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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1968-06-24 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesar •
erna
MONDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE 24, 1968
VOL. ti, NO. UT, J IK'TtONI, lit ......
Smeared Lipstiek
. ._ : ·L_.,,.~,...-~....,..K .... •
The young woman (not named in police reports) who wi! applying •
makeup at the lavatory mirror (center of photo) waa rudely1nter-
rupted about 6 a.m. Sunday wlten car driven by Esther Nora Jan&o
sen, 33, of Whittier, opened up side of house owned by Mark Jordan
at 6701 Seashore Drive, Newport Beach, like a zipper. 1'frs, Janssen,
her husband, Marvin, 37, and Julie Ann O'Brien1. 8, of Costa Mesa,
were given medical treatment and released aner mishap. Note
garage door spring stretched to limit after car plowed through
g~rage wall.
' ers
I
.
Door· to Door Call Girl
• • ID Newport · Hotel
I
• I
'ti * * Screaming . -.
Inmates
' Riot
' . I I
"
In O.hio Penitentiary ..... r':
Door to Door Three Bags Full
Abernathy Arrested Prostitution
ArmedPoliceForcePoor Suspect Held
Denise Darcel Held as Shoplifter
MIAMI, Fla. (AP) -Bosomy
Freacb actress Deaise Darcel, with
money in her purse and a show date
waiting, was charged with shoplifting
$35 worth of underwear Sunday. She
called it "a bum rap."
Eight Guards
In]-ured, Ten
Fires Started
From Resurrection City
WASHINGTON (AP) -Police arm·
ed with shotguns end tear gas moved
tbrGUgh and took possession of the
Poor People's Campaign Resurrection
City today. At the Capitol, other polic.e
arrested the Rev. Ralph David
Abernathy, the campaign leader.
About 50 arrests were made al
Resurrection City, where the residents
had been told they could no longer
stay on ptiblle: land. Abernathy was ar-
rested, peaceably, on charges of
violating a · law which forbids
demonstrations on the C a p i t o I
grounds.
Despite the massive show of force -
1500 police were on hand -there was
no serious violence as police cleared
the camp. ru police with their shotg\1.ns and
tear a:as guns at the ready approached
Uie gates of the camp the only sound
Oraage
Weather
The sun's still sl.eeping late
along the Orange Coast, and
Tuesday'IJ be no exception. Not
much change In the tempera·
ture (70) either.
INSIDE TODA'\'
Ai Kioloa II took an tarly
ltad In Newport, R.1. to . Btr·
mudd race, no one b cnt.ain ju.st
who it leading the f"CCe to
Tahiti. Boattng Pa{Jt 10.
was a man siaging civil right! songs
over the camp's public addiess
system.
The police moved down in two lines
checking each of the shanties and
tents to se.e if any campers remained.
Halfway through the encampment
they found a tent containing more than
50 demonstrators singiag and clap-
ping. This group submitted to arrest
nonviolently and they were ta.ken one
by one to waiting poliCe buses.
William Rutherford, executive direc·
(See ABERNATHY, Pare %)
Laguna Boy, 5,
Stricken After
Swallowing Drug
A 5-year-Old Laguna Ber.ch boy who
may have taken the dangerous
hal:lucinaOOry drug STP is in S'e~ous
condition today at South Coast Com·
munK:y Hospital.
Police Staid GeITy Griggs of 1215
Rooeevelt Lane was rushed to the
hospitai Sunday night alter he com·
plained or his hands burning, coll1Jl>6ed
and began to convulse.
A bo6pital spokesman said the boy is
in. intensive care in an oxygen tent
after having his stomach pumped. 'Ibe
effects of the drug, particularly on a
child, are not fully understood.
However, it apparently caueed a
respiratory collapte.
Police said the youngster was
playing with other children in a field
near his house when he became ill.
U. Robert McMurray said the boy'•
father. John M. Griggs, told police the
yooogst.er may have discovtftd some·
one's outdoor drug cache. 11>e mat-
ter ii under inve.tlgation.
Police .all the drug, which bears a
Jong chemical name, is nicknamed
serenity, Tranquility and Peace. It has
"'°""""Ing symptnm1 M d008 I.SD
but II said U> be me ... dangerous.
Prostitution charges were lodged
against a 24-year-old Sacramento
woman today after she was arre1ted
at a large Newport Beach hotel for
allegedly going from door to door
trying to drum up business.
Held under $315 bail was Alee May
Morris, a pert blue~yed bloade who
assertedly tried to strike a bargain for
her services with two \lndercover
Newport vice officers.
A secob.d woman at the hotel was
identified. as Miss Motil'is' companion,
but was not arrested after she claimed
to be an undercover policewoman
from the Reno, Nev., police depart·
ment.
The supposed policewoman was
ideotified as Lita LeMa)'8, 32, a tall
blue-eyed blonde. Newport Beach
police today were verifying her story.
Miss Morris allegedly was seen
entering and leaving the rooms of
several hotel guests from 11 p.m. Fri·
day t.o 2 a.m. Saturday morning.
Police said they confiscated a red ad·
dress book and found f135 hidden in
the woman's bra.
1be case remained under inves·
tigation today to determine whether
others also were involved in the alleg·
ed. prostitution activities.
Berkeley Police
Capture Escapee
A Costa Mesa man was arrested In
Berkeley Sunday to redoce ta two the
number of escapees still at large in
the II-man Orange County jail break
cl last Feb. 20. .
William V. Willeford, 24, wati picked
up in Berkeley for the second ttm9.
Poli'ce had arrested him in May oo
suspicion of burglary but he was
released. He was using an .nu.
A check o! fingerprinll by the Call·
fomla Identification Agency showed
Will.Cord to be the Berkeley arnot..
and the Orange Coonty SberW's clllco
asked that ht be picked up again.
Berkeley offjcers found him Sunday.
He Will be brought' bB<k to Ora11g1
County sometime tbls week, the
rh<rlll'• olllce Mid.
Miss Darcel, who rose to film
stardom in the late 1940s , was Ar·
rested outside a downtown Miami
department store by a store detective
who said "she had three stopping bags
fuU or merchandise."
Later, . in jail, Miss Darcel said,
"They can't get away with treating me
like a common criminal."
"She had already.purchased several
articles and paid for them," Police Lt.
Paul Obot said. "And she was picking
up other things she wanted. She claim·
ed there was no sales lady at the time
and she intended to pay for it later.
She claims she went out to see if a bus
was coming by. That's when she was
arrested by the store detective."
Police said the goods -valued at
.$35.08 -in Miss Darcel's shopping
bags included hose , slips, a comb and
mirror, hairpins, a few pair of panUes,
a nightgown and one bra -size 40.
Miss Darcel, petite and trim at 43,
had her blonde hair tucked under a
!lcarr when jailed. She wore a blouse
with fruit prints, slacks and large
sunglasses.
She posted $500 bond Snd was
released from jail about three ho'6rs
after her arrest. She must appear in
Municipal Court next Friday on petty
larceny charges.
The Paris-born actress came to
ltollywood in 1947 to film "To the Vic·
tor." She followed with a success in
"Battleground" opposite Van Johnson
and the late John Hodi&Jt.
She headlined shows in New York,
Miami Beach and Las Vegas ln the
early 1950!1. She now calls Las Vegas
home. but bas an apartment In Miami
Beach. -
UPIT.._.....
'BAGGED' IN MIAMI
Actrff• Denf1e D•rctl
Four of Fainily . Kill~d in Crash
LOS BANOS (AP) -.Five persons
-rour of them members of one faml·
ty -were killed early today in a two-
car crash on Bighway 33 about five
miles west of Los Banos.
The vtct.ime: wore:
Adam Doctor, 59, Citrus Heighll;
his ton, Gerald Doctor, 18, on leave
home from the Army ; a daugtiter,
Mn. Katherine Lynn Hltdonbe!lll. 21,
Ventura; her 10n, David Hardenberg,
2. •nd a lamJly frlen<!, I.any
Campbell, I, ol Citrus llelghtJ.
The only survivort of the cra1h were
Mn . Hax\lenberg'1 ~·ye a r • o Id
daugbt.,., nlant, and the driver ol the
other car, Ilo McCUDoo1h1 "5, Loi
Banos.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -Hun-
dreds of screaming prisoners, armed
,..., with pipes and broken bottles, went on
a destructive · nlmpage at the Ob.lo
Penitentiary today, setting 10 ril.ajor
fires and ·attacking-guards.
Authorities said .' .i,t least eight
guards were injured. and one suffered
a heart attack. .
Warden Ernie . Maxwell said tliree
guards.,were lteld'hostage briefly ,by
the conv!Cts · bUt managed to escepe.
M. C/ Koblentz, state' J!ommissloner of
correCtions, sL'd. .. semi-coatrol" of the
priaon had been achieved.
Kobteatz said fires Were set In the
prison print shop, t~o 'Workshops, the
hospital, an aduitorium, the eo;ton and
woolen mills, the power plant, me11
hall and shoe ract.ory.
"Damage is going to be exitenslve,"
Koblentz said.
About 100 policemen wtth bayonet·
tipped riot shotguns rushed the prison
yard and made their way to t.he
botpital where fires raged on the first
and third !loon.
Dr. Richard Brooks, penitentiary
physician, was trapped on the hospital
roof. He was rescued by rll'e ladders.
Koblentz said all hospital patients and
'hospital employes also were removed
from the building.
Koblentz said 800 Ohio National
Guardsmen were brought to the prison
for duty·tn the event they were need·
ed.
Besides setting the fires t b e
prisooe.ra knocked out the prison
power plant.
Police officials took no chances with
the rioting convictr.
"U you have to take them, take
'them, 1 doti't. carf"bOW," said Colum·
buJ Pollce Chief Robert Baus. "You
are dealing with -a hard core outfit in
here1 not a bunch of teen-agers. Don't
get within wresUJni dletan<e of them.
"U one Ot them com.es at you w1 th 1 knlle or anything elle defend roorstll.
stay together and pr«ect eocb other."
8 Guardsmen Injured
FORT mWIN (AP) -A small
mlillarY rocket elthor bas lplted or
exp(oc!Od inolde a berrocks Ill tll1J
deHrt tratnlnc -... btlurllic cllhl Nall.onll Guudameo IJ\>in the San
Franc!Joo "Bat Ano, one lerlouoly.
I
,.
---------------------------
/! OAJlY "lllT MOl'ldly, Ju/'llf 24, lM
G•in Delefate•
Nixon and HHH
Near Nomination
87 Uolle<I PnN l*ruUoul
Pr .. tdeotlal fr<loCnmn<n Hubert II.
Hum,phrey and Richtri ¥. Nixon roll-
ed up more de1egate ctrength over the
weekend and moved c.Joaer to thelr
poriy 111111llnatl<»•. .
Nixon took a giant stride by IC<ll'ing
victories in South Carolina, Louisiana,
Maryland, Washington and MonW>a.
Humphrey picked up deleg,ate
strength from his home state of Mio-
nesota and in Connecticul
Gaining nearly 100 delegate votes,
Nixon now bas about 600 eorrirnitted
delegate votes, with 667 votes needed
for lbe nomillatloo.
Gov'. Nelson A. ROCkefeUer of New
York ba5 254 delegate votes aft« get-
Ung only a bandlul th11 weekeod.
Nixon's only 1etback came ln New
Melico where Gov. Ronald Reagan
picked up half the state's 12 delegate
votes. Two others were uncommitted.
Humphrey .picked up 3814 votes in
Minnesota, compared with S e n ,
Eugene J. McCarthy's 13~. In Con·
necticut, where McCarthy forces
walked out because they weren't given
tile "°'" tlley tllou#lt Ibey abould
have, Humphrey ccllectl<I probably 35
votes out of the state's 44 delegate
votes.
The viCe president now bas 899 com-
mitted convention vote11 witb J,312
needed for nomination.
McCarthy has edged ahead of Nixon
and Rockefeller in popularity, a
(!allup poll indlcated Stm:lay.
The poll was completed. on the eve
ol. the New York primary last Tuesday
in whlcb. Democratic can d Id ate
McCarthy scored a major Victory by
iwnning a majority of convention
delegates. DAILY PILDT Stiff Pllolllll
Soccer Fans
Stampede;
71 Perish
BIJEllOS Al R E S (UPI) -A
stampede started b7 dla-Utd 1oc-
cer lam hurling Oaf1\llt1 newspapers
onto fans below k.llled 71 persona s~
day afternoon in the River Plate loot
CEI' itadium:. Hundred& more wenC'
trampled and 69 Wa"e in teriom" COQ·
dlti<>n today. .
Police said a tumstlle Jammed al
exit No. J.2 and that a aeefblnl mQs Of
fans filing outward down a winding
staircase panicked when hoodlums
above rolled up newspapers, set them
on fire and tOfised them down onto the
crowd for fun.
The crowd became a human
avalanche and the staircase became a
bloodstained passage to death with
body piled on top of body. Clothes
were ripped and even torn oU. There
were screams of fright and pain that
heii::htened the panic.
2 Men Missing
As Fire Rages
On Freighter
The poll also .showed Humphrey
would defeat Republican candidate
Nixon but would lose to Rockefeller,
competing with Nixon for the GOP
nomination.
Freshly painted signs propped in a cluster at Newport Beach sign shop seemingly dispense conflicting ad·
vice on how to get just about anywhere on new Irvine Ranch developments. After drying, they'll be pos·
ted all over Orange Coast.
Feelings run high at soccer games
in Latin America, but Sunday's game
was between arch rivals River Plate
and Boca Juniors. The game ended in
a scoreless tie between these teams
whose stadiums are only four miles
apart. P.olice blamed the visiting Boca
Junior fans for starting the trouble, HONOLULU (UPI) -Fire raged The. polliltg organization pointed out,
out of control on the freighter SS however, that "rarely have political
fiortb. America 1n the P__acldc_Stinday_views sh~n such volatility as during
-night and two crewmen were missing. the last fWOOr lllfe"e months and
Twenty.two others were rescued bv ~ldom h~ve so many candidates been another lb.Ip. · involved. m such clos~ contest..."
The Coast Guard said the 4.11.foot Hump~ey and 1!f c Ca~ th Y ,
Nortn America was ablaze and drif-,,~while, i:nad~ the V1etnem war the
ting "in good weather" 630 miles east-..:hief ca,mpa1gn i.ssue.
southeast or Honolulu McCarthy reaffirmed his Intention
''The fire ls out or' control and ln-to visit Paris to look in on the Vietnam
tensifying " an officer said peace ~s and Humphrey called for a ' · i::easef1re.
A coast guard rescue plane directed McCarthy said he doesn't plan to
another frelght.e~, ~e SS St. Paul, ~o negotiate with North Vietnam
the scene where it picked up 22 men in delegates to the Paris talks, but "it t~? lifeboats. . might be a good thing for me as a
The two missing cr~w members presidential caadldate to speak to
were r~ported to have lifejacketa on, them ... (and) find out what the
but we re not sure if the~ burned to I?OSSlbilities for some kind of ac-
death on the S'hip or are ~~ out ~ere commodation or settlement are."
90ID.ewhere In the water, the officer Humphrey proposed .a ceasefire in
sai8C:., -tgh h , 1 b 1 a~ interview with the New York
uu1 u 'IC ters ave ,... er an Times.
registry. 1be st Paul was bound for
Y okohmla. The destination of the
North America was not immediately
known.
The Coatt Guard plane circled the
two ships until darkness, then headed
for Honolulu. The St. Paul stayed with
the burning ship and searched for the
misainf men.
The Marine Exchange in San Fran-
cisoo 1ald the North America was
owned by ' Atlantic Marine
Enterprises, Inc. Her home port was
Monrovia.
'nle exchange said the shlp was built
in 1952 and had a gross tonnage of
5,626 tons, a draft of 24 feet and a
beam of 57 feet, two inches.
Short Circuit
Causes $5,000
1Blaze on Boat
An electrical short today was listed
as the probable cause of a $5,000 boat
fire that whipped through the interior
of a 40-foot cutter owned by a
Westminster man.
Newport Beach firemen and Harbor
Dlatrict patrolmen responded to the
Solurday emting blaze.
n>e vessel, regi'stered to Edgar A.
Rende, Jr., of Westminster, was
moored at King's Lido Landing near
Davey'a Locker. The owner was not
aboard and no injuries were reported,
an official said.
In another weekend boating incident,
ct 29-year-<>ld Anaheim man suffered
three deep cut.a on tte bottom of his
right foot when it was cut by a churn·
ing propeller.
The accident occurred while Migu el
Maloney was standing on an outboard
engine of a ski boat operated by
Fausto ~eas, 22, of La Habra.
Beach Budget
Contains Certain
Increase in Taxes
Huntington Beach taxpayers face an
almost certain tax increase following
adoption of the city budget for 1~9
which calls for an increase in the
basic rate from the '1.33 per $100
assessed valuation prevallillg over tbe
past nine years.
Councilmen are to consider adoption
of the preliminary budget at the 7:30
p.m. meeting in council chambers of
Memorial Hall, 5th Str~t and Pecan
Avenue.
As presently written the total budget
Is •11.1 million with $7.2 mlllion
earmarked for the general fund. To
finance increases in salaries and to
strengthen the police department with
additfonal manpower, the tax rate
must increase to ,1.355 unless the
estimated assessed valuation of $308
million soars far above the estimate.
Councilmen will consider also in·
creasin·g the tax rate for the Recrea·
tion and Parks Department from the
present lllcents per $100 assessed
valuation t the full 20 cents allowed
by city charter.
The rate for the Library Depart·
ment is likely to be Jncreased to the 15
cents per •100 8.S!essed valuation
allowed by the charter.
Cost for all the increases for the
average homeowner fs expected to be
less than '7 or '8 pef' year,
All departments have asked for In·
creases with t.he exception of City
Treasurer Warren Hall's department
which has asked -and received
without much question -a $20,000
reduction.
The budget must be approved by Ju-
ly 1 and the tax rate set by Sept. 1.
-First Major
Brush Fire
St~ Burning
LOS ANGELES (AP) -California's
first major brush fires o{ the 't)!at rag.
ed on today after ravaging thousands
or acres oi tmer-dry park land.
A blaze in Angeles Nat1onal Forest,
a wat.el"6hed area 40 miles north of Los
Angeles, bu burned more than 40,000
acres in the Liebre Mountain area
since Friday.
It W<IS reported 50 percent COD·
tamed, fire officials said.
A second blaze about 16 miles east,
in the huge forest's Bouquet Canyon
seetion, charred more than 3,500 acres
before It was brought under control
late Sunday.
A 3,000·acre fire in c e n tr a l
<(alifornia's Los Padres National
Forest, 60 miles north of San Luis
Obispo near the California coast, was
about 90 percent contained.
Winds exceeding 45 miles an hour
whipped the Liebre Mountain fire
eastward Sunday but subsided ln
today's predawn hours. More than
1,500 firemen, including men from the
U.S. Forest Service, Los Angeles
County Fire Department, California
Division of Forestry and about 150
Arizona Indians, battled the inferno ..
Five fire fighters were injured Fri·
day, one critically.
Capt. Phlllp Goodell, 45, of Lake
Hughes, Calif., was burned over 32
percent of his body, hospital officials
said. Two other men were in serious
condition and two others were listed
as good. All five were trapped Friday
when flames closed off their escape
route.
No communities were threatened,
autfloritles itald. Trucks, bulldozers,
helicopters and planes, which dropped
tons Of chemical retardants were
moblllzed to prevmt the flames from
spreading to more of the valuable
watershed lands.
The Bouquet Canyon firefighting
team was reduced from 450 to seven
men Sunday, with most of the others
sh.lfted to the major Liebre Mountlain
fire line.
Flremen at Los P.adres said 1,150
men were on the line, includlng about
450 soldiers from Fort Ord and the
Hunter-Liggett military reservation.
The fire began Thursday on the
northern Up of the reservation.
DAILY PILOT
........... c ... w-Westminster's Budget "_"_ ....... -.... I No ...... ,....,
CAUl'OIJllA
A•Mrt N. W.H --111•••• K1nl1 .......
Tlt1~1 A. M1rplil11 Mlllllllll••• J11• R. C.rl'Y , P11tl Nll1111
....... IMMetf' Mvwllr.lnt Dlndlr om, ••
C.. Miiii »I Wd hr I"""
....-a-cri1 i:nr'W)..._,....._,
t.ltlllll .... ft : .. tii"\Hrt1t' ·-
............ , • Ill """'
'
•
.
To Eliminate 24 Jobs
By JAMES McNABB JR •
Of "!-Dllh' l"lllt ,, ...
A reduced number of cl.ty employes
and big cutbacks in public works pro·
jects are needed to bring Westminster
city services in Une with expected
1968-69 revenues. '
In effect, that was the warning to-
day ol City Adminis!Nltoi Robert J.
HunUey who recommended city coun·
cU ue the dollar outf»w while main-
t.:llning the current Sl per $100 assess·
ed valuation property tax rate.
Huntley, who was hired by the city
council a year ago, has already pen·
clled S207,000 (10 percent) from tile
present general fund spending leve.t.
The propased 1968-69 budget ls
"14,850,108. U ace.pied, It w 111
eliminate about 11 pereent (21) of tile
city's 210 job1, primarily from the
public work.a departmeaL
Citizens ...... 1c1 feet Ill• cuu 1n
decline• in development and main-
tenance (I( slreelJ &D<j parks.
James Stilwell, clty 1 t r e e t
superintendent and president ol the
Westminster Munidpal E mp 1oyt1
AHoclatlon crttlclted tl!e propoied
a
layoffs. "We know you can't save
them all but we want .a positive ap-
proach to the problem," he told coun·
cilmen last week.
SWwell asked council to use reserve
funds and money trimmed from other
departments' budget. "We are asking
consideration of the human aspect.
This situation didn't happen In two
weeks," he added.
Westmlnater's population has grown
from 10,755 in 1960 to its present
56,lSS. Added to the generally unset·
ll1ng nature of such a rapid population
increase were yea.rs of city govern·
me.nt turmoil.
Commerce and industry, major tac·
tors for a 80Und tax base, shied away
from the city notorious for its political
instability.
Huntley s&Jd unW the city attracts
tl&nlil<lllnt lnduotrlal and commercial
develapment to offset the low yield of
the re1ldentiaJ tax base,
Wettmlnrler'1 liDancial probtem1 will remain.
"J'm making such serioUI cuti this
year because I never want to do thl1
aa:aln," be 1ald.
'
Viet Cong: Truining Site
Neat Saigon Obliterated
SAH)ON (AP) -U'.S. Air Force B52
bombers today smashed a Viet Cong
training cenler 13 miles from Saigon.
The B52s, have bombed closer to the
capMal only ooce. Last Feb. 13, at the
height of the Viet Cong's Tet offensive
on Saigon, they struck a suspected
enemy troop concentration 10.5 miles
north of Saigon.
The U.S. Command said ground
observers in the train.Ing camp area
southeast of the capital reported that
secondary explosions lasted for six
minut.es after the eight-engine
bombers left the site. A secondary ex-
plosion means ammunition or fuel
going up after the SOO. and 750·pound
bombs have exploded.
In the last two weeks, the B52s have
flown nearly 100 missions within a 75.
mile radius of the capital, trying to cut
infiltration corridors from the Cam·
bodian border and prevent enemy
troops from massing for a threatened
attack on Saigon next month.
In five raids Sunday, the B52s aimed
at enemy troop concentrations and in-
filtration routes in Phuoc Long Provin·
ce, next to the Cambodian border 79
miles north of Saigon.
Saigon was spared of any shelling
for the third consecutive day today,
but the Viet Cong shelled two airfields,
a province capital and four govern·
ment military }XlSts.
Government headquarters said the
shellings killed two g o v e r n m e n t
soldiers and wounded six soldiers
and 15 Vietnamese civilians.
It was the quietest night in two
months in the capital and almost
e,yerywhere else in the country, U. S.
sources said the enemy likely may be
"laying back" to reeeive replace·
ments, retrain, refit and resupply for
fresh attacks.
$500,000 Federal Grant
Approved for OC College
A federal grant of $500,000 has been
approved by a U.S. agency for building
projects at Orange Coast College.
But a $7.25-million September bond
issue may have to be passed for
Orange Coast Junior College District
to use the federal money.
To obtain the grant, the junior col·
lege district must provide $871 ,166 in
local money.
The funds would be used for an
allied health building and additions to
the matil-scieoce and data processing
buildings.
"If the bond issue were to fail, Ulen
it wou.Jd be a matter of establishmg
priorities. We would be seriously
curtailed," said Assistant Superin·
tendent Correllan Thompson .
The federal funds would be made
available tbrough the Department of
ltealth, Education and \Veliare under
the lligher Education Facilities Act.
The Orange Coast College master
building plan shows work on the three
projects scheduled to start i n
February, 1969, with completion in
August, 1970.
Meanwhile, architect \Vi I Ii am
Blurock and Associates of Corona de!
Mar has bcEJiJ given the go ahead on
wttrking drawings for remodeling the
present librh.ry to Muse counseling
and the admissions and records office.
Estimated cost of the remodeling
project is $195,000. Work will start
when the new lib£ary ls completed in
March, 1969.
I! things go according to plan, the
old Army barrack building now hous·
ing counseling offices will be torn
down, Thompson said.
The police department said a
preliminary lnvesUgaUon showed that
turnstiles which only allow one person
at a time to pass through were in
place at exit No. 12 and were responsi-
ble for the jamup of fans . They also
blamed the rowdies abgve.
Stadium officials insisted th e
turnstiles had been removed and the
exists were perfectly free. Police said
they would investigate the claims.
Interior Minister Guillermo Borda.
who visited the police headquarters
being used as a morgue, said: "Two
contradictory versions about . the in-.
cident exist. The president' of the
(River Plate) club told me the exit
was open and the turnstiles removed.
but the information I have received
through the police from witnesses at
the scene contradicts this, saying the
exit was completely closed and the
turnstiles in place."
Police said virtually all of the dead
and injured were male, many Of them
teen-agers. One unidentified woman
was among the injured.
From Page l
ABERNATIIY • •
tor of the Soulhern C h r I s· t 1 a n
Leadership Conference, which ran the
Poor P~le's campaign, called the
police oPeration orderly.
Two tear gas canisters did go off on
the sw~p down the camp. One ap-
parently was part of the booby trap
which went off when police ripped
open a shanty door. PoUce fired the
second one apparulUy assuming there
was someone fmide. '
The arrest procesis at the tent took
more than a half hour with the
demonstrators including women and
children singing suC'h songs as "Do
Right, White Man, Do Right."
Abernathy. who has frequently pro·
claimed he would be arrested, offered
no resistance as two policemen led
him and other demonstrators to be
photographed and then placed him
aboard a bus.
At Resurrection City, police were
working their way through the camp
from east to west, that is from the
\Vashington Monument to the Lfncoln
Memorial area.
The residents were given 1 police
ultimatum at 9:42 a .m. EDT to get out
or be arrested. More than 1,500 riot·
equipped Metropolitan and Park police
were on duty to enforce the order.
Columns of black smoke threaded'up
into the muggy air. Police on the line
near the Lincoln Memorial said the
fires were in some of the plywood
huts.
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Huntington_ B~a~h DAILY PILOT Vov Bomet.own
• • Dally Paper -
vol:. 6f, NO. '1&1', 2 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES MONDAY, JUNE 24, ·1968 TEN CENTS
Tax Hike -Draws Nearer
Huntington Councilmen Consider Budget Tonight
Huntington Beach taxpayers face an
almost certain tax incre.ase following
adoption af·tbe city budget for 1968~9
which calla for an increase in the
ba!ic rate from the $1 .33 per $100
a!i"Se'Ssed valuation prevailing over the
µa-st nine years. •
Councilmen are ta consider adoption
Jf the preliminary budget at the 7:30
9.m. meeting in council chambers ot
Memorial Hall, 5th Street and Pecan
Avenue.
As. presently written the total budget
is $11.1 million with $7.2 million
earmarked for the general fund . To
finance increases in salaries and to
strengthen the police department with
additiooal manpower, the tax rate
must increase to $1.355 unless the
estimated assessed valuation of $308
million soars far above Ute estJmate.
Councilmen will consider a!Jo in-
creasing the tax rate for the Recrea·
lion and Parks Department from the
present 11 cents ptt $100 assessed
\•aluation to the full 20 cenU allowed
by city charter.
The rate for the Library Depart·
1nent is likely to be increased to the 15
cents per $100 assessed valuation
allowed by the charter.
Police· Clear Shanty City
Abernathy, 50 Others Arrested as 1,500 Officers Move In
WASHINGTON (AP} -Police arm·
ed with shotguns and tear gas move~
through and took possession of the
:>oor People's Campaign Resurrection
City today. At the Capitol, other police
arrested the Rev . Ralph David
Abernathy, the campaign leader.
About 50 arrests were made at
Resurrection City, where the resfdents
had been told they could no longer
stay on public land. Abernathy was ar·
rested, peaceably, on charges of
violating a law whlch f o r b i d s
demonstrations on the C a p i t o 1
grounds. '
Despite the massive show o! force -
1500 police we.re on hand -there was
no serious violence as police cleared
the camp.
As police with their shotguns and
tear gas guns at the ready approached
the gates of the camp the only sound
wu a man singing civil rights songs
over the camp's public address
system.
The police moved down in two lines
checking each of the shanties and
tents to see if any campers remained.
Halfway through the encampment
they found a tent containing more than
50 demonstrators singing and clap·
ping. nus group submitted to arrest
nonviolently and they were ta.ken one
by one to waiting police buses.
William Rutherford, executive direc·
tor of the Southern Christia n
Leadership Conference, which ran the
Poor People's campaign, called the
police operation orderly.
Two tear gas canisters did go o!i on
the sweep down the camp. One ap-
parently was part of the booby trap
which-went off when police ripped
open a shanty door. Police fired the
second one apparently assuming there
was someone fnside.
The arrest process at the tent took
more than a hali hour with the
North Rejects Humphrey
Proposal for Cease Fire
PARIS (UPI) -North Vietnam to·
day rej~ Vice President Hubert ll.
Humphrey's cal.I for an immedaate
cease-fire in Vietnam.
Xuan Thuy chief North Vietnamese
delegate to' the Hanoi-Washington
tallm in Paris, told a lunch meeting.of
the Anglo-American Press Associ a-
tion: "The United Sates must first ccas"
its air raids and other acts of war im
mediately and uncondltiomilly."
Commenting on Humphrey's sta~e
ment that he believed a cease brr
would enhance chances !or the succes:-.
of the Paris talks, Xuan said "we
must not mix. up aggressors and thei r
victims." . Humphrey in a newspaper in·
terview, had1 called !or an immediat1·
cease fire in Vietnam.
Thuy said the "only objective of th1'
Palis talks now was to agree on <.
ceGS&rtion of tile air raids."
"Only if an agreement is reached 01·
this matter can we m-0ve on to other
s11bjects,1t he saAd.
Ttruy said Hanoi would make no con·
cessions in exchahge for the end of U. s. air raids and other "acts of war"
1gainst North Vietnam.
He aL!io repeated charges that the
Angels' Schaal
Out of Hospital;
Rest Ordered
California Angels thlrd baseman
Paul Schaal of Fountain Valley today
was released from the hospital in
Boston where he has b e e n
recuperating fro111 being struck in the
head by a pitched ball.
failure to make any progress in U1e
talks was the fault of the United
States. And he appeared determined to
knock down optimistic statement! by
key U. S. officials that the talks which
began on May 13 were showing some
signs ot progress.
He said that the United States, in·
slead of cutting back on its war ef-
forts, bad sharply stepped up air raids
north of the 17th Parallel which
divides the north and south. U. S.
Jllanes have been restricted by Presi-
dent Johnson to targets in thr•
southern part of North Vietnam , with
iJanoi and ftaiphong now out ol
..1ounds.
"After nine negotiating session5, our
conw:rsations, which have lasted more
than one month, have reached. no
result ,'' Thuy said ••• "11 thCH talks
are showing no progress, the wholf
responsibility lies wtih the American
side."
11huy said the Uriited St&tes ha"
"deliberately sought to substitut:
black !or white."
He said the United States had
"violated" the 1954 Genev a
agreement6 on Indochina and was the
"aggressor" in Vietnam. ·
"But it has come be.re to accuse
Noc.th Vietnam of having violated the
agreements," Thuy said.
He called on world opinion "to go on
condemning" the United States and
"00 demand more vigorously" that
Washington end the air raids on N<rlh
Vieblam.
8 Guardsmen Injured
FORT IRWIN (AP) -A small
military rocket either has ignited or
exploded inside a barracks at this
desert training center, injuring eight
National Guardsmen from the San
Franci'sco Bay Area, one seriously.
demonstrators including women and
children singing such songs as "Do
Right, W·hite l\r.an, Do Right."
Abernathy, who has frequently pro-
clain1ed he would be arrested, offered
no resistance as two policemen led
him and other demonstrators to be
photographed and then placed him
aboard a bus.
At Resurrection City, police were
working their way through the camp
from east to west, that is from the
Washington Monument to the Lfncoln
l\1e.morial area.
The residents were given a police
ultimatum at 9:42 a.m. EDT to get out
or be arrested. More than 1,000 riot·
equipped Metropolitan and Park police
were on duty to enforce the order.
Colum ns of black smoke threaded up
into the muggy air. Police on the line
near the IJncoln Memorial said the
flreS were in some of the plywood
huts.
• Woman Charged
As Prostitute
At Newport Hotel
Prostitution charges were lodged
against a 24-year-old Sacramento
woman today after she was arrested
at a large Newport Beach hotel for
allegedJy going from door to door
trying to drum up business.
Held under $315 bail was Alee May
\1orris, a pert blue-eyed blonde who
assertedly tried to strike a bargain for
'1er services with two undercover
·~ewport vice officers.
:\ second woman at the hotel was
Jentified as Miss Morris' companion ,
uut was oot arrested after she claimed
~o be an undercover policewoman
from the Reno, Nev., police depart·
ment.
The aupposed policewoman was
identified as Liza LeMays, 32, a tall
ilue-eyed blonde. Newport Beach
.JO lice today were verifying her story.
Miss Morris allegedly was seen
~ntering and leaving the rooms of
several hotel guests from 11 p.m. Fri·
day to 2 a.m. Saturday morning.
Police said they confi scated a red ad·
dress book and found $135 hidden in
the woman's bra. ,
1be case remained under lnves·
ligation today to determ~ whether
others also were Involved ln the alleg.
eel prostitution activities.
OV Trustees Switch
Dates of Meetings
For the month ol. July only, trustees
of Ocean View School District will
change meetings !rom the first and
third Mondays to ttie second and
fourth Mond2.Tys.
The July 8 and 22 meetings will be
held in the board room , 7972 Warner
Ave., Huntington Beach.
Cost for all the increases for the
average homeowner i's expected to be
less than $7 or ·$8 per year.
All departments have asked for ~
creases with the exception of Cit}'
Treasurer Warren Hall's department
which has asked -and received
without much question -a $20,000'·
reduction.
The budget must be awroved by Ju·
ly l and the tax rate set by Sept. 1.
Finance Firm )
Holdup Man
Still at Large
The stickup artist who escaped the
clutches of Huntington Beach policP.
F'riday <Wter holding up the Beneficial
Finance Co. is still on the loose.
Capt. Earle Robitaille said today the
police department · is proceeding with
its routine investigation o( the $'70
armed robbery .and is preparing a
composite picture of the pi'Stol·
wielding suspect.
The nervous robber fired one shot
into the counter of the company office
located at 16121 Beach Blvd., before
he fled in a "hot-wired" late model
car.
Police units later found the alleged
getaway vehicle with its engine sUJJ
running in a parking lot near Beach at
!-lope Street. The robber had vanished.
Lagunq, Boy, 5,
Stricken After
Swal,lowing Drug
A 5-year-old Laguna Beach boy who
may have taken the dangerous
hallucinatory drug STP is in s~rious
condition today at South Coast Com·
munity llospital.
Police said Gerry Griggs of 1215
Roosevelt Lane wai: rushed to the
hospital Sunday night after be com-
plained of his hands burning, coll~ed
and began to convulse.
A hospital spokesman said the boy is
in intensive care in an oxygen tent
after having his stomach pumped. The
effects of the drug, pa.rticularl)' on a
child, are not fully understood.
However, it apparently caused a
respiratory collapse.
Police said the youngster was
playing wi1h other children in a field
near his house, when be became ill.
Lt. Robert McMurray 11aid the boy's
father, John M. Griggs, told police the
yOllllgster may have discovered some-
one's outdoor drug cache. The mat·
ter is under investigation.
Police said the drug, which bears a
long chemical name, is nicknamed
Serenity, Trcmquility and Peace. It ha s
reoccurring symptoms as does LSD
but is said to be more dangerous.
Short Circuit
Blaze on Boat
An electrical short today was listed
as the probable cause of a $5,000 boat
fire that whipped through the interior
or a 40-foot cutter owned by a
Westminster man.
Newport Beach firemen .and Harbor
District patrolmen respooded to the
Saturday evening blaze.
The vessel, registered to Edgar A.
1-lende, Jr., of Westminster, wa11
moored at King's Lido LandJng near
Davey's Locker, ~e owner was not
aboard and no injuries were reported,
an official said.
OAILY PILOT P11ott ... J'""" t..v
Slide 'Devils'
Pamila Reed of Huntington Beach, current bolder of Miss Costa
Mesa title, has company of Mayor Alvin Pinkley (right) and Cham-
ber of Commerce Executive Manager Nicholas Ziener as trio en·
joys first ride down "sky slide" on Baker Street, just east of Har-
bor Boulevard. They took inaugural ''flight" on 40-foot-high slide
late Friday afternoon in Costa Mesa.
71 Trampled to Death
As Soccer Fans Stampede
BUENOS A IRES (UPI) -A
stampede started by disgruntled soc·
cer fans hlµ'ling naming newspapers
onto tans below killed 71 persons Sun·
day afternooo in the River Plate soc·
cer stadium. llundreds more were
trampled and 69 were in serious con·
dltion today. ·
Police said a turnstile jammed at
exit No. 12 and that a seething mass of
fans filing outward down a winding
staircase panicked when hoodlwns
above rolled up newspapers, set them
Coast Woman's
Death Probed
In Woodand
WOODLAND (AP) -An inveotiga·.
Uon into the deaih of a woman whose
body was found two months ago in Or·
ange County has moved to Woodland
where officers hope to learn who the
woman was.
The body was found March 14 in a
drainage ditch at Huntington Beach.
Authorities said the woman had been
beaten end her throat was slashed.
Detective Sgt. Joe Gnmdy of Hunt·
lngton Beach said investigallors have
learned the woman bought a birth-
stone ring from a Woodland jewelry
store nine days before her body was
found,
Trio Wins $4(),306
AGUA CALIENTE, Mexico (UPI) -
Robert Labossiere, 45, of .Gardena and
two unidentified partners collected
$40,306.80 !or their piclc:1 in Caliente
race tr.ack's 5-10 racing handicap
Saturday.
Labossiere, who picked all six win·
neTs in the contest, said he did his own
handicapping.
on fire and tossed them down onto the
crowd !or fun.
The crowd became a human
avalanche and Uie staircase became a
bloodstaln~d passage to death with
body piled on top of body. Clothes
were ripped and even torn off. There
were screams of fright and pain that
heightened the panic. ·
Feelings run hJgh at soccer games
in Latin America. but Sunday's game
was between arch rivals River Plate
and Boca Juniors. The game ended in
a scoreless tie between these teams
whose stadiums are only !our miles
apart. Police blamed the visltin~ Boc1
Junior "fans !or starting the trouble.
The police department said a
preliminary Investigation showed that
turnstiles which only allow one person
at a time to pass through were Jn
place at ex.it No.· 12 and were respansl·
ble for the jamup of fans. They alJo
blamed the rowdJes above.
Stadium officials insisted t h e
turnstiles had been removed and the
exists were perfectly free. Police said
they would Investigate the claims.
Interior Minister Guillermo Borda w~o visited the police headquarteri
be mg used as a morgue. said: "Two
contradJctory versions about the in·
cldent exist. The president of the
(River Plate) club told me the exJt
was open and the turnstiles removed,
but the information I have received
through the police from witnesses at
the scene contradicts this. saylnJ{ the
exit was completely closed and the
turnstiles in place."
Police said virtually all of the dead
and injured were male, man.v of them
teen-agers. One tm ldentined woman
wall among the injured.
Orllllge f',oast
Wead.er
Schaal was struck down in the bat·
ters box June 13. Upon his reiease to-
day, physicians gave him assurance
that he would be able to resume his
playing career eventually.
Dr. John M. Kurkjian said the 25-
year-old Schaal bas beel1 told to al>-
staln from all ballplaylng far about a
month, and &hould then bw able to
begin practice sessions.
Westminster Budget Cuts 24 Jobs
The sun's still sleeplng Jate
along the Orange Coast, and
Tutsday'll be no exception. Not
much change In the tempera-
ture (70) either.
INSmE TODAY
"We have every expectation t.bal he
will be able to play again," Dr. Kurk· Jlan said, "But we are not able to say
When at this point."
Re 11aJd Sdla&I itlll ex_P.Ct_lenct:s
some minimal dizziness arid "9001e
definite hearing loss 'Which will pro-
bably be pennanent to some degree."
Schaal, batting agairlst the Boston
Red Sox' Jose Santiago, was bit just
behind the temple.
. Ile also 1ulf6".'d a perforatfd car
drum.
By JA~tES McNABB JR.
Of ,,. 0.llY .. iltt .....
A reduced number of city employcs
and big cutbacks ln public works pro·
Jec+.s are needed to bring Westminster
city services In llne with expected
1968-69 revenues.
In effect. that was the warn.lng to-
6ay ol City Admlnistrator Robert J,
l·JunUey wbo recommc::nded city COUD·
cil axe the dollar ouUlow whlle main-
taining the current tl per t lOO assess·
eel valuaUon proporty tax rate .
Huntley, who was hired by the city
..:
council a year ago , has alre~dy pen·
died $'207,000 (10 percent) from the
present general fund spending level.
The proPosed 11168-69 budget is
'4,850,108. I! •cccplA!d, It w I 11
ellmlnate about 11 percent (24) of the
city's 210 jobs, primarily from the
publlc works department.
Citilens would tee! the cuts in
dectlnet In development and main·
tenance of stl't!ets and parka:.
James Slllwetl, elty 1 tree t
superintendent and president or the
Westminster Municipal E mp Io yes
:\ssoclation criticized U1e proposed
layoffs. "We know you can't save
lhCm all but we want a positive ap-
proocb to the problem," he told coun-
cilmen lallt week.
StllwelJ asked council to use reserve
funds and money tl'imrried from other
. departments' budget. "We are asking
consideration of t.he human aspect.
This situation didn't happen in two
weeks," he added.
Westminster's population has grown
from 10,75S In 1960 to Jts present
56, 158. Added to the generally unset·
tling nat\D'e of such a rapid population r.
increase were year1 of ~overn·
mllnt turmoil.
Commerce and Industry. major fac· ton for a sound tax base, shjed away
from the city notorious for Its political
Instability.
Huntley said untJI the city attract•
significant tndumlal and commercial
devel:opmeDt to offset the low yield of
the residential tu base,
\Ve1tmlnster'1 f1nancial problems will
remain.
"I'm making auch serious cuts this
year because l never want to do thl1
again,"" he said.
~
As Kialoc II took an tarly
ttad in Ntwport, R./. to Btr--
muda mce, Tto on.e lt ctrtafn jll.St
who ii l«OOino tht race to
Tahiti, Boattng Pcge 10. _,., "
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j! DAILY PILOT
Nixon, Humphrey Boosted
Two Front Runners Move Cl.aser to Nomination ·
DAU. Y PILOT lllff Ptllllt
OITAWAY CAR -Huntington Beach Police Del. Duane Brown loo~s
over car uaed by guriiDan In taking f70 from the Bene~cial Fi_nance
Co. Friday afternoon. Robber left car, with its motor still runmng, a
short distance from the finance company an\t-apparently changed to
another. Police are still looking for the gunman. (See Story, Pg. 1.)
•
Viet Cong Training Site
Near Saigon Obliterated
SAIGON (AP) -U.S. Air Force BS,
bomben today smashed a V~t Cong
training center 13 miles Crom Saigon.
The B52s, have bombed cl05er to the
capiial only once."Last Feb. 13, at the
height of the Viet Cong's Tet offensive
on Saigon, they strock a suspected
enemy troop concentration 10.5. mHes
north of Saigon.
The U.S. Command said ground
observers in the training camp area
southeast of the capital reported that
secondary explosions lasted for. six
minutes after the e I g ht-en gl n c
bombers left the site. A secondary ex -
plosian mean1 ammunition or fuel
going up after the 500-and 75()..pound
bombs have exploded.
ln the last two weeks, the B52s have
flown nearly 100 missions within a 75·
mile radius Of the capital, trying to cut
in11Uration corridors from the Cam-
bodian border and prevent enemy
troops from massing for a threatened
attack on Saigon next month.
In five raids Sunday, the B52s aimed
at enemy troop concentrations and in-
Beach Trustees
To Study Budget
At Meet Tonight
Mostly budget matters will occupy
trustees of Huntington Beach Union
High School District Tuesday night.
Chances are good that 1968-69
budget will be up from current
figures, but 6till will fit within the
$1.39 general purpo6e rate authorized
by the voters in March.
Trustees meet at 7:,, p.m. at the
lil)rery of Marina High Ed!OOI,
Springdalo Street and Eding<r Aw·
Due, Huntillgton Beocll.
They an expected to adopt re6olu-
tions setting tile tn rate at fl.39 plus
pennimve oft!Tidea and about 50
ceo4 for bond tnteree:t l;l?ld redem p-
tion. A total rate of about ,2.05 is ex·
pected.
The meeting at Marina High School
is in accordance with the new policy
rotating meetings to schools In various
part.& of the 52-aquare mile district oo
the last meeting oC the month during
the 1ummer.
DAILY PILOT
.............. c.tw.na.
fl.olt1rt N. W114 ·-lh111111 k•••il ....
filtration routes in Phuoc Long Provin-
ce, next to the Cambodian border 75
miles nortb Of Saigon.
Saigon was spared of any shelling
for the third consecutive day today,
but the Viet Cong shelled two airfields,
a province capital and four govern·
ment military posts.
Government headquarters said the
shellings killed two govern men t
soldiers and wounded six soldiers
and 15 Vietnamese civilians.
It was the quietest night in two
1nonths in the capital and almost
everywhere else in the country. U. S.
sources said the enemy likely may be
"laying back" to receive replace-
ment!, retrain, refit and resupply for
fresh attacks.
Hanoi Radio rejected a U.S. appeal
far a halt lo the shelling of Saigon
sayJng North Vietnam Js "ready to
fight the U.S. aggressors anywhere in
Vietnam." The broadcast also said the
Communist-led forces have "a solemn,
inviolable right" to defend the
sovereignty of Vietnam and warned
they would intensify their attacks on
Saigon and other areas of South Viet-
nam.
Over North Vietnam's southern
panhandle, U.S. Air Force and Navy
pilots reported destroying or damag-
a daylong battle 41 enemy soldiers
parently loaded with ammunition.
On the ground, South Vietnamese
troops suffered one of their worst set-
backs in months Saturday as guer-
rillas ambushed a South Vietnamese
infantry column moving down a
h~ghway 60 miles northeast of Saigon,
killed 44 of the government troops and
"'OUnded 71.
A·merican helicopters flew in a se-
cond gGvernment battalion, and alter
a daylong battle 41 enemy soldier
'"·ere reported killed. The reinforcing
t.roops suffered light casualties, head-
quartens said.
Government troops also reported
kllllng 95 Viet Cong soldiers in two
other battles, 25 miles north of Saigon
and 100 miles southwest of the capital.
Government losses were reported as
14 killed and 15 wounded in one clash
and as light In the other.
Indications mounted that the reports
of North Vietnamese helicopters
around the demilitarized zone last
week were erroneous. Gen . Creighton
\V. Abrams, the U. S. commander in
Vietnam, s~ld Sunday "there is J!O
formal, concrete factual evidence"' dt-
such activity and no evidence ol
enemy helicop ters operatlng in North
Vietnam's lower panhandle area
above the DMZ.
The U.S. Command is expected to
release the findings o! ita investigation
into the reports soon.
By Ullle<I PHii lllkr111Uoaal
Ptt1ldentW frontrunner• }lubert lt.
llumpbrey and Richard M. Nixon roll·
ed up more delegate strength over the
weekend and moved closer to their
party nominat1011.11.
Nixon took a ilimt 1trlde by scorlng
vlctorle1 ln Soufb Carolina, Lou11.lana,
Maryla.id, Washlllgto,n and Monlal>a.
Humphrey picked up d e I e g 1 t e
strength from his borne state or Min·
nesota and in Connecticut.
Gaining nearly 100 delegate votes,
Nixon now has about eoo c0mmitted
delegate votes, wltb 667 votes needed
for the nomtnalloc.
Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New
York bas 254 delegate votes .alter get·
First Major
Brush Fire
Still Burning
LOS ANGELES (AP) -California's
first major brush fires of the year rag-
ed on today after ravaging thousands
of acres of Under-dry park land.
A blaie Jn Angeles National Forest,
a watershed area 40 miles north of Los
Angeles, has burned more than 40,000
acres In the Llebre Mountain area
since Friday.
It was reported 50 percent con-
tained, fire officials said.
A second blaze about 16 miles east,
in the huge forest's Bouquet Canyon
section, charred more than 3,500 acres
before it was brought under control
late Sunday.
A 3,000-acre fire in c en tr a 1
California's Los Padres National
Forest, 60 miles north of San Luis
Obispo near the Califomla coast, was
about 90 percent contained.
Winds exceeding 45 milea an hour
\vhipped the Licbre Mountain fire
eastward Sunday but subsided in
today'a predawn hours. More than
1,500 firemen, including men from the
U.S. Forest Service. Los Angeles
County Fire Department, Calilornia
Division Of Forestry and about 150
Arizona Indians, battled the inferno.
Five fire figtiters were injured Fri·
day, one critically.
Capt. Philip Goodell, 45, of Lake
Hughes, Calif., was burned over 32
percent of his body, hospital officials
said. T\YO other men were in serious
condition and two others were listed
as good . All five· were trapped Friday
when flames closed ofI their escape
route.
No communities were threatened,
authorities said. Truck!, bulldozers,
helicopters and planes, which dropped
tons of chemical retardants were
mobilized to prevent the flames from
spreading to more of the valuable
watershed lands.
The Bouquet Ganyon firefighting
team was reduced from 450 to seven
men Sunday, witlh most of the others
shifted to the major Liebre Mountain
fire line.
Firemen at Los P·adres said 1,150
men were on the line, including about
450 &0ldier1 from Fort Ord and the
Hunter.IJggett military reservation.
The fire began Thursday on the
northern tip of the reservation,
Boot Camp Slated
By Marine Facility
The Marine Corps Air Facility Navy
League at El T<>ro will s?OOsor a one
week Boot Camp for 50 sea cadets
from throughout the country today
through Friday.
The week's activities, which run
from 5 a.m. to 10 p.m. daily, will in·
elude physical fitness tests, rifle
familiarfzatloo, combat practice and
tours througti the gas chamber.
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$500,000 Federal Grant
For OCC Building Ok'd
•
A federal grant of $500,(XX) has been
approved by• U.S. agency for building
projects at Orange Coast College.
But a $7.25-million September bond
Issue may have to be passed for
Orange Coast Junior College District
lo use the federal money.
'fo obtain the grant, tbe junior col-
lege district mUJt provide $871 ,166 in
local money.
The funds would be used for an
allied health buildlng and •dditiona to
Ibo m1tll·lcl"""" and data pro<OlllllJ
bulldln&•·
•1u tbe bond issue were to fall, then
it would be 1 matter of e1t.abll1blng
priorities. We would be sulous[y
curtailed." u.Id Anistant Superin-
tendent Cocrellan Thompson.
The federal funds would bl made
nvallable through the Dapartm.ent of
~
Health, Education and Wetrare under
the lilgtler Education FaciUlles Act.
The Orange Coast College master
building plan shows work on the three
projects schedult?d to start j n
February, 1969, with completion In
Augu&t, 1970.
PtfeanwhUc , archltect W i 111 am
Blurock and Associates of Corona del
Mar has been given the go ahead on
working drawillgs for remodeling tht1
pre1eDt library to house counseHng
and the admJsstons and records office.
EsUmated coat Of the remodeling proJ•cl Is fl95,000. Work will start
when the new library 11 completed in
March, 1969.
If tlllnp go according to plan, the
old Army barrack build.in& now hous-
in& counse.llng of(lctt will be torn
down, Thompson said. <
Ung only a handlul this weekend.
Nixon's only setback came in New
Mez:Jco wher.,e Gov. Ronald R~~1an
picked up half the state's 12 delegate
vote1 .. Two oltlers were uncommitted.
Humphrey picked up 381h vote.a il"I
Minnesota, compared with S e n •
Eugene J . McCarthy's 13Y.t. In Con·
necUcut, where McCarth1 fott:e1
walked out because they weren't given
the votes they thought they should
hQve, Humphrey collected probably 35
votes out of the sbate's 44 delegate
votes.
The Vice pre1ldent now has 899 com·
milted convention vote1, with 1,312
needed for nomination.
McCarthy has edged ahead of Nixon
'
and Rockefeller in popularlty,1 A
Gallup poll Indicated Sund.,..
The poll was completed on the eve
Of the New York pfimai-y last Tue&day
jo which Democratic can d l d ~ t e
McCarthy scored a major victory by
iwnnln1• a majority of convention
delegates.
The ~U also showed Humphrey
.woukl defeat Republican candidate
Nixon but would lo.re to Rockefeller,
competing with Nixon for the GOP
nomination.
The polling organization pointed out,
however, that "rarely have political
views shown 1uc.b volatility &5 during
the last two or three months and
seldom have so many candidates been
Three Bags Full
Denise Darcel Held as Shoplifter
(AP) -Bosomy
French ac ess Denise Darcel, with
money in er purse and a show date
waiting, as charged with shoplifUng
$35 wo of underwear Sunday. She
ca t "a bum rap."
Miss Darcel, who rose to film
stardom in the late 1940s, was ar-
rested outside a downtown Miami
deparbnent store by a store detective
who saJd "she had three shopping bags
full of merchandise."
Later, in jail, Miss Darcel said,
"They can't get away with treaUng me
like a common criminal."
"She had already purchased several
articles and paid for them," Police Lt.
Paul Oboz said ... And she was plcfctng
up other things she wanted. She claim·
ed there was DO sales lady at the time
and she intended to pay for it later.
She claims she went out to see If a bus
~as coming by. That's when she was
arrested by the store detective."
PoUce said the goods -valued at
135.08 -In Miss Darcel's shopping
bags included hose, slips, a comb and
mirror, hairpins, a few pair of pan ti ea,
a nightgown and one bra -size 40.
Miss Darcel, petite and trim at 43,
had her blonde hair tucked under a
scarf when jailed. She wore a blouse
with fruit prints, slacks and large
sunglasses.
She posted $500 bond and was ~ ·
released from jail about three hours
after her arrest. She must appear in
Municipal Court next Friday on petty
larceny charges.
The Paris-born actress came to
llollywood in 1947 to film "To the Vic-
tor." She followed with a success in
"Battleground" opposite Van Johnson
and the late John Hodiak.
She headlined shows in New York.
Miami Beach and Las Vegas in the
early 1950s. She now calls Las Vegas
home, but has an apartment in Miami
Beach.
Ul'I Tdepftoto
'SAGGED' IN MIAMI
Actress Denise Darcel
Selective Service Center
Bombed in N. Hollywood
NORTH HOLLYWOOD !UPI) -A
bomb today ripped a two-!tory
building occupied by a Selective
Service board and police, fearing ad·
d.itional bias.ts, asked IO families to
le.ave their homes near the severely
damaged draft office.
However, police said a subsequent
search o! the building disclosed no ad-
ditional bombs.
'l'here were no injuries in the ex-
plosion. /
The ground floor of the building
"was 100 percent damaged," a police
offJcer said.
The explosion buckled walls of tht! 50
by 75 foot brick and stucco structure,
knocked out windows and did ex-
tensive damage to office equipment.
involved In s1.1ch close1contests."
Humphrey and McC•rthy,
meanwhile, made the Vietnam war the ,
chief c11.mpaJgn issue,
McCarthy realfirmed his intentifn !
to visit Paris to look in on ~the VJetnifn ~
peace talks and Humphrey called !or a.
ceasefire. '
McCarthy said be doesn't plan :to
negotiate with North V 1 et n am
delegates to tht1 Paris talJr:s , but .. it
might be a good thµl g for me as a
presidential candidate to speak to
them ... (and) find out what the
possibilities for some kind of lie·
comrnodation or setUement are."
Humphrey proposed a ceasefire tn
an interview with the New York
Tintes.
2 Men Missing
As Fire Rages
On Freighter
HONOLULU (UPI) -Fire raged
out of control QD. the freight.er SS
North America in the Pacific Sunday
night and two crewmen were missing.
Twenty-two others were rescued by
another ship.
The Coast Guard said the Ul·foot
North America was ablaze and drif.
ting "in good weather" 630 miles east·
southeast of Honolulu.
"The fire is out of control and· 1n.
tenslfying," an officer a aid.
A coast guard rescue plane directed
another freighter, the SS St. Paul, to
the scene where It picked up 22 men in
two lifeboats. ·
"The two missing crew members
were re.,orted to have llfejackets on,
but we're not sure if they burned to
death on the S'hlp or are still out there
somewhere )n the water," the officer
said.
Both freighters have Libert an
registry. The St, Paul was bound for
Yokohama. The destination cf the
North America was not immediately
known.
The Coast Guard plane circled the
two ships until darkness, then headed
for Honolulu. The St. Paul stayed with
the burning ship and searched for the
missing men. ·
Beach Council
To Select Two
Pla1mers Tonight
Two Planning Commission open-
' ings likely will be filled by the Hunt-
ington Beach City Council at tonight's
session at 7:30 o'clock in chambers 0-f
Memorial Hall, 5th Street and Pecan
Avenue.
Incumbents Frank Larkin and
Thomas j'Gus" Worthy are on the list
of 15 applicants for the two positions.
Top contenders., however, are Realtor
Roger Slates, fofmer homeowner
association officer Henry Dukes and
Michael Bokor.
Also in the running are former city
clerk John HendrJck5en, Ba;arrl of Ap·
peals member Charles V. Cclstadt,
Mac P. Bangoy, Stanley Kro.m, Gerald
E . Larsen, M. R .. Beychak, Robert A.
Butler, Harry Boggs, C., A. Moore and
Richard Y. Nerio. ·
· Those appointed will take over four·
year terms which begin July 1. All
have been interviewed and the council
presumably is ready to make a
decision tonight.
0
OMEGA
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Sale1 Ir S1rvicf
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Laguna Bea~h DAILY PILOT Today's Closing
)/.. EDITION N.Y. Stoeks
VOL. 61, NO. 15 1, 2 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES [AGUNA BEACH; CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JUNE 2~. l 96' TEN CENTS
• • 0 r1c en; ame
•
Abernathy Jailed
1,500 Police Clear Resurrection Cit)'_
WASHINGTON (AP) -Police arm-
ed with shotguns and tear gas moved
through and took possession or the
Poor People's Campaign Resurrection
Citv today. At the Capitol, other police
arieste,d the Rev. Ralph David
Abernathy, the campaign lead .
About 50 arrests were m de at
Resurrection City, where the r fdents
had been told they could no longer
stay on public land. Abernathy as ar-
rested, peaceably, on charg s of
viola.ting a law which f or ids
demonstrations on the C a p t o l
grounds.
Despite the massive show of for e -
1500 police were on hand -there was
no serious violence as police cle ed
the camp.
As police with their shotgun! d
tear gas guns at the ready approa<:
the gates of the camp the only so d
was a man singing civil rights songs
over the camp's public address
system.
The police moved down in two lines
checking each of the shanties and
tents to see if any campers rcmaihed.
11allway through the encampment
they found a tent containing more than
50 demonstrators singing and clap-
ping. This group submitted to artest
nonviolently and they were taken one
by one to waiting police buses.
\Villiam Rutherford, executive dire<:·
Minutes Apart
BEHIND BARS
Rev. Ralph Abernathy
tor or the Southern Christian
Leadership Conference, which ran the
Poor People's campaign, called the
poliee operation, Orderly.
Two tear gas canisters did go off on
~ sweep down ~ catne. One ap-
parenttrwas parf Of !he booby trap
12 lnjured in Separate
Laguna Beach Crashes
Twelve persons were injured in two
Laguna Beach auto accidents that OC·
curred within a few minutes of each
other Sunday night at opposite oods of
town.
''It was y,:i!d here." said a
tipokesman for South Coast Com·
mu.nity Hospital where many of the in·
jured were taken.
Seven persons were injured in a
three-car accideDt at the east city
limits on Uaguna Canyon Road. It in-
cluded a headon collision.
The injured were Devon L. Neissess.
16, possible leg macture and possible
concussion; Beverly Helvin, 15, cuts
and brui ses: and Kathy Luley, 16,
facial lacerations and a possible
Youngsters Sign
Fast for Three
Trips b y YMCA
Registration for three SlSuh Coast
YMCA trips to Yosemite and Big Sur
is way ahead of last year, according to
Director Roger Carter.
Openings for the trips, planned for
August are almost gone, he said.
Carter 'said, "\Ye have been surprised
because we already have as many
registered fO'l' some trips as we had
total for the same trips last summer.
And August is still two months pway.
broken nose.
The three girls, all thrown fro m a
car, are from Fullerton.
Also injured were Edgar C. Butts.
16, of Upl·and. a scalp laccratioo and
possible knee fracture: and Jeffrey
Butts, age unknown, of Upland who
suffered a fractured nose and facial
lacerations.
Suffering lesser injuries were Clair
A. Huard, 53, of Santa Ana and his
wife. Both were to see tfleir own
physicians.
The accident investigation had not
bcefl completed this morning but
police said the Neissess girl, west-
bound, apparently lost control of her
car and it crossed into the e~stbound
Jane colliding with the obher two cars.
A few minutes earlier, five were in-
jured in the rear-em! collision in-
volving four cars in the 2600 block of
South Coast llighway. One or the cars
slowed-in the heavy traffic.
The injured were Tom C. Baltazar,
64, of 7281 Wyoming SL, Westminster,
treated tor cuts iand released; Charles
M. Waiters. 16, of 5104. River Ave .•
Newport Beach, treated and released;
Debra Lynn Rankin, 17, Of' Fullerton,
treated for a cut lip; Anastacio Flores,
64 , of Los Alamitos, suffering a possi ·
ble concussion.
Sally Ann Sampsel, 16: and Mary
Louise Wolte, 17, both Of' Fullerton,
were to seek a.id from their own doc·
tors.
which went off when Police ripped
open a shanty door. Police fired the
second ooe awarenUy a.s~wning there
was someone fn6ide.
The arrest process at the tent took
more than a half hour with the
demonstrators iocluding women and
children singing such songs as "Do
Right, White Man, Do Right."
Abernathy, who hM !requenUy pro·
claimed be would be arrested, offered
no resistance as two policemen led
him and other demonstrators to be
photographed and then placed him
aboard a bus.
At Resurrection City, police were
\vorking their way through the camp
from east to west, that is from the
\Vashington Monument to the Lincoln
Memorial area.
The residents were given a police
ultimatum at 9:42 a .m. EDT to get out
or be arrested. More than 1,500 riot·
equipped Metropolitan and Park police
were on duty to enforce the order.
19 Nominated
For Playhouse
Victor Awards ·
Nineteen actors and actresses have
been nominated tor o u t s t a n d i n g
performances during the \Vinter·
Spring season at the La g u n a
Playhouse.
The 16th annual presentation Of the
Victor Awards will be held Sunday,
J·une 30, at 7:30 p.m., a<:cording tu
Mrs. Jrma Nofziger, Players' geaieral
manger.
The First Nighters, Players' work·
ing and social auxiliary. will serve
refreshments from 7:30 to 8:00 p.m.
An entertainment program will follow
while the ballots are counted.
By categor.)\...and alphabetically, the
following are nominees for Victor
Awards: Best Actor: Bob Franklin,
Dave Paul, Ralph Richmorid, Geoffrey
Riker and Joel Tropper. Best Actress:
Jacquie Hoffett, Vikki Shore, Francy
Walsh", Best Major Supporting Actor:
Terence Doyle,. Art Mancini and Paul
Toft. Best Major Supporting Actress:
Elaine Bernard, Betsy H e w e t t ,
DeeDee Settlemire. Best Minor Sup.
porting Actor: Harry Ashe, Alan Hart,
Ed Nofziger, Best minor Supporting
Actress: Saundra Matthews and Helen
Vail.
Members of the Playe.ns are also
voting for their favorite play of the
season selected from the six Winter·
Spring productions -''A View From
the Bridge", "Luv", "The Amorous
Flea", "Barefoot in t he Park",
"Never Too Late" and "Slow Dance
on the Killing Gro~nd".
SteeJc JtlarJcets
NEW YORK (AP) -The slock
market was unable to hold a slim ear-
ly advance and worked irregularly
lower this afternoon. Trading was fair·
Jy active. (See quotations, Pages 14·
15 ).
Volume for the fir6t four hours was
9.23 million shares compared with 9.97
million tor the first lour houn Friday.
Splinters Decor
S1neared ·Lipstick?
'J'!le-~Oun,l! )'{~~~ in JIP!i<e repo14) :"11'.b\> WP !'jl,DJ)'i!j& makeup''il''llle'fa lillmif'(ci!ntOr of plloto) ·was rudely"liiter-
rupted about 6 a.m. Sunday when car driven by Esther Nora Jans·
sa 18, of Whittier, opened up side of house OW.D.ld. by .Mart Jordan
at 6101 Seashore Drive, Newport Beach, like a zipper. Mrs. J anssen,
her husba nd, Marvin, 87, and Julie Ann O'Brien1. 81 of Costa Mesa,
were given medical treatment and released aner mishap. Note
garage door spring stretched to 1limit alter car plowed through
garage wall. '
Man Facing Drug Charges
Linked to Laguna Thefts
Police today linked. the arrest of a
Santa An'a man early Sunday morning
for alleged mDrijuana possession and
the burglary of two Laguna Beach
businesses that included more than
$2,000 worth of jewelry.
The bUJ'lglary of both Jewelry by
George, 1436 S. Coast Highway; and
Vk Stuart Realty, 1400 S. Coast
llighway, were discovered early Stm·
day.
Lt. Robert McMurray said tbe
Cloudy Weather
C11rtails Crowds
Overcast weather curtailed beach
activity during the weekend. L.r.oguna
Beach llleguards reported, despite a
warming surf.
Guards estimated the total beach at-
tendance at 33,000 with 12 weekend
rescues.
The yellow caution flag flew both
days, guards said. with a medium size
surf and some riptide action at dil·
ferent beaches.
The water temperature Saturday
was 61 degrees, rising to 65 degrees on
Sunday. The previous weekend it had
aim.mered up to a baimy 73 degrees in
the fiUrf' and then dropped about 10
degrees.
Quaint
jewelry store case involved 150 to 200
rings, watcl1es. a fan , and blank
checks. The loss "'·as more than $2 ,000.
A back door was pried open.
ln the real estate office burglar}
nearby, an electric clock, a vacuum
cleaner and a $500 check were stolen.
The burglar &ashed a screen to reach
in and unlock the office.
Lt. IL C. Davil of Santa Ana police
mid the DAILY PILOT !hot Julius
James Logan, 38, of Santa Ana was
arrested on suspicion of mariju~e
possession at 5:41 a.m. Sunday after a
routine U'affic stop.
Davis said a hold was also placed on
Logan for Laguna Beach police after
items were discovered in his car
believed taken in the art colony
burglaries. ·
Jn another theft report, Glenda C.
Eaton, 462 '.Mtird St., a waltress at
Denny's Restaurant, complained to
police that $82 had been taken from
her purse while she was working
Saturday.
In another burglary report, artist
Marilyn TaurieUo told police that her
$150 German shepherd, "Lobo" had
been stolen from her unlocked home
Friday.
·.Woman Charged
As Prostitute
At Newport Hotel
"We expect a tumaway registration
not on ly from Laguna Beach, but
Mission Viejo, El Toro, San CJemente,
and the other South Orange Coast
communities. I wouldn't be surprised
if we passed the 90 mark for total
registrations, and that is quadruple
what we had last year."
The first trip is for junior high boys
and girls to Yosemite~ Aug. 10 to 16.
Candy-Striped Aivnings Colnr Art Shoiv
Prostitution charges were IO'dged
against a 24-year-old Sacramento
woman today after she was arrested
at a large Newport Beach hotel for
allegedly going from door to door
trying t.o drum up business. The second b1p is the Big Sur high
sohool boys and girb from Aug. 18 to
24.
And the last trip is abo lo Y .. emlle,
10< boys only, Aug. 26 to Sept. I.
The boys only trip is tar boys from
grades fjve through eight, Carter said,
··we have had quite a bit of fecdl:iack
from the boys Who usually go to moun-
tain camp. Usually teen triµ1 start at
12, but popular deman<j has lowered
the age limit." •
lntererted boY$ or girls can call tbt
''Y" at 494-9431 or write to the YMCA.
491 F°'est Av~ .• Laguna Beach. t
A quaint and nostalgic atmospllere,
complete with refreshing red and
white candy-ctriped awnings, wtll be
emphasized at the Sawdll3t Splinters
art show.
The s.lte of the proposed show, 346 N.
Coast Highway, has room comfortably
to accommodate only SB booths for
d!splay and two sales booths.
Because of tile lim1ted 5t)ace and the
demand for booths, almost all the
booths already have been taken, ac-
<Onling to Roberta Holm . pubUe rtla·
tion5 director. 4
"OUr !lrst ohllgations are to those
who, 1n good ra1121, Joined the Sawdust
Festival but now w1.sb to withdraw,"
she said.
The 11spll.oters" show fJ: open, she
added, only to remdents of Greater
Laguna Beach.
A final decision by the city plannlng
commission on use of the lite in
l'ellJ'ONe to the variance 1pplic.ation
w!IJ be handed In on July I.
Thenew),y elected board Of directors
~ the new group agreed unanfmou1ly
. that the group will do evorytblng It
can to work with, not agaln&t, the
Festival ot Arts, and to foster good
will wherever it can.
The board of dlrectun Includes John
Hiers, president; Fred F"'.!kner, vice
president; Joan Short, secretary.
treasurer; Paul Thomas, advisory
board member; and Roberta IJolm,
public relations director.
A general memberfhip meeting will
be held at the Laguna Federal
BuJldfng on Tuesday, July 2, at 8 p.m.
Booth assignment& will bl J'll.ade at
that time.
Also, an oUlclaI name tor the group
~ill be decided upon 1t lhlt ttme.
Held under $315 ball w.u Alee May
Morris, a pert blue-eyed blonde who
assertedly tried to strike a bargain tor
her services wlth two undercover
Newport vice of!icen.
A second woman at the hotel was
identified as Mi11 Morris' companion,
but was not arrested after she claimed
to be an undercover policewoman
from the Reno, Nev., police depart·
ment.
The S\.IPPOSed policewoman wa11
Identified •• Llia LeMays, 32, • tall
blue-eyed blonde. Newport Beach
poll~today were verifying her 1tory.
Eaguna Tot
Seriously ill
'.At S. Coast
A 5-year-0ld Laguna Beach boy who
may have taken the dangerous
hallucinatory drug STP U in sertou1
condition today at South Coast Com·
munity Hospital.
Police said Gerry Griggs of 1215
Roosevelt Lane wa.s rushed to the
hospital Sunday night after he com.
plained of his hands burning, collapsed·
and began to convulse.
A hospital spokesman said the boy ls
in intensive care in an oxygen tent
after having his stomach pumped. The
effects of the drug, particularl)' on a
child, are not fully understood.
JJowever, it apparently caused •
respiratory coUapse.
Police said the youngster was
playing with other children in a field
near his house when he became ill.
Lt. Robert McMw-ray said ttie boy's
father, John M. Griggs, told police the
youngster may have discovered some-
one's outdoor drug cache. The m at-
ter is under investigation.
Police said the drug, which bears a
long chemical name, is nicknamed
Serenity, TrwquiUty and Peace. It has
reoccurring symptoms as does LSD
but is said to be more dangerous.
.Coun,cil Favors
Clubhouse for
Lawn Bowlers
A new lawn bowling clubhouse for
Laguna's Heisler Park looked as iC it
will become a reality today.
Councilmen appeared generally to
favor the facWty on city lM!d at a re-
cent meeting but will require that the
club provide proof of financial
capability to construct the project.
The planning commission h e s
recommended the project, a 1 273-
square·foot building to be located
below curb level of Cliff Drive.
Councilmen were advised that op·
ponenls of the proposal. Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Jahraus. 450 Cliff Drive were
willing to withdraw their protesi.
Councilmen indicated they would
like to see the cb:ange in Jahraus ~i·
tion in writing. ·
City' AUy. Jack Rimel h1• bffn Mk·
ed to prepare a lease agreement for
the project. It will be considered at a
ftrtw-e study session.
Tryouts Slated
For Saddleback
Cheers wi?I be ringing through the
air Tuesday as tryoota f o r
cheerleaders, songleaden: and pep
girls are held at Saddl~ck College.
Along with all the coeds, men are
encouraged to try out. Audltlons will
be held from 9 a.m . to noon at tlle ool·
Jege office, 25001 La Paz RoaJ
Mission Viejo. '
Orange C:out
Weather
The sun'1 sWI sleeping late
along the Orange Coast, and
Tuesday'IJ be no exception. Not
much change In the tempera·
lure (70) either.
INSmE TODAY
Ai Kialoa l l toOk. an ~arlt1
ltad in Newport, R.T. to Ber·
muda race, no one is ccrtm:n 1tut
toho tr leading the NU to
Tahiti. Boattng Page JO.
!
DAILY PILOT Mondly, Jul}I 24, 1968
Kiivanfans ,· .
Kiwanis Club's entry in the American League of
Laguna's Utile League competition for the current
season includes, front row (left to right): Robby
Potter, John Payne, John Burns and Doug Browne.
Center row (same order): Eric Van Wart, Eric
Brown, Chris Nikkelson, Tom Payne and Carl Lar·
sen. Back row (from left): Manager Dan Huston,
team mother Mrs. Carol Browne, Kevin Smith,
Chris Daye, Gary Gregg and coach Mark Diercks.
Not In picture: Chris Graybeal, Wade Binley, Mike
Kessler and bat boy Dave Browne.
• I , '
Optimists
Here's the lineup for the Optimists team in the
current season of Laguna Beach Littie League play
in the American League. Front row (left to right):
Bobby Armstrong, Eric Heard, bat boy Philip Mc-
Carty 1 Dwight Miller and Gily Backman. Center
row (same order): Larry Smith, Doug Case, Mark
Lyster, Ji1nn1y Ar1nstrong, John Lilijestro1n aiul
Steve Hogan. Back row (from left): Manager Don
Cooley, team mother Mrs. Juanita Hogan, Robert
A-kCarty, Jeff Plummer, Dana Smith, Brent LiJj e-
strom and coach Dave Brown. Not in picture, Paul
Treveno.
$500,000 Federal Grant
Fo1~ OCC Building Ok'd
A federal grant of $500,000 has been
approved by a U.S. agency for building
DAILY PILOT --"'-an.rt N. W--4 -Tho1t1•• K11Yll
Editor
The1t1•1 A. M11rphl111
M9MtlM editor
a1,h•N P. N•11 ~ .. tdl '"" lllfflr J•clc a,,, C.,ley P•11I Nit1111
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I
projects at Orange Coast College.
But a $7.25-million September bond
issue may have to be passed for
Orange Coast Junior College District
to use the federal money.
To obtain the grant, the junJor col·
lege district must provide $871,166 In
local money.
The fund.I' would be used for an
allled health building and additions to
the math-science and data processing
buildings.
"If the bond Jssue were to fail , then
it would be a matter of establishing
priorities. We would be seriously
curtailed," said Assistant Superin-
tendent Correllan Thompson.
The federal funds would be made
available through the Department of
Health. Educauon and Welfare under
the Jligher Education Facilities Act .
The Orange Coa1t College maattr
bulleting plan shows wotk on the three
projects scheduled to start J n
February, 1969, with completion ln
August, 1970.
Meanwhile, architect W 111 J a m
Blurock and As1oclat.e1 ot Corona del
Mar hu Men lfven the go ahead on
working drawtna1 for remodeling the
present library to house coun1eltng
and the admlaslon1 and records oUlcei.
EsUmat.ed cost Of the remodellng
project II 119',000. Work wlll 1tart
when the MW library 11 completed tn
March, 1988.
rr things 10 accordJni to plan, the
old Army barrack bulldlng now hou1·
Ing cow11111Df ol!lcea will be lorn
· doWn, Thom-uJd.
Screaming .Cons
Rip Ohio Pen;
8 Guards Hurt
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -!Iun-
drcds of screaming prisoners, armed
with pipes and broken bottles, went on
a destructive rampage at the Ohio
Penitentiary today, setting 10 major
fires and attacking guards.
Authorities said at least eight
guards v.·ere injured and one suffered
a heart attack.
Warden Ernie Maxv.•eli said three
guards were held hostage briefly by
the convicts but managed to escape.
M. C. Koblentz, state commissioner of
corrections, said "semi~ontrol" of the
prison had been achieved.
Koblentz said fires v.·ere set In the
prison print shop, two workshop!, the
hospital, an aduitorium, the cotton and
woolen miUs, the power plant, mess
hall and shoe factory.
··oa1nage Is going to be extensive ,"
Koblentz said.
1\bout".100 policemen with bayonet·
tipped riot shotguns rushed the prison
yard and made their ""aY to tho
hospital v.·here fires raged on the first
and third floor s.
Dr. Richard Brooks, penitentiary
physician, was trapped on the hospital
roof. He was rescued by fire ladder!.
Koblentz said all hospital petleints and
hO!lplteJ employe1 also were removed
from tl>e building.
Koblena said 800 Ohio National
Guatd1men were brought to the prt1on
for duty In the event lhey were need-
ed.
Besides setting the flre1 t h c
prl1one.r1 knocked out the prison
power plant.
Polle• oUJclalJ took no chances with
the rioUnf convicts.
'
I
-•
Nixon, Humphrey Gain
Front R·unners Closer to Nomination
By United pte11 llttraaUoaal
Presidential frontrunners Hubert H.
Jlumphrey and Richard M. Nixon roll·
_e1J up more delegate strength over the
~eekend and moved closer to their
party nominatiOtls.
Nixon took a giant stride by scoring
victories in South Carolina, Louisiana,
Maryland, Washington and Montana.
Humphrey picked up d e 1 e g 1 t e
strength from hi• home state of Min·
nesota and in Connecticut.
G;iiin"!g n~l!!Y 100 de]egate votes,
Nlxon now llas about 600 committed
delegate votes, with 667 votes needed
for the nomination.
Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New
York has 254 delegate votes after get·
ting orily a handful this weekend.
Nixon's only setback came in New
Mexico wh~re Gov. Ronald Reagan
picked up half the 1tate's 12 delegate
votes. Two others were uncommitted.
llumphrey picked up 381,2 votes in
First Major
Brush Fire
Still Burning
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Calliornia's
first major brush fires of the year rag-
ed on today after ravaging thousands
of acres Of tinder-dry park land.
A blaze in Angeles National Forest,
a watershed area 40 mJles north of Los
Angeles, has burned more than 40,000
acres in the Liebre Mountain area
sJnce Friday.
It was reported 50 percent con·
taJned, fire officials said.
A second blaze about 16 miles east,
in the huge forest's Bouquet Canyon
section, charred more than 3,500 acres
before Jt was brought under control
late Sunday.
A 3,IXXl-acre fire in c e n tr a 1
California's Los Padres National
For est, 60 miles north of San Luis
Obispo near the California coast, v;:as
about 90 percent .contained.
\Vinds exceeding 45 miles an hour
whipped the Liebre Mountain fire
eastward Sunday but subsided in
today's predawn hours. More than
1,500 firemen, including men from the
U.S. Forest Service, Los Angeles
County Fire Department, California
Division Of Forestry and about 150
Arizona Indians, battled the• inferno.
Five fire fighters were injured Fri-
day,· one critically. •·'
Capt. Phlllp Goodell. 45, of Lake
Ilughes, Calif .. was burned flver 32
percent or his body, hospital officials
said. Two other men v. .. ere in seriou1>
condition and two others were listed
as good. All fi ve were trapped Friday
when !lames closed of! their escape
route.
Coast Woman's
Death Probed
\VOODLAND (AP) -An Investiga-
tion into the death of a woman whose
body was found two months ago in Or-
ange County has mQved to \Voodland
'vhere officers hope to learn \Vho the
woman was.
The body was round March 14 Jn a
drainage ditch at Huntington Beach.
Authorities said the woman had been
beaten and her throat was slashed.
Detective Sgt. Joe Grundy of Hunt-
ington Beach &aid invttstigatora have
learned the woman bought a birth-
stone ring from a Woodland jewelry
store nine days before her body was
foun<I .
Minnesota, G_Stmpared with Sen .
Eugene J. McCarthy's 131h. In Con-
necticut, where McCarthy forces
walked out because they weren't .given
the votes they thought they should
hav·e, Humphrey collected probably 35
votes out of the s~ate's 44 delegate
votes.
The vice president iiow has 899 com-
mitted convention votes, wltb 1,312
noeded for nomination. • ··
McCarthy baa edged ahead oI Nixon
and Rockefeller . ·in popularity, A
Gallup poll indicated Sunday.
The poll was completed on the eve
of the New York primlll'Y last Tuesday
in which Democratic c a n d.i d a t e
McCarthy scored a major victory by
iwnnlng a majority of convention
delegates. · ·
Thi: poll also showed "' Humphrey
would defeat Republican candidate
Nixon but would lose to Rockefeller,
competing with Nixon for the COP
nomination.
The.polling organization pointed out,
however, that "rarely have political
views shown such volatility as during
the last two or three months and
seldom have so many candidates betn
involved in such close contests."
Jtumphrey and Mc Car thy .•
m-;,anwhile, made the Vietnam war the
chief campaign issue.
McCarlhy reaffirmed his Intention
to visit Paris to look in on the Vietnam
peact talks and Humpbny called for .a
ceasefire ·
McCarthy said he doesn't plAD \o
negotiate with North V i e t n a m
delegates to the Paris talks, but '1it
might be a good thing for me as a
presidential candidate to speak to
them. . .(and) find out what the
possibilities fc:ir some kind of ae.-
com.modation or settlement are."
Humphrey proposed a ceasefire In
an interview with the New, Yor,k
Times.
North Rejects Humphrey . '
Proposal for Cease Fire
PARIS (UPI) -North Vietnam to·
day rejected ViCe l>resident Hubert H.
Hwnphrey'1 call for an immedaate
cease·fire in Vietnam.
Xuan Thuy, chief North Vietnamese
delegate to the Hanoi-Washington
talks in Paris, told a lunch meeting of
the An glo-American Press Associa-
tion :
"The United Sr.tes must first cease
H~ air raids and other acts of war im-
mediately and unconditionally."
Commenting on Humphrey's state4
ment that he believed a cease fire
would enhance cO.ances for the success
of the Paris talks, Xuan said 0 we
must not mix up aggressors and their
victims."
Jtumphrey, in a newspz.per in·
terview, had called for an immediate
cease fire in Vietnam.
Thuy said the "only objective of the
Paris talks oow was to agree on a
cessation of the-air raids."
"Only if an agreement is reached on
this matter can we move on to other
subjects," he s&id.
Thuy said Hanoi would make no con·
Auto Shop Class
In Summer School
Auto shop cJasses will be open to
adults during this summer school
session at Laguna Beach High School.
David Lang, auto shop instructor,
said the course will be run for both
specialized automoti'l1! tuneup training
and as a basic automotive course.
There will be enough individual at·
tcntion to have both the advanced and
the beginning students enroll.
"It is designed especially for those
v.·ho want to know more about their
own cars and wish to be able to
perform light rnaintainance and repair
for themselves. The course will al10
supply a better understanding of
automotive engine theory," Lang ex·
plained.
Sessions will be held from Monday
until August 2 at the high school.
There will be two sessions; 8 to 10 a .m.
and 10 to 12 p.m. Enrollment is limited
and registration may be m ade by call·
ing the Summer School office, 434·
8546.
cessions in exchange for tbe end of U.
s. air raids and other "acts or war"
against North Viet!)im.
He also repeated chargea t.bat the
failure to make any progre&s in uie
talks was the fault of tile Uniff:d
States. And he appeared. determined to
knock down optlmJstic statements by
key U. S .. officials that the talks which
began on May 13 were showing gome
signs or progress.
fie said that lhe United States, ij.
stead of cutting back on its war et.
forts, had sharply stepped up air raids
north of the 17th Pt .. allel wbJch
divides the oorth and south. U. S.
planes have been restricted by Presi•
dent Johnson to targets in th•
southern part of North Vietnam, with
Ha!Kll and Haiphong now out of
bounds.
"After nine negotiating sessions, our
conversations, which have lasted more
than one month, have reached no
result," Thuy said . , . "U Utese talll:s
are showing no progress, the whole
responsibility lies wtih the American
side."
Thuy said ·the United States has
"deliberately sought to substitute
black for white."
He said the United States had
"violated" the · 1954 Gene v a
agreements on Jndochlna and was the
·'aggressor" in Vietnam.
"But it has come here to accuse
North Vietnan1 of having violated the
agreements," Thuy said.
He ctlled on world opinion "to go on
condemning" the United States and
"to demand more vigorously" that
Washington end the air raids on North
Vietnam.
Special Show Set
For Lyric Opera
Friends of opera and presidents <1{
Orange CoWlly social an4 business
organizations haVe been invited by the
LyrJc Opera Assoclation to attend a
special musical pn)gram from 3 ta 5
p.m. Wednesday: at the Irvine Bowl in
Laguoa Beach.
Purpose of the event will be to ar•
range ·an audience for the •elected
artists to be booked a1 entertaiMnent
by the Orange Oxmty organizaU.ons
during the year.
0
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Three Bags FnJI ·
Denise Darcel Held as Shoplifter
MIAMI, Fla. (AP) -Bosomy
FreDCh actress Denise Darcel, with
money in her purse and a show date
waiting, was charged with shoplifting
$35 worth of underwear Sunday. She
called it "a bum rap."
Miss Darcel, who rose to film
stardom In the late 1940s, was ar·
rested outside a downtown Miami
r ..,department store by a store detecUve
who said ''she had three shopping bags
full of merchandise."
Later, in jail, Miss Darcel said,
"They can't get away with treating me
like a common criminal."
"She had already purchased several
articles and paid for them," Police Ll
Paul Oboz said. "And she was picking
up other things she wanted. She claim.-
ed there was no sales lady at the time
• and she intended to pay for it later.
She claims she went out to see if a bus
was coming by. That's when she was
arrested by the store detective."
Police said the goods -valued at
$35.08 -in Miss Darcel's shopping
bags included hose, slips, a comb and
mi.qor, hairpins, a few pair of panti.?s,
a nightgown and one bra -size 40.
Miss Darcel, petite and trim at 43,
had her blonde hair tucked under a
sc~f when jailed. She wore a blouse
with fruit prints, slacks and large
sunglasses. .
She posted $500 bond and was
released from jail about three hours
after her arrest. She must appear in
Municipal Court next Friday on petty
larceny charges.
The Paris-born actress came to
Hollywood in 1947 to film "To the Vi~
tor." She followed with a success m
"Battleground" opposite Van Johnson
and the late John Hodlak.
She headlined shows in New York,
Miami Beach and Las Vegas in the
early 1950s. She now calls Las Vegas
hOme, but bas an apartment in Miami
Beach.
UPI T•i.tlmo
'BAGGED' IN MIAMI
Actress Denise Darcel
County Jail Escapee Held
A Costa Mesa man was arTested in
Berkeley Sunday to reduce to two the
number of escapees still at large in
'Most Wanted' Man
Captured by FBI
JACKSON, MiSs. (UPI) -Johnny
Ray Smith, one of the FBI's 10 most
Wanted men, was arrested today on
the Mississippi Gulf Coast, the FBI
&aid.
The FBI said Smith, a fugitive from
Florida, was picked up after an
"alert" Mobile, Ala., re side n t
recognized Smith from wanted posters
and other publicity and set off a chain
reaction of law enforcement alerl.5.
the 11-man Orange County jail break
of last Feb, 20.
William V, Willeford, 24, was picked
up in Berkeley for the second time.
Poli'ce had arrested him in May on
suspicion of burglary but he was
released. He was using an alias.
A check of finge<prints by tile Cali-
fornia Identification Agency showed
Willeford to be the Berkeley arrestee
and the Orange County Sheriff's office
asked that he be picked up again.
Berkeley officers found him Sunday.
County sometime this week, the
sheriff's offi'ce said.
He will be brought back to Orange
Soccer Fans
Stampede;
71 Perish
BUENOS A I R E S (Uj'I) - A
stampede started by disgruntled soc-
cer fans hurling flaming newspapers
onto fans below killed 71 persons sun.
day afternoon in the River Plate soc·
cer stadium. Hundred! more were
trampled and 68 were Jn serious con·
dition today.
Police saJd ·a tW'DSWe jammed at
exit No. 12 and that a seething mus of
fans fUing outward down a winding
staircase panicked when hoodluma
above rolled up newsparers, set them
on fire and tossed them down onto the
crowd for fun .
The crowd became a human
avalailche and the staircase became a
bloodstained passage to death with
body piled on top of body. Clothes
were ripped and even torn off. There
were screams of fright and pain that
heightened the panic.
Feelings run high at soccer games
in Latin America, but Sunday's game
was between arch rivals River Plate
and Boca Juniors. The game ended in
a scoreless tie beh!_El_en these teams
whose stadlwns are only four miles
apart. Police blamed the visiting Boca
Junior fans for starting the trouble.
The police department said a
preliminary investigation showed that
turnstiles which only allow one person
at a time to pass through were in
place at elit Noh 12 and were responsi-
ble for the jam.up of fans. They also
blamed the rowdies above.
Stadium officials insisted t h e
turnstiles had been removed and the
exists were perfectly free. Police said
they would investigate the claims.
Interior Minister Guillermo Borda,
who visited the police headquarters
being used as a morgue, said: "Two
contradictory versions about the in-
cident exist. The president of the
(River Plate) club told me the exit
was open and the turnstiles removed.
but the information I have received
through the police from witnesses at
the scene contradicts this, saying the
exit was completely closed and the
turnstiles in place."
Police said virtually all of the dead
and injured were male, many of them
teen-agers. One unidentified woman
was among the injUJ"t!d.
NAACP Meet Opens
ATLANTIC CITY, N. J . (UPI) -
The Natiooal Association for the Ad·
vancement of Colored P e o p 1 e
{NAACP) opens a six-day convention
today with word from it director that
the group will stay out of presidential
politics and continue to stress racfal
nonviolence.
-------------------~-------------------------~
Monda1, Junt 24, 1968 DAILY PILOT
Need Directions?
Freshly paint:J signs propped in a cluster at Newport Beach sign shop seemingly dispense conflicting ad·
vice on how to get just a1>out anywhere on new Irvine Ranch 'developments. After drying, they'll be pos·
ted all over Orange Coast. .
U.S. Smashes Cong Camp
Bombers Hit Com111unist Trai11ing Area Near Saigon
SAIGON (AP) -U.S. Air Force B52
bombers t.cxlay smashed a Viet Cong
training center 13 miles from Saigon.
The B52s, have bombed closer to the
capital only once. Last Feb. 13, at the
height of the Viet Cong's Tet offensive
on Saigon, they struck a suspected
enemy troop concentration 10.5 miles
norUl of Saigon.
The U.S. Command said ground
observers in the training camp area
southeast of the capital reported that
secondary explosions lasted for six
minutes aftecthe eight-engine
bombers left the site. A secondary ex-
plosion means ammunition or fuel
going up after the 50().. and 750-pound
bombs have exploded..
In the last two weeks, the B52s have
flown nearly 100 missions within a 75-
mlle radius of the capital, trying to cut
infiltration corridors from the Cam·
bodian border and prevent enemy
troops from massing for a threatened
attack on Saigon next month.
In five raids Sunday, the B52s aimed
at enemy troop concentrations and in-
ftltratlon routes in Phuoc Long Provin-
ce, next to the CamboW.an border 75
miles north of Saigon.
Saigon was spared of any shelling
for the third consecutive day today,
but the Viet Cong shelled two airfields,
a province capital and four govern-
ment military posts.
Government headquarters said the
shellings killed two g o v e r n m e n t
soldiers and wounded six soldiers
and 15 Vietnamese civilians.
It was the quietest night in two
months in the capital and almost
everywhere else in the country. U. S.
solll'Ces liald the enemy likely may be
"laying back" to receive replace·
ments, retrain, refit and resupply for
fresh attacks.
Hanoi Radio rejected a U.S. appeal
for a halt to the shelling of Saigon
saying North Vietnam is "ready to
fight the U.S. aggressors anywhere in
Vietnam." 'The broadcast also said the
Communist.Jed forces h~ve "a sqlemn,
inviolable right" to defend the
sovereignty of Vietnam and warned
they would intensify their attacks on
Saigon and other areas of South Viet·
nam.
Over North Vietnam's soot.hem
panhandle, U.S. Air Force and Navy
pilots reported destroying or damag~
a daylong batUe 41 enemy soldierl ' parently loaded with ammunition.
On . the ground ,. South Vietnamese
troops suffered one of their worst set-
backs in months Saturday as guer•
rillas ambushed a South Vieblamese
infantry column moving down a
h'ighway 60 miles northeast of Saigon,
killed 44 of the government troops and
wounded 71,
Ame?ican helicopters new in a se·
cond government battalion, and alter
a daylong battle 41 enemy 60ldier
were reported killed. The reinf<rcing
troops suffered light casualties, head-
quarters said.
Government troops also reported
killing 95 Viet Cong soldiers in two 0
other baUles, 25 miles north of Saigon
and 100 miles: southw&st of the capital.
Government losses were reported u
14 killed and 15 wounded in one clash
and as light in the other.
Indications mounted that the report.I
of . North VietnQmeSe helicopters
around the demilitarized zone Jut
week. were erroneous.
It's true! Our once-a-year Vanity Fair SALE
..
MEllPORT CEHm • 11 FA!fflOH ISLAND •
•
on bras and girdles is here. You save
up to 25%. So, stock up now!
Gil'! your fashion budget a boost. Take advantage of reduced prices on these famous-
fitting bras and girdles, We have styles to flatter evel)I figure. Just pick your type.
A. Hyl111 lace 2·secti111 cup bra for natural look. Sides and back of nyloo Lycra®spandex; while
or hooey bei(e, 32-36 8-C, reg. 4.00, now 2.9& "Taper-mate'' loog leg panty girdle in
nylon/lycra•spindex; white, yellow or coral; S·M·L, reg. 9.00, now 6.95
B. Nyloo bicot solt·look bra, white. hooey beiie. yellow or coral; 31·36 &C
ref. 4.00, now 2.91 °Taper·mate'' brief in while, yellow or coral;
S.M·L, re1. 7.00, now 4.15
C. Nyloo lace 1111ieiwired bra fM thO full figure. White or hooey beiie;
34'36 B, 32'33C, roz, 6,00, now 4.!lti 31·38D, rei. 7.00, now 5.95
"Tulip" desipd panty airdle has :self reinforced froot, sides
and becll panels, 6 priers. White M hooey beiie; S·M-L-XL,
rei. JS.Ill, now 12,11 Looi lei sfyle, reg, 16.50,
now 11.N Gird~, ro1. 12.50, now S.95
FOllldatioos
u umS '
644-2200 • MONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY 10:00 TILL 9:30 , A
---·--
• OTHER DAYS 10:00 TILL 5:30 ' •
I
4 DAll.V 1'!1.0T
•
~ .... _... .......
TWo llltle Cblcago brothers have
heeded a r,1oa by Police Supt.
JolMI Conl ak for rtsldent. to turn
in their guns in the wake of Sen.
Robert F. Kennedy's assassination.
. After bailing a patrol car, Brue•
and Sidney E1nn complied. Bruce,
6, and Sidney, 7, handed. over two
water pistols, two cap guns, and a
genuine death-ray People Erlermi-
nalDFI •
Farmer Eddie Winterbothom,
victimized repeatedly by chick-
en thieves at hi.1 H<l!lingden,
Eng !and, ranch, ·bought a watchr
dog ecently for protection. Ob-
viou. ly, 11ou know what had to
Big Stoi·m
Sl~ms Texas
With Floods
CORPUS C!QllST!, Tex. (UPI} -
Tropical storm Candy, which battered
the Texu coast with more than 60
mile per hour wlndl SllDday, inched
northward across t .h e central Texas
. plainB today, leaving up to five inches
of rain and flooding io south Texas
rivers.
At V1c10r1a, Tex., the Guadalupe
Riv« ran more than three feet over
its banks, forcing evacuation of at
least 85 persons from their homes on
tht" western edge of the city.
Corpus Christi itself did not receive
as much rain as bad been anticipated
when the big storm boiled up suddenly
out of the gusty winds tti.at bad swirled
in the Gull of Mexico fot a week.
A spokesman for the Texas Depart·
ment of Public Safety said in Corpus
Christi the stGrm·weathered people of
the coastal city were little bothered by
the more than gale-force winds and
monsoon·lik:e rains.
-
J
Refuses to Leave
2Q Injured
'.As Limited
Jumps Rails
LANCASTER , Pa. (UPI} -The last
eight cars of the Broadway Llmjted
derailed near bere Sunday night as the
Penn Central's New York-to-Cllicago
train hurlted at 80 miles an hour
through Southeastern Pennsylvania.
Twenty or the 143 passengers aboard
the 13-car train w~re injured as two
sleeping cw, two dining cars and four
coaches buckled and jumped off the
tracks at the ed~e of the small com-
munity of Landlsvllle. None of the
, cars overturned.
Seven of the injured were admitted
to hospitals. The others were treated
and relectsed.
The derailment on the railroad's
main line occurred at a point where
the two tracks parallel highway Route
230.
The wreckage could be seen from
the highway and one railroad worker
estimated that some 4,000 persons
flocked to the scene and hampered
rescue operations.
Winterbotham earlier
this wtek discovered thieve1 had
stolen a batch of pullets and
taken tht new watchdog along
with them.
. !'We were pretty lucky. We didn't
get as mucli rain as we expected," he
said. ioNobody got very shook up about
it here.:•
.. Early ,Sunday, however, the storm
poured more than two inches of rain
on the city, sending water up to the
porches of some homes in low-lying
sections .
Rev. Ralph Abernathy, shown arriving with aides
for a· news conference at Resurrection City late
Sunday, said his Poor P eoples Marchers were· pre-
pared for eviction or jail but would not voluntarily
quit their encampment in the ~tion's capital. The
permit for camping expired at 9 a.m., EDT, today
and at 9:42 a.m., the residents were given an ulti-
matum to "get out or be arre~ted." More than 1 500
rioWquipped police were on duty to enforce 'the
order.
The derailment tore up a quarter·
mile of track. The other track re·
mained o~n but was blocked to
routine trai'fic by a wrecking train
dispatched 'to the scene !rom Lan-
caster.
Almost all the passengers, Including
the injured, walked from the train.
One passenger said it seemed like "an
e ternity" before he got out "but I
guess it was only about two minutes.''
• Britisher M.rk McGrath recent-
ly speared on the cover of the Scot~
land Yard newspaper "The Job,"
and it resulted in his having an-
other photo taken -a prison mug
shot. McGrath helped three bob-
But two Inches of rain were not
enough to make residents of the area,
devastated last year by Hurricane
Beulah, worry much. Gunfire Kills -196 • I ll W e ek The injured were taken to the Lan-
caster General Ho!pital and St.
Joseph's Hospital in nine ambulances.
-bies save a man who was threaten-
ing to jump from the 71).foot-blgb
Union J ack Club In London last
rlionth. Tbef all won the Queen's
Commendation and werQ photo.
graphed together. McGrath, 28,
was then sj>otted as an escapee
from Kirkham Open Prison, where
he was doing a 14-month sentence
for burglary.
"I've been on this island 45 years
and I watch these storms pretty
close," said Louis Rewalt, 72, who
n.111s a boat stiand on Padre Island.
"I've been wiped out twice by these
storms, but this one is not going to
hurt me."
Survey Conducted as Demands Grow for New Controls The rest of the passengers were
given temporary shelter and aid by
nearby residents. A fire company set
up a canteen. Later they were Wiken to
Harrisburg in buses provided by the
railroad to continue their journey.
•
A San Fran¢sco mon1ct11 Ml
diicovned the toildeat ormi.ge
monke11 bar i111taUatioft. in exist-
ence -the Golden Gate Bridge.
A jolted ...,...,. ipotkd th<
monkt11 attaling an orange
from a lunch bag a week ago
after which it da.shed off up a
diogOflal atrut A fnd~fi!ltd
trap has ao far failed to catch
him.
• Unidentified Flying Object. are
frightening to many, but the popu-
lace of Trinidad, Colo., would like
to get theirs back again. Winds this
week swept away the flying saucer
replica, held aloft by a helium bal·
loon, and where it now blows, no-
body knows. The object was a
tourist.promotion gimmick. • There was both a traffic jam and
strawberry jam on the Santa Ana
Freeway through City of Com-
merce Thursday, after a metal
band broke on a truck, sending 250
gallons of the berries cascading
beneath the wheels of speeding
traffic. Cleaning up the mess took
a full hour. • Actress N•ncy Kw•n says she
has divorced her Austrian bus.
band, hotel heir Potor Pock. Miss
Kwan, a native of Kowloon, is in
Hollywood making a rnovle. Pock,
28, and Miss Kwan, 29, were mar·
ried in London in 1962 in a civil
ceremony. They have one son.
Strongest winds !rom the stonn
were recorded near A~ell, Tex.,
?.'inter nesting ground of the world's
few remakli.ng whooping cranes,
where winds hit 62 m.p.h.
The department of Public Safety
:taid Nueces County sheriff's units
were sent oUt Sunday to the Padre
Island reueatioo park, across Corpus
Christi Bay, to evacuate tourists on
the island.
"They roadblocked the bridge to the
island during tlbe storm," a DPS
spokesman said.
At least 15 vacationers were tem-
porarily atranded on the long, narrow
sandy-beached. island during the peak
of Candy's violence, but they found
refuge among the brushy sand dunes
running down the spine of the island
and were not in danger.
Candy spawned a number o[
tornadoes across South Texas as it
moved slowly inland Sunday, but most
struck in open country. One twister
grazed a group of houses in El Campo,
but there were no injuries.
Hurricane Brenda
Heads Out to Sea
MIAMI, Fla. (AP) -Hurricane
Brenda moved away from Bermuda
today. spending her 75 mile an hour
wind fury on open ocean.
B r e n d a was traveling east.
northeastward from her midnight
position 275 miles from Bermuda at an
estimated rate of about 20 miles an
hour, the Miami Weather Bureau
reported.
The hurricane was to slow up later
today, but little change in size or in·
tensity was forecast.
Highest winds in the hurricane were
estimated at 75 m.p.h. in the center
with gales extending out 150 miles to
the southeast and 75 miles northwest.
Of the center.
By The Associated Presa
Gllllfire killed persons in the
United St.ates, a week-long survey by
The Associated Press shows, aod most
of the deaths were homicides. The
survey, ended at midnight Sunday,
was taken during the same week
President Johnson signed. an antlcrime
bill containing gun-<:0ntrol provisions.
The shooting deaths included 113
homicides, 6S suicides and 18 ac·
cidents.,
In 1966, the last year for which FBI
figures are available, there was an
average of 125 gun deaths a week.
Demands for tighetr gun-control
measures were made after the
assassinations of President John F'.
Kennedy, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
and Sen. Robert F. Kennedy-all kill·
ed by guns.·
Proponents of gun control blame
loose traffic in fireanru for thousands
of deaths each year.
President Johnson signed an om·
nibus aM.icrime bill last Wednesday,
whi.cb contained a gun-control section.
More stringent laws on gun Ci)ntrol
are being oonsidered by Congress.
Two of the provisions in the crime
biU :
-Prohibit inte'rstate mail·order
sales of handguns and a lso their over·
the-counter sale to nonresidents of a
state and to people under 21.
-Make illegal the possession o! any
firearms by felons, m e n ta 1 in-
Historic Landmwks
Cost at $829,000
WASHINGTON (UPI) The
federal government has made grants
totaling $829,000 to pay up to half the
cost of preserving historic landmarb
in nine cities.
The money. released during the
weekend by the Department or Hous·
ing and Urban Development, will go
for sites in Boston and Haverhill,
Mass.; New Orleans; Aruiapolis , Md.;
Easton and Norwood, Pa.; Los
Angeles; Detroit; and Warren, Ohio.
Can dy's Confection Sticks
Tropical Storm: Drenches Texas Witli Heavy Rai1i
C•llfOrtlMa
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s-•dl( t11~1'1torm1 critic~
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Wldt ll'ffS of lhl MklWHI Svndly
n1t111.
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bM 11'11 T1u1 he1rtl1nd1, we1kMln1 bl.It ur.-yln1 l'IMV'f r1IM 1nd u,..blt of __ ,,,. moro lornodoe1. H11rrl-e11,. 11.-1 fl'IOYed ,.,....,. from lltr·
fftUd1, 1Plnd!M her 75 mill 111 lleur
Wind IU.-Y 111'1 OPtft otlln.
A UVIM tlorln ION! ff'lrclllllll ffCo
lions ol lhe O\IQ190 •~ c.1111lnt1 wilfe.
N>l'Md ~ dl"1olM Ind Ill! t~ furl~of ~ wrlllOfl.
Faur 1-oe 1lrll trorn 1utiurbln
A!1lo wt .. lnturtd whM wll\Ctl. UI "' 60 m!lt1 1n hour 1111«1 1 ttrnlv1I
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c1nc1nn1t1
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Frttn0
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competents, aliens illegally in the
country, Americans who have re·
nounced their citizenship and veterans
who receive other than an honorable
discharge.
A measure pending before Congress
and sponsored 'by the President would
ban mail-order sales of aU firearms,
including rifles and shotguns.
The AP survey, begun midnight Sun~
day, June 16, showed gunfire in Texas
claimed 20 lives, the great'e'St number
of any state, homicides there ac-
counted fur 14 deathR, almost double
the next highest states -Illinois, 16,
California, 13, Michigan and Ohio, 10.
\Vith the rising public concern over
the availability of firearms two of the
nation's largest mail order houses an-
nounced changes during the week in
firearms sale policy.
Seans, Roebuck & Co. banned all
purchase •f guns through mail and
Montgomery \Vard and Co. stipulated
that all mail orders mus-t be picked up
in person, at stores or catalogue order
outlets.
A railroad spokesman said shortly
after the derailment "nobody-has any
idea" what caused it. A train crewmen
said a coupling separated on the se·
co nd car, triggering the automatic air
brakes.
Ward's also announced a 11 Fare Slash Sought
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Rep .
Illinois had the most s u i c id e
shootings, 7, and Tennessee and
Georgia the greatest number of a c-
cident.al shooting deaths, 3.
purchasers of firearms at i t s
downtown Chicago store will be
photographed at the time the sale is
made. The change in policy came,
company officials said, in croopera·
lion with local authorities enforcing a
recenUy passed gun regilltration
ordinance.
Claude Pepper D-Fla.), joined today in
sponsoring legislation to authorize
lower commercial air fares for
military personnel, students and
Americans 65 or older.
People are different.
So are Bank of America
Personal Choice Checking Accounts.
Now Bank of America gives you a choice of personal checking plans, We've introduced a new flat
rate plan with a maximum charge of $2.00 a month. The basic checking plan has
been improved so you won't have to pay any service charge if your miriimum balance is
$500 or more. You n ow h ave a ch oice of four checking plans, more than )'OU will
find at any other major bank. One's the right choice for you. To find out exactly which one, see
the details below-or come into, your nearest Bank of America branch for a check-up.
1. T HE NEW TWO/
ONE/ FREE PLAN. If
you've found service
charges that change from
mooth·to-month bother·
some in the past, you'll
like our new system. The
monthly rate is basro
entirely on your minimum
balance no matter how
many checks you write.
Our Two /One/Free
Plan provides 1JlQllthly
statemmts ancf charges
arc easy to calculate,
predict and cDntrol from
month to month. This
is all there is to them :
MONTHLY CHARGE
1. THE-BASIC CHECK-
ING PLAN. With this
plan, too, you'll pay no
service charges if your
minimum balance is $500
or more. If you now
receive monthly state·
men ts this is the service
charge sptcm you're
probably used to, and you
may prefer to stay with
it. Your monthly charges
will vary with the number
of checks you write Bnd
your minimum balance.
3. TENPLAN". We
haven't chanced this
popular Bank of America
checking service-for
people who write fC'IV
checks and need a state·
ment only once every
three months. You pay by
thC chcck-15 cents tach
plus a so cents mainte~
nance charge every three
months if your minimum
balance falls below $100.
-··--------..... _.,...__....._..__....
4. BANKAMERICARDlll/
TENPLAN. If you use
your BankA.mericard for
most purchaacs, }'OU can
write fewer checks. With a
BankAmericard/Tcnplan
account, you get a
discount on those checks
you do write. It's the
same as our Tenplan
account-with a state·
mcnt every three months
-a:ceptthatBank·
Americard users pay just
ten cents per check and
no maintenance charge.
•
., I ----------------------~ --.----·----~~--·--..... ---~----------·---c
MONDAY
JUNE: U
l V f NIN(,
............. -(t) (60),.,,., b1111pby.
0---(t)('!O)
e---. (t) (90) StM'.• IUtlb •rt Dtll1 R1111, Don
Knotu, Clfl1 Barros. ind Pr«tl90r
Julius Sumner Miiier; (R') n ......... _,._
¥'iiJW" (honor) ''2-SllllMI l,o..
llt, Albwt Lupo.
m •-.., (t) <Jo1 m•"" -~01 ftlWW1 ._,
111•-
l:JCI D MIC Ntn S.WlCI (C) (60)
D T1Ni '""" 111• <C> (30)
m11C111tw Flk (30)
ID Mdllit'• ""' ()())
ED DOUT E.illlC:ltiln 11 Motil1:
"School An:hitectvft." o.ipn ol
ln110¥1tivt Cal!fomi1 xhools em·
phnl1:1 th• trend tow1rds both
ICOllOrrlY tnd testheticl.
Im Motkln 34 (C)
7:00 II CIS Ennllt1 hn: (C) (30)
Wilt« Cron~tt.
fJ' ,..., (t) (JO) mo...,...., <JOI
............. (30)
t:lO D 9111 f,.n, Alfolr. !<> (JO)
Mn ""'J1olif1R pl.,. 1 brassy Btolld·
nr m11sleal mr wno lrrtemts
st111-strucl Ciss;1 tnd BllffJ It
sflow. buslneu.wun.. (R)
o mim,_ ,,_ <C> clOl
Or. Ro.illnvitts M1rshl tnd Cll'Cl-
tyn to dinner; Su•n dtcldes to pity
it uft; Jot ~s In on Jiii.
m"'-1001
fl!l llEr Josul: "Jluw1ll" BBC rt•
port1r Altn Whicker provld• 1 Sil•
donlc look It tll• 11117 Arahlln coun·
by whole lncoml 11 hutd IOlttJ
on oil. l
ly Ken hid
NO QUESTIOH.S NCN JIM. YOU'LL
6fl ALL THe AHswW TONIGHT •
11)-M--~
IJRBAN· PROBLEMS -Walter Cronkite probes the
diUicuJties which plague large urb8n centers in a
three-part investigation series, 11Tbe Cities," to--
night, Tuesday and Wednesday evening at 10 p.m.
on Channel 2. Tonight's program discusses air pol-
lution, overcrowding and traffic congestion.
TELEVISION VIEWS
Glen, Nancy
Great Switch
mw .... ,....•-1C>
Im LI C...t Ytda
l .... Dll!ICIJCIS -_,.., l~~-~~=~=~~0~:¢2~~=~.~~~J~~=~l~::-=-~~c,,~'.:°:'~~::;<:J.~~~=~~~~....._~ CMlla: (C) (60) .. A City /1 To LM JI o !'--------------------'
In." Rtparter W11tw Cronkltl be-GORDO
7:J01Jll!lm•-: <tl 1001
iibrftl lirllon tebl I tortuous b1p
Into Mllk:o In pumtlt of tour
fu&itlves wsnttd for kl1Hn1 h
friend, a retirinr sheriff. The btil,
.trewn with Mule1n bs!Mlldos In
etlilnct with tho Olll:l•ws. leed1 to
• showdown at 1n old miuion.
• Ptul Rlchsrdl (UISts. (R)
D n. ........ : (t) (30) "Feiry
Tait." Tht Monkees ~aute 1t1·
.ndsry chlrtctm from some ol the
world's bSlt·known childrtn's Ito·
rill. This h•lf·hour 111isod• may not
be an 1CCurat1 1cmunt ol eny of
the l1lry bits you Rlllllftbtf, but II
wm ht entertllninr snywiy. (R) a·-_, (t) (30) ·~•.
Parit of tht Amerlcai."
1ln1 this ttl,...nl&flt lhidy of u!Mn
pniilltml ""'Wlltl I look I\ bnitrt
bfolltht lbout hr Wll• pollution,
1lr pollutloft, blftlpX'll&in llu6-
Khn and thettDeL Thi -* •·
1mlnes how WI 1llond our di! ..
to dec1y ind whit tht PIOPI• are
ckllnt to th1 cltin 11 wtll 11 whit
the cilia ltl doln1 to the ptOtlle.
O Q)CIJI "" (I) C60l """" pl1ce I H1111 Mrteif 11 Moimt." SUd-
dtnly 1fflldld with ., ..n. oom·
pullion to ta•• h!s OW'll lilt, Scctt
Uncllfl(llS mldic.11 trlttrntnt thlt
hat him relMnr hii )lltt. (R)
...... ·--(t) (60) 0 IHl ill ....... ,...,, (C) (00)
"The Bull11o Min." Victoria tries
out htr priton rlfonn thlOria on
thr.. hardened crimln111 hlrtd to
pkt; htr peid1 crofl. (R)
G T•po (C) (60) •
m '"' ...... -'" 1001
D @ (]) Cowbtr 111 Africa: (C)
(60} ''The Hesitant Hero." John
H9111J l.al1s ln IO'le with Dien Whit·
tJUr. •· nei1hborin1 r1nclltf'1
d•uth!er. [lt111 i• drawn lo the
Indian end 11 her 1fftdlon trnws. IE Tllh Ft•llilr
aht btcfMTtn ortr\1 prvt.ICt!Yt ti.-
ward him. Brooke Bundy 1uats. 10:30 ID Jihn: (C) (30) Sid johns.
(R) fZl) WW'• KlllPtlillS. Mr. llfll1
0 Mtllien $ Molril: "'JM Clrf Ht (C) "Mii Lymtn ind tht Avatlr."
ltft ltlllnd" (comedy) '56-Tib D1vld Sllv« 'lisib with tilt tdltor of
Hunter, Nal1llt Wood. Costcm'• moll outlpoktn under-
m Tl"ltll • c.n.q ..... (C) (30) c;ound ~.
ID ""7 -(00) ll:DOfj) -....... -(C) (JO)
IZI"' -Qo! <Rl ,.,,., °"""'· Im c...a r1Cllidt,.. D n. 11• ....,. ..._ (C) (30)
11:00 D n. Q•• .... : cC> (60) "The
lnvbiblt Min."
11 MD: "'SlltJ D'IMrW' (ro·
m111<:1) •4g...;..,tJ1n Ltdd, G1H RU$·
tell.
m """ <"1
fl) Rel .. Qaest: Ptlt SMpr'1
pests m Petricll Sky and Thi P•
rrywhisll•s, Iii youn1 l1dlt1 from
Gtorlt SkiflMr.
Ollie Wllinn (30)
D Ntn: (C) (JO) lutef Werd.
D lllelli: .,,lerit" (4r1ma) '57-
Sttf'tlnr Hl)'dtn. Anll1 £1r.blfl.
mi..en. <C> <001
IJlllwle: "S9ll Fnftdsce ...,..
(dr1m1) '52-Jotl McCrta, Yvonnt
Dt Cerio,
south Africa. Plll'tl ind Mr. Sky In· ll:JO II MD: (t) "l1tt11 tf tht Rtp1
JUDGE PARKER
°"°" COMP'l.fTION OF
PINNEii!, KA.TH£~NE
'>llGGES>TS THA.T
SHEILA ANP THE
MEN 60 INTO Tl!E
LIVIN6 ll:OOM
WILE' SHE
ASSIS.TS
N'S. TXIMILE!
"-EASE. MRS. P'An:EI NO, 'iOtl
,.CMIT I HELP WITH MAV NOT.
'THE PISHES?'
terch1n1• b1njo 11111 tulbr •• thty Rlvlf" (•dVtnt!Jrt) •54 _ Gt0ri•
linr Amtrlctn folk :1onp. " ,_ N ~ H I j;;;~ on_. .... ,, a .... a rtr.
Ill°!' ... Delltrtt I) D 9 Cil n. Tflittd: ... (C)
l'.JO II 9 (J) Tiit LllCY Slltw: (C) 0 MM: "IW ......... (c:orn-11==
(30) Kin BlrTJ pt1y1 e tuts!: rol1 Id)') '4G--lab Hope, P1ut.tt1 God·
11 tht hHd of , danc1 tludlo cl•rd. IL---
"'"' •••--· h•'" tor D ll7lill"" --cci TUMBLEWEEDS tht rocJa. Lucy eotnel ID ttlt n•
ti.If, rnudl to Mr. MDC1M7'1 d~. Jt.• m he """ (C)
(RI • OFFl~l:isi . o IHl ill"' '""'' !Cl !l~ l~lO GI 01t. """ HUSBANI? HU HANPllOOK
"Th• Boom1t1111 R1ld ... H1uplm1n fDActlo• Dtttrt: •·u1 Yq1s tzJ : EVERY FUTURE BRIDE SHOULD °"""" '' ""' '"' loll "' ...., "'""""'·" DEVELOP SOME AITTISflC TALENT durln11 btttlt with tht Rita on I SHE CAN USE lO ENTERTAIN HER "°"' lhktn .-. Oki "'''"' 11:40 D -: ..., -"' ~ M•· PROSPECflVE HUBBY, AND
suest&. (R) i«" (dnma) '6Z-Edwl1• FtuHllfL IMPRESS HIM WITH HER ABILITY.'
m• ..... , cc> (IO)
m""" ~ -<tl llOl
tl)Allltt .........
"
t<oBllllCIJ..., ....,., <Cl 13~
Shtflff Andy Ttylor Mndl IOn Opl•
to 1 IWtnk boy$' ump 1nd thtnl
rtll'eb lt (R)
TUESDAY
1:0011 Mlril: "'JM ....... (lllJI"
lllJ) 'SJ-Y"ftlllrio Gnn1n, Gloff&
,
Cinh1mt.
D lllMt: ........ II Ila'•_.
"" (Wllt•m) '65--Mlct1Y Ktflltl1,
II CNlanlJ IM11 IMnl
O-(t)
11:001·::. ... -· (comtdy) • Hope ........... , ... ,
...... (COl!lllfy) '36-MM W1"-
12:JO m "A .. ..__ NII'!'• Drtnl"
(C\Olllldy) '3S-Jlm•• Ctsner.
DAYTIME MOVIES l:JO 111 ..., -..,. 1.,._,,
'II -Merta MOtlttt, .IM11·Pltml
l:JO D "ltlln ._ " c.IW" (oom· ( Aullllllll.
Hy) 'SZ-Ma11t1111 O'Sull"'' Ed· mund hln1t. t:JO 8 "1:11 " l••" (t!Mnturt} '57 G "Chtll a C.W ....... -Cla'l11 ford, V111 Htfllfl.
{lll)'sttry} 'Sl-Rldl111f Todd. "ti• G "'ft ...,,.... II If* ..,.
_...,. (clr11M) 'C7-Jofl11 Git· liltlf' (lll)'lt.lry) '50-Htlnz Rull·
lltld.. 1111ni., Mldltf SiMolt.
Complete Printing Service
Top Quality -Fast Service
'''''''"""'' 642-4321 -
2211 Wott l•lboa Blvd. Nowport koch
Mun AND JEFf
MISS PEACH
YEH, IGET
FIRED EVERYDAY!
I'M A HUMAN
CANNONBALL
AT™EClRCUSI
SMi'S Ol.UMJN6 MW
HAS AUTH~OF
n+osE MEtl EA.TINO
Oil' OF MEI HAMP!
.~
ly Gus Arriola
I~ Harold Le Don
I'Yl ~ FOii: '!IOll lD MEET"
Ml. !llCAANMI WHO WEI.PS UI' TME
SUwt.e: THfA"!'i« MOllP: MiEllA!
Ji\NPV CAN PRIVE ¥0U Ot'Bt
10MOnOW AFTBtrfOON ~
By Tom K. Ryan
--·-· -·
ly Al Smith
LATE AGAIN! TttlS
TIME YoU'RE FIRED
O.K. SEE Wl-IERE )OU
CAN FINO ANOTHER ., HUMAN CANNON BA
OF MY CALIBRE! SlITGOOO!
ly M ..
AND ON ni~T
Ml!&iC PAY,
YOO CJIN
~ET 'IOU/I. SON .
Mt11E IN ...
By CYNTHIA LOWRY
NEW YORK (AP) -The winier Smolhers
Brothers show serves up humor with some musical
interludes. The sunuDer Smothers Brothers show
is music with humor. lt is a switch of emphasis .
IN COLD WEATHER, it was !he jokes, the
sketches and the topical humor that were the im-
portant elements. That is pretty much pushed into
the background in the tuneful CBS hour that had
its premiere Sunday night. '
Glen Campbel!, an attractive young singer, bas
taken over the show for the summer, and in his
first assignment as star proved to be interesting
musically and to have a quiet but effective style all
his own.
HE WAS BACKED up by most of the winter
regulars -the dancers, the musical organization
and comedian Pat Paulsen. Nancy Sinatra was the
guest star. The Smothers Brothers turned up, too,
to get the show oil to a good start.
Like NBC's summer replacement for Dean Mar·
tin's hour, the program is airried primarily at the
young audience.
CO-PRODUCED by Tommy Smothers, the show
was a commonplace 60 minutes that will not make
TV history. But then, summer shows almost never
do.
It will be interesttng to see if the Smothers
Brothers and their stall go ahead with their ela·
borate plans to· satirize, through Pat Paulsen's par-
ody, the current political campaigns.
WHEN IT STARTED months ago, Paulsen's
_P?rtrait of a double-talking cliche-bound president·
1al hopeful was highly amusing. Then, in the course
of events, the world business of running for presi·
dent abruptly lost most of its humorous content.
Each season there are a certain number of re-
placements and additions to casts of established.
programs. Actors leave and producers feel that the
series could stand some fresh faces.
THERE WILL BE an unusually large number
of additions next season, however, and an extra·
ordinarily high percentage of them will be Negroes.
Programs adding Negro performers are comedy
series like 0 The Flying Nun" and "Gomer Pyle''
to the action shows like "Mannix" who will have a
new secretary with a young son.
A NEGRO neurosurgeon, will arrive in "Pey·
ton Place." Later on, the evening soap opera will
develop plot lines involving the doctor and his fam~
ily. Percy Rodriguez, a Canadian actor with wide
stage and screen experience, will play the role.
CBS starts its thr~part series, "The Cities,''
tonight -10.11 PDT -and will document the prob-
lems from slums to air poUution in hour shows on
three successive nights.
NBC's "Comedy Playhouse" which takes over
the Danny Thomas Hour for the summer starting
tonight -~g -will consist of reruns from the 1966
Bob Hope series.
I
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Dennis the Menace -
. -
•
LEGAL NOTICE •
-·=-·
JOc: •• ,,
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11~ r*!W/J
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21\'JC Phw/p
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,
LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE l n H igh Ge a ,.
lOe llh'Wl•IJI ....
lOc phw/p{ll
lOC phwJ•!ll
)lie; Pl'lw/Pl21
3Dc: phw/J(l)
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j 1
Toyota
Agency
Opened
' By CARL CARSTENSEN
Of ... O.tlY ,, .. , •••ff
Les Elmore, 0 range
County auto dealer since the
early 19SO's baa opened his
new Toyota dealership in
Westm.iJUter.
The ${00,000 lacility OC•
cupies four and a h...alf acres
at 15292 Beach Blvd. and the
3200 square foot showroom
accommodates a four tar
disp l ay while the 3750
square foot service depart·
ment has eight service stalls
wilh plen~y of room for ex-
pansion.
The new Toyota store wJJI
handle about 200 new and
used cars. Elmiire is strictly
an Orange County _product
having started !wee as a us-
ed car dealer. He gradually
worked his way into the im·
port business and was for
five years the Triumph
dealer in Garden Grove.
He received the Toyota
franchise in 1966 and quickly
became one of the top sell-
ing Toyota dealers in the
U.S. In April last year,
E 1 m o r e outsold all 712
Toyota dealers in the coun·
try.
* * * MAY BIG MONT H
FOR OLDSMOBILE
Oldsmobile Division pro·
duced more cars in May
than fn any previous month
in its history. Harold
Metze l, Olds GM said,
"May's production of 72,305
cars has never been equall-
ed and the 648,000 cars we'll
build for the model year is
55,000 more than the
previous record established
in 1965."
The reason is that Olds
sales this year are up 15.8
percent, compared with an
industry increase of 11 .3
percent. The Toronado is
one of the big reasons with a
19 percent increase in sales.
* * * FACTS AND FIGURES
CAN BE INTERESTING
The nation established
new automotive records last
year in motor vehicle
registrations, miles of
travel, fuel consumption, ex-
ports and in just about any
other field named. The new
records are highlighted in
-NEW DEALERSHIP -j'articipating in opening
festivities of Les Elmore's Toyota dealership on
Beach Boulevard are (left to right) Elmore, Roger
Beck, Toyota district manager, James McGraw,
national sales director for Toyota, Ron Pinchot,
general manager for Elmore, and Tatsuro Toyoda,
vice-president of Toyota.
the 1968 e d it i on or
"Automobile Facts and
Figures," the an n u a l
statistical book.let published
by the Automobile Manufac-
turers Association.
The booklet shows that in
1967 the nation h ad
81,051,000 passenger cars
and 16,476,000 trucks and
buses. They traveled 967
billion miles during the year
and consumed nearly 78
billion gallons of fuel.
Automotive exports last
year climbed more Ulan
$4.00 million over t h e
preceding year to total near-
ly $2.9 billion.
The 70-page booklet in-
dicates that Americans are
driving newer _and better
equipped cars. The average
age Qf passenger cars in use
last year dropped to 5.63
years from 5.71 in 1966 and
5.90 in 1965. Selection of op-
tional equipment rose to
new highs with 85 percent of
the 1967 model cars having
automatic transmissions, V-
8 engines and radios. Three
out of four had power steer·
ing, better than 38 percent
had power brakes and a like
number had factory in·
stalled air conditioning.
The importance of motor
vehicle product.ion to the na-
Your Money's Worth
LEGAL NOTICE What Women ••1t '" IU,t:ltlOlt COUltT O" TMe
STAT• OP' CALIP'OltNIA P'Olt TM• COUNTY OP' OltANO•
lrto. A"'2M NOTICI! OP' M•AltlNO -"l!TITION FOii "ltO•ATe: 0 1' WI LL AND 1'011:
Ll!TTl!ll:S Tl!STAMl!NTA•Y
E1t1t. of JAMES R. EUOALY, OKN· ....
« phw/p
Ck plrW/p
NOTICE IS t1E RE8Y GIVEN Thal L11cni. R. Elld1lr, h•1 fifed ~1r1!n • PC'll· '"-ot rwUJ lion far P,.lt of Wiii 1n0 for l:i.111...:e « 11hWIP of Ltlltfl Tnt11Mnl•rv lo II-. P.i1noner, tltftr~ct to ""1'\lch It m1dt far lur!11er
p1rHc111t.,, 1nd tl'YI !I'll time 1nd pl1c1 "' IM1rl111r the nmt ,.., be-.. 'et fOf Ju~ l?, \,..,•I t~30 •.m .. In Ille courtroom of O.s>1~! No. 1 ol u lcl cou'1. 11 101 N,
Bro1clw1v. In UM Clrv ot Stnll An1.
C1l,.,ornl1.
By SYLVIA PORTEil
\V omen are now invading
career fields ranging from
the seemingly incredible
(ordinary "seamen") to the
seemingly ridiculous
(chimney sweeps). We are
becoming eminent in white
collar professions w h i c h
were closed to us until only
a few years ago. We are
proving our worth in blue
collar occupations which
have just opened up to us
for the first time in history.
CC Pllw/J
17c pfiw"'
27c ••t•
21c """'''
"'""'"
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Jlc Pllw/J
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27c ,it•I•
01t9d JUM 21, 1'61
CM!bn-,
Ml11r•l"ll
W. E. ST JOHN
Counl'Y Clerk ldMrmKIMI'', C.1-n'ltl I /Ml
AftM'llt'fl Al Ltw
US T-11 ~ <:wflf,.., lttH
Orallf9, C•llfwlllll HUI T-4 cn4) J.o1r-1111
AttetMYI fw "•tltl-"11bUlhfd Or•-C011I
JUl\of 22. 24, 2t, IHI
01Uy Piiot, ·-The reasons are not just
the obvious Jegal b a n s
again.!lt job discrimination
Leasing Now Practical For Everyone
l ncr1•1in9 n11mb•r1 of Am1ric1n1 now 11111 th• f•mily
ftr 1om• "'"' good r••1on1. EXAMPLE:
Vou ctn now 11•1• 1 l:1t1nd n1w Cou91r for 192.00• p•r month,
•nd iu1t look •t wh 1! lt includt1: Full 11ryi,, ind m•lnltn~nc•
for !ht ntrl two y•1r1 or 40,000 ml l•" AT NO IXTRA COST TO
YOU, Your full l1T11int1n1nc1 1111• will include tl1• fol1ow in9 ...... it••~
1. A 41,000 Mii• .. nlc• w•rr•nty, lnclvdln1 •II ,.rt• •nd l•b.r.
2. All m•Jor •ntl Minor njMlr•, lntludln1 lultrl-
c•t~•. ell. •ntl filters.
J. Tuitt u,., C•rltureter np11lrt, 1,.rk Plvt•• lt-
nltlen Pelnt1, •nd Dl1trlltutor ••,.lr-1.
4. Tr•n1mlul.n a4Jv1hn.nt1 •ntl ,.,.,,.., plu•
•tMrll'll' a4}u1trn ... t• •ntl repair•.
s. lr•k• MIJnhMnht llnlntt. ~Ira, phn wh"I
IMll•nclnt •M •lltnnMnt. "n,.. .........
7. Any arMI •II Npalrt Mlnw •ncl m•lor wh•n•ver
.... wherevw ".... ••c•pf d•m•tH CIUIM
freM •<<kfenh .t colll1len er netl•ct. a. W• wlll ltuy yevr Preunt C•r.
f. My ... c•n 1 .... • c•r '"""' JohnMn & Son. All yiau nMd 11 l•nk .,..reverd credit.
OTHER EXA.i'M"-P-"'Ll::;:S"-: ------.
1H& MIRCUltY
ITATION WAGON
Air CllNllt .. 1u11t. trtnt.. :Jnl _,,
Nm. .. ltlbr•k"" radio, clllc*, .... ltt', Hnt 11•1 .. •OOO "'11n. s12500,_ _.
1KI CONTINENTAL
A111e., wtmo. control, l11ttwr
..... , ,.W \HI, 1tnltcl lllMI,, w.w1" tlm. 1~ Mllnl. 4'
DIXI mlll' ..
5165°:,. ~··
-VI, •111+.. tr•n• .. ,,.,.,, , .. ,,. ,r1i l1,
wllool 111••"·
JOHNSON
AND 50N
on the basis of sex in the
1964 Civil Rights Aot and the
mounting acceptance of
birth control vi a con·
traceptives. The underlying
reason is the .!lpreading
scarcity of highly educated,
h i g h I y trained workers
throughout the n a t i o n .
Because women are needed
as never beCore in the job
market, there is virtually no
occupation still closed to us
and women are now being
acUvely r ecruited for jobs
once exclusively in the do-
main or men.
LET'S S1\ Y you're a
young woman considering a
career in this challenging
era, In ~·hich lf you are
typical you will marry at
age 20, raise children and
still work .at a job an
average of 2'l years. What
guidance could I properly
give you to help you fuliiU
yourseli as well as make a
significant contribution to
your family and to the na-
tional economy? This:
Before you decide on your
career, study the range of
occupations now open to
you. Consult your school
guida nce counselor o n
details of career op·
portwUties and the Labor
Department's com·
prehensive "Occupational
Outlook llandbook," whlch
describes more than 700 dli·
ferent careers.
Set your career goals as
high as you dare, or can.
sider upgrading your goals
Within a given Ueld you've
already picked. For ex-
ample, U you're thinking
about becoming a nurse, a sk
yourself whether you might
qualify for training M .a
nursing teacher or a
medical technologist. If you
want toJ>ecome a secretary,
consider a higt·paying
specialty such u 1nedlcal,
legal or bilingual aecretarlal
work.
MAKE A lollg·range plan
to meet the requirements
for the occupttUon you
choose. Your lmmed.tate
goo! probably will be to
'S
Mondq, Juot 24, 1968
-A-
DAILY PILDT
Wasson Joins
Bekins Soard
E . Hornsby Wa 11o n ,
chaimlan of the board and
chief executive officer of
Pact1lc Telephone a n d
Telegrll!lh Co.. has be<n
elected to the board of
Beldnl Yan & S-ge Co.,
aooonling to D"11el P.
Bryant, Beldno prosklent. · w._ Is the third new
cllred<>r added to tho Bekins
boilnl rtnc:e February when
the company deparUd from
the procedure wller<by all
company directors were
either memben of manage· ment or famUy stockbold·
era.
Ot!ler ......,. addiUona to
the ll·member boanl are
A118tin T. Cusbman, im·
mediate Poat cbalrman of se.a, Rcel>U<k and Co .. and
0... Robert R. Docluoo,
d.... al the School o1
B u dnest AdminlstraUon,
Uulvtnlty of Souther n
calilomlL
WUIOll Is also on !be
boanl of Bell ~ Co.
of Nevada, The Prudential
lMuraoce Co. of America~
Bank of Am«toa, SW!ford
Research lmtltute and Tho Emponum cav-~u Co.
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<f DAILY PILOT J $
Monday's · Oosing Prices -Complete New York Stoel{ Exchange List
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)f DAILY PILOT Mond.,, June 24, 1968
••
a··n.~ MORE ili:Es-YOU BUY ••• The-
Whitew all or
BlackWall &lleDi~ B&Y011
_More You SA VE
I t . • .
Guar dsman
Bur 1 Tin
SAVE s3
·1Just In Time
for Vacation
Get Your Tires
at NO MONEY
DOWN on
Sears Easy
!Payment Plan
I
Whitewall
or Blackwall
Silent Dfn&CIOr
Rayon
Gaards m-·
Buy 2 Tires
·SAVE
'8
·Whitewall or
Blackwall
Silent Dynacor Rayon
Guards•••
Buy 3 Tires
.SAVE
•t5
ALLSTATE Passenger Tire Guarantee
Ouarallteeil Aplnlt: AU !all·
urea ot the tin ruultlng
trom normal road baz&rdli or
detect. in material or work·
manahlp.
For How Loq: J'or the ll!• ot the original lret.d.
What 8Mr9 WW Do: Repair
nail punctures at no charge.
In th• cue of failure, In ex-
chang• for the Ure, replac•
It, -charging only the propor·
tlon of current regular sell-
lllg price plua Federal Exci.H
Tax that represent1 tread """· .Gaannteed Aplnlt1 Tread wear-ouL
Fm' How Long: The number
of montha apectt1ed.
What Beul Will Do: In U:·
change tor the Un, replace
1t, cha.rg:lng the current reg-
ular selling price plu1 Fed-
eral ExclM Tax leu the fol-
lowing allowance:
Month• Allowaaee
12 to 24. 10%
27to39 20 %
,.
Whitewall or
Blackw U Silent D a G Ynacor Rayon
Full 4-Plri Nylon ALLSTATE
uardsJJJaa sAVi Crusader
Tires
Lifetime Treed Guarantee
Broad.Shouldered Wide Tread
95
.... lllJ T•bde•• lll.Uwalll
Pl111 I.IS Jl'ed . f:~e. 71-.: aad Ohl Tino
• New Contour Safety Shoulder
• New 7-rib tread design for all-
weather traction
• New 6" whiti aidewall to match
the width of the white sidewall on
many new cars.
SAVE '20
Regular
$199.95
77
M ... I
6112
• Thermostat automatically maintains the temperature that you select
• Two 4-way adjustable louvers allow draft-free circulation at all times·
• Chrome plated dio-caat bezel front enhances your car'1·biterlor
• Mounts handsomely under dash .(
Expert Installation A•ailable
,
Smoot.\! Road Gripping 4 Ply Silent Dynacor Rayon
Guardsn1an
Sears Most Wanted Tire with the BIG 3 PATENTED
Feafures tlw.t GRIP the Road in Any Weather
lkly" 1 Tlr• , •• Yoa Save SS OU the~ Trade-bl ~l SIZE .... '""\' ... "I 'AVE "fAVE.111\"" "'\FE T l!:aelr. When. Wiie• Wlie• 'lll'h"a Wiiii l'oa B'll "".011 811;, \'011 B~ l'o• Ba' • • •
Buy! rtre1 ••• You Save 13 eh
~be RegUlar Trade-In Price:
Trade-la l '.l'IK 'TIRES I TIRE 4' TIBE
TUBELESS BLACKWALL
Buy J TtreL..Yoa Save •tli OU
the Regular ~In Price!
6.50113
6.95x14
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Mond<)', Juno 2~. 1968 041LY "1LOT n
Fraz·i-er. 4-1 Favorite in· Title Bou·t With Ramo·s
NEW YORK (AP) -Manuel
Ramos, a 4-1 underdog, is expected to
sboot the works euly in a desperate
a t t e m .P t to dethron.e five-state
heavyweight champion Joe Frazier in
a 15-round title fi ght at Madison
Square Garden tonight.
''It only takes one punch to turn a
fight around," said Gil Clancy.
"Ramos can punch pretty good but he
better get Frazier quick because the
champ keeps coming at you. If Ramos
can nail him everyone may be in !or a
surprise."
Clancy, co.manager and trainer of
former middleweight champion Emile
Griffith, worked witb the tall, 24•year~
old Mexican champion for a ftek. He
will be In h.IJ corner tonight
The general opinion of the esperts
was that ttie s.root-3 Ramoe' only
chance to win was to get in the big
bomb quJckly. The unbeaten 24-year·
old Fra:.ier ha11 been floored ooly
three ti.mes in his career, all in these·
cond round.
Mike Bruce put him down in the se·
cond before be was" stopped in the
th.1rd -round. Oscar Bonavena decked
Frazier ,twice in tPe seoond round but
Frazier came on to win the 10-round
decision_,
Fraz!er'1 record It 20-0, !ncludlng 18
knockoOll. Ramoc' record ta 26-6-2,
including 18 tnoctouQ. He bu won 15
straight, 12 ()( tbem by knockouta and
nln& o( them in three rounds or less.
' Tonlfffa' -TV
Channel s, 7 :30
Ramos never has been fioored or stop.o
ped. His face is unmarked.
Frazier, aS"uaual, won't be bard to
find.
"l'm coming out smoking, like I
always do," be said. "I hope it ends
right after llJo bell souocia."
Soderberg to Kentu~ky
Marina Ace to Enroll in August
By GLENN WRITE
Of 11\t Dilly Piiot Slaff
schedule, going aU over for 23 dif.
ferent games, including Vanderbilt.''
Mark Soderberg, highly regarded
basketball star from Marina High
School , will enroll at the University of
Kentucky and continue bis cage career
wuler the experienced guidance of the
old coaching master, Ad olph Rupp. ,
Vandy lancieci prep giant Steve
Tumei so Sodef"berg will get a chance
to match talents with the 7·2 whiz next
season: Doctors say Turner may grow
to 7-5. Soderberg is 6-81/4.
Soderberg, All·Coast Area, All~Sun
set League, All..CIF tournamect first
team and a member ol two summer
all·star squads, was given a full four·
year scholarship at tbe Luingtoo. in·
stitution and is the only Oall!omian in
the Clln'elll Wildcat hoop irogram,
•
Soderberg told the DAILY PILOT,
"the whole 11etup back there really im-
pressed me. There were 10 or 11 other
schools which really interefJted me,
but Kentucky stood out.
"Not only do they have an im-
pressive program, but the school and
country are beautiful. The coaches
haven't decided yet whether I'll play
center or forward but in their style of
play it really won 't make much dil-
ference.
He is noted for ttis rebounding, agili-
ty and excellent shooting, outside or
inside.
Kentucky fowid out about him
through alumnus Ray Allen, who now
teaches at Marina. Neil Reed. new
Santa Ana JUgh coach and former aide
to Rupp, followed through. "They have a tremendous freshman MARK SODERBERG
Newport's Voss Learns Laver Opens
Being a Major Leaguer Wimbledon
HasltsPainfulMoments Bid Today
There are times when being a major
leaguer hurts.
T a k e the case of Bi 11 Vo ss, the
former Newport Harbor Higt and
Orange Coast College baseball hero
who now hangs his chapeau in the
dressing quarters of the Chicago
Whi te Sox.
Today Voss is so sore he literally
aches all over. But he creaked out of
bed to make practice and he'll b:e on
the bench tonight against Minnesota to
be used in an emergency capacity.
Voss has sore ribs, kidneys, an
aching head, a jam.med right thumb
and a bruised shoulder as a result of a
collision with a Comiskey Park wall
in Saturday's game with Boston .
He had just been shifted from right
Oh Those Mets!
Dodgers Glad
To Leave NY
NE\V YORK (UPI) -Bill Singer
just might wind up boycotting games
a gains t the New York Mets. The Los
Angeles D o d g er righthander isn't
having m uch luck against them this
season.
The Dodgers, whose record now is
even at .500 at 36-36, are idle today.
They open a three.game series at San
Francisco Tuesday ni ght.
Si eger saw h.is record slip to f>.7 Sun·
Dodger Slate
JI/,.. 25 Ooc19ers 11 Sin FrlnCIKO 7:55 Jt.m. ICFI
i6"10J .June 26 Ood~r1 al 51n Fr1ntllel! 12;SS P.m, KFI
(6"10) J11ne 27 00d9ers 11 San Fren<ltco 12:.U p.rn. KF I
C6.t01 J,_ 71 Oodoon >'I Atllnl1 7:1.S p,m. ICFI C...01
J11ne 2' Oodlll:'l"S .... A1l•nl• 7:.U p.m. KFI '"'°'
day and took his third loss in three
decisio ns against the Mets in a 5-4
Dodger setback.
A crowd of 56,738 -the largest in
the major leagues this year -wat-
ched the Mets capture a three.game
serie s two contests to one.
Si nger, who entered the game v.itll a
1.75 earned run aver age, left after
Cleo n Jones hit a three·run homer
with one out in the fourth Inning to
give New York a 5-0 lead.
* * * LOS ANGEL•I NEW YD•« &IP hr'bl •IP hr'lll
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field, where the wall is padded, to left
field, wtiere it ls not.
A long fly ball came his way .. Voss
gave chase and caught it, then slam-
med into the barrier , with head and
shoulder. He peeled ofi and dropped to
the ground, still holding the ball.
The umpire rushed to the scene -to
make sure he bad caught it -then
anxious Chcago mates gathered
around till Bill was able to get up.
Meanwhile, in the stands, wife Donna
....................
WHITE
WASH
...............•••• ,
was devouring fingernails at a rather
frantic clip. "And I was even more
worried when they took him to t h e
hospital," she adds. "It seemed to take
so long before they'd tell me how he
was."
Manager Eddie Stanky asked Bill
Swlday night if he would be available
for emergency use. Voss , anxious to
make good on his chance in the ma-
jors, said he would.
"I've got the opportunity to make
the bi g leagues and I don't wMt to do
anything to lo se Jt ," the Yardley
Trophy finalist confides.
Stanky once polnted out during
discussion at Anaheim that Voss was a
guy who had the kind of competitive
heart it takes to stay in the majors.
Obviously his appraisal is accurate.
WIMBLEDON, England (AP) -
Three American tennis 11tars, all rank-
ed. in the top 10, stood in the path of
Corona del Mar pro Rod LaVEr as he
started his bid for the first open
Wimbledon title today. ·
Laver , top seeded, had to play
Eugene Scott of New York City, rank·
ed No. 9 in the American list, in the
first round on the No. 1 court.
U Laver wins , he probably will find
himself fating two more U.S. stars
later in the week -Stan Smith, rank-
ed 7th, from Pasadena, in the second
round, and Marty Reissen. No . 5, from
Evanston, Ill., in the third.
It's six years since the great
Australian left-hander last w o n
Wimbled<>n.
Now the change to open tennis has
brought him back into the world's
most famous tennis arena.
The six pros controlled by Laver .
Ken Rosewall, Roy Emerson and Fred
Stolle of Australia, Pancho Gonzales
of L<ls Angeles and Andres Gimeno of
Sp a in -a r e entered in the men's
singles.
So are Lama.I Hunt's Handsome
Eight troupe-defending champion
John Newcombe and Tony Roche of
Australia, Dennis Ra Is ton of
Bakersfield, Earl Buchholz of St.
Louis, Cliff Drysdale of South Africa.
Roger Taylor of Britain, Nikki Pilic of
Yugoslavia and Pierre Barthes of
France.
Six former champions are hunting
the title -Laver, Emerson,
Newcombe, Peruvian-born pro Alex
Olmedo, now coaching in Los Angeles,
Australian pro Lew Hoad, who runs a
tenni3 school in Spain , and Spanish
amateur Manuel Santana.
The $62,760 in prize money includes
$4 ,800 for the men's champion.
UP1 Tt .........
WIMBLEDON FAVORITI! -Corona de! Mar's Rod Laver opens
competition at Wimbledon' a famed -towuey. today as the top
seed in the first-ever combined pm-amateur match of the ·world
classic. Suteen members of the Newoort Beach Tennis Club em-
barked today to take in the tournamei..
"I !<now he'll be comlng and I'll be
ready," said Ramos. "He can punch
but ao can I. I didn't come here to lose."
Gard1:u oUl.clals predicted a crowd
upwards ol. 10,000 lo pay more than
SlOO,OOJ at price1 ranging from $5 to
$40.
Frazle-will be making the first
defense of the piece ol. the world t1Ue
he won by stopping previously un ·
beaten Buster Mathis in the 11th rouod
at the Garden last March 4,
Fraz.ler is recognized as .....-orld
champion by New York, Pennsylvania,
Illinois, Massachusetts and Maine.
Lew Plans ' •
Return
Io UCLA
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Lew Alcin-
d<r, the giant UCLA center, says he'll
. be back with the BN.ns for his senior
year instead of becoming an instant
millionaire in professional basketball.
"I'm looking forward to next season
-and l'm still optimistic about our
chances," remarked Alcindor, 'Ntlo
has led UCLA to two consecutive na-
tional collegiate titles.
Before leaving f0t New York for
sununer vacation, Alcindor told a
newsman he's bothered by rumors
that he might quit college basketball
immOOiately, pertiaps to sign a Sl
million contract with the! Harlem
Globetrotters.
"The NCAA is going to begin
woodering, 'Who's he talking to oow?'
or 'What does he have up his sleeve ?'
They could make it rough on me -
and I don't want that," he said,
"I want to play my remaining year
of college."
Alcindor conceded he's talked to im·
portant professionals in the game -
but only socially. lle'J a friend of
Philadelphia's Wilt Chamberlain and
Boston's Bill Russell, f6r instance.
"I see them often," said Alcindor " d • an we talk about my future once in
a while. But as far as my sitting down
and bargaining over a contract, that's
out Of tile question ."
\Vhy, then, the rumors?
"Maybe it's because I 'm different
I'm not realty sure , .. I know for on;
thing, that there's a lot of hoslitity in·
volved," he said.
"A lot of people don 't Jike me be·
cause I've spoken out against some of th~ attitudes on Negroes in our siciety.
This automatically creates hostility ...
"And usually it's the people who
don't like what I say who start all
those rumors."
Alcindor's summer will be spent
working witil underprivileged dllldren
in New York, under commission ol.
Mayor John Lindsay.
Alcindor will conduct twice-daily
basketball clinics for youngsteTl! in the
New York Housing Authority.
Briton Wins
Fiery Race
MONZA , Italy (AP) -F'rench rac-
ing driver Jean Pierre Jassaud is
hospitalized with a serious head injury
tod ay follow ing a spectacular seven·
car smash-up during the Monza Grand
Prix Formula Two race Sunday.
Physicians said Jassaud suffered a
skull concussion, fr actured hls left
knee and multiple fractures of his
ribs. They added that it would take
tum months to recover.
The accident occurred ab o u t
halfway through the race when three
Ferrari Dino cars collided and burst
into flames. The other four autos
smashed into the wreckage.
Jassaud was the only driver injured
seMoll6ly .
Jonathan Williams of Brltain won
the race, taking bis Br abham over the
160 miles in one hour, 14 minutes, 9.8
seconds for an average time ol 130
miles per hour . Britons Allan Rees, in
a Brabham, and Robin Widdows , in a
McLaren, were secood <ind third.
Charles
TORONTO (AP)" -It's getting to be
a habit .
Bob Cllarlcs of New Zealand won the
SL25,oo> Canadian Open Golf Cham-
pionship Sund cy and became the se-
cond golfer in eight days to ignore a
final-round charge by J ack Nicklaus. ·
Lee Trevino did it a week earlier
and won U!e U.S. Open.
"And I didn't turn my back on
J ack's tee shots," said th e leftllanded
swinger when asked If the booming
Nlcklaua drlves disturbed him.
"Actually, I wanted to aee wtiere he
was hitting them."
Otarles abot a four·under-par 156
durtng Sunday's final round for a ab.·
und er-par 271 lllld picked up $2$,000.
Nlcklaua, w h o staged a head·to-
head battle with Cbaffe1 over the Unal
18 boles o1 the e:m-1an1 St. Geor&•'•
•
• ~
Ul"I T.-1M!9!'' NOW, THE REAL THING -Mexico's Manuel Ramos (top) ana
Philadelphia's Joe Frazier wound up their training ·over the week·
end with some work on the heavy bags, but it will be the real thini
tonight when F r azier bids to make a successful defense of bis shate
of the world heavyweight boxing title. Frazier is a .i.r favorite In
the Madison Square Garden bout, sporting a perfect 20-0 record.
Ramos is 23-6 and has never been decked.
Seek .500 Mark -· -· -~
Halos Win Again in 9tJi -= Battle Oakland Tonigli
ANtUIEIM -Bill Rigney was
ejected from six early season games,
when the Cahlornia Angels were hav-
ing trouble winning.
"Now I'm afraid to argue with the
umpires," be says, "because I want to
be around in the ninth inning. I don 't
want to miss something exciting."
The Angels are fast beCilming the
late-inning champions of baseball, win-
ning 11 times this season in their final
turn at bat.
Jim Fregosi, who had beaten the
Angel Slate
JllM '' An11ell YS O•kl•nd 7:55 p.m. KMPC (1101
Jl/nf. 1S Angels YI Olkllnd 7:» 11.m. ICMPC (710) Ju,.. 1' A'-11 YI 01kland 7:1.S 11.m. l(MPC (1101
Yankees with a twelfth-inning homer
last Monday ni ght, became the hero
a gain here Sunday when he opened the
ninth inning with a homer to give the
Angels a 3·2 victory over Baltimore.
It was the sixth time in their last
eight victories that the An gels have
done it. in the final inning.
The Angels, winners in eight ol. their
last 10 starts, will try to gain the .500
mark at 34.34 tonight when they open
a three.game series here against
Oakland. Rick Clark. 0-7, goes against
the A's John "Blue Moon" Odom , 6-4.
Fregosi has hit three homers in his
last six games, disproving 'Ntlat once
wa s one of Rigney's pet theories.
"I used to hate to see Jimmy hit a
home run," Rigney said late Swxlay,
"because it would take him a week to
get over it. He'd start swinging for the
fences and I've always thought he
was a better hitter when he just tried to meet the ball. But he 's really get-
·outlasts
Golf Club layout. said later that the
New Zealander's game wa.s Hjust too
good ."
"He just flat beat me. I thought I
putted considerably better than I did
in the first three rounds, but he putted
better. Every putt he mate• looks UJte
it's gotng in. He putts conciatenUy bet·
ter than anyone else on the tonr.''
• • ting U!e job done now!' ... Th~ winning homer off Oriole rl#
hander Tom Pboebus, 6-7, surpriHid.
tbe Angels ' $60,00).a.year sbortttap.;
"f can't remember ever getttn& a J#.t
off him before," said Fregosi. "I tb1lk
h.e's one of the toughest pitchers in~
leauge." :
Fregosi had to share back.slaps wjlh
Vic Davalillo, the five-foot seven-~,
!SO.pound outfielder and leadoft man
who has helped the Ailge ls win ftv~
six starts since he arrived here f<J9r-
ing a trade -with Cleveland. * DavaliUo hit a third·innU:ig
and a sixth4nning triple to drive e
Angels' first two runa off Phoebul.,A
walk to pitcher Tom Murphy, p1-a
wild pitch, set up one run and thaa't·
pie followed a pinch single bf:Zd
Kirkpatrick. =
Davalillo has had a band 1n fo'lt:Of
the Angels ' last five victcries.
The little Venezuelan said be 11~
beginning to recover from a ~
jury that sidelined him for a week.
before the Angels acquired him
the Indians. ~
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fj' DAllV ,ILGT
World
~avelin
·Record
-
4UJIJAERVI, Finland -
Jt.nls Lusi1 of the Soviet
Qhion broke the world
DVelin record Sunday with
aitoss of 301 feet , 91/,,inches
at.a track meet here.
:!'The old mark was ~
feel, 11 inches, set by Ter1e
Pedersen of Norway in Oslo,
$epl 2, 1964 . ...-'Lusts, who won a bronze
medal at the Tokyo Olym·
pies in 1964, set the record
on his first try. He fouled on his next two throws, then
passed up his last three. ... ... ....
ANDVOORT,
btrl1nd1 -Jackie
wart a tiny Scot with an
injured right wrist, drove a
felterlng Matraaford to vie·
tqry tn the Dutch Grand
Prix to give a French car Us
first world championship
win in 16 years.
Although the ~ar was
l wered by a Brld1pnglne, ~'
French triumph In
and Prix auto racing wa1 ~ tlmmed home by the 1e·
C..d placln&' of a French
Jitver In a French car. ... ... ...
LANGHORNE, Pa.
Gordon Johncoc.k took home
'ttle prestige and first place
1noney after winning the
.united States Auto CJub's
.m.mile championship car
race at Langhorne
~way. .. ,., .., .....
PASADENA --Th o
&e.n11a1 City Spun and Loi
Angeles Wolves baUled to a
'Rorele11 tie Sunday as Lo1
Angeles goaUe M a l e o I m
White gained his fourth
Jilraigbt shutout.
'
•
'White also established a
'Worth A m e r t c a n Soccer
League record of 36Z
1corele11 minutes of play.
.copping: the 305 mlnules 1et 1 ~ Jack Retll1 of II
.Washington. TALL TIMBER COUNTRY -When it came to
height, there wasn't lack of it in battling for this
rebound Saturday night in the fourth annual Orange
County North-South All-Star game at Orange Coast
College. Mark Soderberg (40) at 6-8V•, Bob Klein-
'
Photo llW 0111 S1m01t..-
holz (21) at 6-6 and John .Yule (34) at &-7 do the
honors, with Yule coming out on top -one of 12
he hauled in for the evening. North Stars posted
stunning 82-77 upset for their first win in series.
\
Hawk .Wins Tilt an(l Cigar; ,
South Is 82-77 Upset Victim
By RAY PLUTKO turned h ball over (lost l-lowever, Greg Snyder
OI ... Delly Plllf ... " al ) 29 • I and Al Gage prove~ the lone COacb Russ Hawk won posseaiuon on occ s ons.
himself a cigar Saturday Evidently, som.elhlng Wits consistent performers for
nigbt, while Bill Bloom -hlnderlnc his club's ability the Soutb and the talented
who all but had his name to advance the ball over lhe fr<>nt line never did make it
engraved 011 thetcigar band mtd-court line. out of the starting blocks.
picked up the crying ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;:iiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiii~ towel. ,
Need!... In say, boill B. F. Goodrich 4 PLY NYLON mentors found themselves
insomewhat "awkward ''LONG MILER'' positions" when the final
6uzzer sounded to the fourth
annual Orange C o u n t y
North-South All.Star cage
classic at tbe Orange Q>ast
College gym.
Bloom anlf his much·
heralded band of Rebels
caffie prepared with their
victory speeches and pens
for: the autograph seekers,
but the lone greeting cast
their way was ·a simple
"good night" by the custo.
dian upon leaving the dress-
ing room.
Bloom and his South Stars
"accomplished" th e im·
·~ possible -tiley dropped an 1 82-77 deci'sion to the North
and left a crowd of 2","Jbo
fans limp in ttie process.
Having won the three
previous meetings between
the tea·ms, this year's South
squad Wafi by far . the most
t.alented and entered the
contest a 15-point choice to
make it in four straight.
Although having to settle
for a 35-35 deadlock at in-
tennission, it was thought it
would be just a matter of
time before the Rebs broke
out of thW-shell.
The North, with its tallest
playtt -Bob Kleinholz (6·
6) -already on t h e
sidelines with five personal
infractions, appeared doom-
ed.
H<1wever, the North hwig
on the heels of the South in
those final 20 minutes and
when Mike Staffieri of Sun-
ny Hills hit both ends of a ·
one-and one situation from
the line, it was all over.
Staffieri's two po i n ts
made it 61·60 with 10 :23 re·
maining in the contest and
the North never did sur·
render that lead over the
final segment.
• SIZE
JC)NES
TIRE
SERVICE
4th JULY
SAFETY
T11Nleu llaclrirlolls T•bel-W•..._11,
1st TIRl 2nd TIRE lat Tllllf 211d TIRE
6.50-13 8 78 14.60 7.30 17.55 7.00-1 l • 1-~'"'"'----1----1-·-l---I
.... ... Tu
•.n
~:~~::: 16.40 8.20 19.35 t .68
~ ----1----1----1 __ _
1.15-14 18.85 9 .43 21 .80 10.90
_!_··-·--"-1----1----
1.ss.1 4 23.SS 11.78
l .4S.tS
..'! Tbe c:amit, played la SS.
:Mcree beat befor1 a sparse
crowd of 1,011 in the Rose
.Bowl, was tb1 aeventb
straight contest without a
Jt.efeat for the Wolvt1 and
l~ir fifth tie In t.be last
seven games. ... ... ..
':':':SAN ANTONIO, Tex. -
iin:iversity of. Sou t be r n
:California has its lOd:J cham-
pionship in the 23-year
history of tile NCAA. Tenois
..Tournamellt.
Eliminator
Field Set
Metro~ln Status Quo Mesa Gal
"They just outboarded
us," said Bloom in the
locker room. "We just didn't
get any offen sive rebowids
and they did."
With a starting front line
of 6..8%, 6-7, and 6·5, the
South did indeed bl<1w its op·
portunity on the boards.
NO.
MONEY
DOWN
... The Trojans won the title
:Saturday with 31 points.
Rice W'8S &eCOnd with 23
points and UCLA tbild -21.
FV C.ards .
;:Clobber
~}\les~ 7 -1
·~
""-·" 0..~r'lt ... ...... 1. =' •• ... -· -·· ~"·" ... -.--, ...
At Raceway
mtu.MTO
W.liTCH •••
ARCEtS
iN.'AN'A"H'E'iM"S'fAOi'llM ..................... , ................... _.
North Meats So1,1th in
8i9 l G•m• S•riest
OAKLAND
ATHLETICS
Tonight,
Tomorrow & W•dn••d•y
G•m• Tim•, 8 p.m.
' Following Three Ties 2nd in State
AAU Meet
tlowever, Hawk felt the
difference. in the contest was
the ability of hi s club to go
to a 2-2·1 zone press in the
second half -a pressure
Without a doubt, it wa s a
unique Sunday in the Metro
League baseballl ranks as
Ward's Pirates and Golden
Wesit. College both played
single encounters. but fa iled
to gain or lose any ground in
t.heir bids for Uie pennant.
That came about when the
Orange Coast College con·
tingent battled Long Beach
City to a 2·2 deadlock and
Golden West fotlowed suit
under the light.'! at Shaffer
Field (Santa Ana ) in a
smreless duel with Cal State
(Fullerton).
Jn fact. deadlocks were
apparently ttie order of the
day Sunday as Chapman
Colleg"e and Santa Ana
College wound up in an 8-8
knot as well .
Before the evening was
over, thf!re we.re more than
a few criticisms by the
respective managers to the
league rule that permits no
extra.iooing gameg to be
played.
Ward's Pi.rates sported
the best opportunity to pull
one out , holding a 2-1 lead
OVf:r Long Beach City in the
top of the ninth .
tlowever, the I..ong Beach
City crew pushed across an
equalizer and then the
Pirates blew t he i r op-
portunity to win it in the
bottom half of I.he final in·
rri ng.
With .Jesse Flores at thirri
and Gary Dunkelberger at
seCond. Ed Washko hit a
grounder to short that wafi
bobbled and the apparenl
winning run croosed the
plate.
But the base umpire ruled
that Dunkelberger had in·
terfered with the short.stop.
Wirf'• ""r•lll (I) ...
Ollv•r. Cl W11hko, JS Jenkln1, lb Balltv, C'I
l tl'P8, lb Seiber!, rf
f'ln1er. rl Flotfl, 1b
f'•lmer. <
Oal,bou1, c
Swftlm. P Crl1p. p
Ounktlbtr~'· P
To1tl1
' ' • 0
• 0 • • ' . ' . ' . • • ' . ' . ? g
• • " ' CO.lfttl Wftf (l l
DeGur, lb carroe11, 111 S1>tl\Cer. p
f'lne1. r1 N""9el»wr, cl
=~~~,' Jb r:,~:t,~· c
M•ples, p Elder. ph
Tal•lt
...
• 0 • • • • ' . • • • • ' . l ~ ' . ' .
" 0
" Ill!
' i
' • ' • ' • • • • ' •
• • • • • • • • • • • • •
M Ill ' . 0 • • 0 • • • 0
• • 0 0
' 0 0 0 0 0 ' ~
SAN B E R NARDINO
I UPI) -Sharon Callahan , a
16-year.old from Whittier,
Sunday went five feet. seven
and one-quarter inches for
the second best high jump
performance for a woman in
Uie nation this year.
Her effort, an American
girls' record, came in the
~ate AAU women's meet at
San BerDardino V a I I e y
College.
Cost.a Mesa's Dee DeBusk
glided to second place in the
defeooe the South never did
solve.
"We felt if we could just
control the tempo of the
game we would haVf: a
chance." confided Hawk.
''But as it turned out we
were just in better shape
than they were and we ran
them off the court in tho.se
final minu1es."
Bloom didn't point to the
press as a major problem,
but the stats reveal bis club
100-meter dash with a 12.2 sea•• b• H1tvn Norlll Star~ lS 47-IJ clockin g. finishi ng behind ~1h s1~·· » '2-11 .,. HO!'f!I S11r1 1121 Barbara r errell of the Los No. P••••• l'G l'T PP TP
An geles Mercurettes. who 1tiJ::l?1~~~· : ~ f :
posted an 11.7. 21-ic1e1nno1i o ' ' '
Eleanor Montgomery had 1l::::!l>fl ~ i 1 n
the top high j u m p ~~~~~.. l ~ J 5,,
pe rformance of five fe el. U=~::h':.." ~ •' d 10
eight inches. 25T0'f~/!11m• 11 3g J 1;
C Lif . 'd d f Soul!o Sl1n. 1711 a orn1a prov1 e mne o He. P11,,, FO ll'T Pl' TP
20 members of the 1964 -soduber; 10 2 1 n 32--Moore o 1 J l United States' 0 1 y m p i c u.-v1111 1 ' J 11 ll-Huc-steln 1 J J 1 w o m e n ' s team. The 21--Snr""• • 1 1 ?'I
0 1G-Gavt 01!,' women's ly mpic trials will 2.c.-s_,,., o o
be held in the l..<ls Angeles !j;:~': 2
1 : ; :
A-a Aug. 24.25 1'-Sth:lltem•lft' 1 .1 n' ,, ~~~~~~-'~'~"~"~~~~~'~'_c:"c...:"c__::
Baseball Standings GIGANTIC
ANNIVERSARY National League AMERICAN LEAGUE
w L Pct. GB Woo Lost Pct. GR
44 26 .629 St. Louis .. '.l6 .629
San Francisco "" 33 .5.35 6\1
Atlanta "" 33 .522 7'h
Philadelphia 32 31 .508 81\
Los Angelc1 ......... :\Ii "" • 500 • New York 3.1 3' .49.1 91\
Cincinnati 33 35 .485 10
Pittsburgh 31 35 .470 11
Chicago 31 37 .456 12
Houston Tl 41 .397 16
Detroit
Cleveland
Baltimore
Minnesota
Oakland
Boston
California
New York
Chicago
Washington
38 33 .535 A II
34 3'l .515 8
35 33 .515 8
34 33 .507 81f.i
33 3.1 .500 9
33 34 .493 91\
31 36 .463 11 'h:
30 37 .'48 12\1
21 4() .385 161\ ••tvrd•r'• ••••ti• N-YO!il 5. M11t11Uolt 2
BOl!lofl 7, CllH;-190 1 C~ei.nct t Oe!roU I
Ollr.tlnd 4. W1Shl1111oft I
C•1lfornl1 S, !11tllll"IOl't 7
IUllflY'I IHIO!h Cte...llncl S.1, Detroit 1).4
MlnnHDlt ,, H-Yort ) "°510n .. ,. ChlulD 2-\a
c 1n1orn11 l. Bllttmcire i
0.lr.l&lld f, W•1h"'9._,,, O
t""'f'I G-
o.tfftlt (Mt;Ltln 1).!) ti Cl-11..t (Wllllt<M ).•!. rt1$hl
MIN'lft0f1 IChlKI' I .. ) Y$, Chic•• (P rltlrdlt f.)), 11 Ml'-Ultet. rt'1lhl
:;...-#
,' M~ PCURY
I INl_(l l N
. '
COST plus SALE
D11rlttt Our
ANNIVERSARY SALE
Ew..y
COUG'AR·MONTEGO-MERCURY
In our haHJe Stock con be ,..,..
<llased "" faerary. <ost +
$50 Service & P'rtpanrtioa
ond 5 °/o Sales Conwnhsla11,
FREE e e e e FREE
SPECIAL BONUS
Witt. '"''1' MW •11 .. 111M cir toltl
tl1rri11t oMr 11111IY1t11tf 1110 1 b.•u·
tlful clir11111 l119t•t• ''";,, • ••
$45.00 Value-FtH II
•
NEW TIRE GUARANTEED RETREADS
ANY SIZE
WHITEWALL
-l4A~or $48-s.~~·=-~:'. ~ l!xch•T•• ........
G11•ra11f'ffct 114JC1!11u rootl lto:iarcl, worii-111lllp far lffetl-., ........_"°"-'" ot rR9wlor pt"li:e ot ti1M af MJ111t-r.
* JONES TIRE * SAFETY SERVICE * INSPECT A.ND
ADJUST IRA.KE$ * lt!NCK FRONT
WHEEL llA.RING
s119
* JONES TIRE *
SAFETY SERVICE
Here'• What Yo .. Get! * Allgnmenr and Sl•.,Jng $ 9 95 * Set Camber-Coster-
Toe-In * IMpect ottd MOST ' Acffnt lrak.s CARS * lolonce FrHt Wheels * Repac:•-•Whffl Tariion b1r 1djuttmont
i nd 111•d1d p1rl1 110!
i11clud1d. _,..,
* JONES TIRE *
COMPLETE BRAKE RELINING
ALL NEW PARTS
NOT RHUILDS * GUARANTEED 30,00G MILES
OR 3 YRS,
e Ntw Ll11l11ft 9 .... W!IMI (yllHJn
$48~.!.~ ..... _
e lllM I fl-ll'*IWC tYtNlll
e AfltoSI -e 1W ltll •-unt.d (1111 l'tWll) • 11..SIOl'feft ~ ... "_,...__, .......
We -rMlw -llt11t1 ..e!lnlnt Hfl'k• tor the •Mcl!IW ""'""'' o1 mile
91' Yll,._ from Cllllt el IMllllAl!on, wll~ con.n llrV. MllUS!m9"1s
--.cl or1 mlle9" 11'111 blMd 111'1 Jl'k n C1KT'Onl 11 11m. llf N I"""""'.
I
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I
-Newpor·t Harbor DAILY PILOT Today's Closing
EDITION , N.Y. Stocks
VOL 61, NO. 151, 2 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES NEWPORT BEACH, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JUNE 24, 1968 • TEN CENTS
$9 Million City Budget Up for Vote Tonight
j
By JEROME F. COLLINS
Of 111.-o.tMr Pl .. t Staff
Newport Beach city councilmen
Tuesday night are expected to adopt
the city's first $9 million budget.
Councilmen at ,the same time will
probably grant a 6.8 percent pay boost
to mwticipal employes.
City Manager Harvey Hurlburt in-
dicated prospects of the salary hikes,
as recommended, cons id er ab I y
brightened with a report from the
county assessor's office on 1968-69
assessed valuations.
The city's assessed valuation will be
some '4 million above preliminary
budget estimates of $220 million. This
means, 1-Iurlburt explained, an ad-
ditional $45,<XX:l to $.50,000 in city pro·
perty taX revenues. · That much. was needed to assure a
balanced budget with the proposed
wage increases. Total cost of the ·
salary package, recommended by pro-
fesslonal outside consultants, will be
$291,<XX> extra annually.
Councllmen already have provided
much of this additional income
through various perm.it and license fee
hikes.
Mayor Doreen Marshall said "there
is no great question" about the wage
proposal winning final council ap-
proval "as long as the budget is balan·
ced."
One year ago, city employes recelv·
ed an across-the-board S percent in·
~ .. , ' ....... ,., ........ ~
FLYING THUNDE!IBIRD 'llilAIC£1 FORCED LANDIN~ ON TOP OF TWO CARS
It 'flew' Wften It Struck Gas Pump As Drivtr Piloted it Into Station
Autos Crash
P11mps, House
In Newport
Newport Beach traffic investigators
today were untangling w e e k e n d
crackups which included a flying
'[hunderbird and a housebreaking
sedan.
The abortive night of tlle Thun-
derbird occurred at noon Saturday in
a gas station at Balboa Boulevard and
Pacific Coast Highway where Jo Ellen
Sterling, 35, of Altadena, steered her
T -Bird to a landing atop two other
cars.
The woman told police her throttle
had stuck and she was turning into the
gas station to have it fixed.
1-Ier car collided with a gas pump,
spun around and landed on top ct two
other vehicles. Aside from the damag·
ed cars and a loose pump, there were
no major injuries.
The housebreaking incident oc·
curred about 6 a.m. Sunday at the
Mark Jordan residence, 6701 Seashore
Drive.
Officer John Andrews said motorist
Esther Nora Janssen, 33, of \Vhlttier,
was driving east on Seashore when sbe
(See ACCIDENTS, Page Z)
Blaze Sweeps
Tl1rough Cutter
An electrical short today "''SS listed
as thc-pr<:i6ab1e cause -Of a-$5;1XXJ boa-r·
fire that whipped through the interior
of a 40-foot cutter owned by a
Westminster man.
Newport Beach fir.emen. and Harbor
District pf trolmen respoAded to the
Saturday evening blaze.
The vessel, reg[stered to Edgar A.
tlende, Jr., of Westminster, was
moo red at King's Lido Landing near
Davey's Locker. The owner was not
aboard and no injuries were reported,
an official said.
•
SU>f!k Marl<eu
NEW YORK !AP) -The stock
market was unable to hold a slim ear-
ly adwnce and worked UttguJarly
lower this afternoon. Trading was fair·
Jy acUve. (See quot.atiom, Pages 14-
15).
Volume for the first four hours WP3
9.23 million shares compared wkh 9.97
mllllo"\for the llnl four boun Fjldoy.
-~·-RUNAWAY CAR OPENS HOUSE FRONT LIKE A ZIPPER
Mirror, Bathroom Lav•tory (C•nter) Where Victim Stood
North Rejects Hitrriphrey
Proposal for Cease Fire
PARIS (UPI) -North Vietnam to-
day rejected Vice President l-Iubert ll.
Humphrey's can for an Immediate
cease-fire in Vietnam.
Xuan Thuy, chief North Vietnamese
delegate to the Hanoi·Washington
talks in Paris, told a lunch meeting o(
tho Anglo-American Press Associa·
Uon :
"The Unlted S*s must fint cease
iis air raids and other act& cl war Im·
mediately and unconditionally.''
Commenting on Hum.Phrey'1 state·
ment th&-t he believed a cease fire
would enhance chances for the succes.s
or the Paris lalkJ. Xuan 1e.ld 0 we
must not mix: up aggressors and tht~
victims."
1-lumphrcy. in a newSJ>2ipcr In-
terview, had called for an immediate
cease fire In Vietnam .
Thuy said the "only objective or the
Paris talks now was to agrff on a
Cefisatlon of the air raids."
''Only if an agreement ls reoched on
this maUer can we move on to other
•ubJects,"it.i' .
Thuy se. lta · would imke no con·
cessions in e ange for the end of U.
S. air raids and other "acts ol war"
against Ncrth Vietnam. .
Re also repeated charges that the
failure to make any pro&rf!6s in the
talk.< wa• the fault of th• Uni!~d
St.ates.
crease. The current plan ranges from
a 2.5 to a 7 .5 percent increase, depen ..
ding on job classification. City
lifeguards are included among the
highest increase category.
Hurl~urt's. preliminary budget total
of $9,106i000 does not includ~ the
salary hikes. ~
With the pay boosfs, It will cost
about $9.4 million to run the city in the
new financial year.
The predicted new rate Is $1.25 -up
7.5 cents from 1967-88. The tu: rate
won't be set Wiu1 Augu~t. when
assessed valuations are made official
by County As senor Andrew J,
Hinshaw.
Municipal expenditures dtD'lng the
current fiscal year will amount to just
a few thousand dollar! less than $8
million. The new budget will be more
than $1 million above that.
Most of the increase is split roughly
equally between the increased cost in
city operations and an accelerated
capital lmprovements program.
Counctlmeo Tuesday are also t:X•
peeled lo g1,., l<lnnal apiroval lo a
pl.an to raise city water rates. The
cost per household will go up about
25 percent.
The increase, wh.k:h already has
won tentative uB8Jlimous coWlC.il ap·
proval, is neeW!d in oroer-to meet a
14 percent rise in the oost of MWD
water and a 3.5 percent annual hike
in operating costs, according to city
officials. The rates have remained
unchanged •inoe 1963.
Abernathy Jailed
1,500 Police Clear Resurrection City_.
WASHINGTON (AP) -Police arm·
ed with shotguns and tear gas moved
throug'h and took possession of th_e
Poor People's CampaJgn Resurrection
City today. At the Capitol, other police
arrested the Rev. Ralph David
Abernathy, the campaign leader.
About 50 arrests were made at
Resurrection City, where the residents
had been told they could no longer
stay on public land. Abernathy was ar-
rested, peaceably, on charges of
violating a law which f o r b i d s
demonstrations on the Capi t o 1
grounds.
Despite the massive show of force -
1500 police were on hand -there was
no serious violence as police cleared
the camp.
As police with their shotguns and
tear gas guns at the ready approached
the gates of the camp the only sound
was a man singing civil rights songs
over the (:amp'a public a~ss
system.
The police moved down in two lines
checking each of the shanties and
tents to see if any campers remained.
llalfway through the encampment
they found a tent containing more than
50 demonstrators singing and clap-
ping. This group submitted to arrest
nonviolently and they were taken one
by one to waiting police buses.
William Rutherlord, executive direc·
Woman Charged
As Prostitute
At Newport Hotel
Prostitution chargc1= were lodged
against a 24-year-old Sacramento
woman today after she was arrested
at a large Newport Beach hotel tor
allegedly going from door to door
trying to drum up business.
Held under $315 bail was Alee May
Morris, a pert blue-eyed blonde. who
assertedly tried to strike a bargain for
her services with two undercover
Newport vice officers.
A second woman at the hotel was
Identified as Miss fl.1orris' companion,
but was not arrested after she claimed
to be an undercover policewoman
from the Reno, Ne~ .• police depart-
ment.
The supposed policewoman was
identiried as Liza LeMays, 32, a tall
blue-eyed blonde. Newport Beach
police today were verifying her story.
Miss Morris allegedly was seen
entering and leaving me rooms of
several hotel guests from 11 p.m. Fri-
day to 2 a.m. Saturday morning.
Police said they confiscated a red ad·
dress book and found '135 hidden in
the ..,.,·oman's bra.
Tile case remained under inves-
li gatJon today to determine whether
others also were involved in the alleg-
ed prostitution activities.
2 Trans£ ormers
Left Dangling
Two electrical transformers in
Newport Beach were left dangling on
three 12,000 volt lines Saturday after a
utility pole supporting them was burn·
ed. away by a fire within one ol tile
transformers .
Firemen said they managed to ex·
tinguish the fire but the pole had
already been burned away in an alley
at 3m E. COoa! Hlghway.
The sH.uatlon worsened briefly when
one of the hanging transformers burst.
spilling hot oil below. 'Ibere were no
injuries reported.
Firemen •tood by until Edlson Co.
crews were able to restore support for
the trantformers and repair the
cymeged lines.
•
BEH1lilo BARS
Rev. Ralph Abernathy
tor of the Southern Christian
Leadership Conference, which ran the
Poor People's campaign, called the
police operation orderly.
Two tear gas canisters did go off on
the sweep down the camp. One ap·
parently was part of the booby trap
'
which went of[ when police ripped
open a shant): door. Police fired the
second one apparently assuming there
was someone fuside,
The arrest process at the tent took
more than a haU hour with the
demonstrators including women and
children singing such songs as "Do
Right, White Man, Do Right."
Abernathy, who has frequently pro·
claimed he would be arrested, offered
no resistance as two policemen led
him and other demonstrators to be
photographed and then placed him
aboard a bus.
At Resurrection City, police were
working their way through the camp
from east to west, that is from the
Washington Monument to the Li'ncoln
Memorial area.
The residents were given a police
ultimatum at 9:42 a.m. EDT to get out
or be arrested. More than 1,500 riot•
equipped Metropolitan and Park poUce
were on duty to enforce the order.
Columns of black smoke threaded up
into the muggy air. Police on the line
ne3J· the Lincoln Memorial .said the
!ires were in some of the plywood
huts.
The blazes did not appear serious.
\Vhen the first fire trucks arrived they
remained only a few minutes and then
withdrew. only to hurry back a few
minutes later.
Irvine Co. Concerned
Over Air Traffic Boost
llesidents of the Upper Newport Bay
area -concerned over possible in·
creased air traffic at Orange County
Airport -may take heart.
The Irvine Co. is worried too.
"'\Ve have expressed this concern to
Ule appropriate public officials and
they have assured us that a thorough
study of the mat1.er is being made,
with results to be made available
soon," said Irvine Co. President
William R. Mason.
Mason, however, said it would be in-
appropriate for the Irvine Co. to take
any public stand on the matter, pen-
ding announcement o{ the study fin-
dings.
·1·!owever. we do believe this matter
should be settled now, and action must
Laver Triump1ts
In First Match
At W irnbl edo n
WIMBLEDON, England (AP)
Top-seeded Rod Laver ot Corona del
Mar defeated Eugene Scott of New
York 6-3, 4-6. 6-3, ~2 today in the open·
.ing match or the first Wimbledon Open
Tennis Tournament.
The match was held up by rain after
Laver took the first set and, whon he
clinched the victory, rain began to fall
again and play on oll courts was
halted.
The •slippery conditions of the court
prevented Laver from ptaylng his
usual devastating attacking game, but
he still carried 4>0 much speed and
strong volleying for Scott.
Scotl played well in taking_ the se·
cond set. Laver, though, never took ea:
In real danger of being upset A
service break in the eighth game Qf the third aet moved Laver to hli
triumph.
Seventy-eight pros and 211 amateurs
are on hand for the two-week tourna·
ment. The $62, 780 In prize money In.
cludesf,800 for the men's Utleholder.
--
be taken . to control continued ex·
pansion of the faciUty without a clear
view of its ultimate size and the
ultimate needs of the county," Mason
said.
Mason also said Orange County
Airport could never reach the size and
capacity of Los Angeles International
Airport.
If the study indicates Orange County
needs such a facility, be said, it should
be located elsewhere to avoid lo·
terlerence with reside n ti a J
developments L-1 the area.
"A noise abatement policy applying
to private as well as commercial
a ircl'\aft should be strictly enforced,"
Mason added.
Residents of the Back Bay area,
mos t of them from Irvine Co. develop·
ments, are conducting a continuing
campaign against ell:pansion o! the
airport and its current traffic.
Orange Coast
Weather
The sun's still sleeping late
along the Orange Coast, and
Tuesday'll be no exception. Not
much change In the tempera·
ture (70 ) either.
INSWE TODAY
As Kialoo II took an t tlrlu
lt ad in Ntwport, R.I. to Btr·
mu.de rc&eit, no ont U certain just
who ii ltadino the race to
Tahiti. Boattno Paae 10.
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I % DAll.l PILOT
Mesa Figl1ts
Goll Course
~Tax Plan
' Colta Me• city officlala are looking
today f&r a legal way to ofteet oounty
Assessor Andrew J, Hlnshaw's an·
nounced JntentiOn to asse!S the city's
GoU and Couoery Club. ·
The toH clllb aod Anahelin'1 "Big
A" lladium have one thklC In common
-they're b<(lb tag.,. ol tile county
as.essor.
Hinshaw said today he would make
poaessocy interest a c 1 e s .s m e n t s
apl.Dot the opertolcn ol the roll club
and the calllomla Angels bu<baU
team.
He describes possessory interelta u
"esseoUally the rlgbt or priVUege o( a
private lndlvidual or private compt.Cly
to excluslve use of. governmental pro-
perty. The ball dub baa aaclulfve
rlcht to UH tbe otadlum for baseball
and Uierelore bM a poo.-y In·
term In the property," lllnobaw 1ald.
Hinsbaw said be bas court decisions
to back him up.
Cost.a Mesa City Manz.ger Arthur R.
McKenzie said this morning that the
city 1.s reviewing the contract with the
golf club lessee looking for a Iei::al way
out ol the anes11neot.
"As the contract reads now, ~
believe country club operator Ronnie
Reif would be responsible for· the tax
payment," McKenzie said.
The operator of the new got! course
is a vulnerJble target for the assessor
as the operation has not been a !inan·
cial 1ucceS1 to date, observen noted.
McKenzie's move was obviously an
effort to a void having Rei! hit with any
additional expense.
The city of Anaheim lo tile target In
the Angol.s cue. Under the c-oct
widl the ball club, the city would have
to pay any possessory iDtelMt aesess·
ed agalllot the Angels.
The Costa M... Golf and Country
Club ia said to have a value of $1.6
mllllon just !or the improvements, two
DAILY PILDT PMM W llldltnl ltNfller
'BULLDOZED' HOUSE, GARAGE PARTS COME TO REST
Run1w1y Car (B1cq,...,nd) Mi11od P1rkod Car (For09roundl
From P .. e 1
NEWPORT ACCIDENTS ...
18·hole goU courses and the $300,000 .. ran off ttie roadway and ripped along
clubhoU&e. the west side of the house, tearing
said. Police reports did not name the
young woman.
The state owns the *1d and leases open the wall like a zipper.
to the city for $10,. an acre per year. The auto came to rest in a bathroom
Hlmbaw said be belleves he can where a young woman had been ap. =·the land al&o even though If.ate· piytna: her mor'Di.ng makeup, witnesses
Mrs. Janssen, her husband Marvin,
YT, and Julie Ann O'Brien, 8, of. Costa
Me sa , within the home were given
l!'edical treatment and then released.
'Salesman' Play
For Top Grades
Among Hot Ideas
$500,000 Federal Grant
For OCC Building Ol{'d
'lbe play "Death of a Salesman"
may be prueol«f nexl fall by South
Qioot Repertory Tbeate< to 11th and
12th grade.rs et the four Newport·Mesa
bigb schools.
This ts one or f1ve hot ideas con·
<titiooally approved in the amount or
$11,300 by NewporHf.esa scboo1'' Hot
Idea Review Panel.
The panel alloc ated $4,MIO for th e
play performances providing high
·schools show interest in supporting the
event in future years.
The hot idea fund iJ concelved as a
source for educational change without
draining funds from established pro·
grams. Funds from $50,000 set aside
each year are available on a one-Ume
basis to teachers with hot ideas.
Donald Ulander propo.sed t h a t
"Death of a Salesman" be presented
to 200 &bJdent.s at a time ln 13 special
performam:es with the director and
principal actors discussing tbe · play
with students afterward.
Other hot ide&J presented to the
review panel:
"Monte Viata Principal Doa Hout re·
quested $8,917, received '6,000, to in·
st.an seating in multi-purpose room (or
136 students· In independent study.
-Gerald McClellan, assistalJt prin·
cipal at Corona del Mar High Schoo~
reques~ $6,tsOO far S'ludy of ;rograms
and stalling needed to accommodate
increased eerollment. Since all high
schools will faCf: the same student in-
flux, the project was referred to the
d Is tr i ct· w ld e Dev e }Opment
Laboratory.
DAILY PILOT
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A federal grant of $500,000 has been
approved by a U.S. agency for building
projects at Orange Coast College.
But a f7.25-million September bond
issue may have to be passed for
Orange Coast Junior College District
to use the federal .money.
To obtain the grant, the junior col·
\ege district must provide $871,166 in
local money,
The funds would be used ror an
allied health building and additions to
the math·scieoce and data processing
bulldlngs. ·
"If the bond issue were to fail, then
Newport's Ho gue
Heads Count y's
New USO Council
A Newport Beach man ha.! been ap·
pointed dla!rman of the newly founded
Orange County USO Council, it was
armounced today by national USO's
Southern California chairman, Charles
F. Edwards.
Tbe new chairman, William M.
Hogue has served as president of the
United' Fullerton F'UDI. president of
the Orange County Federation or
Funds and Chest&, vice president of
the Noctlt Ora·nge County YMCA,
director or the former Los Angeles
Community Chest , and its successor.
the United Way.
"There is no question," Edwar ds
said, "That tile USO and the citize n!.
of Orange County are very fortunate
in the acceptance of this im port<:fl !
volunteer post by Mr. Hogue who has
given his time, efforts. and e<1n·
siderable skills to many worlhw1tile.
charitable causes in Orange Count y."
Hogue Js retired president of the
Larsen-Hogue Electric Co., head·
quartered in Los Angeles.
Lankford Phebus
Services , Planned
Graveside services fOr Lankford V.
Phebus, a resident or Newport Beach
since 1938, will be held 2 p.m. Tuesday
at Melrose Abbey Memorial Park,
Anaheim.
Mr. Phebus died Friday wtille on a
vi.sit to relatives ln Tenne&see. lie was
81.
Em.ployed by the CaUfornla Marine
Cannery for .J5 years, he made his
home at 1675 Tultln, NewpOrt.
Survivors include a .son, Lankford
Vlrgll Phebus Jr., r&tired Ueutenant of
tile Newport Beach police deportment,
.and a daughter, Mrs. Donna Robinson
or Newport i one brother and two
siB'ters, all of Tennessee; f I v e
gra nd ch 11 d re n and nine great·
grandchildren.
Baltz Mortuat)'1 Coflta Me.s•1 U ln
charge ol arrM1emenu. )'
'
it would be a matter of establishing
priorities. We would be seriously
curtailed," said Assistant Superin-
tendent Correllan Thompson.
The federal funds would be made
available through the Department of
1-lealth, Educauon and Welfare under
the 1-ligher Education Facilities Act.
The Orange Coast College master
building plan shows work on the three
projects scheduled to start i n
February, 1969, with completion in
August, 1970.
Meanwhile, architect WI 111 a m
Blurock and Associates of Corona del
Mar has been given the go ahead on
working drawings for remodeling the
present library to hou se counseling
and the admissions and records o£fice.
Estimated cost of the remodeling
project is $195,001. 'Vork will start
\\•hen the new library is completed in
March, 1969.
If things go according to plan, the
old Army barrack building now hous-
ing counseling offices will be torn
Jown , Thompson said.
L:ity Playgroun d1;
List Schedules
\Yant to get the kids out of the house
:or awhile this summer ?
You can send them on an "Around
:he World Cruise" at Newport Beach
playgrounds where special activities
\Vill emphasize the culture and folklore
of many foreign lands.
Included will be games. drama,
music and crafts , all conducted tree
by trained city recreation leaders.
Tlme schedules for each playground
are:
Community Youth Center, 10 a.m. to
10 p.m.; Eastbluff Park, 10 a.m. to 6
p.m.; 38th Street Park, 10 a.m. to 5
p.n1 .; Mariners Park", 10 a.m. to 6
p.m.; Peninsula Park. IO a.m. to 5
p.m.; Irvine Terrace Park. 10 a.m. lo
5 pJll.; and Newport Heights Elemen-
tary School 12 noon to 6 p.m.
Boys Ouh Robbed
Of $2 75 in Cash
A thief who may have hidden inside
at closing time looted the Upper Bay
Branch of the Boys Club of lhe Harbor
Area of $275 in cash Saturday.
'The money was taken from a drawer
In Dire4:tor Dick Rojo's office in the
facili ty at 2131 Tusun Ave., club of·
flclals told Officer Dave Dye.
There was no sign of forced entry.
Fingerprints found at the scene are
being checked today In an effort to
ldf.ntify the burglar, police said.
The office was clos.td from 2:30 to 4
p.m. Saturday and the theft was dJs-
~ when It was opened. l
·-
Ni xon, Hu1nphrey Gain
Fron t Runners Clos er to Nominaiion
B1 Ualttid Preas IDtuaatlonal
Presidential frontrunners Hubert H.
Humphrey and Richard M. Nb.on roll-
ed up more delegate strength over the
weekend and moved cloa:er to their
party nominations.
Nixon took a·giant stride by scoring
victories in South CaroUna, J,.ouisiana,
Maryland, Wuhlngton .and Moatina.
Hu.mpbrey picked up d e 1 e g a ~ e
strength from his home state of Min·
nesota and In Connecticut.
Galo!ng nearly too delegate votes,
Nixon now has about 600 committed
delegate votes, with 667 votes needed
for the nomlnatloo.
Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New
York bas 2M delefate votes after get·
!Ing only a handfu this weeken~.
Nixon's only setback came in New
Mexico where Gov. Ronald Reagan
picked up half the state's 12 delegate
votes. Two others were uilcommltted.
Humphrey pfcked up 38¥.. votes in
Minnesota, compared with Sen.
4,000 Attend
Harbor Youth
Center Carnival
Moce than 4,000 -the filth annual carnlval ol tbe Community
Youth Cen!tt of Newport Harllor and
contributed more than '2,000 for ~
reatiooal facllltlel for the center,
acCMl!ng to Ed Wbitebouse, publicity
chairman for the recent event.
Winners in Uclo!t sales competitloo
,...., Chris Crol8en who sold H5 tick·
ets to win a SlOO gift certificate.
Other boys wbo won baseball bats,
balls and transistor radios included
Bi<nt Fair, G«don Henry, Rooald
Dom, William Merrell, Lawrence
Savage, Brian Robinson, Blaine E nds·
ley, Bill Barry and Todd KazeUs.
Local SEl'Vi<:e clubs whose nw:m·
hers contributed to the success of the
booths for food and games included
the Corona clel Mar lllgb School 8-t·
<'r Club, Community Church Youth
Group, Chamber of Commerce, Ki·
wanis, Optimist Chm, Balboa Lions
Club and the Newport Harbor Cham·
ber of Commerce Women's Division
and Newport Exchange Club.
Lag una B oy, 5,
Stricken A her
Swallowing Drug
A 5-year-old Lagura Bei>.ch boy who
may have taken the dangerous
hallucinatory drug STP is in serious
condition today at South Coast Com·
munlty Hospital.
Pollce sald Gerry Griggs of 1215
Roosevelt Lane was rushed to the
hospital Sunday night after he com·
plained of his hands burning, coll~ed
and began to convulse.
A hospital spokesman said the boy is
in intensive c are in an oxygen tent
after having his stomach pumped. The
effects of the drug, particularl}' on a
child, are not fully understood.
However, it apparently caused a
respiratory collapse.
Police said the youngster was
Playing wt.th other children in a fi eld
near his house when he became ill.
Lt. Robert McMurray said the boy's
father, John M. Griggs, told police the
youngstef' may have discovered some·
one's outdoor drug cache. The mat-
ter ls under investigation.
PoHce said tne drug, which bears a
long chemical name, is nicknamed
Serenity, Tranquility and Peace. It has
reoccurring symptoms as does LSD
but is said to be more dangerous.
YOUR
Eugene J , McCarthy's 13"1. In Con·
necticut, where McCarthy forces
walked out because they weren't given
Ute votes they thought they shouJd
have, Hwnphrey collected probably 3S
vofes out of the state's 44 delegate
votes . The vice president now has 899 com·
mlttod convention votes, with l ,31l
needed for. nomlDation.
McCarthy has edged ahead !)f Nlxo~
and Rockefeller ln popularity, a
Gallup poll indicated Sunday.
The poll was completed on the eve
Of the New York primary last Tuesday
in which Democratic cand i d a le
McCarthy scored a major victory by
iwnnlng a majority of convention
delegates.
The poll also showed Humphrey
would defeat Republican candidate
Nir.on but would lose to Rockefeller,
competing with Nixon for the GOP
nomination.
The polling organization pointed out,
CdM CHAMllER CHIEF
John S.mplo
Semple Elected
New President
Of CdM Chamber
Long.time liarbor Area realtor J ohn
Semple today is new president of the
Corona de\ Mar Chamber of Com-
merce.
Semple, 48, a resident t. n·d
businessman in Corona del Mar since
1948, was named successor to outgoing
president Hubert Peirsol by the cham·
ber's new board of directors.
He will be loot.ailed at an Irvine
Coast Country Club banquet on July
18.
Semple said amvng his intentions
during 1968~9 ls to push ahead with
the chamber's beautification program.
Which currently is re&ulting in a new
landscaped traffic Island at Heliotrope
Avenue and the hJghway.
He said be will also support a pro--
posal to build a new civic center in
the Corona del Mar area.
"If the civic center is moved farther
east," he said, "it will help break up
the concept of Newport Beach being a
city oC villages."
City Hall is now located at 32nd
Street on the Peninsula.
New firSt vice president of the 220·
member Ch.amber is fonner Newport
Beach City Council candids.rte Donald
Andrews Bolton, just elected to the
Chamber board. Bolton ls owner of
Newport Floor Covering.
however, that "rarely have political
views shown such volaWlty as during
the last twb or three months and
seld(lm have so many candidates beeh
involved in such close contests."
llumpbrey and M cC a r thy_,;
meanwhile, made the Vietnam war the
chief campaign issue.
McCartby reaffirmed bl& intention
to visit Paris to look in on the Vietnam
peace talks and Humphrey called for a
ceasefire.
McCarthy said he doesn't plan to
negotiate with North V i e l n a m
delegates to the Paris talks, but "Jt
might be a good Wng for me u a
presidential candJdate to spell: to
them. . .(and) find out what the
possibilities for some kind or ac-
commodation "or settlement are."
Humphrey proposed a ceasefire ln
an interview with the New York
Times.
* * * Legion Lauds .
• Raffertv on
·~
'Smut' Blasts
FRESNO (AP) -Max Rafferty Sot
a rumdlng •-on today at the
California Amertcan Legion con-
V<ntion for bl& oralo<lc.t blaatt at the
naUon's "guilt oomplu.0 and .. movfe
&mut." ,,
The state superintendent ol publl.c
lnstructkm, now the R e p u b 11 c a n
nominee for U.S. senator, told en
estimated 2,000 at Fresno Convention·
Center that Americans must stop feel·
ing guilty al?out oucb altuatiot>1 ..
Asia's starving mllllons. I
Rafferty said oympathy and aid al'•'
worthy avenues but feellna a:WJty
.about it goes too far. He told the
Leglonnairos that 1"'1.booka ol today
even convey to children the 1m·.
pression o( a guilt complu over
slavery and past wars.
Rafferty charged that the built of
movie producers copcentrate on bl4·
tant S'eX and smut, ignoring the finan·
cial success and appeal of tue;b
whole®me -movies as "Mary Pip-
pins." He said the producen loot for
"dirty books" to buy movie rlgllta for
them.
Screaming Cons
Rip Ohio Pen;
8 Guards Hurt
COLUMBUS, Ohio fUPl) -Hun·
dreds of screaming prisoners, armed
\Vil h pipes and broken bottles, went on
a aesLructive rampage at the Ohio
Penitentiary today, setting 10 major
fires and attacking guards.
Authorities said at least eight
gu ards were injured and one suffered
a heart attack.
Warden Ernie Maxwell said three
gu8rds wete ·held hostage briefly by
the convicts but managed to estape.
M. C. KoblenU, state commissioner of
corrections, said "semi-<:ontrol" of the
prison had been a-chleved.
Koblentz said fires were set in the
prison print shop, two workshops, the
hospital, an aduitarium, tll,e cotton and
woole n mills, \he power plant, mess
hall and shoe factory.
"Damage is going to be cX'lensive,"
Koblentz said.
About 100 policemen with bayonet·
lipped riot sbQtguns rushed the prison
yard and made their way to the
hospital where fires raged on the first
and third floors .
0
OMEGA
Yo11.r OmeQO
SoUs & Strvfu
Agency
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RIN'5 52.49 SIZED,,..,.
$4.99
Jewel ry Ded gnint
A Specialtyl
Now 2 Greal Stores To Serve You
HAUOl SHOmM• HUNT1N•TON CINTll
CINtll llACH 6 UIN•ll
UM HAllOI llrD. HUNTIN•TOM IU.CH
C.OITA MUA 141-t4tl ttl·llOI
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Costa Mesa Today's Closing
~ 'EDITI ON
' VOL i-r, t'IO. 'isr. 2 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES COSTA MESA, t:ADFOJINIA: lEN CENTS
esa s ....,,.ourse ax
Ball Game
Highlights
Anniversary
' 11le Cosla Mesa Comets and the
Jll•tnell Chevrolet agency's Connie
1·1ack League team will clash headon
1ext Saturday iii a baseball game
.'Ommemorating the city's 15th anni-
,ersary.
The Te Winkle Park game, set for
?:30 p.m., is the Saturday highlight of
Costa Mesa's 15th Crystal Anniver-
'iary weekend celebration.
Special retail sales are to begin at
.shopping centers throughout the city
J(ff' a three-day run, wiUt a variety of
other atcivities scheduled as well.
Sunday's big evoot will be a city-
wide public golf tournament at the
Costa Mesa Golf and Country Club,
!ollowed by a special buffet banquet.
Speakers at the dinner will offer
glimpses of Costa Mesa as it will be
in 1983, when the thirtieth anniver·
sary of incorporation is reached.
Delivery of thousands of commem-
orative 15th anniversary postcards is
expected later this week , so city resi ·
dents can spread the word around the
world.
Five cards will be mailed to each
of some 16,IXX) homes in the city, with
almost countless additional c op i e s
available from the Chamber of Com ·
merce 3nd at other locations.
Restaurants and motels throughout
the city will &tock the free caros-'.-
which show the Civic Center, Gol! and
Country Club, and Orange County
Airport-as well.
Newly chosen Miss Costa Mesa,
Pamila Reed, 18, who mailed the ini·
tial copy o{ the card to President
Johnson last week, will reign over the
three-day festivity.
GeoeraI chairman of the 15th anni.
versary committee is South Coast
Plaza shopping center executive Wer-
ner Escher.
Costa Mesa was inCOn><>rat.ed June
29, 1953, and few of the civic leaders
\vho aided in a ttaining cityhood ever
dreamed how the mesa community
\Vould bloom in its first 15 years.
Sc reaming Cons
Rip Ohio Pen;
8 Guards Hurt
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -Hun-
dreds of screaming prisoners, armed
with pipes and broken bottles, went on
a destructive rampage at the Ohio
Penitentiary today, setting 10 major
fires and a ttacking guards.
Authorities said at least eight
guards were injured and one s uffered
a heart attack.
Warden Ernie Maxwell said three
guards were held hostage briefly by
the convicts but managed to escape.
M. C. Koblentz, state commissioner of
corrections, said "semi-control" of the
prison had been achieved. ·
Koblentz said fires were set in the
prison print shop, two workshops, the
hospital, an aduitorium, the cotton and
'A-'oolen mills, the power plant, mess
hall and shoe factory.
';Damage is going to be e~ensive,"
Koblentz. said.
About 100 policemen with bayonet-
tipped riot shotguns rushed the prison
yard and made their way to the
hospital where fires raged on the !irst
and third floors.
Boys Oub Robbed
Of $275 in Cash
A thief who may have hiddeo. lnstde
at closing time looted the Upper Bay
Branch of the Boys Club o( tbe Harbor
Area of $275 in cash Saturday.
The money was taken from a drawer
in Director Dick Rojo's o!llco in the
facility at 2131 Tustin Avt., club of·
ficials told Officer Dave ·{)ye-.
There wa~ no sign of forced entry.
Fingerprints round at the scene are
tieing checked today in an ellort to
identify the burglar, police aa.kl.
The ollico was closed !mm 2:3> to 4
p.m. Safllrday and the tl>!tl was dl5-
""""1!<1 -n It ""' opened.
Seeks Legal.Way Out of. A-ssessment
Costa Mesa city oilicials are looking
today for a legal way to offset County
Assessor Andrew J. Hinshaw's an-
nounced intention to assess the city's
Goll and Country Club.
The golf club and Anaheim's "Big
A" stadium have one thing in common
-they're both targets or the county
assessor.
Hinshaw said today be would make
p()$Sessory interest a s s e s s m e n t s
against the operators of the golf club
and the California Angels basrb:!I
team.
He describes possessory interests as
"essentially the right or privilege of a
private individual or private company
to exclusive use of governmental pro·
perty. The ball club has exclusive
right to use the stadium for baseball
and tberefore has a possessory in·
terest in the property," Hinshaw said .
Hinshaw said he has court decisions
to back him up.
Costa Mesa City Man~ger Arthur R.
McKenzie said this morning that the
city is reviewing the contract with the
golf club lessee looking for a legal way
out of the assessment.
"As the contract reads now, we
believe country club operator Ronnie
Reif would be responsible for the tax
payment," McKenzie said.
The operator of the new goU course
is a vulnerable target for the assessor
as the ClpCI'atioo has not been a finan-
cial succetss to date, observers noted.
McKenzie's moVe was obviously an
effort to avoid having Reif hit with any
additional expense.
The .city of Anaheim is the target in
the Angels case. Under Uie contract'
with the ball club, the city wo'Uld have
to pay any possessory interest afisess·
ed against the Angels. ..
The Costa Mesa GoU and Country
Club is said to have a value of $1.6
million just for the improvements, two
18-hol.e gol! courses ao,d the $300,001
clubhouse.
The state owns the land and leases
to the city for $10 an acre per year.
Hinshaw said he believH he can
assess the land also even though state-
owned.
Abernathy Jll;iled
1,500 Police Clear Resurrection City
\VASHINGTON (AP) -Police arm·
ed with shotguns and tear gas moved
through and took possession of the
Poor People's Campaign Resurrection
City today. At the Capitol, other poll Cf'
arr·ested the Rev. Ralph David
Abernathy, the campaign leader.
About 50 arrests were made at
Resurrection City, where the residents
had been told they could no longer
stay on public land. Abernathy was ar-
rested, peaceably, on charges or
violating a law wb.l.ch f o r b 1 d s
demonstrations on the C a p i t o l
grounds.
Despite the massive show of force -
1500 police were on hand -there was
no serious violence as police cleared
the camp.
As police with their shotguns and
tear gas gu ns at the r eady approached
the gates of the camp the only sound
was a man singing civil rights songs
over the camp's public address
system. ·
The police moved down in tv.ro lines
checking each of the shanties and
tents to see if any campers remained.
Hallway through the encampment
they found a tent containing \JlOre than
50 demonstrators singing and clap-
ping. This group submitted to arrest
nonviolently .and they were taken one
by one to waiting police buses.
\Villiam Rutherford, executive direc·
BEHIND BARS
Rev. Ralph Abernathy
tor of the Southern Christian
Leadership Conference, which ran the
Poor People's campaign, called the
police operation orderly.
Two tear gas canisters did go off on
the sweep down the camp. One ap·
parently was part of the booby trap
.$500,000 Federal Grant
For OCC Building Ok'd
A federal grant of SS00,000 has been
approved by a U.S. agency for building
projects at Orange Coast College. .
But a $7.25-million September bond
issue may have to be passed for
Orange Coast Junior Coll~ge District
to use the federal money.
To obtain the grant, the junior col-
lege district must provide S871,lfi6 in
local money.
The funds would be used for an
allied health building and additions to
the math-science and d ata processing
buildings.
Meanwhile, architect W i 11 i a m
Blurock and Associates of Corona de!
Mar.has been given the go ahead on
workin g drawings for remodeling the
present library to house counseling
and the admissions and records office.
Estimated cost of the remodeling
project is $195.000. \Vork will start
when the new library is completed in
March, 1969. ·
IC things go acr:ording to plan, the
old Army barrack building now hous·
ing counseling of(ices will be torn
clown, Thompson said.
which went off when police ripped
open a shanty door. Police fired the
second one apparently assuming there
was someone i'nside.
The arrest process at the tent took
more than a baU hour with the
demonstrators. including women and
children singing such songs as "Do
Right, Whitt Y.an, Do Right."
Abernathy, who.bas frequently pro·
claimed he would be arrested, offered
no resistance as two policemen led
him and other demonstrators to be
phQf:ographed and then placed him
aboard a bus.
At Resurrection City, police were
working the,ir way through the camp
from east to west, that is from the
\Va shington Monument to the Li'ncoln
Memorial area.
The residents were given a police
ultimatum at 9:42 a .m. EDT to get out
or be arrested. More than 1,500 riot-
equipped Metropolitan and Park police
\Ver e on duty to enforce the order.
Columns oC black smoke threaded up
into the muggy air. Police on the line
near the Lincoln Mem orial said the
fires were in some of the plywood
huts.
The blazes did not appear serious.
\Vhen the fi'rst fire trucks arrived they
remained only a few minutes and then
withdrew, Oflly to hurry back a few
minute! later.
Mesan Injured
In Auto Crash
A Costa Mesa n1an was Injured Sun-
day night when his sports car was
struck broadside on N e w p o r t
Boulevard at the intersection or 16th
Street. police said today.
Nicholas V. \Var'illow, 31, of 955
Pomona Ave., was treated at Hoag
Memorial Jlospital for a slight con-
cussion and released, according to in-
vestigating officers.
\Varillow was northbound on
Newport Boulevard when hit by a van
driven south by Rayford L. Tabor, 18.
of 21U Raleigh Ave., as he made a left
turn, according to police reports.
Tabor was unhurt.
I . .,
.t
DAILY PILOT ~ W ~tffwy '"'91•
Slide 'Devils'
Pamila Reed ol Huntington Beach, current holder ol Miss Costa
• Mesa title, bas company of Mayor"l\lvtn Pinkley (right) and Cham-
ber of Commerce Executive Manager Nicholas Ziener as trio en·
joys first ride down "sky slide" on Baker Street, just east of Har·
bor Boulevard. They took inaugural "flight" on 40-foot-high slide
late Friday afternoon in Costa Mesa.
Woman Arrested at Hotel
On Charge Qf Prostitution
Prostitution charges were lodged
against a 24-year-old Sacramento
woman today after she \va s arrested
Mesa Planners
Meet Tonight
A variety <J( requests -from a 24-
hour car wash to a produce shop hous.
ed in an old bus -wiU be up !or con-
sideration by ttle Costa Mesa Planning
Commission tonight.
The 7:30 o'clock legislative session
following a 5 p.m. business meeting
and field inspection tour feautres a
shorter-than-usual agenda.
Thomas B. DeForest, or 1436
Serenade Tetrace, Col'ona del Mar, i1
seeking a conditional use permit for a
"Follow Charlie" car wash operation
at 3010 S. Bristol St.. in a comrhercial
zone.
Genji G. Kawamura. of 718 St.
James Place, Costa Mesa. is asking a
conditional use permit to sell
vegetables at the southeast corner of
proposed South Road and Bear Street.
at a large Newport Beaclt ·hotel for
allegedly going from door to door
trying to drum up business.
fleld under $.115 bail was Alee May
Morris, a pert tiluc-eyed blonde who
assertedly tried to strike a bargain for
her services with two undercover
Newport vice officers.
A second woman at the hotel was
tdentl.fi.ed as Mias Morris1 companion,
but :was not arrested after she claimed
to be an undercover policewoman
from the Reno, Nev., police depart..
ment.
The supposed policewoman was
identified as Liza LeMays, 32, a 't.all
blue-eyed blonde. Newport Beach
police today were verifying her story.
Miss Morris allegedly was seen
entering and leaving the rooms ot
several hotel guests from 11 p.m. Fri·
day to 2 a.m. Saturday morning.
PoliCe said they confiscated a red ad·
dress book and found $135 hidden in
the woman's bra.
The case remained under inves·
tigation tod<JY to determine whether
others also were involved in the alleg ..
ed prostitution activities.
Orange (;oast "If the bond issue were to fail, then
it would be a matter or establishing
priorities. \Ve would be seriously
curtailed," said Assistant Superin-
tendent Correllan Thompson.
The federal funds would be made
available through the Department or
Health, Educauon and Welfare under
the Higher Education Facilities Act.
Flights Worry lrvine ·Too Weadaer
The sun's still sleeping late
along the Orange Coast, and
Tuesday'll be no exception. Not
much change In the tempera·
lure (70) either. The Orange Coast College master
building plan shows work on lhe three
projects scheduled to start I n
February, 1969, with completion in
August, 1970.
Stock MarkeU
NEW YORK (AP) -Tbe mck
market wu unable to hold a slim ear-
ly advance and worked irregularly
lower this afternoon. Trading was fa\r·
ly acUve. (See quotltiOB!, Pages 14.
U).
Volume for the fint four boun was
9.23 million sharea compared wit.ti Sl.97
million for the Ont lour hours Friday.
(
Cornpany Assured Air Traffic Study Under Way
Resident5 of the Upper Newport Bay
area -concerned over possible in·
creased air traffic at Orange County
Airport -may take heart.
The trvine Co. is worried too.
"We have uprened thJs conctrn to
the appropriate public otflclall and
they have assured us that a thorough
!ludy or the matter is belng made,
with result& to 1>e made available
soon," •Id Irvine Co. President
IVllliam R. Muon.
Mason, however, said It would be in·
•
~'
appropriate for the Irvine Co. to take
any public stand on the matter, pen-
ding announcement of the study fin·
dings.
"However, we do believe thl!t matter
should be settled now, and aeUon must
be taken to control continued ex·
pansion of the facility without a clear
view of its ultimate gJze and the
ulUmate need!! or the county,'' Mason
said.
Mason also Hid Orange COunty
AiJi>ort could never reach the dze .and
oopadty ol Los Angeles lnternatiooal
Airport.
Jf the study indicates Orange County
needs such a facility, he said, it sho1*!-
be located elsewhere to avoid in-
ier!erence with re11idential
development.s in the are1.
"A noise abatement policy applying
to prlve.te as well u commercial
aircraft should be gtrlctly enforced,"
Mason added.
Resident$ of the Back Bay area,
most of them Crom Irvine Co. develop-
ments, are conctuctmg a conUnulng
campaign agalnrt expansion ol the
au,iort and Ill current tralJlc.
.~ .
INSIDE TODAY
A.t Kialoa 11 took an tarlJI
ltad in Ntwporl., R.I. to Btr·
muda roct, no OM ii certain Jwt
uiho Lt ltacUng the rau io
Tahtu. Boating Page 10, ......
C1ilfwllle (IMllfttf
'~"' ·-Ddnl N•tlc• .. .. _
l•ttwf&I .... •llffrh"'"'"lfl' ·-flll'I c.. .. -... -..-.. -
.. • ....
" " ' ' " " ... 1.
' " .. ,
'
I DAILY PILOT
'Salesman'
.Play Among
1
5· Hot Ideas
' •
The plf..y "De•tb of a Salesman''
Jn•Y be presentec:i next fall by South
:Coast Repertory Theater to Uth and
12th graders at the tout Newport.Mesa ·
blgb sct>ooll .
This la oae of five hot ideas con·
ditlODally approved tn the amount of
fll,300 by Newport-~esa schools' Hot
Idea Review Panel
The panel allocaled $UOO for the
p\ay performances providing hJgh
tchools show interest in supporting the
l!vent in future years.
1be hot idea fund U cooceived u a
avurce Cot educational change without
draining fund! from established pro-
"1'am•. Funds from fl0,000 •el uide
each year are available on a one·tim•
basis to teachers with hot ideu.
Donald Ulander propo<ed t h 1 t
•Death of a Salesman" be presented
to 200 students at a timt In 13 ipeclal
perfocmances with the director and
principal actors discusslng the pia1
with studeota afterward.
Other bot ldeaa pruentetl to the
ceview panel:
"Monte Vllta Prl.ncipal Don Hout re-
quested S&,617, received '6,000, to in-
sta!I. seating in multi-purpose room for
1311 students In Independent study.
-Gerald McClellan, aalll.-prtn.
cipal at Corona del Mar Higb School
requested '6,l!OO'for atudy of ~ogr1m1
and Nfflng needed to accommodate
ilK:rffsed enrollment. Since all high
schools will face the same student in·
flux, the project wac referred to the
district-wide Development
Laboratory.
Newport's Hogue
.Heads County's
New USO Council
A Newport BMch man baa been IP'
pointed chllnnan of tile newcy founded
Orange County USO Council, Jt was
announced today by natiooal USO'•
Southern Callfornla chairman, Charles
F . Edwards.
The new ehalnnan, Wllllam M.
Hoeue, has served •president of Ibo
United Fullerton Fund, president of
the Orange County Federation of
Funds and Chests, vice president or
the Norlh Orange County YMCA,
director of the former Los Angeles
Community Chest, and Its successor,
the United Way.
"There ls no question," Edwards
said, "That the USO and the ciUzens
of Orange County are very fortunate
in the acceptance of this important
volunteer post by Mr. Hogue who has
given his time, efforts, and con·
siderable skills to many worthwhile,
charitable cauaes tn Orange County,"
Hogue Is retired president ol the
Larsen·Hogue Electric Co., head·
quartered in Los Angeles.
Daniel Twigg
Services Held
Servi~s for Daniel L, Twigg, 22. a
ruldent of C.Osta Mesa for the past 13
yeM"I, were held today at Peek Fami·
ly Colonial Funera l Home,
Westminster.
Mc. Twlfl died 1t HunUngtoo
lnt....ommunity HOIJllW Fridly as
the rel<llt ol lnjuriu IUlfered urller
llllt doy In an ICC!dentot·Matn st. and
Utica, Huntington Beach. He was
riding a bicycle.
DAU.1' l"ILOT ,.._'9 11 llllct11,.. JtMftltf'
'BULLDOZED' HOUSE, GARAGE PARTS COME TO REST
Runew•y C•r (8.ckground) Missed Parked Caf (Foreground)
Newport Auto Crashes
Border on 'Spectacular'
Newport Beach traffic invesUgat<rs
today were untangling w e e k e n d
crackups which included a flying
Thunderbird and a housebreaking
sedan.
The abortive flight of the .Thun·
derblrd occurred at noon Saturday in
a gas station at Balboa Boulevard and
Pacific Coast Highway where Jo Ellen
Sterling, 35, of Altadena, steered her
T·Bird to a landing atop two other
cars,
The woman told police her throttle •
had stuck and she was turning into tile
gas station to have It fixed.
Her car collided with a ga.!i pump,
spun around and landed on top of two
other vehicles. Aside from the damag-
ed c(!rs and a loose pump, there were
no major injuries.
The housebreaking incident oc·
curred· about 6 a.m. Sunday at the
Mark Jordan residence, 6701 Seashore
Drive.
Officer John Andrews said motorist
Esther Nora Janssen, 33, ol \Vhittier,
was drivin'g east on Seashore when she
ran off the r oadway and ripped along
the west slde of the house, tearing
open the wall like a zipper.
The auto came to rest in a bathroom
where a young woman had been ap-
plying her morning makeup, witnesses
said. Police reports dJd not name the
young woman.
Mrs. Janssen. her· husband Marvin,
37, and Julie Ann O'Brien, 8, of Costa
Mesa, within the home were given
medical treatment and then released.
Selective Service Center
Bombed in N. Hollywood
NORTH HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -A
bomb today ripped a two-story
building occupied by a Selective
Service board and police, fearing ad·
ditional blasts, asked 10 families to
leave their hornet near the severely
damaged draft office.
However, police said a subsequent
5earch of the building disclosed no ad·
ditional bombs.
by 75 fool brick and stucco structure,
kn ocked out windows and did ex-
tensive damage to office equipment.
Angels' Schaal
Out of Hospital;
Rest Ordered
Nixon,. Humphrey Gai·n
'
Front Runners Closer to Nomination
BJ UDltecl Pre11 IUteraaUooal '
Pmidential frontrunners Hubert H.
Humphrey and ~chard M. Nixon roll-
ed \IP more delegate strength over the
weekend and moved closer to tbelr
party nominations.
NiXon took a giant strk:le by scoring
vl(:torles in South Carolina, Louisiana,
Maryland, Wuhlngton and Montana.
llumphrey. picked up d e I e g a t e
strength from hJs home atate. or Min·
nesota and In Connecticut.
Galnlng nearcy 100 dele1ate votes,
Nixon now has about 800 comm.Jtted
delegate votes, with 667 votes needed
for the nomination.
Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New
York has 254 delegate votes after get·
ting only a handful this weekend.
Nixon's only setback came in New
Mexico where Gov, "Ronald Reagan
picked up half the state's 12 delegate
votes. Two others were uncommitted.
llumpllrey picked up 38'12 votes in
Minnesota, compared with S e n .
Eugene J. McCarthy's Viii. IJ> Coo·
nectlcut, wbtte McCarthy forces
walked out because they weren't given
the votes they thought ttie:; "'l tfoWd
have, Humphrey collected Prob8bly 35
votes out ot the state's ff· del~gate
votes.
The vice president now has 899 com·
mltted co nvention votea, wltb 1,312
needed for nomination.
McCarthy has edgefahe.a of Nixon
and Roi:~eleU.r In popularity, a
Gallup poll lnclJcated Sund"ay.
The poll waa completed on the eve
of tho New York prlm,ary tait Tue1day
in which Democratic ca n d l d a t e
McCarthy scored a major victory by
lwnnli;ig a majority o! convention
delegates.
The poll ·also showed Humphrey would defeat Republican candidate
Nixon but would JOH to RockeCeller,
competing with Nixon for the GOP
nomination.
Tlie polling organization pointed out,
however, lbat "rarely have political
vlews shown such volaUlity as during
t.be last two or UU'ee months and
seldom have so many cand.Jdates been
involved in such close contesls."
llwnphrey and McCarthy ,
rneanwhile, made the Vietnam war the
chief campaign issue.
McCarthy reaffirmed bi.a inten~n
to vi.< Paris to look in on the Vietnam
peace talks aod Humphrey called for a
ceueflre.
McCarthy said he doesn't plan to
negotiate with North VI et n am
delegates to the Paris talks, but "jt
might be a good thing for me as a
presidential candidate to speak 1 to
them ... (and} find out what Ule
possibilities for some kind of ac·
commOdation or settlement are."
Humphr.ey proposed a ceasefire In
an in terview With the New York
Times.
* * * North Reje<;ts Humphrey Legion Lauds
.Proposal for Cease Fire
PARIS (UPI) -Nortl! Vietnam to-
day rejected Vice President Hubert H.
Humphrey's call for an immediate
c&ase-llre in Vietnam.
Xuan Thuy, chief North Vletname1e
delegate to the Hanoi·Washington
talks in Paris, told a lunch meeting or
the An glo-American PreS6 Associa·
tion:
''The United S::tes must first cease
its air raids and otl:ler acts of war im·
mediately and unconditionally."
Commenting on Humphrey's state·
ment that he believed a cease fire
would enhance chances for the success
of the Paris talks, Xuan sald "we
must not mix up aggressors and their
victims."
Humphrey, in a newspEper in·
terview, had called for an immediate
cease fire in Vietnam.
Thuy said the "only objective of the
Paris talks now was to agree on a
Laguna Boy, 5,
Stricken Af~er
Swallowin.g Drug
A 5-year.c>ld Laguna Be&eh boy who
cessation of. the air raids."
"Only if an agreement is reached on
this matter can we move on to other
subjects," he sa·ld.
Thuy said Hanoi would make no con·
cessions in exchange for the end of U.
S. air raids and other "acts of war"
.against North Vietnam.
He also repeated charges that the
f&llure to make any progress in the
'taiks was the fault of ttie United
States.
He said that the United States, in·
stead of cutting back on its war ef·
forts, bad sharply stepped up air raids
north of the 17th PhaUel which
divides the north and south. U. S.
planes have been restricted by Presi·
dent Johnson to targets in the
southern part of North Vietnam, with
Hanoi and Haiphong now out of
bound&.
"Alter nine negotiating sessions, our
conversations, which have lasted more
than. one month, have reached no
result," Thuy said . , . "U these talks
are showing no progress, the whole
r~pon.sibtllty lies wUh the American
side."
Thuy said the United Stttes has
"deliberately sought to substitute
black for white."
l-Ie said tne United States had
"violated". the 1954 Gene v a
agreements on Indochina and was the
"aggressor" in Vietnam.
Rafferty on
'Smut' Blast~
FRESNO (AP) -Max Ra!Ierty got
a standlng ovation ...-today at the
California American Legion C9n·
ventlon for his orat.orical blasts at the
nation's "guilt complex" and "movie
smut."
The state superintendent of public
instruction, now the Rep u b I i can
nominee for U.S. senator, told . aii
estimated 2,000 at Fresno Convention
~nter that Amer1Cans must stop feel·
lng guilty about such situations as
Asia's starving millJons.
_ Rafferty said sympathy .and aid are
worthy avenues but feeling gWtty
.about it goes too far. He told the
Legionnaim that textbooks of today
even convey to children the im·
pressJon of a guilt complex over
slavery and. past wan.
Rafferty charged that the bulk of
movie PfOOucers concentrate on bla·
tant .sex 13'1d smut, ignoring tbe ft.'nan-
cial su~cess and appeal of such
wholesorhe movies as "Mary Pip.
pins." He said the producers look for
"dirty books" to buy movie rigbta for them.
Alan Cranston, the former state con·
troller who will be Rafferty'a
Democratic foe in the November elec·
tiOfl; for Sen. Thomas Kuchel's seat.
arranged to address the same con·
ventlon IMer in the day.
may have taken the ·dangerous ff • M
hallucinatory drug STP iJ In serious Lectures Slated untmgton an condition today at South Coast Com·
murtity Hospital. J ii d ' M Pollce said G.rry Griggs of 1215 a e W esa
Ro .... velt Lane was rushed to the On Government
hospital Sunday n1ght after he com· 0 B l R
plained Of his hands burning, COll"PSed n urg ary ap, and began to convulse. A series of four lectures designed to
A hospital spokesman said the boy is stimulate interest Jn government, A Huntington Beach man who twice · · t · · t t sponsored by the Republican 1n 1n ens1 ve care 1n an oxygen en As misspelled "his" name while using a alter having his stomach pumped. The sociates oC Orange County, will
ef!ccts of the drug, particularly on a begin Tuesday at 7:30 p.Q). at the credit card to buy a $45 radio at a
child, are not fully understood. Republican Central Committee offices, Costa Mesa store today faces burglary
How ever. it apparently caused a 1509 S. Grand, Santa Ana. charges, following his arrest Saturday.
respiratory collapse. Instructor of the classes will be Dr. Kerineth A. Turlis. 20, of 6502 Police said the youngster was John Amendt, a proiessor at Cal State Limerick Drive, was taken into playin~ wi,th other children in a field Long Beach who -served in Europe as
near his house when he became ill. a political and economic ana·lyst dur-custody after a clerk al Sears,
Lt. Robert McMurray said the boy's ing the Eisenhower Administration. Roebuck & Co., 3333 S. Bristol St.,
father, John N . Griggs, tolq police the lie also was once a candidate for the became swpicious ·that he wasn't
youn gster may have discovered some· GOP nomination to the Assembly. Daniel B. Caleman1Jecause be couldn't
one's outdoor drug cache. The mat· Reaistratfon Information for the four spell the name correctly.
ter is under investigation. consecutive Tuesday ledures may be In a statement filled with other
Police said the drug, which bears a obtained by calling 541·3861. Those misspelled words; Turlis said his
Jong chemical name, is nicknamed who register for the claGs may bring a father died r ecently and he is the sole
He is survived by a wife, Alice of
114-D 23rd St., C.Osta Mesa; two
daughten Dona Marte and Danielle,
both of the home; parent!, Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Twigg; four broihers
and a sister.
There were no injuries in the ex-
plosion.
The ground floor or the building
"was 100 percent damaged," a police
officer said.
Serenity, Trcmquillty and Peace. It has guest to the tint lecture at no charge. support Of his family.
California Angels third baseman ,. reoccurring symptoms as does LSD Material course for the charge ts $6.50 He denied stealing the credit card,
Paul Schaal of Fountain Valley today but is said to be more dangerous. per person. according to investigating of!Icert.
Intennent will follow at Pacific
View Memorial Park.
DAILY PILOT c---R•lt•rf N. W•.4 -·-1\•111•• K••'fll .....
Tll•1t1•1 A. Mitrphi11• Mltlnllle ir.itor
J1e.k R. C-1.,. P•1I Niu•" ...._ ....._ ~ Plrlclor c---lJO Welt t.y Strttt
Melti.1 _.,..,,.,r P.O. hic-1160 tJ,26
OtW Offl••• ,....,.,. ..,_, m1 w . .._. ..,....,. ...._ .. "Cfl~m~•
.._...,, • .., "9dl1 ..... """'
\, • A
The explosion buckled walls of the 50
V olleyhall Plans
Slated for Mesa
It's billed as the Ladies' Volleybal!
Program, but you'll have to !orglvts
them if they don't always live up to
the tiUe in the heat of competition.
Anyway, the spirited games will
continue at C.Orslca Park o n
Thursdays from 10 a.m. to noon under
the Costa Mesa Recreatton
Department'& summer program .
Mothers are invited to bring their
children to the no-fee class, where a
program for children 6 and older will
be offered , along with supervision for
smaller tots.
Mesa Sets Class
In Papier Mache
You may not be able to build a
working scale model of London Bridge
with jt, but mald ng thlng1 out of
papier mache can be a Jot of f\01.
A Coata Mesa Recreation Depart·
ment cJus for adults in papler mache
work beifn1 June 2S from 7:,, to 9:30
p.m. Jn the Community ReereatJon
Center, with four subsequent se11lon11
planned.
Rttiatratlon for UH class, carrying
1 ~ lee, wlD be JIUIO llO, 8 to 8 p.m.,
1Dd Juno 12 and 21, t a.m. to I p.m., In
fourth Ooor otllou at tho Co1tl Mesi
Civic Centu.
\vas released fro m the hospital in ------------------------------.::... __ __:::._c.:_c._:=
Boston where he has b e e n
recuperating from being struck in the
head by a pitched ball.
Schaal was struck down In the bat·
ters box June 13, Upon his release to-
day, physicians gave him assurance
that he would be able to resume }}is
playing career eventually.
Dr . John M. Kurkjian said the 25·
year-old Schaal has bei!n told to Bb·
stain from all ballplaylng for about a
month, and should then be able to
be1:1in practice sessions.
"We have every expectation that he
\vlll be able to play again." Dr. Kurk·
jlan said. "But we are not able to say
when at this point.''
He said Schaal still experiences
some minimal dizziness and "some
definite hearing loss which will pro-
bably be permanent to some degree."
Schaal, battJng again11t the Boston
Red Sox' Jose Santiago, wos hit just
behind the temple.
He also suffered a perforated e~,.
drum.
Mesa W on1an File~
Claim Against City
A Costa Mesa woman who tripped
and fell at an allegedly defective spot
In the sidewalk on We.t 19th Street a
week a.go has fileo a claim acainst the
city for medical expenses.
Mn. Ida WlUdn10t1, who gave no ad·
drt11 when ahe mailed the claim to Cl·
ty Clerk C. K. Priest. said she also
ruined a dress and pair of stockings.
"The street department has fixed
the hole, but my knee 1UU h11n't
recovered," the victim said In noW:ica·
tion that she wished recompense.
•
I CINnod I Oiled
• Ad lu1ttd PEARLS Sl 99 RE·STRUNO •
RINliS
SIZED, Irons
Mlulnt l>l11monde R~from
52.49
$4.99
J-lry Dffl1nln9
A Spoctoltyl
I
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OMEGA
Now 2 Great Stor.., To Sem You
HAllOI IHOPPI... HUHTIN•TON CINTlll
CIHTll IUCH A lllNMI
1Jff HAUOI llft. HUNTIN•TON llACH
COITA MBA Ma.Mii HJ·lltl
0,.., Mon. Thun., Fri. Tiii 9 p.m.
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BY
WILLIAM
REED
Reeds •••
In the Wind.
· Did you know t'.baf the Hun-
tington Beach Union High School
District laundry during the past
school year washed 998,280 towels
for atheletic teams and physical
education classes, 2,103 pounds of
dust mOps !or the custodial staff,
5,875 pounds of liners for trash con·
tainers and 20,460 pounds of
miscellaneous items for the
cafeterias?
Well, I didn't either until Norm
Campbell, laundry foreman, said
all this plus athletic uniforms were
\Vashed this last school year with
7,700 pounds of soap powder and
detergent.
I guess it's not only the athletic
team cleaning up in the county, but
I won't ~orry about it much: As
Dean Inge pointed out. "Worr'y is
interest paid on trouble before it
comes due."
* * * .
While we're on the topic of
statistics, the Fountain Valley
Planning Department's c h i e f
honcho Stan Mansfield has releas·
ed some census figures which \vill
be no surprise to school officials or
to anyone driving through the
tracts on a Saturday afternoon.
On April 15, the median age of
the 25,744 residents of Fountain
Valley was 21.5 years. Of that
total population figure, 12,767 are
residents under 21 and 12,977 over
the magic age.
Highest total for any age group is
4,198 (16.3 percent) and it is for the
5 to 9-year-olds. No surprise there.
Second largest total for any group
\vas between 10 to 14 which totaled
3,274 persons, or 12.7 percent of the
total population.
* * *' The age group 14 and under com·
prises 41 percent of the total
population. It's no wonder the kids
are demanding that more money
be spent on parks and recreation.
Why if all these kids would begin to
demonstrate -well, the con·
consequences are too horrible to
contemplate. Imagine that, 41 per·
cent.
Fountain Valley ma 1 es out·
numbered females 12,950 to 12,795
and the median age for males is
21 .1 while the women are a bit
older at 21.9 years.
, NEWPORT CEMTER '
'
Monday, June 24, 1968
Heap Big Game
Valley 'Injuns' Team Witli Dads
Ind.Ian baseball la about American
as one can get.
To celebrate the freedom victory
from squaw schooi. marms, the
Cherokee Tribe Of the Great Plains
Nation, Fountain Valley YMCA Ind.Ian
GuMes, took to the basepaths for a·
mixed father-son contest.
The 'Old Ones' seem~ a little rusty
1 after the long winter hibernation;
however, ooe dad caught a ball on the
lly.
The Wampum Men made one
doubl e play when the man on first
went to get some potato chips instead
of going to second base.
"Red Deer" drew cheers from the
crowd (all squaws) when he hit the
ball alm<>st five feet without his dad
helping him swing the bat.
It paued that the gods smiled on the
Chieft.ains ..WO beat the Wampum
Men, 9-7.
Weightlifting, Fitness
Programs Start Today-
Bench press 180 pounds? It can be done, even if a boy only weighs 140.
2 . Councilmen
Due Honors
MUSICIANS CONGRATUL.(ITEO -Music award winners Stephanie
Bell (left) and Sharon Rahm are congratulated by Fountain Valley
School District Superintendent Edward Beaubier.
The method in weightlifting is
regularity, like the regularity offered
by the Fountain Valley summer
weighWfting and fitness program.
lteading the course are Bruce
Pic kford, assisted by Larry Cooks,
Ken Dudridge and Verne Wagner who
say th.at the concentration will be <>n
upper body development, condition
running, and general physical ex·
ercise,
Newly elected city councilmen Jerry
Matney and John Harper w1ll be
honored Thursday at a dinner planned.
for recognition of their service as
trustees of the Fountain Valley SChool
Board.
Matney, elected to the Huntington
Beach City Council, retired from the
Fountain Valley Board ot Trustee• on
April 16.
Valley Band Members
Receive District Awards
Classes meet three evenings a week,
l\tonday, \Vednesday and Thursday
from 7 to 9 p.rn. in the Fountain Valley
High school gymnasium. The first
. season is scheduled for tonight.
Three programs have been arranged
-freshman-sophomore; junior ..
senior; and adult men.
Cla ss registration is being taken at
Fountain Valley City Hall cashier's of·
fice, 10200 Slater Ave. The fee is $3.25
for the eight-week course.
Harper, a new member <>f the Foun.
tain Valley City Council, bas resigned
the school board aa of June 30.
The third annual Awards Night for
the Fountain Valley All-District Band
Awards was held recently at Fulton
Scliool.
Prizes were presented by district
superintendent Edward Beaubler to all
band members who had played in the
b;;.nd last year, all new members and
n'embers with perfect attendance
records.
The perfect attendance trophies
went to Sharon Rahm, stephanie Bell,
Heather De Valois, Elizabeth Herte,
Aikido Defense
Oass Scheduled
Maybe the best <>ffense isn't a good
defense, but Aikido, the ancient
Japanese art of self defense, may still
be a good thing to know.
Once taught only to , the Japanese
nobility, a summer Aikido class is now
being offered by the Westminster
Recreation and Parks Department.
The class will be taught every
Wednesday in the Westminster High
School gym from 7 to 9 p.m. The first
session is Wednesday.
To register, signup at the recreation
office, 14381 Olive St. The fee is $4.50
for the eight-week class.
Julie Quijano, Peggy Shaver, Gretel
\Veiss, Verlene Wilson, Me I j n d a
Baldwin and Eugene Bowling.,
More winners were Debbie Margh·
lem, Joyce Rowland, Carol Trader,
David Wilder, Keith. Wehner, Mike
st.opher, James Fry, Doug Wolford
and Conrad Stegner.
Oboeiet Marlow Earle from Tamura
was named "student who has shown
the most musical growth." Outstand-
ing bandsman was Bushard School's
School's Stephanie Bell, wh was chos·
en by a vote of the band members.
Senior Citizens
Plan Activities
Potluck dinners, trips , tours and
card games, as well as a variety o[
other stimulating activities , are en·
joyed. by members of the Costa Mesa
Senior Citizens Club each week.
Newcomers are sought, especially
you , reminds the C<>sta Mesa Recrea·
tion Department, sponsor of the club.
The group meets Tuesdays from 11
a .m. to 3 p.m. in the Community
Recreation Center at Orange County
Fairgrounds, according to Mrs. Wanda
Wright, recreation aide.
·Chilcott Named
Editor at GWC
Wrangler-in-chief o( the 1968-69
Branding Iron, the God.en West Col·
lege student newspaper, will be Ed
Chilcott, a 19-year-old journalims i:r_ia·
jor.
Chilcott, son of Mr. and Mrs. Daryl
E. Chilcott, 15842 King Circle, West·
minster. was recommended to the
editorship by the newspaper's editor·
ial advisory committee and confirmed
by the College Affairs Council. He
succeeds Ed Dobkoski of Huntington
Beach.
Active in journalism a{ Marina
High School, where he graduated in
1967, Chilcott held positions as sports
writer, editorial writer and editor-in·
chief on the school newspaper, The
Volsunga. During his first semester
at Golden \Vest, he was news editor,
and news and feature writer.
Huntington Realtors
Set Insurance Talk
Vincent Nuccio, president of Equity
Insurance Service, will dJscuss "Er·
rors, Omissions and Fraud Insurance''
at the 8 a.m. meeting of the Hun-
tington Beach Board of . Realtors
Wednesday at the Sheraton Beach Inn.
Charioteer Donny
For the sixth straight year, Donny Tucker of Santa Ana will direct
his stalwart steeds from a Roman chariot in the Huntington Beach
Independence Day Parade. The youth is seen here on the ground.1 of
a familiar Southland arena. .
It's true! Our once-a-year Vanity Fair SALE
• #1 FASHION ISLAND " .
on bras and girdles is here. You save
up to 25%. So, stock up now!
Give your fashion budget a boost. Take advantage of reduced prices on these famous·
fitting bras and girdles. We have styles to flatter every figure. Just pick your type.
A. Nylon lace 2·section cup b1a for natural look. Sides and back of nytoo Lycra~spandex; while
or honey bei~e, 32·36 B-C, reg. 4.00, now 2.95 "Taper·mate'' long leg panty girdle in
nylon/lycra~spandex; white, yellow or coral; S·M·l, reg. 9.00, now 6.95
8. Nylon tricot soft· look bra1 white, hooey beige, yellow 01 coral ; :2·35 B·C
reg. 4.00, now 2.95 11Taper·male" brief in while, ye llow or coral;.
S.M·L, re1. 7.00, now 4.95
C. Nylon lace underwired bra for the full figure. White or hon!!'f be ige;
34·JS B, JNSC, re1. 6.00, now 4.95 31·380, reg. 7.00, now 5,95
"Tulip" desipd panly gfrdle has self reinforced front, sides
and back panels, 6 prteis. White or hooey beige; S.M·L·XL,
reg. IS.DO, now 12.IO L011 le1 sfyle, reg.16.50,
now 11.50 Girdle, reg. J2.SO, now 9.95
Formdatioos
u umS'
644·2200 • ~')NDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY 10:00 TI'f 9:30 • OTHER D~S 10:00 Tl1.Lh30' ..
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Two little Chicago brothers have
heeded a plea by Police SupL
James Conll1k for residents to tum
in their guns in the wake of Sen.
Robert F. Kennedy's assa.ssinatiDO.
After hailin.f a patrol car, Brvce
and Sidney ~•Mn complied. Bruce,
6. and Sidney. 7, banded over two
water pistols, two .cap guns, and a
genuine death-ray People Extermi-
nator. •
-· -24, 1"68
Big Storm
Slams Texas
:With Floods
CORPUS CHRISTI, T"'. <UPO -TrOpical storm CUiiy, whlc:h botterecl
the Texas coast with more than IO
mile per hour wlodJ Sanday, iJ>cb<d
northward ac:rou t b t central Tuas
pWos today, leaving up to five inches
of rain alKI flooding in south Texas
rivers.
Al Victoria, Tes.. lbe Guadalupe
River ran more than three feet over
its banks, forcing evacuation of at
least 8S persons trom their homes on
thP western edge ol. the city.
Corpus Christi itself did oot rece:ive
as much rain as bad been anticipated
when the big storm boiled up suddenly
out of the gusty wind& that bad swirled
in the Gulf of. Mexico !J>r a weet.
A spokesman ror the Tex.as Depart·
meat or Public safety said in Corpus
Cbrilti the storm-weathered people or
the coastal city were little bothered by
the more than gale-rorce Wiod.s md
monsoon·lik~ rains.
f
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I
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Refuses to Leave
20 Injured
As Limited
Jumps ·Rails
LANCASTER. Pa. (UPI) -The last
eight car• of the Broadway Limited
derailed near bere Sunday !light as the
Penn Central's New York-to-Chicago
train hurlted at 80 miles an hour
through Southeastern Pennsylvania.
Twenty of the 146 passengers aboard
the 13-<:ar train were injured as two
1leeping cars. two dining cars and four
coaches buckled and jumped off the
tracks at the edKe of' the 1mall com.
munity of LandiSville. None of the
cars overturned.
Seven of the injured were admitted to hospitals. The others were treated
and released.
The der;litment on the railroad's
main line occurred at a point where
the tv.·o· tracks parallel highway Route
230.
The wreckage could be seen from
the highway and one railroad worker
estimated that some 4,000 persons
flocked to the scene and hampered
rescue operations.
Farmn Eddit Winttrbotham,
tiictimi:ed ref)laUdly b11 chicJc..
en thitoe1 at hil Htulingden,
England, Tan.ch, bought a u;atch-
dog recently for protection. Ob-
!rlo!uly; JIOU klWID what hod to
happtn. Winterbotham earlier um wtk dbeowred thieve• Md
itolen • baf<:h bf f'l'll<ll and
token the ,..., wak/tdog akmg _.,......
"W• were pretty luclof. We didn't
get ;u. much rain as we expected," be
said ... Nobody got vay shoot up about
it here."
Early Sunday, however. tbe storm
poured more than two inches of rain
oa u,. city, sending wmr up to the
porcbel ot aome homes in low-lying
Rev. Ralph ~rnathy, shown arriving v1itb aides
for a news conference at Resurrection City late
Sunday, said his Poor Peoples Marchers were pre.
pared for eviction or j'ail but would not voluntarily
quit their encampment in the nation's capital. The
penn..it for camping expired at 9 a .m., EDT, tuday
and at 9:42 a.m., the residents were given an ulti~
matum to "get out or be arrested." More than 1,500
riot.equipped. police were on duty to enforce the
order.
The derailment tore up a quarter.
mile of track. The other track re-
mained open but was blocked to
routine traffic by a wrecking train
dispatched to the scene from Lan-
caster.
Almost all the passengers, including
the injured. walked from the train.
One passenger said it seemed like "an
eternity" before he got out "but I
guess it was only about two minutes."
• -· But two inches of rain were not • Brili.lber Mori< McGroth recent-
ly apeared OD the <Onr of tbe 8cot-
13ncf Yard newspaper ''Tlie Job,"
and It ....Wl<d in hil having an-
other photo tal<en - a prllon mug
shot. McGrath helped lhne hobo
hies 1ave a mp Who waa threaten-
ing to jump from the 71).foot.bigh
Union Jack Club in London last
month. They all won the Queen's
enough to make residents of the area, elev..._ lut yeaz by Hurricane
Belllah, worry much.
"I've been on this island .ts years
and I watch these storms pretty
dole,'! Aid LouiJ Rewalt, 72, who -nm a boat atand OD Padre. Island.
"I've been wiped out twice by these
st.onm, but tbil one iJ not coing to
hurt me."
Gunfire Kills 196 • ID Week The injured were taken to the Lan-
caster General Hospital and St.
Joseph's Hospital in nine ambulances.
Commendation and """ photo-graphed together. McGrath, 28,
was then apottecl as an escapee
from Klrl<ham Open PrlJoD, where
he was doing a It.month aentence
for burglary. •
A Son Fnmcilco "'°""'ti ....
dllCOff1'<d the tDfldut ~·
monkey bo1' illltall4!ion in eritt-
enu -the Golden Gate Bridge.
A jolt<d -ipotted the monkt11 Jttaling mi. orange
~om 4 lunch bag a week ago
afkr 'IOhich it dalhed off up a
diagonal rt"'t A {nlit-{ill<d
trap hal 10 /or failtd to cokh
him.
• Unidentified Flying Objects are
frightening to many, but the popu·
lace of Trinidad, Colo., would lilte
to get theirs baCJ< again. WJ.nds this
week swept away the flying salicer
replica, held aloft by a belium bal·
loon, and where it now blows, ~
body knows. The object was a
tourist-promotion gimmick. • There was both a traffic jam and
strawberry jam on the Santa Ana
Freeway through City of Com·
merce Thursday, after a metal
band broke on a truck, sending 250
gallons of the berries cascading
beneath the wheels of speeding
traffic. Cleaning up the meu took
a full hour. • Actress N•ncy Kwan says she
has divorced her Auatrian bus.
band, hotel heir Peter Pock. Miss
Kwan, a native of Kowloon, is in
Hollywood making a movie. Pock,
28, and Mias Kwan, 29, were mar-
ried in London in 1962 in a civil
ceremony. They have one son.
strongest winds from the 1tonn
were . recorded near Austwell, Tex.,
winter oeJting ground or the world's
few remaining whooping cranes,
where winds bit 62 m.p.h.
'!be clepartm•nl of Public Safely
said Nueces Coooty 1berifr1 units
were sent out Sunday to the Padre
uland -on park, acr<>61 C«pus
CbriJtl Bay, to evacuate tourists on
lbe illand.
"They roadblocked the bridge to the
ialand during the storm," a DPS
spokesman said.
At least 15 vacationers were tern·
porarily stranded on the long, narrow
sandy-beached island during the peak
of Candy's violence, but they f®Jld
refuge among the bnJshy sand dunes
running down the ·spine of the island
and were not in danger.
Candy spawned a number of
tcrnadoe.s across South Texas as it
moved slowly inland Sunday, but most
struck in open country. One twister
grazed a group of houses in El Campo,
but there were no injuries.
Hurricane Brenda
Heads Out to Sea
MIAMI, Fla. (AP) -Hurricane
Brenda moved away from Bermuda
today, spending her 75 mile an hour
wind fury on open ocean.
Brend a was traveling east·
northeastward from her midnight
position 275 miles from Bennuda at an
eatimated rate of about 20 miles an
hour, the Miami Weather Bureau
reported.
The hurricane was to slow up later
today, but little change in size or in-
tensity was forecast.
Highest winds in the hurricane were
estlmabed at 75 m.p.h. in the cent.er
with gales extending out 150 miles to
the southeast and 75 miles northwest.
Of the center.
Survey Conducted
By 1be Assocla&ed Prt11
Gunfire killed 189 persons in the
United States, a week-long survey by
The Associated Press shows, and most
of the deatha were homicides. The
survey, ended at midnight Sunday,
was taken during the aame week
President Johnson signed an anticrime
blll containing gun-control provisions.
The shooting deaths included 113
homicides, 65 suicides and 18 ac-
cideot.s.
ln 1966, the last year for which FBI
figures are available. there was an
average of 125 gun deaths a week.
Demands for tighetr gun-cootrol
measures were made after the
assassinations of President John F'.
Kennedy, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
and Sen. Robert F. KeDDedy -all kill·
ed by guns.
Proponents of gun control blame
loose traffic in fireamu: foc thousands
of deaths each year.
President Johnson signed an om·
nibus aOOcrime bill last Wednesday,
which contained a gun-control section.
More stringent laws on gun control
are being considered by Congres,,.
Two of the provisions in the crime biu ,
-Prohibit interstate mail-order
sales of handguns and 4'1.l.so their over·
the-counter sale to nonresidents ol a
st.ate and to people under 21.
-Make illegal the possession of any
firearms by felons, men ta l in·
Historic Landmarks
Cost at $829,000
WASHINGTON (UPI) The
federal govermnent has made grants
totaling '829,000 to pay up to half the
cost of preserving historic landmarks
in nint cities.
The money, released during the
weekend by the Department of Hous-
ing and Urban Development, will go
for sites in Boston and Haverhill,
Mass.; New Orleans; Annapolis, Md.:
Easton and Norwood, Pa.; Los
Angeles; Detroit; and Warren, Oliio.
Candy's Confection Sticks
Tropiccil Storm Drenches Texas Witli Heavy Rain
coeune ~-11r -I.• """'" IOd•Y ~I momlnt c!Mllllll lftO
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f1f • "''"" frtltM tr1rn '" bllnclmt
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ClnciflNOI!
C~ve!1nd
Oe1 MOIM1
Oetro.11
Evt"I
Fort Worll>
·~ Ht1"'1t
Honolulu
HOllUOl'I
K1t111s City
LIS Veoas
Lm Anoele1
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,:: :~ to h .1s
as Demands Grow for New Controls
competents, aliens illegally in the
country, Americans who have re-
nounced their citizenship and veterans
who receive other than an honorable
discharge.
A measure pending before C.Ongress
and sponsored by the President would
ban mail-order sales of all firearms,
including rifles and shotguns.
The AP survey, begun midnight Sun·
day, June 16, showed gunfire in Tex a&
claimed ~ lives, the greatest number
of any state, homicides there ac-
counted !or 1' deaths, almost double
the next highest states -llLinois, 16,
California, 13. Michigan and Ohio, 10.
Illinois had the most s u i c id e
shootings, 7, and Tennessee and
Georgia the greatest nwnber of ac·
cidental shooting deaths, 3.
With the rising public concern over
the availability of firearms two of the
nation's largest mail order hoUSleS an-
nounced changes during th.e week in
firearms sale policy.
Sears, Roebuck & C',o. banned all
purchase •f guns through mail and
l\1ontgomery Ward and Co. stipulated
that all mail orders must be picked up
in person, at stores or catalogue order
outlets.
\Vard's also announced a 11
purchasers of firearms at it s
downtown Chicago store will be
photographed at the time the sale is
made. The change in policy came,
company officials said, in ccoopera-
tion with local authorities enforcing a
recently passed gun registration
ordinance.
The rest of the passengers Were
given temporary shelter and aid by
nearby residents. A fire company set
up a canteen. Later they were taken to
Harrisburg in buses provided by the
railroad to continue their journey.
A railroad spokesman said shortly
after the derailment "nobody has any
idea" what caused it. A train crewmen
said a coupling separated on the se-
cond car, triggering the automatic air
brakes. J
Fare Slash Sought
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Rep .
Claude Pepper D-Fla.), joined today in
sponsoring legislation to authorize
lower commercial air !ares for
military personnel, students and
Americans 65 or older.
People are different.
So are Bank of America
Personal Choice Checking Accounts .
Now Bank of America gives you a choice of personal checking plans. We've introduced a new flat
rate plan with a maximum charge of $2.00 a month. The basic checking p lan has
been improved so you won't have to pay any service charge if your minimum balance is
$500 or more. You now have a choice of four checking plans, more than you will
find at any other major bank. One's the right choice for you. To find out exactly which one, see
the details beloW-or come into, your nearest B ank of America branch for a check-up.
1. THENEWTWO/
ONE/ FREE PLAN. II
you've found service
charges that change from
month·to·rnonth bdthcr·
some in the past, you'll
like our new system. The
monthly rate is based
C'ltirely on your minimum
balance no matter bow
many checks you write.
Our Two/One/Free
Plan provides monthly
statemmt.s and charges
are easy to calculate,
predict and control from
month to month. This
is all there is to them;
MONTHLY CHARGE
2. THE BASICCHECK-
JNG PLAN. Wjth tltis
plan, too, you'll pay no
service charges if your
minimum balance is $SOO
or more. If you now
receive monthly state·
ments this is the service
charge system you're
probably used lo, and you
may prefer to stay with
it. Your monthly charges
will vary with the number
of checks you write and
your minimum balance.
3. TENPLAN3, We
haven't changed this
popular Bank of America
checking service-for
people who write few
checks and need a state·
ment only once every
three months. You pay by
the check-IS cents each
plus a so cents mainte~
nance charge every three
1nonths if your minimum
balance falls below $100.
.......... _ ... ______ ._. ____ ...,
' t ,
4. BANKAMERJCARD~/
TENPLAN. If you usC
your BankAmericard for
most purchases, you can
write fewtt checks. With a
BankAmericard/Tenplan
account, you get a
discount on those checia:
you do write. It's the
same as our Tenplan
account-with a state·
ment every three months
-except that Bank-
Americard usen pay jU1t
ten cent.s per check and
no maintenance charge.
I
•.
fJ.S. Disturbed
New
REYKJAVIK , Ic e l 1 n d
IUPI) -Secretory ol Stat<
D6an Rusk seld today U\e
lJnlted States was "dei!ply
disturbed" a b o u t the
flhreatening new 8 e r I i n
crisis brougbt by East
Germany's efforts to force
rerognlUon of lhrat Com·
munist regime.
Rusk addressel the o~n·
ing session ol the NATO
f'oreign M i n is t er s Con.
ference along w;tn We sl
German foreign minister
who s a l d East Germany
had opened the new tension
Berlin
In an effort to halt improv·
Ing rtlatioos between East
and West Germany.
Rusk said the-.1athcr tide"
also was creeling problemt
in Berlin , the M.idd~ East,
Latin America. Sou1.•heast
Asia• and Korea and that
tnere must be renewed
NATO solidarity in a con·
tilluing effort to keep world
poa<l<.
"'lllere n1ust be no open
hostility aeross t-he OO:n·d
when thousands ol tons of
nuelear OOmOO and the
possibility of a nuclear ex-
change is thl'eatening tbe
De Gaulle Victory
Not Yet Con1plete
PARIS (UPI) -r·ren·
chmen reacting to Gaullist
warnings of a possible Com-
munist takeover t u r n e d ..
back to the leadership of
President Charles de Gaul!t>
in Sunday's parliamentary
elections and as.sured hirn
control of the national
assembly.
But the victo ry was not
complete. and hard in-
fighting lay ahead. The
Gaullist.s won 142 of the 154
seats decided Sunday and
were leading in 150 more of
the remaining :ltf\ seats to
be decided in next Su nday·s
runoff elections.
bc~un, thr nation still facr s
irave problems over thP
next six months. 1· h r
~overnment will br hard
pressed to hold down in-
flation. protect the franc ,
keep students satisfied anrl
avoid mnre cripp ling strikes
next fall.
Gun Battle
Continues
In Mideast
The voting amounted to a
landslide victory for De JERUSALEM Li\.P)
Gaulle from· a F'rench public Israeli and Egyptian gun-ners fought across the Suez outraged by six "'eeks of Canal cease-fire line with
turmoil caused by student rtill rta d
domoostrations and a strike a ery, mo · rs an
machine guns for 90 minutes hy JO million workers. De Sunday and 5 e v e r a 1 Gaulle warned of a Com-buildings were reported set munist attempt · lo scize ;afire in Js mailia oo the
Power during the social E . gyptian side. unrest ! But w'hether the na.tion·i; Tie fighti ng along a 20· mile front wounded six internal problems \\'ilJ be Egyptian soldiers and two
solved by the spectacular Israeli soldiers. report s
performance remained a from the two sides said.
moot question. An Egyptian comn1unu1uc
Political observers also ~aid the Israelis began the
raised questions today abou'l clash by firing on a hospital
how successful the Gaullists in JsmaiUa, about halfway
will be June 30 in turning along the canal. The Israeli
the initial gains into actual arniy said the Egyptians
assembly seats. opened 'fire first with small
De Gaulle's imernational arms.
prestige, which s u ff e r e d The E g y p t i a n com·
severe blows during the munique said a number of
'·May Revolution,'' cou ld fires in houses and public in-
now start swinging upward. s-tallalions in lsm.::ilia all
l-lc and his supporters will were brought under con-trol.
be able to point to the vote J.t claimed that E gyptian
as an indication that despite _i!uns destroyed si x Israeli
domestic discontent. lhe 77-tanks. four antitank guns,
year-old general still is the three machine-gun positions.
firm master of his land. an ammunition du"11"{1nd an
De Gaulle needed the elec-adminisLr-alive rJlll'I_ -· a n d
tion. victory to keep from silenced se ven obher gun
being discredited by his positions.
allies -and hi s nominal Jn Amn1an. a .Jordanian
allies. such as the United milil<:'l"y spokcsinan s;i1d
States. Israeli troops touched off a
Before the r e be I l i on . 00-minute machine-gu n duel
Gautlists had pointed lo thr across the .Jordan Rivrr
12encral's record of trying to Sunday by opening fire on
avoid making enemies oi Mansieh village in t he
any nation and said his sue-northern .Jordan valley. Thr
cess in this field stemmed spokesman said Jordanian
largely from his own pro-forces suffered no casualliei;
gress in re b 11 i I d i n g ' s but the Israelis were seen
F'rance·s worldwide reputa-evacuating: lwo casuall il'~.
tion. In twn clt.<shcs Saturday.
Ycl there was nn certaint y Israeli troops reported kill ·
ne Gaulle"s problems at i n~ II of 12 . .\.rab infiltrators
home are over. Much will just west of the Allenby
rlei:;cnd on whcU1cr !hr Bridge near .Jericho ;ir.rl
Presi dent, Premier Georges ki lling five more ,gu errilla.~
Pompidou. and the expecterl in the Beis;in Valley on !hr
new Gaullisl. majority in occupied Wes I Bani... ..\
parliament can produce thr spokesmaJlo said one Israeli
reform s they pron1i sed dur-wa .~ killed near .Jericho ano
fng the election ca1npaign. there werr no I s r a r 1 i
Some observers said thrre casualtie.<. 1n the srcond
may be a tcrnptalion on !hr skirmish.
part of the Gaullists to in· The Israeli arn1 y al:;o
lf~rpret the vote Sunday as reported tht.~ an nxp!o~ivt>
.en endorsement of !hr charge slightly damaged a
overall policies of ne Gau!!P tractor al !he Dead Sr:'!
durin.g lhe past 10 year~. potash \l•orks in ! h r
But even if reforms al'r northern :\egev nrsr rl to·
Drown
JI oay
OAIL V PILOT $
Drugs, A1•t1as, Murder
Crisis·
world," ltu1k Hid. lie said
now is a th:ne whert the
tot11I solidarity ot t h e
alliance ls important.
Rangers Deny All Ch,arges.
Rusk urged mutual reduc-
tions in the armOO strength
ol East and West Europe
and said the reductions
"ca nonly be made when
they are comparable with
the other side."
NATO PROTf:L.,.ION S. Viet
CHJCAGO ( U P I l
Edward Ray, 2.1, sat im-
passively, a hairnet over hi~
pompA(Jour. .
NeXt lo him Sy lyester Hut-
chins. 21 , w~s tall in a whi te
sweater and a string of
heads. I-le chewed gun1 con-
stantl y and loked coolly out
of 1· n ifn d , while-rimmed
sunglasses.
Ray and }lulchins are
rnemOers of the Blackston('
Rangers, a sotith :;ide Negro
,i!ang charged with being in-
vo\ved·ia the alleaed misuse
of-nearly $1 million in an-
tipoverty fund s.
He said it wag necessary
fo protect NATO's southern
flank in the Mediterranean
from increasing So v i e t
military and political in-
flu.e nce and pledged that the
United States would roo-
tinue to adhere to its NATO
commitments.
The opening s e s5 io n i;
lasted an hour and 15
ntintltes in the fcstiV"al hall
of Reykjavik Univctt'sity. us-
ed as a movie house. Then>
were some anti-NATO and
anti-American demonstra-
tions out.side as the foreign
ministers arrived.
Refugees
Cheated
WASHtNGTON (AP)
A news cnnference had
-been called Saturday niJ::"ht
al the F'lrst Presbyterian
Church. It was expected the
The three million to four
1
n1illion South Vietnamese
uprooted by the wtr have
~n cheated out of large
shares of aid sent to tbem
by the llniled States. ac-
cording lo a Senate sub-
co·mmi1tee report. Brandt. t.he first to speak,
presided in place of French
l•'orei gn Minister ?;liidle l
r>ebre who could not .attend
bee a use of ti11e F'tencti elec-
tions.
HIC.10 POSITION
!·le siaid the EaSll German
moves agaiffit Berlin had
been ..agreed on by Moscow
hi-cause of their ''rigid posi-
tioo which wants lo see the
s.tatus quo perpetuated in
Europe a n d to c u t West
Gennany off from the allies.
East Gtnnany recently
demanded that W e s t
C'n!rman.~ travellng k, West
Rerlin secure enttance visas
from the East Germans.
Brandt said East Germany·
waos so worried iabout Bonn's
improving relaitions witb the
Communist East European
Bloc she added "llhe paper
and rulbbcr st amp curtain"
to t1he ex.i~ti ng barriers.
Representatives of Mle lfi-
nation defense OO',l?an1zation
garhered in one of the few
buildings in t>hiis small na-
tion large enough t-o ac-
commodate the delegates to
t.heir 3'tlnual s u m m e r
min·isterial session.
CONFERENCE ACT ION
In the las t three years
about '100 million has 'been
cnntribu ted in refu_i!ee aid,
the rep:irt s tated. but "In
staff i'nterviews with the
hard ·Pre s s e d American
l'Cfugee personnel. it was
repeatedly es timated th.::il
less than hair the supPlies
ever reach t'he regufee.''
The subcomm ittee. which
ha.~ed its findjn~ on hear-
in~s and an investigative
trip made last yrar by Sen.
Edward M. Kenne d .y ,
D-Mass.. said a b o u I
refugee aid :
''There is ge n eral
know ledge among U. s . or-
ficials both in Vie tn<:<m and
Washington that t he pro-
gram has been crippled by
rampanl corruption a n d
thievery . , .
Thus, the report weot on.
government of So uth Viet-
nam and the province chiefs
supported by tl)em have the
keys to the warehouses. and
they diverted much of th('
goods to their own use."
Thus. the report went o
lhe refugees are victin1izcd
"both in 'Mle siphoning off of
commodities and in the
st ea\in~ of meager
assistance and resettlement
<Jid . .,
To end the situation the
subcommittee said there
should be "a special in·
vestigatory team u n d e r
President Tt"ti.eu·s personal
control In undertake lhP
rooting out of corruption in
the refugee program."
The problem of an E.a st
Germ-an squeeze through
new travel re9tric"tions on
West Berlin was expected to
d'Ominate t he minister s'
discussioos. w.llict1 conti nue
ltlrough WedllQSday . NATO
sourc-es said conference ac·
ti'°n would include the df!af-
ting of a stiff protest to the
Soviet Union. h o I d i n g/
Mo scow responsible for the ,,.,__~--·, ha rassment. 11
Youn1! den1on~1rators pro-~.
tested trhe NATO presience ~
in Iceland Sunday n<ight.
Several h-undred of them SAFECO
marrc:1ed in icv winds the 25 INSURANCE
miles fron1 the U. S. Nrava l
Ba~e at Kcfl avik to Reyk-
.iavik and conducted a rally
near a Communist center in
the Icelandic capital. In
several runnin g s c u ff I r s
with police. several dozen
demonstrators were ar-
rested and OOuled away in !
nn·ld v waqo ns.
Police k>'>..,pt lhl'nl from
(h!" movie house.
Police Cite
18 Nudists
I
1.0S ANGE LES IArl -1 Sheriff'.~ depulir~ ~woof)Pd l
flown on !he Elvsian Field s
Nudist Colony ·Sunday andl
ci1ed 18 adults under an
ordinanCt> bannin,g such
facilities in the county.
·r hcy were orrlered In ap-1 pear in Malibu .lusti er Court1
for special
GOOD STUDENT
DISCOUNTS on
your Family
Auto Insurance,
Bob Paley
and Associates
INSURANCE
474 E. l71h ST.
COSTA MESA
642-6500
Wednesday. __ii,,....,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,,I
Rangers would dt'ny wh~t
Gearge "Watusi" Rase. 2.1,
Jorroer Ranger warlord.
was telling Se n ate in-
vestigators in Washington -
that the gang wa11 jnvolved
in murder and storage or
arms and dr.ug11.
1'wo hours past tht' an·
nounced starting time Satur-
day. Bay and l~utchlns ap-
peared. They said :
··we have no comments on
U1at. '' .
"Then why did you call
the news co nference? .. they
were asked . No answer.
But newsmen ·persisted.
Bay. one of the main council
21 that runs the 3,500-
member J?;ang . denied all
charges by Rose and the
Senate SubcommiUee.
"Wt' haven'! extorted
anyone'' Bay said.
liutchlns removed h i s
glasses when a newsman
asked why Rosr made suc.h
charges.
"Becau.~e he wanted to be
top man." Hutch.ins said of
Rose. "He couldn't be top
man . . . We have no top
man. We have a com-
mittee."
1-lutchlns denied Rose was
nlarked for d e a I h. Ba y
denied the ' $1 million
wanted the Wood Lawn
organization for educatinR
.end training members of the
gang for jobs was used to
buy peace. on the south s ide.
Subcommitlee Chairman
Sen. John L. McClellan, (D-
Ark.) made the charge last
week In arguing iMt lhe Of·
rice nf Economic Op-
portunity grant not be rofun·
ded.
"Tht' money w a s not U!·
ed to buy peace." Bay
answered. '·ft was nol a
bribe.·•
Bay and llutchins were
asked if. as Rose charged.
the Rev . .John R. Ji'ry had
control over their activities.
.. Fry has been a good In·
nuence." Hutchins replied-
"But he has no control over
us."
Fry was not in the pulpit
Sundav. I-le wa s en route to
Washi'1gton to testify.
All -Penney Sto;es Open Every Night Monday Thraugh Saturday
'
•
USEYDUR
EN NEY
CHARGE
ACCOUNT
In Boating
Accident
NIGHT •nd DAY SERVICE TOCAVI
l '900
DAYTON, Ohio IArl -A
motorboat contafnini;!'. I n
persons drifted over a d£1tll
and crashed in to rocks in
swirling rapids S u n d a y .
Tlcscuer5 saved seven peo.
ple. but th ree were missing
and presumed drowned .
BeUeved drowned in tho
Mia mi River accident were
.Junior Ben }loll. owner of
the 14-foot boat: Shirley
Willi ams. 30. and her son,
Warren. 7. lfol~. and ttle
WilUamses were neighbors
in Dayton.
].1ontgomery C o u n t y
sheriff's deputies s.iid J.l ok's
boat w .a s pulling WoOO.ford
Wiiliams, the d r o w n e d
woman's husbcnd. on water
ski!I when iU e.ngint st.op·
ped.
Tht' bnat went over the
dam with lloM. hanging onto
th~ side, ~r1shcd Mto the
rapids and beca.me wedged
between the rocks.
9,30 A.M. TO 9,30 P.M.-SATUROAY 10 A.M. TO 6 P.M.
I
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What more could you want! long weoring, cotton sailcloth
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1.99
24• to 63" length•
In 1, 1 'h: and 2 widths
Volo nee
NEWPORT BEACH
I
I
-------'"
..
• DollL y l"ILOT
Man Slain
At Sthool
f.arnival
LOS ANGELES IAP ) -A
la Allfltles pollttman -
and k1Bed a ma wt» wu
l"<pOrWd!y tbralaDoc ms
partner with a rwi SmdaJ
Ill&!>~ bat ....-his
partner wiUi the IUDe
baJld. The _, ... oil •
rDCkul at a acbool canifyal
The -olficer, JGllo v. MerniJm, .... reported
m utiltac.tcry coo:1ilioa at
C..0-al Ileoeiriog HocpiW
att.r tlle~-lbe w-dU<rict. Spokesmei
-Ille balkt pued IW
bud.
' '
Passengers Land,
'
Sale But Sick
S.'-~ DIEGO CUPO -The 0ttaa. ... c::>tlMr e r e w m e a
a -· lllJoord lbe -Cod to r1p 111e -Boeing m jot aHna _.. .... <If lbe "°"""" ...i
--tr,. small ..._ amt lbe -d .... and many became m.anally.
oaose•ed Sooda1 during Oadn lbeo -gllt Ille
two boon o( -9edlaled plane in far a J*fect ~
aerobatic maoeums. din&: at Lindbe:rg:b 6dd.. Be
Pacific SGatlnmt -piwed Imm 1be eockpit u
pilot Edwanl °'1lh. u. put ho .... -tr,. ooaod
lbebi&jec~·--
ottte.p-mdclimblin "'A lat ot lbe -
a ...,.,. "'ul ~ to lru got llict, • lie aid. "I -
a jammed lnclPtg gear. • ft: an ...... God we
The jot tool: otf Imm Los made it oU,. All -did was fallow DOl'm.a1 emergen.
A'*lll._llOol_ ..
•• Pt l s , .. Blctill ..-a.•• ..., _____ ,.._
twte ls•IMD ... .._.
Cll 1 W ., . tlly .. fir 8ldlll
llof ... -,., i.a.,...., -____ ..,_,_...,_ ..,_,__ .... .... ,_ .. ...,_
wllllll: I ' .... : ·-.-
::if.·: •BCIRY SAVINSS ·~ Mwlltllrl~ --1112-.-. -irl&h+ ....
.. Eollillr. --
--8114 KDatt An. _ ...
Ol Jtmtl. .. u.::r.
•
The dud man was iden-L..~~;._~~~~::.:;i...~..:::.:::,:::;::.-~-..1
tili<d u Emm<tt Manin. 30. "I hate to say it, but the ~ of the po.er
!'•lice uld he bad bffo stnicture a.round here is getting out ct lhaj><..
Aog•l•s --.,..--.· OPEN SATURDAY, JULY 6 -10 A.M·-2 P.M.
Airport a 2o3D p.m. cm •i--'-''--~~~~~~-'-~~~~~~~~~~~....:.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
ltigbt to San J.... Sbartl7
ejected trom the cranival as -------,------------lleing umuly. bu< .......,...,
with a gun. He fired it over
the heads of a group ol
tftnagen, !kn threatened
Mftriam, who 1'4'1 OD duty Solo Sailor
at the .carnival. police laid. .
-lbe ~ bOcame ' =-~~ed ":,. ';!..": ft AU · Penney Stores Open Every Night Monday Through Saturday
gear bad jm111.., port _,
-lbe beBJ ot lbe 111--
0adn ---enn~1 CdJ to tree tbe sear over .
E~.·;;~_oa1e Begins Nonstop World Trip
Au.. the .-c. police
th< Los Angeles .,..;, 1ben ALWAVB FIRST QIJAUTY
beaded -.. ......, to tab advaoUg< ot Ille Jmg
• •id, the crowd becamo LOS #..>jG£LES (UPI) -doll boo oteed a tropbJ end
US'1llJ. One ~ .... ~· Riclmd.:Li Steveam ...., m ,mo ill _.,• ~ to tbe -'edmd-..i'"''l"P" . r---,
nmway at Minaar" Naval
Air --in San Diego. B• O.W tr,. Ille ccllllrol
to.er' at IJ~ Field,
San Diego's ccmmerci.al
airport. and Fedora! Avia-
tim Agency em pl::f 1
visually <vnlirmed • m.alfuncti"'*' door bod
cicm o1 -..,. acD* a to . ho 1be Sir Edmund lint .,.._ it <Glllplete •
...-.. and .-... '... Billa<y of the .... and to-..... IJOOltop trip. One ot Ille ~ ~ a chrge ol ttful· day be wa5 under "'af on .a judges is Sir F r a n c. j s
lDI lo dilperle. 30,<0> mie journey to Chchelta-. wt.o 1 a i I e d
acbi<Ye bis P>al-. around the world, making
Warren's
Retirement
Criticized
From Witt 8t'rvlca
WASHINGTON -Gov.
Ronald Reagan bas criticiz..
ed Odef Ju.tice Earl War#
ren for reported]y retiring
from the Supreme Court al
UU. time b> allow Pre•ident
Johnson to name bi.a 1uc·
CUIOT.
"I don 't really think be
tw that right." Reagan. a
~ubllcan favorite I o n
presidential candidate, said
Sunday.
"It 1how1 a lack of faith in
the 1yatem," Reagan 1aid,
for Warren to c boo 1 e
"which president 1 h o u Id
nominate the chief jw:tice
for the nm 20 yean.
"The President, .. Reagan
said, "would be in keeping
with tradition to let hill sue.
ce11or make t h e ap.
pointment."
Reagan was in
Washi n gton for a
Republican workshop for
con1P"es1men.
Meanwhile ' Sen. George
Murphy (R-Calif.), told a
news conference in Lot
Angeles Sattaday that he
was '.'.shocked" that the 'n·
year-Old chief j~tice would
1tep down before a new
president was elected.
"The proper thing since
the Cilurt iJ out of session
would have been to just
maintain the status quo and
1ubm.Jt his resignation to the
new president," he said.
Murphy said he would
vote against a Johnson ap..
pointee as a matter of prin-
ciple, even if he might ap.
prove or the choice
personally.
Mesan Given
Art Degree
Johnnie Earnest. 3 1 7 5
Sicily Ave., Costa Mesa, has
graduated from the Famous
Artists SchoolJ of Wettport,
Conn .
Earnest specialized I n
cartoorftng under the direc-
tion of Norman Rockwell,
Ben Shahn. :Mllton CaniJf
and Al Capp.·
si-.:n,alormoro-~~bis . ty lifeguard, ... sail Suncla7 ...... ...,,, ~ ~ Gipsy
.in his 3-foot t I o o p , Moth.
American S{Cit, in an at· Stevemon cannot qtlaJify
tempt to become the first f« the prize money or l>e
-to circumnavigate trophy -ground rules the globe alone oo a nonstop ... by """"9paper. To wil>
voyage. the '12,000 oUered for the
"I want to be tbe ~ fastest trip, S tevenson
ot tile ,..., .. Steveosod said, """1d have tD leeve and
referring to the N e w return from a Brltist port.
Zealand mountaineer who "All my life I've Wimted
was one ol tbe first two men to try to uiJ around the
Lo climb Motml Evereg\., world alone witho!Jt a
The Sonday nm.. of Loo· landfall," Stevemon Aid.
jll!Dllled 1he LnMrig -· er.ts c:retN ad t b e
gromld·prepared I« a poosi-
ble belly Janding while On·
dre beaded out over the
Pacific Ocean far aseries of
sometimes violent
mmeuvers in an attempt to
tr .. the~.
The faulty door was finally
ripped from th< fuselage by
win<b as Ondre flew the
plane at mare than 400
miles an hour over the
Tank, Field
Guns Sold
At Auction
Tune in the
Colorful
LOS ANGELES !UPI) -
More than ax> military
relics, ranging trorp a
portable heater to a tw~ton
World War I French tank,
brought a total of tl8,<XX> in
winning bida Sunday at an
auction.
Lee Epstein, manager of a
surplus 1tore, bought the
tank for '900. "We'tJ put the
tank in front of the store
and let the kids climb over
it." he said.
The heater. a small mass
oC rusted metaJ. was knock·
ed down for $5.
A gun dealer from the San
Francisco Bay area made
successful bids on three
field artillery pieces and a
Santa Monica J>el food
manufacturer purchased an
Italian 105mm caMon of
World War I vintage.
The military gear was
auctioned off by the M. H.
De Young Musewn of San
Francisco because the col-
lection was no longer com·
patible with its exhibits.
Sound of
Orange
County
Music!
RADIO KOCM 103.1 FM
From Fashion Island.
Newport Beach
Searsi----souNn ...
GUA.&Alft'U
u 1•i• •••'1•1 ,;, _.,t«i .. •ilJmo _,_.,, .. i., ... •111.ot_....,.._
..... • ..,._ h lno ........
Your Vital Link with Peopk!
Regular 1239
Tru-Ear XI Hearing Aid
.No Unoigbtly Cord• or Witt• '199
• tul:TIOfMtlll n"DN "'"'" e•c:.r
• ~ rr.11, CAff'T •to MIOUlltO ,,.------. --+
I I
f
COSTA MESA
,
(
I I
~MmJDmJD 0
~~a
jaunty jamaicas
in come-alive colors
·~for@~
SVfnmef' ~ awirlg into oct1on with 1~
Miiich, li...ty ~tatt.nolt ••• .d tt.tcnii,.. •• )'OUnl
Quolty cotton. oncf Dacron• poly.-..cottw1 Wends
ht;o boon -11<1. lo...._,, rltkf ,...;ticor""""
w. only -........., ;,, "'" """' ...... -..,..,, .•• and .... ,.,;c., of ~ Stort ,...,,, }oMoicm holiday
now, tind zip up the MSviftgl (Oft tt. .W.) ill
m9-' li.z:es I to 11.
HllOlllGTOI BUCH llfWPORT BUCH ••-::-.::::.:'°='" • .MLlllJADS '&=1 SOl/TIJER!f · SHOP 6 NIGHTS
J2M ,., MAIMrui ·'' : U.4D TO ~ ~UFORNrA S'l'OltES .otllOffDATnmuv.TVllDlt '-..,;;_;;.;.,;;;;,;.;,;;;;,;;;-1.,.,I / \, .... Ao& TO 911t !'JL -------··· aAlll,~O'AlflJm.---------------.__.....;...;.c...;;;:..;.;;;;_...,J (Horbor Shopping Conler) (Humington Center) /Foshio n lslond) '
• '
'East' Co11ies 'West'
Ground was broken Saturday at Intersection of Ball Road and State College
Boulevard. Anaheim . £or start or construction of this $3 million Polynesian
Village. first phase of multi-million-dollar development announced by its pro--
mater, Dr . .John J. Magrann. as the "fourth ace" among Anaheim drav,,ing
cards. He says the project. The Orient, will vie with Disneyland. Anaheim
Stadium and Anaheim Convention Center for attention of tourists. This Poly-
nesian Village section of The Orient will feature luau gardens to accommodate.
2.500, and a tri-level reslaurant seating 500 persons.
Salute Due Cererno1iies to Ma,rk
:~:~1 ,~uc~~~1 , Openfng of Freeway
Governnienl.'' w i l 1 he .
presented Th11rsda~· at thi!
Newporter Inn. Ne~·port
Beach, al the ~ e n e r a I
membership luncheon of the
Orange County Chamber of
BUENA PARK -Ground
breaking ceremonies mark-
ing the final project linking
the Artesia F'reeway (Route
QI ) to the Santa Ana
F'reeway will be held Tues·
day. at 10:30 a.m . on the
anrl !he Santa An;i FreE>way
in Anaheim and ·Fullerton.
Commerce.
A\vards will be present ed
to members of the Boarrl of
Supervisors hy the Orange
County Oiamber anrl hy the
OrangP County Co a s t
.A..ssoci·aHon.
DE.4TH NOTJCES
freeway right-of-way near
the intersection of Page
AvPnue and Thomas Street
here.
' Spons..ored by the
Chamber of Commerce and
the city of Buena Park.
W;ilter Knott will be the
principal speaker.
The new project covers
construction of slightly over
one mile of e i g h t ·I a n e
freE>wa y between B e a c h
Boulevard in Buena Park
CAC Meet Se t
SANTA. ;\NA The
Roard of Director:;1 of the.
Orange. County Community
Action Council will meet
Wednesday, al 8 p.m . in the
Re soul'Ct' Room of Monie
\(isl.a School , 2116 W. Monte
Vista. Santa Ana.
Fire Calls
ll~11ti111t111 &Ne~
4:!1 •.m S~!U•d~•· oow~r II~~ rlfl'"'"•
The project i!I schedulerl
for completion in the sum-
mer of 1970.
•
' ' <· ' • ,. • , ...,; • • • •
• ' >-• ,,
'
Sen11nar To1•lc 2nd Marine
Dies of M edio<;rity Way
Of Business Life? Crash Burns
ORANGF. -The );econd
nf lwo Marines badly burned
in a saturday night freeway
accident rlied early today at
Ille Orange Coollty Medic81
Center.
Too many workers at all
lewis in business and In·
dustry today a c c e p t
mediocrity as .a way O{ life
and do just ~ to get
by, 1'00rnar:s C. McDermott
told a semNwlr at Orange
Coast College Saturday.
Speaking l-o several h~n·
rlred qtw1lity control person·
nel. from Sou l he r n
Oa.Liforn ra. M c Dermott
stressed programs of
se lf development and im-
provement to keep pace
with rapid growttt in nE>W
koowiedge.
The speaker, directer or
quality and r e Ii a b i I i t Y
assul'3f1Ce for the Space
Division of North American
R o c k w e 11 Oorporatm~.
keynoled the llecond annual
quality AssUN1nce Seminar ._
The criteria fOi' being a
professklool. Whether a
person ls a brick mason or
in lop maf1114,>ement. are
h1~ personal standard.'! for
the job, tlhe ability to main-
tain proficiency in a
specialty. and conductine,
The 1..-oroner'!! office !lald
Thomas S. Galliher. 21, of
Camp Pendleton died of
1961t
102
County Traffic
Death Toll
19fl7
113
one'« work m an ethical burns and injuries sulfe.red
manner. he said. In the Newporl·Santa Ana
Commenling on the sharp ~·reeway junction crash in
upwant curve. in n e w which Sgt. Paul .I. Speelman
knowledge, he said that Jr.. 22, o( Whittier and
obsolescence relates not on· Can1p Pendleton was killed.
ly to product.."! but w pe<lflle . Sgt. Speelman died in-
"Hall of wtiat an engineer stantly of burns suffered
learns today in sehool will when the sports car he was
be obsolete in IO years, and driving flipped over and
half of wtial he nefW!s to burst into flames. The
kn<>w i."I not even available.'' California llighway Patrol
he said. said he had attempted to
negotiate the off-On ramp
B ll' S ] l He pohlted out tha1 more from the s nu I h b au n d a Ill e ee S I formal edooauon ro.· quality Newporl Freeway to the
C • A'd 1 control personnel ill now northbound Santa An a ann.1a1gn 1 e .... Hatl• •• .., 1·ur6<>· ool· r Freeway at high speed.
SANTA ANA _ "Fted lege, college and gradu;ite r===========,
Harber. former mayor ~ of I eve I and urged I hos f'
Santa Ana will act as ca·m· pres.ent lo take ·ad'Vlanta-ge of
Pal.gn managec ror R~-rt thesie opportur1ities. ,
l1ut: No ot11•f ll•w1p•p1r till• y•ll
LOCAL
DllLY mor 7
Escaped <;_ounty
Pair Captured
ORANGE -Two men
who esc11ped from t h e
Orange County branch jail
Saturday were c a p I u r e d
Sunday in Arizona when a
hi.ghway patrolman spolited
the stolen car the pair was
driving.
1'akcn Into custody at a
rnadblock in Winslow, Ariz ..
Wt>re .John J. Gallivan, 36, of
llollywood. F'la. and Donald
N. Schneider, 19, of
~·u llcrton .
The men we1·e found miss-
ing al Salurday'i; I I p.m.
head L·ou nt. s heri f f 's
dcputiei; said. Galli van had
been sentenced Friday to
se ven months on a forgery
conviction and Schnelder
had pleaded .icuilty June 10
to P<>Slll!lllJOn and
transportation of dangerous
drug11 and received a 298·
'day sentence.
Deputies believe the paJr
climbed the fencf! at the
minimum security Th e o
Lacy far·i1ity in Orange.
After escaping they went
to Lhe home of Dean Slough
in C.arden Grove, lltolf! hill
wallet cnntaining $30, a nine
shot revolver and his car.
Slough, a paraplegic, wale
not injured, Garden Grove
police said. He wall .ac-
quainted with GaUivan.
J~ 0'Prtparc for
tht future .••
Toda11!" School of Business • S•cr•t•ri•I
s~ • M1.ol ic1I
iRoll•lllCI
• lt10~~•1pin9 ' • D1nt•I
ABC SHORTHAND Anilli11t W. Battin, a candidate for "G r Ow th through f!X-mor•, •v•ry day, ~liowt wh•f •
C<>unt y supervisor in pe11ience must be aot:ive, not 1Joi119 "" in th• 9•••'•' 111 W. Sth Phon• Orange County's F i rst passive, anrl is directly Or•119• Co•.t th t11 tht DAILY
· Disbict. -~"~l~al~ed~l<>~a~com~im~ilm~e~n~l~l:o_::-:'='~LO~T~.=======~~~~~~S~1n~t~1~A~n~1~~~~S~43~·~1~7S~3~o~r~S~4~3~.J~n~I~~ i'larber. activt> in civic af-do a )ob~ ... he said.
fairs since 1955, ha,11 al'lo
served ai; Planning Com-
missioner, a councilman and
city manager. All Penney Stores o ·pen Every Night Monday Through Sahnday
BELL & HOWELL SUMMER
TRADE-IN EVENT!
W.,fil
\{ (
• DftUll'( CA.st
THE
END
• fltlf CA.to Sff
• IXTIA llfl WITM
CASI
---·-----
• MOVIE MAIOMG
IOOllUT
~ . I "~ "10 · ' tlstac\"°"'
BALTZ MORTUARIES
Co rona del l\lar OR 3-9450
Costa Mr.sa rtfl 6-!424
BEL!; BROADWAY
MORTUARY
NOW
nOUBLI!
JIARRELEn
SAVl!\"GS
on
Aulomoblle •nd
Homeown.,.s Insurance
st 1mi>ortant thing we sell Issa
We'll allow you from $20 to $100 trade-in
8 MM camera and projector for our
BELL & HOWELL DELUXE 9 PIECE
' • . 110 Broadwa~, Cn111la l\1esa
LI 3.3433
1ttERITPLA.N
'l~@IVRAl'iCV. COM PA!"o"\'
{RJtedA+ (l.Xcelhtnt}
SUPER 8 MOVIE OUTFIT • •
PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemeterv e Mortuary
Chapel
350ft Pacific View Drive
Newport Beach, Callforola
644-2700
PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
ROME
7Mll Bolsa Ave.
Westminster 893-35!5
SM!TR'S MORTUARY m Main St.
RuotingUln Be•ch
LE 6-653!
WESTCL!FF MORTUARY m E. 17th St., Costa ~1t11
•4M888
WESTMINSTER
HEMORIAI, PARK
1'1ortu1rv & Cemetery
Chaptfs
1(3(11 8f1ch, W•!ltmlnster
$.11 -17%5 e 8.CJ3-%4Zl
' ,I
by A~ted M. 8H! Co.
Introduces The All New
FAMll.Y
8~
POLICY
ll'IWl'IT11 In on. CorMn;.nt Policy
COMPfl£H£NSIV£
l'IQM£0WN£.RS covtAACl
"'" rULL COVfJtACE
AUTOMOlll[ INSU"ANC(
'"°""ll Fttnfty AlJtlc»
DTAi\ LCYN COST Wilt-I U.SY llUDG£T PAY .. [NT
"°'""" ~ TH[ llGQEST
Of SAVINGS
OH AUTOM081l£ AND
H0MEoWN£ltS PltOTtCT!OH
•CONTACT•
WIGMORE
INSURANCE
2959 H1rbor Blvd.
Cost1 Man S•9..0391
Start a fresh new
summer look wilh a
Penney perm!
7.50
Fad1ion cut, 5 • 5 0
W• spedolit• in th• core of fashion wigs
NO AP'P'OINTMENT NKISSAIY
f'ULLlltTOM
°'"" .. '•Ir Ct11lf>r
""'"-· t11 ·4CJ
MUMTlftGTON tlACM
HUl'!tlllt!Oll C111111t" ""'''°"'· ...,.m1 ..
MIWi-OltT llA(M
~.,11 ...... ,,,,,..;
:1no:1 "-· .u.nu
,
•
24-9.95
USl P'ENNEYS TIME PAYMENT P'LANI
lVElll:YTHING YOU NEID TO TAkl AND SHOW flllll:flCT COf.Ofl MOVllS ••• Lrk'.I TMI NOS'f ~
Super 8 'zoom' comera
with action grip
• Zoom ler" -for clot• I.If) or wide onolt Jhott
• lo"ery dr+vt , • , "° windi"g
• T rJwer bvih inlo l+lt ocfton grip
• Elktric 1ye bvilt j11 behind ftlt len1 to adi11tl the ••powr• outotr10ric0Uy
HUNTINGTON BEACH • (Huntington Cenlecf
l)ual 8 automatic projector
' 1how1 regular 8 mm and Super II
• Thrt!Qds it"lf in l ..conds , • , no g.on. ~
•ts, loops
• Shows ..00 fHt of filM without Ntteuoptioft
• mtword, ,.....,,. Of'ld 'stilt' pic:tw• control
NEWPORT BEACH
(Fashion lslond)
...
..
. ,...._,_. .. .._."'-__
••
I IMill v Pt LOT
' It Is a Mark of Distinction to Be a Member of
Costa
•••AJ•v•• A-1 IMrirlp & Allr•'-MUNI
It. Olaon. w. C11rt.IODM•, o-••
lJM ""°"""'!• \I 1. ,._..., Co. 14-ll»
01! Or!TI VP, ~ W. ltttl
•«OUM1'aNn
Ct•°"-" tncl \,llllttr
C.fl.A. Htrwv c1._11, "'"""'· I(. 01vlo Ll!lodtt, NrlMt, W.'316
IU1 11~"' SlrMI
Jonti 1. c:a11i. PA s•s1~
1'1 I!. ltocMfle!' 51'"1 Crlnvllt. Swln. Grlmlllr & Ct. (PA
C~ Crlnlll1, (.P,A. l)OQ ..,.,... SI~ Suri. XIL-S.O.tdl
JtmQ A. Fltltll CPA S*WI
1,10 S11'lt1 AM ... vlt!INI
ltOIWld 0. t+ouo.r (fl" ~11
1t .. IOJ11t Peniwr
Gott. Ll'lllN"", SI-. & Wolf Cllrllllto P11~lk A«OUl)lllltl
UOD A$Mt, Sulff :1111
Htrold F. ~ CP ... S*l71CI
UCIO .r.a-. "°'Ut lll
W. ltlchtrG Mlllt, C,P A,
P,0 llO"a 11''6 -W>-6112
Otherotl. l<tilo &. s1ruaer -
Ctrtltltd l'utllk: At;c011M111i.
Wrn, C. SIM!lbwn. office M1t.
200 Wukllll Or .. 5ult1 Ill. NI
P.O. 81111 11111 -"2·•1" Doneld T. Whvte PA 54·11,.
11151 H•rbo<' Boulev1•<1
ACOUNTANTS COMP'UTllt SERVICE
...Aecountant>. CamPUlff Service
Acaiunlll•ll Com""'t•r Sel'Y~
2190 H••bor, $1111• l1l-U).ld1
Phlllo L. Krll:ff-Ow11er
IDVl!RTISll<(~
B.mnttt Advt!rll1lno & Putlllc
R•l1tloo1
Marv 8tnnett. owner , ... 60U
olSOCI C•l'l'lf>uS Or. NII
AOVERTISO .. O & OIRl!CT MAIL
TM Ptnnvuver 6d·Oll11
HC Vtn Ausdeln, Publl•l>tr
lW NOWPol'I
AOVERTISING & MARKETIHG
MarWtlln9 $..e<l•tlsh or Amffftl
GUfll!Of Lund Mar11"rtl1111 Ol~tor
.soi Rlwff, Ii.a . •1tod:IJ, •42~1111 W~I«~ Olw, tiel<;\.,
46.S s. &f'\ot<..,. or., B1....-IY Hiiis
CR UlU ADViltTISING-SALES l"ROMOTION
WIH Promoll"" Sl>Kilfbl$
Ed s. All>lor~
149 Bro.teh¥1Y -Soll•?511
AEltOSPACE COMPONENlS C..ill~ G1!11! -Wul CM,r
Howard C•rson. Vk• P!'ffldt<il,
v1uvtin N. Rt<ldlnv, Mgr ,
h>dU•lrl•l R<tlallan•
lW Whinier --?'91
AIRCRAFT ANO MISSILE
EQUIPMENT
J, C. Car•tr Ca ~•S-lnt
Coolidge Corter. Ch1lrmen <ti Aoard
D•n Kfl~r. Pl'M"'"M FlexlDle Metal Ho~ Mia 6~,~Sl
E. Halle!! Pra•. 1)1 W 161~ SI
Atll!CRAFT ACCESSORIES
OVERHAUL Engineering MOdlflclllan Co
5-0-1'1~ M1rv Cl"'llo Ca Qw~r
IQl P ~na"!pn
AIRCRAFT FIXED IASE OP.IRA·
TO R·FLIGHT TMIN!NG·SALES·
SERVICE •
Marlin Awlallan, !nc,--.1'6 .. JOO Orin~ Counh ... lrpQ!'I. S. A.
It/chard flrown. Pr•tldtnl
Jolin Mlttln, Can•ult1n1 Tit Ptnnoc ... F lltht lnl!tUCIQ!'
AIR.CRAFT H•.ROWAllt:
OISTRIBUTOR-INOUSTR IAL
Slate SlltCieltles CP J'9·11l1
J P llrft>d~ Own.r ~•? 9Akff SI.
AIP.CllAFl INf'LATAILES I.
SAFETY DEVICES
v~e L!ne Corporation s~b. al A.C.R. EIKtrankl Corp,
1iSO S\11>tr<Ot Av' , 6'1·""16
01vlo S. Tanner. V.P Gen Mtr.
AIR ( 11.A :Ol PARTS
MA,,,.UFICTUl!tNG
Srreutln PtOOU<"l Ca S•~ll•I
W, R H1gen O!v Mat.
1<-'l'I Hnrl>".r
,O.IRCl'tAl'T SALl!5, SERV IC E,
FLIGHT l,.SlPUCTIO-OliALlll FO~ IEECM AIRCRAFT CORP.
Mll~ on B>KhCf'Afl -~.io.1no UTll N AlrPOtl W1v. Orlnllf! Ca. "''"°''· s A -; .... •111n s. Ct1rt\e, Prf.sldent
AI RLINE -COMMERCIAL
Afr Cntlfprnl•
Orn""' Cc11n1¥ Affpor1
•«ll'I CJ1mP1J• otlve
N~wocn fleac~ -54().Jnn
Rf~erval•'lis : HO·•S!Q
Carl II. B~•Cottf', Pr"-ld9nt
0 .1n•ev F Mlllr•, Viet Pre,ll!en! /, .. ,..,.rHn~
110~1r1 II El'l•l{k, Station Mtr.
Alt Wt'lt -Jll'r1531
l~orm~r!v flonllnu "'!r!!np)
Or1n1P1' (OU"IV Al:'l>(lrf
1V"'1 Ctm•l'\ Orio!, S.•.
l!•••rvn!kni -s.10.l'OlO lM"I~• cnar>dle•, Sl!l'\I, Servi~
NAn•t~' -D•entt Countw Jemts F C1rme1n,
01i1rk1 s,i~ M1n11ger
1.~USEM~NT-SPORTS Cl!NTt!ll
Ha'•d.lv Fem;tv SPO<r, Ctnt~r
C J, Mo•dn, Qwne• -!oll).0190
"11 w BeOtt ANflQUES
M ~r:j M '"''"'.,as 11~! NPl<ttK'!'! 111.-d, -W 1ltJ
L&•ry Mofgan, Owner
APARlMf l<TS I. APARTMENT
HOU5ES AN:;; lOW,,,.HOUSE~
At~on.,>n·PeeblPr Aoti !4•6lll
Ro• PPtblfr Q .. ner
,\l>.191 Vlc1or\1
Holiday P1111 •P•s ..a 11nlt5
td1 Golt, Oan Orl1col! Ownen
191.5 Poman1 fl.''·54!4
26JJ Orin~• A•enw
N~ Maltu •to~•-•'"'"'' Sv.,ems
E. 0 . Mar-• Ow""' I~
lf5t M~PI' -u u11!11 NtwPO•I ll·••t •A TownllOUHI
6'2·el00 Herold E. Gl1H, Mo•
Apt, Ren!~I• 16' unlt1
lSO Rlvlttl Ot
VIII• Mn~ A~"· ., unli. 1•6"1151
Ernie Br.o.,.n, Mgr.
J S MQflfy Prp,
119 W Wtl\Of' !!'"-'
Al"ARTMENl RENTALS &
M.&HAGll!MENT
L~ llulr -l'6·161l?
10111 SontA An1 Av• , S A
AP•RTM ENTS-RET IREMENT
ISENIOR CITIZl!,01
BP!hPI lcwe•t OI Co••• MPSI
WP!! 19th SI & Pomona
Mall •o Po lie~ 30l\ll, P111ele11•
)
11e~ wm. H Robot!\Qh
01\!tkt SuP,...inte"Clent
llt• L. E Halvorson.
,t.dmlnl1,..11or -Cll•l'l•I~
ln!ormAtl"" -US-10!1 Al"PLIAPfC IES
~N1•r1or.·s A~ll111Ctt J•l·laoll
H, H•"<ler-Ow ... r 1111 H1•bor
AP,.Ltl>ICIES-MAJOlt •PPLIANC•
ltEPAllt & 5ALl\'.S
Cetlltlt<I SerYlce 1n..-il0
C. L Mlll1 M•• lll E•st 11th ~t.
APP!..IANCI! Rl!PAIR
-'1Mld'n IDPllAnt~ R~i>alr 646-Jll11 G 0 Tl"'lf"f'I. Mgr,
&JI W ltlh SI
Al'PLIANCl!S -VACUUM~ &
se.w1 N11 M,.CNINlfS
OiKO MllllC & •DPlllllCft
1300 !11rt»r Blva -s.a.11n
P. 5. Ma....S.•Jno, Owner
AltCMlTECTS
C~1rln M Jlll'ln\On "'IA-ft,.S60f
7911 So. Ca.11 HWY• Llqu.,. B'IC~
Wllllrd 1 . JCH'OU\, Arc~ITKl1
AIA I. 4UOC. S•S.113'
lJOO .t.a•m,, Sult~ )01
ltoll• Pul1s~I 6'?•:JJ'IO
171 Wtsl J!Jlh Street
:.Ch""lffr HtndetSO!> & .. »OCll!H
!ol6"17fl 1500 Adtms S..J!e 30'
A111CHITECTS (CONSULT!HGI:
aHGINE••s .. l'LANHl!RS
GorOOn L!Plg & <\UOCll!ot•
.,., Cl""""• O>lve, NB
Gordatl Lln1, •r'Cfollfcl.
J«l-4)11·)
Al.T GAL.LaltY Cl~ Z\ll<tl G1!1tory -'4)·'0t7
1lll HewiMlf1 !llwd.
CtYW H. Zuktl, 0-C..
-.RTlfT'I MATEllALl-.l.ltT
INfTltUCTIOH & FltAMIHG 1"' Ptgmy B"* 4-lt·tlll
Oorb L. 8'rtv. OwMI'
121 Ent 11111 Strfft
•nOINl!Ti
A II-' or Attor,., Membff• wlll M
Ml'lt"" r-1.
AUCTIONS
Wlnd'l''l ,IWOl(llll llilnl ~
Wlrdy WllldMm ewr,o.,.
nui.. N•-•
AUTO ACC•SSOltlll-&l"••O IHOI"
WIY"''• SDOftO ~.,. ..
IJQ A NfWl'Orl Aw
Wl'IM (.Rief,,"""""'
AVTO 9001' 1t•ll1>1lltNO c: .. w Pllfll & loclp $llOp ltU Ctwrd'I ,,,........,,.,,
~Ill 0 WOOIH, °"""''
M I M t h I u R 11 COSTA' MESA CHAMIER OF COMMERCE e s a s 0 n y ' ~ 0 n 0 r 0 -513 WOii 19th• St--Phone ~536
Directory of Business, Professional, Industrial, Service and Wholesale Firms and Individuals in the Costa Mem Metropolitan Trading Area
HI"'°' Al.Ito llod'I' w ....... ~ .. _,..,
,g Wu1 11111 St.-6<1Nt4
AUTO SIMONll & l"(ILISH
Thot Slmonl1 ~tw» ~'9
Hueo F, $1111 .... M•lhlfton
OWntn ti. we.i Jtt~ s1r .. 1
l,IJTOMO•ILE CLUI
Automobl1e Club or SOV111er11
C1lltornl1 4ff W 1'111 ....,,,\!
Charle1 E. Edw1rdto, 0111. Mt>',
AUTOM09fL.e.S-USID
Berger MOIOl'l ~,
Ger"'°" Beroer Owllll' 11)9 SUPerlor
A UTOM09 ILEl-SUN9EAM-f'IA T
OI RECT FACTORY OEALIA
1:1111 J-. 8.J. Ct>tyller
l,,,,_1 Olvl5loro
:ltl:I HltlMll' Btvll.~oLRI
W1llllm G, ~ Prtli<lel'll
AUTOMOBILE DEALERS NEW Ii
l.ISEO C-'llS, P.t>JITS, Siil.ES & Sl!RVJCE
Alli• Cllrvsle•·PIYmoulll inc.
Al TfdOeo, GM. M91,•VI<• Pft1.
2t2t Hartior ~1tlt
ltOY (¥1/i!r "Olll<.C ) .... .UU
ROY Clt\Oe'f Owner "2~ Hlfbor
(OMIU Chtvroll:I U..UOO
J. H. Connell Prn. 1:111 H•rlMll'
Hert>o;.r Oodoe -5091
II R Sny<l'er Pru. tl.!4 H•tDOI'
Halld•Y Siles & Sef\O IC1
•mt:rl~n R1mbler
1'6t Harbor--60·6'1»3
C V. Speer , via pr~~I
c111c-tverl<ln. inc.
47U'IOO & S'\>.OJ(IJ
ChJCk l~•••Oll Prts. 1110 H••bol'
votk1w10t11 & Por!ldle
HaDtfl C1d1U1c tnc.orPOra!t'<I
)40D Hartior Blvd -S4C-9100
Rlch1rd w. N•l>llr1. Prerldeht
Stan\bury 811lclt S.-716.S R. F. Slan•bury Owner
230 Eail 11lh ,
r heodOr• Robi11• Faro 6-ll-«:110 T, Roblt\$ Pres. 2060 H1rbar
Unlver111y Dla•mobll• ~Jss.o
L. R -B!MY Prtl. 2t.s.i:t H11oor
•UTOM091LE FOlttEIGH CAR I.NO
SERVIC E
Hubl!rl'1 A111o S«vlce f>.16.W2
H. K\lfll 0-• 1•11 P•r• Awe1111e
Pelt•t Forelen Ctr Servoc.-
VolklWa"11 Specl•llSh 60-6!1) P. S.U.ltolollorst Owner~ H1roo.
•UTOMOllLIE -MUFFLERS I.
EX HAUS JS e.z M11tt••f1 1M2.5901
JOIVI F . Herlo•lku• Owner .a1 E11t lllh SlrHI
AUTO, Ill.I.KE REPAIR
Natlanwl"e Bralte
Nm. L. Montgomery, ,.,.na~,
1111 NeW90rl ll!wd.-6 .... Sl>2l
AUTO PAR?S &
MACHINE SHOP SER.VICI! (n1a Mew 111110 Pa•I• -s.J-:).u~
H, L. Muto, Owne<-2115 H•rbor
•UTO REPAIR-TOWING SERVICI!
IOOY REPAIR
ll•V Autom01•w• Sff\Olce oM6·l'C6o
Garv Tlve1an Owl>l!r "°" NeWPOrt 8er11; Auto Se••ice ••2·41'
I. L. Berkawlt1 owner
2MO Placenlll
NewP<'rt Auto Worltr }4-7111
J. L. Harper Ow""'
120 lnduslrlel Wav
AUTOMOTIVE & MARINf
CUSTOM UPHOLSl'Elt ING
Ric~'• TOP Shop S.·3088
11311 Su1>erk;r J. J!, Hook qwner
Tavlor'' Trim st-$4·1331'
B. L. l1vlor Owner
1"5 ll'ldust•lal WIV
AUTOMOTIVE MUSEUM er.vin Cunt>!ngham Automotive
M11Seum -).16-16'0 -250 lla~er
BfOll!IS S. Cunnlng.,,.m, Preo,
AUTOMOTIVE REPAIR
Fo•d's Automotive Sf!rvice u• 1nc1 ... 1rl11 -6U·l$11
Faro Brown, Ownl't'
AUlOMOTl\llE REPAIR ' P•RTS
VOll(SWAGEN
C.codwin \lolk•waaen Se .. ict
1971 "(•· H~r!lOr -"'2·11'6
Tim Gooawin, Own"'
AUTOV.OdlLE SERVICES
R~Y(O Casi• Ml!u iol.Cl<CllO
?&60 Harbor
AUTOMQlllLE SPECIALITY
COMPO"IE"ITS MANUFA.CTURING
Cf!>wn Menutat111ring Ca. Inc.
~Sl Wost 11111 $1, 6•?·13'1
FreMrlck A Trevor, Prnld""t
AUlOMOBllE·SPORT5 C,t..R
ACCESSORIES
T~e Big Hou•-~•2-Slf•
19S9·~1 H~rbor Bl~d.
Biid 011n•Un, Ow!lfr
AUTOMO&ILE SUPPLIES
REPAIRING I. SERV.ICIE
Clilf'1 Aulo llpp61r 548·•711
II & C \leSI Own.trs !Ill Anahe•m
Cotta Me'a R1olatar e, wei.alnp
•.a.1·1031 A. Kti: Owner
Hts Newport Boulev~rd
Fite~·· Auto Service S.OJ.•5Sl o. B. Fi!Ch Owner lldV. N..WPQ•I
Uowlf't Avtamollve.Foreitn &
Oome•llc -Qoll?
H. Mei"! Owne•1•"' B•• SI.
Ml'~ Center Gar-5~
L. E Olngu Owner 196 E••I i.th
AUTOMOBILE. TR•"ISt.\iS510N
SERVICE.
AATCO Tta ... miulan Sl!rYke
1121 PllC@nli. Ave.--4ol6"tl1{
W. l. Modic, Owner
AAMCO lransmiHIOOS
Burl COiie• Manager 116 N._,,., BIV<I. 6*166t
B & B Tra ... m!sslor1
•18 Wes! 1711'1 SI. '~·21'1 w. C. Newb•, Dw"tr
Co.OSI •11tornallc Tra,,r.IT+IH1Qfl L A. J1ssave1, Owner-s•a.12u
.. , Wes! Bay Slr~t
AIJTO WltECl<IERS--f'0Rfll1N-
DOMESTIC
M•I• Al!IO WrKl<t.--L.I 1·701J
11115 PllC@nlla
E B Grl~a1rd-Pre1h1eflf
AVIA.llON SALl!S-SERVICE-
TR AINING
Torl>O!t Alrtr11t, lllC.-S~1196
Oran09 C0tm1¥ Al•POrt, Santi Anl
Robe<-! J. Tl)rtlf:I, PrfSl!H/11
•WNINCOS
Ti>e Awnlnt Mall JE l·Olll(t
R M. WH.an ow~•
lMOCI J . Harr.or SA
IAIY SITTING
llan. s111er1 & Dom~,uc Agencv
s.ia.1n1 Vlalet OllCh••~ owner
lJl E•J! l?tn SI.
91.kER SU PPLIES-
CAl<E OIECOltATIHQ"
TM Fro~Hllt HOllH 54-579'
M~llle Wiiiiamson Owner
1Jl..I NP*l>Ort Blvd.
l •l<ERY-RETAIL
CuPCl~f Bake.., $d ·)(IJI
Wiiiis E. Burts. 0wnt_r
)I) E••I 17th Frl'11Cn'i Pattty -H6·6l96
11111 w la'er Stteoot
Ja1nnP Frencl'I. 0-•
l(a011n'1 Hou"' of CCM'ned Beef
J:)l) !lrhlol-$ou!n Ca.it Pl•UI
•tlo'~~am KaPlan-5.IO.'I012·1J
IALL POINT P EN C,t..RTRIOGE
T"" Hll<llPY Co. --·~! LISI~ A. Wolle. fle~ull"' ViCt·Ptt•laf:nt
1911 Placen111 BALLOON~ CUSTOM MA.OE-Sl"OllT
Don Pl<c•rd l•!!aon Mafl\lflClurer
16! w. ltlh .. ,.JS6 .. ~·
l•ND l"ISTlllJMENT REPAlll
•bf B•ow,..__llal'ld IO'lf;lf1tm1nl
T1£hlllcl1n-Allt lrown Own~r
to.a (l'lllr\1 6 .... 5630
IAl<l<I
ll•hk of A1M•lc-ce.<11tol & l111""IP~l 79'11 Br1'1ol M-030
ktltll A, Gerton, Ms~ter
11~M al "'"'"'" ..... mi C C. "(lllC' (llr,t, Mftnlwt
Sdl w lttll l,0111< OI •m.:rl(1 IH111)or & ....,..m,1
J (;•os,. M•• 1101 H1rb0r
!.._ltH
CH•C~lr CIUt~s N1tlon1I B•nll
tlOll ll1rbo! Sl>'d
Girnn V l.Kk, A•tl V P -Mpr,
s..J-0'1!
Crock.,<1111-N•tlor>.i !111111-
9rlllOl·Sllf'lll--Soo!lfl CNll
Pit/I
»90 !lrlt.td, ... 0. Po<tt· 1171
JofM P MOt<I...,, All'I V P -
Mpr .• UO-US.
fh" Finl NU1G111! $1nk Of
Ori "°"" C-IY ~'110
M J $11,,.,.r. Via P"'l -MOf'.
1 IJO ..,,."'" 1'••1t Wtlk'N't 11....-; & T""'~ Ca
""'"' (1!11,1 O!'fl« -J~ol660 ltll S. Brttltl
r O BOii JOlJ 0 \111'1CH>d $1• .. S A.
wnu1m w McClli~•· M.o~-
0••11t1t COll"lv 1!11111>; &d ·l6tll
J c $tfflm1n P••t )'_JD E111 11111
Sf.cUt!ly Fl"T N•lloll9t ll11'1t
•4'..IU• Cl'llX:t Ad1mt. Mgr.
th E11! 11th $1,
11(.Vtlto/ Fk'tl N1llonAI IA'*
'4l•WU J. D. Vkk1rm1n ""9r.
2HO HerlMll' llff.
U<1llM C.Utornl1 9lflll ...._'°" (. C, tend, VICI 111"9a!cknt Xl1t H1rtior 9 ... d.
Uni!"" 511111 NA!lonll llNI ~. Fr1111l Zrfbll<, \l.P.·Mlll'.
114.l Ne-I Blvd.
uno.a St•lll H11ion.1 a111k
JQ3 !1rl1tal-SOUlll C-1 P!111 J_, w. V•trlll, ..,.'t, V,P',·
M .... ...$41).$211
aAlt111' 5HOl'S
P1-r ll•rll*< s-..... 2.U•
W. L, SI. Clllll' OwfMI"
2~ HIWPOrl
51. Ci.Ir 91rblor l.tia.t LI .. '10
M. F. 5'NllKlll' o-
llAO Ntw-1 INll.
IASKl!TI & ltATTA-AITAIL
APPrWed FIH'nllllrt LI .. "60
Wlhll•fd Dlln. OWllll' 215' H1rbar' BtYd
•AlTliRllS --'UTD,
COMMEltCIAL a MAltlNI!
L...,11 l<'>fl>eo .. rM,., CP.
'4l·JU1 \If E11I 16th Sll'HI
I EA i<INGS
A·! IN•I..., & Abr11lvet ..._ .. .,
R. Oi.an, w. Cllrll~• o ... ner1
,,.. -..... 1.
l aAUTT COLLEGE
G!r1rO'i Ca!ltM OI llelUf'I, lnC.
"""'111 E, Glr1ro Pre1.
1tU NewDOrl 111\'G.
91AUJY SALON•
D<>M! Cafflur•s J.U.1310
E . Ba•clt• Dw11t1r 2114 H11bol'
J.1.5.lJ!O
Etnll'• 8e1uly S•ton 54-1221
i:. Btre!1y Owner l:W E. 19th.
JOl'ln or Sl>erlt't 8UlllY Stlan
U..1llt J . ,\, Rollerl• Ow,,.r
139 W. Jttl! Slrffl
Mt. Jo~ Jori's Cah!ur• Sty!l$lt
College Cl'fller 27.SO Hlfbor B!wd. -SolQ.2247
John F. G•vln, M1n1aer
M1llle1 Wig .. Be•uly S.IOll
H. H. Z1vrodi.1tv, OWflllf-~·J.14'
'10 E1sl 17th S!rHI
51/ly'I Btauly Nook-6n·1"41 SllN V!llCtnf
l:JO E111 11111 St.-U"h G l uth T 1tm1cloe'1 l<e• lo Be1UIY s.nn llwth T1Jm.c:J91 0w ... r
:If E••I 17th S.
BEAUTY SUPl"LY
Your BffU!'I' SUPl'h>
GICM'll Kl'*'a11r1U W.512t
!Soll Wttl AdllM
BE,t.,UTY 5UP'PLIE5-REJAIL
Ii WHOLESALE
Rt~I lltlUTV SI/Op,.,, Irie:. M1·"81
W. 5l'Orlf Owner 21J E11I 111h &
1:100 H1rbor llou!eVlrd
llCYCLE SALES & ltEPAllt
Se1 Stflwlnn Bfkes ""'77'116
M. Cutler Owner lll El.II 11111
BILLIAROS FOR THI! P'AM!LY-
•rnerlc1n Blllltrds 5-48-ttM l<tU Hef!I Owner 14S Ell! IJI~
l lLLIARD SUl"PLIES & Html TllllH
Ari Judice Family llllllard Ctnter
•rl Jualce, Owner....ji4!·'8•1
511 w, l?lh Street
.LUEJ'ltlNllNG a J'RINllNG
Mat!or Blueprlnl & 011Stl SUPP. CP.
518-!m Fred El!l1 p,.,,
7JllJ NewPClf1
90AT5 Nl!W & USED-
SALES I. IROl(IERAGE
C1tem1r1n and Ttlmaran Small
(rift
100 E. C0111I Hlllllwey, N.11.
Llrrv Bacon, Plrlner....j;IS.)020
llOAT IEPAtRS
Rober! F. Mve•• -6'1·•4'7
1S3S Wes1 CGl>I Hlt~wlV, NB llOATS-SAILINO & INFLATA&LE
Oon PJcc1rd 8081, Irie:. Don Pkctrd, Pre•ldenl S'J.l'6•
~ NO!'!~ 8111<.er St., SA
BOOl':l<l!l!PINO SERVICES
F. ' M. Boalt~""°l1111 5t"llCt .s.lt w. 19111 s1, -6'11-n1l
Mlr\O R\ldklll, P1r1ner
S.rvict• IOr S1n1ll Builne11, Irie:.
•lt E111 11th 51, "1·'3oll
Pnlllp J. Reimer, M~n•"''
IOOKIEIPING Sl!RVICl!S &
INCOME TAX SllllVICI
"Tnt Olllce" ...i2·"6•
4J.< E1st 11th Stretl Mrs. J1mle Wlllt•d, Ownet
IUSINl!IS ENGINlaRING I
TAlt llETIJltNS
~.,.,,1 lluilntH Services 6•1..-i11
J O. 51unlletSOt1 Owner
ji] w. ltt~ 51.
IOOKSHOI" -Rl"TAIL
Pickwick llootu"°"s lllC. Wl-11'1
A1ron M Eps!e1n Vice f>r•slO..nl
Larrv Pullev. M~n19e1 Soul~ c"'"" Pitt• llll B•l•!o! SI.
IOWLINO ALLl!Y & Rl!STAIJRANl
Kon1 L1ne1 .k!-1111
R. Stoeffler Gen Mtr.
16n Horbn•
IRl>J<I SEltVICE
Midi! MulHrr & Br&k• Shw
W. A. l(enneow. M•n•9'•
641·o'l11. ''~·•911
19" New1>1>rt 8au!~vl•d
IRID-'L SHOP & ACCESSORIES
Trn Ch1,.nor.t S.0.16t6
1750 Hlrbor 8!vd.
Mr. & Mr•. f>1ul F, Zltmonl,
Co.owners 9 1JILOl!lt5-SITE IELl!CllON-
PLAJtNJNO-lfNGINl!l!RINO-Fl"IANCtNO-CONITltUCT ION
TM 0 .K. Eltl t:OrJ>Or•llDfl
Edt•• M. Secord,
Proltd E•ecurlv1
!?45 Ar1U1 SI., N.B -+U·llaJ
N1tl0111I Held<lulrle" 21).IW..,.1a1
1" 5, HVCIMltl Ave .• PIMldenl, Cl l. I UlLOl!RS-
SHOPPING CENTEltS, tic.
Don Kotl C"""'1nw, Inc. 6'6-JJ!I
0, M. l(oll Pre•. Ufl M011rovl1 NI
9 UILOIHG ALTl!R.AllON I.
ADOll'IOp.jS
Cml1 Mei. Lumber Ca. ~·1061
J. Hoottlltr VP 111)(1 $U1H!•lor
I Ut~OINO Ml>.lNTENANCf
U11l~1rial !lulkllnt Sll·lll'2
M1Tntenanc1 Co. SD lndu5trl1t
J1nltor01I M1lnt1nt11Cf
l<!l'I Stiver. Co.owner
S. L. S11v1r, C~wner•Mor.
0' H. Hlrbor Blvd., San!• Ant
I UILDING Mlll•l.1-'LI
L1rtY'I lulkllnt M1terl1ls, Inc.
~ L. $herner Pr11.
llSI llllk~r Street
Tonv·i 811lldl1111 Mlllt<lt l•
XIH NIWPOrl Blvd. -ll .. 1121 & I( I 9.J327
A. J, GOllUIM Ownet
J . L1mi>a11, M11r. CAMl"ER IAANU,ACTUltlHG
SALl!:S & Sl!RVtCE Mo!orw1Y Trl!ll!I" Manu!tnud "Q
211G Pl~enlla -60·••11 Pl\lllp R1t1191ber. Owtll!I"
CAMPER SALEl-ltlHTllL.S
H11ton C1mffr Siies U&•OJ.IJ
222 W, WltMIOI
Edear H•ttoo, aw .....
CAllPl!T CLEANING
•l'• RUii Cle1nlnt S4?0'0
•1 P-fl Owntr .. w 91Y
CAttP•TS, OltAl"•Rlll & IJPHQLSTl!llY
-lt••lm al C1...et1
OOl'l<ll & Fred V~rs
1111 Hert.or llvd, ~ .. 11 &
14-312• CAR~IT INSTALLATION & SALES
Aldefl'• c '""-'' ..... rus
T. & M. B1lov1n Owntrl
IUJ Placenll1
CU!PETS-ltl!T.llHL
C.t11el Town ol' Cott• Mtuo Murr1y M. ColUns, P1rt111r
$24 West lf!l'I St.-60-00.S
C.t.Rl"llT & Ul"NOLSTEllY
<LllANINO
' Du"" Riii & UlllWll1t~ry S .... )<132
J. s. Dll•lh Owner 1'50 Rtndo!Ph
CAI WASH I. J'OLllH
Ell!w Cir W1ill -J..:101
M11ro.C1lllornl1 ll!nlness
Enler'vrlse1 -7'50 Hlfbor lllvd .
l"rlnlr. v. l l•ncfllnl.
8u1!11eu Drlelaomll'll M•11•tttr
Lida C•r w .... & Poll•h Inc:. ......
L G. McKinney. V P.
111 E1•1 1111'1 SlrMI
CATl'IElt
KNl"''' Houw of Corntd llfl'f uu l<l1to1~111 Coeit Pl1n
Abr1hlm W::IP!ln, Jlfn ~41).toJJ·n (AfiltlH(il
11111111 Mn F~t C.!e•1t11 s.t-)OU
Riii~ Join Fudtl Owner
jlt H1mll ton
Owl Lllluor' -"2-«17' 1 ns w, Vk!Ofl• s1.
JotePP! Mtlll1otn. OWl\tr
Jtrry M O'M!M. M1n1ger
CilTHOLI( ltELtGIOU• •UPl"Llll
Phlllll R Wall, S.."'117
P~IHP It. Wollt Ow~ ,. 1!111 0th
CEMENT CONTltACTOllS
L. Sh•w Ind ion W •OMO
L£ Shlwc.,..,_
f.911 S.ff• WI V
MEMBERSHIP MAN OF THE MONTH
JOHN C. LEONHARDT, Owne<
Co&st Dr•pery Servlc• and
South•rn Countlas Dl1trlbutor1
2065 Chari• Str .. t
EDWARD J. KEEFE, Own~r
8 & 8 Rubber Stamp1 and i-rlnfl11•
Sil WKt l tth Street
Two Chamber members, tlvic leaders and community boosters, earnfil the coveted
title of "MEMBERSHIP !\-1AN Of THE l\10 NTH" for their dedicatio n to helping build
the Chamber's membership strength by obtaining five new members each.
They are shown here witb their "Certifcate of Award" which the Chamber presents
to those memben who serve the community and the chamber in this capacity.
John Leonhardt is 11. chamber dirC'clor, A\\-·ards Commit!~ chairman and an Official
Greeter. Ed Keefe ils Chairman of the Costa Mesa Official Greeters. Membership to
this select group is earned by obtaining five new members for the chambC'r in a six
month or less period or time.
CEMETl!llY--MAUSOLl!:UM Ii
CltEMATORIUM
P aclfk View MtmotJel Ptrk
613-261l1 J. A. Vibert Pres. PO Bax ,,36 N8
CEMETERY & MAUSOLEUM
Harbor Re~t Memarial P••k
Cemetery & Meusar~um
R. M. (Jim) Wel91!1, Vice
P~slden!-.S..S. 1151
Edn• Jacot.er, S«relar)l·Brol<er
16U Glt$ler
CHEMICALS
l!e•c• Ch~lca! ComP•nw S•9·1M1
Helf'fl B1r1us Owner 2'56 RlndO!ph
CHICKEN T•KE OUT
Ktnluckv Frie.I Chicken IMol-1111
J, H Denmel<I Owner "81 E. 17111
Slick Chltk Fried Chkken I.
COlln"'• Club OOflur.
100.0 S.nlm Ana Ave. S.A. 5"6-0"
Albllt1 J. H1dlt'/, Ow ... r
CHILO GUIDANCE
SOUit! Co;tsr Child Gvi<l•noe
111 East 111~ SI. -6-16-1133
Maurice K1ol1n, M.D .. Ol•td1!r
CIVIC LEADERS 9••be•• L. Bunker ~~2'7'
2'9 H•~· o rlve
JMn L. 01v
27111 (lt>ol1 Avt.
W.O:U? & n7-4311 E~I. 36)2
ll\Ofna• deForest
U» ~rt11aoe Tt .. IC<!'
Coron1 del M1r....ji7J..9ollCI
Gene E:w•n• s.2m nn SI•!• Sfreet
L~Rov 8. Gou M&o.\S,1
12:rt Pacific Awt.
Mrs, Elitabtlh Lhl'f'
N~t-Me .... Unlllt<I Jc/'loCll
Ol1trkl &o.,d Memt..'
101 Oar!mw1h Pl, -S•S.11~
Mrt. LUCV Mor•v
615 W. U ih $1.-54-1351
Mr•. John Nolan (Mlrvl
1010 llnltre Pl. -l'6·12SI>
M•$. Ch•rlts TeWl11kle
190 Ef:S! lllh S!"'el
G<01ge A. Tucker, Counellmlln
16'11 Mlnoru -IJA.S327-5~·1Cll
Arthur ~. Meyers &»-JJ.18
131.ll Unit 311 N. F1lrvlew GG
W, C. "IHI" Sml!lllY
1Xlf LI LlndA. N.8.-6.M·l6J1
CIVIL ENGINEERS
Franl<lln o Ml'!rll "7>3211
Jll West ltth StrHt Rm. I
eon.Id E. Stevena. Inc.
Clvll Entlneers
Oon1ld E. Steven,, _.,.,
116 E11t ltlh ~~"ll
CIVIL ENGINEERS & U.NO
SUR\ll!TORS
Raob, Bein, Frcnl & Auoclale• w. J. Frosr. V.P.-s.n?J
134 l!atM•!er St,-P,0. Bo• 111
CLE,t..NERS, LAUNDAY I. DYERI
!lt y Cle~Mrs ~8-J.<60
L. J. !luuev Jr, Ow11er
1697 Orante
Golclen H1n1111r 0.., Ct<eaners
1017 W. Biker SI, -S<ol-76!!0
J11TW$ II. Hoover. Mana11tr
l<·Mlrt D.,. Hour Martlnll1ln1
J1tk A. Moore, Ow11er--.!'8-6•!J
2200 Harbor Blw<I.
lido Cleaneri S•&-..01• Jerry J-s. Ow.,.,
1111 N~W11Crf
M~~· Cle•ne" Ralp~ Flt?P•lrlck, owner-349·1037
?66'1 NIWl>Ort B0111tward
Mathews Pl'"'' tl<o&nr" ~•f>.JOl'll'
Jtrrv Jones, Owner 551 W lflh SI.
M••a Norm-One Haut M~rllnl1ln9
Stl-13?3 L L. Linder Owntr
11'0 B~~er S!r~t
CLEA"ltNG & TAILORING
"lorllt Pro"'ss!anal Cleanln• &
l 1llorlno ~·9032
$1Nen A. F!l'!ley, Mar>e'1~•
;33 W~sl 10th SI,
CLEANING & SPECIALIZf:D
GREASE REMOVERS -COM·
MERCl.U. KtTCHl!:N EOUIPMl!NT CL EANIER·MA NUF ACTU R ER
IY1l11n Prodvcll, Inc. -S.01~
1f0 8'19" 51 .. P.O. !la~ 1708
CLl!J~;.=f:~t'll•11, Pr~l_,,
F1tner JQl!n C•mp/on Sr, Rk ... rd'1 C•lllotle Cllurc~
Borr.ta Sorlnes. Cell!.
CLOTHINO STOAES, MEN & IO'l'S
R-•• Han c1o11>t1 ~sso
I , N. il'l•lltt Mpr. 1601 "l~W!>or l
klnos Store lat ~n ~•7'1
J G. Guvolf M~· tlOO ~•rbol
(OtN5-10UGHT·IOLD-A,.PllA1JEO
Col" Merl. Allee Zlenet, Ma.,.ff•
1M NtwPVI BOlllev•rd---141•'10
COLLl!CTIO"I AGliNCllS
Calltciioll ft11''"" of Wt•lff"
O•lnff COUl'h '""J'ttO I.~. Gll)Oo $et. '" w 'l'(I SI l<~tKlnll AttOUfll A"lur••ri. ll'IC.
~S.Wl G. Tflorofl'!ft Prn.
1$m ""'"'• COLL EGll
Southern (11Uornl1 (otl~•t S•~11 fl
Or 0 . C, l\ld°' Pr••·
252' Ntwporf'
COLLEGIES-JU,.IOlt
Ora"9'1' Coert Coll-. IJ•·S!ljl 1101 Ftltvltw Ra.d
Or. ltllberl B. M_.., Pttl.
e:M.sl'11, Ot Thom.ot
A lllll••lv·Olll. 011, Ewnln9 Col·
l"'lt, W.J.llO, JeffPl'I R l(rOlf.
OMn Of Stvdllll Acllvltl..,.,
llol.sl'l1 CONlllAClO!b-.1.ll'NU.T PAVI M(il
R. W Mt:Clelllll'I .. Son• $.18-SSl l
Rollo w. McClfll•lld Jr Pttsldtnl
ROiio W, M((lt'llln $r ·VI« l'f1l. u1 c-me•cl•I w1,
CONTltACTOll~l!lll.MIC TILlf •• ' Del ,,,,.nftll ....ottl
Otl Ma"tel• o..ner 11n Pllcer.11•
CONT~ACTQRS-COHCltl!:TE
ClllJ. C. W1r'""' ' $o111, lrw;.,
54-701' C. T. W1rren VP
toSl HtwH11 8au~&ra
COrolTltACTOR~EMl!ltU.
-''i«ll~ O.ner1I 8~11Q~f\ !If Sou!PH'm C1ll!Of'nl1 S411,6.ttQ & St>=oo
C. I(', RiCMrd$Ol'I, .. •tt!ilfl!ll
UOO Aa11T11, SI/lift )GS
All•• lu!kfers '.f'l-4J4l
R. F. Garrett, Pres. 101 Newaort
W T, Covlnpton
Dl1t c...,.1rue11on Co.
1131 W11tmll\ltet Aft.
WHtm1,..ltr 638-1'12 & 1'17·'811
GlorM M, Hal11tln I. Soni 54-~I
George M. Hol1teln 111 Pres.
170 E11l lllh $Ire.I
R. A. Huft 0 111 Con1!rll(1lon Co. 1732 W1stm111,ter Aw1.
Weslmlnl!tr 6Jf.U12 & ffi-4182
Gordon G. Montvomerv
C11111lrvctlon. Inc.
Gordon G. Mon!tomtry Pre1l<1enl
SC·Tltl ol03l WHI Cllap1n1~ .,,,_
J. R11 C011•trvc11on ca. okl.~10
J, 0 . RIY Prt•. lM E11t 17th St.
Sllltll &. MUod1rn-Commt:rtl1t
ll\d\IS1rl1l, ln•llM!on•I 5-19-1111
HUC!Son S.ltttl, RklMrd ""4:AdPfl'I
Dwlllri :!006 Elllerprl,.
:!oauth Caett Con1trvcllan C$.
Jw.1 1•1 w. MlllPtt PrtL
1111 Bike<' Slretl
H. J. M Jtnwnll" w-Cantr1£IOI'
' Builder Bl 54-.o.lt 112 Flower Street
CONTRACTOltS-1".t>JNTING a
DRYWALL
Bowlno inc. J.464211
c. M. Ewi111 Pres. PO ftox 10JI
CONTRACTORS-REMOOILING-
ALTERATION•
•t11• lullder1 60""36l
R. F, G1rre1t Pres 1•31 "ltWPOrt
CONTRACTORS-SHEET METl>L
Bradll!ld M1n11f1cturlnp s.11·25"
Metal, SIM! & $"""! M!l1I
P. 0. llradfleld Owr>er
1612 Sul>'Orlor
"'ONVAlESCENT HOIPITALS
Co1t1 MP>I Co,,v11eJctnl H<nPll1I
l>i6·961t 661 Con1•• S!rtel
~Ing Convlle1c1nt HO•Pl!t l
Andr11w T. Hft¥Sll11, .. dmlnls!r1tor
IClO We" W1•nt't, Santi An1 , .... »
tOP'YING MAClll"IES, SUPPLIES
& SEltVICIE
Orantf County CoPler -l "f>.1!11
7lCI W. 19'111 Sll'ffl
ll••mcnd C. Kllngltr. P1rtnet
C09METIC5, Ckmttlc COll•lllllnti..
S•le• •"' Stnict M'rle Norm1n cos-Ila .......,,
Rvth llrr1nt owoer 1'l E•ll 111n
COSMIT1C MANUFACTUltl!ll
S1r1 Cooley c°'menci ,Inc.
6"2·1lll ~··• Coalev Pres.
ll'tt P!lce"ll• "'w
COUNCILMEN -CITY Qlt COSTA MESA-Pho.,.: 1)4..1111
A L. P•olllt•. Mayor
"'" Ph•rm1c•e•
RoO!rl M Wl11an. \l•Ct·M~YO•
i.e •wnlng1
Willard l JOfd.tn. (011nc1lm8n
"' Archltl!tlJ W!llltm L, SI. Clt lr, COUn(llmln
i.ee ll~rber s._.
GNrtt II. fucker. Caundl.,,.n
>te Civic L'adtrr
COUN TltT (LUI
Mes• \lt•de Coun1rv ctull J<lf..mn
R • Win, Pu•l<lent Robor! l':tllV. Gen. M9r.
3000 CluD HOlltt Rd. CRATING •
P•e·Fftll Crate Co, J•J.tSSS
F. E. Decterd 0WMf '6CI W. 1'1'11
CRl!Oll REPOATING
C•t<!!I Buteau ol \'ftJl~n
O•ange Caun!v 6~·9lJ1 J. Mt~•
Mor 7" W 20th
OA"ICl"IG a MOOELl"IO
Gw,n'• Schoell a! Ch•rm •"II MOOtllng S<ol).2'61)
79JJ Har bor BoulewM'd
Gwtn Wl11lemi. 01rPCIOr
O•l• ,ROCESSING
l111ev••led 0111 Coroor1!I011 6116-1•1'
J . Heh•erlft, Pres.
12&J F•ll'Yie.. Rd.
DELtCAlESSENS
l(ftal•n'i Houie ol Cornpd ~
llll Brl•lal-Sou., Cl>l•I Plau
ADrthtm 1t1al1n. •rb.-5-IO.f012·7l
0ENTl5lf
J•eK W. "'"°ll!WI ODS Ro11trl G. Arw;lrl'W> 0 05
5t!v~ Atlh(no, OrlfMIO<lntl1I
Ge••10 1<. ac~'""'" oos
Ll11Vd A. l""""lt . DOS (9rl L (1~nlu, 005
RlCl'lltd P. Oo~ne, ODS
P•ul J. H""'l!ton, 00$
Schuyler C. Jovner. O.-th<..aan!11•
L_I, A lt11n OOS
Erne11 L, KOlllan DOS G~r11d W McC•elliln o0~ Terfell L, ltoot, Or!l>cdanl11
WtldOn $Cllorg 00$
Lt • O, $l1fne5, Orthodonhl
OEPARlMINT STORES
K Mft•I '1i·l'tOI
ll;obfrt M, Sh'w Mt• noo Hl'bor
M•v (Q!Tlatnv !:~tJJl Roy Kl•u., Gen. MP• "lJ B•l11a1
J c. Penner ComP1ny 116-JOn
F Parttr'M\11'. JJO!) Hnrll(>t
Rt1MTl'S oea•rltnf'n! S!Otf
54-1111 J & P. Reinert Owner~
llH Newoort
k•fl Rotbuc• & Ct. C1!1lot
Selt1 OH. 54~3W
5oulll COl11 ,.111• IU:S 8•1Uet
JOH'lth M1K1tf, Mtr.
St1r1 RPfbvcl! & Ca !-IOoJDl
Sou"' (Ollll Pl111
JO.lfll'I Mtlu!f, MPr. llll 8rhltl
wtll!t Fr11111 ~
II-E""'"°"' Mllf, JON !ll!ltol
F. W. Wool-n..-.s.....m
John G. lotcl\, Minne•
5o11n, Ca.11 Pllll
1:m Btl'lol $1Tttl
F, W, WoolWOO'l~
0.•ttd A, "GffrY' Mlrt1 ..
MO-
llllO H1rtlal' B0111tv1rd
OUt•CTOltY l"V9L .. Nllt$
Htrbor Tt...,_ OfrtelorY CP.
Uti MOl'l•Wll, N.I . •.a.J177 a-,. B. Thamhll~ 0-
Lusic~ llr0!Mr1 & Comoenr
60I E. !lraedw11, Alllh•lm
lloblrl L Lusk<ty, Jt.
V,P,.:sec,.t1rv-TrN•urer n 4"561J
DONUT HOUSef & SHOPS
Country C1ull OOllUl....Sol6-'19t
A, J. Hodle o owner
200olO S.nt1 AM Awe .• S.A.
k.•lv't Carner OOnul $1\oP &
Hot Lunclle1 54-0t'Ool
K. M. Ber11r Own1r 1400 NtWPOt1
WlndM!U't OOnll! HOUH S4·2 ....
Norm• Mc8rldt Owntr 2'0 H1rbol'
OllAnlHG MACNIHES a SCALl!I
......,,...NUl'ACTVltlNG
V1rd NIWPOl1 $.tl-7U.o
T11omt1 OJbar" VP tJ00 Ftltvllw Ra.
Oll:APERT CLliANIHG
Coll Dr1pery Cle1nero 641~111
Richard W. Roulle~. (p.0w...,.
Rub'I' F. J1ou11e,, Ca-Owner
1102 N-POl'1 Soulev•td
DRAJ'ERY NAltOWAltlf &
WORKROOM 5UPPLll!5-
WHOLES .. LE
Sou11141rn Caunllei Olstrlt>utor1
JOIWI C, LtoM1rat, OW.....
?OU Cllarte. $1.-S4~i.
DRAl"lltT MANU,ACTUlllNG
llfftl'I Dr•perY Serwkt ...._Mj5
o Kenney Owner u• 1 Monrovl•
DltAP'Elttas. WHOLESALI MAHU·
FACTUltl:RS & IEltVICE
CMtl D••P!ry Servlc• .........,1
J, C. LeOllhlr<lt Ow..., :IDi!i Ch1r11
C1r1 •!len, Mantller'
DRESS SHOP-$EI! WOMEN'S
OltESS SHOPS -'NO WEARINO
•PP AREL
ORIVE·l"I FOODS & trF <'.'IEAM
T•$1tt Free, al Cost• Mel•
~l R. " I, Fl1her co-ownero
2966 Brl11111
ORIVl!·l"I RESTAURANT
McDana1a·, Dtllli! tn Hembutttt1
6'16"09'9 Lewis M. Sima/I
F••n<:hlse own~r-oi>er1tor ""w. lflh $1
MtOon1td's Or!Y! 1., Hlmbu•tl'•t
.S.S-99.&J Donald McC1•.,.han. Mer. 3U1 H&rbol' 9oulev1rl!
OR''G STf\<IES-SN P~•r-•ci.1
ORY CLEANING EOUIPMl!NT-
IM1rllnlll11t S11H).
ONM Erruh•ment S.!t~1110
\l'lclor R. Llndernlnn, Pre11ct11111
630 B~•er SI.. P.O. Bo1 llrt
OUPLICATING MACHINES,
SUl"PLY & SEltVICI!
Ot1!\le Couniv Coaler -6"'-1!167
730 W 19th StrHI
l!arll'ICH>d C. l<Uno!f!r. Pa'!'lnor
EDITORIAL & ADVERTISING
Sl!ltVICE
Jowce Edltctlll Service 5"4-6611
Coay Wrlllng, FeaNre & J~cn.
Wrlll11t. Publk1!lon Design.
Pllolo rtadv COPY Otfoel. Jo,ce
S.ive<-Ovmer 1500 A.dim•
Sult• 20$
l!OUCATIOr.-l"UllL•C
ALSO Sl!E COLLEGES
Cir• K. 11-11 Alim. AH'I. Biii.
Se,vlte1 N•wPOrt•MPll Uhlllea
0111. 6'6-372'-Exl. :I.I
PO BOK 1361, NI
Chil~ael Tyi>ew•lting School S'8·11!t
Typ-rlllllt In 10 leHan•. M1ud•
Ellf!I Ch!lca.ol 113 Oel Mar
NtWPOrl·MeJJI Edvutlan AUOCl1tlcn
J40.10'2 Nin• Hera•
3120 SIJl'NITI
l'slle Miiier S'9·11U
2151 OeSo!a Street ELECTRICAL CONTltllCTORS
S. E. Brig .. & 5.,.,,, Inc. ''6.Ut6
11. o . 11ri1rt~ vP na w. 20th s1
Tallon Eleclrlc 6116-~1!96
llfon T!!lan Ptt•. '17 W. lttn
ELf:CTltlCAL rOWEll TOOL
REPAIRING
R O. "Ruts" C!er~e •.a·1.0• 151 w_ llllh street
ELECJRIC,t.J.. SUPl"LIES 6
FIXTURES
Con$01loSllf(I ElecirlcAI Suppty Ce.
'4MIM' C. l.91t!\l<J M<1•
IU W . lf!"I
ELECTllCITl
Soull>em C1llto<nl1 EdfSOf' Ce,
S0·1Sll A. L. Gf:l'"r Mt>'
lSQS Me•• V"dl E11I
l!LECTRO•MECHANICAI.. OIEVICES
ANO INITltUMINT'S, rnits.
Sl8co. Inc, Sl•N11rd EleclrlcJI
Producl1 J"-:io.l E F. Gi rdner
E1tw::u!lve VP lllf l!ftker
ELECTRC).M ECNAN IC •L
INSTRUMENTS A DIEVICl!S
C~rOndek Elecllonla, Inc.
3011 EnterPrl-5'5·111?
O.V. RllltY. President
EL l!CTllCf.MEC HAN ICAL
ltESl!AltCH & OEV•LOl"MINT
Y-llb--LI .. US&
J~.YJilMr ,_ 01"Ct~ tll w,sl 1tlh St•ttl
ELECTRONIC H•RNESS •n•
CllllLI! ASSEMILllS
Swli' 1ndutlrlt1 54'· .. SO
T P Swlu Prt1. 29)0 Collt•
rf1..ECTRONICS
9•b<:oc• Elttlronlc• Co•-•llon
"'11nufK1url119 S..O.Ulol
J-Endicott VP lsal H1rbor
W L Blllee:k' O!r, Ind, Rel,
C•vltron Eltctrolllcs, Irie:.
"" BrlltOI lo• 11U. 5*1f'" Jldl Cu"nln9h1m, Cll1. <1' lotrf
I J, C11-1-11e. St<;,·ntA•,
Cotlln• A..:llo t:PmPMr IJa.0.00
R. O, Jlll'lnlOll, vice P•1110tn1
-Gfntrll Mtntter Mel Scl'll,,.,,
Ol~tor Pulltlc Rtl1lions-Advertf1Jno
191!!0 l•l'lbaree Rd. HI
ELECT110NICI ,,.,..NU,ACTUltll
Otlnc1n EltctronfQI, Int.
2liJ Ftl"lltw Ad~I
Oon•l<I C. Ol.lntl~ Pfftldent "-•rd CJ.Irv, Adm. M«, SLfiCTllONICS MAHUPi>iCl'Ultlltt
ltll"ltlt•NTATIVI
Wllll1,.,., ~-& M1rtl11, tnc..
S.0.32U W. A. M¥tlll P'•r'"9t
?tW ltlflll01flll
ILICTllOHIC PARn DISTRlluro. Otwlltc~ "" ,_. ..... ...,,. Q, W. Llltk. a-et
ILaCTllGNIC PllOOUCTS &
fWITCNIS
Malhr $111Ct1HM °"'"""""' T. W. Hllllrfloll't. Chllrm.1'1 ot ... ,,,
LN Ktlllf'tMn, Pl't$ldln!
ltob9rl IC. YOUf19, (;M. MIMMr
16"111 MOl'lmtll Sl.-U>-101
I MP'l.OTM•HT •OEHCIES
IJllllT* Vnllmllfld Affl!CY J~ H. Atlitl'I, OWntr 41 E•tl 11111 St.-6'11-1410
Ar'"" EmalOY"""' Atfl'IC'f 5'1-11N
Catlnne Smhll M•r,
21MJ Wnlclllt Orlv1 SI.Ille 2AS
N-1 kacll
Co111mbf1 fmalCl•fN'fll Agency 19'.U H••bor etwo. -"·2-~1!
Jlfl\fl G. L1w, Ge""'ll Mllnl!!<!r
Htbfr91r Prnonnet AttftCY '°' w. 1711'1 Sl•tel -6'6-<l"l
Htltn A. HtOltttr. OW....r.
"'-' P1rsonne1 •11tnc' W -lllO
NOftl Hoflm1n OwM• w DO\Otr or. s..,ue 21 NI
Riii~ RYln -'llet'CY 6"-"4S<o tm N.wocrl l!ou1ev1ro
Urklul l"IK-t AttncY
Wllll1m M. lllct. Owner
111$ P•'1< -'Vi!. -1'641JI
liMPLOYMENT •GENCY &
Tl!Ml"OllARY OFFICE SERVICE$
J, II. J'lttel A!.SOCltlfS Agency,
Inc. .04110
J. R. Pierce Pnulaent
Mrs, Gordon M1n1ger
1111 N•waort Bl~d. !llr. Qllkel
fNl1!Ni lll!P•lltS (Sm1l1)
SMALL l!LECTRICAL APPLIA"ICE
Rt:P-'tlt
Jtt L1w11 Mower Salff & Sf!rwltP J1c~ E. T1rttu1~. Ow'"'' 6•2·2211
U6·121 E•st 19th S1reo1
E"'Gl"IEERING, CIVIL Ii U.ND
SUR VE.YORI
ll<llll>, lleln, F•01I & A~-. )•8-1713
W J . Fro•! VP 13' 110(./1..sler
ENGINEl!R!NO 5EltVICES
R. M. EngJ....,trlnt, liw;
1500 AoSlmr-Swllt l09
Ra':lerl McCOY, PrtJ,-5d·117'.
ENGRAVING
Hayl'I H1rtio.r En11r•v•1111 H1rl1nd W. Hoyt, M91'. LI J.9'll't ''°' W. 11th SI. P.O. 8oK 1ll
EN , A ,N,.-IHOUSTRl.t>4
r l'),o,i.M ERC I A L-NAM<;PL• TES-
l"AN EL$-(OES IGNl NG THE
UN USUAL I
Cof!ln1 Engr1vers 6'2·'8lS
71t W. 1911'1 ST., !tulte "0 "
NII• Collins, Owner
Noet11 T•Ol>l>y & l:fl91ovlnp Co
6""31•1 M. & E, "looCk, Ownet1
11)2 1!11! 16th
ESCROW COMPANIE.I
lulldt•I l!""row Co. _.. • .,,
H. w. Endlca!I P•e•. 110 E. inn
l!QUl PME"'? RENT ALS B101r Equipment Re1>1~1~ s•5·•MI
G. Finch Ow"!f 11~1 Ba•er St
lled·E·Ren!als 1"6-l.f!l1
Roy E. Gammill Ow11tt
,2161 Harbor Boulevard
EQUIPMENT SUl"PLtES-PHOTO
COPY
American Copy PTed. -"46·"116
K. L. Griffith. Ow11tr 196 W. ll!h
EXTERMINATING & 5lRUClURAL
P'l!ST CONTROL
B1rdt n'• Exletmlnt!lng Co.
$.16-.$$10 C. O. Tlloll\llson Mgr
•96 Rar1dolpli
Co1!1 M"' Ewterm!t\lltlng Co. (!11
bu1lfll'H In Oreruie countv Slnct
lfSS)
1aJ4 H•WP<lrt Blvd.-6'16·1/).I
Mel~ln Limb, 0Wf'ol!•
FENCING & ORNAMCHlAL IRON
Pvrt mld Fence Company S.OS-9061
Mrs. P~lll1p1_c...........,r 76(1 W. li!h
Fl!NCING SCHOOL
Unl<llll S!Udlos -6'16-SOU
lW Pane. •wenut Wllllem M. Rite. Ownff
l"llllEGL•SS, RflNFORCED1
MISSILE COMPONENTS
OmDlll!ndrP.SChWtl'ld. Inc. S*-'100
R, L Crllll Mtr. M!g, 1131 8'~H
,tNANCE COMPANIES
HouHllold Fin.Ince COt'p. 6 .... ~•16
J • .. .,,,.,u M~• 1#91 Hart>D•
Pl1111!AllMS l'FL.fW.411 MANUl"ACT'UlllNG
United l"lt r1>1tlon1I Gu" Gun WOfkl , Inc.
'l)O Vktorl1 SI., C.M. "'2-41$\
Je~oD Chrblianien. Pre1111en1
P1uden1 & Los A11gefel lFFL·?S~J92).
FLOOR COVIEltlNG5
(triton's Linoleum SlloP 6'6-1901
E. v. Carlton. Pres.
1S32 NIWDOrl Blvd.
l'LOOR CO\IERING-RESILIENT
H•rber FIDO<' Cowtrlnu-Sl.8-'aJI ins Newoorl Blvd
W•llace P. H1rbtr. OWM•
FLOiU~TS
C!llll Meu Flori.-!, LI l-6071 117 llrOIWIV
Al & Ml!tY snaltr, Co.Ownl'rs
Flowers Fr-DtMu•t ~••If OeMurl TOih owner 'l.o& N1woort
FLOWERS-ltTIFICIAL & FRESH E~o!I~ Floral Ar• -6'12·"°8t
Sil W. 19th St.
M•itee 1(1wa1T111r1, Ow~
FOOD J'ROCESSI NG-PIE
MANUFACTURING
Corlemaor1rv Caoltll Corp. S6-SSQ
II. F. 8ulltr Pro•. 29'9 Ranoolph
FOOD-SPECIALTY STORE
Hlc•Of'Y F1r1T1S O! Onia -S<G-6\l'f!
ll3J BrblOI, So. Caeu PlaU
Wllll•m l . Tnompson, Ow""'
FOOD· TO·GG-oCH1 N ES I!
T•l's Kllcl>tn '42·3132
!ltrYI L. Kw1n. Owllff
1•• H1rbor
,000 TO GO-,IS"I & CHIPS
H S~I! E'lll, F\5h & Chila
1150 H~<bor -S"6-19JU
Gfar91! o. Ro101a, Ow""'
l'UltNITURE-1".t.CfORY
CLOSE-OUTS-RETAIL
-'PP•OYIKI F"'rnllllre Ll a-966(1
J . H, De1n1 Owner
11Jt Hart»r BIV<!.
l'URNITUlll! STORES-RElAIL
Alotrl'• lnlotlo"
1015 H1tbor Blvd. -M6~•1
let AIPl!rl, Owner
•II•'• i<urnltu,. 5"6-341
A. 0 Kl\10.ml OW"fr lJCO 6<'.Mm•
H J. G•rrtll Fur"llU•t 646-0215
nts Harbor Boutn••t
Martin Fumllute J .. Slll
l . Mlrlin llW""r 1116.! H1rlm• R1!p/'1:1 Furnltur1 J'l<U9J
R. Martin 11Wner ll!Ol NfWl><)tl
R. & 0 . Fuml!vrt Marl
1U• "''""""'' Blvd. -"1"188 Rt11bt!I Frftdmtn, Ow"fr
GAGI!\
Dtlltank Corp. S4$.l).IQI
It. L11tle,_ Pre1. t1' lla~e•
G· ''"E OOOR CENTER-
SALlfS ANO SEltVICE
Mllltr Ooa•1, Int_ 6'1·lll0
A W1noltt owner.
11N N~ Bl""
GARMl!HT Ll!TTll:ltlNG Wer!ern Al~lt!k-..k0.!'656
2' .. R1n<1olltfl
DOii 1w1n90, OwM• ...
So··•~fr~ r,.,.,.,~. Gt • r-.. "~ • ·~~•
J1mts w. Dtd<er, Loc:11 Ml"'"'
1l• B1a1dw•v L•9una 1tac11
P.O. lax 1017
GAS OET•CTION DEVICES -
MANUP-ACTUlttNO
GtMrll MOl'll!Cn 5'0-llf)
)111t E111tr1Wb•
Fr11111 Llnv1n,, P""ldent
ltllPh lerl1ln1, G ..... Mtnlte•
~l!-11: -.t Sl!Ml\LllEI I ~ ,r A(•
TIJltE StltVO'I
Pkllup P~111a11 Gt•• m12u
C. V. P'ldl~ o.tl\. MPr
1m P11cen111
81NERAL CONSTltUCTION
J. R•v con1tl'llC1lan co. """'tu
J. 0 . II.IV Pre. 111 I!, 1111>
l tF':'S
NOid; T.,_t.y & l!llPl'IYlnl Ci.
•'6-)U1 M • £ NOie\ owntn
lilt E 1'1h SI.
.l,Tl-IMl"OltTt-PA1NYINOI
Arlll 64«a Alfrtcl C•luhilll.
~, Mt E11! Ull'I
OIPf tHOI" lov ,Klary -.., .... 7
tlH Hl rtlot 9el,lltv1nt T. w. Gonlorl. owner
•uSS--.lUTOMO'Tl'IS-Cf:N I It Al
Oict,..,_,'l Nllllnll Auto Gl1sa C:9' us Jl:od'lfttw &a.oo&I
-H. L~ & Mllbll OIQI.,_, ~ H1l..,,,.I Auto Gi.n Co. J'MJ21
J1:1111 ~ lillP".-ISli N~
OLAU OINEltAL lllT.\IL 9 IALIS Mini ltldl/M' ...... &§00 1.0 w. 11111 ,,_
Johl'I MtH1m1re. 0....-
0LASS-CllT.,l I.ALU
H11111'10lul,~
ll-Hlllll °"""""' Q l".u111tne
G01..P a COUNTitV CLU91
Coate. MtM Goll &
Covntrv c111i-s.c-noo
!l:onnlt Jl:tN, COl!Tr•cl ,..,.,..,.,.,
Oh-tc1C11· of Goll
Norm1n Ol!vw, FoOcl & '"'· "''"· 1701 Golf Cou"" Oriya
GUEST MOMI!
¥111k1 F11r G1111t Hamt
Gl"if'I'• MflltlMllt. Owntr-14'-;nu 201 w.~. For111 ROPd
iA'tJIN-.ltE ITORl!I
kerm 1tlm1 H1rdw1i. S....70IO
I<. 1tlm1 DWl'l4'r 2666 H1rbar
Kirll•'• H1raw1•1 ~IJOO
G. C. G!bt>Oll5 !AIC· lJDO HlrllOr
Tt Winkle Hlrdw1i.
110! Newport 91Yd.~IUS
Jallh Vogel, Owner.
iAWAUAlt GOODS
H1w1ll1n Ull Aot•rel !Ml.6571
Sommv Billet 0Wntr S20 E. 11'11
HEALTH SPA
Hol!dly HNlm $pa Of
co.11 Mtu, lnc.
UDO HlrtlOI' llvd.-$.4"3:161
Jeri>me B. Kihn, Prnl<le11i
l l>e L~au-Malolll, ~Pl• J1:1S11ur1n1-
Tner1J1tutlc Pools
ti !he Alraarl, P.O. Box 115
8orttll0 5Prl~g1, C1111.
II J. A"""'ll• EnltrPl'IHI
Belll•mln J. Audto!H, 0wl!ll'
165-SSOS & l4·110l
iE•.LT~ & PHYSIC AL l THER .. PY l!QUIPMl!NT
Juli• M. l urns, 5*U2t 136-1561
1805 La511i.
HEATING & AIR CONOITIONINO
,.. Grahem Bros. Htltlng & Alt
• Candl!lonlng 5'6·1653
I R. Gr•lllm a1rtntr WSJ ll~"liOIPh
HDB9V SUl"PLllS & CLASSl!S
E~otl" Floral Ari -.. 2-40t9 513 W. 191~ SI
I Madoe Kaw1mur•. Owner
HO SIERY
Alber1'• Hasi9ry--S.0-MI
Alllc•I H•vtr. Ol•lrl(1 Man111tr
lJll Brls!Ol-Sa. CMll Pl•••
HOSIER' MANUFACTUlttNG-
LADIES
Hanes Heil!.., OIVl!.lDn-Hlntl
Corp. SI0-34.k Dile JohnSOtl
Man111tr ]1'40 P111!m~n St.
HO~PlTAL I. SICICROOM IEQUll"·
M:NT-PARTY ITEMS Ii TOOLS
RENTALS
A to Z Rental Centl!r -•"6-l!IO
1109 N..,.Pofl !loulewl•O
Lee G•rber1. °""""' '40SPJTAL5
Costa Mn.I Me~fJI HOIPllll
Oavtd W, L1wrtnce, Admlnlstr11o•
Ui-113' Thomas F Abbat Jr,
Gen, Mgr, Xll I/ •tCM'!a
HOit Memorl•1 1· ·~lfal 541-MSl
Wllllal'l R. Hv~··i, Jr Adml~.
:xn N&WPCtl B '·· N,B. Pal ?tbll, Dev,,opmt"I Olllc1
Assli1a111
i OTELS
Tne >iewparler Inn ,...\/00
Richard Flinn, Pres!O.nl
0 . Ren, Vice Pre•ldenl·
Ma,.1gl11g Olnclot \IOI Jambor""
Rd. NB
HY D1tAUL1CS fOUIPM!"'T -HY·
OltAULIC CONTAMl"IATION CQN·
TR,OL -OCEANO~RAPHIC IN·
STRUM!!NTS MANUF-'CTUlllNG
HvdrO<l•I•, lnc.--6"6-l•S.O
1711 Monr11vl1
JP\e M, Molina. Cantral!er
IMl"O 't T ·IEX ~ORT ·WHOL l!SALE
B~tton Tr~de A'!OC.-54!k216
F L. ll~rlon. Own-r-U01 Saker
INCOM~ TAX SEllVICE
Km-mer Ta~ .se .... 1c1 & School
1·20 Ho•bcr Blvd -5''1-1.0•
I •try l':~mm~r, Owntr
INOUSlRIAL HEAT TREATING
M•l•I Servic' (Pm1>1nv I" Wut lt'h 51.-548-lltl
c;race E lllellel fl•r•, Ow""'
!NOUS lltlAL LE-'SING
8ov" Enlfrprl:e' ,......B91
Wl!lls Bnvd Owner 1115 P19centl1
IN~UllA,,,.CE
llt•rbawer & Rutt, Aoents S"-•371
State Form '"• 2190 Hlrbar
Broc:k & Hal~U ln>ur1nct
IRtareoentTno Trev.in, ln1.. Co.I
Norman Broe• & Die~ Howell-
•gt~ti nn Ea1.1 111h SI
646-l81 •
A, G. ''Al· Carter ,...9?21
S!lle Flfl'l Ins ffll Bl l•tal
Tom H Dovie, Inc.
Tr1velu1. ln1uranct-S..6-1lln
1500 •aam>-Sul!e l!O
Lfe Err.1nuel-Re11•e•~ntlng
5•0.•1'9 U79 ror11nder •DI. C
Amerlc•" Mvlu•I Life '"'· J~·•~n & McCaU••y at~n•• )•1·1011
Slate Farm ln1. Ill Eis! ll!h
Cl1lre M. "lel'll>n-S•f>.1lSO
5ll W, 191'11 Stroel, P.O. 8ox 366
Robert IC. P•ley & All« .• inc.
M?·6JOl'.I •7• Et•I 11th Streu
Oon Rhoadt>. ln1ur1nct Braltet
1163 Sa,.,_r Or,-S.00.71SO
Ken uwesugl.Unlt Man•!ll!•·S0-tl'10
Sun llff! ot C1nad1
1500 Ad1m1 •Vite JOO Henry C V•ull!lll 5'1·~7&1
P.O. Be~ ]5]
Ro~rt J Wlgmcre Mf·03''
Wl9niore ln1. 79Jt H•r_.
1NSURA"l:E IROK IHlS
P1rkt•·0011bltdtt 6"6413'
G. Ooubltaee aer!nu uo E •?t~
S1>e1,.·Sam~ Av-ncy 6"6-ltJa
1611 We•1dlll Orlve
TN1m11 H. Shell"•, Parlner
C. It. 5Piller, Co. j.jl.Jl11
1111 Wt11Cllff Orlwt, NB . Charles R, Spiller, Ow11e•
INlEltlOR OEStGNElt5
Nani• Wllll1ms lnl•rlori.-.5'6"300
1'H1 ltiNIPIDh A\19., P.O. 8a~ 1Jlf
Paul R Wllllam1, PrMl~nt
IHVISTMENT~
Th• lluccoll (Qtnpen•
George lluccola, Ow11er-S.O·ll3l
dill f'.lrth Sl .. N,B. INVESTMENT SICURITll!I 6
ll,E INSURANCa PROGRAMMt,.G
Eugtn!! Brawn-Cam1111nw R!P••
senla!lve-S1111se1 Liit ln,11r1nc. Co.
110 Georgetcwn Lene end
Mu tuel F11nd Advlwn, Inc.
1?12 N. Brc,dwav, S,A
S•0.3511 t Bu•. 54'·13]1
IRO"' PROOUCJS-ORNAMENTAL
~rlt1n Iron Crin 6•1·1llJ
D. MMler, P•rtntr ,,. w. 11th
J W. Hattlfl~ & C-ftY
JOJll Ba~u -5-0-1JC7
J, W. Hatfield, Owne•
JEWELEltS
J c H11mp11fles s.ie.J•Ot
J, C HumPll•le1 ownff
!11l NowPO!'I
J,_11 ttv JO&f'Ph. S.00.906'
lllJ llrlltol, $o. (Piii Pll U
Joieoh I. HITli!tlh. Owner l<lr~ Jtwelfrs WS.94b
H •usllft r:_.,., 1XIO HtrW
ll'OVl!n's Jewelers lJll 8r1i1tol Sl.-Sa. CMll 111111
J1mes Greene. M1n~1tr~lO
JEWELERY !IND LOANS
Cas11 MtH J""'"'ery t. LCll"• lrw;.,
s.ia-uu o. J. R1en1 Owntr
\Ill N..,.1>0rl.
IOB SH0P1"-MACHIPll! WORI(
HwtrOll M1nu11cturl"9 Ca. '-'f·7'11
J . c. Rehlln• owntr t06 w 111n s1.
SuDrtmt F.111lneertna 6lol.6-0l6
0 . Rftdl OW!'llf 1m "8" ,.bicenll1
l<H!lTlNG MILi..
(otl~ .\111• 11,nUllnt Miiii, 1 .. c.
S4t.QlAt L1w~ MtYefl. Vlct-
Pr.s•derll·Mtn•te•
t'19 llltlr 5tree1
L-'MP SHAOllS & CUrtOM
LIOHJINQ
M• Johll -+0.J.!10
!•,111• Pun"' Owntt
l3' E•ot ll'lll Sin"'
U.NO OEVELOPMl!Nl
C. I, Se;tr1lrom " Sons 5'6.0ll•
H. I & H, S.l!tlltOM -fl
nu F•lnlew llMd
(""""'9'1:111 I l11C1111tr111
51" J011<111ln Auocl•te1 s ....... -ti IC.G_M_r
11511 NeWllOrt 1.oulirottr•
LANO QWNlltS ANO
LANO 01.VILOl"•llS
Thi lrvl.., (<1. LI, 4-0110
W. ll. Mii'°" Pttt, lfVflw!, Cllf.
tf\'IN lnclllt!tlll C-lt•
Jann E.. Mu•Pl'I•. Pfftldelll
,,,, C1"""11 Or•ve
l".O, SO-4"°4, ll'Ylne-IJJ.1010
...l'INO!IOMAT ,
Ft'H Dry L~ll M&otno
It. $d\fttkle!' o-.r TUIA HlfW"
UWM MOWllt ltll"lllt 9 SALO
F1utkne"' ,..,_, snot .-.rm
Ill. hcluMk. H. 1'1ulkMr OWMn
1122 H1rllor lloulWl fd
37,500 PER MONTH -450,000 PER YEAR DISTRIBUTION OF THIS MONTHLY DAILY PILOT TWO PAGE REPORT
' ,.
\ • '
ITY I
6 No L1wn M
G N•~•r•mt ,M l.~.r. Sh :ti IN. Wl!IC
Fnncl1 -'· WM MOINlll
Jtl Ltwn M"'"' ..,.?JU J1cl
111-11 E. lt
11••R IJt l11IJ• MC(
f11 Librll'Y f
~1 .. ~c•l-Mes.
ltO! fole,..,,Ort
1,1 l"ISURAH
IOI" M 1.JQO .,.,
1•· • •<11m'
IGMTIHG F IX'
K<ft R~I LIU
IJIP folPWPOf ~rnnelh S.
1GllTl"IG FIX
•1110a ~IKI•°' G <,(:l'IOfnl!.o
1lHOGll•,HIC
111GAf lVl!f
c1111•C•UI -
!ll/MOl'l<Oll
i'IOY'•IO Ja11o Robert Hlrr
1NGERll
Slr>Clf't flUll
)$0 B East :
5.t!ldr (1tls
Miii Gra~
1QUOR SlORI
Boe' Pil'J L ~ I SIK>h•
noll NtWPG
(jlll'I Fine V. :ui east 11
F•t<I Stlrlln
0...1 Liquori ·
1125 W. Vic
Jooeoh Miii
Jerrr M. C
ITllOGRAl"Hf
Tht Prlnt•n I
N.W. Elmor
1111 """'""" OA1'1i SoLl!lltrn Cllll
11.ao,1rl1U
I . !.l!Oei>llf
OCICSM1TH
... &T.loc:I<&.
ltlll "B" Bl
TPIOmlls Tn.
Ace Ke' Se< IUJ Newpe
J. P, Vtlc
tle<•POfl Hitt
(. R. (lwlh
UI RICANTI
.... \ Be1rlnp
R. A. Ol•Cll'I _ .. _
UGGAGE &
UTAIL
Rco!en" LUil
Oan11d I . s.outh (Ml
UMBf.lt CO#
C<>1l1 /NH L
J, Hm1tller
'HINE l'AI
J1•to Englnt'
J. L. Crull t
CNl"IE SHO
Coit• Me11 S
E. F. Hero~
Aon's Cu•!on
II.fl W, lnh
John F. J•
,W.CHINE SHi
LATHES -Marte 5peCll
11i0 Moore ~lcnard H;
MACNINE Ta
M•HUFACTI
11\ISSI LE I
COMPONEN
Criterion M•
Htnrv Brei
ZelPn1 II"
J G S&'N
Marcelle c
Ol!lte Mai u.s w. 1611
ACluNE WU
COMPONENl
P•orn~• M.r.
H. llet;e, T.
'111 Pl1~n
GNET!C Rf lAPE-mtg,
Gl!cnlcte El
S ~r1ndl C
)IM Canvo
l"ITENANC
ING, PAltl':ll
Mor;1n·s M•
3136 lpwa :
~. l. Mo.-.
AN•GEMEN
Sttrllnt Bu1i 150 E. 111
Phollp S. I
Accounhng
MANUFACTUI
SPECl•LIZE
REMOVE RS ! 11'.!TCllEN E
I W1J11n Pr<X
1.0 Brlvt• JQl\11 w. s
.,.AR!NE Cl.N
Mlt·Can -
15lS W"t l
F.,rence '
MARINE EN(
P••ts
R1>110r1 "!Ill Rotoen &
Ill Wt.i
MA•INE EOL
N...,ao,, Sui
16JO Suoe• ~otoert F,
M•ll:INE llAI:
R c. M•rir
Llt Wu!
Ila• C. Ci
MUllNE INF
SAFETY DIE
\ltt Une Car
!Sub. cl •.
16!0 Super
C1vla s. T
MlRINE SUP
C1Ner Crof
J. C•rvtr
~Jtl"IE UPll
.. t!n1 E All
•l!ha E. I T!Q Wnt I
MIRll'.ElS, GI
SUPER MAR
l ltef1't0n'$
9Ja \lerm
Ato~1 !It!• ,
J 1m11,_
''d!t!·M••lf
lil E. 17!
Chu{t Lt' 9&·$~'" 811
fol C l!••n ..... o_ <'•!
l}l)O H.-b
N .,~H B11I
'I F1nle• l~• Pln!r•
I P Won.
l>••cna Ma
P A Ch•v
!• ·1<>y Sic
G••lt lo"'
T•• 5nu!hlai
W1~.~·n C
1 II Siar"
P 0 Bo~
l~oe<k!~ ,
!,\gr
l • fir•
'l E OvP
1 ' Toe: 'rll J<hn J C
/SU ti1w1
M•IS•C-'Nr.
Y•l <!loTOR!
J~ll11.• 11
l .. •1 La Sl
M•TTll:ESSI!' I >t Mlttrt• no E,,,
o,1,~r~ Mn'
Ml~Ti-IET r~. c-•• ~· ( I •f &"'""' • llu * W1u Sl'>f't-~
MfCHAH!CA
Dl!VllOP~
¥AWUPA("
PN! Doti.,
P•ul A ,..,. 11 ....
MIDICAL Cl
Br1.io1 P•r•
rn e"'' Aamlnitlr °'•"at Cr81
" TuKJle IDSJ El (,
•
DAILV PILOT 9
WHO'S WHO 1IN BUSINESS
:ITY DIR ECTORY OF THE CLASSIFIED MEMBERSHIP ROSTER Of; TH ~ COST A MESA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
'·
PM~-OW,., .S.lOI
T. l . f '4nt. MaMtlflt Olr, ltlO .... , ..
CWTICAL ll•VICI
Smll11 o..tk.t l Senllct j.M,.~
J. 'W, St!lltlo OWMt 11111 f . ltlh
Of>TOMITlt1STS
lt-lof Y. Cralt 11.0. 1616)1 no E.Mt 1n11 s11 .. 1
Of't Dt lt1, CrtWl(lfCI lo tftl'Clft
$oft.21•2 11ff N.-.1 l fvcl
Dr. 8, H, IUtlnt J.&fld ,. ""bv< 81\00. Or. $NU·CIOn Mt rW ll,. 0.0.
Wllllt F ror.t 51or"
XIII llrla1o1 J.ICl..h..'
Or. L, L. l<llc:l'llOOfl ~..US
UI We..1 lftll llfffl
Dr 8ernuc1 SI"*! ~·1111
MIY Co. Sou/h C.0.tl Pklu
ml l rltiol
Or. LHler S. Zifl "'6-•f tf m I . ~II 17Trl Slrt "
PAINTS-PEltMALUMI! COLOll!D
l l..UMI NUM COATING
CM!t Mew Jt•cl!tlor ti. We141nt
1411-103> "'""'' IC•h OWner U9J New_.! Blvd.
PAINT STOlll! & ,.t.CTOltl OUTLET
Wtikff Ptlnl I. Chenllc;tl WOr'k1
J. 0 . Wtll<er, OWMl-4'2•S17'
l lt Weit 16111 s1ree1
l",.Pl!lt OISTltllUTOl-
JAN1TOll1Al "lt0DUCTS
Plcllwlck Piper Products. Inc,
Oorrntrly Or1n91 COii~! Peper Co.I
H•l PIKtnllt Avt.
54-!5'11 or 5411 n
JltlPh L. autcl\tr Jr .. :Dn!1~n1
PAINT 11'11> WALLPAPI:•
loul1 o. S.nlk P•l111 & Wal~p"
Ca. 191! PIM!ntl• An. "':l-1141
PARTY FAVOUR~
GIFTS ANI> IUPPlllil
Party Plta·Z•• 5*-nll
G. M. Tubach OWMI' :IOU Ha rbol
l'ERSl>NN l l MlillAGlMENT
SERVICES, PU.CIEMl:NT
L11 Re lnotfl PtrSOMel S...1111
4500 C•tn11111 Dr., Newport 1kac1>
Lli Rt!ll<leri.. QwMr
~•HIW!'CI Ptr.onnel AUG<:. &
Allena' 40-141 J, F. l ou bol
MOr. tOI DOYtr Dr. S\>Ue 102 NII
PHAltMAC ... S-ORUG 5Tl>RllEI
Ccllege Pharmacy 5<16-3191
G. A, OrtVl~t OwMr 440 Fl h Or .
CrawtorD'I Pre..crlpllon P1!1rmea-
5'1·225l Sam~I D. Crawfc,.,,, Pre1.
llll4 NtWPorl
Cr•wlo•D'I M.tw Vlll•tt Pll1rmac•
5"16·1144 Stmvtl D. Crtwlord, Prt1.
lOJ.J El Camfnc Or.
F011tr'1 P111rmacy ...._lt.Sl
A. E. Cr1yd>M Mgr, $It W, ltll>
MtW V~OI P l>t rme<:J 2'11 HlrbOr !l l....,.-5-IM77CI
Nortll Orug--546-2171
1110 llali.er
Pll\k'I Costa Ml!M Pl'lllr....ey
S4-ISIU Alvin & LI/CY Pinkie~
Owner• 1110 New..on
SIY·On.Drw. Inc. "'2.:1211
Krn HYder, Mgr. 1020 lry1~ NB
$oulll (Giil Drugs, 546-11373
llll Brl1tal, South Cot ll Pita
M1rvln LtYJ, Pretldtnl
Vl1t1 DrU9,_."2·<dOCI
121 W11I 191h Street
PHOTO FINISHER ,
PHOTOGRAPHIC & CAMERA
EQUIPMENT
D1v.'1 C1mer1 E~t.lwln;e Ml •213t
D1¥1d B. RDberh OWntr
0~ E. 1711> SI.
PHOTOGRAPHllER-WEOOINOS & .MARINE
Roblfl F. Mre" -kl·4Ul' 2S3S Wt1t Coat Hwy., N.B.
PHOTOGllAPHERS-l'OllTllAIT,
MARINI & COMMERCIAL
Swenton'! Pl!olatrePllY iolf.257!
L. M. Swen1on owner
Uf BrOlld\ll1y
PHOTOGRAPltlC 6 C.l.MERA
EQUIPMENT
c.1·1 C•mer1i, lllC. i•tllJ c. SllMe'f Owner UIO Newo>on
c orrlP "'' t 1mer11 "'6-1138 R. J, c 11rrl11n Owner SX1 W. ltlll
p HOTOORAPHY-INOUS 1 RIAL
ADVERTIS ING
Mckoan Pnarotrlpll'f-~1 ~
1363 l Olllln Avtnue
Ho1mer C. M<:Koon. owner
PHYSICIANS' GUILO C1!Uornl1 Pt1yslclan1' Gulkl m 111~1r s1. -~n1•
RalPll K, lltnWl f11• Manegl119
Dlr~dor
l"HYStC1ANS a SU RG EONS
Fr1nd 1c;a J , AlV!Wt ' MO
Alan II. llarton MO
John I(, Chllnl MO
J, W. Cc:ddl119tan MO
RlndOI~ S. Col~'f MD
llantl II. di Sliva, M.O.
JKk l . H1990Dm MO
Horton Humptnyi.. M.O.
F. Krtl!lft', M.O.
0 . Mklllel Macl-MO
Rt lnllllrd ""-rtMtl MO
Hudl J. lltls MD
P'HYt!CAl THIERAPY
Ort nllt COllSI Cent
P~yll~Hlal!I> Nie -E. -1?f'd>-R!!911 PhYI 1 T 1p!l1
21S M<llt DfJv -~ ' l"IANO, A ORGANS-TI JL
Ward's 61ldwl" 51uOl -._.1.Jd•
C. o. W1rd Own.,. IOl,,.ewl'l!rt
Pll!S
Riii!! JOI!" FllClgf C1t1rlnt h .. '°'2
Ruth Joan Fudge owner
S\l'I Htmlllan
PIE SHOt> .oMrle C1Ht"dff'I l"le Slloc> No. 10
C. L. Ctltendtr. MCrll1rv
Herb Wirt!\, M§r.-4.(2~ m East 11111 Strttt
PIPE $H0 1"-5MOKI! IHOt>
Stnelk1 $heck -•.r.1.1n 1
"1l E. 171,.,_ $trHt
H••CIO 0. HanlOll. Owner
P ll'l!S AND SMOKERS
Tht Tinder BoK~tU1 3llJ llrl1to1, So. Co111 Pl11•
S~PMn Wiison. OWN'r
PLAITlt$ I EHOINQ & UTIUtslON
Flbre-Tek COl'l>Of'tllon
ervc:e Rekl, Pn!1klen'I
Nell G. Pe111<1 1n1 Anetlf:lnl A.,.,_.......,,
PLUMllHG & Hl! .. TtNG
De Ge1re'1 1"~119 Service ~ T. DeGe1r1 Owner
ffl West 1711> $!., un11 C
PLUMl lNG ANO Hl:ATING-
SALl!S & Sl!llt VICE
H. H. !-lOlbrOOI< Plumblnv '*"" C. F. OUflCl n Owner 711 W. 191~ rn. E•rr1 Plumblng, Inc. M2.JIJl
E. V. Heflell11 Prt1 1526 H-r1
.. LUMllNG-Rl!PAIRS & lll!TAtl.
Jae Cerln P1umbln1 Co. i4mt
J. '-'''°' Owroer 111s Superior
.. LUMllNG-l'UCTUl.ES &
SUPl'l tl!S-WHOLEIALE
Our~ff l'I~ & 1-'V U..7180
J c. ome. °'"""'' ,.,. f1rm1 ... 1 WIY
PLTWOOD-1.Ull'lll!lt
ll UILOlltl HAIDWAllE
llKtf Ptywood JAt.)Oll
C. E. GarlJer, Pr11kltfll 17! &l~tf
POOOLE ~OOMINO &
.. ccBsto•111
Amourt l'oOdlt "•lact JSolB H.....,.,I 1 1Y!l.-6'7·511j
11oo>nlt a. ,.,r>0ld, Owflf•
l'OSTMASTI R
Jofln 6 KlllgU IU ~SJlG
Mlln Poot Otflu l.lllml SI.
l"OW EJI TOOL' v. 8 ,.,..,_ Ca ... J.s7Jlll
O. E. ~ VI' 7o. W ""'
l"OWIR fll.AHSMISSION
EOU 1 .. M•NT ._, Btl•lfltt & Al>rl l-1 ......,.!
It. A. 01-.oll,. W CMlllOPll«
0WMn 11,I MO'l<CVll
.. 11 r c1110111 MACM INl"'G IJ• .... I
Ad"' M•n1Jf1tcvr1111, lllC 11' 1!111 P111l11lno ,,.,.,-l i0"110
A""""' L. J:lm..,.nnan, Pru!"-"'
f'RIHT•ll N"'"""'1 TY-n1n.-. .. -tu•
1m Mor1rov11
Jo.IMll L. Plll'Wr, Ow""'
Pr1ftll111 Mir'! of Colla WIN
to1 W. 11ltl St. -,._.,1«1
A. Wllfli in HtM'tff', OW~
PRINTI RI ANO ST•ftOMI RI
I & I R\llllllf M1mp a. l'rl!nlflll
S4-DI M, I IE. ic.tra Ow!wt
ID W, lfll> 11
;
tl'l!I Ort\IMI ~ ClrtMr ~ ...,,...,. Mtl'.--uNlt1
171' TUlfh -f'.O. .. 17!P ......, .. ,,.,_ • t..ll!Mr•f'M'
M-4211 J. W. t4-OW..
,,,._
~-'"""" ... sa.»» C. M. LI~. OWN!f t\O Wtst 1'1t! SI .....
l"llot Prlpflf'll9 "'241
R. M. WIM "IAl-fl1tllr
:DO 'Nm Bl ¥ SIM lw•n-ller9 Prl"lllll SolMl71
D. l'oraMOll. R. ..,_ Ownlrt ,,, ll'OMPWll'f
lt b Prtnlltll a V1rll'folrtto ta.
IM1.JQ:l1 -tllftl A. a.urrm tr~
Tllil"I A. •-Jr, c..o-ntn t6fl l l fl(<d.
PlllNTIN4
W , f'1 SPled Prlfltlnf ~
f-1 G. MorlftO 0-
145 E1ll 11111 St..t
lllllH11N~ PU.Tit
PRIHTING-AODRISSIN~
MAILING-L.ISTI
G•rllA .. PrLntlno tAtl Mtllll'lll c..
Solf.33U J , F, S.Olloclt Jr. Dwnl•
202• N1WllON
t-IOYl'I Harbor E11tr•vlfl0 )11:.9'1'
H. W. HO'll Mfr. W W. 11111 •1 .
l"ROl'ISl lON4l-OTNE1$
J. E.T. 1tllll1r
PUILIC l •l.AflONI
8ennrn M.....rtl•l"ll 1 PuoilC
Reltllonl llOO C1mpon Ot. HB
MllW lllnnttt OwN!r $.lol-4Glt
l'U&S
Slue¥ Sw1n l,.."30
II. F, Ctmtroro Prt1. t71 W. lfl~
l'UMPS
l.T.T. J1bKO, ln<.-J.1$-ll:il
E. C. Slort, llEllecllllv.! Vk•
Prtsldent-~nertl M11111Hr
1415 Ot!e W1y
RAt lNG
Cl rello M1tne1os, inc. -5.o-3Sf1
111] Rtn<talph
AnlfW>n' M. (frtllo. Pres.
Thomai l. C!rello, VI«. Pres.
lt .. OtO IROAOCAST ING
Rldlo S!illon KOCM·FM
Ho. 57 F1Wllon llltflCI, J't,11.
IMl-1121 Ga•y eu,,111, Pr•1klenl.
ll•ILROAO
Mulhern P1C1flc Rl•IW•Y co.
KE 1 .. 731 1631 S. ltwlJ, ANheltn
G 11.. MOl'ln 0 111 Frt & P•N .... I
REA,l lill•TE IRC'IKf.l'
111w & Beien Re1nw 67).f?OO
J . L. Sml!n \IP
10'U lllllXJe lll•d., NB Ind
1401 E, Coest HWy., (llM
C F. Coltowcr!hy " Co. 1904 H•rbcr 61Vd. -~'1·1111
C. F. Cott1wort11v, P1r1ner
~lie91 Re1l1V ~~ s. T. Mever OWntr UOO M a!N
Casl1 Mest ln"'tlmtM Co. S.7111
M•rlt Le1, Pre1. ltn Hewpert
01vid1011 Re11tv 54-"""°
Jl ¥fll DIYkllOll Owner 1150 Ht rbar J.B
Oo,11 .. WOOd RH I Ellllt Co. 270 E. 1711> St.-54-lta
Cle!Mfll C. Doylt, Ctrl l . Wood
GIO<len M , f l, 67).tJOO
GIO<len F1y Pre•.
'10'1.S W. Btlboe 81YC. NI
Tiie Ged°'1 Co. -.5#-20).S
R. F. Gel!Ctt owner
6IO C1mpin Or., N.8.
1111 HenCrldr.1 Ra11 E1t1i.
14'1 W. a.ktr -~Ul
M. M. ll8ordl '4(ill$
Mitt l 1ll«C1 owner :no E111 111h
Ficn'O W, LYlle j.4.tftl
Fkn'd W. LYlll Owner SJ W ltltl ......w Vt,.,,. Rtlll'I 5'6.Jf'O
J. 8. WOil! VP
~ Meu Vtro. Ot.
v1rv1ni. H. -rllOll 141m
'ltll H1rbar Box U'l'
HtWPDrt H1rbor.(OJl1 Mtst llolr<t
Re11tors-Wllll1m C. Rine, Pres.
Glenn M1rtln. Exie. \/let Pftl
401 N. Newpor1 N8 "*6·1111
Pftul, Wlllte, C1m1han Rtt ll'I t:o.
546·$.140 A. Go<don VP
1on.c e a-er
A. J, Ptllttrlnl Rt l! Esttlt
A. J. Pe!legrlnf, Owner-t.G-CUO
"*4 NtwPO<'I Ill"".
Perrot1 Reilly k1·117\
17T7 Or111ge """"""" ECmolld M. P11<rot1. Owner
•· C P1lltlt Realtor S41-t5Z1
1109 H1rbor R McC1ro11 OWl\ft uac Newp0r1 l"-Real E5lator1 IM6-1111
Ed Rlddlt Re1Ucr, l..c,-146-1111
10I Vlclorl-EO Rlddl1. cni..
Rollm111 RH I E•ttle ~
M. Rottman, Owner
tin F1lrY!ew
ROber1 0 . Va11 Oder
"'10Cl1llld, Nell Martin
1'1 lltker St. W.H11
well• • Mee•"''-Sd·n 2' R. McC1rdl-, G. N, Welti OwNrt
1110 NewPOrt
W1lk1r a. U. "5-f<ltl Ernie H. Lelllenc Miii', __
'H1' Harbor
Cl1rt W. Wortmen 442-tllll 1711 Wnlt llfl Or. SUl!e c, NB
lllEAL U1'AT• COUNSELOR Oil" I. H..OdllllOll '4•J511
111' Or1nve
llllEAL ES TATE
Ol:VELOl'ERS 1ft• ACREAGI w E. t.achentnV11r Re1nor i,.t.t.3''11 IJ6a NtwPDrt
ltl!Al ESTATl:-INDUITRIAL I
COMMERt lAl.
Goolstn a. Clar-Anoc:ltltl
Wlll11m D. Cllrk, RobH1 W, ......
45'0 C1mDt11 Or .. N.8.~2055
•l•l ESTATl-MOTEL l'ACKAO.
IN-SIT• FEASlllLITT-
CONST RUCT ION--M.\NAGllMl!HT
Glor" B. Sb1rP1 RUll't'
'14 E••I 11111 Sl.-646-0291 •1Al ESTATE RENTALS-C:OM-
MIEll CIAL &UILOING' FOii Rl:HT Mr, & Mra. Cl'ltrlts M, Jot\lllOn
ff+.504' 320 Ai.llton Orlw , lG!lllfll 8ffdl
ll EAL l!STATI SALESMEN Ml/"f Gralllt m W ·110 & 6<12.f1to
l'OO A.I""'° N.8.
REt;OROI NC, PROOUtlNC
PHOHOGRAl'H RICOROS
Or1nt1 COl•I Recording Sf!Jdl1
16tl Whittler Aw.~I°"
Wlllttm G. G11Thrle, o-tr
RECltl AflOH-f'AMll T
Arnerk1n Bll111rd$ Silo.,.
LOii ~I OWN< 1.U Els! 1911'1
REl<ltlOEaATION -ITa UCK FAlltlt;ATION I
ThttrnobH1 '"· 6'2.QIJ L. Rldl1r11 SOI!'! President
163 Wiii lllh SI,
RI NT .. L I OUIPMll!NT -TOOLS-
HOSPITAL & PAltfY Nll!OS A la 1 Ren!tl C11nt1r-4"2-1\IO •eot NewPfl'l flcule¥1ro
ltt O..rbttl. 0WM•
Rl!STAUlltANTI
ArnltOl R11t111r1nt1, 111<.
11-E111 17111 51. -W ·4'H2
Ph!lllP K. HOnlftll. 'Pres!O.....
c11ar1tt S. CollNn. 01r.c:1..,
01 Publk R.tl1tlon1
B .. a Kn19hl 1te111ru.1nt M4'11
W, P. Dr191n11 "'"· :IDO fill 1711'1
flGb't •111 flVI' 1Mf.2ls.I
C. E. MeltOll Owner 15' Ea1t 11111
&uroer Clllh!lv lM·27«1
O. K•mmtralt OWrwr 1tal ttlr-
C11pl"' ReSll U!'lnl 111·11t)
E. ''1om" R1khtll1nl o-
1410 N!"WPC<I !II....,,
C~ott V 546-195J
J1ck Owwtr Owner Soul~ (Olltl PllJI ))ll 8 rl1lol ~I
Oltk C!lllrch't R~lllllltlM,._.,,..1·15(11
R. A. Chllrd\, owner-U'I NtWPOrt
c--..·1 Rt1!1ur1nl
OIMllr House & Coel Mii h r 1.o w. ,,,.,.,,~n'
-c111r11t o. '°"'"' c-
Dlnftr's l ltJ SU."" )11' H1rtl0!' 11'111.
Ad!'letn VIN!llt ll....-t. Ml!'lf ....
Don Rowi.'1 -,...,,.,,
lf'IS H ... bot l tvd,
Ell~ a Rlllh Mlrtl-. ~· H1mD11llflt Htnrv't .... 1111
H, ~r ~r lUI Pl1unti..
Htf'Yr<I HOllAf Jl"t111r111I Sou1n Cont Pl•1-= l rl•lol
Ja. D1rbr , M9",-l46401l
How1ro Jallnto11'1 ~
E. T, P .. llodY, l"'' ,150 H•rllor lfli.t"lllllonal ...... ., ... ~ ..
~.Q1 w. .......... o-r.r :IDll IElll 1'1tl It.
lfVIM'I .........
I, I. 1-1¥1n 0WNr tit W. ltll>
191" 1!09tf' R1Ul llf'l nt Jolt-"*
A. """°""' owi-t tJOIJ Hw....,,
...
~ ALL COSTA MESA CITIIENS AU CORDIALLY INVITED
..,,.-"' JOI~ IN THE CELEIRATION OF
COSTA MESA'S
FIFTEENTH ANNIVERSARY oF INCORPORATION
BUFFET DINNER AND PROGRAM
Subject: "Costa Mesa's Next 15 Years"
Sunday, June 30, 1968-6:00 p.m.
COSTA MESA GOLF AND COUNTRY CLUB
1701 GOLF COURSE ORIVE
Adult Buffet Dinner ···························-················· .. -· 4.00
Children (under 12) .. ·-.... ····-······--·······-················ 1.75
ATTENTION
Fi rst Annual
Mens City Golf
GOLFERS!!!
Costa Mesa
Championship
Call the Pro Shop 540-7200 fo r Starling Times After June H
• • • • • • • • • • • • • DINNER • • • • • • • • •
RESERVATION
••••••••
l'LEASE MAK E YOUR DINNER RESERVATION BEFORE S ,,M, FRIDAY, JUNE ?S IY RETURN·
ING THIS RESERVATION FOR M WITH YOUR CHECK MA DE PAYAILE TO THE COSTA
MESA CHAMBER Of COt.4MERCE, !it) WEST 1,TH STREET.
Att1d11d i1 chick for $ .•....• , , ., , , . , ••• for ,,•••,,. •dult dinn1r tickeh 11 $4.00 1ach
•~d •• , ., ,. , c hildren'' di11n1r tic.th •I $1.75 11 ch for the f ifl•1nlh An11i¥1n 1ry C1l1br•tio11
of the l"corporetion of lh1 City of Co1t1 M111 11 th1 Co1t1 M1•1 Golf 1 ~d C ou11try Club, on
Sunday, Ju111 )0,
NAME ....•••• : ••••••••••••••••• , ••••••• FIRM ••••••• , •.• , ••• , •• , , ••••••••• , ••
ADD RESS PHONE •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •
T • ...,.. CONT•O\ .. ,.., b'Ml 1n~~llll C:.. ...rm c. 0. "'*""-•. ... ._ ..
fNIAT•ll EftVch C'-M ,,....,. ~lit
J, !HM,. Jr. '"-llM M-.
F• loufll C°'" l'lt• l'Mli"" :Mii ll'IOot ....... SoiH711
HtfTY l'rw•-. Me111w
llrMM Tllt•fl'I ~l M. Slier ()wJl9r' HM ~
tllt.IS ANQ un1~1n ,...,~,nr.~1
.:;, s::i::. °=""-.!;.~ J. Hiii OwMI" 17'2 N~
TIRI Ol•ltlll & ll!R'fl<S-
P-IRISTON•
Fl,..."°"" $1orw -~M4ol ~ts lat! 11th Slrtlt Cti...c.tt .... .,.., MMe ....
Tl•I OllAL.I R.-a. P:. OOOOl.JCM
J-. TIA ~ Inc. IMMO'l·t:a
I . F. Goodrkll »If HtrllOI' ttV4.
EtMll J-. PrMkllfll
nRI DIALIR.-OOOO't'U-TDUM .. LIM TIN Cl.
111 E. 11111 II~
Robin I'. LIM. H rt-
T1RI .IMO SlllVIC:I CClllTllt
1'4•rbor Tlr• • ~ canw * w. ltlh ,, ......... ,,.
Mt! .. RMOt, Owl*
TITLa INIUltANCI COMPANY Fll'lt ~n T" .. ,,_,,.,_ C..
W. G. Mt;i/!1#'/
GI N. Mall! St,. ~.-J
TOWING l lltVtCI
wisa T-sanolce
Oln A.Iller•~ 2'V $. 8tlltal-MIMJM
TOY~•TAIL
1l'lil Toy HOUH JO..J4$1
F. W. lt\lldl P.-.a m llE1tl 11'11
TRAOINO STAMPI
Sperry a. Hlllcl!llOll Co. 505 N. Mt!lft, S.A.-$4).1'11
Mn. RoblnlOll. Mll'llger
17ot HIWPO'f
fR.\ll l R. .. AR.111:5--MO l lLI NOMl!S
llV H1rb0r Molllle Minor ~
I . Y-Owner "6 El" tlll
Four Se1.on1 Tri ller P1r11 ~
G. Mlr1l11 OWner 10t W. W1'-
0r1"" COISI Trllltr Lod•
"" Whinier A¥e ........ l!M Wllll1m W. GUl!Vlol, OWtwr
SuburO.nl .. Nd>tle HOfMI t!llllhl
SIS-17" l.. M. Rllllklnt OWner
'11" 11rltttl Pl11'P«l Moblle VLllltl U..NU
F. H. Sia Own1r 9G:I W 111h
fr•lllr Town 54-1201 8, 1tobl111t111 OW!ltt w w. w11-
TllA\llL AOl!NCll'I
(OSI• Miii Trawl A91M'1' ~
J. 8. Herm111 OWnlr :uo East 171h
K1t11n'I HouM ct COITllCI 8-1 Wlllhlrt Fallerl l $1Vln81 j, l oan lttO~PINO (ENTER.I Mtsa TrlYfll AlllllCY ~•111 m t !lrl1tol, South COllll Pll JI AHOCll tlan H11'9ar SltoJIOlncr Ctn,.,. SI~ w. l . MtCl•IMnf Miii'.
Abr1hlim K1Pl111. Prei. 5'0-to2:1-1J 1w Newport lllvd -IM2•0'11 svoney Shir owner 1110 • ..., 27U Har bor
Tiit l u1u, SP• & Thor111tutlc Pool Wlllltm T, Bfl'1"orl1, B•l fldl llf ""' S!1rt kltt. .cs Trans GIOOll Trawl l vre111 At Ille Ah11art-P.O. BOJr 175 Mtnlllt<. Clnf!J,., CllY ...._5006 R. A. Pllllltr 0.n, #llWI',
Barreto Spr ln91. (1111.-161~ UiW SHOP ANO 1•11v 1c1 Sin Jaequ ln Auacl•lt• ~ lUO Nt~ "o."l,•.m;,,~}.·1t,""'er!::~~':'s.i. .. 7M ll1y•1 Saw Si1011 '46-129l M. K. Gltdl, ""9•· 17.SO H1rb61' fRAVIL. AOl!NCll~ ....
.,... ~N; .. fltvtl .. N,ll, RIY B~Uhlk Owner 1!'1 Hl rtlor SOlllll Cet1I Pl111 Wakllll Tr1v.I S.rv10I
M.ill'r1 o.!""Re1taur1nt & Bar lcR•EHS RITAIL & WNOL•SAL• Dl3 Brlitot-~ T. A. Oobble J r., "1r1111r 6'12-'l!Cl C. Rou p,11, Ac.,,. lndll$1rlll-Ul-S~ Gene A. Robens. Gentrl l Mllllt« 112' We1t<:Jlff Or., H.l ....... 2"3Q'to
1u Weil 19111 160 W, 1711'1 St. Wetner EKller. Olrldor TROPHll!S & AWAROl-
M,0-••'• Hemlouro<r Drlv. In Jofln MeN1m1ri , OW11tr P11b!lc R1l•ll0111 & Adv1rll1l119 PUSLIC AOD ltlll ITSTl!MS ~· Vl1t1 lrlopplflll Gt"ltr •1s.tlll7 H1rbor Sound -"6·~0 IM6-\l'lft-Lewl1 M. Simon, Sl!ClllT.141:1AL Slll!VICE H. B. Trtulwel11 OW111r W Wtil 1111> llrHI
FranchlM Owflllf' 0Per1lor HtllN'I St<rtl••l•I ltf'lke 1'1h • Pt1ct11111. 1131' F11lllM011 JIPl'I Gtf'llV, Owner lli W. ltll'I St. 22tl F1lr¥I-Rold, Suitt 1 • McOonlld't Htmbu1"91r Orlw In Help M. Jorit.cl. OWner, "'2·3107 llOIN• CONTllACTO• TR.Ol'HIES AND I NQRAVIN
;UWtO OOMld McCl1111ll1n. Mer. SECURITllS DOl'lt E. SFl'llltl So!WMS Haeod Trwlly & E119r1yln1 Co.
11'1 H1rbor Roblrl E. H1rt>l lOll, 0 111, M1r, O. E. Sm!!~ OWMr 116"3U1 M.. & E. NOid< OwMn
Mtl's Oii-Rt111ur1nt Mulutl Fund A<tY1.an. Inc:. 21'5 Mlndi>Z. Or. 102 EllT lMll SI.
1505 ""411 Vertie E11t~ 1,lt N. l roaclwtY. S.A.-flGMl-•LICllllCAL & PAINTID TROPICAL l'ISM & IUPl"t.llS
Sll11!tv See Kii Y'M I nd P.O. !!OJI 1n C.M. ..._ Trudi 'l.lltel-1119 -""..., SOVlll Se&J Tr911(.el 1'1111 S.-7"1
John Kim Fa1 YH, 11r1Nr1 .stl-Ull &. Sll-4"0 au "A" Wiii ""' ll. Ecrw1rd a Slltron S!\1bl1191r,
M'Goo'" lnc.-'C!·IS3I Sl!MICONOUtTOR ANO Htrold M.. Gr1y, OWl\ef °""1\ers
Marjy Bryman. Praldlnt $ClllNf lFIC l!OULPMINT Dllbt EIKtl'lc91 Sign ~"'° 211 WlilCNI. CM.-ll 1·1ff1 Cllrl1 K•••rnPllOIL ,.,,..,..., GTI c.,.._.11on -$"'6111 w. 8oulk• Owntr ,,7 Rlndolpll 1n 'G• Rlwfllllt or .. N.fl,
1'00 West Coal HW'f., N.B. DIN EMlnffrln9 OIY11lon ll'llEllOOMITI R & TACHOMllT•ll IM6-l536 Mlftl Me•1t111 Re1t1ur1nl ll?t l -n AYMllW SALIS .. RIPAlll rY .. EWRITIRl-IALLI. l lJIVICI
$.17 w. 191h S!.-6'12·f164 R. RllOOlPi'I, l'l'«lklenl G1n•1 Slllt<lorl'lthlr $ervlce COllll Ofllc• EQUIP ....... J4-J1'4
Jote' Saucedo, Owntr SyOnl'f' Dllc, Gtntrll M .... ter 117 Eltl 141t! lt.-MI 6-fl'JCI W. Touell. Mtr. 1111 Mlfbar 81¥11.
/WJ/Oy Oldl'I 1'1$11 .. (lllpt G. Botlflt--ownet UnlYtrlll'I Of!ICI EQUll"l'Mnl
C. H1\'den, 11r11111r-540-26~ l ll•VlCI! n ATION & OAltAOll 64Htlt Sl1n Rlct G4-n. M1r.
1170 61ker SlrH t Gent't $trvlct Cenltr-$*7305 IPDRTINO 0 0001 lfl3 "'''*°
Mr. Ste1~ W-11112 ltJ E. 1111> St. Colli Mtt• GIN'I ROOfll UM••<". •·••u>ACTUl•• 22t7 F1lrvltW R;oad C1cll E. CufTY, owner Joh" G. Jun9k1ll, OWM• .. _. .....
Ronald P. kl'lmllt. Prt1l<»nl SEltVICE STATION & COMf'LllTI 1"6 tft<Wporl 81Yd.'"""""1t33 IP.I.TIO)
Mewporter Inn 64+.1100 PRIVl!NTATIVI MAINTINAMCI! H1rt'1 Sporting Goocl1 "'""" C1Ulort1l1 UmbttU1 Cl,. Inc.
Rkh1rll Flinn, Presldtnl SllERVICli' Joll11 Hlr1 Dwflll' S3I CtfllW 29n Ctnl\11"!' Pi.c-~
0 , Rost VP 1101 J1mborl!t Rd. Nfl Rinllln'I Slll>tr Shell Strvlcl l .. ORn CAR R•v A. 11:1111111, Pra !dlnl
()011·1 F1rnous Sl"""'d H1mbut9trt JUI Htrtiar Bl\ld.~ ACCl!SSOltllS I SIR.VICI U,.NGLSfli'RIN8 & ORA,.1•111
·~ Al~rl Qdtnlllll OW!'lef' Harold E, l<:•nl!lft. Jr,. 0WMr J1mt1 l imited 6ol2.oo«i Bur9tr Gutlll'f Upl\.ollltry j,11.lt!J
211 f l t! 17th Slreel Sl!llVICE STATIONS R. f. J111111 C...OWMr J. 8Ur91f' Owner
0.lstlnal Sf'tl!J.11 F'lll'I 'n ClllPI G.ASOLINI! & OIL. UM NI~ "'Wnt 11'ttl tlnlt H
Jl'rry R.. Rt1m, OWntr......,,.ilOf Arlln'1 Gull Service ITli'IL. a ALUMINUM 115 E11f 17111 Slrtel
50I' Werl-1fltl Slrl!ll 17«1 H-1 81'14. -IM:l-414' l'A•RU:ATION GIG UPflOl1NtY -.... Utt P1!1.(Kl>ldltn "'2.,IN Arlin $1i~rd, Own• ~UMINUM WAR IHOUl!Ne Wllll1m I. GetwleL OW111r
T. A. C1rru11'1 "artner llr1dy'1 VUltte SMH llrvlc• R1g111 lralllen su.&226 Mn1 Upf!ol1h'l' S.IJU
lll E••I 11th SI. Sof0-17.U l . J . Btady Owntr G. E. Reg1n Owntr Ofl.A H1r1I Pollard, tt11tn Htdlu!ld
Tl:e P1llsldt1 -~ 1°'5 El Cimino tt71 Gr1~ LIJ'll Pt rtntr& 2!1JO HtwPOrt 11....,,
12fll P1lllldlt, S.A. C a. J Ef\Co SerYIU--.wf-1313 STOCJ( •rrtOKl!IS VALVll a CONTROLI Oan Linh, M1n•1M1t J. L. Glsrlel Owntr Gcodbocl &. c •IYler1 Rt 1!111r1nt, ll'IC'll<'PllrlNO :JOO Ellf 11111 'f OPl'IPlllY Cle-VII Co. {Ml1.I 5a•2'l01
Rene BOlllCI...,, Stcn!t•,.,-·frtal. Lii Ca rter Rlcllf!eNI Roblrl Shodl. M1ne11r. S«M!21 D. G. Grl.-ld P!'llt.
3J1l 8r1slol SlrNI 1106-Sot/lh 261:1 Hlrbor l !Yd. -S<ll).OJ31 ~~1!1M.~'o. llOll o. NJI PO BDll 1325 NI
Cot1! lllt~3UD l t1ll!T V, Ct r1er -Owner Mttrllt, LYndl, Pit~, f11nner VA•llTY STORll
ltnd P90bltl 6"11·9'HJ D111'1 union 16 t!ld Smllll, Inc. F. W. Wlltll-1h-54'.snt
1144 MtWJIOli Boulev•nl m1 Newwt 111\'il. -141·7tl• S0·7'U2 1~ N. fl roadw•y I.A. John G Bo.Kl'!. M•-r
Edward V•nc:e, OWMr 01nlll s, H1mmKI< Ill, Dii ier 1outll Coe1t P .. q llllkl'f'I Pilla IM6.f2'QI Hirtlor $MU Strvlcl ITJIUCTUJIAL AOHllllVI S & DJ3 8rlllot 1"911 •
C. R., .V..WllUOfl. Jr. ~r. Dft Herb« 81....,, PU STtCS F. W. Waolwor11'1-14'.3t21 nu Newport ...,ml & k1·7U2 N1rrrx;o Mll•lll1 D!¥11lan of !ht ~r1r11 ,,_ "GlfTIF'' M1r1lrt. Mtr.
illlUtr SJs•-HOllM No. 11 S.·'21' Rid! M1n1et11, °"""' Wllllllktr Corp .. J(l.114' uoo Harbor lovl..,.rd T~ E. Rkhlt<li. Ca-P•rt.,... karbor Tlrt & Strvla Ca11tet W. G. H-.. CO!llroll•r Vl!NOI NO MA.(HIN lt
Caril WnetlWriolll, (1-Ptrlner .WOW. ltm Sl.~·139, 600 Victoria SlrMtl L111n·Lyn1 Mf1, Co
791 E1•I 17th NII• Retell. OWnef lttlll btt Manuf1cturlllll P.O. Bo~ l n 4 -s.IO-SMO
Vt rH1Htl Rtlllvrint Hie.kt<'• Servlc1 (R lchlltldl 1•10 Plactnlll Sf.-11"2·171• Wm. l Yftfl Pertrton, ow...,
1617 Wtl!Cllfl Dr., H.B.-41.0.4MG ~ta E. 17111 SI. -"'2·4'11 James l lr>Colft -Pra !clllnl VllE Nl!TIAN I L.IMOS-lSlt S~M .. I
Jalln (!role, Man•lll!r Rlch1rd A. Htclttr, Ow~tr R1y W. Pk-tnt -Viet VARITYPING & PRINTOIO
•ESTAUJIANT-CHINESllE w1m1m Hcldtll Rlchllt!O Prttldenl -M.lrktflne TAB '"'"""' ... V1rlfv1•n1 Co.
Mtl'I ai,ine._ Rt tleuranl 74' W. 19111 & W1111c~.olf.7t/it SURFIOAltl> MANUPA CTURINO 142·5027-Tam A. flt\1111 Sr., T.,..
lSOl M"' Verde E•••-~•Ht Wm. I N1ncY Holdtn, Co-otw"''' Accurate SYtl1m1 A. 81ume Jr., c_,..." Ed. KOll!tr'• Slle!I Station Sil·S221 191• Pl1Ctflll•-S.olf.34N 16,t 81t1coc-Stenli!y Set Kl! Yet Ind E. Kogler OWntt Jalln M, Redflt!d, J r., Pl't1~t VI TEll1NIJl:IANS AND HOll'ITAL Jan" Kim Foy Yet, PINMrt tot w. ltlll St. Coll M AnllJlll HO II t lll!STAUltANT-FIENCH .... ,...,n•-Cl'llY""" 541.nu IUROICAL SUl'Plll!i -,.:.,..."", L D ,_,.,·.~" Gtr•rd'I Reit1ur1nl -.S•l611 ''"" ....,, ""'' IALIS 111111 lll!NT.AU ,,._...,, • •"""" 7SI st. Clalr tllrll!OI •St, C11lr ) O. J. Johnson Owner Sa11'1 Survlcll Slrppllll ~ Owner ollO East 11th Gera rd Tiii,.,, owner 7'00 w. ltlh 1'· l1rry Seal, Dwfttr m Ctt1I" NeWPOff H9'11or V1tvlnlry Hottthtl lltt NtwPOl1 1ts Motst Drlw -Soll-13'l Rl!STAUltANT-MEXICAN f'OOO l "''' U11lon Slrvkt I URPLUI STOR.IS Mltlon P .• ,_,., C-
l • Potadl -4"2.n7• 2211 HIWparf BIYd . ..........0, Gr1nl'1 Surplus Stefl ~1... WA"••••• -,.,.,. 2200 Harbor Baulr.r1rd Leonard L. Htoln-, Qwner Butl Gri n!, OWMr .... ..
n111t1 J, Cowr, l)wner MIN Enco Servlct -Gar111 17JO Htwpllrl «KP...,.l'tl W•ll Otcori
T .,,,, IN 1111 H-11 •tw. -"6--ttU lltl!S TAURAN --~--Towlno ~tlP• IWIMMIN• l'OOL llltVICI Gwe..lyn P .... unno flUflfr Corri l-'42-wnt 0... .\lhctlh Co-Owntr Bit ltrle't l'IOI SttvlCI ~4 WATll•
22ll F•lrvlew, '""st GafMl Co-<>wnet $, Bllell:•r O-R. L. P11'111r, OwMt 2'17 SoiJll! 8 rlllol 2121 Slllnl., Dr. COiia Met• C-'¥ W1ttr Dllfrtd
l ollll P. P1r-er, Ca-0-M111 Vtrda Union krvlcof SW IMMI NG POOLS ~l::-:: Wt litcl
•Oll•R ••MK •·• __ 1"'5 Ad1m1 Aw .-541* l lu• H1¥tn Pool1 ~4 jj~flt Ol'lw Miit.
H1rb0!' Roller l!ll'lk ,_.._. W1yne Alldetton. Owner F, Zlmtl Prt1. WELCOMING l l RVKI
MlllOll W. Mly, 0Wner Didi' OQlttblt Cll111ron Sl1!Toro 1tn2 H1rW G.O. Cotti Mell Vltllor
1n 1 sun rlor ~7000 o. DlltatlM owner TAI LOR INO • ALTIRAflONS John K r-tG 202 ROO,ING A1tO WALKING Oli'CKS ~ F t lf'llew Ml!N a '#OMllN po 11 er 1m .• I Cr11lk &•DI. Roollno j.11..S.S.f P•ltter'1 Ufllln Sllrvl« • . o• ' .. 2241 Harbor 81¥C1 . .....u2·7701 Hawport Cut11rn f•ll•n M3.f)f• Hotplllllly HvtttU Sln'IOI
0. Cr•'* l'.-s. Arnold G. l"fllllf, Ownlr Mr1, A, Mll"Uloff 0Wntr Sllt rtene V111ee, Oltl. Mlt'lllW ,,, Commtrcltl WtY 212* NNP«t ?~ E. Mlfn SI,, T1111fn
LR Roollnt Co. SmHl'I'• -111 Strvk • W-UM TAX . OUllNlllS Sl!IVICIS sun• 7-.14+.ffU
llli SuPttlot Av.:.-141·12'2' T. J. Smll!I 0-Com-'''"''" Co, 6'2-tm '26 E. 81lbat, B11br..1 Vtl'l'IOll Lee, Ownt1' 11" Harbor l wlev•rd 135 1•1 Eu! 11'1h l ttMt
lltVl llR STAMPS Jim Tkl Cnttron 5!1lloll Slf·ro,f Jlmft R. Wllt91tr, OWnlr w:~~·~~p~or~:Ml!NT a " B RVbbl!t 111m111 I. Prlnll"I Jim Tice Owner Glneri l a1111111u Strvk• "2-01' L. Ml-03"' M. & E. Keet. Ownero UN Hl!'ll'OOrt J 1 .. nc1 OWn1r If. I . ~ C.. UWDI S llRVIC llE SfATIOM & U·M.AU\. ' • 11 lf'Mtlo O. E. Orth YI" JOol W. \ml Ru•~S~· ~:LiCTIOM Arlin'1 G<l!f Servi« -s.-1)'1 TAX~.~M1:" WIG SALO N Ot_,., Rubblth SerYk:e "2•11'1 600 W. lftl'I SlrNI G_,. LM & A11ocl1l11 "'"3121 M•lllll W'll Sllori S•)UI Arlln St1lto,.,,, Ow111r H. H. Z1troduky, Dwlllr H. J. Otting, Owner C. 5, GIDfvt, 8. L LH Ownert 170 E11t 11111 $lrttt
Jill C1nvon lll!WING MACHIN• SAt.•s • "'°"'·11th St.-! 8 ld1. u WOOOWOlllKINO .. MILL WDRJ( ~Al'l!T'f EQUIPMENT llRVtCI! Tl!Ll!l'HON• ANSW•RINO Stanley 0 . W1lk1, Co.-4-4241 13
v II. AllllerJOn Co. IM)·S»O l lneert S.Wlllll M.tehlne ... VICllllll'I s•11v1c1 "° w. 171'11 51., 11119. 24
0 . E. Or!11 V.P. 104 W, 11111 IMM7"2 1111 H1rl)« l lvd. Cotti Mtu 1111.>n-AMMrlnt St1111ty G. W11kt r. Owntt
I AIL&OATS Howl~ w1mnsrn1m, owner l um u ..... 11 G. w. Smllh WOMIN'S A .. PAltlL.-IPICIAL llf
Acc11r1le System1 SHADl!I POI WINDOWS-Ownlf 2lt Eltt 11111 f'DR THa AIOVI AVaRAO•
ltl• Pl1KMll1-~ Vl!Nl t tAH l l l1't0S flLllPHON• SllRVIC• l<IOURI
Joll11 M, Rtdfltld, prelldtnl HIMOlll ll'llcNI Shot! S.1TI' ,.Klflc ftltPllDnl I T•lt.-11111 Co. LI,.. 8/"flftt-$11)-7111
5A1L.MAKl!RS O. L. 0....nn.tll OWl'llf' ......,IQ, $f....-ter G. Kine, SOulfl C:O.lt .... ni
MCKlbl>tn St tl,_.1:1434 ... , S•... Oltl'rkl M-oer. aDa •t1t1111-Jlcl!' Miff. Jr.,""-· 1m .. ll ttllllt Avltltl.Ot 1" E. -, 17'4 Or•"'41 AV.nut WOMl!N'S DRllS IHGl'I .IND
O. H. McKlbbin, Owntr IHll!IT Ml:TAL CONT•..t.CTOlll flLaVISION ANT•NNAS WIA•INO APPAll•L
IALll TJIA ININO • CC.II Snetl Mtlll ..... 122 ll•r Tlfltvltlon -"'2-f74 LH11W1 UM)N ~ l rllJot SI,
MOTIVATION CONSULTANTS c. II. si • ..., ... Co-Qwl>er m E. 17th $1rfff SOUit! Coen ftlt H
flar11ell Mtoel1ln -S*'ttlO 131 W. 17111 ..lfNT Dld<Pl'llll, OWMr Rldl Glw, .. rt1l•11t ~7'0 Ht•bcr 8l\/d., SI/Ill '°' IND• RIPAIR ,..L..VISIO N AND Al' .. LIAHCIS Mll...,.I 81M IOI! 40-2"11
M, L. 8a rllil!, Prtildenl Frt nll'• SllClll •~ii.rt ...._,,,.. 0 1vli l rown co. ~31 M1,., Nffl811 OwMr lllt W, ""'
SaVN.A SATH 6.j).ff l(ennelll w, JollNOn, M1n1.., H. 8. Ot~ls OWntr 411 llE1ll 11ttl Tiii Wei 5"1 1*172'.l
l!tltt Sl lln•"""' &1wl 2H Cast 11th T•LIVlllON -MA'ONAVGX SALIS l . Huvcke Prtt. J1G IE. 1"" ~6y2! ~~,:0~1119n, <>-· lll'tblr...,·1 Shoe 111-•r ... )JU AHO Sl!RVICI WOMllJi''S DRiii SHO ..... Al'PAltlL
.A GS NO l.OAN W. H. Ml~rry OwMr WltNn'I PPC'tM'T OINC1 MHntvtll -"IW a US•D
I A~llHOt;IA;IO!rll 11N H1rbor ....... ('.m.r, '46-4411 111~ N-1 •I. ""'.uo'r.1~1!1~ ~
C1Ulel't1!1 f.otrt l S.v""'J &. L.1111 1tt0a ITOR•1 W, 0. 8-, 0WMr Mlrlh'!l A. 1trv9, Owntr
Auoci.11an Mi-noll 21'Dt Httbor (!!'(:VI illottl'T M-2711 r•t.•VlllON ..... ,. YACHT MANUl'ACTUJllNO-c. M, We'40tt Aul. "" I 111'.1•· E. G • ...,,,.,._ OW,,., ... I ...... T.V. lttYklnP CUITOM o-ney 51\/11'91 • LN ll At-. m Eltt 1711o ... S""'-OwMt-AIWrllfMft iWlrllll c _,,, ~"":.,fc1:·c~~ ,,.,.,, ~~~oh~o!., 1U I MtwJ!Ott Tll~.::ruu:aa~.VICI ~..:·~~st,, ~~rm
HuntlntlOn Slvlrl• &. Lo111 ANK. JO'l'Ct Ii. T,.,., Ill(. .. 't'Ylew Eltctrenkl. S..W.IS tel\llTtbla YKl'll ~1'7' ~11 l rlltol -MQ-JStl I . O. Nldlr5Gllo Pr11ldlnl lttty L•Hrw Ow!W R. v. v 1..,.._ ,,_
• H11'1114 L. loeltfltr, V ... .,.Mw. Soult! C.tl .. fUI llMm llnfll Ml Av•. :t1J Mc:(Off!llU Avt. l',0 , ... .r1
Mttlfllr'I leYlnft-&. lNn M*' = lrllltl St.~ •w 81111"1 '"'°'"' T.V. Lullr kl~ M:!-4000 1. ltollt°' l!a, V,., MO•· Kl-.. sno.t MMl1t ltSJ NtwPOrT .... W .11111 St.
UlS ww\l"cntt Dr. M.8. O. H. 011tto11 Mt r ... , 144!tW Rov 8ulla, Owner ......,..,, R.IY L""" Mt!llRr
Mulul l S1v11111t 6 LO.II ,\JIOt, ~· sr--Edton I d R.kit't TellVltlon sa, .. &. $tnilcit WaVl"1f' V.cM '4irJ, .... 1GJ
•IS.JlllO J. R. Pllflt. V... tiollltrt ''°"" 1110 hill,_,,.... 8. K""" °"""" 1'8 f"-"'
"'"" R ... """°"" ~ Soulll Coelt Pia,. John t!'. lllkt, oww Wllllrd •• Worb .-.m *' I . CO.II HlvhWI¥ CdM #0 llltfol SI~ '''' ~·----· W, It. Tltllt .... 1tfl 1111:• •• Newpwt lalbol leVlnll• • LMn Nomittt w. kt-1. """'"'"" ,...... 1'ACMT SUl'•LlllS
U).IUO AQf'41 &~ltl ,.,,.,, tllom MCAtt '7S IE. lftfl rtrMI M.-t ~It C:-W.'t -'* vi. LJOo N&, kl/I\ co..t Pl111 .Mrry DlcMIPfl. °"""' 1'30 '""'""' , ... , .. K iiie Slvi1191 &. L--:mi lftttel-9t;.d6f9ft f'SW>oAA•Y P••IDNMll __ htitrt '· Md:WW, ,.,_,.....
"1totlall0fl Si'IH t 1ytor, M1Mt11r HltYKI 'f.lllDAO~AnlRJtt-aOTIOn -
G lrlt!OI Strwt, Se. COit! S .... A. .,_,, I~.. ~ ~ .,..,.,_ ..W411 Tltl'lt'I 't'.,,._tldi: t i.a ,.,.a , JOI ,...,__.rtl'ICJI .m ,.., 11'11 11.. ,,,,... ....._ Twrt, Mlllr. a L 1'911 1t~1m
.....,.._....., ~--'-~..:.:~:...:.-..:.:c·~ ........ -'-"-'~~~~~'-~·-"'"~-"'-,..~~~~~~~~~~.....,-"-"'~'-"-"'_",.~-o•_•_=~~-
I
If DAILY PILOT
[Y11y week AAl.ICO 111•11111 '""'"
1111'1 10.000 ltl"l,..,I.,_ prMll"'•·
l'llU llll hee IOW•'ll, I 1•11 •Old· chic~. hit. efl'C•O"I 1e"''•c1-mo11
tom11 "' )Ull on1 d1y, A11d w•tl>
MMCO. you• 1r1n•mi11lon C•" be
Pf'Oltc!ed b1 ..... , soo A ... MCO c.. ...
111'11 Cltll! to COISt
[•••r m inute 1nd 1 ll1H, -.omt.
""' p rOYfi , , •
Y .. c:•1t t1111I YHt
f1•11tMINl•11 h AAMCQJ
Kialoa II
Leads lo
Bermuda
NEWPORT. R.I. -.John
8. KIJroy's 73-foot yawl
Kialoa II led the Class A
neet across ttie starting line
in the 635-mile Bermuda
race Sunday as the t51·bo&t
neet headed toward the GulC
Stream and a posSible brush
with •lurricane Brenda.
The race start w a s
delayed 24 hours to allow
the race committee to
determine the course of the
hurricane.
Kialoa II. a Newport
1-larbor Yt.oehl Club entry.
was first to finish in the 1966
Bermuda race but i.s ex-
µected to be hard-p ressed
this year by Sumner \,!\.
··Huey" Lon-g'-s new 73-foot
Ondine II from New York.
The starting fleet was one
short of the 152 boats which
made the 1966 race. The
race committee said the 41-
foot yawl Madrigal failed I()
make the ~tarting line for
the 26th beiennial event.
~lttllw II" Nltl •1d11Mr
NEW CHAMPION -Skipper Dave Ullman and his crew Dave White, Balboa
Yacht Club receive trophy as winners of the Lido-14 Fleet No. I champion -
ships. From left are White, BYC Commodore Jeff Deaver, Ullman, and Gared
Smith, new captain of Fleet No. J ..
Positions In Questio11 . , '
Salncia Ahead to Tahiti l
Leader~ In the 3,571-mlle
Los Angeles to Tahiti. race
had completed ·about , oi;ie·
third of the course -but e.x·
aotly who was leading who
was .another question.·
Reports from .J a c o b
Wood's 6l·fool ketc~ Chiri·
qui, communications vessel
for the six-boat fleet in-
dicated that one or more of
the yachts were either
playing games or were not
sure of thelr navigational
fixes.
Tom CorkBtt's Sa I a c i a
from Newport. !·!arbor Yacht
Club wa s apparently stiU in
the lead. reporting a posi-
tion that would place her
l.311 miles from Lo s
.o\ngeles ..
Dwindling winds slowed
t:he fleet Sunday as most of
the boats were reporting
day's runs of 155 miles or
less. whereas in t he
previous lwo days 200 miles!
Balboa Sailor
for a 24·hour run was tbe
average.
Chiriqui's position plaCf'd
her l,l.89 miles from Los
Angeles, moving her up into
second place behind Salacia.
The big question mark
was Henry Wheeler's .o\ran-
ji. Il er latitude ·a n cl
lflngitude position placed her
about 18 miles north and 28
miles e a s t of Salacia. Bui
her estimated mileage was
only 1.197 -only 35 miles
ahead of her position Satur-
day.
A rough estimate of co r-
rected time posilions by
Nelson on Friday placed
Aranji in the overall lead on
a handicap basis w i t h
~Alacia running a C'lose SP·
t·ond. Others in order of
handicap' standing w ,. r e
Misty, Rapture, Star Dancer
and Chiriqui.
Latitude a n d lon~itucle
positions at noon Su nday,
PD1':
CHIRIQUI ' 15-5() N-r:llJ.
00 W.
SALA CIA : 15-SSN-131-22
IV.
RAP'rURE : 17-10 N-131·
21 W.
ARAN.II : 15-58 N -131-50
IV.
STAR DANCER : 18-07 N
(longitude ooi reported)
MJSTY' 18-29 N-130-44
W. -----
Fun ind thrills
10c I ride
l /25c
7/50c
ll/$1.00
for the whole family
BAY HARBOR SLICE
l111ker Gt H111riJ•r 11,.4.
C•1t• MHO
Open 10 a.m. Daily
until Dark
I 1745 Newport II. M6·1•66 '
Cornelius B r u y n z e c 1
owner-skipper of the scratch_.
boz.t. Stormvogel, fr o m
South Africa. hoisted a pro-
test fla,e: a1 thr start after a
near collision with .J ubilee. a
yawl skippered by F'rank
McClear.
Dave Ullman
New Champ
Of Lido 14s
W ?_nien' s Sailing Won
By Leslie Messenger Holds 5th Place .<::::==:==:"""'.'?--___,e.
G•rden Grove 1.cslie ·Messen~t>r 11 f McGre~or of Seal Rrach Argyle Campbell f r n m Ad•1rll•tme•I
Santa Ana Dave Ull man nf Balboa Newport llarbor Yacht Club Yacht Club. Balboa Yacht Club, rep!'<'·
Yacht Club is the new LidO-won the Yacht Racing Union ·rudi and .Ju st y Persnn senting USC in the North
14 F'l eet No . 1 champion. nf Southern Ca I i for n i a were the crew for Miss American Inte.rcollegialf'
Stops Tormenting
Rectal Itch ttt I . ,lrJI St. 10-tOt
OVER 60 AAMCO SHOPS
IN CAllFORNIA The Stormvo,e:el has thr
smallest Ii me allo"''ance
rt f·n I r th Ad M sailing championships w a 3 Ullman edged his cluh-qua er-1 as or e ams eiscnger. and .lee.n Sha/. holding down fifth place as rnate and defending champ-Cup, women's N ° r 1 h fer and Terry Wherritt were the single-handed champion-
icrn Rowland Lohman in the Americau S' I f Ii n g cham-in the cockpit for Miss ships got under way at Bran-
Exclusive Fonnula Promptly Stops Itching.
\
Burning and Relieves P ai n of Piles In Most Ca9CS with on ly 27 minutes. ·
. I Ith , afl/lual F'leet No. l pionship, McGregor. ford. Conn.
I Newport Beach) champ-Quarter-finals for both the In first place was Butch
Netf' 1'ork. N.Y. (Spei:ia1): The
embarrassing itch caused by
hemorrhoids is most torturous.
But science has found a speci•l
1orrnula with the ability, in
most cases -t.o promptly 1top
the burning itch, relieve pain
and actually &hrink hemor-
rhoid&, And all without nar-
cotics or 1tinginr •stringe•ta
o! any kind.
I See by Today's
ionship held at Balboa Yac~t Ynu and the Sout·hern Other YR U en tr ies werf' Minson. Coast Guard Aca-
Cl ub Satu1·day and Sunday. Caflfornia Yachting Associa-from King Fl arbor an<I demy, followed by Dennis
The secret is P·rti]XWo.tibw.H•.
'There is no other b,monhoicl
formula like it. Preparation R
a \so I ubrica tes, aoothea irritated·
tissues and helps preTent :fa.r ..
ther infection. In ointment w
•uppository form.
Phil Glasgow of BYC was lion were held at Kin~ .i\lz.•milos Bay Yacht Clu h. Lettinmeir. University uf
awarded the fleet perpetual Harbor Yacht Club. Rcdon-Oefeated <.'Qnlenders from Washington, and Tom Han .
trophy for the best perfor1n-do. SCY.i\ were Cabrillo Beai-h Ohio Wesleyan (tied for sec-Want Ads ance in the B divi sion of the Winner of rhe Sf' YA Yacht Club and Voyagers ondl. Andrew Johnston,
r!ass. eliminations wa~ Shirlry Yacht Club. PrinCl'lon, and Campbell. Garf'CI Smith was elected 1----------~-----------__:__:_::_c:___:_ __ _: __ __:_ ______________ --::------
i
• WhrrP In finO 11 hah,v~it
IPr rtay nr nigh1 , hy thr
hrlur nr thP. wrPk.
• An antique Grandmother
clock:
• (~l"A.RP AAlP~ , • • •wi!h
thrir mys!Priou~ contrnt~.
11r1> rhr 1·;:ige of the !W'l\Mln~
• That your f:imil~· outin~~
!his ."llmmer ran hf> mnrP
fun in 1 Greenbrier FAM.-
IL\' BlfS~
• l!Pl'P·~ Rn itrm thii1 11)\Jld
hp useful 'l!"I thl'l1 c11mpln.:
IT'ip thi~ ~ummPr ... 11.n
11r x 12' trnt wilh twn
Tip.in ht>droom ~
neel captai.n al the annual
meetin.I!: held Saturday al
BYC. Other officers elected
wtte "Bob Brown. secretary;
Charles Vandervort, treasur-
er; Pat Dunigan, me asurer.
and .Jim Tyler and D o n
Wiese. di rectors.
Top trophy winners in !hi>
fleel championship :
I. Dave Ullman . BYr:
12) Rowland Lohman. BYC':
13~ .Jim Tyler. BYC; l.i l
Bill McCord. BY C: 15) Herb
Riley . LJYC .
PENETRATION
N11rly ~v~•vonl reed1 the
DAILY PILOT, hom~lown n~w•·
pi per lot the F1bulou1 Oran9•
Coad.
lido ''DRIVE IN'' Cleaners
1776 NEWPORT BLVD ., COSTA MESA
QUALITY SHIRT Lau.n.deri.n.g
•
PLUS BEST QUALITY
,ORY CLEANING -
OUR AIM ••• TO HELP YOU
LOOK YOUR BEST!
WE WILL CLEAN ANY
AMERICAN FlAG FREE
OF CHARGE FOR THE
4th OF JULY
Lido ''DRIVE IN'' Cleaners
1776 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA
EASY DRIVE • IN· PARK
AND D•IYI ·OUT f
,., ' ,,
El Rancho travels with you to the corners of the world!
This week we bring the enjoyment of delicious foods from
FREI HUNGARIAN RECIPES AT OUR SER'l~E MEil COUNTERS!
MJ.B. Coffee .... 111. '"· .. 69' .... 111. "' 1.35
A r11vorite in Hungary .'. se.rvPd blacli anrl \'Cr~· str(lng'.
Wine Vinegar .......................... 3 r.r $1.00
~pier Islands ..• "II fla vnric ... 12 (l7.. btl111 .... olrt "''orlrl iest:
White Rose Potatoes .................... 5 11< 29c
. ' Cook up n1ore thAn ynu n{'f'd ••• and Sf'l'\'fl potato ratt1f"l5 .
Santa Rosa Plums ................... 2 11n 29c
Be l!Urf' !ti g~t oul' reciJ)" for "Plum Dumplin,~ .. !
Hungarian Wine .. .. . .. ....... $1.59
Vl·iebel's ••• light and dry and delicious . , , imported ... ~th
'
J·hr i nt·n111r1111·trhlr !Jnnrlnr.~.~ nf H ll7lfJ'1rtri11 r111si"!I(' •• ,
(ro •11 pn11/a.~h fn strudel ••• r,a.n be ynurs, th is
1rr.t:.h', nt E.'I Ranr.ho
Beef Stew ........... US:DA .CHOIC[ ........... 79~
U>an cuhf-111 ... finPst qua lit~' ... tPn<if'r fnr ta.~t~-1rnu\Mh !
f.et our recipe for sAlmon hRlicrl in sotir crf'Rm'. I
Enjoy Apple. Bluehrrry or Chf'P>V'. at this lov• rrice ~
Paprika . . .. .. ~P ICE .ISLA•~s ............. 39c
SRve 14c nn thP :?~;.,oz. si1.e'. ••. and !Z'Pl Mag,,·ar flavor:
Noodles ................ 1 .18 .P'~ ................. 33c
Globe A-l ... }<'inf'. Medium or \\lide ••• g"r"e butlereO'.
~1eadow Golrt ••• Hungarian recipes call for lots or ill
I'ricrR in rf/rrf 111 n/I 3lor r.•
Mon., T11cs., Wtd., J11n, 11., 25, t fi
ARCADIA: Sunsel & Huntington Dr. (B R1ncho Cenler)
PASADENA: 310 West Color!do BIYd. • SDUT1l PASADENA: Fiemont & Hunhngtoo Dr,
NUNTIN&TDN IEACK: Warner and Algonquin (Just [1~ of Huntington H1rbour)
11£-T IEAClt 2727 Newport BIYd. • 2555 last~ufl Dr. (usl~utt Village c..ller)
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It would seem that the m~
tion picture at the Mesa,
which it a biography of
Anthony J . Drexel Biddle, was
a "natural" for Walt Disney
to produce as a musical com-
edy. The Happiest Millionaire
is based upon the book, even-
tually a Broadway play, writ-
ten by Cordelia Drexel Biddle
and Kyle ChrichOOn.
Actually Disney had not
planned on The Happiest
MllllOoatre to be a musical
production. However, "Mary
Poppins" l)ad ,f!een r~~ved
so enthusiasticaUy as musical
screen fare that,Dfs ney decid-
ed to make his new show
another musical hit.
Fred MacMurray plays the
title role. England's popular
Tommy Steele plays h i s
d!voted butler. Greer Garson
appears as the ever Iovfug
wile. Co-stars Ger a Id in e
Page, Gladys Coopef·and Her-
mione Baddeley keep the
hilarity at a high peak.
'
l l lD Mtc:MUllAY
Lesley Ann Warren is the
Biddle daughter who marries
Angier Duke, played by John
Davidson. This 'wedding of two
prominent names _serves as a
backgroun'd 'for some startling
developments in the laugh:
making dept.
Added attraction with 111.e
Happiest MtlUonajr~ at the
Mesa is another Walt Disney
family film,' Monkeys, Go
Home. It stars Ma u r i c e
Chevalier, Dean Jones and
may be seen each day during
speeial matinee showings!
The Lido presents t h e
Academy Award winner a
"Best Foreign ·Fllin", Closely
Watched Train! ·along with
The WhJsperen, which , co-
stars Edith Ev'a1)3 and Eric
Portman.
A pro.du c t of
Czechoslovakia, C I o s e I y
Watched Trains deals with
much activity ·between the
sexes and also a ·wt of Czech
resistaiiCe to occupying Nat.i
' forces. The scenery and the
dialogue delving into the rela-
tions between members of op-
posite sexes in this film will
remove it from the "family
film" classification!
For The Rec·ord ·
Meetings -Soln'olllc TMtlrrrlufei:&. Clilltorftl. I.I,,..
Intl •1111 U.... C.t. l!MM, 1 ,.m,
C..lamulirrs To-thl\Ulwl. CW1I lt'9f
r.at111ra111, H.u ~rbor 11¥11., Colta Mne,•:••.m. !:tplor'9f" SQ:luts,, ltllcodt E..._J.a,
lix.IOl'"w l"otl IN, ... bcadt EIK-
troftlu. :UOl turbot •IYcll.. COfla M ... , J:lf p.m.
Orll'llll CO.ti Ml,..ral Ind Lapllllt'I' S«let>,, CMll Mesa, Wamt11'1 CIUb, '" w. Hiii st .. C01t1 MtH. r:• p,m. F01,1!!lt!11 VtlJtY J11111ot Cllamlll>f' al ~a. Kint'• Tablo. '' 71 WntmlMNI'" Aw .. Wntrnlnater, 7:JO
1.m.
Co.II Melt Ht,_ Lodte N9. If, Odil ~1llgW\ H1H. 1ilH N-9 srw .. eo.11 Mn9, • ll.fll.
,_
Council al Ch\ll'd'lft, N-' "'-..-.. • ,_,, at varlow dlu.V-. cont.a
ltn. H. C1ri.ti, ..... 1M1, It -· C.!1 MeM ~,.. CIW. Coral lllNI'
Rnl1ura11t, "'5 Kertlor llW., Co.la
Mesa, u -· NtwPOrt Harbor .t.ctlw :r.» Cllll>.
YUi-IM, 12t Mlorlne. l•lbtol
1t1ai>e1. u .-n.
Cotta Meu Rotary Club, Nwltl, Cotti
M ... Golf Mid COlilltrY Club, 17'1
Goll C°t'rw Dr1va, Costa MtH. lt:lO
c!:.. del Mer KIW1111t. Club, VIiii ~. l5JI E,' CN1f Hllhway.
,_ del ,..,.,, 12:10 """·
Hu11tlntran Bead! Klw111l1 Club, """"'· ln1ton kKh C-ll'Y Club, 7"
11th st .. Hvnn111to11 e11cti. n:u •.m. N~ H1rtior Ol>Hmltl Club, \1111e
Mlrl111, llMl 81yslclol Drfw. N~
llffdl, 1t:1S p.m.
Cotll M-Ktw1nll Club. C1pl1n
Rutaur1nt. 14l'G H•-' 111\td.,
Co1t1 '°'"'' l2:1S JJ.m. Hunllntloll 9 .. ch Rollry Club. Norltl.
F011r Wlnd1 Rnl1ur1nt, lUll lolH\ Clllc.t R0td, Hunlf1>11ton llMdl, -'II:-"
P.m,
Divorces
P1tw11n
Slllrlff M. Sh1w "" G1rv l . Shaw E.,.11111 LUM YI Dtvld Lunt
Sflt1 I", Whlltl1111tlfl .,. 01r1 I!. Wiii!·
11111~
MIMrv• Jt1n L1mblrt YI Rlcftlr4 L.
Ltmbtrt
Kllt!IMI\ A. Molllo YI ftoe.rt "· Mollto 1111 J11n Ented•I n s .... 1111 R.Wrt Husi.ct Enoedal Ya.lllko Davll YI Joella Ill\' D1Yl1
P1P:o Jolln DIYlch n JICOl,,,.llM M.
""'"" Clt\ldll G11lt MffllM YI Jolln E•lnota MldlM JIM E. 8111tlltr ... l-r4 W.
8111tlltl'" 81'111r1 Jun Olrlltlan n G1ry Ci r•
Cl\rltlla.. Ve~nlc.t Ann ltdlklnl YI WUU1m
--...... D. OMt. .. n... ClelfM -...... ,..,. Orw\ .. ...., ,_ ~
.....,. """ .,...,,_ • ,....,, 1-...... -
~A. ............... I(. .......
f'll¥f 0. W.aet "' UMI 1uM11 ... _
..... J. -. ... \II '°kn' •. .,.,. ...
"'9llM I, """" .. J-Rldlitf'll
,~Jr.
... ...... A. , ... w. RoboHt R. 'lfrW
...... J. ................ °"T ·-...... L.. .......... .,. a.Ml •• .... ' ..... L.-• ..,...,. ... ..,,,.. --PINAl. ..._... '
~rlll ,...,._.,. ~ C. ......
..... ->-"-... J-........
G,_' I
AltK W, C,..._ n l!luMM M.
c""" ' L-f'll 0..rt. ~hr YI ....
Intl ,,. Mtnthl• ....
StilrltY Rvtll Klrtt YI CKll L•m
Klnot, Jr.
J..,iri A. OMlttdl YI Mt1111r1I !!. ..
""' """"" De.rtlllY '· Grltflfl YI Wlltl1m •• Grlf. •• Sheron L.. 81111ntllt1 YI RIU..N
91Hllllli.t' 11 'Utfl ft , Slllultt 'n Ch1rln ,r1nt
Scllultz
Robwt l eck!Wll Jt1MITt C...111 YI Wttltr Ctt!IY j
INTIR.LOCUTOftY DICRlll Jolln Li wrMCt Mllllmauer YI An ....
Rldlard Clle¥11 YI l!llan Tlllrn• ROI• MelllmtlllT ,
D!VOllCl!I ,ILI D Clll¥1.1 httv J, H-t rd _YI Jl nMI A. Ho• Lturle J. CrlKenH YI JOHpll A. lr111 L. Wlllllll'll YI Rlttltr4 J1me1 ln:I '
CrlKimtl ~ Wlllltml JMnnt E•trlde YI R•YlfttlnOll E1tr ... Francl1 A. l.11111 YI .i.net L. Le1111 Cllrlllllll K. W.llrle .......... WHll•m Rltlo l!H"" L-YI Jotffll GIJl'MW" FerrMhl M. ltntltY Y1 Ray EuttM 'Wlllrlt L-
Llntr\Q ll!"v1 Ml'F Mln1.,, 'n J11llo!M L11lll Ellt!l LOlllM Alford YI G1ry G-.
Mlrlt D".' Movrlt Y11 11.ld\tnl H. Moilr'll Ml l\je'F Altor4
M11 L0111H Sllllrld!I YI J°"" J. Aclll1kle R. ROU1111 '19 Mlrtlfl M. ICfflMlll D Polluf YI Derl1 J. l"ol .. nl
SltllrlCl'lt RllllDll Otrlene ltt'-" YI Rlc!wird J.m ltnl M. Jecotil n Rlchlrd J1col>I · K1re11 Jo Tiler n ltlchtnl •rv•n T1!1r Rllllrt
DffnM Cr!iwell YI John Dtvld Jotn MlrtOI ~r YI C1rl 1"1111'" l1tty Lou Tlllmtl YI Rlcllt.. H. Crl1~!1 H_.r Tllom11
Tllom11 Jolln Lllc.,11, Jr. YI Lindi Siie S"'*9rt E~ Clll' YI Avl1 Cll 'I' Rll1 Ann HllW YI Herold W1N1
LIK:lflll o Dult'I' Lff YOU'fll Yt ''''* 0. Youn1 Hublr Ed111 LUClll 8111 n Ch1rlw lll'F lel Iii 11 1 11\owe M r11 J .i-Clltr1I J .. n 01 Mtrco YI VllKl'llt ... e 0 r YI • II • I w.r,..., A. Andlore YI ''"" c. Ancllor1 ••· tiow.r Rultl June W•klttt YI llldlllnl Otlt f\lax1nder DI ....,rco Jolln Elliott Scllotntltld n Slllrlta Wulalh
"''
•• , JHn Bink YI P1111 Rober1 I ii* C I Md J11111ll1 kl\oenlltld 9ewrlY J, eo.111:1 YI ~t ao.1.t11 Contutlo Soll$ YI Timoteo 11 1 1 lOlllH A. Mcllretn YI ODntlof loul$ Oorotl'l'F l"IT?I VOi YI AMll\lr Al1n ''t/m
5ol11 Mcllrttn Ml1'91 AnMtlt Mtmtndlt YI Lldltl9do MlrYln Robert VIII Buren YI Lllllen Rlcl\tnl Clltlord Alblrt n Emmi Ltolnm1 ....... llllel
GtMnide Vin lluren Dorl Albert D1r11M Jay O'Httrll YI l"r11'1Cb J~
51111 R11 OtLftl'lhetr YI Giiton Vic· K1nneth c. Ga11kltn YI "'""-J. O'Htam
tor °" LHnhffr G1ulden N.ltb9 I. Gl9a YI Rolllrt E. Gltu
l"tlKIV lnetr Hemandel YI l"redtrlcll Chlt"1'1 Rtt lurl YI H1roW ft. 811rt David ElrNr H••l•I• YI Miry l!llln
R*rt Her111n<k1 Sv1Yll l . 5111$ YI Hirlty O. ltlto H11hll1 RoblM Ed'w1rd Giimore YI M1rv PhlUlo Kllltv YI Carol'l'ft A. K.i!w J11MH 91Ql..ntm YI Vlf'llOll L'"""
M1ro1rtt1 Giimore Lindi Clwrll Hen1t1 YI C•r1 Leonirll llucltlntllam Gordon 0 . P1l11t YI Dtrvl L Ptl1k Htnll1 J-lt C. !"off YI L1rry D. l"otl', Jr. 'udv 11.. c1mobell YI J1me1 T. Clmp. Vtrlo Juel Sfr11'111 YI Norm• Jff-~ Meul'Qn C1rrl1111l1111 Y1 Wlllltm C. Str1n11
bolll Clrrl1111ton Fr1111t L. Cutltf, Jr. YI Oort Ltt CUI· ll1rbtr1 Loulae llloam YI Irvin A. J\ldllh L. MaMenoen Y1 LIOlllrd o. Ill'
Bloom Mtr'hlnnn -. a1rkr1 Mlrl• Crldlr n SllYtn ~It !11rblr1 .t.N'I "'-~di ,.. Roeerl si,.n111• L, ·Tllr'HdaM· vt David AIYln . , Cr•llw .JJ ;
RenKll Rl'l'nol<#t, 4 r. , , • , , ,'f.lnt~I '"°''"' G. Cerllln' YI Roblrt Cer~
Joy Jtnla' llrl1bM ¥1 C•rl l!vtn1tf .. rll!ln J•n '''"" n Wl ltllr' o-,.. ,· ,cr;ri1n111 AM' ~ "':..!:' · llrhbln f!•· a.ti.., .lfe11'1'11n Htllllltl11 J•~ Mlrle Jollnlon 'o H1rcld Dnltt! MMll'l'I JI. Cllrlt 'n ...... t.. Cief11 Jalldrt y,_ ,..,. __ YI H.
JollnlC!l Ma.., Elltft s_,. YI 'orut Ra.,.. P1rmt ltt F. · Ma,...rtl ..._,"' Slrlftt•r YI Joll!l mlllld s_....., Slllri.t' Ft \' l"lftr n Robert Ml•
WIUl1m Sorlf!Mr' Bonnle'L. Whllt w WIJU.m c. Wlllli l"h.lllr · ~«
Chrl$MI Aline Vt 141¥11 '19 Ma!IUal Val-Genev1 ~Ml Wllteiley n All Id Lee C!Mrlll F. R•nl9.,. SllltllY ,A.. Rt il!vl1 Wlltit"'1 r -¥ Loulll Clll,,_111 'n l"tllnr. ~Ill
""' Mly Ll ntldlorr YI Gu11tvt: Mirian Ft•-Nlollol1 .... ·~ "'" Ml~i:;: '"""' "''"=-"""J.' Jtn'llS L•1111!1dorl Hitold Nktoolt. Jff11 ll'IYlln K11llh! YI K Ml II He)llft P, P<>ll•nl n E,,._ fllllr1l11 L1 Vert11 .lohmon Yll 81rrf Cllntlfl · Knllhl · • : ,
· l'oller& ' , Jollnto11 M1rlofl Kl1MI YI L1wr1nc1 I. Kl1111 Mearl LI Gene Marrin, Jt. YI 9t r· .. ur1 II. ICOl'ller YI G10T111 IE. Kohler, Jolln Tl rtllCt Gl'lllflWllOM YI Chrt1t1n1 ball .ltM MIM!n .IT. · R G ~
FIO<'tflet c. "'"" YI Robert 11. KtllY PrllC!ILt """ EmmtM YI ROI.I Geo,,,. JovC. '•rltnt 5-llowlr YI H'POld Miidred Gr1cr Mven w E4w.rd Emmons Leo ~
Geor11o1 Mver1 ~~rn."' L. Sllln ,,. Ml'l'•r '· Stein Jtnrill•r Jin Rtllk YI G•rv Hutlll• Florence L. Hrmln11lon YI DtYld E. Y '" Mlnntr YI Jolln S. Mtr,,,.r llin~
Htmlnvton . Krllmllltot R. Wl\f!ftldt .... lloblrt s. Dotlt J. WI~ YI ear-. IC. W•~
Je-onnr M. H11r YI Leon Hier Wllltuldt R11 I!. Hilt YI Ellubllll AllM HUI
Jetn G. Pl1ce YI Chtrl"-Plltr l'l!lct Glry Clontld Welr YI Joy~ KIY Wllr JallY M. C1br1I YI Henry M. Clbrt l Dl~ll L. Se1r1t YI Fr.dtrlc M, S11rle Elltlll Htlln Terrl nl YI KenMltl Loll M. WI-YI Emmett Jll Clllrlll T1rr111t w-Jr Dorothy LH l1111r1m Y1 G1rv LH .... Kl'l'fftll M. llDblfl.IOn YI Rkflenl R. Giii Ell~ ivrt. YI J1m11 l!dWl nl or1m ftDblnt1111 lurt.
MIMI M . .\tul11r YI JDSe E. lltlllllr Minnie L Ctlfllll\btll YI A11111!1 H. Jolaph IE. Che,...,. YI hrtier1 l!lltn w.~ ROl-t Robel"Mn YI 1"111t Elll1 Cl~n Clllrll'I'
lloberbm Renon Klodl YI LoYd Slt"ll'I' Klodc Hi~ld llruet ,v.-i YI Loll l"lortnc1 G1rrlr LOii lieu YI .\11111 JI,,_ ..... Htlt!l 81rbtr1 L!ndll'I' YI Rldltrd Manti
Allnt cor,,,.11111 Scatfl«l YI Joseoll J°"" Ol'lol Llndlay JUDSMll'fTl
Sc.tfkll • Gl rJ' llr111t ...... , YI ChlMo "-'I GI'~' a. HIC:UX \•1 J1mn •. "t Jim, .. Al.., Noble YI l"•trld1 K. Noblt ~.-J. W1r11111 n C.r11dt1!1 M. (1nn111rnw!tl. · ' •
01111'9 Dodd Y1 lobbV Dodd ' ... -· •-· L I !tr': · Rld>ln:I H1rllln P-rt YI H•"" •••• V'·"" Allfl Ka··· YI Gt 'l ... J1m11 ·•"'1•r YI ..... w... . Ill ' "'""' """' -.., · .. -' nulmentl • l"owlll Syw"•" .... Ml-Whlla YI Cllffwtl Wl rl'lft JOll-" W WllM 'n JI AM W.. (u..'. V]!'91nl1 L. l!rtie n A. R-Erbt ,,. _,, ''.t "'"
1-t• C. Went'Wortll vt Lllld• L. C1t11wl111 v. N:oble YI t erry Ly,. ·nu1mem1 · f! W..,lworth Nibl9 ' • • Ml111•rtf JIVM KllllY ' YI T1ltlrltil
Nlckl Ann Ullllr YS _La RO'I' Gr1~t Sfllll Audit Slrllon YI Rld'ltnl AIMlfew J1mn KlllY • ~' U11'11r Slrnorr ·AM K11htr1,_ Coul. ¥1 OYllllfl . FIYI lr11ant Aloullllfl W. Mldlll Allll· Gllfllll J. 01'1 YI Gar1nl It. Dlllr' Cml
1nl1n Pl\Ull'.D. Kratt YI Jandrl J .. 11 Krlft An111 ltr1<:111 YI Allrtd l.lrNll '
Don L. Cr1blrM YI lol•-C. Cr1bl1111 Jlldllll Key Cl'lt /T\hli'I .... R.lf'IClll Jet Mlrtllll-Allll co11or1111·Y11'1d'11nl 81rNr1 R11 Sl'•llr YI Wlm1m QIJr"' Ollmbeu 11 Col1n1111 .
5"1trr JudY Alln Ri«lt'dl Yll MfdlHI Yllo ~ Mlrle LeNn va J1m11 Wlll DltrM Connie E111I-YI Hu, 1"1T11 Rkclnll , LOI.ii
E111lncu Gell Elltftl MurphJ Y1 Girt h! Ar1flu~ .. M1111er.t Y. MllSlllHll YI AN1111nir J\ldlltl M. Dorton YI Dtovld R... Dortan Mur....... . T Mlutl'lo•lt l"r~ll Mcllurnett lelt YI A6t MITlt Oonlll Li-1<1111111 W John ll. Kltlltn Ki ffirvn It. Tllf'Jlll YI MITll'lltl E.
lltlt .>olln R. uurlt \II Jo AM L111rl1 Turioln
.Mlrltvn Je•n °'"''"" YI Rebtrl 0 . Eunice L. D1rtw ....... _111 L. O•rttr Slndr I( MonKo G L Montco Olmtnn Miry Ml1111,... l.a~IT YI I • Y1 l l'Y •
Leontrd Peter Gttl\11 YI M1rl1Y11 Jrtn RICh1n:I Glann Ltufe!\blf'e., (1111111flnenll.
Geel!•• Ntl>Cl' L EdW1rd1 YI Ki ri DaY14 Pilot Vi it Harrf P. ProlcPl'IS YI J01111 M. EdWtrdl • or• Prctopap011 Elll• May llP11nlk YI l dW•nl
Solly J, Roblaon ..., J1clt G. Roblion l1tt1nlt rwre •rt ~ ~"!«"fm •" •
McL1111lllln Cherrie I", l1n1l!111 YI D1"'4I ltobert 1111 no.. of II r-t ... , -..,,.
Sl,vtn "· McL11111hlln YI M1rl1Yn J. Sl'l1""' SllYI YI l"Ttnk R. SIN• ~{~!d•~w:r ~':' 0:., "::!!
Oell1 W. Dllloll YI JoWPll G. O!llon lon1t1111 ti, _ _, -Pl,IMY qlOOlM<., M1r1 M. P1tarwn YI D1vld l . Vlr1lnt1 Halim G1-r YI Hlllrf V1.. R"" QA LY I" OT COMING SOON: The long·l-'=--'.:.....C:::=....c--'=--''--""-'-=.:.....='---'=-"-....::;:::_..::_....:;:;_.,:=.:......::.:::.:.:.:.
awaited Newport-Mesa show-
ing of Pllnet Of The Apes!
Look for a real exciting one
when Charlton Heston heads a
cast that depicts the story of a
landing c;in a planet where an
ape civilization treats modern
man as a primitive.
lllC IOlTMAN
MESA MATINEES will be
daily for the local showing of
The Happiest Mtlltonalre in
order tor more fans to enjoy
this very t\appy motion pic-
ture. Take your choice, af-
ternoon or evening
performance all Utis laugh.
week.
.. FREE PASSES to the Mesa
or the Lldo will be mailed to-
day to H. L. Hane1. 3il
Mont.n>, Balboa, Frank E&-
queda~ 2892 Riverside, q:iata
Mesa, •H. J, Pearson, 4833
GorbaJQ..Dr., corona del Mat
and Denni1 Carpenter, 2138
Bonalre War, Ne~ BeaCh.
Don't lei tho ~ "' .. cub keep,... nay fnm ....
joying a line film al Ibo Udo
or Me1a. Step up to the win·
dow and preaent your •er,
o w n Banbmericard or
Muter Charge Can! for ad-
Jn.fssion to better movits.
Nftw!
Out of the Clear Blue Sky ...
come Air California's new
DC-9 Sunjets
The Easy Way from Orange CountY..AirP9!!
to the Cities by the Bay. •.
San Francisco, Oakland: San Jose•
Air California announoel the most .ooa.ven·
ient :ICbedule ever to the San Fran<:iloo-Bay
area. Leave the grind behind •.• and un-
wind, duriog • pleUant oi<-hom to<he City
by the Boy. Why fight tho cruwdod n..way Iii the awl at Loo Angel" !,..motional?
s,;.)'OUrprooiowo time .. , on .. ~,0th"' "'Y.·-.. Orao&• Cqwity A&port..-ted
near the tip ol the San Dirco Fieeway, just
minutes from the Santa Ana and Newport
Freeways, tool New jets, More Flfgbtt aod
Oraop County AUport _,. "Euy Com<,
Euy eo• for: Yw with Air C<fomial
Forre.ervationl: Cl.ll YourTnvelApnt or
Ah Callfomla (7lf) 540-4560
CALIFO-NIA
TH~ uaY WAY/
........
RIGHT GUARD 74¢
0w·1 ... !7c
Fa"'ily 1i1• liijlht 6'.1nl 111 c•11v111111t
''ray ca 11.
TOIUT AUICUS DI".
14 , ...
JUM• .......
PATIO BROOM 96¢ °"' .... 1.14
Patio or 11r1ga pw1h ..,,, lweoPfl. Sw11p1
14" 1pace •f a tim1.
HAIDWAll Din.
Salt Woter
TAFFY 27¢
Ourlet.Jlc · '••t•I color.ti, indi1idua lly wr1pp1d
piec11 i11 • l·po1111d hag.
CANDY Din.
Wlllll JIJNI
Oullltl!MI . "'U.26 "'' ' Metal
WA 'rE~ING CAN
2~44
Our Ret. 3.11
H1ndy for w1f1rlnt both 11\Goor and d1li•
c•t• outdoor pl1nt1.
PATIO DI".
'w .....
JUN• .......
ALUMJ~UM FOIL 1·9¢
0w' .... 27c
largs roll multf1111rpo11 foll •t thi1 low,
low price for ffir11 d1y1 only.
WUo
°"'"'"'" ....
PA'lrT ~DI Din.
lound
HASSOCK
4.22
Our .... 4.H
JU Ha .... u
Vinyl c•v•r•tl h111ock i11 pof0ul1r color1.
w ... _ .... ....
FU•NnURI D1'1',
Wicker Detl9n
JUllll .... u
YARD BASKET
1.92 °"' .... 2.'2
l'la1tic bi•••+ h11 a ttr1ctiv1 wick•• d•·
lftn. A wld1 v1ri1ty of u111.
Wllli. 011111nt111
L11t
PATIO DIPT,
MIM
JUHi
t .. U.M
S'WEATSHIRTS 99¢
°"' .... 1.5'
Pop11lar crew 111ck p11llover with r1lftforc-
1d 111ckb1nd. 51111 S-M·L llll'llt J p•r
ew1to1111r.
w ... .. _ , .....
Al Sia"
BAMBOO BLINDS
1/3· OFF
All dt11 T11 1tocl. I /J eff with ... .,,.11,
NOMI 1MfiiOYIMINT Din.
' -
Hmdy
TRAVEL CASE
1·.77
Our .... 2.17
P1rf1ct for 1h1rf trip1 er ov1t11ight 1t1y1,
LU•GAfil DI".
hpando
HAT RACKS 72¢
Our .... 94c
•••dv +• h•11g 011 th ...... u1
HAIDWAll DI",
1 Pound
JUNI .. .. u
CANNED HAM
97¢
Our .... 1.17
DIU Din.
WMll ~JUNI Clva11Hll• Cl 14-U.U .....
ZO Pounds
CHARCOAL 97¢
Oor .... 1.47
lia1y to light. Cl11n burning.
HAIDWAll DIPT.
W>" ~JUHi GN11nl.. Cl U.U.M ....
Protection
SC.OTCH GUARD
1.9"6
Ow R ... 2.57
Protich 1g1in1t .t1in1, 1pill1.
HOUSIWAllS DIPT.
Wlllle JUN•
Clulflllllal 14-.. 1' .....
Portable
TOT TOTER
1.96
Oor .... 2.18
1C,1pi ba hy 1!ld molt11r mo•• comfort.
1bl1 i11 het 1umm1r w11th1r.
n••ANTS Df'1.
Wlllll JUNI
ctu1n11111t 14-U.fl ....
LUIE 1and
OIL CHANGE
'
1.99
Yow• cholc• of l ma Jor br1nd1 of on •.
AUTOMOTIYI DI".
WI!"-' • JUNI
ou1nnt11t ~ u .u.u LHI ~
Matdll119
PEtlDBfTS and ' ~RINGS
1688&.1788
w ... --...
Comp.@ 2'.H
'INI JIWILIY' DIPT.
FllM119
JUMI ..... ~
ROD HOLDER
I
42¢
0.1~-~
''"• 1j',1. FH1 •II rot! ha11dla1.
SIOITIN• ~DS DIPT.
---------------------------------------------
DAJlY PILOT J:r• I .
Lar,.o Siu
STYLE SPRAY 74¢
Ow .... 77c
IC11p1 h1ir. 111 ,pliic1.
TOILIT ~ICUS D'".
w ...
OVMHfi., .....
~·-.
"'"" ·-
BEACH CHAIR ' . ,,. ,.7. L__,;;4
. Oor .... J.17
l ritht color1d ca nva1 on woo.I. Thl1 1tur.
dy chair will t1st a nti la1t.
Whl1• °"'"""-....
,UINITUll DI"· -·
-....--·· ·~J
1'68
MODEL · KITS 94¢
Our let. 1'.57
All mak11 a nti' mod1l1 1v1ilabl1 for thra•
d1y1 only with coupon.
TOY DIPT.
Wllllt ~JU NI Oll•llltllH a l+SWll Liii
6 Piece
LUGGAGE SET
27.88
0.r a,._. JS.Bl
6 pi1c11 in wild y1ltow, .. lu1, or red
pai1l1y prlnh.
LUGGAGI DI P'T.
Whlll ~JUN• Qu~~llll ~ M-u-M
rc::lo
BUTT BUCKETS 58'¢
Our RIC). 77c
Co11111 with 1!1nd , Julf 1tic• In ground
and h1ng buck1t from hoolr.
PATIO Dl'1.
Wh .. ~JUN• Oll•ntltltl a ,.. .. .....
8 Piece
SNACK SET
1.63
Our 199. 1.97 Sa~ i1 cry.1tal 0111~ with vi11t1g1 t r1p1
d11ign. Four pl1t11 ind fo11r cupr.
D'INNll WAll Dll'T.
Wom1ni ,
DRESS PUMP·S
So min,
acc•nh.
2.88
Oor .... J.81
'"'art <elori •wHh, Lrlght ,.,...,
SHO I Dll'T.
Whll• ~JUNI Ou111t1Hn Cl M-U-M ....
SylYanla
FLASH CUBES
1.07
Oor .... 1.Jt
Thtoe cub11 giv1 ll fl11h11.
CAMD A DIPT.
W .. o ~JUN• °""'"""' . Ma4I .....
l•1ta;1aatlc~
TIME-ALL
7~24 °"' .... t .44
$1t it, -~ fo"tet ft. At1te1t1•ttc11ly twr111
011 ot off •pplia11co1 •r li9ht1 •t' • Pff·
• •• tilft•.
SMAU APPUANCU l lPT.
t
'
"
. _, • "
.,
l
• '
] f bA1lV PILOT Mtlrlday. June 2•. 1'68
Kanin Returns From NY Fil1n
Garson Kan.In ha1 return·
ed t.o Los Mgelea, having
compl~ted the New York
,. .=, -"""'1sr • ... **Z Iii__,, ..... ...
location sh'OOung ot "The
0ne Wlth The Fuzz," his
orlgin1l screeoplay which he
is directing For release by
Unii.d Attlsu. ,. -.. .
: ~~,_w :
: lru; lllalfl IN Wal !
The production stars Dick
Van Dyke and Fkirence
Henderson.
! 0 LD E Collin~ Signs
: MSllOIM: HOLLYWOOD (lJPI\
;
·.·:. •ffla•••ffftl•• IJ: .. •:• = ~l!n~I s~:~t a l!!:t Universal and will co-star in
hls first assignment witti
Andy Griffitt. in .. An Angel
in My Pocket.'' ; SPSCTACVL&a !l---''--------1 :.-. •nm,., •. :1---L_E_"G_AL~IAR:,~TICE
Ql1V SUJlllRto• COUllT OF THI: tTATll
~ .l,'UA .. Elll "• OP. CALll'ORNIA ,OR TH• ~ ~~.!:!. COUNTY 01' O•ANGI ! ST.'.DIUll : NOTICll OI' H":A:::2ol' PET1t101t A l'OR PllOIATE 01' WILL .t.NO 1'01111 "• a : ~....... .lit LITTERS TESTAMENTARY ~-&.II&. E1t•l1 OI Aln'l.I I(, lrowro, ~. )t -•••••••••••••• lt NOTICE IS HERE!IY GIVEN Th•I ·-~•11'1111 mlll Jt Merion Flmt< 11n tllod rier.e!n • oetltlon ~ • tor 11roblte of WIM •nd tor luu•nc:I of ,,..~AU. SfA!S lllSaVllOt... Lttlf" THllrTMnl•tv ID Ptll!loner,
.. ~ 1"'.11 ·$Ul·$Ut·SI.. lt teftrenu to whld'I 11 .,...,,. tot hlr!lle• 1f. CW*• 11 l..,... All l'!IH! • pertlculal'I, ind tri.t tM lime •nd Dl1ce • lt OI M1rlll!ll lhl .. IM has be!'n set tor Julv » 1llbtl •Sall"' ....... ..._ Jt n. 196', 11 t :JD •.m .• In !Pie courlrCJPm el Jt. .._. ~ ac-...,.. -t"1 • Oe111rlm"" N<l, I ot wld court, 11 11111 Jt. ......... ••. .......... Nori!> l toldwav, In lhl Cllv OI S.11t1 """•· ~ C1lltornl1.
FIRST, FAST
Wlio telt1 you firil •bout th•
b•ll in lo,•I n•w17 Ch.,k ii
out. lt'1 n••rly .1lw.1y1 tlie
C,._ILY PILOT.
01ted JU"f 11 , 1'61 W. E. ST JOHN,
Cr>Untv Cler~.
H1rw1Dd, soc1111 •lld .t.dlrl111cwo, ms '(lol Lido, sunt 20t
Nt-ork INCll, C1Htornl1
Ttl (FUJ •n-tOl't
AnWMv1 lor PttlllD!llr
Publl1hacl Or1nge Co1•t 0~11• Pl!al,
JUM '2, 2~. 2t, lMI 11)117-M!.
LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE
CITY 01' (OITA Ml.IA
OllANGI COUNTY, CALll'OllMIA
NOTICI! INVITING 8101
NOTICE IS HEREllY GIVEN tNol !Ille City Clorl< of ff>o Cllv nl Cost• Me~
will receive ie1/ed P•!IP°"'ll on or befllre FrlOlv. ~ Ull! d•v of July. 1'61, .,..,11 ~ l'IDl,ir or 11:1111 1.m. o! nld dalt, at the Cl1'1 Hill. 11 Fair Orlvf, Cosll
Mell, C1Ufornl•. • PtOPOM11 tar fl/rftl11!in9 •II l•bDr •NI me•erlals 111< !he IMPROVEMENT
OF SOUTH COAST ORIVE, HYLAND .t.VENUE ANO SUNFLOWER .. VENUE
will b9 OP~ In PUbtlc .1nd ~Id lloud In !flit Cr>Unc:ll Chamber• oro llkl d1v, "' °" l tll>UI Mid llmt. by the Cllv CllB. OI Jtld clty. The -rds "SOUTH COAST ORIVE. HYL.ANO AVENUE AND SUNFLOWER AVENUE" sho<Jld 11~•r on
the ff!velOPe OI Md! '"led "'""°"'" S..ld p-.1 should be aodreue(t to the Cit)" Clor1<, Cftv H•ll, Cosll Mew, Catlfornl•.
The -r11 wm tonl!ll Ill' P.t.VEMENT CONSTRUCTION ANO STORM DRAIN
FACILITIES, WITH APPROXIMATELY 4,IDS TONS .t.SPHALT CONCRETE, 5121
TONS AGGREGATE 1.UE, 11,llG TONS AGGREGATE SUB·BASE. 4411 LINEAR
FEET CONCRETE CURI, ) CURI INLET STRUCTURES, 140 LINEAR FEET
OF '4" R.C.P, ICll' FEET OF l9" R.C.P. Ind Oltlff' IPPU!'!el!l•nt wvk.
A Ml ol Pl.Ins, Speclllcatloftl •nit olhtr Con!rtel Docu....,nls may be 01>!1IMd
1f !he otflct ol !ht CllV C~rk, 77 F1lr Orlve, Casl1 Me .. , Calll°"'I' UPOll •
del>os ll 01 SU.1111. A cll•g.t o1 11.00 wll! bf m""" II handled bv m.11. MAIL
SEP.t.RATE CHECKS.
E1'h bill 1hel! bl! ""de .., ll>e D1'9POSll form and In !flit manner p>'C)vfdrd
111 "" contr.ICI document$, and 1nan be KCompen!ed l>v A arlltled or c•1hil!r'1
dle<.k « e b1d bond lor !IOI Q than JO')I. of Ille •mount ol tti. bid, m•d• PIY·
1tll9 to !he City of C11111 Me.Ml.
.t.0Dtevl1llons used In Ille Khedule ol ~1trml11ed wage •11et In COf'fUIM:>
tlon w\tn 1mplover 1111Ymen1s l!t!ll'd In the rlghl hind cclwmnt '" ldrnUtled 11
lollcw1: .. ,.. ...
phwl•
ps!h
psthw
pJlhp
PJthw/o
...,, ho<Jr
per hour wort;rd
per hour peld
i>er hour worked or 1>1ld
per 1lr•ltht lime ttoor
.,.., 1tr.1l11ht time hour worked
1111r lfr•lrtrt llme llo<lr Plld
per 1tral11hl time hour worked or Plld
Pd p .. r IM'f
pc1w "~ Illy worktd
PdP per dlV Plhl
Pdw/p per day worked or Pllld
W Wl!je
"" gross w1oe
lw tc11I wage
Pmd per min ,,.,.
Emoloytr pevmtnl• olt>er fll•n !how ltem!zld herein as defined ln ~cllon
1m.1 OI ma Llbor Codi, ''" "' ti. N ld In 1Ccord1nc1 Wllil the U.ttn1 "' IM
cel!Kltv1 blr111lnl.,. Hreernent 1ppllcat1te to the ,.,,,. or ct1ulflc11lon DI ttl4I
--men or mecl'lln1t1 trm>lovt<I on the prol..:t.
Overl!me. Sllnd•VS •1111 hollcllv-i tn• !hen IV. limes 11'11' be•I< kourlv r11e
plus aoollc1bl1 tms>IOl'e• p1yments. The holldan uoon which sucfl ••lfl 1h1ll bl
P.lld shell bl! •11 hollden •KO!lfllltd '" llw colle<"tlve ber1Nl1'lll9 1ereemrnt
appllc1blt IO the P1r1kultr cr1t1, clliss!llctllon or IVM DI W<lrtmt11 tmpktytd
Dll 111e orO[ICI.
COPln OI 111 cotlecfl"" b"flllnlllQ •flrftrnenls rel11lv1 to 1111 WOrll; •1 lfll
lorth In ma •lartrnenlioMd L1bor C-•re on !llo •nd 1v1U1ble l« lnso-ction
In the office Df ti. Dto•rtment of lncluslrlal Rtllll<llU, OIVlllon ol L1bor Sl1ll1!1cs
Ind RtMlrdi.
An1ntlon II dlrllcird "° Sedlon 1·l.01G ot !flit s, • ....,.,d SotcllleiilloM pro.
vlded for 1mplo'rt1Wftl OI IPPrtnllcn on ffll! -k. Everv such aoP~nllC• shell bl!
Plld lhl lfandtrd Wiiii p1l(t 10 •PP,.nllc11 under the re111111tions ol ffir !ride •I
wlllch h• ,. emplortll. lnform1tlorl rel1tl¥9 to emPlo'>'""'"' cf •oortntlcts lha•
lie obf•IMll from !ltl Dll'Ktllr of Ille Oeo1rtmen1 OI lndustrlel Rtll!Jorlll wile 11
Ille Admlnl1tr1tlve Officer of the CaUfornla Apprenticeship Council.
Purwan! JD !tit prO\lllloru. ol SKllon 1710 ot the Labor Code OI I~ Sitt• ~
C1lffor11!1, the Cl!y Ccunclt ol the Cl!y ot Cast1 ~ ha1 IKfr!llMd !tit 11~•11r1!
o,...,1llln11 r1,. ot w11191 end emoloyer Pi'vmenls ftw hetltl! and well1re, v1clllon1.
P1n1l11r1 •nd 1lmll1r PUfPO:ret 111 In. county In which !ht work 11 to b9 ~ lo bli
•• follows:
•n1c ri"' •m11tver ~ • .,.,,..,,., ter
,_,. ~t111r C1111llk11111! H ti\' w V•ctllol! Pen11111 SK ILLED L.ltolt
~.31 A ... h•ll ol1nl enPlllf'll• s.12 A1ohett 1>t1nl 11,,,mtn
S.Ot C1r111nttr
~.tl Ctme'fll mtlDll
S.01 Cl'lalnmtn & roi:tmtn l?I
S,ll Cct'1<:rete or 1sl>l\lll soreadlne
ml!Ch111lcel l1mplng M
tlnl1hlnfl mtchlne -r•tor
:10c ohw/1>
JOc ohw/I>
Uc onwto
25c: PhW/P
JOc Phw/p
J0c: pj!W/O
J.3.t Driver ol dump trltd:, 25 VOS. or lSc Phw/P
mort w•ter leV1!l-.llnt1le unn or combln1llD11 cl vtfllcle1
J .71 Fence erec:ror
S.31 G••de d!Kt<er s.12 tns1rum111lll"lln 121
S.•l Molar Ptl•ol -rt!«
l .Jt P1inler • brush
S.41 Parlv Chief U)
l.U Plumt»r
S.ll Rel11forcln1 lrt1nworkl!r
J .U ll:oller ooe••tor
S ll Rubber tlrtd, l!ol1VY dutv
e<iulrwnent -•IOI'
7k .... Ill
lllc. pltw/P llk .,,, ... , ..
)tit ohw/p
'" pnw lOc Pl!W IP
711>c ol-C~1
71c 1>11wll l
:Ilk Dl'lw/P
lOc Phwfp
S.11 Sklplo.der -•lier wh••I 1'11W! lOt Dllwl •
over 'o4 .,.m. Ut to a. 1nc1111tln1 1v. viii.
5.41 Slr.lo!-r ooer11or wheel tyoe 3!lc Phw/11 over 1•;, viii.
1 ?t EIK1rlc!an
5.41 TrKIOr loedtr oper11ar 1tt
1'1oe1
5 41 Tr•<:nlr ON<lfar with boom
'""""""'~!$
30c ohwlo
l.41 Trtctor lolder OPlrtlor crtwler 30c: ohw/o
!ypt -Ill 1(1e1 •!Id lvPIS
S.J1 TrlCIM -••for -drlfl!~l>I. lOc phw/e ~I, bu!ldottr, t1moer.
1cr1"'r •nd PUSh !r.IC!or
J.11 Trt,.Chlr>O mtcll!ne OP1r11Dr vo lDc """'I• ,.., '' oeott. etP4ltl1v mf9. rall~11
S.41 Tr~nchfr>g m1chln1 oprr1tu
ovtr '' d~tll uo1cltr mfg. r1lln11
J.41 Unlverwl e<1ulprne11I eperl!!N' lOc phw/o
MDVI!, bitck/lot, dr•flllM. tl•-
1hell, ""rrldl;, dtrrltk t;.1 ... ,
crtne, olle drl¥9r &
muc:klno mtehLM
INTIEaM•Dl.t.TI. OltAD• LABOR
4.ll Ak c:omprt1-oumo « -·•tor -·!Or '·°' AsohtU rtker Ind 1._r J '5 Al!>htll 1"°Yllt1'
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0.~l J-" 1Hf IY OllllDfR OF tHf CITY COOPKIL OF
THI! CITY 0~ CO*tA MESA. C.Al.l"ORNI~ C. I(. "lllllESt, CITY CLERIC OF Titl
CITY OF COSTA MEl.t.. C,Al,1,-0llllHIA
•11o1 • .lllllt 11, !4 '"" -'°" ...
•
Overseas 1
Now Home
For Silva
BY VERNON SCOTT
;<OLL YWOOD (UPI)
Henry Silva can't wln unless
he's treading watflr In the
precise center of the Allan·
tic Ocean.
When he's seeking work in
Italy Henry is mislaken for
an American. In Hollywood
they figure him Jor an
Italian.
At about 40 d e g r e e s
latitude and 30 degrees
longitude, which would place
actor Silva somewhere near
the center of the North
Atlantic, maybe everyone
would accept him for what
he is -a Puerto Rican.
Of course. few -if any -
producers are looking for
actors in mid-ocean. Henry
knows this . In fa ct the other
day he said, "It'ii important
that t he industry know ~
where an actor is."
lie will get no argumen!
there.
"If I run into a producer
or director in E u r o p e
they're surprised to see
me," Silva went on. "They
say. "I thought you were Jn
the "States."
"Then they tell me they
hired someone else ·for the
part,. because they thought I
was in ~lollywood. Yet when
I get back to California 1
run into a director who says
he thought I was perfect for
a role, but he gave it lo
another guy because he
thought I was in Europe.
"Maybe I should take out
a billboard on S u n s e t
Boulevard reacting, 'Hey.
I'm in town!' Trouble is
somebody might write 'Who
cares?' underneath."
Henry has brought the
miseries on himself. He has
made a total of 10 pictures
.abroad and that's where he
will return.
"I will be appearing in
Amerlcan movies, but I'd
say two thirds of the pie·
lures I make in the next
three years will be in Eur·
ope. No matter what is said
for or against filming in
Europe, it is an economic
reality. It's cheaper to make
them there."
Silva recently completed
"Holiday" in Italy and
"Assassination'' elsewhere
in Europe. Next are two
possibilities in Spain and
another in Czechoslovakia.
Henry would rather work
in Hollywood. if for no other
reason than directors would
know his whereabouts and
he wouldn't have any trou·
ble wittJ his laundry.
Then .again. there i s
always the mid·Allantic.
oa.1LY PILOT SllH P'"""
'And A1aother Thitag ••• '
Alan Sandquist makes a point in an argument with
Dennis Perrin in this early scene from "The Petri-
fied Forest," resuming Friday for two more week-
ends on the stage of the Huntington Beach Play-
house.
Ames Finds Success
Without Cash Lure
By DA \10 LAMB
RENO, Nev, (UPI\ -Ed
Ames walks a professional
tightrope to prove success is
measured in personal
satisfaction that m on e y
can't buy.
Boston. poked at a turkey
diMer as he talked. He 's an
imposing figure with 1he
ctuseled features o{ an In-
dian. He looks like he should
be playing gangster roles in-
stead of si nging about Jove.
But he's hardly stopped
singing since the 1950s when
July Attractioti
Melodyland Gets
'Carnival on Ice'
Skating star1 from 11l lhe 1 lit I p.m. aridi S p.rn. each
major ice shows have been week .
engaged for "Carnival On Ticket prices are $2.50 and
Ice," a new and elaborate '3.00 all reserved with .::===========
ice revue coming to ,Juniors, 16 and under half
Melodyland Theater o n price at the Wednesday I
Wednesday. July 17, Cor a p.m. iind 8 p.m .. Thursday 8
four-week ~ngagemenl . p.n1. and Sunday 5 p.m.
Kids Like to
'Ask Andy' "Camival On Ice" i' an performances only.
elaborate ice extravaganza, l -.~======================-1 handsomely produced .and
beautifully costumed. The
product.Jon has been staged
and choreographed by Ice
director Bobby B I a k e .
himself a former star of Ice
Follies and Holiday On I~.
Leading the roster Of
skating stars are Janet
Champion, featured f o r
eight years in Ice Follies:
Arthur Newman. soloist or
the silver blades featured
with Dick Buttooo World's
r·air I c e Extrav.aganza :
.lean Sakovich, skat in C
ballerina of Holiday On I~:
.John Curtin and Patti Hittle,
adagio duo wiU1 lee Capades
and Holiday On Ice; Jack
Ros(', also from Holiday On
tl1e-rnesa · ""A tt -••,' .i r ·)l' l\.-1.1v cp:;1n "'._-·1 ".::'
\!f \'.'P()RI AN D H1\RBO R IN COSTA M ESA
lllfPHONE 541·1552" FOR INFOlM.t.TION
·································*········ wanT -::~1 · ffapPest .~ ..
~llionalm~
Ice. ___;i
Joe Jackson. Jr .. with his •••••••·•-•••••• ... •-•·-•--••-v--
FRED MACMURRAY
GERALDINE PAGE
internationally acclaimed ALSO
bceakaway bicycle act: Jay L'AUGHTER. L'AMOUR, LE MONKEY BUSINESS! Kirk. featured star of sup·
per clubs Ir 0 m coast to -wm DISME.YS
coast will be on hand to
keep the laughs flowing fast ~l/OV,:
and free. Singer Rob Peo-ffr'f.Jl\lll'f~)
pies has starred in motion Go ~M / ~lures. night clubs and 11~~~~:,~~~fJV~~~E~,~~~~~~! "GarnivaJ On lee'' will 1£QllllCQl.M"
have five eve ni·ng
performances Wednesday,
Thursday, Friday a n d
Saturday at 8 p.m. and four
matinees Weednesday l p.m
Saturday 3 p.m. and Sunday
----, "SCALPHUNTERS"
,Exebasiv• ,
And just to amplii.Y his
point. Ames once took a
!19,920-a~week pay c u t .
That's right. A week.
Of C()Ur5e, the 6·foot ·4
actor -singer has Pocketed
enough change to enable
him to take a few risks. But
.....tien that status quo feeling
sets in. Ed Ames' soul isn't
for s·ale.
he was the lead and soloist co111t1:11" cine coAsr H1ctnrA'>' 1. 1rw IT,
with t'he Ames Brothers. l~~;:;~f, ...,.
1st Run
"All of a si.idden. T just
know I can't take one more
day or on~ more step." he
said between shows at a
Reno casino. "Then the
restlessness settles. a n d
nothing can keep me pointed
in the same direction.
"Just look at how many
people are leading lives Or
quiet desperation. They're
afraid of change, of failure.
So they follow their basic in·
stinct, and keep doing the
same thing even if it's hor-
rifying in nature. What a
garbage existC11ce ."
Ames, the younge~I-nf
nine children raised by his
Russfan Jewish parents in
The quartet disbanded in I'
1960. One brother drifted off l,Eiilmll!'i;l;
to Little Rock, Ark., anGther
to Germany, a third to New
Jersey. Ed quit recording
and turned toward an acting
career.
.. The happiest time of my
life, bar none, was when I
left a $20.000-a·week job
singing in Las Vegas and
got a role ia a play off
Broadway for $80 a week,"
he said. "That was hap-
piness.
Truman·Capocc:. ·
IN COLD
BLOOD
~'°'"' ICl-otod6orKtOd l>r
1
, RK:hard Brooks . , ACai....bia~...._ .. ,~•
NATIONAL GENERAL CORPOR .. TION
Showin9
Crossword P11zzle
From-that obscure
theatrical beginning, Ames
began to build a neat stack
of varied accomplishments.
He starred in· the musical
comedy "The Fantastiks,"
took over the l e a d
Broadway role in
"Carnival" in 1962. played
an Oxford-educated Indian
on the Daniel B o on· e
television series. started
c u t t i' n g million·selling
records again. and perform·
ed to fuJJ houses in the night
clubs.
Foco•x'"MSOUTH COAST
PLAZA TMmATWS
1 ACROSS
1 F<tm!d
composer 5 Household
furnishing items 10 Record
14 Plaii t of
1.9lYt ;mus. 15 Lac king
significance 16 Preposition
17 Lost Y<tlue
19 ll!ll glh x
•idth
211 Gtt b)'
compell ing 21 Exuding
fragrance · 2) Flower
25 Ready for
harvesting
26 Wrong namr
30 Did certain
.. rt •ork
34 Between :
Comb. lonn JS Rents ~7 Ooer<1te
I <1\rphlOf Oft
the ground
::18 Dentist's
group: Abbr. )9 litountaio
tops
·42 54, in
<lntlHl
Romt
.()Consider
at length
.tS F1sttner.
.t6 Fttninlnt
namt
•8 Newfound-
land,
for one
l
"
"
l•
"
" .. ..
SIJ Wav1rtd
precariously
52 South
Afric1n
54 Rebu ke
55 Kind of
communi· cation 59 Aris'
comp111ion ~
') Public;
figurt 64M atWest ro1t:
2 words 66 Me1cury 1n!iseplic
67 Mr. Lev1nt.
68 Physical
compttiti on 69 Unit of
Foret
70 Br .. nls
71 Made I Ht
by economy
DOWN
l Co111m<1nded
2 Adex1ndt1 '5
nickname .• 3 Egyp. J!!
Chrislian ~· 4 Prlncipal
frmalt
Chat<lCll!'f
5 Quarry
b Cuckoo 7 R!Yrr of
Eutope I Enroll in a
comp rt Ilion
' lllosl f\ln·down 10 Local
Y<ltitly
of /1ngu1gt
11 Businrss
.11bbrevi1·
lion:
2 words
12 British 'IVeapoo 13 Garment
18 81.seball
statistic 22 Make a.
choict 24 Southern
U.S. city
26 Noon ovrr-21 River
to tl1t
Arabian St.t 21 Oivisfon of
1 stable 29 Ftrgivt
31 More robust
JZ Sanishtn"nt
J) lndul grd i11
Ol:tmp lcs sport
Jfi Flooring
p i ~~s
40 Predicted
loser
fi/24/68
41 Plant!
44 "--Camts Sans
Merci":
2 •ords
47 Rtmovr
sym bol
of office
~9 Strong alt
51 Rrquest to
play aga in
5) Sal1ry
Increase
54 Had Sl!llt
• scorr
SI> Nervous 57 Bird
58 Heav~ sl<1ff 60 Anti aueralt
firt:
Colloq. 61 Prison
sentrncr:
Informal
62 Vthlclt
with pa ir
of 1unn rrs 65 Universily degrees;
Abbr.
' 7 • ' 10 !1 11 13
" ..
..
• " •
lido ,
NN'POU tUoCll -•I !lo• ••h•_. lo 1.~,.i ... lloh !,lo •• 01. l•llJJI
First. Run
PAULDEWmAn
• The Sacral Waraf
HARRY FRIGG •
Also
11.i}i"l' Mills
T"""' Howard IN
'll i\13Heror
Innocence"
HOMl 0, IOCll'INO CHAil lOOIJ
. I 16t !AST !AllOA 8lVO.
l BAll OA Pf/llHSUlA· 61l40il
., J1 l
GAIETY •••
VI HANCE
lADIANCE
ff
.
Continuou1 Show1 DRiiy
Door1 Open 12:30
l 201K CENllJRV. fDX' 1 ,_ .
cHARlroN
'l ~ESfON ;~
'. ~·
:, ···-' ,..... Clllnt'Mtli ~
D1tlly Show Tlrnn
I "Pl1n1t'': 3:004:45-10:30
"Fiim": 1:15-5:00.a:CS
,,
Nightly 6:30 & 9,30
Wed .• S.at.·Sun. 2:30
Not Continuous
EXCLUSIVE BEACH
CITIES SHOWING
[ • J! ·-" .. !
'"'""""'
~
~
(3
NOW THRU TUESDAY
Now for the first
~
fB
~ ~J-~~•H•m•t~l•o~ge~th0e0r~~~==:::::;::::;:::::::::
fB llf.l~CIJlll'llRAllOI!-
~ a Bl.AKE EDWARDS \.9 PllOOOCTIOll
(8 O'Clllll~ ........ ,.....
~·1-~'··~"·"·'~"-'.'.'_'_"'.'.".'.'.'.".".'.' ... ~~ ..
~ • Starts Wednesday, Jun• 26 •
(!) 10 ACADEMY .AWARD NOMINATIONS!
~ ·· ~'-·BEST PICTURE! fl -~ l' ~ f0l,,_.,P1CT0r>1~..-a Stanley Kramer..-._
~ TRACY' POITIER . HEPBURN
~ gueu who's
~ coming to dinner \.9 llCl<HlCOl.Oll' .al
-
...
,rs How You 00171
Tia llOllt w ..... _HARRY RB
A, UHtV£aSAL PICTUllC
T(C"tol!C0\.0"
• -
• '
' •
'
• •
• '
• '
MON D AY
' JUN< 24
1vrN1r~<.
l<OUlllo Ill( -(C) (IO) *'1 Dunphy.
D--(C)l!Ol
ID -Moo aw. (C) (90) SllYl'S &utltt art DIU1 R ..... DOii
Knotts. G111t BIYlot. Ind P'rvfmor Julius Sumner Miii•. (R) n .. ......,_,._ r..,,lrl"" (horror) '&2-S.11111 Lo-
ret, Albert Llipo, m ....... CC) (30) m•._..., t3o>
@:IWWt flew?
l!!i)D-
l:30 0 INIC "'"' -(C) (IO) on.. c,..,,·;, .. <t> (lO) m ladlll« fltll• (30)
llJ McH11t'• 111WJ (30)
Em DOUT f.d..U. 11 Mttlon:
"School Archltectur1." Onlgntr• of
innov1tivt C.llforni1 xllOols 1m-
ph1slrt the trend tow1nll bot!I
tconamy ind •tsthttics.
Ell Notidtro 34 (C)
7:001J CIS &1t11ln1 Nin: (C) (30)
Witter Cronkite.
011..., CCI (30) m1 ,_...., tlO>
m Cillllp ... bland (30)
fEI Wllillqlon .. hrin' (C)
IE La Cn1 Vida
1:,. u am,,..-, lCl teo>
Mlrah11 l5f11on tlkes 1 tortuous trip
Into Metico Jn pumiit al four
fullti'I•• wtntld for kltllnr hi$
friend, 1 retlrina: sheriff. The tra!I,
strewn with Mnle1n b1ndidos in
1Hi1nc1 with th• outlaws, Inds to
a showdown at en old mission.
Paul Richards ruests. (R)
01ht Monkaes: (C) (30) "F1iry
t ale." The Monkees re-cteale leg·
endaiy characters from some of the
wtirld's best-known children's slo·
fie s. Thls half-hour 9j)isode may not
b1 an 1teurate 1CC01Jnt of Ill)' of
tile fairy Liits you ramemtur, but lt
will be 111tertlillin1 ln)'WI)'. (R)
0 Soldtll VOJIP: (C) (30) "Rio,
Paris of th• Amlricls.''
D llllJIJ -, lo """' !Cl (60) '1h1 Hnllllnt Hero." Jolln
W _,.. __
(C) (IO) "AM Bt'7 M•kn f1¥t.• MC1t1ff Hin l11ttoduca
Ind 111"11111 I Mtlts of fllmtd
llOfin. TOlll&M'I COl'l'lldy b tbovt citJ vnua country IMq tnd io,.
' Inc. Chris N)t (An(1I DlclllllOn),
I model wbt IMtN lhe II aptet.
tllt, 1nd hw huMnd WI!! (Clltf
Robtrtaon}, t llOl'l•Mlblllin1 tllttlor,
dll.ld their tttWS to live 111 •
11111111 tDww wtMtt Wiii can bt 1
Cr\llldlnr counllf tdftOI'. Nine fodl
tnd Wtlttr Abt! 11s.1 *·
?oi~ .. ~no!,~w=.fl set Stone 1nd DNctl¥I Brlua
1111111 1 .lllzardous .loul'MY to Utln
Am• to -1: •-erimt Cl:lt Jot
Sta/Ill bad; lo WtfJ btfOf1 I
tnnd llllJ. hit I of two Plrtl. (R)
Ill -(C) (30)
GD118't .....-: ~ 0ou th•
MOM)' Come rromr Communltr If.
f1irs M'ltlll'llll Leo McElrot asks •
p,11111 of llPtrtt •boUt th• led!·
alques of e1mp,11in lund·r•Wn1.
II) II ... r [Miies Mmurt
9:30 89 m F••ltr Affllr: (C) (30)
Join S10iicl1ll pl1ys • br•SIY Broad· w1y musical stir who Interests
st11•strudl: Cissy ind Buffy In
ahoW-bu&lneu airem. (R)
D tHl IIJ ,_ ""'' !Cl !30) Dr. Rem! hlYlfu M1rlh1 ind Clro-
lyn to dinner; Su11n dKldu lo pl11 It Alt; Jot drops in on Jill.
111 n. -(60f
fl\) NET Jow11t: '"Kuwtit." BBC 11·
porter Al1n Whicker provides 1 ur·
donlc look at th• tiny Ar1bl1n coun.
try wllost lncom1 It btMd soltly
on oil •. 111-·--
10:00 u a (I)"' -_._"" Cltltl; (CJ (60) "A City 11 To lM
1 n." R"'°"" W11t1r CroftkH1 bt-
tins ttiis ._lilht ttudy of urbln
Pf(lb1tmS witll • look •t bllaht
brou&ht lbout by W1t1r pol1Lrtk!n,
1ir pollution, "1naport1tlon hud-
1Ches and &hllttML The lerih IX•
1mll'lll a we tliow.d our cities
to dOCI)' Ind wflll lht ptop11 1r1
dolna to the cltl• •• well 11 wlllt
th• cltlu 1r1 dolnc to the peoplt.
0 9@ I Spr: (C) (IOI "'"1·
place I Hane: M)'Wil ls Home." Sud·
denly 1H1lcted with 1n eerie com·
pulsion to take his own life, Sc<11t
ullderrioes medical trutmHll that
has him reli'lln1 his P•Sl (R)
u ............ -(C) (60)
D llll IIJ T>o llc •-(C) l60l "The Buftllo M111." Vktwi• tries
out Mr priQi rlform ttieorln on
thrtt llardentd crimln11s hired to
pick her peech c:nip. (R)
ll T•pe {CJ (60)
mi ... """" -(C) (IO)
Henry fll!s in IDYe witll Eltn Whit·
liker, 1 neirflbofln1 r1nehe(1
d1u1hter. Ellen is dr1wn to the
Indian and IS her affection trows. i!I Tllh F••lllr
she b$Comts Ollerfy protectin to-
w1rd hlm. Broob Bundy runts. 10-.30 aJ N-: (C) (30) Biii Johns.
(R) ID WNf't ......... Mr. Sllwlrf
Q Mlltln $ Mont: -r111" 1tt fh (CJ "M_1hlyma1 tnd tilt Avtllr."
L9tl hhind" (comldy) '56:._ lib David S11YW Yislb •Ith tbt tdltor of
Hunter, fClt1llt Wood. Coston'• lllOSt outlpoktii under· m rrv11 ., c.n.ci·-(C) (30J L:ounc1 .,..pt!'.
m""' •-t60l 11:00 u ........... ...,.. tc> t3o>
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GORDO
11''6 NOt"IO<JR 11!'.ICJIJS1 Jll;ALL"if
l••l."•
JUDGE PARKER
u,..,.
COMl'lETIOt.I OF
P'INN£«, KATHHINE
!>UGG6TS THAT
SMEil.A .\NP' THE •
MEM 60 INTO THE
LIVING 111:00111
WHILE SHE
AY.t!ST5
MRS. TJ:lMSLE!
fj:-f!f;~-
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to 1 IWlnk boys' camp end ttltfll
rqreb it. (R)
TUESDAY
DAYTIME MOVIES
l:IOllMIN:.,.. ·-... (lll)'to
ttry) '53--Ylttorio '-"llr Cloril
Grth11111.
CllhN: ........ llllCf'I ...
to" (wat1rn) '65-Mi~17 H1riJtly. ID .... ...,, _ _.
0-(C)
Complete Printing Service
Top Quality -Fast Service
.,., ''''"""' 64Z-43Z1 --
2211 w .. 1 Bolboo Blvd. Newport lluch
0 0FFICIAL
HUSBANP HUM I MIWIPllOOK
f2J : EVERY FUTURE BRIDE SHOULD
DEVELOP SOME A!UISrJC TALENT
SHE CAN USE 10 ENTERTAIN HER
PROSPECrlVE' HUBBY, AND
IMPRESS HIM WITH HER ABILITY.'
MUTI AND JEFF
YoU GOTAJOB
THil;I" YOU'RE
ED
MISS PEACH
YEH, IGET
"FIRED EVERYDAY!
I'M A HUMAN
CANNON BAL.I..
AT THE CIRCUS!
•
••
~E'S CNAIMIN6 MtP'
HA~ ALL nine OF
THOSE MEN '°'TIN&
OllT OF J.ff:llt H~P'!
.-
By
ly Ken lahl
HO Ql.!l!STloH$ Mt::IN, JIM, )'OU'LL
6fT ALL TH! ANSWeft,S TONlcSHT.
•
ly &us Aniola
ly Harold Le Doux
t'vl: MrMl6EP FOl ¥DU TO Mfff
Ml. BUCHANAN WWO HEAP$ UP THE
SU~ 'TW~TEA' 6lOllfl: SHEILA!
JrANP'V CAN P'RIVE 'tOU O't'ER
~AFTUMOON!
By Tom K. Ryan
ly Al Smith
ly Mel
AND DN Tll~T
m11"c PAY, 'IOU CJl>I
Lei 'IOU~ ~O>I .
MCNE Ill.-
,
------------------------------~-----
r
" Monday, June 24, 1968 OAJLY PILOT
URBAN PROBLEMS -Walter Cronkite probes the
difficultieS which plague. large' urban centers in a
three-part: investigation series, 14The Cities," t&.
night, Tuesday and Wednesday evening at 10 p.m.
on Channel 2. Tonight's program discusses air pol·
lotion, overcrowding and traffic congestion.
TELEVISION VIEWS
.
Glen, Nancy
Great Switch
By CYNTHIA LOWR:Y • NEW YORK (AP) -The winter SmotherJ·
Brothers show serves up humor with some musical~
interludes. The ununer Smothers Brothers show
is music with humor. It is a switch of emphasis. ·
IN COLD WEATHER, it was the jokes, the
sketches and the topical humor that were the im--
portant elements. That is pretty much pushed into
the background in the tuneful CBS hour that ha.d
its premiere Sunday night. ·
Glen Campbell, an attractive young singer, has
taken over the show for the summer, and in his
first assignment as star proved to be interesting
musically and to have a quiet but effective style all
his own.
HE WAS BACKED uP by most of the winter
regulars -the dancers, the musical organization
and comedian Pat Paulsen. Nancy Sinatra was the
guest star. The Smothers Brothers turned up, too,
to get the show off to a good start.
Like NBC's summer replacement for Dean Mar-
tin's hour, 'the program is aimed primarily at the
young audience.
CO.PRODUCED by Tommy Smothers, the· show
was a commonplace 60 minutes that will not mak"'e
TV history. But then, summer shows almost never
do. .. ·
It will be interesting to see U the Smothers
Brothers and their staff go ahead with their ela~
borate plans to satirize, through Pat Paulsen's par ..
ody, the current political campaigns.
WHEN IT STARTED months ago, Paulsen's
portrait of a double-talking cliche-bound president-
ial hopeful was highly amusing. Then, in the course
of events, the world business of running for presi-
dent abruptly lost most of its humorous content.
Each season there are a certain nwn~er of r~
placements 1lnd additions to casts of established
programs. Actors leave and producers feel that the
series could stand some fresh faces.
THERE WILL BE an unusually large number
of additions next season, ho wever, and an extra-
ordinarily high percentage of them will be Negroes.
Programs adding Negro performer.s are com~y
series like "The Flying Nun" and "Gomer Pyle"
to the action shows like "Mannix" who will have a
new secretary with a young son.
A NEGRO neurosurgeon, will arrive in ''Pey-
ton Place." Later on, the evening soap opera will
develop plot lines involving the doctor and his fam-
ily. Percy Rodriguez, a Canadian actor with wide
stage and screen experience, will play the role.
CBS starts its three-part series, "The Cities,"
tonight -10-ll PDT -and will document the prob-
lems from slums to air pollution in hour shows on
three successive nights.
NBC'• "Comedy Playhouse" which takes over
the Danny Thomas Hour for the summer starting
tonight ...... 8-9 -will consist of reruns from the 1966
Bob Hope series.
Dennis the Menace
!
8
'
I
I
•
•
Lifeguards Ha rdened to Instant
' I ·--·-
•
....
, .... ' ,
HUNTINGTON BEACH LIFEGUARD TOWER JUST SOUTH OF MUNIC IPAL PIER
It's a split second from the time
a lifeguard spots trouble in the wa·
ter until he's approaching the vie·
tim cautiously, pushing a can·buoy
toward him.
Huntington Beach City life·
guards -and their brothers else-
where -have hardened them·
selves to instant response in em-
ergencies.
From "cadet" days, when can-
didate~ for lifeguard posts leap
from piers, sprint and swim com-
peting for jobs, the guards knQW
their worth depends upon reacting
automatically to demand.
Ten candidates for lifeguard
were finalists this spring from 118
applicants for summer work. They
will help the regular Huntington
Beach city crew watch over some
six million sun-seekers on the
sands.
The offici;il summer schedul e
started June 16 and will extend to
Labor Day.
Seventeen lifeguard towers along
city beaches offer promise of help
to swimmers end surfers all day-
li ght hours. A dispatcher alerts
men in jeeps or rescue boats if
the situation calls for back-up sup-
port.
Occupying a fai r share of the
lifeguard's time are lost children,
ma1or and minor first aids. The
men are thoroughly trained in
mouth-to-mouth resuscitation -
thei r most urge nt first aid · call.
The starting pay for lifeguards
is good -$3.19 per hour. Toward
the end of the summer, the men
will no doubt !eel underpaid.
GUARD NEARS VICTIM WARILY, AVOIDS PANIC
SURFE R JS KING OF THE WAVES ONE MINUTE, WIPED OUT THE NEXT • ~I '
JUMP FROM PIER JS PART OF CADET TRAINING
k -•+••
I .. -.... ,
' I·
CADETS LEARN FAST TO GRAB CAN BUOY WHEN LEAPING FROM PIER
GUARD CARRIES UNCONSCIOUS VICTIM BEST OVER SHOULDER ' . '
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---Mo~~-.-J,-~-2-.-.-1968~~~~~~~~0.-l-LY~:-Lor~--1-~~~-,T-.l
LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE
NOTIC• Of' TIUSTat't U.L.1 '40TICa 01' OfT•NTION TO aNOA•a Ofiflf, C.llf\lnllt, 110, "IC No. llh IN l'Ma U.La 0, ALCOttOLI~ T~t fll4I .......,., P-m to tit
On J111t' 16, ""' ti 111• 1.m., ll'lllU4lS lrtntr.rnd It o..ctllllO In Ml'ltrtl .. COLONIAL MOltTOAO! SEll:VICf ' CO. JllM U, IHI ,.,.f'CflelldlM lllVllft,.,.., Ind It loclthicl ti!
OF CALll"ORNIA ff d1,11Y •-lllltd TO WHOM IT MAY COHCERNi 9AV$101 INN, 31U 1!1t1 PKlrlt Cw1t
Tru'I" lllldti" .na IPIJl'iu.,.f to Deed ol Sllb\t(I ,, tuu.11«1 ol Ille llUnM •• HleP1w1v N'°"°°'' ktc.h t1111 ·-·~
Tr111t clftl'd S..tembtr U, lft.S lll9Cllftlll •lltcl '°"' notlc:e 11 llertbv 1111tr1 ttwit fnt .,. with i11e lollowlllil dt.Cr!btod '11eo11o11c
1w Priln. J, ,,,_, I lll'llllt rNn Incl llfl(:ltl'llOntCI Pl-to Mii l lQ)f'loll<;; ~riff llCIAMl{•ll ON SAL! GEM· fKMdec! Ottiobtt-12, l,.,_ u ll'lll!t. No. llt'ttrtttt 11 tilt ,,.,,.It", d..Ulbed " EllAL 1.IOVOlt LICENSE now luu..i mt. ln ~ Mt, , ... '19, « Offlci.t "*"'::!11 •... , ......... tor Mid •r-11 .. for Pttft'IJ-loet!H Retoru. In ll'lt oftlc-flf Ifie COl.mfY -• ..._. n.,.~ 11 I "'*-J'UI E p 10< R.ci>rdtt crf Or-. C-.tv, ClllfOfl'lll, NewOOrt tMdl .. ,.... i;i 1: .. 1 K C C:-1 WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO hrw1nl to .fuell lnltfllloft. tllt Uflo M~W•Y· N*-'1 llNch, C:.11'-I•,
H!GHEIT alOOlllt. FOR CASH (NY•blt .:itr.len'4 ll •J'l'h<llW 19 tlll DtHr"""'t tr~~ ::: =klef"•tl: : ":
11 flmt ot .... In lnl'ul _.,. Of tht OI A~llc 8_.pe Control for 1-ntt II { ) I I lltU 1 "' unllt'd St1t11) 1t the SOUth tront tnlflnet D"t' ,,..ns,... OI •n 1ko!lollc bt""I" ~ • t "-turfl Of 11,.000.00, '"' to JM 0t111119 County Courthoui.t (tty ot ll(tMI lor llcwi~l fW "-" preml ... •• dllOlflt lllV9"10ry Hll-.1111 11 13.000.00,
$.llnl• Ant, Countv or Orl llff, 'stitt ol fOl lowa: wl'llcll <OM!sft Of tn. lollowl""': $$.000,00
Ci lllornl1, 111 rlthl, title incl lnflfftf COfl. Off SALE OENElu.L ~lttd In ft<l'llW• IS.000,00 dlM•nd flO .. ~Ved to Ind now held bV It undtr Mid lliONA Fl0£ PUBLIC E:ATING to bt ~la* wltl'I Ulll ~lltd 111
om of Tr~• lrt "" ..,._r1y tltuai.i In PLACEJ 8'l'OW. Ind U.000.00 dlmtlld ~ '° be
ltle Cltv ot COtt1 ,\Aftf, Col#lty "' 0tll'J9e, Any-M1lrl111 ~ Pl'llllll "" lm.il"<IJ l'elllletd wllll ""' to -INl"<MndlM Jn tald County ~ Slltt ftK'flbed M l or IUOI llttnMb) IMV lllt • verltteirl .,~ lrt\191\!0ry wlleft Ml.,., _, 11
Lot 11, Tr1d 1M5. In t1!t Cltv ot tost1 tttt with 1nv otil<t ot tM CtP1r!fNflt or dlt~T~Mi1 btll!I r"4 betwffn Id
Mesa, 11 shown on • m111 tt<»rcMd In Alcohollc 8•~•1»• Gonl~, within ::io tr1nslttff(tl 1t'ld •• 'i1 tr1n1fttor(t l ;:.,
book 60, P.iie I, MllUllll!tOW ~ din of ttw datl "-·~ Pt'lm!Ht ~ldlrlflOfl for t111 fr"•nsft1 of Id
rte:Ol'llt of 11ld Otll'IOI cwnfv. w-llrtt .otled. 11111111 t!'WNlt for ri...1 ..... itld or Mid llcti\tefsl It ~"IHI
Sold .... Wiii "' "*"'· blit Wlth0\11 f9nl1I •• Cll'OYlllW " llw. TM 1ror.m1-(Ol'llMltl\fNlttd """' •flw fr• .. l•r II•• bffn (OVe!l•!'lt or w1rr1nty, llltt'IU "' IMO!ltd, .,. -11 c • " ••• for tM .... vi ·~ bV Dlp1rt'""'' ot Aleoholl( reo1rdl111 till-. PGUMSlon. OJt _.... •loo/Wiiie llwtr-. n. IOrJ'ft vi verlnc,. • .....,... CO!ltto~ iu"u."t II) Jtc. 'Mn cumbr11ncet. to NY tllt rtfnt1nh1t ftl'l~ tlon fNIY M obl1I'*' trom lllt'f .ttlw of et '"
clo11 1um of t11t lltle secvrtO W ••Id "" o.,Hol'fmMt. ni.i lht i.,..r" OtstTllled trt.ntlert ,,. Deed of T ....... t~wlt : 116.ftt.]$, wnll AlllPonV CIPPll to .. CO!llUIM'llltd tlll>ltd IQ ..... boW
1n1orfll from O.cembtr lt, IH7 " In fl:-ld w. Mllllf i>rovl1Jon1, et tllt' olllct of Or•~
11ld noM ••O'lllWd. 1dY1nct1, 11 ... Y. 4'00-0C EKf'OW Campuy, :1611 West $h1th Slreet under lhl ttmu ot Mid 0..0 ot Tr,191, Publlshld Ori-COllll Dl!IY Piiot, LOii A"''"-• Clll!Wnll toOOJ, Ol'I cw irt.i
fH,, d'l11'111 Incl tllPfn• ot Ille T ...... JIJl'lt ,., lHI lOn-41 JulV If, 1Ht.
I•• il\d of thl truth cr11ttd bY MIC! LEGAL NOTICE All olJWr bWllllS ,,,,.,.. •nd 1~ Deed of T""''· utod bV the fT1rurferor(I) wllllln lllfff
Tht benellcl1rY under "Id Deed of -Yllfl LIU .. "' Ml t1r 11 lmown II) Tn.111, bv rea.on ol 1 b1'91H:ll or dll1ull Ill ,,; •tcrOW NI. 1•·* Tr1nsltrfft, ere: N-. !tie oblloat!OM H'C\lted tll1r1t1v , Mn"IC• TO CREDITORS 01' •1.nJc Dtlld: June u. lHll.
florelofote 111.ecuted 11!d del!vtred to lht TRANSPER ANO O• INTl!NTIDN TO Foret! G. Smltll Ert!ttl>tlMI 1~ undtrJ!9ntd 1 wr!!tlifl Dtcl1}'11llofl ol TRANll'l!R. LIQUOR LICENSl!{I) Byr Forrell $mlt11, Jr.1
ot11ull •nd DMnlnd tor s.a11,1•nd written !Stet. 'lfl ... Uf U.C.C.) Pratdtnt notice ol b1e1ch end of tledlon to n1111 Notte. 11 Mretw t1vtn l'lllt • bull! Tr1n'lfltor
lhe undtr1lolltd to ten 11!d 11..-nv to tr1ns"1 fll ""°"'I ~nv 1nd • Ant'llonv C111C>•• ••r!,l"f .-Id oPlltl•llollt, 1MI t111reetltr; tr1111ter Of w-llctnttU) Is •boll! lo be R-ld W, MIHtr,
on M1rdl 11, lNI, !Pie undol~ltned -.te. Tr~Mltrets
civitd .-Id not1et ot br'NCll and or Tiie '"""' SOCS1I S.CWllV (Otl Ftdtrel "'01-0C elKHOfl to bf rtcorded' 1n boil* '540, Tall. Number, end Mlr1e11 IOdl'llL end Publli.lled Ot1110t Goist 01llY Pllclt,
pege t o1 11ld Ofllcl1I ltecorcla. t!P Coo:ls NUITlbtr, of 1111 lr1ntllrt1r 111J ____ .. _, c'"'~~------'-'""-· i Date: Jllllt 11, ,,.. Fort$! G. Sl\'llftl f"nlarpr!ll't Inc.. Fed.
· COLONIAL MORTCAGe: Tu No. t5-mt65f, 153 I!. PKllk: Coed LEGAL NOTICE
SERVICE CO. 011' HlthWl"f. NIWllOrt llld'I, C.Mf. j--,""='""°'"""'===,-.,~~-1 CALIFORNIA. 11 MICI Trut... TP\e n-. Soc:t1I $eairlty (Ot) l'tdtrll NOTICI!! DI' TRUSTl!l'S IALa Bv J. A. Lord, Tiii. Nurr+blr, Ind buslfleQ tcldreu, I~ NI. lfftft
AH!lta"I secret•TY ZIP coo:i. Numbtr, of 1111 fl'lllSllP"ll'I •••. On July 11 1"8 If 2·00 o'clOdt p M '-..Sl"S 15'tt An~ C1pp11,,Soc:. Ste. NO. 20Mtl.f756 th .' ' · · ·• ub"D\ld 011nn COlld 011IY Piiot. 111d R.on11d w. Mlilt•. SOC. Sec. No, flt-• r t Soulh Iron! ceneer door of lht Coun-p 7 ~ ""J • 1 lNI l«IMt HM4r IM$ $0Ulh Gllndtle Ave., Olen-fv Court Havst, Ill Ille C!tv of Stnt1 A.._, JvM 1 ' • ..._I U • • Ctlllot~lt. LAWYERS TITLE... GUARAN--
LEGAL NOTICE llEGAL NOTICE TY COMPANY, I Celllornle coroor1tlon,
---=;.;::;_;:c..: __ ="'°=-::=,-,:=:-:----------l•1 1vl>ltlluted T1u1fefl ullCler the De.ed of Trust mad1 bl' ELIZABETH DAll:NELl,
CIT'I' Ofl' COITA Ml!SA 1n tl'nmarrled woman 1fld re<orded MIY
ORANG• COUNTY. C.U.l•ORNIA 10, 1945, lfl eoe.k 7513, P1ge 5'1 ol Otllc!•I
NOTi<• INVITING 1101 Re.:ord1 ol Ortl!Ot Go<intv, Cllllfatnl•,
NOTICE IS HERE•Y GtV~N th•! th• Cltv Clertf of fM Cl'IY of (01!1 Ml'lll orv111 lo 1ecure an lndtbledlleU In t1wr
!Ill reetlvt Hllod ;l'OPO$al1 on Ill' befor. lrlda"f, Ille $!h d•Y ol JUl\I, 19'1 of GLENDALE FEDERAL SAVINGS ANO
mtll llw 1111ur Df 11:00 1.m. ol ••Id dlll, II the (Oita MtN Clf'f H1U. 11 F1lr LOAN .U!.OCIATION, Ill Unllod Sl1Nt
Orlve, co.11 MeN, c1u1omi.. corpar1t1on. by re.son of tile bt'HCll of Pro_.1, tor tuml1hl110 •II l1bol', m1t1rl1!1, eow!_,,I, lreM-11llOll •nd certain oblt11nonJ 1ecur.d ffllAllV, nolln such ofhf:r ftellllln tor !tie IMPROVEMENT OF FAll{VIEW ll:OAD FrtOM THE of Whlcti w11 reco1ded Mlrell 11, INI, In
SAN OIEGO FREEWAY TO SUNFLOWER AVENUE WI~ bt OIM"lld In publlC Booli; U.U, P101 Ol. of Nld Otlltl1I ,
"nd read 1i1:1Ud In ltll cwncM Cf11mbe" on ••kl dlY, •t «" 1D011I Hfd tlmt, R.eccrdJ, Ortl'ID• COllnf'f, 'Niii sell 11
by !ht C!IY Cllrk Of tald Cll\I, llUbllc 1ucl!on lo !Pie hlDtlltl blddtr for fP1e ~1 "FAIRVIEW JIQAO, SAN DFEGQ i;REEWAY TO SUNFLOWER C•th p1y1ble In lllwtul money ot 111t
AVENUE" should ·-·· on "" .n .... 1-Of ••di IHled p,_.I, S1ld pl'(>flOlll United Sltlet Of Ame•lc• ,, 1111 time of ,hould bt i ckltt$Hd to the Cltv Clerk, Cltv Hill, C0tla Mtte, C111forn11. 11le, wltllo\Jt CO\ltfllllf or wernnty .,..
The -rte wllt c-1•1 of PAVEMENT CONSTRUCTION ANO CURB AND Meed or lmt1lttd, 11 to 11111, P011t11lon
GUTTElt CONSTRUCTION wlltl Al'l'RO)(tMATEl Y 91:12 CUl!llC YARDS OF OI' encumbr1nces, ti. l1111tts1 convel'ld lo
EXCAVATION, l.l60 TONS OF A!PHALT CONCRETE, tt20 T~S OF AGGRE· Ind l\OW' htld bV 11kl Tn11fet Undlr 111d
GATE BASE, !SD TONS OF LIME ANO APPURTENANT WORK. ONG of Trust, In Incl to thl folloWlng
A Mt ot pllnl, IPKlflc1tto.wi, Ind Otlltr r;ornrKI dOeUllllMt mey .. otlttlneco ckKrlbed PrOl'lrtv, lo-Wit:
11 the offlct OI ltll City Clertc:, T1 F1lr Otlvt, Colli Mell, C.lltoml1, UllOll 1 Lei 30 1nd 1n undivided 1/'2 lnllr1$l d~llO'lll et $15.00. An adcl!Ttonll dl1rte of SI.OD wlll be mlde It hlndltd 11'1 mtU. In lo! ll ol Tr1ct No. S:W, In t11t Cl'IY
M,l.IL SEPARATE CHECKS. of Cot!• Met.I. CO!lnty Of Or1nv11, $1•1t E1cll bid shell be midi on tlll """'°"I foml •lld '" 1'11J """""" provided In of CllU01nl•, 11 JMW11 on 1 mlP
!hi contllld c1oc:umentt, ind 111111 tot .1.cccmpenled bv • urlUltd or uilhltr'1 <~ recorded In loo!>; Jt$, Plffl 24 ind 21
or 1 b1d bond tor net lw ll"n 109 of th• 1moun1 of Ille bid, mtdt "Ytblt ol Mfsceli.11eou1 M11>1, ncot1lt of
10 lhl City of Cc1!1 Mnl. Ot1"9l! County, C1lllornl1 Abbrevl1tlon1 used In Ille 1cl!edull ot Pltdeltrmlntd w11111 r1111 hi C<ll'llul'tl;flon For fflt PUl"ll'Oll ol Pll'lno obllt1tlon1
with tmPlover p1Yrntnl1 llslld Ill lh1 right l\lincl column• ire Identified as tollowt: secu1e<1 bv Mid Deed' Of TrVJI lncludlnt
ch per hour pd per Chl"f lee1, dl1rg.e1 1nd •-te' of ti. Trust11, phw per hour wortctd POW per dlY wort~ 11dv11nc:n, If 1nv, undtr th• tlrm• ot wld
ph,:t per 1'.ot!t p.aJct l>dP per d•Y Ptld Ottd of Tru1t, lnter"l$t thereon encl
phw/p per hour wo1ktd or Plld l>dw/p per dly worhd or paid S12,11•1.,4. In llnOlld prlnclPll .of tllt note
P'lll'I per tlrlleht llmt flour w wtgt &eeurtd by 111d Deed ot Tn1" Wllll ln-
Plll'lp Pl!r 1tr1loht time hOUf P'ld gw 1ros1 w._ t1r11t thereon from Otcemblr I. IH7, 11
p11riw per 1lr•IDM tlrnt rw:iur worttcl tw tol•I w1" In selct ncll Ind bV llw pn:ovlded,
pmc1 per men Illy psthW/lt per 1tr"1!1M time '*" -11:111 Dete; Jvnt II, lNI. or N ld LAWYEll:S TITLE GUAltANTY
EITIPIO'l'll Hvmtnll ofller lllln ,,_ Jl1mlll!cl f1111ln, 11 d.tlt'lld lrt Sec!lon COMPANY, Trvsttt
1m' Of '"' Llbor Codi '"' lo .. Hid Ill 1cGOl'dtn<1 Wllll !Pie i.mu "' 1111 BY s. A. ILUSH, Vice ....... cGll~cll_.. t1o1r111fll,. 111'~tn111111111llc1bll to tht IYl'9 « cll11lllullon of flll :!!r'S::,',~ 0. Wol«IH
work..-or rnedl1n1cs employed on tht Jll'Oltcl. 1 2uo
Ovwlh"!M, Sundin Ind liollclt"f~ IW l'lllll l V. llrnts tf\t bllk llClurly Publltlad Ottntt COlllf Dtlly Pllot
rite PIUI 1111lk1blt 1111111~, PIYfl'llnl&. The NOUdln Ul'Oll wllld! such ''"' Junt 24 Ind JulY I I IHI 101'"' ~n1n bt p11d 111111 be 111 llotldlys rec°""lztd In the ccl!Kll..,. ~r11!nlnt ,,,... • •
men! 1pPl1c1blt "' tr.. Pllrllcui.r cr111, clu111ic1Hon ar tl'9t Of WOl"ltm.n em-LEGAL NOTICE ployed on IM pro\lcl. CopJ11 Of 111 colledtw llll'Plnlnti 11r-lt rt1•tlne to"-work ., set l -----~~~-----1 forth In tr.. 1fofemenltoned Llbor Codi 1r1 on Ille 1NI •v1U1blt tor lnlHtllon In T 2SUt lhtr c.fflct o1 the Dt!P11rlmtnl of lnc1utlrl1I Rtl•lllln1. Dlvl1lon ot Llbor lllll1tla IUl'l!RIOR CDU RT OIJ TH•
Incl ReMll'Ch. STAT!! 01' CALll'ORNIA
Attention ~ di~ to Stctlon 7·LOIG flt tt.t St111C11rd SPKllletllon1 PTOVldlng FOR THI COUNTY OIJ ORANel
fer tlTll>!oYmtfll of IPPrl!flllCH on !ht 'll'Ork. EVitrY IUCh IJ>Oren!lcl ahtll bl Nici Nt. A....ul llll l!dndird Wiii J)91d lo eporenllCes ulllkt 1Ple l'ellUlallon' ot lht tr1d1 II NOTlCI!! OF Hl!ARINO 01' PITITION
."'
•• "' • 1mPI0,1d. lnlormellon relJllve "To emPloYment ot lpPl'elltlces 111111 IJOR PROIATI o• WILL AND IJOR "' < < < ' < 1•-·· "° b Ll!!TTERS TIESTAMl!NTARY. bl oblllned from Ille DI reeler ot lht Oe1>11rtment ol ndustr 1 11 ~ w E$la!e ot EVELYN ELIZABETH
!ht Admlnl1tr1llve Officer of 1111 C.ilfcrnl1 Ai>Prenllceshlp CO\lllCll. REYNOLOS DetHltd Pu~uanl 10 the provisions of Stctlon 1770 of !Pie L1bor Cede 01 IM S!a!e NOTICE '15 HERE.IV GIVEN Thi!
crf Calllornll, !hi Cltv Courw:ll cf !hi Cltv cf (O!lll Mele hll IKftlllMd lhl "'": Barberi P1trld1 Wlllll hes flltd hl•lln 1 tr<ll p.,,\llU!nt rtlt of Wlllft Ind tmPloytr Pl~mtnll IOI' health Ind wllflrl, VI PlllllOll for Problt!t of Wiii Incl 19r
<•lions, pension ind 11mll1r ourpases In !hi <OUntv In wllldl 1111 ~ ll to I!-111u111C1! cl Letten Test1men11rv to tile
!lone lo be 11 followl: petitioner, r~erenc;t lo which 11 J'll..,. fOf
B•Jlc r11t EJ'llpl.,... """""'' fll' lurtl\er p1rllcvllra, ind 1'1111 ti. tlm1 1nd tt1r )lppr Clltllf!Qllllt N 1111 W VICIHefl "-*' pl1ce of he<lr!ng Ille Mml h11 been set 5klLLED LAIDR for Julv 12, 1961, ,, t :JO l.J'll., In tf\t
5.31 AsJ>Mlt i:o11n1 eno!nter 30c phw/p 30c phw/p(31 4k phw/P c:tUrtroom ol OK11rtm1nt No. J of &116
5.\2 Aspnall pllllf llr1mtn 30c PhWIP 30t phw/plJ) ·& PhW/P <OUrt, II tol North 8r011dW1y, In !ht City
5.0'1 CerPOnler Mc pmt/p Uc phw/p 30c phw/1 of Senta Ana, Callfoml1. • ~.IS cement m1ton 2k PhW/P 2Sc 1hw/p 3Cc pl\w/p Dated June 21, 19611.
SOI Ch1lnm1n & rOdman (2) 20c phw/p 30t lhw/pll) '5c Phw/P W. E. ST JOHN
.S..JI conc:rell or 1spll11t 11>readll!O 30I; pl!W/11 :IDc phw/p(31 '5c phw/p Countv Cl•rk
111 Diph Gear
Toyota
Agency
.Opened
By CARL CARSTENSEN
Of "" 0.lly , .... , ..
I Les Ellpore, 0 r a n g e
County auto dealer since tht
early !9S()'a bM cpen<d bb
new Toyota · dealer1hlp in
Westminster.
The $400,000 fadlity oc-
cupies tour and a half acres
at 15292 Beach Blvd. and the
3200 square foot showroom
accommpdates a four car
display while the 3750
square foot &ervice depart..
ment has eight'servlce atalls
wfth plenty of room for ex-
pansion.
The new Toyota store will
handle about 200 new and
used cars. Elmore is strictly
an Orange County product
having started here as a US·
ed car dealer. He gradually
worked his way into the im-
port business and was for
five years the Triumph
dealer in Garden Grove.
··He received the Toyota
franchise in 1966 and quickly
became one of the top sell·
ing Toyota dealers in the
U.S. In April last year,
E I more outsold all 712
Toyota dealers in the coun·
try.
* * * MAY BIG MONTH
FOR OLDSMOBILE
Oldsmobile Division pro·
duced more cars in May
than in any previous month
in its hist<Jry. Harold
Me t z e 1, Olds GM said,
"May's production of 72 ,305
cars has never been equall-
ed .and the 648,000 cars we'll
build for the model year is
55,000 more than t h e
previous record established
in 196.5."
The reason is that Olds
sales this year are up 15.8
percent, compared with an
industry increase or 11.3
percent. The Toronado is
one of the big reasons with a
19 percent increase. in sales.
* * * FACTS AND FIGURES
CAN BE INTERESTING
The nation establi'shed
new ·automotive records last
year in motor vehicle
registrations, miles of
travel, fu el consumption, ex·
ports and in just about any
other field named. The new
records are hlghli,ghted in
NEW DEA~ERSHIP -Participating !n opening
festivities of Les Elmore's Toyota dealership on
Beach Boulevard are (left to right) Elmore, Roger
B~k1 Toyota district manager , J ames .McGraw; ...
national sales director for Toyota, Ron Pinchot,
general manager for Elmore, and Tatsuro Toyoda,
vici.president of Toyoll\. · .
the 1968 e d l ti on of lion's economy is pointed up
"Automobile Faci.1 and with such statistics as:
Figures," tJre a n n u a l -Prodliction for .1967 in· cluded an output of
statistical booklet publlsbe~ 7,412,659 passenger cars and
by the Automobile Manufac-1,611,077 c o m m e r c: i a I
turers Association. vehicles.
The booklet shows that in -More than 13.5 million
1967 the nation h a d people are employed in the
81,051,000 passenger cars ma~ufacture, distribution,
and 16 476 000 trucks and maintenance a n d com·
buses. 1Th~y traveled 967 ..:...lPe~cial use of m o tor
billion miles during the year vehicles.
and consumed nearly 78 -More than 60 percent of
billion gallons of fuel. all rubber consumed i'n the
Automotive exports last United States is for
year climbed more than automotive use whiclf also
$400 million over t h e accounts for 20 percent of
preceQ.ing year to totaf near· total steel consumption.
ly $2.9 billi~n. -There are over 800,000
The 7()..page booklet in· automotive businesses, or
dicates that Americans are one out of every six firms in
driving newer and better the United states.
equipped cars. The average -Special motor use taxes
age of passenger cars in use accaunt for 22 percent of
last year dropped to 5.63 total tax revenues for all
years from 5.71 in 1966 and states.
5.90 in 196.5. Selection of op·
tional equipment rose to
new highs with 85 percent of
the 1967 model cars baving
automatic: transmissions, V·
8 engines and radios. Three
out of four had power steer·
ing, better than 38 percent
had power brakes and a like
number had factory in·
stalled air conditioning.
The i'mportance of motor
vehicle production to the na-
* * * MILESTONE REACHED
The U.S. motor vehicle
manufacturing i n d u s tr y
reached a special milestone
early this year when the 250
million mark for vehicles
produced fn this country
was passed. Do you know
when the first motorcar was
sold in the U.S., what Jt used
far fuel, and its name?
Greater Efficiency
Exec.utives Also
Must Get Rest
By JORN CUNNIFF weekend.s moot com-
NEW YORK (AP) -"I paniea ·seem to be llberallt·
want you to take atcoupie of tng their poli'cle1 for
week.I otr, Futalc and 1 a8larfed wQfker1. want you to get ouf of tbe ci· t1 to ,1ome nice spot and 1 "Policies are undergoing
don't 'fi.Dt you to .~c:.n think widespread review a n d
about tbe office/' Mr. Big, modification," the maDage·
the president, tot his Illes mtnt -association 1tttes. ~
managtr. big change appears to be in
. Fa1te,Ul protesWd: be had reducing, the length o f
too. much work ,\o do; be · l!lervice requirements for ex·
wasn't tired, he / loved hls t~ time off.
job. "That's an 9rder,11 Big Jn almost all corporation111 ' l>arked, and so; Faatalk the management associati"on
1lunk •way to bis summer says, length of service is the
v1cati911 ,, I determinant or vacations.
The scene might not be The generitl pattern for
common, but t\ doe1 occur salaried workers is one
tn many large, companies, week after six months and
for one of the )nost persis· two.wee)£:s: .alter a year.
tent problems ~ scheduling The liberalization appears
vacations, whif;:h generally most noticeably 1n the
are being Ube.tallied, is to shorter timP. needed for
get the executive to take the three·wetk vacationa. Some
ti.me due hlm. compllnles which once re•
AWAY FROM OFFICE quired 15 years of service, the management association
Rest, relaxation, recrea-sa)rs,. have now lowered the
tion. -just ti'me away from requirement to 10 years.
the office -are being
regarded·tncreasingly as the LOWERED RATIO
rou te to greater e!ficier\c:y Other companies· .have
and pr~ucUvity. But lowered the ratio to three
ironically, sorile of those weeks for five years, and a
very executives who first tendency ii now appearing
spotted t:Jiis route are the to grant a mOllth after 15
least able to follow Jl years or even 10, instead of
A report to member com-after 25 years of continuous
panies by th~ American service.
Management Association, a For top e x e c u t J v e s ,
nonprofit research and however, a different policy
e du c:ational organization usually applies, with three that does a continuing study -fo k <Jn vacation poli.eies, con-or ur wee 5 generally granted r e..g a rd I e s s ot tains this observation: service length. And whereas 1
'· ··the predominant pro-most employes forfeit vaca·
blem appears to be the dif· tkin time not used in one
flculty in persuading ex· calendar year, executives
ecutives to take the vaca-often can carry over their
tions to which they are en-time from one year to the
titled a~ to . take l enougkh next.
consecutive~!time o ta e
maximum a'dvantage of the Trouble is tbe executives
rest whfch is intended to be don't always want it. They'd
the purpose of vacations." rather putter around the of.
The study shows also that !ice, it seems, than putte r
some companies now insist around a goU course: rather
that executives not only take dive into their work than in·
lOilger vacations but follow ,....to_a_coo_l_p_oo_l. ____ _
them with shorter periods ·
away from the office, and
that time off "be taken
away from home a n d
uninterrupted by business."
POLICY STATED
One company's poticy con-
tains the. clause: "Ex~
ecutives will take such ad:
diti"onal time off from ·work
for' recreational purposes1as
ls necessary or desirable to
maintain a high peak of
physical and mental well
being." mechl"l<ll•t1molng or lln!thlflll R"ln Ind R1ddln'
meclllne oi>er1tor 201 E11t OUvt A"'""' S.:14 Driver o1 dUnlP truck, 15 yOS. )$( fll!W/P Uc PhW/p 20t llllW/J 8Urtllnk, C1Af0rnl1, '1'0t
,,, more w111r 11 .... 1-,111111 T1I: 2U·M4·110 Your Money's Worth The management associa·
tion reports that "these
companie's hav~ ·1 reported
lmproVed efflciMcy and
productivity as a result of
such pollcles." But there
are other reaso ns also
u~ll or comblno!lon of AHorMYI for l'trlllontr veh1Clt$ PuDllshed Or1nte Co11I 01!1Y l"llot,
5.71 Fence erector De Pll!ll 23c phw!11 He PllW!ll Jun1 n, 14, 'lf, 19611 109' .....
S.ll Gritde clledeet' lOc phW/P 30c pllW/1>(3) •k Phw/p
5.12 lnslrumen!Tilan 1'1 J0c; PhW/P 33c phw/p(l) '5c Phw/P s.•1 Motor p"rtil -r1tor JOc: pllw/p JOc: 1>hw/P(31 4.5c Pllw/p
LEGAL NOTICE What Women Shouldl(now
S.79 P<l1Mtr -brutll 2« pllw 10.: pflw 2.Sc PllW 5.41 P•rly Ch!d Ol 30c pllw/p 30c PhW/p(31 4SC PllW/P 8Alt 1Jl
s.6• Plumber 71/tc: ol irw(61 Uc ot irw 11)( Of irw
S.!3 1telnlorcln1 ltonworktt 'lie phwll) 23c cflw(l1 2k phwOI
IUPl!RIOR COURT OF THI!
STATE OIJ CALIFORNIA •Oil THE COU NTY OF ORAMGE
5.12 Roller -rllllr lOc PllW/P lOc phw/Pl3) '5c P!IW/P
5.31 Rubber !Ind, htlVV cfufy lOc pllw/p ~ phW/P{3J '5c phwlP NI.A~ NOTICI! OIJ HEARING -PETITION l'OR PROaATI! 01' WI LL ANO ,,011
Ll.TTlllS TISTAMl!NT~RY
By SYLVIA PORTER
Women are now invading
career fields ranging from
the seemingly incredible
(ordinary "seamen") to the
seemingly ridiculous
(chimney sweeps). We are
becoming eminent in white
collar professions w h i c h
were closed to us until only
a fe:w years ago. We are
proving our worth in bl ue
collar occupations which
have just optned up to us
for the first 1e in history.
eoulriment OJll••lor
S.ll Sklllk>tdlr -r•tw wllffl lvpe over "" Yd•. UP lo &t !nc::ludlnv l'h yds. ,
S,41 SklPIOldtr o ... ,.tor wheel
!VP• ove' 1\\ vdt.
J,lt EleC!rkllrt
5.(1 Tr•tlor IOlclitr OPtfllor
ell lYP!I
1.41 ":"raclor aper1tor with bOOITI
lttlthmtnl•
30e r:kiW/r>
lk p))wUl
3Qc: p!\WIP
30c PhWIP
3Cc pllWfl' S.41 Tr1Clt>r IOl!lef -r1tor
crawler IYPt -111 slzet end ,.,.J)tl
5.31 Tr<lClor OPtrllor -drllll\IPt, )Ge; pl\W/P
t11ov•l• blllldoter, t1mPtr. scraper ind pUsh tractor 1.12 t1111Chln1 rntchlnt OPtrltor UP lOc: phw/p
"' ,. depth (IPl(;tly
mto. Ttllne
l.41 trenc::1>11111 1n1ctil111 OP&r"°" over 6' dwth c111tcl1Y
mre. r1tln1
31)( DhW/11
1.41 Unlvel'lll e~~•pmet\I ottr11cr JOc PhW/P
shovel, blCkMI!, dr1111ne, clemi.111!11, Mrrl.;Jc, 6errl~~ twor1M, crafle, 111le driver &
mucklMI machine
INT£RMEDIATI GRADE U8011:
4.SJ Air ccmprU10r pUmP or oener· lOc 1>hw/p
41or operator '-~ Asphalt r1ker llrtd Ironer
• l. tJ AsPMll lho,,.ler •.o.1 Concret• cun:r rn111ervl0111 membrlM incl form 011"• 4.n Concr•ll mixer oper1tcr :IOc 1111w1p
4.50 Ortwr ot dllll'IP tru<k leu thin lSc llhWIP
' ydl. w11er ltv•I 4,SJ Or!Yfr• Of du,,,. lrudl: 4 )'ds, lSc PhWIP
bu! lnl t111n I Y<11. water
·~· ~.Sf Ori"" of d"""' !nick I Vdl. lSc phWll
but le11 then 12 yd&. Wiier
llYtl f.M Orl~r ol dumP truck 12 yoh. Sk PhW/P
bvl leu then 1• ye1, water
·~· •.llf Driver of dumP lr\ltk 1' VOi. 1$C PhW/I'
but leu 1111111 '! ydl. w11er
·~· • 5l Engineer, ol~r. 1l1n•lm&n lOc ill!WIP 3.~~ Fine grader, MghWl"f &. llNtl 21 \.tc Phw/P
Pll~lng, l!n>0rt1. runw1.,.,
& slmlllr lyPI hl8VY
corurtru<:llon J.t3 Guinea c.h1Hr t t\.tc Phw/p
4.SJ He1...., ctutv r1P•l""lrt'fi MIP'r JOc rollw/p
4 It l ll'IMI of 111 !IOl'•mtlllllc fll'tc ,.,,W/I'
>DC !lflw/J!3l
30.: Phw/p(31
JDC 11hw/PUI
3Dc PhW/PUl
JOc pllw/P(3)
:IOt .tlw/P{3)
*PllWIP 20t PhW/P
J:k r#JW/P
-1>11W/p(:ll 25C phw/P
25c l'hw/p
tlc: llhW/P
2Jc: phw/p
»: o~w1•UI 10c: pllw/p
)lie pl\w/P
:IOt pftw/p!31
20t PhWI•
PhH lrl(.ludllll -r pll>I,
dr.ln pipe encl lrl(.ludlne
11nderorouNI 1111
• Gol M1klno &. t1Ulllno of alt ,_ 11'r'tC rllr#IP 20i: phw/P met1Hlc PIH IOlllb
4.56 W1l~r II' t.vik•IYPI fnldl dl'lvet 1k rJlr#/1
unclfl 2SOt Giit.
'·" W•ter "' "nt•IY" tnO drlwr a f#lw/J
2500 °''" ~ 00 Gib. •.~ W1Mr Of l"*.fYPt ln.d drlvtr 1k filrlW/r>
.1000 Giit. 11111 O\ff
UNSKILUD LAIOR
ilDc phw/p
lOt phw/a
Ck p!!W/I
Ellale al JAMEi A. EUDAlY. Otcee· .... NOTICE 15 HEREBY GIVEN Thi!
Lucille R, Eud11V, /Ill flied her1l11 I Piii· 1-.i. of ewtSJ tlon tor Prob!lle ol Wiii end tor h1111nc1
'5c PhWI' of l elltr1 TIJf•menl•.Y to file P1tlllon.tr. reltnncl to Wfl!dl I• mlde tor lurthe•
4Sc: PllW/P P1rtlcul1ri. Ind 11111 "" time •!Id -l•c:• al he1r!n1 tM llmt 1111 bftn &el for JUIV .SC PhW/I 12, lNt. 11t::io1.m., !fl 1111 courtroom ol Dw•rtme11t No. 7 of 11ld i;ourl, II tel N,
lroedw1y, In tht Clfv of Slnte Al\f,
... C11lt«nla. ...,.. PhW/ll Olltd JU'"° 2\, 1'61
W. E, ST JOHN
Countv Cit,. Ck PhW/P CIMMY, k:llumlcW, Ctltm111 aM
' MIRY9"1
A"'"""' At llw Ge Pl'lw" IH T-11M1 C.UMl"I' It ...
Ori .... Clllfonll• "'"' Tll tl14J 1414111
Uc J>hWlll Atltl'MYI t• 1'11111-
Publlllltll Ori,,._ C0111I
June 22. 24. n, 1"8
O.Uy Pilot, ·-The reasons arc nnt just
the .'lous legal b a n s
against job discrimination
27C Phwll 27c phwfo
'Uc phwlp
Uc PhWIP IOC pl\W/I'
20( PhW/P
* pllw/1
'5c llflwfP Ve pllwlp
27t llltw/P
4k phw/I 21C P~W/11
t?c llflw/11
fOI: l'flWfr>
l?c r>ft'ooo/p
IJc !lflw/11
Leasing Now Practical For Everyone
lncr1t1l119 11u111btr1 of Am1ric1t11 now 11111 th1 f1mily c•r-1hd
fot 101111 "'"I 9ood rt110111. -EXAMPLI:
You c111 now 11111 a br•nd 111w Co119ar for S92.00' p1r month,
e11d ju1t Jook 1t whit It includ11i Full 1trYic1 1rtd 1111i11t1n1nc1
for th1' n1wt two l''n or <t0.000 m!101, AT NO IXTIA COST TO
YOU. Your f ull rn1it1lon1nc1 11111 will incluJ1 tl1t followl119
11rvic11:
1. A 40,000 mil• Hrvkt w•rranty, lncllttdh•t all
ptrh tnd labor.
2. All m•Jor •nd minor repelrt, lncludln1 lubrl·
catlOt11, ell, and fllttra.
S. Tune ups, Ctrburt9or rtpa.lr1, Spark Plugs, 11·
nltlon Points, end Dlttrlbutor ltepeln..
4, Trtntmlulon tdJv•tmtnf'I and rtpalra, phn
""'''"' Hjuatmtnt• •ncl reP11ln:. 5. lr•k• edjv1tment1, llnln91, rtpelr1, plu1 wheel
INrlanclnt and tll9nm1nt.
6. Tlrtt rotettd.
1. An'/ end all repelra minor 1nd m•Jor wh1ntvtr an whtrner nffded exctpt demagn cavud
from accldtnh of colll1lon or negltct.
I. Wt will Mir your Prtttnt 'Car,
t. Any ont can IMH a car from Johnt0n & a.n.
All y.u nHd 11 Sank tppf"OVtlll credit.
OTHER EXAi"M"'PL"'E"-S:'-----,
,,U Fl10-.n '1* """IP 3.U labor~I er coi.fn.IC'tloll 2ll'IC .,_,,
(I) Tn:Yel 111'1'11 11 Cia'llkllrtll .. fllM --.eo,
(2) 5"<:191 (*ldltlofll fO'lllirlllfll Ille -el 1'111 cl••lflc.ttltll .,. ... fOl'fll Ill
1ffl MlllCURY
STATION WAGON
Air otnodH .. 1vlo. tr11111., W Mt!, p/1lotr ,, p/11t1kn. rtd'IO. clocll;,
llftlw, H"f tltu. 40.0W mlllt.
1'61 CONTININTAL
AulO., telt!P. C011!rol, ltlflllr
kf'f -1•1!. tlfllod lllll. -..wall lire&. I~ M1Jnt, ..
000 mutt.
trll ccllf<'llW9 blf'fltftlllt "~· Ul lrw:lvOll 1JC llllW1' 1or 110•vt. !41 Set ID,_t f9I' IH'ICIH _,1H.
Ul 111 HC'Or'drlnOI wllll ''lnwo..,._ ltMfft Aenetntflt". H! lndktltd tit M nfrc fll ,.....1111v .,_ "Yftll.
Tiit CG'llffdet .... II UM tnlr unmllllllltl\WM l'l'llttrf1ft ~ In fl'll United 111"9 ... 111tv '""""Kt\IUd 1N1ltrlll1 J'l\lftllflc:lwN In "" Uftli..t ., .... lllbllllltlli,, ... 4 ..._ _ _..,..,.~ Ill .. Vfllttd~&---111 .... ~
" '"' CllllltT'ld. NI bid 1111111 .. ~ ""'"' It II -· Oii I _,. fOttl'I l\IMlllllM t1J "" Cl,.,. of CO.II ..... Ind II m0 11'1 ~ra Wlfll 1111 WO'llllolll If ltll ....,.., ....ulrelnfflft,.
£1cft blddlr mvlt ._ ''°'"""' eflf 11M ,,..,.nflH • ,_,ittc1 bl' lew,
Thi (tty CeufKll • "" Otr ., C.111 MMI ,.,..,_ lht rkllll '° nfrd
lllV or Ill blcll. 01116: J-11111, ,,..
51250:,.-.
"VI, aw+t. *"'"'" P-· •t11r. 'Whttl Cl'fl"'
JOHNSON
AND SON
5165°~ ...
,red.lo, he1t1r, ti11t1d 9l11t, Jbr ..
on the basis of sex in the
1964 Civil Rights Act and the
mounting acceptance of
birth control v i a con·
trac:eptives. The underlying
reason is the spreading
scarcity of highly educated,
h 1 g h 1 y trained workers
throughout the n a ti o n •
Because w<nnen are needed
as never before Jn the jot
market, there is virtually no
occupaiion still closed to us
and women are now being
actively recruited for jobs
once exclusively in the do-
main of men.
LET'S SAY you're a
young woman considering a
career in this challenglilg
era, in which if you are
typical you will marry at
age 20, raise children and
still work at a job an
average of 22 years. What
guidance could 1 · prc>perly
give you to help you fulfill
yoursell as well as make a
significant contribution to
your family and to the na·
tional economy? This ·
Before you decid(: ~n your
career, study th~range of
occupations now open to
you. Olmsult your s~hool
guidance counselor · o n
details of c a r e e r OP·
portuiilties and the Labor
Department 's com-
prehensive "O~upational
Outlook Handbook,' which
describes more than 700 dif-
ferent careers.
set your career goal! as
hi gh as you dare, or con-
sider upgrading your goals
within a given field you've
already picked. For ex-
imple, U you,'re thinking
about becoming' nurse, ask
yourself wflether you might
· quaUfy for tralnlng 8$ a
nursing teacher or a
medical lochnologl$L u you
want to become a secretary,
consider a hlgb-p-aylng
specialty such as medical,
legal or bilingual secretarial
work.
MAKE A Jong-range p!M
to meet the requirement.•
for the occupation you
choose. Vour immediate
4oal probably will be to , ..
behind the imfstence an
complete, college. Tb e vacations1 Wins Promotion statistical likelihood is "that In soi::ne companies, for
you'll then get married and example, the executive's un·
raise a family. But you can derl!ltudy U expected to Edward S. Saxey of
go on to specialized educa· develop his abilities during Huntington Beach has
fessional train i n g or the bou' vacation. It's sup-been promoted to as·
and practice your !kills posed to be his tryout sistant vice president
while you're an a c: ti v e period, which is reason in United California
housewife. Today nearly 100 . enough for men like Fastalk Bank's Los Angeles
coUeges and universities, in· to stick around. head'Quarters comptrol·
eluding communi'ty colleges TAKE VACATION lers department, finan·
and university extensions, cial reseat.ch division. offer "continuing education At least one compan)' re-----------programs" for ad u It quire1,that every execuUve
women. In some cases, take a two-week vacation
class schedules are geared every si"x months, partly "to
to the hours you're likely to prepare for the coming
be free from domestic season," which presumably he w.lll attack with bullish duties. energy. If you r e c e i v e d pro-While execuUves a r e
Bank Makes
Film on
California fessional train in g or resisting .long vacations _
graduate education before and in some instances are
you manied and left the said to be choosing multiple
labor force, do everything n at! •-
slbl t k t h 1 sma vac ons or .Hiii£ A colorful documentary
pos e 0 eep a film titled "California" has training up Id date while
You're homemaldilg. For ex-just been reloo-sed for local Two State showings, H. H. "Hal" ample, keep your mem-bership J n professional Jackson, vice president in
assoclatJonl!I. Subscribe to, chacge of are'· a ad· B nk Pl mlnlstraUon for Bank of and read, technical Journtls 8 8 an America In Orange County
in your field. Attend any announced today.
seinlnar1 or lectures in your T M Jackl!lon said the film of·
field which you pooslbly can. 0 erge ferg ... fresh and offbeat
Keep in touch with other look" at the state,
members of Y o u r -LOS ANGELES (UPI) -The 30-mlnute docwnen·
Cession. Use your education Two California banks hav~ tary was produced by
a"d practice your skills announced plans to merge Wolper Productions o t
through part-time Jobs or klto a single financial in· Hollywood.
volunteer work in your field. 1UtuUon with a combined •icallfornla" was Ull·
When you're Cree to take a capital and surplus of $300 dertaken by Bank of
{Ull·tlme job, don't Ju.st million. America aa a public servic:e t
''take a Job." Look for work Plans for the merger were ''to present • ClllTent, well-·•
in the Oeld in which you announced J o 1nt1 y Wed-rounded picture of the stat.e
were orlginarlly educated or nesday by Security Fir1t in all ltl strengths and
trained. If tt requires more NatiOnal Bank of L o t wWne1se41" J a c k a o n
training, get tt. Or ·U you Angtl•a and Pacific Na· noted.
want to start over on a new Uooal Bank of San Fran· "People Who have :seeh.
cal'ffr goal, do that. cl&eo. the film tay It captures the.
After the merger they Will essence of the tate by focu• '! 11 E R E NOW are be known aa s e c u r J t y ing on elements that have
281000,000 women In the U.S. PacUlc National Bank. made It the Jtadlng edge Of
labor force, of "ho m The action hea the ap· American 1ociety."
roughly 15,000,0QO are .rork-pn>vll of tbe U.S. comp. The film b avlilable free
1ng wives. By 1980, the num. troller af the currency. The or oharge to any civic
her of women tn the labor Justice department bas in· o(ganlzatioo, service club,
force ll slated to leap up dicated Jt will not oppose the sthool, cburth, or similar
36,<ro,OOO, a far greater rate merger on a a trl •tr u 1·t group. or-lncrtase than eipectod rrounc11. . lntere~ groups may
for m<n. Security oper1lal at 3118 contact the publlc rolaUoM
If this labor force f$ to Jn· banking 1 o c a t I o n 1 in dei>artment In Los Angeles
elude you, pr~pare )'OUSeJf Soutbern C!allfornla. Pacific or order the fiJm through
to occupy a posjtlon in National 11 a &t.ngte unit t.01 Bank of A ·m er I c a
Ylhlch you can have pride. baok:. branch.
• '
-------------------·----· ------------------·-------------
•
I
i
J.• DAllY PILOT '!'onday, J11nt 24, 1968
Tlie MORE TDtES YOU BUY·~ .·The
wruuwallor
Blackwall
Slkilli DJUd'' ... ,...
·More, You.SAVE
Guardsman
Buy l Tirt SAVE s3
,Ju•t ·in Time
1for Vacation
Get Your Tir ..
at NO MONEY
DOWN on
Sears Easy
1Payment Plan
Whitewall
or Blackwall
Sllmt D,rnacor
8&70•
G•arthmaa
Buy 2 'l'irt8
SAVE-s3
ALLSTATE Passenger Tire Guarantee
Ouaz-aateed Art.tn1t: All f all· Tax that npreaent. tread
urea of th• tire rHUlting used.
from normal road huarcb or Guaraateed Aplnt: Tread
defect. ln materlal or work-wear-out.
ma.nah!.p. Fw Bow I.one': The number
o! montha lpedfled. For Row Lonr: For the life Whal 8Ml-ll ww Doi In ex-
of the original tread change for the tire, repl&M
What Searl WUJ Do: Repair
natl puncture.1J at no eha.rfe.
In the case of failure, in ex-
clwlgl for the tire, replace
lt, ch&rfing only the propor-
tion of current regular 11ell-
lng price plus J'ederal Exoiae
it, charging Uie current Hf·
ular &elllng pr:lce plu1 Fed·
er&J Excl&e Tax Ieu the fol·
lowing a.J]QWlllJl<le:
Months ,&Jlowanw
12tol' 10%
27 to 89 2{)'1f
Full 4-Ply; Nylon ALLSTATE , -
Td I -lla.dnr.u.
~ ;;1: 1.1111i lOli'" Ut
Uw' u.ts ,,,15 "'Iil5'" T.H
~tlMon
hr Tin!
l;rnsader
Tires
Lifetime Tread Guarantee
Broad.Shouldered Wide Tread
95
.... .1111
hbeJHI Bl1oeli:w.U1 _; PJ•1 l .51 Fel.
Est, TU'.u• 01• 2'1.N
• New Conto.r Safety Shoulder
• New 7-rib tread design for all-
weather traction
• New 6" white 1idewall to match
tht width of the white 1ldewall on
many new ears.
Regular
$199.95
Whitewall or
Blackwall
Silent nynacor Rayon
GaartJs~an
·Buy 3 Tires
SAVE
•ts
Whitewall or
Blackw U Silent"--a
G ~.rnacor Ra
08..... Yon
B •USJQa11
.uy 4 Tires
SAVE
Off Regular .
Trade-in Price!
SAVE '20
77
M ....
1111
• Thermott.at automatically maintains the temperature that you select
• Two 4-way adjustable louvers allow draft-free circulation at all time.!
• Chrome plated die.cut bezel front enhances your car'a interior
• Mount. handsomely under dash
Expert Installation Available
'
Smooth! Road Gripping 4 Ply Silent Dynacor Rayon
GuardsD1an
Sears M06t Wanted Tire with the BIG 3 PATENTED
Features that GRIP the Road in Any Weather
..,-1 rtn •.. Yoa Saft ta Oft
UM Heplar Trade-ID Price!
Ba7 I 1'1.rM ••• l'oa Save fl Ott
the Replar 'l'rado-1.n Price?
BllJ I 'l'lreL..You Save fl5 Ott
the Berulu' Trad&-lb Pr1oel
Buy'-'l'lrea-Yoa Save $U OU
the JtesU1a;r Trade-ID Price!
' Ea... PrlJ '""'*I 11A.VK P l1.an:1111 n 1u.IJ l E-e.. w•e11 w11.. WM• ••u SI Z Wit• Y•• w Y•• 11.,. Y•• •a T•• :ii . T. Trade-la l Tl I Tl&Zli a '.fl& 'TUI
TUBELESS BLACKWAIJ.
6.50:s:13 17.95 14.95 13.95 12.95 11. 5 . 1
6.95•14 18.95 15.95 14.95 13.95 1 .95 1.95
7.35xl4 20.95 17.95 16.95 15.95 U.95 2.06
7.75xl 22.95 19.95 18.85 17.95 16.95 .19
8.25xl4 24.95 21.95 20.95 19.9 18.95 2.35
7.75xl5 22.95 . 19.95 18.95 17.95 16.95 2.21
TUBELESS WHITE
6.50x13 20.95 17.95 16.95 1~.95 14.95 1. l
6.95x14 21.95 18.95 17.95 16.95 15.95 1.95
7.35•14 23.95 20.95 19.95 18.95 17.95 2.06
7.75xl4 25.95 22.95 21.95 20.95 19.95 2.19
8.25x14 27.95 24.95 23.95 22.95 21.95 2.35
8.55xl 4 30.95 27.95 26.95 25.95, 24.95 2.56
8.85x14 33.95 30.95 29.95 28.95 27.95 2.85
7.75•15 25.95 22.95 21.95 20.95 19:95 .21
8.15•15 27.95 24.95 23.95 22.95 21.95' 2.36
8.45x15 30.95 27.95 26.95 25.95 24.95 2.54
8.85x15 33.95 30.95 29.95 28.95 27.95 .76
9.00xlli 36.95 33.95 32.95 31 .95 30.95 2.81
Big Patented Features of AU Road,
.All \Veather Safety!
Patellted Bafet:r
Shouldera help
you ride back in-
to the road with-out a lurch, if
you 1tn.y off.
Patented 1!11.lencer
Button1 between
r l b1 1top the
aquealing lll"Ound
turrui and when bcaldn&".
Pateatet blter-1ocklnr Tread ex-
ert. vlH-llke grip
tin road for bet-
ter traction, 1tarl
and atop quickly.
4 Ways Betur ! Quieur,
Smoother with 4 Full Plie1
of Dynacor Rayon
1. Gives Silent, Soft Ride
2. Quietly Corners, Easier
Steering
3. No Thump, and No Bump!
4. Nor Harsh Warmup.s
· Every Tire Purchase Includes :
FREE FREE FREE
'"'" Mountlnr Fro1t Wheal Allltate Tin
Check A.Upment Rotatioa
Every a,oo Mllfll
12 BIG -Reasons Why Sears
Brake Reline
is Better and Safer
All ~trican Cilrs and Volkswqen1
All 4
\Vheels
Only 2888
NO MONEY DOWN on Se&l'I 1:&11 PaJmmt Pl.I•
V lnmpec& Hut.a
C,Uncler
:I/ Bonded IJll1np [.n.
ltallf!ld on ' Wbeell l/ Reballd AU 4.
\\''heel C,llnder1
\I Arc Grtnd Break .....
\I Reiurf&C'll AU ' Brake Drum1 \I Repack Fr-ont Wb ... _
AND NOW
SEARS COVINA
Automotive
Service
Center
Is Open!
Drive bl today and
Wt• advanta,.. ~
th• complete llln'• tc. ottered by th1I
modem Automotive
Center!
Attow
Highway al
4--An.
-......... c ,_.
v lnapect lkak•
Ho1e1 :\I bsped ut A.,_I
h<ld.oe ....... v i..,ect 0,... .....
V Bleed .U lbN anf
Add Fhdd
V Fne Adja.tm.t
for We of lJat9ll
V Road Test for
Brak• Bel'aNll'1
I
-'
• •
,. . ------~-.. -~·WFF~-.·. I :,). .,
Empire Debutanfes Presented •
FORMAL BOW -Presented to society during the
fourth annual Empire Debutante Ball are (fore--
ground, left to right) the Misses Linda Marie Fan-
sler and Shawn Elizabeth Slocum; (center row, left
to right) the Misses Dellyn Eleanor-Binswanger,
Donna Jean Lee, Susan Carol Shafer and Laurel
Rae Lloyd, an\! (back row, left to right) the Misses
Marcia Ann McKerren, Sondra Lee Osterhoudt,
Kathleen Diane Glockner, Patricia Louise Kemp,
Joan Michele Hamilton and Diane Adele Johnson.
f!ECEIVING GUESTS -Heeding the receiving line Bl relatives and
friends ~ the 12 Empire Oebutantes arrived for the presentation Fri-
day evening are (left to right) Mrs. Thomas Crosson Jr., presenta-
llon chairman; Frank C. Marshall and Mro. Marshall, ball chairman.
Regal Setting Enhances Splendor
A long-awaited dream· has com.e true for 12 young
Harbor Area women who made their formal bow to society
Friday evening. ·
A Garden setting was created in the Balboa Bay
Club for this memorable occasion -the fourth annual
Empire Debutante Ball sponsored by the Harbor Auxiliary
of the Child Guidance Center of Orange County.
Wearing white ball gowns, the ·debutantes carried
graceful ·white lace fans covered with flowers and moss
green velvet ribbons as they stepped thrdugh a large silver
frame, flanked by pleated white satin screens.
Cascading over the stage, where ·each presentee
curtsied, were festoons of white rosebuds which held mini-
ature white doves, giving the effect of birds in flight. The
midnight blue backdrop was enhanced with palm fronds ,
spra'yed silver, and side pillars were wrapped in blos-
soms and leaves and at the base were potted plants.
Completing the garden scene were table centerpieces
of silver urns containing arrangements of pearled roses
and sky blue carnations resting on white satin runners and
trailing green fern.
Debutantes, their parents and escorts are Miss
Dellyn Eleanor Binswanger, Mr. and Mrs. Max W. Bins-
wanger. James Clark Jorgenson ; Miss Linda Marie Fans-
•
' \II " ~I '"I. ' .,.f., ... ... ~.
! -> • ' ! " ·~-~ • "•
' ;~ • •
'AFTER THE BALL •• .' -Boarding the Island Holi·
day for a cruise and breakfast followfng the fourth an.
nual Empire Debutante Ball are debutantes and escorts:
(left to right) Lawrie Cunningham, Mils Linda Marie
Jer, Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Fansler, Lawrie Cunning-
ham; Mi ss Kathl een Diane Glockner, Mr. and Mrs.
Francis H. Glockner, Thomas Key, and Miss Joan Michele
Hamilton, Mr. and Mr.s. Jack K. Hamilton, Richard Robin-
son.
Others are Mi ss Diane Adele Johnson, Mr. and
Mrs. Owen B. Johnson, Thomas E. Spangler; Miss Pat-
nc1a Louise Kemp, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Kemp, Thomas
Andrew Jones; Mi ss Donna Jean Lee, Mr. and Mrs. Lawr-
ence H. Lee, Dennis Redman, and Miss Laurel .Rae Lloyd,
Mr. and Mrs. Frank W. Lloyd , Grant McCormick.
Completing th e li st are Miss Marcia Ann ·McKerren,
Mr. and Mrs. John J . McKerren, Michael Harry Kemp;
Mi ss Sondra Lee Osterhoudt, Mr. and Mrs. Melvin A.
Osterhoudt, Frank Marshall Jr.; Miss Susan Carol Shafer,
Mr. <!nd Mrs. James L. Shafer, Timothy Baskin, and Miss
Shawn Elizabeth Slocum, Mrs. Wayne Slocum·, Douglas
Ostman.
Stags were Jay H. Robinson, Philip Bentley Potter,
Craig Veltman, Michael William Ogden and Gary De
Santo.
Music for dancing was provided by Joe Moshay and
hi s orchestra-.
(Sn DEBUTANTES BOW, Pago 181
Fansler, Miss Marcta Ann McKerren and Michael Harry
Kemp. Relantion was emphasized during the cooclus-
!on of. presentation festivities.
• ' )
•
---------------------------- ----- ----------------------------~-----·-----...i.lL.._-.J
I '
'
What's Problems Have a New Wrinkle 1
·
Doing
MARY DAY, 642-4321
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I !eel like a
moron. l'm sure nobody bu ever writ·
ten to you about ll>la problom becaUH
I am probably the onl1 one lo tile
cowrtry wbo la dumb enough to uk i~
I am .the world.'1 loUliest troou . ._ ______ _, MY hlllband bas been very nice
M«*MY about H. Hll ah1rU always klot ter..
~ ., ~ •., 1,,. rlble and 1 am aabamed ol myaeU. No = :9 ..,C:::: ; =*' ~ matter bow bard I try I can't do bet·
•· w. 1Ctitt1o1.,a-. ..,.....,, -· ... ter. I've scorched ao many eollus I ,.::.~,.1..,_~."?:!.. ,_,decided it would be better to have the .....,. ..._. _.. ~ iron too cold than too hot. So now bis
:.;:.-' to -~ T-1t. 1:• shirts loot U if they hive not beeo '°" ~ ""-'" -...._ ironed at all.
Jct-i. ea.ta Me$11, ':• ,...., Our d gb'·-~--~ I ...,_ J •* TOftt Cll!t _ 5'1lllJI au w:.il are gl'Owwg op oUJU ~...,.,,..,., ldlOOf. ,._,.... lludl. want their blouses and dreuel to look '·:..!·::..... . .__ _ ANlefw fresh and crisp like the little gitlJ they
ScMo1 MldlltOl'lufn. *"""'"-•· • """"'play with but I juat cim't m•••ge It. ......... a..tw, IWm ,,..... ' --c.t11ei1 ,..,. ~ c... -.. • l am getting an inferlorit)' complex. '"~ ..... _,. ..., c:.a.k It'• awful to admit I'm too rtupi( to
~ • ~ -st. J9dllm's iron balfWay decently when mil.DOOi (If -hh "-II. C....-., I.,_..., '-1-to do It. r •• ...... ,. .... XI ~ ..... --WOmPn are AUICI ~ yOll help?
,.. -1..«11n. lftfwiNo11o11 i. ..,.11111* -WRINKLED IN WHrlTIER
i.t alh ~ c....., ...,._, .,,..,.,. DEAR-~ T ~ ... ~-' •.m. nna.i,.n.: e -a f ~ i:,::-_u. uc..~" =:,.~:-: doe1 Mt take .......... It takes bow-
..... u.r. bot' c.1111,. Mrt.. DeuNt •w, ,,aetace aH paUeaee. Ge le a
Mar.., s.1na. • ".m. frieM er KIP.._ wMle lnlllbtC '"
c..e. .._ ~ct._ _ c-. admire. Ad: \er te )et ,. .. watdl Hr = F•~= nC::rn~' Ori,.. !~It aH Ina. See Rat abe pstl ..
... ••• I I Cll*., .......... -..ell lluoc: ..... water. SeyeraJ pndKtl -
-Ft.ncob rnl1ur.11t, 12:15 P.tn. (be market 111.alre tr.ea(.-~-s~-, ,..,,... Ct.It fll ,...._. M.,._ -._-' .-..
Meu VtnM eountrv club, •:• ;.m. yoar on lr9a aJo1.1 H tile teeM Hl~wre "":'::.-'c~~ vWt and troa aloacdde a.er. Aller tile
01111,. flown 1. • l'.m. third or feartla teNIH yoa aboald be ..:S:::.."~~1:'1=.:';i! well on your way.
•v1111b11 bl' amne ~ Kfll Martt... ln exehance (or tile leuoa ... eu. •+19". ,, "..,... stw c...,.., • OtM ., buy ber aa 1ppropr1Me gift er brtac
t:..rw. s1ar -. $Hl1'1nt MalOllJc over a 1taadtac~ rib ru.+ a eauente T""'""'le, H,,_. 8Mdl. I l'.m. , .-'!!'".,
ANN I.ANDERS ~
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I would
lite your oplnfoo of a newspaper ad
that made me lurious. Pleue tell me
U you think I am a aourpuss and a kill·
joy •
The ad 1ay1, "Don't just GO
STEADY -go P}\E-ENGAGED. Buy
t b l 1 14 kt. gold diamond ,in ... gap-
ment ring for oolJ '1f.!O.'
We bave three dngbten, two in
their -· I am trying desperately to give my girls wholesome values. lt'1
bard enough to keep ttenagen in line
these days, with 1ei: screaming at us
from the billboards, the movies
becom.iog wildly suggestive and ~very
other teenager driving a c a r of his_ own. And now we have ads urging kids
to get pre.engaged! How b1mgry can a
merchant get?
Pl._ reply In the paper and I wlli
watch with inteftst t.o tee if the 1ame
paper ttJat printed the ad will have the
nerve to prlot my letter and your com·
menla. -ENRAGED MOTHER
11111 .,.., ·-JII lo ... , .1 ... bocb
ta1 of 10me •ma.b Mllll by 1a1ce1ttn1
Uiat &My uplaJ IMue'' 11 roek·b9ttoa
la1111boM.
CONFlDENTIAL TO FRIGIIT·
ENED, ASHAMED A N D
CAN'T GO ON THIS WAY: Your let.
ter indicates that )'OU do not know
what homosexuality 11. Every week I
receive at least a dozen letters from
'WODllfll1 'Wbo dllplay tbe same kind of
ignorance. Have 1 talk with your fa.
mily doctor. I hope he wW &ive you
some "'8ding material along with a
few basic facta oa married Jove.
TN maay ...,ie. fO .frea
m1trlmolly t. acrlmeay. Don't let
,.... manf1fe !lop 0belore Jt Cell
started. Selld Iv Ann · LIDden'
ltootld, "Maniace -What to Ex· peet." SeDd yHr request 1o A.a
IAnden hr care ef th11 newspaper
enclotlag 51 eeDU hi eola ind a lone,
1tamPfdt telf-addrffled envelope.
HARBOR BELLES -Sprucing up one· belle are three others, members of
Exchangettes of Newport Harbor who are anticipating 350 guests for their har-
bor tour, luncheon and fashion show June 29. Seeing that everjrthing is ship-
shape are (left to right) the Mmes. James Ewart Jr., entertainment chair-
m;µi; Robert E. Turner, decorations; and Dwight Gick)f general chairman of
the events.
Dell• n.r1 T-. Mii •t• ~ _ of e1eallopcd potateera.d a dlerrJ
l.oc:lfloll 1"'°'1Mtloll 11 rt•lllbll bw' •
alb Mn.. FID'l'd H911, sa-4121
DEAR MOTHER: Tlte nffettloa
Oiat teenacen 1lloold cet pre-eq:1ged
(Oat.ever that means), wit.II. 1 lf ll
gold rlac for 11ue Jet. II re••llDS.
st ............. ....,. w_., c..dl-
Cllurdl Plrllll NH, I l'.m.
WEOlll•SOAY
W...__, ......_ CllA .. c.t•
Mal -a.lbol In Clu9, 11 •.M. T0"5 IN ~ -Kil~
Betrothal Revealed
Jd'lool, Coll• Mist, 1 •.m. "-'l ..... aMCllTOPS--.:11 ....
-ll-::rut""" c..itw. 1 ~.
Au Lucien wtlI be glad to belp
you wltb yoar preblem1. Send them te
her la eare el th DAILY PILOT,
eactotlnc a teU.adclre11ed, 1t1mped
UTelope,
Guests 'Pirated' Away
la 0-. T .... :;lli11w C... .. "-"
""""' ._.. -~ Clulblwlno: •I A~ M"lll S4ll"1'Wood A-.. 7:• l'.11"1. T-" .....-. ~ -
T-11 SNni. lltlltlout ktlool,. Colle Mew, I p.m.
OWrutwl A_,_ -her ltTwt
At Graduation Party
Cathari ne Sue
Day for 'Exchanging'
Jd'lool. Collll Mesi, I p.m.
THURSDAY c.t. .... ... ..... .,.. 11...-1uio
Giacomazzi, daughter of
Mrs. William Gtacomaz.z:i. of w--. c ... -KJrm Rim• Balbo I, __ , d Ste H•r<lw•re, eo.11 Mew, t:JO 1.rn. a SJ411U, an ven
rors 00'• ., '"""""''., .. _. -M1'cbael enc• anoounced Carn~tty Mfltlodlll Oourdi. t :• ..
before continuing on to
Golden Well College.
Ber flanee wu alro active
in student affaJr1 1 n
Westmlmter Hlgb Scbool
aod GWC.
"Yo ho ho" and "shiver
me timbers" will be phrases
of the day when the Ex-
changettes of New po r t
Harbor host a luncheon,
fashion show and . harbor
cruise.
Pirat~.s of Balboa will be
the theme or the events
which are scheduled for
June 29 in the Balboa
Pavilion. Attending will be
350 women present at the
California 0 i s t r i c t Ex-
change Clubs convention in
Orange County.
Weddings, Troths
Pilot's Deadlines
To help fill requirements on both wed·
ding and engagement stories, forms are avail-
able in all of the DAILY PILOT olfic ...
Further questions will be answered by Social
Notes staff members at 642-4321 or 494-9466.
From Page 17
Debutantes Bow
Host for the evening was
Harry Babbitt, a Guardian
Angel award winner, who
greeted assembled families
and friends and introduced
M r s. Robert Bernard, im·
medilite past president, who
in turn introduced the ball
chairman, Mrs. F r a n k
M a r s b a 11 ; presentation
chairman, Mrs. Thom as
Crosson Jr., and incoming
preside nt, Mrs. John Sp&rl·
ing.
Club was give.c to honof"
debutantes, their fathers
and escorts. and afterward,
a time for relaxation was
emphasized as debutantes
and their escorts boarded
t!Je 1sland Holiday for a
channel crµise and
breakfast.
H06ting the informal
cruise were the Messrs. and
Mme.;. McKell"efl, Fansler.
Shafer and Jobn6on.
Master of ceremooies was
Dr, Tom RobiMon, another
Guardian Angel award reci·
pient.
Prior to the ball, a private
party in the Balboa Bay
Other guests were the in·
coming and outgoing
presidents of the auxiliary,
ball chairman and presen-
tration chairman with their
husbands.
dinner a
dramatic departure
in May Co's Terrace Room
Oi!'in9 i1 • cl•lightful pl••1ur1 when y0t.t shop •t
Mey Co, Coit• Mes•. Along with excellent food
you m•y hive your choic• of imported domestic
win11, b11r1 or ch1mp19ne. Dinner Is ierv1d
MDnd•y through Frid•y ni9hts until 1:)0 p.m.
Lunch1on tlrrtd d•ity.
r ....... •-. ._i...i
co
may co IOuth coast plaza, san diego freeway et briato~ cosi. meoa; 546·9321, 675·3418 -diop moo. tllnJ 11l JO 1.m. to 9:30 p.m.
•.
··~. -.. uw.,., SMrT ,._. _ their August wedding plans
Organizing the day will be ~~ .. :-~·=· 10~~ _ last week at a graduatiOll
Mrs. Dwight Gick, president w~~~""w:i'~ .. = ~ir::-;;-. party, attended by college
of t~e Newport Harbor Club, 1~~$ ~~=-~~ ~;:;·~., friends. •
assisted by the Mmes. H~"~'=!: ~~· ~i:.'"i.t •111""'1111... The benedict's parentJ,
James Ewart Jr ., en· ·-F11111Y Scmol mum .... .--,_,.,,, r Mr. and Mrs. Henry F.
tertainment c h airman; p.m. 1<•IDAY Click Jr. of Westminster
Robert TurTier, decorations, l'owwt1111 v11111r Nvts 1, N~ w·m Tofl's ciu. -Reo:~11a1 CHlttr, 10 were host and hoste5s for and l am Loitz, cos· 1.m. th t tt ded b tumes. ,.,,...,.., ,,,.., LvncMM c111~120 e par y, a en y
w. lier Ave .• 1111t1o1, ,,_,_ friends and relatives of the
Models will Include the Oh-c.u111Y 11..,., a--Doi• couple.
M Th od R b. J Scfaoal. Girder\ Grovit, I p.m. mes. e ore o ins r ., • ..,_,.._..,_,_.,._..., ~ The Aug. 31 rites will be
Gerard Wooters, H u g b performed in St. :WJchaels
Mynatt, Reece Ca v e , and All Angels Church in
Norman von Herzen, and G . I lk Corona del Mar.
the Misses Laura Mynatt ~ Ir Ta The bride·elect graduated
a n d Sar a h R o bins . from Corona del Mar High
Hairstyles will be by Kell)' -. School, where she was ac·
Templet~ or Cos~ Mesa. Preparing to camp at tive in student affairs,
. Entertainment Wlli be pro-Firestone Boy Scout camp
HB Mothers
The couple will be at·
tending Humboldt S t a t e
College In the fill
v1ded by the Blue Gardenfas in Brea are members o(
and Tania's T a h i t i a n s , Brownie Troop 903. Mrs. B.
Fashions will be supplied by J . Work6, troop leader, is in
Surf and Sand , Bay Depart· charge.
me,nt Store, My Favorite Swimming, rifle safety
Things of Balboa, Ann training and archery are
Folger and Waltah Clarke of some of the activities being
Huntington Beach Blue
Star Mothers. Chapter 2, ~.
stage meeting! the second
Mond:ayg of the month at
Fashion Island. offered June 26-28.
Be" Ratcliff
I • I
l :30 p.m. irl Lake Park
Oubhouse. To Become • Bride
·.A -
ENROLL NOW!
Classes Begin July 2
""-540-3333
to assure your
place in class
Sears· Costa Mesa
South Coast Plaza
3333 Brktol St.
SWITCHED-ON
by our experts
and SWITCH-MATCHED
with our instant hair coloring
We can twirl O!' swirl ADJ' switch and -in
a flub -match your own hair to it wiUl
' ROllX
SHAMPOO, SET AND $3 00
RINSE IMon. thru Thurs.I •
!Aft•• S p.m. ,1.251
Fri., Set., Sun. ,l,75
• colon inet.antb'; shamPQ03 wt if J'O'I
chanrt J'OUr mood f
• use1 no peroxide ; needs no atter-m..I
• COVUI ll'a,J', ttJ.reabf.t dull hair,
txmai bleached hlir!
COSTA MESA. CALIF. ,. ""'""'" ...... llt-M1'1 ?\eu --COSTA MESA, CALIF. "" w. ,,.. St. --COSTA MESA, CAllf.
111 I . IJWI It,
MQt1lr Centw '"°"" ,.....,,
FOUNTAIN VAlllY, CALIF.
1mt "''°"°u' VIII-~ .............
OkANG(, CALIF.
112• w. a.-,_.....,
SANTA ANA, CALI,. ,,,.. W."""""9r
T-CM!w
SANTA ANA, CALI,. ""°"" Dl·l11t 2Ut , ........
F .. l"lllW C111ttor ,.............,.,,
FOUNTAIN VALLEY, CAL IF. ,., ......... ., hdl ... •• ...,c....... ,,_. Ol·2'11M
'
t
~---------·-----------------------------------------------.... ---... --,......,
•
Hawaiian Wedding Trip .... Newport Beach Residence
Sandra Spurgeon Recites Vows
MRS. RICHARD ALLEN McDANIEL
Afternoon Ceremony
An altar bouquet of white flowers and pews decorated with
white shasta daisies and baby's breath in St. Andrew 's Presbyterian
Ch urch was the setting for the marriage of Sandra Spurgeon and
Richard Allen McDaniel of Newport Beach.
The Rev. Charles Dierenfield performed the single ring cere.
mony for the great·granddaugbter of W. ff. Spurgeon, founder of
Santa Ana.
Parents of the bride are Mrc.-and Mrs. W. H. Spurgeon 111 of
Newport Beach. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
A. McDaniel of Llm3, Ohio.
Escorted to the altar by her father, the bride wore a point
d'esprit cage heavily appliqued with venise lace Dowers, featuring a
panel back. Her elbow length veil in a double bubble style was caught
to al} venise flowered headpiece. Her bouquet was a spray ·of ste--,
phanotis.
Miss Anna Katherine Harris of Newport Beach was maid of
honor, go~ned in floor length aqua alaskine and an aqua veil . Her
bouquet was fonned by white regal daisies backed by green leaves
and white ribbon.
Bridesmaids, dressed in gowns identical to the maid of honor's
were Miss Shelley Spurgeo11, Newpo~t Beach, sister of the bride, and
Mrs. Robert J. McNeal ·of Gardena.
Best man was Malcolm MacNab ol Arlington, Ohio. Ushering
guests to their places were Donald C. Keim of Kailua, Hawaii; John
M. Burroughs of La Canada, apd Craig H. Nance of Fullerton, cousin
of the br:ide. Soloist was Jonah Cliewer.
A reception for 250 gµests took place at the church in the Fire--
side Room and was followed by a supper for the wedding pany a·nd
relatives at the home of the bride's parents. Miss Elizabeth McDaniel,
a sister of the bridegroom from Dayton, circulated the guest book.
Among special guests at the a·fternoon ceremony and en.suing
reception were Mrs. Iva MacFies, grandmother of the bridegroom
from Marion, Ohio, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Spurgeon Jr. of Santa Ana,
grandparents of the bride, and Mrs. H. U. M. Higgins of Laguna
Beach, grandmother of the bride.
The bride is a graduate of Newport Harbor High School and
attended the University of Redlands. She was a 1959 Children's Home
Society Oebutante. Her husband is a graduate of Ohio State Univer·
sity where he affiliated .with Sigma Chi Fraternity. He is a senior
financial analyst for a cement firm.
After a wedding trip to t.be Hawaiian Islands, the newlyweds
will reside in Newport Beach.
DAil Y PILOT J IJ
Fireworks
Go Fwoosh
-. •• Atlanta Rites Join
Couple ·in .Marriage Firework • _, help ·
celebrate the l'.ourtb ol Ju.ly
Jmmacul~te Heart o f an alumnus of the same will be f()ld by the Coeta
Mary C&tbolic Church ill schOol and served three Mesa Federated Republican
Atlanta, Ga .. was the· aetti'ng years in the U.S. Army In Women's aub at M ... ·
for the double r l n g Germany befol"1! becoming a North Shopping Center frOm:.
ceremony linking M-arl.J'la teacher in Forest Park, Ga. June 28 through July 4. -1
Ann Connell and Ear). 'v. Alter a wedding trip to All labor manning tb•:;
Lord Jr. Tbe Rev. Mathew Sarasota, Fla. the couple booth is donated by eh.th ,
Robbins solemnized the rite. will reside in Carrollton. members. ;.
The bride Is the daughter Ir~~~~,;;~~~============,-.
of Mr. and Mrs. E. T. ·con·
nell or Huntington Beach.
Her husband is the son of
Mrs. Guy Clark and the
stepson of Clark,
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride wore a
floor length lace over satin
gown with a cathedral
length train, fitted bodice,
and a bouffant skirt. Her
beaded and jeweled head-
pfeee held an illusion veil
and she carried h e r
mother's bridal pra.yerbook
with streamers or lilies-Of-
the-valley.
ELECTROLYSIS
fer tll• •ltill'Mlt. Iii
•lfltl•nt ll•lt '"''°"'''
.... ~--tt.1 D11•l.1ctl••
lltc"•· .. 1•R .. Mth.C.
Ph•~• fer C.MplJ..
"''nl•ry C.111~1t1tiMo
k1w+, Sh.idle
'I Fesh ion ls tend Newport Center e 044-2200
Maid of honor was Miss
Mary Connell, lister o[ the
bride. Bridesmaids were
Miss Frances Jane Connell II ::,;;;~~~;;;:;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;d and Miss Teresa Connell, I~
both sis~s of the bride,
Miss Lyn.TI Soretts of Glen
Falls, N.Y.. Miss Janice
Childs and Miss Jane Booz.
Attendants were identically
gowned in pink linen frocks
with overdresses of pink .and
white lace bordered· with
pink linen. They carried
nosegays of white daisies
and pink roses with burgun-
dy streamers.
Best man was .Joe Man-
ning. U s h e r s were .John
Drummond, Richard Gam-
mon , Edward Shell. Brady
James, and John Conaell.
the bride's b r o th e r .
Ringbearer was Edward R.
Connell, another brother.
Mrs. Marjorie W a ts o n
was organist i'n the church
decorated with w hit e
g I ad i ol I and chrysan-
themums.
SUPER
CHECKED
GINGHAM
by
·SINGER
•
. .
:,o:gz__ !£& W a fi*.JttiLSB l • xµg .fi!M&Mi±aw:M • ;: ass M94 b SL&
A reception took place, in
the reception room of the
Decatur First N a t i o 11 a 1
Bank. Decoratioos featured
bouquets or pink roses and
white chrysanthemums and
gladioli. Assisting were Miss
Frances Sullfvan. M i s s
Mary Messner. Miss. Judy
Nicks and Miss Mauree
Dailey, who circulated the
guestbook .
Cheerful 100•1o Cotton!
Newport Couple
Plan Marriage
Pamela Ann Marshall,
recently graduated from
Newport Harbor H i g h
School. and Rudolph J.
N.al.ik Jr. of Newport Beach
are making wedding plan~.
The engagement was an-
Installation
Mrs. Leonard Rubin' of
Costa Mesa accepted tbe
gavel and presidential du-
ties of Harbor Chapter of
Hadassah during ceremonies
conducted by Mrs. Robert
Bergman.
Installation followed a
luncheon in t h e Revere
.House.
E
nounced by parents of Ule
bride-elect. Mrs. K a y
Marshall of Newport Beach
and William J. Marshall or
Oakland. A date will be set
when Miss Marshall returns
from Europe in September.
Miss Marshall i:s a theater
arts major at Orange Co.ast
College. She has been active
in the Drama Club ,
theatrical productions a nd
as a nurse's aide.
Her future spouse, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph J .
Malik of Dallas, Texas al·
tended the University of
Texas, where he majored in
engineering and was actlve
' 'v '
in the U of T Underwater c ...... H-io1101o
Society and SCUBA diving
circles. He will continue at PAMELA ANN MARSHAL
UCI in the fall. Brid ... lect
FINE SUMMER FABRICS
DACRON POLYESTER & COTTON
VOILE PRINTS
end engelpuff prints, cr11pett11 prints end solids, petti
point pigu11 prints, isl end "tepe" prints, end other1.
VALUES TO $1.69 YARD
m•ny no iron
many m<1 chine w•sheble
lb" to 45 " wide
NOW ONLY
CO TI ON
SPORTSWEAR FABRICS
c
yd
\
C•suel prints, woven desi9ner cotton, poplin prints,
lewn prints, dots, stripes, hopsicking prints, meny, meny
more.
HONER l'l.AZA
t 7TH AT IRISTOL
SANTA ANA
14)0 1511
Values to $1.39 yd.
All wesheble
34" to 45" wide
NDW ONLY
HONTl ... TON CINTIR
EDIN<if.ER AT llACH
HUNTINQTON SEA.CH
••7·101)
SOUTH COAST PlilA
IRISTOL ,,.T SAN DIEGO
FwY .. COSTA MESA
14s.111•
Summer Plans Told
A mid-summer wedding in the daughter of Lt. Col. and
the United St.ates Marine Mrs. E. Roger Ciampa.
Corps Air Facility Chapel, Her future spouse, son of
where the bride-elect has Mr. and Mr$. V.artin J. Fen-
of:ten performed as organist, nelly of Sparta, graduated
is being planned by Dar· from Sparta High School
rolyn Ann Ciampa of Costa where he played vanity
Mesa and Peter s . Fennelly football and baseball. He
of Sparta, N.J . enlisted in the Marine Corps
The bride is a graduate of
Sacred Heart Jr. College,
Cullman, Ala, and West
Georgia College in Car-
rollton, Ga. Her husband is Miss Ctampa graduated in June, 1966.
from Corona del Mar High ---"-----N---1-----------I
Sc hool and is at present a 0.
music major at UCI. She is
WATER BABY',
WHAT A WAY TO WEAR YOUR HAIR
T ry our salon scis soring and shaping for an
amphibious little coif to dive right into the
summer s wimt Wet or dry, with a flick of
your brush it's ready to go into a set-les s
season. The cut, 5.00. 'Water Baby• wave
complete w ith cut, 20.00. Beauty Salon.
IN A QUAN DRY AIOUT YOUR COIF?
Have a complimentary consultation with our
Style Direc tor, Mr. Plerre, here every
T uesday .•• with Mr. Plgnatti, creator of the
'Comb-Jn-A-Breeze' Cut, here every Thur"s day .
•
Machine Washable!
36"wide
NOW2YARDS
Regularly 69~.
ACT FAST!
ONE WEEK
ONLY
... tile ne ... t ro'UCR • ssw• 1..tnr maehine-
Ule OnlJ' maehlne tb&c doe. all a ldnU of ...snst
Otb•r new 8INGBR• MWtns ma.obln" from ... .IOI
Whatir new
for tomorrow is
atSINCER
• SINGER
GARDEN GROVE
8831 Chapman
Orang• County Plaza 530-4010
ANAHEIM-515 N. Loara
Anaheim Center 535-1126
HUNTINGTON BEACH
Edinger at Becich
HuntingtOll Centre 897-1041
COSTA MESA-2300 Harbor
Harbor Center 549-1105
COSTA MESA
Bristol & Sunflower
South Coast Plaza 540·2633
••
----------------~-----------------------------·--------------------------
.,
·;
,
,
r
' , •
"
; n IWl.Y l'ILOT -· -24. 1'611
No Time to While Away . Horoscope
: Professor Stu dies for Stu de nts,
Makes Classrooms Come Al ive
Aries:
Tuosdoy,
,,._ 25
No Outbursts
material. Mean& 1 o m e Good alJ.o far partnership
tt.stricttc:m are .dropped. e:ffarts tUt lffed finaoCes.
' •• JUDY llUllSI' ..............
• t 0..QDt Mtn1 k a pro--
fess« who oUen o u e
: mDHmeter man.
, Re Is lmown •t Orup
Coast c.n.,. ... -oi cultuul Ud phydcal
antbropoloo -llDCialoCJ'. But to the som of stone or
B<ni Sakhr lrlbe In Jardao
be is a Wnterner and
lri<ftd.
Several ]'Nn .,. be lfid
field wen m Jordan tor bis
doctcrate detree at New
Yark Uniftnity. It was a
nawra1..-beea ... be
already bad hia masten
degree '"1m the Hebrew
•• ckpartment al NYU. ~ M hi.a studema whiled t; &WIJ' their time OD the r beaches the handsome
• father ol. four was doing
~ raun::h on the s a n d y
~.c!Hms of Jordan to benefit
• · tbem tn the classroom.
~· "'_I ~veled with a
;:, ---sapplied by the ~ Jonf.an..Arab Legion and a
'.'... .pide wtlicb IUbMituted u a
tr...W..," be bepn.
"In the daert lnl>a lbe
family ii ot prime im-
partance with the folber the
bead. In !be tn'be all ID-
-.... held ucnd ,, and Ibey anlsl othor lnl>a
~ -anlaa there is 0 p e D
·' warfare. The Arabi are fac-
ing a bodile environment.
· and it draws all mar closer
• 'togotber," be --. · Bia stnde:nb have learned
· · Iha! lbe city dwellm of
' · Jordan are a mizture of
· people witb no ties. '"There
· iJ not much uniting but a lot
" IWpicion and hostility ...
'1be cities bollle Arabt,
30me Christians and Arab-
NOT FORGETFUL
Dwayne Many ·
Cbristians. 'l'bere was a
~ti.mi of two million but
now with the ~ boun-
dary cbaoge -· are pro-bably dOHr to one milllon."
Dwayne wulhn...t. .. "lbe
land Is llCl\ to be coafused
with the dam 0 i 1
tincdoms . Natural
re.ourcu don't abound and
agriculture doea 't e v e n
Ripply lbe neecb of th•
people.
"About 90 percent al the
area iii not capable of king
cultivated. Only camels ex-
ist and UU. is oot a ftlm.ble
commodity," the profm10r
iDclicaUd.
"It Is due to lbe Unil<d
States' mid Britain's 1iu.ble
.ppropriationl that t be
country m.ta. ..
Be poinl<d ool that the
money exchange is b y
b.trt<r and trade. and the
INTER NOW
Your chil.d's plwtograph
can wi.n a spectacular
s2,soo.oo
SHOPPING SPREE Ill OUR STORE!
And thal'• jrut o"" of tM lwndml.
of ooluabk prize< and gifu lo~
•2s,ooo.oo
in the 34P> National Children's
PHOTOGRAPH CONTEST!
YOU CAii Wiii Oii£ If TIER llATilllW. PllZD:
Fir# Prize .•. sz,500.00 Slwppinf Sprtt
Second Prize •• Sl,500,00 Slwppinf Spree
Third Prize •• Sl,000.00 Slwppinf Spree
Fo""" Prize ••• ssoo.oo Slwppinf Spr«
SO Fifth Priul, ea. S 100.00 Slwppinf Spr..,
H -W llUllD8DS ..... ._._ IAVlllS ......
Al llCMIOUlll llDfl1CMI NIJUI
Han yound! a Shopping Spnz ..• JCS. a paid.
up charge account th.It Jet. you buy whatever you
want! la's a anap lo enter and euy to win. Let 111
photograph your child and we'lleoter a duplicate
in the coau.t at no atra charge. Complete de-
ta.ilt and ru1a in our Photograph Studio now.
Big balloon will be givm to ffff!IJ' conte&t&lll
, __ : _____ Clrml" ,,..., ...
CONmT WICIALI 7 fw 4K
One MO and llz ..U.t-Ne
'""'"' ..... ,_ l\ Off ,_ a...w ""'''
Huntingtoft IHch
147-107', e.t ... ; .. zu
J---lo aurecl to .... l!rffla -llla'l-i..r. ,,,. ~ Is ral-
... by • wmllMlmll """'"""'7 and ldam Is the "'""'rellOoo-.
The imtnlc:tar. who ,, a •
raioedla--and
WJalllial. ii c r o • • t n 1
anoCblr OCMD fm-lltDdeatL s. .... a1 days qo ... Ill•
-rill Ilia wile, Palrida, at lllaal Oollege foe the ......
-_..._ ''11!J chlldmJ Yd a cboiot but chose tbeir
Cfl'Ddrnnfher'1 home," he
laughed.
Besides tnchi,,,-and a lit.
tie llilldfeebog, be wlll lllDdy
-·· cullure and IOdaJ .tructure fDr I u t u r e
wrllinp.
By SYDNEY Ol!Allll
'"'?'be wise mm cootrots
bis destilly. . .A.rtrology
pobrta the way."
AllI&'I (March 21-Aprll
11): New moon position
empb.ad:ra JOtU" II o m e •
domestic duties. There may
be some oPJ>OSiition to plans
b1 family member. Be
reasonable. Win points by
facts. not emotional out-
bonU.
CANCER (June 21.July OrJiinal ..,._ provides
22): Center spotlight on fine resWtt .
your..U. All lor what I> ~ CAPRICORN Ill«. ?io
qulnd. T~, more -'8 J ••) •--""' wlllillg to listen and be ... ~ : -...... IDday
impreued. New moon ia could find yvu·ltraddling the
,...,. sip blgblighi. op-fence. Y.oa may be fighliDg
pearanoe.. penonalit)', Take •gal.mt your own cause,
illitiative. Mate or p art n e r may
LEO (July 23-Aug.. 22): appear overly aggressive.
Woning ia secladoe for a Make coneellloq_ -don't
time fDday gets ... jol> IOndle Dama.
done. Strive foe barmoay AQUARIUS (Jan. 31-Feb.
within group, -orgamza~ 11r. Employment Interests
Mi,gbt be best to mnai.D in empbashed; JOU are able to
bockground. Diplomatic ap-accomplllh balic t a s k , ,
}r08Cb ii favored, Realiu that acme health Jn.
Tall and .... lo be darbr
under Hawaii's r a y s ,
Dwayne noted that "Orange
Coast College baa bad dose
communication with t b e !
l•la.od ccllege. Hawaiian
educators hne used OCC
for a possible model," be
noted.
I
TAURVS (Ajril 31-May
ll))' Avoid ucess opeecl.
Check details. Be willing to
._.,.._ bat work with
materials at hand. Avoid
argumeat w:itb c I o s e
relative. Write no ldten in
anger. Highlight aen.se of
humor.
G.EMOO (May 11..June
20): You can gain wbt.t you
Deed today. New moon posi-
tion coincides with adding to
possessions. YOu b r e a k
through to """""' o I
VIRGO (Aug. 23-S<pt. 22)' ftftlll I b 0 a I d ... ' be
'You can find ways to bolster negJected.. _Keep medical.
income. You can al.lo win deota1 appointments.
frimds. inOueDCe people. PISCES (Feb. 19-March
ContacU made today cou1d. 3>): Some basic changes are
pron of lasting value. Be du~ which m~y involve
perceptive. See lituation a ~ ,..Crutive forces
it actually exists. are high; you put something
UBRA (Sept. %3-0ct. 221 : of yourself in proje~. Stress
Seek favor1 ; m a i n t a i • _the creattve. Don t ~ttle
worldly outlook. Tbe moon emotions. Express feelmgs.
position coincides w I t b IF TODAY JS YOUR
chance to ~ to authority. BIRTHDAY you tend to be
Prestige rues. You bave intJ':olpective. You are
more resporuibWty but gain hf«ibty princtpled. This is a
greater reward. time when }"OUr views are
Regarding OCC where be
h• taught for three yean:,
the Costa Mesa resident
lllaWI that . lbe "studeol3
come nr.t. · Tb e ad·
minillntioa does Its best to
help th• !acuity. This junior
co~ce ii dedicated lo
l<aching and here you will
fi.od top rate teachen," be
concluded with Jride.
For his dedication and in-
terest in Jtudenta Dwayne
may ftnd himself nominated
for the "Golden Apple"
award some day.
Workshop
Scheduled
nu. public is -to at·
tend a worbhop n e x t
Wedoe>day where speakl:rs
lrom !be Department ,ot
Public Heallh, Orange Coun·
ty Modicat c.nter. State
Rehabilitation Center, Hope
Haven Retarded Childreo's
CerKtt and Head Start pro:
gr am will be participating in
the progrei.
The Uniled Fmd building
in Garden Gf"ove will be the
tetting at 1 p.m. Further in·
fcnnlltioo may be received
by calti:ng ttie Volunteer
Bureau or Mrs. Robert West
at 962-4382.
Council Names
Volunteers
Mn. wrnmn J . Studlman, w .. tmmot... • Midway a1y
~ Council presi-
dent, announced the names
of new wltmt:eers.
Wekomed 1 n t o the
mernbenltUp are Marion
Smith ..i the M m e 1 •
Ernnt Fnoquez, Donna
Cucanato, Eldon Brown and B-Gr.,_.
The IJ'OUP ltill ;. to need.
ol-volUDteen to
dafl the olllce M.....,
t:hrou&'l Friday, 9:~ a.m. lo
3,:io p.m. 'lbo&e inl«e""4
moy call 11111 olfic< at m-
0048 for more information.
Kids Like to
'Ask Andy'
MRS. NICHOLAS MISSERVILLE
HunH ...... Beach Homo
August
Selected
For Rites
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. tuted.; IUghliJbt the new,
%1): MW plans for travel.. daring -be a pion~r.
•acation. Strengtbea ties with those .tor. Tie op loose G E N E R A lD T E N-
ends. You can finiJb major J?EN~: New mooo pol5i•
projed Important to k>ot tion, conjunct Mars, cause1
ahead; anticipate IUl'J)riJe beadllnet related to pro-Wedding Vows Pledged
In Garden Grove Rite
move oo part of relative. pe:rty destruction.
SAGmARIUs (Nov. 22-T• ,...., ..,. ...... ~ .... vou 111
A •eddinc Aog. 10 in Sl Dec, %1}: Fine for getting :;:::,,..,,~ ~ ~~~
A. d r.... ~......... ·--..,. __ . d w-.-S4irlll *"*'-and • ""'' • .. •....VJ"'""'"'"" I.a.A. mai.u:.1• m o r er , ,. DIN"~ s.rrh.,,.. 0"11.-v O:wrch, Nflrport Beach is straightening a c c ou nt • . I'll.OT • ._ JMt. ~ e.emr11 11 .. A double ring ceremony in ol. the bride. being plaDoed by Jeanl:;;;; _______________ ..... _._.v;;;;.;;;;"';;;;";;;;· -~
SL C.Olumban'1 Cat ho I I c Providing mulic in the Bartow and David Rossll
Church, Garden Grove link· cburcb decorated 'witb attar Young.
ed in marriage Kathleen New& of. the forthcoming
Kelly and Ni c b o I a 1 bouqueU of white flowers eved. has been aDOOUDCtdl
Misserville. with pale pink pew ribbons by the future b r i d e • 5
The Rev. Patrick McHug'h was Bill Gergen, organist parents, Mr. and Mrs.
solemnized the rite for the ~1eadowlark Country Club Marvin Kellogg Barlow of
daughter of l\ir. and N'.rs. was the setting for the Cost.a Mesa.
John Kelly of Costa Mesa reception for 200 guests at A teacher in Tustin, MW
d -f Mr nd Mr which a buffet luncheon was an we son o . a s. Barlow is a graduate of
Laguna Beach School of Ari and Design
blO LAGUNA CANYON ROAD
714-494-1520
SUMMER
PROGRAM
-·
NicholinG M.isserville o f served. Music was provided. Newport Harbor H i g b
Anaheim. by tbe Eddie Ryan , Trio. School. Miended Qrwe
Miss Vickie Miller of Costa -eo T w--L w .L-L-Start Tbe bride, who was given Mesa as!lll<d with the c...t College, received her WO-...,. o........,ps
in marriage by her father. stbook BA from California State JIM GILIUT _ Design Medi• \
selected a floor length long gu!._ brid. . d •-of CioDege • Loog Beach md IOGU KUNTZ Stu ';• & f;9u•• sleeved cbantilly lace over • ll'C e 11 a gra ua..,, spent one year at graduate 0
Joly •
Jwly 22
...... 5 ...... ,, organza sheath with &eed Co6"ta Mesa High School .and study at the University of DAVID SCHNAIB. Po rtr•it & fi9ure
pearl trim and 8 bow in Orange Coast College. Her Madrid. IOIEIT NAME Adv•nc.ed Oil
front Her elbow length veil husband is an alumnua of Her fiance, IOll of Mrs. Vi· IENNm llADIUIY Marine Oil
was caught lo a headpiece Magnolia High School in viao. MflTill Young 0 f Six-Week c~-of crystals. pearls and rib-Anaheim and Orange Coast P a....._ and David -..,..,.
boo forming an open Dower College. Both are attending Roberta Young of S • n IUTH OS&OOD O il Paint ing
with buds in the center. Her Calilornia State College at Diego, graduated from IOGll AIMSnON6 Dr•wing
bouquet was of white carna-Long Beach where she is Pcmona Co&ete where be DONNA. SHAllCEY Life Dr•wing
Qom and gardenias. studying psychology and be earned bis degree in IOGU AIMSTIONG W•terc.olor
Miss Laurie Noll of San is studying indu!'bial arta. physics. Prese:mly he is
""'· 1' Start
Joly I
July I
July 12
July 11
Francisco was maid of After a Hawaiian hooey· doing graduate'-work at ALSO c....aa, Sul,._.,
honor, wearing a cherry, moon the newlyweds will Scripps Institute ol WRITE ocm~LF'o~FR'lE :RocHURE organ:.a,floorlengthempire~,..=~=·d=•~iD::._::H:lBl:liD:'~gton::::~Bea::::c:b~,~Oceaoogr~~~apb~~Y·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~"'!'~~~~~
gown. She carried a prese.~ ._,..
utionbouquetmlig!Jtpink r-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-,.~~~~~~~~--.
carnatiom.
Bridesmaid&, c1r .. 1ed In
pale pink fr<>cb and car-
rymg dart pink carnati.ons,
were Miss Jane Gravis of
Costa Mesa, Miss Sandi
Bates of Co..ta M.,a and
Miss Pamela Roper, niece
of the bridegroom, of Los
Alamitos.
Best man was Gary
Bowden of. Whittier. U"1er·
ing guests to their places
were Edward Ryan o f
Buena Park and Paul Roper
of Loi Al.am.ltoe. b o th
brothers·in·law of t h e
bridegroom, and John Kelly
Jr. of Costa Mesa. brother
Library Ho ur
Coota Men Library Is the
scene of a library story hour
every 'Ibun!day at 10:30
a.m.
JOSEPH
MAG NIN
TAKES OFF!
BRAS, GIRDLES
AND PANTIEGIRDLES
do-dt miss it! by gossard, warner,
olga, nemo an dJther famous .
makers are
SHOE SALE
QualiCraf t dr es s sty l.es
w re 8.99 .
49.'!,,59B
QualiCraft casuals
were 4.99 to 6. 99 2.99.3.98
o-.i-111 _,,heel helclhts. -loob ond -'-~ will! • Mi-leol;ne. All "°"' ~ "9'1iar '"""·
....... • ..... _I.tit,. ll.91
NOW 1/3 OFF!
in the
jm inside-fashion
collections
Moo. & Fri. 10 a.m. to 9,10 r.·"'· Tu ... w..i., Thur. & Sal, 10 a..,,, o 6 p.m. NfWPOlf l lACH • HUNTINCTON llACH COST A MlS.(
,.1litl.i1 1111"' Ht111ff11,+011 C.11hr So1ttfl Co•d Pl•111
sftop t" •f sovfh co1af pl11a, l.rlsfol et Mft dleg:o fr•ew1y, Co1t1 m1:11: menday, th11nd1y '"cl hidey 10
to 9:)0; tue1d1y1 wacln11cl1y •nd 11turcl1y 10 to 6,.
, I •
I
•
-------·--.... -·--.. ---------------------------------------
JENNIFER JOYCE KEIM
Betrothed
Presbyterian Rites
Planned for August
Jennifer Joyce Keim , daughter of Mrs.
Joseph Keim of Costa Mesa and the late Mr .
Keim, and Norman Harold Shepherd of Glen-
dale plan to wed.
The news was announced at a champagne
dinner party given by Mrs. Keim for mem-
bers of the two families.
The ceremonies will be performed Aug.
30 in St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church,
Newport Beach.
The bride-tcr-~e , a former National Char-·
ity League debutante, is an alumna of New-
port Harbor High School. She continued her
education at San Jose State College, where
she received a Meritorious Service Award
and affiliated with Kappa Kappa Gamma.
After receiving her bachelor of arts degree
she obtained her secondary teaching creden-
tial from Ca lifornia State College at Fuller-
ton.
Her future husband is a graduate of
1-lerbert Hoover High School and Glendale
College. He received his bachelor of science
degree in business and industrial manage-
ment from San Jose State College, where he
also served as president of Pi Kappa Alpha
fraternity.
His parents are Mr. and Mrs. Jess Harold
Shepher,d, of Glendale.
Association
Seats Officers
Janice Ann Raus Weds
In Double Ring Rite
JuUce Ann Raus and
Joseph Francis Robinson
pledged nuptial vows ln
Trinity Episeopai Church of
Orange. ·
The Rev. Tracy Silvester
officiated at the double ring
ceremony in the presence of
family and friends.
The bride is the daughter
of Mrs. Myrtle R a u s of
Costa Mesa, and her hus-
band is the SOil or Mr. and
V..rs . Francis Robinson of
San Bemardlno.
Given in marriage by her
brottler, Richard A. Raus ,
tb.e bride wore an empire
gown of. lace and crepe with
a matching train. Her veil of
illusion was caught to a
headpiece of. seed pearls and
lilies--0f-the-valley held by a
crepe bow. Her bouquet wcu;
formett by white roses with
daisies and ivy.
Mrs. Jo h n Showalter,
cousin of the bridegroom
from Santa Ana, was asked
to be matron of honor. She
was dressed in an empire
gown of maize lace .and
crepe. Het headpiece was
formed by artificial daisies
and netting, She carried a
bouquet of white daW.es
witb maize ribbon.
Brtdesmaida, d r e s s e d
ident.i"cally in empire gowns
of nile green lace and crepe
were Mrs. William Laird of
Santa Ana and Miss Kath·
leen Rintchen, cousin of
the bride from Huntington
Beach. Both wore head-
pieces of artificial daisies
and net and carried white
daisy baskeU: with Dile
green ribbon.
Showalter was best man
and Laird and Mike MRS. JOSEPH ROBINSON
Lahr~an of San Bernardino Epi1Copal Ceremony
were ushers. A recepUon
took place after . t h e
ceremony in the Parish
Hall.
The bride is a graduate of
Aurora High School of
Aurora, Ohio, and Canton
Business College in Maple
Heights, Ohio. Her .. husband
ia a graduate of Pacific
High School in S a n
Bernardino and atteOOed
San Bernardino V a 11 e y
College and Skadron
Business College.
Th n e w I y we d s honey·
mooned in Las Vegas.
Gorden Grove Home
Allin .. Bemis Vows Said
Honeymooning at Mission
Bay before making their
home in Garden Grove are
newlywed Charles W, Allin
Jr. and his bride, the form.er
Charlene Faye Bemis.
Blessed Sacrament
Catholic C hu rc h ,
Westminster, was the 1et-
ting for the double ring
ceremony conducted by the
Rev. tbomas Dunn.
The former Miss Bemis
donned a titted satin gown
with lace trim on h e r
bodice, sleeves and hemline.
A crest of daisies, pearls
and crystals caught her roll·
ed nylon veiling and she car-
ried daisies and orchids in
her bouquet.
Attendants were M i s s
Judy Allin, the bridegroom''
sister, maid of honor; MisR
Marci Mcintyre of Garden
Grove; Mµis Shirley Kanase
of Westminster, ahd Miss
Debora Bell of Rosemead,
bridesmaids.
The honor attendant wore
a long aqua chiffon gown
trimmed in daisies. Fresh
aqua daisies held her veiling
and she carried a nosegay of
daisies.
The bridesm·aids w e r e
gowned in identical yellow
gowns. Miss Celeste Arlene
Varela, the bride's cousin,
was flower girl and Darin
Gustafson of Claremont, Ule
bridegroom's cousin, was
ring bearer.
The son of Mr. and Mrs.
'(
' "
Jtmw1, ,....,.
MRS. CHARLES W. ALLIN JR.
Former Charlene Fay• Bemis Unit Peers
Into Past
Mrs. J. Orland Smith of
Garden Grove will be guest
speaker for the Orange
County Geneaologlcal Socie·
ty at the evening meeting at
the Bowers Museum i.n San·
ta Ana.
Charles Allin of Garden
Grove asked his brother,
David Allin to be the best
During the final meeting man. Ushering guests to Los Alamitos, was the set· of Mr. and Mrs . Arthur
of the season officers of their pews were David ting for the reception at-Graven ol H u n t l n gt on
Graven, Larry Waddell and tended by 200 friends and Beach., is a graduate of
Golden We5t branch of Reginald Wiswig. relatives. Special g u e st s G<:ilden West College where
California Division of Mrs. Roz Giardini was the were Miss Varela and Mrs. she was a mem1ber of Beta
Woman ·s National Farm organist while Miss Jessica Rebecca Varela. the bride's Sigma Phi, international
and Garden Association Warren of Fresno, the grandmother, both from sorority.
Ted Riscliard of Santa
Ana, president of, t h e
organization, will can the
meeting to order at 7:30
p.m. Thursday, June 27.
The guest speaker. a resi-
dent of Garden Grove since
1922, will speak on the
growth of tbat city. The
society will discontinue their
evening meetings during Ju-
ly and August.
were seated during in -bride's cousin . wa s the Roswell, N.M . Her husband attended
stallaMoo ceremonies. soloist. The new Mrs. A 11 i n , Orange Coast and Golden
The affair took place ln "iiiiiAiimi;i;er;iki.aiiniiiiiiLe;igjii,;;•.;;n·iiiiHi.aiiliil.iiiidioaioui:gi;hi.te;i;r;;ii;;iii;ii'iiteiipdiiiia.Ouiigh.Otiiei.r iiiiW .... e•.;;t .. ciioiiUi.egiieiisi;. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijl
the Hun.tingtoo Beach home r
or Mrs. Kemietti Severns.
and a buffet lunc heon
followed .
Leading the group next
term will be ttie Mmes.
Charles Sanders. president;
John Dumbrille. vice presi-
dent; .Joseph Gutowski ,
secretary. and Au re Ii o
PereyTa, troo.surer.
FINE BAKERY
~<»~
French breed fo pped with Cheddar Cheese
end cheese through if. SOc
iJeA:U.ut«ff ff#tPUJHfl't;d
Light •nd puffy donufs, • mid-morning coffee
specie!. 6 for 54c
Suger iced loel, leced through with cinn•-
mon, nice .for bre•kfasf, SOc
Miss LEAH
.t
If your birthday is in July, August or September,
1top in and fill out •n entry .•. • decor•ted
2-l•yer c•ke to S lucky people ••ch monthJ
Monday, Junt 24, 1%8 DAILY PILOT V
Wayfarers Chapel
Vows, Rings Exchanged
Honeymooning in Hawall
.,.. Christopher Cailllet Md
his bride, Ute -Mary SUUUUH!l Harlan of Costa
Men, after the double ring
ceremony uniting them in
mln'lage last weekend.
The bride , daughter of
Mrs . Elizabeth McCroskey
Harlan, wu given in mar.,..
ri'(e by her brother. Robert
D. Harlan Jr., in Ute ·
Wayt.,.,,, <Jhapei.
A reception for 125 guests
followed at the Allen Center
Officer's Ciub, Terminal
ls-land.
The bride's gown, a loosely
woven net cage over traffeta,
was trimmed with Venice
lace appHqued throughout
the bodi~. with Venice
medallions down the back of
the attached train. She ear.-
ried a Cascade of white
orcltlds, baby's breath and
ivy. Her shoulder length il·
lusion veil was fmshioned
with a headband or tiny
white roses, lily of the
¥alley and baby's breath.
Miss J u di th Elizabeth
Harlan, sistler of the bride,
wee tile maid of honor and
the b r i d e ' 1 sister-in-law,
Mrs. Robert D. Harlan Jr.,
w&f matron of honor. The
bride also was attended by
two bridesmaidt, M r 1 •
Rooald Kennard of Anaheim
and Mrs. Gregor Cailliet of
Santa Barbara and a junior
bridesmaid, Miss L a u r i
Bootil of Westwood.
The bridegroom. son ol
Dr. and Mrs. Rene Cailliet
of Santa Monica , chose hls
brother, Gregor Cailliet, as
best man.
The ushers, attired in
burgundy diMer jacket.s,
were Steven Granstrom,
Russell Pierce, Jon Kasten-
dick, Rich&l'd Golden and
MRS. CHRISTOPHER CAILLIET
Hawaiian Honeymoon
Chriatopher Covey. a:l1 of
Santa MOilica. Ron Booth
Mirved as junior usher and
the bride's nephew, Robert
Bruce Harlan, . was ring
bearer.
Special guests included
Mr. and Mrs. John G.
Harlan of Silva Springs,
Md., the bride's parental
grandparents; Ml'6. Helen
MeCroskey of Laguna Hilts,
the bride's mater n a I
grandmather, and M r s .
Eugenia Rees and Mrs.
Valentine Cailliet of Santa
Monica, both gnmdmotbens
of the bridegroom.
The former Mies H·arlan
graduated from Costa Mesa
High School and attended
Orange Coast College.
Her husband, a graduat.e
of Santa Monica H i g h
School, has been attending
San Diego State College and
plans to tran6fer to tht
University of California,
Santa Barbara-for the fall
quarter.
The coupk! wtll make their
home in Santa Barbara.
Feefurin9 The Fine1f Line ol W igs •nd H•itpieces
1545 E. Co•if Hwy., Coron• del M•r
67J-6H1
~~LIDO CENTER •
---3-43-3V-IA_L_10_0 ___ 1N-EWPO--Rr_s_EA_·c _H ___ 6_73--63_60 __ .. ,~J)\uo..s~Sl11•/~.Ckl\:~sqs.~w~-t-lkh.~Y·~M 1:
•
~-----------~~-------------------------. -------------------
I
n .~YPll.OT . -.-:M,l'M
f Ziesniers Marry
l In Church Rite
I Berkele)' wW be tbe home Edwvd p .. r k l D I 0 D of
'of MWIJwod Mr. aad Mn. 'J'u>tln. MJos Kim J a D ~Peter B. Zie1mer (d:le UDckrman, tbe b r 1 de• a
f"1Dlr Vicki Helen Riley) n!ec:e, wu ber Dower sirL
1fbe.u tbe1 return trom their weutn& a dreu identical to -)1DOCl1 trip to Sanla tllOH _. by tbe other at·
·Barbara and Monterey. tendanll. She carried a
'lbe couple were murled wb!te buket of pot TOH .
hi St. James Epiacilpal petala.
Church ol Nowport Beach Belt man -Lury
with the Rev. David Crump Dingul, wbile &a 1 her r n c
olficlaling. guest& to their places '"""
Tho bride ts tile daughter Robeit Fergupoo, Gary
of Mr. and Mn. Francis W. Semans, Kenneth Savage,
Rlley of lnlne. Th• the brtdegr.-'1 secood br~ ts the aoo of coualn; and CUUord J .....
Mrs. E~ S. Zi011Der '!be church ""!!decorated
of Su Marino. with -1<1 aiiil-ribbons
Given fn marriage b:t her md ftower arf"angementa of
father, the brldt wore a white dtrysaacbemWDI with
almple gown of white crepe spray1 of pint canll.tioDI.
' --. lloor leD&th '!be receptlOll . fOllowlng Ulrl, a acoop neckline and a the ceremooy took place In
wide band of p e a T ls the EIU Club of Newport
, eucading down the ba.ct of Beach, which waa decorated
' the fOWll Into • wide -· -colUJlllll ol plnlF: aad The kllg full sleeves tapered wb!te Dowers. There was
to blDded wristl of pearls. music and dancing for the
Her beedpiece of illlllion 225 gueata. Mlt:a Jane Fran·
formed a r ... at the top. A clskovic of Newport Beach
strand ol pearls, a gift of was in charge!' Of the bridal
the bridegroom, and her book, while Mr. and Mrs.
· bridal bouquet, formed of Clarence McCoy of Moun·
white l'05eS and stepbanotis, lain View and Mr. and Mrs.
completed her ensemble. James S. Linderman of
The bride asked b e r Balboa Island assisted at
lister, N.n. James B . the recepuon.
Consumer's Often Fall Guy
(WdllDt't '"'91 lNr Is #It fw.ltlh atld flNI ~ .............. i.dfW .....,., _, "'
~ Dw911W w..a ""'° k ,__ advW JOr "-1>111.,.,.ity ti C.llfroorllla AtrlalttwM EllfltNIM ..._,
Moot bu&loeH b hooeol and lair to
the public. But tba'e la a small mi·
norlty who tau. advanta~ of t b e
coofulion and guJ.Ublllty of Con.sumen
with unfair or fraudulent .selling
schemes.
In most cues of fraud the fall guy
-the COOS11Dlef' -is partially to
blame. He falla for "get rich quick"
er "1omething for
notblng" schemes ,.... ___ because of hia own
greed, his own ig·
noraooe or tact ol
common sense or
his emotlooal rath-.
er than rational 8i>f
proacb to decision
making.
There ere laws
against consume r
fraud which are en-
forced at local,
state and . led<ral
levels. The Counly
Dbtrtot Att«ney's
office, fer ei:ampl111:,
employs several consumer fraud in·
ve6tigaton. The state Attorney Gm·
eral's office and the Federal Depart·
ment of JU:Stice also have consumer
fraud di\."ialoos.
'lbe U.S. Post Office iovestigatec
and prosecutes an endless variety of
mail fraudJ. The Federal Trade Com·
mission guards against false ad·
vertising and unfair and deceptive
selling. The Food and D r u g
Adminiatration bu the power to in-
vestigate beauty, health a n d
therapeutic devices for safety and
truthfulness of labeling.
Yet ia spite of tbese laws gullible
coneumers continue to be bilked ol.
billloos Of dollars yearly b y
umc:rupulous operatcn ..
budgets and not enough .WI to ade-
quately enforce the laws.
SaUonwide, for eQmple, the Food
and Drug AdmlnlstraUon bu about 20
inspectors asaigned to protecting con-
1umer1 from health swindles. lt 11
estimated that only one-fourth to one·
t h I r d of the frauds in bffuty a n d
health are detected and stopped by
FDA lnspectDrs.
Another problem is tbe loog and di.I·
flcult legal maneuvering necessary to
prosecute tbe offenders. 1be "Drown
case" -an intricate medical hoax
that had over 35,00J victims -took
over four years to get a conviction,
whicb now is being appealed.
In many fraud cases the puniltbment
to the offenders is a small fine -a
mere slap on tbe wrist.
And many of the swindlers are fast
operators. They move into an area.
b i I k as many people as possible and
quickly move on to another com~
munlty before law enforcement agen·
cies can catch up with them.
Or the swindlers m ilk ooe scheme
for all it's worth, then "go out of
business" and switch to something
else.
The slickest and hardiest raeket to
which the public falls victim is that for
home improvement or repair -roof
repair, furnace ' 'i n s p e ct i on , ' '
driveway resurfacing, water sof.
teners, built in v.acuum cleaners,
termite "inspection,'' carpet cleaning,
aluminum siding, and so on.
A favorite pitch is that your home
would be used as a model 'or showcase
and that you will receive a bonus pay-
ment or commission for every sale
res_ulting therefrom,
This is known as "referral" selling
with the "something for nothing" ap-
peal. The bonus never materializes
and you end up hooked on a long-term
credit contract for something you may
not have needed or wanted.
•
ara a 0 lucky wlnntt'' and YOU must
pick up your "pri&e" by a oertaln date.
U yo11 bite, and go to &et your prize
you will oo doubt find that to talt;
possession you muat tpeDd some
money -for enmple buy a cabinet
for a "free" sewing macbine, or &ign
up f o. r a Jong term .ervioe contract.
Any tune you have to 1peod money to
&,et a prize, it is no longer a bona fide
prize.
A discoW1t on merchandise as a
prize may turn 011t to be nothing more
than a "come on" to get you to a
store. The merchandise will probably
be marked up in orice to compensate
for the "discount''
Smooth.·talking door-lo-door g y p
artists have many approaches to get
you to believe that they are not selling
anything. They may be making a
"survey" or are looking for volunteers
to "test" their product or clalm that
you have won a contest.
Their reaJ goal is to get your
signature on an installment sales con.
tracl Your best approach ls to ask
"What are you selling?" The 1windle;
will usually leave in a hurry when he
finds out that you're on to his game.
To avoid being tripped in a swindle
scheme, don't be rushed into signing
any contract, agreement or estimate
no matter how good the deal sounds.
lf the seller is legitimate, the deal
will still be on after you've bad a chan.
ce to check up on the company and
product and compare Prices with
other dealers. It'• the swindler who
claims he has a now-or-never offer.
The Orange County oUlce of the Bet.-
teT Business Bureau maintains a file
of businesses in the county, including
any complaints received by the
Bureau. It also issues reports on cur.
rent consumer frauds to aoyooe re-
questing information.
Linderman of Colla Meta, Special guests atteodlng
to be her matron of honor. iDcluded Mr. and Mrs.
She wa1 attired Jn a floor \ George Burkhardt of. Costa
length ice-pint crepe dress M e s a , . t h 1: b r i d 1: ' s
witb a scoop neckline and a grandparents, and Mr. and
crepe bow holding the flow· Mrs. Raymood Ze:ismer ~.
tog back. Her headpiece was of Laguna Hills, t,,h e
of matching ice·pint crepe bridegroom's granc:tpar:Mts.
in shapes of roses with The bride is a grszd ite of
stepbanotis interwoven with Corona del Mar High
four tiers of netting. She School and attend Orange
canied a bouquet of white Coast College. Her husband CCN11t1I Honeymoon "Why? One reason is that the con·
sumer fraud agencies have limited
The "you have won a contest" pitch
is another favorite. You are Wonned
either by telephone or by mall that you
If you have any doubts about the
legitimacy of a deaJ, a call to the Bet·
ter Business Bureau might save yo11
much grief. The BBB also issues
helpful pamphleta on current con-
sumer problems.
carnations and stephanotis is a graduate of the Cate•----------ADV. in a colonial shape. School in Santa Barbara and
Bridesmaids, dressed ex-received bU bachelor of 'I W F d actly like the hooor at· arts degree In ecooomlcs as orce
tendant and carrying iden-from Cali!ornia S t a t e
tlcal bouquets were Miss College, Los Angeles. He is T F T h
Sally Zeismer CJ( s a. curreotly studying for his 0 ace rut
Marino, the bridegroom's doctorate in agricultural
lister, Miss Cindy Bayer of economics at the University Aho M }£'
Whittier, and Mrs. Philip o1 California, Berkeley. Ut yse
Volunteer
Notes
Feellrig bOred thiS summer? Tiappe<I?
You may not know it, but you're desperately
needed.
You, your car, and an hour a week may make
available to some needy child the treatment which
will save his sight or hearing.
Or, il you are over 18 and love children, the
Well-Baby clinic needs you to weigh, measure and
record the health progress of infants, to perform
light clerical work and to assist examininll doctors.
Interested in trying out the nursing field? Here's
your chance.
Volunteers are needed immediately for a sum·
mer handicraft program fo r girls, ages 6 to 10, in
the Costa Mesa area. All materials are fumished-
instruction is simple.
Or if you're a stay-at-home, the United Fund
EXCLUSIVE:
By MRS. ANN LEVY
N. Curson Ave., Los Angeles
At told to Gloria MarsM!L
in an exclusive
coJ1vrighted letter
"When my husband jok·
ingly referred to me as his
'plush pony' 1 was forced to
face the real truth. It has
been juJt ten weeka since I
waited into y o u r Beverly
Hilll salon and weighed in
at 1721,2 pounds. My latest
progreu check s h ow e d a
toW loss of 30 pounds and
40 inches, but you have giv·
en me much more • . . a
w a r m and friendly atmos.
phere with people who are
genuJnely interested in hel~
Ing me with my program."
* needs telephone workers. "Your reducing program
A motivation program for the mentally retard· is the easiest and fastest
ed needs your help in the office. way to lose those extra
If you need to feel needed this summer, simply pounds and unwanted inch-
call the Volunteer Bureau, 642-0963, weekday morn-es, I've tried dieting many
ings from 9 a .m . to noon. times, but jmt couldn't seem ;::::===================;to keep the weight off. In eight weeks 1 lost 2sv,
inches and 15¥, p o u n d s.
Everyone at the salon has
been very helpful and en·
counging, and have helped
mate reducing fun.
PERMA TRESS
BEAUTY SALONS !..--WITH OR WITHOUT APIJOlNTMEHT __ _,
BRECK
PERMANENT WAVE
COM,lfTE: STYLED CUT -SET -& STYLED COMIOUT
NICK COUPON HICK •s• .,.,. ·-.... "' ........... •s• • lrlCll: •s.....,... ,.,,..,_., wave effw
........... w ............................ .
1 look forward to my visits
and feel better every time I
leave the salon."
Mra. Mardell Doty,
Wvngate Ave., Tujunga
* "Your method ls the quick·
est way to lose wei ght I have
ever tried . . . I know, be·
cause I've been on many of
them. When 1 had· to buy a
size 18 dress a couple of
months ago, I decided to stop
in at your salon on the way
home. You guaranteed me to
not only Jose w e I g h t but
In ches too ! I've lost 20
pounds and 35 inches from
a siie 18 to a size 11! The
best mo n e y I ever spent.
P.S.: My husbsnd stopped
playing cards Friday nights
and ii takJng me out again!"
Mrs. Glady! Heath,
Rathburn Ave.,'
Northridge
* Gloria Mar1hall ha:s helped
thousands of women regain
their youthful, slender fig-
ures. The above la a aampling
of the hundreds of letters she
bu received, telling of how
she has completely revamped
her patrons' llve1. Declaring,
"I haven't met 1 Women yet.
whose fJgurt: I couldn't im-
prove," Miu Mar1hall Invites
you to 1ee tor your1elf bow
i&AlDfH &lOVl °''"'' Ceu11ty ,1111 110.4110 1he can ouorantft a lovelier
-E•j,'''~r ltl!.'-.lll new ... flgw_._qwkJclr-6"4-ta/• ---j-•n·R11lr---;,, lr11khur•t''-=c.-,~,,.---,JI: 2. 7111
1221 H. E•cll4 PJI: 2.2101 111 without pllJJ, strenuoua u -
• HUNTINQTOM I P1l11h C.11tt, VI 7·1011 erdte or ltlrvatlon dlet. Cl.ll
l t:\CH s,,r,ul1l1 C.11t., 1t1.11tJ now for your compllment.aey COSfA MISA H1r .. w C.d1r ICI f.0717 ~---,.-_____________ ,,treatment and figure aaalysts.
I
•
this ad is for
overW"eight W"omen
•
"7ithout W"ill poW"er.
I Al.tr 'rOUltU&lr I
1. -..... -"'al9'tt --41et ..... , i. De.,.. lia;11M ..._ _. lrritaW.,., 1fvtt.
..... nil ...... 'lie wMft yeu'N ltattU1t1 M .... _ . ..,
2. De .,.. tty pllls, tliett, ex.m. hr .while,
..ty t. hrt-• ,.. ..... Ntvm •• ..-••
Y" tlfp freM rith:I NVfine!
4. Wit... Y" DO 1 ... -.i1ht, Is ft •fw..ys freM
the •wr9n1" placu?
Y"D "' D Y"O
if you've answered "yes" to any of these questions, read on. • •
Now, at last, you can lose pounds and
inches quickly and safely this one abso-
lutely guaranteed way: and, you can do
it without starvation diets, pills or stren-
uous exercise.
The Glorf1 lfar1hall S)'ltem II a pen°"""''' propam of
complete flrun and posture Improvement eomblned. with upert:
in1truction on eve.r7 facet of be1uty. To our lmowledre, no other
weight reducinl' 111tem can, or does, offer our Hrvlca. We
h1n developed a varlet,. of machines to b&ni1h ntrr correct.
able firure f1utt. It is a relaxinr, quick and _,, waY to lote
thoee extra pound• and Inches. We can help :rou rqain and
keep • trim, poi1ed, youthful 1hape and at th. nme time rele1M
mu1ele ten1lon.
Appearance Affects Persano/lty
Overweirht ia not onl1 damariDI' to health but too many
pounds make a woman appear years older than she la. Every
woman knows that her J>ersonal appearance d0et affeet her
peraonality. Overweight c1n change a nonn1lly viYacioua wom·
an Into one who is depressed, irritable and unhappy. The mort
diaaatisfied the becomes: with hereelf, the more 1he 11 likely to
overeat She get3 Ieu u.d leu exercille and IOMI the eneru to
le1d an active-li!e.
You. ean look lovely u Jona" u you live. Today, It fa llUi•
than ever to look like a new woman. We will take care of &he
ditticuJt part. Call today for your free treatment and firare
analysis with no obligation. We will dlscu11 ,.-our f igure prob.
Jema with you and 1how you how we can guaran• resulta •••
remember, it'• mtttr too late to be lotftly. ·
Results Are Guarantffd '
Every p1tron receive1 a WRITTEN GUARANTEE that
she will reach her predetermined. dreaa ai:z:e within a apecffied.
period af time. If the promised reault3 are not attained on
tchedule, Gloria Marahall will furnish additional treatments
until the l'Uarantee ia fulfilled at no further cost or obllration to the patron.
How Can We Guarantee Results?
A personalized progrtaa chart is prepared to that each time
1'0U Yiait the •alon a trained eounaelor can KUide you toward
70.ur 1pecifie goals. We keep a constant check: on your prosreea
towa~ a lonlier firure. In thla w1;r, you reach your dMired
roa1 ID the ahorteat time ••• and for the leut expente.
How Much Does All 1hls Cost?
The atandard price for treatments ia $2.00. You are clearlt
told the number and frequency ot treatments required to help
:rou reach yoilr predetermined l'Q81. Thia wa:r you know exaetJr
what :rour alt.improvement 11 roing to colt you •• , then an
DO extn.I or hidden eharret whataoever.
No Di8robing Necuaarv ••• We Are NOT A Gvm
CA.LIFOBMlA't LA.BGl8T 1IGO&B CONTllOL IYITJ:lf
F.IG'UBE
CONTROL
SALONS
1
Do.il11 g.g; Sat. g.5 • BankAmeri'orird and M<Uter Charge Welcome
NEWPORT BEACH
430 Pacific Coast Highway
2 lloclu Eost of lalboo Bay Club
642·3630
SANTA ANA
1840 W. 17th. Smet
543.9457
•
• -· ..... 24, 191.8
• .. --'i
DAJLY PILOT JI"
Frazier 4-1 Favorite in Title Bout With Ramo·s5
NEW YORK (AP) -Manuel
Ramos, a 4-1 underdog, Is expected to
lihOOt the work.I early ln a desperate
a t t e mp t to dethrone five-state
heavyweight champion J oe Frazier in
1 15-rouncl title fight al Madison
Square Garden tonight.
''lt only takes one punch to turn a
fight around," said Gil Clancy.
"Ramoa can punch pretty good but he
better get Frazier quick because the
champ keeps COlnlng at you. IC Ramos
can nail him everyone may be In fer a
surprise."
Clancy, co.manager and trainer of
fGrmer mJ.ddleweigbt c.hampion Emile
• Grirt'Jth . worked with the tall. 24-year-
old Mex.lean champion for a week. He
will be in his corner tonight.
The general opinion of the expert.I
was that the 6-loot..:I Ramos' only
chance to win was to get in the big
bomb quickly. The unbeaten 24.-year-
old Frazier has been floored Mly
three times in his career, all in the se·
cond round.
Mike Bruce put blm down in the se-
cond before he was Mopped in the
tni.rd round. Oscar Booavena decked
Frazier twice in the second round but
Frazier came on to win the 10.round
decision.
T011i9ftt -TV
Ch•11t1e l S, 7:30
Ramos never bas been fioored or atop.
ped. His race is unmarked.
Frazier, aa uaual, won't be bard to
find.
"I'm coming out smoking, lil:e I
alway1 do," be said. "l hope it enda
right after the bell sounds.'.'
Soderberg to Kentu~ky
Marina A ce to Enroll in A ugust
By GLENN WHITE
or ""' 01nr 1"1111 ,,.,.
schedule, going all Dver tor 23 dif.
ferent games, including Vanderbilt." ,
Mark Soderberg, highly regarded
baltetball star from Marina High
School, will enroD at the University of
Kentucky and continue tits cage career
under the eiperienced guidance of the
old coaching master, Adolph Rupp.
Vandf lancie<i prep giant Steve
Turner so Sodef'berg will get a chaDce
to match talents with the T-2 whiz next
aeason. Doctors say Turner may crow
to 7-5. Soderberg is &-a.JU. .
Soderberg, All-CoaSt Area, All-Sun.
set League, All.CIF tournament first
team and a member ot two summer
all-etar squads, was givm a full four·
yur 1cholanbip at the Le:llngtm in·
stitution and is the only Californian in
the CllmlOt Wildcat hoop progam.
. Soderberg told the DAILY PILOT,
"the whole setup back there really im-
pressed me. There were 10 1r 11 other
acboola which really interested me,
but Kentucky stood out.
"Not only do they have an im-
ire3Sli.ve program, but the school and
country are beautiful. The coaches
haven't decided yet whether I'll play
center or forward but in their style of
play it really won't make much dif·
ference.
He is noted for his rebounding, agill-
ty and excellent sbooUng, outside or
inside.
"They have a tremendous freshman
Kentucky found out about him
through a.Iwnnus Ray Allen, who now
teaches at Marina. Neil Reed, new
Santa Ana High coach and funner aide
to Rupp, followed through. MARK SODERBERG
Newport's Voss Learns Laver Opens
Being a Major Leaguer Wimbledon
HasltsPainfulMoments Bid Toda y
There are times wben being a major
leaguer hurts.
Take the case of Bill Voss, the
fonner Newport Harbor High and
Orange Coast College baseball hero
who now bangs his chapeau in the
dressing quarters Of. the Oticago
White Sox.
Today Voss is 10 1ore he literally
aches all over But he creaked nut of
bed to make Praot:ice and he'll be on
the bench tonight again!I. Minnesota to
be used in an emergency capacity.
Voss has sore ribs, kidneys, an
aching head, a jammed right thumb
and a bruised shoulder as a result nf a
collision with a Comiskey Park wall
in Saturday's game with Boston.
He bad just been shifted from right
Oh Those Mets!
Dodgers Glad
To Leave NY
NEW YORK (UPI) -Bill Singer
just might wind up boycotting games
against the New York Mets. The Los
Angeles Dodger righthander isn't
having much luck against them this
season. .
The Dodgers whose record now 11
even at .500 al 36-36, are idle today.
They open a three-game aeries at San
Francisco Tuesday night.
Singer aaw his record slip to &-7 Sun·
Dadga Sl•te
J-15 Docl9l'n •I Sen l'rll'lcilco 7:15 ,.rn. KFI
01J ... " DCldlln " "" 'F'll'lt'-12:15 "·""" Kii
l"'Ol K•I JUM 't1 Oodlln If "" Fnonclteo 12:51 ,.m.
1"'01 I IUOl J.-• °"'""' 'fS NIMlfl J:J.S 1.m. KF J~,,. 2' Docl9ff'I w Atlat1!a 7:.U ,.m. KFI (UOJ
day and took bis third loss ~ three
decisions against the Mets m a M
Dodger setback. .
A crowd of 56,738 -the largest m
the major leagues thit year -wat-
ched the Mets capture a three-game
series two contest& to ooe. .
Singer wbo entered the game WI.th a
t .75 ea.rited run average, left after
Cleon Jones hit a three-run homer
with one out in the fourth trml.ng to
give New York a 5-0 lead.
* * * LOS A•O•Lh ,. .. YOlllC • "'
•r11rti1 ''' W.01¥1a. cf J I 1 I ~ M • I I "~·,, ......... lb •t. G1brl1bcw1, I • I I I ~ rf l t • 81ffln~on. • • • • • Mlitftll 111 • • •
H1tlff, c 1 I I I 1M.-:h, W : : ~ lllll'l'tt", a 1 I I I --;.i 1'1trty, rt I I J I G"'"-c 1 I I ,_,. 4111 COlllN..Jb JO I ~·c t I I I._... d I I I
l"tr1Mt,U1 •lllltn"'I' 11 I " -•••• .t..Jldt-. • • • • :.~--· 1 I 1 1 ~T.,._., • I I t
""-· " 2 ••• ""'"""' . . . . . F•ltl'l',11 1111 lllfl
field , where the wall is padded, to left
field, where it is not.
-A long fiy ball came his way. Vosa
gave chase and caught it, then slam-
med tnto the barrier, with head and
shoulder. He peeled off and dropped to
the ground, still holding the ball.
The umpire rushed to the scene -to
make sure be bad caught it -then
anxious Olicago mates gathered
around till Bill was able to get up.
Meanwhile, in the stands, wif~ Donna
......................
WHITE
WASH
uuuus:ouuuuu;uuuuu I
was devouring fingernails .at a rather
frantic clip. "And I was even more
worried when they took him to t h e
hospital," she adds. "It seemed to take
so long before they'd tell me how he
was." ·
Manager Eddie Stanky asked Bill
Sunday night if he wnuld be available
for emergency use. Voss, anxious to
mU. good on bis chance in the ma·
jcn"S , said he would.
"I've got the opportunity to make
the big leagues and J don't wMt to do
anything to 1 o s e it," the Yardley
Trophy finalist confides.
Stanky once pointed out during
di&CUssion .at Anaheim that Voss was a
guy who had the kbld Of. competitive
heart it takes to stay in the majors.
Obviously rus appraisal is accurate.
WIMBLEDON, England (AP) -
Three American tennis stars, all rank·
ed in the top 10, stood in the path of
Corona del Mar pro Rod La~r as he
started his bid for the first open
Wimbledon title today.
Laver. top seeded, had to play
l!:ugene Scott of New York City, rank·
ed No . 9 in the American list, in the
nrst round on the No. 1 court.
U Laver wins, he probably will find
himself facing two more U.S. stars
later in the week -Stan Smith, rank-
ed 7th, from Pasadena, in the second
round, and Marty Reissen, No. 5, from
Evanston, Ill., in the third.
It's six years since the great
Australian left-hander last won
Wimbledon.
Now the change to open tennis has
brought him back into the world's
most famo111 tennis arena.
The six pros controlled by Laver.
Ken Rosewall, Roy Emerson and Fred
Stolle of Australia, Pancho Gonzales
of Los Angeles and Andres Gimeno of
Sp at n -a re entered in the men's
singles.
So are Lamar Hunt's Handsome
Eight troupe-defending champion
John Newcombe and Tony Roche of
Australia, i>enni.s Ra 1st on of
Bakersfield, Earl Buchholz of St.
Louis, Cliff Drysdale of South Africa.
Roger Taylor of Britain, Nik.kl Pille of
Yugoslavia and Pierre Barthel of
France.
Six former champiOJJ.S are hunting
the title -Laver, Em er 1 on,
Newcombe, Peruvian.born pro Alex
Olmedo, now coaching in Los Angeles,
Australian pro Lew Hoad, who runs a
tennis school in Spain, and Spanish
amateur Manuel Santana.
The '62,760 in prize money Includes
$4,800 for the men's champion.
"11mow he'll bo oomlng and ru be
ready," said Ramos. 11H1 can punch
but 10 can I . I didn't come ber1 to lon."
Gatden olticla1a prodlcted a """'"'
upward• of 10,000 ta pay more than
$100,000 at prices ranglnf from '5 to '40.
Frar.ler wlil bo ma.Ing the llnt
defeme ol the plece of tbe world tlUe
be won by 1topplnf PHViously un.
beaten Buster M'aihii ln the lltb round
at the G....ie. lut Moreb 4.
Frazier ia: recognized as world
champion by New YOl'k, Pennsylvania.
lllln<U, Muoachusett.s and Maine.
Lew Plan s
Return
Io UCLA
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Lew iUdn-
clor, Ule giant UCLA center, NYI be1l
bo back wUll the Bruim fer bll ...ior.
year imtood ot btcom!nr an ~
mllllonat.. In·"""~ bubthall. "I'm looJdni f<lrwll'd to next 1euon
-and I'm 11ill optlmlltic -our
chances," remarked Alclndor, wbo
bu led UCLA to two conoeeuttve na·
tiooal collegiate titles.
Before leavin& fur New Ym-k tar
summer v.acaUon, Akmdcr told a
newsman be'• boliwred by rumors
that be might quit college bukethaI
immediately, pe!11ape In sign a '1
million contract with the Harlem
Globetrotters.
"The NCAA is going to begin
wooderlng, 'Who's be talld.ng to now?t
ot 'What does he have up hifl 1leeve?•
They could make it rough on me -
and I don't want that," be said.
"I want to play my remaining yew
al.. college."
Alcindor conceded be'1 talked 1" izn.
port.ant professionals in the game -
but only socially, He's a friend of
Philadelphia's Wilt Chamberlain and
Boston's Bill Russell, for instance.
"I see them often," said Alcindor ... ~ talk ' ..... "" we about my future once in
a while. But 11 fw as my aitting dowit
and bargltining over a contract, that'a
out Of. the question."
Why , then, the rumors!
"Maybe It's beca111e I'm different,
I'm not really sure ... I know, fot one
thing, that there's a lot of hostility hi·
wlved," he said.
"A lot of people don't like me be·
cause I've spoken out against some of
the attitudes on Negroes in our siciety.
This automatically creates hostility."
"And usually it's the people who
don't like what I say who start all
those rumors."
Alcindor'1 summer will be spent
working with under-privileged ·dlildren
in New York, under comm1Mion of
Mayor John Lindsay.
Alcindor will conduct twice-daily
basketba:ll clinics for youngsten in the
New York Housing Authority.
Briton Wins
Fiery Race
MONZA, Italy (AP) -French rac·
ing driver Jean Pierre J.usaud ia
hospitalized with a serious head injury
today follpwing .a spectacular seven-
car .smash-up during the Monza Grand
Prix Fonnula Two race SWlday.
Physicians said Jassaud suffered a
skull concussion, fractured bis left
knee and multiple fractures ol his
ribs. They added that It would take
him months to recover.
The accident occurred a b o u t
hallway through th~ race when thn!e
Ferrari Dino cars collided and burst
into fiamet. The other four autos
smashed into the wreckage.
Jusaud was the only driver injtred
seriously.
J onathan Willi ams 0( Britain won
the race, taking his Brabham over the
160 miles in ooe hour, 14 minutes, 9.8
seconds for an average time ot 100
miles per hour. Britons Allan Rees. in
a Brabham, and Robin Widdom, in 1
McLaren, were second and third.
Charles
TORONTO (AP) -It's getting to be
a habtt.
Bob Oiar1" of New Zealand won the m:;,ooo Canadian Open Goli CbaJn.
pionlhip Sunday and became the se-
cond collier in eight days to ignore • --round charge by Jad: Ntcitlaus. ·
Lee Trevino did it a week c•Uer
Ind WOii Ult U.S. Open.
'1And I didn't turn my back on
Jack'• tee ahota, '' 1a.ld the lffthaDded
swinger wllen ul:ed U the booming
Nicklaus drtvea dtlturbed him.
"t1tt11to •4f• Tftlll 171 -4
ltl ...,...... .... • •....••.. • ooe, ""-*"-----__ ....,.. .. ---"'." .. , .... " .... "Actuall1, I -tee! to ... W... lie
Wit hlttiDc bro.''
t11iila 1iiiii1t~-aiarti!J"-ib'fjf-.-Jout=WR11F.,..-•
WlM LE DON FAYOR!Tll -Corona del Mar's Rod Laver opeN dw1n& Suoday'1 tiDll round for a &Ix. SINlr (1..6n ._T/i I 5 .t I •
A9U1rrt H1J I I I 1 I a11t1n11"'"' 1 t t I f I
It.rift (WA-$) 1<\11 • I I I • A.Ja-l/J I t t t t It T..,_. 1-1/1 1 I I t 1
H .. , -"""'"' l11'11mi:ll'Y). WI" -• .. ~ I"& -Hiiler, Timi -t:& ~ -
compe1ition al Wlmbledon's famed tennla tourney today u tbe loll under-par 274 and picked op '25.000.
seed in the ftrst--ever combined pro-amateur match al the woria Nkklaua, who staled a bead·to-
classic. Sixteen member• of tbe NeWllOrt Beach :rennla Club em-head bottl1 with ~r.. ..,.. lbe final
bal'k.ed today to lake in lhe townamei.~ •• 18 bolet of lbe l,'m-yard SI. Geor1e'1
•
~· --
U•I T NOW, THE REAL THING -Mexico's Manuel Ramos (top) and
Philadelphia's Joe Frazier wound up their training over the week~
end with some work on the heavy bags, but it will be the real thin~
tonight when Frazier bids to make a successful defense of his share
of the world heavyweight boxing "title. Frazier is a 4-1 favorite in
the Madison Square Garden bout, sporting a perfect 20--0 record.
Ramos is 28-6 and has never been decked . -Seek .500 Mark ! --Halos Win Again in 9thi --Battle Oakland Tonigh~
•
ANAHEIM -Bill Rigney was
ejected from six early season games,
when the CalUomla Angels were hav-
ing trouble' winning.
"Now I'm afraid to argue with the
umpires," he says, "because I want to
be around in the ninth inning. I don't
want to mJss something exciting."
The Angel! are fast becoming the
late-inning champions Of baseball, win-
ning 11 times this season in their final
turn at bat. ,
Jim Fregosl, who had beaten the
Ange l Sl•te
J.-u Anl•ll va 0.~1""'1 1:ss p.m. KM,C 1n o1
Ju111 25 Atlltf1 'fS Cllkl111d 7:.U P.rn. KMPC 1110)
JuM 21 M~I· v• Cllkl•nd 7:15 p.m. KMPC (110)
Yankees With a twelfth-inning homer
last Monday night, became the hero
.again here Sunday when he opened the
ninth inrr:ing with a homer to give the
.Aingels a 3-2 victory over Baltimore.
It was the sixth time In their last
eight victories that the Angels have
done It in the final inning.
The Angels, winners in eiglht ol their
Ian 10 starts, will try In gain the .500
mark at 34-34 tonight when they open
a three-game series here against
Oakland. Rick Clark, 0-7, goes against
the A's John "Blue Moon" Odom, 6-4.
Fregosi has rut three homers in hls
last six games, disproving what once
was one of Rlgney's pet theories.
"I used to hate to see Jimmy hit a
home run," Rigney said late Sunday,
''because It would take him a week to
get over It. He'd start swinging for the
fences and I've always thought be
was a belt.er hitter when he just tried
to meet tbe ball. But he's really get·
Outlasts
Goll Club layout. aatd later that tt>e
New Zealander's game wu "just too
1ood."
"He Jutt 11111 beat me. I thought I
putt.ed cohllderably better than I did
in th,. flrlt Uree rounds, but be putted
better . Every putt be m.akea loob likt
it'1 loinl in. He putts C001istenUy bet-
ter than anyone ell• oo the tour.''
•I
•• ting the job done now." 1 ~
The winning homer off Oriole rfght!
hander Tom Phoebus, 6-7, surpristcl
the Angels' $60,000-a-year sbortatop.,:
"I can't remember ever getting a JC
ol1 him before," said Fregosl. ''I ~.!l
he's one of the toughest pitchers in tOi
leauge." :
Fregosi had to share baclulaps w111
Vic Davalillo, the five -foot sev.en-InC
l~pound ouUielder and leadof:f •
who has helped the AngelJ win fiv_e2f
six starts since be attlved here folic..
ing a trade with Cleveland. :
Davalil!o hit a third-inning double
and a ~ixth-inning triple to dri o1e in ~
Ange. · first two runs off Phoebus.;
walk to pitcher Tom Murphy, plUl4
wild p it~h. set up one run and the •·
pie fol1 :wed a pinch single by. Cl
Kirkpatrick. :
Davalilio has had a band in four:rf
the Angels' last five victories. -
The little Venezuelan said he 11 Jiil
beginning to recover from a knee •
jury that sidelined him for a week j·~
before the Angels acquired him il'S1
the Indians. ...
tALtlMO«I! CALl•Oll:Nloli • ._,,,.., '''ti 11""°'11, 2b t I I I O.vallllo. rf .. I J
V1lentl,,., rl ' • 0 • Fr-1, II .. I • '
F.ROOINO<I, It l I 2 I lftPOZ, <f 2 I ...
P-11, lb 2 I 0 I MJnctw, 1b 3 I b e l .lfllbl..,.,.,, Jb 4 I 1 I R.ichlrdt, If J I I •• ,,~.,.,. c l 0 1 1 S.trl1i., c 2 0 • 0
D.JOl\ruon, M ' 0 I I JlodrlWoA. a ) t f O
l l1lt, cl l 0 I 0 ~. 211 , I ~· Phoel:IUI, ' J I I I M~,,...,, ' I I ~I
Kln.,..trlcll, "' 1 t • J.H1mlt"'"' J> I I I
"l"lftlre, "' 1 • • Wrl~I, ' I t •t Tol111 ll f 1 1 "1"111111 M I .... ,._ out wl'ttft wtnnlnt "'" t<:Ortd. ... lllltlmor. .. . . ... • . . . .. . . . 001 «It • -
c1n1orn11 . . . . . .• . .• . .. .. . 001 tol 001 -.::L
OP -!111tl'""'°' J, C1IJfGnd1 1. LOii -..,... ""'"' 3, c111forn1, 2. 2a -o.v111111. n -09jto
llllo. HR -Bl.lfilltd C'l, Frl'lml (IJ. IF -........ • • •
Nicklaus
-• ••
------------~----------------~-~-~---~----·------~-~---~~~-~-----------
• •
•
'
--·~ .._ .......
4 Di.JLV flllOT
~world
:c -:-javelin
'
"" ~:Record , ..
·~
SAAJ IJAERVI, Finland -
Janis Lusis ol the Soviet ~nion broke the world
.Javelin record Sunday with
a toss of 301 feet, 911" inches
at a track meet here .
...., The old mark was 300
if,eet. 1 t inches. set by Terje
.,..Pedersen of Norway in Oslo,
.j;ept. 2, 1964.
•• : Lusi.s, who won a bronze
... medal at the Tokyo Olym-
.pics in 1964, set the record
;pn ltls first try. He fouled on
his next two throws, then
passed up his last three. .... .... ....
Z AND VO ORT,
Netherlands -J • c k I e
Stewart a tiny Scot with an
Injured right wrist. drove a
falUring Matraaford to vie·
tory in the Dutch Grand
Prix to give a F rench car its
.(irst world cbamplon1bip
Wi n la 16 years.
.; Although the car waa
powered by a Britl1h engine,
the . French triumph in
Grand Prix auto racing waa
rammed h~me by the 1e·
•ond placJ.Dg of a French
::lriver in a French car. ::.... .... .... -:_ LANGHORNE. Pa. -
~nioo Johncock took home
1he prestige and first place
money after win ning the
....JJnited St.ates Auto Club'1
~tISO..mi1e championship car
.... racf: at L a n g ho r ne
;=-.Speedway. ..... .... .... ....
•" PASADE NA Tb •
...:'Kan1a1 City Spun and Los
:.--Angeles Wolves batUed to a
scoreless tie Sunday as Los
Angeles goalie M a 1 c o I m
-white gained bis fourth
::1tralgbt shutout.
White also estabUsbed a
North A me r I ca n Soccer
Leacue record ol 36!
!~Scoreless minutes or play.
'""'topping the 385 mtnute1 set
by J ack R e 111 y nl
Washlngton.
__ The game. played in 8.'i·
::degree beat before a 1par1e
-,.crowd or 1,021 in the Rose
• '-p,owl, was the seventh
.nstralgbt conte1t without a ~ereat for the Wolves and
•-;their fifth tie kt the last
·-seven games. __ .... .....
••• --SAN ANTONIO, Tex.
University of Sout hern
California has its 10th cham-
,,,pionship in the 23-year
_tllstory of tlhe NCAA Tennis
-Tournament.
't'be Trojans won the title
Saturday with 31 points.
.. Rice was second with 23
:. points and UCLA third wit h
•A21.
FV Cards
Clobber
=Mes~ 7-1
-
Mond.Q, JuM 24. 1968
.~
•
P'ho!I 111 Diie SIPMll«
-
Hawk Wins Tilt and Cigar;
South Is 82-77 Upset Vi ctim
• •
By RAY PLUTKO turned the ball over (lost llowever, Greg Snyder °' t11t o.llY ,.. ... St.it possessJon ) on 29 occaslons. and Al Gage prov~ the lone
Coach Russ Hawk won U th. conslS' tent performers for hi Eviden y, some 1ng was
·mself a cigar Saturday the South and the talented night, while Bill Bloom -hindering his club 's ability
who all but had hl$ name to advance the ball over the front line never did make it
engraved on the cigar band mid-court line. out of the starting blocks.
B. F. Goodrich 4 PLY -NYLON
picked up the crying 1 ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiO;ooiiiii;;;;;;;;;;,..w;;;;;;;.p;;jjjjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio~::;~ towel. IJ
Needlesg to say, bath
mentors found themselves
in s o m e w ha t "awkward
positions" when the final
buzzer sounded to the fourth
annual Orange Co u nty
North-South All-Star cage
classic at the Orange Coast
College gym.
''LONG MILER"·
Bloom and bis much·
heralded band of Rebels
came prepared with their
victory speeches and pens
for the autograph seekers,
but the lone greeting cast
their way was a simple
"good night" by the custo-
dian upan leaving the dress-
ing room.
Bloom and his Sou tt'l Stars
''accomplished" t he im-
possible -they dropped an
82-77 decfsion to the North
and left a crowd of 2,100
fans limp in the process.
HaTI.ng won the three
previoos meetings between
tbe teams, this year's South
1quad wati by far the most
talented and entered the
contest a 15--point choice to
1 make it in four straight.
Alt.hough having to settle
for a 3.5-35 deadlock at in-
termission, it was thought it
would be just a matter of
time before the Rein broke
out of their shell.
The North, with its tallest
player -Bob Klei'nholz (6-
6) -already on t h e
sidelines with five personal
infractions, appeared doo m·
ed.
Hawever, ttJe North hung
on the heels of the South in
.• those final 2{I minu tes and
when Mike Staffi eri of Sun-
ny Hills hit both ends of a
one-and one situation from
the line, it was all over.
' SIZE
6.50· 1 l
1.00-1 l
1. 75-14
7.15-t 5
JONES
TIRE
SERVICE
4th JULY
SAFID
Tub.less lloclnitoll1 T11beleu Whl-.wcdls
1st TlltE 2ftd TIRE 1st TIRE 211d TlltE
14.60 7.30 17.55 8.78
------
16.40 8.20 19.35 9.68
-------
.... ...
TH
>.n
u o
TALL TIMBER COUNTRY -When it came to
height, there wasn't lack of it in battling for this
rebound Saturday night in the fourth annual Orange
County North-South All·Star game at Orange Coast
Coll ege. Mark Soderberg (40) at 6-8V4, Bob J:(lein-
holz (21) at !Hi and John Yule (34) at 6-7 do the
honors, with Yule coming out on top -one of 12
he hauled in for the evening. North Stars posted
stunning 82-77 upset fo r their first win in series.
Staffieri's two poi n ts
made it 61-60 with 10:23 re-
maining in the contest and
the North never did sur·
render that lead over the
rinal segment. I "They ju.st outboarded
us." sOOd Bloom in the
locker room. "We just didn't
get any offensive rebounds
1.15·14
1.1 5-15 18.85 9.4l
----1.55.14
1.45-1 5 ----
.I.II PrlCH lllul l••H-O•<hlnM
--
21.80 '10.90 •.»
23 .55 11.78 2,1,
"Tiiis sire only • •1' roted.
Eliminator
Field Set
At Raceway
1ltC lt.ui TO W~ICH . "
uciii
iif~:fj'A'A"Eii;fsfAi':iiDM' -·•n ..... , ......••. M .... ,,, •••••••••••••
North Meets South in
Big ) Geme Serie1 !
OAKLAND
ATHLlTICS
Ton ight,
Tomorrow & Wedne•d•y
G eme Time, I p.m.
Metro In Status Quo
Following Three Ties
Me sa Gal
2nd in State
AAU Meet
and they did." ·
With a starting front line
of 6-8'h, 6-7, and 6·5, the
South did indeed blow its ap-
portunity on the boards.
However, Hawk felt the
difference in the contest was
the ability of his club to go
to a 2·2·1 zone press in the
second half -a pressure
defense the South never did
solve.
Without a doubt, it was a
unique Sunday in the Metro
League baseba:ll ranks as
Wafi'.l's Pirates and Golden
West College both played
single encounters, but failed
to gain or lose any ground in
their bi& ~ the pennant.
That came about when t he
Orange Coast College con·
Lingent battled Lon g Beach
City to a 2·2 deadloc k and
Golden West fttllowed suit
under the lights al Shaffer
Field (Santa Ana) in a
scoreless duel with Cal State
l Fu\Jerton).
In fact. deadlocks were
apparently the order of the
day Su nday a11 Chapman
College and Sama Ana
College wound 11p in an 8-8
knot ru; welt
Before the evening was
over, there were more than
a few criticism ~ by the
respective manager~ to the
league rule that permits nn
extra-inning games to be
played.
Ward's Pira4.c~ sported
the beS( apportunity to pull
one out . hold ing a 2-1 lead
over Long Beach City in the
top of the ninth.
However, the Long Beach
City crew pushed acr05s an
equalizer and then the
P irates blew t he i r op-
portunity to win it in the
bottom half of the final in·
ning.
Wi th Jesse Flores at third
an<! Gary Dunkelberger at
second. Ed Washko hit a
grounder to short that waEi
bobbled and the apparent
winn ing run crossed the
plate.
But the base umpire ruled
that Dunkelberger had in·
terfered with the shortstop.
Wlrtf'I ..,,1111 UI ...
Olivpr, ct wa.nko. n JP.nkln~. lb 9••1e,, cl k:'r~~L l~'
Pinier, rt Flor••· lb l'•lmer, <
Oalebo\i1, c
Swaim, o Crl10. o Ounkelt>erver. •
Tol•l1
' . • • • • • • , ' ' ' ' . • • ' . l g ' . ' . Jl :
Ooltffll Wn l !fl
DeG•er. lb -Cornell. l!l $1>!n<••· o Pin••· r• Neuvet>euer, cl
Rev~•. !.! ,t,lltns.on. ~
Mei111, If Esrrad.I. t
M8Pl<eS, II EIMr, Pit Tollh
" . • • • • • • , . • • • • ' . ' . ~ ~ ' . " .
M ltSI
' • ' , • ' • , • • • • ' '
• • • • • ' g • • • :
H ltll l , . • • • • ' . ' . ' . • • ' . • • • • • • , .
SAN BE R NAR DI NO
(UPI) -Sharon Callahan, a
16-year-old from Whittier,
Sunday went five reet, seven
and one-quarter inches far
the second be&!. high jump
performance for a woman in
the nation this year.
Her effort. an American
gi rls' record, came in the
state AAU women 's meet at
San Bernardino V a I I e y
Col lege.
Costa Mesa's Dee DeBusk
glided to second place in the
"We felt if we could just
rontrol the tempo or the
game we would have a
chance," confided Hawk .
''But as it turned out we
were just in better shape
than they were and we ran
them off the court in those
fin al minutes."
Bloom didn't point to the
press as a major problem,
but the stats reveal his club
JOO-meter dash with a 12.2 seer• 'Y "''v"
I ki r, . h. • be . Nor"' Sta" Jj 41-11 c oc ng . 1n1 s 1ng hin d s ..... 1~ si.,. lS o-n
B b F II f h , ~ Hertll 'l1r1 (11) ar ara erre o t e 1.NS Ne. ~l•Y" "G itr ,., r ,
Angeles Me rcurettes. who 1~~~)~1~~11 ~ : t : posted an 11.7 . 21-1C1e1Mo1z o ' J , l-ROIPI\ I ' l 1!l Eleanor Montgomery had ll-Fo• J 1 l 11
the t-op hi gh j u m p 1~~i;i~.. l ~ 1 ~
performance of five feet. ~l=l~~':,n 11 1 J 1~
eight inches. 270'111/~11"'• 1: 1g J 1~
,California provided nine of Ne. ,.,., ... ~1~ 5117G1"#r ,.,.. r,
20 members of the 1964 olO-Sadl•be•• it 1 ' 11 l'l-Moore a 1 J 1 United States' 0 I y m p i c J4-Yutw J ' J i,
women's team. The ~5~,,::e1111 ! ~ ~ 2;
women's Olympic trials will i.....s.!:!.,.., : ~ i ~ be held in the Los Angeles l0-llnct1e• , o , • JD-Jord"' I o 1 , Area Aug. 24.25 . lot--St1r,1eme1.. 1 1 ,i n' ~~~~~~-'~·~"~'~~~~~'~'__:_:"_:·::.._·~
Baseball Standings GIGANTIC
ANNIVERSARY National League
W L Pct.
20 .629
:tl
St. Loui!i 44
San Francisco .'VI .5.'l.\
(iR
6'1
711
811,
Atla nta :16 33
Philadelphia 32 31
Loi Angcle1 ......... :ui :16
New York :l.1 34
Cincinnati 33 3.5
Pittsburgh :11 J.I)
Chicago 31 37
Houston 'l1 41
'1111n1Y'• ll:"11lh
fl '~" • """" ' ntlllf'lot1 J. Clllcaft l •n F .. 11(.rt ''· Plt!SboJ.roll ·' 'I .l.ntelt1 N.-. Y"'k f ~ 1-IPlll• ' HOl.lllon • ""'6oY'• .........
Cl111;l111W1tl ,_._ Ollc:•:s:" Son F"ncliK!A' P'I rtn 1 ,. ... ,. ... s. ........ ,
.1.111nt1 J..1.,.,.1. :f,!l.,1 '3
522
.500
.500 9
.493 911,
.485 10
.470 11
.456 12
.397 16
Hl;llllton '· 11 •• ,.~·.: GMtfll
\11! Y«ll (IC_.., 1l.i1 11 Clno:,.,.,111 fNol.., ).)\, " . l'lfuOD (Mrtl 4-7) 11 Heut10fl (Dlerli"" 6-ltl. 1111 .... 1
~JthWrtrl'I 1v .. i. .. ,. •• SI. lDUlt !C1r1ton t>)I, ~"" ••mot ldlodllltd
541-7751 642.0Hl
' -
i\!'ltJo:RIC'AN LEAGUE
Oetroi1
Cleveland
Baltimono
Minnesota
Oakland
Boston
California
New York
Chicago
Washington
Won Lost Pct. GR
44 26 .629
38 33 .535 ,.,,
34 32 .515 8
35 33 .515 8
34 33 .507 811
3.1 3.1 .500 9
33 34 .493 91h
31 38 .'63 11 \1
JO 37 .448 t211
25 4-0 .385 1611
h t11n11y._ ltn 111h lllew Yort: $, Mln.,...ot1 I
eoe'°" 1, Chk 1 .. 1 Clevt!.fld t. DtlroU I
o.lll1nd .C. Woll'l!nt!Ofl 1
Coil....,,le 5. 8oll!moro '
5110H1•1"1 ltttlllh
Cloftlll'td ~I, Dtlrolt o.c Mt-to11 6, Now Yllft J
!losl'Ofl 6.1, Cllkl90 Jo.It
C10fllrnl1 l. hltlmoro I
o.t;i.nd t, w.~~ o r ... ,.,._
D+trolt IMd.1ln 1'·11 11 Ct-ill'ltl fWl!llo!M M l, nl ... t
Mlfll'lftctlt IChlflCt ... ) YI, c~ic... f~rtdlh lo,)I, 11 Mli...v•ff, nlOM
:;...>' .l/lfio_
I ~~!-PClJ f~V
I I r>1 l ()I N
•
-----
COST plus SALE
D"'lot Ow
ANNIVIUAIY SALE
1 • ..,
COUCOAR·MONTIGO..MIRCURY
•• .., hut• stock c.. .,. ,.,..
dlased for fac'°'y COit +
$50 -.. "'-"'law .
-1•1. Sales c ..........
FREE e e e e FREE
SPECIAL BONUS
Wlffl ow•ry ~•• •IHI 1t N ci r "IJ
J 11ri1119 o lfl' 1 nnivor1ory solo • lte•11·
tif11I c:hl'o111t l11ff•t • c1rri1r , • ,
--1 _ _..,S4 .... 5.Q0_¥1lue..,. Etfl!J_
·----
NO
MONEY
DOWN
GUAll:ANTEE.1..., "'" 1.f.-0:> _ .. ..,.,.. • .,_,
._.. .. ,. .. -1 ..... -.,,""'""'""'""'-""' .. ""••• -·l*·•-'"1tcb • ........... --..... ··---,.._.,, ..,..a,1_1.,..,",..,..",... .. ,.,,.
!• -.. ...., .... -'"'"~" .... "'' !,, .. -· ...... -... ..... __ "'"'· °" -""' '"-•• ---.. , . ...;,, ....... _ .............. _ _,, .. --.......... -........................ _
NEW TIRE GUARANTEED RETREADS
ANY SIZE
WHITEWALL --
£ • (It t ft•
••1•C•\W
'G11aronlff4 oqainst road hm:CH"d, workmanship for llfetl1119 ef
trea6-l"roratwd at re911lar price at tilM of odj11shMnt.
* JONES TIRE *
SAFETY SERVICE * INSP'ECT AND
ADJUST IRAKES * ltEP'ACIC FRONT
WHEEL IEAll.ING
s119
* JONES TIRE *
SAFETY SERVICE
Here'• What You Get! * Allgnment and ste.,;09 $995 * Set Camber-Caster-
To~ln * Inspect ond MOST
Adjust lrakes CAltS
lalonce kHt Wheek
Ropack-tWheel ....... r oriion b11r •di1utmo111t
tnd need1d po rt1 not
i111dudod .
* JONES TIRE *
COMPLETE BRAKE RELINING
ALL NEW PARTS
NOT REBUILDS * COUARANTEED
30,000 MILES
OR 3 YRS.
• "" l l11!11n • " .. W11oo1 c,~ (1111 r.~11)
$48~.!,, ..
b r.H11,.
• ettft & n111111 RYtf .. ullc '''''"'
........ -· .... """ .,,,,. nt1t1d
• ll:•S~n DNrn1 • .I.II -""'"'•'11191
Wt "'1r111too our bt1ke te!lnl"' sorvke !or tilt llM<llle.:t nllf!lbtr 111 mllel w ~Hrs from dot. of 1ns1111a11on • ..,.itllfvt'I' cornn 111'11 ,t,Gillllrnlfttr.
--'ff Ofl mltM .. •nd t>eSed Ofl prlce1 cv....m 11 time (,i ..,I"'"""''·
J.
Midway City Eegion, 9 Rolls·
To 7th Consecutive Victory;
B7 ROGER CARLSON or"' o.11r .... ,...,
Mldwa7 City ...., lU at.th
and 1eveotli &ames fn a row
in ttie National Divlaion of
t'be American L e g i o n
Baseball Leaiue over the
weekend when the league.
leaders won single iames
from Tustln and Sun-Low.
Sunday, it took U bminga
to dlspose of Sun-Low, S-2,
after doing in Tu.stin, H , in
Saturday action.
New port Harbor,
meanwhile, dropped to a 2-7
record in abaorbins: a 4--0
blanking at the bands of
Mack Play
Resumes
Toriight
€onDle Mack bueball con-
tinues tonight with lea111e·
leading Connell Chevrolet
hosting Huntln&lon Harbour
at TeWinkle Park in C.O&ta
Mesa et 6 p.m.
Connell sportl an 8.0
n!conl w b i l e Hurrtln(!On
Harl>our is 4-4.
Saotialo OD the loaer'1 d1a-
mood, Saturdo,y.
Mldwy Qty:a 12-inning ::!' ae Sunday ahoved ill to &-i The second game ()( the scheduled doubo
iebeeder wu put. off until a
lat.. date-not }'et ffiected.
'lbt ruw frame started
quietly enouiti, with two · Quiet outa. However. Cart
Dedrick ignited the rally
with a slngte and Ed Bane
followed with a grouM rule
double to rigbt..eenter.
P'rom there, Rick Russell
hit a ground ball to third
and.the imie.lder threw wild
to flr•t, Allowing Dedrick to
acore the winning tally.
Bane went tbe dist.nee,
otriking out 10 and walking
two in the extra·in.ning Ull
He gave up eight hits.
Mid,..y City had tied JI at
2-2 in Uie bottom ot the sixth
w1"'1 WU McCartney walk·
ed and advanced to second
on a sacrifice.
Wayne Kiefer then 1trok·
ed a slnlle to center and
when th~ outfielder JuUled
the ball; McCartney COO•
tinued to the plate.
Midway'e: 6-4 de c J 1 l on
over Tustin ns slightly len
dramatic with Midway City
scoring three times in tbe
first innin( and adding two
more in the third.
J'un Hog111 wrapped It up
wit.h a 80lo homer in tne
sixth inning.
Nnport Harbor w a I
unable to solve Santll.go'a
pttcbin1 and fell on a fiv•
bltter.--
Roa Martin led I b e
Newport offensfve punch
with lw• bit• Jn 1.,,, trips. Miki Paul went d. the
way for the losers, &trikine
out n:lDe iD· the process. _.,_
••• Mklw1y CltY Jlllll 001 ooo-4 ' t ""'" !fl t10 ......... '' ' Miftef cry C•I .. • " ltllnltll, a • I • w. MCCar1tlw. d • I I ....... , ·• • • ·-· .. • • • Wtlltr, c ' I ' Jim H09fin. lb • I ' ...... " • • • JllfWt ""99fl. • • • • Dedrkk. u I • • ... Mc:Cfftrwy, II • • ' ,. ... n • • .-. .., 1111111111 . ". 5-l.-hi Ml DOO llOl--t I 6
Midway CltY 1• DOI 01 Oll'l-4 ' 1
Mlfw1y CllY CO
•-n . ., w. MCCartMy, d
lmlttt, If
ic.lftr, :II
w11i.r, c
Jim "°"'"• lb
Aa • M 1t•I
' ' 0 • c 1 0 •
4 0 I I
J 0 1 •
5 • • • • • t 0 s 1 e o P. McC1r1,wy, rt
Jttl" MDIII\ • Dtdrltk, a ...... " Torti.
S.1111 ...
""""'
I 1 0 O
J o I I
3 • l •
.U J r I . ". lOI 001 0»-4 11 1
DOO OOll 000.-0 S t
"""" 0 1 •• • M ltll MllMlll. C • ' • • C11rry, ct • ' ' • Ct.rt!, • • • • • Mllllflltf, lb • • ' • lMvy, 3b • • • • -·· • • • • l'•lw, If ' • I I .... llltt, 2b • • • • .. __
• • • • '•Ill. " • • ' • Tlltt .. .. • • •
other action bas Brea
entert&lnlng Kauffman &: -------------------•! Broad Marina in a double--
header while West-Grove
travels to San Clemente for
a single game.
KaUffman &: Broad stands 5-t in loop action while
West-Grove seeks to end a
two game losing streak. (3-
2).
Here are averages fOr
O:tast area ninea :
Hollypark
Entries
C~IMl ... '" ...................................... ...
-· •vrierl ...
"'" Sdlr•lltr
W1lsll
""' ll•n1gu
Plnttr J. Linnert
• • " . " ' " . " . " . " . " . ' . . ' .. . " . " ' • • • • ' . • •
·"' ... .... ••• ... ... ... ... .... .... ....
.176 ••• .... .... .... ....
Hu"tlnthol H1,..,.,r 14-41
lllMlll
MMll
Wl'llffleld
""'~ ... ~
Moullv
lltvlr
Snydar
Gooll1ker
MOl"llllh M'"""' J oUel
"""
.. " " . " . " . .. .
n ' " . " . " . . ' ' . ' . ' . " .
........ .... ... ·"' .... .m .. ~ .ns
.111
.111 .... .... .... ....
Klllffl!MR & lroH MlrlM (J.11
Currin
MtOtnltl
C1m11bot!I ... , ,.,,,m_
c~ul ""'N -Fl'"'I ... Wlnlrt
klvn1enettH """lt'!"f' McGvlrt
'"'" FrtM
Al H ... ..._
U 1 .JU . ' .... 12 s .417
15 s .lll lt ) .)06
16 ' .250
I& 2 JOO
It t .167
!l 2 .U-i
14 2 .14
ttl I .lllO
4 t .000
) ' .tr"! t II .eoo ' .....
W"t-Or'" IJ.21 •• Stf11" ' J. C•rr&ll • lltl'flt " RU$!lll " P. C1rron • Robtr'ls " M_,brlt. • Sltr1< • 01ueMrtv " Ali.tl"9n1 • Flttt " llol!en • MC Dent Id • Hld:1 "
Why
pay 12~
more for
a Great
Scotch?
,..,, ..
BlL
...:::&.
• • • ' • • • • ' • ' • I
' •
·-IM"°'"1D 6 otmrn•ln'D
IV PMl!ltOTT 6 CO.. .......... ..,.
An .
.~• ... .... .m .m
.3D .... ·"' .... ....
.214 . .. .... •••
l'w T-ay, ,,._ U. 1--...... Dty
CINI" & l'ttl -l'lnt l'•I l:U l".M.
Fllll:ST lll:ACI. 6 tur1-. 4 YHr
olds a. up. Cltlmlt11. l"une MOllO. Top
<lt !mlnt pr Q MOOG.
eut A Miion cw Mttrlll llt
Qulq ~ CW Htm.11'1 114
Pt ll!ll l llWI' {M \ltltt'INllt l 1U
ChtMlllet Ser {J AMrbu"'I 114
llltkv AWi Jr. fJ S.tltnl 11'
Tvn'I Tt l"tKt (M Yt l'IU) 111
E~IPHd (It C.mp11) 114
5-flt Vwt<J l17
l'-Y St!"I IW H1rtadl;J 12tl
Ttiltll'ler ANlft {A l"l_,t) 1U
S•COMD ltACI. ' fllrllwl ... 4 vtlt
olll• & \IP. cr.1m1111. l"une uooo.
TOP cl1lmlnt Pritt UIOCI. Gold ... 1111.,
Mobile Home Owner1 Le1tue. 1
Rubblst! Mtn fW Mthor.,.,-) 117
Mfln Cltv !J Trvlltlo) 111
0.llt nl Stkl 112
Lift~ (L Plneev Jr) 10•
I'm 1'111 CM V•nul 1211
llrlC'I W1rtlot (M v11 ... rutlt) 117
EWI' 111'1 (0 Mt!IJ tot
~•Ill II II' G<trui) ,109
Htv Si m IJ S.tlen) 114
T!voll (It Yortc) 1U
THllUI lll:ACI!, SV. f\111ont1. t .,...,
oil! ,.,.1,,... fllll• 11r.i 111 ctnron11 ••
Clt!ml"'· '""'" uooe. c111mr,.. "rk:' SlO.llm. Oertry l'ttt ltK rt•lloft.
l'ldor!l"I TV1! IL l't11Qy Jtl 117
$""'9d LffY f! MHl1>11 t i 117
lltll&blri1 llH fW Htrft\thl 117
Ve!lew lll:Jwr (A \111tnzuel1) 117
\/tile {J 1'1lotr1l110) 10
Lt Lii-fl' Gt n1 11 xn2
l't!"IM \11Uey fM Vtf~I I) 111
Thufldtr l tY {O H1!1) 111
~. !nie fM Y11111 t) 111
l'tbbte Mi ld IA l'lntdt) 117
!eutl Sll•l"91 fJ ~lltrs) 111
Mo-le-Jo flt Toms> 117
flOUlll:TN 111:.f.CI. °""-mlltl. J & 4
YNt old mild~ nni... ""'" USDD. O.nlln Grew Stftlor Cl!lhrlfo.
lmbttr•>t CM Vt1>11tl 112
I~ Ja" (J TN!IMtl 112
IR A Wtll~ f lt York) 117
Lt J tY IW Httrlll lU
Sllwr Gobltf 10 l'ltru) 112
Toutut. {W Ml~ot,,...,.l 111
JUIWI'• Olttmml IA l'llltd•l 112
Lt lltl!'llfnvws (L ,.lllUY Jr 2) 112
Stllll "'-(0 \ltllMl\IU 1) 117 Am Ttd011f (J St!llrs) 112
l'll'TH lll:AC•. I 1/1' mlltl. l'Hlltl
& mt1"91 l "'r olds & u1. Clt lml ....
l'U/"IOI ..uoe. Tt111 c111m1,. 1rkt t1000.
11\em>tn O.Q Ju"lor w.n..11•1 Clu\,
Ge SIHCV 1W Htrt.41 11S
l\nne111 --
Adltut COMtr IA "1fttdll 1t4
U...:ll«:lctd CJ S.!ltt1) 111
ktll 1W Hlrft\tftl 1i.
T9'*.le ll l'lllC.IY Jr) tOI
T11lv1rett. (M V1r11rl lU
ll1buctlt IJ Lltnber'll 111
SlXTH MC•. s~ f\lr'lontl. ' .,..r olds. AllO'iwt-. l'V/"l.f SUDO. SI •
Jtmn """'"'II•" Cl'K.lrdl . Good MlllMl'S fJ Stlllr1) 116
Jtdl; 5.,,.,..ltr !J LtftltMlr'l l 1211
Htt'I &ti (W Htrtll) UO
l'OP Artist (A l'li\tdtl 120
Pal•mt Kid !J TNllllol 11•
Swift lmllr .. (t) Hltll 1JO
OV111mlc W1v II Trwl110l 11'
A·Ttnttl 01y IL l'lllUY Jr) 121
Flht SurPrlM (0 l'ltruJ 120
S1m•1 PrlMt CJ l't1otr1l110) 112
St.llH o (M V1ltllrut11tl 11'
lteclilll Hfll (A \ltltlUutltl 116
SIV•NTH JtACI. ' turlon11. J "'r
old fll!t.I. All-.nc11. l'llnt SNOO,
Wl'll!lllr Ol1trld lttrd of 1le11tors.
G1"9V CrltlUI fW M1rm1trJ 114
T""'ntv Wl"I IM VtMI) 120
Ovllle'I llttlto {J Ltmbotrtl 114
Prem11t OlllYtl"\I' (A l'lned1J 110
(tyll1t Dllchftl (0 M,till) 111
Too An•rl {J TNl!lkll 120
MMIV llo>< fl l'IMt., Jr) • 120
Mtrctllt IW H1rrll) 114
Tt lt!!l\f St rb (W H1r'11do;) 1U
lteKT .. JtACS. W, fllrl-1. I Yittt
oldl t. Ult. Hollywood l!x.1"911. l'unt
UO.OCO 1ddtd. Orou 171.l50. To wl~
Mr Sll..dfl. tc:111rn• Gt<ClrH fW MtllorrM<rl l:rt
Cl\lcllro (J LtlT\Oer'I) 11'
lt1Cl/lf lltoom IL l"lMtY Jt'l 112
Tlmt To LH¥t 10 \lt111Q\Jtr) lfll
ll1ru" !M Vt lll'I) 110 S.-ty ,Clftl fJ S.llers) 114
VOllllf 1'1"11 CA l'l'"!!t) 111
l1rtlt 10t
NINTH IUiCS. 1 1nl lftlllll ., tM!
turf. I Yllt oldt a :1111. At1-111Ct•.
l'un1 VJOO.
I'~ i+IMP {0 Ht lll 114
Cut lltllk [W Htrrlll 114
ClltdlHl"I Cl\1,llt CJ TNtlllo) ltll
Ltutl\111 Sir 111
Cotn61e fl 1'!11C1Y Jrl 11' PtM1V1rl1llo llt Vortl I) 111t
Wtl'ft'I Colon fJ S.lt~rtl 11' Am11lno fW H1rm1hl 111
lluano °""""''° (A l'l111d1l 11• l'GOt Tiit 1111 !It C1m1>111) JOI
Cl!•rmlne l"!ltl (fl thr11) xlot
llttHd San fW Ml"°"""') IOI AIH IU~i.
S11:1ll11ho flit Vork !) 111
S. N•11"Ullttl (W Ht rttdt) 111
911 MIPS !\'HAT WI CHIOC ...
NAlllW IWll
dil Iii Oii
1 ................ ,, ... ,...._t_ -. ............... _...-... .. ... _........,, .. __ .,...,.
~.-.L t.Ill.,-_ -._., ... _
.... -...... i,. ....... ,__,
MUS WHAT TOU-OUI ... ................ ._ ...... __,. ... _ ... ..,..,... __ .. _,_ ..... ................ _.,
---.. -__ .. ts ?lqfa.., _.,,,,, ........ _ ... ·---------......
! __ ....;;.;_J_Wll.:..:;.24.:..• .c.ICJ68=-------.C.DC.:AIC:.LY:...;.;PIL;;;at;;_.,lf>e
Lindley
Fans 16
For Vikes
Marllla uocktd over Hun ' Uuton Beach, 3-2, Thur1·
day, In the openln1 round ot
the Huntlngt°" Bnch High
Sdlool 1ununer bueball
league.
Tom Lindley ot Marina
struck out 16 In going the
route for tbe victory. ...... _
••• Mtr1... t 11 ODI 1-4 J I
Hw.Unttari 8Mdl tit tll .._. J I ,,,,.,,... Ill
.... It ..... ,,..,., 211 t t t •
Aftd ..... Mn, •• :) • • • Morein. 11 .s • t • ...._,.,, a .I 1 I I
Llnctln, ~ t t t I
"'"'""· c .s • • f l.-, lb • , 1 1
Oewfllrat, r1' 2 I t I
Mtharty, r1' 1 • t •
HotfOfl,11 t 0 I I
Totlll t!I J St ........... ktdl Ii)
I Al It Hall ArvW. .j t 0 •
l'HC«k, r t I I I
C1Ml ... H, lb • t ! I
Kl..,.r, • 4 0 D l
ldld1tlcf, • s • • &
IMN.ly,. 2 It O
Sl'iullln, " J I t t Ed•Jt,d l ·O t e
Wll1011, r1 J I t t
Toltls 24 I .a 2
OSU Leads
Ohio SUte l!d Bil Ten
teams in football attendance
1ut season. The Buckeyet ·
· drew 883,502 fans for their
tlve home games.
Deep Sea
Fish Report
Pro Soccer
•
Standings
• ................. ....,L.-Mn••• CONl'lll•Cll
A"""lk DMMM
Wl.Tll'Ph.·••eA
10,IS:)nM,I
S•7117AM71
J.A .SJIJllUl lCI
l ll tt7l•IO
lllltl»Mlf
LIU. Dlw!NM
Olk 190 '''"~·· ae........., • 4 • u-fl • ,. T_,. 614!l 71 J4:U
Dtlrotl ' f t lt " • ,,
WlfTllll:N COM'•l•MC•
9'1" 01w•1.ii
ic.,.. CltY 1 4 J :n 7t » N
Hourten l I 1 t1 4oJ It tt .St. L""-J J 4 It 61 M Iii
0.1... tll' 14 u 14 ..
1'.Ulk •i.w..
Stlll*N 114):Wl"st•
O.kltrod • • • " rt • ..
L• AllNlitl ' t 1 M 11 at 11
\IMCWM-S 1 4 JI ~ :a •
SllMll,.... •-it. llt1""'°"9 I, New Yortt I
S... Oltto Z. Ottrllt I
l• "'*'-' I, Kt llMI Clf'f t, tte
llOUSES FOR SAll
Gonor1l 1000
Harbor View Hills
Coron1 del Mir
Lulk • buUt bomn locatH'
ln the Southllnd'• most d•
llrable A tuctnannc UM.
Scboo1I .. CallL Jrvta.
Cam.put juat mom1n11
l1'Q'. Sensibly priced •troi:r
$34.900. to $48,900
LUSK HOMES
Dlrectiom: MacArthur Bl\llll
from Pad.fie Cout HWJ. or
N ....... Fwy. Tum cia S.. J-llJlh Rd., -tollow lli&m to model uea..
tlOUSIS POii SAl I
1000
f.H.A. l£SAl£
5%" • $161 MO. INC. TAlC·
ES A INS. nfte bdtms, 2
blthl, DINING A R E A,
brttiktast ber, apt.et savfn;
Sutlt-ln. Pl kitchen IJld KP.
•n.te 18Vice porch. Nf!'Wl)'
!U:lt!d thru out, c&qlft.s A
drapes. ONLY $23,500.
MESA VERDE
Slup, cle111 Cambridge 3 SR
2 ti.th home -try 10?'
down.
./C<>odquid-
'Neu Adams School
f/Nettt Park
./2 fireplaces
-'Blt-ht BBQ in tam nn
$33,500
Newport
it
Vlctorl1
646-1111
(Opon
lv.,Jnp)
THE SUN NEVER SETS on
Oaat&d'• actkm powe:r.
Fat an ad to .U U'lllmd
... doclr. 41'1 -
All Penney Stores Ope_n Eve_ry Night Monday Through Saturday
Re-power your car with a
Foremost®Remanufactured engine!
NOT A SHORT llLOCK, NOT AN OVERAAULI
'57-'62 Ch-1at 2H, oxchango
NO DOWN PAYMINT,.,
UH PINNIYS' TIMI
PAYMINT PLAN
Meet Arnertarn tftllnet et tlmllar few prtc.1
Don't toke chancn on a motDr )ob or on overhauled en;lne. Giit a eornpl ... q lne
with new parts or port• thor art rtmonufacturtd to prtclsfon tol1nrnc"'
HIRl'S WHAT YOU GIT WITH A PINNIY INGINl1
• lrancl. n.w valvet, 1uldt1, lifters, wive Ndcen, puthrocf1
• lrand new platon1, rfn9s, and wrltt pins
• lloclca .,. ma1ncrffuxed Md .,,....,,. tMtecl te • ...,,. ,.rftctlen
t llDClc1 ,..bo,.cl t• precision fadery telerancn:
t All new main ~nd rod bearings and bushln11
• Crankshaft ancl cam1haft 1'91round to pNCltlen toleronaa
NEWPORT BEACH
(FHhion l1nd) I
/ HUNTINGTON BEACH
(Huntington C.ntor)
I
'
tlOUSIS fOll SAll
Gonoral IOGO
5 IEDllOOMS
$950 Total Cash
Requlred to mow ~to tWe ....... ,,,., ...... °"" .. 1hoppla1. ICboola and
cburch!s. Jmt Pit Gil the
mariftt. thll one won't lut
'163 per moatb includes tao
el •nd lnlutancel
»13 WDTWn' DJUV'a
1146-1711 °"" -bcoptlon11l $20,51\0
3 b<dnu. M-t lift.
p1.,.. Slldq -.. tovQy
petio wtlh BBQ. c:.re.trM
happy livina! ~1721. I
TA.RBEL 2!156 Harber
Spec:tacul: '
Ocean View
from uclwlw cameo Sboru ;
lovelY custom bome ..
in exprelllive '
G reclan des:lp ,
3 extra larie bl!drocma
dinlnc room.A elm ;
tarn poa1. ~
OPEN HOUS~ DAILY
Soo 4545 P1rll1m Rd.·
Reduced to $14,500 )
Contact'
Jim O!ibb '·
$11,500
FULl PRJCI An~ balDI at aim
a low price! Built on -"tr
llARDWOOO 11.0ClftS wllli
LARGE BEDROOMS. QuOea
siu kitchen wttb aepan.ta
aervice porch. Ideal tD lJv9
in or rent oot .. an~
ment. 121 ft . Jot. Excellfnt
Terma. Call Now.
COSTA MESA once.
2629 Harbor Blvd.
"'5-0491 Opel t1lJ 9 PM
SWIM & SUN·
Colloge Pork, C.M.
In this Sptclou• yard, _.
party 1n the larp teparlta
Play rm, next to the OVU'o
Ji.zed heated pool_ 3 SR.
bdwd noon thruout. AD '~
comer lot -OWNER~
SEU.-a real value at~ 500. •
Burr While, Realtor
2901 Newport Blvd. I
Newport Beach
675-4630 Eve1: 642-2!53
EXCHANGE
for Colt• Mna home up; tG
$30,ocn. Have I tmfts • tn
Westmtnster, sin&le storiat
$111,0X>.
Newport
11
Vlc!orl1
646-1111
(Open
!venlnp)
4 BEDROOMS -2 84
$19,950
No dawn peqment to VA bu,..
en and low, Jow l'HA tenne ,., ........... ""_
comer lot with room for boat
or traller.-Fut~
546-2313 646-7171
Open !v ...
rrrrr ~'J r ..... i
E·_;·r l\.-r 1: :r
WESTCUfll
$33,500 ,
Thlo lmmoc"1a .. I -·
-,... nduce4 tor ""' mediate aale. Larp Jtv1Ac
rm, dinln.c nn, 2111 bat 11 ..
BEST UlCAT!a<,
llDO lllAL TY •
3«XI VI• Udo &n-mo
POOL POOL
The ........ "'-· hirt
3 BR, ' both -•
...., IXtrU + I -jn-vltlnc pool. Auumo ~
FHA 1olUI er 11.ltmtt .)l1'tlt
tmns. Be N'Jldted -tilt
po91e1s. CALL MR. m;,
SON !W().Wl (ope "9l
Herltqe RM1 Eetate>. :
IAUOA ISLAND
Pin-lorceo IOlt ol tit.
Dupl6: near Bay. 2 JS& 1
bolh + 1 BR 1 bot!>. ~
rtntA! ..... °'"*' a...
aut cl .,..... ftl"J' ~
*i.ACH1N't.cY'if
DAVIDSON 1twli;
POOL .. ___ __
s.p, pJ., ~ ,.,. "" ~
41.._ -Ill. 1' loa ..
lUtr. ml -SB, dot
----Evol. --RHI Good l11i1We t
l.ftatlonw/-~
. S BR, dtnlnc rm, OIW <!!iii.
dnpe, -patio,' .. fam rm, W lh&J.f bath, JSl.-
500.
MIZE:u, REALTY -
-________________ ....... _ ·-~--·-~-~----·-~--.--------------------·--·~·-·-----·----
HOUSES l'OR SALi • HOUSES POR SALi • HOUSIS l'OR SALi RENTALS -
H..-PurnlthM
~INTALS ----
Hou.., UnfurnlthM
lOOO Cosio MeH 1100 Newport H .... 1210 Huntl ...... ·INch 1400 L'!""° INch 1705 ;Go;:::;n.,..::.=:l~--....:2000::.: Newport INch 3200
. -LUXURIOUS
lliJPLEX HOME
Hevr)'OU been looking lor •
likt new ~m. luxurious.
q)lii\t one • stocy duplex
~! We bmd it !or you~
\'Ou wW enjoy the fireplace
in the large llvin& room,
~l>eeutifUl kitchen wilh
~ins, two bl( bi!drooms
with loeds of storage. Both
-.;Li would bring $200 per m&lih. Thls is tbe ultimate
JUi ,pride of (JllJT'lership in-~ prc:iipert)'. May trade ~"local 'Z or 3 bedroom
bon;e.
!l't'O':WE.STCLIFF DRIVE
64&-ffll °""' i:-.
·-~ "' ~'.:JN14 Vista Del Oro
'~~,... Newport Beach
~'~ Upper Boy
sl>.LEs & LEASES
.JlOW AVAILABLE
~ style homes aurroun--dill' by ml!inl GrttnbeU.1,
pools, llOfTle W /Bay Views.
i~ are all the modern ex-
tra •.
ld••I 2 Bedroom
Hard In lind but 10 easy to
buy. ()Jstom built and just
3 ~ new, Sparttlln& l\a.nf..
wood floors, aepare.te laun.
dr,,' room, 2 lara:e itll!d beths
lamlJ:y room adjoiN the uJ.
tra modem all eleclrle kit·
ctlffi with dishwasher. Large
lot and Ull'lina; will permit
11n extm income unit if de-
sired. Ample aoce&a to rear
yard for travel trailer llol"-
age. Excellent Eastside lo-
cation. Under $21,lW w 11 h
w.ring'mg terms.
Colesworlhy & Co.
. IA2·7777
l90l HRrl>or Blvd., C.M.
Open Eves.
4 BEDROOMS
MESA VERDE .
Want 80f'llett)ing SHARP!
Hera It is. W/w a!Jl)eling,
drapes, llhade trees, bi& pa.
rio. ~ady for YOU . NO
DOWN VA or minimum
down f'llA. "'111 irit.'1! only
$2:l,!M. ~ like this ire
SCARCE. Be quick.
...&... co:Ts
~ WALLACI!
~EAL TORS
-5<16-4141-
K>p. E-..nin91)
: .I.EASES from $225 NO DOWN l!~od $23,900 & Up Helecre•t """"'" _ 3 a...
: ··-Ph. 644-l lU rooma, 2 Baths, Built-in Kit-"!!l~~~: I dM'!I including dishwash«.
ii Fireplace. Hatdwood Floors. :.-Jayfront P"ter 2 car garage. Shingle Roof. , ., '" & Slip Paradise in landscaping. ~:g·.:.:;e<chuDve $84,SOO. f BR ~~ hrNOYoow"'" •Nnjoyment. . ~.~ ~v~ ' le.m rm or form din rm LOW' OOWN F'HA Terms.
~7 -wet. bar. Pier & ~fer
Ja.r;e boet. Immar., ocndi-
Jion: Move in lor llJfllmer.
~o&_.Qarkson
, -• COST"A MESA OFFICE
; ...,.,. 2629 Hart>oi: Blvd.
•:• 54Ml491 Open till 9 PM
: MESA VEDA FHA (¥)ilwell, Banker & Co. ""'" rornily borne ..;., .... • noo e. Coost Hltl'IW•~ ante living room 3 Bed • ~.Jllfwpoort lMc:fl, C.Ulorl!Mt ' •
: ~ .Kl MJl1 o• f.Mll room' tt.! &IT King siul,
2 $!2!22 Family room with tirepla.r.e,
Corona dol Mar
Ideal tor workJna: cou~
Comfortable 2 BR., cottqe.,
w/min Upltff'P. $28,000,
707 Iris
Call to 1ee or drop by
OPEN SATI: SUN1 -S
llli £ast Corall Hwy.
O>rona de:l Mar ~3145
<WANTED
.ft#.al Eatate Sa1es People.
WHY NOT GEr ON THE
BAND WAGON'!
Over 2S Yean: in
Oran&e County e Full paie adverti.!in1
• Inter office teletype
• Trainin& procram .,.........,.
e Many other ~ta
CaU 646-449f • For interview
3 BR. HOME
NORTH EAST CM
Hardwood noon, large yard
lot with acceu to rear f«
boat or. campu, VACANT.
Jmmediate posaeasion,
$18,500
W11l1-McCiirdle Rltr1.
1810 Newport Blvd., C.M.
548-7'129 Eves 644-0684.
BEACH HOME
$26,950
2 BR &. ruest &pt. 2 bloeks
from beach If shopping:. Ve-
cant. Low down.
PERRON REALTY CO
18th & Orange &12-11n
FOR SALE or EXCHANGE
for Orange Cnty, or L.A.
home. Fallbrook. are•. I 'Ai
ac w/viN, 6 rm ranch h.se + 5 rm guest or rental.
Avocado It fruit trees. lAy
pool, patio. $54,000, Bkr1.
OK. Ph: TI4: 'n8-8ll2 or ru: 38&-6330 OWNER
Assume 6%
Victoria Mola A Uttlo
Homos
16 NEW HOMES
Low dn. 6"" »yr an f,..m $24, 950 '
Valley Road at Victcrll
(Jutt E. ol Brookhurst
u.p 00 blu.W
Udo liie loll, fff almple
land • Hfah above eta level
Bullt·ln etecb1c tdtchen.
Convenient CD shoppltti; cm-
ter, ntar achooU. 3 and 4.
BDRMS • 1 ' 2 st1, 1'ire-
pJace1, carpeting, dr•perlet,
tencin&'. landscaping.
Mlch11I Kay, Builder
Phone 642-2821 Eves 64U106
S23,fKKl, EASl'SlDE 1700 Sq.
It. 3 BR., 1% Ba., t•m. rm.
lmmac. 302 Walnut St.
Ocean View
&Ott with this home Oii a
hip lot. 3 BR, 11' ho, !pl<,
patio, dbl pr on alley w/
vitra parklnz, AUnc nelP·
.. -. $25,900. GRAHAM RE"L TY
(Near NB Poat OOlcc)
646-2414
a.JFF Haven 3 BR, 1 BA,
euractive., w e I I k e p t •
SlS.000. 97 Own« 64fl..30?9
Balboa Covtt 1215
WATERFRONT 3 BR 2 bath
private pier & float. $50,500.
(TI4) f>29..3709 after 5 PM
University Park 1237
Owner 5C>7602 646-1931 OiANCEl..LOR Hame1 2 BR,
For Sale by Owner, home 2 BA Den. Beamed oeiling,
w/income. Eastakte, 2 fr'pk, Prof. l.od&cpd. Lush carpets,
2 gar, lg den $27,900 548-377'l drapes. A Beauty. 5% % TO
• BY OWNER Im.mac 3 bdr. I =132="=""=0wn=:":.,..==l'="1!=~ $18,150 FHA, VA, or 8MtUne 1240 •-·· ,,, rn Bick B•y """ 7t. • 540--9439 ;:.:=~:.:... ___ .;.:..:.:;
.
Miu Verde 1110
BACK BAY in County Cor·
rldor. BY OWNER $22,500. 3
BR. home with detached
OPEN SUN. 1-5 garage. Large separate yard
2936 Royal Palm. Large 5%. area, ide.J for bollt or
JorlA loan. SlfiO Mo. pay1 trailer storage. 51.4 o/f loan
•II. Sharpest 3 BR. &: Jam. can be au:umed. Ca 11
nn. in Mesa Verde. Olx.' 642-2146 after 6 pm.
e&rl>. If. drapes; eJ1pertly --Lo-,.-,,-.-B-R-2\l~B-A ___ Loon __
manicured yan!. Frpl. in Bal •~ ooo M k OH
I .....,, . a e er.
am. rm. Sep, Util. rm. S25.-Owner • 548-8870 150. J take trades. ========= REAL'IUR &J6.5580 Coron• d1l Mar 1250
Open Sal & Sun 1-5 ,;;;;,;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;
'"" J"''"""'' Av.. LOCATION-LOCATIOH
Beautiful Pool, Mesa Verde
3 BR, :l Ba plus fam rm,
BETI'ER nl.AN NEW!
DAVIS Realty 642-7000
3032 CAPRI LANE. CM
EJ1ect1tives -Drive by
thi1 beautiful horn,
on 15th fairway or
Fir!l offering -you haven'I
seen this one. 2 Homes pJur;
Guest Suite, 50 x 118, R-2
lot on Jasmine, near the
Beacb.
Delancy Real Estate
2828 E. Coast Hwy., CdM
673-3770
Mesa Verde C.C. $79,500 Cameo Highlands, 1pacious 4
ph. 673-2654 eve br, 2 ba. On canyon, $36,500,
ONE WEEK ONLY! l bdr, 1 ___ 0_WN_E_R_6_7H<l __ '3 __
3 bath, dining, family, liv-BROADMOOR
. iferm, 7100 aq, ft., pool, Lrg. 4 Br. It Fam. Rm.
GI loan 18& 2'ii blttru, large bai;h lloust, !!I.Indeck, her, $53,COO * 644-0073
lot. Owner transferTed. under $30,000. Mesa Verde. I========='=-
Neer School & park. 540-6190. Lido Isle 1351
Delta Real Estate 646-44.14 MESA Vet'de. 3 Bdrm\ New I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I
COUNTRY CLUB .. ..,,.c P.unt, E' 1'" · One of Lido's $24,500. l232 Iowa. App'l KI
I >1500 Most Gracious UY NG 3 BR, 2 BA, lorn rm, bll·W. B yf H Only 'J: blka. to ocean. 3 BR, 2 tr-pica, close 10 lK.ilools & G ront omeS
! Ba., trpl. $23,900. shopping, 12S,900, 1 0 % -lacks nothing for full en·
C'n!Ofie Williamson, Rltr. down. 545-0022 joyment of Life on Lido.
673-4150 OPEN EVES. '""'==-~~---Pier & Slip for large boat 4 BDRM or J and den, 2200 plus your own sandy sw\m-
IQ·ft on Country Oub Drive ming beach. Exciting Bay
$43,500 Owner. ~3617 View from traditional Llv· BEACH SPECIAL!
Immaculate 3 BR, 2 be home
2 bloclu to Ocean.
$25,900 -10% down
CAYWOOD l!EALTY
6306 W. Coast Hwy.
N.8 . 548-1290
Newport leach 1200
Ing rm &. Dining rm. Spac.
ioul inside patio compli·
mcnts the charming Family
Berth for your Y1cht rm. 4 large family Bed·
OPEN SAT If SUN l -5 rooms. 4 Baths plus Guest ; J ¥ciR OLD DUPLEX t"OVered patio and bMutiJul.
, : $17.50CI Jy landSIC'llped _yards -$29 -Costa Mesi 1100 ~~·1s your chance of a life-$0 -10% down. ' I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;; [
3401 Finley, Npt Bch. Powder Rm. Prime location.
at your own front door. Easy $215,000.
access to the Bir Bay from LIDO REALTY
"'" Chomnol loc•tion. Old" 2-atOl')" hom@ with room to 3400 Vi• Lido
ti~. F.ach unit has I large 646-7171 e M6-2313 I• ~sand a custom bath OPEN EVES Eastside • Weslside Md large dining erea. 1\vo · build. Pier & Float, $55,000. !!!!1!!!1!11!!6!i7!ii3!!·8!!8!ii3i01!11!!1!11!!!! g4t~es. Located in • good
•T'N near everything. The
~r will wheel & d.ee.l on
the down payment. Liw in
on7and rent the other.
THE~EAL
E S TATERS
2 exceptional condominiums.
EAS'I'SIOE -2 BR, 1% ba ,
near l'lubhauae Ir: pool, 2
Burr While, Reallor 3 1NcOME uN1Ts
story, adults only $25,500. 2901 Newport Blvd.
WESI'SIOE -3 BR, 2~ ba, Newport Beach
Custom -Clo1e pool, quiet are•, near free-67s.46lJ Eves: 673.-6069
To Golf Course way, kids OK, $21,~. THE Bluffs Plaza: for qu ick
Bn od oew ""'"tifully ... Burr W·ht'le, Realtor "1' by own'"' 3 BR. ,.,,
Lge R-3 Jot 40xll0 Units
leased. Walk to shop& &.
beach. Club privileges
SlO.'i,IXXl -1/3 ce.sh. Submit.
R. C, GREER, Realty
3416 Via Lido 67'.J.9300
DEAR ABBY:
My tamily b lelvtnJ IM.
Pieue aend '°"1eol\e to bu)'
m•. l'm a t>eautllv.l t BR
home wttll J loveQt M.tha,
covertd Pl.do ' tuch nl~
landllcapinJ A I'm REALLY
REALLY ~." Only
12$.950.
$20,200
Full prlot fw this 3 BR Mini!'
wt.lb hardwood lloon on a
comer lot. Good loc:atlon.
Submit VA or any terms.
Hurry?
EXTRA BONUS
Luxury 3 BR horne with fam·
Uy room, fittpla«, forced
air heatin&:, electric built-ins
& a HUGE play room eover-
il\i the entire teCOnd atory.
Play pool, Pini ponr Or
what•hfve · )'OU. Unbeliev-
able ~t only $27,950. No
dov.on lo veterans or FHA
terms.
LISTER REALTY
16612 Bee.ch Bl, HB MZ-6633
NEED ROOM?
Need Room'! No Down G.t.
or F.H.A. Term1! 4 BED-
ROOM! Big (..ot? Trailer or
Boat·Sp4lce! 'Family Room!
~place! Dining Room?
Qu1)e't1 and drapes! Quiet
Street! Fast possession?
Near the Be a ch? Owner
transtirTed! Ql.11 Qu;ck!
7682 EDINGER
&424456 OPEN EVES.
Retirement Raadyl
$3150 down If $129 per month
for large 2 BR Toune House
that waa converted from J
BR model 1how place. Many
extras make this an excel-
lent buy at $17,950.
Pacific Shores Realty
847-8586 Eves. 962-5408
.
WOW!
Duplex 2 BR each, good loca·
tion. Out of. Jtate owner
must: sacrifice at $21.000.
Better hurry.
Eves, 536-2465
$122 pay1 everything, princ,
interest, laxes & ins. Not
too sharp -needs work.
S3100 down get1 ii. Big lot ,
3 BRs, 5%. % GI 168.n. Will
help you raise the dcwm
ipymnt.
Rex. L. Hodges Realty
847-2525
PRICED for Quick Sale! 3
BR, 2 BA, crtpts, drps, frplc,
patio, newly pai.med. See to
believe! S23.300, Owner 9382
Nantucket Dr. 962-2912
1410
LOS PAORES
REALTY
~ Glertacyre Street
494-IU3
Apple Pie
and Ch-
Are typicelly American.
BUY Uke rent; $f25 mo 3
BR., 3 Ba., p~r il flot.L
2 s.Jboa Coves 6'JS.4331
NEWPORT Beach 1 BR,
alttPI of, 1 bUocean It bay,
LA.CiUNA at Vlctorla Sch, 1
br slffpl •. teciuded. avaU I =========
naw Jub' f,!$0. Aue $.150. Newport Helghtt 3210
642-lm 3 BR.. 1 ea., feneed yd. New·
Rent1t1 te Shir• 2005 ly decor. S225 Mooth
TI 5 St. Jam6 R.d. 642.mi
Y ouna rlrl to 111.iaft 2 BR 2 BR TRlPLEX
apt. One child OK. Otlld
care av•ll. t..c.vc name "t patio, range, ~ mo, Fortin Co, 642--5000
162 A Tulip Lane, Cotta =========
Mesa (otf Ot'ange Ave.I
SHARE Lovely . home, nr.
B•ck Bay w /retln e d
buslneSs woman. Priv. bl. . .. ~
Newport Shoru 3220
NEWPORT SHORES
2 BR • Den on years leue
Sl90 mo. 642..3430
This famlly Home, nestled ln
the mkSdle of the amall
communllJ' ol settled cbarm
is aQ Laguna Beach. WILL ahare my elei;ant
OE'l'ALLED POsr & BEAM· waterfront home, man 35.fiO
CONSJ'RUCTION, LA p. Yl'I· S150 Mo. 6~1
Dovef' Shor-3227
BOARD SIDING and GAY
CROSS BAR WINDOWS Costa Mua 2100
have been reproduced and
a.re reminlsctnt of the old
world environment.
3 BR Tlaniahed CM home.
EncIO&ed rear yard. n 75 per
month. Avail June 2'2· Act.
546-4141
EXEetrITVE home, 150' to
beach; 4 BR. S Ba. Llv. rm.,
ram. rm., ideal for e:n--
tertaining. Ava.ii 9/1 .$400
mo. 646-57U
Coron• del M.r 3250 PANELLED W ALLS ,
TONGUE and GROOVED CEILING .nd GRACEFUL 2 BDR, i:;ar~. patlo, tropi-: BEAUT. Oceanview 3 BR, 2
FIREPLACE IWTOUnd a liv· cal aetting f'Cr adlts. 1 blk ba.. 2 Fplc, m•int/pooJ,
in&: room of rrace and beau-ahope;, trans, $160. 544-418J. retrig, washer/dryer. Avail
ty. Private study tor con-Au.r. ht. $290 iease. 673-663.5
centrated reading or just Huntington Beach 2400 Balboa 2 BR s!P:s 6, oft st.
plain napping, has J:>een set LEASE new 4 br, 3 ba . .(.. pkg.; wshr: 100 ft. to beach.
aside with it's own private bonus rm, 2330 &q ft, ideal -=115=0=..X=. :675-0:::2153==== enO-ance. • SUNNY KITCHEN, FOR· for lrg faro. Avail 7113 to
MAL BREAKFAST ROOM, =l/=l5'"'. ;13'"'1''=mo=·="=2-4'1::003'==-
Huntington leach 3400
FREE RENTAL BOOK
Drop In and Bt'OW'!e 2 FUU.. SIZE BEDROOMS
and 2 BA.ni.S complete the
main section of this ramb-
ling home. PR I V ATE
GUEST ROOM with malll'!ive
living.bedroom combination,
and separate bath, have
been blended into 1rchitect-
urally pleasing lines to con-
form with rustic charm.
liome is aituated ln a quiet
neighborhood one lllock
from town, and a few blocks
to the surf. There are not
many Home1 in this a r e a
available. PRICE JS ONLY
$34,500 -see tod11y?
A LITTLE HOUSE
BY THE SIDE OF TKE
ROAD &. close ID the Sea,
Open beam celling, Fplc,
twin-size Br, quaint kilehen
$20,IXX) FP. Mission ReaJU:
ITI4J 494-0731
LAGUNA NIGUEL 4 BR. 211.i
BA, tam rm w/wel bar, 2
frplcs, exceptional Kitchen panoramic view. $41,500. a;
apPt, owner 714:495-493'.l
Long Beach 2500
ARTHUR BERGE
277 ESTER.
COSTA MESA
You att the winner of
2 tic:keta 1l:J tbe
FIREWORKS
SPECTACULAR " ... ANAHEIM
STADIUM
On July 4th
Please call 642·5618, ext. 2'l9
WE HAVE SOME
7682 EDINGD!.
842-4456 or 54C).5140
l BR. -2 Ba., blms, frpl.
drapes, hdwd nn .. fenced;
dbl garage. Nr. shopping
center. $160 Mo. 962-4391
LEASE 1 Br, Duplex, crptl,
dl'J>l!, ele blms, lrplc. patio
.!Im yard. gar. ;135 mo.
847-s:J06
between. 9 and 1 p.m. to """-c""=-oo.,---,-,,..--
claim your tickets. <North New 4 BR, 2 ba, crpt11, dri>i,
o.mty toll· free number is .E'plc, ganlener. nr beach.
Lea.!le-Option 2$40. 968-2S01 54{).1220).
Vacation Rent1l1 2900
SUS wk. 2 Br. duplex. Blk to
ocean & bay. 417 Harding
St., Balboa Penn.
673-2484 or 540--9545
•• .;1'11 1 AL5
Houses Unfurnished
3 BR., paneled den, din. nn.
5';rnd patio, cpts, drps, blt-
ln11, gardr. S250 mo. 962-2578
3 BR., paneled den, din. rm.
Scrnd patio, cpts, drps, blt-
ins, gardr. $250 mo. 962-2578.
3610
3000 ~Lc::•.!!.9"::":::•:...::N:cig!:u::e::_l _-.'..:17~0'..'.7 G.ne ra I
HILLTOP Home, $32,900, 5
BUILDERS own cu 11 tom ,
avail. 7fl. Nr fwy in·
terchange • best schools &
college, lg shady y d .
Lovely 3 Bdrm House $295/mo Is. Brok«ra Br 2U. Ba. Panoramic view
overlooking hills, new ci vic l* baths, neat house with welcome. 54~7740
large and beautifully kept =========; I center & lake in new county
park. Lovely Palos Verdes
atone fireplace with mat-
yard, S200 mo, on lease. No
pell. Ca.II 673-6568.
Eve1, & week-ends ching 51.one exterior &
w !, I ks . Professionally I ~!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!!!!~!:
la.nd11eaped. Vinyl Corlon Costa Mesi
floors in kitchen & bath 3100
~eguna Beach 3705
MONARCH BAY AREA
LOVELY OCEAN VIEW.
2 BR & den, I 1h b1 , cpts,
Drps, frpl, paol. $225 mo.
Adults. 496-1243 betw 10.S pm C&rpeted It draped, z.-JS 2 BR Split level medallion
min to Newport Beach, San-tOYmhouse, I~ ba, drps,
ta An a & Ana.M:!im busines.s cptJ, f:rplc , htd pool. dbl gar, _S_u_m_me __ r _R_e_n_t_e_l• __ 3_99_S.
& Industry, 3 min lo beach pvt road. 447 Gloucester
Dana Pt. Harbor. 496-5791 betw 20th & Zlst ofl Tustin
IJ.RGE 5 bedroom, 2~ bath, EL NIGUEL COUNT Ry Ave. $195. Avail Ju I y .
family room, all built-in1. 'CLUB locations. 3 Br 2y, 642-4155
BLUE La goon Villa.
Available July-August $250
per wk. 2 Br. 2 Ba, turnist>-
ed, private heh. 2 pool11,
Guard service Bkr. <WJ-22381 49!}.-1592
Completely <'arpeted & Ba, u n d e r -construction. draped. Large lenced lot 1 Br. House. Newly redecor.
-• · 1 1 d Several 4 & 5 Br facing goll Crpts, stove & refrlg, Ideal a, .... nice y an scape d course. Planned for !m-
S27,695, low 61.4. ?'o interest. mediate future. r~~lln· g & for dog fancier or car buU 2 BR F\lrn, on SEASHORE
Ci... t F I · v ll ..-. I"" on large Jot. 64Ui808 o oun a1n a ey front landscaping included, Or, NB. $175 wk. 6'5-1700
High & grammar school. C\lstom built homes from For Lease home with income (633-4863 Alter 5 PMl
pointed custom home with Ba.; I ~~ yrs. old. Carp ..
7682 a:>INGER. lush arpenn .. , ...,,_...., fix-drapes, pool, patio: dbl. gar. ~oe ,.........g 2901 Newport Blvd. /·' 842-4455 OPEN EVES, t:ures, etc, 4 lovely BR.o, for-w e1ec , o Pen er . Nr.
,"='"=""======= $50,!fiO to under $60,lm Eastside. 2 Frplcs, 2 gar. COMP. furn. db. 3 BR. 2 Huntington .Beach 1400 496-5791 huge rec. room 543-3772: Ba.; $150 week, avall. July
S•nta Ana 1620 ~~~-----=~--DELUXE 3 BR horn• with • A 0=1557 tt g PM Newport Be1ch '--'· :!"$995 MOVE-IN mal dining room, family 675-4630 Eves: 6(2.225J llC•.........,, stores & park
room • bo~-l t ·th $24.950. Principal& on I y No"''1011lng CO!its. 3 BR 2 • " WO. ll Ol'Y WI
bath, large livint1: room lhakf' roof, on4' % block fo OONDO'MINIUM Deluxe ~ _644-__ !'°!3"! ~=~-
eiia.. blt·in R It o , hood, • Fallway, Ottered 11t 154,. BR large livinr room & in 291C Clift Dr.NB--
garl.ge cllipofal, dining 500. "as new" condition. One oi Lovel_y 4 Br, 2 ba home ai.a with hangini I 8 m p, College Realty 546-5880 the few single s 1 0 r i es w/frrn din rm. <.'f'J>U, drps,
sepa:n.te master bedroom 1500 Adams al HarOOr available. Asking 0 n I y Kit. hims Secluded tree
witk &epQrate bath. LArge i ::'N:"'~':"':""""::Thea::":':':::: S19,950. Let's talk terms. 11haded back patio, wlkg d" lo'i.~plet<'ly fenced. Pay-CALL 540-1151 (open Eves.) to 11.ll scbl. By Owner
°*rits less than rent -only E Heritage Rea.I F.at.a.te 43,500. Principals only. state Privacy J1S> per month including Enchanting :t BR l2'11i balh 3 BR or 2 Ir: den; 2 cov. BACK BAY 1 yr old 4 br, J ta~. tiome • meticulrusly main-pa.tiOI'!; lge. fncd. rear w/ ba, lrg fam It liv rm, 2
1llage Real Estate
~· tained &. beautifully decor-Java waterfall It tropicals. frpls, di n rm, C u 11 Io m
atedl Near Bay, 00 fee sirn-New carp. & m•tch'g. drps. featutts If lndst"ping, $51,500
pie lot opposite delightful On C\JI de Sac Westside, Owner 363 Vi!la Bnya ,
tree shaded priva~ park CM:, Just appr_ at $18,500. ="'~'--===~~--
with 2 pools & putting green FUJI pr. $16,500 caM. By TOWNHOUSE 3 Br. 2% ba .
~ANISH FLAVOR shared by 11 amall group of 11pp't. owner 646-4600 Beau. appointed. Ele-c bltns,
distinguished lamili6 . Only -'s"2~.ooo=~a.-1"o-'-wc..;Mac:....r~ke_t_ frplc. crpt11. drfll. Pri patio. A -+a r g e nunblq tune
w'.iai that certain S(>AAish
na.wr. Spanish tile entry,
lotrflal dinine: room, family
t'OCltft. 3 car garage, of large
bedrooms and room for 11
$49,500. 14950 dn 10 S% % GI I0&11 Maintained pools &. gardens.
Ruth Pardoll, Realtor $1'10 mo p-.ya all $29,500 Quick Sale. 0 w n er
1609 \Vestcliff Dr. 6(2..5200 4 br, w&lk to C&tholic ICh.I , ,,,-==~==~--
High sch!, college & shops. HARBOR HIGHLANDS
o60t' nm builder • owtt('r • h
ho"I' -. th• """' or 10 n macnab \\'~~mRnship. iG.5,500.
~esPR~NG """"~"'vE1~.!~~~-blt -=. •RE A T'l'TV horn< w;ih • Vl•w from .,.
••
l'U.IJ. J ery room, 3 BR, panclled
• '"ANYTIME" cien, !amily rm , crver 3500..., .... ,., ....
h, t'('flecting pool. Exe. fin. . · '..." SAVE $950 and ng ...... $87,500.
·-Call for Appl.
~ 3 BR ..... j" 11 !!!!!!!l!i!i!(7!!!14!!i)~/A!ii!!!2-8"2ii3!i5!!!!1!~
st$ to the ocetlnff'ont. 2 "PROBATE" ba~ large living room l + 2 batha, 2 .F\teplaces
MMf fi~, sfrJ>-58.VP.r ~In kitchen. Reduc@d to Walk IO Bffch "" $35,IXXI
f.15,GOO.
.tot l'\I I o\\1 11 11
~' \H\\11\\
~ ' I I I '
1iii:,S....., C.M.
NEWPORT BEACH
O.:ran Vlrw , ••. , • $25,900
lluge 2 Bdrtn1, 2 btl, 50xl27
Ji'~acP. ~low m•rketll
HOMF: 642-4000
lv•n Wells'
N ... est Model
4 BR of hi;, lonn1I difl nn,
tam rm w/wet bar, 3 car
3130 Umerick .549-1403. Ranch
BY OWNER . $24,SOO, 3 br, modem, 3 huge Bdrms, 2 ba.
1~ ba, F\111 cpts & drps, L..ow<>at prief: in area
lndsopd, xtra ya.rd for boat ==~H70ME=~"'-'"'°'°~~~
Andlor trlr. Xlnt loc, w. ot. ELEXiANT Bayview condo. 3
Harbor. 548-73L~. 64-2--07'11 Lee. BR., ? lavish baths.
Aft 6 Poula, golf, etc. Fet land.
BY OWNER: Ca.mbrid'e Sac $37,500 ~r 6'73-4Xi6.
model, Collt!ge Ptirk, 3 lrR OCEAN View/Feto 1imple 3
br, 2 h1, xtra trr tam rm, 2 Br. large fa.mily room ol·
used brick b;pls, cpta, drpe., fe!'K by prl prty $54.00Ct.
lnd&cpinc, A Rwtic Be•uty. Must Sell! 642-3064
s.21,900. 540-~1 or 8»-2531 LUXURY Condom • 8\ulfa, 4
HOUSE FOR SALE BR, 3 BA. Must aell! Owner
3 bedrooms, :Z baths with transl. '36.500. Call owner
attak~ root. Used brick e.ves ah S. 644-ttiOO.
fireplace. Detached 1uqe. MOVE ln! Neu ~of BR.,
Patio. 548-0385 Owner. tr 1 p .. new <:pt.I. nr. beach.
ly Owner/Pool Home $28,000. Open weekend&; lii1
Reduced to $29,4SO, lmm•c. 62ncl St.~~«
3 BR. 2 BA. Hu everythtna: W. OCEANFRONT Comer, I
Xlnt ftna.ncing. 5f6.D>S br O:itta.n cpts, dfl>'l, Ltx
• Home I Buaine1a •• $12,!m e 3 BR CLEAN! •• $19,900
Kennedy & AHoc.
642.97J) ~
pr $49.500 494-9111
Newport Heights 1210
'!HOW'S THE
TIME FOR
~UICK CASH
-. i'.HR'OUGH-A
pr. OJntract now ror Aua. S600 MQV&.IN 4 Br, 2 e..
~ • choose )'OUl' lovcl.y fenced yard, fruit
own ('0!01"1 • oupedni;. lrffl. $23,(Ql. AastWne VA
Roy J. We.rd Co. 646--1550 loan. Owner 642-9126
CUSTOM lfOME: 3 br. 1%
ba. 4-car JU', 75' lot Room
for 11'1 pool. EZ flnt.nclnk,
~uced to $33..!IOD. By OWflCr'
324 El ModMI.. 548--1954
~
:DAILY PILOT
WANT.AD
•
BEACH HOUSE CANYON-Mt. view 3 BR by
Oote lo 0.Y • Oct an. owiler-:-Asaumi ntA ~~~
Quid "· > BR. Frpl, ""1o. loan. lli,000. P\111 .... "
Ju• 15,000 dwn. Slj,GIJO. 121.900. MWlM
Btlboa ~ F..tate Co. 3 BR. I~ BA. I.am rm. fllKc,
100 &. IWboe Blvd., Balboa la: ,..,.i, emu •ll'I(. io.n. f rn.41«J $'1,900 ""-· ~
• BR.. ' BA. h... ,...,..
yard, C\1l4t•MC, p a i J o ,
"""'· ""'· m .950. 316 Ramona P~ 543-4131
AVAIL Imm«!. Cliff Hav;;ii'i
Br, 2 b.. A 2 Br ~an Vu
lnc Apt. $(9,500. Wr7'2U
4-PLEX * Monarch Bay * ~ "•· ·~ A · pool; avail 1n. Lease $300 8 lncome $510 per month, well 3 BR 2 ba. all extras patio, S. Coast's finest exclusive . 1 . 546-9205 AL Isle. Sleeps 8. 3 SR, 2
located & a 1'eal money landscapes, fenced SZl,000 beach community bid?'! olf· mo. me. poo serv. BA. SlSO wk. 100 ft to beach.
m a k e r. Ssax> down will Ow'ner 546-9174 SA 107 Gamet 673-0645 ~========' I er 8 new 3 & 4 bdrm homes Newport B h 3200 -~-~~,.:...-=~--h II n d 1 e. This one can-;;. UC Fur ished Ba h Util pd not br dupl;-1'-" --," • • • L B h 1705 with me.gnificent Ocean and ....c.._,..:.:...:.:.:..:c=--== n c . . ,
c"nrlitinn. "a "" " ~ aguna eac Island Views. 5 min from Ocean & B•y S50 WEEK
DECKS & BEDECKED! S52,1Dl • ~.IXXI Carpets/Drapes & Bit-ins. Perron Rlty Co. lTmf.tai:tml~~
Cor Brookhurst & Garlield
962-4471 546-8103
Just • few 3 BR split
level ho"'9a still av•il·
able. Lathe & plaat1r.
f.anel1d family r~m1,
ormal d ining rooms.
6V•~• Financing. Price
$34,000. 962-2461 HB.
Brookhurst & Ad•m•·
PRESTIGE SPECIAL
VIEW! VIEW! VIEW! 499--2850 499-3'»8 2 Bdrms • 2 bat'ha • $:inJ/Mo. ,...~ .~ 1 ALS
Of ocean, city lights & hlll1 3 Bclrms • 2~ baths-$250/Mo. Aph. Furnished
rrom this intriguing upside--_D_•_n_e....;.P.;.•;;.in;;.t ___ .;;17:.;3::0 613-3663 Eves: 548--696ii
down no end, oceanside pf Bay &. Beach Realty, Inc, Costa Mesa 4100 hwy home, 2 br +sun-den f'HA LOAN S%'3 120Zi W. BaJboa Blvd., NB 3 BR, 2 bft, ST/ST cor. loL + charm +++, Divorce Lush valley & Ocean View, BACK BAY 1 yr old 4 br, J $25 Wk. Up
forces sale. J u1t tt<luced f"plc, huge fam rm, parquet ba, lrg fam & llv rm, 2 e Studio I: Bach apts.
from $51,00'.l lo $47,700. Fee !lrx bit-ins, landscaped & frpls, din rm, Cu .!I Io m e Incl Utila &: Phone lll!'l"t'.
simple transJera.blr no-point rencect, patio. Only $26,!IOO features & lndscping , S51 .500 e Maid Service • TV avad,
low-int. loan. Bkr. 4.94-157&. POINT REALTY Owner 363 Vii.ia Ba.ya, e New cafe &: Bar
LAGUNA BEACH 34156 Coast Hwy 496-5323 &42-$j00 2376 Newport Blvd, 548-9755
Charm in aU it's glory, 2 BR, NEW 3 BR., 4 Ba., boat dock, Bachefar Apt $45 mo,
2 he.. study + spe/gue!t hse Condominium 1950 sundeck: S350 Per Mo. 36<Xi 646.Th!J2 Mr. A., Derman
1\1 open beam constr. 1 bl lo __ ..:.;...:.;.c::_::.:__...:_:,:: Finley 529-3081 =========ol
2 town, lew bllu to MA I N THE BLUFFS Newport lle.och 4200
I,! story 5 BR bath, like new BEACH, l!JIC cond. See to-BEST RAY VIEW .Low Leue MANY WONDERFUL OP· ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,[
rpts. Walk to catholic day $34,500. 1st Unit. J Br, 2 ba, POR'lVNITIES ba•e been
!IChool & church. Price be--t:A• .01 __ _. .J Los Padres Realty ~.oco * 615-3609 ........vvoi:~ In Clullfied Adi. Will LEASE low market. Sell CJ or F'HA Tum back to "B
BRASHEAR REAL TY "' Gl•Mey,.., St. Dal4' PU .. Wom ... ,, "°"""'""" Now":'""' Op-8'17-8531 Eves, 968-Ll78 ~La:"""~"'°'"'~•ch~=P;oh:. 4~94-8833~~==Al~w~.,..~~·=~~~r~·=...'....::========
HOME WITH INCOME Generol 2000 Gen.rel 2000General 2000 A delighUul 3 BR 2 bl.th --'-"'C...~--_.::.:.:c:_.:::::;.:::.:::_ ___ _:::::_:::::::,:::_ ___ _;~
home + a 2 BR unit. Blt.-in
Oven & Range, w/w carpet-
inc;. 2 car garage. Value &.
terms to please. $21.900.
A. D. Slates Realtors
M7·3519
LOW DOWN
NO DOWN GI
Only S.'ei coata. 3 & 4 BR.a +
family rooms.
liAFFDAL REALTY
"Home to Mitch Income"
1741} Warner ~
NO DOWN
on this lmmac:ulatt: l BR
home neer Dooglu Pl1nt &
Me•dowl8'1t 01!.rntey Club.
Appra.l&t'd 11
$23,750
Pf"rn'Jl'I Rfflty 64.2-lm
3 BR, 1 ~ BA., newly dee., VII·
ant view home. By Owner,
$:3),450. Ternui. 968-iflffi
MUST Sac. Condo., b 1
owner; nr. bre•dl. JIC\lnl,
sauna. tennia, pr.. ttc.
962-19511
3 BR, 1"' BA, MWl7 eke. YI·
Cl.Ill view pne. By Owntr,
$20,450. T.!rnu. 963-39611.
...
S©\l~1A-'£t.~s·.
Soll>f: Cl Sim.p~ SC7'11mbtcd Word Pu.zzli frw • O..ckl.-
O lteorrof'I09 i.n.~ of the fcwr KFO~led _.d1 h.-
1 low to fOtln four tlmple W01"d1.
'1'ITEXNOS I
•.
1 I I I r I' .
!IHr'f Cr 1 I
·I '"'A_L_1_x_A--~1
1 _ J J' J J' ff' oN ttie tconomi1ts in Phe . ~ • • WOfJd were placed .net to end, · •.i• thsy wouldn't reoch a -.
ID!cl,ur r 1 I ~n~~~a_
·~Mm~;·· r r r r t r I' r r r 1
t>&i::~· I I I I I I I I I I I
SCRAMLETS ANSWW~ CWSIFICATION 1600
ADULTS ONLY
July • Aug. -Sepl.
FURNISHED APT.
2 BEDROOMS -2 BAn-JS
Waterfront/Loe
BOAT SLIPS
Channel Reef
2525 Ocean Blvd., CdM
673-1711
ATI'R.ACT 1 hr, sl~ 5, 1
bik to beh; July; S75 wk,
~ug: $85 wk l'12 32nd, Apt A
Newport Sho,... 4220
RKHARD N. CARTER
433 TUSTIN
NEWPORT BEACH
Yoo are ttlt winner al
2 tickota ., the
FIRlWORK5
SPECTACULAR .....
ANAHllM
STADIO/il
~ .... ...
,,.... ................. 229 ~ 9 -nei 1 p.m. 1o
clMm )'OUf ticit"t'l'.I. !North
Comty toll • fl'ft' muober a
5tt>-U201.
L .-
E .!~!! .!.~~ .. r!!~.f~t!!! !...
H«o .. ._It ---··········Clltdt ... Clooolfll4 --.., to -ff,_-• II poll!-lo• ..-W ..i. It - -lo •Y * -{! tf•1lfl...._ ff It-. ... 641·5'7', ati11loo 12t, bet•-t •d 1 'M 1e ~ ,_ 1 Proo tl .. oto. An9t--i.. ...... for ~
po to plcll -"' • .y -••loot DAILY l'tLOT office. . ** **
RENTALS
Apto. Fumlahod
CorGM d•I M1r 4250
COMPJ.EI'EL Y P r t v a t e
Bachelor, bot plate. tl!:fri&+
$a1 tl'O tncl util. 65-28$1
. 'llTALS
Apts. Unfvmllhocl
G.n•r •I 5000
RENT
3 Room1 F umlture
* * * * *
I~ .
ANNOUNCIMINTS
oncl NOTICIS
SIRVICI DIRECTORY
lll>yslHlnt 6550
F.uncl (p,.. ~ 6400 BABYSl'l'l'ING, my_ -··
da,)I or allht. by hr. or we.k.
FOUND larp female doe MHl1, Dcper. care by ttll-
bl&dc. w/tan lep il tan able parent. f'enctd yard.
muk. n.med. Vic. Hubor Aho, lron1.rli. 10c aptece,
• Adams, CM. 540-lJTS. brln&' banger1. M&-9078
SERVICE DIUCTO!Wi
Oordonlnt UIO
lxpert J1peMM lll'1•
Gardlnlne ! "
Olt ~ edM, ii1mmtll.
'"tdl"' .. tho --by .... th ....... -'111111. .....m ~-0--1 J 1p111110 OordoM~~
-·· complete ,_., aervict. 1Ne dtirnat.•
• 5fl.7!1M • • ,,,i
$25 Month
ruu.. OPI'ION TO BUY
No deposit c.a.c.
H.F.R.C.
Whlddy1 Wontt Whlcldy1 Get!
SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION POR
NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS
Spoclol !tote
• ~.rov1 OLD fi S!ONg . ;;..~! .. !.IG.&.NTIC
ST. Bernard found In Conin• BABYsmING in m,y home.
de!. Mu. Ple:ue ca 11 Larre yard for pll.)'lq.
~ aak tor Nancy. Good care, l'tUOl'llble. Eut
ST. BERNARD Looldna dos· 1eoata M"' area. Da71 oftb.
vie. Acacia St. CdM 173--58'M ~====-:=--;:,= uk !er Nancy 8125 BABYSl'ITING, my home.
Ul wk AllO ~ $1.50
dor.. 642-5484
B.Uisrrn'NG In my home.
Day or rllte. Meals. Fncd
)'d. 2S48 <>ranee Ave. C. M·
• JAPANESE GARDENMG
Service C!eenup, lAn~
in&. 531-7034 a.ft T p.m. '""
l/JW COST M.W.t<nili&
MOW -EDGE -SPRA¥:',
Furniture Rentals I 11--5 tl1n11 -5 11ucb ... *flftWORKS ;:~":c ·:~ rEllTILlZE. 962-1Jl.I
517 W. 19th, C.M. 548-34!1
1568 w. Lndn, Anhm T14-28XI
llUlP -A.D ti\Ull INClUO&
6401 ._.... .. ..... • ......... a.-wi.. .,. .... .. """ ~ner•I Servi~ ~YOUJI ,.._ tMI• ..._, M !Ir. 91 ~ Brick, M1tonry, etc. ~OTHING f'Olt SAi.i -flll.ADal OML YI . 6560
Cost• Met• 5100 PHONE 642-5671 PROF'ES.SIONAL WI 11 db w
aeanln& fiee est eu.mww;
resid A: const. Qystal Wfli. dow Clnnllll. 541-8737, .........
To Plod Y-Trlldor'1 Porl4 ... Ad BRICK. °""""'· ""-"" C'uatom Cabinet.I. Small ;tobl: SILVER
GATE
Apartrnenh
1 lrdrm .Apt
Near schools, truwaya
Walking dlstance to OCC
988 El Camino
Apt. # 1 Co1!1 Mo11
HARBOR
GREENS
BACHELOR • UNruRN.
from $100
incl. util.
l-2•3BDRM.
FURN •• lJNnmN.
Heated Pools, Oilld Can
Center, Adj. ttJ Shoppln& -
No pets allowed
2700 Pe~rlOD War. at Har-
bor • Adams, r.o.rta Men.
5"-o311>
Exedlent, park -lilce sur·
roundin1s for adults requir-
ing peace & quiet.
Discrlminative Tenant.
1, 2 &: 3 BDRM. API'S.
POOL. NO CHILDREN
MARTINIQUE
GARDEN APTS.
l!lth & Santa Ana, C.M.
oitt Mrs. Henderson 646-5542
Jm Santa Ana , Apt 113, C.M.
Beauty Salon -4 1taticm -
room for 2 more, an equip.
ind. FOR eq. tn anal1 home
or submit -any reaa. pro-
posal. Rltr. 546-5880.
HAVE 11 Units, aood lhel.·
ter plus Incccne. $39 M
equity. TAKE Beach, Fall-
brook, Pauma Va 11 e y,
Mountain& or ? Mad.it Da-
vis, Rltr. 642-1000.
HA VE Watertront Mobil
Home with cab9nli, trplc, rree a: clear, . $ll.~.
WANT House, Unit. Land,
or ?? Madie DaYis Rtaltor
612-!00l.
WATERFRONT &: dock; 3
BR. 3 BAtlll. Equity $50,COl
FOR: TD'•, Boat, or -? , or
le..&e I option. #2 Be.lboa
Covet:, 615--031.
4 Income units on 21.at St
in Costa Mesa. Trade tor
house or trust deeds. In·
come $402.50. Owner.
·~!Mml.1 *
01..EAR -4 Unlfa fum.
ocean view, 1A blk. Npt.
pier, best rental am.. $58,•
500 take sm. hae ln trade.
21n>lh Court Ave., 673-6627
BEAUTIFUL, n"°. Laguna
Beach, octan TI~ 3 BR.
2 Ba. home: $34,00J FP,
$7,000 ~ty. Want TD'11
clMr lot, Nbmlt. 494-6140.
DELUXE 3 BR l ba. furn
OD Golf Count, pool, wat-
erfalls, bobby shop $15,500.
!Q'. Want income Units.
Dania Rlt;y Co. 642-6560,
WANT HOUSECAR;
Tdults, 2 BR, garage, Uf> Have UYr; duplex zone &
stairs by Itself. East.side. _... ...1. E u:"""' ..... ., """! .. uao:r. q, ~,uuv, <JIU""""" S90. 835-17U, 3 to 11 PM rn mo. Local pm ti1 11
* 548-595< * Newpo rt Beech 5200 1-----'-'--
SAN MORITZ CHALET, J
BAYFRONT Apt. 2 BR, 2 br, listed $!1.500 .. Privately
BA, 2 car garas::e, Prl•ate $29,00l! Trade for·n.w land
pool, utilltie1 furn., no pets, or aptl. 23764 Zuaer. 0-est-
year ly lease. S400 mo. line. 338-2431, 83J.U45 ev&
046-1522, 548-4690, 673-Z40l TRADE clear vacant, ex-
3 BR. 2 Ba., nr. Ocean and edlent &rM. Will add cub
shops. $700 Ptt Month, year-for Motor Sail Boat 40' to
ly, Avail NOW. No pets. 50'. Corbin-Martin. 675-1662.
S48-0S97, ~769 eve. 2112 Acres Level lend
Available Ju1y 15th NEAR VICI'ORVILLE
2 BR. apt., 2nd fir, Adults, no Trade for late model
pets. $100 Mo., yearly. 211 "aide door" van. 962-7349
\V. 32nd st 714: 792-2'207
NEW soundproof 2 BR, 2 BA *
ICT'061 fm Wstclltt P1aza, * *
mn.Will'l 6 tdr. 3 bt.
Jodee with 2 cabina. »
~ val $40,000 $7000 im-
Pl'O"· mJte fw deu f bdr
be9dt area al like net val-
ue. 642-5009-
TRADE: cuatom Ba.Ycr61.
home; 3 BR. pool; 2%
Dr.thl: trade $15,llXI equity
for coodomlntum in Hawaii
e OWNER. 64&600J. •
SPE CT.ACUL ft 'in Tilly. May have sctten in
. ~ oomeooo'1 oar • -lw a « * * 4 It • . ride. u.t tl/12 Vic . ol «it.. .. fb-1.A. ..... .f. JaAl_• • Jama St .. C.M. Reward! r jll.L~ys ,._ 11.L • !!ii" ~6 • Call 5•M53111ter 5,311_ ~ ~ ~ e: ~'M. .. :=·•;.: 0.i!.FJl~ok,.~"!:~
11-.,..t 11-BTAI>J:'D'DI: • --·: ~ :...: :.
11-l-11-11\I][D[TI0ill/]\? I • :. .:.~ 0m,., * uu •\\ ~ IWfW .. ,I. wrist watch; men'1 n1.me1
FIBERGLASS Lehman 10, * ir it * -Ir ~ I 1111 lUI CID back; retirement sift.
wt-t ""'' or nidd"· 11--It lllEl-IWllllll lllllD.llWlll l•an1 REWARD! 61'"2258
WU1 trade for J.arie older FOUND • p r e • c r I p t I o n
OK. l'rff F.lt ~
Busln-S.rvlco 6562
S.Cret1rl1I S.rvlcet o..,,.. C»lmty Bank llldr.
DI !:. 11th st. &rite 212
O>lta M-
Call Vldd e 6.f.2..1485
Bulld1ra 6570
REMODEL. repalra
plumt:1'1., p&tntinJ, elec.,
carpentry, reald., commerc.
room add. Reu. 675-3038 ~.:~~.,= ~ Finworka,P.D.laz 17'11,ADueim Calil 11803 i'::'Pil~. ~~.:,'s~'.
E E TE E 15T Tl Collta Men Corpontorl"I 34' Sedan C>U!M< U966l. RENTALS R AL STA R AL A LG. Blk. ""'l'whtt• , .. ,. 6590
Planked hull. WUl trade: Apt&. Unfurnished __ G"--on_1_r_1_I _______ Geno.;..;.._,_•.;.l _____ 1 1xa c:htlll LI No. 33.37. 312t REPAIRS * ALTERATIONS or TD, cleu iota and pos-1-~-------· I CABINETS Any a1 v.t.. lily &mall boats. Lagun• Belch 5705 Office Rent11 6070 Acre•ge 6200 L1nco1n Way. CM~ · M """'
<Tit) 54M192/548-5009 Revm'd! Yr. old blK & btwn 23 yrs eXJ)er. 543-41713
l.O'JELY 2 bf' 2 ba view apt COSTA M~ •BREA 10 A<tt!. So. C.Womia. SI Dobmnan Pincher. Male CARPENTERING WORK.
TRADE $«XX> eq. in 3 BR, 2 with pra.1e. No ltfl'P9. Lse ANSWERING SERVICE Down; $8 per mo. $795 Full Clll 536-8m. Patios, llldinr aiU1 doon fD..
BA, trplc, Townhouse w/ $175 mo. 494-1891 ()U!l'I alt condltloMd otftces price. L. Sbewfelt, D: W. • stalled. * 5f6-7S81
51i4 % FHA ln. $100 mo. & deak space + &ecl'et.arill 3l"d St., L.A. 213: ~m MALE Cocker Sp&nlel. CM • Carpentry • Cabln@ts •
Want 2 BR mobile home, Rent1 l1 W1nt9CI 5990 service U needed. $25 I up. -R.-E-. -W-,-.-1-14---6-2-.-.' MTae~~=· ~~~4,, Vic. ot e BJt.int • Altert.tiortl e
EL!X."l'ROLUX -l!ales and Strvke
5304ll3 -
'67'°
Lr1TLE GIANT TRUCK.
Hauling. 6' htl&ht, 10' lliK
You name It I haul. rteu.
Bir John MJ....Km
./ l!AULING. Trub 1'19
Trimmi.. Anythina .
tt an. Expa-worti:. SB--2192
CLEAN Lota, 1arqes, etc.
Trtt ttm:wal, dump, aldp,
backhoe, ftll. arad@. 962--8745
Cance a~ trlmmlnp,
dirt. You name It I H~
BlrJolul6'2-<030 .•
HouMCINnln9
* APT. CLEANING ._:,,.,
Fut • Ill_,.. 1 tur/iofi
everything &C2-81M • 1"
adult Park, H.B. 96U)l3'27. --~-1870 PLACENTIA, CM c:;..::.o...;~~iijts-';....-.-\·=====~====~ \ ~·~R<~pa!n~~·~""'~~! ~M6-~"83~ WANT 3 or f unlt.1 Corona Ex•c. S.ekln9 642-0127 OWNE8 S Ironing HOUSE for 9 member fa.ml· "" ;;;:.;o;:.... ____ ..:;:.= I del Mar. For approx $14,-2 ~m·1., 1 indust., 1 w/Uve Apt. Unlta Wanted ._P_•_•_••_n_1_1_, ____ 640_5 Cement, Concrete 6600 000 eq 1n cute 2 I dining ly for 9 winter mo1 ea. year. qtr1. Coata Mesa.. 11).30 Unita, ttnt clua. Ex··· Iromnr $1.SO bf,
rm Belmont Sborea ~ blk Beginnln& Sept. 1968. Can Owner, 646-7130 II B h * * PHONE PAL* * CUSTOM PATIOS • Pick·up • deltv~. Br I
furn hse all year. Call -=========I ce ent omdltion, Npt. c " SAFE It INEXPENSIVE Block wallL .AllO concrete han1er1 968-3853 968-M. Bay. College RJty S46-5880 J ames Heltrlch 114 :~1234 -C.O.ta Mesa, On'ona ~l Mar MEET BY PHONE ::3 1968 RCA REMOTE C'ON-ext 202 lndu1t rl1I Re~tal_~ area by Prt pgrty. Write aaw:l111 l removll. 842-1010
TROL WILL TRADE for ho in De.Uy Pilot Box P-146. P.O. Box 4193• Irvine 926&4 CEMENT Work, &II types. Li ndscaplng
EXTRA CLEAN vw. Business woman need• 1 Br 450 SQ. Ft. Ware UM --Get in tune with June! No job too amlll. Free est. GAYNOR'S , ... ~,.. ... ,,,__ :
6110
43'1·34:l4 days 592-5004 l!Yes. untum Apt, CM, Newport, Newport Beach. $50 Month. BUSINESS 1nd DIAJ....A·DATE tonight! H. STUIUCK M&-8615 .....-w.,...........u-"',...,
l68Sl Bayvi~ St Sunset B. Corona del Mar, Hunt Bch •~19 Evts.• FINANCIAL (TI.f.l 635-5651 (213) OL 5-53Tlro ~~N~CR=E=IE~.-b~loo~k-, ~.-,.,,~~7h· 1 It;.~= !:c'7r~,
-~~=-~~--! or Laguna. To $100 mo. Gar Bull. Opportunitl• 6300 Franchises Available tile, wrought Iron, wood & Ret.ldentlal _ Omlmerdll'
'63 Chev rolet or carport neceasal')'. Lott 6100 Fly to C1t1llna alum. roofl. Lie. MS-5101 Yard aeanup Frtt F.lt'1"
Station Waa:on &42-<0!6 atfer 5 p.m. CANOY Daily fllghtJ; from Orange No job to big. 893-3581",1
Will tr.de for properfT. 60x80 Oceanfront Lot SUPPLY ROUTE FLO O RS.Walka-Patio1 & Employed college student County Airport to tbt airport Expoled Rockl. E x pert ~~~C~aU~671'<~1'8--~·I seeks, small, furn apt. yrly (Balboa Peninaulal PART OR FULL TIME ln the lky. $46-6613 Workmanship. ~14 Paperhantlnt ~
WANTED: 2 bedroom trail-Bal/Nwpt Pm!, Local rrf· 1148 E. Oceanfront Street We are appoinlini diltrl~u· ALCOHOLlCS Anonymoua P1lntlng daft
eMmlia -Td'1 for .f, bed· erences:. 673-2706 Se ll or t r1cM tors mw; proven field ret11l-Harbor AreL Phone S13·rnt Licensed -Qu1llty ~
room, 2 be.th Me1a Verile MINISTRY Student & Wife 1 ~~~~53~1~-0.180~~;;~~ [ lnl &. colleetina: money from P.O. Box 1223 Coata Mea. Cem~nt work. 839-5<l"i6 REDECORATE: We dfo..
borne. $8,00J equity -6% w .. R 1 I b< rum, apt or cott 1 · new, hlih quality coin oper--=,.-,-----,--everyth.q: Pain.tins. 19"¥1 -· OCEAN VIEW .H-Telephone anawerfna Chll' Coro 6610 •· · loan. 642-3802. In or nr CM $85 top, refs. ated ~·SU•. No selling, u out; cuatom w-ape1; CUllOm -131 , _ '"-.. ~ v1 995 tt-.. .... . 2.f, Hours • SOc a day ,. all 25 View AettS La au n a Leave nu~. Geo 548-6126 ""x ....,ve-..uu ....... e ew. $ to ..,,.,., ClllllU required. • 5.f.4..6760 • SPECIAL Summer Day Care carpe ; w cov"'-''11..-AL-
Beach. So m e improve-WANT to REtlT 3 or 4 Br. Under8J'Ollfld. utilities. $2.f.,· High net profit. For penon· 1-~======~ Hot baW!ced meall, snacks. color coordination. 20 :Yfl ·
me-ntll. income $1'100. $243,· unfurn hou!t, bdare Aug IS. 500 -Terms. Robert Nat· al lntervf~. aend name, ad-DYNAMIC FRIENDS State llc. 2% to I yrs, 1 am. uper, tree eat. aamplti to
OOJ equity, For TIJ's or ? Yearly. Write Dally Pilot tress, Realtor 642-l«i. dre~~ro: = !~!e.qu~:O tor 6 pm. $18 Wedt. Oavta ~door. lJc • tnf. ~ .. ~
Owner. 494-4653, 494-4957. Box M.153 ~= c::: :. ~a: DIS'TRIB1IMNG CO. INTERE!T Monteuorl Scboola, 1525 N. MODERN D!XX>RA'JOjj:
LOVELY ahop, beach area, WANT To rent gara,ze, 1or2 joining lots, zoned R.--2• 590 N. AZUSA AVE. EXTRAORDINAIRE! Santa Ana, C.M. 646-3706. 536-9513 1
acCHSOrle1, ilfta, paintings car Costa Mesa, Newport COVINA CALIF 9172'J ::~l ~.:e~~ ~I!~ Area. Box M-152 Dally Pllot f1i!OOJ cub. 61~7
after C.ANDY ~y .ROtn'E ~~~~g~~ ~1~1~ .;.C;.;o.;.n.;.tr.;.1;.;cton="---ON-'6"'-'2'-0· I PS~~.~ER. :'i~ ::::
or camper. 673-0098. Rooms for Rent 5995 PARTIAL Ocean vtew; Cor· Man or woman to restock outlnp. Orilinal I: unique. • ROOM AI>Drn S • F o 1 lt-VJD)i. SOIWA.Jl.1'1
ona del Mar. Ox>iee o'llu new type coin dispensers TI£E GROUP L.T. Conatruc&a 847-1669 ' ..-.
TWO-4 pleK, all two bed-Lara:e pleuant turn. room. lot NOT lee.aehold. 1.A:>vely with high qUallty paekaie (114) '7'76.$.f,1 (n3) OL 1-684t Family rooma. ldtcben or PAINTING and Pa.perins • .J
rooms, located good rental Prtv•te en~ • bath. trees. 673-20lO Realtor. candy product.I without &fv· Franchises Available unit.I. Slnlle story or 2; )'OU call me ft both beneftt.
area, eKchan1e Jor local G•ra&e * 543-3790 in& up pre&ent posl.tlm. No HALE .\ Hearty Yachting plans CU1!0m deaipfd. For Excluaive but not expenaWl residence to $25,CKXI. R~l· PVT 1 d .. ~ 1% ACRE Rr2 $49,000 pl1n1 ge1u.... D ~-'able .. _.. e&tlmatH • 1-yout, phone: -... __ ., ....,._,.,~.,
to' o•• -n. ooly·. "'°"'l10 .... •,mp .. ?>'.,.', m1189-• !0< 20 tll'llts alkl Several Jt-3 .... ,.. e~.... per90n wluvwer Wiehe• to meet af· ••i me mlf<> .... .ru~ 11'U-_, .. can neot VERY HIGH nuent & _,, .. Rt widow w1 tlt • 847-uu . • p·~·c I -=-· lotl near beach, aomt with ..,,...._. IUI.,, ..,_, ~ .c.i, ... i:.AJ
cnstmount. C.M. 548-8119 older houses. H.B. 847-.3957 EARNINGS. R.equire1 $900 or without te-ena1er to share 1Jcen1td Contr1ctor Inte"rlor .il Exterior * * * 1665 lrvlne $1B5-$20'.l. 642.-
0239.
---~--R&AL ESTATE e~T ocean view lot, No. :::.::hi: ~n:!~la~~ ;~j~or:e ~ .. :, 0,~ ~::r~ti~ep~~i~:: SfS..7srT . .., .. ;
11.1:1'1 f ALS Gen•r•I La&una; $12,500; a re h' l terview, elvinl phone matrlmony!? P. o . Box 67J..2129 PAINTING, txterlor, intar5or
Nowport Shor11 5220
6461 KIOWA RD.
WESTMINSTER
FIREWORKS
SPECTACULAR
at tho
ANAHEIM
STADIUM
"" July ...
P1eul! ca.I.I 641-5678, ext. 229
betw~ 9 and 1 p.m. to
claim your tick!'l:s· <North
County toll -fzff number 11
540-1220).
WATCH your TV show• oo
the set yoo find ID the
Ou.afted Ads.-O»Ck them
"°"·
f
~ENTAL S
Aph. Unfurnished Aph. UnfurntahM lnconM Prop9rty 6000 plan incl. 494-6216 Owner number to Inter.State Dist. 3093, Term.lnal Ia\and. PATIOS • Patio C.OVert lie. In&. 17 )Tl exp. l'rff tit.
! BARGAIN ! Co., 456 E. 4th St. SuUe 200, Room Addltlon1, Uc. 543-UJS. ACCOUltical ctiL'I•·
525C NEW INDUSTRIAL C.M. TIUPLEX UYr Solt Like Oly, Utah MIU. Announcomonh 6410 .. ,.,.,, o., .. ET .. Wlmdo PAINTING --···
$9450! Owner S44-Z958 ESTABUSHED vend Jn 1 fteinodellnc e Add11ionl exterior • .1,1 work d-.. Coron• del Mllr 5250 Coron• del Mir
Lib new, Larae 2 BR A:
den Upt!Airl apt Soft
water, diahwaahtr, frplc, wamer ,\ dryer' 2 bloeks
to ocean S'B.'7J87 fiTJ..6991
2 'Br./or unf'lrn. New w/w
ClllfPl!lling • rana:e.
U9'ii Orcbtd CdM m..l136
2 BR., betted ti00l· S\Jb.let 9
mo&. $185 mo. Walk to
beach. Avllll July 8. 644-ll30
2-BR.. ~ •. b1t-1ns.'
walk beacb, sbopa; $140 U;e.
Adu1ta. No pet. 675-4275
BUSIEST matbql'lac. tn
tmm. 'Iba DAILY PD.OT
Ouslfled ttcti<"o. s. ..
money. ttmt • eaon. i..ook
nlJl'lll'!!I
Cholct Santa Ana. location. route H.B. area. Few hrs. Coast Health Club J . G. MacBetb, Uc. f\eU)Dl.ble * 839-'
•:; Leued 2 tdlant buildinp. Acr••SI• 6200 per month. Net~ return. Hospitality 11 Our Motto e 6'15-5628 •
0,.. 6 rt• WW return a spendable of Inve1trn.ent from $360. Call FREE SAUNA wrm A.ddftioaa * lttmodelinl '-'% ;:! M'"f"' ~ ""'. A mNTION 536-1!60. SWEDISll MAS.'!AGE ,,... "· Gtn<l<:k, Lio.
Plumblnt
e 2.f HOUR SER.VICI:•
Plwnbln1 • repalra, rernocM;.
fnr, Electr1c aewer cle.,.
ln&. AJl wcric: l\W'. 146-1.n
ON TEN ACRES ictn1 7970 oan. price DEVELOPERS & BALBOA I•. Toy Shop, est_. Open wkdys 10 &m·ll pm m.60'll * 549-2170
1 I 2 BR, F'urn .\ Unlurn m.<XXI. F 0 r information INVESTORS 20 yr•. Mutt MI due to Sundays 10 11H pm
from $UiO mo. Frplcs I Pri/ pleese call K. w. Small with * 80 LEVEL ACREs• other demandinc Int· 132 E. 18th St. &t2-5000 Cal'fMf L1yln9 &
Patlos I Pools. TeMis ·Con· Eckhoff & Auoc., Inc:. Ideally Jocat@d ln blf1Mlry Own/act. ~200, 548-1467 Re-Ir 6626
'I Bk! 9 hol Pu V 1!18 W. Chapman Ave. bl ~ tnt st. e t Oranie. CaUt deae.rt (no 1m<>1 pro em1, .. ve. Funerilt 6412 C1rpet Remodel., ltepilr, 61J
Gt'ffll. wonderful dry-air!) juai I! SUMMm Ia Here! Beach
900 Sea Lane, CdM &14-26ll 5.f.l-262:1, Evea-wlmds S:JS."71 miles East of 8 a r •tow Gitt Shop, ready to 10. WESTMINSHR Uc. Contractor
AU pr!tta
546-f.f.'71 ewntnp !MacArthur nr. Coast Hwyl T6 Lov•ly 1 BR Apts. (where gre•l expansion bu $3300. 548-1914 AM or aft 6 ---------===11 '"'"·beaut 1r 1o1 ... "'"' .,,.,.., ...,..,i --MEMORIAL PARK
H II I a. h s·~ I N 90 man • made Lake• in lnvut ment Oppor. 63 10 "-rtuory .. c ..... lory ft-~1nlnt ·-I 6 un n9 on -•c -.vv r-enta area. r. everything. area! Idea.I tor 1 e 10 r 1 mu vt1r111 66IO .,.w n1 2 BR dplx. Pool, privacy: AA•~•" .... !...nc,,;,.... ~cmde.yrly. d e.,. e 10 pm en t, alfalfa SAFE 7~ ON YO UR. Com plete funertlt ---~-----Altorotlont-642·5att'.: .• _,' ""' .,.....,.,.,., •r• MONEY from$245 RELIABLE: F<e11 . cpb, drpl, 1 sty. Gar. lJke Rlch1rd10n/Pu rcell growing, Uah rai•lne. ett. h Bonds C I w/OM.ntal tare. <le&JHrpa Neat, act'W'<, XI )Tl. ~
nu. $130. Ava.U 112. 842-&337 Realty 67a.4031 , 646-4331 Eves .•. opportlll'lltiea boondleu. Oiurc , emettry oft 4 o&!. J!'bt. VI n t • n t • :mr.._ ''
Thi• ii •rt.rt otf•rinl. af. 673-1733 from $130 M2-0325 TILE, Ceramic ~·
THE QUICKEtt YOU CALL, I A YFRONT T RIPLEX tontin1 the tnveitor e ire•t ---------I Includes Endowmtnt Clre
nlE QUtacER YOU SELL Pr!vate bee.ch I dock future! Pet'IOl\l.I drcum. l 634() Zverytbjnz 1n orit bnutlful sru6ENfi workln&: thetr
ldefll location, ·mo,ooo stance& lorct this aalt; will Rea l l ttite 01"' place mean. 1• co.t. way thru. collect. Allen
615--01'1'8 sell all or part. call owner: BOt\ROW on Your F,quity No tnmc problmia. Broe. lndtc ardnra comp. 1-=========o I MT-8&«1 Eves/wttkenda. Private 2nd Mortg. money 14801 Beach. Westrnflm:er lawn care. ~
Busln1M R•nlll 6060 l•I /) A(lltf rn. 1ppralaal. No obllc. 531-IT.15 1193-2''1 GEN'L CIHJl-up, "'" ff<V,
• PRIME R.etall Loc1Uon • 1lU ALSO rolotlJ, andlna. aprtnkltra,
STOilE 17 x 40 90" lat TD loartl to $11.500 leaal· Notfcet 6450 lawns. ~ui·1. Reu. ~
* Verne, the n1e Man ff0
CU1t. work. Inatall • ~.
No job too 1mtll.
patch. Lta.Jdn& I b. 0 W
repek. M7-IJ51
J 1$ & EMPLOYMI
1873 Harbor, CM~ 'IWO and 1/3 acre• vacant Servtni Oranie City 18 yra. .;;.:r.: J1p1,.... G•rdener 1-=========;I ::x's.~':a ~:.. ="1.:: Sattler Mortrage Co., Inc. I WID not be rt~Je kr c.re. IAwn-anythlnr. CQ1pl. LADY Would like position u
Office Renta l 6070 336 !: lTth St , C.O.ta MeM any debts: othtt than my llfll'Vice. ~ 00..kHPft' ot ~
Is only major undeveloped &l2-21TI ~ own. Bryce Ward JAP= 0 _. ........ n-n tor one er two cbiWren °'*' ~
LAGUNA l lACH boulevan1 in thla area. Ap. ..u'""""'""' Al\,1,,1,W,~ • I
Deak ..,...ace1 av11.Uibl• ll1 pc-alHd at $60,0XI. Price, Pr1R.E. ~~ ~'!,~ Znd SERVICI: DlfRECfOltY Malntmanc. by the rnontb. !...?'~~ ... ~~· .!!u~
vr SM.000 net ttJ eab.te. Water • ..._.. WVUI .......... ap ! Good rda. Expll' 5*-T7M l-6, ...... ~ • ...----nl11 ::,~ ~~ :11~~ and all utUlUts avallt.ble. J'ack Smith O>. ainca 19tt l i byslttfn9 '5JO LAWN 5mVICE $15 M6. CARPET Qeuli4 FkMir
La.1\111& Beach. A.Jr CODID-109 ft ft'ollta1a For f'Urther 5434311 BABYSITI'lNO by the Wffk, f)epemble, Proteutonal ~ Wuinr. WA.i
Uoned. carpeted, t..autltlsl tntormaUon phone SG!l533. Mort-T .D • 6M5 permanl!!lt; )'OUr" home. Weeklf 8.mc.. 912-&tll. ~ wube4. sn..OSlfr ..
paneltd PU'UtSoalna. Two Courtety to broken. 1 •I a.ed tnmpmUdOn. , fC. MOWING, Edatnl, ncalawn. WAN'l'a) HOOMwotl ..,...
entnncu; rur lads to 1---.B'-Y'"OWN="Eft=--Brine YoUt TD;..., Trust 1407. Gn'1 du.nap, Kt.lllinc. ttnstm Btach .._ Gii·
Munlelpll """"" lots. l'O S.W. Colorodo Mio. Dffd c.ntct wlitte .,. TEAa!Ell wm owe !w Odd Jol>I. * -2.lS hi'. -. l
per month tor .-pace. Add 2'iii Acrea, 8 mnts aorfb cl buyers an . .Jade Smith C». thUd. dQa .18 lft1 hlne. yAfil) CidDUP w Ind 0 w • wom.o Uke to do ~
$5 fM delk •nd chain. Add Sa.n Jun National P'orwt. 1323 N Broadwt.y, SA OS-: 9 Haltcnat ll'M. oo.ta M-., wutled, rt~le rat& woril. N4!WpOl't Bead!,
SlO tor bullntlt boun ..,.. Delotta River Mii thru to S Sat Ph. 5CU.18l ~. 71" eetlmllllt IG6t01 Udo arta. ~ aft
....nn.r ---All '"""" """'°""· O!lo. H..,. ll iABYSITl'ING dQ 0< -Oii • i.di9 r:;;;;;
pold ~'.:,';'.y PD.Cfr•· fmll. 11990, 10% On. IU 1M ·;;;'°";;;'°';;;:;' W;;;;;1ntod;;;;;;;;;;;;;;"50;;;;;,i wlll board ..,, --M-..Co. Llctiii«l-·Dem..,.c Holp
m FOJtEST A.VEN'U& mo bal.J, Ewklr.n2Walt.1• Call~-..... MHt10 aft ' PM LIVEINS
JAGUNA B&AOI "'· MOob. U!Ah 9'Jll3. SHORT TI RM LOAN llAll'illll--w YARD C1Hm!o 'If""-Li61 ~ PIYI -
....._ 'n1E SUN NEVD, U'l'I cm Or will ccnd4tr ~p Beecti ' Warner A~. H.B. IUa!Jnr Powt:r tool.. D:p, Gearte Byland J&l.*f!tiC:I
0-..S'o .--. ., ...,... wfth ,,,_ "41• Coll --1 p=-tlMlll!. !HH9S3·0< ... IOOl lllD IOI Ji E. ltlh. a.A. ..... ' ---· Hona bic:kpolnt. Pluu.n -· Far le ad to ..u .._, Mllt4oia ~ Ale ao .wm .,.. '!I' 1 dliJ4 Olt 6.l'Ale.l.an CWbtla. lfle.~7'1~
the c10c:k. All &Gill'I. Nnter Mttm _lfW hmk ........ ~-IMMrm• Plnnanlnt. ~
. caD 9141U !Ml .... ~.,Plll JV!lut--
SOCK tT TO 't.:M!
Dlol~
F« DllJlr l'Uot Wut -
-~ • ___________________ _.~ ... ~-------~ . .----... -------------------
---.JC ---
. -
111 DAIL V PILOT -.,, ,,.,. 24, 1968
1 & EMPLOYMIN I JO i5 & r-~LO T JOoS A EMPLOYMENT JOa5 A EMPLOYMENT JOBS & EMPLOYMENT JOU & EMPLOY MINT MERCHANDISE ,OR MERCHANDISE FOR JOllS & EMPLOYMENf
H I W Md, Mon noo SALE AND TRADE.....:S;;.A;.;:L.;oE..;A.;;N.:;D~T.;;R;;.A;.;:0..;;E~ A .. nd.,; Mon A
··-U--7100 Help w!nted. -7200 Help w ....... -7200 Help Wonted, -7200 • p •n Help W1nlod -•• --· -IOOO w...... 75'" l::!!i=·::-::=.:.:"'""=--~= ;.;;;:;...;.;.;;="'-'..;...-·-·i--SALESMAN Womon 7400 Furnllure IOOOFu.,,lture i -:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::;;;;;;::;;;;;~;;\
ifEXECU11VES 1---WANTED -I• f p Id Loctl nuinuf1ctu.rwr hat Oranae ewntles largtlt :AU.:N~~ immediate openln• for: EXPERIENCED = *-ca~~:~J
t 1 job, • Proclu.;tion Reoc:reatlonal Vehicle. Sales-
ELE<TROIHC
ASSIMBLY
8' Wood carved ann diJan, lg. man's cl\air; •
Spanish/Medin· S'"'wroom Samples p,
beaut !abries. ~Pc hexagon dark oak din. set, remteJ'
' ~~t t~0 ;:K Test T.ch. 1
----.-----,N THIS WOR,I(? :~r ==~ea~:;
c t-eer-minded. the rir;ht MEN -E•ming Point lo point w1rln.r
&nd circuit board a ..
11:mbl)'. 2nd shin.
w/black or avoc1do !ramed chairs: 5 Pc BR
set, 9-dr Mr. & Mrs. dresser, lg mirror, 2 • PIRSONNI L
BJ, "El\IOl.OGIST to '"' • Wiremen The foremost manufacturer "'"""" unlimited. o ..... billt> "' 1rn,...... Coll Mr. GERARD '31-M.30
; """'""'· we ore '" .. 1.bllshod of automatic valves and cOflo
commodes, paneled headboard. AGENCY
445 I . 17th St. VALUE $195 -FULL PRICE $429.95 Cotto ,._
APPLY or terms 11 low 11 $3.00 Wffk . 646-4531
Bt ANALYST 10 11s.soo comm.,d1I firm wllh trols has a permanent posl•
jQy e:xdtemenl of future flber1I fringe btntflts.
Agenele•, Women 7300
NEWPORT Marshall
I llM I. 17th ·St. ttems Sold Individually -No Down -S•nta Ana
Use Our Store Charge -No Fancy Front 541.t121 , umlng. Only poople w ith •I tlon for you.
lso F• Positions leist she months t'X· Personnel Agency
133 Dover D r .. N.ll.
1/ut -Quality Values In.side! MALE
AIS;US EMPLOYMENT perience should •pply
(#'ISULTANTS AGENCY to Day Shift 642-3870 Communications Approved Furniture: 2159 Harbor, CM
Dolly t.t, 10.5 Sunday • 541-9660 Factory T raln"s
To $2.41 Hour
J·o·a·s-a"""'EM .... P·L~O·Y~M·E~N~T_J_O_B_S_&_E_M_P_L_O~Y·M·E~N--,I :a· ~a,1~· r!fer~1::~:
rotl Wesrclifl, NB 5'43-7796
!G?S E· 17th St., S.A. 547-6336
C!fast Employment
~ESUME SERVICE
•• AGENCY
Ettita Ana Prot'I Bldi. :l6'7o Santa An1 Ave,
C'l(t• Me.. 642-9611
Hrn;S:ll am -S pm Mon-Ft1.
H. W•n!ed, Men 7200 ,. .. :: SKILLED .. u AND l! UNSKILLED
t.IJ;N NEEDED NOW
FJU. VACANCIES IN
DEPARTMENT
NINGS DUE TO EX·
P.SJON IN OUR QR..
f E COUNTY DIVISIO~.
ARTING SALARY
$120
1 per WMk & up
lf\1$ED1ATE EM PL 0 Y·
I NT FOR THOSE WHO
Q A L I F Y. COt.fPLETE
TRAINING AND RAP·
~ ADVANCEMF.NT. :: ::REXAIR INC.
" ..
lit.ANGE COUNTY DJV.
il'For information call .. [• Ml'.K'lday & Tuesday
• : 774-7251
" " ;; .. •• " •• :1 .. :i
COMPUHR
DESIGN
:! ENGINEER :1 d' . *'151 have preViota lgt-.;i t'{)ITlputer circuit e.'11:-
~rience. This ii an e."<-
'9nent ground Ooor op.
J\Ortunity with a rapidly
~panding local com-
~ny. Call or sex! re·
d me 10 •• •• " " " •• Marshall
tommunicalions ib230 S. Anne St.
:;s•nt• An•, C1lif.
:. 540-2120
" !J:areer Selling
E~llent opportunity f o r
C"fltrently licensed Salesman
tOihave the desire to enter ~ 1pecialized fie ld of ex·
cefnging. Working in Com-
nifrc:ia.1 • lndustriaJ -land,
a.ml high value Residences.
~le with exchange train-iri& prererrecl . Real Estate
~Ing offrrs • challenge to
q•lified men & women who ullik creatively and for
t~fse who desire high in-
c@ie status. \Ve will show
Y:f want to do and how to
Paul Stuart, Re11ltot.
all 6T.">-4070 fQr apPt.
\\'ith 1hnrough
ka wlcdge of sailboats, to
h die customers coordina-
t &. olher assi~ed duties
fdll! sailboat mfg. Fringe
blcflts. Send resume &·. +rY expected to : Mr. Vie-t« J\lo rl ensen. RZll
f.4ikershim Blvd.. North
l&lywood, Calif. !1160a
lllaintenance Man
~~erma.nent pozitlon
l::Donald'a Hamburgers 't Huntington Beach !, ~ Edinger Ave. t: Phone 893-9602
-RINE WAYS MAN
IBc' repair yard exper. req.
S up ways, haulout, paint
f.' Good job for top man.
E ck:ie'1 Boat Yard 67J. ••• i! Boya Wtnted--ag" 12 to 14 evenlngs and
S61urda,ys. Apply now for
~mer work. Work with
!latlon field manager.
train. Transportation
~ 1hed. Phone 546-8697
e iLat Mechanics Helper It lexperien<:l'dl
.ansen M.rin• Corp. :JF Fillcher, Col!la Meu.
" ___..__·'""~~~~~~ YqrNG Man ~ vicinity
~ Nigui!I for llwn cut-
t route. No exper. nee.
' ~dy. 5 ....... '""' l400 r MUii hlivt> auto.
831-11~
DESK CLERK
K• NUes Villa Ma.tin•
> 8. lllll -Drlv" N JrDOrt Beech. ' -!F7-'..;;c::=::..,,.,.-.,.-,-rvn Station Attendant
~18yr. min.
Rm. 646--
mar.kttpJac. tn
Tho DAILY PILOr ~u .. .':~:!:
IXWJl l ..
PARAMETRICS
929 Baker StrHt
Cost• Meu
549-2221
CITY OF
NEWPORT BEACH
ELECTRICIAN
S57G-S701 per month cur-
rent. $636-$713 proposed
Ju I y lst. Immediate
opening for Journeyman
Electrician to perform
11 a r i e I y of electrical
maintenance work. Per-
manent and secure with
e.iccellent fringe benefits
Md workin11: conditions.
Call or come in 10
Personnel Office
CITY HALL
3300 Newport "Blvd.
Newport Beach, C1llf.
17141 673·2110
• Turret Lathe Operator
• Radial Lathe Operator ,
• Drill Press Operator
• Punch Press Operator
Swing Shift
• Turret Lathe Operator
• Engine Lathe Operator
• Radial Drill Operator
• Screw Machine Oper.
• Production Machinist
CALL OR APP~ Y
CLA-VAL . CO.
17th & Placentia
Secrot1ry $486
Front of.ftce ~. aood *ill.a. Cost ol llvini: bo-
nus, a fun job. !fee by ap-
plicant)
P•yroll Clk to $500
Xlnt working cond. !\tin 2
yrs exp. Familiar with IBM.
Utt by applicantl
Production
Coordin•tor to $391
Production oootrol or re.lat-
ed exp. Lite t)'tlinx, {fee
pald)
Customers Serv. to $425
1\1.in 2 years general olfice
plus good phone abillt;y.
typr 50. (ftt pakt)
General Office $375
Good g61. ofc. background,
type 00. Personable. {fee
paid)
Leg•I Secy $500
Xlnt firm, Min 1 year exp.
(fee by applicantl
Siles Dept. Clerk $400
Attractive and sharp, with
good typing. Light SH and
good phone technique. \fee
by ap.l
PBX Receptionists $375
NEEDED . , . three beaut).
ful girls, Must be. intelligent,
OA•ell motlv1ted with good
skills. Typing, SH helpful.
\fee wkll
2230 S. Anne St.
Santa Ana, Calif.
540.2120
An equal opP01tunity
employer
Statistical
Typist
Experienced. Permf.
nent, good opportun·
ityl C•ll or •pply:
Cla-Val Co.
17th & Placentia
Costa Mew
548-2201
An equal opportunity
employer
Cosmetic Sales
Full lime
Apply P•rsonnel
10-4 Mon thnJ Fri
Help Wentod Help· W1ntod
Women 7400 .....;Wc.o;;.;m.:.:•;.;•.:_ ___ 14_00_ 1 --------TRAIN FOR
Job Openings
IBM
tELF.CI'RIC TYP&REPRO)
DMV
(DEPT OF MOTOR
VEHICLES I
STENOTYPE
(MACIUNE SHORHANn)
BOOKKEEPING
llNC PAYROLL&: TAXES)
DICTAPHONE
<TRANSCRIPTION
OPERA WR I
TERMINOLOGY
(LEGAL-MEDICAL!
REFRESHERS
<GREGG-STENO. TYPE)
REGISTER BY J UNE 28
For July 8 Term
For Appoin tment
T'
FACTORY
TRAINEES
Uachine Ope!-ator Trait\eel'i
for Plastic Moldina. 25 years
&: crvrr, aU shifta:. 850 W. 18th
Costa Mesa.
Jobs-Min, Wom. 7500
SHO£ SALES
Experienc•d
Full T ime
Top Commissions
Exctllent Benefits.
Apply Personnel
10-4 Mon thru·Fri
ROBINSON'S
FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH
An equal opportunity
employer
Meehanlcally inclined.
Tool Desl9n•r
To $150 Sta rt
Fe• Negotiable
S Years experience on
board. as designer.
Accountant
As1ist1nt Controll•r
From $800
Fee Negotiable
Degree, with eXperienu in
CPA offi ce. Aggressive-and
re,sponsible person for au~
ervisor,f '(IOSition.
Electro Pitting
Foreman
F•o"" $140 Weok
3 Years experience. Know
electron1c PCB tPChni·
ques and AO!utions.
AUTOMOTIVE ·
Serv. Station TrM .... $1.65 .
Parts Helper . .. . . . lo $400
Drivers, Helpers .. to $3.2'2
Tru'Ck-Van Drivers to $3.47
Forgn Car Medt's from $3.50
Trbu ~ Mech from ~
MACHINE SHOP
DISPATCHER Costa Mesa 548-2201 F.C. Bookp• to $700
With C.P.A .. or AC(.'OUnting
bkgr, 'fee pa.id) ROBINSON'S
546-7391
EDUCATIONAL
CENTER
State Dept. of
Emplayment
2nd Fl. -2817 S •
Bristol, S'.A •
--M'"•""tu_r_e-.C~•'•h"i~e-,--ITrans/Air Cond. Mech .
•nd M1rgin Clerk SllO + com . Must be familiar w i l h An equtl opportunity employer
madline shop pnictices,
an_d ability to read blue-I
pnnl$,
MISS UK AGENCY FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT .BEACH
Experienced in brokerage General Mech fl20 + com.
business. Approximate sa.1-Silk Screen
ary $400 a. month, Salary
• Engine Lathe
M1chinists
FH by Applictnt An equal opportunit;y
employer
negol1a.ble depending on CK· $2.50 Hr.
45 Hr Min Worl< Weck
Profit Sharing Maintenance
Mechanic
Secrcta.cy .......... " .. S500 perienc!!. Experienced but will con-
Secy/It bkpg •....•.••• ~
Secy/legal trne ••••••.• S:MXI
General Of.lice • . . • . • . . 1375
Secy/It SH . . • .. •• . .. . $381
AClltS Payble ••... :·:." S~72
~ypunch/2 yrs e:-tp ... $372
Rec-pt /Dental . . . . . . 10 $3~
Goodbody & Company sider artistically inclined.
LAGUNA BEACH HS grad, with military
J. C. CARTER CO. Relief R.N. Assemblers Call for appointment complete, u · trainee.
4-12 P.r.t
Mrs. Kirner 4M-8003 Administrativ•
671 W. 17th St.
Cost• Mesi
541-3421
• CARPBITERS
~ Or mabile home
f'xpttimce prdernd.
Exc.llmt bendi:t.s.
Appjy in penori
ElPLORfR
MOTORHOMf CORP.
4000 C1mpus Drive
Newport Betch
• Turret lathe
Machinists
• Drill Press
Operators
Solnf' opmillbl Cll da::v
Wit and IQIDt> Oil nl&ht
"'""'
.f5 Hr Mm Wcrl \\"eek
Profit Sharioe
J. C. CARTEi CO.
671 W. 17th St.
Cost• Mew
548-3421
E'xperien« required in
hydraulic: S)'Slems. steam
and 'A·eJding. Only qual-
ified applicanls need ap-.
ply 10
Per-sonnel Office
U.S. Divers
Company
3323 W. Warner
Santo Ana
An equal opporunity
employer
Fu by Employer
S<cyl '-"'1 ........... l500
Pt Tim' Girl Fri .. to S2 hr.
410 W. Coast Hwy., N.B.
Call Betty Bruce. &J6..393S
Beach Area Openings
Secy. F et p!tid • . . . .. . S$IXi
1 Girl ofc., Npt Bch.
Gtrl Friday.~ _ ..... $475
fee reim. Stable, mature.
Gen 01c-Fl"t' paid n;o.sm
Type, phones. inv t.'flt:rl.
Medic&l.. ln>n1 otc ..•.. SJ50
Dent.al Cir asst ..• UX)..S32S
Fet> Jobs Ali;o
J. R. Pierce A&soc. Agency
1885 N'ev.-pon. C.M. 642-6720
Sec)os, many ........ to S6IJ)
f . C. Bookkeeper •. to S5'Xl
Legal Set-y ............ S5ZJ
D."'IV • . . . . . • . • • • • . . . . • • S;..ao
P.ece-ptlonist . ......... S-KK1
Full time R.N.
8-4:30 A.M.
Excellent Opptyl
Huntington Beach
Convalescent Hospital
18792 Delaware
Huntington Beaeh
~7-351~
PUBLIC RELATIONS
& SALES
Or1n9e County De1ler
N1tional Organiution
Salary phn frep hospit.<11liia-
tion, com.minion, bonus.
vacation. Car necessary.
Must eam S525 a month
minimwn. A p p I y 12730
\\'estern Al•enUf'. Garden
GroVt". ~y J~ 25th 9
a.m. 01\'LY.
Dana LaOOratories, a ra-
pidly growing rornmerci·
at electronics test instru·
ment manufacturer has
several openings for ex-
perienced electronic as-
semblers. Requires 6
months to 3 years reeent
experience in electrotiic
mnpooent assembly op-
eration&. lofust know col·
or cocW and hand solder·
ing techniques. Know)•
~e of schematics is de-
sirable but not mand•·
tory. Visit
DANA
laboratories, Inc.
WAITRESSES 1: Dishwash-
ers, al l shifts. Ex:per only
need apply. Denny's Coffee
Shop, 1600 S. est Hwy.,
Lllgun1 Bch. No phone calls
plse.
REAL ~ATE. ShouJchi1
you be sellina the hottest
area I Huntington Beach?
Call fot" ~. Village R. E.
962-44n 546-8100
TEACHERS
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT
Phone Mn. Hobkirk
83S-4f(71 or 835-4044
BEAUTY OPERAWRS
Full or Part time
mE BEAlITY SALON
• 6ofl-4718 •
FRY COOK. Man er Woman,
e-itperlenced or will train.
673--4110
School1-lnstrudfon 7600
Offic.-Supervisor
Start $475
Experienced administrator
with ~me coUege pre-
ferred !or clerical and
supervisory responsibility.
Electrontc TKh
To $3.25 Hr.
Have pl'Ollen skills knowl-
edge of electronic assem-
bly production. Trouble -1.
As1i,t1nt Mgr.
To $125 Week
Need shaI'P young man
with previous experience
in mocl.em car wasb opera-
tion.
Aircraft
Interior Design
To $650
Public Relations
and Sales
PART TIME
Help needed now
Ideal p;ir1 I i m e job
working 5 nights a .,.,.eek
from 6 to 9:30 p.m. Pay
r a nges 1cart f rom
Medical AMist • • . .. . .. S-lOO
Trainee, legal secy ..•. $400
General Office . . • . . . . . $350
Trainee, med assist .. S:tl.'i
ACCOUNTNG C L i'RK':
!'>-1ust have rttent toxper w
hand!C' varied func:tions. 2401 Cempus Drive
... Irvine, Calif.
An equal opportunity
employer
--· 2 Years college, or equiva·
SOIOOL C1tildreo's vacation lent on-the-job experience.
rates. Olilcoot ]~Lesson
Typing School. MS-2859. 173
Del Mar, c .M.
S400 per month ba!e 10
start plus commission
plus auto allowance.
Work local a~a. Excel-
len1 career opportunity.
Call
• Precision
Sheet Metal
Mechanics
$228 per month
No experience neces-
1ary. We need nine ex-
tra men now. Must }lave
lived in this area t w o
years or longer. Call for
1ppointmen1 .
Den!al Assistant . '' ... ' C!"Jl
Trainee ,.~ile am .... 1294
Train<'<'. Office .•...... S286
AU.SET AG ENCY
4.17 W. 19Lh, C.M. 642-6752
B O OKKEEPER-F\Jll
c·har;;e: Thro triaJ baJ It
ability to handle P&L. Ftrm
located i:n San O emente.
For appt call 492-115.1
LAGUNA Becu::h Uni t I e d
School Dislrict is accepting
CITY OF
NEWPORT BEACH
lEGAL illNO ARGUS applications for 2 positioM,
12 mo basis, re-rords clerk &
Work Near Home &eCretary. Good skills re--S452·$54!1 per month cur·
SWIM Lessons: Your pool.
Private-or group. !148-212()
aft 6 PM
MERCHANDISE FOR
SALE AND TRADE
Furniture 8000
Mr. Beiler 642-7352 Traintt, HS grad .....• S303 quired. Contact Per:lonnel rent. $48645SI propoeed Mr. Nelson
774-7251 Trainee, Bkpr Secy .. to $400 Office, 550 Blumont. Phone-,JuJy l11t. Excellent bcne-Furniture returned lrom dis---Mach1·n1'sts 'T'rainE'E'. ).('gal secy '''' S400 494-8546 fits. Immediate vacancy play studios, mocl.el homes.
Dr1ft1m1n/Designer-• Career Typisl tme ...• S32S GENERAL Office Girl Part fOf" steno Witfi ab;llty 10 decorators cancellation,
J\techanical draftsman rr-SaJe-s Secy .• , • . • . . • • • • S460 · k f 2 Take ... ,.,,,~ •t 100 5 ........ isti &. Medit•~••o <I'. "red ASSISTANT M 11me wor a ttt 5 p.m. or u•... "'" .,...,. ... q.u1 for permanent J)Olli· M•lf & Lath ed. Secy ..••. , , . , . , , S'150 :I hoorll per day. Apply w.p.m. And type 5 w.p.m. RD FURNITURE ~on. Growth potential, min. I e COLLEGE MAN ~pro Typist ••• ·• •• · to S5;ll Hamburger Henry 2 136 to work as ~tarial a~ 18« N rt Bl d CM
'" C<'xp. Apply ai · · • our internat.ional t i rm """'ad J\f11.kcr '·· · · ·· · · · S~OO Placentia Ave., Costa Mesa. sistant to Auma.nt Cily •w~"" v ·•
OLUMBIA Trans:com c r now hiring a limited ARGUS EMPLOYMENT 642-84S.1 ask for Margot Attorney. Previous le-ga l every .~.t t1l ·9
YACHT CORP. ; 0 p. number of atudents for ffiNSULTANTS AGENCY e-xpericnce desirable. A.-.. Wed .. Sat. & Sun. 'ti.I 6
"7-·1~ 2013 w li" ""'SeamS tress ,.. w·• • ;> " ... -.ormic k A11e. 851 full time work during eslc u, NB 548-7796 ply ~..,.,Sat. &: Sun. 'til 6
Costa Mesa CW. 18th St. summer. 1624 E. 17th St., S.A. 547-6336 Experienced only. Contart ANTIQUE lamp table S12,
SHTPPING Room clerk to do 6°4'1
2•.9000Mesa $115. nar week MR. FULTON, TiiE GOWN Personnel Offic• large Colonial wing chair
k •-Help W•nt--' SHOP Z726 E ast Coast High. 135 •m 11 4 d h 115 pac ing, shipping, l Q c a I QuelifiC'<I mrn will be .., CITY HALL , a rawer c es ,
deli11eriE.'s, occasional &mall _ _ consid<'IW lor p 1 rt Women 7400 way. Cororia dcl Mar. 673-3300 Newport Blvd. round oak table SJS. Spanish
maintenance j)ba. Mus-t YOUNG MEN 18 to 25 lime work tor the corp-0-EP=:-:-----"-·--""-'-·-.====--Newport •-, .. h, Callf. type student table witb "· E _ _, ENDABLE Babysll!cr & s~~ -' d 115 "'" •032 Sil nave own car and good driv. xpeti!!nc~"' OI.' not. Learn oration after summer. . <:A..OJ::.iARY rawer , '"'1'""I , . I Ille housework. AM tll •. p .... "' · k K' Pl N H · h'· I~ record. Mi\eag, poid. sa es with ti guarantee. If For ""r!!Onal inccrvil'w ..... -.. me -trinncc o . H.B. -----1ng5 . ewport e1g ...,,
P · I "'" Mon-f'ri. Vic of Bolsa & I ffi c-e BOOKKEEPER e ,...,,.,...,. ,.,.,,,·... you can quahly can otter .. .,, ~•0.118.1 c., ....... ~ 0 2 ...aw o . ce. ~ aS1 ...... ing, TRADITIONAL
" ... """' U\" ........ ;?' Edward's. ()y,.-n trans. S20 .. _ ... A -~ .,,..., Acc .. ~. receivable: cxper. near • new CROWN MFG. CO,, INC. you: p.m. suui·ui...,,... !162-69U. truftwood oval din .!et 6
$155 k per wk. 892-9170 aft • prcll'rred. Apply: , • 651 W. 17th St., C.M. • per wee sa lary WOMEN Expe r. lilmokr---;;--p w .D. SCHOC"K co. chrs. beautiful brcaldrool.
SKILLED Yotmg machi ~lit e A new Cadillac JOURNALISM GrAd;t:;;: for HAffi HU N TE R Ml S. Crecaville, Santa Ana $425. Hardwood Contemp 6'
with a yean experience • Mln~g.ement CAREER Puhlic Relations as~ign-SALON in s.A. &: N.B. e 54S.2277 e studio couch trS-548-7364
minimum for a.Jl -arou-" ,.. b Tra1n1n9 ment. Yea r round. full tim!!. 644-1484 10 to 5 Mon thru Fri :;::,:;:;===-===c-1 ·~ w f ·~ m· OPPORTUNITY I Camp Fire Girl._ So nt11 Ana Babysitter wanted, my home. DANISH Teakwood dining shop work. 45 hour wrek dee .urni ... , c~~ ing eXC!!Pt • 541_7114 AID working mother 5 day Own tran11. 7:30 to 5:30, 5 tft.ble. 19" Ma f n tl 11 o :<
minimum. sire lo m ...... e money. Ap-Join todays rastest growin~ .c=---c week. noc:.i to S PM. 2 day. Vic Brookhunt & Ad-blck:/whl T\(,. Va r i o u 1
CROWN MFG . CO .. INC. ply 1500 Adamll, SUitc 303. prolcssion-~tutuAI Fund salm; \\'AlTH I-SSE.~-:-E:irper only i:hldm , It hsMJork. own ams, H.B. Call irnm!diate-rnaple-pieces.~6-2863
65J W. 17th St., C.M. Costa Mes& 11-4 p.m. dailj-. No e"""rir~cc-ncccssa..... nrrd 8 JY11)1. Den ny's Coffee traru;p . ......_ 1759 aft 1 PM I A"'" • ~ 51....... 1~""' s ~1 H ~ y! 962-7621 OJSI'OM 9' aofa new $185.
LOT MAN SALES V.'e tra.in . lull Qr part time L;;ma ·&b. No ;hon. c:h;; DR ESSM AKI NG & AT'TRAC11V"E"'""W;;;O°"MEN=""'1"'m-Blk leather chair top con-
Wlth some mechanical ex-REPRESENTATIVES Mutua l Fund Advisors, lse ALTERATION:;, must be mediate openings, part Ott ditlon $4{). ~
perience I: dl'tail exper-Leading I n depend r n I Inc. : A~ y ., 1 TT experienced. 673-4134 full time. S60 week, 90J'M $12'i. &16-12f:o.
icnce. See Jol\n or Joe. spedallst.1 dealing in over Np: B 1r.03 \Vestcliff 642-6422 • ER . Light 100 mutual lu d and" houseke...ino , 1'1y home. • BAR to.1ATD, experienced eves. We train. Add to fafni. VELVET Sectional NEWPORTER ~1CYT'OD"" n s. c-·.; lllg S.A. 1212 N. Broadway ~.-~~ 2l l · ·
2036 Harbor Blvd.'"" in Or~e County, ihis a an 547-83.11 Ovm trans. 842-2241 aN 6. over · Phone-lor ap-Y mcome. 4%-5427 Davenport. Gold-Modem
o Pp or tun it Y ro enter Young Anractivf' Orthodon-pohT\me-nt. 545.9S6,_3 ___ OCCASIONAL Babyilitter $200 531·7936
S E RV I CE ST AT I 0-.; dignttied profc:;!iurial s!!llin.t: ------==== · · C'. Saleslady needed. Able to lJvl!-in w'---=========i Sal · PLATER FOREMAN -tic assistant ..... 'q)('r, not nee '":" -esman. Expcr lu ne-up .r., tulJ or part time lnvr1tmcnt Call 642.15,'j) Experience in Jewelry '1«<' out of town. 19 mo old chikl. Office ~urnlture 8010
br11.kes. OldC'r man fine. Top exp not necffUTY. wr lr:oin . lmml'd!ale opport\lnity lor -.,.-~-~~---I li years or over. 548-3402. Refs. 642--4910 or &4&.8461.
salary I comm. lnt<'rviC"w 547~. Mutual Fund pe-rson exper. hi Prt'C\Bion Telephone Solicitor; top
A,\.!' only. Chevron Sla Investors lnc. 2100 N. Main. eleclro-plallng for printed romrnlssiona; experienced: BUS Cple Want wOOianGr BARMAIDS. · • ·
Adams & ,\tegnoHa, HB. ' Santa An1 ch~it board•. Mutt kn 0 w for interview: 546-704.1 girl, hsewrk 1 tu 7:ll. No .• · llild GO.CO
hod Silt or SUn, tJ5 wk 6'n-8715 DANCERS 2,,.~='!n ~a~<;'; th~~ Marine Carpenter ;:s ; °'mfl~ai:~: P:u~T n::"ec!~~::ra~;: BABYsrITER Needed. 2 SJOO per week .
Expcr RA c Q)e mcnt11. Xlnt location. GTh-~ am•tl children. l\ty homt , -,,,=63&.54".'=-83-=or~633m3~~--I · Y llreJ vrm, Experienced, for boal ovt'r-CHEMFLEX Npt Shores 642-7364 41ves. WANT,ED: Ma!UJ'e lady corn-~hSo· Coa.s1 Hwy, Laruna baul yard. Call m.-1833 3767 Birch, NB o:..-.,_ £ARN S3-S5 hour pBrt time, panlon for same. Jn °"' n.....--A _.._,.._,,,,, ove-r 20. ruUf'r Brush Co. e OFTICE GIRL good w It h ==-=-,.--~,.---I ..,...~'3ide or Contact Man-Etfu•I opportunity ,.mplo)'t't ""',..<'•· MacGr'ior Ytichb. N~. 2 er mort: day11 Autu Trimmer. Top wq't"I IJf'I, at 1550 Harbor Dr. N. Mt'I. Edwards S-16-57-L';. •-weeklY. Noon to T. Need car,
& co. benefits, p11.ld V31Cf· Oce.naide-. Leiding Import O.t ler MAKE ·;;,,...=c:mttt.::'::""'p"ar1=-i"1m=-=f! Phone-. 673-t95G __ refs. 494-5703 eves
I Ions. St<!11dy employment. o-'RA"'°">"·"i1;~MA~N~W~H~h-1~00-,-.,-,-h I Jlas .. ope1nl•s• r1or quallftcd wl( ~I .,, optbial. Mn. 8,r,~~ ~·•blom' "".,.ar~·'"H".a. e WA~ . experlmccd,
Call Mike. M<MJJTO knowledge o.I 111.ilboa.1.1, ror "'u o • Hmtn 811Uf')' $4(1--1932 962--nbll ,,., .. u --· • Graveyard a. swine only.
SERVICE SlaUon Mechanic sailboftt mtii:.: l<'ntl T't!frufne Def Iii Man SALESGIRLIJ, 8 e-r wee n F V., Mrt. Brown 540.lS32 Cottage Coffee Shop ~ W.
Salary open. Enco OU Co. wtth s•lary expected: frll\ie Servic. Writer %:.j....G, ~~ onl7. ~ COOK -H~ke<eper. 5 day, 19th St, Colta Me.a
·-~--H NB Lot M11n Sh ... -· ..._ c-,_ •"P't 2 •dlt• prJ 1,· ... 1n <>p ......., ..__,., wy., · · bene-ftla. Mr V l ct o r :.,,. ~ ,...., 1• • ' a ' ' LVN 3-U Ch&JEe Nurw Ai>-
EXPER. JlectwUc with o;n Merten.en. 8ZU Lankf!f'ahlm Detn l•wi1 lmporta HOUSEKEEPER Yor eldttly refs. $300 673-7871. ply irl ~ Brlltol Conv.
tools; ~: pltn(y o1 Blvd .. Nor t b Hoil)l'W'ood, 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9.103 lady, Uvr In. R.ettrtftct Oper1ton., Sewing Hoep. 1209 W. tkmlock Way
WG'k. ?14T Ambeim, C.M. Calif, 91811 OIAttGE m tH-46.12 tSM> MOCl'CN NB 642--3116 8.A.
•
• .
JOHN MASON
21 N. PORTOLA RD,
LAGUNA llEACH
FIREWORKS
SPECTACULAR .....
ANAHEIM
STADIUM
On '""' ...
PleUt C9ll 642-5678, ext. 229
betwMn ~ and 1 p.m. to
dl1m YD'a'" tidcets. (Nomi Count> .... ,_ ..........
"°'~·
FEMALE
Jr. Steno
To $400
Fee Paid
Join • happy ,,-oop. Th is
is a pet client. Some office
C'Xperie9ce needed here,
able to tyrpr 50 and know
Mlorthand.
Secret1ry
From $350
Can you speak a foreign
language'? Young. attrac·
live, type 60. No shorthand
nccesYry. A real glamour
job.
Utility Girl
$550 + MilHgo
Do you like W travel? -
around the country, that is.
Never a dull momenl-If
yoo know VA and FHA
l>flCkaging and escrow.
thltl is kr you .
Super Snooper
To $425
Company needs experienced
CredH & Collection gal. Ac-
curate t)'ping.
Accounting Clerk
5400
It yoo like io worit with
figures, thei this is for
you. Make up payroll. Run
10 key. Maintain general
ledger.
Full Charge Bkppr.
To $600
Thie cornp&ny want5 some-
one who CUI prepe.no fin-
ancial 1tate-ments. Ugtit
typi~.
MEDICAL
Front OttQ ........ to $4SO
Nursef!; Nds • •• . . • to $2.00
Medical Reep ...... to S.175
Live In Hsk::pn • • • • • • S22S
Cuetl Home Trnes • • S1 .65
DlshWMhers , . . . . • . . . $1.65
URGENTI
URGENT! URGENTI
C:.U. you operate 11. Btlr-
roua:h'a 1500! Tbey will
pey ~ les8 tha.n $400.
Will be tr•ined to thia:
company's system.
Also FM Positions
a ¥3-:+-A • -• M • -g iZ ZZK '&Zt? n mb"F#ttec =osss seem==-•---
.
MERCHANDISE l'Oll MIRCHANDISI l'Oll
SALi AND TltADI SAi.i AND TltADI
Tolovl1i..t l20J Mloc. w.-1610
'!1:~, !.s"'.'~ SONY TV
"'"· -· m.om HtaclqllCll'terl ........ 0ooU 1020 TIWISIB?ER POl\'?ABLES
Cir Bolt Hom. BMda
-UHd
!Wtabla. Jaw boy., -
21" Inf'. m.adi. A mllc.
"" Mwn 4 pm a T om I Victoria A .. D, CM $29.95 UP
Mlscel11neout l600 --10 DAY ESCROW
. Sale Open Until Ev--or 10 days
Please Come!
!60 ..,... aw.. Cooch. lawn
mower 1'15. Cttamk tile 100
1111 ft, 30c aq ft. 2 Sets of
wood foldin1 doon: $1 each.
Larte p&intin& lptlr'ODt 3x5 n•. 2 Hand ..-po1n1.
in11 $15 each. Cradle $25,
mattrtu I: be.by bed $7.50.
'----1 Brin(,.... mult>...,.i tape
2 Specials
rtitzer orsll'I mod. 4150
ed walnut w/Cord. $689.
rand piano, A·l inside -
taide needs your help! $599.
WAILICH'S ·MANNING'S
5«>-2165 * Costa Mesa
PRIVATE Party anxious to
bu:r PtANO from private ........ -
ttCOlder for trade.
280 E. 15th St -SCR·AM-LETS
ANSWERS
Sexton • Poach • Axial • J~
c:und • CONCLUSION.
It all the economists in the
workl were plattd ~ tf)
end, ~ wouldn't ttt1ch a
CONO.USJON.
WANTED
TUNSl'ORTATION
..... & Yochto -TRANSPORTATION
Molorcycl• 9300
HODAKA WJ \. buOt e4glne,
Cnian&a tront 6 rear, 21"
front whH1, chrome frame,
ilUI tank. B•autlfu l ! --'S2 t'ORVAIR • $250
Automatic. Black I. M.11"-
oon. OelA. M'T.J.659
TltANSPORTATlbN
ht'!'""" <9d 1 o• 9600 U.... c.,, 9f01 UMd Cars 9900
MG IUICK COIYEI IE • '
1960 MGA 1800 Xln t
mtthanklll eond. ~ dl1e
btlkt•. Part. rtttored. $900.
548-1362 &ft fi
PORSCHE
(2) '67 Ponche 911 S.
"""""· AM/FM .-adlo. Recaro .eat, low mile&.
lmm~ate ddlvtl')'!.
Red er Bahama ~llow
8081 'GARDl'N GROVE: BL.
GARDEN GROVE
~or SM-22114 ==-PORSCHE '58 Cpe, red
w/blk lnt. Am/fm .
OiromN, PlrelUa. belldera.
11650 Prl '""". 5J6.-0290
SUNBEAM
'II COllVE"ITE -· )'lllow; blk. tater., aD
power. S2'1 Auto., xln1 eond. onr . ..-.!3900.~
COUGAI
'II COUGAR llRT GT. aulo,
RAH, air, chrome wbk.
ndlal, looded. 1315Q. Woold
con&ider DatlUll or TO)'Ota
pickup In trade. --aft 5or wktodl.
DODGE
LEAVING COUNTRY .
MIJgj' llLI., .. DODGE
1963 BUICK DART, GT, VI, '""'· po,
SKYLARK llAH. -xlnl <00<!, !1900
·'!
• .. .,,
' . ' ' • ,~.
' ' . . I , ... ..
' .
". • .... r ... ..,.. ... _ ·~1
••• •w·e•r· Mt ., .
Al Roberts
Power steerine, bucket -.ts; 1..,,"',,.-=,,,"'=",., .... ,,....1"1,__,_~
---------w/w.'$7Ci. 'M DODGE Dart. U>aded. Claryaler·
• •••••• ,. J 1961 ALPINE . NEW
ENGINE, IOWld body, cletll
interior.
;650 or best oUer. 545-t86S
'61 SUNBEAM 1MP $1000.
2363 Weslmlnattt Place,
C.M, 648-Sl.1)
• 1960 TRlA '695
Excellent condltioll
Private OWner. 499-2957
•
m-Met ~-. fO,OOD Mo-Ortamal owner. 146--JllOS
CADILLAC FALCON
'57 CADll.J,.A.C 4 dr nevme, 1---------
.,, ... .... """'· Jaw ., 0...,. miles, famiq car $425. Impala HT ledM VI
546-5141 automatic, JOWel' steerl!w
"" 196'7 El. DORADO, leather, Holiday Rambler
AM FM radio, stereo alr 1969 Harbor &C2-6Q23
cond, new tl:rft 613-6635
CHEYIOLET
'61 Falcon
F\ltwa cpe.
"" HoUd.113 Rambler
1969 Harber ~
FOID
1'59 ford Galaxi.
' door I orl&tnal owntr' '/tty cleu. Must tee to apprec-
iate $l'IO 1931 Skit! Orcle,
Hunttnrton Beach.
80 FORD 9 ~npr O:iun-
'IJ'Y Squl~. Immaculate!
1465. 67l-8040
'62 Falcon Ste.ha\ W-con
M•t Sell. $395.
642~ll5.
'614 Dr. Ford Sta Wag. R&H,
pcFI\' S&:B, excel. cood. $450.
~.
'56 FORD. Fair cmdftion.
MUST 5El1-! $125. 5t0-33IO
MERCURY
... ..........
. ..
U.llACUDA
•9900
DEUYEIS
1960
---------llll C•inln• .... $399
'63 MERC Coonley OW...
'" waa. R/H, lnl -~ "" $399 tu&raae rack, auto, PS. new Plyin••t~ • • • • • • ,
""'· Xlnt """'-19 ••· ,... $599 ' 548-<H54 Clll•¥t•ltt •••••• ~ ... ~~row:r==~Sla--w~....,--.11
RIH, pow/s, w/a/w, ex·
eel cond. $1200. 1168-.nG
,... $899
Far cl • •, , , •, •••
=======II'"' $899 MUSTANG c'""""''1 • •• •
~~~~ .......... $999
'"' $999 D•rt H.T. • •• , , •
,,.. $999 "•"'"' ......... .
"" $1499 v.11 ... t w, .....
:::~ ........ $1599
1966 $2099 Wlitlwot HT .. , •
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1967 $2999
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lt67 $4899
C•4. O.Vlll• ••
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.ROBERTS ............. ........
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,OJ\.R Y PU,OT EDITORIAL PA.GE ' I .
Harbor District
The Orange County Board o! Supervisors surprised
many persoDJ when tile members last week voted 4 to
1 to retain the coQ.Dty Harbor District. Th~. action wa$ tar from routine ; there was more to it than ap-
pears on the surface.
One underlying factor was the board members•
feeling that they were being given the "gunl>blnt" treat·
ment by the Orange County League of CfUes and by
Assemblyman John v. Bri~gs CR-Fullerton).
Briggs, without. contacting the supervisors ~ore
band, had introduced a bill in the Legislature which
would abolish the Harbor District. Last week his rep-
resentative announced that Briggs will amend the bill
to put the issue on the ballot next November.
Another political thorn in this situation is concern-
among supervisors that 1ome of the politicians in and
out of the league of cities would like to use the league
as a vel'Jcle to run county government. By its nature,
of course, the league as an organization is not account-
able to the voters.
The league of cities, at the urging first of Hunting-
ton Beach and then of some inland cities, came out for
dissolution of the district and conversion to a county
department.
Some cities feel a single combined harbors, beaches
and parks operation· simply makes for better adminis-
tration and orerations.
Some fee that as long as a separate Harbor Dis-
trict exists, with its commission and tax , the county
will give disproportionate attention and funds to har-
bors and beaches, and too little attention to inland
parks.
Others frankly !eel that no more taxes should be
spent for harbors and beaches and that somehow these
facilities should become totally self-sustaining.
Some coastal communities want to take over some
or all harbors and beache11 furlctions, with the county
providing most or all operating funds. Huntington
Beach contends it can do the job better and at less cost
A Way to Jam
Neighbor's TV
One of the great and essential in·
ve nt.ions of our time has been prac· ~tically Ignored by the press. Even the
tNew York Times SQ misjudged its im·
]>ortance as to devote only a few lines
'at Ult bottom of page 46 to its an-
.nouncement.
According to a Reuters dispatch
;from Rlccione, Italy, a young 1.talian
;.electronic student has invented a
. cheQp and portable jamming device
.that w i 11 completely silence a
:netgljxtr's televisioo let when it gets
:too noisy.
To tho$e of us who travel ex-
tensively, this new invention comes
like a cup of cold water to a wanderer
in the desel"t.. For most of us suffer
from what may be called the Holiday-
Mote1-1yndrome: thin walls and Joud
television sets.
MOST OF 111E NEW motels,
whatever their other advantag~. are
built with paper·thin wall!; and a> man
returning to-his room at 10 p.m., ex·
hausted from tfle day's doings, falls
onto his bed only to hear the television
sets on either side of him blasting
away witb their Ol"ganized inanitie:!I.
ln other countries, he might be
tempted to complain, er.ther to the
management or to the offenders
themselves. But in America, for some
strange reason, the complainer is coo-
sidered the bffc!nder.
SO HE LIES THERE silently and
suffers., uot.il J ao.m. or so, then fialls
into • fitful slumber -ooly to b<
awakened at 6:30 a .m. by an early
news nut who has turned on the boob
tube to full volume, vibrating every
wall partition in the whole tremulous
structure. And he is always in tlle
room next to mine.
Now, hallelujah. willh our d1e<p and
portable jamming device, we silent
sufferers can strike back when they
$'.et too noisy. When they jump, we
Jam ; and it will even be worth getting
ttp bleary.eyed in the dawn, just to
discombobulate the TV sets of ttiose
m&1:utinal morms.
I HA VE LONG HELD that th<
tolerance for noise Ui in direct inverse
proporlion to lntelligeoce -tllat peo-
ple of low mental voltage absolutely
require .a IUgh level of noise at all
times, to drown out the dis6008.nt
humming of their defective mmdJ.
The transistor zombies, who mume
aliOng a street witih a blaring bail-game
held one inch from their ears, are only
the most obvious and tragic examples
of this.
Until now, we who re<: oil from flee·
tronic noise have had no recourse but
quiet curses, petulance, and ear·plugs.
The young inventor from Rlccione is
our sonic savior -a ma11 we held In
far higher esteem than be who first in·
vent.ed the television tube . For exery
parent knows it idi harder ti!> get. a-TV
set turned off than turned on.
C~_rrent Female Prose
Tl was an ordinary luncheon meeting
!or the office working ladles at their
neil rby quick. service grill a o d
be:>nery, the "ln-and·Out Club."
They were hen:pecking their pro·
blems as usual. A curious male
bystander who hcoppened to be
munching his hamburger and drinking
gr:sly Wet milk alone nearby, was
s:-mewhat J;>e.mused to hear these
lY!'l ical examples o( current female
~4:>se in the industrial arena :
"I would tattier stay single forever
t'1::.n marry any of the available jerks
i ~ my place."
"~le isn't a bad guy to work for if
) J J don't mind spending eight hours a (~v with a per'son who wears a clip-0n
~ ···e11t bow tie ar)d whose mind falls
r .•rll at 9:02·a.m."
"J WOULD DESCRIBE him as an
e· ·1'>yer who is just finding out he ls
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
Why do all the foreign cars use
loud mufners while the Ameri-
ca n cart: can't get away with
it? And also, why is It that those
little foreign cars seem to get
aw.,. with vlolating all the speed
la"' while standard-1Jze get
nilled. but r1&ht now!
-V. E. D. and D. W. A.
""'-......... ~ ,......,. ..._.. ... ............... _ .... .... ,......, ......... __, ........ ....
·,
•
tied alive to a wile he doesn't want to
be found de-ad with ."
"When he uses a word 1 don't un·
derstand, I simply cross my legs -
and he starts the sentence all over
again."
"His basic problem is that his wife
does understand him -and so do I."
"Which one of you girls spilled her
daiquiri in my peanut bu t t er
sandwich? It makes It taste like damp
-ugh!"
"Watch out for Maude. She always
orders, a third one because her boss
has fuur at lunch -and that means
she does n't have to worry about him
being able to smell her breath after
lunch."
" ... AND THIS one here ls a pic-
ture of my ex-boy friend, the one who
got away. Dorf"t you think he has a
cute forehead?"
"I hate to go to business and have
the kjds come home to an empty
house. But lf I don·t go to busi ness,
how can we afford a color television set. and you know how important color
television is to the modern child."
''This waiter t.hlnk1 he Is so terribly
clever. JJ he belonked to me, oh, would
I pin his smart aleck tongue down."
"Mabel .•. Mabel , honey ... don't
look JO blue. You were right and he
wa3 wrong. Anyw11y. none of them are
worth It.''
"U I had to W$crlbe him 1n so many
words, I'd have ID say that ho hid
the mann.-1 of an angel. but the vv-
nhb In h1t moollJ ,..,. bfnll1 wor1h
111t tant1s11 .. bis rtnc." ·
-.
on Its own. Newport Beach complaln.s of the inefficien-
cy of overlapping city and county jurisdictions.
Another ingredient in the stew is personal dissati~
faction of some city officials with specific administra-
tive actions or attitudes of Harbor Commissioners and/
or 'their operating personnel.
The situation is not too unlike a group of relatives
who are united i°' attacking a will -so they can later
haggle and batUe with each other over what they think
is their proper share of the eetate.
The question still gets down to:
--Will a change save the county taJ:payers money,
or provide needed, better services for the same money?
-Who pays for what?
Obviously the county supervisors aren't convinced
they have enough answers -or enough answers in
which they have sufficient confl.dence.
Unnecessary Deception
An FBI agent posed as a newspaperlt)an ta get de-
tails in an antidratt melee in Washington last week.
The agent said be did it because demonstrators "us-
ually talk freely to newsmen."
His statement was an unintended high compliment
to the news reporters of the nation. But his action dam-
ages the newsman's image and makes his job of get-
ting the facts for the American people that much more
difficult. .
Needless to say, any newsman posing as an FBI
agent to get information would quickly land in a fed-
eral jail.
While we admire the FBI for the· efficient investi-
gatiVe agency it is, we believe it need not resort to a
deception which tends to inhibit freedom of speech and
the free flow of the news.
Overseas
Reaction to
U.S. Violence
He Shows Intellectual Arrogance
"Our future may Lie beyond our vis·
iun, but it is not completely beyond
our control." Sen. Robert F. Kennedy,
"To Seek a Newer World" (1967)
How can any claim to moral
leaqership, the Yorkshire Post asks,
be put forward without presumption
"by a country which cannot protect its
political leaders from the assassin?"
The question is typical of the outcry of
the world press as violence, seemingly
uncontrollable, roams the streets of
this country .
The Scotsman of Edinburgh
observes: "Within a space of four and
a half years Americans have seen
three champions of the under-privileg-•
ed sections of society torn away by
assassins' bullets ... One man's gun
has changed the course of the
preaidential campaip .and perhaps of
American history more than the
millions of votea in the primaries."
THE LONDON SUN asserts :
H America has the most terrible record
of criminal violence in all the world.
Four or her Presidents have been
assassinated. Every year there are
nine thousand murders."
The Westdeutsche A 11 g e m e i n e
states: "The capacity of American
democracy fo r change and adjustment
which always develops new forces
ought to survive even this (the second
Kennedy assassination). But the coun-
try is going through a deep and
serious crisis." Die Welt of West
Germany says : "The three crimes of
Dallas, Memphis, and Los Angeles
have poisoned the political climate in
the United States for a long time."
Sirhan Blshara Sirhan. the alleged
assassin of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, Is
undergoing psychiatric tests. He is ex·
pected to enter a plea of innocent by
reason of Insanity when he appears in
court in Los Angeles on Friday. The
plea could be not guilty coupled with
the insanity defense.
DR. DONALD W. H A ST I NG S.
chairman of the depirtment of
psychiatry and neurology at the
University of Min nesota MedJcal
School. reports that all but two of the
assassins or would-be assassins of
American Presidents were psychotic.
The two exceptions , Dr. Hastings
says, were fanatics. They were Oscar
Collazo and Griselio Torresola. who in
1950 tried to kill President Truman
because they thought It would help
Puerto Rico.
Dr. Hastings made his study follow.
ing the ~illing of President Kennedy
by Lee H1rvey Oswald. He believes
the seven psychotic attackers weri
paranoid schizophrenics-mentally Ill
persons who believe someone is out to
get them and who may attempt to
counter by murdering.
THE SOVIET REACTION to the
series or assassinatlons in this country
11 typlf\Ni by a Moscow radio brood·
cast of June 5. "The hawks," said the
broadcast. "demand an extension of
the war Jn Vietnam, threatening those
who dJssent from them with punish·
ment, and at times use the services of
paid 1ssasslns. ••
MakJn& assassination a pecuUa.rly
American phenomf!non Is unfortunate
arid unfair. In no fewer than 14 of the
pa1t 2'.I years at least one political
Je1der 10mewhert Jn tbe world has
ruched a violent end.
I
. .
McCarthy Is Too Pompous
Sen. Eugene McCarthy has said he
does not believe the nation will be pa·
tient with presidential candidates
(Nixon -Humphrey) who stand for
the status quo. The senator wishes to
be asked to give a ringing challenge to
the convention. He should, by .all
means, be allowed to do so. Exposure
would be helpful all around.
rt is a somewhat arrogant con-
clusion that the two major party con·
tenders "stand for the status quo ." If
not an example of exorbitant estima-
tion of self, the statement does reveal
a somewhat pretentious self-esteem, a
view Of the senator by the 1enat<r as
901?1ehow being ttle one man who bu
looked into the future and understands
wh.at it wants.
It is a preposterous piece of busineu
to say that Hubert Humphrey or·
Richard Nixon "stands for the status
quo ." Mr. Nixon ia: regarded as the
more consenil'tive and the one who
ha.a: avoided fixed ~mltmenta and
is, tbe~ore, more easily able to
move. But Mr. Nixon is well aware
that the status quo is a piece of shif-
ting sand. There hasn't been any
status quo since, roughly, the first
World War. Certainly there ba.s been
none since the second.
SENATOR M c CA RT HY 'S in·
tellectual arrogance and vanity seem
t6 stem from the fact that he opposed
the war in Vietnam. Thls war was
never a "status quo." It now is going
along in somewhat the same manner
as did the Korean War:. fighting while
negotiations continue.
Certainly it is not a "status quo"
situatiorl.
It was intere9ting, just in passing,
that none of the Hanoi cult, which used
to bleed from every one of its moral
veioo when U.S. bombers struck at
legitimate targets in North Vietnam,
said a mumbling word when the Viet
Cong shelled Saigon -aiming at no
target at all but sending in shellfire to
till civilians for the sake of terr« on-
ly. Not a one of ttiose wflo bled so
copiously alx>ut bombing Hanoi made
even tbe mildest complaint about this
ugly piece of business .
IF HANOI'S intransigence and
civilian -attack atrocities continue,
they may p-ove that U.S. policy that
developed across four adminJstratiOrts
was perhaps Inevitable in that no
peace response was ever possible
from Hanoi in those years. 'Jbe more
vocal doves look less and less con·
vincing -and more intellectually and
morally in error -as events move on.
Hanoi·s morals must be somewhat
embarrassing to those who made the
pilgrimage to Hanoi and came back to
v.Tite of ihe brave peace-loving people
undergoing the wicked bombing on the
outskirts of their capital.
At any rate, Senator McCarthy is
too, too pretentious in deciding what
the status quo of O}lf time is -and
who "stands tor it. 1
DEAN ACHESON, who w a 1
Secretary of State in HaJTy Truman's
severe years of testing, said that
history has a way of coming full cir-
cle. It does. One can see that process
now in movement We once were
"bogged down'' in the status quo of
being pledged to defend the islaDdl of
Quemoy and Matsu -and others of
the nearby Pescadores chain. Time
was when these two words were the
hottest headline items. We still are
pledged to defend Formosa and the
islands deemed vital to its security.
(Newsmen who covered former
governor of Mississippi Ross Barnett
told a story of a preu conference
after his election. He wa1 asked what
he thought ought to be done ab o u t
Quemoy and Matsu. He was reported
to have sald he would find a place for
both of them in the highway depart-
ment. That's about what we did with
t b e m. They are in t b e internat1onll
highway department Wt remain there
until history he a ta up In their area.)
RUSSIA IS UNEASY a b o u I
Czechoslovakia. The Czechs dJdn't boil
over as did Hungary some years ago.
They came along gradually. So, the
Soviets put on' pr,11sure in Berlin and
East Germany to keep those areas
fro'm getting any ideas about new
liberties. The Middle East steadily
becomes more dangerous to the future
than the Far East, etc., etc., etc.
There is no status quo. And for
Senator MCarthy to say he is the only
"candJdate" who isn't standing for the
status quo is a piece: oi pompous non-...., •.
Pride, Inc. Deep in Scandal
WASHINGTON -A highly tnuted.
much publicized special project to pro-
vide employment for hundreds of
disadvanta:ged youth in Washington's
ghettos is being extensively in-
vestigated on a number of sensational
charges.
Pride. Inc .. hurriedly launched last
summer with a $2 million Labor
Department grant at the urging o{
Vice President l~umphrey and other
AdministrDtion leaders when tensions
were running high and the Cap!tal ap-
peared on the verge of racial violence.,
is undergoing extensive probing for
the following:
(I) Alleged large-scale payroll pad·
ding and other fiscal Irregularities,
(2) The killer of a liquor store
dealer in a holdup repute<lly was a
Pride, Inc .. employe. The police are
checkirtg on information thM ottier
B11 George---,
Dear George :
When my husbs.nd and I get
mad at each other and I'm
shouting at him. and furioos.
sometimes he buys me a dozen
roses. This always quJet.s me
right down. Howev!f, I wonder
w:hat kind of a gift I shoukl send
him sometimes when h c ' s
shouting and I'm wrong~
CURIOUS
Dear Cur lo!.Mi :
What's the matte:r with a dozen
roses? That ahould shut him op
-1 beUeve tht word is dum·
founded.
(Domestic problenu solved
quickly. JnternatlQnal proble-ms
slillhtly hirer .... t of the
l\llaiaippl.
..
,
members of ~he robbery gang also
were Pr.i<if; workers.
(3) TWO HIGH-PLACED Pride of-
fici'als allegedly rented a car to drive
to Philadelphia where they met with
members of the Revolutionary Action
Movement (RAM), an extremist
Negro nationalist organization, and
gave them $1 ,000. Investigators have
definitely established that Pride w~
billed for ttte ~nlal ol this car.
(4) Pride employes are reportedly
attemptlne: to e x tort "protection
money" from Washington merchants.
(5) An alleged plan under which
Pride, Inc., would buy a Oett of.
Volkswagens by putting down one·
fourth of the cost. 'Ille can would then
be turned o v e r to supervisors and
other administrative personnel who
would pay the remainder in monthly
installmeris from padded mileage and
other auth«ized expense aiccounts.
Presumably, in the end, tbe 1utoe
would belong to these individuals
although actually paid for with
gov~ent funds.
(6) A D.C. CHILD Labor Bureau In·
spector reporrted ttiat 1 Pride emplCJle
told him !!\at • "number of Pride
boys" were using narcoUcs, and that
one allegedly told tho lnfomant "he
had .. ver used dope" untll hi• Ptlde
supervisor introduced him to It.
17) A number of Pride employ ..
...,.. found \o be Juvenilel .-tile
lcg,ol _, Oi• of lt. °"" -dio<Jooed 12, of wllom o.. wag 10.
three -• 12, aod oiCllt II ,....., of .,..
18) Four Prldo offid.tlo-.. beinC
pald at ttie rate of $?.SO to $300 a week;
a nwnbef' of others S125 to S175 •
week. Frooi September 1967 to June
1968, $10 ,CXX> was paid for "comultant
services". One consult~ received S80
a day, but his advioe concernin·g
business ventures was ignored.
(9) A U.S. Man;hel memorandum on
the bulletin board ol the "poor
people's campaign" headquarters in
downtown Washingt.on war~ tbat
unauthorized pet'60R! were ~mnc up
government surplus food at vanous
pickup points, selling it and pocketing
the money. The marshal stated tbe
memo concluded, "The men are
believed to be members of Pride,
Inc ."
The wide-ranging investigations of
these and oU1er shocking charges
against Pride, Inc., are bein1 made
both by Congl'M$ and five government
agencies.
Robert s. All••
--~--
(
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'
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•