L - Oakland County Historical Resources

Transcription

L - Oakland County Historical Resources
Page8-R
THE
N O R T H V I L L E R E C O R D - N O V I NEWS
ThursfJay, September 15, 1966
Planners
AnotIier
Year—Another
Cram
E y e
Future
Course
S P E - 4 K J N G
i
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h
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Thp planning coniiiiission's spokes­
man added that he was certain that
the citizens' couimittee would come
up with the same ret-omiuendations if
they had studied the communit)- as long
as planners.
They learned at the outset that
councilmen and planners don't always
see eye-to-eye; and as they, the citi­
zens, listened intently to gain a firm
grasp on the exact objectives of their
committee, they becani.j aware that it
boils down to where one places the
emphasis.
Broadly spea(<inj, the citizens' ad­
visory committee was appointed to
study community deficiencies, evaluate
methods of improvement, delernilne
priorities and help inform the general
public of the needs and proposals for
improvemc-nt.
Technically, it's a committee that is
required by law to implement a m.-istcr
plan if federal funds are to be sought.
.Northville has a master plan. It w;is
developed during the past fnur yearsby
the city's planning commission unththc
assistance of professional consultants.
And this master plan points up com­
munity deficiencies, recommends rem­
edies and establishes priorities.
The master plan, aguidefornowand
the future, is not the product of one in­
dividual or body. It was encouragedand
authorized by the city council, developed
by planners and consultants, and paid
for by federal and local tax dollars.
But it is the croviTiing achievemi^nt
of the planning commission and its
members are understandably proud of
its content.
So Monday night the inevitable ques­
tion arose:
Is the citizens' committee merely a
dummy organization created to place
its stamp of approval on the planning
commission's 75-page report?
He called the pl.in flexible to the point
that if there are aspects which citizens
believe should be thrown out, they
should discuss these with planners and
look to the planning commission for
alternatives, not set about to develop
their own proposals.
If the newly-appointed citizens had
developed .some feelingsof insecurity or
being ••unwanted" at this point, Zerbel
disi)i-lli-'i thi-ni with his parting state­
ment.
••Rein-imi)<:r. the planning commis­
sion was the first to advocate appointmr-nt ofa citizi-ns'advisorycom.iiittee."
The out.spuken exchanges between
council and planners provided an ex­
cellent initiation for the citizen advis­
ors. It forewarned them that these are
serious, dedicated people who are
sincerely concerned over the future of
our comniiinity.
It is completely understandable that
planners should guard jealously their
long-studied recommendations. And it
is equally apparent that final responsi­
bility for a l l decisions rests on the
slioulders ul the elected city cuuncilmen.
They w-ant citizen reassurance before
they place their finalstampofapproval.
The big task, the im|)lem'-'netation
of any plan, rests with the citizens'
com.mittee. They must becom'^ so con­
vinced that the program of procedure
they choose is right that they can con­
vince the final authority... the ta.xpayer.
R
e
a
As a matter of fact, the emphasis
on discarding master plan proposals
seemed so strong to Planning Chair­
man George Zerbel that he offered a
rather pointed rebuttal to the council­
man's interpretation.
"You are suggesting that this body
doesn't necessarily have to pay any
attention to w-hat we've done", Zerbel
charged. He noted that planners are
not laymen, that they have worked three
years in exploring many plans before
making their reconiniendations. and that
they would take a dim view uf any com­
mittee that would move in at this
point and declare "we don't like what
you've done and we're going to propose
something else"'.
Zerbel declared that there is not
time to wait another three years to
"find out what we already know".
Furthermore, he left no doubts as
to priorities in.sofar as the planning
commission is concerned.
"The planning conimissiun goes ofi
record as stating tliat the moit-imi^rtant thing is thi-imnu'diatedevelopm-.'nt f;';':
of the central busines.s district. We're
COLUMBIA
W
o
o
f
B
d
e
r
s
Senate debate on topics related to the
Constitution were quite involved a year
after it was signed on September 17,
1787. In fact, the title of the President
resulted In heated deisate. The Senate
selected the title, " H i s Highness the
President of the United States and Pro­
tector of the Rights of Same," which
Vice-President John Adams disapprov­
ed because it was too plain!
Madison finally ended the debate in
the House of Representatives by noting
that the Constitution already spelled
out the title, "President of the United
States'..
The Constitution was the second at­
tempt by this nation to frame a funda­
mental law. Soon after the Declaration
of Independence, the Continental Con­
gress started the machinery that pro­
duced the Articles of Confederation ratified by the last of the 13 original
states in 1781.
At the time the Constit'Ition was
drawn, the nation of 13 stateshadatotal
population of approximately 4,000,000.
r
d
o
Much of our recent social legisla­
tion and a chief weapon against states'
rights advocates has not been found in
the body of the Constitution, but in the
document's preamble:
"We the People of the United States,
in order to form a more perfect Union,
establish Justice, insure domestic
Tranquility provide for the common
defense, promote the general welfare,
and secure the Blessings of Liberty to
ourselves and our posterity do ordain
and establish this Constitution for the
United States of A m e r i c a . "
Of the states claiming a part in the '
Constitution, one of them - New York had only one signer to the document
because other delegates left Philadel­
phia In a huff because they contended
their purpose was to revise the Articles
of Confederation, not draft a new docu­
ment. Alexander Hamilton, youngest of
all of the delegates (30), remained to
represent that state. Thus, 39 of the
original 44 delegates were present to
sign the Constitution.
To The Northville Record and
Northville Merchants:
As winner of an Albert Pick M M e l Hotel weekend, we senda special "thank
you."
We selected East Lansing and en­
joyed our visit.
Sincerely,
M r . i M r s . PaulM.Appleby
and family
1013 Grace court
T
h
a
n
k
M
Lastly, I would like to thank a l l the
parents who have chaperoned our dances
at one time or another.
Without the time and effort given us
by all the people I have mentioned, our
dances would not have been possible or
successful. Thank you againforallvour
help.
Sincerelv vours
K r i s Wistert
Corresponding Secretary
H O W
M U C H
D O
Y O U
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NATIONAL
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d o e s
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I i K . lol N . C e n t e r S t . N o i t b v l l l e ,
SUBSCBIFTION
YEAR
IMlctiieu).
BATES:
I NMICHlC.4N: $3.00
Advertising Manager
ELSEWHERE
-iohn Harrington
Superintendent
Robeft Blougfi
Managing Editor
J o c k Hof fmon
Publisher
r
N
T
Vol.
n
'
B
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h
Value
of
D
Information on r e q u e s t
your
A n d r e w
C.
the
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savings
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Value
of
CUT
your
sovings
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Company
D e t r o i t Stock E x c h o n g e
" F i n i s h i n g
Philadelphio-Boltimore
Stock E x c h a n g e
Donald Burleson
Registered Repfesentotive
MAYFLOWER
HOTEL
F E D E R A L
GAS
F E D E R A L
S A V I N G S
S A V I N G S
200 N . Center, Northville F l 9-2462
200 N . Center, Northville F l 9-2462
MEMBER F.S.Ut.C. F.H.UB.
i
"It's wonderful, just wonderf'Il... I
don't know how to thank them," said
Fredrick A. McLaughlin of -12580 Eight
Mile road after he saw his freshly
painted house.
m o r e
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e
,
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n
d
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s
t
oi^Tier probably will pay higher taxes,
say planners, than property owners in
industrialized Wi.xom.
Taxes will also tie higher in the
township, because, by design, the lots
will be bigger to create a residential
community with " a .:ountry atmos­
phere."
Unlike Northville toM^nship, residen­
y o u r
I
c l o t h e s
R
O
N
H
E
M
T
O
O
V
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y
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tial land in Wixom .'s al a premium.
Under present conditions, only 29 per­
cent of the land is readily adaptable for
residential use, consultants point out.
There's a large amount of muck
land - :6 percent - mostly in the north­
west part of the city, and the soil in
other areas has a high water content.
About 40 percent of this now unin­
I
N
white paint.
Unofficial captain
for the enthusiostic crew of painters WPS Father John Wittstock,
pastor of Our Lady of Victory
Church of N o r t h v i l l e .
PAINTING
BEE-An
army of
friends of a Novi father of a dozen
children attacked
his historic
home on Eight Mile road Saturday,
dressing it in a fresh coat of
e
n
d
s
h
i
H
p
I
o
n
250
m
d
u
Hear,
M-275
Public
e
o
s
t
w
r
See
Plans
A t
Hearing
S
O
s
k
B
i
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s
o
n
A
d
d
i
t
i
o
n
:==- PROPOSED M--275
!
T
o
N
o
v
i
H
i
g
h
S
(With the opening of liids in North­
ville. costs were pegged at more than
$100,000 less than estimates, despite
a general rise in construction costs.
Architect for the Northville project is
O'Dell. Hewett and Luckenbach, the
same architectural firm for Novi's high
school project.)
In addition to the main project, bids
will be received on an altern'ite library
plan. The alternate calls for location of
a library to be located in the new
addition, with the present library slated
for classroom purposes. Original plans
call for enlargement of the present
library, i^'hich officials note will reduce
the width of the open court by approxim-Jtely I-l feet.
Included in the new addition, part of
which Hill bo built on the west wing and
part on the south wing are: physics and
chemistry lab, metal and m;itor me­
chanics shop, art room, draftiiig room.
The proposed addition toNovi'shigh
school moved closer to reality this week
as advertisement ofbids were launched.
According lo Superintendent Thomas
Dale, bids are scheduled to be opened
October 12 with construction to start
later that month.
Completion
of
the
estimated
$735,000 addition i s slated for A u ^ s t
15. 1967 - in time, said Dale hopefully,
for opening of school next year.
P
o
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a
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a
d
Touch"
l
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Robert J . Pohlnian, 41119 McMahon
Circle, was elected president of the
. WiUo'Abrook Community association
last week. He succeeds J . F . Buck.
• Others elected at the general fneetfng include:
Robert Wilkin.s,
vice-pn.'sl'ient;
Fran Habcrmehl, .secretary; Diane
Ward, treasurer; J . F . Buck and Vern
Dewaard, Subdivision I, Robert Radtke,
Richard Reid, and Bayard Tein.'iie,Sub­
division II. and Kent Mathes"and Mich­
ael Michaels, Subdivl.sion n , all board
of directors memiiers.
Duriiig the meeting, the outgoing
president reviewed the accomplish­
ments of the as.sociation during the pa.st
year and drew attention to three i m - '
portant goals of the gi^oup:
E
i
x
o
m
habitable land, con.su'tants declare, can
be reclaimed for residential use-only,
however, with the coming of sewers.
Septic tanks cannot function inlhehigh­
ly impermeable soil.
"But Wixom has a tremendous i n ­
dustrial base," Charles Loman points
Continued on Page 8-A
W
10«
N o v i , M i c h i g o n - ThufscJay, September 2 2 , 1966
While he and his family were away
Saturday, more than 30membersof Our
Lady of Victory parish, all friends of
McLaughlin, attacked the big two-story
house with brushes and tools, painting if
from top to bottom and repairing broken
woodwork.
It wasalla "wonderfulsurprise"for
McLaughlin, who, along with his wife
(she was aware of what would happen),
took their children on a long-promised
picnic. When they returned, the house
sported its gleaming new white coat of
paint.
McLaughlin had wanted to get the
painting done hlmself.but with mounting
medical bills, his own condition, and, of
course, the mountainous task of raising
a dozen children, he was simply unable
to get it done.
That's why Father John Wittstock,
pastor of Our Lady of Vlctoryand Rich­
ard Janes of Northvllle decided to take
matters into their owx hands. A s plans
were laid for a big painting bee, mem­
bers of two other parish organizations
were joined In. These Included the Holy
Name Men's club and Our Lady's league.
With the men, including a paint
smeared priest, supplying the elbow
grease and Our Lady's League the tasty
lunch for workers, the enthusiastic crew,
working in shifts, sUrted andfinlshed .
tlie project a l l in one day.- '
The McLaughlins have lived in the
historic house for ID years. The house
is the former Yerkes homestead, locat­
ed near the Eight Mile road curve into
the eastern city limits of Northville,
and, reportedly, will be lOOyearsoIdin
six years.
The McLaughlin children range in
age from 2 to 15.
McLaughlin is group manager for
the Great West Life Assurance com­
pany.
t h a n
k
C
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p
FABRICS WITH A
D E T R O I T
Phone GL-3-1890,
If No Answer Phone GL-3-1977
Y O U R SAVINGS continue to earn 4'4%
annual rate compounded quorterly.
T h i s is the highest insured regulor
possbook rate ovailable in the greater
Detroit area.
m m
m m
D E T R O I T
v
N
r
IRONING TIME A N D
GIVE A P R O F E S S I O N A L
TO T H O S E N E W M I R A C L E
&
h
1 2 , N o . 18, 16 P a g e s T w o S e c t i o n s
:::W
Reid
R E C E I V E L I F E I N S U R A N C E for a c c i dental death in on amount equal to
your savings account balance up to
510,000 regordless of your age and at
no cost to you.
t
e
i
the
r
S
P e r C o p y , $ 4 . 0 0 P e r Y e a r In AcJvance
12
With an eye on lower-than-estimate
bids last week on Northville's new jun­
ior high school, local officials have
their fingers crossed in hopes thatbids
locally will stay within estimates.
C u r r e n t Income and F u t u r e
oppreciation
o
developmuiiK
They are located in the extreme
southwest and southeast corners and in
the center of the toraship, running
from Eight Mile road south to Waterford Lake.
With such a small proportion of
land allocated for industrial develop­
ment, the individual to-.i-nshlp property
Northville township, for instance, is
a municipality of 10,683 rolling acres
with very little flat land, making the
iand ideally suited for developmentasa
residential community, planners note.
In the m'3.;ter plan, the only three
substantial flat areas totaling 1,230
acres or 12 percent of the total land
area have been set aside for industrial
Fatlier of
Of this total estifiiated cost, approx­
imately $579,000 is earmarked for gen­
eral construction, $68,000 for built-in
type equipment. S13.000 for furniture,
$35,000 for architectural fees, and
$29,000 in contingencies.
William C . Sliger
I
o
D r y e r
\\V kjidw that .T ;;as dm'i- can't acttially
inm dnihi-s. Kiii What uv aii- stiyuii: is
thai with .-1 niiKit'i-n jz.is dvyvv thu- nvw
jjiiraoli.* lahrii"?* I'lwtif fml ol' the fhycl*
it-ndy tn wi'ni', flr mtfiini; r»nly ttnnli-tip
irniiiilj;. 'I'dday's iifw i;a> di-yi'i> iiiv dv>ij;ried uitli tlu' "Wash and Wi-;ii'* cl.iihes
in niiild.
Savf yiiiii>flJ and sivr hom- "t lnniin;.'
With a modfin \:ns diyi-i-. ^'t•>. ymi'll
"Walt/ :hifpiit.'h Washday" with ;;iaii-tiil
pi'aiM' lor thi.*- atiia/iri;: ht'Iprliatt' to tiie
aiiffimatic washt-i-. .'•^'t' tht-v hl-w dlyt'iN
ittd.'iy. Vdu'Ii (h- ;;!ad vi.ii did!
Second C l a s s Postage P a i d at NortlivlUe, Micli.
E
f
NEWSPAPER
Piftilshed each Tlimaday b y the NorthvlUe B e c o r d .
$4.00 P E R
s
N E E D ?
A
More than 3,000 amend­
ments fo the Constitution
have been introduced in Con­
gress, but only 22 have be­
come a part of it.
I
m
You need enough to give you a reaerve of safety.
Tiiot's power at low to medium speeds for passing, occeieratlnj out ol dangerous situations and climbing tillls. This
reserve is substontlolly above the power required for normal
driving.
Conirery to generei belief, and many so-calIed safety auIf^HKI U A P U
thoritles. you need very IIttie of it for high speed.
JUflil (nAUl
Only a minor portion of the rated horsepower is used for actual driving. Of 200 rated
horsepower, for instance, os little as 35 is normally used to propel the cor.
IIorsepower ratings of an engine are taken from the amount of power developed by an
engine when it is revolving at maximum speed. Reductions of speed result in less horsepower being developed. There is an average drop of 50 horsepower from maximum when
a car is driven at normal speeds of 60 mph.
Atmospheric conditions may reduce horsepower S percent. Power steering, air condi­
tioning, transmission ond reor axle friction onother 10 percent.
The power needed to operate the generator, fan and fuel pump and the heat loss from
the plugs, exhaust and drag from ihe muffler end ah- cleaner collectively total around 20
perc ent.
Underlnfloled tires and faulty wheel alignment are rated as high sources of power loss.
TWs leaves a reserve of about 60 Iwrsepower from a rated maximum of 200 for your saf^
ty reserve.
GAS SYSTEM
for
e
A
T h e
o
H O R S E P O W E R
f r
To the Editor:
I am writing this letter on behalf of
The Cavern to thank you and everyone
else who helped to make our dance
September 7 and all our past dances,
a big success. With.aut your assistance
it could never have been possible, and
without the merchants who sponsored
our advertisement we wouldn't have
earned the extra money wedidthatwent
towards our Building Fund.
1 would also like to thank the school
system for allow^ing us to use the Com­
munity building where we have been
holding our dances until wt- have a
building of our own. The janitor's help
has been greatly appreciated too, and
the police should be thanked and con­
gratulated on the great job they have
done handling the dances.
Our thanks also go to the Mothers
Club for being our .spnn.sor and the
help they^ve given us gettini' .started.
o
Unable to work regularly since suf­
fering a heart attack six months ago,
a Novi father of 12 children learned
Saturday that the hearts of others are
brimming with goodwill.
lyiode Island was the only
one of the 13 original states
to refuse to send a delerate to Philadelphia's In­
dependence Hall.
s
r
•* *
Help
Interpretations of the Constitution
have generally led to condemnation of
prayer in our public institutions.
Yet, interestingly, it was D r . Ben­
jamin Franklin, who (he was 81 at the
time) during the lengthy debate on the
proposed Constitution, commented:
••In this situation of this assembly,
groping as it were in the dark to find
political truth, and scarce able to dis­
tinguish it when presented to us, how
has it happened, sir, thit we have not
hitherto once thought of humbly apply­
ing to the Father of light to illuminate
our understandings...
•I therefore beg leave to move that
henceforth prayers imploring the assis­
tance of Heaven, and its blessings on
our deliberations, be held in this A s s e m -
f
d
More than land separates the city of
Wixom
from Northville tonTiship;
there's i;ven a bifger gap between their
blueprints for the future.
Wlxom is likely to become an indus­
trial center whereas Northville is des­
tined to become a bedroom coijimunity.
Why? Topography is the most sig­
nificant reason, according to VIlicanLeman, Inc., planning consultants for
both communities.
Because of a widespread feeling
that the Constitution insufficiently guar­
anteed individual liberties, 10 amend­
ments (the 10th amendmentgenerallyis
considered part of the ninth) were made
to the Constitution within two years.
Since then 13 more amendments have
been adopted.
James Madison, generally consid­
ered the "Father of the Constitution,''
' earned much of this credit by virtue of
the fact that he was able to convince
the other framers to incorporate his
philosophy on the powers of the federal
government in the document. Madison
had been a Oelegate to the Revolutionary
convention of Virginia in 1776 and was
a memlier of the first Legislature
elected under the Virginia Constitution
which sparked much of his thinking.
........«...*.*
S p e a k
s
e
E D I T O R ' S N O T E : Following is
the third in a series of articles on
locol area plons for the future.
T h i s article deals with the major
differences
between
Northville
township and Wixom, both of which
employ the same consulting firm.
Next week's article w i l l deal with
plons of Novi and the city of
Northville.
bly every morning before we proceed to
business, and that one or more of the
clergy of this city be requested to of­
ficiate in that service."
Since we're about to celebrate N a ­
tional Constitution Week, September 17
to 23, supported locally by the Sarah
Ann Cochrane Chapter of the DAR, I
thought you might enjoy some Consti­
tutional sidelights I came across in the
library.
T h i s was emphatically denied by
both planners and councilmen. But a
matter of emphasis remains.
Councilman .fohn Canterbury placed
more than casual emphasis on the posi­
tion that "the committee isnotappointed for the sake of carrying out the
work of the planning commission. This
body (the planners) is an excellent
source of information, but the citizens'
com.Tiittee should review, not neces­
sarily accept their recommendations".
p
^ y J A C K W. H O F F M A N
alrr-arly latt-. We'rf- not going to sit on
(iiir hand.s, w..''r(- going to do a selling
job", added Zerbel.
It was a healthy l)t;ginning.
o
mtmA
d
By B i l l Sliger
Ten of tiie 14 members of tlio city'.s
newly-formi-'d Citizf-ns' ..\dvisnryCom­
mittee were initiated into their iissipnment IHonday night.
T
1. Reduction of speed lifuit on Ten
Mile road.
2. Securing appropriate school signs
on subdivision area roads.
3. Making available a lot from the
developer for a recreation area.
Village Manager Harold Ackley and
the new village water superintendent,
Duane Branch, were on hand to answer
questions pertaining to waterand sewer
projects in the .subdlvlsldn.
Special guests included three high
schoolers, who were sponsored by the
association at the recent Wolverine
Boys State program in Lansing. They
were Randy Pohlmin, Ron Radtke and
John Hasley. Young Hasley reported on
their experience, noting that it was a
"most rewarding" experience.
c
h
o
o
l
typing room, language lab, andbandand
instrumental m-jsic room.
Seven additional classrooms also
are incorporated in the new sections.
Upon completion, the entire high
school facility will house some 30 classrooms. It Is planned for a maximiim
capacity of 750 students.
Presently, the high school, which
includes students from seventh through
10th grade, has a student population of
402, which makes it "pretty crowded",
explained Dale.
Next year, the school will house 11th
graders as well, and the following year,
1968.
it will have a complete high
school program with ninth through 12th
grades.
Eventually, the enrollment will necessitate, said Dale, a (3-3) three-year
junior high and a three-year senior
high program, but nit within the Im­
mediate future.
Anticipated enrollmimt of seventh
through nth grade next year i s pegged
at between 525 to 550. This increase.
Dale said probably will necessitate an
additional five new teachers, an i n ­
crease from the present staff of 18 to
23.
Total school enrollment this year in
Novi i s well over the anticipated 1,050
students. Enrollment increased from
last year's total of 942 to 1.140 this
year. This includes some 97 10th grad­
ers. Last year 10th graders attended
school in Northville as do Uth and 12th
graders now.
Biggest enrollment i s at the kinder­
garten level where 133 youngsters are
enrolled in five sections. This heavy
kindergarten enrollment necessitated
an additional teacher, the superintend­
ent pointed out.
Here's a break-down by grades:
First, 106; 102, second; 93, third;
109. fourth; 103, fifth; 95, fifth; 108,
seventh; lOS, eighth; 94, ninth; and 97,
10th.
A total of 741 students are enrolled
at Novi's two elementary schools.
An estimated 250 persons, including
three Novi officials, were present at a
pubUc hearing in Walled Lake on the
proposed freeik'ay that will extend from
1-96 In Novi north to M-59 near Pontiac.
Attentlng
from
Nnvi
were
Councilman -Donald Fuller, Village
Manager Harold Ackley, and Clerk
Mrs. Mabel A s h .
The hearing was conducted by Pub­
lic Hearing Officer John Knecht of the
state highway commission.
The proposed highway will start at
r-96 near what the state has described
as the world's largest interchange,
travel north along the quarter-section
line past 12, 13 and 14 Mile roads into
walled Lake.
It will start directly north of the
present end of Seeley road. An inter­
change i s planned at 13 Mile road,
with overpasses at 12 and 14 Mile roads.
ToUi cost of the 13.4 mile project,
including right-of-way, i s estimated at
$21 million. It will be financed with
50-percent federal funds and 50-percent state funds.
Right-of-way for the section in Novi
is expected to be purchased in theearlv
1370s, with construction slated after
1972.
The other major freeway system
for this area, that one which will travel
south from the giant interchange here
along the eastern edge of Haggerty, i s
slated for earlier construction.
S4,600
n
i
a
e
l
r
P
s
C
a
Novi Heights subdivision residents
threw up another stiff wall of resistance
Monday night and successfully torpe­
doed a proposed Industrial park.
The motion to rezone for the indus­
trial subdivision failed to muster the
needed number of v o t e s - f o u r - f i f t h s as Councilmen Donald Fuller and Jo­
seph Crupi cast dissenting votes.
A petition, signed by more than 20percent of the adjacent property owners,
actually brought about the coup. It made
mandatory for the request to pass by a
four-fifths m.ijority, rather than the
normal simple majority.
Voting for approval were President
Philip Anderson, Leo Harrawood and
Raymond Harrison.
As a last-ditch effort to avoid ap­
parent defeat of the original request
for light and heavy manufacturing, E m ­
ery Jacques, attorney for Contractor
Paul Boscoe. submitted a revised re­
quest. A s permitted by ordinance, Jac­
ques lowered the heavy manufacturing
portion of the request to medium manu­
facturing.
But it failed.
Owned by B . J . Pbllardrthe46-acre
site up for rezoning Is located west of
Novi road and south of the C i O r a i l road. It abuts Novi Heights subdivision
on the west.
Monday's hearing was a resumption
of a public hearing flr.st aired three
weeks ago. At that time the council
postponed action to permit further
study.
Boscoe also was advised at the Aug­
ust 29 hearing to revise his plans by
extending the proposed buffer between
the industrial site and the subdivision
from 200 to 300 feet. But the council
noted thatit was making no commitment.
Boscoe returned Monday night, re­
vised preliminary plans in hand, i m ­
mediately, Novi Heights residents
pounced on his plans.
Led by M r s . Neil Nichols, the ad­
jacent home owners presented their
arguments.
Chief among them was the argument
that the council, by granting the re­
quest, would be handing the contractor
a blank check. He could do a»he pleased
with the land, they contended, and the
village or residents would be helpless
to regulate its use.
Substantiating the residents' fears
was Attorney How-ard Bond, who ex­
plained that the developers were re-
Stolen
F r o m Apartment
Investigation continued this week
Into the theft of an estimated $4,600
from an apartment above the Novi inn,
43379 Grand River, earlv Friday morn­
ing.
According to Novi police, M r s . Es­
ther Tlnkham, proprietor of the Inn,
discovered the theft about 1:25 a.m.
shortly after leaving work downstairs.
An outside door off a staircase had
been forced open, police said, and the
money taken from a desk. Nothing else
in the apartment was disturbed, police
said.
r
CHAMBER
PRESIDENT-.Newly
elected
president
of Wixofn's
Chamber of Commerce i s Thomas
McGee, operator of Wixom General
store. Other officers elected last
week include John L u t z , vicepresident, and D ' A r c y Young, treesurer.
Members of the board of
directors include John Parvu, M r s .
Vernon Spencer, Ralph Docksey,
Richard M i t c h e l l , Charles Smith
and Ben Schneider.
r
k
u
P
s
l
h
a
n
strlcted only by the ordinance. Beyond
it, the only way the village could inter­
cede would be In the event it owned
property within the proposed site.
Other objections raised by the .'-ubdivision residents were: the industrial
park would create traffic hazards, the
rezoning request had many undesireable features, and land conducive to
manufacturing was available elsewhere
in Novi.
Councilman Leo Harrawood, sup­
ported by Raymond Harrison, favored
the Industrial park and engaged in
lively debate with the homeowners.
"He's given us more than we asked
for," Harrawood declared, pointing out
where the council had demanded a 200foot buffer and Boscoe had allocated
300 feet. Harrawood also explained that
Boscoe had turned the buildings around
to face the subdivision as the council
had requested.
"They've been more than cooper­
ative," Harrawood continued, "they've
come here and submitted plans In good
faith."
Ideally, he said, the land was suited
for maniifacturing "Since It'was located
next to the railroad tracks, and that
rather than lying idle, the land could
yield more tax monies with an Indus­
trial park on i t .
Crupi moved to deny the request.
Seconded by Fuller, the motion failed
by a 3-2 vote. Fuller and Crupi voted
for denial.
Bond then advised the council mem­
bers that they must vote on a motion
for approval of the request. When it
was apparent the request would be
scuttled, Jacques withdrew the original
request and submitted the revised ed­
ition.
N o v i
N a b
P o l i c e m e n
2
I n s i d e
B u r g l a r s
S t o r e
A 2;-year-old Walled Lake man,
caught in the act of burglarizing Nick's
Grocery. 2205 Novi road, pleaded guilty
before Justice Robert K . Anderson
Monday and was bound over to (3akland
county circuit court to stand t r i a l .
Jailed was Patrick J . Bennett. A
15-year-old Novi companion wasturned
over to county juvenile authorities.
Novi police officers discovered the
burglary while ch3cking doors of the
grocery store early Monday morning.
Discovering a broken window and hear­
ing voices inside, they ordered the men
from the building.
Bennett started out the window,
police said, and then jumped back In­
side. Police then radioed for assistance.
As officers in six police cars from
the county. Novi, Walled U k e and Wix­
om
arrived on the scene, Bennett
climbed out of the window and surren­
dered.
Novi Patrolman Dale Gross then
searched the building and found the 15vea:-old hiding. He w-as armed with a
knife but put up lio resistance, police
said.
An estimated S300in merchandise.
Including 50 pounds of hamburger, was
found stacked by the rear window.
According to police, entry was
gained by climbing to the top of a rear
shed and breaking out a second-story
window.
P
o
w
e
r
U p s e t s
F a i l u r e
R o u t i n e
Mom \ras frantic. Father's dinner
wa.? I'.t! 'and kids couldn't wntcii their
favorite T V programs.
All because of a transformer falliire
in nearby Northvllle.
The failure cut electricity to most of
Nov' Tuesday afternoon for more than
an hour befoio ..'.irkmen wore able to
repair ihe duina^o.
T H E N O R T H V I L L E R E C O R D - N O V I NEWS
Page 2-A
T h u r s d a y , Septembef 2 2 , 1966
T
o
w
n
T H E N O R T H V I L L E R E C O R D - N O V I NEWS
T h u r s c i a y , September 22,1966
Plans
Eastern
O
n
r
i
e
t
C
Star
h
a
p
t
Page 3-A
D i n n e r
e
r
N
e
a
r
s
7
5
t
h
B
i
r
t
h
d
a
I
y
W
h
a
t
^
s
n
g
^
l
W
By Jean Day
WOMEN
C
2
o
u
p
l
e
s
S
K i n n a m o n - B a r b e r
For her wedding, the bride chose a
sill; organza gown styled with an empire
w:iistline andanA-line sicirL The chapel
train fell from the slioulder.Thetwdice
and train were of matchingalencon lace.
A sill; organza rose .held her floorlength illusion veil in place. She car­
ried a cascade bouquet of white ferns
and roses.
O u r
N e w
o f
S h i p m e n t s
I m p o r t e d
H o l l a n d
^ H a v e
B u l b s
J u s t
A r r i v e d
HYACINTHS
TUIIPS
CROCUS
Kay Rowe of Shelby, Ohio was the
matron of honor. The bride's sister,
Leah, andMurilla LeFevre were brides­
maids.
The attendants wore floor length
pale green crepe dresses with olive
green lace leaves accenting the empire
waistline. The matching green illusion
veils were held in place by flower
p.?tals fashioned from organdy. They
carried pale green and white baby
mums.
Richard Barber, the bI-Idegroum's
brother, was best man. Tlie ushers were
Joseph Eclielberry of Battle Creek and
John Morrison J r . of Detroit.
The bride's mother chose a pale
green crepe sheath with matching ac­
cessories. Her corsage was of babyblue mums.
A. reception at Bushnell Fellowship
hall followed the ceremony.
Following a trip to the East Coast,
the couple toolt up residence In P l y ­
mouth. Both are graduates of the Uni­
versity of Michigan school of music
and are teaching instrumental music
in Farmington public schools.
DAFFODILS
R
.
E
L
Y &
F1-9-335Q
S O N S
k
V
o
w
s
Ann Christine Moase and Terrence
Bannan exchanged wedding vows Satur­
day, September 10 at Our Lady of V i c ­
tory catholic Church of NorthviIIe.
Officiating at the l l a.m. ceremony
were Fathers David Neiswanger, Edi^ln
Schoettle and John Wittstock.
The church wasdecorated with white
mums, glads and carnations. Organist
was M r s . John Hlochineck.
The bride is the daughter of M r . and
M r s . Sidney Moase of 436Randolph, and
the bridegroom is the son of M r . and
Mrs. William Bannan ofFIve Mile road.
Given In marriage by her father, the
bride wore an empire gown of lace over
Peau de Sole, and she carried white
carnations and white orchids.
The matron of honor was Dee Mee
Bailey, who wore an empire goivn of
apricot Peau de Sole, and she carried"
apricot carnations.
Connie Bannan and Pat Moase,
bridesmaids, wore gowns similar to the
one worn by the matron of honor and
they carried the same kind of flowers.
Robert Ebert was the best man, and
Michael Meyers and Richard Berqulst
served the bridegroom as ushers.
For her daughter's wedding, M r s .
Moase chose a cream and gold bro­
cade. The bridegroom's mother wore
celery green silkwool.
Following the wedding, a wedding
breakfast was held in the church hall,
colorfully decorated with white mums,
glads and apricot carnations.
The bride chose a short version of
her wedding gown in blue with white
eyelet for her going away outfit. The
newlyweds took a wedding trip to V i r ­
ginia wliere they will live in Norfolk.
The newlyweds both are graduates
of NorthviIIe high school, and the new
M r s . Bannan also attended Schoolcraft
college. Her husband i s serving with the
United States Navy.
i
n
b
o
w
G i r l s
T a k e
Enid Penn, daughter of M r . a n d M r s .
fiarold G. Penn, will be installed as
worthy advisor of Northvllle Assembly
"29. International Order of Rainbow
tor Girls, at an open instaiiatloii Tues­
day at 7:45 p.m. in the NorthviIIe
Masonic Temple.
Diana Smith is the retirinj w.irthy
advisor and Miss Susan Famuliner will
be the worthy associate advisor.
The recorder is Jeanette Terpstra;
treasurer,
Laura Famuliner; and
mother advisor, M r s . Betty Willing.
These officers serve a year and were
installed in January.
NorthviUe Assembly extends a most
cordial invitation to a l l to attend their
installation.
STORMPLAY
ALL-WEATHER
A
T
S
C
reporter
the
Mrs. Terronce
Bonnon
' C o l l e g e
N i g h t '
Preliminary plans for the annual
college night program at the high school
are in the woriis.
Pians cail for the program to be
held between 7 to 10 p.m. on October 4.
COATS
from
H o s p i t a l
G r o u p
P o s t p o n e s
M e e t
The general meeting of the North­
viIIe State Hospital, postponed due to
the timing of the recent patients fair,
has been rescheduled for Tuesday, Oc­
tober l l at l l a.m. in the board room
of the hospital.
An executive board meeting was
held, however, at the home of M r s .
Robert lAag, on September 20. The
purpose of this meeting was to discuss
the goals of the auxiliary for the com­
ing year.
P l a n s
U n d e r w a y
with representatives onhandfrom more
than 30 coiieges and universities.
Besides seniors from Northvllle,
seniors from four other high schools
will be present to receive information
and suggestions from the representa­
tives.
Other high schools will include
Farmington, North Farmington, Wailed
Lai<e and Our Lady of Sorrows.
IF YOUR HAIR
BECOMING
See Our C o m p l e t e
COMING
ISN'T
TO YOU
YOU SHOULD
S e l e c t i o n of S c a r v e s &
Mittens, for t h o s e c o o l
l
post
the
e
g
MEMBERSHIP CHAIRMAN M r s .
Kenneth Kastner feels it i s this ex­
ceptional leadership that gives North­
ville's cooperative nursery group its
greatest value. F o r many years, there
was a long waiting list for the schooi.
But this fall, for the first time, there
seems to be a decline in the three-andfour year old population. A s a result,
there still exists one vacancy before
the capacity of 32 youngsters i s reached.
Mothers Interested may call M r s .
Kaestner, 349-0698, or M r s . Bemish,
349-2687.
A s a final bonus, Pat Wright adds,
nursery school i s an excellent getacquainted activity for mothers claim­
ing - "We never would have met
ANYBODY in NorthviUe U it had not
been for nursery school!"
And many Northvllle mothers whose
now-grown children were taught by
Jean Langtry, Mary Conley, Pat HartL
Joyce Skipper (now of Jackson) and
Nancy Smith agree that this-wa^s where
they met friends after the school was
begun by M r s . Howard Meyer and a
group of mothers seeking playmates
for their children.
e
C
o
r
n
e
r
will be presented by the Perfor.ming
A r t s Company, including "Arsenic and
Old U c e " and "Saint Joan."
Slottery
A woman's
"IT TAKES the efforts of school
AND home to produce outstanding stu­
dents" - This observation comes from
a NorthviIIe high school teacher who
was queried about the exceptional a chievements of a high school boy who
was preceded by a sister who graduated
at the top of her class and now Is a
sophomore at University of Michigan.
The young students were Glenn and
K r i s Deibert, two of the four children
of Glenn and Rae Delbert. Their young­
er sisters are Colleen and Lorrle,
ninth and seventh graders. In addition
to her three-day-a-week teaching stint
M r s . Deibert makes time to be a G i r l
Scout troop leader.
page
two
summers,
her round-up
following
returning
to
Michigan
State
Noncee
ortieie
sophmore
Attending MSU this fall will be a
large number of local students, begin­
ning with KAY G I L L E T T , who i s work­
ing toward a secretarial degree. She
worked for the Orchard HlUs school
this sum.mer.
of colleges
before
studies
at
university.
This week we
up our preview
of fall '66 on college campuses through­
out the state and country. East Lansing
Is our last stop in the final whirl.
Michigan State university i s the
largest college in Michigan, and has one
of the most beautiful campuses i n the
country
with the Red Cedar River
running through It.
Twenty-three buses are required to
carry the nearly 40,000 students to
classes and activities across the huge
campus.
The 23 residence halls are mainly
of the co-educatlonar'living-learning"
type. Students are able to live, eat, at­
tend classes, lectures, movies, dances
and plays right in their own dorm or
complex. Each complex alsohasfaculty
offices, auditoriums, branch libraries
and student affairs offices.
An exciting fall term i s planned.
The Spartans, defendingBigTen champ­
ions, will try to hold onto their title
this season.
A College of Human Medicine will
welcome Its first class of 26 students.
The Lecture-Concert series has the
New York Ballet and Opera Companies
the Vienna Strauss Orchestra and T o r ­
onto Symphony scheduled for fall.
Three "pop-entertainment" con­
certs featuring Henry Mancini, the
Beach Boys and the New Christy Min­
strels will be held on Friday nlghtsbefore home football games. Seven games
JANICE HLITTlSON, a sophomore,
i s a member of the honorary society.
Alpha Lampda Delta. The group i s open
to freshmen women who earn a 3.5
grade average. Its activitlesare design­
ed to encourage high scholastic achieve­
ment by entering freshmen.
NANCY BOSAK, a journalism major
will be living In Wilson Hall again this
year. Wilson i s Included in a complex
of three dorms. A fourth Is now under
construction.
L A R R Y ANGOVE is a member of
P s i Upsilon fraternity on campus. The
77-year-old group i s active In a l l as­
pects of campus life - government,
sports and scholastics.
A member of Alpha X i Delta sorori­
ty Is ETTA RUTTAN, a social science
major. She has won scholastic honors
at MSU, and was a resident advisor
the past two years.
i
I
I
Mr. and M r s . Howard Shields, worthy
V e t e r a n s
E y e
C e m e t e r y
A
n
o
t
h
e
W i n s
r
and
worthy
T i t l e
Thirteen-year-old Sharon Thomas
of Northvllle captured the world foot­
ball queen title Saturday at Fayette,
Ohio for the second consecutive year.
Daughter of M r . and M r s . Jack
Thomas of 883 Allen Drive, Sharon
won the Junior division title this year.
Last year she was judged tops in the
juvenile division.
Besides winning the title of queen,
she also won first place' in strutting,
second Ln military strutting and sec­
ond place in twirling.
Earlier this summer, Sharon won
third place In the national twirling
contest.
Sharon's sister, Shirley, a 17year-old Northvllle senior, wan first
place in military strutting and second
place in twirling at Fayette.
o
o
k
i
A t Nofthville H i g h School
Following is the cafeteria menu for
the week of September 26-30 at North­
vllle high school. A hamburger on bun
and french fries is an alternate main
course each day.
Monday - - Spanish rice and corn
bread and butter, a l l with a salad, pud­
ding and milk.
Tuesday — Ham and scalloped pota­
toes, together with carrot and pineapple
salad, princess peach pudding, and
milk.
Wednesday — Salisbury steak and
mashed potatoes and gravy, together
with buttered corn, rolls and butter,
apricots, and milk.
Thursday - - Chili and crackers, to­
gether with salad, bread and butter,
apple kuchen, and milk.
Friday - - Salmon loaf and cream
potatoes, together with buttered green
beans, muffins and butter, rhubarb,
and milk.
On the soup line, chicken noodle is
scheduled Monday, split pea on Tues­
day, beef vegetable on Wednesday, beef
noodle on Thursday and tomato on
Friday.
patron.
M o r e
B e a u t i f i c a t i o n
Preparations for next week'sblgLas
Vegas Night, co-sponsored by the Amer­
ican Legion Post 147 and the VFW Post
4012, gathered steam this week.
The party, which i s being held to
raise funds for the beautification of
the Veterans' Memorial Post in Rural
Hill Cemetery, will be held at the
VFW Post home, 438 East Main street,
at 8 p.m. on Friday, September 30.
Beautification of the plot was begun
this past spring, with the paving of
T w i r l e r
matron
S
C
B
walks with a bituminous mix thanks to
the efforts of both veterans organiza­
tions and donations.
Next big project on tap i s to land­
scape the high ban'< directly in back of
the fiag pole.
The memorial plot history dates
back to the early l940's. At that time
the American Legion had a 14 grave
plot in the northeast section of thecemetery. Then, through the leadership of
the late .Mayor Claude (Pete) Ely and
various other Legion members, the
grave site w"as traded for the present
site in the southeast corner of the
cemetery.
The present plot has 248 grave
sites and was dedicated as the Veterans
Memorial Plot on May 30, 1952.
The lonegrave in the walk-way Is that
of Lloyd H . Green, one of the first men
from Northvllle killed in action during
World War H . It is after him that the
local Legion post i s named.
Burial space in the memorial plot
may be obtained in order of precedence:
1. Members of the NorthviIIe VFW
and the American Legion pasts.
2. Veterans of United States military
service who reside.ii1thin,the boundaries
of NorthviUe and Northvllle township,
who are not members of either post.
3. Such other Veterans as may be
approved by the memorial plot com­
mittee.
The committee consisls of a repre­
sentative of the city of NorthviUe. one
from the VFW and one from the Aint-rIcan Legion.
i
r
t
h
s
M r . and M r s . James M . Howarth of
21865 Novi road announce the birth of
a son, James Harold, born August 31
at St. Mary hospital, Livonia. He weigh­
ed 7 pounds, 11 ounces.
He was welcomed home by two sis­
ters, Lisa Ann, 5, and Catherine Jean,
2. Grandparents are M r . and M r s . J .
D. Howarth of Northvllle and M r . and
M r s . Ken Mailhot of St. Ignace.
M r . and M r s . Kenneth Rathburn of
Northvllle are the happy grandparents
of two recent a r r l v I l s .
A bahy jcirl, named T l a Lynn, was
born to M r . and M r s . Rogar Rathburn
>if Plymouth on August 26 al St. M.iry
hosi'ita: in Livonia. F i r s t child of the
Rafhburns. -ihe wol^'hed 7 pouuti.s-. M.lternal grandparents . i : - ; M r . and M r s .
Delbert Groom of Plymouth.
Eariier, on Ausu';. 13, a second child
was born to M r . a n d M r s . Larry Wel'sof
P") rn .-I'h. A iioy, the b:iby w-a.-; born at
St. JosephHisiiltalinAnnArbor.Named
It.'l'i y, he wei^licd 8 pounds, 6 ounces.
Pa-ernal grandpar-iDtsareMr.andMrs.
Lewis W;-"s. alS": of Plymouth.
|
W
e
c h a r g e
C a r r y
t h e
F i n e s t . . .
F i n e s t
i n
A c c o u n t s
f
REYDl Ladies' Wear
Northvllle
P h o n e 349-0777
R
F
112 East
H
m
H
m
o
f
a
r
d
P
a
r
t
WINTER
W e l c o t n e
MEN'S
NEAR
Nirlhvirii
s
Nofthville
The
Novi
Record
N e w s
-!•:
jij:
Published Each
By
Thursday
o
w
jji
ALSO
A v a i l a b l e
POLAROID COLOR
CAMERAS
LIMITED
NorthviIIe,
?;
|
Michigan
48167
Second C l a s s Postage
At NorthviIIe,
Subscription
Paid
Rates
$4.00 P e r Yeor In M i c h i g a n
$5.00
Elsewhere
William C . Sliger, Publisher
Your
Outdated
be brought
our
Modern
Bring
it
Suit
can
up to dote i n
Tailor
in for
Shop
a
Cost
Estimate.
m
E . IMidn
Nofthville
349-3677
Do
You Know
Where
You
Can B u y
R e d
R i v e r
C e r e a l
c o o
0/'^/,T I M E
PARTy"-,."sTORI
1
C
JACKETS
Joclteis
from
l
O
O
.
C
Y
s
9.9Sio22.98
Soys'
,
WINTER
i
Flannel
1
Shirts
2.98
SHIRTS
and
Men's
DRAWERS
A l i - W e a t h e r Coats
In T h r e e W e i g h t s
With Z i p - o u t
W
J
I
A
N
C
T
K
E
E
R
T
PACK
1.98
each
2.98
each
3.98
each
Lining
19.98
S
Boys' & Girls'
SNOW
SUITS
0
.
9
8
Girls'
Ski Jackets & Coats
8.95
up
Ladies'
Ski &
Corduroy Jackets
N Y L O N SKI J A C K E T S
$12.99
3
i t s
NBrthvllle
Plymtutli
J E m o n a
from
f a r
"Northvilh's
To $20
Fomily
Shoe
2
.
SUPPLY!
C A M E R A
S H O P
103 E . M a i n
Phone
200 S. M A I N S T .
1
Store''
In the Heart o f
D E P A R T M E
N o r t h v i l l e ' s Shopping C e n t e r
N O R T H V I L L E
349-0105
Street
FI-9-0613
)
Thefmol
•
GL-3-3SS0
Si
Michigan
M e n ' s Warm
Salon
FI-9-0838
Ij
101 N . C e n t e r
8.98 To 14.98
Boys'
S i z e s 4 to 10
SOON
•?
T h e NorthviIIe Record
JACKETS
Q u a l i t y !
The Ladies of Northvllle Council No.
89 are sponsoring a card party at the
NorthviIIe Masonic Temple at 8 p.m.,
Saturday September 24.
Refreshments will be served, and
table and door prizes given. Donations
will be S l per person.
N
1
•:•;
A L L W O O L with P I L E L I N I N G
CLEANERS a m
Main
The
M e n ' s Western L o o k
BENCH WARMERS-
m
REYDl'S
w
y
US
Beauty
e
Schwarz of Hill and Dalle Village,
M r . and M r s . John Murphy of Walled
Lake, M r s . Harry Mohr of Walled Lake
and M r s . Anne Tomalis also of Walled
Lake.
On Wednesday, September 14, M r s .
Charles Ware entertained the midnight
fifth floor surgery staff of St. Marys
Hospital of Livonia for breakfast.
;j:?SKS;:fty:::W^^
M r . and M r s . Robert Hughes of Wix­
om road attended the wedding of Pam­
ela Connolly of Wixom and Richard
Morphu of Commerce at St. Williams
Catholic church. The reception was at
Camolot Inn, Walled .Lake. There were
100 guests at the reception.
The Decathlon will be held at the
Wixom recreation center for all Wixom
elementar.y children on Saturday, Sep­
tember 24. ln case of bad weather, the
games will be held the following Satur­
day. Games for children 1 through 3
grades are from 10 to 12 a.m. and for
children 4 through 6 grades are from
1-3 p.m. There will be dash, broad jump,
bike races, ball throwing and other con­
tests.
The teenage march against leukem­
ia, which was held in Wixom on Sunday
netted $108.36. G i r l s taking part in the
march were Cheryl LaChance, Susan
Vangieson, Connie Sutherland, Coleen
Callahan, Alexis Smith, Belinda Docksey.
M r . Timothy Callahan i s in Pontiac
General hospital recovering from a
stroke.
M r s . Ray Burke has returned home,
having spent 2 1/2 weeks in Pontiac Os­
teopathic hospital.
The Wlxom Social Service group held
its monthly meeting at the home of
MliiS Hilda Furman on Wednesday.
On Sunday, September 18, M r s .
Ethel Hesslngfrom Warren, M r s . Gor­
don Hare and sons from Warren and
M r . and M r s . Ralph Hlnson from Wy­
andotte were guests of M r . and M r s .
Lee Harrison of Pontiac T r a i l .
Dinner guests of the Charles Wares
on Saturday were M r . and M r s . Peter
M r . and M r s . Harry Sedan of Lonbard, Illinois announce tSeliir*!i of their
first child, :i baby girl, onSeptemberS.
The baby .named Barbara Lynn, weighed
3 pounds. 15 ounces.
Paternal grandparents are M r . and
M r s . Harry Sedan of 504 H i r - i n .ind
m.. ?rna: grandparents are M r . alid
. M r t i ' i m a s Foster of Pittsburgh,
P-'r,i,:;,-!vanla.
M'B
t
N
Guest speaker for the evening was
Lester Carlson coordinator of the coop
program of the Wailed Lake schools.
M r . and M r s . Evert Petteys from
Dade City, Florida are the guests of
M r s . Petteys' brother and family, the
Everett Pearsalls.
M r . and M r s . Exel Waara were Sun­
day guests of their son's family, the
Fred Waaras.
M r . and M r s . Polston of Beck road
spent the weekend in Algonac as mem­
bers of the Century Trailer club. M r .
and M r s . Darlington of Wixom also
are members of the trailer group.
oilier
A
m
BE
S w i n g e r s . . .
C A L L
o
Mrs. Charles Ware
MA 4-1C01
At the installation of officers, which
was held at Moreysgolf club, the Wixom
Chamber of Commerce elected officers.
NYLON F L E E C E LINED
QUALITY
DRY C L E A N I N G
ALTERATIONS
D Y E WORK
RE-WEAVING
TUX R E N T A L
x
from 1
C
TO US!
foil days oheod.
118 E . Moin
l
copes w'ith the occasional "problem
child" in nursery schooi. Such loving
treatment for little folk with behavior
problems is one of the beneficial as­
pects of nursery school, believes M r s .
Lawrence Bemish, who Is this year's
president of the group. Her daughter,
Casey, now i s one of the children In the
playgroup. Three years ago son, Andy,
was in the nursery. During these years
as a nursery school mother, she says
she has seen how problem children and
only children have benefitted.
Pat Wright points out that while some
mothers may feel pre-school groups
are not needed for their children as
they have neighborhood playmates, the
nursery school experience can broaden
by giving DIFFERENT playmates their
0W7I age.
for T h e R e c o r d - N e w s for
concludes
with
$1798
CAR
o
by N o n c e e
P e t i t e s and R e g u l o r s
WHITE S T A G
A kindergarten teacher before Julie,
Chris, Mark and Martha were born.
B i z Gazlay concedes she could feel
changes in her attitudes when she re­
turned to teaching. Teaching Is a pro­
fession that is popular in the Gazlay
family as her husband, Fran, also i s
one. Daughter Julie, now married, i s
beginning her first year as a teacher
of fourth graders. Chris Is a senior at
Kenyon college, majoring In Spanish,
while Mark and Martha, tenth and eighth
graders, respectively, still are at home
in the family's large white Victorian
house on Rogers street.
EDITOR'S N O T E :
Other new officers Include Linda
Jones, charity; Carol Stew~art, hope;
Shelley Sweetman, faith. The appointed
officers are: Patti Wachtel, chaplain;
Ann Bonner, drill leader: Lynn M c Corm:cic, love; Narda Foreman, re­
ligion; Janet ReiUy, nature; Robyn A r m ­
strong, immortality; Bonnie McKiilney,
fidelity; Debbie Downey, patriotism;
Pam Braun, service; Debbie MacDo.rald
confidential observer; Cindy Baldwin,
outer observer; Nina Bosworth, mu­
sician; Pat Stoclt, choir director; Averil
Green, prompter; Judy Wainwright,asr
sociate drill leader.
W E A T H E R - W I S E
Last week " B i z " Gazlay began her
seventh year with the group, and Rae
Detbert, who came when the nursery
mtived from the Presbyterian church
to the new scout-recreation building,
Is starting her fourth. A s the year pro­
gresses. M r s . Gazlay says, there will
be trips (to the fire station, etc.) and
holiday observances, but right now the
teachers' -main concern Is that their
very young pupils be comfortable and
happy in what for most is their first
group experience.
For a long time both teachers have
attended Saturday workshops of the
Metropolitan Detroit pre-school organ­
ization, updating technlfjues and ideas.
Such recent programs as Operation
Headstart, M r s . Gazlay feels, have
pointed up the value of nursery school
experiences. Thanks to its publicity,
most mothers realize that cooperative
nurseries are not duplicating kinder­
garten experiences but are preparing
children for them.
" Y O U CAN ALWAYS finds.3mething
good to love about them" i s the answer
Rae Deibert gives i f asked how she
O f f i c e
N O R T H V I L L E
A N D
O
a
T o
F A S H l O H - V f l S E
C
a
W
R
C
e
Moase-Bannan
In a double r i n j ceremony on August
6 at Buslineil Congregational Ciiurcli,
Detroit, Fern Rose Kinnamon became
the ijride of [Robert Paul Barber.
The bride i s the daughter of Urs.
Jane Kinnamon of 46051 West Seven
Mile road, and the late Van Buren G .
Kinnamon. The bridegroom is the son
of M r . and M r s . Gerald F . Barber of
1-122-) Warwick, Detroit.
Officiating at the ceremony u-as the
Rev. William Strait.
Mr. and M r s . Robert P . Barber
p
" T H E Y HAVE such a wond-;rful
insight into a child's needs ... Perhaps
it's because each has tour children of
her own."
Thus, M r s . Harold Wright, a past
president of the NorthviUe Cooperative
Nursery Play Group, summed up one
of the "pluses" of the Monday-Wednes­
day-Friday pre-school
cooperative
over which M r s . Francis Gazlay and
M r s . Glenn Delbert preside. Under
their skilled direction three-and-four
year olds share experiences from 9 to
11:20 a.m. In the scout-recreatlonbuilding.
Here the atmosphere i s alm.i.st de­
ceptively easy-going - although often
reverberating with the noises of ener­
getic youngsters who realize they can
really play here. It also can become
hush-quiet as they inspect first green
shoots In pots they have planted with
beans.
Orient Chapter No. 77, Order of the
Eastern Star, will celebrate its 75th
diamond anniversary Friday, September
30 at NorthviUe high school.
Presiding at the meeting, which will
include a dinner at 6:30 p.m. followed
by entertainment in the school auditor­
ium, will be M r . and M r s . Howard
Shields, worthy matron and worthy
patron.
Grand officers of the state, past
matrons, past patrons, life members,
50-year members and honorary mem­
bers will be guests of the chapter.
Orient Chapter received Its char­
ter October 15, 1891. Present mem­
bership totals 366. The roll is made up
of master Masons, their wives, daugh­
ters, mothers, widows and sisters. The
chapter has 38 life memb{Jrs and 11
with gold certificates.
Nellie Freydl, past matron and a
long-time resident of Northvllle, has
been a member 71 years, having been
Initiated on August 30,1895. Her mother,
Ida Joslin, past matron tiecame worthy
grand matron of the Grand Chapter of
Michigan in 1897.
The Past Matrons' club was organiz­
ed in l925 and has been active through
the years, meeting monthly. Its special
project for the last several years has
been a child at the Eastern Star Villa
at Adrian. Still living are 42 past
matrons and 27 past patrons.
The group sponsors Northvllle Rain­
bow Assembly No. 29 which wasorganized in 1941 and today has a member­
ship of 57 giris.
Over the years the Orient Chapter
has supported the Masonic Temple as­
sociation through its worthy matron's
project by supplying various items of
equipment annually. Recently Orient
Chapter was honored by being asked
to elect a representative to the associ­
ation board.
In the 75 years of its existence.
Orient Chapter has had three members
appointed by the Grand Chapter as grand
representative, grand committee woman
and grand counselor.
Special recognition has been given
C . Ray Van Valkenburgh, past patron
who served as soloist for 19 years
and who was honored last year by
being asked to sing two solos at the
Grand Chapter session held in Grand
Rapids.
Another significant fact Is that
several families are associated with
Orient Chapter, where each member
of the family is a member of the chap­
ter.
Since 1955, Orient Chapter has ex­
changed yearly visits with Laurel Chapt e t No. 164 of Toronto, Canada. One
year the Canadian chapter visitsNorthvllle and the following year, the local
Chapter journeys to Canada. A friend­
ship chain Is presented to the visiting
chapter, to which discs are added each
year bearing the names of the presiding
matrons and patrons.
Business members of the chapter
are held on the third Friday of each
month, with special meetings slated
for the first Friday.
The Order of the Eastern Star i s a
charitable organization. In Michigan,
through the* 50-cent contribution to the
"every member project, the following
charities are supported:
1. The Villa for children, ages 6 to
18, located in Adrian.
2. Educational scholarships for first
and second-year college students.
3. Educational loans for third and
fourth year students.
4. Estarl scholarships for those
studying for the ministry or other re­
ligious fields.
5. Relief funds for aged sisters,
cancer cases and emergency situations.
Eastern Stars throughout the Eas­
tern Star world have set the record of
contributing a million dollars for re­
ligious training scholarships.
i
•
F r e e F o r k i n g in Rear
•
C h a r g e A c c o u n t s Welcomed
SPKIAUZINO
I N ORTHOPEDIC
f i n i N G
141
Free
153 E . M a i n
I
E .
M a i n
Parking at Reor
N T - S T O R E
FI-9-3420
Open F r i -
Northvill«
Sat
'til9:00
9
8
Page
Four
T H E
N O R T H V I L L E
R E C O R D - N O V I
N E W S - T H E
S O U T H
L Y O N
I.^".f.2''°.y.' S e p t e m b e r
H E R A L D
22,1966
1
Speedy
l - C a r d
o f
T h a n k s
1 - C a r d
o f
Want A d
T h a n k s
We, llie class of 1969 would llkp to
express our appreciation to tt-.e VFiv
and J a y c e e ' s lor their support and co­
operation In helpincmakeourGalaDa.vs
tic.olh a success. We would also like to
extend a special thank you to M r , and
M r s , Wiseman for ttieirmtich-apprf-clated help.
Our deepest appreciationtoourdear
friends and neighbors for the flowers,
memorials and many other expressions
of kindness and sympathy extended to
our family al the passlne of our dear
husband and father. Especially do we
wi.-^h to thank Reverend Boerger for his
comfurting words. D r . Atchison, F r e d
and Emily Casterline for their gracious
H3Bp help.
The George Lien Family
Acain cur llianks,
Class of 1063
SFE us
R E A L
FOR
E S T A T E
AND
V.A,
I N S U R A N C E
REPOSSESSED
Variety of Homes
GE-7-513I
C H .
S o m e p m t s . i c s s tiion r e n t
Z E R O DOWN
L E T Z R I N G
C o l l Management Broker
121 E a s t L a l < e St.
South
1 - C a r d
C l o s e d Saturdny during
T h a n k s
| 3 - R e a l
Our slncerest thanks and deepest
appreciation to tho.se who donatedblood
to our daughter ConnieM r , i M r s . Willard Sprenger
Lovely
on
2 0 7 2 0 M i d d l c b e l t at 8 M i l e
J u l y and A u g u s t
3-bedroom
beoutiful
baths,
New
V/2
walk-out
368
E
N
D
E
R
R
Y
Many
a n d J-i a c r e h o m e s i t e s .
Mile
West
acre.
Sewer.
Trees.
$570Q
T
A
R
K
R
GL-3-1020
Open
E
A
Roads.
Also
to $ 7 9 0 0 .
Edge of N o r t h v i l l e .
S
Paved
1
T
colonial.
completing.
1
acre
ronch,
ceramic
tile,
hardwood
full
bosement,
Formico
floors,
tops,
insuloted
walls and c e i l i n g s , birch cob-
school district.
trees,
farm
3 cor garage,
inets, doors ond panelino.
lot.
MODEL:
Building
out­
54181
M a n y Yi a c r e
W.
with
Eight Mile Road.
&
Off Seven
Sites
28425 P o n t i a c T r a i l
A d d i t i o n s and
sites.
sewer,
septic
able
S - F a n n
E s t a t e
Some-
some
tonk.
on B a n k
4-bedroom
well
Garages
G e n e r a t i o n to
WANTED. GOOD quality hors. li.iv ami
bright wheal straw. Write Lennais K-'-ilj
C o . nox 4721 Detroll, Mich.-18210. i l l f
brick,
V/2
ment,
built-ins,
goroge.
FI-9-5270
boths,
base­
2
• Homemade
Open
B I L L
or
Eleven
36
Mile
A
acres.
nr.
H O M E
H O M E S
Road.
A
N
T
E
D
Nine
Qjrrie
Rd.
gently
A c r e a g e
S m a l l
96
U
T
L
E
R
Pears
-
. . .
. H o m e s
land.
Residential
Dorothea and Fred
P A Y C A S H
F O R Y O U R
Home Phone
P R O P E R T Y !
WALNUT
trees,
ernized
KE-7-3640 -
J
E
N
must-see
N
I
N
G
and N o r t h v i l l e - $ 8 0 0 per
on
other outbuildings 23 Y e a r s
In T h i s
area,
Gr.
and
Area
2
bedroom ranch,
1
and
Hot water
aluminum
HORTON
P R U N E
Rd.
A n y t h i n g for o
AUCTION
room
and
150
x
styling
$21,000
-
will
E. LeBOST,
attached
garage.
In t h e
story
NOVI
extra
with
$18,500.
C E N T E R
2V* m i l e s w e s t o f
Mile
(Sheldon Rood)
home, .large k i t c h e n , l i v i n g
Northville Realty
Offers:
%
%
A
114 S. M a i n
R E N T
good
going
apartments
business
and post
and
store
office.
4 5 0 9 9 N e e i o n S t . 5 R m . neat home in o quiet n e i g h b o r h o o d .
U t i l i t y R m and K i t c h e n ore p a n e l e d . A good i t o r t e r home
for y o u n g p e o p l e , or i d e a l for o r e t i r e d c o u p l e .
Newly
p o i n t e d & c a r p e t e d . Vh c o r goroge. L o w p r i c e d o t S 9 B S 0 .
Hot
P E A R S
nice
living
room
bedroom,
ern k i t c h e n
with
2
5 0 X 150
ear
P R U N E
mod­
P L U M S
Excellent
M i U l o n i now p r e f e r
to S A V E b y r o M i n s
iCA
new foitherwcitht
/ML
• h o m p o o c r lor
1
bettor, f o i t e r .
. . . l o r , tDor.
Z £ / B L U E
frequent r u (
,
,^^Xcle.nins.
L U S T R E
•
appli­
garage.
G r a n d v i e w
lot.
%
40245 Grand River,
E
-
South
L y o n
4
989 N O V I S T R E E T .
P o u r large bedrooms i n t h i s l o v e l y
four l e v e l q u a l i t y b r l c i i h o u s e b u i l t In 1965- T w o b a t h s ,
f i r e p l o c e i n family room, man y b u l l t - i n s , g o s f u r n a c e ,
2-car goroge.
Near schools.
529,900.
Income
4 9 7 5 0 W. 9 M I L E .
A l o v e l y home o n o v e r one a c r e In the
country.
A b r i c l i 8 rm. house i n c l u d i n g S b d r m s . L R , O R ,
Kitchen.
1)^ b a t h s , f u l l bosement.
Mony e x t r o s .
3>cor
gargge.
528,500.
10045 SIX M I L E R D . , S A L E M .
A 6 room c o u n t r y home o n
about 2 o c r e s w i t h t r e e s .
F u l l b o s e m e n t , 2 ear g o r o g e .
A l s o o n property a 30 x 30 c o m b , g o r o g e ; 40 x 15 c h i c i t e n
c o o p ; 14 X 11 u t i l i t y b i d g .
533,900.
8 9 8 0 W. 7 M I L E R D . , S o l e m t w p . n room h o u s e w i t h o u t ­
b u i l d i n g s ond 33 a c r e s .
Good c o n d i t i o n . E x c e l l e n t b u y .
Vfe h o v e E x c e l l e n t l o t s throughout the N o r t h v i l l e o r e o .
For
$26,000
R
your
check
inventory.
D
F
I
T
Z
G
E
R
Complete Real Estate
18851 V A L E N C I A R O . T h i s s l « room one story h o u s e i s
l o c a t e d on 4 o c r e s in N o r t h v i l l e T o w n s h i p . M a n y troes
H o r s e s permitted.
H o r d w o o d f l o o r s . 3 rooms & h a l l c a r ­
peted.
Excellent condition. {34,900.
and
e
a
l
t
PONTIAC TRAIL
Phones:
A
L
these
call
2 9 c
for
Excellent
location.
gas
ROAD
Very
good
Mile
Rd.
Family
and Flowaring
apartment.
Very
attractive
scaped
5
Very
good
bedroom
acres.
goroge,
cation
5
Excellent
born
for
in Northville.
Maben,
off
of
Arbor Rd.
Aluminum
at
'
siding.
!
$24,900.
j
location.
Rental
Value i
$21,500.
•
3
home
on
Ann
Bedrooms.
location.
horses.
The
Private
most
305
Rd. Near
1
A C R E .
Oaks,
A
Ranch.
Family
drive,
2
desireable
j
Mile.
200
x
A c r e s on
Six Mile
I e e l l e n t b u y at
Rd.
just
east of
lo­
198.
$3,700.
Pontiac
Trail
Ex-;
$35,900.
PROFITABLE
Bed­
nicely
landscaped
room
attractive
tri^level on
lot. T h r e e lorge bedrooms,
with
fireplace,
garage.
joven and refrigerotor.
glassed
and
Kitchen has
In
the
W H E A T
and
9350
4
6
bedroom
Rushton
and
8
rooms.
2/i
large
acres.
between
4
Mile.
bed-
5 acres.
Low
F e r t i l i z e
baths,
screened
built-in
in
stove,
A
7650
Angle Rd.
tween
6
Bedroom
Barn.
8.
w i t h
7
G
R
I
C
O
Be­
Mile.
Ranch. 3
4
acres.
a t p l a n t i n g
t i m e
A - 1 . L o w forties.
***
$38,000.
E. Main,
Excellent
Studio,
ice
R
L
H
.
V
I
L
L
E
older
Profit
home.
From
the
Agrico
Root]
Joy and
Warren
R
E
A
L
T
H
S
O
Free
A
L
E
S
T
A
ESTATE
OFFICE
St.
349-1515
Farms-All
of Northville
Sizes.
8,
349-2000 or
E
C A L L
B R A N C H .
Mr. V a n Bonn
($810 to $ 1 0 0 0 per
Herb Bednor, Salesman
(349-4279)
°
'
T
H
E
N O R T H V I L L E
R e n t
R E C O R D - N O V I
1 2 - H e l p
N E W S - T H E
S O U T H
L Y O N
H E R A L D
831
T W O - Y E A R old house for rent, com­
pletely furnished, on Walled U k e , call
after 4, 838-1462.
1 2 - H e l p
Page
floor
for
Y o u r
A g r i c o
D e a l e r
A
T o d a y
G
R
I
100 .Sauth Mill
pitallzatlon, life
insurance,
paid vacations and holidays.
New
plant l o c a t e d at
Plymouth
more
LaJie. A p p l y
A n equal
In
located
one
known
Five
St.,
$45.00
MONTH.
H .
J O H N S O N -
R E A L
EARN
per­
&
H
trip to
ESTATE
or
S
349-0157
money
block east of red
as
Jimmy's
Lyon,
restaurant.
Saturday,
2 counters
3 leather
a n d 17
Sept.
'
stainless
Peerless
and
soda
TO SERVE YOU
m
stamps,
saucers
Universal charcoal broil,
bar
show
E. of
miles
New
a
for
like
deluxe
cor
camp­
9 week
guarantee
with
LYON ELEVATOR C O .
i
oge.
mention
4 1 5
E .
L a k e
P h o n e
G E - 8 - 2 6 7 i
Auctioneers
Moson
tail
white
and
around neck,
Brown
white'
floppy ears.
Phone
437-2011R A T H B U R N ' S
NOIlTHVILLE
Use
C H E V Y L A N D
O u r
560 Saiith Main
W a n t
A d s
FI-9-l)ll33
F I
9 - 1 7 0 0
1963 F O R O Country sedan, 6passenger,
v B , automaUc transmission, power
steering and brakes, power rear window.
A clean s o l i d c a r . $1195. west B r o s . ,
downtown Plymouth, G L 3-2424.
buying
Before
a
USED
SOUTH
CKR
L10H
"-^^M--
mORS
T H E
105 S . L A F A Y E T T E
SOUTH
Phone
% ;
-:--'c
see
A R E A ' S
LYON
C O M P A C T
437-U77
Used Cars Bought and Sold
C A R
E N G L I S H
H D .
Q T R S .
F O R D
L I N E
CORTINA-GT
S O L D
CORTINA-';>AGOK
A T
CORTINA-lZOOaedlSOOSEDAN
P U B L I C
One
A U C T I O N
1955
and o n e
Fofd,
2-door,
T o b e s o l d ot t h e
of the
on
A t r C L I A - S E O A N l Q d V A N
B e r g e n
1955 O l d s m o b i l e .
City of
Northville
O c t o b e r 2 5 at 2
U S E
1000 W. M a p l e
Wa'Hed L a k e
"
MA-4-1331
p.m.
N
O U R
W A N T
M o t o r s
D.P.W.
o
w
m
e
I s
T
h
e
A D S
T
i
I n
T
O
O
o
G
n
W
P
to
sell
W
1966
T
e
h
t
e
,
L
O
W
R
I
C
E
S
e
H
a
v
e
D o d g e P o l o r o 4 dr. H . T .
Factory
off.
plus
Loaded.
tax
&
lie.
Sized
Automatic
Dart
2
T
plus
tax
&
o
O
f
f
e
r
dr.
Transmission.
lie.
Expert
K E N N E L S
Poodle
G . E .
M i I I e r
styling
S a l e s
DODCE
I n s i d e
a n d
O u t s i d e '
48200 T w e l v e Mile
Novi,
H e I p
1-96
Rd.
127Hutton,
*56 G r a n d P r i x , g o l d , 2 - « a y p o w . , R & H , i l k * n « w .
$2895
'55 C a t a l i n s A dr. hgrdtop, V l i t Q , a q u o , R & H , P . S . , & P . B . , W W $ 2 1 7 5
$
995
F o r d C a l a x l i 2 d r . hardtop, g o l d , V 3 , a u t o . , R S H , W W
$1445
L t M a n a 2 dr. hordtep, dk blua, V 8 , a u t o . , P . S . , R & H , W V
$1775
Northville
B a n n . y l l l < 4 d r . hardtop, g o l d , f u l l p o w s r , R & H , WW
$1675
FI-9-0660
Expressway
Chov)r II W a g o n , oigua, 6 c y l l n d o r , a u t o . , R & H . , Sharp
W a i t r e s s e s
a n d
•63 C o t o l i n o 4 it.
$1195
hardtop, b i u t , 2 - w a r p o w o r , R & H , WW
$
Pays
demonstrator
o f order.
g r o u n d w o r l c .
oh
Bob-O-Link
Check
and
work
Call
GA-2-4913
for
Golf
GfoncJ R i v e r at
B e c k
RAMBLER
|
Club
9^5
TRADES
C o t o l i n o 4 it.
!
Clarence DiiCharme
1960 R a m b l e r C l a s s i c 4 dr., std.
PRESS BRAKE O P E R A T O R S
$1295
•61 C h o v y w o g o n , 6 c y l , s t i c k , R & H
$
995
$
ggg
trans.
special.
$195.
B o n n o r i i l o c o n v t r t l b i o , b i u o , 2 - w a y p o w o r , R & H , WW
$
795
1961 R a m b l e r C l a s s i c 4 d r . , S t d . t r a n s . R & H
R & H
$495.
O l d * n , Ait.,
$695.
O l d a 88 c o u p o , b l u e , R & H , WW
1963 R a m b l e r C l a s s i c 4 dr., Y 8 , auto. R & H
M e r c u r y 4 dr
$995.
1964 R a m b l e r C l o - s i c 2 dr., std. t r a n s . , R & H
WELDERS
i o d o n , b r o w n , 2 - w a y p o w o r , R & H , WW
C o t o l l n o 4 d r . • • d o n , b r o w n , J - w o y p e w t r , R f t H , WW
B"'' Conn
OPERATORS
$1375
j
R d . j
349-2723
C o t o l l n o c o u p o , b r o w n , J - w o y p o w o r , R & H , WW
h o r d t e p , b r o w n , f u l l p o w e r , R & H , ffW
$
795
$
745
l e d o n , g r e e n , power i t e o r l n g , 8 o u t e .
$ 4 4 5
Ford wogon, b l o c k . V 8 , auto., P . S . . R & H
$
695
$1095-
TRAINEES
B
softener
We E m p l o y
Fuljy.poid
Owner
and E d Gottscholk
paws,
A n s w e r s to Knarf.
$ 2 8 9 5
E
R
R
Y
P
O
N
T
I
A
C
,
I
Y o u In O t h e r C a p o c i t y U n t i l
Y O U G E T T H E W R I T E
vacations,
Blue
P R I C E
Qualified
Cross, Blue
Road
Shield,
Plymouth
676-2304
9 Paid
Holidays,
P A R A G O N
44000
N
I N S T R U C T I O N
W H E R E
Lester Johnson
old puppy.
white
tipped
874 A n n Arbor
SOUTH
information
' 6 4 C a r v o i r M o n i o , r * d 4 a p c t d . R & H , WW, Sliorp
C H A R - M U R
CO.
P R E E
Gibson,
or
GIFTS.
receipt
case
James
R E W A R D
return
l e a d i n g to r e t u r n o f s m a l l
on truck. Complete pock-
acre).
FI-9-5270
pickup,
with
new Koydel
er.
$25
Yi t o n
V O L K S W A G E N , 1959, 2 d r . Looks and
runs l i k e ' a '65. o n l y $395. Rathburn
Chevrolet Sales, 560 S. M a i n . 349-0033
Novi
a
WELDER
a r t i c l e s too numerous to
l
new
case
commercial water
cabinet
L A B R A D O R R e t r i e v e r , white blaze on
chest, white toes. Northville a r e a . 3490455. R e w a r d .
349-2017
HOME
disposal
d
J A G U A R , 1959, M a r k 1 3.4 liter sedan.
S e l l , trade, best offer. FI 9-1343.
with
Woste King gorboge
a
n
1964 M E R C U R Y 2 d r . hardtop, h r e e z e way, low mileage, V 8 , standard trans­
mission, R 4 H , white walls. Only$1295.
west B r o s . , downtown Plymouth, G L 3 2424.
new fires.
cups
i
a
1932 C H E V R O L E T - two door sedan best
offer over $350. 349-1648.
33000 actual miles.
stove
c
9600
1963 R E N A U L T C a r a v e l l e , 4 speed,
radio, white walls. Clean. $695. west
B r o s . , downtown Plymoulh, C L 3-2424
1962 R o m b l e r station wagon, std trans.,
table
l
1 9 6 5
1964 F O R D 2 dr. hardtop. Perfect con­
dition, 1 owner. 49349 7 M i l e , near
Ridge
19tf
$1876
refrigerator
Hobart dishwasher
bowls
other
Miles
River
bonus,
MACHINE
salad
e
'65
65 M U S T A N G c o n v e r t l b l e 2 8 9 V 8 , 4 v , red
automatic, excellent condition. G A 72421.
Transportation
Garland 6 burner gas
plates
refrigerator pie
B U S H E L
stand
grill
refrigerated
platters
ice cream
35^ A
substituting.
rest
p
y
Chev
S M A L L DacSchuDds A . K . C . 7 weeksold
with shots, a i l C R 6-0112.
fryer
Tyler double
tables
coffee
p.m.
steel coffee
Pitco deep
chairs
3 doz. soup
-1
R A T E
stools
booths
20 dinner
24,
BEST
Howail.
t h e b e St.
v
O N L Y
$2677
B E A U T I F U L aprlcotpcodlepuppy.Minl a l u r e . A K C . 349-0S92.
COMMISSION
extra
P L A Y
1962 R A M B L E R station wagon, recon­
ditioned. $575. west B r o s . , downtown
Plymouth, G L 3-2424.
Man
SUPPLIES A N D
light in South
W O R K E R S
Demon-
No collecting, delivering
or
C O L U E , 4 y r s . , free t o i n y a U d o f older
person. M o n g r e l free to good borne. 349089L
A
Toy
green
1963 9 P A S S E N G E R v W wagon $600.
A l s o 1958 Rambler A m e r i c a n $100.
349-1723 after 6 p . m .
S
e
HORSE for sale, gentle, 8 y r . o l d . duncolored horse with saddle and b r i d l e
$250. C a l l n
9-0676 after 5 p . m .
P I C K E R S
40255 Grand
20%
S a l e — A u t o s
1956 F O R D dump truck, F - 6 0 0 - 5 y d . |
box, 4 new t i r e s . 437-1223.
H38tfc I
Priced
strotor.
Receive
h
opportunity
St.
MOTHERS-HOUSEWIVES
B
C
time
F A R M
Home
O N E belt, two satin bows, r e w a r d . FI 90609.
L
preferred
202 W. Main
Ploy
1 5 — F o r
1 6 - L o s t
S o l c — A u t O S
RIDING H O R S E , dark brown grade mare,
14 hands, to good private home. $100.
349-4129.
A P P L E
the
AGRICO SERVICE C E N T E R
Trail.
E . Main
Northville. O N L Y
Estimate
12 r e s t a u r a n t
O
105
lo­
1 B U C K A.NGUS bull, 4 ponies - 1 b r i ­
dle, 1 saddle, 825 W. 10 M i l e R d . , South
Lyon.
H38-39P
1 5 — F o f
E N G L I S H P O I N T E R , male, 2 y r s . o l d ,
trained gun d o g . C a U between 9 and 3.
349-4482.
employer.
STATION
extra
I 4 - P e t 5 , Animals, Supplies
1500
E . North Territorial, Whit­
A T T E N D A N T
space
Excellent
Job.
29 chrome choirs
C
office
rent.
AUCTION
32 steak
S e e
W a n t e d
POODLE PUPPIES
M h i l - t c x a l l c o l o r s and ages. Breeding
t e r m s a v a i l a h l e . Sangaree, G R 6-4298
o r C R 4-1206.
efits olferetl including lios-
PAYS A L L PREMINUMS,
Difference/
Pennimon, Plymouth
GL-3-1020
W a n t e d
MAI.K R E T I R E E , part-lime now, fulllime KITCHEN H E L P , 3.19.0556 after .1. 6lf
--" ler fill repairlnc.small motor.-;. Write
H.ix 300 r.'o >-,irltiv;||i. Rernrd.
36lf
S E C R E T A RY - experienced tj-plst, will
teach dictaphone, 35 hour week, call
W.UTilESS W , . l . M K l l . .ifti.ni"-ns.
662 - 4534 or 662 - 4 5 35 ask for M r s .
Suh'lay.s <ii li,j|i,lavs, 18003 N ' T l l . v i l l i . Russo.
H37.38CX
rood.'nor 7 Mile. Bohi's Lunch.
19
R . N . ' s , L P N ' S , 4 NURSES aids needed for
R O O M l o r rent. Older gentlemen pre­
f e r r e d . C a l l 349-1239.
T H E
O U R
*•*
N O R T H V I L L E
349-0157
.
- APPLY BATHEY MFG. CO.
GL-3-0723
Ply­
mouth.
OLDEST
160 F a s t Main
Phone
T
.
8 - F o r
3 B E D R O O M 1 ome, undirnisheil, C o m ­
merce La'i-?, S160 per month. Security
deposit. Immediate occupancy. Write
Box 331 c / o Northville Record.
I4tl
349-2000
THE N A T I O N ' S 1.EA0IN6 r t R T I U Z E R
GE-7-2443-Pontiac
E
120 N . C E N T E R
R E A L
N
Y
R
NORTHVILLE'S
N
!
Experience
Deliver
*inr
Small
O
!
RENT OUR Clamorlne shampooer for
your spring rug cleaning. Gambles Store,
South Lyon.
Htfc
C A R L
off­
Commercial.
$21,000.
W.
J
'
SERVICE
2nd
Haggerty
1 0 ioz.
H
S O D
Between
or (Jo'a C o m p l e t e
Northville.
Physicians
or
M E R i O N
Yot) P i c k - o p , We
Make wheat while the sun shines . . . make it better
, . . make more of i t . . . with AGRICO fertilizers in the
soil to give your grain the start it needs. Wheat
growers say the yield barriers are breaking. Research­
ers are talking in terms of 100 bushels or more per
acre. How? With proper management, of course, and
with quality AGRlCO fertilizers correctly applied.
AGRICO gives you quality in extra measure. AGRICO
fertilizers are tailored to your specific soil needs..
You get the precise formulation your crop calls for.
Our free AGRICO soil test will pay dividends, lt shows
exactly the plant food needs of your soil and will
recommend the AGRICO formula that's best. It's the
practical way to help boost wheat yields.
SEASON
between
7 Mile.
422
A
!
3 - R O O M semi-furnished a p a r l m e n L Ui
town. A d u l t s only. 349-2232 after 3:00
p.m.
P E R
«•»
Rd.
F A R M S
At 7278
12 w o o d e n
C
^
R e n t
cation,
thirties.
l o c a t i o n for t h i s
'
Eom
Exquisite
room.
Chubb
C U T T I N G
D A W N OF A
Ply­
superb 2
English Manor. 23
7
'
Northville
S Y C A M O R E
River
room
7
I 65
family
T
Ntvl
Beck,
***
Newburgh
!
Full or Port
$22,900.
land- I
beautifully
$56,500.
jpatio, 2 c o r attached
R
Trees
1S940 G r a i 4 R l i r t r
twenties.
Excellent
Services
S P R U C E
C o m p l e t e L i n e of Shrubs
Elegont
South
mouth.
3
^
O F F I C E S P A C E , available about O c t . 1.
A l s o storage space for rent. 349-1473.
l3t
FORSYTHIA-LILAC
near
47270
3
investment
,
8 - F o r
appoint-
3 Bedroom ranch. $22,900
***
Residence437-2850
furnaces.
:
son.
Five
Northville
L o c a t e d at c o r n e r o f C e n t e r a n d
separate
.
addresses
us
B L U E
42533
N O R T H V I L L E
Four
?
7 — M i s c e l l a n y
bet. H i u i r l y & S i i l e y
F o u r f a m i l y apartment.
.
*ir«
Service
Business 665-3146 -
'
Steady Work.
convenience-
D
A N D TERRITORIAL
'
y
***
Multiple Listing
Dancer's
Novi
ment-
S 9 S S 0 T E N M I L E R O . T h l i 7 rm. h o u s e in the c o u n t r y
3 bdrms. port b a s e ­
may be j u s t whot y o u ore looiting for.
ment.
C a r p e t e d . Mew a l u m i n u m s i d i n g .
JlS.SOO.
18.449 D O N E G A L In E d e n d e r r y H i l l s s u b d i v i s i o n .
This
l o v e l y 8-room, 2 - s t a r y b r i c k h o u s e w a s b u i l t In 1965. F o u r
b a d t o o m s , formal d i n i n g room, 14 x 2 0 fomlly r o o m w i t h
b e o u t l f u l f i r e p l o c e , th b o t h s , many q u a l i t y f e o t u r e s , 2 - c o r
goroge, opproximotely 1 acre lot.
549.500.
Price
includes everything except
j L o t on
\
LUSTRE
water
S t a r k
Full
car
P
P.rD.r
room
building with
Bosement.
^
CUSTODIAN
SHAMPOOER
$1
B A R T L E H
A n n Arbor
B l u e Lu>tre E I o c t r i c
C A R P E T
Northville.
G L - 3 - 7 6 6 0
$320 per month. E x c e l l e n t investment.
^
Sew outomotics. L o w bal­
***
A
2 2 4 S . M a i n S t . T h l i 5 R m o l d e r home h o . 2 B d r m t . part
boiement.
C o i s t o v e ond refrigerator I n c l u d e d .
Lot
» 9 ' X 132'. $13,000.
Cady.
A
^
sewing
S I N G E R C O , NO-2-S569
O r c h a r d s
and master
$14,000.
heat.
A
floor
moclilnes including 1965 Toucfi
and
3 4 9 - 4 0 3 0
^
m o d e l s 3na' r e p o s s e s s e d
and
O r c h a r d s
country
rentals,
ance,
F o r e m a n ' s
home,-excellent,
ances,
contract.
***
Lyon
STOREWIDE
Demonstrotors,
acre-fporcel.
city of
Troil
with 2 bedrooms and den,
carry
340 N O R T H
with fireplace, den -
SINGER
A P P L E S
lot.
S T O R E
P E A R S
Northville on Seven
Full
large
C E N T E R
2J4 M i l e s S . o f S o u t h
P L U M S
rongh,--
garage.
house.
E V E R Y
9010 Pontiac
H O N E Y
in­
90
and
Sets.
CLFARANCE*
oc­
square
siding.
Beautiful
Large 3 bdrm. ranch
heat.
boseboord
474-4900
3 bedroom
Breakfast, Dining
Living Rm.
Cooking
B A R T L E T T
in Pork-
area
F U R N I T U R E
w i t h J>urchaie o f B L U E
23941
acre.
family
lot. C o l o n i a l
F.H.A.
bdrm.
living
dining room.
2
living room with fireplace, dining
garage.
U S E D
Mile
Eating and
Plymouth.
2300
of
cludes
acre.
River
Attached
cupancy.
colonial.
Will
basement,
***
o r e o , k i t c h e n , V/2 b a t h s .
37411
farm home, barns
$700 p - '
Experience
S P I N E T P I A N O . Mav lie liart bv assiiminc s m a l l monthlvp.ivni.-nls. Be.iiitiful
finish. See it Inraliv. Write Credit
Dept., Box 57, Nile.s, Mii-h,
h37-38p
A P P L E S
Plymouth
R e o d y for i i n m e d i a t e
older
schools
attached
6 0 a c r e fonn South L y o n
UPHOLSTERED rockers and chairs from
$29.95. Gambles, South Lyon.
H-lltft
ex-
feet
M o d e r n - .3
S
C U S T O M M A D E s l i p covers - Phone
437-96l2.
H38CJt
SAT. E V E .
older
bedrooms.
in
to
868
acre.
D E T R O I T J E W E L gas range, 4 y r s . old,
good condition, $30. Phone 437-9074.
H38at
O l d f o r d
1270 S. M a i n
home.
Pontiac
Corner Novi
R e a l t y
Four
shopping.
vacant on 8 Mile between
R O L L A w A Y bed, good condition, $12.
349-5036.
F A R M
mod­
retains
size
Close
R E A L T O R
S t e w a r t
245 WING S T .
LOOK T H E S E O V E R
f^-^Rf,.,
lot.
lone Estates,
349-4071
9x15 and 9x9 RUGS. Both for $35. 2 1 "
R C A T V , $20. Phone 349-2686.
20
9om-7pm
and 10
4 bedroom home
type
U S E D D A V E N P O R T , platform r o c k e r ,
chest of drawers, needs r e p a i r . F I 91629.
F1-9-2034
on S e v e n M i l e R d .
D U N L A P
atmosphere.
KE-7-2699
L A R G E D m l N C room set, dark wood,
UbIe, 5 chairs, buffet and c h l i i i cabinet.
$50. 349-1068.
possession.
but
eel lent
T V . R C A . 2 3 " . FI 9-0136.
desirable
Vintage type home
Member of t h . U n i t e d North>»e»tcm R o . l t y
A»»n., W e . t e m W.ync--OdtIiind County
B o . n l o f ItDAItors.
Trail
Store hours,
area.
8 6 x 172 ft.
522 W.
A
349-3470
.
2 ROOMS for 2 w o r k l n g g l r l s . No smok­
ing o r drinking, withkllchenandprlvate
p . m . shin. Eastlawn Convalescent Home.
W'OMAN to assist spmi-invalid -.villi
CINDERS
for
driveway
and
clean-up
Jobs.
hath.
349-4006.
7 - M i s c e l l a n y
349-OOli.
51lf
Top soil and peat humus. G L 3-2363 or
house in Novl, 12 In 5. Must have .nui
G L 3-192L
Htfo
S L E E P I N G R O O M , new home, private transportation. C a l l 3.19-970.1 alter C W A I T R E S S W A N T E D - A p p l y J i m m y ' s
F O R S A L E - Honda 450. Ask for J i m
P.m.
ID
Restaurant, South Lyon.
H28tfc
438-3021.
H37tfc B O T T L E GAS stove, like new. Sell or half-bath and entrance. Male, nond r i n k e r , day work. 43030 Eleven M i l e
trade. Rocking chairs, commode, other
w
A
T
T
R
E
S
S
E
S
,
cooks
4
porters,
full or
K X P K R I E N C E U nmk, al.-n nursesaidsand
G I R L S 3 speed E n g l i s h r a c l n g b i k e , $ 2 0 ; furniture, F I 9-2862. 25100 .Novi Rd. road, N o v l .
Ijiimtrv help. EaslIawnConvalescent Home, part time - apply hi person. T h e new
b a r - b e l l s , completeset,$10;Zenlth21
Howard Johnsons, 2380 Carpenter, Ann
_
J2l!
F U R N I S H E D 3 room apartment, couple 34'.)-001L_
console T V , $15. 349-4129.
Arbor.
Hietfc
O V E R 400 sq. f l . of oak tungand groove with one c h i l d . U U i l t l t s except elec­
M E A T C U T T E R , lull time. E M B Food
flooring. FI 9-1755.
t r i c . $28 weekly plus one weeks deposit. Market. 349-0522,
S T O R M WlNDO'iVS - 3-67 x 29, 2-67 x
B
A
B
Y
S
r
i
T
E
R
,
five
days
a
week,
8 to
496 W . Cady, Northville. Inquire hack
25; 2- 53 X 30, 1 - 55 x 30. call 3493:30, owntransportadon, FI 9-2079 after
1 G E N E R A L GAS»aterheater$20; I C E apartment. 453-2952 or 543-8485.
2770.
D E N T A L ASSISTANT, ex|.t-rli-nci-pre­ 4:30.
wringer type washer $15; 1 set of ce­
ferred, may consider Irainini: ri;:lit
ment laundry tubs $5; 1 gas range, good N O R T H V I L L E area, quiet r o o m , kitchen
person, 349-2750.
20 M A L E O N L Y : Glassware washer, 16
L I K E N E W . 1 year old 12 gauge pump
condition $25; 1 baseraeni shower c o m ­ p r i v i l e g e s . Reference required. C a l l
gun with case, 1 box s h e l l s $65. Phone
y e a r s or older. Own transportation.
plete with cement bottom $30; 1 wood evenings or weekends. 437-1385.
349-4174. 440 G r a c e street.
S E R V I C E STATION
help days, jnod
Work 30 h r s . per week after school.
and coal heating stove suitable for gar­
wages and benefits, F I 9-9814.
18-19 $1.50 per hr. Call 349-1800, ext. 425
age or basement $5. Phone 349-2536.
C H A I N - L I N K kennel gates, $2.00 each.
between
8 a.m. and 4 p . m .
John Little, 7931: i-earl Street, S a l e m .
Fencing and horse manure tree. 3499 - W a n t e d
T o
R e n t Y O U N G M A N a p p r o i d m a l e l y 2 5 f o r snapH38(
2319.
shot film processhig. F u l l time steady S T O R E C L E R K S , full lime, a p p l y l n p e r work, w i l l t r a i n . Apply al C o l d Seal
son D 4 C store, Norlhville.
R O G E R S D R U M , $45; Normandy c l a r ­ RUGS A MESS? Clean for l e s s with 3 o r 4 B E D R O O M home, immediately. Photo, 775 Davis, Plymouth.
43tf
Blue Lustre! Rent electric shampooer
inet, $65; portable organ, $17; music
i n South Lyon school d i s t r i c t . Referenc­
B A B Y S I T T E R , Willowhrook a r e a . C a l l
$1. Dancers, South L y o n . H38cx
es available. Box 33C, c/o South Lyon D E L I V E R Y BOY »-ith car. Call 345.055C after 4. 476-7880.
stand, $2.00. 49825 W. 9 M i l e , 349-4472.
20
Herald.
H3eifc after -1.
20
6tf
16 II. F L A T t r a i l e r ; 8 ducks $10; fryer
P
A
R
T
T
I
M
E
for
work
on
egg
farm
chickens % ( and $1.00. 12909W.9MIIe
RUMMAGE SALE
WATTRESS, cocktail lounge. E x p e r ­
mornhigs. G E 8-4231.
H38cx
phone 437-9013.
H38p
F i r s t Presbyterian Church House, F r i . ,
1 2 - H e l p
W a n t e d
ience not necessary. Excellent work­
Sept.30,9lo9;Sat.Oct.l,9tol2.
20
ing
conditions,
steady,
full
or
part
B
U
S
DRIVERS
needed,
male
or
female,
1964 F A R M tractor Massey-Ferguson
Ume. Northville Hotel 4 B a r , 212 S. hours 7 to 9 a.m. and 2:45 to 4:45 p . m .
diesel deluite. Shetland pony. Phone M A L E - Apple p i c k e r . 437-2726.
S E L M E R E coronet i case. $150. E x ­
W i l l consider either a.m. or p . m . only.
H38CX M a h i .
349-2666.
H38p
cellent condition. C a l l after 6:30, 349Apply 235 W. U b e r t y , South Lyon. C u s ­
1704.
todial
help also needed.
H38-39cz
NOON
L
U
N
C
H
room
and
playgrounij
G A R A G E 4 R U M M A G E S A L E . Sat., W A N T E D . Substitute r u r a l c a r r i e r , men
Sept. 24, 10 a.m. to 4 p . m . Clothing, or women, I n q u l r e a l N o r t h v i l l e Post of­ supervisors needed for A m e r m a n E l e ­
5 P I E C E s i l v e r - p l a t e d coffee i tea
" A V O N C A L L I N G " for represenUtive
t i r e s , car lop box c a r r i e r , refrigerator, fice or call the Postmaster at 349-0300. mentary School and M a i n Street E l e ­
service, $45. 349-2893 after 5 p . m .
mentary school, N o r t h v i l l e Public School to serve customers on the east side of
youth bed, 2 dining tables, three law-n
System.
Apply
B
o
a
r
d
of
Educatlo.1
of­
whitmore
Lake. F o r Information call
mowers, boys 2 6 " converted English F U L L O R part time help. Hauling and
tf
E V E R G R E E N S - $1 to $3 - dig your r a c e r bike, miscellaneous household picking. F o r e m a n Orchards, 50050 w . 7 f i c e s , 107 South Wing, 349-3400.
NO-2-5671 or write P . O . Box 1926, Ann
own. T u r n off US 23 at Silver Lake Items. 22380 Pontiac T r a i l corner of M i l e , 3 1/4 m i l e s west of Northville.
Arbor.
H38-39cx
road go 1/2 m i l e to Evergreen road. Nhie M i l e road, one m i l e south of
WAITRESS WANTED
L o g Cabin Nursery.
H36tfc South Lyon.
H38p
I
F
Y
O
U
U
V
E
I
n
t
h
e
N
o
r
t
h
v
l
l
l
e
Plyraoutt
R E C E P T I O N I S T - T Y P I S T for law office
Full or Part T i m e
I school area; have a few hours a week
In Farmhigton. Must he aeat InappearANDY'S STEAK
HOUSE
\ and love people please call me Wednes­
E V E R G R E E N S A L E . 2000 select e v e r - S T E R E O - P H O N O G R A P H ; e x e r c i s e W k e ance and have good telephone voice.
day o r Thursday nights between 7 4 9.
greeas, 21 i a r l e t i e s . D i g yourcholceof and tape recorder. Phone 437-2619. Experience p r e f e r r e d . C a l l M r s . Stew26800 Pontiac Trail
Phone 437-2917.
H38at
n u r s e r y at $2.50 each. P e t e r s ' E v e r H38CX art. 474-8360.
South L y o n
tVeen Cu-deas. M i i f o r d , M l d L a t F r o s t y ' s Phone 684-75te.
H35-38p
H U N T E R S We still have a few Reming­ M A N to work In roadside market, aflerPhone 437-2038
ton centennial model.s in stock.
noons. 1 p . m . , 6 p . m . Apply 40O01 G r .
1 3 — S i t u a t i o n
W a n t e d
R O O F I N G , 90 Ih. r o i l $2.25; shlngles
H38-39CX R i v e r , N o v l .
$8.50 p e r square. T a r paper $1.S0 p e r
E X C E L L E N T
C H I L D C A R E In my home week days.
r o l l . Roof coating, 5 g a l . $2.50. A l u m - R U M M A G E S A L E , Sept. 30 - Oct. 1.
O P P O R T U N I T Y
Have references. C a l l 349-1162.
letf
Inura g i i t i e r s l 5 ? ft. A l u m i n u m siding, 10 a . m . to 6 p . m . at 48130 west R d . ,
AVON'S
EXCITING
f i r s t grade. $22.50 per square. G A 7- w l x o m .
20
Mechanically
inclined
New
line of g i f t s
ond
3309.
H31tf
C H I L D C A R E In my home; have ref­
man to l e a r n o u t s i d e sererences, phone 438-4516.
H37-38cx
toiletries con give you
RENT OUR Clamorlne Shampooertoryour.
vice work. P a i d traininga
n
u
n
u
s
u
a
l
e
a
r
n
i
n
g
o
p
­
spring rug cleaning. Gambles Store, South
I ' M a 4 year old who would Uke my
Tnjck and tools s u p p l i e d .
Lyon.
Hlfc
mommy to baby sit with a playmate
portunity during the com­
R O A S T
B E E F
Guaranteed
earnings,
about my age 349-1321.
16tf
ing
holiday
season.
AUTO batteries, tires and accessories.
w i t h p o t e n t i a l to $ 1 2 , 0 0 0 .
Gambles, SouUi Lyon.
Htfc
F
o
r
p
a
r
t
i
c
u
l
a
r
s
c
o
l
l
T
Y
P
I
N
G
to
do
In
my
home.
Have
had
D I N N E R
v
M u s t be w i l l i n g and r e ­
experience with memos, letters, stenA V O N MANAGER,
SUE
CINDERS for driveways, seasoned fire
Sunday, Sept. 25
c i l s , etc. P h . 437-1214.
l i a b l e . P h o n e .Mr. W a l l a c e
place wood. G L 3-4862 after 4:30.
tl
FLEMING,
FE-5-9545.
St. William's P a r i s h H o l l
for a p p o i n t m e n t . 3 4 9 - 0 4 5 1 .
N E E D L E P O I N T done, beautifully, r e a ­
ONE 16 (.-auLie Winchester pump -.:un,
Walled L a k e
sonably, quickly. F o r Information c a l l
full rhokc ami 'ine30O,Savaw.0435FirG E 8-8303.
H38CX
1 to 6 p.m.
MiKKi drive. South Lv->ii, G E 7-7493..
H37ir,
Adults
$2.50,
Children
C H I L D C A R E In my home part time or
S c l i o o I
C r o s s i n g
full t i m e . 349-4086.
ten and under $'t.00"''
Hove immediate opening
G A R A G E S A L E : featuring Johnson 10
G
u
a
r
d
F
R
E
E
A
R
T
S
A
N
D
f
o
r
f
u
l
l
t
i
m
e
c
u
s
t
o
d
i
a
n
h o r i e outboard motor with stand. Many
R N W I L L C A R E for ooehed-ridden
other attractions Includlng.'dental cab­
patient In m y home call 349-1168 after
C R A F T S
44 hour week salary
5 day week
inet, hobby horse, tiaby s c a l e s . T h u r s ­
6 p.m.
open-insurance
benefits
SHOW IN U P P E R
H A L L
day thru Saturday. 43600 6 M i l e , FI 9M a l e or F e m a l e
4848,
a v a i l a b l e - c a l l for a p ­
8 M l l e S , Center St.
14-Peh, Animals, Supplies
Wilson,
pointment
Tom
A
p
p
l
y
N
o
r
t
h
v
i
l
l
e
P l u m b i n g S u p p l i e s
F R E E to good home, s m a l l dog, 2 665-7733 - Howard JohnR U M M A G E
S A L E
months o l d pup, female. 349-3654 after
P o l i c e Dept. 8 to 4
son Motor L o d g e , 2380
S e l l i n g ({etail at
4 p.m.
Arbor.
Carpenter,
Ann
Plymouth Credit Union
Wholesale Prices
F R E E - 3 kittens, housebroken, grey
PHILLIPS PRODUCTS
5
0
0
S
.
H
a
r
v
e
y
,
c
r
.
M
a
p
l
e
,
and white striped, phone 437-2786,
GL-3-2882
C
O
M
P
A
N
Y
27777
Martlndale road.
H37-38a
Plymouth
P L Y M O U T H
PLUMBING
IMMEDIATE OPENINGS
JOURNEYMAN
Saturday, September 2 4
HORSES BOARDEU. Box s t i l l s , standing
All
shifts, no e x p e r i e n c e
& HEATING S U P P L Y
stalls, pasture, good riding f a c l l l t i n , r i d ­
9 am to 5 pm
DIE MAKER
ne(»ssary as we will train
ing lessons, c i r c l e C. 437-2975.
47tf
149 West L i b e n y S t .
Sponsored by W I L P F
.- many fine company l)enAll Around Experience.
EGGS
3 Miles West of Northville
locoted
Older 3 bedroom
B I L L
ex­
C & L HOMES, INC.
30 beautiful acres
Plums
Stop A t White Barrel
well-kept
Immediate
Laird,
Sal esmen
O F F I C E PHONE
W E
quiet
terraced
3 bedrooms, brick ranch, 40 ft.
wide, full bsmt., over lOOO sq.
ft., ceramic tile, 20' living rm.
Will build within 50 miles of
Detroit. Model ond office at
23623 6 Mile Rd., 2 blocks
East of Telegraph.
SERVICE
in
Many
faxes
ON Y O U R L O T
FOR HOMES IN THIS AREA
and
I
$82.48 Month p l u s
LIST WITH US FOR QUICK
building.
S T O R E
P E A R S
basement
posed
$12,900
RESULTS. W£ H A V E BUYERS
for IncJustfial, C o m f n e r c i o l
F A R M S
HONEY
SARATOGA"
$100 DOWN
MEMBER OF
MULTI-LIST
145
'66
F O R S A L E cheap, Kelvlnator e l e c i r i c
range. Excellent condition. 349-1699.
G O O D R E F R I G E R A T O R $50; a l s o e l e c -
P L U M S
3 bedroom ranch with
"THE
nr.
E i g h t M i . nr. E a r h a r t R d .
F a r m s
rd.
G R A P E S
acres
rolling
doily
A P P L E S
Prune
acre
Mi.
9
S T O R E
"jAMES C.
Toft
B e a u t i f u l 19
parcel.
to
Baseline
O R C H A R D
C
6 — H o u s e h o l d
doughnuts
E R W I N
F O R Y O U
IN
^
O N E ( J P R I G H T p i a n o , o n e e l e c l r i c s l o v e C O L E M A N ' S excavating sand and gra'vel
like new. C a l l G E 7-2385.
H37cx hauled. Septic tanks and sewers Installed.
8085 DIckerson, Salem. Phone 340-5338,
H17tfc
.MATCHl.'.o davenport i chair, clean .
and In good condition, Stanley Proctor,
F O R D 250 baler with engine, John Deere
273 Woodland Drive, South Lyon.
H37-38rx 12-A combine with engine. Ludwig K i l ­
ter, G E 7-2120.
Htfcx
F O R E M A N ' S
Apples
'
24
9
708
REALTY
12,
"
P r o d u c e
M A P L E DINlNG room bihle, hutch cablnet and four c h a i r s . A l s o Speed Queen
w r i n g e r type washer. G E 7-9092. H38p
349-3181
Road)
349-4030
Linville,
8843
Cider
« Caramel Apples
Terms
C O B B
Serve Y o u .
C E N T E R
(Shelden
car
« Fresh
S M A L L EGGS A C A I N ! Poewees, loo,
s m a l l 2 l / 2 doz. $ l . C 0 ; 15 doz., $5.50;
peewees 2 1/2 ioz. $.75; 15 dot;. $4.25.
Hollow Oak F a r m , South Lyon. Rushton \
a l Eight M i l e .
H37-38c]< ;
GE 7-2014
areas.
340 N O R T H
.
6 — H o u s e h o l d
ALFAL.i^A
a t Y , second culling 38
acres, you cut, rea.son3bk-. -17-1-1282
evenings.
Desir­
Livonia.
W
5 - F a r m
P r o d u c e
H A Y 4 S T R A W , Joe Hayes. G E 8-3S72. 1 K E N T U C K Y wonder b « n s . 47671 w . 10
13
H37-39C M i l e . 349-0752.
L O T for sale on Pheasant L i k e . Inquire
825 W. lO M i l e road. South Lyon.
H38-39
O R C H A R D
Beautiful
Y
Plyinouth
large
buildings.
acre
Sunday.
L
just
3 bdrni.
2 » H i l e s N . 10 M i l e , S o u t h L y o n
acres,
home,
Hills.
3 - R e a l
Estate
ZONED
INDUSTRUL
PROPERTY.'
1 l / 4 A C t l E with 600 tt.buslnessfrontage In Salem, Michigan, onSiIem street.
$6,500. T e l e : GA l-383B.
H35-38p
$43,500.00
Northville
Underground Utilities.
bedroom
Northville
N .
H I L L S
43
4 and 5 B . R . Models,
4
Builder
base­
oil heat.
ment,
D
3 - R e a l
j M O D E R N 3 bedroom home, good heatJ ing system, corner 12 Mile road and
[south M i l f o r d road. $14,000. C a l l 438j 833-1,
H38CX
Rogers.
E
E s t a t e
brick
lot,
^
Results...As C l o s e as
2 i/4 A C R E S , 6 room house In South
N O R T H V I L L E E S T A T E S builders modH38p
I wish to thank e-.-eryone for the ' n e w c o t t a g e and wooded l o t - F u l l • els, -1 bedroom colonials, 2 1/2 baths, Lyon area, phone 271-1940.
i n q u i r i e s , cardsand gifts during my stay p r i c e $2595, with $259 down. P r l r a t e . paneled family room, f i r s t - f l o o r laun­
NICE S T E E I . red apples tree run $1,50
in the hospital and since returning home. sand beach on large lake. F i s h i n g and
dry and study, half a c r e lots. Now under
bu. While they last, E v e . S a t . i Sundays.
Waller M i l l e r
H38p b o i l i n g . Deer and partridge hunttog. construction, 8 -weeks occupancy, will 5 — F a r m
P r o d u c e
54550
9 M i l e at C u r r i e road.
Northern Development Company, H a r r i ­
decorate to suit. $3-1,750, K E l - 5 0 6 5 .
H37-40CX
son, Office on Business US-27 (l-75)
lStf Q U A N T I T Y o f h e n s . E g g f r a d e r a n d o 345-0734. 21655 Chubb r o i d .
a c r o s s from Wilson S i i l e P a r k . Opfu 7
3 - - R e a l
Estate
days a week. (Member Chamber of C o m ­
C U S T O M
B U I L T
H38-39CX
I L O T S irith lake p i i v i l e g e s : Union, merce).
P A R M E N T E R ' S
R A N C H
H O M E S
SImms, J r . , 9 M i l e road, 1/2 mile east
' C o m m e r c e , Long, Upper, Middle Straits
P o n t i l e T r a i l . 437-2726.
H38tfc
I L i k e s , M A 4-155-1 Schneider, w a l l e d
C o m p l e t e l y
F i n i s h e d
C I D E R
M I L L
iLike,
I5tf
L I V E F R Y E R S and roasters also eggs. I
$ 1 2 , 2 0 0
w m . Peters, 58620 Ten M l l e R d . , G E 8 - '
Welcomes
you
to
our
3466.
H38tfc
No Money Down
D O N
M E R R I T T
93rd
season.
S82.00 Mo. P l u s T o x e s
G O O D M I X E D hay for sale. E d Wiles,' I
Fifth
R E A L T O R
340-2147.
iBtf ;
On Your L o t
E L L I S
Lyon
o f
'
Pension Plan.
B R I D G E
Grand River
Overtime
A N D S T E E L
Novi,
C O .
Mich.
R A M B L E R - J E E P
1205 A W N A R B O R R D .
PLYMOUTH
CL-3-3600
Phone
GL-3-2500
WO-3-7192
C
P o g e Six
T H E N O R T H V I L L E R E C O R D - N O V I N C W S - T H E SOUTH L Y O N H F R A L D '
ThurscJoy, Sepfefnber 22, 196
T H E N O R T H V I L L E R E C O R D - N O V I NEWS
T h u r s d a y , September 22, 1966
P a g e 7-A
1 8 - B u s i n e s s S e r v i c e i l S - B u s i n e s s S e r v i c e j I 8 - B u s i n e s s S e r v i c e s ! 1 8 - B u s i n e s s Service
CARPENTER
WORK
R o o f i f i g , S l d l n e , S i a r m tVlnflows
Esvetrouglis, R e c . R a o n j ,
A f l i t i t l o n s , A«>nlngs
Licensed Contractor
JERRY
M . i T T R E S S E S i BOX springs, standard [.NEED A l a w ; or preparation for one"
and odd s i z e s of best prade m a t e r i a l . A l s o cradinc and mowing. Call Hon
See our retail showroom at six M i l e F l 0-3110.
8t/
road and Earhart road. Two miles west
.ADULT P W N O and orRan lessons, |
of Pontiac T r a i l . ..Idam Hock Beddinp
mo.-nin[^s and aftt.rnoons only. B e p i n C o . . Telephone GE 8-385S. South Lyon.
n e r s a n d advanced mf-tlirids, Vourliomo
TREE SERVICE
tf
or sludio. C a l l iKfori- 8:30 a.m. 34912 Years Experience
189-1. Gardner Music StuiJio, 850 .N.
Center, .N'orlhviUc.
22
P R I V A T E PIA.NO lessons in my home Trees Removed. Pruning, Trimming,
SJ.50 lialf hour. Guaranteed lo learn.
A l l aces. G R 4-303.1.
16
SHETTLEROE
FI9-4192
CASH LOANS
up T o SI,000.00
:;
Woncy When You Neod ll
BULLDOZING
PLYMOUTH
FINANCE CO.
Guntzviller
BULLDOZING
IjAND
839 P e n n i m o n - P i y m o u t h
Herb
i
SEPTIC TANKS - GRADING
!
BACK FILLING
P L U M B I N G
TREE REMOVAL
-
CHUCK
I
H E A T I N G
L A R G E OR S M A L L J O B S
GLENN
C.
^MITH
13550 10 Mile - South Lyen
Phone iJE-7-2466
NEW INSTALLATION
REMODFI ING
SERVICE W(JRK
EI«ctrlc Sewer Cleaning
Electric Pipe Thawing
FI-9-2009 or FI-9-255S
46200 T E N M L E
NORTHVILLE
BULLDOZING
lie
CO.
E. d u n l a p
PHONE
RAY WARREN EXCAVATING
northville
STRAUS
CO.
Fleldliroolt 9-0373
F I - 9 - 2 0 0 5
27S29 Hlggenr RmH
474-6695
299 N . M i l l St.
South Lyon
Phone: GE-8-8411
Reody Mix Concrete
Septic Tanks
Dry Wells
Curb Stops
Splosh B l o f k s
SCMNUrf
SANDING
'INSTRUMENTAL
505 N . Center
f i n i s h i n g , o l d and new floors
WmIc
guoronteed.
H. B A R S U H N
P h . G E - 8 - 3 6 0 2 . tfno answer
cali E L - 6 - 5 7 6 2 coiiect
Guns
COMPLETE
over 60 calibers of ammunitions in stock. Blue
Rock - $2.49 cose.
LaChance Bros.
Excavating
299 N . M i l l St.
South Lvon Mich.
Phone: G E - 8 - & 4 n
HOME
MODERNIZATION
Septic Tank and
Drain l^ields
Basement and Sewers
Bulldozing
Attics - A w n i n g s
Storm Windows - D o o r s
Sosemenfs
ALL TYPES OF SIDINO
Roofing - Sfone - K i t c h e n s
NUGENT'S HARDWARE
South Lyon
LIFETIME
. . y ^ n n o u n c i n ^
A L U M I N U M
S I D I N G
IMMEDIATE SERVICE
SERVE
FI-9-058a
O w n power. F r e e e s t i m a t e s .
Trade
NEW
STUDIO
First C l a s s loying, sandiog,
GR-4-42D4
A
m i C
'PIANO ond ORGAN
FLOOR
PARTNERSHIP TO
BETTER
YOUR INSURANCE
7 Yeors To Pay
No Money Down
NEEDS
Additions-Free
TRI-COUNTY
Atchison
DON'S P A t N T l N G , exterior o r Interior,
commerdiil, Inilustrlal,residential.A-l
work. Ciill C E 7-7454. 8 a.m. - 6 p.m.
FINEST
hos j o i n e d A l l e n McCrofy i n the
Casualty
Insurance
Lirge
G A L E
Agency
tr
i
SoiitIi L y o n
WHITFORD
437-1142
i
ATCHISONREALTY
I ROOFING&SIDING
GE-7-2111
SEWER
!•'•'•
iaiid coottscts. Oil
«ft«r 5 P.II1.
FI
F O U R
MG, AUSTIN
Aluminum
HEALEY
M
RATER
BRIGHTON
Trim
ASPHALT
Guaranteed 30 Years
MGB-MIDGET-SPRITE
AUSTIN H E A L E Y - 3 0 0 0
1100 S P O R T S S E D A N
Roofing _
A l l Kjids
PAVING
&
CO.
Porklng Lets and Drivewoys
ACodeny 9-«498
lOOOW.Mople
Walled L a k e
MA-4-1331
e
s
e
S
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r
Lockhart
v
Tills Area tar a
Fl-9.t945
I J a l l
A w a i v
PLYM
PLYIMOUTH,
D A Y S —
SPIC &
W E D . , T H R U
S A T . ,S E P T . 2 1
c f f i b s
•
S . R.
THREE
MOBILHEAT
FURNACES • BOILERS
HOUSE DRY?.
Initolf a New Power HUMIDIFIE;! Tedey'
Sowe On Doctor BpIIi and Furniture
PHONE CL.3.0400
O t i r i i l H a a t i i s I StppI; Co.
1447S Nsntirillc R d .
PljniMlll
AUTOMATIC OIL
HEAT IS THE
SAFEST
Bill
(Doc) O t w d l
D A Y S
—
S U N . ,M O N . ,
a n d
TUES.,
CAN HAVE
NOW EVERYONE CAN SEE THE M O S T
l O V E R l Y M O T I O N PICTURE OF A I L T I M E !
"
Factories
Apartments
m
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m
m
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m
m
u
s
t
C R .
SERVICE DEPT.
L O S E WEiCIIT safely v,1tli D i - x - A - D i e i
tablets. Only 08? at Spencer Drug.
H31--I2P
A
YOLR iOCAL FORD
P & A
Fl 9-33S0
COMPLETE
DEHER
5S0 Seven Milt-Norihyille
A s k for S e r v i c e
P
L
Y
M
DID
Floor Covering
Featvinc Salts and Installaiign st:
LANDSCAPING
iomiira Cnunlt-rs
hcntittt^n^ttl»nc Pritduti.s
Ht.l.Mlr s<tl iiti-
AND
TREE
SERVICE
OON BINGHAM
Res.: 349-2879
Phsne 349-4480
D
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o
R
S p e c i a l
Coming Wed. Sept. 2 8 "Aroond the World, Under the S e a ' ' - Color
L l o y d Bridges - David McCoHum - Shirley Eoton
OON STEVENS
349-4066
^fonci.nq AU:,yi In io^.nq Tribute
NURSERY
KOO NAPIER
FI-»-iin
W
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Doug Schott gave Novi its next op­
portunity as he blocked a punt, and
Halfback Ken Osbom capped the 35yard drive by running three yards for
the touchdown and a 14-0 Nov! lead.
Schott also figured prominently In
the second-quarter scoring as he inter­
cepted a pass and ran 15 yards for the
touchdown, then hooked up with Doug
E a r l , who caught a 22-yard pass for
the touchdown.
By halftime, Novi had a soft 28-0
lead, and the end result was clearly
visible.
Osborn scored his second touchdown
at the outset of the third quarter, diving
four yards for the T D , and Schott du­
plicated Osborn's fete by scoring tiis
second touchdown on a quarterback
sneak of one yard.
A fumble recovery i n the fourth
quarter led to Halfback John Davey's
one-yard scoring plunge and Tackle
Paul Faulkner capped the Novi scoring
parade by intercepting a pass and run­
ning 68 yards for a touchdown. .
With Coaches Osborne and Milan
Obrenovich looking to the bench, the
Mllan Jayvees finally put enough to­
gether to eke out a last-minute touch­
down.
a
n
SAVE
-
B
m
E
n
PLYMOUTH
m
c
THURSDAY NITE OWLS
NORTHVILLE U N E S
John Mach Ford
8
0
Chisholm Contr.
7
l
Olsons Heating
6
2
A 4 W R o d Beer
6
2
L i l a ' s Flowers
4
4
Eagles
4
4
Perfection
3
5
Cutler Real Estate
3
5
NorthvlUe Bar
2
6
Northvllle Lanes
2
6
Northvllle jaycettes
2
6
Bohls Lunch
1
7
Indlv. Hi Game: J . Hclntz Jl8l, M .
Wastier 181; Indlv. Hi Series: J.Helntz
488, D. Fulton 488; Hi team game:John
Mach Ford 740; Hi Team Series: John
Mach Ford 2151.
m
O N THESE
TIRES
m
H E A T m e
€ 0 .
m
1
• B U C K W A L L S & WHITES
IN P L Y M O U T H , M I C H I G A N
• C H A N G E OVERS
Open 8:30-5 p.m. - Mon. thru F r i .
INDUSTRIAL
Newest Most Cfmiplete H E A T I N G C E N T E R
476-0920 Of 0921
•BLEMISHED
• M O S T SIZES
• N O T R A D E I N NEEDED
S E E
GE-7-2255
L I V E
I N
D E M O N S T R A T I O N S
O U R
S H O W
C o m p l e t e
R O O F
G o o d w i l l
H U R R Y I Q U A N T I T I E S LIMITED
R O O M
• C A S
New
a n d
• A I R
• C A S
O I L
F U R N A C E S
H U M I D I F I E R S
P U R I F I E R S
a n d
O I L
B O I L E R S
by S P A C E C O N D I T I O N I N G
437-20CI
W E
of:
C O N D I T I O N E R S
• P O W E R
Hudson Roofing
Specializing in floi, roofing,
shingling, ecvesfroughs and
repoirs. Free estimotes.
Call ony time, doys or eves.
D i s p l a y
S E L L
Brake Linings .
&
I N S T A L L
• Shock Absorbers
• Wiper Blades
• Mufflers
' Auto Lights & Bulbs
' Tailpipes
' Ball Joints
• Batteries
• Idler Arms
P i c k - U p
The next visit of Goodwill Industries pickup trucks to Northvllle i s
scheduled for Monday. Goodwill trucks
collect household discards of clothing,
shoes, hats, toys, most types of furni­
ture and other household discards.
To arrange foraGoodwlllindustries
truck pickup, ask the operator for
toll-free Enterprise 7002.
• Radiator Hosas
• Fan Belts
k
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e
Ed
r hrrr j DPautifyl lomily mfmoMol
^ agrlpvv gron.fr Of fTiofble
"i- • •> k(iuriMr ur mar DIP
Allen Monument Works
Springs
i
H
O
W
S A V E
Matatall
N O
M O N E Y
D O W N
Round Oak
N E W
I s f e r * rn
punhnt
e s y n e w e ^ y i ^ m e n t see m . . e e e f c l l g e t i e a t
AND C A R P E N T E R
Factory Trained Servicemen to Serre Y o u
IT COSTS NO MORETO HAVE THE BEST'
rn\
d
ECKLES
H E A T I N G
8 8 2
N . H o l b r o o k
A U
WORK
DONE I T l O N K D
C R E D I T !
HOLDERS OF CHARGE PLATES ANO NATIONAL CREDIT
CARDS . . . JUST DRIVE IN, PRESENT YOUR PUTE OR
CARD AND YOUR CHARSE ACCOUNT WiLL BE OPENED
EASY TERMS.
C O .
Kinsncinc Avaliabir
For foit. courteouft lervice coll
G L - 3 - 0 2 4 4 or 34S-0715
I N S T A N T
C L
3 - 4 2 0 0
P L Y M O U T H
ARBOR
T I R E
CO.
70S W. A N N A R B O R R O A D , IN P L Y M O U T H
INSTAIXfKS
C L
3 - 3 1 6 5
C L
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Planner Leonard Klein replied that
the township's new zoning ordinance
was the result of many years of work,
that pubUc hearing's had been held on
the ordinance and the map published.
Complete text of the zoning ordinance
and the zoning map were published in
The Record last March.
The hearing lasted nearly three
hours. Planners took no action, but are
expected to rule on the requests at
their Tuesday night meeting at the
township haU.
Northville area boys and girls who
attended Boys State and G i r l s State
programs this past year will be feted
at a potluck dinner here next Tuesday.
The dinner, to start at 6:30 p.m.
in the Legion hall.
M
U
B Y
C
H
T I M E
D O
Y O U
S P E E D I N G ?
Hot much. And a praf.iiianoi gambl.r wsuldn't giv. yau a
dorn for til* .ddi.
Hero'i what you save:
If yeu'r. driving through o iinail town wh.r. th* b u i l n . i i |
oroo l i on onrag. on. mil. long, you .ov. 17 ..condi if you
. x c d th. ip.od limit by fiv. m i l . , p.r hour - soy 35 Instagd
of so­
on ttw mame baait, you wlIi aav. on« tninuto and 33 .aconda
if you drive throush a larsar town wh.re tha raatricted Umlt it rtv. mUaa Ionf.
On th. op.n hlghnoy vrh.r. th. u.ual limit U 60 mph, you will tov. four mlnutoi ov.r
50 mll.i by driving on ovorog. 55.
That*s what you aave. Now, hers'a what you couid Ioaa: Over 40 percent of aII traf­
fic caaualti.i laat year Involved ap.odlnt. In the U.S., 17,000 people died and 1,553,800
were Injured in auch accldenta.
Sine, you or. vlolotlng th. low, you con .xp.ct th. low of ov.rog.. to cotch up with
you now ond ogoln with o .po.dlng violation. Thi. con b. v.ry i.rloui If th.r. i i on
accld.nt Involving humon and prop.rty damog. and could d.cld. th. cos. ogolntt you.
If you wouldn't play acainat a ataclied decii, then don't apeed. It'a reaiiy the aaroe
thins.
•
P a u l
B o e r g e r
W i n s
G r i d
Q u i z
Ninth grader Paul Boerger topped
a l l contestants in the opening footbaU
contest by turning in an entry with
only two wrong selections out of 20.
Paul is the son of Reverend and
Mrs. Charles Boerger, 221 Elm street.
Reverend Boerger is pastor of St.
Paul's Lutheran church in Northvllle.
Ann White, 11846" Riverside drive,
Plymouth, and R. G. Skelly, 101 Hill
street, Northvllle, tied for second
place. They each missed three games
and had the same point spread on the
Lions-Pitt game.
Paul wins $10 and Anne and R. G .
$4 each.
This week's contest appears on
page 9.
EMERGENCy
without breaking stride, streaked un­
touched 53 yards into the end zone.
Northville led, 12-6.
There were some more normal pat­
terns to the game however. The scoring,
for instance, began in a relatively rou­
tine manner.
After gaining good field position on
the Northville 30, following a personal
foul against Northville, Plymouth began
moving goalward. It took nine plays to
negotiate the distance with Quarterback
Dave Prochazka sneaking over from
two yards out.
Plymouth held a 6-0 lead at the out­
set ot the second period when the extrapoint kick sailed wide of the goalposts.
It was then that the teams played
ketchum with the footbaU and Northville
quickly struck for its two touchdowns
of the game going into the dressing
room with a 12-6 advantage.
The lead was short lived once the
second half got underway, although it
took a break for Plymouth to score.
Northville kicked off and Plymouth,
unable to move the ball, punted on
fourth down.
A roughing the kicker penalty was
whistled against Northvllle and Ply­
mouth resumed its march on the North­
ville 41. That's when Ron Lowe took
charge. A s earlier in the game, Lowe
found running easy over right tackle
and he didn't let up until Plymouth got
the equalizer. Prochazka, however,
capped the drive by diving in from a
yard out.
Another break, this time an inter­
ception on the Northville 30, put Ply­
mouth within easy striking distance. In
eight plays, Plymouth talUed the tie­
breaker, with Lowe scampering six
yards into the end zone.
Only two desperate minutes re­
mained in the game.
5tH VlUb
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Northville's Tumble-Weed chapter
of the NaUoiial Campers and Hikers
association was represented this past
weekend at the orgainlzation's faU state
convention atFltchburgPark near Jack­
son.
Families attending from the North­
vllle A r e a were the Herb Blssas, the
Howard Shermans, the Lawrence Woods,
the George Henshaws, the Frank M c Keens, the James Scotts, the Kenneth
Beyers, and the Howard Atwoods.
Special guests included the Merrltt
Meaker, the J . B . Straub, and the WUliam Hensch lamiUes.
R e t u r n
Bruce TurnbuU of 350 Eaton Drive
and sons Bob and Mike returned Monday
from a lO-day canoe and camping trip
in the Georgian Bay area of Canada.
On the way back to Michigan they camp­
ed at Lake Superior, Sudbury andBlack
Lake. Both boys have now returned for
classes at Michigan State university.
M
I
THE
H U E
SPEAKS
TO Y O U
CKLK
NIGHT
FI-9-0850 FI-9-0S12
Youf Health la Ouf
BuslneaB
PRESCRIPTION
DELIVERY.
NORTHVILLE
DRUGS
134 E a a t Iblaln
Al
Bi
Loux,
SURE
R.
.
Ph.
.
.
IHSURi
C a r r i n g t o n
&
J o h n s o n
fnsuronce
Chor/ei F.
Agency'
Carrington
Carl H . Johnson
C o m p l e t e
I n s u r a n c e
i e m c e
120 N . C E N T E R
NORTHVILLE
FI.9-2000
Invisible
Style
with
Support
a
REALISTIC
Prescription
Wave
T h e i n v i s i b l e support
of G R E A L I S T I C P r e s c r i p t i o n Wave h o l d s
your H a i r s t y l e a l l
week l o n g !
Let o
qualified Hair A n a l y s t
p r e s c r i b e and a p p l y
the perfect w a v e for
f
u
v
x
s
HAIR
STYLISTS
THICKER THAN FLIES-PI/mouth
gridders swarm over Northville's
'iim Z a y t i after a short g a i n . It
wos one of the longest Northville
had a l l night as Plymouth held
the Mustangs to just 12 yards
rushing.
k
ADVERTISEMENT
T
r
N
e
a
v
e
l
a
a
m
N O R T H V I L L E - 349-9871
Formlngtpn - 474^«45
FOR
BIDS
S e r i e s
T h e V i l l a g e of N o v i w i l l accept s e a l e d b i d s for Workman's
d
l
D A Y
To Sono Xou Batt«r....
Evening Houra..By Appolntmont
>».d.-Thur.._Fth
P
N
8
l
F i r s t Downs
166
12
Yards Rushing
54
15
Rushes
3-10
5-18
Passes
29
24
Yards passing
190
Total yards gained 41
2
Interceptions by
l
2
3
Fumbles rec. by
4-3L4
6-35
Punts
8-80
Penalties
7-SI l / 2
Attorney LitteU outUned the pro­
posed plan for an apartment project
that would Include 156 one bedroom
units and 156 two bedroom units. He
said they would rent for between $140
and $185 per month. He said they would
be rental and lease units. A greenbelt
would surround the development, Littell
stated.
Resident protested possible traffic
problems and detrimental effect on
residential values.
the ball out of the air and raced 72
yards - far in front of the nearestfoe for what appeared to be Plymouth's
second touchdown and a commanding,
12-0 lead. But officials detected a clip
and called the play back to the Northvllle
30.
On the succeeding play, the elusive
bail played hard to keep. It slid from
the fingers of a Plymouth back as he
was tackled and Northville's Roger
Kline grabbed the ball on the bounce.
Along with a three-man escort, he ran
unmolested 66 yards for a TD to tie the
game, 6-6.
Within a minute and one-half. Half­
back J i m Zayti stunned the partisan
Plymouth crowd and elated hometown
zealots. Running full gallop, he picked
off a Plymouth pass on the sideline and
you!
•
C a m p e r s
Manufacturer o f :
T i m k e n Silent A u t o n M t i c
h
Plymouth clearly had the offensive
edge, but this was a game of bobbles
and bungles, normal fare for openers.
There were three Interceptions and
five lost fumbles, plus 141 and one-half
yards in penalties and countless jang­
ling moments.
Zanlest moment in the game came
In the second quarter. A s NorthvUle's
Holman went back to pass, players
from Plymouth converged on him,
knocking the ball loose. Rotund Tackle
Tom EUas, Johnnie-on-the-spot, picked
In pointing to an area of B - l Gocal
business) zoning on Five MUe road for
a distance of about four blocks from
Marilyn to Park Lane William Smith,
15S60 Roblnwood, stated that the zoning
had been done without notice to Uie
people of the area, and charged that it
create a blight and a traffic hazard to
the new elementary school.
C O .
P u r c h a s e !
DISCOUNTED
t
K o l l y w i l l come to town
tomorrow night to furnish opposition
for N o r t h v i l l e ' s
home opener.
Kickoff is
scheduled for 8 p.m.
interest in this township".
ARBOR
:^SECONDS
Johnston
'0 prrpctuatc chftiihtrd me.Tio'ies
-
d
m
IHcBiiysForEulyBtrdtl
CUSTOM BUILDER
RIDGE
s
Iron Firemon, P e e r l o u ,
/
GREEN
i
d
Continued from Page l A
O
ANN
Company
Call
r
n
ned areas within the entire township
that~will denote progressive thinking
for future development rather than the
spot-impulse rezoMng being requested
by land speculators who have no real
GO!
Open ot 6:30 - Showings ot 7 & 9 -- Now showing
Walt D f s n e / s " L L Robin Crusoe, U . S . N . " - Color
[ Dick Von Dyke - Nancy Kwon
Sot. & Sun. - Some Show - 3-5--7--9
RESIDENTIAL
COMMERCIAL
9-1400
G
a
T H E A T R E
• A I R
fl
p
7:30
GO!
A L C O H O L I C S ANO.NVMOUS
meets
Tuesday and Friday evenings. C:U1
349-3458 o r F I 9 - i l l 3 . Your call kept
coafidentlal.
26lft
PROBLEMS?
E L Y
& S O N S
7
H
SOPER PANAVISION'70' FROM WARNER e i t t S . r
PLEASE NOTEi
Sun. Showingi 3:00-6:00 end 9:00
M e n . a n d Tues. - O n e S h o w i n g s O n l y Starting st
CUSTOM GUILDERS
Count sn our skill and
(iptritncc to save you
'"^e, troutic and moner
-
n
Novi actually had the game in its
hip pocket before the first quarter was
over.
The W i l d a t s took the opening kickoff and marched 65 yards for a touch­
down, Fullbaclt Dave Adema charging
tlie last six yards for the T D .
m
e
TECHNICOLOR*
Coll KE-2-6220
from 9 to 4
After 4, call 349-1389
•WE CURE SICK FURNACES"
John M a c h
5
a
Novi i s scheduled to play Lutheran
West today on Novl's home field* lOcltoff will be at 4 p.m.
Although the victory last Saturday
didn't prove much, other than Milan's
weaicnesses, it extended Novi's winning
strealt over a two-year span to five
games.
2 7
COMFORT SYSTEM
YOUR HOME
l
But It did give everyone a chance to
get Into the act. "1 hope we've found a
couple more ball players, which will
permit us to substitute more frequently
in future games."
So Novi Is looking for its first real
test, and It may not be long in coming.
This afternoon, as a matter of fact.
9:30
SEPT. 2 5 , 2 6
Service
E C K L E S
IMMEDIATE INSTALLATION
i
It was Ctiristmas :n Sc.o'.omber last
Saturday.
Aai the visiting Milan Jayvees
played Santa Claus, giving Novi high
school a 55-"! football victory.
"The game didn't answer many
questions for us," Coach Paul Osborne
lamented after the slaughter.
W o o d
•DISCONTINUED
&
M
2 4
TECHNICOLOR'PANAVISiON'FROMWARNERBftOS.
NigIitly S h o w i n g s 6:45 end 9:30
Sit. S h o w i n g s 1:30-4:10-6:45 e n d
SPAN
Janitorial
goal line. Not for long, however,
Plymouth scored from two yards
out on the next ploy.
T D B O U N D - B u r i e d under this
heap of players is a Plymouth
back who was stopped short of the
IMICH.
E o w ^ t ' ' T h e C r e a t R a c e ' '
L...."J'riZS.
Years
Totoi Rebuilding If Required
I M i o i i o
^
IN
George
S e f v i c l n E F i n e P l m o s In
h
Northville
TUNING
Member of the Piano
Technicians Guild
T
108 W, Main
T I M
ALUMINUM STORM
WINDOWS'
GLASS
FI-9-1252
; g o o d > ^ e a r
PIANO
M o t o r s
PLATE
RICHARD F . L Y O N , M A N A G E R
L e m m o i i
ROOFING R E P A I R S
B e r g e n
f
r
"We had to throw and we couldn't."
Coach Alex Klukach put his finger
on the crux of the whole matter. North­
ville needed to pass to win. But the
Mustangs couldn't and iost, 18-12, to
Plymouth last Friday night.
Most of the time. Quarterback Chris
Holman had Plymouth linemen fogging
up his helmet as they breathed down
his throat. When they weren't batting
Holman's passes to the turf, astheydid
time after time, they were threatening
to give Holman the same treatment.
It was pretty rough treatment for
the senior who saw limited action last
year behind the likesof TomBaughman.
Rarely, and just barely, Holman got one
of his aerials away.
"Our receivers were open," K l u ­
kach moaned, as any man would who
had just suffered defeat in his debut as
the new Northville head coach, "But
we couldn't get the ball to them."
Then in painful recollection, Klukach
continued: "And they dropped it when
they got it.''.
That was the baU game Friday night.
Without their passing attack, the Mus­
tangs were stripped of their most ef­
fective weapon, one they were relying
on to loosen the defense to make room
for light backs, not fast, not slow,
who need every inch of daylight.
The statisUcs are witness toNorthville's lack of offensive punch: one
fh-st down and 41 total yards rushing
and passing.
AU In a l l , defeat was a nasty pill to
swallow for players and coaches alike.
But not aU thoughts were lost in
frowns. The defease, while notbearlsh,
was stingy enough, giving up ground
begrudgingly to a heavier, more exper­
ienced Plymouth football team.
When appraising NorUlviile's de­
fense, statistics can be tricky. They
l i e . Plymouth was officially credltefl
with 190 and one-half yards rushing
and passing, but truth of the matter i s
that It took a late last quarter fumble
and a costly penalty to pin defeat on
NorthvlUe.
And it was the defense, too, that
kept NorthvlUe in the game. It account­
ed for Northville's two touchdowns of
the game in the second period after
recovering a fumble and intercepting a
pass.
,
.
HOMEOWNERS
I 9 - S p e c i a l Notices
Siding
Aluminum
LIABILITY
FIRE
o
PRESCRIPTION
5
9-2M2
ea
1 8 - 1 2
5ERWCE
m U R A H C i
AUTO
N
m_
CASH FOR
O p e n e r .
Inc.
A I R - C O N D I T I O N E D
3 4 9 - 5 0 9 0
SPORTS CAR H D . QTRS.
S
H38ifc
Offices
Stores
EXCAVATING
GE-7-2446
THE AREA'S
A
KOCIAN
23283 CiBTle R d .
V
S EWI.S'C NUCHLN t ano ncmm s«---<-per
I'xp-rl service, .s'rec estim.ili^s.spedalizini; un K.rhy, HiK-vcr an.l EI,.,-trolux.
P a r t s and s e n i n - nn i l l other makes.
Vour se'.iinj ma,nine adjustedandoiled
an.! luned up in yuur lioni.-, S2.:.,- 3n-
C o p s
y
SnialI
CALL D & HASPHALT CO.
See F r e d ot the o f f i c e s of
6009 7 M i l e R d .
QUALITY
ASPHALT PAVING
inspect Our Work anij
Compare Our Price.
McCrory-Atchison
r
IDA MAY LAIRD
Funeral services will be held today
(Thursday) at 1 p.m. at the HeeneySundquist Funeral Home in Farmington
tor M r s . Ida May Laird, 93, who died
Tuesday at Orchard Lake Rest Haven.
M r s . Laird had resided for periods of
time with her son, Fred Laird of 743
Grandview, Northville. She is survived
by two sons and four daughters. The
Reverend Lloyd Brasure of the F i r s t
Presbyterian church of Northville will
officiate at services.
ARTHUR LEWIS GREGORY
A 77-year-old Northville resident,
Arthur L . Gregory, 341 East Main
street, died Tuesday, September 20 at
St. Mary Hospital. He had been 111 for
one week.
Born April 23, 1889, he was the son
of William H. and Susan (Stralth) Greg­
ory. He was married July 23, 1905 to
Ema B . , who died in 1952. M r . Gregory
moved to Northville from Flint In 1952.
Survivors include two sons, Floyd
of Northville and Donald of Holly; one
daughter, M r s . Pearl Boyd of Plymouth;
one brother, James, and one sister,
M r s . Anna Marshall, both of Dexter;
and seven grandchildren and 12 great
grandchildren.
Funeral services will be conducted
tomorrow, September 23, from the
Ebert Funeral Home, with the Rev.
S.D. Kinde, pastor of the First Meth­
odist Church of Northvllle, offlclatlJig
at 1 p.m.
Burial ivlll be in Oakland Hills
Memorial Park cemetery, Novi.
C - h i J U
PIMO ond ORGAN
-JlUaiO
INSTRUMENTAL
YOUR HOME OR STUDIO
C . I I B e f o r e 8:30 A . M .
HOME
MOOERNIZATIOIf CO.
GR-4-9243
d
T H E A T R E
18—Business Services
FHATeniis
Fred
u
P l y m o u t h
Bloom
COMPifTf
G a r d n e r Music
850 N . C e n t e r
NortlivlUe
349-1894
Eitlmatej
t
DIRECT
WORK MYSELF
Grading
H o r o l d
A g e n c y ,
i
ANNW S.
Ams. S. Curry, 74, of 18351 MapleFeeding, Cabling, Cavil)- Woiii.
W'jod, Livonia, died Sunday, September
Fully Insured. CALL JIM DAVIDS
18 at Detroit Osteopathic Hospital. She
437-1342
New Hudeon ! had been i l l for nearly three weeks.
•j
Born May 24, 1892 in Kansas City,
' Missouri, she was the daughter of
NORTHVILLE
George and Catherine (Bretch) Schueler. She was married to Ira Curry,
TREE SERVICE
who survives her.
TREE REMOVAL - PLANTING
A daughter, M r s . Nora Allison of
TRIMMING-STUMPS REMOVED
Livonia, also survives her.
Fl 9 - 0 7 6 6
Funeral services were conducted
through the Ebert Funeral Home at
the Evergreen Cemetery Chapel, with
REMODELING
the Rev. S. D. Kinde, pastor of the
First Methodist Church of Northville,
Attic Rooms-Cobinets
officiating.
Additions
Cremation was at Evergreen Ceme­
Recreation Rooms
tery.
SAVE MONEY-DEAL
Eifth Moving - Land C I « v I n (
LONG
Site Devclopnient -
HORNET
CONCRETE
EXCAVATING
GL-3-60G0
GRADING
We
C.
I.A-l P.\INTING jiiil l).-r..rjiini:. Int.-rlrii.
.in.l ..vl.-ri-.;. ..Msn.*.,ll ".ishinir.l|.,v
s.aicc.
;cif
A-1
800 K C
1
I
a
r
i
n
g
S t a r t
Area residents were reminded this
week that NorthvlUe Rotary's annual
Travel and Adventure Series i s nearing
the start of another exciting season.
The opening program, featuring a
film entitled "Byways in B r i t a i n " , Is
slated for 8 p:m. in the high school
auditorium on October 6.
Thayer Soule, who has appeared in
major theaters throughout the United
States, wlU make the first picture
presentation, a l l in 16mm color motion
pictures.
•
Others Included In the six-part pro­
gram include Robert Brouwer with his
"Desert to D i x i e " , JonathanHager with
"Scotland Afore Y e " , Dick Reddy with
" R u s s i a " , Gerald Hooper with "Only
in Portugal", and Harry R. Reed with
"Alaska Journey".
Rotary i s presenting the entire sixpart travelogue for $5, according to
Chalrmafl Kenneth Rathert.
Season tickets may be purchased
from any Northvllle Rotarlan, or from
Northvllle Drug, Manufacturers N a ­
tional Bank, C. HaroldBloom Insurance
-agency, and the NorthvlUe Record.
NOTICE
PUBLIC
OF
HEARING
C I T Y O F WIXOM
Notice i s hereby given that a
public hearing will be conducted
at the Wixom city hall, 49045
P o n t i a c T r a i l , Wixom, Michigan
on Tuesday, October 11, 1966
ot 8:00 p.m. to consider the request of John P . Hums to rerone
the property shown on the official
c i t y of Wixom mop as CV297
consisting of 9.41 acres from
single family residential (R-2)
to business ( B - l ) ond multiple
family residential ( R - Q for the
purpose of constructing 48 opartment rental units and loosed
commercial space.
Sunday 9:4S A . M .
What i s
Developlne Within Y o u
Donna Thorsberg
Deputy C i t y Clerk
Compensation,
and G e n e r a l C o m p r e h e n s i v e L i a b i l i t y
Insur­
ance i n c l u d i n g i t s fleet of V e h i c l e s , u n t i l 5 o ' c l o c k P . M . , on
October 17, 1 9 6 6 , at the o f f i c e of the V i l l a g e C l e r k , V i l l a g e
H a l l , 25850 N o v i R o o d , N o v i , M i c h i g a n .
S p e c i f i c a t i o n s may
be o b t a i n e d from the V i l l a g e C l e r k .
T h e V i l l a g e of N o v i r e s e r v e s
the right to a c c e p t or
reject
any and o i l b i d s .
Mabel A s h , V i l l a g e Clerk
A
D
V
E
R
T
F
O
R
Sealed proposals will be received
by the Novi Community School District,
VlUage of Novi, Michigan until 8:00
p.m., E.S.T., October 12, 1966, for
construction of the Additions to Novi
junior-Senior High School, located at
Taft and ElevenMlle roads, Novi, MichIgan, in accordance with plansand spec­
ifications prepared by O'Dell, Hewlett
and LuckeiJbach, Inc., Architects, E n ­
gineers and Planners, 950 North Hunter
Boulevard, Birmingham, Michigan.
Separate Proposals will be received
for the following work:
Proposal No. 1: General Construc­
tion Work, including Architectural,
Structural and Site Work Trades.
Proposal No. 2: Mechanical Work,
including Plumbing, Heating and Venti­
lating and A i r Conditioning.
Proposal No. 3; Electrical Work.
Proposal No. 4; Drafting and Work
Rooms Equipment.
Proposal No. 5: Music Room Equip­
ment.
Proposal No. 6; Library Equipment
(To be bid later).
Proposal No. 7: Language Lab.
Equipment.
Proposal No. 8: Science Room
Equipment.
Proposal No. 9: Metal Shop Equip­
ment.
Drawings and specifications will be
I
S
E
M
E
N
T
B I D S
available at the office of the Architect,
950 North Hunter Boulevard, Birming­
ham, Michigan on or after September
21, 1966.
Two sets of appUcable bidding docu­
ments WlU be allowed to a bidder for the
work Included under his particular pro­
posal.
The following deposit will be requir­
ed for each set of documents obtained:
Architectural Trades - $75.00
Mechanical Trades-$60.00
Electrical Trades - $50.00
Drafting & Work Rooms Equipment430
Music Room Equipment - $30.00
Language Lab. Equipment - $30.00
Science Room Equipment - $30.00
Metal Shop Equipment - $30.00
Proposals shall be submitted ln
dupUcate, on forms provided by the
Architect, enclosed in sealed envelopes
marked with the name of the bidder
and the title of the work, and shall be
deUvered to the Office of the Board of
Education, Novi CommunitySchoolDlstrlct. Orchard Hills School, 41900
Quince Drive, Novi, Michigan.
Board of Education
Novi Community School
District
Novi, Michigan
Russ Taylor
Secretary
Page
8-A
T H E
Continued
N O R T H V I L L E
B
e
d
from
Page
One
R E C O R D - N O V I
r
o
•Jilt, '-esl.iblished initially by the loca­
tion of the Ford Wixom plant within
city limits.''
Of the city's 5,600 acres, about 28
percent or 1600 acres have been set
aside in the master plan for industrial
development, which will branch out
along Wixom road north to Pontiac
T r a i l . Already, the proposed industrial
acreage exceeds that of the average
community.
C L E A N - U P
NorthviIIe
tee
met
womon
TEAM-Members
Beoutification
Soturdoy
woman
of the
Monday
Commit­
with
to
j e c t s for t h e
discuss
future
community.
C
Continued from
i
Page
y
up
committee
with
S
In tile past the rubbish contractor
has levied an additional charge for a
second pick-up in the business district
from firms desiring the service. The
council decided to enforce second pick­
ups where itdeterminestheyareneeded
in an effort to remove eyesores and
possible health hazards in the business
district.
Councllmembers informally agreed
that it would be desirable to purchase
the former John Mach Ford agency
building from the NorthviIIe .\rBa De­
velopment Corporation as proposed by
the parking authority. The latter body
noted that the site " w i l l lend itself to
our parking program of necessary park­
ing areas now and as an excellent
business site for future development."
Before taking action, however, the
council decided to consult with the de­
velopment corporation and to await a
financial report from the city manager.
Action was delayed on a request for
a meeting from the NorthviUe Commun­
ity Chamiier of commerce. Through its
president, Robert Webber, the chamber
wrote the council asking for a meeting
with the NorthvilleDrivingClub, North­
viUe DowTis and directors of the cham­
ber of commerce "for the purpose of
developing traffic plans and patterns
which are absolutely necessary to the
future development of the NorthviIIe
Downs race track".
The manager told the council such a
meeting would be "more meaningful"
if results of a plan and cost study now
underway by the city engineer were
available. He said these statistics
t
u
d
i
e
clean­
members
p o i n t e d to three-year
One
in
night to c o n s i d e r adoption
ap­
s
should bo ready within a month or six
weeks.
The chamber has endorsed a pro­
posal to e-ttend Griswold street through
to Heal street.
Manager Ollendorff assured Ran­
dolph street residents that sidewalks,
described as "obstacle courses'', would
be cleared for foot traffic. The street
i s closed to vehicular traffic for i n ­
stallation of improvements and paving.
He said that the newly paved street
could serve pedestrians six hoursafter
pouring. He said auxiliary police are
stationed on the street from 5 p.m.
until midnight to assist pedestrians
over crosswalks and to see that the
pavement is not disturbed during the
six-hour hardening period.
Three to eight days, depending upon
the weather, are required before cars
will be allowed on the street, Ollendorff
stated.
City Attorney Philip Ogilvie re­
ported that a complaint will be issued
against the Benlcke and Krue building
company for removal of rubbish on
company property along Novi road ad­
jacent to Village Green. He told a com­
plaining citizen that the firm would be
cited for creating a nuisance or litter­
ing.
Councilmembers reviewed a pro­
posed new subdivision ordinance, which
Includes present requirements but pro­
vides for such stricter measures as
concrete street paving, underground
utilities, yard grading, etc., by subdividers. Several questions were raised
by the council and turned over to the
city manager and attorney for review
with the planning commission.
P L Y M O U T H ,
M I C H I G A N
T O
G
C O R D I A L L Y
A T T E N D
R
A
V
e
r
s
u
s
I
n
d
u
It's the planners intention, Leman
explains, to shift the downtown district
east along Pontiac T r a i l , with the city
hall serving as the hub for the proposed
new business district.
Adjacent to the present city hall,
planners envision the building of a com­
munity center, and across the street, a
full complex of business establish­
ments.
M o t h e r s '
Planners are now trying to imple­
ment the new business center idea,
seeking survey funds for a proposed
C l u b
M o n d a y
H a y e s
C a s t e r l i n e
s
t
r
1966
y
route that will eventually encircle the
business district.
•iopography and geography, then,
are inherent, conclude consultants, in
the planning process.
They're con­
stants, which the local planners must
utilize in shaping the face of their
communities.
F u n e r a l
H
o
m
e
S t r i c k e n
Sheldon Hayes, 71-year-old owner
of gravel mining and land development
operations in NorthviUe township, suf­
fered a mild heart attack last week and
i s reported in good condition at Ford
Hospital. He is expected to be hospital­
ized for another two weeks.
Another less important, but none­
theless significant factor accountingfor
the predicted differences between the
communities i s geographical location.
Northvllle township, whose fore­
casted ultimate population is 47,435,
has a tremendous purchasing power,
planners note. Certainly, much more
than Wixom, with an estimated popula­
tion of 38,000 to 40,000 people.
Lawyers
N a m e
> Private Off-Street Porking
•
Tznnr
m. d a n o l
DIMECTOM
24-Hour Ambulance
A i r Conditioned
RAY J.
CASTERLINE
loai-isgs
Service
Fieldbrook
Wives
OF
9-0611
•
v)
R o o m
M r s . H i l l
CLOSE
Chapel
FRED A. CASTERLINE
DIRECTOR
a
lU
</i
M r s . Clifton D. mil. 17740 Beck
road, has been named a delegate-atlarge to the association of Lawyers'
Wives of Michigan. The organization Is
affiliated with the American B a r and
Michigan Bar associations. M r s . HIU
will attend the state convention in Lan­
sing on September 29.
But because of geographic location,
NorthviIIe township plans do not call
for a central business district. It will
rely instead on the cities of NorthviIIe
and Plymouth for major shopping cen­
ters.
This, too, frees land for develop­
ment of homes, planners say.
NorthviUe township emphasis will
be on convenience centers, or more
popularly, local shopping service cen­
ters, consultants report. Under the
master plan, six have been designated
for development.
B e a u t y
B e g i n s
Y o u r
w i t h
W i n d o w s
OUT
1966
There's m o r e thon a shade o f difference in every
S N Y D E R
!.
r o o m o f y o u r h o m e vvhen y o u r e s h a d c vviih l h e J C
\
lovely,
• priced
new,
popular-
shades
ORENEMAN'HAI^TSHORN
by
H I - L O
That's not the case in Wlxom, how­
ever. This community does have a cen­
tral business district included in its
plans. "We hope to give the town an
identity," Leman said, "by incorpor­
ating a central business district in the
master plan."
Comper
PRICES START AT
Troilers
CQ
N e w and Demonstrators
s 1 1 9
K O O L
S E A L
R O O F
M O N S O N
But it poses a uniq-Je problem, he
says, because the C&O railroad runs
through the heart of the city, and
there's a concentration of heavier type
businesses, as a result, already in the
center of town.
I N V I T E S
s
September 22,
The first meeting of the 1966-67
season for the NorthviUe Mothers'
Club will be held here Monday. A reg­
ular business session, it will be held
at 8 p.m. in the home of M r s . Glenn
E. Delbert, 9825 Napier road.
There's essentially only one factor
limiting the amount of industry in
Wixom - the desires of the planners.
They recognize the major role In­
dustry win play in Wlxom; that's the
reason the original plan, calling for 860
acres of industrial property, was re­
vised upwarJ to 1600 acres, the con­
sultants explain.
terms.
m
M e e t s
With a large amount of property re­
served for industry and with other in­
dustries helping to spread the tax base,
mare and more industries will seek out
sites in Wixom, Leman said.
council
and erection of a permanent
pro­
Council-
t
a s k e d the
of a model b e a u t i f i c a t i o n o r d i n a n c e
Councll-
Beatrice Carlson (stonding),
chairman,
Carlson
o
Thursday,
NEWS
C O A T I N G
1
TRAILER
PARTS
CO.
200 South Moin
iPaint
NorthviIIe
A c r o s s from the Spring
Products,
2534S Novi R d . - N o v i
I n c .
349-0793
349-2240
Y O U
ITS
N
J
D
Doofi
C
H
A
N
C
B
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m m
T
^
C O
o"6
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: 5
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4/1
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W e
a r e
l e a k i n g
f o r w a r d
to
s e e i n g
y o u
a n d
s h o w i n g
y o u
t h e
n e w
i n f e r i o r
d e c o r
o f
o u r
t w o
f a s h i o n s
w o m e n ' s
0 ^
HI
di
<
f l o o r s
a
m
SPECIAL CROUP OF
S P E C I A L
ALL
G R O U P
O F
F A L L
W O O L
y i
WOOL
N
m
Im
S
P
A
N
T
P
O
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W
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>•
HI
201
S
M
HI
•1
PRICE
FINE CROUP OF CORDUROY
C
A
R
C
O
A
• • •
T
$1050
S
*
• • •
HARvrs
owr^
•
•
V I S I T O U R SECOND
FINEST COLLECTION
A N D COORDINATES.
YES
•
.
.
. you
may
9
FLOOR FOR T H E
OF S P O R T S W E A R
charge
it
a t
z
0
>
S
o t
III
8
l u S
n
Haryi's
,
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0
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I K ! H
PRINTS and SOLIDS
DISTIISCTIVE
i
OPEN
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C
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J e a n s
Thufs.
til
S E A M L E S S —
S H O R T ,
P U I N
M E D I U M ,
or
M E S H
a n d
9
Fri.
p.ftt.
Corner
Main
Pcnniman
Plymouth,
L O N G
Phone
Grand
of
and
—
0
Mich.
0
^
4SS-0136
^
Opening
Special
^
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C OO S
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5 - 2
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Page
2-B
T H E
N O R T H V I L L E
R E C O R D - N O V I
Thursday,
N E W S
September
22,
1966
Thursday,
m
A
r
e
a
C
h
u
r
c
N O R T H V I L L K
Walled
IIRS- IIAPTIST CHURCH
-•-K .SORTIIVIl.LE
P.,s(or Rohrrt Spr..dlin,{
Rrv :0Q N Win,: Strrrt
Sund.,y Worship. I I ,. m jinil 7 .10
p.m. SiJndi.v Schuol, 10 ,,.m
EVANCELICAI. LUTHERAN
CHURCH OF THE
EPIPHA.NV
Rev David Strun,-. Pitltor
CU^VsSO: GL-.!.M1t
Worahipp.n,! ul 4lt..'.0 Kivc M.l,Sund.y Worship. « .10 ,.nd 1! ».rr.
Sunday School. Q:4S a.m.
ST. WLLIAM'S
CATHOLIC CHURCH
Viulled Litke, Michigan
Futhrr Roymond Jones
AsaiBtont Fr. James Mnywum
Suniday Masses: 7:30. 9:00, 11
u.m, and i2:15 p.m.
TRINITY CHURCH
(BAPTIST)
38840 W Sis Mile near Haugerty
GA. 1.2357
Rev. N .rman Mathias, Pastor
Sunday Worship. 1 1 a.m.
Sunda> School. 9:30 a.m.
ORCHARD HILLS BAPTIST
CHURCH SBC
23455 Novi Rd.
Church Phone FI-9-S665
Pastor Fred Trachsel
FI-9-9904
Sunday Worship. II a.m. and 7 p.f
Sunday School, 10 a.m.
TraininR Union. 6 P m.
H o w
i s
'This
e n o u g h
q u e s t i o n
tially
and
b y
pany's
of
m y
provide
C o m ­
Holy Eucharl.l 1st and 3rd Sunday
of each month.
Phone 835-0667
elec­
W e
y o u
The
give
you
concise
w i d e
a
a
to
secur­
ffuide
Will
clear
and
p i c t u r e
of
Where y o u stand
you need
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
Of Nov!
Eleven Mile and Taft Roada
Church Phone Fi-9- 3477
Rev. Gib D. Clark
SiMiday Worship. 11 a.m, and 7 p.m.
Sund-iy School. 9:45 a,m,
W i l l
With
financial
ity.
the
electronic
confidential
for
today
Bob
Williams
and recommend
question—"How
/ou?"—simply
and
Lincoln,
exactly
What
tomorrow.
To obtain y o u r confidential ansWer
Clip
THE HOLT CROSS
EPISCOPAL MISSION
Orchard Hills School
10 Mile and Quince Drive
Novi. Michitfon
John J . Frlclce. Vicar
II a.m., MomlaK Prayer and
y o u ?
ac­
T h r o u g h
our
c o m p u t e r
your
f o r
N O V I
programming
service.
use
m s u r o n c e
impar­
unique
tronic
SALEM BAPTIST CHURCH
8170 Chubb Rd.. Salem
FJ-9-2J37
Rei L. Dye. Pastor
Sunday Worship. 11 a.m. and
6: 30 p.m.
Sunday School. lO a.iS.
c a n
n o w be ai1sWered,
curately
file
m a i l
much
fill
to:
out
life
to this
insurance
and
mail
W o o d m e n
the
is
important
enough
coupon
Accident and
l i f e
Co.,
Nebraska
name
Street
Town
1005 W.
address
Prolectiiig
W o o d m e n
Uttcoltt,
FELLOWSHIP BAPTIST
Alton Glazier, Pastor
10774 Nine Mile Road
Sunday Worsiup. 11 a,m,. 7 p.m.
Sunday School, 10 a.m
Wednesday evening service
7:30 p.m.
A c c i d e n t
and L i f e
[
C o m p a n y
tha
F
A
T
E
cartfraa
R
w a y !
multi-purpose
Water
Condihoner . . .
the
soltener that removes iron Ihe
"Carelree" way.
N » \m RENTAL PRICES
SlandardstKonly S5.00 per mo.
i j r g e siIe only
Renlais applied
{7.50 per mo.
toward
pur­
chase, when desired,
invesiitale the very best in
water c o n d i l i o m n g - n o ohiigalion. C a l l . . .
R E Y N O L D S
Ari Approved
Comero Shop
Mchigan't
Rcsptctedfor
Service
^'^'>'
O F E J S
E v e r y
^f-
Plymouth
E v e n i n g
6 L - 3 - 5 4 I 0
T I L
9
S T U D Y
' ? e v . R.
New
A.
Hudson
Mitchinson
Methodist
Church
wouldn't surprise me if Jesus minister­
ed to a homosexual or tvo. He wasn't
hindered in his ministry like so many
preachers of today with being worried
by what their congregations might think.
This is the plight of both clergy and
laymen of today. They guard what they
say and do, in order not to dlstrb
the status quo and lessen their own
popularity. Yet, how do we as Chris­
tians expect to change the lives oi
people if we do not make an attempt to
Identify and understand every person
we meet. If the Church Is to survive,
It must come out of its "ivory tower"
and rub elbows with the rest of the
world. To quote Pierre Berton, "...the
church elders, the pew warmers, and
the plate passers do not rub shoulders
with the kind of men that Jesus wel­
comed as brother, and the religious es­
tablishment no longer Identifies itself
with the man in the gutter, the convict,
the thief, the prostitute, the political
radical, or the real social outcast of our
t i m e . " This is a sad commentary on the
Church, and one wonders what we are
doing. True, some of us are concerned.
We admit the need for ministering to
the prostitute, the homosexual, etc., but
when it comes to seeking them out.
Since reading a small book entitled
The Comfortable Pew by PierreBerton
(a book which every inquirer should
read), some words of Scripture have
been on my mind. "When Jesus m.s at
table in the house, many bad charac­
ters - tax gatherers and others - were
.seated with him and his disciples."
(Matthew 9:10 N.E.B.) These words
plague me because the Church for the
most part seems to have forgotten its
primary purpose, that being, to redeem
the lost. Many Christians give the i m ­
pression that the Church is made up of
those people who belong to the " i n "
group. Their cry seems to be one of
desperation and horror when consider­
ing all other miserable creatures on the
outside. Many well-meaning church peo­
ple have glossed over their own short­
comings to the point that they do not
recognize that they do have something
in common with the out and out sinner
and, therefore, are unable to identify
and sympathize w t h him.
Didn't the founder of Christianity
move among the outcasts of his day?
He wasn't afraid to move among the
prostitutes, thieves, tax collectors, and
a i l kinds of scurvy
characters.lt
that Is an entirely different story.
To illustrate what the Church needs
to be doing, an old stoI-y comes to mind
about a great English preacher who
was once asked to preach at a little
church in an English village.
He arrived early to find the church
locked, and, before anyone arrived to
let him in, it began to rain. He took
refuge in a pub across the street. The
minister spent some time talkingto cus­
tomers in the pub until the church was
opened. Wlien he got up to leave, one
dejected and slightly inebriated man
put his hand on the minister's shoulder
and said, "If the likes of you would
come in here more often, perhaps the
likes of us would go in there (pointing
to the church)."
Today many ministers deal only with
the righteous sinner and completely
ignore for the most part the unrighteous
outcasts. We ministers and laymen are.
apt to forget that we have one thing in
common with the social outcast of today.
We are all sinners. Instead of con­
veniently directing the social outcast to
governmental agenciesforhelp, we must
accept our Christian responsibility of
being concerned for every human being,
materially and spiritually.
B
I
T
U
A
R
I
E
R E C O R D - N O V I
Page
N E W S
One day, recently, the children a n d I stopped, on o u r Way home; to pet
B e a u t y and her baby. B e a u t y lives a t M r . R y d e r ' s fa1-m, not f a r f r o m our
home, and the c o m i n g of her colt has been a pi-ime topic of conversations
these p a s t few Weelcs.
T H E
C H U R C H
F O R
A L L
T H E
F O R
A L L .
. .
C H U R C H
The Qurcii u tiie grMlcjl fKtor on earth for
liic tuiidiog ot cii.iractcr and good ciiizouiiip.
T h i s pai-ticulai- day Carla's question about Starlight's D a d d y and his
Il I'j a slorciioujc of spirliuji vaiucs. Without a
Whereabouts sparked a discussion -with m y th1'eesome that ranged f r o m God's
strong Ciiurcii. ncillicr democracy norciWiiislion
can jurvive. Tlicrc ate four Jound reasonj why
p l a n f o r the b i r t h a n d ca1-e of baby animals, on to people and their babies.
every pcMon jhouid attend seri-ica regularly and
It was a rare and precious moment, such as parents a n d teachers treas­
jupport the Cimrcli. They are: f l ) For hi!
ure, When young minds reach out effortlessly for i n f o n n a t i o n and under­
oivn soke. (2) For his chiidren'a aalie. (3) For
standing.
the salic of his community and nation. (4) For
A s we drove home, I thanked God for the oppoi-tunity H e had given me
Ihe sake of the Church itself, whidi netdj K j
morai and malerlai support. Plan to go to
to share i n this eager unfolding of m y children's thoughts a n d ideas. I
church rcguiarly and read your Bi"bic daily.
thanked H i m , too, f o r H i s C h u r c h w h i c h has inspired m y religious gi'owth
a n d thus helped me keep pace m t h the developing quei-ies of m y children.
T h e Church i s the source of gl-eat understanding.
^
Copi/rijM 19$6 K<iMUr Adoeriiting Service, Inc., Straibury, Va.
Sundoy
Deuteronomy
32:4-9
Monday
II CInronlcies
34:1-7
oldest and
r
t
R
i
n
h
v
i
l
l
e
-
M
a
d
e
g
s
i
n
V
i
e
t
B
n
An old school bell manufactured in
Northville many years ago irill soon be
ringing for children in South Vietnam.
e
l
l
B
h
e
s
K I N G
t
o
"Super-Right"
c
h
o
o
l
o
o
k
R
e
v
i
e
Venus Disarmed by Jeremy Dale,
a humorous novel about a presidential
candidate who sets out to find the arms
of the Venus de Milo as part of his
campaign.
e
t
h
a
t
c
The Taff and the Spider by John
Creasey, a tale of murder, blackmail
and jealousy in which poisonous snakes,
spiders and scropians attack an English
detective.
C o m - F e d
Careers in Natural Resource Con­
servation by Frederick Herbert, a de­
tailed picture of the work and goals of
each of the conservation careers.
Great Lakes Country by Russell
McKee, a history of the region and the
people who first explored it.
Basic Tools of Research by Philip
H. Vitale, a bibliography of service to
the undergraduate and graduate major
in English who lacks knowledge of the
basic works of reference in his field.
Omensetter's Luck by William H.
Cass, a novel set in rural America in the
1890's Involving a man whose luck be­
comes an obsession with townspeople
who must destroy it and him as well.
Among the new non-ficUon novels
are:
a
r
e
Top
R O A S T S !
Mature,
Progress and Poverty by Henry
George, written In the lOtli century, a
classic inquiry into the cause of indus­
t r i a l depression and of increase of
want ivith increase of wealth.
s
e
e
Quality,
e
a
b
o
u
t
G o v e r n m e n t
y
o
Tuesdoy
Psalms
i 39:13-18
V/ednesday
Eccleslastes
11:5-9
Thursday
Luke
2:41-47
Friday
Luke
Saturday
John
11:5-13
3:3-12
This is who
to see for a
good deal
on auto
insurance.
This is who
to see for
the same
good deal
on life and
homeowners
insurance.
P A U L F.
210
S.
e
c
i
p
a
i
l
l
s
G
i
v
e
FOLINO
Ctntef
NorttivllK
F i - m n
STATE FARM INSURANCE COMPANIES
Home O f f i c e s : B l o o m i n g t o n , l i i i n o i s
Inspected
Beef
Ribs
6
9
F i R t
F i r s t
5
IB.
R i b s
"SUPER-RIGHr'
L e g
l b
0 /
7
3
R i b s
SPRING,
WHOLE
5
GENUINE
L a m b
d
•
IB.
7
9
*
Spilt,
•
" 7 9 *
•
Quartend
Ort-Up
" S U P E R - R I G H T "
Q U A L I T Y
R O S E
C i t O I X
F r y m
A L L ' G R E E N
A s p a r a g u s
P
O
7-Rlfi
R
K
L
L O I N
E N D
O
E N D
I
N
S p e a r s
S
C E N T E R
RIB
C H O P S
P O R T I O N
P O R T I O N
lWEtiittr3-3«N
of
Unitarian
Farmington
Church ot 10 o.m., lectures
ond discussions ot 11 a.m.
Robert Miles Eddy, minister.
Topic:''Why I am not a C h r i s t i a n " .
SOUTH LYON ELEVATOR
Sooth Lyon
NORTHVILLE STANDARD SERVICE
302 E. Main, 349-4044
NORTHVILLE HARDWARE Your Truslworthy Store 107-109 Center Street
NORTHVILLE SHOES & SHOE
SERVICE Joe Revitjer 104 E. Moin
PHILLIPS TRAVEL SERVICE
110 N. Lofoyelte, South Lyon, 438-2221
NOV! REALTY AGENCY Reol Estoie
and Insuronce Novi, GR-4-5363
MclNTOSH HOMES Custom Builders
340 N. Center, 349-4032
SOUTH LYON MOTORS
J. W. Bokhous, 437-1177
C A N S
55° ^89
n
K I D D I E S
L O V E
J A N E
' E M
ludgsicles
C l a s s e s
ANN
PAGE
JAR
PHIL'S PURE SERVICE 24-Hour AAA Service
Free Pickup 4 Del. 130 W. Main, 349-1622
NORTHVILLE DRUG CO.
A. G. Loux, Reg. Ph. FI.9-0850
FRISBIE Refrigeration & Appllonces
43039 Grand River. Novi
H. R. NODER'S JEWELERS
Moin at Center, Northville
NORTHVILLE COACH LINE Charter
Serv,_.. 41122 W. 7 Mile, 349-1333
SOUTH LYON LUMBER CO.
201 S. Lofaycile. GE-7-9311
ALLEN MONUMENTS AND VAULTS
580 S. Main, Northville
HANSON MOBIL SERVICE
Corner 7 Mile ond Northville Rd.
R e d
W H E A T
B e e f
R
E
A
D
a n d
GUNSELL'S DRUGS R. Douglas Lcreni
102 E. Main. Northville, 349.1550
NOV! REXALL DRUG Prescriptions
Professionally Perfect-Properly Priced
JOE'S MARKET
47375 Grand River, Novi, 349-3106
RATHBURN CHEVROLET SALES
560 S. Main. Northville, 349-0033
R O T A R Y
BRADER'S DEPARTMENT STOR.!
141 E. Mom. Northville
C HAROLD BLOOM AGENCY
108 W. Main. Northville, 349-1252
MICHIGAN SEAMLESS TUBE CO.
South Lyon
CUNG
H A L V E
OR S U C E S
P e a c h e s
7 9 '
1-LB.
8-OZ.
CAN
4 9 '
1-LB.
13-OZ.
CANS
7 9 '
S-OZ.
1 - L B . ,
S P E C I A L
S I Z E
. l A N E P A k K E R — P A C K OF 4
JANB
WISCONSIN-MiLD
C h e d d a r
Cheese
7 3 '
a
O F F E R — A & P
I n s t a n t
f c e " & s s ; r : . . . . ' « t ' 8 9 '
PARKER
l-LB.
i-02.
SfZE
Coconut-Orange P i e .
N E T W T .
3 9 '
C o f f e e
|
10-OZ.
0
9
J A R
M i c h i g a n
AfrP
M c i n t o s h
BRAND
H a l f
A P P L E S
C L U B
a n d
C a k e
A W
or.
cm. 4 5 '
H a l f
6"°
SERIES
MICHIOAN
Starts
T h u r s d a y ,
O c t o b e r
M i x e s
6 t h
RUMET
Potatoes
U.S. N g . i
l O i ^ s y
G o l d e n
Y a m s
"
H e a d
5 9 '
Lettuce
m
ASDS ZI«T TO lAI-AOS
1 0 '
G r e e n
2
heads 2
I
&
7
9
'
J u i c e
3
s
S
8
9
'
BRAND
P e a n u t
SS U
UL
LT
TA
AN
NA
A
B u t t e r
2-PLY
2
WBBEERRRRYY
SSTTRRAAW
P r e s e r v e s
T
Z
GRAOE " A "
G r a p e
A D V E N T U R E
^
7 5 '
mmg^
m
5 9 '
.
F A C I A L TTiissssuuee
.
A
A
M
P e p p e r s . . 4 for
P u f f s
2 9 *
PRICES
4
EFFEaiVE
THROUGH
«
8
SAT., SEPT.
9
24TH.
J
TICKETS:
F o r tile entire
series 6 Travelogues
T i c k e t ! m a y be p u r c h a s e d
following
from a n y
Rotarian
businesses
5.00
P L A Y BONUS BINGO
U P
P
Cofrington-Johnsofi
SPENCER REXALL DRUG
112 E. Lalce. South Lyon, GF-8-4141
S t e w
YELLOW
V a V E T
or at a n y o f t h e
LITTLE PEOPLE SHOPPE
103 E. Main, Northville
MOORE
" N E W "
at the N o r t h v i l l e H i g h S c h o o l A u d i t o r i u m 8 p . m .
NEW HUDSON LUMBER CO.
56601 Grond River, GE-8-844i
1-LB.
CAN
S a l m o n
LIBBY'S OR DINTY
A&P
5 9 '
ALASICA
P A R K E R
W H O L E
B
PINI WITH PORK
DON TAPP'S STANDARD SERVICE
128 S. Lofoyeltc, South Lyon
C U T
SWANSOOWN—LAYIR
N O R T H V I L L E
T R A V E L
E-JAY LUMBER MART Shop At Your
Modern Store Northville, 349-1780
!
4th & 5tb
Eleven Northvllle students are at­
tending
special education classes.
Assistant
Superintendent Raymond
Spear revealed this week.
Four students, he said, are attend­
ing the new Livonia Trainable program. Three of these had been attend­
ing Wayne County Training School In
past years.
One student Is attending Farmington
Crippled Children's special education
program, and six are attending Northvine's own Type A program at the
junior high school. Other potential
students for this latter program, he
said, are presently being evaluated.
Another child i s still unassigned,
Spear said, but It Is expected that he
will be enrolled at Livonia within a
week.
P6639
See him now!
p
u
u
Rib Roast
HELEN M. VEALEY
Helen M . Vealey, 69 of 57670 Pontiac
T r a i l , New Hudson, died suddenly at
her home Monday night. She Is survived
by her husband, Richard.
B o m in Northvllle on October 16,
1396, she was the daughter of May and
John Scherer.
M r . and M r s . Vealey had moved to
New Hudson elglit years ago froni P l y mouth.
Besides her husband, M r s . Vealey is
survived by two daughters, M r s . F . J .
(Geraldlne) Knapp of 57732 PontUc
T r a i l , New Hudson, and M r s . W. j .
(Elizabeth) Hickman of YpsIlanU; and
five grandsons and one great grandson.
Funeral arrangements were rwtIm­
mediately available from Schrader Fun­
eral Home of Plymouth. The Rev.
Robert Mitchinson, pastor of the New
Hudson Methodist church, was to offlclate.
P
w
Goya; a biography by Elizabeth Rip­
ley, with drawings, etchings and paint­
ings by Goya illustrating the iMOk.
A few of the new fiction books at the
Northville library are:
Through an arrangement with SAS
Airlines the bell was flown from O'Hare
International Airport to Vietnam and
the little school house.
r
O F
S
But an alert company employee had
saved it for the Kohler recreation hall.
The 243-poiind cast-ironbel] was refur­
bished and specially hand-painted with
the Vietnamese national colors of red
and yellow.
Sergeant Edward A . Schelk, whose
wife, Virginia, lives In Sheboygan Falls,
Wisconsin, organized a group of engi­
neers to help remodel and expand a
school in Can Ranh Bay, just outside
Saigon.
A s the project neared completion,
Sgt. Schelk began searching for a bell
T
m
That's when he decided to write the
Kohler company where his wife is emplo.ved. Officials recalled it had received
a bell alons uith a shipment of scrap
metal that was to be melted dOTO for use
in making bath tubs.
In a clipping sent to M r s . Jack Doheny of 43923 Pickford by her muther,
she learned this story:
ADA B . P I C K E L L
Ada B . Pickell, 84 of 227 West
street, died suddenly at the University
of Michigan Hospital. A dressmaker,
she had been a resident here for 80
years.
Born July 4, 1882 at Leamington,
Ontario, she was the daughter of Henry
and Elizabeth Wales Hyatt.
She Is survived by one sister, M r s .
Luella Hlgglns of NorthvlUe.
Funeral services were conducted
September 17 from the Casterllne Fun­
eral Home, with the Rev.RobertSpradllng ol the F i r s t Baptist Church of
Northville officiating. Burial was in
Grand Lawn cemetery, Detroit.
a
since h'? felt no school would be com­
plete without one.
The bell, manufactured liere by the
long defunct Am--rican Bell Foundry
company, until a few months ago was
destlneti to beeomo a bath tub in Wis­
consin,
FRED K . P E R R Y
A 69-year-old former Novi resident,
Fred K . Perry, died September 9 at his
home in Sylvia, Tennessee. M r . Perry
hadmovedfromthisareanlneyearsago.
Born September 17, 1896 in Wlngo,
Kentucky, he was the son of Louis D.
and Callie McNelly Perry. His u'ife,
Minnie, survives him.
M r . Perry was a retired employee
of the Dodge Motor Company Mound
road plant.
Besides his wife, he i s survived
by seven daughters, Wanda Hargrove
of Dickson, Tennessee, Joyce Edw'ards
of Sylvia, Ruby SImeck of Summerset,
Kentucky, Opal Smeck of Ferndale,
Analene Herley of Ferndale, M r s . L a verne Stephens ot South Lyon and Pa­
tricia Cotter of Walled Lake; a son,
Robert of Wixom; a brother, Willie D.
of Nashville, Tennessee; andlS grand­
children and eight great grandchildren.
Funeral services were conducted
September 16 from Casterllne Funeral
Home, with the Rev. Norman Riedesel
of the First Presbyterian Church of
South Lyon officiating. Burial was In
Oakland Hills Cemetery.
WILLIAM H . M A X W E L L
William H. Maxwell, 56 of 3345
West Maple road, Wixom (Hed Thurs­
day, September 15. He was a resident
of Wlxom for the past 30 years.
Born October 5, 1909 at Portage,
Ohio, he was the son of M r . and M r s .
William M . Maxwell. His mother, Edna
of Mt. Pleasant, survives him.
Other survivors Include his wife,
Mamie Lee; four children, William of
Plymouth, David Lee of New Hudson,
Robert of Novi, M r s . R. T. ffionna)
Baas of Union Lake; three brothers,
George of Carlton, John of Sanford,
Frank of Mt. Pleasant; two sisters,
Mary of Royal Oak, M r s . Betty Grass
of Mt. Pleasant; and 12 grandchildren.
Funeral services were conducted
Monday, September 19 from RlchardsonB l r d Funeral Home of Walled Lake,
wltll the Rev. Robert Shade, pastor of
Shepherd of Lakes Lutheran Church,
offidaUng. Burial was In Oakland Hills
Memorial Gardens.
o
largest water
I Z I M C i g y i n t a k , Detroit 4, M k l t .
3-B
S
seven grandsons and one great grand­
daughter.
Funeral services were conducted
September 19 from Schrader Funeral
Home, with the Rev. S. D. Kinde of­
ficiating. Burial W'as in Riverside cem­
etery, Plymouth.
MRS. ROBENA JOSLIN
M r s . Robena Joslin, 92, died Wed­
nesday, September 7, on the 74th anni­
versary of her wedding day. Death came
following a long Illness at her home at
54299 Nine Mile road, Northville.
M r s . Joslin was born in Detroit
February 26, 1374, the daughter of Carl
and Friedericka Hartwig Smith. She
married George Joslin on September 7,
1892 in Livonia. He died in 1947.
She had lived in the county for 42
years, coming here from Bedford town­
ship, and was a member of the F i r s t
Baptist church of Northville.
Survivors are: one son, Lyman of
Northville; two daughters, M r s . Clar­
ence (Zada) C a r r o l l of South Lyon and
M r s . DeForest (Verna) Thompson of
Worden; nine grandchildren and 14
great grandchildren. Another daughter,
M r s . George (Myra) Gardner died In
1955.
Funeral services were held at P h i l ­
lips Funeral Home Saturday, Septem­
ber 9 at 3:30 p.m. Burial was in the
South Lyon Cemetery. The Rev. Robert
Spradling, pastor of the First Baptist
church of Northvllle, officiated.
MRS. F E R N A . JENlONS
M r s . Fern A . Jenkins, 74 of 15840
Northvllle road, died September 16 at
the Northwest Branch of Grace h o ^ l t a l
after a two weeks illness.
B o m February 17, 1891 In iron
River, she was the daughter of George
and Content Omas Reed.
A resldeflt of the community since
1953, die-was a member of the F i r s t
Methodist Church of NortlivlUe and the
Senior Citizens of Northvllle. On Feb­
ruary 26, 1966 she and M r . Jenkins
celebrated their golden wedding anni­
versary at the Methodist church here.
Besides herhustoind, she Is survived
by two sons, Clinton of Redford town­
ship and Willis of Grand Rapids; a s i s ­
ter, M r s . Ralph M i l l s of Flint; and
tonditioning eampany . . . aince 1931
If so, you moy be o Universolist Unitarian without realizing it.
Services held ot Farmington
junior high school,33000 Thornas street, 1 block north of
Grond River off of Warner.
WW
P A S T O R ' S
O
N
I Water Conditioning Company
Are you of the opinion that the
deeper ultimate purposes of religion are better served when
enlightened reason and on open
mind are held superior to blind
faith in static or circumscribed
beliefs?
D
N O R T H V I L L E
I
t h e
T
N . w . i o f the firsJ lime, you can
Church
and
O
Universalist
P L Y M O U T H ' S E X C L U S I V E C A M E R A SHOP SINCE 1945
T H E
S
Nebraska
A Mutual Legal Reserve Company EstabUahcd 1890
Quality
S
W
CHURCH OF CHRIST
22820 Valerie St.. cor. Lillian
CE-7-2498 or 422-4440
Louis R. Pippin. Minister
Sunday Worship. 11am. and 6 p.m
Sunday School. 10 a.m.
The
1966
R E N T
ST. PAUL'S LUTHERAN
CHURCH fMissouri Synudi
7701 K««t M-if,. llamhurK
SuniCy Worship. 10:45 u.m.
Sunday S. hool. 9:.i0 u.m.
Hand
P l a n s
REYNOLDS fully-Automtlic
Gl-3-3035 HI-9-238S
R e p r e s e n t i n g
S t u d y
22,
1 1
ST PATRICK'S CATHOLIC
Fr. A. A Loivry. Pastor
Whitmore Lake Rd. at
Northfield Church Rd.
Sunday Masses: 8 ..nd 10.30 a.m
WILLIAMS
Ann Arbor Tr.
ST. JOHN'S AMERICAN
LUTHERAN CHURCH
Rev. C. Fojt
23225 -.ill Road-GR-4-0584
Sunday Worship. s:30 and 11 a.m.
Sunday S-:hool. 9:45 a.m.
RENT »famous
Jtat*
BOB
FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST.
SCIENTIST
33825 Grand River
Farmington
Sunday Worship. II a.m.
Stoiday School. 1 1 a.m.
September
m
SUNNYBROOK
A. C. Pounds. Jr.. Pastor
Sunday Worship. 11 a.m.
7:30 p.m. Sunday .School. 10 a.m.
i KTOuld liico t o k n o w , w i t h o u t o b l i g a t i o n , h e w m u c h i i f e I n M i r o n c o
Il enoggh for m c .
Tour
NOVI METHODIST CHURCH
Rev. R. A. Mitchinson
GE-8-8 701
Sunday Worship. 9 a.m.
Sunday School. 10 a.m.
GREEN OAK
FREE METHODIST CHURCH
US-23. 2 mile* north of
Whitmore Lake
below.
m
^
M a y o n n a i s e
CALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH
279 Dartmoor Drive
iVhttirore Lake, Mlch.-HI-9-234?
William P. Nicholas. Pailor
Phone NO-J-0698
Ron Sutterfield. Assiatai.i Pastor
Sunday Worship. 11 a.m. and 7 a.m.
Sunday School. 9:45 a.m.
for
o
m
The F i r s t
Methoflist
church of Nortlivilie will
hold a Planning Conference
Sunday from 3 to 5:30 p.m.
at the church.
During the first part of
the conference each Church
commission and committee
will finalize its plan for the
year.
After light refreshments
a l l groups will meet with the
official board to determine ^
how the plans of each c o m - "
mission and committee may
be assimilated into the over­
a l l church program.
Chairmen working on this
conference are; Essie N i r i der, membership and evan­
gelism; Lester Phillips, ed­
ucation; M r s . Fay Waldren,
missions; Charles Skene,
finance; John Hobart, Chris­
tian social concerns;
Robert Gotts, trustees;
Oscar Hammond, building;
M r s . John AngelJ, music;
M r s . Douglas Bolton, Wo­
men's Society of Christian
Service; M r s . Bert Moshlmer, Wesleyan Service
Guild; Richard Davis, Meth­
odist men; Fay Waldren,
pastoral relations;
Kurt Kinde, Methodist
Youth Fellowship; Mrs.
Ward Schultz, church mem­
orials;
Warren Walter,
scouting and D r . E . J . McClendon, lay leader.
WEST SALEM COUNTRY
CHURCH
7050 Anicle Road, comer of
Tower, ne«r 7 .Mile RdPsator Harry C. Richards
Sunday Worship, II a.m.
Sunday School, 10 a.m.
SALEM FEDERATED
CHURCH
Iv«n £. Speight. Pastor94SI W. Six Mile, Salem
Office FI-9-0674
Sunday Worship. 10 a.m. and
7:30 p.m.
Sunday School. I 1 a.m.
L Y O N
r
WILLOWBROOK
COMMimiTY CHURCH
EvanKelical United Brethren
Meado>vbrook at Ten Mile Road
Rev, A, V. Norris
Phone CR-6-06J6
tjnified Service-10 A.M.
' 6 7
S A L E M
***•*****»»*««•
f
y
M e t h o d i s t s
SALEM CONGREGATIONAL
CHRISTIAN
706 1 Dickenson, SaJ«n
Phone 349-0478
Pastor Fred Neal
Sunday Worship. 10 a.m. afvd
7 p.m.
Prayer Meeting, Thursdoy,
7:30 p.m.
Sundaty School, H a.m
WHITMORE LAKE
METHODIST CHURCH
Robert F. Davis, Pastor
Sunday Worship. 11 H.m.
Sunday School, 9:20 a.m.
m u c h
r
T o
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
620 N. Wnom Rd.. i»iiom
Rev. Robert Warren
Phone MArkel 4-3823
Si»lday Worship 1 1 a.m.
and 7 p.m.
Sunday School 9:45 ^m,
S O U T H
o
CALVARY MISSIONARY BAPTIST
CHURCH
51395 Ten Mile Rd.. Northville
Rev. Ben Moore
Sunday School. 10 a.m.
Sunday Service. 11 and 7 p.m.
Singing Service; Second Sunday
each month at 2:30 p.m.
KINGDOM HALL OF
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES
22024 Pontiac Trail
victor Siolmo. Minister
Sunday Address. 4 p.m.
Walchtower Study. 5: 15 P.m.
W I X O M
H U D S O N
t
FIRST BAPTIST
Robert Beddlnefield
Sunday Worship. 1 1 a.m. and
7:45 p.m Sunday School. 10 u.m.
••»»»«oM0M*«»»
NEW HUDSON
METHODIST CHURCH
56807 Grand River
CE-8-8701
Rev. R, A, Mitchinson
Sunday Worship. 1 I a.nj.
Sunday School. 0:45 «.m.
c
ST. JOSEPH'S CATHOLIC
Fr. Edmund Baltersby. Pastor
Fr. Stanley Milewski. Assistant
Masses ul 7:00. 8:30.
10:00 ond 1 1:15 a.m.
PLYMOUTH SEVENTH DAY
ADVENTIST CHURCH
4295 Napier Rd. just .North of
W.irren Rd.. Plymouth. Mich
Leslie Seal. Pastor
452-s0S4
Saturday W. rship. 9: JO ., m
Sabbath -Sch.iol. 10:45 .. rrREoRCANIZED CHURCH
OF JESUS CHRIST OF
LATTER DAY SAINTS
31670 Schoolcraft at Bradner
Plymouth
Ray Maedel. Pastor
Gerald Fitch. Associate Pastor
Sunday Worihip. 11 a.m.. 7 p.m
Sunday School. 9:45 a.m.
FULL SALVATION UNION
.;iti30 W. Ei|!ht Milt Rd.
James F. Andrews, Gen. Pas.
Saturday Worship, 8 p.m.
Sunday Worship, 3:30 and 8 p.m
Sunday School. 2:30 p.m.
e
FIRST METHODIST CHURCH
225 E. Lake Sl.
Rev, ROBer Merrell, Pastor
Sunday Worship. 10 a.m.
Sunday School. Ii:15 a.m.
CHRIST TEMPLE
8275 UcFadden Street. Salem
Pastor R. L. Sizemore
Sunday Worship. 11:30 a.m. and
8 p.m.
Sunday School. 9:45 «.m.
THE FIRST PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH OF NORTHVILLE
349.09 11 349-2262
Rev. L:oyd 0. Erasure
East Mou. and Church Sts.
Sunday Worship, 9:30 d 11:00
Church School, 9:30 i 11:00
r
IMMANIIF.L Ev. LUTHERAN
CHURCH
330 East Liberty. South Lyon
Pastor Ceo. Tiefel. Jr.
Divine Service. 9 a.m.
Sunday School. 10:15 a.m.
PLYMOUTH CHURCH
OF CHRIST
9)01 Shildon Road
Plymouth. Michlim
Stnday Worship. 10:30 •,m.
and 6 p.m,
SiAday School. 9:30 a.in,
ST. JOHN'S EPISCOPAL
CHURCH
Rev. David T. Davies, Rector
Rev, Robert S. Sh«nlc,Jr. Ase't.
574 Sheldon Rd.. Plymouth
South ot Ann Arbor Trail
Res, 453-5262 office 453-0190
SUNDAY SERVICES AT 7:45. 9,
and II A.M. Nul-iery and Church
School It 9 A.M. and 11 A M
OUR LADY OK VICTORY PARISH
Northville, MichiK«n
KI-9.2621
I*ev. Father John Wittstock
Sunday Masses. 7:00. 8:30 and
10:30 a.m.
12: 15 p.m.
i
FIRST UNITED
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
South Lyon
Nonnan A. Riedesel, Minister
Sunday Worship,ft:30and 11 a.m
Sunday School. 9:45 a.m.
FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST.
SCIENTIST
1100 W. Ann Arllor TralI
Plymouth. Michlian
Sjnday iitorthlp. 10:30 «.m.
Sunday School. 10:30 •.m.
ST. PAl'L-S EVANGELICAL
LUTHERAN CHURCH
Comer Hiith and Elm Streets
Rev. Charles BoerKer. Pastor
Church FI-9-3140
Pnrsonnge 349-1557
Sunday Worship. 8 and I0:.30 a.m.
Sunday School. 9. 15 a.m.
D
ST. JOHN'S EVANGELICAL
LUTHERAN. NORTHFIELD
2945 E. Notlhfield Church Road
Raymond Frey. Pastor. 663-1669
Sunday Worship. 10:30 a.m.
Sunday School, 9:30 a.m.
7:45, 9 and 1 I a.m. Church School
Classes and .Nursery at 9 and I]
L a k e
P L Y M O U T H
FIRST METHODIST CHURCH
109 west Dunlup-NorthvillP
Rev, S.D.Kindr, Pastor
omce FI-9-n-14 Res. FI-9-1143
Worship Services. g:30 i 11:00
Church School 9:45 i 10:45
N E W
h
m
Northville Drug
Manufacturers
C.
Each
Bank
Insurance
Northville
Insurance
Northville
Record
O
G
R
A
M
N
o
.
1
3
T O
9
A g e n c y
C o .
National
Harold B l o o m
R
t i m e
lutely
Free
#139.
G e t
y o u visit
a
Bonus
o u r store
Bingo
Prize
y o u will
Slip
receive
m a r k e d
abso­
Program
A g e n c y
A g e n c y
playing.
(C)
Copyriflhf
your
Start
W . J . .leffery
N e w
winning.
1964—All
G a m e
N o
Book
Purchase
Righij Reserved
Strotcflic
this
week.
Start
I N
Required.
Merchandising,
90
nooo
Pork A v e . ,
N.Y.C.
C A S H
*
P a g e 4-B
T h u r s d a y , September Z i i ,
T H E N O R T H V I L L E R E C O R D - N O V I NEWS
lypo
Thursday, September 2 2 , 1966
O f f i c i a l
T
o
w
n
s
h
P r o c e e d i n g s :
i
p
N o r t h v i l l e
2. Letter and Resolution - Wayne
County RoadCommisslon- advising that
Clement road between Main Street and
Seven Mile road isherebvdesign.itedas
a through highway at the entrance to
which vehicle traffic un intersectinp;
highways is requirpd by law to .stope.xcept at Main strcetandSevenMileroad;
and that easlbound traffic on Main street
shall stop at Clement road.
3. Letter - Donald Robinson- thank­
ing the Township board for their dona­
tion of the out-of-use meeting table.
Old Business:
1. Annexation of the Moraine Elemen­
tary School property to City of North­
ville. Laid on the table for future
consideration.
2. Agreement with Township of Ply­
mouth re: Five Mile Plymouth Elemen­
tary School Sewer.
Supervisor Merriam briefed the
board on past action, stating that nowit
appears that the Bond Council would not
approve the bonds of the Plymouth
School district until the Northville Town­
ship board enter into an agreement with
Plymouth Township Board that they take
entire charge of the school sewer. He
further advised that M r . Ashton had
contacted the PlymouthTownshipattorney and he expected that Plymouth
township would soon have an agreement
ready for the Northvllle Township
Board's approval. Until it was received,
no action could be taken.
New Business:
1. Request - Northville Coach line.
Letters from the Northville Coach
Line and the Northville State Hospital
addressed to the board, were ready by
the clerk.
Supervisor Merriam Informed the
board that M r . A . Schiller, owner of the
Northville Coach Line, was to have at­
tended the board meeting with more
facts but was not there. A great deal of
discussion followed regarding possible
subsidizing, whether theD.S.R. had been
approached since they now run buses to
Livonia Mall and Plymouth. It was de­
cided that M r . Schiller should be con­
tacted and asked to furnish more documiintary material such as dailypickups
at what points, number of passengers,
rates charged, etc.
2. Request - Northvllle Board of
Education to extend lease on Old Library
building.
Supervisor Merriam explained that
Northville Township were part owners of
the Old LibraryBuilding.thattheSchool
Board had been given a two year lease
with the understanding that they would
make all improvements, take care of
all maintenance and Insurance with no
rental charge and were now asking for
a renewal of their lease for a year or
two.
It was decided that the School Board
Attorney should submit a lease for the
Township Board's review.
Trustee Baldwin moved, supported
by Tellam, that the lease agreement
with the Northville School Board on the
Old Library building be extended for a
period of one year on the same terms
Nortliville Tounshii) hall, Tiipsday,
September C, iOGG, nif-etin!- rallied to
order at 7:33 p.m.
Members present: R. D. Morriaiii,
Supervisor, Marsueritp N . VminR, Clerl;,
Alex M . Lawrence, TrDasurc-r, Bernard
W. Baldwin, Triisteo.
Members absent: .lanios H. Tellam
trustee - joined mw-tins at 8:30 p.m.
Consultants: John .^shfnn. Township
Attorney, L . W. Moslier-, Town.ship En­
gineer. Visitors: Jack Hoffman, North­
ville Record, Thom;is Armstrong, E l ­
eanor Hammond, Frank Arlen, Ricliard
Mitchell, Ron Nisun, Leon Bonner,
James D. Howarth.
No questions or corrections, min­
utes of the Township Board meeting of
August 3, 1966 were approved as writ­
ten.
Treasurer's report was read - the
foilowing recommendations for invest­
ments were presented by Treasurer
Lawrence.
1. Purchase a C . of D. intheamunt
of $5,000 with funds in Account «535010327 Special Assessment W - l in the
nami? of the township of Northville assigned to the Bond Account.
2. Return to the General Fund the
.$3,000 loan to the Water & Sewer Com­
mission and invest in a $5,000 C. of D.
in the name of the Township of North­
ville and placed in the Fire Prevention
Fund.
3. Purchase a $10,000 G. of D. out
of the General Fund in the name of the
township of Northville and place in the
Capital imiirovement Revolving Fund.
Lawrence moved, supported by Bald­
win, that recommendation «1 be ac­
cepted Motion carried unanimously.
Trustee Baldwin suggested that any
investment of Water & Sewer Commis­
sion monies should be done only upon
recommendation of the Water & Sewer
Commissioners. Agreed. No action
taken.
Clerk Young moved, supported by
Lawrence, that recommendation *3 be
accepted. Motion carried unanimously.
Office receipts for August 1966 and
bills payable were reviewed. After due
consideration, Lawrence moved, sup­
ported by Baldwin that the bills as list­
ed be paid.Motioncarriedunanlraously.
Building Inspector's report for A u ­
gust 1966 was reviewed and accepted.
Planning Commission minutes of Au­
gust 16 and August 30, 1956 were
brought under discussion. Following i s
quote from minutes.
Item 2. Request by Arthur Jahn for
land f i l l . " M r . Stromberg moved to grant
M r . Arthur Jahn permission to proceed
with the land fill upon proper application
to the township lxiard. This fill should
be according to the Land F i l l Ordinance
and the drawing submitted. Said permit
to be issued for solid fill only. We also
recommend to the township board to
consider a clause in the permit, to pro­
tect the township, since the land imme­
diately to the North will be considerably
lower after the f i l l . Drafting of the
permit be referred to the Township
•
• • • •
Attorney. Supported by Bathey. Motion
carried unanimously."
C i t y
C
It was decided that residents living
to the north of this proposed fill should
The regular meeting of the North­
be notified by mail of the proposed
ville City Council was called to order
permit.
by Mayor Allen at 8:03 p.m. at the
Laiwence moved that the township
Northville City hall on Tuesday, Sep­
board instruct the township attorney to
tember 6, 1966.
draft a permit allowing land fill on the
Present: Allen, Black, Carlson and
Arthur Jahn property In keeping with
Kester. Absent: Canterbury.
recommendations of the Planning Com­
Minutes of the regular meeting of
mission; said permit not to be effec­
August 15, 1966 and special meeting of
tive until passed upon by the Township
August 29, 1966 were approved. Coun­
Board at their next special or regular
cilman Kester stated that he hoped that
meeting. Baldwin seconded. Motion car­
Benlecke and Krue would be soon com­
ried unanimously.
pleting the clean-up work on their prop­
Item 3. Glen Meadows Subdivision erty as mentioned in August 29th min­
Earle Mcintosh. After review of past
utes.
procedures by Trustee Baldwin, L . W.
Moved by Kester, supportedby C a r l ­
Mosher and John Ashton, Supervisor
son that bills in the following amounts
Merriam stated he would entertain a
be paid:
motion to either accept or reject the
General
$22,937.46
adoption of the recommendation of the
Water
2,575.32
Planning Commission.
Unanimously carried.
Lawrence moved that the township
Police report for August, 1966 was
board accept the recommendation of the
received.
planning commission. To wit, "Werec­
Communications:
ommend to the township board, that in
Letter from Chris Winkler, mayor
accordance with the letter dated August
of Northville High School Student Coun­
29, 1966, from M r . Edward Draugelis,
c i l , asking permission for teenagers to
Northville township attorney, whichadsolicit for St. Jude's Leukemia Re­
vised that the platplansubmittedbyMr.
search Center (Alsac). After consid­
Mcintosh be reviewed under the previous
erable discussion, permission denied.
ordinance which was in effect at the
M r . Winkler asked if there was anarea
time ot the preliminary plat submitted.
that Council might suggest in which the
Such approval should be conditioned
students could participate. Councilman
upon the proper filling in accordance
Kester suggested they contact the United
with the prints previously submitted to
Foundation.
our engineer - and that further an ade­
Clerk read a communication from
quate performance bond should be ar­
Greater Michigan Foundation, Lansing,
ranged with M r . Mcintosh to guarantee
stating the dates for 1967 Michigan
that such filling shall be completed
Week as May 21-27.
within one year from date of approval of
Communication from Russell E . Har­
the performance bond.'' In addition that
rison, Wayne County Road Commission,
suitable engineering data be submitted
asking that the City of Northville agree
and arrangements for a proper perfor­
to participate in the cost of a signal
mance Bond be completed within 90
Installation to the extent of 75fc (esti­
days. In event that these' terms are
mated cost of $2,550 to city); with
not complied with, the provisions of
County Board being asked to partici­
the current Ordinance will then apply.
pate in cost of installation to the extent
Trustee Baldwin seconded. Motion car­
of 25^ti ($850) and to bear subsequent
ried unanimously.
cost of signal maintenance; city to
Trustee James H . Tellam joined the
bear electric energy charges subse­
meeting at this time.
quent to Installation, approximately
Appeal Board minutes of August 8
$19.58 per month. Mayor Allen recom­
and August 29, 1966 were accepted as
mended that the city manager bring back
submitted.
additional information regarding pro­
Correspondence:
posed signal light.
1. Letters - Liquor Control Com­
City manager asked that council set
mission advising that Stanley F . Soak
a date for a special meeting for book­
Was asking for a full year Class " C "
keeper and M r . Hoffman, city' audit­
license to be locatrdinNorlhvilletown­
ing firm to confer (at request of M r .
ship. Board determination - No action
Hoffman). This meeting designated as
would be taken until M r . Sonk advised
Monday, September 26, 1966, 8:00 p.m.
the Board of his plans.
at city hall.
C o u n c i l ,
and conditions as presently. Motion
carried unanimously.
3. Award Contract - No. S-2 Sewer
Installation contract.
The G. i K. Stafford Construction
company bid was reviewed. Decision
reached - their bid could not be consid­
ered since it was improperly executed
and not signed.
When referred to, M r . Mosher recthat the township board
omm.9nded
award the contract to the Don Gargaro
company. He did not think the town­
ship would get a better price on new
bids due to the increase In labor wage
which would probably increase the con­
tractors net costs by $1.25 an hour. Ad­
ditionally, when detailed plans were
prepared the Wajne County Road Com­
mission dictated that the sewer be lo­
cated 7 feet from the edge of pavement
instead of at 17 feet as anticipated In
preliminary plans. This considerably
Increases the hazards from traffic and
consequently the contractor's costs.
The change also introduced the addi­
tional work of removing reconstructing
existing 12-inch storm sewer and man­
hole. The same change produced a long
crossing of the existing gas main. Con­
sumers Power Companyhas supplied an
estimate of $700 for removing and re­
storing approximately 120 linear feet
of gas main to facilitate the contractor's
operations.
The Water & Sewer Commissionhave
recommended that the Don Gargaro bid
be approved.
Trustee Tellam moved, supported by
Lawrence, that the Northvllle township
board award the contract No. S-2 to the
Don Gargaro company at the figure
quoted and direct M r . L . W. Mosher,
township engineer, to inform the Don
Gargaro company. Motion carried unan­
imously.
4. Petition - Edward L . Grieger Special Assessment Sewer Installation.
General discussion followed regard­
ing the properties set forth in the pe­
tition. There was question of why a l l
private properties in the area were
not included in the petition. It was de­
cided that this matter shouldbe checked.
Trustee Tellam, supportedby Trus­
tee Baldwin, moved to adopt Resolution
#66-23 Sewer Installation ResoluUon
No. 1 Motion carried unanimously.
Trustee Tellam moved, supported
by Trustee Baldwin, that the Township
Engineer also consider including a l l
of the private property directly south
of the described property in Resolution
#66-23. Motion carried unanimously.
5. Garbage i Rubbish Ordinance.
Supervisor Merriam brought under
discussion a local Garbage &. Rubbish
Ordinance saying that the Wayne County
Board of Health would like the Township
to have a local ordinance so that a s e s
developing in the Township could be tak­
en to a local court instead of the county
having to take them to Circuit Court.
No action taken.
6. Schoolcraft College request for
use of Township Voting Machines.
•
•
•
•
•
•
o u n c i l
Mayor asked that regular order of
agenda be changed as M r s . Zayti was
present representing Northville Downs.
City Manager Ollendorff explained
that neither M r . Carlo or the city
could agree whether city pays for chief
and three regular policemen. Mrs. Zay­
t i was present and explained that the
Northville Downs was willing to pay
for chief and three regular police; and
city should pay for anything over and
above that. The agreement is to be
written this way and agreement to be
reviewed each year.
City manager reported that firms
previously indicating interest in 196667 garbage-rubbish collection contract
have indicated they are not presently
interested. After discussion regarding
the list of commercial pick-ups and
prices for same submitted by M r .
Brooks for $12,000for residential pick­
ups and prices for same submitted by
M r . Brooks, it was moved by Black,
supported by Carlson to accept bid of
M r . Brooks for $12,000 for residen­
tial (one pick-up) contract and contract
for commercial pick-ups as discussed
by M r . Brooks and city manager; city
manager to prepare contract and pre­
sent to council and then to M r . Brooks.
Unanimously carried.
There will be a work session on
September 7, 7:30 p.m. at which time
Council will go over plans for Citizens'
Advisory
committee
organizational
meeting.
The proposed Subdivision Ordinance
will also be studied on September 7,
1966.
Housing Code, as proposed, to be
studied at a future meeting.
City Attorney Ogllvie explained the
NIMLO association (membership for
him representing City of Northvllle $67.50) and requested permission to
attend their annual conference at Que­
bec City in October, 1966. Moved by
Kester supported by Carlson that above
request be granted and also approval
of NIMLO membership for cityattorney
Ogilvle. Unanimously carried.
The city manager made a report
on the current status of Detroit water,
Randolph street, Novi sewer. North
Center street sidewalks.
There being no further business
the meeting was adjournedat lO:40p.m.
Respectfully sublnltted
Martha M . Milne
City Clerk
T o w n s h i p ,
Special meeting of the Board of
Education, Northville Public Schools
held on Monday, August 12, 1966, 7:30
p.m. in the Administration building at
107 S. Wing street.
Members present: Becker, John­
ston, Cook, Lyon, Froelich. Members
absent: Kipfer and Lawrence.
Motion by Lyon, supportedby Johns­
ton and unanimously carried that M r .
Fred Holdsworth be elected Principal
of the High School at an annual salary
of $14,000.
Motion by Lyon, supported by Cook
and unanimously carried that the ap­
pointment of Joyce Rood as a High
school counselor be confirmed with
salary according to existing salary
schedule.
Meeting adjourned:
Stanley Johnston, Sec.
Regular meeting of the board of
education held on Monday, August 8,
1966, 7:30 p.m. In the Administrative
building at 107 S. Wing street.
Members present: Becker, Johns­
ton, Lawrence, Froelich, and Superin­
tendent Alexander Nelson. Members
absent: Cook and Kipfer.
The minutes of Special meeting July
5, Regular meeting July 11 and Special
meeting July 25 were unanimously ap­
proved as read on motion by member
Johnston, supported by member Law. rence.
Moved by member Lyon, supported
by member Lawrence and unanimously
carried that 1966-67 teaching contracts
for Mary Brown, Susan Hughes be
approved.
Motion by member Froelich, sup­
portedby member Lyonand unanimous­
ly carried that the B i l l Warrants and
Payroll be approvedasaudited;General
Fund $293,356.86.
Bids for gasoline; fuel oil and school
lunch milk were opened and tabulated.
Motion by member Lawrence, support­
ed by Member Froelich and unanimous­
ly carried that the gasoline bid of .1229
per gallon and chassis lubricant bid
of .1025 per pound be awarded to Sin­
clair Oil Company. Motion by Lawrence,
supported by Froelich and unanimously
carried that the bid of .10 per gallon
for #2 Fuel oil and .0875 per gallon
for #5 oil be awarded to Gulf Oil com­
pany. Motion by Johnston, supported by
Froelich and unanimously carried that
the bid of .055 for white milk per 1/2
pint and .06 for chocolate milk per 1/2
pint be awarded to Ira Wilson.
Bids for black topping playground
areas of each school were opened. The
bid of $24,664 from Northvllle Paving
Company was accepted.
Motion by member Lawrence, sup­
ported by member Johnston and unani­
mously carried that the total tax levy
of $1,196,093.75 be authorized for the
school district.
M r . Glen Diebert was appointed by
the President to study the crossing
needs at the Moraine Elementary school
site.
Motion by Johnston, supported by
Froelich and unanimously carried con­
firming the appointment of M r . Robert
Stafford as the principal of the A m e r man Elementary school.
A discussion of the proposed devel­
opment at the 6 Mile-Bradner Road was
next discussed.
M r . Blake Couse, chairman of the
board of trustees of the P r e ^ y t e r i a n
church Informed the board of education
that the classroom facilities of the
church school would be made avail­
able to the district rent free.
Meeting adjourned:
Stanley Johnston, Sec.
Special meeting of the board of ed­
ucation of Northville Public schools,
held on Monday, August 29, 7:30 p.m,
in the Community Center at 405 W.
Main street.
Members present: Becker, Cook,
Johnston, Kipfer, Lawrence, Lyon,
Froelich.
Bids for equipment/furniture for
the Moraine Elementary school were
opened and tabulated. Moved by Kipfer,
supported by. Cook and unanimously
carried that the bids be turned over to
the Administration for study and rec­
ommendations.
Motion by Froelich, supported by
Cook and unanimously carried that the
proposition to initiate an in-service
training program for administrators
be tabled pending further study. Motion
by Froelich, supported by Cook and
unanimously carried moving the fol­
lowing resolution:
RESOLUTION: Regular
meeting
place for Board of Education
WHEREAS: The citizens and pa­
trons of the Northvllle Public Schools,
School District have demonstrated an
Interest In attending meetings of the
o
a
r
d
o f
E
d
u
c
a
t
i
Board of Education; and
WHEREAS: Conference Room of the
Board of Education located In the
basement of the District's Board of
Education offices, i s small and lacking
i n adequate space; and
WHEREAS: The Board of Education
wishes to encourage continued attend­
ance by interested citizens and patrons
of the school district; and
NOW, THEREFORE RESOLVE: That
the regular meeting of the Board of
Education of the Northvllle Public
Schools, School District, scheduled for
the second Monday of each month at 7:30
p.m. in the Board Conference Room
of the B oard of Education Administrative
office, 107 S. Wing street, be moved to
Library, Junior High School, 405 W.
Main street. Vote: Yeas, 7; Nay 0,
carried.
Motion by Cook, supportedby Kipfer
and unanimously carried that the fol­
lowing teacher appointments be con­
firmed and contracts according to exist­
ing salary schedule authorized: Oak­
ley Noblit, and Lawrence Rogers.
Superintendent Nelson reported that
a Curriculum Work-Session will be
scheduled for the first Wednesday af­
ternoon of each month during the 196667 school year. The objective will be
to study the total curriculum in terms
of over-all improvements and to Im­
prove the continuity of curriculum both
vertically and horizontally.
Motion by Cook, supportedby Kipfer
and unanimously carried that the Stu­
dent Insurance Program as presented
by Mutual of Omaha be adopted for the
1966-67 school year.
Motion by Kipfer, supported by Froe­
l i c h and unanimously carried that the
Superintendent be authorized to dele­
gate an administrator to attend the
National Conference of the Association
of School Business Officials.
Motion by member Lawrence, sup­
ported by memberJotihstbnadoptlngthe
following resolution:
RESOLUTION: Ratification of P r o ­
fessional
Agreement
between
the
Northvllle Teachers' Association and
the Northville Public Schools Board of
Education.
WHEREAS: A professional negotia­
tion agreement covering classroom
teachers has been proposed pursuant
to the directives of the Board of Edu­
cation, between the Board of Education
and the Northville Teachers' Associa­
tion, the duly designated exclusive bar­
gaining agent of the classroom teachers,
and now completed; and
WHEREAS: The Superintendent of
Schools has submitted to the Board of
Education a document contalninga draft
agreement Incorporating (this agree­
ment does not constitute all) terms and
conditions of employment arrived at as a
result of negotiations with such collec­
tive bargaining, and such document be ing thirty (30) pages in length; and
WHEREAS: The Northville Teach­
e r s ' Association ratified the agree­
ment; and
WHEREAS: Such agreement i s to be
effective from the first day of July 196S
through the last day of June 1967, and
the Superintendent of Schools wishes
to proceed for such period in the man­
agement and operation of the school
district in accordance with the terms
thereof; now therefore, be It
RESOLVED: That the Board of E d ­
ucation hereby formally approves the
above-mentioned agreement and the ad­
ditional matters contained In the docu­
ment and authorizes the President, In
the name of the Board of Education to
execute the agreement; and be it further
RESOLVED: That the Board of E d ­
ucation hereby adopts as Its policy for
the operation and conduct of the North­
ville Public Schools, School District for
the period July 1, 1966 to June 30, 1967,
the terms and conditions of .saldagreement; and be It further
RESOLVED: That the Board of E d ­
ucation hereby authorizes the Superin­
tendent of schools to submit such
amendments to bylaws and rules and
regulations as may be necessary to
accomplish the objectives of this reso­
lution; and be it further
RESOLVED: That the Board of E d ­
ucation hereby suspends for the period
July 1, 1966 through June 30, 1967, any
inconsistent rules, regulations or bylaw
provisions to the extent necessary to
achieve the objectives of this resolution;
and be it further
RESOLVED: That the Secretary file
with the State Department of EducaUon
certified copies of this resolution to­
gether with the documont referred to
above. Vote: Yeas, 7; Nay 0; carried.
Motion by Cook, supported by Lyon
and unanimously carried that a special
Budget Work session be scheduled for
September 7 and further that a Public
Hearing for the budget be scheduledfor
Septemlier 12, 7:30 p.m.
B o a r d
mit as allowed by the township board in
conjunction with their liquor license.
Appointments:
1. Ron Nisun to assist in policing
Local No Hunting Act #1.
There was question oi whether the
township board could legally appoint a
Livonia Constable fo police Northville
township during the hunting season, with
following action being taken.
Trustee Baldwin moved that John
Ashton check the legality of a Livonia
Constable to act as constable in North­
ville township and specifically enforce
Voting Machines to the college for
their October student election. Motion
carried unanimously.
7. Dun Rovin Golf Club Dance per­
mit.
Supervisor Merriam stated that it
had been brought to his attention that
Dun Rovin Golf club was using their
dance permit for other than private
parties and banquets and he was of the
opinion that the board should give this
matter some consideration.
After discussion, the Supervisor
was directed to write Dun Rovin, advis­
ing them of their agreement in connec­
tion with provisions of their dance per­
Clerk Young explained that she had
a call from a M r . Alfred Dumouchelle
asking that the college be allowed to
rent two of the Township voting ma­
chines and have them moved to the
college for a student election to beheld
the first part of October.
The fact that voting machines are
very expensive, delicate machines and
weighing 1200 pounds each, are hard to
move, and the fact that the township
insurance would not cover them if moved.
Treasurer Lawrence moved, supported
by Trustee Tellam, that the Northville
township board deny Schoolcraft College
their request to move two Township
B
S c h o o l
(Continued on Page 6)
o
n
Superintendent Nelson presented a
budget analysis of the several construc­
tion projects. The board scheduled a
Special meeting for September 19 to
review with the Architects the actual
status of construction and review pro­
jection for the future.
Motion by Cook, supported by Kipfer
and unanimously carried that the School
Bus Note due September 1, 1966 as
second payment of $3669.44 plus inter­
est of $260.02 and the final payment
of Loan from State A i d in amount of
$125,000 plus interest of $3,832.53 be
allowed and paid.
Motion by Lawrence, supported by '
Johnston and unanimously carried that
State Bond Loan Fund resolution be
adopted for application of not to exceed
$56,700.
(1) Resolved to make a supplement­
al application for a loan from the School
Bond Loan Fund in the amount describ­
ed in this application to assist the D i s ­
trict in meeting the payment of principal
and/or interest on the qualified bonds
of the District, such appliatlon being
supplemental to the Preliminary Loan
Application dated August 31, 1966.
(2) Agreed that in the event a loan
Is obtained from the School Bond Loan
Fund to levy a tax of at least 7 mills
on the state equalized valuation of the
District each year until such loan i s
repaid in full to the State of Michigan.
(3) Read thlsappUcatlonandapproved a l l ;>tatements and repi^fisentation
contained herein as true to the best
knowledge and belief of said Board.
(4) Authorized the Secretary of the
Board of Education to s l g n t h l s a p p l l a tion and submit same to the Superinten­
dent of Public Instructlonfor his review
and approval.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have here­
unto set my hand this 29th day of A u ­
gust, 1966.
Vote: Yeas 7; Nay 0; carried.
Motion by Froelich, supported by
Cook and unanimously carried moving
the following resolution be adopted:
RESOLUTION: Bus purchase
WHEREAS: This school dlstrlctfurnlshed transportation to its pupils; and
WHEREAS: it i s deemed advisable
by this Board of Education that this
School District purchase one number
of school buses from Rathburn Chevrolet
Sales upon Htle retaining contract In
form annexed hereto as "Exhibit A "
and to pay therefor In accordance with
the following statement of transaction:
Statement of Transaction
Total Cash Purchase Price $6925.57
Tax
Total
(five equal payments of $1385.11)
Unpaid Balance
$6925.57
Cash Down Payment
Deferred Balance
$6925.57
Plus 4% per annum
simple interest
WHEREAS: The useful life of the
buses i s estimated at 5 years; and
WHEREAS: it i s deemed advisable
that School District retire the obliga­
tion of said title - retaining contractby
annual repayments as follows:
March 1, 1967
$1385.11
March l , 1968
$1385.11
March 1, 1969
$1385.11
March 1, 1970
$1385.11
March 1,1971
$1385.13
and to pay in addition thereto interest
at the rate of four (4) percent (4%)
per annum.
NOW, T H E R E F O R E : resolvedby the
Board of Education of said School Dis­
trict as follows:
1. That thlsSchoolDIstrlctpurchase
from Rathburn Chevrolet Sales of North­
vllle, Michigan the following described
school buses:
Chevrolet School Bus, #327 Motor,
Serial Number S6926A171677 complete
with Thomas School Bus Body, 66 pass­
enger capacity.
paying therefor the cash price of
$6925.57 Dollars at a cash down pay­
ment In the amount of none Dollars and
a deferred balance of $6925.57 and in
addition thereto interest at the rate of
Four percent (iTc) per annum on the
principal unpaid balance from time to
time outstanding.
2. That the President and Secretary
of the School District be and they are
hereby authorized and directed to exe­
cute said title-retaining contract for and
on behalf of the School District and that
upon execution thereof and purchase and
delivery of the above described school
buses there under, the same shall be
delivered to the above named seller.
3. That the Secretary of this School
District be and he is hereby authorized
and directed to deliver a certified copy of
this resolution to the above named seller
on behalf of this School District.
Vote: Yeas 7; Nay 0; Carried.
Meeting adjourned.
Stanley Johnston. Secretary
D a v e
VALUABLE
R y d e r
E n t e r s
P a g e 5-B
T H E N O R T H V I L L E R E C O R D - N O V I NEWS
TOP
D O U B L E A
S T A M P S
VALUE
D . O .
W E D . , S E P T . 21 T H R U
SAT. SEPT. 24
W I T H
C O U P O N A T
I
I
David Ryder of 412 Ran­
dolph the son of Mr. and
M r s . Earl Ryder, enrolled
for the first year of study at
the College of Osteopathic
Medicine and Surgery, Des
Moines, Iowa on Tuesday,
September 6.
The college i s one of five
osteopathic medical schools
in the United States offer­
ing afour-Vear course lead­
ing to the Doctor of Osteo­
pathy degree.
Ryder completedhlspreprofessional training at
Eastern Michigan universi­
ty, Ypsilantl, where he re­
ceived the B.S. degree in
Special Education before en­
rolling at the College of
Osteopathic Medicine and
Surgery.
SHANK
A
M
e
a
OR
HALF
A
M
S
6 9
CENTER
C U T
RIB
U.S. CHOICE
PORK
CHOPS
t
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7
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BEEF
RIB
S T E A K
INCH
CUT
8
9
U.S.
.
CHOICE
T E N D E R A Y
LOIN
CHOPS
8 9 ( t L B
R
r
HYGRADE'S
Schoolcraft College Even­
ing Choir will begin re­
hearsals for the 1966-67
season at 7:30 p.m., Wed­
nesday, September 28, in
Room F-3lO In the Forum,
Wayne Dunlap, director,
has announced.
The choir i s open to a l l .
persons in the college dis­
trict. New members will be
auditioned, Dunlap said.
Choir membership require­
ments include sight reading
ability, previous choral ex­
perience and regular re­
hearsal attendance.
Plans for the year i n ­
clude a performance of
Christmas cantatas by Buxtehude and Plnkham and a
major choral work, yet to be
named, in the ^ r i n g . A l l
choral performances are
accompanied by orchestra.
AUen Shaffer, of the School­
craft music faculty. Is choir
accompanist and assistant
director.
Arrangements for audi­
tions may be made at the
first rehearsal or by con­
tacting" elthisr Duiilap or
Shaffer at 591-6400, exten­
sion 317.
SERVE
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"Yojimbo,'' an actionpacked epic of Japanese
samurai violenceInthepattern of an American Wes­
tern, will be the second In
the Schoolcraft College fall
film series.
The movie, free to the pub­
lic, will be shown at 2 p.m.
and 8 p.m., in the amphi­
theater In the Forum on
campus on Friday, Septem­
ber 23.
Toshlro Mlfune, who won
the Venice Best Actor award
for his performance, por­
trays an unemployed sa­
murai whose services are
available to the highest bid­
der, in a small town divided
Into two factions, he first
serves one side, then the
other. Captured and tortur­
ed for his betrayal, heprovokes amass battleln which
everyone i s annihilated.
PURCHASE
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Valid thru Sun.. Sopt. 25, 1966.
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WITH THIS COUPON ON
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CLUBi
• •
SLICED L U N C H E O N
MEAT OR WIENERS
*
V a l i d t h r u S u n . . S e p t . 2 5 , 1966
at K r o g e r D e f . i East. Mieh.
•.
•
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'
l
T h u r s d a y , September 2 2 , 1966
T H E N O R T H V I L L E R E C O R D - N O V I NEWS
Poge 6-B
Page 7-B
T H E N O R T H V I L L E R E C O R D - N O V I NEWS
T h u r s d a y , September 2 2 , 1966
M
i
c
h
i
g
a
n
M
i
r
r
o
r
FOR
X O V I
M r s . Henderson w i l l be owoy for
a few w e e k s .
N o v i area r e s i ­
dents ore a s k e d
Edward
to c a l l M r s . .
Rix,-Mrs.
Henderson's
d a u g h t e r - w i t h their news while
she i s absent.
Telephone G L - 3 -
5178.
•
•
•
By M r s . H. D. Henderson
Members of tiie Martin Wliiacker
family, after spending severai weeks
this summer at their Duck Lake cot­
tage, have returned to their home on
Taft road. Daughter Carla celebrated
her fourth birthday September IS at a
party on Saturday with six of her play­
mates. September 14 M r . and Mrs. Wli­
iacker celebrated their 20th wedding
anniversary.
M r . and Mrs. Owen Bellenger and
daughter, Deanna attendedapre-nuptlal
shower honoring Miss Carol Kushnerat
Royal Oak on Sunday. Miss Kushner
will become the bride of Willard B e l ­
lenger, son of the Owen Bellengers,
on October 29.
After two months of vacation with
her parents, M r . and Mrs. George Webb
M r s . CarlGreenlee and children, David,
Janice and Stacey have returned to
their home at San Jose, California.
Rickey White, son of the David
Whites of Novi road, left for the ser­
vice at Fort Knox, Kentucky last week
Tuesday. Ricky is a graduate from
Northvllle high school and was em­
ployed at the Marathon Gas station on
Novi road.
M r . and M r s . Kenneth Webb spent
this past weekend at Niagara Falls.
U s t year Tom Bingham attended
college at Northern but for his second
year he chose the University of A r i ­
zona where he will major in architec­
ture. Tom i s the son of M r . and M r s .
Richard Bingham of Willowbrook.
Since March M r . and M r s . Roy
Schram have spent most of their time
at their cottage near Cadillac. During
the summer several of their grandchil­
dren were with them.
Mrs. Russell Race, M r s . Fred Mandllk and M r s . John Klaserner attended
the Blue Star Mothers Past Presidents
Club at Port Huron on Tuesday.
M r s . Florence Lanning of Howell,
was the house guest of her sister, M r s .
Marie LaFond for a few days last week.
A farewell dinner honored Mark
LaFond at the home of his parents,
M r . and M r s . Cecil LaFond one even­
ing last week. He left on Friday to
enroll at Houghton college for a course
In engineering.
There v,ii! be a rummage sale in the
Novi community building September 29
and 30. This is ^ n s o r e d by the Novi
Mother's Club for band.
M r . Wirt Lee who has been visiting
relatives in Michigan for the past
month, left Saturday evening by plane
for his home in Winter Park, Florida.
Victor Rix, of Falls Church, Virginla spent a few daysf last week with his
mother, M r s . H. D. Henderson. Friday
evening they were the dinner guests of
M r s . Henderson's niece and family, the
Kenneth Penders at Kendalwood. Satur­
day evening they had a family get to­
gether at the Henderson home on Fonda
street.
WILLOWBROOK COMMUNITY NEWS
Friends of M r s . Arnold Bell will
be glad to know that she i s back home
again after a sojourn i n the b o ^ l t a i ,
M r . and M r s . E r r o l Myers were
the guests of M r . and M r s . Raymond
Brown at their Lakeland cottage on
Sunday.
The Novi Pin Pointers bowling
team has started to bowl. September 21
was the deadline for anyone to join the
team. They hope to have at least 30 on
the team.
M r . Harold Ackley, village manager
and M r . Duane Branch, water superin­
tendent were in attendance to answer
questions regarding the water and sewer
project in Willowbrook.
The election of new officers and
board of directors was also held.
M r . and M r s . William Brinker of
Mills street are the parents of a son
Daniel Tye, born September 12 at St.
Mary's Hospital. He weighed ten and one
half pounds. The Brinkers have two
other sons Mark 3 i n November and
Spencer 2 years old. The paternal
grandparents are M r . and M r s . Vincent
Brinker of Reed City and the maternal
grandparents are M r . afid M r s . Alex
Browne of Detroit.
NOVI REBEKAH LODGE
Vlsitotion WlU be held at Novi Re­
bekah Lodge on Thursday, September
22 (tonight). A U tllose not contacted
please bring a salad.
A bazaar and bake sale will be
held from 11 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. at the
Novi Community Hall and turkey sup­
per from 5:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m on
Saturday, October I.
The Rebekah Independent club will
meet on Monday October 3, at the hall.
H I G H L I G H T S
can Inland Mission. They will be enter­
ing into a ministry of Christian Educa­
tion and youth of the Inland Africa
church. They expect to train teachers
and church leaders so that they may
reach their own through Sunday school,
vacation Bible school and camping pro­
grams.
A l l young people are reminded of
the voice of Christian Youth rally at
the Masonic Temple on Saturday night,
September 24. Guest speaker will be
Bob Stone. In addition there will be
special music.
The Junior High group went to
Northville to play miniature golf at
the Whistle Stop and then went to the
home of the Lewis Dlems on LeBost
for a barbeque. It was also Dennis
Dlem's birthday and they helped him
celebrate. Those furnishing transpor­
tation were their sponsors Ron and
Piease bring a sandwich. Lillian Byrd
and Flossie Eno hostesses.
We are selling Bensons' Old Home
Fruit cakes for Christmas with pro­
ceeds going to the Medical Center of
the Oddfellows Old Peoples Home at
Jackson.
NOVI METHODIST CHURCH
The Commission on Christian Educa­
tion week will begin Sunday, Septem­
ber 25 With dedication of the Sunday
school teachers.
A dinner honoring the Sunday school
workers will be held Thursday evening,
September 29 at the church. Miss Edith
Butfett, district educational director,
will be the speaker.
The new hymnals are now at tile
church and will be used in the services.
Sunday, September 18 both the Wes­
ley and A(tult choirs sang at the Sunday
morning service.
E . U . B . WILLOWBROOK
COMMUNITY CHURCH
Next Friday, September 23 the WSWS
of the Willowbrook church will serve
the third annual Sunday School workers
banquet for the Trinity E.U.B. church
of Detroit. They will serve fried chicken.
NOVI BAPTIST CHURCH
On September 22 the whole family
Is Invited to go roller skating at Island
Lake. The rink has been reserved for
F i r s t Baptist and 40 are needed to par­
ticipate. Bring your own skates or
rent them. Cost i s 35? for admission
and 35? for skates. Drivers will caU
pastor Clark ahead of time and meet
at the church at 6:30.
The Senior Youth Group met at
the church Sunday evening and elected
officers for the coming year: Dave
Clark, president; Sam Button, vice
president; Fay Quails, secretary. The
group Is for all young people from 10th
through 12th grades.
Three of the young people from the
church, who are attending Detroit Bible
school, have made final plans as to
where they wiU be serving their intern­
ship throughout their senior year. Bob
Taylor wlU be participatingatNorthem
Presbyterian church, Sharon White at a
church near Farmington A Judy Button
will be at the First BapUst church of
Novi. She will be teaching a Sunday
School class, working in church time programs and be Involved In many other
phases of Christian education throughout the church.
Special speakers on Wednesday night
were Roscoe and Rachel Lee who plan to
leave In January 1967 for Kenya, East
Africa as missionaries under the A f r l -
N o r t h v i l l e
B o a r d
T o w n s h i p
M i n u t e s
(Continued from Page 4)
the No HuntlngActandfurtherauthorIze
the township supervisor to make the
appointment for the period of the pheas­
ant season. Trustee Tellam seconded.
Motion carried unanimously.
It was further suggested by Trus­
tee Baldwin that a notice of the No
Hunting Act be publicized in the North­
ville Record.
2. Water & Sewer Commission - 3
year term.
Supervisor Merriam stated that
Frank Arlen's one year term on the
Water & Sewer Commission had ex­
pired, that he was willing to be reap­
pointed for a three year term and he
would appreciate the board's consid­
eration.
Trustee Tellam moved, supported
by Trustee Baldwin, that Frank Arlen
be appointed to a three year term on
the Northville Township Water i Sew­
er Commission. Motion carried unani­
mously.
A l l business on the agenda being
completed. Supervisor Merriam asked
for any questions from visitors
M r . James Howarth said he had two
questions:
1. How soon will the contractor start
constructing the Seven Mile road sewer.
Answer: In about two weeks.
2. Who should he see to obtain a
building permit to build a tool shed?
Answer: M r . Willis,'Township Build­
ing Inspector.
Lawrence moved to ad­
journ the meeting.
Meeting was adjourned at
10:45 p.m.
I r o
Marguerite N . Young,
Clerk
N
A
T
I
O
N
A
Nancy Shaw, M r . and M r s . Diem, M r .
and M r s . Presnell, M r s . Ron Ozark
and M r . and M r s . Leo Jude.
Several of the teachers attended the
Bible school conference at Calvary
Baptist church on Saturday. They heard
speakers such as Rev. G. Talbot, M r s .
F . Kee, Rev. J . Bradford, Dr. Stevenston and D r . Frank Scott. Subjects cov­
ered the entire teaching program of
those working in Sunday school, as well
as sessions on senior citizens, personal
witnessing, counselling and visitation.
NOVI BOY SCOUTS
Over Labor Day, Troop #54 spent two
days and three nightscampingand canoeing on the AuSable River between Mio
and the High Rollway Camp ground. The
following boys were present: J i m WilenuisJr., Lynn Dietrick, Randy Tobias,
Butch Meyers, Lev Tafrallap, Dlcron
Tafralian, T i m Bowman, Andy Bowman,
Tim Bell, Tom Bell, Mark Muenchow,
George Garcia, David Bumann, Mark
Bumann, J i m Wachtel, Ken Cookson,
Richard Slgsbee and George Gombasy.
AduUs: J i m Wilenius Sr., Herb Muen­
chow, Duane Bell, Lou Gombasy, Jerry
wachtel, Harold Slgsbee and Art Slgs­
bee.
Upon arriving at the High RoUway
camp ground, the group was met by the
Tafralian family and the grandparents
of Tim and Tom Bell, M r . and M r s .
Kenneth Cole of Glennle. Highlighting
the day was a shlshkabob supper pre­
pared by M r . and M r s . Tafralian. The
trip consisted of about 55 miles by
river.
Several scouts from Troop #54 at­
tended the Order of. the Arrow at
Camp Agawan, Monday evening.
NOVI MOTHERS CLUB
S
KEN RATHERT
Why
not en/oy
Insurance
(and
C.P.C.U.
fhe
for
Call
your
C i t i z e n s
N o r t h v i l l e
lasordBce
IMC.Ma
M-IW.
Home!
^ r l ^ r a b - ^ r ' s home furnishings
c a n b e
o r
L e g a l
N O T I G N O R E D -
H
O
M
P l a n
t o v i s i t t h e
t h a t ' s
O
N
T
H
d
h o m e
G E A R E D t o
m
m o d e r n
L i v i n g . . . T H E ' ' G A S .
CLASSIFIED
C o m f o r t - C o n d i t i o n e d
H o m e ' '
W h e n you go house hunting, look for the " G a s ComfortConditioned H o m e " - the home that lets you enjoy the carefree life and save money at the same time!
A l l "Gas Comfort-Conditioned Homes" are built to the
high quality standards of the nationally-known Blue Star
Homes. This means that they include a fully-automatic
Gas range with the thermostatically-controlled "burnerwith-a-brain" . . . the dependable Gas water heater that
delivers a constant supply of hot water for a l l household
n e e d s . . . and carefree, thrifty Gas house heating that keeps
your home snug and draft-free a l l winter.
Plus, a new dimension of comfort has been added . . . .
wonderful Gas a i r conditioning that fills every room with
cool, healthful, filtered, circulated a i r a l l summer!
During National Home Month, look for the "Gas Comfort-Conditioned Home" and get a l l the facts on this won­
derful, new way of life!
STATE OF MICHIGAN
Probate Court
County of Wayne
556,703
Estate of FRANK A , WALTER, De­
ceased.
It Is ordered that on October 17,
1966 at 10 a.m. in the Probate Court
room, 1301 Detroit, Michigan, a hearing
be held on the petition of Raymond P .
Heyman, f e c i a l administrator, for a l ­
lowance of his first and final account
and for turning over the balance of said
estate to the administrator with will
annexed:
PubUcation and service shall be
made as provided by statute and Court
rule.
Dated September 7,1966
Ernest C . Boehm,
Judge of Probate
Raymond P . Heyman
18724 Grand River Avenue
Detroit, Michigan
18-20
L E T US B E Y O U R
3
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i t f o r y o u ?
bock lilt Mfl — thtrt'f o l w o y i mom to cemt.
Sura, rmi ton hlil« II - potlpon. ,1 -
Ignon
it — but it won't flO oway. New yau con ocaccompllih this tiring, unpopular lotk foitw
on4 M i i o r wllh o wondofful now S o i Oiytr
/bol', bom dnifMl with Ibo now mkatk hbtia
in mkid. Mony clothoi com. diraet from Ihtw
now irftt,
wriniila-froo oni foody lo woit
Yi«, ladiot. you con tevo yevrtolf. ond
boon a l tiring ironing tge. with o imort now
got dryn. C o l tbo foat, you'll bo glad you did)
Touch"
TO THOSE NEW
MIRACLE FABRICS
George & Norm
Reg. Pharmacists
N O V I
"D R^U "
G ^
43035 Grand R i v e r
A MODERN
C O O K I N G
Novi
Fast-Action
RESIDENTIAL
G
offers i O O l t e m p e r a t u r e s
All
Automatic
A
Water
S
COMMERCIAL
1
Heater
and
w i t h tiie a m a z i n g
IS t h e a n s w e r
"BURNER-WITH-A-BRAIN"
~ ^ r ^
INDUSTRIAL
to t o d a y ' s
WIRING
7
demands for
more
N O
H
O
T
W
at bw
A
T
E
J o t
T o o B i gor T o o
Small
R
cost
0
B
U
Y
N
A
N
D
S
O
A
W
V
E
K I N G
SEE YOUR GAS
APPLIANCE DEALER
g
e
r
B
a
b
s
o
/
'
E L E C T R I C
0
Publlih«if by Conumori Powor Company
During Appliance Dealer's " W a l t z t h r u W a s h d a y S a l e " !
(GET A WORK-SAVING G A S DRYER AT A S P E C I A L INSTALLED PRICE)
-Hllrt2 B N 1 NOVI R O A D
t 4 ^ 2 T S l
v
e
S
t
a
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strange contrast between the old, ornate
doors and chandeliers and the new,
neatly partitioned offices remodeled
in the iast few years for more efficient
use of available space.
o
l
E A R L Y F A L L days of school usually
provide a visible warning signal to
motorists for extra care on streets
where small children might be cross­
ing.
State law requires all traffic to stop
in both directions when a rural school
bus is .'stopped and its flasher lights
are blinking.
On a divided highway, however, only
those cars going in the same direction
as the school bus must be stopped.
Traffic may proceed on the other side
of the dividing median.
The state law does not apply at a l l
in cities or villages. Here i s where the
confusion occurs. Many cities and v i l ­
lages have adopted locai ordinances
requiring traffic to stop, but in the
others traffic is permitted to proceed
normally, with caution of course.
FEW STATE government workers
complain about lack of work, but one man
n
f
l
a
t
i
o
n
F
i
g
h
t
N
e
e
d
s
Y
o
BABSON PARK, Mass., It i s now of­
ficial. President Johnson would like to
see Congress take action to cool off our
overheated economy. He i s worried
about rising prices and believes that
• first steps should be taken before the
elections to prevent runaway inflation.
He also called on the money managers
to ease the "Inequitable burden" of
high interest costs.
In his message to Congress, M r .
Johnson asked for onlya limited amount
of legislation now. Howev ; there was
an Implication that if t-'s first attack on
inflation should p'' ..^c effective, more
recommendatiods for new laws would
be made. This would presumably be
done after the turn of the year.
N O R T H V I L L E
H
e
r
e
a
r
e
t
R E C O R D
h
e
•
n
e
FOLLOW
O
THIS
FOOD
•
DINING
S
u
GUIDE
f
TO
and FUN
ROOM
a
r
a
• COFFEE
t
o
g
a
F
a
r
SHOP
m
s
42050 G r a n d R i v e r - N o v i
(4 M i l e s W e s t
F1-9-9760
of.Farmington)
C O C K T A I L
Open Daily
except
1 1 A . M . - T
L O U N G E
Mondays
$undQys
A.M.
10 A . M .- 10 P J ^ .
Use
O u r
EHTER
OUR
P h e a s a n t
To remove bUsters from
veneers, split the blister
lengthwise with a razor
blade and insert liquid glue
under the raised portion,
using a s t i c k or smaU
brush.
Cover the b r e a k with
several l a y e r s of n e w s ­
papers and place a weight
on it. When glue has set,
r e J T l o v e paper by s o a k i n | it
with olive oU and scraping
lightly with a razor blade.
Then sand the area carefully, starting at the center
and working t o w a r d the
edges. If patched surface is
discolored, t o u c h up with
varnish or sheUac.
u
N O V I
i
W a n t
A d s
n x - r r
before inflation can be licked. A l l of us
will have to give up something to win
UIe fight. Otherwise we will all be burn­
ed by the inflationary fires as they Uck
ever closer to our own particular homes
and Interests.
not fully understood. More than a "bal­
ance" of the national budget, more than
a slowdown in business expansion, more
than a tiny and selective tax rise, more
than a mild restraint on soaring money
and credit supplies ...wiU be necessary
PLEASURE
?
EFFECTIVENESS of the ombudsman
over the years will depend essentially
on citizen use of his services.
First, with Alexander dealing wthin
a single department, citizens must know
the responsibilities of that department.
Secondly, only if Michigan residents
know that Alexander is there to handle
complaints will he be able to function
as intended.
It might develop that citizens, who
usually' can tell friends about many
complaints regarding the government,
do not really have enough problems
with this department to w r r a n t a fulltime person to handle complaints.
The powers within the department
doubt that this is the case. They tend
to think that it vill take time for peo­
ple to become familiar with the exis­
tence, uses and values of Michigan's
first ombudsman.
in Lansing is doing just that.
He is Gordon Alexander, who -ns
named a few months ago to the post of
ombudsman in the Secretary of State's
office. This position, defined largely as
the citizen's spokesman in the depart­
ment, is unique in the U.S., although it
is used in several countries abroad.
Essentially, Alexander holds down
an office, for some months without sec­
retarial assistance, to hear complaints
from private citizens which come within
the Secretary of State's jurisdiction.
At 510,500 a year. It is doubtful
that Michigan's ombudsman i s earning
his keep, although this can hardly be
blamed on him.
He was appointed in July, but Sec­
retary of State James M . Hare didn't
tell anyone about the new post for three
weeks. Even then, the word apparently
didn't get around as well as it might
have.
And after three months, Alexander
has heard from only a handful of citi­
zens. Some of the complaints which
reached him were entirely outside his
department's domain, dealing instead
with the responsibilities of local gov­
ernment or other state units.
n
Furthermore, timing i s most Im­
portant. If the economy i s overheated
- and most economists agree that it is
- any action taken to cutback the demand
pressure on our productive machine
should bring results fairly rapidly. The
President himself pointed out that order
backlogs for machines and equipment
are months behind production right now.
It i s not Ukely that plans already in
operation will be cut back very much
by die suspension of tax relief. Perhaps
the best that can be expected i s that
projections now on the drawing board
wUl be postponed. Thus, the desired
impact on the economy may be a long
way off ... when it i s needed here and
now.
And, as for the requests made of
Congress, the money managers, busi­
nessmen, and labor leaders, it is highly
doubtful that early decisive action can
be expected. It i s the same old story.
Management may hold back on price
hikes... but not if unions keep punching
wage costs ever higher. Labor in turn
points to historically high profits antj
says aiey want theirs too! Congressmen
who are about to go before their voters
are under pressure to "bring home the
bacon." No, human nature is not going
to change just because the Chief Execu­
tive says we must slay the inflation
dragon!
A s far as the Federal Reserve auth­
orities are concerned, we miistnotforget that they are charged by law with
keeping prices from running a w y .
Familr lianing i i igmiwhot lika • w n p n g
"FInlsMai
P H A R M A C I S T S
9
G A S
o
To us It looks very much as tiiough
suspension of the Investment and con­
struction tax reUef - even If promptly
made effective - would be too small
an effort In the face of such a mighty
Inflation wave. It would be like fighting
a big forest fire with a bucket of water.
The outpouring of crefllt which has
been going on for years cannot be halt­
ed by an attack on one small front.
GA$ DRYERS
GIVE A PROFESSIONAL
P E R S O N A L
4
l e t
a
AND
N
E
W
S
•
F e a t h e r
C o n t e s t
C o m e In and S i g n Up.'
1st
Prize
2 n d
- $ 1 0 . 0 0
P r i z e -
D o o r
P r i z e -
Gift
Certificate
5.00 Gift
Certificate
5.00 Gift
Certificate
S I I n l t h ' s
S p o r t
S h o p
105 E . Main St.
Nortbviile
349-4344
S O U T H
L Y O N
H E R A L D
R u l e s
T a k e a p l a i n p i e c e of paper and nurobsi down the left hand s i d e from
1 to 2 0 .
Y o u w i l l n o t i c e that e a c h square below i s a l s o numbered from 1 fo 20
and e a c h c o n t a i n s a f o o t b a l l gome to be s t a g e d t h i s c o m i n g w e e k e n d . T o
complete your entry y o u must do the f o l l o w i n g :
(1) after e a c h number on your paper write the nome o f the sponsor of
MO
F i r s t
P r i z e
the c o r r e s p o n d i n g s q u a r e .
(2) f o l l o w i n g the s p o n s o r ' s name - write the name of the w i n n i n g team.
(3) i n a d d i t i o n y o u must p i c k a score on the outcome of the gome i n
squore 2 0 . T h i s w i l l be used in the c a s e of a t i e and then the c o n ­
w h y n o t
i i i i i i i i i i i i i i a
COOL...CLEAN
S
N o t i c e
E
s o
M
R
BUT FOR NOW-before the current
session heads for the hustings-he is
asking for congressioaal action to sus­
pend the 7% tax credit on business i n ­
vestment In new machinery and equipment..fr«n»-5epte1nber 1,.-1966 to Jan— •
uary l , 1968. Also, deferment for the
same period i s asked for the fast tax
write-off on new buildings. A l l otter
anti-Inflation action sought i s in the
form of requests: (1) To Congresstogo
slow on approprlationsfor non-defense;
(2) to the Federal Reserve to ease
Interest rates; (3) to the government
agencies not to add to the demand for
money; (4) to business and labortohold
prices and costs down.
F l 9-1838
p o s t p o n e d , b u t
L
e
M a n
In o u r S t o r e o r
h i d d e n
W
U N S I N G - Within the nextfewyears
a decision must be made regarding the
focal point of Michigan g o v e r n m i 3 n t , the
87-year-old State Capitol building.
Before that decision is final, Michi­
gan residents are likely to see as big a
fight as any tax question ever produced.
The question will be: Should we re­
tain the present building and add to it
to meet increasing space demands or
should we tear It down and start anew,
presumably with a considerably more
modern architectural base?
Opposing forces will be debating the
historical values ot the building as it
stands versus the safety and convenience
of the legislative and executive branches
of government.
Original cost of the construction, in
1879, was about $1.5 million. Legisla­
tive proponents of a new building say it
would cost considerably more than this
to do an effective renovation to make It
fully useful and safe. Several areas on
the fourth floor are closed off because
of fire hazard and inaccessibility If
escape became necessary.
fflstorical buffs win argue on behalf
of the more than 100,000 people who
visit the capitol annually and see the
I
Select the Right
n i n g
d
less)
Color and Fobric...
1 1 1 N. C e n t e r
l
Benefits
often
us H e l p you
your
u
exfro
CARPETING
At
o
D
Marge F'Geppert FI 9-26E9 or Mary
Louise Taylor FI 9-2714 for pick up.
NOVISCHOOL MENU
September 26
Monday - Chicken noodle soup,
crackers, grilled cheese sandwiches,
buttered peas, prune spice cake and
milk.
Tuesday -Italian spaghetti, hot rolls,
butter, tossed salad, peaches and milk.
Wednesday - Hot dogs on buttered
buns, potato chips, hot vegetable, pine­
apple upside down cake and milk.
Thursday - SaldJury steak, mash­
ed potatoes, gravy, buttered greenbeans,
bread & butter sandwiches, jello-jems,
and milk.
Friday -Tunafish noodle casserole,
hot buttered beets, carrot-celery sticks,
bread, butter, fruited dessert and milk.
The Mothers Club wiU have a rum­
mage sale benefit to help UIe Novi school
band buy their uniforms. The sale will
be held at the Novi Community hall
September 28-29. Take rummage to
hall or call Eleanor Smith, FI 9-2003,
Let
h
RELA^iATION
Publlshod by Consumers Powor Conip4ny
IN ADDITION, for monUls now, Uie
whole brunt ofthelnflationaryonslaught
has been borne by the Reserve Board.
They can hardly make money easier
and less costly until they see higherprice pressures subsiding...especially
since this Is the first time the Admin­
istration has offered to help fight the
battle. Hasty moves now t o w r d money
ease could really put the fat in the fire.
We are very much afraid that the
enormous size of the job ahead of u s dampening the inflationary fires - is
testant w h o s e s c o r e i s c l o s e s t to the a c t u a l s c o r e w i l l be d e c l a r e d
the w i n n e r .
S e c o n d
B e sure to write your name, a d d r e s s onci phone number p l a i n l y on your
P r i z e
piece of paper (your entry).
E n t e r just o n c e a week, but may enter a s many w e e k s a s you w i s h .
In c o s e o f t i e , p r i z e money w i l l be s p l i t .
C o p i e s of the contest w i l l be posted at the N o r t h v i l l e R e c o r d and
South L y o n H e r o l d o f f i c e e a c h w e e k .
E n t r i e s must be postmarked of brought to either of our o f f i c e s no
T h i r d
later than 5 p . m . e a c h F r i d a y .
P r i z e
E m p l o y e e s of T h e N o r t h v i l l e R e c o r d - N o v i N e w s or South L y o n H e r a l d
or s p o n s o r i n g merchants ofe not e l i g i b l e .
E
n
t
e
THE
RIDE
WITH
THE
GOOD
GUYS!
G. E . M I L L E R - N O R T H V I L L E D O D G E
127 Hunon
FI-9-0S60
1. P u r d u e
at Notre
Liability,
Gloss,
WITH
108 W. Main
Nortliville
State
Prescriptions Accurately F i l l e d
Have Your Doctor C a l l U s - G E - 8 - 4 1 4 1
S P E N C E R ' S R E X A L L DRUG
112 E . L a k e
South L y o n
SEE THE
ALL
Nebraska
NEW
13. W i s c o n s i n at S.C o l .
DRIVERS
Northville
See
of
Arkansas
STORE
Y
FOR
and Top
Brand
a
y
B
e
a
W
i
n
n
e
r
M O B I L H E A T for
Automatic Personal
M < » b i l |
TAILORING
Northwestern
C a r e - C a l l FI-9-33S0
C . R . E L Y & SONS
316 N . Center
4. Michigan
at
Northville
California
Fords-Falcons-T-Birds-Mustongs
24 Hr Burner
See A l l the New '67s at
WILLIAMS & L L O Y D . I N C .
124 N . Lafayette, South Lyon
GE-7-1200
College
8. H o l y
F O R HOME
DELIVERY
PHONE
349-1466
Novi Road
'MILK.ICCMEAMl
w o i i T H v i u . t . MicmaAW
ENTER
Florida
FORD'S
PUNT,
C r o s s at
24 Hour H e a v y
HERB'S STANDARD SERVICE
15. T e x a s
T e c h at
NOVI
12. Stanford at M i n n e s o t a
PASS
&
KICK
COMPLETE
SUPPLY
J O H N MACH F O R D S A L E S
550 W. 7 Mile R d .
Duty
SERVICE
349-0100
CONTEST
D E L ' S SHOES
153 E . Main
Northville
Army
WRECKER
YOUR
Shoes
Service
G E N E V A OIL C O .
438-2791
11. M i s s . State at
Washington
M
PLACES
F R E Y D L ' S M E N ' S WEAR
112 E . Main
Northville
349-0777
at
u
THE
WHO IS GOING
D O OUR OWN
o
BUILDING
HEADQUARTERS.
SOUTH L Y O N B U I L D I N G S U P P L Y
Mick Weinberger
Noithville
Texas
16. South
Lyon
437-93U
at L u t h e r a n
West
MONEY
Service
VISIT
C A L ' S G U L F SERVICE
at
N O R T H V I L L E INSURANCE
160 E . Main
34M122
17. T u l s a at
FI-9-0034
Ins.
K e n Rathert
!
at
The H o m e o f Q u o / / f y
14. Airforce at
SAVE
y
1967
and OLDSMOBILES
Automobile
Lines
a
RATHBURN CHEVROLET & OLDS
560 S. Main
Just Arrived...New F a i l and Winter
Jackets ftor the Family
BRADER'S OEPARTMENTSTORE
1 4 1 E . Main
Nortkville
d
7. O h i o U . a t B o s t o n
10. H o l l y at N o r t h v i l l e
9. N a v y o t S M U
All
RATES
S T A T E SAVINGS B A N K
102 W. Lafayette
GE-8-22U
CHEVROLETS
SAFE
NEW 1 9 6 7 A U T O
US-BANK
6. Utah State ot
MAN
3. Indiana
Windstorm
FI-9-1252 or FI-5-3872
5. P e n n State at M i c h i g a n
YOUR
o
FASHION
WE
NODER'S JEWELRY
Comer N . Center & Main
Fh9-0171
FINANCE
T
YOUNG
2. M i s s o u r i at Illinois
Dome
C. HAROLD BLOOM
ConiDlete Insurance Service
Theft,
DIAMONDS-WATCHES
Expert Natch Repair Service
r
349-1227
470 E . Main
18. U C L A
at
349-1818
202 W. Main
Syracuse
OUR
BIKES
BIKE
AND
DEPARTMENT
FOR
ACCESSORIES
STONE'S GAMBLE STORE
117 E . Main
Northville
19. H o u s t o n
at Buffalo ( A F L )
IF
YOU
ELSE
CAN'T
FIND
. . . YOU'LL
IT
FIND
ANYWHERE
IT
AT
. . .
GOOD TIME P A R T Y S T O R E
567 7 M i l e Road
20- A t l o n t o ot D e t . ( N F L )
Northvllle
Score?
!
THE
P a g e 8-B
T h u r s d a y , Septefrlber 2 2 , 1966
N O R T H V I L L E R E C O R D - N O V I NEWS
Higher
Education
I n
S P E A K I N G
T
m
o
p
o
W i x o n i .
N o r t h e r n
N o v i
f
i i
V
f
o
r
T
h
e
R
e
c
o
r
J A C K W. H O F F M A N
By Bill Sliger
Wixom's city council caiied a meet­
ing this weei! that must be a " f i r s t "
for any poiitlcai body.
Usually elected officials hear enough
complaints without Ioo!<ing for them.
But Wixom's council called a special
"gripe session".
"We're giving the taxpayer his 'day
in court'", explained Mayor Wes
McAtee.
And just in case a citizen has a
complaint, but Is unable to attend the
special session, forms were mailed to
every taxpayer so that he might send
his complaint for airing at the meeting.
Basically, the special meeting was
called to get citizen reaction to en­
forcement of ordinances.
Mayor McAtee notes that the city
is plagued with complaints about chick­
ens, dogs, horses, abandoned autos,
condemned houses, etc., but no one
wan.s enforcement
of ordinances
appUed to themselves.
2- -Senator Griffin has introduced
legislation which would exempt service­
men from paying excise tax on air
tran^ortation while traveling on mill tary leave;
3- -Congressman Vivian is seeking
to amend legislation that would "temp­
orarily"
suspend the accelerated
capital depreciation allowed business
enterprises by permitting business to
retain the seven per cent income tax
credit and depreciation allowance to
purchase pollution abatement equip­
ment.
I have no argument with these pro­
posals. As a matter of fact, the latter
sounds especially logical.
But It makes one wonder. If all our
congressmen are seeking ways to gain
deductions and savings for taxpayers,
who are the culprits passing all the tax
bills?
I recall Jack Hoffman once writing
about an embarrassing experience when
he was locked In a public library.
Perhaps an aroused and informed
citizenry can help Its elected officials
solve the problem.
The studlousedltor could have picked
less desirable surroundings. I did last
Friday.
Northville's Mayor A. M . Allen has
had a little personal experience lately
in the matter of complaints.
And right about now he'd probably
like to tell his tormentor that "sleeping
dogs don't bark".
Mayor and M r s . Allen have receiv­
ed several anonymous telephone calls
and cards complaining about the barking
of their dog, " M i c k e y " . They took steps
to correct the situation.
One complaining and unidentified
neighbor still calls. But the trouble Is
the caller never gives the mayor time
enough to explain: Mickey can't bark
anymore.
Three releases on my desk this week
report that:
C a n
y
o
u
i n v e s t
a
d o l l a r
OR
MORE
A DAY....
To buUd an estate, or accuinuIate an
iaveatment fund or buy an Intereat in
American induatry? Many MutuaI Funda
have plana io aid you invest aa IitUe
or aa mucii aa you wiati on a ayatematic
baala.
Phone or write
Investment
ANDREW
today-
Securities
C. REID & CO.
Member Detroit stocit Exchanee
PhiIadelphi>..BalUmore
Stock Eicliange
Donald A . Burleaon, R e i l d o m Portnar
Moyfiower Hotel
Phone G L - 3 - i e 9 0 -
**************
It all started when the rubbish col­
lector decided to make his rounds on
time last week. After noting that every
other container In the neighborhood
had been removed but ours, it became
apparent that: (1) the containers would
have to remain there for a week; (2)
be carried back to the garage; or (3)
taken to the city-township sanitary land­
fill (dump).
He was right. But when I returned
from the far corner of the dump where
I had disposed of the weekly family
rubbish, the gate was locked.
It's difficult to describe just how
one feels when he's staring at 10-foothlgh, barbed-wire-topped fence from
the Inside of a city dump. Silly, stupid
and lonely are all pretty goodadjectlves.
Anyway, when the first flush of panic
wore off, I discovered that the door to
the DPW storage building had been left
unlocked. There was a telephone inside.
I called city hall. Clerk Martha Milne
answered saying Bud Hartner had left.
"Can I help you'', she asked politely.
"No thanks, I ' l l find B u d " - I wasn't
going to try to explain my predicament
to Martha.
Finally I reached Bud at home.
His reaction i s better left unreport­
ed. But he was still laughing 15 min­
utes later when he came to my rescue.
Who locked the gate? It must have
been accidental, said Bud, still smiling.
N O R T H V I L L E L O D G E N O . 186
F. & A . M .
Regular Meeting
Second Monday
Charles A . Wilson, W. M .
R. F Coolman, Sec.
DOUBLE I
the
your
Yolue
R e a d e r s
i i
of
sovings
your
O
l
d
S
p
r
i
n
o
t
t
h
a
t
A
To the Editor,
Time has come, I believe, that the
people of Detroit and surrouncUngareas
be informed that what they are drinking
from the old NorthviUe spring Is not
spring water or for that matter even
Northvllle well water. People i r e
driving forty or forty-flye mlles to get
what Is In Uielr own tap.- tliat of Detrolt water.
Fiu-tbermore, it seems to me that
. this great laodmarif Is rapidly vaalshlag
as a place of Importance. I'm sure
that city officials could do something
about getting our spring water back. It
would be a real shame If we were to
forget what real water taste like.
L a r r y A . Forth
(Editor's Note: The fact that city
water now runs through the Old Spring
lines has been well publicized several
times in The Record. Efforts by the
city engineer andpubUc works'depart­
ment to restore the spring source were
unsuccessful, thus the connection to
city lines. Detroit water is not yet
flowing from the spring; It wIU, how­
ever,
when NorthviUe converts to
Detroit water, hopefuUy within a week
ortwo.
jf.
if.
If
T
h
a
n
k
s
To the Editor:
Our Association would certainly like
to thank you for your cooperation in
helping us achieve our goals by your
coverage in the newspaper.
Effective October 1, 1966, new of­
ficers will take over and we feel sure
you will continue your fine cooperation.
Kathleen Buck,
Sec.-Treas.
(On behalf of tile WUlowbrook Com. Assn.)
Yolue
of
m
sovings
D E T R O I T
S A V I N G S
200 H. Center, NorthviIIe F l 9-2462
i
F E D E R A L
S A V E N G S I
200 N . Center, NorthviIIe F l 9-2462 ij
11
M E M n e g P.S.UI.C.. F.H.i..B.
i
Special
W
a
t
e
r
Also
M E M B E R |:.S.Ui.Cw F . N . L . B .
n
y
m
o
r
e
Serving
134
GALLON
OF
Breakfast,
This
HALF
9
&
W e e k
^ 4 1 «
HALF
4 5 *
c
Lun ch and
CARTONS
Sandwiches
N . Center
FARMS
Nortiivilie
DAIRY
FI-9-1580
H o m e t o w n
M e m o r i e s
Dear Sirs:
Will you please send me a
copy of the Northvllle Rec­
ord for the enclosed coins?
It has been some time
since I lived In your fair
city but every now and then
one stops to Ullnk of the
folks we used to know there
and Oie many good times
spent there.
Of course time changes
tilings and the old timers
are now long gone but the
memories still linger on.
Even the city Is growing up
too. But It is still North­
vllle - Ule old home town.
Recalling names from the
past- WUllam Safford Is no
longer Chief of Police.
Frank Perrin no longer op­
erates a tavern Uiere and
the MlUerBrothersnolong­
er have a meat market on or
near the main corners.
FranJt Neal at one time
Postmaster and Jake C a r ­
reer no longer makes shoes
for the towns folks-andUle
Palmers - with their re­
freshment
stand
right
smack dab atthe end of Sev­
en Mile road - has long
since given way to - What?
liandsome nw FIcctaide... one of 26
flll-^e^v- Chc^-y pidfup models for 1967:
H e r e ' s t l i e b r a n d n e w '67
Chevy pickup! Strikingly
neW i n s t y l i n g , i t s t r i m ap­
pearance puts m a n y cars to
shame. A n d t o u g h neW body
Eddie Stinson no longer
makes airplanes In a part sheet m e t a l resists r u s t bet­
of Uie old Globe Furniture
plant - and the road side
Spring by the depot - what­
ever happened to that? Many
the times we took our turn In
line on warm evenings to
f U l a f e w jugs with this cool
Spring water to carry on
home.
Yes. These were the days
_ tiie Northvllle that I once
knew. But the old Carmer
home was moved from P l y - mouth Avenue to make way
for the extra lane of highway - to some place on Riv­
er street; may not even be
Uiere.
V-'-f
F E D E R A L
s
t
o
B
u
i
l
d
E
y
e
s
A
d
d
i
e
D
e
c
i
d
e
S
c
h
o
o
l
B
o
n
d
I
s
s
u
e
W
e
d
n
e
s
d
a
y
N
t
i
Only property owners may vote on
the school bond is.sue, but all register­
ed voters may vote on the reorganizational plan.
Of the proposed S9.7 million bond
ic3-u6, j7 minIun isearmarkefitnroonsirudion of a higii school ohBecKi'oad.
The remaining S2.7 million is pegged
for a swimming pool, acquisition of
school site property and construction
of two 20-room elementary schools.
The proposed high school and pool
site, already owned by the school dis­
trict,, consists of 50 acres on Beck
road, one-quarter mile norUl of Pontiac
Trail.
Specifically, $550,000 would be for
the pool, 5150,000 lor land acquisition,
and $2 million for the elementary
schools.
According to school officials, a
" y e s " vote on the reorganization ques­
tion will aad 860 ohiidren from tke
Dublin school district to Walled Lake.
There also will be approximately 50
children from Ule Waterford school
district.
These students are in addition to the
320 Dublin children in grades nine
through 12 who already attend Walled
Lake schools.
Presentiy, the Walled Lake district
has nine elementary schools-Including
one in Wixom, two junior high schools
and the single senior high school. Total
enrollment Is estimated at approxi­
mately 8,500 students.
The board hopes to have one of the
t-,;-o 20-room elementary schools open
by l!;c '.zll of 1968. The district re­
portedly has an excess of four elemen­
tary classrooms this year. However,
two of these rooms are used for high
school classes. By next year, there
will be a shortage of seven rooms and
by 1968-69, 21 additional elementary
rooms will be needed, officials contend.
The present high school Is carrying
a load of more than 1,800 students in a
building that officials say "would be
more suitable for 1,300.
Plans call for the new high school
to include areas of Instruction for elec­
tronics, graphics, foods occup?.tlons,
and auto mechanics. In addition, facili­
ties m i l be available for advanced study
in suchareasasbiology, chemistry,for­
eign languages, English, music and art.
Despite the multi-million dollar cost
of the proposed school construction pro­
jects, the total tax Increase requiredto
offset it has been estimated at oniy 1
mill, thus raising the district's total
bond miliage from 6 to 7 mills.
Limiting the tax increase to 1 mill
Is made possible because of the state
school bond loan program. Under this
program, the state considers a distrlct
levying 7 mills for debt retirement as
making a maximum local effort to sup­
port schools.
Any money necessary to finance
school construction over the 7 mill levy
Is loaned to the district by the state at
a low interest rate. The loan need not
be repaid until such time as the 7 mills
levied by the district raises more
money than i s needed to meet the dis­
trict's building debt.
In other words, the total miliage
levy Is held to a minimum while stretch­
ing out the life of Indebtedness-some­
thing like a low initial investment that
increases the lengUi of a mortgage
r
o
e
n
T h e
w
N O V I
V o l . 12, N o . 19, 40 P a g e s , F o u r S e c t i o n s
s
N E W S
N o v i , M i c h i g a n T h u r s d a y , September 29, 1966
But I'd like to see a copy
of The Recordagaln-tosee
just how much the town has
changed - and the people.
W i l l you please send along a
copy of your advertising
rate card and mechanical
requirements?
And
thanks a lot for
everything.
Very truly yours,
Harry Carmer, Mgr.
R A T H B U R N
Ingham Specialties
Co.
Lansing, Mich.
560 South M o i n Street
ter. N e W all-steel p i c k u p
box
provides full-depth
double-Wall side p a n e b a n d
tailgate. . A n d the attractive
n e w c o l o r - k e y e d cab i n t e n o r i s roomier. .Also, there's
better v i s i b i l i t y plus m a n y
added safety features. T h e
n e w '67 C h e v y p i c k u p l o o k s
so good a n d is b u i l t so W e l l
you c a n use i t for almost
anything!
Village to
•
Docksey, who owns 24 apartment
units now being rented on the site, said
he plans to build an additional 128 to
132 single-bedroom units on the adja­
cent property.
GLASS
CLOYERDALE
N
i i
I D E T R O I T
,
QT.
g
MILK
CLOYERDALE
P A C K A G E D I C E CREAM....84(-94(-S9C
R E C E I V E L I F E I N S U R A N C E for o c c i ­
dental death in on amount equal to
your savings account balance up to
$10,000 regardless of your age and at
nocost to you.
YOUR SAVINGS continue to earn 4'4%
annuel rote compounded quarterly.
T h i s is the highest Insured regulor
passbook rate ovoilable in the greoter
Detroit areo.
r
The Wixom city council set a public
hearing for October 25 at 8 p.m. to air
the request of Ralph Docksey. He Is
seeking rezoning of six acres on Pon­
tiac T r a i l , between the Wixom City
hall and Beck road.
HOMOGENIZED
S p e a k
DOUBLE
the
e
10(? P e r C o p y , $4.00 P e r Y e o r In A d v o n c e
Sewers or not, one developer Is
prepared to go ahead with plans to
construct apartments in Wixom.
4
Proposal three won-out by a family
vote of 1-1.
Although the dump Is normally clos­
ed Friday afternoons, NorthviUe DPW
Director Bud Hartner assured me the
side entrance near the DPW storage
buildings would be open because trucks
were dumping dirt from the Randolph
street project.
expert ... call the weatherman, he'll
tell you the same thing."
But all the weatherman would tell
rae was: ' T h i s Is a recording, today's
high
"
So I called a professor over at my
alma mater in Ann Arbor:
" W e l l , " he said slowly, wondering
probably if he had a nut on the line, "I
think what your friend had in mind was
a short frost as opposed to a long
frost."
That was about all I could take. But
he went on:
"I suppose you could consider a
warm frost a short frost ... one that
doesn't last as long as a long one."
Professors haven't changed a bit.
" A short frost at 28-degrees might
be considered a warmer frost than a
long one at 30-degrees."
Ah, now he was talking my language.
What you're saying, I said trying to
steer him in mydlrectlon.lsthatafrost
occurs in freezing weather and that frost
Is nothing more than frozen dew.
Almost. You're half right. Frost
occurs at 32 degrees, but it Isn't frozen
dew. Dew forms when vapors condense,
leaving the water you see on foliage.
Frost forms when these vapors freeze.
There's no change to water first. What
you're thinking of are hailstones. Now
they....''
That was enough. He'd answered my
question. I think.
So the next time someone comes
up with this "warm frost" bit, I ' l l
counter with:
" A warm frost Is a cold frost when
frozen vapors are short. I know because
I spent a night In the refrigerator and
watched it all happen."
A friend of mine licked his finger,
stuck it in the air and announced pro­
foundly, "Well, looks like we'll have a
warm frost tonight."
The fact that he was able to predict
weather with his finger didn't surprise
me. Everyone knows that fingers, aches,
birds, the moon, clouds, sunsets, and
crickets are proven methods of ac­
curately predicting weather.
But that bit about a "warm frost"
stuck in my craw.
What the heck is a "warm frost"?
I asked him.
Stunned by my ignorance, he replied
simply, "It's the opposite of a cold
frost, naturally.''
But, but...
" A warmfrostiscold.butnotascold
as a freeze frost ... It won't kill any­
thing."
By now I was beginning to warm up a
little myself, so I shot back with what I
thought was a scientific fact: It's abso­
lutely impossible to have a frost at a
temperature above 32-degrees.
"Ah, but that's where you're wrong.
We can have a frost at 34-degrees,
sometimes higher. It's not very cold,
mind you, but It's still a frost. It usual­
ly occurs very early in the morning.
You probably have never seen one 'cause
you don't get up until noon."
Now you're talking about dew, I
insisted, 'cause frost is notlling more
than frozen dew. A frost i s a frost!
"Frost might be dew," he conced­
ed, "but warm frost i s frost!"
Whereupon our conversation ended.
But a few days later, he picked up some
equally scientific cohorts, who, after
whipping me with their strange logic,
challenged me: "Okay, stupid, a l l an
1- -Congressman Farnum Is spon­
soring a bill to permit a teacher to
deduct any legitimate educational ex­
pense from his income tax;
It's a familiar story ... one that has
echoed through the council chambers
of NorthviIIe, Novl and hundreds of
other communltes.
This is exactly what Wixom's city
council i s hoping.
t
Wixom and northern Novi voters
will go to the polls October 5 (next
Wednesday) to decide a multi-million
dollar school bond Issue and a school
district reorganization proposal.
Here's wliat they'll be asked:
1. Snail the Wailed Lake schooi sys­
tem be given permission to bond for
$9.7 million for construction of a sec­
ond high school, two more elementary
schools and a swimming pool?
2. Shall the Dublin school district
be annexed to the Walled Lake school
district, and shall permission be given
for the consolidation of the Oakford
and North Oxford school districts?
1
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W i x o m ' s
S t u c k
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Included In the plans Is the recrea­
tion building, containing a large swim­
ming pool.
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0 l i s t of violators put out by the
commission this week. The c i t y
of Walled Lake, on the other hond,
was high on the l i s t for dumping
sewage Into the loke from which
it gets its name.
MUD U K E P O L L U T E D ? Apporentiy not, ot least not bod enough
to come under fire by the State
Water
Resources Commission.
Earlier this year the commission
cited Novi for polution, but the
v i l l a g e ' s name was scratched from
H a u l i n g
O f f i c e s
C o m p a n y
O n
G r a n d
Construction Is well underway on an
all-steel office and storage headquar­
ters here for the Matter Transportation
company now located In Salem.
The newfacUItywlllbelocatedonUle
norUl side of Grand River, east of Beck,
next to the nearly completed new Camp­
bell Machines company headquarters.
According to E . S. Bud Matter Jr.,
company president, the facility i s sched­
uled for completion November 15. steel
made by McAtee to Washington.
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B u i l d s
R i v e r
•ll-HllI CKiWI.VAN IDIIIM- PHHtBASI)
jmu cmyr.Ms n wo- miiiiAso
New Chevy-Vans in two sizes for '67... new V8 power, too!
A l l neW for '67 is the C h e v y With h u s t l i n g V S power.
V a n l08 With 108" WheelThere's a b r a n d n c W breed
base a n d 256-cu.-ft. load
of C h e v y t r u c k s at y o u r
space. O r pick the ChevyChevrolet
V a n 90 w i t h 209-cu.-ft. cargo
d e a l e r ' s , so
area. B o t h can be equipped
stop b y soon!
CHEVROLET
North i v i i i e
SALES,
INC.
The planner waved his magic wand
and poof: Northvllle became Mt. Pleas­
ant and Novi, Kalamazoo.
Mixing expertise and imagination,
Waldemar Johnson, planning consultant
for both Northvllle and Novi, came up
with this comparison while looking at
the future of the two local communities.
NorthviUe, he predicts, will grow In
population and probably In size but re­
tain Its small-town image, while Novl
will blossom Intoa "fairly large", selfcontained city of the sizeof Kalamazoo.
The bulk of Northville's future c i t i ­
a
k
e
S
p
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S
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zens will be living here and working
elsewhere. Novi, on tte otter hand, will
have sufficient industry and business to
employ the bulk of its population.
Does this mean that Novl, because
of its larger projected size, may one
day absorb Norttville?
"No. Northvllle will maintain Its
identity - particularly If tte centi^l
business district (CBD) plan becomes a
reality soon. Our plan shows a central
business district that can effectively
hold the business trade for a ninesquare mile area."
Will It be snfflcIenUy large to "hold"
the trade of Northvllle township?
"As l see It there Isn't .mythlng In
the township plans nor In the plans of
Plymouth to prevent It. The township
plans provide for neighborhood type
shopping centers, but Northvllle will be
the center of trade for the entire
area."
What about to tte north? If Novl has
a large central shopping area, won't It
siphon trade from Northvllle and hurt
business here?
"It depends on the timing. If Nortt­
ville waits until after Novi's central
business district i s started before It
implements Its CBD plan. Its business
could dry up. The point here Is Ulat
Northvllle must do what It can now to
retain Its trade. To try and win trade
back after development begins In Novl
will be pretty dilflcult."
"But Northvllle has the edge over
Novi since It already has tte nucleus
for Its future CBD and because com­
plete development of Its trade area
probably will occur years before It
happens In N o v l . "
He suggests that complete develop­
ment of toe present city of Northvllle
(8,802) could take place by 1880, where­
as complete development of Novl might
not be reached until well after tte turn
of the century.
While he makes no prediction as to
where the eventual boundary between
Northvllle and Novl will be located,
he notes that the "planning area" es­
tablished In the Norttville master plan
shows Nine Mile road as tte boundary.
The southernboundaryof this "planContinued on Poge,8-A
s
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Fresh from .sampling preliminary
sewer cost figures, village ofttclalsplan
now to join Walled Lake and the county
department of public works In wrestling
with ttefederal government for financial
aid.
The bout won't be an easy one, as
witaessed by Wixom's long-standing request for aid. (See related story on this
page).
Nevertheless, Novl and WaUedLake
may put the bite on tte government for
as much as $2 million - or approxi­
mately 45-percent of the estimated
sewer project cost.
Separate applications for aid went
out from Walled Lake and the county
several months ago. Itlshopednowthat
Novl can join in these requests, either
by filing separately or by amending
present applications to include Novl.
The sewer plan as discussed last
week Is essentially the same prelimi­
nary blueprint for sewer construction as
was under study back in 1962. Prime dif­
ference Is the estimated cost which has
zoomed upwards because of Increasing
cost of labor and building materials.
Still to be determined Is how tte
project wlU be financed locally, wither
wittout financial help from the federal
government.
As nowproposedby tte county, bonds
pledging tte faith and credit of tte county
would be sold to cover tte entire cost of
a disposal plant, trunk-line sewer, and
lateral sewers In tte lake area.
Presumably, Novl and Walled Lake
would repay tte county ttrough special
assessments - alttough even this pro­
cedure Is undecided.
If carried through, tte disposal plant,
which probably will have a lifetime ex­
pectancy of 10 years, wlU be built in
Novl near the lake with tte trunkline stretching around the lake up
ttrough the city of Walled Lake, and tte
•
framework Is already In place.
A 30 X 32 foot offlcebulldlng will face
Grand River, witt a 42 x 80 footgarage
adjoining it in tte rear. The latter will
be used for storage and repair of tte
f i r m ' s hauling equipment.
Constructed of prefabricated metal,
tte exterior of tte facility will be blue
steel with a white roof.
Matter Transportation, a famUy
owned corporation, transports sand,
gravel, and rock throughout Livings­
ton, Washtenaw, Oakland and Wayne
counties, primarily for state highway
.projects.
MORE LOAD SPACE ON A LOKGER WHEELBASE!
E D I T O R ' S N O T E : Following is
the fourth ill a series of articles
on local area plons for the future.
This article deals with aspects
of the master plans of NorthviIIe
and Novi os seen by Waldemar
Johnson, planning consultant for
both communities.
Next week's
article w i l l concern real and proposed housing developments in
the oreo.
L
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wixom's application for federal
funds to help Hnance proposed sewer
construction, long bogged down In red
Plans call for construction in stages,
tape, has reached the critical stage.
with 26 units being constructed In each
Now sitting on the desk of Robert
of three stages, and 20 units In each of
Weaver, secretary of the Department of
three other stages.
HealUl, Education and Welfare, the re­
quest will eltiler be launched Into final
FoUowiiig the meeting, Docksey said
stages of approval Friday or fizzle out.
that he had been approached by another
Count down actually began Tuesday
developer who indicated he would be
when Mayor Wesley McAtee received
willing to buy property to Ule east of
word that the decision would be forth­
Docksey's proposed development. The
coming tomorrow. "Weaver will decide
interested buyer, Docksey said, wishes
whether or not tile request deserves
to construct two-bedroom apartments.
further shIdy," the mayor explained.
Docksey says he, Docksey, intends to
If the government gives Wlxom Uie
build one-bedroom apartment units.
green light, McAtee Indicated he wiU
probably return to Washington to fur-.
There Is a critical need for apart­
iliFi ,di>..a.is aleMjpllcation. In the event
ments in the Wixom area, to house pre­
of denial, Ule ina'yor' sald he will ap­
sent and prospective employees who
proach the city council, asking mem­
work at tile Ford Wlxom jllant.
bers to decide thefate of Wlxom sewers.
Most of the developers, however,
Hopes Ulat the application would be
are waiting for sewersbefore beginning
approved received a boost as a result of
construction. According to plans, about
McAfee's latest visit to Washington
800 apartments are on the drawing
D.C. Accompanying him were Attorney
boards at the present time.
Gene SchnelzandAudltor Robert Clarke.
They met with Donald Hall, assistant
Mayor Wesley McAtee informed tile
to Weaver, pointing out that by granting
council Ulat Wixom's request for afed­
tile request, the government would be
eral government grant for sewer con­
solving two problems:
struction was now being based on the
First, It would be meetingUle "nor­
housing shortage and on the normal
mal sewer needs."
.need for sewers in Wlxom. (See story
Second, the government would be
elsewhere on this page).
helping the depressed area of Appalachla, because Uien employees from
Promise of final action has been a
Appalachia could be hired at Ford's
long time In coming. Wixom's request
Wixom plant.
for funds has been under government
Presently, the flow of workers from
scrutiny for nearly 18 months.
Virginia and Kentucky has slowed to a
trl<41e, primarily because there Is no
In other action, the council author­
housing for them In Ule Immediate area
ized the mayor to negotiate a deal to
of the Wlxom plant.
secure asphalt for an ice rink at a
"The
odds are better with tvo
cost not to exceed $1,000. Council also
points," McAtee said he had been told
authorized McAtee to have no hunting
in Washington. "We quaUfy In every
signs posted In the city's 90-acre par­
respect wiUlgrantrequIsltes,"Olemay.
cel.
or added, "but now Its a question of
priority."
The council also approved the In­
Wlxom Is Indeed playing the odds,
stallation of four traffic signs: a fouraccording to McAtee. Requestsfor sew-'
way stop sign at the intersection of West
e r funds totaling $2.1 bilUon have been
and West Maple roads, a 25-mIle-persubmitted, but only $100 million has
hour sign on Balcony and MoGanzer
been approved tills year by the House of
roads, a 25 mile-per-hour sign on
Representatives; the U.S. Senate has yet
Flamingo street and a no parking sign
to act on the appropriation, McAtee r e on Flamingo street In the area of Loon
ported.
Lake drive.
This Is the second trip In six weeks
N
Federal
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a
Seek
S t o r y
H o u r
S e t
Novi's successful Story Hour program, qlonsored by the public library
here, will resume'here Wednesday,
October 5 following a summer recess.
Open from 2 to 3 p.m. each Wednes­
day, the program Is open to Novl pre­
schoolers between the ages of 3 and
5. M r s . Donald Waldenmayer will be
the story teller.
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Novl apparently has escaped for the
time-being the pollution noose strung up
by the State Water Resources Com­
mission.
In a press release from the com­
mission Uils week, Novi's name was
scratched from tte list of seven com­
munities under tire by the commission.
A notation l n Ink referring this
newspaper to page two of tte release,
Novi's name i s crossed out by a yellow
crayon.
The city of Walled Lake, on tte
other hand, remains as one of seven
Michigan communities - Pontiac Is
Included --. against which tte commis­
sion Is considering legal action.
Specifically, tte commission wiU
decide today or tomorrow if notices
should be Issued establishing a date
for a statutory hearing that would i n ­
clude a time-table for abatement of raw
sewage discharge into Walled Lake.
x
:S About Women
2A, 3A
if Want Ads
4A, 5A, 6A •;:
i-i; Wlxom News
43
5;
i^NovIFootbaU
9A
ii!:
:;i: Novi Justice Court
33
iiji Novl Highlights
53
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MIch.MIrror, Babson....9B
Vi1 Editorial
lOB
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Village Manager Harold Ackley ex­
plained that Novl may have been scratch­
ed from the list "because they know
we're doing all we can to correct tte
'situation.''
He admitted that a commission cita­
tion had been issued against the village
last spring. At that time, he said, he
appeared before the commission at De­
troit. He was informed that tte village
s
t
laterals will branch off tte trunk to
homes ttroughout the lake area. An es­
timated 1,480 homes would be served In
Walled Lake and 800 In Novl.
Under a cost sharing proposal
worked out by tte county, Novl would
pay 28.308-percent of tte total cost,
while Walled U k e would pay 7L692percent.
Here are tte preliminary cost esti­
mates of tte project as revealed toNovl
councUmen by tte county last week:
Treatment plant and tte trunkline, excluding, land acqulsltion, Engi­
neering, test borings, etc., $1,5810,580.
- Lateral sewers In Novi, $4]fe,065.
--• Lateral sewers in Walled Lake,
$1,417,210.
- Contingencies Including engineer­
ing, $193,000; inspection, $102,000; admlnlslriaUon, $te,000; legal and f i ­
nancial, $19,750; soil borings, $5,000;
land acquisition, $55,000; easementacqulsltion, $6,500; and general contin­
gencies, $193,895.
- Capitalized (5-percent) interest to
bond holders during period of con­
struction, $330,000.
_ Total cost of a l l of these categories
amounts to $4.4 million, wlto Novi's
share pegged at $1,245,552 and Walled
Lake's share at $3,154,448.
Principal and interest cost to Novl
over a 30-year period amounts, councilmen were told, to approximately
$2,490,609 based on cost estimates.
Walled Lake would pay $6,307,641 over
30 years.
Possible tap cost to the Individual
property owner In Novi, as seen In total
cost estimates, was pegged at $120
annually, excluding operating costs
which were estimated at $30 annuaUy.
These figures obviously staggered
the council. They immediately urged
cooperative efforts In securing federal
aid.
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would be notified of a second meeting
later. The notice never arrived, he
added..
Ackley said the commission had
charged that raw sewage was being
dumped Into a storm sewer near Novi
road and Grand River and that a house
on Mud (Fish) Lake was dumping sew­
age into ttat lake.
S n i p e r s
2
7
W
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Twenty-seven tinted windows wItt
an approximate valu^ of $1,000 were
broken at tte Orchard Hills school bv
sharpshooters with a BB gun.
Three boys, aU under l l years old,
were apprehended by Novi police, ques­
tioned, and admitted their part In tte
shooting. Their a i r rifle was confiscated.
Police, who are now investigating,
said other youths were probably In­
volved.
Exact time of tte destruction has not
been determined, but police said tte
shooting did occur either Saturday or
Sunday.