ 44 transplant in Cincinnati. 10 3M uw H!)* iiv®^ longer than any of ' '*jthe other four child transplant I S2'/i S2'A J 13 2*H 2SM 2514-W'P by the invasion trf cold air. light snow and flurries skipped around the northern plains and the Great Lakes region. STORM BREWING A new stMtn began building up strength in the southern Rockies and southwestern desert region. Travelers’ warnings were up for the New Mexico -and northern Arizona mountains as the storm coupled snow with strong, gusfy winds. The Southwest’s lower elevations had showers and rain. ,★ *- The Pacific Northwest, scene of violent storms earlier in year, enjoyed unusually clear and tranquil weather toddy. Elsevrtiere, conditions were mostly stmny but a bit on the chilly side for the season. * ★ * Early morning temperatures ranged from 11 below zero at Bozeman, Mont., to 64 at b^my West, Fla. Giveaways Are the Premiurfi Issue wrote, “is our customers. How they consume our custonoized preparations is our customer’s concern.” With that out of fhe way, the question again, was asked. Premiums, Battle suggested, benefit the customer in many ways, including^ these: They“ entice a customer to buy a product she might enjoy and continue using but which she might never have tried without the incentive of a premium. • Premiums have value in themselves. Some of them are worth only a few cents, some premiums are as large and costly as television sets or even automobiles. They add glamor to shopping. What appears to be considered by PAAA as the ultimate proof of premiuin acceptance is the strong growth of the industry from less than $1 billion 20 years ago to as much as $4 billion now. These multibillion-dollar estimates are for the total of goods won or earned or given away as premiums. They include prizes won by salesmen in sales contests and those given to shopkeepers for stocking certain products. SURPRISING NUMBER But a large part of the total represents the items collected by shoppers for buying certain products for expressing interest in them. And they were awarded in a surprising number of ways:* > In sweepstakes and contests. A sweepstakes involves no more skill than it takes to match a number you receive in Okinawa Return, Cut in Ja pan Bases Asked MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) The United States should reduce its military bases in Japan and return control of the Ryukyu Is-I the Japanese, Sen. Mike Mansfield said today. Mansfield, Senate Democratic leader, prepared his st ' for delivery at Kansas State University in one of a series of lectures honoring Alfred M. Landon, former Kansas governor and 1936 Republican nominee for President. Noting the U.S.-Japan security treaty may be amended or terminated by either party beginning next year, he said many Japanese are irritated over the presence of American troops in their homeland as well as U.S. control of the Ryukyus—especially Okinawa. Mansfield said: “Okinawa is Japanese; we have never claimed otherwise. no just or rational alternative other than to try to arrive at a fixed time schedule for the progressive and prompt return of administrative control over the I^kyu Islands to Japan. ‘NOT INDISPENSABLE’ The senator called jU.S, ba on Okinawa “a great military convenience but ... by no means indispensable.” Mansfield suggested any iu-ture trouble in Southeast Asia is more likely to result from economic underdevelopment and political instability ^an fr^m a direct threat by Conununist Chi- Zealand and Japan—which has been advocated by some Japa-!se. Concerning the U.S. economic boycott of China, Mansfield d: ‘We would be well advised to abandon this antiquated pursuit of China’s downfall by ecdnomic warfare and treat with the Chinese in matters of trade as we treat with European Communist countries—no better and no worse,” SIGNS OF TROUBLE The senator also said there are signs of trouble between the United States and the Philippines, mainly over trade and U.S. military bases. “If we cannot hold the confidence, the friendship and the respect of a people with whom we have been intimately associated for half a century,” he said, ‘what can be expected with regard to other nations in Asia with which we have had little or no historic connection?’ He supported formation of regional economic aid groups to help developing countries—such as a combine of the United States, Canada, Australia, New News in Brief Pontiac Travel Service announces 2 carefree tours for April: New Orleans Easter Holiday, April 5-9; *.Washing-ton-WilliamSburg, April 19-26. For complete (letails contact Pontiac Travel Service Minor fire damage was reported when a homemade bomb was thrown through a window at Wallace Headquarters, 544 E. Beverly, it was reported to Pontiac police Saturday. STOCK aVeRAOKS , , Year Ago 1NBW High . . -4.7 -1.1 —- 415.3 195.1 . 509.4 114.4 440.4 145.7 . 53U 117.7 413.4 159.4 the mail with a list on the storekeeper’s wall. A contest involves skill, such as “answering in 25 words ...” • As in-pack items, such as glassware in the soap box. Some premium people claim as much as 15 per cent of all glassware manufactured in a year is dis-> tributed as {M^niiums. • As on-pack items, sucli as lother can of coffee taped to the one being bought. • As factory packs, such as the reusable pail that packages the detergent, or the plastic toy that contains a bubble bath for babies. Mail-in offers. Typically these involve money and a box-top, or a facsimile of a company’s trademark. Battle claims that premiums distributed in this manner cost housewi^s only 46.5 per cent of the rmil price. • Redemption of coupons, commonly distributed through the mail or printed in advertise^ ments. Trading stamp redemptions. The PAAA people claim $1 billion a year in premiums are distributed in this manner. , * ★ ★ The business grows, Battle reminds a listener. It thrives despite criticism. It 'doesn’t matter that some housewives participate in the premium offers out of a sense of necessity or even that they may dislike them. in Evidence ^of the industry’s ability to command the best is the fact that the annual PAAA Marketing Conference next month will be the grand and stylish Philharmonic Hall. A FREE BREAKFAST The premium for those attending, said Battle, is a free continental breakfast. Cool Miners to End Strike BECKLEY, W.Va. (AP) -Striking coal miners have to return to the pits after Gov. Arch Moore Jr., signs a “black lung” compensation bill but say they’ll continue their fight for stronger legislation. The three-week strike by 1,000 miners halted.the state’s coal production. ★ ★ * More than HiGOO delegates from about two-thirds of West Virginia’s United Mine Workers union locals meeting Sunday first shouted down a motion to end the walkout as soon as possible, tlien* later agreed to end the strike when the bill is signed. Miners said their food and coal to heat their homes are in short supply. Othenel Bennington, a strike leader, told the delegates; “We didn’t get what we wanted, but got something. I say let’s go back to work and replenish our coffers. We’ll be out on vacation iuly 1 and we’ll keep at it again.” Successfuhlnve^ltig.^. By ROGER E. SPEAR Q—My husband and I have heard newscasters mention the Phillips’ Curve. Can you make this clear to ns and how it may affect us?-M. B. -You’re already affected by it through the woes of inflation. A chart of the Consumer Price Index over a period of years through 1968 shows a steeply g curve. This is the Phil-Curve presenting half of a disturbing lesson in economics. The other half of the lesson concerns the rate of unemployment for the same period of years. Prof, A. W. Phillips of the London SchiMl of Economics (has made a parallel study of these two sets of statistics from which he points to a significant correlation between inflation and mininium unemployment (or high employment). This seemingly favorable condition, however, brings rising wages and more ? expendqble cash, tending not only to push up prices but to increase demand for goods and services. Total labor costs run, higher, competition among employers in security work e r s may boost page rates and uniem contracts (may do the same. With mwe money to spqnd the public pays fpr pros^ity with inflated jM-ieds. ' President Nixon wants to ease inflationary pressures as soon possible. The Phillips’ Curve warns him that this may adversely affect labor by increasing unemployment. Here is a dilemma for delicate handling by the President and his economic advisers. * ★ * Q — If a convertible bond is neither converted nor Suit in for redemption by the advertised date, does the bond then become worthless?—S. C. -Yes, it does, and for this reason wide publicity is givien to the redemption or call date." A 30-day notice is sent to all registered holders to which they should respond promptly. Of course, there are sometimes justifiable personal reasons for „ I’m certain, though, fliat ’ companies issuing a redemption notice are troubled by the possibility of eventual loss to some bon^olders because, occsteion-I have ^n asked by a company to include a, reminder that time is running out on an advertised redemption. (To order Roger Spear’s 48-page Onide to Successfnl Investing (recently revised and In' its 10th printing), send $1 with and address to Roger E . Spear, (care of Hie Pontiac Press, Bmt lilt, (>and Central Station, New York, k Y. 1M17.) (Copyri^t, U60)