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Full text of "Benton Harbor Herald Palladium (1975-09-17)"

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COMBINING (Up Jfotw-fJaUa&fom AND THE HERALD-PRESS 


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FINAL EDITION - 48 PAGES - 4 SECTIONS 
BENTON HARBOR - ST. JOSEPH, MICHIGAN 
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17,1975 


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-Hlgt, 72, * £M •.•.; U», «, it 11 *.m. 


lie 


Experts Feel Violent Crane Has No Reed Solution 


By MARGARET GENTRY 


Associated Press Writer 


WASHINGTON (AP) —As robbers, rapists and murderers prey 


upon more and more Americans, many experts are conceding that 
little if anything can be done to stop it. 
, 


' Some suggest that any politician who promises more is a fool but 
one who dares ignore the issue may be a bigger fool because many, 
'many voters fear that they, too, may become victims 


The politicans and the professional crime-fighter!) niay tinker 


.with the system of police, prosecutors^courts and prisons and they 
may actually improve it in slow and small ways 
_;. But whatever, the improvements, those who deal with the 
problem say there's hardly a chance in a million that the nation's 
"crime rate will drop significantly, quickly or permanently 
-; A collection of 15 men and women who have made it their 
-"business to fight crime or study it examined the problenKwith a 
^gVoup of reporters and editors last week in a conference sponsored 
,ty the Washington Journalism Center. 
" - This group of liberal and conservative government officials, 


lawyers and researchers disagreed sharply on the changes that 
ought to be made in the sluggish and often unfair criminal justice 
system. 


But all were pessimistic that any changes could bring about a 


swift national decline in those crimes which touch their victims 
most closely — murder, rape, assault, robbery, burglary, larceny 
and motor vehicle thefts. 


The nation's crime rate, based on the number of those seven 


offenses reported to police, rose 17 per cent last year and the 
upward trend is continuing at about the same rate this year. Other 
studies indicate that the number of crimes actually committed 
may be two or three times as much as is reported to police. 


"I don't feel the crime situation .will improve immediately. 


We're in for a long, hard fight. It's going to get worse before it gets 


'If you locked up every- body you convicted until age 


35, you'd have no recidivism. The drive 


to commit crime is .gone by 35." 


belter," said Charles R. Work, deputy ch»ef of the Law En-" 
forcement Assistance Administration 
* 


"I'm of the belief that there is no any really effective deterrent: 


to crime," said Glen D. King, executive director of the Interna- 
tional Association of Chiefs of Police and a 21-year veteran of the 
Dallas police department. 


"I don't sec any glimmer of hope for the present criminal justice 


system in our present society We don't have the glue any more," 
said Donald E. SantareUi, a Washington lawyer, former head at 
LEAA, and a former District of Columbia prosecutor 


This group of experts generally agreed that neither they nor any 


other students of the problem really know what causes crime . •. 


One by one, they recited a familiar litany of conditions which 


form the conventional but unproven wisdom about why people rob 
and kill their relatives, their neighbors, and strangers on-the 
street 
• 
..' 


Poverty, unemployment, two hundred years of discrimination 


(Sec, back page, see, 1, etl. 1) 


FOBD REJECTED, SAYS RUNOFF WINNER 


JOHN A. DURKIN 


FUsMlS victory smile 


CONCORD, N H 
CAP) - 


.Democrat John A. Durkm says 
his smashing victory in New 
Hampshire's Senate runoff is a 
rejection of President Ford's 
economic policies and a warn- 
ing to Congress to get to work. 


. i "We have sent a message to 
Washington and I hope they lis- 
ten," the 39-year-old Durkin 
told Jubilant supporters 
in 


Manchester Tuesday night as 
his margin over Republican 
Louis C. Wyman swelled past 
the 20,000-vole mark. 
< 


The combative, wisecracking 


former state insurance.com-, 
missioner, who will become the 
Senate's 
62nd 
Democrat, 


pledged, "1 am going to stand 
up, I am going to speak out and 
I am going to rock the boat in a 
responsible 
manner 
until 


Washington starts listening to 
the people again." 


The decisive Durkin victory 


' came in the unprecedented 
rerun of the closest Senate elec- 
tion In the nation's history arid 
gave 
this 
once 
solidly 


Republican state Iwo Democra- 
tic senators for the. first lime 
since 1855. 


Both the turnout, more than 


240,000, and the margin of 
Durkm's victory exceeded the 
preelection forecasts of both 
parties. 


Unofficial returns from all of 


the stale's 299 precincts gave 
Durkin 140,273 votes, or 54 per 
cent; Wyman 113,044, or 43 per 
cent, and'Carmen Chimento of 
the American party 8,853, or 3 
percent 


In the original election last 


November, 
three 
different 


tallies produced three different 
outcomes, with Durkin and 
Wyman each polling more than 
110,000 votes and Chimento just 


Winning 
Number 


LANSING, Mich. (AP) 


—The winning number in 
the Michigan Daily Lot- 
tery contest for Wednes- 
day,' Sept 
17, is four- 


seven-eight 
(478), 
the 


state Lottery Bureau said 
today. 


; 
NY Police Prowling 
For Officers' Slayer 


NEW 
YORK 
(AP) 
— 


Hundreds of policemen prowled 
the city, searching for two men 
and a woman seen fleeing the 
scene after two officers were 
shot to death on a lower East 
Side street. 


The two victims, assigned as. 


a: neighborhood team in the 
predominantly Hispanic area of 
the East Village, had stopped a 


car with Pennsylvania license 
plates Tuesday night In what 
police described as a routine 
check. 


But police said that suddenly 


a man wearing a red dashiki 
burst from the car, firing a gun. 
One officer apparently got off at 
least three return shots. The 
second policeman's gun was not 
found. 


'POLICE SLAIN: Two New York City policemen, Sgt. 
Frederick Reddy, 50, left, and police officer Andrew 
Glover, 34, were shot to death on Manhattan's lower 
East Side Tuesday night. Police officials said the men 
were shot after stopping a car in a routine check. (AP 
Wirephoto) 


INDEX To Inside Pages 


SECTION ONE 


EdttwMs 
.............. 
Pas** 


Twta CttKs News ....... Page) 
WHIM'S SecMM.... Pages <*•« 
AMlaMters...., ....... Paget 
OMtearfcs 
............. 
Page 18 
secnoNTwo 


..... PagflJ 


CtMM, TV, BM* 


Weather Ftrecast...... Page 11 
ChssKMMs 
Pages B-K 


SECTION THKEE 


K'Mftft Supple rttcttt.... 8 Pages 


SECTION FOUR 


Sean Sip*4en*M 
8Pages 


Correction: 
Hormel 
Sliced 


Bacon »!.« 
12 m. pkg. 


Schneck's, St. Joseph. Adv. 


Police said the gunman fled 


on foot and that witnesses- 
reported that his two com- 
panions also slipped away. 


The shooting occurred in front 


of a five-story brick tenement on 
East Fifth St., between Avenue 
A and B, an area marked by 
decaying, turn -. of • the - cen- 
tury buildings once part of a 
classic melting pot inhabited by 
waves of immigrants. 


Killed were Sgt. Frederick 


Reddy, 50, a veteran of 28 years 
on the force, and Patrolman 
Andrew Glover, 34, a veteran of 
eight years. Both were dead 
upon arrival at Bellevue Hospi- 
tal 


Maiiy officers followed as 


Reddy and Glover were taken to 
Bellevue, then fanned out into 
the city to join in the search for 
the killer, or tellers. 


Patrolman William Buryk, a 


colleague of the two slain of- 
ficers, said Reddy went on pa- 
trol because Glover's partner 
was not available for,work. "He 
was the senior sergeant in the 
precinct,"" Buryk. said. "He; 
didn't have to go out." 


The suspect In the dashiki, a 


loose-fitting Afro-style shirt, 
was described by witnesses as 
an Hispanic male with a large 
Afro hairstyle and a goatee. 


Mayor Abraham D. Beanie 


said he had asked Deputy Police 
Commissioner James Taylor 
"to spare nothing to track down 
these killers.", 


Reddy, who lived at Lcylt- 


lown, in Nassau County, was the 
father of six children. Glover, of 
New York City, was the father of 
one child. 


They were the fifth and six 


policemen slain here this year. 


Surcicor DICK 


LONDON 
(APX - 
Josef 


Rosensaft, » survivor of the 
Nazi concentration camps who 
became a leader of liberated 
Jews at the end (it Wnrtd War II, 
is dead. He was M. 


1,372 


Feuding 
New Hampshire 


Republicans had united behind 
the 58-year-old Wyman, who 
noted that in addition President 
Ford had "put his name on the- 
line" by staging an 11-hour, 
118-mile motorcade through the 
southern part of the state in his 


behalf last Thursday. - 


When the votes were tallied, 


however, Durtan had improved 
his 
showing 
just 
about 


everywhere, 
doubling 
his 


earlier margins in the cities of 
Manchester and Portsmouth 
and' demonstrating increased 
strength 
in 
normally 


Republican towns. 


"The people have spoken," 


said the disappointed Wyman 
"I accept it in the spirit of the 
majority way " 


He said he didn't think New 


Hampshire voters "would elect 
an organized labor candidate," 
added he didn't know why he 


had lost and declared the out- 
come "indicates that next 
year's general thrust of politics 
is going to be the left of center." 


His 
campaign 
manager, 


California political consultant 
George Young, said the con- 
troversy over Wyman's role m 
arranging a 1972 Nixon cam- 


paign contribution by Ruth 
Farkas, now U.S. Ambassador 
to Luxembourg, "had a chilling 
effect on Wyman's campaign.". 


J Joseph Grandmaisonj the 


Nashua native who directed 
Durkm's campaign, said the 
crucial factor was that "people 
wanted a change." 
;- 


HIGHWAY CENTIPEDE: This 11-axle truck shod with 42 tires is an 
example of the biggest-capacity truck that can operate legally on 
Michigan highways. This one, photographed at South Haven, hauls 
up to 101,000 pounds of castings from National Motor Castings, 
South Haven, to a Chrysler plant in Detroit area. More common 
forms of the 11-axle truck in southwestern Michigan are double- 
bottom petroleum tankers and sand haulers, which are known as 


"Michigan trains". The; 11-axle rigs are confined to run only in 
Michigan, because surrounding midwest states do not permit them 
on their highways. Three of the 11 axles under this trailer can be 
raised and lowered by air, to reduce tire wear when running empty 
and to make tight turns easier. A set of tires for the big rig will cost 
approximately $5,000 to ?6,000. (Adolph Hann photo) 


Homosexual Ban Undergoes Test 


By LARRY McDERMOTT 
Associated Press Writer 


HAMPTON, Va. (AP) - An 


exception to Air Force regula- 
tions banning homosexuality' 
appears to be a crucial point as 
a discharge hearing for T. Sgt. 
Leonard P. Matloyich entered 
its second day. 


The regulations say an excep- 


tion can be made in a case "... 
where the most unusual cir- 
cumstances exist and provided 
the airman's ability to perform 
.military service has not been 
compromised." 


Matlovich.told the secretary 


of the Air Force in a letter six 
months ago of his sexual 
inclinations after deciding to, 
wage a test case against the 
rules banning homosexuals. 


Members of the five-officer 


Langley Air Force Base board 
hearing the case said at the 
outset Tuesday they weren't 
aware of the exception. 


Col. Robert E. Shank, the 


board's legal adviser who acts 
as a judge, told the panel Tues- 
day that a discharge wasn't 
mandatory for homosexuality. 
He instructed members of the 
board to "read over the regula- 
tions carefully tonight." 


David F. Addlestone, an 


American Civil Liberties Union 
lawyer who heads Matlovich's 
defense team, planned to call 
the first of about 20 witnesses, 
including expcrls in the field of 
sexuality, 
philosophy 
and 


religion, after the government 
concluded its case today. 


Addlestone said Tuesday he 


felt the emphasis placed on the 
exception to the regulations was 
important, and he apparently 
will attempt to show the panel 
that 
Matlovich, 
a 
12-year 


veteran wounded during one of 
three.tours in South Vietnam, 
can still ably serve the Air 
Force. 


The 
government 
called 


several witnesses Tuesday in an 
attempt to show that Matlovich," 
32, talked about homosexuals 
and visted gay bars while serv- 
ing as a race relations instruc- 
tor in Florida. 
• 


But, in virtually every case, 


wilnesses who had attended 
race relations courses laught by 
Matlovich at Hurlburt Field, 
Fort Walton Beach, Fla., said 


despite his sexual preferences, 
they considered him one of the 
best instructors they had ever 
bad in the Air Force. 


S. Sgt. William R. Wilson said 


he told Matlovich last year after . 
attending a class in which 
discrimination 
against 


homosexuals was discussed 
"that 
the Bible condemns 


homosexuality" and that he felt 
it was morally wrong. 


Still, Wilson said he believed 


Matlovich was "one of the best 
inslruclors I've seen." 


In one of the few questions 


from a member of the hearing 
board, Col. Davis H. Glass 
asked 
Wilson 
if 
he 
felt 


Matlovich had allempted to 
persuade members of the class 
to lean toward homosexuality. 


"He was able to change 


people's attitudes," Wilson 
said. "He had that technique;" 


But under further questioning 


Wilson said he felt Matlovich 
taught the class to be tolerant 
and not to discriminate against 
homosexuals. 


"He didn't try to convert 


anyone," Wilson said. 


Michigan Schook $200 Million Short 


By JIM KKEGSTRA 


Associated Press Writer 


LANSING, Mich. (AP) - Money-starved Michigan school boards 


are In limbo today over state aid dollars after top-level stale of- 
ficials failed Tuesday to find a way to make a $200 million aid 
payment Oct. 1. Gov. William Millikcn urged chiefs of the educa- 
tion, treasury and attorney general departments to continue dis- 
cussing how to solve the nagging problem of getting money to 
worried school districts. 


"This is a cash flow problem 


not 
an 
ultimate 
lack 
of 


resources," Millikcn said. 


John Porter, state superin- 


tendent of public instruction, 
swd the state either mfft obey 
laws 
retpirlng 
the 
state 


ireasnror !<*• fcoop his books 


balanced between .school aid 
spending.and tax income, or 
obey 
laws 
requiring 
aM 


payments on a regular basis. 


The law requiring bimonthly 


payments must be changed by 
(he IfHsl.ilnro — which does nnl 


reconvene until Oct. 13 — or the 
state should tell local boards as 
quickly as possible how much 
they will have lo borrow, Porter 
said. 


The payment dilemma arose 


when the state Administrative 
Hoard was told by Ally. Gen. 
Frank Kcllcy last week the stale 
could not delay half the October 
payment until November as the 
board proposed lo do. Inslcad, 
the state must make payments 
on the bimonthly schedule set 
up by Michigan law. The first 
state aid payments of the new 
FNcal vo;ir' jnic in AiK'iH. 


"Tlie legislature has mandat- 


ed 
bi-monthly 
payments," 


Kcllcy said last Friday. "If the 
date... is to be changed, it must 
be done by the legislature." 


The board wanted the delay to 


avoid larger deficits in funds 
providing the school aM dotUn. 


Porter said earlier that many 


school districts would be forced 
to increase 
their 
planned 


seasonal borrowing from com- 
mercial banks to carry them 
over the delay and also adjust to 
« O.fl per cent aid cut In the 
budget bill passed by the 
SGT. LEONARD MATI/md. 


PAGE TWO 
THE HERALD-PALLADIUM, BeitM Barter-St. J*M»k, MleUga* 
WEDNESDAY. 8EPTEMBEK 17, UTS 


EDITORIAL PAGE 


Miter And Publisher, W. J. Banyan 


, tort Und*n<*M 


Were it left to me to decide whether we should have government without 


newspapers or newspapers without government, I should not hesitate to prefer 
the latter. — Thomas' Jefferson. 


Oops! 
Tom Tiede 


teachers Right To Boo 
$19,500-A-Year Salary 


-• 
r> Yesterday's edition of the Herald- 


' Palladium related how teachers in the 
>au<Jience booed Monday night when 


'the Benton Harbor Board of Education 
Iwjted to hire a 25-year-old public rela- 
-tioBS man for $19,500 a year. 


r *• -The teacher were right; the salary 
•/isf-iiqt only needlessly high but, by be- 
•jing so, can create mischief in wage 
MgOtiations between the teachers' 
•uiioh and the board. 
ivfJThe annual salary of $19,500 is far 
/-more,than need be paid for a for- 
ijiidly-traintd PR man of excellent 
'atiility. Jobs in journalism and related 
Jfclds are scarce as hens' teeth. Well 
^qualified applicants out-number open- 
ing at least five to one. ' , 
;iRurthermore, 
the 
$19,500 
is 


thousands more than salaries received 
by Benton Harbor teachers with more 
adyalnced academic degrees and with 
mitre practical experience. 
>An article in today's edltion-on 
•page-3—will suggest an. ironic cotn- 
•parison to those readers who know the 
history of Benton Harbor schools. The 
article reports that the Benton Harbor 
board Tuesday named Bernhardt M. 
Kuschel director of the Benton Harbor 
schools music program. Kuschel will 
now work a 44-week year for $20,500 
whereas he formerly worked 38 weeks 
tor" $17,523 as "coordinator of ins- 
trumental music." 


Now "Bernie" Kuschel is well worth 


$20,500 a'year. For 24 years, from 1947 


^eterans Day 
Tradition Upheld 


By voting to return Veterans Day to 


its logical position on the calendar, 
Congress was only giving recognition 
to. the fact most of the nation simply 
refused to go along with an October 
designation for this holiday. Forty-six 
of the states already had acted to re- 
tain Nov. 11 as the official designation. 
- Confusion over the dual status of the 
event which saw federal employes and 
agencies observing it on one day and 
nearly everyone else on another finally 
will be eliminated. But not before 1978, 
fully 10 years after Congress first 
made the switch, because of lead time 
needed to make calendar and other 
changes. 


So for 1975 and the next two years the 


federal government will, remain out of 
step withlhe obvious preference of the 
majority of the people. That is not the 
first time that has happened, but this 
time the traditionalists eventually will 
win the argument. 


until 1971, he was director of bands at 
the senior high school. His bands 
reached a consistent level of ex-- 
cellence that has never been matched 
in this area. They not only copped 
every state award in sight, but won 
national recognition, as well. 


The irony is that in 24 years of 


directing the high school bands in 
flawless fashion, Kuschel never came 
close to earning as much as the 25- 
year-old PR man will in his first year. 


If teachers are irked with the Benton 


Harbor board, they can't'be blamed. 
Not even inflation can be blamed for a 
discrepancy of this magnitude. 
> 
: Neither can a predictable adminis- 
tration claim that the new employe is 


, not just a PR man but rather a genuine 


administrator 'with a long title, 
"director! of communications and in- 
formation services," to prove it. The 
administration very obviously con- 
vinced the board to start the press 
agent at high pay so he'll feel at one 
with other even more generously- 
compensated administrators, thus as- 
suring he'll sing the right school song. 


, These comments should not be taken 
to disparage the character or ability of 
the young man just stepping into the 
information post. He may be excellent 
in every way and probably does have 
high goals for his pew job. 


But for the board to start him off at 


a wage so far removed from the reality 
- 


of private business and from what 
teachers are getting invites legitimate 
teacher dissatisfaction. This is a 
remarkably poor time for that. The 
board and teachers' union have 
1 reached an impasse in bargaining for 


a new contract to cover the school year 
now in progress. The union Monday 
followed the lead of the neighboring St. 
Joseph teachers' union in asking for 
binding arbitration to get a new con- 
tract. 
' 


Well, just because this newspaper 


agrees with the Benton Harbor 
teachers in booing the PR man's 
salary does not mean that it agrees on 
binding arbitration. Binding arbitra- 
tion is simply a device to turn the tax- 
payer's pocketbook over to a "profes- 
sional" who wouldn't keep his job long 
if he didn't take care of the unions. 


School boards are the elected 


representatives of the people and have 
both the right and responsibility to 
bargain wages and working condi- 
tions. As of this writing, neither the 
Benton Harbor nor the St. Joseph 
board has agreed to binding arbitra- 
tion. 


The boards-should be commended. 


They do right not to abdicate a duty, 
painful as that could turn out to be, at 
the expense of the taxpayers. 


Mini-Calculators May 
Hurt Johnny's Math 


When the typewriter first came into 


prominence as a communication tool, 
it was not universally hailed as an ad- 


- 
(A dally newspaper published regular- 
'. ly except Sundays and certain holidays at 
'• Michigan and Oak Sis., Bcnlon Harbor, 
. Michigan, 49022, being the consolidation 


- - of The Herald-Press and The News- 
;• Palladium.) 
' 
Entered for second class postage at 
. Benton Harbor and St. Joseph, Michigan. 


'. 
Volume 00, Number 21D 


'. : Member of The Associated Press and 
-'the Audit Bureau of Circulations. 


The Associated Press is entitled cx- 


clusively to the use for publication of all 
local IHWS printed in this newspaper as 
well as all AP dispatches. 


Telephones: 


Benton Harbor, 6I6/9Z5-flfl22 
; 
St. Joseph, (II6/9M-2S3I 


Subscription Kates: 
! All Carrier Service 
75c per week. 


Motor Route Service.... I3.7S per month. 
Mail in Bcrrlen, Cms, Allegai) and Van 


Duren Counties: 


One Year 
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Six Months 
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Z6.5* 


Three Month* ....'. 
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.All Other Mail: 


OneYnr 
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StxMwKhs 
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. 
ThreeMomte 
18.M 


OneMomh 
IM 


All mil ntocriplions payable M ad- 


.wnoe. 


MM flnfew IM accepted wlMiv eaffier 


" Dtrvke k availaMe. 


vancement in the art. There were 
those who saw it as a mechanical sub- 
stitute for the written word, but not 
necessarily one which would improve 
its quality. 


To a degree the critics were correct. 


The art of beautiful script has been on 
the decline since the typewriter's in- 
vention, but that fact also could be at- 
tributed to the faster pace of modern 
society. 


Will the miniature electronic cal- 


"culator be to mathematics what the 
typewriter was to the written expres- 
sion of the language? Some educators 
already are warning of that possibility, 
especially as the pocket calculator 
makes headway in the classroom. 


A survey taken of elementary and 


secondary school teachers by one of 
the leading manufacturers .of the 
mini-calculators 
found 
a 
large 


majority of the educators opposed to 
the use of the device in elementary 
grades before basic mathematics was 
mastered by the students. Less op- 
position, indeed some justification, 
was found among the teachers for use 
of the calculators in higher grades. 


As a means to an end, the wizardry 


of minitature electronics undoubtedly 
hastens the results. Whether it also 
inhibits an understanding of the 
means of achieving those results is the 
question. 


EDITOR'S MAILBAG 


DOES THE SLAVE 


LIKE IT THAT WAY? 


Editor, 
' , 
, _, 
- 


Maybe others have the same 


mental image of slavery that I, 
had, till I thought about it: Poor, 
suffering people that were 111- 
housed, ill-fed and ill-treated, as 
reputedly described in "Uncle 
Tim's Cabin" and the lyrics of 
"Old Man River." 


After some thought,'! suspect 


the picture was much brighter. 
Each slave'represented a subs- 
tantial Investment for 
the 


master, and the master had to 
protect that investment. A slave 
had a job to do and got fed, 
clothed, and housed _accor-_ 
dtngly. Medical care and even a 
funeral were the master's res- 
ponsibility. Really' the only 
thing the slave lacked was his 
personal freedom. Often the 
slave was much better off than 
the non-slave who worked in 
similar circumstances, except 


, for" that freedom.* 
, 
'"" 


Surprising how a century 


later there is such "widespread 
clamor for the benefits of the 
guaranteed job, food, clothing,; 
' housing, medical care and" all 
the other, "cradle to grave", 
security features the, 'Slaves 
had! 
• 
' 
' -' , 


How foolish to think that 


anyone can have these benefits, 
without paying the price for 
them' — the loss of personal 
freedom!, 


The state may not Intend to 


limit your choice of job, or diet, 
or dress,; or house, or hospital, 
or doctor, or funeral', but just 
tooktotheeastandseebowttis 
in"the 'fine countries where 
collectivism 
has 
'already 


progressed farther than here. 
Consider 
some 
typical 


examples: 


In Happy Holland, you may 


not move Into the house you just 
bought and paid tor, until you 


Do You REMEMBER? 


- II Years Agi - 


Fairplain Presbyterians this 


Sunday will dedicate their 
handsome 
but 
functional 


$180,700 educational unit, which 
has just been completed on West 
Napier avenue, adjoining the 
church on its east side. The 
wing is to be'formally named 
Sunday morning the "Dr. Ed- 
ward Montgomery Christian 
Education building" in honor of 
the church's beloved honorary 
pastor, Dr. Montgomery, now in 
his 90's. He was pastor of the 
mother church, the First Pres- 
byterian church on Morton Hill 
for 
many years and 
the 


Fairplain church dedicated in 
1955 was fulfillment of a long- 
time and cherished dream of 
his. 


- » Years Ag»- 


The congregation of St. Paul's 


Evangelical 
and Reformed 


Church 
of 
Bainbridge 


Township, on Sept. 24, will 
begin a series of services com- 
memorating the 100 years since 
its organization. Following 
closely after the opening of the 
Bainbridge area for settlement 
with the completion of Terri- 
torial road to St. Joseph in 1835, 
a large number of: German: 
people gathered here. In 1850 a 
Rev. Philip Bernreiter came 
and conducted religious ser- 
vices. The next year a log 
church was built on the site of 
the present St. Paul's church, 
two miles north of Bainbridge 
Center. 


•-il Years A«»- 


J.S. Morton, Benton Harbor's 


veteran and revered steamboat 
man, celebrated his TSth birth- 
day Wednesday. The day, found 
him busy and happy and still 
concerned with steamboat af- 
fairs/ Last night Mr. Morton 
was pleasantly surprised at his 
Morton 
Hill 
home 
when 


members of the cemetary board 
came in unexpectedly and 
presented him with a huge 
bouquet of n pink gMtoU and 
also a bouquet of roses. For 
years and years Mr. Morton has 


been Identified with the city 
cemetary board and thanks to 
his interest and contributions, 
both in effort and'money, the 
city's two burial places are 
among the most attractive spots 
in this part of the state. Morton 
Hill cemetery especially has 
been greatly improved by Mr. 
Morton's personal efforts. 


' 
' . ' . -nYearsAf»-\, • 
O.G. 
Gumper, a Chicago 


campaign 
button 
agent, 


declares that be has sold 18.50 
worth of Bryan, buttons In the 
twin cities and 2S cents of 
McKinley pins. From this fact 
he derived the startling infor- 
mation that Benton Harbor and 
St. Joseph will go democratic. 


The first football game of the 


season oh the local gridiron .was 
played Saturday between two 
juvenile elevens. The boys, 
whose ages ranged from five to 
12 years, fought over the nig 
skin for several hours, the Ben- 
ton Harbor juniors finally being 
crushed by Charlie Keller's 
tiraves, Score, 4 to 2. 


Berry's World 


f.m H my**. 


•7 don 1 M* you not to wtmr /MM* am/1 (ton T M* 


Crime Goes Up 


Despite Spending 


prove to the authorities that 
your family is indeed large 
enough to occupy It efficiently. 
^ .In industrious, postwar Ger- 
rrnny, you cannot quit OP 
change your, job, except at" the 


" end if a quarter, and then only 
, after six weeks prior notice. 
' 


• • In* toe soviet republic of Bus- 
da, you dare not go on strike or 


"'criticize your^govennnentrif 


you want to stay alive'.'"".'..,' 


These countries aren't such . 


terrible places to live in, for the 
inhabitants aren't anxious to 
leave. Many would be simply , 
lost, without all the benefits 
their state provides - mostly at 
their own expense,' of course. 


In many respects they" have 


become slaves', unable to make 
their own decisions, If .they 
could, and unwilling to face, the 
possible consequences, if they 
ad. 


We are still the world's "Bas- 


tion of Freedom". Must we 
succumb to Eastern Slavery? 


EHom Heyning 
3624 Lakeshore Drive 
St. Joseph 


HlGB-MINDeD WOULD 
LKE-GULAG'PEACE 


Editor, 


In his Sept. 9th column 


Jeffrey Hart could have men- 
tioned another offshoot of the 
self-hatred of the high-minded. 
The high-minded ones, who 
haven't the slightest interest in 
atrocities 
committed : after 


Communist-backed 
"libera- 


tors" take over, are presuma- 
bly the! same ones who would 
also 
go 
to 
Moscow- (or 


whereever the center of.the 
Conpinicy lies) on their knees 
in the interests of Communist 
style "peace." And what kind of 
tender hearted people will they 
find to administer the "Gulag" 
peace of the new world order? 
The fundamentally .insane, 
champion self-balers of all , 
times, is who. 
- 
, 


Nuclear holocaust has been, 


held up as the alternative to 
gulag peace for three decades. 
The; argument goes that any 
kind of existence Is preferable 
to the ultimate catastrophe of 
annihilation of the human race, 
because with life there can at 
least be hope for succeeding 


(See page B,tttaaMT) 


WASHINGTON - (NEA) -* 


'When the Law Enforcement 
Assistance 
Administration 


''(LEAA) announced its inten- 
tion 
to spend more than 


$200,000 in the search for 
proper footwear for America's 
gendarmes, observers across 
the, nation sighed in unison. 
The idea,'to field 'test SOO pairs 
of shoes and then'pay the Army 
for final development, was even 
criticized by cops themselves. 
It's absurd, said Seattle Police 
Chief Robert Hansen, because, 
for one thing, "police spend 
more time on their butts than 
their feet." 


It has always been thus for 


LEAA, a youthful (six years 
old) 
and Immature 
federal 


bureaucracy: logic has; never, 
fazed its relentless quest for 
ways to spend the taxpayers; 
coins. Set lip originally 'as, 


vanother government'attempt to^ 
• curb crime_ through-innovatkMir 


the agency- has succeeded in' 


-•, the latter but at the expense of . 


;the former/?" 
V'-Wnlle spending nearly $6 
: billion on some- of the .go!':" 


'"darndest,' Jim-dandiest, ,gee-~ 


* wUUker, Innovations in law eni - 


forcement< history, - crime in 
America during the period has 
risen by 40 per cent. 
"- 


LEAA. of course, will have - 


none of the talk of modifies-1 


lion. Its latest project, for 
example, is a l^week, 1541,823 
study "to improve the physical 
fitness of the nation's 'police 
.officers.'", Noting that too many 
cops are,goin£ the way of all 
flesh, 
• 
while • criminals 


presumably keep tit and mm, ' 
LEAA proposes the; develop- 
ment of exercises>and exercise 
manuals "\which, will "build 
confidence and effective police 


, responses in dangerous »itua-. 
'Sons." 


At that, the expenditures of 


half a .million for exercise ,is 
cheap by LEAA standards. It 
once spent $25' million to con- 
duct an opinion poll of crime 
and is now spending 1300,000 
more to evaluate the success of 
Uu original project. 


In general, a chief complaint 


against LEAA is that precious 
few of its expensive programs 
have 
national 
significance. 


Another complaint1 is that 
mmy'of the programs have no 
local significance either. 


Last year, at.^a cost of $1 


mllion, LEAA invented a "ci- 
tizen's 
alarm" 
wristwatch 


which was said 'to enable 
wearers 
to.warn'authorities 
of 


' personal 'troubles'. Unfortuna- 
tely, the watches bto noHrans- 


• mtt signals over 500 feet, which 
somewhat limits protection for 
; everybody' Jnfto jsjMt _ bedrid- 
den.' 
' 
••*•. "'.-> •• 
^ this wristwatch^solution to 


criminal superiority, by the 
way, seems to be something of 
a 
fixation 
with' 
LEAA. 


, Currently it; Is „ budgeting 
.,«50,000 to develop a watch that 
;wul monitor -the degree of 


stress experienced by cops on 
active duty. Essentially, and no 
kkkttng, LEAA wants police, at 


" a glance, to be able to measure 
• the stress engendered' by 


wrious activities., 
' In time, perhaps, It LEAA Is 


. allowed continuation of its $770 


mutton budget .(which,Is $300 
million more than that of the 
FBI), the^agency will create 
the compleat cop: Soft of shoe, 
hard) of. muscle" and elec- 
tronically motivated.' 
• Ah, yes, that'll'be the day. 
tint by,Godfrey the crooks 
should,be forewarned because 
by then LEAA will have spent 
tt) much money there won't be 
any left for stealing. 


Marianne fft&ms 


'Favorite Son9 


Game Underway 


WASHINGTON 
(KFS) - 


Popular Ohio Sen: John Glenn, 
after months of anguish and 
pressure, has told friends he 
won't do it, , Not-so-popular 
Pennsylvania 
Gov. 
Milton 


Shapp, 
after -• months 
of 


indecision and discouragement, 
has announced that he will. 


It's the favorite son (favorite 


person?) game, 1874 version. 


,' So far, Shapp Is the 'only 
favorite son who has made it 
official. 
But 
Sen. 
Ernest 


Boilings Is privately organizing 
support for a favorite eon bid in 
South Carolina, which selects its 
delegates by convention rather 
than by statewide primary. 


Last spring, Chicago Mayor 


Richard Daley's organization 
was promoting a', favorite son 
rote for Sen. Adlai Stevenson 
3rd, as a means of 'assuring a 
btoc of Daley-oriented delegate. 
and preventing Democratic 
Gov. Dan Walker, a Daley foe, 
from controlling the delegation. 
Stevenson was tempted, but has 
lately been 
having second 


thoughts. Associates now doubt 
that be will do it 


Gov. Wendell Anderson bag 


been considering a favorite son 
bid in Minnesota, but the state 
delegate convention to in June, 
which is very late. By that time, 
Sen. Hubert Humphrey may 
either be an active candidate or 
a viable potential Presidential 
compromise, in which case the 
state delegates would be his for 
Ibe asking. 


Wisconsin's Gov. Patrick 


Lucey held a few private .ses- 
sions with advisers to discuss 
the favorite son ploy, but was 
forced, to rule it out. Under the 
state's regulations, only boita 
fide Presidential candidates 
may be placed on the primary 
.ballot; In order to qualify, he 
would have to run in other states 
as well and mount at least the 
semblance of a national cam- 
paign. • 


California 
Gov. Edmund 


(Jerry) Brown IMS given IM 
public hint of his puns, bit 
many Democrats beHem he will 
nm as a favortte son in order to 
Influence the convwUon choice. 
. New York Gw. ftagft Carer 
ro«y DeM M* mm CM**** for 


<* ike CmgnuilMail dta- 


Irfctt ft OK «a*c primary. BM 


for the first time New York is an 
early and therefore desperately 
important ,- primary. 
Carey 


would be risking the wrath of 
the real Presidential candidates 
and the'gamble may not• be 
worth tt, unless Cary decides he 
is fantastically popular locally. 


Tte fawrite son complication 


has not been with us recently. In 
1972, It was in such disfavor that 
new Democratic rules were; 
drafted to downplay the device, 
and all major local political 
figures but one agreed not to use 
It. The exception was Hep. 
Walter Fauntroy of the District 
of Columbia, who irritated party 
leaders. 


It was felt that the voters 


should have the opportunity to 
help select the nominee, not 
merely hand over backroom 


"power to some local politician 


woo might or might not reflect' 
their wishes. Most people (till 
•eem to feel the tame way. 


ftit tt to not y«t dear whether 


Uwre will be a collection of 
favorite sons to confuse the pic- 
ture or whether there will be 


Democrats Want 
Another Seat 


LISBON, Portugal (AP) - 


The Popular Democrats today 
held out for one more sett than 
the Communists in the new- 
Portuguese cabinet as political 
maneuvering continued. 


The 
centrist 
Popular 


Democrats rejected a proposal 
that they and the Communists 
each have two seats in the 
coalition cabinet the premier- 
designate, Vice Adm, Jose 
Pmheiro de Awvedo, has been: 
trying to put together for more 
than two weeks. 
'.;* 


'Family' Topg 


NEW YORK (AP) - CBS' 


diwbte "All in the Fimuy," 


1 from JMarday to Mm- 


f* the W7V7I 


nation's 


..-__ 
*lr'n£ 
' ^^IHMTB WWK . • 
' 
.. •» A.C., 
iO». i 


Twin City 
Highlights 
itutt 


COMBINING dip Jfow-JJolla&fom AND THE HERALD-PRESS 


BENTON HARBOR - ST. JOSEPH, MICHIGAN 
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1M 


Twin City 
Highlights 


QUADRIPLEGIC ATTORNEY HERE 


This Young Man Doesn't Expect It Easy 


By SCQTT WILLIAMSON 
, 


Salt Writer 


''If'it coir)es~too easy it's 


'usually not worthwhile " 
' That's one of the credos David' 
Snanson lives by, and it proba- 
bly means a lot more to him 
'than to most people " 


Dave is a quadriplegic, and 


has been for the1 past 11 years. 
When he's seated behind his' 


desk, 'though, most people 
probably wouldn't knowv'he's 
paralyzed from the neck down. * 


His desk is in the p[fices,ef the 


ftnton 
Harbor * law firm i of 


Thomas Robinson' and 'James 
Ford, Whore 
1 he joined 


js an associate last week 


Not loo many things have 


. come easy for the likeable 29- 
year-old attorney, a native of 


(Jbly, lMich V, located in the 
state's""thumb" area." 
> 


His father died of-a heart al- 


' (licit when David was seven, and 
the following year his mother, 
three brothers,'and his- only 
sister died in an automobile ac- 
cident In 1965 he lost his only 
other brother—again < in an auto 
crash 
H 
, ^ ' . 
'. 


"You stop thinking about it as 


tragedy since it's something 
over which you have no con- 
trol," Dave says "You just 
have to do the best you can " 


Dave graduated from high 


school in 1964, and had been ac- 
cepted to Notre Dame university 
to enroll in prc-medicme He 
also had a wrestling scholarship 
from Notre Dame But, as he 
puts it "I botched it " 


He e\pl.ims that during the 


summer between high school 
and college he » as working road 
construction "It was one of 
those 90 degree 90-per cent 
humidity days when we hit a 
break in work I went swim- 
ming in the SI Clair river and 
got out of work for the rest of the 
day " 


He got out of work because he 


DRIVES SPECIAL VAN:'David'Swanson, new Benton Harbor at- 
torney, is.'mobile even though paralyzed from, the heck down. His 
special van has hydraulic lift (left) which lowers when he inserts 


' key in' side of van, then raises 'Dave into vehicle. Driver's seat is 


removable to reveal inclined track, and wheelchair rolls into posi- 
tion behind steering wheel. (Staff photos) 


Skidmore Clears One Tax Hurdle 


By RALPH LUTZ 


Stall Writer 


"The Benton township board, 
following a public hearing last 
night, designated Skidmore 
Corp. property in Pipcstonc In- 
dustrial park as an industrial 
development, district for tax 
exemption purposes. 


The board then scheduled for 


its next meeting, Oct 7, a final 
decision on gVanllng the actual 
tax exemption on a plant addi 
lion proposed by Skidtnorc. 


Industrial firms planning 


plant additions may qualify for- 
a 50 .per cent reduction on local 
property taxes for 12 years, but 
only on the assessed valuation of 
the addition The plan, aimed at 
bringing In new industries and 
expanding 
employment, 
is 


founded in the Michigan Plant 
Rehabilitation and Industrial 
Development Districts Act of 
1974. 


Skidmore last'.month in- 


formed the township board of 


Student Car Wash 
1 
i 
i 


Lake Michigan Catholic high school seniors will sponsor a car, 


wash Saturday from Sam to 5 p m at the Hilltop Foods parking 
lot on Hilltop road in SI Joseph Piocceds from the car wash will 
lie used to finance the school's annual Homecoming dance and the 
senior float. 
' 


tentative plans for an 18,750 
square-foot addition that would 
cost-about $278,000 and employ 
up to 10 more people at the end 
of the first year of operation. 
Another 10 may be added by the 
end of the second year, the 
board learned last night. Skid- 
more now employs 88 people. 


Skidmore manufactures con- 


dcnsatc and vacuum pumps and 
hydraulic systems. 


The board in other business 


took 
under 
advisement 
a 


resolution by the township 
planning commission that a 
breakwater groin, Installed in 
Lake Michigan for Herbert 
Mendel of 1800 Rocky Gap road, 
be removed,because of alleged 
erosion to adjoining properties. 


The board approved planning 


commission recommendations 
to approve the combining of two 
lots sought by Bonita Biclman, 
2500 Territorial road; and to 
approve the rezoning from 
cemetery,to commercial for a- 
new Twin Cities Federal Credit 
Union office. The site at 1873 
Eist Napier is near Crystal 
Si>rings cemetery. • 


The board 
also 
followed 


planners' advice in denying a 
request by Craig A. Taylor for a. 
used car license at 2174 M-139. 


The board voted to urge the 


Bcrrien' county road commis- 
sion to consider the installation 
of four-way traffic lights on 
Delaware at Broadway and also' 
at Ogdcn. Action came when 
.Timothy Hayes of 242 Delaware 
presented petitions signed by 60 
Delaware residents whb want 


the lights because of heavy 
traffic, speeding and lack of 
sidewalks for the safety of 
children. 


Also approved was a request 


by the Main street Seventh-day 
Adventist church for lls annual 
ingathering campaign on the 
streets from now until Dec. 31. 


Tabled until the Oct. 7 nieet- 


.. ing wore decisions on a pension 
kplan for all township employes 
except police, fire and elected 
officials; and a decision on en- 
tering a contract with Bargcr 
Engineering, St. Joseph for, 
development of Robblns park. 


The township board will be 


host to. the monthly .session of 
the Michigan Township as- 
sociation at 7:30 p.m. Wednes- 
day Oct. 15, in Benton township 
hall. 


ALMOST READY: Construction of Cedarwood Medical center, on 
Lester avenue (foreground), off MM Mock of Nltes avenue in south 
St. Joseph, i* nearing completion; Cttrtkng $1 millkM, center will 
IWNM professional corporation of pftytteiaM and mrgeem and to 


scheduled to be completed next month. Center Is being built on 
4Vfcacre site by Health Care Industries, Inc., of St. Louis, Mo., a 
subsidiary of Bank BuiMing Corp. (Adolpti Hann aerial photo) 


dove into water 28 inches deep 
and broke his neck I "Just not a 
real bright thing to do," he 
terms it. 


The injury cracked 
and 


dislocated vertabrae in his back 
jnd severed his spinal cord The 
paralysis was immediate, he 
says, and has been permanent 


He cannot move his legs, and 


Ins very limited use of his 
arms 
He can 
move his 


shoulders, wrist, and can raise 
his arm with some effort. But he 
compensates for the lack of 
motor, ability with a sharp mind 
and quick wit 


Following the injury, Dave 


was hospitalized for 13 months 
"They spoiled,me rotten," he 
notes "At the time," he says, 
"I still thought I'd be going to 
Nnlre Dame 


"There was never any ques- 


tion of giving up It was a mat- 
ter of how and when I would 
continue my schooling, there 
was no 'if about it " 


Dave began taking college 


dasscs part-time at Port Huron 
two weeks after his release from 
the hospital He lived with an 
aunt who is Robinson's sister, 
: and says she always wanted him 
to be a lawyer. He adds Robin- 
son and Ford, both of whom he's 
known lor many years, also 
influenced him to turn to the 
legal field. 
- . . ' . ' 


"I had to give up my thoughts 


of medicine since I wouldn't be 
able to do. a-very good job in 
surgery with limited use of my 
hands," Dave says, "and to me 
law was the only logical choice. 


"It was something 1 felt I 


could do," he explains, noting 
many of the people in his aunt's 
family were in the legal proles'; 
sion. 


After Port Huron, ho went to 


Wayne State university, where 
he received his undergraduate 
degree in political science in 
1970. He obtained his law degree 
from Arizona Slate university in 
1978, and before joining the 
local law firm he worked in the 
office of judicial assistants in 
Detroit Recorders court. 


Despite his seeming han- 


dicaps, Dave gets around as 
well as many people and leads 
an active life. He drives to and 
from work in a specially 
equipped van fitted with a 
hydraulic lift to get him In and 
out, a special bar with which he 
controls the speed and brakes, 
and a peg-like device he at- 
taches to his hand to steer. 


He got his driver's license 


aftar only two weeks in a 
driver's education course for 
the handicapped in Ann Arbor, 
and has the same complaints of 
mnst drivers. 


"The only time I'm uncom- 


fortable is in rush hour traffic," 
ho says. • 


Two cousins live with Dave in 


Ihe Fairplain house he rents, 
and he says he likes;having 
people around to assist him or 
help .out-in case, of an ac- 
cident—"Like when'-I flip the 
wheelchair." 


How docs ;oric flip one's 


wheelchair? ' 


"By going down .the ramp at 


the house to see if one can coast 
to a neighbor's yard," Dave 
smiles. "The foot pedals got 
caught in the dirt and the chair 
stopped, but I didn't. 1 almost 
made it, too,"'he says brightly. 


He says he still needs assis- 


tance to do some things. "I'm 
not going to climb Ml. Everest 
or even little curbs." 


He says architectural terriers 
'are the biggest hassle," like 
steps and curbs. "Little things 
like curbs not cut out still get in 
my way," Dave explains. 


Of his social lite ho notes: "I 


have no complaints." He com- 
pensates for lack of physical 
skills with hobbies in which he 
am use his mind, lie loves to 
play chess (he has a number of 
chess sets collected 
from 


various parts of the world), 
bridge, and being outdoors. 


He's a longtime member of 


the Audobon Society and enjoys 
witching and identifying birds. 
DHVC says he's actively learning 
UK identities of ly|>es of mam- 
mals, and hopes to learn as 
much about trees In the future. 


Of his law practice, he says 


he'll "do anything that comes 
my way," but notes he's most 
familiar with criminal law. 


His current focus is getting 


established in the area and the 
KB-(inn. 


'I wlsti it were an overnight 


thing but it doscn't come that 
fflsy. If it oVies it's not usually 
worthwhile." 


LAWYER AT WORK: David Swanson last week joined 
Benton Harbor law firm of Robinson and Ford, -and 
has same duties as most lawyers — even though he.'s 
paralyzed and confined to wheelchair. He has enough 
mobility m arm to turn pages, answer phone and take 
notes, and hasn't let paralysis from neck down stand 
in his way of pursuing law career. 
Berrien Jail Bids 
Exceed Ceiling 


Bids were opened yesterday 


for installation of new windows 
and a ventilation system for the 
Dcrrien county jail but alt three 
exceeded the cost county of- 
ficials had anticipated. 


No action was taken by lh« 


county board of commissioners' 
administration committee ex- 
cept to refer the bids to the 
project's architect for further 
•evaluation. 


County commissioners In July 


approved 
seeking bids to 


replace all windows in the 
ccilblock and receiving areas of 
the 23-year-old jail and to Install 
a new mechanical ventilating 
system, but set a celling of 
about $155,000 for construction 
costs. 
. ' . . • • - • • 


The three bids opened yester- 


day were from Dent Plumbing 
and Heating, of Kalamazoo, 
$217,777; City Plumbing, St. 
Joseph, $248,712; and Ideal 
Plumbing, 
Benton 
Harbor, 


$274,395. 


County Coordinator Roger 


Pclrlc said the board originally 
hoped construction could begin 
in late September, but that 
timetable was thrown off by the 


high bids He said the board will 
hopefully be able to consider 
some type of revised bids at its 
October meeting, but he doubt- 
ed It construction could be'done 
before winter. 


The bids to replace windows 


and the ventilation systcin are 
part of a program to expand the 
jail to accomodale the ever- 
increasing 
number ' of 


prisoncriislodgcd there Com- 
missioners previously said the 
jail is usually filled to capacity 
or greater most of the time, 


A portion of the federal 


revenue sharing funds allotted 
to the county have bccn'cafr 
marked to pay for the installa- 
tion of the windows and-.ven- 
tilating system, but county.ofr 
ficials arc slull unable, to 
predict the cost of a complete 
jail expansion program pending 
results of a study. 


Commissioner Frank Poor- 


man previously sold the present 
windows lose two million BTU's 
of heat annually, and the -new 
insulating windows will recover 
their cost within five years in 
the heal they save. 


Kuschel Gets New 
Tide, $3,000 Hike 


'-; Bernhardl M. Kuschel, director of championship high school 
bands in Benton Harbor for 24 years, Tuesday was named director 
of the Benton Harbor school music program. 


Kuschel was tapped tor the 


high-level administrative post 
by the board of education, which 
approved a 44-week contract 
and put the salary at $20,500. 
Kuschel currently has served 
under a 38-wcck contract as 
coordinator of instrumental 
music at a salary of $17,523. 


The board in a special meet- 


ing also ratified three-year con- 
tracts for the district's 30 cooks 
and 
40 bus. drivers. 
The 


economic package for both 
groups is identical and includes 
pay raises totaling 47-ccnt per 
hour increases over the three- 
year period, plus a cost of living 
income to start the second year 
and not to exceed 15 cents per 
hour. 


Present pay ranges for cooks 


have been $2.25 to $2.»0 per 
hour, depending on job clas- 
sification, for the first 90 days, 
and $2.00 to $3.55 per hour after 
the first 90 days. Bus drivers 
have been paid $2.97 per hour 
the first 90 days and $3.77 per 
hour after that, according to 
John FehsenfcM, group director 
of personnel for the district 


In naming Kuachcl to an ad- 


ministrative position, the board 
felt the director's tide wwrid fit 
b«»er, since wort pttfuriiml by 
KmcM to cmentMljr admtnto- 
tnttvc now. 


BERNHARDT KUSCHEL, 


Director Tltfe Fits 


Kuschel joined the district in 


mi and for 24 years was direc- 
tor of bands at the high school. 
Under KuschcPs baton, tho 
Benton Harbor Tiger band won,: 
countless awards and sUtewMe. 
acclaim. 
t; 


KiMchcl retired from the hMri" 


director's post in 1171, b«i 
rmxtned wtth the BMNm H»-- 
bor (Nfltritt in UK < 


'- -PAGE FOUR 
HEEALD-PALLAMUM, BM!M Barter - St Jtewpk, MfeUfii 
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1»7S 


AAUW Book Sale 


BEGINS THURSDAY: The annual used book sale, sponsored by the Benton Har- 
, bor-St Joseph branch of the American Association of University Women, will be 
held Thursday, Sept 18, through Saturday, Sept 20, in the parking lot of Sears, 
Roebuck and Company, Benton Harbor. Hours are 9 a m. to 9 p.m. Thursday and 
Fnday and 9 a m. to 4:30 p.m. Saturday. Mrs Boccy (Marcia) DeFrancesco, 
' general chairman, gets assistance in sorting books from her son, Roccy Jr. (Staff 
photo) 


New BP& W President 


JANE DeHAVEN 


Jane DeHaven, first vice- 


president of the Twin Cities 
Business 
and 
Professional 


Women's club, will i>er\e as the 
club's 
president 
for 
the 


remainder of the 1975-76 year. 


Mrs. DeHaven succeeds Ethel 


Oppenhulsen who resigned upon 
moving to Michigan City, Ind. 
Mrs 
Oppenhuiscn 
is now 


employed as assistant cost 
manager for Arno Adhesive 
Tape Company. 


•Mrs. DeHaven,,'a resident of 


the Twin Cities for 20 years, has 
been an active member of the 
Business .and 
Professional 


Women's club for four years 
and served as membership 
chairman in 1974-7.5. 


Mrs. DeHaven has 30 years 


experience in accounting and is 


now employed as accountant for 
Ross Hadley, owner of Ross 
Janitorial .Service, 
and is 


treasurer of Allied Financial 
Corp., Sarasota, Fla. 


She and her husband, Bruce, 


reside at 629 O'Brien drive, 
Benton Harbor. 


Circuit 


SOUTHWEST 
MICHIGAN 


WRITERS' CLUB will meet at 
7:30 p.m. Friday; Sept. 19, at the 
YWCA, St. Joseph. The year's, 
programs will be planned and 
manuscripts read. Interested 
persons arc invited. 


'Shoulder To Shoulder' 
PBS Series Scheduled 


t/l round the clock witk 


WOMEN 


CLUBS • CHURCH • FAMILY • FASHION • SCHOOL '.HOME 
SOCIETY 


Begins New Year 


Couple Wed 


NEW BUFFALO - 
MIS.S 


Yvonne Taskey and James L. 
Herbert exchanged wedding 
vows Sept 6 at St Mary of the 
Lake Catholic church, New Buf- 
falo 
The Rev 
FT. Howard 


Murray 
performed 
the 


ceremony; 


Parents of the bride are Mr. 


and Mrs Chester G Taskey, 
New Buffalo The groom is the 
son of Mr and Mrs Edwin J. 
Herbert, Michigan City, Ind 


The bride wore an ivory A-lme 


gown of silk illusion and rose 
point lace over English net* and 
trimmed with lace appliques. 
She wore a sleeveless lace coat 
which extended into « chapel 
length train over her dress and 
a seed pearl crown held her 
short veil 


Miss Sara Fenton was maid of 


honor Bridesmaids were Miss 
Maureen 
Alexander, 
Miss 


Pamela 
Taskey 
and Miss 


Sharon Bohnsudt 


Andrea Taskey was flower 


girl and Joseph Wagner was 
ringbearer 
. 


Serving as best man was 


Jerry Abrams.1 Ushers were 
Robert 
Spychalski, 
Roger 


Taskey, brother of the bride,! 
and Richard Herbert, brother of 
the groom 
' 
"- 


A reception "was held at 'St,1 


Joe Hall, Michigan City . 


Following a^weddlng trip to 


Canada and New England, the 


couple is making their home in 
Mlshawaka, Ind. 


The bride is a student at In- 


diana 
university 
and 
Is 


employed ds manager of sales 
administration at Ames Com- 
pany, division of Miles Labora- 
tories, Elkhart, Ind Her hus- 
band, a graduate of Purdue 
university, is a design engineer 
at Joy Manufacturing Company, 
Michigan City 


Say 
Vows 


DECATUR - First United 


Presbyterian church, Decatur, 
was the setting Aug 30 for the1 


wedding of Mrs. Marguerite 
Pterson and G. Raymond Gale. 
The Rev Theodore Neely per- 
formed the ceremony. 


Attendants were Mrs Myra 


'Melvuvdaugnter'of the bride, 
and Randolph Gale, son of the 
groom 
* 
> 


A reception was held at the 


.Stone Inn, Cassopolis. . 
i 


'•~ Following a wedding trip 
around Lake Superior, 
the 


couple is making their home at 
Sister Lakes. 


Wadding 


< 
> / 
, 


Anniversaries 


I 


Howard Leasenbys 


BUCHANAN - Mr and Mrs, Howard Leazenby, 908 West Third 


street, Buchanan, will be honored at an open house celebrating 
their 40th.wedding anniversary Saturday/Sept. 20, from 2 to 5p.m. 
at the Buchanan township, hall. 


Friends and relatives are invited. 
Hosting the event 'will be the couple's children, -Mrs, Michael 


(Terry) Specre of Big Rapids, and Jerry Leazenby of Malvern, 
Ohio. 


The former Margaret Paddock and Leazenby were married 


Sept. 28, 1935, in a ceremony at the Buchanan fall festival. 


Leazenby retired from Clark Equipment company in Buchanan 


in I9«8, and Mrs. Leazenby retired from Electro-Voice, Inc., 
Buchanan, in 1970. Mrs. Leazenby is active in the Church of Christ, 
Buchanan. 


The couple has four grandchildren. 


I 


Dale Englishs 


NEW TROY - Mr. and Mrs. Dale English, Weechick road, New 


Troy, were, honored at a reception in their home Sept. 14 in ob- 
servance of their 40th wedding anniversary. 


Hosting the event were their chlldren,,.Mr, and Mrs. Kenneth 


(Nancy) Baldwin of Jackson, Mr. and Mrs. Rex (Arlenc) Hos- 
tcttlcr of Uhrichsvillc, Ohio, and Allen English of Indianapolis, 
Ind. 
. 
• 
• • 
- . . -..'...-., •'" 
-... 
. - 


English and the former Margery Stearns of Galicn;were married 


Sept. 14, 1835, in the Congregational church parsonage, Michigan 
City, Ind. 


The couple has seven grandchildren and one great-grandson. 
English is employed us superintendent at Holland Construction 


Company, SI. Joseph. 


Maurice Doddingiohs 


Mr. and Mrs." Maurice Dotlingtqn; ,503--East' Napier avenue, 


Benton Harbor; we're honored at a surprise party.Sept. 14 at the St. 
Joe Kickers Sport club, Arden, in honor'of their 25th wedding an- 
niversary. 
. 
. 
• 
- 
',''; ' • ' • • • .'.' 


Hosting the event were the couple's children, Daryl Dotlington, 


Mrs. Kathi Tanner and Miss Lori Dottington, all of Benton Harbor. 


On Sept. 16, 1850, Doltinglon and the former Marilyn Atwood 


were married at the Peace Temple United Methodist church, 
Benton Harbor. 
.-'•,.•' 
• 


Doltington is. owner of Kitchen Mart, Sodus, and Mrs. Dotlington; 


Is employed by Heath Company, St. Joseph. 
' 
, - ;... •'.•' 


Denim Popular .TJiis Year 


. Try a coverall style sundress. 


, Wear'it wlth'a Trshlrt now and 


with just your tan later in the 
summer. 
'•;-• 
. 
•'. 


Denim is everywhere .this 


year, 
contrary 
to 
fashion 


predictions that said its time 
had passed. " 


IN SUFFRAGE SERIES: Georgia Brown plays Annie Kenney in "Shoulder To 
Shoulder,' a six-part dramatization of the struggle for women's suffrage in Bri- 
tain: The series will be seen on Public Broadcasting System beginning Oct. 5. (AP 
Wirephoto) 


Alloiv Parents To Visit Sick Infants 


•The customary gloom of a 
treatment facility for critically 
iU newborn babies has been 
rttepdlcd at a Denver hospital. 
^Contrary lo general practice, 
th*,. Newborn Center of the 
Children's 
hospital 
allows 


(•rent* to visit, caress and even 


4 their sick infant, in the 
•••i UMK the newbom's need 
tir tote tat security outweighs 


the risk of infection. 


A sophisticated communica- 


tions system and a well-coor- 
dinated transportation network 


allow the facility to provide care 
for critically-ill babies in a 
seven-slate area from South 
Dakota lo New Mexico. 


Make Time For Break faxl 


No lime for breakfast? 
It takes less than five minutes 


lo mike an omelet, a serving of 


scrambled eggs, an egg and 
fruit juice beverage or French 
toast. 


I tearing Aids 
* supplies 


SdMtaiwl toetery prlct* »mrt at lew as IN.M. 


Hi. 9634343 


HERITAGE PROGRAM: Mrs. Edmund Eaman presented program, "Our Heri- 
tage — The .13 Colonies"-at the 1975-,78 opening meeting of Benton Harbor-St. 
Joseph Federation of Women's clubs Sept. 15, at the Josephine Morton-Memorial 
house, Benton Harbor. Executive board members served as hostesses at the 
meeting. Serving coffee, frifm left, are Mrs. W. Hayden (Patsy) Oldham, record- 
ing secretary., Ossoli club; MrsTHerbert (Helen) Noffke, trustee, Triginta club, 
and Mrs.i Howard (Alice) Collins, chairman of the hostess committee, Alpha Beta 


• Epsilon Sorority. (Staff photo) 
v 
- 
1 


i 
• 
» 


Set Nuptial Dates 


SUSAN SCHULKR 


U« Drake ' 


NEW BUFFALO—,Mr. and 


Mrs. Floyd W. Schiller, 907 
West Detroit street, New. Buf- 
falo, announce the engagement 
of their daughter, Susan Joy, to 
Leo Edward Dreske, son of Mr. 
and Mrs. Edward' Dresko of 
LaPortc, Ind. 


Miss Schuler Is a graduate of 


New Buffalo high school.and 
Lake Michigan college. She is a 
senior at Western Michigan 
university. : 


•Her fiance is;a graduate of 


Rogers high school, Michigan 
City,-Ind.;,and is a third-class 
petty officer in the United Slates 
Navy, stationed aboard, the USS 
Tripoli, San Diego, Calif. 


A Dec. 19 wedding is planned. 


SEA BATTLE 


In 
the 
bloody battle of 


Jutland, the German navy 
slugged It out with the British 
navy in the North Sea in 1916. It 
was Iho only major sea battle of 
World War I. 


GAIL WORST 


Jfta Gagllirfe Jr. 


COLOMA - 
Mrs. Marie 


Yenchus, Cicero, 111., announces 
the 
engagement 
of 
her 


daughter, Gail Worst, to John J. 
Gagllardo Jr., son of Mr. and 
Mrs. John Gagllardo Sr., route 
2, Box 85, Lake Michigan Beach, 
Coloma. Miss Worst is also the 
daughter of the late Marvin A. 
Worst Sr. 


The bride-elect Is a graduate 


of J. Sterling Morton East high 
school, Cicero, and attended 
Morton Junior college: She is 
employed by Vince's Club 33, 
Benton Harbor. 


Her fiance is a graduate of 


Coloma high school and is 
.employed by DiMaggio's res- 
taurant, Benton Harbor. 


A March 27 wedding is 


planned. 


NANCY KING 


INDOOR TENNIS 


PH. 429-5285 


Mr. and Mrs; Duane Schauer, 


7219 Stevcnsville-Baroda road; 


, Stevensvllle, announce the en- 


gagement of their daughter, 
Nancy L. King, to Michael A. 
Seaman, son of Mr. and Mrs. 
Thomas Brodertck, %m Maple 
Lane, Benton Harbor. 


Miss King Is a graduate of 


Lakcshorc high school. 


Her fiance Is: a graduate of 


Eau Claire high school and is 
employed at'Modern Plastics 
Corp., Benton Harbor..: • - • 


A 
• November 
wedding 
is 


planned. . . . . . . 


Hallmark 


CARDS & P A R T Y SHOP 


AT 


Gillespies 


BENTON HARBOR 


CITIZENS OF THE 


ST. JOSEPH 


SCHOOL DISTRICT 


Your educational system is in trouble 
We' "'l^Vf teqcheriitare concerned. We 
i*0Pe yow'i1* concerned too — con- 
cerned enough to come to a meeting 
tonight, 7:00 p.m. in the St. Joseph High 
School cafeteria. 


TALK TO A TEACHER 


The St. Joseph Education Association 


WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 17. H75 
THE HERALD-PALLADIUM, BeatM Barter-St. Jtseph, Michigan 
PAGE FIVE 


Eye-Catching Desserts Please Palates As Well 


Grape Sauce Tops Ice Cream Pizza 


The best of two worlds — 


pastry and frozen cream and 
sugar - ttu't's the Ice cream 
pie. 


Serve a large "ice cream 


pizza," or individual pies with 
a choice of sauces based on red 
grape juice or white grape 
juice or the classic purple 
grape juice, and a distinctive 
confection is achieved with 
ease. 


The result has such an eye- 


catching 
appearance 
that 


guesls are certain to feel the 


- pies required hours of labor. 


The many ice, cream flavors 


available provide for instant 
variety, and the sauces based 
on the three juices increase 
that diversity 


Possibly the most dramatic 


combinations are gained by 
using any of the sauces with 
pistachio, 
peach, 
vanilla, 


strawberry or raspberry ice 
creams, or sherbets — the 
contrasting flavors are deleq- 
table and the colors are entic- 
ing 
, 


ICE CREAM 'PIZZA' WITH 


GRAPE SAUCES 


1 baked Much pie shell <«r 


graham or vanilla or chocolate 
crumb pie shell) 


1 quart vanilla »r •Uwr flavor 


Ice cream or sherbet, slightly 
softened 


Grape Sauces, Toppluxs 
Pill prepared crust with ice 


cream, piling higher in center 
Place in freezer 
until 15 


minutes before serving. Pour 
over the selected Grape Sauce 
and serve extra sauce on the 
side Yields 6 to 8 servings. 


Or, use individual pie shells 


and fill with ice cream, then 
pour over the 'sauce. 


PURPLE GRAPE JUICE 


SAUCE 


',4 np pwpfe grape jutac 
, 


^4 cup high qwllty grape 


Wy 
" , 


1 tea*«M cwMttreh 
2 (aMespwm purpto grip* 


W« 


Combine % cup purple grape 


juice 
and grape jelly 
in 


saucepan. Bring to/a boll. Mix 
cornstarch with 2 tablespoons 
grape juice and add to boiling 
liquid. Cook and stir- over 
medium heat until slightly 
thickened. Cool. Yields I cup 


RED GRAPE JUICE SAUCE 
1 UM*spoo» ensured 
One-third cap sugar 
1 cup red grape juice 
Grated rind of 1 lemon 
I laMespoou bitter 


.In .a saucepan, combine 
cornstarch and sugar. Stir in 
red grape juice. Cook over low 
heat, stirring constantly, until 
sauce bubbles and thickens. 
Remove from heat; stir in rind 
and butter. Chill. Serve cold 
over ice cream. Yields 1 cup 
plus. 
. 
- 
. 
• 
• 
• 
, 
. 


WHITE GRAPE JUICE 


SAUCE 


1 tabteaHMi constant 
Vicupsagir 
1 cup white grape hike , 
. UgU rim to taste 
In 
a saucepan, 
combine 


cornslarch and sugar. Stir in 
white grape juice. Gook over 


; low heal, stirring constantly, 
.until: ; sauce 
bubbles 
and 


thickens. 'Remove. from heat; 
mil. Add light rum to taste. 
Yields 1 cup, plus.. 


• 
To 'gild the lily' provide a 


selection of such toppings as 
crushed nuts or coconut; or 


t grated chocolate, or whole or 
."chopped candied cherries or 


drained fresh or canned fruits. 


Wouldn't it! be wonderful if 


all pudding recipes were as 
easy as this one discovered in a 
quaint 
old 
cookbook • aptly 


named "Mud Pies and Other 
Recipes:"' 


"Pour the contents of a pen- 


cil sharpener into a bowl. Add 
enough puddle water to soften 
and stir with a sharp pencil. 
Allow to set in the shade, cither 
in the bowl or in individual 
'dishes." 
' 


Today's recipe for pudding is 


• almost as easy to make as 


Pencil Sharpener Pudding, but 
fortunately it's infinitely more 
edible. Based on a velvety 
egg-whipped cream mixture, 
Grape Velvet pudding needs no 
cooking and can be whipped up 
in minutes to enjoy right away 
or refrigerate for serving later. 
Light, yet refreshing, Grape 
Velvet is a lovely way to end a 
meal. 


Much of the credit for the, 


marvelous flavor goes .to a 
delicious but rather unusual 
pudding ingredient — grapes. 
The crisp ' texture and sweet 
taste of grapes wonderfully 
complement the rich pudding 
dessert. This is a great time to 
sample Grape Velvet using the 
sprightly aeedtes* grapes. This 
popular gnat will be available 
wit Into October. 


For all grape recipes, as well 


as for refreshing out-of-hand 
snacking, you'll want to be, 
sure to select plump grapes 
that cling to pliable, green 
stems Seedless grapes are 
wonderfully convenient Just 
wash them under a gentle 
spray of water and pat dry with 
paper towels before snacking 
or adding to recipes There's 
no need to wait for ripening, 
either Grapes are ready to be 
enjoyed when harvested 


GRAPE VELVET 


ll/i 
caps 
vanilla wafer 


crumbs 


>/4 cup bitter or margarine, 


1 cup powdered sugar 


Great 
Snack 


Sweet, 
refreshing 


grapes are kind to the 
figure — a whole cupful 
provides a moderate 100 
calories. 


Think about it the next 


time you reach for pop- 
corn, cupcakes, cookieb or 
potato chips With grapes, 
you get a lot more for a lot 
less 


Fresh grapes, as well as 


being low in calories, are 
sweet tasting too. So why 
not eat them instead of a 
rich dessert as a sweet 
meal-finisher? Gourmet 
chefs consider fresh fruit 
a perfectly elegant des- 
sert Serving is easy — do 
as the Europeans do and 
serve each 
bunch of 


sparkling crisp grapes in 
its own bowl for eating 
with the fingers Dishes of 
sour cream and brown 
sugar alongside for dip- 
ping are nice, too. 


1 teaspoon vanilla 
2 bananas, sliced 
I pound seedless grapes, 


stemmed 


1 cip 
whipping 
cream, 


whipped and sweetened to last* 


Sprinkle about 2 tablespoons 


crumbs in bottoms of 8 dessert 
dishes; 
reserve 
remaining 


crumbs. In small mixing •bowl, 
cream together 
butter and 


sugar. Add. eggs and vanilla; 
heat 
until 
fluffy. . Drop a 


spoonful of creamed mixture 
onto crumb base, dividing 
equally. 
(Dessert 
can 
bo 


refrigerated here. Add fruit 
and whipped cream just before 
serving.) Top with bananas and 
grapes, reserving a few grapes 
for garnish. Top with whipped 
cream. Garnish with reserved 
grapes and crumbs;. Chill 1 
hour. Makes 8 servings. 


Variation: Cover bottom of 


8-ihch square cake pan with 1 
cup of the cookie crumbs. 
Spread 
creamed 
mixture 


evenly over crumb base. Top ' 
with bananas, 23 of grapes and 
whipped cream. Garnish with 
remaining graiics and crumbs. 
Chill at least 2 hours. Cut into 
squares. 


Longtime favorites of. the 


American home are grape jelly 
and peanut butter and bread 
combined in sandwiches for 
breakfast, 
lunch, 
supper, 


snacking, carrying on trips, to 
school and office! 
' • 


Not only docs the trio have 


great taste and inviting tex- 
ture, 
but 
the : components 


remain economical to buy and 
use, and are true convenience 
foods needing no preparation in 
themselves, and; in combina- 
tion, taking equally to „ just 
about any beverage — juices, 
milk, cocoa, lea or coffee — hot 
or cold. 
', '• . 


Along with the good flavor 


and the convenience, peanut 
butter and 
jelly sandwiches 


have great versatility and need 
not be the "Plain Janes" of the 
table. 


The bread may bo made with 


any flour, and be with /or 
without nuts, raisins, candied 
fruit, sesame' seeds, etc. Then 
go on to one of the open-face 
sandwiches and serve with 
glasses of red grape juice or 
while or purple grape juices. 


HAM-W1CH 


Spread a slice of bread with 


peanut butter, then with grape 
jelly and top with two slices of 
boiled ham, rolled and gar- 
nished with celery tops or 
feather cscarole. 


BANANA-WICH 


Spread a slice of bread with 


peanut butter, then add a 
spread of grape jelly. Arrange 
banana slices on top. 


«*ATC PUFT-WKHES 


'/B (easpMn cinnamon 


' 
\<s teaspMi allspice 
8 slices raisin w whole wheat 


bread 


Grape Jelly 
Peanut butter 
In an electric mixer bowl, 


beat egg whites until they 
stand In soft peaks. Slowly add 
sugar and spices while,con- 
tinuing to beat. Set aside Toast 
bread until golden 
Spread 


slices with peanut .butler, Ihtn 
grape jelly Top with beaten 
egg mixture Broil sandwiches 
until golden 
brown 
Serve 


warm with a spoonful of grape 
jelly on lop of each _ Yields 4 
servings, 2 puff-wiehes each. 


Most of us can't resist thai 


old-fashioned favorite, the ice 
cream sundae 
With a little 


inspiration, 
a 
sundae can 


become an elegant dessert to 
follow your best dinner 


And it'll taste even "fresher" 


than the traditional version 
your local soda fountain jerk 
used to make when you add 
crisp, fresh grapes 


Grape growers have com- 


bined the sundae idea with 
some fresh seedless grapes, 
banana wedges and a choice of 
three special sauces, and called 
it Fresh Grape Sundae You 
can make .all three sauces — 
Fondant, .Currant and Hot Tof- 
fee — in the morning Then, 
just before serving, arrange 
the fruit and ice cream in 
fancy dessert dishes Pass one 
or more of the sauces, for 
guests to serve themselves — 
they're delicious hot or cold 


For this recipe, as well as for 


refreshing 
• 
out-of-hand 


snacking, you'll want to, be 
sure to select plump grapes 
that cling lightly to pliable 
green stems. Seedless grapes 
are so convenient — all you do 
is wash them under a gentle 
spray of water, pat dry with 
paper towels and they're ready 
to use Store any extras in the 
refrigerator where they'll stay 
bright and fresh: for several 
days. 


FRESH GRAPE SUNDAES 
Banana wedges 
1 quart vanilla Ice cream 


"1 ptund 
(about } cups) 


seedless grapes 
' • 


Vanilla 
Fuudant; ,C«rrant 


Lemon and* Hot Ttffee Sauces 
(recipes follow) 


Arrange 
several 
banana 


wedges in serving 
dishes. 


Spoon ice'crcam over bananas; 
lop wilh grapes and pass sauce 
of your choice. Makes' 6 serv- 
ings. 


VANILLA FONDANT SAUCE 
% cup butter or margarine 
1 cup sugar' 


1 % cup light cream 


1 eggydk, lightly beaten 
% teaspoon vanilla extract 
In saucepan, molt butler; Stir 


in sugar and cream. Bring to 
boil; reduce heat and simmer 2 
minutes. Stir a little of tho hoi 
,saucc into egg yolk; then 


gradually stir warmed egg yolk 
mixture into hot sauce. Cook 2 
minutes longer over, very low 
heat, 
stirring 
constantly. 


Flavor with vanilla extract. 
Serve hot or cold. Makes abtiiil 
2 cups 


Nole: For lemon, lime or 


orange vanilla sauce, stir in 
Vrcup lemon, lime or orange 
juice after adding vanilla. 


CURRANT-LEMON SAUCE 
Melt 1 cup currant jelly Stir 


in i 1 tablespoon lemon 'juice. 
Serve.hot or cold. Makes 1 cup. 


HOT TOFFEE SAUCE 


% cup heavy cream 
'/••cup firmly packed brown 


Familiar 


Fruit 


The. Thompson seedless, 


'he 
familiar 
"green" 


grape, is named after 
William Thompson, the 
farmer who first cultivat- 
ed them in the1890's 


Thompson 
seedless 


grapes are light green and 
medium to large in size 
The clusters are long, 
conical and full, and they 
taste sweet yet sprightly. 


Thompson 
seedless 


grapes are easy to use — 
no chopping, peeling, or 
pitting — and they're 
already 
bite-size. And 


with 
all 
their 
juice 


enclosed 
inside 
the 


delicate skin, grapes au- 
tomatically make any dish 
juicier 
and 
more 


refreshing. These special 
flavor and convenience 
characteristics of Thomp- 
son seedless grapes have 
made them the all-time 
favorite grapes. 


sugar 


1 teaspoon rum extract (op- 


tional) 


In,saucepan, bring cream to 


rapid boil. Add brown sugar 
and cook, stirring, until sauce 
is slightly thickened and shiny. 
Add flavoring. This is a thin 
sauce. Makes'aboul 1 cup. 


Fresh grapes are an age-old 


snack food dating back to an- 
cient Greek and Roman times. 
They've stood the test of time, 
for grapes ,are still a favorite 
fresh snack today. 


Ripe and ready to eat when 


harvested, grapes should be 
stored in the-refrigerator after 
purchase. Just before serving, 
wash grapes under a gentle 
spray of,water and pat dry. 


When selecting grapes, look 


for punches with well colored, 
plump, grapes [irmly attached 
to green, pliable stems. Avoid 
grapes 
that 
are 
soft 
or 


wrinkled, have bleached areas 
around the stem end, or arc 


NOTHING 
NECKLCES 
WITH CLASS 
They're the major fashion accessory 


• * ' .for back to school. 


; ' $«• our complete selection. 


C 


$15. .' 


A.'12 Karat gold-filled, $5.95. 
B. 3 Cultured pearls, $8.95. 
C. 5 Genuine jades, $15. 


:j»W. MAIN ST. 


BENTON 
HARBOR 


Out Ptopte MoU U« Ntfmbtw Off* 


' tUntn CH* »Co»t» M»mN « Ur»*«n I 


"leaking." Green grapes arc 
swcclcst and best 
flavored 


when they're yellow-green in 
color; red varieties when all or 
most 
of 
the 
berries 
are 


predominantly red; and Ihe 
blue-black 
varieties' when 


grapes have a rich full color. 


Swcet-tasling fresh grapes 


are 
a 
greal 
snack 
food, 


especially for dieters. And with 
good reason. They're satisfying 
and low in calories — a whole 
cupful provides a moderate 100 
calories. In addition, lo their 
low calorie contenl, grapes help 
dieters in other ways. Fresh 
grapes are crunchy, chewy and 
crisp. Grapes come bite-sized 
so a whole cupful for. only 100 
calories can last a long time 
(consider how fast' % an ounce 
of chocolate or 10 potato chips 
can.be gulped down for Ihe 
same or more calories). And 
grapes supply necessary bulk 
and water which, in turn, cause 
a "Mi" sensation. 


If you're not worried about 


weight, you can still enjoy 
grapes out-of-hand for their 
sprightly 
sweet 
flavor, 


refreshing coolness, and na- 
turally crisp texture 
Either 


way, .grapes are a "grape" 
snack. 


Star-ratecl desserts with fresh 


grapes needn't 
take great 


amounts 
of 
planning 
or 


preparation. Superb dessertb 
can be as simple as serving 
fresh grapes in combination 
with other summer 
fruits: 


Spooned into chilled,goblets of 
sweet sauterne ;or bubbling 
champagne. Topped.with sour 
cream or yogurt and brown 
sugar. Arranged on a cheese 
board with assorted cheeses 
and crisp crackers. Mixed with 
mounds 
of 
softly whipped 


cream. Drizzled with honey 
and sour cream 
whipped 


together with splash of liqueur. 
Dipped in a sauce of maple 
syrup-flavored 
yogurt. 
Or 


served au natural in a crystal 
bowl for a beautiful edible 
cenlerpiece. 


Homo economists offer these 


various serving ideas tor fresh . 
grapes: 


— Create a pretly parfail 


when a quick and easy dessert 


ICE CREAM PIZZA WITH GRAPE SAUCES 


is, needed 
Layer crumbled 


sugar or coconut cookies with 
sweeteneed whipped cream and 
fresh grapes in parfail glasses 
Betrigerate to chill. 


— Add fresh grapes 
to 


cooked rice puddings 
and 


pilafs, fruit cups, gelatin molds 
and green salads. 


— Attractively arrange large 


bunches of red and green 
grapes in a bowl or serving 
dish for an edible centerpiece. 
For a more elegant look, 
"frost" grapes by dipping 
them into beaten egg white and 
sprinkling with sugar before 
arranging. 


— Tuck a bunch of grapes 


into the picnic basket or knap- 
sack for a cool thirsl quenching 
snack during an active day. 


— For tasty hot hors d' 


oeurves, wrap tiny pieces of 
bacon around whole grapes; 
spear with toothpicks and broil 
until bacon is crisp. 


— NFor a summer breakfast, 


fill cantaloupe halves with 


fresh grapes and lop with a" 
dollop of fruit-flavored yogurt, 
a sprinkling of wheat germ or 
crunchy cereal 


— Serve a colorful brunch 


salad: Cut one large pineapple 
in half lengthwise 
Remove 


pineapple "meat" from sides; 
cut into cubes, reserving shell. 
Fold cubes' with 3 cups fresh 
seedless grapes inlo a mixture 
of 1 cup sour cream, Vi> teas- 
poon cinnamon and 1 square (1 
ounce) grated unsweetened 
chocolate. Pile into pineapple 
shells and chill until serving 
time. 


CONCORD RICE PUDDING 
Vi cup uncooked long grain 


rice 


1 cup Concord grape juice 
% cup sugar 
1 tablespoon cornstarch 
Dash salt 
2 eggs, separated 
2'A cups milk 
>/2 cup raisins 
11/2 tablespoons lemon juice 


'4 op s«gar 
V4 cup chopped pecans 
In saucepan, combine rice 


and grape juice. Heat, to 
boiling, stirring several times. 
Reduce 
heat, 
cover 
_and 


simmer 15 minutes, until ^ee- 
ls-absorbed. Do not remove 
cover during cooking. ' «? 


In mixing bowl, combine 


sugar, cornstarch and -.salt. 
Beat egg yolks slightly. Add 
yolks and milk to sugar mix- 
ture; blend well. Stir in rice, 
raisins and lemon juice. . ,, 


Pour into ungreased 1%. 


quart casserole Place in pan 
with 1-inch hot water. Bake" at 
350 degrees lor 1% hours, stir- 
ring occasionally. 
! 


Meanwhile, beal egg whites 


until foamy. Gradually beat in 
Vfcup sugar. Continue, beating 
until stiff peaks form Stir in 
pecans. Spoon meringue:, onto 
pudding. Increase heat-to 400 
degrees. Bake until meringue 
is golden; Serve warm" ;Jilakcs 
6 to 8 servings. 
• j~. 


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Special 8.99twin and lull 
Queen and king sizes 
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Big blanket value. 


Special 3.99 


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ticking. 


DOWNTOWN BENTON HARBOR 


PAGE SIX 
THE HERALD-PALLADIUM, Beitoi Htrtor-St. Jtaeph, Mkklgu 
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17,117$ 


'Your Problems9 By Ann Landers 


An Unreasonable Request 


••Dear,. Ann Landers: This 
praMfin may seem 
insig- 


n)ifcaht to others, but it's ruin- 
iae«ir sex life. 


I have always fantasized 


atoul • the men in muscle 
magazines — not only because 
at their great builds, but 
because 1 admire smooth, 
hairless skin. 
«My husband has a terrific 
physique, but the hair all over 
his body is long and dark and I 
tjA it repulsive. I've asked him 
I* shave his body but he says it 
«iwld Irritate his skin. I sug- 
gMM-hair-removal products 
but he insists men are supposed 
to 
be 
hairy. 
He 
thinks 


mnething is wrong with me 
because most women consider 
haky males very sexy, 
pur love life has become sub- 
mediocre and I'm, too em- 
bjfrraned to talk about the 
problem with a counselor. 
Ytu're my only hope. Help me, 
pBJMe. - Schenectady, N.Y. 
•Dear N.Y.: When you ask a 
nan to shave his body, I hope 
you realize it's not a one-time 


thing. Hair does grow back, you 
know. To be the hairless hus- 
band you want, the poor guy 
would have to shave frequently 
to maintain the desired state. 


Since you're big on fantasiz- 


ing, I seriously suggest that you 
psych yourself out and accept 
your husband as he is. Your 
request is truly unreasonable. 


JVo Smoking 


Dear Ann Landers: I notice 


you are against high school 
smoking lounges because you 
say they encourage and condone 
smoking. 


Well, 1 don't smoke. I am a 


W-year-oW girl who thinks it is 
a filthy, expensive, 
rotten, 


smelly habit. But I am in favor 
of smoking lounges in high 
schools because I believe all 
those nutty kids should be 
cooped up together and not be 
polluting 
the air 
in 
the 


bathrooms, which is what they 
are doing. 


What's more, those smokers 


tie up the bathroom stalls 


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Send f 1.09 for each pattern. Add 
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class mail and handling. Send 
to: Marian Martin, Pattern 
Dept. Ml, 232 West 18th St., 
New York, N.Y. 10011. Print 
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and STYLE NUMBER. 


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12 Prize Afghans No. 12.... 5»c 
Book of 16 Quilts No. 1 
50c' 


* ASTERISK * 


THBWRX 


WB».«REIVL 


AMBLE INN 


PAW PAW LAKE 
COLOMA 


ANN LANDERS . 


between classes and make the 
rest of us'late. If they had a 
room to smoke in it would free 
up the Johns for us non- 
smokers. 


So you see, there are two sides 


to this question, Ann. Please 
change your mind. — Hate 
Smoking 


Dear H.S.. There are two 


sides to EVERY question. 
Sometimes more. 


Your arguments are ex- 


cellent, in fact they are the,ones 
most often cited to get the ad- 
ministration to knuckle under. I 
believe, however, that smoking 
should not be permitted under 
any high school roof. The ad- 
ministration ought to post 
monitors, in the bathrooms if 
necessary, and see to it that the 
rules are not violated. 


Non-smokers shouldn't have 


to choke in the Johns nor should 
they be made to wait while 
tobacco 
addicts 
light 
up 


between classes. 


What it boils down to is this: 


Who is going to run our high 
schools — the students or the 
administration? 


Don't Figln 


Dear Ann Landers: My dear 


mother made her home with me 
until she passed away a few 
days ago. 


My sister and brother gave 


her some rather nice gifts 
through the years. After the 
funeral they announced they'd 
be back next week to take back 


the gifts'. Do you think this is- 
right? — Stunned 


Dear S.: No. It's cheap and 


petty. But let them have their 
gifts. Things are not worth 
fighting about. It was worth the 
price to find out what the clods 
are really like. 


NORTH 
17 


A A Q J 
V A Q 5 2 
»Q8.1 
* A K J 


WEST 
EAST (D) 


A 8 7 3 2 
A K 9 5 4 


V 10 7 
* 4 


« J 2 
+ A K 9 7 6 


+ 9 8 6 5 4 
* Q 10 7 


SOUTH 
4106 
» K.I 98 6 3 
* 1054 
+ 32 


x 
Both vulnerable 


West 
North 
East • South 


1 » 
Pass 


Pass 
Dbl. 
Pass • 1 V 


Pass 
2 » 
Dbl 
2 * 


Pass 
4V 
Pass 
Pass 


Pass 
Opening lead — J » 


South at all. The play involved 
here has the fancy name, of 
"Vienna Coup", but it should be 
simple, common sense. 


South plays a couple of rounds 


of trumps and then establishes 
East's king asjhe high spade by 
cashing the 'ace. Then he runs 
off the rest of his trumps to 
come down to the 10 ol spades 
and deuce of clubs hrhls'hahd 
and 
king-jack 
of clubs in 


dummy 


East will see that it'is suicide 


to unguardliis queen of clubs 
and wilF chuck the king of 
spades in the hope that West has 
the 10. The-hone is futile amUhe 
game is scored. 


Discover how to be date bait 


without falling hook, line and 
sinker.- Ann Landers's booklet, 
"Dating Do's and Don'ts," will 
help you be more poised and 
sure of yourself on dates. Send 
50 cents in coin,along with' a 
long, stamped, self-addressed 
envelope with your request to 
Ann Landers, P.O. Box 1400, 
Elgin, 111. 60120. 


LaLeche 
League 
Tonight 


UNION "PIER — Michiana 


LaLeche League will meet at 
7:30 p.m. tonight at the home of 
Mrs. Louis Price, Lake Shore 
road; Union Pier. 


Any woman interested in the 


subject of breastfeeding'is in- 
vited. Topic will be "Nutrition 
and Weaning." 


Group co-leaders are Mrs. 


Gerald Bucksbarg, Three Oaks, 
and Mrs. Holland Oselkay New - 
Buffalo. 


Garden Club 
Meeting Set 


GANGES — Ganges Garden 


dub will meet Friday, Sept 26, 
at 1:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs. 
Clovis Dornan. 


Mrs. Keith Hutchins will as- 


sist the hostess. 


The program, "Syriibols of 


America," will be given by Mrs. 
Albertina Stenberg. 


By Oswald A James Janby 
'Frank 
Schultt 
has 
just 


published a book called "The 
Simple Squeeze in Bridge " 
Today's hand is taken from an 
article about the book in the 
American Bridge Teacher's 
quarterly. 


Frank points out Unit North 


could have bid three nntrunip 
and there wouldn't have been 
any problems. But that, wasn't 
the case. West ruffs the third 
one and leads a club. North 
settled for Four hearts. The 
defense starts with three rounds 
of diamonds. West ruffs the 
third one and leads a club. 


It Is apparent that East holds' 


both the queen of clubs arid king 
of spades as part of his weak 
opening bid so both finesses are • 
wrong. Tliis shouldn't bother 


A New Jersey reader wants 


to know what we bid after our 
right hand opponent opens one 
diamond. We hold: 
, 


A A K 10 9 fi 4 V A 6 5 4> 4 x x 
*' x x. 
' We simply overcall one 
spade. In modem bidding this 
may be a pretty good hand. Of 
course, if we played in- 
termediate jump overcalls we 
could jump to two spades. 


We do not make a takeout 


double with this type of hand, 
since it is not strong enough to 
double and then bid spades later 
on after our partner makes the 
expected minor suit response. 


Astro-Graph 


Bemice Beds Oiol 


FOR THURSDAY 
> 


SEPT. 18,1575 


ARIES (March 2l-April 15) 


You have a.tendency today to 
talk to the wrong'people about 
your confidential affairs. Button 
up. 


TAURUS (April -it-May' 21) 


Examine your motives carefully 
today regarding, your behavior 
toward a friend, You. may be 
little cool because you're en- 
vious of something she has. 


GEMINI (May 21-June 21) 


Try not to bo vacillating where 
your views are concerned today. 
, Failure to take the firm position 
will be annoying to your as- 
sociates. : 
. 
' 


CANCER (June 21-July 22) If 


you're 
working with 
new 


appliances, tools or materials 
today, first study the instruc- 
tions carefully. , 


LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Be on 


guard if you find yourself in the 
company of one whom you know 
to be a bit deceitful. She may 
pull something sly again today. 


VIRGO (Ang. 21-Sept. 22) Tie 


a little string around your finger 
today if there's something im- 
portant you promised to do for 
your male — it could slip your 
mind. 
- 


LIBRA (Sept. 2J-Oct. 23) At- 


tend to your most important 
tasks as early in the day as 
possible. Your initiative tegins 


to wane rapidly thereafter. 


SCORPIO (Oct. Z4-N«V. 22) 


Most of the day you'll manage 
your resources wisely, but if you 
plan to go out on the town it 
'could be a very expensive night. 


SAGITTARIUS (Ntv. 2J-Dec. 


21) Today you're likely to leave 
a trail of things half finished. 
Several projects will be shelved 
for a considerable time. 


CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Ja«. 


IS) Don't praise someone ."today 
unless she really deserves it. 
Flattery for its own sake will 
boomerang: 
• 
' 
• 
' . ' ' - ' 


AQUARIUS (Jan. 2*-Feb. 15) 


Don't buy anything today unless 
you have a specific'.purpose for 
it. An expensive item you may 
never use will look very ap- 
pealing. 


PISCES (Feb. 2t Marth 21) 


You'll try to behave in a manner 
today so as to impress others, 
though you'll know what you.do 
is not to your advantage. 


Your 
Birthday 


Sept. 18,1I7S 


You have excellent financial 


prospects for the coming year.' 
Be wary, however, of making a 
change in location till you have 
checked everything out. 


The Kindest Gift 


I suppose a lot of you got 


parking meters for Christmas 
last year. 


A friend of mine_ watches 


when the city puts the old ones 
on sale and was kind enough to 
put one under my tree. 


It may just have been the 


most inspired addition to our 
house since we put a basketball 
hoop over the clothes hamper. 


At first, we were hard-pressed 


to know where to put it, but 
decided since the TV set at- 
tracted the greatest number of 
vagrants, it was a place to start. 


"Okay,, gang," I announced, 


"from here on in, it's going to 
.cost you to park in front of-tho 
TV set. You got your meter here 
that explains it all...each nickel 
buys you 30 minutes, one dime 
60 minutes. Nickels and dimes 
only." 
' 


"What 
a 
rip-off," they 


snarled. • 


At the end of the week, the 


house had raked in J43.20. Then 
business fell,off. 
; 


"What's the matter?" I asked 


one of the boys. "Aren't you 


Cut 
Costs 


Want to cut chicken costs. 


Then try cutting a whole 
chicken yourself. 


When you buy already-cut-up 


chickens at the market, you're 
paying the meat men to do the 
cutting for you, in addition to 
the cost of the chicken. 


By cutting it yourself, you can 


usually save anywhere from 1 to 
10 cents a pound. So be a cut- 
up-yourself and save. 


Cutting a chicken is simply a 


matter of making about five 
cuts with a sharp knife. Remove 
the wings, remove the legs and 
then split the breast and back In 
half and you have done it — and 
saved at the same time. 


When budgets are light, con- 


sumers redeem more and more 
coupons and this certainly is the 
caso'now. 


A recent report shows that 


nine out' of ten shoppers do 
redeem M>me coupons. Coupons 
can save money when used 
wisely, but do be careful. Using 
every coupon that comes along 
can result in spending more, 
rather than less. 


Coupons that'provide cents off 


or refunds for products you 
usually buy can and do save you 
money so save the usable ones 
from magazines, newspapers, 
advertising flyers and-from in-, 
side 
and 
outside -of 
food 


packages. 
. 
" 


It's a peachy time of year for 


Michigandcrs. Several varieties 
arc now oh the market and will 
be through September. 
. The biggest volume peach' 
available during September will 
be the Red Skin variety, that 
very closely resembles the other 
"most favorite" .-7 the Red 
Haven. Red Skins, as-well as 
Elbcrta varieties, 
will' be 


available all of September, so 
don't forget to include peaches 
in menus and lunch boxes. 


FOUNDED v 


The, 
American .Communist 


Party was founded in 1919. 


watching TV today?" 


"And pay a nickel .for a half 


hour of Yoga? Are you crazy?" 


The next stop for the parking 


meter was another problem 
area, the bathroom. For years, 
we have had an over-parking 
problem which didn't seem to 
improve. The parking meter did 
it. 


"Go check your son," I said to 


my husband. "I think his meter 
is expired." 


"His meter's all, right," he 


reported,- "but our son has ex- 
pired. There is no sound in there 
at all." 


"He's there all right .with 


headphone 
and 
People 


magazine. Tell him he's about 
to be ticketed." 


As the traffic fell off in the 


bathroom, we moved the meter 
to another limitless parking 
zone — the telephone. 


The kids became absolutely 


paranoid about their timer One 
evening as I walked by on my 
rounds and chalked a warning 
on a forehead, I heard my son 
say, "Okay, so you're a wrong 
number. Keep talking. I've still 
got 30 minutes left on my 
dime." , 


The real test for the parking 


meter came when we finally at- 
tached it to the refrigerator 
door. 'Everytime the' 'door' 
opened they had to put in a 
' nickel for the first 30 minutes ' 
they stood there. Then one night 
we did something rather dras- - 
tic. We towed our 'son' away. 
"You don't 'understand," he 
said, "I was just .waiting for you 
to come along so I 'could gel 
changefor.aquarter!" .' ,.. 


• 
He' was towed1; away three ' 


months ago and can you believe ' 
it, no one has claimed him yet. 


Dr. tester 


My w«e eiqwete t» give Mrtk 


in Itv imnths. I never knew 
that we had a* many scfenttste 
!• Mr family. They ill have 
definite tpi^Ms ibwt the vahe 
if drnmcfafeii. What Is ywrs? 


Mr. P.O., W.V. 


Dear Mr. G.: 


You will find that much of the 


debate revolves around the fact 


1 that circumcision has some 
religious,-, cultural or realistic 
implications. 


It is true that some religious 


and some social groups insist on 
circumcision when a male child 
is born. 


But m modern society, cir- 


cumcision 
is 
performed 


frequently without any relation 
to religious beliefs or customs. 


It is done, basically, for better 


hygiene and cleanliness. Boys 
who are not circumcised may 
develop a condition known as 
"phimosis." This is a tightness 
of the foreskin over the penis 
which may be painful and dif- 
ficult to keep clean. 


The decision should be made 


by you, your wife and your 
physician. 
* * * 


The small child «f a friend tf 
•n swaltnrtd SMIK lye. She's 
lerriMy skk. D* JOT thlik there 
will be permanent damage t* 
herlnsMeg? 


Mrs: G.S., Or*. 


Dear Mrs. S.: 


The damage done by lye to the 


delicate lining of the mouth and 
the esophagus can.bo. great. 


This depends on the amount of. 


lye that! was swallowed and bow 
long it was in contact with these 
tissues.- -• 
• • : . ' : : 


Lye produces-a burn that of- 


ten results ; in stricture, or 
: narrowing; of the esophagus — 


, the tube that carries food from 


the mouth to the stomach".'' 


It is difficult to anticipate the 


permanent changes that can oc- 


cur/ 


Fortunately, these serious ac- 


cidents are occurring less 
frequently than they did years 
ago. People have been practic- 
ing prevention. 


Never fill a milk container or 


soda pop bottle with any 
dangerous substance.' Curious 
children are attracted'by the 
easily recognized bottle and 
have lid sense of judgment about 
what it contains. 


The original containers of 


pesticides, household cleaning 
substances, garden sprays and 
the like must be kept out of the 
tempting reach of children. 


"I didn't'know that he could, 


get into that closet" is another 
variation of "I didn't know the 
gun was loaded." 
* * * 


DR. LESTER COLEMAN has 


a,, special eye-care booklet 
'available called,-"What You 
Should Know About Glaucoma; 


and Cataracts." For your copy, 
.send 25 cents in coin,and a' 
large; Self-addressed,' stamped' 
envelope to Lester L. Coleman, 
M.D., 
(Eye booklet), P.O. Box 


5178, 
Grand Central Station, 


New York City 10017. Please 
mention the booklet by title. 


CmemaNatnnal^ 


•OW MOWflK! 


7i3O - 9:30 
. 


",,,nainKiTO WCE, IJOT 


• 
[HDMHAPICTUIISpn-wrj, 
BITE THE 
BULLET 


GENE HACKMAN [jf| 


FAIRPLAIN CINEMA 1 A 2 


BINGO 


EVtkY FRIDAY NIGHT 


'• 
'fcHWH-"**!*!". 
7:»f.M..Th,.|., Oiinii" 
53*3 ROOMVILT ROAD 


CATHOLIC CHURCH ANNfX 
snvtmviui 


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WHITE LINE 


FEVER 


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nintiiiii pirtun 


frnni Ihi 


JAWS 


ST. JOE AUTO THEATRE 


RED ARROW HIGHWAY 


BOX OFFICE OPENS 7:30 • PHONE 429-3946 


ADMISSION: ADULTS $1.75 - CHILDREN UNDER 12 FREE 


Nick Nolte And 
Don Johnson In... 


RETURN TO 


MACON COUNTY 


— ALSO — 


Dustin Hoffman And 
Susan George In... 


STRAW DOGS 


SEPTEMBER 


17, 18, 19, 20 


WfD. THRU SAT.. 
BIG MIXER 


PIZZA 


SPECIALS Schnapps (foil* 
• • • * 
' 


A COMPLETE Liquor 


983-26*1 


TIME FOR 
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2410 S. CLfVELAND AVI., ST. JOSfPH 
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ONIY4S' 
REO< ^ 


WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, W5 
THE HERALD PALLADIUM, Beat*! H*rfe.r-St. Joseph, Mlchlgai 
PAGE SEVEN 


'SqueakyV Bail Chopped To $350,000 


By LINDA DEUTSCH 
Associated. Press Writer 


SACRAMENTO, Calif (AP) 


— 
Lynettu 
A 
Promme, 


wrapped in a hoodetl red robe, 
fought back tears as she 
pleaded tram the witness stand 
for freedom to resume the 
"simple life" of a Charles 
Munson disciple 


Miss Fromme, charged with 


the attempted assassination of 
President 
Ford, 
made 
a 


surprise witness stand ap- 
pearance at a pretnal hearing 
Tuesday but failed to win 


rcl&tse from jail 


Instead, U.S. District Court 


Judge Thomas J 
MaoBnde 


reduced bail Irom $1 million to 
S350,<KX> 
Miss 
Fromme's 


roommate, Sandra Good, con- 
ceded outside court, "We don't 
have that kind of money." 


Miss Fromme, her voice 


cracking with emotion, had 
asked to be set free on.her 
word 
i 


"Before the world.at this 


time, my word (o myself or 
anybody is my life," said the 
26-year-old defendant 


MacBnde did-modify a g,ig 


order Imposed on all officials 
connected 
wilh the case lo 


allow Miss Fromme to. speak 
freely wilh visitors, including 
reporters, as long as she 
doesn't disouss the court case. 


MacBride-is expected.tti rulu 


Friday on a request by Miss 
Fromme that she be permitted 
'lo act as her own attorney He 
indicated he might-allow her to 
act as her own cocounsel, but 
only il a qualified attorney ad- 
vises her on legal matters 


At Friday's hearing, Miss 


Fromme is scheduled'to enter 
a plea lo the charge that she 
tried to kill Ford as he walked 
across Capilol Park here on 
Sept 5 A Secret Service agent 
said he wrestled a loaded 45- 
calibcr gun from her hand as 
she stood two feet from Ford 
i Authorities said there were 
four live rounds in the clip of 
the military semi-automatic 
but no cartridge in the firing 
chamber > ' , 


Manson, now 4(1, was con- 


victed 
with 
three 
women 


followers in the 1969 murder of 
actress Sharon Tate and s,i)4 
others. He is serving a life 
sentence 
at 
San 
Quentin 


Prison. 


During the bail hearing on 


Tuesday, Mibs Fromme ami 
HIP 30-year-old Miss Good, 
another 
Manson 
"family" 


member, said: 


—They moved lo Sacramento 


some 
2M> years ago 
Miss 


Fromme said they were emo- 
tionally troubled because they 


had: broken a vow to camp 
outside the Uis Angeles Hall of 
Justice 
until 
Manson 
was 


freed. They gave up after two 
years of living on the sidewalk. 


— They and a new friend 


who shares . their apartment, 
Susan 
"Heather"''. Murphy, 


have money problems. 


Miss Good said she receives 


$200 a'month from a trust fund, 
which will decrease to $100 a 
month 
next 
year. 
.Miss. 


Kromme said she had at linies 
applied tor food stamps and 
that, she ihad received a $1,11X1 
loan lo attend Sacramento City 
College. 


WED. NITE SPECIAL 


ALASKAN KING CRAB 
$4" 


SOUTHTOWN 
PHONE 983-3233 


TWIN THEATRES 


Labor Costs Top $ 10-Hour 


PETHOIT-.,(AP)'— Average 


hourly .labor-costs at the aulo 
companies are edging over Ihe 
$10 mark for the'first time in 
history, according to spokesmen 
for all four major companies 


George B Morris Jr , General 


Motors Corp vice president of 
industrial relations, said Tues- 
day the total annual labor cosl 
for Ihe GM hourly employe who 
works 2,000 hours a year will be 
about $20,000 starting (he first 
of next week' 


About $13,400 of the total, or 


$6 67 an hour, is in wages 
Morris said. Benefits' for in- 
surance, 
pensions, 


unemployment, 
and 
Social 


Security make up $4,500 of the 
$20,000 total, and the remainder 
is for vacation and holiday pay, 


spokesmen said. 


Spokesmen for Ford Motor 


Co., 
Chrysler . Corp. 
and 


American Motors Corp said 
their figures are comparable. 


A ' nine cenl cost-of-living 


increase, for hourly employes 
wenl inlo effect Sept. 1 at GM. 
Improvement factor raises go 
into effect next Monday at GM, 
and range from 12 to 26 cents 
per hour. That means the 


average worker has gotten $1.48 
in hourly increases since the 
1!)73 contracts .were ratified, GM 
said, with 88 cents of the total 
coming 
in 
cosl-of-living 


benefits 


Spokesmen for the other'thrce 


auto companies said .similar 
increases are written into their 
contracts with Ihe United Auto 
Workers. 


ONMAOM: 7:0019:00 


THE AUmOKIZEl) STORY OF 


XAVIEKA HOLLANDER! 


THE 
HAPPY HOOKER 


(R) 


MUBCU* iNrmunoNU nouns 


QNtM* TWO: 7:15 t»U 


BUFORDPUSSER's',;'• 


own true story ,,'/ 


PART 2 
u/iirn.M 


FOR BEST RESULTS TRY CLASSIFIEDS 


BACK TO J\IL: Lynette "Squeaky" Fromme, in U.S. 
Marshal's auto and holding pencil and papers, peers 
through window Tuesday while being taken back' to 
Sacramento County (Calif.) jail following a Federal 
Court appearance. Miss Fromme, who is being held 
for the assassination attempt of President Ford in 
Sacramento, sought and was given a reduction in her 
$1 million bail to |350,000.' (AP Wire photo) 


BEST BREAKFAST 


JJNTOWN 


8J50 


PANCAKE 
SPECIAL 


Man. thru Fri. Til 11a.m. 


Downtown 
St. Joseph 


The Berrien County Youth Fair Officials and 
Livestock Exhibitors of Berricii County say 


"THANKS" 


TO THE LIVESTOCK SALE BUYERS!! 


1975 Steer Buyers 


GRAND CHAMPION BEEF - 
Seifort Form Supply, Three Ookt 


' Tractor Land Sales, Eau Claire 


RESERVE CHAMPION BEEF - DoVries Insurance, St. Jo*eph 


Auto Specialties, 
B IL I't Sports, Inc., 


Bank of Three Oaks, 
Sam Bernstein 


Fruit Broker, 


Bon-ten County N.F.O., 
Berrien Springs 


Co»op,, Inc., , 


Toddy Bartuca 


Fruit Broker, 


ipplyCo., 
.Cadillac, 


St. Joseph 
Scottdale 


' 
Bridgman 


Thro* Oaks 


Benton Harbor 


Berrien Springs 


Benton Harbor 


Bridgmon 


Nil*! 


Berrien Cantar 


Buchanan 


Briggs OMs-Ci 
Lowell Bruce, 
Buchanan Co-oaf, Inc., 
Buchanan Farmer* 


Credit Union, 
Buchanan 


Bungalow Tavam * 


Steak House, 
Gallon 


Products,'Inc., 
Buchanan 


AMce Carter, 
Berrien Springs 


Conloy-Blockmun Ins. Agency 


First Notionol Bonk of 


Borrion Spring*, 
Berrion Springs 


First National Bonk of Southwestern 


Michigan, Fairplaln, 
Benton Har- 


bor 
Foster Farm* and Nursery, 
NHes 


John (Masurian, 
Eau Claire 


Carl Gnodtfce, 
Bridgman 


Oary's Oreen house, 
Nlles 


Paul Oormtnaer, 
, 
OaHon 


Ov» Oarage Doors, 
Bonton Harbor 


Harbor Metal 


Benton Harbor 


Eau Claire 


Construction, Cas- 


Nilos Automotive Supply, 
ttfemw nttx, 
Ban Nye A Sans Nursery, Stevensvllle 
Nylon fVoducts, ^^ 
BrMgman 


LanMne Pollard, 
Buchanan 


Reintck 
Meat 
Packers, • South 


auaw Fead 
^ 
Rauaw 
MHI, 


Baroda 


Berrien Sprmgs 


Treating Co., 


Hardmg* Market, 
Dale Hartsell 


James Cuiay Receiving 


Bontan Harbor 
Benton Harbor 
LaGrange, III. 


Bridgman 


Berrien Springs 
Borrlen Springs 
Berrien' Springs 
Borrlon Springs 


, 
Eau Claire 


Benton Harbor 


Benton Har- 


Harold Howe, 
Inter-City lank. 


Caslmlr Karris, 
Khigl 


NHal 


N.K. Cupp A Sans, 
Ariono Elliot, 
Oils Insurance Agency, 
Evans Agricultural 


Larry i*ans, 
•one Evans, 
Low Evans Ford Sales, 
Farm' Bureau OH Co., 
Formers A Merchants 


Hv Fli ehuiiiiii*! Tires 


Larry Krteger, 
Lake's Farm 


Service, 
Now Carlisle, hid. 


LaSallo Federal Savings, 
Buchanan 


Laughin' Place Stables, 
Nlles 


Phil Lindt 


Insurance Agency, 
Berrion Springs 


John Utty, 
• 
Dawaglac 


Ml-Oro Seed, P.J. Walton, Three Oaks 
Miller's Market, 
St. Joseph 


MU*cfaltot Farm* 
' 
•tarO^ci 


Monte Package Co., 
' 
RivenMe 


Newson Slaughter House, 
NHas 


Eau Claire 
iildoHlan 
Tow me 


Fred Schmaltz, 


Schnudt Packing Company, 
Schroder1. Super 
, 
t 


Market, 
Berrien Springs 


Schroder's Super Market, 
Throe 


Oaks 
i 


Serfert Farm Supply, 
tnree Oak* 


Dan Schutti, 
Buchanan 


David Stockman, 
. Washington, D.C. 


K.V. Stover A Sons, 
Berrien Springs-• 


Champion Angus Buy 


Swarta rlorofordrarm. 


Bud Tatike A Son Farms, 
Tractor Mart, 
Tree-Mendus Fruit Farm, 
Trade Lines, 


Mkhiana 
Publical 


Claire 
Fi ed Vorgon, 
. 
Champion Hereford Buyer 


Cod Wagner Farms, 
Dr. C.F. Word, 
Whirlpool Corp., ftdrmnUtroHo.. 


Cantor, 
Bonton Hi 


NHes-- 


Eau Claire! 


III. 


1975 HOG BUYERS 


GRAND CHAMPION HOG - W.O. Wodo Show*, Mown, Mich. 


RESERVE CHAMPION HOC - DavM Sloduimn, WcaMoaton, D.C. 


GRAND CHAMPION PEN'OF 3 - 
C * D Cwtom Orape Harve*tor, 


RESERVE CHAMPION PEN- ROMOW Feed MHI, Bvchonon 


mty N.F.O., 
Hngs Co-op, 


, inc., 


NHes 


Borrlen Springs 
Berrion Center 


Buchanan 


Buchanan 


Eau Claire 


Leonard Kestorke, 
Berrien Springs 


Farm Bureau Food Sorvkos, 
Lans- 


ing 
Federal Land Bank, 
'Three Rivers 


First National Bank of Southwestern 


Michigan, Berrien Springs 
Office, 
Borrlen Springs 


Lowell Bruce, 
Buchanan Co-ops 
Buchanan Farmer 
~ Credn Union, 
C AJ Machine 


Curhbert Insurant. 


Agency, Inc., 


Fisher A Marks 


Well Drifting, 


HernoM Market, inc., 
Hi-Lites Shopper, 
Bob Howe Ford Iwjoncy, 
Duane Jackson, 
Dr. James D. Johtiian, 


Frank Culby, 
_.A... 


NHes 
Jonas 
Ronilck " 


Oejwogtot 


Borrion Sprin 


Springs 


Rkhord Kraft, S.W. Survey,' 
Lancaster 
Quarter 
Horse, 
Eau 


Claire 
Phil Undt 


Insurance Agency, 
Borrion Spring* 


' Michigan Livestock^ 


Exchange, 
Cassopalts 


NoffVe Family Farm Market, 
Co"oma 


St. 


Frank Rouse, 
ScMNrnj Forms, 
Henry ichlnske, 


Custom Dozer Sorv.,' 
Eau Claire . 


Don Schuftz, Twin Oak Form, Buchanan .: 
Serrert Form Supply, 
Throe Oaks 
Totzke Farms, 
Baroda 


Tractor Land Sales, 
Eau Claire ' 


0.J. Watton, 
: Throe Oak* '-; 


Dr. C.F. Ward, 
NHos 


Wafdy Sales A Service, 
Buchanan " 


Winter-Beck Drug Store, 
Buchanan' 


W.H.I.L. Radio, 
NHes 


1975 LAMB BUYERS 


GRAND CHAMPION LAMB - Rrrtw'i Rmtawrant, Stcvwitvlll* 


RESERVE CHAMPION LAMB - Tom Walton, Dawaaiac 


CHAMPION PEN - Whatnot. Auction Co., Flv* Point, Mkh. 


RESERVE CHAMPION PEN - 
HoroM Sooatt 


ABC General Tool Co., 
DkkBasslor, 
Berrien County N.F.O., 
Borrlon County Kecord, 
. Connie Both, 
Lowed Bruce, 
Buchanan Co-op's me., 
i Credit U 


Stevens vflle' 


Nlles 
Niles 


Buchanan 
St. Joseph 


Berrien Center 


f 


Buchanan 


Union, Southwestern 


C A D Orape Harvester, 
Buchanan 


Cass County Fair Assoc., 
Cassopolls 


Chesnut Farms, 
Throe Oaks 


Jack Creden, 
NHas 


Sam Creaan, 
NHei 


Amy Cririer, 
Buchonon 


Sherri Critxer, 
Buchohon 


Cuthbort Tractor Solas, Inc., Eau Claire 
Enel Eborhardt, 
• 
Benton Harbor 


Arlane Elliot, 
La Orange, III. 


Ellis Insurance Agency, 
Briagman 


Farmers A Merchants 


National Bonk, 
Benton Harbor 


Farm Bureau Food Dept., 


Buchanan Co-op, 
Buchanan 


Federal land Bank, 
Three Oaks 


HaroM FreeMIng, 


First National Bank of 


First National Bank 


of Watonrllet, 
WatorvHot 


Fox Sates A Sorv., 


P.J. Walton, 
Throe Oaki 


James Ouse 


Garage Door, 
' 
Bonton Harbor 


Bob Howe Ford Agency, 
Dowaglac 


Judge Julian Hughes, 
Bonton Harbor 


Inter City Bank, 
Benton Harbor 


Kerley A Storks 


Funeral Home, 
St. Joseph 


Pioneer Seed Corn, 


L.O. Bruce, 
D.I. Parts, 


rVoscrl»Irlon*'rarming, 
Rentkk Packing, 
•.Mot's Dover Locker, 
Rassaw Feed MHI, 
DanSchvnx 


Twin Ooks Form, 


enSchuttx, 


Borrlon Center. 


St. Joseph 


Eau Claire 


Stevensvllle 


Flint 


Richard Kraft, Southwest Survey, 


Jack Kretchman, 


Jacks Auto Serv., 
Berrien Springs 


LaSalle Federal Savings, 
Buchanan 


Elaine Marsh, 
Buchanan 


Michigan Livestock 


Exchange, 
Cassopolis 


Bonnie Miller, • 
BrMgman 


Nylon Products, Inc., 
Bridgman 


Edgar Ott Insurance, 
Baroda 


Peoples State Bank, 
Berrien Springs 


Nick Young, 
Buchanan 


Buchanan' 
Buchanan 
Buchanan 
Susan A Laurie Sebasty, 
Southwest Michigan College 


OovM Schulti, 
Dowaglac 


David Stockman, 
Washington, D.C. 


K.V. Stover A Sons, 
Berrion Sprmgs 


thompson's Super Market, 
.* . 


Buchanan! 


Richard Toney, 
Berrien Confer 


Tractor Land Sales, 
Eau Claire 


Treasure House, 
Bangor. 


Troy Meadow Farms, 


Jake Busick, 
Buchanan' 


E.C. UHory, 
Nlles 


Dr. C.F. Ward, 
Miles 


1975 POULTRY BUYERS 


GRAND CHAMPION PEN - Kantvcky Fried Chkkon of Nil** 
RESERVE CHAMPION PEN - Konfutky Fried Chkkon of NiH» 


Al Bar Ranch, Barry Borst, 
Baker's Seed and Fi " 


Nlles 


•eod, 
Nlles 


Dr. H. Michael Chadaock, StevensviHe 


Bruce Factor, 
NHes 


Pam and Mark Koebel, Berrien Springs 


Laytwr's Pork Farm, 
Rossaw Feed Co., 
Ran Ward, 


Niles 


Buchanan- 


Nlles 


1975 RABBIT BUYERS 


GRAND CHAMPION RABBIT — Rossow F««d Mill, Buchanan 


RESERVE CHAMPION RABBIT — Gene Baker, Niles 
i 


Ms.dieg«r Forms, 
Throe Oaks 
Gerald and Rita 


Baker's Food and Seed, 
Niles 


Dr. K. Mlchool Chaavock, StevensvHIe 
Ceteme CoMtniciion Co., 
Coloma 


Fokleiiil Forms, 
NHes 


' J. A E. Food' Co., 
Eeu Crirlro 


fo«M, oanton Harbor 


Hang-Up Shop, 


ImtMm Federal Saving* 


Berrien Springs 


Benton rtuibot 
Bon Ion Spring* 


Owwagiac 


Borrlen Spring 
Bon fty* 


Preston Farms, 


TaHaWA PtWlf**,. 
Mr». August Tonka, 


RAGE EIGHT 
THE HERALD-PALLADIUM, BeitM Barter - St. JMeph. NteUgu 
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER IT, 1171 


BH Teachers To Map Moves Thursday 


By JIM DELANO 


AsslstMl City Editor 


Benton Harbor teachers will 


meet Thursday to decide their 
next move In contract negotia- 
tions that remained deadlocked 
following the recess of a media- 
tion session Tuesday. 


Mrs. Camilla Hunt, president 


of the Benton Harbor Education 
Association and chief negotiator 


for the teachers, said a general 
faculty meeting will be held at 4 
p m Thursday at the high / 
'school to consider "several op- 
41ons" 
that she declined to 


specify. 


Mrs/ Hunt said state mediator 


Howard Case recessed Tues- 
day's mediation session after 
the school board negotiating 
team requested additional time 


to study the teachers' proposals. 


She said no attempt was made 


to 
negotiate 
any 
of 
the 


unresolved issue's, including 
salaries, but added that media- 


St. Joe Township 
Rezoning Bid Filed 


St Joseph township planning 


commission last night sent a 
rezoning request for 3333 Miles 
avenue to committee to clear 
the way for public hearings and 
a decision by the township 
board 


Ralph Post of 1100 Flanders 


Place, 
St 
Joseph, 
asked 


planners to rezone about an acre 
of property he owns at 3333 Niles 
avenue, from R-4 multiple 
dwelling to B-2 commercial so 
that it could be used for a fabric 
shop. The property is just north 
of Lydia drive. 


Chairman Ernest Knauf of the 


planning commission assigned 
Fred Umden and Dave Kempf, 
members of the commission, to 
work with Post in the prepara- 
tion of the rezoning petition. As 
soon as proper descriptions of 
the property are received, 


lion by Case could be resumed 
at the request of either side. 


The 
teachers 
Monday 


requested binding arbitration 
on all issues left unresolved 
after Tuesday's mediation, but 
the board of education has not 
yet responded to that request. 


According to the State Board 


of Education, Benton Harbor is 
one of only four districts among 
the 35 largest in the state that 
have not yet reached at least 
tentative settlement on a new 
master contract. 


The others are Kalamazoo, 


Taylor and Traverse City. 


The board said its latest sur- 


vey, taken Monday, showed new 
teacher contracts have been ra- 


tified or tentatively approved in 
75 per cent of Michigan's 5SO 
districts. 


As of Monday, 351 districts 


(862 per cent) have ratified 
contracts, 45 (8.5 per cent) have 
tentative agreements and 134 
(25 3 per cent) are 'still nego- 
tiating. 


The 351 districts with ratified 


contracts have about 1.9 million 
students, or W per wot of 
Michigan's 1.1 million student 


Districts 
• with 
tentative 


agreements include three of the 
state's largest — Flint,,Livonia 
and Warren — with a combined 
enrollment of more than 100,000 
students: 


Teachers Invite Parents 


The St. Joseph Education association is sponsoring a "Talk to 


a Teacher" night at 7 p.m today in the St. Joseph high school 
auditorium 
Richard Maxam, association president, said the 


meeting is for parents and other interested citizens. Maxam said 
subjects will include current teacher contract negotiations and 
what he termed "current trends in the system." 


EIRE BY FAULTY WIRING: Benton Harbor Fire 
Cap't. James Collis said fire Tuesday at home of John 
H. Jones and family, 822 Pearl street, was caused by 
faulty wiring in bedroom closet. Firemen responded 
t6 scene abdut 9'20 a.m. Extensive damage was done 
t6 interior. No one was home when flames broke out. 
Shown fighting blaze are Firefighters Gary Bush (on' 
ladder) and Roger Burgess. (Staff photo) 


f 'BH School-Administrator 
Negotiations Are Stalled 


(Contract negotiations between 
tlie Bentcm Harbor School Ad- 
niimstrators' Association and 
trie school district are stalled 
aAer three fruitless bargaining 
sessions, according to spokes- 
men for both sides 


(The. association represents 


middle and lower echelon ad- 
ministrators in the Benton Har- 
bdr Area schools and .was 
fojrmed last April as a means of 
obtaining a master contract for 
the group.' 


The association has about 30 


members, who have adminis- 
trative titles below the level of 
director In the district. Included 
in membership are principals, 
counselors and 
supervisors, 


reported 
John 
Fehsenfeld, 


group director of personnel for 
the district. 


Fehsenfeld said talks have 


stalled because the association 
spokesmen have caused con- 
fusion in demanding certain 
guidelines for talks to follow. 


Bargainers Will 
Meet In St. Joe 


A meeting with state mediator 


Howard 
Case 
has 
been 


scheduled for 4:30 p.m. Thurs- 
day in an attempt to break a 
deadlock in contract talks 
bcjtwccn the St. Joseph public 
schools and the Non-Teaching 
Employes Association. • 


TheNTEA represents some 95 


custodial, kitchen and transpor- 
tation''employes who have been 
•wqrkij®' without a contract 
since -".July 1, when their old 
cohtract expired. 
: Don: Rose, president of the 
NfEA- has charged school dis- 
trict negotiators with "dilatory 
tactics" and said they have in- 
dicated 
no 
willingness 
to 


compromise on economic is- 
sues. ; 
. 


•,'In c effect, the district is 


asking the NTEA membership 
to work for less money this year 
and in-succeeding years,"-Rose 
said, "despite the fact that the 
St:' Joseph board of education 
voted ,10 per cent cost of living 
increases to all of the top ad- 
ministrators in the district in 
July of this year." 


He also said the district has 


refused to make all benefits 
negotiated retroactive to the ex- 
piration date of the old contract, 
as has been the case for the past 
eight years. 


He said the NTEA had.shown 


its good faith by working 
without, a contract since July 1 
and that it would continue to do 
so until further negotiations ap- 
pear imintless. 


St. Joseph business manager 


Dennis Percy agreed that wages 
Fire Blamed 
On Short 
In Wiring 
: 
c5 


A fire Tuesday that Benton 


township firemen believe was 
started by a short in a picture 
frame light, caused about $3,(KH1 
damage to a Benton township 
home. 


Firemen said the 4:55 p.m. 


blaze extensively damaged o 
bedroom at the home of Jonn 
Wakcfield, 1990 Taube avenue, 
where the picture frame was 
located. There was smoke and 
heat damage to the rest of the 
home, firemen reported. No one 
was at home at (he time of the 
fire. 


were the main issue, but said he 
did hot want to become involved 
in a public debate at this time. 


"f want to continue the past 


practice of bargaining at the 
table, instead of in the news- 
paper," Percy said. 


Negotiations have been going 


on since June 10, when the 
NTEA submitted a new contract 
proposal to the district. 


The association in a release 


said the last negotiation session 
was on Sept. 11, but was ad- 
journed after 18 minutes with 
board of education representa- 
tives "ignoring repeated at- 
tempts by the Administrators 
association 
for 
necessary 


groundrules to conduct effective 
bargaining." 


The groundrules sought were 


not revealed. 


The release said tho. bargain- 


ing session was adjourned by 
Ally. Michael Ward, of the 
Kalamazoo law firm Jacobs and 
Ward, legal counsel for fthe 
board for the talks. 


Fehsenfeld, when asked by 


Uiis newspaper about the Sept. 
11 session,' said it was ad- 
journed, but only because talks 
were not getting anywhere. 
Fehsenfeld-said much of the 
misunderstanding appears to be 
because 
-the 
association 


members are "novices" at the 
bargaining table. 


The 
association 
release 


names Ranee Deckard as as- 
sociation spokesman and Arnold 
F. Fcge as press spokesman for 
the association. 


Further talks have not been 


scheduled, Fehsenfeld said. 


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WE FEATURE: 


BURGER DAIRY PRODUCTS 


BURGERS DAIRY 


BUTTER 
».89« 


Knauf said, notices for public 
hearings 
can 
be 
ordered 


published. 


Post said Robert fls Rue of 316 


Cherokee Trail, Fairplain, who 
operates fabric shops in St. 
Joseph and Fairplain Plaza, Is 
interested in opening a shop at 
the Niles avenue location. 
• > 


Post said he has started con- 


tacting the 27 neighbors seeking 
to obtain their approval to the 
rezoning. 


Knauf said that after planning- 


commission review and hear- 
ings, the matter would be sent' 
to the township board for final 
action. 
House Tackles 
Energy Policy 


WASHINGTON (AP) - As 


the House returns to work on its 
energy policy bill, Republicans 
are poised to try to knock out a 
section on oil price controh. that 
President Ford feels may be a 
roadblock to compromise 


Meanwhile, the Senate was 


awaiting the outcome of today's 
House vote on pricing before 
deciding what to do about 
another bill, already passed by 
the House, that would extend 
controls through October. , 


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ARMOR: 
Leonard 
Rosen, 


managing partner of Protective 
Apparel Corporation of America 
of Englewood Cliffs, N.J., wears 
armored vest that company 
says is lighter than nylon, 
stronger than steel. Vest was 
shown at International Associa- 
tion of Chiefs of Police conven- 
tion In Denver, Colo. 
(AP 


Wirephoto) 


1 


Guardsmen Go Home , 


LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) - 


The last contingent of Kentucky 
National Guardsmen called in 
11 days ago after antibusmg 
disturbances has been deac- 
tivated, but a beefed up force of 
state police remains on special 
duty 
in Jefferson 
County ' 


"Everything 
is 
calm, 


everything is fine," said Bob 
Yatcs, a police spokesman. 


- 


JO GARDNER 


i 
• 
' 
1 
i 


IS NOT EXACTLY 


A WILD-EYED RADICAL 
" 
i 
' 


At least her 5th grade student! don't think to. They think 


she's nice.- 


i 


' She Is also concerned ' about teaching conditions, about' 


increased elementary loads. ' About why the board won't 
consider binding arbitration to settle the contract dispute. 


. 
I 
* 


And she want* to talk to you. To find out what you think. 


Talk to her at the meeting tonight at 7tOO p.m. hi the St. 
Joseph High School Cafeteria. 


__ 


TALK TO A TEACHER 
The St. Joseph Education Association 
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WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17,197$ 
THE HERALD-PALLADIUM, HCKM Ru*tr- St. taepk, Mkhtgai 
PAGE NINE 


State Prison Businesses 
Turning Neat 'Non-Profit' 


By PATRICK CONNOLLY 
AjMdaied Press Writer 


WISING, Mich. (AP) - The 


stale auditor general 
says 


Mchlgan's "non-profit" prison 
license plate shop and other In- 
mate industries have made 
about IS million illegally since 
lfl«9. A Corrections Department 
i official says the report is ac- 
curate but the figure is too high. 


Law stipulates that the 12 


prison industry operations at 


/'Jackson, Ionia and Marquette 


must not show a profit at the 
end of the year, said Auditor 
General Albert Lee. But for the 
years 1MD-1974, the industries 
turned over >S million in profit, 
Lee said. 


Guilty, 
admitted 
Frank 


Beethan, deputy Corrections 
Department director in charge 
of 
prison 
industries. 
But 


Beethan cited a string of mi- 
tigating circumstances. 


For one thing, he said Tues- 


day, the auditor general failed 
to account for costs and (he net 
profit actually was closer to $3 
million for the five years. 


All profits are turned over to 


the stale treasury to help run 
state government 'and do not 
finance 
prison 
industries, 


Beethan said: 


"We're not crooks. It all goes 


back to the general fund," he 
added. 


He said another problem is a 


bookkeeping 
difference 
of 


opinion 
with 
the 
auditor 


general. Beethan also "ilrt the 
law is unfair because no mul- 
timillion - dollar business can 
judge to the penny when a loss 
or profit will occur. 


Beethan said some badly 


needed prison shops would close 
if the Corrections Department 
had to absorb about J2 million 
additional costs which Lee said 
be wants to impose, such as 
paying supervisors and civilian 
employes out of money earned 
. by the prison industries. 


Beethan agreed with Lee that 


prison industries often tram Li- 
mates for jobs that are unneed- 
ed in the outside world and their 
products should get heavier ad- 
vertising Improvements are 
being made m both categories, 
he said. 


Under law, state prison in- 


dustries'can only sell wares to, 
state and local governments, not 
private persons or organiza- 
tions. In addition to license 
plates, inmates make tables and 
chairs, wood and steel office 


furniture, lockers, cushions, 
'shirts and shorts, bath towels 
and washcloths, sheets and 
mattresses, 
shoes, 
socks, 


jackets, sport coats and prison 
guard uniforms. 


About 890 inmates now work 


in various prison industries'for 
an average f2 90 a day, or about 
(500 a year, Beethan said Top 
wage earners can put away 
$800-$900 a year while the lowest 
pay is about $35 a year, he said. 


While acknowledging behind- 


bars industries have failed to 
teach useable skills in many 
cases, Beethan claimed the pic- 
ture Is improving. A tool and die 
apprenticeship, recognized by 
the U.S. Department of Labor, 
has been added and metal 
working and furniture and 
cabinet making have been ex- 
panded, he said. 


Teaching Inmates unnoted 


skills "is a holdover from years 
ago When people didn't care 
much what a convict did as long 
as he paid his debt to society," 
Beethan said 


Beethan bristled at Lee's ob- 


servation that prospective cus- 
tomers sometimes buy from 
commercial .sources because 
prison products are inferior. 


TURNER ENTERS PLEA: Glenn Turner speaks to news media outside federal 
court at Tampa, Fla., Tuesday after pleading no contest to federal misdemeanor 
charge. Turner and his former business associates had been charged witb a felony, 
using the mails to promote an illegal pyramid sales scheme to sell distributorships 
in Turner-controlled Kosrot Cosmetics. (AP Wirephoto) 


> 
i 
^^^ 
' 
Seven Year Legal Battle 
Ends For Glen Turner* 


TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - "Des- 


pite the harassment I've under- 
gone, I'll never take oft my 
American -flag," 
promoter 


Glenn W. Turner sobbed as he 
was fined $9,000 as the, last step 
of a seven-year legal battle with 
the federal government. 


His six-week retrial on mall 


fraud-conspiracy charts ended 
Tuesday when Turner and three, 
former associates were allowed 
to' plead no contest to lesser 
misdemeanor charges of violat- 
ing Securities and Exchange 
Commission regulations.: 
• 


Turner, Hobart Wilder of Al- 


tamonte Springs, Fla.; Ben 
Bunting of Wijltamston, N.C., 
and Jess Hickman of Pinevillc, 


La., were each fined 19,000. All 
charges were dropped against 
Clyde Cobb, S5, of Lakewood, 
Colo. 
1 "I'm not the man I once was," 
said Turner, 41, a South 
Carolina sharecropper's son 
who parlayed his gift of gab into 
a business empire later- lost. 


"I have S8 million in civil 


judgments against me and I'm 
S2 million in if»bt. I've been 
fighting 
iie, government for 


seven years. My money ran out 
and I couldn't fight any more. 
Trial's what happened." 


Thi> fir^i trial'last year ended 


with a hung jury after nine 
months. 


Since his legal battle began, 


Turner has lost control of three 
companies. 


.Koscot Interplanetary Inc., a 


cosmetics firm, has been legally 
revamped, and Turner is no 
longer associated 
with 
it. 


Turner' pleaded no-contest to- 
mail fraud, conspiracy charges 
on'behalf of his motivational 
business, pare To Be Great 
Inc., and its parent firm, Glenn 
Turner Enterprises Inc. 
» 


The. defendants were or- 


ginally accused in 12 counts 
with using the mails to defraud 
some 80,000 persons in an illegal 
pyramid sales scheme to sell 
distributorships in pare to Be 
Great and Koscot. 


NYC Teachers End Strike; 
Chicago Talks Deadlocked 


By ASSOCIATED PRESS 


Teachers i end a week-long 


strike In financially strapped 
New York City '.today and 
prepare . f o r i Thursday's 
resumption of classes for 1.1 
million public school pupils 
under a contract that cuts class 
time 90 minutes a week. 


The pact Was grudgingly ac- 


cepted by the teachers and 
already to the subject of parent 
"protests:- ,.•.-/ •••'-•.•> ': '.. . . 


Teachers voted 10,641 to «,»B5 


' to accept . a 
compromise 


settlement Tuesday, but some uf 
the City's «S,000 teachers ac- 
cused United Federation of 
Teachers 
president 
Albert 


Shanker of "selling out.", 
S«mk«r called the new two-year 
contract one which "nobody 
BhS," tat he added. "w« •"** 
gotten the most we can, given 
to fiscal situation in the city." 


Local tdmst how* and many 


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In Chicago, meanwhile, nego- 


tiations continued without' an 
apparent breakthrough. About 
530,000 pupils have been idled 
since 27,000 teachers struck on 
the first day of classes Sept. 3. 


Teachers in Waukcgan, 111., 


about 50 miles north of Chicago, 
voted .Tuesday 
night 
to 


authorize a strike which would 
affect 15,000 pupils, but no 
decision was made when the 
strike would take place. 


Teachers at (EHOVE) Joint 


Vocational School 'in Milan, 
Ohio, voted to return to work 
today after accepting a new 
contract Tuesday night raising 
their base pay from 17,759 to 
18,300. They struck at the start 
of the school year, delaying the 
.opening for 900 students. 
' ' 


Lay teachers. who; staff 12 


Annan Catholic schools in the 
New York archdiocese went on' 
strike Twsdiy after negotia- 
tions broke down. A 'similar 
walkout has been in effect in the 
Brooklyn diocese. 
, 


Other teacher strikes con- 


tinued 
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PAGE TEN 
THE HERALD-PALLADIUM, BeilM Barter - Si, JMCPk, Mteklgu 
mcnMESDAY. SEPTEMBE* 


' 
- 
' 
' 
_ *^^^^ 
Parbershopper Quartet Show Coming Sept 27 


The 27th annual quartet show 


sponsored by the Fruit Belt 
chapter of the Society for the 
Preservation 
and 
En- 


couragement of Barber Shop 
Quartet Singing in America will 
he" 8 p in Saturday, Sept. 27 in 
St. Joseph high school audi- 
torium. 
I^The, afterglow, a program of 
group singing, will follow at Mr. 
Smorgasbord restaurant, 2800 
Niles avenue, St. Joseph 


The parade of harmony will 


feature 'three, prize-winning 
quartets and the Fruit Belt 


chapter's own 36-voice choir. 


The program is the main 


.fund-raising project of the. bar- 
bmhoppers, who send part of 
the proceeds to the Institute of 
Logopodics in Wichita, Kansas. 


"Tiffanys," 1973 queens of 


harmony, of Calumet, 111.; "The 
Northern Ili-Lites" of Oakland 
and Grosse Pointe near Detroit 
and "The Harmony Hounds" of 
Battle Creek arc the .featured 
quartets. 


Each has a. solid background 


of success ill Barber Shop 
quartet singing competition. 


The 
"Tiffanys," 
descnlw 


thcm.selves as four jewels pos- 
sessing beauty and talent. They 
\vere third place finishers in the 
Sweet Adelines' 1972 interna- 
tional competition and won tile 
top title as "Queens of Har- 
mony" in international compe 
titimi in Washington, D C. the 
next year. 


Members of the quartet are 


Jane 'Walker, 
tenor; Joan 


Mellmg, who sings lead; Dale 
Syverson, who sings baritone; 
and Louise Manicki who sings 
bass. 


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The 
"Northern Hi-Utes" 


were organized in 1972 and the 
first yciir won the Pioneer dis^ 
tnct 
championship 
which 


covers Michigan and Ontario. 
Tlie members of the group are 
Bob Dcmchak, tenor; Dave 
Caldwell, lead; Bob Wisdom, 
baritone; 'and Lee Hanson, bass. 
The four represent over half a 
century of participating in 
S.P.E.B.S.'Q.S.A. activities and 
competition Demchak is an au- 
to layout inspector, Caldwell is a 
veterinarian. Wisdom an in- 
surance executive and Hanson a 
radio station manager. 


The Harmony Hounds in 1970 


were invited by the U.S'.O. to 
entertain at U.S. hospitals in 
Japan, Phillipines, and Guam. 
They sang to 2,500 wounded 


Slasher Held 
For Psychiatric 


Examination 


AMSTERDAM, 
The 


Netherlands (AP) - A psychia- 
tric examination has been or- 
dered for Wilnelmus A. de Rljk, 
38, who was detained by police 
after 'the knife slashing attack 
on the Rembrandt masterpiece, 
"The Night Watch " 


After the examination was 


ordered by the court on,Tues- 
day, the Amsterdam district at- 
torney said the case against de 
Rijk in the Sunday slashing of 
the 
17th century 
painting 


probably would not be pursued 
because 
of the man's un- 


balanced condition. He was 
charged only with the theft from 
a hotel of the knife used in the 
attack. 
, , 


Museum officials said: it will 


lake about four months to res- 
tore the painting. 


parade of harmony, Ray Leatz, 
sing so others can speak," is* 
servicemen 
in the 
19-day, 
hat*. 
i~- -« «• •»• •—v .—' 
• 
---— 
.. 
___.ii ™inD in 


20,000-mile tour. The "Hounds" 
Among the big features of the 
said the chorus has been 
term^.W 
"^T^S.S? }i 


Include Lai-ry Swan, tenor, 
&how is the Fruit Belt chorus 
rehearsing 
for 
weeks 
in 
the speech center in WICIHU ui. 


Roger Lewis, • lead, Lowell 
under the direction of Roger 
preparation of the show. 


Wolfe, baritone, and Ron Mcll, 
Valentine. Chairman of the'1975 
The theme of the show, "we ' problems. 


help youngsters with speecjy 


PAY IS NOT THE ISSUE 


Some people say that teachers think 
only about salaries. Don't. believe it!! 
The real issue in the St. Joseph contract 
dispute is whether or not teachers will 
have a voice in maintaining and im- 
proving your child's education. 


-, i - 
< 
i 


That's why we're asking for binding 
•arbitration. 


That's why we'd like to talk to you 
tonight, 7:00 
p.m. in the high school 


cafeteria. 
' 
' 
) 


TALK TO A TEACHER 


The St. Joseph Education Association - 


QUEENS OF HARMONY: One of the feature quartets to be'presented at the 27th 
<$uartet show sponsored by the Fruit Belt chapter of S.P.E.B.S.Q.S.A. Sept. 27 will 
be the "Tiffanys" of Calumet, 111.'The'show will be 8 p.m. in St. Joseph high school 
auditorium. From ,left are, Jane Walker, tenor; Louise Manicki, bass; Joan 
Melling, lead; and Dale Syverson, baritone. "Tiffanys" are 1973 international 
'Queens of Harmony" title winners. 


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WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, U75 
THE HERALD-PALLADIUM, Bentra Harbor - St. Joseph, Michigan 
PAGE ELEVEN 


Jill Is Independent, Rich, 
And Likes The Casual Life 


STEIGER: Just like W.C. 


IIOW SEE HERE! 


Bert Bacharach 


.SMATTERING OP SIGNS: 
ThS; Capricorn native doesn't 


' Mi till he, gels where he's 


heading — he just will not ac- 
cept nor recognize defeat 
Marians have almost prophe 
ticynsignt Sagittanans enjoy 
playing games of chance and 
outdoor sports — especially 
Sree races. 


^MAGICIAN Doug Helming 
ouirro the request most often 
nfade of him Is "Make my Mile 
dfiSppuar" — and sometimes 
thj^husbjnds aic not laughing1 
^ 
Sandwich Favoiile uf 


Homeland Maestro Paul Martell 
paper-thin salami, slice of 
cfeddar cheese and Kussian 


WR TWfEDY 


di essing on a large seeded roll 


Faded Phrases "You can 


argue till you ic blue in the 
face," "He's top dog aiound 
these parts ' and "She's a worry 
wart" ' JimmyMedcrlander's 
next big B'way show will be 
"Habeas Corpus." (Writ On 1) 
Thcio's a Pet & Claws Pet shop 
in Woodland Hills. Calif (What, 
no Jaws') 
Mary Wilson of 


The Supremos learned self-hyp- 
nosis so that'she can put heiself 
to sleep on planes and.axoid the 
let lag feeling of overseas tours 


Danny Thomas said that 


"Fay," being produced by Ins 
TV production company, should 
please both the Noi th and South 
Playing tta title role is — Lee 
Grant' 


by Ned Riddle 


Q: How come that gorgeous 


Jill St. John Isn't married?— 
S.G., Pierre, S.D. 


A. Jill's an independent girl 


and not easily impressed. She is., 
not only smart as heck but also 
financially independent as a 
icsult pi marriages to singer 
Jack.Jones and the late Wool- 
worth heir, Lance Rcventlow. 
Jill now enjoys the casual life in 
Aspen, Colo. 


Q- What's the status of the 


love life of Maria Callas? — 
J.V, Austin, lev. 


A 
Giuseppe Stefano, who 


toured the world with the diva 
for several years, has gone back' 
to his wife Their 21-year-old 
daughter 
Luisa died 
from 


leukemia and thai did it. Now 
there is hope for Callas' e\, Ba- 
tista Meneghihi, who has stead- 
fastly manlained his love for the 
oiwra singer even though when 
AM Onas,sis stole her away from 
him, th(i-Golden Greek berated 
Meneghini: 
"Don't 
be 


melodramatic; learn to be a 
good loser." 


QUICKIES: Most popular tee 


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Heck, that's 


nothing, Elizabeth Taylor wears 
a sweater with the.words, "I am 
not Elizabeth Taylor so please 
stop following me" 
. Rod 


Steiger is not only playing W C 
Fields', he is behaving in Fields' 
mean unpleasant way off the 
screen as well It's called living 


jour role. 
A iccent Holywood 


party for Liza Minnclli used in- 
vitations showing the star's 
nude .back'With "Liza's Back" 
scribbled across it. The invite 
said 
"dress 
casual " 


Everybody did. 


Q: How solid do you think the 


Mick 
and 
Bianca 
Jagger 


PEOPLE 


NU9^B9 wwww 


taries for'their'help with his 
best seller. 


+ + -I 


Robin Adams Sloan welcomes 


questions from readers. While 
Sloan cannot provide individual 
answers, questions of general 
interest will be used in the 
column. Write to Robin Adams 
Sloan, care of this newspaper. 


JILL: The casual life 


>1THEY DON'T BUILD 
VF/V\ 


, LIKE THAT ANY MORE." 


By Associated Press 
• 


Today,is Wednesday, Sept. 17, 


the 260th day of 1975, There are 
105 days left in the year 


Today's highlight in history. 
On this date in 1787, the Con- 


stitution of the Umled Slales 
was completed and signed by a 
majority of delegates attending 
the Constitutional Convention in 
Philadelphia. 


On Ihis date: 
In 1665, a bubonic plague 


broke out in London. 


In 1862, in the Civil War, 


.Union forces, hurled .back a 
Confederate 
invasion 
of 


Maryland in the battle of Antic- 


lam 


In 1939, the debut of the radio 


program, Major Bowes Ama- 
teur Hour, started a trend 
toward 
talent 
contests 
in 


American radio programming. 


In 1939, the Soviet Union in- 


vaded Poland in World War II 


In 1964, Ihc United Stales 


disclosed development of two 
weapons systems capable of in- 
tercepting 
and .destroying' 


armed satellites circling the 
earth. 
' 


In 1967, U S Air Force jets 


attacked a highway bridge In 
North Vietnam, only seven 
miles from the China border ' 


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CALLAS: Hope for her ex 


marriage Is? - T. McD., 
Otamlws, Ga. 


A- We'd say ihaky Rolling 


Stone 
advisors 
now 
tell 


reporters if they want to inter- 
view Mick, not to sec Bianca 
first. Ms Jagger has gotten 
slightly star crazy and only 
wants to be with the beautiful 
and famous people On the last 
tour 
she 
infuriated 
Stone 


staffers by grabbing up scarce 
tickets for her fancy friends 
1 Q: I read s»me»h«r« that 
Nancy Kissinger Is extremely 
ambltitas politically tar her 
Hnry. What d*es she have In 
mind after Secretary tf State? 
- E.J., Bnrllngtmi, Vt. 


A Nancy has no Intention of 


managing 
her 
husband's 


career It's unlikely that she 
wants him to stay in politics as 
she doesn't like Washington 
much What she hopes Is that 
after Henry leaves the State 
Department, they will move to 
New York and she'll go back to 
high school teaching which she 
loves. 


Q: Jnst finished David Niven's 


twtk "The MMI'S A Ball**n" 
and wraM Hke I* know tf he is 
writing another. He seems like a 
•fee gay - H.H., Bristol, Va. 


A. Niven's sequel will be 


published' this month, titled 
"Bring oh the Empty Horses;" 
It is a portrait of Hollywood 
from the Thirties to the Sixties. 
Nivcn is the nicest of film stars. 
When his first book came out, 
he wrote and thanked almost 
every one of his reviewers and 
look time lo walk through Put- 
nam's offices thanking evcryoVic 
from top publishers to sccre- 


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PAGE TWELVE 
THE HERALD-PALLADIUM, Be«Ui Harlwr - SI. Jwsepk, Mkhlgu 
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17,1J78 


Death Row Pair Count Days To Freedom 


By JOHN VAN GIESON 
Associated Press Writer 


TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) - Two more nights in a cell and 


Freddie Lee Pitts and Wilbert Lee will be free at lasl after 12 years 
and « days in prison for murders another man confessed to nine 
years ago. 


"I want to head out of here, crawl off by myseli and unwind," 


the 31-year-old Pitts said Tuesday after he learned that final action 
had been completed on a pardon. "I just want to see that pardon," 
sold Lee, 40. 


The two black men will walk out of the Florida State Prison ut 


Raiford as free men on Friday, then Ihev will be whisked mlo 
seclusion by supporters who fought for 10 years to free them 


"I feel a bittersweet sense of great my ami yet underlying 


sorrow," said Public Defender Phillip Hubbart of Miami "Jo.v at 
this incredible victory after long, hard years and sorrow that il 
:'didri't come sooner." Pitts and Lee were convicted by an all-white 
• Jury, of the July. 1983 execution-style murders of service station. 
^President Plans 
Revamp Of CIA 


attcndunls .lease Burkett and Grovcr Floyd Jr. at Port St. Joe. 


'i'hc.v had confessed to the murders, but later claimed that they 


were coerced and Ireaten into confessing Sentenced to death in the 
electric chair, they spcn( most of their first nine years in prison 
confined to B-hy-9 foot Death How cells. 


Supporters of Pitts and Leo, including ilubbart and Pulitzer 


Prirc-wmning reporter Gene Miller of the Miami Herald, em- 
harked on a ciusade to iree them. But even after the 1966 confes- 
sion hv white convict Curtis "Boo" Adams to the Floyd-Burkctt 
murders, the legal struggle to free Pitts and Lee was not over. 


The two «on a new (rial in 1072, but weie convicted a second 


lime by another all-while jury when Circuit Judge D. R. Smith of 
Ocala ruled that Adams' confession was inadmissaute hearsay 
evidence. Gov. Reubin;Askew issued a pardon last week after an 
18-month investigation of his own, but under stale law, such a 
Pcirdon must be signed by the governor and three Cabinet 
•'members. 


WASHINGTON 
(AP) — 


President 
Ford 
intends to 


revamp the Central Intelligence 
Agency, and among plans being 


. considered are stripping the 


agency of its covert operations 
and naming an over-all coor- 
dinator of U.S. intelligence ac- 
tivities. 


% The coordinator would not be 


the CIA director, according to 
'administration sources who also 
'cautioned not to expect any 
major 
change 
for several 


months. 


Ford told a news conference 


Tuesday that no matter what the 
fate of the CIA, American poli- 
tical action aimed at Influencing 
events in other countries is 
'likely to continue. 
." "I wouldn't rule out necessary 
• political activities by the United 


States 
if 
it 'involves 
our 


security," the President said. 
" This might be one role trans- 
ferred from the CIA, the sources 
said. 


'-- Ford said his staff and 


• appropriate federal agencies 


,.• are studying recommendations 


5made by the Murphy and 


Rockefeller 
Commissions, 


which have investigated the 
CIA 


From these and other sources 


Ford will make administrative 
changes in the agency and 
propose legislative recommen- 
dations to Congress on the na- 
tion's intelligence-gathering ap- 
paratus, he said. 


Meanwhile, the Senate in- 


telligence committee is seeking 
to determine whether the CIA 
destroyed records relating to its 
stockpiling of deadly poisons. 


"We have evidence that there 


are memos which one would 
think should exist which no 
longer exist," F. A. 0 Schwarz, 
chief counsel for the committee 
said Tuesday at the end of the 
'first day of public hearings im 
the CIA's Project Naomi. 


Schwarz said that former CIA 


Director Richard M. Helms 
would be asked about the matter, 


1 when he testifies before the 
committee today. 


William E Colby, the current 


CIA director, testified under 
oath Tuesday that some records 
on Project Naomi were des- 


Askcw, Ally, Gen. Robert Sheviii and Treasurer Philip Ashler 


signed the pafdon last week. Education Commissioner Ralph 
Turlington added his name Tuesday. In Port St. Joe, Burkelt's 
lather, W.L Burkett commented angrily, "Oh, this was politics, 
pure and simple. Askew has obligated the NAACP to his political 
career/' 


The Rev. O.T. Stallworlh, a spokesman for the town's blacks, 


called the pardon "very much overdue. We never have thought the 
boys were guilty. I think the police and all were just, trying to 
pacify (he while folks. They had the trial so quick.... Why, they 
found them guilty before they ever found the bodies of the two 
men." 


Bui Jimmy Samson, 30, an ex-convict who now owns the station 


where Burkell and Floyd were slain, asked, "How would you feel?- 
There were two trials, 24 jurors, a whole bunch of judges and the 
5th Circuit Court of Appeals, bul all said Ihey were guilty and one 
man can overrule it? That's not justice." 
O'Briens Wife 
Called To Stand 


CIA DART GUN: Chairman Frank Church, D-Idaho, of 
Senate Intelligence Committee, holds poison dart gun 


, during session of panel's probe of Central Intelligence 
Agency Tuesday in Washington. CIA Director William 
\E. Colby, who also displayed the gun, told the com- 
mittee Inat 37 lethal poisons were discovered in an 
agency laboratory.'(AP Wirephoto) 


troyed in November 1972 Colby 
referred to a memo between 
Helms and Dr. Sidney Gottlieb, 
then one of the agency's top 
scientists, concerning the des- 
truction. 
j- However, Mitchell Rogovin, 


special counsel to the CIA, later 
informed reporters that Colby 
had been in error According to 
Bogbvin, there was no destruc- 
tion of records relating to 
poisons and no such memo 
between Helms and Gottlieb. 


DETROIT (AP) - Met with 


silence by Charles "Chuckle" 
O'Brien, a federal grand jury 
investigating the disappearance 
of 
ex-Teamsters 
President 


James R. Hoffa has subpoenaed 
O'Brien's wife. 


Brenda O'Brien's' attorney, 


Richard M. Lustig, was expect- 
ed to argue in court today that 
the subpoena lor Mrs. O'Brien 
should be quashed on grounds of 
"marital 
privilege" 
and 


because she is ill. 


The case was set for 11 a.m, 


before U.S. District Judge 
James P Churchill. 
., O'Brien, raised by the'Hoffa' 
family, took the Fifth Amend- 
ment when he appeared Sept. 3 
before the grand jury The sub- 
poena for Mrs. O'Bnen was is- 
bucd to Lustig last Thursday. 


A person does not have to tes- 


tify against a spouse under the 
principle of marital privilege 
which Lustig said applies to the 
scheduled 1 grand 
jury 
ap- 


pearance of Mrs. O'Brien 


Lustig also said Mrs. O'Brien 


is sick, but he refused 
to 


disclose her illness. He said she 
has been under a doctor's care 


Rail Subsidy Request 6Unf ealistic' 


"as a result of the strain and 
publicity 
surrounding 
the 


investigation of her husband." 


Lustig said/he felt Mrs. 


*0'6rien~ was, subpoenaed 
because her husband "is a tar- 
get of the grand jury .. ,and on 
thaUiasis, she has a right not to 
be called to testify " 


O'Bnen is regarded by James 


P. Huffa, the real son of the 
missing ex-Teamsters boss, as a 
prime' suspect in his father's 
disappearance The young Hoffa 
said last week he believes Hoffa 
was murdered 
i 


O'Brien told th'e FBI earlier 


he was driving a car belonging 
to the son of reputed Mafia 
chieftain Anthony "Tony Jack" 
Giacalone on the day Hoffa 
dropped from sight near a 
fashionable suburban Detroit 
restaurant where the ex-Team- 
sters boss was last seen July 30. 


O'Brien, 41, denied knowing 


anything about Hoffa's disap- 
pearance and said he was in the 
area that day only to deliver a 
salmon to the home of a Team- 
sters official nearby. 


Mrs. O'Brien, the former 


Brenda Lou Berger Goldsmith 
of 
West 
Memphis, 
Ark., 


married O'Brien in June The 
O'Briens have moved to Planta- 
tion, Fla., near O'Brien's new 
assignment with the Southern 
Conference of Teamsters. 


By SUSAN ACER 


'-I: 
Associated Press Writer 


.'-;.'• LANSING, Mich. (AP) - 
;."^Recommendations for 
hefty 


;':',"federal subsidies to Michigan 
" ;Jrail lines facing abandonment 
; " are probably unrealistic, said a 
;'';. Michigan 
congressman of 


\''rproposals by the new Michigan 


;iCitizens to Save Rail Service. 


f •' The citizen's group's rocom- 
;;";nx>ndations, approved Tuesday 
• •7'';n a conference of rail industry 
"•'representatives, shippers and 
; '. 'local planning agencies, call for 
*;fa moratorium on rail .abandon- 
•'"'merit until a new system of as- 


' sessmg 
usage, 
needs and 


', • economic dependence- on the 
;-.;rail lines can be developed. 
'"' The group also asked that' 
' "during the moratorium federal 
'subsidies cover full operating 


•-i'uisls of the lines, after which 


'federal support would gradually 
' "'telinc 
' 
.. 


Hep Garry Brown said Tucs- 


1-1 day, however, that he has little 


hope for Ihc' future of the 
recommendations, which Ihe 
group will pass to Michigan's 
congressional delegation. 


"I doubt it very much," the 


Schoolcraft Republican replied 
when asked it the group's ideas 
could ever become part of the 
federal ConRaii proposal. 


..The., bill,' awaiting almost as- 
sured passage in Congress, 
would grant a 70 per cent 
federal subsidy lo rail lines for 
only two years. 


Brown said he suspects that 


the bill may be amended to 
allow decreasing federal sub- 
sidies over a four-year period, 
from 90 per cciit in the first year 
to 4(1 iwr cent in the fourth year, 
with- stales'picking up the 
remaining operating costs. 


Amendments to the ConRaii 


bill must be acted upon by Nov. 
9.:If no action occurs by.then, 
the bill becomes law as is. 


• Though Brown and Rep. J. 


Bub Traxler, D-Bay City, agreed 
that chances of convincing 33 
unaffected stales to oppose the 
ConRaii legislation are slim; 
they are convinced amendments 
stretching the subsidization 
period longer than two years 
could be passed. 


"I don'l Ihink any of us as- 


sume Ihe continuation "of non- 
economic lines in this'stale," 
Brown said: Instead, he said* 
•Michigan shippers and rail 
representatives would rather 


•see decisions based on "in- 


telligent 
compromise" 
and 


sound usage and economic data. ' 


"I think when they look at this 


again, legislators will see that 
arbitrary ' .limitations on Ihc 
amount.of'money any stale can 
gel arc unreasonable," Brown, 
said. "Michigan, being* penin- 
sular slalc,, has particular 
transportation problems." 


Conference, opposition to the 


bill centered on ils subsidy 


limitations and on the fact thai 
recommendations would allow 


il treats Michigan n6 differently , Michigan lo receive up to 20 per 
than any of the other, 16 states 
cent of a federal discretionary 


involved in the proposed reor- 
ganization. 


Another 
of the 
group's 


fund of tm million, rather than 
the 10 per cent specified in the 
bill. 


People DO 


Read Small Ads. 


You Didl 


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>ow until October 31,1975 
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ve 
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"WHY WON'T OUR 


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WEpNESPAY. SEPTEMBER 17. 1>7S 
THE HERALD-PALLADIUM, Beitoi Barter - St. JMe»h, Mkklgaa 
PAGE TIIKTEEN 


Echeverria Picks Next President 


Mexico Awaits Its 'Chosen One9 


By CHARLES GREEN 
AswetatMl Press Writer 


s MEXICO CITY (AP) - By 
the middle of- next month, 'al- 


most a year before the election, 
Mexico's 85 million people will 
know who their next president 
will be ' 


He will have almost dicta- 


torial powers for one six-year 
term and then fade back into thfe 
obscurity from which he came 


Under this unusual system 


Mexicans learn the name of the 
next president months before he 
is even officially nominated 


A well-rehearsed group of 


farmers 
or 
laborers 
will 


demonstrate 
"spontaneously" 


in favor of a certain man on that 
October day The news will 
flash 
across 
the 
nation 


President Luis Echeverria and 
'the Institutional Revolutionary 
party - PHI, the initials for Its 
Spanish name, have picked a 


man to take up the red, white 
•and green • presidential sash 
when Echcverria's mandate ex- 
pires Dec 1,1976 


Once the president reveals his 


choice there is no doubt The 
PHI has not lost an important 
election in more than half a 
century After the man is of- 
ficially nominated later this 
year he will travel extensively 
so the people can see him 


But only after 'he: is in .office 


will he reveal Ins,private poli- 
tical ideology The PHI is not 
like a United States political 
party. It encompasses almost 
all shades of political belief 


FOR 1975-76 


•> \ 


Catholics Select 
New Class 
Officers 


SPIRITED MAILBOX: Bob Armstrong is unemployed 
' but be uses his time to spruce up things around, the 
house at'Port Huron, Mich. One project was this red 
r 
.white and blue 'fa mailbox post made of wood. (AP Minnesota 4-H Market Lives- 
Wirephoto) 
' 
l 
lock show 


Election of senior, junior and 


sophomore 1975-76 class officers 
at Lake Michigan Catholic high' 
school, St. Joseph,-have been 
completed, Donald M., Stock, . 
principal, said today. 


Seniors elected by their 


classmates are Dave Flood, 
president; Mark Fish, vice 
president; Brenda Story, secre- 
tary: 
and 
Steve 
Gentry, 


treasurer. 


Junior class officers are: Kris 


Peterson, 
president; 
Mary 


Helen Lehman, vice president, 
Terese Herzog, secretary, add 
Julie Krleger, treasurer 


GIRL WINNERS 


ST PAUL, Minn t(AP) - 


Girls have claimed three of the 
top four places m live lamb and 
live swine competition at the 


Elected by the sophomore 


class, are 
Val .Hohstein, 


president; Steve Chiriick, vice 
president;' Mary Bazan, secre- 
tary and John Spear, treasurer. 


Election of freshmen class of- 


ficers will be held later In the 
semester, Stock said. . 


Six months ugo a cabinet 


minister let slip the names of 
seven 
men, 
all 
cabinet 


members, on Echeverrla's list 
of possible successors^ They are 
known as "tapados" or covered 
ones and'are usually depicted in 
newspaper cartoons with white 
hoods over their heads. 


Bureaucrats, politicians <ind 


"lambiscones," — Mexican 
slang for apple polishers — have 
been trying to curry favor with 
all seven, supporting a can- 
didate or waiting nervously to 
stand in line to give the winnci 
an embrace and declare eternal 
loyalty 


Once the candidate is known 


he wdl become, as far as inter- 
nal politics are concerned, more 
powerful than Eche\erna him- 
self 


Echeverria may have already 


made his decision and the 
chosen one may already know it. 


The president promises his> 


successor will be more,"revolt 
tionary" than he has been. To 
the wealthy and part of the 
middle class that means more 
government control of private 
enterprise, more favors for 
labor, stronger agrarian reform 
and heavier taxation, social 
programs which have earned 
Echeverria the animosity uf 
some. 


Ltpez 
Brac»m«rt«s 


PRESIDENTIAL HOPEFULS: One of these seven men will succeed President 
Luis Echeverria, top left, as next Mexican president. Top from left: Echeverria; 
Hugo Cervantes del Bio; Porfirio Munoz Ledo; Mario Mayo Palencia. Bottom from 
left: Jose Lopez Portillo; Carlos Galvez Betancourl; Augusto Gomez Villanueva 
, and Luis E. Bracamontes. (AP Wirephoto) 


He says his successor must 


continue .these • programs or 
possibly face a revolution from 
the countryside where many 
struggle for existence on the 
edge of starvation. 


The outgoing president has 


almost absolute say in who suc- 
ceeds him. A few — probably no 
more than a dozen — other 
politicians can counsel him and 
perhaps reject his first choice. 
But they do not have strength 
enough to put forward their own 


candidate. Whoever is chosen 
will be opposed by the National 
Action party which _ usually 
draws less than 10 per, cent of 
the popular vote. Other opposi- 
tion parties usually endorse the 
PRI candidate. 


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gAGEKKJETEEN 
THE HEBALD-PALLADIUM, 
-gfc jMepfc, MteUgai 
WEDNESDAY, 8EPTEMBEI17,1I7S 


Coloma Mayoral 
Petitions Rejected 
By Robert Wooley 


i 


COLOMA — Nominating peti- commission, and he said his 


OHN MULT 10-10, SUNDAYS 
WED.,THUW.,Ftl.,SAT. 


BARBARA WIER 
Seeks clerk's p«rt 


EUGENE E. BAKER 
CtmmissiM cudMate 


Hunter Safety Course 


The Benton township police department will conduct a hunter 
; safety course next Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday at the Benton 
township hall. The classes, open to prospective hunters 11-16 years 


r. of age from the twin cities area, will be held from 7-9 p.m. each 
•day. There is no charge and advance registration is not required. 


lions seeking to place Coloma 
Commissioner Robert Wooley 
on the ballot for the post of 
mayor in Coloma's November 
election were withdrawn by 
Wooley yesterday. 


Wooley, 23, first elected to the 


city commission-in 1973, said he 
was never formally told the pe- 
titions were being'circulated 
and the circulators did not ask 
his approval. 
, Wooley said he withdrew the 
petitions after he learned they 
had been filed with the.Coloma 
city clerk's office. 


The commissioner has two 


years remaining to serve on the 


HERE'S PROOF! 


^-/ 
^s 


YOU SAVE AT 


Policy On Student Busing 
Mffirmed 
At South Haven 
:,/«/ 


ByTOM RENNEK 


'-' S««h Htvn CMreqMHk* 
;•-• SOUTH HAVEN - 
South 


-Haven board 
of education 


' upheld its policy of only provid- 
'iiig school bus transportation 
, for students who live 1% miles 
-or more from their school 
/building during its regular 
v monthly meeting last night. 
N''The board decided not to 
•Change its policy after hearing a 
T group of concerned parents 
•'from the Lambert subdivision 
'who asked that their Ugh'school 
' aged children be bused to school 
•^even though they are eight- 
i tenths of a mile from the build- 
;.mg- 
-•-' The parents said they were 
-concerned for the safety of their 
1 children, noting there are no 
'sidewalks along M-140 where 
;the boys and girls must walk. 
; Elementary-age students in the 


Lambert subdivision receive 
>bus transportation 
because 


.their school building meets the 
'1%-mUe guideline. 
.- Supt. Harold Oaarde noted 
(hat changing the policy could 
/make up to 1,000 additional 
•children eligible for bus trans- 
"portatiwi. The district's buses 
.''currently transport about 1,800 
-•Orients. 
': He said the 1%-mile guideline 
,:*» established by the state 
,«pd*r Its bus, transportation 
reimbursement program and 
"that 
any 
transporting of 


students under that limit would 
not be eligible for state funding. 
'.'•In other'matters, the board 
•pproved a |4,182,8S2 budget for 
tSe current school year and es- 
tablished its tax levy as 25.19 
mills for operation and debt re- 
tirement. .This compares to a: 
budget of 13,847,011 last year 
and a tax levy of 27.48 mills. 
* Gaarde noted that overall 


• local millage was reduced 2.27 


mills. A special 1.92 mill levy 
for improvement of existing 
facilities expired and the dis- 
trict reduced its debt retirement 
levy .3$ mill to 2.11 mills 
primarily because of a large 
increase in the property valua- 
tion of the district. 


.The district's state equalised 


valuation increased «,293,2» to 
|W,729,190. 
Valuation 
of 


governmental units in the dis- 
trict 
with last year's in 


parentheses are: 


City 
of 
South 
Haven 


$36,094,190 ($29,336,281), South 
Haven 
township $13,326,526 


($13,591,361), Geneva township 
$5,532,619 ($5,489,302) and Cas- 
co 
township 
$9,756,027 


($9,019,083). 
. Gaarde reported that enroll- 
ment through the second week 
of the school year was down 60 
students from last year even 
though the high school has a 
rcfcord number of students. The 
official enrollment is deter- 
mined by attendance on the 
fourth Friday of the school year. 


Current enrollments with last 


year's in parentheses are: 
elementary 1,714 (1,794), junior 
high 537 (563) and senior high 
1,093 (1,047). The total is 3,344 
compared to 3,404 last year and 
S,3«9 in 1973-74. 
; The board authorized es- 
tablishing an interscholastic 
volleyball program for girls. 
; Howard Jessup, assistant 
senior high principal, reported 
that the high school student 
teacher program has been ex- 
panded to where M students are 
Volunteering their services in 
tt* elementary and junior high 
•choois M teacher aides, hall- 
wr monitors and cafeteria and 
ataygroond supervisors. Last 
yw there were 28 students in- 
Vvrvcd in the ^^tm\\. 
• The board approved appoint- 
tig Craig Ldm M he*d track 
CMCh In place of ItoMM Den 
C|f wk» Totpei. Den Uyl will 


continue as cross country coach. 


New coaching assignments 


approved by the board included 
Miss Linda Wood as cheerlead- 
ing coach and Michael OeVnes 


as assistant wrestling coach. 
The board authorized continu- 
ing the freshman baseball 
program with John Weiss ser- 
ving as coach. 


Niles Library Sells Cards 


NILES - The Niles community library, 820 East Main street, Is 


selling note cards depicting the library. The cards wilt'sell for 
$1.50 per box of 10 and will be for the benefit of the children's 
library fund. They are available at the children's librarian desk. - 


. New Buffalo Township Meeting 


' NEW BUFFALO - New Buffalo township board will hold an 
information hearing on the status and timetable of the planned 
Galien River sanitary sewer system that will 'serve Ihe township, 
the,city of New Buffalo, and Chikaming township at 8 p.m. on 
Wednesday, Sept. 24 at the New Buffalo township hall: The in- 
formation reported at the meeting will concern residents of New 
Buffalo, township. 


Bloomingdale Hearing 


BLOOMINGDALE — A public hearing on Bloomingdale 


township's new proposed zoning ordinance and map will be held 
Thursday, Oct. 2, at 8 p.m., In the township hall, according tu 
Robert Pearson, township planning commission secretary. The 
proposed zoning ordinance and map are available for public ins- 
pection by contacting Delmcr Warren, Monroe street, Blooming- 
dale, or the Michigan Printing company, North Van Buren street, 
Bloomingdale.. 


business demands and faith in 
incumbent mayor Glenn Ran- 
dall resulted in his withdrawing 
the petitions. Randall will now 
run unopposed. 


Circulators of the petitions, 


said Wooley, .were Mrs Frances 
Wooley, his mother, and Mrs. 
llattie Carrothers, wife of can- 
didate Norman Carrothers, a 
former commissioner. 


At the deadline for tiling 


nominating petitions, which was 
4 p m . yesterday,, there were 
three candidates for city clerk 
and five for three commis- 
sioners' seats. 


On Monday, Mrs.'Barbara 


June Wier, 20 filed for election 
as clerk while Eugene E. Baker, 
55, submitted a nominating pe- 
tition for a commission seat., 


Mrs. Wier will oppose incum- 


bent 
clerk Mrs. Patricia 


Beczley, 47, and Mrs. Martha 
Wheeler, 30, who filed her 
nominating petition Sept. 9. ^ 


Baker, a tax accountant'for 


Dumke and Associates, St. 
Joseph, seeks a" four-year term 
on the commission. 
> 


He will oppose two incum- 


, bents, and two challengers for 


three seats on the commission 


Incumbents 
- 
William 


Wcybright and Mrs. Wavia 


i Noack are seeking re-election 


and two challengers filed for 
spots on the ballot last month. 


They are former commis- 
. 'sinner Norman Carrothers, 71, - 


and Thomas Pratt, 26. 


• Baker is seeking public office 
for the first/time, and he has 
been a city resident since 1957. 
'Mrs. Wier is1 'employed,as a ' 
secretary at Household Finance 
'JCorp., M-1S9, Benton Harbor. A 
resident of the city for one year, 
she and her husband, Jan, 
reside' at 340 South Church 
street..; 
,' 


A1973 graduate of the Coloma • 


high school, she seeks election 
to public office for the first 
time. She is a life-long resident/ 
of the Coloma area. 


Besides Randall, two-other 


incumbents are running unop- 
posed for city offices. Warren 
Beczley is seeking re-election as 
constable and Mrs. Gladys - 
VanDcrVecr Is again seeking 
the treasurer's post. 


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tthllNESDAY, 
SEPTEMCER 17, I3J5 
,THL HERALD-PALLADIUM, BcnUu Garb»r-St. J«srj>h, 
PAGE FIFTEEN 


Questionnaire Asks Views On Bangor Schools 


Herbert 
Van 
::;Horn Jr., 41, has been appointed 
f;'ji> BloomingdaVe .village council 
•pto till, until March village elec- 
teitons; unemred term of Victor 
^Cornell who died Aug. 20. He is 
vTLmploycd by Eaton Manufac- 
V,'turing of Kalamazoo. 


BANGOR - Distribution of a 


one-page school questionnaire to 
all. Bangor school 
district 


residents was completed Mon- 
day, according to Paul French, 
president of a It-member com- 
mittee established to determine 
the needs of the Bangor school 
district. 
- The 
questionnaire 
asks 


residents' opinions on bow well 
the school district is educating 
children and whether the dis- 
trict should' provide classes In 
subjects such as music, art,' 
drama, atheltics and driver 
education; 


The survey was called for by a 


blue ribbon committee created 
by the school board on Sept. 8. 


Over 70 volunteers distributed 


the questionnaires Saturday, 


Farm 


said French, and another 2$ or 
30 worked Sunday and Monday. 


He said he hope* the qu«- 


tiobaire will 'reach all 3,990 
Bangor residents. 


"We really want to get 


everybody's two cents worth," 


said French. 


The results of the survey will 


-be compiled and'made public. 
The results will also be used by 
the committee In formulating 
its evaluation and recommen- 
dations to be submitted to the 


school board. 


"We would urge everyone to 


get.thoee surveys back as soon 
as possible," said French. 


People distributing question- 


naires will return them, he said, 
and residents needing more 


time can leave them at dropoff 
points at Harding's market or 
Waite's market. The question- 
naires may also be given to any 
of the 13 committee members. 


Anyone who did not receive 


one should contact French or 


another committee member. 


Formation of the committee 


followed the rejection of five- 
mill property tax levy proposals 
in June and July and a three 
mill proposal that was turned 
down Sept. 4. 


Bemuse of the defeat of the 


, millage tasue, the school board 
i eliminated II teaching'posi- 
tions, all athletic programs; and 
some other scholastic and ^ex- 
tra-curricular programs for "the 
1975-76 school year. 
'•,' 


** ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ 


" , 
r-l 
, 
^ 


Named In Benton 


- The «7-*cre firm owned by Mr. and Mrs: Donald, G. Miller at 
4053 Red Arrow highway, Benton township,' has been designated a 
rt^termlal Farm by the Division of Michigan History. 
< 


In the possession of the family since it was originally purchased 


June' 14 of that year by Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Barnum, grand- 
parents of Miller. 
'- 
•' "_'..' 
,- 
x 


A log cabin built on the property by Miller's grandfather shortly 


after bis purchase of the iand still stands today. The grandfather 
later built a second home, which the prevent owners occupy today.: 


A Centennial Firm certificate will be issued to the owners by the 


Michigan history division, and a large metal marker will, be fur- 
, nisbed by the Detroit Edison and Consumers Power companies. 
"-Secretary at State Richard H. Austin, whose department ad- 
ministers the program, said the Centennial Farm program was • 
inaugurated in 1948. Since then more than 3,000 Michigan farms, 
have been certified as Centennial Farms!" 
, 
- 


A Centennial Farm is one that has been In the continuous pos- 


session of the nine family for 109 years or more, Austin explained. 
iFarrti Wives Talk 
With Union Aide 


By NKK SMITH 


8Mt Writer 


. Satisfied with last week's visit 
"; to AFL-CIO 
headquarters, 


; Laura Heuser, of Hartford, and 
• other, farm wives, will visit an 
''aide to President Gerald Ford 
,ttts week in Washington, D.C. 
; The farm women are lobbying 
• In the nation's capital telling all 
"who will listen that government 
and big labor "should not be ' 
interfering with the marketing 
of an agricultural commodity 
such as wheat," Mrs. Heuser 


WEST. POINT was'the focal 


point of the treason of Benedict 
Arnold Arnold was given com- 
mand of the West Point for- 
tifications on Aug. 3, 1780. For 
more than a year-however,;hc 
had been secretly negotiating 
with the British. Once in com- 
mand / he arranged with Sir 
iHeriry Clinton to turn over West 
Point for 20,000 pounds. Maj, 
John Andre, the British officer 
with whom he had been dealing, 
-was captured and Arnold's plot 
was revealed. On Sept. 25, Ar- 
nold fled to a British warship 
and from that day fought on the; 
side of the enemy, The World 
Almanac notes. 


Addresses Of Your 
Men hi Government 


, 
Oot a quvsllon. complaint or proWtfn you wont to present to a lawmaker 


wtw represents you tn either Wcnhirtgton or Lamina? 
' 


Following Is.a list odU.S. S*notors and Congressmen and State 


Rtcrcsentatlvcs and Senators who represent Southwestern AAlchlean along 
with Iticlr mailing addresses: 
., i 
-' 


U.I. SCHATORS 


Phlllfp A. Hort fD) 
153 Old Senate Btdg. 
. 


.Washington, D.C. 20510 


Robert P. Oriflln 'R) 
3S3 Old Sfnate Bidn. 
Washington, O.C. 20510 


U.S. CONGRESSMAN 


. Edward Hutchlnson (R) 


2336 Ravbwrn Blda. 
Washington, D.C. M515 


ITATt »MATORS 


Cnorfn 0. Zotlor (ft). Knd Dlst. 
State Cafritol iWg. 


Gory Bykcr IR>, ?3rtJ Di&t, 


• State Capitol Bida. 


Lansing, Mich. 46902 


JTATI HPmWHTATIVES 


ROT MlltW IK), Wtl'Oisl. 
. 
Mta E, KCTnHMRI. »Sttl DISI. 


LOflStW, Mien. 4WV2 


Stat» Cwllol Bldq. 
Lansing, Mich. 44902 


Harry Omt, Jr., IK). 43rd Diit. 


Lomtng, Mich. *W2 


Oforrest Slrovw fR>, 42nd nist. 


-' 
, 
^^^H ^^HNow 


you can have your 
Social Security 


Last week the women, plan- 


ning to talk with AFL-CIO 
President 'George 
Meany, 


settled for an audience with the 
public relations director of the 


i mion, she reports. 
. The man "agreed that 


•.brmen, like labor, are entitled 
tea coat'of living increase and a 
return on their In •pslment," 
according to Mrs. Heuser, com- 
nunicationi 
chairman . for 


Mbmen for the Survival of 
Agriculture in Michigan. 


Her next point was that while 


the union ','keej* talking about 
tahtinc prices down," it doesn't 
seem to realize that "prices are 
.ourwages.". . 


The'women"plan to tell the 


presidential aide that farmers 
are upset with the president's 
suspension of grain shipments 
urtil October and because of his 
cooperation with Meany during 
the boycott of ships loaded with 
grain headed for Russia. 


McGovern Not 
A Candidate 


PARIS (AP) - Sen. George 


McGovcrn says he will not be a 
candidate 
for 
the. 
1976 


Democratic. 
presidential 


nomination. 


The South Dakota Democrat, 


answering questions'during a 
.French television 
interview, 


made the comment near the end 
of the program. 


STORM STRIKES 


' SAN, JUAN, P.R.'(AP) - 
Hurricane Eloise hit the north 
coast of the Dominican Republic 
today with 80-mile winds and 
heavy rains after killing at least • 
seven people and causing ex- 
tensive damage in Puerto Rico. 


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PAGE SIXTEEN 
THE KEBALD-PALLAJMUM, BwtM Hutar - St. J«teph, MkUgu 
WEDNESDAY. SEFTEMBEt 17.19J% 


Congress 


.; 
Votes 


BY CONGRESSIONAL 


QUARTERLY 


-; WASHINGTON - Votes of 
area members of Congress on 
key roll calls for the weeklng 
ending Sept. 12 were: 


.SENATE 


-' Oil Price Controls. The Senate 
voted, 
61-39, 
to 
sustain 


President Ford's veto, killing a 
bill which would have continued 
federal controls which hold the 
price of most domestic crude 'oil 
down to 15.25 per barrel. The 
bill would have extended,'these 
controls for six months. (Oil not 
subject to price controls sells 
tor $11-114 per barrel.) The ef- 
fort to override the President's 
Veto tell six votes short of the 
Btoenary 87 votes, a two-thirds 
majority, 


Advocates of overriding'the 


veto argued that decontrol of oil 
prices would allow foreign oil 
producers to set the price of oil 
produced in the United States 
and would result in steep price 
increases for the consumer. In 
addition, they said, these price 
increases would provide exces- 
sive profits to U.S. oil com- 
pantai. 
',.Voting to sustain oil price 
control veto: Griffin (R). 
r-Voting to override oil price 
control veto: Mart (D). 


DES Ban. The Senate voted 


S4-35 to end the use of the drug 
diethyistilbestrol (DES) as a 
growth-promoter in beef cattle 
until the government deter- 
mines that the drug does not 
pose a health threat to people 
who eat the beef. 


* Voting to ban DES in cattle 
raising: None. 


.Voting against ban on DES in 


cattle raising: Griffin (R). 


•Not Voting: Hart (D). 


HOUSE 


•Education 
Veto 
Override. 


With 89 votes to spare, the 
House easily overrode President 
Ford's veto of the |7.t-billion 
education appropriations bill. 
The vote was 37M1 with M 
Republicans 
and 
five 


Democrats voting to sustain. 


The Senate subsequently vot- 


ed 88-12 to override the veto; 
thereby enacting the bll into 
taw. 


Opponents of the override at- 


tempt contended that the bill 
was ll.S-billlon more 
than 


President Ford requested and 
WwiM contribute to a great 
federal deficit. 
..Supporters of the override at- 
tempt argued that the bill was 
only IBS-million more than the 
previous year's appropriations 
and almost UTO-million less 
than the limit Congress set for 
education spending. 
,' Voting to override education; 
appropriations veto: Blare-hard 
(D), Brown (R), Conyers (D), 
O'NciU (Majority Leader). 
. Voting to sustain education 
appropriations veto: Hulchinson 
(R), Vandcr Jagt (R), Rhodes 
(Minority Leader). 


Foreign Aid Restriction. By a 


238-164 vote, the House adopted 
an amendment to a foreign aid 
bill that would deny economic 
assistance 
to 
countries 


regularly violating 
"human 


rights." 


The amendment named no 


specific 
countries, 
but 
a 


congressional 
subcommittee 


has been investigating 
the 


treatment of citizens in South 
Korea and the Philippines. 
Some 
congressmen 
have 


expressed concern about the in- 
ternal policies of India and 
Chile, among other recipients of 
U.S. foreign aid. 
•; Supporters of the amendment 


• argued that it was necessary to 


insure that U.S. aid intended for 
the; needy of a country did not 
end up in the pockets of repres- 
sive 'rulers. They noted that the 
original 
bill 
contained 
a 


loophole allowing aid to such 
countries to continue if the 
President could show that it was 
ijideed going to the people and if 
Congress did not object to the 
President's report within 30 
days. 


Opponents of the amendment 


countered 
that 
it 
unfairly 


punished the suffering people of 
a country for the sins of their 
raters. They argued further that 
economic aid should be used for 
purely "humanitarian" purpose 
and not tied to the political 
policies of the United States. 


Voliiig to deny aid for viola- 


lions of 
"human 
rights.": 


Blanchard (D), Conyers (D), 
Vandcr Jagl(R). 


• Voting against denying aid for 
violations of "human rights": 
Brdwn (R), Hutchinson (R), 
O'Neill 
(Majority 
Leader), 


(Minority Leader). 


THE TIME HAS COMETO PUT 


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PAGE SEVENTEEH 


Electric 
Demand : 
Forecast | 
Is Lower " 


LANSING, Mich. (AP) — W" 


demand for electric power wilf 
not increase dramatically, as; 
predicted a few years ago,'two 
experts have told a state com- 
mission. 
! 


But while one said utilities 


should be able to meet demand 
over the next few years, tbe 
other said electric companies 
may be in trouble by 1980; at 
their low expected rate of new 
construction. 


Duane Chapman, assistant 


professor 
of 
agricultural 


economics at Cornell Univer-, 
sity, and William Hayes, editor , 
of the magazine Electr.ical 
World, cautioned Tuesday they, 
could only discuss the nation as 
a whole. But Chapman said 
Mchigan 
has 
traditionary, 


mirrored national trends -in 
electrical demand. 
; 
i 


The pair appeared before the, 


slate Advisory Commission on 
Electric Power Alternatives in 
the first of four hearings on the. 
future demand of power and 
how to supply it. 


The commission will advise 


Gov. William Milliken how- to 
insure the state has enough 
power. 
, 
:•• ; 


Chapman said the recession 


and increased fuel prices have 
sharply lowered the projected 
demand for electric power.- In 
contrast to the predictions just-a. • 
few years ago of skyrocketing 
demand, his graphs showed a 
gradual increase over the next 
decade or so. 


In Michigan, Chapman said, 


' electric demand is related to the 
health of the auto industry. .-.'•• 


"The auto industry may never 


return to its earlier prosperityj" 
he said. "The" direction of the 
impact is clear — it would 
seriously retard the use of elec- 
tricity 
in 
all 
sectors .of 


• Michigan." 
. •'-••>, 


But Chapman said electric 


utilities were "relatively well 
off compared to other indus- 
tries. And he said there was 
"probably adequate generating 
capacity" in Michigan for. the 
next decade. 
, .->•' 


Hayes, whose magazine -hatt 


been 
forecasting 
electrical- 


demand for 26 years, said the- 
increase in demand for the nejK" 
two years will be the same:^ 
the past — but not for the same< 


' reasons. .':..".., 
• ..-'. .•"•.' . 


< He said the predicted 7.to 18; 
per cent growth is a "caictwip' 
growth rate from the recess 
sum?' and not necessarily a're-. 
turn to normal increases. 
• ;-:s; 


He predicted a slower growth- 


rate of about 5 to 8 per cent for- 
1 


the next 10 years. But he said 
that financial pressures -an, 
utilities will drop their reserves 
of electric power so that by 1980' 
their reliability to provide, 
energy could be endangered; .* .' 


"If our projected growth:in 


demand is right, and the utitii 
tics' projected installation rato> 
is right, then by 1985 they will 
reach minimum reliability,".ho 
said. "But if load growth ex- 
ceeds projections — say to six- or,' 
seven per cent — they could be 
in serious trouble by 1880." ' -•' 


Hayes said nuclear power. Is 


essential 
to 
meet 
future- 


demand, and that solar energy 
and other alternatives are 20 to" 
30 years away. And he opposed 
government subsidies or other 
public involvement in utilities to. 
restrain prices as a "hidden- 
cost" that will damage the s«i>-! 


ply of capital and eventually hit 
the consumer anyway. 
• "' 


NOSTALGIA: Country miisjc 
singer Narvel Felts has capi- 
talized on nostalgia, making 
hits out of songs that fared kss 
well several years ago. lie has 
just had his first No. I record 
with "Reconsider Mo" after 
jumping from label to label, for 
the 
past 
19 years. 
(AT 


Wirepholo) 
'.;•". 


COST INCREASE 
.'-..., 


BETHPAGE, N.Y. (AP),j. 


Confirming a Defense Depart; 
mcnt report, Grumman Aeros- 
pace Corp. says a }1 million-; 
pw-plane increase in UK cot* «f 
its F14 fighter jet «M cawct bf, 
a gnvetiimcnt-ordend Mnrtw- 


PAGE EIGHTEEN 
THE HEEALD-PALLADiUli, Iterta* Barter-St. JMCpk, MkUgu 
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17,1171 


^-™ • 
^^ 
• 
. 
, 
, 
, 
, 
_ 


Experts Don\ Have Answer For Ending Crime 
:.'• 
M 
' 
• 
• • 
'"" '; 
' 
. 
, 
-' ^3 * 


-, 
! 
(Continued From Page One) 
, 


. hy the rich against the poor and whites against blacks. Those 
; conditions lead the list for political liberals. 
•' -The conservatives tend to start their recitation with the break- 


• down of the family, the dwindling influence of the church, and the 


shattered discipline of the schools 
.Perhaps the liberals are closer to the mark, perhaps the con- 


servatives are. But the crime experts at this conference and others 
say they know of no solid research identifying the causes of crime. 
- As Georgetown University law professor Sam Dash pointed out, 


• people have offered the same guesses for decades. A Johnson 
administration crime commission came to about the same 
conclusions in 1968 as another government crime commission did 
in 1937. 
'Though handicapped by the lack of knowledge about what 
causes crime, the experts suggest st.me ways of dealing with it. 
; -The most optimistic say the changes they advocate might make 
1 a.small dent in the frequency of crime Others argue only that the 


changes will improve and speed up the way the system treats 
criminals and their victims. 


• ' • 1 Restore the death penalty because that is a real deterrent to 


'crime, argue police spokesman King and such political figures as 
Republican Ronald Reagan and Democrat George Wallace. 
- ;No, replies Washington lawyer E. Barrett Prettyman Jr., who 
has researched the death penalty issue extensively. He says sta- 
tistics show that the highest murder rates have occurred in states ' 
with the death penalty. 


• • Regardless «f the effectiveness of capital punishment in deter- 
. ring crime, perhaps the people will demand It. An Ohio newspaper 


editor remarks, "I think we're an Old Testament nation. There Is 


• something in us, perhaps savage, that is only going to be satisfied 


by a permanent, visible and drastic punishment." 
.Prettyiiian responded, "If we do have these savage impulses, I 
.would hope we could get rid of them in some way other than 
putting someone to death." 
' The issue of what to do with criminals once they're in prison 
provokes sharp disagreement, but more and more policymakers 


and scholars are leaning toward the View that rehabilitation 
doesn't work. 


"It's a joke to say anybody is getting rehabilitated in prison. 


We'te just putting them in storage," argued Edward Bennett 
, Williams, the high-priced and highly effective Washington lawyer. 


".I don't agree with those who say rehabilitation doesn't work 


because I don't think we've tried much of it," contended Patrick 
Murphy; who runs the private research-oriented Police Founda- 
tion and at one time or another was police chief in New York City, 
Washington and Detroit. 


"I'm not one of those people who think there's no hope for 


rehabilitation," added Work of the LEAA, which spends nearly $1 
billion a year of the taxpayers' money on programs to fight crime. 


But those/who argue for continued effort to find ways to 


rehabilitate-some offenders agree with their opponents that half- 
way houses, job training programs' and the like probably aren't 
going to work.with Uie career criminal. '„ 
• V 
/ 


Work said 'he senses a "remarkable degree- of unanimity 


between the traditional left and right that something ought to be 
done about the recidivist." 


> The statistics indicate that most violent crimes are committed 
by men under 35, many of them 
repeaters. 
." ' 


There is a trend among the crime experts to argue that those, 


offenders should be locked up, not with any nope of rehabilitating 
them, but simply to keep them from harming society for at least 
those months or years they are behind bars. 


Santarelli put it as bluntly as anyone. "If you locked up 


everybody you convicted until age 35, you'd have no recidivism. 
The drive to commit crime is gone by 35." 


This group of thinkers about crime tossed around some other 


ideas, few of them new, some modest, some outrageous. •. 


Glen King suggested administering a truth serum to defendants 


at their trial to determine whether they'committed the'offense 
charged. Mitigating • circumstances 'and punishment could be 
considered by the attorneys and the judge later, he sys. 


"A federal judge ought to make at least 160,000 a year," grand 


juries .ought to be abolished in most cases, and. trials should be 
videotaped to speed up the process, 'suggested Williams. ., 


There should be some experimenting with a system of requiring 


offenders to make restitution to their victims, some others said. 


"Full employment," Murphy proposed. 
But Jerry Wilson, District of Columbia police chief for five years 


and now a crime researcher and writer, offered the simplest 
proposal: "I have sort of a gut feeling that if less attention were 
paid to crime, we'd be better off." 


TIDBITS 


Will Attend Faith Workshop 


•Donald Stock, Lake Michigan Catholic high school principal, and' 


Robert Schmid, middle and primary school principal, will attend 
a' workshop, "Community of Faith,", at Nazareth college,. 
Kalamazoo, Thursday and Friday. The workshop will be combined' 
.with a retreat. Its goal. Stock said, is to build a"greater religious 
atmosphere among teachers and students. Later district meetings 
-will be set up,to explore how these goals can beWt. Catholic 
schools in the Twin Cities; Watervliet, South Haven and Paw Paw 
are in the southwestern Michigan district. 
' 


Michigan Tech Dean's List 


_• HOUGHTON — Twelve students from south western'Michigan 
attending Michigan Technological university here have been' 
named to the dean's list for spring quarter, 1975. Named to the list 
were- Brian Berndt, John Bock, Nancy Carlson, James Dcwitt, 
Kevin Moss, and William Sundstrom, all of St. Joseph; Mary 
Nahan and Rodney Wedge, Allegan; Steven Serdel, Bloomingdale; 
•David CouJston, Nfles; Dana Glenn, Plaimvell; and Lee Richmond, 
Watervliet. 
College Test Deadline 


DOWAGIAC - Next Monday is the deadline for postmarking 


applications for the Oct. 18 American College test, a standard 
prc-college test which students planning to enroll'full time at 
Southwestern Michigan college and many other'colleges'and 
universities should take before enrolling in classes. Results of the 
test are not required for admission at SMC, but students are.urged 
to take the test for counseling and advising purposes. Application 
forms for the American College test (ACT), are available from the 
Student Services office at SMC. This is the last primary test date 
.that insures full 1976-77 state competitive scholarship considera- 
tion. 
Turquoise Open 7 Days 


'The Turquoise Treasure Chest, a gift shop which recently 
opened at the Benton Harbor Holiday Inn, is open seven days a 
week. The Saturday hours for the shop, which are 9 a.m. - 9 p.m., 
were left out of information about the store which appeared in 
Monday's edition of this newspaper. 


PAST PRESIDENTS HONORED: Twenty past " current president Dr. S.G. Cilella of Niles; past 


president Dr. B.C. Conybeare of Benton Harbor, who 
served in 1952; and Dr.N Fred Henderson of Niles, 
president in 1942. Society now has over 130 members. 
(Staff photo) 
, 


presidents of Berrien county Medical society,were, 
'honored last night at 75th anniversary dinner at 
Pickwick club'in*Niles. Pictured, from left, are Dr. 
John Ames of' Niles, who was president in 
1933; 


DEATHS AND FUNERALS 


Toclav In 


MICHIGAN 


Transit, Downtown Bills Inked 


LANSING, Mich: (AP) - Bills designed to launch a *93fl million 


statewide mass-transit and rail preservation program were 
signed into law Tuesday by Gov. William Milliken. Milliken also 
signed a measure to authorize municipalities to establish down- 
town development authorities aimed at preventing further 
deterioration of business districts. One of the transportation bills 
allows the sale of $150 million in revenue bonds next year to begin 
a range of projects, including the start of a modern Detroit rapid 
transit system, a Milliken aide said: The bill also authorizes an 
immediate $30 million loan from the state trunk line fund to fuel 
the projects. The other bill — known as the Transportation 
^Preservation Act — allows state subsidy or acquisition of rail 
freight lines threatened with abandonment in pending rail reor- 
ganization. It also names the Stale Highway Commission as the 
agency responsible for Michigan's rail reorganization. The 
development authority bill is aimed at stopping the flight of many 
businesses from core cities, increasing property tax values and 
spurring economic growth. The bill lets local governments adopt 
ordinances to create the authorities, which would have power to 
acquire and dispose of property, levy property taxes and issue 
revenue bonds. 
Incinerator Shutdown Order 


LANSING, Mich. (AP) - A Swartz Creek liquid waste in- 


cinerator has been ordered by the state to shut down in order to 
protect air qualityv Operation of the Berlin and Farro Liquid 
Incineration Inc., plant is a""clear and present danger to (he 
public health, safety and welfare," said Howard Tanner, director 
of the Department of Natural Resources. Tanner also ordered the 
company to stop hauling additional wastes to its plant and to 
submit a plan for disposing of l.S million gallons already stored 
on its property. The waste incinerator must remain cold until 
stale-approved air pollution control equipment is installed and 
working, Tanner said. "Since Berlin and Farro began opcraling 
soine three-years ago, nearby residents have complained long and 
toad about smoke and odors from the incineralors," Tanner said. 
The company failed to honor agreements with Ihc DNR lo submit 
i a plan by last Friday for controlling excessive emissions and to 
arrange for disposal of the stored wasles, Tanner said, explaining 
UK DWt order. 
' 


, 


William H. Hadloic 


William H. Hadlow, 24, 1009 


Southern avenue, Kalamazoo, 
died,at 3:30 p.m. Tuesday in 
Bronson hospital,' Kalamazob; 
following a long Illness. 


He was born Dec. 24, 1990, In 


Benton Harbor and was a 
graduate of Benton Harbor high 
school. He was employed >al 
Fryling Electric Company in. 
Vicksburg, Mich. 
, Surviving are his parenls, 
William 
R. 
and Lorraine 


Hadlow, Stevensville; a brother, 
Robert Hadlow, Benton Harbor 
and two sisters, Mrs. Kathleen 
Fisher, Irvine, Calif., and Mrs. 
Nancy DeLong, Kalamazoo. 


Funeral arrangements were 


incomplete today at Fairplaln 
chapel, Florin funeral home. 


Memorials may be made to 


the Oncotagy-Hemotology Fund 
of Bronson hospital. 


Afn*. Liim McDermotl 


Mrs. Lina McDcrmotl, 76, 


formerly of Benton Harbor, died 
at 4:55 a.m. today in Shoreham 
nursing home. 


She was born Aug. 26,1899, in 


Lakeside and was a retired 
nurse. Her husband, Louis 
McDcrmqtt, preceded her in 
death in 1974. 


Surviving are a son Floyd, 


LaPorte, Ind.; four daughters, 
Mrs. Jay (Doris) Mead, Bcnlon 
Harbor, Mrs. Charles (Phyllis) 
Sicbcrt, Michigan Cily,- Ind., 
Mrs. Tony (Sharon) Vickey, 


LaPorle and Mrs. Patricia 
Phillips, Jenison, Mich.; a 
brother, 
-Floyd 
Perham, 


Lakeside and a sister, Mrs..' 
Mable Tomchack, Michigan 
City.' "J • -" 
- ' '•' •• ; 


A funeral mass will - be 


celebrated at 11 a.m. Friday in 
St. Joseph Catholic church. 
Burial will be in Calvary ceme- 
tery. 


Liturgical prayers will be 


recited al 7:39 p.m. Thursday in 
Kerley and Starks funeral 
home, where friends may'call 
after 7 this evening. 


Herbert Krensien' 


Word has been received of the 


,death of 'Herbert Krenzlen, 71, 
5*3 South Victor street,' Cham- 
paign, III. He died Sept. 11. 
Services and burial were held in 
Champaign. 


Surviving are his widow 


Anne; a step-daughter, Mrs. Pat - 
Prothc, Champaign; a brother 
Paul, Watervliet 
and two 


sisters, Mrs. Irene Rothcrmel, 
Stevensville and Mrs. Mathilda 
Stermcr, St. Joseph; 


George A. Kroicn 


LAWRENCE - George A, 


Brown, 97, 112 'North Paw Paw 
avenue, Lawrence, died Tues- 
day evening in the extended 
care unit of Lakcview Com- 
munity hospital. He had been a 
patient in the hospital since 
Dec. 1971. 


He was born April 20,1878, in 


Berrien Divorces Granted 


The following divorces have 


been granted in Berrien Circuit 
court: 


Rissman, Patricia.of Niles 


from Gerald. Married June 21, 
1958. 
.. . 
- 
. , - • 
. 


Thomas, Charles of Niles 


from Loretla. Married Jan. 21, 
1973. 


Dexel, Blanche of Niles 


township from George. Married 
Nov. 21, 1964. 


Houston,- Shirley of. Benton 


Harbor, from William. Married 
Oct. 7, 1868. 


Hayes, Joyce of Benton .Har- 


bor from Theodore. One child to 
the mother. Married Aug. 11, 
1971. 


Rodgcrs, Shari of Benton 


lownship from John. Cuslody of 
one child lo probalc court's 
proteclivc services division. 
Married Feb. 22, 1972. 


Ferguson, Dcssic of Benton 


Harbor from George. Seven 
children to the mother. Married 
Sept. 24, 1962. 


Harris, Phillip, Jr., of Benton ' 


Harbor 
from 
Bcrnadinc. 


Married Feb. 20, 1972. 


Tyson, Minnie of Bcnlon Har- 


bor from Joe. Married Oct. 2, 
mi. 


Moshier, Sharon of Benton 


township from Charles. Four 


children to the mother. Married 
April 5, 1973. 


Scnll, Raymond of New Buf- 


falo from Rulh. One child to the 
mother. Married Nov. 10, 1972. 


It was incorrectly reported in 


Ihc Sept. 11 edition of Ihis 
newspaper that John Ott, of 
Bcrricn Springs, received a 
divorce, from Linda Oil. Court 
records show Linda received the 
decree on a eounlcrsuil. 


Beirut Fighting 


In Three Suburbs 


BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - 


Security forces in armored cars 
shelled Moslems and Christians 
.battling in downtown 'Beirut 
today;'. but - a cease-fire was 
reported holding in the northern 
city of Tripoli despite minor 
infractions during the night. 
'Police 
officials 
reported 


"several casualties" in Beirut's 
Nasra district, where Moslem 
Icflisls and Christian righlisls 
'dueled 
all 
morning 
with 


machine guns. Police and 
paramilitary security forces 
were ordered to quell the fight- 
ing but iwre unable lo bring ft 
HOdet control immediately. 


Lawrence township and for 
many years had operated^ a 
sporting 
goods 
store 
in 


Lawrence. He also served as a 
deputy sheriff for over 20 years. 
, Surviving are a son George 
and a daughter, Mrs. Charles 
(Lillian) Staantonj < both of 
Lawrence. 
His 
wife Myra 


preceded him In death. , ' ~ 


Funeral services will be held 


at 2 p.m. Friday in Lawrence 
United. Methodist 
church. 


Burial will be in the family lot of 
Hill cemetery. 


Friends may call at Sisson 


funeral: home, Lawrence, until 
noon Friday. 


Olmglead Riteg Set 


GALIEN — Funeral services 


for George L. Olmslead, 87, 
Route 1, Galien, who died Tues- 
day in Niles Pawating hospital, 
will be held at 2 p.m. Thursday 
in Connelly-Noble funeral home, 
Galien. Burial will be in Galien 
cemetery. 


Mr. Olmstcad was born Sept. 


17,1887, in Galien township. 


Surviving are' his widow, the 


former Pauline Tolarid; three 
sons, Laverne, Toledo, Ohio, 
Donald,-. Paonia, Col., 
and 


George, Riverside, 111.,, and a 
daughter, 
Mrs. 
Palricia 


Walker, San Bernardino, Calif. 


Mr. Olmslead was a relired 


farmer. 
Cordon Ha\nex 


SOUTH HAVEN - Gordon 


Hayncs, 62, 103 Clover lane, 
Longwood, Fla.; formerly of 
South Haven, died Sept. 14 in 
Florida hospital, Allamonte 
Springs, Fla. 


. 
Surviving arc his' widow 


Yvonne; a son Gordon, Long- 
wood; two daughters, Mrs. 
Janet K. Clay, Kalamazoo and 
Mrs.•- Kathleen Pawls,.' In- 
dianapolis, Ind.; two brothers, 
Marshall Hayncs, Chicago and 
Wallace Haynes, Bangor and a 
sister, Mrs. John Dec,, Ft. 
Laudcrdale, Fla. 
' - 


Funeral services were held in 


Allamonte Springs. Cremation 
followed the service. 


Memorials may, be made to 


the Damar Home for Retarded , 
Children, 6324 Kentucky, In- 
dianapolis. 


MrsrEdna Scht>r<>r 


WATERVLIET - Mrs. Edna 


Schcrcr, 60, of Bainbridge 
Center 'road, Coloma, died 
Tuesday evening at her home. 


She is survived by her hus- 


band; Kenneth; her father, John 
Warsko; five daughters, Mrs. 
William A. (Jane) Frank, 
Anchorage, 
Alaska, 
Mrs. 


Donald (Rhonda) Wiltenkeller, 
Watervliet, 
Mrs. 
Richard 


(Terry) Ott, Buchanan, Mrs. 
Tim (Cathy) Cabuy, Buchanan, 
Miss Holly Scherer, Idaho Falls, 
. Idaho; a brother, Alvin Warsko, 
Watervliet; and two sisters, 
Mrs. Albury (Dorothy) Cor-, 
tright, Oxnard, Calif., Mrs. 
Frank (Helen) Kelly, South 
Bend. 


Funeral services will be held 


Friday,,at 2 p.m., at St. Paul's 
United.- .Church 
of Christ, 


Bainbridge. Burial will be in St. 
Paul's' cemetery. Memorials 
may be 'made to the church's 
building fund. 
\ • . 


Friends may call at Hutchins 


funeral,home after Noon Thurs- 
day. 


Mr*. Julius Stecetuoa • 


HARTFORD — Mrs. Julius 


(Grace L.) Stevenson, 85, Olds , 
avenue, Hartford, died early 
today in Lakeview Community 
hospital, Paw Paw. • 


Funeral arrangements were 


incomplete today al Calvin 
funeral home, Hartford. 


Mrs. Belly Wright 


WATERVLIET - Mrs. Betty 


Wright, 45, of route 3, Coloma, 
died Tuesday morning at Bor- 
gess hospital, Kalamazoo, after 
a long illness. 


She is survived by her'bus-' 


band, Chesley; a daughter, Mrs. 
Greg (Brenda) Gclesko, Eau 
Claire; her mother, Mrs^ Clara 
Blocker, Leachvllle, Ark!; two 
brothers, Charles Blocker and 
Ken Blockcr, both of Leachvillc, 
,Ark.; and two• sislcrs, Mrs. 
Louise Cook, Paragould, Ark., 
Mrs. 
Dub (Calhryn) Hcnsen, 


Osceola, Ark.N 


Funeral services will be held 


Thursday, al 2 p.m., at Church 
of Christ, Watervliet. Burial will 
be in North Shore Memory Gar- 
dens. Friends * may call at 
Hutchins Funeral home after 3 
p.m. today. 


I FLORIN 1 
l^jfJJNERALSEHyiCE^J 


William H. Hadlow 
, To Be Arranged 
' Fairplain chapel 


(MM. fair AT*., 
i»m»ii M»ffc»r 


FMONI tar-am 


Mrs. Roberta Joe 
To Be Arranged 


KHl E. NAPIER 


BENTON HARBOR •Ht-Tta 


MY-MMOttni 
?»« NILE: AVE. 


ST JOSEPH «3-151< 


MVMOHOMm 


M» E. CENTER 
COt-OMA M-llfl 


snr mo ARROW 


STEVEN1VILLE OMM1 


POLICE ROUNDUP 
St. Joe Township 
Man Arrested 
.? 


V 
'', 
% 
r- 
I* 


On Sex Charge j 


*- 
n 
* ' 
^ 
^ 
' 
, A St. Joseph township man was arrested by township police 
Tuesday on a'charge of criminal sexual misconduct in the first 
degree after a search of his home in which an alleged pipe bomb 
also was found. 


. -v Booked at the Berrien county 


jail was Richard Herman, 29, of 
•3307 Lincoln avenue. He is being 
held for federal authorities of 
the Alcohol, 
Tobacco 
and 


'Firearms department for pos- 
session of a pipe bomb. 


Township police Chief Keith 


Mills said a search of the Lin- 
coln avenue home, authorized 
by the county prosecutor's of- 


r fice, turned Up evidence which 


ted to/the arrest. He did,not 


i release details on the sexual 


misconduct charge, but said it 
appeared to involve juveniles'* 
over the past year. - 


A' representative of 
the 


prosecutor's office went along 
on the search and authorized the 
charge. Also present, was an 


, agent forx llie federal depart- 


ment. 


A hose found running from 


the gas tank of a car to the back 
of a pickup truck led to the 
arrest late Tuesday of a Berrien 
Springs man on a'charge of lar- 
ceny of gas. from a vehicle, - 


Booked at the Berrien county 


jail.was Michael Edward Wil- 
son, 17, of 1400 North Kephart. 
Berrien, sheriff's Sgt. Jack 
Knuth said he was.making a 
routine patrol through 
the 


parking lot of,Howard Johnson's 
Motor Lodge, 298» M-138, Sodus 
township, about 11:30 p.m. when 
he found the gasoline siphoning 
operation. He said the hose was 
connected to an electric fuel 
pump lathe back of the pickup. 


Owner of the car from which 


the gas was -being taken was 
identified as Wilson Lewis, 
Madison, Tenn. Sgt. Knuth said 
about five gallons of gas had 
been siphoned. 


State police of the Benton 


Harbor 
post 
arrested 'a 


Roseville man Tuesday on a 
charge of receiving and con- 
cealing stolen property 'after ,an 
investigation linked him With an 
allegedly stolen car from the 
Detroit area. ' - 


Booked at the Berrien county 


jail was Kenneth E. Killian, 17. 
Troopers said he was stopped 
. while hitchhiking at the Napier 
avenue entrance ramp to 1-04 
about 8:20 a.m. Earlier troopers 
found an abandoned 1973 Pon- 
liac, reported stolen- from 
Grosse Pointe, in a lot at a fac- 
tory on US-33, Hagar township. 
Police investigation 
alleges 


Killian abandoned the auto. 


Benton Harbor police arrested 


a Benton township man early 
today after a computer check 
revealed he was wanted.on a 
forgery warrant and two traffic 
' warrants. He was also charged 
. with driving, with a suspended 


operator's license and having 
improper license plates. 


Booked at the Berrien county 


jail was Willie M. Logan, 34, of 
385 Urbandale avenue. Police 
said his car was stopped about 
2:15 a.m. at Jefferson and Sum- 
mit streets. Police said he'was 
wanted on the forgery charges 
in Elkhart county, Ind. Police 
indicated the license plates on 
his car allegedly belong "to 
another auto. 


Benton 
township . police 


arrested a Benton Heights man 
Tuesday on a warrant charging 
him with receiving and con- 
cealing stolen property, 
i 


Booked at the Berrien county 


jail 
was William . Harold 


Ballard, 28, of 21S3 Berg 
avenue. The warrant, issued by 
the county prosecutor's office 
and signed Aug. 5, 1975 by Fifth 
District Court Judge Leo Cook, 
i charges Ballard with having a 
stolen two-way radio in his DOS- 
session last July. 


Two thefts were reported 


Tuesday to Benton Harbor 
police. Christine Payno, 579 Ed- 
wards avenue, told police an 


/Of OHulity, Distinction 


and .Good Value for 


All Occasions 


•*•»«* C«M 


CRYSTAL SPHINCiS 


FLORIST 


ADC check in • the 'amount of 
JlH.ah ADC identification card 
and three speakers were stolen 
from her apartment. Preston 
Ward, 298 Jefferson court, said 
an electronic watch, Valued at 
1190, was taken from his borne,.: 


Ed Quardokus, 1874 Anthony 


drive, St. Joseph township, told 
Benton township police Tuesday 
clothing, jewelry and old coins, 
ail valued at |215, and 110 & 
"cash-were stolen from* his car 
while it was parked at Roclgy 
Gap park. 
' ' " - ,"'r:r- 
-fc 


Reduced ^ 


Two Lincoln township men 


booked for investigation Mon- 


' day by St. Joseph police (in, 
' felony charges of possession of 


marijuana with intent to sell' 
were arraigned on ' lesser- 
charges Tuesday in Berrien" 
Fifth District court. 
; \ 


Prosecutor John Smietanka. 


authorized charges of posses- 
sion 
of 
marijuana 
— , 'a < 


misdemeanor — against David' 
Richard Kelm, 20, of 3817 
Meadow lane, and David Scott 
Sater, 17, of 3933 Meadow lane. 


Both men pleaded innocent to 


the charge, demanded jury 
trials and were released on per- 
sonal 
recognizance 
bond. 


Sater's bond was set at 11,500: 
and Kelm's at 11,000. 
;;- 


Arrest Tricf 
Here For 
Newaygo 
':•- 


Officers of the Berrien county- 


Metro Crime Unit arrested 
three men Monday and Tuesday 
on charges of breaking and en- 
tering five homes .in the 
Newaygo area. Moje than $2,000 
in merchandise was confiscate 
ed, officers said. 


The three,. who are to be 


transported to Newaygo for 
arraignment were: Philip R: 
Herclk, 21, of 144 Lemon Creek 
road, Baroda; Terry D. Bach, 
a, Unco road, Berrien Springs; 
and Dexter A. Schlutt, 21, of 
8M First street, Barodat They 
are being held at the Berrien 
jail without bond. 
, -.I 


Metro officers 'wid the arrest* 


followed investigation by the 
metro unit 'and troopers from 
the Newaygo i state police post? 
Recovered property included 
televisions, guns, stereo equip:: 
meat, clothing, .tools and hunt- 
ing equipment. The break-in* 
allegedly 
took place, last 


January, metro officers said. •'. 


More arrests on charges of 


receiving and concealing stolen 
property, are to be made, oft 
fleers indicated. 


JLETFER DESnbOYED 


NEW YORK (AP)-Top FBI 


officials, "probably including 
former Director J. Edgar 
Hoover," ordered the destruc- 
tion of a letter in which Lee 
Harvey Oswald, made violent 
threats 10 days before he killed 
President John F. Kennedy, the'•'• 
New York Times says in today's' 
editions. 
IV; 


•RMMsr. 


983.5538 


Henry Wlttmaier 
2 p.m. Thursday 


V First Assembly 
•: 


of God church 


MR Urn McDermMt 


FMcral Maw 
11 a.m; Friday 


St. 


Lmirgical prayers 
'•» P.m. Thursday 


In the chapel 


M7S HiMlmi • 


On /Wf Wnnmh* Flmlt 
run* '• r<irn> 


Area 


Highlights 
«Ji)e Jh raid 


COMBINING (Up $ftt)fi-JJ(tUadtom AND THE HERALD-PRESS 


BENTON HARBOR - ST. JOSEPH, MICHIGAN 
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1S7S 


Ar«a 


Highlights 


Coloma Chief Raps Berrien Juvenile Office! 


KENNETH UNRUB 
CMM» PtUce Chief 


COLOMA — Coloma Police 


Chief 
Kegneth 
Unruh 
has 


charged that the probate court 
and its juvenile authorities in 
Berrien, county are failing to 
deal with juvenile offenders as 
they should,. 


Unruh's comments followed 


incidents 
which 
occurred 


recently in Coloma. 


According to Unruh, head of 


the city's police force for 10 
years, 
both 
agencies 
are 


"negligent in their duties to en- 
force the laws of the slate in 
reducing the juvenile crime rate 
of the county." 
/, .- 


Unruh released a three-page 


statement dealing with the 
problems .encountered with the 
authorities. 


. 
His statement said: 
/'Juvenile people want to take 
truancy and runaways out of the 
court system and refer them to 
a federal funded agency, such 
as Link. 
, - 


"Parents have been told that 


their child does not have to at- 
tend school at 15 years of age, 
also that parents are not res- 
ponsible fo the damage their 
children cause while they are 
runaways. 


"We (the Coloma police 


department) Were told by one 
official not to refer any more 
runaways to the juvenile of- 
fice " 
--Citing the case of four 
•juveniles on the night of Sept 9, 
Unruh said, "the juveniles 
physically attacked a: deputy 
sheriff and also fought with two 
private citizens on the sidewalk 
in Coloma in ..full fiew of six 
witnesses" 
• 
> 
"~ 
_z 


One of them was a runaway 


girl. The other three were boys, 
including two that had attacked 
another.officer.last June_ in the 
city after robbing.,two'young 
boys, according to Unruh. 


"After placing a call to a 


juvenile officer, the police were 
advised to turn the runaway girl 
over to Link and the one young 
boy to his parents, while the 
oilier, two were taken to the 
juvenile detention facility." 


Unruh 
continued 
in 
Ins 


statement, "The very next day' 
these same two were back in 
town harrassing the two citizens 
who were trying to break them 
up the previous night. 


"The -runaway girl, who 


refuses to stay home after 
pleadings from her parents 
(whom I'personally know to be 
fine people) left lank and is now 
walking the streets laughing 
because the police and her 
parents are powerless to do 
anything to her. 


"The answer we constantly 


get from the probate court is 
that they do not have the room 
for offenders; 


"So what is the answer' — Do 


we as parents and policemen 


just turn our heads and hope the 
rising juvenile crime rate will 
go away, — or, do we stop 
spending money on cake and 
cookie rap sessions or do we 
start cracking down with some 
penalties to ,deter this type of 
crime? 


"There is just no way that the 


people can expect the police to 
do their job, without ~the 
cooperation 
of 
responsible 


people in the probate court and 
juvenile office," said Chief 
Unruh. 


The chief's statement con- 


tinued, "Where do parents turn 
when they have exhausted not 
only their money, but also their 
health, trying desperately to 
save their youngster from run- 
ning the streets and headig into 
a life of dope and boofe and 
crime. 


"I'm not talking about the 


parents who don't give a damn, 
by letting their kids run free 


and never try to control their 
actions, or even check to find 
out where they are at 2 or 3 in 
the morning. 


"I'm 
talking about good 


parents who work hard to make 
a good home for their kids and 
then find that they (their kids) 
resent the fact that some other 
kids can go where they want arid 
do anything they desire with no 
parental control of any kind. 


"These parents turn to the 


juvenile authorities in the hope 
of findng some help, but what do 
they find in Berrien county? — 
only to be told that they, as 


parents^ are hot responsible for 
the actions of the juvenile after 
they run away. 


"Does this help the parent 


regain control of his child?" 


Unruh continued, "But when 


the child winds up in a hospital 
or a mental clinic or in a funeral 
home from an overdose of 
drugs, then this lets the probate 
court off the hook, because it's 
too late to help this one. 


"Possibly 
the 
kid 
will 


somehow reach the age of 17, 
and: then the adult court: can 
have their day with the young- 


ster. This again, lets, the 
probabe court off the hook.-" 


Unruh's statement concluded 


by saying, "What ever hap- 
pened to the boys and girls 
training school? Whoever said 
that it was a "crime to pumsn 
the violator"? Someone has to. 
take the incorrigible child out of 
society until he or she can Un- 
derstand that law and order, still 
must prevail, both in society 
and in the home. 
- _ • 


"Until this is done, there 


cannot, and will not, be-any 
reduction in juvenile crime in 
Bcrrien county." 


"There is no way that . . . the police can do 


their job without the cooperation of ... 


the probate court and juvenile office." 


LIST AREA'S MERIT SEMI-FINALISTS 


ByALANAREND 


Staff Writer 


Fifteen students from nine 


southwestern Michigan high 
schpols are among some 15,000 
of the nation's top students 


• named semi-finalists in the 1976 
National Merit 
Scholarship 


competition, 


All 15 and the other semi- 


finalists will now compete for 
3,800 Merit scholarships to be 
awarded next spring. 


The semi-finalists were the 


highest scorers on a test given 
last October to over one million 
students in about 17,000 schools 
nationwide and represent the 
top one-half of one per cent of 
the nation's most academically 
talented young people. 


Semi-finalists must qualify as 


finalists to advance in the 
competition for scholarships. To 
become finalists, the semi- 
finalists must be endorsed by 
their schools and recommended 
for scholarship consideration, 
confirm their first test scores 
with an equivalent performance 
on a second examination and 


Fifteen Top Scholars 


provide 
evidence 
of 
high 


academic 
performance, and 


supply information about < their 
accomplishments. 


Over'90 per cent of the semi- 


finalists are expected to become 
finalists and each finalist will be 
considered 
for scholarships 


through a final judging process. 


The winners will be con- 


sidered for one of 1,000 National 
Merit scholarships, or about 
2,800 'four-year 
scholarships 


worth' up to $1,500 each year. 


The scholarship program will 


release the names of winners In 
three public announcements in 
1978. The winners of corporate- 
sponsored 
four-year 
Merit 


scholarships will be announced 
April 8; winners of one-time 
National 
Merit 
»1,000 


.scholarships on April 22; and 
winners of college-sponsored 
four-year Merit scholarships on 
April 29. 


The 1976 competition is" the 


21st conducted by the National 
Merit Scholarship corporation 
since 1956. In that lime, over 
41,800 students have won Merit 
scholarships valued at more 
than $113 million. 


St. Joseph high school topped 


the list of semi-finalists this 
year with four and Buchanan 
high school had three. Dowagiac 
high school had two, and 
Bcrricn 
Springs, 
Coloma, 


Lawrence, Brandywine, Paw 
Paw, 
and 
Lake 
Michigan 


Catholic, one each. 


The semi-fmahsts arc: 


, RICHARD M. KINNEY, 17, 
son of Mr. and Mrs. Ronald F. 
Kmney, 2716 Highland court, St. 
Joseph. Kinncy, a senior, is 
president of the student council 
and was president 
of his 


sophomore and junior classes. A 
member of the varsity tennis 
team, French and math clubs, 


ALBERT J. CARTER 
VICKY EAVES 
TIMOTHY M. BAKSUHN 


C*l*ma 


Bicentennial Tlieme Chosen 


For Blossom,time Festival 


A theme that ties in with the nation's bicentennial celebration — "This Is Our Country" — 


has been chosen for next year's Blossomtime festival The week of May 2-8 has been desig- 
nated for the 1976 Blossomtime observance with both the Grand Floral Parade and Grand 
Floral Ball scheduled, for May 8. 
, 


The board of directors of Blossomtime, Inc., also has established Monday, March 29, as the 


date for the Miss Blossomtime pageant All area queen contests must be completed by March 
15. The Miss Benton Harbor contest has been scheduled for Friday, Jan. 23, while Miss St. 
Joseph will be selected on Friday, Jan. 30 
: 


The Blessing of the Blossoms, traditional opening event Of the Blossomtime festival, will Ire 


held on. Sunday, May 2, at the Trcc-Mendus fruit farm in Eau Claire. Other events on the 
calendar Include a visit by Miss Blossomtime and her court to the Great Lakes Naval hospital, 
on April 13, the Blossomtime concert on May 6, the Blossomtime fashion show on May 5, the 
youth parade in Benton Harbor May 6 and the Blossomtime square dance May 8. 


he has not yet decided on a 
college or major 


RONALD E. LUNDE, 17, son 


of Mr and Mrs 
Marvin C 


Lunde, 1414 Niles avenue, St. 
Joseph. Lunde, a senior, plans 
to enroll 
at 
Northwestern 


university or the University of 
Washington to major in science 
or math A former Boy Scout, he 
is a member of the science and 
math clubs. 


KAREN 
L. 
POND, 
17, 


daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lester 
E Pond, 4325 Laurel drive, St. 
Joseph. She plans on attending 
Michigan State university or the 
University of Michigan to major 
in science or engineering. A 
senior, she was - one of 23 
students in the nation selected 
to participate in a course on 
oceanography at Occidental 
college, California. She is a 
member of the science, math 
and German clubs and teaches 
Sunday 
school 
at 
First 


Congregational church, Benlon 
Harbor. 


STEPHEN M. PIRAINO, 17, 


son of Mrs. Dawn L. Plraino, 811 
Arislcy druve, St. 
Joseph, 


Piraino, a senior, is a member 
of the marching band and is 
undecided on a college or 
major. 
'"' 
. 


CASIMIR J. PETUCK, 17, 


son :of Mr. and Mrs. Cass 
Pctlick, 1547 Ponliac road, 
Falrplain'. Pellick plans on at- 
tending 
the 
University of 


Michigan or Michigan Tech- 
nological university. He was 
president of his junior class and 
a winner of the VFW Voice of 
Democracy award. .He's a 
member of the .Lake Michigan 
Catholic high school bowling 
team. 


DAVID A. RECTOR, 17, son of 


Mr. and Mrs. Murl Rector, 605 
East Prairie Rondo, Dowagiac. 
A senior, Rector plans to attend 
Southwestern Michigan college 
before 
enrolling at 
either 


Michigan State university or 
Western Michigan university to 
major in math or engineering. 
He is a member of the National 
Honor society, varsity club, 
marching band, pep band, jazz 
band, and choir. He is also a 
varsity tennis player. 


JAMES E. MORAN, 16, son of 


Mr. and Mrs. William Moran, 
route 7, Dowagiac. Moran, a 
senior, plans to major in pre- 
law' at 
the 
University 
ot 


Michigan or Kalumazoo college. 
A basketball manager for two 
years, Moran enjoys intramural 
sports and was on the school 
newspaper for one year, and is a 
member of the National Honor 
society. 


DAVJD F. HABRICHT, 17, son 


of 
Mr. 
and Mrs. Robert 


Habrlchl, 308 West Front street, 
Buchanan Habricht plans to 
major in biology, but has not 
decided on a college. A senior, 
he is a member of the drama 
club and varsity wrestling and 
tennis teams. 


LAUREL A. NELSON, 16, 


daughter of Ally 
and Mrs 


Maurice Nelson, 316 West 
Chicago street, Buchanan. Miss 
Nelson plans to major in 
theater, but also has not select- 
ed a college. A senior, she is 
president of the drama club, a 
member 
of 
the 
student 


representative assembly and 
treasurer 
of 
her 
youth 


fellowship group al First United 
Methodist church, Buchanan. 


THOMAS W. TRULL, 17,'Son 


of Mr.1 and Mrs. Donald Trull, 
302 
West 
Fourth 
street, 


Buchanan. Trull plans to attend 
either 
the 
University 
of 


Michigan or Massachusetts Ins- 
titute of Technology to major in 
chemistry. A senior, he is 
president 
of 
the 
student 


representative assembly and 
has been a member all four 
years in high school. 


VICKY EAVES, 17, daughter 


of. Mr. and Mrs. Claude Eaves, 
1512 Fulkerson road, Niles, 
Miss Eaves plans on attending 
Kalamazoo college or Notre 
Dame to major in business'ad- 
ministration. She is a member 
of the Brandywine National 
Honor society. 
, 


ALBERT 1. CARTER, 17, son 


of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Carter 
Jr., 409 North Mechanic street, 
Berrien Springs. Carters plans 
on attending the University of 
Michigan to major in phar- 
macology. A senior, he is a 
member of the National Honor 
society, 
.thespians, 
and 


president 
of the 
German, 


science and math clubs. He also 
is a varsity football player. 


TIMOTHY M. BARSUHN, 17, 


son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald E. 
Barsuhn, 4067 Evergreen lane, 
Benton . Harbor. A senior at 
Coloma high school, he plans to 
enter the ministry. He is a 
member of the chess and drama 
clubs and 
National Honor 


society. 


DALE J. ZOODSMA, 17, son 


of Mr. and Mrs. Lester Zoods- 
ma, 
3303 
Corwin 
road, 


Lawrence. Zoodsma, a senior, 
plans to go to college, but has 
not selected a college or field nf 
study. He is a member of the 
Van Buren folk dancers group. 
His father is president of the 
Lawrence school board. 


NINA L. CONSOLATTI, 10, 


daughter of Mr. and Mrs. An- 
gelo Consolatti, route 4, Paw 
Paw. Miss Consolatti, a senior, 
plans to major in biology at the 
University of Michigan. She is a 
member of the National Honor 
society. 


Wifl Build New High School 


? BERRIEN SPRINGS - Construction on a separate 
high school building at the Andrews university school 
center here will begin early next spring, according to 
Dr. Richard Orrison, school director. The building, 
which is estimated to cost $1.71 million, will house 
about 400 students in grades 9-12, said Orrison. It is to 
open in the fall of 1*77. 
, 


: This year the high school, with 3K students, is full to. 
ctfMKtty, he Mid. High idMl student* are presently 


1 to • w*r rt the fltaWUM MMttg. The new 


high school will be built on a site adjacent to the 
clcmcnlary school. 


Funding for the new building will come from the 


university, the Michigan conference of Seventh-day 
Adventists, the Pioneer Memorial Seventh-day Ad- 
venlist church, and other nearby Seventh-day Adven- 
list churches. 


The architect, Trend and Associates of Kalamwzoo, 


is now preparing preliminary drawings of the build- 
ing. R will haw ctannmm facilitfen for 4M students 


arjd additional facilities, such as a library and 
cafeteria, for 500 persons. 


Enrollment at the university school in grades K-12 is 


823, the highest ever, according to Orrison. To cope 
with the increase, 76 over last year, the school has 
hired five additional part-time teachers. 


There are 131 junior high students and 332 grade • 


school students. All three divisions of the university 
school showed gain, Orrison said. 


DAVID F.HABKICHT 
LAUREL A, NELSON 
THOMAS W. TRULL 


JAMES E. MORAN 


Dtwagiac 


DAVID A. RECTOR 


Dtwagiac 


DALE J. ZOODSMA 


Lawrence 


NINA W. CONSOLATTI 


Paw Paw 


CASIMIR J. PETLICK 
Lake Michigan Cathtlic 


RICHARD M. KINNEY 


St Jtsepk 


s 
r^ 


RONALD E.LUNDK 
8TEPWEN M. n*AINO 
•AHNLNM) 


M., 


•J'AGE TWENTY 
Hi;, HL'IULO PAUADIU.V,, I,.' 
H rb/r-Sl 
Y. Sc-PrEMBLK I.', JSi.i 


pfFL Li State Of Chaos With Openers Five Days Away 
., 


'" J' Frtoi AsMciatwl Press 


The National Football League, 


" five^days away from opening its 


J973 season, is in a state of 
chads 
'.The players are angry and 


•.disiH-gam/ed. 
-'Crrte owners are indignant, 
more or less unified, and feel 
they have a sacred trust to 
uphold the integrity of the 
"gaine. 
'"Arid the fans — remember 
them? — are confused, unhappy 


* and tired of having their sports 


pages taken up with endless 
tales of strikes,' lockouts and 
collective bargaining when they 
should be reading about flashy 
rookies and shrewd game plans 
• The New England Patriots lit 
the spark in this latest dispuio 
When they went on strike and 


skipped last Sunday's exhibition 
ganie with the New York Jets in 
an attempt to force a new con- 
tract. New England officials 
responded 
by 
locking 
the 


players out of training camp. 
The fire spread Tuesday with 
the .lets and the Washington 
Redskins joining the Pats on 
strike, and sources close to the 
New York Giants and Detroit 
Lions saii those clubs niay join 
the strike today. 


Unity, however, v is not the 


players' strong jxjinL'llouston, 
Cincinnati,, Minnesota 
and 


Miami, among others, have 
come out firmly against the 
strike 


"We'll play this week whether 


it's against the Shreveport 
Steamer, New Orleans or New 


England," said Oilers'; player 
representative Skip Butler. "We 
voted 43-0 not to strike at this 
time. The Oilers will continue to 
practice and will play football 
Sunday." • 


"We're just going to sit'here 


and sec what happens when the 
smoke clears," said the Ben- 
gals' Bob Johnson "The main- 
stream of the league isn't even 
behind it." 


The litest bid by the NFL 


Management Council, bargain- 
ing agent for the owners, was a 
six-point proposal that, in es- 
sence, called for the Patriots to 
return 
to 
camp 
and 


management to.present a,new 
contract offer by Sept 25. 


New England rejected the 


proposal and the strike spread 
to New York and Washington 


"We saw a lot of teams giving 


New England lip service and we 
decided to do nothing wishy- 
washy," said Jets' player rep 
Richard 
Ncal. 
"We 
need 


something to show us they re 
serious about doing something 
to obtain a fair and just bar- 
ganmg agreement 


The two sides couldn't even 


agree on the origin of the siv 
poml offer. Ed Garvey, execu- 
tive director of the players' 
union, claimed federal mediator 
W. J. Usery had originally 
proposed eight points, two of 
which would have increased 
i osiers from 43 to 46 players 
until Oct 1 and temporarily 
reinstated the old 1970 contract. 
Both points were turned down 
by the Management Council. 


Sargent 
Karch, executive 


director of the Council, said 
Uscry-never .recommended the- 
c;6at points and that Garvey 
had a hand In preparing them. 


The Management Council met 


Tuesday night to talk things 
over and spokesman Terry 
Bledsoe said afterwards, "I 
would have to say the regular 
season is in jeopardy. We have 
three clubs which have voted 
not to strike and three clubs 
which voted to strike — and the 
rest are floating some place in 
between " 


An Associated Press survey 


found that five teams are on 
strike or on 'he verge of 
striking, seven teams are dead 
'set against a strike and the 
other 14 haven't decided what to 
do yet. 


-<-¥nm Associated Press 
•' The Pittsburgh Pirates took 
somj: extra batting practice at 
Wrigley Field. Wasn't it nice of 
. the Chicago Cubs to supply the 
pitchers?- - 


With the aid of the Chicago 


staff, the Pirates raised their 
batting averages — and plenty 
of eyebrows — with 24 hits en 


"route to a record-making 22-0 


victory Tuesday 


'Rennie Stennctt was the most 


ferocious of the Pirate bombers 
— Wasting out seven straight 
hits.'for a modern major league 
record In addition, the Pirate 
second baseman tied a major 
league mark'by getting two hits 
in two separate Innings. 
_ "The 'Pirates as well set a 
record for the most lopsided 
Shutout margin 
in modem 


baseball history. 


•Stennctt called his extraor- 


dinary performance "lucky" 
and thought that his record hit 


—a triple in the eighth — might 
have been an out. 


"1 thought that hist one might 


be caught," said ithe second 
baseman whguised his batting 
average 11 points to 287 "I hit 
it real good, but I was afraid it 
was starting to float." 


Stennelt led the hit-happy 


Pirates with a triple, two dou- 
bles and four singles before he 
was lifted for a pinch runner in 
the eighth You have to go all 
the way back to 1892 to find a 
player who got seven hits in a 
game — Wilbert Robinson of the 
old Baltimore Orioles. 


Every Pirate in the starting 


lineup had at least one hit and 
scored at least one run, Their 
22-run total was the highest in 
the majors this season and the 
most in the National League 
since Sept. 2) 1937, when.the 
Milwaukee Braves routed the 
Cubs 23-10. 


The victory kept the Pirates 


six games in front of the 
Philadelphia Phillies in the Na- 
tional League East The Phillies 
kept pace with the Pirates by 
beating the St Louis Cardinals 
4-3 in 13 innings. .The Pirates 
and, Phillies open a big, two- 
'game series in Philadelphia 
tonight. 


Elsewhere in the National 


League, the Houston Astros beat 
the Cincinnati Reds 5-1; the New 
York Mets nudged the Montreal 


Expos 4-3 in 18 Innings; the Los 
Angeles Dodgers trimmed the 
San Diego Padres 5-2 and the 
San Francisco Giants topped the 
Atlanta Braves 7-6. 


Mike Anderson's 13th-mnmg 


sacrifice fly sent home pinch- 
runner Alan Bannister with the 
winning run as Philadelphia 
beat St. Louis. Greg Luzinski 
drew a leadoff walk from Mzke 
Carman, 3-7, and went to second 
on Dick Allen's single, chasing 
Carman for Harry Parker, who 
walked Mike Schmidt before 
Anderson lifted his long flyball 
to center. 


Reggie Smith's blow roller 


brought home Lou Brock and 
tied the game at 3-3 in the sixth' 
Brock had doubled and taken 
third on a groundout 


Larry Dicrker pitched a five- 


hitter and Milt May knocked in 
three runs, leading Houston 
over Cincinnati. The Astros 
scored early off slump-ridden 


Seven Hits 
For Stennett 


CARRIES BIG STICK: Rennie Stennett Hashes seven 
fingers — one for each straight'hit he made in 
Pittsburgh Pirates' 22-0 win over the Chicago Cubs 
Tuesday in Chicago. Stennett and his bat set modern 
major league record with the seven consecutive hits 
and equalled the all-time mark. (AP Wirephoto) 


CHICAGO (AP) - "It's tough 


enough to get to the plate seven 
times in a game let alone get 
seven hits," mused Pittsburgh 
Pirate Manager Danny Mur- 
taugh about Rennie Stennett's 
modern major league record set 
against the Chicago Cubs. 


"Unreal, just unreal," echoed 


Pittsburgh batting'coach Don 
Leppert. "You know, t could 
throw batting practice forever 
and not have a guy get seven 
straight base hits. Imagine do- 
ing It in a game." 


Yet, 
the 
24-year-old 


Panamanian's 
feat 
— not 


achieve! since Wilbert Robin- 
son of the old Baltimore Orioles 
did it in 1892 — did. not par- 
ticularly stir the dressing room 
of the Pirates who are notorious 
for their batting prowess and 
dominance of the National 
League Eastern Division. 


Neither were the Pirates es- 


pecially excited about the 22-0 
margin of their victory over the 
Cubs, the most lopsided shutout 
in the modern major league 
baseball history. 


Stennctt was happy about the 


four singles, two doubles and 


skipping 
triple 
he lashed 


against the Cubs, but the lithe 
young inflcider recalled wryly 
his last visit to Wrigley Fluid for 
a July 4 doubteheader; 
• 
. 


"1 got hit in the head and 


didn't play," he said, i 


Stennett also tied a major 


league mark held only by-three 
other persons when he rapped 
out base hits twice in a single 
inning on two occasions. Me 
doubled .to lead, off the first 
when the Pirates scored nine 
runs and sent 14 men; to the 
plate, then singled a second 
time at bat in the first. He 
singled In the third, and led off 
again in the fifth with a single. 


The Pirates batted around 


again in the fifth, picking up six 
runs, and Stennett lined a dou- 
ble to left-center in his second 
:trip to the plate that inning. 


He led off Hie seventh with a 


single, eventually scoring his 
fifth run of the game — a Na- 
tional League high this season 
— and with'two out in the 
eighth, lined the record shot, a 
triple, on a low line to right 
field. 
; 


Jack 
Bilhngham, 
15-9. 


Billingham has won only one of 
-his last six starts during the 
tdllbpin, with an earned run 
average of 7.12. 
< ' 


Del Unser's • bases-loaded 


walk with two out in the 18th 
inning gave New York its vic- 
tory over Montreal in the lon- 
gest game of the major league 
baseball season. Unser walked 
on four straight pitches from 
Don DeMola, 4-8, to end the 
marathon four-hour, 29-mlnute 
affair. The previous longest 
game this year was a 17-inning 
meeting between the Texas 
Rangers and Cleveland Indians 
on June 8. 


Roy Staiger and Mike Phillips 


singled and Jerry Grote walked 
before Unser's gamewlning 
walk. 
, - 


Mike VaU of the Mets had his 


hitting streak stopped at 23 
games. New York's young sen- 
sation, who had tied the Na- 
tional League record for rookies 
with the hot streak, was held 
without a hit in seven official 
appearances. 


Jimmy Wynri slugged his 18th 


home run and Dave Lopes stole 
two bases as Los' Angeles 
defeated San Diego behind the 
five-hit pitching of Rick Rhodcn 
and Charlie Hough. 


Willie Montane/.' run-scoring 


single in the ninth inning gave 
San Francisco Its victory over 
Atlanta. Montancz' game-win- 
ning hit followed inning-opening 
•singles by Bobby Murcer and 
Gary Matthews off Tom House, 
7-7. The Giants had tied the 
game an inning earlier on Gary 
Thomasson'b sacrifice fly. 


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McMillan's Title Dreams At End 


; Heads List Of Veteran NFL Players Put On Waivers 


Fnm Associated Press 


; • "The drc;,n. of any athlete is 
;tfl'-]ilay (in a championship 
;tcam," said Ernie McMillan. "I 
-wouldn't like to look back after 
|15 years and say I'd never done 
•that." 
''. But at ago 37, McMillan's 
;drcam appears to be at an end. 
• McMillan, co-captain of the 
''St. Louis Cardinals and one of 
;the most dependable offensive 
•linemen in the National Football 
ILeaguc for over a decade, has 
;been told his services are no 
•longer needed. 
;• McMillan headed the list of 
•players placed on waivers 
'Tuesday as, amidst the turmoil 
3rf;thc strike situation, NFL 
•teams went aoout the routine 
'business of paring their rosters 
lo the regular season limit of 43 
jfor Sunday's scheduled opening 
games. 
! The chances of McMillan 
earning that Super Bowl ring cf 
Ms oYMim are remote. His only 
dope is that some club, gearing 
for * title run, will decide his 


years of experience might be 
more valuable than Ihc strength 
and speed of some younger 
lineman. 


McMillan lost his starting left 


tackle job with the Cardinals to 
Roger Finnic, eight years his 
junior. 


"It was the toughest decision 


we have had lo make since all of 
us came to St. Louis three years 
ago," said Joe Sullivan, the 
Cardinals' director of opera- 
tions. "It was based on who we 
felt could help us the most right 
now. As far as all of us are con- - 
cerned, Ernie is an All-Pro, a 
leader, and everyone respected 
him." 


He is also a man with an un- 


fulfilled dream. 
, 


The Cards also dropped a trio 


of NFL journeymen — defensive 
end Willie Ilolman, defensive 
tackle Greg Wojcik, running 
back Hubert Ginn — and gut 
defensive 
lineman 
Charlie 


Davis from Pittsburgh for a 
draft pick. 


Pittsburgh pulled a surprise 


by cutting running back Preston 
Pearson, an eighth-year man 
who started two games last 
season and was the team's third 
leading groundrgainer even 
though he missed five games 


due to a hamstring injury. 


A number of players were 


fortunate to be plucked off the 
waiver lists as soon as their 
names showed up. Chicago 
claimed 
veteran 
linebacker 


John Babinec* from Houston, 
Cleveland 
obtained 
safety 


Jimmy Hill from Green Bay and 
San Diego acquired rookie 
linebacker Drew Mahalic from 
Denver. 


Miami 'dropped, rookie Morris 


Owens, leaving the Dolphins 


"with only three wide receivers. 
Kansas City cut veteran wide 
receiver Andy Hamilton and 
picked up rookie tight end 
Walter White from Pittsburgh. 


Los Angeles, searching for a 


punter, cut Jim McCann and 
signed Duanc Carrcll, who had 
been dropped by Dallas. The 
New York Giants released three 
players, 
including 
veteran 


linebacker Bruce Bannon, while 
the cross-town rival New York 
Jets cut reserve quarterback 
BillDemory. 


TH',r WHEEL ALIGNMENT 


BALANCING 


I 1.111. M '•:• ».«... 


Ml., I M II HMO 
TIRES 


TOUR OINIRAL TIM MSTRIIUTM 


Should the strike spread into 


the regular season, the players 
will be hurt financially more 
than the owners, at least for the 
first few games. The average 
NFL player made »42,000 last 
season, 85 per cent of it spread 
out over the 14 weeks of the 
regular season. 


The average player would lose 


about $2,590 for each game he 
misses. Someone- in the upper 
bracket, like the Jets' Joe 
Namath, stands to drop about 
$30,000 a game. 


The owners have long claimed 


that they are lucky to break 
even over the regular season 
and depend on the income from 
exhibition games to get'into the 
black* Now that the preseason is 
over it would not be surprising 


If some owners, many of whom 
are independently 
wealthy, 


prove less than panic-stricken 
at the'prospect of missing a 
game or two. Certainly they are 
unlikely to sacrifice what they 
consider the very structure of 
the game'in order to insure a 
prompt kickoff 


The biggest fly in the contract 


ointment concerns the Rozelle, 
Rule When a player wants to 
move to another team, he plays 
out his .option for one year and 
then makes a deal lor himself 
with another team.'If bis new. 
dub and his old club agree on 
compensation, everything is' 
One. If they don't agree, Com- 
missioner Pete Rozelle steps in. 
and decides the issue. 
" 


Players claim this prevents a 


man from making a good deal 


for himself. Owners lay it is vi- 
tal to keep.balance In th> 
league. Complicating the issue 
are current lawsuits challeng- 
ing the rule in' San Francisco 
and Minneapolis courts. 
,/, 


If there te one thing certain fit 


' thte situation It is that nothing is 


certain. The Council's executive 
committee, consisting of owner* 
Wellington Mara of the Giants; 
RanUn Smith of Atlanta, Ralph 
Wilson of Buffalo/Art Modell of 
' Oevetand, Joe RobWe of Miami 


and .George,' Halas Jr. of 
Chicago, planned to meet today 
to discuss the latest develop- 
ments.. 
-, ,< 
ij 


Several clubs, including the 


(Hants, Detroit, New Orleans,' 
Buffalo 
and 
Houston, also 


planned meet'ngs today.' 
V 


Records Fall In 22-0 Wrigley Field Massacre 


Hit-Happy Hues Batter Cubs 


CUB BOBBLE: Chicago Cub pitcher Tom Dettore bobbles throw as Richie Hebner 
(right) of Pittsburgh Pirates is safe at first in fifth inning of Tuesday's game at 
Chicago. Dettore bobbled toss from first baseman Andy Thornton. The Pirates won 
22-0. (AP Win-photo) 
Oklahoma Remains 
Atop AP Grid Poll 


U-M Second, MSU Nowhere 
I 


FTWTI AffitcUM Prcn 


Mighty Oklahoma maintained 


its hold on the top spot in the 
weekly Associated Press college, 
football rankings today' by an 
overwhelming 
margin, 
but 


there's an Interesting battle 
shaping for runner-up honors 
between 
Big 
10 
powers 


Michigan and Ohio State. 


The 
defending 
champion 


Sooaars, on the strength of 53 
first-place votes in the Top 
Twenty 
balloting''.released 


Tuesday, compiled 1,130;of a 
possible' 1,140 points from a na- 
tionwide panel of 97 sports 
writers 
and . ' broadcasters. 


Oklahoma was Impressive Sa- 


Furlow Kclurns 


Big Ten scoring champion 


Terry Furlow will be among sltf 
Icltermcn who'll return 
for 


Michigan State's 1975-76 varsity 
basketball season. .They 6-5 
three-year letlerhian. senior 
from Flint, paced all conference 
scorers'.last-season with a 21.4 
average. 
. 
: 
. 


tuntay in whipping Oregon 62-7. 
'A scant nine points separate 
second-ranked Michigan and 
No. 3-rated Ohio State. The 
Wolverines have amassed 031 
points and the Buckeyes 922 
with each team collecting a pair 
of first-place votes. Michigan 
topped Wisconsin 23-6 and Ohio 
State disposed <>' Michigan State 
21-0 last weekend. 


Oklahoma; Michigan and Ohio 


State ranked 1-2-3 a week ago. 
Also repeating from last week in 
the fourth through sixth spots 
were Southern California, Mis- 
souri and Nebraska. Fourth- 
ranked USC has 685 points after 
beating Duke 35-7, Idle Mis- 
souri, Nor 5, polled 632 points 
and 
sixth-rated 
Nebraska 


received 478 as a result of a 107 
victory over LSU. 
N 


Penn State climbed lo seventh 


from 10th with 433 points after 
defeating, Stanford 34-14, and 
Texas and Tennessee moved in-' 
lo the Top Ten for the first time 
this season. 
: 
. 


Texas, 12th last week, ad- 


vanced to eighth With '427 points 


by beating Colorado State 4<MI 
and Tennessee jumped from 
20th to 10th with 310 after 
downing Maryland, which had 
been 14th, »•«. 
, 


Notre Dame, 17-3 winners 


over Boston College Monday 
night, remained ninth with 392 
points. 


Auburn, 
Michigan- State, ' 


Maryland and North Carolina 
State suffered a lost weekend 
and all dropped out of the Top 
Twenty. 


The AP's Second Ten lists of 


Texas-A&M, UCLA, Florida, 
Alabama, " Pitt, 
Arkansas, 


Arizona, Arizona Stale, Miami 
of Ohio and West Virginia. 


LMIcMam 13) 
lOWo St. 171 
4.S. Cotll. . . 
S.'Mllsourl 
6.Netor<Bka 
1 


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9.Notre Dame , 
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H.UCLA 
. " 


H.Ftorldu 
RAIobama 
IS.PIrt 
16. Arkansas 
17.Arliona 
IB.Arlrona SI. 
n.Miomi, o. 
20. West Virginia 


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WEDNESDAY. 8EPTEMRFR 17)1WS 
THE HEtALO-PALLADIUM, BratMHmrWr-St. J**fk, Mteblgu 
PAGE TWENTY-ONE 


St. Joe Plans Victory Gift 


Dickinson's 25th Anniversary Friday 


COURAGEOUS REED: Dave Reed lost his left arm in 
a farming accident at the age of 10 but didn't let the 
disability stop him from playing ./football. The 
'youngster is now the 'starting center on the Ed- 
Wardsburg football team. (Staff photo) 


A victory would bo the best 


way for the St. Joseph Bears to 
celebrate Friday night's 25lh 
anniversary 
of 
Dickinson 


Stadium. 
• Trying to spoil the party will 
be Battle Creek Lakeview, 
coached by former Bridgman 
mentor Al Fischer. 
- The 7:30 p.m. game marks the 
debut of Lakeview in the Big 
Seven. It will also be the first 
game ever between the highly- 
successful Class A schools. 
•Lakeview, which has three 


straight winning seasons behind 
it, Including a 7-2 record, last 
fall, comes to St. Joe off last 
,week's 
20-7, triumph over 


Harper Creek. 


Meanwhile, St. Joseph will be 


opening 
defense 
of its- 


conference championship with 
an 
eight-game 
winning 


streak the 
longest 
' m 


southwestern Michigan. • 


The anniversary will undoub- 


\-' 


tcdly bring a tot of fond gridiron 


> moments lo the minds of St. Joe 
fans, but for the Bears down on 
the field, it will be the game that 
counts. 
. Dickinson 
Stadium 
was 


dedicated 23 years ago on Sept. 
22, 1950 with a 13-7 triumph over 
Three Rivers before 4,600 fans, 
at that time the largest crowd 
ever to witness a football game 
in St Joseph. 


St. Joe is coming off an un- 


convincing season-opening 14-8 


- victory over Lakeshore, and 


coach Ike Muhlenkamp knows 
his 
Bears 
must 
show 


improvement to shake the "un- 
derdog" tag he has put on them 


"We need a lot of work on 


techniques and execution, on 
offense 
especially," 
says 


- Muhlenkamp while noting game 
films showed the Bear linemen 
were} "not calling the right 
combination of blocks" while 
the backs were "not running in 


3leed Overcomes Disability 


;iil 


... 
. 
_ 


Eddie Center Plays With One Arni 


y, .ByJACKWALKDEN 
'-I 
SMI Sp»rte Writer 
; '^ 


3: Dave Heed has always'been 
•called a hard working, gutty' 
~kil. 
> * 
-*\ 


And one doesn't have to look; 


too bird to find out why.. Reed, 
the starting center on the Ed-' 
wardsburg football team, has 
jutt one arm. 
: 


At the age of 10 Reed lost his 


left arm in a farm accident. 
WUle shoveling corn into a 
grain auger, be slipped on some 
/of the loose corn and fell Into the' 
- machine. The disability has not 
- h*A him from doing the things 


be wants to do, however. 


"Dave's a real hard worker," 


Bkrardsburg coach Ted Peak 
sips "He's the type of kid that 
you just give him a job and he 
don it. He's used to hard 
vinrk." 
'I— 


Reed is a muscular 9-8, 155- 


pound junior. His shynesn 
aftrws him to make his actions 
apeak louder than' his words. 


"He's relatively quiet," Peak 


nays. "He's not what you would 


iCdl a team leader but he doesn'.t 


V take a back seat tb_ anyone 


eKner.".' - ' 
% ' - ' * ' . " . • 


^That' he doesn't.-"The.same 
summer Reed was involved jn 
'the'accident he still came back I 
. tnnlay little league baseball. He 


not oiily played but he played 


-will. 
' 
.' "'-' ' 


His baseball career didn't 


stop thue, either. Last,spring 
Ited was a member of the Ed- 
die baseball' team. Though he 
, didn't start, he did see* a lot of 
action. 


"He usually, tnak'es contact 


white betting," Peak says. "He 
even broke four bats >ast 
season. Oh defense he catches 
the ball, flips it up In the air, 
'throws his glove off and then 
grubs the ball to throw it in. 


"He's well coordinated and 


' compensates well for balance. 
He never seems to let anything 
got him down. He's not the type 
of person that will lei it bother 
hkn If someone says something 
*out the disability." 


His sense of humor was shown 


...vividlyc. during his freshman' 
,'5y«fcof>otball. Bob,Gable,"the 


Eddie freshmen coach then, had' 


xife players down oh ail tours for 
. a particular drill' When Gable 


• came across Reed'he screamed, 
,'f'You don't, have botlf hands 


down." 
'.,fj 
' - 
" 
- 


Dave shot,back, "I only have 


one hand." , 
* 
", 


, -.While Gable turned an em- 
harassing red! the whole"team1 


• laughed, including Reed. ^ 


At first Reed was a little 


apprehensive 
about playing 


football. 


. s "I was a little scared because, 
• 1 didn't know how I'd do," he 


explained. "I thought I-might be 
at a disadvantage but my 
brother went out so 1 thought I'd 
try, too. I didn't feel that I 
should 
be treated' special 


thugh." 


And Reed has certainly not 


,rnrt the Eddies. 
.' 


"Dave's played very well," 


Peak said. "After looking over 
the video ,tape of Friday's White. 


i Pigeon game "we feel that the 


one man that didn't hurt*us was 


- their ndserman Dave,sticks his 
,/: hoseuh 'there 'and staysj With 


;' "-"He's a very'good 6'locker, 
'•-.'probably as effeclive^as we've 


ewr'hadr. He may have'a little 
weakness'on a slant to'the left. 
He's'real quick in snapping the 
. baU and" getting to .his blocks.1'1 


Peak ' also -believes Reed 


would make an excellent defen- 
sive player were it not for the 
handicap. In Friday's game 
'with White Pigeon he even 
nude a tackle of a Chief player 
who had intercepted a pass. 


"We pretty much figured 


- before the season that he would 


start at center," Peak added 
"We had watched him play-on 
both, the freshmen'and junior 
varsity teams and all of. the 
coaches'commented on what a 
great- blocker he was. We as- 
sumed that he would have very 
little problem breaking in." ' 
, 


And that he has not. 
_, - 


•the proper places." 


St.' Joe has been working hard 


on correcting these faults in 
practice 
this 
week, 
and 


Muhlenkamp feels his squad 
will "execute much better" 
Friday night. 


Quarterback Dave Ziebart led 


the Bears last week and was 
named offensive player of the 
week The senior signal caller 
scored the winning touchdown 
in overtime and completed 9 of 
16 passes for 100 yards. The 
leading rushers were fullback 
Scott, Wolff with 87 yards and 
tailback Jay Ciaravmo with 62 
yards 


Tackle John Donahue was 


selected as the defensive player 
of the week, but he'll be at 
middle guard this week Steve 
Toney will be at tackle in a 
move which gives the Bears 
more si^e on the defensive line 
The starting middle guard last 
week, Leo Pickar, is slowed by a 
sprained ankle. 


Running back and defensive 


halfback Dave Tibbitts suffered 
a rib injury last week, but like 
Pickar, should see some action 
Friday. 


Lakeview had a balanced 


running attack in its opener 
with four backs ge'tting more 
than 50 yards apiece — junior 
quarterback Phil 
Brewster, 


junior halfback Joel Manby, 
junior halfback Rick Perry and 
senior fullback Greg Fleeh. 
Flees is quick with 10.3 speed 


Camdafc Cup Race 
Aguai Postfjoued 


DETROIT 
(AP) - 
,Yct 


another day of low-velocity 
winds has postponed what could 
be the final race in the Canada's 
Cup sailing championships on 
Lake St. Clair until today. 


Sunday's race was canceled 


because of a lack of wind and 
Monday's race was declared in- 
valid when the contenders, Gol- 
den 
Dazy 
and 
Marauder, 


couldn't finish the race within a 
six-hour time limit. 


The U.S. contender, Golden 


Dazy of the Bayview Yacht 
Club, is leading'the series 3-2. 
The first boat to collect four 
points is the* winner of the cup, 
so Canada's Marauder needs a 
.victory today to remain in the 
competition, 
' 
< 


60M/UNG; 


li 
OfMDAHY lOOftMJN. 11-4 
WED., THUR8., PRI., SAT. 


FIRST NIOHTEM MIXED DOUM.ES 


—Mm Lorry Dlnm 571, Ebmr OikkfT- 
tWn SO (III), Ltvl Millhn Hi, O*cn> 
loll 121?) , Own Forroy IHO). WHIWI: 
Huu ttnftr su <17<), Hilrtov EMU 9H 
. 


TWILIGHT —hb HorrM'tB (HI), Pot 


rBrUT 171 MM), WIMI. JaMi 157 (Ml. 


-lua Dtmuun <nsi, two 


i >•>. »' MoMwin m, HtrD Orlw 


NIGHT OWLS -Joan HaM HH IttI), 


Mm Luckw Hi (212) Barbara Pwnain 
m, L»rl« Pmetoi at, Rum s*mtw4W. 
OMtoi Mont BU, IrldgtTian IOA («IJ>. 


COUNTRY CLUI -JMI Utort HI. 1(1- 
V SOimMm « (2M), Lm.rtw Yund 
, 


SJ TEACHERS —Mm: Don Woltwd 


92, Mfe Pmlan SM.'KMt Llamll «!. 
J»mw: j«v WIMglng W, LII Dovl. 434, 


. TWIN CITY —frank Nmnftirta I2M), 
, Art Nlckil in, Karl Mnonai 9N; Paul 
nann JW, Emit Tlwnwwn S» Hwltow 
SMBI7M, ilT«I FlriDw* (MO) 


INTER CITY - C CtrtCkt «M, C 
fHl*.5t5. F. HntolMrSSi (214). TaRntl. 


CITY -RICH Loclmon OS, Dim JttcH,, 
M, Wlkt Doming W, Lynn Rlntt. 5K 
I3J7), »^r« rMMarta M. LtVallev-KhJin 


CODE BLUE BELLS —2« NabK Ot, 


Trwlv Klnr »1, Dkm NMTHHX* (U7). 


GUTTER OALS — >«l«r Ardwr 474 


(M7), Bomto Klrbr 494, Virginia Homll. 


'ton 44», Dlon> JockiOn 442, Jahnlta.Vln- 


am m MWity MICM 17M i<n). 


INTERFAITH —0«nbnno Keen 4»1, 


Vlratnla Sltinmon **•, Frlvda Mal«r 455 
(113), Pnwv eraniMll <S1, Morcla Pawl 
4)4 Do. » D**m »• (577) 
TWILICHTERS — RNa Wllllami ». 


CMrMM Bora 47> l>17) Sandra Btaiy 47., 
trm\'lmlt 475, Dvrontfa Pnvhm 472. 
2bm'i R.d Conxt 2171 («7) 


MOM SOUAO — Owry Stoma 542 1KB), 


rUnnon Manocll SH, Connlt Pln-c. 4H, 
Norma JosJtt 460,'Joan Oro«tcn«l 457. 
Mir-l-con« 1771, Dlng-A-LInn (.23). 


SODUS TOWNSHIP — Zrt. Z«tttll 9t7 


HM), Don Pn-klniSM, Eloon Freni s» 
12231. Shlnwri25Nimi). 
• 
: ECHO -Lorry Orr 515, Bob Deirnke SK, 
Bill Orr 574, Jr Doon 571 (2M), Paul 
Murray 574' (1H). AP Auto Sain MM 
ffl9) 


TC KINOS — Toni scnramm o3t, Crola 


Fair 541, MHO F«KI 541, Don Weckwerfli 
5)7, Jo. DOWker IMS). Fmcl Clinic 25W 
IW) 


KNIGHT OWLS—L«l» Price *M 1102), 


Morv K«un.53< (225); Role Lynch 47? 
van; ROM St. John 475, LoMte,R«dl«Y 4*7. 
BoBO l,R«t 2112 (722) 
v 


NAPH -Vonct Slf.lt 9M, Helen Jot 


321, Janwi SchluM 2H, Su. Sl.lnke 211, 
Helen Ptllon IN, Dow Mtrrlll HI, Mai 
RouhH. 


SWITCH vnoot — A«II f m* at, 


VwiwIN An^wtwi 4Jfc Oujjjp 'tfaHttn 
X OHtNv PicMillllM 1177 (IW. 
»ATuSo»Y (ilOHf MIX«D.-*Wl Jr 
•"" *** '"*>' t«fnMrttiji«»» to, 
rt CvpMfir ut, Wwimf Bvwty. 
4«f»»), N«n IMrk O7,*AMm 


TUESDAY 
NlttMT. LADIES tttt 


LaRocca Uv, Clwrtatlt WMBW141, LUNM , 
K«rm 141 (21*1, Olmr ttHf SM. Lhrta 
. Del MlUM SlTCMMa StMk 


HITS t MISS — CftrM IWIUvar SO, 
I ins), MM* HMk 4n,pM 


MIXED —MM: Mai OH 


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, B*d PMIHPI 
<H,L. 
• 


Our 
ft»0.20.97 


With 4 Ibs. poly- 
ester 
insula- 


tion. Washable. 
33x77"" 


Hoo§ier Teams Beat Bear§ 


PORTAGE, 
Ind. - St. 


Joseph's harriers didn't fare too 
well with two powerful Hoogicr 
squads here Tuesday. Elkhart 
ended with 28, Portage 45' and 
St. Joe 55.' 


Jim Harris of Elkhart won 


' first with 12: K over two and half 


miles. The Bears' Tim Dine was 
third in 12:34 and Jeff Cullender 
ninth. 


The Bear junior varsity was 


last with ft? white Elkhart won 
with 22. and Portage was second 
at ,18. Todd Matson was St. Joe's 
Inp'finishcr with a ninth. 


Owfteg. 


3.97 
It noatsl '/4-mile team. Hand made. Stainless steel. 
Qt. vacuum bottle, cup-cap. 


"••7 
Moktod Ham** 
AddMtabto strap 


Bucks Break Marks But RV Wim 


BUCHANAN — Three runners 


broke the old Buchanan cross 
country course record but River 
Valley edged Buchanan Zft-M in 
a Bkwsomland match here 
Tuesday. 


Tnc Mustangs' Dave Rfcth 


was first.with a!new mark of. 
17:00 while Dfno Jackson of the 
Bucks followed with 17:18 and 
Terry Siiancr of the Bucks 
posted a 17:25. Denny Zebell of 
Valley and Rich Humphrey of 
Buchanan were fourth and fifth, 
respectively. 
: 


Spurt Sign Sullle 
Wither Netxi Seoul 


Owftoo. 


' '.^w^^.Rr fc^^HWWw ^.P^^V^MBI 


Our ftog.14.9?1197 
it 


SAN ANTONH), Tex. (AP) - 


Mck Smite, HIM ww Mp scnrw 
tnr tn* Unlvmltr »f 


ARLINGTON, Tex. (AP) - 


DM WUk«r, ImWlinM Trtfte-A 
' 
* 


humidity-proof Nnlno^ M«ny lengtht. 
For rtltat with mounted «cop«. Save. 


PLAZA RIVERVIEW DRIVE 


for the 100, while Flees is a 
hard-running 210-pounder. 


The Spartans also have some 


big linemen, with 235-pound 
senior tackle Marc Stevenson 
considered an all-state pos- 
sibility. Roverback Tim Quinn 
is another stalwart Lakeview 
defender. 


The kicking game could be of 


'particular importance Friday. 
St. Joseph's Frank Bock earned 
the 
Bear 
"game 
breaker 


award" for two field goals 
against Lakeshore last week, 
and Lakeview's Dan Peters won 
two games for the Spartans last 
year with field goals. 


This is Fischer's first year as 


Lakeview's coach. He came to 
the Spartans from Battle Creek 
Springfield, where he had 45-8 
record, three KVA crowns and a 
mythical state championship 


. 


x-cllnchod division title 


Tinman's • _ _ 


Pittsburgh », Cnlcago 0 
Houston 5f Cincinnati I 
Now York 4, Montreal 3, IB Innings 
Philadelphia4, SI.-Logls3,13 Innings 
Los Angeles 5, San Diego 2 
son Francisco 7, Atlanta £ , 


Wednesday's Ognwt 


Atlanta (Morton 17.16) at Son Francisco 


(Montefusco 13-9) 


Pittsburgh. (Klson lO-'l) M Philadelphia 


(Underwood }411), (n) 


Houston (Cosgrove 1-1) at Cincinnati 


(Norman 10-4); (n) 


Chicago (Burrts U-1Q\ a1'N«w.Yerk 


(Swan 1-2), (n) 


Montreal (Renko 5-12) at St. Louis 


(McOlothen 15-11), (n) 


Son Diego (Mclntosh 8-14) at L« An- 


odes (Messersmlth 1714), In) 


TMMoy'i. RMuHi 


CttvMMji (Horrlmi 7-4) ot D*froii 
ICulmMi M7), (it) 


Cincinnati at Atlanta, (n) 
Pittsburgh at Phllddelonld, (nl 
Chicago at New York, (n) 
Montreal at St. Louis, (n) 
Only gomes scheduled 


i City « Minimum 
—InlCwtrolt, (n) 


jtCMun, (n) 
CantonMmTM«, <n> 
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> PACE TWENTY-TWO 
THE HERALD-PALLADIUM, tb*i*m HariHr -84. J«*e>>; 
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17,1171 


Comets, Bobcats Squaring Off Friday 


in- _ 
' 
Bud Offensive Battle Shaping Up 


A ital offensive treat. 
^That's the mouth-watering 
. prospect Friday night at Colonid 
•when the Comets and Bran- 
dynvinc Bobcats tangle in an 
early showdown in the Bios- 
«omland conference. 


The league opener pits two of 


the 
toughest 
runner!, 
in 


southwestern 
Michigan 
in 


Coloma's John Bertuca and the 
Cats' Daryl Walls. Both gained 
over 1,000 yards rushing last 
season. 


In Bother 
league 
curtain- 


raisers, Lakeshore travels to 
Cassopolis, River Valley hosts 
Buchanan and Dowagiac makes 
its Blossomland debut at Ed- 
wardsburg 


The Comets and Bobcats will 
. be-startmg up where they left 


off last year as the two met in 


•^the final league game of the 
" season for, the league cham- 


pionship. 
Coloma 
won 
the 


thriller 27-22 at Brandywme to 
capture the league crown 
>Ih that off ensue spectacular, 


the two teams combined for 737 
yards total offense with Bcrtuca 
running for 211 yards and one 
touchdown and Walls 235 yards 
and three touchdowns. 


"We'll be ready for Coloma." 


voices Brandywme coach Pete 
McCauley "Last year we had 
the ball on their 10-yard line 
with 1 think 28 seconds to go and 
couldn't 
score. 
Our 
kids 


remember 
that. 
They've 


thought about it for a yejr. 
They're looking forward to 
Friday's game." 


Coloma'again has been tabbed 


by Blossomland coaches as the 
team to beat for the 1975 title 
while Brandywinc has been 
picked for third. 


Both teams got off to shaky 


starts last Friday in nonleague 
openers with the Comets falling 
to Lake Michigan Catholic 24-B 
and 
Brandywine 
losing 
to 


powerful Mishawaka Marion 
32-0 
But both coaches are flis- 


missing those scores as not true 


indications of their foes lough- 
ness, 
i 


"Brandywme is one of the 


toughest or the toughest team 
we'll be facing all year," ob- 
serves Coloma coach Bob Irvni. 
"They have a big, sound football 
team and they're big. They also 
have one of the best runners in 
the area in Walls. We'll have to 
contain him Also they have a 
pretty good quarterback. 


"Also we're just going to have 


to correct our mistakes we 
made against Lake Michigan 
After the game we really felt we 
beat ourselves with our boo- 
boos, so to speak " 


"I think it's going to be an 


offensive 
battle," 
says 


McCauley. "Berluca is a break- 
away threat...we have to contain 
him. Against LMC, Coloma had 
a few bad breaks and LMC 
capitalized on them." 


Bertuca gained 
109 yards 


against the Lakers and Walls 70 
against Marion 


Irvm is hoping wingback and 


defensive secondary performer 
John Mattson will be ready by 
Friday. He missed last Friday's 
game with an injured ankle. Ir- 
vm is also toying with the idea 
of moving offensive guard Den- 
nis Ory to fullback 


Braiidywine, which features a 


hefty (185-pound average) mid- 
dle on defense, will start Walls 
at tailback. Ed Pilarski at 
quarterback, Jim Reed at right 
half and Mike Holy at the up- 
back slot. Hillary Forrest is a 
top .sub 


Lakeshore will be out to stop a 


repeat of last season when the 
Lancers also lost a -heart- 
breaker in their opener with St. 
Joseph and then turned In con- 
secutive "down" efforts against 
Portage Central and Buchanan. 


"Our job is to get mentally 


ready to play this football 
game," offers the Lancers' 
,Dave 
Topping. 
"The 
kids 


"seemed okay Monday in prac- 
tice. They know they .have 


Houk Loses Temper Again 


CAPSULES A$ Charges Are Dropped 


- V 


* J • • - - GENERAL 
r* 
JACKSON, Miss. - The Na- 


»' Henal Collegiate Athletic As- 
[} nciafion placed ' Mississippi 
-' Slate University on probation 
i 
tar more than one year and 


'<' ruled two players ineligible as a 
•'• result of football recruiting 
: > violations. 


• TENNIS , 


ATLANTA— Maria Bueno 


continued her comeback with a 
' 7-6, 6-3 victory1 over Julie 


Anthonj- in the $75,00" Little Mo 
Tennis Classic. 


Seventh-seeded 
Rosemary, 


Casals 
lost 
to 
Natasha 


Chmyreva of the Soviet Union, 
.24, 6-3, 6-3. 
'HAMILTON, Bermuda - 
Top-seeded Jimmy Connors 
.defeated Spence Scgura 6-3, S-l 
lo advene*! to the quarter-finals' 
«f the' $50,000 Princess lutema- 


Zl (tonal tennis tournament. 
"' 
LOS ANGELES -Top-seeded' 


r; Arthur Ashc had a difficult lime 
:" kl defeating Fred McNair, 6-3, 
™ 7-S in second round action of the 
*i 1100,000 Pacific Southwest Ten- 
,-' its tournament. 


Triplets 
Capture 
Series 


•I 
EVANSVILLE, Ind. (AP) - 


',- The Evansvlllc Triplets, who 
;,, rallied late In the season to 


capture the American Associa- 
tion pennant, are champions- 
today of baseball's Junior World 
Series. 


Evansville, farm club of the 


Detroit Tigers, wrapped up a 4-1 
series Tuesday night by defeat- 
ing Tidewater of the Interna- 
tional League 8-5. 


Marv Lane and Ed Kurpicl 


helled fifth-inning home runs lo 


^ 
drive in five runs for the 


;; winners. 


Lane's homer, a 390-foot drive 


to left-center field, followed 
singles by Artie James and Bob 
Molinaro. After a walk to Ed 
Scrivener,' Kurpiel 
followed 


with a belt over the rightfield 
wall. 


The homers were the I2th of 


the year for both players. 


The Trips took the lead for 


keeps in the seventh inning on a 
run-scoring single by John 
Gamble and a run-producing 
squeeze bunt by Boots Day. 


Evansville got the final run 


when James smacked his fourth 
hit of the night, stole second and 
came 
around on throwing 


errors. 


Meanwhile, Tom Makowski 


was slamming the door on the 
Tides' few remaining hopes. He 
. retired all 13 batters lie faced 
;. after relieving starter Mark 


Lomongello in the fifth. He 


, 
struck out five batters, two of 


j them in the ninth inning. 
• 
The 
International League' 


; champions scored three runs in 
; the first inning on three Triplet 
• ; errors. Ron Diggle. George 
; Theodore and Benny Ayala 
; scored with help from singles by 


; Bandy Trapp and Diggle. 


In the fifth inning, Rick 


Miller's single scored Mark 
De-John and Ayala's single 
scored Miller. 


The winner was Makowski, 


BALTIMORE 
(AP) - 


; Manager Ralph Houk of the 
Detroit Tigers is legally free of 
assault charges filed by a Bal- 


• timore newsman but he didn't 


let a court appearance Tuesday 
go by without an outburst 
similar to one which prompted 
the lawsuit to begin with. 


• Houk, charged with assault 
after losing his temper,'lost it 
briefly Tuesday as he appeared 
to have the charges formally 
dropped 
, 
' 


The,hearing originally was 


scheduled for next week, when 
ithe Tigers make their last visit 
of the season to Baltimore. 
However, it was moved up on 
the docket and Houk flew in 
from Detroit prior to Tuesday's 
9-2 loss to the Cleveland In- 
dians. 


Houk expressed surprise to 


sec a reporter outside the 
Northern District Court, and 


then he uttered a few expletives 


"at a photographer who snapped 
his picture. 


He later apologized to the 


reporter; just, as he did to Phil 
Hersh of the Baltimore Evening 
Sun, 
who had charged 'Hiiuk 


with 
assault 
following 
a 


clubhouse incident m Bal- 


' timore. 
'. 
- \ 


Hersh had sworn out a 


warrant, contending Houk had 
slapped' him and dragged ,hlm 
through the Detroit clubhouse 
on June 27,'after.disputing a 
story which Tiad appeared in the 
Evening Suri a day earlier The 
story said Houk had given up on 
his • team,' even though the 
season was at about the half- 
way point. 
• 


Under an agreement reached 


between the twovpartlcs on July; 
2 and released to the news 
media on July 17, Hcrsh agreed = 


to drop the charges after - 


receiving a written apology 
from Houk. 
-"I was very upset about your 


story," 
Houk 
said (m -his 


apology, "but I admit this did 
not justify the physical means 
which I used in ejecting you 
from the Detroit clubhouse." 


, 
Hersh then agreed to drop the 


• legal action. 


The original action was taken, 


Hersh said, "because I'feel that 
no working journalist need be 
subjected to this sort of treat- 
ment and-in the hope that the 
attention' focused on Mr. Houk 
would serve as a warning that 
writers Will not let such at-/ 
tempts 
at 
intimidation 
go 


unanswered." 


Copies" of Houk's apologV 


were sent to Baseball Commis- 
sioner Bowie Kuhn, President 
Lee Macltiail of the American 
League, and to the Baseball 
Writers Association of America 


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another job to do this Friday. 
We'll try to work hard in prac- 
tice...talk it up...create a lot of 
excitement." 


The Lancer&-have 'taken Cass 


nine straight games 'but the 
Rangers are vastly-improved 
this fall, attested by their open- 
ing 
18-6 win over Berrien 


Springs'. 


"Cass can beat us if we don't 


play top-notch football," adds 
Topping "Their backs are good 
runners and they have a big 
, defensive line and a respectable 
1 passing game We're going to 
work hard on our passing game 
this week." 


Cass, which7 has been,outs- 


cored by the' Lancers 103-29 the 
last three years, boasts two top 
tailbacks in sophomores Tim 
llartsell and Eric Collins Den- • 
nis Lawson is the quarterback 
with Tom Brown at flanker and 
Roy Brown or Joe Wallace at 
fullback. 


"We know Lakeshore has a 


real rugged defense... it'll .lie 
lough moving the ball against 
them,!' comments Cass coach 
Cal Titus. "I was pleased with 
our game Friday, except we had 
165 yards In penalties which 
destroyed our offense.", 


Blossomland teams took it on 


the chin last week in tkmleague 
competition, winning only two' 
of eight clashes 


Star Grant Sorry 
Dionne Is Gone 


STRING SNAPPED: Mike Vail 
of the New York Mets had his 
hitting streak;snapped at 23 
straight Tuesday at New York 
in Mets' 4-3 win over Montreal '• 
The rookie sensation, who had 


• tied the National League record 
for rookies with the hot streak, 
was held hltless Tuesday in 
seven official appearances. (AP 
Wirep'hoto) 


Shoot Sunday'' 
"•, 


')MEW BUFKALO - The an- 
nual New Buffalo Rod and 'Gun. 
Qub barbecue and trap shoot 
»U1 be held here from loam to 
6 p m 
Sunday at the club 


grounds. 
' 


KALAMAZOO, Mich. (AP) — 


Left wing Danny Grant may be 
in the minority, but he is sorry 
f that center. Maritl Dionne is not' 
playing with the, Detroit Red' 
Wings. 
' He credits 
Dionne 
with 


enabling him to score 50 goals 
last'season. 
, 


"Personally my chance's o'f 


• scoring, 50 goals are, slim,,, 


without Marcel here," Grant' 
said Tuesday as, the National 


, Hockey'League Wings ended 


their second day of training 


1 camp. 
\ 
,'• - 


','1 was sorry to, see the little 


iguy go We got along pretty 
t gO(id. together. 'He's a, helluva 


heckey player. I never would 
haye scored 50 goals last season 
without him as my center." ,A 


But most.of the Red Wing • 


'Players are just as glad Dionne 
is gone, having been traded to 
Los Angeles. Many contend his 
presence" detracted from team 
effort. 
'_;• 
;,' 


1 "I think Marcel is the- best - 
offensive player in the game," ' 
Grant maintained. "He can do 
anything But in Detroit, he was 
misunderstood!' I'didn't always , 


. agree with whaf he'nad,to say., 
'Most,of Ills problems were 


caused by frustration!" 
' 


Dionne played ouf'his option,, 


with the Wings' last, season 
before Joining the Kings. In 're-' 


• turn Detroit received winger. 
"' 


Danny 
Maloney 
, .and 


defenseman Terry Harper, who 
has" not yet reported to camp. 


"t had my best season 'ever 


vlast^year;1"' Grant continued. 
"Marcel was a 'big reason why 
'it was so good. We had- a rou- 
tine. I'd, give Mm the puck in 
our own end and he'd skate 
down the ice! I 'just tried to 
catch up to him. By the, time' I 
had got to the other end, he had 
already 'made a play and 
.slipped me the puck "'' , 


Grant, 28, came, to the Wings 


last 'year, from ' Minnesota in 


, exchange for* Henry' Boucha. 


Grant is the 12th National 
Hockey League player to break 
the 50-goaJ mark. - \ , •• 


t 
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Roger Daugherty finished first 
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Nelson' Layman was .third, 


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WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, U75 
THE HERALD-PALLADIUM,. Beat*! IUrt*r-St, J*sepfc, MkUgil 
PAGE TWENTV-TBREE 


Oriole Title Bid Almost Doomed 


, 
t 
\ 


Bosox' Tiant Picks Perfect Time To Be Perfect 


Fran ASSOCIATED PRESS 
Luis' Tiant picked the perfect 


time to be perfect. 


'-I've thrown faster than I did 


tonight," said Tiant, "but my 
control was at its best. When 
you have your control it doesn't 
matter who's hitting." 


Cheered by a pennant-hungry 


Boston crowd that included his 
proud father who is visiting 
from' Cuba, Tiant was, nearly 
unhittable as he pitched the Red 
Sox over the Baltimore Orioles 
2-0. 


Tiant, 
17-13, limited the 


Orioles to five hits, two of them 
infield singles, and closed the 
lid halfway over Baltimore's bid 


for its.sixth American League 
East title in seven years; 


A victory over Baltimore 


tonight, which would give Bos- 
ton a 6V4 game lead with 10 
games left, would just about 
hammer the lid shut. 


"When the big game comes 


he's unbclicveable," said Carl- 
ton Fisk, who stroked one of the 
two homers off Baltimore ace 
Jim Palmer. ."His'pitching 
completely 
.dominated 
the 


_game." 
, 


Palmer, 
21-11, who, like 


Tiant, struck out eight and 
walked one, was tagged for Rico 
Petrocelli's homer in,the third, 
and Fisk's in the fourth. , 


BEATS BIRDS: Boston Red Sox pitcher Luis Tiant is 
embraced-by catcher Carlton Fisk after Tiant'out- 
duelled Baltimore Oriole hurley Jim Palmer Tues- 
day. Tiant blanked the Birds 2-0 at Boston. (AP 
Wirephoto) 
Saints' Good 
News Now Bad 


NEW ORLEANS (AP) — It's 


been a grim parody of those 
"good news, bad news" jokes as 
the : rookie-laden New Orleans 


. Saints approach the opening 


game of (he 1975 National Foot- 
ball League season. 


Quarterback Archie Manning 


flowed the best preseason form 
of his career, but Manning 
broke his arm three weeks ago 
and.figures to sit out at least 
Sunday's opener at Washington. 


The Saints drafted the swif- 


test wide receiver in the team's 
eight-year history, but he has a 
hamstring pull that won't heal. 


They drafted instant help for 


their traditionally porous offen- 
sive line, but the center they 
chose hasn't hit a lick yet and 
their rookie guard got a late 
start due lo an All-Star game 
injury. 
. 
, 
, 
. .'; 


• The receiver, Larry Burton, 
is expected to suit up for the 
Redskins game Sunday, healthy 
or hot. Coach John North calls 
Mm "a real burner" with the 
potential to blow a game open. 
Burton has reportedly run the 
V yard dash — professional 
football's speed measure — in 
anything from 4.4 seconds to 4.2 
seconds. 
' But getting him into action 


Berrieii's Depth 
Sinks Hartford 


BERRIENSPRINGS-Brian 


Bunn of Hartford took'first but 
Bcrricn Springs used superior 
depth In defeat the Indians.2S-J8 
here Tuesday in cross country. 


David; Eichbcrg 
of 
the 


Shamrocks took second followed 
by 
Kevin 
Oarmichacl 
of 


Bcrrien, Ed Manning of Hart- 
ford and Rick Ruhl of Bcrricn, 
which also took the fifth through 
ninth sixits. 


Lakcsliorc Wins , 


CASSOPOLIS — Lakcshore's 


Ron Field ran for a touchdown 
and added a |>air of PATs as the 
Lancer freshmen downed Cas- 
sonolis 22-6 here Tuesday night. 
Other Lakcshore TDs came on a 
ran by Dave Goodwin and on a 
pass from Matt MohVer to Pete 
BfHlscMte. 


may be another :of those "good 
news, 
bad 
news" 
things. 


There's reason to doubt that the 
offensive line will give backup 
quarterback 
Bobby 
Scott 


enough time to hit Burton when 
he outruns the secondary. 


The line was one of the 


reasons the Saints lacked a 
passing threat in 1974. Another 
reason was a nagging knee in- 
jury that caused Manning to 
undergo an operation after the 
season ended. 


North tried to rebuild the line 


.through the draft., H6 traded 
away veteran center John 
Didioii, who won' his' team- 
mates' vote for .most valuable 
player last, year, intending to 
replace him with Lee Gross of 
Auburn. 
: 


Gross has never recovered 


from surgery to remove a cyst 
from his knee, and rookie free 
agent Sylvester Croom has been 
filling the spot. :- • 
< • ' • ' , - , . • 


Kurt Schumacher, drafted in 


the first round to bolster the 
guard spot, saw extensive ac- 
tion only in last week's 20-0 loss 
to Cincinnati. . 


North also traded or cut every, 


running back with more than 
: two year's experience, relying 


heavily on fullback Alvin Max'-' 
son to improve on the 714 yards 
he gained as a rookie in 1974. He ; 
also counts on another socond- 
' year man, Rod McNcill, to live' 
up to his potential. 
' 
i 


• McNcill may be moved out of 
his starting post by rookie Mike 
Stracnan, one of three rookies 
who 'fill out the "roster of rini- 
ningbacks. 


The Saints finished 5-9 in 


1974, tying .the team record for 
most Victories in a season set in 
1969 and equalled .in 1973. If 
Manning recuperates quickly 
'and stays, healthy, the Saints 
could improve on that mark a 
bit. 
/ 


, Manning talks in terms of 
right or nine victories and a 
shot at a playoff berth. That 
sort* .of performance would 
surprise even the most ardent 
fan. 


At the same time — with a 


healthy Maiming in the game — 
"the Saints should be about three 
wins 'better than the 3-11 
forecast for them by at least two 
nationaj rating services. 


Without Manning, they might 


not be even that good. 


fclsewhere in the AL, Oakland 


took a pair from Texas'11-5 and 
6-4; Cleveland crushed Detroit 
9-2; Chicago nipped Kansas City 
6-5; Milwaukee downed the New 
'York ;Yankees 5;2 and Minneso- 
ta shaded California 4-3. 


The season isn't over soon 


enough for Ferguson Jenkins 
and Gaylord Perry. 


Two of the best right-handers 


in baseball, Jenkins and Perry 
each'lost to the A's Tuesday 
night, lowering their records to 
16-17. 
• 


Reggie Jackijon belted his 


32nd- home run to pact the 
•second-game victory after Sal 
Bando's * ihree-riin 
homer 


touched off an eight-run eighth 
inning that pealed the opening- 
game triumph. 


"Really it was good to get win 


No: 13 but I really wasn't, that 
good tonight," said rookie Den- 
nis Eckersebt after the Indians 
beat the Tigers on homers from 
Boog Powegl, Oscar Gamble 
and George Hendrick. 


Detroit Manager, Ralph Houk, 


whose team is buried in the AL 
East cedar, could say the same 


thing. His team just wasn't that 
good, losing its fifth straight 
game. Earlier in the season the 
Tigers lost 19 in a row. 
•Jim Hughes,' 15-13, became 
the winningest rookie pitcher in 
baseball but he needed pihch- 
hilter Craig Kusick's three-run 
homer with one out in the ninth 


CHICAGO 


ob r h bi 


PKellyrt ' 2 1 VI 
Colucciort 
1 0 . 0 0 
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Ortcrfb 
4 0 0 0 


DeJohmmdn 4 1 1 3 
MellonM 
3 0 0 0 


Nymoncf 
Squlreslb 
Dents! 
Downingc 
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Hamfltonp 
GOSSOOBD 


KANSAS CITY 


O b r h B I 


FWnlteft 
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Plnsofidti 
GBretlJt) 


4 1 1 0 
4'1 1 0 
4 1 2 V 
4 0 0 0 
. 0 0 0 0 
.0 00 0 
0 0 0 0 


1 0 0 0 
5 1 3 1 


_ _ _ _ _ _ _ . 4 0 1 0 
Mavberrylb 4.0 1 0 
Cowensc! , J 0 2 0 
Oulrklf 
Otlsef 


to get the victory. 


Bobby Mitchell drove in four 


nuis with a'pair of homers and 
rookie left-hander Jerry Augus- 
tine scattered nine hits before 
needing ninth-inning relief help 
from Tom Murphy in Mil- 
waukee's victory over the 
Yankees. 


Deron Johnson slammed a 


three-run homer to cap a six-run 
fifth inning and the White Sox 
held off Kansas City. 


Wohltordrt 
sllrisoitc 
solbltaoh 
HScottm- 
BMartlnzc 
L'conordp 
McClurep 
Pottlnp 


3 0 0 0 
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, CLEVELAND 
Htm Hi 


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2 1 1 0 


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Wonnlnoc! 
4 2 2 1 


Hendrlckrl 3 1 1 3 
.Sflkesrf - . 2 0 1 1 


DETROIT 


gb r h tai 


4 0 0 0 
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H « 1 6 
T«nt 


CMcofo 
.KWWwCttY 
^aiOOOOWB-5 


• E-Gqulres, G.Brett. DP—Chicago 2. 
LOB-Ctilcooo 3, Kansas City 8.:28-Pln- 
son, 
3B-f=;WhIte, 
- 
Wohlford. 


HR-OeJohnson 
(IB);; SB-Patek -2, 


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Powelllb 
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Eckrslv 0 
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4 1 1 1 
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Cleveland 
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Detroit 
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FAGBTWENTY-rout 
THE HERALD-PALLADIUM, Bntoi Hvfcw - St. JMtpfe, 
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, WS 


AMOK/IN LEAGUE 


-— 
4»»>-Co™w, Mln, 
mama*. NY. .31*. 


u jlli O InH, KC. .310 
», B«i, Mi MovMrrv, KC, 
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PITCHING (14 D*clt!on*)-More1, BMI, 
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U; M.Torr«2, Bol, 1*4. .»«. l.»; Bos 
•M, OOK, 10 S, Ml, 1.*; Polmw, Bol. 
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1 STRIKEOUTMonono, Col, 
241; 


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• 
NATIONAL LEAGUE 


BATTING I4H o« bortl-Mcrflock, CM, 


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M, .314; Wation, Htn, .3Jti Morflan, CM, 


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HY, W; umilllliit, SP, W. 
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m A.OII»r, PM. »; CoMl, PHI, 36; 
iMinai mi n-Tinnin *r - 


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kv.Ckiftl RJHtokwer, Hlfcf; D Tnomot 


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Ch, J7. D Portnr, P|h, M; C«v, LA. J4. 


• STOLEN BASES-LOS.., UA, 73; MOT. 
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PITCMINO ll4'o«cl»ICK™)-Hrobo>kv, 
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ut; mmiBii. cm, in. .TM. 3.71, SMW, 
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. 
. 
.. 
Dlrcv, CM, M-s. Mi, IMi R.Jo™. SD, 


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MUKO, V. M, MnMntnltti, LA, 202, 
MMn. LA. m, curmn. ™, M. 
Another 
Season 


PONTIAC, Mich. (AP) - 


Sources close to the Detroit 
Uotis said lale > Tuesday the 
players were all but set to join 
the spreading strike against 
National 
Football 
League 


owners. 
> 


An announcement was ex- 


pected early today following a 
9:30 a.m. team meeting at the 
dub's practice 
facility 
at 


Oakland University. 


Jim Yarbrough, the Lions' 


player representative, would 


neither confirm or deny the 
report Tuesday. 
» 


"We took a'secret ballot on 


two issues," Yarbrough said, 
"but we don't want to release 
the nature of the questions nor 
the results of the vote until 
we've had a chance to discuss 
them in the morning." 


Yarbrough said much of what 


the players talked about Tues- 
day concerned "all events 
around the league." 


The Washington Redskins and 


New York Jets went on strike 
Tuesday, 
joining the 
New 


England Patriots in a growing 
player demand on NFL owners 
to agree to a new labor contract. 


Sources said the New York 


Giants, like the Lions,: also'ap- 
peared close to joining the 
strike. 


The walkouts came about 


seven hours after management 
and 
union negotiators had 


emerged from an all-night 
meeting in Washington with 


federal mediators.,The league 
made a six-point proposal that 
promised « new labor contract 
offer by Sept. 25 and said the 
Patriots, who struck over the 
weekend, could return t» prac- 
tice without reprisals. 


"Personally, I'm disappoint- 


ed there isn't a collective bar- 
gaining 
agreement," 


Yarhrough said. "Tb"t! hasn't 
been as much advancement in 
the last year as I had hoped 
there would be. But, I still hope 


there will be some type of 
agreement." 
^ 
r .-• 


The new strikes raised the 


distinct possibility that some or 
all of this weekend's'season' 
openers would not be played. 


A spokesman, for owner 


William Clay Ford said the club 
wasn't given any details of ,the 
meeting. 


"We're in the dark" the 


spokesman said. "We don't 
know if we're, going to Mil- 
waukee this Sunday or not We 


know very little about the whole 
situation; and caiVt even guess 
whit the outcome might be." 


Coach Rich Forzano arid his 


staff, meanwhile, continued 
preparations 
for 
Sunday's 


scheduled NFL regular season 
opener against the Green Bay 
Packers in Milwaukee. 


"I can't concern myself with 


strike talk," Forzano said. "I've 
got to be more concerned about 
getting ready for Sunday's 


To that end, Forzano toade his 


final cuts for the scheduled 
opener byytrimming running 
back Jimmy Jones, a second- 
year player from UCLA, and 
rookie guard Steve Myers from 
Ohio State. 


Forzano also .announced that 


veteran cornerback Lem Bar-. 
ney was named defensive cap- - 
tain and tight end Charlie 
Sanders offensive captain for 
the 1975 season. 
, 


FACTORY CLOSEOUT 


Sears 


8TEEL BELTED 
RADIAL 36 TIRES 


For Howe? 


' HOUSTON (AP) - Hockey 
perennial Gordie Howe says It 
looks as though he'll play a 
third season with the World 
Hockey League Bmston A«n» 
ntber Uun take a non-pHying 
eiecutive post 


"Bight «ow, emytUikj looki 


more potitive Ulan negative," 
nid the 4J7-ye.T-«M Howe, who 
was to meet today with WHA 
bMrd chairmM Ben Hntin, 
•te favors more Ice time for 
Howe. 


"My ntft h not f»Uy made 


•*," «Med Howe "I'U meet 
wtth Mr. HttUn Brat." 


"I feel pretty good," said 


Howe, who played a. pickup 
•Bine Monday with other Aeros 
taun memben. BM he added, 
"You cat teU about the legs 
•til yo» get to there fun time." , 


HowepUyed 8 yevs for the " 


Detroit Red Wings of the Na- 
tional Hockey League before 
being tared to play with sons 
Mark nod Marty after two years 
*e a Wings vice president. He 
•cored 1,8W points and 786 goals 
with the wings. 


Earlier, Howe said he would 


play the opening game this year 
in the Aeros' new stadium, and 
then take up executive duties. 


Bobcat Runners 


Defeat Comets 


NILGS — Braddywine cap- 


tured ib of the top seven 
place* to down Cotoma 18-43 in 
high school cross country run 
at Brandywine Tuesday. 


The Bobcats Greg Gallus was 


first 
In 17:46 followed 
by 


teammates Marck Cummins 
second, Joe Kachoris fourth 
mA Dale Delf fifth. 


Dave Oakley was the Comet's 


lop runner, finishing in third 
spot wtth Al Stolpe ending up 
in seventh place. 


Lancers Fall 


To Cassopolis 


Lakeshore got a first from 


Russ Shank but it wasn't 
awugh as Cassopolis ran p;ist 
the Lancers 23-32 Tuesday in 
high school cross country at 
Likeshorc. 


Shank's time of 17:57 just 


edged out Konrad Allison of 
Cassopolis who finished in 17:59. 
Bruce Poe was third. 


Other 
finishers 
for 
the 


Lancers Included Scott Cowgill 
fourth, Mike Waldmann eighth, 
Mike Mead ninth and Al Tio 
tenth. 


Racers Sign Pnir 


INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - The 


Indianapolis Racers of the 
VferM Hockey Association an- 
nounced today the signing of 
second-round amateur 
draft 


choice 
Kim Clackson 
and 


sixthround pick Eric Sander- 
son. 


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.WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, MS 
THE HERALD-PALLADIUM, B«tM Harlwr - St. Jiseph, Michigan 
PAGE TWENTY-EIVE: - 


FIGHT HIS APPOINTMENT 


•i' ! 


Foes Nipping At RosenbeiM- 
-* -*• 
' 
CD 
;>•<$?;;, 


SKATE-A-THON: Jerry Lewis Skate-A-Thon for Mus- 
cular Dystrophy association (MDA) will be held from 
Friday, Sept. 26, 4 p.m. until"Saturday, Sept. 27, 4 
p.m. at Scotty's Roller Bowl, New Buffalo. Skater ob- 
tains sponsor to pay him 50 cents for every hour 


• skated. Proceeds are donated to MDA. Planning event 


are, from left, Jack Kennedy, New Buffalo fire 
department; Norman Lubke, township fire depart- 
ment; Edward C. Smith, rink manager; Mrs. Anne 
Scott, rink* owner, and Robert Cook, chairman of 
event. In wheelchair is Pat Martin, Union Pier, a 
muscular dystrophy patient. 


LANSING, Mich. (AP) - 


William G. Rosenberg, former 
Public 
Service 
Commission 


chairman, is feeling the icy 
breath of stale regulatory • ad-, 
versaries. as: he awaits U.S. 
Senate confirmation as assis- 
tant 
administrator ' of 'the 


Federal Energy Administra- 
tion 
i 


Rosenberg has been a consul- 


tant for the FEA after resigning 
a three-year stint on the PSC 
Aug 5. But his controversial 
votes in favor of repealed utility 
rate increases have aroused 
controversy over his federal ap- 
pointment. 


He also has been forced'to 


testify in a pending Consumers 
Power rate case, over which he 
no longer has jurisdiction, but 
in which Ally. Gen. Frank 
Kelley feels he played a sig- 
nificant role. 


Both Rosenberg and Con- 


sumers Power Co. board chair- 
man A. II. Aymond have been 
subpoenaed in the case, which 
focuses on whether Consumers 
should be allowed to charge 
customers for the full $156 
million cosl of its Marysville 
plant. 


The total, plant cost is $74 


million more than Consumers 
expected. 


While Rosenberg was chair- 


man, the PSC voted to allow 
Consumers 
to 
include 
$120 


million of the:plant's cost in its 
rate base..It is now considering 
whal'to do with the rest. 


Rosenberg has denied that he 


pressured a Stanford Research 
Institute consultant to include in 
a report a recommendation that 
the Marysville plant's full cost 
be passed on to gas users., 
aymond revealed during cross- 
examination Sept. 8 that he put 
in a good word for Rosenberg's 
federal appointment only one 
day before Rosenberg's key PSC 
vote to approve a $29.2 million 
interim gas rate 'increase for 
Consumers Power. 


•In a deposition last week 


before 
Asst. 
Atty. 
Gen. 


Roderick Coy, Aymond said Ihe 
favorable PSC vote was "totally 
unrelated" to his urging the 
influential Edison Electric Ins- 
titute's- executive .committee 
"not lo oppose Mr. Rosenberg's 
appointment" to the FEA. • 
' Aymond strongly suggested 
during his testimony that fear of 


, Rosenberg and what he catted 


"consequences" were behind 
his proposal earlier Ihis year for 
federal financial help for hard- 
pressed 
stockholder-owned 


utilities. He has since scrapped 


the plan. 


Also intervening in the Con- 


sumers case is Gonesec County 
Prosecutor Robert Leonard. He 
has assigned an assistant to 
investigate the case and is try- 
ing to block Rosenberg's almost 
assured appointment. 


In a July 22 letter lo Sen. 


Henry M.: Jackson, D-VVash., 
chairman of the Senate Interior 
.Committee which is hearing 


Rosenberg's 
nomiliatlvftiv 


Leonard 
called 
the 
formef. 


chairman "an industry spb&p; 
man for utilily magnates"'and' 
died his "unparalled record of 
industry bias and indifference" 
lo consumer inleresls." . ";*",'', 


Jackson's committee' -look' 


testimony from Rosenberg-S'ept,' 
8, bul put off making a ixjepjrp' 
meiidation lo Ihe full SenaiesfiiV' 
' ul least'two weeks.. 
.,',,':', ,'," 


Berrien Licenses 


Margaret Thatcher Facing Another Test 


LONDON (AP) - The London 


Sunday Telegraph said in an 
editorial last week that British 
Conservative party leader Mar- 
garet Thatcher's visit to the 
United States "is arguably the 
most Important — and the most 
testing — engagement which 


MARGARET THATCHER 


she, has 
undertaken 
since 


becoming leader of the Conser- 
vative party " 


"What the Americans Are 


hoping to find in her Is some 
grounds for renewing their faith. 
in Britain: some reason to 
believe that she embodies 
qualities of leadership and 
character sufficient to give this 
country a new lease on life," 
said the Conservative paper. 


"... Mrs. Thatcher ls;a new, 


unknown face; the first woman 
ever to lead a political party in 
.the Anglo-Saxon world, very 
much a novelty, an innovation, a 
spectacular break with tradi- 
tion. 


"In American eyes, these are 


inestimable 
advantages, 


guaranteeing her a degree of 
attention, respect and goodwill 
which none of the old gang of 
British* politicians could hope to 
enjoy. ... 


"Her 
particular 
political 


beliefs are, in many ways, 
American political beliefs; more 
so perhaps than has been the 
case with any previous political 
leader 
since 
Sir 
Winston 


Churchill: 


"Self-reliance, equality of op- 


portunity, 
hatred 
of stale 


feather-bedding, faith in in- 
dividual freedom — all ' the 
themes closest to her heart-arc 
those closest to the heart of the 
American people 


"Only let her be true to her- 


self, and speak from her heart, 
and she will go straight to 
.America's. ... "At a time when 
the only sound emanating from 
Britain has been a death rattle, 
her voice could sound a fresh 
note of change and renewal " 


In other British editorial 


comment", the Financial Times 
of London, wrole lhal II has 
become apparent during the 
United Nations special session 
in, New York that "the 
TJ S 


government has moved in a 
very long way to reach some 
kind of understanding with the 
developing countries." 


"It unveiled a large and ami 


bilious 
pjan 
lo 
bolslenng 


developing, 
countries' 


economies, primarily by Ihc cs-, 
tabllshment of a 'development 
security facility' which would 
help 
sustain 
the 
foreign 


exchange-earnings of nations 


mainly dependent on 
com- 


modity exports.... 


"Last year it was widely 


believed, erroneously, that it 


was the industrialized coun- 
tries, as the major oil im- 
porters, which might face a 
serious financing crisis. The 


new U.S. position may reflect 
Ihe view thai it is the developing 
countries which have Ihe real 
financing problem.... 


The 
following 
marriage 


licenses have been issued by 
Berrien Counly Clerk Forresl II. 
Keslerke: 


Josh 
McKinncy, 
4(i, 
and 


Darelme Joyce Wiggins, 28, 
bold of Berrien Springs. 


Charles Steven Waldron, 27, 


and Brenda Darlene Baker, 20, 
both of. Benlon Harbor. 


Arlis Paul Burton, 25, Gallon, 


and Karen Sue' Locdmg, 19, 
Berrien Springs 


Daryl Corne Morris, 21, 


Buchanan, and Susan Lynn 
Konkey, 20, Three Oaks. 


Fred Alberl Wreggelsworlh, 


18, and Beverly Jean Patton, 19, 
both of Buchanan. 


_Glcnn Norman Steffey, 20, 


and Karen Jean Myers, 18, both 
of St. Joseph. 


Randy Gene Regester, 24, 


Baroda, 
and Teresa Mary 


Schuck, 22, Galien. 


Jimmy Ray Green, 19, and 


Sharon Ann Sikes, 20, Iwth of 
Baroda. 


Richard Allen Sirk, 27, and 


Jane Ann Ellsworth, 23, both of 
St. Joseph. 


Jeffery Alan Buttorworth; 20, 


and Robin Myra Slapleloii," li,~ 
both of Niles. 
.--V1!" 


Claude .Ella ,Denno, 35." ami" 


Anna Jane Taylor, 32, b'olfrot- 
Buchanan. 
• 


Gerald Leon Pearison, 4li, i'miL 


Dixie Lee I ee, 38, both jit-'- 
Buchanan. 
"'^ ^ 


Sloven Douglas Shreve,<* 'If?,'" 


and Cheryl Ann Shermai'C It," 
both of Buchanan. 
t ^ i._ 


Reggie Allen Hanking; > iM,-. 


Vandalia, 
and 
Melody, » ,gu'e" 


Greene, 18, Niles. 
, '•*,>*-,'•'» 


Charles F. Adams, 29'/]md, 


Marian Louise Collinswofth; 3t," 
bolhofNiles. 
''-:.:'v 


Ronald - Glenn demons"; . 19,' 


Coloma, and Sharon Mary. N.u'f, " 
17, Hartford. 
<" .--»i- 


Jon Michael Sheffield,' 22! and" 


Kalhleen Suzzanne Day, 23, bpllr 
of Watervlict. 
i _ 


~ 


FORD TRIP 
J ' ' 


WASHINGTON 
(AP) 
-^ 


Presidenl Ford will go,^ \oi 
Oklahoma and California-tor ' 
four days of official and political 
business beginning Friday. ,. 
ft 


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WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBEB 17.1171 


Radio Evangelist Lives, Thrives 


By CHRIS CONNELL 


AsstciatMl Press Writer 


COJJJNGSWOOD, N.J. (AP) 


-r^Radio evangelist Carl Mcln- 
tire is no stranger to con- 
troversy. 
|6ver the years, his feisty 
hrimd of fundamental Chris- 
tianity and crusading antlcom- 


• imtnism 
has 
led 
him , on 


numerous 
Vietnam 
victory 


Birches' in Washington. A 
coHege 
ho 
headed 
was 


disaccreditcd in New Jersey in 
1971 and moved to Florida. 
When the Federal Communica- 
tions Commission closed his 
radio station, WXUR, in Media, 
Pa., in 1973, he defiantly 
broadcast from the high seas 
one afternoon in a converted 
.minesweeper; 


But the dramatic highlight of 


his life, the 69-year-old Mcln- 
tire says, was getting kicked 
out of Kenya this summer for 
castigating African liberation 
movements. 


Mclntire was picked up while 


eating* breakfast in a Nairobi 


CARL MrlNTIRE 
'I wis kicked wrt' 


hotel July 28, two days before 
his International Council of 
Christian Churches closed a 
12-day 
conference 
there. 


Government officials hustled 
nilfrto the airport, bought him 
a 'ticket to New York and put 
him* aboard, an East African 
Airways jet that had been kept 
waiting for 90 minutes. 
S"I • was kicked out, called * 
hyena and kicked out like » 
dog. I had no personal rights *t 
all," 
said Mclntire at the 


headquarters 
of his Bible 


Presbyterian Church here. "I 
was kidnaped, just like that." 


Mclntire, who had said the 


liberation 
movements 
were 


Communist-infiltrated and ac- 
cubed the World Council Of 
Churches of supporting them, 
said: "If it hadn't been for 
Watergate and the defeat In 
Vietnam, and these countries' 
looking to Russia for support, 
it would never have happened. 


"I cannot travel with a sense 


of security. My country did not 
protect; me. What happened to 
me"" i happened 
to 
every 


American citizen. We need a 
Teddy .Roosevelt in the White 
HoiSscHHc wouldn't have per- 
mittidlthis to happen for five 
minutes. He would have had 
gunboats 
out 
there 
or 


something." 


Bij&thc blue-suited minister 


admitted there was a bright 
side to! his adversity. 


"Tliis thing has just revived 


my ch'urch," said Mclntire. 
And since his return, he found 
a static/I in nearby Camden to 
air his! broadcast. He had not 
been heard in the Philadelphia 
area since the FCC took the 
WXUR!off the air for allegedly 
violating the Fairness Doc- 
trine. ; 


But his troubles are not all 


behind :him. The tax collector 
in the -:quaint ,shore town Of 
Cape May has threatened to put 
Mclntire's extensive holdings 
there up for tax lien sale in 
October unless more than 
$150,000 in 1974 and 1975 taxes 
are paid. 


The properties, including the 


Champion 
Buying 
In Italy 


TOLEDO, 
Ohio (AP) - 


Champion Spark Plus Co. 
agreed in principle Monday lo 
acquire all the shares of Arman 
& Co. of Turin, Italy, Champion 
chairman R.A. Slranahan Jr. 
announced. 


Terms of the agreement were 


withheld, but sources said it 
calls for a consideration of 
Champion common stock, notes 
and cash. 


Arman's products, steering 


wheel locks and windshield 
arms and blades, arc sold in 
Italy, all European and mosl 
Middle Eastern 
and 
north 


African countries, with limited 
distribution in the U.S. 


Sales for Annan last year 


were attnut $10 million. 


stately Christian Admiral Ho- 
tel, are held in the name of 
Mclntire's weekly newspaper, - 
The Christian Beacon,: which is 
registered as a nonprofit cor- 
poration. 


If the Hen were sold, Mcln- 


tire would still have two years 
to pay It off and retain the 
property. But he insists he is 
not about to lose anything. He 


has not paid the taxes because 
he has appealed for*religious 
tax exemptions, he said 


: Mclntire encourages his sup- 


porters to vacation at the 
Christian Admiral, a Victorian 
structure 
where 
a 
Bible 


conference runs all summer. 


City officials complain that 


his hotel, guest houses and 
restaurant are used more for 


commercial 
than 
religious 


purposes, but Mclntire said: 
"I'm a 100 per cent religious 
operation." 
l 
' / 


Mclntire also offers package 


vacations to his "Gateway to 
the Stars" complex in Cape 
Canaveral, Fla. He acquired 
holdings there in 1971 that 
include a former Hilton motel, 
condominiums and a museum 


with * model 'of the city of 
Jeruulem. 


Mctatire said he nil turned 


over a former IBM building to 
17 Vietnam'refugee* bit "church 
has sponsored. He Is seeking 
140 more refugees, particularly 
thote with craft skills. '> 


"They're -developing It into 


an elephant factory, making 
porcelain elephants, rugs and 


other crafts," Mid Mclntire, 
who alw hope* to build t 
Vietnamese village as a tourist 
attraction,-with the refugees 
getting the profits. 


'The Florida complex also 


Includes Shelton College, which 
lost its New 'Jersey license In 
1W1. 
^ '- 


Mclntire, who .formed.his 


church In IBM after .breaking 


away from (he United Pres- 
byterian Church, once claimed 
his show was heard over' 600 
stations, and a research group 
estimated In 1M» that be took 
In B.I million yearly In con- 
tributions. 


. 
The figures today may be 


considerably smaller. 


Mclntire no longer reveals 


bow many stations carry ,nis 


"Reformation Hour," but he 
lists tour — la Camden, Cin- 
cinnati, Baltimore and Cocoa, 
Fla. — that carry a second. 
Informal'show. 


He boasted that In 197J to 


finance his struggle with the 
FCC "In the six months before 
WXUR died I raised «SO,000." 


He Is still appealing that 


•license revocation. 


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WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, IMS 
THE HEEALD.PALLADIUM. BralM Barter - 81 JMepk, MkklgM 
PAGE TWENTV-8EVEN 


Over the yean whenever I 


hive written a column about 
ArsWsracIl relations, I have 
' received a fair amount of quite 
nasty mail, , Because of my 
strong 
support tor Israel, 


readers have made all sorts of 
random accusations, ranging 
from my living off the Zionist 
slush-fund to changing my 
name* from Rosenbloom (or, 
once, Rothschild!). 


My recent columns, on the 


Kissinger interim settlement, 
suggesting that it was at best a 
mirage, at worst a fraud, have 
triggered a different response 
from concerned readers. They 
haven't called me nasty names; 
they have asked why, If all the 
leading 
spokesmen 
for 


American Judaism have given 
their support, I' should try to 
throw a monkeywrench Into the 
works?, Or, .alternatively, why, 
K.the Israeli government has 
agreed, I should substitute my 
judgment for that of Prime 
Mnlster Yitzhak Rabin? 


This can be answered on two 


levels. First of all, my concern 
fe American national Interest. 
Whatever Rabin or the Knesset 
may think, whether they believe ' 
it the greatest diplomatic coup 
since the Treaty of Alx-la- 
Chapelle, In no way detracts 
from my conviction that 1) the 
survival of Israel is In the 
American national Interest, and 
2) the KMnger deal Imperils 
our nattouaT Interest In Israeli, 
survival. My viewpoint Is not 
based on an opinion poll of 
American Jews, or anyone else. 


But there Is another' level of 


analysis with far more disturb- 
ing implications 
for 
both 


Americans and Israelis. Here 
the key question is brutal, but 
must be asked: To what extent 
has the Israeli government been 
blackmailed by the United 
States into accepting an arran- 
gement which it would other- 
wise have rejected? To put it 
another way, how does the 
present 
Interim 
agreement 


differ from the one rejected 
overwhelmingly by Jerusalem 
last spring? The immediate 
reply ti the KM Americans as- 
signed to the early warning 
system In Sinai," an answer 
which has touched off congres- 
sional debate on whether we an 
taking our first step into 
another 
quagmire, 
a 
new 


"Vietnam." 


This dispute strikes me aa 


wholly 
diversionary. 
The 


Inclusion of 200, Americans in 
the package is essentially 
cosmetic, a ploy designed to gle 
the Israelis a basis for distin- 
guishing between Kissinger- 
Mark I, which they turned down 
six months ago, and Kissinger- 
Mark H, which they have ac- 
cepted. The fundamental ques- 
tion, neatly avoided by loose 
chatter about Vietnams, is 
Whether the long-term Kis- 
singer scenario for a MMdle 
Eastern "Peace" — In which 
this is the first installment — 
will leave Israel Incapable of 
successful self -defense. 


Moreover, there, has been a 


good deal of conversation about 
tuiw unhappy Moscow is about 
the new American triumph, but 
curiously the four Communist. 
members of the Israeli Knesset 
did not oppose the interim ac- 
cord. And President Sadat, who 
Is a big talker, told the 
Lebanese paper "Al-Hawadilh" 
(generally 
considered 
the 


Beirut voice of Cairo); on Aug. 


. ISth that the Soviets had con- 


sistently urged him to "talk to 
the Americans." From the 
Russian viewpoint, it would ob- 
viously be ideal to have the 
United States achieve what the 
USSR and the Arabs have so far 
aborted: eliminate the Israeli 
Defense Force's capacity, given 
adequate military equipment, 
to maintain the integrity of the 
Jewish state. 


Of ^ course, 
if 4he U.S. 


promised 
as part of 
the 


settlement to guarantee Israel's 
survival, this would provide 
some weight at the other end of 
the see-saw. (Admiral Elmo . 
Zumwalt, retired U.S. Chief ;of 
Naval Operations, has ques- , 
timed 
on .purely military 


grounds how much weight ho 
could in fact throw into the 
balance, short of a nuclear 
confrontation —, but: that Is 
another story.) However, from 
recent leaks it has become ap- 
.parent that the American 
pledge to rapport Israel In the 
event of trouble has been for- 
mulated In the conditional - 
subjunctive tense. In effect, we 
have MM that If Congress 
approves, and we have the stuff, 
and tte weather is right, we will 
do MT best. Thanks a lot - but 
this is no way to define our 
mttonal IMcnti. It may he 


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PAGE TWENTY-EIGHT 
THE HEKALD-PALLAOIUM, 
WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 17. 


BANGOR SCHOOL: Walls outline Bangor school district's $2 4 million middle 
school, construction of which is due to be completed m time for 1976-77 school year. 
Work began in March" New school, to replace present 1902 middle school, is 
located directly behind Bangor high school Construction is being financed by $4 1 
million bond issue approved'by voters in April, 1974 Also to be financed by bond 
Issue are demolition of present middle school and construction of new elementary 
school. (Adolph Hann aerial photo) 


Paw Paw Plans Tribute To Grape., Wine Industry 


; 
By DENNIS COGSWELL 


Paw Paw Mreaa 


PAW PAW - 
Everything 


from belly dancing to fireworks 
displays lire planned as part of 
Paw Paw's eighth annual Grape 
•id Wine festival scheduled for 
Sept 18-21 


Depending op the weather, 


festival Director Gary Verdnes 
said he expects upwards of 
some 75,000 visitors from across 
the state, Indiana, and Illinois, 
to attend weekend's.tribute to 
the grape and wine industries 


The festival, formerly under 


the direction of the Paw Paw 
Jaycees has been reorganized 
with an expanded schedule 


under a Grape and Wine Fes 
lival association comprised of 
about 85 local civic, business, 
and church groups 


"We plan to have some kind of 


free entertainment everyday," 
Verdnes said "It will be a 
combination of both profes- 
sional and aipateur bands, and 
dancing ana hinging groups " 


WINETASTERS: Gary Verdrles, left, and Richard K. Burnham, right, sample 
some of wine which will be available at this weekend's eighth annual Grape and 
Wine festival in Paw Paw. Verdries is festival director, and Burnham president 
of festival association. Area's wineries, St. Julian, Warner Vineyards, and 
Frontenac in Paw Paw, and Bronte in Hartford, will be open for tours and tasting 
during festival. Serving is Pole Palasinski of Warner Vineyards. (Staff photo) 


New Buffalo Residents 
Protest Sidewalk Charges 


NEW BUFFALO - A group of 


residents living along Detroit 
street attended last night's New 
Buffalo city council meeting 
protesting city imposed en- 
gineering 
and 
surveying 


diargcs for sidewalks they ins- 
talled themselves. 


John Schroeder, spokesman 


fer the group, told the council it 
tad no authority to lack the bill 
coto the residents and suggest- 
, id the council find another wuy 


to pay the fee. 


All residents on Detroit street, 


with the exception of those who 
already had sidewalks, were 
Charged $3.75 per front running 
foot for the engineering and 
surveying fee. Residents whose 
sidewalks were installed by city 
workers were charged an addi; 
tmul fee of 65 cents per front 
running foot. 
. William Marx, city manager, 
•M UK city paid for half of the 
HI.TR engineering and survey- 
lag fee for the 4,1 M feet of 
MBfewwk ftNtailM akins Detroit 
AMt fMn Barter street to the 


elementary school. The balance 
was spread among the property 
owners. 


• Tlie council told residents it 
would discuss the complaint in 
an executive session and then 
hold a special meeting to make 
a decision'on the matter. 


Detroit street residents also 


complained that the newly ins- 
talled sidewalks are used more 
for bicycles, motorbikes and 
horses than for pedestrians and 
requested that signs be posted 
prohibiting use of sidewalks for 
such transportation. The coun- 
cil look no action on the request. 


In other areas, .the council 


scheduled a public hearing for 
Tuesday, Oct. 14, at 8 p.m., on a 
request froin Gordon Chris- 
topher to redone an area on Clay 
street, between Kenzie and 
Bronson streets, from parks and 
recreation 
to multi-medium 


residential. Christopher plans to 
construct some duplex residen- 
tial units on the property. 


The council said it would 


request Amtrak railroad of- 


ficials to change the warning 
railroad crossing device at 
Townsend street lo Eagle street, 
since it felt Eagle street was the 
more heavily traveled street. 


Extension of the city water 


main to Riviera road was dis- 
cusssed, but Marx reported 
there, has been- no 'further 
progress on the proposed exten- 
sion to: date. He was instructed. 
til contact New Buffalo township 
officials lo find out the status of 
the township's water plan and 
how it will affect the proposed' 
extension. 


Marx also reported that work 


on the new Whittaker street 
bridge over the Galien river is 
sliji ahead of schedule, with two 
of the three spans already set. 


RECOVER VfOUiV 


PARIS (AP) - A $38,000 


Guadagnini violin belonging lo 
violinist Isaac Slern has been 
recovered from a (axi driver 
who thought it was worthless, 
police reported today. 


Included in the list of enter- 


tainment will be a magic show, 
two plays by local theater 
groups, professional wrestling, 
belly dancing, fireworks, and 
"Sing-Out Kalamazoo", a na- 
tionally 
recognized 
young 


people's vocal group 


Verdries baid a stage for the 


various shows will be set up 
near the Michigan Avenue 
school, next to an art fair which 
Is expected to draw 100 exhibi- 
tors 


As usual,. the area's four 


major 
wineries, St 
Julian, 


Warner 
Vineyards, 
and 


Frontenac in Paw Paw, and 
Bronte in Hartford will be open 
for tours and wine tasting. 
There'will also be a separate 
wine lasting tenting located on 
South Kalamazoo street, as well 
as carnival rides In the down- 
town area. 


About 25 grape displays and 


booths will be open, with 
another 17 organizations spon- 
soring food concessions. 
' One of the highlights of the 
.festival willbc the 1 p.m., Sa- 
turday, Sept. 20 parade, which 
will feature 100 unite', with. Miss 
Michigan, Julie Ann Beckers of 
'Allegan, serving as 
grand 


marshal. 


Here's a day by day rundown, 


of scheduled festival activities: 


Thursday, Sept. 18 —., ;A 


variety show, the first of several 


' scheduled for the weekend, will 


be held on the stage near 
Michigan Avenue school, ill 6 
p.m. 


Friday, Sept. 19 -'.Miss 


Michigan officially, opens the 
festival ; at 
.ribbon 
cutting 


ceremonies at 10:30 a.m. in the 
downtown 
park. 
Helicopter 


rides, which also run Saturday 
and Sunday, begin at 5 p;m, The 
wine lasting tent will be open 
from 6-9 p.m., and there will be 
another variety show during the 
same lime. "No Falher lo Guide 
Her," a melodrama prcscnled < 
by the Village Players, wilhbe 
slaged al Ihe Village Playhouse 
at 7 and 9 p.m.- Bingo is 
scheduled for 7:30 p.m.' at the 
American Legion post, and a 
dance at 9 p.m., featuring 
"Velvet Touch" al the Elks 
lodge. 
, 


Saturday, 
Sept. 
20 — 


Throughout tile day and Sunday 
an arts and craft show and art 
fair will lie open. The third an- 
nual United Stales Twirling As- 
sociation baton Iwlrltng conlcsl 
begins at 8 a.m. and runs lo 5 
p.m. 


The wine lasling lenl re-opens 


al 11 a.m., wilhlhc parade 
scheduled for 1 p.m. "Nathan 
Hale, Anicrican .Patriot", a 
play, will be performed by the 
Northern Bcrrien County Scot- 
tish Kite club at 3 p.m. at the 
variety stage. Also on stage will 
IK the Van Burcn Folk Dancers 
at 4 p.m., a band concert by the 
Scotlville Clown band »t 5 p.m., 
singer Rlc Masscy at * p.m., 
"Sing-Out Kalamazoo" at 7 
p.m., and a magic show at 8 
p.m. 


A jazz-rock band will perform 


at the south end of Maple late at 
8 p m , to be followed by a 
fireworks display over the lake 
at 9 p.m. Two dances will also 
be held at 9 p.m. at the Elks 


lodge and American Legion 
hall Repeat performances of 
"No Father to Guide Her" will 
be slaged al 7 and 9 p'.m. 


Sunday, Sept. 21 — The final 


day of Ihe festival will gel off lo 


a roaring start with motorcycle 
races slated to begin at the Paw 
Paw Conservation club at noon.' 
The wine lenl will also open at 
noon, closing at 8 p.m. A turtle 
derby, and pony pulling contest 


are both slated for 2 p.m Elk- 4 
tertainment at the variety show,: 
stage include* square dancing 
at 4 p m , singer Ric Mahsey at 
5 p m , and belly dancing at 5 30 '. 
p.m. 


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EDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17,1S7S 
THE HEEAUVPALLADIUM, BeitoaHarter-St. J*M»k, MfeUgu 
PAGE TWENTY-MINI 


leanti ful Countess Admits 


< 
t 


• 7 
, 1 
l 


'One Man Is Not Enough' 


BjrJUIATOKAlKKAS 
AntdiMFteM Writer 


NEW YORK (AP) - "Sex Is 


[only one per cent of ray life. 
Why is that all that anybody's 
interested In?" the beautiful 
countess complained. 


Christina Paotozzi Bellm has 


raised money for hospitals m 
Cambodia, 
and 
Gabon, 


orphanages' in Afghanistan, 
sponsored a Vietnamese family, 
jUxl supports 18 foster children.' 
But it seems that these days the 
only thing people ask her about 
is "her interesting,' unconven- 
tional married life. 


The 35-year-oM mother of two 


young sonsi ' Christina 
is 


married to Howard T. Bellln, a 
prominent New York plastic 
surgeon and for toe last five 
years has been happily involved 
with Claude Dolgfcer 


"Just the way life is today, 


one man is simply not enough," 
said Christina. 


"This life-style suits us," said 


Bellln, who has a special girl 
friend as well. "We'd have an 
awful lot of tensions in our life 
otherwise." 


With her enormous green 


eyes, blond hair, tawny skin and 
aristocratic profile, Christina, 
the daughter of in American 
heiress (United Fruit) and an 
Italian count, was a successful 
model when in 1962 Richard 
Avedon photographed her svelte 
nude torso for Harper's Baiaar. 
That launched her career as the 
ultimate free spirit, the jet set's 
answer to Lady Godiva, as she 
was hailed. 


More headlines were made 


when she married Bellm 10 
years ago in a mixed marriage 


UNCONVENTIONAL: Countess Christina Paolozzi 
Bellin, 35, wife of Howard T. Bellm, a prominent New 
York plastic surgeon, poses in her New York home. In 
background is a painting of herself, her husband, her 
two young sons and her lover, 33-year-old Claude 
Dolgicer, a Frerich-iraeh airline 'purser. (AP 
Wirephoto) 


of an Episcopalian and a Jew 


"But now getting married 


, across religious barriers is ac- 
cepted," said Christina. "And 
I'm sure our life-style will be 
accepted one day, too.'1 


The Bellms live in a rambling 


18-room apartment filled with a 
< 


constant explosion of children, 
dogs, half a dozen servants, 
jangling telephones' and walls 
papered with photographs'and 
newspaper clippings of their 
adventures, Claude, a 33-year- 
old 
French-Israeli 
airline 


purser who always makes a 
point of bringing gifts back for 
the Bellin boys, is a frequent 
visitor 


Occasionally the trio, plus 


children and dogs, board one of 
Belhn's several planes he pilots 
himself and take off for the 
weekend. 


Their wide circle of friends 


(the Bellms entertain up to 80 at ' 
least once a week and the door 


- of their apartment is always 


open for midnight out-of-town 
visitors) have adjusted to this 
open marriage with amusing 
diplomacy. 


"If it's a Mack tie event, they 


invite me and Howard because 
they know Claude hates formal 
dinners. If it's for the ballet, 
they invite Claude because they 
. know he used to be a dancer," 
explained1 Christina, fluttering 
her long fingers with dagger red 
nails. 
t ' 
' 


"I 
adore 
Howard. He's 


brilliant, talented, exciting and 
imaginative. But Claude is 
wonderful, too If I had to com- 
pare them I would say Howard 
has the 
1 drive for' life, and ' 


Claude has the art of living " 
, "When the sex drive for a 
partner leaves, you just just 
don't' throw away the rela- 
tionship," says Christina of her 
marriage "We would never 
divorce. 


"The family unit is impor- 


tant, and we have a very good 
working relationship. We're 
good for each other," she said. 


"I've never met a girl before 


or since Christina I would want 


• to marry," said Howard, 39 A 


mod dresser, he has a brown 
belt 'in karate, flies his own 
helicopter and volunteered his 
surgical skills during the 1973 
Israeli war. 


"Christina is the best woman 


I have ever met. She's bright, 
beautiful, witty, unpredictable, 
and the best 'mother in the 
world." 


Ask Your 
Dentist 


By ALFRED E. SEVLER, 
£ 
D.D.S. 


't 
• 
- 
Q. I own a small beauty shop. 


One of my best operators is a 
young lady.who.has bad breath 
-halitosis they used to call it. 
Oddly enough, it seeins to gel 
better during the day and by. 
afternoon she doesn't offend our 
customers. 
; 
, 


What causes bad breath? 


D.F.P. 


A. If your young lady is oh a 


reducing diet, it is possible that 
she,is skipping breakfast, which. 
often is a cause of bad breath. 
Even 
a 
light 
breakfast, 


especially if a piece of toast, 
some fruit or fruit juice are ea- 
ten", will tend to eliminate bad 
brtath simply by virtue of the 
mechanical cleansing of the 
mouth. 


Sinus trouble can cause a 


secretion of fluid during the 
night and the drainage which 
occurs when a person stands or 
siu erect after arising in the 
morning, tends to produce 
unpleasant mouth odors. 


Human breath odor varies 


considerably during the course 
of « day. It is affected by such • 
things m emotions, age of the 
individual, menstnl periods, 
food, drink and other factors. 


The 
so-called 
"morning 


breath" of almost everyone 
whon first awakened, is pun- 
gent, "heavy" ind disagrees-. 
Me, because during sleep the 
nWuth bacteria can act upon 
any Mod particles pmcnt hi Ac 
tTWuth, owe tttt typicil ted 
«*r if <fcc«ttg'« noug M. 


Fast Recovery 


Gas Water Heater with 


7 
l/z Year Warrantee 


Super 
"48" 


4O-gallon 


• Dual-flame Ignition 


Two magnesium 
anodes help add 
tank protection 


• With built-in high 


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Beige jacket 


Warranteed. All parts found de- 
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manship within one yen of 
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at ' our . option • and 
installed 


free.' New water heater if tank 
fails in 7!'; yeau; installation 
extra after thu Tint year. 


SPECIAL PURCHASE 
LIMITED QUANTITIES 


SAVE *60 MODEL WE 
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Sah. selector gauge lets yon 
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program 


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Sears 
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CRAFTSMAN 10-1V RADIAL 


OR 10-IN. SAW OUTFIT 


2311 


229 


Regular S279.9S. Powerful 10-inch Radml arm saw develops a maximum 
2 HP Single yoke swivels motor and blade tor ripping. 


Regular S279.9S. Table outfit include* 10-m. saw, smooth-running in- 
duction motor, steel extension and stand. 


S20OFF!>£-HP 
bench grinder 


regular 
197 


Two grinding .wheels of ilu- 
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Unit resists rust! 


II SAVE »2 to 


YOUR 


CHOICE 
97 


A. $8.99 Craftsman Block Plane 
It. $8.97 Companion Filer Set 
C. *8.99 Ignition Wrench Set 
1C. «8.H9 Craftsman y-in. Halchut 
K. {7.49 Heavy-Duty Pipe Wrench 
G. $8.49 Craftsman 18-in. Level 
II. $8.99 Craftsman 3/8-iri. Ratchet 
.1. S8.M Craftsman Die Set 
K. $7. -IB Craftsman Lineman's Filer 


-..*«: 


sale-prices in effect 


3-D AYS ONLY! 


to 
OFF 


YOUR 


CHOICE 
each 


Ilcgular ?34.S8 Craftsman 3/8-in. 
Drill 
Variable-speed 
reversible 


drill develops a maximum 1/5 HP, 
ft-1200 rpm and is double-insulated. 


Regular J34.99 Craftsman Sabre 
Saw 
Variable-speed sabre 
saw 


develops a maximum 1/5 up, 0- 
2000 rpm and is double-insulated! 


Regular «J.M Craftsman Dual- 
action 
Sander 
Double-insulated 


sandcr develops a maximum 1/5 
HP and offers orbital and slraight- 
line action. 


ask about Scars credit plans 


SHOP AT SEARS AND SAVE 


Situ/action OuarmtOtert or Your Money Back 
89 


ith 


8CAD9, IOCKCK AND CO. 
CFlRBRATiflN 


610 W. Main St., B.H. 


I'll. 926-2161 
Free Parking 


Cat. Sales Ph.-927-1381 


STORE HOURS: 
Mon. through Fri. 


9 to », 


Saturday » ta A 
Sunday 11 (• S 


PAGETHHTY 
THE HERALD-PALLADIUM, BeitM H«rb«r - g^. Jtgcph, 
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER »,_-»» 


Playtime 


Answer to Previous Puzzle 


'1 Sport " ' 


r 5 Winter sport 


8 Play ten-pins 


12 Verbal 


• 
13 Ignited 
14 Earnest money 


(It) 


15 River islands 
16 Compass 


point 


17 Toes (Scot.) 
18 Daylight 


Saving'Time 
tab) 


19 Thoughts 
21 Make, lace 
22 Guide 
24 Weight i 


allowances 


26 Idolize. 
28 Kind of diet 
29 Remain seated 
30 Belonging to 


him 


31 Negrito 
32 Apostles (ab) 


33 Erie or Suez 
35 Dislocate a 


bone' 


38 Frozen rain 
39 Certain 


llsherman 


41;Rbcky,hlll 
.42 Improve 
46 New;Gulnea 


seaport 


47 Continent 
•49 Small-fish 
50 Animal skins 
51 Stiff grass 
52 Goll rriounri 
53 Feminine 


name 


54 'Gaelic 
55 Finish 
56 Bird's home 


DOWN 


1 Prods 
2 Wan 
3 Tangled 
4. Certain 


railways (coll.) 


TELEVISION LOG 


BEETLE BAILEY 


5 Snow vehicle 
6. Cows' 
7 Shrub genus 
8 Used in 


baseball 


9 Makes 


pompous 


/ :speech 
10 Lei. 
11 Endures 
19 To provoke 
20 Took off 


clothing 


23 Red dye 
25 To wrestle 


(coll I 


27 And others 


(Latin) 


28 Masculine 


name (ab.) 


33 Nearer 
34 Eagles', nests 
36 To refer to 
37 Longs for 
38 Look fixedly 
40 Took a seat 


again 


43 Arachnid, 
44 Biblical garden 
45 Want 
48 Summer drink 
50 Bog 


(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.) 


This Evening 


3 p.m. 


2,3,22 Match Game 
5,8,18 Another World 
7,13,28 General Hospital 
91 Love Lucy 


1:10 p.m. 


7,11,28 One Lite To Live 
2,3,22 Tattle'lales 


4p.m. 


2,3,22 Musical Chairs • 
, 5 Somerset 
> 


13,28 Mickey Mouse Club 
7 You Don't Say 
8 Gllligan's Island 
9 Flinlstones 
1C Bugs Bunny 


4:31 p.m. 


2,3,28 Dinah Shore 
5^2 Mike Douglas 
7 Movie 
- ' 


8 Partridge Family 
9 Gilligan's Island 
131 Love Lucy 


' 
5 p.m. 


8 Ironside 
' 
K 


9 Mickey Mouse Club 
K Gilligan's Island 
UAdam'12 ' 


5:10 p.m. 


13'News ' 
9 Bugs Bunny 
K The Lucy Show 


(i p.m.' 


8,13,3,2,5,7,18,28 News 
9 Hogan's Heroes • 
22 That Girl 


CIO p.m. 


MAM,1M« News 
13 Adam-12 
> 


JBewitched 


7 p.m. 


» Andy Griffith 
3 Concentration 
2,5,7,8,22 News . 
•H Ironside , 


RAW LOG 


!:• P.M. 


WJOR-Bulltfln Board; Hymns 
WSJM-Oon Bortm 


• WGN^Cddie Hubbard1 
««X)W.-Ancrni»ii Show 


IM P.M. 
WJOR-LM Eirwnon . 
• 
• 
4:M P.M. 
WOOW-Altwnoon Show; 


tori Niomirwot. 


. ' • 
fcOP.M. 


WHFB 


ABC AFFILIATE 
1060 ON DIAL 


'WJOR-New; Sporft 


WJOR— Jon Run 
MDOW-Lum I, Aimer 
'«:• P.M. 


, 


1 
t 
' 1:11 P.M. 
W5JM-«uslc . 
WDOW-MIgh Bret 


7:MP.M. 
WJOR-Slsn Oft!:• P.M. 
«6JM-Ne«ni Music 
» 
VCN-MtjsIc Unllmlt«d 


»:«• P.M. 


" V»5JI«— Jim Sloooord 


««DN-e<n<MII 


1l:HP.M. 
WDOW-Eiiri OK 


3:»5— The Chuck Campbell Stow 
3:M— News Rwnd-Up 
3:<W-Spwrtecas( 


, 4:0t— ABC News 
4:3»-Ucal News/Weather 
i.-M-ABCNews 
5:3f-Eve. Ucal News W/Kelly 
5:45-L«»l Sptrfe ft/Campbell 
f :0»-ABC News 
«:IS-Muslc/News/Fca(urcs 
«:10-Ucal News 
7:tt-ABC News 
7:«S-"P.M." W/Herb Crawfcy 


News/Wealher/Musle 


Thursday 


WJOft-ftews; Breakfast Cluo 
M&JM-MIke ferlak 
WGN-Wally ptlllllps 
WOW~Momlna Show 
. YJpniyV' Mewl] Mull]: 


»:«• A.M. 
W»R-AUc« Flood Show 
.WSJM-Mlkf Andcrion 
WOOW-6wnW Ofl 


WDOW-6o\md Off 
•WJOR-Cotmd on»:* A.M. 


«WW-Momln«Sr»w 


11 :• A.M. 


WJCW-Ralph Emmery 
, 
>!:• NOOM 
WUM-News 
WJOR-News, Form Report 


II.'M P.M. 


••WSJM-6oundOnI'H P M 
f 
;WGW-F«r'm Show 


WSJM-Cound on 
WJOR^Trodlo 
' 
1:MP.M. 
W5JM-8III Culleni Music 
V^OR-Lre Emerson 


- 
!:•> P.M. 


WSJM— Don Bockus 
.WON-Roy Leonard 


TOMORROW 


C:45-SlgB-On Mmlig'Slww 


W/Fraak Rdwrts 
News/Weatter/Jtaslc 


t:55-Ag Weather Advisory 
7:Ot-ABC News 
7:M-Ucal News 
7:35-Sp«rt5 Pake 
8:H-Ma|« News Cast 
8:15-Weathenasl 
8:2»-Eai1 Nightingale 
8:2S-ABC's H.wart C«sell 
8:3«-Pa«l Harvey News 
»:M-ABCN«ws 
S:«S-Fraik lUberts Sh«w 
1I:N-ABC News 
IMS-Lee Murray Shtw 
l»:W-V»ior tf thr Pc.ple 
11:H-ABC News 
ll:li-12-Brti»ch U l.anch 
12:H NOON-Maj«r News Cast 
12:15-Flshliig Keptrl 
12:17-Farm "3»" W/Kclly 
l2:5«-Paiil Harvey Sh»w 
1:M-ABC News On-Thc-lloiir 


Ucal News On Half-Hour 


l^i—J»hn Dwemns Shtw 
349—The ChKk Campbell Sh«w 
3:M-News Rmudsip 
3:4t-Sp*rtscast ' 
4:)*^-Ucal News/Weather 
S:M—ABC News' 
5:3»-Evc. Ucal News W/Kelly 
5:45-Ucal Spwts W/Campbell 
«:0»-ABC News 
«:M—Mnslc/News/Fcaturcs 
«:3I- Ucal News 
7:N-ABCNews 
7:«i-"P.M." W/Herb Crawley 


News/Weather/Music 
, • 


8:N-Sign-Off 


WHFB-FM 


'Stereo. 100 


Van Bureii Unit Honored 


LAWRENCE — The Van Buren unit of the American Cancor 


Society vv-as recently recognized by the Michigan division of the 
society for exceeding its dollar goal in the 1975 crusade for cancer. 
The state office of the society presented the Van Burcn unit with a 


. 1975 crusade goal key award for collecting 816,933, which was $fi83 


. over its goal. 


They'll Do It Every Time 


THE QRllLlEKS 
ftlp 28 GKMP 
MO SOUP IT 


FOR 60 


YOU HEAR 
ABOUT PEOPU 
MAKING Bid 
PROFITS seu.- 
INS THEIR 
HOMES- 


FOR THEIR 
House— 


I KNOW YOU RE ASKING FORTY-NINE, 


FIVE, BUT THE WAY REAL ESTATE 
TOVttf- AM/WAY, THESE PEOPLE 


ARE-MAKING A FIRM OFFER OF' 


$37000 


C 


THEN YOU 
Toseuu-soHow 
ARE CONDITIONS? 


6IRLS HAVE ;UANf 
DIFFERENT WAfS OF 
6ETTIN6 ATTENTION 


3:0#-T<tgelher 
S:4»-MaJ*r Newscast 
6:M-Earl NighUugale 
S:«i-T»achlnK 
6:lJ-SUck Market Reptrts 
8:45—OmtnmiKy Ctinmiinlquc 
>:N—Johl DwfDius Show 
ll:N-Uve Shadtws 
ll:4S-Ucal News 
)2:M-Mld. Slgii-Off 


TOMORROW 


5:3I-8:N—Sign-On 
Mwning 


Show 


W/Frank Koberis 
(Ncws/Weather/Music 


(:,TO—Local News 
8:55—Ag Weather Advisory 
7:IM1-ABC News 
7:3»-Ixical News 
7:35—Sports Page 
8:M-15-Mln. Major Newscast 


ABC News :15 After Hour 
Ucal News :45 Before Hour 


8:45—Community Communique 
»:(M-OnlyYou 
IMS-Major Newscast 
12:lr»-Searchliig 
12:19—Fishing Report 
1:M—Community Communique 
H:«fl-Togcther 
5:45—Major Eve. Newscast 
«:(KI-Earl Nightingale 
«:05-Touchlng 
6:15-Stock Market Reports 
8:-15—Communique 
!):IMI—Jiilin Dorcmus Show 
IO:WI-)xive Shadows 
11:-15—Local News 
12:WI-Sign-Off 


13 Truth,or Consequences 


7:3t p.m. 


2L22 News 
3 Wild World of Animals 


, 5 New Price Is Right 


J Dick Van Dyke 
8 Let's Make A Deal 
U To Tell The Truth 


8 p.m. 


2,3,22 Tony Orlando and Dawn 
5,8,W Little House on1 the 
Prairie 
7,13,28 When Thing's Were Rot- 
ten 
9 Baseball 


8:38 p.m. 


7,11,28 That's My Mama 


9 p.m. 


2,3,22 Cannon 
5,8,1« Doctor's Hospital 
7,1J,28 Baretta ' 


11 p.m. 


2,3,22 Kate McShahe 
5,8,1« Petrocelll 
7,11,28 Starsky'and Hutch 
* 
11 p.m. 


8,13,3,2,5,«,22 News ' 
28 Virginian 


11:1* p.m. 


2,3,7,»,11,22 Movie 
8,5,11 NBC Nfews Special 
, . 


ToniorTow 
, 
• - 


. 1 8 a.m. 


2 News- 
, 


5,8,11 Today Show 
. ,' 


7^8,13'A.M. Amenca 
•S Ray Rayner 
22,3 Captain Kanganm 


Ja.m. / 


2 Captain Kangaroo 
3 Channel 3 Clubhouse 
22 Give-N-Take," 
8 Buck Matthews 
13 Movie 


9:10 a.m. 


9 Garfield Goose 
22 Price Is Right 
3 Accent 
8 Not For Women Only 


10 a.m. 


2 Give-N-Take 
5,8 Celebrity Sweepstakes 
9 Movie 
> 
• ,• 


IS To Tell the Truth 
22 Homemaker's Time 
( • 


28 Phil Donahue Show 
7 A.M. Chicago 


, 10:11 a.m. 


2,1 Pried Is Right 
II You Don't. Say 
5,8,1( Wheel of Fortune 


11 a.m. 


2,3,22 Gambit 
5,8,1( High Hollers 
28 A.M. Michiana 
11 Showoffs 


11:30 aim. 


2,3,22 Love of Life . 
5,8, li Hollywood Squares 
7,11 Happy Days 


12 Noon 


1,2,22 Young and Restless 
5,11 Magnificent Marble 


Machine 


7^8'Showoffs 
8,11 Noon Report 
S Phil Donahue Show 


' 
12:31 p.m. 


24^2 Search For Tomorrow 
5,11 Jackpot 
7,11,28 All My Children 
8 Mike Douglas' 


1 p.m. 


2,5 News 
' 


1 Give-N-Take, 
,7,11^8 Ryan's Hope' 
9 Bozo's Circus 
K Somerset 
22 Afternoon Show 


1:30 p.m. 


.2,3,22 As The World Turns 
5,8,lt Days of Our Lives . 
7,13,28 Let's Make A Deal, 


2 p.m. 


2,3,22 Guiding Light 
9 Father Knows Best 
7,13,28 *10,000 Pyramid ' 


2:30 p.m. 


2,3,22 Edge of Night 
5,8,1« Doctors 
7,13,28 Rhyme And Reason 
9 Love American Style, 


Heart Pioneer 
Lacks Patients 


JOHANNESBURG, South 


Africa (AP) — Dr. Christiaan 
Barnard, the heart-transplant 
pioneer, says his cardiac unit at 
Gnxitc Scluiur Hospital in Cape 
Town may have to close because, 
of a lack of patients. 


Combined Centers Studied 


SOUTHFIELD, Mich. (AP) — Michigan's prison psychiatric 


centers would l)e combined with some mental health facilitcs in a 
plan being studied by the slate, according to a Department of 
Mental Health official. Dr. Donald Smith, Mental Health acting 
director, said Friday one proposal would replace both his depart- 
ment's Center for Forensic Psychiatry in Ypsilanti and the 
Corrections Department's Psychiatric Diagnosis and Reception 
Center at Southern Michigan Prison in Jackson. Smith said both 
centers are "Inadequate", and "very cramped for space." He said 
he has talked with Corrections Director Perry Johnson on how the 
two department can combine services. "If we can't build a com- 
mon facility, we hope we can set up close to one another so that we 
can share mental health personnel," Smith said. 


THAT'S ONE OF THEM 


FOUND A 
New' 


INTEREST? 
SINCE THE . 


STOPPED 


YAL.U CONTINUE 
T'Ee BROKE... 
MOOCHIN' OFF 


FRIENDS 


I SEE NO"SIGNS O' A JOB 
IN YER. FUTURE, 
SVLVESTER..' 


INCEK.PENT- 
AL.LY, HOW 
AR.E YA 
GONNA PAY 


FER. THIS^, 
P.EADIN1 ? 


MICKEY MOUSE 


DO-YOU THINK I 


THIS DRESS VOULD 


LOOK .SETTER 
WITH A PEPUUM 


OR MAYBE SOME 


RICKRACK 
-di 


OR'A SUBSET ")s 


YOU .DON'T 
KNOW HOVV 
LUCKY YOU 
ARE TO BE A 


CHILD 


I WISH I 
WERE IN 


YOUR 
SHOES 


BE MY. 
GUEST 
WHAT A LIFE — 
SCHOOL, BATHS, 
ERRANDS, NAPS 
HOMEWORK—- 


WE'LL NEVER KNCW, UNLESS WE 


&er A ©UPPEN PAINSTOKM. 


THERE SjCes THAT 


• KIP WHO G&VS 
PIRTIBR THAN 
I'WONDER . \ 
WHO HE IS? J 


PICK 
_/^p 
CAVAUJ 


REX MORGAN, M.D. 


I'LL MAKE IT A 
POINT TO SEE TOt) 


TODAY OR 


NO/HE HAD TO/MAKE 
HOSPITAL ROUNDS AND 


THEN TAKE KEITH 


HOME FROM THE HOSPITAL / 
BUT HE'LL BE STOPPINS' 
Br AFTER THAT./ 


HE SAID SOMETHING T GOOD.' 
ABOUT GOING WITH JlHEN HE 
YOU-TO TALK TO AN /HASN'T 


INVESTIGATOR/ ,< FORGOTTEN/ 


MARY WORTH 


' I'M VER/ TIR6P, 
RftNA-ANP SO 
IS PIPPA.'vANPWE 


HAVE A LON<5 


HJSrrT TOMORROW.' 


IVE BEEN TALKING WITH 
MY NEIGHBOR, MRS. WORTH: 
SHE HAS SOME INTERESTING 
1P6AS ABOUT MARRIAGE/- 


OUR MARRIAGE.' 


I'M NOT EXACTLY PELISHTETP TO 
HEAR THAT YOU'VE BEEN DISCUSSING 
A VEW PRIVATE MATTER WITH A 


STRANGER, PANA.' 


SOOD NISHT.' 


WELL/ TURNING IN 


SO EARLY, ELAINE? 


•WITH NO PINNER? 


JUDGE PARKER 


I WONDER IF THAT 
INCLUDES CLEOPATRA? 
SEEMS AS THOUGH 
5 NOT IN.' 
T.T. TOLD ME? THE 6KRET TWENTY VOTED 
ME THE BEST BELLY DANCER OF ALLTI/VE5.' 


WEDNUWAY, SEPTEMBER 17. 1975 
THE HERALD-PALLADIUM. BeitM H.rb.r - St. Jweph, 


TVT li1 %W/"O ^kTl H /•* A 'wm'g'r' • ir»i/"N 
NEWS OF MARKETS 


Wall Street 
New York Stocks 


As quoted bv 


TYr^nlm.rw-, 
WM C RONEY & CO., BBS W. MAIN, B.H. 
Declines 
mj^m 
^s 
r, 
v,,,,rto., 


t lose 
Iliup 
Low 
( |()s, 


Continue 
$ 
S" 
i 
«" a 
«™ 
- as 
« 
MV 
i "m 
D 
M% 
W& .^Hs 
KresgcSS 
27U, 


NEW YORK (AP) - The ^ ' $ 
An!™" 
'S 
S'*'S2 
£""&. n 
I9l1 
stock market declined further 
52 
43% 
Am Tel & Tel 
Wfe 
^ 
MacDn 1 Doug 
15 


today amid concern over mfla- 
SVl ^ 
ATA™ 
1" 
18 
J5'<4 
M 
43 
Mmn Mimns 
4914 


don and rising interest rates 
mi,, n,? 
An,™* 
.., 
^ 27^ 
Mareor 
23% 


The 'opening Dow Jones 
"nJ '2! 
^o"" 
' !|. 
« 
J» 
^g'Sr 
!JS 
iverage of 30 industrials was 
2014 
11% 
Ball Corp 
|S% 
2g,? ,1$ 
OHH'CWD 
«f 


fractionally lower, and declines « ?4« 
Bell, steel 
35^ 
»& '^ 
j™^, 
™ 


took a 3-2 lead over advances on 3 'Ij 
- Slick 
,mf 
"ft 
37 
Phl" 1>ct 
«* 


•he New York Stock Exchange 
lift 61* 
« Kughs 
* 
' n£ | 5& 
S^"1""1 
• ffi* 


< , Tlie 
market's 
attention 
J7% 
26 
Chcswc Sysicms 
31% 
24$ m, 
ROW, Met 
, Jnl 


Kerned to be focused on warn- 
"$ '* 
Chrysler 
nVh 
w 4 « % 
jgS In? • ' r 
.5$ 


Ings from several government 
S 
«!? 
Cities Svc 
42% 
74* «# 
sears Hocb " 59(4 


Mlpnvate economists Monday $ H 
C—s'Powsr 
58 
1,« 5$ " ™y Pal 
ll 


that inflation and high interest 
28% 22^ 
conlCan 
24$ 
48% 
25% 
SJ M ? • 
w 


rates might choke off the 
,'•" 
•>$# 
' 
D»w Cncm 
87% 
33 
22 
Std Oil Cal 
< 
»u 


developing economic recovery 
« 
J,™ 
S1 ' ; SIL 
"** . ««« M 
Sid Oil Ind 
44% 
1 
Today's early prices included 
18 
24 « 
Esmark 
8?35 
f5'4 ?£ 
TcSft™" 
"S 


Southern Co, unchanged at 
«"4 ^ 
Exxon 
- 
8S7/8 
fjfc 
jff 
^A 
% 


12%; Chrysler, up % at 101/4, S J2& 
Eoril;"ot'- 
-- 
35% 
7514, 
3714 
-Union Camp 
' 
wu! 


Texasgulf, down % at 29, and 
,'7,? ',% 
r« pif 
™/4 ^ *'* 
', Uri Carbide 
_ 
'»« . 


Anw.orr%rt«H4 
£g i?5 
< gssin, 
22i 
lu 
% $ 
urtr"* 
a 


. On Monday the Dow Jones in- 
f« 
lj.% 
Oen.Tcl&Elec 
JIH 
jj ^ 
Un Kl Prod " 
,& 


.dustnal average fell 806 to 
"*> '"* 
Sc,?rre 
' 
I5% 
7"6 »W 
us Steel 
M% 


796. IS 
• 
!,!,; flJJ 
£llle,lte 
*fc. 
38% 25 
Warn Lambert ', 
am 


^Losers outnumbered gainers S !o| 
WT 
> S& 
If g ' S^L 
S 


by nearly a 3-1 margin on the 
227.% 157,/, 
InlBusMch 
i78Vfe 
714 S 
WOT™™ 
- w 


NYSE, and the exchange's « '»» 
'"'""" 
'/--ia%- 
28% 
10 
ShRad 
^ « % 


'composite index was off 42 at 
61/2 
M% 
lnl Pjp 
*** . 
, 
' 43 "M 
* 
' 


'~r Big Board volume totaled 
' LOCAL LISTED SECURITIES 
WViif Innrkl - 


f 13.09 million shares 
, 
, 
Supplied by 
- 
TT 1111. ApWl 


' 
At 
the 
American 
Stock 
FIKST OF MICHIGAN CORPORATION 810 Ship SI St Joe 


-Exchange, the market value in- 
' 
- 
,- ,„, 
YoJtcrto s 
T>f>h^n tllf^K 
dex dropped 66 lo 82 21 
' 
IliHh 
Low 
Uow 
, " CUClllUI CS 


Anuric.!,, Molalb cl,ma\ 
Sfei^ 
28 ^i 
49% 


Bt mli\ 1 m-p 
' 44,i> 
2|i, 
J8 
4~\fr 
1 
/^ 
1 1 17 
11 
1 lark L(|,,i|i 
W/4 
'nh 
w, 
• lTTfkt*P'4l 
Gold Falls 
iKff.K 
B « B 
3!;. !^ 
14^ 
^llcrea 


- e* ft 
f~\ 
llanimorniillHaiKT 
1711, 
12'^ 
iji^ 
The public offering of $50 
«5ti "UnCe 
M^'s.Mhhintnri. 
IP* 
?'-, 
10% 
million Whirlpool corporalion 


Zi!™ 
1; utiinKs 
• 
M t 
t% 
& 
slnklllg fund debenlure!> hd!i 


, A 4. r] 
• 
1 
Xuliimal siandard 
IdU? nC 
1UA 
ljcen announced by Goldman, 
' /Vl (t^liriCIl 
- I'u Im 
25-n 
llrs, 
jflj 
Sachs & Co of New, York, 


' ' 
u':i'''","ll"i',V ' 
'*''- w 
ly& 
manager of a nationwide group 


• ZURICH, Switzerland (AP) - 
• „•["£ o,^1'" 
S"4 '?> 
'' 
of underwriters , 


The price of gold hit an 18- 
* 
"h 
The nine-and-five-eights |>cr 


,* month low on the Zurich bullion 
, 
cent debentures, due Sept 15, 
1 market today while the dollar HVVIT5TriRS' fl TinF 
20W)> wcre offered Sept 11 at a 


Vhhproved " 
ill T do! Vfimo, VU1J-»CJ 
prin4 of 99,39 per cent to yield 
^In hectic opening trading, 
" 
' 
i) 70 per cent 
* 


gold dropped to $144 an ounce, 
¥J 
I JO I ^___. ^™o ' 
Net proceeds from the sale of 


down $3 from Tuesday's close. JjOnU 
OftOI/Pt? f A 
the debentures will be added lo 


The volume traded was reported 
i 
I 
the company's general funds 


i below average. 
and are intended lo;be utilized 


. .The dollar opened at 2.721-20 
f . 
A T 
S\ 
from time 'to- lime- for Invest- 


Swiss francs, up from 2 7150 It |,|«f 
A 
j jOTl fT f / M P 
mcnl in llnr expansion of the 
i*as the highest rale of exchange 
M^^^t' -^» AJUIlg 
f^ f H? 
company^ business. ' 


», ten months. 
( 
The debentures 
are not 
sarL^.^te;; jr^-u-v^ t^r--^^ SWSWJJTISS: 
psychological influence" on the 
Q P^abo send me a complete 
about $350 a month torn our 
lnvo| 
h,,,.^^ at an 


,gold market, but he could give 
"«* of lavoxempt bonds 
:a»mb,ned ^lane^ What sort o 
aflnua| inttlnffit CWjl of ^ lhan 
no other explanation for Ihe 
A Thai is very much like 
long-term investment program 
9,7U |K!r(,enL Th(, (,ebt,hturPS 


! plunge. 
Baying I want to buy five uns 
should we set up? 
entitled to sinklnc fm,',i 


II. U-ndon, fears of a British 
of lMke<l beans Ploase send me 
A. Since you- already ^have a ^yrSXgL g »Wi cal 


•leel Mnke drove the pound 
« ^ "f ^nned tans sold by 
comfortable bank la ance, it ^,^ , 
« 
93 percent of 


sterling to a hew low of $2.0855, «c.j supci market and grocery' 
would seem logical lo begin 
(hc |j>su<, 
, 
,na urily 


down from $2,091 at the close of 
i" ««•' country 
acnuirmg common shares in a 
mM^. Corix)ratlon is a 


.trading Tuesday. The .pound lias 
If-rally thoirands of bonfc 
taw^rm "^^"K" 
leading manufacturer of major 


now lost jusUver two 'cents in -both corporate and tax- 
Since you 1 ricnd to go m ^olhc 
houscho|d app|lancC!!-, Wn rl. 


two days. 
exempt - Have teen issued In 
.Navy, -a monthly plan would be 
,, and j(s ;onsolidalc<j sub. 


Blast- furnace workers have 
this count, y and are now outs- 
most - convenient because It ^^ mttn^^^. 


threatened to escalate a wildcat 
landing: When you go shopping 
would 
take 
care 
of the 
tjc 
washcr!. 
a d 
d 


walkout by men al plants of the M>" »1U''1 "^ >'01"' to»kor "r 
safekeeping ofjour securities. 
ri!fn-g(,raU)rs I : B d 
frc^crs' 


government'!, 
British' Steel 
hokei «Hat is, available, with 
Set up such a plan . with a 
„,„„, djr con<miomng 
' ! 


Corp. into an official strike by te credit rating you want, in 
reputable 
brokerage 
firm, 
{ -..vacuum cleaners, dish- 


Sunday unless they get a hefty 
UK; amounts you want, and al a 
select scveralgrowth stocks you 
h 
, 
ic|cv,J,on 


pay increase. A Mnke «ould 
lair price. 
jwflt to acquire and hold for a 
^ etertronic organs 


.hut down a uWen ma,or steel 
N0 TR,VNSFER 
'""H l."11c' and thl!™irtcr ]uf 
central heating systems, 'cen^ 
plants that feed British W 
, Q. , cln't find a,,v cxplana- 
S«,,d. '„ your monthly mvcst- 
lra, eltH;lrio aV S 
cund!ti'ollcr 
n 
s 


duslr>'- 
tin,, -of why Illinois Power 
JLiwr rRANn OH THW 
and;olhcr products. 


''- 
- 
" 
(W.02) preferred pays only 
o rmnmS Mavwi-ikP 
The ".mpany is Ihe principal 


Shiller Industry ^™££^ ^-^ '" « ^^BSWK 
plantCulbaik ^^^^ ^^^^^ '^£^.&£Z. 
'•BARREN 
Mich 
(AP) -' inmsfcrringu'per.ceiilslKnloa ^ fur canil- llo^ in -inv '^uum cleaners, central heal- 
S MuMrta .plans to cut -'^r -sten'. They are NOT AT Ot\tr » ?here are no ^^^'"ndcentral.electric 
tack production of equipment MX the sanw. 
profits lo offsel) is $1,000. To 
Jlr con(llllontrs- 


'Used in automata! checkout 
Illinois Power, a nmniyraled 
get ttii 
1" deduction you must use 
* • 


wpermarket .syslems, Ihe com- 
titility, has a 4.08 (pcr-ccnl) 
citbcr $2"iioo"of long-term losses 
o 


'pany announced Tuesday 
cumulative preferred nulstand- 
or $li00fl of s|,0rUerm losses. 
Of'ITK'H. 


Shiller manufaclures a label »« 1ht Pjr v'llue °r lhc '"^ 
(Long-term applies to an. in- 
,, 
, 
reading sjslcm under tbe Irade 
1S w°. And i.U^per cent 01 wu 
V(;slnM;nt hcid tor six mont|, or 
(rCIH'rul 


na-nicAcroscan. - 
"jmcs to $2.04.^ So you arc 
)lwo; shorUerm Io lcss lhan 


;-The cutback lollows revised 
n't-civing c\atlly wnai inc. 
-y^t length of time.) 
.n«.Do.«™ 


market projections by NCR 
preferred was issued to pay — 
GOT NO IDEA 
ADMISSIONS 


;C6rp;. a major-producer of au- »•»« « *™r "r 51 cralls cmr*' 
Q. 1 wrote you a few weeks 
BERRIEN CENTER - Pa 


itomaled 
checkout systems, Barter. 
ago but have seen no answer lo 
-ticnts admitted to :Bcrrlen 


-which has resulted in-a rcduc- 
-THc stock sells in the low 20s ^ 
es,jon of how w |nvcgl 
General hospital during the past 


: lion of Acroscan deliveries to 
because- -at -tlmt price level it 
$10()0o i win soon te receiving. 
24 hours include: 


NCR,:Shillcr said. 
)'«*& 9 per cent, which is what 
A l|(|W cuu|d , . -nsww whe|, , 
Bernen Center-Wayne Air- 


Shiller said NCR indicated ""Utt prcferreds of tins quality ^^ lh(, r.li|)lcsl |dca of. ,,ow 
B,,xl, P.O. Box 72; Pete Garcia. 


! iinccrlainlies.. in the economy -a"-' yiulding today. 
„,,, 
you 
a r L V w h a l 
otncr 
Ucnton Harbor - Debra Pal- 


', have i.madc supermarkets mi- 
WHAT TYPE PLAN? 
resources and income you have, 
ton., 4«9 East Main, 


'willing to, .invest in (he au- 
Q. 1 am 24, married, have just 
your goals and when you hope io 
^ St. Joseph — James Douglas, 


tomaled systems. 
fiuislmd college and will soon go reach- these igoals? 
1 .0. Box b/9. 
, 
1 
Bernen Springs 
— Janet 


iK^ "*• - !«SU2«i»»-i>«--' 
> ' 
- 
-H-. 
j 
Poling, 225 West Hamilton. 


r^ -y^^SJJBM^B^Bi ^""i"-"" 
li|ll||||E^^ 
" ^^^|^^*T 
"'W/>'/«/ 
- - 


UNINVITED GUEST: Bush Parker, 26, of South Haven, escaped serious injury 
SOUTH HAVEN - Patients 


:aflcr his car went out.of control crashing into gas station on Phoenix road at 96th «*njtt«l Mouth-Haven Com- 
istreet, Geneva township; last night. Slate police at South Haven said corner of !™™£1 JSULJestc|[?iiy 
:building, owned by RoMld Vochaska, was damaged in 8:30 p.m. crash. Parker was 2SS:r /2I2? ^IIV:.^ 
•arrested on charge of driving under influence of intoxicants and ticketed for i],^^ Andww KrtMn' 
'driving without an operator's license. (Tom Rentier photo) 
Grand Junction. 


».- 
' 
• 
' >• 
" 
• 
f • 


Tomafn 
\U 
MfliiK^/ M |^M|||«Mif«MlN4rMMMl WIATMKI^IVWC, 
rv^iflJIffiL/ 
mUm^cAA. u*. *^t * e*^*^.. 


Bid, Are -^WSfe^ 
Slower 
P^(E^iH»f 


• A drop in tomato prices in • 
F sXStJ^ffm*Mmr—*?~/Sil 
\fiaXaMTjf 
4> 
~ 


California, caused by a surge in 
\ f V^jf 4/Vrf 
/*/ UHmSfU^-J-^SS 


production, is serving to level 
j ^ /*V^si>l' VJn±£— - ^^VliiiJlHnllDjlLi " 
"" 
M^&^SS 
M/NEr^L 
w8ffiffi8^H.- on 


Mike Pflueger 


Although tomato offerings a 
O y>j/^csV4 wmw* »~~m 
t \ 
77 VUM%lItf.ro_. ^ 


Die Bullion Harbor Fruit Market. 
nXffm^Wn 70 \^*v / 
{ 
TWI'VyW\ 
>MIM> 


have been liglit recently,. buyer 
•i«lHlWf¥ll 
JC 
Vh^WyVlJlft \ 
' .^^ RM! 


have held down bidding to sia. 
in line with prices out West, h 
said Prices paid at the marke 
Tuesday were: 


TOMATOES Pinks, 
8-qt 


Mich. 1. mostly $150, few $1 6 


• to $1 70, occasionally $2, 8 2-qt 


Mich, 1 medium J4 50, 12-qt 
unclassified $2 to $2 50, mostl 
$2 25, 12-pt cherries $2 75 to $3 
14-lb. Mich 2 $1 25 to $1 50 
Receipts 2,791 packages 


GRAPES 
8 2-qt 
Mich 


Fancy, Concord $4 to $4 50 
mostly W, few J5, 12-qt. uncla& 
sified, Concord $1 25 to $1 50 
Fredoma few $1 50, some un 
sold Receipts 4,880 baskets 


APPLES:, Unclassified, bu 


Cortland, Maiden Blush an 
Wealthy J2 50, Golden Deliciou 
$3 50 to $4, Jonathan $3, Mcln 
tosh $2 50, few , $2 75, Re 
Delicious $4, some fair ap 
pearance $3, Wolf River »3 50 
%-bu , Wolf River, ,Jonee an 
Opalescent 
$2 50, 
GolHe 


Delicious ?2 75 to $3, Jonatha 
12 25 to ^2 50, Mclntosh $2 t 
$2 56, mostly $2 to *2 25, Rei 
Delicious 32 50 to *3, .mostl 
$2 50 to »2 75, Crab $2 75 to $3 
Receipts 3,525 bu 


PEACHES 
M>'bu 
unclas 


Mticd, Redskin $4 to $4 25 
mostly $4, few $4 50 to $4 60 
small ?3 to $3 25, Kalhaven fei 
$3 50, Sunday Elberta »3 25 t 
$3 75, mostly $3 75, few larg 
$4 50, Rio Oso Gem few larg 
$5 25 Receipts 2.0S4 packages 


PEARS %-bu , US 1, 2'X 


inch-up, Bosc and Bartlctt J4 
i/i-bu unclassified, Bosc $2 1 
$2.50, Bartlett $2 to $2.25 
Receipts: 635 bu. 


PEPPERS. Bu , green, larg 
1 $4.75 to $5, medium $3 to $3 51 


mixed red, medium to larg 
$3.50 to $4, small -to -modlun 
mostly medium, $3 lo $3.50; 12 
ql. yellow hols $2 to $2.5(1 
mostly $2 to $2.25. Receipts: 27 
bu.; 23 12-qt. 


PLUMS: ''/i-bu., Stanley an 


Blufre mostly $2.50, few highei 
Damson $3 50 to $4, mostly $4 
Receipts »30 


SQUASH- 8-ql Zucchini an 


•Yellow $1.50 to $2, mostly $1.51 
bu. and 1/19-bu., all varieties ( 
to $3.50 Receipts' 276 8-qt , 38 
bu. 


ONIONS: Yellow, 50-lb. $4.9 


' 
lo*5, 10-11). $1.10. 


POTATOES: Round -white, U 


1-A, 10-lb. 65 cents, 20-lb. $l.2( 
50-11). $3. Receipts: 100 sacks. 


GOURDS: Bu., small $6, lart 


$3.50; i/4-bu. small ,$3 lo $3.51 
Receipts: 184! 


INDIAN CORN: Doz. mostl 


$1.50, few 80 cents. 


STRAWBERRY. CORN. Dpi 


fcw$l. 


GLADIOLUS 
Can 
K 


Receipts: 8 


QUINCE: 
i/i-bu. 
$3.51 


Receipts: 8. 


BEANS: Bu. $6, 1/19-bu. $6.5 


12-qt: 
Limas 
few 
$4.7' 


Receipts: 67 bu.; 117 12-qt. 


CANTALOUP: Bu. US 1 Bu 


pec Hybrid few $5. Receipt. 
270. 


CUCUMBERS: Bu., US l"fc 


$5 50, large $2.25, unclasslfit 
S3.25 lo $4, mostly $4. Receipt 
265. 


EGGPLANT: Bu. 
few S 


Receipts: 73. 


Volume at the market yesle 


day was 17,583 packages. Ther 
were 36 day buyers on band. 


Wule'rrlict 
Hospital 


f 
., 
.. 
. . 
70 \ r 
va^x^iir \ i 
. 
— 
; 
F)f'** *•»* l*« IWKftffllHM 
\J 
V5£>V !' 
N» 
t >' 


t 
li|H<tMl Until Thumtay M*rnln| 
^S' 
'-^~ - 
' ' • 


I»UM4 P««l»l..tl.» N.f llUlMI^- C*K»H l*«l fi»H,M 
^£^^>>»*Jur^l_ 


' 
TODAY'S WEATHER MAP: Showers are forecast Wednesday for much of the 
East. Warm weather is forecast for the East and cooler weather in the West. (AP 


Y 
Wirephoto Map) 


ROSS FIELD 
flmidv 
v^iij utj. y 


New Tower Chief 
^eather 


i An FAA Veteran 
Continues 


.1 , 
James L. Campbell, formerly 
Southern Lower Michigan: 


i 
Jft 
"> 
assistant chief at the Michiana 
Mostly cloudy today, high near 


. - 
' 
JK 
< 
.- ' 
Regional airport control tower, 
70. Partly cloudy tonighi, low 


. lt> 
.v' f 
South Bend, Ind., and a 15-year 
upper 50s. Cloudy Thursday 


1 ' 
3ff 
. ' 
Federal Aviation Administra- 
with a chance of rain, Ugh tow 


n 
'"^' 
.S»t--;':" < 
lion veteran, has been named 
70s. Winds light and variable 


n 
*f It ' ^•Fthfc 
Ross field control tower chief . 
today and tonight, southeast 


o 
% " ^^'IBr 
Campbell, 
43, succeeds 
about '10 miles per hour Thun- 
i jA *' « 
Ijjt 
•*??* ' 
Richard 
Mack, 
who was 
day. Chances of precipitation 20 


y • ' % ~ . d^^ft|k 
<" 
promoted and transferred to the per cent tonight, 40 per, cent 
A 
* 'JHilS'- 
regional FAA office at Des 
Thursday. 
^L ' %,« '.iHr 
Plaines, 111. 
THE WEATHEK PICTUtE 


- ^^^ Bk;; ;.3t' 
Mack has been- air control 
The highest temperature in 
^^^^ ^Hwj|Bi 
tower chief since the facilily 
Michigan Tuesday was 70 at 


, ^^B[ ^^•k 
opened at Ross field, the Twin 
Port Huron. The lowest was 45 


v ^^^^k, ^^^B ' 
Cities airport, in October, 1973. 
at Lansing. 


o ^^^Hk ^^^H 
Campbell was at South Bend 
The highest temperature one 


e ^^^^H^^^^H 
the past five years as an air 
year ago in Detroit was 70. The 


i> ^^^^^^^^^^H 
traffic controller. Before that lie 
low was 50. 
, 
^^^^^^^^^•'"*sx 
was at O'Hare International 
The highest temperature for 


- ^^^^^^^^^^liVi - 
airport, Chicago; for seven 
this date hi Detroit since 1872 


, ••••••M^, years, DuPage County airport; was 93 in 19S5. The lowest was 
0 
IAMPSI rAMPnru 
St. Charles, 111,, for a year and 
38lnI9S9. 
J^SL.CAMPIBELL 
al Weir r^k airport, In- 
The sun sets today at' 7:40 


Control Tower Uu« 
dianapolis, Ind. for two years. 
p.m., rises Thursday at 7:'l8 


e 
- 
- 
a.m. and sets Thursday, it 7:38 


, 
-w-k 
-m . 
i 
..-t * 
1 
P'm- 
. 
' 


c l-'n 1 1C £>ri£»C: 1 llCf*ri fH*tt£* 
The moon rises today at 10I 
A UlJSallCS 1-FlSC/IiarKC 
p.m., sets Thursday at5:39a.m. 


^^ ' 
and rises Thursday at 2:32 p.m. 


, 
p-w-^ 
I T * 
• 
m 
• 
Highs, lows, sky' conditions 
' lopped Limit Iwice ^*«**™™ «*»*<** 


d 
* 
* 
'. - 
' 
,', 
• 
• ./ 
.•- 
•' : , . ; - - 
'H«SII,UW 


JACKSON, Mich (AP) - Radioactivity in a discharge channel 
*$**%' ^ 
S 4J 


at Palisades nuclear plant exceeded allowable limits during two if V y, . 
™ 57 


days this summer, Consumers Power Co. has told a federal 
t^™?!; °Wsr 
81 -*' 


1 
regulatory agency. The company said the radioactivity was not 
r. Ro' S 
w 
! 
hazardous to the environment or surrounding area. The utility told 
u'^E! 
c 
68 56 


3 
the Nuclear Regulatory Commission the increase was detected ' ll!!!'8!?"1',0^ 
M * 


« 
after an error in .calculating released 'radioactive materials' was 
HouKnlon LK,.fog 
81 4v 


discovered. Tho recalculation showed radloaclivc concentrations 
Jackson, cldy 
8756 


" 
in the discharge exceeded allowable limits for a short period of rfnsr*' eld/ 
; , 
W 4S 


time on Iwth Aug. 28 and 29, the company said. • ' - • ' ' 
Marquette, fog 
S3 47 
S 
-; 
Muskcgon, cldy 
8550 


Pellslon, cldy 
- 
, 83 4» 


c Marathon 
Memorial 
SSWr; 
™ 
. 
S.S. Marie, fog 
8448 


v Wholesale 
Hospital 
.-1Vv«*c^ «•*,.,,•,»« 
y 
TT 1IU1CSM1C 
1 
EXTENDED OUTLOOK 


Motmy cloudy with chance of 
' Pf»ir»*> rilrke 
c, , A™lnT™ 
-, , 
rain Friday through Sunday. 
J. 1 ICC LJ1U» 
St. Joseph - 
August L. 
LOWS in the upper 40s to mid 


r 
Bishop Jr. 2505 Wi.la drive: 
SflTHighs in t^ upper BOs^to 


FINDLAY, Ohio (AP) - The '$&%££ 7?' X*%£ 
-"id 70s Friday and Saturday 


' 
price of gasoline sold to retail *££ SrS^^hur^ g "»«*«».•» "-I* Sun- 


, 
and wholesale^ customers of 
Rudlo, 4384 Uncoln avenue; 
™ y - - . 


Marathon Oil Co. dropped hv .. 
Fnnk 
VII ilo 
mi 
i 


one cent Tuesday, a spokesman 
Harrison 


"• 
sa™' , 
,„,.,., „ , 
^n'on "arbor - 
Mrs. 
t/llf/V 
,. 
1 ho decrease wl likely affect 
George E. Anderson, 1616 Mil- 
„ 
. v , 
- 


customers who fi 1 up a Ihe 
mn slrect; Mrs. Charles Chap- 
Hospital 
*' 
[nn's 35(K) retail oullols n, 
,, ,0;to Co|f 
G | d a ^ 
«//«t«f 


" 
Illinois and Indiana. 
' 
£U ^^L £ S? of WaUcr 
ADMISSIONS 


'' 
Willliam 
P. 
Ryder, 
a 
SiharafeldleM s" P pMton? 
'BUCHANAN 
Patients ad- 
, 
Marathon spokesman, said the 
Mrs Kjch.;r(1 -M Nich0is ogi 
milled lo Unily hospital during 


company is selling gasoline for walnut 
' t h e past 24 hours include: 


r. 
39.6 cents a gallon under Ihe 
Buchanan - Daryl W Lulir- 
Buchanan 
- 
Margaret 


e 
now rate. Consumers pay laxes 
sen routc , ^ 10^, ' 
Rogers, 1207 Red Bud Trail; 


and profits lo Hie dealer in ad- 
Coloma ' Lillian A Parisi ' Ruby wisnei% 411 Arctic; John 


dition to the base price at the nulc 2 ^ M 5946 McKln, ' 
Weldy, route 1, Box 629. 


pump. 
avenue 
Bcnton Harlwr — Karen 


Tlie price decrease excluded 
Dowagiac _ Mrs rton j D 
Campbell, 607 West Winans. 


(liesel and home beating oil. 
s, 
routo 7 j^^; 
d ' ' 
New Carlisle, Ind. - Deborah 


Ryder declined comment on 
Marcellus - 
Timothv ' R 
Folger, route 1, Box 272. 


the reason for the decrease. 
,,arriSt r()U(e j Box 237 
' 
Niles - 
Billie Shank, 410 


Slevcnsvillc '- Mrs, William S*?8ani A1fi10"?' Penninsfon. 


I'. Galbrealh. 5826 Longhorn 
JUJ oulu" ""'• ""'"' ""'"»"• 


ADMISSIONS 
Mert'Y 
.trail; Mrs. Ronald L. Kriel, 5048 
712 Forr>'- 


WATERVLIET - 
Patients 
.""".' 
Cleveland avenue. 
Stevensville - Minnie Han- 


admitted to Walcrvlicl Com- 
,. 
. 
. 
Watervliet — Wylmoth F 
sen- Mob"c Village, Lot 48; 


munity hospital during the past 
Hospital 
Caldwell, 264 W. St. Joseph '• ^lly Finke, Grande Vista Mo- 


24 hours include: 
- 
, , 
,,._ 
. ,],,n, ,\' Tallahan ' ?!6 St' 
lcl' 


Watervliet — Verner Mead, 
, Joseph 


218 Pleasant. 
. 
ADMISSIONS 
' 
BIRTHS 
/7,» :,./,., r»' 'J 
I 


Coloma 
Mrs 
Charle" 
Patients admitted to Mcrev 
«„ 
,"_" 
. 
. . 
l/P/OII/l UlVlaeiM 


Wilkens, route 4, Box 98; Mrs. 
Richard Lalham. P.O.Box 619 
William Krobel, 2644 Park roat 
Duane Donohuc, P.O.Box 813 
Sanford Walke, 3247 Bcsseme 
road. 


Hartford — .Earl Burg, rout 


I, Box 82. 


LOCAL GRAIIS 


BUCHANAN CO-OP 
B(JCItVN,\N, SiHCH. 


No. I Soybeans, S5..34 up I2c 
No. 2 a-irlcy, $1.54 steady 
iNo. 2 Ear Corn, $2. W steady 
' No. 2 'Slielled Corn,- $2.8 


No. 2 New Corn, $2.77 up 8c 
No. 2 Wlical, $3.81 up 4c 


. 
hospital dur.ng the past 24 weighing 8 pounds, 1 ounce, was „,,.„„ 
, 
n/t 


. 
hours include: 
torn 
to Mr and Mrs. Gerald A 
Will Reach 24c 


; 
Bcntun Harbor - William 
Frascr 625jakwav Tuesday at 


; 
Cole Jr., 995 Buss; Mrs. Robert 
J- l^p m 
KALAMAZOO, Mich. (AP) - 


. 
Hanner, 1126% Territorial; Mrs. 
'A girl' weichinc 7 nounds •) 
The Uw'ohn Cn' says 1"artcrly 
John Brennan, 1310 Jennings; 
olmcts '", 'C'r' ,' '«, 
'A 
dividends for the most recent 


, 
Rickey McMillion, 988 Colum- 
Mrs Michael J Vcraasco 1829 
PCriod *"' rcach 24 CentS ^ 


bus; Michael Catching, 325 E Ofiden Tuesdiv ^ l^«'a m 
share of common stock. 


Iligl ; Nikita Wofford, 166 Kline; 
Coioma 
Abov 1^^'" 
uW°hn manufactures phar- 


Urvillo Coffey, 770 Colfax; Mrs. 
mundT I Uunc« wTs tern ,o ™«»''^ 
chemicals 
and 


. . 0. C. l^ggains Jr., 8855 East gr! and Mrs! "SobcS P^, 
a8ricullural ***^ ?««««*• 


Berricn Springs - Jeremy at^nm 
POMPT FTF 


. "&SZZ su» ,:™Kf.: SS 
. S«i:=r -"-' rsstasr 
SE™ 
CE ' 


\ir , ... 
!? 
„ 
W at 9 a.m. 
.^^••••••••^^^B 
Watervltct — Duane liar- 
inilivnrXVlAJ^IIIPS 


(testy. Pleasant View Mobile 
CK-E-IT AUWC 
•••llkff41lUAffUkH 


No. 2 New Wheat, $3. /V up Vc 
'»""« ' -'ik. 
WASIUNGTON (AP) - A new "^J^T-.-^ NL^^..' 


New Oats, $1.29 steady 
f BIRTH 
drive for House approval of 
<&^°^Zt?M^ 
•Ryc..».OD steady 
Watervliet - A girl wigtnng 
Tml,^, IIS .^^ .,,„, 1(v <^V=S) SINCE 
1867 


These arc the markets as o 


this morning — prior to Ih 
opening of the Chicago Board o 
Trade. 


f . pmiras Bounces was Dorn to 
Turkey is being mounted by 
'Jbp> 1 M*. UM f. mm. MM. 


e 
Mr. and Mrs. Jcffcry Ludl.m, mm,^,, ^ ,„„ ,„ „„* ^ 
m •*«*»*+ _ 


f 
4,1 West Pmsons, »i U:<W p.m. 
Aniertom bwklash in Turkish 
M3.0SM 


So'11"1*- 
eteelinngnextmnnth. 
W3-WW 
:. . 


»> 
1 


>AOETB1BTY-TWO 
THEIEBALD-PALLAimjII, 
••rtor-ft. 
. BEPTEMBEK 17. IfTI 


Illinois 
•b 
, ,_ 
Residents Jailed 
|By Berrien Court 
f 
. 
* 
' 
• ' 


6 Four Illinois residents arrested in separate incidents and 
••charged with the felony carrying concealed pistols were sentenced 
-to jail time and fines and costs yesterday on'reduced charges of 
Z. possession of unregistered pistols. 
* 
AJso in Berrien Fifth District 


'•; court Tuesday 21 other people 
J- were 
sentenced 
and 
two 


•'- demanded 
preliminary 


p; examinations. 
> Sentenced 
for 
the 


'/' 
|Ex-Bertrand 
fCouple Sue 


'l 
A former Bertrand township 


-' couple has filed suit in Bemen 
'• Circuit court against Shell Oil 
nCo., claiming spillage from pe- 
-.troleum storage tanks near 


' ; their house contaminated their 


-,well. 
'.' 
The plaintiffs, Martin and 


J'Thelma Sly, formerly of 247 
M Hartman road, and now living 
'in Silver Creek township, seek 
j -IBS.OOO from the oil company. 


- Tire Slys claim Shell owns pe- 
troleum storage.tanks at 325 
Fulkerson 
road, 
Bertrand 


township, near their old home, 
and 
charge the 
company 


allowed spillage and overflow of 
petroleum to permeate the 


• ground and contaminate their 


well. 


The suit claims the couple 


was forced to move in March, 
-1974; because the drinking 
water was unsafe and caused 
illness, and the petroleum left 
an odor in clothes washed at the 
house. The suit cites a water 


•• analysis test by the Michigan 


> Department of Public Health on 


Feb. 22, 1973, which indicated 


' .the presence of petroleum in the 
water, and the Slys say their 
former house in now uninhabi- 
table. 
Portage 
Resident 
Convicted 


.' A Portage, Mich., man was 
"convicted yesterday in Berrien 
Circuit court of carrying a con- 
cealed weapon during a one- 
:half. day trial in which the 
'defense offered no testimony at 
all. 


Convicted by Acting Circuit 


Judge Ronald H. Lange was 
-Thomas Christofalos, 36. He was 
accused of carrying a .22 caliber 
derringer in a car on Highland 
avenue In Bentun township on 
April 14. 
A Christofalos was .continued 
free on $2,900 bond to await 
sentencing of up to five years in 
prison. 


The case was scheduled for 


Judge Julian E! Hughes' court, 
but Christofalos waived his 
right to a jury trial, so Hughes 
disqualified himself because he 
previously 
heard 
testimony 


about the case on a motion filed 
earlier. Lange was then called 
in to hear the case. 
'.Opposing counsel were Assl. 
Prosecutor Quentin Fulchcr and 
Kalamazoo Ally. Nelson Pelle- 
ticr. 
Jackie Joins 
Viking Press 


,NEW 
YORK 
(AP) — 


Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, 
widow of President John F. 
Kennedy and Greek shipping 
magnate Aristotle Onassis, has 
joined the Viking Press as a 
consulting editor. 
'.' Viking President Thomas II. 
'Guinzburg, who described Mrs. 
Onassis as "an old friend of 
mine," said she'll have an office 
in the firm's Madison Avenue 
headquarters. 


misdemeanor violation, posses- 
sion of an unregistered pistol, 
were: 


Larry C. Chambers, 28, of 


Chicago, two days in jail; Susie 
A. Williams, 26, of Chicago, 13 
days in jail; David L. Hoagland, 
22, and Brian F. Barkdoll, 21, 
both of Elgin, ID,, three and five 
days in jail, respectively. Each 
was also sentenced to fine and 
costs of $190. 


Hoagland and Barkdoll were 


arrested in a car Sept. 5 in 
Benton \ township; Chambers 
was arrested Aug. 23 in Benton 
township and Susie Williams 
was arrested Sept. 3 in Coloma 
township. 
All 
but 
Susie 


Williams, who pleaded nolo 
contendere, pleaded guilty to 
the lesser Included charge. 


Demanding 
examinations 


were: 


James R. Mathieu, 18, of 529 


Pipestone, Benton Harbor on a 
charge 
of 
uttering 
and 


publishing a false $140 check 
July'11 in St. Joseph. He was 
freed on $2,000 personal recog- 
nizance bail. 


Jesse Lee Vaughn, 22, of 432 


' Foster, Benton Harbor, accused 
of receiving and concealing 
stolen property valued over 
$100, two electric typewriters,, 
Sept. 13 in Benton Harbor. Bond 
of $2,000 was posted. 


Sentenced were:' 
Pleasant J. Hurst, 53, of 232 


Bellview,) Benton Harbor one 
year in jail for aggravated as- 
sault against Don Sheppard 
Aug. 28 in Benton Harbor. 


Adjis "Rocky" Cummings," 


19, of Benton Harbor, $60 for 
simple assault against Jon 
Masini June 6 in Benton 
township. 
• 


S. Jenkins, 19, of 1157 Bishop, 


Benton Harbor, $121 or 30 days 
in jail for receiving and con- 
cealing stolen property valued 
under $100, a television, Sept. 13 
in Benton Harbor. 


William L. Srmek, Jr., 37, of 


808 .North Red Bud trail, 
Buchanan, $100 for reckless 
driving Sept. ItnBaroda. 


Sentenced for these violations 


were: 


Use of marijuana - Keith W. 


Comstock, 22, and Brian H. 
Smith, 22, both of Glens Falls, 
N.Y., and Gary R. Shopp, 20, of 
Stow, Ohio, $100 and three 
months probation each. 


Driving, while license sus- 


pended -Michael L. Minics, 28, 
of Artie street, Buchanan, three 
days in jail and $61; Sylvester 
Edwards, Jr., 27, of Bridgman, 
three days in jail and $80 or 15 
days In jail total and, for elud- 
ing police, $150 or 15 days in 
jail. 


Driving while intoxicated - 


Steven J. DuDck, 28, of Ladd, 
III., $150; John W. Blackport, 54, 
of Livonia, $200. 


Petty larceny — Vcrnon B. 


Adams, 32, of Scottdale, 15 days 
in jail; Essie M. Washington, 24, 
of 204 Harrison, Benton Harbor; 
$121; Hollie Mae Evans, 48, of 
1850 Council drive, Benton 
township, $120. 
• 


Impaired driving — Michael 


D. Opulskas, 18, of Rangelinc 
road, Berrien Springs, $150 and 
six months probation; Michael 
L. Fullrlede, 21, of 295 North 
Paw Paw avenue, Coloma, $76; 
John A. Gray, 41, of 650 Crystal, 
Bonlon township,.$150 and six 
months probation; Frank E. 
Fisher, 28, of 4191 Park, Eau 
Claire, $300 and one year 
probation for second offense. 


Disorderly person — James 


H. McClinlon, 21, of 992 Buss, 
Benton Harbor, 30 days in jail 
for resisting arrest; John Smith, 
Jr., 30, of 353 Britain, Benton 
Harbor, 14 days in jail tor loi- 
tering; Richard Whitfield, 28, of 
209 Territorial, Benton Harbor, 
14 days in jail for creating a 
disturbance. 


DUNE DRAGSTERS: Four-wheel-drive vehicles equipped with' 
special tires throw up roostertails of sand as they drag race over 
dunes near Covert exit off 1-196 Similar vehicles and sport buggies 
with two-wheel'drive will be in action at same site Saturday and 


Suritiay in Twin City 4x4 invitational drag and obstacle races. 
Registration will be from 8 a.m until noon each day with the first 
event at 1 p.m. Cash prizes will be awarded to top drivers and 
refreshments will be available for spectators. (Staff photo) 


Porter. Believes Michigan 
Arrests Follow 


Students Sharp Readers 
Break-In Reports 


'LANSING, Mich (AP)-The 
head of Michigan's nublic 
schools says he can't prove it 
but claims there is "no ques- 
tion" Michigan-children are 
belter than average1 readers 


A special expanded testing 


program 
would prove 
it, 


however, and Dr John Porter 
would like to set such an exam 
for 1978 to make the determina- 
tion 


"Until then we Just have to 


assume we're doing better than 
the rest of the nation," the 
superintendent of public ins- 
truction said in an interview. 
"You just gotta have faith " 


Porter defended the state's 


reading and testing programs 
alter a national testing company 
said last «eeV 'he nationwide 
high,school class jf 1975 scored 
10 points lower in verbal skills 
on its college entrance tesls 
than 1074 graduates 


Van Buren Judge 
Bars Spectators 


PAW PAW- Spectators were 


barred yesterday by Judge 
David Anderson, Jr. of the Van 
Buren circuit court from at- 
tending the; opening day of the 
trial of a Paw Paw leacher 
charged with a morals offense 
involving a 12-year-old bpy._ 


Anderson look the action, ac- 
Boy Hurt 
In St. Joe 
Collision 


St. Joseph police said one 


person was injured in a car- 
truck collision Tuesday at the 
intersection of Park and Court 
streets about 7:50 p.m. 


Police said a passenger in the 


pickup truck, Chris Rose, 14, of 
2515 Willa drive, St. Joseph, 
sought his own treatment for 
minor injuries. The pickup was 
driven by Darwin Rose, '!0, also 
of 2515 Willa:-The driver of the 
car, David Robert Day, 24, of 
809 Lake boulevard, St. Joseph, 
was unhurt arid ticketed for 
failure to yield the right of way, 
police indicated. 


cording to Van Buren Prosecu 
tor Frank Willis following a 
motion by defense Atty. Richard 
Howard of Kalamazoo. 'Ander- 
son said he made the ruling 
because: of the nature of the 
case, according to Willis: 


The teacher; Thomas L. 


Hawley, 29, Portage, who is also 
president of the Paw Paw 
Education 
association, 
is 


charged 
with 
first degree 


criminal sexual,conduct. 


During <m earlier preliminary 


examination, Willis alleged thai 
Hawley took the boy, a student 
at Black River school, into a 
conference room during the 
first week of 'April and had se- 
xual relations with him. 


Paw Paw school board has 


also filed charges under the 
slate leachcr tenure acl againsl 
Hawley^ the exact nature of 
which have not been revealed. 
1 Most of yesterday was taken 
up in selecting a jury of seven 
men and six women, Willis said. 
Both attorneys also made their 
opening arguments. 


Willis said he has been asked 


by Judge Anderson lo refrain 
from discussing the specifics of 
the case during the trial, but 
predicted .it would last at least 
another two days. 


CADILLAC P01 1I71- The formal styling of the 
Cadillac Fleclwood Sixty Special Brougham accents 
an interior which features many special Fleetwood 
Brougham luxury appointments. As with all 1978 
Cadillac models, the Fleetwood Brougham is availa- 
ble in IS standard and 6 optional firemist paint colors 
11 of which are new with this model year. In addition, 


11 padded elk grain vinyl roof selections are offered, 
complemented by 8 available color accent stripes. 
The Fleetwood Brougham also offers two "special 
edition" luxury options, the Fleetwood Talisman and 
the Fleetwood Brougham d'Elegance, both featuring 
unique interior and exterior trim 


Test given last spring showed 


nationwide scores dropped for 
the 12th consecutive year, the 
College Entrance Examination 
Board said 


"I'm confident that Michigan 


will be atypical because of our 
accountability 
system 
for 


myself and our school boards," 
Porter said, "I haVe confidence 
In our staffs and school ad 
irinislralors." 


Porter said he won't be able to 


prove his belief for three years 
until the complete "assess- 
ment" or testing program he 
envisions Is used statewide 


Assessments are now made of 


all Michigan fourth and seventh 
grade studrfits, Porter said, but 
he wants to expand current pilot 
programs to the first and 10th 
grades arid also add a 12th 
grade lest 


Some "encouraging," though 


slight, evidence of state educa- 
tional quality was offered by a 
Department 
of 
Education 


college scholarship expert who 
said in the 1873774 school year, 
some 55,000 Michigan high 
school students averaged 19.6 on 
an American College Testing 
test,'compared-with a national 
average of 18.7. 


Porter's proposed 
testing 


system will be submitted to the 
state Board of Education for 
adoption. Necessary funding 
needs the approval of the 
legislature. 


There seems to be a return to 


educational fundamentals now, 
Porter said. He said the best 
excuse for the drift away from 
them during the .past two 
decades was growing ^enroll- 
ments 
which 
forced 
more 


emphasis on quantity rattier 
ton quality and hurt teacher 
training. 
. ' ' • • • ' " • 


Covert Man 
Charged As 
Drug Seller 


COVERT - Kenneth Johnson, 


24, M-140, Covert, was to be 
arraigned today in Seventh dis- 
trict court at South Haven, on a 
charge of selling heroin follow- 
ing his arrest yesterday by state 
police from Soiith Haven. 


Johnson was arrested at his 


home on a warrant alleging a 
prior sale; of heroin to a police 
informant. Officers said they 
confiscated an ounce of sus- 
pected heroin believed to be 
worth $1,500 from Johnson's 
home. Also confiscated was $800 
in cash. • : 
; 
••••• 


Sgt. John Karscn.'of the state 


police, said he expected a 
federal warrant lo be issued 
against "Johnson1 today on a 
charge of a convicted felon pos- 
sessing firearms. K*rs«n MM 
three handguns were also cm- 
fhjcatert when ih* arrest was 
mode. 


BLOOMINGDALE - Stile 


police at Paw Paw reported they 
arrested four people following 
reports of two separate break- 
ins in the area yesterday after- 
noon and early this morning 


Daniel Smith, 17, Robert 


Beer, 23, and Glen Prichard, 17, 
all of Bloomlngdale, were 
lodged in the county jail, police 
said, on charges of breaking and 
entering in connection'with the 
theft of a sleeping bag and 
several "piggy banks," from the 
mobile home of Howard Caswoll 
on SKth avenue yeslerday af- 
ternoon. 


Caswell told troopers 
he 


arrived home froih work about 
3:30 p.m. and saw a man run- 
ning from the mobile home He 


alerted police who said they 
arrested the three as they were 
walking along CR-885 about a 
liille away. 


Clifford C Vickery Jr , 18, 


box 176 Bloommgdale, was 
arrested 
on a charge of 


breaking and entering Dicker- 
son's Green House, CR-388, 
early this morning, police said 


Owner James Dickerson told 


troopers he had gotten out of 
bed about 2 30 a m when he 
noticed a light on in the green 
house and saw a man moving 
between two parked vans out- 
side Police said Dickerson then 
went downstairs and surprised 
the man, holding him until 
troopers arrived.' 


Mice said they were not sure 


if anything was stolen. 


Decatiirite Heads 
For Circuit Court 


PAW PAW — James 0 


Jewell, 53, 405 West St Mary, 
.Docatur, was bound over to Van 
Buren circuit court yesterday 
after 
waiving 
preliminary 


examination in Seventh district 
court, on unrelated charges of 
breaking'and entering and as- 
sault with a deadly'weapon. 


The assault charge grew out 


of a complaint by two Decalur 
firemen, Mike Ray-and Lorcn 
Cole, that a man threatened 
Item with a -.Imtgun labt May at 
Ihcv weie attempting to fill a 
tanker truck from a hydrant. 


Jewell is also charged with 


breaking and entering a church 
rectory last May 31 in Decalur. 


In other cases, Lester Vin- 


cent,,. 20,' Edgar Goon farm, 
Hartford township, demanded 
preliminary examination on a 
charge of larceny from a per- 
son. 
• • . . . ' 
. 


Vincent was arrested after a 


worker at the camp, Homer 
Jordan, 41, told police two men 
attacked him Sunday and took 
his wallet containing $107. 
Another laborer at'the camp, 
Grady. Mills, 41, was arrested 
Horse Show 
Will Start 
At 9 -AJM0: 


Starting tirne for the Bcrrien 


County Shrine club horse show, 
scheduled for Saturday near 
Walcrvltet, is 9 a.m., according, 
lo Jeffery Kcefer, co-chairman. 


A caption under a picture 


published yesterday regarding 
the show gave an earlier lime, 
based'on information supplied 
by another club spokesman. 


The show is to be held at 


Tacy's horse farm on M-14B, 
small (rf Watervliet. Proceeds 
wHI be Hseri to benefit nan- 
dtaiflnwl chiMnr-n. 
, 


earlier and charged with' lar-; 
cony from a person. 


Vincent was ordered held on 


.$500 bond pending a Sept. 23 
hearing. 


Gerald W Spangler, 24, Hart- 


ford, was bound over Ib.clrcull 
court after waiving preliminary 
examination on;a charge of ar- 
son wilh intent to defraud. The 
charge alleges thai he burned 
his own car July 11 to collect the 
insurance money. 


James 
P 
Hewlett, 
28, 


Kalamazoo, Was bound over to 
circuit 
court 
following 


preliminary examination on a 
charge of auto theft. He was' 
arrested in connection with the 
theft of a car from Paw Paw 
Sept. 12. 
- 


Readers 
Air Views 


(Continued from page 2) 


generations. True enough, as 
far as it goes, but why assume 
that any gcrnation's can survive 
totalitarian global rule by mad- 
men? The probability is 6lhcr- 


;w|sc.r Haters" jf life can only 
turn upon themselves 
after 


they've deslrpyed all others! 
• An infinitely mournful end to 
the human 'story would bevfor 
the vast-majority to acquiesce 
to a small groupi.nf madmen, in 
;thc LJntercsts. of; 'continued 
'human existence, only to have 
tha small group and everything 
because it can't stand living 
with Itself. To allow a Soviet 
style global .dictatorship to 
come, into being, under wha- 
tever guise, amounts to asking 
for the suicide of humanity. 


Sincerrty,i 


LEGAL NOTICE 


CITYOFBBIDGMAN, 


MICHIGAN 


BRIDGMAN SANITARY 


SEWER EXTENSION 


ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS 


The 
City 
of 
Bridgman, 


Michigan will receive sealed 
proposals for work shown below 
until S-00 P M, E.D S.T., on the 
«th day of October, 1975, at'the 
office of the City Clerk, 4234 
Vine 
Street, 
Bridgman, 


Michigan, and all bids will 
publicly opened and read aloud 
at730PM 
. 


The work on which proposals 


are to be submitted includes 


The furnishing and installa- 


tion of approximately 983 lineal 
feet of 12" sanitary sewer pipe, 
appurtenances, and related res- 
toration work 


The Contract 
Documents, 


including plans and spcUica-*~ 
turns are on file,at the office of 
Barger Engineering, at 612 
Mam 
Street, 
St 
Joseph, 


Michigan and at the office of the 
City Clerk, 42S4 Vine Street, 
Bndgman, Michigan 


Copies of documents includ- 


ing plans and specifications, 
required for review or bidding 
purposes may be obtained only 
from the Engineer by depositing 
$1000 with the Engineer for 
each set of documents so ob-! 
tuned 
', 


Full refund will be given to all 


who use the documents in a 
bona bde proposal submitted to 
the City of Bridgman and who 
return the plans within ten (10) 
days. All nou bidders will-be 
refunded one-half the required 
'deposit upon returning the 
complete documents in good 
condition to the Engineer within 
ten (10) days after the bidding 
date 


A certified check or bank 


draft payable to the City of 
Bridgman, or a satisfactory bid 
bond executed by the bidder and 
a surety company in an amount 
equal, to five percent (5%) of the 
bid shall be submitted with each 
proposal 
,, 


No bid shall be withdrawn 


after opening 
of proposals 


without Ihe consent of Ihe City 
of Bridgman for a period of 
thirty (30) days after 
the 


scheduled time of closing bids 


The Owner reserves the right 


to waive any irregularities, 
reject any or all bids or accept 
any bid when in their opinion, 
such act will serve their best 
interest. 


flie successful bidder will be 


required to furnish a satisfac- 
tory performance bond and 
labor and material payment 
bond each in the amount of one 
hundred percent (100%) of the 
Contract Price 


The successful bidder will al- 


so be required to show proof of 
insurance as outlined in the 
Contract Document!). 
Dated at Bridgman, Michigan 
this 27th day of August, 1971 


City of Bridgman, Michigan 


By: Phyllis Weber 


City Clerk 


Sept 13,17,1975 
H P Adv 


HfS COMING MCK 


...TO WORK. 


ME THE VETEftAN! 
NOTICE! 


The follpvinnq Ttontient 


Clooificotioni muil b« . 


CASH IN ADVANCE: 


Loit & Found 
Cord O* Thank I 
In Mwrr 
Wanff-4 To 
Situation* Wanted 
Rummage Sole 
Cart & Truck * 
older than 1970 
Motorcycle! & 6i*y<l«t 


AH &aby Sitting 
Pet, 


pr*>npilt jv it , jft h* pr#4 *•>*>'d 


-REVISED 


I 


DEADLINES: 


Ml -H> I, run Ih, I.II 
IHK dl' mqvf Kr pL,ro 
hs i I II \M 
M»|\!> ^ 


ANNOUNCEMENTS 


FOUND MALE COCK-A-POO — S«HI 
aroy 1 block. Slut toll. Will trained. 
Puwv cut. N«r Nlclurxm «W Collon. 
cui D. Moaijon, Ml 105 „ 
• 


, 
Bi- 
Sowil.n; 


Hewonl, PH. 
j\t 


WtrWIJH TO EXPRESS eur >iMtr< 


M tocti ont who oulitM In «iy 


• m 
LOVIHO W«WORY OF OWK 
JOM* PHivlfc wfctnnM «mv MJM. 17, 
TM^ ytljl^y * lint nnwffjbvnm* 


WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17,197$ 
THE HERALD-PALLADIUM, Beatn Barter - St. J«wph, Mlchlgu 


ANNOUNCEMENTS 


AUTO INSURANCE - No-Foull lor 
everyone rraordless ol driving record. 
Flnonclol responsibility. Low down 
payment:'• Edw: budget terms ALL 
DRIVER'S IHMjgiANCE. H TO-ilSl. 


REAL ESTATE 


FORSAIE 


, HiwMhrMi 7 


SpwMMMkH 6 


, EAR PIERCING —Sot , Sept JO, 10-5. 
''HELLO SUNSHINE DRESS SHOP, 3M 


Main, wate-vllet, »12 povs tor the pierc- 
ing & stolnless steel surgical studs. 
.PAINLESSI INSTANT1 Coll 463-7SI1 for 
details. 
___ 


,,;,SHAPE UP FOR FALL 


At Marty fl. GIrmv's Figure Solon Mrs.- 
' Mwi. thru Ttwrs., B 30 till 12 noon. Back 
Jrom 4 to 7 P;M. Frl. 9 to 12 noon. Ph. 
V8&1W. 721 W. St. Joseph Qrive; St. Joe. 


''' 
s 
ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS 


The.Fermville Public Schools will accept 
.sealed bids. on.the demolition of the 
building known as the Old Junior High 
.School localtd on West Main Street, City 
of Femwl.le, Allege" County, Mich (pan. 
,Soeclf(cations Ore available at the'.Otflca 
(of the Superintendent, of -Schools, North 
MaoJe Street, eennviiie Mich.'4wo*. PI.. 


-»1-5101. 
.Bids rriust.be received no later ttwri 1:00 
PM Oct 13,1975 
. 


FEHHVILLE BOARD OF.EDUCAT|ON 
INDIA SPREADS,—A new:sniDment In 
time ' for back-to-school. CARROLL 
DRAFTS, 5 J 
; 
REAL ESTATE 


FOR SALE 


Nicely located ,m Washington Ave. 
Close to schools 4 shopping Coun- 
try living, with nice shade trees 
surrounding this 3 bedroom & full 
basement home Just right for the 
growing family also has a nice barn 
for your horses. 120,509. 


C. BILL H*« 
BUCK 


Realty 


429-6181 


HwtKBfofWt 7 


CONDOMINIUM- 
TOWN HOUSES 


legendary living 


Storting Under $22,0001 


MODEL 
Doly ]-6rMH 


HOURS: 
SM. 1-4 Ml 


Condominium of St Joseph 
Ml 42tMOMi*f 925-2506 


KIENZLE 
LISTINGS 


'. . 
HOME & ACREAGE 


Nearly new 3 bedrm. 
home, 


.furnished, 1200 sq. ft. of living 
'area. Carpeted living' room, wood 
cabinets 
& 
breakfast. bar • in 


• .kitchen 
Electric 
heat, 
water 
. softener. Approx. 40 A. of land, 300 
.-ft. frontage on paved road. Priced 
' In mid forties. Home could be sold 


separately with I' acre & priced In 
' - upper twenties. Hartford area. 


SOUTH WATERVUET 


„ NEAR CATHOLIC CHURCH" 
, 2. bedroom home. Living room, 


'dining room & kitchen. Newly 


' "remodeled and has birch paneling. 


New cupboards In kitchen. Autom. 
gas furnace. Utility room. .City 
sewer and water: Priced to sell. 


MOBILE HOME 


I Bedroom Mobile home on approx. 


• 1 acre. Carpeted, fireplace, stove, 
Arefrlg., washer ic dryer, garbage 


disposal, central air cond., tower 
antenna, all fenced In. Located near 
Thunder Mountain. Price has been 
reduced to sell. 
v 


KIENZLE 


' 
IB 
463-4475 


J49Hm«*i$t., 


SULKO 


REALTOR 


RAY WAU-Wtm. 


LES BURFORD-Sltm. 


KEN SULKO-Brkr. 
468-6706 
Rrrl Arrow H.V a Bus. Ill 


DILLINGHAM 


ST. JOE CITY 


Charming 2 story brick home local- 
led in one of the City's best residen- 
tial area* wtthln walking distance 
to' all schools and shopping. The 
• knme offers J bedrooms and bath 
;i|i, one bedroom and bath down, 
'tstsc living room with fireplace, 
trrinal dining'room, first floor 
Slitmly mom, bwemeat and 2 car 
firage Being set on a large ravine 
tot, It has a private backyard wit* 
screened in porch In enjojr U. 


J." 
BRICK DUPLEX 


in Lincoln Township Lakeshore 
; schools, between Slevensvllle and 
'Bridgman. 
Each 
side has t 


bedrooms and garage. Wall to wall 
tarpetmg 
In most rooms. First 


floor utility room and garage plus 
air conditioning and extra IttH bath 
ta each side.1: 
i> . WHITE PILLARS 
Grace the front of this family sized, 
i story four bedroom home located 
in St. Joseph Township, St. Joseph 
school system. The four bedrooms 
and 2 of the baths are 
up. 


Downstairs there are kitchen with 
family room next lo It, formal din- 
ing room, half bath; and carpeted 
living-room with fireplace. Ap- 
pliances included are disposal, 
Hove, dishwasher, central air con- 
ditioning, and garage door opener. 
CMy water to In use and the well is 
met for sprinkling. Priced In mM 
It's. 


"Buy or sdl thru Dillingham 


and have a happy day." 


DILLINGHAM 


OWN TOUR OWN L4ND 


On which thte i BR Mobile 
home is localed. No month- 
ly payments for the site. A 
country »ulng with plenty 
of space and privacy. Lot is 
75x283. Mobile home and 
lot *10,M. See this one 
today" 


Sec this rambling ranch 
home today situated on an 
one acre ravine setting 
with 
access 
to 
Lake 


Chapln. Spacious carpeted 
living room, semi-formal 
dining 
room 
carpeted, 


family size kitchen/full 
basement 
with 
finished 
"rec room", oil hot water 
heat, central air and many 
other fine features • must 
be se«-call today I! 


UCMM in City M DtnUn 
Harbor - good income - g» 
heal - some furniture ant 
all appliances • call 'or 
further, information today. 


1 . iWr^ JMMlt Mt> 


9S3-4M3 


I.I 


••tiMkiii. 
.<n-mt 


REAL ESTATE 


FOR SALE 


H*»m rar M« 7 


SUBURBAN BRICK HOME 


On corner lot, with two* kitchen. Potto 
otf family room with flreoloct. Living 
room. 3 bedroomsn 2 battis* double 
oorooe. Low down payment. Qualities tor 
5% 
flovernmertt 
lax credit. -Contact •• 


McKlnlev Assoc.. 4i9-3«l. 
_ 


~2 BEORM. HOME —For Sale on 2 Acres. 
BlacK loo drive. Root cellar. Chicken 
.coop. Berrlen Sprlnos Sch.,DWrlct. Ph. 


RIAL ESTATE 


FOR SALE 


REAL ESTATE 


SCHUMACHER 


COLOMA TWP. 
3 Bedroom, all , carpeted ranch 
home on % acre lot Attached 2 car 
garage, Interior finished. All elec- 
tric. «5,000. , 
' 


COLOMA CITY 
Tri-lovel 3-4 bedroom home, all 
carpeted, attached 2 car garage. 
Laundry room, BBS heat, City water *• 
& sewer. Priced, 932,900. 


SCHUMACHER 


92/-3179 
SULKO 


COMM BLDG. 


Located 
on 
Main 
Street 
in 


Watervllet. Office space plus a two 
bedroom 
apartment. 
Excellent 


Potential. PRICED in the MID 20's. 


RESTAURANT 


Excellent business located in the 
heart of town. Business, Equipment 
and Real Estate all included. 
Owners moving south and sac- 
rificing 
for a 
QUICK SALE. 


PRICED in the HIGHER iPs. 


STONE RANCH 
Three bedroom home with view of 
Paw Paw Lake sitting in Coloma 
Township. 
Fireplace 
In living 


room, ,• finished 
rcc 
room 
in 


basement 
with 
Ben 
Franklin 


fireplace, brmeway and attached 
one car'garage. Unique: all stone 
exterior. Owners are anxious. 
PRICED RIGHT in the MID 20's. 


, 20 ACRES 
Three bedroom ranch located in 
Coloma-Township. 
Brick 
and 


aluminum exterior, two car garage 
and also'has some grape vineyards. 
PRICED in UK HIGH 20's. 


FOUR BEDROOM 


Brick Ranch! sitting in the City of 
Coloma. Large! living room, 2V4 
ceramic baths, kitchen with (built- 
ins, full basement, central air 
conditioning, attached two car 
garage with a huge covered patio 
with gas Bar-rWJue and a fenced In 
double lot. PRICED in the MID 


FOR SALE — Reasonable to. 2 opt. 
modern house..? cor ooraae, small cot- 
tooe & other bldos. on one acre near air 
port. ph. H5-WS otter 7 p.m. 


A NEW HOME BUY 


ST.'JOSEPH SCHOOLS 


No 
«4«9..Off, Cleveland 
in 
a 


excellent new home- area has a 
huge lot with big grown shade 
trees: All carpeted picture window 
living room 22 ft^ long, a formal 
carpeted dining room includes a 
Iwautiful driftwood stone fireplace. 
Custom built cabinets In the IK ft. 
long , kitchen, /automatic : dish- 
washer, convenient 1,4 bath. Tiled 
entrance hall foyer leads to three 
huge bedrooms 12.9X13, 11.8x11.4 
and master bedroom is 12 10x18.8, 
sliding glass doors leading out to 
railed sundeck also a railed sun 
deck over a huge two car attached 
garage. A full master bath. This 
brand new home is a buy at 


MOBILE HOME $3200 
IN SHAWNEE PARK 


No 
6418. .In 
Lakeshore school 
district off Cleveland Ave a 12x»» 
Liberty ' Mobile home 
has 
a~ 


carpeted 12x16 living room, sharp' 
kitchen 12x16. Big bedrooms 12x12 
& 10x12,' all carpeted and includes a 
yeiir old refrigerator and kitchen 
range, also air conditioner, has 
heat, 
reasonable 
land 
rental 


Includes snow plowing etc., Has'a 
lawn with pretty birch shade trees. 
Quick possession, a real buy at this 
just reduced price of only 13200! 1 


A FARM SPECIAL! 
' 


PRICE REDUCED $11,000! 


-No. M38...NOW a real farm buy 38 
acres In all Eau Claire 'school 
district area. Has lots oMwo paved 
road frontages with 4 acre plums, 3 
acre 
good 
producing 
concord 


"grapes. Excellent melon, tomato, 
corn land etc. Approx. 23 acres 
land,-a fresh water creek flowing 
thru with stone'rapid Ideal for 
irrigation of newer style a block 
bank bant two story 30x49 ft. also a 
3 door newer style, masonary block 
building 20x60 and a 3rd. well built 
,3 door newer style mawnary block 
garage 22xM all three buildings 
painted and In tip top condition also ; 
5.smaller wooden buildings. The 
modern updated home Is built on a 
slight'rise with a rambling lawn & 
pretty shade trees. Has a non- 
painting exterior siding, a sharp 
wall to wall carpeted living room 
12^ x.20 ft. A carpted formal 
dining room 128x19, kitchen has 
lots of modern cabinets. Full bath 
t I bedroom down, four more 
bedrooms up, have nice Georgia 
plne 
; floors. Full basement, paneled 


15x22 fl. family rec room, modern 
heat. Home is now vacant. Call now 
to. sec this very well .kept modern 
farmll 
.-;.. 
. 
V 


EXCLUSIVE BY 


NEWMAN 


REAl ESTATE 


429-1545 
2120 W. 


COMMttCIAl * . 


• ACUSf 17,900 
snvmwiui 


Nice 
parcel 
of 
land 
near 


Sievensville that Ms frontage on 
John Beers Rd.'.The lot thai fronts 
John Beers Rd. there mre pUns (or 
It to be zoned commercial. The rest 
,of the 8 acres has < acres of grapes. 
Truly a bargain for the right 
person. 


REOUCD $8/000 
3 MO. SO. ST. tOt 


This lovely all-brick home Is vacant 
and ready to move~:in. La'rge car- 
peted living room with , fireplace. 
Kitch. has many cabinets. Large 27 
ft family rm If, baths, 2-car at- 
tached • garaged Lovely lawn on 
large lot: 'Owner must sell, they' 
have moved out of state. Now pric- 
ed at 135,900. 


6 KO. $37,5OO 


MIDOMAN 


Attractive large Z-story home with 
large carpeted living rm and fire- 
place, separate dining rm. Large 
modern kitchen with dishwasher, 
disposal, etc. 5 hdrms. & bath up, 
one bedrm. ft bath down, full 
basement, • gas hot water heat. 
Family rm 2-car attached garage. 
Alum, skiing & storms. Large lot. 
A beautiful large home. 


"MUM" 


NEWMAN 


, 
< 
' 
KAlBMTt 


429-6105 


57W St. J«*ph Ave.. st*v«ittviife 


HMMttoSd* 7 


HOUSE FOR SALE -SI. JoseWI, woltcllw 
dlstonce to town. 2 »rorv, 1 bedroom, tull 
bosement, , beautifully 
recedoroted: 


I15JM. Coll; va-uti. _ 
i _ 


ST. JOE, 5 Unit commerlcdl, gross *700 
month. «5,000. ll!0 Nlles Ave., 3 unit 
eross MM month. 124,000.: 519 Archer. 
Benton Hart»r. 4 .unit gross* MOO month. 
$14,000.775 Broadway, unit gross »540. 
month. >10,000. W Plpeslone. ALL CASH. 
4K-3531. 
_ 


2 BEDRM. HOUSE 


For sole or rent. 
_ 
400 Porker or rai-MW _ 


FOR SALE e ROOM HOUSE. 2 CAR 
OARAGE. Located 542 Colonibus,. B.H: 
Ph. 92S-73K. 


UAUTIFUL 


COUNTRY LIVING 


HOLLYWOOD ROAD 


Living in 'the country is beautiful. 
This 1 room charming: home is 
spacious with. 15x24 living room 
with fireplace. Three large bed- 
rooms with double closets & 2 
baths. 3,car garage with additional 
buildings on this 17 8 acre farm 
located some 8 miles south of St. 
Joseph. 
Gracious 
living 
with 


spacious area for recreation and 
cultivation 
:of grapes & other fruits. 


Plan'to see this charming property 
today: 


LARRY LARSON 


REAL ESTATE BROKER 


925-3382 


REAL ESTATE 


FOR SALE 


7 
ihrMt 1 


• THREE OAKS AREA 
, 
1 story, 5 bedroom homt with lull 
bosement, gas h*bl. Good water on this 
land, also city wotor Is available. Cerber 
Bobv Wear Factory tieor by. Ph. Three 
Ooks, 75*-74go tor' more Information. 
WIFE CAN'T DRIVE, Don't worry. Walk 
to store~& school trom mis charming 3 
bedroom brick rancher, Fireplace,' lots 
of closets, loroeVooms.-bulll In oven, IVa 
car goroge with extra parking. St.' Joe 
Cltv. XK,m Cosh or Terms. Ph. W3-1MI 
(or oppt. between 8 & 5. 
' 


PERFECTION Yri 


COLOMA 


You've got- to see this 2 yeur old 
brick, ranch on a wooded ravine i& 
acre just oMteide Coloma to fully 
appreciate it: The 3 bedroom home 
features deluxe carpeting,' In all 
rooms including .tiie .35 tool long 
basement recreation room & 4th. 
bedroom. Your family ;wl!l be 
.delighted by the, •'fireplace in the 
1st 
floor 
family 
room, 
the 


adjoining patio, centra^ air con- 
ditioning, H4 baths, 2 car attached 
garage, and many other custom 
features. Best of all, taxes are only 
J728 per year & there arc no special 
assessments. All this con be yours 
tor only $44,900. 


REALTORS 


429-4700 


^Member of Mutlole Listing system 


fORWST RESULTS TRY 


CLASSIFIED AOS 


No. SM..JKMK MUNI W fenced acres 
of beautiful rolling pasture land 
with pond and Paw Paw River 
frontage. A rented home for help or 
extra income. Large barn and but 
buildings. Main house has had 
extensive remodeling in Spanish 
decor with J bedrooms and family 
room. Plenty of. room for the kids 
to play inside or out. Owner may 
consider spilling the land. »7»,»1 


Na. Mi-XMB-STOOa WIN MM HUI 
I'A acres trench while grapes, 4V4 
acres raspberries, 4 acres tomatoes 
totals 13.S acres. Block with steel 


^ frame heated & insulated green 
house. Shed for tools * equipment 
also 
insulated' chicken 
house. 


Remodeled 5 bedroom 1 bath home 
with den or office. Home V land all 
in immaculate condition. Call Bob 
Washbum TODAY to learn about 
the terms available 429-5109. 


Hi. S*;...COiq«A IOWOU Two-year 
old, 3 bedroom bl-lcvcl set on a hill 
just West Of Coloma. Spacious 
rooms and our 1700 sq. ft. of finish 
living area thai is decorated to a T. 
24 X 10.9 kitchen with sliding glass 
doors to the patio, finished rec 
room just to beautiful tor words. 
Owner needs a fast sale. Priced 
under the market at ...... $*,***. 


•V 51UMM COMMKIM 132 feet 
frontage close to Plaza. Excellent 
business location with lots of 
exposure t 
traffic. 
Call Boh 


Washburnal4»ilW. .. 
kv SM..NO nan ma - BUI that's 
all that's missing from this cozy 2 
bedroom in Fairplain with raised 
formal dining tad a kitchen that 
has just been re-done to suit your 
taste. Alum, stdlog and a ft acre 
lot just oft Ntekenon Ave., and it's 
ONLY 
$HMt, 


•». iTV-JW MMl W and see this 
very clean sharp, > bednwm starter 
house with 1 car garage and a 
beautifully landscaped large lot. 
Kecarpeted and deuMiteil and 
rwdy for you at only 
.. 


429-1518 


G*tl 429-1531 


LOOKINOFOR 


A GOOD BUY IN 
LAKE PROPERTY? 


Comity t?y* jpftJL Prffly^L _^j. 


OWN IHMtOWN HOMC 
Novae 
3665 S. LAKESHORE DR.-ST. JOStPM.MI 


$$ DOLLAR FOR DOLLAR $$ 


No. 1306... You can't beat this home for valued Very well kept all brick 
with 3 nice sized bedrooms, large 13.5x19.6 living, room, with fireplace, 
plush carpeting throughout, large lot with chain link fenced In backyard, 
beautifully landscaped, full divided basement, 2 car attached garage, 
screened in patio, gas forced air heat, yes, this newer ranch style home 
located In Fairplain is a sacrifice at only 126,9001 1 


F.H. A. APPROVED 


No. 1214... You can buy this line 2 bedroom home with a LOW LOW down 
payment. This home has been completely remodeled, which includes new 
plumbing, electrical wiring, plaster, carpeting, kitchen cabinets and 
vanity. Gas heat, double car garage. 113,000. 


GODFATHER HOUSE 


No: 1289... Bring us an offer the owner can't refuse and after you see this 
house you won't refuse to make an offer. The advantages of this home are 
many. Water, & sewer assessments are completely paid & hooked up. 
Almost half an acre lot. All aluminum siding soffits and gutters. Trl-level 
home with 3 bedrooms. Very well kept you wouldn't have to do a thing but 
move in. located close to N. Lincoln School and in a friendly neighborhood. 
Call to see today only »26,900. 


LAKE BLUFF TERRACE 


No. l!N...Shorehanra finest location for building your home. Clone to Lake 
Michigan. Fine neighbor!! with lots of children for your kids to play with. 
Slop In to discuss your building plans. 


AFTER HOURS CALU 


Ctmm Knwff 
937-tatt 
M ••*..*? 
97I-4O17 


<MS-5O*a 
Jock Tent 
4M-4S70 


4I9-44M 
Chuck BraeXcy 
4M-«4aO 


47»-a»10 
Jim IvckMr 


Jkn Kovodl 
*. lyiw MUrHn 
MHnNtoc 


WMmCANWtHtm 


M UK VHHI* yw'N *< «*»> vw not 
m * *» Hotvir.. Mi CwMn ClMl 


THE lOCATMII: HI MV 
•n« cam 
ConipMMv ' 
***•.-" . " . 


SUNDAY HOURS: 1-5 PM 
i 


WRKDATS 9 AM - » m SATURDAY » AM • 6 PM 


NEW HIRAIO OHKE 4M-1SI9 


429- 1531 
^mim^,^ 
KECHKAYLO 


THE STYLC: Two tbrt Country Ct*D** 
wttti •uliu* tBtarvt IndwdtoB, hort* 
•Idbtoi oufbuddhvi t> fWt MM. 


REAL ESTATE COMPANY 


"Brighten Your Future" 


THE 


H mr hurl'i M tin mnili i and nur 


wkvrv Mar, kit on 
"WlHn dm Wt Iw 


, ROOM TO OROW ON 


This three bedroom ranch style home Is located out in Ihe country with 
14.8 acres for the growing family. Nice features throughout home plus you 


JJtH^_'_l' _1^_ ___^ 
.- can °*° y°llr own gardening and have your nets loo! Over 1.100 foot of road 


frontage will keep anyone from gelling close. Quicl, peaceful and relaxing 
and only $34,090. Call 429-3209 


INVEST IN THE BEST 


Very charming two bedroom bungalow home in lovely Lake Michigan 
area. Fully carpeted, buiiL-ln kllchcn, nice palio for Ihe cool summer 
evenings ahead. Plus as an added bonus yoli have a cozy one bedroom apt. 
for Income. Price Is a low 121,500. Why not let us loll you more today? 429- 


MMH.V ON TM MOWT 


ThMH Ikt mmi jar r»u. |U°*g In •»» 
torn* tram •••"•»*» • 


MSTIMQHMMO 


tarfcMWtlkrft 
"tfcpKVT 


HOME OF THE WEEK 


Start with a Ihrec bedroom L>shancd rancher and a Iwo car 
attached garage on a quiet cul-de-sac. Add.a massive woodburning 
fireplace, ccthedral ceiling in living area, parquet floors, 14 bath off 
entry and a private fenced yard with trees and shrubs. Going at 
only $24,900. Call 428-3209 Nowf 


TWP BEDROOM - COLOMA 


Nice quiet country location large 100 X 212 lot with big shade Irees. Home 
has been completely remodeled and is ready for immediate occupancy. 
114,500. Terms arc available. Call 4*8-3138. 


TWO ACRES - SWIMMING POOL 


We have lislcd'this beautiful three bedroom frcnch modern home with two 
acres of land In Coloma Township. Largo 18 X 20 family room, mansard 
roof, 1% baths, fully carpeted, built-in kitchen and lols more. $32.200. Call 
468-3138 Today I 


OLD FARMHOUSE AND 20 ACRES 


This land is loculed in Coloma Township and has good frontage on the 
road. The house Is very mush 1ml might he saved. $16,500. Call 468-3138 lo 
know more. 


LET OUR FULL SERVICE OFFICES HELP YOU 


ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS 


Tht loardif Emotion of tht Bcrrim Spring; 
Public SthAoliyWiH ractiv* %wM bids for KM; 
following 'dtJ'ribod property: 


The real property and buildings known as the' • 
"Berrien Springs Junior High School" and the' 
"1912 Building", including permanent fixtures 
only, said buildings and real property being 
located at 401 North Cass Street, Berrien' 
Springs, Michigan. 


1. Only sealed bids submitted on the . 
provided forms and according to the 
specifications therein will be received at 
the 
Superintendent's 
Office, 
Middle 


School Building, P.O. Box 130, Berrien 
Springs, Michigan 49103 until 4:00 pm on ' 
Monday, November li 1975; appointments 
for inspection of the premises may be 
made after August 20, 1975 at the above 
office (616-471-2891). 


2. The Board of Education reserves the 
right to reject any or all bids submitted, 
to waive any irregularities therein, or to 
accept any responsible proposal when it 
may appear to be in the best interest of • 
the sehooldistrict to do so. 


Dated: 8-20, 1975 


Jon N, Schuster 
: Superintendent of Schools 


RR 


COLOMA CITY - CATHEDRAL CEILINGS 


No. ISJ8...The family will enjoy entertaining in the family room with the 
large fireplace or step uut onto the patio where the yard is bordered with 
many shade'trees. In the master bedroom you have the convenience.of a 
master bath and a large walk-in closet. Priced in the mid-forties, you will 
have a complete built-in kitchen, separate office or den, full city services 
plus many more Items to make this a very comfortable and enjoyable 
home. TRADE YOUR EQUITY. 


WATER AND SEWER ASSESSMENTS PAID 


WATER AND SEWER HOOKED UP 


No. 8TI...UItimatcly contemporary and over 100 ft. long, this pure example 
of modern living boasts features that cannot be found in new construction 
today. Over 2,000 sn. ft. on first floor of this sprawling ranch encompasses 
a 15 x 20 living room, 39 ft. California room, 22 x 22 master bedroom with 
bath, fireplace In family room and first floor laundry. Downstairs li a 
completely finished bar room with tongue-in-groove panelling and over'tt 
ft. king. Underground sprinkling, tool shed and construction 'is 
Incomparable. Huge willows and maples shade-and protect a lifetime of 
comfortable living. |37,9WI I West Fairplain on Miami Rd. 


CONTEMPORARY CASTLE ON ST. JOSEPH RIVER 


No. 1185...Once upon a time a Queen wanted a castle—<t contemporary 
castle. She searched the Hamlet of St. .Joseph for a whole year. It was not 
to be found I So the King built 111 Now th* great King says move out tiflhat 
Hamlet. It Is with sadness and pride that we offer this stupendous castle 
for sale. 3264 sq. ft., 3 baths and a kitchen for a Queen. A fantastic view 
across the inual (St. Joseph River.) A pool is just one of the fine 
appointments In this "beyond description" home. CALL FOR YOUR 
PRIVATE SHOWING. 
.;';;, 


SPANISH TWO STORY 


IN ST. JOSEPH WITH POOL! 


No. 1380...Five top floor bedrooms featured, two with private baths and •- 
others with exits to huge balconies overlooking the 1 acre wooded ravine. 
Stone-terraced landscaping and tree-lined creek almost surround this 
stately home. On the first floor we have such magnificent feature, as 27 ft. 
flrcplaced living room, 1! x 20 formal dining with fireplace, 21II, family 
room, huge formal foyer entry, 20 x W healed and filtered pool, *car 
garage with workshop and separate studio with % bath overlooking: the 
ravine. Basement has finished roc room with a fireplace plus a fireplace In 
master bedroom, living room and dining room. New gas hot water neatlng 
system keeps operating costs low. Priced In the eighties. 


> TO U NEAR A HOSPtT ALT 


No. 137«...Momorial is only three blocks from your new home on Morton- 
Avc. A well built home with emphasis on comfort. For the gardener,' IhjJ 
grounds arc filled with a variety of flowers for year-round color. The home 
workshop can be cither In the oversized 2«:ar garage with electric door 
opener or in the basement which is spotless. The, 3 bedrooms arc 
accompanied by 2 baths upstairs plus a % bath in the basement. »36,900. .- 


ENJOY LAKE MICHIGAN 


a APARTMENT OR 4 UDROOM HOME 


No. 13«8...Picture a quiet, beautiful setting overlooking Lake Michigan. 
Over 1300 sq. ft. of comfortable living area. Lots of storage, largo 
basement and 2-car garage. All this Is on the first level. Upstairs is a neat 
2 bedroom apartment that brings a rental income of 1290 per month. Large 
tot. Excellent return on investment when used as a 2-apartmcnt home. 
Colotnu school district. Offered at 134,900. 


3400 SO. FT. RANCHER 


NEAR CHRIST LUTHERAN SCHOOL 


No. !367...Posh decor flows throughout the 4 large bedrooms with II- ft. 
dressing room and private bath off the master bedroom, formal dining, 
first floor laundry and huge cat-in kitchen that overlooks the heated and 
filtered in-ground pool with a backyard plenty large enough for a tennis 
court. Two heating systems for economical balanced heating, central air 
sodded lawn, 6 ft. redwood fence enclosing back yard, double gas barbeque 
grills and- over 100 shrubs. Priced for the discretionary executive in the 
sixties. Trade imt 
• • 


HALF ACRE NEAR SrMNKS CORNERS 


No. l34l...En]oy the benefits of lower cast living in thJs 2 bedroom 
bungalow with full basement for only 118,000. All rooms are spacious. If 
you're tired of that hemmed In feeling you will investigate this value 
today. 


YOU DID IT 


No. 1327...You'vc wailed 'til now to move up te that 3 bedroom brick homo 
with first floor family room. Your paticnco Is being rewarded with one of 
the best values around. This newer homo offers a fireplace, 1% balhs, 2- 
car attached garage, Lakcshorc location and finished basement roc. room. 
Ask us how to get the equity from your present homo to purchase "this 
great value for (34,900, bul act now, this won't last. Let's tradel 


GOLFER'S DELIGHT 


FOUR BEDROOM BRICK AT LAKESHORE 


No. W10...If you want your weekends free, here's the home for you. No 
moving or weeding, the fenced back yard is a formal garden with huge 
syinctrical palios throughout, with lighting, for those lovely evenings 
outside. In Maple'Shadows, this home has all the extras which should be 
included In any house of luxury and distinction. JWO sq. ft.. 3 full baths 
and professionally decorated. 


AFTER HOURS CAUt 


pnn ft jfai 
Ml- 2109 


Or*«»<x*ov* 
429-A20* 


Okk On«*»m 
t25~4OM 


••fcHfiKh 
tta-rooa 


Don ftdwMiMiiiBBBM AAS«fl4A9 


Mck *•« 
Mw«n *** 


«3*-MSi 
917-1744 
429-70M 


FISTER AND COMPANY 


'•TNI rUNENMT PtOff $S(OHAI 


983-7395 


MM MUt •«., tT. JOMVN 


PAGE THIRTY-POUR 
.r 


t*" 


r REAL ESTATE 


FOR SALE 


' 
HwttsFwUt 7 


REAL ESTATE 


FOR SALE 


HMHtf -rOT * S0M 
' / • 


THE 


REAL ESTATE 


FOR SAL! 
.. 


, H*«.>.hrM. r 


HERALD-PALLADIUM, BotfM Barber -St. Joseph, Mteklgu 


REAL ESTAn 


FOR SALE 
HOT. feW. 7 


REAL ESTATE 


FOR SAL! 
*m*iU*, IS 


RENTALS 


THE BLUFFS 


WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBEt 17, 1171 


RENTALS 


rfiTifnIffJ'Ap.rhiirf ' 


4H HOOM 0»rU«N APT«~Ad»hV 
,110 . ll» per month. Stoom Mot* in 


EMPLOYMENT 


, JOT ••.«.;' 1* ' .. 


LIOHT DCUVfjRY rr«5««U2?S,CliUl 
gurroumWte) area*. Mwf MV* ear. von 


i, Pric 


' HARVEST CORN OR HOME SITES 


, $*« M Acre porcel near Bear Cove, Red 


Bud Trail; Buchanan at 4650. acre. 


^COMPARE THESE WOODED LOTS in 
•Bljje Crcvk Vista.' Builders. Corner ot 
Wells. & Vista Lake Or. 


3, OR 4 BEDROOM RANCH, at- 


garooe. Fenced yd Sorter School 
12,000. Terms. 


BLUE CREEK REALTY 


• 
• 
Fdlrplatn Plaza 
MLS REALTOR 


,«59645 
9SM076 


DILLIN6HAM 


7- 
WOODED ESTATE 


•- We' urc proud to offer one ur the 


truly unique homes in Burnuii 


^County. 
Originally 
built 
by 
a 


builder for his pcrMmn) residence', 
' nothing hab bcon left to debiru Set 
"oii a large well lyndsoapod parcel, 


it is conveniently Incdted to botli 
South Haven and (lie Tuin Cities. 
Many of Uie fine featun-'i- included 


,111 (his home are 4 bedrooms, J 
- baths, balcony, palio and pro- 
fessional decorating Call today for 


van 
appointment 
to 
view 
this 


unusual: residence1'now offered at 
onl> i 


ONLY $17,90U 


and located In a quiet residential 
-street near the corner of Euclid and 
,.Tcrnloria"i." 3 bedroom ranch home 
u ilh 
full basement and 2 car 


garage. Extras include central air 
, conditioning, 
stove, 
garbage 


disposal, and the house is con- 
nected to VUu sewer. 


:,' 
FAJRPLAIN 


A good deal is this 4 bedroom 
home i!900 square teet, central air, 
township bcwcr. This home has 
cathedral ceilings and a master 
_bfilh and a kitchen lull of good 
appliances 
Don't 
miss 
this 


gracious living for you and >our 
family Call today $48,500 


„ "Buy or Sell thru Dillmgham 


AndHave'a Happy Day" 


DIIUNGHAM 


•983-6371 
Mem bur of MuItiplu:ListiiiH Systuiu 


0 
'12,900 
. 2BEDRM.-IARGE10T . 
I 
Off NKKERSON 
I 
! 983-1535 ' 


BALDWIN 


BENTON 


TOWNSHIP 


Two apartment house, 
separate utilities, large 
lot. Owner anxious. Price 
reduced to $13,800. 


and 


Two bedroom home, 90$ 
heat, garage. Priced at 
$9,500. 
Land 
contract 


possible. 


01 


MLS 


BUN BALDWIN CO, 


TWIN CITIES 473-4131 


BRIDGMAN 465-6863 


RED ARROW REALTY 


' 
NOW IS THC TIME 


Ne. I4K...to make your move to this 4 bedroom Cape Cod Style home. U 
feature* large open effect living roohi and formal dining and new kilchen. 
23 ft master bedroom has full wall of closets, family room with fireplace, 
2 car attached garage. Brick and aluminum siding, low Lakebhore taxes! 
Mid 40V 


MORTON 
AVI. 


CITY OF ST. XX 


No 133 ..Newly decorated from lop lo bottom with the off while shag 
carueling that sets off the 13^4 X 24 ft. living room wilh it's large brick 
wood-burning fireplace. Features formal dining with large doors lhal enler 
ftui beautifully enclosed patio area with it's own built-in brick barheque. 
the" most enjoyable features of this home Is Ihe spacious well landscaped 
backyard wilh it's many trees and flowering rose bushes 3 bedrooms, full 
finished basement, bath and one half. WH.WO. 


A 
sum 
SHARP 


No'IW...4'bedronm 2 story with central air, 2 full baths with one off Ihe 
master bedroom, all new decorating makes this an excellent family home. 
Urge brick p*Uo b complimented with completely fenced In yard. First 
lime offered. |I*,OW. 


MVirOWBB 4*5-57*0 
COHNIf CAM 42f-M74 


MARK HAWKS 429-1934 


SHiMEr HOFFMANN 429-10M 


REALTY OB 


LOCATED IN VILLAGE SQUARE 
PHONE 4Z9-B1Z7 


Kcrr 
real estate service 


FIRST OFFERING 


No. 3W...Country location comes with this lovely 3 bedroom ranch style 
home with spacious rooms. Hardwood floors, wall to wall carpet, gas heat, 
covered patio, 2-car attached garage, low taxes and all in a very quiet 
area. 121,900. Call today. 


NEW LISTING 


No. 471...A beautiful :) bedroom bi-level with Hi baths, modern kitchen, 
family room, ylass sliding doors off the formal dining room to the deck 
patio area, .'2-car garage, sharp interior, all situated on a large K}|)'\-i:iO' 
lot. Lakeshore Schools. (32,5(10. 


FIRST TIME OFFCR1D - ST. JOE SCHOOLS 


No/,62.1...Everything isTdady for you to move right in. This lovely 3 
bedroom ranch home is sharp and neat - no redecorating needed. l'/j 
baths, full basement with recreation room, attached garage and a licatcil 
above-ground swimming pool!,Priced right at $28,!«HI. 
: 
' y 
MINI FARM 


No. 9620...Nice '2 bedroom ranch with large rooms, full hasemt'lll. enclosed 
breezeway, 2-car garage and b'.:l acres for a garden, horses ur whatever! 
Priced to sell at $19,900. Call today! 


ONE ACRE 


No.'8M«....of land gives (his lovely tri-level home a true country selling. 
P£ car garage, full basement, palio, aluminum exterior, modern kitchen, 
all help to make this liomc very desirable. Priced at S17.WO. Possible 
mortgage awumption.'Cal) today. 


: 
LAKE ACCESS 


No. 429..-Comes wilh this sharp 3 bedroom aluminum ranch home, full 
basement, 2-car attached garage, large 100'xlOO' lot with several large 
shade trees. It you're a fisherman, then Ihls is lor you! S23,!)00. 


fferr 


IIH mm n. • n. mm, nci 


983-1585 


2 BEDROOM HUME 


UNO Cash or will to* ttrms. 
JUNG 


WOODED WONDERLAND 


40' L1V. fc FAMl RM. 


liisy walking distance lo Lakeshorc 
Ugh or Roosevelt Orjdo School. 
Picturesque wooded- ravine selling 
tin N. Donna, I7IK) sq. ft. ranch wilh 
finished full lusemcnl and alijchcd 
l\H) cjr gumsc. 
Ce'nlrally air 


conditioned, foyer entry, all new 
lunest gold oven and dishwasher. 
H4 lulhb, 1st floor laundry, fully 
cur|>eledr only $40,8110 


VERY COMPLETE 


Formal 
dining 
room, 
paneled 


family room wilh brick fireplace 
mid sliding k'las* doors to palio 
Kitchen has oven and dishwasher 
with dining area Slate foyer, 3 
bedrooms, I1//baths, paneled 2 car 
garage Large workshop, cenlral 
air conditioning 
Wfl.WO 
Lake- 


slwre, S<l St Joe all brick and 
aluminum exterior. 


WALKOUT BASEMENT 


1800 sq. fl. brick, Isl floor plus 
sliding glass doors from basement 
In lower ouldoor palio Isl floor, 3 
Iwlroomb. 'i full balhs", formal 
dining room, paneled family room 
wilh fireplace Kitchen has buill in 
dishwasher and oven and range 
Beautiful 
soft 
shag 
carpeting 


thruout 
From 
kitchen 
dinette 


sliding glass doors to redwood deck 
oierlookmg your gently rolling lype 
M 
Gas heal, central air con- 


ditioning. Paneled 2 car garage. So. 
St. Joe - Lakcshore. Just 146,900 


A GREAT BUY 


/ ALL BRICK $29,900 


3 bedrooms, full basemenl divided 
into rec room, workshop, gas heal, 
cily water, I'/i balhs, built m oven, 
range, 
ceramic 
foyer, 
24 
fl. 


tarpcled 
living 
room, 
redwood 


fenced 
in rear yard 
Altached 


garage Heavily wooded lot wilh ,40 
(t 
full grown trees. N. Lincoln 


Grade School, mile from St. Joe. 


ST JOE CITY 


OFF VERONICA DR. 


On quid Briar Cl, within a few 
Mocks of SI Joe Sr High, all brick 
3 bedroom, mulllple balhs, fire- 
place in living room, complete 
kilchen 
includes 
refrigerator, 


stoic, trashmasher, and disposal. 
Sillier basemenl rec room finished 
just like Ihe u'pslairs wilh paneling, 
indirecl lighlmg, bar, bar stools, 
won-'draped, .central air,.'i .car 
garage 1*1,900 


3 BED. - 3 CAR GAR; 
FULLY CARPETED 


$22,1X10 • 


Uke new frame ranch 3 bedroom 
with 3: car garage, concrete polio, 
l!i baths, 
fully 
carpeted 
and 


draped, immediate occupancy. 


NEED 4 BEDROOMS? 


A. Ann Drive -'Just block off 
IKllliip, St. Joe, brick ranch 4 
bedrooms; 3 baths,'on ravine. Over 
'1XH sq. fl. plus basemenl and 2 car 
garage. $5f),HWI. 
U. Alpine Hldgu • brick 4 bedroom,' 
II'baths," « fl. heated, pool, full 
bwomeht, wooded setting, Stevens- 
ville. M2,0(IO. 
(J. Two Slory • Colonial, wooded I'/i 
acre ravine, 3 baths, formal dining, 
family room wilh fireplace, lull 
IxKcmenl, its big, $59,900, Stevens- 
ville. 
1). CarllKiu Itaiich • Wooded ravine, 
mien 
uiil 'basement rec .-room. 


Nearly 3200 sq. ft. uf finished floor 
area. 
Private 
buy yel 
wllnin 


walking distance lo Stevensvllle.' 
flu's. 


30 ACHES 


Clly Wilier available, frontage on 'I 
IKived roads, Hickory Creek crosses 
entire rear of properly. Ming 
typo land in growing Lakeshore 
Schools. 


CARIBOU BRICK RANCH 


ailO ft. deep lot, 1800 sq. 
fl. !) 


uedroom rancher plus entire base- 
1 mcnl Hnislied into rec area and 2 


additional- bedrooms 
if needed. 


Central air conditioning, double 
garage. 2' blocks lo SlcvcnsvlHc. 
SISJKW. 


" 
IN THE VVOODS 


•»fi ACRES • 


SPRING FED CREEK 


One would have lo look long and 
hard lo find such an ideal setting 
for this like new contemporary 
styled 3'bedroom with 27 fl. living 
mini with 21) fl. high fireplace, 23 
ft. formal dining room, kitchen has 
all new appliances. Entire rear o[ 
home 
all 
thcrmopanc windows 


overlooking 
creek 
and 
ravine. 


$5(1,51X1. 
: ' 


SKI 'FT. JIAMBLING RANCH 


4 bedrooms. 4 baths, heated 40 fl, 
pool, fireplace 
ill- living: room. 


Hirinal dining room, fireplace in 
living room, big double garage all 
tm !i:t acre wooded lot with some 
over 75 years - old. Big country 
kitchen, central air conditioning. 
Umcfcd 
family 
room, and old 


Biglish decor recreation room, 
Immediate occupancy. Low Btl's. 
Si. SI. Joe. 


ATTRACTIVE BRICK 


Courtyard entry, foyer cniry all 
leads In large open kilchen, dinette 
and 
family 
room 
with 
warm 


fireplace couplet! willl glass doors 
In your wooded rear yard. Formal 
dining room, 3 bedrooms, cenlral . 
air, 
2 car garage. Uasy walk lo 


lakcshori! School 
from 
Golden 


Crest. Mid 40's. 


SARETT NATURE CENTER 
Located 
near 
Sarrctl 
, Nalure 


Center, -til acres wilh 3 bedroom 
brick capc.eod. .with, full basemenl 
and attached garage. Barn, sheds, 
tenant hoiise', a' go'ntlemens type 
farm. $65.000; 
JUNG 
REAL ESTATE 
429-9507 


AfTMACAU. 


479-3502 or 42 


.FOR SALE: INCOME PROPERTY.'St. 
Joe locution. ) roomi t botti upptr, i 
rooms A botti oown.-Off strevt porKlno. 
Gos hoot & .woter, How wlrlno, Moorate 
elec. service. PH. 9P-7073. 
FOR SALE — 1, 2 oportnwit home, 3, 2 
bedroom homo* Banton Harbor $10,000 
CASH i m-mn. 
HILL 


50 ACRES 


In Rayatton Township with 12 acres 
uf grapes and the balance of op«h 
land. An excellent place for a home 
in the center or the fruit bolt. 


TWO APARTMENT 


With two acres or W Jcrcs with it. 
Lucutcd in the SI Joseph %hool 
district, this beautifully remodeled 
homo has a three'bedroom: apart- 
ment down tind a one bedroom 
apartment up An ideal spot for a 
growing family who wants room to 
roum and tne extra income 


TWO APARTMENT 


Near Lake Michigan in the City of 
St. Joseph. Building has 
been 


completely remodc'led with new 
aluminum siding and carpeting, 
each apartment 
has 
100 j\MP 


service, gas furnaces and gas water 
heaters, stoves and refrigerators. 
Priced at 132,900. 
HILL 


REAuOl? MIS 


Md Em* jftireci t 


HAND REAL ESTATE 


US-33 NORTH (BOX 17!-Hz 


BENTON HARBOR -Ph: 


~ 40 ACRES OOOD FARMING LAND. 
Has frontage on 2 roods Property runs 
about Vt mile deep Located In Lake Twp 
Brldgmafi School District Priced at only 
usan win divide 


STREFLING REAL 


ESTATE 


BARODA 422-1500 
_ 
Res. 422-13» _ 


S'Y OWNER SMALL FARM —on County 
Line Rd, between Walervllet ft' Hartford, 
!nd place north ol Red Arrow Highway. 
No Sunday colts. 
_ 


HARTFORD —40 acres Older house, 7 
rooms -'A' bath. Needs' remodeling. 2 
barns, paved road, open land. Ph. 
621-22>7j 
_ 


EAU CLAIRE ^10 acres, 26x50' walkout 
basement started Sanitation approved 
Sandy loam soil,' barn, woods, .paved 
rood. Hear Block Lake. Ph; 621-2297. 


Um fur Suit 
10 
- 


GOING TO BUli-D? 


Choice lots, take your choice, city water 
and sewer In street and paid In. full. We 
can help arrange financing.' Call Kovoch 
Real Estate Inc 4291531. 


RIVER LOTS 


Ideal fishing, boating, swimming 


REIMERS 
^429-5433 


COMMERCIAL" LOT TO BUILD ON —on 
US 12, with well. Call 92S-33B2. 


1* ACRE WOODED LOT — Lakeshare 
schools. 52 acres, WOO per acre. Temis. 
LAKESHORE 
925-8233 


MUST SELL —12x111 on Benlomln lust 
off Jokeway. HOOD or Best otter. C. 
Porroll. Bloomlngdole, yfl-TTK. 


TrtlWIrlOUJO 


No 
KB . MMterplccw in evury 


HcM are acarcel We ofrtT you u '/4 
acre kit lo buUd your DREAM 
HOME near wo»d«d ravine. W 
well, tuts u( trees. Secluded ideal 
tucatiun 
in 
lAkushore 
whoul 


'dlatrivl. 


siauoiDioiiwuean 


No. M6/..H.27 acres .way l»ck o.ff 
LautT ' Hiiad in Berrren Sprlngn 
Suhoul district: Lat»! trt« and two 
INinds. Blectric KrvK» already In. 
.Uulld your OWN ESTATE. 


429-3266 


TOTZKE 


TO PLACE YOUR 
RESULT-GETTING 


AD! 


WA 5-0022 or 


YD 3-2531 


• MOWH cfOMt Unl II 


taan 12 


'RESTAURANT FOR SALE 


for further Information a call 927-1622 or 
V2S-73W or 9g7-Wji. _ 
; __ '_^ ^ 


TAX SHELTER 


This commercial prime property Is locat- 
ed In the heart of one ot SI. Joe's finest 
areas, with eleven diversified units. Two 
merchant units, tour bustticssotticcs. tlvc 
apartments. Terms arc negotiable to 
qualified buyer. The potentials of this 
property will amaze you. Stop in & see us 
for 
further 
details. 
Priced 
below 


replacement! I 


KOVACH REAL ESTATE 


Ph. 429-6292 


OfKEMAlUIEMOONtl 


No. 
'931.;.0iiu 
story 
wilh 
111' 


ceilings. Tile 
floor 
and 
^5x5ti' 


bascmumt in excellent 'location with 
roar door delivery. Located in the 
path of PKOGKtiSS. Brick & block 
construction. Suitable for many 
typos of manufacturing or business. 
Call TODAY. 


STIVENSVIUE OTTKE 


429*3266 


Utrt, Kb* «d IHuft 11 


BUY A LAKE LOT 


At Pow Paw Lofce. cash or monlhw 
payments. Guaranteed clear title. 
CUBTISCOATES 
Hp«^ll 


NrMi M 


. 
tHtEE OAKS AMA 


K ACRES INDUSTRIAL AREA ZONED. 
All focillne} ore io. such a^ '.owcr, oos. 
WtJtCf, & '.!(< vl „,.•..--.. '^fll..- «OOdS. On 
U S i7 Mh. Tlifee uu*i. /56 74M). 


APARTMENT HOMES WANTED 
ST. JOSEPM-BENTON. HARBOR 


AREAS. ANY CONDITION 
<» 3SK 


(USSIH£DADS 
RENTALS 


FURN. COTTAGE — Couple or small 
tomllv. Permooenl bosls «I2S mo plus 
elec Smoll Sec Dep Reo Ph. 4W-W72, 
Union Pier 
. 


2 BEDRM. DUPLEX 


$160 


AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY. Comple- 
tely tornliheii (Including dishes! for 1 
person or »170 lor couple, t miles S. ot SI 
Joe FREE Indoor tennis membership. 
CHILDREN & PETS WELCOME Coll 
CHALET ON THE LAKE, <»-5865. 


IN COLOMA AREA 3 ROOM FURN. 
APT Utll cold. Coble TV hook op Adults 
only. No pels, sec 
Dep 
Rea 
Ph 


vatsa. 
3 ROOM'MODERN APT. —no nets, sec. 
dec rea 7 ml. no of St. Joe on US 33 
toll M5-62<3. 
HOLTON APARTMENTS ST. JOE -I 
odull, 2 rooms, bath & showr. private 
entrance, narking. Rel.. sec dep Jl« oil 
utilities. Ph. ye3-S1». 
_^_ 


LEASE UPPER — 1 bedrm. lor couple 
wlfhrel K*C No children orpels »t« 
mo mil lurn. 1120 Nlles Ave t»-tan 
DELUXE STUDIO APT -Available year 
'round In Slevensvllle oreo Totally 
orlvole overlooking woodland Only 1 
single person or married couple need 
ogplv Reference, lease & dep red Ph. 
4»M~ 


LUXURY APTS. 
OVERLOOKING 
LAKE MICHIGAN 


COMMUNITY 
HOUSE, 
SWIMMINO 


POOL? CENTRAL HEAT t AIR CONDI- 
TIONING. 


CORNER Apt. Avail. 


V BEDROOM FROM 1W 
2 BEDROOM FROM 1225 
3626 LAKESHORE DRIVE 


429-4481 _ 


2 BEDROOM MODERN JKPTS. — City 
Colomo, S170 month, »150 deposit. 1 years 
lease Ph «3-e»»7 or 4»«-75P 
_ 


2 BEDRM. DUPLEX 


$150, 


AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY for 1 per- 
son orJloo for cowrie. 6 miles S. of St. Joe. 
FREE 
Indoor 
tennis , membership. 


CHILDREN i.PETS WELCOME Call. 
CHALET ON THE LAKE, J29-5285 
_ 


ST. JOE COZY 3 rms — carpeted opt. 
near town Stove, refrigerator & utilities 
furnished Pfi 


TURE fn m-on 


EXECUTIVE RENTAL 


' Are you thinking about apartment living 


but not Interested In a large complex? We 
have a vacancy In our attractive four 
apartment building Ideally located In St 
Joseph Privacy of a house In a seven 
room, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, olr conditioned 
apartment. Reply to Box «X In core of 
this paper. 
_ 


DELUXE DUPLEX- 


Look at all mese features .2 bedrooms, 2 
baths, carpeted, wood burning llreblace, 
sell clean range, J cor Inside aovooe 
FREE 
Indoor 
tennis 
membership 


Children & pets Welcome. South of Tosl'.s, ^ 
S240 montti. PH. 4»-52toV _ 
. . . . . . 


1 RM APT. -With kllchen All uffl pd 
Femole over 21 preferred Ref ft Sec 
Dai Reg Pll 4g-51ffiofler4P.AA 


NEWLY FURNISHED —Shog corpellno, 
elec. flreoloce, private ent .odults only, 
no pels, rel «. sec dec Lake Mlffliean 
bad) areo, U S 33, N. ot St. Joe i B H. 
PH.9Z7-2551. 
1 BEDRM. EFFICIENCY APT - In SI 
Joe Walking distance to Downtown. Sec. 
dep ft ret. rea No pets or cnlldren. Ph. 
471-3030. _ 
_. 


IN 5 J— Clean, 1 bedrm , oil Utll lurn. 
except elect Na pets Adults onlV. Sec. 
depTea »13»_ma. M3 
ffl» 
_______ 


COLOMA — Completely turn , small 2 
bdriD duplex, SIM) month, plus sec. 
dep. 


Accept 1 child 44H-7397. _ 
_ _ 


NOV I TO MAY 1 — seoclous, tastefully, 
completoly furnished, four room apt Just 
pack your suit cose & move In Close 
downtown St. Joe No pets Ret. t 
Sec. 


Dep. pay own utilities. W3-4MO. 
_ 


LARGE, CLEAN — 1 -B.drm 
Good 


Falrplaln location Adults, nomts Rel & 
sec'dep rea »1« ma. Coll Ifl-UK 


3 ROOMS * BATH J— Adults only. No 
pels, references & sec c*»p. Ph «3-78» 


3 ROOMS & BATH —Steam heal, odutts 
only, call T 


FURNISHED 1 BEORM. — Apt. lor rent. 
1054 Hall St. off Martin Luther King Dr. 


3 LO. ROOMS t, BATH -Electric stove, 
heal ft water turn Adults Dep. ft ret. 
needed m ma B H mHH75 (M. I tm 


2 
BEDROOM 
IN 
STEVENSVILLE 


Newly 
decorated, carpeted, stove, 


relrldae. air cond, covered deck, 
garage, swimming, pool. $190 per month, 
no HOBS 42Y-47W. 


SPACIOUS LUXURY 1 BEDRM APT — 
I miles N U S 13 Full carpet, oil aopll., 
S1SS month plus utll. Ph. 9634467. 


FURNISHED APT -Watervliel area for 
working adulli or retire!! couple. 
Security dep, rea. Ph 429-03J5. 
v 


ST. JOSEPH — Efficiency net., near 
Whirlpool, 
everything 
turn . 
»120, 


security deposit, ph. «Me»S. 
IN 50. ST. JOE — Overlooking river, 3 
rooms » bath, all utll Sl«0 mo Dep » 
ret red. Adult, only MM225 
KITCM6HETTE APT. - For 1 adult. 
Furn. except linens. No pets. 3» Church 
St., St. Joseph 


1 BEDROOM, KITCHEN, LIVING ROOM 
S. BATH —Partly turnlsried. Coll Eg-Hle. 


WATERVLIET AREA —1 bdrm , accept I 
'small child, ret. & sec. dep., heat turn., 
4KS VUi, 5-? P VI. 
/ 


3 ROOM APT. — Reference & security 
deposit-required. Near paw Paw Lake, 
Colomd, Ph Ht-KB 
_'_ 


UPPER 3 ROOMS —I working adult only. 
No children or pets. HW deposit. »«0 
rent phone ep-leTt; 
__^ 


117 


1 BEDRM. IN B H. — Newlv redecorated. 
AII mil inci PH. m-im 


2 BEDRM DUPLEX — In Stevensvllle, 
carpeted, stove l> retrlg. turn., gar., 1190, 
month, Sec."dep.-*' rel.' repaired. Ph. 
O-7456. 


LAROE 2 BEDRM. DUPLEX —Will tw- 
nlsh II ileslred. All eke. Senior citltern 
preferred. Hollywood .Rd, & -Lemon 
Creek Kd. Ph. 422-1205, 


AVAILABUSOON 


nAiUIHS INCUJM: 


Fully Carpeted. -Air Condition- 
ing, Stove, Refrigerator, Gar- 
bage Disposal, All Utilities. 
'Muster Antenna, ^Clubhouse, 
Swimming Pool;'Paved' Park- 
Ing 


IfMLMTMH 


J«nt i««t of Crfitd An. 


Okw Mm-hi. 10-S 
PHOMfl.Vt.VSI 


W 


NEW 


1,2*3 
BEDROOM 


APARTMIMTS 


Complete 
sound- 


proofing, got hoot, 
private 
patio 
ft 


decks, 
breakfast 


bar, 
club 
house 


with indooor swim- 
ming pool & tennH 
court. PLUS MUCH 


(616)695-2555 


80* Wt»t Front St. 


mm 
.MKnOIKW, fwCn. 


STUDIOS, $130 


1 BEDROOM, $140 
2 BEDROOM, t ISO 


• CM>b«IM 


» UwnaVv Focilitiei 
* Swimming PooJ 


• (omrafligftfly Located 


' 
'lohle 


• Imnwdlare 


Oc<upaiKY 


616^471.2423 
616-473-4381 


511 ROSEHILLRD. 


Berrien Springs 


r——-—i 


NAPIER MANOR 
LUXURY APTS. 
' 
mitmtrnxn. 
' 


Deluxe Spacious Studio Apt 
appnix. 990 sq. ft. from llfHI 


I Bedrm, Apt. appnix. m $q. ft. 


> 
. frnin IIP , 


Zlwdnii apl approk IIODsq It 


from tan • 1209 • 1210 


RegiongMv priced, IgrgtM tor vow 
monev, 
gppllonccs 
lurnlshetf, 


garbage disposal, dlsrMaslier, air 
cond., sell-cleaning range, 2 dr. 
refrlg., tudv coratteev Vh~ Mttn. 
lull din. -rm. . securm/ dggri A 
Intercom plus private bakooies, 
laundry, an .ewvrvr tloor, storage 
mace galore. Pod, cluMouso, 
tennis 
courts 
and 
^ 


i 


wg«k own Ogm <*-? 
tMMTtMMOpgilHVt 


CAUftMAfrOMTMMT 
4 
,J 


EASY 
LIVING 
2KMOOMAPT. 


3 BEDROOM WJPUX 


• COLOMA 


2 Bedroom. Fully Cur- 
pcted, 
appliances, 
air 


conditioning & laundry 
facilities. 


• IN HARTFORD 


2 Bedroom, fully car- 
peted, appliances AV air 
conditioned. 


• RURAL COLOMA 
TIMBER RIDGE ASSO- 
CIATION. Secluded com- 
plex in wooded area. 2 
Bedrooms, Laundry fa- 
cilities, air conditioning, 
appliances. 


743-1537 
927-1129 
471-1000 


nMNISHtO OR UNPURMISHfO 


LAKECREST APTS. 


atOANOE WITHOUT EXTRA VAOANCI 


; 
UWMRMfBURT 


'W»7 HD AMOW HWT. 


MOGMAN/MKH. 


. 
' 
'ON.rHfUKt 
. 


3N*-1WIAI(DHOKB«IVI 


H.tOLHKH. 


, 
PN.9IM444 


FREE GAS 


'All rcnls include FREE gas for heal, cooking 'and hot water. 


Spacious Sludio & One * Two Bedrm. apis: from 1135. .Minimal 
elec 
hills. Air Conditioning, laundry facililies, inlercotn & 


weurity- syntcni. A mamlcnance free complex wilh pkasam 
living conditions for adults only 


MUST BE SEEN TO BE APPRECIATED. 


< 
RIMOCNT MANAOMS 


Offk* Mow* 9-» or anythn* by ovBt. 


5orry No Pels. 


2 BEDRM. DUPLEX - »rl»gnion, OtJ- 
peled, stove «. retrlg., olr cond , uflltty 
room, garage, tm.Sel Tom, 473^H«I. 


3 ROOM APT. - corner ol Britain 4 
Povone. For 1 or 2 older odult. Wokjr » 
heat turn. No children or pets »12» 
month. Ph. ~" 


WANTED CA-».IIR, 
--• 


»*tk. For mart "forM'to1'' o>!' TM 
HtroM Polk*w» clreuKmon «•««.. «* 
ter Mr. Don iWH- 
__ 
1_ 


COLOMA 


,Nlc» 2 bedroom. Atfulti only. »M5 montti 
IncludH hwt. stov«, rvfrlgwotor, porno* 
& dnw«. Rvtwwic*. Pti. oftw A 
p.m., 


IN WATERVLIET'— 3 ta*m out. tUO 
monttl «1« »:. d». Call m-3O7, . 


FOR RENT —6 room lot; modtrn apt. 
also 2 room cottw around airport. 
Prefer couple I'll m-iSM 
_ 


UNFURN. 
2 
>ORM. 
DUPLEX 
— 


LatcetAore *chl. dl»t., reference & s«c. 
dep required, oh M3-M» between 7 
AM t t P M _ 
. _ 


UPPER 4 ROOM' APT .•—Portly turn. 
Utilities ind. No children. 404 Liont.porti 
Dr., St. Joe 
. 
, 


CHATEAU-CONDO 


LEASE OPTION 


429-8131 


- , — „ 


WANTED -CarrWl lor MM oMgtrY 
of the Mwow-Pollajuim in *• «J» £ 
Hartford. Muit M twelve wry old or 
older, own MM In oood condition. For 
more mtormollon coll- Ul-att. 
_±_ 


MOEKSTBA ROOFINO IN KALAMAJOO 
meat foremen «, l«rMmi«"J«'«Mn> 
motors. Full work ectiedule. *•• John 
Potonon, 
1063 Olmitood 
*o«d, 


MECHANIC NEEDED 


Prefer lomeone tomlllor wlttiolr cond. 


LEASING— I ft ! bedrm opts tor senior 
citizens. 
Fully 
carpeted, 
spacious 


Interior, total electric kitchen, lighted otl 
street parking, cosy walking to shopping 
center. Handicapped units available 


-These apartments ore available to all 


qualified renters without regard to 
renters race, color, creed, or notional I 
origin. Ptl. VKn«.TMeHQ Court. 


BRIARWOOD APTS. 


1903 UNION ST. 


One and two 
tedroom 


apts. from $133, to $163.. 
Open daily,, 12 noon to 8 
P.M. 
Sun. 1 P.M. to 6 


P.M. 


927-1055 


1 BDRWl. FURN. COTTAGE —For tauie 
10 1 or 2 responsible persons! no pets, 
Seot to June 15 S14Q mo. plus utll. Sec. 
Deo ft Rel. R«. for oppt. to see. Ph. 
929-eW4 Evehlnes only <7 to » p m.) Loc 
9 ml N. at whirlpool 
_ 


WANTED -Responsible family to lease 
3-bedrm. furnished home near Lake 
Mich.' S»ot. to June 15. <250 per mo 
Includes oil beat (you pay elec ) Sec 
dep. ft ret r« For aeot. to see, Ph. 
715JM4 eves only 17 to 9 I m.). Colomo 
Schools. _ 
• ' _ 


COZY ft SeCLUDEO — 1 bdrm lurnlsbed 
&lnsulahKlcatl<i.»torleo.eonLk Mich. 
to I or 2 responsible persons, no pets. 
seat, to June 15. »l» Her mo. plus utll. 
sec. Dep. ft Ref. Ren. For oppt. lo sj. Ph 
•2S4H04 eves only.. (7. to 9. p.m.). 10 ml. 
NW of ColOrnd. 
__ 


2 BEDRM HOUSE 9 miWsNorth of St. 
Joe t!65 mo. AaXilts No pets. Ph. oft 4, 


-. Service Monooor. »»» i. »•»•.» H . 
ONE OUT REACH WORKER »r me 
Motor, Horoor Arts. tt.!S nr. N *••« 
nook. Ability to met! PodpM of hl»h 
crow coltoro oockgram*. «ujf have 
mm tronwortotlon Good attendance 
reaulred This CETA position Will ohe 
preference to ttwH wlw hove been 
unemployed tor 15 weeta or more. Thew 
not covered by unemphrvment Imurona 
Specall Viet Na«n veteran*. wolfdre 
rectolentl, 1, mliwltln. Agpty at room 
200 Fidelity Bid. B.H. Berrlen County 
Action on offlnnotiye action employeri 
i 


EXPERIENCED MALE -Feroenjjol 
tormina Call; Warnn Taylor, m-nti, 


RNI i LPNs infereited In pe™>nolHed 
patient cor*. Wo encourage creativity 
odd chw nunrvottont, Intwoetlon. Wo 
hove rogulw ' , continuing ' odueotlon 
Including ctawJ In'cofonory Burtlng." . 
Port time PO.HKXO «< oil mm* ovolloblo, 
inquire by calllM LdM Vl»* C 
Howltdl, Paw Paw, Ml. 
plroctor;.of Nurilng.8ory|CT. 
__ 
_ 


ELECTRONIC TRAINEES NEEDED i- 
'Aw» l« JS. Good Hlorv olu> bonollti. 
conwenomlvo ' trolnlna. 
Ronylroi 


rotocatton. * Colt Army Opponumttw, 
m-3\S6 or OJ7-S773 
_ 


COMMUNICATION 
SYSTEM 


MAINTENANCE. Tromoe poiltton, AV» 
IMS. Excrtlont training, g4od **iry plu» 
bnwtltl Rowlrn rolocotlon In US or 
overwoi. How Interviewing. Coll Army 
ocoortunnm, H7-JH5 or gam. 
• 


CHILDHBN IN SCHOOL? HOUMkoeoof 
tiMdod, > boun o week Mu«t now cor, 


RECEIVING CLE1K -Agoi IMS. Abovo 
oyeniwsotarylbwrtH Mudowrow 
x\an 4 bonoflni Murt relocate Maw 
comma, in us on) oveneoi. Now Inlor- 
vKKIng. Call 727-1155 or 617 5771. Army 
0«>ornmlH«t. . 


LABORATORY TECHNICIAN or Com- 
poundor Em>erloncodper»twlHiogood 
knowlodgo 
of 
ruober t 
cottaon 


polyurottnmi hoi on excellent 
mall but 


SISTER LAKES — t bedroom Tunjtthed 
'home. Multt preferred. Security deposit 
«, Ret. Pti. IH-UU. 
FURNISHED 1 BEDRM. HOME — S). 
Joe Available early Oct. to June I. 
Rel. 


Sec, dep site. Ph. «U-03»<. 
COLOMA I BEDHM. HOUSE — » I 
bedrm. out. Utilities turn. 'Til June 15. No 
pels, pll .eH-3777. 
1 


i on excellent oppor- 
but growing mMwettoni 
United Mom 4 ForeW, 


account!. All bmoflti. OegrH oeelrid 
but not eiMntlol. Send resume i latarr 
eoected to •« S»X In core of thta gogor. 


WE ARE NOW ACCEPTING APPLICA- 
TIONS 
lor 
EKgerlenced 
Srocent 


Manager. Resume i perwnol Interylew 
required 
Apply In person. RON'I 


SUPERMARKET, 
. 


, OS Red Arrow Hwyr, 


If 


h-teiM*d leegif with ajeod 


knowteoge of proper roll bull 


2 BEDRM. HOWE FOB RENT — Oas 
heal, lorg* kltcften t llvg. rm. From 
pgrch. On I acre. For Into. Ph. 4»W»I 
> 


3 B60RM ^HOUSe - LAKE VIEW. Sent. 
1 Oct. «ilv. Healed. All utll. Incl, HS oer 
wfc Ph. Or-nw. 
IN SAWYER -Tower Hill Shoretonos 1 
Bedrm 
house 
overlooking 
Lake ,, 


Michigan. Private begcn. Utll. Rm. 
Large klleiien. Formgl din. rm.'Llv. rm. 
wlttt fireplace. Wood paneled thru out. 
Carpeting, Stove * Retrlg Oil furnace. 
Partly turn. 11 <t«vr»d. .Avoll; Oct. 1st. 
So. Sec. Pep. * Kef. Reg. Call »»-Hll. 


3 BEOROOM HOME -«1B mo plus «ll 
Total elect. Sec. dep req ChlMmi 0 K 
No pets. Coll 463-ltll oner i p.m. 


Mare ttron me usual Deneflts. Sena 
corrvMe resume ant titan enecM le 
Bon HX, m core 01 IMS poper. AH rntor; 
rnatKx kegl lunftdentkil. 
. 


J BEDRM. SMALLER TRAILER - In 
small owlet trailer pork tar rent. Security 
dep reg ptt.-<ae.*3>S. 
|^__ 


LOT FOR RENT 


Pul your mobile home on.private lot 
Save and nave your own home. At *ls»er , 
Lakes. Pn. WM335. ; 


2 BEDROOM FURNISHED -Very nice, 
I child, no pels. Advance rent. Ph.: Mart- 
lord «31-4»l. 


KEYPUNCHERS 


m* (Mil tar kg* 


TYMSHAREJNC. 
777 ****** 9*., tM. 


927-1391 


HEATED 
FIRE-SPRINKLER 
CON- 


TROLLED WAREHOUSING AVAILA- 
BLE. ALSO EXCELLENT WAREHOUSE 
IN COLOMA AREAr LARGE TRUCK 
DOCKS. Phone Mr. Raines, WHoJI. 


*•*•»• T» i»lH IS 


WANTED TO RENT 2-1 BEDROOM 
HOUSE —M. jM-StevemvllU area. Coll 
m-\ns. 
"MATURE WORKIHO LADY" -Desires 
to rent a turn. 2 Bvdrm. House. 


Coll ets-me. 


ATTORNEY A.WIFE SEEK —Unfum. 
spacious Hat In.St. Joseph area. Coll 
9P-7I31 between <-5 P.M. 
ROOMS* BOARD 


ROOM FOR RENT - In Fglrplotn. 
Ovnttvman 
pr«t«rr«*. 
. R«t»r»nc« 


requlrwl. Coll 9M-23M, Days. 
'•' 


HAVE VACANCY — For 1 (wt-«t>1. 
Private room. N*ur J«ttw Lake. ACTOH 
•RdjfoiTt ao» eMfM_. Ptt. 427-J7JI. 
1 


PERSONNAL CARE for omtwrdtorv tody 
In private llcwrnwd n«w ttom«, Prlvatt or 
Seml-grlvate^oom. 4*MJB3. 
• 
• 


FOtAOVMKED 


SKIUS... 


HmtTHtVtTHUm 


EMPLOYMENT 


'«",'...' 


MALE TO SERVICE —ft repair oil ft got 
burners.v Musi be exoerlenetd.. Coll tor 


/ oppointmenl. 9B-11**. 


NEED FEMALt PART TIME -Setecl 
Irom a variety of nours. Need own 
transportation. Ph. tor appt. MS-***. 
BrMgman. SARAH COVENTRY. 


MAINTENANCE t YARD MAN -P«r.. 
WoMrvllet area opts. Salary_open. Co«: 
W7-3174 between II * S. As* lor Mr. 
Deoner. " • 
' 
' 
' 


EXPERIEMCeD WAITRESSES WANT- 
ED. Mommg »m. AlWIy m aerso"L"«- 
JEMIMA PANCAKE MOUSE, CoHmo. 


EXECUTIVE 
SECRETARY 


Sharp pcrMA ~ nwBt Mvc li 
yu» mlntmum exprrtwict m 
Bookkeeping 
mri Gmntlm 


S«reUrt«l 


Submit mmiM« 


ftl 


StKccggtiU •utomaU-d FMiHtr; 
In. 
SoutliwwtCTTi 
MlcWkin 


tfedu 
• 
foreman 
with 
• cx- 


p*Ttenc« 
In 
nipervttlng 


mlUwrlgM 
not/at 
miKhlm 


repglr people. KnovVntoe at 
hydraulici h belpful. 
Good 
sUrtlng 
salary 
and 


excellent fringe benefit*. 
Send reemne gf work «Dd 
nl*rr experience to1 Box OX 
hi care of H*raJd.P«ll«dluni. 


AUTO MECHANIC 


CMlh MWf IMW iW.™ 


EXPERIENCED 


BODY MAN 


WOArM *• W0ffc Mi 


:. •OW^HK ft nNTMpN 


. .TeMgt gwl «MVf •**[ Wwgi 
' 


INVEMTORY 


SAUSANO CRIOIT 


E«l«y 
C«m»wiv Bmrtlta 


ctoge t* H*im. 


' targe O 
working 


P«r Mcrytew adl 


MMtGtnn. 


927.3161 


Ordtr Stort 


Y, SEPtTMBLK 17. 197S 
.UK 
NentflDHarb»r-Sl. Jostpb, Michigan 
PAGE TUIBTY-FIVE 


CMPL'QYMEfcT 
EMPLOYMENT 
EMPLOYMENT' 


„" < JMf— feMrti1 11 
- 
IflffT luiid SI 
, 
MeV— OM» St , 


WANTED REGISTERED DENTAL 
CD OU/VIs AWMPD ' 


HYCIENIST. Thundoyi Mfrlen Sorlnes 
On. rlttAjKAMMHiK 


ettKe Coll Lou ot 47H4Xt. 
Supervise prowommlnt ston, motor mtg 
i 
ewllcotloni wlttl (A e«B. needed peePd. 


S'S S 1 $ t t t 
»t541Mn Coll Bob Doer Wl-7111 


fart time dortTr "itrtki ?n«,ledw ol 
5NELLINO* SHELLING PERSONNEL 


intwanceHrimiwetsiarv. Coiomaareo. 
WANTED LPfi FOR DOCTOR'S OF- 


Coll Mrs. Woot«y4eH751 Hourly 
FICE Reriv to Box oSX In core ol the 


CLERK WANTED -5 o m Io1l:»om. "*"** fa>ualt*" 
Tues thru Sat Must be U or older 1, 
EXPERIENCED TV TECHNICIAN — n- 


reliable. AOPly In person, mornings 
tide - Outside work. Benefit! Include 


r 
ufAMrVh BA*T TIUK 
~ 
vocotiont. Reply to Box'tfX In core ot 
WANTED PART TIME 
4*.,. L1 
, _t_»|..L MMllfirntlnnB 


Truck mectmrtc to wort AM noun. 
*" *•* '*"!* "w""1™"™1 ... 


Call lele) 4eMl». 
/ 
PART TIME HELP WANTED — Mature 


i!^jeirlSr'i!fi!»nhiiw'>* pr***fT*rt Cotl: 
n your own home 
Call 
429-7432 


EXPERIENCtjp HOOPERS WANTED — 
yeor around work, no tav-oHt Report 
IMC. *"• 
w 


between 7 * 7 » AM ot SiMrrln-Ootlln, 
• »•>— 0«k» Si 


552 South Crvstdl, B H 
• 
= 
. .„, ,,.,,.„ 
VILLAGE OF KAU CLAIKE —now ac- 
TELEFMONS SOLICITORS — Male or 
ceptlng applications lor on admlnlstra- 


temate. MM* H i War over. Experience 
tlve assistant Mutt hove colieae educo 


not memory But helpful Hourly wooes 
lion or equivalent experience Appllca. 


Cat! tle-*W Mlweon 12 i, 1 p m 
tlons ovollobie at Vlllaoe Clerk's office 8 


WArlTFP ••Y»II «»"«•"•— p-rt 
o.m. to S p m. Mon thru Frl 


time. MWt b* «bte to work wotkotMS 8, 
SECRETARY WANTED FOR ST. JOE 


AC^'HAROWAReTSn «'-!»,' St Joe'" 
oBMIcatt' Pmse'send resume ffSSS 42 
" — 
_ 
- 
I 
" 
~ In core ot this paper. 


riXi^'RJMcV^T^TO' P^CE^£ieIto5Z~^£S8, 
,F«ePd,CAIIBItlOer«WO-7i8t 
' 
' 
AUlST*WrTH IN^TOKG^MTeS Duties 


SMELLING 1. SHELLING PERSONNEL 
Include limited typing B, recerd-KeeDlno. 


f" orMMS Vv/uuki '"I ^5^*iw 
D"i-B^h'"H»i»rA'-""«t 


S 
' 
> MUmUIHV 
t 
FULL TIME NURSING SECRETARY — 
C 
v "' 
••*• 
JJ 
or Director ot Nursing Typing skills 


5 For Die Cut Onratan' k S 
necessary, shorthand skills helptut but 
5 -J, TT 
^_ "l*™~™ ™ e 
not mentor* tor position Involvet In- 
•J Trim Press Openton for the I 
terviewim ond dealing with personne . 


1 I Nieht Shift 
Assured Over- 5 
Excellent benefits Please apply at: 
1 I; 
. ,, 
;Tr 
V S 
SHOREHAM TERRACE, MB Lakeshore 
1 1 time, fully paid insurance It f 
Drive, St Jowph 
•, 


J i fringe 
Benentsv Apply 
in £ 
POSITION OPEN —tor tun or port time 


1 ' person ONLY. S a m til 4 30 S 
Pwson 
with 
some 
bookkeeping 
! I 
' 
f 
knowledge ol accounts receivable & 


-! 1 P.11. 
, > 
general office work 
Write stating 


!' KOHN KAtTINft t «jffir""B°"'4'Bcare°tH'r0'1' 
1 
*••*» 
. _. 
C 
COLLECTIONS 
' 
4759 ReOMVth Rd. 
S 
•»•*»«• ptrsanatile Individual win «xo 
l 
- 
„. 
2 
In collections Shorn, ond able to dea 


1 I 
SttVMSVille 
j well^people *140 weekly. Call Mary 


tfr ereTeTefll WV¥¥¥1 n n fill H|H J 
SHELLING d SHELLING PERSONNEL 


1 
Would you like to work dovs Monday thru 
: BRAKE AND 
£» — » .— 
c°" L" 
Fari 


• At 
IGNAAPNT 
SHELLING <, SHELLING PERSONNEL 


*•• e& ^*n*"%l^ • •»* 
Vs&& TlTTCl? 
P E R S O N N E L 


experienced brake and align-, 
*>** 


"ment mechanic. Ability to sell 
rjBrt CKM — Urtjo tool ft™ 


service needs to customer is 
Matte* l»r M MM4M nM 


,* Goodyear 
benefits include 
nipn«i»n I BWMH •«* tMtaf 


paid 
vacations, 
free 
hos- 
wM tsilyi* nmmi. Uiilnil 


plUllntion 
and insurance, 
MMIM t me 41 oil timnii. ». Jw 


plus pension progrtm 
imiim. 
*606 |»r nwirh. 


tl£*^«L"»w 
KIT 
KNCH 
OffMTOI 
- 


GOODYEAR 
9*3-6*41*°**' 
MRVKISfOttl 
»Mw..»M8ri8i 
WISE PERSONNEL 
•*^!iltJ.tI' *'• ' 
*0« MOAO ST. 
T»WP"«HVW i 
*« lAtftBOU Hall 
- M MMI BHHinmilli nnplow 
- 
ST. JOStFM, HH. 


JOI«~MM n 
MK-MM » 


SALES OPPORTUNITY 


Growing 
service 
organization 
seeks 


representative with proven sales ability 


., for challenging & responsible position. 
,- The candidate 
selected .will , receive 


".thorough" training In "our field, will 


participate 
In 
a 
liberal 
incentive 


• program, (Salary plus commission) and 


will have opportunity tor advancement 
within our company. 


PHONI 983-2133 FOR AW. 


ORKIN EXTERMINATING 


COMPANY, INC. 


t 


*'. 
JOB timr.1 11 
XHS 8BH.nl 11 


INDUSTRIAL ENGINEER 


, Immediate opening exists for a graduate 
• I.E. 
with 
a 
minimum "of 
5 years 


experience in Time Study, Plant Layout, 
& Equipment Justification. If you desire 
to perform the complete gambit of the 
I.E. function In a small, but aggressive 
organization, 
send 
resume 
including 


.salary requirements to: 


INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS DEPARTMENT 
BALL RUBBER DIVISION 


BALL CORP. 
P.O. BOX 469 


ST. JOSEPH, MICHIGAN 49085 


; 
An Equal Opportunity Employer. 


TAKING APPUCATIONS FOR 


MAINTENANCE MAN 


: 
MUfT M AtU TO HEAD 


! 
OECTRICAL * HYDRAULIC BLUE PRINTS 


ZINC & ALUMINUM 


• 
— 
; ' ' - . ' ; • • ' DIE 'CAST'';. ; 
• •"'' - 
/: 


SET UP -OPERATORS 


LEAD. iMAN - ZINC DEPT. 


DIE REPAIR MAN 


; P*nom iXPOtlENCED In any of 


fh« .ibov* Hsttnfls may 


AMtY IN KtSON 


9,00 A Jl*. TO 4.00 P.M. 


PHONE 471-7713 If «th«r 


PREMIER TOOt t DIE CAST CORP. 


TMMM'MAP 


.TYCIST 


Ton notch tmM noodri lor Mtir wrfKt 
odvertlslng copy. t433^ Coll L«e Ford 
W) 7181. 
SNELLINO 8, SH6LLINO PEKSONMEL 


mn jg|tl jj 


FASTENER 
REPRESENTATIVE 
WANTED 'FOR WES- 
TERN 
MICHIGAN. 


MUST BE' DYNAMIC & 
PROGRESSIVE 
TO 


JOIN A GROWING FAS- 
TENER COMPANY. WE 
CARRY A COMPLETE 
LINE OF FASTENERS, 
BOLTS, NUTS, SCREWS 
& WASHERS 'IN ALL 
METALS. 
PLEASE 


CONTACT: 
BERNARD 


L. JONAS, EXECUTIVE 
VICE 
PRESIDENT, 


l-(313)-773-5400. 
CALL 


COLLECT. 


DISCOVER MUSIC 
trifi 1* on opportunity for ofte who s 
seeking a challenging career. Grlnnell's 
needs exp#rl*flc*d keyboard soles per- 
sonnel Sell tht top brood names In organ 
& pfano. You will be trained lii product 
knowledge. It1 you qualify we offer good 
guaranteed draw plus high commission. 
Paid hospital Izatlon, retirement program 
ft excellent chance for advancement. 
Move ahead with GrtrmeN's.' Apply tn 
person only 


GRINNELL'S 


544 W; Main St;1, Benton; Harbor; 


SALESMEN WANTED — Knowledge Of 
truck fleet & tires helpful. Selling a tire 
sealer ft balancer. Toll: 471-7JB after 5 
p.m 


helaine's 
Fairplaln Plaza 
Immtdat* Opening 


Full Time 


SALESLADY 


TOp'tlM|BS fOf pWCMI Wlfn 
raody ta WBQT vxpontim. 


Call Mr. Friedman 


feropot. 


925-4403 


WILL CLEAN , 


Your ottlce or business estdbllshrnent. 
Acceotlne sotna hou» cleanlna lobs 
4I8-U44 


Washington —.Lincoln School District. 
Ph:«X69M. 
. 
. 
, 
^. 


licensed child care ' 


p . W3-W27 


Would Ilkjilo do housework, -DAYS. Ph. 
TO-2W9. 


DONT FORGET 
• 


HIRHHEVETI 
FINANCIAL 


lurimn OfijortiiniHtf 37 


OUTSTANDING BUSINESS LOCATION 
— In St,' Joel Bloc* building Is opprox. 


Owncr.will finance/at a%: 


Findling '& Associates 


983-7701 


tat Mom St. si. Joseph. 
Free CotoloB Available 


U8BK «M«t.«|« 31 


BUY —SELL —TRADE 


controcts — Mortwges —Equities 


Coll Ut RIEMLANO WJ-3MJ 
MERCHANDISE 


FOR SALE 


MHMH8MM4M rOf >•• ^» 


TELEVISION.RADIO5.RECORDERS 


Tobkt Modfls 1, consoles. U»d but like 
new. Guor., low tarlcts. Ttrms. 
KEETER'S' KORNER, 95 Wall St., B.H. 


DAMAGED I UNCLAIMED FREIGHT 
Morlllt tub kits, lir.M. Assortment ot 
Mnl coblnits, B M. Celling tile, 12X13. 
Gloss tlr«ploc« screws s2S,uii, Furnace 
pine 8. occn«, M-told doors U up, bond * 
garden seeders, garden cultivators, 
wr»ellxirro*. sgravers, window screens 
2Sc. Tractor town *wtep*r, wow blowers 
(, wheel wetgnrs, path tub ceramic kits, 
sink rims TSc. «" vonltv toes M>, coal » 
wood stoves, fiberglass bathtubs, vinyl1 
loldlng doors »c tug. Drves, curtains, 
hampers, rugs (large assortment, a 1 
sizes). Roll-up blinds, SI H. Drapery rods, 
bath carpet, cushions, pillows, storm 
doors, garage doors, office files, desks, 
basketball 
bockBoords, 
lounlo ns, 


uvenlle 
furniture,, saddles, 
room 


dividers, Indoor fc outdoor shutters, cork 
wall tile. lOOO'S OF ITEMSII Savings to 
75% * 
UP. MIKE 
YOUNG EN- 


TERPRISES, 1101 Plpestone, B.H. Open 
Wed., Thurs., Frl., 1-5:30. Sat. 10-5:30. 
Sunday M-l. : 


15 FT. TYLER ' PRODUCE' :CASE. 
Complele'wlth retrlaeratlon compressor. 


S*H CRATES FOR SALE 


TOP CONDITION 
• 


' 
«c EACH 
PICK UP 


AT 6LKHART, INDIANA 


J & J DISCOUNT 


WAREHOUSE 


1S35 M-139 B.H. 
• • • 


OPEN 11 AM loo PM 


Wranolcr leans, boys & mens; storage 
coblnets/lodles pants 8. blouses, sewlno 


. tables, trash masher boos, Iwuialno llohts, 


men's cc-ordlnated Wronoler sports sets, 
foam rubber, more md«. arrlvlno cvcrv 


SYMPHONIC TAPE DECK — «3S. 2 snare 
drums, IM » ISO. Electric clothes dryer, 
S40. Call: 4W-SBM. 
• 
. 
' 


REDUCED PRICES. 6 1 8 II:. lengths. 
Call: W4-SI30. 
- 
• 


STEREO-RAOlO-Record Plover, D us 
tone deck. Cost. 1700. Will soil tor 1300. or. 
KM offer. Ph. W3-J845. 
15% M «S% OFF ENTIRE STOCK - day 
Only, Salurdov, Sent. M. 10-5:30. HELLO 
' SUNSHINE DRESS SHOP, 354 Main,, 


Watervllet. 


motor, tW; Mr. Goskel Irack bars, *IQ: 
Jenny Llnd bed frame, varnished or on- 


' varnished, make otter, Ptl <»-7343. ' 


WINE 
MAKING 
SUPPLIES, _ Al, 


Lambrochl's 
Liquors, 
2Wfi 
NILES 


AVENUE, SI. Joe.' 


RuiMfHiyt Sohi 51 


ALL "RUMMAGE SALE", "GARAGE 
SALE". ETC. ADS PLACED IN CLAS- 
SIFICATION SI. MUST BE CASH WITH 
COPY. THERE WILL BE NO EXCEP- 
TIONS TO THIS POLICY. .•'• 


ST. JOSEPH LIANAS RUMMAGE SALE 
Sept, 17, S to 8 P.M. Sept. 18, y to 12 A.M. 
LUTHER HOUSE, ST. JOSEPH. 


RUMMAGE —4 barrel corb., 15,000 BTU 
propane 
heater, 
sewing • machine, 


c arlnet, clothes, misc. TUES.-WED.- 
THURS. GREG DRIVE, Oft Cleve and 


GARAGE SALE -J-Good. clean rummage. 
Thur., Fri. » Sot. 1775 ARCADIA OR. Oft 
Cleveland Ave., St. Joe. . 


BIG SALE — Sharp T.V. New. woo 


Thur!'»>Frir«w conim', B!H: 
Bifi RUmmAGE SALE —New mints, 


• toT:'»». .»•» G*&vS."l.M. Over me 1 J» 


1 1 III! Ht«HT *n. KM., TIMrs., Frl. 
Rumnwot -ItW Lew **«., Dwnt; 
(gwjjt. M*. Tlwimi * Frwer, le*- 
tember 
W Ik Tr. 


MERCHANDISE 
MERCHANDISE 


FOR SALE 
FOR SALE 


MMM..J* MM SI 
Fm t^pOTt M T»k. 53 


GARAGE SALE -Stroll O Chair, baby 
WHOLESALE PRICES -Shell motor 


turn , crib t molt., 3'X12' swim pool, 
luwiconts,cos« «, barrels Peoples Cool 


rioHin. 8, coah. 4225 Browning Or (oft 
t Oil Co Ph »25-11» 


denlordl WED » IHUKS 
riELD CRATES I. «" r-AI ' "1" «TeB1 


GARA'GE SALE 
2137 GOII or, 
WATER TA^NK—M voipe, 3831 E Em- 


Mouuuvllle Wed -t=rl (Take Elizabeth 
plre 


Or off Olentord, to Ga|l) Open 9-6 P M 
C^.E ^ TRftcl-OR , ^^ „„,„ 


LOW PRICES —On domes i mlsc Items 
PTO, Iron! end bucket, rear mount drag, 


at 
EVERYBODY'S 
EVERYTHING 
12 spd trans Very good cond 83,200 Ph 


Resale Store In Downtown S J 1 tear 
Mi-MSS 


a<OT'5'bed?nnens5,lsnowmobllesullsl!elO 
GRAPE HARVESTER 


143J WILSON, otl Washington SJ Scot. 
Ex^c " corS » SSjVor SlljB 


LITTLE GIRL'S WINTER -School 
FALL SPECIALS 


dresses, Slies « »! each Ph 4W-I721 
ON NEW EOUIPM6NT 


RUMMAGE SALE — Women's clothing, 
. 
5 ft 3 point Disk, 8300 


?»-U Uniforms, mlsc Wed , Thurs & 
'MO ton Running Gear less tr«, IM 


Frl 12* S««ca Rd , B H 
._ 
^J™^™*™™.,™^ 


BIG GARAGE SALE — Furniture, 
SMITH TRACTOR PARTS, Hartford, 


Clothes, Toys, Appliances Wed -Thurs - 
^Ich 


Frl 7431 Hollywood Rd , Slevensvllle. 
463-6141 
621 2001 


GARAGE SALE — Tues., Wed. 8, Thurs. 
. 
WANTED SNOW PLOW 


Ice box, antlaue dresser, old coffee 
coll 925-3375 


grinder Many small Items Paw Paw 
— — 
-— — 
Q 


YARD SALE - 1015 HARRISON AVE. ST. , p.m. 


SEPT. 17 18-191H 
tQf) MCJ fftl^ff ff Y 


THURS, FRI S, SAT 
UetlM.UI.Wl 


1406 5. STATE, ST. JOG 


GARAGE SALE -Thursday Sept 18th 
•*"* •"• «•"""»» » 


'only 8 o m 'III " Ours, Our kids, Our 
rusTOM BOAT COVERS —Tops, Side 


ot°mMicnlgon ^AlumnaV^wrves ' 437 ' 
Curtains, Aft Covers, Cushions, Flags, 


HOOVER, BH off Fairplaln Ave 
E 
B 
c 
EHT 
0^ipuA<!DBnS iwuiup, «. TPNT 


Sept. 22-26, S-9. 
nn i-«p 
fTJTTTWITTT'V? TT\TP 


RUMMAGE SALE — 5221 Ridge Rd 
w^^^sVM^C^Im'ljowVrVfrn'we'll 


Thurs - Frl sot. 18, 19, 20. ""Jjjj™0^' 
eaulpped for fishing, skiing, i family 


GARAGE SALE -September ]8th J, 19W 
slee7huMf'Srih hdtp"» twin V-a"englnes 


2192 Pawnee Path, Stevensvllle off John 
gjin()r Mll 0&r 
winter storage 


Beers Rood' 
Inrlmti-* !'«• 
s»ii«SATljrK YACHT 


GARAGE SALE - You've keen to 'em 
SERVICE INC , 868 Hollond St , Souga 


nil. ~,» trv mini Lnrae Selection Ol UD to 
tuck Ml (616) 857-2001 


clothing, new junior miss formal, on- 
^ 
^ VHp ratj)0/ ^i,, engines with low 


tlaue chairs, ainene set, appliances, 
wourB SAUGATUCK YACHT SERVICE 
decorator Items, much mlsc; Thurs , Frl 
|NC _. (616. 057.3001 
& Sat. 1603 N 
Bonny 
Bruce, off 
mi m mim QJ/ ««,i 
1 — t 
1 — _ — 


Cleveland N of John Beers NO EARLY 
BOATS TRAILER TOP SHAPE— 196827 


SALES 
ft REVELCRAFT. 10 ft beam Powered 


_,__,,..„.__ — .„,,,„„,„ ...mn,,™" 
by 21» H ' Chrysler Inboard Coost 
BIG RUMMAGE 
Apcllances, furniture, 
Q 
a Aoprov,,j 
All Tackle, down 


clothes, dishes, drapes etc !«W 
riogers, vejllor fish finder Included For 


Napier, Thur, Frl , Sat III noon 
_ 
((J«^r 
|n)0 
Contact 
50um End 


— — — 
~" 
-Beverages, 921-9461, Price reduced M«0 


Forai Praducti-TMngs To Eol 52 
or best otter 


BARTLETT PEARS 8. APPLES -By the 
WIST SHORE MARINE 
bushel or by the truck. Roy Shuck, 5295 
TIIJI jnVIH mHKini 


Napier, B H Ph 944 5159 
Douglas (SouaOllK*) 


YOU PICK— Blueberries, olums, oooles, 
gropes & pears Ph, 473-3131. 
BostOfl WholeC - SllC.kr.roft 


TOMATOES 
you pick, S2 bushel Wm 
StuTCraft - MCIXUIY • MvKrilisvr 


Cheevers, 2656 Yore Ave., B H Ph 
' 


925-0505 
* 
IT.J [grjdcr t Hokrlirw Trnilvn 


ACORN * BUTTERNUT SQUASH: 13.50 
BU Your container Corner Balnbridae 
li.:!,, fl. A Criilnv tn ft P II 
» Empire Ph 468 5689 
UOI7 *•'. ' """T T0 " "•*• 


RIPE GRAPES NOW READY Red 
c,.n 11 t flnCMl Tll.uiflv 
Belaworer Blue Concord, White Nlagra, 
JUH. 1 1-1, UOStd (UtSWiy 


Red Catowba, Green Ontario, Black 
. A . 


Fredonla, Blue champion, 7 varieties ol 
Qn (he road tO SOUOdtUck Oval 


French hybrids. Ideal lor wine moklno, 
"" 
* 


fresh trull telly, 8, loble use 15c per Ib or 
, , 
, Bt 
_ 


U75per30lb crote Open 7 dovs o week 
Phone MUgalUCk 85/-Z/3U 


Open 9 to 9 FOSTER'S VINEYARDS. 
" !_...«_.. __L.,| 


Dowaoiac 1-782-7597 lor directions. 
HAY FOR SALE 


MACINTOSH APPLES —You Btej^by 
CALL 782-3633 


Ph 471 7181 Duone Fancher 
)-r ,^. „, 3ra eunln« nav t, straw. D.P. 


Borli, 5315 Lincoln, St. Joseph. 
, 
SEASONED FIREWOOD —Mixed, 117, 
rh.rry IM. Aonle. 122.' Call. 423-8570. 


NDIVIDUALLY QUICK FROZEN — 
Decatur. 
p^^h^, ?fl lt« tnr U, Green beans, 20 Ibs 
. 
. 
, . 


tor « 50 IM Ib tin, grode A applesauce, 
SEASONED FIREPLACE 
WOOD 
- 


»1.SO Case ol6, J840 Frozen opplc cider, „,„„ ,,7l cherrv or mlfl ,a. Frcc 
no preservatives, >1 50 gallon IQF oo- 
KIMn » tailgate stacking Call John 


p es, apricots, osporogus, blackberries, 
^rtw, CKCalur, 423-7503. 
blueberries,. boysonberrtes, canteloUpe, 
'"""*' 
' 
• 


RSP cherries, sweel cherries, grapes, 
»*.___*__ « 
i 
CA 


honeydew, mixed trull, rhubarb, slrow- 
fftanng Apparvl 
Vt 


berries HURON FARMS, 201 S George 
_— 


SI , Oecotur, 423-7001 
MATCHING —Light mink lur hat 8. neck 


U PICK NIAGARA CRAPES 
B. BuT 
<£g*K£manMf' "** «'«lltl0" M" 


Bring conlolners. Angclo Marsala, 1 mile 


THE GARDEN PATCH — U Pick, Beans, 
green 1 lima; Tomatoes: Green 8, Hot 
WE PAY CASH — For good used furnl- 


Peopers; Egg Plant; Melons, Corner of 
ture Lynch'* 448 cast St. Benton Morbor. 


Meadawbraok t. Yore, B H Ph 925-3015 
WA62W1. 
' 


MAPLE LAWH CIDER MILL 
' GOOD USED —Ranges 8. RetrnHrotOrs 


Cider, Grape Juice, Kegs, barrels 8, 
. FRICKE'S HOME APPLIANCES 


sinolles. Order Early. Custom pressing. 
H WALL STREET BENTON HARBOR 


MCINTOSH — Cortlond, apples, 12.50 tor 
Stoves. Used but like new. Guor. Terms. 


'/! bushel. RISCH FARM. >/t ml. cost, 
tt 
KEETER'S KORNER, 95 Wall, B.H. 


ml. soutn on weiworrow kd. _ 
spQT CA5H _faf ^ UJJ() ,„,.„„„,., & 


•TOMATOES U-PICK 12. BU. 2 miles 
opollances. PLANGGER'S FURNITURE. 


. South ot Scottdale on 5795 Scottdole Rd. 
1034 Territorial. 925-4201 . - 


ir>t>T T?c TT Vtf^K 
Furn. We "buy sell or trade. Ph. 92S-3!4~5. 


. . . . ArrLjit) U-rl*-.R. 
Riverside. Mien. OPEN DAILY. 


Jonothon Golden Delicious 8, Mutsu. Also 
BUY-SELL-TRAOE 


'" SQUASH wllkeep all winter. U.S. 31, 6 
SERVICE FURNITURE HOUSE 
mil", M of Berrlen Sorlnas 10 Rockey 
360 TERRITORIAL, Benton Horbor. 


"ppfe sfin^AL^' KOL«oy*s"Tph: 
«f TABBED ^g>1."fi.liSwd. ffi: 


FRESH CUT GREEN CABBAGE. S.onlcv 
sxA trom W. U»d soto «B; H«w cof1« 


nrun« & llalldn Drune plums, Bartlett 
tables from (15. Block vinyl swivel choir 
mra, W P an»-flr«n peppers, 8. hot 
«0. CRAY MOBILE HOMES, Nopl«r & 


2p2.r,r% Jonas, % mile E. of Wa- 
1-94, B.H. 
tervllet on R*d Arrow Hwy- f h. 46WIM. ^^ ^, K. , ,ul 
K^,^*. 


' MERCHANDISE 


__ 
POR SALE 


LIVESTOCK 


P**, Htt Awl SvffllH M 


H«Mi4«U OM^I M 
MOVING MUST SELL » mo. COLLIE 


• 
; 
PUP — . Houwbrolien. J20 or be*l offer. 


Ss^HHSHw l^iirdW^co'iPrrrri 
Carolirw, Blond »lld mod/btdrootn. M" 
Nortti ot Harttord on CR-487, 
sSl^l^S£iiI Esssusfi!" S 
1 IKSr 


Mems' 
Extrcistr ' Blkt., MdtMfl* 


machine, ' 


PH W13M 
FREE KITTENS 


429-4367 


suite. With swing twin beds Pair ot 
Shepherd, all shots, very b«aut. good 


Wlllet end tables 7 pc din rm s«t, 
watchdog Ph W6-7431 


bI«Kh*d mahg. Excel- cond. 983-3449. 
jwo CREAM cn, np MA, F . TOY 


aladl Come see'us soon tor oood clean 
(ered litter. Call Wfr-M23. 


used turnlture. SNYDER'S USED FUR- 
— 
• 


NITURE, downtown Benton Harbor, end 
. .—.».,-.»_• ^rn.^—***** 


of Territorial at 136 Water Street. 
AUCTION NOTICES 


Muska) 
U'J 


hHfrufiMHh — ktRrvcnon 61 


':lJ&£^-£i£!!SSSSiti% 
I^lvVE-SY6 WZSttZSfc ¥Sf 
SrSd MSSbSft! «iSt.1 NATS Call 
'"•* s.,.lc, .coll «« "71) TWIN CITY 


H3 7817 weekdays 1 thru 5 30 ONLY 
^f/liro^orn- J?rc°"a™ 


Si? rjood Condition*, «0UMB°NE ~& 
"« JEEP WRECKER - Vehicle No 
cose oooa conaition,v«i , 
j3A4«6ZN316lo. ond all llxtures, eaulo- 


.^ — — 
— 
f 


ARMSTRONG FLUTE 
2 
W 


USED FLUTE FOR SALE — S9S Call 
H 


955 TOO w«Kdavs, «S W58 evenings & 
D 


weekends. 


THE GAME BAG 


In downtown Brldamari teaturlno Ammo- 
Guns-, We take trades) Live bait 
Open M PM Mon thru Fri Sat 7-5 PM 
Ph *vS-5150 


,B'A FT. CAB OVER —Sleeps 4, self-con- 
tatiwd, call 429 1B7S ; 


MMSr roHllif nOWHSf TfMS 
W 
c 


DORMANT ASPARAGUS ROOTS — & 
£ 


strawberry plants for fall planting 
t, 


Several varlelles 
DEAN 
FOSTER 


NURSERIES, Hartford, Mi. 621-4480. 
' 


«n1 ond Inventory of o service Motion 
1 1 be sold ot public sole on September 
th, 1975 at 3:30 P.M. at W.E, Jersey & 
ons, Inc.- 1171 Milton Street, Benton 
arbor, Mich. We reserve the rloht to 
d W.E. Jersey & Sons, Inc. 


MOBILE HOMES 


MowK iwiws 72 


COLOMA MOBILE HOME SALES 


ADMIRATION 


ARLINGTON - PARK ESTATES 


5100 LITTLE PAW PAW.LAKE RD. 


COLOMA. Ph. 466-77.36 


SUNSHINE SPECIAL 
big 60' 'ront kitchen home that is really 
ffererit. Butcher block counter tops, 
opper bronze' splush carpet, citrus 
rapes & deluxe pillow back furniture 
omblne tcrmake this a very brlaht & 
tioerful home: The price Is only *WW on 


s, one of a kind, home. 


GRAY MOBILE HOMES 


Nooier & 1-94, B.H. Ph. 925-2182 


BLUEBERRY 
PLANTS 
Bluecrop, 
WANTED 
Used mobile homes under 


Bluerav, Jersey. Rancocas, & Early 
$3500 Will pay top dollar Phone 6633012 


DEAN FOSTER NURS Horlford, MtCh 
H"w JV"t:nigan 
. 


621 4480 
FOR SALE OR RENT —With Option to 


LANDSCAPING EVERGREENS — Vi 
., 


mile E ot Sodus then 1 block north on 
u 
Htllandale CHAPEL HILL NURSERY 
- 


rnlshed Fully carpeted & skirted with 
II shed Pn 429 32]B 


Ph W-586? 
FOR SALE 1974 STAR MOBILE HOME — 


LIQUIDATION SALE —Trees & Shrubs 
1^,^ ph ^ f^ r C 
rm ' 
C°r 


linear foot. Evenings & week-ends only- 5 
14X60 ROSEBROOK — Like -new. 2 


mi. No. East, of Bonoor on 24th Ave. 
bcdrm.,'carpe1*d, appliances, .total elec. 


Harry E. Johnson. Phi 427-7174. 
, 
: 
Cat .(29-5022. 


WANTED 
THIS YEAR'S (CROP OF 
19 


BUTTERNUT 8- WALNUT NUTS'WITH 
S 


OR WITHOUT HUSKS 
S4 BUSHEL 
t« 


BUTTERNUT, 53 BUSHEL WALHUT; 
'o 


PHONE 4684909 
» 


Wonted To Buy 66 
^ 


WANTED TO BUY. — Used stove & 
rclrlgcrolor. Coll-. 429-6418. 


WANTED -i JEEP -"or 4 wheel Dr; INT 
.Scout with or without snow plow. Good 
Condition. Ph. 9B3-6056. 


FORFASTttSUlTSTRY 


CUSSVIED ADS 


LIVESTOCK 


Irvwtock-Horws 
67 


Mueller's .Western, Shop, 


TACY'S SADDLE SHOP 


REG. 
QUARTER HORSES —Also Reg. 


Buckskins. Ph. 41M003. 
' 


CHAROUMS BULL FOR SALE 


468-4734 


APPALOOSAS —.For sale, rea. more! 
' 


yearling, weanling. Call 443-4361. 


BO^Sf r*tl MM MppHM 
Ow 


COUNTRY KENNELS —Phone 925-099?. 
Modern, clean A h*ot*d. Boarding duy, 
weett, or month. Outside runs. 


CAT LOVERS —HIMALAYAN KITTENS 
FOR SALE. 'LONG HAIR. Blue point & 
seal point. 1175. with papers. 1125, without, 
papers. Moke very good pets. Ph. 
«S«42 


70 LIBERTY — 12x50 ft. . 2 Bedrm 


3 In Lincoln wood Estates. 13300 or best 
ler. Coll 983-4905. 


72 MERIDAN 14XM FT. —2 Wdrms., 
irpetlng,- partially turnlihed, utility 
ed, skirting S, pump. 15500. 4»W-7251, 


RENTAL 


PURCHASE!! 


Be sure, and look /into this 
money saving plan tK'fore you 
I)U\ 


RILEY 


MOBILE 


HOMES INC. 


3887 M-139 


St. Joseph, Ml 
429-4800 


AUTOMOTIVE 


BRIDGES CHEV-OLDS 


Wotervllit, Mich. Ph. «-3107 


Rogel's — Watervliet 


Lincoln — Mercury — Monteoo —Cornel 


COME TO LEVALLEY-KLUM, 
The llncsl In new & used cars. 
OLDS.CADILLAC-RAT 


ROCKET SQUARE, MO W. MAIN, B.H. 


CASH 


For Your USED CAR OR TRUCK 


See "Dutch ol- 


ASHLEY FORD 


AUTOMOTIVI 


fcn.,.^. n 


197! TOYOTA COROLLA COUFJ i - 
RKdo, auto Irons •«"""*& "§JfflB' 
(KcillMI cond , 11775 Ph »»-»•» -on . 
3:30 widows. AH *>» ««»*einh. 


new muffler t Mlwust. Rum MoutrMlry. 
WOO Coll OHMi 


Air, 311 enflln*, economv, IW5, Ph 


•70 OREEN MAVERICK Stick shift Jusl ' 
luneduo Good tires Snow llres on. »9S. 
Pk **4S71. 
*•• 


MUST SACRIFICE — WJ Coprlce £tos- 
slc. Air, P.S , P B , cruise, AMfFM, 
really clean! Ph aft 4 o m , 7564781 


W71 MONTE CARLO -Block with black 
vlnv tot), 0ood condition, low mileage. 
Ph. Harttord oSI-«75. 
1W FORD MUSTANG —Clean, white 4 . 
Diack wim black vlnvl top, 302 engine 
New tires PH VK-sm. 
' 


M IMPALA SS 


No rust. Runs goodl 
Ph, 993*$3fl, anytime. 


MUST SELL —1975 OLDS, CUTLASS 
SUPREME. Loodedl Call: «M»S alters 
p.m. 


I9», S DOOR PONTIAC CATALINA, 


PHONE 9U-»71 


BEST BUYS In used OK Cars ft Irucks 


Com* to Berrlen Springs. 
• ' 


DON SPRUNG CHEVROLET SALES 


19« JEEP CJ5 —New body, 10". chrome, 
wheels & llres, plus mounted snow tires. 
I19«. Ph. <»-7703 aft. i p.m. 


FOR FAST RESULTS TRY , ; 


CLASSIFIED ADS 


Tnda Far Sab 74 


GMC TILT CAB — Inline 671 Diesel, 238 


Thermo Klna. Tip-Top Condition! Ph. 
WS-3W3 or 4634106. 
. i 


miles. Excellent cand. Call «9-lOK.-~ 


POR SALE— 1975 v^ ton Chev.'4-wtieel 
drve, PS, PB * Autam, radial tires, HOC 
miles, U.B50. Ph. 944-1373. 


ed. Good condition. Ph. 429-1602. 


USED TRUCKS 


1974 G.M.C. Vi TO/) Plckbn; :Aiito:t trans- 


mission, . power' iiecring. - power 
brokcis 
Vft entHfte 
Only ^KOOO 
Miln, can juw . lebded aov -VV'v- 
Sfwro 
f 
14,595 


19/2 1 H C Single eulJ tractor, MtMcl 


1700. Excellent Condition. : ;. . "13,250. 


1971 44-Ton 4x4 PIckUD. V-B Eng., Auto. 


Trans.; 
Power r.Stecrfna, .Power 


Brakes, 7Va* »«yers Snow plow with 
turn ongie. Very Oood 
13,795. 


1969 Ford F350 I -ton cob & chowls, Dyal 


Rear Wheels, V-8 Engine,' ^Soeed 
Transmission. Good 
,S1,»S 


19?3 i.H.C. ^ TOO Camper. Soec^AUto. 


Trons., 
Power 
Steering, 
Power 


Brakes, V-fl Engfne. Very Ctebn. 


S2.49S. 


1971 Chevrolet 
3/4 Ton -Camper -Special. 


V-8 Engine, Aoto. Tronsmliston, 
Power Steering. Power Broh*?*, • £ 
Goody For , 
1^,39$ 


ZERBEL 


ffjBT3 


1-94 - NAPIER, 


927-3521 


MHiiilLtii efiyrlii n 


JIM 4 GEN'S .., ". 


B«5, BIG, FALL CLEARANCE SALEI 1 


. 
on 1975 Motorcvclei. See us DetorCtvu 
buy! KOWOMKI, Morton, Duco«l,,.mo- 
nwal, MonhnM, C.Z., Jawa and used 
CKles.4«-«271. 


1974 
SPORTSTER 
XLCH 
— SMHI 


cftooeed. Excel. Corrtltlon with MoM. 
new rebuilt engine). Coll m-7411. . ..--,. 


1975 HONDA 590 
4 cvl. 900 miles. 


Call «t-3177. LIKE NEW CONDI 


MUST SELL —-73 HONDA » Choooer. 


Ph. 4M-8146, Three Oaks. 


DACHSHUND FEMALE — 3 months. 
r-AiptPLAIH PLAit* 
19» SUZUKI GT 2M 
. . 


Ton «5 
. 
73 STA. WAG. 9 pass. Dodoe custom. 
1300 or, best offer or trade tor V.W. 


Ph. Brldomon, 4A5-3652 
Am-Fm. Rack, P.S. , P.B. Auto, trans. 
. 
CALL: W7-1757. 


AKC BEAGLE Pl]pS" ' ' Started Beogies 
Atr^L^ new. «^. V-omV^-^. ;. ^ ^WKl TM W 
B«1 o«er, must 


& running' Beagles, pair of Running Fox 
1974 GMC 3M VAN — P.S., P.B. air cond. 
jell. Lot* of wtrok Ph 4M-7M1. 
. 
, 


Walkers. German Short Hair Pointer. 
Completely 
customized. Musi sell. 
* 


GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPPIES, *20. 
1972 CAPRICE —4 dr hordtop, olr cond. 


Ann ceoo 
PS, PB, PW, new tires, excel 1 condition 
3i»-<>(>lW 
ph926-24J4. 


. , AKC REGISTERED TOY POODLE 


- ' • • 
PUPPIES 
' 


PARTI COLORED 


CALL: W7-3856 


- 
BRIAN'S KAWASAKI 


SUPER SAVINGS- 


LAST RE»MKmG STOCK MUST GO . 


73 VEGA —2 dr. Hatchback, R&H, 3 sod.. 
1975 Models —Lowest Prices 


icw tires, 30.000 ml. Red Beauty, Shorn! 
. 
' 
, 


1575. COLBYS, 983-3287. 
2j «0cc,4-cvl. Reg.«69S. 
«29S 


972 CADILLAC COUPE DEVILLE - 


OLD ENGLISH SHEEPDOG — 2 years 
g (ni Sharpl Stereo tape. Radial tires. 
SSStlZ'^i £«' ii w's 
"i»5 


otd, 
very good with children. Plus A- 
Moto. or best oiler'. Ph. Three Oaks, 
X^oncc 
''"NOWW95 


frame dog house. I7S complete. 925-8219. 
756-9584 after 6:00 PM. 
".'ti'irpn ViVpp'i'v 


BRITTANY SPANIELS — Must sell Ihls 
week (40. Ph. 944-5932 days; nltcs coll 
429-4721. 


73 DODGE CHALLENGER —340 V-8, 
PS&PB, outomotlc, AM-FM d track taw 
nlayer, 782-7507 otter 5 p.m. 


HURRYl HURRY1 HURRYl 


TAKE 1-94 EAST TO LAWRENCE EXIT 
THEN NORTH APPROX. 10 MILES TO 


-!;!Sw""-°— " ^Er^^.sHWASH.R -I AUCTION NOTICES &£W^%&>£~% 
PHONE 1427-5038 


HI«RFF'R YOU-PICK FARMS —Gropes, 
Aoplcs. Sweet Peppers, Plum Tomalocs, 
GREEN SWIVEL ROCKER —Green solo 


Keltlcr P^'p"!1 ",5 g*"! H°G«LAND 
' & cllalr' grev Ml° * chair' 2 """ loblc5' ' 


Reo-VGCoWt5°IJ.II c°oRu°P8.LJo,«thln5op; j^™"' Pr"='d M ° ** Mlc- C"": 


oleBlue0CreekWRdr:Vi mile North. Ph. 
FOR SALE: COUCH 8, CHAIR. 


. CONCORD GRAPES — You pick, your 
.... 
. CALLJ'jSisii; 


4356 Bundy Rd., Colomo. Ph. 468-3334. 
MAYTAG AUTOMATIC WASHER 


QUALITY APPLES 
Peaches, pears, 
^"S^tSS^' 


Plums. Garden Fresh Vegetables. By me 
""'• <6M°£: 


pound or bushel. Good potatoes 8. tomo- 
HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE 


loos. BLOSSOMLAND FARMERS MKT., 
TJUnMl? JOQ A *ntl 


1985 M-139, B.H. Nexl to Pondcroso Slk. 
JTrlVJlNEj 'IZU-IIOA. 


Hse. Open dolly 10 to 7. 
REPOSSESSED RCA HOME ENTER- 


YOU PICK — Pears, Barllells & Bosc. 
TAINMENT CENTER. 25" T.V., AM-FM, 


Apples Mclnlosh, Jonathans, Grimes, 
Stereo, Record Player. All 
walnut 


Golden Delicious. Earle Gordon. 3841 
cabinet. Cost new S1500, tor J650. PAS- 


Tabor Rd.. Sodus, 925-3048. 
CAL'S, 154 Nooier, B.H. 
- . 


CAU THE EXPERT! 


, 
BECAUSE Of THEIR YEARS OF EXPERIENCE AND POLICIES OF 


1 
GUARANTEED CUSTOMER SATISFACTION, THESE ADVERTISERS 
ARE CONSIDER* 0 MASTERS IN THEIR TRADf . 


C^gctWoW, 4, 
H^T«d*, « 


>. ROTOTILLING ^rood gravel, stones for 
WILL HAUL 


'drlvcwov. black dirt, top soil, J. Monto 
TRASH, OLD FURN-, IRON, ETC. 


925-3W7, 
CALL AFTER 3 P.M. 9-M-56.fi 


-. BUILDING 8. REMODELING — Addl- 
-« _|.-- ._j M...*!..,. jx 


t!6ns, oaroocs, roofing, concrete work. 
riwuniij win ,»-.... v w 


• LICENSED. Ph. 463-5217 or 782-3e,A3. 
Arrinu HFATmr X COOLING Heat 


Avcttom 
71 


AIirTION 


75 BLAZER 


FULLY EQUIPPED 5,000 MILES 


wheel drive, air cond., PS & PB, Cruls 


control, moo wheels, radio, snow tires, 


L \.\*J Vy JL m. vFl™ 
— : 


1WI CHEVY IMPAUA -Custom, <1,00 
actual miles, V.8, Air, P5, PB, Till whee 


li-lUDAY, SEPT. 19. 1975*- 
vinvi top; «tso. Ph «e«7i. . 


AT 12;0fl NOON 


Conn; Early For The Drawing 


Having mid my home will sell all 
Personal Property listed, below a 


69 MUSTANG —302 3-sp«ed, Runs oood 
very clean. New headers, 8-traek lap 
deck in-dash, J10P5. '69 SATELLITE, 
door, automatic, E.T. Moos, vinyl top, n 


471-1132. 


975 CORVETTE — T too, 350 engine, PS 
PB, p-Wlndows, air, leather interior 


WatenTel, 
Mkhtean on North 
AMM ««r«Si'!» «""»'• ™*2i-'»'- 


. Water-vllcl Rond al the corner of j^"^"^^^^^^^^^^^ 


M-l-W). 
927-3153, otter 5 D.m.. 429-4124. 


HOUSEHOLD GOODS 


Whirlpool 
Imperial 
Automatic. 


Dryer. 2 Cushion Pullman Hide-a- 
bed. While leather type .chair * 
ottoman. Reclining Chair. 2 Floor 
Lamps. End Tables. Cotlce Tahte. 
Ncsco Roasler. Sunbeam Mixer. 
Scars 
exercize 
Bike. 
Pictures. 


Knick 
Knacks. Clock. 
Pictures. 


Card Tables and chairs. Paper 
dispenser. Eureka Vacuum cleaner. 
Electric Broom. 
Chaise Lounge- 


L-iwn umbrella. Kruit jars. Dishes, 
pots and pans. 


UANO AND GARUKN 


•mous 


21" 
Toro 
self-propelled 
Uwn 


mf**^\- 
Salef fc Scrvicc- 925'5946- 54 hr- 
frmcro- 
condition. Pipe wrenchal. Plumb- 


' J* 
*^, 
scrvlce- 
'• 
inn tools. Ex, ladder. Grinder. 
J*|}QWN^* 
: 
toofinf-SWm 47 , 


i 
SPOUT X 
ALUMINUM SIDING 


• \ 
MNHIlOCItS 
*m 
v-c SALES PH. 4»-9«7i. 


f 
Concrdt. Hwivv Duty. JF 
- ""* "Wf 


J* 
•» .*' 
f 
' DRY ICE 


- ^ 
*3 EA* 
'*m 
Town V Country Cos, next to DEER 


'•• f 
fn 
f 
FOREST Ph. 4M-6721. 


t 
T™' A JL— * . f 
SEARS SEAMLESS WHITE ALUM 
T> 
**M4 HMKW Pi. 
J| 
GUTTERS — «.<» Ft. installed. Free £s 


<L tOMff 
42f-7334 % 
tlmolcs. Call W6-!16l. 


f 
\i_L J3?i?' f 
FLEOTROLUX RAIrF,s 


fp 
}W/IJt£&[ 
' Jb 
• 
*i€RVICE. JojTTWsLoMunlon4»-5lA3 


*Hh 
SVVBPVV/ Jk 
HYMAUL1C E AIR EOUIPMtHT SEIt 


•A 
m*mmm^K* •• 
VICE. Pwtww. v«vt4 fc cvl. r«wir*« 


^^Z?r 
*s&sr 


Fishing equip. Drop cords. 
Ply- 


Pipe vise. Other Misc. tools. Hand 
and garden tools. 


TERMS: — CAST! — Not Responsi- 
ble For Accidents Or Goods After 
Sold. 


MRS. E.H. HITTER: Owner 


Watcrvlict Mich 


JOHN.M. GLASSMAN 


"Your Friendly Auctioneer" 


Eaii Claire, Mtek. 


"THE AUCTION WAY 
IS THE BEST WAY" 


70 CHEVY NOVA —2 door, 6 cvl.. P.S 
Autornallc. • 


after 5 P.M. 


233 AMERICAN MOTORS 6 Cylinder, 73 
Good condition. Best otter. 


Ph. 429-4918. 


FOR SALE, TAKE OVER PAYMENTS 
1974 FORD LTD. Regular gas. 4 dr. ol 
class B trail hitch. 427-7161 Banoor. 


1974 HONDA XL350 1750. Call 983-7273 
after 5 p.m. 


1974 YAMAHA DT 350 CC 


S, 
LIKE HEW. PHONE 983-4100. 


0 
1972 DUCATI T- Dtrt Bike. 450CC, very 
good condition. MM. Call 466-7251. 


• 
ftvcmrtiwi 
Vthidn 76 ' 


* 
MINI MOTORHOMES 
0 
- 
. 
FROM vms. 
• 


PICKUP CAMPERS 


FROM 1995. 


F1FTHWHEEL TRAILERS 


FROMIW495. 


FROM $1495. 
'. "I 


Aux. tucl tanks, oorls & occ. GRAVEU 
HILL SALES, INC. 6 miles West ot Paw 
Paw. 
Phone 657-4455. 


WINNEBAGO • CHAMPION - TIOGA 
MOTOR HOMES — A» .197S models .al. 


otter Crctuicd. Also all travel trailers al 


MAPLE LEAF — Just In — Kor 'A ton, 
Catnino or Ranchero, 22 tt. tttth wheel '76 


trailers. JIM'S TRAILER SALES, Paw 
Paw, 
37'A St., N.W. 457-5040. 


new, will sell tor H750. Coll 471-7653.' 


L60, 15 in. tires. JacKman wheels. 304, V-8 
]9?J FORD ^ -you SPECIAL —With ll'/j 


AMtst see to appreciate. 695-5333 otter S 
m^n^nttrr A n m. 
' 


V73 
HORNET SPORTABOUT 
— 


cylinder automatic. Low miles. $2350 


., 
TAKING RESERVATIONS — For-Cayo 
Motavator Motor Home, Sleeps 4. Coil 
(Mil Molrtrt, 935-1139. 


FOR SALE -1969 Olds Cutloss. 62.000 
J.OUNIHY |UUIKb L 
^«J *'J™: 


miles. Excellent cond. SI100 or best oltcr, 
W,Jf|s smiles Bast o ' Paw Pow Ph 


:ali 4W-47S3. 
-m^ 0^1' "days" 
P°W 
"' P> • 


1971 FORD WAGON —P.S. 8. -B. oir cona. 
Excollcnt cond. »l!50. Coll: <»•»»<. 
SmWimfelks 
77 
-••-•- 


1971 PEUGOT — «.«» miles. 32 MPG, 
,ws 
Irani wheel drive, disc brokes. Mlchelln 
^ 
„„ Nl)r(>i „,, 


rodials, Jl»5. 471.20OT. 
nrSllili vfnr 1 lm!t.<™1-1 •, f»*.hnl 


'71 PONTIAC T37 


SI 500 


CALL: «i-76M. 


1974 VEGA NOTCHBACK —3 stwed. «« 
or $500 & Toke over payments. Cal 
Ht-lttl or «7-«ll, exl. 215. 


AIM ttw Sport & Roily too. PIPESTONE 
SPORTS SALES, 4610 PorK Rd., Eoo 
CHUre, W4-10W. 


_ 
AccHwnn AM! Iwpwf 7r 


RADIATOR REPAIRS 


•75 PINTO —Blue, 4-SDCed, moo wheels, 
"""f'X'."'^'^ "u??'Jn, ?'"" 


MOO. Cal,: «3J3», mK lor David. 
^ ^CHET NICHOLS^ 


BUY - SI U - TRAtX 


UNITED AUTO SALES 


COTIHf BHW m RpVltVHV 


926.2107 


ROOT WORK 


»• j*k »»» H *t t** HMD. Ml 


ASHUYFOftD \ 


rWNwfer 
fH-nn 


PAGE THIRTY-SIX 
THE HERALD-PALLADIUM, BcitM Barter-8t J*M»», 
WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMMg tt, 


. Joe Native 


Is Sales Chief 


MAX KLEMM 
Mtcctor »f Sales 


CRANSTON, R.J. - Max 


Ktemm, a native of St. Joseph, 
has been named director of 
sales for Welsh, a Textron 
company 
and 
'a . leading 


manufacturer of personal pro- 
tective equipment and safely 
products. 
- ' 


In his new position, he will be 


responsible for Welsh's nine 
regional sales divisions in the 
continental United States, 


Klemm, a 1956 graduate of St. 


Joseph high school, is the son of 
Mrs. and Mrs. Max Klemm Sr., 
2502 Thayer drive,. St. Joseph. 


Before joining Welsh, he was 


regional sales manager for the 
health and safety division of 
Marion Laboratories1 in Kansas 
City,"Mo. Earlier he ted been 
district sales manager for the 
General Electric company's 
health and safety, division. 


Klemm now lives with his 


wife, Kay, and three children at 
2 Payson lane, Cumberland, 
R.I 


Group Sees God 
;As 'Father-Mother 


DURHAM, N.C. (AP) - Some 


Christians are 
taking the 


" "Him" out of the hymnals. 


They say if humans were "in 


'the image and likeness of God," 
then God must be both mas- 
culine and feminine. 


,. ."Unfortunately, some folks 
.are attempting to see this as 
'neuterizttig' God," said the 
.Rev. Robert Young, chaplain al 
Duke University. "It's more 
:positive than that." 
,'. Under the Rev. Mr. Young's 
guidance, a group of male and 
Van Buren 
Marriage 
Licenses 


• PAW PAW - The following 
marriage licenses have been is- 
sued by Van Buren county Clerk 
Charles E. MacDonald: 


l Billy Btevtas, JO, and Patricia 
'Ann Brewer, 23, both of South 
Haven. 


Perry Lelaiid Blackman, 19, 


and Brandy.Ann Walter, 16, 
both of Bknmingdale. 


Terry Lynn Crouch, 32, and 


Linda Ann Jach, 23, both of Paw 
Paw. 
. • David Andrew Lyklns, 20, and 
.Shirley Jane GillUand, 18, both 
of South Haven. 


• Patrick Allen Collins, 20, and 


•Diana Lynn Koch, 18, both of 
Hartford. 


Curt Lewis Cowell, 18, and 


Robin Dec Audette, 18, both of 
South Haven. 


James Francis Sarno, 26, and 


Marguerite Marie Gay, 23, both 


', of Covert. 


• Anthony Homer Hardaway, 
21, Detroit, and Giscle Christina 
Flowers, 21, South Haven. 


female 
Duke students are 


rewriting not only hymns and 
prayers .but passages of Scrip- 
ture. Ultimately, "an- entire 
"nonsexist" Bible may develop. 


For instance, in a standard 


translation, John 15:13 reads:. 
"Greater love hath.no man than 
this that a man should lay down 
his life tor his friends." 


The Duke group has convert- 


ed that-passage to: "Greater 
love has no one than this that 
one should lay down one's life 


. for a friend." 
' • 


The Rev. Mr. Young said 


there has been no major op- 
position 
, 
' 


"We aren't making' total 


breaks, anyhow. We still use the 
'Glory be to the Father and to , 
the Son and to the Holy Ghost,' 
arid, of course,' the Lord's 
Prayer, starting, -Our Father, 
who art in heaven ...," he said. 


In the main, he said, the Duke 


group has been 
substiluting 


"God" for the pronoun "Him" 
whenever possible and, In some 
instances, praying, ."Oh • God, 
our Father-Mother," 


So far, the group has left in- 


tact the masculine pronouns 
referring to Jesus Christ. 


"Jesus was more than a man. 


He was the fulfillment of 'pcr- 
sonhood,' for all persons, both 
men and women," the Rev. Mr. 
Young said. 


However, he said: "There are 


students and some faculty who 
In their own private prayers are 
referring to God as 'She' or 
'Her'. But .that kind of thing is 
still very personal, not public." 


LEAVES FOR U.S. 


TAIPEI, Formosa (AP) - 


Madame 
Chiang 
Kai-shek, 


widow of the former leader of 
Nationalist china, has left for 
the United States for medical 
treatment. 


Kim! 


H> An Unktatvn 


And II... IV. Oprnil 


DMi 
"I Crrwi. « Kinm 


"" 
As I Ctvwtf H Iht- 
-By liiMlh llr«l 


Success Secrets Of 
Supersalesmen Told 


• As jobs become scarcer, competition increases with the 
result that no matter what business you're in, you'd tetter 
know how to sell your product — and, at limes, yourself. 
This week Art Linkletter tells you how. He talks about four 
of Ihc greatest salesmen he's known or heard of and how, 
;by their example, wc'can learn this valuable art. 


Showman Billy Rose, Arthur Godfrey and builders Henry 


Kaiser and Bill Zeckendnrf are his candidates for super- 
salesmon. You'll learn their secrets, how they made big 
money through uncommon methods. What's the most im- 
portant attitude to maintain? Art says, "Always be 
prepared to lake 'no' for a starter." Don'l miss this week's 
cover story — it's a WK seller. 


Read it Saturday in Family Weekly magazine, a regular 


feature of The Herald-Palladium. 


Besf for tess of MUIR'S 
B« bf for /..--us of MUM 
S 


Your Prescriptions always cost LESS at Muir's! 


Drug Stores 


* In KM fabulous 


FAIRPLAIN PLAZA 


*0p«n Daily « Sunday 
8 AM to 9:45 PM 


^ Hurry!. Last 4 
-Days of Sale! 
ENDS SEPT. 21 


Save up to 50% — by Buying 2 
Muir's Quality VITAMINS 
NOW AT EXTRAORDINARY LOW PRICES! 


SPECIAL! 


2 Bottles 
$ I 40 


!•» $1.09 Each 


Muir's Own Quality 
250 mg. VITAMIN 'C 


KM <*a* fa* hurt, in Otrw Mfc. M*M*I C •* * 
- 
hMMy few fcr "«"«*•!" *. nW »fc 


VITAMINS 
PLUS IRON 


1" 


1 t* W. M tfc 
2~ 


-, ._.„, ,_ ,j 
ummw| am row cm 
aHnm im 


flmpt^MMlMrfcMtarfjiNMn.*!!,.,* I MMn| m 


IMrV 


VITAMINS, 
MINERALS 


VITAMINS 


EandC 
2*7" 


bf. i« f* M. ML Mm* 
cw*» CMMMRf 410 MMi 
Ml. EM* MO •«. MM* t 


Wheat Germ 
Oil Capsules 
2 
165 


btb. I 


tfwfe t IM far 
""•* MM. tbw M* • 
^ 


Sweetened lo«Cal»rie 


WAGNER NATURAL 


FRUIT DRINKS 
2 
FOR 


54 OZ 


Jug. 


Regular 69* Jug 
3 Popular Flavor* 


VITAMIN 


E, 400-unit 
2 
A** 
Mb.O 


ft* 
PN 100. M* pw 


GREETING CARDS 
BUY 2 


Shampoo Sale 


Sand 16 
Or. Sixes 


Regularly 89* Each 
Save 44' on Sale 


1 8 Ot. Stain-removing formula 
'SNO-BOL' TOILET 
BOWL CLEANER 
169 


NATURAL 
VITAMIN A 
2** I84 


N- ti>_p.t M. m 14000 
•IW (MtfHCf Ngfwt's hut 


MUIR'S QUALITY PRODUCTS 


YOUR BEST BUY! S A T I S F A C T I O N G U A R A N T E E D 


Muir's Nightime 
Cold* Medicine 


60uncw— 


$1 68 
I 


CwnMndnHMoctliin. 


Muir's 'Vogue' 
Douche Powder 
60uiHM— 


73 


MUM'S! 


HfMofty pnpnd-fgr fmMm 
You olwys sow* iMnn at 


New 'Stop-Sine' 


Sinus Tablets 
BoMte of 30 — «3c 


btll. $1 20 
1 


Modi to abut imm Iwxttit pgin and 


No 
pmMptkm 
itttM. 


Mulrcotussin DM 
Relievo* Coughing 


- 
*1.2» 
89 


co«Bli. 


\ \ \ 
MAGNETIC 
Photo Album 


S» **• • (Md m m m MMR. ff\n 
JM Ml MM MfMHc •*• **»+ 
FOR 


pMk *•«, plu ^ktm M mi,2> 
FORib79 


$2.49 


Our 'Mag-Lum' , 


ANTACID 


12 Ounce* — tog. 9Sc 
2*,*!60 


A. N^UM tvspvmofi TOT TIM kwrtmtnt of 
nyptr oddity of TM ttoMHCh OM juHv 


Regularly 29c S Ox. Can 
ZIPPO Brand 
LIGHTER FLUID 


FOR 


Muir's 'Histop' 
NASAL SPRAY 


20 cc Sin — 98c 


33 


hr in* in HM MM to 


dw M cofch, ahtyn, 


Exwfcot 


Liquidate Your Water Weight 


LOSE EXCESS POUNDS 


T« « »t 3 RMh o *, m *• OM M«d*| nm, mi Hi IM m&t. A 
HMt Mn nwk cMki gpftWt. T« rtmmUul, M tot b*CMM p. 
•ml IM; Hun y«« IM ^M* mi Mm MMntr. Kt cnA'dtoM Sifi, 


l tan tht dim, trim fifm yw taw ilwyt mttWI Iiy MM MW 


• 
• • 
• 
• ' • • • 


70 Tablets-*^ sri«-Sale 2 fcr »2. 1 9 


COMPLETE SATISFACTION OR YOUR MONEY REFUNDED! 


Mufr'i Quality 


A.P.C. PAIN 


RELIEF TABLETS 


lOOTabton —79- 


btU. 115 


NMr't 


MEDICATED 


. SKIN CREAM 
11 OWK« Jar — 9T 


84 


IODINE, OR 


MERTHIOLATE 
1 Ox. Battt* — 4V 


Muir's OjMHty 


WINDOW 
CLEANER 


1*O>.IM«H« — 
2^64 


•'i 


PLATINUM 


RAZOR BLADES 
Poekao* of 10 — 99- 


1I00 


MILK OF 


MAGNESIA 


MMr'i M-Onrfn 


SACCHARIN 


TABLETS 


1,000 Count — 90. 
2 
$1 


btto. 
1 20 


MUIR'S HERBAL 


CRIME RINSE 


Best for Lets at MUIR'S 


GLYCERIN 


SUPPOSITORIES 


Jar of 35 — 69- 


"<** for. 


llrorf Hot 


MUIR'S SALAC 


-2*67 


or i-Ms of MUIR'S 


to OHE HBRAIO-PALLADIUM ^ 
SSTSMBER-I?, 1975 
SALE ENDS SAT., SEPT. 20 


Skin-look Te 


Natural 
Shodot 


SO VERSATILE! 


NEW "SUZY" WIG 


Luxurious curls, easy to handle. 
Wear with bangs, center port, 
or part it on the side. 


K MART'S ADVERTISED 
MERCHANDISE POLICY 


4.48 


I.f.KRE»ECO. 


JUNIOR BOYS' 


NO-IRON JEANS 


_ 


Four-pocket, belt-loop cotton/ 
polyester western flares." 4-7.- 
Matchlng Denim Jacket . . 4.48 


ACRYLIC KNIT 


SLIP-ON SWEATER 


Our ^^fcOO 
R.9 mm^GZ 
3.»7 f^iflP 
Thru Sot. 


Long-sleeved sweaters in mock 
prturtleneck, jewel, V-neck and 
U-rtock styles. Misses' sizes. 


CAMPUS HOSE 


PUT PEP IN 
ANY OUTFIT 


Our Regular t7« Pr. 


C 


PR. 


Striking argyle or snow- 
flake patterns accent 
skirts or dresses.1 Orion • 
acrylic/stretch nylon in 
fall colors. Fit sizes 9-11. 


Kmart - BENTON HARBOR 


455 Rtvwview Drive 


Open Daily 10 AM. to 10 P.M. - Open Sundays 


Men's 
Sixes 


4.96J 


NO-IRON TWILL 


WORK SHIRT 


Short on care, long on wear! 
Polyester/cotton twill shirt. 
Our 5.88 Matching Pants, 4.96 


"FLORENTINE" 


QUILTED 


BEDSPREAD 


Our Regular 16.88 
96 


Save 6.92 


A screen print bouquet 
on polyester/cotton ba- 
.tiste: Nylon tricot bock, 
•bonded polyester fiber fill. 
94x108-in. Save today! 


$4 


3.22 


Solid* and Plata1* 


$22 


Abo In 
Brisk 
SoM 
Color* 
18.88 
-«;' 


1*5 


I $5 


1 


SILK-LIKE SHIRTS 
Our Regular 4.97-SaU Ends Sat. 


Care-free acetate/nylon shirts with placket 
front, long-point collar. Missels'sizes. 
POLYESTER PANTS 


Our Regular 5.96-Sate End* Sat. 


No-iron double knit polyester pants. Cuffed pull- 
ons, zip-up styles and more. Misses' sizes. 


T-SHIRT TOPS 


Our R«g. 3.97-Sate Ends Sat. 


Comfortable cotton tops. Some with em- 
broidered or print front. Misses' sizes. 


*4 
»S 


FASHIONABLE 
WARM COATS 


Our Regular 21.96 


COZY COATS 


FOR GIRLS 


'Our Regular 25.96-26.96 
IS88 *22 
• ^^ 
Thru sot. 
mm* i^mm 


Popular no*wal« cotton corduroy 
coat* include styles with *nap 
front imitation jamb fur trim, 
novelty pockets, interesting 
waist treatment. Misses' sizes. - 


• Regular or boat-kngth coat* . . . 
so«d* look*, Orion* acrylic pile, 
Zhivogo sty l«*.Som« with a hood, 
furry trim or «mbroid«ry. 7-14. ' 
Our 23.? 6-24.96, Slt«t 4-6X, $21 


K«9, TM 


ttftnt 


DENIM JACKETS 


Our Regular 6.97 


Sale End* Sat. ^^_^_ . ,,, 
,^BJHlW Boy* Site* 


Unlmed cotton denim western-style jacket 
with snap-flap chest pockets; banded bottom. 
Our 5.97 Matching Denim Flare Jeans, 4.97 


In Men's Sizes 
BRUSHED 
SATEEN 
FLARES 


Our Regular 7.97 


Sal* Cndi Saturday 


Smooth idea for fall; 
western-style jeans 
tculored in softly 
brushed cotton sateen 
to set them apart from 
the usual jeans. You'll 
find solid colors to 
complement the new- 
est solid color or print 
shirts. Save todoyl 
GET YOUR NUMBER 


Boy*' 
^g|F 
Men's 


Our 3.77-4.77 Creslan* acrylic/cotton" sweat 
shirts in your favorite numeral and color. 
Our Reg. 2.96, Jr. Boy*' Size Sweat Shirt, 3.47 
• Amwlcan Cyonomld »»g. TV, 


Men's Sixes 
GENUINE LEATHER BOOTS 
SO $19 
6-Inch Bo«4» VJj^^fV 
*-'<>ch Boots • ^1^^^ 
Our Reg. 14.97 ^*^i^^ 
Our Reg. 16.97 ••••••••• 


flexible leather boots with arch-supporting steel shank, shape-retaining 
Goodyear* welt, cushioned leather insole, oil-resistant sole. 


SAFETY STEEL-TOE BOOTS 


6-Inch Boots •••^•^•V 
«-lnch Boots 


Our Reg. 17.97 ••^•^•^ 
OurReg. 20.97 


Compression- and drop-tested to meet industry safety standards. Rugged 
leather, steel shank, cushioned insole, oil-resistant sole. Shop K mart! 


TOTS'"GROW" 


SLEEPERS 
;44 
I Our Reg. 4.44 


2-pc. flame-retardont 
sleepers of SEF* mod- 
acrylic/polyester. 1-4. 


CHILDREN'S 


SLEEPEI 


) Our Reg. 4.66 


F lame-retardant, 
sleepers of SEF* mod- 
acrylic/polyester 4-6x. 


WORK SOCKS. 


Our Reg.< 


1.84 
_ 


Cotton slack socks with cushion 
sole.3-poirbundle. Sizes 10K -13. 


POCKET RADIO 


Our Reg. 3.88 
Sol. End. Sot. 
Battery*-operated AM pocket 
radio cornes with handy strap. 
'Noi included 


SALE! 45-PC SET OF MELAMINE 


Our Regular 15.97—Sale Ends Sat. 


Dishwasher-safe melamine set includes 8 each: 
10" plates, 7" plates, soup-cereal bowls, cups, 
saucers. Plus platter, bowl, cream and sugar set. 
Save 4.40 


'* 


fUT W A L L P*| 


INTERIOR LATEX 
Our Reg. 4.76 
Sale Endt Sat. 


Easy-on latex dries quickly to a 
flat finish. White and colorst 


tLYESTER 


»-PC. BATH 
[ENSEMBLE 


Sale Price 


Sale Ends Saturday 
Decorator color for 
your bathroom. Ensem- 
ble includes lid cover, 
2-pc. tank set, 20x24" 
contour rug, 20x32" ob- 
long scatter rug. Non- 
skid waffle-backed. 


Alto In Mat Black 


FIRE 


Our Reg. 


2957 


With matching bottom bar. Cus- 
tom made to fit opening to SO". 


4' POTTED 


TREE PLANTS 


Our Regular 13.87 


Save 3.90 


Large, 4' tall artificial plants look 
ever-to-lifelike. Choose n«w palm, 
Hawaiian blossom, hemlock, For- 
mosa boxwood or Oriental palm. 


.7.7* 


'DAISY' SWEEPER 
Our Reg. 11.33 
Sol* Ends Sot. ^- s«ve 3757 
Enameled metal; rotary brush. 
H -Gal. Rug Shampoo 
2.68 


V POWERDRILL 


- End. Sot. 
Double-insulated. Drills up to 
"•> 


in wood, Vi "in steel. UL approved. 


3.97 


2.97 


STEEL FILi BOX 


Our Reg. 3.97 
SoUEndtSat. 
Woodgrain steel. I2y.x5^xl0 in. 
Jumbo FH«,12H x*x)0" 
3.97 


200 NAPKINS 


Our Reg. 5ff 


' Sole Ends Sal. \ 
Strong and absorbent! Single-ply, 
I3V4 x!2" white paper napkins. 


,•• ^ 


COOKER-CANNER 


OurReo. ^&^\&7 


26.97 
MSm^J Sa». U 


8-qt. pressure cooker-conner has 
unbreakable pressure control. 


MEN'SrWOMEhTS 
FINE WATCHES 


Our Regular 19.96 


Quality timepiecesJrom West- 
clox* and Waltham*.Fine dress 
watches, with Swiss movement, 
are shock-resistant." Save! 
'Equof fo drop of 3-ff. to hardwood surface 


LARGE CORN POT 
Our Reg. 6.27 
Sale Ends Sat. 
Big 11-qt., 7-oz. porcelain enamel 
pot. Ideal for corn, stews, soups. 


CERAMIC LAMPS 
II88 
I I 
Save $6 


Our Regular 17.88 


Sale Ends Sat. 


Beautifully designed with the decorator look! 27" 
table lamps with high-fired, colorfully glazed cer- 
amic base topped with .18" pleated shade. 


CAFETERIA 
SPECIAL 


5» 


PU'NTER* 


CANDY OR NUTS 
Our Reg. 


Old fashioned peanut candy; 
mixed nuts with peanuts. 12 oz.* 
•Nefwt. 


BEEF SANDWICH 
COKE 


Trademark® • 


Hot beef sandwich, whipped po- 
tatoes, beef gravy. 10-oz. Coke*. 
*Reg. TM of the Coco-Co/a Co.. 


S*4 
'£> 


„ 


^^"l;^ 


iS 


%ri 


Ce/anese* 


Acetafe^B/end/ 
NO-IRON 


DRAPERIES 


Sale Ends Sat. 


Lovely two-ton* jacquard 
draperies of Celaneae* 
acetate/cotton/rayon. In- 
sulating acrylic foam back. 
48x63" Draper!**, Pr. 7.47 


BATISTE 
PANELS 
Sal* Ends Sat. 


63x81"Ea. 


Super wide, tailored pan- 
els of sheer polyester ba- 
tiste. No-iron care. 
63x43" Panel*.. Ea. 2.67 
63x45" Paitel*..Ea.l.*7 


4e* 


: 
*' •* fi >jo 


9» nl*1**10 i?«\ 
^fnfff^gf' 
V*» *a*»^^ 


t 
I 
i 


r Color* Available 


r - 


>N PANELS 


SatoPrlc* 


Thru Saturday 
40x81'Ea. 


Tailored pan«l* of no-iron polyester ninon, 
»h««r lov»lin«»« alone or ut»d under drapes, 
40>63-lnch Panels 
Each 1.57 


v:; 


T-SHIRT KNITS 


Our (tegular 1.97 
Sak Ends Saturday 


, 
• 
Yard 


Soft no-iron polyester/cotton in T-shirt body 
knit prints to fashion dresses, top* with the 
"in look" of today. 58-60 inches wide. 


FLANNELETTE 
SCENIC JERSEY 


OurR«g.97f 
Sal* Ends Sat. 
I Yd. 
JS7 
• 
Yard 


No-ironcotton/polyesterflannelette, colorfully 
printed for gaiety. Machine wash and tumble 
dry to retain softness. 44-45" wide. 


ThMe yard'goods not intended for u« in childrcn'i ilnpwMr. 


Kmart Sak Pric* 
Through Saturday §• 
Y rd 


Silky acetate/nylon jersey supplely molds to 
your body for figure-flattering fashion. Scenic 
prints odd a dramatic touch. 50-52". 


CANNON. 


3-OZ. DAZZLE AIRE 
C 
SakEndiSat. 


An «xc«)knt yam! Mothproof, machine wash 
and dry. 
V«ry toft, bru*had-look Cr««lan • 


acrylic/nylon in whit* and ombres. . 
• American CyonomW R«9 TM *N*twl 


•^^Sf^$'^-A;-U^.'^ - 


BEAUTIFUL NO-IRON SHEETS 


Charming "Maytime" floral print or striking "Molibu Strip*" 
in smooth, wrJnkl«-fr*« 130-thread-eount polyMtar/cotton. 
Matching 42u36-liKh Nllewca«««, Pair 
2.47 


DewM«f lotOr Fitted Sh«t« ............... 
... 3.80 


Qu**nFlotOrFltt*dSh*«tt 
5.97 


Twin Flat 
OrFtttad 


11 


~\v. llj?ip^ 
C-A-V^ 
^/u 


i CANNON. 


SLEEPING PILLOWS L*5lERRA STRIPE1 


Sal* End* 
Saturday 


Filled with resilient,non-allergcnic Kodel* 
233 polyester fIberfill. Permanent prats cov- 
er of smooth polyester/cotton.Corded edged 
e Kodak R«g. TM 
, 


Sale Ends 


22x42" 


"Tri-tone sheared, fringed cotton terry bath 
towel reinforces modern look in bathrooms. 
Washcloth, 52* ; Face Towel, 16x26" . . . 869 


Sale Ends 


SotUr*>T 
• 
24x44 


Fringed jacquard bath towel, unusually ab- 
sorbent ' unsheared cotton/polyester terry, 
Washcloth,63*; Face Towel, 16x26".. .1.27 


NYLON KNIT 


WARM-UP SUIT 


Sole Ends Saturday 


Jogging, biking, tennis— 
Jthis suit adapts to any ex- 
ercise. Zippered jacket, 
and pants with zippered 


tlegs, 2 zippered pockets. 


nitio 


FkMrmt nd knmwnllion *rt 
lotd irt Itrkt camptlwu with 
F«ln»l, «w» ml tool km. 


lip In pwori.' PurcfMHr imnt 
bt • mUim of ttw SHU tn 
wtikh flfwm* md/ 


DOTATION) I 
• Mm. Wk |Mt • 


pm flu in M y«l I 


HEAVY-DUTY 
AUTOMOBILE I 


MUFFLER 
Our Reg. 16.88 


TUSTAUATWC- 


JkVAIUIll 


Guaranteed As Long 
As You Own Your Car 


hie Ends Sat. 
>-coated, double- 


Sped protection. 


!>izes for most U.S. cars. 


Save now at K mart! 


FINE QUALITY K mart® 
BRAND SPARK PLUGS 


Compare 
with ^| ^Sdfc 


national brands. ™W^3^^*Eo. 
Resistor Plugs 
•... Ea. 54f 


CARTRJDOFC* t. .. 


ON OIL FILTERS 


Our Reg.!.»». Sizes for "127 
most U.S. cars. 
, 
I Ea. 


17,97 
BARBELL SET 
OR BENCH 
Sale Ends Saturday 


'cb 
^ !«. 


Each 


100-lb." plastic-coated 
barbell set or vinyl-cov- 
ered, foam-padded, tubu- 
Jar steel bench. 


Plates 
11.97 


17.97 


.22 SEMI-AUTOMATIC* AND SCOPE 
Model 60 rifle fires 18 LR shells 
-without reloading. Powerful 4X 
.22 scope. Walnut-finished Mock. 


»REMIUM 400 
48-MONTH 


BATTERY 
Our Reg. 33.88 


8-TR. TAPE 
•LAYER WITH 
SPEAKERS 


Our Reg. 59.88 


No Exchange Necessary 


Polypropylene case 
for added power.Sizes 
for most U.S. cars. 
Terminal ProHctortPr.7 7* I 


Sale End* So*. - 


Compact player fea- 
[tures matrix 4-chan- 
nel-5" speakers, 
lock Mount.. .5.37 


Wode/ KS100 


BS54CF 


STRONG ALL-STEEL 
AUTO RAMP SALE 


Steel ramps with Our 28.88 
ha n dy built-in 
wheel cradle. Save. 


CHOICE OF 


STEREO SPEAKERS 


5"Vound with 4-oz. 
magnet or dual 
wedge speakers. 
Pr. 


8 A 


Sears 


starts Wednesday September 17 
i v*7 « vr v «."H? » * 
'•-v'v ~>-ri,yiA - • " 
* 
v 


IttfW 


SAVE $10 to 


YOUR SA VINGS-.PICK YOUR ITEM., 


• WASHERS • DRYERS • REFRIGERATORS • FREEZERS * RANGES 
• DISHWASHERS • MICROWAVES 
« VACUUMS 


•STEREOS • TELEVISIONS •DINETTES • BEDDING • SOFAS -CHAIRS 
•FURNACES • SEWING MACHINES («r-»r other tingle m.j.r item for the Hom«) 


S10 OFF on any single item pur- 
chase* from SIOO to $199. 
*Nol applicable to Sale Merchan- 
dise, catalog or Service. 


J20 OFF on any single item pur- 
chaw* from $200 to $299. 


J40 OFF on any single item pur- 
chase* from $400 to $499. 
'Not applicable to Sale Merchan- 
dise. Catalog or Service. 


$50 OFF on any 
chase* S500 or more 


*Not applicable to Sale Merchar 
dise, Catalog or Service. 


•Not applicable to Sale Merchan 
disc, Catalog or Service. 


Sears 
OUTSTANDING VALUES... 


OFF 


AND MORE! 
men's long sleeve 
ESS SHIRTS 


************* 
******* *** * *** 
SAVE*1.89 


TO *7.98 


SAVE H.98 
TO*5.98 
V2 OFF! 


KM UlSKfN 


Kilt 


OVERALLS 


«1¥\ 


bigger girls' 
SAFARI JACKETS 


regular 


18 to'$9 each 


Fashion turns with the season lu the 
soft pastels of autumn . . . now a 
hefty savings! Choose from a wide 
range of colors, all in Perina-Presl® 
Knit fabric and of 100% lextuHzed 
polyester. With smartly designed 
cape collar for best looks, chest 
pocket for convenience. Wide range 
of sizes. See them today! 


30% OFF! 


misses'crisp quilted 


LONG ROBES 


Otir lim^ tjullls rimu: in flonil prints nr crisp 
r hecks. Hutlon ttr zip styles. Mnchinc- wash able 


(incl rollon fHc<:, ncelnlc back, quilled 


HirhpolyrMrt-ril(rrri!l. 10 in 18. 


SAVE 
13 to$18 


LEISURE 
JACKETS 


* tlinx button closure 
* iw« Sower flap pockeis 
• Scolvhgiird finish 
• Conlrasl.stitching 


Leisure jacket is made of 
machine 
washable 
tex- 


tnrizcd polyester. Il is 
available in an assort- 
ment of colors and popu- 
lar sizes. 


ask about Sears 


credit plans 


Sears 


25%OFF 


ON ALL 


READY-MADE 


DRAPERIES 


You'll find a wide selection of textures to suit formal or 
, casual room settings. Shimmery solids, airy sheers, even 
nubby open-weaves! All in today's fashion colors, prints 
and patterns. And many Sears ready-made draperies are 
washable. Unlined or with acrylic foam back to help insu- 
late rooms. 


ask about Sears credit plans 


PERMA-PREST® SHEETS 


percale 
097 


twin 


Stock up on white easy cure 
sheets while priced this low! iS'o 
ironing needed — machine wash, 
nimble dry. 


1/3 OFF BRAS! 


regular $3 each 


NATURAL OR 
CONTOUR CUP 3 for $6 


STOREWIDE 
Sears 


6-PC. METRIC 
WRENCH SET 


Hurry. . .quantities are limited 


Most Items at Reduced Prices 


f 
** 


CUT *50! 
CRAFTSMAN 10-IN. RADIAL 
ARM OR BENCH SAW OUTFIT 
229 


ask about Sears 


credit plans 


V2 OFF 


CRAFTSMAN 
20-FT. TAPE 


[$£215 


AU WEATHEd 


SAE iow-30 
motor oH 


YOUR 
CHOICE 


Regular $279.95 Saw develop! a maximum 2 HP. Single yoke swivels motor and blade for rip- 
ping. . .fi»ed slopg at center and 45 left or right. Fixed miter stops and bevel slops. Large workia- 
ble. Partially assembled. 
, 
. 


Regular (279.95 Includes saw, smooth-running induction motor, formed steel 10x20-in. extension 
and rugged steel stand. 24-in. rip capacity enables you to rip 4ox8-ft. sheets of paneling. Partially 
assembled.